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UCLA  DAILY  BRUIN 


LOS  ANQELE 
CALIFORMIA 


FALL  2000,  PAET  1  OF 


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MIy  Bruin  Ncwi 


Septembef  25-28, 2000 


Moit  ptizzling  aspect  of 
The  Bruih  is  all  that  nev\^ 


COLUMN:  Look  up  from 
your  crossword,  notice 
your  UCLA  communit;^ 

e  is  a  crossword  puzzle  in 
eVery  edition  of  this  paper.  It's 
the  world's  easiest  crossword 
puzzle,  and  diances  are  the  professor 
won't  notice  as  you  attentively  scribble 
the  answer  to  "where  fish  live"  instead 
of  taking  notes 
on  the  ancient 
history  of  Egypt. 

Whether  it's 
the  instant  grati- 
fication of  being 
able  to  come  up 
with  the  answers 
or  the  meticulous 
yet  rewarding 
task  of  filling  in 
each  box  with  a 
letter,  the  cross- 
word puzzle  is 
arguably  one  of 

the  most  popular  features  of  the  Daily 
Bruin  among  UCLA  students. 

People  tear  out  the  puzzle  so  it's  easi- 
er to  hide  in  dass,  and  we  get  calls  when, 
God  forbid,  the  answers  are  printed  for 
the  wrong  day.  It's  a  comfortable,  mind- 
less job,  and  filling  it  out  is  a  break  in  our 
busy  schedules  -  because  everyone  is 
very  busy  at  UCLA. 

So  busy  we  often  forget  why  we  are 
here  in  the  first  place.  It's  easy  to  get 
caught  up  in  the  whiriwind  of  reality- 
based  TV  shows,  sparkling  cell  phone 
covers  and  Thursday  night  k^gers.  To 
focus  on  getting  a  degree  instead  ofgetr 


Barbara 
Ortutay 


ting  an  education.  To  forget  that  with 
the  privilege  of  attending  one  of  the 
most  prestigious  public  universities  in 
the  worid  also  comes  a  responsibility  to 
be  Jw  active  member  of  society. 

I  don't  like  the  crossword  puzzle 
because  maybe  if  it  wasn't  there,  you 
would  read.  Then  again,  maytte  then 
you  wouldn't  pick  up  the  paper. 

This  past  year,  news  happened  everv 
day  at  UCLA.  In  February.  16  people 
were  arrested  at  the  Law  School  while 
protesting  the  dwindling  number  of 
underrepresented  minorities  admitted. 
In  April,  after  a  $150  million  donation, 
UCLA's  hospital  was  renamed  honor- 
ing former  president  Ronald  Reagan. 
In  May,  less  than  8  percent  of  graduate 
students  took  the  time  out  to  vote. 
Do  you  care? 

What  you  do  and  don't  do  will 
affect  people  for  years  to  come.  In 
1996.  voters  passed  Proposition  209 
and  ended  alTirmative  action  in  college 
admissions.  The  university  is  still  recov- 
ering. 

This  past  year,  like  every  year,  deci- 
sions were  made,  meetings  held,  funds 
raised.  Students  were  admitted,  others 
denied.  Someone  got  yelled  at  for  hold- 
ing hands  with  her  girlfriend.  Someone 
looked  around  his  classroom  and  saw 
no  other  African  Americans.  Someone 
helped  a  high  sdiool  student  get  into 
college.  Someone  looked  up  from  the 
crossword  puzzle. 

We  don't  make  the  news  here:  this  is 
your  paper.  Are  you  news? 

Ortutay  is  the  2000-2001  news  editxDo 
you  have  what  it  takes  to  be  a  reporter? 
E-mail  her  at  bortutay@media.ucla.edu. 


CORRECTION 


The  Aug.  28  article  titled  "Critics  decry  financier 

merger  as  monopolistic"  contained  errors. 

The  story  should  have  read:  "Sallie  Mae  does  not 

participate  in  the  Direct  Lending  Program."  It  also  should 

have  read:  "Interest  rates  on  federally  guaranteed  Stafford 

and  PLUS  loans  are  standard  for  all  lenders." 


At  long  last,  students  mpve  Into  De  INJeve  Plaza 


HOUSING:  Frustration  at 
end  for  residents  upset 
about  crowding,  delays 


ByltavidKing 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Three  years,  several  delays,  and 
more  than  SSI  million  later,  students 
now  have  the  opportunity  to  reside  in 
the  partially-completed  De  Meve 
Plaza. 
r  The  four  perimeter  residential 
buildings  -  buildings  C,D,E  and  F  - 
are  expected  to  open  their  dobrs  to 
residents  Sept.  23. 

"We've   made   housing   assign- 
ments, and  we're  currently  anticipat- 
-/  ing  four  of  the  buildings  will  be  in 
operation  by  the  time  school  rolls 
'around,"  said  Michael  Foraker,  direc- 
tor of  housing. 

According  to  Foraker,  approxi- 
mately 900  students  will  be  living  in 
.  De  Neve  Plaza  this  school  year,  with 
each  building  containing  more  than 
100  rooms. 

Comparable  to  Sunset  Village  in 

design,  De  Neve  Plaza  residents  will 

pay   similar   costs,    ranging   from 

■$8,049  to  $9,389  per  school  year, 

'depending  on  the  number  of  room 

See  HOUSING,  page  6 


BRICXSET  O'BRIEN/Ddily  Biuin  Senior  Staff 

Most  of  the  De  Neve  Plaza  housing  complex,  located  in  front  of  Dykstra  Hall,  will  open  this  quarter  after  three  years  of  construction. 


High  rents  drive  tenants  out  df  town 

WESTWOOD:  Proximity  to 
UCLA,  high  turnover  rate 
keep  apartment  prices  up 


S95T- 


fs^nta^  of  tenants. 


i  f 


By  Jessica  Kwck 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

UCLA  students  comb  the  streets 
of  Westwood  each  year  searching  for 
affordable  housing,  but  what  many  of 
them  find  in  the  end  are  overpriced 
apartments. 

Wedged  between  Bel  Air, 
Brentwood,  Century  City  and 
Beverly  Hills,  some  see  Westwood  as 
a  target  for  overpriced  housing. 

"They're  just  normal,  average 
apartments,"  said  Jannie  Younis 
Alvarez,  manager  at 

RentOnWeb.com.  "There's  really 
nothing  special  about  the  apartments 
in  Westwood." 

But  the  shortage  of  available  on- 

campus     housing,     proximity     to 

UCLA,  and  nearby  luxury  housing 

.units  all  lead  to  outrageous  rent  rates 

liin   Westwood,   said   Liz   Kemper, 

fji  director  of  Student  Legal  Services  . 

L     As  a  result,  some  choose  to  live 

joutside  of  Westwood  to  escape  the 

Tiighrent. 

"I  opted  not  to  live  in  the  heart  of 
Westwood  because  the  prices  are  sim- 
ply too  high,"  said  Jamie  Bakos,  an 
employee  in  Westwood. 

Inflated  rental  prices  stem  from 
the  high  demand  for  housing  near 
campus. 

As  UCLA's  population  grew  over 
the  years  -  from  5,000  students  in 
1944  to  more  than  36,500  students 
today  -  so  has  the  number  of  people 
living  in  Westwood, 

Despite  Westwood's  increased 
population,  few  apartment  buildings 
are  beine  constructed  ioday. 

Mott^apartments  in  Westwood 
were  hvtfft  in  the  '60s  and  'TOs, 
according  to  Sonya  Burnett,  an 
administrative  assistant  at  the 
Community  Housing  Office. 

The  buildings  in  Westwood  are 
predominantly  older  buildings,  with 
a  few  larger  property-managed  build- 
ings that  are  owned  by  companies 


PROVISION  OF 
SCCURITY 
DEPOSIT 
In  California,  a 
security  deposit 
is  limited  to  two 
month's  rent  for 
an  unfurnished 
apartment 


USE  OF  SECURITY 

DEPOSIT 

Landlords  may  only 

UM  the  deposit 

toward  unp^  rent, 

to  repair  damages 

caused  by  the  tenant 

other  than  normal 

wear  and  tear,  for 

necessary  cleaning  of 

the  premises,  or  to 

remedy  out 

violations  Of  the 

rental  agreement 
REPAIRS 

The  lartdlord  must  repair  problems  that  make  the  unit  uninhabitable,  such 

as  poor  plumbing,  gas  or  heating  systems,  and  unsanitary  grounds  with 

detKis  and  rodents  or  vermin.  But  the  lar>dlord  is  r>ot  responsible  for 

repairing  damages  caused  by  the  tenant  or  tenant's  guests.  The  landlord 

artd  the  tertant  may  sign  an  agreement  that  the  tenant  will  assume 

responsibility  for  all  repairs  ar>d  maintertance  in  exchange  for  lower  rent 

Landlords  usually  have  30  days  to  make  repairs  after  a  tenant  informs 

them  of  a  problem  except  in  emergency  cases. 

MUM  CaJwUlOtMl— mCwMUHiWMnjUllitaSrir  Hi»U»CmiIk 


RETURN  OF 

SECURITY 

DEPOSIT 

Landlords  must 

retum  the  full 

deposit  or  partial 

refund  with  a  list 

of  itemized 

deductions 

within  21  days 

after  the  tenant 

moves  out. 


with  other  apartment  complexes. 

Landlords  of  smaller,  older  build- 
ings try  to  keep  their  prices  competi- 
tive with  the  property-managed 
buildings,  Burnett  said. 

Since  1995,  prices  have  soared  in 
Westwood.  In  the  early  '90s  land- 
lords charged  about  $700  for  a  one- 
bedroom  apartment  in  Westwood. 
Tenants  today  pay  S  1,1 00  for  the 
same  apartment,  Kemper  said. 

Despite  high  prices,  many 
Westwood  buildings  remain  under 
rent  control,  including  most  apart- 
ments dated  before  1978,  Kemper 
said.dlent  control  means  a  landlord 
can  only  raise  a  tenant's  rent  3  per- 
cent each  year  or  5  percent  if  they  pay 
some  of  the  tenant's  utilities. 

"However,  if  a  tenant  voluntarily 
vacates  the  building.  The  landlord  can 
raise  the  rent  as  much  as  they  like  for 
the  next  tenant,"  Kemper  said. 

Because  undergraduate  and  grad- 
uate students  generally  do  not  live  in 
the  neighborhood  for  more  than  a 
few  years,  Westwood's  high  turnover 
rate  gives  landlords  the  opportunity 
to  raise  rent. 

Along  with  raising  rent,  landlords 


ADAM  BAOWN/Dally  Brum 

are  also  raising  security  deposits. 

"I've  noticed  landlords  are  dou- 
bling deposits,"  Alvarez  said.  "This 
means  the  tenants  end  up  paying 
three  months'  rent  just  to  move  in." 

Subsequently,  some  students  opt 
to  move  to  cheaper  areas  such  as 
Palms,  Mar  Vista  and  West  Los 
Angeles.  However,  rent  in  these  areas 
are  affected  by  prices  in  Westwood. 

"If  rent  in  Westwood  goes  up 
S200,  rent  in  Palms  goes  up  S200  as 
well,"  Burnett  said. 

A  two-bedroom  apartment  that 
costs  $1,610  in  Westwood  can  run  for 
S  1,085  in  Palms  and  $1,050  in  Mar 
Vista,  according  to  a  UCLA 
Community  Housing's  Rental  Rate 
Survey  this  year. 

"Palms  is  cheaper  and  the  apart- 
ments are  generally  bigger  than 
apartments  in  Westwood,"  said 
Nicole  Morones,  a  third-year  mathe- 
matics student.  "The  only  drawback 
is  the  distance  to  UCLA,  but  still, 
many  students  live  in  that  area." 

Besides  high  prices,  students  are 
concerned  whether  they  receive  fair 

S«cJIMRniBnS,pa9c24 


Three's 


a 


m 


DORMS:  Roommates  need  to  set  ground  rules, 
respect  each  others'  space  in  order  to  get  along 


ByNkoleTabo 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Living  with  two  strangers  in 
Sproul  Hall  was  the  first  time  Van 
Chau,  a  second-year  undeclared 
student,  had  ever  slept  in  a  place 
without  her  parents. 

"I  had  strict  parents,"  Chau 
said.  "1  never  went  to  a  sleepover 
unless  my  parents  were  sleeping 
there  too." 


But  Chau,  like  other  first-year 
students,  soon  discovered  that  liv- 
ing with  two  strangers  was  much 
more  difficult  than  living  with  her 
family. 

The  majority  of  studerits  who 
live  away  from  their  parents  while 
attending  college  are  still  limited  in 
their  freedom  by  the  roommate 
factor. 


See  ROOMMATES,  page  22 


^  AVJ''^ 


AMYHABER/DailyBiuin 


S«ptfmbef  25-28, 2000 


(MyBniinNcwi 


Oaity  Bruin  News 


tHe  mbst  of  opportunities  at  UCLA 


Septeinbef  25-28, 2000         5 

-^«c 


COLUMN:  Stay  informed, 
gel  involved,  take  a  stand 
with  help  of  The  Bruin 

If  I  told  you  the  secret  to  success  at 
UCLA  and  in  life,  you'd  laugh.  It's 
WEPAP 

Yes,  that's  right.  WEPAP 

Say  it  with  me  now:  work  ethic, 
positive  attitude,  perseverance. 

A  successful  Bruin  told  me  that 
one.  After  he  completed  his  career  as 
a  scholarship 
UCLA  baseball 
player,  he  went 
on  to  teach 
junior  high  alge- 
bra. 

The  most 
dynamic  people 
I've  ever  met 
from  all  the 
places  I've  trav- 
eled across  the 
country  are 
UCLA  students 
or  alumni.  You 

probably  already  know  many  Bruins 
and  you're  going  to  meet  more  this 
year. 

And  you're  a  Bruin  too.  That  must 


Christine 
Byrd 


make  you  a  dynamo. 

My  former  teacher  still  talks  to  his 
students  about  UCLA:  how  to  get  in 
and  how  to  go  beyond.  And  WEPAP 
is  always  involved. 

It's  because  of  him  that  I'm  at 
UCLA.  And  it's  probably  because  of 
WEPAP  that  you're  now  at  this  uni- 
versity. 

It  doesn't  matter  if  you  always 
knew  you  would  get  here  or  if  you 
never  dreamed  it,  whether  you're  a 
brand  spanking  new  freshman  or  a 
supcr-duper  sixth-year  senior. 

It  doesn't  matter  if  you  came  from 
a  private  school  where  mommy  and 
daddy  bought  you  a  new  car  on  your 
16th  birthday  or  if  you  went  against 
the  grain  and  worked  your  way 
through  high  school  to  help  pay  the 
bills. 

It  doesn't  matter  if  you  got  a  1550 
on  the  SAT  or  a  950. 

Now  you're  here,  and  this  is  proba- 
bly as  dose  to  an  equal  playing  field 
as  you're  ever  going  to  get  in  your 
life.  Welcome. 

Wc  call  it  U-C-L-A,  but  really,  have 
you  seen  L.A.  lately? 

Take  a  look  around  this  campus 
and  you'll  see  a  second-stringer  gone 
winning  quarterback.  A  conservative 
transfer  student  elected  president  of  a 


historically  leftist  (long  ago,  arguably 
communist)  undergraduate  student 
council.  A  youngster  from  the  Bronx 
grown  up  to  be  a  chancellor.  An  intra- 
mural hockey  player  turned  founder 
of  a  fund  for  paraplegics.  And  that 
basebkll  player  who  became  my 
Algebra  teacher. 

There  is  a  reason  everyone  changes 
their  major  five  times  at  UCLA  and  a 
reason  the  road  you  once  set  out  on 
takes  dozens  of  stomach-rolling,  high- 
speed, dizzying  turns  in  your  time  at 
UCLA.  Growth  takes  place  exponen- 
tially around^re. 


n  t  *  i  *t 


m 


On  this  campus  are  world-class 
professors,  state-of-the-art  technology, 
one  of  the  most  diverse  communities 

S«e  1110,  page  20 


DAILY  BRUIN 


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Kiddet  Sam  lee.  Sherry  Ohara,  Christina  SanctKZ 

KMbAMMT  Elena  Jams 
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RECAP  OF  SUMMER'S  EVENTS 

While  you  were  baskii>q  in  tlie  sun,  here  is  what  happened  at  UCLA  and  in  the  .)ews0wr  the  summer. 
Check  the  DaHy  Bruin  Archives  at  www.dailybruin.ucla.edu  for  complete  stories. 


Jiily17 

Th*  Uk.  County  ShwifTs 

dcpartmant  r«l— f »  a  sketcit 

of  •  nMD  tiMy  want  to  taNi  to 

ragaitHng  th*  disappcaraiKt 

of  than  flnt-ycar  student 

MidM«(  Ncgratt,  who  >ms 

bam  missing  line*  Ok.  1  a 


.luft«30 

Gov.  Gray  Davis  signs 

I  naxt  year's  $99.4  billion  | 

budget,  iitcraasing  tha 

UC's  budget  by  17.9 


JUNE 


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iuly 
The  Ertglif  li  dtpartmant 

chartget  Ktany  of  Its 

four-unit  dasies  to  Ave 

units,  citing  higlter 

workload. 


^M: 


July  19 

U.S.  District  Court  Judge  Gary  A. 

Fees  rules  that  the  LAPO  planned 

security  perimeter  around 

Staples  Center  durir>g  tlic 

Democratic  National  Convention 

is  unconstitutioiMl. 


July  19 

The  UC  Board  of  Regents 

meet  in  San  FrandKo, 

discussir>g,  amortg  other 

thirfgs,  security  lapses  that 

have  brought  tlie  university's 

management  of  the  lab 

ur>der  scrutiny. 


July  25 

CorKordc  flight  crashes 

minutes  after  t»k*otf  from 

the  de  Gaulle  airport  In 

Paris,  Icilling  all  1 14  people 

al>road. 


AUGUST 


^i  ■  9tm^ 


August 
Wildfires  continue  to  rag*  in  the 

Western  United  States.  Davis 

raquests  an  enroNment  financial 

aid  and  other  deadlirtes  for 

student  flrefighters. 


July  28 

Two  federal  judges  allow  Napster  to 

remain  online,  two  days  after  another 

judge  grants  an  injunction  that  would 

have  effectively  shut  down  the  site. 

Napster  was  sued  for  copyright 

infringement  by  the  Recording 

Industry  Association  of  America. 


Septi 
The  federal  government 
warns  consuniers  that  1 .4 
million  Firestone  tires  the 
manufacturer  refused  to 
recall  could  pose  a  safety 
kTitk  and  slwuld  be  replaced. 


i,AM0CMMhrB 


SEPTEMBER 


Aug.  15 

The  Undergraduate  Students 

Association  Council  votes  to 

freeze  all  accounts  for  student 

advocacy  groups. 


Aug.  14-17 

With  protests  throughout  the  week, 

the  DfK  is  held  in  Los  Angeles.  Al 

Gore  arKi  Joe  Ueberman  are 

nominated  for  president  artd  vice 

presMentiat  candidates.  Amoitg 

other  preparations,  800  CaMomia 

Highway  Patrol  Offican  stay  in  the 

residerKe  halls,  drawing  complaintt 

from  sonte  students. 


Russia's  Kursk  nuclear 
'  subnurine  sinks  In  the  Barerrts  ' 

sea.  Despite  rescue  efforts  by 

^  British  and  Norwegian  teams, 

all  aboard  die. 


-     i  fe» 


ADAM  BROWN/tXHy  Bruin 


•Svc  agreement  o(  1  yr  required  130  acli«a«on  toe;  USD  lemiination  lee  Svc  i»  3uh)»ci  lo  ere  itn 
approval;  deposit  may  be  raquirad   Sale*  tax  appDas  to  MSRP  of  handset  Other  condition*  apply. 
1  Activation  of  $29  9IVmo  &  above  Personal  Choica  rata  pltt\  induda*  choice  o(  1 )  Free  domeafc  tong 
dialanoa  on  voice  can*  »at  originata  in  CA/NV  mftmnW  »  mckided  mine,  era  ameeded,  airlima  chaiget 
apply;  A  k««mllad  Mobile-To-Mobile  (MTM)cal»ig.  MTM  oHar  appiaa  to  aimme  tor  mooming  or 
oiagoing  voice  calto  lo/irom  a  PBW/^IBW  Pt»  aubacriber  enmled  In  the  MTM  pton  talnMn  anoViar 
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Sun  .»S19  9Mm>.toeap|«aatoaachFafiil|r  IWk  phone  number  added  to  tie  aooount.  Aluei 
account  there  the  prknaryaooourthoUar^tnckMladmlna  AddMonal  aimma  m  ameaa  of  Inchided 
monthty  mina;  appltoebto  tang  dManoe  chaigaa.  taaaa.  Maehargaa  a  wiy  other  chergettlaae  tor  each 
user  are  extra  a  are  appltod  to  tie  account  A«  chargaa  under  the  account  era  bUed  to  tie  prkawy 
account  holder  OHer  raquliea  new  avc  acUvaMon  an«irl  yr.  agraamani  by  primary  aeoount  hoktor 
under  a  Peraonal  Choioe  lato  pien  «  for  eeoh  Famty  Tb»<  Una  added  in  our  LAA^antrai  CA  region 


between  4/1  &*0O-9/3O/O0  2No  domestic  long  distance  or  roaming  charges  tor  vona  caiia  ongmatoO 
In  the  U  S.  to  domeelic  deaHnattona.  R  Inctodad  mint  are  exceeded,  ainlme  charge  oi  36«Mn 
appaa*.  Rooming  coverage  oUride  CAMV  not  avBllebto  In  el  areaa  3tj)ng  OlManoa  la  kwhaled  in 
the  per-mm  rate  to  domaeHc  taoaiona.  Mwtoe  •  Canada  In  our  CA/NV  networii  4|yw«  ■  $tO 
nonrafundabla  donation  by  check  or  money  ORtor  to  Special  Olymplca.  ConauK  your  Uk  advtoor  tor 
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September  25-28, 2000         7 


HOUSING         e 

From  page  3    ^       *  ;..      i 

occupants  and  meal  plan,    j 

De  Neve  "Plaza  rooms,  unlike  high- 
rise  residence  halls,  feature  a  private 
bathroom  in  each  roorn,  as  well  as 
individual  air  conditioning  and  heat- 
ing systems.  They  are  240  square  feet 
in  size  -  20  percent  larger  than  Sunset 
Village  rooms. 

Brad  Erickson,  director  ofCampus 
Service  Enterprises  and  Qe  Nev^. 
Plaza  project  manager,  said  student 
input  was  a  crucial  part  of  th«  plan- 
ningstages. 

"De  Neve  Plaza  represents  the  lat- 
est and  greatest  of  understanding  for 
what  works  best  for  students  at 
UCLA,"  Erickson  said. 

With  the  expected  date  of  comple- 
tion of  the  podium  building  -  which 
includes  a  dining  hall  -  set  for  Spring 
2001,  De  Neve  Plaza  will  eventually 
house  a  total  of  1,258  students  in  614 
double  rooms. 


The  original 

completion  date  for 

the  $51  million  project 

was  set  for  fall  1999. 


But  Erickson  said  converting  some 
units  into  triple  rooms  remains  a  pos- 
sibility as  demand  for  on-campus 
housing  continue  to  grow. 

The  project,  whose  original  pur- 
pose was  to  address  issues  of  over- 
crowded housing  before  anyone  even 
knew  of  Tidal.  Wave  II,  will  help 
accommodate  future  Bruins,  Foraker 
said. 

Tidal  Wave  II  is  the  phenomenon 
wh^e  an  influx  of  college  students  are 


MMOY  ROSVCMly  Brum  Senior  Starr 

Rooms  In  De  Neve  Plaza,  like  the  one  shown  here,  feature  their  own  bathrooms,  air  conditioning  and 
heaters.  Students  are  scheduled  to  begin  moving  In  to  the  partially-completed  residence  hall  this  fall. 


projected  to  surge  onto  California 
campuses  by  2010. 

Though  plans  for  increased  hous^ 
ing  date  back  to  1988,  the  De  Neve 
project  unofficially  began  in  May 
1997  when  the  UC  Regents  approved 
fmancing  for  the  construction. 
Designs  for  the  plaza  were  completed 
in  June  of  that  year,  with  the  ground 
breaking  ceremony  taking  place  Oct. 
1, 1997. 

The  original  completion  date  for 
the  $31  million  project  was  set  for  fall 
1999,  but  several  problems  -  which 
Erickson  declined  to  comment  on  - 
pushed  the  date  back  considerably. 

"It's  had  its  challenges,  but  every 
project   has    challenges,"  Erickson 


said. 

A  few  months  into  construction, 
the  heavy  rains  of  El  NiAo  and  result- 
ing mud  slides  significantly  delayed 
progress. 

The  project  was  also  temporarily 
delayed  when  a  tractor-trailer  struck 
and  killed  19-ycar-old.  construction 
worker  Jason  Drass  near  Dykstra  Hall 
onAUg.  15, 1998. 

Other  delays  included  problems 
with  subcontractors  and  a  major  pro- 
ject redesign  to  accommodate  a  high- 
voltagepower  line  running  under  one 
of  the  buildings. 

In  preparation  for  the  opening,the 
housing  office  hired  resident  assis- 
tants to  move  in  immediatdy  upon 


completion  of  the  plaza.  But  the  stu- 
dents were  eventually  given  other 
positions  as  construction  continued 
throughout  the  1999-2000  school  year. 

Before  construction  began,  the 
area  was  originally  the  site  of  Dykstra 
Hall's  commons  building,  which 
included  a  dining  hall,  mailboxes,  and 
a  computer  lab.  The  area  also  featured 
several  basketball  courts. 

Approximately  217  trees  were 
cleared  for  construction  of  the  plaza, 
with  assurances  from  officials  that 
they  would  be  replaced  with  new  trees, 
according  to  Tova  Leiah,  campus 
environmental  planner. 

With  De  Neve  Plaza  located  off 
Gayky  Avenue,  the  area  around  the 


site  was  directly  affeqted  by  the  build- 
ing process.  In  a  June  1999  Daily 
Bruin  article,  residents  complained 
they  lost  40  parking  spaces  on  Gayley 
to  construction  vehicles  entering  the 
site. 

University  officials  said  eliminating 
the  spaces  was  necessary  for  safety 
reasons  and  to  reduce  liability  for  the 
construction  crews. 

Prior  to  the  start  of  construction,  a 
Westwood  community  meeting  raised 
several  concerns,  printed  in  a  Daily 
Bruin  article  April  18, 1997,  regarding 
the  proposed  new  dormitory. 

"The  project  is  massive,  and  it 
affects  us  tremendously,"  said 
Wolfgang  Vieths,  of  the  Northwest 
Village  Residents  Association.  "It  will 
practically  destroy  at  least  half  of  the 
buffer  zone  between  us  and  the  cam- 
pus." 

Another  Westwood  resident, 
Andrew  Milder,  concurred. 

"What  a  greedy,  bad  neighbor 
UCLA  has  been,"  Milder  said. 

In  response  to  noise  complaints 
from  Gayley  and  Dykstra  Hall  resi- 
dents, housing  officials  set  up  a  con- 
struction hotline  to  address  concenu. 

To  compensate  impacted  Dykstra 
Hall  residents,  representatives  from 
the  housing  administration.  Office  of 
Residential  Life,  and  Dining  Services 
formed  a  mitigation  committee. 

The  committee  sought  to  alleviate 
construction  inconveniences  by  offer- 
ing certain  compensations  to  resi- 
dents. 

These  compensations  included  free 
microfridges,  a  special  catered  dinner 
once  every  quarter,  and  monthly 
snacks  delivered  to  residents.  First- 
year  residents  in  Dykstra  were  also 
given  priority  in  housing  assignments 
for  the  following  year. 

Despite  this,  many  students  still 
complained  about  the  nearby  con- 
struction. 


See 


16 


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8         S«ptember  25-28, 2000 


Diily  Bruin 


ampiis 


-t'  .■■•/•■ 


'•'■  i. 


New  stores,  services  find  home  in  Ackerman 


ASUQA:  Reorganization 
results  in  downsizing  of 
BearWear  department 


By  David  King 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

ASUCLA  officials  are  hoping  the 
old  adage  that  "change  is  good"  will 
hold  true  for  Ackerman  Union.  - 

With  expectations  of  greater  sales 
and  increased  lease  space, 
ASUCLA's  student  union  has  under- 
gone reconfigurations  in  services  and 
layout. 

"From  a  business  standpoint,  we 
always  need  to  change,"  said  Jerry 
Mann,  director  of  the  student  union. 
"What  we're  doing  is  going  to  better 
utilize  our  square  footage." 

Changes  to  the  A-level  of 
Ackerman  Union  include  the  closing 
of  Papercuts,  opening  of  Campus 
Cuts  and  Moby  Disc,  as  well  as  the 
addition  of  a  Krispy  Kreme  store- 
front in  the  Cooperage. 

B-level  also  underwent  renovation, 
as  employees  rearranged  sections  of 
the  UCLA  Store. 

According  to  Mann,  the  A-level 
changes  are  a  direct  result  of  student 
surveys  conducted  over  the  past  few 
years. 

A  1998  survey  revealed  a  post 
office,  music/CD  store  and  hair  salon 
to  be  among  the  top  ten  services  stu- 
dents requested. 

Mann  said  ASUCLA  officials 
made  such  requests  priorities  in 
reconfiguring  the  store.  The  post 
office  opened  in  January,  and 
Campus  Cuts,  a  full-service  hair 
salon,  opened  on  A-level  of 
Ackerman  early  September. 

Privately  owned  by  Hair  on 
Campus,  a  national  corporation. 
Campus  Cuts  features  six  to  eight 
workstations  and  is  open  every  day, 
according     to     owner     Mauricio 


Medrano. 

Medrano  said  though  business  has 
been  slow,  he  expects  the  salon  to  be 
busy  whtfn  school  starts  and  plans  to 
eventually  extend  hours  for  both 
walk-ins  and  appointmenu. 

Michael  Regalado,  a  fifth-year  psy- 
chology student  and  one  of  Campus 
Cuts'  first  customers,  said  the  hair 
salon  was  much  needed. 

"It's  very  convenient  - 1  don't  have 
to  go  down  to  Santa  Monica 
Boulevard  anymore  for  a  haircut," 
Regalado  said. 

Also  new  on  the  A-level  is  Moby 
Disc,  a  new  and  used  CD  and  video 
store,  in  the  1,500-square-foot  loca- 
tion formerly  occupied  by  Papercuts. 

Mann  was  confident  the  store 
would  open  by  zero  week. 

He  said  the  addition  of  both  stores 
reflects  ASUCLA's  desire  for  an  A- 
level  that  better  serves  students,  while 
adding  dynamics  to  the  entire  union. 

"We're  hoping  it  will  bring  some 
life  and  vitality  to  the  store,  and  we'd 
like  to  see  A-level  stay  open  later," 
Mann  said. 

But  it  is  not  only  the  A-level  that 
has  changed  during  the  summer 
months. 

In  response  to  an  independent  con- 
sultant's report  spring  quarter,  which 
found  that  Ackerman  Union  devoted 
too  much  space  to  retail  and  lacked  in 
student  services  compared  to  student 
stores  in  other  colleges,  ASUCLA 
officials  are  in  the  process  of  downsiz- 
ing BearWear  and  other  clothing 
floor  space. 

"We  realized  we  were  going  to 
need  to  compact  the  space  we  had, 
and  in  doing  so,  we  could  free  up 
space  and  offer  other  services,"  Mann 
said. 

In  the  store,  BearWear  floor  space 
decreased  significantly,  along  with  the 
Computer  Store,  which  Mann  said 
has  become  a  low  priority. 

SMildlEMMN,|M9e18 


XEfTH  ENf«£)UEZA3Wly  Brum  S«nk)(  Stair 

The  UCLA  Medical  Center  has  lost  money  in  recent  years. 

Medical  Center  prepares 
for  year  with  tighter  belt 

FINANCES:  Layoffs,  budget  cuts  could  have  impact  on 
patient  care;  officials  remain  confident  of  high  quality 


By  Hemesh  Patd 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

After  losing  nearly  $50  million  over 
the  last  two  years,  the  UCLA  Medical 
Center  is  continuing  to  make  cuts  at  a 
potential  risk  to  the  quality  of  patient 
care.  J , 

The  net  income  of  the  univeraity'i 
medical  center  took  a  nose  dive  frojn 
S50  million  in  1998  to  Sl.l  milTtdn  l^t 


year. 


Despite  this  loss,  officials  forecast  a 
leap  in  productivity  to  $10  million  by 
;'(^d  of  the  next  fiscal  year. 

The  center  had  a  strong  month  in. 
July,  with  a  $  1.6  million  operating  gain. 
The  expense  cuts  are  beginning  to  take 
effect  and  are  in  large  part  responsible 
for  our  improved  profitability."  said 
Dr.  Gerald  Levey,  provost  of  medical 
scieiKes. 

StcMWinivpagcU 


PhotCH  by  mUL  Af<M£  MAN/Datty  Bruin  Scrtot  Staff 


(Above)  Maurido 
Medrano,  one  of  the 
owners  of  Campus 
Cuts,  trims  Ride 
Williams'  hair.  Campus 
Cuts  is  a  fuil-service 
salon  located  on  the  A- 
level  of  Ackerman. 

(Left)  Some  employees 
feel  Fast  Track's  new 
location,  near  the  UCLA 
Store's  north  entrance, 
decreases  its  visibility. 


Mtnmin... 


ugh  nuts 


OPENING:  New  counter 
opens,  bringing  Krispy 
Kreme  to  Bruin  masses 


ByOvMncByrd 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Used  to  be,  one  had  to  drive  20 
minutes  to  get  a  Krispy  Kreme 
doughnut.  But  now.  from  south  cam- 
pus or  north  campus,  they  are  just  a 
few  steps  away. 

The  grand  opening  of  the  Krispy 
Kreme  was  Sept.  20  at  the 
Cooperage  in  Ackerman  and  at  Cafe 
Synapse  in  the  Gonda  Goldshmeid 
building. 

In  the  first  two-and-a-half  hours  at 
the  Cooperage,  they  sokl  more  than 
106  dozen. 

"I  guess  it's  not  just  the  freshman 
who  arc  going  to  gain  15  pounds," 
said  Tiffany  Jew,  a  third-year  physio- 
logical sciences  student. 

But  managers  expect  the  store  to 
get  even  more  business. 

"As  more  are  learning  about  it. 


OWE  HH.LyO*ty  »utn  Senior  Suff 

Miroslava  Rabanczuk  hands  a  bag  of  Krispy  Kreme  doughnuts  to 
Maurido  Madrano  at  the  new  doughnut  shop  in  Ackemian. 


it's  expected  to  get  busier,"  said 
Jhezie  Cabayan,  general  manager  of 
Van  Nuys  store,  who  was  on  hand 
for  the  opening. 

Though  the  doughnuts  are  not 
made  on-site,  they  are  delivered 
fresh  from  thf  Van  Nuys  store  twice 


daily,  Cabayan  said.  At  closing  time, 
unsold  doughnuts  will  be  thrown 
out. 

"They  came  in  the  morning,  so 
they're  fresh  but  they're  not  hot," 


Sm 


20 


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September  25-28, 2000 


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Just  buy  $35  or  more  of  groceries*  and  we'll 

take  10%  off  your  bill. 

^Excluding  alcohol  and  tobacco. 


Breadsliks 

Grocery  tmykftva 

Tlreelop  Apple  Juice  64oz J3.19 


Breadstiks       Ralphs 

WCiMlSiOpffr    Bv€f)UI]lrllLC| 

12.87 12.99 


Langers  Cranberry  Juice  64oz. 3.29 2.96 2.99 


1.49. 
2.69. 
3.69. 
3.99. 
4.19. 


.1.34. 
.2.42. 
.3.32. 
.3.59. 

.3.77. 


.1.29 
.2.59 
.2.99 
.3.59 
.3.89 


Gatorade  32oz. 

Heinz  Ketchiip  36oz 

Best  Foods  MavonnaLse  32oz. 

General  Mills  (Jieerios  15oz 

KeUocg's  Raisin  Bran  Crunch  I80Z. „ 

Post  Crape  Nuts  24oz. 3.69 332 339 

C  &  H  Granulated  Sugar  lib 0.99 0.89 0.99 

Skippy  Peanut  Butter  ISoz. 2.«9 2.60 2.67 

Sunmaid  Seedless  Raisins  15o2 2.47 2.22 2.39 

HersheyChocoiale  Syrup  24oz. 2.29 2.06 2.27 

SlaitNick's  Fiesh  Roast  Coffee  12oz 8.89 8.00 8.39 

TMe  Ultra  Liquid  50oz. 539 4.85 4.99 

Viva  Ultra  Paper  Towel  ea. 2.29 2.06 199 

Northern  Batti  Tissue  4pk. 1.69 .....1.52 155 

Dixie  Everyday  Plates  24ct 2.89 2.60 2.77 

Sparklelts  Water  2.5Cal 2.59 2.33 2.59 

SpaiideOsWaier  IGal 0.87 0.78 1.25 

SoBe  2O02. 1.29 1.16 1.35 

Mars  Snickers  Bar  2.07oz. 0.59 0.53 0.59 

Jumbo  Red  Vines  l6oz 1.95 1.76 1.85 

Pringles  7oz. 1.79 i.6l 1.97 

Nabisco  Oreos  20oz 4.15 3.74 3.97 

Nabisco  Vllieat  Thins  lOoz 315 2.84 3.37 

Orowheat entry.  Buttennilk  Bread  24oz....3.19 2.87 2.89 

Doritos  Chips  3.5oz 0.99 0.89 0.99 

lays  Chssk  Potato  Chips  7.5<m. 1.99 179 2.07 

Red  Bull  Energy  Drink  8.3or - 2f.l7 1.95 2.07 

Sara  Lee  Plain  Bagels  20oz. 329 2.96 2.99 

Grey  Poupoo  Mustard  8oz. 3.15 2.84 3.05 

Cfll^ory  Iblal m.. 87.17 78.44  ......82.65 

Milk 

Knudsen Homogenized  GaUon 365 3.29 3.75 

Knudsen  2%  Lowfat  (paper)  1/2  GaUon 2.29 2.06 2.07 

Knudsen  1%  Lofwtat  Qumi 139 125 1.64 

Knudsen  Nonfat  (paper)  1/2  GaUon 2.09 1.88 2.03 

Cirtcgory  Total 9.42... 8.48 9.49 

Soda 


Discount 

Good  Thru 
Dec3r 


Breadstiks      Breadstiks       Ralphs 

Ewiydi|iPhct    DilciMMSboiifwr  EmydayPiice 

Louis  Rich  1\irkey  Bacon  12oz 2.49 2.24 2.29 

lyopicana  Pure  Premium  O.J.  32oz. 2.77 2.49 2.69 

Tropicana  Pure  Premium  O.J.  64oz 4.09 3.68 3.89 

Donald  Duck  Orange  Juice  64oz 3.29 2.96 3.07 

SpringBeW  Butter  8oz 1.69 1.52 1.67 

Laughing  Cow  Cheese  Wedges  6oz 3.37 3.03 3.49 

Pillsbury  Choc.  Chip  Cookies  ISoz. 3.19 2.87 2.97 

Foster  Farms  Tlirk^  Franks  l6oz 1.79 1.6I 1.69 

Ottegory  Total 34.68 31.19 33.78 

Froxen  .  - 


Kraft  Cool  Whip  8oz 1.77. 

Eggo  Homestyle  Waffles  12.3oz 2.29. 

Swanson  Chicken  Pie  7oz. 0.99. 

Stouffer  Macoroni  &  Cheese  12oz 2.49. 

Minute  Maid  Orange  Juke  12oz 2.07. 

Cat^ory  Total 9.6I. 

Ice  Cream 

Dreycrs  1/2  GaUon .;„...... 539.. 

Ben  &  Jerry's  Pint 3.49.. 

Haagen  Daz  Pint 3.39.. 

Category  Total 12.27., 

Produce 


..1.59. 

..2.06. 
.0.89. 
..2.24. 
..1.86. 
.8.64. 


..1.79 
.2.19 
.0.99 
.2.39 
.1.99 
.9.35 


....4.85. 
....3.14. 
....3.05. 
.11.04. 


...5.39 
....3.57 
....3.57 
.12.53 


..1.29 
..1.50 
..1.29 
..2.49 
.6.57 


Coca  Cola  2hr...». 1.29 1.I6., 

Coca  Cola  6pk.-12c«.  cans 1.99 ^.179.. 

Dr.  Pepper  2ltr. 1.29 1.16.. 

7-Up  6pk.-12oz.  cans „... 2.19 197.. 

Category  Total ^ „ 6.76 6.08.. 

DeU 

I  Can't  Believe  It's  Not  Butler  lib 1.89 1.70 1.77 

Fldschman's  Egg  Beaters  I2oz. 2,97 2.67 2.97 

Mocha MbcNonbairy Creamer  Quart 1.89 1.70 1.85 

Dannon  Yogurt  8oz 0.98 0.88 0.89 

Mountain  High  Plain  Yogurt  I602. 1.98 1.78 1.95 

"  ~  Dozen .^29 $2.06 .$2.59 


Bananas  lb 0.69. 

Strawberries  Basket 2.59. 

Grapes,  Red  lb 2.49. 

Granny  Smith  Apples  -  Sm  U) 1.29. 

Fuji  Apples  lb 0.99., 

Romaine  Lettuce  ea. ,'..„ I.39., 

Large  Tomatoes  lb I.99.. 

Roma  Tomatoes  lb 1.69., 

Lemons  ea. 0.45., 

Cut  CanlakMipe  lb 0.89., 

Cut  Walermdon  lb 0.49.. 

Avocado  ea. 2. 19.. 

Broccoli  U) I.59.. 

Rassett  Poutoes  lb 0.69.. 

Brown  Onions  U) 0.69.. 

Category  Total 20. 11.. 

Sushi 

California RoU  8pc 4.19 377 3.95 

Mixed  Sashi  5pc 4.99 4.49 4.79 

Mixed  Su.shi  8pc 7.99i 7.19 7.70 

Category  Total 17.17 15.45 16.44 

Chicken/Hamburger 

Foster  Farms  Boneless/Skinless  Breasts 5.79 5.21 5.99 

Whole  Chkkens 1.19 1.07 1.49 

Hamburger   Not  to  exceed  15%  fal 2.69 2.42 3.29 

Category  Total. ,j. 9-67 8.70 10.77 

GRAND  TOTAL 206.86 186.11....201.77 


0.62. 

....2.33. 
....2.24. 
...1.16. 
...0.89. 
...1.25. 
....1.79., 
...1.52., 
...0.41., 
....0.80., 
....0.44.. 
....1.97.. 
....1.43.. 
...0.62.. 
...0.62., 
.18.09.. 


0.63 

2.29 

1.79 

...1.69 

1.79 

1.29 

1.99 

1.69 

0.69 

0.79 

0.49 

1.99 

....1.39 
...0.89 
....0.79 
.20.19 


j^  Open  'til 


Midnight 


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Daily  Bruin  Ncwi 


10       September 25-28, 2000  -  -     'V^    -;"'"'     -^''^    ./:  0i»)6nmHem^^^  '  1^ 

Ecstasy^  substance  of  choice  for  rave  participants,  under  scrutiny 

DRUG:    Studies  question      HH^  ~" ^"^       I        The  DEA  invoked  the  Ernergency 


September  25-28, 2000  '     11 


DRUG:  Studies  question 
MDMA's  neurotoxicity; 
more  research  planned 


By  William  D.Braxdale 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  dub  drug  MDMA,  more  com- 
monly known  as  ecstasy,  is  creating 
controversy         because  some 

researchers  are  at  odds  regarding  the 
potential  dangers  to  users'  health. 

The  drug  is  being  examined  for  its 
potential  therapeutic  uses,  but  contin- 
ues to  remain  most  popular  as  a  fix^ 
ture,  as  well  as  a  curse,  in  the  rave 
community. 

"The  increasing  use  of  synthetic 
drugs  and  club  drugs  such  as  MDMA 
by  our  young  people  is  quickly  becom- 
ing one  of  the  most,  significant  law 
enforcement  and  social  issues  facing 
our  country  today,"  said  Drug 
Enforcement  Administration 

spokesperson  Rojene  Waite. 

According  to  the  DEA,  ecstasy 
may  cause  feelings  of  confusion, 
depression,  anxiety,  paranoia,  sleep 
problems,  dehydration,  hypothermia, 
heart  failure,  kidney  failure,  blurred 
vision  and  involuntary  teeth-clen'ch- 
ing 

MDMA  is -a  drug  that  has  the 
chemical  properties  of  both  ampheta- 
mines and  hallucinogens.  It  causes  the 
release  of  large  amounts  of  serotonin 
into  the  brain,  which  gives  the  user  an 
enhanced  sense  of  touch  and 
increased  self-confidence,  energy  and 
empathy. 

According  to  Dr.  Charles  S.  Grob, 
director  of  the  division  of  child  and 
adolescent  psychiatry  at  Harbor- 
UCLA  Medical  Center,  one  of  the 
biggest  problems  with  the  drug  is  that 


K£ITH  ENBIQUEZ/Oaily  Bruin  Senitx  Staff 

MDMA,  a  designer  drug  known  as  ecstasy  which  is  commonly  used  at  raves  and  night  clubs,  is 
currently  the  subject  of  research  to  determine  its  permanent  effects  on  the  brain. 


people  who  believe  they  are  taking 
ecstasy  are  not  actually  taking 
MDMA. 

"Half  of  ecstasy  turns  out  to  be 
something  else,  "Grob  said. 

He  added  that  these  other  drugs 
can  be  anything  from  methampheta- 
mine  to  PCP,  also  known  as  angel 
dust. 

Officials  at  DanceSafe,  an  organi- 
zation that  attempts  to  promote  safety 
in  the  rave  community  by  testing  the 


purity  of  MDMA  pills,  agreed  with 
the  problem. 

"Fake  adulterated  ecstasy  is  one  of 
the  greatest  risks  to  MDMA  users," 
said  Emanuel  Sferios,  director  of 
DanceSafe. 

Additionally,  Grob  expressed  con- 
cern with  the  way  the  drug  is  being 
used  by  the  rave  culture. 

"MDMA  can  be  dangerous,  very 
dangerous.  Especially  when  used 
unwisely,  at  high  doses,  mixed  with 


other  drugs  or  alcohol  and  in  a  setting 
where  there  is  vigorous  exercise,  lack 
of  attention  to  fluid  replacement  and 
high  ambient  temperature,"  Grob 
said. 

For  those  using  MDMA, 
DanceSafe  recommends  drinking 
about  a  pint  of  water  every  hour,  eat- 
ing something  salty  or  drinking  juice 
or  sports  drinks,  as  well  as  taking - 
breaks  from  dancing  and  wearing 
loose-fitting  clothes. 


The  DEA  invoked  the  Emergency 
Scheduling  Act  in  1985  in  response  to 
the  prolific  use  of  the  drug. 

Hearings  were  held  in  several 
cities,  and  according  to  Grob,  the 
judge  presiding  over  the  hearings  rec- 
ommended schedule  III  status  for 
MDMA. 

But  the  DEA  director  at  the  time 
overruled  the  recommendation  and 
classified  MDMA  as  a  schedule  I 
drug  -  the  strictest  level,  which 
excludes  the  drug  from  being  used  for 
medicinal  purposes  in  the  United 
States. 

One  of  the  biggest  questions  cur- 
rently surrounding  ecstasy  is  whether 
IJ  causes  damage  to  the  brain.  •;.  t;':V 

Much  of  the  current  research  indi- 
cates MDMA's  toxicity  may  cause 
significant  damage  to  portions  of  the 
brain. 

But  Grob  challenges  this  research 
in  an  article  that  will  be  published  in 
the  journal  Addiction  Research. 

"A  lot  of  neurotoxicity  research  has 
serious  flaws  in  the  methodology  and 
the  interpretation  of  data,"  Grob  said. 
"Many  of  the  research  studies  you 
hear  so  much  about  in  the  media  these 
days  are  retrospective  studies  of  poly- 
drug  abusers  who  also  happen  to  have 
taken  a  lot  of  MDMA." 

At  Harbor-UCLA,  Grob  was  the 
principal  investigator  in  the  first  study 
approved  by  the  FDA  since  its  place- 
ment as  a  schedule  I  drug,  alongside 
drugs  like  cocaine  and  heroin. 

That  study  was  funded  by  the 
Multidisciplinary  Association  for 
Psychedelic  Studies,  an  organization 
that  designs,  funds,  and  reports  on 
research  into  the  potential  healing 
uses  of  psychedelic  drugs. 

Grob  is  currently  proposing  a 

See  ECSTASY,  pag«  32 


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Ma'!«(aMP**>a>>l>vnki«>>>a<« 


September  2S-28, 2000       13 


f   ■■ '  ■-.■  * 


Qiversity 


-.S': 


hope  to  enact  diversity  requirement 


OBSTACLES:  Committee 
no  longer  reviews  classes 
for  multicultural  content 


6yJoyMcMastefS  ,, 

Daily  Bruin  Staff 

Ignorance  is  bliss,  but  not  if  it  per- 
petuates hate  and  discrimination. 

Kor  this  reason,  some  students  have 
fought  with  faculty  since  the  '80s  to 
require  classes  that  would  expose  stu- 
dents to  different  cultures  and 
lifestyles,  but  at  UCLA  the  battle  is  yet 
to  be  won. 

Other  UC  campuses  have  estab- 
lished academic  diversity  or  multicul- 
tural education  requirements,  but 
UCLA's  policy  since  1993  has  been  to 
encourage  multicultural  content  in  all 
courses  rather  than  institute  a  specific 
requirement. 

Though  many  students,  faculty  and 
administrators  still  point  to  the  impor- 
tance of  having  ethnic  diversity  in  the 
classroom,  that  diversity  dropped 
sharply  since  UC  Board  of  Regents 
decision  SP-I  and  the  statewide 
Proposition  209  ended  affirmative 
action  in  admissions.  To  some  stu- 
dents, that  drop  in  diversity  makes  hav- 
ing such  a  requirement  even  more 
important,  albeit  a  secondary  issue. 

"The  academic  diversity  require- 
ment is  secondary  to  making  sure  that 
there  is  a  diverse  community  on  cam- 
pus, otherwise  you're  studying  people 
who  aren't  in  your  class,  who  aren't  on 
campus,"  said  student  Regent  Justin 
Fong,  a  UCLA  graduate  student. 

"For  students  to  learn  about  diversi- 


ty, they  need  to  be  surrounded  by  it. 
You  can't  read  a  book  about  it  or  see  a 
film  about  it,"  he  said. 

Current  general  education  courses 
lack  diversity  in  the  perspectives  and 
issues  discussed,  according  to  Fong, 
which  makes  a  separate  academic 
diversity  requirement  necessary 


Photo  Illustration  by  JASON  CH£N/Datly  Bruin  Seniof  Staff 


"Students  are  very  supportive  of 
this.  They  feel  that  they're  building 
enough  support  to  bring  it  to  fruition," 
he  said. 

In  the  early  1990s,  the  Academic 
Senate  investigated  the  possibility  of 
creating  a  diversity  requirement,  but 
decided  against  it,  said  Director  of 


Undergraduate  Education  Initiatives 
Lucy  Blackmar^- 

"Instead,  a  series  of  resolutions  were 
passed  recommending  that  issues 
involving  ethnic  and  gender  diversity 
be  merged  into  the  existing  curricu- 
lum," Blackmar  said.  "It  is  the  philoso- 
phy of  the  majority  of  the  faculty  at 
UCLA  to  incorporate  multicultural 
content  and  perspectives  into  a  broad 
spectrum  of  undergraduate  courses." 

The  resolutions  call  for  undergradu- 
ates to  "study  multicultural  interac- 
tions, and  develop  the  ability  to  analyze 
complex,  multicultural  issues  from  dif- 
ferent perspectives,"  as  well  as  for  an 
annual  report  to  be  delivered  to  the 
Senate's  Council  on  Undergraduate 
Education  discussing  and  evaluating 
the  integrational  success  of  this  curricu- 
lum. 

"As  was  the  intent  of  the  1993  reso- 
lutions, multicultural  perspectives  have 
been  incorporated  into  a  large  number 
of  UCLA  courses  over  the  past 
decade,"  Blackmar  said. 

The  Council  on  Undergraduate 
Education,  however,  was  later  merged 
with  others  to  form  the  Undergraduate 
Council,  which  "authorizes,  supervises 
and  regulates  all  undergraduate  cours- 
es and  programs  of  instruction"  and 
"periodically  reviews  and  evaluates  all 
undergraduate,  programs  of  study," 
according  to  the  Senate's  Web  site. 

The  relatively  new  Undergraduate 
Council  is  no  longer  specifically 
required  to  submit  such  a  report,  said 
Undergraduate  Council  Policy  Analyst 
Linda  Mohr. 

"I  have  not  seen  anything  address- 
ing that  in  the  bylaws,"  Mohr  said. 

Making  a  curricular  change  such  as 


adding  a  diversity  requirement  is  diffi- 
cult because  of  iill  the  stages  of  faculty 
and  administrative  approval,  Fong 
said. 

But  modifying  existing  courses  in  a 
variety  of  disciplines  is  much  harder,  he 
continued. 

"Building  consensus  among  faculty 
that  would  be  n^ded  for  a  major  cur- 
ricular modification  can  take  time.  This 
consensus  is  necessary  for  a  change  to 
be  approved  at  alt  levels  of  the 
Academic  Senate,"  Blackmar  said. 

General  education  modifications, 
for  example,  have  to  go  through  the 
school  or  college  first,  then  to  the 
Faculty  Executive  Committee  of  the 
Academic  Senate,  the  General 
Education  Governance  Committee, 
the  Undergraduate  Council,  and  finally 
to  the  General  Assembly,  which  meets 
only  once  a  quarter. 

The  amount  of  time  this  process 
could  take  varies  depending  on  when 
different  groups'  meetings  occur  and 
how  much  space  is  available  on  the 
agenda,  Mohr  added. 

Those  pushing  for  a  diversity 
requirement  as  well  as  those  who  would 
approve  and  implement  it  are  hesitant 
to  move  too  quickly  because  they  want 
to  set  standards,  establish  expectations 
and  iron  out  the  details  before  estab- 
lishing a  new  requirement,  Fong  said. 

Though  many  students  and  educa- 
tors agree  that  learning  to  function  in  a 
diverse  society  is  important,  not  all 
believe  an  actual  diversity  requirement 
will  help. 

"UCLA  has  had  many  conversa- 
tions about  a  diversity  requirement  and 

S«e  RHMMIEMENr,  page  16 


MONEY  MATTERS 

Cost  of  attendance  of  four-year  and  private  institutions,  as  a  share  of  family  Income  from 
1972  to  2000. 


1972-73  1M1-«2 

SOWa  Hmud  SMwi>«(C«le9«,II»CilnilMrt 


Race  relations  still  hot  topic  on  campus 


ADAM  BROWN/Dilly  Brutn 


Minorities  Nt  by  drop  in 
need-based  financial  aid 


EDUCATION:  Merit-based 
awards  eclipse  assistance 
for  low-income  families 


By  Maijoric  Hemanda 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Financial  aid  given  to  underrcpre- 
sented  minority  students  has  declined 
since  the  end  of  affirmative  action, 
while  middle  and  upper-middle  class 
families  continue  to  receive  ever  more 
financial  aid. 

The  rise  of  merit-based  awards  has 
made  it  difficult  for  undcrrepresented 
students,  who  traditionally  receive 
need-based  aid,  to  compete  with  afflu- 
ent students. 

"Since  Proposition  209,  we  have 
seen  a  decline  in  the  number  of  stu- 
dents   from    loweHncome    back- 


grounds," said  Susanne  Blessington, 
senior  administrative  financial  aid  ana- 
lyst for  UCLA.  "We've  seen  the  parent 
income  going  up  and  fewer  students  in 
the  low-income  group." 

Affirmative  action  expanded  the 
opportunities  for  minority  students  by 
allowing  colleges  to  consider  ethnicity 
in  admissions  decisions,  in  1996, 
California  voters  passed  Proposition 
209,  ending  the  use  of  affirmative 
action  in  the  state's  public  schools. 

According  to  officials  from  the  state 
Department  of  Education,  ethnic 
minority  stud^ts  lost  funds  since  the 
proposition  prohibits  the  use  of  state 
funds  for  scholarships  based  on  race, 
gender  or  ethnicity. 

Many  educators  fear  that  this  loss  of 
funds  will  widen  the  gap  between  those 
who  can  and  cannot  afford  college. 

S«t«EiUTN,pag«14 


INTERACTION:  Variety  of 
responses  meet  outcry 
for  diverse  student  body 


By  Karen  Matsuoka 

For  the  Daily  Bruin 

For  the  first  time  in  recent 
California  history,  the  2000  census 
revealed  that  white  people  are  no 
longer  the  majority  in  the  state. 

EHversity,  in  all  its  colors,  shapes 
and  forms,  remains  a  touchy  and 
widely  discussed  subject  in  and  out 
of  UCLA. 

Part  of  the  ongoing  debate  is  the 
use  of  term  "balkanization"  in  refer- 
ence to  the  perceived  lack  of  social 
interaction  among  college  students 
of  different  races  and  ethnicities. 

Coined  more  than  80  years  ago, 
the  word  then  referred  to  societies 
breaking  down  into  ethnic  subunits, 
according  to  sociology  professor 
David  Lopez.  But  many  students 
and  educators  disagree  with  its  cur- 
rent use. 

"Balkanization  of  races  tends  to 
be  more  of  a  perception  than  a  reali- 
ty," said  Lori  Vogelgesand,  Director 
of  the  Center  for  Service  Learning 
Research  and  Dissemination  at 
UCLA.  "What  happens  is  that  white 
students  may  only  see  black 


students  when  they  are  hanging  out 
with  other  black  students,  which  cre- 
ates the  impression  that  black  stu- 
dents only  socialize  with  each  other. 
"White  students  also  don't  under- 
stand the  extent  they  are  hanging 
out  with  other  white  students,"  she 
added. 

Since  the  loss  of  affirmative 
action  in  admissions  in  1 995  due  to 
the  UC  Regents'  SP-I  and  SP-2 
decisions,  and  Proposition  209  a 
year  later,  the  number  of  under- 
represented  minority  students 
admitted  to  UCLA  has  decreased. 
Students,  faculty  and  administrators 
have  been  looking  at  ways  to 
enhance  campus  diversity. 

"I  think  it's  the  truly  big  issue  Uiat 
faces  us,"  said  Executive  Vice 
Chancellor  Rory  Hume.  "It's  impor- 
tant to  our  faculty,  our  faculty  pro- 
file, it's  important  to  the  future  of 
California  that  we  continue  to  work 
together  to  do  the  best  we  possibly 
can  in  areas  of  diversity." 

In  the  last  academic  year,  39.5 
percent  of  the  UCLA  student  body 
was  white,  34.3  percent  Asian,  4.8 
percent  was  African  American,  and 
13.6  percent  was  Latino.  Although 
the  statements  of  intent  to  register 
students  sent  in  for  this  fall  showed 
an  increase  in  the  number  of  under- 
represented  minorities  planning  to 
attend  UCLA,  the  numbers  still 
don't  reach  those  before  1997,  the 
last  year  affirmative  action  was  used 
in  admissions. 

Of  the  1,544  studenu  admitted  as 
freshmen  from  underrepresented 
minority  groups,  723  are  planning  to 
come  to  UCLA  this  fall. 

"UCLA  puts  out  the  leaders  in 

this  community,  and  the  leaders 

should  look  like  their  constituency," 

said  Celia  Lacayo,  President  of  the 

Latin        American        Students 

Association. 

But  Vogelgesand  said  while  hav- 


AMYHAeER/Dail/Brutn 


ing  a  diverse  campus  is 
important,  it  is  not  sufficient. 

"The  campus  needs  to  promote 
meaningful  cross-racial  interactions 
by  creating  an  environment,  where 
students  don't  feel  threatened  and 
where  someone  is  facilitating  the  dis- 
cussion and  can  step  in  when  things 
get  tense  or  the  conversation  breaks 
down,"  she  said. 

"Meaningful-tross-racial  interac- 
tion can  happen  in  the  classroom  if 
professors  are  willing  to  uke  it  on 
and  not  pretend  that  race  isn't  an 
issue,"  Vogelgesand  continued. 

Lacayo,  a  fifth-year  political  sci- 
ence student,  said  such  discussions 
on  race  do  not  occur  often  enough  in 
her  classes. 

"You  would  expect  a  department 
like  political  science  in  a  multiethnic 
city  like  Los  Angeles  to  devote  some 
class  content  to  race,"  she  said.  "But 
race  is  not  discussed  here.  And  I 
know  it's  even  worse  in  other 
majors."  _  ^^„ 

Other  students,  like  Aldriena 
Rico,  chief  of  staff  for 
Undergraduate  Students 

Association  Council  President 
Elizabeth  Houston  don't  necessarily 
agree  that  diversity  alone  is  the  most 


Set  MVBSIIT  pa9*  22 


searcNng  for  ways  to  assuage  campus  parking  crisis 


TRANSPORTATION:  Bus 
discounts,  stacking  cars 
among  interim  solutions 


By  LauraJlico 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

UCLA  is  not  immune  to  the  traf- 
fic woes  that  plague  the  rest  of  Los 
Angeles,  as  ilts  commuters  rapidly 
exceed  the  number  of  parking  spaces 
available  on  carripus. 

Until  the  university  provides 
enough  parking  spaces  to  accommo- 
date all  students,  staff  and  faculty, 
stacked  parking  and  public  trans- 
portation may  be  the  only  alterna- 
tives for  these  commuters. 

"Our  goal  is  to  balance  the  inven- 
tory of  parking  spaces  available  to 
the  increasing  demand  for  parking 
permits."  said  Parking  Services 
Director  Mark  Stocki. 

"Parking  Services  promotes  real- 
istic alternatives,  such  as  vanpools, 
discount  parking  permits  for  car- 
pools  and  public  transportation  in 
order  to  lessen  the  demand  for  park- 
ing permits,"  he  continued. 

To  compensate  for  the  lack  of 
parking  spaces,  the  university  utilizes 
stacked  parking  in  Lots  4,  8  and  the 
Janss  structure. 

While  additional  parking  spaces 
are  welcomed  by  many,  stacked  park- 
ing poses  an  inconvenience  for  some. 
"It  can  take  a  lot  of  time  to  go 
retrieve  your  car,  check  to  see  if  it  is 
blocked  and  than  go  inform  the 
attendant,"  said  Ruben  Pena,  Jr.,  a 
third-year  biochemistry  student. 

"Sometimes  I  have  to  go  back  and 
copy  the  number  of  the  car  that  is 
blocking  me.  Because  of  this  I  was 
almost  late  to  work  a  few  times,"  he 


■      •  NICOIE  MIUF.fW)aHy  Bruin 

Due  to  lack  of  adequate  space,  stack  parking  lots  such  as  the  one  shown  here  In  Lot  8  are  becoming 
more  prevalent  on  campus.  An  additional  lot  under  the  IM  field  Is  expected  to  open  Spring  2001.    ; 


said. 

Despite  such  annoyances,  parking 
services  has  been  able  to  sell  about 
1,000  more  permits  to  students  by 
using  stacked  parking. 

In  addition  to  stacked  parking,  the 
university  has  tried  to  make  use  of  its 
land  space  by  constructing  under- 
ground lots. 

"Aside  from  going  underground 
there  is  really  no  land  available  on 
campus  on  which  to  erect  new  lots," 
Stocki  said. 

The  demolition  of  Lot  14  in  sum- 
mer 1999  resulted  in  a  loss  of  1,400 
parking  spaces  to  accommodate  the 
future  Ronald  Reagan  Medical 
Center.  UCLA  prepared  for  this  by 
constructing  a  S33  million  lot 
beneath  the  soccer  field  and  Janss 
steps  in  May  1999,  which  created 
1,200  spaces. 

An  additional  2,000  spaces  will  be 


available  upon  completion  of  a  lot 
beneath  the  intramural  field  in 
Spring  2001. 

Underground  parking  lot  projects 
are  more  expensive  because  they 
require  ground  excavations,  stronger 
walls,  a  ventilation  system  and  a 
waterproofed  structure,  Stocki  said. 

"UCLA  is  really  concerned  with 
aesthetics,  so  it  has  to  be  done  nice- 
ly," he  said. 

Aesthetics  are  not  a  major  con- 
cern for  students  who  apply  for  per- 
mits, however.  Many  are  denied 
spaces  because  they  live  too  close  to 
campus.  Others  are  assigned  to  lots 
farther  away  from  the  center  of  cam- 
pus.    ' 

Having  to  assign  specific  lots  to 
students  because  of  the  lack  of  spaces 
frustrated  Yumi  Chapman,  a  '00 
alumnus. 

"Even  as  a  senior  I  was  unable  to 


get  parking  because  parking  services 
said  I  lived  too  close  to  campus," 
Chapman  said.  "At  that  point  I  just 
started  to  pay  five  bucks  to  park  at 
Circuit  City  and  Maloney's." 

Students  living  in  Westwood,  for 
example,  are  rarely  able  to  get  a  park- 
ing space  on  campus. 

University  officials  are  working  to 
find  long-term  solutions  to  the  lack  of 
parking  spaces  and  to  offer  altemi^- 
tives  for  commuting  to  campus. 

The  Transportation  and  Systems 
Demand  Management  plan  advo- 
cates carpooling,  bicycling  and  pub- 
lic transportation.  Developed  in  May 
1987,  the  plan  tries  to  balance  the 
number  of  available  parking  spaces 
with  demand  for  spaces  and  offers 
commuting  options.  The  plan's 
objective  includes  reducing 
Westwood  traffic  by  25  percent  by 
2007 


According  to  Stocki,  the  program, 
funded  by  parking  and  citation  fees, 
has  reduced  traffic  by  16  to  17  per- 
cent so  far.  Vanpools,  an  important 
component  of  the  program,  receive  a 
50  to  70  percent  subsidy  from  the 
university. 

To  further  alleviate  traffic  conges- 
tion around  Westwood,  UCLA 
Transportation  Services  and  the 
Santa  Monica  bus  system  are  negoti- 
ating a  one-year  Bruincard  Bus  Pass 
Pilot  program.. 

This  would  allow  students  to  swipe 
iheir  Bruin  cards  upon  boarding  the 
Big  Blue  Bus  for  rides  to  and  from 
campus.  While  the  rides  would  not  be 
free,  Stocki  said  the  university  hopes 
to  secure  a  IO<ent-per-ride  discount 
from  the  Santa  Monica  bus  line  for 
the  5.000  UCLA  students  who  use 
the  bus  system,  Stocki  said.  The  pro- 
gram is  expected  to  cost  $1  million 
the  first  year. 

For  every  million  dollars  UCLA 
invests  in  the  Pilot  program.  $3  will 
be  added  to  parking  permit  fees  to 
fund  the  program,  Stocki  said. 

For  the  program  to  continue 
beyond  one  year,  the  university  must 
raise  student  registration  fees,  which 
would  require  a  referendum  vote. 

Technical  difficulties  experienced 
by  the  Santa  Monica  bus  line  delayed 
the  program,  but  parking  services 
officials  said  the  project  is  "very 
much  alive"  and  a  pilot  program  is 
slated  to  begin  this  year. 

Shion  Sakiyama,  a  second-year 
business  economics  student,  said  she 
Would  take  adyanUge  of  the  program 
should  it  be  implemented. 

"My  sister  went  to  UCSD,  where 
they  have  the  same  kind  of  system, 
and  she  says  it  was  really  convenient 
to  just  show  yoiir  card  and  get  a  ride 
to  campus,"  she  said. 


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14       September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Gov.  Davis  approves  $12  billion 
expansibh  of  Cal  Graht^ro^ram 


AID:  Additional  funds  will 
lessen  financial  burden  for 
many  low-income  students 


By  Barbara  Ortutay 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


More  low-  and  niiddle-income  students 
will  be  able  to  afford  college  as  a  result  of 
a  $1.2  billion  Cal  Grant  expansion  Gov. 
Gray  Davis  recently  approved. 

The  expansion,  signed  Sept.  1 1,  means 
more  financially  eligible  students  with  a 
3.0  average  or  better  can  receive  Cal 
Grant  A  ,  and  more  students  with  at  least 
a  2.0  GPA  can  be  awarded  Cal  Grant  B 
scholarships. 

"This  is  a  huge  victory  for  students," 
said  Stacy  Lee,  former  Undergraduate 
Students  Association  President  and  orga- 
nizing director  of  the  University  of 
California  Student  Association,  a  state 
lobbying  organization. 

"Students  will  be  able  to  work  less 
hours,  take  more  classes  and  graduate 
earlier,"  she  added.  "It  also  lessens  the 
loan  burden  many  students  face." 

Cal  Grant  recipients  include  communi- 
ty, state  and  private  college  students  in 
addition  to  UC  undergraduates.  UC  pres- 
ident Richard  Atkinson  praised  the  legis- 
lation. 

"We  anticipate  that  it  will  make  a  UC 
education  possible  for  many  students  now 
in  our  community  colleges  who  wish  to 
transfer  to  UC,  "  he  said. 

In  the  past,  students  who  were  finan- 
cially and  academically  eligible  to  receive 
grants  did  not  always  get  them  because 
the  state  lacked  adequate  funds.  With  the 
extra  $1.2  billion,  more  qualified  students 
will  be  able  to  receive  financial  aid. 


To  be  eligible  for  Cal  Grants  -  which 
may  only  go  toward  an  undergraduate 
degree  or  certificate  -  a  student  must  be  a 
California  resident,  be  making  satisfacto- 
ry academic  progress,  and  not  have  any 
defaulted  student  loans.  The  deadline,  to 
apply  for  the  following  academic  year  is 
-March  12. 

At  UCLA,  approximately  6,568  stu- 
dents receive  Cal  Grants,  according  to 
Ronald  Johnson,  director  of  the  office  of 
financial  aid.  He  said  as  a  result  of  the 
grant  expansion,  this  number  is  expected 
to  grow,  as  more  students  are  now  eligible 
to  receive  the  grants. 

"This  is  going  to  help  students  a  lot," 
Johnson  said.  "You  have  the  increase  in 
Cal  Grants,  and  also  the  possible  increase 
in  federal  Pell  Grants.  The  combination 
should  erode  some  of  the  financial  burden 
on  students." 

Lee  said  low-income  students  who 
don't  receive  grants  often  end  up  being 
unable  to  go  to  the  school  of  their  choice, 
or  having  to  work  extra  hours  and  take 
fewer  classes  in  order  to  afford  it.  As  a 
result,  many  students  are  taking  longer 
than  the  traditional  four  years  to  gradu- 
ate. 

Both  Johnson  and  Lee  agreed  that  the 
amount  of  loans  students  have  had  to  take 
out  in  recent  years  has  increased  in 
inverse  proportion  to  the  grants  they  are 
awarded,  and  this  leaves  many  students 
graduating  with  a  significant  loan  burden. 

The  income  ceiling  for  Cal  Grants  for 
independent  students  is  $23,500,  and 
$64,100  for  a  family  of  four,  according  to 
the  California  Student  Aid  Commission. 

"The  next  big  battle  is  how  much  the 
minimum  award  will  be,"  Lee  said. 

To  find  out  more  about  applying  for  Cal 
Grants,  go  to  www.csac.ca.gov. 


Daily  Bruin  News 


September  25-28, 2000     '15 


MINDYHOSS/Daity  Brum  Senior  Staff 

Whether  belonging  to  students  or  visitors,  expensive  cars  abound  at  UCLA. 


WEAITH 

From  page  12      '  '    ,'   '.L 

"I  don't  buy  the  assumption 
that  low  and  moderate  income  stu- 
dents are  taken  care  of,"  said 
Lawrence  Gladieux,  a  former 
executive  director  of  policy  analy- 
sis for  the  College  Board,  which 
studies  trends  in  higher  education. 

"We  just  aren't  finding  the 
grants  to  efficiently  offset  the  bur- 
den for  students  that  have  the  least 
sources  to  begin  with,"  he  said. 

As  college  tuition  prices  rose 
during  the  1980s  and  1990s,  the 
cost  of  higher  education  outpaced 
the  average  middle  class  income. 
A  year's  tuition  plus  room  and 
board  has  increased  to  just  above 
$8,000  at  four-year  public  institu- 
tions and  to  over  $2 1,000  at  private 
sch<^s,  according  to  the  College 
Board.  The  median  family  income 
is  about  $47,000,  according  to 
Census  Bureau  figures. 


As  the  purchasing  power  of 
aids  such  as  the  Pell  Grant  contin- 
ue to  decline  and  borrowing 
increases,  the  affordability  of  col- 
lege may  become  more  difficult 
for  low-income  students,  accord- 
ing to  a  1996  College  Board  study. 

Recent  figures  report  an  85  per- 
cent increase  in  total  aid  over  the 
last  decade,  reaching  $64  billion  in 
1998-1999.  But  the  inaease  comes 
mostly  in  the  form  of  student 
loans,  making  up  to  58  percent  of 
all  aid,  according  to  College  Board 
figures. 

National  trends  in  financial  aid 
show  a  tendency  to  favor  middle 
and  upper-middle  class  students 
not  necessarily  qualifying  for 
need-based  aid  by  giving  them 
merit-based  awards. 

"That's  nothing  new,"  said 
Terry  Hartle,  senior  vice  president 
of  the  American  Council  on 
Education.  "For  as  long  as  people 
have  kept  records,  the  higher  your 
income,  the  more  likely  you  are  to 


gotocollege. 

"What  is  worrisome  is  the  gap 
in  college  participation  between 
those  from  families  with  high 
income  and  those  coming  from 
low-income  families  has  not  appre- 
ciably narrowed  in  the  last  30 
years,"  he  said. 

Currently,  financial  aid  that  was 
generally  reserved  for  lower- 
income  students  is  instead  award- 
ed to  students  with  high-five-figure 
and  low-six-figure  family  incomes, 
according  to  a  1999  U.S..i!«Jews 
report.  ■«■  ,:   ■'^-  ^:;     ^ 

But  the  future  of  coHege^und 
students  may  look  more  promis- 
ing as  legislators  recently 
approved  more  aid  in  the  form  of 
grants. 

Gov.  Gray  Davis  recently 
signed  a  revamped  Cal  Grant 
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See  the  Classified  Section  every 
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,U. / 

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LSAT  •  G^L\T  ■  GRE 


Upcoming  Course  Inforniathn 

Schedules  for  the  December  &  February  LSAT  now  available. 
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HOME  DELIVERY  IS  AVAIUBLE 
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HOUSING  iW 

From  page  6 

"Sometimes  when  they  are  backing 
up  the  v^icles,  the  beeping  noises 
wake  me  up  in  the  morning,"  Naomi 
Matsumi,  then  a  first-year  poJitical 
science  student,  told  The  Bruin  on 
March  3, 1999. 

Because  of  student  complaints, 
housing  officials  restricted  construc- 
tion time  Trom  8  am  to  S  pm  for  most 
of  the  project.  Later,  in  spring  1999, 
flood  lights  brought  onto  the  site 
extended  construction  time  from  7 

HOSPITAL 

From  page  8 

Though  Levey  is  optimistic,  others 
say  reaching  $10  million  in  one  year 
won't  be  easy. 

"The  goal  is  possible  but  it  will  be 
very  hard,"  said  William  Pierskalla, 
professor  and  former  dean  of  The 
Anderson  School  at  UCLA. 

Some  doctors  said  the  cutbacks 
have  hit  them  and  they  have  to  try 
harder  to  maintain  the  quality  of 
patient  care. 

"We  have  an  overworked  stalT  and 
things  are  a  little  bureauaatic.  I  don't 
think  patient  care  has  been  compro- 
mised but  it  is  difTicult  because  we  are 
exUemely  busy,"  said  Dr.  Gary 
Schiller,  associate  professor  of  medi- 
cine. 

Others     agree 
but  note  that  these  ■■ 

changes  are  noth- 
ing unique  to 
UCLA. 

'In     hospitals 


amtoTpm.  ' 

During  thfs  period,  some  construc- 
tion crews  worked  nine  to  10  hours  a 
day  for  six  days  a  week.  ■■ 

And  with  this  past  weekend's  antic- 
ipated moving  in  of  residents,  the  long 
hours  may  have  finally  paid  off. 

While  the  opening  of  Phase  One 
and  eventually  Phase  Two  of  De  Neve 
Plaza  will  alleviate  some  overcrowd- 
ing within  on-campus  housing,  the 
project  will  most  likely  not  be  the  last 
one. 

Foraker  said  a  new  dorm  in  the 
area  of  the  Hitch  Suites  is  currently 
being  discussed. 


at)le  to  avoid  further  layoffs  in  the 
future." 

Much  of  the  medical  community 
sees  UCLA's  financial  downturn  as 
part  of  a  trend  occurring  throughout 
the  United  States. 

"In  California,  70  percent  of  all  hos- 
pitals are  losing  money.  We  are  facing 
these  past  losses  and  will  come  out 
stronger  in  the  end,"  Levey  said. 

Pierskalla  agreed  this  is  a  pattern 
with  medical  centers  around  the  coun- 
try. 

"This  is  a  trend  with  a  lot  of  parallel 
academic  medical  centers  to  UCLA," 
he  said.  "The  University  of 
Pennsylvania  lost  $200  million  (in  the 
last  fiscal  year);  they  should  have  seen 
it  coming,"  he  said. 

Demer  said  two  things  explain  this 
decline  in  net  income:  managed  care 
organizations  have  cut  their  payments 
to  hospitals  in  gen- 


"We  have  to  have  a 

competitive  cost 

around  the  TOun-  stfucture,  that's  whv  we 

took  the  action  we 

needed  to." 


Uy,  resulting  cuts 

in      staff      and 

resources      have 

affected     patient 

care  at  the  level  of 

convenience,"  said 

Dr.  Linda  Demer, 

chief  of  cardiology   — ^-.— — — _ 

at  the  hospital. 
Levey  said  cuts  are  being  made  in 

all  areas,  including  the  budget  and  the 

administration,  where  inefficiencies 

existed. 

He  said  the  major  cuts  have  already 
been  made  and  that  the  center  will  con- 
tinue to  make  selective  cuts  through- 
out the  year. 

Hospital  officials  said  280  employ- 
ees were  laid  off  this  past  year,  but  they 
don't  think  this  will  affect  patient  care. 
"It  is  fair  to  say  that  the  cuts  impact- 
ed the  administration  and  manage- 
ment staff  much  more  so  than  the 
patient  care  staff,"  said  Mark  Speare, 
the  medical  center's  senior  associate 
director  for  human  resources. 

Speare  stressed  the  importance  of 
preserving  the  quality  of  the  hospiul 
and  saw  the  cutbacks  in  staff  as  a  last 
resort. 

"We  have  to  have  a  competitive 
cost  structure,  that's  why  we  took  the 
action  we  needed  to,"  he  said.  "What 
has  taken  place  in  the  last  year  has 
made  us  more  viable  where  we  may  be 


Mark  Speare 

Human  resources 


end  and  Medicare 
reimbursement  to 
hospitals  has  also 
been  significantly 
reduced. 

About  half  of 
the  SSO  million 
loss  can  be  attrib- 
uted to  the 
Balanced  Budget 
Act  of  1997,  which 
drastically  cut 
Medicare  reim- 
—————^  bursements, 
according  to 
Medical  Center  ofTiciaJs. 

Medical  reimbursements  do  not 
necessarily  cover  all  medical  expenses 
and  as  a  result,  the  university  loses 
money  in  many  cases. 

In  addition,  improvements  in 
patient  care  are  costly  and  as  a  result, 
large  budgetary  increases  are  neces- 
sary to  have  a  noticeable  effect, 
Schiller  said. 

He  compared  patient  care  to  a  bot- 
tomless pit,  where  a  contribution  of 
several  million  dollars  would  have  a 
small  impaa. 

"The  costs  of  patient  care  arc  high 
and  historically  people  believe  it 
should  be  borne  by  the  state,"  Schiller 
said. 

In  the  coming  years,  the  effects  of 
the  Balanced  Budget  Act  may  mean 
difficult  times  for  health  care. 

"We  remain  hopeful  that  the  feder- 
al government  will  realize  that  it  has 
severely  imperiled  the  fmandal  health 
of  the  major  academic  medical  centers 
in  the  United  States,"  Levey  said. 


REQUIREMENT 

Fn)mpage12 


"I  am  not  a  great  supporter  of  diver- 
sity requirements.  I  don't  believe  they 
have  had  much  impact  nationally  and 
,  .  ck)  prefer  the  approach  I  have  outlined 

always  concluded  that  a  diversity     -  if  we  achieve  it,"  Paredes  said.  "We 


requirement  is  not 
the  most  effective 
response  to  the  goal 
of  u^ning  students 
to  function  effec- 
tively in  a  multicul- 
tural environment," 
said  Associate  Vice 
Chancellor 
Raymund  Paredes. 
Paredes  said  he 
prefers  UCLA's 
current  approach  of 
curricular  diversity 
across    the    board 


"Multicultural 

perspectives  have 

been  incorporated 

into ...  UCLA  courses. 

UKyBladonar 

Academic  Seriate 


still  have  a  way  to 
go" 

For  many  stu- 
dents, just  going 
away  to  college 
provides  enough 
exposure  to  diversi- 
ty, and  Fong  said 
that  this  experien- 
tial learning  is  one 
of  the  greatest 
axpecU  of  attend- 
ing a  university. 

"Unfortunately, 
the  trend  at  UCLA 


and  exposure  to  diversity  in  a  variety  of     and  other  places  is  that  we're  losing 

?^u  T^  ,V^!r^^^'  ^  ^^     *^««ity.  a"d  that  experience  is  being 
lished  by  the  1993  resolutions.  lost  with  it,"  Fong  said 


Mly  Brain  Nmm 


'$«pl«nbef  25-28, 2000       Hi 


UJELCOME  SUNDRY  •  SUNDHV,  OCT.  1  •  1 0:30  AM 


a  member  of  the  University  Religious 


>nf©rence 


III 


-«.^-'<^| 


r>-.'.' 


-'r*«ci 


:%.v 


•»>>^ 


i^-j?-'-" 


tf*« 


mm--inA^~ 


Welcome  to  a  new  academic  year,  Bruins!  it'd^time  to  start....investing. 

Invest  in  a  relationship  with  Jesus,  a  friend  unlike  any  other. 

Invest  in  eternal  friendships  with  those  who  love  Him; 

Healthy  friendships  that  last  make  for  a  life  worth  living. 


We  invite  you  to  join  us  in  worshipping  the  Lord  at  UP. 


We'll  grow  together  as  we  grow  in  Him. 


university 

Presbyterian 

church 


Look  for  G-funk,  the  big,  blue  UP 
Van  at  the  following  convenient 
locations: 

•  Sproul  Turnaround  [at  Sproul 
Hall]  at  10  AM 

•The  Co-op  at  500  Landfair 
Avenue  at  10:10  AM 

Rides  are  also  available  from  the 
Westside.  Call  us  for  details. 


10962  Le  Conte  Avenue 

between  Cowboy  Sushi  and  Sepi's  Subs. 


Sunset  Blvd. 

I     1 

Ave. 

►z 

raisrvn 

"^^*i 

La  Conte  Blvd. 

n       1 

@ 

1 

Hllgard 

1 

■ 

www.upcla.org 


Park  free  at  the  meters  along  Le  Conte 
or  at  900  Hllgard  Ave. 


> 1      v_ 1         -V, 1         I /v .^^^  ...^■■J..-/       V ^ K— X 


Welcome  Sunday 

Sunday,  October  1  @  10:30  AM 

at  10962  Le  Conte  Ave. 
Get  a  taste  of  the  great  community  going 
on  at  UP  during  our  first  worship  service 
of  the  academic  year.  Bring  a  friend! 

EXTREIME  Bowling 

Friday,  October  6  @  10:45  PM. 

Meet  at  Lot  6  Turnaround 
Meet  some  new  faces  at  Chaira  (UP's 
group  for  grad  students,  faculty,  and 
working  professionals)  in  an  evening  of 
strikes  and  snacks!  Please  bring  $15. 

Barbeque!  Free  Food! 

Saturday,  September  30  @  12  PM 
Sunset  Rec.  Upper  Park  Area. 
Hey  Undergrads!  Meet  some  people 
who  know  how  to  love  the  Lord  and  BBQ 
like  pros.  Have  fun,  eat  some  good  food, 
and  meet  new  friends! 

Questions? 
Give  us  a  call! 
(310)208-3991 


UIELCOMF  SUNDflV»SUNDflV,  OCT.  1  •  10:30  AM 


.^bi. 


..^^ 


18       September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Newt 


COLLEGE  BOWL 


College  Bowl  will  be  held  in 

the  Ackerman  Grand  Ballroom 

on  the  following  nights: 


November  13  7pm  to  9pm 


WTIL  ARMf  NIAN/Oaily  Bruin  Senioi  Staff 

The  Computer  Store  is  now  partially  hidden  by  the  Fast  Track  clothing 
department.  Ackerman  Union  has  undergone  several  changes. 


1^  Prizes  awarded  to 
top  4  teams! 

1^  Top  5  individuals 
will  go  to  regionals! 


■■■'V^yif'      -V! 


*Tlmffi  a%t  to  (honge  in  ordet  to  octomodiite  the  tounument  schedule. 

Email  your  questions/comments  to 
xcapedasucia.ucia.edu 


ACKERMAN 

From  page  8 

Because  trends  show  students  are 
buying  more  computers  ofT-ca.mpus, 
ASUCLA  ofTicials  wanted  the  store 
to  have  less  emphasis  on  computers 
and  technology,  Mann  said. 

The  changes  to  BearWear  and  the 
Computer  Store  have  made  room  for 
the  new  Adidas  and  Fast  Track 
departments  respectively,  which 
ASUCLA  expects  to  boost  store  prof- 
its significantly.  ';  . 

"We're  hoping  increased  visibility 
and  more  access  to  products  will 
translate  into  sales,"  Mann  said. 

He  said  Fast  Track  and  Adidas 
products  are  generally  impulse  buys, 
so  putting  them  closer  to  the  store's 
entrance  will  attract  more  customers. 

"A  lot  of  the  time,  you  don't  come 
into  the  store  to  buy  a  pair  of  socks  or 
a  sweatshirt,  so  that  merchandise 
should  be  displayed  in  the  front," 
Mann  said.  "You  might  not  buy 
them,  but  you  will  look  at  them." 

This  was  the  case  for  Marjorie 
Budiman,  a  fourth-year  economics 
student  who,  on  her  way  to  B-level, 
purchased  several  items  in  Fast 
Track. 

Budiman  said  she  had  no  intention 
of  buying  the  items,  adding  that  the 
new  layout  makes  browsing  easier. 

But  Tiffany  Butler,  a  customer  ser- 
vice supervisor  and  fourth-year 
English  student,  said  the  changes 
have  actually  decreased  sales. 

"People  tend  to  walk  right  by  us," 


Butler  said  at  the  Fast  Track  counter 
by  the  store's  north  entrance.  "I 
would  have  preferred  that  we  hadn't 
moved  at  all." 

She  said  the  downsized  space  has 
eliminated  popular  items  such  as 
casual  shoes  and  Ralph  Lauren  Polo 
products  while  frustrating  shoppers. 

"It's  v\^ay  too  small  and  too 
cramped."  Butler  said.  "Personally, ! 
don't  like  (the  changes)." 

But  other  employees  have  found  it 
easier  to  manage  a  smaller  floor 
space. 

"We're  definitely  a  lot  smaller 
now,  but  I  like  the  layout,"  said 
Brandon  Florian,  a  student  supervi- 
sor in  the  Computer  Store.  "It's  not 
such  a  huge  area  anymore  that  we 
have  to  search." 

He  said  the  only  problem  he's 
encountered  is  some  difficulty  for 
customers  trying  to  find  the 
Computer  Store. 

"A  few  people  have  made  the  com- 
ment that  we're  behind  the  bras  and 
panties  now,  but  that's  okay,"  Rorian 
said. 

Changes  on  the  B-level  floor  allow 
room  for  additional  leasing  space 
where  Fast  Track  used  to  be. 

ASUCLA  officials  are  targeting 
several  sporting  goods  stores  or  ath- 
letic shoe  stores  as  potential  tenants 
in  the  4,000  square  foot  space. 

"What  we're  trying  to  find  is  a 
business  that's  complimentary,  not 
contradictory  to  what  we  already 
sell."  Mann  said,  adding  that  the 
space  should  be  filled  by  the  first  few 
weeks  of  fall  quarter. 


310  206  0829 

www.uclastore.com 


ULLilsToiT 


TOP  TEN  SERVICE  REQUESTS 

ASUCLA  sunreyed  2,000  students  (1,600  undergraduates  and  400  graduate  students)  both 
years  to  get  an  idea  of  what  they  want  to  see  in  Ackerman  Unwn 


1998 

1.  Post  Office 
2.Video  Rental 

3.  Music/CD  store 

4.  Pub 

5.  More  study  lounges 

6.  Billiards  (Pool)  Room 

7.  Computer  lounge 

8.  Hair  Salon 

9. Dry  cleaning/Laundry 
10.  Craft  Shop 


2000 

1.  Music/ CD  Store 

2.  Video  rental 

3.  Bowling  Alley 

4.  Pub 
S.Orydeaning/laundry 

6.  Billiards  (Pool)  Room 

7.  Computer  lounge 

8.  More  study  lounges 

9.  Additional  Internet  access 

10.  Craft  shop 


WWQ  »WCUSw«will»toiiD>wlif>(llfc( 


HARSHA  RAOnijily  Bnitn  itnto,  ixJi 


4  it,<.t''jfff*^''-'^ti/" 

'■-'"■- 


>  .'   \..:. ...>.• 


..V  %' 


DMyBiUiniinn 


"ir.. 


September  25-28, 2000       19 


^'•^•'y*^* 


i 


^^-'-■■:* 


<•? 


'1 


^UStO  -V 


Look  for  the  YELLOW  sticker  that 

identifies  a  UO  textbook  and 
check  out  the  savings! 


Get  Cash  Back  at  Book  Buy  back) 


mi^m 


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Keep  the  booKs  you'll 
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UCLfkir 


-^ 


f'--^-:: 


20     ^September  25-28, 2000 


■  /■■•  'f  <■*?•, ,. 

■  If  If  'ii'  '^ 


Daily  Bruin  News 


?■•'.■,•'■•  .' 
'  'V  ' ,  ■ 

.■■•  "?.!■■■••  '•' 


.^^^A'^v.-V~ 


STU 


Services 


Featured  Vendors 

Automobile  Club  of 
Southern  California 

los  Angeles  Times 

Wells  f  argo  Bank 

Washington  Mutual  Bank 

and  man^  others 


Thursday/Friday 
September  28  &  29 


BRUIN  PLAZA 

IOam-3: 


A 


A-Level  Ackerman 


510,825.^311 

www.uclastore.com 


BYRD        > 

From  page  5 

in  the  world,  a  notorious  nightlife,  an 
acclaimed  sports  legacy  and  (not  to 
toot  our  own  horn)  arguably  the  best 
college  newspaper  in  the  nation.  Now 
what  are  you  going  to  do  with  all  this? 

Do  something  new,  try  everything 
-  anything.  Just  as  long  as  you  don't 
do  nothing. 

Of  course,  not  everything  here  is 
for  you.  Perhaps  you're  tired  of  par- 
ties, or  you  are  burned  out  on  istudy- 
ing,  or  the  big  city  smog  chokes  you. 
Don't  worry,  there  is  much  more  out 
there. 


inay  break  laws,  a  struggling  student 
musician  may  make  it  big  time. 

The  university,  for  all  it  has  to  offer 
you,  requires  actiorrand  participa- 
tion. UCLA  did  not  become  the  most 
dynamic  school  in  the  world  because 
its  students  and  alumni  sat  back  and 
let  someone  else  run  the  show.  I  hope 
you  don't  let  anyone  else  run  your 
show,  either. 


t 


^  Find  out  aboti|^s«dalscM]|iM 


^^  pips  of  Survivor,  sccArtsft 
&it«rtliiM»«iapa9e29 

#  ^ewsalbouteiectioiisbobNewf 
page  46,  while  viewp«ints«b«it 
«)e^Jonf  art  an  VlMfoint  page  3 

^  Read  about  student  minicians  in  Arts 
&  EntertaiMMntpajie  29 


But  be  careful.  There  will  be  peo- 
ple who  try  to  comer  you  in.  They  will 
say  there  is  only  one  path  to  success, 
one  way  to  get  from  point  A  to  point 
B;  that  the  smog  will  never  go  away. 

So  keep  your-eyes  open.  Make  sure 
that  you  see  L.A.  for  yourself. 

You'll  discover  countless  people 
taking  an  unexpected  path,  going  the 
untried  way  and  having  more  fun  in 
the  process. 

Maybe  for  all 
its  diversity,  ^^b— bi^i^— 

UCLA  isn't 
diverse  enough 
for  you.  Change 
that.  Maybe 
among  all  this 
science  and  tech- 
nology, you  still 

wish  we  had  the        

cure  for  cancer. 

Find  it.  Maybe 

among  all  the  nuggets  of  wealth  in  the 

surrounding  communities,  you  think 

the  poverty  you  hit  when  you  drive 

down  Sunset  Boulevard  is  unfair.  Fix 

that. 

And  I  hope  the  Daily  Bruin  is  part 
of  your  guide.  In  the  real  world 
(beyond  the  television  show 
Survivor),  part  of  being  an  educated, 
responsible  and  successful  citizen  is 
being  an  informed,  opinionated  citi- 
zen. While  on  campus,  you  will  be 
asked  to  vote  in  national  elections  and 
student  government  elections. 
Regents  who  govern  the  UC  system 
will  make  decisions  influencing  the 
ethnic  and  socioeconomic  diversity  of 
our  classrooms.  Fees  may  be  initiated, 
construction  may  be  delayed,  athletes 


Find  a  passion  this  year 

and  participate  in  this 

amazingly  dynamic 

community. 


Be  an  informed  community  mem- 
ber, pay  attention  and  have  an  opin- 
ion. Watch  who  is  in  power  and  who 
is  not. 

Maybe  you  want  to  be  an 
informer;  by  all  means,  come  to  the 
Daily  Bruin  and  apply  for  an  intern- 
ship. Maybe  you  just  realized  the 
need  to  be  an  informed  student.  Then 
read  the  paper. 

That  old  cliche,  "There's  some- 
thing for  everyone,"  well,  there's 
some  truth  to  it  at  UCLA,  and  I'd  like 
to  think  in  The  Bruin,  as  well.  Look 
through  the 
paper  every  day 
^^^■"^■™"""     and  you're 

bound  find  some- 
thing that  inter- 
ests you.  And  if 
you  come  into 
the  office,  you'll 
find  artists, 
designers,  pho- 
tographers,  edi- 
tors, reporters, 
columnists, 
sports  writers  and  movie  reviewers  - 
someone  like  you. 

Be  passionate.  Whether  it  be  in  the 
laboratory,  the  library,  the  social 
scene,  a  band,  student  government,  a 
fellowship,  an  outreach  program  or 
the  footbaH  field  -  find  a  passion  this 
year  and  participate  in  this  amazingly 
dynamic  community.  Let  the  Daily 
Bruin  be  your  guide  and  introduce 
you  to  this  community.  Let  us  show 
you  L.A. 

Make  it  your  year.  And  don't  for- 
get the  WEPAP  that  got  you  here. 

Byrd  is  editor  in  chief  2000-01.  If  you 
want  to  hear  about  how  absolutely 
amazing  the  Dally  Bruin  staff  is  this  year, 
e-mail  her  at  cbyrd@media.ucla.edu. 


KRISPY 

From  page  8 

said  Barbara  Grizzelle,  a  crew  leader 
from  the  Van  Nuys  store  who  helped 
with  the  grand  opening. 

At  the  Cooperage,  the  chocolate 
glazed  were  running  out  while  at  Cafe 
Synapse,  it  was  the  custards  that  were 
fiying  off  the  shelves. 

Krispy  Kreme,  like  other  restau- 
rants in  the  Cooperage,  is  controlled  by 
the     Associated 

Students  of  _^_^^_^_^ 
U  .  C  LA  — — 
Restaurant 
Services. 

"We  get 

numerous 
requests  to  bring 

foods  on  campus      

from     students,      , 

faculty,  staff  anti 

the  comnibruty,"  said  Dave  Nirenberg, 

associate  director  of  ASUCLA  Food 

Services.  j    "; 

"There  was  a  significant  outcry  for 
this  particularly,"  he  added.  "We  are 
always  striving  to  keep  up  with  food 
trends  and  certainly  Krispy  Kreme  is 
at  the  cutting  edge  right  now." 

The  doughnuts  will  be  available  at 
the  two  on-campus  locations  and 
thrbugh  UCLA  Catering  Services. 


In  the  first  two-and-a- 
half  hours  ...they  sold 
more  than  1 06  dozen. 


Already,  Krispy  Kremes  have  been 
sold  at  the  Rose  Bowl  for  football 
games: 

"We  sold  180  dozen  in  just  three 
hours  at  the  Rose  Bowl  last  weekend," 
Cabayan  said,  referring  to  the  UCLA- 
Michigan  game. 

ASUCLA  buys  Krispy  Kremes 

wholesale,  but  the  association  supplies 

the  employees,  sets  the  prices  and  does 

not  pay  a  commission  to  the  company. 

This  agreement  is  unlike  that  df 

Taco  Bell  and  Rubio's,  in  which  the 

association  pays 

__^^^^^^_^^      a  commission  on 

sales     to     the 

restaurant. 

"Any  arrange- 
ment in  which 
we  are  not  pay- 
ing a  commis- 

sion  is  a  goiod  sit- 

u  a  t  i  0  n  ,  " 
Nirenberg  said. 
The  prices  are  set  the  same  as  at  the 
honie  Krispy  Kreme  store,  bot  that  by 
th^.  dozen,  they  are  slightly  mQ|[e,l)ie. . 
said,  but  less  that  at  other  small  Aores 
like  the  ones  at  USC,  and  CSU  Long 
Beach.  A  dozen  at  USC  is  $9,  whereas 
at  UCLA,  it  is  $6  99. 

To  get  the  word  out  about  the  store, 
about  9,000  doughnuts  were  given 

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KRISPY 

From  page  20. 

away  in  the  two  days  before  the  open- 
ing to  get  the  word  out. 

■  At  any  rate,  having  a  doughnut  shop 
on  campus  is  somewhat  of  a  novelty. 


"To  be  honest,  they  weren't  any- 
thing out  of  the  ordinary,"  said 
Nftchael  I>aines,  an  employee  of  the 
molecular  cell  developmental  biology 
department  buying  a  doughnut  at  the 
grand  opening. 

"But  it's  better  than  Winchell's,"  he 
added. 


Daily  Bruin  Newt 


September  25-28, 2000       23 


DIVERSITY 

From  page  12 


important  issue  on  campus. 

"So  many  of  us  like  to  celebrate 
diversity,  but  we  don't  celebrate  uni- 
versity and  what  we  have  in  com- 
mon," she  said.  "Since  I've  come  to 
UCLA,  I've  found  lots  of  things  in 
common  with  people  I  never  thought 
I  would,"  she  said,  adding  that  while 
she  is  Latina  most  of  her  friends  are 
not. 

Citing  a  study  by  Anthony 
Antonio  on  friendship  groups  among 
students.  Vogelgesand  said  minority 


students  report  having  friends  from 
many  different  races. 

Of  the  balkanization  idea,  Lopez 
said  "we  both  see  it  and  -it  is  also  a 
myth." 

The  rate  of  mixed  marriages,  for 
example,  has  never  been  as  high  as 
they  are  in  Southern  Califom^  today, 
according  to  Lopez.  . ' '     ;  '  • . 

"We  often  miss  the  degree  to 
which  people  cross  boundaries 
because  we  don't  understand  the 
extent  of  the  boundaries,"  he  said. 

With  reports  from  Dharshani 
Dharmawardena  and  Barbara  Ortutay, 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


"The  function  of  an  RA 

is  to  be  a  mediator.  We 

leave  it  up  to  the 

roommates  to  work 

things  out." 

Darlene  SugKa 

Resident  Assistant 


ROOMMATES 

From  page  3 

Many  on-campus  residents  share  a 
180-square  foot  hole  in  the  wail,  also 
known  as  a  dorm  room,  with  two 
other  people  they  have  never  met  and 
encounter  problems  alien  to  their  pre- 
vious living  experiences. 

"Don't  expect  a  happy  family 
thing,"  Chau  said.  "It's  a  lot  harder  to 
forgive  and  forget  with  your  room- 
mates than  it  is  with  family  members." 

One  thing  Chau  had  to  relucuntly 
put  up  with  was  clutter.  Cereal  bowls 
with  milk  that  have  been  out  all  day 
and  excessive  junk  left  out  by  her 
roommates  irritated  Chau,  but  she 
never  spoke  up  to  prevent  tension. 

Toward  the  end  of  the  school  year, 
however,  Chau  could  no  longer  with- 
hold her  frus- 
tration. 

"There  was  ■— — — ^— — — 
one  point  when 
everyone  was 
just  getting  on 
each  other's 
nerves,"  she 
said.  "We  all 
just  sat  down 
and  talked 
about  it." 

From  her 
experience, 
Chau    advised 

new  students  to      ——^—^^—— 
communicate 
with  their  roommates. 

"Don't  hold  it  in,"  she  said.  "Talk 
to  your  roommates  or  complain  to 
your  RA." 

Resident  assistants  live  on  each 
floor  to  ensure  students  live  peacefully 
among  one  another. 

Darlene  Sugita,  who  has  been  a  R  A 
for  two  and  a  half  years,  said  students 
moving  in  to  the  residence  hall  for  the 
first  time  should  be  open-minded,  hon- 
est and  go  out  and  meet  people  on  the 
floors,  where  up  to  90  students  can 
live. 

"In  the  beginning  of  the  year,  RAs 
are  supposed  to  make  sure  each  per- 
son on  their  floor  signs  a  roommate 
contract,"  Sujita  said. 

"The  roommate  contract  is  for  pre- 
ventative measures,"  she  continued. 
"Instead  of  being  reactive,  we  want  to 
be  pro-active." 

Roommate  contracts  attempt  to 
foster  open  communication  among 
residents,  according  to  Sugita.  They 
include  such  things  as  study  hours  and 
vacuuming  schedules.  They  are  also 
designed  to  give  students  an  expecta- 
tion of  what  their  roommates  are 
going  to  be  like. 

"Everyone  is  real  polite  the  first 
three  weeks,"  Sugiu  said.  "But  after 
that,  the  real  person  comes  out." 

The  first  and  most  common  com- 
plaints RAs  receive  pertain  to  noisy 
neighbors. 

"The  walls  are  really  thin,"  Sugita 
said.  "You  could  practically  hear 


whole   conversations   through 
wall." 

Another  issue  that  is  often  brought 
up  to  RAs  by  residents  is  the  "fourth 
roommate  syndrome",  where  a  room- 
mate's boyfriend  or  girlfriend  spends 
the  night  numerous  times. 

"My  roommate's  boyfriend  always 
slept  over,"  Chau  said. 

One  time,  she  really  felt  especially 
frustrated  when  the  boyfriend  stayed 
during  midterm  exams. 

"It  was  12  o'clock  in  the  morning 
and  I  was  studying  for  a  midterm  that 
I  had  at  eight  in  the  morning,"  Chau 
said.  "My  roommate  and  her 
boyfriend  were  in  the  room,  and  my 
roommate  asked  me  to  study  some- 
place else." 

"I  got  really  frustrated  so  I  picked 
up  my  stuff,  told  them  they  had  two 
hours  to  be  finished,  and  I  left."  she 
said. 

According    to 

^^"^""■"^^^  Sugita,  guests 
may  only  stay  a 
total  of  four  nights 
a  month  in  the  res- 
idence halls. 

But  this  rule  is 
difficult  to 

enforce  since  RAs 
cannot  really 
monitor  how 
often  visitors  stay 
overnight.  It  is 
usually  up  to  the 
——^—^—^  roommates  them- 
selves to  resolve 
their  problems,  Sugita  said. 

"The  function  of  an  RA  is  to  be  a 
mediator,"  Sugita  said.  "We  leave  it 
up  to  the  roommates  to  work  things 
out.  We  are  not  disciplinarians." 

Although  only  first  and  second- 
year  students  or  transfer  students  can 
live  in  the  halls,  third  and  fourth-year 
students  can  also  reside  there  if  they 
are  employed  by  on-campus  housing 
or  hold  positions  in  building  govern- 
ments. 

This  will  be  the  third  year  Frances 
Wong,  a  third-year  chemistry  student, 
will  be  living  in  the  residence  halls 
because  she  will  serve  as  a  Student 
Health  Advisor. 

Being  a  long-time  dorm  resident, 
Wong  advised  students  to  think  seri- 
ously about  roommate  relationships. 

"Be  considerate,  and  try  not  to 
cross  the  line,"  she  said.  "I  think  that's 
really  important." 

•  For  many  students  wishing  for  pri- 
vacy, like  fourth-year  psychology  stu- 
dent Gil  Gatchalian,  living  in  an  apart- 
ment is  an  alternative  to  on-campus 
housing. 

Gatchalian  weighed  out  the  pros 
and  cons  of  living  in  the  residence  halls 
and  apartments,  finally  deciding  on 
off-campus  housing. 

Although  Gatchalian  said  he 
enjoyed  the  convenience  of  dormito- 
ries, like  having  a  meaj  plan,  he  pre- 
ferred living  in  an  apartment. 

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ROOMMATES 

From  page  22 


"I  like  the  freedom  of  an  apart- 
ment," Gatchalian  said.  "I  would 
choose  my  freedom  over  living  in  a 
dorm." 

Civil  engineering  graduate  student 
Peter  Chiu,  who  will  be  living  alone  in 
his  apartment  this  year,  shared  the 
same  sentiment. 

"You  have  more  space  and  quiet 
time  to  yourself,"  Chiu  said.  "In  the 
dorms,  especially  in  the  high  rises,  you 
don't  have  an  area  to  retreat  to  if  you 
want  to  be  by  yourself" 

Gatchalian,  however,  has  a  unique 
living  situation  in  that  he  shares  an 
apartment  with  his  older  brother,  who 
attends  USC. 

Despite  .the  different  schools, 
Gatchalian  and  his  brother  are  more 
friends  than  rivals. 

In  fact,  he  said  living  with  family 
helps  avoid  the  awkwardness  of  meet- 


,  ing  a  roommate  for  the  first  time  or 
sharing  bills. 

"It's  really  convenient  living  with 
my  brother,"  he  said.  "We  don't  have 
to  play  that  getting-to-know-you 
game. 

"We  have  the  same  friends,  we 
hang  out  together,  and  we  don't  have 
to  split  the  bills  or  our  possessions." 

Living  with  friends,  on  the  other 
hand,  is  not  as  easy,  especially  when  it 
comes  to  money  matters. 

"It's  tough  when  the  bill  is  under 
your  name  because  you  have  to  split  it 
up  and  remind  everyone  to  pay  you," 
Chau  said.  "It  ended  up  that  me  and 
my  roommates  had  to  pay  each  other 
one  lump  sum  at  the  end  of  the  year." 

Like  those  who  have  lived,  in  the 
dorms  before,  Chau  emphasized  shar- 
ing responsibilities  to  avoid  later  prob- 
lems. 

"Sit  down  and  set  up  ground  rules, 
so  as  to  avoid  major  living  disagree- 
ments, such  as  sharing  food  and  how 
to  pay  bills,"  she  said. 


Oa«y  Bruin  rue  Phoio 

Apartment  prices  in  Westwood  have  increased  in  recent  years  in 
response  to  the  high  demand  for  housing  near  campus. 


APARTMENTS 

From  page  3 

treatment  from  landlords. 

Last  spring,  four  students  founded 
the  Student  Tenants'  Union,  which 
provides  information  about  tenants' 
rights  to  transfer  students  and  those 
living  ofT-campus  for  the  first  time. 

"It  is  important  that  we  collective- 
ly come  together  as  students,"  said 
Vartan  Djihanian,  one  of  the  union's 
founders. 

Some  residents  fear  their  land- 
lords are  taking  advantage  of  them 
because  they  are  students. 

"Many  landlords  know  that  we  are 
first-time  renters  and  they  take 
advantage  of  that  situation,"  said 
Dena  Yahya,  a  third-year  political 
science  student. 

Similar  prices  are  prevalent  near 
other  highly  populated  universities. 

"It  is  the  same  near  USC. 
Apartments  arc  overpriced  and 
you're  not  getting  a  good  value  for 
your  money,"  said  Adrian  Fontanilla, 
a  fourth-year  music  student  at  USC. 

But  not  all  college  campuses  face 
this  overpriced  housing  problem. 

California  Polytechnic  University 
at  San  Luis  Obispo  has  several  large. 


privately  owned  housing  buildings 
that  cater  to  students,  according  to 
Jessica  Reed,  a  former  resident 
there. 

They  offer  separate  leases  for  each 
roommate,  similar  to  on-campus 
housing,  at  affordable  rates. 
Additionally,  many  apartments  are 
furnished  and  close  to  campus,  Reed 
said. 

In  contrast,  apartments  in 
Westwood  aren't  private  buildings 
that  cater  to  students. 

Not  only  have  rental  prices  in 
Westwood  gone  up,  but  the  commu- 
nity itself  has  diminished  in  the  the 
past  two  decades.  Burnett  said 
Westwood  residents  today  do  not 
enjoy  the  same  night  life  that  once 
existed  years  ago;  they  pay  higher 
prices  for  a  less-lively  nei^borhood. 
"Years  ago  Westwood  just  started 
to  pick  up  around  11  o'clock," 
Burnett  said.  "Today  when  I  go  into 
Westwood  at  II  o'cldck  the  streets 
are  dead." 

Yet  Westwood  remains  a  popular 
neighborhood  to  live  in  because  it  is 
in  the  heart  of  West  LA. 

"Everyone  wants  to  live  near 
UCLA  in  Westwood,"  Alvarez  said. 
"Not  only  to  be  near  UCLA  but  also 
because  it  is  a  trendy,  upscale  area." 


r 


inter  the  Los  Angeles  Times  College  Connection 
Student  Sweepstakes  online  and  you  could 
be  a  WINNER. 


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it  will  taste  a  heck  of  a  lot  better. 


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26       September  2S-28, 2000 


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UCLAs  eighth  chancellor  Albert  Carncsalc  discusses  campus  issues  at  the  Inverted  fountain,  his  favorite  place  on  campus. 


The  man  behind  the  suit.  Chancellor  Camesale,  talks  about  his  childhood, 
being  chancellor,  and  the  'tingle  theory'  during  a  lunch  interview 


By  Dtianhani  Dharmawardcna 
Daily  Bruin  S«nior  Staff 

Chancellor  Albert  Carnesale  walked 
briskly  into  the  UCLA  Faculty  Center  in  full 
suit  and  lie,  smoothing  down  his  hair  with 
one  hand  and  shaking  hands  with  the  other. 

"It's  the  nice  thing  about  living  in 
California  -  you  can  always  cat  outside,"  he 
said,  heading  towards  the  terrace.  - 

After  enjoying  a  chicken  salad  and  a  caf- 
fcinc-free  diet  cola,  the  Chancellor,  who  will 
begin  his  fourth  year  at  UCLA  this  fall,  fold- 
ed his  hands  on  the  table. 

"There  are  some  %irho  bdieve  I  never 
grew  up,"  he  said  with  a  laugh.  "But  I  got 
larger  in  the  Bronx." 

The  first  in  hit  family  to  attend  college. 
Camesale  initially  went  to  public  elemen- 
tary schools  and  later  graduated  from 
Cooper  Union  in  Qreenwich  Village,  with  a 
degree  in  mechanical  engineering. 

Growing  up  in  an  area  where  few  people 
attended  college,  Camesale  said  he  was 
labeled  an  "IQ  kid"  because  of  his  test-tak- 
ing abilities,  although  his  grades  were  never 
great. 

"There  was  never  a  qutttion,  when  I  was 
growing  up,  whether  I  would  go  to  college," 
he  said. 

"I  always  felt  that  I  was  at  least  being 
taken  seriously,"  Camesale  continued. 
"That  no  matter  what  nutty  idea  I  had  at  the 
time,  or  what  I  wanted  to  do,  I  was  taken 
serkMuly.'' 


By  studying  mechanical  engineering,  a 
person  could  easily  enter  middle  class  after 
college,  he  said. 

"My  plan  was  very  modest,"  he  said. 
"My  plan  was  to  get  a  job,  where  you're  in 
the  middle  class,  where  you  can  wear  a  white 
shirt  and  tie,  you  could  enjoy  it,  and  you 
make  a  hundred  dollan  a  week." 

Alter  graduating,  Camesale  found  a  job 
that  satisfied  all  his  goals,  and  felt  content  in 
his  situation  for  the  time  being. 

"And  that  might  explain  why,  after  a  year 
or  so  after  that,  I  started  to  look  beyond 
that,"  he  said. 

As  a  college  graduate,  Camesale  said  he 
had  achieved  more  academically  than  both 
his  parents  and  the  people  in  his  neighbor- 
hood. 

He  then  went  on  to  graduate  school  and 
received  a  Ph.D  in  Nudear  Physics  from 
North  Carolina  State  Univereity. 

Over  the  yean,  Camesale  buih  his  career 
teaching  as  a  professor,  working  for  the  U.S. 
Arms  Control  and  Disamfiament  Agency, 
and  serving  as  the  Academic  Dean  of  the 
John  F.  Kennedy  School  oT  Government  at 
Harvard. 

He  came  to  UCLA  as  chancellor  in  1997. 
amid  student  protests  at  his  inauguration  in 
1998  over  the  end  of  afTirmative  action  in 
admissions. 

AAer  his  stay  at  Harvard,  Camesale  said 
the  onl)bbig  difference  between  the  two  uni- 
versities comes  from  one  being  private  and 
the  other  being  public,  and  the  difTerences 


stemming  from  that. 

"They  are  a  lot  more  similar  than  they  arc 
difTcrent,"  he  said.  "But,  this  is  double  the 
size  of  Harvard  in  total  number  of  students 
and  four  times  the  number  of  undergradu- 
ates. 

"So,  Harvard  is  two-thirds  graduate  and 
professional,  one-third  undergraduate," 
Camesale  continued.  "This  is  the  other  way 
around." 

Being  chancellor,  he  said,  is  not  more 
prestigious  than  any  of  his  previous  jobs  - 
but  difTerent 

"Chancellor  is  not  higher  than  profes- 
sor," Camesale  said.  "In  other  words,  you 
have  to  be  careful  not  to  look  at  an  organiza- 
tional chart." 

To  recognize  professon,  he  said  universi- 
ties do  not  need  to  promote  them  to  admin- 
istrative positions. 

"We  have  the  most  distinguished  scholars 
and  sdentisu."  Camesale  continued. 
"Nobd  Laureates  do  not  normally  become 
deans,  provosu,  and  chanodtors,  but  most 
of  them  would  much  rather  be  professors 
and  continue  working  in  sdenoe." 

With    three    years    behind    him    as 
Chancellor  of  UCLA,  Camesale  has  a  com- 
pletely   difTerent    style    than    former 
Chancellor  Charles  E.  Young,  said  Assistant 
/Chancellor  Antoinette  Mongelli. 
/      Althou^  Mongelli  said  she  had  limited 
\  experience  wording  with  Young,  she  also 
added  that  Camesale's  personality  is  the 
opposite  of  Young's. 


"Chuck  grew  up  in  this  place,"  she  said. 
"He  was  here  for  30  years,  so  he  knew  what 
so  and  so  did  over  in  that  comer  because  he 
knew  all  of  those  people." 

Over  the  years,  Mongelli  said  UCLA  has 
transformed  into  a  multi-billion  dollar  oper- 
ation, which  requires  the  type  of  manage- 
ment Camesale  administers. 

"Chancellor  Young  was  sort  of  the  pop  of 
the  "mom  and  pop'  operation  in  building  a 
business,"  she  said.  "Now  we  have  a  huge 
operation  where  all  your  lieutenants  have  to 
be  able  to  take  their  marching  orders  and  go 
and  do  their  jobs. 

"The  CEO  can't  know  what  that  person 
in  that  position  does." 

Nonetheless,  Mongelli  added  Camesale 
tries  very  hard  to  listen  to  students. 

"He's  just  very  respectful  of  students," 
she  said.  "Even  if  there's  a  point  of  (fisagree- 
ment,  you  don't  fed  like  there's  a  bad  guy  ^ 
here." 

Camesale  himself  said  he  sees  the  impor- 
tance of  keeping  in  touch  with  students.  He 
mentioned  that  during  regular  office  houra, 
where  times  are  advertised  through  Mnail, 
and  special  appointments,  studenu  can  talk 
to  him  about  appropriate  issues  conceming 
UCLA 

"A  student  sent  me  an  Mnail  (saying)  she 
thought  the  idea  of  my  having  more  interac- 
tion with  students  in  an  inforrnaJ  environ- 
ment, in  addition  to  office  hours,  was  a  good 


■.-■■■     ' 


Daily  Brain  News 


ScpMnbcr  25-28, 2000       tJ 


CHANCELLOR 

From  page  26 

idea,"  he  said.  "And  so  I  asked  to  meet 
with  her  and  we're  actually  following 
up  on  that." 

Mongelli  said  although  Camesale 
sincerely  wants  to  meet  everyone  who 
wishes  to  see  him,  his  calendar  is  virtu- 
ally grey  with  appointments,  leaving 
little  time  for  impromptu  meetings. 

"I  hear  that  everybody  feels  like 
he's  not  as  available  as  he  needs  to  be," 
she  said.  "I  hear  the  criticism,  but  I  see 
the  reality." 

Currently,  the  chancellor  said  he 
sees  two  major  problems  UCLA  faces 
in  the  future:  access  and  resources. 

"How  can  we  be  sure  that  as  a  pub- 
lic university  we  really  are  serving  the 
people  of  California  and  not  just  one 
or  two  segments?"  he  asked. 
!:  Camesale  said  because  students 
learn  from  one  another,  having  a 
diverse  student  body,  racially,  ethnical- 
ly and  socio-economically,  can  ensure 
access  to  the  best  education. 

"My  number  one  responsibility  is 
that  the  students  who  are  at  UCLA  get 
the  very  best  education  possible,"  he 
said.  "And  I  believe  firmly  that  they 
will  all  get  a  better  education  if  we  have 
a  diverse  student  body." 

Mongelli  said  she  also  understands 
Camesale's  emphasis  on  accessibility. 
"When  I  was  a  high  school  student, 
I  always  thought  about  UCLA  as  that 
sort  of  green  jewd  over  there."  she 
said.  "1  think  he  wants  to  take  away 
that  bver  there'  part ." 

The  problem  of  diversity  has 
become  a  major  challenge  for  the  cam- 
pus. Camesale  said,  one  that  requires 
special  attention  through  outreach 
programs  in  secondary  schools. 

"The  budget  for  outreach  has  prob- 
ably gone  up  in  the  last  three  years  ten 
times."  he  said. 

With  UCLA nowreceiving only  21 
percent  of  its  budget  from  the  govern- 


ment, maintaining  a  reputation  as  one 
of  the  top  educational  institutions  in 
the  U.S.,  either  public  or  private,  is 
another  problem  for  the  university,  the 
Chancellor  said. 

"Ensuring  that  we  have  the 
resources  to  have  the  quality  of  pro- 
grams that'the  very  finest  universities 
have  is  essential,"  he  said.  "And  seeing 
where  those  resources  will  come 
from." 

Trying  to  remedy  the  resource 
problem  by  attending  fundraising  din- 
ners and  meeting  with  faculty  groups 
consumes  many  of  the  Chancelk>r's 
evenings  and  a  great  deal  of  his  spare 
time. 

"Is  that  social  or  is  that  work?"  he 
asked.  "Well,  the  answer  is  it's  both 
because  they're  interesting  people  and 
I  enjoy  being  with  them." 


"I  believe  firmly  that 
(UCLA  students)  will  all 
get  a  better  education 

if  we  have  a  diverse 
student  body." 

Albert  Camesale 

Chancellor 


Camesale  said  he  uses  whatever 
spare  time  he  can  find  to  try  to  exer- 
cise. An  avid  walker,  who  can  finish  a 
mile  in  14  minutes,  he  rarely  drives  his 
car  to  campus. 

"Almost  any  weekend  day,  you  can 
see  me  walking  around  campus  or  on 
the  track,"  he  said.  "But  I  do  that 
because  if  I've  been  doing  exercise,  my 
energy  level  is  high." 

Camesale's  other  hobbies  include 
reading,  especially  in  his  field  of  study, 
and  the  opera. 


"I  really  got  hooked  on  that  when  I 
was  involved  in  those  strategic  arms 
negotiations  when  I  spent  a  lot  of  time 
in  Vienna,"  he  said. 

"Ip  the  time  that  1  spent  in  Vienna, 
the  dollar  was  worth  a  lot,"  Camesale 
continued.  "You  didn't  haVe  to  think 
about  what  a  ticket  cost." 

Executive  Vice  Chancellor  Rory 
Hume,  who  works  closely  with  the 
chancellor,  said  he  wished  Camesale 
would  allow  more  lime  for  himself 

"I  would  like  him  to  take  more 
vacations.  Truly,  he  works  very  hard," 
Hume  said.  "He  tends  to  overwork- 
that's  the  only  criticism  I  have  of  him. 
"If  he  would  take  a  little  more  time 
for  himself  and  relax  a  little,  I  think 
he'd  be  even  better  at  what  he  docs," 
he  continued. 

For  Camesale,  the  path  to  becom- 
ing chancellor  has  included  many 
changes,  none  of  which  were  really 
planned. 

"If  you  wanted  to  be  chancello/'  of 
UCLA,  first  of  all,  you  wouldn't  have 
grown  up  in  the  Bronx,"  he  said  with  a 
laugh.  •   ■  'Hi''- 

"But  if  you  trace  back,  there  cer- 
tainly are  some  common  threads," 
Carnesale  continued.  "The  reason 
that  people  thought  of  me,  I'm  sure,  as 
a  potential  candidate  for  being  chan- 
cellor of  UCLA  was  because  I  had 
been  provost  at  Harvard." 

He  also  said  he  got  involved  in  gov- 
emment  because  of  his  knowledge  of 
science  and  technology,  not  because  of 
political  knowledge. 

Despite  the  career  changes,  the 
chancellor  said  he  liked  all  his  jobs, 
and  credited  his  success  with  this 
enjoyment. 

"I  always  did  things  that  I  enjoyed," 
he  said.  "And  that's  why  my  advice  to 
people  in  career  planning  is  what  I 
desaibc  as  the  'tingle  theory:'  do  what 
makes  you  tingle. 

"Do  what  excites  you,"  he  contin- 
ued. "That's  what  you  do  well  at  and 
other  things  will  evolve  from  that." 


www-Cfaniamjfiid  com 


Students  utilize  Internet 
to  serve  varied  purposes 


USES:  Web  sites  flourish 
as  medium  expands  in 
field  of  higher  education 


ByMaryHoang 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

UCLA  researchers  had  a  hand  in 
creating  the  Internet,  and  today 
UCLA  students  and  alumni  use  the 
Net  for  various  personal  and  public 
purposes  -  from  personal  home 
pages  to  startup  companies. 

Thirty  years  after  that  first  com- 
puter-to-computer connection,  the 
modem  Internet  per.^ades  the  lives 
of  many  UCLA  students  and  alum- 
ni both  on  and  off  campus. 

Current  and  former  Bruins  use 
the  Intemet  in  as  many  ways  as 
there  are  different  Web  site  genres. 
Some  of  their  sites  offer  informa- 


tion to  the  public,  while  others  will 
put  out  personal  pages.  Still  others" 
may  also  form  startup  companies, 
wishing  for  the  influx  of  cash  that 
Internet  has  brought  so  many  oth- 
ers. 

One  avenue  fifth-year  political 
science  student  Grey  Frandsen  and 
first-year  public  policy  graduate 
student  Ryan  Ozimek  took  was  to 
create  a  forum  to  deliver  political 
information.  They  formed  the 
Political  Information  Center 
Network  (www.picnet.net). 

"We  take  politics  and  make  it 
digestible,  usable  and  hopefully 
encourageable  by  focusing  on  the 
technology  of  politics,"  Frandsen 
said. 

"The  Web  is  our  medium  as  it  is 
the  most  dynamic,  flexible  and  effi- 
cient means  of  getting  information 

S««MTBHIET,|>age33 


I  IV|  AX'  *  DAILY  BRUIN 

Want  to  invite  you  &  a  guest  to  a    . 
spedoi  1^9Wli)^ir  screening  of 


Thursiday,  October  5*  at  tiio 
Universd  GtyWolk  IMAX*  Theatre 

For  a  free  screening  pass,  stop  by  tbe 

Dally  Bruin  Offices 

Beginning  Thursday,  September  28*  at  lOam 

118  KercMioff  HoH 

Regular  Engagement  Starts  ^ 
r,  October  6*^ 


Friday, 


V 


No  pirdNM  Mctsswy.  Out  poss  par  panoa. 
tmk  pass  aMts  twa.  Pissas  iritad  to  sapply  «i  bad. 


A(^^    ASI^    AiKf 


MVINI 


ONTAUO 


VAUNOA 


28       September  25-28, 2000 


Group  bud^ti 

UNIONS:  Membership  on 
rise,  economy  good,  but 
workers  asking  for  moi-e 


By  Timothy  Kudo 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

After  nearly  two  decades,  the  turbu- 
lent relationship  between  the 
University  of  California  and  organized 
labor  is  becoming  more  volatile,  yet  at 
the  same  time,  perhaps  closer  to  a  res- 
olution. ':']  ■  • 
Membership  at  some  of  the  unfons 
representing  university  employees 
tripled  since  last  year  in  part  as  a  result 
■  of  "fair  share"  fees  which  increased 
their  budgets  by  as  much  a$  1,000  per- 
cent in  some  cases.              .'      • 

But  this  union  renaissance  is  com- 
ing at  one  of  the  most  prosperous  eco- 
nomic times  in  recent  history,  in  which 
the  state  can  give  the  UC  abundant 
budgets  and  more  flexibility  in  dealing 
with  the  unions  over  wages  and  bene- 
fits. 

"One  of  the  things  that  limits  our 
flexibility  is  that  we  are  a  state  funded 
institution,"  said  UC  spokesman  Brad 
Hayward.  "In  many  cases  the  offer 
that  we  can  put  on  the  table  is  depen- 
dent on  the  money  we  get  from  the 
state." 

Additionally,  UC  officials  recently 
began  an  examination  of  their  labor 
policies  and  are  showing  more  willing- 
ness to  sit  down  and  talk  with  the 
unions  about  various  topics. 

"Employees  are  critical  to  the  quali- 
ty of  the  programs  we  offer  at  the  UC 
and  as  a  result,  we  are  placing  a  great 
deal  of  attention  in  finding  ways  to 
recruit  and  retain  the  very  best  faculty 
and  staff  that  we  can,"  Hayward  said. 
Both  sides  are  on  the  cusp  of 


V^^^  VvWH  ^MV^S 


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jy  •':, 


Daily  Bnm  New 


examines 


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^^^  MWCrBOSS/Dally  Bruin  SertoeSiaff 

J«WM  Edmonds  joins  other  workers  In  applauding  good  news  about 
contract  negotiations  with  the  UC  at  a  Sept  1 2  demonstration. 


change.  The  university  hasyet  to  prove 
its  desire  for  better  labor  relations  to 
the  unions,  and  likewise,  the  unions  in 
some  respects  fed  the  need  to  prove 
themselves  to  their  constituency  by 
using  their  newfound  funds  effectively. 

Union  boost  by 'Yair  share"  fees 

In  January,  sute-legislated  "fair 
share"  fees  came  into  effect,  causing 
the  drastic  increase  in  union  budgets. 

The  argument  for  the  fees  is  that 
they  prevent  people  from  freeridiftgin 
the  system  by  gaining  all  the  benefits  of 
collective  bargaining  without  any  of 
the  expenses. 

At  the  time,  union  membership 


lagged  at  around  10-15  percent,  mean- 
ing that  out  of  all  the  employees  each 
union  represented,  only  one  tenth 
payed  dues  to  the  union.  As  a  result  of 
the  legislation,  nearly  all  employees 
are  currently  paying  dues. 

"Up  until  now  we've  been  operat- 
ing on  a  shoestring  budget,"  said 
Qaudia  Horning,  president  of  the 
Coalition  of  University  Employees 
union  whose  statewide  and  local  bud- 
gets increased  from  $200,000  to  over 
$1  million  since  the  fee  initiation. 

Fair  share  fees  only  go  to  bargain- 
ing efforts  so  they  are  slightly  less  than 
normal  dues,  which  are  anywhere 
between  .005-1.25  percent  of  earned 
wages,  or  about  S2S. 


"It  helped  us  put  the  glue  of  the 
union  together,"  said  Qiff  Fried,  an 
organizer  for  the  University 
Professional  and  Technical  Employees 
union. 

The  effect  on  the  union,  however,  is 
more  than  just  increased  funds. 
Membership  increased  about  three- 
fold since  the  fees  were  instituted. 

"They^y,  Tm  paying  for  it  any- 
way, so  I  might  as  well  join  so  I  can 
vote,"'  Fried  said. 

Organizers  say  increased  member- 
ship allows  the  union  to  demonstrate 
its  strength  to  the  university  in  more 
effective  ways  than  money  can  buy 

"The  most  important  thing  is  your 
ability  to  have  the  workers  organize," 
said  Jose  Hernandez,  an  organizer  for 
the  American  Federation  of  State, 
County  and  Municipal  Employees 
union. 

The  state  dumges  the  UC 

Since  the  slate  first  allowed  unions 
to  represent  univenity  ernployees  the 
two  have  had  a  rocky  relationship. 

"The  university  has  always  been 
very  politically  antininion,"  Homing 
said. 

University  officials  denied  union 
charges  but  is  r^«xamining  its  policies 
in  light  of  a  changing  labor  environ- 
ment 

"We  are  in  a  different  environment 
by  virtue  of  the  number  of  employees 
in  unions;  that  means  we  have  to  take  a 
fresh  look  at  the  way  we  operate  in  that 
environment,"  he  said. 

In  the  past  year,  state  legislators 
criticized  the  university's  labor  policies 
leading  to  UC  President  Richard 
Atkinson  testifying  June  8  before  the 
Assembly  Higher  Education 
Committee  on  UC's  labor  policies  and 
its  union  dealings. 


Some,  however,  criticized  that  pres- 
sure is  the  resuUlof-political  favors 
given  to  thfuhions  rather  than  a  gen- 
uine belief  in  university  wrongdoing. 

At  the  September  meeting  of  the 
UC  Board  of  Regents,  Assembly 
Speaker  Robert  Hertzberg,  D-San 
Fernando  Valley,  a  regent  by  virtue  of 
his  office  said  in  an  interview,  "I  have 
good  friends  in  those  labor  unions." 

Additionally,  some  regents  began  to 
express  concern  over  the  UC  Office  of 
the  President's  operation  of  the  labor 
relations,  said  Student  Regent  Justin 
Fong. 

While  the  regents  delegate  labor 
relations  to  the  UC  Office  of  the 
President  the  university-wide  adminis- 
tration, the  board  still  has  final  say  in 
all  matters.  .;  v  ;- 

According  "to  Regent  Sue  Johnson, 
the  board  hasn't  discussed  any  items 
regarding  labor  relations.'  But  within 
the  past  year  Atkinson  chartered  a  task 
force  to  examine  its  labor  relations 
policies. 

In  part  the  university  is  responding 
to  legislative  pressures,  but  it  is  also 
able  to  simply  be  more  responsive  to 
labor  as  a  result  of  the  economy. 

In  the  eariy  '90s,  a  fiscal  crisis 
forced  the  university  to  freeze  wages 
and  cut  working  hours  for  some  work- 
en. 

At  the  time,  union  leaders  criticized 
the  university  as  acting  more  like  a  pri- 
vate employer  in  its  cost  cutting  than  a 
public  one  with  an  obligation  to  public 
service  -  criticism  that  continues 
today. 

Even  though  times  have  changed, 
"They  keep  the  same  modus  operandi, 
they  don't  see  the  difference,"  Fried 
said. 

Even  in  good  economic  times,  how- 

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ScplHnber2S-28,2000       29 


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A  well-rounded  person 
ishould  find  the  right  balance 
'     of  Social  and  scholariy    ; 
experience;  Dario  Niardi  has 


ByStribOw 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


Although  surfing,  listening  to  rave 
music  and  playing  the  guitar  may  seem  to 
be  the  hobbies  of  a  typical  college  student, 
thirty-year-old  Dario  Nardi,  adjunct  assis- 
tant professor  in  the  math  department's 
Program  in  Computing,  also  enjoys  the 

same       pas- 
times. 

Besides 
being  an  avid 
surfer,  he  also 
performs  sok) 
guiur  acu 
with  his  stu- 
dents at  the 
Westwood 
Brewing 
Company. 

Some      of 
Nardi 's    stu- 
dents said  they 
could     relate 
more  to  him 
on  a  personal 
level  because 
of  his  open- 
ness to  young 
people. 
"Professor 
Nardi  doesn't  look  like  other  professors," 
said  former  math/applied  science  student 
Robert  Kaplinsky  "He  looks  like  us. 

"One  day  he  came  into  class  to 
announce  he  was  getting  his  long  hair 
chopped  and  ^ked  for  suggestions," 
Kaptinsky  said. 

In  addition  to  teaching  PIC  courses, 
Nardi  also  teaches  Honors  Collegium' 
courses,  which  in  the  past  have  included 
topics  like  Artificial  Intelligence:  People  as 
Machines,  Machines  as  People.  He  is  cur- 
rently completing  his  third  book,  which 
deals  with  organizational  psychology  and 
career  counseling. 


■f''^ 

.>jr»f^('x  .                            "~~' 

• 

■    & 

.^^ 

jf^-^ 

" 

■■■  ■-••^.i-'Wy- 

Daily  Bniin  will  take  a  k)ok 
at  members  of  the  UCLA 
community.  In  ttiis  continu- 
ing series,  we  highlight  the 
many  activities  Bruins  are 
Involved  In. 


(Nardi)  avoids  traditional 
classroom  settings,  where 

lecture  dominates 

-     discussion. 


Nardi  is  not  your  typical  professor. 
Having  called  Japan  his  home  for  a  few 
years,  Nardi  also  lived  in  Barbados  for  a 
large  portion  of  his  life. 

"I  lived  right  on  the  beach  in  Barbados 
as  a  kid,"  Nardi  said.  "And  memories  of 
this  time  have  had  a  big  impact  on  my  life." 

Even  though  he  studied  aerospace  engi- 
neering as  a  use  undergraduate  Nardi 
decided  to  ttudy  art  history  while  he  was  in 
Japan. 

There  he  was  exposed  to  a  liberal 
Japanese  collie  life,  an  experience  that 
inspired  him  to  create  a  learning  environ- 
ment where  labs  and  proiects  prevailed 
over  lectures. 


^■^i^^'rr/s^r •  -'°*^' '"  *•  "■""  '^""^^  "  ^"-"  ""  -'»  ""conve„,.o„r" ';"^^" 


Traveling  abroad,  having  lived  in  two 
very  different  cultures,  and  learning  a  for- 
eign language  has  been  very  ey^opening." 
Nardi  said. 

He  said  that  this  Mend  of  science  and 
cultural  backgrounds  have  tau^t  him  that 
people  can  find  equal  interest  in  both  sci- 
ence and  culture. 


"Reading  good  books  and  taking  in 
some  educational  TV  like  the  History 
Channel  is  a  wonderful  way  to  learn,"  he 
continued.  "I  ahvays  thought  that  Carl 
Sagan  was  a  wonderful  example  of  some- 
one who  brought  science  to  the  masses,"  he 
added,  referriitf  to  the  scientist  as  an  inspi- 
ration. 


The  welM>alanoed  indtvidual,  the  one 
who  can  find  the  perfect  mix  of  scholastics 
and  cultural  interaction  leads  a  more 
meaningful  life,  he  said. 

"I  believe  being  well-rounded  is  more 
important,  and  more  rewarding,  than  just 


S«PMPIsmtpaft32 


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*    •-  * '.-''. ^    ■  '     "•.■-'"     ■»     •  ''  ■'*•■■"      ;      '"      *'",-■',■         '  ■.  .1  ■'  '  '         -     .■'■''.■'■. 


30    ^September  25-28, 2000 


Oaiiy  Bruin  Nfwi 


Some  question  legitimacy  of  US,  News  college  ranking  system 


CraTERIA:  Most  students 
say  that  report  has  Httle 
effect  on  school  choice 


By  Monique  Simpson 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

When  Larnell  Ferrell  took  a  class 
at  Yale  he  noticed  his  books  were  the,, 
same  as  at  UCLA,  even  though  the 
two  are  ranked  23  spots  apart  in  the 
2001  U.S.  News  and  World  Report 
college  ranking. 

"I  don't  think  ranking  matters," 
said  Ferrell,  a  fourth-year  mathemat- 
ics student.  "It's  about  the  programs 
and  departments  at  each  school." 

Though  Ferrell'  said  when  he 
applied  to  colleges  he  did  not  give 
much  attention  to  the  rankings,  many 
high  school  students  look  to  them  as 
the  final  word  in  where  to  apply. 

This  year,  UCLA  is  ranked  as  the 
25th  best  national  university  and  as 
the  third  best  public  university. 
Princeton  University  was  ranked  first 
this  year. 

But  as  the  list  was  being  released, 
questions  again  arose  over  the  legiti- 
macy of  the  U.S.  News'  annual  rank- 
ing. 


COLLEGE  RANKING  CRITERIA 

The  U.S.  News  and  WorW  report  ranks  collegesby  taking  into  account  various  things  like 
acadenfik  reputation  and  financial  resources. 


"We  don't  pay  great  attention  to 
the  ranking,"  said  UC  spokesman 
Chuck  McFadden.  "We  view  ranking 
as  one  of  the  many  things  prospective 
students  and  parents  take  in  consid- 
eration." 

In  the  September  issue  of  The 
Washington  Monthly,  pditor 
Nicholas  Thompson  criticized  the 
ranking  for  having  several  serious 
problems,  such  as  not  measuring  stu- 
dents' actual  leaniing  and  deliberate- 


AOAM  BROWN  *nd  ^aAsaAa  6RyutAy/baiy  6niln 


ly  placing  Ivy  League  colleges  at  the 
top. 

Bui  U.S.  News  maintains  the  rank- 
ings are  nonpartisan  and  that  they 
fairly  ranks  colleges  according  to  the 
magazine's  methodology. 

"Once  we  pick  how  we  are  going 
to  conduct  the  ranking,  what  hap- 
pens happens,"  said  Richard  Folkcr, 
a  spokesman  for  U.S.  News. 

Folker  added  that  the  magazine 
prides  itself  on  presenting  unbiased 


reports. 

"We're  journalists  first  of  all. 
Being  objective  is  primary,"  Folker 
said. 

Though  McFadden  dismissed  the 
ranking,  when  both  UCLA  and  UC 
Berkeley  fell  out  of  the  top  25  best 
national  universities  in  1996,  UC 
President  Richard  Atkinson  sent  a 
letter  to  the  UC 

Board  of  — ■ 

Regents  explain- 
ing what  he 
thought  were  the 
reasons  for  the 
drop. 

Atkinson  stat- 
ed in  the  letter 
that  "the  College 
Guide  is  popular 
and  affects  how 

universities  are     ^ 

viewed,  so  when  ■ 

our  campuses  :•  r .  '  •  "  ' 
drop  in  the  ranking  we  want  to  under- 
stand why." 

But  he  attributed  the  low  ranking 
more  to  the  magazine's  methodology 
than  to  the  institutes  themselves. 

Much  as  UC  ofTicials  have  varied 
in  their  response  to  the  ranking,  stu- 
dents have  done  so  as  well. 

According    to    the    American 


Freshmen  survey,  conducted  by  the 
UCLA  Higher  Education  Research 
Institute,  the  rankings  do  not  greatly 
influence  students'  decisions. 

The  1999  study  showed  only  7.5 
percent  of  the  surveyed  students 
viewed  ranking  in  national  magazine 
as  very  important. 
According  to  the  survey,  47.6  per- 
cent of  students^- 
■■'■■■^'■■"■■■■"^     considered  col- 
lege reputation 
as  very  impor- 
tant   and    44.6 
percent  consid- 
ered what  gradu- 
ates go  on  to  do  ,. 
after  college  as;; 
very  important.  . 
"Looking   atr 
these  small  sta-- 
tistical  number, 
there's  no  clear 
trend,"        said 
William  Korn,  Associate  Director  of 
Operations  at  the  institute. 

Melina  Duenas,  a  first-year  biolo- 
gy student,  agreed  that  the  ranking  is 
not  the  only  determining  factor  when 
choosing  a  college. 

"I  looked  at  the  ranking  of  the 


"Once  we  pick  how  we 

are  going  to  conduct 

the  ranking,  what 

happens  happens." 

Richard  Folker 

U.S.  News  spokesman 


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RANKINGS 

From  page  30 

departments,  articles  in  newspa- 
pers, and  listened  to  my  coun- 
selor," Duenas  said. 

In  addition,  some  students 
prefer  to  look  at  the  college's  rep- 
utation. 

Orlly  Solis,  an  undeclared 
first-year  student  from  Mexico, 
said  UCLA's  global  recognition 
was  more  important  than  maga- 
zine ranking. 

"UCLA  is  known  worldwide," 
Solis  said. 

Even  students  who  know  there 
is  controversy  about  its  credibili- 
ty still  use  the  ranking  to  help 
them  select  a  college. 

If  the  college  was  ranked  too 
low  or  too  high,  Jon  Frank,  a 
first-year  biochemistry  student, 
said  he  didn't  apply  to  the  coi- 
Icgct.* 

"I  didn't  apply  to  UCSB 
because  it  was  ranked  low," 
Frank  said. 

Whatever  critics  have  to  say 
about  the  ranking,  U.S.  News 
plans  to  continue  publishing  the 
annual  college  ranking,  leaving 
its  readers  to  decide  the  worth  of 
individual  colleges  and  the 
ranking. 


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lABOR         "  % 

;.  From  page  28  .;,;  y-:,f,r-ir'-\ 

>  •  .■  •  ■  r .'  '  .^^  ■  i  ,"<>  •.■ 

ever,  the  university's  obligation  to  use 
taxpayer  money  wisely  sometimes 
forces  it  to  be  tight  with  purse  strings. 

"We  try  to  run  the  business  parts  of 
the  university  in  ways  that  are  eco- 
nomic so  we  get  the  most  value  for  tax- 
payer money,"  Chancellor  Albert 
Carnesale  said  at  the  regents  meeting. 

In  recent  months,  the  university  has 
met  with  labor  leaders  on  an  informal 
basis  to  discuss  such  issues  as  how  best 
to  spend  money  allocated  for  raises,  as 
well  as  changes  regarding  the  manage- 
ment of  the  UC  retirement  fund. 

"The  university  has  been  taking  a 
number  of  steps  to  improve  relations  ' 
with  its  employees  and  the  unions  that 
represent  them,"  Hayward  said. 

But  union  organizers  say  such  state- 
ments are  nothing  more  than  political 
posturing. 

"So  far  we  see  nothing  to  indicate 
anything  more  than  a  public  relations 
effort  though  we  hope  the  university  is 
sincere  about  trying  to  change,"  said 
David  Johnson,  director  of  the  UC 
division  for  the  California  Nurses 
Association  union. 

In  mid-September,  however,  when 
AFSCME  began  contract  negotia- 
tions, the  university  came  to  the  bar- 
gaining table  offering  a  5  percent  wage 
increase,  something  Hernandez  said 


:  Imm  10  years. 

Organizing  for  the  next  year 

AFSCME  and  one  of  the  groups 
UPTE  represents  recently  began 
negotiations  over  a  new  contract. 

Also,  several  contracts  UPTE  nego- 
tiated will  be  ending  this  year  and  once 
that  happens,  union  organizers  have 
the  ability  to  coordinate  protests  on  a 
grander  scale  by  allying  workers  pur- 
suing similar  causes. 

Once  those  contracts  end  the  work- 
ers will  legally  be  aWe  to  strike  if  they 
feel  the  need. 

"It's  all  coming  together  at  the  same 
time,"  Fried  said. 

Similarly,  CUE  organizers,  fed  up 
with  the  two  years  it  has  taken  them  to 
get  their  first  contract  are  preparing 
for  action. 

"We're  very  close,  if  the  university 
is  willing  to  meet  our  latest  offer  we 
could  have  this  wrapped  up  pretty 
quickly,"  Homing  said. 

But,  if  not,  "We'll  shut  down  this 
goddamn  place,"  added  Kathy 
Kasten,  a  CUE  member  at  UCLA. 

Currently,  the  CUE  local  at  UC 
Berkeley  is  preparing  for  a  strike  by 
collecting  signatures.  The  same  thing 
may  soon  be  happening  at  UCLA. 

With  reports  from  San  Francisco  by 
Benjamin  Parke,  Daily  Bruin 
Contributor. 


NICOLE  MILLER/Daily  Biuin 

UCLA  employee  Dora  Herrera  stands  in  front  of  UPTE  organizer 
ClWf  Fried  at  a  forum  on  casual  employment  in  July. 


"A  start-up 


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Investment  Banking  Night:  Thursday  October  19 

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"■'.*^'t 


32       Septehbg2^28. 2000 


HP^ 


5* 


Daity  Bruin  News 


PROFESSOR 

Frofnp«je29 


'-■.■•■' 


academics  or  socializing  by  itself," 
Nardi  said.  "I  believe  college  is  just  as 
much  about  social  experience  as  it  is 
academics." 

According  to  former  cognitive  sci- 
ence student  Nidc  Prager,  students  feel 
:     more    comfortable    around    Nardi 
because  he  incorporated  this  kind  of 
casual  atmosphere  into  his  classes. 

"What  struck  me  the  most  about 
Dario  was  that  he  was  more  like  a  stu- 
dent than  a  professor  and  I've  kept  in 
contact  with  him  for  that  very  reason," 
"  he  said.  "No  one  calls  him  'Professor 
Nardi.' just  Dario." 

In  college,  Nardi  had  taken  courses 
where  professors  only  gave  lectures. 
This  lack  of  interaction  spurred  him  to 
avoid  traditional  classroom  settings, 
where  lecture  dominates  discussion. 

His  Honors  Collegium  class'  small 
size  and  curriculum  flexibility  catered 
to  his  desire  for  more  student  interac- 
tion, more  student  and  teacher  interac- 
tion, as  well  as  more  freedom  in  creat- 
ing the  various  student  activities, 
Nardi  said. 

"Students  had  more  interaction  and 
were  therefore  more  confident,"  said 
Nardi.  "There  are  activities,  so  it's  not 
just  lecture." 

According  to  Nardi,  many  profes- 
sors become  alienated  from  their  class- 


es, choosing  only  to  lecture  without 
hearing  any  studem  feedback. 
,  "Some  professors  have  the  attitude 
that  it  is  the  teaching  material  that « 
important,"  he  said.  "What's  impor- 
tant is  what  theytewn." 

To  remedy  this  feeling  of  distance, 
Nardi  secured  even  more  student 
interaction  by  setting  aside  discussion 
time  during  lecture  periods. 


"We  could  tell  that  he 

tpdk  a  genuine  interest 

in  his  students  as 

people." 


Melanie  Ho 

Student 


"Many  students  have  busy  lives, 
and  1  found  that  it  was  difficult  for  a 
complete  group  to  meet  outside  of 
class,"  he,  said.  "So  1  set  aside  time 
wipiin  dass." 

Despite  his  efforts  to  become  closer 
to  his  students,  Nardi  said  five  to  ten 
percent  of  the  students  are  not  com- 
fortable with  his  method  of  teaching. 

"Some  students  want  a  more  step 
by  stq)  approach,"  said  Nardi.  "But 


that's  my  teaching  style  and  students 
need  to  understand  their  own  learning 
style."  , 

Most  students,  however,  preferred 
*is  stressing  the  importance  of  student 
interaction  within  the  scholastics  of  the 
course,  Nardi  said. 

"The  Honors  Collegium  class  was 
defmitely  one  of  the  best  courses  I  have 
taken  at  UCLA,"  said  fourth  year  pol- 
icy and  media  studies  student  Melanie 
Ho. 

"The  group  projects  and  interac- 
tions foster  a  level  of  intellectual  and 
personal  discourse  between  the  stu- 
dents and  between  the  students  and 
professor,"  she  continued. 

Daniel  Gomez,  an  undeclared  sec- 
ond year  student,  said  that  although 
Nardi's  teaching  methods  were  unlike 
any  other  professor,  he  enjoyed  the 
experience. 

"It  is  true  that  his  teaching  could 
probably  be  considered  a  little 
unorthodox,"  he  said.  "This  group 
project  was  unlike  anything  I  had  ever 
done  before  in  school,  and  was  a  great 
experience." 

Nardi's  emphasis  on  student- 
teacher  interaction  goes  beyond  the 
classroom  material. 

"We've  gone  to  the  Brew  Co.  three 
or  four  times  together,"  Kaplinsky 
said.  "We  just  talked  about  totally 
nort-academic  material  quite  a  few 
times."  :-.■•,  ./,  V''..:' \ 
According  to  Kaplinsky,  Nardi  is 


unique  because  he  makes  the  effort  to 
reach  out  to  his  students  on  a  more  per- 
sonal level.    ' 

"I  feel  that  a  lot  of  professors,  while 
completely  intelligent  authorities  in 
the  field,  are  not  the  best  teachers  as 
they  arc  not  in  touch  with  their  stu- 
dents anymore,  and  make  no  effort  to 
get  in  touch,"  he  said.  "1  really 
enjoyed  hearing  about  all  his  adven- 
tures." 

"I  thought  it  was  great  that  Dario 
shared  his  other  interests,  such  as 
music,  with  the  dass  because  it  helped 
uj  to  rdate  with  him  and  feel  more  at 
ease  in  the  dass,"  Ho  said. 

"We  could  tell  that  he  took  a  gen- 
uine interest  in  his  students  as  people 
and  in  our  growth  personally  as  indi- 
viduals," she  continued. 

Although  Nardi  enjoys  sodalizing 
with  his  students,  he  said  he  sometimes 
finds  he  doesn't  fit  in. 

"At  the  same  time,  I'm  not  a  college 
student,"  he  said.  '*Some  undergrads 
invited  me  to  a  party  once  and  I  was 
quickly  bored. 

"1  fdt  like  I  was  the  guest  of  honor 
or  something,  which  is  quite  embar- 
rassing in  a  way." 

Nonetheless,  Nardi  said  he  enjoys 
the  positive  response  he  receives  from 
his  students. 

"When  students  stop  by  to  say 
hello,  or  write  something  touching,  or 
even  make  fun  of  me  -  moments  like 
these  are  very  rewarding,"  he  said. 


ECSTASY 

from  page  la 

study  sponsored  by  MAPS  that 
will  test  the  effectiveness  of 
MDMA  in  alleviating  pain  and 
stress  in  cancer  patients  who  are 
not  responding  to  conventional 
medical  treatment. 

MAPS  is  also  sponsoring  a 
study  in  Spain  that  will  use 
MDMA  to  treat  rape  victims  who 
suffer  from  post-traumatic  stress 
disorder. 

Rick  Doblin,  the  founder  and 
director  of  MAPS,  said  getting 
FDA  approval  for  MDMA 
research  between  1985  and  1990 
was  nearly  impossible. 

He  added  that  large  pharma- 
ceutical companies  *T»ave  done 
nothing  to  investigate  the  thera- 
peutic use  of  MDMA  or  other 
psychedelics,  and  that  their  finan- 
dal  interests  might  suffer  if  psy- 
chedelics  were  to  be  approved  as 
prescription  medidnes."     -^   < 
"The  reason  is  that  psychedel- 
ic-assisted  psychotherapy  may 
prove  to  be  an  alternative  treat- 
ment for  depression  and  other 
indications  for  which  the  pharma- 
ceutical industry  offers  pills  that 
must  be  taken  on  a  daily  basis  for 
extended  periods  of  time,"  he 
said. 


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INTERNET 

From  page  27 

disseminated  to  people  who  need, 
could  use  or  should  be  involved  in 
political  discourse,"  he  added. 

Frandsen  reflected  on  how  his 
experience  as  an  undergraduate  stu- 
dent at  UCLA  has  helped  him  and  his 
fellow  PICnet  organizers. 
^    "UCLA  has  obviously  created  the 
4  (ramework  by  bringing  together  the 
^^mpbnenu  -  us  -  and  has  allowed  us 
to  utilize  the  most  valuable  resource 
UCLA  offers  -  its  students,"  he  said. 

Ileana  Perez,  a  1999  alumna  of  The 
Anderson  School  at  UCLA,  also 
decided  to  put  out  a  Web^sed  ser- 
vice for  people,  but  of  a  different  sort. 

Perez  founded  CraniaMania,  an 
online  real-time  forum  for  high 
school  students  to  compete  with  each 
other  in  eight  academic  arenas  span- 


Septembef  25-28. 2000       ft' 


ning  from  essay  writing  to  SAT  math 
and  knowledge  of  world  events. 

Perez,  the  CEO  of  CraniaMania 
(www.craniamania.com),  wanted  afl 
high  school  students  to  experience 
academic  competition,  especially  if 
they  were  not  able  to  in  school.  She 
said  she  saw  an  opportunity  in  the 
online  medium  because  "ofTTine  acad- 
emic competitions  are  exclusive  and 
have  registration  fees." 

At  The  Anderson  School,  Perez 
said  she  learned  the  skills  necessary  to 
write  a  business  plan,  and  the  net- 
works she  formed  in  the  business 
world  whilp  in  school  have  enabled 
her  to  launch  her  first  Internet  staii- 
up. 

While  some  students  and  alumni 
decided  to  us«  the  Internet  for  its 
business  afid  political  possibilities, 
knowledge  of  the  Internet  is  slowly 
becoming  one  of  the  fundamental 
requirements  of  an  undergraduate 


education. 

In  many  first-year  General 
Education  cluster  classes,  good  old- 
fashioned  research  is  combined  with 
knowledge  of  Web  site  design,  and 
how  students  perform  at  both  of 
those  Usks  may  determine  their  final 
grade. 

As  a  portion  of  their  final  exam, 
students  in  GE  Cluster  70: 
"Evolution  of  the  Cosmos  and  Life" 
were  assigned  a  Web  site  project. 

"In  our  groups,  each  of  us  had  to 
have  two  pages  of  written  text  and 
pictures  on  the  web  JMige  which  was 
theiv  linked  together  to  present  our 
topic,"  said  second-year  linguistics 
student  Adriana  Rodriguez. 

Reflecting  back  on  the  project, 
Rodriguez  said,  "It  was  fun  and  much 
easier  than  I  first  thought.  I  felt  smart 
aAer  1  finished  it.  I'll  probably  make 
my  own  Web  site  in  the  near  future 
too." 


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34       September  25-28, 2000 


•  • 


I 


Here's  q  look  at  the 

inner  workings  of 

UCLA.  Like  a  mochine, 

it  is  more  thon  the  sum 

of  its  ports,  and  each 

:ii|iQi%  thousands  ^b^ 


students,  faculty  and 
odministrators  share 

the  responsibility  of 

making  sure  it  gets  the 

job  done.  How  well  it 

runs  ...you decide 


Senate  may  be  slovi^  but 
lets  faculty  voice  wisdom 


PROFESSORS:  Academic  input 
crucial  to  sliared  governance, 
preserving  education  process 


By  Timothy  Kudo 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  facuJty  at  UCLA  are  some  of  the 
most  renowned  professors  in  the  world  - 
which  means  a  lot  of  research  and  teaching. 
As  a  result,  they  often  have  little  time  to 
pursue  campus  issues  as  they  work  to  rise  in 
their  fields  and  promote  the  status  of  the 
university. 

But  their  role  on  campus  is  unique,  since, 
as  a  result  of  tenure,  they  are  one  of  the  few 
—  groups  with  power  and  the  ability  to  speak 
freely  in  and  out  of  the  classroom. 

"In  universities,  faculty  cannot  be  given 
orders,"  said  Werner  Hirsch.  an  emeritus 
professor  who  has  been  active  in  the  faculty. 
The  Academic  Senate,  the  representative 
body  of  UCLA's  professors,  has  been  quiet 
recently,  though  there 
are  issues  out  there  it      ^"— — ^— — ■ 
could     be     tackling, 
Hirsch  said. 

When  affirmative 
action  in  university 
admissions  and  hiring 
vk^as  removed  through 
SP-1  and  SP-2,  the  fac- 
ulty, like  most  of  the 
UC  community,  spoke 
out  against  it. 

"We  told  the  regents      

we  don't  like  it,  the  sen- 
ate certainly  told  the 
regents  they  didn't  like  it.  the  students  told 
the  regents  they  didn't  like  it,  the  public  told 
the  regents  they  didn't  like  it,"  said 
Executive  Vice  Chancellor  Rory  Hume. 
"But  that's  the  way  it's  dealt  with,  because 
the  regents  do  govern  the  university  on 
behalf  of  the  people  of  California." 

Shared  governance  has  existed  since  the 
1920s  when  the  regents  gave  the  faculty  say 
over  certain  things  like  hiring,  tenure  and 
other  academic  decisions. 

That  relationship  is  considered  by  many 
to  be  a  key  check  to  the  administration, 
which  often  faces  external  pressures,  sucfrdis 
balancing  the  budget. 
;         Though  decisions  like  SP-1  creat- 
ed a  major  dissent  among  the  facul- 
ty, infringements  of  a  more  academ- 
ic nature  might  have  ended  with 
even  more  conflict. 

"I  can't  think 
of  a  single 
instance     where 


they've  said,  'I  don't  like  that  program,  take 
it  out,"'  said  Donna  Vredevoe,  the  immedi- 
ate past  chair  of  the  senate.  "That  would  be 
a  major  upheaval  within  the  university." 

Since  1995,  little  has  been  heard  from  the 
senate  however,  at  least  not  on  social  issues. 
"The  senate  has  its  primary  mission, 
maintaining  academic  programs," 
Vredevoe  said.  "The  social  issues  are  things 
that  may  impact  on  that.  If  they  impact  on 
the  academic  programs,  then  it  will  take  a 
stand." 

Much  of  its  work  recently  has  focused  on 
upcoming  challenges  to  the  university,  like 
the  enormous  enrollment  growths  the  UC  is 
facing  and  how  to  deal  with  distance 
learning. 

But,  at  the  same  time,  not  much  has  come 
out  of  the  senate  because  many  of  its  deci- 
sions come  only  after  many  months  of  dis- 
cussion. 

"They're  professional  teachers  and  schol- 
ars, not  professional  administrators,"  said 
Stephen  Yeazell,  the  current  senate  chair. 
Many  of  the  things  the  senate  deals  with, 

ranging   from   some- 

»  thing  like  a  copyright  - 

issue  or  approvjil  of  an 
entrepreneurial  pro- 
gram, can  take  any- 
where from  two 
months  to  a  year  to  be 
settled. 

Things  take  a  long 
time  because  "commit- 
tee members  may  not 
be  involved  with  the 
problem  and  they  need 
to  inform  themselves 
on  it,"  Vredevoe  said. 
Additionally,  the  large  committee  struc- 
ture set  up  in  the  senate  means  items  often 
go  through  numerous  groups  of  people, 
leaving  each  individual  member  with  little 
say  in  the  process. 

"Do  you  think  you're  going  to  feel  good 
at  the  end  of  the  day  even  if  something  hap- 
pens? Your  infiuence  is  zilch,"  Hirsch  said. 
But  the  result  is  a  decision  that's  both 
informed  and  well  thought  out. 

"Very  often,  the  senate,  because  it  takes  a 
little  longer,  is  more  reflective,  and  on  mat- 
;  ters  of  big  policy  importance,  the  outcome  is 
a  very  good  one,"  Hume  said.  "So  I  think 
that  difference  in  pace  has  some  benefits 
though  sometimes  it  can  be  irritating." 

The  .senate  not  only  discusses  issues  for 
long  periods  of  time,  but  also  has  difficulty 
attracting  faculty  who  see  it  as  an  extracur- 
ricular that  takes  up  research  and  teaching 
time. 


"Very  often,  the  senate, 
because  it  takes  a 

little  longer,  is 
more  reflective." 

Rory  Hum« 

Executive  Vice  Chancellor 


Se«  SENATE,  page  4S 


Oayn^l 


work 


'-.•/■ 


September  25-28, 2000       35 


Tension  part  of  process 
for  USAC  administrators 


ADMINISTRATION:  Decision-making 
still  occurs  despite  differing  views 
which  can  divide  students,  officials 


ByUnhTat 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Past  disagreements  between  the  admini«tt«u«ta^ 
and  student  government  on  how  to  tackle  lari^^ 
issues  have  some  believing  an  adversarial  relation- 
ship exists  between  the  two. 

Because  UCLA  answers  to  the  UC  Board  of 
Regents,  administrators  must  enforce  policies  that 
are  not  always  favored  by  students. 

At  the  same  time,  however,  some  feel  admnistra- 
tors  should  stand  up  for  students  by  spepiaag  out 
against  the  board' decisions.  •  v^^ 

"Students  can  never  ask  too  much  of  adittistra- 
tors,"  said  Mike  de  la  Rocha.  last  year'S 
Undergraduate  Students  Association  Council 
president. 

Though  both  sides  recognize  tension  in  their  rela- 
tionship, they've  also  agreed  this  is  not  always  the 
case  and  contend  that  working  together  is  beneficial 
to  the  university's  decision-making  process. 

"There's  an  inherent  and  probably  healthy  ten- 
sion between  the  students  and  the  administration," 
said  Lyle  Timraerraan,  USAC  administrative  repre- 
sentative. 


KilTH  tNRlQotZ/Daily  Brum  Senior  Staff 

USAC  Administrative  Representative 

Lyle  TImmerman  listens  at  a  USAC  meeting. 


*MIY  HA8£«/Daity  Bruiol 


KEITH  ENROUEZ/Ddily  Bfujn  Senior  Staff 

Portia  Pedro  speaks  up  at  the  Sept.  12 
undergraduate  student  government  meeting. 

"But  I  don't  see  it  as  one  that  has  to  be  such  a  sig- 
nificant barrier  that  it  ...  precludes  students  from 
interacting  effectively  in  the  decision-making 
process,"  he  continued. 

Sometimes  tension  evolves  when  one  group  sus- 
pects the  other  side  doesn't  trust  them,  said  Steve 
Davey,  who  is  serving  his  second  consecutive  term  as 
USAC  facilities  commissioner. 

"Some  student  leader's  do  not  trust  administra- 
tors," Davey  said.  "As  a  result,  there  are  some 
administrators  who  come  to  meetings  and  take  stu- 
dents' concern  with  a  grain  of  salt." 

De  la  Rocha  conceded  there  is  mistrust  on  the 
part  of  some  students,  but  said  administrators  have 
not  always  demonstrated  concern  for  students 
either. 

"There  will  be  student  concerns  or  issues  that  they 
won't  see  as  student  concerns  because  they're  not 
students,"  de  la  Rocha  said.  "What  they  prioritize  is 
different." 

But  according  to  Executive  Vice  Chancellor  Rory 
Hume,  there  are  issues  both  sides  agree  should  be 
given  top  priority,  such  as  diversity  on  campus. 

In  1995,  both  students  and  administrators  spoke 
out  against  SP-1  and  SP-2,  which  ended  the  use  of 
affirmative  action  in  the  university's  admissions  and 
hiring. 

"At  the  moment,  we  need  to  continue  the  dialogue 
on  issues  related  to  diversity,"  Hume  said. 

Besides  diversity,  the  university  asks  for  student 
input  on  other  issues  concerning  them,  such  as  stu- 
dent fee  allocations  and  outreach  programs. 

Each  year,  student  government  members  or 


See  ADMINISTRATORS,  page  45 


Voter  turnout  Nnders 
GSA  funding,  function 

GRADUATE:  10  percent  minimum  voids  referenda  that 
might  facilitate  association's  ability  to  deal  with  issues 


Cases  could  change  group  funding 


STUDENTS:  USAC  may 
have  to  drastically  alter 
distribution  of  resources 


By  Barbara  Ortutay 
Dally  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

It's  a  government  for  the  students, 
but  few  of  them  seem  to  be  aware  of 
it. 

For  the  past  1 1  years,  voter  turnout 
in  the  Graduate  Student  Association 
elections  has  not  passed  the  10  per- 
cent mark  necessary  to  put  any  refer- 
enda  in   iffect,   even    they   were 


approved  by  more  than  half  of  those 
who  vote. 

As  a  result,  GSA's  membership 
fee,  which  comes  from  mandatory 
student  fees  and  is  the  association's 
primary  source  of  funding,  has  not 
increased  since  1982.  Without  adjust- 
ments for  inflation  and  rising  costs  of 
programming,  the  amount  of  funding 


SMGSA,pa9eS6 


By  Michael  Weiner 
Daily  Bfuln  Senior  Staff 

Members  of  the  Undergraduate 
Students  Association  Council  are 
engaged  in  a  process  that  could  rad- 
ically change  the  way  the  council 
distributes  funds  and  other 
resources  to  student  groups. 

The  process,  which  bas  been 
going  on  for  the  past  month,  arose 
out  of  questions  regarding  the  fair- 
ness and  legality  of  the  annual  base 


budgets  assigned  to  student  advoca- 
cy groups.  But  the  council's  inquiry 
could  have  implications  far  beyond 
this  year's  budget  allocations. 

That's  because  university  admin- 
istrators fear  USAC's  current  fund- 
ing system  may  not  be  in  compli- 
ance with  U.S.  Supreme  Court  deci- 
sions that  govern  distribution  of 
student  fees. 

The  most  recent  decision. 
University  of  Wisconsin  v. 
Southworth.  confirmed  in  March 
that  public  universities  can  collect 
activities  fees  from  students  as  long 
as  those  fees  are  distributed  on  a 
content-neutral  basis. 

That  case  essentially  certified  an 
earlier  decision,  1995's 


Rosenberger  v.  University  of 
Virginia,  which  decreed  that  such 
fees  must  be  allocated  without 
regard  to  the  political,  religious  or 
ideological  agendas  of  the  groups 
being  funded.  It  also  provided  a 
refund  mechanism  for  students  who 
disagree  with  the  way  their  fees  are 
used. 

Now,  with  two  decisions  by  the 
high  court  more  clearly  defining  the 
legal  issues  surrounding  the  collec- 
tion and  distribution  of  mandatory 
student  fees,  university  officials  are 
pushing  USAC  to  ensure  compli- 
ance with  the  court  by  adopting 


SceFUNmN6,pa9e58 


36        Septembff  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bfuin  News 


.~ci 


Secession  movements  may  soon  change  fece  of  Los  Angeles  area 


CITY:  Valley,  Hollywood, 
other  regions  looking  to 
govern  their  own  towns 


By  David  Dradnr 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 


Welcome  to  Los  Angeles, 
Take  a  look  around;  if  the  secession 
—  movements  that  have  organized  in  dis- 
parate parts  of  the  city  are  successful, 
you  may  not  be  here  nuich  longer! 

The      San      Fernando      Valley, 
Hollywood,  and  LtA.  Harbor  arc  three 
out  of  the  seven  regions  considering 
■■■  seceding  from  the  city. 
I      "The  primary  reason  people  want 
"to  secede  is  the  desire  for  local  cxxh 
iJrol,"  said  Jeff  Brain,  president  of 
^Valley  Voters  Organized  Towanb 
^JEptpowerment. 
^"i^Fares  Wehbe, 
President        of 

^♦l^gl  I  y  w  o  o  d*  ' 

:VQTE,    echoed 
Btfain's      sentF 
ijnents. 

"For  ,  years, 
the  folks 

involved  in  this 
movement  tried 
to  accomplish 
things  by  work- 
ing with  City 
Hall,  but  the  sys- 
tem is  so  bureau- 


"We  feel  there  ar€f  tots 

of  assets  that  are  being 

squandered  away." 

Faras  Wehbe 

President  Hollywood  VOTE 


cratic  that  it  was  simply  impossible," 
he  said. 

Secession  of  these  regions  would  cut 
L.A.'s  3.6  million  population  by  more 
than  one-third  and  significantly  reduce 
its  current  467  square  mile  area. 

According  to  School  of  Public 
Policy  professor  Eric  H.  Monkkonen, 
an  expert  in  the  historical  development 


of  cities  and  .qiunidpal  fiscal  policy, 
L.A.'s  breakup  in|o  smaller  entities 
would  have  mixed  resulLv. 

"Big  cities  have  more  dout  in  cer- 
tain respects,  such  as  securing  an 
Olympic  Games,"  Monkkonen  said. 
"  But  they  also  tend  to  be  less  efTident." 
L.A.  City  Councilwoman  Cindy 
Misdkowski,  Chair  of  the  Ad  Hoc 
Committee  on  Spedal 

Reorganization,  the  council's  commit- 
tee on  secession,  said  L.A.  should 
remain  intact. 

"Diversity  is  the  most  significant 
reason  why  I'm  opposed  to  secession," 
said  Misdkowski,  whose  1  Ith  District 
includes  parts  of  the  Valley  and 
Westwood. 

"It  would  ruin  the  sodai  demo- 
graphic value  of  bang  a  large  urban 
dty,"  she  said. 

CalifSanria     Assemblyman     and 
Speaker    \    Emeritus        Antonio 
Villaraigosa,  D- 
••  Los  Anodes,  an 

L.A.  mayoral 
candidate  and 
UCLA  alumni, 
agrees. 

"The  assem- 
blyman doesn't 
support  seces- 
sion," said 
Villaraigosa's 
communications 
director  Elena 
Stem.  "He  loves 
L.A.  as  it  exists 


J^^iygSiQBSSION  AREAS 

SmafMimaMeswMito^aiyoftflsAagelHMomdinliifMw^ 


E«9i(iiock 


OinMll0sAii9(teaiy 

bOMMHrtes 

PnpoKdbeuntiriR 

AddWoMlbitataipof 

West  Los  AngHn 

NtigMNxtngCWts 


mimfnifmmf 


HAMSHA  MCVM^  m*.  S«*»  Ml 


today,  and  appredates  its  diverse 
makeup." 

in  response  to  this  argument,  seces- 
sion proponents  are  quick  to  highlight 
the  heavy  support  they've  garnered 
from  minorities. 

"When  petitions  (for  secession) 
were  drculated,  we  received  over  50 
percent  support  from  minority  com- 


munities like  Paooima  and  Sylmar," 
Brain  said.  "In  white  suburt)an  com- 
munities located  along  Ventura  Blvd., 
support  was  in  the  low  30s." 

Added  Harbor  VOTE  Executive 
Director  William  Silverthom,  "People 
in  LA.'s  inner  dty  will  vote  for  our 
leaving  because  they'll  end  up  getting 
more  attention  as  a  result." 

Fueling  these  secession  movements 


within  the  nation's  second-largest 
metropolis  is  lingering  resentment 
over  political-footballsiwst  as  well  as 
distribution  and  management  of 
L.A.'s  $3.6  billion  budget. 

In  practical  terms,  those  concerned 
want  the  city  to  be  more  responsive  to 
the  235,000  constituents  who  reside  in 
each  of  L.A.'s  15  coundl  districts  and 
the  sometimes  contrasting  demands  of 


each  district.  -  ..^  ' 

"People  care  how  their  ndghbor- 
hoods  are  managed,"Silverthom  said. 
"The  LA.  Harbor  has  one  of  the  best 
views  in  the  world,  yet  it's  filled  with 
more  than  it's  fair  share  of  subsidized 
housing." 

Brain  explained  that  the  move  for 
secession  dates  back  to  theJ970's, 
when  then-Mayor  Tom  Bradley  suc- 
cessfully lobbied  the  California 
Legislature  to  put  the  dedsion  for 
secession  in  the  hands  of  the  LA.  dty 
coundl,  rather  than  the  state. 

"Many  people  feel  the  dty  has 
grown  too  large,  and  that  relates  to  the 
fairness  of  taxes  paid  and  the  services 
received  for  them."  Brain  said.  "L.A. 
recdved  $4S  billion  for  mass  transit 
and  all  the  Valley  got  was  a  stub  of  a 
Metro  Rail." 

Wehbe  said  the  effect  of  the  dty's 
mismanagement  also  pushed 
Hollywood  into  organizing  the  peti- 
tion drive  tfnt  coOected  twice  the  25 
percent  of  signatures  required  by  the 
Local  Agency  Formation 

Commission,  the  state  agency  which 
now  regulates  the  formation  of  new 
cities. 

"Hollywood  is  the  most  famous  dty 
in  the  world,"  Wehbe  said.  "But  it 
doesn't  live  up  to  those  expectations, 

and  we  fed  there  are  lots  of  assets  that 
are  bdng  squandered  away." 

But  Misdkowski  pointed  out  that 
LA.  has  responded  to  the  concerns  of 
neighborhoods  like  Venice  Beach  and 
Padfic  Palisades,  two  Westside  com- 
munities whidi  recently  fiirted  with 
secession. 

"Cleariy,  we  are  doing  something." 
she  said.  "Most  predominantly  we  cre- 
ated the  Department  of  Neighborhood 
Empowerment,  which  allows  commu- 


S«eSEaSSIOItp»9e56 


cards 


Tfie  Ultimate  Gift  Store 


BACKPACKS 


ORGANIZER 


•  •  •  • 


Diily  Bruin  Nmh 


Minimum  wage  eamers  cant  afford  rent 


September  25-28, 2000       37 


ECONOMY:  Inflation,  other 
factors  leave  many  unable 
to  find  affordable  housing 


By  Shannon  MeCaAey 

The  Assodated  Press 

'..J 

^:'  WASHINGTON  -  Employees 
-j-^^'u^'ng  the  federal  minimum  wage 
over  a  404iour  week  cannot  afford 
what  the  federal  government  considers 
a  "modest"  two-bedroom  apartment  in 
any  county,  according  to  a  study 
rdeased  Sept.  20. 

Federal  Housing  Secretary  Andrew 
Cuomo  said  the  report  by  the  National 
Low  Income  Housing  Coalition,  an 
advocacy  group  that  favors  raising  the 
minimum  wage,  demonstrates  the  flip 
side  of  the  booming  economy. 

"Rents  continue  to  increase  dra- 
matically, wWIe  the  minimum  wage  has 

not,"hesaid. 

The  study  used  the  Department  of 
Housing  and  Urban  Development's 
definition  of  "fair  market  rent"  to 
determine  the  houriy  wage  needed  to 
pay  for  an  average  apartment  in  each 
state,  county  and  metropolitan  area. 

The  federal  minimum  wage  is  $5.15 
an  hour. 
"HUD  says  people  should  not 


__n   3   f?   ^   \ 


Whatever  your 
congregation 
or  spiritual  group, 
whether 
you  are... 

Lutheran 


c: 


:„ngregatt»" 


a\ 


Jewish 

Christian 

,1 

a 

\       iytet±icxiLst 

You  can  reach  more 

people  by 

advertising  in  the 

Daily  Bruin 

Religious 

Directory, 

running  every  Friday 

in  the  Daily  Bruin. 

to  place  an  ad,  call 
825-2221 


iW-ii^' 


spend  more  than  30  percent  of  their 
grosi  income  on  housing.  Using  that 
standard,  no  minimum-wage  earner  on 
a  404)our  week  can  afford  an  average 
rent  in  any  county,  the  coalition  said. 

"Marin,  San^  Francisco  and  San 
Mateo  counties  all  in  California,  tied 
for  the  least-affordable  county,  with  a 
worker  needing  to  earn  $28.06  for  an 
average  apartment.  Nantucket 
County,  Mass.,  was  next  ($25.54).  fol- 
lowed by  Santa  Clara  County.  Calif, 
($25.15)  and  Daricn  County,  Conn., 
($22.62).  Barbour  County,  Ga.,  was 
ranked  most  affordable  ($6.73). 

"New  Jersey  was  ranked  the  least- 
affordable  state,  with  workers  having 
to  cam  $16.88  per  hour  to  pay  for  an 
average  apartment,  the  study  found. 
Washington,  DC,  was  next  ($16.60), 
followed  by  Hawaii  ($16.52), 
MassachusetU,  ($16.43)  and  New 
York  ($16.04). 

"Excluding  the  self-employed,  the 
average  U.S.  worker  earns  $I6r.l7  an 
hour,  according  to  the  Bureau  of 
Labor  Statistics. 

"Although  some  states,  including 
California  ($5.75)  and  Connecticut 
($6.15),  have  higher  state  minimum 
wages,  they  still  fall  far  short  of  cover- 
ing an  average  rent,  said  the  report, 
tided  "Out  of  Reach." 

"House  Speaker  Dennis  Hasten,  R- 


III.,  said -last  month  he  supports  boost- 
ing the  minimum  wage  by  $1  over  two 
years  Clinton  favors  an  inCTease  in  the 
minimum  wage  but  is  concerned  about 
GOP  attempts  to  tie  it  to  tax  cuts. 

"Cuomo  and  affordable  housing 
advocates  are  using  the  report  to  push 
for  an  increase  in  the  minimum  wage 
and  more  funding  for  Section  8  rental 
assistance  vouchers. 

"Earlier  this  month  the  Clinton 
administration  announced  it  was  pro- 
viding $100  million  a  year  to  expand 
Section  8,  which  helps  more  than  1.4 
million  low-income  households. 

"HUD  also  has  inCTeased  fair  mar- 
ket rents  in  certain  high-income  areas, 
in  effect,  inaeasing  the  value  of  the 
renOl  voucher. 

"Missouri  Sen.  Christopher 
Bond,  who  chairs  the  Senate 
Appropriations  subcommittee  on 
HUD,  wants  to  increase  the  value  of 
the  vouchers  beyond  the  level  of 
HUD's  new  policy  and  provide  the 
$1  billion  grant  to  build  new  homes 
for  low-income  families.  Bond  says 
one  in  five  vouchers  currently  go 
unused. 

"The  wages  needed  to  pay  for 
housing  increased  in  98  percent  oV 
the  3,646  local  jurisdictions  studied 
from  1999  to  2000.  The  average 
increase  was  3  percent. 


Education  Dept.  facing 
second  probe  on  fraud 


SCANDAL  Money  meant      committee  hearing,  focusing  on  the 

for  schools  PTiHpH  nn  in  ^'''^^'^^  ^''^^^  ^'^  *'^  '"'"'0"  ^0^ 

lOr  SCnOOlS  ended  up  m         schoolchildren  who  live  on  Indian 

Maryland  bank  accounts      '■nervations  and  military  bases. 

Citing  an  ongoing  investigation, 

Lewis  also  said  she  could  not  give 

details  on  how  grant  money  for 
South  -Dakota   schools    districts 
ended  up  in  at  least  two  Maryland 
bank  accounts  this  spring.  The 
money,  the  Justice  Department 
alleges  in  civil 
_^______      federal  court  fil- 
ing, was  spent 
on  a  Cadillac,  a 
Lincoln 
Navigator  and 
a  building  in  a 
Maryland  sub- 
urb of 
Washington, 

'fi'       and  distributed 

to  other 

Maryland  bank  accounts. 

The  inquiry  centered  on  tfie  latest 
allegation  of  theft  from  its  $34  bil- 
lion annual  budget.  Lewis  said  near- 


By  Anictta  McQueen 

The  Associated  Press 

/     WASHINGTON  -  Facing  a  seo 
ond  major  fraud  probe  this  year, 
Education 
Department 

officials  could-  "^^'"*"~~"' 
n't  say  for  sure 
Sept.  19  just 
how  much 
money  the 
agency  has  lost 
to  waste,  fraud 
or  abuse. 

"I   can   tell  ';"" 

you  there  has 

been  a  concentrated  effort  to 
address  all  of  the  concerns;  I  can't 
give  an  exact  dollar  figure," 
Lorraine  Lewis,  the  agency's  chief 
inspector  told  a  House  Education 
and  Workforce  investigations  sub- 


The  inquiry  centered 
on  the  latest  allegation 

of  theft  from  its  $34 
billion  annual  budget. 


See  OEMRTMENT,  (Mige  66 


Need  to 


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38       SeptembCT  25-28, 2000 

"    ' ?r — 


Daily  Bruin  News 


™  ?^  *^  ^*^  to  smoking  habit  ( ucu  astronomers  find 

black  hole  in  Milky  Way 


STUDY:  Researchers  at 

t:  UCLA  say  Zyban  helps 

those  with  lung  disease 


,  V 


By  Emma  Ross 

The  Associated  Press 

FLORENCE,  Italy -The anti- 
smoking  pill  Zyban  could  help 
even  some  of  the  most  hardcore 
-^  smokers  -  those  who  can't  stop, 
despite  being  sick  with  »  debilitat- 
ing lung  disease,  according  to  a 
study  by  UCLA  researchers. 

Studies  have  shown  the  drug 
can  help  up  to  30  percent  of  ave^ 
age  smokers  stay  ofT  cigarettes  for 
at  least  a  year.  But  the  medication 
hks  never  been  tested  in  people 
with  chronic  obstructive  pul- 
monary disease,  a  smoking- 
induced  lung  illness  that  the  World 
Health  Organization  estimates 
affects  600  million  people  world- 
wide and  kills  about  3  million 
every  year. 

Experts  say  about  60  percent  of 
those  with  the  condition,  known  as 
"smoker's  lung,"  continue  to 
smoke  and  that  quitting  tobacco  is 
the  only  thing  that  has  been  shown 
to  halt  or  slow  its  progression. 

The  findings,  presented  at  the 
World  Congress  on  Lung  Health, 
showed  that  taking  the  drug 
almost  doubled  the  chances  of 
quitting,  from  9  percent  to  16  per- 
cent. 

"They  almost  doubled  their 
chances  of  giving  up.  That's  about 
the  same  chance  as  smokers  in 
general,"  said  Dr.  Donald  P. 
Tashkin,  a .  professor  of  pul- 
monology  at  UCLA  and  leader  of 
the  study. 


The  study  was  funded  by  Glaxo 
Wellcome,  the  drug's  maker. 

Dr.  Pierre  BSrtsch,  professor  of 
lung  medicine  at  the  University  of 
Liege  in  Belgium,  said  the  findings 
are  important  because  people  with 
chronic  obstructive  pulmonary 
disease  have  the  most  difficulty 
giving  up  smoking,  which  is  their 
only  chance  of  retarding  their  dis- 
ease. 

"Of  course  the  results  show  a 
much  lower  success  rate  than  in 
the  general  population,  but  these 
are  people  who  were  smoking 
almost  two  packs  a  day  for  25 
years,"  Bartsch  said.  "It's  impor- 
tant to  show  that  something  can 
help  these  patients  give  up." 


About  60  percent  of 
.those  with... 

"smoker's  lung" 
continue  to  smoke. 


Ft  probably  wouldn't  be  a  good 
treatment  for  those  with  the 
advanced  stage  of  the  disease  - 
about  40  percent  of  all  those  with 
the  illness  -  because  it  may  not  be 
a  good  idea  to  mix  the  drug  with 
the  other  drugs  those  patients  use, 
Bartsch  said. 

Chronic  obstructive  pulmonary 
disease  causes  gradual,  irre- 
versible damage  to  the  lungs,  and 
encompasses  such  diseases  as 
emphysema  and  chronic  bronchi- 
tis. 

It  afflicts  about  15  million 
Americans  and  kills  about  100,000 


of  them  a  year,  according  to  the 
American  Lung  Association.  It  is 
the  fourth  leading^cat^e  of  dfealh 
in  the  United  Statesr^hind  heart 
disease,  cancer  and  stroke. 

The  study,  conducted  by  scien- 
tists at  the  UCLA,  involved  41 1 
people  about  54  years  old  from 
across  the  United  States  who  had 
the  lung  illness  and  smoked  almost 
two  packs  of  cigarettes  a  day. 

All  had  mild  or  moderate  stages 
of  the  disease,  where  patients 
cough,  wheeze  and  feel  breathless 
but  don't  yet  need  inhalers  to  help 
them  breathe.  Most  had  tried  vari- 
ous methods  to  stop  smoking  in 
the  past. 

For  12  weeks,  half  were  given 
the  drug  twice  a  day,  while  others 
were  given  fake  pills.  They  also  got 
counseling. 

When  the  treatment  ended,  18 
percent  of  those  on  the  drug  had 
not  inhaled  a  single  puff  of  tobac- 
co, compared  with  10  percent  of 
smokers  on  the  fake  pill. 

Three  months  later,  16  percent 
of  those  on  the  drug  had  stayed  off 
cigarettes,  compared  with  9  per- 
cent of  those  not  getting  the  med- 
ication. 

Scientists  verified  that  the 
smokers  had  quit  by  testing  their 
breath  for  traces  of  carbon 
monoxide. 

The  number  of  people  aban- 
doning the  medication  early  was 
about  the  same  in  both  groups  -  2 
percent.  Those  on  the  drug  report- 
ed temporary  insomnia  at  the 
beginning. 

Zyban  costs  about  $60  per 
month.  It  has  been  available  in  the 
United  States  since  1998  and  is 
currently  being  launched  across 
Europe. 


SPACE:  Team  concludes  fbur-yeai:  study  of  phenomenon; 
findings  support  theories  about  galaxy  formation,  center 


ByWaiiamMkCall 

The  Associated  Press 

Astronomers  have  pinpointed  with 
unprecedented  accuracy  an  immense 
black  hole  with  a  mass  of  more  than  2 
million  suns  at  the  center  of  the  spiral  of 
stars  that  is  the  Milky  Way  galaxy. 

The  researchers  have  spent  four  years 
watchmg  stars  spin  closer  and  faster 
around  the  black  hole,  an  illustration  of 
its  powerful  gravitational  tug.  ^^^'-^^^-.^^ 
UCLA  researchers,  led  by  Andrea 
Ghez,  used  the  Kepk  telescope  in  Hawaii 
to  measure  tiny  differences  in  infrared 
images  of  stars  orbiting  the  estimated 
center  of  the  galax;^  near  a  point  called 
Sagittarius  A.  ;    .    ,      :; 

Radio  waves  ertittted  by  Sagittarius  A 
make  it  relatively  easy  to  find  through  a 
thick  veil  of  dust  and  gas,  but  measuring 
the  orbital  paths  of  nearby  stars  has  been 
difficult. 

The  velocity,  or  speed  of  the  stars,  had 
been  roughly  measured,  but  the  UCLA 
team  took  it  a  step  further  by  using  the~ 
infrared  images  of  three  stars  to  measure 
their  acceleration  -  or  how  fast  the  stars 
were  speeding  up  -  and  triangulate  their 
center  of  rotation. 

"And  the  nice  thing  is  they  intersect 
right  on  top,  almost  exactly,  of  this  radio 
source,  Sagittarius  A,  which  people  have 
long  suspected  is  a  black  hole,"  said  John 
Kormendy,  an  astronomer  at  the 
University  of  Texas  in  Austin. 

The  study,  published  Sept.  21  in  the 
journal  Nature,  is  considered  a  major 
advance  that  lends  support  to  other  theo- 


ries about  the  formation  of  galaxies  and 
black  holes. 

"This  has  always  been  a  major  goal  - 
to  try  to  figure  out  exactly  where  the  cen- 
ter of  our  galaxy  is,"  said  Wallace  Tucker 
at  the  Harvard-Smithsonian  Center  for 
Astrophysics  in  Cambridge,  Mass. 
The  black  hole  could  hold  2.6  million 
'  stars  the  mass  of  the  sun  i  nside  a  relati  ve- 
ly  tiny  area  -  less  than  the  distance  from 
the  sun  to  Mars.  .  " 

In  addition  to  providing  proof  for  the 
massive  black  hole,  the  discovery  gives 
astronomers  a  chance  to  actually  see  the 
galaxy  rotate  about  its  center,  and  watch 
how  it  distorts  and  bend«-the  orbits  of 
nearby  stars. 

"We're  used  to  looking  at  gafaxies  that 
change  on  times  scales  of  millions  and 
billions  of  years,  but  we  never  see  them 
change  because  they  change  too  slowly," 
Kormendy  said.  :,,  ' 

"Now  we  can  see  so  close  to  the  center 
of  our  galaxy  that  things  are  actually  hap- 
pening on  a  huri?an  time  scale.  If  things 
go  OK,  we're  going  to  live  to  see  this 
piece  of  the  galaxy  rotate  right  in  front  of 
our  eyes,  and  that's  very  nice."  he  said. 

Black  holes  are  so  dense  they  create 
gravity  so  strong  that  even  light  cannot 
escape  their  surface,  making  them  nearly 
impossible  to  see.  Kormendy  said  the 
black  hole  at  the  center  of  the  galaxy  is 
not  pulling  in  other  stars. 

His  research  team  has  been  searching 
other  galaxies  for  signs  of  black  holes, 
and  so  far  has  documented  at  least  37 
similar  galaxies  that  appear  to  have  black 
holes  at  the  center. 


STUDENT  JOBS  AVAILABLE 


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Program 


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Music  Ubraiy 


Science  6 
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UCLA  Bruin  Card  Required  To  Apply 


V        Daily  Bruin  News 


September  25-28, 2000        39 


Fall  quarter  starts.  Another  adventure  begins. 


'  -;,■■  .  ',:r:  ■•..  -    . 


/Ife  you  feaay? 

(  990  to 


stock  Ufon  supplies  for  the  quarter 


3x3  Post  it  Notes  Assorted  Colors  rejS/. 25  SALi  99( 
Pencil  (ose  Assorted  Colors  regSl.SO  SAL[  99( 
Sony  2puck  ol  AA  Batteries  reg  Si. 79  SALE  99( 
Assorted  multi  packs  of  pencils  or  pens  SL99 
Sony  T120  Video  Tape  reg  S2.59  SAL[  S1.99 
Essselette  Poly  Pocket  reg  S7.95  SALE  S4.99 
Eistein 3 Subiect  Spiral  reg  S5.95  SALE  S4.99 
File  Box  regS9.95  SALE  $7.99 
Clip  lamp  reg  $10.95  SALE  $7.99 
Desk  lamp  rej  5/3.95  SALE  $8.99 


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provisions  everything  you  need 


maHie^ 


( 990  to  SaSS 


6  Quort  Super  Bowl  reg  $169  SALE  99< 
Hangers  pkg/10  reg  $1.39  SALE  99( 
Storage Crotes  rej|S5./9  SALE $3.49 
Shower  Totes  reg  $6.99$7.99  SALE  $4.99 

2  Shelf  Closet  Organizer  or  Shoe  Organizer  reg  $10.99  SALE  $7.99 

3  Drnwpf  Sioroge  Unit  reg  $11.99  SALE  $9.99 


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(  $3.99  to  $9.99 


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techno  accessories 


Auroro  Mini  Calculator  Assorted  Colors  reg  $4.95  SALE  $3.99 

UCIA  Script  Mousepod  reg  $5.95  SALE  $4.99 

Imotion  10  pack  Neon  Floppy  Disk-,  $8.95 

ImationorMemoiexSpockCOROisks  reg  $9.95  SALE  $8.99 

ShorpEL53IRB  Calculator  $9.95 

Case  logic  CD  VVollets  holds  24  CDs  Assorted  Colors  reg  $10.95  SALE  $9.99 


Sole  pric«  good  through  October  10lhJirnil*J  to  slock  on  ^^^ 

ovQiioble  at  Hill  Top  Shop,  Lo  V^le  Commons.  NorthCampos  Shop  and  Haahh  Sciences  Store! 

Essentials  *  310  206  0820      Computer  Supplies  *  310  206  0828 

www.uclastore.com     Market .  310.206.0822 


UCWkir 


40       S«ptemb«  25-28, 2000 


Diily  Bruin  N«ws 


■#  ■■■ 


.!» 


CSU  system  trying  to  limit  overa-owdlng 


■*Tr 


■•MMMta 


GRADUATION:  Numerous 
students  taking  longer  to 
complete  their  degrees 


ByChdsMJ.Cartar' 

The  Associated  Press 

LONG  BEACH  -  Nearly  four  in 
10  students  who  enter  the  California 
^  State  University  system  as  freshmen 
take  six  years  to  obtain  a  degree, 
according  to  a  report  presented  Sent 
19.  . 

The  finding  is  important  because 
the  23-campus  system  is  expected  to 
add  130,000  additional  students  over 
the  next  decade,  and  trustees  are  look- 
ing at  ways  to  make  sure  students  get 
the  classes  they  need  and  better  use 
their  classroom  space. 

The  report  is  one  step  in  helping 
trustees  evaluate  how  they  can  get  stu- 
dents to  graduate  more  quickly. 

"The  reality  is  that  most  students 
are  simply  not  taking ...  a  course  load 
heavy  enough  to  graduate  in  four 
years,". David  S.  Spence.  the  system's 
executive  vice  chancellor  and  chief 
academic  officer,  told  the  CSU's  com- 
mittee on  educational  policy. 
The  report,  presented  to  the  CSU's 


governing  board,  found  thirt  39  per- 
cent of  freshmen  took  six  years  to 
graduate  after  enrolling.  The  system 
did  not  have  comparison  numbers 
from  previous  years.  . 

The  lengthy  graduation  rate  is  like- 
ly a  factor  of  students  juggling  school, 
family  and  work,  CSU  student  trustee 
Neel  Murarka  said. 

Community  college  students 
account  for  two-thirds  of  CSU's 
incoming  students.  ■■■■  ■       :    ■ 


Eight  of...  10  Students 

work^and  36  percent 

have  full-time  jobs. 


The  average  age  of  a  CSU  student 
is  26,  and  a  quarter  of  them  are  par- 
ents. Roughly  eight  of  every  10  stu- 
dents work,  and  36  percent  have  full- 
time  jobs. 

Trustees  will  now  look  at  alterna- 
tives for  helping  students  graduate 
more  quickly. 

"The  main  misperception  here  is ... 
(the  graduation  rate)  has  little  to  do 


with  the  academic  progress  of  the  stu* 
dents  and  much  more  to  do  with  their 
financial  responsibilities  and  their 
responsibilities  to  their  families,"  said 
CSU  spokesman  Ken  Swisher. 

Among  the  options  is  offering 
more  night,  weekend  and  summer 
classes.  That  will  not  only  help  work- 
ing students,  but  also  could  free  class- 
room  space  for  students  who  prefer  a 
traditional  daytime  class  schedule, 
"Swisher  said. 

The  report  is  part  of  a  accountabil- 
ity process  begun  a  year  ago  for  the 
360,000-student  system. 

It  also  found  that  three  campuses  - 
at  San  Luis  Obispo,  Chico  and  San 
Diego  -  are  at  capacity  and  should  be 
.allowed  to  use  new  admission  stan- 
dards to  control  enrollment  growth, 
the  report  said.  The  Long  Beach  and- 
Fullerton  campuses  are  near  capacity. 
Responding  to  the  enrollment 
crunch,  trustees  earlier  this  year 
broke  from  the  system's  long-stand- 
ing commitment  to  accept  all  students 
who  meet  minimum  qualifications  of 
a  B  average  and  complete  all  required 
college  prep  courses. 

Under  a  new  statewide  policy,  cam- 
pus admissions  officers  at  crowded 


New  label  shows  humane 
treatment  of  food  animals 


FARMS:  Government  sets 
voluntary  standards  for 
cattle,  chicken  producers 


See  CSU,  page  so 


By  PMip  Brasher 

The  Asjipclated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Wisconsin 

egg  farmer  John  Brunnquell  says  he 

treats  his  hens 

more  humanely     ^^^^^^^^^ 

than  most  other 

producers.  He 

doesn't       put 

them  in  cages 

or      withhold 

food  and  water 

to  get  them  to 

lay  more  eggs. 

Now  he  has 
a  way  to  prove 
to        grocery     """""""""""" 
shoppers    that 
he's  good  to  his  birds. 

The  government  is  allowing  farm- 
ers to  display  a  new  seal  on  meat  and 
dairy  products  to  attest  that  they 
meet  new  voluntary  standards  for  the 


Products  with  the  label 

initially  will  be 

available  primarily  in 

natural  food  stores  and 

upscale  supermarkets. 


treatment  of  cattle  and  chickens. 

To  qualify  for  the  "Free  Farmed" 
seal,  farms  would  have  to  eliminate 
cages  for  laying  hens  and  stop  using 
forced  molting,  a  common  practice 
that  involves  the  withdrawal  of  food 
and  water  to  increase  egg  produc- 
tion..Dairy  cattle  would  have  to  have 
access  to  pastures. 

Standards  designed  to  improve 
farm  conditions  for  broiler  chickens 
and  beef  cattle 
■«M....^_  also  are  in  the 
package.  Rules 
for  hog  farms  are 
being  written. 

The 
American': 
Humane 
Association 
dev«lo|Md     the 
standards  and  set 
_^__^_^_____     up  a  new  organi- 
zation.      Farm 
Animal  Services, 
to  inspect  farms  that  want  to  use  the 
label.  The  Agriculture  Department  is 
to  monitor  the  inspection  process. 


See  MMB,  page  65 


•'■•>• 


fabulous  journalism  career 

Galling  all  studenls  interested  in  ne^paper,  television,  Internet  or  magazine  journalism 


<*■ 


Attend  our 

Orientation 

and  Open  House 

T\iesday  October  3 

at  6:30  p.m.  in 

Ackerman  Union 

Grand  Ballroom 


',^-,-^ 


:i!i^- 


Slu<J<'rtl^i;^H  U(:U  ofTors  op|K)rlunili(!s 
for  sludrnix  in4»'T('.sl(!<l  in  nvmly  ('very 
Asiml  of  m(!<liH— from  r(;jM)rlinj,'  lo 
l)usin(!Hs,  from  newsroom  mana^t'mcnl  U) 
lol(!vi.sion  journalism.  You'ri;  Jnvil(!<J  lo 
come  find  out  more  hIm)uI  our  f)uhlic.ations 
and  projjrams  n(!xl  Tuesday  ni^hl  wh(!n 
we'll  Im'  hoslinj,M)ur(juarlerlyo|Mm  house. 

II  d(H'sn'l  mailer  what  your  major  is  or  If 
you  have  any  prcjvious  ex(H;rienc(un  media. 
We'll  Iraln  you  in  wcsekend  workshops 
lau^'hl  by  |)rof(!ssJonal  journalisLs. 


journalism@ucla 


WH:r>,: 


*♦•> 


WMITTOGETMVOiyED? 

If  you'd  |jk(;  lo  know  more,  come;  lo  our 
Orii'nlalion  and  Ofx^n  I  louw;  Tu(!S<iay, 
(JclobiT  Hal  «:80  p.m.  in  Ackerman  Union 
(Jrand  IJallr(M)m.  Come;  h(«r  whal  wv.  have 
lo  Oder,  visit  our  ofTietss,  ancJ  m(H!l  some  of 
Ihe  slu<l(!nl8  who  tmkv.  mtuJia  work  al 
UCU.: '. .- z:'^'-- >:  ..;?:,: 

■'■''. 

R)r  mon'  inlormalion^  cjill  us 
al  825-2787. 


IWly  lli-uin  •  m-Sludml  M^^niH  •  IKJj^v  N(!ws 


Daity  Bruin  News 


September  25-28, 2000       ,4V 


■t^I^ 


-.i'.-.-- 


tudiMf 

Give  Your  Bruin  (drd  Wheels! 

Introdudne  The  NEW 


Transit  Pass  Pilot  Proeram 

Bceiiniin?  Monday, 

Seplcnker  25,  OCU  Sf  Hdenfs 

CM  ride  any  Santa  Monica  Bie  Blue  Im- 

*UCLA  Transportation  Services  Is  sponsoring  this  pilot  program  In  order 
to  analyze  the  most  cost-effective  commuter  transportation 
options.  The  fare  Is  being  prepaid  by  UCLA  Transportation  Services  which 
has  allocated  parking  revenues  for  the  Fiscal  Year  2000-01  pilot  program. 

Board  the  bus,  swipe  your  Bruin  Card  through  the  fare  box,  then 
sit  back,  relax,  and  enjoy  the  ride!  Now  your  Bruin  Card  can  help  you  travel 
gnywhere  the  Big  Blue  Bus  goes.  Travel  any  route,  any  time!  There  are  5 
direct  routes  to  campus  and  9  other  routes  that  connea  to  them. 


I? 

ICU  StadcAfs. 


^  more  information  eo  to  www.transportation.u(la.edii/brulneo 


^' 


So.  ride  the  prepaid  Big  Blue  Bus  for  FREE,  then  let  us  know  /^M^K 
how  easy  It  was  to  Bruin  Gol  ♦>^5^a^^-. 


« 

E-aaii  ii  a*  krgiaf«@ff.icl«.ctfi 


<r 


Dedicated  to  Excellence 


<.\ 


-ti— ^f, ji--^    r—       '■  -^^    ^-^»->t    -t--^*-*^' 


-V.    i. 


42        Septfmber.25-28,2000 


-.«^.:<>v 


DailyBfumMnw;^     ,  ■ 


YOUR  BEST  lERM  AT  UCLA  COULO  BE 

THE  TEBM  YOU  SPENO  ABROAD  ON 

THE  UC  EDUCATIUN  ABROAO  PROGRAM 


COUNTRY 


AUSTRALIA 


AUSTRIA 


BARBADOS 


BRAZIL 
CHILE 
COSTA  RICA 


DINMARK 


EGYPT 
GERMANY 


GHANA 


HONG  KONG 


IIIJNGARV 


INDIA 


IRCl.ANI) 


ISRAEL 


TAIY 


JAPAN 


KORIA 


MEXICO 


UANDS 


NEW  ZEALAND 


IN  IS  2  ()()() 


PHILIPPINES 


RUSSIA 


SINGAPORE 


SOUTH  A!  RICA 


SPAIN 


SVVIOIN 


TAIWAN 


URKIY 


UNITED  KINGDOM 


\'ll  I  NAM 


PROGRAM:    DEADUNF 


LANGUAGF  PRE-RFO? 


^  car  I•n»^ranls:  \la>  l.s.  2001 

I  all  QiJcciislaiKJ  Marine  Sciciuc  |» 


Year  Program;  February  9,  2001 


Tail  v!v  \car  I'rourams:  lcl)[u.n\  2.  2( 


Spring  Semester  &  Year;  May  1 1, 2001 


I  all  and  \  car  IVouranis: 


Spring  Semester  &  Year;  May  1 1, 2001 


Summer.  I  all  t^  \  car 


am:  Jaiuu 


ii:ar\   1  2.  2 


Biology  Programs  (Fall  and  Spring):  October  16,  2000 
San  Jos^  Semester  and  Year  Programs:  May  1 1. 2001 


Summer,  lall  »vi  ^  car:  .l,imiat\  ^(^   ^ 


Year  Program;  February  2,  2001 


I  all  ami  ^  ear  I'toLirams 


Year  Programs:    February  2,  200 1 
-Sgring  Programs  -  Bayrenth  and  Gdttingen:  October  27, 2000 


I  all  and  ^  car   I'mfir; 


mis:  I  j'l'  i;a'  \    1  (- 


Fail  and  Year  Programs;  January  17, 2001 


lall  and  ^  ear  l*r(»uram>:  [  cniuaiA  ').  2< 


Fall  and  Year  Programs;  January  8. 2001 


1  ear  I'l OLiram:  \ 


Summer,  Fail,  Spring  &  Year  Programs;  March  2, 2001 


Aeadcmie  ^  car.  Summer,  and  I  all  frct^rams:  .1 
\  eniee  Sprinii  Semester  I'rooram:  Oclohci  If).  2 
Siena  Spring  Quarter  Prnurani:  No\  ember  3.  2(1 
Siena  Spring  Quarter  2002  l'r()<:ram:  Ma\  1  i .  2( 
lineeoni.  Pisa,  and  \  eniee  Areliiteeturc  : 


2.200 


ams:   \Ia\ 


Year  Programs;  November  16,  2000 
Tsuru  Language  and  Culture  Fall  Program:    November  16, 2000 
Tsuru  Language  and  Culture  Spring  Program:    May  17,  2001 
Tohoku  Engineering  Spring  Program:    October  19,  2000 
jyieiji  Gakuin  Spring  Program:  October  26.  2000 


Summer.  I  all  iSl  N  ear:  f  el>ru  ua  'K  2 


Morelia  Summer,  FRP  Fall:  January  12,  2001 
Monterrey  Fall,  Spring  &  Year:  January  12,  2001 
UNAM  Fall/Year;  January  1 2,  2001 
FRP  Spring.  Monterrey  Spring:  May  1 1, 2001 


I- all.  Spring  ^.  ^  car:  Jaiuiarv  20.  20( 
I  treelil  Spring  I'rutiram:    Ma\   IS.  2 


Year  Program;  May  21, 2001 


^  ear  Program:  Oeloher  \(\  2()00 


Year  Program;  May  14,  2001 


Prdi-rams:  I  cbiiiar\  ''.  ?' 


Fall  and  Year  Programs;  January  19, 2001 


N  ear  Pro'-ram:  Ma\    1  ^ 


Fall  and  Year  Programs:  January  12,  2001 

Spring  Programs— Carlos  111  and  C6rdoba  May  4, 2001 


Slimmer.  I  all  \  ^  cm:    j,:i!iia;A     '>    ^i 


Fall  and  Year  Programs:  February  12,  2001 


I  all  and  ^  car  ProLirams: 


Year  Programs:  November  2,  2000 
England  Summer  Program;  February  16 


2001 


^  eat   I'l  (I'll . 


iiiin:  I  ,'^' 


no 

yes 

yes 

no 

yes 

no 

yes 
no 

no 

no 

no 


yes 

yes 

yes 

no 

no 

yes 
no 
yes 
fes/no 


no 

no 

no 

yes 
/es 

fts 

no 
no 


mil  lit  wEisin  n  WWW:iS0P.I6U.EPI/EAP 


.-f»5r 


•.  i 


...* 


:'ii'.j;i''i'^')i( 


Daiiy  Bruin  News 


•; ,  s-  i-.'i-.  ■   /. 


V  ■t;::'  ■'.■ 


y 


SeptemlMf  25-28, 2000      % 


■■,-■:    t::-:- 


THE  UNIVERSITY  OF  CALIFORNIA 
EDUCATION  ABROAD  PROGRAM. 


-rv;  ..«%■:<'■?  ■.-..'.N 


exchange  program,  The  Education  Abroad  Program  (EAP). 

•  Graduate  on  time.  Units  and  grades  transfer  completely.  Maintain  UCLA  student  status 

•  Pay  regular  UC  reg.  &  ed.  fees  -  no  foreign  student  tuition! 

•  Scholarships  and  full  financial  aid  available 

•  Take  care  of  GE,  language  and  departmental  requirements  while  you  study  abroad 

•  Transfer  students  and  freshmen  can  apply 

.    Go  abroad  for  a  quarter,  summer,  semester,  a  year  (or  more!)  depending  on  destination 

•  No  language  requirements  for  most  programs 

Deadline  dates  depend  on  country  &  program  -  some  as  early  as  October  (see  next  page) 

Learn  more  from  the  EAP  website:    http://www.isop.ucla.edu/eap/ 

Come  talk  to  us  soon  and  pick  up  a  brochure  at  Hershey  Hall  1101,  1105  or  1333 

tel.  (310)  825-4995. 


CAN 

GOME  TO  AN  EDUCATION  ABROAD  PROGRAM  WORKSHOP  IN  OGTOBER. 

Eachjworighopteajiajff  hour  presentation  with  a  question  and  answer  session. 


For  students  interested  in  the  following  academic  areas,  departmental  counselors  will 
be  there  to  answer  questions  and  refreshments  will  be  served!: 


Life  Sci  &  Pre-Med: 
Economics: 
Poli  Sci/IR: 
Engineering: 

Environmental  Stds: 
So.  East  Asian  Stds: 


Thurs,  Oct  12,  Life  Sciences  2322,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 

Tues,  Oct  17,  Bunche  Hall  9383,  1:00-1:30  &  1:45-2:15  &  2:30-3:00 

Tues,  Oc!  10,  Bunche  4269,  1:00-1:30  &  1:45-2:15  &  2:30-3:00 

Wed,  Oct  11,  Boelter  Hall  6426,  11:00-11:30  &  11:30-noon 

Thurs,  Oct  12,  Boelter  Hall  6426,  1:00-1:30  &  1:30-2:00 

Tues,  Oct  10,  Bunche  Hall  1261,  11:30-noon  &  noon-12:30 

Wed,  Oct  4,  Bunche  Hall  11377,  3:00-3:30  &  3:30-4:00 


For  studMts  IntOTMted  In  the  following  gloiial  roglons/contlnonts: 

English  speaking  countries:  IMonday,  Oct  2,  Hershey  Haii  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 

Thurs,  Oct  12,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Tues,  Oct  24,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Men,  Oct  9,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  5:30-6:00  &  6:15-6:45 
Thurs,  Oct  19,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Thurs,  Oct  26,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Thurs,  Oct  5,  Hershey  Hall  1648|  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Tues,  Oct  17,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Mon,  Oct  30,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Tues,  Oct  3,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Mon,  Oct  16,  Hershey  flail  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Tues,  Oct  10,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 
Mon,  Oct  23,  Hershey  Hall  1648,  3:00-3:30  &  3:45-4:15 


Europe: 


Asia: 


Latin  America: 


Middle  East/Turkey/Affrica: 


44        September  25-28, 200& 


Daily  Bruin  News 


■.3 


t    ' 


BackW^ 
driv^-in  cafes 
were  the  thing 

to  do, 
V  Westwood 
Village  was  a 


'  ■  hustling, 
bustling  college 


town 


ByLinhTot 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

From  a  once-budding  college  town  to  one 
trying  to  revitalize  itself,  after  70  years 
Westwood  Village  continues  to  endure  growing 
pains. 

Few,  if  any,  merchants  or  residents  would 
describe  the  village  of  yesteryear  as  dismal.  On 
the  contrary,  many  were  proud  to  be  a  part  of 
such  a  dynamic  college  atmosphere. 

"The  Village  was  adorable,  so  nice  and  pret- 
ty. You  knew  everyone  by  name.  Students  just 
sauntered  around  at  night.  It  was  a  real  college 
town,  a  wonderful  place  to  live,"  said  former 
store  owner  Tom  Crumplar  to  UCLA 
Magazine  in  fall  1989. 

Though  the  village  still  hints  at  its  former 
glory  days,  it  is  no  longer  the  thriving  neighbor- 
hood it  once  was,  and  it  has^ost  some  of  its  stu- 
dent-oriented focus. 

A  complicated  web  of  expansion  in  popula- 
tion and  new  construction  projects,  traffic  con- 
gestion and  changing  clientele  visiting  the  vil- 
lage contributed  to  this  change.  But  change 
doesn't  have  to  be  bad,  and  many  continue  to 
marvel  at  Westwood's  history. 

In  1820,  a  Spanish  soldier  named  Don 
Maximo  Alanis  became  the  first  property 
owner  in  the  area.  Later,  the  Mexican  governor 


granted  him  4,438  acres  of  land  from 
Sepulveda  Boulevard  to  Beverly  Hills.  This 
area  came  to  be  called  San  Jose  de  Buenos 
Aires. 

After  the  land  changed  hands  several  times, 
the  Janss  brothers  bought  the  area  and  settled 
in  Wcs'twood  in  April  1929.  The  new  village  and 
university  celebrated  their  birthdays  in 
Westwood  the  same  year,  for  in  September, 
UCLA  moved  from  its  original  location  on 
Vermont  Avenue  to  its  present  location. 

With  hopes  of  harmonizing  the  university 
and  village  through  architecture,  the\  hired 
Allison  &  Allison,  the  same  firm  thjtt'^cagned 
Royce  and  KerckhofT  Halls,  to  dM^  their  new 
dome-shaped  office.  Then,  as  now,  the  dome 
was  decorated  with  blue  tiles  and  gold  leafmg. 

Today,  the  "Dome",  building  on  Westwood 
Boulevard  is  a  historical  landmark  occupied  by 
Eurochow  restaurant. 

In  fact,  many  of  the  buildings  in  the  village, 
though  housing  modem  movie  theaters  and 
restaurants,  are  protected  as  historic  buildings. 

Following  on  the  heels  of  the  university's 
move  to  the  village,  Campbell's  Book  Store 
relocated  to  Westwood,  becoming  the  first 
retail  business  in  Westwood. 

Brothers  Bob  and  Blanche  Campbell  situat- 
ed the  store  on  Le  Conte  Avenue,  the  street 
closest  to  the  university. 


"They  were  such  nice  people,  they  would  let 
students  sign  an  I.O.U.  for  textbooks  and  pay 
later,"  said  Steve  Sann,  UCLA  alumnus  and 
Westwood  historian. 

According  to  Sann,  not  just  the  Campbell 
brothers,  but  the  entire  village  was  meant  to 
cater  to  the  university  from.the  very  beginning. 
The  first  male  dormitory  was  located  in 
Westwood,  on  the  second  floor  of  the  Janss 
dome  building.  Meanwhile,  female  students 
were  housed  in  Holmby  Hall,  now  known  as 
the  Clock  Tower. 

Students  frequented  Tom  Crumplar's,  a 
restaurant  famous  for  its  malts.  Originally  on 
Westwood  Boulevar<l  south  of  the  village,  the 
restaurant  eventually  relocated  to  the  comer  of 
Weybum  and  Broxton  Avenues  where 
California  Pizza  Kitchen  now  stands  also  in  a 
historic  building. 

By  1931,  Hi-Ho  Drive-in  Cafe,  one  of  the 
world's  first'drive-in  restaurants,  came  to  the 
village  at  what  is  now  the  Oppenheimer  build- 
ing on  Wilshire  and  Westwood  Boulevards. 

Today,  students  still  like  drive-throughs,  and 
many  line  up  at  the  only  one  in  Westwood  -  In 
&  Out  on  Gayley. 

Also  in  1931,  the  Fox  Theater  opened  and 
immediately  launched  countless  movie  pre- 
mieres, this  summer  hosting  the  opening  of 
"Space  Cowboys"  and  "What  Lies  Beneath," 


among  others. 

Six  years  later,  The  Bruin  theater  opened 
across  the  street.  Both  movie  house?  are  now 
operated  by  Mann  Theaters  and  serve  commu* 
nity  residents  of  all  ages. 

Nearby  the  theater  stood  the  Village 
Delicatessen. 

"At  any  given  moment,  you  could  see  some 
movie  star  or  some  sports  person  eating  there," 
said  Shelley  Taylor,  a  long-tinK  Westwood  resi>; 
dent  who  recently  started  a  village  Web  site. 
"We  used  to  get  a  kick  out  of  calling  it  the  '  V- 
D.'" 

Schlotsky's  Deli  and  Jerry's  Famous  Deli 
are  now  located  near  the  theaters.  Celebrity 
spottings  frequently  occur  at  Jerry's,  where  stu- 
dents study  upstairs  late  into  the  night. 

Another  place  that  catered  to  students  was  a 
recreation  center  on  Broxton  Avenue,  featur- 
ing a  soda  fountain  joint,  pool  hall  and  a 
"Mom's  Bowling  Alley." 

"That's  where  the  tough  kids  hung  out  and 
that's  where  college  students  were,"  Taylor 
said. 

There  hasn't  been  a  bowling  alley  in 
Westwood  since  the  student  union,  which  had 
one,  was  recently  remodeled. 

As  UCLA  and  car  usage  grew,  parking  on 


Sec  MSnMY,  page  45 


■ADMINISTRATORS         ' 

'  From  page  35 

;•  .  .      ■■         .    A. 

•  appointees  sit  on  various  advisory  boards 

along  with  faculty  members  and  administra- 
tors. Thes<  boards  tackle  specific  issues  and 
forward  their  recommendations  to  administra- 
tors who  make  the  final  decision. 
For  example,  the  Student  Fee  Advisory 

<  Committee,  where  the  majority  of  seats  are 
filled  by  students,  plays  a  large  role  in  deter- 
mining how  student  fees  should  be  used. 
According  to  Bob  Naples,  assistant  vice 

*"  chancellor  of  student  and  campus  life,  there 
have  only  been  two  instances  in  the  past  20 
years  where  the  chancellor  did  not  go  along 

;  with  the  committee's  deci- 
sion. ' 

"Sometimes  our  final 
decision  is  not  what  stu- 
dents want  and  so  they 

-  feel  we  don't  listen  to 
them,"  Timmerman  said. 
In  spring  1998,  to  make 
sure  they  were  heard^ 
USAC  and  other  student 
groups  protested  outside 
top  administrators'  offices  — ._- — ^^ 
by  taking  over  Murphy 
Hall  in  response  to 
Proposition  209,  which  ended  affirmative 

.-  action  statewide. 

While  administrators  may  take  student 
protest  seriously,  they  don't  always  agree  this 
is  the  best  way  to  deal  with  frustrations. 

"If  their  only  tactic  for  getting  something 
done  is  to  protest,  then  it  becomes  ineffec- 
tive," said  Naples,  who  is  also  dean  of -stu- 
dents. 

Current  USAC  President  Elizabeth 
Houston  concurred,  saying  protests  should 
only  be  used  as  a  last  resort. 

"I  don't  think  it's  always  been  used  appro- 
priately in  the  past."  Houston  said.  "USAC 
has  not  always  explored  all  its  venues." 

But  some  students  believe  the  administra- 
tion won't  necessarily  set  policies  that  are  in 
the  best  interest  of  students  un)osj  they  are 
pressured  into  it 


OailirBnrinNmn 


September  <l^8, 2000       45 


"The  only  way  the  chancellor  or  the  admin- 


istration will  do  something  is  if  there's  pres- 
sure put  on  them,"  de  la  Rocha  said. 

In  the  past,  USAC  members  demanded 
immediate  responses  from  the  chancellor. 
During  a  town  hall  meeting  last  spring,  coun- 
cilmembers  asked  Carnesale  to  promise  he'd 
hire  someone  to  look  into  hate  crimes  and  to 
pressure  university  police  to  attend  sensitivity 
workshops. 

"I  would  never  approve  such  an  important 
request  the  first  time  I  was  asked,"  Carnesale 
said  at  the  time.  "One  thing  I  will  not  do  is 
make  promises  I  cannot  keep." 

Insunces  like  this,  de  la  Rocha  said,  illus- 
trate how  the  administration  isn't  in  totich 
with  student  concerns. 

"The  chancellor  is  the  leader  of  our  univer- 
sity," he  said.  "As  a  leader, 
■■"■'"■■~^"^~      he  should  be  able  to  come 
up  with  answers  on  the 
spot. 

"If  the  administration 
were  acting  immediately 
and  taking  student  con- 
cerns seriously,  there 
would  be  more  of  a 
healthy  relationship,  but 
as  it  is,  they  have  a  more 
—~—————  relaxed  attitude,"  he  con- 
tinued. "That's  what  caus- 
es tension." 

For  their  part,  administrators  said  they 
must  be  cognizant  of  rash  decisions  and  prefer 
instead  to  hear  input  from  different  sectors  of 
campus. 

"The  administration  has  different  roles 
than  the  students  do,  given  the  responsibility 
by  the  regents  to  make  decisions  on  the  opera- 
tion of  the  campus,  but  that  doesn't  mean  they 
make  those  decisions  in  isolation,"  Naples 
said. 

"There  needs  to  be  consultation  with  the 
students  and  faculty,"  he  continued. 

Despite  disagreements  between  students 
and  administrators  in  the  past,  Houston  said 
she  feels  the  administration  is  eager  to  forge 
friendlier  relationships  with  the  council. 

"It's  really  up  to  USAC  what  kind  of  rela- 
tionship it  will  have  this  year  with  our  adminis- 
tration," she  said. 


"There  needs  to  be 
consultation  with  the 
students  and  falculty." 

«;v   Bob  Naples 
Assistant  vice  chancellor 


SENATE  W:M-. 

From  page  34 

The  senate  is  made  up  of  22 
committees,  each  handling 
different  areas  such.;is  lyring 
ami  tenure  or  graduate'and 
undergraduate  education. 

Committee  members  serve 
for  three  years,  which  is  "quite 
a  commitment  for  a  faculty 
member,"  Vredftvoe  said. 
-^Currently,  the  senate's 
committees  are  all  nearly  full, 
and  desire  to  join  the  senate 


'  has  wavered.'  .•.'':: 

Professors  at  the  universi- 
ty, alongside  teaching  and 
research,  must  also  do  what's 
known  as  university  service,' 
in  which  they  participate  in 
the  senate  or  in  a  less  time- 
consurning  departmental  pro- 
gram. 

"There  are  easier  ways  to 
do  university  service  than 
being  on  a  committee  in  the 
faculty  senate,"  Vredevoe 
said. 

Though  the  senate  faces 
difficulties  in  its  operations 


and  recruitment,  thej^^ole  it 
has  served  for  neariy'80  years 
remains  vital  to  the  integrity 
of  UCLA. 

"Great  universities, 

UCLA  is  one  of  them,  have  a 
democratic,  egalitarian  cul- 
ture, so  essential  to  fostering 
individual  initiative,  creativity 
and  excellence  and  with  it, 
great  teaching  and  research." 
Hirschsaid.  V  ,  .  ; 

With  reports  from  Barbara 
Ortutay,  Daily  Bruin  Senior 
Staff. 


HISTORY 

From  page  44 

and  around  campus  became 
more  and  more  of  a  chal- 
lenge. 

In  the  place  of  parking  lot 
32  was  once  the  worid's  only 
year-round  ice  rink,  the 
Tropical  Garden.  With  its 
10,()()0  bleacher  seats,  it  soon 
became  the  home  rink  for 
UCLA's  hockey  team. 

Growing  up  side  by  side,  it 
was  not  surprising  that 
Westwood  Village  took  part 
in  the  university's  celebra- 
tions. Starting  in  1933  and 
lasting  for  some  time,  the  vil- 
lage hosted  UCLA's  home- 
coming parades. 

"The  whole  community 
got  involved,"  Taylor  said. 
"There  was  a'  whole  cama- 
raderie with  the  students  and 
family.  There  was  the  UCLA 
marching  band.  It  was  kiiid  of 
a  real  emotional  thing." 

But  the  warm  relationship 
between  merchants  and  resi- 
dents and  the  younger  genera- 
tion started  to  change  as  ten- 


sion built  between  ideals  for  a 
quiet  community  village  and 
for  an  edgy,  hip  crowd. 

Some  residents  say  things 
started  changing  when  the 
Mann  National  General 
Cinema,  known  today  as  the 
National  Theater,  showed 
"The  Exorcist"  in  1973.  For 
more  than  a  year,  the  movie  - 
which  features  a  young  giri 
being  possessed  by  the  devil  - 
was  so  controversial  that  no 
other  theater  showed  it. 

Then  a  series  of  violent 
incidents  erupted  among  the 
younger  crowd  that  flocked 
into  Westwood.  At  nights  and 
on  weekends,  pedestrians 
often  filled  the  streets,  and  at 
times  Broxton  Avenue  closed 
to  vehicle  traffic  at  night. 

The  village's  safe  and 
quaint  reputation  suffered  a 
blow  during  the  1984 
Olympics  when  a  reckless  dri- 
ver careened  down  Westwood 
Boulevard,  killing  one  person. 

Then  on  Jan.  30,  1988,  a 
visitor  to  the  village,  Karen 
Toshima,  was  killed  when  she 
got  caught  in  the  crossfire  of 
gang  members  on  Broxton 


Avenue. 

Westwood's  repatation 
quickly  changed  and  the 
crowds  dwindled.    -  ^t*.'  r*^:"-^ 


An  increased  awareness  of 
violence  in  movies  and  the  the 
rampant  teen  cruising  in  the 
late  '80s  and  early  '90s  made 
visitors  more  wary  of  the  vil- 
lage. Then,  new  shopping  cen- 
ters in  Santa  Monica, 
Century  City  and  elsewhere, 
lured  many  businesses  out  of 
the  village,  according  to  Sann. 

In  the  past  two  decades, 
the  village's  Business 
Improvement  District,  an 
organization  of  landowners 
and  merchants,  has  tried  to 
reverse  the  trend. 

With  storefronts  closing 
faster  than  new  stores  are 
coming  in  to  replace  them, 
revitalization  efforts  are 
ongoing. 

Officials  keep  a  positive 
outlook,  but  whether  the  BID 
will  succeed  in  its  mission 
remains  to  be  seen. 

"Westwood  was  a  college 
town  but  it  was  also  a  neigh- 
borhood village  and  it's  lost 
both  of  those,"  Taylor  said. 


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46       September  25-28, 2000 


DdMy  Bruin  Ncwi 


;i  .;>•■:■:• 


Qlectioiis 


?as*. 


Prop.  36  aims  to  change  drug  policy 


BALLOT:  Voters  to  decide 
if  Ireatment  program  will 
replace  prison  sentences 


■s,V'  ■' 


ByMidiaelWeiner 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

A  measure  on  the  November  bat 
lot  is  asicingCalifornians  to  approve 
a  significant  change  in  state  sub- 
stance abuse  policy,  by  mandating 
treatment  and  probation  rathfer 
than  incarceration  for  many  drug 
ofTenders. 

Proposition  36,  known  as  the 
Drug  Treatment  Diversion 
Program  Act,  would  require  that 
most  first-  and  second-time  ofTend- 
ers convicted  of  the  possession,  use 
or  transportation  of  illegal  sub- 
stances -  including  marijuana, 
cocaine,  heroin  and  methampheta- 
mines  -  be  put  in  treatment  pro- 
grams rather  than  prison.  The  initia- 
tive does  not  apply  to  those  convict- 


ed of  the  sale  or  manufacture  of 
drugs. 

"The  goal  is  to  break  the  cycle  of 
drug-relat€d  crime  through  the 
proven  method  of  providing  treat- 
ment instead  of  incarceration  for 
people  who  should  not  be  behind 
bars,"  said  Dan  Abrahamson,  the 
..measure's  co-author  and  the  direc- 
tor of  legal  affairs  at  the  Lindesmith 
Center-Drug  Policy  Foundation,  a 
leading  advocate  for  national  drug 
policy  reform. 

But  opponents  of  Proposition  36 
say  that  treatment  programs  can't 
work  unless  unless  drug  offenders 
are  held  accountable  by  the  criminal 
justice  system. 

"It  effectively  will  decriminalize 
hard-core  drugs,"  said  Jean  Mufioz, 
spokeswoman  for  Califomians 
United  Against  Drug  Abuse,  the 
anti-36  campaign.  "Il  will  actually 
undermine  treatrhent  programs  in 
California." 


BALLOT  MEASURES 

Besides  Propositfon  36,  seven  other  initiatives  hwe  qualified  for  the  November  ballot  in 
California.  Other  measures  may  be  added  later. 


o 


o 


Se«PIIOfOSITION,|»9e4< 


92 

Veteran's  Bond 
Act  of  2000 

Provtdt*  for  a  bond  issue  to 
provide  aid  to  California  vettrans. 

33 

Legislature 
Retirement 

Would  ctiange  retirement  benefits 
for  sute  legislators. 

3« 

Campaign  Contributions 
and  Expcnditurts 

Provides  for  very  moderate 
campaign  finance  reform. 

35 

Public  Works 
Projects 

Would  allow  state  to  award  public 
works  protects  to  private  companies. 

3? 

Fees,  Taxes 

vote  to  levy  few  on  businwies  that 

31 

School 
Vouchers 

Would  provide  state  p^mtMits  of  up 
to  HOOD  pw^  studMt  for  private 
orrrifgioussctioob. 

39 

School 
Facilities 

Authorizes  bonds  for  school 
improvcfnent  if  spproytd  by  SS%, 
Jltf»Ih*n2/3.of«iector«e. 

WaaOMMitfMHFMiMn 


Third  party  candidates  vie  for  spot  in  debates 


POLmcS:  Commission  is 
too  exclusive,  some  say; 
organizers  defend  criteria 


By  David  Dnicfccr 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Ending  the  two  major  political  par- 
ties' debate  over  the  presidential 
debates,  GOP  nominee  George  W. 
Bush  and  his  Democratic  rival  Al 
Gore  agreed  to  three  duels,  beginning 
Oct.  3  in  Boston. 

The  debate  continues,  though,  for 
third  parties  making  a  run  at  the 
White  House  but  who  have  yet  to  reg- 
ister the  15  percent  polling  support 
necessary  for  an  invitation  to  the 
Commission  On  Presidential 
Debates'  sponsored  faceoffs. 
^  "There  are  a  variety  of  things  that 
make  it  difficult  for  third  parties  to 
break  into  the  system,"  said  School  of 
Public  Policy  and  Social  Research 
Professor  Mark  Peterson,  who  fol- 
lows the  presidency  and  political  inter- 
est groups. 

"The  financing  mechanisms  that 
fuel  political  parties  favor  those  that 
have  been  in  power  in  the  past." 

In  an  effort  to  overcome  the  strong- 
hold enjoyed  by  the  two-party  system 


The  Ajsociited  Pr«s 

Green  Party  presidential 
candidate  Ralph  Nader  speaks 
In  Las  Vegas  on  Sept.  15. 

since  the  election  of  1 800,  third  parties 
are  anxious  to  get  their  candidates  the 
coverage  afforded  by  the  debates 

"Let's  not  forget  the  Jesse  Ventura 
factor,"  said  Nader  2000  California 
spokesman  Ross  Mirkarimi,  referring 
to  Independent  Gov.  Jesse  Ventura's 
rise  in  the  polls  following  his  participa- 
tion in  the  1998  Minnesota  gubernato- 
rial debates. 

"He  began  the  debates  with  8  per- 
cent support  and  shot  up  immediately 


afterward,"  he  said. 

Even  people  active  in  the  political 
mainstream  concede  that  the  process 
isn't  entirely  fair. 

"I  believe  the  debates  should  be 
open  for  all  sides  so  that  people  can 
hear  different  ideas,"  Bruin 
Democrats  President  Melanie  Ho 
said.  "Unfortunately,  our  media  focus 
on  the  two  major  parties;  in  many 
cases  just  because  it's  easier." 

But  the  COPD  sees  their  purpose 
differently. 

"The  idea  is  to  provide  the  public 
with  an  opportunity  to  see  the  leading 
candidates  and  shed  light  on  who  they 
really  are,"  said  COPD  media  director 
John  Scardino.  "It's  impossible  to  do 
that  on  a  stage  with  multiple  candi- 
dates who  have  no  real  chance  of  win- 
ning in  November. 

"We  hold  the  debates  far  enough 
along  in  the  campaign  that  if  a  party 
doesn't  have  a  certain  amount  of  sup- 
port by  then  it's  indicative  of  whether 
or  not  they  should  be  included,"  he 
said. 

In  die  aftermath  of  Reform  Party 
hopeful  Ross  Perot's  19  percent  show- 
ing in  the  1992  presidential  race,  and 
then-Reform  candidate  Ventura's  vic- 
tory in  1998,  smaller  parties  see  the 
debates  as  their  ticket  to  mdilBtccarti 
support.  /^ 


Tb*  AtyxMcd  Pins 

Libertarian  party  candidate 
Harry  Brown*  discusses  issues. 

The  Greens  and  the  Libertarians, 
two  parties  that  consistently  hover 
around  I  to  5  percent  in  the  polls, 
specifically  credit  participation  in  the 
debates  for  creating  Reform's  success. 

They  insist  that  in  spite  of  their  low 
poll  results,  their  existing  base  of  sup- 
port warrants  inclusion  in  next 
months  debates. 

"The  harrier  for  participation 
should  be.  'Do  you  have  a  mathemati- 
caJ  possibility  to  get  elected?'"  said 


S«cMRTKS^pa9e49 


Ads  for,  against  Prop.  39  criticized  as  misleading 


PLATFORMS:  Proponents 
hope  to  lower  vote  needed 
to  approve  school  bonds 


By  Jennifer  Kerr 
The  Associated  Press 

SACRAMENTO  -  Backers  of  a 
school  bond  initiative  on  the 
November  ballot  are  starting  their 
television  ad  campaign  with  a  spot 
featuring  a  Poway  third-grade 
teacher,  one  of  the  state's  five 
Teachers  of  the  Year. 

The  two  sides  on  Proposition  39 
have  battled  for  more  than  a  month 
in  radio  ads  attempting  to  simplify 
their  messages  about  the  complicat- 
ed initiative,  which  involves  school 
construction  needs  and  property  tax 
increases. 

Proposition  39  would  lower  the 


vote  needed  to  approve  local  school 
bond  measures  from  the  current  two- 
thirds  to  55  percent.  The  bonds  pay 
fpr  new  and  remodeled  schools  and 
community  colleges  and  are  repaid 
with  property  tax  increases  over  sev- 
eral decades. 

The  initiative,  sponsored  by  a 
coalition  of  education  and  business 
groups,  is  the  second  ballot  attempt 
this  year  to  reduce  the  vote  require- 
ment. The  first,  which  would  have 
reduced  it  from  the  current  two- 
thirds  to  a  simple  majority,  narrowly 
failed  in  March. 

Its  lead  opponent  is  the  Howard 
Jarvis  Taxpayers  Association. 

Proposition  39  is  one  of  two 
major  school-related  initiatives  on 
the  Nov.  7  ballot,  but  is  not  getting 
the  attention  of  Proposition  38, 
which  would  give  parenu  a  S4,000 
school  voucher  to  send  their  child  to 
a  private  school. 


Both  sides  of  the  voucher  initia- 
tive ran  television  ads  for  several 
weeks  in  July  and  August.  That  cam- 
paign is  expected  to  top  S40  million 
in  spending. 

Proposition  38  is  sponsored  by 
Silicon  Valley  venture  capitalist 
Timothy  Draper. 

Many  of  its  opponents  -  including 
Gov.  Gray  Davis  and  virtually  every 
school  group  in  the  state  -  support 
Proposition  39.  They  have  the  tricky 
task  of  convincing  voters  to  vote  no 
on  vouchers  and  then  vote  yes  for  the 
school  bond  measures  just  beneath  it 
on  the  ballot. 

Proposition  39  backers  added 
some  limits  to  try  to  make  the  bond 
proposal  more  palauble  to  voters. 

Those  include  a  cap  on  property 
tax  increases  in  one  election  of  $25  to 
S60  per  S  100.000  of  assessed  proper- 
ty value  and  a  requirement  to  hold 
bond  voles  only  during  regular  local 


or  state  elections. 

Some  of  those  limits  are  not  actu- 
ally in  Proposition  39.  which  is  a  con- 
stitutional amendment,  but  are  in  a 
companion  bill  signed  this  year  by 
Davis. 

Proposition  39  opponents  say 
those  limits  could  be  changed  by 
future  legislators  without  a  vote  of 
the  people  and  are  not  really  part  of 
the  initiative. 

Those  limits  are  mentioned  in  the 
new  TV  ad  featuring  Karen 
O'Connor,  a  third-grade  teacher  at 
Sunset  Hills  ElemenUry  School  in 
Poway  and  one  of  five  state  Teachers 
of  the  Year  for  2000. 

She  states  in  the  ad  that  "39  caps 
the  amount  that  property  taxes  can 
be  raised  by  a  school  bond." 

A  spokeswoman  for  the  n&on-39 
campaign  said  Wednesday  the  new 


See 


Sf 


ADAM  BfCWN/Dally  Bruin 


...    s.,     1.. 


r:T--r':--="^:'--'  *" 


Polling  season 
ready  to  begin 
...  plus  or  minus 
margin  of  error 

SURVEYS:  Questions  of 
accuracy,  influence  are 
crucial  during  elections 


ByMidiadFakene 

Daily  Bnjin  Senior  Staff 

The  gap  between  the  winner  and 
loser  of  the  2000  presidential  election 
is  likely  to  be  one  very  small  number  - 
a  stark  contrast  to  the  thousands  of 
polling  numbers  that  inundate  the  pub- 
lic via  the  news  media  during  election 
season. 

In  the  weeks  before  the  November 
election,  a  barrage  of  polls  will  bom- 
bard the  American  people,  and  while 
many  polls  claim  to  have  their  finger 
on  the  pulse  of  the  electorate,  few  are 
actually  as  accurate  as  they  say. 

According  to  a  statement  co- 
authored  by  The  Gallup 
Organization's  current  Editor  in 
Chief.  Frank  Newport,  most 
Americans  think  a  poll  of  1,500  to 
2,000  respondents  "cannot  represent 
the  views  of  all  Americans." 

But  Gallup  and  a  host  of  other  his* 
torically  reputable  polling  organiza- 
tions say  well-conducted,  scientific 
polls  are  accurate  predictors  of  public 
opinion.  Even  so,  a  great  deal  of  cru- 
cial information  is  often  left  out  when 
news  organizations  report  poll  data, 
and  this  leaves  some  wondering 
whether  the  media  should  be  doing  a 
better  job  of  explaining  exactly  what  all 
these  numbers  mean. 

"There  is  too  much  preoccupation 
with  who's  ahead  and  who's  behind 
and  not  enough  reporting  of  trends  in 
the  electorate,"  said  Michael  Traugott, 
the  former  president  of  the  American 
Association  for  Public  Opinion 
Research  and  a  professor  at  the 
University  of  Michigan.  Ann  Arbor. 

A      poll's      comprehensiveness 
depends  in  part  on  the  detail  and  scope 
of  the  questions  asked  as  well  as  the 
amount  of  background  information 
collected  about  the  respondents.  The 
better  a  poll  is.  the  better  the  chance 
that  the  kinds  of  trends  which  Traugott 
is  referring  to  will  be  brought  to  light. 
One  recent  example  is  the  apparent 
gender  gap  between  Al  Gore  and 
George  W.  Bush  supporters,  which 
was  reported  in  a  recent  CNN/USA 
Today/Gallup  poll.  The  poll,  which 
showed  a  higher  percentage  of  women 
favoring  Gore  and  a  higher  percent- 
age of  men  supporting  Bush,  did 
receive  media  coverage,  but  other 
^demographic  trends  may  go  unreport- 
ed. 

Traugott  said  it  is  the  so-called 
•^seudo  polls"  that  give  polling  a  bad 
name  and  he  advised  voters  to  beware 
of  them.  These  pooriy  conducted  polls 
include  self-selected  polls  as  well  as 
"push"polls. 

The  Internet  is  a  perfect  breeding 
ground  for  self-selected  polls"  where 
with  a  few  clicks  of  a  mouse  people  can 
submit  their  opinion  on  a  particular 
poll  question  posted  on  a  Web  site  and 
the  site  will  update  their  percentages 
based  on  the  respondents  In  such  a 
poll  there  is  no  way  to  control  for  bias 
in  the  respondents,  and  it  is  possible 
that  the  same  person  can  submit  a  poll 
response  hundreds  of  times. 

"Push"  polls,  conducted  over  the 
phone,  arc  not  polls  at  all,  but  instead  a 
method  of  trying  to  sway  voters  to  sup- 
port a  particular  candidate  or  tisue 
using  the  guise  of  poHing.  In  February 


SeeSransno^pageSO 


IMySnrinNcws 


FBI  questions  Lee's  duplication  of  tapes 

LABORATORY:  Senate  to 
investigate  government's 
handling  of  prosecution 


S«p(Mnb(!r2S-28,20bO       47 


By  John  Solomon 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Preparing  for 
a  tell-all  interview  with  Wen  Ho  Lee, 
the  FBI  has  learned  from  the  Los 
Alamos  scientist  that  he  made  a  total 
of  20  tapes  with  nuclear  secrets,  half 
of  which  were  duplicates,  government 
officials  said  Sept  19. 

Only  three  have  been  recovered, 
but  Lee's  lawyer  said  his  client  will  tell 
the  FBI  the  remaining  tapes  were 
destroyed. 

The  FBI  told  congressional  investi- 
gators this  week  that  one  of  the  key 
questions  for  Lee  to  answer  is  why  he 
made  as  many  as  10  duplicate  tapes  of 
information  he  downloaded  from 
secure  Energy  Department  comput- 
ers, the  officials  said,  speaking  on 
condition  of  anonymity. 

The  government  learned  about  the 
duplicates  from  Lee's  attorneys  as 
they  prepared  for  a  plea  bargain  earii- 
er  this  month,  the  officials  said.  The 
revelation  caused  a  brief  delay  in  a 


planned  plea  bargain,  with  the  scien- 
tist, the  officials  said. 

FBI  agents  are  slated  to  begin 
interviewing  Lee  on  Sept.  26  under  a 
court-approved  deal  in  which  the  gov- 
ernment dropped  58  felony  charges 
against  the  scientist  and  released  him 
from  solitary  confinement  in  a  case 
that  has  raised  questions  of  excessive 
prosecution. 

One  of  Lee's  lawyers,  Brian  Sun, 
said  Sept.  19  his  client  will  tell  the  FBI 
he  destroyed  all  missing  tapes  with 
nuclear  secrets  but  otherwise  could 
not  comment  on  any  issues  related  to 
the  interview. 

"Our  position  has  been  and  will 
continue  to  be  he  destroyed  all  tapes 
that  had  classified  information  on 
them,  and  we  will  honor  our  commit- 
ment to  the  bureau  to  describe  the  cir- 
cumstances surrounding  the  tapes," 
Sun  said. 

"All  of  this  is  sup|K)sed  to  be  han- 
dled confidentially  in  the  context  that 
all  of  this  is  under  seal  by  order  of  the 
court,"  Sun  said. 

When  Lee  was  charged  in 
December  1999.  the  government 
alleged  he  had  made  only  10  tapes  of 
nuclear  secrets,  seven  which  were 
missing.  An  FBI  agent  later  told  the 
court  investigators  believed  he  had 


made  as  many  as  15  tapes. 

Now  the  FBI  has  told  Congress  it 
believes  Lee  made  4  total  of  1 7  tapes 
that  are  unaccounted  for  -  in  addition 
to  three  originals  that  were  recovered 
from  his  office.  The  17  include  seven 
originals  and  10  copies,  the  officials 
said. 

This  week,  while  agents  interview 
Lee,  senators  will  begin  exploring  the 
government's  conduct  in  the  Lee 
case,  including  whether  he  was  sin- 
gled out  because  he  was  Asian 
American,  why  he  was  imprisoned 
without  bail  when  the  government 
had  no  evidence  he  engaged  in  espi- 
onage and  why  so  many  charges  were 
brought,  only  to  be  dropped. 

That  Senate  hearing  is  slated  to 
begin  Sept.  26. 

Attorney  General  Janet  Reno  has 
defended  the  Justice  Department's 
handling  of  the  case,  even  as  her  boss. 
President  Clinton,  has  questioned  it. 

Reno  has  said  Lee's  lengthy  deten- 
tion without  bail  was  necessary  to 
protect  the  government  until  he 
admitted  what  he  did  with  the  tapes. 

"With  all  my  heart  and  soul,"  Reno 
said,  she  wished  "Dr.  Lee  had  come 
forward,  said,  'This  is  what  I  did  with 

See  Ftl,  page  65 


The  Associated  Press 

Wen  Ho  Lee  walks  out  of  his  garage  at  his  home.  Lee's  release  under  a 
plea  deal  came  nine  months  after  he  was  put  in  solitary  confinement. 


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PROPOSmON 

From  page  46 

The  fight  over  Proposition  36  is 
shaping  up  to  be  one  of  the  most 
bruising  battles  of  the  election  sea- 
son, with  both  sides  investing  ritil- 
lions  of  dollars  and  enlisting  the  sup- 
port of  big-name  celebrities  and 
politicos. 

The  campaign  in  favor  of  the  ini- 
tiative is  being  funded  by  several 
wealthy  business  leaders,  including 
billionaire  philanthropist  George 
Soros,  who  also  bankrolled  the  suc- 
cessful effort  in  favor  of  Proposition 
215,  the  1996  California  initiative 
that  legalized  marijuana  for  medical 
use.  That  measure  has  since  been 
largely  delegitimized  by  the  U.S. 
Supreme  Court. 

Spearheaded  by  the  powerful  state 
prison  guards  union,  the  campaign 
against  Proposition  36  also  has  high- 
profile  support  from  actor  Martin 
Sheen  and  President  Clinton's  drug 
czar,  Barry  McCaffrey. 

According  to  a  Field  Poll  released 
Aug.  30,  most  Califomians  have  not 
yet  heard  of  Proposition  36,  though 
55  percent  of  the  respondents  said 
they  were  inclined  to  support  the  pro- 
visions in  the  measure.  Twenty-seven 
percent  were  opposed,  with  18  per- 
cent undecided. 

Specifically,  the  initiative  would 
require  court-supervised  treatment 
and  probation  for  up  to  a  year,  as  well 
as  up  to  six  months  in  follow-up  care, 
for  those  convicted  of  nonviolent 
drug  possession  offenses.  Most 
felons  with  a  history  of  violent  crime, 
as  well  as  those  who  fail  treatment 
programs  two  or  more  times,  would 
not  be  eligible. 

According  to  a  report  by  the  inde- 
pendent Legislative  Analyst's  Office, 
the  initiative  would  result  in  SI 00  to 
SI 50  million  in  annual  savings  to  the 
state  due  to  the  lower  cost  of  prison 
operations.  In  addition,  the  state 
would  be  able  to  delay  the  construc- 
tion of  more  prisons,  thus  saving 
another  S450  to  $550  million. 

Supporters  of  Proposition  36 
point  to  a  1994  study  by  the  RAND 
Corporation  regarding  the  supply 
and  demand  of  cocaine.  The  report 
found  that  for  every  dollar  spent  on 
drug  treatment  progralhs,  there  were 
$7.48  in  resulting  "social  benefits." 

Proponents  also  compare 
Proposition  36  to  a  similar  initiative 
Arizona  voters  passed  in  1996.  A 
study  by  the  state's  Supreme  Court 
found  that  in  the  measure's  first  full 
year  of  implementation,  61  percent 
of  the  offenders  who  completed  treat- 
ment programs  did  so  successfully. 

"The  state  doesn't  have  to  ware- 
house people  in  jails  and  prisons," 
Abrahamson  said.  "They  are  produc- 
tive members  of  the  community." 

But  Mufloz  disagreed,  saying  that 
the  Arizona  initiative  has  been  far 
from  successful.  "If  you  talk  to  peo- 
ple in  Arizona,  they  will  tell  you  that 
it  is  not  working,"  she  said. 

One  of  the  most  prominent  oppo- 
nents  of  Proposition  36  is  U.S.  Drug 
Czar  McCaffrey,  whose  name  tends 
to  evoke  either  admiration  or  dis- 
dain, depending  on  who  you  talk  to. 
According  to  Abrahamson. 
McCaffrey  has  expressed  support  for 
similar  proposals  in  the  past,  but 
won't  back  the  California  measure 
for  political  reasons. 

"General  McCaffrey  is  a  consum- 
mate politician,"  Abrahamson  said. 
"To  cover  his  fiank  politically,  he 
.  thinks  he  has  to  oppose  it." 

But  McCaffrey's  spokesman,  Bob 
Weiner,  said  while  the  drug  czar  sup- 
ports the  expansion  of  drug  treat- 
ment programs,  he  sees  Proposition 
36  as  dangerous. 

"It's  got  worthy  objectives  but  our 
concern  is  that  it  might  throw  the 
baby  out  with  the  bath  water," 
Weiner  said.  "Without  accounUbili- 
ty,  no  treatment  program  can  be 
effective." 

Californians  will  vote  on 
Proposition  36,  along  with  at  least 
seven  other  ballots  measures,  Nov.  7. 


A 


Daily  Bruin  News 


-    September  25  28,2000       49 


PAiniES 

From  page  46 

Jim  Babka,  press  secretary  for 
Libertarian  candidate  Harry  Browne. 

"We  spent  $750  thousand  to  put 
ourselves  on  the  ballot  in  all  50  states, 
and  have  passed  that  test,"  he  added. 

Ho  said  although  the  15  percent 
polling  support  requirement  is  some- 
what random,  some  reasonable  stan- 
dard for  inclusion  should  exist. 

"The  number  the  COPD  has  cho- 
;.sen  looks  kind  of  arbitrary,"  she  said. 
"But  if  they  didn't  require  some  level 
of  support,  you  could  conceivably  end 
up  with  50  parties  with  the  ri^t  to 
debate." 


"Ifwe  hosted  these 
debates  several  months 

earlier,  third  party 

candidates  might  have 

valid  concerns." 

John  Scardino 

COPD  media  director 


Scardino,  who  said  the  15  percent 
level  is  a  holdover  from  the  League  of 
Women  Voters  sponsored  debates 
occurring  from  the  1976  through  the 
1988  campaigns,  doesn't  see  a  prob- 
lem. 

"If  we  hosted  these  debates  several 
months  earlier,  third  party  candidates 
might  have  valid  concerns,"  he  said. 
"But  the  reason  we  hold  the  debates 
this  late  in  the  campaign  is  so  the  mar- 
ketplace of  ideas  can  determine  their 
viability." 

Scardino  added  that  the  Ventura 
election,  lauded  by  third  parties  as  an 
example  of  what's  possible,  is  not  an 
accurate  one. 


"It's  deliberately 

designed  to  dissuade 

the  existence  of  third 

parties  altogether." 

Ross  Mirkarimi 

Nader  2000  spokesman 


"Hypothetically,  it's  not  a  valid 
comparison,  because  in  Minnesota, 
voters  can  register  on  election  day,  and 
that  makes  a  big  difference  in  the  elec- 
toral process,"  he  said. 

The  national  elections  require  30 
day  advance  registration. 

But  Mirkarimi,  more  than  just  dis- 
agrees with  the  policy  of  the  GOP  and 
Democrati&mn  noni)rofit  COPD. 

"It's  deliberately  designed  to  dis- 
suade the  existence  of  third  parties 
altogetlier,"  he  said. 

"Th^  tricky  and  insidious  aspect  of 
this  wh[iie  thing  is  that  this  com  mission 
is  non-anding  and  not  accountable  to 
anybody,  so  they  can  do  as  they 
please,"  Mirkarimi  added. 

Babka  agreed,  saying  the  debates 
are  essential  for  any  candidate  who 
wants  national  media  coverage. 

There's  no  irtdependent  or  third 
party  representation  on  their  commit- 
tee," he  said.  "The  message  they're 
sending  is-4hat  these  parties  are  irrele- 
vant." 

In  spite  of  third  parties'  obscurity, 
and  though  they  say  Republicans  and 
Democrats  havt  become  an  ideologi- 
cally similar  entity,  Peterson  said  their 
efforts  are  not  wasted. 

"In  every  election,  there  are  com- 
plaints by  other  parties  that  the  two 
major  parties  control  the  system,"  he 
said.  "But  anytime  aif  outside  party 
poses  a  threat,  their  ideas  are  incorpo- 
rated into  one  of  the  platforms  of  the 
two. 

"So  even  though  they  don't  succeed 
in  a  substantive  way,  they  can  succeed 
ideologically."  Peterson  added. 


Dr.  PatricR  Doyle,  O.D. 

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STATISnCS 

From  page  46 


■'•» '.'  ■■%',  *•>>'  '«>." 


the  AAPOR  called  for  a  nationwide 
elimination  of  the  use  of  push  polls, 
but  Traugott  said  many  political  cam- 
paigns still  use  the  push  poll  tadic. 

In  addition  to  pseudo-polls,  some 
polling  critics  argue  that  more  polls 
may  be  contributing  to  the  nationwide 
problem  of  low  voter  turnout.  If  a  pre- 
election poll  shows  one  candidate 
ahead  of  another,  some  segments  of 
the  public  may  believe  the  election  is 
already  decided  and  there  is  no  need  to 
vote. 


"Ifthe  polls  show  that 
the  race  is  too  clos^o 
.  call,  it  may  stimulate 
voter  tumout." 

Michael  Traugott 

Professor 


Though  Traugott  said  polling  could 
possibly  diminish  the  value  some  citi- 
zens attach  to  their  vote,  in  other 
instances  polls  may  actually  help 
increase  the  number  of  people  that 
turn  out  on  election  day. 

"If  the  polls  show  that  the  race  is 
too  close  to  call,  it  may  stimulate  voter 
turnout,"  he  said. 

In  a  publication  issued  by  the 
National  Council  on  Public  Polls, 
Sheldon  R.  Gawiser  and  G.  Evans 
Wilt,  the  cofounders  of  the  Associated 
Press/NBC  News  Poll,  said  the  real 
challenge  for  both  the  journalists  who 
report  poll  data  and  the  public  who  lis- 
tens to  them  is  to  ask  the  right  ques- 
tions about  the  numbers. 

Poll  financing,  the  number  and 
method  of  selecting  interviewees, 
those  left  out  of  the  interview  or  out  of 
the  data  reportin|,  the  way  the  actual 
poll  or  interview  was  conducted,  the 
kinds  of  survey  questions  that  were 
asked,  their  wording,  and  the  order  in 
which  they  were  asked  are  all  valid 
areas  of  skepticism  when  interpreting 
poll  results  according  to  Gawiser  and 

Witt.  — : '-^ 

Of  the  scientific  polls  out  there 
Gallup  is  the  most  well-known,  but 
polls  conducted  by  major  daily  news- 
papers like  The  New  York  Times  and 
Washington  Post,  often  in  conjunction 
with  television  networks,  also  offer  an 
important  second  or  third  opinion  to 
Gallup's  numbers. 

Election  season  and  polling  season 
are  now  nearly  synonymous,  and  with 
new  poll  results  coming  out  every  day, 
the  public's  constant  task  is  to  find 
truth  in  the  numbers. 


csu 

From  page  40 

schools  will  guarantee  seats  to  all 
local  students  with  minimum  require- 
ments while  restricting  admissions 
for  those  from  outside  the  immediate 
area.  Students  hoping  to  attend 
crowded  campuses  will  be  steered 
toward  those  with  more  space. 

San  Diego  State  was  the  test  cam- 
pus this  year,  but  others  will  follow. 

Among  the  report's  other  findings: 

•  The  number  of  students  needing 
remedial  covirscs  dropped  in  the 
1998-99  school  year  for  the  first  time 
in  at  least  a  decade.  In  math,  48  per- 
cent of  students  needed  remedial 
help,  compared  to  54  percent  in  the 
1997-98  academic  year.  In  English, 
46  percent  needed  remedial  help, 
compared  to  47  percent  the  previous 
year. 

•  The  number  of  students  applying 
for  multiple-subject  teaching  creden- 
tials rose  31  percent  from  4.951  to 
6,493.  csu  is  taking  steps  to  increase 
the  number  of  teachers  it  produces  as 
the  sute  faces  a  shortfall  qf  qualified 
teachers. 


'■" '  -    ■ 


September  25-28,2000       51 


Southern  California  University  of  Health  Sciences,  (SCU),  internationally  recognized  as  the  leader 
in  scientifically-based  health  care  education  with  its  Los  Angeles  College  of  Chiropractic,  now 
plans  to  bring  the  same  innovative  curriculum  style  and  dedication  to  excellence  with  its  new  '  ;: 
College  of  Acupuncture  and  Oriental  Medicine  starting  January,  2001. 


Los  Angeles  College  of  Chiropractic 


•The  leader  in  scientifically-based  and 
evidence-based  approach  to  patient  care 

•  Has  the  finlx  chiropractic  college 
accredited  by  the  Western  Association 
of  Schools  and  Colleaes  (WASC) 

•  A  leader  in  sports  medicine 
programs  with  emphasis  in  ports  injuries, 
nutrition,  radiology,  pediati^s  and  pain 
management 

/  Sate-of-the-art  audio/visual 
and  computer-assisted  leaping  resources 

•  Is  proud  to  announce  thefiperiing  of  the 
College  of  Acupunitiire  and!  Oriental 
Medicine  starting  January,  2001 


College  of  Acupuncture  and 
Oriental  Medicine 


Curriculum  abilities  include: 

•  Effective  Cpinmunication 

•  Reason-Based  Use  of  Science 
nd  Evidence 

Patient-Centefed  Disease  Management 

•  Illness  Prevention  and  Wellness  Focus 

•  Diagnostic  Skills 

Programs  Offered: 

•  Acupuncture 

•  Traditional  Oriental  Medicine 
•Western  Sciences  and  Orthopedics 

•  Herbal  Studies 
•Ethics  and  Practice  Managffent 

•  Clinical  Training 


£2S£" 


SoutMiii  California  University 
of  Healdi  Sciences 


'"^ 


l/l/e  re  coming 
to  see  you  Oct  4! 

Dr.  Rosette  Martinez  of  SCU  will  meet 
with  UCLA  students  to  share 
information  and  answer  questions 
on  Wednesday,  Oct  4,  during  the 
Graduate  Professional  Fair  at 
Dickson  Plaza. 


L^  Angeles  College  ofOiirc^pnictic 
College  of  Acupurfctiin'  &  Qioital  Medicine 

562-902-3309 
www.lacc.edu 

Merit-based  scholarships  and  financial  aid  available 


Applications 
being  accepted 

ONLINE  NOW! 


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'     52     '  Septembef  25-28, 2000 


*..■*■  ■  .1  -  ■  •  i 


[My  Brum  News 


"   '^1 

(Counter-clockwise 

from  top  right) 

Sunset  dead-ends  at 

the  ocean  in  Pacific 

Palisades. 

The  world- famous 

Whisky  A  Go-Go  has 

% 

been  the  starting 

ground  for  many 

bands  since  its  open- 

ing in  1964. 

A  man  takes  a  break 

from  the  heat  on 

some  steps  in 

Silverlake. 

The  Metro  subway 

i 

,     ;       station  entrance  is 

» 

open  at  Sunset  and 

-* 

Vermont. 

The  bridge  crosses 

the  Los  Angeles  River 

i_  ' 

;     downtown,  near 

where  Sunset 

•«, 

Boulevard  turns  into 

,        Cesar  Chavez  Avenue. 

By  Timothy  Kudo 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Stretching  across  Los  Angeles  from  the  sparkling 
blue  of  the  Pacific  Ocean  to  the  not  so  sparkling  blue 
of  the  L.A.  River,  Sunset  Boulevard  encompasses 
just  such  extremes. 

It's  probably  best  known  for  the  glamour  of  the 
small  section  known  simply  as  "the  strip,"  but  for 
those  who  transcend  its  winding  roads,  a  less  shallow 
picture  emerges. ■    •' 

Downtown,  around  where  it  turns  into  Cesar 
Chavez  Avenue,  Sunset  sits  among  some  of  the 
poorest  areas  of  the  city. 

The  Rampart  division  patrols  its  streets,  families 
walk  down  its  sidewalk  to  Echo  Park,  and  at  times  as 
you  look  around,  the  only  sign  in  English  is  the  name 
ofthe  street  itself. 

Going  west  and  passing  through  the  clubs,  the 


Angelyne  billboards,  the  place  where  River  Phoenix 
died  on  the  sidewalk  so  many  years  ago,  you  get  to 
the  other  end  of  Lx)s  Angeles  -  Beverly  Hills. 

There  the  people  who  bussed  down  Sunset  from 
the  other  side  of  town  work  away  inside  the  greek  pil- 
lared mansions  or  out  in  yards  almost  as  large  as  the 
park  they  took  their  children  to  the  weekend  before. 

Drive  a  little  further  and  on  your  left  you'll  see 
UCLA,  where  on  any  given  night  of  the  week  the 
students  stop  their  studies,  zip  up  their  pleather 
pants,  spray  some  Isaye  Miyake  and  head  east  for 
the  night. 

And  then,  after  you've  driven  some  more,  down 
the  canyon,  past  Pacific  Palisades,  you'll  come  to  the 
Pacific  Coast  Highway  and  a  Gladstones. 

As  you  make  the  turn,  the  end  of  the  other  road 
approaches  unexpectedly  and  Sunset  Boulevard  is 
over,  as  nonchalantly  as  it  begins,  or  ends  depending 
on  how  you  look  at  it. 


Daily  BninNcwi 


Septmber  25-28, 2000       S3 


Wprld  organization  works  to  help  women 


UN:  Reproductive  health, 
violence  major  problems, 
but  progress  being  made 


BySuoLMNW 

The  Assodated  Press 

LONDON  -  Eighty  million 
unwanted  pregnancies  and  20  million 
unsafe  abortions.  Millions  of  beatings 
and  rapes.  Infanticides  and  so-called 
"•honor"  killings. 

This  is  what  the  world's  women  still 
endure  each  year,  despite  major 
changes  at  the  end  of  the  20th  centu- 
ry, according  to  a  U.N.  report  pub- 
lished Sept.  20. 


Girls  and  women  the 

world  over  are  still 

routinely  denied 

access  to  education 

and  health  care. 


The  report  by  the  U.N.  Population 
Fund  said  discrimination  and  vio- 
lence against  women  "remain  firmly 
rooted  in  cultures  around  the  world," 
stopping  many  from  reaching  their 
full  potential. 

"Passed  down  from  one  genera- 
tion to  the  next,  ideas  about  Veal  men' 
and  Vi  woman's  place'  are  instilled  at 
an  early  age  and  are  difficult  to 
diange,"  the  report  said. 

The  "Sute  of  World  Population 
Report  2000"  said  girls  and  women 
the  world  over  are  still  routinely 


denied  access  to  education  and  health 
care  -  including  control  over  their 
reproductive  activity  -  and  to  equal 
pay  and  legal  rights. 

The  report  points  out  that  govern- 
ments last  year  agreed  to  targets  that 
include  halving  the  1990  illiteracy  rate 
for  women  and  girls  by  200S,  meeting 
the  need  for  family  planning  by  201 S, 
reducing  youth  HIV  levels  by  one 
quarter  by  the  year  2010,  and  ensur- 
ing that  skilled  attendants  assist  90 
percent  of  all  births  by  2015. 

Providing  family  planning  is  a  par- 
ticularly significant  challenge,  said 
the  report,  compiled  from  sources 
that  include  U.N.  agencies,  the  World 
Health  Organization,  World  Bank, 
national  governments  and  surveys. 
About  one-third  of  all  pregnancies  - 
80  million  a  year  -  are  believed  to  be 
unwanted  or  mistinled. 

In  developing  countries,  only  53 
percent  of  all  births  are  attended  by 
professionals,  translating  into  "the 
neglect  of  52.4  million  women  annu- 
ally." Nearly  30  percent  of  women 
who  give  birth  in  developing  coun- 
tries -  some  38  million  a  year  - 
receive  no  care  after  the  birth. 

Each  year,  the  report  said,  women 
undergo  an  estimated  50  million  abor- 
tions, 20  million  of  which  are  unsafe, 
resulting  in  the  deaths  of  78,000 
women  and  the  suffering  of  millions 
more. 

The  report  added  that  at  least  one 
in  three  women  has  been  beaten, 
coerced  into  sex,  or  abused  in  some 
way.  One  in  four  is  abused  during 
pregnancy. 

At  least  60  million  girls,  mostly  in 
Asia,  are  listed  as  "missing,"  as  a 
result  of  infanticide,  neglect  or  other 
factors  and  "as  many  as  5,000  women 
and  girls  are  murdered  each  year  in 
so-called  'honor'  killings  by  members 


of  their  own  families." 

In  addition,  the  report  said,  some  2 
million  girls  aged  5-15  join  the  sex 
trade  each  year. 

Despite  this,  countries  have  paid 
only  $2.1  billion  ofthe  $5.7  billion  per 
year  that  they  agreed  is  needed  for 
reproductive  health  and  population 
programs,  the  report  said. 

But  there  has  been  some  progress, 
the  report  said. 

In  India,  male  health  workers  have 
motivated  other  men  to  take  an  inter- 
est in  women's  health  and  help  with 
housework.  In  Mali,  men's  involve- 
ment in  reproductive  health  has  led  to 
support  for  women's  employment.  In 
Nicaragua,  courses  on  gender  and 
power  have  reduced  violence  against 
women.  •'■■.-^ ;  .jtv 


In  developing 

countries,  only  53 

percent  of  all  births 

are  attended  by 

professionals. 


Mexico  and  Peru  have  passed  laws 
to  increase  access  to  reproductive 
health  services  and  the  Portuguese 
government  now  guarantees  access  to 
family  planning. 

Botswana,  China,  Colombia,  the 
United  Kingdom  and  Vietnam  have 
increased  penalties  for  various  sexual 
offenses  a'nd  Bolivia  no  longer 
requires  that  a  woman  be  found  "hon- 
est" to  be  considered  the  victim  of  a 
sexual  ofTcnsc.  Germany  has  crimi- 
nalized rape  by  a  husband  against  a 
wife. 


-  Where's  the  '^ 

UGMJouimlism 

Department? 

^'re  holding  it  J^ 


jN  • 


JUST  JQUmAUSM 

The  Daily  liruin  is  one  Mflhi^  b<\sl 
\)\)uvii  in  lh(!  nation  to  loarn 
jiturnHli.sm.  II  wa.s  (he  Irainin); 
(;i'()uiiil  loi  I'ulilzcr  Prize  wiiin(>r.s 
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Krank  SiNtlnilz.  iiroduccr  of  "The 
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olh(!r  RKMlia.  And  for  each  of 
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olhons  who  launchcMl  (-JtnttTs  wilh 
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lh<!  Daily  liruin.  Ileceni  Daily 
Bruin  .slAlTers  went  on  to  jobs  al 
|)la((w  liki^  I  he  l>os  Ani;(-i(»  Timivs. 
Ih(;  Philadelphia  ImjuinT,  Ihe  San 
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•V:-: 


54       Seftember  25  28,2000 


D«lyBniinNcwi 


li  «  * 


heading  south  for 


•  III 


VOTERS:  Candidates  spar 
over  electoral  votes;  both 
parties  strive  for  Florida 


ByKarinMiller 

The  Associated  Press      '  • 

NASHVILLE,  Tenn.  -  The  South 
is  rising  again  in  the  battle  for  presi- 
dential votes. 

Al  Gore  -  counting  oi)  big  electoral 
votes  from  California  and  New  York 
and  fighting  hard  in  the  Midwest  - 
originally  was  expected  to  cede  the 
South  to  Republican  George  W. 
Bush. 

But  as  Democrat  Gore's  poll  num- 
bers climb  nationally,  he's  focusing 
more  on  the  region  both  candidates 
call  home.  Bush  is  governor  of  Texas; 
Gore  represented  Tennessee  in 
Congress  for  16  years. 

Since  Labor  Day,  Gore  has 
stumped  in  Kentucky  and  Rorida, 
raised  money  in  Georgia  and  joined 
his  wife.  Tipper,  in  Louisiana. 
Daughter  Karenna  has  campaigned 
in  Tennessee,  and  Gore's  running 
mate,  Joseph  Lieberman,  have  spo- 
ken in  Arkansas  and  Texas. 

Bush  and  running  mate  Dick 
Cheney  aren't  worried  about  losing 
Texas,  so  in  the  South  they've  focused 
primarily  on  Florida,  where  Bush's 
brother  Jeb  is  governor  and  25  elec- 
toral votes  are  at  stake  -  the  fourth 
biggest  prize  in  the  nation. 

Bush's  father,  former  President 
Bush,  carried  Rorida  twice;  so  did 
Ronald  Reagan.  But  the  Clinton- 
Gore  ticket  look  the  state  in  1996,  and 
the  state  has  some  300,00d  more  reg- 
istered Democrats  than  Republicans. 

Gore  has  been  criticized  in  Rorida 
for  pandering  to  Cuban-Americans 
by  advocating  permanent  residency 
for  Elian  Gonzalez,  but  his  health 
care  plans  have  gained  him  support 
from  retirees.  His  Orthodox  Jewish 
running  mate  could  bring  out  more 
Jewish  old  folks. 

"Anybody  who  writes  Rorida  off 


Gene  modification  unsafe 
according  to  expert  panel 


RESEARCH:  Experiments 
on  animals  have  shown 
risk  of  lethal  side  effects 


The  Asioclattd  Press 

Democratic  presidential  candidate  Al  Gore  speaks  to  a  crowd  during 
a  campaign  stoprGore  is  currently  ahead  of  Bush  in  the  polls. 


in  one  column  or  the  other  is  making  a 
mistake,"  Gore  says.  Polls  in  the  state 
show  Bush  and  Gore  neck  and  neck. 
Analysts  say  Bush  can't  win  the 
presidency  without  Texas,  Florida 
and  a  good  chunk  of  other  Southern 
states  and  spokesman  Tucker  Eskew 
says  the  governor's  message  fits  the 
South  well  -  "It  will  be  one  of  the 


foundations  on  which  his  victory  was 
built." 

Bush's  "compassionate  conser- 
vatism" plays  well  in  the  South,  and 
some  Southerners  -  particularly  farm- 
ers' and  coal  miners  -  have  been  put 
off  by  Gore's  stands  on  the  environ- 

SccS0U1N,pa9e64 


Byi 

The  Assodated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Attempting 
to  change  genes  and  create  future 
generations  of  perfect,  healthy 
human  beings  is  dangerous,  irrespon- 
sible and  should  not  be  permitted 
now,  a  panel  of  experts  says  in  a 
report. 

A  committee  of  ,the  American 
Association  for  the  Advancement  of 
Science,  in  a  report  issued  Sept.  14, 
called  for  the  CTeation  of  a  public 
committee  to  monitor  and  oversee 
the  increasingly  sophisticated 
research  into  genetic  modification. 

Much  current  researdi  is  concen- 
trating on  modifying  the  genes  to  ^- 
rect  health  problems  in  living 
humans.  This  is  caUed  somatic  gene 
modification  and  involves  changing 
the  genes  in  existing  mature  cells. 

But,  the  committee  said,  there  is 
animal  research  in  which  there  is  an 
alteration  of  genes  that  alTect  future 
generations.  This  is  called  "inherita- 
ble genetic  modification,"  or  IGM. 

Applied  to  humans,  IGM  could, 
in  theory,  allow  the  production  of 
"designer  children,"  or  babies  bom 
with  genes  modified  to  make  them, . 
and  future  generations  taller,  more 
athletic,  more  beautiful  or  more  intel- 
ligent. IGM  could  also  be  used  to 
remove  from  a  family  lineage  the 
genes  that  cause  inherited  diseases. 

Dr.  Theodore  Friedmann  of 
University  of  San  Diego  said  IGM 
technology  now  "is  not  safe  for 
humans."   " 

He  said  experiments  have  pro- 
duced animals  bom  with  major  birth 
defects,  gross  physical  distortions 
and  fatal  abnormalities.  The  same 


thing,  he  said,  could  happen  in 
humans  if  the  current  IGM  technolo- 
gy was  applied. 

Friedmann  said  reports  of  gene 
manipulation  and  cloning  experi- 
ments tend  to  concentrate  on  the  suc- 
cesses. But  behind  each  triumph  can 
be  scores  of  animals  that  were  bom 
with  terrible,  and  usually  lethal  genet- 
ic problems.  This,  the  committee 
said,  shows  that  the  IGM  research  is 
not  now  safe  to  use  on  humans. 

"In  animal  experiments,  this  tech- 
nology has  been  highly  inefficient 
and  not  of  proven  safety,"  said 
Friedmarm.  "There  are  major  techni- 
cal barriers  to  using  this  technology 
in  humans." 

Sondra  Wheeler,  a  teacher  at  the 
Wesley  Theological  Seminary  in 
Washington,  said  pemiitting  IGM 
researdi  in  humans  also  could  be 
socially  disruptive.  She  said  there  is 
the  possibility  that  genetic  dianges 
that  would  produce  healthier  and 
improved  children  would  be  avail- 
able only  to  the  wealthy. 

"This  would  widen  the  gap 
between  the  'haves'  and  the  'have 
nots'  to  an  unprecedented  extent," 
the  report  said. 

"There  is  a  moral  problem  on  the 
distribution  of  these  benefits,"  said 
Wheeler.  "Who  gets  it?  Who 
decides?  What  criterion  do  they 
apply?" 

The  committee  report  said  a  pub- 
lic committee  should  be  organized  to 
monitor  and  oversee  any  IGM 
research  on  humans.  The  report 
called  for  a  public  discussion  to  deter- 
mine if  Americans  really  want  to 
approve  human  IGM  research. 

The  American  Association  for  the 
Advancement  of  Science  is  the 
world's  largest  federation  of  scien- 
tists, with  more  than  146,000  mem- 
bers. The  AAAS  publishes  Science, 
one  of  the  world's  major,  peer- 
reviewed  journals  of  general  scientif- 
ic researdi. 


.*i^ 


Daily  Bruin  Newt 


Memorial  offers 
remembrance  of 
past  unity,  new 
political  divides 

ELECTIONS:  Poll  boycotts 
could  result  in  victory  for 
Milosevic,  further  division 


By  Mcnita  Ohimgjoiu 

The  Assodated  Press 

KOSOVSKA         MITROVICA, 

Yugoslavia  —  A  dark  red  marble  mark- 
er overlooking  Kosovo's  tensest  com- 
munity stands  as  a  lonely  rehc  of  the 
years  when  Serbs  and  Albanians 
fought  a  common  enemy,  the  Nazis, 
instead  of  each  other. 

It's  a  reminder,  as  Yugoslavia  heads 
into  elections  Sept.  24  with  Slobodan 
Milosevic  fighting  to  stay  on  as  presi- 
dent, that  things  were  once  very  differ- 
ent -  that  in  its  communist  period 
Yugoslavia's  official  credo  was  ethnic 
tolerance,  and  many  of  its  citizens 
actually  believed  in  it. 

Nowadays  the  memorial  to  those 
who  "gave  their  lives  for  the  freedom 
of  the  future  generations"  is  overshad- 
owed by  other  realities  -  the  antennas 
and  radio  transmitters  set  up  by 
NATO  and  the  United  Nations 
charged  with  keeping  the  peace 
between  Serbs  and  Albanians. 

Bdow  the  monument  lies  Kosovska 
Mitrovica,  divided  into  hostile  halves. 


It  is  feared  a  boycott  will 
play  into  Milosevic's 

hands  by  allowing  him 
to  claim  the  votes  of 

those  who  stayed  away. 


September  2S-28, 2000       55 


The  presidential  and  parliamentary 
elections  include  Kosovo,  which  nomi- 
nally remains  part  of  the  Balkan  feder- 
ation despite  being  uiKler  NATO  and 
U.N.  control. 

But  the  Serbs  of  Kosovska 
Mitrovica  have  other  concerns  -  the 
approach  of  winter,  arul  the  fear  of 
their  Albanian  neighbors,  still  in  venge- 
ful mood  over  the  Serb  crackdown  that 
led  to  the  NATO  bombing  last  year. 

Most  of  the  200,000-strong  Serb 
minority  has  fled  Kosovo.  Those  who 
remain  are  pressed  into  NATO-pro- 
tected enclaves,  and  they  are  angry  - 
with  the  West  for  taking  the  Albanian 
.side,  but  also,  in  many  cases,  with 
Milosevic  for  causing  the  war. 

The  Yugoslav  president  rose  to 
power  mc|e  than  a  decade  ago  by 
promisingr  to  protect  all  of 
Yugoslavians  Serbs.  Instead,  after 
goading  SMbs  into  war  first  in  Croatia, 
then  Bosni4  and  finally  in  Kosovo,  he 
abandoned  them,  leaving  them  to  the 
mercies  of  rival  ethnic  groups  now  in 
control. 

Still,  Milosevic  seems  to  hope 
Kosovo  can  help  him  win  the  eleaion 
against  his  main  rival,  Vojislav 
Kostunica.  who  is  presently  ahead  in 
the  polls. 

Most  of  Kosovo's  2  million 
Albanians,  having  fought  to  break 
away  from  Serbia,  will  likely  boycott 
the  elections.  So  will  many  Serbs, 
according  to  some  moderate  leaders. 

Still,  it  is  feared  a  boycott  will  play 
into  Milosevic's  hands  by  allowing  him 
to  claim  the  votes  of  those  who  suyed 
away 

That  should  be  relatively  easy.  Th< 
United  Nations  and  NATO  have  sai< 
tttey  win  not  monitor  dte  voting,  am 
restrict  their  role  to  kemng  the  peace 
Thus,  like  elsewhere  m  Yugoslavia 
there  will  be  no  independent  verifica 
tioa  of  who  voted  for  WtR^ 


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GSA 

From  page  35 

the  graduate  student  government 
receives  allows  it  to  do  only  minima! 
activity. 

"This  has  led  to  considerable  prob- 
lems," said  GSA  President  Martin 
Griffin.  "Last  spring  we  failed  to  get 
10  percent  turnout  and  thus  our  refer- 
enda, one  on  the  admission  of  the 
American  Indian  Graduate  Student 
Association  as  a  special  interest 
group  to  Forum  and  the  creation  of  a 
Public  Policy  Council,  and  one  on  the 
increase  in  GSA  fee  failed,  even 
though  they  received  a  clear  majority 
of  votes." 

The  Forum  is  GSA's  executive 
committee.  It  is  comprised  of  dele- 
gates from  11  departmental  pro- 
grams and  schools  such  as  law  and 
biological  sciences,  and  five  special 
interest  groups.  Griflln  said  the 
School  of  Public  Policy  has  grown  in 
recent  years,  and  had  the  referendum 
been  approved,  the  Public  Policy 
Council  would  have  been  the  12th 
Council  on  Forum. 

University  policy  requires  a  mini- 
mum voter  turnout  in  student  govern- 
ment elections  for  referenda  to  go 
into  effect,  so  even  if  100  percent  of 
those  who  vote  approve  a  fee 
increase,  if  not  enough  students  show 
up  to  the  ballots,  their  vote  doesn't 
count. 

"It  is  a  vicious  cycle  because  in 
order  to  increase  services  to  graduate 
students,  GSA  needs  to  have  more 
money  to  do  it,"  said  GSA 
Administrative  Representative  Mike 
Cofin. 

Griflln  added  it  has  more  to  do 
with  little  involvement  from  the  grad- 
uate student  body  that  GSA  has  not 
been  at  the  level  of  activity  many  of  its 
members  would  like  it  to  be. 

"GSA  has  not  been  where  the 
action  is  over  the  last  few  years," 
Griflln  said.  "I  mean,  let's  be  honest. 
Someone  elected  oh  8  percent 
turnout  has  less  to  work  with  than 
someone  elected  on  a  Si  percent 
turnout." 

Whether  all  this  means  the  associa- 
tion is  less  effective  than  its  under- 
graduate counterpart,  however,  may 
not  be  a  clear-cut  issue. 

"It  depends  on  how  you  deflne 
effective,"  said  Joarfna  Brooks,  GSA 
president  in  1998-99  and  currently 
assistant  professor  of  English  at  the 
University  of  Texas  at  Austin. 

"GSA  has  more  power  as  a  stu- 
dent advocacy  organization  than  it 
does  as  a  programming  body.  It's  true 
that  every  advocacy  organization 
needs  a  budget,  but  vision,  commit- 
ment, and  volunteer  hours  are  more 
powerful  than  money,"  she  contin- 
ued. 

When  it  comes  to  being  able  to  get 
things  done,  money  does  matter. 
With  low  funds  and  little  student  par- 
ticipation, GSA  may  have  trouble 
working  on  issues  affecting  graduate 
students. 

"Having  the  fee  level  currently 
S5.S0  per  quarter  written  into  the 
GSA  constitution  is  a  legitimate  pro- 
tection for  the  membership,  but  it 
becomes  a  nightmare  when  the  elec- 
toral participation  is  so  low  that  we 
cannot  make  basic  reforms,"  Griflln 
said. 


Though  the  gracfuate  and  under- 
graduate student  governments -may 
see  eye  to  eye  on  some  issues,  such  as 
diversity  and  increased  enrollment, 
graduate  students  often  face  different 
challenges  than  undergraduates. 

Working  on  lowering  non-resident 
tuition,  for  example,  is  a  high  priority 
for  GSA  because  many  students 
come  from  other  states  for  graduate 
school. 

In  fall  1999, 44.4  percent  of  gradu- 
ate students  came  from  outside 
California,  compared  to  only  6.1  per- 
cent of  undergraduates,  according  to 
the  Ofllce  of  Academic  Planning  and 
Budget. 

Additionally,  unlike  the 
Undergraduate  Students  Association 
Council,  the  graduate  student  gov- 
ernment often  focuses  more  on 
departmental  issues. 

"Most  graduate  students  partici- 
pate in  and  benefit  from  GSA  at  the 
departmental  level,"  Brooks  said. 
"For  example,  GSA  annually  distrib- 
utes thousands  of  dollars  to  depart- 
mental student  organizations  for  par- 
ties, conferences  and  projects." 

This,  she  added,  may  dampen 
voter  interest  because  students  have ' 
more  exposure  to  the  departmental 
benefits  of  GSA  than  they  do  to  its 
central  functions  not  specific  to 
departments. 

The  creation  of  a  Public  Policy 
Council,  for  example,  has  been  on  the 
ballot  for  several  years,  but  despite 
voter  approval,  the  low  turnout  has 
kept  referenda  from  going  into  effect. 

The  10  percent  minimum  thresh- 
old, according  to  Griflln,  was  put  in 
the  constitution  25  years  ago  as  a  pro- 
tection, but  now  it  is  more  of  a  hin- 
drance. 

"It  has  always  been  difficult  for 
GSA  to  get  over  a  10  percent  turnout 
for  their  elections,"  said  Mike  Cohn, 
GSA  administrative  representative. 
"The  primary  reason  for  this  is  the 
nature  of  graduate  students.  Many  of 
them  are  not  on  campus  all  that  often 
and  when  they  are,  they  are  insulated 
in  their  own  departments." 

Cohn  added  that  this  past  year 
elections  were  scheduled  during  the 
finals  week  for  the  Law  School,  which 
may  have  prevented  those  students 
from  voting. 

Indeed,  academic  pressures  for 
graduate  students,  as  well  as  having 
to  work  and  often  raise  a  family, 
makes  student  government  a  low  pri- 
ority for  many. 

"The  pressure  and  workload  prob- 
lems have  increased  over  the  years  for 
grad  students,"  Griflln  said.  "People 
have  less  time,  more  commitments  to 
meet,  and  something  like  GSA 
becomes  a  fringe  activity." 

The  graduate  student  president 
added  that  this  year  he  would  like  to 
work  on  trying  to  reinvent  cross-disci- 
plinary social  interaction  among  grad 
students  on  campus,  as  well  as  focus 
on  graduate  students  support  on 
issues  like  unattractive  fellowship 
packages  and  high  non-resident 
tuition. 

"We  need  to  consistently  defend 
the  value  of  graduate  students  to  the 
teaching  and  research  mission  of  the 
university  and  the  contribution  of 
graduate  programs  to  the  wider  soci- 
ety'and  the  economy,"  Griflln  said 
"If  we  don't  do  this,  nobody  will  do  it 
for  us." 


SECESSION 

From  page  36 

nities  to  form  their  own  councils  with 
the  power  to  make  recommendations 
to  the  city  council." 

Monkkonen  said  the  unique  urban 
character  of  Los  Angeles  County, 
which  includes  88  other  independent 
cities  that  are  home  to  6.4  million  peo- 
ple, has  contributed  in  part  to  the 
desire  of  many  L.  A.  residents  to  secede 

"All  people  have  to  do  is  look 
around  and  see  the  performance  of 
smaller  cities,"  Monkkonen  said. 
"They  haven't  sunk,  and  it's  dear  to 


most  that  these  city  governments  satis- 
fy their  residents." 

"Much  of  what  big  cities  do  is  small 
potato  stufl,  like  filling  potholes,  which 
can  be  handled  just  as  easily  by  a  small 
city.  Then  again,  large  cities  have  the 
revenue  to  afford  things  like  special 
police  investigation  units,"  he  added. 

But  a  proposed  Valley  city,  with  a 
population  of  1.4  million  people,  would 
hardly  qualify  as  a  small  city. 

And  Brain  insisted  that  the  issue 
revolves  around  the  need  for  kxal  con- 
trol. 

"What  we  need  in  the  Valley  is  not 
necessarily  what  they  need  in  other 
parts  of  the  city,"  Brain  said. 


't,. 


-  -wii  ipiB  n  iHBiyi  ii 


M»#— i— >M    *■" 


A"...    ,.       ■. 


Daily  6niinNc«K 


September  25-28,2000       57 


Property  managers  requiring 
drug  screenings  for  renters 


TENANTS:  Company  says 
policy  has  reduced  crime; 
some  question  its  legality 


ByDonBabwin 
The  Associated  Press 

CHICAGO  -  The  way  Charies 
Poole  remembers  it.  The  Bryn  Mawr 
apartments  used  to  be  a  full-service 
building  -  if  the  services  you  were 
looking  for  involved  drugs  and  prosti- 
tutes. 

Outside  its  doors  was  what  amount- 
ed to  an  open-air  drug  store.  And 
inside,  right  behind  the  front  desk,  one 
woman  ran  her  own  little  side  busi- 
ness, finding  customers  dope  and 
hookers. 

These  days,  the  79-year-old  Poole 
says  he  sees  none  of  that.  And  a  big 
reason,  he  says,  is  the  test  for  illegal 
drugs  like  cocaine  and  marijuana  that 
everybody  -  from  teenagers  right  up 
to  a  white-haired  retired  accountant 
who  needs  a  cane  to  get  around  -  must 
pass  before  they're  allowed  to  move 
into  the  building  and  keep  passing 
once  a  year  to  stay. 

"To  me,  it's  that  much  more  of  a 
guarantee  that  we  do  have  a  drug-free 
building,"  he  said  of  the  drug  testing 
implemented  more  than  a  year  ago  by 
Holston  Management  Corp.  after  it 
bought  and  rehabilitated  his  building 
and  two  others.  "I  think  it's  great." 

It's  also  rare. 

The  same  company  requires  the 
tests  of  tenants  in  three  of  its  Chicago 
buildings  -  one  across  the  street  from 
The  Bryn  Mawr.  And  the  testing  has 
been  required  since  1994  at  an  apart- 
ment complex  in  Cleveland,  but 
nobody  in  the  organization  that  owns 
that  property  knows  of  any  other 
apartment  buildings  that  have  fol- 
lowed its  lead. 

In  both  cities,  the  testing  -  paid  for 
by  property  owners,  not  the  tenants  - 
was  implemented  in  areas  known  for 
soaring  crime  rates  and  illegal  drug 
use. 

"This  was  a  property  with  a  history 
of  terrible  problems,"  said  Tom 
Slemmer,  the  president  of  National 
Church  Residences,  an  Ohio-based 
not-for-profit  provider  of  affordable 
senior  and  family  housing  which 
began  testing  for  drugs  at 
Summerwood  Commons  in  the 
Cleveland  suburb  of  Euclid  after  it 
bought  the  property.  "There  were  sus- 
picious murden  on  the  site  that  were 
drug-related.  The  building  had  been 
shut  down  and  fenced." 

In  Chicago,  the  story  was  the  same. 

"Dealers  would  be  banging  on 
doors  all  night  and  you  couldn't  leave, 
take  a  vaca^n  (for  fear  oO  someone 
breaking  intb  your  apartment,"  said 
Louis  McCionald,  56,  a  resident  of 
The  Bryn  Miwr. 

What  Ho^ton  Management  Corp. 
didn't  want  when  it  bought  the  three 
buildings,  the  first  m  1997,  was  to 
pump  in  millions  of  dollars  only  to 
watch  them  fall  into  disrepair  again. 

Neither  did  the  people  who  lived  in 
and  around  the  buildings. 

"They  were  like  cancers  in  the 
neighborhood,"  Jerry  Marcoccia, 
president  of  the  Edgewater  Beach 
Neighbors  Association,  said  of  the 
Bryn  Mawr  and  the  Belle  Shore. 

Candice  Howell,  a  Holston  vice 
president,  said,  "When  we  went  in 
there  to  do  the  first  rehab,  people  in 
the  community  asked  us.  'What  are 
you  going  to  be  doing  differently? 
How  do  you  plan  on  screening  (would- 
be  tenants)?'" 

Holston  officials  asked  the  tame 
questions.  So,  the  cornpany  decided 
that  along  with  the  badcground,  credit 
and  other  chedcs,  it  would  add  a  drug 
test 

As  in  Ohio,  where  a  lawyer  told  the 
building's  ovmers  that  the  tests  were 


legal  as  long  as  everyone  was  tested, 
Howell  said  Holston  oflldals  quickly 
concluded  that  the  fastest  way  to  run 
into  legal  problems  would  be  to  single 
out  people  for  the  tests. 

For  its  part,  the  federal  Department 
of  Housing  and  Urban  Development, 
which  enforces  the  Fair  Housing  Act, 
said  such  a  policy  is  legal  as  long  as  it  is 
enforced  in  an  evenhanded  manner. 

Still,  even  though  everybody  was 
tested,  Matthew  Roddy,  Holston's 
executive  vice  president,  figured 
there'd  be  a  lawsuit.  "We  talked  for 
five  years  of  putting  together  a  pool  of 
funds"  to  fight  a  legal  challenge.  So  far, 
that  has  not  happened,  in  Chicago  or 
Qeveland. 

Avery  Friedman,  a  fair-housing 
attorney  in  Oeveland,  thinks  the  rule 
is  legally  suspect.  "It's  illegal  to  deny 
housing  because  of  a  handicap,"  he 
said.  "Chemical  dependency  is  a  hand- 
icap." 

And  F.  Willis  Caruso  Sr.,  a  law  pro- 
fessor at  John  Marshall  Law  School  in 
Chicago  who  also  runs  the  school's 
fair  housing  clinic,  sees  another  prob- 
lem. 

"There are  people  with  asthmaand 
other  disabilities  who  may  be  using 
controlled  substances  and  it's  perfect- 
ly legal,"  he  said.  "There  is  substantial 
risk  of  excluding  somebody  (from  an 
apartment)  with  a  disability." 

Then  there  is  also  another  concern 
that  Howell  said  she's  heard  raised, 
that  the  test  targets  poor  people  and 
minorities.  Howell  said  that  is  non- 
sense. 

"It  angers  me  when  something  like 
a  drug  test  comes  up  as  an  example  of 
further  violation  of  their  rights,"  she 
said.  "This  is  a  policy  aimed  at  people 
engaged  in  criniinal  activity.  Period." 
^  Holston  has  Usei)  the  tests  to  deny 
would-be  tenants  apartments  and  has 
refused  to  renew  the  leases  of  a  hand- 
ful pf  tenants  who  failed  the  tests  after 
they  moved  in. 

While  it's  illegal  to  deny  housing 
because  of  past  drug  use,  said  Sherri 
Kranz,  the  director  of  leasing  at  The 
Bryn  Mawr  and  the  Belle  Shore,  it  is 
lawful  to  deny  housing  to  those  cur- 
rently using  illegal  drugs.  There  is  a 
medical  review  policy  to  ensure  that 
people  taking  drugs  for  legitimate 
medical  reasons  are  not  denied  hous- 
ing, she  added. 

Roddy,  who  said  he's  'Absolutely 
shocked  the  policy  hasn't  been  chal- 
lenged," nevertheless  thinks  there  are 
a  couple  of  other  reasons  why  that  has- 
n't happened.  In  Chicago,  for  exam- 
ple, one  way  the  city  has  cracked  down 
on  crime,  including  illegal  drug  use,  is 
by  holding  property  owners  liable  for 
the  criminal  behavior  of  residents  and 
others  on  their  property. 

"If  we  went  to  court,  we'd  say, 
'How  can  you  hokl  us  liable  and  not 
aOow  us  to  correct  the  problem?'"  said 
Roddy. 

As  for  the  tenants,  many  said  diey 
love  thie  policy.  Willie  Skipper,  a  tenant 
of  the  Midwest  Apartmenta,  takes  his 
enthusiasm  a  step  further. 

"1  don't  tell  anybody  about  the 
test,"  said  Skipper.  56.  "I  don't  want 
them  to  get  themselves  cleaned  up 
long  enou^  to  get  in  there  and  start 
using  again." 

Why  then  does  the  practice  remain 
so  rare?_ 

Steve  Johnson,  Midwest 
Apartments'  property  manager,  said 
one  reason  is  the  cost  of  the  tests. 
"Every  test  costs  S25  and  we  test 
everyone  in  all  our  276  units  every 
year,"  he  said.  "So  it  is  an  expense." 

Roddy  added  that  not  every  ovmer 
of  property  who  rents  to  low-income 
residents  spends  millions  of  dollars  to 
rehab  their  buildings.  Other  'AbsehW 
ownen  of  substandard  housing"  are, 
he  said,  more  concerned  "about 
iiKXHiie  and  occupancy  than  ...  crimi- 
nal activity  and  how  the  buildings  are 
cared  for." 


T^e  Center  for  African  Jimerican  Studies 

M^ekomes'You  to  t>'(X;?^^^^^^^^^^^    :  |S 


for  fad  courses,  spediaC  events,  arufresearcH  updates 
cHec^our  weSsite  at  www.sscnet.  ucCa.edu/caas 


&  stop  By  the 


CAAS  LiSrary 

(ocated in  Murphy  HcdC 

^om  (B324 
>  9ionday  -  Triday 
9:00  a.m. -5:00p.m. 


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Center  fcr  African  American  Studies 

2308  Murphy  Hall 

310-825-7403 


for  thought 


organic  coffees  &  teas 
breakfast  lunch  &  dinner 
12081  wilshire  bWd. 
Brentwood 


310/231-7484 


r\ 


$2 


.00 

ucla  student  discount 


(iel  S2.(M)  ofKany  pi'irciiase  of  S4.00  or  more  with  this  ad.  Offer  good 


throii^li  o/ioher  15 


.2000.  . 


\ 


-SBB 


^:-^'^-:t 


58       September  25-2«,  2000 


Diilf  Brain  Nnb 


X- Village 
^xpressmart 

10974  Le  Conte  Ave.  at  Qaytey 


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r  ^  ^ 

Mditef  Caid 


^^ 


COME 
RIGHT 

WERE 

ALWAYS 

OPEN 


Whether  it's  three  in  the  morning  or  three  in  the  afternoon,  take  some  time 
out  from  your  studying.  Our  24  hour  express  store  is  stocked  wih  all  the  essentials 
(and  goodies)  you  might  crave  at  dusk  or  dawn. 

In-store  ATM  machine.  Withdrawals  as  little  as  $5.00 


CSD^ 


GEMS  AND  JEWELRY  101 

1 055  westwood  tM.  •  wesiwood  villoge 
(310)208-3131 

Supporting  UCLA  Academics.  Atneflcs  and  Performing  Arts 


Presented  by 


HQmi^ 


(In*  iawalarr 
Where  OuGity  and  Ett«:s  Come  Hrst...  9nce  1946 


Popular  Westwood  Jeweler 
Begins  Education  Column. 

WELCOME  TO  GEMS  AND  JEWELRY  101. 

While  this  is  not  yet  part  of  the  official  curriculum, 
we  are  lobbying  to  have  it  included  as  a  GE 
requirement?  Hello,  I  m  Dean  Abell.  Some  of  you 
may  know  me  as  David  ft-om  my  undergrad  days  •  I 
graduated  in  1998  as  a  proud  Bruin  with  a  degree  in 
English. 

Since  then  I  have  joined 
my  family  s  business, 
SARAH  LEONARD  fine 
jewelers,  and  would  like  to 
^^^^^^^^  take  a  few  minutes  to  tell 
f.  ^^^^^^^H  you  about  it  and  the 
purpose  of  this  columiL 

Friends  of  mine  often 

visit  me  at  work  looking  to 

.o-iA..  9»    ""y  "'*"^  "Oy*  o""  girlfnerKl 


a  special  gift...  or  want  to 
look  at  diamonds  for  that  "big  event''  So  many  of 
these  visits  erul  with  my  friends  commenting  on  how 
lucky  they  arc  to  have  a  jeweler  on  whom  they  can 
rely  and  trust.  That  got  me  to  thinking...  How  many 
people,  then,  DON  T  have  a  jeweler  that  is 
knowledgeable,  helpful,  and  ethical...  a  jeweler  that 
they  consider  a  friend.**  not  just  someone  with  whom 
to  do  business.  Not  a  day  goes  by.in  our  store  without 
hugs  and  kisses  between  our  staff  fcfid  clients...  I  can  t 
think  of  a  better  atmosphere  in  which  to  work. 

Does  your  jewelry  need  cleaning?  The  only  charge 
for  that,  as  my  grandpa,  L.enny,  always  says  is,  "a 
smile  and  a  thank  you!"  Do  you  have  some 
questions?  Or  need  a  suggestion  to  help  find  that 
perfect  gift?  Whatever  it  is,  vw  re  here  for  you. 

SARAH  LEONARD  fine  jewelers,  the  oldest 
merchant  in  Westwood  Village->cttabltshed  in  1946- 
hu  tfnived  since  Day  One  because  of  dedication,  hard 
work,  and  lots  of  love  for  each  other,  the  business, 
and  our  clients  (jut  ask  anyone  who  knows  us!) 


We  have  built  an  extremely  close  relationship 
with  the  UCLA  community  over  the  years 
(including  five  family  members  that  are  UCLA 
alumni)  giving  decades  of  support  to  UCLA 
academics,  athletics  and  performing  arts.  We  know 
that  the  best  way^to  give  back,  though,  is  to  provide 
superior  customer  service  backed  by  professional 
know-how.  That  is  why  three  generations  of  our 
family  have  earned  the  title  of  Graduate 
Gemologist  (G.G.)  from  the  Gemological  Institute 
of  America  and  why  we  are  proud  memben  of  the 
American  Gem  Society  (AGS),  an  organization  of 
fine  jewelers  dedicated  to  the  highest  ethical 
^  standards,  gemological  knowledge  and  consumer 
protection. 

All  in  all.  nine  membera  of  ow  staff' (five  fiunily) 
are  G.G.s.  That's  probably  more  than  any  other 
single  store  in  the  country!  But  all  that  gemological 
expertise  only  helps  if  we  can  get  that  information 
to  you.  As  members  of  the  AGS  it  seemed  only 
lutural  to  share  what  we  know  of  gems  and  jewelry, 
thrbugh  this  column,  to  make  you  a  more  informed 
and  confident  consumer. 

Each  montti  1  will  be  addressing  a  new  topic,  such 
as  diamond  and  gemstone  treatments,  watch  and 
jewelry  care,  and,  of  course,  what  you  should  know 
when  buying  a  diamond.  So  look  for  my  column 
again  soon...  or  don  t  wait  until  then!  Come  down  to 
SARAH  LEONARD  fine  jewelers  at  1053 
Westwood  Blvd.  and  introduce  yourself,  or  call  me 
at  208  -  3131  with  yow  questions.  You  can  also 
reach  me  via  e-mail  at  th>A^(g>jiipn  m^  (Please 
alkxw  a  few  days  for  response). 

Finally,  when  you  come  in,  be  sure  to  tell  us  that 
you  re  a  Bruin.  All  UCLA  students,  faculty  and 
staff  receive  a  SPECIAL  DISCOUNT  on  aU 
purchases,  aU  repairs,  aU  the  tinte.  It  s  our  way  of 
saying  Thank  You  to  a  convnunity  that  has  been 
so  supportive  of  us  for  so  long.  And  be  sure  to  ask 
for  me...  I  d  love  to  help  you! 


EDUCATION 

Ffoinpage46  « 

television  ad  never  mentions  the  real 
issue,  which  is  lowering  the  voter 
requirement. 

"I  would  say  this  commercial  is  not 
only  misleading  but  outright  decep- 
tive." spokeswoman  Sheri  Annis  said. 

The  TV  ad.  running  in  two.similar 
versions,  began  airing  Monday  in  San 
Diego,  Sacramento.  Los  Angeles  and 
San  Francisco  and  is  costing  the  can>- 
paign  SI.5  million  a  week,  said  Sara 
Brown,  spokeswoman  for  the  ytyotf 
39  campaign. 

Both  sides  started  running  radio 
ads  in  August 

The  first  n<H)n-39  ad  featured  state 
Board  of  Equalization  Chairman 
Dean  Andal  saying  "Proposition  38 
increases  property  taxes  20  times 
higher  for  taxpayers  in  the  poorest 
districts  tlvin  those  in  the  ridiest." 

Proposition  39  itself  does  not  raise 
any  taxes,  its  backers  say.  Local  vot- 
ers would  have  to  vote  for  school 
bonds  to  do  that  Differences  in  cur- 


rent local  property  taxes  are  the  result 
of  current  law  and  not  Proposition 
39,  they  say. 

The  supporters*  radio  ad  then 
stressed  the  limits  and  audits  of 
school  bond  money  and  said 
Proposition  39  would  "hdp  us  fix  our 
schools  and  fix  the  way  our  schoob 
spend  money." 

The  iKH>n-39  side  countered  last 
month  with  a  radio  ad  criticizing  the 
other  side's  ad  and  implying  that 
backers  were  deliberately  trying  to 
confuse  voters  by  failing  to  talk  about 
the  two-thirds  vote  requirement. 

Annts  said  the  no  campaign  hopes 
to  use  television  ads,  but  has  not  yet 
made  a  decision.  Opponents  to 
Proposition  26  were  greatly  outspent 
by  proponents  -  S2S  million  to  $1.S 
million  -  and  a  similar  difference  is 
likely  for  the  new  efTort. 

Supporters  reported  raising  S7.7 
million  throu^  June  30.  Almost  all  of 
that  money  came  in  loans  from  sever- 
al Silicon  Valley  entrepreneurs. 

The  opponents  to  Proposition  39 
listed  SI.7  million  in  contributions 
through  June  30. 


FUNDING 

From  page  35 

specific  criteria  for  funding  groups  on  a 
contenvneutral  basis. 

"The  way  we  allocate  resources  will 
change  substantially  because  of  this," 
said  Lyie  Tmunernuui,  the  administra- 
tive representative  to  USAC  who  will 
judge  whether  the  council  is  in  compli- 
ance with  the  law. 

"I  believe  that  Southworth  raised  as 
many  questions  as  it  answered,"  he 
continued. 

Tmimerman  said  he  believes  USAC 
must  be  prepared  to  answer  three  ques- 
tions about  an  its  funding  allocations. 
First  was  the  money  distributed  with- 
out regard  to  the  type  of  group  or  pro- 
gram being  sponsored?  Second,  does 
the  group  or  program  have  a  "legiti- 
mate university  purpose?"  And  diird, 
were  the  aflootions  balanced  among 
comparable  groups,  with  similar  mem- 
bership numbers  and  appeals  to  the 
campus  at  large? 

Historically,  the  council  has-nuinly 
given  base  budgets  to  the  20  SAGs. 
sponsored  by  student  government 

These  groups,  which  include  the 
African     Student 

Union.  Asian  >— — — ^^ 
Pacific  Coalition 
and  Gay  and 
Lesbian 
Association,  are 
defined  in  USACs 
bylaws  as  "repre- 
senting student 
populations  which 
have  historically 
been  denied  access 
to  power  aitd  the 
decision-making 
process." 

But  with  the  doctrine  of  content- 
neutrality  set  forth  by  the  Supreme 
Court  the  council  may  no  longer  be 
able  to  give  SAGs  special  privileges  - 
induding  base  budgets,  office  space 
and  access  to  computers  -  based  on 
who  they  represent  This  means  SAGs 
could  be  treated  no  d^erentiy  than  any 
other  group  registered  with  die  Center 
for  Student  Programming.  As  a  result 
all  4S0  groups  would  then  have 
unprecedented  access  to  USACs 
resources. 

Tunmennan's  doubts  that  this  sum- 
mer's budget  process  foikmcd  the  doc- 
trine of  oonlent-neutratity,  even  among 
organizations  that  received  base  bud- 
gets, prompted  the  funding  inquiry.  He 
cited  that  four  of  the  groups  -  ASU, 
APC,  Samahang  Pyipino  and  MEChA 
-  were  given  more  than  40  percent  of 
the  total  funding. 

At  die  end  of  August  an  ad  hoc 
committee  made  up  of  ASUCLA 
Student  Support  Services  Director 
Jerry  Mann,  President  Ehz]^>eth 
Houston,  External  Vice  President 
Portia  Mro  md  ot)ier  council  mem- 
ben addressed  the  problem. 

While  the  conunitlee  is  seeking  an 


immediate  solution  to  this  yearS  base 
budget  issue,  dramatic  dianges  in  the 
way  USAC  allocates  funds  and  office 
space  may  be  in  store  as  the  school  year 
progresses. 

In  addition  to  base  budgeU,  USAC 
distributes  money  to  groups  on  a  pro- 
grammatic basis  through  contingency 
funding.  More  questions  about  content 
neutrality  are  lilcely  as  those  fuiuis  are 
distributed  throu^KMit  the  year. 

"Our  entire  funding  system  is  a  little 
out  of  Kne  and  it  needs  to  be  adjusted," 
said  Houston,  who  ran  in  May  as  an 
independent  candidate  with  significant 
support  from  the  Greek  system  and 
Christian  groups  on  campus. 

But  Pedro,  whose  Praxb  slate  con- 
trols a  majority  of  seats  on  the  council, 
disagrees.  Praxis  represents  some  of 
UCLA's  most  active  SAGs,  orgwtiza- 
tions  that  stand  to  lose  significantly  if 
the  funding  process  is  open  to  every 
group  on  campus. 

Pedro  agreed  the  allocation  process 
for  fuiKb  aii^office  space  may  need  to 
be  changed,  but  she  emphasized  that 
weO-estabfahed  SAGs  with  large  mem- 
berships should  not  be  treated  exactly 
the  same  as  smaller  organizations  with 
more  narrow  interests. 

-There 
■— ^■■-■■— ■-■— ■     are     defi- 

n  i  t  e  I  y 
improve- 
ments that 
can  be 
made  and 
this  is  a 
good  time 
to  make 
them," 
Pedro  said. 

-We 

need      to 
look       at 
ways  to  define  what  the  actual  differ- 
ence is  between  groups,"  she  contin- 
ued. 

For  her  part,  Houston  supports  dra- 
matic chai^  in  the  way  IJSAC  allo- 
cates its  reMuroes,  including  the  com- 
plete elimination  of  base  budgets  in 
favor  of  funding  groups  on  a  program 
to  program  basis  as  weB  as  the  regular 
redistribution  of  office  space. 

But  she  doesn't  expect  such  far- 
reaching  duuiges  to  be  adopted  by  the 
current  Praxi»controfled  council. 

-They  want  things  to  stay  dte  same, 
the  status  quo,  beariMe  ttiere  are  a  k>t  of 
groups  that  are  comfortable,"  Houston 
said.  -  But  that  doesn't  make  it  right" 

Ultimately,  any  decisions  die  coun- 
cil makes  must  be  approved  by 
Timmerman  or  a  more  senior  adminis- 
trator,  such  as  Assistant  Vice 
Chancellor  of  Student  and  Campus 
Life  Bob  Naples,  Vice  ChanceDor  of 
Student  Affairs  Winston  Doby  or  even 
Chancellor  Albert  Camesale.  And 
Timmerman  beKeves  significant  modi- 
fkalions,  including  amending  the 
USAC  bylaws,  are  in  order. 

-It's  going  to  be  a  real  change  in  the 
landscape,"  hAaid. 


There  are  definitety 

improvements  that  can  be 

made  and  this  is  a  good 

time  to  make  them." 

Portia  PmIio 

USAC  External  Vice  President 


MIy  Brain  Nfws 


September  25-28, 2000       S9 


m 


OFFICIAL  NOTICES 


TO: 
FROM: 


Aa  STUDENTS 

THE  DEAN  OF  STUDENTS 


OFFUUM.  MOnCES  such  as  those  printed  In  this  edition  appear  in  the  Daily  Bruin  at  various  times  during  the  academic  year.  They  are  also  printed  in  the  schedule  of  classes  and  University 
catatog.  Additionally  these  notices  are  accessible  via  the  internet  at  wvyw.deanofstudents.ucla.edu.  Such  OFFICIAL  NOTICE  are  important  and  all  students  are  held  responsible  for  the 
information  in  them. 

For  copies  of  relevant  polKies  and  regulations  contact  the  Dean  of  Students  in  1206  Murphy  Hall.  '■''■:--^\:-i;:. 


TO:  ALLSTUOENTS 

FROM:  DEAN  OF  STUDENTS 

REGARDING:  RELEASE  AND  DISCLOSURE  OF  INFORMATION  FROM  STUDENT  RECORDS  .         ,  ^ 

The  FamHy  Educational  Rights  and  Privacy  Act  (FERPA)  affords  students  certain  rights  with  respect  to  their  education  records.  They  are:     : ,'     v    ^v-  •;....(>. 

1 .  The  right  to  inspect  and  review  the  student's  education  records  within  45  days  of  the  day  the  University  receives  a  request  for  access.  :.  .' 
Students  should  submit  to  the  registrar,  dean,  head  of  the  academic  department,  or  other  appropriate  official,  written  requests  that  identify  the  record(s)  they  wish  to  inspect. 
The  University  official  will  make  an-angements  for  access  and  notify  the  student  of  the  time  and  place  where  the  records  may  be  inspected.  If  the  records  are  not 
maintained  by  the  University  official  to  whom  the  request  was  submitted,  that  official  shall  advise  the  student  of  the  correct  official  to  whom  the  request  should  be  addressed. 

2.  The  right  to  request  the  amendment  of  the  student's  education  records  that  the  student  believes  are  inaccurate  or  misleading. 

Students  may  ask  the  University  to  amend  a  record  that  they  believe  is  inaccurate  or  misleading.  They  should  write  the  University  official  responsible  for  the  record,  cleariy  identify 
the  part  of  the  record  they  want  changed,  and  specify  why  it  is  inaccurate  or  misleading.  If  the  University  decides  not  to  amend  the  record  as  requested  by  the  student,  the  University 
will  notify  the  student  of  the  decision  and  advise  the  student  of  his  or  her  right  to  a  hearing  regarding  the  request  for  amendment.  Additional  informatran  regarding  the  hearing 
procedures  will  be  provided  to  the  student  when  notified  of  the  right  to  a  hearing. 

3.  The  right  to  consent  to  disclosures  of  personally  identifiable  information  contained  in  the  student's  education  records,  except  to  the  extent  that  FERPA  authorizes  disctosure  without 
consent.  One  exception  which  pemiits  disclosure  without  consent  is  disctosure  to  school  officials  with  legitimate  educational  interests.  A  school  official  is  a  person  employed  by  the 
University  in  an  administrative,  supervisory,  academic  or  research,  or  support  staff  position  (including  law  enforcement  unit  personnel  and  health  staff);  a  person  or  company  with 
whom  the  Unh«rstty  has  contracted  (such  as  an  attorney,  auditor,  or  coilectmn  agent);  a  person  serving  on  the  Board  of  Trustees;  or  a  student  serving  on  an  official  committee,  such 
as  a  disciplinary  or  grievance  committee,  or  assisting  another  school  official  in  performing  his  or  her  tasks.  A  school  official  has  a  legitimate  educatranal  interest  if  the  official  needs 
to  review  an  education  record  in  order  to  fulfill  his  or  her  professkmal  responsibility. 

Upon  request,  the  University  disctoses  education  records  without  consent  to  officials  of  another  school  in  which  a  student  seeks  or  intends  to  enroll. 

4.  The  right  to  file  a  complaint  with  the  U.S.  Department  of  Education  concerning  alleged  failures  by  UCLA  to  comply  with  the  requirements  of  FERPA.  The  name  and  address  of  the 

Office  that  administers  FERPA  is: 
Family  Policy  (kxnpliance  Offk» 
U.S.  Department  of  Educatkm 
600  Independence  Avenue,  SW 
Washington,  DC  20202-4605 

Notkx  is  hereby  given  that  the  following  categories  of  personally  identifiable  information  have  been  designated  by  U(XA  as  public  informatkNi:  student's  name,  address  (mailing, 
permanent,  and/or  e-mail),  telephone  numbers,  major  field  of  study,  dates  of  attendance,  number  of  course  units  in  which  enrolled,  degrees  and  honors  received,  the  most  recent 
prevkxis  educatkxtal  institutkNi  attended,  participatkxi  in  offk:iaHy  recognized  activities,  including  intercollegiate  athletics,  and  the  name,  weight  and  height  of  participants  on 
intercollegiate  athletKS,  and  the  name,  weight,  and  fwtght  of  pailicipants  on  intercollegiate  UCLA  athletk:  teams.  Such  categories  fall  within  the  limitatkxis  of  the  definition  of  public 
information  in  Section  1 30.250  of  the  UdA  Policy  Applying  to  the  Disclosure  of  Information  from  Student  Records  and  may  be  disck)sed  without  prior  student  consent  unless  a 
student  notifies  the  Registrar's  Offk»  in  writing  or  via  an  established  electronic  procedure  that  such  infomuition  shall  not  be  disctosed. 

For  more  information  regarding  this  notice,  or  any  OFFICIAL  NOTICE  or  policy,  you  may  contact  the  Dean  of  Stixients'  Office  in  1 206  Murphy  Hall. 


TO: 

FROM: 

REGAROMQ: 


AU  STUDENTS 

OEANOFSniDBfTS 

AVAKABiUTY  OF  UNIVBISITY  POUCIES  AND  CAMPUS  REGULATIONS 


Copies  cXVnelMverslty  Of  (^llk)n}iaPottdes  Applying  to  Campus  Activities.  Orgarrizatlons,  and  Students^Hne  UCLA  Regulations  on  Activities.  Registered  Organizations  and  Use  of 
fYiVWftfss  (UCLA  Activity  Guidelines);  and  the  UCLA  Student  Conduct  Code  of  Procedures  are  aMdMAe  free  of  charge  at  the  foHowing  k)cations  and  can  also  be  found  on  the  Internet: 

•Offk»  of  the  Dean  of  Students,  1 206  Murphy  Hall  (www.deanofstudents.ucla.edu) 
•Center  for  Student  Programming,  105  Kerckhoff  Hall  (www.saonet.ucla.edu/csp/default.htm 
•Student  Psychok)gical  Servk^es,  A3-062  Center  for  the  Health  Sciences  (www.saonet.ucla.edu/sps.htm) 


TO:  CAMPUS  COMMUNITY 

limM  DEAN  OF  SniDBITS 

REGARDING:         ACCOMMODATION  OF  REUGKMJS  PRACTICES  OF  STUDENTS  IN  THE  SCHEDUUNG  OF  EXAMINATIONS 

In  compliance  with  Sectton  926450(a)  of  the  California  Educatkxi  Code,  the  University  must  accommodate  requests  for  alternate  examination  dates  at  a  time  when  that  activity  would 
not  vk)late  a  student's  religkxjs  creed. 

At  UCLA,  accommodatkx)  for  alternate  examinatkm  dates  should  be  worked  out  directly  between  the  student  and  the  faculty  member  involved. 
General  GukJelines: 

•Students  shouM  make  such  requests  of  the  instructor  during  the  first  two  weeks  of  the  quarter,  or  as  soon  as  possible  after  an  examinatkm  date  is  announced  by  the  instructor. 

•Students  unable  to  reach  a  satisfactory  arrangement  with  their  instructor  shouM  contact  the  Campus  Ombuds  Offk:e  or  the  Offk»  of  the  Dean  of  Students. 

•Instructors  who  have  questkms,  or  who  wish  to  verify  the  nature  of  the  religk)us  event  or  practice  involved,  shouM  contact  the  Campus  Ombuds  Office  or  the  Office  of  the  Dean  of 

Students. 


TO: 

FROM: 

REGARDING: 


ALLSTUDBITS 
DEAN  OF  STUDENTS 
NONDISCRlMmATION 

The  University  of  California,  in  accordance  with  applteable  Federal  and  State  laws  and  University  policies,  does  not  discriminate  on  the  basis  of  race,  cotor,  nattonal  origin, 
reNgton,  sex,  disability,  age,  medteal  condition  (cancer  related),  ancestry,  marital  status,  citizenship,  sexual  orientatkMi,  or  status  as  a  Vietnam-era  veteran  or  special  disabled 
veteran. 

The  University  also  prohibits  sexual  harassment  This  nondiscriminatkKi  poltey  covers  admisskm,  access,  and  treatment  in  University  programs  and  activities. 

Inquiries  regarding  the  University's  equal  oppoflunity  polk:ies  may  be  directed  to  the  Offk»  of  Campus  Counsel,  31 49  Murphy  Hall. 

Inquiries  regarding  Americans  with  Disabilities  Act  (ADA)  or  504  Compliance  may  be  directed  to  Dr.  Douglas  Martin,  Special  Assistant  to  the  ChancelkK/Coordinator  of  ADA 
and  504  Compliance,  A239  Murfjhy  HaN.  , 

Students  who  believe  they  have  been  discriminated  against  on  the  above  grounds  may  contact  the  Offtee  of  the  Dean  of  Students,  1 206  Murphy  Hall,  for  further  informatkm 
and  procedures. 


'y.  I' 


..  V 


■f 

'»■  • 

i  I  <; 
I', I  " 


M       September  2S-28, 2000 


OiHy  Brain  Ncwi 


OFFICIAL  NOTICES 


TO:    AU  STUDENTS 

FROM:  THE  DEAN  OF  STUDENTS 


OFRCiAL  NOTICES  sucft  as  those  printed  in  this  edition  appear  in  the  Daily  Bruin  at  various  times  during  the  acadeniic  year.  They  are  also  printed  in  the  schedule  of  classes  and  University 
catalog.  Additionally  these  notices  are  accessible  via  the  internet  at  www.deanofstudents.ucla.edu.  Such  OFFICIAL  NOTICES  are  important  and  all  students  are  held  responsiUe  for  the  infor- 
mation in  them. 


•,-V«^_': 


For  copies  of  relevant  policies  and  regulations  contact  the  Dean  of  Students  in  1206  Murphy  Hail. 


TO:        - 

FROM: 

REGARDING: 


ALL  MBNBBIS  OF  THE  OCU  CAMPUS  COMMUNITY 

THE  DEAN  OF  STUDENTS 

RAPE  AND  OTHBI  FORMS  OF  SEXUAL  ASSAULT 


UCLA  will  not  tolerate  sexual  assault  in  any  form,  including  rape,  acquaintance  rape,  or  date  rape.  These  also  include  situations  when  the  accused  sexually  assaults  a  complainant 
Incapable  of  giving  consent,  including  where  the  complainant  is  prevented  from  resisting  due  to  alcohol  or  drugs  and  this  condition  was  known,  or  reasonably  should  have  been  known  by  the 
accused.  . 

Where  there  is  probable  cause  to  believe  a  student  has  committed  a  sexual  assault,  disciplinary  action  wHI  be  pursued. 
Sanctions  may  include  Dismissal  from  the  University. 

IF  YOU  HAVE  BEEN  RAPED  OR  SEXUALLY  ASSAULTED: 

Take  care  Of  your  safety  and  health  needs. 

•Can  Um  Police  DefMrtment  If  possible,  call  the  UC  Poltee  Department  at  (310)  825-1491  or  91 1 . 

•Get  medical  attention.  Campus  poHce  will  provkJe  transportation  to  the  Santa  Monica  UCLA  Hospital  Emergency  Room  for  emergency  medical  treatment  and  evidence 
collection.  A  counsetor  from  the  Santa  Monica  Rape  Treatment  Center  will  be  available  free  of  charge. 

^    Utilize  Campus  and  Community  Support  services. 

•Contact  a  Rape  Servlcee  ConeultanL  Rape  Services  Consultants  (RSC)  are  available  through  the  Women's  Resource  Center.  RSCs  have  expertise  in  working  with  people 
who  have  been  raped  or  sexually  assaulted.  They  can  discuss  options  and  alternatives,  help  kJentify  the  nwst  appropriate  support  servfces,  and  provide  information  about 
medical  care,  psychotogical  counseling,  academk:  assistance,  legal  options,  how  to  file  a  police  report,  and  how  to  file  a  complaint  ttirough  ttie  Dean  of  Students'  Office 
)  RSCs  are  available  to  assist  any  UCLA  student  regardless  of  where  or  when  the  assault  occurred.  For  assistance,  contact  the  Women's  Resource  Center  at  (310)  206-8240 

or  go  to  Room  2  Dodd  Hall  and  ask  to  speak  to  an  RSC. 

.     *Contact1tie  Rape  Treatmem  Center  at  Santa  Monk:a  Hospital  at  (310)  319-4000  for  free  emergency  medtealti^atmem  and  couns^ 

CARING  ASSISTANCE  IS  AVAILABLE  IF  YOU  HAVE  BEEN  SUBJECTED  TO  RAPE  OR  SEXUAL  ASSAULT.  YOU  ARE  ENCOURAGH)  IN  THE  STRONGEST  TERMS  TO  MAKE  A  RB>OIIT. 


TO:  ALL  MBMB8IS  OF  THE  UCU  CAMPUS  COMMUNITY 

FROM:  THECHANCELLOR 

REGARDING:         UNIVERSITY  OF  CAUFORNIA  POLICY  ON  SEXUAL  HARASSMBIT  AND  COMPLAINT  RESOLUTION  PROCEDURES 

..      tJ^!?.  "*^^  °*  ^  University  community  shouM  be  aware  that  the  Unwersity  will  not  toierate  sexual  harassment  and  that  such  behavk)r  is  prohibited  both  by  law  and  by  Urtversltv 
policy.  The  University  vvill  take  whatever  action  Is  necessary  to  prevertandcorrect  such  behavior  and.  If  wropriate.dbci^ 

UNIVBtSTTY  DEFINmON  OF  SEXUAL  HARASSMENT: 

Uwveicome  sexual  advances,  requests  for  sexual  taMirs,  and  otfw  vertBl  or  phys^ 

Submission  to  such  conduct  is  made  either  explicitty  or  implteltiy  a  term  or  condition  of  Instruction,  emptoyment  or  participation  In  other  University  activities; 


1. 
2. 
3. 


Submlsskm  to  or  rejection  of  such  conduct  by  an  indivklual  is  used  as  a  basis  for  evaluation  in  ntaking  academk:  or  personal  deciswns  affecting  an  indivMual;  or 

Such  conduct  has  the  purpose  or  effect  of  unreasonably  interfering  witii  an  individual's  peilbrmanca  or  creating  an  Intimktating,  hostile,  or  offensive  Univereity  environment 


.  _.  ^     In  detennining  whether  the  alleged  con(fcida)nstittites  sexual  haras 
mduding  the  context  m  which  the  alleged  incidents  occurred. 

COMPLAINT  RESOLUTION 

Experience  has  demonstrated  that  many  complaints  of  sexual  harassmem  can  be  effectively  resolved  through  inforinai  intervene  IndivMuais  who  experience  what  they  consider  to 
be  sexual  harassment  are  advised  to  confront  the  alleged  offender  Immediately  and  firmly. 

Additionally,  an  Indivklual  who  believes  that  she  «  he  has  been  sexually  harassed  may  contact  the  Sexual  Haraswnent  Coordinator  or  a  Sexual  Harassment  Information  Center  coun- 
setor  for  help  and  information  regarding  sexual  harassment  complaint  resolution  or  grievance  procedures,  or  may  file  a  complaint  of  harassnoent  directty  with  tt)e  appropriate  Complaint 
Resolution  Offfcer.  The  appropriate  Complaint  Resolution  Officer  is  detemiined  by  the  status  of  the  accused  harasser.  Listed  betow  are  tins  kxations  of  the  Sexual  Harassment  Coordinators, 
the  Sexual  Harassment  Information  Centers  and  the  Complaint  Resolution  Offteers. 

•  Lynne  Thompson,  Emptoyee  &  Labor  Relations  Manager,  Campus  Human  Resources,  Employee  Labor  Relations,  UCLA  WHshire  Center,  Suite  200;  310-794-0880 

•  Campus  OmtKJds  Offtee,  Strathmore  BuikUog.  Room  105. 310-825-7627  or  924  Westwood  Blvd.,  Ste  540;  310-794-6802  (lor  Medk:al  Enterprises) 

•  Dr.  Joan  Brown,  Associate  Director,  Center  for  Student  Programming,  105  Kerckhoff  Hall;  310-825-7041 

•  Susan  Townsley.  Offfce  Manage.  Graduate  DiviskMi.  1237  Murphy  Hall;  310-825-4383 

•  Dr.  Amy  Gershon,  Judicial  Coordinator.  Offtee  of  Residential  Ufe.  Resklential  Life  BWg.;  31 0-825-3401  v 

•  Eliza  Vbrenberg.  Asst  to  ttie  Vtee  Chanceltor  -  Academk:  Personnel.  31 09  Murphy  Hail;  31 0-794-421 7 

•  Kathleen  McMahon,  Assistant  Dean  of  Students;  1206  Murphy  Hall;  310-825-3871 

•  Dr.  Harold  Pruett,  Director,  Student  Psychotogteal  Servtees.  4223  Matti  Science  BWg.;  31 0-825-0768 

•  Joan  Kollar,  Director,  Human  Resources.  University  Extenskxi,  629  UNEX  BWg.;  310-825-4287 

•  Fred  Churchill.  Director  of  Student  Servtees.  University  Extenston,  214  UNEX  BWg.;  310-825-2656 

•  Tina  Oakland,  Director.  Center  for  Women  &  Men.  2  Dodd  Hall;  310-825-3945 

•  Unda  Avila.  Interim  Staff  Affirmative  Action  Offteer,  Staff  Affinnative  Action  Offtee,  1 103  PVUB;  310-825-0751 

•  Jim  Justiss,  Heatthcare  Human  Resources,  924  Westwood  Boulevard,  Ste  200;  310-794-0500 
•Tina  Simmons,  School  of  Medteine  Human  Resources,  924  Westwood  Blvd.,  Ste.  540;  310-794-6802 

•  Cynthia  Cohen,  Associate  Director  Administration/Human  Resources  Director.  Neuropsychiatrte  Hoepital.  760  Westwood  PIz.;  B7-370;  310-206-5258   ^ 

•  Nancy  Merder,  Manager,  Santa  Montea  UCLA  Hospital,  1250 16th  St,  Santa  Montea,  CA  90404;  310-319-4351 

•  Dr.  Neil  H.  Parker,  Sentor  Associate  Dean  of  Student  Aff^rs/Graduate  Medteal  Education.  School  of  Medteine,  Student  Affairs  Offtee,  12-139  CHS;  310-825-6774 

•  Ann  Beech,  Assistant  Dean;  School  of  Dentistry;  A3-042  Dentistry  BIdg.;  310-825-7146 

•  Dr.  Robert  Krasny,  School  of  Dentistry,  23-087  Dentistry  BWg;  310-825-5248 

•  Joyce  Fried,  Dean's  Offtee;  School  of  Medteine:  12-138  CHS;  310-794-1958 


Diily  Bruin  News 


.;»jW 


September  25-2^  200q       61 


OFFICIAL  NOTICES 

TO:  AUSTUOENTS 

FROM:  OEANOFSTUOBITS 

REGARDING:         STUDBfT  CONDUCT  AND  DISCIPLINE 

"nteUClA  Student  Conduct  Code  (Code)  is  ettK!tiwfal\  Jem.  2000. 

I!!ii£!^if!^^.?Tl"^I^  '*  "^  °"  ^J^!:^  ^^'  ^"^^  ^^^  of  Procedures,  and  now  incorporates  parts  of  the  following  documents:  the  Unfmsltyoiicaiifbrnla  Policies 
^S!St^^Z^i'?"^^'.°^"/S?*^-  '"^I^J"^'  W'e  UOLA  Interim  Student  Conduct  Policies  and  Student  Discipline  Procedures  In  Cases  of  Hai^ssm^t  Sexml^S^ssmeT 
SSS^d^iSf  Snl?,^'  ^^  '"^""'^^'±"1  ^5  ^''''t'"?  ^^^^  ^^'P'^^  ^«^"^«^ '"  (^^  ^'f^  '"^  Other  Forms  ofSexu7l^ui.  T?eSgSs  student 
SSif/?!/<Hl/MHP^J!i^Pi£.^?®* '"  '^'^  ^i^^"^  '^  ^"'^'^^  *°  ^"  ^PP"'^®*^  disciplinary  procedure  of  a  school,  college,  or  other  University  unit)  Some  differinceTfrom  the 
Sm^f^^l^X  ?S  oA«ra:«/«/fB5  indude  extetiskMi  of  jurisdiction;  delegation  of  certain  auttiority  from  the  Chancellorto  the  Vice  ChanceliS  of  Sti^eKS  a^d  tiie 
prohibition  of  unauthonzed  conduct  regarding  course  lecture  notes,  handouts,  readers  or  other  information  provWed  by  an  instructor,  among  other?. 

Jurisdtetion  has  been  extended  as  described  below  in  Section  \\A. 

2iP!lf^®!°Li??  ^6'«flated  the  auttwrity  to  the  Vice  Chanceltor  of  Student  Affairs  to  review  and  mle  upon  appeals  of  the  sanctions  of  Suspension  or  Dismissal  imoosed  bv  thp  ntfirp  nf  ttin 

£ssr?(?rr^^2i^^s^iiisss^ 

mSSiX^!!tSMSm.  """^^  °^  ^  ^  ^'^^  "^^  ™y  ^  ^^  ^^  Wftce  of  the  Dean  of  Students,  1206  Murphy  HaH;'or  may  be  found  on  ttie  internet  from 

U.    STUDENT  CONDUCT  POLiaB  ^        .^ 

^li^^l^m^s^  ^^  ^^'^  '^  the^academte  community  witii  attendant  rights  and  responsibilities.  ShKJents  a^^  expected  to  comply  with  the  general  law.  University  policies. 

A.    Jurisdiction  ^ 

HS^IIiSiSLIf!^  r^"^  T'  ^«"L<»f^<i!  ^  occurs  on  University  property,  or  in  connection  witti  official  University  functions  whether  on  or  off  University  orooertv 
SSSSTh^^i^^^ISSl^!^^  !:?^']!l*"'^JE*f'P"'^i™^  °^  "^"^  «***»«^  that  occurs  off  campus  except  in  connection  with  anSXSh^S^' 
^^Sf^iUZ^SS^^  ^  °^  '°™**^  ^^  ^^'^  °"  "^^  "^  ^  "^^  '^'  stSent^nduct  and  discipline  policies  or  regulaKl Te  wnduct 

(1)  The  alleged  misconduct  indteates  the  student  poses  a  ttireat  to  the  safety  or  security  of  any  memberts)  of  ttie  University  community;  or 

(2)  The  alleged  misconduct  imrolves  academte  work  or  the  forgery,  alteration,  misuse  of  any  University  document,  record,  key,  electronic  devtee,  or  identification. 
Specifically,  the  University  may  choose  to  exercise  jurisdtetion  over  off-campus  IncWents  under  section  (1)  above  wtiere  the  alleged  misconduct  involves: 

^'^    ScmIL^^SS'SjS^S^^^  ^  f  M  Sft«/enf  Conduct  Code,  betow),  sexual  assault  (as  defined  in  Section  102.08b  of  ttie 

^  utLA  awdent  conduct  code,  below),  sex  offenses,  and  ottw  physical  assault;  ttircats  of  vtoience;  or  conduct  ttiat  ttireatens  ttie  health  or  safety  of  any  person; 

Stalking  (as  defined  in  Section  1 02.10  of  the  UCLA  Student  Conduct  Code,  below): 

Sexual  harassment  (as  defined  in  Section  1 02.09  of  Oie  UCLA  Student  Conduct  Code,  below); 


(b) 
(c) 
(d) 


K?i^i!2S,l^!S!l°?r^i  ^  ^  ^^^^1  ^^"^  ^^'  ^^'^  °^  ^y  '"«'^  "^  '""*a^  ^  pre-mitiation  into  a  campus  organization  or  any  activity  engaged  in 
ttSSy  S^oCjS  "^  '*"^'  "^ ''  ^^ ''  ''""•  ^"^  "^"^'^  P*'^^'  '«""•  °^  P«^"^'  ««9^«^«tion  or  disgrace  result  iHphySTo" 

2.2!2^i"t!Il?ir^^^r"S  5  *"'^'^  off-campi«  jurisdiction  in  cases  under  section  (1)  above,  the  University  will  consider  the  seriousness  of  tiw  alleged  misconduct-  whether  the 

iHlS,^  »?!1  'iZa^^l^  T^S*  ^"i?^"^^.  ^  the  exercise  of  discretion  by  the  University  in  invoking  its  jurisdiction  over  conduct  that  occurs  off  campus  It  may  not  be  relied 
upon  by  any  student  charged  under  this  section  to  create  any  rights,  substantive  or  procedural,  or  as  a  b^  f6r  a  challenge  to  the  exercise  of  the  University's  juriStetion     -3 

B.  Grounds  for  Disclplne 

d!teS?a'^SlS?(?^^  2.SJK.S  !5±2  "2; ^TS  P*S!^°'  ?^P^  "^"'^^  ^^^  ^"^^  «' '"»«"» ^  commit  a  violation  is  not  a  factor  in 

hSSJd  ^SXSS^ti^^ZS^^Ji  ESirSiSL^®',^  HHy  l?  ^  •"  ^rtrming  the  appropriate  sanction  if  it  has  been  determined  that  a  violation 
SSrr  if!?S5:S^^  <~^  »«^ «-  '^^-'"^  ^  "-«--  1 02.01  through  1 02.25  are 

C.  Types  of  Misconduct  ,  ■  .  :i-^^^^^-\  ■ 

10^01:  Acadsmte  Distiunosty 

Sl'SIII^lSJ^i  '"S^If^.llIf*"?^.^  ^  "'""**  ^'  '*«^"fl'  fabrication,  plagiarism,  or  facilitating  academte  dishonesty. 
R)r  the  purposes  of  this  Code,  the  foitowing  definitions  apply: 

102^a:    Ctwatkig 

The  use  of  unauthorized  materials,  information  or  study  aids  in  any  academte  exercise;  or,  helping  anottier  student  commit  an  act  of  academic  fraud;  or  the  failure  to 
ooserve  tne  expressed  procedures  or  instructions  of  an  academic  exercise,  e.g.,  examination  instructions  regarding  alternate  seating  or  conversation  during  an  examination. 
1024nb:    Fabrication 

Faisifteation  or  invention  of  any  Information  or  citation  In  an  academte  exercise. 
lOLOIc: 


^.!tVl^^l  rST**  "!J^^JL1^  **™  °~''  ^''  '™**''"0'  ^  "°*  "'"'^  ^  representing,  eittier  witti  Oie  intent  to  deceive  or  by  ttie  omission  of  the  tnie 

iSSiWe  bS  ^\^r^^!^i!^!^^J'^^^  °*^  ^" J'lJL?^'  °?r^  ^  P""^'«^  °^  °^'*^«''  **  ^  ^^'^  0"9*"a'  ^^^J  ^'  representing  ttie 
loemmawe  out  altered  Ideas,  data  or  vmttng  of  anottier  person  as  If  ttwsekleas.  data  or  writing  were  ttie  student's  original  worit  y  'v 

^fam&.    Multiple  Submlaaions 

^!^'il!^!^^^i^'^  of  any  work  whteh  has  been  prevtously  submitted  for  credit  in  identical  or  similar  form  in  one  course  to  fulfill  ttie  requirements  of  a  second 

SJS'fSrmTrZr™!!^  KS^^"^l"'f  '""^^^"^  °!  ^  ^^^^  ^^''  ^'  ^  s^f^'sswn  by  a  Student  of  any  wori(  submitted  for  credit  in  identical  or 
similar  form  in  one  couree  to  fulfill  the  requirements  of  a  concurrent  course,  wittwut  ttie  permission/consent  of  ttie  instructors  of  botti  courses. 

102412:  Oilier  Forms  of  DistKinesty 

(Jttier  forms  of  dishonesty,  including  but  not  limited  to,  fabricating  information  or  knowingly  furnishing  false  information  or  reporting  a  false  emergency  to  ttie  University  or  to 
University  officials  acting  in  ttie  performance  of  ttieir  duties.  a     j  « i  lu  uiii»ci»iiy  ui  w 

102.03:  Forgery 

aJnsS": r^dTeS Of rufrSlSmlSr'*  ''^''  '^'  ^^^  "^^  °^ '"'""^-  "^  ''''' ^^'^ '' ^^ *"^'^'^"^'  ^^ "^  "^^  ""*^«^'^ 
102^:  Tlieft 


102.05: 


JiSLSL^Z^  t  H^S!^  °^'  *  ^"^!?1^,  '^  *«*^"C«0"  0^.  ariy  property  of  ttie  University  or  property  of  ottiers  while  on  University  premises  or  at  official 
University  hmctions;  or  possession  of  any  property  of  ttie  Univefsity  or  ottiers  stolen  while  on  University  premises  or  at  official  University  functions 


lUmZ^SlSjaZ'^^!^^^  *!LS^5!!^  ^T'  '^^^  ^  "°^  '*'"*^  ^  unauttiorized  fentty  irto  a  file  to  use,  read,  or  change  ttie  contents  or  for  any  ottier 
SSSf 'flSS^I^Si^^^lilJj^i^      "^  °^  ^"^^^  indivkluars  identification  or  password;  use  of  computing  facilities  to  int^ere  witti  ttie  wori(  of  ariittier 
student,  faculty  member,  or  University  offteial;  use  of  computing  facilities  to  irterfere  witti  a  University  computing  system. 

a'Sioffii^JfSeoSnl^ 


- 


■%jr''.^-"   •■'•■ 


62       September  25-28, 2000 


IMir  Brain  News 


^ 


DaHy  Bruin  News 


September  25-28, 2000       63 


I':'' 


V> 


OFFICIAL  NOTICES 

MOM:  Unauthorized  Conduct 

:  ■      Unauthorized  ix^ession  of.  receipt  of.  duplication  of.  or  use  of  V»  Unlverstty's  name,  insignia,  or  seal.  Unauthorized  entry  to.  possession  of,  receipt  of  or  use  of  anv 
University  properties,  equipment,  resources,  or  services.  k     ,     u^«  wij 

peSon  oMhelKtS^  '**^^*  "°^'  ^^^*^'  ^^®^  '^  °^  information  provided  by  an  instructor,  or  using  them  for  any  commercial  purpose,  without  the  express 

102.07:  Universtty-Ovmed  Housing 

102.06: 


•/' 

- . 

t  . 

V 

102.12: 

'  *•' 

> 

«..   '■ 

102.13: 

■    • 

102.1* 

Violation  of  policies,  regulations,  or  rules  governing  Unlvwstty-owned  or  -operated  housing  facilities  or  leased  housing  facilities  located  on  University  property. 
Physteal  Abuse 

K'^lfJlf®'  '"*^''^'"fl  ^  ^  ^'^  to,  rape,  sexual  assault  sex  offenses,  and  other  physical  assault;  threats  of  violence;  or  conduct  that  threatens  the  health  or  safety 
01  any  person.  * 

102.08a:    Rape 

•       ^ZSZS^^UX  °^  ^'^,S?®lT  '^^'^  ^  '^^^.  ^^  ^  ^  ^•'tomla  Penal  Code  (as  It  may  be  amended  from  time  to  time).  Among  other  acts,  the  Penal  Code 
prohibits  the  following  acts,  which  are  summarized  below:  ^  '  ^^ 

1.  Sexual  intercourse  against  a  person's  will  accomplished  by  force  or  threats  of  bodily  injury. 

2.  Sexual  intercourse  against  a  person's  virtll  where  the  person  has  reasonable  fear  that  she  (Of  he)  or  another  will  be  iri^ 

Intercourse.  >     '     V   .Xv  "^ 

^'    S  SB^^b!!^\S^^i^,^r^^^  °^  ^^^  ^^^' ""  ^  ^^"^"^  *^  '^^^'  ^^  to  alcohol  Of  dnjgs.  and  this  condition  was  known,  or  reasonably 

4.    Sexual  intercourse  where  the  person  is  incapable  of  resisting  because  she  (or  he),  at  the  time.  Is  unconscious  or  asleep,  and  this  Is  known  to  the  accused. 
102.08b:     Sexual  Assault 

NOTE:  For  the  purpose  of  this  regulatwn.  students  shouW  understand  that  ~  ^ 

:;  V       1.    I^ed  intercourse.  Of  other  unv>«nted  sexual  contact,  is  defined  as  rape  or  sexual  assault  whether  the  assaite^ 

2.    Intoxicatwn  of  the  assailant  shall  not  diminish  the  assailant's  responsibility  for  sexual  assault. 
102.09:  Sexual  Harassment 

Unweteome  sexual  ad\«nces.  requests  for  sexual  favors,  and  other  verbal  or  physical  conduct  of  a  sexual  nature  constitute  sexual  harassment  when- 

ScSJSi?  ^"""^^  "^  unreasonably  interfering  with  an  IndMdual's  performance  or  creating  an  inSnidating,  hostile,  or  Sve  uZS? 

102.10:  Stalking 

seriously  alarms,  torments,  or  tenonzes  the  person,  and  which  serves  no  legitimate  purpose.  «»uiKuiiy «« 

102.11:   "Rghting  WorHs" 

ITw  use  of  "fighting  words"  by  students  to  harass  any  pers^ 
University  functions  or  University-sponsored  programs. 

"'  ii;"!!!^'"!^'®^"'*®*^ 

— ^  dero^  references  to  race,  ethnicity,  religton.  sex.  sexual  orientation,  disability,  and  0^ 

arcumstances  of  their  utterance  create  a  hostile  and  intimidating  envlronmert  which  the  studert  uttering  t^ 
to  pursue  effectWely  his  Of  her  education  a  othen(»ise  to  parttelpate  fully  In  University  programs  and  activity 

Hazing 

S^to^uSri5SJ?(£l^^ 

Hiweiyro  cause,  Dooiiy  danger,  physical  harm,  or  personal  degradation  or  disgrace  resulting  In  physical  or  mental^  •— — . 

Obstruction  or  DIsruplfoii 

Obstructton  Of  dhrupBon  of  teaching,  research,  admlnlstratton,  disciplinary  procedures.  Of  other  Un^ 
Oisordarly  Conduct 

Disorderly  « lewd  conduct 

Disturbing  ttw  Psm:* 

Participatkm  in  a  disturbance  of  the  peace  Of  unlawful  assembly. 
Faihve  to  Comply 

^^'"^.to  WenWyoQwelf  to.  Of  com^ 

at  official  University  fundtons.  or  resisting  or  obstnictlng  such  university  ^ 


102.1S: 
102.16: 


102.17:  ControOad  Substances 

SS^rSS^ISK'ofJSSi^^        -«, »  «*, «(, » l^.  mm^^  ™™*clu™.  *«b«««,,  di»««n,.  or  sak,  01  «ni™.«.  «**mc«,. 
102.1a:   AlcoM 

102.19:   Destructive  Oevicas 

Possesston,  use,  storage,  or  manufacture  of  exptosives,  firebombs,  or  other  destructive  devices. 
102.20:  Weapons 

Except  as  expressly  permitted  by  law,  possession,  use,  storage,  or  manufacture  of  a  firearm  or  other  weapon  capable  of  causing  bodUy  ii^ury. 
102.21:  Violation  of  Disciplinary  Conditions  ' 

Vtolatton  of  the  condltkMis  contained  in  the  terms  of  a  disciplinary  action  Imposed  under  this  Code. 
102.22:  Violation  of  Emergency  or  Interim  Suspension  CondHions 

Vlolatton  of  the  conditions  contained  in  a  written  Motrce  of  Emergency  or  Interim  Suspension  issued  pursuant  to  Sectton  IV.  of  this  Code. 
102^(3:  Violation  of  Campus  Restraining  Ordsr 

Violatton  ef  the  conditions  contained  in  a  written  Campus  Restraining  Order  issued  pursuant  to  Sectton  III.A.2.a.(1)  of  this  Code. 


OFFICIAL  NOTICES 


102J4:  Unhrersity  Properties 

Using  University  properties  tor  the  purpose  of  organizing  or  carrying  out  unlawful  activity. 
102.25:  Violations  of  Law 

Violation  of  Federal,  State  or  local  laws.  ;, 


III.    STUDENT  DISCIPUNE  PROCEDURES 

7.    Sanctions  '•"'■■' ''  ■•  ■''-■-' ■'  ' '""  •;  -'■      ' '  .■;'-••  "■'-■ '  •;"'^'^  ^':'  •  ■'■•  ■;;• ''-  -,■••,:■•':<■"■<■,  i"-  ■.;:■:• :'  'r  /■=  •'^"  ■',••■ 

Sanctions  for  violation  of  University  polk:ies  or  campus  regulations  include: 

a.  Restitution 

Reimbursement  (which  may  take  the  form  of  monetary  payment  or  appropriate  service  to  repair  or  otherwise  compensate  for  damages)  for  damage  to  or  misappropriation  of 
University  property,  or  the  property  of  others  white  that  property  is  on  University  property  or  at  the  place  of  an  official  University  function. 

b.  Warning  .^ 

Written  notice  to  the  student  that  continued  or  reported  viotatlons  of  spedfied  University  policies  or  campus  regulations  may  be  cause  for  furttier  disciplinary  action.  . 
c    Censure 

...-,. .. ..  ^  Written  reprimand  for  vraiations  of  specified  University  policies  or  campus  regulations,  including  notice  to  the  student  that  contlnoed  or  repeated  violattons  of  sp(^::ifled 

University  policies  or  campus  regulattons  may  be  cause  for  further  disciplinary  actkxi. 


d.    Community  Servtoe 

Sennce  hours  whtoh  are  unpakl  and  receive  no  academk:  credit. 
a.    Disciplinary  Probation 


:^«»'^. 


f"(?*)f>- 


A  status  imposed  for  a  specific  period  of  time  In  which  a  student  must  demonstrate  conduct  that  conforms  to  University  standards  of  conduct.  Conditions  restricting  the 
student's  privlteges  or  eligibility  for  activities  may  be  imposed.  Misconduct  during  the  probattonary  period  or  vlolatton  of  any  condlttons  of  the  probatton  may  result  in  further 
disciplinary  actton. 

LOSS  Of  iTwagas  anc  txcwsion  wrpm  Acuvnies 

Exduston  from  parttolpation  In  designated  privlteges  and  extracurricular  activittes  for  a  specified  term  or  terms.  Violatton  of  any  condlttons  in  the  written  Notice  of  Loss  of 
Privlteges  and  Exduston  from  Activities  or  vtolation  of  University  poltoies  or  campus  regulations  during  tiw  period  of  tite  sanction  may  be  cause  for  fiirti)er  disciplinary  action. 

g.    Hold  on  University  Records 

A  Hold  may  be  placed  on  the  studenfs  University  records  for  either  a  stated  period  or  until  the  student  satisfies  any  conditions  imposed  as  part  of  another  sanction.  The 
placement  of  a  Hold  on  ttw  student's  University  records  may,  for  exampte,  prevent  tite  student  from  rej^stering  and  from  obtaining  tianscripts,  verifications  or  a  diptoma 
from  tite  University. 

h.    Exclusion  from  Aims  of  6w  Campus  or  from  orndaiumvaralty  Functions 

Exduston  of  a  suspended  or  dismissed  student  from  specified  areas  of  ttie  campus  or  from  official  University  functions  when  tfiere  is  reasonable  cause  to  believe  that  die 
stiident's  presence  ttwre  win  lead  to  physkal  abuse,  tiireats  of  violence,  or  condud  ttwrt  threatens  ttte  healtti  or  safety  of  any  person  on  University  property  or  at  offidal 
University  functions,  or  other  disruptive  activity  incompatible  with  the  orderty  operation  of  the  campus. 

L     Suspension 

Termination  of  student  status  for  a  specified  academte  term  or  terms,  to  take  effed  at  such  time  as  ttw  Dean  or  ttw  Vtee  Chanceltor  of  Student  Affairs  determines.  After  ttie 
period  of  Suspenston,  ttw  student  shall  be  reinstated  it 

(1)  ttw  student  has  complted  wtth  all  conditions  imposed  as  part  of  ttw  suspension; 

(2)  ttw  student  is  academtoally  eliglbte; 

(3)  ttw  stijdent  meets  all  ottwr  requirements  for  reinstatement  induding,  but  not  limited  to,  removal  of  HoMs  on  records,  payment  of  restitution  where  payment  is  a 
requirenwnt  of  reinstatenwnt  and 

(4)  ttw  student  meete  ttw  deadNnes  for  filing  all  necessary  appltoations.  induding  ttwse  for  readmisston,  registration  and  enrollment. 

Suspension  may  indude  a  prohibition  against  entering  specified  areas  of  ttw  campus.  Vtotation  of  ttw  conditions  of  Suspenston  or  of  University  pdtoies  or  campus 
regutations  during  ttw  period  of  Suspenston  may  be  cause  for  further  disdplinary  action. 

|.     Dismissal 

Termination  of  stiJdent  statojs  for  an  indefinite  period.  Readmisston  to  ttw  University  shall  require  ttw  specific  approval  of  ttw  Chanceltor  of  ttw  campus  to  which  a  dismissed 
student  has  applied.  Readmission  after  Dismissal  may  be  granted  only  under  exce^tonal  circumstances.  Dismissal  may  Indude  an  exduston  from  specified  areas  of  ttw 
campus. 

&    Posting  of  Suspension  or  Diomissal  on  Academic  Transcript 

When,  as  a  result  of  vtolations  of  ttw  UCLA  Student  Condud  Code,  a  stiJdent  is  suspended  or  dismissed,  ttw  fad  ttiat  ttw  disdpline  was  Imposed  must  be  posted  on  ttie  academic 
ttanscript  for  ttw  duration  of  ttw  Suspenston  or  Dismissal. 


TO:  ALLSTWEMTS 

FROM:  DEAN  OF  STUDENTS 

REGARDING:         REVISED  POUCY  ON  STUDENT  GRIEVANCE  PROCEDURES 

On  August  15, 1994  ttw  University  adopted  revised  Policies  Apptying  to  Campus  Activities,  Organiatkjns,  and  Students,  whteh  may  be  found  on  ttw  Internet  at 
www.ucop.edu/ucophome/uwnews/aospol/toc.htini.  Excerpted  below  are  ttw  sections  dealing  witti  stiJdent  grievance  procedures: 


110JI0 


POUCY  ON  STUDENT  GRIEVANCE  PROCEDURES 

111.00    ChanceHors  shall  devetop  and  submit  to  ttw  President  for  approval,  procedures  to  resolve  grievances  claiming  to  have  been  ttw  subJed  of  any  of  ttw  fdtowing 
types  of  University  action:  .--^    . 

111.10    Vtolation  of  ttw  privacy  rights  accorded  ttwm  by  ttw  Federal  Family  Educational  Rights  and  Privacy  Ad  of  1 974,  porttons  of  ttie  State  of  California  Education  Code, 
an6iiwf\)lk:ies Applying  to  the Disck)suf9  of  Infonnam^tomSluda^ 

1 1 1 .20    Discriminatory  practices  based  upon  sex.  under  TItie  K  of  ttw  Education  Amendments  of  1 972  or  appltoabte  Federal  or  State  laws,  or  under  ttie  Student-Related 
PoHcy  Applying  to  Nondiscriminatkm  on  the  Basis  of  Sex  mi  Jhi  f\)licy  on  Sexual  Hanssnmt  and  C^^ 

111.30    DIscrimlnatofy  pradices  based  upon  disability,  under  Section  504  of  ttw  Rehabilitation  Ad  of  1973  or  ttw  Americans  witti  Disabilities  Ad  of  1990  or  under  ttw 
Guidelines  Applying  to  Nondiscrimination  on  the  Basis  ofDisamy  (see  Section  140.00); 

111.40    Discriminatory  pradices  based  upon  race,  cotor,  or  national  origin,  under  TItte  VI  of  ttw  CIvH  Rights  Ad  of  1964;  and 

111.50    Ottwr  types  of  actions  ttiat  may  be  grieved,  such  as  discrimination  on  ttw  basis  of  sexual  orientation,  age,  or  marital  statijs,  as  specified  in  campus  regulations. 


1 1 2.00    Such  campus  procedures  thai  be  developed  witti  stiJdent  consultation,  and  shall,  at  a  minimum,  meet  ttie  requirements  of  applicable  Federal  anti-discrimination 
and  privacy  laws.  Once  adopted,  they  shell  serve  as  ttw  sote  remedy  wlttiin  ttw  University  for  nonacademic  student  grievances  brought  pursuant  to  any  such  law. 

1 13.00    As  provMed  In  State  law,  civil  law  remedies,  including  injunctions,  restiaining  or  ottwr  court  orders,  and  monetary  damages  also  may  be  available  to  complainants. 

1 14.00    Grade-retated  and  ottwr  academk:  grievances  are  covered  under  separate  poltoies  established  in  consultation  witti  ttw  Academk;  Senate. 


\ 


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Declassified  report  about 
plot  in  CNIe  to  be  posted 


QA:  Agency  reveals  its 
involvement  in  political 
unrest,  kidnap  attempt 


By  David  Briscoe 

The  Associated  Press 


WASHINGTON  -  The  CIA  is 
acknowledging  for  the  first  time  the 
extent  of  its  deep  involvement  in 
Chile,  where  it  dealt  with  coup-plot- 
ters, false  propagandists  and  assas- 
sins. 

The  agency  planned  to  post  a 
declassified  report  required  by 
Congress  on  its  World  Wide  Web  site 
Wednesday  that  admits  CIA  support 
for  the  1970  kidnapping  of  Chile's  top 
general  for  refusing  to  use  the  Army 
to  prevent  the  country's  congress 
from  confirming  the  election  of 
socialist  Salvador  Allende  as  presi- 
dent. The  kidnapping  failed,  but  Gen. 
Rene  Schneider  was  shot  and  died 
two  days  later,  the  day  Allende's  elec- 
tion was  confirmed. 

The  CIA  admits  prior  knowledge 
of  the  plot  that  overthrew  Allende 
three  years  later  but  denies  direct 
involvement.  The  report  says  the 
agency  had  no  idea  that  Allende 
would  refuse  safe  passage  with  his 
palace  under  bombardment  and 
apparently  kill  himself.  He  was  found 
dead  of  gunshot  wounds. 

There  is  no  evidence  the  CIA  want- 
ed Schneider  killed  for  refusing  to 
join  the  coup  attempt  in  1970,  the 
report  said,  although  the  agency  later 
paid  $35,000  to  the  group  that 
botched  his  capture. 

The  report  also  disclosed  a  CIA 
payment  to  Gen.  Manuel  Contreras 
Sepulvcda,  head  of  the  Chilean  secret 
police,  whom  it  knew  to  be  involved 
in  post-Allende  human  rights  abuses. 
In  1993,  Contreras  was  sentenced  to 
prison  for  a  rare  act  of  foreign-spon- 
sored terrorism  on  American  soil  - 
the  1976  car-bomb  killing  of  a  Chilean 
diplomat  and  an  American  associate 
on  Embassy  Row  in  Washington. 

The  report  does  not  reveal  how 
much  Contreras  received  in  a  one- 
time payment  for  his  CIA  services 
and  says  the  payment  was  made  by 
mistake  after  it  had  been  overruled  by 
high  officials.  The  report  says,  howev- 


er, that  the  CIA  had  contact  with 
Contreras  on  several  occasions 
before  and  after  the  bombing. 

In  Chile,  Contreras  called  the  CIA 
claim  that  he  had  been  paid  "a 
shame."  '  '■' 

"I  think  this  is  revertge,  a  reaction 
to  700  documents  that  I  handed  to  the 
FBI  describing  the  barbaric  things 
that  the  CIA  did,"  Contreras,  who  is 
now  retired,  said  by  telephone  to  tele- 
vision Channel  13  of  Santiago.  He 
spoke  from  a  prison  where  he  is  in  the 
final  year  of  a  seven-year  term  for  the 
1976  assassination  in  Washington. 

Payment  to  remnants  of  the  group 
that  kidnapped  Schneider  w^s  made 
for  "humanitarian  reasons,"  to  main- 
tain their  good  will  and  to  avoid  dis- 
closure of  prior  CIA  contacts,  the 
report  said.  It  said  in  those  contacts 
the  agency  withheld  support  for  the 
Schneider  kidnapping,  because 
agents  believed  the  group  could  not 
pull  it  off. 

The  report  also  describes  efforts  to 
influence  news  media  in  Chile  against 
Allende  and  to  augment  anti-leftist 
propaganda  activities  by  the  coup- 
maker  who  toppled  and  succeeded 
Allende,  Augusto  Pinochet.  It  spoke 
of  CIA  activities  "including  support 
fornews  media  committed  to  creating 
a  positive  image  for  the  military 
junta,"  which  is  now  accused  of  an 
array  of  abuses  during  Pinochet's  17- 
year  rule  including  more  than  3,000 
killings. 

Despite  the  disclosures,  the  CIA 
report  admits  to  no  abuses  or  cover- 
ups  by  CIA  agents. 

"A  review  of  CIA's  files  has  uncov- 
ered no  evidence  that  CIA  officers 
and  employees  were  engaged  in 
human  rights  abuses  or  in  covering  up 
any  human  rights  abuses  in  Chile," 
the  report  says.  But  it  chronicles  clan- 
destine contacts  authorized  by 
President  Nixon  and  other  top  U.S. 
officials  that  it  said  would  violate 
standards  now  followied  by  the 
agency.    . 

The  agency  now  carefully  reviews 
all  contacts  for  potential  involvement 
with  human  rights  abuses,  the  report 
said.  It  "makes  a  deliberate  decision 
balancing  the  nature  and  severity  of 
the  human  rights  abuse  against  the 
potential  intelligence  value  of  contin- 
uing the  relationship." 


SOUTH 

From  page  54 

ment  and  tobacco. 

•   But  the  fight  is  far  from  over. 

"The  battleground  is  not  only  in 
the  Midwest,  but  also  in  the  South," 
said  Ellen  Mellody,  Gore's  Southern 
communications  director.  "The 
South  has  been  an  area  that 
Republicans  could  count  on  without 
putting  much  money  or  resources 
into  it.  That's  not  true  anymore." 

One  reason  is  that  six  Southern 
stales  now  have  Democratic  gover- 
.  nors.  The  South  also  is  becoming  less 
agrarian. 

"You  cannot  dismiss  that  it's  still 
more  conservative  and  moralistic  and 
culturally  traditional,  but  there  is 
movement  in  that  direction,"  said 
John  Kuzenski,  a  political  science 
professor  at  The  Citadel  in  South 
Carolina  and  organizer  of  an  annual 
symposium  on  Southern  politics. 

A  candidate  needs  270  of  the  538 
Electoral  College  votes  to  win  the 
presidency.  Texas  would  give  Bush 
32.  Add  Rorida  (25)  and  seven  other 
states  trending  toward  Bush  - 
Alabama  (9),  Georgia  ( 1 3),  Kentucky 
(8),  Mississippi  (7)  and  North 
Carolina  (14),  South  Carolina  (8)  and 
Virginia  (13)  -  and  Bush  would  get 
129  electoral  votes  in  the  South. 

Gore  probably  will  win  Tennessee 
(1 1)  and  West  Virginia  (5).  He  has  a 


shot  at  Louisiana  (9)  and  Arkansas 
(6),  and  there's  a  slight  possibility  he 
could  pick  off  Georgia  or  Kentucky 
And  then  there's  the  fight  for  Rorida. 
One  key  for  Gore  in  the  South  is 
turnout  by  African  American  voters. 
The  fact  that  his  campaign  manag- 
er. Donna  Brazile  of  Louisiana,  is 
African  American,  could  help.  So 
could  President  Clinton,  who  has 
strong  support  from  African 
American  voters. 

And  though  some  question 
Lieberman's  commitment  to  af^rma- 
tive  action,  he  marched  with  Martin 
Luther  King  Jr.  and  registered 
African  American  voters  in  the 
1970s. 

Lieberman's  criticism  of  Qinton's 
relationship  with  a  White  House 
intern  also  could  attract  Southern 
conservatives. 

As  the  candidates  campaign  in  the 
South,  they  like  to  emphasize  their 
roots.  Gore  pulls  on  his  cowboy 
boots;  Bush  his  cowboy  hat.  Botfi 
pepper  speeches  with  y'alls  and 
drawls.  Gore  declares  himself  a  grate- 
ful "son  of  the  South."  Bush  calls  him- 
self "the  only  true  Southerner"  in  the 
race. 

But  Gore,  52,  was  born  in 
Washington,  DC;  Bush,  53,  in  New 
Haven,  Conn.  Both  went  to  private 
prep  schools  -  Gore  in  Washington 
and  Bush  in  Massachusetts.  Both 
graduated  from  Ivy  League 
universities. 


FBI 

From  pi^A7 


•:?^vv,- 


tfie  infdirrnatton  .!!  (aind)  HI  ..  try  to 
give  you  as  much  information  as  pos- 
sible to  permit  you  to  confirm  and 
corroborate  it." 

A  Senate  subcommittee  led  by 
Sen.  Arlen  Specter,  R-Pa..  wants  to 
question  prosecutors. 

A  key  question  is  prosecutors' 
decision  to  reject  a  cooperation  offer 
from  Lee's  attorney  just  before  the 
December  1999  indictment.  The  sci- 
entist offered  to  give  the  government 
"credible  and  verifiable"  proof  of 
what  he  did  with  the  tapes  and  take  a 
lie  detector  test  to  prove  he  was 
telling  the  truth. 

"We  will  immediately  provide  this 
credible  and  verifiable  explanation," 
Lee's  attorneys  wrote  the  U.S.  attor- 
ney in  Albuquerque,  N.M.,  on  Dec 
10,  1999. 

"Specifically,  we  are  prepared  to 
make  Dr.  Lee  immediately  available 
to  a  mutually  agreeable  polygraph 
examiner  to  verify  our  repeated  writ- 
ten representations  that  at  no  time 
did  he  mishandle  those  tapes  in  ques- 
tion and  to  confirm  that  he  did  not 
provide  the  tapes  to  any  third  party," 
the  letter  said. 

Prosecutor  George  Stamboulidis 
said  the  government  pursued  the 
offer  but  concluded  it  was  "cosmetic, 
not  a  real  offer."  Defense  attomeys 
would  only  allow  two  questions  -  Did 
Lee  destroy  the  tapes  or  pass  the 
tapes  to  others?  -  and  wouldn't  agree 
to  an  FBI  polygrapher. 

"How  can  you  lest  his  credibility 
with  only  two  questions?"  the  prose- 
cutor asked. 

The  government  proceeded  with  a 
59-count  in<Jictment  against  the  sci- 
entist that  carried  a  penalty  of  life  in 
prison  and  asked  the  court  to  keep 
him  in  solitary  confinement  in  prison 
without  bail  -  a  position  it  held  for 
more  than  nine  months  until  it  aban- 
doned the  lion's  share  of  its  case  ear- 
lier this  month. 

The  latter  action  caused  the  judge 
in  the  case  to  apologize  to  Lee  for  his 
"unfair"  solitary  confinement  and  to 
lambast  the  government  for  embar- 
rassing "our  entire  nation  and  each  of 
us  who  is  a  citizen  of  it." 


FARMS 

From  page  40 

"A  large  portion  of  the  American 
people  are  very  concerned  about  the 
social  concerns  of  animal  husbandry," 
said  John  Brunnquell,  president  of  Egg 
Innovations  of  Port  Washington,  Wis., 
the  only  egg  producer  now  approved 
for  the  program. 

The  new  program  was  being 
announced  at  a  news  conference 
Wednesday 

"If  you  want  to  improve  the  lives  of 
farm  animals,  look  for  this  label,"  said 
Adde  Douglas,  executive  director  of 
Farm  Animal  Services,  said. 

Products  with  the  label  initially  will 
be  available  primarily  in  natural  food 
stores  and  upscale  supermarkets.  A 
handful  of  farms  have  been  approved 
for  the  program  so  far:  Brunnquell's.  a 
group  of  dairy  farms  in  northern 
California,  and  cattle  producers  that 
supply  a  Montana  processor. 

Tlie-  new  program  comes  after 
McDonald's  Corp.  began  last  month 
forcing  suppliers  to  improve  the  han- 
dling of  animals  in  slaughterhouses 
and  implement  humane  standards  on 
egg  farms.  Although  McDonald's  con- 
tinued to  allow  hens  to  be  caged,  its 
standards  require  the  birds  be  given 
more  room,  and  the  rules  also  will  ban 
forced  molting. 

"There  are  many  production  situa- 
tions nowadays  where  animals  are 
kept  in  close  confinement  and  are  not 
able  to  present  many  of  their  normal 
behaviors,"  said  Joy  Mench,  director 
of  the  Center  for  Animal  Welfare  at  the 
University  of  Califomia,  Davis.  "In 
many^ascs  they  may  not  be  able  to 
.turh  around  or  lie  down." 


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DEPARTMENT 

From  page  37 

ly  ail  of  the  money  and  property  had 
been  recovered,  but  questions  about 
past  thefts  and  financial  missteps 
resurfaced. 

The  department  has  had  trouble 
clearing  its  audits,  according  to  the 
General  Accounting  OfTice,  the 
investigative  arm  of  Congress,  which 
by  law  reviews  the  books  of  more 
than  20  federal  agencies.  ^ 

.  A  Senate  panel  is  currently  consid- 
ering the  r«fc  action  of  forcing  a 
GAO  audit  of  the  federal  agency; 
House  lawmakers  approved  a  bill  in 
June. 

Usually,  auditors  are  asked  by  indi- 
vidual lawmakers  to  examine  agency 
Hnances,  said  GAO  spokesman  Jeff 
Nclligan. 

Education  Department  officials 
said  Tuesday  they've  address  the 
troubles  by  reviewing  its  new  com- 
puter systems  and  increasing  employ- 
ee scrutiny,  among  other  actions. 

Recalling  recent  incidents  - 
including  a  Si  million  employee  theff 
ring  uncovered  in  March,  $77  million 
in  loans  forgiven  for  falsely  claimed 
deaths  or  disabilities,  more  than  $150 
million  in  grants  paid  twice  to  the 
same  winners  -  lawmakers  asked 
when  it  all  end,  and  what  has  it  all  cost 
taxpayers. 

"You  should  know  the  answer  to 
that,"  countered  Rep.  Charlie 
Norwood,  R-Ga. 


A  Senate  panel  is 

considering  ...a  GAO 

audit  of  the  federal 

agency. 


The  panel's  top  Democrat,  Rep. 
Tim  Roemer,  D-lnd.,  praised  depart- 
ment efforts,  but  cautioned  officials 
over  the  effect  of  the  scandals:  "I 
don't  want  things  to  take  place  in 
Washington  or  elsewhere  that  some- 
how erode  taxpayer  confidence  in  the 
public  education  system. 

In  a  civil  action  filed  in  July,  the 
Justice  Department  alleges  that  $1.9 
million  intended  for  two  South 
Dakota  school  districts  was  diverted 
on  March  31  into  two  bank  accounts 
in  Upper  Marlboro,  Md.  Somehow 
the  districts'  correct  bank  account 
numbers  were  substituted  on  a  dn-ect- 
deposit  form  submitted  to  agency 
officials  and  entered  into  the  depart- 
ment's electronic  payment  system, 
said  the  Justice  complaint. 

The  Justice  Department  filing  says 
the  money  placed  into  those  two 
accounts  was  used  to  draw  cashier's 
checks  to  pay  $46,900  for  a  Cadillac 
Escalade,  more  than  $50,000  for  a 
Lincoln  Navigator  and  $135,000  for 
the  building  in  Maryland.  The  docu- 
ment says  the  rest  was  diverted  into 
other  bank  accounts.  No  criminal 
charges  have  been  filed  in  case  yet, 
said  Channing  Phillips,  spokesman 
for  the  U.S.  attorney's  office  in  the 
District  of  Columbia.  He  declined  to 
elaborate. 

"We  didn't  have  to  empty  the  pop 
machines  to  make  payroll,  but  it 
came  dose,"  said  Chris  Anderson, 
superintendent  of  the  600-student 
Bennett  County  Schools  system  in 
Martin,  S.D.,  which  along  with 
Wagner  Community  Schools  in 
Wagner,  S.D.,  was  left  waiting  a 
month  for  its  funds. 

Impact  Aid  is  a  $906  million 
department-run  program  meant  to 
help  school  districts  educate  children 
living  on  Indian  reservations  or  mili- 
tary installations.  Such  places  are  fed- 
eral lands  that  don't  generate  the 
local  property  taxes  that  usually  fund 
local  school  programs. 

Aides  for  the  Senate  sponsor  of  the 
bill,  Tim  Hutchinson,  R-Ark.,  say 
Senate  leaders  back  the  bill.  It's  not 
clear  whether  President  Clinton 
would  sign  it. 


Oily  Brain  Newt 


September  25-28, 2000       67 


Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown  identifies  the  US  investment  banking  aid  brokerage  activities  of  biB  Alex.  Brown  ILC  and    ' 
Deutsche  Bank  Securities  Inc.,  which  are  indirect  sut)sidtaries  of  Deutsche  Bank  AG. 
•Trademark  application  pending 


Deutsche  Banc  Alek.  Brown 


Turning  change  into  opportunity 


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Opportunity  is  right  around  the  world. 
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To  learn  about  our  Global  Analyst 
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68        September  25-28, 2000 


..:--T. 


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Oily  aniin  Arts  I  EMHtaiMMnt 


Septemtier  25-28, 2000         3 


Perks  only  part  of  j 
for  A&E  staff,  critics 


Angela 
Salazar 


COLUMN:  Glamour  is  hard 
to  find  while  trying  to  sort 
through  artists  of  all  types 

That  never  happens  to  us. 
We  never  get  kidnapped  by 
rock  stars.  We  never  get 
offered  a  thousand  dollars  for  a  ..    ^ .  • 
Rolling  Stone  cover  story.  We  ncvcr^ 
even  hang  out  with  groupies. 

True,  there  are  some  perks  to 
working  in  the  Arts  and 
Entertainment  department  of  the 
Daily  Bruin,  but  nothing  of  "Almost 
Famous"  proportions. 

After  seeing 
the  movie  in 
one  of 
Westwood's 
many  theaters, 
I  couldn't  help 
but  feel  a  little 
jealous.  Its 
story  is  built  on 
the  kind  of 
stuff  entertain- 
ment writers 
dream  about  - 
well,  the  kind 
of  stuff  almost 
every  "fan" 

dreams  about,  I  guess:  leaving 
everything  behind  to  do  what  you 
love  most  while  taking  a  little 
adventure  in  self-discovery.  In  the 
case  of  "Almost  Famous"  lead  char- 
acter William  Miller,  the  love  is  for 
the  music  and  the  adventure  lies  in 
a  road  trip  with  a  rock  band. 

The  glamorous  perceptions  of 
the  lives  of  the  rich  and  famous  are 
what  keep  the  entertainment  indus- 
try going.  It  is  the  fa9ade  of  flawless 
beauty  and  charisma  that  makes 
movies,  music  and  money  in 
Hollywood.  And  the  fascination  for 
this  high-rolling  lifestyle  is  what 
pulls  in  fans  and  holds  them  for  as 
long  as  the  dream  lives  on. 

In  "Almost  Famous,"  the  fast- 
paced  life  of  rock  music  captures 
15t-year-old  William's  attention.  As 
an  aspiring  Rolling  Stone  reporter, 
he  is  lured  into  the  world  of 
Stillwater,  a  fictitious  band.  The 
sex,  drugs  and  rock  'n'  roll  formula 
that  creates  real-life  legends  works 
its  same  magic  on  Stillwater  and 
intrigues  William  in  the  movie. 
While  touring  with  the  band,  he 
gets  a  taste  of  what  rock  star  life  is 


alt  about. 

But  when  he  writes  about  his 
.experiences  on  the  road  with 
Stillwater,  the  lines  between  his  per- 
sonal and  professional  life  are 
blurred. 

Early  on  in  the  movie,  Wiltiam  is 
deemed  "the  enemy"  by  the  band 
because  his  job  is  to  report  on  their 
life.  After  gaining  the  band's  trust, 
he  crosses  enemy  lines  and  reveals 
too  much,  providing  the  whole 
story  to  readers. 

Since  the  beginning  of  true  star- 
dom, the  media  has  played  the  role 
of  the  enemy  by  building  stories 
around  celebrities,  while  pushing 
aside  stories  about  "real"  people. 
Maybe  it's  because  "famous  people 
are  just  more  interesting"  as  Penny 
Lane,  the  film's  infamous  "band 
aid,"  (or  groupie)  says.  Or  maybe 
it's  because  we,  as  the  media,  just 
make  them  seem  more  interesting. 

It's  said  that  the  media  has  the 
power  to  make  or  break  stars,  and 
in  most  cases  I  tend  to  agree.  We 
can  exploit  and  manipulate,  but  we 
can  also  promote  and  publicize. 
And  as  long  as  we  "never  make 
friends  with  the  rock  stars"  as 
music  writer  Lester  Bangs  advises 
in  the  movie,  we  can  print  what  we 
see  and  hear  in  an  effort  to  tell  the 
objective  truth. 

Our  responsibility  is  to  the  com- 
munity we  serve,  and  in  the  Daily 
Bruin's  case,  that  community  is 
UCLA  and  Westwood.  In  Arts  and 
Entertainment,  we  strive  to  satisfy 
the  diverse  tastes  of  our  readership 
by  providing  varied,  balanced  and 
accurate  coverage  of  local,  well-  ^ 
known,  student  and  campus  music, 
film  and  theater  productions. 

We  sort  through  the  free  CDs 
from  unknown  bands,  we  watch 
low-budget  independent  films  and 
we  go  to  sketchy  theaters  in  the 
seedy  parts  of  Hollywood,  all  to 
provide  to  you,  the  reader,  quality 
entertainment  coverage  (or  at  least 
that's  our  goal). 

We  may  not  get  to  tour  with 
•NSync  or  Britney  or  interview 
movie  stars  in  their  homes,  but 
that's  OK  because  we're  almost  sat- 
isfied by  the  free,  bright  pink 
"Almost  Famous"  halter  tops  that 
are  sent  our  way  by  eager  publicists. 
So,  maybe  we  like  tcf  live  vicariously 


■AMl4^TELEyiSI0N 


Campus  Events  brings  entertainment  home  to  IJCl^A 


oS^^5<S 


Thnnclay  10/ 5  0  Dr.  T  and  the  Womca 

Wedoeaday  10/1 1  »  The  Ladie's  Man^l^ 

Thnnday  10/13««  Ike  Cootcoder^^ 

Fridaf  10/13  •  Reqwoi  feraDican 

ToeMlajr  10/17  *  Pajr  h  Forwud^^ 

nionday  10/1«.  ^  X-Me. 
ftihy  10120 

WcdncMky  10/25 
TkandqrlO/26  '  CkkkcaRu     . 

fnitfUli  4  Yea  Gui  Count  on  Me 

Vim,  '  '«Hi.o.««-i-.<i-ta*.| 

Thondajr  11/16  «^  Wlua  Lia  Beneath 
Fridqr  11/17   ♦QoiUt^^ 

Wednesday  12/6    *SlMMlowoftkcVaniptfr 


All  $2  fOm  arr shown  at  7  and  9:30  p.m. 
in  Ackeman  Grand  Ballnom. 
Sneaks  an  shown  at  6  or  8p.m. 
in  Adurman  or  at  Pmid  Playhouse, 


AOAM  BROWNAJwty  Brum 


ByOirbMoriatts 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Hollywood,  the  epicenter  of  enter- 
tainment, known  around  the  world  as 
the  place  where  stars  are  born.  UCLA 
is  located  just  a  few  miles  up  the  street 
from  the  Sunset  Strip,  which  is  home 
to  some  of  the  most  famous  clubs  and 
small  concert  venues  in  the  country. 
But  why  leave  campus? 
The  Campus  Events  Commission 
works  year-round  to  bring  the  worid 
of  entertainment  to  students' 
doorsteps.  From  movie  sneak  pre- 
views to  guest  speakers  and  live  con- 
certs. Campus  Events  offers  it  all  to 
students  by  bringing  big  stars  and  up 
and  coming  bands  to  campus. 

One  of  the  most  popular  features 
of  the  CEC  is  their  movie  program. 
Just  how  popular  is  the  program? 
Well,  a  minor  riot  almost  erupted  last 
year  when  tickeu  became  available 
for  a  free  advance  screening  of  the 
movie  "Gladiator." 

"The  office  was  crazy  -  extremely 
busy  and  packed  with  people  wanting 
the  tickets,"  said  Jennifer  Tse,  the 
CEC  films  staff* director.  "It's  all  very 
exciting  for  the  entire  CEC  staff  to  see 
so  many  people  enthusiastic  about  a 
screening,  and  the  energy  and 
response  from  them  gives  us  a  good 
impression  of  how  successful  the 
sneak  will  be." 

Though  not  every  advance  screeiv 
ing  incites  rioting,  the  CEC  film  pro- 
gram also  offers  a  host  of  second-run 
movies  ranging  from  Hollywood 
blockbusters  to  old  school  college 
favorites  for  the  tow  price  of  $2.  To 
spice  up  the  experience,  audience 
members  are  given  the  opportunity  to 
have  fun  and  do  crazy  things  for 
prizes,  such  as  moyie  posters. 

"(Campus  Events)  thinks  that  you 
should  leave  UCLA  with  fun  tollege' 
memories,"  said  Jared  Seltzer, 
Campus  Evenu  Commissioner.  "If 
we  arc  not  giving  you  some  great  big 

S«eCMinfS^pai9el6 


The  best  of  entertainment  as  determined 
by  the  A&E  staff 


Futurama 
Sex  and  the  City 
That  70's  Show 


aMIlllf    ^  ^ 

^  X-Cape 

^Kerckhoff  Coffee  House 
<^  Sculpture  Garden 


WESTWeOfi 


■^  Arrosto  Coffee 

ll^  California  Pizza  Kitchen 

<^  Diddi  Reise 

<%  Barenaked  Ladles 
^"Maroon"    .u'..-:-.-.:::-rWfU 
^Brak 

"Brak  Presents  The  Brak  Album" 

<%  Rage  Against  the  Machine 
^  "Battle  of  Los  Angeles"      ^ 


<^  www.hapst^r.com 
1^  www.brunching.com 
^  www.lawweeldy.com 


mtJtm 


4         September  2S-2t,  2000 


OlV)f  BniiR  Afti  A  bitciliiRiMiit 


0%  Brain  Am  A  EalcrtaiMMiM 


■ 


i 


Film  editor  defends 
movies  as  art  form 


COLUMN:  Cinemgi  finds 
success  in  skillfiil  telling 
of  common-felt  themes 


Iceberg!  Everyone  knows 
what's  going  to  happen.  The 
"unsinkablc"  boat  is  going  to 
sink.  There  is  no  doubt  about  the 
tragic  fate  of  the  passengers  and 
crew  aboard 


In  fact,  so  many  people  went  to 
see  "Titanic"  despite  its  glaringfy 
obvious  ending  that  the  movie 
made  over  $600  million  at  the  box 
ofTice,  making  it  the  highest  gross- 
ing movie  of  all  time. 

Are  moviegoers  anvnesiac 
ignorami?  Why  else  would  they  go 
see  a  movie  when  they  already 
know  what's  going  to  happen? 

I'm  going  to  go  out  on  a  limb 

and  propose  that  moviegoers  are 

not  frivolous  blockheads  and  that 

there    is,    in    fact,    more    to 

/America's  favorite  pastime  than 


meets  the  eye. 

Film  tends  to  be  pigeon-holed 
as  a  form  of  mass  entertainment. 
And  because  your  typical  movie  is 
more  accessible  than  your  stan- 
dard philosophical  dissertation, 
American  cinema  tends  to  be  cat- 
egorized as  amusement  and  not 
art. 

True,  movies  are  a  great  diver- 
sion from  daily  life.  They  are, 
however,  so  much  more  than  just 
a  mindless  distraction. 

For  one  thing,  there  needs  to  be 
more  to  a  movie's  crux  than 
15,000  people  lost-in  a  sinking  ves- 
sel. James  Cameron  artistic  vision 
took  "Titanic"  $150  million 
beyond  its  $100  million  budget. 

Naturally,  then,  it's  not  just  a 
remarkable  tale  that  draws  people 
to  the  movies.  What  separates  an 
amazing  Him  from  an  average  one 
is  how  well  that  remarkable  story 
is  told. 

People  don't  really  care  who 
framed  Roger  Rabbit. 

Flash  back  to  1988  and  a  film 
that  combines  live  action  and  ani- 
mation to  perfection.  The  main 
plot  is  a  murder  mystery,  but  it's 
the  interaction  between  some  of 
the  biggest  names  in  toon  history 
that  really  steals  the  show.  "Who 
Framed  Roger  Rabbit's"  innova- 
tive story  telling  makes  it  classic 
fun  for  people  of  all  ages. 

Secondly,  the  narrative  style  of 
films  are  often  based  on  literary 

SceifWJuifi^pageS 


Try  balancing  between 


•  If  • 


s,  scenes 


FILM:  Many  stars  choose 
to  stay,  return  to  school 
to  complete  education 


By  Emilia  Hwang 

Daily  Bmin  Senior  Staff    .... 

Returning  to  the  site  of  the  "best 
years  of  your  life"  is  a  different  expe- 
rience for  every  graduate. 

For  Gabrielle  Union,  walking  into 
a  locker  room  in  Pauley  Pavilion  was 
just  another  day  in  the  life  of  an 
actor.  Though  she  said  it  was  great  to 
be  back  in  Westwood  talking  about 
her  character  "Isis"  in  the  summer  hit 
"Bring  It  On,"  the  UCLA  alumnus 
could  not  look  at  every  aspect  of 
Bruin  life  with  the  same  sentimentali- 
ty- 

"I  don't  miss  walking  up  and 
down  and  back  and  forth  to  the 
dorms,"  she  said. 

Though  Union  has  gone  from 
trekking  up  Bruin  Walk  to  starring 
with  Morris  Chestnut  in  the  upcom- 
ing film  "The  Brothers,"  she  was  not 
always  on  the  path  to  acting. 

"I  thought  I  was  going  to  go  to  law 
school,"  said  Union,  who  majored  in 
sociology. 

While  she  didn't  pursue  law,  she 


can  add  her  university  degree  to  cre- 
dentials that  include  movies  like  "  10 
Things  I  Hate  About  You"  and 
"She's  All  That."  Moreover,  she  has 
many  fond  memories  of  college  and 
friends  despite  her  demanding  work- 
load. 

"I  miss  the  parties,"  she  said. 
"There's  so  much  going  on  and 
there's  such  a  diversity  (at  UCLA)." 


"I  felt  a  need  to 

re-engage  my  sense 

of  curiosity." 

Elisabeth  Shue 

Actor 


For  Eilza  Dushku,  the  path  to 
fame  as  Faith  in  the  television  series 
"Buffy:  The  Vampire  Slayer" 
required  her  to  choose  between  col- 
lege and  her  acting  career. 

Dushku's  mother,  a  university  pro- 
fessor, encouraged  her  to  attend  pub- 
lic school  and  forget  about  malcing 
movies  when  her  grades  suffered 
from  on-set  tutoring. 

"It  was  just  her  wanting  the  best 


for  me,"  Dushku  said  at  a  recent 
press  junket. 

At  her  mother's  request,  Dushku 
went  back  to  school,  attended  her 
prom  and  graduated  with  her  high 
school  class.  Just  shortly  after  she 
attended  her  college  orientation  and 
settled  into  her  dorm,  she  was  ofTefed 
the  role  on  "Buffy." 

She  said  it  was  diflicult  to  choose 
between  college  and  her  acting  career 
because  she  was  excited  to  go  to 
school  and  the  series  originally  only 
wanted  her  for  five  shows. 
Fortunately,  her  decision  to  postpone 
her  academic  career  was  fruitful  as 
Faith  turned  into  a  recurring  charac- 
ter on  the  series. 

Dushku,  who  began  her  career  as 
ten-year-old  Alice  Bloom  in  "That 
Night,"  said  she  plans  to  return  to 
college  when  the  time  is  right. 

"I'm  going  to  be  undecided  - 
that's  what  all  my  friends  did  when 
they  went,"  she  said  with  a  playful 
laugh.  "I'm  just  going  to  figure  it  out 
as  I  go  along." 

Actors  who  are  able  to  attend 
school  find  themselves  confronted 
with  the  same  problems  as  other  col- 
lege students.  Just  ask  Jesse 
Bradford,  who  has  been  exploring 

Sm  ACTORS^  page  6 


+  4-  +*-f 


+  4 .  •  +•  t  -f  •  Y 


September  25-28, 2000         S 

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speaic|bDut  expe^ence$ 


FILM;  Work  in  visual 
effects  field  has  hrought 
Yeatman  praise,  Oscar 


By  Emilia  Hwang 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Hoyt  Yeatman  is  no  stranger  to 
sleepless  nights  dreaming  of  extrater- 
restrials. While  working  towards  his 
degree  at  the  UCLA  School  of 
Theater,  Film  and  Television,  he 
joined  the  effects  crew  of  the  1977 
film  "Close  Encounters  of  the  Third 
Kind." 

"They  needed  someone  to  baby-sit 
cameras  from  seven  in-  the  evening  to 
seven  in  the  morning,  so  instead  of 
sleeping,  I  went  there,"  said  Yeatman, 
who  will  be  the  featured  alumni  guest 
at  the  School  of  Theater,  Film  and 
Television's  fall  orientation  on  Sept. 
26. 

Since  his  all-nighters  interning  as  a 


production  ^sistarit,  Yeatman  has 
contributed  to  the  conception, 
design,  supervision  arid  production 
of  special  effects  for  more  than  100 
motion  picture,  television,  and  com- 
mercial projects. 

Before  becoming  the  senior  visual 
effects  supervisor  at  The  Secret  Lab, 
the  digital  production  studio  of  Walt 
Disney  Feature  Animation,  Yeatman 
studied  motion  pictures  and  televi- 
sion in  the  day  while  interning  at 
night. 

He  said  he  was  fortunate  to  have 
the  opportunity  to  work  on  "Close 
Encounters,"  as  the  hands-on  experi- 
ence he  gained  came  at  a  stage  in  his 
life  when  his  interests  were  gravitat- 
ing toward  visual  effects. 

"I  had  a  little  10  watt  light  bulb  and 
this  little  ancient  machine  which  was  a 
predecessor  to  motion  control  (made 
up  oO  poggle  switches  and  thumb- 
wheels," Yeatman  said. 

See  YEATMAN,  page  8 


coming 

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check  yournawsstands. 


U  RL  WANTS 
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Septtfflter2S-2>,2000 


Oaiy  anil  Am  ft  EMHtahinnt 


Daily  Brain  Arts  ft  EntertaiMMnt 


ColumUa  PIctum 

Actor  Elisabeth  Shue  decided  to  return  to  college  to 
obtain  her  degree  after  a  10  year  breal^ 


AQORS 

From  page  4 

ways  to  keep  the  textbook  store  from 
burning  a  hole  in  his  pocket. 

"What  I've  been  doing  to  save  dough  is 
taking  (books)  out  of  the  library,"  he  said 
in  a  recent  interview.   . 

Bradford,  who  made  his  first  television 
appearance  as  an  infant  in  a  Q-tip  com* 
mercial,  is  currently  studying  film  at 
Columbia  University. 

He  admits  that  having  a  resume  that 
includes  roles  in  movies  like  "Hackers" 
and  "Romeo  +  Juliet"  probably  helped 
him  get  into  the  Ivy  League  school. 

"They're  looking  for  good  SATs  and 
good  grades  along  with  that  extra  special 
thing,"  he  said. 

That  extra  special  thing  for  Bradford 
includes  starring  in  .  "Presumed 
Innocent"  with  Harrison  Ford  at  age  8. 

"They  want  to  see  initiative,"  he  said. 
"Being  an  actor,,  especially  one  who's 
been  working  consistently  for  most  of  his 
life,  that's  just  a  plus." 

While  it  has  its  perks,  acting  has  also 
taken  a  toll  on  Bradford,  who  works  hard 
to  juggle  his  film  career  while  in  college. 

At  the  beginning  of  his  freshman  year, 
he  was  offered  a  great  role  and  the  oppor- 
tunity to  work  with  director  James  Ivory. 
For  "A  Soldier's  Daughter  Never  Cries," 
Bradford  had  to  take  time  off  from  school 
to  film  in  North  Carolina. 

Bradford  petitioned  to  receive  special 


permission  to  continue  the  term  on  inde- 
pendent study. 

"I'd  been  (at  Columbia)  for  Jjvo 
months,"  he  said.  "I  didn't  want  to  drop 
out  before  I  even  sUrted." 

In  addition  to  completing  the  regular 
course  work  and  passing  the  final, 
Bradford  had  to  hand  in  supplementary 
Work  for  missing  lectures.  So  in  between 
filming,  the  actor  used  his  breaks  to  write 
papers. 


Balancing  academics  and 

acting  was  a  learning 
experience  for  Bradford. 


"All  my  time  was  either  dedicated  to 
making  the  movie  or  school,"  he  said. 

Balancing  academics  and  acting  was  a 
learning  experience  for  Bradford  that 
taugjit  him  to  maintain  his  GPA  by  making 
movies  during  summer  vacation. 

"I  ended  up  having  a  double  workload 
my  first  semester  of  freshman  year  and  it 
blew  me  away,"  he  said.  "It  ma  my  worst 
GPA  since  my  sophomore  year  in  high 
school  and  it  was  horrible." 

With  upcoming  films  like  "Cherry  Falls" 
and  "Speedway  Junky"  underway,  when 
(iocs  actor-student  Bradford  find  the  time 
for  socializing  and  student  life? 

ThCTe's  too  much  to  do  in  Manhattan 


I  ■Mi»»i»i<«M«*«W«M««liMi<;B^-ii— .»-»M. 

not  to  have  a  social  life,"  he  said.  "If  you're 
going  tb  sit  in  your  room  and  study  all  day, 
what  are  you  getting  out  of  college  beside  aH 
this  book  learning?" 

Nevertheless,  actor  Elisabeth  Shue 
craved  that  "book  learning"  aAer  a  10  year 
break  from  school. 

"I  fdt  a  need  to  reengage  my  sense  of 
curiosity,"  Shue  said  at  a  press  day  for  this 
summer's  "Hollow  Man." 

Her  decision  to  return  to  school  was 
prompted,  in  part,  by  her  husband,  who 
had  been  working  on  documentaries  about 
fmtHime  teachers. 

"Every  day  he  would  come  home  with 
footage  that  made  me  cry,  seeing  these  peo- 
ple do  such  a  heroic  job  with  no  attention 
and  no  recognition,"  Shue  said.  "To  sec 
him  inspired  by  his  work  on  an  intellectual 
level ...  made  me  fed  like  I  needed  to  re- 
engage that  side  of  mysdf" 

Shue  was  one  semester  short  of  earning 
her  d^ree  from  Wellesley  College  when  she 
drc^ped  out  to  pursue  her  acting  careo*. 
After  memorable  roles  in  movies  like 
"Karate  Kid,"  "Adventures  in 
Babysitting,"  and  "Leaving  Las  Vegas"  she 
returned  to  school  and  graduated  from 
Harvard  University  last  spring  with  a 
degree  in  political  sdenoe. 

"It's  incredible  how  nerdy  you  become," 
Shue  said  about  her  return  to  academia. 

She  also  isaid  that  her  courses  and  coutit- 
less  papers  left  her  exhausted 

"I  really  did  need  a  break  after  ooUege," 
she  said.  That  was  the  hardest  film  I  ever 
filmed." 


'      S«fil«m6er  25-28. 2000    -^  T 

■  ■  .    .     I.I     i  i»     'II,.    I.  Ji     !l' 


lissed 

re 

^aily  Bruin] 

ver  the 

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WITH  CHABAD 


xfeDrHCTRe 

High  Holidays 

with  a  man 

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shared  joy  with 

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people.. 

Rabbi  Boruch 

Shlomo  Cunln 

of  the  Chabad 

Telethon. 


Roth  Hashana: 

Evenii^  Services:  Sept.29  6: 15  p.m.&  Se|>c30  7rl  5  p.m. 
Morning  Services:  Oct.  I  &  Oct.  2  at  10:00  a.m. 

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Kol  Nidrei  Oct.  8  6:00  p.m. 

Shacharit  Oct.  9  lOKX)  am 

Neilah  Oct.  9  5.00  p.m. 

Services  are  free,  warm  and  welcoming. 

Festive  Gourmet  Meals  following  services:  $36  couvert,  no  charge  for  students, 

RSVP  shabbatdchabad.com  or  3 10.206-75 1 1 


to  advertise  call 
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Chabad  House  at  U.C.L.A.  has  a  strong  tradition  of  providing  the  resources 
.    for  Bruins  to  help  make  this  planet  a  better,  kinder  place  for  us  all. 

Visiting  the  elderly  and  the  sick,  providing  aid  to  disaster  victims,  drug  prevention 

education,  and  on  a  lighter  note,  building  bridges  for  students  of  all  backgrounds  to 

meet,  have  fun  and  help  each  other  through  social  and  educational  programs. 

■  » 

Thinking  globally  and  acting  locally  is  getting  a  real  C?hai. 
•  (Chaiis  Hebrew  for  "Ufe") 


..im.  • 


Here's  some  of  our  programs. 


High  Holiday  Services  &  Meals*  Shabbat  Dinners  at  Chabad  House  every  Friday  @  Sundown 

•  World  of  Good  Campaign  •  Cookie  Bake  for  the  Hungry  •  Hospital  Visitation 

^  Elderly  Visitation  •  Daily  Minyans  •  Women's  Torah  Academy  •Classes  in  Jewish  Mysticism,  Hebrew 

and  more  •  Anti-missionary  Task  Force  •  Succot  on  Campus  •  Holiday  celebrations  •  Simchat  Torah 

party  •  Mitzvah  Campaigns,  including  MezuzaK,  Charity,  Teffilin,  Shabbat  Candle-lighting  Campaigns  and 

more  •  Jewish  Birthday  Celebrations*  Kashrut  $  Aid  •  Jewish  Bookstore  •  Free  Loans 

•  Jewish  Education  •  Tu  B'shvat  •  Purim  Bash  •  Passover  Seders  •  Lag  Ba'omer  BBQ...  and  more! 


Chabad  House  at  U.C.LA.  •  741  Gayley  Ave. 
(31 0)  208-751 1  •  e-mail:  Chabad@ucla.edu 

"Dedicated  to  tfie  £ove  and  inspiration  ofiht  Luhavitcher  !Rf66e,  fKfiBSi  ^hienachm  TAenddScimeenan 


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spun.com 

the  entertainment  exchange 


..■f.:  :  ?..  .»■ 


Free  CDs,  DVDs,  and  Gaines 

Just  Trade  In  Your  Favorite  Dust  Collectors  For 

The  Next  Big  Thing! 


L'f-M'-J  II  \N   |Hyi_J 


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-  the  entertainment  exchange. 

Because  evolution  is  good. 


'8         September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  li  EntortafaMnMit 


HWANG 

Fro(npa9e4 


form.  A  successful  movie  engages  its 
audience'on  many  levels,  often  capti- 
vating the  soul,  provoking  the  heart 
and  challenging  the  mind. 

If  told  skillfully,  Hollywood  could 
release  the  ultimate  suspense  thriller 
"Professor-Plum-in-the-Billiard- 
Room-With-the-Candlestick"  and 
both  Clue  fans  and  non-Clue  fans 
alike  would  flock  to  theaters.  I'm 
sure  it  would  have  considerable 
potential  to  be  the  greatest  who-dun- 
nit  of  all  time.  The  well-executed 
drama  would  hook  audiences  inter- 
ested in  seeing  the  mystery  unfold, 
despite  previous  knowledge  of  the 
outcome. 

Cinema  has  come  a  long  way 
since  its  early  days  of  unedited 
shorts  and  one-reel  narratives. 
Motion  pictures  started  out  by  cap- 
turing commonplace  events  -  a  baby 
eating  its  food  or  a  guy  being 
sprayed  with  a  water  hose.  Even 
without  color  or  sound,  the  first 
films  could  address  the  everyday  in 


an  artful  alliance  with  spectacle. 

Back  then,  the  spectacle  was  the 
medium  of  the  motion  picture  itself. 
The  way  movies  told  ordinary  sto- 
ries was  extraordinary  in  itself. 

Long  before  Technicolor  and 
THX  sound,  filmmakers  have 
always  possessed  a  magical  combi- 
nation of  deternmiation  and  imagi- 
nation, enabling  them  to  create  that 
which  eludes  them. 

They  don't  call  Hollywood  "the 
dream  factory"  for  nothing.  Movies 
are  made  in  order  to  provide  viewers 
access  to  the  fantastic  and  the  impos- 
sible, but  always  from  a  safe  dis- 
tance. 

For  example,  you  can  watch  the 
notorious  boat  sink  for  a  good  two 
hours  without  getting  even  a  drop  of 
water  on  your  popcorn. 

Additionally,  the  cultural  power 
of  Hollywood  surpasses  social 
boundaries,  reaching  new  levels  with 
each  budding  blockbuster. 

With  the  multicultural  fragmenta- 
tion of  American  society,  block- 
buster-marketing strategies  can  still 
yield  a  momentary  consensus  at  the 
box-office. 


Abroad,  films  act  as  ambassadors 
to  foreign  countries,  carrying  myths 
and  stories  about  America  through- 
out the  world.  The  cultural  (while 
often  transient)  prominence  of 
blockbusters  is  not  something  critics 
should  cluck  their  tongues  at. 

Finally,  what  would  contempo- 
rary social  life  be  without  the 
movies? 

Since  the  late  1800's,  the  cinema 
has  been  a  fundamental  part  of  the 
American  cultural  experience.  Like 
an  indigenous  folk  tradition, 
Amiericans  have  been  repeating  the 
same  tales  generation  after  genera- 
tion. The  retelling  (that's  right,  it's 
been  told  before)  of  the  British 
ocean  liner's  disastrous  collision 
with  an  iceberg  in  the  North  Atlantic 
is  characteristic  of  a  society  that  not 
only  enjoys  repeating  stories  for 
^ture  generations,  but  seeing  them 
through  different  perspectives. 

Not  only  have  there  been  a  hand- 
ful of  Titanic  talcs,  but  the  core 
romantic  story  line  can  be  traced 
throughout  cinematic  history  from 
"Gone  With  the  Wind"  to  "Ghost" 
to  "Notting  Hill." 


Most  blockbusters  don't  stray  f|tf 
away  from  timeless  stories  of  boy 
meets  girl,  or  good  guy  defeats  bad 
guy.  Moviegoen  like  epic  romances 
and  amazing  tales  of  heroism.  If  you 
don't  recognize  recurring  themes 
immediately,  they  may  just  be  dis- 
guised as  a  variation  on  the  themes: 
rooster  meets  hen,  or  Autobots  beat 
the  evil  Decepticons. 

More  than  just  box  office  figures, 
movies  embody  a  uniquely 
American  spirit  by  blending  enter- 
tainment and  art. 

So  continue  to  support 
Hollywood,  even  though  you  know 
Rose  is  going  to  let  go  of  Jack  into 
the  freezing  cold  Atlantic  ("Rose... 
don't  ever  ...  let  ...  go").  But  never 
fear,  I'm  sure  she'll  get  over  him 
-  and,  eventually,  her  heart  will  go  on. 

Oops,  I'm  sorry  -  I  hope  I  didn't 
ruin  the  ending  for  those  of  you  who 
haven't  seen  it. 

'  "■■     ,  ..'  v.-  a* ,", 

'  .  !'!:•:  .ft  ■■■._  '■        -■:/•' 
-        '      ■ ."    ^"    Ky«  I     "S. 

When  Hwang  isn't  busy  watching 
nr>ovies,  eating  popcorn  and  saving 
Hollywood,  she  takes  time  out  to  read 
her  e-mail.  Send  your  thoughts  to 
emilia@ucla.edu. 


YEATMAN 

From  page  5 

With  primitive  visual  effects 
devices,  Yeatman  helped  to  create 
spectacular  shots  of  the  alien  mother- 
ship  descending  over  the  moon  base. 

"I  didn't  know  what  I  was  doing  at 
the  time,"  he  said.  "(I)  had  an  expo- 
sure sheet  and  sat  there  for  12  hours 
flipping  switches  in  the  dark  and  the 
smoke." 

According  to  Yeatman,'  movies 
like  "Qose  Encounters"  and  "Star 
Wars"  (1977)  really  n»rked  the 
beginning  of  the  big  rage  for  visual 
effects. 

"There  had  been  stuff  previous  to 
that,  but  for  the  most  part  that  was 
when  things  started  to  explode,"  he 
said. 

In  1979,  Yeatman  would  go  on  to 
cofoiind  the  visual  effects  company 
that  would  become  The  Secret  Lab  in 
a  two-and-a-half  car  garage.  And  a 
decade  later,  he  would  win  the  Oscar 
for  Best  Achievement  in  Visual 
Effects  for  his  work  on  the  1989  film 

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Daily  Brain  Arts  ft  EntcrtaimMnt 


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September  25-28, 2000 


Academics  in  the  Co 


MMONS 


iiiUVisum  L>J  t/ii'  (  oUt'£e  of  Letters  c-^  Science 


Academic  Support  Workshops 


Title 
•  Academic  Stress 


•  Altern§tive^to  Med  School 


..4  - 


•  Choosing  a  Major    " 

•  Preparing  for  the  CBEST  :^ 

•  Preparing  for  the  GMAT 

•  Preparing  for  the  GRE 

•  Internship  Preparation 

•Preparing  for  LSAT 

•  Memorization 

•Note  Taking 

•  Preparing  for  Careers 

in  Business 

•  Preparing  for  Law  School 

•  Preparing  for  Med  School 

•  Preparing  for  Midterms/Finals 

•  Procrastination 


Time  Date 

4:15       11/2.11/7,11/15.11/30 

4:15       10/16.11/8 

7:00       10/30,  11/29 

4:15  10/12,  10/30,  11/20 

7:00  11/8 

4:15  10/25    v 

4:15  10/18       !^    ;^   : 

7:00  ^OI25\.'-^y:::i::;/^ 

4:15  10/19,  11/29  ;?; 

7:00  10/10.  11/14 

7:00  10/18 

4:15  10/11.  10/30,  11/27 

7:00  11/6 

7:00  10/16.10/30,11/2,11/20 

4:15  10/25,11/21 

7:00  10/16,  11/30 

4:15  10/26,  11/9 

7:00  10/17,11/30         ■      -.^^ 

4:15  10/11,11/6 

7:00  10/17,  11/16 

7:00  10/24,11/2,11/9,  11/28 

4:15  10/19,11/2 

7:00  11/16,11/27 


"Mim^sJ^'^'^e^Mf^&k!. 


Workshops 
Drop-in  Academic 

Counseling 

1 pm-6pm 

1 pm-5pm 
Tutorials 

9am-9pm 

9am-5pm 

Writing 

Math  &  Science 


Title 
*  Public  Speaking 

>  Reading  Speed 

'Study  Skills 

Succeeding  at 

Writing 
Time  Management 
Transfer  Adjustment 


Tinie 

4:15 
7:00 
4:15 
7:00 
4:15 
7:00 
4:15 
7:00 
7:00 
4:15 
7:00 


203  CovEL 

203  CovEL 

Monday-Thursday 

Friday 

Monday-Thursday 
Friday 

228  CovEL 
230  CovEL 


Date 

10/24,  11/16 

10/11.  11/6 

10/10.  10/30        :Vv 

11/13.  11/27        V    : 

10/12.  10/23,  11/1 

11/9 

11/1.  11/13 

10/11.  10/19 

10/10.  10/24.  11/14,. 11/28 

10/5.10/10,11/15  / 

11/7 


The  Essential  Handbook 


Get  your  copy  of  the  new  UCLA  study 
skills  handbook  created  by  Academic 
Counselors  for  UCLA  undergraduates. 


•  Choosing  a  Major 
•Study  Skills 

•  Time  Management 

•  Test-Taking  Techniques 

•  Preparing  for  Lay  School 

•  Succeeding  at  Writing 

•  Memorization  and  Notetaking 

•  and  many  more  subjects... 


Graduate  School 
Workshops  (4: 1 5  prc\\ 

•  Education  -i. 

•  English  / 

•  Law  ' 

•  Public  Policy 

•  Chemistry/Biochemistry 

•  Language 

•  Sociology 
•TESL 

•  Political  Science 

•  Psychology 

•  History 


10/24 

10/17 

10/18 

10/19 

10/25 

10/26 

11/2 

11/8 

11/14 

11/28 

11/16 


Career  Center  f4:lS  pm^ 


Career  Planning 
Resume  Writing  for 
Internships  and 
Part-Time  Jobs 
Internship  Research 


10/23 


10/26 
11/16 


Available  at  the  UCLA  Bookstore 
B  Level,  Ackerman  Union 
308  Westwood  Plaza 
Los  Angeles,  California    90024 
e-mail:    bookzone@asucla.edu 


Academic  Success  Skills 


To  sign  up  call:  (310)  206-6685 

Monday  -  Friday  9am  to  4  pm 

For  more  information:  (310)  825-9315 

Woricshops  are  held  in  203  Covel 

Commons 

www.colleqe.ucla.edu/uD/workshQps 


r** 


W     September  2^28, 2000 


IMy  Brain  Ami 


":r.. 


,  «'■'"' 


let:s^talk 


M-o 


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The  Scholarship  Resource  Center 

233  CovEL  Commons  •  (310)  206-2875 

http://www.college.ucla.eclu/up/src 
Hours:  1 1 -6  Monday-Friday 


,*•  .1 


k^ 


"  Library  of  Scholarship  Books 
"  Free  Scholarship  Database 

Internet  Access  to  Scholarships 
^  One-on-One  Counseling 
^  Writing  Assistance 

^  Even  a  typewriter!  ^ 

(So  why  haven't  you  visited  us  yet?) 


Guiding  UCLA  Undergraduates  tt^rough  the  Scholarship  Process 


f 


1      I    1    ■■  '      ■  ■-• 


^ 


Brain  Alts  ft  Entertainment 


,  -i(  J.'  -—  .— ' 


September  25-28, 2000^      11 


-:    'T: 


Attention:  Transfer  Students  and  FRESHiviEr^ 

COLLEGE  OF  LETTERS  AND  SCIENCE  PRESENTS: 

CONVOCATION  WEEK  2000 


Office  of  Residential  Life  (ORL)  Computer  Resources  Wkshp 
ORL's  Acceptable  Use  Computer  Workshop 
ORL's  Acceptable  Use  Computer  Workshop 
Transfer  Adjustment  Workshop 

African- American  Studies  Open  House 

Asian  American  Studies  Open  House 

Honors  Programs  Open  House 

L&S  Counseling  Services  Open  House 

ORL's  Acceptable  Use  Computer  Workshop 

ORL's  Acceptable  Use  Computer  Workshop 

ORL's  Acceptable  Use  Computer  Workshop 

ORL's  Acceptable  Use  Computer  Workshop 

ORL's  Computer  Resources  Workshop 

ORL's  On  Campus  Housing  Resource  Fair 

Prc-Professional  Advising  Office  (PAO)  Open  House 

Transfer  Adjustment  Workshop 

Transfer  Adjustment  Workshop 


12:00-1:00 
10:00-11:00 
1:00-3:00 
1:00-2:30 


Covel  Commons  Computer  Lab 
Covel  Commons  Computer  Lab 
Covel  Conmions  SouthBay  Room 
203  Covel  Commons 


mMiSMl 


2^ 


2:00-5:00 
2:00-4:00      ^T3 
1:00-4:00 

l:00-4:0a     /     {  •  V 
10:00-11:00  ■  /;    ^ 
1:00-3:00 
6:30pm-8:30pm 
10:30pm- 11 :30pm  ^ 
12:00-1:00/4:00-5:00 
10:00-2:00 
1:004:00 

10:00-11:30/2-3:30 
4K)0-5:3a 


2312  Murphy  Hall  ___^ 

3230  Campbell  Hall    ^T^v^'TTrZ 
A3 1 1  Murphy  Hall        j  >- .  i  ■ 
A3 16  Murphy  Hall 
Covel  Commons  Computer  Lab 
Covel  Commons  SouthBay  Room 
Northwest  Auditorium  ; 

Covel  Conmions  Computer  Lab 
Covel  Commons  Computer  Lab 
Sunset  Village 
A334  Murphy  Hall 
203  Covel  Conmions 
624  Hilgard  Ave. 


"Academics  in  the  Commons"  Program  Open  House 

Academic  Advancement  Program  (AAP)  Open  House 

Aerospace  Studies  Open  House 

Anthropology  Open  House 

Atmospheric  Sciences  Open  House 

C^sar  E.  Chivez  Center  for  Chicana/o  Studies 

Classics  Open  House 

Comparative  Literature  Open  House 

Career  Center  Open  House 

East  Asian  Languages  &  Cultures 

East  Asian  Studies 

Economics  Open  House 

English  Open  House 

European  Studies  Open  House     ■  ^  '  ■  ',-  - 

French  Open  House  — '■'— — ' 

Geography  Open  House 

Germanic  Languages  Open  House    ";  >      -^ 

History  Open  House  •    tr-^ 

Italian  Open  House 

Lesbian,  Gay,  Bisexual  &  Transgender  Studies 
Linguistics  Open  House 
Mathematics  Open  House. 
Microbiology  &  Molecular  Genetics  Open  House 
Military  Science  Open  House 
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Neuroscience/  Organismic  Biology,  Ecology  &  Evolution/ 
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ORL's  Computer  Resources    Workshop  ^^ 

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South  A  Southeast  Asian  Languages  &  Cultures  Open  House 

Transfer  Adjustment  Workshop 

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Undergraduate  Research  Center-Life  &  Physical  Sciences 

Women's  Studies  Program  Open  House 


10:00-12:00noon 

10:00-2:00 

2:00-5:00  >  •  - 

2:00-5:00  v^ 

2:00-5:00  '-- 

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2:00-4:00 

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2:00-4:00        -. 

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2:00-5:00  f      '^     ^ 

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2:00-5:00         , 

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10:00- 12:00noon 

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l:00-8:30pm 

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2:00-4:00 

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10:00-12:00noon 

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10-1 1:30  &  2-3:30 

2:00-4:00 

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2:00-5:00 


2nd  Fl  Covel  Commons 

Campbell  Hall 

210  Men's  Gym  .■  v  Nr 

3135  Hershey  Hall       ;  :.  ;■  ^^ 

7 1 24A  Math  Sciences 

7373  Bunche  Hall 

221ADoddHall 

314  Royce  Hall 

Career  Center 

243  Royce  Hall  ^      y-   ^ 

243  Royce  Hall     .  \-,-^-\.  ^^;'^ -.; 

2209A  Bunche  Hall      '■'':  ^  i  x 

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11377  Bunche  Hall 

236  Royce  Hall 

Palm  Terrace,  Bunche  Hall 

3rd  Floor  Terrace  Royce  Hall   ;   : 

6282  Bunche  Hall 

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251AKinseyHall* 

3125  Campbell  Hall 

6620  Math  Science  Bldg. 

Molecular  Sciences  Bldg.  Courtyard 

Bruin  Walk/Westwood  Plaza 

Life  Sciences  Courtyard 

Life  Sciences  Courtyard 

Life  Sciences  Courtyard -, 

123  Men's  Gym 

386  Kinsey  Hall -; 

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Covel  SouthBay  Room 

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2-222  Knudsen  Hall 

4269  Bunche  Hall 

Franz  Hall  Tower  Lobby 

332  Royce  Hall  ' 

233  Covel  Commons 

115  Kinsey  Hall 

1642  Hershey  Hall 

243  Royce  Hall 

203  Covel  Commons 

1201 A  Campbell  Hall 

2121  Life  Sciences 

355  Kinsey  Hall 


^ 


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^YEATMAN 

From  page*,      .. 


^  -"The  Abyss."     ■-■-.  '  -.  -^- ■-:.  .■■■•^' ';  ■  ;•; 

"We're  extremely  proud  of  Hoyt 
Yeatman,  his  work,  and  his  career,"  said 
Wilham  McDonald,  vice  chair  for  pro- 
duction in  the  department  of  film  and  tele- 
vision at  the  UCLA  School  of  Theater, 
Film  and  Television.  "He's  a  very  good 
example  of  the  type  of  student  we  bring 
into  the  program  and  type  of  student  who 
graduates  from  the  program." 

According  to  McDonald,  Yeatman  is  a 
graduate  who  is  trained  in  and  under- 
stands the  craft  of  filmmaking,  while  also 
being  an  artist  who  has  stories  to  tell. 

"Each  frame  of  the  work  he  does  con- 
tributes to  the  greater  good  of  the  story,  of 
the  film  that  he's  working  on,"  McDonald 
said.  "And  not  all  effects  people  can  do 
that." 

Working  on  films  like  "Armageddon," 
"The  Rock"  and  most  recently,  "Mission 
to  Mars,"  Yeatman  demonstrates  a  cre- 
ative and  innovative  approach  to  visual 
effects. 

"What  you  do  (as  a  visual  effects  super- 
visor) is  help  orchestrate,  like  a  conductor 
of  an  orchestra,"  Yeatman  said.  "You 
help  come  up  with  the  ideas  and  you  help 
decide  which  ways  we're  going  to  go  by  lis- 
tening to  the  different  experts  in  the  field. 
Then  you  are  responsible  for  getting  the 
shot  completed  and  working  with  the 
director  and  the  editors,  and,  creatively, 


.making  stiie  it  works  as  wefl  as  tedmical- 

ly." 
■^;  According  to  McDonald,  Yeatman's 
'  work  on  "Mission  to  Mars",  is  a  good 
example  of  his  ability  to  blend  technology 
and  artistry  in  visual  effects.  In  the  film, 
not  only  is  the  transit  to  the  pfanet  Mars 
believable,  but  so  is  the  planet  itself. 


"Hoyt  Yeatman  is  the 

unique  combination  of 

artist  and  innovator." 

wiltlam  McDonald 

Vice  chair,  UCI^  Theater,  Film 
and  Television  Department 


"Hoyt  Yeatman  is  the  unique  combina- 
tion of  artist  and  innovator,"  McDonald 
said.  "The  work  he  has  done  over  the 
years  have  been  cutting  edge  both  cre- 
atively as  well  as  technologically." 

For  Yeatman,  interning  in  the  filw 
industry  during  college  afforded  him 
priceless  experience  that  acted  as  a  spring- 
board for  the  rest  of  his  career. 

"It's  still  an  apprenticeship  system,"  he 
said.  "In  other  words,  you  can  get  very 
good  classes,  but  once  you  get  through  the 
academic  aspect  of  what  you're  learning 
it's  really  handsK)n." 

McDonald  said  that  he  stresses  the 


importance  of  interning  to  students  in  his 
program.  Graduates  must  have  some  kind 
of  a  marketable  skill,  as  well  as  an  aware- 
ness of  the  filmmaking  industries. 

"There  are  many  types  of  filmmaking 
industries  out  there,"  McDonald  said. 
"Internships  are  a  key  stepping  stone  to 
understanding  what  the  options  are  that 
are  out  there." 

Yeatman,  however,  recalls  an  experi^ 
ence  that  he  does  not  consider  a  fulfilling 
internship.  In  a  handsoff  situation,  he 
found  himself  sitting  behind  a  monitor 
producing  paper-punch  tapes  that  would 
go  down  to  the  computer. 

Nevertheless,  Yeatman  said  that  the 
right  internship  can  provide  invaluable 
experience  to  a  student. 

"You  begin  at  a  certain  level  working 
with  a  company  or  individuals  that  can 
teach  you  something."  he  said.  "And  the 
best  way  to  Icam  is  by  learning  from  peo- 
ple who  you  admire  and  people  that  do 
good  work." 

Speaking  to  new  and  returning  stu- 
dents at  the  UCLA  School  of  Theater, 
Film  and  Television,  Yeatman  plans  to 
give  an  overview  of  the  past  and  future  of 
visual  effects. 

According  to  Yeatman,  the  technology 
for  visual  effects  is  exponentially  climbing 
forward. 

"It's  moving  fast  and  becoming  cheap- 
er and  faster  for  ail  of  us,"  Yeatman  said. 
"It's  going  to  be  amazing  in  the  next  five 
to  ten  years  the  things  that  we're  able  to 
do.  It's  really  driven  by  imagination." 


My  Bniiii  Arts  ft  EMMaiMMiit 


Domiogo/Khw  Conart 


^U^    OOROrMV  CHANOIER 

%F  PAVILION 


Mk  Oitrwy  FcMuic  AnimMiQn 

Hoyt  YMtnum  will  be  a  featured  alumni  guest  at  the  UCLA 
School  of  Theater,  Film  and  Television  fall  orientation. 


SEATING   SECTIONS   AND   STUDENT   PRICES 


This  special  student  subscription  offer  is  not  a\ailable  for  Friday.  Saturday  or  Sunday 
evenings  or  Saturday  and  Sunday  matinees  and  some  performances  of  Aula. 
Seating  is  limited  in  some  sections,  so  please  be  sure  to  indicate  an  alternate  choice. 


STUDENT    SUBSCRIPTION    ORDER    FORM 


THE  f  INE  MtINT:  Mnimun)  of  3  operas.  FuM-tiin*,  currentJy  cnrolM  high  school  and  college  students 
quaWy  One  senes  per  ID.  Enclose  a  copy  of  yoor  student  ID.  and  drivel's  kense  with  your  order. 
Student  exchange:  regular  price  will  be  ctwrged  for  new  performance  date.  All  exchanges  are  subiect 
to  availability.  Artists  subiea  to  change 

Ah«i»«t«  Numbir 

QP**^' Drte  Date         SKtion         Price    x  ofTicktts  *  Mai 


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D  I  will  accept  higher-priced  tickets  to  a  maximum  of  $ per  ticket. 

D  I  will  accept  lower-priced  tickets  to  a  minimum  of  $ per  ticket. 

D  I  will  accept  seats  that  are  not  together. 


THE  NEW  BRUIN 

BARGAINS 

OFFERS 

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UCLfl    PERFORMIfrC    ARTS 

Student  Committee 

is  looking  for  approximately  24  undergraduate 

and  graduate  students  interested  in  producing 

and  promoting  the  performing  arts  at  UCLfl. 

Produce  M;f  ;|-c^^^^^^^ 

^  free  and  ticketed  performing  arts  events  for  the  UCLR  community 

Work  with 

performers,  managers,  agents,  production  crew  and  the  jnedia 

Gain  first-hand  experience 

in  the  field  of  performing  arts  management 

No  experience?  No  problem! 


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Or  take  a  dianctl  StudaM  msii  tickets  arc  |utt  S20.  Cash  only. 

Rush  tickets  are  subject  to  availability  to  students  with  valid  I.D. 
and  proof  of  current  enrollment,  from  one  hour  before  curtain 
for  available  perforpiances.  Call  (213)  972-8001  for  complete  list 
of  performance  dates,  and  rush  availability  on  day  of  performance. 
Only  one  rush  ticket  per  I.D.  Seating  at  the  dixretion  of  the  Box 
Offke.  All  sales  are  final. 

For^a  complete  listing  of  Los  Angeles  Operas  2000-2001  Season,  seating  sectioQS 
and  prKcs,  visit  our  website  at  www.laopera.org  or  call  (213)  972-1001. 


Positions  include: 

Wtbsite  Coordinator 

Grophic  Designer 

Marketing  Director 

Producers 

Computer  Services  Director 

Ticket  Manager 

AND  MORE! 

Applications 

are  now  ovailoble  in  Royc«  B96,  or 

on  our  website:  www.tco.ucla.edu 

DEADLINE:  OctoberlO 


Questions? 

CALL/  310. 82B. 3283  OC 
i-HAZL/  sca9uclo.edu- 


UCLfl  Performing  Arts  Student  Committee 
wants  you  to  ^.. 

Experience  the 

Perjormin?  Arb/s  ab  UCLA 


SoMe  of  the 


Bf  ST  seats 


in  the  house  ore  being  held 
exclusively  for  UCLA  students 
at  the 


LOWEST  prices. 


UCLflg 


TICKETS  noy  be  purchased 
approximately  one  month 
prior  to  the  event  — 

ONLINE  ot 
www.sca.ucla.edu 

or  IN  PERSON  at 

UCLA's  Control  Ticket  Office. 

Don't  miAA  out? 
Great  pric6>4?  Great  >46at/sO 

R  UCLN  Iruin  Cord  i*  roquirod  at  both  tho  tiaa  of  purchoto  ond  at  tha  door. 
IXMXT:  7  tickott  por  Iruin  Cord 


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16       September  2S-28, 2000 


My  Bruin  Am  &  EnlertaiMMiit 


Daily  Bnwi  Arts  i  Entertainment 


September  25-28, 2000        17 


CAMPUS 

Erom  page  3 


college  memory,  then  at  least  we  arc 
providing  a  good  time." 

Going  to  a  preview  screening  also 
involves  an  element  of  surprise  and 
can  be  like  playing  the  lottery. 
Sometimes  the  movie  is  a  highly  antic- 
ipated release  such  as  "Gladiator,"  or 
many  times  the  movie  is  an  obscure 
film  that  becomes  a  blockbuster  bit. 

The  movie   "Being 
John  Malkovich"  was    ' , .  ;.■•' '  .  ■";■; 
unknown  when  it  came 
to  UCLA  last  year,  but  it 
became  a  surprise  hit 
and  even  gained  critical 
acclaim  at  the  Academy 
Awards. 

To  top  it  all  off,  often 
the  directors  or  stars  from 
the  film  appear  after  the 
screening'  to  discuss  the 
film  with  the  audience. 

Last  year's  highlights 
included  a  sneak  pre- 
view  of  the   highly 
anticipated      "Blair 
Witch        Project," 
which   came   com- 
plete with  an  open 
discussion  with  the 
film's  directors.  The 
CEC  also  organized  a 
free  screening  of  an 
episode     of     "West 
Wing,"  which  was  fol- 
lowed by  a  forum  discus- 
sion with  the  cast  of  the  show. 

The  Campus  Events 
Commission  is  a  nonprofit,  under- 
graduate-run organization  that 
attempts  to  entertain  the  extremely 
diverse  audience  of  UCLA  and  the 
surrounding  area.  The  Campus 
Events  Commissioner,  who  is  in  an 
elected  position,  leads  the  CEC  with 
the  help  of  enthusiastic  directors  and 


interns,  who  help  with  programmiflg; 
organizing  and  publicizing  the  events. 

With  an  abundance  of  ultra  trendy, 
swanky  clubs  and  movie  theaters  in 
the  Westwood  area,  the  CEC  film  pro- 
gram comes  without  overpriced  box 
oftlce  tickets,  gigantic  bald-headed 
bouncers  or  the  need  to  travel  any- 
where, 

Students  who  often  lack  both 
spending  money  and  private  trans- 
portation like  to  take  advantage  of 
CEC  events,  even  though  UCLA  is 
;  ■■ :-;.'-:  located  in  the  middle  of  the 
■~~r*~^     entertainment  mecca. 

"Our  location  actually 
presents  a  bit  of  a  problem 
for  us,"  Seltzer  said.  "In 


~  The  CECgoesl  stiip  furdierllmn 
similar  organizations  at  other  college 
campuses  to  ensure  that  it  is  providing 
the  students  with  wide-ranging  enter- 
tainment and  a  good  time. 

"Other  colleges  many  times  hire 
companies  to  bring  the  movies  to 
them,"  Seltzer  said.  "We  go  directly  to 
the  studios  or  we  work  with  the  difTer- 
ent  companies  to  bring  the  movies  to 
campus.  This  way  we  are  able  to  bring 
more  movies  that  are  diverse." 

According  to  Seltzer,  movie  conv 
panies  are  usually  grateful  for  the 
opportunity  to  test  screen  their  films 
to  college  students,  which  many  times 
is  their  target  audience.  Also,  the 
screenings  work  as  publicity  for  the 


ttfovte  andlTclp  a£fia  lo  ffiiTbype  of  big 
releases. 

Movie  companies  hope  that  word 
of  mouth  among  college  audiences 
will  create  a  buzz  before  the  ofTicial 
release  of  their  film  and  help  prepare 
it  for  the  first  steps  toward  a  successful 
blockbuster. 

This  year  CEC  promises  to  bring 
more  blockbusters  and  big  names  to 
Ackerman,  as  well  as  their  free 
movie  program  during  Week  10 
which  features  older  movies  ^or 
those  that  need  a  break  from  the  gnh 
eling  finals  studying.  A  quarterly 
film  calendar  is  available  to  all  stu- 
dents during  Convocation  Week. 
The  calendars  can  be  found  in  the 


doniis,  aroiinj^ camput,  and  in* 
Westwood  Village. 

According  to  Tse,  Campus  Events 
is  anticipating  an  exciting  year  full  of 
entertainment-  for  the  students  at 
UCLA. 

"Basically,  the  CEC  strives  to  be  a 
student-run    organization 
that  brings  quality  enter- 
tainment on  campus  to 
our  peers,"   Tse   said. 
"Plus,  the  sneak  pre- 
view films  are  free,  so 
who  can  say  'no'  to  a 
free  movie?" 


the  mid- 
dle of  Iowa,  if  an  organiza- 
tion brings  entertainment  on  campus, 
then  it  is  a  really  big  deal ...  in  L.A.,  we 
can  kinda  get  lost  in  the  shuffle." 
So  how  does  Campus  Events  do  it? 


ibidlive 

www.ibidlive.tv 


Now  that  you  have  registered  for  classes,  register  with 
www.ibicHive.tv  where  every  weelcday  at  12  noon  and  4  p.m. 
we  auction  off  gift  certificates  from  Gap,  Oid  Navy,  Olive 
Garden,  The  Gardens,  Acapuico,  Tower  Records,  Brewing 
Company,  Maui  B^ch  Cafe,  Otomix-  Worlid  of  Fitness,  Barnes 
and  Nobles  and  more.  Registration  Is  fast  and  easy.  So  what 
are  you  waiting  for?  Get  back  to  school  discounts  on-line 
every  weekend  by  logging  onto  www.ibidlive.tv.  Last  week  a 
$25.00  gift  certificate  at  Acapulco's  sold  for  only  $6.00. 
Unbelievable  deals  only  at  www.ibidlive.tv  every  weekday  at 
noon. 


Theater  &  Art 


'■•♦':■ 


Lasers  and  kners  lij^ht  up  the  ni^ht 
at  the  Griffith  Observatory 


By  Megan  Oickerson 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

UvUm-  a  rid  jaiktl  ami  hliu  jiaiis 
Ittcaiiir  sliiirtiiaiMl  fur  riltrl.  Ilic 
(itiirnti  ()lKir»ator\  \>as  a  prinu  dts- 
tiiialion  litr  passion. 

•lariiis  Diaii  kiuu  it  -  in  iIk  M>55 
filtii  -Kiliil  NMili.Mil  a  (  aiisi."  ilu 
ailor  iiiriisid  ilu  I  (•>  \n<iiUs  land- 
mark uiili  rdinaniic  liir\.  I.mii 
"HiMrh  Hills.  <>(l2l(»"s  Ihlaii  kmw 
il.  lakiiiy  his  paramitiir  ki!l>  to  sn'  ilu 
iiiillioiis  (it  stars  and  llic  liolh^dod 
sii;n  (hat  ra<iu  omt  llu'  I  os  XiiuiUs 
basin. 

I  lie  (iriltitli  <)lisir\alnr\  is  sijH 
(|njn(i'ssi(iiial  lldllwtond.  In  lait.  du' 
lonrisi  allraclion  rmlav  looks  \^r\ 
iiMK  h  Ilic  «a\  it  did  in  l'*.<5.  «liin  pliil- 
anlhropist  (  oli.nil  (.riflilh  .1.  (;rillllh 
piiKlainud  that   I os    Xn-^iKs  siioidd 


IS  that  ari'  oil  musics  lualiii  path. 
«ith  conirihntions  Iroin  Iniyiiia  and 
pirlormancf  artist  I  auric  \ndirson. 


Shows  Through  Oct.  31 

Tuesday  and  Wednesday 

6  pm.  Pink  Floyd  s  Dark  Side  of  the  Moon- 

8. 45  p  m.  Laserock  3D 

Thursday 

6p.m   Laser  Visions 

8:45  p.m   Fright  Lights 

Friday  and  Saturday 

6pfn.  TheBedtle*. 

8  45  p.m.  Fright  Lights 

9:45  p.m.  Pink  Floyd  s  The  Wall 

Sunday 

6  p.m   Laser  Visions 

8:45  p.m.  Pmk  Floyd  s  Dark  Side  of  the  Moon 


tlid  "music  lor  \our  c>cs."'  ran;:c  in 


Tickets 

3D  shows    $9 

other  shows    $8 

(818)997  3624 


»r»alcil  lor  .mi.iUiir  scientists  luars 
Ihc  capital  distiiution  nl  .i  t.rctk  tcm- 
|ili.  uilh  an  open  door  polic\  to  all  ol 
I  OS  Xnucks.  farkinu  is  still  Ircc.  and 
Ihc  public  tclcscojus  ih.it  line  the 
ohscrxatioiial  decks  like  sciilinels  arc 
still  onl\  .1  ipiartt  r. 

Km  Nuilll  h.lM-  ttl  .let  t.lst  In  lutl    till 

Olisin  iiiir\  closis  III    j.iiiu.irx    20ii2 


ADAM  BROWN  D.i.ly  B'u.n 

l.os  \ii::cl.sthal\oMcant.ikeadalcin  \t     the     (.riffith     Ohsinalorx's 

the  cxcniii'.;  at  little  or  no  cost."  said       I  ascriuin.  thousands  come  \cariv   to 
John     \|oscl\.     the    OhscrNatorxs      seciascr  p 


Director  o|  I'rourammin^.  "I  ook  l.ii 
Ihroii-:!!  the  telescope,  the  exhihits.  tin 
and  the  \'w\\.  and  there's  no  cost."  I  is 


)ser\ator\   is  more       di 


/s»U)ite  (Ionic,  (.oiif.^  hcMtnd 
the  tridilioiial  ■Hooked  on  (  l.issics" 
lasir  s|io>\.  the  I  ascriuin  oilers  scuii 
ditlereiil  shoos.  "I  .iserock  ^D"  <Si\i.s 


NNcre  oni'  ot  the  \i 


r.iiher  than  a  research  iiisiitiite 
<  )hser».itor\  has  kept  |)ace  uith  ■ 
lilic  cliani;es  durini;   the   last    tv 


nii\ed  program  ol  I  1.  Hi  \]  .md 
Kadiohe.id  tiiiu  s.  I  user  \  isjoiis.  which 
MrcMr  calls  the  most  artistic  sho\», 
adopts  .1  led  close  to  "I  antasia"s" 
let  images.  I  \pcct  musical  choic- 


a  laser  c\tra\aiian/a  palteriud  on  the 
»»ork  id  Mclallica.  Musical  la\oriles 
perlorni  intricate  hallels  to  the  same 
laser  IcchnoloyN  that  the  shou's 
hacker,  laser  Images  Inc..  u.ts  in 
tllnis  and  music  tideos. 

Mere,  the  soundtrack  to  romance 
jusl  mii;ht  be  I'ink  1^  lo\  ds  ■  I  he  \\  all." 
"I'ink  I  lo\d  has  al«a\s  been  the 
staple  diet  id  laser  shims."  said  han 
Urexcr.  the  I  aseriiinrs  executixe  pro- 
ducer and  a  lhirl\-\ear  xeteran  id  laser 
technoioHx.  "We"!!  retire  il  lor  a  xxbile. 
I)iit  x\e  al\»axs  hriii'^  it  back." 

I  lloll^h  the  shoxxs  haxe  become  part 
id  the  llollwxoiid  tradition,  rankiiii; 
hiuh  .imon};  I  .  \.  theatrical  tourist 
attractions,  the  promnlers  arc  still  lr\- 
iiii;  to  spread  the  shows'  appeal  to  a 
wider  audience.  Ncarix  Wl  pcrceiil  id 
the  crowds  are  under  the  aye  ol  24. 
which  keips  lon'.;-tiiiU'  List  r  chorcoHr.i- 
jdier  Ixaii  Hrexer  kexed  into  the  xoulh 
experience. 

I  en  xears  aiio.  the  I  ascriuin  xxas 


See  GRIFFITH,  page  24 


Hollywood 


m  1 


COLUMN:  Street-vended 
directions  can  be  fun  to 
follow  for  an  afternoon 

Star  Maps.  You  sec  the  signs 
everywhere  and  all  you  think  is 
fraud.  After  passing  by  the  guy 

on  the  comer  of  Bellagid  and  Sunset 

for  the  20-fnillionth  time,  I  decided  to 

play  d«(ectivc 

for  theiday  and 

see  what  the 

tourist  Craze  was 

all  about. 
Making  my 

way  over  toward 

Bel  Air  and 

Beverly  HiUs 

from  West 

Hollywood  on  a 

Satuixlay,  I 

picked  up  my 

own  "golden 

ticket"  for  $7  at 

the  corner  of  Gardner  and  Sunset, 

from  a  boy  who  was  no  doubt  break- 
ing those  ancient  child  labor  laws  that 
must  not  mean  a  thing  in  Hollywood. 

Forborne  odd  reason  my  friends 
were  under  the  impression  that  the 
star  maps  were  run  by  an  under- 
ground whore  division  (don't  ask 
how),  but  I  quickly  learned  otherwise 
as  I  saw  various  children  selling  the 
maps  at  every  single  comer  on  Sunset. 

Upon  pulling  over  and  giving  the 
map  a  good  look,  I  reahzed  that  this  is 
a  well-run  operation,  the  map  having  a 


Barbara 
McGuire 


rather  professional  appearance.  I  was 
honestly  impressed.  It  was  well  print- 
ed, published  proudly  by  some 
Vivienne  Welton,  with  graphics  and  a 
detailed,  well-drawn  map  with  the 
street  names  very  visible  and  accurate 
-  but  not  cheesy.  UCLA  was  even 
given  a  home  on  the  map,  which  pret- 
ty much  already  made  my  day. 
s  Various  trails  to  take  were  also  out- 
lined in  red  for  those  who  just  wanted 
to  take  a  general  tour  of  some  star 
homes  rather  than  selecting  their  own 
and  going  from  there. 

Additionally,  ."jy  v 

besides  an  '  ' 

impressive  list  of       "■■^■^'^■~'"~' 
well  over  200  star 
homes,  there 
were  the  loca- 
tions of  other 
tourist  hot  spots. 
Categories 
included: 
"Famous  Night 
Clubs  and  Cafes" 

(The  Palace  and 

Planet 

Hollywood  were  a  few),  "Premiere 
Theatres"  (The  Mann  Chinese,  the 
Pantages),  "Places  of  Interest  inihe 
Los  Angeles  and  Vicinity"  (Farmers 
Market,  Knotts  Berry  Farm.  La  Brea 
Tar  Pits),  and  "Studios"  (Walt  Disney. 
Twentieth  Century-Fox). 

And  this  wasn't  all.  Buyers  serious- 
ly got  their  money's  worth,  especially 
those  out-of-towners,  since  most  locals 
know  where  all  this  stuff  is  located 
anyway.  Me.  being  a  local  and  looking 


at  this  later,  thought  big  whoop,  but  in 
my  tourist  mode,  I  was  amazed  at  all 
Hollywood  and  the  surrounding  area 
has  to  offer,  all  the  stardom,  if  you 
want  to  call  it  that. 

Anyway,  I  digress,  back  to  the  won- 
ders of  the  map,  because  I'm  still  not 
finished  describing  it.  Rip  the  map 
over  and  one  finds  "News  of  Interest 
Concerning  Movie  and  TV 
Celebrities,"  with  a  side  note  that 
excused  their  lack  of  "photos  and 
other  fancy  frills,"  explaining  that  they 
had  "been  sacrificed  here  to  provide 
' .' ■■  the  accuracy  of 

renewing  this 

guide  every  90 
days."  OK,  like 
we  care. 

What  seemed 
to  be  missing 
back  here,  how- 
ever, was  any 
news.  All  I  saw 
were  promos  for 
movies  which 

;     " were  and  are  to 

\  be  released  this 

year.  All  right,  interesting  1  suppose. 
though  only  six  movies  were  selected. 
And  then  finally,  directions  were  given 
to  the  visual  centerpiece  of  Hollywood 
that  is  in  every  movie  concerning  the 
town,  the  Hollywood  Sign.  These  will 
be  useful  when  I  decide  to  go  out 
sight-seeing  again,  because  I've  always 
wanted  to  sec  the  sign,  but  never  actu- 
ally considered  goingnip  there.  Now 
with  directions  I  haoK  a  no  excuses. 
Back  to  the  actual  map.  The  stars 


Besides  an  impressive 
list  of  well  over  209  star 

homes,  there  were  the 
locations  of  other 
tourist  hot  spots. 


homes  are  located  on  the  map,  which 
is  placed  on  a  grid  with  numbers 
and  letters  running  along 
the  two  perpendicular 
sides,  by  stars  and  accord- 
ing to  a  very  logical 
numeric  system. 
For  example, 
Sylvester  Stallone 
was  number  98, 
(they're  in  alpha- 
betical order) 
and  his  home 
is  located  at 
1121  Beverly 
Dr.,  in 
square  J-2 
of  the  map. 
Simple, 

right?  Well,  though  the  map  really  is 
self-explanatory,  without  the  help  of  a 
knowledgeable  navigator  (my  assis- 
tant was  not  good  with  maps)  and 
me  stuck  with  my  total  lack  of 
a  sense  of  direction  I  got  lost 
a  few  times.  My  arms  defi- 
nitely got  a  work  out  con- 
stantly flipping  U-turns,  but 
for  the  most  part  I  was  always 
going  in  the  right  direction. 

SeeMC6UIRI,paqe22 


^ 


BOOtRICK  BOXAS/0*(y  Brum 


^•^•^m 


18        September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Am  &  Entertaininent 


•>>> 


Opportunities  for  art  fans  await 


EXHIBITS:  Museums  in 
L.A  bring  culture  to  any 
interested  in  galleries 


By  Barbara  McGuire 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

College  life  is  all  about  experienc- 
ing new  things.  Whether  it  be  getting 
a  C  in  a  class  or  getting  drunk  for  the 
first  time,  a  new  range  of  activities 
are  waiting  for  all  to  encounter. 

As  many  say,  with  age  comes  an 
appreciation  for  the  finer  things  in 
life  -  which  may  be  one  of  the  rea- 
sons college  life  is  full  of  so  many 
new,  wonderful  experiences.  Take, 
for  instance,  art.  While  in  high 
school  art  may  just  have  been  a  doo- 
dle of  the  girl  falling  asleep  next  to 
you  with  drool  on  her  face,  in  college 
art  is,  for  many,  something  to  be 
appreciated  and  enjoyed. 

Here's  a  quick  glance  at  what's 
going  on  in  art  galleries  and  muse- 
ums in  the  Los  Angeles  area  for 
those  who  are  ready  to  take  on  their 
new,  refined,  collegiate  view  of  the 
world. 

J.  Paul  Getty  Museum 
"The  Queen  of  Angels" 

Running  through  Nov.  5,  this 
exhibition  features  19  works  from 
the  Middle  Ages  and  Renaissance 
Europe  when  the  Virgin  Mary's  pop- 
ularity was  at  a  high.  Items  range 
from  prayer  books  to  art  depicting  a 
saint's  life  to  a  panel  painting  and 
focus  on  the  Virgin  Mary's  three 
most  important  roles:  as  virgin 
mother,  queen  of  heaven  and\utter- 
cessor. 


"Peter  Paul  Ruben 
and  the  Art  of 
Drawing  in  Flanders" 

Focusing  on  the 
career  of  Ruben,  this 
exhibition,  which  will 
run  through  Oct.  22, 
demonstrates 
through  his  paintings 
that  Flanders  was  a 
place  of  immense  cul- 
turaland  artistic 
expansion  in  the 
1500s  and  1600s.. 
Ruben  is  considered 
one  of  the  most  inno- 
vative and  influential 
painters  and  drafts- 
man of  his  time 
because  of  his  unique 
interpretation  of  the 
Flemish  style. 

Museum  of  Neon  Art 

"PoliticaUy  Lit" 
and  "Presidential 
Busts" 

These  two  group 
exhibits  will  be  on  dis- 
play through  Oct.  29 
and  offer  an  interest- 
ing look  at  politics. 
No  matter  how 
bizarre  this  may 
sound,  the  interpreta- 
tion of  politics 
through  neon  lights 
should  prove  interest- 
ing. 


The  SUrball  Cultural 

Center  /^ 

"Revealing  & 
Concealing  Portraits  and  Identity" 

The  truth  behind  a  portrait  is  the 
focus  of  this  collection  from  twenty 


Photos  courtesy  lh«  J  Paul  Getty  Trust 

(Above)  "Anatomical  StueHes/can  be  seen 
Aug.  29  through  Oct.  22  in  the  "Peter  Paul 
Rubens  and  the  Art  of  Drawing  in  Flanders" 
exhibit  at  the  J.  Paul  Getty  Museum. 

(Right)  The  Getty  Museum's  exhibit, "The 
Queen  of  Angels,"  includes  this  display,  titled 
"Saint  Bernard's  Vision  of  the  Virgin  and 
Child.'The  exhibit  will  be  on  display  from 
Aug.  15  to  Nov.  5. 


artists,  such  as  Andy  Warhol,  which 
will  be  shown  through  Dec.  31. 

See  MtT,  page  47 


CAPPP  Quarter  in  Washington  Program 


EARN  UCLA  CREDITS  IN 
^  WASHINGTON  DC   ^ 


^Internships 
V^UCLA  Honors  Credits 
^Independent  Research 
^Scholarships  ^ 
V  Financial  Aid 


Find  out  more  at  our  Fall  Quarter 


INFORMATION 
MEETINGS 


Tues  &  Wed  in  October 

5:00pm 

4355D  Public  Policy  BIdg. 


to  ALL  majors 


Applications  due 
November  3rd 


ceNTep.  Fop.  AMeiz.icM>i  politics  anp  pueuc  policy 

4?.6o  Pubtifc  yo\i€H  ^uiMino  t9\6\  2.o(*-?lO<f 


http://www.cappp.ucla.edu 


iMIy  Brain  Am  ft  EnttrtaiMMiit 


u;.t. 


Septtmlw  25-28,2000.:  't^1f"'T      . 


Festivalllighfights  side 
side  of  animated  films 

THEATER:  'Spike  and  Mike'  features  adult  cartoons, 
originators  of  mainstream  shows  like  'South  Park' 


By  Sandy  YiMig 

Daily  Bruin  Staff 

When  Q.  Allan  Brocka  filmed 
"The  Happiest  Gay  Couple  in  All  the 
World,"  about  a  lesbian  couple  who 
want  to  conceive  with  the  help  or  their 
gay  friends,  the  UC  Berkeley  Arts 
film  student  wanted  to  make  a  com- 
mentary about  Hollywood's  portrayal 
<^gays. 

'  Brocka  filmed  the  eight-minute 
short  with  gay  characters  insulting 
each  other  and  making  love  using 
Lego  building  blocks  and  plastic  Lego 
people  with  painted  smiles  symboliz- 
ing Hollywood's  "watered-down  gay 
characters  in  sitcoms,"  Brocka  said. 

"In  the  sitcoms,  they're  so  cute  and 
adorable;  they're  plastic  and  they're 
so  nice  they  don't  do  anything  wrong, 
and  you  know  what,  we're  jerks  and 
bitches,"  he  said.  "I  wanted  to  make  a 
film  where  they  hated  each  other." 

"The  Happiest  Gay  Couple  in  All 
the  World"  is  just  one  of  the  20  ani- 


mated shorts  in  this  year's  Spike  and 
Mike's  Sick  &  Twisted  Festival  of- 
Animation. 

Like  Brocka's  animated  short,  the 
festival  similarly  proves  that's  also  the 
case  for  animation  -  that  cartoons 
don't  just  have  to  be  nice  Saturday- 
morning  kiddy  fare.  In  its  10th  year, 
the  festival  has  drawn  an  increated 
adult  following  and  introduced 
today's  ultra-popular  adult  animation 
creators  like  Nick  Park,  John 
Lasseter.  Mike  Judge,  Trey  Parker 
and  Matt  Stone  to  a  mainstream  audi- 
ence. 

And  the  festival  shows  that  anima- 
tion visionaries  are  just  beginning  to 
explore  unlikely  themes  using  anima- 
tion that  ranges  from  the  gruesome  . 
and  disturbing  to  the  satiric  and 
thoughtful. 

"Animation  is  limitless,"  said  Craig 
"Spike"  Decker  of  Spike  and  Mike. 
"What's  cool  about  animation  is  you 


Sw  SPIRE,  page  21      A  double-headed  monster  lizard  wreaks  havoc  In  Gan  &  Emek's  work. 


Spike  &  MMce's  Festival  of  Anjmiiion 


When  It  ComesTo 

M  Fresh 
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(  Were  In  A  League 


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Come  enjoy  our  famous  salad  and  soup  buffet,  with  fresh  cut 
produce,  specialty  prepared  salads,  made-from-scratch  soups, 
hot  pasta  dishes,  and  fresh  baked  muffins  &  breads  served 
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Ol'  ; 


20       September  25-21, 2000 


Internet  sites  focusing  on 
college  provide  chuckles 


WEB:  Fast  access  allows 
collegiate  resources  to 
be  reached  with  a  click 


fiy  Brent  Hopkins 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  StafF 

The  Tirst  day  of  college  brings  many 
things     to     the 


bright-eyed 
young  student: 
world  class  acad- 
emics, big  name 
athletics,  a 

chance  to  make 
life  long  friends 
and,  of  course, 
high  speed 

Internet  connec- 
tion. " 

The  first  three 
are  exciting  and  all,  but  for  all  intents 
and  purposes,  the  fmal  one  is  the  most 
exciting  and  possibly  useful.  Though  by 
-now  most  students  will  have  had  a 
chance  to  log  onto  the  vaunted  infor- 
mation superhighway,  they  may  be 
unfamiliar  with  all  the  information 


College  Stories ...  serves 
as  a  clearinghouse  for 

all  the  ridiculous  tales 
you'd  ever  want  to  hear 

about  university  life. 


available  within  its  vast  murky  borders. 
Particularly  useful  to  those  newly  mint- 
ed Internet  hounds  will  be  coUege^elat- 
ed  Web  sites,  which  helpfully  preadi  all 
the  bylaws  of  how  to  be  a  successful  stu- 
dent 

For  those  who've  already  played  the 
collegiate  game  for  a  few  years,  these 
sites  aren't  quite  so  informative,  but 
they  do  ptrovide  interesting  diversions. 
These    sites    are 
^— — ^™"      worth  a  visit  for 
off-campus   resi- 
dents blessed  with 
DSL    or    caWe 
modems.       For 
everyone  else  with 
those  creaky  old 
modems       that 
seem  so  antiquat- 
ed after  they've 
_^__— ^-^      moved  out  of  the 
dorms,  visits  to 
these  sites  may  be  better  reserved  for 
when  you're  slacking  off  in  the  library, 
pretending  to  be  looking  up  important 
information  for  class. 

Colege  Stories 

wwwxolegestoriesxoai 


Everyone 
has  a  disgusting  col- 
lege story  to  tell.  These 
will  soon  become  a  sta- 
ple of  conversation  once 
you  return  home  and 
meet-up  with  all  your 
high        school 

friends 

once 
again. 


Whether  it's  that  time  your  roommate 
blew  her  nose  on  your  sock  and  forgot 
to  tell  you,  or  the  incident  w^iere  you 
accidentally  walked  in  on  him  trimming 
unsightly  back  hair  with  your  razor, 
you'll  want  to  be  able  to  top  everyone 
else  back  home. 

G}llege  Stories  takes  this  a  step  fur- 
ther, serving  as  a  clearinghouse  for  all 


the  ridiculous  tales  you'd  ever  want  to 
hear  about  university  life.  From  profes- 
sors from  hell  to  disturbingly  ofT-coior 
sexual  exploits,  this  site  has  a  wealth  of 
oddtales. 

In  exploring  the  site,  it's  never  really 
dear  whether  the  stories  are  really  true, 
but  they're  amusing  enough  that  it  does- 
n't matter.  You  thou^t  your  anecdote 


JASON  CHEN/0*riy  Bruin  Senior  Stiff 


gence,  like  the  mindless  tale  of  dx  two 
friends  beating  up  some  misguided 
police  officer  who  stopped  them  for  dri- 
ving drunk,  lots  of  them  are  genuinely 
fiumy.  Many  will  be  fodder  for  count- 
less e-mail  forwards  for  quite  some 
time,  no  doubt 


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SeptMibcr  25-28, 2000 


SPIKE 

FnMn|Mg«19 

can  do  a  lot  of  crazy  stuff,  but  you  don't  see 
animation  done  in  adult  themes.  People  think 
of  animation  as  being  cartoons  and  innocent 
stuff." 

But  not  anymore  thanks  to  Decker  and  the 
late  Mike  Gribble,  whose  cult  following  of  a 
festival  spawned  "South  *" 

Park,"  "Beavis  and  — — — — . 
Butthead"  and  works  by 
Park,  of  "Chicken  Run" 
fame.  Spike  and  Mike 
also  produced  the  pilot 
for  today's  cartoon  dar- 
ling. "The  PowerpufT 
Girls,"  eight  years  ago. 

Though     animation 
has  recently  seized  the 
media's  attention  in  the 
form  of  more  prime- 
time  animation  and  ani- 
mated films,  both  the 
festivals  and  sick  and 
twisted  animated  shorts  had  been  around  in 
some  form  since  the  early  '70s.  Back  then. 
Spike  and  Mike  produced  local  rock  shows 
and   horror   film    festivals    in    southern 


California.  Before  the  main  events.  Spike  and 
Mike  would  show  animated  4>ieces  by  Tilm 
students.  Some  animators  took  up  to  three 
years  to  hand-draw  an  eight-minute  piece  - 
that  caught  the  audience's  eye  more  than  the 
main  event  itself. 

The  two  put  together  their  Tirst  animation 
festival  in  the  late  '70s.  called  "Classic 
Animation,"  which  is  still  running  today. 
While  less  sick  and  twisted,  it  still  provided  as 
an  alternative  to 
""■~'"~"'^~"~  Mickey  Mouse  and 
Bugs  Bunny  cartoons. 
In  1990,  after  accumu- 
lating enough  animated 
shorts  deemed  inappro- 
priate for  all  ages.  Spike 
and  Mike  put  together 
their  first  sick  and  twist- 
ed animation  festival 
and  challenged  a  wider 
audience  with  the  idea 
that  cartoons  weren't 
..___i^_____     just  for  kids. 

"We  had  to  battle  the 

stigma  they  were  only 

cartoons,"  Decker  said.  "These  films  were 

truly  masterpieces  with  huge  artistic  merits." 

See  SniS,  page  4< 


"We  had  to  battle 

the  stigma  they  were 

only  cartoons." 

Craig  Decker 

Co-founder  of  "Spike  and 
Mike  Sick  and  Twisted 
Festival  of  Animation" 


Spike  a  Mike's  festival  of  Animation 

Animators  Raymond  S.  Persi  and  Matthew  Nastuk  presented  "Ghost  of  Stephen  Foster"  at 
the  Spike  &  Mike's  Sick  and  Twisted  Festival  of  Animation. 


Soon  everyone  will  be  asking 
Tracy  O'Hara  to  sign  on  the  dotted 

Make  sure  you  beat  the  rush. 


Congratulatians  tt)  Tiacy  OHara,  Track  &  ReU 
cy(rfCalifomia,LosAngdes,  1999-2000  Honda  Award  r 

^Wk  B»  bne;  and  you  may  have  ID  sand  in  iiK  to  ga  her  aiNciin^ 

nleni,  acadetnk  intd^jpKc,  and  community  invdvtment,  s^^ 
U  no  coinckknoe  thoK  sonK  attributes  are  dK  fcasons  she  was  rwniinaicd  for  a  Honda  A 
lb  honor  hei  Honda  he  made  a  danatkm  ID  your  schooft  wank»A  «hletk»  piq^rams.  That  wa)^ 
everyone  wl  have  something  ID  remember  her  by  without  havk^  to  wait  in  Ire. 


•KlMAMrin*  HMi*Mw(G*.kK. 


handLcom/nvHds 


-**- 


^4-r- 


-iri^ 


22       Septeinlw  25-28. 2000 


.- '   ..-.-/■. 


Daily  Bniin  Arts  I  EiMtrtaiRiMM 


,*•> 


SITES 

From  page  20    .v> 


www5tudy24Tconi      ..(.  i'"': ■;''..':''].  :.:/■■, 

In  theory,  this  couJd  be  a  very  us«AiI  site  for 
those  more  interested  in  the  academic  side  of  col- 
lege life.  After  all,  not  everyone  can  spend  their 
whole  time  at  a  fine  university  goofing  off  and  get- 
ting into  trouble,  as  coUegestories.com  would  lead 
you  to  believe.  -  ' :      '}'■■■■  ■::'.■'  '■'■- 

Unfortunately,  Study  24-7  is  so  devoid  of  useful 
material,  students  who  visit  the  site  will  end  up 
frustrated  and  return  to  more  fooling  around. 

The  premise  is  sound:  they  want  to  create  an 
online  community  of  students  that  can  discuss 
their  studies  online.  Students  from  across  the  con- 
tinent can  study  together,  sharing  notes,  talking 
theory  and  uniting  in  one  grand  academic  coUec- 
tivc. 

The  reality  of  the  site  is  a  little  less  shiny  and 
impressive,  however.  The  "discussion  groups"  sec- 
tion is  empty,  the  chat  rooms  do  little  more  than 
crash  your  internet  browser  and  the  virtual  notes 
are  really  not  all  that  helpful. 

The  site  offers  notes  from  many  universities 
nation-wide,  but  from  a  random  sampling  of  those 
culled  from  UCLA,  they  are  sadly  lacking  in  any 
academic  merit.  Study24-7  users  looking  for  a  nice 
supplement  t^  their  classroom  experience  will  find 
only  dead  links  and  notes  that  are  mediocre  at  best. 

Those  interested  in  diverting  themselves  from 
this  not-very-rigorous  studying  can  visit  the  "Brain 
Games"  section.  Then  again,  since  there's  no  con- 
tent other  than  a  'coming  soon'  sign,  they  won't 


find  themselves  diverted  much. 

While  Study  24-7  has  good  aspirations,  it  never 
,  makes  good  on  them.  CoUegiates  in  search  of  a 
truly  good  education  will  be  better  served  by  juit~ 
going  to  class. 

CoHege  Humor 

www.collegehumor.coiii 

it's  kind  of  sad  that  once  people  get  to  college, 
they  still  amuse  themselves  with  jokes  about  vari- 
ous bodily  functions,  lame  digitally  altered  photos 
and  short  movies  of  people  hurting  themselves. 
College  Humor  has  these  in  no  short  supply. 

As  crass  as  all  these  are,  the  site  is  really  rather 
amusing.  The  videos  of  people  getting  run  over  by 
cars,  which  look  suspiciously  fake,  are  definitely 
tasteless,  as  is  the  majority  of  this  site's  content,  but 
at  least  it's  entertaining. 

Most  of  the  material  contained  within  is  noth- 
ing new,  just  dumb  jokes  avaHabie  widely  across 
the  Internet.  Where  College  Humor  succeeds, 
however,  is  in  its  original  content  section.  The 
videos  of  its  staff  shopping  for  freezers  and  gener- 
ally running  amok  in  department  stores  aren't 
exactly  Oscar-quality,  but  they're  funny  enough  to 
warrant  a  visit. 

There's  also  an  extensive  "IM-Abuse"  section, 
containing  transcripts  of  the  staffs  attacks  on 
unsuspecting  instant  messengers  over  the  Internet. 
While  these  selections  are  fairiy  crude,  there's  an 
undeniably  interesting  element  to  watching  these 
poor  chatters  get  preyed  upon. 

While  College  Humor  isn't  the  most  sophisti- 
cated site  around,  it's  well  suited  to  the  not-so<ru- 
dite  crowd.  Those  with  a  semblance  of  good  taste 
will  want  to  avoid  it,  but  Others  will  dive  in  head- 
first. 


•.*«■ 


MCGUIRE 

FiDrnpagel? 


*r 


Just  when  I  would  think  I  was  lost ,  ^d- 
denly  there  was  the  street  I  was  looking  for, 
like  a  godsend.  And  let  me  tell  you,  whether 
or  not  these  houses  that  I  was  looking  at  were 
the  real  thing,  they  were  huge  and  beautiful 
amazing  works  of  architecture.  I  was  a  skep- 
tic prior  to  my  adventure,  but  now  I  am  a 
believer. 

The  first  home  I  hit  up  was  Stallone's, 
which  you  could  only  see  from  the  backside 
because  it  had  it's  own  special  driveway  with 
well  labeled  "no  trespassing"  signs.  This  one 
was  oh,  about  a  block  long.  It  hung  off  the 
mountain  like  something  out  of  the  movies, 
kind  of  ironic.  My  detective  instincts  lead  me 
to  be  fuDy  convinced  this  is  his  home,  rra 
even  thinking  about  taking  my  investigation 
one  step  further  and  writing  him  a  letter  there 
to  see  what  happens. 

Which  leads  me  to  another  interesting 
issue.  How  are  these  "mapmakers"  allowed  to 
print  the  addresses  of  all  these  famous  peo- 
ple? How  are  lawsuits  not  filed  against  them 
daily  for  trespassers  and  other  random  stalk- 
ers?:--..:. 

Just  from  driving  around  to  look  at  a  few 
homes,  the  only  people  on  the  streets  seem  to 
be  other  ()eople  with  star  maps  (though  I  tried 
to  pretend  I  was  not  one  of  them).  Not  only 
were  these  people  slowly  driving  by  the 
homes  like  stalkers,  but  many  also  got  out 
and  took  pictures  in  front  of  them  (well  in 
front  of  the  beautiful,  decorative,  protective 


metal  gates).  If  I  was  a  star,  that  would  bug  the 
hdl  out  of  me,  especially  if  I  wasn't  but  every- 
body thought  my  house  was  owned  by  one. 

Not  all  names  were  given  the  numbers  and 
gird  detection  on  the  map,  but  they  were  easy 
enough  to  find,  at  least  for  me  with  my  trusty 
Thomas  Guide.  The  stars  without  the  address 
and  grid  locations  were  somewhat  more  up4o- 
date  than  the  others,  of  which  many,  many  of 
the  names  I  didn't  even  recognize.  The  map 
boast  an  original  publishing  date  of  1937, 
which  gives  thinp  a  shady  tone,  but  I'm  sure 
they  update  it  yearly. 

Interestingly  enough,  I  noticed  Brad  Pitt's 
name  and  address  (5769  Briar  Qiff  Rd.  for 
those  of  you  who  are  interested)  and  wondered 
if  that  was  how  his  stalker  got  onto  his  premis- 
es. 

In  conclusion,  my  detective  workings  really 
-  produced  no  results.  Halfthe  time  I  couldn't 
even  see  the  house  because  it  was  too  hidden. 
For  example,  Nicholas  Cage's  home  on  363 
Copa  De  Oro  Rd.,  right  by  campus,  was  com- 
pletely masked  by  trees  and  fences. 

Additionally,  the  houses  I  could  see  didn't 
have  huge  billboards  in  their  front  yards  saying 
"Yes,  this  is  Sharon  Stone's  House."  So  who 
am  I  to  know  the  difference?  And  who  am  I  to 
even  care?  At  least  I  had  fun  driving  around 
looking  at  the  homes  that  I  hope  to  one  day 
own.  Besides,  its  not  like  any  of  the  people  who 
I  brag  to  about  seeing  Elvis's  former  home  will 
know  the  difference  eidier. 

For  directions  of  other  famous  stars'  homes,  e- 
mail  Sueko@ucla.edu  or  go  purchase  a  map 
yourself. 


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September  25-28, 2000       23 


WHAT'S 


VISIT  THESE  GREAT  WEBSfTES 


THIS 


Sept.  25  -  Oct.  4,  2000 


Schod)  o<  th«  Art*  A  Architsctuf* 

w«>w.a>t*.ucla.«d» 

D<pt  a<  Aichrtaclur*  A  Urt)«)  Omioi 

■wow  Mid  iid>.»«fci 

D«pl.  o(  Oaatgn 

0«(K.  d  Elhnonuaicology 
www.a«inaiiMMicuc««.«du 

www.ftnch.ucia.adu 
F'lm  4  Wavision  Aretnv* 
www.drwwi«  ucto^rtu 


HimnwrMuMum 

wwwJMmnMrjiola.*du 

UCLA  Pwtomiing  Arts 

www4Mrfonnlngartsjicta.«du 

Dapt  of  Music 

wwwjnuaic4icla.adu 

Dapl  o(  Wodd  Arts  &  CuNurai 

www.iivac.uGia.adu 

UCLA  Cwitral  Ticke*  Offica 

www.clo.ueia.adu 

UCU  Parfomwig  Arts  Studant  Convninaa 

www.aca4ida.adu 


UCLi 


FRIDAY.  SEPTEMBER  29***7  SUWDAY^OcfoBER  1 


Buena  Vista  Social  Club  presents 

Omara  Portuondo 

Mittiipauigued  Barbarito  Torres 
CNlirto|i*7pii,llq«|ill,ltol90 

wM  Am  Mrto.  halt  of -FrectMica  iKira.- 
'«rmnMo:2San44 

Mnnti*  Spa,  Riyti  Nail 

GMnl.t4ikSMM(r)diMitT2 

Best  luxiwn  for  her  slirrlnQ  vocals  on 
blodibustar  tlbm  'Btiens  Vista  Social  Qub.'  ml 
her  memorabie  prtsenca  in  Wim  WIenders' 
docunentary  of  the  same  name.  Omara  Partuondo 
h»  long  iieen  linom  in  Spanish  speaking  counlrits 
ai  m  of  ttii  great  iniHpntors  of  Cubn  olMici 
i^Ktuondo  is  in  the  process  of  r>conllR|  hm  driwt 
Mil  album  tor  release  in  the  US.,  presmfng  the 
inigk:  andridi  misiay  legacy  of  old  Havwa's 
dance  hals  and  sociii  clubs  in  their  gkxious  Golden 


Kids' Flicks 

Faeries 


the 


Jaen  Mm  Theater 

Ferinertii*:20&fim 


MONDAY.  OCTOBER  2 


Oept  of  Design/Uedia  Arts  Monday  Night  Lecture 

Cattforola  and  Hnnish 

Pwipectives  on  New 

Media  Art 

spa,  1473  Mm  If!  OHMr  (EM) 

Fvai(n:(2SLSa07 

The  speakers  an  Nomian  KUn.  UCU  Dmarttnent 
of  DeHpiAiede  Alts  and  CaUmia  hsiiMe  of  ihe 

Arts:  and  Minna  larkka.  Medlabb  at  the  Uniwsity 
of  Industrial  Arts.  Helsinki  (UIAH). 

TUESDAY.  OCTOBER  3 


SUNDAY.  OCTOBER  1 


Evgeny  Kissln 

CMtv«a||i*6pe,RBycillail.ifai190 

•Ml  k.  mpN  Sbn^  ftifeaor  Emanko.  Cat  Sm 
FvfflmMRa&tlM 

PirfinMiia*7fl)pin,Roy(»Hail 

'  tMnl,tS0.SMMrclMt9 
ferMMMtrtZSiTWI 

IhnMrad  br  the  IMly  of  his  1^  Russian 
pMtl  Evgeny  Kissin  is  one  of  those  lan  ariAs  ado 
conw  along  no  mere  than  once  in  a  MMrk  Ms 
fecMva  and  inlBrpillN  poMTs  ha«i  been  cded 
Inneeandenial'  kttK  making  his  US  deb«t  nMi 
*•  NmMi  Phfarmonk:  under  Zubio  MeMa  m 
ma  la  young  piarict  opened  Cme^  Ms 


Chris  Elliott 
'The  Marie  of  Zorro" 

Pirf«maKi<7:30piii,RgynNali 

Sj^gttiagrWw  mmmt  w4  sa«lM.) 

in  the  torelront  of  contemporary  organists,  Chris 
Elott  has  Ihried  mtSmui  across  Amenca  since 
Ms  debut  at  age  IS.  His  parivmance  credits  are 
hf-ranging  -  mighty  iMUm  in  grand  mo«e 
polKtl  regal  insbuments  in  awesome  caltiedrals: 
sbartng  accampanlments  to  classic  siient  films: 
pkjs  brillianl  programs  on  BBC  Radio  «)d  at  the 
famed  Holhwood  Bowl 


UCLA  PERFORMING  ARTS 
ANNOUNCES  2000-pQpl  SEASON! 

IHi!.!^^  ""^15'  ^'^'  ""' '' ""  ""» !"»« '"  ^  «"8«l«»  '•  JW  IHe  "Orid's  most  sought-after 

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Russia's  most  famed  younO  jilanists 

Season  highlights  include  |ia^ 
American  folk  diva  Nanci  I ' 


of  American  politics;  and  th$  Royc^  Hall  debut  oi  one  of 


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new  work, 
Juliet;"  Pull 
Portuondo 
renowned  thi 
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UCLA  Perfoi 
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family,  theat 


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^  \n  pfenlst  KtlttfJirrerf  Iff  a  rare  performance; 

josting  a  live  "mocHT  perfcrriJancS  of  "Politically 

_,  ram's  Audacious  lmprobab|t)llitrfe  performing  a 

i«   •     -      c    ,    r*'"' '*"•'*"""'•"'*"*  in  a  hlp^oi»  version  of  "Romeo  & 
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w^iillT!lifc"Mlf'^  ^'^^^^'  ^""8  %^ '^yiWtafs;  India's  most 
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For  additidnaf  [nfonnatlon.  please  visitlhe  ncW  vVeb^te^nIIIm.perfom^^^ 


WEDNESDAY.  OCTOBER  A 


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AM  Famiy/ChNren  I^Mc  Pograms 

"Kids  In  the  CourtyanI 
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MtrMisiM 

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refect  the  tmiennaion  of  «e  priMkhouse  ki 
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The  WIMest  Show  In  the 

South: 

The  Angohi  Prison  Rodeo 

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WEDNESDAY  OCTOBER  4 

MoftesignAMaArtsExhMon 

F2F:  New  Media 
fromRnland 

Ira  Wigbt  Siltiry,  100  OkIbm  art  Cutir 

riw  -  *«#  Ocl  a  WM-Sn.  ■•M-7pm 
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arts  eMM  aMdi  consists  of  screenings  MMans 
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the  digital  era  and  new  dlgNal  worUs. 


UCLA  Performing  Arts 

Student  Tickets 

www.sca.ucla.edu 


Dapl  e(  ArcMMure  fc  Urban  OasipB  ExWMtons 

live  Oangeniusly 

Kammer  Museos 

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GRIFFITH 

Frompagel? 

nology  outside  of  the  movie  theater.. 
Now,  raves  have  made  lasers  com- 
monplace among  American  and 
European  youth.  In  response,  a  rave- 
like component  is  in  the  worics  for  the 
Observatory  shows.  After  the 
Observatory  closes  for  refurbishment 
in  January  of  2002,  Breyer  says  the  as- 
yet,  unannounced  new  home  of  the 
Laserium  will  allow  for  a  laser  rave, 
complete  with  video  and  interactive 
components. 

For  more  traditional  fare,  turn  to 
the  tried-and-true  planetarium  shows, 
which  cost  $4  a  ticket  and  last  about 
an  hour.  The  rest  of  the  Observatory 
adds  a  delightfully  informative  com- 
ponent to  the  Laserium  and 
Planetarium  experience.  • 

But  it's  unlikely  that  just  science 
and  free  parking  draws  the  dozens  of 
couples  who  promenade  the 
Observatory's  ample  observation 
decks.  Romance  needs  no  scientific 
exhibit. 

"People  can  figure  that  out  for 
themselves^if  you  know  what  I  mean," 
Mosely  said. 

On  a  clear  weekday  night  just 
before  closing,  visitors  will  find  a  vir- 
tual Noah's  Ark  within  the 
Observatory's  famous  walls.  Starry- 
eyed  couples  walk  two-by-two  through 
the  exhibits,  which  range  from  the 


coming 

5*  week 


check  your  newsstands. 


JESSE  PORTfR/OMly  Bcun  Scnioc  Staff 

This  telescope  is  one  of  the  few  attractions  at  the  GriflRth  observatory  that  isn't  free  -  it  costs  25  cents. 


240-pound  ball  that  demonstrates  the 
earth's  rotation,  to  a  series  of  scales 
that  inform  the  interested  of  their 
weight  on  the  earth,  moon.  Mars  and 
Jupiter.  Nothing  says  romance  like 
discovering  you  wei^  400  pounds  on 
the  moon. 

People  woo  and  coo  everywhere. 


from  the  Laserium's  waiting  room  to, 
of  course,  the  observational  balconies. 
Watch  from  inside  Ti  nook  ripe  for 
kissing,  and  you  nught  see  a  micro- 
cosm of  the  world  walk  by.  Japanese 
businessmen,  dressed  in  identical 
suits.  German  tourists,  wearing 
bermuda  shorts  and  binoculars.  A  lit- 


tle girl  with  shiny  patent  leather  Mary 
Janes  and  white  ankle  socks.  A  couple 
will  dance  to  unheard  music  in  an 
alcove  otherwise  dedicated  to  the 
galaxies.  Love  and  science  is  in  the  air. 
As  Mosely  explains,  the 
Observatory  has  always  provided  a 
safe  place  where  those  gone  a-courting 


can  date  and  take  io  the  view.  Though 
spooning  under  the  harvest  moon 
with  hundreds  oF  othef  like-minded 
couples  is  hardly  private,  the 
Obxrvatory  offers  the  security  a  lone- 
ly highway  turn-out  can't  afford. 
Security  guards  are  everywhere,  even 
along  the  spare  chain4ink  fence  that 
separates  the  viewing  area  from 
Mount  Hollywood's  steep  slope.  This 
is  romance,  but  field  trip-style,,  and 
none  the  worse  for  the  wear. 

Outside,  beyond  the  Laserium  and 
under  the  stars,  there's  still  a  little 
James  Dean  left  at  the  old 
Observatory.  On  the  west  edge  of  the 
property,  a  bust  of  the  actor  finds  his 
devil-may-care  gaze  caught  in  bronze, 
raising  an  ironic  eyebrow  to  the  expan- 
sive L.A.  basin. 

He  draws  visitors  out  of  the  indoor 
programs'  galactic  musings  and  high- 
tech  bells  and  whistles  and  into  the 
cool  night  air  of  stars  and  city  lights. 
As  his  character  Jim  Stark  once  said  of 
the  planetarium  program  in  "Rebel 
Without  a  Cause,"  Dean  still  seems  to 
say,  "I  know  you've  seen  this  show 
before."  And  somehow,  it's  difTerent 
every  time. 

OBSERVATORY:  The  Griffith 
Observatory  is  free  to  the  public  and 
open  daily.  Planetarium  and  Laserium 
shows  are  an  extra  charge  For  hours 
and  ticket  prices,  please  visit  the  Web 
sites  www.grifrithobservatory.org  or 
www.laserium.com. 


Daily  Brain  Arts  A  Entcrtainmem 


•dUa 


-^:'-^':'^>-- 


Sepmnbcr  25-28, 2000       25 


■,l-^'.rf  :,/ p^^ 


■•.V;'''  .      ' 


Robert  DeNiro 


Ben  Stiller 


From  the  Director  of  'AUSTIN  POWERS* 


less  than  Jake 

maintains  its 

punit  etiiics 

witlimore 

tours  and 

crazy  hUinits 


MINDV  ROSS/Daily  Brum  S«nior  Staff 

Roger,  vocalist  and  bassist  for  Less  Than  Jake,  turns  away  as  a  tour 
member  launches  toilet  paper  into  the  crowd  at  an  Aug.  1 1  show. 


By  Mariko  Obrcro 

Daily  Bmin  Contributor 

Vinnie,  Less  Than  Jake's  drummer 
and  main  lyricist,  has  a  very  specific 
ritual  that  he  completes  before  every 
show. 

"I  drink  a  Snapple  lemon  iced  tea, 
listen  to  Dillinger  Four,  smoke  two 
cigarettes,  practice  for  30  minutes, 
and  then  piss  in  a  cup  before  going 
onstage,"  he  said  in  a  recent  inter- 
view. 

Playing  live  is  a  specialty  for  the 
six-member  outfit  that  is  well  known 


for  its  outrageous  stage  disguises.  The 
band  which  doesn't  use  last  names,  is 
comprised  of  Vinnie,  guitarist/vocal- 
ist Chris,  bassist/vocalist  Roger, 
trombonists  Buddy  and  Pete,  and 
baritone  saxophonist  Derron. 
Additionally,  Less  Than  Jake  is  noto- 
rious for  an  extensive  Pez  and  toy  col- 
lection. It  is  no  wonder  that  Less 
Than  Jake's  performances  never  dis- 
appoint since  each,  is  complete  with 
confetti  machines,  toilet  paper  rolls 
and  or  fire. 

Since  the  band's  1993  develop- 
ment, the  punk/ska  group  has  toured 


relentlessly  nine  months  out  of  the 
year  and  has  had  over  130  album,  EP, 
compilation,  and  single  releases. 

"We  are  and  have  been  a  live  band, 
primarily,  and  we've  worked  that 
angle.  It's  been  almost  like  an  after- 
thought: do  all  the  touring,  and  then 
we  have  to  go  do  a  record,"  Vinnie 
said. 

Such  is  the  case  for  the  upcoming 
fall  release  of  L'ess  Than  Jake's  sixth 
full-length  album  slated  for  an  Oct.  24 
release  date  on  Fat  Wreck  Chords. 


See  JAKE,  page  34 


First  comes  love.  Then  comes  the  interrogation. 

iVMPilffiMllliWIIISRIHrea^  iMIICrmiUfUeM  JlimiW^  AllifllFUi  HfHIIIII  IfllSMII 

'y[[i  1  PMfms'  iDfi  D  w  li  poio  ms  ini  jon  wmiHS  m  m^  mu  "^vm  mm  jzmm  nm 


PKBfw»<l^tancg 

PKTTURBff 


■OB 


nm  wmmwrn  iiimiiiiig' 


■nnnAi, 


Liio;i;iri,'j«ViJiiii:r:/i.:/[' ''iiiir 


nHDi 


Dorm  resjdents  (an  get  free  passes  Id  see  a  spedal  aite 

Get  them  at  any  of  the  Student  Media  tables  (ucIaradio.com,  Daily  Bruin.  UCLAtv)  at  the  Office  of 
Residential  Life  Welcome  Week  Fair  Tuesday.  September  26  from  10  until  3  at  Sunset  Village  Plaza. 

Meet  thcf  Parents  opens  Nationwide  October  6. 


I 


AOAM  MIOWN/Olity  Bnitn 


-w-:-— .  im^\'^  . 


26       Sef>temb«f  25-28, 2000 


Dajiy  Bruin  Arts  t  Entcftainmtirt 


Latin  Grammys  showcase  talent  from  around 


MUSIC:  Santana  featuring 
Mana  takes  top  award; 
some  artists  boycott  shovC 


'  By  Erica  Wem«r 

The  Associated  Press  ' 

There  were  paparazzi,  a  red  carpet 
and  big-name  stars  like  Jennifer  Lopez, 
but  there  also  were  charro  outfits  and 
obscure  Argentine  rockers. 

As  the  first  multilingual  event  ever 
broadcast  live  during  prime  iihne  on 
network  TV,  the  Latin  Grammys  sig- 
naled a  major  breakthrough  for 
Hispanic  culture. 

"These  prizes  are  very,  very  .impor- 
tant," said  Mercedes  Sosa,  the 
Argentinian  folk  star  who  won  a  Lalirr 
Grammy  for  best  folk  album.  "For  the 
first  time,  popular  music  of  Latin 
America  is  being  recognized." 

Legendary  guitarist  Carlos  Santana, 
who  dominated  the  regular  awards  in 
February  with  eight  Grammys,  took 
home  three  trophies  Sept.  13  in  the 
inaugural  awards  show,  including  the 
top  prize,  best  album.  ;      ► 

The  veteran  rocker's  duet  with 
Mexican  rockers  Mana,  "Corazon 
Eyjinado,"  won  record  of  the  year 


:■•>"*,;•- 


5ei>lm*ef  25-28, 2000       27 


•      • 


seven  months  after  another  Santana 
song,  "Smooth,"  won  the  same  honor 
at  the  other  Grammy  Awards.  He  also 
won  for  rock  performance  by  a  duo  or 
group  with  vocal  and  for  best  pop 
instrumental  performance.  ; 

Mexican  crooner  Luis  Miguel  also 
won  three  awards,  including  album  of 
the  year  for  "Amarte  Es  Un  Placer." 
Mana  won  one  award  in  addition  to  its 
two  with  Santana. 

Santana,  who  alternately  dedicated 
his  awards  to  Africa,  the  women  of  the 
world,  bilingual  education  and  Nelson 
Mandela,  said  winning  so  often  doesn't 
make  him  jaded. 

"It  feels  likeihe  first  kiss,"  he  said. 
"It  feels  very  natural  and  divine  and 
human." 

As  at  any  awards  show,  starlets  saun- 
tered through  in  plunging  necklines 
and  hunky  singers  smiled  for  the  cam- 
eras as  teenage  fans  screamed  in 
delight.    ; 

But  unlike  other  awards  shows,  a 
blue-wigged  Celia  Cruz,  the  Queen  of 
Salsa,  shrieked  "Mi  Madre!"  upon  win- 
ning'and  delivered  an  ecstatic  accep- 
tance speech  in  Spanish.  Cruz  won  for 
best  salsa  performance. 

Also  rarely  seen  on  prime  time: 


S«eCMMMV,pa9e50 


Carios  Santana,  left,  and  Fernando  'Fher* Olvara,  lead  singer  of  Mana.  perform  during  the  first 
annual  Latin  Grammy  Awards  in  Los  Angeles  in  September. 


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For  more  information  about  advanced  self-defense  training  or  classes  for  men, 
please  call  The  Center  for  Women  &  Men  at  310-825-3945 

FREE  to  all  UCLA  Students,  Staff  and  Faculty!! 

To  sign  up,  please  come  to  Room  2  in  Dodd  Hall   (space  «  limited) 


Aiso  JH  Paii  auartcf  2000: 
love  AW  Not:  StaiH  AU  Not 

Wednesday,  Oetodtr  IS,  H:30  pjn,,  t  Dodd  Haii 
Dangers  you  Dont  Sea:  Daia  Rapa  Drtigs 

iMsday,  No¥0t$^af  7,  ¥:0C  pJHu  2  Vodd  Haii 


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Services 

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Every  Friday 


Sponsored  by  The  Center  for  Women  &  Men  and  the  UCLA  Police  Department 

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To  Advertise  call: 
310.825.2221 


IIMDEPENDEIMT  PRODUCERS  PROQRAM 

PRESENTS 


;.'.:l-,.. 


CREATING  POP  CULTURE  IM  A  onRppRATE  e...T..Bi= 


FallSQOO        - 
Mondays  7:00  -  ^0:Oapm 


Dodd  Hall  181 


Pi^ofessor  Peter 

Chairman,  iVIandalay  Picturea 

Si 


Editor-ln-Chlef  of  Variety 

\  "^^^^^^^^Z:^^  —V  face.  o.  ..e 

and  aometimes.  frlghteningly.  why. 

Prof o««or  Ouber  tineJ  Mr.  Bart  have  urm-..-11-i—* 

lumlnarla.  who  wH.  Join  tham  a.  guaata  of Tha  ooMrn'"  *°  '""""-y 

Clark,  Sandy  Oruaho J.  Ja77i!.To  .       ?"  '  "^"^  °*'^''"'''  ^"^ 

Va,an«.  Bran  F.rran.^n«o;Lrr:Xan:;""  °'''"'''  '""''''  °''-''  "^"'^ 


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2S         k'ptenibtr  25-28,2000 


Daily  Brum  Aits  K  fntertciinment 


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,•  til  n'  W.'.  ,11,    ".1,     )',    "i  .     iil.i.t. 


September  25-28, 2000        29 


"^  "*  r«tr'';^»?r!Cir 


'Katbot  inironuiK  tumt 


J  yeas 


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atNgh 


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INTIRNETi  Interactive  site  lets 
viewers  follow  alien  character 
observing  earth  culture,  people 


%  Barbara  McGttire 
Dafly  Bruin  Senior  Staf^ 

Firsttheie  was  E.T.  then  there  was  Alf.  Now. 
make  way  for  i^^ 

Hnalding  a  new  era  tor  alien  invaders, 
Katoot.  the  fim  Internet,  adratenestrial  ^let," 
is  taking  Qfver  G)^)«:q»c«  at  computers  around 
the  ^obc  on  Sept.  25 
at  www.katbot,conL 
A  aeon  green  "kat" 
from  the  pbinet 
fCatatonia,  KadxM  is 
an  animated  kitty 
posing  as  a  (on^ 
exdiange  studoit  in 
suburban  Long 
Island,  New  Yoiic  as  a 
cover  to  study  eartit- 
Ungs. 

SpedficaUy,  the 
Katatonia  Secortty 
Agency,  who  has 
bees  worried  about 
dieir  piaaef  s  ^cov- 

ery  en  a  imssioa  since  NASA's  M^s  landing, 
has  sent  Kadxrt  to  earth  to  see  whether  n'i 
inhabitants  are  a  threatt.  But  rea%,  Kalbot  is 
interested  to  the  advnriuiie  of  it  aS.  SSie'sa  sar- 
castk  kitty  wIh)  was  "bom  to  rock"  and  is  tndy 
intrigued  by  the  crazy  and  wiM  nrnac  scenes  oC 
earth. 

"She's  there  to  scuoy  uxxa^sn,  jun  to  see 
what  their  atdti^es  are  now.  be^uae  vrfien  tiiQ' 
get  older  theyH  be  able  to  reach  Katatonia," 
said  Angela  Martini,  erea^  of  Kidfoeit  *11us 


4   •> 


generation  nowdoefii't  have  &e  technology  to 
reach  that  far,  so  Katbot  isjust  there  to  see  what 
the  vibe  is,  sort  of  like  when  pec^  go  into  the 
jungle  to  studj/gorfBas."  * 

With  her  ooioiieg  and  an 
doeoit't  k>olc  tiloB  the  typical  excnanj|$£  ixmci. 
tnit  witft  her  special  ocwers.  one  befnp  n  h\nr. 
facade,  she  !• 
as  a  regular  i 

the  LcB*vrf -i  ^.  .^,  . 

throuj^t  ijatetiwrt' 

Katbot 

Martiiu  said  that  j  ch  "i  u\'j  m^mmivu  ir 
Katbot  content  came  from  her  hjj^  schoo' 
expericn 

mi|^t  feci  a  uooa  oi  njcaioriL- 
ibem  as  they  dheck  out  Viha- 
Katbot'slife. 

"When  you  ^aiout  ol  hi. 
in  0(^^,1  think  8iotoC>^  ,..^...,.  ...w.w- 

onesaiereallyirei^,  a  -Starting  to  get 

a  little  far&er  away  from  than,  so  maybe  you 
can  bwgfa  at  tliein  a  little  yt.**  ^  ttid  with  a 
reflexive  traje  of  nosttteia.  "So,  I  think  tbat's 
what  I  find  af^MOliag  about  (Katbot),  is  to  look 
backonhigbiii^pI«ndbelBc£, 'OhOod.  J  waa 
so  serious  (H'lililiever.'" 

As  with  most  anything  these  days,  Katbot » 
not  a  r^<ularly  schedukd  cartoon,  biitf  has  its 
own  Intemet^wisted,  big  broAeMi^ie  verstoo 
of  die  real  wtiUd.  Katbot  w0  be  acoessiUe 
through  her  site  24'  hours  a  day,  which  even 
comes  oomp^  w^  Ikiks  to  spy  ctfitt  she  set 
up  around  die  LdBore^s  home. 

"Visiting  Katbot  com  u  tike  usmgaomeone's 
computer  rather  than  sorHing  a  Web  site,**  said 
KetTi  Mahone9,«t  director  of  the  site,  "the 
user  gets  the  seiMe  that  they're  seeing  the  worid 
throi^  Katbbfs  eyes  by  using  her  personal 
computer,    the    'Katatonia    £Bterg^actic 


UMinm.  p»9tii 


«1 


sue 


reality-based  pr  nrams 


TaEVKMON:  Networks 

if  low-cost 
er  to  voyeurism 

U^iJy  Brum  Senior  StaJf 


ucu\  on  a  sccmueu  liianu  (.'Wimout  any 
camera  crcvv=;  near  hx)  most  neonie 
wiHexfWt 

ng  the  nauit 

r  Susan   Ti 
>>tbercon 
the  name 
because,  V 
Besides 
time  usur 

"Survivor'  nai  dccojbc  apcp  cultural 
juggwnaut.  I^'  takinn  the  game  show 
premise  to  i  ifercnt  level- 

forcing  coDtc&uo.  together 

24-7  and  do  ph>  ;vrowiog 

tasks  for  a  reward  ilfion  dot- 

lars~the  prograt: 
impendioi;  oQsiau^m 
from  TV  networies,  Bv 
Wants  to  Be  A  Millionaire"  and 
CBS's  other  un-schpted,  reality  pro- 
eram.  "Big  Brotiier,"  some  writers 
^  may  be  pondering  the  real- 
ity of  their  job  opportunities. 

But  some  would  argue  that  the  only 
real  aspect  of  the«  shows  is  that  tbc 
u^ntestant  en'l  actors.  After 

"      '*~"     yuuujjcous     Stunts     ot 

has  put  it  in  a  differeri 

irom  reaUty  shows  like  "Cops" 

or      America's    Fujuuest    Home 

VidcM  "  CareftiUy  plotted  cMienges 

e  dashing  of  all  \ht  different 

pcfsooalities  pushed  together  were 

part  of  the  thrill  for  viewers. 


UPCOMING  REALITY  SHOWS 


Netwoft 


Premise 


Status 


•TlwMaW' 


*(irf*fl  LK)ht" 


Ten  contFstMU  uke  on 

contvitant  M«dt 

phViKally  dut**(»9tn9  udcs 

uiptoqttii. 

m  top  Wirt  locatKin  Rut  one 

b  a '  mdk'  sent  to  ubot«9« 

ttw  ffltirp  ffwjf!  %  efforts. 

*  <*fW4  documontinq  th«  frfm 

Contestant  sMrdi  m 

making  pr «<«s  as  a  wmnm^ 

pro9wvv.  Sdw4aM 

ur(«tif^y  R  dKwen  to  bt 

toa»tn  iantfaqr 

made  mto  a  featwY  Um 

mi. 

praducrd  by  Matt  Oamon  and 

BwiAffWi 

'(hams  of  low'      One  woman  n  ctwined  to  fotu  Set  to  aw  m  the 

different  men.  alt  tompetm^  to        Mimm«  of  2001 , 
be  he«  neirt  sweetheart. 


'Swvivof. 
The  Australian 
Outlwdi' 

"Temptation' 


CBSwoutdntbedoin^ftstobifit       !i«t  to  atr  Jan.  2S, 
dMlntiap(talt»ontt»«Kre«oC      2Wt.  after  the 
its  island  fuggemaut.  Supertww) 


Kwf  ttnnumed  but  con»«'fte<J 
cmiples.  it  a  frrv^wK-  « ir\c« 
(elittonship  aivl  iO^">o« 
trawt  to  an  ewtic  k!>:a».^(t  to  test 
the  waters  ef  tempt jttof 


Not  yet  in 

pfodaown. 


Real  World'  and  'Survivor*  are 
ail  contrived  in  a  way,"  said  Jin  Stm, 
a  professor  in  sociology  at  UCLA. 
"You  have  a  camera  crew  of  SO  near- 
by. The  contestants  are  never  reafiy  in 
danger.  It's  ali  coastrticted  to  put 
than  in  aoeftatn  situation." 


JACOeuAO/Oail/Baitn 

In  Stein's  ofwiion,  thne  kindt  of 
programs  fidfiQ  an  innate,  voyeuristic 
need  to  see  ordinary  people  sweat 
under  preawre. 

"Whether  you*re  watchmg  over 

Sw  SURVIVOR,  page  32 


Bands  fmd  great  starts  during  a>llege 


H(N&-VI  KMONCi^t>»ay  9ru«i 


fAUSIC  Students  explore 
creativity,  form  groups 
in  search  of  rock  dream 


ByMkiMelRoscn-MOiina 
Daly  Brain  Senior  Stiff 

To  many,  tttt  mention  of  an  up- 
andooming  rock  star  typically  recaBs 
images  of  teenage  garage  bands  play- 
ing in  dingy  ban,  stmn^ing  to  fet  Ity, 
surviviiig  on  hopes  and  dreams  and 
cheez-whiz  out  of  the  can. 

In  scfflie  ways,  die  image  still  rings 
true;  the  duea^vtia.  may  be  gone,  but 
today's  ambitioas  young  go-getting 
nnuicians  ttiQ  feoe  ^  same  stifTodds 
and  still  yearn  for  the  same  gjory. 

But,  with  the  challenges  of  the 
modem  music  industry,  many  find  the 
oMcge  o^Krience  just  as  vital  as  real 
world  performing.  It's  a  time  to  test 
the  waters  <rf  the  scene  or  explore 
alternative  options.  More  musicians 
look  to  nonnnusic  majors  to  get  a 
competitive  edge.  Balancing  song  and 


studies,  student  nraaicians  prepare  to 
meet  tlM  dia&ei^es  of  tte  real  worid. 

"I  think  every  musician  who  comes 
to  UCLA  is  excited  to  think  that 
db^re  going  to  tiie  same  school  as 
Jim  Morrison,"  said  Ian  Brown,  a 
Ihirdyear  undeclared  student,  bassist 
for  Mues  rock  style  )l^  Card.  Brown 
described  wad  Card's  sound  as  being 
heavily  mfluenced  by  classic  rock, 
comparable  to  Jimmy  Hendrix  or 
Creun. 

Alttough  the  band  has  been  active 
arouiul  the  Westwood  area,  playing 
such  venues  as  Westwood  Brewing 
Company,  Wild  Card  is  currently 
busy  putdng  together  its  fust  CD. 

"We're  hoping  to  sell  CDs  at  all 
our  gigs  or  periiaps  handout  free  sam- 
ples," said  Brown. 

Brown  explained  the  genesis  of 
Wikl  Card,  pointing  to  a  dasstfied  ad 
he  ran  in  HThe  Recyder"  newspaper. 
Coinddentally,  Wild  Card's  then- 
future  drummer  Mike  Heaven  ran  a 
similar  ad,  looking  for  bandroates. 
"He  was  ahnost  psychotic  into  it," 
Brown  said,  joking  about  their  first 


meeting,  *'l  Hterally  couMn't  say  no  to 
him." 

David  Joneiis,  also  a  third-year 
undeclared  ittudeat,  oicountered  dif- 
ficidty  m  organizing  a  band  as  well. 
He  to(^  time  out  from  preparing 
demos  in  the  studio  to  discuss  his 
music,  whid!  is  reminiscent  of  both 
Counting  Crows  and  Pearl  Jam. 

JoDcHs  writes,  sings,  and  plays  both 
guitar  and  piano  for  his  own  music. 
With  such  diverse  talents,  Joneiis  had, 
imtQ  recendy,  been  performing  alone. 

"I  made  a  vow  that  I  would  not 
work  another  gig  until  I  could  form  a 
band,"  said  Joneiis.  "I've  woilced  with 
some  bands,  but  since  I  came  to 
UCLA  I've  been  going  solo."  Joneiis 
recendy  adueved  his  goal,  organizing 
an  as-yet  uniuuned  band. 
.  Joneiis  did  make  an  exception  to 
his  vow  at  last  year's  Spring  Sing, 
where  he  performed  his  origina!  com- 
position, "Walls."  He  said  about  the 
experience:  "It  was  really  ftin.  You 
reach  more  people  than  with  any  gig 

See  BANDS,  pa^c  31 


VOLUME      CHANNEL 


POWER 


n — ii' .    .1  1.    .'f .   .'  i>" 


30       September  25-M,  2000 


Mty  Bruin  Am  t  EMtrtaiRiMM 


IWly  Brain  Arts  i 


September  25-28, 2000       31 


r' 


:.-i 


Bites 


CHIXDIGGIT 
"From  Scene  to  Shining  Scene" 


i)  iiii.riai^inniii    ■  liJt 


Chixdiggit 

"From  Scene  to  Shining  icentT 
Honest  Don's  Oee|>  Deep 
;  Pocitets  •'-.■;:;7; 

If  this  band  can  keep  making 
records  as  good  as  "From  Scentf  to 
Shining  Scene,"  it'll  have  to  change  its 
name  to  Everyonediggit.  Music  this 
good  doesn't  come  along  every  day. 

The  lusciously  airheaded  quartet 
sounds  like  Blink- 182  would  if  it  were 
a  good  band.  The  snappy  hooks,     :    ^ 
sugar-sweet  vocals  and  quick  rhythms 
that  fill  "Scene"  are  everything  a  pop- 
punk  band  could  hope  for:  catchy  and 
memorable.  While  Chixdiggit  may  not 
be  burning  up  the  Top  40  anytime 
soon,  it  really  should  be  with  tunes  like 
"Melissa  Louise"  and  "Bom  in 


Toulouse."  Any  band  with  an  ear  for 
songwriting  as  strong  as  this  deserves 
a  shot. 

Singer-guitarist  KJ  Jansen  deserves 
a  large  share  of  the  credit  for  making 
"Scene"  such  a  fine  album,  combining 
solid  guitar  work  and  a  voice  that 
most  pop  singers  would  kill  for.  His 
clear,  sweet  tone  on  "Aromatherapy" 
and  "Folks  are  Gone"  makes  a  perfect 
contrast  to  the  gritty  hum  of  overdriv- 
en guitars,  like  a  spoonful  of  ice  cream 
after  a  sip  of  strong  coffee.  It's  as  if 
the  Ramones  hired  Matthew  Sweet  as 
a  frontman  for  one  really  awesomely 
catchy  tour,  and  man,  is  it  a  nice 
Wend. 

Though  Jansen  may  be  the  one  in 
the  spotlight,  that's  not  to  say  his 
cohorts  don't  deserve  a  lot  of  credit, 
as  well.  Mark  O'Flaherty  contributes 
more  nifty  guitar  work,  and  bassist 
Mike  Eggermont  and  drummer  Dave 
Alcock  thunder  away  with  aplomb  on 
all  1 1  tracks.  Whether  turning  out 
pop-laced  ditties  like  "Going  to  the 
Peelers?"  or  cranking  up  the  classic 
rock  on  "Moto  Foxe,"  the  quartet 
sounds  sharp  and  focused  throughout. 

Chixdiggit  won't  be  winning  any 


laurels  for  the  depth  of  its  lyrics,  but 
there's  a  certain  irresistible  quality  to 
lines  like  "She  spoke  English  like  a 
trucker/she  was  as  hot  as  napalm" 
when  Jansen  sings  them  in  "Spanish 
Fever."  The  goofy  sense  of  humor 
mirrors  the  tongue-in-cheek  moniker 
ofthe  band  itself 

While  "Scene"  clocks  in  at  only  a 
hair  under  27  minutes,  the  relative 
brevity  is  probably  a  good  thing.  Just 
like  cotton  candy,  things  this  sweet  are 
best  taken  in  small  doses. 

Brent  Hopidns 
Rating:  10 


Eve  6 

"Hon'orscope" 
RCA  Records 

The  homonyms  and  difficult  vocab- 
ulary words  strangely  sound  perfectly 
normal  comjng  out  of  the  mouth  of 
Max  Collins,  who  struggled  to  gradu- 
ate high  school  boasting  an  impressive 
0.87  GPA.  Coupled  with  power 
chords,  pedal  notes,  and  poppy  har- 
monies. So.  Cal's  own  Eve  6  achieves 
.  its  definitive  sounds. 


■$■':  ..* 


^>^;'  A- 


Many  may  remember  Eve  6  from 
their  catchy  radio  hit  "Inside  Out,"  or 
from  the  energetic  "Open  Road  Song" 
which  appeared  in  the  opening  scenes 
ofthe  movie  "Can't  Hardly  Wait." 

Abnost  two  years  later,  Eve  6  is  now 
back  in  the  souiid  waves,  fighting  vehe- 
mently to  defeat  the  plagued  destiny  of 
one+it  wofKlerdom. 

"Horrorscope"  has  the  same  pro- 
ducer and  basically  the  same  vibe  as 
their  last  album.  Much  lik«  their  older 
music,  it  is  easier  to  visualize  these 
songs  being  performed  in  an  artsy,  yet 
alternative  rock-n-roll  coffee  shop, 
rather  than  a  large  rock  venue.  The 
new  singe  "Promise"  is  slowly  seeping 
into  the  radio  waves  with  its  infectious 
harmony  and  unmistakable  character- 
istic of  Eve  6  lyrics. 

The  album,  however,  exhibits  a 
more  experimental  side  of  the  band. 
Frighteningly,  many  of  the  songs  use 
keyboards  and  the  opening  track  fea- 
tures the  use  of  cheesy  voice  effects. 

For  the  most  part.  Eve  6  should 
probably  stick  to  what  they  know  and 
not  try  to  borrow  effects  from  Cher. 
Also,  it  seems  to  be  increasingly  trendy 
to  mix  a  string  arrangement  in  rock 


songs  and  Eve  6  jumps  on  that  band- 
wagon in  "Here's  To  The  Night," 
using  an  entire  string  ensemble  to  set 
the  ambience  behind  the  pulsating  gui- 
tar. 

The  CD  presents  12  new  songs 
which  can  be  enjoyed  by  fans  pf  the 
Eve  6  sound,  however,  this  album  will 
neither  break  nor  make  the  band. 
"Horrorscope"  will  not  be  the  hit  fol- 
low up  that  will  establish  Eve  6  as  a 
solid  rock  band. 

It  also  most  likely  won't  be  the  last 
we  hear  from  this  frei^utta.-high 
school  band:  The  album  wiU  probably 
end  up  becoming  the  mediocre  middle 
album  from  this  energetic  and  talented 
group. 

Ctiris  Moiiates 
Rating:5 


"r 


See  SOfMOMUSk  psfc  50 


NEW  COURSES  IN  FRENCH  LITERATURE  AND  CULTURE  IN  TRANSLATION 

FALL  2000 


SEX  VIOLENCE 

STATE-INFORMATION 


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FEAST,  FAMJNE  ANQ  DECADENCE 

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Texts  by: 


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Events: 

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Ronsard,  Rabelais,  Brillat- 
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TTh  12:30-1:45 

All  texte  A  Iftc^wraa  In  Enqljyh 
FRENCH  168:  TOPICS  IN  FRENCH  LITERATURE 
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BANDS 

From  page  29 


at  a  club." 

Student  musicians  face  a  unique  chal- 
lenge, juggling  scholarly  pursuits  with  aspir- 
,  ing  musical  careers.  Although  a  dedicated 
drummer,  third-year  student  Scott 
Silverman  chose  to  pursue  a  degree  in  law 
instead  of  music.  Last  year,  Silverman 
joined  class  of  2000  alumnus  Rick  Watling 
in  the  band  Sunseri. 

"I  had  to  make  a  decision  back  in  high 
school  about  whether 
I  would  go  to  college 
or  to  music  school,"  ■''^"■■"■""■■'■'~ 
said  Silverman.  "1 
decided  to  come  to 
college,  but  to  keep 
playing  music  as  much 
as  possible.  It's  hard  to 
do  both,  but  school  is 
my  first  priority  right 
now." 

,  These  musicians 
saw  the  UCLA  envi- 
ronment as  a  good 
place  for  young  talents 
to  grow  and  experi- 
ment Both  academic 
programs  and  social  ' 

events  give  musicians 
the  opportunity  to  hone  their  skills. 

"My  time  at  UCLA  did  influence  my 
music,"  Silverman  said.  "On  the  plus  side,  I 
benefited  from  working  with  such  great 
teachers.  Billy  Higgins,  for  example,  is  one 
of  the  world's  greatest  drummers,  and  he 
leads  student  combos  here  on  campus.  I 
became  involved  with  legendary  jazz  musi- 
cian Kenny  Burrell's  combo  through  the 
music  department  and  the  Jazz  Studies  pro- 
gram." 


A  music  degree  is  not 

the  only  road  to  a 

thriving  career,  and 

many  student 

musicians  opt  to  study 

other,  more  practical 

subjects,  practicing 

their  music  on  the  side. 


While  Silverman  praised  the  academic 
program,  others  find  satisfaction  by  mov- 
ing direcdy  to  public  performance  Wild 
Card  performed  at  several  campus  music 
festivals  in  WesTwood  Plaza. 

"It  was  great,  a  really  cool  way  to  con- 
nect," said  Brown.  "Music  isn't  like 
sports;  it's  not  a  constant  competition. 
We  get  together  with  other  bands  and  jam 
together,  or  have  guest  artists." 

Perseverance  and  dedication  more 
than  anything  else  can  determine  success. 
A  music  degree  is  not  the  only  road  to  a 
thriving  career,  and  many  student  musi- 
cians opt  to  study 
other,  more  practi- 
""■■~'"~''^~~     cal  subjects,  practic- 
ing their  music  on 
the  side. 

"I  plan  to  take 
the  Bar  exam,  and 
practice  law  for  a 
period    of   time," 
Silverman  said  of 
his  studies.   "I've 
spent  three  years 
studying  it,  so  I 
think  I  ought  to 
practice  it  a  bit. 
Maybe    then    I'll 
take  a  step  back 
■■;  and  take  another 

look  at  where  I'm 
going.  Perhaps  I  could  use  my  legal 
experience  to  launch  a  music  career." 

Jonelis  also  considered  the  possibili- 
ty of  breaking  into  music  through  law. 
"I'd  like  to  work  with  music  -  either  in 
the  music  business  or  as  a  music 
lawyer,"  he  said.  "If  I  could  make 
money  playing  music,  that  would  be 
my  dream." 


See  MHOS,  page  53 


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32        Septembw  25-28, 2000 

SURVIVOR  > 

From  page  2f      , 


OriylnrinAftiAEMmaiMMii 


•-, 


the  LeRoy  Nginuan  Center  for  American  Studies  on 
campus.  The  Center  follows  cultural  and  media 
trends. 

Watching  the  people  on  "Survivor"  eat,  compete 

and  give  heartfelt  soliloquies,  however,  never  felt 

voyeuristic  for  some  viewers.  While  taking  summer 

school  to  complete  her  degree, 

Kathy  McElroy,  a  graduate  of 

molecular  cell  &  developmental      — ^■^— — 

biology,  tried  to  make  time  on 

Wednesday  nights  for  "Survivor." 

.  But  she  saw  the  island  adventure 

as  a  fun  flick,  not  a  documentary. 

"I  didn't  feel  like  I  was  prying 

in  their  business.  I  just  watched 

them  prance  around,"  McElroy 

said.  "They  were  very  amusing  for 

the  most  part.  TTie  show  made 

good  fodder  for  the  dinner  table." 

Aside  from  plans  for  a'second 

round    of    "Survivor"    in    the 

Australian  Outback,  every  major      

network  is  developing  another  /.<:..:. 

incarnation.  ABC,  for  instance, 
plans  to  launch  "The  Mole,"  where  one  person 
among  the  (nine)  contestants  will  be  a  Richard- 
Hatch-esque  mole  who  tries  to  sabotage  the  group's 
attempts  at  different  obstacles.  Meanwhile,  FOX  is 
readying  "Temptation"  where  unmarried  couples 
stay  on  an  island  with  other  singles.  At  the  end,  each 
must  decide  whether  to  stay  together  or  look  for 
other  flsh  in  the  island  sea. 

Reality  programs-that  have  no  grand  prize  at  the 


Reality  programs 
that  have  no  grand 

prize  at  the  end  or 

immunity 
challenges  may  find 

it  harder  to  reach 
the  same  audience. 


end  or  immunity  challenges  may  fim)  it  harder 
to  reach  the  same  audience.  Last  August,  FOX 
tlebuted  the  first  episode  of  "American 
High,"  which  documented  the  senior  year  of 
12  suburban  students.  Although  no  students 
in  the  group  were  yotod  out  or  dared  to  eat 
rats,  each  teen  wrestled  with  their  ^wn  issues 
on<amera.  Producers  focused  on  blend- 
ing into  the  program  and  letting  the 
kids  tell  the  story. 

"It  doesn't 
^^^^^^^      have  a  gim- 
"^"""■■■— ~     mick.  It's  a 
straight-out 
documen- 
tary.        It 
needs  time 
to  build  an 
audience. 
The       other 
shows    don't," 
said      Jonathan 
Chin,     producer 
and    cameraman 
for       "American 

— ^     High."  "I  watched 

'Survivor' too  but  it's 
a  different  experience 
than  'American  High.'" 

Despite    positive    reviews     from     critics, 
"American  High"  was  canceled  after  two  weeks. 
Chin  cites  the  show's  time  slot  against  the  critically 
panned  "Big  Brother,"  which  benefited  from  a 
"Survivor"  lead-in. 
"The  thing  for  us  is  that  we  don't  know  if  it's 


SceSlfllVIVOI|,pa9e33 


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Se|Mefnber2S-28,2000       33 


SURVIVOR 

From  page  32 

because  people  are  just  not  interested  in 
real,  real  life  or  if  it  was  the  competition," 
said  Chin,  who  is  working  on  airing 
"American  High"  on  another  network. 
"In  'Big  Brother,'  there's  really  no  story. 
It's  a  flaw  of  the  show  -  if  you  have  a  bor- 
ing bunch  of  people,  you're  screwed." 

Fortunately  for  "Survivor"  alumni. 
America  doesn't  seem  to  be  bored  with 
them.  Aside  from  signing  endorsement 
deals  for  products  and  popping  up  on 
every  talk  show,  many  of  them  have 
filmed  guest  spots  on  shows  like 
"Becker"  and  "The  Hughlcys."  Thanks 
to  "Survivor,"  some  have  been  able  to 
shoot  for  stardom. 

Sean  KanifT,  the  island's  resident  doc- 
tor, decided  to  take  a  leave  from  his  med- 
ical practice  and  hired  three  agents.  His 
decision  to  become  a  Hollywood  player 
has  elicited  some  criticism. 

"It's  sad  that  someone  who  spent 
years  in  medical  school  with  a  practice 
would  ditch  it.  What  does  that  say  about 
us  as  a  society?"  Stein  said.  "But  then 
again,  if  I  was  discovered  tomorrow,  I 
might  say  'To  hell  with  this  teaching 
job.'" 

Another  pressing  issue  of  the  reality 
genre  is  revenue  for  TV  networks  and 
production  companies.  From  a  network 
executive's  point  of  view,  these  programs 
are  economically  sound  ventures.  They 


are  usually  cheaper  to  produce  because 
they  don't  require  a  cast,  of  actors  and  a 
writing  staff.  This,  howler,  does  not  sig- 
nal a  draught  of  sitcoms  and  dramas. 

According  to  Brian  Lowry,  television 
critic  for  the  Los  Angeles  Tirhes,  30  new 
pilots  were  picked  up  for  this  fall  season, 
down  from  last  year's  total  of  36.  Lowry 
attributes  the  decrease  to  ABC  ordering 
more  of  its  "Millionaire"  franchise. 

"There  has  been  some  drop,  but  not  a 
huge  drop,"  said  Lowry.  "I  think  the  real 
impact  won't  happen  'til  January  or 
February." 

Chin,  who  has  experience  in  both  nar- 
ratives and  documentaries,  believes 
there's  room  for  both  fictitious  and  real 
TV. 

"The  question  is  how  far  the  reality  TV 
wave  will  go,"  Chin  said.  "I  mean,  how 
many  'Survivors'  can  there  be?" 

"I  don't  think  they  have  td  worry 
about  reality  TV.  The  strike  is  something 
to  worry  about,"  said  Chin,  referring  to 
the  ongoing  strike  between  the  Screen 
Actors  Guild  and  advertisers. 

When  the  actors'  and  screenwriters' 
contracts  expire  in  July  and  May,  respec- 
tively, a  union-wide  strike  will  delay  the 
following  TV  season  indefinitely.  As  a 
result,  reality  TV  will  have  plenty  of 
prime4ime  hours  to  fill,  giving  average 
citizens  the  chance  to  become  overnight 
celebrities. 

"These  kinds  of  shows  are  here  to 
stay,"  Chin  said.  "And  with  the  strike,  we 
will  see  a  lot  of  these  shows  for  next  year." 


KATBOT 

From  page  28 


■Hransmitter'. 

"The  interface  feels  like  a  hybrid  of  a  laptop  and  a  per- 

.sonal  digital  assistant,"  she  continued.  "The  user  has  the 

ability  to  read  Katbot's  personal  thoughts,  e-mail  from 

friends  and  her  job,  view  images  of  her  life,  and  get  a 

glimpse  of  what  it's  like  to  be  an  agent  from  outer  space." 

Martini  also  said  she  feels 
that  the  setup  of  the  site  gives 

viewers  a  real  and  engross-  — — ■— — — ^ 
ing  look  at  Katbot,  and 
believes  that  it  better  serves 
to  present  her  as  a  real  char- 
acter than  a  half  hour  televi- 
sion time  slot  would. 

"A  lot  of  the  appeal  of  it 
will  be  that  it's  sort  of  like 
reading  someone's  diary, 
being  that  the  Katbot.com 
Web  experience  will  be  that 
when  you  go  there  you  will 
be  looking  at  Katbot's  palm 
pilot  that  she  writes  on," 
Martini  said.  "So,  you  can 
go  throug}i  all  her  files  and  '.    ,_.;,  .  ■.r-.v.l- 

read  her  &niail  and  stufTlike  ':  ■    •  ' 

thiO. 

"A  lot  of  it  is  a  very  voyeuristic  thing,"  she  elaborated. 
"You're  some  place  you're  not  really  supposed  to  be  and 
you're  reading  and  finding  out  and  watching  moves  that 
you're  not  supposed  to  see." 

Though  not  quite  that  extreme  of  a  "peeping  Tom" 
experience,  Katbot's  little  comer  of  the  Internet  promis- 
es to  be  more  entertaining  than  prime  time's  attempt  at  a 


Though  not  quite  that  extreme 
of  a  "peeping  Tom"  experience, 

Katbot's  little  corner  of  the 
Internet  promises  to  be  more 
entertaining  than  prime  time's 
attempt  at  a  big  brother  high 

school  show  which  got 
canceled  after  three  episodes. 


big  brotherliigh  school  show  which  got  caocdjBd  after 
three  episodes.    ,  '"■•"-i'A'^v'v '■!'•■  ■''>.■■ 

"TV  shows  don't  allow  the  viewer  to  control  their 
experience  and  neither  do  most  Web4)ased  animated 
shows,"  Mahoney  said.  "Katbot.com  is  an  immersing 
and  freeform  experience.  Each  page  in  the  site  ties  into 
one  another,  yet  can  be  enjoyed  as  a  stand-alone  experi- 
ence. 

"The  beauty  of  this  K.I.T.  interface  is  that  the  user  can 
spend  10  minutes  or  a  half-hour  with  Katbot  and  still 

come  away  feeling  fulfilled, 

knowing  who  Katbot  is, 

"'"■^■~"''"^^"^^~      what  she  stands  for  and 

what  she's  up  to,"  continued 
Mahony     .  '    "■" 

Katlx)t  wOl  not  only  isuf- 
fer  through  the  standard 
high  school  dramas,  but  will 
experience  some  alien  ones 
as  well,  especially  when  her 
boyfriend  Eddie  from 
Katatonia  pops  in  for  a  visit. 
"There's  some  funny 
stuff  in  it  and  there's  some 
serious  stuff  in  it,"  Martini 
said.  "Katbot  is  very  sarcas- 
tic and  she's  an  observer. 
;,;■-;  She's    there    to   partially 

observe,  but  she's  got  her 
own  opinions  about  stuff.  '-■■■:'  :'^.  ,^/:^'y':-.:'^ 

"It's  not  all  about  jokey,  jokey,  funny  things  happen- 
ing all  the  time,  but  1  like  that  it's  a  little  more  serious  and 
a  little  more  deep  than  just  funny  gags,"  she  continued. 
"It's  just  more  a  sardonic  look  at  high  school." 

WEB:  Watch  Katbot  appear  in  all  her  gkxy  at  wwwJot- 
botcom  beginning  Sept  25. 


B«y^^qsmuM«w 


ne  UCLA  Department  of  History 

V/ould  like  to  announce  the  addition  of 
/wo  new  courses  for  the  Fall  Quarter 

History  1 31 A  (221 451 200):  Russian  IMuscovy    V 

From  the  Origins  to  the  Rise  of  Muscovy,  Kievian  Russia  and  its  culture. 
Taught  by  Professor  Emeritus,  Barisa  Krekic 

History  190D  (221822200):  Vietnam  Past  and  Present 

Survey  of  history  and  culture  of  Vietnam  from  about  700  B.C.  to  the  present. 
Taught  by  Professor  Emeritus,  Damodar  SarDesai 

For  further  Information  Contact: 
The  UCLA  Department  of  History 
6265  Bunche  Hall    ' 
(310)  825-4601 


1 


i 


BwmqtqqquiiaaaiaaaiaaaiaaaaiaaaataaiaaaiaaaiaaaiataaaaamatataoaijD 


giiifriencl's 


Open  House  ^oy 
Re- Entry  &  Nontf34ltionaI  Students! 


If  you're  an  undergraduate  25  years  or  older,  or  a  graduate 

student  29  years  or  older,  please  come  and  find  out 

about  services  specifically  for  re-entry/nontraditional  students 

\X/here:  2  Dodd  Hall 
When:  October  1 1 ,  2000 
Time:     11:30  a.m.-2:00  p.m. 


Take  this  opportunity  to  meet  other  students  and  learn  about  upcoming  events! 


For  more  Information,  please  call  The  Center  at  310-825-3945. 
Sponsored  by  the  UCLA  Center  for  Women  &  Men    ■     Www.thecenter.ucla.edu 


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BRUIN 
BARGAINS 

'•d»  for  iam«  oww^CaOO  ar»  S2 


34       September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


\li 


JAKE 

From  page  25  ..  ,• 

The  album,  titled  "Borders  and 
Boundaries,"  is  described  by  the  band 
as  "more  open,  more  varied,  and  intri- 
cate" than  previous  albums, 
"Borders"  took  a  lengthy  eight  weeks 
to  record  at  Hollywood's  Grand 
Master  Recordings  compared  to  the 
band's  previous  recordings,  which 
were  usually  finished  in  a  week  or 
two.  This  effort  promises  to  exhibit 
the  band's  musical  growth  and  a  more 
polished  sound  since  more  instru- 
ments and  studio  time  were  used  dur- 
ing recording. 

Vinnie  explained  some  of  the 
band's  recent  changes  including  a 
move  from  Capitol  Records  to  the 
independent  label,  Fat  Wreck 
Chords.  .        —  ; 

"There  was  too  much  fed  tape. 

We're  a  punk  band  with  punk  ethics. 

It's  very  difficult  to  retain  ethics  in  the 

music  industry,"  Vinnie  said.  ' 

Less  Than  Jake  is  renowned  for 

keeping    ticket    and    merchandise 

prices  low  in  the  interest  of  fans. 

However,  continuing  with  the  same 

approach  while  on  a  bigger  label, 

became  a  struggle  since  marketing 

strategies  are  constructed  in  a  very 

specific  way.  Tour  offers  were  fairly 

inflexible  and  choosing  not  to  partake 

in  certain  deals  ended  up  cutting  the 


Roger  s  intensity  helps  excite  the  crowd  during  an  Aug.  1 1  show  at  the  Key  Club. 


MINOV  ROSV  (MIy  Brum  Senioc  St*lf 


band's  budget.  This  prevented  the 
band  from  doing  exactly  what  it 
wanted. 

But  residing  on  an  independent 
label  allows  for  less  formality. 

"We  love  touring  and  recording 
with  our  friends,"  Vinnie  said. 

Some  of  the  band's  favorite  tour 


companions      have      been      The 
Descendants,  ALL  and 

Guttermouth. 

"There's  good  and  bad  to  both 
independent  and  major  labels. 
There's  always  exceptions,  always  a 
gray  area.  Nothing's  definitive  at  all. 
This  is  the  case  in  life,  not  just  the 


music  industry,"  Vinnie  said. 

Along  the  same  lines,  he  proceeded 
to  discuss  the  creation  of  sub-genres 
and  how  such  specificity  creates  divi- 
sion and  exclusiveness. 

"Music  is  about  what  you  dig.  It's 
about  breaking  down  walls.  Of  course 
it's  possible  to  listen  to  all  types  of 


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WEDNESDAY  -  SUNDAY  NOON  -  7:00  PM 


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music  and  like  all  types  of  bands." 
Vinnie  said. 

This  thought  was  furthered  by 
examples  of  sub-genres  such  as  emo, 
hardcore,  ska,  and  a  number  of  punk 
sub-group  variations. 

"A  person  who  likes  Iron  Maiden 
might  also  like  Avail,  as  well  as 
Dillinger  Four,"  Vinnie  said. 

Vinnie's  observations  make  sense 
and  he  has  the  insight  to  back  them 
up.  He's  been  in  punk  bands  since  he 
was  18  and  has  watched  the  scene 
change,  but  more  importantly,  he's 
been  a  music  fan  his  entire  life  and 
grew  up  with  all  sorts  of  rock,  punk 
and  heavy  metal  influences. 

"There  are  corporate  men  who 
make  a  lot  of  money  and  dress  con- 
servatively that  think  and  behave 
more  punk  rock  than  a  kid  with  a 
mohawk  at  a  show.  Things  aren't 
always  so  simple,"  Vinnie  said.  - 

Vinnie's  perceptiveness  and 
humor  is  also  evident  in  his  creative 
analogies.  During  the  interview,  his 
eyes  lit  up  as  he  sat  up  from  his  previ- 
ously reclined  position.  Using  his 
hands,  he  spoke  as  an  old  friend  ia 
casual  conversation. 

"It's  like  we're  a  two^ieaded  hydra 
beast.  Part  of  the  band  has  this  side 
with  skull  heads,  fire,  and  rifles."  he 
said,  playfully.  "Then  there's  this 
other  half  of  us  who  is  serious,  taking 


Scejyus,pa9e41 


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OAily  Bruin  Arts  &  EntertaiimMnt 


September  25-28, 2000       35 


■^eiKAMPUS 


■'f 


T' 


I 


Pholos  couftpsy  o(  UCIA  Petformmg  Acts 

White  Oak  Dance  Project,  composed  of  the  finest  dancers  in  the  United  States,  will  perform  at  Royce  Hall  Oct.  25  -  28. 

Taking  the  stage 


A  new  school  year  means  a  fresh 
start  to  another  season  of     ^ 
great  performances 


\ 


By  Howard  Ho 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Coming  back  to  school  means 
more  classes  and  more  homework, 
but  it  also  means  another  season  of 
football,  basketball,  and  top-notch 
entertainment  at  Royce  Hall. 

The  UCLA  Performing  Arts  calen- 
dar is  niled  with  acts  ranging  from  the 
avant  garde  to  the  mainstream. 
Dancers,  musicians,  TV  personali- 
ties, actors,  singers,  and  storytellers 
all  grace  the  stage.  While  Westwood 
might  be  showing  the  latest  films,  one 
need  not  go  off-campus  for  a  good 
show. 

For  dance-lovers,  the  White  Oak 
Project  will  be  performing  at  Royce 
from  October  25-28.  Among  their 
troupe  is  co-founder  and  artistic 
director  Mikhail  Baryshnikov.  They 
will  lend  their  bodies  to  the  works  of 
the  Judson  Dance  Theatre,  a  center 
for  young  dancers  in  the  '60s  and 
•70s. 


Sec  PBVOIIMINC,  page  4« 


White  Oak  Dance  Project  includes  artistic  director  Mikhail  Baryshnikov,  and  will  be 
perfomfiing  at  UCLA's  Royce  Hall. 


'■9r^- 


Michael 
Rosen-Molina 


1^  Stories 
to 

ongoing  life 
on  campus 

COLUMN:  Entertainment, 
opportunities  abound  for 
students  seeking  diversion 


This  campus  is  a  strange  place. 
When  1  first  came  to  UCLA, 
the  orientation  staff  told  me 
wonderful  stories.  The  campus 
teemed  with  urban  legends,  student 
lore  and  bizarre  anecdotes.  It  seemed 
a  strange  and  exciting  world. 

It  was  a  sweltering  August  day 
when  I  arrived,  grimy  with  the  smog 
residue  of  Los  Angeles.  A  stranger  in 
a  strange  land,  1  could  only  gaze  in 
awe  at  the  glittering  edifice  before  me. 
As  the  earnest  tour  guide  beckoned  us 
forward  into  the  Campus  of 
Mysteries,  my 
dumbfounded 
companion 
freshmen  and  I 
marveled  at  the 
myriad  wonders 
of  this  strange 
institution. 

The  top 

floors  of  the 
Young  Research 
Library,  the 
guide  assured 
me  with  quiet 
sincerity,  were  ——^—^—^— 
the  site  of  frequent  amorous  inter- 
ludes for  students  who  despaired  of 
ever  finding  the  necessary  privacy  in 
their  dorm  rooms.  The  eccentric 
architect  of  Janss  Steps  enjoyed  his 
final  creation  so  much  that  he  asked  to 
be  buried  beneath  them.  No  one  who 
repeated  this  legend,  in  fearful, 
hushed  whispers,  knew  for  certain 
which  step  of  the  staircase  contained 
the  mortal  remains  of  the  departed 
visionary,  so  we  avoided  them  all  just 
to  be  safe. 


Being  the  weathered 

Bruinthat  lam,  I  am 

now  the  perfect 

person  to  put  the 

rumors  to  rest. 


Then  we  ate  lunch  in  LuValle 
Commons.  I  had  a  turkey  sandwich, 
but  that's  another  story  altogether. 

I  look  back  on  that  innocent  time, 
and  see  where  1  stand  now;  no  longer 
a  starry-eyed  freshman,  but  an  ancient 
and  grizzled  senior,  hardened  by  the 
passage  of  years  and  the  tortures  of 
education. 

My  writer's  instinct  allows  me  to 
instantly  discern  truth  from  fiction. 
After  orientation,  rumors  circulated 
that  the  freshmen  had  been  misled  by 
the  orientation  counselors  and  staff. 
UCLA's  treasured  history  was  little 
more  than  a  package  of  myths  imag- 
ined by  bored  upperclassmen  to 
deceive  the  incoming  crop  of  fresh- 
me?l. 

Being  the  weathered  Bruin  that  I 
am,  I  am  now  the  perfect  person  to 
put  the  rumors  to  rest.  And  after  three 
years  on  campus,  I  can  say  with 
absolute  authority  that  the  rumors  are 
wrong:  The  legends  are  all  true.  Every 
word. 

The  founder  of  the  Young 
Research  Library  did  have  a  vaguely 
obscene  name.  There  really  is  a 
labyrinthine  system  of  steam  tunnels 
beneath  Royce  Quad,  centered 
around  the  all-too-innocent  looking 

SeellOSiiHNOUIU,|M9eS1 


-fl 


36       September  25-28, 2000, 


OaUy  Bruin  Arts  ft  Entertaimnmt 


Donation  to  aid  with 
Arts  Center  renovation 


ART:  Broad's  $20  million 
gift  will  aid  in  the  radical 
*>       reconstruction  of  Dickson 


By  Michael  Rosen-Molina 

Daily  Bruin  Sei>ior  Staff 

Dickson  Arts  Center  has  served 
the  campus  well  these  last  few 
decades,  but  it's  finally  time  to  say 
goodbye.  Besides  being  severely  dam- 
aged in  the  Northridge  earthquake, 
the  long-time  home  of  the  arts  depart- 
ment no  longer  meets  the  needs  of 
today's  modern  art  student. 

To  remedy  the  problem. 
Chancellor  Albert  Carnesale 
announced  plans  for  a  completely 
renovated  art  center  to  replace  the 
crumbling  Dickson.  Construction  on 
the  $40  million  Broad  Art  Center  will 
commence  in  2002  ori  the  present  site 
of  the  Dickson  Arts  Center. 

The  project  is  supported  by  a  dona- 
tion of  $20  million  by  SunAmerica 
Inc.  chairman  and  arts  patron  Eli 
Broad. 

"Eli  and  Edye  Broad's  magniflcent 
gift  will  secure  UCLA's  place  at  the 
forefront  of  the  arts,"  said  Carnesale. 
"As  a  dynamic  training  ground  for  the 
cultural  leaders  of  the  2ist  century, 
the  Broad  Art  Center  will  markedly 
enrich  the  creative  life  of  UCLA,  the 
greater  Los  Angeles  region  and 
beyond." 

Carnesale  emphasized  the  need  for 
a  new  arts  complex  after  the  damage 
done  to  Dickson  in  the  Northridge 
earthquake. 

"It's  seismically  compromised," 


Novel  idea  is  damned  by  problems 


UCLA  khoo*  o(  A/IS  and  Architecture 

Eli  Broad,  Chairman  and  CEO  of 
SunAmerica  Inc.,  Is  contributing 
to  a  new  arts  complex  at  UCLA. 

said  Carnesale,  jokingly,  "which  is  a 
fancy  way  of  saying  that  it  might  fail 
down." 

Broad  cited  a  high  regard  for 
UCLA's  arts  program  as  well  as  his 
deep  commitment  to  Los  Angeles  as 
reasons  for  his  donation. 

"Yale  accepts  one  out  of  every  15 
applicants,  and  Harvard  School  of 
Business  accepts  one  out  of  10,"  said 
Broad,  "but  UCLA  Arts  and 
Architectural  School  only  accepts 
one  out  of  every  32  applicants.  Its 
competitiveness  is  good  evidence  of 
the  program's  quality." 

The  conference  projected  a  vision 
of  Los  Angeles  as  the  "New  Capital 


See 


page  42 


BOOK:  Humorous  look 
at  death,  while  enjoyable, 
avoids  larger  questions 


ByMidiadRosM-Molina 

Dally  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  hereof  "Damned  if  You  Do" 
is  enjoying  a  nice,  quiet  evening  at 
home,  without  a  care  in  the  world, 
when  some  impolite  intruder  starts 
banging  on  his  door. 

It's  an  old  business  acquaintance, 
who  drags  him  out,  tells  him  that 
he's  won  a  lottery  to  become  his  new 
assistant  and  then  whisks  him  off  to 
a  week-long  trial  period  hell  - 
literally. 

That's  bad  enough,  but  if  our 
hero  h  already  dead,  home  is  a 
wooden  box  six  feet  below,  and  that 
rude  stranger  is  the  Grim  Reaper 
himself,  things  can  only  get  worse. 

That  is  the  premise  of  the  novel 
"Damned  If  You  Do,"  by  Gordon 
Houghton,  a  morbidly  funny  look  at 
the  sweet  hereafter.  The  narrator,  an 
anonymous  amnesiac,  is  yanked 
from  his  eternal  slumber  to  serve  as 
an  apprentice  to  Death.  It  seems 
that  Death's  old  assistant  met  with 
an  untimely  ...  death,  and  random 
chance  has  selected  the  nameless 
hero  as  his  replacement. 

Now. he's  to  assist  Death  in  his 
duties  for  one  trial  week,  dispatch- 
ing one  "customer"  to  his  eternal 
reward  each  day.  If  he  does  well, 
he'll  become  a  permanent  staff 
member,  working  the  beat  with  the 
Four  Horsemen  of  the  Apocalypse. 

If  not,  he'll  be  returned  to  his  cof- 
fin. He  can  make  his  exit  any  way  he 
wants,  provided  it  is  one  of  the  ter- 


mination methods  he  witnessed  dur- 
ing his  apprenticeship. 

When  your  clients  include  a  man 
mangled  in  a  freak  carnival  acci- 
dent, atrysting 

couple  . 

devoured  by 
fire  ants  and  an 
accident-prone 
undertaker 
done  in  by  a 
gas  stove,  a 
chain  of 

sausages,  and 
his  own  clumsi- 
ness, this  is  no 
easy  decision. 

The  Four 
Horsemen, 
additionally, 
are  no 

medieval  left- 
overs; they're 
fully  modern 
harbingers  of 
doom,  over- 
seeing a  com- 
plex web  of 
underlings 
who  travel  the 
worid  in  brand 
spanking  new 
Volkswagens. 
The  bij  four 
themselves  are 
little  more 
than  adminis- 
trators, buried 
under  moun- 
tains of  paper- 
work and  red 
tape. 


(The  book's)  skewed 

look  at  the  great 

beyond  is  certainly 

original,  but  ultimately 

it  leaves  the  reader 

unsatisfied. 


BOOK  REVIEW 


Tide:  Damned  irYoM  Do 
Author  Gordon  Houghton 
Publisher  Pkador 

Prke:  $13.00  Pages;  300 


Pestilence  is  most  at  home  in  his 
private  laboratory,  brewing  up  new 
diseases,  while  War  and  his  assistant 
Skirmish  are  the  more  hands-on 


type,  relishing  any  opportunity  to 
stir  up  bar  brawls  and  recess  figlits. 
Readers  may  find  it  difficult  to 
relate  to  Houghton's  zombie  protag- 
onist.  Part  of 
I  this  is  due  to 

Houghton's 
uniqjue  idea  of 
the  undead 
mentality:  the 
dead  lilce  the 
absolute  soli- 
tude and  securi- 
ty of  the  grave. 

"Damned  if 
You  Do"  fol- 
Jows  the  hero's 
rebirth,  as  he 
slowly  changes 
from  a  desensi- 
tized walking 
corpse,  preoc- 
cupied with 
getting  back  in 
the  ground,  to 
a  zombie, 
eager  to  return 
to  the  uncer- 
tainty and 
excitement  of 
the  living 
world. 

The     prob- 
lem is  that  the 
reader    never 
believes     this 
transforma- 
tion. One  of  his 
last       assign- 
ments is  to  kill 
a  former  lover 
from  bis  pervious  life,  an  act  which 
ought  to  provoke  horrified  shodc  or 
at  least  very  deep  unease.  Instead, 


Sec 


UCLA  Dental  Clinic 

The  UCLA  School  of  Dentistry  provides  comprehensive  care 
so  all  of  your  dental  needs  can  be  met  on  campus. 


Convenient  hours:  morning,  afternoon,  and  Tuesday  evening 

The  most  modem  dental  techniques  are  available. 

Treatment  is  by  dental  students  or  residents  closely  supervised  by  faculty. 

Visa,  MasterCard,  Discover  and  American  Express  accepted   - 

Delta  Dental  provider.  Other  insurance  welcome. 

Emergency  care  is  available. 


To  receive  a  free  consultation  and  initial  examination 
bring  this  ad  to  your  first  appointment.  Save  $35  off  the  regular  fee. 

Offer  good  for  Fall  Quarter,  2000. 

-   t  V     *'■■ 

-  *    '        -      '- '      .'■,'*'''■, 

Call  now  to  schedule  an  appointment. 

(310)206-3904 


OaNjrlnjin  Arts  ft  Enteminment 


September  25-28, 2000       37 


Alumna  author  |>ushes 
children  tpward  literacy 


BOOK:  'SkitUedeedoo' 
teaches  kids  importance 
of  learning  to  read  well 


By  Sharon  Hori 

Dally  Bniin  Senior  Staff    V   ^^   '''~ 

When    literacy    advocate    and 
writer  Patricia 


Rust  FouixtotKm 


The  King  of  Skittledeedoo'  introduces  children  to  the  fundamentals  of  language  in  a  fun  and  creative  way. 


Rust  called  the 
White  House 
to  ask  if  the 
President 
owned  a 

library  card, 
she  was  not  try- 
ing to  be  funny. 

The  inquisi- 
tive UCLA 
graduate  and 
current  presi- 
dent of  the  '-—^——— — 
Daily      Bruin      .  ■■■■•■'■ 

Alumni  Association  was  amused  by 
the  staffs  investigative  efTorts. 

"They  felt  it  was  an  important 
question  and  they  said  they  were 
working  on  it,"  Rust  said,  adding 


"For  people  not  to 

realize  their  full 
potential  Is  nothing 
less  than  a  tragedy." 

Patricia  Rust 

Author 


that  she  loves  to  tell  children  this 
story. 

Three  weeks  later,  Rust  received 
a  phone  call  with  a  fmal  answer  that 
would  have  surprised  Regis  Philbin 
himself:  The  President  did  not  have 
a  library  card.  But  she  was  assured 
that  all  was  wdl  -  the  White  House 
was  equipped  with  its  own  library. 
The  response  sufficed  her  curiosity, 
even  though 
mm^m^mmi^^^^  the  qucstlon 
still  lingered  as 
to  whether  or 
not  a  library 
card  was 

required  for 
the  •  White 
House  library. 
Deemed 
persistent  and 
optimistic. 
Rust  has  justi- 
-..  fied  reasons  to 

'    ,  care  about  the 

government's  collection  of  tomes. 
From  renting  a  video  to  ordering  a 
burger  at  McDonald's,  the  award- 
See  MIST,  page  44 


ii,»! 


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3t       September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bniin  Am  A  Entcftainimiit 


s 


British-Sty  If  pi^  offeirs 
upauthentk 


RESTAURANT:  Shepherd's 
pie,  fish  and  chips  line 
reasonably-priced  menu 


By  Michael  Rosen-Molina 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff —-^ 


RESTAURANT  REVIEW 
YeOI(f^iy$HeadPub 


Address:  liSSiHUa  Monica  Blvd. 

lo$  Angeles,  ( 
Hours:     M-F 11  am, 

S«t,Sun.ni 

Phone  NumI 


Thinking  of 
British  food, 
some  people 
imagine  some- 
thing that  tastes 
slightly  worse 
than  airline  food 
and  slightly  bet- 
ter than  dirt. 

"Ye        Olde 
King's      Head 
Pub"  of  Santa 
Monica  quickly 
puts  such  mis- 
conceptions  to 
rest  with  a  wide 
variety  of  tempt- 
ing English  dishes.  Catering  to  the 
English-loving  public  for  twenty  five 
years,  "Ye  Olde  King's  Head  Pub" 
may  at  first  sound  like  a  gimmicky 


theme  restaurant  trying  to  lure  cu$- 
^tomers  with  an  ersatz  old  English 
name.  In  reality,  however,  it  delivers 
an  authentic  English  atmosphere 
and,  more  importantly,  good,  solid 
food. 

Famous  culinary  mysteries  like 
"toad  in  the  hole,"  and  "bubble  and 
squeak,"  fail  to  appear  on  the  menu, 
but  anglophiles 
will  rejoice  to 
find  classics  like 
shepherd's  pie 
and,  naturally, 
the  obligatory 
fish  and  chips. 

Although 
wary  patrons 
will  breathe  a 
sigh  of  relief, 
knowing  that 
the  legendary 
horrors  of  the 
English  diet  are 
nowhere  to  be 
.  seen,  but  adven- 
turous soufs  longing  for  a  real  taste  of 
the  British  Isles  need  not  despair. 
They  still  have  their  choice  of  foreign 
oddities,  such  as  the  frighteningly- 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


September  2S-28, 2000       19 


HARSHA  RAO/Daily  Bruin  Senior  Sulf 


MMOY  noSSA>aily  Bruin  Senior  SrafT 

Robert  Sneddon  serves  up  beer  to  a  patron  at  the  Ye  Olde  King's  Head  Pub  in  Santa  Monica. 


named  steak  and  kidney  pie. 

This  is  not  sissy  continental  cui- 
sine, full  of  snails  and  shellfish  and 
-puzzling  cream  sauces.  This  is  from 
the  country  of  soccer,  of  empire,  of 
beef;  this  is  from  the  country  that  won 


the  war.  This  is  a  real  taste  of  old 
Europe  with  hearty,  honest,  man- 
sized  dishes,  full  of  lots  and  lots  of 
meat. 

A  visit  to  this  restaurant  is  fun,  not 
so  much  for  its  food,  as  for  its  atmos- 


phere. The  King's  Head  takes 
European  quaintness  to  new  heights. 
The  atmosphere  recalls  the  pub's 
namesake,  the  cozy  comer  tavern  of 

See  KHK^  page  52 


AUDITION  FOR  UCLA 

CHORAL  ENSEMBLES 


TTCTA  rHORAf  F 

MW,  3:00-5:15  p.m. 
UNIVERSITY  CHORUS 

TR,  3:20-5:15  p.m. 


5  minute  audition 


We 
Th 
Fri 

Satur 
Sunday 


elcomi 
bac 


mim 


.AUDITIONS  ARE  SHORT  AND  NOT  DIFFICULT 

NO  SOLO  NECESSARY. 

NON-MUSIC  MAJORS  WELCOME 

(YOU.  HOWEVER.  MUST  READ-MUSIC) 


First 

Daily  Bruin 

reouiar  issue  is 

^pt.29th 

m 


to  advertise  call 
825-2161 


isthyi 

spice 
nice 


Photos  and  story  by  Mindy  Ros^ 


VTenice  is  my  destiny,"  muses  Chili,  one  of 
the  dozens  of  street  performers  and 
artists  who  help  paint  the  scene  on  the 
sun-drenched  Venice  Beach  Boardwalk. 

What  began  in  the  early  1900s  as  Abbot 
Kinney's  unrelenting  vision  to  re-create  Italy's 
Venice  Canals  has  evolved  into  a  widely  known 
Southern  California  tourist  attraction. 

Venice  Beach  reached  its  peak  of  popularity 
in  the  1970s  and  '80s  when  crowds  of  people 
flooded  the  famous  boardwalk  on  a  daily  basis. 
Since  that  time,  however,  it  has  had  its  share  of 
setbacks.  In  the  early  '90s,  for  example,  the 
boardwalk  was  shut  down  for  various  reasons 
including  increased  gang  activity 

Currently,  superficial  renovations  and  the 
inflltration  of  upscale  businesses  have  helped  to 
return  activity  on  the  boardwalk  to  the  level  it 
once  was. 

"It  feels  like  it's  a  lot  safer  now  that  they've 
cleaned  up  over  the  pa.st  year,"  said  Jimmy 
Trimble,  a  Los  Angeles  native  who  recently 
chose  to  live  in  the  Venice  area.  "It  doesn't 
seem  like  there's  as  much  violence  around  here 
anymore." 


For  some,  the  Boardwalk  provides  a  difFerV 
ent  kind  of  safety.  Coin  artist  Ray  H.  Bailey  has 
been  a  street  performer  in  the  Venice  area  for 
over  12  years.  If  it  were  not  for  his  perfor- 
mances on  the  boardwalk,  Bailey  would  not  be 
able  to  make  a  living.  He  said  that  he  does  not 
use  food  stamps  or  participate  in  General 
Relief.  .-.  , 

"If  not  for  this,  I'd  be  eating  out  of  trash 
cans,"  Bailey  said. 

While  some  frequent  the  boardwalk  to  per- 
,  form,  eclectic  crowds  are  regularly  drawn  to 
Venice  for  many  other  reasons. 

The  variety  of  activities  such  as  handball, 
paddle  tennis,  body  building,  and  power-lifting 
tournaments  attract  many  participants  and 
observers. 

For  Fred  Roberts,  the  Boardwalk  is  the  per- 
fect place  to  enjoy  the  company  of  a  diverse 
crowd.  Over  the  12  years  that  he  has  been  fre- 
quenting Venice,  he  has  made  a  group  of  close- 
knit  friends. 

"(Venice  is)  just  fun,  exercise,  meeting  inter- 
esting people  from  different  countries,  and  get- 
ting sun  all  in  one,"  Roberts  said. 


(Counterclockwise  from  top  left) 

Coin  art  is  the  performance  of  choice  for  Ray  H.  Bailey  on 
the  Venice  boardwalk. 

Fred  Roberts  swings  on  the  rings  inside  the  Venice  Beach 
"Sandbox." 

J.Garda  winds  up  to  return  a  handball  at  the  Venice 
Recreation  Center's  big  ball  3-wall  tournament. 

Balloonist  Chili  places  a  crown  atop  of  Adrian  as  his  father, 
Pedro,  looks  on. 

Mike  puts  the  finishing  touches  on  one  of  his  customer's 
new  dragon  tattoos. 


40       SqWHwbgf  25-28. 2000    '<^r 


r  ■- 


/ 


„-   ■■;l: 


Datty  Bruin  Arts  ft  Entertaimnent 


>A«- 


BRIEFS 


Aguilera  releases  first 
Spanish  album 

Christina  Aguilera's  moves  on  stage  don't 
require  translation.  But  the  pop  singer 
wants  to  make  sure  her  Spanish-language 
fans  understand  the  lyrics. 

Aguilera  released  a  Spanish-language 
album,  "Mi  Reflejo,"  on  Sept.  12  that 
"includes  five  translated  versions  of  songs 
from  her  debut  album  and  six  new  songs, 
including  a  duet  with  Latin  pop  star  Luis 
Fonsi.  ,'■:...:[  .    j.  , ... . 

"This  will  make  iny'  gratidparehts 
proud,"  she  said. 

Aguilera's  father  is  from  Ecuador,  and 
her  U.S.-born  mother  worked  as  a  Spanish 
translator.  ^ 

Aguilera,  born  and  raised  in  the  United 
States,  says  she  spoke  Spanish  at  home  for 
the  first  five  years  of  her  life,  until  her  par- 
ents divorced.  .  ,  '  •"       :  vV    •.  • 


Hanna  continues 
conservation  efforts 

Despite  his  notoriety  as  a  television  fig- 
ure. Jack  Hanna  doesn't  like  to  be  referred 
to  as  a  celebrity.  The  term  zookeeper  fits 
him  fine. 

"I'm  still  the  same  Jack  Hanna  that  I  was 
when  I  started,"  Hanna,  53,  said  recently. 

Though  Hanna  may  no  longer  run 
Columbus  Zoo  and  Aquarium  on  a  day-to- 
day basis,  his  role  as  its  ambassador  and 
director  emeritus  has  never  been  stronger. 

Since  Hanna's  first  appearance  on 
national  television  17  years  ago  as  director 
of  the  then-little  known  zoo,  he  has  become 
a  regular  on  "Good  Morning  America," 
"The  Late  Show  With  David  Letterman," 
and  "Larry  King  Live"  -  usually  accompa- 
nied by  spider  monkeys,  baby  cougars,  hiss- 
ing cockroaches  and  other  critters. 

His  zoo  connection  is  always  mentioned 
in  his  TV  appearances,  and  many  of  the  ani- 
mals he  displays  come  from  Columbus.  The 
national  exposure  has  helped  attract  more 
than  1.2  million  visitors  and  $30  million  in 
revenue  last  year  for  the  zoo  compared  with 


The  Associoted  Press 

Christina  Aguilera  released  a  Spanish- 
language  album, "Mi  Reflejo," this  week. 

351,000  visitors  and  $1.4  million  when  he 
arrived  in  1978. 

"Animals  in  captivity  are  ambassadors  to 
their  cousins  in  the  wild.  When  people  see  a 
living  creature,  they  can  relate  much  easier 
to  the  problems  of  endangerment  and  the 
need  for  conservation,"  he  said. 

Wallflowers  singer 
discusses  famous  dad 

For  six  years,  Jakob  Dylan  never  men- 
tioned the  word  "dad"  in  interviews. 

When  your  father  is  pop  icon  Bob  Dylan, 
it's  hard  to  step  out  of  his  shadow. 

"I  was  always  aware  that  there  was  no 
story  to  talk  about  except  my  family,  and 
that  made  me  uncomfortable,"  the  singer 
said  recently  in  the  Lo%  Angeles  Times. 

However,  after  his  band,  the  Wallflowers, 
won  Graramys  and  sold  5  million  albums, 
Dylan  is  coming  to  tertns  with  his  famous 
lineage. 

"The  truth  is,  I  am  very  proud  of  my^her- 


itage,"  he  said. 

"The  only  thing  I  ask  is  to  be  taken  at  face 
value." 

He  says  it  didn't  seem  like  a  "big  deal" 
growing  up  in  a  famous  family. 

"Dealing  with  (the  attention)  was  just  one 
other  thing  to  learn.  Just  as  you  learned  to 
look  both  ways  when  you  cross  the  street," 
he  said. 

'Seinfeld' Star  returns 
to  TV  with  own  show 

Michael  Richards  says  he  wasn't  sure  if 
there  was  life  after  Kramer.  Acting  life,  at 
least. 

"At  first  I  didn't  really  want  to  work,"  the 
former  "Seinfeld"  star  said. 

"There  wasn't  anything  that  was  really 
exciting  me.  So  I  thought  I  was  going  to 
retire." 

After  earning  a  reported  $13  million  on 
the  hit  "show  about  nothing,"  Richards 
took  it  easy.  He  traveled,  restored  his  home, 
read  classic  books  by  authors  like  Herman 
Melville  and  did  little  acting,  outside  of  a 
role  in  the  TNT  version  of  "David 
Copperfield"  ' 

But  he's  back  on  NBC  in  October  in  "The 
Michael  Richards  Show,"  playing  a  befud- 
dled detective. 

Some  of  the  mannerisms  are  the  same, 
but  Richards  told  the  Los  Angeles  Times 
recently  that  he  wants  the  audience  to  real- 
ize he  won't  simply  rehash  his  "Seinfeld" 
role. 

"I'm  not  the  Kramer  character,"  he  said. 

Domingo  leaves 
Wagner  festival 

Placido  Domingo  says  he'll  skip  the 
world-renowned  Wagner  festival  in 
Bayreuth  next  year  after  clashing  with  the 
composer's  grandson. 

The  star  tenor  told  the  Sept.  18  edition  of 
Focus  magazine  that  he  had  other-obliga- 
tions that  conflicted  with  director  Wolfgang 
Wagner's  rehearsal  schedule  for  "Die 
Walkuere"  next  June. 

"Unfortunately  it  was  not  possible  to  find 
a  compromise  on  the  rehearsal  dates  with 


Mr.  Wagner,"  he  said. 

Domingo  is  the  second  star  to  call  it  quits 
at  Bayreuth.  Soprano  Waltraud  Meier 
announced  last  month  that  she  would  not 
appear  in  2001,  accusing  Wagner  of  being 
inflexible  in  scheduling  rehearsals  as  well. 


yVWF  star  proud  to 
pose  for  Playboy 

World  Wrestling  Federation  superstar 
Chyna  says  she's  proud  of  her  photo  spread 
in  the  November  issue  of  Playboy. 

"A  body  like  mine  has  been  rejected  for 
so  many  years,"  the  muscular  wrestler  told 
the  Sept.  23  issue  of  TV  Guide. 

"Not  the  ideal  beauty.  Ugly,  masculine. 
But  doing  Playboy  for  me  is  the  pinnacle. 
And  I'm  very  proud." 

Chyna  says  the  Playboy  spread  is  not  a 
"sexual  thing." 

"It  was,  'Look  at  me.  Here  I  am:'  Now 
people  love  the  body.  It's  about  damn  time." 

Chyna  is  also  featured  in  the  WWF's  first 
workout  video,  out  this  month.  And  her 
autobiography  is  due  in  January. 

Country  music  couple 
in  win-win  situation 

Tim  McGraw  isn't  worried  about  losing 
Entertainer  of  the  Year  honors  to  his  wife  - 
fellow  country  music  sensation  Faith  Hill  - 
at  the  Country  Music  Awards  this  year. 

Either  way,  the  award  goes  on  the  mantle. 

"We're  not  speaking  until  it's  over," 
McGraw  joked  to  the  Sept.  23  issue  of  TV 
Guide. 

In  August,  Hill  received  eight  award  nom- 
inations, while  her  husband  snagged  nods 
for  male  vocalist  of  the  year  and  vocal  event 
of  the  year  for  "Let's  Make  Love,"  a  duet 
with  his  wife. 

The  Entertainer  of  the  Year  honor  "goes 
to  our  house  if  either  one  of  us  wins.  And 
next  year,  no  one  will  remember  who  won  it, 
so  when  friends  come  over,  I'll  say  it's 
mine,"  McGraw  said. 


Briefs  compiled  from  Associated  Press  wire 
reports. 


^ ^^^^^^sZ. 


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DaJty  Brum  Arts  A  EntoftaiMMHt 


September  25-28, 2000       41 


Foreign  programming 
invades  American  TV 


TELEVISION:  Shows  from 
across  shores  appeal  to 
U.S.  viewers,  networks 


BySMhSNtd 

The  Associated  Press 

The  British  are  coming  -  to  the 
fall  TV  schedule.  And  so  are  the 
Dutch,  the  Swedes,  the  Australians 
and  the  Jiq>anese.  "*■ 

For  anyone  who  hasn't  6een 
keeping  up,  several  network  hits  of 
the  past  year 


were  imported 
from  foreign 
countries. 
"Who  Wants 
to  Be  a 
Millionaire," 
the  show  that 
saved  ABC. 
came  from 
England,    and 

"Survivor"  on      '■ - 

CBS  got  its 
start  in  Sweden. 

There's  more  on  the  way. 
"Millionaire"  continues  and 
"Survivor  11"  is  scheduled  for 
January.  Meanwhile,  several  new 
shows  were  hatched  overseas.  NBC 
bought  "Cfiains  of  Love"  from  the 
Dutch  creator  of  "Big  Brother," 
where  one  person  will  be  chained  to 
four  others  of  the  opposite  sex. 
ABC,  is  developing  two  group  task- 
type  shows,  "The  Mole"  from 
Belgium  and  "Jailbreak"  from 
Britain. 

What  gives?  For  years,  "foreign 
programming"  meant  the  subver- 
sive, overeducated  humor  of  Monty 
Python  or  such  starchy  dramas  as 
"Masterpiece  Theatre"  with  the 


These  days  the 

opportunities  for 

foreign  shows  to 

make  it  big  here  are 

greater  than  ever. 


even  starchier  Alistair  Cooke. 

Now,  after  years  of  exporting 
heaps  of  lowbrow  popular  culture  to 
the  rest  of  the  world,  the  United 
States  has  turned  the  tables,  becom- 
ing a  voracious  consumer  of  pop 
programming  produced  on  foreign 
shores. 

"The  one  thing  we  were  really 
good  at,  after  we  lost  the  auto  and 
electj^ics  industries,  was  really 
stupidT'Tntertainment  ideas,"  says 
Robert  Thompson,  director  of  the 
Center  for  the  Study  of  Popular 
Television  at  Syracuse  University. 
"When  the 
— — ^— ^-»  British  crossed 
the  Atlantic 
w  I  t  h 
'Millionaire,' 
what  a  sad  day 
that  was.  We 
may  even  lose 
our  suprema- 
cy. 

The    irony, 

'"  of  course,    is 

that  the  two 
monster  successes  brought  in  from 
overseas  were  originally  developed 
here.  Quiz  shows  like  "Millionaire" 
go  back  to  the  '50s,  and  MTV 
helped  pioneer  reality  television 
eight  years  ago  with  "The  Real 
World." 

If  anything,  that  makes  the  cur- 
rent boom  of  foreign  TV  imports 
even  more  like  the  British  invasion 
of  rock  bands  in  the  '60s,  when  the 
Rolling  Stones  wowed  us  with 
music  rooted  in  the  blues,  a  distinct- 
ly American  invention. 

Borrowing  from  overseas  TV  for- 
mats is  not  exactly  new,  but  previous 
examples  were  far  more  subtle  or 

SeeTV,pa9e47 


Band  embraces  W^b  to  Sony  Is  dismay 


MUSIC  Offspring  looks 
to  reward  fans,  increase 
sales  with  promotion 


ByMidiadlMiitt 

The  Associated  Press 

Against  the  wishes  of  its  record 
label,  multiplatinum  rock  band  The 
Oflspring  will  release  songs  from  its 
new  CD  for  free  on  the  Internet  a 
month  before  the  album  goes  on 
sale  in  stores. 

Sony  Music  Entertainment  has 
told  the  band  that  the  online  give- 
away violates  its  contract  and  has 
urged  the  group  to  cancel  the  pro- 
motion, according  to  the  Los 
Angeles  Times. 

The  band's  announcement  on  its 
Web  site  said  the  First  single, 
"Original  Prankster,"  will  be  avail- 
able Sept.  29.  Other  tracks  from  the 
album,  "Conspiracy  of  One,"  will 
be  released  periodically  leading  up 


to   the   official   release   date   of 

Nov  i4."j,.:..'-,.,;-v-^-.;:.-----.-, 

Sony  said  it  was  working  to  fmd  a 
solution  acceptable  to  both  the  band 
and  the  company. 


"We  are  trying  to 

launch  our  album  with 

promotions  that  are 

fan  supportive  rather 

than  fan  exploitative." 

Dexter  Holland     -.  :^ 
Ofhpring  vocalist 


"We  certainly  have  very  real  con- 
cerns when  it  comes  to  unsecured 
downloading  of  music  and  piracy 
on  the  Internet,  but  we're  hopeful 
that  we'll  arrive  at  a  methqd  that 
will  protect  everyone's  rights  apd^ 


still  maintain  the  integrity  of  the 
band's  idea,"  the  company  said. 

The  promotional  campaign  also 
includes  a  prize  of  SI  million,  which 
the  band  said  would  not  come  from 
sponsors  or  the  record  company. 

"This  money  came  directly  to  us 
from  our  fans.  We  feel  it  would  be 
cool  to  redirect  it  back  to  them," 
lead  singer  Dexter  Holland  said  on 
the  Web  site.  "We  are  trying  to 
launch  our  album  with  promotions 
that  are  fan  supportive  rather  than 
fan  exploitative." 

Sony  Music  Entertainment  and 
other  record  conglomerates  go  to 
trial  Oct.  2  against  the  music-shar- 
ing Web  site  Napster  and  its  25  mil- 
lion users.  The  companies  claim  the 
site  violates  copyri^t  laws  by  mak- 
ing music  available  without  com- 
pensation to  record  labels. 

The  Offspring's  1998  hit  single 
"Pretty  Fly  (for  a  White  Guy)"  was 
traded  on  Napster  and  other  Web 

;  ' ,        See  OFFSPMWi,  page  S4 


MINDY  ROSVDaily  Brum  S*nKM  S'aft 


Less  Than  Jake  ignites  a  fire  as  part  of  their  Aug.  1 1  show. 


JAKE 

From  page 34    \  ^:    ;   ' 

anti-violence  and  anti-drug 
stances.  Take  for  example  the 
song  'Dopeman.'  The  song  didn't 
approve  or  disapprove  of  drugs. 
It  posed  a  scenario,  a  broader 
view." 

The  band  also  had  a  headlining 
stint  with  the  Ska  Against  Racism 
tour  in  1998  exhibiting  its  social 
consciousness. 

Until  "Borders         and 

Boundaries"  is  released.  Less 
Than  Jake's  tour  schedule  will  not 
let  up.  After  the  release,  the  band 
will  support  the  album  with  more 
touring,  leaving  the  Gainesville, 
Ra.  natives  looking  forward  to 
visiting  Europe.  Indonesia,  Hong 
Kong,  and  their  favorite  destina- 
tion, Japan. 


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WHAT  THEY  DON  T  TEACH  YOU  AT  FILM  SCHOOL: 

•  Fix  the  script.  t;ie  rest  willlollow 

•  Get  ihe  nghls  or  get  a  lawyer 

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V 


42       Seiitember  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  ft  EnterUimnent 


BROAD  t 

From  page 36      '  •     *  ::    "  ^'^   - 

of  the  Next  Millennium."      \'    ;. 

"Los  Angeles  has  the*  second 
largest  population  of  artists  in  the 
country,"  said  Broad  of  the  city's  cul- 
tural accomplishments.  "We've  got 
more  musicians  in  L.A.  than  in  New 
'^rk."  ■''.■'{■:;'■'■■ 

Broad's  ,;      -      ;  .a  :  : 

involvement  _J.i.^___iMi. 
with  UCLA 
extends  back  to 
1971,  when  he 
worked  as  the 
founding  chair- 
man of  the  exec- 
utive committee 
of  the  Board  of 
Visitors  of  the 
UCLA  School  •  -■-■  ■  '-^  ■'- 
of  the  Arts  and 
Architecture.  In 

addition,  he  has  served  on  the  board 
of  directors  for  the  UCLA  Hammer 
Museum,  and  stood  on  the  Visiting 
Committee  of  the  UCLA  Graduate 
School  of  Management. 

"Rather  than  just  patching  up  the 
old  building,  we  could  create  a  new 
and  better  building,"  Broad  said. 
"The  old  Dickson  complex  was  35 
years  old,  and  not  very  functional, 
even  before  the  earthquake.  This  is 
something  new  and  wdWeserved." 


The  new  floor  plan  will 

additionally  divide  the 

space  into  open-ended 

studios  better  suited 

for  artistic  practice. 


Outside  "of  UCLA,  his  contribu- 
tions to  the  arts  are  exceptional  - 
Broad  was  the  founding  chairman  of 
the  board  of  trustees  at  The  Museum 
of  Contemporary  Art.  Outside  the  art 
world.  Broad  led  the  campaign  to 
bring  the  2000  Democratic  National 
Convention  to  Los  Angeles. 

Broad  is  a  busy  man.  His  daytime 
job  is  chairman  and  chief  executive 
officer  of  SunAmerica  Inc.,  a  finan- 
V ;      ;..^       cial       planning 
___MM>«iBi_>_      company      that 
specializes       in 
retirement    ser- 
vices. 

Although  not 

involved  in  the 

selection 

process.    Broad 

professed   great 

admiration    for 

the     work     of 

architects 

Richard    Meier 

and  Michael  Palladino,  the  UCLA 

commissioned  architectural  Arm  who 

is  designing  the  Broad  Art  Center 

"I've  seen  their  work  around  the 
world."  said  Broad.  "I  liked  their 
design  Museum  for  Decorative  Arts 
in  Frankfurt." 

The  Tirm's  projects  are  recognized 
by  others  around  the  world  as  weU, 
including  the  High  Museum  of  Art  in 
Atlanta  and  an  1 8-story  medical  office 
tower  in  Singapore.  Meier  became 


n«'l  i.fi  >i.l.. 


Diity  Bniki  Arts  li  Entertaiimwnt 


September  25-28, 2000       43 


UCLA  Urbwi  SimuUtian  TNm 


Shown  here  is  a  frame  capture  from  the  virtual  reality  model  of  the  Edythe  and  Eli  Broad  Art  Center 
at  UCLA.  Radical  reconstruction  of  the  existing  Dickson  Art  Center  will  begin  in  2002. 


the  youngest  architect  ever  to  receive 
the  Pritzker  Prize  for  Architecture  in 
1984,  while  Palladino  received  the 
prestigious  Rome  Prize  for  the  year 
2000-2001. 

The  plans  for  the  Broad  Art  Center 
call  for  the  existing  structural  frame  of 


the  Dickson  Arts  Center  to  be 
stripped,  and  its  structural  frame  used 
as  the  basis  for  the  new  building. 

"Reusing  the  existing  frame  was 
the  most  cost-effective  way  to  do 
this,"  said  Palladino.  "Radical  recon- 
struction is  a  strategy  sure  to  become 


more  popular  as  more  buildings  from 
the  'SOs  and  '60s  need  to  be  renovat- 
ed." 

The  Broad  Arts  Complex  will  add 
another  floor  to  the  old  Dickson 


Sm 


53 


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tion, each  devot(!d  to  a  style  of  music.  UCIjAradio.cx)m  will  cxmtain  as 
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j-*t 


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44       S«ptemb«r  25-28, 2000 


Ddity  Bruin  Am  A  EirtertoiiMmM 


RUST .  ;^::c:;::(:>:|;;v^: 

Frompage37  '';--•*  '■: 

winning  television  and  film  writer 
gives  credit  to  literacy  for  providing  a 
smoothly  run  society  And  if  politi- 
cians, she  said,  are  to  construct  the 
scaffolds  on  which  adults  and  children 
stand,  surely  they  must  advocate  liter- 
acy as  well. 

"There's  such  a  wealth  of  lives  to  be 
lived  and  for  people  not  to  realize  their 
full  potential  is  nothing  less  than  a 
tragedy,"  Rust  said.  "Reading  may  be 
admittedly  difficult,  but  it  is  clearly  the 


inost  Important  fhinga  child  can  do." 
With  such  patience  and  initiative, 
readers  will  not  be  surp'rised  with 
Rust's  latest  mission":  to  encourage  a 
love  for  reading  for  children  juUioo- 
wide. 

Within  the  past  year  and  a  half. 
Rust  has  met  with  state  politicians  to 
gain  support  for  her  mission. 
Governor  Jim  Geringer  of  Wyoming 
showed  his  support  by  sitting  with 
inner  city  youth  during  Rust's  reading 
of  her  first  children's  book,  "The  King 
of  Skittledeedoo." 

"It  was  interesting  to  see  that  politi- 
cians were  regular  people  who  were 


The  bottom  line;  Rust 
said,  is  that  reading  is 
only  halfthe  battle  to 
showing  children  how 
to  face  challenges  with 
confidence  and  poise. 


supposed  to  represent  us.  Everyone 
wants  their  children  to  read,  so  let's 
make  the  politicians  do  their  job 


because  we're  paying  for  it." 

"The  King  of  Skittledeedoo," 
which  was  published  in  March  1999 
by  the  recently  established  Rust 
Foundation  for  Literacy,  dwells  on  a 
playful  rhyme  scheme  to  entertain 
children  and  introduce  them  to  the 
structure  of  language.  The  imagina- 
tive world  Rust  creates  through  her 
work  sets  her  ideal  learning  environ- 
ment for  children  to  grasp  the  funda- 
mentals of  reading. 

Her  book  tells  the  story  of  a  king 
who  flees  his  castle  wearing  only  a 
towel  when  a  sudden  fire  taunts  Ijis 
land.  His  people,  unable  to  recognize 


the  naked  king  without  his  robes  and 
jewels,  test  his  basic  knowledge  and 
insist  that  a  man  who  cannot  spell 
"mother"  or  "Skittledeedoo"  cannot 
be  their  leader.  Nevertheless,  the  kind- 
hearted  populace  adopt  the  man  and 
teach  him  the  power  of  reading,  writ- 
ing and  spelling. 

"It's  the  first  children's  picture 
book  that  celebrates  the  joy  of  reading 
and  addresses  the  issue  of  literacy," 
Rust  said.  "I  read  a  lot  of  children's 
books  but  I  was  frustrated  at  the  books 
that  would  only  have  one  word  on  a 


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Dajty  Bniin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


September  25-28, 2000       45 


?  RUST  rm:m:\ 

•From  page  44  r-:;  ■  • 

page.  I  wanted  to  put  as  many  words 
in  to  get  as  much  of  a  story  out." 
Picture  books,  which  Rust  argues 

;        are  visually  stimulating  resources 

''.,  comparable  to  action  films,  have  pro- 
vided society  with  a  pleasing  illustra- 
tion and  less  challenge  to  think.  With 
films,  viewers  will  flock  to  theaters 
with  the  temptation  of  seeing  explo- 

_:.,  sions,  battle  scenes  or  stuntman  Jackie 
Chan,    whereas    subtitled    scripts 

/       require  more  effort  to  fulfill  the  same 

A      entertainment  value. 

Now  with  the  Internet  offering  an 
archive  of  reading  material.  Rust 
hopes  that  her  Web  site,  www.power- 
forkids.com,  will  further  encourage 
her  audience  to  explore  literacy.  Her 
site  extends  a  hand  to  children  and 
parents  beyond  the  book,  featuring 
interactive  links  in  which  children  can 
practice  writing  their  own  sentences, 
color  and  cut  their  own  paper  crowns 
and  get  reading  tips  from  the  King 
himself. 

The  Rust  Foundation,  which  took 
over  publication  of  "The  King  of 
Skittledeedoo"  in  order  to  send  copi 
to  as  many  schools  as  possible,  also 
hopes  to  make  teaching  kits,  contain- 
ing instructional  videos,  audio  tapes 
and  learning  exercises,  to  supplement 
learning  in  language  arts. 

"I  think  I'm  able  to  feel  their  pain 
or  feel  their  frustration  or  sense  what 
their  needs  are,"  Rust  said.  "Having 
spent  a  career  in  journalism  and  enter- 
tainment, I  just  felt  that  words  have  so 
much  power,  and  rather  than  look  at 
these  literacy  statistics  and  get 
bummed  out,  1  can  do  something 
about  it  -  as  can  everyone  else  out 
there." 

The  bottom  line,  Rust  said,  is  that 
reading  is  only  halfthe  battle  to  show- 
ing children  how  to  face  challenges 
with  confidence  and  poise. 

"Children  can  master  some  of  the 
reading  skills,  becoming  so  empow- 
ered that  their  self-esteem  rises  dra- 
matically. As  their  self-«steem  increas- 
es, their  self-definition  increases. 
When  kids  commun^E;ate  and  express 


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(310)477-7550 
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Ccxirtesy  of  PatrKia  Rust 

Patricia  Rust,  president  of  the  Daily  Bruin  Alumni  Association,  is 
behind  several  progranns  aimed  at  increasing  child  literacy. 


themselves,  that  gives  them  power  to 
be  more  confident,"  Rust  said. 

"When  children  see  an  example  of 
parents  reading,  they  learn  to  put  pic- 
tures with  words  and  they  hear  a  word 
in  context  and  they  learn  the  meaning 
of  it  just  by  being  around  parents. 
Those  children  learn  to  read  faster 
and  better,"  Rust  said,  adding  that 
children  are  never  too  young  to  be 
read  to  -  even  when  they're  still  in  the 
womb^ 

In  return,  the  greatest  satisfaction 


in  learning  to  read  comes  from  seeing 
the  children  successfully  pronounce 
words. 

"Sometimes  they'll  pretend  to  read. 
They'll  tell  you  the  story  and  para- 
phrase everything,  but  you  know 
eventually  that  they  understand  the 
story  and  that  the  desire  is  there,"  she 
said.  "And  that's  the  best  part." 

FOUNDATION:  For  more  information 
on  the  Rust  Foundation  go  to 
www.powerforkids.com. 


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Roommote SURVIVAL  Tips 

COllGQe  might  be  your  first  chance  to  live  with  someone  else,  or  maybe  you've  been  Sharing 
a  room  all  your  life.  Either  way,  there  are  Compromises  that  must  be  made  when  you  have  to 
share  space  with  a  stranger.  Here  are  some  things  to  keep  in  mind  to  make  the  year  go  SmoOthly: 


The  most  Important  thing  to  keep  in  mind  is  this:  To  have  a  good  roommate. 
jfQU  must  be  a  good  roommate. 

Be  respectful  of  one  another's  schedules.  If  you  dont  like  her  friends' post-midnight  visits,  chances  are 
she  doesnt  like  you  turning  on  the  TV  at  6  a.m.     . 

Decide  upfront  how  you  will  split  up  bHIs  and  stick  to  it.  Money  issues  can  cause  arguments,  make  living 
togetf>er  stressful,  and  ruin  even  the  best  friendships. 

If  possible,  get  separate  phone  lines. Then  you  wont  worry  about  getting  your  messages,  and  she  wont 
mind  when  you  tie  up  the  phone  all  night. 

Even  if  your  roommate  always  lets  you  borrow  her  CDs.  it  never  hurts  to  say  thank  you.  Also,  just    ^  ':   :* 
because  she  lets  you  borrow  her  CDs  doesnt  mean  that  her  favorite  sweater,  last  cookie,  or    •  ' ,  ' 

anything  else  is  also  fair  game.  Always  remember  to  ask  before  you  borrow.  .'  ..: 

Some  Roommates  Share  the  Oddest  Things! 

Although  no  one  can  explain  why.  it  is  true  that  women  who  live  together  often  have  menstrual  cycles 
that  coincide.  So  make  sure  you  have  plenty  of  Playtex  tampons  on  hand  to  share  with 
your  roommate.  That  way.  if  your  periods  do  coincide,  you'll  both  be  really  comfortable  -  and  easier  to 
get  along  with. 

Have  fun  together.  Encourage  each  other  to  get  out  and  explore  your  surroundings.  Co  for  a  walk,  study 
in  a  local  park,  or  catch  a  concert  or  museum  exhibit.  Take  pictures  of  your  adventures  -  because  college 
only  happens  oncel 

Realize  that  most  disagreements,  whether  they  are  about  phone  time,  borrowing  clothes,  or  late  night 
visitors,  really  come  down  to  respect.  Respect  each  other  s  space,  privacy  and  beliefs,  and  you'll  be  ok. 
Finally  remember  that  the  school  assigns  you  someone  to  live  with,  not  someone  to  be  best  friends  with. 
If  you  get  to  be  good  friends,  great!  But  if  you  dont,  that's  ok.  You  have  to  share  a  room,  not  a  life. 


/" 


P^ti 


So 


you  cant  tvtn  htl  ttmn  • 


46^     ^Sei»«Biibw  25-28, 2000 


C 


PERFORMING 

From  page  3S 


* 


Daily  Bruin  Am  A  EntertakmiMt 


"It  was  a  time  when  we  were  break- 
ing away  from  tradition.  We  were 
young  and  in  contact  with  poets, 
painters,  and  musicians,"  said  Simone 
Forti,  choreographer  for  the  White 
Oak  Dance  Project. 

The  White  Oak  Project  will  per- 
form some  of  Forti 's  works,  some  of 
Which  offer  a  new  definition  of  dance. 
Her  I96I  piece  "Huddle."  for  exam- 
ple, consists  of  nine  dancers  in  a  pile. 
_  which  she  calls  a  "dance  mountain," 
where  they  are  constantly  scaling  each 


"Royce  is  a  dlgJt^  one 

of  the  theaters 

intheU.S.for 

contemporary  dance." 

David  Parsons 

Dancer 


other. 

"I  was  interested  in  the  movement 
of  climbing,"  Forti  said.  "'Huddle'  is 
a  dance  construction,  like  a  sculpture. 


There  will  be  a  camera  person  walking 
around  it  and  looking  at  its  details. 
That  way  the  audience  will  get  a  sense 
«f  walking  around  the  huddle  " 

Stepping  in  for  the  now-defunct 
Martha  Graham  Dance  Company, 
the  Parsons  Dance  Project  will  be  per- 
forming on  October  6  and  7.  David 
Parsons  has  over  a  decade  of  history 
performing  at  UCLA  along  with  Paul 
Taylor,  who  worked  with  the  Martha 
Graham  Dance  Company. 

"Royce  is  a  dig."  Parsons  said. 
"It's  one  of  the  theaters  in  the  U.S.  for 
contemporary  dance." 

Music  lovers  will  also  have  no 
shortage  of  great  performances  to 


This  year's  season  will 

also  feature  many 

television  personalities 

and  celebrities. 


Every  Thursday 

playing  House.  KROQ.  Top  40's  &  80's  Dance  Music 

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Also  2  live  bands 

By  <X0^<  R€CO|?DS 


attend,  with  concerts  in  Royce  and 
also  in  Ostin  Hall.  Among  the  musi- 
cians lined  up  are  Bobby  McFerrin. 
Evgcny  Kissin,  the  Kronos  Quartet, 
Alan  Bergman.  Regina  Carter,  Audra 
McDonald,  Menahem  Pressler, 
Young  Uck  Kim  and  Shirley  Horn. 


''The  sound  will  be  great,  and  the 
lighting  will  be  sensational,"  said  Bill 
Henderson,  who  is  appearing  with  the 
Shirley  Horn  Trio  and  Charlie  Haden . 
on  September  21. 

Those  who  arc  interested  in  classi- 
cal nnuic  can  attend  Kim's  recital  of 
the  Beethoven  violin  sonata  cycle  or 
McFerrin's  conducting  of  the  St.  Paul 
Chamber  Orchestra  in  pieces  by  Bizet 
and  Vivaldi,  while  those  looking  for 
something  more  modern  can  see  the 
Kronos  Quartet,  playing  mu;sic  by 
Steve  Reich  and  Terry  Riley.  Those  in 
for  something  funky  can  see  violinist 


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Show  your  UCLA 
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receive  25%  off 
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SATURDAY,  SEPTEMBER  30 

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From  page  41      -      ^'. 

went  through  substantial  adaptation 
for  U.S.  tastes.  "All  in  the  Family," 
"Sanford  and  Son,"  "Three's 
Company"  and  "Cosby"  all  had 
roots  overseas. 

These  days  the  opportunities  for 
foreign  shows  to  make  it  big  here  are 
greater  than  ever.  Networks  are  look- 
ing for  new  material  to  h^p  viewers 
from  going  to  cable,  and  cable  net- 
_.  works  have  an  appetite  for  new  pro- 
gramming that  can  hardly  be  satisfied 
with  in-house  productions. 

Such  ready-made  shows  as 
"Absolutely  Fabulous"  and  "Two  Fat 
Ladies"  went  a  long  way  to  getting 
Comedy  Central  and  the  Food 
Network  off  the  ground. 

The  Food  Network  has  an  even 
bigger  hit  with  the  campy  "Iron 
Chef  cooking-contest  show  from 
Japan,  which  is  now  the  channel's 
No.  2  show,  following  the  rapid-fire 
"Emeril  Live"  with  chef  Emeril 
Lagasse. 

Judy  Girard,  the  Food  Network's 
general  manager,  said  the  unexpected 
success  of  "Iron  C^ef  -  which  was 
brought  to  the  attention  of  executives 
by  a  production  assistant  -  has  made 
her  more  open  to  new  ideas. 

"We  programmers  all  think  we 
know  what  the  viewer  wants  and  that 
getting  ratings  and  viewers  is  very 
predictable,"  Girard  said.  "But  the 
show  that's  going  to  make  your  sched- 
ule is  alwaysjMurprise.  'Iron  Chef 
shouldn't  work,  but  it  does.  It's  what 
keeps  programming  people  like  me 
humble." 

While  the  boom  in  imports  can  be 
traced  to  last  summer's  arrival  of 
"Millionaire,"  networks  and  studios 


have  beeii  experimenting  with  foreign 
formats^  for  years. 

Stone  Stanley  Entertainment  has 
been  scouring  Europe  and  other  con- 
tinents for  years,  remaking  the  British 
shopping  show  'Born  Lucky"  for 
Lifetime  and  then  Pax  beginning  in 
1992. 

This  season,  the  company  has  sev- 
eral projects  in  the  works  based  on 
overseas  formats  including  "The 
Mole"  for  ABC  and  "Popstars"  for 
WB,  an  Australian  show  where  peo- 
ple audition  for  parts  in  an  amateur 
rock  band.  Two  other  shows  in  the 
works  at  Stone  Startley,  "AH  You 
Need  Is  Love"  and  "The  People 
Vs.,"  also  came  from  abroad. 

"It's  much  easier  to  buy  a  format 
that's  already  developed  than  it  is  to 
develop  one  yourself,"  said  Scott 
Stone,  co-founder  of  Stone  Stanley. 
"Once  we  use  up  all  the  international 
formats  that  are  brilliant,  my  expecta- 
tion is  that  American  companies  will 
come  up  with  the  new  formats." 

Then  again,  the  United  States  is 
just  one  of  many  countries  importing 
successful  TV  formats.  After  bcmg 
launched  in  Britain  in  1998,  "Who 
Wants  to  Be  a  Millionaire"  now  airs 
in  31  countries.  TTie  CBS  version  of 
"Big  Brother"  is  one  of  the  few 
around  the  world  to  have  flopped. 

Like  the  "Big  Brother"  contes- 
tants who  refuse  to  leave  the  house 
for  a  $50,000  bounty,  foreign  formats 
may  be  around  for  a  while.  The  ques- 
tion is  which  shows  will  make  it  to  the 
end. 

"I  think  it's  good  for  the  industry 
as  a  whole."  said  Thompson  of 
Syracuse  University.  "We  were  get- 
ting a  little  inbred,  and  the  U.S.  televi- 
sion industry  was  in  desperate  need  of 
some  new  injections  into  the  gene 
pool." 


JESS€  PORTtR/Odrty  Bmin  Senxx  Staff 

The  J.  Paul  Getty  Museum,  which  offers  free  parking  for  students,  will 
host  a  variety  of  new  exhibits  this  fall. 


ART 

FrompagelS 

Questions  such  as  what  a  portrait 
says^about  its  subject  will  be  high- 
lighted. 

The  Mnseum  of  Contemponii^  Art 

(MO(:a) 

**Adrian  Piper's  Videos, 
ImtaHations,  Performances,  and 
Soundworks  1968-1992" 

Piper's  pieces  examine  pop  cultur- 
al issues  such  as  racial  stereotyping. 
Through  her  political  work  she  creat- 
ed, over  25  years,  an  entourage  of 
video  and  audio  work  which  will  be 
featured  at  MOCA  through  Nov.  5. 
Her  works  are  notable  for  bringing 
viewers  to  question  their  self-percep- 
tion and  their  perception  of  others. 

"John  Gatmaan:  Caiture  Shock 


Gutmann  was  a  prominent  pho- 
tographer of  the  odd  and  interesting, 
whose  100  personally  selected  photos 
from  a  career  of  more  than  50  years 
will  be  on  display  through  Nov.5.  The 
title  is  reflexive  of  many  of  the  photos 
which  are  in  the  exhibit  which  illumi- 
nate the  "Culture  Shock"  Gutmann 
experienced  when  first  moving  to 
San  Francisco  from  Germany 

Petersen  Aatomotive  Museum 
"The  Art  of  Flame" 

This  exhibit  features  images  by 
automobile  photographer  Scott 
Williamson,  whose  photos  are  not 
retouched  or  altered  through  com- 
puter work.  Williamson  has  a  fine 
ability  that  magically  captures  the 
details  and  beauty  of  its  subject. 


IVeasares  of  the  Vault:  Cars  from 


September  25-28, 2000       47 


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The  Peas  will  be  celebrating  the  release  of  their  brand  new 
album  with  a  FREE  live  show,  September  26th  at  7  p.m.  at 

the  Wherehouse  Music  store  at  1100  Westwood  Blvd. 

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■  /      ■  .1 .  ,1  '' 


48       September  25-28, 2000 


Diily  Brum  Am  t  EntertMUMM 


Visit  us  at: 
coveryoumakedness.com 


L.1  •■to  www.wr»rItyreTeige.co« 

*  •  2000  IBEX  MODUCTKMIS 


■ii^;*- 


UCLA 

Hannah  CarSer 
Japanese  Garden 


Hoard:  Tuesday,  Wednesday,  and  Friday 
10:00  a.m.  to  3:00  p.m. 

Rbsbrvations  Required 

Phone:  (310)  825-457< 
iRoav  (310)  794-8208        ' 
E-nudU  garden8@support.ucla,edu 
Web  dUe:  www.japanesegarden.ucla.edu 


-^ 


Volunteer  decent^  needed 


From  page  47 

the  Permanent  Cellection** 

Only  open  a  few  more  days,  until 
Oct.  3,  this  exhibit  features  cars 
which  are  rarely  seen  by  the  public 
eye.  Stored  in  "The  Vault,"  these 
vehicles  are  usually  only  viewed  by 
selected  visitors  for  a  few  special 
tours.  Twenty-five  cars  as  well  as 
other  tidbits  are  on  display,  which  all 
have  some  kind  of  connection  to' Los 
Angelas  and  Southern  Cahfornia. 

* 
ART:Th«  J.  Paul  G«tty  mut«um  is 
open  daily,  except  Mondays,  call  (310) 
440-7300  for  hours  and  parking  infor- 
mation. Parking  for  college  students 
with  1.0.  does  not  require  a  reserva- 
tion. TfM  Museum  of  Neon  Art  is 
located  at  501  West  Olympic  Blvd.  It  is 
open  Wednesday  through  Sunday. 
Call  (213)  489-9932  for  information. 
Adult  admission  is  $5.00,  $3.50  for  stu- 
dents. The  SkirtNill  Cultural  Center  is 
located  at  2701  N.  Sepulveda  Blvd. 
and  is  open  Tuesday  through 
Saturday.  Call  (310)  440-4500  for  infor- 
mation. The  Museum  of 
Contemporary  Art  is  open  Tuesday 
through  Sunday,  call  (213)  626-6222 
for  times  and  admissions  costs.  The 
Petersen  Automotive  Museum  is 
located  at  6060  Wilshire  Blvd.  Call 
(323)  930-CARS  for  more  informa- 
tion. 


SPIKE 

From  page  21 

Due  to  animation  visionaries  like 
Spike  and  Mikeand  influential  works 
like  "The  Simpsons,"  more  people 
are  enjoying  cartoons.  Especially  with 
today's  claymation,  stop  action  and 
CGI,  the  potential  and  variety  in  ani- 
mation has  never  been  more  boom- 
ing. It  shows  in  this  year's  festival  as 
Pixar  (producer  of  Toy  Story")  sub- 
mitted "For  the  Birds"  and  Aardman 
Animation  (creators  of  this  summer's 
"Chicken  Run")  offered  "Angry 
Kid,"  which  ran  alongside  home- 
made animation  that  looked  like  they 
were  filmed  by  a  student  animator  in 
a  garage  somewhere.  For  example, 
Brocka  spent  12  hours  a  day  for  three 
weeks  animating  "The  Happiest  Gay 
Couple  in  All  the  World." 

"This  year  it's  more  cutting  edge 
than  ever  ...  they're  top  quality  pieces 
with  high  production  value,"  Decker 
said.  "But  then  you  have  work  by 
Don  Hertzfeldt  and  it's  simple  line 
drawings,  but  his  stuff  is  genius  and 
very  low-budget." 

A  veteran  of  the  Spike  and  Mike 
festivals,  Hertzfeldt  started  animating 
award-winning  pieces  when  he  was 
17,  submitting  his  work  since  his 
freshman  year  at  UC  Santa  Barbara 
in  1995  and  one  for  every  year  ever 
■sinoe. 

His  newest  work,  "Rejected" 
appears  in  this  year's  festival  as  reject- 
ed works  from  the  "Family  Learning 
Channel"  or  as  Hertzfeldt  calls  his 
work,  a  comment  "about  art,  com- 
mercial culture,  selling  out  the  fact 
that  Americans  are  advertised  to  and 
whored  around  by  commercial  cul- 
ture and  capitalism  so  much  that  it's 
just  become  a  part  of  their  life." 

According  to  Hertzfeldt,  the  festi- 
val alloweahis  early  efforts  to  gain  a 
fanbase  and  are  a  venue  to  showcase 
his  work;  the  Spike  and  Mike  festival 
being  the  only  theatrical  distributor  of 
animated  shorts. 

"The  bottom  line  for  me  is  simply 
that  flbns  are  made  to  be  seen,  and  to 
be  seen  in  theaters,"  Hertzfeldt  said. 
"It's  just  been  a  repeated  personal 
success  for  me  to  screen  our  work 
alongside  these  Oscar-nominated, 
brilliant  works  and  watch  them  hold 
their  own." 

Due  to  the  exposure  from  Spike 
and  Mike  and  other  festivals  from 
Cannes  to  Sundance,  Hertzfeldt  was 
offered  work  on  numerous  television 
and  Internet  series.  After  rejecting 


DiHy  Bniin  Arts  &  Entertalmnem 


S«eSPME,pa9c49 


■■■SPIKE/-''-^-¥..',;:_ 

Fiompa9e48 

the  offers,  today,  Hertzfeldt  heads 
his  own  production  company  called 
Bitter  Films  and  hopes  to  put  out  an 
animated  studio  feature. 

For  Brocka,  reelshort.com 
offered  the  first-time  animator  a 
deal  to  produce  a  series  of  Rick  and 
Steve's  adventure  for  the  Web  site, 
which  will  premiere  next  month.  So 
far,  Brocka's  film  has  traveled  to 
about  85  different  festivals,  includ- 
ing Sundance  and  ones  in  Germany 
and  Korea. 

"I  thought  I'd  show  it  at  school 
and  my  friends  would  laugh.  It  was 
something  cute,  something  I  could 
say  'Look  at  the  thing  I  made,'" 
Brocka  said.  "I  didn't  know  it  would 
turn  into  what  it  would  turn  into." 

Decker  takes  some  credit  for  cre- 
ating today's  mainstream  apprecia- 
tion for  animation  and  inspiring 
avant-garde  animators  to  get  their 
visions  on  film  and  out  to  an  audi- 
ence. The  festival  is  taking  an  even 
bigger  step  towards  drawing  a  wider 
audience  by  partnering  with 
ifilm.com,  where  the  animated 
shorts  are  shown  via  the  Internet. 

"It's  time  to  get  this  stuff  out 
there,"  Decker  said. 

FILM:  Spi]^  and  Mike's  Sick  & 
Twisted  Festival  of  Animation  is 
showing  at  midnight  every  Friday 
and  Saturday  until  Dec.  16  at  the 
Laenunle's  Sunset  Theatre  located  at 
8000  Sunset  Blvd.  in  West 
Hollywood.  Tickets  are  $8.  18  and 
over.  For  more  information,  log  on  at 
www.spikeandmike.com. 


PERFORMING 

From  page  46 

Carter,  who  has  collaborated  with 
Lauryn  Hill  and  Wynton  Marsalis, 
among  others. 

In  addition  to  the  great  variety  of 
performers,  UCLA  also  features 
CcnterStage,  a  pre-performance 
meeting  with  the  artists  one  hour 
before  showtime.  Past  artists  have 
included  Yo-Yo  Ma,  Philip  Glass,  and 
Midori.  For  example,  if  you  have  a 
question  about  Baryshnikov,  why  not 
ask  him  yourself? 

This  year's  season  will  also  feature 
many  television  personalities  and 
celebrities.  John  Lithgow,  of  "Third 
Rock  from  the  Sun"  fame,  will 
appear  on  October  1 5  with  a  sympho- 
ny orchestra,  singing  children's  songs 
and  performing  his  new  children's 
book,  "The  Remarkable  Farkle 
McBridc,"  a  child's  guide  to  the 
orchestra.  !' Simpsons"  creator  Matt 
Groening  will  talk  about  his  travails 
on  November  30.  Bill  Maher  will  host 
a  mock  performance  of  "Politically 
Incorrect"  on  March  3.  Pulitzer 
prize-finning  author  Frank 
McCo^^rt  will  talk  about  his  life  on 
Noveinber  5.  James  Carville, 
President  Clinton's  campaign  chief 
who  was  featured  in  the  documentary 
"The  War  Room,"  will  give  his 
unique  take  on  politics  and  the  presi- 
dential race  on  October  15. 

UCLA  Performing  Arts  is  divided 
chiefly  among  three  theaters.  Royce 
Hall,  perhaps  the  most  ubiquitous 
symbol  of  UCLA,  is  also  the  most  fre- 
quent one  for  large  scale  perfor- 
mancest^as  well  as  intimate  pieces. 
The  newly  renovated  Ostin  Hall  in 
the  Schoenberg  music  building  will 
house  mainly  chamber  music  and 
choral  performances.  The  Freud 
Playhouse  will  feature  plays  and  sto- 
rytelling. 

Many  events  will  sell  out.  Last 
year,  over  half  of  them  did.  With  such 
a  wide  variety  of  great  performances, 
it's  not  hard  to  see  why. 

MUSK:  For  tickets  or  information 
about  the  Performing  Arts,  call  the 
Central  Ticket  Office  at  (310)  825-2101 
or  check  out  their  Web  site  at 
www.sca.uda.edu.        * 


Septemtier  25-28, 2000       49 


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UCLA  Department  of  Music 


Auditions  for 
Performing  Ensembles 


(2  units  each): 
Choral  Ensembles  (UCLA  Chorale  and  University  Chorus): 

Auditions  Sept.  27,  (10:00  a.m.-1 :00  p.m.  &  2:00-5:00  p  m ) 
'Sept.  28  (10:00  a.m.  - 1:00  p.m.),  Sept.  29  &  30  (10:00  a.m.  - 
1:00  p.m.  &  2:00-5:00  p.m.)  Oct.  1.  (4:00  -  7:00  p.m.). 
1325  Schoenberg  Hall.  Sign  up  outside  2419  Schoenberg 
Hall.  Call  (310)  825-4036  for  information. 

Chamber  Ensembtes:  To  be  an-anged.  Call  (310)  825-4761 
for  information. 

Jazz  Ensembles:  Auditions  Sept.  29. 10:00  a.m.  -  1:00  p.m., 
Oct.  2  &  3.  10:00  a.m.  -  5:00  p.m.  Rhythm  section  on  Oct.  5. 
7:00  -  10:00  p.m.  Sign  up  for  an  appointment  on  bulletin 
board  outside  2409  Schoenberg  Hall. 

Musical  Theater  Workshop:  Auditions  Wednesday.  Sept. 
27,  starting  at  3:00  p.m.  Dance  auditions  every  half-hour. 
Prepare  two  songs:  a  ballad  and  an  up  tempo  piece.  Call 
(310)  825-4761  to  schedule  an  audition.  Production  plans  for 
2000-2001  include  Smile  by  Howard  Ashman  and  Marvin 
Hamlisch.  and  Carol  Burnett  Awards  in  Music  Theater. 

Opera  Workshop.  Call  (310)  825-4761  for  information.     , 

Philhanmonia  Orchestra  &  Chamber  Orchestra:  Auditions 
for  STRINGS  only,  Sept.  25,  26,  &  27.  by  appointment. 
Call  Shana  at  (31 0)  206-3033  to  schedule  an  audition. 

Wind  Ensemble:  Auditions  Sept.  29,  Oct.  2  &  3.  Sign  up  on 
the  band  office  bulletin  board  outside  2421  Schoenberg  Hall 
or  call  (310)  825-3835  for  an  appointment. 


fmmp 


Music  Theory  Placement  Exam 


iMiu 


Tuesday,  Sept  26,  9:00  a.m., 
Room  1200  Schoenberg  Hall. 

Mandatofy  for  all  new  students  wtra  want  to 
enroll  in  music  theory  courses. 

partment  Concei 
Fall  Quarter 


Information:  (310)825-4761 
Website:  www.musicucla.edu 
Faculty  Recital 
Mark  Kaplan,  vtoNn 

Wednesday,  October  1 1  &  1 8. 8:00  pm 
Ostin  Hall 

Kaplan  will  perform  J.S.  Bach's  unaccompanied  violin  sonatas 
in  two  recitals  commemorating  the  composer's  death  250 
years  ago.  , 

Adn>ission:  $10,  $7 


UCLA  Philhamfionia  Orchestra 

Jon  Robertson,  conductor 
Walter  Ponce,  piano  soloist 
.  Tuesday.  October  31 .  8:00  pm 
Ostin  Hall 

Brahms:  Academic  Festival  Overture 
Paul  Reale:  Caldera  for  piano  and  orchestra 
Beethoven;  Symphony  No.  7  in  A  Major,  Op.  92 
Admission:  $7.  >3 

Halloween-themed  pre-concert  lecture  at  7:00  pm,  Jan  Popper 
Theater:  Faculty  composer  Reale  (in  appropriate  costume)  will 
perfonm  excerpts  from  his  Satanic  Mass  for  solo  piano,  and 
discuss  the  connection  between  fantastical  visual  images  and 
musical  works. 

UCLA  Wind  Ensemble 

Thomas  Lee,  conductor 

Wednesday,  November  8,  8:00  pm 

Ostin  Hall  .  .  • ;       ,>    :  .. 

West  coast  premiere:  American  Interlude  by  faculty  composer 
Ian  Krouse. 
Admission  is  free. 

Faculty  Recital 

Evan  Wilson,  viola,  and  Walter  Ponce,  piano 
Wednesday,  November  15.  8:00  pm 
Ostin  Hall 

A  program  of  music  for  viola,  including  sonatas  by  Brahms  and 

Glinka. 

Admission:  $10,  $7 

UCLA  Chorale.  University  Chorus  &  Chamber  Singers 

Donald  Neuen,  conductor 

with  special  guests,  UCLA  Campus  Choir.  Irene  Kim.  director 

Saturday.  December  2.  8:00  pm 

Royce  Hall  .  '    "■  '"        :.' V 

UCLA's  annual  holiday  concert  features  J.S  Bach's  Magnificat 
and  two  selections  from  his  B-minor  Mass  ("Gloria  in  Excelsis 
Deo"  and  "Dona  Nobis  Pacem")  in  honor  of  the  250th 
anniversary  of  the  composer's  death  in  1 750.  The  program 
also  includes  familiar  carols  and  holiday  music. 
Admission:  $10.  $7 

UCLA  Philhamionia  Orchestra  ' 

Jon  Robertson,  conductor  .-  ■' 

Peter  Yates,  guitar  soloist 
Tuesday,  December  5,  8:00  pm 
Ostin  Hall 

Ravel:  Bolero 

Paul  Chihara:  Concerto  for  Guitar  &  Orchestra 
Hindemith:  Symphonic  Metamorphosis 
Admission:  $7.  $3 

UCLA  Jazz  Ensembles 

Gamett  Brown.  Hew  Matthews,  &  Gordon  Henderson, 

corxJuctors 

Thursday,  December  7.  8:00  pm  (■ 

Ostin  Hall 

Varied  program  by  UCLA's  award-winning  jazz  ensembles 
Admission:  $7,  $3 


^A^:£:\j:::J,i.y,l 


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Urban  planners  arc  part  of  the  solution 
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working  on  a  broad  range  of  environmental,  health, 
business  development,  and  social  policy  issues.  How 
do  you  enter  this  burgeoning  and  exciting  profession? 

The  Department  of  Urban  and  Regional  Planning 
at  the  University  of  California,  Irvine  offers  a  two- 
year  Masters  degree  program,  which  has  successfully 
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County  Business  Council.  UCI's  Department  of  Urban 
and  Regional  Planning  also  offers  a  Ph.D.  degree  program 
for  students  seeking  careers  in  research  or  teaching.  We 
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University  of  California,  Inrioe 


"I  .1  hnvhiiri.-  .m.l  .inph^ 


■.iiilitK'  ti.r 


GRAMMY 

From  page  2C.   ''• 


■  .<■- 


Spanish-language  exhortations  about 
Latin  unity  from  long-haired 
Mexican  performers  Mana  and  an 
awards  presentation  by  Argentine 
rocker  Fito  Paez. 

Shalcira,  honored  for  best  female 
vocal  and  best  female  rocic  perfor- 
mance, saluted  her  native  country: 
"This  is  for  you,  Colombia.  Para  ti 
Colombia." 

The  parade  of  performers  trading 
jolces,  thanking  family  members  and 
paying  tribute  in  Spanish  and 
Portuguese  on  national  television 
was  more  proof  the  Latin  music 
boom  is  there  to  stay. 

There  was  controversy:  Many  win- 
ners and  telecast  performers  were 
familiar  names  like  Gloria  Estefan, 
'N  Sync  and  Christina  Aguilera,  and 
the  perception  that  commercial 
music  was  favored  at  the  e;(pense  of 
distinctive  Mexican  styles  such  as 
norteno  and  tejano  caused  some 
grumbling  leading  into  the  awards. 

The  largest  Latin  record  label  in 
the  United  States,  Fonovisa,  boy- 
cotted the  awards.  Mariachi  star 
Pepe  Aguilar,  nominated  for  best 
ranchero  performance,  also  refused 
to  attend.  ;';,    /• 

Some  guests,  though,  sought  to 
downplay  the  dispute. 

"Before  people  talk  they  should 
get  educated,"  said  Emilio  Estefan 
Jr.,  who  is  married  to  singer  Gloria 
Estefan  and  was  nominated  for  six 
awards  for  his  work  as  a  producer  for 
various  artists.  "I  was  very  disap- 
pointed about  that.  ...  I  hope  these 
awards  will  unite  people." 

Some  2,600  academy  members 
from  15  countries  voted  for  the  nom- 
inees in  40  categories.  Nominated 
music  was  required  to  be  51  percent 
Spanish  or  Portuguese-language 
music. 

Tlie  awards  were  started  by  an  off- 
shoot of  the  National  Academy  of 
Recording  Arts  &  Sciences,  which 
produces  the  Grammys,  to  capitalize 
on  a  growing  interest  in  Latin  music. 
The  academy  hopes  the  show  will 
travel  to  a  new  country  each  year, 
Olympics-style.  - 

A  hip-swiveling  Ricky  Martin, 
paying  tribute  to  the  late  mambo  king 
Tito  Puente,  opened  the  telecast. 
Puente,  who  died  in  June,  won  an 
award  for  best  tropical  performance. 
The  academy  named  a  Cuban 
singer  in  his  70s,  Ibrahim  Ferrer,  as 
its  best  new  artist.  He  came  to  promi- 
nence recently  through  his  work  on 
the  "Buena  Vista  Social  Qub"  album. 
The  two-hour  ceremony  was  tele- 
vised on  CBS  and  was  seen  in  more 
than  120  other  countries. 


SOUNDBITES 

From  page  30 

IMcst 

•Wasting  Time''         ^   r 

Maverick  Records 

Looks  like  Blink-182.  Sounds  like 
Blink-182.  Must  be  another  poppy 
band  jumping  on  the  "let's  play  in  our 
underwear  and  make  crude  jokes" 
trend. 

It's  just  the  boys  from  South 
Chicago  known  as  Mest,  who  are 
invading  the  radio  with  their  catchy 
new,  I-wish-I-could-get4his-song- 
outUMny-head,  "What's  the  DiUior 

Judging  by  the  pictures  in  the 
insert,  Mest  is  just  another  youthful 
Blink-182  rip  off*  and  it  seems  that  sit- 
ting through  the  entire  album  would 
just  be  "wasting  time,"  which  ironical- 
fy  happens  to  be  the  title  of  their  cur- 
rent CD. 

But  a  listen  to  the  album  surprising- 
ly proves  otherwise.  Don't  judge  an 
album  by  the  picture  on  the  cover. 

Mest  was  actually  able  to  put 
together  14  songs  that  mix  their  punk. 


-  SOUNDBITES 

From  page  $0  '      •' 

pop,  upbeat  sound  with  melodic  lyrics 
and  potent  hooks. 

Most  of  the  songs  on  "Wasting 
Time"  are  about  girls  and  broken  rela- 
tionships (not  real  original,  but  always 
an  effective  formula  for  good  rock 
music).  This  album  grows  on  the  lis- 
tener, causing  him  to  start  singing 
along  more  and  more  each  time  he 
hears  it. 

The  fourth  track,  "Slow  Motion." 
displays  Mest's  ability  to  seamlessly 
change  tempos.  The  song  begins  with 
^he  refrain  placed  over  a  kickback, 
rcverbKlriven  guitar  riff  and  then 
quickly  jumps  into  a  frenzied  distorted 
guitar  part  for  the  verses. 

"Change"  showcases  the  slower, 
sentimental  side  of  Mest  and  contrasts 
well  with  the  more  macho-guitar  dri- 
ven songs  on  the  CD,  such  as  the  first 
track  "Long  Days.  Long  Nights." 

Mest  proves  to  be  effective  at  fast, 
three  minute  rock  songs  that  feature 
melodic  hooks  and  powerful,  no-non- 
sense instrumentals.  Raw  and  in-your- 
face,  "Wasting  Time"  succeeds  at 
being  a  modem  "punk"  album. 

It  may  be  hard,  however,  to  get  past 
the  photo  of  vocalist  Tony  Lovato, 
sporting  his  excessive  tattoos  and  pink 
leopard  underwear,  kneeling  on  a  bed 
surrounded  by  sleazily  dressed  midget 
women. 

But  try  and  you'll  find  much  more 
to  this  band. 

Chris  Moriates 
Rating:? 


51 


ROSEN-MOLINA 

From  page  35 

flagpole. 

Franz  Hall  is  supposed  to  resemble 
a  toilet.  That  rubenesque  statue  in  the 
sculpture  garden  really  is  Ursa. 

A  construction  crew  dropped 
Bunche  onto  its  trademark  stilts  using 
a  massive  crane.  They  did  move  it 
because  the  reflections  from  its  tinted 
windows  distracted  drivers  on  the 
nearby  freeway,  causing  no  end  of 
-  spills  and  collisions. 

The  confused  student  will,  no 
doubt,  wonder  who  to  believe, 
whether  the  word  of  a  handful  of 
gung-ho  orientation  staffers  that 
swear  to  the  truth  of  the  legends  count 
against  the  legions  of  jaded  classmates 
who  dismiss  UCLA  lore  offhand. 

As  the  on  campus  arts  editor  at  the 
Bruin,  I  cannot  confirm  or  debunk 
these  myths.  I  can,  however,  provide 
you  with  other  valuable  information 
about  the  microcosm  of  UCLA. 

The  plethora  of  diverse  clubs  is  evi- 
dent from  a  simple  stroll  down  Bruin 
Walk,  where  numerous  clubs  and 
organizations  present  themselves  for 
the  approval  of  the  finicky  student. 
From  ilharities  and  culture  clubs  and 
religions  groups  to  science  fiction 
forumk  from  UCLAradio.com  to 
CampiB  TV,  opportunities  abound. 

Concerts  and  recitals  grace  the 
Royce  Hall  stage,  featuring  some  of 
the  biggest  names  in  show  business, 
while  our  own  student  plays  appear  on 
stage  and  screen,  at  Macgowan  and 
Melnitz  respectively  Economically 
priced  films,  courtesy  of  the  Campus 
Events  Commission,  liven  up  any 
Friday  night,  and  a  trip  into 
Westwood  is  always  a  treat! 

On  campus,  in  Westwood  and 
through  UCLA  affiliated  programs, 
there  is  always  something  exciting 
happening. 

Of  course,  that  doesn't  change  the 
fact  that,  silent  and  brooding,  the  lore 
and  legends  of  UCLA  stinlurk  under 
the  surface. 
Trust  me. 

Micha«l  is  the  on  campus  A&E  Editor 
for  2000-01  .When  isn't  busy  making  up 
tore  and  legends,  he  hides  in  the  tun- 
nels under  Royce  Quad.  You  can 
attempt  to  contact  Mm  at  mrosennx)!!- 
na9media.uda.edu. 


September  25-28, 2000       SI 


fm  you  consider  career  choces,  think  Fbdiatry.  With  the  aging  population, 
the  need  for  Doctors  of  Fbdiatric  Medicine  has  never  been  greater. 
For  nrxxe  information  on  this  growing  fieW,  and  to  get  a  toehoW  on  a  great 
career,  visit  the  website  of  the  school  of  Fbdiatric  Medicine  nearest  you. 


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PARTieiPATINa    SCNOOLI: 

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September   27th|[ 

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GAY  OWNED  AND  OPERATED 

21  and  over 


S2       September  25-28, 2000 


Oiily  Brain  Arts  ft 


<t 


fi 


•v.r^.'*-- 


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you  an  adult  male 
with  ADHD? 


'■-^iJi'x., 


The  UCLA  ADHD  Research  Group  is  currently  looking  for 

adult  males  aged  18  to  65  to  participate  in  a  medication 

study.  If    you  have  persistant  problems  with: 


This  research  study  requires  weekly  visits  to  UCLA  for  6  weeks 
where  you  will  receive  either  the  study  medication  or  placebo. 
Participants  will  receive  a  free  ADHD  evaluation. 

For  more  information,  call  Kira  at  (310)  825-6587 


KOREAN  LANGUAGE  PROGRAM 

FALL  2000 


■^  KOREAN  CULTURAL  CENTER,  LOS  ANGELES 

The  Korean  Cultural  Center  of  Los  Angeles  continues  to  offer  Its  Korean  Language  Program.  All  of  our 
classes  are  taught  by  well-qualified  instructors,  who  teach  not  only  the  language  but  also  history,  customs, 
and  culture  of  Korea.  Cun^ently  there  are  five  classes: 

Basic  A: 

Our  basic  A  Class  is  designed  for  those  who  have  no  Korean  language  background  at  all.  In  this  dass.  you 

will  learn  how  to  read  and  write  the  Korean  alphabet  as  well  as  speak  basic  words  and  expressions. 

Basic  B: 

Our  Basic  B  Class  is  designed  to  enhance  the  writing  and  the  reading  level  for  those  who  have  completed 
the  Basic  A  Class  and  for  those  who  already  have  a  basic  knowledge  of  the  language.  You  will  also  learn 
basic  grammar  and  sentence  structure. 

intermediate  A: 

Our  Intermediate  A  Class  is  structured  for  those  who  have  completed  the  Basic  B  Class  and  for  those  who 
can  already  read,  write,  and  speak  the  Korean  language.  In  this  class,  you  will  learn  intermediate  grammar 
and  language  structure,  which  will  help  you  to  become  more  proficient  in  both  speaking  and  writing. 

Intermediate  B: 

Our  Intermediate  B  Class  Is  structured  for  those  who  have  completed  the  Intermediate  A  Class  and  for  those 
who  qualify  to  enroll  through  the  means  of  the  Proficiency  Exam.  In  this  class,  you  will  learn 
intermediate/advanced  grammar  and  complex  language  structure.  This  class  will  enable  you  to  become  a 
comfortable  speaker  and  a  vvriter. 

Advanced:  ^r 

Our  Advanced  Class  is  structured  for  those  who  have  completed  both  intermediate  classes  and  those  who  are 
already  fluent  in  writing  and  speaking.  In  the  Advanced  Class,  you  will  practice  writing  short  essays  and 
making  oral  presentations.  v    .    ^   •     . 


if^. 


CLASSES: 
TIME:  S 
LOCATION: 


OCT  10-DEC 19, 2000  (10  weeks) 

*  No  class  on  Oct  24 

7-9  PM,  eveiy  TUESDAY 

Korean  Cultural  Center,  Los  Angeles 

5505  Wllshire  Blvd.  CCnnsStreelKWilshire&DunsmuIr) 


nbulblKAIlUN  FEE:      $30(Pleas«payonthe(irstdayoldaM0fe«;hqu»rter.) 


KING 


From  page  3S 

yester-year.  Distinctly  British  para- 
phernalia grace  the  walls,  from  the 
oil  portrait  of  Sir  Winston  Churchill 
over  the  fireplace  to  the  old  Beatles 
album  covers  over  the  doorway. 
Photographs  of  famous  personalities 
cover  every  available  inch  of  wall 
space.  Stained  glass  windows  add  to 
the  King's  Head's  unique  charm. 

Being  a  pub,  the  King's  Head  nat- 
urally features  a  full  bar  for  the  drink- 
ing crowd,  complete  with  dart  board. 
Every  English  bar  has  a  dart  board; 
it's  tradition.  The  bar  and  restaurant 
portions  of  Ye  Olde  King's  Head  are 
neatly  separated  so  that  diners  can 
enjoy  a  quiet  meal  while  bar-hoppers 
can  carouse  all  night. 

On  the  restaurant  side,  the  menu 
includes  perennial  English  favorites 
like  Shepherd's  Pie,  a  pot  pie  concoc- 
tion of  ground  beef  and  mixed  veg- 
etables topped  with  whipped  pota- 
toes. 

Other  items,  while  less  traditional, 
are  no  less  fitting.  Curry,  tender  beef 
slathered  in  tangy  brown  sauce, 
served  with  sweet  mango  chutney 
and  a  buttery  fried  tortilla,  might  not 
have  originated  in  England,  but  it 
feels  perfectly  at  home;  it  docs  con- 
tain beef,  after  all. 

The  turkey  sandwich  is  a  massive 
affair,  slabs  of  fresh  turkey  wrapped 
in  a  crusty  subway  roll,  served  along- 
side moist  coleslaw  and  crunchy 
potato  chips  -  although  the  British 
call  them  crisps. 

Of  course,  the  staple  of  the  menu 
is  the  fish  and  chips.  The  fried,  bat- 
tered fish  and  the  side  of  what  we, 
unsophisticated  Americans  call 
French  fries,  comes  vrith  zesty  vine- 
gar. They  do  not  arrive  wrapped  in 
yesterday's  newspaper,  but  other- 
wise they  are  no  different  than  their 
authentic  London  street-corner 
counterparts. 

Ye  Olde  King's  Head  is  not  cheap, 
but  generous  portions  make  the 
prices  fairiy  reasonable.  Diners  on  a 
budget  may  do  well  to  visit  King's 
Head  for  lunch,  when  the  prices  run 
around  $8.00,  rather  than  dinner 
when  prices  rise'to  the  $10^1 1  range. 
De^ite  the  consistently  flavorful 
entrees,  some  dinera  might  oompfaun 
that  Ye  Olde  King's  Head  is  too  true 
to  the  legacy  of  British  food.  Making 
no  concessions  to  California  health 
concerns,  the  food  is  quite  rich  and 
heavy.  Although  it  offers  a  wide  vari- 
ety of  exotic  foods,  there  is  little  that 
could  reasonably  qualify  as  "li^t." 
Those  with  delicate  constitutions  or 
sensitive  stomachs  take  warning,  but, 
for  everyone  else.  King's  Head  Pub 
offers  delicious,  homccooked  meals 
with  a  fim,  old-worid  ambience. 

RKTAURANT:  -Ye  Olde  King's  Head 
Pub"  is  located  at  116  Santa  Monica 
Blvd,  (310)451-1402.  Hours  are 
Monday-Friday,  1 1  a.m.- 10  p.m,  week- 
ends 1 1  a.m.-1 1  p.m.  Prices  range  $6- 
$11. 


.,c- 


Application  should  be  relumed  helore  class  begins.   For  more  inforiiialion, 
please  call  Janice  Kiin  at  323-936-71/^1  (Fax  323-936-5712) 


SALAZAR 

From  page  2 

through  the  world  we  write  about. 
But  for  us,  it's  really  all  about  get- 
ting the  story  that  will  entertain  you 
with  unique  writing,  interesting 
subjects  and  fresh  perspectives,  as 
much  as  it's  about  informing  you  of 
what's  going  on  in  the  artistic 
world. 

So  now,  as  the  academic  year  at 
UCLA  begins,  "it's  all  happening" 
as  they  say  in  "Almost  Famous," 
again.  The  entertainment  world  is 
brimming  with  new  events  and  hap- 
pening every  day. 

Despite  the  alluring  perks  of  being 
A&E  section  editor,  Salazar  is  not  in  it 
for  the  money.  To  learn  nwre  at>out 
her  'almost  famous'  workt  write  to 
asalazar9m»dia.ucla.edu. 


BROAD 

From  page  42 


.-■^-i 


building,  increasing  the  amount  of 
usable  space  by  12,800  square  feet. 

A  system  of  filters  currently  allows 
natural  sunlight  to  illuminate  the 
building's  interior,  which  is  being 
redesigned  with  a  loft-like  theme.  The 
new  floor  plan  will  additionally  divide 
the  space  into  open-ended  studios 
better  suited  for  artistic  practice.: 

"This  flexible  floor  plan  gives  fac- 
ulty and  students  the  ability  to  plan 
and  organize  space,"  said  Palladino. 
"Instead  of  trying  to  predict  how  fac- 
ulty will  teach  in,  say,  2010.  we've  left 
them  that  decision." 

An  outdoor  walkway  through  the 
base  of  the  building  will  also  facilitate 
easy  access  to  the  campus  from  park- 
ing lots. 

"The  deadend  courtyard  will  be 
replaced  by  a  series  of  terraces," 
Palladino  said.  "We  will  connect  the 
old  circulation  path  that  currently 
runs  from  Franz  and  dead-ends  at 
Dickson  with  Parking  Structure  3 
behind  the  building." 

While  the  through-way  will  facili- 
tate entry  to  campus,  it  will  encour- 
age new  visitors  besides  just  students 
and  faculty.  A  new  coffee  cafe  with 
outdoor  seating  on  the  plaza  will  be 
added  in  hopes  of  bringing  guests 
from  the  general  public  in  addition  to 
those  affiliated  with  UCLA. 

Although  public  spectacle  influ- 
enced the  design,  the  needs  of  the  stu- 
dents and  faculty  concerned  the 
developers  from  the  beginning. 

"We  spent  many  hours  talking 
with  faculty,  students,  and  adminis- 
trators, people  who  would  actually  be 
working  in  the  building,  all  working 
together  to  get  a  program  together," 
Broad  said. 

"Back  in  the  days  of  (Chancellor) 
Young,  we  talked  about  wanting  to 
do  something  for  the  arts  at  UCLA." 
Broad  said.  "We  needed  time  to  work 
through  the  finances;  we've  refined 
the  plans  to  serve  the  needs  of  the  uni- 
versity for  the  decades  to  come." 


BANDS 

From  page  31 

Jonelis  has  worked  at  a  music  law 
fuTO  and  currently  runs  his  own  pro- 
motion company.  "I  mostly  use  word 
of  mouth,  but  I  also  go  to  parties  and 
sororities.  The  Greek  system  is  a  great 
way  to  get  the  word  out  about  some- 
thing." Both  experiences  help  him  to 
get  an  insider  edge  on  the  ways  of  the 
industry. 

The  stiff  competition  of  the  real 
music  business  might  have  influenced 
their  choices  to  follow  more  stable 
study  courses.  While  UCLA  musicians 
find  that  school  may  be  rich  in  oppor- 
tunity, the  real  world  is  another  matter. 
Theiheer  number  of  talented  perform- 
ers struggling  to  get  that  one  big  break 
discflurages  many  hopefuls  on  the  Los 
Angi^es  music  scene. 

"U.A.  is  difficult  above  all  other 
cities,"  Brown  said.  "There  are  so 
many  bands  out  there  that  even  getting 
unpaid  gigs  at  midnight  is  difficult." 
Even  so,  he  remains  optimistic. 
"We're  different  than  a  lot  of  ban^s 
out  there  right  now.  though,  since 
we're  more  classic  rock  style  while  a  lot 
of  bands  take  another  direction  -  more 
rap. 

"The  club  scene  is  tough."  said 
Silverman,  agreeing  with  Brown. 
"There  are  a  tot  of  good  musicians  in 
L.A.,  but  there  aren't  a  lot  of  gigs  avail- 
able." 

Jonelis  expressed  a  more  positive 
interpretation  on  the  problem  of  sur- 
viving the  Los  Angeles  circuit,  explain- 
ing the  qualifications  needed  to  suc- 
ceed in  this  fast-paced  worid. 

"Connections  and  hard  work  are 
everything,"  he  said.  "I  moved  to  L-A. 
because  this  is  such  a  musician's  town. 
It's  possible  to  book  a  gig  anywhere  in 
town  if  you're  just  willing  to  woi'k 
hard." 


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DAMNED 

Frtrni  page  36 

he  hardly  bats  an  eye  at  carrying  out 
the  duty.  One  might  expect  this  sort 
of  reaction  when  our  hero  was  still 
essentially  an  animated  cadaver,  but 
it  is  hard  to  believe  this  late  in  the 
book  when  he  is  supposed  to  possess 
a  revitalized  humanity. 

Slowly,  the  zombie  remembers 
fragments  of  his  previous  Kfe,  but 
these  never  seem  to  paint  a  complete 
picture.  The  reader  learns  everything 
about  him  except  his  name,  but  still 
feels  like  they  never  meet  him. 

"Damned  If  You  Do"  raises  a  lot 
of  interesting  moral  and  metaphysi- 
cal questions,  but  it  never  works  up 
the  courage  to  answer  them. 

"The  Chief,"  who  occupies  an 
upstairs  office,  is  a  nebulous  unseen 
presence  dedicated  to  cruel  efficien- 
cy. Divorced  from  mortal  affairs,  he 
has  little  connection  with  humans 
and  thus  little  sympathy  with  their 
problems.  The  idea  that  "The  ChieT 
is  out-of-touch  and  needlessly  harsh  is 
one  that  deserves  more  exploration 
than  Houghton  is  willing  to  give  it. 
Death,  on  the  other  hand,  is  constant- 
ly exposed  to  humanity  at  its  most 
vulnerable,  but  has  developed  a  con- 
science regarding  his  work  as 
pointless. 

In  one  interesting  passage.  Death 
muses  philosophically  about  his  role 
in  the  world.  All  human  achievement 
is  pointless,  he  laments,  because  it  all 
succumbs  to  death  in  the  end. 

If  it  is  Death's  job  that  renders 
everything  else  meaningless;  does 
that  make  Death  meaningless,  too?  A 
vexing  existential  puzzle,  indeed, 
made  all  the  more  irritating  when 
Death  never  comes  to  any  satisfacto- 
ry conclusion. 

Throughout  the  book,  "The 
Chier  orden  the  Four  Horsenten  to 
gather  certain  ill-fated  people,  whom 
it  is  suggested  will  play  some  major 
role  in  his  "master  plan."  What  the 
master  plan  is,  however,  and  why  he 
needs  these  people  is  never  explained, 
or  even  adequately  insinuated. 

"Damned  If  You  Do"  is  a  flawed 
but  interesting  woilc.  Its  skewed  look 
at  the  great  beyond  is  certainly  origi- 
nal, but  ultimately  it  leaves  the  reader 
unsatisfied.  It  recalls  other  apocalyp- 
tic parodies,  like  Terry  Prattchett's 
"Good  Omens"  or  Marcos 
Donnelly's  "Prophets  For  the  End  of 
Time"  and  ultimately  suffers  for  the 
comparison.  While  those  books  actu- 
ally attempted  to  solve  the  dilemmas 
they  raised,  Houghton  is  content  to 
throw  puzzles  at  his  audience  without 
any  attempt  at  explanation. 

Still,  "Damned  If  You  Do"  con- 
tains enough  funny  scenes  that  less 
ffnicky  readers  can  enjoy  it  as  a  pleas- 
ant diversion.  After  all,  it  is  hard  not 
to  find  something  to  like  about  a 
Grim  Reaper  who  finds  his  portrayal 
in  "The  Seventh  Seal"  dull  and  pre- 
tentious, preferring  instead  "Bill  and 
Ted's  Bogus  Journey." 


OFFSPRING 

From  page  41 

sites.  At  the  time,  Rolling  Stone  mag- 
azine listed  The  Offspring  as  the  No. 
1  downloaded  band  nationwide. 
Wired  magazine  said  22  million  com- 
puter users  downloaded  "Pretty 
Fly." 

"Digital  downloading  was  not 
hurting  our  sales.  In  fact,  it  may  have 
been  helping,"  Holland  told  the 
Times. 

The  band's  1998  album, 
"Americana,"  has  sold  nearly  12  mil- 
lion copies  wortdwide  even  though 
"Pretty  Fly"  was  downloaded  with- 
out permission,  he  said. 


MUSK:  For  more  information  on  The 
Offspring,  their  latest  album  or  their 
Internet  CD  offers,  check  out  their 
Web  site  at  vvww.offspring.com 


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2         September  25  28,2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


;wse Ve  f9t  an 

Otatnniy^ 
Hetsinaiit 


uniors 


RESTAURANT 

DELICATESSEN 

BAKERY 

CATERING 


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"You  don't  have  to  be 
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Section  offers  other  side 
of  athletics,  big  games 


I 


'mm 


0<ity  Bruin  Sports 


September  25-28, 2000         3 


COLUMN:  Inspiration  can 
be  found  in  athletes  other 
than  UCLA's  star  players 


I 


've  written  at  least  100  articles 
for  the 
Daily  Bruin, 
featured  people 
currently  in 
Sydney  and 
covered  athletes 
who've  won 
national  cham- 
pionships. 

And  one 
thing  I've 
learned  is  that 
it's  not  always 
the  biggest,  best 
or  brand-name 
athletes  who  have  the  stories  to  tell. 

Sometimes  you  can  learn  a  lot 
from  the  ones  who  love  the  sport  so 
much  they'd  pay  for  the  honor  of 
playingit.  .":     ':■';:■■■■'. 

A  year  ago  I  wrote  a  story  about 
Sean  Gjos,  a  UCLA  club  hockey 
player  who  had  slammed  into  the 
boards  during  a  game  and  crushed  a 
part  of  his  spine.  He  was  rendered 
paraplegic. 

Before  the  interview  we  talked  on 
the  phone  first  and  agreed  to  meet  at 
The  Anderson  School,  where  Gjos 
was  taking  classes.  I  described 
myself  so  that  he'd  know  what  to 
look  for. 

"I'm  5-foot-6  and  I'll  be  carrying 
a  small  notebook,"  I  told  him. 

"Okay,"  he  said.  "I'm  6-feet  tall 
and  I'll  be  in  a  wheelchair." 

On  March  3.  1999.  while  playing 
in  the  club  national  championship 


tournament.  Gjos  (pronounced 
"Joss"),  playing  the  game  he  adored, 
took  a  routine  body  check  that/ 
changed  his  life  forever. 

On  the  ice  and  in  pain.  I\e  was     " 
taken  to  the  hospital  where  he  found 
out  that  he  had  less  than  a  5  percent 
chance  of  ever  walking  again.  But  he 
didn't  let  this  discourage  him. 

As  I  learned  over  the  phone,  he 
could  make  fun  of  his  condition.  His 
friend  Jimmy  Young  remembered     / 
one  time  he  asked  Sean,  "Hey, 
what's  up?" 

"Nothing."  Gjos  replied.  "I  woke 
up  this  morning  and  still  couldn't  ; 
walk." 

He  didn't  just  joke  about  it.  He 
found  strength  and  rebounded.  He 
turned  what  could  have  been  mUery 
into  an  opportunity. 

Gjos  helped  set  up  the  Spinal 
Cord  Opportunities  for 
Rehabilitation  Endowment,  also 
known  as  SCORE,  an  organization 
that  both  raises  money  to  fund 
research  about  paraplegia  and  seeks 
people  living  with  paraplegia  to  help 
them  financially. 

When  the  accident  first  happened 
his  friends  wanted  to  set  up  SCORE 
just  to  help  him.  but  Gjos  refused 
until  the  scope  of  the  organization 
was  widened.  Now  SCORE  helps 
anyone  who  has  paraplegia  and  got 
it  while  playing  athletics.  Only  a  year 
old,  it  currently  finances  four  peo- 
ple. 

"He  has  been  the  leader  and  the 
visionary  in  turning  SCORE  into  a 
budding,  important  nonprofit  that 
supports  the  cure  and  helps  care," 
said  Ralph  Vogel,  Gjos'  friend  and  a 


SeeVU,pa9e22 


In  the  Aug  28  issue  of  the  Daily  Bruin,  the  Ofympic  graphic  contained  a 
misspelled  name.  The  correct  spelling  is  Jamie  Dantzscher. 


Tough  opponaiiis  and 
athletic  tradiaondont 
faze  the  Brains  as  much 
as  cheesy  photo  shoots 


Mens  water  polo  senior  Adam  Wright  questions  how  he's  supposed  to 
look  tough  wearing  only  Speedps  and  coach  Adam  Krikorian's  sunglasses! 


Women's  cross  country  senior  Christina  Bowen  waits 
as  a  light  meter  reading  is  taken  before  her  shoot. 


[ 


Women's  volleyball  junior  Kristee  Porter  casually 
fields  questions  from  a  reporter  on  her  cell  phone. 


ByPaullneVu  v  ^.„ . ;  ■., ,,..  ;;■ 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff      '         V  •-''  f,'^ '  ■       V\>  . ;  ^l.  ;;  ;    - 

CK^^'^*'  ^''  r?  "l"^"^  '^^  ^"  "Planation.  men's  soccer  senior 
Shaun  Tsakiris  looks  skeptical.  ^ 

"Is  this  gonna  be  cheesy?"  he  asks. 

The  inspiration  -  that  dramatic  scene  in  movies  just  before  the  big 

The  assignment  -  to  head  toward  the  camera  with  an  intense  look  in 
your  eyes.  To  lift  your  shoulders  with  a  cocky  air.  To  walk  like  you're  the 
baddest  cat  around.  Think  Maurice  Greene, 

Did  he  seriously  ask  if  this  was  gonna  be  cheesy? 

Shaun,  you  bet  it  is. 

But  it's  symbolic  as  well.  When  athletes  choose  to  come  to  a  univer- 
sity w,th  an  athletic  tradition  as  storied  as  UCLA's,  a  school  named 
Sports  Illustrated  s  No.  1  jock  school  in  1997.  there's  something  great 
they  must  live  up  to.  ^ 

"I  feel  some  pressure."  women's  volleyball  outside  hitter  Kristee 
Porter  said.    People  expect  a  lot  out  of  us  just  because  we  are  UCLA  " 

In  other  words.  Bruins  gotta  walk  the  walk 

Especially  coming  ofTlast  year,  which  saw  UCLA  gamer  five  nation- 
al champiorjships.  the  most  since  1983-84.  Especially  when  three  out  of 
the  seven  fall  sports  -  men's  water  polo,  women's  volleyball  and  men's 
soccer  -  are  or  were  at  one  point  ranked  No.  I. 

The  statements  have  already  been  made.  Men's  soccer  upset  defend- 
ing national  champions  Indiana  for  the  top  ranking.  Women's  soccer 
upset  No,  10  Rorida  to  vault  themselves  into  the  top  10 

And  football  not  only  opened  the  season  with  a  35-24  smacking  of 

K     ^°A,^'f'''*"'^'  ^^^^  '"°"°*«^''  '«  "P  ^*»h  a  23-20  edging  of 
then-No.  3  Michigan.  ^ 

So  far,  this  year's  Bruins  are  living  up  to  the  hype.  , 

"Our  coach  always  says.  'Remember  you're  wearing  UCL"A ' " 

women's  cross  country  runner  Christina  Bowen  said.  "Running's' so 

menial.  When  you  think  you're  great,  you  are.  and  it  helps  to  wear 

less^chees"'''  ^^'^  ^^""^  '''^'"  *  '"'"''^  *'*"''"^  ""^  ^'^^^  ~  '''^'^"^  "  ^"^ 
"Is  this  optional?"  Tsakiris  asks  hopefully 
No  more  than  the  hype  is. 


Senior  Scott  Abbott  of  men's  cross  country  finds  it 
hard  to  walk  in  a  cocky  manner  without  laughing. 


Athletes  featured  on  the  cover  are  Christina 
BoVen  (women's  cross  country^.  Kristee  Porter 
(women's  volleyball),  Adam  Wright  (men's  water 
polo).  DeShaun  Foster  (football).  Venus  James 
(women's  soccer).  Shaun  Tsakiris  (men's  soccer), 
and  Scott  Abbott  (men's  cross  country). 


Men's  soccer  senior  Shadn  Tsakiris  demonstrates 
his  off-the-field  soccer  skills  with  poise. 


.f^. 


.n:  '■':  '■. 


Septnnb«r  25-28, 2000 


PaHy^^Spom 


IS  tops 
for  former  track  star 


FAN:  Carl  McBain  looks 
back  on  his  years  as  a 
Bruin  in  the  1930s,  '40s 


Car!  McBain,  82,  is  a  self-pro- 
fessed huge  fan  of  UCLA  ath- 
letics. But  in  his  time  at  the 
school  he  was  also  one  of  the  greatest 
athletes  that  UCLA  -  and  the  country 
-  had  seen.  A  student  from  1937  to 
1941,  he  was  a  track  letterm^n  for  his 
final  two  years  under  coaches  Ducky 
Drake  and  Harry  Trotter,  as  well  as  the 
team  captain  during  his  senior  year. 

In  1940,  he  won  the  National  AAU 
400-meter  hurdles  title  with  a  time  of 
51.6  seconds,  then  a  UCLA  and 
American  record.  This  record  stood  in 
the  Pac- 1 0  for  1 7  years  and  in  the  coun- 
try for  10  years.  That  time  was  also  the 
fastest  in  the  world  that  year. 

In  the  1940  U.S.  Olympic  trials, 
McBain  also  won  the  400  hurdles  and 
was  voted  by  sportswriters  as  most 
likely  to  win  the  gold  medal  at  the 
Olympic  Games,  which  were  canceled 
because  of  World  War  II.  He  was 
named  to  the  UCLA  Hall  of  Fame  in 
1989.  In  the  following  interview, 
McBain  discusses  what  it's  like  to  be  a 
UCLA  fan,  as  well  as  some  of  the 
changes  he  has  seen  in  the  university 
and  Bruin  athletics. 

DB:  How  were  you  involved  with 
UCLA  ulhktks? 

McBain:  While  in  school,  I  was  on 
the  Student  Council  as  Chairman  of 
the  Athletic  Board  and  I  was  also  pres- 
ident  of  Blue  C,  the  club  for  all  major 


sports  -  football,  basketball,  baseball, 
track,  tennis  and  crew, 

DB:  Those  were  ihc  major  sporLsy  So 
what  were  considered  the  minor  sports? 

McBain:  Now  there  must  have 
been  eight  or  10  of  those.  (Long 
.pause.)  Archery.  Swimming,  diving. 
Handball.  Watei"  polo.  That  sort  of 
thing.  Those  were  minor  sports.  I 
don't  think  we  had  soccer,  but  if  there 
was  a  soccer  team,  it  would  have  been 
a  minor  sport.  You  see  how  hard  it  is 
for  me  to  guess  what  the  minor  sports 
■were?  But  there  were  several. 

DB:  How  did  (he  Daily  Bruin  do  in 
giving  the  minor  sports  coverage? 

McBain:  The  Daily  Bruin  was 
excellent  in  covering  sports,  both 
major  and  minor.  The  students  were 
very  interested  in  athletics  at  that  time. 
During  those  times  we  started  to  play 
use  in  football  for  the  first  time  since 
10  years  before  in  1936.  Out  of  the  four 
years  1  was  there  we  tied  two  games 
and  lost  two. 

DB:  How  did  you  become  the  Blue  C 
president?  What  were  your  duties? 

McBain:  Every  year,  all  the  sports 
got  together  to  elect  a  president.  I  was 
also  on  the  student  council  as  athletic 
chair.  We  just  really  ran  the  student 
activities  for  the  year  with  anything 
that  came  up.  If  it  were  spOrts  then  I 
would  bring  up  that  subject,  but  if  it 
was  forensics  or  student  involvement, 
Kenny  Washington  (the  1940  student 
council  president  and  also  a  member 
of  the  UCLA  football  and  track  team) 
would  work  on  that. 


Daily  BniinSportt 


••_■-.-.    J-     ■-■■     I    -.  ■    .  ^f  V. 

Scfitniiber  25-28,2000        5 


UCIA  SpOftj  lolofmition 

Bruin  fan  Carl  McBain  (far  right)  and  his  wife  Bette  pose  with  UCLA  football  coach  Bob  Toledo. 


DB:  How  have  you  stayed  involved 
with  UCLA  athletics? 

McBain:  Just  following  them. 
Following  the  sports  in  the  papers, 
always  being  in  touch  on  campus  with 
the  track  coach  and  some  of  the  com- 
petitors. And  now  I'm  very  involved 
with  the  whole  athletic  program.  I  put 
down  an  endowment  to  football  and 
track,  and  my  wife  made  an  endow- 
ment to  women's  golf  and  women's 
basketball.  How  about  that?  Women 
are  getting  stronger  and  stronger  and 
we're  doing  our  share  to  help  them. 

DB:  What  do  you  think  of  women's 
sports  today? 

McBain:  Oh,  they're  making  rapid 


strides,  especially  at  UCLA.  We're  up 
in  the  top  three  nationally  just  about 
every  year.  The  woman  heading  that 
program  is  (associate  athletic  director 
and  senior  women's  administrator) 
Betsy  Stephenson  and  she's  doing  a 
great  job. 

DB:  What  were  women's  sports  like 
when  you  were  at  UCLA? 

McBain:  There  were  no  women's 
sports  in  1940. 

DB:  What  made  you  chouse  to  cxtme 
to  UCLA? 

McBain:  At  USC  the  tuition  was 
S250,  and  the  tuition  here  was  $24.  I 
was  offered  a  scholarship  at  USC,  but 
I  didn't  take  it.  I  chose  to  come  to 


UCLA  and  pay  the  $24  because  my 
brother  just  graduated  with  honors  in 
zoology  (from  UCLA)  and  he  went  to 
Stanford  medical  school  for  graduate 
school,  i  started  being  loyal  to  the  ath- 
letic program  at  UCLA  when  I  was  in 
high  school  because  of  my  brother.  He 
was  keen  on  all  the  sports.  As  a  matter 
of  fact,  he  was  coxswain  of  the  crew 
team. 

DB:  What  mus  it  like  being  an  athlete 
at  UCLA  (in  1940)? 

McBain:  There  were  no  scholarship 
programs  for  athletics,  nor  grants-in- 
aids.  A  campus  job  was  the  reward.  I 
was  happy  to  get  one. 

S««QM,|Mgc6 


MR.  NOODLE 


Open  Ewetyday  from  11am  unUi  MUnigi 

AH  the  noodles  from  around  the  world 
are  here  at  Mn  Noodle, 


We  accept 


BRUii^ 


We  also  accept 


936  Broxton  Ave, 
Westwood  Village 
(across  from  Fox  Theater) 


student 
Special 


Dine-in  or  Carry  out 

receive  15%  off 

after  3  p.m.  until 

midnight  with  UCLA 

Bruin  Card. 

Exp  10-30-00 


;.!'.:  ■    ,-,»■■;»- 


t  cheer 


o 
tUe 


Dedication  and  athleticism  also  apply 
to  Ute  ultimate  unsung  team  sport 


(310)  208-7808 


Mir.  Noodle  mentt 

also  avaUilo  at 

Bangkok  Cafe 

(Nooiliy 

1QS1  BnwIonAvai) 


J 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

It  takes  a  lot  to  be  a  good  cheer  team. 

Dedication  -  enough  to  stand  practicing 
every  morning  from  6:30  to  9.  Enough  to 
keep  trying  out  for  the  team  when  you've 
broken  your  ankle  at  tryouts. 

Innovation  -  enough  to  completely 
redesign  a  routine  the  night  before  a  com- 
petition because  a  teammate  just  sprained 
her  ankle. 

Chemistry  -  enough  to  withstand  the 
loss  of  nine  veterans  and  still  build  a  team 
worthy  of  watching. 

And  definitely  trust. 

"The  hardest  thing  is  trusting  someone 
to  throw  you  35  feet  in  the  air,"  sophomore 
Alexis  Zanolli  said.  "I  try  not  to  (be 
scared);  I'm  pretty  fearless,  but  I've  been 
dropped  before." 

So  why  is  trust  so  important? 

"When  I  don't  have  confidence,  that's 
when  scary  things  happen,"  Zanolli  said. 

But  whatever  it  is  that's  needed  to  build 
a  good  cheer  team,  it  seems  the  2000^1 
UCLA  squad  has  it  all. 

"This  year,  especially,  our  team  dynam- 
ics are  just  great,"  said  junior  co-captain 


Jessica  Lee,  who  is  in  her  second  year  with 
the  squad.  "Our  team  is  so  close.  It's 
because  we  have  to  depend  on  each  other 
for  everything." 

That's  the  thing  about  chcerleading  -  it's 
the  ultimate  team  sport.  As  Zanolli  pointed 
out,  a  cheerleader's  safety  depends  on  the 
ability  of  her  partner  to  catch  her,  or  the 
stability  of  the  shoulders  she's  standing  on. 

It  would  seem,  then,  that  this  year's  team 
should  be  a  little  shaky,  because  out  of  six 
men  and  six  women  on  the  squad,  nine  of 
them  are  new  to  the  team. 

This  was  a  problem  in  the  beginning. 

"We  had  a  rough  start,  practicing  differ- 
ently because  we  didn't  know  each  other," 
Lee  said. 

But  then  she  pointed  out  why  the  team 
was  able  to  overcome  this  setback. 

"Everyone  is  so  willing  to  work,  and  so 
eager  and  hard-working.  Everyone's  so 
hard  on  him  or  herself.  We're  our  own 
worst  critics  because  we  don't  want  to  let 
the  team  down." 

It  goes  back  to  chemistry. 

"We're  like  a  great  group  of  friends  who 
hang  around  together  and  happen  to 
cheer,"  said  co<aptain  Kyle  Buinch 

The  team  should  be  agood  one  this  year, 


KEITH  ENRQUEZ/Daily  Bfuin  Seniof  Staff 

The  UCLA  cheer  squad  helps  keep  the  crowd  fired  up  at  the  Sept.  16  Michigan  game. 


and  when  they  compete  at  the  USA 
Collegiate  Nationals  in  February  they  are 
expected  to  contend. 

This  doesn't  mean,  however,  that  being  a 
member  of  UCLA  cheer  is  a  walk  in  the 
park.  Or  a  cartwheel  in  the  grass. 

The  team  has  many  community  commit- 
ments. On  Fridays  some  of  them  attend  the 
Bruins  breakfast  club  event,  where  Bruin 
patrons  eat  breakfast  with  the  cheerleaders 
and  a  few  of  the  football  players.  UCLA 
Cheer  also  participates  in  various  outreach 
activities,  teaching  inner-city  cheerieading 
squads,  and  working  the  James  West 
Fulfillment  Fund,  in  which  they  throw  a 
Christmas  party  for  disabled  kids. 

Aside  from  these  commitments,  the 
team  must  be  at  the  Wooden  Center  every 
morning  at  6:30  for  their  two-and-a-half 
hour  practice.  Twice  a  week  in  the  evenings 
they  also  meet  to  practice  their  tumbling. 

It's  all  too  perfect  being  a  part  of  some- 
thing that  many  people  do  not  even  consid- 
er a  sport  so  much  as  a  performance. 


Asked  if  she  thought  cheerieading  was  a 
sport,  Zanolli  answered,  "According  to  the 
NCAA  and  athletic  department,  no. 
According  to  most  of  the  worid,  yes,  ■  ,' 

"It  has  evolved  from  just  supporting  a 
team  into  something  that  combines  dance, 
acrobatics  and  gymnastics.  I  consider  it  a 
sport."  .   .  . 

Lee  would  have  to  agree. 

"It  requires  just  as  much  athleticism  as 
almost  any  sport  at  UCLA,"  she  said.  "It's 
definitely  a  dangerous  sport.  We  have  to 
have  endurance  and  physical  strength  ... 
but  it's  mentally  challenging  as  well.  We're 
just  having  to  get  over  fears  constantly,  and 
while  we're  doing  that,  we  have  to  perform 
as  if  it's  the  easiest  thing  in  the  world  -  and 
smile  through  it  all." 

It's  easy  to  have  fears  in  cheerieading. 

The  last  major  injury  the  team  had  was 
at  tryouts,  when  junior  Jen  Blank  landed 
one  foot  on  the  tumbling  pad  and  one  foot 

See  CHEEH,  page  22 


UCLA  students,  faculty  and  staff. . . 


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•.>i^. 


6        Septefflber  25-28, 2000 


Daly  Bruin  Sports 


Daily  Brain  Spoils 


September  25-28, 2000         7 


Q&A 

From  page  4 


DB:  What  was  your  joh  liki'? 

McBain:  First  of  all,  I  had  to  work 
all  the  hours.  It  wasn't  like,  'Oh,  here's 
a  job,  but  you  don't  have  to  work 
because  you're  an  athlete.'  I  worked  on 
a  stenographic  bureau,  taking  steno- 
graphic materials  all  over  campus  to 
the  professors.  I  probably  knew  every 
professor  on  campus  personally 
because  I  was  taking  things  to  their 
office  all  the  time.  1  knew  at  least  40  or 
50  of  them  by  name  and  sight.  It  was, 
'Hello  Carl,'  and  that  sort  of  thing. 

DB:  You  said  you  were  'fortunate'  to 
get  a  joh.  Why  is  that? 

McBain:  That  was  the  Depression 
years,  and  it  was  very  difficult  to  get  a 
job.  It  was  nice  to  find  one.  Fifty  cents 
an  hour  is  what  they  paid  us,  and  I 
think  if  I  hadn't  been  an  athlete,  I 
wouldn't  have  gotten  that  job.  That 
was  a  specialty  that  they  gave  us. 

DB:  What  other  changes  have  you 
noticed  in  UCLA  athletics  throughout 
the  years? 

McBain:  We  had  two  part-time 
coaches  in  track.  Now  they  have  many 
coaches  in  track,  and  they've  got  an 
equal  number  for  women.  I  don't 
know  how  many  coaches  there  are  in 
track  but  I  would  say  12  or  14.  (In 
1940)  the  coaches  worked  at  junior 
high  schools  in  the  day  time  but  they 
came  out  at  3  p.m.  to  coach.  Now  you 
got  12  or  14  full-time  jobs.  It's  special- 
ized. They  have  the  shot  put  and  the 
discus  and  the  javelins  —  that  takes  one 
coach.  And  now  they  have  the  sprints 
coach,  etc,  V        *  "*'■'-  ,.^      . 

*    DB:  What  do-you  think  Li  the  great- 
est or  mast  memorahle  moment  in 
UCLA  athletics? 
McBain:  Bob  Toledo's  sixth-in-a- 


row  win  over  USC.  We  were  not  sup- 
posed to  win  that  game  but  we  did  it. 

.•  DB:  So  what  did  you  think  oj  last 
year's  game,  when  the  streak  was 
snapped'^ 

McBain:  Last  year  was  an  unfortu- 
nate year  for  the  football  team.  We  had 
many  freshmen,  and  we  had  many 
injuries.  So  when  we  got  defeated  last 
year  I  said,  'Okay,  wait  until  2000 
comes  along.'  And  it  won't  be  long  too. 
We're  gonna  start  that  string  of  victo- 
ries. 

DB:  You  said  that  the  1996  football 
game  iv  your  best  UCLA  athletic  mem- 
ory, hut  what  about  the  1995  men's  bas- 
ketball national  championship? 

McBain:  There  are  so  many  cham- 
pionships, it's  hard  to  pick  out  one  or 
two.  Look  at  the  Wooden  champi- 
onships. Look  at  the  Harrick  champi- 
onship. But  that's  just  one  of  several, 
so  I'm  not  going  to  pick  out  any  more 
(great  moments)  than  I  did.  TTwl's  a 
tough  question.  Look  at  all  the  sports  - 
I've  been  really  thrilled  to  watch  the 
Softball  team.  When  you  look  over  all 
the  sports  over  many,  many  years,  it's 
just  hard  to  pick  out  one.  Like  tying 
USC  in  football  in  1937.  That  was  a 
thrill.  We  weren't  supposed  to  have  a 
chance.  I  think  they  were  favored  by 
about  40  points  or  so  and  we  tied  them. 

DB:  What  do  you  think  is  the  worst 
or  most  shameful  moment  in  UCLA 
athletics? 

McBain:  From  1936-40  we  played 
USC  four  times  a  year  in  basketball 
and  I  witnessed  16  UCLA  losses.  Then 
later  came  the  Wooden  years. 

DB:  When  you  first  came  to  school 
here,  did  you  ever  imagine  that  UCLA 
would  become  the  athletic  powerhouse 
that  it  iv  today? 

McBain:  You  know,  from  1940  to 
2000,  that's  60  years.  It's  amazing,  the 
changes  in  the  athletic  program.  But 


no  more  amazing  than  what's  hap- 
pened in  the  medical  center.  No  more 
than  what's  happened  on  the  campus. 
No  more  than  what's  happened  even 
in  the  dorms.  We  had  no  dorms  then. 
The  athletic  department  is  just  one 
part  of  the  whole  of  all  the  things  I 
mentioned.  Yes,  you  can  be  proud  of 
your  athletic  department,  but  also  of 
the  entire  campus. 

DB:  What  do  you  think  makes  the 
UCLA  athletic  program  so  special? 

McBain:  I  think  that  as  much  as  we 
want  to  win  in  the  athletic  program 
that  we  have,  it's  not  the  most  impor- 
tant thing  in  the  whole  worid.  It's  not 
the  most  important  thing  in  one's  life. 
But  1  know  for  the  athletes,  it's  close. 
Most  of  them  take  athletics  more  seri- 
ously than  anything  else.  But  they're 
also  ...  most  of  them  do  not  go  profes- 
sional. They  don't  make  the  profes- 
sional teams  and  they've  got  to  be  pre- 
pared for  life.  Academically,  (football 
head  coach  Bob)  Toledo  and  the  others 
stress  academics.  Not  just  to  keep  the 
men  eligible,  but  to  try  and  get  all  the 
guys  to  graduate.  About  80  percent  of 
the  football  team  graduates. 

DB:  How  has  being  an  athlete  at 
UCLA  affected  your  life? 

McBain:  Life  is  a  competition  - 
sports  helps  one  to  learn  how  to  accept 
winning,  as  well  as  losing,  as  part  of  life 
itself. 

DB:  Do  you  have  season  tickets  to  all 
the  games? 

McBain:  Oh,  yes.  Ever  since  I  grad- 
uated from  school.  I  have  eight  season 
tickets  for  the  football  games  at  the 
Rose  Bowl,  and  I  have  four  for  basket- 
ball. 

DB:  Do  you  also  have  season  tickets 
for  the  women? 

McBain:  We  have  season  tickets  for 
women's  basketball  as  well.  And  we 
(my  wife  and  I)  go  watch  the  golf  team 


sometimes..  . 

DB:  Describe  the  extent  to 

^^j^^BsassK". ' ". 

■  ift 

which  athletics  are  supported 

by  Bruin  alumni. 

McBain:   More  than   is 

known  by  most  students  and 

i^^m    \' 

-^ 

alumni.   There   are   many 

^KTf^  j>jj||k 

\ 

#^ 

groups,  too  numerous  to 

. 

mention,  that  give  their  sup- 

_jihBMH^H^^!!^^^V' 

\ 

port  to  the  UCLA  athletic 

||^^^^^^:>s:r>f<^-^    '  '  \ 

^ 

^ 

program. 

^v   £^ 

J' 

DB:  Are  'you  raising  any 
Bruin  fans  in  your  family? 

McBain:  My  granddaugh- 
ter. Shannon  Stewart,  is  a 
sophomore  at  UCLA.  And 
Melissa  McBain,  my  grand- 
niece,  is  a  sophomore  on  the 
crosscountry  team. 

DB:  Melissa? She 's  a  trans- 
fer from  Moorpark,  isn't  she? 

McBain:  Yes,  she  is.  I  took 
her  up  and  showed  her  the 
campus.  She'd  never  even 
seen  the  campus.  I  intro- 
duced her  around  and  she 
decided  that  was  for  her.  She 
was  going  to  stay  another 
year  at  Moorpark  but  she 
decided  to  switch  right  then. 
She  didn't  get  a  scholarship 
because  they  were  all  gone, 
but  she  is  a  walk-on  for  track 
and  cross  country.  It's  not  important, 
but  she  won  the  Community  College 
State  1500-meter  Championship. 

DB:  Is  there  anything  you  'd  like  to 
add  to  this  interview? 

McBain:  I  think  that  UCLA, 
nationally,  is  rated  among  the  top 
three  for  overall  athletic  programs. 
A  lot  of  credit's  got  to  go  to  (UCLA 
athletics  director)  Pete  Dalis  for 
having  all  sports,  both  men  and 
women,  rate  that  high  every  year. 
Pete  Dalis  certainly  deserves  credit. 


Bruin 
world 


UCLA  Spofis  Infofmation 

alumni  Carl  McBain  was  the 
's  best  400m  hurdler  In  1940. 

DB:  Do  you  have  any  predictions 
for  the  upcoming  season? 

McBain:  UCLA  wiH  defeat  USC 
this  year  to  begin  a  new  string  of 
wins. 

DB:  Is  there  anything  you  would 
change  about  your  experience  as  a 
Bruin? 

McBain:  None.  Win,  lose  or 
draw,  I  am  a  Bruin,  period. 

Interview  conducted  by  Pauline  Vu 
and  Amanda  Fletcher,  Daily  Bruin 
Senior  Staff. 


Bar  and  Grill 


or  alj  UCLA  and  major  sporting  events. 


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i 


September  25-28, 2000 


Diiiy  Bruin  Sports 


Bruins  are  going 


NICOLE  MILlER/OailySruin 


simm 


(Above)  Sean  Kern,  a  2-meter  man  for  Team  USA,  looks  to  pass  against  the 
Romanian  National  Team  in  a  pre-Sydney  exhibition  game  at  Pepperdine. 
(Left)  Former  Bruin  Holly  McPeak  and  partner  Misty  May  (not  pic- 
tured) from  Long  Beach  State  are  the  United  States'  No.  2  team  for 
beach  volleyball  in  this  year's  Olympic  competition 
(Far  Left)  Mebrahtom  Keflezighi  races  as  a  Bruin  against  USC  and  BYU 
in  1997. 


•} 


JESSE  POflTER/Oail/ Biuin  Seniw  S|*H 


Playing  for  the  other  side,  these  bruins  are 
representing  their  home  countries  in  the  games 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Though  55  Bruins  are  competing 
in  the  Olympics  right  now,  not  all  of 
them  are  seeking  glory  for  the  U.S. 
The  Daily  Bruin  profiles  three  of  10 
athletes  who  are  going  about  it  in 
Sydney  the  un-American  way. 

Marilyn  Chua  (junior)-  Malaysia, 
Swimming 


She  nearly 
didn't  make 
it. 

A  t 

Malaysia's 
Olympic 
swim  trials  in 
May,  Marilyn 
Chua  placed 
second  in  the 
5  0-  m  e  t  e  r 
freestyle     to 

earn  a  berth  for  the  country.  But  her 
time  still  did  not  meet  the  Olympic 
qualifying  time  of  27.27  seconds. 

Chua  swam  in  several  other  races 
to  try  to  make  the  time,  but  still 
couldn't  do  it.  Then,  at  the  Janet 
Evans  invitational  at  USC  in  July, 
her  last  meet  before  the  Olympics, 
Chua  gave  it  one  last  go. 

And  made  it. 

Her  time,  2716,  was  a  Malaysian 
record, 

"It's  not  a  big  deal.  I  felt 
relieved,"  Chua  said  afterward. 
"I've  been  trying  to  make  it  since  for- 
ever." 

The  Bruin,  who  was  born  in 
Malaysia  and  has  a  student  visa  to 
the  U.S.,  came  specifically  for  the 
opportunity  to  both  swim  and  learn. 

"Back  home  in  Malaysia,  the 
(government  and  school)  system 
does  not  provide  for  student-ath- 


letes. It's  either  you  swim  or  study," 
Chua  said  in  a  phone  interview  from 
Sydney.  "It's  virtually  impossible  to 
excel  in  both,  but  here  in  the  U.S., 
you  are  able  to  do  both  at  the  same 
time." 

She  made  the  decision  to  leave  her 
family  and  go  to  a  new  country  when 
she  was  16. 

"I  guess  it  was  kinda  hard  for  my 
family  to  let  me  go  and  be  thousands 
of  miles  away  from  their  'little  baby 
girl.'  but  they  knew  it  was  what  I 
wanted  to  do  and  they  knew  it  was 
the  best  thing  for  me,  so  they  were 
really  supportive  after  I  made  my 
decision,"  Chua  said. 

After  she  qualified  for  the 
Olympics,  Chua  stayed  in  the  U.S. 
and  trained  with  Bruin  head  coach 
Cyndi  Gallagher.  In  early  September 
she  went  to  Kuala  Lumpur  to  train 
with  the  six  other  Olynipic4x>und 
Malaysian  swimmers. 

"It's  a  lot  different,"  Chua  said. 
"It  isn't  as  fun  training  with  the 
(Malaysian)  team  compared  to 
UCLA.  The  team's  a  lot  smaller  and 
people  aren't  as  wild  and  crazy,  so 
it's  less  interesting  and  a  lot  quieter. 

"Generally,  Malaysians  are  pretty 
introverted  and  conservative,  and  do 
not  let  their  thoughts  or  emotions 
show  much." 

Chua  has  only  lived  in  the  U.S.  for 
four  years  and  goes  home  twice  a 
year.  Asked  if  she  considered  herself 
more  Malaysian  or  American,  she 
answered,  "I  haven't  been  in  the 
U.S.  as  long  ...  so  I  wouldn't  really 
consider  myself  more  American 
than  Malaysian. 

"But  I'd  like  to  think  that  original- 
ly and  culturally  I'm  Malaysian,  but  ' 
I've  adapted  and  been  very  heavily 
influenced  by  American  thinking 
and  ways,  so  in  that  sense,  you  could 
say  I'm  American,"  she  added. 


This  season  Chua  will  be  back  to 
swim  for  UCLA.  But  for  now,  she's 
participating  in  what  she  calls  "the 
greatest  accomplishment  an  athlete 
can  achieve." 

"It  means  the  world  to  me  to  be 
able  to  do  it,"  Chua  said.  "Being 
here  in  Sydney  is  like  a  dream  come 
true  and  I  can't  really  describe  my 
emotions.  You  gotta  be  here  to 
understand." 

Nada  Kawar  ("98)  -  Jordan,  Shot  Put 

Nada  Kawar  is  the  greatest  track 
and  field  Olympian  in  Jordan. 

She's  also  the  only  track  and  field 
Olympian  in  Jordan. 

The  Middle  Eastern  country,  nes- 
tled between  Lebanon,  Saudi  Arabia 
and  Israel,  sent  only  10  athletes  to 
the  games. 

"They're  not  that  great  at  sports 
in  Jordan,"  Kawar  said  in  a  phone 
interview  hours  before  leaving  for 
Sydney 

Born  in  Irbid,  Jordan,  Kawar 
came  to  the  U.S.  in  1989  and  has 
dual  citizenship. 

Kawar,  who  is  competing  in  her 
second  straight  Olympics  for 
Jordan,  is  the  country's  most  recog- 
nizable track  and  field  face  and  has 
been  featured  in  several  newspapers. 

"I've  brought  a  lot  of  recognition 
to  the  sport,"  she  said.  "They  all 
know  me." 

But  is  it  at  all  strange  being  a 
woman  and  representing  a  Middle 
Eastern  and  Islamic  country  as  an 
athlete  in  such  a  powerful  sport? 

"(Jordan)  is  still  considered,  I 
guess,  third  world.  Women  are  still 
not  given  alt  the  rights  ...  they're  still 
expected  to  raise  kids,"  Kawar  said. 
"It's  like  America  in  the  l9SOs  or 


Set 


UCLA^S  2000  OLYMPIANS 


This  year  the  Bruins  sent  a  total  of  SS  athletes  ancfcoaches  to  the  Olympk?,  42  of  them  fv 
the  United  States  and  1 0  for  foreign  countires.  Below  are  the  American  Olympianj. 


Women's  Basketball 

Natalie  WiUiams  ('94) 

Men's  Beadi  Volleyball 

Kevin  Wong  ('95) 

Women's  BeadiVolleybaU 

Ayett(Buckner)  Davis  ('94) 
J«r  Johnson  Jordan  ('95) 
HSMd>eak('9p) 


Rowing 

Sally  ScovelT 


Softball 

Christie  Ambrosi  ('99) 

Jen  BrundagefSS) 

Sheila  (Cofneii)Douty  ('84) 
.  Usaf<fl|pdez('93} 
^^Ain|fl(*ili»ed»Ounk)r) 

StaceyNttvemanQunhx) 

DotRkhanIsoft('83) 

Trade  ft  ReM 

ArayAcufr('97],hi9hjpnp 

Andrea  Anderson  r96),4it<^)0m  i 

Sheiia  Bunelt  ('95).  heptathkxi^ 

Oe¥Wf8^,1(J0m}KwK«i 

OtimWef9^,Aot| 

in8f95),dlsart1 

Kefle  )3 


^-Triniililobagftl 


Men's  Soccer  WJ^'* 

BradFriedel('92)  ^f^ 
FrankieHejduk('94)  # 
Peter  Vagenas  ('99)   ^ 
SashaVictorine('99) 

Women's  Soccer 

Jillian  Ellis  (Asst.  Coach) 
David  Vanole(A5st.  Coach 
JoyFaw(ett(f( 
Nandi  Pryc^freshmani 


Women^WMerl 

Guy  Baker  (coadi) 
Robin  Beauregard  I 
NicoNe  Payne  ('9B) 
Coralie  Simmons  fOO) 
Cathvine  von  Sdtwan*  COO) 

^slyiMifs  altentilt 


iACOauM»Mlr*n<n 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


September  25-28, 2000 


FOREIGNERS     fe. 

Fn)m])age8 

1960s." 

Still,  she  added,  "I've  never  had  the 
impression  that  people  are  surprised 
(that  I'm  an  athlete)." 

At  the  recent  Arab  Track  and  Field 
Championships  held  in  Jordan, 
Kawar  was  the  hometown  favorite. 
With  the  whole  stadium  cheering  for 
her,  she  didn't  disappoint  the  crowd, 
winning  the  shot  put  title. 

"Jordan  doesn't  have  very  many 
great  athletes,  so  they're  proud  of  the 
athletes  that  do  well,"  Kawar  said. 

It  was  in  the  U.S.,  though,  that 
Kawar  had  the  throw  that  qualified 
her  for  Sydney  At  the  UCLA-USC 
dual  meet  this  year,  competing  as  an 
individual,  she  threw  a  personal 
record  17  meters,  83  centimeters,  bet- 
ter than  the  Olympic  "B"  qualifying 
standard  of  17.35  m. 

Though  she  doesn't  live  in  Jordan, 
Kawar  says  that  it  means  a  lot  to  have 
the  right  to  represent  her  country. 

"Even  though  1  call  the  U.S.  my 
home,  Jordan's  my  home  country.  It's 
my  birthright." 

Mark  WUiams  (senior)  -  Australia, 
Indoor  Volleyball 

When  he  first  joined  the  Australian 
National  Team  a  year  ago,  Mark 


Williams  was  nicknamed  "sepo" 
because,  Williams  explained, 
Australians  say  Americans  are  like 
septic  tanks  -  full  of,  uh,  waste. 

Now  Williams,  who  was  bom  in 
Sydney  but  became  an  American 
transport  at  the  age  of  10,  is  more 
accepted  on  the  team. 

But  still,  "Once  in  a  while  I  still  get 
a  sepo  call,"  he  said  in  an  interview 
from  Sydney 

"The  longer  I'm  here  I  feel  more 
Australian,  but  I  am  definitely  an 
American  in  the  eyes  of  the 
Australians  because  of  my  thick 
accent,"  he  added. 

Williams  is  a  starter  for  the 
Australian  Team,  though  not  in  the 
capacity  he's  used  to.  Just  months 
after  being  UCLA's  outside  hitter, 
setting  the  sinigle-season  record  for 
most  aces  and  delivering  the  winning 
kill  for  UCLA's  18th  national  cham- 
pionship, he  is  now  Australia's 
libero,  a  player  who  is  only  allowed  to 
pass  and  dig. 

"It's  hard  to  play  libero  when  I'm 
used  to  doing  many  other  things,  but 
on  the  team  1  am  the  rookie  and  do 
whatever  I  can  to  play,"  Williams 
said.  "Ultimately  1  would  rather  be 
playing  outside,  but  it  wasn't  my  deci- 
sion." 

That's  not  the  only  thing  that's 
tough  about  playing  for  the  Aussies. 

"It's  different  from  UCLA 
because   volleyball   becomes   your 


UCU  OLYlilPIANS  FOR  OTHER  COUNTWES 

This  year  the  Bniins  sert  a  total  of  52  athletes  and  coad«  to  Ae  O^mpks,  42  of  them  for  the  United  States  and  10  fw 
Bekiw  aie  the  American  dympiam 


"■■t 


SOBKt:  iytit^ 


mkJ^mmmiJtM 


fanjpDhMkmLSifail 
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JACOeLIAO/DatlyBfuIn 


entire  life,"  Williams  continued.  "You 
practice  twice  a  day  and  lift  weights. 
It's  a  lot  harder  work  than  the  training 
at  UCLA." 

Williams,  who  once  said  he  felt 
more  American  than  Australian,  is 
getting  back  to  his  roots  with  all  the 
time  he  has  spent  in  the  country. 

"The  best  thing  about  being  in 
Australia  is  being  able  to  see  family 
that  1  haven't  seen  for  a  long  time,"  he 
said.  "I  was  bom  here  and  spent  nine 
years  here,  so  it  also  brings  back  fond 


memories." 

The  Australians  begin  play  on 
Sept.  17  and  play  every  other  day  In 
their  pool  they  will  face  Cuba,  Brazil, 
the  Netherlands,  Spain  and  Egypt. 
The  U.S.  is  in  the  other  pool,  and  the 
two  teams  won't  meet  unless  both 
make  it  to  the  medal  round. 

As  the  host  country  Australia, 
playing  in  its  first  Olympics  in  mens' 
volleyball  ever,  received  an  automat- 
ic bid.  They  are  fielding  one  of  their 
best  teams  ever  and  in  the  past  two 


years  have  defeated  teams  from  the 
top  10  like  the  United  States  and 
Brazil. 

"Hopefully  being  on  our  home 
turf  will  give  us  an  advantage," 
Williams  said. 

Still,  despite  his  desire  to  help 
Australia  go  further  than  it  ever  has 
before,  Williams  is  eager  to  get  back 
on  American  soil. 

"I  miss  America  because  that's  my 
home,"  Williams  said.  "I  feel  com- 
fortable with  my  family  and  friends." 


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Daiy  Bruin  Sptrts 


Ddily  BnjJn  Sports 


■«?■ 


W' 


'"^F-W'. 


September  25-28. 2000       11 


etting 


W.  VO(LfYBALL 


the 


With  few  new  faces  on  the  court, 

the  Bruins  loolc  to  spike  and  set 

the  ball  into  a  winning  season 


rOLLEYBALL 


By  Christina  Teller 

Daily  Bruin  Seaior  Staff 

With  five-sixths  of  their  1999  core 
bacic  on  the  court  in  2000.  the  UCLA 
women's  volleyball  team  is  in  good 
standing  Tor  a  championship  run  in  the 
new  millennium. 

"We're  very  excited  with  the  group 
we  have  this  year,"  outside  hitter  Ashley 


MINDYROSS/OiilyBiuin  Semoi  Staff 

Freshman  outside  hitter  Alyssa  Rylander  prepares  to  bump  the  ball 
in  UCLA's  Sept.  14  game  against  Washington. 


Bowles  said.  "Wehaveaiot  of  depth. 
We  came  in  with  a  lot  of  freshmen 
who  are  adding  to  the  group,  and 
we're  returning  five  starters.  It's 
going  to  be  a  very  exciting  season." 

Awarded  the  preseason  rank  of 
No.  I,  the  Bruins  dove  head  first  into 
their  preseason  of  tough  competi- 
tion, including  seven  matches 
against  top  25  opponents. 

"I  think  that  everybody  has 
worked  very  hard  in  the  off-season, 
so  we  felt  pretty  gratified  that  the 
hard  work  was  being  recognized  by 
coaches  and  writers  across  the  coun- 
try," head  coach  Andy  Banachowski 
said. 

"We 'really  saw  it  as  an  honor  that 
everybody  thought  that  we  could  be  the 
top  team  in  the  country." 

They  picked  up  right  where  they  left 
off  in  1999  -  by  defeating  defending 
national  champion  and  then-No.  2 
Penn  State  in  a  tough  five  game  match 
at  the  State  Farm  Classic  on  Aug.  25. 
Last  year,  a  loss  to  the  Nittany  Lions  in 
the  semi-final  round  of  the  NCAA  tour- 
nament ended  UCLA's  season. 

With  few  new  faces  in  their  regular 
lineup,  the  Bruins  have  worked  hard 
and  started  the  season  with  a  bang. 

Outside  Hitters 

Still  slamming  the  opposition  is 
hard-hitting  junior  Kristec  Porter.  As  a 
Player  of  the  Year  candidate.  Porter 
has  already  notched  her  second  match 
of  the  season  with  at  least  30  kills, 
breaking  the  Pac-IO  record  she  began 
setting  last  season.  Porter  led  the  Pac- 
IO  last  season  in  kills  per  game  with  an 
average  of  5.5  per  game,  and  became 
the  second  fastest  player  to  reach  1,000 
career  kills  in  NCAA  history.  She  dom- 
inates as  a  server  and  on  defense  in  the 
back  row,  already  posting  10  aces  and 


Aey  Substitutes^ 


BbHMteyCSeJ 
OvtiMtHktcr.n 


StxaylMlFrJ     > 

1 

MytuKytMdtrCFr,) 

VjButstdt  HiWw,  510^ 


1 16  digs  in  38  games. 

"I  think  everybody  recog- 
nizes what  an  outstanding 
athlete  Kristee  is," 
Banachowski  said.  "Kristee 
is  not  one  to  not  work  hard 
once  we  get  into  practice. 
Everybody  is  happy  to  have  a 
teammate  like  that." 

Key  at  both  the  serving 
line  as  well  as  at  the  net  is 
Bowles,  a  junior.  With  her  all- 
around  ability,  Bowles  led  the 
Bruins  last  year  in  digs  with 
330  and  in  aces  with  30.  She 
is  also  the  olT-setter  when  the 
starting  setter  is  helping  out 
on  defense. 

Setter 

Setting  the  Bruins  is  Erika 
Selsor  in  her  third  year  as  the 
creator  of  the  ofTensc.  which 
led  the  conference  and 
ranked  third  in  the  nation  last 
season  in  kills  per  game  with 
17.71.  Having  led  the  Pac-IO 

See  W.VOUiYBALU  page  16 


USA  TODAY/AVCA  POLL 


This  poll  for  women's  voileyball  was  last 
updated  09/18/200C. 

1 .  Nebraska 

2.  Hawaii 

3.  Penn  St. 

4.  Colorado  State 

5.  use 

6.  Long  Beach  State 

7.  UCLA 

8.  Pepperdine 

9.  Minnesota 

10.  Arizona 
.11.  Stanford 

12.  Florida' 

13.  UC  Santa  Barbara 

14.  Wisconsin 

15.  BYU 

16.  Pacific 

1 7.  Michigan  S 

18.  Utah 

19.  Santa 

20.  Kansas  State 

iOU«(f  wwwnpnconi 
podOiu  r«V<vd  n«T  MandJf 


JAC0eUAO/D*Uy  Bruin 


Selsor  makes  a  big  statement  with  little  fanfare 


Junior  Erika  S«lsor  sets  up  kills 
during  UCLA's  3-0  win  over 
Washington  State  University. 


VOLLEYBALL-  Bruin  setter 
makes  up  for  her  stature 
with  intensity,  fiery  voice 


By  AJ  Cadman 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff  ..-.. 

UCLA  junior  setter  Erika  Selsor 
has  never  been  described  as  proto- 
typical. 

On  a  team  of  unique  talent  and 
character  with  a  chemistry  that  has 
propelled  the  Bruin  women's  volley- 
ball team  to  a  top- 10  national  rank- 
ing, Selsor's  role  and  personality  on 
this  year's  squad  is  one  all  her  own. 

'Erika  is  somewhat  social  or  least 
more  so  than  she  used  to  be,"  said 
senior  defensive  specialist  Michelle 
Quon,  Selsor's  roommate.  "She's  a 
really  good  person.  What  she  lacks  in 
physical  height,  she  makes  up  for  in 
the  mental  game.  She  can  do  it  all." 

Selsor  modestly  puts  herself  in  a 
class  almost  by  herself. 

"I  am  not  your  typical  UCLA  set- 
ter," said  the  5-foot-6  Selsor,  refer- 


ring to  the  taller  players  the  program 
has  consistently  recruited  to  set  in 
recent  years.  "I  would  tend  to  com- 
pare myself  to  a  player  like  Holly 
McPeak." 

"I  think  what  makes  Erika  stand 
out  is  her  competitiveness,"  head 
coach  Andy  Banachowski  said.  "She 
wants  to  win  and  she  brings  everyone 
else  along.  Her  floor  leadership  is  a 
tremendous  quality  that  makes  her  a 
great  setter." 

The  1999  All-Pac-IO  Conference 
First-Teamer  grew  up  in  an  environ- 
ment different  to  what  many  have 
encountered  in  life  in  the  big  city. 
Her  hometown  of  Linden,  Calif,  just 
10  miles  cast  of  Stockton,  is  a  far  cry 
from  the  hustle  and  bustle  of  Los 
Angeles. 

"Linden  is  a  small  farming  com- 
munity with  a  lot  of  orchards," 
Selsor  said  of  where  she  grew  up. 
"There  are  only  two  large  roads 
there.  It's  very  agricultural.  It's  a 
small  town;  everyone  know»  every- 
one. There's  no  gas  statioi^  and  only 
one  market.    ^  / 

"It's  so  rural  that  there's  essential- 


ly nothing  to  do  there  unless  you 
farm,"  she  said  jokingly. 

But  regardless  of  where  one  is 
from,  volleyball  is  played  the  same 
way  everywhere. 

For  Selsor,  however,  the  style  of 
play  may  be  the  same  but  the  manner 
with  which  she  approaches  the  game 
is  strikingly  different. 

"I  think  of  myself  as  intense,  fiery, 
aggressive  and  determined,"  Selsor 
said.  "For  me,  it's  not  so  much  that 
people  say,  'She  is  a  gifted  athlete.' 
Rather,  it's  that  it  comes  down  to 
hard  work  and  perseverance. 

"I  love  to  play  volleyball.  I  love  to 
compete  with  people  and  I  love  win- 
ning. It's  about  getting  the  job  done." 

Her  teammates  have  noticed  this. 

"She  is  such  a  great  leader  on  the 
court/' junior  opposite  hitter  Ashley 
Bowles  said.  "She's  a  little  fireball. 
It's  always  been  fun  to  play  with 
her." 

The  setter  position  is  probably  the 
most  vocal  position  in  the  offense. 

Handling  the  setup  on  every  Bruin 
possession,  Selsor's  has  molded  her- 
self, one  of  the  most  integral  pieces 


of  the  Bruins'  national  championship 
puzzle,  into  a  model  of  consistency. 

"She's  more  comfortable  with 
running  the  team  and  she's  a  great 
left-side  setter,"  Banachowski  said. 
"She's  gotten  a  lot  more  comfortable 
setting  the  back  ball,  which  was  one 
of  her  weaknesses  when  she  came 
here. 

"I  think  that's  helped  us  develop  a 
balanced  attack  because  she  can  set 
the  ball  wherever." 

Much  of  that  stems  from  the  direc- 
tion of  the  coaching  staff. 

"Andy  (Banachowski)  has  taught 
me  so  much.  I  have  gotten  so  much 
better  since  I  first  arrived  here," 
Selsor  said  of  her  metamorphosis 
into  one  of  the  nation's  premier  col- 
legiate setters. 

Handling  the  arduous  responsibil- 
ities and  numerous  tasks  that  com- 
prise running  such  a  potent  offense 
with  the  likes  of  Bowles,  junior  out- 
side hitter  Kristee  Porter,  senior  mid- 
dle blocker  Elisabeth  Bachman  and 
sophomore  middle  blocker  Lauren 

SeeSClSOR,pa9c26 


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12       September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Brum  Sports 


Women's  volleyball  coach  has  been 
winning  prhes  since  the  beginning 


BRIDGET  OBRIEN/Daily  Bfuin  Senior  Staff 

Women's  volleyball  head  coach  Andy  Banachowski  maintains  a 
calm  demeanor  during  a  3-0  sweep  against  Washington  this  year. 


BANACHOWSW:  Years  as 
player  helped  when  time 
came  to  impart  expertise 


By  Christina  Teller  .  '    - 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  game  didn't  enter  his  life  until 
his  junior  year  at  UCLA,  but  it's  been 
his  passion  the  37  years  since. 

"It's  exciting.  I  like  competition, 
and  I  like  to  be  competitive,"  said 
Andy  Banachowski,  who  is  now  in  his 
34th  year  as  head  coach  of  the 
women's  vol- 
leyball team. 

"It's  such  a 
unique  sport 
in  the  way  that 
you  really 
have  to  rely  on 
one  another. 
There's  so 
much  team- 
work involved 
that  one  play- 
er can't  take 
over  a  game  single^andedly,"  he  said. 

Banachowski  has  made  the 
women's  volleyball  team  what  it  is 
today  He  has  been  at  the  helm  of 
UCLA  women's  volleyball  since  its 
beginning. 

Banachowski  first  came  to  UCLA 
as  a  student  in  1974  without  any  expe- 
rience in  volleyball.  In  high  school,  he 
swam  and  played  basketball.  By  the 
time  he  graduated  from  UCLA,  how- 
ever, he  was  an  All-American  in  vol- 
leyball, despite  having  played  the 


sport  for  only  two  years. 

"  He  was  a  really  good  fundamental 
player,"  said  Banachowski's  UCLA 
coach,  Al  Scales.  "He  didn't  have  a 
great  vertical,  but  he  maximized  his 
physical  abilities  and  learned  skills 
really  well. 


In  his  time  as  a  player,  die  game  of 
volleyball  didn't  attract  the  players 
and  attention  that  it  does  today. 
Scates,  who  still  coaches  the  Bruin 
men's  team,  remembers  recruiting 
athletes  around  campus  whom  he  felt 
could  learn  the  game. 

"In  those  days,  we  tried  to  find 
good  athletes  on  campus  because 
there  weren't  any  high  school  volley- 
ball programs,"  Scates  said.  "We  had 
to  train  athletes  who  were  on  cam- 
pus." 

Banachowski  turned  out  to  be  one 
ofhis  best  students. 

Posting  a  career  tally  of  873  wins 
at  the  opening  of  the  2000  season, 
Banachowski  is  the  winningest  coach 
in  women's  volleyball  history. 

He  learned  the  game  almost  at  the 
same  time  he  became  an  undergradu- 
ate assistant  to  the  women's  program 
in  1965.  The  team  was  competing  at 
the  club  level  at  the  time  and  the  expe- 
rience of  learning  volleyball  was  still 
fresh  in  his  mind  as  he  began  coaching 
the  sport.  -— rr^r 

,"He  went  through  it  and  learned 
from  scratch.  He  didn't  know  about 
the  game  before  he  started  playing," 
Scates  said.  "I  think  it  was  helpful  for 
him  to  go  through  and  really  learn  the 
game.  It  helped  him  leam  to  teach  it 
because  he  was  teaching  things  that  he 
just  learned." 


■^  Banachowski  has  learned  coaching 
as  a  player  and  assistant  under  Scates, 
but  most  of  all,  he  learned  how  to 
coach  from  experience.  As  an  assis- 
tant to  the  U.S.  women's  volleyball 
team  in  the  1992  and  '96  Olympics 
and  as  head  coach  in  the  World 
University  Games  in  '93,  the  conti- 
nental and  international  competitions 
have  exposed  him  to  a  wide  range  of 
volleyball.  ,    .,,  „.    < 


"We  expect  to  be  in 

the  top  national 
picture  every  year." 

Andy  Banachowski 

Women's  volleyball  coach 


"Experience  teaches  you," 
Banachowski  said.  "1  always  try  to 
keep  on  learning.  Going  to  the 
Olympics  and  being  involved  in  the 
national  team  program  gave  me  an 
opportunity  to  see  other  styles  of  vol- 
leyball." 

And  according  to  his  players,  his 
experience  is  translating  into  success. 

"He  is  a  great  guy  who  demands 
the  respect  of  his  players.  We  listen 
because  we  know  he  knows  what  he  is 
talking  about,"  said  Bruin  setter  Erika 
Selsor. 

"He  usually  reminds  me  about  the 
choices  to  make  on  the  pourt  and 

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14       S«ptembef  25-28, 2000 


t. 


The 


w.  qgLF 


Diiiy  Bruin  Sports 


Squad  hopes  to  use  added  talent,  y^ 
drive  to  make  up  for  last  year's  \J 
missed  ber^  to  the  NCAAs 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

At  first  glance,  things  look  bleak 
for  this  year's  UCLA  women's  golf 
team. 

Not  only  did  last  year's  team  not 
make    the    cut    to    the'  NCAA 


MASTERCARDCOUiGIATEGOlFroii 

This  poll  for  women's  goif  was  last  updated 

09/06/2000. 

1. 

Arizona 

2, 

Stanford 

3. 

Ouk* 

4. 

Southern  California 

5. 

Auburn    r.^- 

& 

TulM 

lf$>i  ■ 


7.  Texas 

it  San  Jose  State 

9.  Georgia 

10.  Louisiana  State 
n.  Arizona  State      ' 
1Z  Tennessee 

13.  Purdue 

14t  Pepperdine 

14t.  Waice  Forest 

16.  New  Mexico  State 

17.  Oldahoma  Statt 

18.  .UCLA 

19.  TCU 

20.  Mictiigan  State 


SOURCE  wwmn^am 
■politJUi^jdiMIOAM/MOa 


JACOB  LIAO/Daily  Bruin 


Championship,  they  lost  to  gradua- 
tion Amanda  Moltke-Leth,  the  one 
player  who  nearly  qualified  as  an 
individual. 

Still,  second-year  head  coach 

Carrie  Leai^y  remains  optimistic 

about  her  18th-ranked  Bruins. 

"I  think  the  team  looks  good  this 

:   year.  Everybody  on  the  team 

last  year  came  back  looking 

like  they  improved  a  lot  over 

the  summer.  Plus,  we  have  a  lot 

of  talented  new  freshmen,"  she 

said. 

Leary  is  not  exaggerating, 
neither  about  the  improvement 
of  the  returners  nor  the  talent 
of  the  freshmen.  Just  take  a 
look  at  some  individual  Bruins' 
summer  track  record: 

Senior  Laura  Moffat,  a 
member  of  the  Scottish 
National  Team,  won  the  World 
Junior  Ladies  Amateur  in 
Europe.  She  also  placed  sec- 
ond in  the  European  Ladies 
Team  Championships. 

Junior  Alicia  Um  won  the 
Ventura  County  Women's 
Amateur  Championships  and 
also  qualified  for  the  U.S. 
Amateur. 

True  freshman  Gina  Umeck 
won  the  Ping  Phoenix 
Invitational  as  a  junior  com- 
petitor. 

This    freshman    class    is 


already  making  an  impact,  and  not 
only  giving  the  veterans  a  run  for 
their  money,  but  for  the  traveling 
spots  as  well. 

With  three  seniors,  one  junior, 
four  sophomores  and  six  freshmen 
all  battling  for  five  traveling  spots, 
the  players  are  guaranteed  nothing 
and  must  prove  themselves  over 
and  over  again  in  each  tournament. 

But  then  again,  this  only  forces 
the  women  to  push  each  other  to 
new  heights. 

"Is  it  competitive?"  Moffat 
asked.  "Yeah,  it's  pressure,  but  I 
think  it's  good  pressure  because  the 
people  who  come  out  on  top  are 
going  to  be  the  best  ones."  : , 

With  a  14-player  lineup,  the 
theme  for  this  year's  women's  golf 
team  is  depth. 

"We  have  a  lot  more  depth  and 
strength  than  we  did  last  year," 
MofTat  said. 

There  will  be  a  two-team  system 
throughout  the  year:  the  Gold 
squad  and  the  Blue  squad.  The  top 
nine  golfers  will  be  on  the  Gold 
team,  from  which  the  traveling  five 
will  be  selected.  The  remaining  five 
will  be  on  the  Blue  team,  where  the 
players  can  better  develop  their 
game. 

The  teams  will  be  re-evaluated 
on  a  monthly  basis,  with  the  possi- 

SeeW.60lF,pa9e25 


v^-^-^rrwyr**'' 


ill*' III,. 


Daily  Brum  Sports 


September  25-28. 2000       l| 


M.0/.f 


Unranked  but  optimistic,  UCLA  looks 
forward  to  a  good  season,  turnaround 


IKLA  Sporn  Infotmaiion 

Senior  Laura  Moffat  Is  expected  to  be  a  leader  for  the  18th-ranked 
women's  golf  team  for  the  2000-2001  season. 


A  few  items  you  can  sell  in  the  Daily  Bruin's  Bruin  Bargains: 


your  ex- 
boyfriend's 
rare  groove 
collection 


the  picture  frame  that 

used  to  sit  on  your 

t)edslde  table 


that  necklace  he 
A         gave  you 

N    -  — _- 
D    ^ 


Bruin 
Bargains 

everyWed.  &Fri. 


.     .  ■'  ■•'■•'    1.    :■  ■ 

Where's  the 
UCLA  Journalism 
""Department?  ~ 

You're  holding  it. 


MO  DEMirrMEin; 

JUSTJOUMMUSM 

The  Daily  liniiii  i.s  our  of  I  lie  Im-.sI 
lilai'cs  in  llic  iiHlion  Id  learn 
jniiiimti.sni.   II  WAS  I  he  hainiti;; 
^rmiiiil  loi  I'dlilxci  l'ri/.c  \viiiiMT.s 
David  Sliaw  and  T(iny  Aiilh. 
Olhris.  like  lormcr  lirnin  cdiloLs 
.loci  Sicjfal,  "(io<Ml  .Morning 
Amci  ira'  cnlcrixiMmcnl  <-dil<M.  and 
hank  Spolnil/..  ptiNlui-cr  of  "The 
X-Files,"  wcnl  on  lo  can-cr.s  in 
oilier  media.  And  Tor  each  of 
llii-m.  I  here  were  hiindreil.s  of 
olhei.s  who  laimehcti  (areerN  wilh 
I  he  .skill.s  I  hey  learnnl  working  al 
I  he  Daily  Ikuin.  Kei-eiil  llHlly 
liniin  slalTeLs  wenl  on  lojolksal 
|ilare.s  like  I  he  I.k),v  Anp-lex  Tim<'s. 
Ilie  rhiladelphia  ln(|uirer.  Ilie  .San 
.lo.sc  .Merciiiy  New.v,  and  Ko.\ 
'H'levi.sioii. 

The  Daily  Ml  uin  oilers  ', 

o|i|K)ihinilie.s  lor  .sliidenKs 
inleicsled  in  nearly  oveiyH.<<|Nrl  of 
join  iiali.sm — Ironi  repoilint;  lo 
l)ti.sine.s.s.  from  new-sroom 
nianatrenienl  lo  Inlernel 
join  Iiali.sm.  And  we  do  il  Mler 
than  any  cla.s.s  iN-iaas*'  we  oiler  you 
the  clianee  lo  do  mon-  llian  sliidy 
We  olTer  real  exiM-riencc.  Sn  a 
re|MMler  or  |il>')lo^rni|ih('r  liir  Hie 
Daily  liniin      nil  jffl  a  lionl-iow 
.seal  lo  Ihe  (      il.s  llial  .slia|>e  oin 


i-ani|iii.s  and  eoinmunily  There 
i.snl  a  more  e.\eilin(;c.\lra- 
i'iirri(  iilar  aclivily  in  coll*'),'!-. 

Il  doe.siri  nialler  what  your  major 
i.s  or  if  you  have  any  jirevimi.s 
e.xperiem-*'  in  new.s|»a|M'r.s.  Well 
I  rain  you  lo  re|Mtrl.  de.si^rn.  or 
.sliool  |)irl(ire.s  in  lour  wei-keiid 
woi k.slio|Ks  laiiKliI  by  vmikinjf 
jonrnali.sl.s.  Von  nii^dil  end  u|i  end 
iij)  like  many  who  eame  iK-loie 
yoii — wilh  a  .soliti  .slail  loward  a 
ran'cr. 

■UfTTOGCTIIVOUfED? 
HOFSNOW... 

Hyond  like  lo  know  more,  eome  lo 
onrOrienlalion  and  Dpen  lloii-se 
TiiefMlay.  0(1.  :|  al  ri:.t(l  p.m.  in 
A«kerman  I  nioii  (irand  Itallrooiii. 
Come  hear  whal  we  Iwve  lo  olTei. 
visil  our  ollli  e.s.  and  m«>4'l  Ihe 
Hniiri  slaiT. 

For  more  informalion.  rail  ii.s  al 


MASTERCAiU)C0U£(jiATEG6iiP0a 

This  poll  for  men's  (|<^  w«  iasti^xfeited 

09/06/2000. 

1. 

Ciemson 

BiSaorgia 

3.        Georgia  Tech      ^§1^ 

5. 

Houston                   *  * 

MMzona 

7. 

UNLV                        3 
HPMahoma  State 

9. 

Texas                       f 

■Iflorthwestern 

11. 

Florida                       # 

MHPb     New  Mexico                 1 

13. 

TCU:  ^jumigjiijij 

flan^   Wake  Forest              1 

15. 

August*  sw*MM 

MHili^     South  Carolina             \ 

17. 

North  Florida  "^^li||> 

MHHit  -^MUHim                      1 

19. 

Brigham  Young        j 

MBH|k:-::^Kent  State                  i 

Wm-MNUfUH 

■ 

>l*l>i*ftMNM«nM                                                         I 

MddillAO/tMlySfuk. 

By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

After    last    year's    NCAA 
Regionals,  in  which  the  UCLA 
men's  golf  team  missed  earning  a 
berth  to  NCAA  Championships  by 
just  four  strokes,  Parker  McLachiin 
was  quiet. 

"It  hurt  a  lot,"  McLachiin  said 
afterward.  "A  lot  of  practice  and  a 
lot  of  time  was  put  in,  and  to  only 
miss  it  by  a  few  siiots  -  it  makes  you 
wonder  why  you  did  all  that  practic- 
ing. 

Well,  it's  a  new  season,  and 
McLachiin  is  back  on  a  team  deter- 
mined to  avoid  the  great  disappoint- 
ment of  2000. 

"The  last  two  yean  we've  missed 
it  by  about  two  shots,"  head  coach 
Brad  Sherfy  said.  "Everybody  has  a 
concern;  they  want  to  turn  this 
around." 

Including  McLachiin,  a  junior, 
the  team  consists  of  two  seniors,  two 
sophomores  and  four  freshmen. 


This  schedide  only  Psts  tlw  men's  ^  sdwMe. 


iTrffytif/,|fiBWMiB,i. 


09/11-09/12      fNlktNwtinMstClatsk 
09/18-09/19      ■*  '--^nmj  Wwwflegate 

«ntUakN»}ty 
09/22-09/26      #lkisiiyiinritatiofla) 
10-06-10/08      9CaipetCapital 

-GwrnjiaTwh, 
11/06-11/07      #Pfttt 


SOWO:  »im>ifc(»dw*»IIIMUgi|| 


JACOB  UACVDailyBtuIn 

Through  UCLA's  first  two  tourna- 
ments, seven  of  the  players  have 
already  gotten  a  chance  to  compete. 

At  the  first  tournament,  the 
Northwest  Collegiate  Classic,  the 
youth  of  the  team  represented  UCLA, 
with  three  freshmen  and  two  sopho- 
mores helping  the  unranked  Bruins  to 
an  eighth-place  finish  (out  of  18  teams). 

The  Bruin  men  showed  tenacity 
early  on.  At  the  Northwest  they  found 
themselves  in  13th  place  after  two 
rounds,  yet  clawed  their  way  up  to 
claim  eighth  by  the  end  of  the  event. 

True  freshman  Steve  Conway  led 
the  Bruins  and  finished  the  tournament 
in  a  tie  for  1  Ith.  He  made  the  greatest 
improvement,  shooting  rounds  of  70 
and  74  in  the  first  two  days,  but  shoot- 
ing a  64  the  final  day  to  move  from 
42nd  place  to  I  Ith. 

"That's  a  phenomenal  round," 
Sherfy  said.  "TTiat's  the  lowest  score 


UCLA  Spotis  (nfofination 

Senior  Parker  McLachiin  is  one  of  the  team's  top  returners. 


we've  had  since  B.J.  Schlagenhauf 
('99)  shot  a  64.**  ■ 

Sophomore  Travis  Johnson  was 
UCLA's  second  finisher,  tying  for 
25th.  Freshmen  John  Merrick  (T-33), 
Roy  Moon  (T-71 )  and  J.T.  Kohut  (T-74) 
rounded  out  the  players. 

By  the  next  week  and  the  Inverness 
Invitational  in  Ohio,  that  roster  became 


two  freshmen,  one  sophomore,  one 
junior  and  one  senior. 

McLachiin,  who  didn't  go  to  the 
Northwest  because  he  needed  to  finish 
summer  school,  made  the  trip  to  Ohio 
along  with  Johnson,  Conway,  Merrick 
and  senior  Ross  Fulgentis. 

~~       ■,    „■„        SecM.GOLF,page23 


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W.VOLLEYBALL 

From  page  10 

in  assists  in  1999  with  14.12  per  game, 
Selsor  has  worked  with  her  ofTense 
during  the  two  previous  seasons  and 
will  continue  their  chemistry  ituo  the 
next. 

Middle  Blockers 

In  the  middle,  fifth-year  senior 
Elisabeth  Bachman  dominates  at  the 
net,  both  offensively  and  defensively. 
Second  in  the  nation  last  year  in  hit- 
ting percentage  with  a  .429  clip  and 
tied  for  first  in  the  Pao-IO  in  blocks 
per  game  with  1.33,  Bachman  returns 
for  her  final  season  ready  to  continue 
her  reign.  Already  posting  a  .301  hit- 
ting percentage  in  the  opening  match- 
es of  the  regular  season,  Bachman 
looks  to  be  on  track  for  another  stel- 
lar season. 


"We  play  defense  well, 

pass  very  well  and  run 

a  quick  offense." 

Ashley  Bowles 

UCLA  outside  hitter 


Having  lost  6-foot-2  junior  middle 
blocker  Angela  Eckmier  to  an  ACL 
injury,  the  Bruins  were  forced  to 
regroup  early  on  and  train  others 
more  heavily  for  the  position.  Six- 
foot  redshirt  freshman  Ella  Harley 
has  stepped  up  for  the  Bruins  and 
adds  quickness  to  the  front  line. 
Though  she's  a  few  inches  shy  of 
Eckmier's  height,  Harley  makes  up 
for  it  with  her  Aggressive  play  at  the 
net,  including  four  kills  in  the  Bruins' 
victory  over  Penn  State. 


"When  we  lost  Angela  Eckmier,  I 
think  that  hurt  a  little  bit  of  our  conti- 
nuity," Banachowski  said.  "Ella 
Harley  stepped  in  and  is  doing  a  great 
job  at  the  middle,  but  she's  kind  of 
learning  that  position.  Everyday 
we're  getting  better  and  better  as  Ella 
learns  more." 

Having  worked  her  way  into  a 
starting  position,  sophomore  Lauren 
Fendrick  has  provided  aggressive 
play  at  the  net  along  with  consistent 
defense  in  the  back  row.  Fendrick  led 
the  team  in  digs  against  Washington 
State  with  12,  and  tallied  1 1  kills  and 
two  assisted  blocks. 

Defensive  Spedailsto 

Dominating  the  backcourt  is 
senior  defensive  specialist  Michelle 
Quon,  in  her  fourth  season  as  a 
relentless  force.  Though  she  is  on  the 
court  for  only  half  a  rotation,  Quon 
came  in  second  in  digs  with  only  28 
less  than  team  leader  Ashley  Bowles 
in  1999. 

A  new  force  in  the  bade  row  has 
been  freshman  defensive  specialist 
Stacy  Lee.  With  16  digs  in  the  regular 
season,  Lee  is  neck-and-neck  with 
Quon  in  her  current  tally. 

Outlook  * ' 

Without  a  consistent  serve,  a  team 
cannot  win.  It  is  the  jump  serve  that 
Bowles,  Porter  and  now  Selsor  smack 
at  their  opponent  that  is  a  key  factor 
in  their  winning  game.  Against 
Washington,  serving  was  their  main 
tool  in  shutting  down  the  opposing 
attack. 

"I  thought  their  attack  was  going 
to  be  a  lot  stronger.  We  served  them 
out  of  their  attack  and  forced  them 
into  a  lot  of  errors,"  Banachowski 
said.  "Our  serving. kept  them  from 
being  able  to  generate  and  run  their 
offense." 

UCLA  sports  only  half  of  their 
starters  under  six  feet,  with  an  aver- 
age height  of  5-11  in  their  regular 


starters.  But  what  they  lack  in  size, 
they  make  up  with  their  quick  attack. 

"I  like  the  way  we  were  able  to 
counter-attack  and  attack  with  our 
quickness.  We  have  good  size,  but  we 
don't  have  great  size,  so  we  have  to 
use  the  quickness  that  we  have," 
Banachowski  said  after  the  team  beat 
Washington. 

All-around  talent  will  drive  the 
Bruins  through  their  regular  season 
into  postseason  position. 

"I  think  that  all-around  we  cover 
every  position  and  every  skill  very 
well,"  Bowles  said.  "We  play  defense 
well,  pass  very  well  and  run  a  quick 
offense.":    ;     ^!    .r    ..■ 


"We  can  be  in  position 

where  we  can  get 

into  the  final  four.That's 

our  goal." 

Andy  Banachowski 

Women's  volleyball  head  coach 


With  four  Pao-10  teams  in  the  top 
25,  including  No.  5  USC  and  No.  1 1 
Stanford,  the  Bruins  will  face  more 
tough  competition  up  ahead  in  pur- 
suit of  the  Pac-10  crown,  which  they 
shared  with  Stanford  last  year. 

"Every  team  in  the  Pac-10  is  a 
great  team,"  Bachman  said. 
"Between  'SC  and  Stanford,  it's 
going  to  be  a  run  for  the  money  for 
who  brings  it  out  at  the  end." 

With  the  Pac-10  season  already 
underway,  UCLA  has  a  2-0  confer- 
ence record  and  is  7-3  overall.  After 
two  conference  games  they  occupy 
the  No.  7  spot  and  are  in  good  posi- 
tion for  a  postseason  run. 

"That  seems  to  be  a  hard  spot  to 
hold  onto  this  year,"  Banachowski 


said  of  the  No.  I  ranking.  "There's  a 
lot  of  good  teams  out  there.  Looks 
like  everybody's  going  to  take  turns 
knocking  each  other  around  a  little 
bit,"  Banachowski  said. 

"I  think  we're  capable  of  being  a 
championship  team.  We're  going  to 
be  solid  and  we're  going  to  be 
mature,"  Banachowski  said.  "We  can 
be  in  position  where  we  can  get  into 
the  final  four.  That's  our  goal." 


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COACHES 

From  page  12 


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10/13    ^^H^^l 

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10/28    ^^^^^H 

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11/03    ^^^^^H 

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11/07    ^^^^^^H 

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11/10    ^^^^^H 

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11/11  ^K        S 

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eilAO/D*«vanil 

which  ones  to  not  make.  He  knows 
how  to  han(fle  me.  He  can  read  me 
very  wdl,"  she  said. 

The  pace  of  voUeyball  has  quick- 
ened since  he  started  coaching, 
largely  due  to  the  increasing  size 
and  speed  of  modem  college  ath- 
letes. A  faster  game  out  on  the 
court  translates  to  more  intensive 
and  specific  workouts,  focusing  on 
each  player's  particular  skills. 

Having  lost  only  two  players  to 
graduation  from  the  1999  squad, 
the  2000  team  grabbed  the  No.  1 
spot  early  on  and  have  remained  in 
the  top  10  since. 

The  pressure  of  directing  such  a 
prestigious  program  is  intense,  but 
with  the  amount  of  experience  he 
has  under  his  belt,  Banachowski 
isn't  fazed  by  it. 

"I  think  it's  something  that  all  of 
the  coaches  here  put  on  them- 
sdves.  We  expect  to  be  in  the  top 
national  picture  every  year," 
Banachowski  said.  "We  work  hard 
to  maintain  our  level  there  and  cer- 
tainly become  disappointed  and 
frustrated  when  we're  not  at  that 
level. 

"There's  pressure,  but  I  think  we 
enjoy  that  and  that's  why  we're 
here." 

It  isn't  the  fact  that  he  is  the  first 
women's  volleyball  coach  to  be 
inducted  into  the  Volleyball  Hall  of 
Fame  or  the  fact  he  was  awarded 
USA  Volleyball's  AlKTime  Great 
Coach  Award  that  drives  him. 
Banachowski  coaches  out  of  love 
for  the  game. 

"When  I  began  coadiing,  it  was- 
n't like  I  wanted  to  be  in  the  Hall  of 
Fame  or  anything  like  that," 
Banachowski  said.  "It's  kind  of  like 
icing  on  the  cake  of  having  this  job 
and  being  involved  in  coaching." 


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t— 


18       September  25-28, 2000 


■j*^:. 


Daily  Bruin  Spam 


m:s 


RIDE 


At  no.  I ,  UCLA  proves  itself 


WORTHY  AMONG  MORE  LAUDED 
„   EAST  COAST  SOCCER  TEAMS 


By  Jim  Guthrie 

Dally  Bruin  Contributor 


Nine  months  ago,  the  kick  by  Indiana's  Ryan 
Mack  in  ihe  classic  quadrupl€K)vertime  semifinal 
game  seemed  much  more  deadly. 

The  Bruins  entered  the  game  No.  2  in  the  nation, 
with  one  of  the  best  squads  the  school  had  ever  put 
together.  Additionally.  UCLA  was  trying  to  win  one 
for  all  the  West  Coast  schools  hurt  by  the  unspoken 
East  Coast  bias  in  NCAA  soccer.  They  wanted  to 
establish  themselves  as  one  of  the  top  programs  in 
the  nation  by  capturing  their  second  title  in  four 
years. 

Those  lofty  expectations  crashed  down  to  earth 
when  the  shot  ofT  Mack's  foot  hit  the  back  of  the  net. 

Now,  after  months  of  overcoming  the  disappoint- 
ment and  heartache  of  last  season's  end,  the  Bruins, 
No.  I  in  the  NSCAA  rankings,  are  back  to  work,  try- 


ing to  head  to  Charlotte  for  the  College  Cup.     ;. 

And  their  chances  are  looking  much  better  after 
starting  the  season  3-0  and  gaining  a  crucial  2-1  upset 
win  over  then-No.l  Indiana  on  Sept.  2. 

"This  is  a  different  group  of  players,"  head  coach 
Todd  Saldana  said.  "Our  team  felt  they  were  the  best 
team  in  Charlotte  last  year,  but  we  learned  some 
lessons  from  last  year.  We  have  to  deal  with  the  phys- 
ical elements  of  the  East  Coast  teams  and  also 
impose  our  West  Coast  style  of  play." 

The  Bruins  enter  their  first  year  in  the  new  Pao-10 
men's  soccer  conference  without  many  of  the  key 
players  from  last  year's  semifinal  run.  Gone  are 
NSCAA  player  of  the  year  Sasha  Victorine,  his  U.S. 
Olympic  teammate  Pete  Vagenas  and  2000  MLS  No. 
1  draft  pick  Steve  Shak. 

In  their  place,  the  Bruins  will  count  on  the  leader- 
ship of  preseason  All-American  seniors  McKinley 
Tennyson  Jr.  and  Shaun  Tsakiris.  They  also  have  one 


BWDGET  0-BHI€N/Daily  Brum  Sertof  Sljff 

Freshman  Matt  Taylor  celebrates  after  scoring  against  Loyola 
Marymount  on  Aug.  26.  He  scored  UCLA's  only  goal  in  the  game. 

of  the  top  recruiting  classes  in  the  nation,  forming  a 
solid  squad  for  1999  NSCAA  Far  West  coach  of  the 
year  Saldai^a. 


Forwards 

Tennyson,  sophomore  Tim  PIci'cc  and  junior  Sean 
Walker  highlight  a  strong  group  of  young  forwards 
who,  with  the  loss  of  much  of  the  scoring  punch  in 
the  midfield.  are  counted  on  to  produce  a  large 
amount  of  goals. 

The  majority  of  the  scoring  should  come  from  6- 
foot-2  Tennyson,  one  of  the  team's  most  valuable 
players  last  year  with  12  goals.  The  Indianapolis 
native  will  assume  the  role  of  team  leader  and  try  not 
to  focus  on  the  fact  he  is  a  Hermann  trophy  candi- 
date. 

"My  thing  is  to  stay  focused,"  said  Tennyson,  who 
scored  a  key  goal  in  the  Indiana  game  this  year.  "I 
want  to  improve  individually  and  improve  the  team 
as  much  as  possible.  The  awards  will  come  later." 

Without  question,  Tennyson  will  be  the  focus  of 
the  team  (and  many  opposing  defenses).  If  UCLA 
wants  to  have  another  successful  season,  it  will  need 
even  more  production  from  the.forward.  Even  with 
all  of  the  pressure,  however,  Tennyson  looks  like  a 
star  in  the  making. 

More  will  be  expected  of  Walker  and  Pierce  as 
well  Pierce.  UCLA's  1999  Most  Improved  Player, 


'■k 


MCC«LM<VD4Ny  Bruin 


S«eM.S0CaEK,pag«19 


Sophomore  leads  Bruins  in  quest  to  avenge  Final  Four  loss 


M.  SOCCER:  Memory  of 
overtime  defeat  serves  as 
motivation  for  Thompson 


By  Chris  Umpicnrc 

Daily  Bruin  Staff 

It  was  a  sight  Scot  Thompson 
won't  soon  forget. 

Indiana  had  just  defeated  the 
UCLA  men's  soccer  team  3-2  in  a 
quadruple  overtime  NCAA  semifi- 
nal, ending  not  only  the  Bruins'  1999 


season,  but  the  collegiate  careers  of 
10  players,  several  of  who  just  lost  it. 

The  players  fell  to  the  ground  in 
disgust  after  the  game  and  began  to 
cry  as  their  last  shot  for  a  national 
title  fell  to  the  wayside. 

"I  felt  so  sorry  for  (Steve)  Shak, 
Sasha  (Victorine)  and  all  the  seniors 
because  they  were  just  bawling  on  the 
field,"  said  Thompson,  who  as  a 
freshman  had  scored  the  game-tying 
goal  to  push  the  game  into  overtime. 

"It  was  hard  to  watch." 

Thompson  has  used  the  memory 
of  that  difficult  defeat  to  inspire  him- 


«ITM  fNWQUtZ/Djilv  Bruin  Semw  SlaTf 

Midfielder  Scot  Thompson  juggles  a  ball  on  the  steps  of  Men's  Gym. 
His  quickness  and  passion  have  helped  the  team  earn  a  No.  1  rank. 


self  in  the  off-season  and  he  has  car- 
ried that  into  the  regular  season. 
Behind  the  sophomore  defender's 
leadership  and  play,  the  Bruins  are 
3-0  and  after  four  weeks  of  play  are 
ranked  No.  1  in  the  nation. 

The  speedy  and  athletic  Thompson 
already  has  two  goals  in  the  young 
season,  including  a  goal  against 
archrival  Indiana.  Spearheaded  by 
Thompson's  goal,  the  Bruins  beat  the 
then-No.  I  Hoosicrs  2-1  in 
Bloomington,  Ind.  on  Sept.  2. 

While  Thompson  admits  Indiana 
is  not  close  to  the  team  it  was  last  sea- 
son, it  was  still  sweet  to  get  some 
revenge. 

"I  was  going  crazy  after  I  scored," 
he  said.  "I  wanted  to  go  in  the  stands 
and  laugh  at  all  of  them." 

UCLA  head  coach  Todd  Saldafta 
said,  "Before  the  game,  I  talked  a  lot 
about  the  players  that  couldn't  be 
there  to  seek  the  revenge.  We  weren't 
just  playing  for  ourselves;  we  were 
playing  for  the  10  players  that  had  to 
leave  with  that  bad  taste  in  their 
mouth. 

"I  think  Scot,  in  particular,  took 
last  year's  result  to  heart  and  wanted 
to  set  it  straight,"  he  addod. 

He  took  it  to  heart  because  he  had 
grown  close  to  the  seniors  last  season, 
learning  from  the  likes  of  current  Los 
Angeles  Galaxy  midfielders  Victorine 
and  Pete  Vagenas,  and  New  York/ 
New  Jersey  Metrostars  defender 
Shak.  To  see  them  leave  college  with  a 


loss  was  tough  to  swallow. 

Last  year's  UCLA  Rookie  of  the 
Year,  who  started  eight  games  as  a 
freshman,  constantly  received 
instruction  from  the  upperclassmen. 

He  said,  in  the  end,  that  he  learned 
from  the  seniors  how  to  use  his  speed 
with  skill.  He  learned  where  to  find 
guys  and  who  to  play  the  ball  to. 

With  the  seniors  gone,  Thompson 
has  Uken  more  of  a  leadership  role 
this  season. 

"He  wants  to  be  a  team  leader  this 
year,"  senior  defender  Ryan  Lee  laid. 
"Last  year  he  kind  of  took  th«  back 
seat,  he  didn't  really  want  the  bail. 
He'd  be  in  the  game  but  he  didn't  ask 
for  the  ball. 

"This  year  he's  demanding  the 
ball,"  Lee  added. 

Thompson  sees  the  difference  as 
well. 

"I'm  a  lot  more  focused  on  what  I 
need  to  do,"  he  said.  "I'm  not  saying 
I'm  the  perfect  player  now.  I'm  say- 
ing I'm  getting  better  as  a  player.  I'm 
making  fewer  mistakes.  I  think  now 
as  an  older  player  I  have  to  set  the 
example  for  the  freshman  coming 
in." 

The  transformation  really  began 
during  that  fateful  Final  Four  match. 

After  being  inserted  into  the  game 
with  14  minutes  left  and  his  Bruins 
down  two  goals,  Thompson  gave  a 
preview  of  what  to  expect  from  him  in 
the  coming  years. 

Hoping  for  a  spark,  Saldaifa  decid- 


ed to  send  Thompson  in  not  as  a 
defender  but  as  a  forward. 

"I  hadn't  played  forward  since  I 
was  a  little  kid,"  Thompson  said.  "So 
I  have  no  idea  what  I'm  doing.  At  first 
I  wasn't  doing  the  stuff  they  wanted 
me  to  do.  So  they  had  to  calm  me 
down  and  say,  'Scot,  win  head  balls 
and  stay  close  to  Sasha.'" 

The  coaching  staff  had  to  calm  him 
down  because  he  had  a  good  case  of 
the  butterflies. 

"i  was  so  nervous  going  into  the 
game,"  he  said.  "I've  never  been  on 
live  television  before.  It  was  a  huge 
stadium  (Erickson  stadium  in 
Charlotte,  N.C.).  Lights  every- 
where."* 

A  minute  after  he  entered  the 
game,  Shak  was  able  to  find  the  net 
after  a  Bruin  comer  kick. 

Instead  of  celebrating.  Thompson, 
thinking  like  a  senior,  immediately 
jumped  into  the  goal  to  grab  the  ball 
in  order  to  get  play  restarted  as  quick- 
ly as  possible. 

"That's  the  type  of  player  he  is," 
Saldafta  said.  "He's  a  winner.  In 
every  game  in  practice  he's  the  guy 
that's  keeping  score.  Whether  it's  a 
oneH)nH>ne  drill  or  it's  ll-on-II  full 
field  he's  the  guy  whose  always  pay- 
ing attention  to  the  score." 

Then  at  the  82nd  minute  mark, 
Thompson  broke  free  from  the 
defense  and  Victorine  found  him  with 


SMl1IOMKON,pa9e2J 


. .,  y. 


Daily  Brum  Sports 


M^OaER  . 

FrompageHi .  .     .   >v  \i^     X 

may  be  the  key  to  its  offensive  attack 
if  his  play  can  draw  enough  attentit>n 
off  Tennyson. 

Added  to  the  mix  are  redshirt 
freshman  Kyle  Julian  and  a  wealth  of 
true  freshmen,  including  Cliff 
McKinley,  Adolfo  Gregorio.  Matt 
Taylor  and  John  Carson. 

Midfielder!       :;v     V      :  :{ 

Despite  the  loss  of  stars  Victorine, 
Vagenas.  Nick  Paneno,  Shea  Travis 
and  Adam  Cooper,  the  midfield  core 
has  managed  to  maintain  a  large 
amount  of  talent,  centered  around 
Tsakiris.  A  first-team  All-MPSF  selec- 
tion, Tsakiris  should  be  one  of  the 
main  attacks  for  the  team. 

"It's  a  good  start  for  the  team  we 
have,"  Tsakiris  said.  "We  are  excited 
we  are  No.  1  and  that  we  beat 
(Indiana).  But  we  aren't  going  to 
loosen  up.  Being  No.  1  doesn't  mean 
too  much  right  now." 

Returning  midfield  contributors 
include  5-7  sparkplug  junior  Ryan 
Futagaki,  senior  Caleb  Westbay, 
junior  Brandon  Kay  and  senior  Brian 
Foote.  Futagaki  should  benefit  from 
his  play  on  various  national  teams, 
but  he  is  most  valuable  for  the  hustle 
he  demonstrates  on  every  play. 
This  group  doesn't  have  as  much 


September  25-28, 2000        19 


talent  as  last  year,  but  should  pro- 
vide a  solid  middle  to  complement 
the  rest  of  the  team. 

,.   '■      ■•i  .    '■.     ■■    '■■-    V- 

Defender*.    •' 

The  defense  could  be  called  the 
sorcerers  and  the  apprentices  as 
senior  returning  team  captain  Ryan 
Lee  and  sophomore  Scot 
Thompson  mentor  a  strong  group 
ofnew  faces.  ■ 

Lee  was  an  offensive  catalyst 
even  on  the  defensive  end  last  year 
with  1 1  points,  and  he  will  be  a  rock 
in  the  backfield  yet  again. 
Thompson  was  named  the  team's 
Rookie  of  the  Year  after  starting 
eight  games  and  scoring  the  goal 
that  sent  the  Indiana  game  into 
overtime.  He  has  been  busy  in  the 
off-season  playing  with  the  U.S. 
Under-20  National  Team. 

The  rookies  of  this  bunch  are  as 
solid  as  any  group  in  the  country. 
Nelson  Akwari  and  Alex  Yi  were 
members  of  the  1999  U.S.  Under-17 
team  along  with  incoming  Bruins 
Gregorio  and  goalie  D.J.  Countess. 
Tony  Lawson  and  Leonard  Griffin 
are  two  more  standout  recruits  who 
were  national  team  pool  players. 

This  group  holds  the  key  to  the  sea- 
son in  being  able  to  feed  the  ball 
upfield  while  taking  pressure  off  the 
goaltender.  How  the  defense  will  be 
able  to  blend  the  old  guard  with  the 
new  should  be  the  main  focus  early  on 


MEN'S  SOCCER  SCHEDULE 


Ot/23     WcstrooM 
(M/26     UyobMarympont 
09/01     tBHtitr 
09/02     «iMfaM 
09/06     SaiH>ic90&ate 
09/17     SmFl«dS(9 
09/21     #UCinriiie 

09/24  (KSantilMten 

09/28  9SMttCim 

10/01  StMnysCaltyt 

10/08  tStanfarri 

10/13  OnftnSUt* 

10/15  Washington 

10/20  9Cai 

10/22  •OnsoflState 

10/26  #CalStattFtiiieftM 

10/28  PoitiaMi 

11/03  9W4SiNfl9ton 

11/10  Stanfoid 

11/12  Cai 

in  the  season. 


W,3-0 

LM 

W,5-0 

W.M 

W,5-0 

W,3-0 

7:00  PM 

2.-00PM 

7.-00PM 

2:00  PM 

2.-00PM 

5:30  PM 

2:00  PM 

12:30  PM 

2:00  PM 

7:00  PM 

2:00  PM 

7:00  PM 

2:00  PM 

2:00  PM 


JACOeLIAO/Datly  Bruin 


Goalies 

How  the  Bruins  handle  the  loss  of 
star  keeper  Nick  Rimando  should  be 
the  most  interesting  development  of 
the  season.  The  net  minding  duties 
will  be  handed  over  to  6-foot- 1 
Countess  who  has  been  called  "one  of 
the  most  experienced  youth  goalkeep- 


ers in  U.S.  history"  Many  are 
already  proclaiming  him  the  future 
goalkeeper  for  the  U.S.  National 
Team.  In  the  meantime.  Countess 
will  focus  on  establishing  himself  as 
one  of  the  team  leaders  and  one  of 
the  best  college  keepers  in  the 
nation. 

Backing  up  Countess  is  a  pair  of 
6-foot-2  athletes  in  redshirt  fresh- 
man Zach  Wells  and  junior  Stephan 
Gardner. 

Outlook 

In  the  eariy  parts  of  the  season 
the  Bruins  have  shown  they  have 
regained  the  intensity  and  momen- 
tum from  last  year's  Final  Four 
run.  Any  questions  about  the  inex- 
perience of  the  defense  or  the 
team's  ability  to  compete  with  the 
elite  in  the  country  were  dispelled 
by  the  win  over  Indiana. 

Another  shot  at  the  champi- 
onship is  far  from  certain,  howev- 
er. The  Bruins  have  the  tools  but 
they  must  work  on  team  chemistry, 
stay  within  their  game  plan  of  tak- 
ing games  one  at  a  time,  and  avoid 
early  season  upsets,  as  in  the  exhibi- 
tion game  against  unranked  LMU. 

"We  have  a  very  good  chance  of 
reaching  the  same  level  that  we  did 
last  year, "  Saldana  said.  "Things 
will  be  done  in  a  different  way, 
though,  because  this  group  will  need 
to  win  games  by  being  organized 


and  by  supporting  each  other." 

Eacly  season  battles  against  top 
teams  like  Santa  Clara  and  Portlan'd- 
wilFbe  a  test  for  the  team's  durability 
and  talent.  If  they  can  remain  a  cohe- 
sive unit,  a  Pac-10  championship  and 
another  run  at  Chariotte  should  be 
no  problem  for  Saldana  and  his  crew. 


NSCAA/ADIDASPOU 

This  poll  for  men's  soccer  was  i^ t  updated 
09/18/2000.  ,;v  -•  "f; 


1 


3. 
4. 
5. 
6. 
7. 

9. 
10. 
11. 
12. 

13. 


16. 
17. 
18. 
19. 
20. 


UCLA 

Fenn  State 

Creighton 

Connecticut 

St.  Johns 

CS-Futlerton 

South  Carolina 

Virginia 

Southwest  MIssotN^  St 

Portland 

Brown 

Indiana 

North  CaroUim.        .«^ 

14.  Pittsburg 

15.  UMBC 
Duke 

Southern  Methodist 
Marquette 

San  Jose  State  ^""* 
Va-Commonwealth 


SOUUCt  mnnt  npKom 
*olijurrt»wd«H»  Monday 


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22       September  25  28,2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


CHEER 

From  page  5 

on  the  gymnastics  floor.  She  broke  her 
ankle. 

Before  that,  Buinch  said,  the  most  seri- 
ous injury  was  a  few  years  ago  at  camp  after 
a  cheerleader  landed  a  straight  body  flip. 

"She  landed  with  locked-out  legs  on  the 
grass  and  crashed  a  disc  in  her  back," 
Buinch  said.  "By  the  end  of  the  football  sea- 
son it  was  so  bad  she  had  to  leave  the 
squad." 

But  due  to  good  spotting,  those  injuries 
are  rare.  Still,  the  cheerleaders  are  fully 
aware  of  the  risks  they're  taking. 

"There  are  always  tumbles  and  falls  and 
bruises  and  cuts,  but  it  comes  with  the  terri- 
tory," Lee  said.  "It  is  scary,  but  once  you 
get  over  it,  it's  so  much  fun." 

Other  problems  come  lip  in  the  course  of 
cheering. 

One  time  at  camp  a  member  of  the  squad 
sprained  her  ankle  shortly  before  the  team 
was  supposed  to  perform  before  hundreds 
of  people.  The  night  before,  they  frantically 
rearranged  a  routine  they'd  been  practicing 
foj  two  weeks,  trying  to  adjust  for  the  loss 
ofone  key  member. 

They  wound  up  taking  2nd  place  out  of 
20  teams. 

"It  always  happens.  Even  at  our  first 
game,  we  had  planned  out  this  extensive 


routine  to  do  for  the  tailgaters  and  we 
fourid  out  that  the  space  we  have  is  just  a 
fourth  of  the  space  that  we  planned,"  Lee 
said.  "We're  always  throwing  stuff  together 
at  the  last  minute." 

Despite  the  problems,  the  rewards  have 
been  infinite. 

_  "You're  at  the  center  of  85,000  people 
screaming  and  cheering.  You're  supporting 
your  team,"  Zanolli  said  when  asked  what 
was  the  most  rewarding  thing  about  cheer- 
ing.'■•  ■",■        ^-,:.r'■  :':'.'•]■'■.  ■'■-■"'^  ':^  "".'" 

She  recalled  a  specific  game  that  exem- 
plified this:  "The  Alabama  game  was  amaz- 
ing, winning  that,  feeling  the  players'  ener- 
gy ...  seeing  myself  on  national  television," 
Zanolli  said. 

After  alMhe  cheerleaders  are  among  the 
biggest  fans  on  campus.  What  else  would 
make  them  go  through  a  two-week  tryout 
process  that  includes  ai^interview  and  two 
unofficial  six-hour  clinics  along  with  the 
required  tryout  days? 

"I  think  all  the  girls  on  the  team  are  just 
Bruin  fanatics,"  Lee  said. 

The  cheer  squad  has  a  long  year  ahead  of 
it,  what  with  volleyball  games,  basketball* 
games,  and  football  games  for  a  team  in  a 
place  no  one  thought  they'd  be. 

But  that's  okay.  They're  ready  for  all  of 
it:  the  complications,  the  time  commitment, 
the  possible  injuries. 

Because  whatever  it  takes  to  succeed,  the 
UCLA  cheerleaders  have  got  it. 


VU 

Frompage2  :         ^  ^ 

co-founder  of  SCORE. 

Sure,  insurance  pays  the : 
medical  bills,  but  there  are  a  lot 
of  things  insurance  doesn't  pay 
for.  Things  you  don't  ever 
imagine  being  a  problem  until 
you  can't  walk. 

"When  someone  succumbs 
to  a  spinal  cord  injury  there  are 
a  lot  of  expenses,"  Gjos  said. 
"Some  of  those  are  revamping 
a  home  to  widen  doorways  and 
alter  bathrooms.  There's  outfit- 
ting vehicles  and  even  just    ' 
insurance  co-payments. 

"That  could  easily  amount  to 
$10,000.  Our  philosophy  is, 
when  you  suffer  an  injury,  you 
should  be  focused  on  trying  to 
get  better.  You  shouldn't  be 
worrying  about  financial  issues, 
so  we  try  and  lessen  that  bur- 
den." 

SCORE,  which  has  had  a 
number  of  fund-raisers,  has 
also  given  $75,000  to  the 
Christopher  Reeve  Paralysis 
Foundation  and  the  Miami 
Project  to  help  them  in  their 
search  for  a  cure  for  spinal  cord 


injuries. 

For  Gjos  personally,  the 
diagnosis  hasn't  changed  much 
in  the  past  year. 

But  he  hasn't  given  up. 
" . .  -"Unfortunately,  his  condi- 
tion has  stagnated,"  Vogel  said. 
"But  he  continues  to  do  rehabil- 
itation. He  is  on  his  handbike  a 
lot.  He's  keeping  himself  in 
great  shape  and  physical  condi- 
tion in  order  for  him  tof'have 
the  best  chances  when  a  cure 
does  come  around." 

A  year  ago  Gjos  said  that  the 
mornings  were  the  worst  part  - 
the  waking  up  and  having  to 
deal  with  reality  all  over  again. 

"The  mornings  have  gotten 
better.  You  just  adjust,"  he  said. 
A  few  seconds  passed  and  he 
amended,  "Yeah,  from  time  to 
time,  definitely,  it  still  hurts.  I 
think  that's  just  natural,  given 
how  active  I  was  before  and  the 
limitations  I  have  to  deal  with." 

But  when  he  does  feel  bad, 
he  laughs  about  it.  On  the 
SCORE  Web  site,  Gjos  jokes 
that  in  his  free  time  he's  on  the 
Santa  Monica  boardwalk  "ter- 
rorizing joggers  with  his  hand- 
cycle  " 

"I'm  getting  on  with  my 


life,"  he  said  recentry. 

Gjos  has  graduated  from 
UCLA's  Anderson  School  and 
is  the  Director  of  Business 
Development  for  a  startup  fiber 
optics  company,  exactly  what 
he  said  he  wanted  to  do  before 
he  graduated  a  year  ago. 

•'In  a  startup  you  do  a  little 
bit  of  everything.  You  help  out 
wherever  you  can,"  he  said. 

Gjos  is  moving  on,  and  he's 
not  blaming  anything,'  least  of 
all  hockey,  for  his  condition. 

"My  love  for  the  sport  has 
not  faded,"  Gjos  said.  "I  still 
follow  it.  The  Stanley  Cup 
games  were  pretty  good.  I  was 
just  disappointed  that  Colorado 
didn't  make  it.  I'm  a  big  fan  of 
Ray  Bourque." 

As  he  said,  most  days  you 
can  find  him  hanging  out  on 
Santa  Monica  terrorizing  jog- 
gers, so  if  you  happen  to  be  jog- 
ging there,  watch  out  for  him. 

He's  6-feet  tall  and  he'll  be 
the  one  on  the  handbike! 

Vu  is  the  2000-01  sports  editor, 
and  you  can  e-mail  her  at 
pvu@media.ucla.edu.  To  learn 
more  about  SCORE,  visit 
vinvw.scorefund.org. 


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Happy  Hour  M-F,  4-7pm 
Welcome  Back  UCLA! 


Obviously,  <fc»  is  noijourman^ gjfm.  Sure,  we  strenglhenjour  body.  But  we 
also  strengthen  jour  mind.  That's  how  we  go  about  buildif^kaders.  Shaping 
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at  WWW.UAKt^BOFrioiiUMif,  Tou'll  looe  our  mtrotte  cit, 


>mf^'m'»  <  ■■■— Xi^lWWfi^— ^»<>w 


UM^BRMDptftl 


September  25-28. 2000       23 


M.GOLF  ; 

FnNnpagelS 

There  the  Bruins  nnished  sixth  out 
of  13  teams.  McLacMin  9nd  Johnson 
tied  for  13th  place.  Merrick  and 
Fulgentis  tied  for  27th,  and  Conway 
tied  for  37th. 

"We  finished  terribly  and  made 
youthful  mistakes."  Sherfy  said.  "We 
had  guys  play  the  backside  (last  nine 
holes)  poorly.  They've  got  to  finish  it 
off." 

At  the  hehn  is  Sherfy,  whose  play- 
ing condition  is  as  strong  as  his  coach- 
ing condition.  Last  summer  he  played 


in  his  fourth  PGA  Championship. 

The  team's  top  golfer  is 
McLadttin.  Last  year  in  12  tourna- 
ments, he  had  four  top- 1 0  finishes  and 
six  top-20  finishes.  "Parker's  got  a 
pretty  good  chance  of  being  an  Ail- 
American,"  Sherfy  said. 

Johnson,  last  year's  freshman  sen- 
sation who  earned  Pao-10  Honorable 
Mention,  won  the  Long  Beach  Match 
Play  tournament  this  summer.  He 
also  qualified  for  and  played  in  the 
U.S.  Amateur. 

Over  the  summer  Conway  tied  for 
second  at  the  Nabisco  Legendary 
Headwear  Tournament.  He  also  tied 
for  sixth  at  the  AJGA  Rolex  tourna- 


ment. Merrick  tied  Conway  at  the 
Rolex  evcDt  and  qualified  for  the  U.S. 
Amateur.  There,  he  advanced  to  the 
second  round  of  match,  play. 

So  far,  the  team  is  unranked 
according  to  the  Mastercard 
Intercollegiate  poll. 

*niiat's  just  the  way  it  goes.  By  the 
end  of  the  year,  you're  gonna  see  us 
there,"  Sherfy  said. 

This  team  has  high  expectations. 
They  expect  to  redeem  last  year's  four 
stroke  loss  and,  this  time,  make  it  to 
the  National  Championship. 

"It's  about  time  to  turn  it  around." 
Sherfy  said  again.  "I  think  we  have 
the  guns  to  do  that." 


THOMPSON 

FfDtnpagelS 

a  perfect  crossing  ball  that 
Thompson  headed  past  the  Indiana 
keeper  to  complete  the  Bruin  come- 
back. 

"That's  the  most  important  goal  of 
my  life  so  far,"  he  said.  "But  I'd 
rather  not  have  scored  that  goal  than 
not  have  us  win  the  game.  To  me  the 
win  is  the  important  thing,  not  the 
goal."  ^.:,•^V^•^  ■■■/••.:■■,,-:■' -■•■V  :..-•; 

Lee  said, 'TTepTayed'soTid  for "usTri 
that  game.  He  did  what  he  was  asked 
to  do.  They  gave  him  a  specific  job 


and  he  performed  it  perfectly.  Scot 
was  a  good  addition  to  our  team  last 
year  and  we  expect  a  lot  out  of  him 
this  year." 

While  UCLA  didn't  end  up  win- 
ning that  day,  Thompson  figures  the 
Bruins  will  get  other  chances  at  win- 
ning a  national  title  during  his  stay  in 
Westwood.  And  he'll  use  the  memory 
of  that  tough  loss  t9  help  get  his  team 
back  to  the  Final  Four. 

"I  remember  after  the  game  think- 
ing in  the  back  of  my  mind  that  I  still 
have  three  more  years,"  Thompson 
said.  "I  knew  I  had  to  work  my  butt . 
off  in  the  next  three." 

He  has  gotten  off  to  a  good  start. 


BeatelMsm 


Students  needed  for  nightly  news  broadcast  premiering  this  quarte 


K 


r('Ij,\lv  News,  a  new .sluilcnl  projcci  iHiimhinfr  Ihi.s (|iiarlcr. 
is  lookiii^r  lor  .sludcnls  inlrnisird  in  working,' as  [jrcMJurcrs  Ibr 
a  nightly  Idcvision  news  liroadcasi  r(!alurinj,'(am|tiis  ik^ws 
aixl  s|M(rls.  I CLAlv  isclmnnci  2U  in  Ihc  dorms  and  olhrr 
CHmptis  ixiildin^rs. 

(lHndidal(!s  should  be  molivalcd.  orf,'aniz«'d,  ai1iculaU\  and 
inloH'slrd  in  H(^ws.  Ciandidalcx  should  be  c.a|>al)l(!  of  working 
in  H  l«!am  cimlrxl  in  a  dynamic,  d(«dlir»!-driv«!n  j^nvironmcnl. 


While  .some  l)arkf,'round  in  hi>,'h  scIumiI  or  college  journalism 
is  prt'lcrri'd,  c.xpi'ricncc  is  nol  n('(('.s.sarv.  We  pntvidc 
Irainin).'  in  workshops  lau^hl  by  a  UhaI  b^lcvision  news 
prmhirer. 

S<!l('(lion  is  a  <x)m|M^Ulivf  procc^ss.  Ilyou  arc  inlrrcslcd,      ~ 
pbvis«M'onlH<l  usal  ii<^Hlv@m«Vtia.in',la.(«lu  Ibr  applicalion 
dclaik 


journalism@ucla 

IJwklkiiin  •  'mi-Slukyil  Mi^niK  •  I  !(}lwMv  Nctw 


I 


24       Sriitember  25-28, 2000 


Diiiy  Bnin  Sports 


.-"4 


Depth  and  talent  may  help 

the  Bruins  achieve  its     ; 

absolute  goal:  to  he  champs 


respect 


«** 


ByJeffAgase 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  next  level:  that's  what  UCLA  women's 
soccer  head  coach  Jillian  Ellis  wants  her  team  to 
reach  this  season. 

As  the  No.  5  Bruins  finish  up  non-conference 
play  and  prepare  for  the  start  of  Pac-10  play, 
both  unprecedented  experience  and  the  promise 
of  youth  smile  down  on  the  rolling  hills  of 
Westwood.  The  Bruins  return  nine  starters  from 
last  season's  squad  that  advanced  to  the  third 
round  of  the  NCAA  tournament  and  welcome 
the  most  highly  touted  freshman  class  ever 
assembled  in  school  history. 

Ellis  returns  for  her  sophomore  season  at  the 
helm  after  a  solid  15-5-1  outing  in  1999,  but  sees 
in  this  year's  team  the  potential  for  previously 
unknown  success  and  national  respect. 

"With  stability  there  is  no  doubt  in  my  mind 
that  UCLA  can  become  one  of  the  elite  pro- 
grams, and  part  of  that  is  winning  respect,"  Ellis 
said.  "Every  day  when  we  play  a  game,  I  tell 
them,  'Today  we  go  out  and  earn  respect.'  " 

With  four  NCAA  tournament  appearances  in 
the  program's  short  seven-year  history,  the 
Bruins  have' rapidly  risen  to  national  promi- 
nence, but  the  team's  goals  are  decidedly  loftier 
for  this  promising  season. 

"We  want  to  go  to  the  Final  Four,"  senior 
Venus  James  said.  "Everyone  knows  we  want  it. 
We  realize  that  we  have  to  work  hard,  but  the 
motivation  is  within  us." 

With  those  aspirations  in  mind,  the  buzzword 
at  the  North  Athletic  Field,  site  of  the  team's 
practices,  was  "depth."  With  12  freshmen  and 
three  transfer  players  complementing  the  solid 
nucleus  of  last  year's  team,  the  Bruins  will  have 
very  Jittle.  if  any.  vulnerability. 

'  "We  are  two-deep  in  every  position,"  senior 
Tracey  Milburn  said.  "We  are  a  lot  stronger  and 
definitely  deeper.  Everyone  is  going  to  get  in  and 
play- 
Ellis  said  that  her  player's  strengths,  both  on 
the  field  as  players  and  off  the  field  as  people. 


WOMEN'S  SOCCER  SCHEDULE 

nuiiiiiiii 

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08/27 

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09/01 

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09/03 

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09/08 

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09/10 

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09/24 

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09/29 

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MCOe  LMO/Da4ty  Bruin 

:, ..  :v 


NICOLE  tMU.lHAMy  Bru.n 

Senior  Tracey  Milburn  attempts  to  wrestle  the  ball  away  from  a  Venderbilt  player  on 
Sept.  2  while  freshman  Sarah-Gayt*  Swanson  looks  on.  The  Bruins  won  the  game  2-0. 

have  alleviated  the  daunting  task  of  blending  27 
difTerent  individuals  into  one  functional  unit. 
"Part  of  my  recruiting  is  I  want  to  get  good 


people,"  Ellis  said.  "The  melding  has  been  pret- 
ty easy  to  this  point,  since  both  groups,  veterans 
and  freshmen,  are  focused  on  one  goal." 

Forwards 

The  Bruins  are  probably  most  experienced  up 
front,  with  All-Pac-10  players  Milburn  and  Staci 
Duncan  leading  the  scoring  charge.  The  pair 
scored  a  combined  19  goals  and  48  points  last 
season  and  Duncan  led  the  team  in  game-win- 
ning goals  with  four  and  shots  with  54. 

Freshman  SarahOayle  Swanson  has  terror* 


ized  opponents  in  UCLA's  first  six  games,  scor- 
ing seven  goals  on  just  16  shots  and  racking  up 
16  points  to  lead  the  team  in  overall  scoring. 
Swanson  has  also  accounted  for  three  of  the 
team's  five  game-winning  goals. 

Transfer  Stephanie  Rigamat  has  made  her 
presence  felt  early  with  two  goals  and  an  assist  in 
the  first  six  games.  Ellis  said  the  improved  depth 
at  forward  will  keep  the  team  in  the  game  for  the 
full  90  minutes. 

"Last  year  we  would  compete  with  teams 
until  about  the  60th  minute,  and  then  run  out  of 
steam."  Ellis  said.  "We  have  probably  six  or 


Sec  WSOCCBl  page  2S 


NSCAA/ADIDA$POa 


This  poll  for  women's  socftr  wulast 
updated  09/18/2000. 

1 .  Notre  Dame 

2.  Qemson 

3.  Nebraska 

^       4.         North  Carolina 
5.        Stanford 

7.       Penn  Statal 

te 

9. 


iACOaUACVD«Hybni*) 


Bruin  returns  confidently  to  love  of  game 


W.SOCCER:  Overcoming 
injury,  setbacks,  Peterson 
helps  take  on  new  season 


By  Annanda  Fletdier 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Talking  to  fourth  year  junior  goal- 
keeper CiCi  Peterson,  you'd  think 
that  getting  hurt  was  the  best  thing 
that  ever  happened  to  her. 

Peterson  was  recruited  to  UCLA 
in  1997  by  then-coach  and  current 
-Olympic  team  player  Joy  Fawcett. 
After  playing  with  one  of  the  top 
clubs  in  the  nation,  the  San  Diego 
Surf,  Peterson  was  ready  to  become  a 
Bruin  and  take  her  game  to  the  next 
level. 

But  then  it  happened.  * ' 

It  was  just  another  practice  and  as 
the  ball  crossed  in  front  of  the  goal, 
Peterson  went  down  for  a  dive  she 
had  done  a  thousand  times  in  her  life. 
But  this  time  instead  of  sliding  and 
landing  softly  on  the  grass,  her  knee 
gave  out.        ■  :;   _     V.' 

"It  was  a  wet  day.  I  saved  a  shot 
and  was  coming  across  for  another 
and  I  just  slipped,"  Peterson  said. 

At  first  doctors  thought  she  had 


simply  sprained  her  knee,  but  that 
"sprain"  was  actually  i  torn  MCL 
and  lateral  medial  meniscus. 

^From  there  her  life  as  a  Bruin  soc- 
cer player  became  a  seemingly  end- 
less cycle  of  surgeries  and  frustration. 

"(The  UCLA  doctors)  put  pins  in 
my  meniscus  and  they  came  loose  and 
were  floating  in  my  knee  for  two 
months,"  Peterson  said. 

In  the  end,  Peterson  would  have 
three  surgeries  in  less  than  an  year. 

"My  freshman  year  was  really  dis- 
couraging'," Peterson  said.  "From 
playing  every  single  day  to  not  play- 
ing for  a  year  was  really  hard." 

Peterson  ended  up  redshirting  her 
freshman  season,  but  with  every 
game  she  missed  her  confidence 
diminished. 

"I  was  out  there  trying  and  still  in 
so  much  pain  I  wanted  to  give  up," 
Peterson  said.  "Mentally  (the  injury) 
killed  me  " 

When  her  sophomore  season 
began,  Peterson  saw  it  as  a  chance  to 
heal  and  get  back  onto  the  field.  But 
there  was  a  new  coach,  current 
UCLA  men's  coach  Todd  SaldaAa. 
With  Lindsay  Culp  ('Od),  the  starting 
keeper  from  the  year  before  return- 
ing, and  Peterson  still  on  the  injured 
list,  Peterson  once  again  spent  most 


of  her  time  on  the  sidelines. 

"Physically  I  was  fine,  all  I  needed 
was  confidence,"  Peterson  said. 
"(Saldafta)  wouldn't  give  me  a 
chance.  He  saw  that  I  was  injured  and 
kind  of  wrote  me  off." 

By  her  third  season,  Peterson  had 
nearly  given  up  ever  playing  soccer 
again.  In  two  years  she  had  only  accu- 
mulated 45  minutes  in  the  goal  and 
with  yet  another  new  coach  she 
expected  to  find  herself  in  the  same 
situation  she  had  dealt  with  the  year 
before. 

So  Peterson  went  in  to  talk  to  cur- 
rent women's  head  coach  Jillian  Ellis 
and  explained  everything. 

"I  told  her  my  whole  situation  and 
said  that  I  didn't  know  if  I  would  play 
that  year,"  she  said. 

But  instead  of  quietly  accepting 
her  resignation,  Ellis  gave  Peterson 
the  one  thing  she  needed  -  a  chance. 

"I  don't  even  really  remember 
what  she  said,  but  it  was  just  enough 
to  know  that  I  had  a  chance," 
Peterson  said. 

Ellis  remembers,  though. 

"i  told  her  that  I  had  no  pre-set 
starting  goalkeeper  and  said  she 
should  go  out  there  (during  tryouts) 
and  give  it  a  cp^"  Ellis  said. 

"Immediately  CiCi  had  the  best. 


KEITH  EN»»0UtZ/0il«y  Brum  S»nkx  S«»« 

CiCI  Peterson  has  come  back  from  three  knee  surgeries  to  start  as 
goalkeeper  for  the  UCLA  women's  soccer  team  this  year. 


footskills  and  you  want  a  keeper 
whose  confident  with  her  feet." 

Those  five  days  of  tryouts  not  only 
renewed  Peterson's  desire  to  play  but 
gave  her  the  confidence  that  had  kept 
her  on  the  sidelines  long  after  her 
knee  had  healed. 

"Knowing  your  coach  is  behind 
you  and  wants  you  to  succeed  makes 
a  lot  of  difference,  especially  in  the 
goal  where  it  takes  a  lot  of  strength 
and  confidence  and  support  form 
coaches,"  Peterson  said. 


During  the  1999  season,  Peterson 
exploded.  She  went  from  playing  45 
minutes  the  year  before  to  racking  up 
1,203.  She  started  13  of  22  games  and 
played  in  16.  She  finished  the.  season 
with  a  team  high  43  saves  and  ranked 
eighth  in  the  Pac-10  in  goals  against 
with  a  I.6S  average. 

"She's  earned  the  respect  of  her 
teammates  and  she's  blossomed," 
Ellis  said.  "She  has  some  doubts 

S«t  fflBBON,  page  2S 


*y^— —  i'**^ 


"•^^omsBssfstmmm 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


September  25-28, 2000       25 


W.SOCCER        -^ 

FromM<ie24         ;-" .   *    :^       ' 

seven  tltat  can  play  the  front  fine  for 
us,  so  we  don't  miss  a  beat  when  we 
make  a  substitution." 

Midfielders 

■  Senior  Venus  James  heads  up  the 
midfield  contingent  and  gives  the 
team  yet  another  scorer.  James,  a 
member  of  the  U.S.  Under-21 
National  Team,  and  junior  Breana 
Boling  have  already  combined  to 
register  two  goals  and  seven  points 
in  the  team's  first  games.  They  were 
also  instrumental  in  the  success  of 
the  squad  a  year  ago.  V 

Joining  James  and  Boting  are  fel- 
low veteran  players  Lauren  Emblem 
and  Bethany  Bogart.  Freshman 
Katherine  Bjazevich,  who  has  netted 
three  goals  in  this  young  season,  is 
already  contributing.     ^' 

Defense 

Ellis  has  ushered  in  a  new  zone 
defensive  scheme  after  being  dissat- 
isfied with  the  man-to-man  system  of 
a  year  ago.      ' 

"It's  just  more  economical,**  Ellis 
said.  "We've  been  playing  against 
teams  with  three  forwards.  It's  a 
good  test  for  us,  it's  demanding,  and 
they've  responded  very  well." 

Anchoring  the  backfield  effort 
will  be  senior  Karissa  Hampton  and 
junior  Krista  Boling,  the  team's 


defensive  MVP  last  season. 

The  Bruins  were  also  banking  on 
the  services  of  blockbuster  recruit 
NandfPryce,  but  she  suffered  a  sea- 
son-ending tibia  fracture  in  a  2-0  vic- 
tory over  Vanderbilt  on  Sept.  8. 

Junior  Brittany  Whalen,  sopho- 
more Sarah  Morgan  and  freshman 
Kathryn  Lee  will  have  to  step  up  to 
thwart  the  opposing  offensive 
fronts.  .^      ..         . 

Goalkeeping  ?• 

Junior  CiCi  Peterson  earned  the 
starting  job  in  the  middle  of  last  sea- 
son over  recently  graduated  Lindsay 
Culp.  She  will  play  the  brunt  of  the 
minutes  in  goal. 

•  "I  think  CiCi  emerged  as  a  starter 
last  year,"  Ellis  said.  "We  are  work- 
ing harder  defensively  through  the 
whole  team,  and  I  think  that  allevi- 
ates some  of  the  pressure  off  the 
goalkeeping." 

Peterson  has  spent  469  of  the 
team's  540  minutes  in  net  in  the  first 
6  games,  allowing  only  two  goals. 
She  has  recorded  four  shutouts. 

Outlook 

After  lining  up  a  somewhat  mur- 
derous row  of  non-conference  road 
opponents,  the  Bruins  have  emerged 
slightly  battered  but  definitely  not 
bruised.  The  team  dropped  its  first 
contest  to  Clemson  1-0,  but  has 
popped  off  five  consecutive  wins  to 
vault  its  national  ranking  to  an  all- 
time  high  fifth  and  boost  its  record  to 


5-1-0.' 

The  highlight  of  the  schedule  thus 
far  was  the  4-0  drubbing  of  then-No. 
10  Florida  in  Gainesville. 

Overall,  the  Bruins  have 
outscored  their  opponents  21-2  and 
outshot  the  opposition  134-27. 

UCLA  has  four  non-conference 
games  remaining,  on  the  road  at  the 
University  of  San  Diego  and  Loyola 
Marymount,  and  at  home  against 
Fresno  State  and  Marquette.  Pac-10 
play  begins  Oct.  8  with  a  cross-town 


showdown  at  USC. 

The  Bruins  edged  out  defending 
Pac-10  champion  Stanford  in  the 
preseason  coaches'  poll  to  get  the 
nod  as  conference  favorite,  but  the 
team  is  not  taking  anything  for 
granted,  especially  with  four  other 
teams  from  the  parity-rich  Pac-10  in 
theNSCAATop25. 

"We're  always  going  to  look  out 
for  USC  and  of  course  Stanford," 
Milburn  said.  "Anyone  in  the  Pac-10 
can  come  out  and  play  a  good  game 


JACOB  LIAO/Oaily  Brum 

and  beat  you." 

Ellis  has  challenged  her  players  to 
elevate  their  focus  and  play  to  the 
next  echelon. 

"When  I  got  here  last  year,  I  said 
the  train  is  at  the  station.  You've  got 
to  get  on  or  you're  going  to  get  left 
behind,"  Ellis  said.  "This  year  the 
train  is  pulling  away  from  the  sta- 
tion." 

The  Bruins  hope  that  its  final  des- 
tination is  San  Jose,  site  of  the  2000 
NCAA  Women's  College  Cup. 


PETERSON 

From  page  24 

about  herself.  Every  player  experi- 
ences that  and  different  coaches  can 
have  different  impact  on  players. 

"I  came  in  and  was  a  fresh  face  and 
CiCi  responded  to  what  I  wanted. 
Today  she  organizes  her  backline  and 
is  much  more  assertive  which  is  huge 
when  you're  a  goalkeeper." 

For  the  first  time  in  a  long  time, 
Peterson  loves  soccer  again.  But  the 
best  part  is  that  redshirting  her  fresh- 
man season  gives  her  two  more  years 
of  eligibility. 


"I  feel  fortunate  to  have  another 
year,  especially  under  Jill,"  Peterson 
said. 

And  for  those  who  have  been  keep- 
ing track  of  women's  soccer,  this  is  an 
exciting  time  for  a  promising  Bruin 
squad.  With  a  preseason  rank  of  14, 
UCLA  has  already  knocked  off  No. 
10  Rorida  and  received  it's  first  top- 
five  ranking  ever. 

"I've  never  seen  UCLA  play  that 
well  (in  the  game  against  Florida)  and 
if  we  play  that  way  every  single  game 
we  can't  be  beat,"  Peterson  said.  "I 
think  we'll  surprise  a  lot  of  people." 

But  then  again,  Peterson's  always 
been  full  of  surprises. 


W.GOLF 

From  page  14 

bility  of  players  moving  between 
teams  based  on  performance. 

Before  the  team's  first  tourna- 
ment, the  Dick  McGuire  tourna- 
ment in  New  Mexico  from  Sept.  21- 
23.  the  Bruins  had  an  in-team  playoff 
to  see  who  shoukl  go.  In  that  event, 
redshirt  freshmen  Saki  Uechi  and 
true  freshman  Melissa  Martin 
placed  in  the  top  five  along  with 
Moffat,  Um  and  Umeck. 

For  September,  they  are  automat- 
ically members  of  the  Gold  squad. 


Last  year  Moffat  was  a  second- 
team  Pac-10  All-Academic  with  a 
3.39  GPA  in  physiological  science 
complementing  her  74.8  stroke  aver- 
age. She  traveled  to  every  tourna- 
ment last  year  and  won  her  first 
event,  the  Rainbow  Wahine  Classic. 

So  with  skill,  intelligence  and  a 
blossoming  leadership  ability, 
UCLA  has  in  Moffat  an  invaluable 
player. 

"I  look  to  Laura  to  be  our  leader. 
I  believe  she  has  the  talent  to  be  an 
All-American,"  Leary  said. 

Um  is  arguably  UCLA's  most 
improved  golfer.  At  the  beginning  of 
last  year  she  came  to  Leary  to  talk 


about  some  problems  -  mostly 
because  she  was  frustrated  about 
poor  results  on  the  golf  course  and  in 
the  classroom.  After  the  fall  season, 
Um  seriously  considered  quitting. 

But  Um  re-cvaluated  her  situa- 
tion.    -  V- — -- — ^ — — ^~ — -^- 

"It  took  a  lot  of  thought,  but  she 
realized  that  she  could  be  great  at 
both  (golf  and  school),"  Leary  said. 
"Her  desire  was  there." 

And  once  Um  made  that  decision, 
it  was  refiected  in  her  score. 

"Without  her  last  year,  we  would- 
n't have  gotten  as  far  as  we  did," 

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26       September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bfuin  Sports 


SELSOR 

From  page  10    . 

Fendrick,  Selsor  sets  the  tempo  for  a 
healthy  combination  of  different  looks 
that  keeps  opposing  defense  off  balance. 

Her  deceptive  plays  of  misdirection 
and  soft  touch  kills  arc  vital  to  keeping 
the  opposition  from  singling  out  any  one 
player  of  the  UCLA  attack. 

Also  for  Selsor,  adding  the  jump  serve 
has  helped  mixed  things  up  for  the 
Bruins. 

"1  spent  a  lot  of  time  in  the  off-season 
on  my  service  game,"  Selsor  said  of  her 
summer  training  regimen. 

"Andy,  (assistant  coach)  Kim  (Jagd) 
and  I  warited  me  to  become  more  consis- 
tent on  my  jump  serves  and  work  on  my 
technique  so  that  it  would  not  hurt  my 
back.  I  also  wanted  to  improve  on  the  top- 
spin  1  put  on  it  to  give' the  defense  less 
options  to  set  up,"  she  added. 

When  she  came  to  UCLA  on  her  offi- 
ciaJ  visit,  Selsor  was  contemplating  only 
one  other  school,  Texas  A&M.  No  matter 
which  school  she'd  end  up  at,  however, 
Selsor  already  set  lofty  goals  to  meet 
before  her  college  career  ended. 

"I  wanted  to  be  a  national  champion, 
which  is  what  this  team  has  really  put  a 
focus  on,"  she  said. 

Starting  the  preseason  as  the  hunted, 
atop  "both  the  AVCA  and  Volleyball 
Magazine  collegiate  polls,  Selsor  was  not 
sure  how  the  Bruins  would  respond 
against  a  number  of  ranked  teams  before 


the  conference  schedule  even  started) 

"1  didn't  know  how  we  would  do 
against  some  of  the  top  teams  early  in  the 
season,"  she  said.  "We  haye  had  some  dis- 
appointments like  Colorado  State  and 
Nebraska  that  we  should  not  have  lost. 
That's  always  tough  to  start  the  season 
No.  1  because  everyone's  out  to  get  vou. 

"I  try  to  keep  talking  on  the  court  all 
the  time.  We  definitely  have  the  talent  to 
beat  anyone.  We  are  headed  in  the  right 
direction.  We  just  need  to  stay  consistent 
and  fluid." 

For  UCLA,  it  is  vijal  that  Selsor 
remain  a  fixture  in  the  lineup,  having 
played  in  every  game  in  her  first  two  sea- 
sons in  Westwood.  The  Bruins  are  44-16 
with  her  in  the  starting  lineup  as  she 
notched  more  than  1,500  assists  in  each  of 
her  first  two  seasons.  In  addition  to  her 
physical  play,  her  mental  attitude  and 
approach  have  been  displayed  to  the  rest 
of  theballclub. 

1  "She's  intense;  you  can  see  it  all  over 
her  face,"  Quon  said.  "As  a  freshman  dur- 
ing a  timeout,  I  remember  her  yelling  at 
the  team  to  get  them  fired  up.  I  had  never 
seen  a  young  player  like  that  do  that 
before." 

It's  like  what  Jack  Nicholson  said  in  "A 
Few  Good  Men,"  one  of  Selsor's  favorite 
films:  "We  live  in  a  world  with  walls 
guarded  by  men  with  guns."  That  just  one 
of  many  lines  Selsor  can  boastfully  recite 
from  the  movie,  but  it's  definitely  one  she 
plays  by,  because  it's  Selsor  patrolling  the 
net  in  the  Bruins'  quest  to  bring  a  nation- 
al title  back  to  Westwood. 


W.60LF 

from  page  25 


Leary  said.  "Once  she  really  put 
her  mind  to  it,  she  did  it.  She  came 
to  terms  with  her  golf  demons." 

Uechi  redshirted  last  year 
because  Leary  felt  her  game  need- 
ed the  improvement  that  experi- 
ence brings. 

Now  that  improvement  is 
there. 

Although  she  didn't  com- 
pete, Uechi  constantly  attend- 
ed practice.  She  opened  the 
year  shooting  in  the  mid-80s 
and  ended  it  shooting  in  the 
low  70s.  . 

"I'm  really  proud  of  her. 
She's  come  so  far  with  her 
game  and  her  confidence 
level,"  Leary  said. 

And  then   there  is   true 
freshman     Umeck,     whom 
Leary  says  has  everything  it 
takes  to  succeed.  Intelligence,  tal- 
ent, drive  -  and  a  perfectionist 
attitude. 

"Wliich  can  hurt,"  Leary  said 
of  the  last  quality  with  a  laugh. 
"But  she's  a  keeper,  definitely.  By 
the  time  she  leaves  here  she  will  be 
an  All-American." 

Martin,  the  true  freshman  who 
rounds  out  the  five,  was  a  recruit- 
ed walk-on.  Leary  calls  her  anoth- 
er potential  All-American  with 


the  kit]d  of  desire  Martin  possess- 
es. 

Including  the  Dick  McGuire, 
the  women's  golf  team  will  play  in 
three  other  fall  tournaments. 
After  their  fall  season  ends  on 
Nov.  I,  the  team  has  a  break  until 
Feb.  12-14,  when  they  open  their 
spring  season  with  the  Regional 
Challenge.         ^^    h^;''  .    : 


WOMEN'S  GOLF  SCHEDULE 

This  sdiedule  only  Nsts  the  women's 
yisdiedule. 

09/21-09/23  #OidMcOuire 

10/09-10/11  ^tNycfsityofWasMngton 

10/20-10/22  #Staflfo4 

/  •  Pepsi  iovitatioial 

10/31-11/01  tUnlwi^tltlteiiit- 


SOWtt:  »tlM>|>dlN»lllmntl>ti 


JACOB  LIAO/04lly  Bruin 

Although  collegiate  golf  is 
unusual  in  that  it  has  both  a  fall 
season  and  a  spring  season,  all  the 
tournaments  count  equally  to 
determine  rankings  and  a  berth  to 
the  NCAA  Regionals. 

This  year,  golf  will  have  three 
regionals  -  West,  Central  and 
East  -  based  not  on  geographic 
location,  as  was  done  in  the  past, 
but  on  rankings. 

Of  20  teams  competing  in  each 


regional,  the  top  eight  will  gain 
berths  to  the  NCAA 
Championship. 

"I  fully  expect  this  team  to  go 

to  Nationals  and  be  ranked  in 

the  top  10.  There's  not  even  a 

question  about  it,"  Leary  said.  ; 

Well,    last    year's    miss   to 

nationals  wasn't  as  bad  as  it 

looked  for  UCLA.  The  Bruins, 

who  came   in    14th   at  the 

NCAA  West  Regionals.  only 

missed    13th   place   and   a 

championship  berth  by  five 

strokes. 

Then  again,  this  fact  might 
have  just  made  things  more 
painful. 

"It  was  disappointing  last 
year  because  we  knew  that 
we  were  one  of  the  better 
teams  there,"  Leary  said. 

But  disappointments  like 
that  can  be  great  motivators 
too. 

"All  the  girls  who  missed  it 
last  year,  we're  all  ready  for  this 
year,"  Moffat  said.  "It  just 
makes  us  want  to  win  more." 

This  year's  team  better  be 
motivated,  because  with  the 
depth  and  talent  she  has,  Leary 
won't  be  satisfied  with  anything 
less  than  a  trip  to  Daytona 
Beach,  Fla.,  where  the  NCAA 
Championships  will  be. 

Close  but  not  quite  there 
won't  be  good  enough  this  year. 


First 

Daily  Bruin 

regular  issue  is 

Sept.29t 


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Daily  Bruin  Sports 


September25  28,2000        27 


Join  the  club 

It  may  not  be  the  HCAAs,  but  these  organized  sports  offer  the 
chance  to  be  part  of  a  team  and  play  against  other  schools  ^^ 


:»"» 


DAVID  HILUOaily  Bfuin  Senior  StaH 

The  UCLA  women's  crew  team  practices  in  the  early  morning  last 
winter  in  Marina  Del  Ray.  Club  sports  have  been  thriving  on  campus. 


By  Amanda  Fletcher 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

UCLA  is  quite  ren&wned  Tcif  lis 
NCAA  athletic  programs.  But  what  do 
you  do  if  you  love  to  play  a  sport,  but 
just  aren't  Division  1  material? 

Join  a  club  sports  program,  of 
course. 

Organized  through  the  John 
Wooden  Center's  Recreation  depart- 
ment, students  can  join  one  of  18  teams 
or  even  start  one  of  their  own.  Victoria 
Bonnahan  from  the  women's  lacrosse 
team  explains  the  advantages  of  getting 
involved  with  club  sports. 

"1  have  made  so  many  great  friends 
through  my  team.  Playing  lacrosse  has 
made  UCLA  a  lot  smaller.  Club  sports, 
are  a  great  way  to  find  a  niche  in  such  a 
big  school." 

While  some  teams  are  coed,  in  other 
sports  UCLA  offers  a  men's  and 
women's  squad.  Each  team  is  run  by 


the  players  and  coaches  who  decide 
when  to  practice  and  what  lourna- 
menls  to  attend.  Some  teams  travel  as 
far  as  Hawaii  to  compete. 

Below  ,is  a  sampling  of  sorne  of 
UCLA's  club  sports. 

BadmintoA 

www.]t;cocities.com/colosscum/loge 
/%75 

Badminton  is  entering  its  fifth  sea- 
son as  a  club  sport  at  UCLA  A  mem- 
ber of  the  Southern  California 
Intercollegiate" Badminton  League,  the 
team  boasted  .10  members  last  year. 
Throughout  the  year,  the  badminton 
team  competes  against  UCI,  UCSD, 
use,  Cal  Poly  SLO  and  CalTech.  Last 
year,  the  SCIBL  finals  were  held  in 
Pardee  Gym  and  UCLA  took  home 
second  place  behind  first-place  UCI. 

KieM  Hockey 

www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/field- 
hockey 

More  popular  on  the  East  Coast, 


the  UCLA  field  hockey  team  not  only 
competes  against  other  schools  but 
also  works  to  spread  interest  in  their 
sport  and  someday  achieve  NCAA  sta- 
tus Started  in  1998,  the  team  plays 
their  regular  season  on  weekends  in  the 
fall  and  again  in  the  spring 

Ice  Hockey 

\yww,studentgroups,ucla.cduyicc- 
hockey 

Ice  hockey  is  one  of  the  more  popu- 
lar club  teams  at  UCLA.  Last  season 
they  finished  second  in  the  Pac-8  and 
ranked  No.  7  in  the  ACHA  Western 
Region.  Head  coach  Daryl  Evans  has 
taken  the  team  from  a  last  place  finish 
in  1997  to  a  1999  championship  title 
and  the  team  is  once  again  poised  for  a 
title  run.  With  their  20(KM)i  season 
schedule  already  finalized,  the  Bruins 
will  be  playing  old  rivals  Stanford  and 
Washington  as  well  as  top  teams  such 

See  aUB,  page  28 


4S. 


j\   »)|,i_  v"    1111.       I  .1  II  ». " 

i^iimni 


•*^*  \L    -*.     *t  I 


28       September  2S-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


CLUB 

From  page  27 

as  No  3  Weber  Slate  and  No.  4  San 
Jose. 
Lacrosse 

www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/lacro 

Lacrosse  is  one  sport  with  both  a 
men's  and  women's  squad.  The  men's 
team  is  led  by  head  coach  Mike  Allan 
(Princeton  '95-'98)  and  defensive 
coach  Wes  Radulovich.  The  team 
ended  last  season  104  overall  and  4-2 
in  their  division. 

Rugby 


www.studentgroups.  ucla.edu/rugby 

Preseason  games  begin  in  the  Tall. 
Competition  against  lower  caliber 
teams  allows  UCLA  to  ease  into  the 
regular  season,  which  runs  through  the 
winter  and  spring  quarters.  UCLA  is 
in  the  SCRFU  conference  and  plays  . 
annual  matches  against  UCSB. 
Arizona,  Arizona  State,  Long  Beach 
State,  Cal  Poly  San  Luis  Obispo,  USD 
and  San  Diego  State. 

Shooting 
•  www.bol.ucla.edu/%7Eshooting/clu 
b.html 

After  a  15-year  absence,  the  UCLA 
Shooting  Club  was  re-established  in 
1989  and  received  full  recognition  two 


S6me  teams  travel  as 

far  as  Hawaii  for 

tournaments. 


years  later  as  a  campus  club. 
:    UCLA  has  sent  shooters  to  the 
Intercollegiate  National 

Championships  every  year  since 
1994.  Often,  UCLA  is  the  only  non- 
military  team  at  the  Nationals.  In 
the  past  Tive  years,  the  Bruins  have 
brought     home     two     individual 


National  Chanmpionship  titles,  and 
have  had  four  Intercollegiate  All 
American  awards,  which  is  impressive 
considering  the  team  only  requires 
four  hours  of  praaice  a  week. 

Ultimate  Frisbee 

www.student|;roup8.uda.edu/sniau 

u 

The  men's  ultimate  frisbee  team 
l>egan  in  1995  and  has  been  ranked  as 
high  as  35th  in  the  nation.  With  prac- 
tices during  the  week  on  the  Intramural 
field,  the  team  takes  weekend  trips  to 
other  colleges  such  as  UCSB  and 
UCSD  to  compete  in  tournaments. 

Water  Polo 

www.studentgroups.  ucia  .edu/water 


Efilfl  • 

Fall  1999  was  the  first  season 
UCLA  has  been  a  member  of  the 
Collegiate  Water  Polo  Association, 
and  they  finished  with  an  impressive 
fourth  place  ranking.  This  season 
practice  starts  zero  week  and  the 
club  national  championships  will  be 
held  on  Nov.  17-19  in  Washington. 

There  are  still  many  more  club  teams 
at  UCLA  including  bowling,  cycling, 
crew,  fencing,  gymnastifs,  sailing, 
snow  skiing,  surfing,  waterskiing  and 
windsurfing.  For  more  information, 
please  contact  the  club  sports  office 
in  the  Wooden  Center  at  825-7301. 


Daily  Bftiin  Sports 


September  25-28, 2000       29 


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30        September  25-28, 2000 


.  ■  •::ir  ^^^^uJJ!.^^  ■■ '-  ".^-^^KJ, 


UCLA 


are  proven  wrong  again 


COLUMN:  Bruins  silence 
opponents,  critics  with 
pure  strength  of  plays 


s 


issies.  Pansies.  Baby-blue  beach 
bums. 


These  are  the  terms  East  Coast 
fans  and  players  like  to  use  when 
referring  to  UC^A  football. 
Alabama  fans 
swore  by  them, 
Michigan  fans 
threw  them 
around  (mostly 
incomplete, 
though),  and  the 
rest  of  the  SEC 
and  Big- 10  often 
spew  them. 
They  think  it's 
funny,  insulting 
and  humiliating. 

I  just  wonder 
how  the  "power-     -^— — — — — 
ful"  teams  from 

the  east  feel  when  they  get  beat  by 
those  surfer  boys  from  Westwood. 

Because,  like,  the  only  waves  the 
Bruins  have  made  this  season 
occurred  when  they  wiped  out  third- 
ranked  Alabama  and  Michigan. 

I  guess  stereotypes  don't  really 
work  when  they  get  shoved  back  into 
your  face. 

"For  people  who  don't  think 
UCLA  is  a  physical  team,  watch  the 
video  of  the  Alabama  and  Michigan 
games,"  head  coach  Bob  Toledo  said. 
"I  think  they  will  tell  you  that  the 


Jeff 
Kmiotek 


guys  in^  the  baby-blue  jerseys  are 
physical." 

UCLA's  top  priority  of  the  offsea- 
son was  to  become  bigger,  stronger- 
and  more  physical.  Toledo  wanted 
his  squad  to  play  up-the-gut,  pound- 
it-down-your-throat,  smashmouth 
football.  So  far,  his  wish  has  been 
granted. 

"Watch  the  film.  We  got  the  physi- 
cal game,"  safety  Jason  Stephens   - 
said,  moments  after  sealing  the 
Michigan  win  with  an  interception. 
"We  did  what  we  had  to  do.  We  put 
it  down." 

UCLA  has  been  winning  the  bat- 
tle in  the  trenches,  out^nuscling  and 
out-hustling  in  the  heat  of  Pasadena. 
And  they  are  in  the  condition  to 
maintain  that  levd  throughout  the 
fourth  quarter. 

"We  don't  get  tired,"  offensive 
lineman  Mike  Saffer  said. 

And  with  their  newfound  attitude, 
the  Bruins  are  feefing  pretty  good 
about  themselves.  By  beating  bcHh 
Alabama  and  Michigan,  UCLA 
proved  they  could  beat  anybody. 
And  they  don't  need  to  say  «iym<ve. 

"The  proof  is  in  the  podding," 
said  linebacker  Robert  Thomas,  who 
has  played  as  well  as  any  linebacker 
in  the  nation  thus  far. 

"Watch  the  film.  It  speaks  for 
itself,"  safety  Audie  Attar  said  when 
asked  what  lie  would  tell  poll  voters. 
"The  scoreboard  tells  the  story.  It's 
who  won." 

Simple  logic,  although  it  may  go 
over  the  head  of  most  voters,  oonsid- 

~  See  KMIOTEK,  page  35 


Upset  victories  against  two  No.  3 
teams  make  the  Bruins  the  hottest 
team  in  the  nation.  Running  back 
DeShaun  Foster  clears  the  way  and 

opens  up  the  passing  attack  for 

flanker  Freddie  Mitchell.  The  Bruins' 

defense  has  solidified,  and  should 

lead  UCLA  to  the  Pac-10  title. 


The  Huskies  are  the  number  one 

contenders  to  steal  the  aown  from  the 

Bruins.  Senior  quarterback  Marques 

Tuiasosopo  is  sending  Seattle  into  a 

Heisman  frenzy.  Washington  gets  UCLA 

at  home  late  in  the  season,  but  the 

Bruins  will  be  too  tough,  even  for  a 

team  ttiat  beat  No.  4  Miami. 


September  25-28, 2006        31 


Pac-10  teams 


off  high-ranked  talent 


CONFERENCE:   UCLA, 
others  are  making  their 
mark  on  national  scene 


By  Adam  Karon 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  Pac-10  is  back.  Sick  and  tired 
of  hearing  the  rest  of  the  country 
laugh  as  team  after  team  runs  over. 
around  and  through  them,  the  teams 
out  west  are  ready  to  fight  back. 

The  2000  season  will  mark  the  year 
that  the  Pac-10  regains  national 
respect.  And  tlie  UCLA  Bruins  will 
lead  the  attack. 

Already,  three  teams  in  the  top  five 
have  fallen  to  \b&  Pacific  upstarts  this 
year. 

Prior  to  the  season,  USC  line- 
backer 2^ke  Moreno  (x>mmented  on 
conference's  image. 

"I  root  for  any  player  in  the  Pao-10 
except  when  we  play  them.  We  need 
to  ^  out  there  and  earn  respect,"  he 
said. 

Arizona  State  linebacker  Adam 
Archuleta  agreed. 

"Wie  want  the  Pac-10  to  start  mak- 
ing some  noise  on  the  national 
scene,"  Ardiuleta  said.  "We  need  to 
help  get  the  Pac-10  back  on  track  to 
get  the  recognition  it  deserves." 

The  conference  seems  to  be  taking 
these  words  to  heart,  and  after  the 
third  week  of  play  teams  were  24-5 
against  non-conference  opponents. 
While  most  "experts"  pick  the 
Huskies  to  take  the  conference 
crown,  it  will  in  fact  be  UCLA  that 


ends  up  smelling  the  sweet  scent  of 
roses  on  New  Year's  Day. 

LUCLA     ;  -   ',.-'.■' 

No  major  publication  picked  the 
Bruins  to  win  the  Pac-10.  In  fact,  it 
was  said  that  UCLA  could  be  the  best 
0-3  team  in  the  country  at  this  point. 
How  about  the  best  ."i-O  team? 

Why  will  the  Bruins  endure  their 
toughest  schedule  in  years  to  finish 
atop  the  Pac-10?  Because  it  appears 
the  coaching  staff  has  been  watching 
the  powerhouse  Big  Ten,  and  the 
UCLA  scheme  leans  in  that  direction. 

The  Bruins  win  with  power.  They 
are  more  physical  than  last  season, 
and  this  time  it  is  the  running  game 
and  defense  that  cuts  and  plows 
through  ppponents.  With  his  six 
touchdowns  in  three  games,  junior 
tailback  DeShaun  Foster  has  Bruin 
fans  talking  more  about  the  present 
than  longing  for  the  glory  days  of 
Cade  McNown. 

The  UCLA  defensive  unit  has 
been  the  heart  of  the  team  thus  far. 
The  Bruins  stifled  a  tough  Alabama 
offense,  and  aside  from  a  few  late  mis- 
cues,  held  Fresno  State  in  check  for 
most  of  the  game.  Against  Michigan, 
it  was  the  Bruin  defense  that  came  up 
big  to  seal  the  victory. 

The  major  question  mark  for  the 
Bruins  is  at  quarterback.  With  Cory 
Paus  out  for  the  first  weeks  of  the  sea- 
son, the  Brujns  have  had  trouble 
putting  the  ball  in  the  air. 

"We  need  to  get  better  production 
out  of  our  quarterbacks,"  liead  coach 

See  PAC-10,  page  43 


Southern  Cal  will  make  the  bat- 
tle for  No.  1  a  three-way  affair  this 
year.  Carson  Palmer  gets  most  of 
..     the  attention,  but  the  Trojan 
defense  is  as  strong  as  its  been  in 
years.  Look  for  the  USC  vs.  UCLA 
game  to  have  a  huge  impact  on  the 
division  crown.      -      1 


The  Ducks  are  strong  at  home  and 

proved  they  could  play  well  on  the  road 

in  a  win  against  Idaho  and  a  stnmg 

showing  against  Wisconsin.  The 

offense  is  a  well-oiled  machine,  but  the 

defense  has  some  question  marks. 


Ken  Simonton  is  the  real  deal 
who  has  Beaver  fans  clamoring  for 

Heisman  consideration.  Dennis 

Erickson  always  commands  respect, 

but  aside  from  an  upset  or  two, 

don't  expect  the  Beavers  to  make 

too  much  noise. 


Wildcat  faithful  expect  a 
strong  showing  after  last  year's  6- 
6  debade.  Will  the  team  under- 
achieve again?  Ortege  Jenkins 
will  do  his  best  to  make  Tucson 
forget  the  1999  season. 


While  they  are  far  from  con- 
tenders, the  Bears  might  be  one  of 

the  better-kept  seaets  in  the  Pac-10. 
Quarterback  Kyle  Boiler  and  defen: 

sive  end  Andre  Carter  are  playmaken 
on  offense  and  defense.  And  don't  - 

forget  ttie  booming  leg  of  Nid(  Ham's. 


With  Ryan  Kealy  out,  2000  could 
be  a  long  year  for  the  Sun  Devils. 
Colorado  State  found  out  the  hard 
way  that  no  one  should  take  ASU 
lightly,  but  there  is  simply  not 
enough  talent  in  the  desert  to  war- 
rant much  fear  of  ttl^  Devils. 


SMfort_: 

The  score:  27-24.  Those  are  the 
numbers  Cardinal  fans  will  remind 
themselves  of  the  rest  of  the  year. 
A  victory  against  Texas  should  be 
the  only  bright  spot  for  a  team 
that  will  find  itself  a  long  way 
from  Pasadena  on  New  Years  Day.  ' 


It  will  be  a  long  year  in  Pullman.  Cougar 
fans  might  be  better  off  hopping  the  border 
to  watch  Idaho  State  this  year.  LaMont 
'.  Thomas  is  solid,  but  one  player  will  not  be 
enough  to  keep  the  Cougars  out  of  the  cellar. 

Ph(3JoflttiM6|fion  ar»d  design  by  jASON  CHEN/D«ily  Brum  Semo: 


:>■  ■■     >  - 


''  ..  1  ■ --i-J r-M»- 


^•v n ■■  >  .• — ■■■.": 


..Vl 


32       September  25-28, 2000 


DaUy  Bruin  Spofts 


TO 


OOD 


After  earning  a  reputation  as;  UCLA's 
BAD  BOY,  Marques  Anderson  returns  to 

THE  GAME  WITH  BOTH  MATURITY  AND  FOCUS 


By  Joshuii  Mason 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


This  time  last  year,  Marques  Anderson's  col- 
lege football  career  was  undergoing  a  crisis. 

First  came  the  criticism  of  the  his  on-field  per- 
formance. The  1998  season  brought  with  it  a 
backlash  against  the  UCLA  secondary,  which 
was  often  cited  as  the  weak  link  ilfeCLA^s  run 
for  a  national  championship.  Anderson,  then  a 
sophcmcrc  starting  cornerback,  shared  in  the 
defensive  woes  and  was  unable  to  match  the  level 
of  play  he  established  when  starting  as  a  true 
freshman. 

Next  came  the  most  fatal  blow,  an  assault  on 
his  character.  Anderson's  involvement  in  last 
year's  disabled  parking  placard  scandal  became 
the  final  straw  among  prior  disciplinary  prob- 
lems. Most  involved  in  the  scandal  were  suspend- 
ed for  two  games.         "  :.  ;    ". 

Because  of  other  off-ficW  problems,  Anderson 
received  the  stiffest  punishment,  being  cut  from 


the  team  and  forced  to  redshirt  what  would  have 
been  his  junior  season.  ^   ; 

Now,  you  could  say  that  the  Marques 
Anderson  of  2000  has  a  newfound  love  for  the 
game. 

•'  Last  year  was  a  learning  experience  as  well  as 
a  humbling  experience,"  Anderson  said.  "It  took 
being  cut  from  the  team  for  me  to  discover  that  in 
football,  as  well  as  in  life,  there  are  no  shortcuts. 
You  have  to  work  for  your  goals  rather  than  cheat 
them,  and  my  troubles  last  year  taught  me  that." 

Fellow  defensive  back  Jason  Bell  agreed  that 
last  year  taught  Anderson  something. 

**I  think  last  year  showed  Marques  how  much 
he  really  loved  the  game,"  Bell  said.  "Sitting  out  a 
year  was  hard  for  him,  but  it  helped  open  up  his 
eyes  to  see  how  important  his  football  career  is  to 
him." 

If  last  season  did  anything  for  Anderson,  it 
was  give  him  the  maturity  to  take  his  game  to  the 


See  ANOEIBON,  page  3« 


^  .  «rfH£NnOO£Z/Da(lyBfuinSenio«  Staff 

Marques  Anderson  has  emerged  from  a  redshirt  season  and  scandal  to 
become  one  of  the  key  members  of  the  UCLA  football  team's  defense. 


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Daily  fintm  Sports 


September  25-28, 2000       33 


In  dpeningg^ifies  of  sieasoa  Bmihs  show  trife  colors 


RXJTBALL  Consecutive 
wins  have  placed  UCLA 
in  the  national  spotiight 


By  Christina  Teller  and  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

With  two  games  against  No.  3 
teams,  the  UCLA  football  team  had 
one  of  the  toughest  Division  I 
schedules  around.  Still,  the  Bruins 
have  proven  themselves  better  than 
anyone  expected,  shocking 
Alabama,  sliding  by  Fresno  State 
and  holding  on  to  defeat  Michigan 
to  be  3-0  heading  into  conference 
play. 


UCLA  35, 
Alabama  24 
(Sept.  2)  _ 

Starti~ng 
the  season 
against  the 
third-ranked 
team  in  the 
nation  and 
coming  off  a 
4-7  season, 
the  game 
looked  to  be 
the  recipe  Tor 
disaster  for 
the  unranked 
Bruins. 
Instead  of 
melting  under 

the  pressure,  however.the  Bruins 
cooked  their  way  to  a  convincing 
35-24  trouncing  of  Alabama. 

"It's  a  great  feeling  to  come  back, 
in  the  opening  game,  beat  the  No.  3 
team  in  the  country,  and  get  some 
respect,"  junior  tailback  DeShaun 


09/02 

Alabama 

W,3S-24 

09/09 

Fresno  State 

W,  24-21 

09/16 

Mktdgan 

W.  23-20 

09/23 

^Oregon 

1230  PM 

09/3> 

Arizona  State 

7:15  PM 

10^4 

@Cal 

TBA 

10/21 

Oregon  State 

3dOPM 

10/28 

#  Arizona 

4.-00PM 

11/04 

Stanford 

330  PM 

(HMM<wnios) 

11/11 

#WasMngton 

4:00  PM 

11/18 

US£ 

TBA 

MUHg  SwrtiMt 


Foster  said.  "A  lot  of  people  had 
counted  us  out,  I  wanted  to  do  my 
part  and  I  guess  my  part  was  to  run 
for  a  career-high  total." 

At  the  start  of  the  contest,  the  vic- 
tory didn't  seem  too  likely,  with  a 
late  hit  on  sophomore  starting  quar- 
terback Cory  Paus  that  removed 
him  with  a  separated  shoulder  from 
the  game. 

Alabania  quickly  took  the  lead, 
after  a  71 -yard  punt  retura,  by 
Alabama's  Freddie  Milons  with 
only  a  minute  gone  from  the  clock. 
It  was  Foster  who  emerged  from 
the  Bruin  lineup  as  the  game,  rush- 
ing 187  yards  on  42  carries  and 
three  touchdowns. 

Contributing  greatly  to  the  win 
was  the  Bruin 
defense,  who 
let  Alabama 
past  the  50- 
yard  line  only 
three  times 
during  the 
entire  game. 

"They 
dominated  us 
on  both  sides 
of  the  line  of 
scrimmage," 
Alabama  head 
coach  Mike 
DuBose  said. 
"We  had  our 
opportunities 
in  the  first 
half,  we  just 
did  not  make  the  plays.  I'm  disap- 
pointed in  the  way  we  played,  and 
I'm  disappointed  in  the  way  I  pre- 
pared them.  They  just  kept  the  ball 
away  from  us.too  much."  . 


FOOTBALL  SCHEDULE 


JAC0eLIA0/O.«ye(uin 


SM(faV,|iigtS2 


Tony  White  holds  the  ball  up  rn  celebration  as  Ricky  Manning  Jr.  and  Steve  Morgan  fire  up  the  crowd 
while  playing  Fresno  State  on  Sept. 9. The  Bruins  are  3-0  going  into  the  regular  Pac-IO  season. 


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' ■     '         '"        '  .1/.   ■         '■  ^  '■■  -  ■   • 


34       September  25-28, 2000 


By  Christina  Teller    - 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


He  keeps  the  hours  of  a  standard 
work  schedule  during  the  week, 
reporting  into  the  office  around  8 
or  9  a.m.  and  usually  leaving 
around  6  p.m.  He,  along  with  his 
colleagues,  studies  upcorriing 
game-plans  in  painstaking  detail. 

The  difference  between  the 
career  of  49cr  wide  receiver  J.J. 
Stokes  and  most  working  profes- 
sionals is  the  fact  that  his  job  per- 
formance is  rated  every  Sunday  for 
16  regular-season  weeks  a  year,  and 
that  his  dress  code  includes  cleats, 
shoulder  pads  and  a  gold  and  red 
helmet. 

"Most  people  don't  see  profes- 
sional sports  as  a  full  day,  but  I  have 


the  same  hours  as  a  regular  job. 
You're  studying  and  learning  about 
your  opponent,"  Stokes  said. 

Selected  1 0th  overall  in  the  1995 
NFL  Draft  by  the  reigning  Super 
Bowl  champions,  Stokes  was  the 
only  Bruin  to  go  pro  from  his  col- 
lege class. 

The  change  from  the  Pac-IO  to 
the  pros  has  been  filled  with  ups 
and  downs,  but  his  UCLA  career 
outfitted  him  with  more  than  just 
the  skills  he  learned  in  practice. 

Playing  at  the  mercy  of  90,000 
cheering  Rose  Bowl  attendees  was 
one  of  the  most  important  prepara- 
tions of  all 

•Playing  in  front  of  the  Rose 
Bowl  gave  me  experience  in  front 
of  huge  crowds  playing  football,  so 
I  wasn't  nervous,"  Stokes  said.  "I 


Life  as  a  Bruin 
gave  J.J.  Stokes 

the  experience 

he  needed  to  win 

in  the  NFL 


think  that  definitely  helps  you  play 
in  front  of  huge  crowds  because 
that's  something  that  when  you  do 
that  every  week,  you  step  into  the 
pro  ranks."  \:„ 

Stokes,  who  was  the  Pac-IO 
OfTensive  Player  of  the  Year  and 
7th  in  the  Heisman  Trophy  race  in 
1993,  also  got  more  than  a  Uste  of 
the  limelight  while  at  UCLA.  He 
appeared  on  the  Bob  Hope  Show, 
was  recognized  as  a  Playboy  All- 
American  and  had  iiis  face  plas- 
tered on  billboards  and  magazine 
covers. 

"I  understand  the  motive  of  the 
media  and  what  they're  trying  to 
get  done.  I've  been  aware  of  that, 
UCLA  prepared  me  for  that," 


C 


Diily  Bruin  Sports 


Se«CT0gS,pay46      ^^^  alumnus  J  J.  Stokes  currently  plays  for  the  San  Francisco  49ers. 


SPORTS  CLUB  AMENITIES 

AT   AN    OUTSTANDING    PRICE. 


Less  Than 


You  can  reach  more 

people  by 
advertising  in  the 


runs  every  Friday  in 
the  Daily  Bruin. 


September  25-28, 2000       JS 


/Wo 


Lutheran 


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kmiouk 

From  page  30  ;_ 


ering  UCLA  was  ranked  eighth  in 
the  ESPN  poll  after  defeating  two 
third-ranked  teams. 

But  still,  the  Bruins  power  on  with 
no  signs  of  letting  up.  UCLA's  great 
start  has  not  only  been  big  for  this 
season,  but  has  rejuvenated  a  pro- 
gram that  many  thought  was  in  the 
gutter. 

Fair-weather  fans  are  jumping 
back  on  the  bandwagon,  recruits  are  - 
more  excited  about  UCLA  and  I  bet 
the  student  section  will  be  full  for  the 
rest  of  the  season.    '.  '   ■.;  . 

"This  game  was  for  the  program. 
We  wanted  to  make  a  statement 
today,"  Toledo  said  after  the 
Michigan  game.  "It  was  about  the 
UCLA  program  showing  it  belongs 
among  the  elite  teams." 

The  win  against  Michigan  also 
served  as  an  "in  your  face"  to 
Wolverine  kicker  Hayden  Epstein, 
who  was  once  recruited  by  UCLA. 
But  Epstein  decided  to  bypass 
UCLA  in  favor  of  Michigan  because 
he  wanted  to  go  to  a  "big-time  pro- 
gram." 

"And  I  told  our  team  about  that 
(before  the  game),"  Toledo  said. 

Now  recruits  seeking  a  big-time 


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STUDENT  MEDIA  WEB  PROJECTS  NEED  VOU 

Sludonl  Media  I'CLA  j.s  home  to  Iwo  oflhc  nio.sl  vi.silcd  .sludcdl-hniji 
.siU'.sHl  UCLA:  Daily  IJruin  Online  and  Mniinwalk.eom.  We're  looking; 
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ONLINE 


''A--i:  \: 


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36 September  25-28, 2000 


-Vr^ 


^L- 


Daily  Bfuio  Sports 


■■>^- 


M,  WAt^POLb 


Men's  water  polo  looks  to'retain  championship- 
form  andmal<e  a  repeat  in  the  upcorping  season 


ByRckhaRao 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

According  to  UgIa  Water  polo  head 
coach  Adam  Krikorian,  it's  all  up  to  his 
team. 

"They  have  to  have  the  hunger  to  do  it 
again,"  Krikorian  said. 

That  is.  the  UCLA  water  polo  team  has 
to  possess  the  hunger  to  repeat  their  1999 
NCAA  Championship  from  last  season. 
The  team  has  16  returning  members  from 
that  winning  squad,  including  leadership 
from  six  returning  seniors. 

UCLA  now  comes  into  the  season  with 
a  4-2  record,  a  No.  5  ranking  and  a  desire 
to  hold  on  to  their  title. 

Krikorian  compared  this  team  to  foot- 
ball's San  Francisco  49ers  of  the  1980s 
and  early  1990s. 

"The  expectations  are  so  high.  We  go 
into  the  season  expecting  to  win  the  cham- 
pionship. We  realize  that  as  defending 
champion,  there  is  going  to  be  a  target  on 
our  chests,"  he  said. 


MEN'S  WATER  POLO  SCHEDULE 


Senior  Brian  Brown  passes  in  the  Bruins'  1 3-3 


BRIIX£T  0-8RI£N/0aily  Bruin  S«ntof  SWff 


Win  over  Princeton  on  Sept.  15. 


IsouiaiwmWD 


Att><k,2HMttr(WtiM;ai)s  Mmtm.tim 


Two-  Meter  Offense 

Senior  Sean  Kern  would  usually  lead  in 
this  position,  but  the  Bruins  will  have  to 
overcome  losing  him  to  the  Olympics  until 
mid-October.  Filling  Kern's  position, 
senior  Dave  Parker  heads  the  team  with 
his  immense  physical  size,  (he's  6-foot-8), 
and  his  ability  to  out-muscle  the  opposi^ 
tion.  Combined  in  this  effort  is  junior 
Alfonzo  Tucay,  who  assists  in  the  offense 
on  behalf  of  Kern. 

Two-Meter  Defense 

Seniors  show  their  leadership  and  skill 
on  the  team  here  by  combining  to  form 
strong  defensive  play  for  the  Bruins. 

Blake  Wellen  and  Andy  Bailey  head  the 
defensive  movement. 

"Wellen  has  the  strength  to  guard  some- 
one the  size  of  the  offense  men.  You  need 
to  be  a  very  intelligent  player,  possess  a  lot 
of  finesse,  and  be  fairly  fast.  They  are  the 
last  ones  down  the  pool,  and  they  need  to 
chase  down  the  ball."  Krikorian  said. 

Other  t«ro-meter  defenders  include 
sophomores  Kyle  Baumgarner  and  Matt 
Flesher. 


M**.      wppwWi|t 
09/09     #UC<rvine 

Princeton 

Long  Bca^  State 

UGS 

use 

Cal 

Peppeniine 

@USC. 

#Cai 

^Stanfent 

NorCatTwmmem 

NorCailMimment 

Ic^Marmnowit 


09/15 
09/16 

09/17 

09/24 
09/29 
10/01 
10/07 
10/14 
10/15 
10/21 

10/22 

10/2t 

11/04 

11/05 

11/12 

11/18 
l»uiiasi)t» 


..VP^PWlflW> 

1,9-7 

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L5-4 

W,10-7 

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TBA 

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12.-0OPM 
TBA 


JACOeLIAO^atlyBruki 


Driver 

The  driver  position  in  water  polo  is  the 
most  versatile,  and  many  players  can  fill 
this  slot  for  the  Bruins. 

"Everyone  has  to  be  a  driver  at  one 
point  in  the  game,"  Krikorian  said. 

The  top  drivers  again  include  the  peo- 
ple on  the  team  with  the  most  experience 
like  seniors  Adam  Wright  and  Brian 
Brown. 

Wright  is  a  three-time  All-American 
and  can  draw  from  his  experience  to  be  a 
leader  for  the  Bruins. 

"Wright  is  very  uniqufc  and  skilled  at  his 
position;  he  is  a  great  ball  handler." 
Krikorian  said.  "He  is  the  leader  of  the 
offense,  he  is  like  the  point  guard  of  bas- 
ketball    he  directs  the  offense. 

"Brown  is  very  quick  and  also  has  a 
great  outside  shot,"  he  added. 

Goalie 

"To  be  goalie,  you  want  a  person  who 


S««M.WATBtPOLapa9e37 


JACOeilAO/DiHyBfuin 


This  defensive  rock  drags  opponents  down 


WATERPOia  Brown  prepares 
for  another  season  of  NCAA 
championship  hopes,  dreams 


By  Rekha  Rao 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Senior  Brian  Brown  competes  in  each 
water  polo  game  in  the  position  that 
matches  him  up  against  the  best  player 
from  the  opposing  team.  For  the  past  four 
years,  he  has  fought  against  worldwide 
greats,  including  future  Olympians. 

"He  is  very  conndent.  He  has  the  diffi- 
cult task  every  game  of  matching  up  with 
the  opposing  team's  best  player,"  said 
UCLA  head  coach  Adam  Krikorian. 

Despite  this  challenge,  the  coach  added. 
"He  went  through  last  year  guarding  really 
excellent  players,  and  shut  them  down." 

Yet  Brown  is  a  normal,  dependable  guy. 
A  normal  guy  who  just  happened  to  lead 
his  team  to  a  NCAA  championship  and 
has  been  featured  in  Sports  Illustrated 
Faces  in  the  Crowd. 


"f  got  a  lot  of  nack  for  that  one  from  the 
seniors  on  the  team."  Brown  said.  "I  didn't 
even  know  it  was  happening,  and  they 
found  out  before  I  did." 

Brown  was  practically  raised  in  the 
water.  As  a  child  growing  up  in  Tustin.  he 
started  swimming  because  his  father  was  a 
swim  coach.  At  age  8,  Brown  gave  water 
polo  a  try  for  the  first  time  and  fell  in  love 
with  the  sport. 

"I  tried  water  polo  to  break  up  the 
monotony  of  swimming,  and  I  loved  it," 
Brown  said. 

He  went  to  Foothill  High  School,  where 
he  swam  and  competed  in  water  polo,  and 
had  a  variety  of  colleges  to  choose  from 
including  Stanford  and  Cal. 

But  in  the  end  it  was  UCLA  he  chose, 
"The  players  were  the  ones  who  made 
me  decide  to  come  to  UCLA.  We  are  like  a 
family  and  I  liked  seeing  that  interaction," 
Brown  said.  "The  coaching  staff  is  great 
too.  there  is  a  good  relationship  between 
the  coaches  and  players,  it  isinorc  on  aper- 
sonrfl  level."  v  > . ;  _ 

When  Brown  first  came  to  UCLA,  he 
actually  enjoyed  redshirtihj  hi*  frtthnMMi 


year.  ■  .  ^ 

"It  was  the  only  time  off  from  competi- 
tion that  I  have  had  since  I  was  8  years 
old."  he  said. 

But  then  he  found  it  was  hard  for  him  to 
come  back. 

Not  only  was  Brown  detached  from 
competition,  he  was  also  physically  out  of 
shape.  He  used  the  training  time  from  his 
freshman  year  to  regain  all  the  strength 
from  his  previous  high  school  years. 

"It  was  hard  to  get  back  into  it.  But  with 
working  out  in  the  water,  swimming,  leg 
work  and  drills,  I  got  back  into  the  game." 
he  said. 

Brown's  role  on  the  team  is  essential  to 
Its  success.  He  not  only  plays  one  of  the 
most  versatile  positions,  but  as  one  of  six 
seniors  on  the  team  he  takes  on  a  leader- 
ship role  for  the  younger  players. 

"I  try  to  lead  by  example.  I  probably  get 
frustrated  sometimes,  but  it's  all  right.  The 
younger  players  will  listen  to  you;  this  is 
our  fifth  year  here,  and  we  have  the  experi- 
ence to  give  them  answers,"  Brown  said. 


SMMHNra,pa9*37 


ni  1  «    .  ""OWTOWWtNAJ.ilyBfumS^nwf  Staff 

Playmaker  Brian  Bro«im  earned  an  All-American 
honorable  mention  last  year  as  a  Junior. 


-\:::- 


Only  Bruki  Sports 


MAIMTERPOLO 

From  page  36  W  .   - 

will  take  up  as  much  of  the  goal  as  pos- 
sible," Krikorian  said. 

Sophomore  Brandon  Brooks,  6-6 
and  225  pounds,  fills  this  position  well 
for  the  Bruins. 

"He  has  good  reactions,  is  very 
quick,  and  is  very  athletic,"  Krikorian 
continued. 

Brooks,  who  made  a  championship- 
saving  save  to  preserve  UCLA's  6-5 
lead  in  last  year's  title  game  against 
Stanford,  admits  that  there  is  a  lot  of 
pressure  that  comes  with  being  the 
Bruins'  last  line  of  defense. 

"As  goalie,  1  think  every  goal  that 
we  let  get  scored  on  us  is  my  fault," 
Brooks  said.  "Sometimes  there  are 
goals  you  can't  do  anything  about." 

Outlook 

The  preseason  No.  I  Bruins  contin- 
ued their  road  to  the  championship 
with  four  victories  over  the  course  of 
the  Sept.  15-17  weekend  after  their 
opening  loss  to  No.  5  UCI  rvine,  9-7  in 
overtime,  on  Sept.  9. 

**By  no  means  did  they  surprise  us 


September  25-2«,  2000       37 


and  by  no  means  did  we  underestimate 
them;  we  just  Bidn't  necessarily  play 
,op  to  par  against  them,"  Krikorian. 
taidofthelosstoUCI. 

On  Sept.  15,  the  team  beat 
Princeton  13-3  for  their  first  victory  of 
the  season. 

The  streak  continued  on  Saturday 
at  the  Southern  California 
Tournament,  held  in  Corona  del  Mar. 
UCLA  swept  both  Long  Beach  State 
and  UC  Santa  Barbara,  with  scores  of 
13-6  and  10-4,  respectively. 

"The  Southern  California 
Tournament  is  always  great,  because  it 
is  the  first  time  you  see  all  the  top 
teams.  We  want  to  get  back  to  playing 
UCLA  water  polo,"  Krikorian  said. 

Wright,  the  team's  co-captain,  said 
the  team's  philosophy  is  to  focus  only 
on  the  upcoming  game. 

"We  are  taking  it  game  by  game.  If 
you  look  too  far  ahead,  you  end  up  los- 
ing a  game  like  we  did  to  Irvine,"  he 
said. 

The  Bruins  headed  into  the  semi- 
finals of  the  SoCal  Tournament  fresh 
off  two  victories,  but  then  fell  to  USC, 
5-4.  UCLA  did,  however,  finish  the 
tournament  beating  No.  I  California 
10-7.  securing  the  third  place  standing. 


This  poH  for  men's  water  poio  wKlast 
updated  09/13/2000. 
1.         UCLA 


.^.«- 


mm 


5. 

7. 
9. 


11 

m 

13 
IS. 
17, 
19. 


Stanford 


UCIrvlna 

'  IHH>perdine 
Long  Beach  Stat*"^"^*^ 
Pacific 
UCSB 


■■  -«^-»i«i<si9S!a»s»; 


UCSD 

AirR>rce 

Queens 

Massachusetts- Amherst 

Loyola  Marymount 


St  Francis 
ivU 
Brown 
Riivard 


iAdo^LIAO/Daily^ruIn 


BROWN 

Frofnpage36       ,b 

One  way  Brown  leads  by 
example  is  through  his  play. 

"We  can  match  him  up  with 
thf  best  player  in  the  nation  and 
say,  'We  know  Brian  has  that 
taken  care  of.'  He  is  a  rock 
defensively,"  Krikorian  said. 

And  the  younger  guys  are 
taking  notice. 

"He  is  really  quick  in  the 
water,  and  he  knows  he  is  good 
on  the  counter-attack,"  said 
sophomore  attacker  Kyje 
Baumgarner. 

Brown's  determination  to 
finish  the  game  led  him  through 
successful  freshman  and  sopho- 
more years  and  an  unforget- 
table junior  season  that  culmi- 
nated with  the  NCAA 
Championship. 

"We  have  gotten  better  every 
year,  Last  year  was  obviously 
the  greatest  one,"  Brown  said. 

But  it  was  on  Oct.  16  last  year 
that  Brown  played  his  most 


impressive  and  defining  game. 
He  scored  a  career-high  five 
points  in  UCLA's  8-2  victory 
over  Cal. 

"I  was  the  open  man.  and  I 
put  the  shots  away."  Brown 
said.  "It  was  just  going  for  me 
that  day" 

With  last  year's  NCAA 
championship,  this  year's  team 
hopes  to  continue  the  title-win- 
ning tradition. 

"Winning  is  the  greatest  feel- 
ing ever.  It  didn't  really  hit  me 
for  a  while,"  he  said.  "I  knew  we 
had  won.  but  F  couldn't  believe 
it.  It  has  always  been  a  goal  of 
mine." 

Brown,  a  math-applied  sci- 
ence student,  plans  to  go  into 
business  after  graduation.  But 
that's  for  later.  This  quarter, 
water  polo  is  encompassing  his 
life. 

"After  the  season  is  done,  I 
can  think  about  what  I  want  to 
do  with  my  life."  he  said.  "Right 
now  it's  just  polo." 

And  right  now.  it's  just  about 
winning  another  championship. 


"I  HATE  HIDDEN  COSTS!" 

-DR.  ROSS  J.  SOMERS,  OPTOMETRIST,  (UCLA  Alumni) 


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A  Place  for  Men  5'8" 
and  Under  Discovered 
in  the  Glendale  Galleria 

UCLA  Men  Icxjking  for  tailored  and  casual  clothing 
In  short  and  extra  short  sizes  just  need  to  go  to  - 
Jimmy  Au's  For  Men  5'8"  &  Under  in  the  Glendale 


GLENDALE    -    You    walk    into 
what  looks  like  a  normai  men's 
clothing  store  or  men's  section  in  a 
department  store.     You  sec  hun- 
dreds of  suits,  sport  jackets,  dress 
slacks,  dress  shirts,  silk  ties  and 
everything  else  you  would  normally 
find  in  such  a  place.    What  makes 
this  place  different  is  that  every- 
thing is  catered  to  men  5 '8"  and 
under.     The  name  of  this  unique 
store  is  Jimmy  Au's  for  Men  5 '8" 
and  Under. 
S    Back  in   1972  Jimmy,  an  immi- 
grant, took  custom  suits  orders  back 
1^  to  Hong  Kong  every  month  because 
t  shorter  men  in  the  U.  S.    were  un- 
<able  to  find  suits  in  their  sizes. 
Jimmy  saw  a  need  that  was  not  be- 
ing met  by  the  mcnswear  industry 
in  the  U.S.    Suits  and  sport  jackets 
were  not   made   for  shorter  men. 
But,  this  was  only  part  of  the  prob- 
lem.   Suits  and  sport  jackets  were 
eventually  developed  in  short  sizes. 
However,  these  sizes  were  designed 
for  men  between  5'6'  and  5'8". 
That    still    didn't    solve    Jimmy's 
problem  because  he  was  5'3".    So 
he  began  to  design  a  new  size  scale 
for  men  under  5'5". 
By  using  his  tailoring  and  design 
knowledge,  Jimmy  developed,  for 
lack  of  a  better  term,  an  extra  short 
size  scale  for  men  under  5 '5".   Not 
a  cadet  scale,  which  already  existed 
and   was  really  designed  for  the 
body  of  young  teens.  This  was  pro- 
portionately designed  for  men  under 
5 '5".  A  new  business  was  bom  and 
shorter  men  finally  have  a  place 


they  can  call  their  own. 

Since  1975  Jimmy  Au's  has  been 
providing  tailored  and  casual  cloth- 
ing for  men  5 '8"  and  under,  but  even 
more  so,  especially  for  men  under 
5 '5".  Now  the  store  carries  short 
and  extra  short  suits  and  sport  jack- 
ets, pleated  and  plain  front  short  rise 
dress  slacks,  3 1  sleeve  dress  shirts, 
outerwear,  casual  wear,  and  numer- 
ous other  items.  It  would  be  easier 
just  to  go  in  and  take  a  look.  Jimmy 
is  only  5*3"  and  has  dedicated  his 
life  to  developing  clothing  for  men 
5'8"  and  under  in  all  clothing  cate- 
gories. 

When  asked  how  times  have 
changed,  he  said,  "Now  that  1  have  a 
size  scale  that  works  for  my  clients. 
I  continue  to  focus  on  providing 
them  with  fashion.  I  have  our  tai- 
lored clothing  made  in  Italy,  Canada 
and  the  U.S.,  with  most  of  our  fab- 
rics imported  fi-om  Italy.  People 
want  quality  and  fashion  without 
sacrificing  a  proper  fit.  Guys  can 
come  here  looking  for  the  latest 
styles  and  colors  AND  find  it  here  in 
short  and  extras  short  sizes.  For  the 
guys  under  5 '5"  that  have  not  been 
here  before,  they  may  have  yet  to 
know  what  it  is  like  to  put  on  a 
proper  fitting  suit." 

When  asked  of  his  son.  Alan,  what 
kind  of  special  was  going  on  in  the 
near  future,  he  said,  "Right  now  we 
are  in  the  middle  of  a  $199  suit  pro- 
motion. I'm  urging  students  to  come 
in  now  so  that  they're  pnpand  for 
career  week  and  future  interviews.  I 
especially  encourage  those  of  you 


who  are  under  5 '6",  because  the 
majority  of  the  suits  $199  are  in 
your  sizes.  The  selection  is  at  its 
best  right  now  and  our  promotion 
ends  October  1st.  We  want  to  edu- 
cate shorter  men  about  proper  fit- 
ting suits  and  sport  jackets  and  how 
it  makes  them  look  taller.     And 

who  doesn't  want  that?"      

If  you  are  5 '8"  or  shorter,  you 
need  to  check  this  place  out.  You 
will  be  pleasantly  surprised  by  the 
service,  sizes,  selection  and  style. 
If  you're  under  5'5",  you've  found 
the  place  to  build  your  wardrobe. 
Jimmy  Au's  For  Men  5 '8"  and 
Under  is  located  in  the  Glendale 
Galleria  on  the  2nd  floor  across 
from  JCPenney.  For  more  infor- 
mation call  them  at  (818)243-9898. 


Bruin  Readers  Among 
Area's  Top  Consumers 

Leading  short  men's  clothier,  Jimmy  Au's  chooses 
the  Daily  Bruin  readership  to  target  future  clients 


I 
I 


When  it  comes  to  men's  tailored  ap- 
parel. Daily  Bruin  readers  arc  consid- 
ered some  of  the  most  sought-after 
consumers,  according  to  nationally- 
known  short  men's  clothing  expert, 
Jimmy  Au.  "If  you're  retailing  a  short 
men's  market  in  Southern  California, 
you  would  be  foolish  not  to  target  your 
sales  message  to  the  readers  of  the  DB. 
They're  great  consumers  who  under- 
stand the  need  to  present  themselves 


Already  in  Progress. 


1 00%  Wool  Suits  Only      j 

$199.00! 


I  "Be  prepared  for  Career  Week!"  j 

I  Suits  in  short  sizes  (36sh-46sh)  and  I 

I  extra  short  sizes  (34xs-46xs)  I 

.  Bring  in  this  ad  &  receive  a  FREE  gift  ' 

.  with  your  suit  purchase.  ' 

I  Sale  Ends  Sunday,  Octot)er  1 ,  2000  ■ 

I  JlMlVTi^AU'S      ':  I 

I  Menswaar  For  The  Man  5'8' and  Under  I 

1^  2168  GtoQdale  Galleria  in  Gtendato  (818)  243^9898  I 


professionally     when  they  enter 
to  work  force  while  keeping  up 
with  current  trends  and  styles." 
And  Jimmy  Au  should  kirow  first 
hand,  since  he's  also  tiie"o»wer 
of  Jimmy  Au 's  For  Mert  5  '8  "  andl 
Under,  the  premier  short  men's 
clothing  store  in  Southern  Cali- 
fornia who  just  released  the  find- 
ings of  their  current  client  survey. 
The  poll  not  only  assessed  the 
buying   trends   of  hundreds   of 
Jimmy's  clients,  but  also  allowed 
for  them  to  respond  in  their  own 
words  why  they've  made  the  25- 
year   local   clothier   their   men- 
swear  store  of  choice.     Surpris- 
ingly,    or    not,     according    to 
Jimmy's  son,  Alan,  90%  of  the 
clients   who   offered   comments 
about  their  shopping  experiences 
at  Jimmy  Au's  included  positive 
remarks  about  the  retailer's  out- 
standing customer  service,   and 
selection,  an  added  accolade  to 
Jimmy  Au's  touted  extra  short 
size  clothing  for  men  under  5"5" 
Alan    explained.     "The    results 
don't  really  come  as  a  surprise 
because     we     offer     something 
unique.     Where  else  can. a  guy 
under  5'5"  get  a  suit  that  fits':' _ 
On  top  of  that,  we  enjoy  being  a 
family   business  where  we  can 
really  pay  attention  to  building  a 
relationship  with  our  clients.    It 
tums  out  many  of  our  most  loyal 
clients  are  UCLA  alumni,  so  we 
plan  to  cultivate  new  clients  from 
a  population   that  is  ethnically 
diverse  and  professionally  driven, 
that  our  proper  fitting  selection 
and  style  will  drive  them  to  try  us 
and  our  family  service  will  make 
them  want  to  stay  with  us." 

pakl  advertisement 


39       Stplwiitwf  25-21, 2000 

ANDERSON 

From  page  32 


til     .ri-  l'i  w  ; 


.II.  Ill^lj.  IIV  I  ■■   j     ■, 


I  I'll  I    1 1       ''n 


DalylnMSptm 


;■*<..■ 


next  level. 

"It  made  me  realize  what  the  game 
gives  to  me  and  what  I  give  to  the 
game."  he  «aid.  "If  you  respect  the 
game  and  give  it  all  you're  worth,  the 
game  loves  you  back." 

Now  Anderson  is  once  again  back 
in  the  thick  of  things,  only  this  time  in 
a  more  positive  role.  He  has  a  newly 
discovered  motivation  that  pushes 
him  to  work  hard  every  day.  He  has  a 
fresher  perspective,  a  newer  maturity 
that  he  once  lacked.  He  even  has  a 


new  position,  having  converted  from 
comerback  to  strong  safety  in  the 
siipimer. 

So  just  who  is  Marqu«  Andenoo, 
anyway?.  ..;:■■':  ■■■ 

"I  would  describe  Marques  as  just 
a  fun-to-be-around  kind  of  guy,"  Bell 
said.  "He's  very  laid  back  off  the  field, 
but  on  the  field  he  becomes  an  entire- 
ly different  person." 

It's  surprising  that  Anderson  has 
received  little  media  exposure  outside 
of  his  troubles  off  the  field  last  season, 
and  upsetting  because  he's  much 
more  than  just  the  thuggish  character 
that  critics  wanted  him  to  be. 

Anderson  the  ball-player  is  one  of 


UCLA  food>ail'8  best  aIK«round  play- 
m.  He  grew  up  among  a  family  of 
aMeles.  His  father  Maurice  played 
running  back  for  Oregon,  and  his  sis- 
ter Andrea  was  a  former  UCLA  track 
All-American,  who  is  now  competing 
on  the  1,600-meter  relay  team  in 
Sydney. 

A  high  school  track  star  who  was 
part  of  a  Long  Beach  Poly  High 
School  record  400m  relay  team, 
Anderson  may  very  well  be  the  fastest 
Bruin  on  either  side  of  the  ball. 

What's  even  more  impressive  is 
Anderson's  ability  to  combine  quick 
feet  and  strong  cover  skills  with  a 
fierce  hitting  ability. 


•Thou^  Marques  may  not  have 
the  size  of  a  linebacker,  it'$  his  ability 
to  huitle  and  give  the  big  hit  that 
makes  him  so  valuable  to  our  sec- 
ondary." said  UCLA  defensive  coor- 
dinator Bob  Fidd.  "His  explosiveness 
helps  force  turnovers." 

The  characteristic  Anderson  feds 
is  his  greatest  advantage,  however,  is 
neither  his  speed  nor  his  ability  to 
make  crushing  hits  at  the  line  of 
scrimmage.  Instead^  it's  his  aggr^es- 
siveness  that  he  values. 

"I  pride  myself  in  leaving  it  all  on 
the  field,"  Anderson  said.  "1  think  it's 
that  unwavering  mentality  that  gives 
me  my  edge." 


And  then  there's  the  leadership 
Anderson  brings  to  the  program. 

"Marques  definitely  led  by  exam> 
pie,  by  coming  back  and  showing  peo- 
ple that  he  was  serious  about  the 
game,"  Bell  said.  "He  was  out  a  whole 
year  and  came  back  and  outworked 
half  the  team.  He  proved  his  leader- 
ship by  working  as  hard  as  he  did  and 
by  doing  that  -  people  respond."     ; : 

Anderson's  conversion  from  a>r- 
nerback  to  strong  safety  may  be  the 
strongest  testament  to  his  commit- 
ment to  winning  and  acting  as  a  team 
player.  ' 


MlyBniirtSpMtt 


September  25  28,2000       39 


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40        September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


WOMEN'S  CROSS  COUNTRY 


souRg  scomif.  \ 


V        Kelly  GrritKi 

\  (So.lS'S^ 


JACOB  UAO^OaUy  Bruin 


Several  departures  depleted  the 

women's  squad,  but  chemistry 

and  confidence  can  only  mean 

improvement  this  season     / 


With  a  new  coach  and  a  unified 
attitude,  the  men's  cross  country 
team  hopes  to  keep  pace  with 
the  top  programs' in  the  nation^ 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Although  the  UCLA  women's  cross  country  team 
lost  five  out  of  seven  runners  from  the  squad  it  fielded 
for  the  NCAA  championships  last  year,  the  Bruins 
say  they're  comfortable  with  where  they're  at. 

"We're  going  to  improve  every  week,"  captain 
Christina  Bowen  said.  "We're  a  young  squad  but  we 
have  a  lot  of  enthusiasm  and  talent.  We're  going  to  do 
it." 

In  the  spring,  the  No.  6  and  7  runners,  Kara 
Barnard  and  Melinda  George,  graduated. 

Even  more  hurtful,  however,  were  the  departures 
of  the  team'$  frontrunners.  Kelly  Cohn,  who  was  the 
lop  UCLA  runner  during  the  early  stages  of  last  sea- 
son, left  the  team  in  the  spring  due  to  personal  rea- 
sons. 

Then  it  was  Kate  Vermuelen's  turn.  Vermuelen, 
the  1998  NCAA  Indoor  champion  in  the  mile,  trans- 
ferred to  UCLA  from  West  Virginia  last  year  and 
took  over  the  Bruins'  No.  I  spot  late  in  the  season. 
She,  too,  had  personal  issues  and  left  the  school  alto- 
gether. 

Finally,  Elaine  Canchola  decided  over  the  summer 
that  it  was  in  her  best  interest  to  redshirt  her  junior 


S«eWJ(C0UNTilY,|MgeS6 


FINISHLYNXPOLL 

This  poll  for  women's  cross  country  was  last 
updated  09/18/2000. 

1.  Stanford 

2.  Wisconsin 

3.  Kansas  State 
'■^x-.*.        Colorado 

5.        Georgetown 
•righam  Young 

7.  Arizona  State       '^H| 

8.  North  Carolina  State 

9.  Arlunsas 
yig.^^,  Boston  College 

11.      Providence 
Oregon 

13.  Minnesota 

14.  Michigan 

15.  Colorado  State 

16.  Duke 

1 7.  Brown 

18.  Washington 

19.  Villanova 

20.  Texas  A&M 
NR.      UCLA 

SOOUg  »wwnnttny|imcgin/IXMccp<ifcliW 


MCOeLIAO/Dally  Bruin 


CROSSCOUNTRY  SEASON  SCHEDULE 

t^otiii 


09/02/2000     Fulleitonlnvitition^ 
09/16/2000     Aztec  invitational 


Ontcw— /Ti— 


Senror  Christina  Bowen  came  off  a  recJshirt  year  and  has  led  the  Bruins  in 
both  their  meets  so  far.  She  is  shown  here  competing  against  Florida  at  UCLA. 


09/23/2000 

RoxGrfak  Invitational        y.^ 

09/23/2000 

SunOotfoer              WtA 

09/30/2000 

Stanforflflvjtatiwial    ^^ 

10/07/2000 

P«inSt«*lii»ltati(»al  ,-.:-.,? 

10/14/2000 

Pre-NCAAMeet           iHI 

10/14/2000 

CalPolySlOlRvftatlonarW™ 

10/20/2000 

Cal  State  FuBirtoii  tovRatidnal 

10/28/2000 

Pac-IOChampionjWpj 

n/1 1/2000 

NCAAIIetiMV8ianin|»iom}iips 

11/20/2000 

NCAA  Championships 

SOMCi  SoMiMt 

Fullerton,  CA 

San  Diego,  CA 

Minneapolb,  MN 
Seattle,  WA 
Stanford,  CA 
University  Park.  PA 
Aroc$,IA 

San  Luis  Obispo,  CA 
Fullerton,  CA 
Seattle,  WA 
Fresno,  CA 
Ames.lA 


H«en-1$t  Place 

Women*  IstPiaot 

Mco-3idPbce 

Women -Jfd  Place 

Ail  Day 

Alt  Day 

All  Day 

MOay 

All  Day 

All  Day 

AUtoy 

ARDay 

All  Day 

AN  Day 


JACOB  IIAO/O»ily  Bruin 


Rores  blossoms  as  key  distance  runner  for  UCLA 


W.XCOUNTRY:  Coach's  ongoing 
relationship  with  high  school 
star  paid  off  for  Bruin  squad 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


having  performed  well  from  the  start. 

As  a  high  school  freshman  in  1996,  she  won  her 
first  cross  country  race  coming  off  just  three 
weeks  of  training.  By  the  end  of  the  season,  she 
was  the  fifth  best  runher  in  the  city  and  earned  a 
berth  in  the  California  state  championships. 


UCLA  women's  cross  country  head  coach 
Eric  Peterson  has  seen  Valerie  Hores  develop 
over  the  years. 

Peterson  first  saw  her  as  a  San  Pedro  High 
School  sophomore  running  at  the  Los  Angeles 
City  Section  track  champion.ships. 

Three  years  later,  Pcter.son  is  now  her  coach. 

"She's  the  most  improved  runner  in  the  area 
over  the  last  couple  of  years,"  Peterson  said  of  the 
Bruin  freshman.  "She  was  always  a  talented  kid. 
She  just  needed  the  opportunity." 

Competing  in  the  Los  Angeles  City  Section  - 
where  distance  running  times  lag  far  behind  those 
from  the  nearby  Southern  Section  -  Rores  went 
largely  unnoticed  until  her  senior  season  despite 


"I've  always  wanted  to  go  to 

UCLA  ever  since  the  first  time 

I  went  there." 

Valerie  Flores 

Cross  country  runner    :^ 


■^- ,  "I  was  so  excited  to  qualify,"  she  said. 

The  state  meet,  however,  turned  out  to  be  dis- 
astrous. Running  with  a  hip  fiexor,  Flores  finished* 
sccond-to-Iast  and  remained  unknown.     ' 

"It  was  my  saddest  race  evenp*'  she  recalled. 


"My  parents  were  there,  trying  to  get  me  to  stop." 
That,  however,  didn't  deter  her  interest  in  the 
sport. 

"I  really  liked  the  success,"  Flores  said.  "Being 
the  first  runner  from  San  Pedro  to  go  to  state  gave 
me  a  lot  of  satisfaction." 

The  following  year,  she  qualified  for  the  state 
meet  again,  but  once  more,  a  hip  injury  prevented 
her  from  placing  high. 

Rores'  breakthrough  came  when  she  was  a 
junior  and  had  a  new  coach,  Bruce  Thomson. 

Between  her  sophomore  and  junior  years, 
Rores  trained  for  the  first  time  dunng  the  sum- 
mer. In  the  fall,  she  won  the  city  cross  country  title 
and  was  sixth  in  the  state. 

Finally,  for  the  first  time,  she  was  being 
noticed. 

Meanwhile,  Thomson  began  talking  to 
Peterson  about  Rores  Thomson,  a  UCLA  alum, 
was  a  regular  attendant  at  Bruin  track  meets  and 
was  in  contact  with  the  coaches. 

"He  just  told  mc  about  Val  and  how  she 


Uv.lA  jpoili  information 

Bryan  Green  keeps  up  with  the  competition  in  a  meet.  The  junior 
was  the  Bruins'  top  runner  in  the  first  two  meets  of  the  season. 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


September  25-28, 2000       41 


M  c^osQpuyvTT?/ 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff  v; 

After  21  years  as  head  coach  of  the  UCLA 
men's  cross  country  team.  Bob  Larsen  finally 
stepped  down,  giving  way  to  Eric  Peterson. 

Peterson  has  been  the  women's  coach  for  the 
past  six  years  and  has  led  the  team  to  consecu- 
tive NCAA  championship  appearances. 
Beginning  this  year,  he  will  be  in  charge  of  both 
the  men's  and  women's  programs. 

So  far,  the  Bruin  men  are  adjusting,  without 
a  problem,  to  the  change. 

"It  was  an  expected  transition,"  senior  Paul 
Muite  said.  "We're  all  adapting  to  it  well." 

"I  think  the  team  will  do  better  with  coach' 
Peterson,"  junior  Bryan  Green  added.  "Eric  is 
really  focused  on  team  discipline.  We're  coming 
together  as  one  anci  it'll  be  beneficial  to  all  of 
us." 

Missing  the  big  frontrunners  of  the  past 
years  in  Mebrahtom  Keflezighi,  who  is  repre- 
senting the  United  States  at  the  Olympics,  and 
Mark  Hauser,  UCLA  has  implemented  a  more 
team-oriented  strategy  in  its  races. 

In  its  first  two  meets  of  the  season,  the  Bruins 
have  tried  to  keep  its  pack  together  through 
three  miles  in  an  effort  to  drag  along  the  bottom 
scorers. 

"I  felt  it  was  an  easy  sell,"  Peterson  said.  "I 
recognized  in  observing  the  team  that  there  was 
no  superstar  athlete  I  told  them  they  were  bet- 


MONDO/USCCCAPQLL 

This  poll  for  men's  aoss  country  was  last 
updated  08/29/2000. 


1. 
2. 

Arkansas       ,      ^,,^^^ 
Stanford 

3. 

Colorado 

^Pi''v 

;    lona  College 

5, 

Arizona 

6. 

Wisconsin 

7. 

Georgetown 

8. 

North  Carolina  State 

9. 

Oregon 

10. 

Michigan 

11. 

Arizona  State" -"^■■■'■*"""'*'^ 

12. 

Minnesota 

13. 

William  &  Mary 

14. 

Providence 

15. 

Northern  Arizona      ,  .,^, 

16. 

Southern  Utah 

17. 

Oklahoma  State 

18. 

Michigan  State 

19. 

Alabama 

20. 

Notre  Dame 

NR. 

UCLA 

SOUHa  ww»  tacHmyijmuini'ncutqiolUilrol 
'polldJUapdilMlonOV/Jt 

JACOB  LIAO/Daily  Bruin 

SeeMJ(C0UNTI(Y,page48 


JACOB  LIAO/D<iry  Bruin 


See  HORES,  page  SO 


/  N"CatMllLER/D»ily»uin 

Freshman  Vilerte  Flores  placed  second  and 
third  in  the  Bruins' first  two  meets  this  year 


■*»■;■  -^» 


t*^.^Vf-^-  ■^'-^: 


Abbott  triumphs  over  past  injuries,  learns  patience 


M.XCOUNTRY:  After  a  string  of 
Stress  fractures,  athlete  returns 
to  fill  Bruin  leadership  role 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


NICOlEMM.Lf(VD»ilyBfbln 

Scott  Abbott  overcame  various  injuries  to 
run  one  more  year  for  UCLA,  as  team  captain. 


When  Scott  Abbott  first  arrived  at  UCLA, 
he  thought  he  would  one  day  be  an 
All-Amcrican. 

Five  years  and  a  string  of  injuries  later,  he  is 
happy  just  to  be  running  at  all. 

Abbott  came  to  Westwood  in  1996  from 
Jesuit  High  School  in  Sacramento,  where  he 
had  been  part  of  three  state  championship  cross 
country  teams. 

Although  he  ran  behind  current  U.S. 
Olympic  miler  Michael  Stember  for  much  of  the 
time,  Abbott  established  himself  as  one  of  the 
top  runners  in  California,  placing  eighth  at  the 
Division  II  State  Meet  as  a  senior. 

In  the  winter  that  followed,  ^yhilc  Stember 


was  training  to  become  the  first  prep  athlete 
since  1967  to  break  four  minutes  in  the  mile. 
Abbott  began  putting  in  some  major  distance 
work. 

At  the  1996  National  Scholastic  Indoor 
Championships  in  Boston,  which  came  right 
before  the  start  of  the  spring  outdoor  season, 
Abbott  placed  fifth  in  the  two-mile  to  earn  All- 
American  honors.  Stember  won  the  mile. 

On  the  plane  ride  back  from  the  meet, 
California  Track  and  Field  News  Editor  Doug 
Speck  told  Abbott  he  didn't  think  any  school 
had  produced  a  mile  and  two-mile  state  champi- 
on in  the  same  year  (Speck  was  wrong,  Jesuit 
had,  in  fact,  in  1986). 

Based  on  their  performances  at  the  Indoor 
Nationals,  Speck  said  that  Stember  and  Abbott 
were  the  favorites  in  those  events. 

Abbott  was  pumped.  '        '' 

A  week  later,  he  was  hurt. 

A  stress  fracture  had  developed  in  his  fibia, 
and  he  didn't  return  to  competition  until  the 
very  end  of  the  season.  Stember,  too,  became 
injured  soon  after,  and  though  he  was  able  to 


win  the  1600  meter  race  at  the  state  meet,  he 
didn't  come  close  to  cracking  the  four-minute 
barrier. 

"It  was  really  disappointing  to  end  my  high 
school  career  that  way,"  Abbott  said. 

Abbott  did,  however,  have  plenty  to  look  for- 
ward to,  as  several  universities  expressed  inter- 
est in  him. 

"It  was  great  to  run  on  the  same  team  as 
Michael."  he  said.  "He  cast  a  big  shadow,  but  I 
drew  a  lot  of  the  spotlight.  Schools  that  wanted 
Michael  came  after  mc  hard,  thinking  if  ihcy 
could  sign  mc.  they  could  gel  Michael,  too  ' 

Abbott  initially  signed  a  letter  of  intent  with 
Boston  College,  which  olTcred  him  a  full  ride, 
but  eventually  decided  to  attend  UCLA. 

At  UCLA,  Abbott  was  determined  to  make 
an  impact  right  away. 

"1  was  pushing  it  so  hard  the  summer  before 
my  freshman  year,"  Abbott  said.  "Relatively,  1 
wanted  to  be  at  the  same  level  1  was  in  high 
school." 


SeeM80TT,pageS1 


I    •  t    I 


•\i^mJTlKi  ,Ti»Vy>.i^i    _  'iliii.  PI  ^1  ;  ii> 


^mm^^-m^t^mmmtim 


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42        September  25-28, 2000 


Diiiy  Bruin  Sports 


Team  retreat  brings  group  together 


DIARY:  Early-morning- 
runs,  group  cooking  all" 
part  of  becoming  closer 

Kelly  Grimes  is  a  ihinJ-year  physio- 
logivul  sciences  student.  Grimes  is  from 
San  Diego  and  is  a  \: :      . 

potential  scorer  on 
the  2IH)I)  women's 
cross-country 
team. 

•  •  • 

Monday.  Sept. 
4 

A  knock  at  the 
door  awakens  me, 
and  as  Eric  shouts 
out  his  wake-up 
call,  I  groggily  roll 

out  of  bed.  It  is    

6:30  a.m.,  and  I 

still  don't  think  I'm  used  to  the  early 

morning. 


Kelly 
Grimes 


The  men's  and  women's  cross  coun- 
try teams  have  traveled  here  to  the 
Ponderosa  Lodge  in  Mammoth  for 
two  weeks  of  intense,  high  altitude 
training.  This  camp  is  a 
very  important  part  of 
our  season,  a  time  for 
pushing  our  bodies, 
focusing  on  training, 
and  coming  together  as 
a  team. 

We  gather  in  the 
common  room  of  the 
lodge  for  a  team  meet- 
ing before  the  morning  workout.  Our 
coaches,  Eric  Peterson  and  Helen 
Lehman-Winters,  review  our  race  at 
Fullerton,  our  first  of  the  season.  They 
are  very  proud  of  our  performance. 
We  won  the  race  as  a  team,  and  every- 
one had  a  positive  experience.  I  am 
really  excited! 

I  feel  like  I  ran  one  of  the  best  races 
of  my  life,  and  yet  I  still  feel  as  though 
there  is  much  toy^mprove  on. 


The  mood  of  the  meeting  is  opti- 
mistic and  everyone  is  ready  to  get  to 
work.  ■'-,::}:'.'■'::■..  .;.«^ 

We  drive  down  to  the  creek  for  a 
morning  run  of  30  min- 
utes. Though  the  sun  is 
shining  brightly,  the  air 
is  crisp  and  chilly,  so  we 
are  anxious  to  get  start- 
ed. The  run  is  downhill 
at  first,  so  I  am  feeling 
good.  However,  we  are 
at  8000  feet  elevation, 
so  everyone  is  strug- 
gling with  the  breathing. 

One  of  the  keys  to  our  success  as  a 
team  will  be  our  ability  to  minimize  the 
separation  between  our  first  and  fifth 
runner  in  a  race.  Great  teams  often  run 
in  packs,  a  tactic  that  in  races  not  only 
makes  it  easier  to  stay  on  pace,  but  also 
serves  to  intimidate  the  competition. 
Therefore,  we  put  a  lot  of  focus  on 

-    •:  ,..■;■  ■-■■.      SeefiRIMB^pageSS 


j(im  gives  up  chancB 
to  compete  for  friend 


U.S.  basketball  monopoly  unchecked  in  Sydniy 


OLYMPICS:  NBA  stars  crush 
international  competition 
as  Dream  Team  stands  tall 


ByJimLitfce 

The  Associated  Press 

SYDNEY,  Australia  -  The  ques- 
tion is  why  the  rest  of  the  world  still 
bothers  to  show  up. 

"It  is,"  Yao  Ming  said,  smiling 
broadly,  "a  learning  experience." 

This  was  five  minutes  after  the 
Dream  Team  beat  China  1 19-72,  so  it 
must  have  been  some  learning  experi- 


ence. 

Yao  is  7-foot-5  and  only  20,  but  he 
already  knows  all  he  needs  to  about 
the  Olympics.  The  only  chance  his 
country  has  to  beat  the  United  States 
in  basketball  during  his  lifetime  is  if 
they're  playing  Nintendo. 

China  coach  Jiang  Xingquan  could 
have  shown  his  squad  "Hoosi^s"  100 
times  before  tip-off  and  all  he  would 
have  had  for  his  trouble  was  a  burned- 
out  projector. 

"We  started  off  well,"  Jiang  said. 
'And  then  the  gap  widened." 

For  four  minutes  Sunday  night,  his 
team  actually  had  the  lead.  Yao 
blocked  a  shot  by  Vince  Carter  at 


18:12  and  Wang  Zhizhi  made  a  layup 
at  the  other  end  for  a  7-5  lead.  It 
swelled  to  six  before  Ray  iillen 
drained  a  3-pointer  at  14: 14  for  a  17-16 
lead.  Soon  after,  the  exhibition  began. 

"The  way  1  learned  the  game,  every- 
body is  allowed  to  score  points," 
Carter  said.  "The  only  thing  that  mat- 
ters is  what's  the  score  at  the  end  of  the 
game." 

The  United  States  now  meets  Italy, 
New  Zealand  and  France  during  the 
next  week  and  none  of  them  will  have  a 
chance,  either.  That's  pretty  much 
been  true  since  basketball  became  part 


SeeMSI(nBALl.pa9eS7 


OLYMPICS:  Pal  bowed 
down  to  send  injured 
opponent  to  Sydney" 

By  Jocdyn  Novcck 

Associated  Press  Writef 

SYDNEY,  Australia  -  How 
many  times  have  we  heard  ath- 
letes say  it?  Sure,  we're  friends, 
they  explain.  But  out  there  in 
the  ring,  or  pool  or  court  or 
field,  it's  all  business. 
Not  for  Esther  Kim. 
The  striking  20-year-old  taek- 
wondo     athlete 
from     Houston 
has        become     —— — «^ 
famous    for    a 
very     different 
kind  of  sports 
story,  one  of  sac- 
rifice    in     the 
name  of  friend- 
ship. She  told  it 
to  Oprah,  and 
now  she's  telling 
it        at        the 
Olympics,      an     ^— — 
honored  guest  at  ;, 

these  games. 

On  Monday,  facing  a  room- 
ful of  journalists,  Kim  and  her 
best  friend,  Kay  Poe,  were  all 
giggles  and  stolen  glances. 
Long  gone  were  the -tears  that 
engulfed  them  on  May  20. 

That  was  the  day  they  faced  a 
terrible  quandary.  They  found 
themselves  pitted  against  each 
other  in  the  final  match  of  the 


fiyweight  category  at  the  U.S. 


Olympic  trials.  Only  one  would 
get  to  represent  the   United 
States  in  Sydney. 

But  this  wasn't  just  a  story  of 
two  pals  having  to  compete  for 
a  prize.  There  was  a  twist.  Poe. 
1&,  had  dislocated  her  kneecap 
in  the  previous  match.  As  she 
sat  with  Kim  in  the  Jiolding 
area,  the  two  of  them  holding 
ice  on  her  knee,  the  joint  began 
to  swell.  She  could  barely  walk, 
let  alone  fight. 

So  Kim  announced  her  plan. 
She  would  bow  out  so  her  friend 
could  go  to  the  Olympics. 
"Kay  has  always  pushed  a  lit- 
tle harder  and 
_______     wanted  it  a  little 

■""■^"■^  more,"  she 
explained  at  the 
time. 

It  was  espe- 
cially heart- 
breaking for 
Kim's  father, 
Jin  Won  Kim, 
who  was  her 
coach  and  also 
Poe's.  But  the 

longtime    taek- 

wondo  teacher 
supported  his  daughter's  deci- 
sion, and  told  her  he  was  proud. 
Now,  all  three  are  in  Sydney. 
It  didn't  take  long  for  the  story 
to  travel  to  Oprah  Winfrey,  who 
hosted  the  young  women  on  her 
television  show,  and  then  to 
Juan  Antonio  Samaranch,  pres- 
ident of  the  International 
Olympic  Committee,  who  invit- 


"For  the  first  time 

in  my  life,  I  felt 
like  a  champion." 

Esther  Klin 

Taekwondo 
competitor 


208-8048 


10916  KINROSS  AVE 
WESTWOOD  VILLAGE 


We  deliver:  Cakes,  Scoops, 

Shakes,  Sundaes, 

Cappuccino  Blasts, 

Non-Fat  Fruit  Smoothies,  etc. 


Mffinimiptti 


Positive  dit^ 

OLYMPICS:  Weightlifting  hit  hard 
by  results;  agencies  bicker  over 
athletes'  penalties,  suspensions 


September  25-28, 2000       43 


By  Stephen  Wlisoii 

The  Associated  Press 

SYDNEY,    Australia    -    A     Bulgarian' 
weightlifter  was  stripped  ofhis  silver  medal  and 
a  hammer  thrower  from  Belarus  was  kicked  out 
of  the  Sydney  Olympics  in  the  first  positive  dop- 
ing cases  of  the  games. 

The  International  Olympic  Committee  said 
Wednesday  (Tuesday  night  EDHT)  that  it  had 
taken  away  the  silver  in  the  56-kiIogram  (123- 
pound)  weightlifting  class  from  Ivan  Ivanov, 
who  tested  positive  for  furosemide,  a  diuretic. 


With  Ivanov  stripped  of  the 
weightlifting  silver;  the 
standings  w^re  revised. 


Ivanov,  a  gold  medalist  at  the  1992  Barcelona 
Olympics  and  former  four-lime  world  champi- 
on, kissed  his  barbell  after  he  had  clinched  the 
medal  Saturday,  the  first  full  day  of  competi- 
tion. 

The  other  banned  athlete  was  Vadim 
Oevyatovsky,  a  hammer  thrower  from  Belarus, 
who  tested  positive  for  components  of  the 
banned  steroid  nandrolone  in  an  out-of-compo- 
tition  sample  on  Sept.  12  in  the  athletes'  village, 


the  IOC  said.  V-:--^---:-:/'V  v.-.- 

Diuretics  are  used  to  flush  fluid  from  an  ath- 
-  jete's  body  to  reduce  weight,  but  also  can  be 
med  to  mask  the  presence  of  other  perfor- 
mance-enhancing drugs,  Nandrolone  builds 
muscle  and  helps  athletes  recover  faster  in  train- 
ing.     ^V'''.'—-V':^^^-^- '■■•■■■-.'■  •'■■■' 

These  were  the  first  athletes  banned  as  a 
result  of  tests  conducted  during  the  games. 
Several  others  had  been  banned  as  a  result  of 
pre-games  tests. 

IOC  medical  commission  chairman  Prince 
Alexandre  de  Merode  said  the  expulsions  were 
ordered  on  the  basis  of  positive  results  of  the 
"A"  samples.  In  the  past,  no  sanctions  were 
taken  until  after  the  backup  "B"  sample  was 
tested.  ■■■■r-  - 

See  MUC  page  54 


PAC-10 


Armstrong  heads  to  Sydney  with  gold  on  Ns  mind 


OLYMPICS:  Bicydist  looks  to  add 
medal  to  trophy  case,  aside  two 
Tour  de  FVance  championships 


ByJocalynNovcdi 

The  Associated  Press 

SYDNEY,  Australia  -  Imagine  being  Lance 
Armstrong's  teammate.  You  give  a  news  confer- 
ence and  nobody  even  asks  you  a  question  - 
unless  it's  about  Lance. 

But  that's  what  happens  nowadays  when  The 
Lance  Showjrolls  into  town. 

Armstrong  is  back  at  the  Olympics,  for  the 


'There  was  only  one  reason 
to  come  and  that's  to  win." 

Lance  Armstrong 

Olympic  bicyclist 


third  time.  But  this  time,  things  are  oh  so  dilTer- 
ent.  In  the  intervening  four  years,  he  has  become 
a  star  -  one  of  those  stars  whose  fame  transcends 
their  sport. 

Four  years  ago  in  Atlanta,  the  Texan  cyclist  fin- 
ished way  out  of  medal  contention.  Known  as  a 


good  rider,  but  not  necessarily  a  great  one,  he  left 
Atlanta  not  knowing  that  he  was  ill  -  very  ill. 

Two  months  later,  he  was  diagnosed  with  tes- 
ticular cancer  that  had  spread  to  his  lungs  and 
brain.  Doctors  gave  him  about  a  50  percent 
chance  of  surviving. 

The  story  of  Armstrong's  recovery  was  stun- 
ning enough.  Then  there  was  his  remarkable  vic- 
tory in  the  1999  Tour  de  France,  one  of  the  most 
grueling  events  in  all  of  sports.  And  then,  as  if  to 
show  it  was  no  fluke,  he  repeated  that  viijtory  th^s^. 
year.  *  * 

At  a  news  conference  Tuesday,  the  trappings 
that  go  along  with  Armstrong's  newfound  fame 


See  ARMSreONS,  page  S5 


(*■ 


From  page  31 


Bob  Toledo  said  after  the  Fresno  State  game. 

This  should  happen  as  Ryan  McCann  con- 
tinues to  become  more  comfortable  with  the 
oflcnse.":'-'-\-"  \X- 

Big-time  victories  over  Alabama  and 
Michigan  will  prepare  the  Bruins  for  late  season 
showdowns  with  USC  and  Washington. 

Z.Washington  -—  . 

The  Huskies  will  be  tough  contenders  for  the 
•title.  Quarterback  Marques  Tuiasosopo  is  a 
legitimate  Heisman  candidate,  and  he  has  nine 
ofTensive  returning  starters  to  support  him. 

Defensively  the  Huskies  are  very  solid.  Led 
by  linebacker  Jeremiah  Pharms  and  Hakim 
Akbar,  they  have  already  forced  15  fumbles, 
and  were  large  contributors  in  beating  No.  4 
Miami. 

The  Huskies  mi^t  have  an  advantage  when 
UCLA  is  forced  to  travel  to  Seattle  for  a  key 
showdown  late  in  the  season.  Tuiasosopo  will 
need  to  live  up  to  his  Heisman  hype  if 
Washington  is  to  have  a  chance  at  the  title.     . 

3.  USC     '■• 

Good  things  are  expected  out  of  Southern 
California  this  year.  Like  cross-town  rival 
UCLA,  USC  has  turned  its  focus  to  defense. 
Zeke  Moreno  and  Sultan  Abdul-Malik  lead  a 
talented  bunch  that  helped  the  Trojans  down 
Penn  State  and  later  Colorado.  Penn  State  has 
since  lost  to  Toledo,  however,  and  Colorado  is 
not  in  the  top  25. 

The  key^tp  the  Trojans'  season  rests  directly 
MMn  thejpbwferfiil  right  arm  of  USC's  latest 
'plcferi  boy,!fe»rson  Palmer.  The  Trojan  run- 
ning game  has  been  solid  so  far,  and  if  it  contin- 
ues to  keep  pressure  ofl"  Palmer,  USC  will  be 


SeeMC-10,page44 


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44       September  25-28, 2000 


/  ,  ■■.■  :*-'.   '  . 


Daily  Bniin  Sports 


40 


PAC-10 

From  page  43 

tough  lo  handle. 

Both  Washington  and  USC  are  at 
an  advantage  because  they,  will  not 
play  each  other  this  year. 

4.  Oregon 

The  Ducks  still  miss  Akili  Smith 
and  Rueben  Droughns,  but  they 
proved  they  can  move  on  after  a  con- 
vincing effort  in  Madison,  Wis. 
Despite  the  loss,  Oregon  out-gained 
the  No.  4  Badgers  454-367. 

Junior  college  transfer  Maurice 


OalyBruinS^ortt 


(The  Ducks)  are  tough 
to  beat  at  home, 
currently  riding  a 

15-ga me  home-field 
.  w 


Morris  will  be  expected  to  get  the  run- 
ning game  in  gear  for  a  team  that 
returns  just  nine  starters. 

With  a  2-1.  start,  the  Ducks  seem  to 
be  right  where  they  expected.  They  are 


tough  to  beat  at  home,  currently  riding 
a  15-^ame  home-field  winning  streak. 
,  But  Oregon's  2000  home  schedule 
includes  both  Washington  and 
UCLA,  leaving  the  Ducks  in  poten- 
tially troubled  waters.    , 

S.OregonSute 

The  Beavers  have  long  been  known 
as  the  Pac-IO  doormat,  consistently 
getting  walked  on  by  the  rest  of  the 
conference.  But  this  year  should  be  dif- 
ferent in  Corvallis. 

The  key  to  Oregon  State's  season  is 
locked  in  the  legs  of  junior  tailback 
Ken  Simonton.  A  tong  shot  for  the 
Heisman  trophy,  Simonton  has  rushed 


September  25-2S,  2000       45 


They  are  steaming  in 

the  desert  after  a 

disappointing  1999 

season  for  the  Wildcats. 


for  100  yards  or  better  in  12  out  of  his 
last  15  games. 

Defensively  the  Beavers  return 
seven  starters  and  should  be  able  to 
control  opposing  teams.  This  unit  held 
New  Mexico  to  just  42  yards  on  3 1  car- 
ries  earlier  this  year. 


Just  the  same,  the  Beavers  do  not 
have  the  firepower  to  contend  with  the 

..Pac-IO  frontrunners.        » 

, ,  .>  ■•;-.•  .^•.  ■.,■..•,■;  .■;■•■• 

6.  Arizona 

They  are  steaming  in  the  desert 
after  a  disappointing  1999  season  for 
the  Wildcats.  Picked  by  many  to  con- 
tend for  a  national  titje,  Arizona  fin- 
ished a  dismal  6^.    y,  J:-.;.  ■-^,?.;-  ■> 

Senior  Ortege  Jenkins  leads  the  way 
at  quarterback.  Used  as  both  a  QB  and 
wideout  last  year,  Jenkins  will  have 
sole  control  of  the  offense  for  the  first 
time  ever.  Sp  far  the  Wildcats  have 


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looked  nther  Impotent  m  wins 
against  San  Diego  State  and  Utah, 
and  not  much  better  in  a  loss  to  Ohio 
Sute. 

Road  games  against  USC  and 
Washington  will  take  the  heat  out  of 
Arizona,  leaving  the  Wildcat  faithful 
counting  the  days  to  March  Madness. 

' .  X  OnlfM  Ills 

You  know  things  aren't  going  well 
when  your  best  ofTensive  weapon  is 
your  punter.  Nick  Harris  seems  to  be 


on  every  coach's  mind  as  they  pre- 
pare for  Cal,  but  how  bad  can  a 
punter  hurt  you? 

th^re  is  no  doubt  that  the  Bears 
have  talent.  Sophomore  quarterback 
Kyle  Boiler  has  a  large  caliber  rifie  for 
a  right  arm,  but  will  not  get  enough 
time  to  throw  the  ball  this  year. 
Tailback  Joe  Igbar  is  in  the  same 
predicament  -  lots  of  talent,  very  little 
blocking. 

The  defense  is  led  by  end  Andre 
Carter,  but  he  is  one  of  just  four 
returning  starters  to  a  unit  that  should 
see  a  lot  of  time  on  jthe  fjcld  this  year. 

8.  Arizona  State 


Tempe  was  looking  forward  to  the 
2000  season  before  the  Sun  Devil's 
starting  quarterback,  senior  Ryan 
Kealy,  ran  into  off-field  trouble. 
Arizona  State  has  the  best  tight  end  in 
the  Pac-10,  and  possibly  the  nation, 
but  Todd  Heap  has  no  one  to  throw 
him  the  ball. 

On  defense  Arizona  State  returns 
just  five  starters,  two  of  which  are 
sophomores.  A  close  win  over  San 
Diego  State  gave  way  to  an  upset  of 
Colorado  Sute,  but  it  won't  be 
enough  for  ASU  this  year. 

A  lack  of  depth  and  experience  wiH 
take  the  sizzle  out  of  the  Sun  Devils  in 
2000.  .V- 


9.  Stanford 

It's  hard  to  pick  a  team  thafbeats 
No.  ^  Texas  to  finish  jjinth.  Then 
again,  it's  tough  to  pick  a  team  that 
gives  up  40  poinU  to  San  Jose  State  to 
finish  much  higher.  Stanford  faithfuls 
will  point  to  the  fact  that  they  lost  to  the 
Spartans  a  year  ago  and  still  went  to 
the  Rose  Bowl.  This  is  true,  but  2000  is 
a  whole  new  season  in  Palo  Alto. 

The  Cardinal  is  going  to  have  a 
tough  time  replacing  the  big  play  guys 
who  took  them  to  the  title  last  year. 
DeRonnie  Pitts  is  a  good  receiver,  but 
he  is  no  Troy  Walters.  The  rest  of  the 
Stanford  lineup  is  a  shadow  of  the 
Rose  Bowl  team.  y,*: 


10.  WashingtoB  State  -   *v    ' 

Washington  State  fans  will  want  to 
cling  to  those  memories  of  Pasadena 
on  New  Years  Day  1998  because  relief 
from  their  current  torment  is  not  in  the 
near  future.  The  past  two  seasons  have 
found  the  Cougars  in  last  place,  and 
the  third  time  will  be  no  charm  in  2000. 

The  olfensive  line's  lack  of  effective- 
ness will  be  the  biggest  of  many  prob- 
lems for  Washington  State. 

The  lone  bright  spot  could  be  defen- 
sive back  LaMont  Thompson,  but 
even  superman  couldn't  stop  the 
Coug's  from  sliding  to  the  back  of  the 
pack. 


1  Call  825-21 61  to  advertise 

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46        September  25-28, 2000 


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Daily  Bruin  Sports 


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J  J.  Stokes  runs  wjth  the  ball  as  a  UCLA  Bruin  (1 991  -94). 


STOKES 

From  page  34  / 

Stokes  said. 

Because  of  the  attention  he 
received  from  the  media  during  col- 
lege, it's  easier  for  him  to  brush  ofT 
reporter's  comments  now. 

Entering  the  San  Francisco  scene, 
he  was  dubbed  as  the  next  Jerry  Rice, 
only  to  start  his  pro  career  with  con- 
secutive years  or  injuries. 

Healthy  again  in  his  third  year, 
Stokes  endeared  the  media  and  soon 
they  were  back  on  his  bandwagon. 

"I've  had  my  good  times  and  my 
bad  times."  Stokes  said.  "They  strad- 


dle both  sides  of  the  fence  and  they're 
quick  to  point  out  the  negative,  espe- 
cially more  so  in  the  pro  ranks  than 
the  college  ranks." 

After  his  record-setting  career  at 
UCLA,  including  receptions,  receiv- 
ing and  touchdowns,  rushing,  Stokes 
has  not  amassed  quite  as  many  acco- 
lades in  the  pros.  For  one,  he's  play- 
ing behind  a  future  Hall  of  Famer, 
wide  receiver  Jerry  Rice. 

"I'm  still  trying  to  make  it  hap- 
pen," Stokes  told  the  San  Francisco 
Chronicle  this  August.  "But  as  you 
can  see,  my  opportunities  are  few  and 
far  between.  And  that  frustrates  the 


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September  25-28, 2000        47 


STOKES  r^ 

From  page  46 

hell  out  of  me." 

.;  Stokes'  pro  stats  currently  sit  at 

3,120  yards  and  22  touchdowns  in  five 

seasons. 

Playing  a  game  for  a  living  is  some- 
thing most  people  only  dream  of. 
Stokes  knows  he  is  lucky  to  partake  in 
such  an  endeavor.  But  he  knows  that 
he's  earned  it. 

"I  worked  my  butt  off  and  I'm 
lucky  that  I  got  to  get  in.  I  always  went 
the  extra  mile,  I've  always  been  a 
workaholic   I  didn't  always  get  the 


best  grades,  but  I  can  honestly  say 
that  I  worked  my  butt  off  studying. 
Go  above  and  beyond  what  is  needed 
and  you'll  see  the  results."    ;: 

+Iis  dedication  is  what  has  Carried 
him  through  his  career  on  the  field. 
Up  against  some  of  the  best  in  college 
and  even  more  in  the  pros.  Stokes  has 
survived  the  media  and  his  bout  with 
injuries  to  keep  first  the  blue  and  gold 
and  now  the  red  and  gold  jersey  on  his 
6-4,  217  pound  frame. 

What  he  hasn't  let  go  of  is  the  tra- 
dition that  he  was  a  part  of  at  UCLA 
and  in  the  game  of  college  football. 
He  perks  up  when  the  topic  of  rival- 
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years  have  passed  since  Stokes 
donned  the  powder  blue  jersey,  the 
war  against  the  Trojans  remains  fresh 
in  his  mind.    ,  V  ^ 

"Nothing  compares  to  the  UCl.A- 
USC  rivalry.  That's  something  that's 
huge  and  you  know  that  when  you 
first  come  in,"  Stokes  said. 

It  was  the  game  he  always  looked 
forward  to  in  his  four  years. 

"The  city's  pretty  much  divided 
and  you  have  fans  on  each  side 
screaming  and  yelling  at  each  other. 
Everyone's  competing  against  each 
other,  the  fans,  the  band,  the  players, 
the  coaches,  the  school  in  general.  It's 
our  school  against  your  school.  Who's 


the  better  school? 

"In  coflege  you're  wailing  for  that 
last  game,  that  rivalry  game.  It's  the 
city  against  the  city,  or  the  town 
against  the  certain  town  -  it's  not  the 
same  in  the  pro  ranks,"  Stokes 
recalled,  his  voice  brimming  with 
excitement. 

And  even  though  there  has  been  a 
break  in  the  Bruins'  winning  streak, 
Stokes  remains  confident  that  they'll 
get  it  back. 

The  rivalries  in  the  NFL  aren't  as 
long-standing  as  those  between  uni- 
versities. But  something  that  does 
remain  as  players  move  from  one 
level  to  another  is  the  debate  about 


whether  or  not  Pac-IO  athletes  and 
SEC  athletes  compare. 

Stokes  and  other  49ers  from  both 
the  Pac-IO  and  the  SEC  watched  the 
Bruins  assert  themselves  against  then- 
No.  3  Alabama  on  Sept.  2.  During  the 
game  they  argued  which  conference's 
players  were  superior. 

"We  talk  about  whose  athletes  are 
better  which  one's  a  tougher  coijfer- 
ence-  and  the  only  time  that  we  get  a 
chance  to  see  that  is  when  we  get  to 
play,"  he  said. 

Stokes  personally  lived  up  to  his 
words  in  1994,  when  the  Bruins  post- 
See  STONES,  page  SI 


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48       September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


MJCCOUNTRY 

frompage41 

ter  together  than  by  themselves." 

Practice,  too,  team  members  say, 
have  been  more  productive,  since 
there  is  less  competition  among  each 
other. 

The  squad,  which  finished  sev- 
enth among  the  eight  teams  compet- 
ing in  the  Pac-10  last  year,  return 
much  of  their  nucleus  intact. 

Green.  .15th  at  the  1999  Western 
Regional,  looks  to  be  the  team's  top 
runner,  having  placed  sixth  and  third 
at  the  r-ullcrton  and  Aztec  meets. 


respeoiively,  to  open  the  year.  In 
track.  Greeo  was  lOth  in  the  Pac-10 
10,000  meters  with  a  31:22.52  per- 
sonal-best. 

Fifth-year  senior  Scott  Abbott 
returns  to  captain  the  Bruins  despite 
having  earned  his  degree  in  the 
spring.  He  was  a  close  second  on  the 
team  to  Green  at  both  the  Fullerlon 
and  Aztec  races.         ■-  -      •  '  ' 

Muitc.  a  14:41.75  5K  runner  in 
track,  is  also  back  after  a  disappoint- 
ing 1999  campaign.  Although  he  was 
the  team's  top  returnee.  Muite  never 
found  his  rhythm  and  struggled 
through  last  season.  So  far  this  year 
he  has  looked  solid,  finishing  right 


behind  Abbott  in  the  two  races. 

Senior  Mason  Moore  was  the 
No.  I  Bruin  at  the  Pac-10  cross  coun- 
try championships  last  year^  and 
should  be  a  consistent  scorer  for 
UCLA 

"We  have  a  lot  of  experience," 
Peterson  said.  "The  popular  way  of 
thinking  is  that  if  that  experience  is 
no  good,  it  won't  help.  I  don't 
believe  that. 

"The  past  failures  will  make  these 
guys  hungry." 

At  the  moment,  the  question 
mark  appears  to  lie  in  the  five 
through  seven  spots. 


Junior  Justin  Patananan  has  run 


remarkably  well  at  times  but  has 
been  inconsistent.  Junior  Andrew 
Wulf,  an  academic  senior,  missed 
last  season  studying  abroad  in 
Spain. 

Freshman  Jon  Rankin^  a  4:10 
1600  meter  runner  from  Monte 
Vista  High  School  in  Spring  Valley, 

is  another  possibility  to  take  the  fifth 

and  final  scoring  position. 

Peterson  said  the  Bruins  should 

be  capable  of  finishing  between  fifth 

and  sixth  in  both  the  Pac-lOs  and 

Western  Regionals. 

He  pointed  to  NCAA  qualifiers 

Cal  Poly  San  Luis  Obispo,  Arizona 

State    and    Portland    among    the 


regional  rivals  UCLA  can  be  com- 
petitive with. 

"It's  realistic,"  he  sa^tf ""We're 
rebuilding  and  that  will  take  time, 
especially  since  weVe  in  a  confer- 
ence that's  so  strong."    ., 

Stanford,  second  at  last  year*s 
NCAA  championships,  are  the 
favorites  to  win  not  only  the  Pac-IO 
conference,  but  the  national  title  as 
well.  They  are  paced  by  senior  All- 
American  Jonathan  Riley. 

Perennial  powers  Arizona  and 
Oregon  each  lost  their  AIl-American 
frontrunners  in  Micheil  Jones  and 
Steve  Fein,  respectively,  but  are 
expected  to  finish  strong  this  year. 


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Daily  Bruin  Sports 


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FliORES 

Frompage40 

dreamed  of  going  to  UCLA  her  whole 
life."  Peterson  said.  "It  seemed  like  a 
natural  fit  for  her." 

With  Peterson  keeping  an  eye  on 
^er,  Flores  had  a  stellar  1999  track  sea- 
son, winning  both  the  1600- and  3200- 
mcter  races  at  the  city  finals.       .  ..  :,:<.- 

In  the  summer  before  her  seriior 
year  of  high  school,  Flores  sat  down 
with  Thomson  and  set  some  goals>^ 
They  talked  about  the  state  meet,  the 
Footlocker  Western  Regional  race  and 
even  the  possibility  of  qualifying  for  the 
national  championships, 

Rores  went  to  Peterson's  summer 
running  camp  in  Mammoth  and 
entered  the  1999  cross  country  season 
fit. 

At  midseason,  she  got  some  encour- 
agement by  placing  third  at  the  presti- 


gious Mt.  SAC  Invitational,  which 
established  her  as  a  contender  for  the 
state  crown. 

By  this  time,  Peterson  was  seriously 
recruiting  her. 

"I've  always  wanted  to  go  to  UCLA 
ever  since  the  first  time  I  went  there," 
Rores  said.  "My  parents  always  want- 
ed me  to  go  there." 

Had  she  not  been  not  been  an  ath- 
lete, Rores  still  may  have  wound  up  a 
Bruin. 

Academically,  she  was  ranked  19th 
_in  her  class  with  a  3.9  GPA.  She  was  the 
sports  editor  of  her  school  newspaper, 
worked  with  campus  radio,  packed  in 
300  hours  of  community  service  and 
was  involved  in  a  church  group  and  the 
Youth  &  Government  club. 

Rores  committed  to  UCLA  as  soon 
as  she  could,  giving  the  school  her  letter 
of  intent  during  the  November  early- 
signing  period. 

Other  schools  -  such  as  Cal  and  UC 


"She's  the  most 
Improved 'runner  Irt  •; 
the  area  over  the  last 
couple  of  years." 

;..v    Eric  Peterson 
Women's  cross  country  coach 


Irvine  -  had  offered  her  scholarships  as 
well,  but  having  joined  a  game  in  which 
they  were  already  at  a  disadvantage, 
they  lost. 

But  even  though  she  had  already 
signed,  Rores  wasn't  done  with  her 
high  school  running  career  yet. 

She  repeated  as  the  city  cross  coun- 
try champion  but  fell  short  of  her  goals 
at  the  state  meet.  Hampered  by  the  flu, 
Rores  finished  fifth. 


"I  knew  I  wasn't  going  to  win," 
Flores  said  of  her  race  at  the  state  meet. 
.  "I  feft  bad  because  everyone  had  expec- 
tations." 

At  the  Footlocker  West  Regionals 

the  following  week,  where  the  top  eight 

finishers  woukl  go  on  to  national  finals, 

J^  Flores  entered  the  race  without  being 

. :  given  much  of  a  chance. 

Doug  Speck,  the  prep  editor  of 
California  Track  &  Running  News, 
had  u>mpiled  a  list  of  30  runners  who 
could  possibly  advance  to  the  champi- 
onships in  Florida.  He  left  Rores' 
name  off  completely. 

"I  had  to  prove  to  myself  that  I 
belonged  among  the  best  in  the  state," 
Rores  said. 

That  day,  Rores  was  the  best  in  the 
state.  Coming  in  fifth  in  the  regional 
race,  Rores  was  the  first  Caiifomian  to 
CToss  the  finish  line. 

A  week  later,  she  was  19th  at  the 
national  meet.     ; 


Suddenly,  Peterson  looked  like  a 
genius. 

This  year,  Rores  has  already  been  a 
significant  contributor  to  the  Bruin 
squad.  In  the  team's  first  two  meets,  she 
was  the  second  and  third  UCLA 
finisher. 

When  the  season  is  over,  Peterson  is 
hoping  to  enter  Rores  in  the  USATF 
Junior  Cross  Country  championships, 
where  she  can  earn  a  berth  in  the  world 
finals.  ,  ^i 

The  key  for  Rores,  Peterson  said,  is 
to  be  patient. 

"Since  she's  from  the  city,  she  lacks 
experience  at  a  high  level,"  he  said.  "It's 
been  more  of  a  detriment  to  her  devel- 
opment than  anything.  She  was  win- 
ning races  so  easily  there. 

"She's  going  to  have  to  learn  to  deal 
with  not  running  as  well  as  she  can  and 
being  beat,"  he  added.  "But  last  year  at 
Footlocker,  she  proved  she  was 
resilient.  She  should  be  able  to  do  it." 


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ABBCm  :w 

And  again,  At:^tt  got  hart.  This 

-^me,  he  had  not  one,  but  tw,g^9tress 

fractures.  '^-v~'~* 

He  redshirted  both  his  freshman 
cross  country  and  track  seasons. 

In  his  second  year  in  school, 
Abbott  got  yet  another  stress  fracture 
in  his  fibia  shortly  before  the  start  of 
cross  country.  One  more  followed 
prior  to  the  start  of  track. 

"I  started  asking  myself  why  I  was 
doing  this,"  Abbott  said.  "I  think  I 
just  came  back  because  I  hadn't  run  a 
race  yet. !  wanted  to  see  if  I  could  run 
at  this  level." 

Finally,  Abbott  told  his  doctor 
about  some  strange  symptoms  he  had 
been  feeling  since  high  school.  Ten  to 
15  minutes  into  his  runs,  he  said,  his 
legs  would  go  numb. 
:  The  doctor  ran  a  series  of  tests  on 
Abbott  and  diagnosed  him  with  com- 
partment syndrome.  According  to 
the  doctor,  the  four  muscle  compart- 
ments in  each  of  Abbott's  legs  tight- 
ened each  time  he  ran,  cutting  blood 
flow  to  the  area. 

Surgery,  the  doctor  said,  was  need- 
ed immediately  If  the  situation  got 
any  worse,  amputation  may  become  a 
necessity. 

"At  the  time,  I  didn't  think  about 
running  at  all,"  he  said.  "I  was  pretty 
scared,  i  just  wanted  to  get  this  over 
with." 

'  Abbott  was  able  to  start  training 
the  next  summer,  but  found  he  wasn't 
completely  cured.  In  the  1998  cross 
country  season,  Abbott  ran  a  few 
races. 

Then  he  got  greedy  again. 
•    He  overtrained  during  the  winter 
and  had  to  miss  track  again  because 
of  a  stress  fracture. 

"That  was  rock  bottom,"  he  said. 
"I  thought  about  quitting." 

But  that  summer,  Abbott  did  an 
internship  in  Colorado  Springs  with 
the  U.S.  Olympic  Committee,  doing 
research  on  endurance  sports.  There, 
he  learned  of  how  becoming  a  dis- 
tance runner  was  a  cumulative 
process. 

"Each  time  I'd  come  back,  I  tried 
to  play  catch  up  and  I  did  too  much," 


he  said-  "1  saw  that  it  took  time." 

Abbott  returned  last  year  and 
trained  steadily.  \\e  managed  to  run 
in  all  of  the  races  with  the  exception  of 
the  Western  Regional,  which  he  was 
forced  to  miss  due  to  a  ruptured  disc 
in  his  back. 

Afler  a  track  season  during  which 
he  posted  personal  bests  of  15:05.93 
(5K)  and  31:47.85  (lOK).  Abbott 
graduated  magna  cum  laude  with  a 
degree  in  communication  studies. 
Standing  at  the  ceremony  with  his 
diploma  in  hand.  Abbott  felt  a  sense 
of  closure. 

"People  asked  me  if  I  feel  I  had 
failed,"  he  said.  "I  told  them,  'Heck 
no.' 

"J  wasn't  an  Ail-American,  but  I 
was  an  All-Amcrican  student.  As  a 
student-athlete,  1  accomplished  a  lot. 
Coming  in,  of  course,  I  was  hoping 
more  of  it  would  be  on  the  athlete 
side,  but  I  still  did  a  lot." 

Then  came  the  Olympic  trials  in 
August.  Abbott  watched' from  the 
stands  as  Stember  snatched  the  final 
qualifying  spot  in  the  1500m.  He  also 
saw  many  athletes  who  were  compet- 
ing whom  he  had  beaten  in  high 
school. 

"I  realized  I  still  had  more," 
Abbott  said.  "I  realized  that  I  didn't 
yet  have  closure." 

And  so  it  was  then  that  Abbott 
decided  to  come  back  to  UCLA  for 
another  quarter. 

Abbott  was  named  the  team  cap- 
tain and  in  the  Bruins'  first  two  races, 
he  was  the  squad's  No.  2  man  behind 
Bryan  Green. 

Head  coach  Eric  Peterson  is  glad 
to  have  him  back. 

"He  has  a  desire  to  win  and  he's 
extremely  competitive,"  Peterson 
said., ""He  leads  by  example  and  he 
directs  behavior  in  a  positive  manner. 

"He  gives  a  commitment  to  this 
team  that  has  been  void  for  the  last 
couple  of  years."  •.    ', 

When  Abbott's  done  with  this  sea- 
son, though,  he  says  he's  through  with 
running  for  good. 

"I  don't  like  running  itself  any- 
more," he  said.  "I've  learned  to  asso- 
ciate the  physical  aspect  of  it  with 
pain.  I  love  the  competition,  and  I 
love  my  teammates,  but  the  running 
itself  hasn't  been  good  to  my  body." 


STOKES 

Frompa9e47     '       "    %  >v^.■- 

cd  a  25-23  victory  over  the  SEC's 
Tennessee. 

"J.J.  Stokes  is  one  of  the  premiere 
players  in  the  nation,"  former  UCLA 
head  coach  Terry  Donahue  said  in 
1994.  "He  is  as  fine  a  receiver  as  I 
have  seen  in  a  long  time.  The  numbei;. 
of  yards  he  gains  afler  his  catches  > 
because  of  his  speed,  size  ana 
strength  is  what  sets  him  apart  from 
other  receivers." 

Even  those  in  the  SEC. 

A  seven-year  contract  for  $8.4  mil- 
lion finalized  Stokes'  step-up  into  the 
professional  ranks.  He  stresses  to 
drafted  collegiate  athletes  that  in 
order  to  succeed  in  the  NFL,  amidst 


the  money,  the  press  and  the 
demands,  the  important  thing  is  to 
remain  true  to  yourself. 

"Keep  your  head  on  strong  and  be 
the  same  type  of  player  and  person 
you  were  when  you  were  in  college," 
he  said.  "Keeping  a  level  head  and  a 
focused  mind  when  it  comes  to  the 
money  aspect  is  what  sets  people  over 
the  top  as  far  as  who  are  they  super- 
surs." 

It's  this  frame  of  mind  that  has 
helped  him  adapt  to  the  faster  pace  of 
the  pro  game,  helped  him  keep  his 
skills  as  a  receiver  well  rounded,  and 
his  personality  approachable 

Up  against  the  best  in  the  world, 
J.J.  Stokes  has  worked  his  way  from 
an  injury-plagued  start  to  being  the 
relief  for  one  of  the  games'  best.  It's 
all  in  a  day's  work. 


ANDERSON 

Frompage38      .     ]  .     '. 

"It  was  a  move  that  we  felt  was 
best  for  the  team."  Field  said. 
"Marques,  (Ricky)  Manning,  and 
Bell  were  three  of  our  best  athletes  on 
defense,  and  (Anderson)  seemed  to 
be  the  best  fit  to  play  the  strong  safety 
position." 

It's  a  transition  Anderson  seems  to 
have  taken  well.  Through  the  first 
three  games,  he  proved  to  be  an  inte- 
gral part  to  the  sixth-ranked  Bruins. 
In  the  Bruins'  win  over  then-No.  3 
Michigan  on  Sept.  16.  Anderson 
matched  his  career  high  in  tackles, 
gaining  six  unassisted  and  two  assi^- 
cd  tackles  for  eight  total.  The  last 
time  he  had  that  many  tackles  was 
against  Oregon  in  1998. 


"Converting  to  the  safety  position 
was  more  of  a  mental  challenge  than 
it  was  a  physical  challenge," 
Anderson  said.  "Knowing  how  the 
front  seven  line  up  meant  that  I  had 
to  take  on  more  of  a  leadership  role 
than  I  was  used  to  at  comerback.  It 
was  something  that  the  coaches  dis- 
cussed with  me  when  I  came  back 
and  a  challenge  that  I  wanted  to  take 
on." 

As  for  the  future,  Anderson's 
potential  seems  limitless. 

"As  far  as  talent  is  concerned,  I 
don't  think  Marques  has  begun  to 
scratch  the  surface,"  Bell  said.  "I  def- 
initely see  him  as  the  captain  of  the 
team  next  year." 

And  that  seems  to  be  the  type  of 
transformation  Anderson  the  person 
has  undertaken,  from  team  bad  boy 
to  team  leader. 


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Junior  OcShaun  Foster  charges  with  the  ball  in  UCLA's  win  over 
Alabama  three  weeks  ago.  The  Bruins  played  at  Oregon  this  week. 


RECAP 

Frompage33 

Physical  play  was  the  key  to  their 
win,  according  to  Bruin  head  coach 
Bob  Toledo.  '  ;■'  ■ 

"This  was  the  most  physical  game 
we've  played  since  I've  been  here, 
with  the  exception  of  the  two  games  in 
'97  against  Washington  and 
Arizona,"  he  said. 

Stepping  in  for  the  Bruins  on 
offense  was  backup  quarterback 
Ryan  McCann,  who  completed  I4-of- 
24  passes  for  194  yards  on  the  day. 
His  only  serious  mistake  of  the  outing 
was  a  forced  pass  intercepted  by 
Reggie  Myles.  who  returned  it  91 
yards  to  put  the  Crimson  Tide  up  24- 
21  at  the  start  of  the  second  half. 

But  UCLA  claimed  the  lead  off  of 
McCann's  46-yard  touchdown  pass 
to  Freddie 

Mitchell.  ^_^,,____ 

The       Bruin 

squad   was   the 

first     unranked 

UCLA  team  to 

beat     a     team 

ranked  as  high  as 

No.  3. 

"I  don't  know 

if  we're  back."  said  Toledo.  "But  I'm 

very  exdlcd  right  now  for  our  football 

team  and  the  Pac-10." 


in  possession  of  the  ball  on  the  UCLA 
':.  43,  the  Bruin  defense  came  up  big. 

Carr  fumbled  the  snap  from  the 
center  and  UCLA  strong  safety 
Marques  Anderson  recovered  the 
ball  to  preserve  the  lead  and  ensure 
the  win. 

"UCLA  made  big  plays,  and  the 
team  that  makes  the  big  plays  wins," 
Fresno  State  head  coach  Pat  Hill  said. 

He  found  no  consolation  in  how 
close  his  unranked  team  came  to 
upsetting  the  Bruins. 

"It's  not  a  moral  victory.  We  can 
play  with  these  people,"  Hill  said. 

The  Bruins  have  never  lost  to  the 
Bulldogs.  This  win  pushed  UCLA's 
overall  record  against  Fresno  State  to 
M. 

UCLA  23,  IVf  icbisan  20  (Sept.  16) 

It  was  a  challenge,  no  matter  how 

you  looked  at  it.  In  sweltering  heat,  in 

front      of      a 


The  Bruins  have  proven 

themselves  better  than 

anyone  expected. 


UCLA  24,  Fresno  State  21 
(Sept.  9) 

Of  the  Bruins'  three  preseason 
games,  the  one  against  the  Bulldogs 
of  the  WAC  was  expected  to  be  the 
easiest. 

Someone  forgot  to  tell  Fresno 
State. 

Through  three  quarters  of  play,  a 
determined  and  physical  Bulldog 
team  held  their  own  in  the  game 
against  the  then-No.  16  Bruins,  keep- 
ing the  UCLA  lead  to  a  slim  10-7. 

Had  it  not  been  for  Charles  Smith 
tripping  over  a  teammate  after 
returning  a  punt  75  yards  to  the 
UCLA  7,  Fresno  could  have  been  up 
14-7.  The  Bulldogs  failed  to  score  on 
that  drive. 

But  the  Bruins  played  just  as  slop- 
py and  by  halftime,  frustrated  with 
starting  quarterback  Ryan  McCann's 
mistakes.  UCLA  head  coach  Bob 
Toledo  pulled  McCann  from  the 
game  and  played  third-string  Scott 
McEwan  at  quarterback. 

"Ryan  was  calling  bad  audibles. 
He  was  missing  passes  that  were 
there,  and  there  was  no  consistency," 
Toledo  said.  "We  needed  a  change, 
and  I  thought  I'd  give  Scott  McEwan 
a  chance.  He  came  in  and  did  a  nice 
job."  "^ 

In  the  fourth  UQLA  fmally 
seemed  to  break  open  the  game  t^hen 
DeShaun  Foster  ran  in  two  touch- 
downs to  increase  UCLA's  lead  to 

24-7 

But  five  minutes  later,  Fresno 
St^te  quarterback  David  Carr  had 
two  touchdown  passes  of  his  own  to 
close  the  score  to  24-21. 

With  1:17  still  left  and  the  Bulldogs 


packed  stadium, 
the  Bruins  faced 
the  No.  3  team 
in    the   nation. 
But  the  Bruins 
had  been  here 
before,  just   14 
J-      days  prior,  and 
like  that  previ- 
ous game.  UCLA  pulled  out  the  upset 
and  showed  why  they're  among  the 
nation's  elite. 

"That  was  really  an  outstanding 
victory  for  our  football  program," 
said  UCLA  head  coach  Bob  Toledo. 
"We  obviously  had  to  overcome  a  lot 
of  adversity,  but  the  thing  that  was 
kind  of  neat  about  it  is  our  kids  found 
a  way  to  win  it  at  the  end  and  that's  ail 
that  really  counts." 

With  the  heat  boiling  at  100 
degrees  at  kickoff,  players  and  faith- 
ful fans  alike  sweltered  as  the 
Wolverines  and  Bruins  faced  off. 

The  Bruin  defense  squelched 
Michigan  quarterbadc  John  Navarre, 
who  had  led  the  nation  in  passing  effi- 
ciency in  the  first  two  weeks  of  the 
season,  limiting  him  to  just  8-of-28 
passes  for  1 1 1  yards,  and  only  1-for-IO 
and  37  yards  in  the  second  half. 

While  the  Bruin  defense  got  the  job 
done,  UCLA  struggled  to  get  it  going 
on  offense,  and  quarterback  Ryan 
McCatm  completed  only  6K>f-l9  for 
76  yards. 

But  unlike  the  previous  week  when 
McCann  struggled,  UCLA  head 
coach  Bob  Toledo  elected  to  let  him 
redeem  himself  on  the  field 

"I  told  him,  'This  is  your  game  to 
win,  don't  look  behind  you,'"  Toledo 
said.  "This  game  was  for  the  pro- 
gram. If  we  were  going  to  be  among 
the  elite  teams  in  the  country,  we  had 
to  make  a  statement  today.  I  think  we 
made  it." 

Despite  trailing  the  Wolverines 
into  the  fourth  quarter  20-17.  the 
Bruins  sealed  the  win  with  the  one- 
two  punch  of  Michigan's  Hayden 
Epstein  miss  of  a  46-yard  field  goal 
with  13:36  remaining  and  the  inter- 
ception by  Jason  Stephens  with  1:28 


SMlKAP,pa9e56 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


KMiOTEK  . 

Frompage35  -    . 

program  can't  overlook  UCLA. 
The  only  surprise  is  that  the  trans- 
formation happened  so  quickly. 

"This  is  a  happy  program  right 
now,"  said  fullback  Ed  leremia- 
Stansbury.    --- 

Seemingly  overnight,  UCLA 
has  gone  from  a  team  with  poten- 
tial to  a  national  contender. 
Following  a  4-7  season,  many 
Bruin  fans  were  looking  forward 
to  2001  as  the  year  when  UCLA 
would  gain  national  prominence. 
Forget  the  wait. 

"This  is  something  we've  been 
working  for  since  last  season." 
linebacker  Tony  White  said.  "We 
lost  to  the  big  teams  last  year,  and 
now  we're  beating  these  teams.  It's 
a  great  feeling." 

And  the  Bruins  have  done  it 
without  their  starting  quarterback 
since  the  first  offensive  drive  of  the 
year.  Back-up  Ryan  McCann  has 
done  an  admirable  job  filling  in, 
but  Cory  Paus  will  show  why  he 
was  named  starting  quarterback  in 
fall  practice. 

Paus  is  more  consistent,  under- 
stands the  ofiense  better  than 
McCann,  and  is  better  suited  to  open 
up  the  passing  game  by  throwing 
downfield.  Not  only  will  that  better 
utilize  the  tremendous  abilities  of 
'receivers  Freddie  Mitchell  and  Brian 
Poli-Dixon,  but  it  will  make  running 
the  ball  easier  for  Heisman  candidate 
DeShaun  Foster. 

If  defenses  can't  focus  on  Foster 
like  they  have  been,  UCLA's  offense 


ASSOCIATED  PRESS  POLL 


Septembef  25-28, 2000        53 


"te^.. 


MUKLi 


aimntam 


Nebraska 
Florida  State 
Florida 
Kansas  State 
Virginia  Tech 
UCU 
Wisconsin 
Washington 

use 

10.  Michigan 

1.  Clemson 

12.  Miami  Florida 

13.  Tennessee 
14.  Ohio  State 

15.  Texas 

16.  Notre  0am  e 
'Oklahoma 

CU 
19^  Illinois 
>uburn 
2l1.gPurdue  -l^^^ 

>uthem  Mississippi 
J3.    Michigan! 

Georgia 
25.   Mississippi  State 


jA(:6ALIA6/6*llytfuln 


ESPNAISATODAYCOAQiES 


1. 


3. 


Nebraska 
FloHdaSt. 
FiorMa 
inia  Tech 
5.    idinsasSm!! 
Wisconsin 
Washington 
UCLA 

9.  use 

10.  Michigan 

11.  Clemson 

12.  Ohio  State 

13.  Tennessee 

14.  Miami  Florida 

15.  Texas 

16.  OklahqnM 
fltlnois 

Ilk.  Notre  Dame 

19.  TCU 

20.  Michigan  State 

21.  Purdue 

22.  Auburn 

23.  Southern  Mississippi 
4.   Georgia 

25.   Mississippi  State 

SOUKL  mnir.npuMi 

tstinntnm 

will  be  very  productive  and  hard  to 
stop. 

On  defense,  UCLA  looks  like  a 
different  team  than  the  one  we're 
used  to  seeing.  They  can  even  tackle 
now.  The  secondary  has  been  com- 
pletely revamped,  and  it  shows. 
Marques  Anderson  has  been  coming 
up  big,  Ricky  Manning  has  saved  at 
least  two  touchdowns  and  Jason  Bell 
has  been  playing  well.  They  did  get 
some  help,  however,  from  the 
struggling  quarterbacks  of 
Alabama  and  Michigan.  The  sec- 
ondary's true  lest  will  come  during 
Pac-10  play. 

The  Bruins'  front  seven,  led  by 
Thomas,  has  done  a  good  job  stop- 
ping the  run  but  must  improve  its 
pass  rushing.  The  loss  of  Kenyon 
Coleman  due  to  torn  cartilage 
Ukes  a  big  chunk  out  of  the 
defense,  but  Sean  Phillips  is  a 
viable  back-up.And  considering 
Ken  Kocher  has  yet  to  play  at  full 
strength  and  Asi  Faoa  has  yet  to  be 
unleashed,  the  D  should  be  able  to 
recover  down  the  road. 

All  in  all,  it's  been  a  good  start 
to  the  season  and  the  millennium 
for  UCLA  football.  If  the  team 
makes  certain  improvements,  it 
could  certainly  make  a  run  for  a 
BCS  bowl.  And  that  pesky  national 
championship  game  in  the  Orange 
Bowl? 

"In  college  football,  anything 
can  happen,"  Toledo  said. 

Good  thing  there's  a  beach  in 
Miami,  dude. 


Send  any  convnents  and  questions  to 
Jizzeff^aoixom  and  he  will  respond 
to  them  in  future  columns. 


KIM 

Frofnpage42 

ed  Kim  to  come  to  the  games. 

At  the  IOC's  general  meeting 
here,  the  tape  from  the  Oprah  show 
was  played  and  Samaranch  kissed 
Kim  on  both  cheeks,  expressing  the 
hope  she'd  compete  in  four  years,  at 
the  summer  games  in  Athens. 

For  now,  Kim  seems  content 
telling  her  tale,  and  to  judge  from 
the  news  conference,  more  prac- 
ticed at  it  than  Poe. 

She  insists  she  has  no  regrets  - 
though  she  admits  she  wishes  they 
both  could  compete. 

"For  the  first  time  in  my  life,  1  felt 
like  a  champion,"  she  said  of  the 
moment  she  made  her  decision.  "I 
felt  like  I  had  a  personal  message 
from  God,  saying,  'I've  got  a  bigger 
and  better  plan  for  you.' 

"She  may  have  a  gold  medal 
around  her  neck.  But  I'll  have  one  in 
my  heart." 


To  cynics  who  suggest  a  real  ath- 
lete wouldn't  give  up  the  fight  no 
matter  what,  Kim's  father  had  an 
explanation. 

"In  taekwondo,  winning  isn't 
everything,"  he  said  of  the  karate- 
like  martial  art  that  is  heavy  on  kick- 
ing. . 

"I've  taught  for  26  years,  and  in 
these  girls  I  feel  I  can  see  the 
results." 

Kim  plans  to  be  there  when  her 
pal  fights  Sept.  27,  and  she  said  her 
dream  -  "more  than  anything"  -  is 
to  see  Poe  bring  home  the  gold. 

"Having  two  dreams  in  one  body 
will  make  (her  chances)  that  much 
stronger,"  she  said.       .-; -. 

As  for  Poe,  she  admitted  with 
refreshing  frankness  that  she  isn't 
sure  she'd  have  made  the  same  sacri- 
fice. 

"Actually  to  be  totally  honest,  I 
can't  tell  you  that,"  she  said. 
"Because  I  know  that  if  Esther  were 
hurt,  she'd  still  be  looking  out  for 
me." 


Sad  or  Blue? 

Trouble  sleeping? 

Withdrawn?  Low  motivation?      • 

•  Feeling  tired  or  loss  of  energy? 

•  Difficulty  (X)ncentrating? 

•  Changes  in  weight  or  appetite? 

If  you  answered  yes  to  any  of  the  above, 
you  may  be  one  of  the  millions  of 
Americans  suffering  from  Depression. 
Depression  is  often  caused  by  a  chemical 
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NERVOUS 

AROUND 

PEOPLE? 

•  Do  you  feel  shy  in  social  situations? 

•  Are  you  fearful  of  performing  or 
speal<ing  in  front  of  an  audience? 

•  Do  you  feel  uncomfortable  being  the 
center  of  attention 


If  yes,  you  may  have  Social  Anxiety 
Disorder.  You  are  not  alone.  Social 
Anxiety  Disorder  affects  over  10  million 
Americans.  It  can  affect  your  school  or 
work  performance,  social  life,  and 
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Daity  Bruin  Sports 


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DRUG 

From  page  4S 


xr'.V 


The  Bulgarian  and  Belarussian 
teams  have  both  asked  for  the  "8** 
samples  to  be  analyzed. 

IOC  director  general  Francois 
Carrard  said  Ivanov  had  already  left 
the  Olympic  village.  Devyatosvsky 
had  been  scheduled  to  start  compet- 
ing Saturday 

With  Ivanov  stripped  of  the 
<Veightlifting  silver,  the  standings 
were  revised.  The  original  ihird-place 
finisher,  Wu  Wenxiong  of  China, 
moved  up  to  take  the  silver,  while 
China's  Zhang  Xiangxiang  was  ele- 
vated from  fourth  place  to  the  bronze. 

Carrard  said  ofTlcials  were  consid- 
ering arranging  a  new  medal  ceremo- 
ny 

Ivanov.  29,  was  the  Olympic  cham- 
pion at  114  1/2  pounds  in  1992  in 
Barcelona.  He  won  gold  at  the  world 
championships  in  1989,  '90,  '91  and 

'93.      -.  .    ■■:-^-^--    ■■  '  ■    *        - 


The  international 

Weiglitiifting 

Federation  l<icl<ed  out 

the  seven-member 

Romanian  team 
-       Sunday. 


'<r  ::-v 


;•.»<" 


U   QM  A   RADIO.COM 


X.:-    .-■'<  «*i"  jr;: .  ■'4<*.:-i"  ■ 


Devyatovsky,  23,  finished  second 
in  the  hammer  at  the  junior  world 
championships  in  1996.  This  season, 
he  has  improved  his  performance 
from  251  feet-IO  1/2  inches  to  266-1 1. 
The  IOC  teste  were  the  first  drug 
positives  from  the  games  themselves 
but  only  the  latest  in  a  slew  of  doping 
cases  announced  in  Sydney,  where 
more  drug  tests  will  be  conducted 
than  ever  before. 

De  Merode  said  13  athletes  have 
been  suspended  for  failing  tests  prior 
and  during  the  games  so  far. 

On  Tuesday  night,  Alexander 
Bagach  of  Ukraine,  the  1999  world 
indoor  shot  put  champion  and  19% 
Olympic  bronze  medalist,  was  sus- 
pended by  international  track  offi- 
cials for  testing  positive  for  steroids 
for  a  third  time. 

Simon  Kemboi,  a  member  of  the 
Kenyan  1.600-meter  relay  team,  also 
was  suspended  for  testing  positive  for 
steroids. 

Neither  will  be  allowed  to  compete 
in  Sydney. 

The  ruling  council  of  the 
International  Amateur  Athletic 
Federation  announced  those  suspen- 
sions after  an  eight-hour  meeting. 

The  World  Anti-Doping  Agency,  a 
new  international  arm  of  Olympic 
sports  designed  to  conduct  uniform 
out-of-competition  testing,  also 
reported  a  positive  steroid  test  to 
Nigerian  800-metcr  runner  Dupe 
Osime. 

She  was  among  45  Nigerian  ath- 
letes initially  chosen  for  the  country's 
provisional  Olympic  team  but  was 
not  among  the  30  brought  to  Sydney 
Weightlifting  has  been  filled  with 
pre-games  cases.  The  International 
Weightlifting  Federation  kicked  out 
the  seven-member  Romanian  team 
Sunday  because  three  lifters  -  includ- 
ing two  on  the  Olympic  team  -  had 
failed  drug  tests  this  year. 

But  the  federation  lifted  the  ban  on 
the  five  *tlean"  lifters  the  next  day 
after  the  Romanian  Olympic 
Committee  agreed  to  pay  a  $50,0Q0 
fine.  Such  a  waiver  is  included  in  the 
IWPs  rules. 

The  decision  led  to  widespread 
confusion,  with  the  IOC  medical 
director  declaring  at  one  point  that 
Romania  couldn't  buy  its  way  back. 
Later,  after  a  frantic  round  of  phone 
calls  and  meetings,  the  reinstatement 
was  accepted. 

WADA  tests  have  found  at  least 
nine  suspected  positives  out  of  20 
'^devated"  results  since  but  April. 


\ 


GRIMES  " 

working  together  in  practice. 

The  veterans  of  the  team,  captain 

Tina   Bowen.   Katie  Nuanes  and 

Elaine  Canchola.  are  really  vocal  in 

making  sure  we  don't  fall  back  in 

]■   workouts.,  ,■',{:;"'■■,: . 

The  last  half  of  this  particular  run 
is  all  uphill,  and  whenever  1  start  to 
lose  ground,  the  giris  run  right  next  to 
me.  encouraging  me  and  forcing  me 
■^  to  keep  up.  The  support  among  our 
team  is  amazing  as  each  girl  does  her 
part  to  motivate  and  inspire  her 
teammates. 

With  the  morning  workout  over, 
we  have  the  rest  of  the  morning  free 
to  do  what  we  please.  Since  most  of 
my  teammates  are  shop-a-holics, 
many  decide  to  go  to  the  outlet  stores 
.  in  town.  We  also  use  this  time  lo  pre- 
pare dinner. 

At  the  start  of  camp,  Eric  and 
Helen  divide  us  into  groups  and  we 
are  each  responsible  for  two  dinners. 
The  groups  are  coed  and  chosen 
randomly  so  we  get  a  chance  to  inter- 
'  act  closely  with  teammates  we  may 
not  know  as  well.  We  get  a  certain 
amount  of  money  and  each  group 
goes  to  the  store  together  to  buy  the 
food.  Our  group  is  making  barbe- 
cued chicken  tonight.  Yum! 

As     the     afternoon     workout 
approaches,  the  girls  return  from  the 
outlets,  arms  full  of  bags,  exclaiming 
about  the  amazing  sales.  We  all  pile 
-into  the  vans  again  and  head  out  to 
■  run.  This  time  we  are  divided  into 
groups.  The  middle  distance  runners 
go  down  to  the  track  to  run  repeat 
1 50s.  The  rest  of  us  go  to  Shady  Rest 
■for  a  40-minute  run.  Our  coaches 
;  instruct  us  to  run  the  first  half  com- 
fortably and  the  last  half  steady. 
Helen  runs  with  us,  which  is  very 
helpful  because  she  gives  us  pointers 
about  our  form  and  also  shouts 
encouragement. 

Our  team  does  an  excellent  job  of 
executing  the  workout  because  we 
are  able  to  run  controlled  and  com- 
fortably for  the  first  part,  and  we  pick 
it  up  while  still  maintaining  our  pack 
during  the  second  part  of  the  run. 

The  focus  we  maintain  during  the 
workout  is  a  good  sign  because  each 
workout  brings  us  closer  to  our  team 
goal  of  qualifying  for  the  NCAA 
Championships  in  November. 

After  running  is  over  for  the  day, 
we  head  back  to  the  lodge  and  do  sit- 
ups  and  push-ups  as  a  group.  The  din- 
ner crew  prepares  the  food  and  we  all 
eat  together  and  play  cards  and 
watch  movies.  It  is  really  nice  to  have 
this  time  together  before  school 
starts  to  become  comfortable  with 
each  other  and  form  strong  relation- 
ships with  our  teammates.  We  are 
looking  forward  to  a  successful  and 
fun  season! 


ARMSTRONG 

From  page  43 

were  evident  to  all. 

Though  it  was  billed  as  a  news  con- 
ference for  the  U.S.  team,  virtually 
every  question  went  to  Armstrong. 
Finally  teammate  George  Hincapie 
got  a  chance:  What  was  it  like  being  on 
a  team  where  one  person  gets  all  the 
attention? 

We're  used  to  it,  Hincapie  replied. 

Armstrong  proclaimed  himself 
ready  to  ride  in  Sydney  and  almost 
fully  recovered  from  a  broken  neck 
vertebra*  suffered  in  a  hair-raising 
training  aash  last  month  in  the  wind- 
ing roads  near  his  home  in.  Nice, 
France. 

The  29-ycar-old  will  compete  in  the 
Sept.  27  road  race  and  the  Sept.  30 
time  trial,  an  event  that  has  become  his 
specialty,  and  one  he's  tailored  his 
training  to  fit. 

The  goal  now,  he  said,  is  gold. 

"There  was  only  one  reason  to 
come  and  that's  to  win,"  he  said. 


Oill)r  Brain  Sports 


S«jXember  25-28, 2000       55 


*> 


YALGIA 


WANTED  SUBJECTS  WITH  or  WITHOinr  Fibromyalgia  for  UCLA  RESEARCH 

■  '•'■;;    ...       Subjects  must:     ■:-■"■:'■'■■:"■  '■:.^':^^y .  y--      '■:''''■:':'' J''  '■■: 

;,^\;v^.':'vv'-;r  be  female    ■-y'V-----'--         ^:'-y'^:   :^';:^;:-'  . 
'■■':/■']■  ^,:'-"s'  .,r  between  21  and  55  years  old 


-  undergo  an  examination  of  their  muscles  and  joints 
^    ^    f                       *  get  an  electrocardiogram  to  make  sure  they 

:■:  /  ■  have  no  cardiac  problems 

-  give  40cc  of  blood  (3  tablespoons) 

C    ^  -  ^?  participate  in  an  experiment  where  we  will  monitor 

heart  rate,  blood,  pressure  and  measure  blood  flow 
in  two  muscles  (jaw  and  shoulder) 

At  Ae  end  of  the  experiment  we  will  offer  a  night  guard  appliance  for  subjects  that  need  it 

if  we  can  determine  how  blood-flow  differs  in  fibromyalgia  patients  versus  controls,  we 
may  begin  to  understand  what  is  the  cause  of  this  problem. 

If  you  are  interested  in  participating,  please  contact 

Dr.  Glenn  Clark  at  (310)  825-6406 


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Frorn  page  52 


left  on  itie  clock.  .    ; 

"I  was  just  playing  my  normal 
zone,  and  when  I  saw  the  ball  coming, 
"I  was  in  disbelief,"  Stephens  said. 
"The  closer  it  got,  the  bigger  it  got. 
The  minute  I  caught  the  ball,  I  started 
to  cry." 

Holding  the  No.  6  rank  in  the  AP 
poll  and  No.  8  with  ESPN,  the  Bruins 
enter  conference  play  behind  only 
No.  7  Washington  among  Pac-IO 
teams  in  the  ESPN  poll. 

"The  preseason  is  over  for  us. 
Now  it's  the  Pdc-IO,"  Toledo  said. 
"What  we've  done  has  been  great, 
but  it's  not  going  to  help  us  win  the 
next  eight  games.  We  now  have  to  go 
out  and  continue  to  get  better  and 
win."  .      . 


With  contributions  from  Daily  Bruin 
Wire  Reports. 


WJ(COUNTRY 

From  page  40 

year.  An  All-American  in  high  school, 
Canchola  was  one  of  the  fastest 
improving  runners  on  the  team. 

Back,  however,  are  senior  Katie 
Nuanes  and  junior  Alynda  Franco. 
Nuanes  was  one  of  the  Bruins'  most 
consistent  runners  last  year  while 
Franco  was  the  team's  biggest  sur- 
prise, coming  out  of  nowhere  to 
become  the  fifth  scorer. 

This  season,  Nuanes  and  Franco 
will  be  surrounded  by  mostly  new 
faces  this  season,  and  so  far,  results 
have  been  mixed. 

With  these  two  veterans  out  of 
action,  the  Bruins  opened  their  sea- 
son on  Sept.  2  by  blasting  substan- 
dard competition  out  of  the  water  at 
the  Fullerton  Invitational. 

Bowen  won  the  race,  completing 
the  5-kilometer  course  in  17:34.3. 
Freshman  Valerie  Flores,  a  high 
school  All-American  from  San  Pedro, 
was  fourth  in  18:14.9.  Senior  Gina 
Donnelly  (seventh,  18:29.4)  was  close 
behind. 

From  there,  the  team^ent  to 
spend  a  week  in  Mammoth  and 
returned  to  competition  at  the  Aztec 
Invite  in  San  Diego. 

Bowen  again  reaffirmed  her  status 
as  the  team's  pacesetter,  clocking 
17:53  to  finish  behind  Alisa  Rodgers, 
Mesa  City  College's  assistant  coach 
who  ran  unattached. 

Nuanes,  back  in  the  Bruin  lineup, 
followed  at  18:33  for  I  Ith  place  while 
Flores  came  in  14th  at  18:45. 

The  team,  still  missing  Franco  due 
to  tendinitis  in  her  achilles,  was  third 
behind  Texas  A&M  and  UC  Irvine. 

"Our  top  three  are  extremely 
good,"  head  coach  Eric  Peterson  said 
after  the  meet.  "We're  looking  for 
people  to  fill  in  after  that." 

Franco  is  expected  to  recover  soon 
and  take  one  of  UCLA's  two  remain- 
ing scoring  positions.  The  fifth  spot  is 
still  up  in  the  air  with  Gina  Donnelly 
and  Kelly  Grimes  looking  closest  to 
filling  the  hole. 

Peterson,  though,  is  particularly 
excited  about  sophomore  Melissa 
McBain,  who  last  spring  was  the 
California  Junior  College  1500  meter  * 
track  champion  while  attending 
Moorpark. 

"She  hasn't  raced  well  yet,  but 
she's  training  well."  Peterson  said. 
"When  she  becomes  comfortable, 
she'll  be  a  good  contributor." 

While  the  team  appears  to  lack  the 
overall  strength  it  had  last  year,  the 
Bruins  are  confident  they  will  do  well. 
"We  should  hold  our  own  in  our 
region,"  Peterson  said.  "I  think  we 
match  up  well.  We  absolutely  expect  ;  ; 
to  go  the  NCAAs  again  this  year." 

"We're  going  to  have  a  strong 
year,"  Nuanes  added.  "Our  team 
chemistry  is  so  much  better  this  year. 
Even  if  we  don't  have  the  frontrun- 
ncrs  we  did  last  year,  the  chemistry  is 
going  to  help  us." 


BASKETBALL  - 

From  page  42  ,:      ;      ^ 

ofthe  Olympic  program  in  1936,  but 
never  more  so  than  after  an  NBA- 
assembled  Dream  Team  made  its 
debut  at  Barcelona  in  1992. 

There  were  those  two  infamous 
hiccups,  of  course:  first  in  1972, 
"    when  the  officials  helped  the  Soviet 
Union  pick  America's  pocket,  and 
again      in      1988,      when      then- 
Georgetown  coach  John  Thompson 
brought  a  U.S.  squad  to  Seoul  with 
exactly  one  guy,  Mitch  Richmond. 
;-[  who  could  score.  Otherwise,  the  his- 
tory of  the  tournament  is  been  there, 
>   done  that. 

People  like  to  argue  that  for  years 
the  Russians  sent  unbeatable  hockey 
teams  to  the  games.  The  Kenyans 
'  -  still  send  unbeatable  marathon  run- 
ners. But  the  parallels  are  hardly 
exact. 

The  1992  Dream  Team  led  by 
Michael  Jordan  might  have  the  only 
■  mortal  lock  ever  in  sports.  But  the 
sequels  have  been  close  enough  so 
that  the  only  way  the  United  States 
gets  beat  is  if  the  bus  makes  a  wrong 
turn  and  winds  up  in  Melbourne. 

Recognizing  as  much,  defenders 
of  the  Dream  Team  concept  have 
conceded  the  point  is  no  longer  just 
winning  gold,  but  spreading  the 
gospel  of  hoops.  If  so,  the  exercise 
might  be  even  more  futile.  And 
China  is  as  good  an  example  as  any 
of  why  the  rest  of  the  world  has  fall- 
en even  further  behind.     . 

Former  LSU  coach  Dale  Brown, 
who  travels  frequently  to  Asia  for 
basketball  clinics,  says  the  game  is 
more  popular  than  ever  and  esti- 
mates there  are  at  least  a  hundred  7- 
footers  playing  in  China  alone.  Both 
Yao  and  Wang,  two  of  the  three  7- 
footers  who  make  up  the  "Great 
Wall"  on  the  current  Chinese  team, 
are  legitimate  NBA  prospects.  Still, 
the  nation  of  1.25  billion  people  has 
yet  to  turn  out  a  few  decent  guards 
and  even  one  passable  defender. 

"That's  what  separates  us  from 
the  rest  ofthe  world  -  defense,"  said 
U.S. -assistant  coach  Larry  Brown. 

"We're  more  physical,"  Gary 
Payton  chimed  in,  "and  worlds  more 
experienced. 

"We  play  against  guys  like  Kevin 
(Garnett)  and  Alonzo  (Mourning) 
night  in  and  night  out.  Those  guys," 
he  said,  nodding  in  the  direction  of 
China's  locker  room,  "do  it  one 
night  every  four  years  -  if  they're 
lucky." 

Brown,  whose  regular  job  is 
coaching  the  76ers,  was  quick  to 
point  out  that  if  Yugoslavia  and  the 
Soviet  Union  had  remained  unified, 
the  Dream  Team  might  have  had 
some  competition.  He  said  that 
would  be  true  if  Arvydas  Sabonis 
and  Zydrunas  llgauskas,  middle- 
level  NBA  talents,  had  shown  up  to 
play  for  Lithuania  this  time  around. 
.  That  ignores  the  fact  that 
Shaquille  O'Neal,  Kobe  Bryant,  Tim 
0uncan  and  Grant  Hill  found  excus- 
^  to  stay  home  as  well.  The  balance 
of  power  hasn't  shifted  since  Dr. 
Jifmes  Naismith  tacked  a  peach  bas- 
ket to  the  wall  of  a  Springfield, 
Mass.,  gym  a  century  ago  and  it 
won't  anytime  soon. 

The  Australians  boast  a  half- 
dozen  current  or  former  NBA  play- 
ers on  their  roster  and  they  tried  a 
different  tack  against  the  Dream 
Team  in  a  recent  exhibition  game  in 
Melbourne.  Former  Seton  Hall  star 
Andrew  Gaze  took  down  Carter 
early  in  the  game,  they  exchanged 
words  and  glares,  and  the  Aussies 
refused  to  back  down  on  the  court 
until  a  few  minutes  into  the  second 
half. 

Even  so,  they  wound  up  getting 
buried  by  25  points. 

"The  game  isn't  fun  when  we  play 
against  a  team,  und  because  of  who 
we  are,  they  don't  play  hard,"  Carter 
said. 

Unfortunately,  it's  getting  harder 
to  tell  the  dilTerence. 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


September  25-28, 2000        S7 


SiWfAl^ 


S^  GRAND  OPENING 

SEPTEMBER  a6,  aooo 


UT 
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PERFORMING  LIVE 
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58       September  25-28, 2000 


.  I  •>■  ■■  .•'  /• 


DaBy  Bruin  Sports 


■.-■>  -y 


IC€ON  Ice  Skating  Rink 


Broom  ball 


o  uj 


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03  C7) 


Ic^Skatinff: 


Ice  Hockeys 


Ucon.com 


Daily  Biuin  Sports 


September  25-28, 2000       59 


12385  San  Fernando  Rd. 
Sylmar,CA  91342 

(818)833-8881 


Call  to  reserve  a  Broom  ball  time 


F     -     -     ■ 


$  1  .oo 

16oz.    Bud 

Drafisi  MGD 

Red  Dog 

$1.50 

Slltts 


vs4v- 


*5^; 


:«J:r 


$5.99 

Small  one'topping 
pizza  and  salad. 


LaPizxcvia 

1 077  Broxton  Ave. 

Westwood  CA  90024 


(310)824^2011 
(310)824^7471 


Learn  more  about  us  at  www.belairpres.orj 
or  contact  us  at  818.788.4200x148 
studentmin@belairpres.org 


$2  off 
Tuesdays 

Excludes  Sicilians 


WESTWOOD 

208-8671 


SuiKlay  Evenings  at  7KHJ  pjn.  in 
Evans  Chapel 

Students  from  campuses  all  around  the  Los  Angeles  area 
join  together' for  an  Incredible  evening  of  singing  and 
vwrship  with  our  Coltege  Praise  Band,  fellowship,  prayer, 
and  solid  Bible  teaching. 

(Shuttle  service  provided  at  6:30  pm  at  UCLA's 
Sproul  Turnaround  throughout  the  school  year) 


ollege 

Croup 


Equipping  Students  to  be  Completely  CommKted  to  M 


Sunday  Mornings 

Contemporary  Worship  at  1 1 :00  am  in  Evan's  Chapel. 
Traditional  Services  at  9:30  and  1 1 :00  am  in  the  Sanctuary. 

(Shuttle  Service  provided  at  ia40am  at  UCLA's  Sproul  Turnaround.) 


.>•—.»• 


worshiping  God  in  Spirit  and  Tmth 
trusting  scripture  as  our  UUun;Mf  Auihoriiv 
mentoring  relatiortship^ 
impaciinu  lives  thjouuii  evangelism 
leadership  development 
rcsixMiding  to  Gcxj's  call  to  missioiis 

loving  the  pwr 
reJymg  on  (he  power  of  prayer 

using  our  FCSOUrces  for  kinociom^> 
purposes  *^ 


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p,tea) 


■■<•.;•• 


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*  Not  valid  on  Sicilians  or  with  any  other  offer.  Must  mention  ad. 


2  PIZZAS  FOR  THE 
PRICE  OF  ONE 

OFFER  VALID  MONDAY  ONLY.  (After  5:30  pm) 

No  mediums  and  offer  excludes  Sicilians. 
No  half  &  half  order  please.  Must  mention  ad. 

BRENTWOOD 

820-6636 


— t--^--- 


CLIP  AND  SAVE 


Exp.   10/6/00 


LARGE 
PIZZA  w/ 
Free  Liter 


WESTWOOD 

208-8671 

BRENTWOOD 

820-6636 


TWO  TOPPINGS 


TAX  INCLUDED 


Offer  good  only  with  ttiis  coupon, 

one  coupon  per  pizza.* 

Must  present  coupon. 

Limit  3  pizzas  per  address. 

N01/241/2S 

Open  until  1  am 

CUPANDSAVE-^g->g^50---- 


Exp.   10/6/00 


LARGE 
PIZZA  w/ 
Free  Liter 


208-8671 

BRENTWOOD 

820-6636 


TWO  TOPPINGS 


TAX  INCLUDED 


Exp.   10/6/00 


'     LARGE 
I    PIZZA  w/ 
Free  Liter 

TWO  TOPPINGS 


TAX  INCLUDED 


Offer  good  only  with  this  coupon, 

one  coupon  per  pizza.* 

Must  present  coupon. 
Limit  3  pizzas  per  address. 

-;-     V      N01/241/2S 

Open^ntil  1  am 

CUP  AND  SAVE        WESTWOOD 

208-8671 

BRENTWOOD 


820-6636 

Offer  good  only  with  this  coupon, 

one  coupon  per  pizza.* 

Must  present  coupon. 
Umit  3  pizzas  per  address. 


NO  1/24  1/28 

Open  until  1  am 


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sr7?7/e  vvr/nWes  will  be  ydur  biggest  worry 


COMING  SOON.„ 


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COMPUTERS 


EVERYWHERE. 


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Become  a  funjobs  Member 

Resister  NOW  for  the  launch  and  chance  to  win  funjobs 
hats,  T-shirts,  briefcases,  mugs,  car  shades,  and 
The  Grand  Prize  -  a  Whitewater  rafting  trip  for  two 
provided  by 


GordoM 


^  1-1*- 


To  b*>  eligible  f  ■ '    ♦  '^  '■ 
of    t  bo    FRF:F     MrnibcM  % 


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September  25-28, 2000 


Campus  Happenings 
Campus  Organizations 
Campus  Recruitment 
Campus  Services 
Birthdays 
Legal  notices 

I  Lost  &  Found 
Miscellaneous 
Personal  Messages 

I  Personals 
Pregnancy 

I  Recteational  Activities 
Research  Subjecu 
Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 
TIcfceU  Offered 
Tickets  Wanted 
Wanted 


Appliances 

Art  /  Paintings 
I  Bicycles  /  Sicates 

Boolts 
I  Calling  Cards 

Cameras  /  Camcorders 
I  Collectibles 

Computers  /  Software 

Furniture 

Garage  /  VSard  Sales 

Health  Products 

Miscellaneous 

Musical  Instruments 

Office  Equipmem 

Pets 

Rentals 

Sports  Equipment 

Stereos  /  TVs  /  Radios 
rhble  Sports 


transportation 


AutoAccessorie*.'.'  : 
Auto  Insurance 
Auto  Repair 
Autos  for  Sale 
Boats  for  Sale 
Motorcycles  for  Sale 
IHirliing 

Scooter  /  Cycle  Repair 
Scooters  for  Sale 
Vehicles  for  Rent 


travBi 


Resorts  /  Hotels 
Rides  Offered 
Rides  Warned 
Taxi  /  Shuttle  Service 
Travel  Destinations 
Travel  Tickets 
Vacation  Packages 


>>liJi 


1-900  numbers 

Hnancial  Aid 

Insurance 

Computer  /  Imemet 

Foreign  Languages 
I  HeaHn  /  Beauty  Services 

Legal  Advk»  /  Attorneys 

Movers  /  Storage 

Music  Lessons 

Personal  Services 

Professional  Services 
I  Resumes 

TslecommunicatkNis 

Tutoring  Offered 

Tutoring  Wanted 

Typing 

MMting  Help  . 


^JitHlil 


Business  OpportunKies 
Career  OpportunKies 
Child  Care  Offered 
Child  Care  Warned 
Help  Wanted 
Housesitting 
Internship 

Personal  Assistance 
Temporary  Employment 
Volunteer 


tesfig/ 


Apartments  for  Rent 
Apartments  Furnished 
Condo  /  Townhouse  for  Rent 
Condo  /  Ibwnhouse  for  Sale 
Guesthouse  for  Rent 
House  for  Rent 
House  for  tale 
Houseboats  for  Rent  /  Sale 
Housirra  Needed 
fU>om  for  Help 
Room  for  Rent 
Roommates  -  Private  Itoom 
Roommates  -  Shared  Room 
I  Sublets 
Vacation  Rentals 


index 


1 1 8  Kerckhoff  Hall 
308  Westwood  Plaza 
Los  Angeles.  CA  90024 


E-Mail:  classifieds^ 
VJeh:  httpy/www.c 


gmedia.uda.edu 
lailybruin.ucla.edu 


Classified  Line:  [310]  825-2221 

Fax:  (310)  206-0528 
Classified  Display:  (310)  206-3060 

Fax:  C310]  206-0528 


Mon-Thu:  9:00am-3:00pm 
Fri:  9am-2:30pm      .  ,  -  .  . 


One  issue,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
Weekly,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
Monthly,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 


$8.30 
0.60 

28.00 
2.00 

93.00 
5.60 


For  Classified  Display  ads, 

please  see  our  rate  card 

for  variable  rate  information. 


Classified  Line  Ads: 

1  working  day  before  printing, 
at  12  noon 

Classified  Display  Ads: 

2  working  days  before  printing, 
at  12  noon. 

There  are  no  cancellatfons  after 
noon  of  the  day  before  printing. 


^ 


payment 


Please  make  checks  payable  to 
"The  UCLA  Daily  Brum."  We 
accept  Visa,  MasterCard,  and 
Discover  credit  cards.  Allow  5 
working  days  for  mail  payments. 


hoMrto 
anefledhiead 

•  Start  your  ad  \Mth  the 
merchandise  ybu  are  selling. 
Tills  makes  it  easier  for  readers  to 
quickly  scan  the  ads  and  locate 
your  Items 

•  Always  include  the  pnce  of  your 
Item.  Many  classified  readers 
simply  do  not  respond  to  ads 
without  pnces 

•  Avoid  abbreviations--make  your 
ad  easy  for  readers  to  understand 

•  Place  yourself  in  the  readers 
position,  ask  what  you  would  like 
to  know  about  the  merchandise, 
and  include  that  in  the  ad.  Include 
such  information  as  brand  names, 
colors  and  other  specific 
descriptions 


..»e^onVM^.,«,,a^^-:?n';.-:g^^^^  .o,.l«„«^o. 


(^TSr^T^Thra 


announcements 

1100-2600 


1100 

Campus  Happenings 


DANCE  LESSONS 

SWING-SALSA-TANGO 

ballroom  @  ucla.edu 

MONDAYS  7- 11PM  ©UCLA  Ackerman 
Union  2nd  Floor  Lounge  Room  24 14.  Learn 
Famous  Line  Dances  ©9PM.  Learn  Cutwn 
style  Salsa  and  Merengue  01 0pm.  BE- 
COME A  MEMBER!  Enjoy  40  hours  o(  free 
dance  lessons  each  quarter  University- 
DanceClubsOusa  net  310-284-3636. 

DanceDanceDanceDancelll!  Begins  Oct.  2 

EXPERIENCE  50+YEAR 
TRADITION  AT  UCLA 

LEARN  FAMOUS  LINE/ROMANTIC 
PARTNER  DANCES.  Mondays  9-11pm 
Starting  Octotwr  2nd  ©UCLA  Ackerman 
Union  room-2414.  Learn  cool  Swing  moves- 
9:45pm  Salsa(Cuban  Casino  Rueda)-lOpm 
Enjoy  dancing  to  music  from  Brazil-lsrael- 
Greece-Mexico-France-Turkey-Egypt-ltaly- 
Bulgaria-Spain-Morocco-Armenialreland- 
Yemen-Lebanon-Europe-NorthAmerica- 
Asia-Alrica-SouthAmerica-THE  WORLD!!!! 
Intemational  Fom  Dance  Club  310-284-3636 
Cultural  Evenings  Greek  Nov.  13th  Annenian 
Nov.  20th  Persian-Arabic-Alrican-lsraeli 
Dates  TEA  universltydanceclubs©usa.nel 
Co-sponsorship  of  other  Ethnic/Cultural 
Student  Organizations  Weteome!!!!!!!  FREE- 
FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE 

PERFORMING 
DANCE  GROUP 

Meet  at  UCLA  Ackemian  Unton  room  2414. 
Mondays  6:15-6:55pm  Starting  October  2 
Dermnstrate  fun  dances  ©campus  cultural 
events  and  future  performing  opportunities 
include  dance  festivals  in  Brazil  (December). 
Mexteo  (March),  New  York  (April),  and  Israel 
(July).  Can  310-284-3636  Of  email 
UnlversityDanceClubs©usa.net  danceu- 
sa©usa.net 


Fratumities  •  Sororities 
Clubs  •  Student  Groups 

Earn  $1 ,000-$2,000  this  quarter  with  the  easy 
CampMhwdnsaf.cwn  tint  hour  fundraaing  event 
No  SalM  raqukad.  lifKlrMing  dMH  m  IMng  quickly, 
so  can  todiyl  Contact  Oainputlundnaar.com  at  (888) 
n3-a23i,or\MI  '     - 


1200 

Cnnipus  OrnnnizHtions 


BIG  SWING  DANCE 

TRANSFER  STUDENT  ASSOCIATION 
13th  Annual  New  Student  Weteorrw  Party 
Morxlay  Octotier  16th,  8pm-Swing  Lessons 
9pm  Amazing  Social  Event!!!!!!!!  FREE-Eve- 
ryor>e  Welcome  Limited  to  Isi  1,000  partk:- 
ipants.  UCLA  Ackerman  Grand  Ballroom. 
Que8tk)ns  Contact  transfer©ucla.edu  310- 
206-7865  or  310-284-3636.  ball- 
roomttucla.edu 


1100 

Campus  Happenings 


1100 

Campus  Happenings 


^^  20'"  Romantic  Dane*  Lasson  Sarias 

-^WiROOM  DANCE  CLUB  &  INTERNATIONAL  FOLK  DANCE  CLUB 
Mondays  7-11  p.m.  UCLA  Ackerman  Union  2»*  Floor  Loung*  Oct.  2-Oec.  4 

BECOME  A  MEMB£R.TODAT 
Enjoy  40  Hours  of  FREE    SALSA  SWING  TANGO    bANCEo^SSONS 
Mail  your  supporting  mambarship  to  SPACE  is  LIMITKD 

■OC/IFDC  914  Wastwood  Blvil  #299  l_A.  CA  90024  1«  Coma  I"  Sarvad 

.ba]lfoOPl(2)UCla.e4il  284-3636  VnivmHvDaact(nHh^d)»^««,^  j 
Monday  lo/g  Leant  Argehtirte  Taigo.  Cuban  Salsa,  Ettgtish  Wate  &  Uon 


The  Institute  of  Nanophyslcs  and  the 

Los  Angeles  Nanotechnology  Study  Group 

presents  Cal  Tech's  Hideo  Mabuchi  speaking  on 

''Quantum  Information  Science" 

September  30,  7-1 0pm 

call  818-385-1212 

for  reservations  and  location  or  visit: 

http//www.  nanophyslcs.  org 


Lu= 


1200 

Campus  Organizntions 


JANE  AUSTEN 

MOZART-BEETHOVEN 

VICTORIAN-RAGTIME 

DANCES 

EXPERIENCE  HISTORY 

Annual  Souttwm  California  Autumn  Histori- 
cal Costume  Ball.  Saturday.  October  21  st 
7:30-mi{Jnight.  Loam  simple/elegant  Iwll- 
room  dances  o(  the  earty  19thcentury  Less- 
ons lOam/lpm,  Tea  Time-4pm.  Costumes 
welcome/not  necessary    Dinner  included. 
For  information  call:21 3-384-6622  Details  at 
www.regencyfriends  org    Carpooling  avail 
able,  call  BDC  310-284-3636  284-3638  12th 
Annual  Victorian  Grand  Costume  Ball  No 
vember  25th.  Contact  laha©pacbell.net. 
Ragtime   Costume   Ball-10/14   Celebrate 
California's  Sesquicentennial  150th  October 
29th        Sherlock       Holmes       Ball-11/4 
UniversltyDanceClubs  ©  asa .  not. 


1700 

Lost  and  Found 


FOUND:  CATTLE  DOG 

FOUND  RED  AUSTRALIAN  cattle  dog 
(Heeler)  on  UCLA  campus.  While  star  on 
forehead  and  choke  cfiain  collar  WLA  ani- 
mal shelter.  310-207-2953.  Impound  #51278 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1800 

Miscellaneous 


ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-campus  &  on-line  financial  services 
source  tor  students,  faculty  &  staff.  Visit  us  at 
Ackerman  A-level,  on-line  at  www.ucu.org  or 
call  310-477-6628. 


2000 

Personals 


FREQUENT  VISITOR,  good  looking,  suc- 
cessful. 5'10",  I75lbs.,  brown  hair  Looking 
for  gorgeous  blonde  to  spoil,  no  strings 
attached.  Call  David:21 5-854-0200. 

LOVE?  European  writer/linguist,  cosmopoli- 
tan, accomplished,  good-looking,  middle- 
aged,  healthy  lifestyle,  loves  llterature/travel- 
Ing/ouldoors,  seeks  attractive/smart/affec- 
tionate young  female,  any  race/origin,  for 
friendship,  possibly  romance/marriage.  310- 
573-4020/mani©  wordexcorp.com 


NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT Safe"  affordable*  effective'  visit  us  at 
wvw.figureplus.com  1-888-603-9800.  Dis- 
tributorships are  available. 

PROFS^SSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
year  old  females  with  adventurous  and  open 
minded  spirits  who  want  to  expand/explore 
their  sexuality  through  nude  modeling.  Free 
prints  for  modeling  time.  Call  Robert  at  310- 
463-5996  robM©att.net 


2100 

Recreational  Activities 


POLYNESIAN  DANCING.  Let  our  UCLA 
Students  provkte  the  entertainment  for  your 
next  party.  Shows  Include  house  parlies, 
chlWren's  birttidays.  anniversaries,  company 
picnics  and  more.  Lessons  available.  Also 
we  are  starting  a  r>ew  year  and  are  looking 
for  new  dancers  and  a  drummer.  For  more 
Info  call  310-995-3435. 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


U.S.  Green  Card 

Lottery 


Registration  Period 

()ctoJ)er  2nd  to 

November  1,  2000 


^        to  be  Issued 

vailable  to  foreign  students  and  their  families. 
For  a  free  information  package,  call  our 
Lottery  Department  at  l-SOO-VISA-LAW 

>^      Bernard  P.  Wolfsdorf 

olj|>sion;il  l.iiu  Coipoiiiiion 

■1  Spi(  i.tlisi  in  Immifir.ilion  &  .Niitionality  Law 

17383  SuiLset  Blvd.  Suite  120,  Pacific  Palisades,  CA  90272 
(310)  373-4242  •  FAX  (310)  573-3093  •  visalaw@'wolfsdorf.com 

\\\W\.  WOl  J<  SDORF.COM 


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>.-r 


■«', 


« 


\  m 


Stptembw  25-28, 2000 


Diity  Bruin  Classified 


You  can 

get  lost  at 

a  huge 

investment 

bank, 


1100 

C:un|;us  H.iijpciiinys 


11  oo 

C.iiiipiis  HiipptMiiiujs 


M^BniindKdfM 


1100 

Ciimpiis  Happoiiiiuis 


September  25-28, 2000 


1100 

Campus  HnppcMiinqs 


m^^^^^W^^^^mlMMmWTm^ 


or  Join  Ui 
and  find  oti 


>mlly  are, 


■''<■' 


We  will  be  intervieysfing 
off -campus  for  Analyst 
positions.  If  interested 
please  submit  your  resume 


r 

n^^over  letter  by  October 
13th  to:  Mallory  Coffin  by  fax 
at:  212-778-6880  or  email: 
mallory_coffin@prusec.com 


Saint  Sophia  Catliedrai 

proudly  presents 

CATHEDRAL  J'EST 

yf'^y'Mj:' ::■  ':'■'':"■' ^A Fabulous Fes^vat  ' ' 
As  only  the  GREiKS  can  do 

*6oiwe  celebrate  with  us  i^: 

*  Best  Greek  Food  in  L.A.  * 

*  Fabulous  Greek  Pastries  * 
*  Greek  Folk  Dancing  * 

Authentic  Greek  Music  by 
"The  OLYMPIANS" 


Special  Thespian  Production 
''Conversations  with  the  Ancients 

*  Greek  Art  &  Imports  * 

vv--  .;  .V  *Games  for  Kids  *      ^~ 

*  Cathedral  Tours  * 


Plenty  of 


Paildng! 


Shuttle  to  Lots  every  10  minutes. 


For  more  information  visit  our  website  at: 

www.prudentialsecurities.com/ 

investment_banking/careers.litm 


■  <f. 


SAT,  SEPT.  30 

1 1  am  toll  pm 


SWi^  OCT.  1 

—11  am  to  10  pi 


Saint  Sophia  Cathedral 

1324  S.  Normandie  Av 

-  Corner  of  Pico  &  Normandie  - 
(1 1/2  niL  west  of  Staples  Center) 


♦ALWAYS  THE  LAST  WEEKEND  IN  SEPTEMBER* 


2000 

PtMson.ils 


2000 

Personals 


21  OO 

Recreational  Activities 


2100 

Recreational  Activities 


are  you? 


^  — — — Srww.RateYour^^  mm 


Email  ElectrasyUCLA@hotmail.com 
for  a  FREE  Album  Sampler! 


->  :=.~'-/ 


O9/00  Prudential  Securities  Incorporated.  Member  SIPC.      "    ' 

Prudential  S<scurities  Incorporated  is  an  Equal  Opportunity  Employer  (M/F/O/V) 


V^ 


Prudential 

Securities 


Display 
206-3060 


2200 

Rnsf;arch  Siibji-cls 


FREE 
DIABETES  SCREENING 

QwMtic  ttudy  of  DiabctM  racniMs 

haaMiy  voluntears  (18-40  years  oM)  for 

fTMdMMtM  scTMning  wMh  ctandard 

oral  glucoM  tolaranca  test  (2.5  hours). 

Quaified  subjects  (wtw  pass  tfw  oral 

gkiooae  tolerance  test  and  have  normal 

blood  prasat*^  wM  be  Invited  to 

participate  in  a  genetic  study  of 

diabetea.  SubtectswMbepaid$150 

for  participation. 

Oslait,  cal  DtCMa  (310^»MaM. 


FRATERNAL  MALE  TWINS  NEEDEOI 
For  UCLA  Raaearch  prolacl.    Agaa  18-40 
$40  lor  1  hour.  Please  ca«  310^5-9006 


2200 

Res»,>arcli  Subjects 


PLAY  QAMESAEARN  mooey,  too!  Social 
P«ycholoQlcal  experiment.  1-hour.  Average 
$10.  Undergraduate  only  Call:310-825- 
3017,  sign-up  2524  Hershey.  or 
eniall:pbonacichOyahoocom,  leaving  your 
name,  phone  number,  and  available  times. 

SMOKERS  AND  EX-SMOKERS  over  iti 
wanted  In  research  study.  Participants  win  be 
paid  up  to  $120.  Call  310-478-3711 
axt.44319.  Leave  message. 

SMOKERS  WANTED 

UCLA  research  study.  Earn  $7  5Q/hour  plus 
$30  bonus  tof  not  smoking  overnight  and  $5 
per  blood  draw.  794-9891.  IRB  #97-07.005- 
03 

SMOKERS.  EX-SMOKERS  &  NONSMOK- 
ERS  m  good  health,  at  least  18  years  of  age. 
wanted  lor  UCLA  research  study.  Subjects 
wNl  be  paid  up  to  $120  for  2  testing  days. 
Please  cal  Or  Richard  Olmstead  at  310- 
478-3711  axt  44319,  leave  i 


electrasy 


in  here  this  fall 


Presented  By: 


!,'4f?.i;;*\:fi^v 


"Like  a  glorious  night 
with  a  bottle  of  Vodka 
and  the  best  of  your 
entire  record  collection" 
-Melody  Maker 

CHECK  OUT  WWW.ELECTRASY.COM 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


Female  UCLA 

Undergrads  With 

Lupus  Needed 


for  interviews  regarding 
the  college  experience 

Contact:  Kristen  McKlnney 

825-3180 

nickinney@ucla.edu 


SEVERE  PRE-MEN- 

STRUAL  SYMPTOMS 

STUDY 

UCLA  Is  conducting  a  study  using  an  investi- 
gational medication  for  women  with 
SEVERE  Pre-menstmal  symptoms.  You  may 
qualify  for  this  study  it  you  experience  some 
of  the  following  symptoms  during  the  week 
before  your  menstrual  cycle:  'depressed 
mood,  'tension,  'initability,  'feeling  suddenly 
sad  or  tearful,  'increased  sensitivity  to  rejec- 
tion. Qualifying  participants  must:  'have  reg- 
ular monthly  menstrual  cycles,  'be  between 
the  ages  of  18  and  45,  'not  be  using  medica- 
tions for  the  treatment  of  PMS  (including  an- 
tidepressants, herbal  treatments  or  birth  con- 
trol pills).  All  study  related  evaluations  and 
medication  will  be  provided  at  no  cost  to  you. 
You  will  be  paid  $175  if  you  complete  the  7- 
8  month  study.  Some  women  will  receive 
only  inactive  drug  (placetx)). 

INTERESTED?  CALL 
LINDA  GOLDMAN,  RNP 

UCLA  DEPT  OF 
OB/GYN  310-825-2452 


WOMEN  AGES  18-40  WITH  and  WITHOUT 
PREMENSTRUAL  SYNDROME  wanted  for 
a  4-month  study  of  hormone  in  response  to 
progesterone  or  prozac  challenge.  The  study 
entails  mood  diaries,  blood  lest  and  2  spinal 
taps,  and  taking  progesterone  or  prozac. 
May  be  paid  up  to  $200  for  your  time.  Con- 
tact Linda  GoWman,  RNP  UCLA  OBGYN 
310-825-2452 


2300 

Sperm/Egg  Donors 


$50,000  FOR  EGG 
DONATION 

PLEASE  HELP  us  give  our  precious  baby 
boy  a  sibling.  We  seek  a  compassionate,  in- 
telligent, attractive,  honesf,  energetic,  and 
fun-loving  Caucasian  woman,  under  32,  at 
least  5'5".  to  be  our  egg  donor.  Please  con- 
tact us  at  egghunting©  aof.com  or  PO  Box 
140-328,  Howard  Beach,  NY  11414. 


Egg  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 
wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

S5,000 
>    Call  MIRNA  (818)  832-1494    . 


'm 


Watch  for  the  first  regular 
Daily  Bruin  issue  Sept.  29th 

To  advertise  call  (310)  825-2161 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


BE  AN  ANGEL  & 
DONATE  EGGS. 

21-30,  Responsible,  healthy  and  bright. 
Generious  compensatkKi  FFC  800-939-6886 

EGG  DONOR 

HISPANIC  COUPLE  SEEKING  EGG 
DONOR.  Healthy  women,  18-30  yrs.oW.  Call 
for  details  at  pre  and  ask  lor  June.  310-376- 
7000. 

EGG  DONORS  NEEDED!  All  races  Ages 
21  -30.  Compensatran  $5,000.  OPTIONS  Na- 
tional Fertility  Registry  1-800-886-9373 
www.fertilityoptk>ns.com 


Pay  your  tuition 
with  eggs. 


If  IFOu're  a  woman  between  18 
and  35, 70U  can  cam  money  eati* 
\j,  anonymously.  Dbnate  your 
egp  CO  an  infertile  couple. 

$3,500  iai  up,  depending  on 
your  education  and  other  quatifi* 
cationi.  Call  today. 

The  CsMTtR  for  Ecc  Options 
310/546-6786  . 

•  ThcCtnwfefEBOptk)tu.U.C 


Display 
206-3060 


ar 


.r 


''ir-' 


^» 


I     - 


September  25-28, 2000 


tally  Bruin  OassiM 


1100 

Campus  Happeninys 


1100 

Campus  Happoninys 


1100 

Campus  Happeiiinns 


7300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Kecruttiucnt 


■  I 


are  invited  to  sing  with  the 
University  Campus  Choir  ^ 

._     •I 

Open  to  the  entire 


rsali 


Auditio 


iat  UCLA  S 

Tuesdays  7-9:1 5p 

onday  Sept.  25th 
esday  Sept.  26th 


ommunity 


Hall  1325 


6  pm  -8  pm 
6  pm  -8  pm 


iturday  Sept.  30th   1 0  am  -1  pm 


For  information  call  Irene  Kim  (626)  256-7765 
or  e-mail  eggbanana@aoi.com 


Faber  Consulting  is 
seeking  the  brightest 
mmds 

...to  help  transform  our  clients'  data  assets 
into  valuable  Business  Intelligence. 

Business  IntelligerKe  will  separate  the 
winners  from  the  losers  in  the  coming 
decade.  That's  why  Faber  is  looking  for  self- 
motivated,  intelligent  people  with  a 
computer  studies  background  to  contribute . 
to  our  explosive  growth  and  become  our 
next  generation  of  consultants. 

We  offer  a  challenging  work  environment 
with  exceptional  opportunities  for  trainirtg 
and  career  advancement. -And  every 
'Faberite*  receives  an  equity  stake  in  our 
business. 

Use  InterviewTrak  via  JobTrak  to  sign  up  > 
immediately  -  the  schedule  fills  quickly. 
We're  interviewing  Tuesday,  October  17th  in 
the  Career  Center.  Or  attend  our  information 
session  on  Monday,  October  16th  from  7-8 
p.m.  in  the  Career  Center  Conference  Room. 
Refreshments  will  be  served. 

We  are  an  Equal  Opportunity  Employer 


Intelligent 


Minds 


Business 


Intelligence 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


(?  this  paowr  t*Gyciiv  Ihis  pa,'>eii'ei:yc!e  this 
jajjcr  recycio' this  paDtjrrocycift this 
ragvelt?  ttj 


■•H^^K>i 


htililfiMlllM  tfas'. 

?  this  pafx-H"  itiiTycm  tins  papeiBcycio  this 
"  'his  piv>;~r  rfi'.'voir  this  papor^t^f^ycie  this 


Will  your  desk  be  the  next 
home  of  Bondage  Cow?  _ _ 


Meet  Bondage  Cow,  a  small  stuffed  bovine  who 
sits  at  the  desk  of  the  newest  person  on  the 
Bravo!  Marketing  team.  Few  employees  remember 
how  this  tradition  started,  and  they  aren't 
talking.  Bondage  Cow  may  know  something,  but 
her  mouth  is  taped  shut.  And  she's  been  mooving 
a  lot  lately,  because  Bravo!  Marketing  is  growing. 
Check  out  our  exciting  career  opportunities  at 
www.bravomarlcetlng.com. 


'"^^fabe 


^RfPfONSUlTINC-  IK 


v«/(abercon5L.ltnq-tO" 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


COOL  GIFTS  FOR  CHICKSI  One-of-a-Wrxl 
handbags,  jewelry,  racyclements,  and  more. 
Secure  online  shopping  at  www.cucuz- 
za.com. 

GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

SS.OOO  Visas  awarded.  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared application.  John  Manley,  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd.  #300  LA,  CA  90025. 
310-820-7553.  Deadline:  10/30/00. 

MAKE  100  DOLLARS  PER  DAY!!!  Eam 
money  while  you  leam  how  to  professionally 
market  your  intemet  busirwss.  carpe- 
diemOaweber.Gom. 


A  A  A  A  A  w@ 


2300 

Sperm  /  Efjrj  Donors 


EGG  DONORS  NEEDED.  Responsible, 
healthy,  women  ages  21-34  call  Surrogate 
Parenting  Sen/ices  800-373-9525  or  909- 
301-9997.  Personalized  service  w/generous 
compensation.    '  ■     , 


LOOKING  FOR  A  FEW 
GOOD  MEN... 

ANONYMOUS  SEMEN  DONORS  NEEDED. 

•Earn  up  to  $600/nx)nih  and  help  ottiers 
•Free  compretwnslve  health  screening  "Re- 
Ireshments  arxl  parKing  provided  'Conveni- 
ent hours/located  in  Westwood  Please  call 
(310)824-9941 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


2600 

Wanted 


CHILDCARE:  Empathetic/energetic  student 
to  play  with  1  -yr-oW  twy  Approx  6-10  hrs/wk. 
Flexible.  Experience  necessary.  310-448- 
7019. 

FITNESS  TRAINER 

MOTIVATIONAL  Student  fitness  trainer 
needed  3-4  tinfee  a  week,  preferably  morn- 
ings Please  call  310-454-3550 

RESEARCH 
SECRETARY 

A  part-time  )0b  with  a  USC  Professor  of  Med- 
icine at  the  LACAJSC  Hospital.  ExceNeni  typ- 
ing and  computer  skHls,  including  Power- 
Point. Biotogy/IMedicine  background  pre- 
fenred.  Fax  resume  to  Uri  Elfcayam.  MO  at 
323-228-8076. 


31 OO 

Calliiuj  Cauls 


5  CENTS/MINUTE 
PHONE  CARDS 

Ito  Connectton  fees!  No  mtoMHwMOus  tax- 
es/feesl  $20  card  =  400  rntnutot.  Sent  $20 
phM  $.50  shipping  to  HaaitLand  Tefeoom 
20060  Addtoon  Ave.  AltaVista  Iowa  50603. 
888-861-7706. 


rompiilcrs/Softw.iKf 


HP  120MHz  PC,  16  Me  RAM.  ZIP,  CD-ROM, 
FLOPPY,  288  FAX/MODEM,  SPEAKERS, 
VV95.  FREE  PRINTERIII  1100  OBO.  310- 
444-3157 


Computers  /  Softwan; 


IBM  COMPATIBLE  LAPTOP  Half  a  year  oW. 
14'  screen,  Pentium  II  equivalent.  Great  soft- 
ware (including  web).  Great  Deal  $1500^obo. 
310-441-3818. 


3500 


FOR  SALE:  2  couches.  1  bed  (with  mattress 
and  frame)  and  chairs  for  cheap  ($20  and 
up).  310-613-6211. 


3800 

Misr,(;llan(!Otis 


ARE  YOU  STARTING  THE  NEW  YEAR 
WITH  OLD  DEBTS?  Let  Starcom  hefp  you  to 
a  fresh  start.  CaH  877-890-5653. 


-,  rrvJ 


transpottaUon 

4600-5500 


U900 

Aulos  (or  Salt' 


1977  HONDA  ACCORD.  Almost  everything 
new,  Including  clutch,  brakes,  carb.  $650 
OBO.  310-392-6660  weekends  or  evenings. 

1983  SAAB  900  TURBO.  5  Speed,  Mack, 
great  condnk>n  In  and  out,  garaged,  one 
owner.  122K  mi.  $2400  obo.  310-826-3096. 

1985  FRIENZA  (OLDS) 

4dr.  4cytinder.  new  engine,  excellent  body. 
welt-malntaine<lr  teacher's  car  $2500obo. 
310-836-6730. 

1987  Blue  Honda  Civk:.  I50k/mi.  Auto.  4dr. 
AA:.  Mint  conditkm.  $1999/obo.  Uz  310-392- 
6245 

1987  BMW  325,  red  ext.  black  im.  fully 
k>aded,  keyless  entry,  alami,  sunroof.  CD. 
phone,  automatk:.  excellent  cond. 
$5495obo.  page  Ooug0818-513-3383 

1987  NISSAN  200SX.  AC,  Auto,  Great  Con- 
dttkxi,  $2000  obo.  CaB  Veronk»  at  310-231- 
4396. 

1988  WAGONEER  Navy  blue  with  wood 
paneling,  exceOent  conditton.  $5000  ftmn. 
310-385-7884. 

1989  TOYOTA  CELICA.  Grey,  2-door,  5-8pd 
sttok,  AM/FM  cassette,  161K  miles.  Runs  ex- 
cellent. reNabto.  $2300  obo.  CaH  310-216- 
5854. 


Display 
206-3060 


Oiily  Bruin  OatsMed 


Seixnniier  25-28, 2000 


.IV  -•■ 


%' 


1300 

Cam()iis  Recniitmenl 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 


1300 

C.impus  Rt.'cruitment 


1300 

Cam|)us  Recruitment 


'-!*-r 


Anything  Is  Possible 


This  is  where  the  ger>eration  of  new  icieas  lives. 

Because  we've  built  a  global  network  of  people  who  see  possibilities 
where  others  see  confusion  and  risk  —  and  who  kr>ow  how  to  turn  tf>ose 
possibilities  into  realities.  And  by  working  at  intemet  speed  —  propelling 
dozens  of  companies  orKJ  millions  of  investors  into  tfie  new  economy. 

We  are  propelling  careers  all  over  the  world. 

Morgan  Stanley  Dean  Witter  invites  you  to  our 
Information  Presentation  at  UCLA. 

Tuesday,  Odober  lOlh  Bradley  Center,  6:00  to  8:00  p.m. 

Resume  Drop  September  25  -  October  1 5 

Interviews  November  1 ,  2000 


-*-  -•  -*>Sir''^~~' 


Morgan  Stanley  Dean  Witter 

Investment  Banking 


""T"  :<'.'' 


Careers  in  Inveslment  Banking  stort  Omsdw.com/coreer/recruiling 


v 


Morgan  Slariley  Deon  Wilier  is  on  Equol  Opportunity  Employer  committed  to  workforce  diversity    Morgan  Stanley  Dean  Witter  is  a  service  work  of  Morgon  Stanley  Deon  Witter  &  Co. 


y- 


% 


■■«:■ 


2300 

Sperm  /  Enf)  [Joiiors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Efjq  Donors 


For  A  Limited  Time 


GET  $1,500.00  BONUS 

IN  ADDITION  TO  A 
$3,500.00  DONOR  FEE 


when  you  are  chosen  by 

a  couple  within  the  first 

month  of  being 

accepted  by  our 

program 

THE  EGG 

DONOR 

PROGRAM 

Help  a  couple  achieve  their  dream  and 
you'll  receive  the  highest  compensation 
and  most  personalized  attention  from  the 
oldest  donor  program  in  la. 

\We  screen  redptent  parents,  too 

Shelley  Smith  mjl.  m.f.c.c 
523-933-0414 

The  loo  Donor  Program/The  turrooacy  I 


bllOOD 


The  date  of  the  first  regular  Daily  Bruin  issue  is: 


a.  September  29th 

b.  September  29th 

lb  adwrtee  call  (310)  825-2161 


c.  September  29th 

d.  September  29th 

For  the  anewei;  wwH  until  September  29th 


/k900 

Autos  for  SiHe 


1990  MrrSUBISHI  PRECIS  Sdoor,  white, 
82K/ml.  great  condition.  $ll5(Votx}.  Kelly 
310-918-1429 

1990  TOYOTA  CAMRY  In  excellent  condi- 
tion. One  owner.  ljx>ks  and  runs  like  a  new 
one.  Private  sale  only.  $5500.  310-208-7748. 

1990  TOYOTA  CAMRY  LE.  Auto,  4-door,  sil- 
ver  AM/FM  cassette,  A/C.  Excellent  condi- 
tion.  $8600  OBO.  310-420-3960 

1991  HONDA  ACCORD  LX  Sedan  Excellent 
txjyl  Low  miles— 69K.  Navy/tan,  auto,  load- 
ed w/aiarm.  $7900  OBO.  310-207-4039. 

1991  MAZDA  NAVAJO  same  as  Ford  Explor- 
er 2-door  wtiite  4WD  power  windows/locits 
FM/AMCD  103K  miles  Good  condition 
$5,000  310-208-7003 

1992  CHRYSLER  LA  BARON  conveftt)le, 
red.  54K  miles,  new  transmission,  good  con- 
dttlon.  $5300  OBO.  310-471-1902 

1992  NISSAN  PATHFINDER  92.000  miies, 
AC.  Auto,  Excellent  Condition,  $7500  ot». 
CaV  Carlos  at31 0-323-8047. 


1992  VW  JETTA  GL,  red,  4-dr,  5spd,  moon- 
roof.  CO  ptayer,  A/C,  69K.  MUST  SELL- 
MOVING.  $6400  OBO  310-820-7937. 

1993  FORD  ESCORT  DX,  automatic,  4-doof 
sedan;  A/C.  AM/FM  cassette.  Blue  exteri- 
ocAntettor  110.000  mHes.  Good  condition. 
$2,500  OBO.  Call  310-470-6047. 

1993  MAZDA  626ES.  Auto.  air.  PS.  ABS. 
Moonrool.  CtVCuMtle,  leattwr,  60K  mHes. 
New  tire8A>rakeeA)ellS.  $10,000  ot}o.  323- 
939-1696 

1904  HONDA  CIVIC  DX  coupe  5-speed  Nke 
new  and  black  60.000  miles  $7,400  obo. 
Can  310-230-6061 

1997  GE  METRO  LSI.  $7000.  ExceHent  con- 
dttton.  Automatic.  4  cylinder,  red,  urvler  40K 
miles.  Contact  Patricia  310-836-2890. 

93  MAZDA  MX6  LS  Z-6  Air.  sunroof,  ctvome 
w^eeli,  power  aoceeorles,  always  mectiani- 
ceOy  meimelrted,  cruise,  xcint  condition. 
$5200/0t>o  310-230-OOSO 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


'94  SATURN  SL1 

Blue/tilue  int.  5  speed,  /V/C.  cassette,  dean, 
drives  great,  no  accidents,  1  owner.  $4000 
obo. 

•95  FORD  PROBE  SE.  Auto.  air.  alami.  PS. 
PV.  PW.  $6500.  Great  conditwn.  310-244- 
3283  or  818-877-6990. 

"95  VOLKSWAGON  JETTA  for  SALE  Red 
witfi  grey/t)lack  interior.  76kmiles,  great  con- 
ditkjn,  A/C,  am/fm  stereo/cassette,  sunroof. 
West  Hollywood  area.  Call  323-845-0809. 


5200 

Peirking 


PARKING  NEEDED 

UCLA  STUDENT  LlVlf^S  IN  RIEBER  HALL 
Fall  2000-Spring  2001  needs  a  parking  spot 
for  Fan  quarter  and  possit>ly  beyond.  Parking 
can  be  anywtiere  somewtwt  near  resklence 
haN  sMe  of  campus.  CaH  661-297-6108  or 

email  sabruzzoOucIa  edu. 

~ — • * 

PARKING  SPACE  WANTED.  Near/on  Veter- 
an/StrBtti(Tx>re.  $50  per  month  obo.  Can  sign 
lease  for  10-12  montfis.  Start  eitfier 
Sept/Oct.  Call  310-770-1225  or  mga- 
brlelOuda.edu. 


5300 

Scooter  /  Cycle  Rc|);iir 


"  Mo«orcycl«  •  Motor  Sooo«*r  •  %Ao(m6  . 

■  SalM  •  Rapairs  •  Insuranca 

■  •  EXCHANGE  AO  FOR  FREE  PICK-UP  \ 

■  'OR  PURCHASE  DISCOUNT         \ 

5  (310)  275-6734  e 

P  1632S.UCiana9tBlvd  Six  Block*  Soutiol  Pico  e 


Scooters  for  S;tle 


SCOOTER-  in  perfect  condltton  1990 
Honda  eleite  80cc  Bkje  4200mi  $800  obo 
310-918-1429 


Scooters  for  Snie 


Scooters  For  Less 


EdlBiM$54'.99 

EufI  80^64.90 

orle&s/i 


977 


Blvd. 
EWOOD 


WE  DELIVER! 


^roftMANCE  FJRST^ 

(310)677-5800x107 


5620 

Rides  Offered 


CLAREMONT-UCLA  CARPOOL-  Cunently 
has  an  opening.  Claremonl  Depanure:8:30 
AM  UCLA  Departure:  llexible  between  7:00 
and  8:00  PM.  Cost:  Memtjers  rotate  driving 
with  their  cards.  BENEFITS:  Greatly  reduced 
parking  costs,  less  dr1vir>g  stress,  reduced 
driving  costs,  campus-wide  collegial  con- 
tacts Contact:Don  MacKay:310-825-8465; 
mackayOpsych  ucia  edu. 


Call 
206-3060 


»> 


Cl-)ssific(ls 


Display 
206-3060 


M:/ 


September  25-28, 2000 


f;'-  ■ 


^    "^         ^  ItoilyBfuinClassMid 


■T/ 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  RecriMtment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


.V,;:    ■■     V  -I 


"^Mh>^ 


Men 


physical  health 


You  have  the  potential  to  earn  $1,400.00 

by  participating  in  a  research  study  of  an  investigational  medication. 

Our  physicians  are  looking  for  healthy  men  to  supply  semen  samples 
for  research  evaluation.  If  you  are  in  a  general  good  health  and  are 
18-55  years  of  age,  you  may  qualify.  Participation  requires 
twelve  office  visits  over  the  course  of  seven  months. 

If  you  qualify  and  participate  you  will  receive 

all  study-related  care  at  no  charge.  % 

We  are  enrolling  for  a  short  time  only.  Call  today  for  more  info: 


The  Male  Clinic 
9100  Wilshire  Boulevard 
Suite  360,  East  Tower 
Beverly  Hills,  CA  90212 


(310)  858-4455  x-210 

Make  the  Call  that  Could  Make  the  Difference. 


LOVE  ITU! 
HATE  ITU! 


Get  paid  for  expressing  your  opinions!  Visit  our  website  and 
register  as  a  participant  for  our  marketing  research/focus 
group  sessions. 

Our  convenient  Beverly  Hills  and  Encino  locations  host 
day,  evening  and  weekend  sessions  for  men,  women  and 
children  on  a  vairety  of  subjects.  Since  1980  we  have  been 
conducting  research  for  major  manufacturers  and  studios. 

Register  soon  and  tell  a  friend! 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


Change  YOUR  UUorldl 

Chicago $198 

New  York....$303 


Tokyo. ...$450 
\   London $462 


Daily  Bruin  Gassified 


'  f- 


September  25-28. 2000 


«*- 


TRAVEL 


ADEPT  CONSUMER  TESTING 

Or,  call  818-905-9666  ext.  800  for  more  information  -^^ 


920  Westwood  Blvd. 

310-UCLA-FLY 


vv/\A/v\/.statravel  .com 


Watch  for  the  first  regular 
Daily  Bruin  issue  Sept.  29th 

To  advertise  call  (310)  825-2161 


Display 
206-3060 


1300 

Campus  Recruitni«Mit 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


r 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I 

I: 

I  Contemporary.  Egalitarian. 

5  Inclusive.  Participatory 

I" 
I 


And  All  Expenses  Paid. 


I 


HE  RECONSrmxmONiST  RABBINICAL  COLLEGE 


To  obtain  an  application  or  request  a  cata- 
logue, please  contact  the  oCHce  of  the  Dean  of 
Admissions  at  215-576-0800.  ext.  145,  or  you 
may  e-mail  the  College  at  a(lmissions@rTc.edu. 
Many  other  scholarships  and  financial  assis- 
y^^    taiKe  packages  are  available.  Please  visit 


I  I  has  full-tuition  merit  scholarships  ready 
I  and  waiting  for  rabbinical  students  applying 
I  for  the  Fall  of  2001.  Both  the  Mordecaj  M. 
I  Kaplan  Scholarship  and  the  Marjorie  and 
I  Aaron  Z/egelman  Scholarship  include     ^j*     , 

I  sti(}ends  for  living  expenses  and  ^'re  >  j  1 1  ?  |  our  website  at  www.rrc.edu  to  learn  more 
.  renewable  annually  for  five  years.  \JHIi^  about  the  distinctive  education  and  partic- 
AppUcatlons  will  be  considered  ^g^Ql^g^^y^^l^^lg^  ipatory  learning  community 
"  as  they  are  received  through  the  p^ggl|i^lQ^I_  COLLEGE  ^^^^  ^^  Reconstructionist 
i  closing  date  of  March  1,  2001.  www.rrc.edu  Rabbinical  College  has  to  offer. 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


/^ 


% 


Aerotech  Expo 

Job  Fair 


SATURDAY,  SEPT.  30, 2000  • »  AM.  -  4  P.M. 

155  East  Avenue  I 

Antelope  Valley  Fairgrounds,  Lancaster 


Meet  with  representatives  from: 

Select  Personnel  •  Del-Jen/Valenzuela  Engineering  •  Woodside  Summit  •  AVTEL  •  AIL 
-    AS&M  •  CSC  Los  Angeles  County  Sheriff  •  EG«&G  •  SPARTA  •  OnSite  Aviation 
r         Primerica  •  BAE  SYSTEMS  •  New  Horizons  Computer  Learning  Center 
t         So.  Calif.  Aviation  •  S.M.A.R.T.  •  United  Airlines  •  Volt  •  Barratt  America 
$YMVIONICS,  Inc.  •  BF  Goodrich  Aerospace  •  Pendragon  Staffing  •  Southwest  Airlines 
Embry  Riddle  •  OAO  Corp.  •  MDTSC  •  L-3  Communications  •  Boeing  Company 
STS  Services  •  Garrett  Aviation  •  St.  Jude  Medical  •  Sverdrup  •  Lockheed  Martin 


^ 


:*■  If  unable  to  attend,  we  offer  a  resume  service! 

Send  $30  and  35  resumes  and  we  will  distribute  your  resume  to  all  of  the 
participating  companies!  Mail  check  or  money  order  and  resumes  to: 
456  East  Ave.  K-4,  Ste.  #8,  Lancaster,  CA  93535. 

FREE  ADMISSION  TO  THE  PUBIICII 

Call  (661)  W5-5634  formore  details  &  directions. 
Also  check  out  our  website  at:  www.aerotechnews.coin 

Sponsored  by  Aerotech  News  and  Review 


J 


Looking  for  a  spiritual  home? 


Use  the  Religious  Services  Directory. 
Call  Stephanie  825-2221  for  more  info. 

*R.Ngious  Services  Directory  runs  every  Friday. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


"  ■  tJt  ■  ;■.  n-^r^" 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


Council 


America's  Student  Travel  Leader  for  over  50  year. 


Bad  to  school  blues? 

Then  study  thls..^— 

iami .229.00 

Newf  York.... ....263.00 

Mexico  City... .288.00 

Honolulu ...315.00 

London 463. OO 

WHAT  WE  DO  BEST 

WORLDWIDE  LOWEST  AIRFARES 

INTERNATIONAL  TRAVEL  EXPERTS 

EUROPEAN  RAIL  ISSUED  ON  THE  SPOT 

INTERNATIONAL  STUDENT.  YOUTH  AND  TEACHER  I.D.  CARDS 

HOrm.  CARDS 

BUDGET  HOTELS 

WORLDWIDE  ADVENTURE  TOURS 

WORK  ABROAD  PERMrrS 

STUDY  ABROAD  PROGRAMS 

VOLUNTEER  PROGRAMS  ABROAD 

TRAVEL  GEAR  AND  GUIDEBOOKS 

TRAVEL  INSURANCE 

EXPERT  TRAVEL  ADVICE 


)- 209 -UCLA 
931  Westwood  Blvd.  in  Westwood  Village 


VICTORY  TRAVEL 


'^  LATIN  AMsnCA  SI>SCIALISTS  ^ 

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Guadabiara       109    Lima 

169 

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209 

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209 

Honduras          319    logoto 

220 

OMtaKko          208    QuHd 

259 

Nicaragua          228    l««z. 

ao. 

Guotwrala          179    Coracos 

199 

i>i>.l.t.dai,^^4_Vikn>*aVb>aaiiW 

mimnnm 

NEW  YORK  ^ 

^    259  R/T     sSmSSo 

299  ttn 

219  iA 
2»»A 

6200 

Health  Services 


llchcit  NOW  a 


Mexico  Escapes^ 

■$369  Cabo  San  Lucas  <.<6«^C 

l$479  Cancun  vi««^^*» 

|$352  Po««oVallana      ^ 

weaoccl3  nighh  -Air-  Transhn) 


vfww.viitorytravel.com 

(323)  277-4595 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 

Board  CarWtod  darmatologist 

"He  hasnt  forgotten  what  It's 
Uke  to  be  a  student." 

•Acne«Mole  Removal«Warts»Rashes« 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmentation* 

•Laser  Ablation  o(  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)826-2051 

www.DrSllvers.com 

*OfBc«  focafiKf  In  Brmnt,.,nnM* 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Staflord  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Code  832jl^3)  We're  on 
campus  at  Ackerman  f^e v«l^KSi4  >' NK) AS : 
www.ucu.org  ■^'" 


6000 

Insurance 


CycloTimp  Insurance  Services 


■  Motorcycle  •  Motor  Scooter  •  Moped  g 

_  MSURANCC  IS  THE  LAW 

■  IT'S  LESS  TH»N  YOU  THINK) 

Call  lor  a  free  quotel 

■  (310)275-6734 


Exchang*  ad  lot  mmimuni  $10  00 
dncounl  MMh  inauranc*  purchaaa 


61  OO 

Conipiiter/lntern(?t 


SCORE  BIG,  SCORE  OFTEN  with 
mybytes.com.  Register  today  and  get  a  free 
CO  of  cool  music  and  mucti  more. 

Why  sell  your  textt)ooks  to  tfie  bookstore 
when  you  can  sell  directly  to  students?  Buy 
or  Post  your  used  textbooks  at 
UCZONE.com 


6200 

Health  Services 


PERSONAL  TRAINERS  NEEDED  No  expe- 
rience required.  Earn  $60/hr.  National 
Trainer's  Assoc.  1 -888-NTA-2338 

PROFESSIONAL 

NATURAL  PEELING 

FACIALS 

Stop  acne,  acne  scars,  wrinkles,  skin  discol- 
oration!!! Special  $25.00  treatment 
Regular— $65.  Results  Guaranteed! 
CaN:31 0-275-3604  Skin  care  by  Ms. 

SLIM  AND  HEALTHY  and  be  wealthy  Email: 
healthSSOaolcom,  310-712-2505  Ask  for 
Marie. 


Be  Beautiful 


Porcelain  Bonding 

$590  Each,  Less  10%  for  Students 

Open  evenings 

Peter  Wylar),  DOS 

Bellfiower  [>ental  Group 

(562)  925-3765 

10318  Rosecrant     Bettflower  90706 

30  min.  from  campus 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Attorneys 


♦BANKRUPTCY* 

GET  OUT  OF  DEBT  NOW!  Free  Consulta- 
tion Experienced  attorneys,  reasonable 
fees  Law  Offices  of  White  and  Associates 
(Cheryle  M  White,  UCLAW  "86")  800-420- 
9998  Wilshire/Bundy,  WLA 

NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST.  Sexual  fiarrassment.  Discrimina- 
tion, Auto-accidents,  Slips/falls  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  WestsWe,  Scott  D  Myer(UCLAW'86) 
www.bestlawyercom  310-277-3000. 


Display 
206-3060 


'■:■-•  *. 


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#1 


■-I  -  r-*-"i    ' 


8        September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Brum  Classified 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sp<!rin  /  Egg  Donors 


Special  Eg^  Donor  Needed 

Preferred  Donor  will  melfthe  following  crit 

•Height  Approximately  5'6"  or  llaller  •Caucasian  •S.A.T. 
Score  around  1300  or  High  A.C.T.  •College  Student  or 
Graduate  Student  Under  30  •No  Genetic  Medical  Issues 


ation 


Paid  to  you  and/or  the  charity  of  your  choice. 
All  related  expenses  will  be  paid  in  addition  to 

your  compensation. 

(Extra  compensation  available  for  someone  who  might  be  especially 
gifted  in  athletics,  sciencie/mathematics  or  music.) 


For  more  information  or  to  obtain  an  application  pl^e 
contact  Michelle  at  the  Law  Office  of  Greg  L.  Eriteen 

(800)  808-5838 
or  email  EggDonorInfo@aoLcom. 


J 


'Hliis  ad  is  being  placed  for  a  particular  client  and  is  not  soliciting  eggs  for  a  donor  bank. 


6300 

Legal  Advice  /  Attorneys 


SERIOUSLY  INJURED?  Jeffrey  T.  Briggs, 
Esq  .  (UCLA'89),  an  experienced,  ethical  at- 
torney provides  aggressive  representation 
for  maximum  recovery.  Jones&Briggs.  310- 
394-0304.  jtbriggs©eanhlink.net 


6^00 

Movers/Storage 


BEST  MOVERS.  Licensed,  insured  Lowest 
rates  Fast,  courleous+careful.  Many  stud- 
ents moved  for  $98.  Lie  -T- 163844.  t>JO  dOB 
TOO  SMALL!  1-800-2-GO-BEST  Voice- 
mail;323-263-2378. 

HONEST  MAN  w/14ft  truck  and  dollies, 
small  jobs,  short  notice  ok.  SF,  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  Bruins!  10th  yr.  310- 
285-8688. 


JERRYS  MOVING&DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available.  Also,  pick- 
up donations  for  American  Cancer  Society. 
Jerry  ©310-391 -5657. 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedicated  pro- 
fessional. At  your  home  or  WLA  studto.  1st- 
lesson  free.  No  drum  set  necessary. 
NeM  323-654-8226 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


GUITAR  INSJRUCTION  15  years  exp.  all 
levels  and  styles  Patient  and  organized 
Guitars  available.  Sam  310-826-9117. 

GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professional  near  UCLA.  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effortlessly! 
wwwJWGS.com.  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154 


6700 

Professional  Sorvices 


6700 

Professional  Services 


6700 

Professional  Services 


B 


FIRST  CALL 
Staffing  Services 

College  Students! 
Earn  extra  money  for  school! 

Are  vou  looking  for  a  vwy  to  pay  off  those  student 

loaas'  Call  us  for  short  or  long  term  work 
assignments  We  have  lots  of  fun  jobs  available' 

CallJaeinSaauMoflica 

3  10    264.99H 

orCarifinGkxMe 

818242.9988 

www  (I  riloHitiff   com 


PUBLIC  COMPANY  LOOKING  TO 

PROVIDE  CAPITAL  AND 

MANAGERIAL  ASSISTANCE 


To  startup  companies  or  entrepreneurs 

with  products  or  workable  concepts  in 

the  areas  of  internet  software/hardware, 

wireless  communications, 

fiberoptic  technology,  semiconductors 

or  medical  instrumentation. 

Please  contact  Modem  Technology  Corp. 

FAX  (718)  469-3292 

Phone  (718)  469-3132/4 

Email:  arthuriav@mindspring.coin 


6700 

Professional  Services 


i^s^(  iioiiii  KAI»^ 


Caring  &  Confidential 
Counseling 

Depression,  Anxiety, 
Relationships,  Addictions  & 
■  '■(;    Abuse 

Relieve  stress 

Improve  your  self-esteem     "" 

Cope  with  loss/trauma 

Heal  inner  wounds 

Work  through  Bi-cultural  barriers 

Sheriy  Khodada,  MFT 

11850  Wislhire  Blvd.  #201 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90025 

(310)  479-8255 


STRESS, 
;     ANXIETY,. 
i^ELATIONSHIPS: 

Or.  Abt>ey  Kesden-  licenssd,  clinical  pychol- 
ogist  has  helped  many  through  individual 
psychotherapy  In  warm,  supportive  enviro- 
ment  310-786-3102. 

A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/CCXINSEUNG  for  de- 
pression, anxiety,  otisesslons,  post-traumat- 
ic stress.etc.  Couples/Individuals.  Crime  vic- 
tims may  be  eligible  for  free  treatment.  Call 
Liz  Gould(MFC#32388)«  31 0-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  consultation 

ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW,  IWIEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Frustrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  persortal  statements?  Get 
professional  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consuttant.31 0-826-4445.  www.iwinning- 
personstatement.com. 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Comprehensive  Dissertation  Assistance 
Theses,  Papers,  and  Personal  Statements 

Proposals  and  Books 

Intematiorwl  Students  Wekxime.  SirKe  1965 

SlMron  Baar,  Pti.0.  (310)  470-6662 

www.Baar-Wrila.com 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

TO  PRESENT  YOUR  BEST  Personal  state- 
ment and  resume  deveiopmenl.  Editirtg.  Dis- 
sertation formatting  and  finalizir>g.  Persor>al- 
ized,  professional  assistance.  Ace 
Words,etc.  310-820-8830. 

EAGLE  EYED  EDITOR 

PROOFREADS  THESES,  publtoations;  tu- 
tors English,  study  skifis;  trains  time  man- 
agement, stress  reduction  Nadia  L3wrerx;e 
PhD  310-393-1951. 

IMPROVE  YOUR  IMAGE.  Professional 
makeovers  for  law  and  t>uslness  students 
Only  $20/hour.  213-626-7144 

NEED  A  HOUSEKEEPER.  Will  work  any  day 
of  the  week.  Reliable,  works  hard. 
Reasonable  rates.  Specializing  In  t>atfis  and 
kitchens  Jackie  310-758-2439. 

PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pre-pakj  legal  sen/ice  programs 
providing  quality  legal  services  to  plan  mem- 
bers. Robert  Moss,ESQ.;310-260-7650. 


Songwriting 

•  Lyric  Writing    LGSSOTIS 

•  Song  Structure 

•  Melody  /  Harmony 

•  Music  Theory 

•  Portfolio  Development 


Eliot  Popkin  (323)^68-8379 


B.A  in  Songwriting  from  Berklcc  College  of 

music;  President  of  rod  Records;  has  wntten 

sorwra  receiving  airplay  on  over  no  radio 

statior«  nationwide:written  jor  movie 

sourKltracks  and  "U  protects. 


SIGN  LANGUAGE 
CLASS 

Set  your  hands  free  by  learning  to  experi- 
ence a  language  of  beauty  through  visual  ex- 
pression. Starts  October.  Louisa:310-275- 
3809 


SUPPORT  GROUP 

FeeNng  tonely?  Stressed  out?  Overwhelmed 
with  (he  demands  of  a  giant  university?  Join 
others  to  exptore  and  share  common  experi- 
ences. Indrvklual  counseling  also  available. 
Call  Marsha  Orman  MSW,  310-289-5442.  In- 
tern #  ASW880e,  Supen/lsed  by  Mark  Rlvm, 
LCSW,  LCSe445. 


Display 
206-30B0 


■r'  ,1. 


•  ^*-!-r-,  yy-  '■T.T' 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


September  25-28, 2000         9 


3AOO 

Computers  /  Software 


3^00 

Computers  /  Softw/are 


Computers  /  SoftAA/are 


3^00 

Computers  /  Software 


3^00 

Computers  /  Software 


pK,  so  we're  getting  ahead  of  ourselves.  But  when  you  see  oijr  prices  for 
computer  software  and  hardware,  you  Ye  going  to  think  it's  AFTER  Christmas: 


up  to  70%  with  sott4u,com 


(and  register  to  win  a  3COM  Palm  VII) 


Academic  discounts 

on  your  favorite  sofware  and  hardware  products,  on-line  at 

www.sott4u.com 


It's  easy!  Go  to  soMu^com  dx\6  search  for  your  product,  and  then 

click  on  "Academic"  listings  to  SAVE. 


For  volume  license  for  institutions,  please  call  1-877-276-3848 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Services 


6700 

Professional  Services 


Personal  Statements,  Papers,  Theses, 

Dissertations,  Books,  &  Proposals 

Comprehensive  help  by  PhD  from  UC 

International  Students  Welcome 

{Z2Z)  665-8145 


TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research)  assistant. 
Professional  fielp  available  to  you  24 
hours/day  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
pers.com 

VOICE  LESSONS 

If  you  want  a  professional  sounding,  well 
trained  voice.  Call  Patty:310-858-1220. 


6900 

Tolfjconmuiiiications 


INDP  REPRESENATIVE 

is  $1200  and  a  free  computer  enough  for  a 
pfione  call?  Ask  for  Vincent;  1-800-530- 
8739.  www.excelir.conVinter-networkIng 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


**ENGLISH  EXPERT 

DOES  WRITING  IN  ENGLISH  make  you 
crazy?  Assistance  in  t>asic  skills  to  major  re- 
search paper  completion  ESL  experienced 
3 10-839-9933/ Adam 

(800)90-TUTOR.  WWW  MY-TUTOR  COM 
MATH/PHYSICS/STATISTICS/English/He- 
brew/chemistry/biology/aslronomy    Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available  Tutoring 
sen/ice.  Call  anytime. 

BOND  TUTORING 

All  sut)|ects  6- 12th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees  We  will  meet  your  individu- 
al needs.310-471 -7628. 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results. 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall.  Seven-years 
expenence.  SAT/Calculus/Physlcs/Chemls- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/English.  Calf 
Will  310-701-8969. 

EXPERINCED  TUTOR  any  subject  grades 
K-8  Spanish* English  Through  Higti  Sctxx)l 
UCLA  grad.  B.A.  in  Psychology,  Education 
•  MA  in  prograess  $20/hr.  Call  Rachael  310- 
275-0657  310-922-5267 

FRENCH  TEACHER.  Graduate  of  Sortwnne 
University.  Will  make  learning  easy  $20/hr. 
Call  Sophie  310-394-3210 

MATH  TUTOR 

F^or  SAT  math,  Pre-Algebra.  Algebra  1  and  2, 
Geometry,  Trigonometry,  and  beginning  Cal- 
culus. UCl-A  Student,  math  major.  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  math  and  one  year 
'caching  experience.  $25/hour.  Call  for  more 
nfomiation.  Stephanie.3 1 0-702-6455. 

MATH  TUTOR.  UCLA  math  major.  $30/hr. 
Any  math  to  Calculus.  References  upon  re- 
quest. 310-828-6291.  mlopez9ucla.edu. 
Ask  for  Richard. 


NEED  HELP  WRITING  TERM  PAPERS 
AND  ESSAYS?  Contact  Anne  for  assis- 
tance&advise  on  writing,  editing,  spelling, 
vocabulary,  etc.  310-478-4861  Between  4- 
5:30pm. 

SPANISH  TEACHER 
AND  TUTOR 

Adults  and  children,  individuals  and  groups. 
Reasonable  prices.  Ms.  Dominguez:  310- 
319-9335  Santa  Monica 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


UCLA  ENGLISH  ALUMNI,  pro-writer.  A 
papers  GRE,  SAT,  ESL,  &  High  school  tutor- 
ing Jeff  213-212-5556.  jeffforrester©adl- 
dam.org 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate 
Help  with  the  English  language — for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 


Display 
206-30'^ 


Xi 


I 


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,^"'*»' 


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10       September  25-28,2000 


Daity  Bruin  Classified 


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!,„,,;..■;,>** — 


(My  Brain  ClassifM 


September  25-28, 2000        11 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Seivici.'s 


6200 

Health  Services 


5&3  Beveplu  Hills  Acne  Sl^in  Cape  Clinir 


17  Ye 


»caF>s  oi  Lxpepience 

920  S.  PoUrfson  Blvd.  #6  (310)  289-1762 

nnpy/www.acnesKin.com 


Many  suffer  with  unhealthy  looking  faces  for 

many  months,  many  years,  due  to  the  lack 

of  the  knowledge  on  what  to  do. 


^Jl  y  skin  problem  started  when  I  was  about  15,  partly  from  genetics  and 
partly  from  puberty.  It  got  worse  my  first  two  years  of  college.  I  was  always 
trying  everything  I  saw:  over-the-counter  medicine  and  face  wash,  but  they 
were  not  good  enough  and  my  acne  got  worse.  I  even  ordered  medicine 
from  advertisements  I  saw  on  television,  but  they  didn't  work  either.  In  the 
end,  my  mom  had  to  take  me  to  the  dermatologist.  He  first  prescribed 
monocycline  and  later  tetracycline  pills  along  with  Retin-A  medication.  I 
tried  this  medication  for  a  few  months,  going  to  the  clinic  every  two  weeks. 
It  didn't  get  much  better.  Then  I  saw  an  ad  in  the  newspaper  and  decided 
to  give  the  Beverly  Hills  Acne  Skin-Care  Clinic  a  call.  It  turned  out  to  be 
one  of  the  best  decisions  1  ever  made!  Now  my  skin  has  pretty  much 
cleared  up,  I  have  had  "dramatict  results"  to  say  the  least. 

'UCLA  History  Major 
^r\  Sophomore 

Jf^  fter  just  four  facial  treatments  at  the  Acne  Clinic  in  Beverly  Hills,  I 
have  seen  a  100%  improvement  in  the  appearance  of  my  skin.   In  the  past, 
despite  having  used  all  kinds  of  medications  including  strong  antibiotics, 
nothing  was  able  to  help  the  frequent  and  persistent  breakouts  on  my  face. 
Mary  at  the  Acne  Clinic  put  a  stop  to  my  hopeless  acne  problem  and  I  am 
grateful  for  her  incredible  treatment.   Mary,  thank  you  for  all  your  help! 

Sheri  Sepranit 

Urannafic  Results  in  1  Month 

920  S.  RoUfson  Blvd.  #6  (310)  289-1762 


llOll 


use  Student 


Acne-A  Treatable 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED.  Must  be 
graduate  student  or  TA.  For  high  school 
student  taking  second  year  Spanish  and 
math.  310-476-0766 

Female  tutor&companion  needed  for  an  ac- 
tive 7y/o  boy.  Interested  in  sports  and  physi- 
cal activities  And  at  times  for  an  11y/o  girl. 
Driving  necessary  B.H  area  4days/wk  2- 
4hrs/day  $8-l2/hr.  Please  contact  Lona 
ASAP  at  310-273-3663  or  Cell#  310-753- 
3535  Of  E-mail:  Ionz320aol.com. 

FRENCH  TUTOR  needed  for  high  school 
Frerwh.  3-4hrs/week  or  +.  $l8/hr.  Must  have 
car,  experiece  a  +.  Call  310-474-1198. 

GERMAN  NATIVE 

To  tutor  young  boy  in  German  once/wk.  (pre- 
ferably male).  Venice.  310-392-4974. 


SAT  Tiir^gC 


Score!  Prep  needs 

tutors  w/high  SAT  & 

SAT  II  scoreslor  SAT  & 

Academic  sii4>iect 

tutoring.  ftelicDle 

transporllition 

required.  $16  per 

hour  -¥  bonus,  piex 

schedules. 

CALL  NOW! 


call  (310)  371-4500 

for  more  information 


HW  HELPER  NEEDED 

for  bright,  but  disorganized  8th  grade  tx>y. 
Mon-Thurs  4-6pm  or  7-9pm  Must  be  pa- 
tient with  engaging  personality,  to  give  help 
in  all  subjects,  teach  study  skUls,  test  prep, 
and  organization.  Beverly  Hills  off  Olympic 
Blvd  Call  Ms  Bochner  310-203-8835 

JAPANESE  TUTOR  FOR  9  year  okJ  girl. 
310-394-3706 

LOOKING  FOR  TUTOR  IN  DEPARTMENT 
of  Education  or  with  Special  Ed  background 
10  tutor  9yr  oW  girl,  twice  a  week  Westwood. 
310-470^484. 

MAC  PRO  WANTED  Tutoring  needed  lor 
computer  programs  Call  Jay  310-634-3572. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


7100 

Tiitorinfj  Wanted 


Male  coftipanion&lutof  needed.  Driving  nec- 
essary. 7y/o  and  an  lly/o  boy  To  help  witti 
homework  and  help  with  after  school  activi- 
ties. 2-4hns/day  4days/wk.  $8-12/hr.  Brent- 
wood area.  Call  Jackie  at  310-471-7273  or 
310-387-8666  ASAP 

MATH  LOVERS 
WANTED 

For  math  tutoring  service  Flexible  schedule 
Must  have  a  great  understanding  ot  sub^t. 
$15/hour.  Call:310-560-9561. 

MATH/SCIENCE  tutor  needed  for  grades  6- 
12.  Homework  help,  study  and  organization- 
al skills.  $15/hr.  Experienced+  Must  have 
car.  Fax  resume:3l0-474-74l3ASAP 

Seeking  Experienced  tutor  lor  H^g^  School 
Biology,  Geometry,  Chemistry.  Santa 
Monica.  310-394-3499 

SERIOUS  TUTOR  WANTED  for  6th-graders. 
reading  and  writing.  2  hours/day,  M-F. 
Sunset/Crescent  Heights  area.  Michelle 
home  323-851-7273  Of  cell  323-816-9313. 

TUTORA10MEWORK  SUPERVISOR  want- 
ed for  9th  grader  M-TH  5-7pm  (approx) 
Pacific  Palisades  Need  responsible,  bright, 
UCI^  student  w/car.  310-459-1531 

TUTORING  WANTED 

For  two  kids,  10413.  Tutor  all  subjects  in 
Beverly  Hills  home.  4hours/week.  Must  have 
car  UCLA  student  preferred.  Price  negoti- 
able. 818-509-0353. 

TUTORS  NEEDED  In  various  categories  for 
tutor  referral  agency.   Computer,   musteal, 
educational,  etc  Call:  626-333-1730  Email: 
tutonrackerOyahoo.com,   Website:   tutor-  • 
tracker.com 

TUTORS  WANTED:  All  Subjects,  preK-12th 
grade,  computers,  languages,  instalments, 
PT  (WLA/SFV/MALIBU),  salary:  $10-15, 
must  have  car,  310-477-2669,  fax:  310-477- 
1359. 


employment 

7400-8300 


7/*00 

Business  Of)|)or1iiuities 


$GET  PAID  TO  SURF  THE  WEB.  ¥»ww.AII- 
Advamage.com.  Use  relerrer  ID#  HCO-923 
start  Getting  PaM  Todayl 

$SPORTS$ 

MAKE  MONEY  IN  THE  BUSINESS  OF 
SPORTS!  Sell  products/Servkies  over  the  In- 
ternet that  people  actually  want  Email  bruin- 
t>obl  Ohotmail.coiD  4detaHs. 

ATTENTION  STUDENTS:  Own  a  computer 
earn  extra  $$$.  $500-$4000/rTX).  PT/FT.  Free 
Booklet  www.imtheboss.cib.net. 

FORGET  SCHOOL 

EARN  Hundreds  ol  dollars  every  day  from 
comfort  of  your  own  home.  For  more  Info  vis- 
it www.OnlineCashAtHome.com 


INTERNET  BUSINESS  OPPORTUNITY: 
needed  24  enthusiastic  go-getters  with  inte- 
grity and  a  drive  to  succeed.-  323-964-2456 


MAKE  MONEY  lor  you  or  your  school  orga- 
nizatton  with  the  Lifetime  Reminder  Sendee. 
Sign  up  online  today.  http://www.thehot- 
pages.com\reminder214l500.htm. 


7200 

Typintj 


BETTER  RESUMES 

Create,  develop,  or  refine.  Editing,  word  pro- 
cessing, apptkiation  typing,  dissertatkjn  lor- 
matting,  transcribing.  Ace  words,  etc.  310- 
820-8830. 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es. dissertatkKW,  transcription,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Montoa,  310  828-6939.  HoHywood.  323-466- 
2888. 


OUR  WEBSITE  OFFERS  the  ultimate  Nnks 
to  business  and  Income  opportunities,  shop- 
ping, sports  activities  and  tickets,  entertain- 
ment, romance  and  more.  It  will  take  time  to 
look  through  all  we  have,  but  tt's  well  worth  it. 
Come  visit  NOW!  http://www  thecoolpag- 
es.com/merchandise/sulle2 1 4 1  SCO 

START  A  DORM-BASED  buslfieas  In  the  e^ 
commerco/telecommunicafions  Industry  for 
495.  Return  on  investment  within  45  days 
No  sellingl  Bonus-free  vacatk)n.  1-800-579- 
1225  6X177700. 


%^CYCL,E 


WANT  CASH? 

Sign-up  your  dassmatM  kx  cool  Internet 
sites,  and  rec«lvs  a  mMtnum  of  $1  per  per- 
son!! There  is  no  easier  way  to  make  money! 
Log  onto  TEAMMAGMA.COM  or  caR  1-877- 
866-2462. 


7400 

Business  Opportiimtit.'s 


7AOL* 

Business  Opportunities 


uniclue  job  apportunitij 


ftexibte  hours 
minimai'time 
commitement 


$000  per  month 


If  you're  male,  in  good  health,  in 
college  or  have  a  college  degree,  and 
would  like  a  flexible  job  where  you  can 
earn  up  to  $600  per  month  AND  set 
your  own  hours,  call  310-824-9941 
for  information  on  our  anonymous" 
sperm  donor  program.  Receive  free 
health  screening  and  help  infertile  ' 
couples  realize  their  dream  of 
becoming  parents,      v     ;       ^ 


7500 

Career  Opportiiniiies 


ACCOUhmNQ  DEPT  assistant.  P/T  entry 
level  position.  M-F  2-6pm  w/  some  flexibility. 
Basic  computer  knowledge,  car  with  in- 
surance, good  oral  and  written  communica- 
tton  skills  required.  $1Q/hr+mileage.  310- 
276-9166. 


ACTORS  FOR  FILM,  Televiston.  commer- 
cials, and  print  get  a  HEADSTART  now. 
Here's  how  call  323-288-4595. 

KOREATOWN  E-COMMERCE  business 
seeks  P/T  employee  for  computer  and  office 
work.  Fluent  in  Korean  and  English. 
Resumes  to  namhee.hanOgte.net. 

LA  YOUTH  PROGRAMS,  Operates  recrea- 
VoroA  &  enrichment  programs  for  chiMren 
from  diverse  ethnte,  economic,  and  ability 
backgrounds  for  31  years.  Candidates  will 
have  a  min.  of  3  years  experience  develop- 
ing, implementing,  evaluating  and  managir)g 
chiWren's  programs  BA  req.  Spanish  a  plus. 
Excellent  benefits  &  salary.  Email  resume  to 
ivonflaypOaol.com  or  fax  310-313-1360. 

LANDSCAPE 
DESIGNER 

Full  Tim*  Positton.  Garden  Design  Company 
in  Beverty  Hills.  Will  be  involved  in  entire 
Landscape  Design  process  including:  crea- 
tkKi  of  initial  corKeptual  design;  dovetapment 
of  dri|wings  of  overall  site  plan  imegraling  an 
components  of  exterior  design  Including 
plantings,  garden  structures,  pools, 
walls&lences  and  hardscaping  details;  su- 
perviskjn  arxJ  coordir>atk>n  ol  every  stage  of 
productwn  and  installation  of  a  project  to 
completion.  Fax  Resume  to  310-542-8580 

MARKETING/FINANCE 
POSITIONS  AVAILABLE 

F/T  position  and  P/T  intomships.  Learn 
about  corporate  finandng.  oonwnercial  lend- 
ing and  business  managemant.  TNs  is  a 
trair>ing  program  for  a  growing,  enlrapranue- 
rial,  WLA  linance  company  Gradualaa  have 
secured  positions  at  major  commercial 
banks,  Investment  banking  houses,  finance 
conipanies,  and  gair>ed  acceptance  to  busi- 
neaa/law  schools.  Please  fax  resume  to  310- 
231-3338  No  Phone  calls  Please. 

PROPERTY  MANAGEMENT  COMPANY  In 
Westwood  seeks  tulltlme  office  manager  to 
handle  accounts  payable,  accounts  re- 
cievable,  bookkeeping  and  payroll,  please 
fax  resunrw,  310-470-1367. 

SALESPERSON  WANTED:  good  people 
skills  and  self-motivated  a  must.  Flexible 
hours,  good  money  and  peri<s  availatile 
Contact  Mtohael  310-966-1300. 

SYSTEMS/DATABASE  ADMINISTRATOR 
MAJOR  MEDICAL  GROUP/IPA  seeks  man- 
agement level  systemaAtatabaae  administra- 
lor.  The  succeasful  can(Mata  w«  be  weN 
rounded  wHh  expetlence  In  al  aspects  o(  IS 
managamani  and  will  poaaess  a  masters  In 
computer  sdenoe.  CompeOUve  salary  and 
flexible  hours.  FAX  resume  and  salary  his- 
tory  to:  JAVA  Kurtan  at  818-654-3460. 


BARTENDERS 


•» 


ii1M-«flMa«ai 
[  IraifaMa  Job 
iiiwii  hiaudsii 
•  ITS  Mt  ■  lab -in  ■  MKTnii 

Mrtloilli  BartMMtors  School 


1  i    .     .     r      )  I  V    V      /  1         1  • 


7600 

Child  C.'ire  Offc.-red 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  run  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5;30.Ctose  to  UCLA. 
310-473-0772. 

JUST  WHAT  YOU  NEED  FOR  PEACE  OF 
MIND.  Responsit>le,  dedicated,  caring,  kind, 
mature,  compassionate,  gentle,  experienced 
nanny.  Rachel  310-208-5042 


7700 

ChilcJ  C.ire  Wnnted 


ACTIVE  3  YR  OLD  BOY  needs  to  work  off 
some  energy  before  school.  7-9am,  5 
days/wk.  Westwood.  Please  call  Janet  at 
310-441-0383. 

AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  WANTED  lor  9- 
yr-okl  girt  Bring  to  afterschoo)  activities  2  or 
3  days/wk,  Sar»ia  Monica  Most  have  car. 
Will  reimburse  lor  gas-i-salary.  Can  Philip 
310-360-1981. 

ATHLETIC-SPORTS?? 
CHILCARE/DRIVER 

Help  drive  WLA  to  Pac.  Palisades,  Home- 
work &  Playing  sports  3  boys  M-F  2-6PM. 
Colege  students  only  Start  8/28.  $15/hour. 
310-459-8900. 

AVAILABLE  NOV.  1.  $8Air.  4-5days/wk. 
40+hrs/wk.  iSriXKith-oW  boy.  Must  have  ex- 
perience. Possible  2  PTJobs.  310-390-7869. 

BABYSITTER  1-2  times/week  lor  great,  ac- 
tive 8yr-oW  boy  Flexible  hours  $9/hr  Santa 
Montea.  Walk  to  Blue  Bus«1  from  UCLA. 
310-453-6656. 

BABYSITTER  NEEDED  for  7-yr-old  boy. 
Likes  ganwboy  and  sports.  Must  be  avail- 
able Mon&Tburs  2:30-8pm,  Tues4Wed  2:30- 
,  6pm,  plus  more  hours  if  needed.  ChiW  care 
experience  a  must.  10  min  from  UCLA.  $9/hr. 
Cal  Hilary  310-858-5994. 

BABYSITTER  WANTED.  3eveningsAfirt(,  and 
occasional  Saturdays.  1  5-yr-ok1  chiM.  Man- 
davMa  Canyon  area.  Good  pay  310-440- 
1820. 

BABYSITTER- 
SATURDAY 

Evenings  for  three  girls  10,8,6.  Must  enjoy 
art.  Barbie  dolis,  animals,  creative  play, 
cards,  and  Disney  Channel.  $10/hour,  refer- 
ences please.  310-273-9922. 

BABYSITTER.  Experienced  outgoing,  athle- 
tk:  creative  female  UCLA  student  wanted  for 
weeitend  babysKHng  9  year  oM  and  dog. 
References  Raquirad.  310-470-4662. 

BABYSITTER/ 
MOTHER'S  HELPiR" 

kkte  8M.  Expailance,  references,  and  driv- 
er's Ncanaa  required.  Must  enioy  Mdsl  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Endno.  818-788-7886. 

BABYSITTER:  Oocaskxul  afternoons  and 
avankigs.  Boys  8  and  11 .  Must  have  car  and 
references.  Santa  Monica.  310-829-3833. 

BABYSITTING 

Know4edge  of  Finnish  or  Farsi  or  both  a  plus. 
Cal  betora  8pm.  310-202-6822 


Display 
206-3060 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


7500 

Career  Op|)ortunities 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


7500 

Caieer  Opportunities 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


>:M'.~v'-—y^ 


WELI.S 
1  ARGO 


Take  your  career 

mm^:kmm    to 


m. 


next 

We  have  full  and  part  time  positions  throiigfiout  Los  Angeles  for 

^•:--i--^;:';:>- 1  Tellers  ■ : 

resentatives 
Bankers 
Store  Managers 

~^^S''-:^VB---V^ .    :^?T:fj:f-    •  Rexible  Hours  ^'-'T/'V"'   "     .     ■' 
^  ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^    0  •  Tuition  Reimbursement 

•  Competitive  Salary 

Call  today  for 
an  interview! 

1 '800-392-4780 


.  !■: 


Wells  Fargo  is  an  Equal  Uppotunity  Employer,  M/F/DfV  " 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanti.'d 


Babysitting.  Bev  Hills.  Afterschool.  Ilyr  old 
kid.  help  w/homework.  Local  references  onfy. 
UCLA  student  only.  310-278-0458 

BIG  SISTER/DRIVER  for  Palisades  gir1(15) 
from  2:30p.m  to.7:30p.m  M-F.  $10/hr.  310- 
899-3361. 

CHILD  CARE  Permanent  P/T.  San  Fernando 
Valley.  $lO/hour,approx.  20hours/week 
Starting  after  3pm.  Flexible  hours.  Must 
have  car.  Stans  Immediately  818-905-1215. 


CHILDCARE 

for  persorwWe  8yr-oW  girl.  Ptek-up  from 
school/lessorts.  CDL,  o*wi  car,  insurance. 
Non-smoker.  M-F  from  2pm  (end  time  va- 
ries). Experience  arxl  refererx^s  required. 
$10/hr.  Call  31IH40-6738. 


7700 

Child  Care  WanK.'d 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

Light  CookLig,  two  kids  8  i  13  lpm-6pm  M- 
F  Must  have  CADUreferences.  $10-$12/hr. 
Next  to  UCLA  Call  310-208-6004. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER  Needed.  M-F 
Generally  3.30-6:30pm.  Must  have  car, 
insurance,  good  driving  record.  Nonsmoker 
preferred.  Call  818-995-4336  after  6pm. 


CHILDCARE 
Frt/Sat  evenii 
Perm  P/T 
excellent  relei 
can  Chrissy  31 


1^-440-67 
llor    18r 


for    18moA1mo.old:    some 
)s  and   1-2  aftemoons/wk. 
jkxi.  NS,  own  transportation, 
IS  required.  Near  (XLA, 
126-3609 


DRIVER  pick  up  Sepulveda  and  Roscoe, 
Van  Nuys.  2:30pm  M-F  Deliver  to  Olympte 
and  26th.  Santa  Monk».  Message  310-209- 
1913 


fm,  energetic,  &  kind  babysitter 

needed  for  2  year  old  adorable  twins 

Saturday  evenings.  $12/lv. 


C.ill  C.d.lvn 


310  252  3131 


^ 


DRIVING  BABYSITTER,  toving,  Insurance, 
must  have  reliable  car/Ins.  310-712-2572. 

FLEXIBLE  HOURS,  pick-up  student  at 
UES/UCLA.  Babysitting  and  drive  to  after- 
school  adMttaa.  Must  have  car  and  In- 
surance. $10/hr.  818-207-4700. 

FUN^CARtNQ  BABYSnTER  NEEDED"~ior 
picMng  up  A  caring  lor  9yr  old  girt.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-Sdaya/Wk. 
aftamoona-epm.  Gayle  310w|S&4toe  (even- 
Inge). 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


MOTHERS  HELPER  wanted  TW-TH,  3- 
7PM.  ChiW  care,  light  cooking,  enands,  etc 
Can  L0ri:818-906-9690. 


MOTHERS  HELPER  WANTED,  weekends. 
BH  family  kkJs,  meals,  and  play  activities, 
swim,  athletk:,  creative,  CDL  send  resume 
323-957-9762  or  rgJthnOyahoo.com. 

MOTHERS  HELPER.  20hrs^wek.  $8Aiour. 
Walking  distance  to  UCLA.  Previous  experi- 
ence with  infants  and  toddtors.  driver's  li- 
cense and  work  references  eesaniial.  310- 
446-8434. 


MOTHERS  HELPER.  Mon-Frl,  7am-9am  & 
6pm-8pm.  20  hrs/vKk.  Needs  car  Good  pay 
References  checked.  WLA.  Veteran  and 
Pk».  Meianie  310-473-3789. 

NANNY  FOR  TWO 
GIRLS 

8411  20-25  hours/week.  Afternoons  ar>d  ear- 
ly evenings  Good  pay  Westside.  Need  own 
car  FluoTt  English.  310-475-8231. 


P/T  Babysitter 

for  2  boys  In  Bev  l-«lls  flexible  hours 
Experience  and  reference  required,  own 
transportatlorvNon-srnoWng.  310-275-8006. 

P/T  BABYSITTER  FOR  MOM  with  5-yr-old 
twm  girls  In  the  PaHsades.  Flext>le.  Few  af- 
ternoons/early evenlngs/wk.  Please  call 
Mary  Lou  310-454-9568. 

P/T  CHILD  CARE.  Two  chlWren  ages  243.5. 
Afternoons  and  some  weekends.Hght  house- 
work. Must  have  c«r,eapei(anca,and  refer- 
ences. $8/hr.  Email:  tlnymarshnsOearth- 
MLnet.     310-864-0906. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


P/T  NANNY  NEEDED 

Nice  Palisades  Family  needs  afternoon 
chlWcare.2.30-6:30pm.  M-F  for  2  easygoing 
boys  ages  7-11.  References  Req.  Must  drive 
and  speak  Fluent  English.  Please  call  Ann  or 
Gil  Hubbs  310-454-1181 

SEEKING  RESPONSIBLE,  PATIENT  PART- 
TIME  KID  SITTER  .  .  .  Energetic  student  to 
hang  out  with  10yr-oW  boy  Monday-Friday 
Pickup  from  school,  help  with  homework  and 
play  sports.  Must  have  car  Please  leave 
message  at  323-551  -6643. 

SINGLE  DAD  NEEDS  HELP!  Pfck  up  Incred- 
ibte  daughters,  aged  846,  from  Hollywood 
school  in  earty  evening,  help  with  homework, 
prepare  easy  dinner  Hancock  ParV  house. 
Possible  live-in.  English-speaking.  310-917- 
2353 

WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 

ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILD  CARE 

For  12-year-okl  girl,  Santa  Monica/Brent- 
wood.  M-F.  3:30-7lsh  (approx:  15hrs/wk). 
Must  have  reliat>le  car  with  proof  oi  In- 
surance. RefererKes  required.  %Mfout.. 
Night:  310-828-6206.  Day:  818-96^^76. 
Stan  ASAP 

WLA  CHILDCARE 

FOR  A  DELIGHTFUL  very  personable  11- 
year-oW  girl,  ptek-up  after  school,  drive  to 
activities,  supervise  homework,  Mon-Thurs. 
3:30-8:30PM(variable).  $11/hour.  Call  Dr. 
Alan  Yasser  310-277-2796. 


Wonderful  Nanny  needed  3-5  afterrK)ons  per 
week.  Need  Own  car.  Weekends  a  phjsl 
Palisades  area.  310-573-1010 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


SUMMER  OF  YOUR 
LIFE 

Counselor/Specialists  for  all  Land/Water 
Sports.  Tennis,  Outdoor  Adventure- 
Camping.  Climbing/Ropes,  Mtn  Biking,  Golf, 
Rocketry.  Roller  Hockey, 

Saillng/Waterskiing,  A4C,  Drama,  Radio, 
Video.  CAMPUS  INTERVIEWS  Mon,  April  3. 
Please  call  1-888-549-2963  or  email  wayne- 
lx)ysOaoi.com  (www.campwayne.com) 

$$1,000$$ 
FUNDRAISER 

No  Effort.  Big  Moneyfl  No  investment.  Wof1< 
with  your  friends!  Get  a  free  t-shirt  too!  Call 
Sue  at  1-800-808-7442  ext  104. 


$10  PER  HOUR 

Looking  lor  accounting,  business,  math,  and 
econ.  majors  with  computer  and  baste  Math 
and  English  skills  lor  PT-FT  positions 
Phones  and  general  office  duties.  Fax 
resume  and  DPR  (UCLA  students):  818-769- 
4694. 

$15-$23/HR  BRIGHT.  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
pie  to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academic 
Subjects  Transportatten  required  We  will 
train.  Flexible  iKHirs.  Send  or  lax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  lest  scores  (SAT,  GRE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educational  Services,  Attn:Bar- 
ry,  9911  W.  Pteo  Blvd,  jSte.1025.  LA,  CA 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424.  Posittens  avail- 
able throughout  LA  and  the  Valley 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


**RESTAURANT** 

•MARIAS  CUCINA-  NEED  PERSON  TO 
HANDLE  PHONE  TAKE-OUT  4  DELIVERY 
ORDERS,  And  servers.  10761  W.  PICO 
Blvd. 


•ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  Valley  Hollywood,  or  Santa  Monica 
office  needs  energetic  people.  $10/hour 
plus  bonuses!  310-395-7368. 


$1500  WEEKLY  POTENTIAL  MAILING  OUR 
CIRCULARS  No  Experience  Required.  Free 
Informatten  packet  Call  202-466-1639 

$900  WEEKLY 

POTENTIAL  processing  government  relunds 
at  home.  No  experience  necessary.  1-800- 
725-9051. 


•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beats  all  jobs  Start 
immediately  Great  pay  Fun/Easy  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  for  free  medteal  Call-24/hrs 
323-850-4417. 


ACCOUNTING  ASST 

F/T  wanted  for  small  business  tocated  near 
UCLA  campus.  5  days/wk.  9:30am-3:30pm. 
Starting  salary  $8.50/hr.  Fax  rosume:310- 
443-9544. 

ADMIN  ASSIST  for  fast  growing  company  In 
Santa  Monica.  Must  be  computer  literate. 
PT/FT.  benefits.  Fax  resume  4  software 
experience  to  310-315-0607. 

ADMIN  ASSISTANT  desperately  needed  for 
small,  cool  homo  offtee  Must  be  proactive, 
competent,  and  fun  Quicken,  Excel,  Word. 
Flexible  hours.  Call  Monique  310-204-3359. 

ADMIN.  ASST  F/T 
CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

Fast-paced  real  estate  school  seeks  quick, 
experienced  customer  servtee/phone  sales 
person.  No  cold-calling  Excellent  adminis- 
trative skills  necessary.  Must  be  computer  lit- 
erate, typing— 60wpm.  School  registration 
experience  a+.  Call:310-820-3970.  Must 
mention  ad«1486. 


$GET  PAID$  for  the  time  you  already  spend 
surfing  the  web.  Go  to  http://www  alladvan- 
tage  com/go.asp?refkJ=02r385  and  sign  up 
todayl 


^mm 


Displa* 
206-30 


--,.  ,-._  :V-r-'-  ■ 


>.',  ■  ' 


12        September  25-28, 2000 


■^r"-- 


Welcome,  honey, 

to  the  Ashe  Center  for 

student  health  care 

you've  already  paid  for. 


FREE  for  most  services 
No  insurance  needed 


For  more  information 

see  our  od  on 

page  19 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PI  J77IF 


ACROSS 

1  Marathon 
5  Kimono  tie 
8  Atlas  contents 
12  Mpngol 
dwellings 

14  First  garden 

15  Sector 

16  Upright 

1 7  "He  —  heavy" 

18  Like  — of  bricks 

19  Carpenter's 
need 

21  Jog  the  memory 

23  Average  grade 

24  "You  bet!" 

25  Cun/ed  letter 

26  Flashes  of  light 
30  Cuttlefish 

pigment 

32  Narrow  street 

33  Collector's  item 

37  Winnie-fhe-  — 

38  Miscalculated 

39  Island  near  Java 

40  Some  kernels 

42  Rube 

43  Unlike  The 
Rolling  Stones? 

44  Adds  (weight) 

45  Mouths,  to  a 
zoologist 

48  ■  —  OK  by  me!" 

49  Pouch 

50  Leg  bone 
52  Fish  nursery 

57  Tight 

58  Whistle  sound 

60  Cliffside 
home 

61  Soul-singer 
James 

62  At  leisure 

63  Hog's  dinner 

64  Poet  Ogden 

65  Rude  man 

66  Put  on  the 
market 

T 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


Boa@       QamDQ 

ii@B]     sBsiaB}     Baa 
DQaDg][s  Qom  [laiziQ 

BS]E]B[s]g]B][2]    SBSQCOB 


Diima  SQmoQ  asms 


lAlSIKISWElSTsiAIY^EiPIDlYl 


DOWN 

1  Dell  breads 

2  Atmosphere 

3  Ship's  staff 

4  Write  on  glass 

5  'Garfield" 
pooch 

6  ■•— .Hur" 

7  Fearless 

8  Sir's  companion 

9  Bandleader 
Shaw 

10  Laborers 

1 1  Beach  grains 

13  Thickset 

14  Facility 

20  Thing,  in  law 
22  "The  Iliad,"  e.g. 
24  Middle  Eastern 
country 

26  Tree  fluids  - 

27  Farm  tool 
20  Lotion 

ingredient 
29  Alter  (a  skirl) 

T 


30  "Excuse  me!" 

31  Monastery 
head 

33  Grouchy 

34  Shade  trees 

35  Toast  topper 

36  Brickmaker's 
oven 

38  On  cloud  nine 

41  Eltxjw  grease 

42  Succulent 
plants 

44  Touch  gently    . 

45  Many  times 

46  Lariat 

47  Neighbors 
49  Cloy 

51  Bryce  Canyon 
state 

52  Retain 

53  Chops 

54  Part  of  HOMES 

55  Brook 

56  Shout 
59  Harem  room 

nr 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Daly  Bruin  Cbsdfied 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


ASPIRING  WRITERS 

IN  FORM,  EXPOSE,  PROVOKE.  EXPLAIN, 
tell,  ask,  vent,  ctiange.  An  online  college 
community  $25  per  article!  Email  us; 
eamdmaincampus.com. 

ASSISTANT  ART  CONSULTANT  Train  w/a 
professk)nal.  knowledge  of  basic  computer 
programs.  Good  design.color  and  composi- 
tion skills.  10rir/wk  to  start.  310-828-3964. 

BABYSITTER/DRIVER  needed  tor  2  girls 
ages  11.  Santa  Monlca/WLA  area.  Must  be 
available  3-6pm  M-F  Must  tiave  car.  valkJ  li- 
cense and  insurance.  $lO/hr+gas.  Call  Les- 
lie 310-277-8480. 

BANKING 

Pfr  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Union.  Excellent  pay,  hours  &  environment. 
Some  teller  experience  preferred.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd.,  LA,  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.ucu.org/jobs.htm 

BARTENDER  TRAINEES  NEEDED.  Earn 
$l50-$250/night.  Day/eve  classes.  1-2week 
classes.  1-800-974-7974.  Internatk>nal  Bar- 
tender's school,  HUNDREDS  OF  JOBS! 
wwwmybartendingschool.com 

BARTENDERS 

Make  $100-$300  per  night.  No  experience 
necessary.  Call  7  days/week.  1-800-981- 
8168  ext.234 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary. 
Host  music/talk-shows  for  our  radk)  stalkxis. 
P/T.  $10-15/hr,  $200+per/8how,  plus  tanlas- 
tic  benefits.  323-468-0080,  24-hours. 

ARE  YOU  LOOKING  FOR  A  GREAT  FULL 
OR  PART-TIME  JOB?  Fax  resume  to 
Jeff93i0-665-9965  asap  Casual  office 
w/flexible  hours  for  the  right  person. 

ART  GALLERY  and  Art  Appraiser's  office 
seeking  staff  support  assistant.  Please  email 
for  conjplete  descriptmn  of  position.  JSKver- 
App  ©aol.com 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


COMMUNITY-BASED  MENTAL  HEALTH 
CENTER  in  Glendale  seeking  chikl/adol.  in- 
home/school  therapeutic  behavioral  special- 
ists w/1  of  following  requirements:  1)MA  in 
healing  arts;2)BA  w/1  year  experience  work- 
ing in  group  home,  hospital,  SED  classroom, 
day/residential  treatment  setting;3)2  years 
college  &  3  years  exp.  described  in  2).  Bilin- 
gual Spanish/American  a+  If  interested  fax 
resume  to  Dr.  Margaret  Mansour,  818-500- 
3850. 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ORTHOPEDIC  OFFICE 
seeks  experienced  medrcal  historian/tran- 
scriber tor  medical  legal  reports-Word  Per- 
fect. Full  benefits,  excellent  salary.  Call 
Anne©3 10-273-4433. 


BH  LAWFIRM  NEEDS 

a  full  time  receptionist.  Hours  8:30-5:00,  paW 
parking,  benifits.  Please  fax  resume  to  310- 
274-2798  attentkjn  Human  Resources  De- 
partment or  send  to  lurie&zepeda  9107 
Wilshire  Blvd  Ste.  800,  Beverly  Hills,  CA 
90210.  No  phone  calls  please. 


COMPUTER  PC  Coordinalor  lor  small  Cerx 
tury  City  law  offrce  P/T  temporary,  Windows 
NT  exp.  required,  10-20hr/wk  $l2-l7/hr.  Fax 
resume  310-277-6431 

COOL  DEMOCRATIC  LADY  seeks  driver  for 
occasional  errands.  Own  car  required. 
$7/HR  310-826-9150. 

COUNSELOR  POSITION-  $7.70/hr.  60  units 
completed  or  2yrs  experience  -required.  Call 
Antoinette:  818-592-2962. 


BEACH  CAMP  COUNSELORS:  Day  camp, 
M-F  at  Private  Club.  Experience-i-personali- 
ty++!  All  college  majors  welcome.  MUST  be 
energetic,  enthusiastic,  very  outgoing,  team 
player.  MUST  be  available  to  work  all  10 
weeks  6/19-8/25,  plus  orientation  time.  Call 
Andrea  310-395-3254.  Interviews  begin 
2/28/00,  lax  resume:310-395-8857. 
email:TBC201  ©aol.com.  Pay  be- 
gins:$7/hour  increases  w/experience. 

ADMINISTRATIVE 
ASSISTANT 

Will  train.  In  medical  office  30-40hrs/M- 
F/9:00-6:00pm.  Computer  knowledge  man- 
datory. Great  job  for  Business/Pre-Med/Pub- 
lic-Health  majors.  15-min  to  UCLA.  310-476- 
4205. 

ADULT  RESPONSIBLE 
MALE 

For  personal  care  lor  disabled  man.  Monday- 
Friday  1  hr/day  and  altemaie  weekends.  Will 
train  Strong  References  Near  UCLA 
$300/mo  310-475-5209. 

Afternoon  chikJ  care  needed.  Tutoringicom- 
panion  w/driving.  For  an  active  7y/o  txjy  and 
at  times  for  an  lly/o  girt.  Female  preferred. 
Beverty  Hills  area.  $8-12/hr.  4days/wk.  2- 
4hrs/day  ASAP  Please  call  or  Email  at 
Ionz320aol.com. 

AFTERSCHOOL  hoifiework  supervisor  and 
babysitter  for  3rd-grade  boy.  Must  be  clever, 
creative,  dtsaplined  to  teach  good  HW  hab- 
its. Out-of-the-box  ttiinker  and  achiever.  Ele- 
mentary Ed  major  a  plus.  Car  a  must  for 
pick-up  and  soccer  practk;e  driving.  Tues-Fri 
2:30-6:00pm.  $8.00-$10.00/hr.  Call  310-390- 
6962  evenings,  323-468-5273  days,  ha- 
katzhbc©  yahoo.com. 


BIKINI  DANCERS 

EARN  GOOD  $$,  flexible  schedule  apply  at 
FANTASY  ISLAND  Night  Club  11434  W  Pico 
310-473-5678.  Open  daily  11  am-2am 

BOOKEEPER&ASSISTANTmust  know 
QuickBooks  Pro.  General  office  wori<  and  er- 
rands. Flexible  hours,  3-6hrs/week  possibly 
more.  Compensation  DOE  Please  call  Mona 
310-278-3349 

BOOKKEEPING/RECEPTIONIST/data  pro- 
cessor. Development  company  looking  to  fill 
3  positions  start  ASAP  tocation-  Downtown 
LA.  213-489-5540  extll. 


CAFE/ICE  CREAM  SHOP  FT  and  PT 
Westwood  Village.  Cell:  818-381-4401.  Par 
213-286-1957. 


CAMP  WAYNE-sister  half  of  brother/sister 
camp-Northeast  Pennsylvania  (6/20- 
8/18/00)  We're  back!  .We  have  recmited 
great  staff  from  UCLA  and  want  you  to  have 
the  most  memorable  summer  of  your  life.  Di- 
rectors for  Athletks,  Gymnasttes,  Aerobics, 
Cheerleading.  Swimming,  Sailing,  Waterski- 
ing.  Fine  Arts  and  Crafts,  Piano,  Photogra- 
phy, Guitar,  VWeo,  Group  Leaders.  On  Cam- 
pus Intenrtews  April  5th.  Call  1-800-^79- 
3019  or  email  campwayneg8aol.com. 

CASH  PAID  DAILY 

$lO-20/HR.  Fun,  pA  job.  Gay  artist  seeks 
totally  clean  shaven  male  under  22  for  figure 
modeling  etc.  Inexperienced  preferred.  Dan- 
ny©818-980-1666. 

CERTIFIED  LIFEGUARDS.  Must  have  proof 
of  Lifesavtng  Certlfk:atkjn,  pools  or  open* 
bodies  H20.  WH)  supervise  chtWren's  water 
time  at  the  ocean  shore.  Must  t>e  availattle  to 
work  6/20— Ubor  Day  Call  Andrea:310-392- 
3254.  Interviews  begin  2/28/00,  fax  re- 
sume:310-395-8857,  email: 

TBC201  ©aol.com.  Pay  begins:$7/hour  in- 
creases w/experierKe. 


COUNSELORS  and  Instnjctors  In  an.  swim- 
ming, nature.  vkJeo  and  ropes  needed  by 
Tumbleweed  Day  Camp.  Must  be  responsi- 
ble, energetk;  and  enjoy  working  with  child- 
ren. 310-472-7474 

CREATIVE  SECRETARY 

P/T.  Intelligent,  self-starter  Organizing,  bill- 
paying,  creating/placing  advertisements. 
Flexible  hours.  Minimum  16  hrs/mo. 
$12.50/hr.  Beach  residential  offwe.  310-396- 
2499 

CREATIVE  SERVICES  ASSISTANT  Profes- 
sk>nal  sports  team  seeking  creative  assistant 
in  Mart<eting.  Design  and  create  Sales  Pro- 
posals and  Review  Kits  for  clients  and  com- 
pany materials.  Manage  printers,  software 
and  paper  inventory.  Proficient  w/Ouark 
Xpress,  Adobe  Photoshop  and  Illustrator, 
PC.  Send  to:LA  Clippers.  1111  So.  Figueroa 
St.,  Ste.  11 00.  Los  Angeles,  CA  90015. 

CRUISE  LINE  ENTRY  LEVEL  on  board  po- 
sitions available,  great  benefits.  Seasonal  or 
year-round.  Call  for  info  323-644-2102 
www.cruisecareers  com.       .    ^ 


CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HIRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$10.26/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/U 
academic  years  remaining  with  vaW  driver's 
license.  Web:  www.ucpd.ucla.edu/ucpd/cso. 
Email:  cso©ucpd.ucla.edu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 


DAD'S  HELPER 

After  school  compankx)  for  13y/o  boy  Pra- 
ter male  Homework,  light  meal.  Occask)nal 
nights.  $10Air  P/T.  3:30pm-7:30pm.  Week- 
days. Prefer  car.  Has  worked  w/  cWWren  be- 
fore. 310-553-7595. 


mtem.\ 


Living  in  an  unfurnislied  apartment? 


Need  a  bed? 


'mi 


Need 


Or  is  your 


Checl<  out  Bruin  Bargains  on 
page  1 7  to  buy  or  sell  your  stuff! 


Display 
206-3060 


' .;  •  ■•    -•<;.''  . 


:K  '•'.': 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


September  25-28, 2000        H 


7800 

Help  W;i(it(.(l 


7800 

Help  WiiMted 


GET  Paid! 


Do  you  raod  Moxim,  mM,  or  Playboy?  tfso,  Shrad 

'•ml  BocouM  hero  comos  SIZZLE  ,  iho  hofffost  now 

mon's  mogazino  in  tho  country.  Wo'ra  looking  for 

collogo  students  to  join  Hlie  Sizzle  Commandos 

Promotional  Teom."  Earn  cash,  prizes,  froe  gear 

and  more.  To  become  a  Sizzle  Commando,  call  our 

New  York  office  at  (718)  380-2229  or  e-mail  us  at 

EditorOSizzlemag.com 


NEW  FACES  WANTED 

ALL /VQES  ALL  TYPES 

FOR  UPCOMfJG  TV.  HLM.  CX3MMERCIAL, 

lw1USiC,VDE0S 

AND  PRKfT,  NO  FEES.  NO  E»>  REQD 

PLEASE  CALL  FOR  AUOmON  T^/tE 

AUOmONMGNOW 

(818)379-7070 


ENTERTAINMENT  INDUSTRY  CATERING 
COMPANY  NEEDS  part  time  assistant  to  the 
president.  Please  fax  resume  to  323-937- 
0742. 


7800 

Help  W.-uited 


Female  UCLA  Student  needed  lor  part-tim* 
PERSOI^AL  ASSISTANT/SECRETARY  to  a 
lady,  4-5hrs/day,  5days/week  for  general 
housetxjkJ  management,  driving,  shopping, 
etc.  Salary  negotiable.  Call:310-472-1506  for 
more  details. 

FRATERNITIES, 

SORORITIES,  CLUBS, 

STUDENT  GROUPS 

Student  Organizations  earn  $1000-$2000 
with  the  easy  Campusfundralser.com  three 
hour  furKfraising  event.  No  Sales  required. 
Fundraising  dates  filling  quickly,  so  call  to- 
dayl  Contact  Campusfundraiser.com,  888- 
923-3238.  or  visit  www.campusfun- 
dralser.com. 


7800 

Help  Wiiiited 


FREE  PARKING 

Seeking  UCLA  Student  to  help  set  up  homa 
office.  Must  do  word  processing,  will  also 
provide  computer,  internet,  email  tutoring  for 
me!  5-10hr/week.  competitive  hourly  rate 
310-475-0793 


FT/PT  RECEPTIONIST  /  CUSTOMER 
SERVICE  Answering  telephones,  data  entry, 
filing,  near  campus.  Call  310-828-9900. 


FULLTIME  FAX/FILE  CLERK  Santa  Montea 
law  firm  needs  dependable,  flexible  person 
to  do  fax/file  room  duties.  Contact  Cal  310- 
453-5900 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


FUN  SUMMER  JOBS. 

GAIN  VALUABLE  EXPERIENCE  working 
with  children  outdoors  We  are  looking  lof 
caring  Summer  Day  Camp  Staff  whose  sum- 
mer home  is  in  or  near  the  San  Fernando  or 
Conejo  Valleys,  Malibu  or  Simi  Valley  Gen 
eral  counselors  and  specialists.  Salaries 
range  $2,500-$3,000-f  888-784-CAMP 

GBS  2000  A  General  Merchandising  firm  is 
seeking  an  experienced  FA"  salesperson  in 
Los  Angeles.  Contact  Micheal  310-479- 
0444. 


Tacfjc' 


GENERAL  OFFICE  help  in  a  live  Theater 
Some  computer,  answer  phone,  etc  P/T 
Pico/Beverly  Glen.  $7/hr  Call  310-204-4440 


DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BAUOON  CELEBRATION  is  hlrlr>g  van  driv- 
ers. Looking  fof  energetic,  unstoppatMe, 
positive  crew  immediately.  Flexible  hours, 
busy  weekends.  Apply  in  person  M-Sat  tiH 
6pm.  Apply  at  937  Westwood.  310-208-1180 

IX)T  COM  CO.  SEEKS  HTML  specialists 
w/2-4  yrs  exp  to  Join  our  media*  web  devel- 
opment team.  Apply  0:f.  323-936-6836 
rottisteinmefDsic.com/career.htm 

DRIVER  needed  to  take  eWerty  woman  on 
errarxte  or^ce  a  week.  Preferably  female. 
$10/hr  phjs  mHeage.  Call  453-0088. 

DRIVER/MESSENGER 

F/T,  M-F.  must  know  Los  Angeles,  own  car, 
own  insurance.  $400-$500/wk.  Call  Nathan 
or  AndyO310-788-2603 

EARN  $3000  -1- 
3  CANGUN  TRIPS! 

AH  Expenses  paM  for  2.  Set  your  own  hours 
310-638-1371 


ENVIRONMENTAL 

GRAPHIC 

DESIGNER-SIGNAGE 

Must  know  Adobe  Illustrator  and  Adobe  Pho- 
toshop. Profkaent  in  corrfputers.  Designing, 
assisting  in  design  devek)pment.  will  worli 
with  a  leading  company  in  an  entertainment 
industry.  Opportunity  for  growth,  immediate 
need.  Both  fuH-time/part-time  positk>ns.  310- 
440-9840.  fax  resume  to:310-472-1708. 
www.studkxnarc.com 

EXECUTIVE 
ASSISTANT 

Record  label  seeks  motivated  indivklual  with 
computer/internet  experience  to  assist  In  da- 
ily operations.  Fax  resume  to:323-801  -2234 
or  email  to  adminOtantrum 


Work  For  You! 

Administrative/ Accounting/Financo/ 
Real  Estate  Finance 

Careerf<5roup  Inc.  has  fhe  best  full  Hme 
temporary  O|:^)0rtuniHes  with 

premiere  companies. 

bs  Angeles    Phone:  (310)  277-81W    fax:(310)277-8329 


GEOGRAPHY 

Flood  certification  company  near  LAX 
has  immediate  openings  for  map  re- 
searchers. Part-time  and  Full-time.  Must 
be  map  proficient,  detail-oriented,  and 
possess  basic  computer  skills.  Geogra- 
phy background  Is  prefeaed.  Will  train 
Interested  candidates  fax  resume:  310- 
348-9022  atten:  Production  Department. 


EXPERIENCED  BOOKKEEPER.  Psycholo- 
gist's Home  Beverty  Hills.  Call  310-205- 
0226. 

FEMALE  FIGURE 

Or  Nfe  drawing  models  wanted  by  photogra- 
pher. Call  Peter  at  3 1 0-558-422 1 . 


/ADVERTISE 


FEMALE  PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

For  Beverty  HiUs  producer.  Short,  flexible 
hours.  Excellent  pay.  310-278-6972. 


GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  clubs  in 
WLA.  Conversation  only  No  ateohol.  Flexi- 
ble  hours.  Earn  top  $$$.  323-441-0985 

GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  clubs  in 
WLA.  Conversation  only.  No  alcohol. 
Flexible  hours.  Earn  top  $$$.  323-441-0985.  • 

GOOD  PAY!!! 

HARD-WORKING,  reliable,  athletic  persons 
for  p/t  wort<.  Good  pay  Wori<  outdoors.  Own 
car  a  plus.  Call  866-845-0946. 

GOURMET  MARKET  PLACE  (take-out  and 
cafe)  needs  counter  help.  Serving/preparing 
food  and  worthing  with  customers.  Food  ex- 
perience a  must.  Call  ©323-655-2285 


CAREER  GROUP  nsiC 

TheWorkingDigmnce^ 

www.€areergFouiNiiccoin 


GRAPHIC  ARTIST 

Brentwood  Internet  company  seeks 
graphic  artists  for  web  and  print  design. 
Must  possess  strong  skills  in  graphic 
design.  Experience  with  Java,  Flash, 
Photoshop,  &  Illustrator  required  Design- 
er will  m>fk  directly  with  company  found- 
ers and  key  employees.  Email  resume: 
jobs  ©tenantdlrect.com. 


LUOl^.edu     Website:  WWW.dinin^  ucla.edu 

S077     Fax  a  request  for  an  applicati9n  to:  13101  82S-2Saa 

Attention:  Dining  Services  Re^n^jt^r 


JfRVKES 


-*IT^ 


14       September  25-28, 2000 


'•         >.<-'••. -;SEf.- 


DiiyBniinausified 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


GROWING  REAL  ESTATE  company  is  look- 
ing (or  an  energetic,  highly  organized  individ- 
ual to  assist  in  filling  and  record  retention  (or 
the  accounting  department.  Duties:  assist 
with  daily/monthly  (iling  requirements.  Mam- 
tain  existing  (lling  and  record  keeping  sys- 
tems P/T  20-30hrs/wk  $9/hr  Fax  resume 
,  310-458-9881  ATTN:HR 


X 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


BLAIR  WITCH  2 


HANOYMAN-GARDNER  part  time  to  come 
once  a  week  (or  (our  hours.  To  do  things  in 
my  hillside  garden  my  regular  gardner  does 
not  do  including  general  maintenance  o(  tiled 
areas  ,  sprinkler  work  general  cleanup.  Also 
an  around  handyperson  good  with  light  re- 
pairs in  an  older  home;  some  light  paintino 
woodwork  etc.  Will  pay  $io-$l5  per  S 
commiserate  with  your  skills,  (flight  be  able 
to  ad  on  hours  i(  good  as  I  have  other  prop- 

o?!f^oc!.^'^'"9  '^'^  ^^  '°^  Michael.  310- 
<:/o-3256. 


*''>'     •  ■  wv^^ip 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


LEGAL  ASSISTANT 

Beverty  Hills  business/real  estate  law  o((ice 
seeks  enthusiastk:  graduate  (or  entry  level 
positwn.  Great  opportunity  with  growth  po- 
tential Office  experience/computer  skills  ((k<i- 
crosoft  Ottice/Wortf^)  required.  M-F  8:30- 
5:30,  some  overtime.  Competitive  salary  and 
benefits  package.  Fax  resume  310-550- 
8771 . 


7800 

Help  W.Kitnd 


Zen  Zoo  Tea 


now  accepting  applications  . , 

various  posJtions.  Perfect  for 

students.  Flexible  hours.  Fax 

resume  to  310-576-0685 


If  interested,  please  contact  Suzie  or  Debra- 
^-  323-954-7644       :  .. 

dludgin@dlmla.com 


LIBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties,  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Antigone  Kutav 
310-825-1084.  ^ 


MEDICAL  ASSISTANT 

M.D.  otftoe.  Work  with  M-D.  mornings. 
Monterey  Park.  Fax  resume  to  626-573- 
5001 


HIGH  TECH/GRAP.  ART 

&  PfT  Marketing  and  Sales  support  Needed" 
Assist  Sales  manager.  Casual,  (un  enviro- 
ment  Graphic  Arts  background  a  plus.  Know 
MAC.  20-30  hours/wk.  Weekdays.  Flexible 
schedule.  Michael:  310-213-2667 


HOMEWORK  SUPERVISORn-UTOR  (or 
10th  grader  taking  Spanish,  Algebra,  and 
Science.  2-hours  per  evening  M-F,  Sa^r 
310-476-4205. 


HOUSEKEEPER/HOME-OFFICE  ASSIS- 
TANT (or  busy  doctor  Weekends.  Laun- 
dry/cleaning, assist  w/cooking,  etc  No  skills 
required.  Great  pay!  Flexible  schedule 
Leave  message  310-826-981 1 . 

INTERNATIONAL  FIRM  seeks  experienced 
telemarketers  (or  oHIce  In  El  Segundo  B2B 
professional  sales  in  (ast  growing,  high-de- 
mand market.  Salary,  commission,  bonus 
and  benefits.  F/T  and  P/T  available  Call 
Rhonda  at  800-801-1007  and  fax  resume  to 


HOUSEKEEPER  $15/HR 

Bev  hills  adj.  Several  weekday  hours/wk 
CASH.  323-931-7071 


INTERNET  RELATED 

DATA  ENTRY/GENERAL  oftice  work,  (nler- 
net-based  home  business.  P/T,  $io/hr  Re- 
laxed environment.  Detail-oriented,  45»«)m 
Please  inquire  ©323-655-8344  or 
info  9  ne  wremedies  .com 


INTERVIEWER/ 
SCHEDULER     V 

Work  out  of  your  home  at  your  own  pace  20- 
25hrs/wk.  Very  very  good  pay  Make  $1000+ 
a  week  Financial  background  a  plus  Call 
Phillip  at  310-289-8359  or  310-739-1475. 

KAPLAN,  The  wortd  leader  in  test  prepara- 
tion, has  immediate  openings  in  our  West- 
wood  center  for  wen-spoken,  dynamic  peo- 
ple (or  part-time,  high  paying  teaching  posi- 
tions. I(  you  take  pride  in  assisting  others  in 
reaching  their  career  goals,  have  high  GRE 
GMATLSAT,  MCAT  or  SAT  scores,  strong 
presentatran  skills,  a  creative  personality 
and  want  to  wor1(  in  a  (un.  Interactive  at- 
mosphere, call  800-KAP-TEST  or  fax  your 
resume,  including  your  test  scores,  to  310- 
209-2125  Attn:  Recruiting  Manager  Wepro- 
vkJe  comprehensive  paid  training.  EOE 


Looking  for  a  fun  job  with  tots  of  free  time? 
Dynamk:  entertainment  company  is  seeking 
enthusatic  and  entergetk:  DJs  and  Dancers 
to  perlorm  and  lead  interactive  actvities  at 
Parties  on  weekends.  Exp  desired  but  not 
necessary.  Please  Call  Gretchen  818-784- 
7877 


MAKE  A  DIFFERENCE 
IN  THE  ASIAN  COMMU- 
.«  NITY 

COMPANY  SEEKS  TALENTED  Mandarin 
Cantonese  and  Vietnamese  speakers  to 
iwrk  on  Census  Bureau  project.  FuM4Part 
Time  opportunities  available.  Los  Angeles 
work  tocatton.  Position  pays  $7.5aair  Call 
877-561-2221. 


Welcome  Back 

Expand  your  UCLA  Experiente 

$8.18/HR. 


MEDICAL  OFFICE 

Research  assistant  Premed/optometry. 
Freshman/sophomore.  TuesiThurs 

16hrsA(vk.  Jules  SteinAXJLA.  Minimum  GPA 
3.5.  Call:3 10-825-4749  or  Fax  Resume:310- 
794-7904,  Attn:  Veronica 

MESSENGER 

STRONG  BRUIN  SUPPORTERiwell  estab- 
lished Westwood  law  firm  seeks  l-part-lirrw 
messenger(M-W)  to  work  in  our  office  sende- 
es department.  Must  have  reliable  car  in- 
suranceAgood  driving  record  Addlttonal  du- 
ties include  mail,  photocopying,  (axing,  etc. 
Prefer  Bnjin  students  who  are  also  responsi- 
ble&detail-orlented.  Please  call  Robin 
Barnes  310-478-2541 

MODEL  WANTED.  Uninhibited  females  for 
figure  modeling  assignments.  $100  per  seat- 
ing.  If  interested  call  626-806-8577. 

MORNING  HOURS 

M-Th  6:30am-10am  $11-12/hr  CASH 
Calling  Radk)  Personality,  working  at  home 
maybe  an  optton.  Calj^fltjbert  310-478-0031 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 
WANTED 

Must  drive  and  have  own  car  must  have  ref- 
erences. No  smoking,  experience  required. 
Must  speak  English.  Hours  and  salary  flexi- 
ble. 310-275-7813. 

MUSCULAR  MALE 
MODELS 

Video  productton  company  specializing  In 
physk^ue  videos  seeks  very  muscular  men 
for  vkJeo  and  photo  work.  All  muscular  types 
wanted.  Call:3l0-726-6564  and  leave  con- 
tact info. 


PLUS  BONUS 


\  t 


Need  Beer  Money?  CBck  herel  httpV/extra- 
cash2000.spedia.net 

NEED    DRIVER.    3    to    4    timesMeek 
4hours/day.  CaM  Gary.  323-264-6760  ext102 

NEW  CLUB 

WANTED:  Campos  Reps,  promoters,  and 
bands  for  new  westside  club.310-91S-7595 

OFFICE  HELP 
FULL  TIME 

Start  $9+benefits.  Organized,  energetic 
computer  and  typing  skills  a  benefit.  Some 
experience  preferred.  Fax  resume  Attn  Allan- 
323-964-0606 


''Convenient  Scheduling  ^Wj/^ 

(Mon.-Fri.  evenings  &  Sat.,Sun.)       )^J!p 
*Build  Your  Resume  tt-^-^ 

*Speak  Directly  to  Alumni  ^^--^ 

**  We  ore  on  equal  opportunity  employer 

Call  Sandin  for  Appointment 

3 1 0-794-0277 

1083  Gayley  Ave.  4th 
email  callcenter®  support,  i  irla  pHi  i 


OFFICE  MANAGERmOOKKEEPER  for  fast 
Qfowing  company  in  Santa  Monca.  Must  be 
computer  literate,  able  to  oversee  A/P,  A/R 
purchasing.  FT  with  benefits.  Fax  resume  & 
computer  experience  to  310-315-0607 

ON-SITE  PROMOTIONS.  Hiring  8-10  outgo- 
ihg  students.  $75/day,  4hrs/day  Very 
Flexible.  310-374-4993. 

"       P/T  ASSISTANT 

Sundays«-6.  Busy  real  estate  offtee.  Heavy 
Phone.  Show  Properly.  Misc  Projects  as 
needed  Vehtete  necessary.  $10-15/doe  tax 
resume  310-274-4152 


^      P/T  FILE  CLERK 

Busy.  2-man  BH  law-firm  seeks  bright,  reli- 
able, pleasant  ofltee  help.  10-15  hrs/wk 
$10/hr  Some  typing.  Please  fax  contact  info 
toJimO310-285-1728. 


P/r  OFFICE  ASST 

Work  In  Westwood  rr>edical  offtee.  Must  be 
profteent  In  MS  WORD(heavy  typing)  and 
have  good  telephone  skills.  Fax  resume  to 
Mfchelle:310-657-7716 

P/T  RECEPTIONIST/OFFICE  CLERK  lor 
Century  City  firm.  General  offtee  duties  Fax 
resume  to  Cindy:  310-553- 1 540. 

Pn  RECREATION  ASSISTANT  needed  for 
office  duties.  Mornings.  9am-i:30pm  M-F 
Good  cvntomsr  aervtoe  skMt  naceMary  to 

a«w«r  phoow.  lik.  bMabrt  «l«mond  and 
Ptente  rwervatlons,  and  d«Bl  *w%  wHh  (he 
PuMc.  $9.4l/hr  Cheviot  H«s  Riaeatton 
Center  310-837-5186.  Alan  Perlmutter/ 
Charlene  Zaienski  for  Inten^iew  appi. 

^  IVr  TELEMARKETER 

Por  education  pubMwr  na«M.  Great  wort.- 
P«ce.  hourly  and  good  convnisalona.  10AM- 
ZPM.  3-s  days/week.  310-395-9393. 

Pn  WEBMASTER 
NEEDED 

Must  have  good  ganafrt  edWng  and  oraphfc 
skills  Please  caM:310-396-9393  or  email 
your  resume  to:  lnfoOies-ed.com 


DJsplny 
206-3060 


Daity  Brum  Classified 


September  25-28, 2000        15 


,*'•-! 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


7800 

Help  Wiinted 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


$1 0/hour  +  bonuses! 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


TELEMARKETING  RIBBONS/LASER 

PROS  ONLY.  PAID  MEDICAL  $800- 
1200/WEEK.  SALARY/COMMISSION/ 

BONUS.  310-246-9826  6:30AM12:30PM 

TELEMARKETING.  No  cold  calls.  $15- 
40+/hr,  bonuses.  F/T-P/T  Must  have  desire 
to  make  big  $$$.  Flexible  schedule.  Great  for 
students.  Near  UCLA.  310-996-6701 
ext.298 


Part  Time:  10-15  hours/week 

Needed:  Highly  aggressive  and  motivated 

person  for  sales-reiated  field  worl<.  Must 

be  hard  worl^er  and  have  car.  Sales, 

telephone  and  computer  skills  helpful. 

Call  Megan  at  (310)  954-4501 


PART-TIME  CHILDCAREA-UTOR  needed 
for  1st  and  2nd  grader  Encino  Mulholland 
and  405  acflacenl.  Must  have  car  Call  Jack- 
ie: 3 10-626-2466. 

PART-TIME  CUSTOMER 
SERVICE  REPRESEN- 
TATIVE 

For  an  exdusive  fast-paced  Westwood  dry 
cleaner  Outgoing,  friendly  WiH  train/sales 
experience  a  phjs.  15-25  hours,  momings 
phis  Sat.  or  Sun.  $8-1 0/hour.  Call  Jack  310- 
474-8525. 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTIONn-ECHNICAL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  has  one  opening  for  clerical  postttons. 
$7/hr  Momings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Mtehelle:3 1 0-474-777 1 


PT  and  FT  DRIVERS  needed  for  food  deliv- 
eries to  private  homes  and  businesses 
Lunch(1 1-2:30.  M-F)  and  din- 
ner(everynight/wk  5-10pm).  $10+/hr  Must 
speak  English.  Exdlent  map-reading  skills  a 
must  Contact  Dining  In:  310-274-0123 
818-986-3287. 

PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  45%  commission. 
Earn  up  to  $600/week.  310-724-8360  Days 
only. 


SALES:  Full/Part  Time.  High  Commisskjn. 
Have  fun.  make  money,  and  ptek  your  own 
hours.  Start  now  by  calling  Rick  323-465- 
5795. 

SECRETARIAUSALES  Good  pay,  full  or 
part-time  Westwood.  Growing  company, 
flexible  hours.  Call  800-829-2440. 

SECRETARY  for  Beverty  Hills  export  compa- 
ny. Full-time  positten.  Fax  your  resume  310- 
278-0038  or  email  to  aribusseldhot- 
mail.com. 


REAL  ESTATE  assistant  Flex  hours. 
Excellent  communteatkxi  skills  and  comput- 
er skills.  Wort(  for  top  producer  Fax  resume 
310-454-4815 


SECRETARY  NEEDED.  $10/hr  F/T.  M-F. 
8:30-5:30.  Handle  phone  calls,  basic  secre- 
tarial duties.  Alex  Son  or  Connie  Son  213- 
252-1222. 


PC/INTERNET/Savy-  tutor  needed  to  help 
prepare  letters  and  email  attachments 
2hrs/wk.  $25.  Call  Bmce  310-471-4617. 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT 

LOOKING  FOR  PART-TIME  assistant:  Mac- 
intosh computer  sawy:  Must  know  photo 
shop;  General  office  wortt.  Please  call  Susan 
310-271-1114 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  NEEDED  for 
young,  female,  quadnpulegte  wortdng  in  the 
entertainment  industry.  No  experience  nec- 
essary. Weekday  and  weekend  positions 
available.  310-829-2693. 

PHOTO  LAB  ASSISTANT  Photo  Imaging. 
P/T  or  F/T.  Beverty  Hills,  www.goldencol- 
orcom.  310-274-3445 

POSTAL  JOBS       ~ 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
Info.  Call  1-800-391-5856  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar 

— -—    ■  

POSTAL  JOBS  TO 
$18.35/HR 

IfW  benefits,  no  experience.  For  app.  and 
exj^m  info,  call  800-813  3585,  ext.  0712. 
8am-7pm.  7days  Ids,  tnc 


RECEPTIONIST 

8:30-5:00  M.W,  F  Phones,  filing,  light  typing. 
Pay  commsensurate  w/experience.  Law  Of- 
fk:es  of  Davk)  Hoffman.  Century  City.  310- 
286-100Qf7ax  resume:310-282-8117. 

RECEPTIONIST/OFFICE 
ASSISTANT 

PROFICIENT  in  Word,  Excel,  Access,  inter- 
net research,  general  office  experience,  de- 
tail oriented  $26,000+,  F/T  Fax:  310-826- 
5529,  Attn:  Kathy 


Seeking  empkjyee  for  progressive  jewelry 
company  in  Venice  area.  Duties  include  er- 
rands, packing  shipping,  filing,  data  entry. 
Flexible  w/scheduling.  Call  310-827-7775 

SEEKING  MEDICAL 
—^  FRONT  OFRCE 
PERSONNEL 

In  Westwood.  Filing,  computer  data  entry, 
typing  other  offtee  duties  FT/PT  Fax  resume 
to:310-275-0831. 


•V 
exir 


REGISTERED  US  nurses  wanted  NOW. 
$20-45/hour  TAx-lree  per-<liem.  excepttonal 
benefits  package.  For  info,  email 
Wessme430registerdnurses.com 

RESEARCH  ASST  PfT 

use  Medteal  School  professor  studying 
reproductive  toxicology&infertilify  is  looking 
for  an  individual  w/excellent  EnglishAcom- 
puter  skills.  Familiarity  w/basto  lab  tech- 
nk}ues  a  plus.  Fax  resume:323-226-3632 

RESEARCHER  needed  for  2-3week  project 
on  TV  movie.  Graduate  student  or  History 
Major  preferred  Fax  Paula  310-204-0174. 


SPEND  THE  SUMMER  wort<ing  outdoors 
with  kids!  West  Los  Angeles  day  camp  hiring 
energette  staff  for  summer  posittens  Call 
310-399-2267 


TEACH  ENGLISH  FOR  PRESCHOOL 
Need  energetic  female  student  for  great  kids 
No  experience  required.  Monday-Friday 
3:00-6:00.  Can:323-935-3339  between  4:00- 
6:00,  pager:21 3-424-0366. 

TEACH  ENGLISH  TO 
CHILDREN  IN  JAPAN 

Need  20-30  recent  grads  w/4-yr  degree. 
Itotive  English  required  Flexible  start  date. 
Interview  in  LA,  April  8-9.  Fax/mail 
resume:31 0-278-6889  Peppy  Kids:  1158 
26th  Street  #259;  Santa  Monica.  CA  90403 
Email:peppykkl  O  ix.nelcom.com 


CSO  PROGRAMS 


Daily  News 


WRITE  THREE 

PARAGRAPHS, 

EARN  $50 

The  Lx)S  Angeles  Daily  News  sports 
department  is  seeking  freelance  report- 
ers to  cx>ver  high  school  sports,  prima- 
rily football. 

Reporters  are  expected  to  take  com- 
plete statistk^.  file  a  2-3  paragraph 
game  report  and  meet  difficult  dead- 
lines We  pay  $50  for  shorts.  $75  for 
tonger  stories  and  27  cents  per  mile  for 
travel. 

For  more  infcymatkyi.  caH  sports  edi- 
tor Michael  Anaetasi  at  (800)  886-6009 
ext.  3627  or  reporter  Lee  Eiamathan  at 
ext.  3611. 


RESTAURANT  IN  BEVERLY  HILLS  seeking 
person  to  answer  phonos  and  pack  delivery 
orders.  P/T  position.  Morning  hours  Call 
310-271-0027 

ROUGHING  IT  DAY  CAMP-tradttlonal  out- 
door  chiWren's  camp  (SF  East  Bay).  Full 
season:  Group  Counsekjrs  and  Instructors: 
horse/swim/watertront  Refs/Exper.  925-283- 
3795/)obsOroughingit.com. 


SALES  ASST  $8/t>our  plus  commission. 
Articulate,  smart,  bold  person.  Flexible 
hours,  lucrative  P/T  wort<.  Telemart«eting, 
errands,  filing,  phone  messages  Fax323- 
933-1881 


^     SALES  POSITION 

F/T.  Growing  Century  City  company  seeks 
sales  person  who  are  energetic  sell-starters. 
Our  company  is  the  leader  In  the  procure- 
ment of  Ikjuor  Iteenses  and  use  permits  in 
CaHlomia.  Must  be  computer-literate.  Urtian 
planning/legal  background/bllingual  applte- 
ants  that  iwant  to  partteipate  in  our  exciting 
niche  business  call  our  olfk:es  today  (or  de- 
tails:3 10-553-6363  exi  18  or  lax  resume 
to:3 10-553-3996  AttnCindy. 


OMMUNITY 
E  RVI C  E 
FFICER 

ROGRAMS 

8 '$10.26 
per  hour 

Bike  Patrols, 
Evening  Vans, 
mptis  Escorts, 
lent  Hall  Patrols, 
ipatcher  and  many 
idler  opportunities. 
Hiring)  825-2148 
Info:     82S9800 


TENNIS  SHOP  CLERK 

Beverty  Hills  Tennis  seeks  clerks  to  wort<  reg- 
ister, handle  customers  and  pros.  Flexible 
hours.  Fax  resume:  310-652-77752 


B©  <f©u  t/a^fe  a/un  j©b? 
/HatkillHg  TiaMtckt.t! 

idf(  h»un  9»m-  l/im,  ^u  choose    -"^^ 
the  dm^t  eustemiied  f  ^our  **^ 

ettus  tehtduU,  S  fO/hr,  Fax  rasuim 

et$tt  t*  eamfut!  310-645-0596 


$$1,000$$ 
FUNDRAISING 

•^  ettort.  Big  Money!  No  investment.  Work 
«ith  your  friends!  Get  a  free  T-shirt  too'  Call 
Sue  9  800-808-7442  ext.  104 

VIDEOTAPE  TRANSCRIBERS  needed. 
$10/hr  min.  F/T-P/T  available  45wpm  on 
Mk;rosoft  Word.  Fax  resume  to  818-995- 

WAITRESS/WAITER 

Must  have  restaurant  experience  and  be  fa- 
miliar with  full  American  menu.  3-4  lunch 
shifts/wk  for  a  busy,  upscale  cafe  in  West- 
wood.  Call  David  310-473-5045. 


WANTED 


SUMMER  DAYCAMP  COUNSELORS  need- 
ed. Pakj  Alto.  Califomia.  6/19-8/11.  $74- 
$94/day.  9am-4pm.  Decathlon  Sports  Club. 
650-625-1602.  Application  deadline  Apn\  14. 

SUMMERWEEKEND  SERVICE  STAFF.  Pri- 
vate  Beach  Club  reslaurant/t>ar  seeks  ex- 
perienced bartenders,  bar  backs,  servers, 
beach  cocktailers.  bus  persons.  Call  Mil- 
ton:3 10-295-3254,  fax  background  experi- 
ence:3 10-395-8857.  email: 

TBC201  Oaol.com  pay  begins:Minimum 
wage  plus  TtPSIII 

SWIM  INSTRUCTORS 

WSI  and  CPR  certiffcatkxi  required.  Must 
have  own  car.  Up  to  $l2-40/hr  Family  Life 
Aquattes.  310-454;6464. 

Take  Varnish  off  cabinets;  apply  new  varish. 
Approx  30  cabinets,  15  dravrars,  5  doors. 
Prefer  student.  Flat  fee  $750  310-454-6530 


75people  iwffl  pay  you  to  tose  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  drugs.  CaH  now.  323-993-3391. 

WANTED  ENTHUSIASTIC  BIOLOGY 
MAJORS  interested  in  wortting  with  animals 
and  educating  chiWren.  $l0/hr  Flexible,  P/T, 
call  The  Animal  Guys  310-392-5909. 

WANTED.  Freshman/Sophomore  seeking  a 
career  in  film  editing.  I'll  make  things  happen 
for  you!  Experience  required  lOhrs/wk  paid 
323-851-7921. 


WANTED:  Digital  photographers  and  com- 
puter operators  to  wort<  parties  on  week- 
ends. Photographers  must  have  a  good  eye, 
be  friendly  and  be  able  to  direct  a  crowd. 
Operators  must  have  Photoshop  experience 
Please  call  Gretchen  818-784-7877 

WANTED:  MATURE  STUDENT  for  P/T  tutor 
and  rrwther's  helper  VaW  driver's  license 
and  references  required.  $15/hr  SM.  fax 
resume  310-859-1665. 

WANTED:RIDERS&MODELS,  male/female 
for  LA  Marathon— MARCH  5,  Trade  Show— 
MARCH  2-4.  LA  Convention  Center  FREE 
Ultra  Bikes  provkled  for  Bike  Marathon  CaH 
now:888  858-2453 


WEB  DESIGNER 

Small  company  needs  help  w/finishing  up 
website.  Must  have  Frontpage,  html,  web- 
building  knowledge.  Fast  job— fast  money 
Leave  message:323-377-7881 

WESTWOOD  RETAILER  3mi  from  campus 
(easy  bus  access)  needs  sales  person  to 
start  immediately  selling  printed  Chnstmas 
cards  in  the  store-  f/t  or  p/t.  Wort<  into  last 
December.  Open  Mon-Sat  WE  can  train 
you.  Salary  negotiable.  Please  call  Cheri 
310-441-7595 


DOGouO 


get  paid  for  it). 


Questions?  emailt  c8o#uq>d.ucla,edu 

Visit  our  new  website  att 

www.c»o.ucl%cdn 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


WILDLIFE  JOBS 
$8-19/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits  Part«  Rangers,  Secur- 
ity, and  Maintenance.  No  experience  for 
some.  For  info  caM  1-800-391-5856  ext. 
0615  8am-9pm.  Local  not  guar. 

WORK  AT  HOME 

Interrwtional  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo 
F/T:  $2000-i6000/mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888. 


8000 

Internships 


COMPUTER  SCIENCE  major  wanted  for 
intern  position  at  musk;  related  internet  start- 
up. 10-20hrs/wk.  No  pay  but  options  possi- 
ble.  CaH  Mike  Kim  e562-590- 1551 

FREE  ARTS  FOR  ABUSED  CHILDREN  IS 
SEEKING  UNPAID  INTERNS  PLEASE 
CONTACT  KARINA  AT  310313-4ART 

MOLECULAR  BIOLOGY  volunteer  Smart 
biochemistry  undergrad  needed  for  UCLA  re- 
search project  in  computatwnal  molecular  bl- 
ology/bioinformatics.  Must  know  basic  bio- 
chemistry. Computer  skills  needed  (preler- 
able  UNIX)  Dr  Pettit,3 10-206-4748. 

NOW  HIRING  FUTURE 
BUSINESS  LEADERS 

Varsity  summer  management  program.  , 
Mart<eting  sales  and  management  skills 
trained.  Confklence.  leadership,  and  motiva- 
tion required.  Base  salary  ol  $5000+profits 
Average=$  10,000  1-800-295-9675,  varsi- 
tystudent.com 


Display 
206-3060 


September  25-28, 2000 


Oiily  Brain  CbssifM 


»»> 


8000 

Internship 


TOP  10  INTERNSHIP  PROGRAM  is  looking 
tor  dynamic,  hardworking  students.  For  more 
information  please  call  213-243-7027 

WESTWOOD  STUDENT  Credit  Union  offers 
voluntary  internships  in  Banking,   Sales 
Marketing.  Accounting  No  experience  nec- 
essary! Applications  available®  124  Kerckh- 
off. 


8^00 

A|);irtments  for  Rent 


LOOKING  FOR  A  PLACE  TO  LIVE? 
www.houslngioi  .net...  Your  move  off  cam- 
pu8l  Search  for  summer  sublets. 


8700 

/nhoiise  for  S.th. 


8700 

for  S;ile 


MAR  VISTA.  Bachetor  great  area  $520  Low 
agent  fee.  310-395-RENT  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 


8100 

Personal  Assistance 


^       ^PHYSICAL   '"'^ 
ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  disabled  male  in  Fleiber  Hall.  A  few 
hrs/day.  Flexible  shedule.  $10Air.  Call  Alex 
949-369-9871. 


8200 

Temporary  Employment 


YOUNG  DISABLED  PHYSICIAN  needs  UR- 
GENT, IMMEDIATE  ASSISTANCE  w/pack- 
ing  and  papenwrk.  Must  have  driver's  li- 
cense, shouW  be  dedteated.  Female  pre- 
ferred. Spinal  injury— needs  walking  com- 
panionship for  about  hour/day  but  no  real 
personal  care.  Goal:to  get  me  packed,  or- 
ganized, and  ready  for  acute  hospitalization 
at  Stanford.  Some  references  needed.  Stan 
ASAP!!!  Hours  flexible— 4-5  hours/day  $15- 
$20/hr+boous  if  make  deadline.  Potential  to 
return  and  continue  wort(.  Call  only  between 
8:00am- 10:00am,  or  after  6:30pm:3l0-441- 
9803. 


PALMS.  $895.  Single  w/toft.  Fireplace,  bal- 
cony, dishwasher,  oven,  laundry,  gated  paik- 
ing.  Near  shops/freeway' 31 0-836-6007 

■  PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $575,  $600deposit 
1-year  lease  only  Stove,  refrig.,carpets  vert 
blinds.  310-837-1502  l^ave  message.  8am- 
Spmonty. 

SANTA  MONICA  1+1  in  triplex  $850.  Low 
agent  foe.  310-395-RENT  www. westsWeren- 
tals.com 


SANTA  MONICA  1+1  North  of  Wilshire  $975 
Low  agent  fee.  310-395-RENT  www  weslsid- 
erentals.com 


Santa  Monica  Ibd/lbth,  living  room,  parking 
space,  storage,  kitchen  w/oven  &  refridg 
$1150/mo.  Zay  310-541-2887 

SANTA  MONICA  3+2  hardwood  floors  $1625 
Low  agent  fee.  310-395-RENT  www.westsW- 
erentals.com 


SANTA  MONICA  Bachetor  flexible  lease 
$600.  Low  agent  fee.  310-395-RENT 
www.westskJerenlal8.com 


SANTA  MONICA  Cute  2bdmfi  plus  yard,  cot- 
tage. $930  Low  agent  fee.  310-395-FiENT 
www.weststoerentals.com 


SANTA  MONICA.  Bachetor  won't  last.  $350 
Low  agent  fee.  310-395-RENT  www.weststo- 
erentals.com 


8300 

Volunteer 


SHARKS/FISH  &  MORE! 

UCLA  Ocean  Discovery  Center,  the  aquari- 
um at  the  Santa  Monka  Pier,  Is  looking  for 
volunteers  to  help  w/educational  &  puWk: 
programs.  Decent,  aquarist,  admission 
graphk:  design  &  office  work  available.  In- 
ternships available.  Opportunities  for  stud- 
ents, professtonals,  homemakers,  seniors 
For  more  info  call  the  Volunteer  Office  310- 
393-6149  ext  223;  wvw.life^Ki;Upte.edu/odc 


SANTA  MONICA.  Private  room  flexible 
lease.  $400  Low  agent  fee  310-395-RENT 
www.westsWerentals.com 


Tired  of  Throwing  Away 
Money  on  Rent? 

Purchase  your  first  home  or  condo 
with  little  or  no  money  down! 

Call  the  experts! 
Mary  and  Monica  Adimari 

A  mother-daughter  team 

and  UCLA  Alumni. 

Specializing  in  Westside 

and  South  Bay  Areas. 


Call  now  and  all  UCLA  students,  alumni. 

taculty  and  staff  will  receive  a  FRE_E 

Home  Warranty!! 


We  are  proud  to  serve  the  UCLA  community!! 

Mary  and  Monica  Adimati 

ReMax  Realtors 

(31 0)  645-6455  ext.  1 64-office 

;     (310)  493-3519 -cell 

madimari  @  ucla.edu  -  email 


SANTA  MONICA.  Private  room  North  of 
Wilshire  $525.  Low  agent  fee.  310-395- 
RENT  www.weststoerentals.com 

VENICE 

1BDRM  $1370+  2B0RM  $1680+  Lincoln 
Place  Garden  Apts.  Special,  private  garden 
apartments.  Ibed  $1800  and  2bed  $2500 
Call  310-450-8119. 


8600 

Condo/Tovvnhoiise  (or  Rent 


1BDRM/2BTH,  security  buiWing/garage 
sunny  w/view,  pool/jacuz2i,  suana/gym' 
large  ckjsete.  vacant  11/15.  lease  $1275/mo 
310-471-1335. 


9000 

House  for  Sale 


MOBILE  HOME  $25,000.  1930  Stewart 
street,  Santa  Monica.  ibdmVlbth,  To  show 
call  Lots  310-264-2688 


VENICE.  Beach  bachetor.  2  btocks  to  beach. 
$675.  Low  agent  lee.  310-395-RENT 
www.weststoerentals.com 


housing 

8400-9800 


8400 

Apartments  for  Rent 


1BD$700 

HUGE  APARTMENTS.  Garden  courtyard 
pool,  A/C,  phone-entry.  Near  Sherman  Oaks 
Galleria.  Minutes  to  campus.  818-376-8336. 


*  PALMS 


2BD.2BATOWNHOME,FP, 

CENTRAL  AIFVHEAT, 

GATED  GARAGE,  SEC. 

ALARM,  CAT  OK 

3614FARISDR.  $1395/MO. 


•  MAR  VISTA  • 


2BD,  2BA,  TOWf^HOME,  FP, 

CEtvrrRAL  AIR/HEAT,  GATED 
GARAGE.  SEC.  ALARM,  CAT  OK 

11931  AVON  WAY.  $129S/MO. 
12741  MrrCHELL  AVE.  $12fl6/MO. 

(310)391-1076 

•  OPEN  HOUSE  MON-SAT1(MPM  ■ 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


A  BEAUTIFUL  ROOM  4min  from  UCLA  in 
exchange  for  tutoring  (lOhrs).  some  driving. 
KWS-14A12.  Female  UCLA  students  only 
310-271-7575. 


WALK  TO  UCLA 

IVIV1V.  Ice/f  on  to  ivers.  com 

310-208-1976 


ASAP  WESTWOOD 

GAYLEY  across  Medical  center  2bdrrTV2 
complete  bth,  complete  kitchen/den/dining. 
Balcony  w/view.  Whirlpool/sauna/fitness- 
room  2garage  partting  Near  buses  Luxury 
Ife  $1795.  310-475-3996 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ 

Charming  Spanish  duplex.  2bed/1bath.  Ex- 
cellent Locatton.  One  btock  from  Beverty 
Hills.  Hardwood  ftoors.  Living/dining  room. 
$1750/month.  310-858-8817. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  Adj.  studio  cat  OK  $650 
Low  agent  fee.  310-395-RENT  www.westsW- 
erentals.com 


WEST  HOLLYWOOD  ADJACENT.  Ibdrm 
upper,  view.  Small,  quiet  bulkJing,  stove 
fridge.  Groat  area.  20min  UCLA.  Available 
approx.  March  15.  323-935-9152. 

WESTWOOD 

New.  1+1  apartment.  2  miles  to  campus 
Pnme  locatton.  Private  entry.  $850  Female 
prefen^ed  31 0-475-91 45. 

WESTWOOD  Studto  wont  last  $725  tow 
agent  fee.  310-395-RENT  www.westsWeren- 
tals.com 


8700 

Condo/Townhonse  for  Sale 


$330,000 
CONDO  FOR  SALE 

Great  Wesfwood  3  bedroom  2  1/2  bath  town- 
house-AC,  security  system,  extra  storage, 
stoe  by  stoe  pari<ing  and  rear  yard. 
BartMra  Gardner,  Broker  310-285-7505 

IMAGINE  OWNING  WILSHIRE  Cofridor/Hi- 
Rise  single,  ior2bdnn  $75K-$1 50K  Walk  to  , 
UCLA/Vlllago,   24hr/security    Spectacular 
views,  pool,  Jacuzzi,  sauna,  valet  servtoe 
Agent-Bob  310-478-1835ext.l09. 

WESTWOOD  1BDRM/2BTH  CONDO.  Walk 
to  school.  Hardwood  ftoors,  tow  HOA,  partial 
view,  large  unit.  No  down  payment  (OAC) 
$185,000.  Principles  only.  310-475-8366 


FREE  HOUSING 

In  vacant  large,  beautiful  Beverty  Hills  adj. 
home.  Simply  help  tutor  my  chiWren.  Call  Tif- 
fany:310-838-8433. 

LARGE  PRtVATE  ROOMmATH  in  Brent- 
wood home  in  exchange  for  supervising  li 
and  13  yr.  chitoren  and  house/yard  help. 
Board  included.  References  and  resume  re- 
quested. 310-472-0771. 

LIVE  IN  BEV.HILLS 

Room  and  board  in  exchange  lor  chikJcare  4- 
7PM  for  5&7-year  oW.  5  minutes  from  UCLA 
310-859-1374  page:310-236-75S5. 

NEAR  UCLA.  Female  student  only.  Non- 
smoker.  Reliable  and  responsible.  FumiShed 
room  in  exchange  for  housewortc. 
I6hrs/week.  Ntoe  private  room/bath  310- 
474-0336. 

ROOM  AND  BOARD  EXCHANGE  tor  chiW- 
care/dogsiWng.  UCLA  female  student  want- 
ed for  weekend  babysitting/dogsitting. 
(Some  weekntghts).  Excellent  chitocare  ref- 
erences required.  Walking  distance  campus 
310-470-4662. 


9^00 

Room  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS 
VERY  SMALL 

Furnished  rooms  in  large  house.  Grad  stud- 
ents preferred.  Kitchen  privileges,  pool, 
washer/dryer.  utIWies/lncluded.  Need  car. 
$400(very  small,  $500).  Abby:  310-275- 
3831/818-783-5151. 


BRENTWOOD-  Student  prefwred  for  room 
w/private  entrance  and  terrace  in  private 
home.  Laundry  privileges  included.  310-476- 
3169 


BEVERLY  HILLS  Bachetor  $695  Low  agent 
tee.  310-395-RENT  www.weststoeren- 
lBls.com 


BRENTWOOD  ADJ.  Lower  and  quiet  buiW- 
Ing,  no  pets.  2bedrooms+den  or  3bedrooms, 
2Full  Baths,  all  appliances,  patto  2partdng 
laundry  room.  310-479-2307. 

BRENTWOOD  Studto  with  hardwood  ftoors 
$675  Low  agent  fee.  310-395-RENT 
www.weststoerentals  com 


WLA  3bedA3bath  2464  Barringion  #9.  Very 
large  stove/refr(gerator/DW/mi- 

crowava^washeridryer,  fireplace,  Jacuzzi 
tub,  walk-in  closet,  new  paint,  elevator  inter- 
com entry,  gated  -partOng.  ctose  to  Trans. 
$1795  manager  310-390-9401. 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


CHEVWT  Hias  3bdmi-fden/1  5bth,  ofUce. 
playroom,  fireplace,  hardwood,  security,  near 
school  $29S0i^mo.  310-206-4252.day  310- 
285-9836,eventng. 

SANTA  MONICA  -2Bd/1bth.  Cooler.  2  part(- 
ing  spaces  -f  storage.  Breakfast  room 
Kitchen  w/  oven.refridg.  $1460/mo.  Zay  310- 
541  2887  ' 


BRENTWOOD.  Near  UCLA  private  room 
•500  Low  agent  fee  310-395-RENT 
www.weststoerentals.com 

CULVER  CITY  Studto  w/c  pet  $550  Low 
agent  fee  310-395-RENT  www  westskleren- 
alscom 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


WALK  TO  UCLA 

www.keltontowers.com 

310-208-1976 


NICE  HUGE  ROOM 

Weslwood/Esther  large  bedroom  In  doll 
house  2  miles  south  of  campus.  $550/nx) 
(utilities  included).  310-441-0599 

ONE  BEDROOM  AVAILABLE  Fumtohwl. 
water  and  part<ing  provtoed.  Next  to  cair^xJS 
to  campus  at  Hllgard  and  Westholme. 
Please  call  Laura:310-824-9828. 

VERY  NICE/LARGE  APT 

IN  SHERMAN  OAKS  10  Minutes  from  cam- 
pus. 2bdrm  apartment  w/toft.  Private 
bath/partOng,  huge  rooftop  patto.  Female 
only.  $495/MONTH.  CaH  Anthony  at  818- 
681-2787. 

WESTWOOD 

Walk  to  UCLA.  Male-Only  Large,  prtvate  fur- 
nished bdmn  w/baih.  Kitchen  privHagM,  laun- 
dry, pariung.  $700/monih.  Anotfier '  room 
WOOrtnorth.  31(M73-5769 


9^00 

Room  for  R(mu 


WESTWOOD.  1/2  mile  from  UCLA.  _„.. 
room(8).  Stiare  dean  house.  Professtonal  or 
student.  $1200/month.  www.lasolu- 
ttons.com/rem.htm.  ttffanykangOexc- 
lte.com. 


WLA.  Fully  furnished,  private  bath.  Secured 
buiWing.  All  utilities  induded  (excluding  tele- 
phone). Female,  non-smoker  please 
$600/mo.  310-446-1545. 


9500 

Roommjites-Private  Room 


BEVC.1LY  GLEN  CANYON  HOUSE.  Quiet 
mountain  setting,  large  spacious  room,  pri- 
vate bath,  entrance,  full  kitchen  privileges, 
non-snx)ker  only,  studious  male  tenant. 
$525/mo  utilities  included.  310-470-2142, 
best  to  call  nights  and  weekends. 

LUXURY  BUILDING.  Fufl  amenities,  pool, 
paddle  tennis,  24hour  security,  view.  Wilshire 
Comdor.  5min  from  UCLA.  Non-smoker,  fe- 
mato  prefen-ed.  $725.  Call:31 0-474-4 1 26. 

Luxury  townhouse  to  share.  UnFum  Bd/bth. 
Melrose/Crescent  Heights  area.  A/C,  WD  In 
unit.  Rooftop  patto.  Full  house  prtvledges. 
Gated  partdng.  All  Amenities  included.  Must 
Like  CatsI  No  Other  Animals  allowed. 
Available  10/5.  $780  323-651-3382 

NON-SMOKING  FEMALE  TO  SHARE 
huge(1400sq  ft),  sunny  2bdmV2bth  condo. 
5  miles  from  UCLA.  New  16  unit  bulWing. 
Large  private  bedroom,  full  bath,  security, 
washer/dryer  in  unit,  balconies,  fireplace! 
gated  partdng,  A/C,  granite  kitchen,  mi- 
crowave, dishwasher.  Condo  furnished, 
room  unfurnished.  Inckides  water  and  secur- 
ity.  $850/month.  Call  Allison  310-820-5058. 

Own  Large  bedroom  in  a  2bed  apt  in  WLA. 
$645/month,  ctose  to  UCLA  and  plenty  of 
partying.  Call  James,  w: 3 10-288-33 16 
h:310-441-0242. 


PRIVATE  BED7BATH  in  2bdrm/bth  apt  on 
Palms.  $400/month  $300  deposit.  No  lease 
must  be  clean  310-836-8008 


ROOMMATE  AT  BEACH  wanted  to  share 
restoence  in  Pacifk;  Palisades  overiooking 
ocean.  20min.  to  campus.  $775/mo.  Hugh 
Blake  O  310-317-8204. 


ROOMMATE  NEEDED  ASAP.  Own  Bed- 
room/Bath in  3  Bedroom  Apt.  Ckjse  to  cam- 
pus. Female  preferred.  $833/monfh  310- 
824-3326. 


SANTA  MONICA  5th  and  Bay  Ibdr  in 
3bdr/2bth.  PartOng/share  bath  grad/young 
professkjnal  preferred.  $625/nx)nfh  $625  de- 
posit Available  4/1  310-314-0494 

WESTWOOD  1350KELTON  AVENUE.  Own 
room  $300.  With  opttooal  partdng  In  garage 
$316.67.  Large.spactous.modemI  Call  Linda 
310-445-7702  for  more  great  details. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE:  Furnished  Room  in 
great  2bd,  1/3rd  ml  campus.  Historic 
8tock,Fireplace,  Books,  Musto.  Mature  per- 
son to  mind  apartment,  cats  when  other 
occupant  travels.  Mato,  Utilities  included 
$670.  310-208-6606 


WESTWOOD  1-mile  from  campus.  Your 
own  bedroom  only  $425/mo.4share  utilities. 
Partdng,  hardwood  (toors,  laundry  Mature, 
responsible,  non-smoking  roommate  who  is 
easy-going4fun.  Professional/grads  pre- 
fen-ed. Call:31 0-723-0950. 

WLA.  Female  Roommate  needed  to  share 
2bdrm/1blh  apartment.  Huge  yard  and  off- 
street  partdng,  2mi.  from  UCLA  $500/month 
Call  Bart)(e;310-473-9772. 


9600 

Rnomniiites-Sh.-ired  Room 


PALMS.  ROOMMATE  to  share  IbdrmflMh 
apt.  Near  bus.  Parking,  pool,  laundry. 
$392+1/2utilities.  Leave  a  message.  310- 
841-3240/310-841-6890.  Must  be  a  UCLA 
student. 


ROOMMATE  NEEDED 

Female  to  share  apartment  at  10986  1/2 
Strathmore  Drive  in  Westwood.  $375/mo.  6- 
month  lease.  Available  immediately 
C«l:310-209-1031 


WESTWOOD-Wanted  female  roommate. 
Veteran  Ave.  Furnished  2bdnn/2bth.  April- 
August.  $450/month.  Call:310-824-1863  or 
310-497-4610. 


WESTWOOD.  1-2  person  needed  to  share 
room  in  2bdnn/2bath  luxury  condo  on 
Wilshire.  Partying.  Low  rent.  Pool,  Jacuzzi, 
Tennis  courts.  Eric-3 10-475-34 13  paoer 
310-915-2611. 


9700 

Siihlets 


SUBLETS  ROOMMATE 
SERVICE 


FIND  Of  UST  A  SUBLETll 


www.thesublet.com 


IsuMfinaicw— nooi-eM-TieSr 


Display 
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J^yFREE^sgrnegf  the  best  deakin  Westwood.  Check  »«ldy  for  updates  so  you  don't  mi^  out  on  great  savings! 


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To  place  a 

ad  in  the  Bmin 

Bargains,  fill  out 

infonnation  on  the  right 

and  submit  to  the  Daily 

Biuin  Classifieds. 


•Item: 

(1 5  charactas  maximum,  including  ^aces) 
•Description: 

(20  characters  maximum,  including  ^aces) 
•  Price: 


7  : 


L- 


(exampk  $25,  ;74ea,  FREE.  Please  round  to  the  nearest  dollar— NO  OBO) 
Phone:  ( ) . 

•Ad  must  be  submitted  in  penon  or  by  mail 


•Item: 

(15  charactets  maximum,  including  ^aces) 
•Description: 

(20  characteis  maximum,  including  spaces)  .~  -     '■ 

•Price: 

(example  $25,  $74ea,  FREE.  Please  round  to  the  nearest  dollar— NO  OBO) 
-_r.—  — I    I  •Phone:  ( ) . 

No ,;;;;;  orde«a]i<«««lDealline72';^^^^^  \ 

resern!thenghtton^i«orrejeaanyadv«i.sementnotmeetingtkstandarioftiieD4Bniin    ^       ""^^  Umit of 4 f,« ads , 


per  customer  per  week 


Diciples  of  ChrL^f 


Gateway  Christian  Church 

11760  Gateway  BM 

Los  Angeles,  CA  90064 

310^73-3191 

email:  GatewyCCOaol.com 

Worship  Sunday  at  10:45am, 

Children's  Sunday  School  and 

Choir  Rehearsal  at  9:30am. 

Tuesday  and  Wednesday 

Groups. 

Share  in  our  country-style  atmos- 
phere, and  experience  the  blend- 
ing of  traditional  and  contempo- 
rary worship.  Find  yourself  warm- 
ly welcomed  as  you  seek  l)oth 
meaning  and  joy  Near  student 
housing. 


Cbilsliaa 


Westwood  Hills  Christian 
Church 

10608  La  Conte  Ave.  V.' 

Los  Angatas.CA  90024 
310-208^76 
wwwWHCC9metcbc.com 

Bible  Study  9:00am,  WorsNp 
10:00am.  Tuesday  Evening  Bible 
Study  7:00pm. 


We  are  located  across  from 
UCLA  Medical  Center  at  Le 
Conte  and  Hilgard.  Students  are 
welcome.  Join  us  for  lunch  1st 
Sunday  each  month  after  wor- 
ship, .;:•■    \:^    ^\-.-.  ■  : 

Westside  Oikos  Community 
Church 

1343  Ocean  Park  Blvd. 

Santa  Monica,  CA  90405 

310-441-2125 

www.westsiaeolkos.org 

Sunday  worship  at  1:30pm, 

Thursday  UCLA  Oikos  Campus 

Ministry  (OCM)  meetings  at 
6:30pm  in  CS  Young  24. 
Come  and  share  the  joy! 
Encounter  God's  presence 
through  powerful  worship. 
Inspiring  messages,  and  genuine 
community.   Rides  for  Sunday 
worship  provided  at  Sproul  turn- 
around at  1pm. 

Roman^Catholir     '  '  _ 
St.  Sebastian 

1453  Federal  Ave 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90025 

310-4780136 


email:  rangergmarOaoicom 

Saturday  at  5pm  (English), 
Sunday  at  8am  (Spanish),  10am 
(English)  and  Noon  (Spanish). 
Located  on  Federal  between 
Wilshire  and  Santa  Monica. 
Neighborhood  Catholic  parish 
where  all  are  welcome  to  wor- 
ship with  us.  Bienvenidos! 

University  Catholic  Center 

633Gay1eyAve. 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 
310-208-5015  ^ 

wwwucda.org 

Sunday  Masses  at  10:30am, 
7pm,  and  9pm. 
Our  Catholic  community  wel- 
comes all.  With  over  70  years 
of  service  to  UCLA  and  the 
University  Religious 
Conference,  we  offer  worship, 
retreats,  sacramental  prepara- 
tion, education,  and  just  plain 
fun! 

Lutheran 

St.  Paul's  Lutheran  Church 
(ELCA) 

95a  Lincoln  Blvd 


Santa  Monica,  CA  90403 
310-451-1346 

Holy  Communion,  Sunday  at 
8:30am  and  10:45am.  Sunday 
School  for  all  ages,  9:40am.  Child 
care  provided. 

St.  Paul's  is  an  inclusive  and  inter- 
generational  Christian  community. 
Come  and  be  fed  with  God's  Word, 
the  Sacraments,  and  the 
Fellowship  with  real  people. 

University  Lutheran  Chapel 

10915  Strathmore  Or 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 
310-208-4571 
wwwulclaca.us 

10:30am.  tradition  7pm,  contempo 
rary. 

Join  us  in  experiencing  in  the  con- 
text of  word  and  sacrament  in 
small  groups  throughout  the  week. 


manner  of  friends,  followed  by 
fellowship  and  refreshments. 
Children's  program  available. 
All  are  welcome! 


Christian  Science 

Tenth  Church  of  Christ, 
Scientist 

113S.BundyDr 

Los  Angeles,  CA  90049 

310-826-2229 

Sunday  10am  Church  Service 
and  Sunday  School  (up  to  20 
years),  Wednesdays  7:30pm 
Testimonial  Meeting.   Reading 
Room  310-d20-2014. 
All  are  welcome! 


Quaker 


■■■r' 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Santa  Monica  Friends 
Meeting 

1440  Harvard  St.  '- 

Santa  Monica.  CA  90404 
310-828-4069 

Sunday  10am. 

Join  us  for  silent  worship  in  the 


Pridty.  C4l 

Stephanie  Mmttxo  at 

MO-625-2221  for  mor> 

itif/trttiati,tn 


Display 
206-3060 


18       Septtffibw  25-28, 2000 


■My  Brain  CbssifM 


V 


^"'^"MMis  going  to  bate  our  low  bras 


tPut  hwest.com 


One^way  with  T^day  advance  purchase      ^  !^ 

When  you  purchase  at  southwestcom 

-d  bv  September  .,,  2000^  seats  ZZ^S'^S"  "^'^  "  '^"'  =^"  "^  '"  «'™- 
duHn,  ve^  bus.  ,.ve,  „.es  a„d  Ho„da  ^    ,;: '  ^.  ^'^"^^'^  °"  »-  "^^^  .H«  ope«e 


southwestcom 

a  symbol  of  e-freedom" 


"■■  -•-■>-?".. 


FROM  BURBANK 
.  LOS  ANGELES  (LAX) '  OR 
ONTARIO  TO- 

(One-way  with  7-day  advance  purchase) 

^"^ $99 

Albuquerque  -      ^^^ 

(lust  an  hour  away  from  Santa  Fe/ ^ 

Austin .   ^^ 

$99 

^Itimore/Washington  (BWI) . . .         $00 

(29  m,les  to  downtown  Washington,  D.p         /  '  '  ^^ 

Boise  . .  ..■-":  -'■"'■-'*'■•■'"• 

\*-'*-^':-V:  •.-•■•;•■-• -••■-$99-.-; 

Buffalo,  NY.    .  eoiv 

(New  service  starts  October  8l'  '  '  ;*  '* '/  ''^ 

Chicago  (IVIIdway)     ..-,  ~^  __ ;_       6^ 

Columbus  ...  A~» 

El  Paso,  A_ 

••••••'•-••.  •'......$99 

Houston  (Hobby) . . .  ,/. . .   _   _       ^ 

Indianapolis ^s^,, 

•••••• $99 

KansasCity..........  ,  _         ^^ 

^^Vegas................     ^     ^2 

UttleRock...:;...:;-,:.V.v 

Loulsvllfe . .  ^„ 

•  •  •  •  • $99 

Nashville .  ,^ 
•••••••'•......$99 

New  Orleans  . . . .  t„ 

s>VV 

Oakland . . 

■ ......$55 

Oklahoma  City  ,»«« 

•  • .  ■  • ... . . ...... .  $99 

Omaha . .  .^ 
-^ >.T.».  .$99 

Phoenix  ...  -       . 

. ... . . . .... ... ..  -    ^2 

Portland....  ^_ 

$99    , 

Reno/Tahoe ^ 

Sacramento ...,..."  gee 

St.  Louis.     ■■■ eoo— 

Salt  Lake  City ^^^ 

San  Antonio g 

^"'°* $55 

^'^ ••'...:..:.... .$99 

Spokane ^^ 

$99 

Tucson  . .  ^ 
--.....$42 

T^lsa.....  ^ 
$99 

Washington.  D.C.  (See  Baltimore^ashir^on, 

Service  and  fares  fmm  Oange  Cour^  may  differ 
UP  to'S  ??  tS"^^^  ^^'^l  «^«se  tax  of 

OWer  applies  to  putjJished  srh«H..ioH 
Fares  arelS?^!^?*'  -^™'"'  '•  «»' 


f 
I 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


Septfflibef  25-28, 2000       19 


to  the  Ashe  Center fc 
nt  health  care  youVe 
already  paid  for. 

No  insurance  needpicil 

FREE  for  most  services 

Full  service  medical  clinic 

Professional  sfaff  of 
MDsandNPs 


For  more  informafion, 

check  us  ouf  of  the 

Welcome  Week  Fair 

at  Sunset  Village  on  Tuesday,. 
26  September,  1 0:00  to  3:00 


or  visit  our  web  site, 
http://www.saonet.ucla.edu/health.htm 

or  call  310  825-4073 


If  you  purchase  fhe  Medical  Insurance  Plan  (MIP) 

for  UCLA  students,  you  will  have  virtually  complete 

medical  coverage.  MIP  added  Dental  and 

Vision  Care  for  the  first  time  this  Fall 

(Extended  deadline  to  purchase  MIP 

is  30  September) 


Classifieds 
8^:5-2221 


Display 
206-3060 


"?0       Monday,  September  30, 19% 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


.  -^^4^  •.■:  -^. 


ply  by  on^ng^VIAN®Natural 


mer  or 


Hmi  can  help  (Hsmwh  Ikmgar^*^  in  f^orth  Aamwa 
FBtMmiE®  Sparkling  Natural  MinemWWnmfmt  m 

For  every  1  Uter  glass  bottle  of  EVIANpr  FERRARELLEyou  purchase  at  the  parbwrif^^Surants  listed  below  during  October 
and  November  ^m^EVIAN&FERRARELLtmifmmmute  a  portion  of  their  prom^ 

AH  contibubons  go  to  Share  OurSmmgth,  one  of  the  nation's  leading  organizations  supporting  anti-hunger  and  anti- 
poverty  efforts.  So  please,  enjoy  EVIAN  &  FERRARELLE  at  tiiese  participating  restaurants: 


W  Hotel 

930  Hilgard  Avenue 

Los  Angeles 

310-208-8765 

Rlx 

1413  Fifth  Street 

Santa  Monica 

310-656-9688 

World  Cafe 

2820  Main  Street 

Santa  Monica 

310-392-9140 


Chaya  Venice 
110  Navy  Street 

Venice 
310-396-1179 

Angel's  American  Bistro 
636  Venice  Blvd. 

Venice 
310-827-5878 

Red  Rock  Bar  &  Eatery 

8782  West  Sunset  Blvd. 

West  Hollywood 

310-854-0710 


Fonz's  Restaurant 

1017  Manhattan  Ave. 

Manhattan  Beach 

310-376-1536 

Chaya  Brasserie 
8741  Alden  Drive 

Los  Angeles 
310-859-8833 

San  Gennaro  Cafe 

9543  Culver  Blvd. 

Culver  City 

310-836-0400 


James'  Beach 

60  North  Venice  Blvd. 

Venice 

310-823-5396 

Four  Seasons  Hotel 

300  S.  Doheny  Drive 

Los  Angeles 

310-273-2222 

Bicycle  Cafe 

12217  Wilshire  Blvd. 

West  Los  Angeles 

310-826-7831 


Tanino 

1 043  Westwood  Blvd. 

Westwood 

310-208-0444 

Thai  House 

8657  W.  Pico  Blvd. 

Los  Angeles 

310-274-5492 

17th  Street  Cafe 

1610  Montana  Avenue 

Santa  Monica 

310-453-2771 


Le  Colonial 

8783  Beverly  Blvd. 

W.  Hollywood 

310-289-0660 

Cafe  Pierre 
317  Manhattan 

Beach  Blvd. 

Manhattan  Beach 

310-545-5262 


•Calculated  based  on  25%  of  Great  Brands  of  Europe.  Inc's  average  profits  per  1  Liter  glass  bottle  sold  at  participating  restaurants. 
GVldn.com  ©2000  Great  Brands  of  Europe.  Inc. 


FALL • 2000 


A  Guide  to  Greek  life  at  UCLA 


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Interfiratemity  Council  •  Panhellenic  Counca  • 
Asian  Greek  Council  •  National  Pan-Hellenic 
Council  •  Independent  Organizations* 


P  A  G  E     2 -^  :  i^  ^  R  fe  E  K    ¥t)  fb  E     ADVERTISING     SUPPLE  ME  NT 


T-A  i  I 


@  [Ml  If  E  [f^  T 


••"••'.■«■  ■«;"•' 


Sports  . .  i . .  V, . . . , 
Community  Seivice  . .  >  > ;  i 
Opinion  ...^ 


.>i.  J\...«i    >     ■■..■i>     «-.i»i,;-«    I  ■•  .1  .   t  .i,i».  Ill  I   »..i»i    jr 


,■;  a.-**,',;!  "w.  m:i9yw-'v,  i'.  f  ■  ,i.  j-.  j'.i'vt'-I 


Joining  ttie  System,  .i;;; .. 
Fraternity  and  Sorority  l\^aps. ; 

Mioiuiy ■ t  ,  ,  j: , 

GreekLife. . . .... 


*    .•- -Jl^-^IL^^" 


•    •    •     •    *    •    •     •    .    .     »    ■*  ,»t  •    •    •     ■     •     •  •••■.•»     •     •     •    ^\J 


STAFF 


Advertisers 

.''  - ■       ". ' .  * 

Theta  Delta  Chi  . . . . . 

.    .,.^...2 

Enzo's  Pizzeria   . 

.........  3 

Zeta  BetaTau 

4 

PI  Kappa  Alpha 

5 

PI  Kappa  Phi    

6 

Sigma  Phi  Epsllon  .  . . 

.;..  9 

Panhellenic  Council  . . 

. . . .... . .  10 

Interfraternlty  Council   . 

........ n 

Sigma  Nu 

14 

Alpha  Epsllon  PI    

15 

Asian  Greeks 

15 

Theta  XI 

16 

Triangle  .... ,  4^v7rli;v  r> . . . .  17 

Beta  Theta  PI  ^^> ;;■;.:. , . ,  v |^.,  17 
Alpha  Tdu  Omega  :.;.;. ... ..; .  18 

Sigma  Chi  ............ . . .;  ;19 

Sigma  PI 19 

Sigma  Alpha  Epsllon  ;:;.V.>  ...  20 
Delta  Sigma  Phi  .  :i . . . . . , .  S  .  21 

Phi  Psi  91 

■  III  i«9i ........^1 

Lamonlca's  N.Y.  Pizza  .:.,,.... .  22 

The  Bigg  Chill  Frozen  Yogurt  .....  24 

Madison's  Bar  and  Grill  .....  7* .  24 


EDITORIAL 

Christopher  Bates 
Adam  Farasati 

Christian  Hellmers 
Vanessa  Scott 

GREEK  GUIDE  SALES 
COORDINATOR 

Nick  Coiangelo 

DISPLAY  SALES  MANAGER 

Jeremy  Wlldman 

AD  PRODUCTION  MANAGER 

Uz  Magallanes 

AD  PRODUCTION  STAFF 

Adrian  Baianon 

Cliff  Curry 
Ignacio  Sandoval 
Grace  Tomilloso 

ASSISTANT  DIRECTOR  OF 
BUSINESS 

Guy  Levy 

MEDIA  DIRECTOR 

Arvll  Ward 


The  Brothers  Of  ^7iLJLflL   Cordially  Invite  You  To 

Theta  Delta  Chi 


EST.  NaMonaly  1S47 


EST.  UCLA  1929 


Monday  9/26 

6pm  Forma]  Dinner 

By  our  Famous  Theta  Deh  Cook 

Tuesday  9/26 

Magic  Mountain  Trip 
with  the  Brothers  ^^ 

Wednesday  9/27 

6pm  Olive  Garden  Dinxr 
(Informal) 
8pni  Pool  TabJe  Tournament 

lAMsday  9/28 

6pm  In  and  Out  Dinner 
8pm  Bowling  Night  out 

Mday9/29 

Lunch  b>'  our  Famous 
Theta  Delt  Cook 
Swimming  Pool 
and  B-ball  court 
open  ail  day  ;  .  . 


saoa 


SMiday  10/1 

1pm  3  on  3  B-ball  tournament 
7pm  Dinner  with  the  lovely  ladies 
of  Hooters  (must  arrive  by  5pm) 

A\OHday  10/2 

Steak  and  Shrimp  Dinner  (Formal) 
Followed  by  Slide  Show 

Tuesday  10/3 

5pm  dinner  by  our  Famous 

Fheta  Delt  Cook 

7pm  Casino  Night  at  the  House 

Wednesday  10 /h 

3:30  Football  Practice  at  I.M.  field 
Dinner  rfl)7pm  by  Acapulco's 
Special  surprise  guest 


71%  of  the  Men  and  Women  in  Who't  Who  in  America  are  Greek. 


",  *- '  \  ^ 


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Fried  Mozzarella  $4.95 

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Side  of  Meatballs  (2)  $2.00 

SideofSausage(2)$2.00 

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Salad 

Caesar  Salad 
half  $2.25  full  $4.25 

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half  $2.25  full  $4.25 

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Traditional  Sicilian  Stvle         Chicago  Stvle 

(12  slices  of  thick  crust)  (6  slices  of  thick  crust) 

'  Slice  $2.00  '        '  Cheese$12.95  — 

Cheese$12.95  .        Toppings  $1.75 

Toppings  $1.75  ■  ' 

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;.  s  .^       (made  With  Ricotta  and  Mozzarella) 

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Spinach  $5.35  Pepperoni  $5.35  Mushroom  $5.35    ' 


Your  Choice  $4.95 
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(Prosciutto,  Mortadella,  Genoa  Salami  and  Provalone)  Eggplant  ParmesaU 

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J    ::_..■:  ii.  2;  Homemade  Lasagna  $4.95  .  ::  i  ^_ 

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(Italian  style  macaroni  &  cheese) 

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(pepperoni,  ham,  mozzarella  and  Anierican  cheese  baked  in  pizza  dough) 

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(Served  with  a  Salad,  Skte  of  Pasta  and  Bread)  •;     • 

SPAGHETTI  with  tomato  sauce  $4.25  add  Meatballs  or  Sausage  $6.25 
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Dinners  -:•.■;  ^v:-;:'' "V" 

.  (Served  with  a  Salad,  Side  of  Pasta  and  Bread) 


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vo& 


Chicken  Parmesan  $7.95    ^^>^  Eggplant  Parmesan  $6.95 

Desserts 

Tiramisu  $2.95 

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(cherry  or  lemon) 


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PAGE4     '2  000     GREEKGUIDE     ADVERTISING     SUPPLEMENT 


/C 


They  come  out  in  droves  for 
football  games.  They  participate 
in  intramurals  more  than  any  stu- 
dent  group   on   campus.      They 

BY   ADAM    FARASATI 

paint  their  faces  blue  and  gold 
and  scream  their  lungs  out  at  the 
drop  of  a  hat  whenever  Bruin 
pride  is  on  the  line. 

UCLA  Greeks  love  sports. 

That  shouldn  t  be  a  surprise 
to  many  of  you,  but  the  Greek 
system  takes  athletic  competition 
to  the  next  level.  It  forms  one  of 
the  cornerstones  of  Greek  life, 
and  not  a  day  goes  buy  that  fra- 
ternities and  sororities  don  t  take 
advantage  of  the  athletic  oppor-  , 
tunities  being  a  UCLA  student 
has  to  offer. 

UCLA  intramurals  provide 
an  arena  to  all  students  who  want 
to  compete,  and  Greeks  are  no 
exception.      Most  every  house 


A     G  R  E  E  K     H  A  «  -^f  O     STAYIN     SHAPE 


fields  teams  in  the  major  sports- 
football,  basketball,  softball  and 
soccer-as  well  as  the  minor 
sports,  from  water  polo  to  rac- 
quetball,  weightlifting  to  indoor 
soccer. 

This  one  of  the  major  rea- 
sons I  joined  a  fraternity.  In  high 
school,  1  had  my  football  team.  1 
didn  t  think  I  could  replace  that 
experience  when  I  got  to  college. 
I  was  wrong,  said  Jake  Heath. 

Indeed,  many  high  school 
athletes  find  an  outlet  in  Greek 
athletics.  Many  all-American 
athletes  come  to  UCLA  with  a  lot 
of  skill  and  heart,  but  who  could- 
n  t  make  the  UCLA  squads.  In 
the  Greek  system,  they  are  guar- 
anteed a  team  to  compete  on 
made  up  of  their  closest  friends. 

Greeks  are  fortunate  in  that, 
due  to  their  size  (nearly  2,300 
students),  they  can  compete  not 
only  in  the  UC(.A  intramurals 


but  also  in  the  unique  IFC 
(Interfraternity  Council)  play- 
offs. Greeks  have  their  own  sys- 
tem-wide sporting  department 
that  works  with  UCLA  to  devise 
brackets  and  rankings  for  Greek 
teams  to  play  beyond  the  IM  sea- 
son. They  compete  for  the  covet- 
ed IM  Trophy,  a  fifty-year  old 
treasure  that  has  been  passed 
down  for  decades  to  the  year  s 
most  winning  fraternity  and 
sorority. 

The  trophy  means  a  lot  to 
a  Jot  of  people,  said  Nate 
Murphy  after  a  soccer  match. 
Around  this  time  in  Spring,  peo- 
ple can  taste  it.  The  point  totals 
are  close  and  we  re  all  waiting  to 
see  who  II  pull  out  in  front. 

The  year  s  victor  is  often 
decided  by  the  unique  Super 
Sports  Weekend.  It  allows  men 
and  women  to  compete  in  golf, 
traqk  and  field  events,  two-on- 


An  Intramural  hockey  game 

two  volleyball  and  three-on-three 
basketball.  The  weekend  often 
breaks  close  ties  among  fraterni- 
ties that  have  been  neck  and  neck 
all  year  ...;..,■ .;      ■>••■■•■■:;,./;_::';■; 

A  misconception  is  that  the 
Greek  athletic  scene  is  confined 


FALL  SUSH 


•  6:30 
•7:30 

•  9:00 

•  9:45 


The  Best  oF  What  College  Men  Can  Be 


steak  and  Shrimp  Dinner 
(Formal  Attire) 
ZBT  Alumni  Soeakers 
Dessert  by  lattiit^ioMitt 
Infamous  Slide  Show 
Social  Hour 


•12:00  Lunch  by  Schlotszky's  •I 2:00  Lunch  by  Sha key's 

•  6:00  Dinner  by  Baja  Fresh  •  5:00  Dinner  by  in  N  Out 

•  7:00  Dodgers  vs  Giants  •  6:00  Basketball 

•8:00  Live  Guest  Band  Tournament  (3  on  3) 


IknnHb^if 


•6:00    Dinner  by 

•7:00    Live  Band  &  Comedian 


^W^ 


•12:00  Barbeque  Lunch 
•4:00   Hoops  at  the  House 


aKweekottom' 


fHoHdai^ 


•  6:00      Dinner  by  Togos 


•6:00 


UeekZ 

Dinner  by 
Enzo's  Pizzeria 


tiedHeib^ 


•  12:00    Last  Chance 
Dinner 


For  any  questions  about    ^^  j.m  M     ■    call  Nick  (310)  443-0080 
•Founded  1929  •Alpha  Rho  Chapter  •All  Rush  Events  Are  Dry 


Schlotzsky's  Deli 


j^mL 


K?=-^ 


All  but  two  U.S.  PresidenU  since  1875  were  Greek. 


only  to  the  men.  This  is  not  true, 
as  one  sorority  member  states. 
The  girls  get  just  as  fired  up  as 
the  guys.  I  play  soccer,  softball, 
flag  football,  and  basketball.  It  s 
a  great  way  to  get  rid  of  all  that 
midterm  stress. 

Greek  women  also  can 
claim  to  be  a  part  of  the  largest 
amateur  sporting  event  in  the 
country-the  renowned  inter- 
Sorority  Volleyball  Tournament, 
or  ISVT.  Here,  Greek  women 
from  all  over  the  west  coast  show 
up  by  the  thousands  to  see  who 
has  what  it  takes  to  be  the  best 
Sorority  volleyball  squad  on  the 
beach. 

Anybody  who  doesn  t 
thiiik  this  is  great  should  just 
move  to  another  country  or 
something,  said  one  avid  fan. 

Internally,  Greeks  are 
among  the  most  competitive  stu- 
dents at  UCLA,  playing  hard 
with  an  heir  of  pride  and  sports- 
manship. But  that  pride  carries 
over  equally,  if  not  more  so,  to 
Bruin  collegiate  sports.  Never  is 
that  spirit  more  in  the  forefront 
than  during  football  season, 
when  Greeks  pjle  onto  buses  for 
a  fun-filled  trip  to  the  Rose  Bowl 
every  time  a  home  game  presents 
the  opportunity.  Greeks  also  love 
to  rent  Winnebagos  for  road  trips 
to  Northern  California  when 
Bruin  football  goes  on  the  road  to 
Cal  or  Stanford. 

Greeks  also  love  to  join  the 
fray  each  year  when  it  gets  close 
to  our  annual  whooping  of  the 
Trojans.  The  traditional  Beat 
SC  Week  never  comes  and  goes 
without  UCLA  Greeks  being 
active  pranksters  or  engaging  in 
the  various  social  graces  that 
become  commonplace  between 
Bruins  and  Trojans  every  year. 

Somebody  s  got  to  do  it, 
said  one  fraternity  member  of  the 
pranks  between  the  cross-town 
rivals.  c   •         '-■>■"■ 


RECYCLE 

RECYCLE 

RECYCLE 

RECYCLE 

RECYCLE 

RECYCLE 

RECYCLE 

RECYCLE 

.S^**^^'-'- 


2000     GREEK     GUIDE     ADVERTISING     SUPPLEMENT     •     PAG^     6 


Like  other  leaders  on  cam- 
pus, Greeks  feel  they  have  a 
responsibility  to  the  UCLA 
community  at  large,  concerning 
all  issues  of  campus  life.. 

Such  issues  include  but  are 
not  limited  to-  alcohol  and  sub- 
stance abuse,  acquaintance  and 
date  rape,  and  hazing.  And  like 
other  University  leaders,  Greeks 
take  a  proactive  stance  on 
addressing  such  issues,  from 
educational  forums  stressing 
awareness,  prevention,  and 
avoidance;  to  risk  management 
policies;  to  programs  that  regu- 
late fraternity  and  sorority 
social  activities.  Additionally, 
Greek  letter  organizations, 
under  the  guidance  of  the 
Interfraternity  Council  and  the 
Panhellenic  Council,  have  made 
a  promise  to  address  the  issues 
by  working  with  the  UC  Police 
Department,  the  Women's 
Resource  Center,  and  other  out- 
side agencies  with  similar  goals. 

Recently,  alcohol  has  been 
at  the  forefront  of  problems  in 
college  life,  from  deaths  associ- 
ated with  alcohol  poisoning  to 
rapes  associated  with  alcohol 
use.  Like  the  UCLA  administra- 
tion and  other  .student  organiza- 
tions, Greek  Letter 
Organizations  under  the  guid- 
ance of  the  Interfraternity 
Council  (IFC)  and  the 
Panhellenic  Council  (PHC)  have 
come  together  to  establish  pro- 
grams which  directly  combat 
alcohol  abuse  and  drinking, 
especially  in  a  social  atmos- 
phere. 

GAMMA,  Greeks 

Advocating  for  Mature 
Management  of  Alcohol, was 
founded  .several  years  ago  on 
campus  to  heighten  awareness 
about  substance  abuse,  especial- 
ly alcohol.  It  is  the  main  venue 
for  addressing  and  solving  prob- 
lems associated  with  alcohol 
and  substance  abuse  for  fraterni- 
ties and  .sororities  as  well  as  the 
campus  as  a  whole.  GAMMA 
serves  as  a  crucial  part  of  main- 
taining and  a  safe  social  atmos- 
phere and  in  minimizing  liabili- 
ty and  reducing  the  possibility 
of  accidents  among  sororities 
and  fraternities. 

GAMMA  sponsors  infor- 
mation forums  for  both  new  and 
continuing  members,  on 
University.  IFC,  and  PHC  alco- 
hol policies,  alcohol  abuse  and 
awareness,  risk  management 
polices,  and  other  relevant  and 
peifinent  information.  Forums 
arelheld  each  quarter  in  an  effort 
to  vomote  awareness  on  the.se 
issues.  As  a  regulatory  entity 
GAMMA  maintains  a  .self-moni- 
toring system.  It  consists  of 
several  representatives  who 
enforce  regulations,  policies  and 
operational  procedures  for  the 
use  of  alcohol  at  all  Greek  social 
events.  To  facilitate  this, 
GAMMA'S  representatives 

patrol  Greek  sponsored  events 
promoting  a  safe  social  environ- 
ment. 

Besides  GAMMA,  Greeks 
have  taken  a  leading  role  in  pro- 
moting campus  safety.  Over 
twenty  years  ago,  several  Greek 
volunteers  established  a  pro- 
gram of  walking  people  home 
during  late  hours  of  the  night. 


[MP^  Q¥Y 


«i  f  i It    t  IT£    I  S     N  O  T    J  U  S  T    f  UN 


Now,  over  twenty  years  later, 
that  program  has  become  the 
Community  Service  Officer 
Programs,  a  division  of  the 
UCPD.  Staffed  by  students, 
CSOs  provide  valuable  safety 
services  to  the  campus.  And 
although  CSO  Programs  is  now 
run  in  conjunction  with  the 
UCPD  and  is  staffed  by  many 
students  from  all  backgrounds, 
Greeks  still  encourage  their 
members  to  join  this  program. 

Additionally,  Risk 

Management  plays  an  important 
role  for  Greek  Chapters  ensuring 
a  safe  environment  for  its  mem- 
bers. With  GAMMA,  Risk 
Management  consist  of  polices, 
suggestions,  liability  issues,  and 
pertinent  information  promoting 
health  and  safety  awareness. 
Moreover,  Greek  letter  organiza- 
tions under  the  guidance  of  IFC 
and  PHC  continually  work  with 
the  Women's  Resource  Center, 
UCPD,   and   other  agencies   to 


bring  attention  to  issues  such  as 
date  rape,  substance  abuse, 
Sexually  Transmitted  Diseases, 
and  homophobia.  -': . ; 

Greek  letter  organizations 
also  take  steps  to  ensure  the 
safety  of  their  own  members.  In 
addition  to  the  programs  and 
polices  listed  above,  fraternities 
and  sororities  have  adopted  an 
anti-hazing  .stance  to  ensure  that 
problems  do  not  arise  during 
chapter  new  member  programs. 
These  polices  are  enforced  not 
only  by  the  Interfraternity 
Council  and  Panhellenic,  but  the 
University  as  well. 

And  last,  but  not  least, 
Greeks  play  an  active  role  in  the 
world  outside  UCLA.  Not  every- 
one enjoys  the  same  freedoms, 
opportunities,  or  advantages 
many  people  take  for  granted. 
Many  people  are  often  left 
behind  by  society,  forgotten,  or 
removed  from  our  minds  pre- 
senting images  often  too  harsh  to 


Members  of  Sigma  Phi  Epsllon  volunteer  ttieir  time  to  heip  feed 
homeless  of  Los  Angeies  on  Thonitsgivlng  Day. 


come  to  terms  with.  Greek  letter 
Organizations  along  with  several 
outside  agencies  and  community 
programs  address  these  issues 
and  problems  through  their  phil- 
anthropic events  and  community 
service. 

Philanthropy  is  an  essential 


part  of  not  only  Greek  life  at 
UCLA,  but  life  in  general. 
Opportunities  such  as  these  not 
only  benefit  the  less  fortunate 
and  underrepresented  groups  in 
society;  but  they  benefit  those 

See  Service,  page  9 


The  GPA  o|  UCLA's  Greeks  exceeds  that  of  the  campus  at  large. 


-^("T- 


rrr-^nr^- 


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PAGE     6     •     2000     GREEK     GUIDE     ADVERTISING     SUPPLEMENT 


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R  E  F  L  E  CT I O  N  S     O  N     JOINING     THE     G  R  E  E  K     SYSTEM 


As  I  walked  up  to  Hedrick 
Hall,  a  starry-eyed  freshman,  1  had 
no  idea  what  my  years  at  UCLA 
would  hold.  With  so  many  opportu- 
nities awaiting  exploration,  I  did  not 
know  where  to  start. 

Everyone  around  me  was 
preparing  tor  the  week-long  process 
of  Membership  Selection  (formerly 

BY   VANESSA   SCOTT 

known  as  Rush)  to  become  members 
of  the  Greek  system.   I  considered 
the  idea  but  asked  myself,  "Why 
would  I  join  the  Greek  system  at 
such  a  large  campus  like  UCLA?" 

As  an  older  and  wiser  junior,  1 
now  have  the  answers  as  to  why  I 
joined  the  Greek  system  and  why  1 
suggest  it  to  anyone  who  wants  one 
of  the  greatest  experiences  UCLA 
has  to  offer. 

First  of  all,  the  Greek  system  is 
an  excellent  way  to  make  the  over- 
whelming population  of  UCLA 
smaller  and  more  personal.  When 
entering  as  a  freshman,  it  is  easy  to 
feel  lost  and  alone  in  a  crowd  of 
several  thousand  other  freshmen 
plus  another  25,000  students. 

As  a  result  of  joining  the 
Greek  system,  people  become  more 
than  just  another  face  in  the  crowd. 
"It's  always  nice  to  .see  so  many 
people  I  know  on  Bruin  Walk"  says 
fourth-year  sorority  member 
Rebecca  Cataldo.  • 


.    Many  Greeks  meet  their  clos- 
e.st  friends  after  joining  a  house. 

"Bonding  with  my  pledge 
class  is  where  I  made  my  best 
friends  at  UCLA"  remarks  Dave 
Huber,  a  third-year  fraternity  mem- 
ber. 

One  of  the  most  valuable 
experiences  the  Greek  sy.stem  has  to 
offer  is  living  in  the  house. 
Although  living  in  is  not  required, 
most  Greeks  choo.se  that  path 
because  of  the  positive  environ- 
ment. 

Living  in  a  house  is  a  great 
opportunity  to  meet  and  bond  with 
people  who  have  common  interests 
and  goals.    It  provides  a  system  of 
support  and  friendship  that  is 
invaluable  to  the  college  experi- 
ence. 

"Living  in  has  given  me  the 
chance  to  become  close  with  many 
different  people.   I  also  enjoy  the 
fact  that  there  is  always  .someone 
around  who  is  ready  to  study,  hang 
out,  or  go  out  and  have  a  good 
time,"  says  third-year  fraternity 
member  Dave  Suarez. 

It  also  holds  the  most  memo- 
ries this  writer  will  take  from 
UCLA.   Everything  from  the  seri- 
ous study  nights  during  finals  to 
coming  home  after  late-night  mis- 
sions to  Tommy's  after  regular 
Thursday  night  parties  is  an  event 
to  remember. 


Another  great  advantage  of 
Greek  life  is  that  it  provides  mem- 
bers with  many  opportunities  for 
participating  in  outside  activities. 

Philanthropy,  for  example,  is  a 
large  part  of  the  Greek  system. 
Each  house  adopts  a  special  cause 
for  which  to  raise  funds,  organize 
events,  and  interact  with  the  less 
fortunate.  The  events  that  the 
sororities  and  fraternities  hold  are 
athletic  and  fun  and  bring  Greeks 
together  as  one  community  to  sup- 
port those  in  need. 

Greeks  are  also  active  in  the 
student  government  at  UCLA. 
Indeed,  this  year's  USAC  predicent, 
Elizabeth  Houston,  is  Greek. 

The  Greek  system  is  actively 
involved  in  athletics  as  well.   Most 
chapters  have  teams  that  play  and 
compete  against  each  other  in  intra- 
mural sports.   Both  sororities  and 
fraternities  participate  in  sports 
from  Softball  to  soccer  to  flag  foot- 
ball just  to  name  a  few. 

There  is  much  more  to  high- 
light in  Greek  life,  but  I  will  leave 
the  rest  for  students  to  discover  on 
their  own. 

So,  anyone  who  feels  like  I 
did  as  an  incoming  student  should 
try  the  Greek  system.  At  the  very 
least,  amazing  people  and  incredi- 
ble memories  await.  Without  a 
doubt,  the  Greek  system  will 
change  your  life  for  the  better. 


How  iKis  the  Greek  system  made  life  at  UCLA  eosler 
for  you? 


Joining  a  fraternity  has  recrtly  tarought 
tfiis  huge  cannpus  dov*ffi  to  size. 
Through  th©  Greek  system  1  hove 
taeen  able  to  meet  so  many  p>eople 
ond  really  get  involved  in  ttie  UCLA 
community. 

•  Matt  Togue,  PI  Kappa  Alpha 


Being  from  Texas,  I  didn't  krK>w  onyone 
coming  here  and  becoming  a  mem- 
ber of  ttie  Greek  community  provided 
m©  with  the  oppxxtunity  to  meet  many 
different  peopile  vi'lthout  being  over- 
w/tiekned  by  such  a  tiuge  campus. 

-  AHonso  Luna.  Ptii  Psi 


Having  a  strong  network  of  friends  at 
UCLA  hod  has  a  very  positive  effect 
on  my  college  experience.  Behg 
well-bcrtanced  and  having  fun  in  col- 
lege is  much  more  Important  in  \he 
long  run  than  getting  a  4.01 

-  Nick  Colongaio,  Zsia  Beta  Tau 


It  has  oMov/ed  me  to  find  out  about 
interesting  classes.  AdditiorKilly,  it 
kanded  me  a  fun  job  at  tt>e  daily 
Bruin. 

-  Tkn  Sovay.  Sigma  CN 


The  first  American  fraternity,  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  was  founded  in  1 776  at  William  and  Mary  College. 


2000     GREEK     GUIDE     ADVERTISI  N  G     SUPPLEMENT     •PAGE? 


J 


WM^M 


M 


YOUR     GUIDE     TO     THE     INS     AND     OUTS     OF     GOING     GREEK 


■/■jjv.  ■■  j^  ■  *■> 


GREEK  LIFE:  A  PRIMER 


Abtofsome(rftheteftnsyottshouldluwwtfyou«epUtmingtojpwtt»6reefcSyrte<n. 

Aaive:  A  fully  initiated  member  of  a  fraternity  or  sorority  with  full  diopter  privileges  and 

respwuibjlitiej.^-^        "^    •■-    ^^**"  ;     ;      \ '    :. 

Alum:  A  graduated  member.  9IHH|PHMIP1 

Asian  Greek  Council  (AGC):The  representative  governing  body  of  traditionally  Asian-founded 

fraternities  and  sororities.  ■      ;•   ; 

Bid:  An  official  invitation  to  a  new  member  to  join  afraternity/sotonty.  flBHi^H 

Big  Brother:  An  active  member  in  a  fraternity  assigned  to  assist  and  advise  a  new  member. 

Big  Sister:  Art  adive  member  in  a  smtKityassi^ed  to  assist  atttl  a<Mse  ai  nevv  m«i)(| 

Brother:  A  term  used  by  members  of  a  fraternity  when  referring  to  one  another 

Chapter:The  local  group  which  repfoetits  a  segment  <rf  the  iMttomdorgmtzation. 

Exchange:  A  closed  party  for  members  of  a  specified  fraternity  and  sorority 

Greek:  A  member  of  a  fraternity  or  somity. 

Greeks  Advocating  the  Mature  Management  of  Alcohol  (GAMMA):  An  organization  of  Greekjioing" 

education  and  policy  to  prevent  the  abuse  of  alcohol. 

Greeks  Against  Rape  (GAfQ:  A  fwip  devoted  to  educating  members  of  ^&wk  system  on  the 

issues  of  rape  md  sexual  abuM. 

Hasher  A  kitchen  helper  at  a  fratemity  or  sorority 

Independent:  A  non-Greek. 

Interfratemity  Council  (IFO:The  representative  governing  body  of  fraternities  comprised  of  elected 

and  appointed  offlcen. 


.     You  want  the  skinny?  The  low  down?  The 
real  deal  on  rush?  Well  I've  got  just  what  you 
need. 

"'':       First,  it's  not  called  rush  any  more.  The  title 
"rush"  has  little  to  do  with  the  recruitment 

BY   CHRISTIAN    HELLMERS 


Legacy:  A  nishce  who  b  the  soi^grmdMo  orlN«h«r  of  a  mctt^  taaifetetn^w  tJwda^et 
^nddaughter  or  sister  of  a  member  in  a  sMWitji. 

National  Pan-Hellenic  Coundl  (Nf*tK):  The  representative  governing  body  of  traditionally  A 
American  fraternities  and  sororities. 

New  Members:  A  student  who  has  accepted  the  bid  of  a  fratemity  or  sorority.  After  a  period  of 
education  of  the  fraternity/sorority's  histoiy,  ideals  and  traditions,  he/she  may  be  initiated.  This 
period  is  referred  to  as  new  membership  education. 
Pin :  The  acthw  pin,  or  badge,  is  worn  on  the  dicA  deigiurtii^  an  active  m«id>er  of  a  fta^ 
sorority.A  pledge  pin  is  sinipler  and  is  usedtD  show  piedges^>toafnierraty  orsoronty. 
Recruitment  Period:  The  period  at  the  beginning  of  the  spring  and  winter  quarters  during  which 
fraternities  and  sororities  meet  and  recniit  new  members.  All  recruitment  events  are  must  fbUow 
strict  guidelines  laid  out  by  the  IFC  and  PHC 

SeunrUaACiMtteUt 


process.  Jaime  Mann,  former  IFC  Director  of  '"  ""' 
Recruitment,  explains.  "We  stop  using  the  title 
rush'  because  it  led  people  to  think  that  recruit- 
ment was  a  frantic,  hurried  process.  We  cho.se  to 
call  the  period  recruitment  because  we  want       ■ , 
incoming  students  to  feel  more  comfortable  look- 
ing at  Greek  organizations  and  accepting  or 
declining  bids."     ■ 

UCLA's  Greek  Community  hosts  an  official 
recruitment  pericxl  every  fall  and  spring.  During 
this  time  fratemity  and  sorority  chapters  hold  open 
houses  featuring  different  events.  Fratemity  and 
iwrority  chapters  hire  entertainers  such  as  hypno- 
tist and  comedians,  show  sports  events  and  slide 
shows,  perform  skits  and  routines  and  organize 
basketball  and  volleyball  tournaments. 
Fratemities  and  sororities  design  these  events  to  be 
fun  for  both  the  chapter  actives  and  you. 

The  activities  give  you  an  opportunity  to 
enjoy  yourself,  while  you  meet  and  interact  with 
fratemity  brothers  and  sorority  si.sters.  The  ulti- 
mate purpose  of  the  events  is  to  give  you  the 
opportunity  to  decide  whether  or  not  you  feci 
comfortable  with  that  particular  chapter. 
Additionally,  all  recruitment  activities  regardless 
of  when  or  where  they  take  place  are  dry,  meaning 
no  alcohol  is  served.  This  is  to  make  sure  that  you 
are  able  to  make  your  decisions  in  the  best  possi- 
ble state  of  mind. 

The  process  of  recruitment  is  simple.  It  con- 
sists of  registering  and  attending  Greek  sponsored 
events.  Men  are  encouraged  to  register  with  the 
Interfratemity  Council  (IFC),  while  women  are 
required  to  register  with  the  Panhellenic  Council 
(PHC).  For  those  who  did  not  fill  them  out  at 
summer  orientation,  the  registration  cards  are 
available  in  I  OS  Kerckhoff  Hall  or  at  any  of  the 
IPC  or  PHC  recruitment  events.  . 

In  addition  to  registering,  you  should  attend 
all  of  the  IFC  or  PHC  sponsored  recruitment 
events.  Events  such  as  Fall  2000  Recruitment 
Orientation  bring  together  all  IFC  fratemity  chap- 


An  IFC  Recruitment  Event 

ters  and  Panhellenic  representatives  in  one  loca- 
tion where  interested  students  can  meet  them. 
Schedules  of  recruitment  events  for  all  chapters 
will  also  be  available  at  the  Orientation. 

Now  that  I've  covered  the  nuts  and  bolts, 
here  is  the  really  gcxxl  information,  the  stuff  it 
took  me  four  years  to  leam: 
.        I .  Be  yourself.  There  is  nothing  more 
important  during  recmitment.  You  will  choose  the 
right  fratemity  for  you  and  you  will  be  happy  with 
your  decision. 

2.  Evaluate  each  fratemity  or  sorority  care- 
fully. You  want  to  visit  all  the  chapters  and  then 
narrow  your  search  from  there. 

3.  Take  your  time.  Joining  a  Greek  letter 
organization  is  a  momentous  decision  and  should 
not  be  mshed. 

4.  Beware  of  fratemities  or  sororities  that 
belittle  or  make  derogatory  remarks  about  other 
chapters. 

5.  Ask  questions  and  make  sure  that  the 
answers  you  receive  are  satisfying.  Find  out  if  the 
chapter  is  active  in  the  campus  or  community. 
Determine  the  length  of  the  new  member  period. 
Ask  about  flnancial  commitments  for  now  and  in 
the  future.  Check  the  chapter's  GPA  and  ask  if 
they  have  study  hours  or  academic  programs. 

6.  Finally,  be  prepared  to  meet  lots  of  new 
people,  have  a  gcxxi  time  and  leam  about  Greek 
history  at  UCLA.  Also,  remember  that  just  as  fra- 
temities and  .sororities  are  looking  for  new  mem- 
bers to  advance  their  fellowships,  you  should  be 
looking  for  an  organization  that  will  benefit  your 
interests  and  needs. 


RECRUITMENT  CALENDAR  AND  INFORMATION 


MEN 


WOMEN 


Fraternity  recruitnwnt  is  designed  to  mdce  affiliating  witlt  an  cxganizadon  simple 
and  easy.  IFC  conducts  official  recruitnieot  periods  dm>ughout  the  year.  Take 
advantage  of  men's  recruitment  and  fmd  out  what  the  fratemity  systom  has  to  offer 
you. 

The  first  thing  you  should  do,  if  you  haven't  already,  is  register  with  the 
Interfratemity  CouiKil.  There  is  no  cost  or  oUigation  to  regi^er  and  you  receive 
inqwrtant  infcxmation  and  details. 

Once  you  have  taken  care  of  your  registration,  you  should  attend  some  of  the 
various  recruitnoient  events.  IPC  Grgaxazes  several  events  includmg  die  annual 
BBQ/Fr^emity  Forum.  These  events  allow  you  the  best  opportunity  to  mott  members 
fttm  each  fratemity.  In  addition  Each  fratemity  schedules  their  own  events  which 
indlude  meals,  guest  speakers.  spcKting  activities,  etc.  These  ev«its  provide  the  perfect 
diiknce  for  you  to  meet  the  members  and  evaluate  each  fratemity  on  a  personal  level. 
Aobnd  as  many  events  as  you  like. 


Calendar  of  Events 

Monday.  September  25 


1 2.-00  noon 


Thursday.  September  28 


W^Bdnesdey,  October  4 


7:00  p.m. 


11:00  a.m. 


8:00  p.m. 


Orientatioa  Meeting  • 
Brain  naza 

Greek  Expo  &  BBQ  • 

Bruin  Plaza 

Row  Ibitfs  to  follow 

Individual  Quptnr 
Events  B^n 


Fraternity  linf ormatioQ 
Fair  -  Westwood  Plaza 


Official  Remiitment 
Period  concludes 


During  the  Panhellenic  Recruitment  Process  for  women,  prospective 
members  will  visit  the  eleven  sorority  chapters  on  the  UCLA  campus  to  become 
acquainted  with  all  aspects  of  sorority  life.    A  process  of  mutual  selection  works 
to  help  place  you  in  the  chapter  of  your  choice.  This  is  an  exciting  week  giving 
you  an  opportunity  to  enjoy  new  experiences  and  make  friends  that  will  last 
throughout  your  life. 

The  decision  to  join  a  UCLA  sorority  can  be  the  best  one  you've  ever 
made.  A  lifetime  of  friendship  and  fun  awaits  you.  Get  the  most  out  of  your 
years  at  UCLA  by  taking  advantage  of  this  opportunity.  Membership  is  on  the 
rise,  and  more  women  each  year  join  the  largest  women's  organization  on 
campus. 

The  first  step  in  the  process  is  to  complete  the  Panhellenic  Registration 
form..  A  copy  can  be  picked  up  at  Kerckhoff  Hall  105,  or  you  can  fill  it  out 
online  at  www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/panhellenic.  Once  you  have  completed  the 
form,  you  must  return  it  along  with  a  check  for  your  $20  registration  fee 
(payable  to  UCLA  PRC)  via  mail  of  in  person  at  Kerckhoff  Hall  105.  A 
confirmation  letter  will  be  sent  with  additicmai  information. 


Calendar  of  Evmts 

Monday.  September  25 


Tiiesday.  September  26 

Monday,  October  2 
Tuesday.  October  3 


1:00  p.nt 

Welcome  Recq>tion 
Drake  Stadium: 

7:00  pjn. 

Orientation  Meeting  • 
Moore  100 

9:00  a.m. 

Potential  Member 
Check-In -Brain  Walk 

10:00  a.m. 

Rush  events  begin 

6:00pm-9:35pm 

PrcfcTMicc  Night 

5:00  p.m. 

Bid  Day 

■>' 


Lambda  Deha  Ijimbda,  the  nation*a  firat  leabian  aorority,  waa  founded  at  UCLA  in  1929. 


■"■-'~~ 


'-^■~'-  '• 


■'-'—'-'  -=  ^---.--.^--...^^^iit^^,-  rfaiT   rti 


PAGE     8     •     2000     GREEK     G  U  ID  E     A  D  V  E  R  T  I  S  I  N  G     S  U  P  P  L  E  MEN  T 


FRATERNITIES 

-  ■ 

J.    Alpha  Epsilon  PI 

A  En 

V,   ■ 

645Landtalr 

^09-2869 

":.'-'--■'■ 

ij};  Alpha  Tdu  Omega 

ATO 

105  Kerckhoff  Hall 

•     ■;•■■    ■:'  ■•  '■  '■'   ' ■':  '  -'V  .::-.'■.;;■■. 

■ii^{':: 

3v   Beta  Chi  Theta    ; 

Bxe 

1 05  Kerckhoff  Hall 

■^ .:' :  :"X.--..  ■•■'•''■■  ■"■'^'- 

■  ■"  .'■  - . 

•—:--'- 

4i    BetaThetaPi 

Ben 

A50 
AXA 

581  Gayley 
620  Landfair 
10918  Strathmore 

208-9602 

5.    Delta  Sigma  Phi 
6;   Lambda  Chi  Alpha 

208-924T 
208-9474 

\ 

7.  Phi  Kappa  Psi 

8.  Phi  Kappa  Sigma 

9.  Pi  Kappa  Alpha 

10.  Pi  Kappa  Phi 

11.  Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon 

OKI 

nKA 
nKo 

1  ZAE 

613  Gayley 
10938  Strathmore 
555Ggyley 
626  Landfair 
655  Gayley 

208-9570 
208-6953 
208-5052 
208-9011 
478-5481 

— 

/^               ) 

12.  Sigma  Chi 

EX 

459  Gayley 

208-9703 

/^^    mt 

13.  Sigma  Nu 

IN 

601  Gayley 

208-9514 

14.  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon 

15.  Sigma  PI    ,  : 

16.  Theta  Chi 

lOE 
LO 

ex 

611  Gayley 

612  Landfair 
663  Gayley  ;  _ 

824-1984 
208-9131 
208-9165 

17.  Theta  Delta  Chi 

eAX 

547  Gayley 

208-9180 

18.  Theta  Xi 

19.  Triangle 

e5 

629  Gayley 
519  Landfair 

208-9999 
208-3028 

20.  Zeta  Beta  Tau 

ZBT 

10924  Strathmore 

208-9041 

SORORITIES 

—     ,    -f--^     •     ; 

-1 

^^^•-■'%^;'^:-^--:::v.:^;^f---';M 

•■>  f.^; 

'■  --  •,■•'■.■■■-  --■  "-:.  '■- 

■:ffe,::{<i^;:^---v:::'^-|;';;s 

A.  Alpha  Delta  Pi 

B.  Alpha  Epsilon  Phi 

AAn 

AEO 

808  Hilgard 
632  Hilgard 

208-9108/9066 
208-9152/9129 

"  \-; :';  ■''-   :.  ., .  -.\  '■ 

1© 

•  ■  _/  > 

C.  Alpha  Phi 

A<D 

714  Hilgard 

208-9118/9157            '• 

.    ■     ,  •  ^v  ■  "■  ■•'■'.  '■  -'•'  . 

|0 

D.  Chi  Omega 

xa 

708  Hilgard 

208-9176/9266      v 

•    .  '      \      '   < 

lo      : 

E.  Delta  Delta  Delta 

AAA 

862  Hilgard 

208-9005/9202 

-  ' '  '  ■    '  ."'■'-  - 

® 

F.    Delta  Gamma 

Ar 

652  Hilgard 

208-9119/92341           / 

•    -  .    -.            '    ^'  ■     ' 

\®'-'''^^\::  C:r 

; 

G.  Gamma  Phi  Beta 

roe 

616  Hilgard 

"■■'■'■'               •"-'■•■                             ■■                                 ■'        "'"'-':■ 

■ ,..  ■ .      '    •    "     •  ■', 

1® 

H.  Kappa  Alpha  Theta 
1.    Kappa  Delta 

KAe 

KA 

736  Hilgard 
800  Hilgard 

208-9115/9142 
208-9141/9183 

J.   Kappa  Kappa  Gamma 

KKr 

744  Hilgard 

208-9144/9154 

i'        -■.■■"■■,'* 

•^/© 

K.  Pi  Beta  Phi 

necD 

* 

700  Hilgard 

208-9145/9056      :{ 

•* 

.■.*-■' 

/q 

■  ."„'■ .    ■  ■" 

--     ■   .-.^-o- 

■  ■"  • !  •  ':■■' 

:,     ■::V.>V;Vr:-S-^- 

:' •^',  ..■  ■'  -;:■  ■  '...■•.■,.'•■;■:.■'■■■    -■ 

-•'■ '"'. .  .■, 

76%  of  U.S.  Congressmen  are  Greek. 


.\:-; 


t.i  I  .  «    'I    ♦  I    » I  » 


•  •  III       <  I  t  I 


•  I  »  •     *  I     I 


2000     GREEK     GUIDE     ADVERTISING     SUPPLEMENT     •     PAGE     9 


SERVICE  Council   and   Panheilenic   are 

responsible  for  "raising"  over 
$9000  for  UniCamp.  UCLA's 
official  charity,  which  provides 
summer  camp  for  underprivi- 
leged children.  They  also  par- 
ticipate in  a  walk  to  raise  money 
for  the  new  Mattel  Children's 
Hospital. 

Although  some  may  asso- 
ciate community  service  with 
work,  the  Greek  community 
often  holds  philanthropies  that 
promote  fun,  competition,  and 
entertainment  along  with  ser- 
vice, dedication,  and  awareness 
on  issues  such  as  poverty  and 
under-representation.  Some 
examples  include  water  polo 
tournaments,  talent  shows,  char- 
ity auctions,  picnics,  charity 
dinners,  sports  >hot-outs,  and 
other  galas  and  events. 

In  short,  Greeks  feel  that 
they  have  a  responsibility  to 
promote  safety,  whether  within 
an  individual  chapter,  or  on  the 
campus  community  as  a  whole. 
Community  service  is  one  of  the 
focal  points  of  Greek  Life  at 
UCLA. 


:'>• 


from  page  5 

who  take  part  in  such  activities. 
Community  service  fosters  per- 
sonal growth  and  greater  unity 
among  Greek  members. 

Activities  are  often  under- 
taken with  outside  agencies 
such  as  AIDS  Project  Los 
Angeles,  Project  Angel  Food, 
the  American  Red  Cross,  Boys 
and  Girl  Clubs  across  Los 
Angeles,  Habitat  for  Humanity, 
and  other  such  organizations. 

Additionally,  the 

We.stwood  community  is  often 
willing  to  lend  a  hand  through 
co-sponsorship  and  by  donating 
food,  prizes,  merchandi.se,  a 
venue  for  the  event,  and  .staff. 
The  Greek  community  also  rec- 
ognizes that  others  student  orga- 
nizations have  the  same  goals 
and  objective;  consequently, 
fraternity  and  sororities  will 
often  team  up  with  other  student 
organizations  to  combine 
resources  making  for  a  more 
productive  philanthropy. 
.     ^  The  Interfraternity 


MemlMrt  of  severgi  (roternitiffs  toke  kids  from  Poro  Los  Ninos  OrphomiQO  out  for  o  doy  on  the 


Back 


lissed 
re 

Kafjy  Bruin] 
verthe 
mmerZ 


to  advertise  call 
825-2161 


M 


Over  40%  of  the  students  at  ihe  University  of  Virginia  are  Greek,  most  in  the  nation 


.■'■ . '  ,o.. 


2  000     GReIk     guide     advertising     supplement     •     PAGE     10 


WOMEN'S  RECRUITMENT 


During  the  Panhellenic  Recruitment  Process  for  women,  prospective  members  will  visit  the  ten  sorority 
chapters  on  the  UCLA  campus  to  become  acquainted  with  all  aspects  of  sorority  life.  Sororities  are  looking  for 
members  from  every  background  and  academic  pursuit.  A  process  of  mutual  selection  wori<s  to  help  place 
you  in  the  chapter  of  your  choice.  This  is  an  exciting  week  giving  you  an  opportunity  to  enjoy  new  experiences 
and  make  friends  that  will  last  throughout  your  life.  :-^ 

The  decision  to  join  a  UCIA  sbronly  can  be  the  best  one  you' ve  ever  made.  A~  lif etime  oif riendship  and  fun  ~~ 
awaits  you.  Get  the  most  out  of  your  years  at  UCLA  by  taking  advantage  of  this  amazing  opportunity.  Our 
membership  is  on  the  rise,  and  more  women  each  year  join  the  largest  women's  organization  on  campus. 
Come  check  us  out  yourself! 

http://www.studentgroupsMcla,edu/panhellenic 


Sorority  Recruitment  Sctiedule 
2000  Fall  Quarter 


Monday,  Sept.  25 


Tuesday,  Sept.  26. 

Wednesday,  Sept.  27 
Thursday,  Sept.  28 
Friday,  Oct.  2 

Saturday,  Oct.  3 


Welcome  Reception 
Drake  Stadium:  1 :00pm 
Orientation  Meeting  - 
Moore  100:  7-8pm 

Potential  member  Check-In 

Bruin  Walk:  9am 

11  events:  10:00am-7:25pm 

8  Events:  9:30am  -  6:00pm 

5  Events:  4:30pm,  -  9:50pm 

Preference  Night  (2  Events) 
6:00pm  -  9:35pm 

Bid  Day:  Approx.  5:00pm 


DID  YOU  KNOW 


ID 

00 


OF  FORTUNE  500 
EXECUTIVES 


71% 


of  the  women  and  men  in  WHO'S 
WHO  OF  AMERICA 


OO/O    PRESIDENT'S 

cabinet  MEMBERS 


ALL    BUT    TWO  U.S 

presidents  SINCE  1825 


Ik 


76%  o  U.S 

CONGRESSMEN 


ARE  ALL  GREEK 


:.::,■.■  ry--:T^^>^r'    For  quostions  &  registration  information 

stop  by  105  Kerckhoff  Hall,  call  310.206-1521 ,  or  go  to 
www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/panhellenic  and  leave  your  name,  address  &  phone  numi 


The  first  fraternity  founded  at  UCLA  was  Sigma  Pi,  in  1923. 


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2  00  0     G  REtK    GUrDE     AD  VERTISI  NG     SUPPLEM  E  N  r"  t-    P  A  G  E     1  1 


200d  Interfraternity  Council  Recruitment  Schedule 


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O 


0NDAY 


9.25.00 


Fair  &  Information  Session  at  Bruin  Plaza 

12-3  PM 

•  Live  music,  food,  &  games 

Individual  Chapter  Events 

Start  at  7:00  PM 

Check  Schedule  in  Greek  Guide 


9-600  TUESDAY 

Individual  Chapter  Events 


WEDNESDAY 


9.27.00 


Individual  Chapter  Events 


e 
e 

1 


SUNDAY 


10. 1.00 


ndividual  Chapter  Events 


TUESDAY 


10.3.00 


MONDAY  o^'H 

lndi\^duaTChapter  Events 


Individual  Chapter  Events 


10.4.00 


WEDNESDA 


% 


Individual  Chapter  Events 
Official  Recruitment  Period  Ends  8:00  PM 


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Alpha  Epsllon  Pi    AEO 

Alpha  Tau  Omega   MQ. 

Beta  Chi  Theta    BXe 

\      Beta  Theta  Pi    BOn 

Delta  Sigma  Phi   Aia> 

Lambda  Chi  Alpha   AXA 

Phi  Kappa  PsI    OKT 

]  Phi  Kappa  Sigma   <DKE 

Pi  Kappa  Alpha   OKA 


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lAE  Si^ma  Alpha  Epsilon 

XX  Sigma  Chi 

IN  Sigma  Nu 
XOE  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon 

xn  Sigma  Pi 

OAX  Theta  Delta  Chi  ^^ 

©H  Theta  Xi 

A  Triangle 

ZBT  Zeta  Beta  Tau 


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FOR  MORE  INFORMATION,  CALL  310.825.7878  or  email  ifc@ucla.edu  or  check  us  out  @ 

http://www.greekllfe.ucla.edu 


UCLA  has  45  fraternities  and  sororities. 


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20  00     GREEK     G  U  I  D  E.  A  q  V  E  R  T  I  S^m©'^  S^  f/p  L  E  M  E  N  T 


•     PAGE     13 


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THE    GREEK    SYSTEM     HAS   Vl^    VOH9    Aktt    Itl  tf  8  T  R  I  O  U  S    P>k  S  V 


''>vij...;. 


-  *  1 1  * 


Secret  Societies  Come  to  ttie  New  Worfd 

—^-  The  idea  of  secret  fraternal  societies  began 
7,000  years  ago  with  the  ancient  Egyptian  mys- 
tery ciilts,  which  worshiped  The  moon  and  per- 
formed fertility  rites.  Later,  in  Greek  and  Roman 
times,  the  Eleusinian  mysteries  attracted  such 
celebs  as  Homer.  Socrates,  and  Plato.  The  craft 
guilds  of  the  Middle  Ages  led  to  the  semisecret 
friendly  societies  of  eighteenth-century  England, 
which,  among  other  social 
ventures  such  as  partying, 
invented  the  concept  of 
gioup  health  insurance. 

By  1776  several 
chapters  of  the  Social  and 
Benevolent  Order  of 
Freemasonry  (Masons),  an 
outgrowth  of  the  friendly 
societies,  had  been  formed 
on  American  shores. 
Within  fifty  years,  chapters 
of  the  Oddfellows.  The 
Ancient  Order  of 
Foresters,  and  the  Knights 
of  Pythias,  among  others, 
would  follow. 

All  had  .secret  rites  of 
passage  (rituals  and  initia- 
tion ceremonies)  for  their 
new  members,  a  concept 
that  goes  back  to  the  tribal 
rites  of  manhood  in  primi- 
tive cultures.  Early 
American  college  students 
were  often  familiar  with 
these  societies  and  rituals,  since  there  was  not 
much  else  to  talk  about  before  the  invention  of 
color  television  and  football. 


Club,  were  formed  at  Harvard  Their  purposes 
were  more  literary  and  social  than  religious,  but 
they,  too,  soon  folded.  So  this  was  about  the  state 
of  student  clubs  when  six  guys  at  William  and 
Mary  decided  to  try  something  new  over  a  few 
beers  in  a  Virginia  tavern  on  Noyembe/  11.1 750. 


Fraternity  Brother  Thomos  Jefferson 


Pre-Revoiutionory  Fraternities 

America,  under  British  rule,  had  founded 
fifteen  colleges  by  1776.  Each  had  about  fifty 
students  and  basically  taught  rich,  fifteen-year- 
old  WASPs  how  to  write  full  sentences  and  to 
become  clergymen  or  "lettered  and  mannered 
gentlemen." 

The  typical  student's  day  went  like  this:  Up 
at  5:30.  prayer,  recitation  of  Greek  and  Latin  for 
ten  hours,  more  prayer,  bed.  This  did  not  a  frat- 
man  maketh. 

The  faculty  lived  and  ate  with  the  students 
and  watched  them  like  hawks  for  twenty-four 
hours  a  day.  One  writer  described  school  as  "a 
dreary  day  of  fast  days,  eariy  chapel,  .severe  pun- 
ishments, and  bad  board."  It  was  so  bad  in  fact 
that  in  1776.  155  Harvard  students  were  expelled 
for  splitting  breakfast  and  eating  in  town, 
because,  they  claimed.  "The  butter  .stinketh."  The 
one  good  thing  about  school  was  that  "small 
biere"  (i.e..  beer,  half  the  proof  of  today's  brews) 
was  .served  at  lunch  and  dinner.  This  would  a 
fratman  maketh. 

.'i      ■*'"-"  '  ' ' 

Student  Ciubs  Begin 

In  France,  Germany,  and  other  parts  of 
Europe  during  this  time,  university  students 
formed  philosophic  clubs  to  talk  over  the  cultur- 
al issues  of  the  day.  Whether  these  clubs  were 
known  to  American  students  is  anyone's  guess. 
But  the  natural  inclination  of  men  to  bond  togeth- 
er in  groups  soon  caused  American  students  to 
form  their  own  clubs  anyway. 

The  first  effort  at  student-run  clubs  was 
made  at  Harvard  in  1703  and  1716.  They  were 
religious  in  nature  and  didn't  last  long.  Around 
"720  two  clubs.  The  Mock  Club  and  The  Spy 


Tt^e  Flat  Hat  Club 

Fed  up  with  faculty  control  over  their  lives 
"  ■' ■    •■"■-'■  and  wanting  to  discuss 

non-school   subjects   in 
private   by   themselves, 
these  six  students  bond- 
ed together  into  a  club 
that   would   eventually 
lead     to     the     current 
Greek-letter  system.  As 
any  form  of  secret  group 
was  considered  treaso- 
nous   to    the    English 
Crown,  they  adopted  a 
secret  constitution,  ritu- 
al,  oath,   and   grip   to 
keep  things  on  the  qt-. 
Their     motto,     which 
expressed  the  attributes 
of   "friendship,    mirth, 
conviviality,      silence, 
and    charity"    was    in 
Latin.  Taking  the  first 
letters    of    the     Latin 
motto's     three     most 
important  words,  F.  H. 
;  and  C,  they  nicknamed 

their  body  the  Flat  Hat 
Club.  For  a  badge  they  created  a  circular  medal 
which  looked  like  a  watch  fob. 

Although  it  later  opened  its  membership  to 
faculty  and  helped  charitable  cau.ses,  Thomas 
Jefferson,  an  early  member,  wrote  that  "it  had  no 
useful  purpose." 

Ttie  P.D.A.  Society 

Though  the  Flat  Hat  folded  within  twenty 
years,  other  students  began  another  club  called 
the  RD.A.  Society.  Reflecting  Southern  planta- 
tion life,  this  club  was  less  literary  and  more 
social.  Members  were  prone  to  ".social  drinking, 
gaming,  and  horseplay."  Its  secret  insignia  was 
patterned  after  the  Flat  Hat's  even  to  its  initials 
standing  for  the  Latin  words  of  its  motto  (now 
lost). 

It  is  generally  thought  that  the  P.D.A.  fold- 
ed before  coming  the  coming  of  Phi  Beta  Kappa, 
but  no  one  is  sure.  One  theory  is  that  a  Greek 
buff,  rejected  from  the  Latin-named  PD.A.,  went 
on  to  help  form  a  rival  -  the  Greek-named  Phi 
Beta  Kappa.  Again,  it's  only  theory.  But  no  mat- 
ter -  the  big  gun  was  about  to  arrive. 


strained  by  the  strict  codes  of  the  college,  and  in 
an  atmosphere  of  conviviality  and  general  good 
times  (not  too  good,  however;  there  was  a  ten- 
shilling  fine  for  intoxication).  For  "a  fraternal 
prosperity."  they  also  decided  to  "invoke  the 
Deity"  at  every  meeting  in  some  manner. 

For  the  sake  of  secrecy  (and  fun),  like  soci- 
eties that  preceded  them,  the  members  developed 
an  oath  of  initiation,  a  motto,  a  member's  medal, 
and  a  secret  handshake  to  bind  them  together  and 
to  assure  their  discussions  would  remain  undis- 
closed. ■       :  ;.- 

On  one  side  of  the  member's  medal  (a 
square  watch  fob.  later  to  evolve  into  a  "key" 
shape)  was  the  founding  date  of  the  brotherhood 
and  the  engraved  letters  SP.  probably  standing 
for  Societas  Phlosophae,  which  many  historians 
think  was  the  name  members  first  referred  to 
themselves  by  and  which  has  been  translated 
either  as  the  Philosophical  Society,  the  Society  of 
Philosophers,  or  the  Science  of  Philosophy, 
among  other  things. 

On  the  medal's  reverse  side  was  pictured  a 
hand  pointing  to  three  stars,  which  symbolized 
the  |hree  guiding  principles  of  literature,  morali- 
ty, and  friendship.  In  the  center  were  the  Greek 
letters  Phi,  Beta,  and  Kappa,  which  were  later 
revealed  to  stand  for  the  group's  motto,  some 
form  of  the  phrase  "Philosophy,  the  guide  of 
life."  (Different  chapters  translated  it  differently 
-  e.g..  "Philosophy  [is]  of  life  the  govemour.") 
Within  several  years  the  fraternity  would  be 
known  by  these  three  letters  exclusively. 

What  made  PBK  different  from  other  liter- 
ary .societies  of  its  day  and  what  places  it  at  the 
foundation  of  Greek  history,  was  a  decision  made 
three  years  after  it  was  founded  to  establish 
branch  chapters  -  to  expand  "to  the  wise  and  vir- 
tuous..of  whatever  country"  -  a  decision  possibly 
arising  from  a  desire  to  help  unite  the  thirteen 
American  States,  then  at  war  with  England.  It 
v/is  this  that  allowed  Phi  Beta  Kappa  to  survive 
the  war.  to  spread  Greekdom  throughout  the 
country,  and  to  continue  to  this  day. 


society  on  campus,  factions  would  compete  for 
power,  and  almost  always  one  would  break  away 
and  start  a  new  society.  The  time  of  most  bitter 
rivalry  was  at  the  beginning  of  the  year,  when 
freshmen  decided  which  society  to  join.  Public 
meetings  ("publics")  would  be  held,  and  orators 
from  both  sides  would  boost  their  own  .society 
while  huriing  "contempt  and  ridicule"  at  the 
other.  Sometimes  it  got  so  crazy  that  school 
would  have  to  stop  for  the  day. 

As  fraternities  developed  after  1825,  they 
too  sought  control  of  the  societies.  This,  in  itself, 
led  to  the  birth  of  several  new  fraternities,  as  stu- 
dents became  more  involved  with  fraternities, 
their  interest  waned  in  the  larger  literary  soci- 
eties, whose  importance  remained  only  at  the 
new  colleges  of  the  South  and  West. 


Ptii  Beta  Kappa,  the  first  modem  frater- 
nity 

On  December  5,  1776,  .six  months  after  the 
Declaration  of  Independence  was  signed,  John 
Heath  and  eight  fellow  students  of  Williams  and 
Mary  gathered  together  in  the  Apollo  Room  of 
Williamsburg's  Raleigh  Tavern  and  took  a  step 
that  would  affect  the  lives  of  six  million  future 
college  students.  Over  a  few  brews  and  dinner, 
and  under  a  motto  painted  on  the  wall,  which 
read  Hilaritas  Spientae  Et  Bonae  Proles  (roughly 
translated.  "Jollity.  Wisdom,  and  a  Long  Good 
Life"),  they  decided  to  form  a  .secret  fellowship 
of  "sincere  friend(s) "  and  "unalienable  Brothers" 
dedicated  to  the  freedom  of  discussion  of  any 
issue  -  moral,  political,  or  philosophical  -  unrc- 


Literary  Societies 

Concurrent  with  the  growth  of  the  fratemi 
ty  was  the  development 
of  general  college  liter- 
ary and  debating  soci- 
eties. Among  the  earliest 
were  the  Plain-Dealing 
and  Well-Meaning  clubs 
at  Princeton  and  the 
Calabogus  and 

Whitefield  clubs  at 
Harvard,  all  in  the 
I750's.  The  American 
Whig  Cliov)phic  Society, 
establishecft  in  1765  at 
Princeton,  pclaims  to  be 
the  oldest  obllege  literary 
and  debatir|g  .society  in 
existence  in  the  worid. 

Although  secret  symbols  '::  , 
and  initiation  rites  were  practiced  by  all.  of 
greater  importance  to  the  students  were  the 
debates  and  readings  of  essays,  which  allowed 
students  to  .sharpen  their  oratorical  skills.  Since 
athletics  were  not  yet  a  part  of  collegiate  life,  the 
orator  was  the  college  hero. 

Usually  each  college  had  two  societies  and 
they  rivaled  each  other  for  the  best  orators,  the 
most  academically  honored  students,  and  the 
biggest  libraries  (some  had  more  books  than  in 
the  college's  library).  When  there  was  only  one 


Jolin  Heotti 


From  Pt)l  Beta  Kappa  to  ttie  Kappa 
Alpl>a  Society 

During  its  first  four  years  at  William  and 
-Mary.  PBK  initiated  about  fifty  members.  But  in 
1781  the  Revolutionary  War  caused  both  the  col- 
lege and  the  fraternity  to  shut  down.  Fortunately. 
PBK  had  formed  its  first  colonies  (other  chap- 
ters) at  Harvard  and  Yale  in  1779  (which 
spawned  another  chapter  at  Dartmouth  in  1787). 
and  these  kept  Greekdom  alive. 

But  the  spirit  of  PBK  changed.  The  newer 
chapters  admitted  faculty  and  graduates,  and  the 
students  lost  control.  Several  chapters  had  no 
secrecy  aspects,  and  the  students  lost  interest, 
seeing  PBK  more  as  a  literary  society  than  a 
secret  brotherhood.  By  the  early  1800s.  when  the 
students  of  Union  College,  a  small,  nondenomi- 
national  college  in  upstate  New  York  requested  a 
chapter.  PBK  had  set  high  standards  for  member- 
ship, and  the  students  at  the  young  college  were 
denied  a  chapter.  They  didn't  like  that. 

The  president  of  Union.  Reverend  Nott. 
was  very  hip  to  students'  needs,  not  like  the 
stuffy  administrators  elsewhere.  He  thought  fra- 
ternities would  be  beneficial  to  student  growth 
outside  the  academic  area.  So.  after  PBK  reject- 
ed charters  in  1803  and  1813.  he  helped  students 
found  Phi  Beta  Gamma,  a  local  society.  But  this 
fraternity,  like  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  which  finally 
placed  a  chapter  at  Union 
in  1817,  was  soon  domi- 
nated by  the  faculty,  too. 
The  students  didn't  like 
that  either.  Modem  frater- 
nities    were     about     to 
arrive. 

During  the  eariy 
1800s  Greek-letter  liter- 
ary groups  had  begun  to 
appear  on  several  cam- 
puses. But,  like  PBK. 
they  were  more  literary 
than  social.  The  "pure" 
society  of  brothers  united 
for  friendship  foremost, 
which  had  begun  with  the 
Flat  Hat  Club,  was  yet  to 
make  a  comeback. 

In  1825.  eight  years  after  PBK  hit  Union, 
nine  students  got  together  and  formed  the  Kappa 
Alpha  Society.  Inspired  by  PBK,  they  too  adopt- 
ed a  Greek  name,  had  a  square  badge,  and  incor- 
porated a  whole  set  of  secret  grips,  signs,  mot- 
toes, and  rituals.  But  they  were  to  differ  in  one 
large  respect:  While  PBK  had  become  a  faculty- 
controlled,  literary  honor  society,  the  KA's  main 


See  History,  page  14 


^.  V-.  :v.',    V 


63%  of  U.S.  Cabinet  members  since  1900  were  Greek. 


-*« 


''%: 


PA  G  El  4     c    200  0     G  1^  f  E  K     G  U  Id  E     A  D  V  i  R  T  I  SING     SUPPLE  MEN  T 


HISTORY 


The  Raleigh  Tavem 


from  page  13 

goals  were  foremost  social.  Their 
main  concern  was  to  stay  a  tight 
brotherhood  of  friends  who  would 
meet  for  good  times.  And  they  did. 
Two  years  later,  other  Union 
students,    liking   what   they   saw. 
formed     their    own     fraternities: 
Sigma  Phi  Society  and  Delta  Phi. 
Greek  history  jiow  refers  to  the.se 
fraternities   as   the.  Union   Triad. 
What  they  did  at  Union  .set  the  pat- 
tern for  the  growth  of  fraternities 
all  over  the  country.  Every  time  a 
fraternity  popped  up  on  a  campus, 
.several  more  would  pop  up  either  to 
rival  it  or  to  emulate  it.  Five  years 
after  its  founding  at  Union,  Delta 
Chi    .set    up   a   chapter   at    nearby 
Hamilton  College.  Two  years  later  - 
presto!    -    Alpha    Delta    Phi    was 
founded      there      to      rival      it. 
Fraternities  were  now  off  and  run- 
ning. ..    ^ 

The  Birth  of  Sororities 


See  History,  page  16 


Sigma  Nu  Fall  Rush 


2000 


IVIONDAY 

Rush  Begins  at  7;00pm 
Dinner-  Formal  Steak  Dinner 
catered  by  Tony  A's 
with  special  alumni  guest  speakers 
(shirt  and  tie  recommended) 

TUESDAY 

Early  Morning  Surf  Trip 
Lunch-  Catered  by  Baja  Fresh 
Come  Meet  Ed  and  sign  up  for 
3-on-3  Basketball  Tournarnent 
Dinner-  Catered  by  CPK 
Notorious  Slide  Show  Presentation 


WEDNESDAY 

Lunch-  Catered  by  Togo's 
Annual  3-on-3  Tournament 
Dinner-  "BIG  WEDNESDAY" 
SURPRISE  DINNER 

THURSDAY 

Early  Morning  Surf  Trip 
Lunch-  Info  Fair  at 
Westwood  Plaza 
Dinner-  Catered  by  Rosti 

FRIDAY 

Lunch-  BBQ  on  the  Sundeck 
With  live  music  and  hoops 


MONDAY 

Dinner-  Catered  by 
Chinese  Cuisine 


TUESDAY 

Dinner-  Catered  by 
Toni  Maroni's  Pizza 


WEDNESDAY 

End  of  Rush  Dinner 
Catered  by  Enzo's 


Rush  Chairmen 

Evan  Grobecker 

Bryce  Dixon 
Brendan  O'Leary 

(310)  208-3251 

The  rir,t  swrity  •!  UCM.  CM  Qmegi^,  vp«  fqun^^  u,  .1,923. 


What  ore  ttw  bamfits 
of  Itvino  in  a  sororily  or 
fraternity  tiouM? 


The  best  thing  cabout  ivir^ 
m  the  house  is  the  fact  ttxjt 
you  »ve  wtth  around  40  of 
you  closest  friends,  it  was 
c*o  tt^  fifst  time  wittxxit 
any  supervision  like  Ry\.s 
and  C.S.04  As  you  can 
imagine,  this  odds  up  to 
some  pretty  crazy  trnes. 

-ScoftDrtggi.  Sigma  CW 


Some  of  ttie  benefits  of  Iv^ 
Ing  in  tt>e  house  ore  ttxjt 
you  ore  living  with  your  best 
frtends.  Thot  meare  rxxv 
stop  partying  24/7  and  8«) 
a.m.  classes  are  not  a  rec*- 
ty.  It's  Just  a  sun  crtnnosphere 
where  \A«  study  hard  oTKl 
party  harder.  I'm  just  Ivin'  la 
vida  loca  baby! 

-  Don  Hoang,  PI  Kappa 
Alpha 


I  ■«  living  in  ttie  house 
because  you  get  dose  to 
people  ttKit  you  normoly 
wouldn't  interoct  with  on  a 
dally  basis... and  It's  really 
ctieapl 

-  Erin  Elt,  D«ita  Gomnxi 


UvlrTg  in  a  fraternity  house 
Increased  my  resistance  to 
dongecous  bacteria.  I've 
lost  oB  sense  of  cleanliness 
end  hove  learned  to  Ive 
with  ottier  8fe  forms.  Besides 
ttxrt,  Iving  In  ttie  house  for 
the  past  two  years  has 
been  ftie  tDost  memorable 
S'qaerlerce  of  my  We. 
Twenty  years  from  now,  tt\e 
ant&  maggots  and  putrtd 
post-party  odors  wl  be  a 
dbtant  memory,  but  I'l 
remember  an  ttxMe  who 
shared  Slo  Ep  as  a  home 
with  me  Ire  It  WC8  yester- 
doy. 

-Bnfon  Hoang,  Sigma  W 
^Mlon 


2  0  0  0     GREEK     GUIDE     ADVERTISING     SUPPLEMENT     .  '  R  A  G  E     1  5 


Fall  Riish 


645  Landfair  Ave. 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 


Monday,  September  25 
7:30pm-  Dessert  by  Oiddy  Riese  Cookies 
followed  by  ping  pong  and  foosball  with  the  bros 

Tuesday,  September  26 

1 2:30pm-  BBQ  ond  Footbal  at  the  beach 
10:00pm- Broomboll 

Wednesday,  September  27 

5:3ppm-  Go  to  Dodger  Stodium  for 
Dodgers  vs.  SF  Giants 

Thursday,  September  28 

ZjOOpm-  Dinner  with  the  ladies  of  USC's 
Alpha  Phi 

Friday,  September  29 

Rush  suspended-  Join  brothers  of  the  house 
at  Hillel  services 

Saturday,  September  30 
7:00pm-  Dinner  by  Subway  ond 
entertainment  by  a  speciol  guest  hypnotist 

Sunday,  October  1 

7:00pm-  Dinner  by  In-N-Out  and  a  live 
comedian 

AAonday,  October  2 

7:00pm-  Dinner  by  Bojo  Fresh  and  live 
MoriocniBand 

Tuesday,  October  3 

7:00pm-  Dinner  by  Tony  Roma's  and 
alumni  speaker 

Wednesday,  October  4 
6:00pm-  BB6  ond  Hoops  toumement 


"W 


Interested  in  becoming  an  Asian  Greek? 


da  Phi  Epsfton  fmt*3mt^;  mnroj;f?pt  tf>n  A<^i^n.am,;-.n,-i,v 


jcar4  ef . 


\ 


MoHltml 
Rush  Party 

Mon.,  Stpt  25. 

6pm 

JtMnVt* 

broVwnfor 

dtnnar  and  May 

aftarwardiaa 

th«  ckMii  opan 

for 
"QanaoMn*' 


CM  Alpha 
D*Na  Social 

Tuts.  Stpt  26. 

6pm 

Hang  out  wtSi  iha 

brothart  as  «w  eat 

a  calarad  dmnar 

andhaadoul 

togathar  10  maal 

Iha  Mtat  o(  on«  of 

our  (ialar  sorontiea, 

CN  Alpha  Datia 


Sports  Day/ 

HouM  Party 

BBQ 

Thurs.  Stpl  28. 

W»d.  S«pf  27. 

7pm 

1pm 

Meat  the  brothan 

Come  out  to  the 

Iromalof 

parti  lor  some 

Southern 

t>a«(alball. 

CaMomia  ««han 

taolba*  and  a>\|oy 

we  head  out  lo  a 

aaao 

house  pany 

thrown  by  UC 

■  ■  ■  ; 

,-         V 

UmMiPhi 
EpaHon. 

Alpha  Kappa  Oatta 
Phi  Social 

S*t.  SapMmb0r  X. 

7pm 

EtmS  tfte  week  ninth  the 

brottiefs  as  we  attarw) 

a  daaaan  aasston  haM 

byVtaladtosoltx: 

trvtrwandUC 

Riversida  Alpha  Kappa 

Delta  Phi 


For  nrxxe  iofo 

Brian  (3tO)  994  5465 

brtanwonnbtv-jty  mw^ 


"  AH  events  are  nWC 
to  ruahees  and  rtdes 

are  provided  30 
minutes  pnor  to  each 

event  at  Sproul 
tumarour<d. 


httpJ/www.ucMambdas.com 


4»«« 


m-     '   ^  ^ 


•r,  t^^.Hf  «^t^*'i^.u|N, 


C 


'nJnIocMng  the 
Mystery" 

imoNiH 
Sur>day.  Sapiambar  24. 

e-apm 

Buarwa  Aires  Room, 

Sunai  Racf  anon 

Canter 

Coma  meat  Vm  aMars 

o(  XAA  at  y«ur  magical 


"A  Magical  Escapad*" 

Oinr>ef  S  Social 

Tuesday,  September  26. 

6pm- 1am 

Join  Iha  oldest  Asian  Amartcan 

swortty  m  the  nation  at  alumnls 

raaWaooe   itien  dance  the  mjM 

•wy  iMth  Soulhem  CaMomla  s 

Aalan  Oraak  Fratamllies 


"A  Startn  Affair 

Luau 

TtMirsday.  Septembet  28. 

6-9pm 

Buertos  Aires  Room. 

Sunaat  Recreation  Center 

Anotiar  warm  summer 

mght  ol  fun. 


'XAA 

iRusfi2000 
ofC/us 


''Wiarting  Upon  A 
Star" 

Garden  Party 

Saturday.  September  30 

11:30arn-3pm 

Place:  TBA 

CofTvMe  your  magical 

Vi  a  garden  party 

lunch 


"A  Walk 

Through  the 

Clouds" 

Mon.  Sept.  25 

3PIMa  Buenos 

Aires  Room 

(SunaalRec 

Center) 

Come  and  meet 

the  ladws  ol  eK« 


"Watooms  to  Paradise" 

Wed,  Sept  27 

2  PM  e  Buenos  Aires  Room 

(Sunset  Rec  Center) 

Leam  more  about  Theta  iradilKxis 

and  activities  (dress  comfortably) 


"MysUcal  Nights" 

Fn .  Sept.  29 

7  PM  e  Four  Points  Hotel 

e  LAX 

Diner  with  the  Theta 

Sisters  followed  by  a  night 

of  dancing  (dress  lo 

impress) 


!Husfi2000 

Imagine... 

'Dream  It,  See  It, 

'Believe  It 


"Enchanted  Garden" 

11am-2pm  e  TBA 

A  Sunday  Brunch  with  the  sisters  ol 

Ttiela  Kappa  Phi  (dress  in  your 

Sunday  Best) 


For  more  inlormntion  cnll  Chnniga 

208-9924  or  Lien  (310)  592-8740 


founded  m  IVM  by  M»rgare(  Ohara  Inouye  Thrta 
Kappa  Phi  conUnu^«  lo  f*pfe»*ni  thf  ideals  upon 
wtitch  It  WM  founded  ustcrttood  acholarttiip  and 
»efvice  The  titter*  ol  Theta  Kappa  Ph.  wouW  Mic  to 
tnwiiB  you  to  our  4  f  anrHiat  ru* 


^fiZOOO 


■  CMa 

■•FMtle 


For  info  or  ■  ride  caH:  Irene  (310)  2083356 1 
orNikKiOlO)  «78  5751 


2000  iRusfi  Sc/iedule 


4:00  PM  September  24th.  2000  ■  Basi^etball/lntro 

4:00  PM  September  25th.  2000  -  BBQ 

6:00  PM  September  26th.  2000  -  Chi  Alpha  Delta  Social 

6:00  PM  September  27th.  2000  -  Dining  Out         .    . 

6.00  PM  Sepfember  281/1,  2000  -  Omega  Nite 

6:00  PM  September  29th.  2000  -  Theta  Kappa  Phi  Social 

6X)0  PM  September  30th.  2000  •  POST  RUSH  PARTY 

6:00  PM  October  1st.  2000  ■  Post  Rush  Meeting 


Onii<o«  Sigma  Tan  was  (cxiiKlPri  in  (lii-  year  1966  as  tite 
(ir$l  Asian  Americaii  Fraleniily  at  UCLA  Inspired  by 
our  basic  Meets  ol  BroUiwtiood.  Clais,  Divcisiiy  and 
Encellence.  wc  have  kxind  a  way  to  eioel  in  all  realms 
ol  life.  Irom  academically  to  socially  while  Mding  inie 
10  lis  original  purpose  of  providing  brotherhood  and 
Iri^ndSlnp  III  sn  dten  impersonal  university 


f  ol  mult,-  Ml 

Mir-v  Tm 


Al  svenis  meal  al  Via  BRtJIN  BEAR  by  ACKERMAN  UNK>NIII 

Rioes  vwa  be  providedh 


'J.4i.i'|rn,il,iij  r  I 


UCLA'f  fint  fraternity  for  gay  men.  Delta  Lambdii  Phi,  was  founded  in  1989. 


'  r.  .       ..    1  ',- 


■^ 


20  00    Q  R  rtk    Gill  DE 


A  D  VE  RTI  S  I  N^ 


S  U  PPL  E M  E  N  T     •     PAGE     16 


2  0  0  0     G  I?  E  E  K     G  U  I  D  E     A  D  V  E  R  T  I  S  I  N  G     S  U  P  P  L  E  MEN  T     •     P  AGE     17 


HISTORY 


The  Alplto  Phi  Building  at  Northwestern  University,  the  first  ever  house  built  exclusive  for  the  pur- 
pose of  housing  o  sorority. 


from  page  14 

America's  earliest  colleges  were 
all-male.  The  prevailing  attitude  was 
like  the  Virginia  Slims  ad  showing  a 
girl  sneaking  a  cigarette:  Higher  educa- 
tion, like  smoking,  was  something  nice 
girls  shouldn't  be  partaking  of.  But 
times  changed,  and  in  1836  Georgia 
Female  College  was  founded.  Now 
called  Georgia  Wesleyan  at  Macon,  it  is 
the  oldest  women's  college  in  the  world. 
A  year  later,  OberlTh  was  the  first  col- 
lege to  go  coed. 

It  was  here,  at  Georgia  Wesleyan, 
in  1 85 1  -  75  years  after  Phi  Beta  Kappa, 
25  years  after  the  Union  Triad,  and  15 
years  after  the  college's  founding  -  that 
women,  following  the  men's  example, 
first  produced  "secret  sisterhoods  "  The 
first  was  the  Adelphian,  founded  by 
nineteen  women  in  1851.  The  .second 
was  its  rival,  the  Philamathean,  founded 
by  three  women  in  1 852.  Both  were  pri- 
marily literary  societies. 

Like  men's  frats,  the  two  sLstier- 
hoods  each  had  rituals  and  mottoes  and 


See  History,  page  18 


Monday  9/25 

7:00  pm-  Baja  Fresh 

Tuesday  9/26 

12:00  pm-  Subway 

5:00  pm-  Steak  and  Shrimp-  Formal 

Wednesday  9/27 

12:00  pm- Poolslde  BBO 

5:00  pm-  IN-N-OUT 

Thursday  9/28 

5:00  pm-  Wahoos  Fish  Tacos 

Friday  9/29 

12:00  pm- logos  Sandwiches 

5:00  pm-  Olive  Garden 

Monday  10/2 

5:00  pm-  Shakeys 

Tuesday  1 0/3 

5:00  pm-  Poolside  BBQ 

Wednesday  10/4  :-- 

5:00  pm- Tacos 


All  rush  events  are  dry.  For  more  info  contact  Rush 
Chairs  Chris  Caulfleld  or  Mike  Relcher  at  208-9999. 


The  Greek  Alphal»el  ha^  24  letters,  two  lens  than  the  EngHsh  alphahel. 


WiMt  wos  your  most 
embomissing  Oreek 
txperlence? 


My  focst  emboirassInQ 
experience  v>A3S  at 
Posefclon  Man  2000  when  I 
went  on  stage  wearing  orrfy 
a  sock...lt  was  pretty  funny 
at  tfe  time  but  kxjWng 
bock  on  it  now  I  won't  be 
able  to  ajn  for  any  poWkxi 
offteel 

-  Pvtor  Spragg.  Phi  M 


'Triangle 
Fraternity 


On  my  way  out  tor  a  night 
on  ttie  town,  I  packed  ihe 
essentte*  Mce  I.D.,  credtt 
card,  etc.  After  a  night  of 
partying  wrfh  my  gWs,  I 
closed  out  my  tab  with 
wtxat  I  ftxxight  was  a  credit 
card,  not  reafeing  ttie  bar- 
tender ran  it  once  and  it 
was  declried  -  it  was  my 
Vtons  ckjb  card. 

-  Heather  Cose,  Kappa 
Kappa  Gommo 


ft  was  my  fresfTrrxan  year  on 
my  first  fooftxill  fratemfty 
bus  I'd  ever  been  on  arxl  I 
had  to  pee  reciy  bacSy.  I 
was  sifting  next  to  ttiis  girt  I 
had  just  met  but  reciy  iced 
and  ttie  bus  ride  was  reoSy 
bumpy.  I  was  so  desperate 
end  I  had  no  ottier  option 
but  to  pee  in  on  empty 
beer  can.  f^eedless  to  scry, 
ttxit  was  wften  ft*  gW  fei  In 
bvel 

-  Ernie  Uu,  Beta  Th«»a  PI 


Late  or»  nic^  after  my 
roomnrK3te$  and  >  had 
oireody  gone  Jo  bed,  w© 
were  owoltened  by  louc} 
rK)ises  coming  from  ou  wfcv 
dow.  Wb  dragged  our- 
sefves  out  of  bed  and  went 
out  on  our  bcfcony  onfy  to 
And  a  group  of  f^otemfty 
boys  ready  and  waiting  to 
nal  us  with  a  box  of  wafer 
bdoons.  Five  minutes  latef 
we  were  five  wet  and 
gnjnnpy  gifb  sfCTKJng  ffieie 
In  ou  underweor 

•  Ndlato  HalgM.  DeMa 
Gamma 


BETA  THETA  PI 


Mon9/25 

lues  9/26 

Wed  9/27 

• 

Guest  Speaker 

Kings  Gome 

Infamous 

Jolm  Anderson 

vs. 

Beta 

of  the  Anderson 

Phoenix 

Sride  Skew 

School  of 

« 

,. 

Manogement 

Thurs  9/28 


Dodger  Gome 

vs. 
San  Francisco 


Mon  10/2 


Monday  Night 
Footboll 

on  the 
Big  Screen 


TueslO/3 


Beta  Bosketboil 

& 

BBQ 


Wed  10/4 


Beto 
Countdown 


The  Beta  Chateaux  is  located  of  581  Gayley 
For  More  Information  Contact: 


All  Rush  Events  are  Dry 


Jeremy  Kollitz:  jmkollitz@msn.com 
(310)443-5651 


At  the  time  of  its  release,  the  movie  Animal  Home  was  the  highest-grossing  comedy  of  aU  time. 


PAGE     18     ^2000     GREE  K    O^^  V  E  R  T  I  S  1  N  G     SUP  PL  EM  EN  T 


HISTORY 


One  of  the  only  known  pictures  of  Wesleyon  Univereity  os  it  was  ot  ttie  time  of  the  founding  of  the 
first  sororities.  The  gate  was  donated  by  Phi  Mu. 


from  page  16 

the  like,  but  unlilce  men's  frats.  they  had 
no  desire  to  form  sister  chapters  at  other 
colleges.  (When  each  finally  did  decide 
to  "go  national"  50  years  later  in  the 
early  1900s.  they  changed  their  names 
to  Alpha  Delta  Pi  and  Phi  Mu,  respec- 
tively.) 

In  1867,  16  years  after  these  two 
sisterhoods  were  formed,  a  women's 
society  called  the  l.C.  Sorori.s  was 
founded  at  Monmouth  College  in 
Illinois.  Patterning  iiself  directly  after 
men's  fraternities,  its  members  chose  to 
colonize  other  chapters  from  the  start, 
so  many  consider  this  the  first 
"women's  fraternity."  (But  it  wasn't 
until  21  years  later  that  it  became  a 
Greek-letter  organization  -  when  it 
finally  changed  its  name  to  its  founding 
motto.  "Pi  Beta  Phi.") 

Meanwhile,  in  1870  three  years 
after  l.C.  Sororis  began,  the  first 
women's  fraternities  with  Greek-letter 
names  were  formed.  Kappa  Alpha 
Theta  was  the  first,  founded  at  DePauw 


See  History,  page  18 


ALPHA         TAU         OMEGA         FRATERNITY 


ALPHA  lAU  OMEGA  FRATERNITY 


^DOMINATE 

WITH 

DIFFERENCE 


BE  PART  OF  A  NEW  TRADITION  AT  UCLA 
WE  WILL  BE  RECRUITING  OCTOBER  5-16 

CALL  1-800-798-9ATO  EXT.  141 

ORVISITUSATWWWATO.ORG 
FOR  MORE  INFORMATION 


•ATO  WAS  FOUNDED  IN  1865  AT  THE  VIRGINIA  MILITARY  iNSTITlTTi  WITH  A  SINGLE  PURPOSE:  TO  REUNITE 
THE  MEN  OF  THE  NORTH  AND  SoUTH  FOLLOWING  THE  AMERICAN  CiVIL  WaR  •  ATO  WAS  THE  FIRST  TO  BE 
FOUNDED  AS  A  NATIONAL  FRATERNITY  AND  WAS  NOT  FORMED  IN  IMITATION  OR  OPPOSITION  TO  ANY  OTHER 
f^l^'^^ATr?'^"''  "^  PRINCIPLES  OF  THE  FRATERNITY  ARE  ChRISTIAN'RASED,  PROMOTING  BROTHERLY 

LOVE.  .ATO  ANNUALLY  RANKS  AMONG  THE  TOP  TEN  NATIONAL  FRATERNITIES  FOR  NUMBER  OF  CHATTERS  AND 
TOTAL  NUMBER  OF  MEMBERS  -ATO  HAS  MORE  THAN  146  CHAFTERS  AND  MORE  THAN  180,000  MEMBEW 
NATIONWIDE    -ATO  IS  THE  FOUNDER  OF  THE  LEADERShaPE  INSTITUTE,  THE  NUMBER  ONE  XiL^DU^ 

Jl^i^AT'  '"'^'^  ""  ™'  ^^™^  '^"^O  ^^'^^  °^>^  ^350,000  IN  SCHOIARSHIPS  A^D^^ 
EACH  YEAR  TO  UNDERGRADUATE  MEMBERS  v.iwum  i» 


83%  W 


Covrt  Jmtiees  since  1800  were  Greek. 


Wtet  wot  your  most 
immoroMo  Oftok 
oxp«rl«iico7 


My  most  memorable 
Greek  experience  would 
hove  to  be  Mexico  tfiree 
times  in  one  year,  which 
was  mode  possible  thanks 
to  the  opportunities  pro- 
vkied  by  the  Greek 
System. 

•  Erin  Undhokn.  D«lla  0«ila 


My  most  memorable 
experience  was  waking 
up  in  the  driver's  s«at  of 
a  UCLA  food  service  van 
ir>  frortt  of  Oykjtro  Hall 
after  a  Wg  nfght  of  por- 
tylng  with  my  fraternity 
brott>ersl 

•  Bret  Pursuit.  PM  Pti 


The  ci-Greek  sW  trip  my 
freshman  year  seeing  Rurv 
DMC.incorK»rtl 

-MkeMalM.90maCN 


The  most  memorable 
sorority  experience 
would  be  with  my 
pledge  class  freshman 
year  when  fi^n  of  us 
Jumped  kito  art  SOV  lim- 
ousine fHiecl  wtth  o 
bunch  of  wonnctoe 
octon  off  of  Sunset  Wvd. 
We  hod  on  omozb^ 
n^jht  on  the  town  gotoQ 
from  o  fun  bar  ia<e 
Dublins  to  a  mansion  In 
Hollywood  Hills  and 
bock  to  Dykstro  Holt.  It 
was  o  wild  ri\^i  of  crazy 
freshmen  funi 

-  tori  tomes.  DeMo  Delta 
Detta 


2  0  0  0     G  P  E  E  k    G  U  I  D  E     A  D  V  E  R  T  I  S  I  N  G     S  U  P  P  L  E  M  E  N  T   'i^  E     1  9 


RUSH 
SIGMA  CHI 


7pm 


6pm 


1  2pm 
6pm 


"Formal"  Steak  and  Shrimp 
dinner 

Award-winning  rush  video 
to  follow 


In  'n'  Out  Burger 

"Big  Balls"  dodgeball  tournament  to 
follow 

World  Famous  Sak's  Ter  iyaki 

Pool  TournarTient  to  follow 


3  on  3  basketball  tournament 
starring  low  post  powerhouse  Tony 
Castillo 
Barbecue 

Baja  Fresh  w/  Sigma  Chi  Alumni 


IFC  Athletics  Champions 

1 997,  1 998,  1 999,  2000 

I  want 
mj/^MTV* 

All  events  meet 
at  the  house: 

459  Gay  ley  Ave. 

(top  of  fraternity  row) 

ALL  RUSH  EVENTS  ARE  DRY 


-.  Panda  Express 

Opm  Ping  Pong  tournament  featuring  3  time 

World  Champion  &  Sigma  Cfii  Kyobin  Koo 


m       El  Polio  Loco 
6pm        Popeye's  Chicken 


6pm        Carl's  Jr. 


6pm        Fat  Burger 


*Sigma  Chi  has  been  chosen  to  be 
featured  on  an  MTV  series  on  fraternities 


RUSH  ENDS  AT  S.OOpm 


UCLA'S  FIRST  PRATERNITV 


\ 


day  9/: 
7:00am  Surf  Trip 


Recognized  as  the  #1  Chapter  in  the  Nation 

Wednesday  9/27 


7:00  DInntr  by 

&Z«£^e^.>..     12:00 

5:00  Dinntr  by 


5:30  Dlnn«r  by 


O(U/e0^ 


•^1  ~nt>  Wi^-wftiaiiiw.iJWdiiiiB 


7:30  Pool  and 
Cigara  In  tha 


<4*^* 


7:00  Sigma  Pi 

"Gone  Wild- 
Rush  Video 


*  TASTI  lO  q«? 

tn  m  oim  MAM«~ 


7:00  Evant 

9906$ 

Baaketball 
.,  Tournamsnt 


en  our  full.  IN  ceun 
(»fll«lot  1npl»c«) 


Thursday  9/28 

3:00  Football 

Practica 

By  Chef  Rubin 
7:00  yegas  :hfigfit 

Ho«i*d  by 
Fantaay  Caaino 


5:30 


•■>• 


EJUIiUZZi 

8:00am  Breakfaat 
6:30  OInnar  by 

(♦FAMOUS  FOR  lUBS')' 

with  Live  Band 
Performance 


Monday  10/2 

6:00  PM 

Dinner 
Meet  Ron  Jeremy 

Tuesday  10/2 
5:00  PIM 

Lost  Chance 


iBp 


IS\  T  FOAM  PAKr\ 


FALL  RUSH  2000 

Notet  An  ruth  ewenti  ore  dry 


I  (.r  \r 


liitorni;itioii: 

lii):  (.<l(ti  44,<.')'».M 
II:     i.'IOi  .<5I  0(l<*.« 


ilraUimore  Avf. 
Giyley  Ave. 


B»li 


liiiif oiiif'  liM@/» 


Nationwide,,  Greek  graduation  rates  exceed  those  of  non-Greeks. 


:.  ■•■■■->.  ^:- 


PAGE     20     •2  000    G  R  E  E  K    G  U  ID  E    A  D  V  FR^ 


HISTORY 


from  page  16        ■ 

in  Illinois,  and  Kappa  Kappa  Gamma  came 
three  months  later  at  Monmouth. 

An  interesting  sidelight  is  that  the 
woman  who  was  the  force  behind  forming 
Kappa  Alpha  Theta  was  first  offered  token 
membership  in  Fiji,  which  her  brother 
belonged  to  on  campus.  She  demanded  full 
membership,  but  in.stead  got  a  silver  cake  bas- 
ket as  a  compromise.  Her  father,  a  Beta,  then- 
suggested  she  start  her  own  group.  So  she  did 
-  the  Thetas.  The  Fijis  and  the  Thetas  are  now 
considered  brother  and  sister  societies  on  a 
national  basis. 

The  20lho  Century 

The  expansion  of  the  fraternity  system 
did  not  stop  at  the  beginning  of  the  20the  cen- 
tury. More  than  25  national  fraternities  have 
been  founded  since  1900,  several  of  which 
are  well  known  including  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon 
(1901);  Alpha  Gamma  Rho  (1906);  Lambda 
Chi  Alpha  (1909);  Sigma  Alpha  Mu  (1909); 
Alpha  Epsilon  Pi  (1913);  and  Sigma  Tau 
Gamma  (1920). 

.It  was  during  the  early  years  of  the  cen- 
tury that  the  interfratemity  movement  began. 
Representatives  from  seven  sororities  met  in 


Chicago  in  1902  and  founded  the  National 
Panhellenic  Conference.  In  1909  representa- 
tives of  26  fraternities,  including  Delta  Sigma 
Phi,  met  at  the  University  Club  in  New  York 
City  and  founded  the  National  Interfratemity 
Conference. 

The  wide  extent  of  the  collegiate 
Greek-letter  fraternity  system  may  not  be 
readily  reahzed  by  an  observer  whose  per- 
spective is  ba.sed  only  on  his  own  campus 
organizations.  There  are  fraternities  at  more 
than  600  colleges  across  the  United  States  and 
Canada,  approximately  half  a  million  under- 
graduate members,  and  several  million  grad- 
uate members.  There  are  almost  60  national 
fratemitie.s  and  nearly  30  national  sororities. 

The  fraternity  system  in  the  Unites 
States  and  Canada  has  weathered  many 
storms  since  its  founding.  Opposition 
amounting  to  outright  hostility  failed  to  daunt 
it  in  its  youth,  and  worid  wars  and  depression 
have  failed  to  kill  it  since  its  maturity.  It  has 
.sometimes  been  sharply  criticized,  even  by 
its  friends,  but  has  exhibited  the  vitality  of  a 
system  which  fills  a  basic  human  need.  As 
long  as  fraternities  continue  to  serve  the  spe- 
cific purposes  for  which  they  were  founded, 
and  as  long  as  they  remain  .sensitive  to  the 
realities  of  campus  life,  they  will  continue  to 
serve  students,  colleges,  and  our  nations 
well. 


-*,.-»-:«^' 


2  000     GREEK     GUIDE     ADVERTISING     SUPPLEMEN  Tip  A  G  E     21 


UCLA  Students  continue  to  mointoin  ttie  centuries-old  Greelt  tradition  on  into  ttie  21st 
century. 


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Formal  Dinnar  ty  ranownad 
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CONTACT  DUR  RUSH 

CHAIRMEN 
PABLO  FUENTES-FILP 

443-0623 


Vssed 
the 

Daily  Bruin] 
over  the 
^ummerti 


SCOTT  LID5TER 

B24-5742 

ALL  EVENTS  AT  DUR  HOUSE 
AT 

655GAYLEY 

UNLESS  OTHERWISE  SPECIFIED 


Monday,  September  25th 

Greek  Orientation  Fair  (8>  Bruin 

Plaza®  l2-3pm 

Baskin  Robin's  Ice  Cream  @  House  .  '■'   ' . 

@  7pm  followed  by  •    . 

Infamous  Slide  Show 

Tuesday,  September  26th 

Surf  Trip  to  Silver 

StreetA'cntura  ®  7am 

Open  House  1 2-6pm 

Lunch  provided  by  I  n-N-Out  ' 

Paintball  @  Ipm  >. 

Formal  Sushi/Steak  Dinner  9  6pm 

Wednesday,  September  27th 

Surf  Trip  to  Malibu  @  7am 

Open  House  1 2-6pm  A 

Lunch  provided  by  Baja  Fresh 

Bus  to  Dodger  vs.  Giants  game  - 

Meet  @  House  @  5pm 


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Surf  Trip  to  El  Porto  @  7am 
Chin  Chin's  Dinner  @  6pm 
followed  by  World  Famous  Hypnotist 

Friday,  September  29th 

All  Day  BBQ.  volleyball,  baskeiball. 
ping  pong  games 
Starting  9  1 1 -6pm  along 
w/  ASU  Smash  &  Bash 


Surf  Trip  to  County  Line  @  7am 

Breakfast  0  House  9-1  lam 

Formal  Dinner  provided  by 

Rosii's  @  5pm  . 

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Surf  Trip  to  Point  Dumc  9  7am 
Breakfast  «»  House  9-llam 
Dinner  provided  by  Saks 
Japanese  Teriyaki  9  House  @  .Spm 
Followed  by  pig  wrestling 

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SurfTrip  (o  Manhattan  Beach  @  7am 
Breakfast  6»  House  9- 1 1  am 
Dinner  provided  by  La  Pizzeria  e»  6pm 
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to  advertise  call 
825-2161 


Kappa  Alpha  Pm,  founded  in  1923,  was  the  first  African- American  fraternity  at  UCLA. 


lil'-l    »H    iiui 


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PAGE     2  2     .     20  0  0    G  R  E  E  K    611  f  b  I    /^  D  V  E  R  T  I  S  I 


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2000     GREEK     GU  ID  E     AD  VERT  IS  I  N  G     S  UPPlEhA  E  N  T     •     P 


AGE     23 


A     PORTRAIT     OF    FRATERNI  T  I  e«     A  N  D     S  6  R  OR  III  E  S     A  T    U  C  I  A 


Clockwise  from  Top  Right: 

1.  4-way  exchanges  are  common  way  in  which  fraternities  and 
sororities  gather  to  socialize. 

2.  A  Halloween  party  at  Sigma  Pi.     ^ 

3.  A  recent  concert  given  by  Def  Leppard  at  Zeta  Beta  Tau. 

4.  Greek  leaders  at  the  annual  fraternity  and  sorority  leadership 
■■:      retreat.    -;^. ■;■■••  ';.:••;,;•;;.:    ;,■•;•  .v,,..  ;..-,  -■,•/•-:•■■■•-;'.:■.■■;-   ■•,'-,::■•••"-.:'■,■. 

5.  A  performance  sponsored  by  the  National  Pan-Hellenic  Council. 

6.  A  Panhellenic  sorority  Philanthropy  event.  •    -. 
.7.  Actors  David  Spade  and  Chris  Farley  appear  at  Pi  Kappa  Alpha 

during  the  promotional  tour  for  "Black  Sheep". 


<^^ 


The  only  president  this  century  who  was  not  in  a  fraternity  was  Harry  S  Truman,  who  did  not  attend  coUege. 


■■■;  •/:/;-'•  : 


'.*' 


PAGE     24    V    2000    VrVe  K    B  lit  dI    AD  VERT  |  SIN 


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Forum  for  readers'  views 
novy  open  for  business 


VIEWPOINT:  SecUon  staff 
eagerly  anticipates  input 
from  UCLA  community 

Welcome  to  the  Viewpoint 
section.  In  this  section, 
almost  anything  goes.  You 
will  read  everything  from  serious 
political  debates  and  social  topics,  to 
satire,  comedy  and  insights  on  dat- 
ing. The  diversi- 
ty of  issues  and 
ideas  discussed 
within  this  sec- 
tion is  what 
makes 

Viewpoint  so 
interesting  and 
for  many,  sim- 
ply irresistible. 
More  impor- 
tantly, our  goal 
is  to  develop  a 
section  that 
reflects  the 
diversity  of  the  campus  community. 

You  may  open  the  section  one 
day,  read  a  column,  and  crumple  up 
the  paper  in  anger  at  what  was  said. 
Another  day,  your  eyes  may  be 

Lalas  is  a  third-year  international  devel- 
opment studies  and  political  science 
nnajor.  He  is  the  Viewpoint  editor  for  the 
2000-2001  year.  E-mail  him  at 
jlalas@media.ucla.edu 


scrolling  down  the  page  in  complete 
awe  at  of  what  the  writer  is  saying. 
Other  times,  an  article  may  compel 
you  to  submit  your  own  piece  to 
Viewpoint  because  you  have  some- 
thing to  offer  or  your  fmgers  are 
itching  to  type  up  a  response. 
Clearly,  the  possibilities  are  endless. 

It  is  important  to  understand  that 
unlike  other  sections  in  the  Daily 
Bruin,  Viewpoint  does  not  belong  to 
a  group  of  staffed  writers  with 
assignments;  rather,  it  belongs  to 
you,  the  reader.  There  are  three 
main  aspects  to  the  Viewpoint  sec- 
tion: editorials,  submissions  and 
columnists. 

Every  week  in  Viewpoint,  you  will 
Hnd  the  Daily  Bruin  editorials.  This 
is  the  opinion  of  the  editorial  board 
that  will  focus  on  important  current 
issues.  Notably,  this  quarter  we  will 
be  covering  the  elections.  Look  for  a 
series  of  debates  and  editorials 
regarding  the  candidates,  proposi- 
tions, and  other  political  issues. 

During  the  spring  quarter,  we  will 
be  covering  student  government 
elections.  This  is  especially  impor- 
tant for  you  as  a  UCLA  student 
because  the  young  individuals  elect- 
ed will  definitely  impact  you. 

The  second  main  part  of 
Viewpoint  arc  the  submissions.  The 
section  acts  as  a  forum  where  stu- 
dents can  debate  issues  and  respond 

.    .     •  See LAUS, pages 


Jl\,^^  •    -JT*    "— — ■ 

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Presidential      V/ 

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jGORE:  Democratic  Party  on  the  right  side  of  the 
important  issues,  unlike  the  rival  Republicans 


MICHAEL  SHAW/Daily  Brum 


It  is  popular  these  days  to 
claim  that  there  is  no  differ- 
ence between  the  two  major 
American  political  parties. 
While  such  a  statement  makes  a 
good  sound 
bite,  it  is  far 
from  the 
truth.  To  say 
that  there  is 
no  differ- 
ence 

between  the 
two  parties 
is  to  espouse 
that  there  is 
no  differ- 
ence 

between  a 
Democratic 
Party  that  favors  universal  health 

Ho  is  the  President  of  the  Bruin 
Democrats.  She  encourages  you  to 
keep  hope  alive  and  vote  on 
November  7th.  E-mail  her  at 
melanieh@ucia.«du. 


care,  environmental  protection, 
and  a  higher  minimum  wage  and 
a  Republican  Party  whose  words 
and  actions  show  the  exact  oppo- 
site ideals. 

To  say  that  there  is  no  differ- 
ence between  the  two  parties  is 
to  assert  that  issues  like  gun  con- 
trol legislation,  public  education, 
civil  rights,  and  affirmative 
action  are  of  no  importance.  To 
say  that  there  is  no  difference 
between  the  two  parties  is  to  say 
that  the  lives  of  the  people  who 
are  affected  by  such  issues  are  of 
no  importance. 

Sounds  like  a  big  difference  to 
me.  In  today's  media-based  soci- 
ety, politics  is  portrayed  as  mere- 
ly an  abundance  of  red,  white, 
and  blue  balloons  and  talking 
heads  telling  you  who  is  ahead  in 
the  polls  and  whose  tie  better 
matched  his  suit.  Sure,  both  par- 
ties throw  the  same  color  confet- 

SccllO,pa9e28 


BUSH:  Republican  Party  candidate  will  fight  to  save 
your  future  with  Social  Security  overhaul,  reform 


In  this  year's  upcoming  presiden- 
tial election,  the  race  will  come 
down  to  a  very  simple  question: 
"Do  I  know  who  I  am  voting  for?" 
The  answer,  at  least  at  this  still-early 
juncture  of  the 
race,  is  a 
resounding 
"No." 

Voters  have 
thus  far  been  eas- 
Jly  seduced  by 
image  over  reali- 
ty, and  promise 
over  history. 
Thus,  we  have 
reached  the  situ- 
ation in  which  Al 
Bore  enjoys  a 
moderate  to 

strong  lead  in  the  presidential  race 
over  the  fresh  face  and  fresh  ideas  of 

We  have  seen  the  enemy  -  and  he 
hails  from  Tennessee.  Contact  Andrew 
Jortes  at  rffan34#ucla.edu. 


Andrew 
Jones 


George  W.  Bush. 

In  every  facet  of  the  race.  Bush  is 
the  stronger  candidate,  but  through 
some  perverted  "new  math."  all  of 
these  positives  somehow  add  up  to  a 
negative.  Rather  than  immediately 
detail  the  reasons  why  Al  Gore 
should  not,  and  must  not,  be  the  next 
president  of  the  United  States,  per- 
haps it  is  more  instructive  to  examine 
why  George  W.  Bush  is  the  man  to 
blaze  a  path  out  of  Clinton's  Garden 
of  Iniquity. 

Social  Security,  traditionally  the 
third  rail  of  American  politics,  is  for 
the  first  time  in  decades  a  topic  of 
serious  discussion.  Gore's  slogan 
promises  to  "preserve"  Social 
Security  in  its  current  form,  when 
what  the  program  really  needs  is  at 
least  a  bold  revision.  What  Social 
Security  really  needs  is  a  complete 
overhaul,  but  Bush,  no  dummy,  real- 
izes that  the  voters,  bloated  by 

SccJ0IKS^pagc27 


MKHAtL  SHAW/CMy  Brum 


NADER:  Green  party  candidate  offers  alternative  to  major  party 
nominees,  who  share  ideologies  as  well  as  corporate  funding 


H»<tG-Y1  KHON(i'D»it»  Brum 


Because  Gore  and  Bush  are  full  of 
crap."  I  was  thinking  of  how  I  would 
respond  to  someone  asking  me  why  he 
should  vote  for  Ralph  Nader,  this  year's 
Green  Party  candidate,  and  that  was  really 
the  first  thing  that  came 
to  mind.  See,  I've  been 
reading  up  on  the  two 
big-party  candidates  and 
came  across  so  much 
rhetoric  and  promises 
that  it's  absurd.  You 
read  what  they  say.  and 
you  want  to  believe  it, 
deep  down  you  really 
do. 

But  actions  speak 
louder  than  words. 
500,000  dead  in  1996 
with  4.000  dying  every 
month  since  then.  Iraqi  children  that  is,  with 
the  embargo  that  is  causing  these  deaths  hav- 

Varshney  is  a  third-year  computer  science  and 
•nfineering  student  Yes,  engineers  have  opin- 
ions toa  Rnd  out  rnon  of  Rahul's  by  e-mailing 
him  at  varshney^ucla.edu. 


Rahul 
Varshney 


ing  little  effect  on  Saddam  (CounterPunch. 
Nov.  1, 1999).  Nazar  Ali,  an  Iraqi  local,  said, 
"You  are  creating  a  generation  of  people  who 
hate  America"  (U.S.  News  &.  World, 
September  1 1, 2000).  Is  this  the  foreign  policy 
that  America  should  be  pursuing?  Secretary 
of  state  Madeline  Albright  told  60  Minutes, 
"We  think  the  price  is  worth  it"  (May  12, 
1998). 

Worth  what?  What  is  the  U.S.  gaining 
from  all  of  this?  One  answer  comes  from  a 
Kuwaiti  newspaper.  "The  U.S.  frightens  us 
with  Saddam  to  n>ake  us  buy  weapons  and 
sign  contracts  with  American  companies, 
thus  ensuring  a  market  for  American  arms 
manufacturers  and  a  continued  American 
presence  in  the  Middle  East"  (www.coastal- 
post.com,  February,  1999). 

Arms  manufactures  can  lobby  Gore  and 
Bush:  the  Iraqi  children  cannot,  and  this  is 
what  it  comes  down  to.  The  collective  silence ' 
of  Gore  and  Bush  has  been  bought,  but  not 
Nader's.  As  a  result,  he  flatly  opposes  the 
embargo  on  Iraq. 

Iraq,  sadly,  b  not  the  only  source  of  wan- 


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September  25-28, 2000 


bilf  Brain  Vlwptkt 


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Differant  PeRpeciiins 


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■<\.'\ 


unfinished  revolution 


PROGRESS:  Many  changes  in  American  society  owe  a 
debt  to  ordinary  people;  our  future  is  in  their  hands  too 

Approximately  100  years  ago.  the  Much  has  changed  between  then 

great  African  American  social        and  now.  Then,  white  supremacy  was 
1 


pproximately  100  years  ago.  the 
great  African  American  social 
aheorist  WEB.  Du  Bois  wrote, 
"The  problem  ©f  the  20th  century  is  the 
problem  of  the  color  line."  Black  and 
white  were  thecolbrs  most  on  his  mind, 
but  his  visi'6n  oT 
the  world  encom- 
passed its  many 
hues.  Nor  was  he 
insensitive  to 
other  lines  ot"  dif- 
ference and  domi- 
nation, sucfi  as  the 
one  betweeil 
social  classes,  or 
between  men  and 
women.  And  these 
lines  criss-crossed. 
In  "The  Souls^ 
of  B"lack  Folk," 
Du  Bois  vividly  portrays  a  young  black 
woman  named  Josie,  who  is  poor,  hard- 
working, ambitious  -  and  who  sacri- 
fices her  ambitions  for  the  well-being  of 
her  family.  Race,  class  and  gender  each 
play  a  part  in  determining  her  life 
chances.  In  short,  the  problem  of  the 
color  line  is  multi-dimensional;  but  Du 
Bois  properly,  and  with  great  pre- 
science, placed  it  before  his  contempo- 
raries. 

Wolfenstein      is      a      professor      of 
political  science  at  UCLA. 


E.  Victor 
Wolfenstein 


the  law  of  the  land.  Black  people  had 
been  disenfranchised  politically, 
stripped  of  their  civil  rights  by  Jim 
Crow  laws,  and  frequently  reduced  to 
economic  peonage.  They  also  were  the 
victims  of  a  truly  horrific  campaign  of 
terror  and  intimidation. 

Between  1890  and  1917,  some  two  to 
three  black  Southerners  were  hanged, 
burned  at  the  stake,  or  otherwise  mur- 
dered each  week.  That  was  also  a  time 
when  workers  had  virtually  no  rights 
that  employers  were  legally  bound  to 
respect  and  when  women  did  not  have 
the  right  to  vote. 

Now,  legal  white  supremacy  is  a 
thing  of  the  past;  African  American 
women  and  men,  and  women  generally, 
iSjuhave  been  enfranchised;  and  workers 
have  the  legal  right  to  form  unions,  to 
strike,  and  otherwise  to  act  in  their  own 
best  interests.  Hence  it  is  no  exaggera- 
tion to  say  that  the  century  just  con- 
cluded witnessed  a  social  revolution  in 
this  country. 

How  did  this  great  change  come 
about?  Stated  negatively:  it  was  not  a 
generous  dispensation  from  the  socially 
high  and  mighty.  Those  who  benefit 
from  an  existing  social  order  don't  vol- 
untarily surrender  their  advantages. 

SccW0IJEIISrEIN,pa9el8 


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Daily  Bruin  file  pholos 

Malcolm  X,  above,  and  Dr.  Martin  Luther  King,  Jr.,  bot- 
tom right,  were  leaders  in  the  civil  rights  movement  in 
the  1960s. 

(Above)  Angela  Y.  Davis,  a  former  UCLA  professor, 
speaks  to  commemorate  the  30th  anniversary  of  the 
Center  for  African  American  Studies  at  a  recent 
gathering. 


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1 


Ittty  Bruin  Wwmpdlm 


September  25-28, 2000 


finally  achieved  equality  at  coH^ 


DISCRIMINATION:  Female 
students  have  passed 
males  in  UC  enrollment 

Affirmative  action  was  intend- 
ed to  provide  equal  access 
and  opportunity  to  groups 
of  individuals  previously  discrimi- 
nated against.  These  previously  dis- 
criminated groups  not  only  include 
different  ethnic 
and  racial 
groups,  but 
females  as  well. 

In  recent 
years,  affirma- 
tive action  sup- 
porters have 
sought  equality 
of  outcomes  in 
education 
rather  than 
equality  of 
opportunity. 
Feminist  orga- 
nizations call  for  legal  measures  to 
enforce  statistical  parity  between 
male  and  female  populations  in  vari- 
ous educational  fields.  Affirmative 
action  is  steadily  trying  to  produce 
equal  outcomes,  which  is  social  engi- 
neering. 

Is  gender-based  affirmative     .. 
action  still  needed  when  dealing 
with  university  admissions?  There 
was  once  a  time  when  gender-based 
affirmative  action  was  needed  to 

Sheytwni  is  a  fourth-year  political  sci- 
ence student.  She  has  been  working  on 
an  upcoming  book  about  females  and 
affirmative  action,  which  will  be  pub- 
lished by  the  American  Enterprise 
Institute. 


Susan 
SheybanI 


ensure  women  were  admitted  into 
universities.  But  with  the  many 
advances  women  have  made  in  edu- 
cation, it  is  clear  that  time  has 
passed. 

Current  literature  supports  the 
fact  that  women's  participation  in 
higher  education  is  greater  than  that 
of  men.  In  addition,  their  perfor- 
mance on  standardized  tests  is  equal 
to  that  of  men.  With  a  steady  rise  in 
the  percentage  of  women  earning 
degrees,  women  have  exceeded  the 
number  of  men  in  both  undergradu- 
ate and  graduate  school  since  1984. 
(Diana  Furchtgott-Roth  and 
Christine  Stolba,American 
Enterprise  Institute,  "The  Feminist 
Dilemma.  When  Success  is  Not 
Enough."  2000). 


In  spite  of  the  present 

status  of  women, 

there  was  a  time 

when  women  were 

the  victims  of 

extreme  educational 

discrimination. 


In  spite  of  the  present  status  of 
women,  there  was  a  time  when 
women  were  the  victims  of  extreme 
educational  discrimination.  Yft 
even  though  the  educational  ambi- 
tions of  women  were  hampered  for 
over  a  century,  women  today  have 
the  opportunity  to  pursue  any  edu- 
cational goal  at  any  university. 


When  will  the  corrective  and 
affirmative  action  be  put  to  an  end? 
One  major  goal  of  affirmative 
action  was  to  overcome  the  effects 
of  past  discrimination.  The  effects 
of  the  past  discrimination  toward 
women  in  university  admissions 
have  been  o^rcome. 

According  to  the  1999/2000 
admissions  data  provided  by  the 
U.S.  News  web  site,  UCLA  had  a 
male  acceptance  rate  of  28  percent 
and  a  female  acceptance  rate  of  29 
percent.  University  of  California, 
Berkeley  had  a  male  acceptance  rate 
of  26  percent  and  a  female  accep- 
tance rate  of  29  percent.  Clearly,  the 
admissions  rate  of  women  are 
greater  than  that  of  their  male  coun- 
terparu  at  a  majority  of  California 
schools,  even  after  the  implementa- 
tion of  Proposition  209. 

The  University  of  California,  San 
Diego,  for  instance,  in  Fall  1994 
recorded  a  male  acceptance  rate  of 
63  percent  and  a  female  acceptance 
rate  of  65  percent.  Even  in  fall  1999, 
with  a  more  competitive  applicant 
pool,  females  continue  to  have  a 
higher  rate  of  admission  at  49  per- 
cent, in  contrast  to  the  male  rate  at 
47  percent. 

Today,  enrollment  numbers  in 
higher  education  indicate  a  larger 
population  of  women  than  men.  The 
1998  New  York  Times  article  "U.S. 
Colleges  Begin  to  Ask:  'Where  Have 
the  Men  Gone"'  (Dec.  6, 1998) 
noted  a  decline  in  the  number  of 
men  enrolled  in  college  as  opposed 
to  a  steady  rise  in  the  number  of 
women  enrolled  in  college. 

The  literature  even  states  that 
women  are  such  an  overwhelming 
majority  at  some  universities  that 
administrators  are  having  trouble 


attracting  more  men.  The  U.S 
Department  of  Education's  Office 
of  Educational  Research  and 
Improvement  released  the  NCES 
Mini-Digest  of  Education  Statistics 
1999,  which  stated  that  fall  enroll- 
ment in  institutions  of  higher  educa- 
tion reported  a  greater  increase  for 
women  since  1980  than  men. 

The  digest  reported  a  total  male 
enrollment  of  5,874  and  a  total 
female  enrollment  of  6,223  for  the 
year  1980  For  1999,  the  digest 
reported  a  total  male  enrollment  of 
6,370  and  a  total  female  enrollment 
of  8,51 1,  a  significantly  greater 
increase  in  female  enrollment. 


Affirmative  action 

supporters  are  not 

lool<ing  for  common 

sense  answers. They 

are  seeking  the 

equality  of  outcomes 

in  education. 


Still,  affirmative  action  support- 
ers deny  the  data  on  women's 
achievements  as  proof  of  equality  in 
educational  opportunities.  Feminist 
organizations  such  as  National 
Organization  for  Women  (NOW) 
and  the  American  Association  of 
University  Women  (AAUW)  contin- 
ue to  support  gender-based  affirma- 
tive action,  their  primary  reason 
being  that  women  are  not  entering 
certain  educational  fields. 


Majors  in  fields  dealing  with     . 
mathematics,  science  and  engineer- 
ing continue  to  be  dominated  by 
men.  Common  sense  would  lead  a 
person  to  conclude  that  some 
majors  are  more  appealing  to  men 
than  women.  For  example,  women 
continue  to  dominate  majors  in  the 
fields  of  dance,  nursing  and  English. 

Affirmative  action  supporters  are 
not  looking  for  common  sense 
answers.  They  are  seeking  the  equal- 
ity of  outcomes  in  education  rather 
than  the  equality  of  opportunity.  If 
women  do  not  make  up  half  of  a 
particular  major,  discrimination  is 
branded  the  culprit.  I  believe 
women  choose  their  majors  because 
of  personal  preferenc«s  an4not  edu- 
cational discrimination. 

History  clearly  demonstrates  that 
for  over  a  century,  women  were  vic- 
tims of  discrimination;  hence,  their 
educational  aspirations  were 
obstructed.  But  unlike  the  past, 
women  today  can  pursue  any  educa- 
tional field  they  choose.  The  little 
female  participation  in  certain  fields 
can  be  attributed  not  to  discrimina- 
tion, but  to  choice. 

The  women  of  the  present  enter 
institutions  of  higher  education  at  a 
rate  higher  than  that  of  men. 
Despite  this  fact,  affirmative  action 
supporters  claim  that  the  trend  of  a 
women  majority  population  on  uni- 
versity campuses  is  not  enough. 
Women's  organizations  such  as 
NOW  and  the  AAUW  are  pushing 
for  parity  in  all  majors,  including 
those  underrepresented  by  women. 
Affirmative  action  was  designed 
to  provide  equal  opportunity,  not 
equal  outcomes.  The  goal  of  affi[- 
mative  action  for  women  in  educa- 
tion has  been  achieved. 


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6         September  25-28, 2000 


. '  ::V',"-..;*v:-^' •■/'.■> , 


Daily  Bruin  ViewpoM 


Fieldwork  brings  realit)^  perspective  to  study  of  worid 


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7 

INDIA:  Foreign  exposure 
make  textbook  examples 
come  to  life  for  students 


By  Sarah  Borchelt,  Lisa  Hwang, 
Bahar  Kumar  and  Tracey  Tuyen 

Little  Sonu  is  scolded  in  front  of 
his  Standard  II  class  for  coming  to 
school  in  "dirly"  clothes.  He  is 
sent  home  by  the  principal  to  clean 
up  and  harshly  reminded  to  never 
show  up  m  this  manner  again. 
Sonu  will  take  off  his  clothes  and 
give  them  to  his  mother  to  wash 
regardless  of                   ' 
whether  or  not       — ■.^■■■■■■■■^ 
she  has  soap 
and  water. 
Yes.  the  easiest 
solution  is  to 
send  him 
home  to  deal 
with  his  soiled 
clothes.  As 
they  say, 
"ignorance  is 
bliss."  Pajs  the 
buck,  please.  — . 

For  many 
onlookers,  the  desire  to  hold  Little 
Sonu's  hand  and  follow  his  swift 
feet  to  his  village  in  pursuit  of 
understanding  where  the  "dirty" 
clothes  came  from  and  why  they 
exist  is  almost  ridiculous.  Why? 
Filthy  clothes  are  commonplace  in 
a  poor  village  community  in  India, 
right?  It  is  "common"  when  we 
find  out  that  there  is  no  water 


Borchelt,  Hwang,  Kumar,  and  Tuyen  are 
graduates  from  the  International 
Development  Studies  program. 


pump,  no  access  to  serf  (deter- 
gent), and  no  clothes  but  the  uni- 
form on  Sonu's  back.   • .    "     .  /. : 

In  following  Sonu,  a  complex 
web  of  "poverty"  is  disguised  as  a 
belittled  common  day  occurrence. 
Pass  the  buck?  We  don't  think  so. 
We.  four  UCLA  International 
Development  Studies  graduates, 
had  the  rare  and  amazing  opportu- 
nity to  gain  field  experience  in 
rural  India  through  the 
International  Development 
Studies  departmetlt.  We  were  sent 
to  Bodh-Gaya,  a  strong  pilgrimage 
site  for  Buddhists  all  over  the 
world,  tQ  "leach  English"  for  an 

NGO-run 
— ^— ^— ^^      (non-govern- 
mental organi- 
zation) school. 

Over  the 
past  four 
months  of 
teaching 
English,  we 
were  exposed 
to  the  adminis- 
trative politics 
ofthisNGO, 

caste  issues, 

gender  poli- 
tics, village  politics,  and  the  effects 
of  unequal  land  distribution.  It 
became  the  greatest  challenge. 
Mere  exposure  to  the  local  com- 
munity and  the  workings  of  this 
NGO  compelled  us  to  be  braided 
into  the  grassroots  development  of 
the  Bodh-Gaya  area. 

Bodh-Gaya  used  to  be  a  small 
pilgrimage  area  surrounded  by 
agricultural  communities.  But, 
due  to  the  growing  number  of 

See  HWANG,  page  8 


Mere  exposure  to  the 
local  community 

compelled  us  to  be 
braided  into  the 

development  of  the 
Bodh-Gaya  area. 


A  village  boy  looks  out  from  the  fallen  wall  of  his  home  in  Bodh-Gaya,  India.  This  is  often  the  reallw  for"""*^ 
many  who  live  in  poverty-stricken  villages. 


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8         September  25-28, 2000 


Ddily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


LALAS 

From  page  2  ■<. 

if  ■  .'■ 

to  columns,  editorials,  or  other 
submissions.  It  is  also  a  place 
where  students  can  talk  about  pop 
culture  and  their  social  life.  We  are 
open  to  submissions  that  seek  to 
get  the  reader  to  laugh,  or  simply 
smile.  Comedy  is  an  important 
part  of  the  section  that  also  adds 
to  the  diversity  of  viewpoints  we 
strive  to  present. 

The  third  major  feature  of  the 
section  are  the  columnists.  For 
those  of  you  who  are  really  serious 
about  speaking  out  to  a  readership 
of  50,000,  you  can  apply  for  a 
position  every  quarter. 
Applications  for  winter  quarter 
columnists  will  be  available  during 
the  fmal  weeks  of  the  fall.  I  was 
columnist  last  year  and  can  testify 
to  the  uniqueness  of  the  experi- 
ence. You  are  given  the  opportuni- 
ty to  write  every  two  weeks  on  vir- 
tually almost  any  topic  you  desire. 
Your  picture  will  also  appear  with 
every  column  you  publish  and 
pretty  soon,  people  will  start  rec- 
ognizing you  on  campus. 

Finally,  we  must  realize  that  as 
students  at  a  top  ranked  public 
university,  we  are  in  a  position  of 
power.  Many  of  us  will  go  on  to 
become  the  future  journalists,  doc- 


tors, scientists,  engineers,  lawyers, 
social  workers,  teachers,  senators 
and  possibly  world  leaders.  Being 
in  such  an  esteemed  position,  we 
have  an  obligation  to  make  our- 
selves more  aware  of  the  problems 
that  continue  to  run  amok  in  our 
local  communities  and  society  as  a 
whole. 

By  exposing  ourselves  to  a  vari- 
ety of  different  backgrounds  and 
listening  and  reading  people's 
viewpoints  and  personal  experi- 
ences, we  can  truly  contribute 
more  to  our  own  education.  It  is 
not  enough  to  simply  read  about 
issues  and  think  about  them.  You 
have  to  express  your  ideas  and 
challenge  other  people's  beliefs 
and  assumptions. 

Every  single  one  of  you  has 
opinions  and  I'm  willing  to  bet 
that  every  person  on  this  campus 
has  at  least  one  topic  or  issue  that 
makes  their  hearts  and  minds  burn 
up  in  flames.  No  one  on  this  cam- 
pus lives  as  a  hermit;  all  of  you 
encounter  students,  professors 
and  ideas  every  day.  Now  it  is  time 
to  express  your  thoughts  in  section 
that  thrives  on  it. 

So  remember,  any  time  you 
have  something  to  say,  all  you 
have  to  do  is  e-mail  us  your  sub- 
mission or  letter  at 
viewpoint@media.ucla.edu.  We 
hope  to  hear  from  you  soon. 


HWAN6 

From  page  6     .:    . .  .,;■  J.,.  ; : : . 

Western  Buddhists,  there  has  been 
an  influx  of  foreign  resources  into 
this  area  in  the  name  of  "world 
peace".  Within  the  past  ten  years, 
foreign  money  has  given  rise  to  a 
load  of  20  charitable  societies,  trusts 
and  foundations.  Each  of  these  fall 
under  the  large  umbrella  of  NGOs 
along  with  the  hotels,  restaurants 
and  monasteries  in  Bodh-Gaya. 

Although  these  organizations  and 
businesses  may  have  been  erected 
by  "good  intentions,"  the  effects  on 
the  local  communities  have  included 
child  beggary  during  peak  pilgrim 
season,  land  displacement  (a  move 
from  fertile  to  marginal  lands)  and 
dependency  on  foreign  aid.  TTiis 
gives  a  fair  amount  of  truth  to  the' 
cliche  stating  that  the  ''road  to  hell 
is  paved  with  good  intentions." 

Without  proper  understanding, 
communication,  knowledge  and 
training,  "development"  work  can 
silently  destroy  village  communities 
such  as  Sonu's. 

In  our  four-month  fieldwork,  we 
have  gained  a  reputation  in  Bodh- 
Gaya.  Whether  it  be  with  the  local 
"subzi  wallah"  in  the  bazaar  or  the 
bearers  of  power  in  the  community, 
we  caused  havoc  by  consistently 
questioning  decisions  made  by 


"higher  authorities."  We  have  also 
listened  to  different  people's  life  sto- 
ries and  the  various  issues  facing  vil- 
lage members,  voicing  the  concerns 
of  those  who  are  afraid  to  do  so. 
In  a  small  way  and  in  a  short 
amount  of  time,  we  were  able  to 
work  with  people,  shaking  the  exist- 
ing system  that  does  not  seem  to  be 
working  for  the  greater  surrounding 
village  population.  It  is  amazing  to 
see  how  our  exposure  to  a  broad_i^ 
range  of  disciplines  including 
anthropology,  politics,  history,  lan- 
guages, economics,  has  given  us  a 
holistic  picture  of  how  development 
in  third  world  countries  such  as 
India  works. 


We  were  stuck  In  the 

books  but  now,  in  the 

field,  all  of  that  took  a 

back  seat  to  real 

human  concerns. 


It's  crazy,  but  at  the  same  time 
natural,  that  it  was  just  this  interdis- 
ciplinary aspect  of  our  studies  that 
allowed  us  to  transcend  our  world 
of  tinsekown  glamour  to  work  with- 
in the  complex  reality  of  life  in  rural 


India.  It  was  working  in  the  context 
of  human  volatility  thai  made  clear 
to  us  that  an  interdisciplinary 
approach  is  the  foundation  to  truly 
understanding  the  reality  of  devel- 
opmentwork. 

We  were  stuck  in  the  books:  case 
studies,  theoretical  models,  and  eco- 
nomic equations  But  now,  in  the 
field,  all  of  that  took  a  back  seat  to 
real  human  concerns  like  whether 
tfie  harvest  will  come  next  year, 
whether  the  roads  will  be  closed  due 
to  an  out-of-control  politician  (a.k.a 
Laloo  Yadav),  or  if  a  mother's  third 
child  will  survive  to  see  her  first 
birthday. 

When  working  with  the  people  in 
the  community,  we  found  ourselves 
coming  up  against  many  walls  of 
power.  Yet,  in  sharing  four  months 
with  the  people  in  the  community, 
"social  justice"  was  no  longer  a  ban- 
ner to  stand  behind,  but  a  vision 
that  has  become  real  to  our  hearts 
and  minds. 

■    And  you  know,  when  you  root  for 
the  underdog,  whether  it  be  in  vil- 
lage communities  in  India  or  on  a 
university  campus,  you'll  constantly 
be  up  against  those  walls  of  power. 
It  is  comfortable  for  those  who  are 
behind  and  keep  up  those  walls,  but 
we  believe  and  know  that  "struggle 
is  a  long  process  and  the  path  is  only 
made  by  those  who  walk  it."  Don't 
pass  the  buck! 


SOPHMORE  STUDENTS!!! 

» 

DO  YOU  WANT  TO  COMPLETE  YOUR  GE  PHYS 
SC2IENCE  REQUIREMENT  IN  ONLY  TWO  . 

QUARTERS? . 

DID  YOU  ENJOyIpaTH  AND  PHYSIOS  IN  HIGH  SCHOOL, 

even  though  you  are  majoring  hn  something 

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LOOKING  FOR  A  DEEPER  PHYSICAL  UNDERSTANDING 
OF  HOW  THF  UNIVERSE  WORKS?" 


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(Similar  to  Astro  3  and  Physips  10) 

•    TWO  QUARTERS  COIVIPLETES  YOUR  ENTIRE  GE 

PHYS  SCIENCE  REQUIREMENT 

(of  3  courses,  complementary  course  fequirement,  and 

physical  science  laboratory  /  demonstration)    . 


Missed  your 
Bruin  over 
the  summer? 


Now  geUl 


-laboratory  with 
hands-on  experiments- 


INCLUDES: 

-telescope  &  planetarium 
i  sessions- 


-opportunities  to  travel  to 
'  '  dark  sky  sites  for 
astronomical  viewing!!- 


MWRF  at  10  a.m.  and  a  lab  session  (Thursday  is  a  discussion  section) 
For  more  information  see:  www.astro.ucla.edu 


to  advertise  coll 
825-2161 


I 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


September  25-28, 2000 


Student  leaders 


University 


Or  u sad 


rs 


EDUCATION:  Integrity,  fueled  by  personal  decisions,  is  vital 
to  creating  a  unified  campus  which  fosters  diverse  interests 


DIVERSITY:  Student  organizations  cater  to  underrepresented 
communities  while  attempting  to  combat  societal  injustices 


Welcome  to  the  University  of 
California,  Los  Angeles,  one  of 
the  most  prestigious  public  uni- 
versities in  the  nation.  Welcome  to  foot- 
ball games  at  the  Rose  Bowl,  beating  'SC, 
basketball  at  Pauley,  and  fmals  week's 
Midnight  Yell  (please 
no  violence,  okay?). 
Welcome  to  Thursday 
night  Greek  parties. 
Hip  Hop  Xplosion 
and  Filipino  Culture 
Night. 

Yes,  there's  some- 
thing for  everyone 
including  parking 
nightmares,  book- 
store lines,  dropping 
and  adding  classes, 
and  flyers  in  your  face 
on  Bruin  Walk.  But 

hey,  it's  all  part  of  the  college  experience, 
good  or  bad. 

Seriously  though,  whether  you  choose 
to  attend  a  football  game  or  you  lean  more 
toward  hip  hop,  the  opportunities  listed 
above  will  not  be  the  deciding  factors  that 
make  or  break  your  college  experience. 
Instead,  those  deciding  factors,  my  fellow 
Bruins,  depend  on  you  and  the  day-to- 
day choices  that  you  make  regarding 


Houston  is  a  fourth-year  political  scierKe 
student.  She  is  currently  the  president  of 
the  Undergraduate  Student  Association 
Council.  E-mail  comments  to 
usapres@asucia.ucla.edu. 


Elizabeth 
Houston 


Divierslty  alone  will  lead  to 

nnisperceptions  and  racism 

...  Some  groups  divide  the 

campus  along  racial  and 

cultural  lines.  I  challenge 

you  to  think  twice  before 

joining  a  group  on  campus 

that  preaches  diversity 

without  unity. 


your  education.  After  all,  our  education  is 
the  primary  reason  we  are  here. 

As  college  students,  we  possess  a  cer- 
tain freedom  that  requires  us  to  make 
responsible  decisions  regarding  our  acade- 
mics. We  must  prioritize  our  time,  devel- 


When  I  stepped  onto  this  campus 
three  years  ago,  I  had  a  huge 
culture  shock.  There  seemed  to 
be  so  few  people  with  which  I  could  identi- 
fy. I  was  expecting  to  find  the  campus 
overflowing  with  people  I  considered  to  be 
truly  intelligent  and 
socially  talented;  peo- 
ple who  not  only  are 
book  smart  but  street 
smart,  have  mad  play- 
er skills,  are  multi-cul- 
tured or  at  least  bilin- 
gual, have  acquired 
the  ability  to  think 
outside  of  the  box, 
and  possess  a  sense  of 
social  responsibility. 

Much  to  my  disillu- 
sion, I  found  two  men     

claiming  to  be 

Christians  carrying  signs  warning  the  cam- 
pus of  God's  hate  for  anything  outside  of 


See  HOUSTON,  page  10 


Enciso  is  a  politicat  science  and  Chicana/o 
studies  student  He  currently  serves  as 
the  Internal  Vice  President  of  USAC. 


Anyone  who  attacks 
communities  of  color  by 
saying  that  these  student 

organizations  are 
unnecessary  and  cause 

racial  tension  are 

mistaking  the  cause  for 

the  effect  (and)  have  inept 

analytical  skills  when  it 

comes  to  assessing  the 

socio-political  state 

that  we  are  in. 


the  traditional  white  American  patriarchal 
society.  In  the  midst  of  a  desperate  yearn- 
ing for  a  safe  space  I  was  fortunate 
enough  to  have  met  some  of  the  students 
working  in  Kerckhoff  Hall,  where  many 
student  organizations  and  student 
government  offices  are  located.  At 
Kerckhoff,  I  found  many  community 
leaders  who  were  putting  their  time 
and  energy  into  the  struggle  to 
improve  the  socio-political  situation 

SeeENaSC0,page12 


«r?^.. 


INVOLVEMENT:  Make  a 
difference  in  our  world 
by  fmding  your  niche 

So  I  guess  by  now  you  first- 
years  are  probably  sick  of 
people  congratulating  you  on 
getting  into  UCLA.  But  just  in 
case  no  one  has  yet,  CONGRATS! 
Many  people 
would  love 
the  opportu- 
nity to  be  in 
your  place. 
Remember 
that,  because 
it'll  come  up 
again  later 
on.  . 

Here  is  a 
little  some-         Poitia 
thing  to  just        ^_j 
give  you  a  rCOfO 

quick  run-  —————— 

down  (and  to  give  returning  stu- 
dents a  reminder)  about  where 
your  fellow  Biliins  are  coming 

Pedro  is  a  fourth-year  international 
development  studies  student  and  a 
member  of  the  African  Student 
Union.  You  can  contact  her  at 
ebony80459hotmailxom. 


from. 

Most  first-years:  They  are  prob- 
ably ready  to  get  this  whole  UCLA 
thing  started,  wondering  if  they're 
going  to  be  able  to  cut  it  in  their 
classes  and  get  their  college  4.0 
going;  looking  for  some  cool  peeps 
to  kick  it  with;  hoping  their  room- 
mates are  cooler  than  they  seemed 
when  they  first  met  them;  and 
counting  on  that  hottie  to  sit  next 
to  them  in  lecture  to  ask  them  out. 

Most  returning  students:  They 
are  probably  wishing  summer  was 
just  a  little  bit  longer,  wondering  if 
they're  going  to  be  able  to  cut  their 
classes  (because  they've  already 
gone  to  a  few  back-to-school  par- 
ties and  10  a.m.  classes  no  longer 
seem  doable);  expecting  a  little  less 
drama  with  their  friends  this  year; 
wishing  they  could  find  an  apart- 
ment and  ditch  their  roommates; 
and  counting  on  there  being  some 
new  first-year  hotties  because  that 
girl/guy  from  lecture  last  year 
turned  out  to  be  whack. 

Most  fourth-,  fifth-  and  sixth- 
year  seniors  (yes,  they  do  exist): 
They  have  one  thing  one  their 
minds  -  GRADUATE! 

But  even  with  all  these  differ- 
ences, M  have  one  thing  in  com- 
mon: %ve  all  come  here  to  get  an 
education.  Keep  in  mind  that  this 


education  is  not  automatically 
handed  to  us  on  a  silver  platter  just 
because  we  were  fortunate  enough 
to  get  accepted  to  UCLA  and  have 
taken  a  few  classes.  We  have  to 
actively  go  out  and  get  it. 


We,  as  students,  need 

to  take  responsibility 

for  the  state  of  our 

campus  and  our 

communities. 


The  most  important  part  of  our 
college  experience  cannot  be 
found  by  reading  one  book  or  by 
listening  to  a  professor  speak 
(although  those  are  both  good 
places  to  start).  We  have  to  engage 
ourselves  in  the  stuff  going  on 
around  us.  Books  and  classes 
alone  are  not  enough  without  dis- 
cussions after  class  that  can  make 
us  question  a  lot  of  things  that 
we've  always  accepted  as  fact. 

College  mf^t  be  the  only  time 
in  our  lives  that  is  supposed  to  be 
completely  dedicated  to  learning 


more  about  ourselves  and  the 
world  and  critically  analyzing  it. 
What  good  is  it  to  learn  about  all 
of  these  issues,  write  a  ton  of 
papers  and  form  personal  opin- 
ions if  we  don't  act  on  them? 

I'm  sure  a  lot  of  us  are  burnt 
out  already  from  high  school,  espe- 
cially between  getting  the  grades  it 
took  to  get  in  here,  being  on  athlet- 
ic teams,  participating  in  student 
government,  and  being  active  in 
clubs.  The  list  goes  on.  By  now,  we 
must  be  tired  of  being  "leaders." 
Instead,  it  might  seem  easier  to 
just  get  lost  among  the  35,000  stu- 
dents and  let  someone  else  do  stuff 
for  a  change.  It's  tempting  to  just 
get  by  with  the  bare  minimum  - 
taking  the  classes  you  need  to 
graduate  and  getting  out. 

But  don't  be  fooled. 

This  is  not  the  best  path  to  take. 
You  only  get  as  much  out  of  this 
school  as  you  put  in.  We,  as  stu- 
dents, need  to  lake  responsibility 
for  the  state  of  our  campus  and 
our  communities.  If  you  don't  like 
something,  try  to  change  it.  Don't 
just  be  a  spectator.  As  many  of  us 
have  figured  out,  learning  by 
osmosis  does  not  work  for  classes, 
so  why  would  it  work  for  life? 

As  UCLA  students,  people  are 
continuously  making  decisions 


JENNY  rURSHANSKY/0»i(y  ftum 


that  affect  our  lives.  Some  of  the 
people  that  are  making  these  deci- 
sions are  the  regents  for  the 
University  of  California  system, 
our  chancellor  and  administrators, 
our  elected  officials,  our  profes- 
sors and  voters  state-  and  nation- 
wide. Decisions  on  admissions 
policies,  civil  rights,  curriculum, 
domestic  partnership,  financial  aid 
and  many  other  important  topics 
will  continue  to  be  made  whether 
or  not  we  are  a  part  of  the  process, 
so  it  is  crucial  for  our  voices  to  be 
heard. 

Remember  earlier  in  this  col- 
umn when  we  went  over  how  so 
many  people  would  love  the 
opportunity  to  be  in  your  place  as 
a  student  at  UCLA?  Well,  this  is 
where  that  comes  into  play. 

It  is  important  to  understand 
that  many  people  don't  have  the 
liberty  to  debate  whether  or  not 
they  feel  like  participating  in  the 
decisions  being  made  for  them,       ' 
because  they  can't.  This  happens 
for  many  reasons:  the  person 
could  be  working  overtime  to  sup- 
port their  family,  they  might  not 
have  citizenship  in  this  country 
yet,  so  they  can't  even  vote,  and  on 
and  on.  The  point  is  that  we  each 


See 


l>»9«13 


>'« 


-I— — n-r-*- 


-yr-  '-,   — •- 


10       September  25-28, 2000 


DalyBniinVIcwpilM 


DaKySnim  Viewpoint 


HOUSTON 

From  page  9.  . 

op  good  study  habits  and  make 
excellent  use  of  the  resources  avail- 
able to  us.  But  you  probably  know 
this  or  otherwise  you  wouldn't  be 
here. 

Still,  it  is  important  for  us  to 
understand  that  education  tran- 
scends the  four  walls  of  the  class- 
room, encompassing  not  only  acade- 
mics, but  morals,  values  and  social 
awareness  as  well.  Essentially,  good 
grades  are  incomplete  without  good 
character,  and  good  character 
should  naturally  lead  to  social 
involvement.  Even  politicians, 
Republican  or  Democrat,  are 
emphasizing  like  never  before  the 
importance  of  morality  and  good 
character. 

What  choices  are  you  making  that 
will  build  character  and  integrity  in 
your  life? 

Every  day  you  have  the  opportu- 
nity to  either  choose  the  mora!  high 
ground  or  to  compromise  your  prin- 
ciples. We  can  see  the  result  of 
choosing  integrity  over  compromise 
through  the  daily  actions  of  Mother 
Teresa.  Her  life  proves  that  success 
is  not  merely  measured  by  knowl- 
edge or  gain,  but  by  one's  character 
and  the  choices  she  or  he  makes. 

Similarly,  we  as  students  must  not 


measure  the  success  of  our  college 
expe/ience  solely  on  the  quality  of 
our  academic  performance.  We 
must  also  consider  the  characte'r 
that  we  develop  in  the  educational 
process.  My  father  once  told  me  that 
it  is  not  what  you  are  doing,  but  who 
you  are  becoming  that  really  mat- 
ters. 


If  we  are  to  combat 
racism  on  our  campus. 


we  must  choose 
diversity  with  unity. 


Without  a  doubt,  it  is  our  respon- 
sibility to  make  the  right  decisions, 
regardless  of  surrounding  influ- 
ences. Friends,  classmates,  room- 
mates, girlfriends  and  boyfriends 
will  all  have  clear  influences  on  your 
character  and  the  choices  you  make. 
Relationships  are  an  important  part 
of  the  college  experience  and  friends 
have  the  ability  to  bring  out  the  best 
or  the  worst  in  you. 

It's  been  said  that  bad  company 
corrupts  good  character.  I  choose 
friends  who  encourage  integrity,  not 
compromise. 

Lastly,  we  must  make  responsible 


choices  in  how  we  choose  to  per- 
ceive and  relate  to  other  groups.  The 

many  groups  and  student  organiza- 
tions that  constitute  our  UCLA 
community  represent  one  of  our- 
greatest  strengths. 

But  some  groups  divide  the  cam- 
pus along  racial  and  cultural  lines.  I 
challenge  you  to  think  twice  before 
joining  a  group  on  campus  that 
preaches  diversity  without  unity^ 
Diversity  is  an  important  element  of 
our  campus  life,  but  if  we  cannot 
have  tolerance  for  other  people, 
then  we  will  have  no  unity.        .-.  '  r-[; 

Unity  can  seem  like  a  vague, 
philosophical  concept,  but  it  is  really 
nothing  more  than  recognizing  our   . 
similarities  and  building  relation- 
ships based  on  them.  Only  when 
people  fully  recognize  their  similari- 
ties can  they  begin  to  appreciate  and' 
value  their  differences. 

Even  President  Clinton,  inter- 
viewed recently  at  an  evangelical 
leadership  conference  in  Chicago, 
Illinois,  quoted  statistics  that 
stressed  the  fact  that  our  similarities 
far  outweigh  our  differences. 

Diversity  alone  will  lead  to  mis- 
perceptions  and  racism.  We  must  be 
a  generation  that  moves  beyond  the 
past. 

We  must  recognize  the  wound 
that  racism  has  left  on  our  country 
and  work  together  toward  reconcili- 
ation. We  cannot  fight  racism.  It  is  a 


wound  that  must  be  healed.  Yet  rec- 
oncihation  is  a  hard  solution  to 
achieve;  it  requires  that  we  lay  down 
our  bitterness  and  forgive,  reaching 
out  to  those  who  offend  us  the  most. 
If  we  are  to  combat  racism  on  our 
campus,  we  must  choose  diversity 
with  unity. 


Students  Involved  with 

USAC  are  hardworking, 

passionate  and  active 

on  their  campus  and  in 

their  community. 


One  can  truly  see  the  diversity  of 
our  campus  community  in  the  halls 
of  Kerckhoff  where  our  student  gov- 
ernment resides.  Being  involved 
with  the  student  government  here  at 
UCLA  is  exciting,  and  quite  contro- 
versial to  say  the  least.  Our  student 
government,  known  as  the 
Undergraduate  Students 
Association  Council,  is  composed  of 
various  committees,  advisory  boards 
and  student  groups. 

Students  involved  with  USAC  are 
hardworking,  passionate  and  active 
on  their  campus  and  in  their  com- 
munity. As  we  go  through  many 


changes  this  upcoming  year,  I 
believe  that  we  can  build  a  strong 
student  government,  fully  represen- ,. 
tative  of  our  campus  community 
and  open  to  anyone  who  wants  to     : 
make  a  difference.  I  encourage  you 
to  get  involved  with  USAC. 

As  a  politically  active,  extremely  'J 
loyal  Bruin  and  patriotic  American, 
I  am  very  passionate  about  making  a 
difference  in  my  generation.  I 
believe  the  choices  I  make  will,  in 
the  end,  determine  the  person  I  will  ~ 
become  and  the  impact  I  will  have 
on  society.  --- 

So  many  of  us  are  disillusioned 
because  of  leaders  who  have  had 
their  lack  of  good  character 
exposed.  These  leaders  made  bad 
choices  and  their  careers,  relation- 
ships and  credibility  have  suffered  as 
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very  practical  piece  of  advice. 

Whether  you  are  a  freshman  or  a 
super  senior,  I  welcome  you  to 
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you  during  the  year. 

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12       September  25-28, 2000 


■>^;......,^- 


'^y'  ■' 


ENCISCO 

From  page  9 


of  aggrieved  communities  on  and  off 
campus. 

I  became  involved  with  a  student 
group  named  La  Familia,  a  queer 
Latina/o  organization.  I  was  excited 
to  meet  folks  that  understood  my 
struggles  and  had  a  clear  sense  of 
what  it  is  like  to  grow  up  in  a  state 
that  has  a  painfully  long  history  of 
channeling  people  of  color  into  the 
most  poverty-ravaged  sectors  of 
housing  and  public  education.   "" — ^ 

For  two  hours  each  week  I  meet 
with  other  members  of  La  Familia  to 
organize  and  strategize  on  how  to 
help  our  community  get  into  institu- 
tions of  higher  learning  and  out 
from  underneath  the  boots  and 
batons  of  the  LAPD.  Other  times,  it 
was  really  dope  because  we  came 
together  just  to  give  love  and  sup- 
port to  one  another.  We  kick  it  and 
put  it  down  at  whichever  club  we  hit 
up. 

After  all,  it's  crucial  to  be  with 
people  who  are  conscious  of  the  dis- 
crimination and  oppression  ever  so 
present  and  obvious  to  people  like 
oneself.  It  is  difficult  to  maintain  a 
positive  state  of  mind  when  one  is 
constantly  surrounded  with  only 
people  who  do  not  see  how  they  are 
racist,  sexist,  classist,  homophobic. 


xenophobic,  and/or  heteroscxist. 

In  class,  an  event  transpired  that 
proved  to  me  that  the  SAT  and  what- 
ever criteria  UCLA  uses  for  its 
admission  process  is  partially  or 
wholly  incompetent.  I  heard  a  stu- 
dent in  a  course  section  say,  "I  think 
self-love  can  be  as  divisive  as  hate 
for  other  groups."  This  student 
could  not  understand  why  everyone 
had  to  be  so  conscious  of  race  all  the 
time  and  he  felt  that  everyone  was 
always  trying  to  "push"  his/her  cul- 
ture and  politics  on  everyone  else. 

I  suspect  this  dude  was  referring 
to  all  the  student  of  color  organiza-  ~ 
tions  and  the  work/programming 
done  by  these  student  groups.  I  also 
suspect  he  was  absolutely  clueless 
about  the  deeply  embedded  cultural 
stereotypes  and  structural  inequali- 
ties that  plague  people  of  color, 
women  and  queers.  He  had  obvious- 
ly been  miseducated,  blinding  his 
consciousness  to  the  dire  need  for 
cultural  representation  and  self-affir- 
mation. 

As  a  matter  of  fact,  this  young 
man,  like  many,  cannot  understand 
or  accept  the  reality  and  advantages 
that  a  white  racial  identity  allows 
him  to  enjoy.  Such  privileges  range 
from  psychological  wages,  such  as 
the  ability  to  walk  into  an  affluent 
neighborhood  or  a  retail  store  with- 
out instantly  garnering  suspicion,  to 
the  ensured  opportunity  to  accumu- 


late assets  through  inter-generational 
transfers  of  wealth  that  have  been   ^ 
procured  in  part  by  a  political-sys- 
tem that  legally  denied  communities 
of  color  access  to  the  same  opportu- 
nities whites  had. 


Proposition  after 
proposition,  and 

injustice  after  injustice, 
we  continue  to  fight 

^one  after  the  other. 


Discriminatory  federal  housing 
policies,  racist  home  loart'agenls, 
and  Jim  Crow  laws  are  recent  exam- 
ples of  the  structural  and  social^ 
inequalities  people  of  color  have 
faced;  slavery,  manifest  destiny  ide- 
ology, and  the  violent  and  forceful 
annexation  of  the  southwest  are  ear- 
lier examples  of  how  American  poli- 
cy has  worked  to  slaughter  people  of 
color  and  take  their  wealth  and 
property. 

Because  this  student's  identity 
was  not  the  target  of  38  brutal  mur- 
ders since  the  death  of  Matthew 
Shepard,  and  because  his  identity  is 
not  the  target  of  a  rising  prison- 
industrial-complex  that  has  seen  the 


building  of  21  prisons  in  the  sUte  of 
California,  he  is  unable  to  appreciate 
the  work  students  from  these  respec- 
tive organizations  on  this  campus 
have  done  in  getting  UCLA  to  adopt 
a  hate  crimes  policy  that  can  work  to 
protect  all  students  on  this  campus. 

The  work  done  by  students  of 
color  and  progressive  white  students 
on  this  campus,  and  campuses  coast 
to  coast,  includes  actively  participat- 
ing in  many  of  the  social  movements 
that  have  brought  about  much  need- 
ed change.  These  movements    ; 
include  the  Civil  Rights  Movements 
of  the  1960s,  the  Farm  Worker 
Movement,  the  antiwar  demonstra- 
tions of  the  early  '70s,  and  the  anti- 
globalization  movement  that  has 
been  calling  out  global  corporations 
such  as  Nike  to  hold  them  account- 
able for  the  exploitation  of  workers 
everywhere. 

Student  of  color  organizations 
have  created  a  space  for  communi- 
ties to  voice  our  concerns  and  take  a 
stand  against  the  issues  that  contin- 
ue to  tear  our  communities  apart. 
Proposition  after  proposition,  and 
injustice  after  injustice  -  we  contin- 
ue to  fight  one  after  the  other.  The 
UC  Board  of  Regents'  decisions  SP- 
I  and  -2  and  the  end  of  afTirmative 
action  played  on  the  neo-conserva- 
tive  rhetoric  of  a  tolor  blind" 
society. 

Gov.  Pete  Wilson  claimed  that  it 


was  unjust  to  give  hand-outs  to  stu- 
dents of  color  when  in  fact,  affirma- 
tive-action adds  race  and  ethnicity  as 
simply  another  factor  to  consider  for 
admissions  (much  like  extra-curricu- 
lar activities  and  sports),  a  conces- 
sion that  clearly  appears  paltry  when 
one  considers  all  the  privileges  peo- 
ple of  color  and  women  continue  to 
be  deprived  of.  Even  after  the  Civil 
Rights  Act  of  1964  ended  de  jure  (by 
law)  segregation,  it  certainly  did  not 
end  de  facto  (by  fact)*  The  end  of 
affirmative  action  has  cut  enroll- 
ment of  blacks  and  Latina/os  by  SO 
percent.  More  notably,  only  3  per- 
cent of  the  students  admitted  for 
Fall  2000  are  African  American. 

We  must  also  never  forget  the  fact 
that  our  communities  are  being 
channeled  into  prisons  instead  of 
universities.  Politicians  and  corpora- 
tions are  investing  heavily  in  the 
prison-industrial  system  and  have  a 
vested  interest  in  keeping  people  of 
color  incarcerated.  After  all,  history 
does  repeat  itself.  The  prisons  have 
become  the  modem-day  plantations 
and  prisoners  the  modern-day 
slaves,  sometimes  receiving  as  little 
as  25  cents  per  hour  to  make  the 
underwear  we  wear. 

Student  of  color  organizations 
provide  spaces  for  students  of  color 
to  educate  ourselves  on  such  issues 

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ENasco 

From  page  12"^   ^  ■/!":; 

by  maintaining  communities  of 
strong  practice.  On  this  campus  they 
have  been  the  organizations  that 
have  done  the  noblest  work.  From 
youth  conferences  to  the  Student 
Initiated  Outreach  Programs,  the 
work  done  on  this  campus  continues 
to  understate  our  sense  of  social 
responsibility.  Anyone  who  attacks 
communities  of  color  by  saying  that 
these  student  organizations  are 
unnecessary  and  cause  racial  ten- 
sion are  mistaking  the  cause  for  the 


effect,  have  inept  analytical  skills 
when  it  comes  to  assessing  the  socio- 
political state  that  we  are  in  and  is 
also,  as  George  Lipsitz  puts  it,  pro- 
tecting the  possessive  investment  in 
whiteness. 

Let  the  millennium  offer  an    . 
opportunity  for  students  to  create 
their  own  vision  of  society,  one  that 
involves  integrity  at  its  finest  and  the 
ability  to  put  personal  privilege 
aside.  Our  vision  must  accept  the 
fact  that  our  society,  as  it  stands 
now,  is  not  "justice  for  all"  and  we 
must  realize  that  we  as  students  can 
do  so  much  moFe  than  go  to  class  to 
change  this  reality. 


Mly  Bruin  Viewpoint       •^- 


September  25-28, 2000        13 


PEDRO  ?^, 

Frompage9 

can  play  a  role  in  these  decisions 
and  this  is  a  privilege  and  a  respoo- 
'■■  sibility;  it's  not  as  optional  as  it    ,    ' 
might  seem. 

The  next  question  is,  "How?"   - 
Just  keep  your  eyes  open  and  even- 
tually something  will  stand  out. 
Whether  it's  a  flyer  for  an  organiza- 
tion's meeting  that  seems  interest" 
ing,  a  dope  concert  out  in 
-Westwood  plaza,  a  speak  out  dia-  - 
logue  going  on  in  front  of 
KerckhofT  Hall,  or  a  viewpoint  in 


Keep  in  mind  that 

this  education  is  not 

automatically  handed 

to  us  on  a 

silver  platter. 


the  Daily  Bruin  written  by  someone 
who  works  in  the  External  Vice 
'  President's  office  for  your  student 
government  (in  41 1  KerckhofT  Hall, 
drop  by  any  time),  talk  to  someone 


to  find  out  what  it's  about  and  see 
for  yourself  *  . 

Just  keep  an  open  mind  and 
remember  that  we  are  all  shaped 
and  infiuenced  by  our  personal 
experiences.  While  it's  easy  to  criti- 
cize a  person  or  organization  and 
never  engage  them  again;  it's  even 
harder  to  try  and  reach  out  and 
understand  that  p'erson's  back- 
ground. Sadly,  many  people  are  too 
quick  to  judge. 

As  a  campus  community,  that  is 
perhaps  the  greatest  challenge  that— 
we  face:  learning  to  understand 
each  other's  experiences  and  take 
true  ownership  of  our  campus. 


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14       September  2S-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Oiily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


S«j)teinb«25-M,2000       15 


StBdentewups 


<r« 


,;■■  «■« 


Students 


with 


boundaries 


u 


ADMISSIONS:  Diversity 
issues  can  be  addressed 
in  student  organizations 

Like  most  incoming  students 
who  enter  a  university  the  size 
of  a  small  city,  I  felt  complete- 
ly and  utterly  alone  when  I  came  to 
UCLA.  But  when  I  realized  that  I  am 
one  of  only  320  black  men  out  of  the 
3,000  students 
who  entered 
UCLA  last  year, 
I  finally  under- 
stood what  the 
fuss  was  about. 
All  of  the 
debates,  flyers, 
rallies  and  pro- 
grams came 
down  to  one 
reality:  the  black 
presence  on 

campus  was  no       

longer  just  dwin- 
dling, but  becoming  non-existent. 
Last  year,  UCLA  felt  that  only 
320  African  American  high  school 
seniors  in  the  state  of  California  were 
qualified  to  attend.  We  cannot  allow 
the  university  to  continue  slamming 
the  doors  of  higher  education  in  the 
faces  of  students  of  color,  while  per- 

Smith  is  a  second-year  undeclared  stu- 
dent and  a  member  of  the  African 
Student  Union. 


petuating  the  lie  of  a  "diverse 
UCLA." 

Since  the  implementation  ofthe 
UC  Regents  decision  SP-1  and 
Proposition  209,  which  ended  the 
consideration  of  race  in  the  admis- 
sions process,  the  university  environ- 
ment has  been  hostile  to  the  needs  of 
black  students.  A&the  campus  reseg- 
regates  (which  is  evident  on  a  daily 
basis),  funds  for  African  American 
studies  are  being  cut,  causing  African 
American  studies  courses  to  be 
dropped  from  the  schedule  of  classes. 
While  the  number  of  black  students 
has  been  decreasing,  hate  crimes 
have  been  rising.  Clearly,  racism  is 
alive  and  well  on  this  campus. 

At  this  critical  junction  in  history, 
all  must  challenge  the  university's 
inability  to  meet  the  needs  of  under- 
represented  students.  The  African 
Student  Union  has  struggled  for  30 
years  to  protect  diversity  and  access 
to  higher  education  on  this  campus. 
Seeking  to  raise  the  levels  of  con- 
sciousness for  all  people,  ASU  has 
historically  organized  around  educa- 
tional issues  and  brought  them  to  the 
forefront. 

Through  ASU  programming, 
UCLA  students  from  all  back- 
grounds have  experienced  a  myriad 
of  forums  connecting  them  to  and 
beyond  the  issues  affecting  UCLA 
Last  year.  Hip  Hop  Xplosion  2000 
brought  in  artists  such  as  Fourth 

SeeSMnN,pa9e26 


ROOCfUCK  KfXAVDa^  Bf  uin 


MIN&Yl  KHONG/Dilly  Bfuin 


CAREERS:  LGBT  students 
shouldn't  be  intimidated 
to  test  revealing  status 

One  of  my  fellow  employees 
asked,  "Are  you  two  broth- 
ers?" It  was  pretty  doubtful 
that  we  would  bt  brothers,  what 
with  Chris  being  Asian  American 
and  my  lineage  running  more . 
toward  white 
redneck  than 
anything  else. 

Sure,  I  guess 
we  could  both 
be  products  of 
some  multicul- 
tural rainbow 
tribe,  but  really, 
that's  not  too 
likely.  But  this 
woman  was 
grasping  at  any 
straw  available, 
and  had  already 

run  through  "in  law  school  togeth- 
er" and  "friend  from  home."  It  had- 
n't occurred  to  her  that  we  might  be 
dating. 

Her  reaction  wasn't  that  uncom- 
mon. Most  of  the  other  partners  and 
associates  in  the  firm  I  was  working 
for  didn't  know  what  to  think  when  i 
brought  another  guy  along  on  one  of 

Fox  is  a  second-year  law  student.  He  is  a 
member  of  the  Gay  and  Lesbian 
Association. 


the  many  fun  outings  that  they  had 
scheduled  for  us.  Not  that  I  helped 
too  much.  While  everybody  else 
gave  the  standard  "This  is  my  girl- 
friend Terry"  or  "This  is  my  fiance 
Ray,"  I  was  a  little  too  uncomfort- 
able to  use  relationship  terms. 

These  are  some  of  the  issues  that  I 
face  as  a  gay  man  in  our  society.  I 
remember  that  when  I  was  in  law 
school,  a  common  question  amongst 
the  queer  law  students  was  "Should 
you  be  out  on  your  resume?"  Some 
said  yes,  some  said  no,  but  the  fact 
that  it  was  something  that  a  lot  of 
people  felt  had  to  be  discussed  was 
somewhat  disappointing.  Even  some 
of  the  members  of  the  career  ser- 
vices ©nice  gingerly  suggest  that  I  be 
careful,  or  "realistic"  about  includ- 
ing my  involvement  with  the  local 
queer  groups. 


For  the  first  month  or 
so,  I  really  wasn't 
very  out  at  work. 


So  I  took  it  to  heart  and  decided 
that  the  best  thing  to  do  was  to  keep 
quiet  when  looking  for  a  firm  job 
and  then  test  the  waters  if  I  did 
indeed  end  up  working  somewhere. 

I  went  to  some  interviews  and 


Mi(l-(:<iin|)iis: 

cS2")-()7(i8 

S(  i(MU'(\s  Muildino 


See  MR,  page  20 


Soiiih-Cdiiipus: 

( 'CMKM  lor  lh(^ 
I  l(Mlih  S(  iciu cs 


student  Psychological  Services  (SPS)  provides  confidential  Individual  and  group-  counseling  through  two 
campus  locations.  It  is  staffed  by  psychologists,  clinical  social  workers  and  psychiatrists  who  are  familiar  with 
the  needs  and  interests  of  university  students.  We  are  open  Monday  through  Friday  from  8  a.m.  to  5  p  m 
Services  are  free  to  currently  registered  UCLA  students 

FALL  GROUPS 

For  information  or  an  intake  appointment  for  any  of  the  Fall  Groups,  please  stop  by  our  offices  or  can  the  location  numl>er. 


«<BRUIN  WEIGH** 

A  WB8kty  weight  loss  group  sponsored  By  SSBSfentHeWH 
Services  in  conjunction  with  SPS  and  UCLA  Recreation 


This  interdisciplinary  weight  loss  program  combines  nutrition 
education,  medical  management,  cognitive/behavioral  strategies,  stress 
management,  social  support,  and  fitness  classes.  For  information, 
contact  Sheri  Albert,  MPH,  RD  at  (310)  794-4180. 

Tuesdays       3:30  p.m. -5:30  p.m.      794-4180 


DISSERTATION  AND  THESIS  SUPPORT 

GROUP 

For  Graduate  Students 

Come  to  one  of  these  groups  if  you  are  a  graduate  student  who  would 
like  a  safe  and  supportive  place  to  discuss  Issues  and  difficulties 
regarding  the  Thesis  and  Dissertation  writing  process.  Call  for  an  intake 
appointment.  Three  groups  are  being  offered. 

Tuesdays  3:00  p.m. -5:00  p.m.  825-0768 
Wednesdays  3:00  p.m. -5:00  p.m.  825-0768 
Fridays  10:00  a.m. -12  noon      825-0768 


GAY/BI  MEN'S  PSYCHOTHERAPY  GROUP 

For  Gay  and  Bisexual  Men 

Issues  to  be  dealt  with  include  those  specific  to  gay  men,  e.g., 
internalized  homophobia,  as  well  as  more  general  personal  and 
interpersonal  concerns,  e.g.,  depression  and  isolation.  Call  for  an  intake 
appointment.  .  , 

Mondays        5:00  p.m. -6:30  p.m.      825-0768 

GETTING  BEYOND  GRIEF 

Dealing  With  the  Aftermath  of  Death 

Whether  the  death  was  recent  or  long  ago,  was  of  someone  close  to 
you  or  was  an  observed  event,  was  due  to  natural  causes  or  suicide,  the 
effects  on  survivors  are  often  similar  Issues  that  will  be  dealt  with 
include:  feelings  of  anger  and  guilt;  eff.ective  and  non-effective  ways  of 
coping;  and  phases  of  bereavement.  Call  for  an  intake  appointment. 

Thursdays      4:00  p.m.  -  5:30  p.m.      825-7985 

GRADUATE  &  RETURNING  STUDENTS* 
PSYCHOTHERAPY  GROUP 

A  personal  exploration  group,  providing  an  opportunity  for  graduate  and 
returning  students  to  investigate  a  wide  range  of  concerns. 
Understanding  yourself  and  others  and  important  issues  in  personal 
relationships  will  be  emphasized.  Here  you  will  find  the  support  of 
kindred  spirits  who  know  first  hand  the  tribulations  of  graduate  school. 
Call  for  an  intake  appointment. 

Mondays       3:00  p.m. -5:00  p.m.      825-0768 

LESBIAN  &  BISEXUAL  WOMEN'S 
PSYCHOTHERAPY  GROUP 

A  support  group  for  women  who  wish  to  explore  their  identity  and 
coming  out  issues,  self-esteem,  and  personal  and  interpersonal 
concerns.  Call  for  an  intake  appointment. 

Tuesdays       3:00  p.m. -5:00  p.m.      825-0768 


MAINTAINING  HEALTHY  UFESTYLES 

Examine  Strategies  To  Prevent  Problematic  Behaviors 
Due  To  Drugs  And  Alcohol 

Problems  with  drugs  and  alcohol  can  negatively  effect  one's  performance 
and  progress  in  school  as  well  as  other  areas  in  life.  This  group  will  focus 
on  exploring  how  the  use  of  drugs  and  alcohol  have  led  to  difficulties  in 
one's  life,  how  they  influence  our  behavior,  and  ways  to  prevent 
reoccurring  problems.  (This  group  is  a  replacement  for  UCLA's  Conduct 
Course  and  is  jointly  sponsored  by  Student  Psychological  Services  and 
Student  Health  Services.) 


To  Be  Arranged 


825-0768 


OBSESSIVE  COMPULSIVE  DISORDERS 
COCD)  TREATMENT  GROUP 

One  in  forty  students  has  OCD  —  a  treatable  condition  that  causes  people 
to  engage  in  repetitive  behaviors  or  to  experience  intrusive  thoughts  that 
interfere  with  their  lives.  This  group  provides  a  combination  of  education 
and  cognitive-behavioral  treatments  that  have  been  found  to  be  most 
effective  for  OCD.  Call  for  an  intake  appointment. 


To  Be  Arranged 


825-0768 


PSYCHIATRIC  DISABILITIES 
SUPPORT  GROUP 

This  group  is  for  students  who  have  diagnosed  as  having  a  chronic 
psychiatric  condition  or  disability,  such  a  bipolar  disorder  The  group  will 
combine  support  and  coping  strategies.  Please  call  for  an  intake 
interview. 


To  Be  Arranged 


825-0768 


PSYCHOTHERAPY  GROUP 

For  Self  Exploration,  Personal  Growth  and  Change 

This  group  will  explore  a  range  of  personal  and  interpersonal  concerns 
including  self-esteem,  assertiveness,  intimacy  and  emotional 
expressiveness.  The  intent  of  this  group  is  to  help  the  participants 
enhance  their  sense  of  personal  competence.  Call  for  an  intake 
appointment.  Ttiree  groups  are  being  offered. 

Wednesdays  5:00  p.m. -6:30  p.m.  825-7985 
Thursdays  1:30  p.m. -3:00  p.m.  825-7985 
Fridays  1:00  p.m. -3:00  p.m.      825-7985 


STRESS  CLINIC 


The  Stress  Clinic  offers  three  and  four  session  groups  each  focusing  on 
different  coping  skills  and  strategies  for  reducing  excessive  stress  and 
increasing  performance  effectiveness.  The  Stress  Clinic  group  schedules 
and  other  sign-up  information  can  be  obtained  by  calling  825-0768  or 
visiting  the  Mid  Campus  location  at  4223  Math' Sciences.  Sign  up  for  all 
the  groups  you  think  might  be  helpful.  ■. 

COGNITIVE  APPROACHES  TO  STRESS 
MANAGEMENT 


LOVE  LESSONS 

The  purpose  of  this  group  is  to  assist  members  in  understanding  the 
attraction  and  selection  process  as  it  applies  to  their  lives.  Each 
member  will  be  responsible  for  becoming  aware  of  his  or  her  needs, 
expectations,  and  desires  which  fuel  the  dating  process.  Further,  eacfi 
member  will  develop  a  shopping  list  clarifying  their  priorities  for  a 
relationship  as  well  as  avoiding  looking  for  love  in  all  tfie  wrong  places. 
Finally  there  will  also  be  an  opportunity  for  group  members  to 
understand  the  characteristics  of  a  healthy  relationship  including 
physical  intimacy,  emotional  connection,  and  exclusivity.  Call  for  an 
intake  appointment. 

Thursdays      10:00  a.m. -11:30  a.m.  825-0768 


'^■:-:y '■■-._. fiy       Constructive  Ways  Of  Thinking 

The  amount  of  stress  a  person  experiences  is  often  related  to  how  he  or 
she  interprets  events,  not  just  the  events  themselves.  This  group  will 
focus  on  identifying  beliefs  and  self-talk  that  may  intensify  stress 
responses  and  on  replacing  them  with  more  realistic  and  constructive 
ways  of  thinking. 


RELAXAHON  TRAINING  AND 
BIOFEEDBACK 

This  group  is  designed  to  help  participants  learn  ways  to  remain  calm 
during  stressful  situations.  A  variety  of  tools,  including  biofeedback, 
imagery,  relaxation  and  positive  self-talk  will  be  introduced. 

STRESS  CLINIC  WORKSHOP  SERIES 

One-session  workshops  focusing  on  various  stress-related  topics. 
(See  Stress  Clinic  Brochure  ior  topics  and  schedule.) 


« # 


16       Septeint>«r  25-38, 2000 


-    i ^<_-_L^ 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Stiident  groups  continue  to 
fight  for  educational  equality 

AG1VISM:  MEChA,  other  organizations  of  color 
strive  for  equality  on  campus,  in  community 


JENNY  YURSHANSKY/Daily  Brum 


Each  generation  must,  out  of 
relative  obscurity,  discover  its 
mission,  fulfill  it,  or  betray  it." 
Though  these  words  were  spoken 
more  than  30 
years  ago  by 
Frantz  Fanon, 
they  still  apply 
to  the  present 
generation  of 
students  who 
walk  within  the 
walls  of  the 
ivory  towers  of 
UCLA.    -     ; 

For 
Movimiento 
Estudiantil 
Chicana/o  de 

Aztlan,  student  of  color  organiz»- 
tions  and  student  activists  on  cam- 

Serna  is  a  third-year  history  and 
Chicana/o  studies  student  She  will 
serve  as  the  chair  of  MEChA  this  year. 
Contact  her  at  e6serna@ucla.edu. 


Elizabeth 
Sema 


pus,  the  beginning  of  this  academic 
year  brings  us  an  opportunity  to 
reflect  on  the  past  and  begin  plan*'  - 
ning  and  realizing  our  mission  for:  : 
the  future. 

Thirty  years  ago,  the  student  of 
color  organizations  that  were 
formed  on  this  campus  and  many 
other  campuses  throughout  the      • 
nation  were  seen  as  the  student 
branch  of  larger  social  movements 
that  called  for  revolutionary  change 
and  an  end  to  oppressive  conditions 
that  plagued  our  communities.  The 
student  movements  were  successful 
in  establishing  a  power  base  within 
institutions  of  higher  education  and 
in  demandirig  that  the  university 
provide  resources  and  remain 
accountable  to  the  needs  of  our  conv 
munities.  This  was  realized  through 
the  establishment  of  aflirmative 
action  and  ethnic  studies  programs. 

Today,  the  daily  realities  of  our 
communities  continue  to  be  those  of 

S«eSBdM,page24 


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•  •    .         11 


Daily  Bruin  Vicwpeint 


September  25-28, 2000       17 


U  C  L  A  ?  E  R  F  O  R  M  I  N  G   A  R  T  S 

ill 


Fall  Quarter  Calendar  of  FREE  tvems 


/" 


■.  ^w 


In&pireyour  Imasmations  Nurture  your  Spirit 


•X'- 


Shlriey  Horn  Trio  G  Chaille  Haden  Qwuiet  West 

*rhe  Art  of  the  Song"      i: ' 

ciNTiRSTACE  With  Charlt*  Haden.  artist 
Thun.  Sept2iai7PM    Roycei9o 

'    Martaa  Monte 

CENTERS T ACE  With  Scfflo  MMniczenko.  consul  general  of  Braiil; 

host  of  'Olobal  Vjllaje.'  KPFK  90.7FM  G  -Brazilian  Hour' 

KXLU88.9FN 
Fri.  Sept  22  at  7PM   Royce  190 

Buena  VUta  Social  Club  preAenu 

Oman  Portuondo  with  special  guest  Barbarito  Torres 

CENTERSTACE  With  Juan  MoTillo.  host  of 'Frccuencia  Latina.' 

KCSN88.;fm 
Fri,  Sept  29  at  7  pm    Royce  190 

Evgeny  Kissin  .,^ 

CENTERSTACE  With  Of.  Mllton  Stera  professor eiMrttos. 

Cal  State  University  Los  Angeles 
Sun.  Oct  I  at  6  PN    Royce  190 

The  Ru'sons  Dance  Company 

CENTERSTACE  With  David  Parsons.  artistic  director 
FriGSat.  0ci6C7at7PM    Royce  190 

POST  PERFORMANCE   DISCUSSIONS 

Fri  C  Sat  Oct  6  G  7   Royce  Hall 

Alan  Bergnuui  S  Karen  Morrow 

CENTERSTACE  With  Michael  Kerker.  director  of  Musical  Theater 

and  Cabaret  for  ASCAP 
Sat.  Oct  7  at  7  PM    Schoenberg  Music  BIdg.  Jan  Popper  Theater 

MEET  THE  ARTIST  -  Karen  MofTOW 

Mon.  Oct  9  from  3  to  <:jo  pm 

Schoenberg  Music  BIdg,  Jan  Popper  Theater 

Ratan  Thiyam's  Chorus  Repertory  Theater 

"Uttar-Priyadarshi" 

CENTERSTACE  wtth  Dr.  SuHil  Kothart.  piofessor  C  dance  cflttc 
ThursGFri.  Octi2  Ci}at7PM   Royce  190 

DISCUSSION 

Frt.  Oct  ij  from  11  am  to  u:)opm 
Glorya  Kaufman  Hall,  Theater  200 


Eileen  Ivers  ''  ^t  :''■['■'    ■/■ 

CENTERSTACE  With  Eileen  Ivers,  artist 

Sat.  Oct  14  at  7  PM   Schoenberg  Music  BIdg.  Jan  Popper  Theater 

An  Evening  With  Audra  McDonald 

MEET  THE  ARTIST 

Fri  Oct  20  from  ;;)o  to  7  PM    Schoenberg  1)4 j 

CENTERSTACE  with  Kari  Windlngstad.  soprano 
Sat.  Oct  21  at  7  PM    Royce  190 

POST-PERFORMANCE   DISCUSSION 

Sat.  Oct  21    Royce  Hall  r."-'  ;    -i  • 

Whirling  Dervishes 

DISCUSSION/WORKSHOP 

Sat,  Oct  21  at  I  PM    Schoenberg  Music  BIdg.  GameUn  Room 

CENTERSTACE  With  Dr.  Kabir  Helminskl.  Mevlevi  Sheikh  and 

direaor  of  The  ThreshoW  Society 
Sal.  Oct  21  at  7  PM    Schoenberg  Music  BIdj  Jan  Popper  Theater 

Berlin  Philharmonic  Wind  Quintet 
with  Jon  Nakamatsa 

CENTERSTACE  With  Fergus  McWilliam.  artist 

Sun.  Oct  22  at  6  PM   Schoenberg  Music  BWg.  Jan  Popper  Theater 

POST-PERFORMANCE  DISCUSSION 

Sun,  Oct  22   Schoenberg  Music  BWg.  Ostin  Hall 
White  Oak  Dance  Project 

CENTERSTACE  With  Nancy  Duncan,  director  of  outreach. 

White  Oak  Dance  Project  and  Maura  Keefe.  dance  scholar 
Wed-Sat.  Oct  25-28  at  7PM   Royce  Hall 

DISCUSSION/DEMONSTRATION  .       .    -' 

Fri,  Oa27from  iiAMiD  i2:K>PM  ^    r.  ,, 

Glorya  Kaufman  Kali,  Theater  200 

MASTER  CLASS  led  by  company  members      '    ..^v-' 
Dorr  and  rim«  to  be  announced  .'.'    - 

ketervaUont  are  required 


www.performingarts.ucla.edu 


The  GATE  Theater  Dublin  'Waiting  for  Godot' 
CENTERSTACE  With  David  Hammerbeck.  faculty. 
.,    Loyola Marymount University  ''•'''- 

Wed-Sat.  Oct  25-28  at  7  PM; 
Sun.  Oct  29  at  1  PM 
Freud  Playhouse  ^¥ 

POST-PERFORMANCE  DISCUSSION 

Wed.  Oct  j$  Freud  Playhouse 
Optmins  Night  Only  .'-t   ■■  .  , 

INFORMAL  DISCUSSION  With  Barry  McGovem 

on  the  "Theatre  of  Samuel  Becken' 
Thurs,  0ct26at2.3OPM    Location  ro  (>e  determined 

INFORMAL  DISCUSSION  with theartists 

on  "Playing  the  Irishness  of  Becken' 
Fri.  Oct  27  at  4  PM   Location  to  be  determined 


Rennie  Harris  Pnremovement  "Rome  and  Jewels' 

-   DISCUSSION/DEMONSTRATION 

Thurs.  Oct  26  from  11  am  to  12  noon 
Gk>rya  Kaufman  Hall.  Studio  208 

CENTERSTACE  With  Keith  Terry,  faculty. 

UCLA  Department  of  WorkJ  Arts  C  Cultures 
FrtGSat.  Oct27C28at7PM 
Schoenberg  Music  BWg.  Jan  Popper  Theater 

SpormrH  by  Pnaaytntm  CainnI  on  *«  Am 

Sequentla  Thousand  Year  Old  Songs' 
i    CENTERSTACE  With  Benjamin  Bagby,  director 
Sun.  Oct  29  at )  PM   Schoenberg  Music  BWg.  Ostin  Hall 

DISCUSSION/DEMONSTRATION'.'    . 

Mon.  Oct  30  from  12  to  1  pm 
Schoenberg  Music  BIdg,  Ostin  Hall 

Misla       ■  ■-.    --..  ■' 

CENTERSTACE  With  DonaW  Cohen,  attorney,  folkterist,  G  educator 
Thurs.  Nov  2  at  7  PM   Royce  190 

DISCUSSION/DEMONSTRATION     '- 

Fri,  Nov)  at  I  PM   Schoenberg  Music  BWg.  GameUn  Room 
Acccntus 

DISCUSSION /DEMONSTRATION 

Thurs,  Nov  2  from  12  to  1  pm   Schoer)berg  1345 

CENTERSTACE  With  Laurence  E()uilbey,  music  ditectoT 

Thurs,  Nov  2  at  7  PM   Schoenberg  Music  BWg.  Jan  Popper  Theater 

■  IpMiMit'  by  ihr  Henry  Mawn  EnAwmni  an^  by  i«<t  AMwn  md  ElMnt  tordwrd  FountfMKn 

'  An  Evenlnj  With  Arlo  Gudule  and  Family 

.CENTERSTACE  with  Amy  Wooley,  director, 
UCLA  Anglo  American  Ensemble 
Frt.  Nov) at  7PM   Royce  190 

f^Ofifond  by  S«nMMrar4  Fnt  Inwltn 

Menahem  Pressler  and  Young  Uck  Kim 

CENTERSTACE  With  Paul  Huybrechts.  faculty,        .    - 

use  Thornton  School  of  Music  '         '     , 

FrtGSat,  Nov)G4at7PM,  ■•.;.•'•. "^ 

Sun,  Nov  5  at  )PM   Schoenberg  Music  BIdg,  Jan  Popper  Theater 
Nadja  Salemo-Sonnenberg  with  the  Assad  Duo 
CENTERSTACt  with  the  artlsts 
Sat,  Nov  4  at  7  PM    Royce  190 


Mark  Morris  Dance  Group       ;  ;. 

MASTER  CLASS  led  by  company  members 

Thun,  Nov  9  at  6  PM  In  Glorya  Kaufman  HalL  Studio  214 

0  c  A  with  Mark  Morris 

'         Frt.  Nov  lofrom  HAM  tOI2:)OPM 

GWrya  Kaufman  Hail.  Theater 200 

.     CENTERSTACE  with  Barry  Alterman.  general  director 
Sat,  Nov  II  at  7  PM   Royce  190 
One  Mfsfir  Onf> 

POST-PERFORMANCE  DISCUSSION 

With  Mark  Morris  G  company  members 
Sat,  Nov  II    Royce  Hall 
One  NIsht  Only 

■     Spennr«4btr«itN(«EnflandFaun4iiKinfarthtAroan4lh(jMinA  Doollill«  Endowmmi 

Borromeo  String  Quartet  with  Christopher  O'Rlley 

CENTERSTACE  with  artists 

Sun.  Nov  12 at) PM   Schoenberg  1)25 

PIANO  MASTER  CLASS  led  by  Christopher  ORiley 

Mon,  Nov  I)  from  I  to  )PM   Schoenberg  1343  ,_...::. 

Regfaui  Carter  Quintet 

D I  s  c  u  s  s  1 0  N  with  Reglna  Carter 

Wed.  Nov  15  from  1 10  2  PM    Schoenberg  134) 

c  E  N  T  E  R  s  T  A  0  E  with  Regina  Carter,  anist 

Sat,  Nov  18  at  7  PM   Schoenberg  Music  BIdg.  Jan  Popper  Theater 

Keith  Jarrett/Gary  Peacock/Jack  Dejohnette 

CENTERSTACE  With  Freddie  Johnson,  program  director, 

KCSN885FM  '        ." 

Thurs,  Nov  16  at  7  pm    Royce  190  . ,  ■ 

Shakti  with  John  McLaughlin  8  Zakir  Hussain 

CENTERSTACE  with  David  Askren.  guitarist  G  educator 
Sat,  Nov  18  at  7  PM    Royce  190 

Ensemble  Galilei 'Annas  Garden' 

CENTERSTACE  with  theartists 
Sun,  Nov  19  at  I  PM    Schoenberg  1)25 

"Kwaidan"  Three  Japanese  Ghost  Shorles 

c  E  N  T  E  R  s  T  A  c  E  with  Ping  Chong.  vmiter  G  director 

Thurs,  Nov  )o  at  7  pm   Freud  Playhouse  ^     ■  ■    .    .       ~ 

Openins  Night  Only 

DISCUSSION/DEMONSTRATION  led  by  Ping  Chong 

Fri,  Dec  I  from  11  am  to  i2:)opm   Glorya  Kaufman  Hall,  Theater  200 

POST-PERFORMANCE  06 A  withcompany  members 
Frt  C  Sat,  Dec  I  G  2    Freud  Playhouse 
Cvenins  Pertormanced  On{y 

Denyce  Graves 

CENTERSTACE  with  Juliana  Gondek.  faculty, 

UCLA  Department  of  Music 
SuaDec)ai)PM    Royce  190 

POST-PERFORMANCE   DISCUSSION 

Sun.  Dec  3    Royce  Hall 
Duo  Calabrese 

CENTERSTACE  with  John  Anthony  Calabrese,  artist 

Sun,  Dec  3  at  3  PM   Schoenberg  Music  BIdg.  Jan  Popper  Theater 

MASTER  CLASS  '^  ' 

Time  and  date  to  be  derermined    Schoenberg  Music  BWg 
Chava  Alberstein 

CENTERSTACE  With  David  N  Myers,  faculty, 

UCLA  Oepanment  of  History 
Thurs,  Dec  7  at  7  PM    Royce  190 

The  Boys  Choir  of  Harlem 

CENTERSTACE  With  Dr  Albert  McNeil,  director  G  founder, 

Albert  McNeil  Jubilee  Singers  of  Los  Angeles 
Sat,  Dec  16  at  I  PM   Royce  190 

Tallis  SchoUrs 

CENTERSTACE  with  Peter  Phillips,  director 
Sun,  Dec  17  at  3  PM    Royce  190 

Prosram*.  darei.  timw  and  \fenue6  iubjeci  to  chanse    ^ 

For  more  information  or  for  a  complete  calendar  ol  events, 
call  310.  206. 1144 


'--  -w 


These  events  are  FREE  for  UCLA  studentsi 

A// CENTERSTACE   DISCUSSIONS 

are  FREE  fo  tteketholdert 


UCL^B 


..  •■■.^*w  «*. 


■  ^■J.i,^— >..>.lM.i,...l'^      I 


-^-^ 


18       $eptofflber2S-2a,2000 


Oii|f  Brain  VlN^Mkt 


Do  your  part  to  help  protect  California,  our  nation's  resources 


Marc 
Nickel 


ENVIRONMENT:  At  UCLA, 
CALPIRG  works  on  local, 
^—national  activist  issues 

Welcome  back  (or  just  plain 
welcome)  to  UCLA.  Now 
that  we've  all  had  our  break 
from  the  normal  routine  of  discussion 
sections  and  all-nighters,  it's  time  to 
get  active  again.  This  is  college,  the 
"^""^  Mecca  of  youth 
politicized, 
where  a  hun- 
dred-and-one 
different  people 
openly  present  a 
hundred-and- 
one  different 
viewpoints.  So  if 
you  haven't  yet 
gotten  involved 
with  some 

cause,  campaign 

or  issue,  the  — — ^— — ^— 
beginning  of  the 

year  is  a  prime  time  to  grab  onto 
something  larger  than  yourself  and 
enjoy  the  ride,  maybe  even  take  a  turn 
behind  the  wheel. 

What  did  you  do  this  summer? 
Like  many  others,  myself  included, 
you  probably  got  some  mindless  job 
doing  menial  tasks  for  one  reason 
and  one  reason  alone:  money.  I 
know,  I  know,  a  necessary  cause.  We 
all  need  to  have  spending  money  for 
our  recreational  activities  -  and  let's 
not  forget  the  ever-present  tuition 
bill.  But  now  it's  Fall  Quarter  2000, 
and  each  and  every  one  of  us  has  a 
golden  opportunity  to  put  some  time 
into  a  cause  of  his/her  choice. 

Now  that  we're  back  at  UCLA, 
causes  abound,  each  of  them  ripe  for 
the  picking.  Two  issues  that  I  am 
most  concerned  about  have  to  do 
with  the  well-being  of  the  planet  and 
the  six  billion  people  who  live  on  it. 
Both  will  be  decisively  concluded, 
one  way  or  another,  before  we've 
even  cracked  the  door  open  on  the 
real  new  millennium  in  January.  The 
two  causes  to  which  I  refer  are  the 
fate  of  the  nation's  forests  and  the 
quality  of  California's  air. 

America's  last  remaining  national 
forests  are  priceless.  They  are  home 
to  thousands  of  plant  and  wildlife 
species  as  well  as  an  important  refuge 
for  people  to  enjoy  hiking,  camping 
and  fishing.  Yet  sadly,  they're  up  for 
sale  to  the  timber  and  mining  indus- 
tries. Today,  logging,  mining  and  oil 
drilling  have  scarred  more  than  half 
of  our  national  forest  land.  These  are 

Nickel  is  a  third-year  history  and  sociol- 
ogy student.  E-mail  him  at 
nfwiickel@uda.edu,  or  call  CALPIRG  at 
(310)  206-4439  with  questions. 


forests  owned  by  you  and  me,  every 
man,  woman  and  child  in  this  coun- 
try, and  yet  only  a  mere  18  percent  of 
them  are  protected  from  actiohs  like 
strip  mining,  clear  cutting  and  road 
building. 

I  could  nil  this  space  with  statistics 
to  describe  the  problems  our  forests 
are  facing,  but  I  don't  need  to 
because  two  numbers  tdl  the  story: 
four  and  200  million.  Four  is  the  per- 
centage of  ancient  forests  that  are  left 
in  the  U.S.,  forests  that  once  grew 
from  the  Atlantic  to  the  Pacific 
Ocean.  Two  hundred  million  is  the 
amount  of  tax  dollars,  your  hard- 
earned  cash,  the  government  gives  to 
the  logging  and  mining  industries  to 
subsidize  the  destruction  of  our 
forests. 

Fortunately,  this  (i\l  quarter  we 
have  a  historic  opportunity  to  protect 
the  last  remaining  60  million  acres  of 
wild  forests.  Thousands  of  students, 


like  myself,  across  the  nation  will  be 
working  with  professional  suffs  of 
lawyers,  scientists  and  advocates  to 
convince  President  Ginton  to  pass 
strong  forest  legislation  before  he 
leaves  office  in  January. 

We  have  already  made  tremen- 
dous progress:  last  October,  Ointon 
talked  about  protecting  forests  in  his 
State  of  the  Union  address.  Now  it  is 
time  for  students  across  the  country 
to  make  sure  our  wild  forests  are  pro- 
tected for  future  generations. 

The  second  issue  I  will  be  working 
on  this  quarter  will  be  improving  the 
quality  of  California's  air.  California 
continues  to  have  some  of  the  dirtiest 
air  in  the  nation.  In  1998, 95  percent 
of  Califomians  live  in  areas  that 
failed  to  meet  health  standards  of  air 
quality.  To  make  the  air  safe  to 
breathe  and  curb  global  warming,  we 
must  reduce  pollution  onitted  from 
cars. 


HtNG-Yt  KHONG/Daily  Bruin 

Fortunately,  the  technology  exists 
to  do  just  that.  Electric  cars,  which 
have  no  tail  pipe  and  do  not  pollute 
the  air  exist  with  ever  increasing 
ranges.  For  example,  Toyota's 
Electric  RAV-4  can  achieve  ranges  of 
125  miles  between  charges.  While  the 
technology  to  realize  this  goal  exists, 
attacks  from  the  auto  and  oil  indus- 
tries threaten  to  weaken  the  Zero 
Emission  Vehicle  (ZEV)  Program. 

California  is  frequently  cited  as 
the  nation's  leader  in  environmental 
policies,  especially  in  the  territory  of 
air  quality.  But  in  order  to  achieve 
clean  air.  Governor  Davis  must  pass 
dean  air  policies.  That  is  where  stu- 
dents like  you  and  I  come  in:  we  need 
to  show  Governor  Davis  and  the 
California  Air  Resources  Board  that 
Califomians  want  to  breathe  clean 
air  and  drive  dean  cars. 

Crudal  dedsions  are  going  to  be 
made  on  both  the  national  forests 


and  dean  air  issues  (lefore  ^  year 
2001,  resulting  in  policies  that  could 
last  for  decades  or  more. 

The  organization  at  UCLA  tfat  is 
spearheading  the  efTorts  to  save  our 
National  Forests  and  protect  our 
Clean  Air  is  the  California  Public 
Interest  Research  Group, 
CALPIRG.  CALPIRG  is  unique 
among  UCLA  student  groups  in  that 
it  offers  an  opportunity  to  Work  on 
these  campaigns,  while  earning 
course  credit  through  a  professor- 
sponsored  internship.  Interns  are  the 
backbone  to  the  campaigns.  They 
include  everything,  from  running 
press  conferences  and  organizing 
education  forums,  to  voluntieering  in 
local  homeless  shelters  and  research- 
ing environmental  and  other  public 
interest  issues.  '    „ 

I  think  it  is  safe  to  assume  that  you 
care  about  protecting  the  environ- 
ment, or  at  least  don't  want  to  see  it 
destroyed.  So.'indulge  me  while  i 
imagine  all  the  reasons  why  you 
might  care  about  our  national  forests 
and  California's  air.  One  reason 
might  be  because  you  went  to  the 
redwood  forests  in  Northern 
California  this  summer  and  would 
like  to  go  again  next  summer  and  one 
day  take  your  kids. 

Another  reason  you  might  care  is 
because  you  drove  from  Northern 
California  to  Southern  California 
this  summer  and  gas  alone  cost  you 
almost  S80,  and  you  have  no  real 
alternatives. 

You  might  care  because  your  little 
brother  had  asthma  and  he  couldn't 
play  baseball  with  the  other  kids  this 
summer.  You  might  care  because  20 
percent  of  your  summer  paycheck 
that  went  to  the  government  is  being 
used  to  cut  down  forests  you  want 
standing. 

All  of  these  reasons,  and  more,  are 
why  I'm  writing  to  tdl  you  to  get 
involved  in  causes  at  UCLA.  Be  they 
political  or  service-oriented,  conserv- 
ative or  liberal  agendas,  join  the  mil- 
lions of  students  around  the  worid; 
students  from  Tienanmen  Square  in 
China  to  the  Civil  Rights  Movement 
in  America;  students  who  have  used 
their  time  in  college  to  create  and  for- 
ward soda]  change. 

Aristotle  once  wrote,  "The  ulti- 
mate value  of  life  depends  upon 
awareness  and  the  power  of  contem- 
plation rather  than  upon  mere  sur- 
vival." In  other  words,  education 
can't  always  be  found  within  your 
textbook.  Don't  be  content  to  merely 
ace  the  midterms  and  cram  for  the 
Tmals.  Don't  be  content  to  merdy 
survive  college;  use  it  to  change  your 
world.  And  if  you  do  that,  the  results 
of  your  hard  work,  both  in  and  out- 
side of  the  dassroom,  will  affect  us 
all  for  a  long  time. 


WOLFENSTEIN 

Fn)mpage4 

They  use  all  means  possible  to  retain 
them,  including  the  ideological  mask- 
ing oftheir  interests. 

So,  stated  positively:  the  transfor- 
mation of  American  society  has  been 
the  work  of  the  disadvantaged  and 
the  dispossessed.  As  Malcolm  X 
rightly  said,  "It's  not  in  the  nature  of 
power  to  back  up  in  the  face  of  any- 
thing but  some  more  power." 
Progressive  change  results  from  the 
exercise  of  power  by  ordinary  people, 
working  together  for  the  realization 
of  thdr  collective  interests  and 
against  the  entrenched  privileges  of 
social  elites. 

There  are  multiple  levers  of  popu- 
lar power.  Take  the  example  of  the 
dvil  rights  movement.  One  approach 
to  the  problem  of  the  color  line, 
favored  by  the  NAACP,  was  judicial. 
The  landmark  Supreme  Court  deci- 
sion of  Brown  v.  Board  of  Education 
in  1954,  which  overturned  the  doc- 
trine of  "separate  but  equal"  in  edu- 
cation, was  the  most  dramatic  result 


of  tbis  strategy.  It  was  also  a  begin- 
ning: the  end  of  de  jure  school  segre- 
gation set  the  stage  for  a  broadened 
assault  on  white  supremacy  in  the 
South;  and  that  struggle  brought  to 
the  fore  Dr.  Martin  Luther  King  and 
the  strategy  of  nonviolent  direct 
action. 

Nonviolent  direct  action  disrupted 
the  normal  operations  of  white  radst 
power.  When  white  politidans  and 
police  responded  to  these  peaceful 
actions  with  the  brutal  use  of  force, 
they  effectively  yielded  the  moral 
high  ground  to  the  demonstrators, 
and  this  hdped  members  of  the      :   - 
movement  to  gather  around  them- 
selves a  large  and  sympathetic  follow- 
ing of  both  races. 

The  march  on  Washington  in 
1963,  at  which  Dr.  King  delivered  his 
rightly  famous  "I  have  a  dream" 
speech,  testiffed  to  a  nonviolent  revo- 
lution in  progress;  and  the  Civil 
Righu  Act  of  1964  and  Voting  ftighu 
Act  of  1965  set  the  seal  of  victory  on 
this  phase  of  the  movement. 

Just  as  nonviolent  direct  action 
grew  out  of  the  judicial  strategy  that 
preceded  it,  so  the  militant  political 


protests  of  the  late  19608  were  the 
legacy  of  the  preceding  struggles.  On 
the  one  hand,  they  built  upon  the  dvil 
rights  movement's  strategy  of  collec- 
tive engagement. 

On  the  other,  they  were  a  response 
to  the  limitations  of  the  movement  - 
to  its  inability  to  engage  effectivdy  de 
facto  radsm  in  the  North  or  the  prob- 


Wearethe 

beneficiaries  of 

(ordinary  people's) 

often  heroic  efforts. 


lems  of  poverty  that  were  endemic  to 
Mack  communities  north  and  south. 
Malcolm  X,  espedally  after  he  left 
the  Nation  of  Islam,  was  the  most 
forceful  and  mfluential  spokesperson 
for  the  more  mHitant  perspective;  and 
the  force  of  his  words  was  amplified 
by  the  ghetto  uprisings  of  the  period 
-  induding  the  one  in  Watu  in  1965. 


Thus  we  come  to  UCLA,  which 
was  one  of  the  centers  of  political 
protest  activity  in  Los  Angeles.  I  was 
reminded  of  the  terrible  glory  of  that 
place  and  time  at  a  gathering  last 
spring,  when  the  Center  for  African 
American  Studies  celebrated  its  30th 
anniversary. 

The  speakers  strongly  evoked  both 
the  feeling  of  being  part  of  a  collec- 
tive movement  that  was  literally 
transforming  lives  and  the  hardships 
and  pain  that  accompanied  bringing 
something  radically  new  into  exis- 
tence. That  something  new  induded, 
of  course,  the  center  itsdf;  and,  as 
several  speaken  emphasized,  the 
organizoj  power  of  African 
American  students  played  a  vital  role 
in  forcing  the  UCLA  administration 
to  act  affirmatively  in  the  nutter. 
One  should  not  think,  however, 
that  the  exerdse  of  popular  power,  at 
UCLA  or  more  generally,  was  with- 
out contradiction.  There  were  a  vari- 
ety of  tensions  within  and  between 
organizations  -  including  the  one 
between  women  and  men.  Power,  it 
became  dear,  wu  lendered  as  wdl  as 
raced.  Feminist  struggles  of  various 


kinds,  as  well  as  the  assertion  of 
rights  by  lesbian  and  gay  activists, 
grew  out  of  the  movement  (induding 
the  antiwar  side  of  the  movement). 
And  these  overlapping  and  conflict- 
ing political  tendendes  combined  to 
alter,  in  quite  radical  ways,  how  we 
live  our  lives. 

I  have  been  telling  an  American 
tale.  It  would  be  vastly  more  compli- 
cated, and  its  tragic  dements  would 
be  far  more  pronounced,  if  1  broad- 
ened it  beyond  national  borders. 

But  either  way,  I  want  to  derive 
two  morals  from  the  story.  First,  the 
realm  of  freedom  has  been  signifi- 
cantly expanded  by  the  collective 
action  of  ordinary  people.  We  are  the 
benefidaries  of  thdr  often  heroic 
effbru.  Second,  the  problem  Du  Bois 
posed  has  only  been  partially  solved, 
the  revolution  is  unfinished  and,  in 
some  instances,  its  accomplishments 
are  under  fire.  (1  have  in  mind  the 
attacks  on  affirmative  action  and  a 
woman's  right  to  choose.) 

Let's  hope  that,  in  the  century  now 
dawning,  we  will  keq)  the  wheel  turn- 
ing and  cover  just  a  little  more 
groand. 


V'    ;'■/ 


Sepiembef  25-29^  2000       19 


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20       September  25-28, 2000 


OaiiyBniinViewpomI 


FOX 

Frompagel4 

ended  up  getting  an  ofTer  Tor  a  sum- 
mer job  at  a  firm  that  felt  like  a  very 
nice  place  to  work.  The  people  were 
friendly  and  I  felt  the  working  envi- 
ronment would  be  a  fun  and  com- 
fortable one.  I  really  wasn't  sure 
what  the  firm's  reaction  would  be  to 
having  a  gay  summer  associate. 

It  was  a  friendly  place,  as  I  said, 
but  also  very  family-oriented.  What's 
more,  the  office  was  in  Orange 
County,  which  is  not  exactly  the  first 
place  that  comes  to  mind  when  one 
is  looking  for  gay-positive  work  envi- 
ronments. 

I  figured  that  I  would  take  it  slow- 
ly. For  the  first  month  or  so,  I  really 
wasn't  very  out  at  work,  even  to  the 
other  law  students  working  that  sum- 
mer. The  first  thing  I  did  was  check 
out  the  firm's  anti-discrimination 
policy  and  was  pleased  to  discover 
that  it  did  include  sexual  orientation. 

Pleasantly,  the  firm  had  also  seen 
fit  to  explicitly  include  HIV  status 
under  disabilities  against  which  it 
would  not  discriminate.  That  was 
one  check  in  the  "Okay  to  come 
out"  column.  But  there  were  no  ben- 
efits for  same-sex  partners.  A  check 
in  the  "Don't  be  out"  column.  I 
searched  for  other  gay  people  in  the 
office  and  couldn't  find  any. 


Another  check  in  the  **No"  column. 

Regardless,  I  still  couldn't  fight 
the  feeling  inside  urging  me  to  come 
out.  After  working  there  for  a  few 
weeks  and  considering  the  possibility 
of  coming  back  to  the  firm  in  the 
future,  I  came  to  realize  that  I  was 
goingip  have  to  start  testing  the 
waters  in  some  real  way.  For  exam- 
ple, I  decided  to  bring  my  boyfriend 
Chris  along  on  some  firm  outings. 
This  brings  us  back  to  the  confused 
lawyer  I  mentioned  at  the  beginning 
of  this  column. 

Eventually,  some  people  seemed 
to  catch  on  to  the  situation.  Of 
course,  after  all  of  the  build-up,  what 
did  I  learn?  No  one  really  cared.  By 
that,  I  mean  no  one  really  cared  to 
treat  me  or  him  any  differently. 

Chris  got  the  same  small  talk  as 
the  other  boyfriends  and  girlfriends. 
Attorneys  invited  him  to  come  out  to 
dinner  along  with  me.  I  got  at  most 
one  negative  response,  but  seeing  as 
how  that  was  from  another  student, 
it  was  pretty  easy  to  shrug  off. 

Since  then,  I  have  realized  that  I 
can  be  that  Mr.  Out-and-Proud,  or  at 
least  Mr  Out-and-Confident,  that  I 
was  unsure  of  being  before. 

Since  this  summer,  I've  gone  on  a 
number  of  interviews  and  was  com- 
pletely up  front  with  employers 
about  my  orientation  whenever  it 
came  up.  I  included  my  activity  with 
UCLA's  LGBT  Mentoring  Program 


on  my  resume  and  freely  talked  with 
them  about  the  kind  of  company 
environment  that  I  was  looking  for.  I 
also  talked  to  my  fii^  about  their 
benefits  policy,  encouraging  them  to 
consider  enlarging  it  to  include  \r} 
same-sex  couples. 

Through  all  of  this  I  have  found 
few  troubles.  From  my  experience,  it 
seems  that  many  modem  companies 
and  firms  have  learned  to  be  profes- 
sional enough  to  look  for  good 
employees  of  all  types  and  to  respect 
families  and  relationships  of  all 
kinds,    ."m  '■;   ■'.■n,  .■  -,  '•■.., "';.,-f.''",fv  -, 


After  all  of  the  build- 
up, what  did  I  learn? 
No  one  really  cared. 


Some  of  you  who  have  made  the 
mistake  of  reading  this  far  are  no 
doubt  saying,  "Wow,  that  Ryan  guy 
sure  is  one  impressive,  confident-in- 
his-alternative-lifestyle  piece  of 
work.  But  how  does  his  little  feel- 
good column  apply  to  those  of  us 
who  haven't  come  anywhere  near 
that  point  yet?" 

Yes,  I  realize  that  there  are    "^^  "  ' 
undoubtedly  many  readers  of  this 
column  who  are  not  out,  or  only  out 


to  a  few  people,  or  are  just  looking 
for  some  more  LGBT  (oh,  how  I  do 
love  typing  those  letters)  opportuni- 
ties on  campus.  Let  me  suggest  a  few 
resources  on  campus  that  can  help. 

First,  for  those  people  who  are 
having  issues  with  their  coming  out 
processes  or  have  not  come  out  to 
anyone  yet,  let  me  suggest  the  afore- 
mentioned LGBT  Mentoring 
Program.  This  program  offers  a 
chance  for  each  student  to  meet  one- 
on-onc  with  a  mentor  who  can  help 
him  or  her  through  his  or  her  coming 
out  process  by  offering  supportt ;  •'• 
guidance  and  resources. 

Basically,  if  you  feel  like  you 
would  appreciate  a  willing  ear  to  talk 
to,  or  would  like  some  simple  advice 
as  you  wade  through  telling  people 
about  yourself,  dating,  or  learning 
about  the  LGBT  community,  this 
program  might  be  right  for  you. 

Also,  keep  in  mind  that  anyone's 
involvement  in  the  program  will  be 
kept  confidential.  Check  out  the  web 
page  at  www.bol.ucla.edu/~mentors, 
or  call  825-0768  if  you  would  like  to 
learn  more. 

:■: .  Next,  if  you  are  interested  in  get- 
ting involved  in  campus  activities, 
there  are  a  number  of  opportunities 
for  you,  the  least  of  which  is  GALA, 
a  social/political/community  group. 
GALA  meets  every  week  at  7  p.m. 
in  355  Kinsey  Hall. 

GALA  also  sponsors  discussion 


groups  for  men,  women,  and  bisexu- 
al students  that  also  meet  weekly. 
GALA  can  be  reached  al«25-8053. 

Finally,  for  students  looking  for 
further  resources,  check  out  the      '^ : 
LGBT  Campus  Resource  Center  in 
240  Kinsey.  Dr.  Sanio  and  the  stafT  - 
there  run  the  center  every  day  and 
help  students  find'resources  they 
need. 

In  addition,  there  is  an  excellent  ; 
library  with  many  many  books  relal" 
ing  to  LGBT  concerns.  Check  out 
their  web  site  at 

http://www.saonet.ucla.edu/lgbt/.  --: 
This  Web  site  also  has  links  and 
information  about  GALA,  the 
LGBT  Mentoring  Program  and  the 
numerous  other  programs  that  did- 
n't get  mentioned  here.  It  is  your 
one-stop  UCLA  gay  shop!     '  -' 

I  hope  that  this  (slightly  schizo-    . 
phrenic)  article  has  done  a  bit  to     \_ 
address  concerns  that  LGBT  stu- 
dents at  UCLA  have  both  as  they 
struggle  to  come  out  and  as  they 
struggle  to  integrate  their  personal 
and  professional  lives. 

I  hope  I  wasn't  too  Pollyanna  for 
your  tastes,  but  I  sincerely  believe 
that  for  the  most  part,  coming  out  at 
school  and  at  work  can  be  done  suc- 
cessfully if you  just  have  the  courage 
and  energy  to  see  it  through.  So  if 
you're  in  that  position,  I  wish  you 
good  luck  and  many  confusing  intro- 
ductions. 


M^rBniinViewpMm 


September  25-28, 2000       21 


\ 


.-i:'ri*^._ 


Welcome  back.  Graduation  may  be  right  around  the  corner,  but  it  shouldn  I  mark  the  end  of  your  education 
PricewaterhouseCoopers  gives  you  major  options  when  it  comes  to  your  career.  Like  ongoing  learning.  TTie 
challenge  of  new  and  exciting  projects.  And  the  promise  of  change.  All  in  an  environment  that  fosters 
professional  growth  and  development.  And,  if  you  decide  youd  like  to  explore  other  areas  within  the 
organization,  we  II  support  you.  Any  way  you  look  at  it,  PricewaterhouseCoopers  is  the  place  to  be. 

www.pwcgiobal.com/ocp 


:•".♦' 


COPERS  i 


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loin  us.  Together  we  can  change  the  world/ 

Prir^v*„>rt^^nnpm  hpmvd  m  b,  tnAOmMhm  Aclioo  j,nd  tquji  Oppnnunlly  Imph^. 


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22        S«ptftnb(r  25-28, 2000 


UCLA  ready  to  meet 
challenges  of  future 


Albert 
Gmiesale 


CHANaiLOR:  New  demands 
redefine  university's  approach 
to  funding,  technology,  city 

The  ^yproadi  of  Fall  Quarter  is 
always  a  time  of  great  excitetnent  at 
UCLA.  This  is  when  we  weloome 
new  and  returning  students  and  &culty, 
and  complete  our  preparations  for  the 
academic  year.  It  is  a  season  of  begin- 
nings, for  our  university  and  for  everyone 
who  is  a  part  of  it. 

In  each  of  the  last 
three  years,  UCLA 
received  more  appli- 
cations for  freshman 
admission  than  any 
other  university  in 
the  country.  During 
that  period,  UCLA 
also  has  garnered 
national  and  interna- 
tional recognition  for 
its  achievements  and 
innovative  leadership 
in  many  areas, 
including  faculty 

scholarship,  undergraduate  education, 
multicultural  programs,  academic  medi- 
cine, and  private  fund-raising. 

Gearly,  there  is  much  to  celelnrate.  But 
we  must  not  rest  on  our  laurels,  as  impres- 
sive as  they  are.  The  excellence  that  draws 
every  reader  of  this  colunm  to  UCLA  is 
not  a  guaranteed  entitlement;  it  is  the 
product  of  hard  work,  and  it  must  be  pro- 
tected and  nourished  in  order  to  endure 
and  grow. 

Achieving  that  objective  has  become 
increasingly  difficult.  This  is  because 
research  universities  like  UCLA  are  con- 
fronting unprecedented  challenges  -  chal- 
lenges bom  of  the  constant  change  that 
buffets  the  major  institutions  of  our 
society. 

For  example,  the  voliune  of  knowledge 
is  growing  exponentially,  along  with  the 
extent  to  which  it  is  interconnected.  This 
knowledge  explosion  poses  significant 
challenges  for  universities,  even  as  they 
continue  to  fuel  it  throu^  the  engine  of 
academic  research.  Moreover,  many  of 
today's  complex  research  problems 
demand  an  interdisciplinary,  collaborative 
approach,  and  universities  must  be  orga- 
nized to  facilitate  scholarship  that  crosses 
the  boundaries  of  the  discipUnes  and 
professions. 

Camesaie  has  served  as  chancellor  of  UOA 
since  1997. 


Universities  also  must  respond  to  ttie 
widespread  and  transforming  impacts  of 
information  tedinoiogy.  New  tools  are 
being  devek^ied  at  an  extraordinary  rate; 
~Sur  challenge  here  lies  not  only  in  deter- 
mining how  best  to  use  them  in  our  own 
educational  and  research  activities,  but 
also  in  understanding  the  fuQ  significance 
erf"  the  informatioii  tedmology  revolution 
for  society  in  general. 

Funding  higher  education  is  another 
dialtenge  with  special  ramifications  for 
{HiUic  universities,  which  traditionally 
have  enjc^ed  generous  support  from  state 
government.  Today,  public  resources  for 
iof^  education  are  shrinking  relative  to 
need,  even  tiiougfa  the  number  of  students 
has  increased  and  will  continue  to  grow. 
About  21  percent  of  UCLA's  budget 
OHnes  from  the  state  of  CaUfomia,  far 
below  the  80  percent  it  once  was. 

Conscquentiy,  UCLA  and  other  public 
research  universities  must  rely  upon  multi- 
I^  funding  sources,  inchiding  federal 
grants,  partnerships  with  industry,  and 
private  i^anthropy  -  w^ile  ensuring  that 
the  academic  agenda  is  not  determined  by 
vhai  businesses  and  the  government 
duxKC  to  finance. 

A  fourth  challenge  -  deriving  in  part 
from  the  combined  effects  of  the  knowl- 
edge explosion,  the  information  technolo- 
gy revohitioo,  and  the  problems  of  fund- 
ing Inipier  education  -  is  the  changmg  role 
cf  the  research  university  itself  All  sudi 
uaiversities,  inchiding  UCLA,  are  actively 
transforming  and  reinventing  themselves, 
assessing  anew  whom  to  teach,  what  to 
teach,  and  how  to  teach. 

I  like  to  view  the  challenges  faciqg  hi^ 
er  education  as  opportunities  for  innova- 
tion, fbr  growth,  and  for  the  forging  of 
mutually  beneficial  partnerships  that  we 
might  not  have  puraied  in  the  past  Here, 
I  believe,  is  where  the  true  excitement  of 
university  leadership  lies  -  in  assessing 
potential,  identifying  possibihties,  and 
moving  forward  in  new  and  creative  ways. 

This  year,  UCLA  will  launch  nugor  ini- 
tiatives in  three  areas  that  build  upon  the 
University's  strengths  and  cut  across  the 
full  scope  of  its  endeavor.  Each  of  these 
areas  is,  in  effect,  an  interdisciplinary 
"frontier"  advanced  through  the  accumu- 
lation of  knowledge  and  experience.  And 
each  offers  the  added  benefit  of  strength- 
ening undergraduate  and  graduate  educa- 
tion in  die  College  of  Letters  and  Science 
and  the  professional  schools. 

The  first  of  these  "frontiers  of  knowl- 
edge" is  the  new  biology  -  the  rise  of  the 

SccCARNESAU,pa9e24 


DaHyflrak  Viewpoint 


/-'~^. 


Two 


niver 


The  student  regent 

and  chancellor  present 

their  differing 

perspectives  of 

progress  at  UCLA 


on  a  campus 


MOMa  SHMW/lMy  Bn*l 


September  2S-28, 2000        23 


1\/lixed  messap  sent 
to  minority  applicants 


^<t. 


instill 
Fon9 


REGBIT:  Repeal  of  SP-1,  SP-2 
would  translate  into  tolerance 
for  underrepresented  students 

re  attend  an  institution  that 
offers  educational  opportuni- 
tiea  that  rival  and  often  exceed 
those  at  <^ier  pubKc  or  private  universi- 
ties around  the  ^obe.  As  the  state's 
largest  four-year  piMic  university,  UCLA 
can  offer  practically  any  educational 
experience  imagin^Ue  and  helps  students 
to  open  doors  to  the 
futures  of  their 
choice. 

We  have  the 
chance  to  learn  from 
distinguished  faculty 
from  all  fields  of 
study,  attend  a  uni- 
versity famed  for  its 
research,  and  chal- 
lenge the  boundaries 
of  our  knowledge 
and  the  society  we 
live  in.  These  are  the     ^_______^ 

precise  reasons  I 

chose  UCLA  for  my  graduate  study.  I 
came  here  to  woric  with  Profess^  Joshua 
Muklavin,  recipient  of  the  UCLA 
Distinguished  Teadung  Award,  and  to  be 
a  part  of  ^»1iat  will  become  among  the 
most  exciting  Public  PKdicy  programs  in 
the  nation. 

Unfortunately,  not  all  students  have 
access  to  what  UCLA  has  to  offer.  I  also 
chose  UCLA  for  the  of^rtunity  to  serve 
as  the  UC  Student  Regent  for  the  2000- 
2001  academic  year.  The  UC  Board  of 
Regents  has  26  full-voting  members.  Of 
these  members,  18  of  the  regents  are 
i4)pointed  by  the  governor  and  each 
serves  a  term  of  12  yean.  There  are  seven 
ex-offido  regents  who  indude  the  gover- 
nor, lieutenant  governor,  speaker  of  the 
assembly,  superintendent  of  public 
instruction,  president  and  vice  president 
of  the  alumni  associations  of  UC  and  the 
UC  president 

I  currently  serve  as  the  26th  student 
regent  in  the  history  of  the  university  and 
am  a  full-voting  member.  There  are  also 
two  non-voting  faculty  representatives. 
Any  student  is  eligible  to  serve  as  the  stu- 
dent regent,  unless  you  have  previously 

Fong  is  the  UC  Student  Regent  for  the  2000- 
2001  school  year  and  a  graduate  student  in 
public  policy.  Rk  mofe  information  about 
the  UC  Regents  visit  www.ucop.edu.  E-ntail 
him  «t  JustiaFongOucop^u. 


I     I 

served,  but  diere  is  a  rigorous  selection 
process  including  interviews  with  stu- 
dents systemwide  to  ensure  potential  can- 
didates can  address  concerns  across  all 
campuses. 

Ultimately  members  of  the  Board  of 
Regents  sei«:t  a  sin^  student  regent 
from  three  finalists  forwarded  by  students 
themselves.  It  is  an  extrenae  honor  for  me 
to  be  serving  the  university  community 
and  the  greater  state  of  California  as  a 
UC  regent. 

Recently  in  Sacramento,  SCR  89  was 
passed  commemorating  the  2Sth  anniver- 
sary of  the  student  regent  position. 
Officially  the  regents  have  "full  powers  of 
organization  and  governance"  in  relation 
to  the  UC  and  have  traditionally,  through 
a  system  of  shared  governance  during 
most  of  the  past  century,  administered  all 
the  operations  (^the  UC  system. 

Among  recent  years,  the  most  contro- 
versial and  publicly  noted  action  the 
regents  have  taken  is  the  passage  of 
Standing  Policy-1  and  Standing  Policy-2, 
the  UC  regents  proposals  to  eliminate 
race  and  gender  in  admissions  and  hiring. 
Since  the  loss  of  affirmative  action, 
UCLA  has  been  struggling  and  continues 
to  stnig^  to  enroll  underrepresented 
minorities. 

For  Fall  2000,  approximately  31 S 
African  American  students  were  admit- 
ted (compared  to  1,387  in  1997,  the  last 
year  affirmative  action  was  used  in  admis- 
sions), 316  Latino  students  were  admitted 
(compared  to  1,093  in  1997),  864  Chicano 
students  were  admitted  (compared  to 
2,633  in  1997),  350  Pilipino  students  were 
admitted  (compared  to  1,406  in  1997),  49 
Native  American  students  were  admitted 
(compared  to  161  in  1997),  and  20  Pacific 
Islander  students  were  admitted  (com- 
pared to  1 10  in  1997). 

Hundreds  of  underrepresented  minori- 
ties who  were  UC-eUgible  were  denied 
admission  to  UCLA  and  among  those 
who  were  accepted  for  this  year,  over  SO 
percent  chose  not  to  come.  That  means 
underrepresented  minorities  will  make  up 
only  17  percent  of  the  incoming  freshman 
class.  Many  of  the  most  talented  under- 
represented  minority  students  and  others 
are  choosing  not  to  go  to  UC  for  a  host  of 
reasons,  but  partly  because  many  do  not 
feel  welcome.  Qearly,  there  is  a  problem. 

UCLA  is  sending  a  mixed  message  to 
underrepresented  minority  students 
whid)  is  at  best  negative.  The  university 
tells  students  we  value  racial  diversity  on 
our  campuses,  but  that  as  an  institution 

Sec  FONG,  page  24 


BaibaraJ.Kenkwr 

Graduate  student 
(immunity  Health  Sdenos 

"To  pre- 
pare myself 
to  be  able  to 
earn  my  liv- 
ing and  sup- 
port a 
lifestyle 
where  I  am 
comfortable 
andean 
contribute  to  the  support  of 
loved  ones  and  others.  That's 
my  personal  choice.  I  also  want 
to  have  the  privilege  and  free- 
dom of  contributing  to  others  as 
they  need  it  and  when  they  need 
it  and  I  don't  want  to  retire." 


LNienoN  F.  Lego 

Third-year 

Biodwmistry  ^ 

"The  purpose 
of  a  college  educ- 
tion is  to  empow- 
er yourself  Once 
you're  self- 
empowered,  then 
you  can  go  on  to 
do  things  like  be  a 
catalyst  for  sodal 
change.  You  can 
also  do  things  like  advance  your  own 
family  and  yourself  The  more  degrees 
you  get.  the  more  empowered  you  are 
to  do  these  things.  Degrees  carry  a  lot 
of  weight  these  days  regardless  of  wliat 
other  people  say.  And  I  think,  especial- 
ly here  at  UCLA,  getting  a  college 
degree  will  really  provide  a  way  for 
self-fTOwth  academically,  socially, 
politiqdly,  culturally  or  however  you  ;; 
want  to  fo." 


ThM-year 

Sodology  and  CNcana/o  studies 

"I'm  here 
notcmlyto 
learn 
concepts, 
practical 
toob,  take 
my  classes, 
and  go  to 
school.  I  also 
want  to 

learn  organiartional  skills  to  go 
out  and  help  make  changes  in  my 
community." 


Graduate  student 
Economio 

"The  con-' 
ditionsinmy 
country, 
Turkey,  are 
different 
from  the 
way  they  are 
here.  If  you 
don't  go  to 
college, 

there  is  no  way  that  you  can  get  a 
good  job  or  advance  in  life  and  in 
business.  Without  a  college 
degree,  you  can  beconoe  nothing. 
So  the  purpose  of  a  college  educ- 
tion is  to  secure  a  future  life."  . 


gPEAKS 
OUT 

What  do  yoiWefieve  is  the  purpose 
ofacokge  education? 


Speab  Out  compliity  Jonah  Ula^Dely  Bruin  Seniof 
StrfF.  Photos  by  IWtMMquci;  Oily  Bruin  Scf^  SUA 


Fourth-year 
PMUcalsdence 

The  pur- 
pose of  a 
o(^ge  edu- 
cation is  to 
give  you  a 
cushion 
before  you 
hit  the  real 
worid.  It's 
like  a  pillow. 
You  don't  want  to  land  on  the 
concrete.  Some  people  go  into 
the  real  worid  straig|it  out  of  high 
school.  They  of  course  will  get  the 
lower  salary  and  it  will  be  harder 
for  them  to  make  it  throu^  life 
and  provide  for  their  family. 
College  ghws  you  a  step  up.  You 
have  to  work  harder  to  separate 
youTMlf  from  everyone  dse  ia 
ooHege; 


"For  me, 
the  purpose 
of  a  college 
education  is 
to  prepare 
myself  for 
my  future 
career, 
hopefully  to 
be  a  doctor. 
Its  purpose  is  also  to  make  sure 
that  you  have  an  understanding 
of  the  worid  and  to  prepare 
yourself  for  what  the  world  has 
to  offer.  With  a  college  educa- 
tion, you  get  so  many  opportuni- 
ties to  study  about  a  lot  of  differ- 
ent thinp  and  you  learn  a  lot  of 
new  things  you  did  not  know 
befofe." 


Ml 

Rfth-year 

Math  wMt  omputer  spedalty 

"College 
is  sodety's 
definition  of 
you  moving 
on  and 
preparing 
yourself  for 
the  future, 
but  it's  not 
necessarily 
the  right  way  for  you.  Sodety 
makes  you  go  to  college  because 
they  beheve  that  it's  the  way  to  go 
in  order  for  you  to  have  a  better 
future.  But  in  reality,  it  may  not 
be  the  way.  I  think  going  to  col- 
lege is  a  sodally  constructed  defi- 
nition of  what  it  means  to  be  edu- 
cated There  are  other  ways  of 
letting  ahead  or  being  educated 
B  society  without  a  deBPec.** 


9k,/ 


Mumna 
OmvnunicatkNtt  studies 

"I  think 
the  purpose 
of  a  college 
education  is 
to  broaden 
my  hori- 
zons, to 
become  a 
better  per- 
son, and  to 
understand  more  about  life  and 
what  really  goes  on.  Actually ... 
come  to  think  of  it,  I  don't  even 
know  what  I  was  doing  here." 


-"(('   ; 


'F^7^^^"■' 


II 


24       September  25-28, 2000 


DaiJy  Bruin  Viewpoint 


FONfi 

From  page  23 

we  arc  also  race-blind.  The  reali- 
ty is  thai  therest  of  the  public  is 
race-conscious  and  conscious  of 
the  lack  of  racial  diversity  at  the 
University  of  California.  In  just 
a  few  years  wc  have  lost  the  rep- 
utation for  diversity  and  accessi- 
bility the  University  of 
California  has  spent  decades  to 
buM — ^~,- 

The  I'nivcrsity  of  California 
has  been  trampled  on  as  the  bat- 
tleground by  those  who  choose 
to  attack  alTirmative  action  and 
civil  rights  Public  universities 
across  the  nation  are  the  targets 
of  anti-affirmative  action  efforts 
while  the  majority  of  private 
universities  continue  to  use 
atTirmative  action  policies  in 
admissions  and  hiring  without 
criticism.  UC  has  been  (mis)- 
uscd  as  the  "poster  boy"  of  the 
debate  on  racial  politics  and  is 
increasingly  characterized  as  the 
university  that  makes  minority 
students  feel  unwelcome,  not 
wanted  and  unimportant. 

As  private  institutions  wel- 
come talented  minority  stu- 
dents, the  passage  of  SP-I  and 
SP-2  send  the  message  that  they 
are  "Not  Wanted"  at  the 


University  of  Catlfornia.  The 
passage  of  SP-I  and  SP-2  has 
eroded  morale  on  campus  for 
many  students,  faculty  and  staff 
who  have  lost  faith  in  the  univer- 
sity's commitment  to  diversity. 

Over  800  minority  high 
school  students  filed  a  class 
action  suit  against  UC  Berkeley 
for  discrimination  by  the  univer- 
sity. This  is  not  the  message  wc 
warit  to  send  high  school  stu- 
dents and  their  peers,  but  that  is 
what  they  arc  getting.    "■ "  ■  '■■  ' 

This  negative  message  over- 
shadows outreach  efforts  that 
have  amounted  to  over  $  1 20 
million,  more  than  three  times 
the  amount  UC  had  expected  to 
budget.  I  have"  personally  been 
involved  in  UC  outreach  efforts 
for  over  five  years  and  believe 
being  fully  committed  to  out- 
reach means  doing  everything  in 
our  power  to  make  it  successful. 

Repealing  SP-I  and  SP-2 
would  send  a  clear  message  that 
all  students  are  welcome  and 
wanted  at  the  university. 
Repealing  SP-I  and  SP-2  would 
be  the  single  greatest  boost  to 
outreach  efforts  for  the  universi- 
ty, and  at  no  added  cost.  In  tak- 
ing action  to  repeal  SP-I  and 
SP-2  the  university  has  every- 
thing to  gain  and  nothing  to   . 
lose. 


CARNESALE    ' 

From  page  22 

life  sciences^and  medicine  -  which 
is  distinguished  by  its  flourishing 
connections  to  a  host  of  other  disci- 
plines, from  mathematics  and  engi- 
neering to  philosophy,  business,":." 
and  law.  An  extraordinary  new  sci- 
entific future  is  upon  us,  and 
UCLA  is  already  at  the  forefront 
as  a  pioneer  in  such  emerging  fields 
as  biomathematics,  nanoscience, 
biological  imaging,  and  computa- 
tional biology. 

The  second  frontier  of  knowl- 
edge is  the  growing  importance  of 
information  technology,  both  as  a 
tool  for  teaching  and  research,-and 
as  a  communications  phenomenon 
with  sweeping  effects  on  our  soci- 
ety. This  theme  also  is  of  great 
interest  to  UCLA  scholars  in  a 
wide  range  of  fields.  Our  faculty 
and  students  are  exploring  every- 
thing from  Internet  use  to  molecu- 
lar computing,  and  the 
"My.UCLA"  service  is  a  first  in 
undergraduate  education. 

The  third  frontier  is  "UCLA  in 
Los  Angeles,"  inspired  by  the 
University's  active  engagement  in 
our  home  city  and  the  surrounding 
region.  UCLA  considers  greater 
Los  Angeles  to  be  its  foremost 
partner  and  principal  resource,  as 


reflected-in  a  myriad  of  educational 
and  public  service  ventures  that 
link  our  campus  with  the  broader 
community. 

Beginning  this  year,  we  intend  to 
strengthen  those  connections  by 
focusing  on  three  target  areas:  pro- 
grams that  benefit  children  and 
youth,  including,  expanded  K-12 
outreach  programs;  partnerships 
with  the  business  community;  and 
activities  in  support  of  the  visual 
and  performing  arts.  .  -  - ;  [■. 

The  challenges  confronting 
UCLA,  and  the  frontiers  they  open 
up,  are  relevant  for  all  members  of 
our  campus  community  -  students, 
faculty,  and  staff  members  alike. 
Because  of  new  technologies, 
altered  funding  patterns,  and  the 
growing  storehouse  of  knowledge, 
our  UCLA  experience  already  dif- 
fers significantly  from  the  experi- 
ence of  those  who  preceded  us 
here.  Wc  don't  know  precisely 
what  the  future  will  bring,  but  we 
can  be  certain  that  there  will  be 
more  to  learn,  better  ways  to  teach, 
and  a  host  of  new  linkages  between 
UCLA  and  other  organizations. 

1  am  looking  forward  to  all  that 
we  will  accomplish  together  in  aca- 
demic year  2000-2001,  and  I  feel 
fortunate  to  be  part  of  the  Bruin 
family  as  we  continue  our  exciting 
journey  to  UCLA's  -  and  to  your  - 
great  future. 


■sERNA,:ii-:„;,j:'g:;;::^v-- 

From  page  16    i  I  :    -■  ;  / 

increased  poverty,  violence,  unequaf  access  to 
education,  police  brutality,  exploitation  in  the 
workforce,  sexism,  racism,  homophobia  and 
much  more.  As  student  activists  at  UCLA,  we 
must  never  forget  the  legacies  of  those  students 
who  came  before  us  and  paved  the  way  for  our  ■ 
entrance  into  this  university. 

We  must  also  never  forget  the  responsibility  : 
we  have  to  our  respective  communities,  which  is- 
grealer  than  personal  achievement  and  more 
meaningful  than  any  degrees  we  will  receive  at 
UCLA.  Kor  over  30  years,  MEChA  has  sought 
to  organize  and  challenge  students  to  maintain 
self-respect  and  dignity  as  we  overcome  histori- 
cal prejudices  and  discrimination.  The  historic 
and  continuing  mission  of  MEChA  involves  an 
educational  plan  of  action  that  ensures  equal 
access  to  education  for  all  communities  of 
color. 

This  past  year,  M  ECh A,  along  with  other 
student  organizations  on  campus  like  the 
African  Student  Union  and  the  Muslim  Student 
Association,  formed  a  coalition  with  communi- 
ty groups  such  as  the  Concerned  Educators  for 
Justice,  Youth  Organizing  Communities,  and 
the  Coalition  for  a  Better  Environment,  in  a 
movement  to  fight  for  Educational  Justice. 
During  the  Democratic  National  Convention  in 
August,  the  UCLA  student  organizations 
marched  in  solidarity  with  students,  parents  and 
teachers  to  demand  Justice  for  Youth  in  an  edu- 

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Not  everyone  can  get  into  our  outfit  But  if  you've  got  what  f 
faeces  to  become  a  United  States  Manne  Officer,  you  couid  get 
tt)e  ultimate  wtiite  collar  lob.  To  fill  this  position  you  have  x>  be 
smart,  tough  and  able  to  handle  a  tremendous  amount  of 
responsibility  In  short,  you  have  to  be  a  leader  Officer  Candidates 
School  (OCS)  IS  where  you'll  develop  these  skills.  See  if  you' /e  got 
what  It  takes  to  be  a  Manne  OffKsr  It  could  be  the  perfect  fit 


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If  you  think  you're  management  materiaL 
call  Captain  Hollimon  at  (323)  294-373^. 


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September  25-28, 2000       25 


.  ftom  page  24    ^'''.'•■•••/  ;-':'\..\':'''-'^ 

cational  system  that  is  set  up  to  dis- 
criminate against  people  of  color. 
'     The  march  was  part  of  a  series  of 
marches  that  took  place  during  the 
DNC.  The  organizers  of  the  march 
presented  a  set  of  10  formal  demands 
to  Gov.  Gray  Davis.  We  demanded  he 
take  action  to  repeal  Proposition  209, 
Proposition  21  and  other  laws  that  tar- 
geted youth  of  color.  Other  demands 
dealt  with  an  end  to  standardized  test- 
ing which  has  been  proven  to  be  cul- 


turally biased.  •' 

For  this  upcoming  year,  M  EChA* 
plans  to  continue  working  with  other 
student  organizations  and  community 
groups  around  the  fight  for  education- 
al justice.  On  campus,  this  will  be 
done  through  a  campaign  to  educate 
the  campus  community  on  the  issues 
affecting  communities  of  color 
Among  our  many  programs,  MEChA 
will  continue  to  fi^t  so  that  the  doors 
of  higher  education  remain  open  to  all 
students  who  seek  a  higher  education, 
and  to  ensure  that  education  remains 
a  right,  and  not  a  privilege. 

More  importantly,  the  fight  around 


We  must  not  forget  the 

power  that  students 

have  to  create  change 

both  on  campus  and  in 

our  communities. 


educational  justice  has  reminded  us  of 
the  need  to  build  a  movement  on  and 
off  campus  by  solidifying  a  strong 
base  comprised  of  students  and  com- 


munity members.  We  must  not  forget 
the  power  that  students  have  to  create 
change  both  on  campus  and  in  our 
communities.  Let  me  remind  you  that 
the  university  will  be  a  training 
ground  for  our  leadership  in  larger 
society 

For  those  of  you  who  might  be  new 
to  UCLA  and  unaware  of  how  to 
become  a  student  activist,  we  welcome 
you  to  the  university  and  encourage 
you  to  join  us  as  we  begin  this  year 
acknowledging  that  as  student  of  color 
organizations,  we  must  stand  in  soli- 
darity to  continue  the  struggle  for  the 
advancement  of  our  communities. 


Walter  Mosley  tdls  us, 
"Advancement  is  not  defmed  by  the 
passage  of  time,  but  by  deeds  and 
change."  Change  will  only  occur  if  wc 
continue  to  make  the  conscious  deci- 
sion to  challenge  the  oppressive  condi- 
tions that  still  exist  and  engage  in  a . . 
struggle  for  social  justice. 

Change  needs  to  come  from  us,  the 
students,  who  have  experienced  those  • 
daily  realities  and  know  the  needs  of 
our  communities  best.  The  advance- 
ment of  our  communities  will  ulti- 
mately depend  on  our  acceptance  of 
the  responsibility  to  carry  the  move- 
ment forward. 


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SMITH 

From  page  14  '" 

Avenue  Jones,  Talib  Kweili,  Mos  Def 
and  KRS-One  to  bring  awareness  to 
Proposition  21  (last  year's  juvenile 
justice  initiative).  This  concert  alone 
performed  to  a  sellout  crowd  of 
5,000  hip  hop  heads  of  all  ages,  back- 
grounds, colors  and  nationalities  for 
a  peaceful  and  worthy  message. 
Last  February,  Black  History 
Month  was  extended  by  the  idea  of 
Pan  African  Week,  featuring  perfor- 
mances and  speakers  throughout  the 
African  Diaspora.  History  was  made 


as  people  such  as  Amiri  Baraka,  and 
the  son  of  Steven  Biko  came  and 
brought  their  struggles  alive  to  (his 
campus.  Students  also  participated  in 
the  African  Market  Place,  where 
items  ranging  from  incense  to  litera- 
ture were  met  by  the  smells  of 
Jamaican  food  and  live  dance. 

The  African  Student  Union  even 
dedicated  every  other  week  to  open 
educational  forums  where  any  per- 
son was  able  to  voice  their  concerns 
or  become  educated  on  issues  affect- 
ing students.  Teach-ins,  cultural 
awareness,  criminalization  of  youth, 
and  access  to  higher  education  were 
just  some  of  the  topics  discussed  last 


year.  Through  all  of  this,  ASU  con- 
tinues the  goal  of  elevating  aware- 
ness for  all  people. 

This  year,  though  SP-I  has  thinned 
our  numbers  at  UCLA,  our  voices 
will  not  be  silenced.  The  African 
Student  Union  will  continue  pressur- 
ing Chancellor  Camesale's  adminis- 
tration to  recognize  that  education  is 
a  right  for  all  people,  not  just  a  privi- 
leged few. 

In  the  meantime,  ASU  will  contin- 
ue stepping  up  its  own  outreach 
efforts  through  the  student  initiated 
program  SHAPE  (Students 
Heightening  Academic 
Performances  through  Education), 


I  volunteer"! 


@  UCLA's  Aquarium  In  Santa  Monica! 
The  ,  .  ' 

UCLA  Ocean 
Discovery  Center 

is  looking  for 

energetic  and  v 

enthusiastic  people  who  love 

the  ocean  and  want  to  help  conserve  it. 


We  are  an  education  aquarium 

that  offers  the  general  public  and  school 

kids  the  chance  to  see,  touch  and 

learn  about  the  Santa  Monica  Bay  mahne 

life.  Volunteers  enjoy  great  benefits. 

Internships  also  available. 

Must  be  1 6  years  of  age  or  older  to  volunteer. 


which  seeks  to  increase  .the  number* 
ofblack  students  at  UCLA.  SHAPE 

raises  students'  academic  competi- 
tiveness through  peer  advising,  tutor- 
ing, preparing  them  for  the  SATs, 
and  informing  them  and  their  par- 
ents about  the  requirements  to.enter 
all  higher  education. 

In  addition,  ASU  works  to  ensure 
that  black  students  who  make  it  to 
UCLA  stay  at  UCLA  through  the 
Academic  Supports  Program  (ASP). 
Using  student  counselors,  ASP 
guides  students  through  their  college 
experience,  both  personal  and  acade- 
mic. Through  this  holistic  approach, 
we  intend  that  100  percent  of  incom- 


ing black  students  become  Mack    ' : 
UCLA  graduates.  ": ; 

As  the  African  Student  Uni«n    ;; 
starts  another  year,  we  will  continue 
to  struggle  for  educational  awareness 
for  all  students.  -^ 

Can  a  public  institution  justify  itis 
existence  if  it's  not  mandated  to  truly 
represent  the  "public"  that  partially 
funds  it?  It  is  up  to  all  students  to 
hold  this  university  accountable  to  .' '. 
the  people  and  cx)mmunities  it  ■  ■•:■'  - 
serves! 

Until  this  day  comes,  ASU  will  * 
work  to  raise  consciousness  for      ._ 
everyone  so  that  equality  becomes   - 
real,  for  the  sake  oi^  UCLA. 


rf^i*—   *fc 


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Orientation:  Octobers,  2000 

6:00  to  8.i)0  p.m. 

Training:  October  10,12,17,19,24,26. 

UCLA  Extension  credit  optional. 


For  more  information,  contact  the  Volunteer  Coordinator  at 
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ii 


Pepperdine's  MFT  program 
appealed  to  me  because  it  is 
sensitive  to  the  needs  of 
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has  theoretical  as  well  as  practical  implications." 


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Septembef  25-28, 2000       27 


JONES       i 

From  page  3  ■■•V; -■■■''"•■: 

decades  of  the  govemment's  month- 
ly checks,  are  not  yet  ready  to  take 
their  medicine. 

Bush's  plan,  by  contrast,  will  par- 
tially privatize  a  portion  of  the 
younger  worker's  contributions  into 
funds  that  may  be  managed  for 
extreme  stability,  while  still  giving  a 
far  greater  return  than  Social 
Security  could  ever  dream  of. 

Social  Security  funds  have  tradi- 
tionally been  invested  in  govern- 
ment bonds.  It  sounds  like  a  strong 
enough  investment,  but,  factoring  in 
inflation,  workers  receive  a  ludi- 
crous 1.5  percent  on  their  money. 
The  most  pathetic,  bottom-floor 
Wells  Fargo  savings  account  pays 
two  percent,  while  no-brainer  invest- 
ments like  CDs  and  money-markets 
-  both  FDIC  insured  -  pay  5  to  7 
percent.  Without  increasing  a  work- 
er's investment  risk  one  iota.  Bush's 
plan  would  at  least  triple  the  rate  of 
appreciation  on  Social  Security 
investments. 

Should  a  worker  choose  to  "play 
fast  and  loose"  with  his  money  and 
stick  his  money  in  those  wildly  fluc- 
tuating investments  insiders  like  to 
call  mutual  funds,  a  return  of  10  per- 
cent yearly  is  quite  typical. 

But  Bush's  no-brainer  plan,  which 


would  in  effect  refloat  the  sinking 
Social  Security  boat,  is  met  with 
derision  and  outright  hostility  by 
many.  Some  have  accused  Bush  of 
trying  to  place  their  money  in       ■ 
'Visky"  investments,  and  forecasted 
4oomsday  predictions  of  workers 
taking  their  money  and  plunging  it 
into  Florida  swampland.  While  such 
an  action  is  in  theory  possible,  a  per- 
;  ion  could  also  ruin  themselves  Hnan- 
cially  in  a  million  other  ways. 

One  wonders  how  those  who  see 
Bush's  plan  as  'Yadical"  ever  man- 
age to  cross  the  street,  let  alone 
drive  a  car.  Every  turn  is  suffused 
with  danger.  What  if  I'm  rear-ended 
at  this  stoplight?  What  if  an  armed 
intruder  enters  my  home  and  mur- 
ders me  in  cold  blood?  If  Bush's 
plan  is  unsafe,  then  perhaps  reading 
this  newspaper  is  too  risky  as  well. 
The  ink  rubbing  off  on  your  Angers 
might  contain  lead  and  risking  a 
paper  cut  is  sheer  suicide! 

Social  Security,  in  its  present 
state,  is  startlingly  similar  to  the 
drug  war  in  its  goal  of  protecting  the 
public  from  itself.  With  Social 
Security,  the  goal  is  to  protect 
Americans  from  poverty.  With  the 
drug  war,  the  menace  to  be  battled  is 
illegal  substances.  Oddly  enough, 
neither  seems  to  be  gaining  any 
headway  against  their  respective 
nemeses. 

Social  Security,  with  its  blanket 


approach  to  investment,  has  simulta- 
neously guaranteed  sut>sistence  to 
those  who  depend  on  it,  and 
doomed  those  who  might  have  made 
better  use  of  their  workplace  contri- 
butions. Perhaps  America  has  not 
learned  the  lesson  of  inequality:  in  a 
democracy,  some  wilt  do  well,  and 
some  will  do  worse.  Social  Security 
guarantees  an  unhappy  medium,  in 
which  no  one  starves,  but,  because 
of  this,  no  one  feasts. 

The  Soviet  Union  crumbled 
under  the  weight  of  this  realization, 
but  Al  Gorebachev's  plan  will  delay 
the  inevitable  collapse  of  this  nation- 
al Ponzi  scheme  for  several  more 
generations. 

For  a  man  who  speaks  so  con- 
vincingly of  wanting  a  "better  world 
for  our  children,"  Gore's  policies 
amount  to  chewing  gum  and  baling 
wire  when  what  the  program  needs 
is  a  serious  overhaul.  An  infusion  of 
fantasy  "surplus"  money  will  not 
solve  the  problems,  only  delay  com- 
plete collapse  to  a  later  date. 

A  comprehensive  list  of  reasons 
why  we  should  vote  for  Gore  actual- 
ly reveals  just  the  exact  opposite. 

1 )  Al  Gore  invented  the  Internet 
...  and  all  these  years  later,  our  col- 
lective hard  drive  runneth  over  with 
pom  and  illegal  music  files. 

2)  Al  Gore  knew  President 
Ginton  was  telling  the  truth  about 
Monica  Lewinsky ...  and  therefore 


was  shocked,  just  shocked,  he'll  tell 
you,  when  the  man  he  spends  half  of 
his  waking  hours  with  turned  out  to 
have  actually  had  an  "inappropriate 
relationship"  with  the  intern.  The 
more  heartless  have  suggested  that 
the  Clinton<jore  administration 
itself  has  had  an  "inappropriate  rela- 
tionship" with  the  country  since  Day 
One,  but  Slick  Willy's  swingin'  ways 
seem  to  have  caught  the  fancy  of 
America,  so  perhaps  they've  got  it 
wrong. 

3)  Al  Gore  didn't  realize  his 
appearance  at  the  Buddhist  temple 
was  a  fundraising  appearance  ...  and 
in  a  related  controversy,  also  didn't 
realize  that  he  had  inadvertently 
removed  Tipper's  lower  intestinal 
tract  while  probing  her  in  what  is 
politely  referred  to  as  "The  Kiss"  at 
the  Democratic  National 
Convention. 

4)  Al  Gore  has  chosen  a  Jew  with 
lots  of  "chutzpah"  as  his  vice  presi- 
dent to  add  an  element  of  morality 
to  an  otherwise  secular  ticket ...  but 
Lieberman,  a  man  with  "strong 
moral  convictions"  who  gave  a  wide- 
ly heralded  "tongue-lashing"  to 
Clinton,  promptly  voted  against 
convicting  the  president,  despite  his 
supposed  outrage. 

5)  Al  Gore  is  his  "own  man,"  and 
has  cleansed  himself  of  Clinton 
improprieties ...  but  has  no  problem 
crediting  the  current  economic 


boom,  which  actually  started  injttie 
mid-1980s,  as  the  work  of  "his"  > 

Clinton-Gore  administration.  Al 
Gore,  it  would  seem,  is  his  own  man  . 
when  needed,  but  like  Clinton  when 
it  reflects  well  on  him.  Well,  Al, 
which  one  is  it? 

6)  Al  Gore  wants  our  nation's 
children  safe,  and  gun  control  will 
be  a  definite  ingredient  is  his  safety 
pledge  ...  but  soon  to  be  announced 
is  his  pledge  to  create  a  Federal 
Bureau  of  Things  That  Might  Hurt 
You.  Rumored  to  be  high  on  Gore's 
blacklist  are  sharpened  pencils,  .y,  ,;,•  , 
Children  have  lost  eyes  to  pencils 
more  times  than  he  can  count  and, 
tragically,  many  have  even  fallen 
and  impaled  themselves  on  these 
pointed  forest  products.  As  a  wood 
product  himself,  Al  Bore  has  always   ^ 
been  a  little  jumpy  around  sharp 
metal  objects,  so  pencil  sharpeners     •  ;: 
are  very  likely  next  on  the  list. 

With  the  help  of  his  faith,  and  his 
wife  Tipper,  Al  seeks  to  eliminate 
every  danger  facing  every 
American.  Please,  vote  for  Al  Gore. 
Without  him,  America  will  degener- 
ate into  a  stinking  cesspool  of  self- 
sufficiency,  personal  accountability,     , 
and  most  horrifying  of  all,  outright      - 
intelligence. 

Your  vote  for  Al  Gore  will  send  a 
clear  message  to  Washington  that 
we  will  no  longer  stand  for  such 
things! 


wblw 


luve 
itedall 
ler 
igand 
>w  it's 
lally 
ire... 


ABCLUIiAIL. 

TOMTK 


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iah 


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focus  (HAPI,  HLAS) 


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n  k 


(■      J-  .■*   ■    T 


28       S«|>tein6ef  25-28, 2000 


t^»'  '-^r.* .«« : 


Daily  Bruin 


HO 

FrompageS      ;  '    *' 

ti  into  (he  air  at  rallies.  6ut,  when  it 
coitffis  dbwri  to  it,  there  arc  Tunda- 
mental  differences  between  the  two 
parties,  their  policies  and  their  can- 
didates. These  are  the  differences 
that  this  election  is  about. 

The  2000  presidential  election  is 
not  simply  a  choice  between 
Democratic  Vice  President  Al  Gore 
and  Republican  Governor  George 
W.  Bush.  It  is  a  choice  between  two 
.  opposing  ideologies  and  two  com- 
pletely different  sets  of  policies.  It  is 
a  choice  between  a  Democratic 
Party  that  will  use  our  national  pros- 
perity to  lift  up  all  Americans  and  a 
Republican  Party  that  wants  to 
spread  that  prosperity  only  to  those 
who  don't  need  the  help. 

Gore's  policies  confront  the  chal- 
lenges that  our  nation  faces.  Bush's 
plans  only  exacerbate  already  exist- 
ing problems.  For  example,  take 
campaign  Tmance  reform.  While 
Gore  has  proposed  a  sweeping  cam- 
paign flnance  reform  package, 
wants  to  furnish  public  subsidies  to 
candidates,  and  plans  to  ban  soft 
money.  Bush  supports  raising  cam- 
paign contribution  limits  and  would 
permit  wealthy  individuals  to  con- 
tinue making  unregulated  soft 
money  donations.  These  differences 


will  matter  a  lot  to  the  local  school- 
teacher who  wants  to  run  for  public 
office  and  doesn't  have  big  money 
or  big  business  on  her  side.  Gore's 
campaign  finance  reform  would 
assure  that  she  has  a  chance. 


When  it  comes  to  gun 

control,  Gore  supports 

national,  mandatory 

licensing  and  backs 

photo  licenses  and  gun 

safety  tests  for  new 

lun.pwners. 


When  it  comes  to  gun  control; 
Gore  supports  national,  mandatory 
licensing  and  backs  photo  licenses 
and  gun  safety  tests  for  new  hand- 
gun owners.  Bush  opposes  govern- 
ment-mandated registration  of 
guns.  These  differences  will  matter 
a  lot  to  every  could-have-been  vic- 
tim whose  life  is  saved  by  the 
stricter  gun  control  laws  favored  by 
Gore.-  ■''•  /■jl<':-:':-'-''~. 

On  civil  rights,  Gore  supports 
affirmative  action  across  the  board, 
advocates  congressional  hate  Crimes 


legislation,  and  supports  pay  equity 
for  women  and  workplace  protec- 
tions to  gays.  On.the  other  tumd, 
Bush  declined  to  back  a  '•'<■  ■ 

Democratic-sponsored  hate  crimes 
bill  and  declined  to  support  the 
|999  Nondiscrimination    -       ;  V 
Employment  Act  which  extends  fed- 
eral  workplace  anti-discrimination 
protection  toward  gays. 

Electing  Gore  will  make  a  posi-    . 
tive  difference  to  every  female  who 
currently  makes  less  money  than  a 
male  in  the  equivalent  job,  to  every 
child  who  does  not  have  equal 
access  to  education  because  of  class  ^ 
or  race,  and  to  every  worker  who  is 
afraid  that  his  sexual  orientation 
might  cost  him  a  job. 

-  Perhaps  one  of  the  most  crucial 
issues  in  the  2000  election  is  the 
future  of  the  Supreme  Court. 
Historically,  the  Supreme  Court 
has,  at  times,  played  a  critical  role  in 
advancing  social  justice  (such  as 
with  Brown  v.  Board  of  Education, 
which  prohibited  racial  segregation 
in  schools  and  Roe  v.  Wade,  which 
recognized  a  woman's  right  to 
choose).  In  other  cases,  the  court's 
rulings  drastically  stomped  on  civil 
rights  and  liberties  (such  as  in  the 
infamous  Dred  Scott  v.  Sanford, 
which  near-legitimized  racial  dis- 
crimination). >  :,    •  ,♦,     :. 

The  next  president  wflt  appoint 
two,  three,  or  even  four  new  justices 


to  replace  those  who  are  expected  to 
retire  soon.  The  ideological  leanings 
of  these  justices  will  be  critical  in 
determining  which  rights  the  court 
protects  or  destroys.  ,.v  -  .. 


Behind  the  streamers ... 

^  ^^and  the  flashy     - 

headlines,  there  are  real 

issues,  policy  proposals, 

"^     and  concrete 

differences  between 

the  candidates. 


■*?*!■ 


Bush,  if  elected,  is  expected  to 
nominate  individuals  with  views 
similar  to  those  of  ultra^onserva- 
tives  Antonin  Scalia  and  "Clarence 
Thomas.  Just  adding  one  or  two 
new  justices  to  make  a  Scalia- 
Thomas  led  far-right  majority  would 
cause  the  court  to  roll  back  abortion 
rights,  voting  rights,  gender  discrim- 
ination, sexual  harassment,  religious 
liberty,  workplace  righU,  environ- 
mental protection,  and  campaign 
finance  reform.  Such  a  majority  on 
the  bench  would  be  inclined  to  over- 
turn Roe  V.  Wade,  reduce  worker's 


rights  (for  example,  by  eliminating 
protections  against  firing  for  offens- 
es such  as  belonging  to  the  wrong 
political  party),  and  eliminate  limits 
on  contributions  to  campaigns. 

These  are  real  differences  with       _ 
real  consequences  that  will  affect 
real  people.  Between  now  and 
November,  campaign  literature  will 
fly  rampant  in  your  faces.  Poll  num- 
bers and  breaking  news  will  some- 
times make  the  election  seem  more 
like  a  horse  race  than  anything  else. 
But  behind  the  streamers,  the  televi- 
sion commentators,  and  the  flashy  """ 
headlines,  there  are  real  issues,  poll- 
cy  proposals,  and  concrete  differ- 
ences between  the  candidates. 

And  these  differences  are  the  rea- 
sons why  this  election  matters.  Not 
just  to  Gore,  the  Democratic  Party, 
politicians,  and  historians.  A 
Democratic  victory  will  mean  much 
more  than  a  new  president's  name 
in  the  history  books.  It  will  mean 
something  to  every  child  who  gets 
additional  early  education  and  a  hot 
lunch,  to  every  patient  who  is  able 
to  receive  proper  medical  care,  to 
every  family  that  benefits  from    ' 
increased  child  care,  and  to  every 
citizen  that  avoids  sickness  due  to 
clean  air  and  water. 

This  election  is  about  each  of 
these  people  and  each  of  these 
faces.  Your  choice  on  Nov.  7  will 
affect  all  of  our  lives. 


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with  Disabilitie 


Serving 

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Disabilities 


(permanent  or  temporary) 


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II 


Daily  Brutn  Viewpoint 


Septemt)er  25  28,2000        29 


VARSHNEY         I 

From  page  3  >^     -  ' '      . 

ton  death  on  the  hands  of  the 
Clinton-Gore  administration.  Th? 
White  House  decided  in  early 

^ptember  to  enter  the  U.S.  into  a 
40^year-old  civil  war  in  Colombia  by 
giving  $1.3  billion  to  the  Colombian 
government.  While  atrocities  have 
been  committed  by  both  sides  of  the 
war,  78  percent  of  the  nation's 
human  rights  violations  have  been 
committed  by  the  right-wing  ,     ■ 
paramilitary. 

T"    A  paramilitary  is  a  group  of  civil- 
ians in  military  form  that  has  the 
backing  of  local  and  international 
businesses.  This  same  paramilitary 
has  "deep  ties  to  the  Colombian 
armed  forces,"  as.reported  by  the 
Council  on  Hemispheric  Affairs  in 
Washington  D.C.  (San  Jose  Mercury 
News,  June  29, 2000). 

So  is  the  Clinton-Gore  administra- 
tion funding  human  rights  abuses  to 
win  the  '\var  on  drugs"  or  is  some- 
thing more  covert  occurring  here? 
Former  U.S.  ambassador  to       : 
Colombia  Myles  Frechette  com' 
ments,  "Clinton  is  coming  to 
Colombia  for  domestic  political  rea- 
sons and  that's  to  allow  Al  Gore  to 
say  that  the  Clinton  administration 
did  not  neglect  or  underfund  the 
drug  problem  in  Colombia" 


(www.cnn.com). 

Simply  put,  the  Clinton-Gore 
administration  is  funding  what  some 
term  as  the  "new  Vietiiam"  in  ordei^- 
-  to  make  Al  Gore  look  tough  on ' 
drugs.  If  Gore  really  wants  to  reduce 
drug  production  in  Colombia,  he 
should  first  look  toward  reducing  the 
demand  that  it  supplies.  Sadly,  the. 
Clinton-Gore  administration  has 
decided  that  eradication  of  the  coca 
plant  (what  cocaine  comes  from)  is 
the  only  solution,  even  though  a  1994 
study  shows  that  eradication  is  "23 
times  more  expensive  than  drug 
treatment  programs"  in  reducing 
national  cocaine  consumption  by 
just  1  percent  (Foreign  Policy  In 
Focus,  October  1998). 

The  Clinton-Gore  administration 
has  authorized  $330  million  for  coca 
eradication,  independent  of  the  $1.3 
billion  spent  on  the  military  (San 
Jose  Mercury  News,  June  29, 2000). 
For  $14  million  (yes,  I  did  the  math) 
we  could  accomplish  the  same  effect 
without  the  biological  warfare  being 
committed  today. 

Again  I  ask  you,  is  this  foreign 
policy  that  America  should  be  pursu- 
ing? 

Before  you  answer,  let  me  delve 
into  a  little  American  history.  Back 
in  the  eariy  '80s,  President  Carter 
funded  a  similar  war  in  El  Salvador. 
In  1981,  in  an  El  Salvadorean  village 
named  El  Mozote,  a  US-trained 


elite  army  unit  killed  more  than  4S0 
children  under  the  age  of  14.  70,000 
Salvadoreans  died  over  the  next  10 
years  (San  Jose  Mercury  News,  . 
September  3, 2000). 

Now  let  me  rephrase  the  question. 
Are  you  going  to  let  history  repeat 
itself?  Or  will  you  cast  your  outrage 
at  the  polls  this  November? 

"But  a  vote  for  Nader  is  a  vote  for 
Bush,  and  he's  much  worse!"  chant 
the  Al  Gore  supporters.  ;"    ^ 

Oh  yeah? 

Gore's  Web  site,  www.algore.com, 
in  bold  letters  declares,  "The 
(Clinton-Gore)  Administration 
Proposed  the  Largest  Anti-Drug 
Budgets  Ever."  Bush  offers  no 
brighter  picture.  "1  support  the  $1.3 
,  billion  in  aid.This  money  should  help 
build  up  the  capabilities  of 
Colombia's  armed  forces." 
(www.georgebush.com.) 

If  Gore  and  Bush  are  so  different, 
as  many  Al  Gore  supporters  claim, 
then  why  are  both  Gore  and  Bush 
supporting  inane  drug  policies,  poli- 
cies that  will  kill  innocent  people 
with  no  fruitful  gains?  Because  they 
know  it's  what  gets  them  votes,  it's 
what  gets  them  power,  and  it's  what 
gets  them  in  position  to  start  the 
cruel  cycle  all  over  again.  Does  your 
conscience  tell  you  something  is 
wrong  here? 

Without  a  doubt,  none  of  the 
issues  mentioned  in  this  article  will 


be  legitimately  discussed  in  the 
upcoming  presidential  debates, 
which  by  the  way  are  privately 
financed  af^d  organized  by  th«        ♦ 
Democratic  and  Republican  parties. 
This  is  why  your  vote  counts  so     .  ■: 
much.  It  signifies  a  want  for  change 
in  the  American  political  system'.  For 
less  than  $3  per  taxpayer,  the  cam- 
paigns could  be  100  percent  publicly 
financed  -  no  special  interests,  no 
corporations,  no  PAC  money 
(www.ralphnader.org). 

Gore  and  Bush  may  support  this 
in  rhetoric,  but  Nader  practices  it. 
The  only  type  of  donations  he 


accepts  are  those  from  individualSj, 
with  a  $  1,000  cap  on  each.  As  a 
result,  Nader  is  beholden  to  no  one; 
he  has  no  hidden  agenda  to  satisfy. 
Instead,  Nader  speaks  forthright  on 
institutions,  both  corporate  and  gov- 
ernmental in  nature,  that  have  pollut- 
ed, killed  and  harmed. 

Take  the  U.S.  auto  industry  for 
example.  Under  the  Clinton-Gore 
administration,  the  auto  industry  has 
been  given  a  free  ride  on  emission 
and  fuel  efficiency  standards,  While 
Honda  has  taken  the  lead  in  produc- 
ing environmentally  friendly  cars  all 
on  its  own.  Ford,  GM  and  Chrysler 
("The  Big  Three")  received  a  billion- 
dollar  "injection"  from  American 
taxpayers  over  the  last  eight  years 
(votenader.org). 

The  results,  you  may  ask?  The  Big 


Three,  along  with  Isuzu,  are  the  four 
worst  polluters  in  the  auto  industry 
(www.ucsusa.or^).  What?  Excuse 
me?      .  * 

What  about  all  the  money  the 
Clinton-Gore  administration  threw 
at  them?  Doesn't  it  count  for  any- 
thing? As  Nader  writes  in  his  Web 
site,  the  $1  billion  infusion  "has  been 
a  perfect  smoke  screen  behind  which 
they  (the  Big  Three)  can  carry  out 
their  efforts  to  thwart  mandated 
increases  in  CAFE  (national  fuel 
economy)  standards."  This  is  what 
Nader  calls  "corporate  welfafe,"  and 
he  has  done  and  will  do  everything  in- 
his  might  to  end  such  practices. 

Again,  1  want  to  make  sure  that 
everyone  knows  what  happened 
here;  taxpayers  gave  money  to 
Detroit  automakers  to  produce       ' 
greener  cars,  and  not  only  did  they 
do  nothing  in  return,  the  Big  Three 
spent  this  money  on  lobbying 
Congress  to  fight  laws  that  would 
force  them  into  producing  greener    ■ 
cars.  Okay,  I  just  got  a  headache 
from  writing  that  last  sentence.  Does 
anyone  see  how  stupid  our  whole 
political  system  has  become?  And 
where  the  heck  is  Al  Gore  in  all  of 
this?  This  is  the  man  who  the  Sierra 
Club  claims  would  be,  "the  most  pro- 
environment  president  in  our  histo- 
ry" (Fox  News,  July  24,  2000).  Are 

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FRATERNm^  Develop 
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joining  house  at  UCLA 


Michael 
Vines 


Where's  the 

UCLA  Journalism 

Department? 


You're  holding 


I  h<;  Daily  Hriiin  i.s  o,w  oIIIk.  |,(..s|  pUics  in 
ItH'  nalion  lo  Irarn  jounwlKsm.  It  wa«  Ihf 
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David  Shaw  and 'HmyAu I h.  OlhcLs  like 
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Moininj,' Am(Ti(Vi-  (-nirrlaininrni  cdilor.  and 
hrank  .S|m)IoiI7..  priMlunT  ol'-Thn  X-Fiirs  " 
wonl  on  lo  vHrrvrn  in  olhor  m«Mlia.  And  f«lr 
<!a(h  of  Ihom.  IIktc  wen*  hundn'ds  ol' others 
who  launchjHl  «an'«!r.s  with  the  skill.N  Ihcy 
«^Hrn,.d  working al  Ih.'  Daily  Hruin.  ({.Mrnl 
Mily  Mruin  slaniTs  wcnl  on  tojohsat  plarcs 
Ike  Ihc  U>.sAnp>l..s  Times.  |Ih>  I'hiladcilphia 
liHiinrcr.  th«'  San  .lo.sc  M.-rcirv  N*'w.v,  and 
rox  M!l«!vi.sion. 

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sliidcnl.s  intcn'.stcd  in  nearly  cvcrv  a.siKT|  of 
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more  I  han  si  iidy.  W-  oiler  re^l  (!X|MTi«'ne4- 


Ah  a  re|M)rler  or  pholo^rrapher  for  the  Daily 
rum  you'll  ni'\  fronl-rowseat  to  lhe  ev.^nKs 
nial  shaiM!  our  eampus  and  eonimunily 

There  i.sn'l  a  monM^eilinjf.'.xIra-currirular 
aelivily  in  (•o||ej,i!. 

II  d(M'.sn'l  mailer  what  your  major  i.s  or  if  you 
have  any  |)reviou.sc!.x(H'rien(e  in  new.s|MiMTs 
W!  II  train  you  lo  n^Mrt,  de.sijfn.  or  .shool 
pieliinw  in  lour  wc-eketnl  work.shoiw  lauyhl 
by  working' journaliNt.s.  You  mijrht  end  im 
«'nd  up  lik<!  many  who  t-ame  h-lbn;  you— 
wilh  a  .solid  .start  toward  a  vHm^r. 

JMw  TO  on  MvotvED?  HERTS  mm  J 

n  y<Mi  d  lik(!  lo  know  mon-.  coitm;  to  our 
Orientation  and  ()|M'n  llou.se  Tue.s<lay,  ()c|  ;| 
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Kor  more  inlbrmation.  call  u.s  at  H2r).27«7. 


journalism@ucla 


■Mi 


DO  you  know  the  dilTercnce 
between  the  nightly  fire- 
works show  at  Disneyland 
and  a  Fourth  of  July  fireworks  show 
in  any  other  town  in  America?  / 

The  difference,  aside  from  the 
tourists  who  are 
holding  big 
cameras  and 
who  you  can't 
understand,  is 
that  on  the 
Fourth  of  July, 
no  matter 
where  you  are, 
you  feel  a  true 
sense  of  cama- 
raderie with 
everybody 
around  you 
(unless  you're 
Canadian). 

Obviously,  I  am  speaking  only  of 
Americans,  but  other  nationalities 
do  have  similar  days  that  draw  an 
entire  nation  together  despite  all 
other  differences.  Sure  Christmas 
has  a  similar  effect  of  making  you 
feel  all  warm  and  cuddly,  but,  in    ^ 
actuality,  it  does  not  compare.      '  ' 
Christmas  is  mostly  about  family, 
whereas  the  Fourth  of  July  is  about 
community. 

With  the  exception  of  Disneyland, 
on  the  Fourth  of  July  anywhere  in 
America,  everyone  is  just  like  you, 
sitting  and  watching  the  fireworks! 
They  act.  talk  and  dress  just  like  you 
on  just  this  day.  On  every  other  day 
your  differences  are  as  obvious  as 
losing  in  Vegas.  But  when  you  watch 
the  firewoFks  show  in  your  town's 
stadium,  or  light  your  own  fireworks 
at  a  block  party,  everybody  around 
you  is  your  friend,  despite  race,  reli- 
gion or  wealth,  even  if  you  have 
never  met  them  before.  You  cannot 
buy  that  feeling,  no  matter  how 
much  you  spend. 

It  Is  hard  to  duplicate  that  feeling 
at  UCLA.  This  campus  is  heavily 
populated  and  thoroughly  diverse 
Bringing  all  of  UCLA  together  as  a    . 
community  is  more  like  uniting  the 
world  as  opposed  to  a  single  nation, 
and  in  my  three  years  at  UCLA,  I 
have  never  seen  it  accomplished. 

I  apologize  to  all  of  you  incoming 
freshman  who  were  hoping  for  a  col- 
lege experience  in  which  the  whole 
campus  gets  excited  about  home- 
coming or  one  in  which  traditions 
are  rich  and  continued  on  a  campus- 
wide  level.  UCLA  has  none  of  these 
things. 

While  UCLA  desperately  lacks 
certain  essential  elements  in  building 
a  true  sense  of  community,  there  are 

units  of  UCLA  that  accomplish  this 
goal.  These  are  called  student 
groups,  and  at  UCLA,  they  mean 
something  totally  different  than  they 
might  have  meant  in  your  high 
school.  Obviously,  at  UCLA  joining 
some  sort  of  activity  is  a  necessity. 
Your  chances  of  staying  in  school, 
getting  better  grades,  and  having  a 
good  time  increase  exponentially 
with  the  activities  you  are  involved 
with  and  the  friendships  you  build. 
Many  student  groups  offer  just  these 
things,  which  brings  me  to  my  point. 


SMVMB^pagtJt 


Vines  is  the  current  hter-Fratemity 
Coundl  president  Comments  can  be  e- 
melled  to  him  at  mvir>e$®ucla.edu,only 
tf  they  ere  funny.  Or  you  can  visit  him  at 
the  office  that  USAC  wont  give  him 


n^-^y 


(My  Bruin  ViewfMit 


Septemtter  25-28,2000       31 


-4 


.^^ 


VARSHNEY 

^  From  page  29 


tft*y  joking 

Ralph  Nader,  on  the  other  hand, 
;    could  rightfully  make  this  claim.  He 
■_  is  dead  against  the  World  Trade 
f;  Organization  and  trade  agreements 
;•;  such  as  NAFTA.  Why?  Because  they 
,:  >  put  corporate  interests  ahead  of 
.  "•'human  rights  and  the  environment. 

Promptly  after  the  Clinton-Gore 

administration  legitimized  NAFTA, 
■^U.S.  companies  moved  their  opera- 
;    tions  south  of  the  border  to  seek  out 

cheap  labor. 


I'm  sure  you've  heard  of  this 
movement  of  factories,  but  do  you 
know  these  multinational 
'^aquiladores"  across  the  border 
have  little  care  for  worker  safety  or 
any  sort  of  environmental 
regulations?  -I^ 

Women  spray-paint  toys  with 
mere  eye  goggles  for  protection  - 
never  mind  that  the  toxic  oil-based 
paint  drenches  their  skin  and  invades 
their  lungs.  Walking  up  and  down 
the  assembly  line,  you  can  see 
women  of  all  colors.  No,  this  isn't 
some  racially  heterogeneous  group. 
These  women  are  red,  blue,  or  pink 
depending  on  which  toy  they  have 


More  than  anything,  I 

want  you  to  question 

politics  today. 


r^:-:.- 


sprayed  (Joshua  Muldavin,  March 
1999). 

With  Gore  and  Bush  both  enthusi- 
astically supporting  NAFTA  and  the 
lax  human  rights  and  environmental 
standards  that  "free  trade"  entails, 
where  are  the  differences  between 
these  two  candidates  that  we  hear  so 


much  about?  ' 

Quite  frankly,  there  are  none. 
Gore  and  Bysh  have  been  bought  by 
corporate  and  special  interests;  noth- 
ing they  can  say  will  change  this. 
Their  mindset  and  their  biases  are 
mired  so  deep  in  this  vile  political 
system  that  lying  and  cheating  come 
naturally  to  them.  More  than  any- 
thing, I  want  you  to  question  politics 
today.  I  simply  do  not  have  enough 
space  to  raise  all  the  issues,  all  the 
controversies,  and  all  the  corruption 
in  this  year's  election.  Heck,  I  could 
barely  talk  about  Ralph  Nader,  let 
alone  his  running  mate,  Winona 
LaDuke,  a  Native  American  woman. 


Please,  go  to  www.votenader.org  and 
www.ralphnader.org,  and  read  up  on 
Ralph  Nader  and  what  he  believes 
in,  you  will  be  impressed  with  what 
he  has  done. 

One  final  thought:  Keep  in  mind  ' 
that  every  word  in  the  other  two  arti- 
cles you  (hopefully)  read  on  Gore 
and  Bush  are  backed  by  millions  of 
dollars  in  advertisements,  media  cov- 
erage and  corporate  money. 

Like  I  said  in  the  beginning,  you     ; 
want  ttf  believe  these  guys,  you  really 
do.  I  implore  you,  do  your  own 
research ,  make  your  own  conclu-      ~ 
sions.  Otherwise,  our  democracy  will 
only  suffer. 


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32        September  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Campos  Resonrees 


.r^^ty:^'' 


with  a 


Smile 


Nancy 
Greenstein 


SECURITY:  Not  here  just 
to  reduce  crime,  UCPD 
works  as  link  to  world 

UCLA  is  a  great  and  safe 
place  to  live,  work  and 
study.  The  UCLA  Police 
Department  is  one  of  the  campus 
groups  that  helps  to  keep  things 
that  way. 

As  the  uni- 
versity's own 
police  depart- 
ment, it  is  our 
job  to  ensure 
campus  safety 
so  that  stu- 
dents, faculty 
and  staff 
members  can 
go  about  their 
day-to-day 
objectives, 

pursuing  a  ■ 

higher  educa- 
tion in  an  atmosphere  that  fosters 
learning,  socialization  and  recre- 
ation. While  we're  here  to  reduce 
crime  in  our  community,  UCPD 
also  provides  many  other  services 
that  complement  the  university's 
mission  of  education,  research, 
and  community  service. 

The  university's  unique  geogra- 
phy and  population  make  it  an 
ideal  setting  for  "community  polic- 
ing." a  philosophy  that  is  based  on 
police  building  partnerships  with 
campus  groups  and  individuals. 
We  want  you  to  get  to  know  us  as 
individuals,  rather  than  just  the 
people  with  the  uniforms  and  a 
badge.  In  turn,  we  want  to  get  to 
know  as  many  members  of  the 
campus  community  as  we  can. 

Greenstein  is  the  Director  of  Police 
Community  Services  for  the  universi- 
ty police  at  UCLA. 


GENDER:  Center's  new 
name  reflects  changing 
roles,  society's  attitudes 

For  nearly  30  years.  The 
Center  for  Women  &  Men 
(formerly  known  as  the 
Women's  Resource  Center)  has 
worked  to  create  a  trusted  place  for 
all  students  to  discuss  their  experi- 
ences and  con- 
cerns, especial- 
ly those  linked 
to  gender. 

Sometimes 
being  a  UCLA 
student  can  be 
complicated 
and  occasion- 
ally feel  over- 
whelming, 
especially  for 
students  who 
are  new  to  the 
university 

experience  or  to  our  campus. 
Trying  to  balance  classes  with  work 
and  family  responsibilities  while  at 
the  same  time  developing  new  rela- 
tionships with  roommates,  friends, 
dates,  or  partners  can  create  con- 
cerns and  raise  questions  about 

Oakland  Is  the  director  of  The  Center 
for  Wonoen  &  Men.  SernJ  comments  to 
toakiar)d0saonetuda.eda 


Tina 
Oakland 


Our  community  policing  efforts 
have  led  to  the  creation  of  many 
joint  programs  with  other  groups 
on  campus.  Examples  include  a 
protocol  with  the  Center  for 
Women  &  Men  for  survivors  of 
rape,  working  with  a  multi-division 
response  team  on  workplace  vio- 
lence and  prevention,  safety  pro- 
grams with  students  and  campus 
organizations,  and  partnering  with 
groups  such  as  the  Office  of 
Residential  Life  on  education  and 
problem-solving  activities. 

While  many  of  these  activities    : 
happen  out  of  the  public  eye, 
sometimes  events  do  put  us  in  the 
spotlight.  One  such  incident  from 
last  school  year  is  the  disappear- 
ance of  Michael  Negrete  from  his 
residence  hall.  UCPD  remains  in 
contact  with  Michael's  family  and 
has  involved  multiple  police  agen- 
cies continuing  to  search  for 
Michael,  unfortunately,  without 
success. 

Much  more  common  is  the  rou- 
tine call  received  by  UCPD  called 
"overdue  adult."  These  calls  are 
often  from  a/amily  member  indi- 
cating their  sons  or  daughters  have 
not  been  heard  from  for  a  period 
of  days.  Officers  typically  locate 
the  students  in  the  residence  halls 
or  at  their  apartments  and  ask 
them  to  call  home. 

Though  it  occurs  infrequently, 
crime  against  individuals  is  a  high 
priority  for  UCPD.  Many  such 
calls  are  for  incidents  between  peo- 
ple who  know  each  other  ■-  such  as 
domestic,  roommate  or  employee 
quarrels.  Because  UCPD  is  a  full- 
service  police  department  and  the 
officers  are  state  police,  we  do  our 
own  investigations  and  prepare  the 
cases  for  filing  with  the  City 
Attorney  or  District  Attorney. 
Municipal  departments  with  a 
larger  number  of  victims  typically 
do  not  have  the  resources  to  priori- 


tize all  crimes  against  persons. 

A  recent  example  is  the  case  of 
Michael  Peers,  who  in  1998  was 
posing  as  a  talent  scout  and  luring 
female  UCLA  students  to  his 
apartment  where  he  inappropriate- 
ly and  without  their  knowledge 
videotaped  them.  A  student  report- 
ed the  behavior  and,  after  receiv- 
ing a  search  warrant,  our  detec- 
tives found  videotapes  of  numer- 
ous other  victims.  Peers  was 
charged  and  fied  the  area. 

UCPD  detectives  followed  his 
trail  and  with  the  cooperation  of 
the  Allegheny  County 
Pennsylvania  Police  Department 
had  him  arrested  and  extradited. 
On  Aug.  3,  2000,  he  was  sentenced 
to  I  year  in  jail  and  ordered  to  stay 
away  from  college  campuses.  The 
latter  is  most  important,  as  it  will 
be  difficult  for  him  to  victimize 
young  college  women  again. 


JASON  CHEN/Daly  Brum  Semen  Staff 


This  past  August,  a  crime  bul- 
letin was  received  from  the  San 
Diego  area,  noting  an  individual 
suspected  of  robbing  a  UC  San 
Diego  student  was  thought  to  be  in 
the  Los  Angeles  area.  During  their 
daily  briefing,  officers  were 
informed  about  this  individual  who 
was  known  to  seek  out  college 
campuses. 

Soon  after,  an  observant  officer 
saw  a  person  meeting  the  descrip- 
tion. It  was  the  suspect,  who  was 
questioned  and  sent  back  to  San 
Diego  before  he  could  do  any 
harm  in  our  community. 

I  share  these  few  cases  not  to 
scare  people.  They  represent  a 
minority  of  crimes  (last  year  40 
"Part  I"  crimes  -  which  are  serious 
felonies  such  as  murder,  rape,  and 
arson  -  were  reported),  but  the 
cases  highlight  the  significant 
police  work  that  is  done  to  ensure 


everything  from  self  esteem,  rela- 
tionships, and  body  image,  to  per- 
sonal safety,  sexual  violence  or 
harassment,  and  academic  success. 

As  part  of  the  Division  of 
Student  Development  &  Health, 
The  Center  for  Women  &  Men  pro- 
vides a  unique  student  service 
which  offen  a  broad  range  of  pro- 


grams, workshops  and  support  ser- 
vices to  help  our  students  to  get  the 
most  out  of  their  university  experi- 
ence and  overcome  any  gender- 
based  obstacles  which  might  pre- 
vent them  from  succeeding  here  at 
UCLA. 

Students  are  often  surpnted 
when  they  see  our  office.  We  like  it 


ROOCnCK  nOJ(ASA>a<ly  Bruin 


when  we  hear  that  our  office  looks 
more  like  a  living  room  in  some- 
one's house  than  a  university 
department.  That  is  exactly  what  we 
set  out  to  do.  UCLA  is  a  big  place. 
The  Center  tries  to  create  an  infor- 
mal and  confidential  setting  -  to 
bring  things  down  to  a  more  per- 
somil  scale. 


a  safe  environment.  ■     .  ,.".-/ 

The  majority  of  crimes  at 
UCLA  are  property  crime:  often 
the  theft  of  unattended  personal 
objects  such  as  laptop  computers 
and  backpacks.  These  "crimes  of 
opportunity"  can  easily  be  avoided 
by  insuring  your  property  is  not      ' : 
left  alone.  Auto  crime  also  occurs. 
Locking  doors  and  placing  objects 
out  of  view  could  prevent  many 
incidents. 

Officers  on  foot,  bicycles, 
motorcycles  and  in  cars  patrol 
campus  and  the  surrounding 
neighborhood.  UCPD  officers 
provide  a  layer  of  security  on  canv 
pus  and  a  protective  shield  around     '^ 
UCLA  properties. 

A  number  of  students  and  staff 
live  in  University  Apartments 
South,  which  are  a  few  miles  from 
campus.  Crime  is  very  low  on  the 
UCLA  properties  compared  to 
adjacent  neighborhoods.  UCPD         v 
officers  are  visible  to  the  local 
neighborhood,  having  been  the  pri-    "' 
mary  agency  in  solving  a  number       T 
of  area  crimes.  Those  seeking  to 
commit  criminal  acts  have  learned 
to  stay  away  from  UCLA  proper- 
ty, since  there  is  a  higher  likelihood 
they  will  be  caught. 

Assisting  the  officers  are  the  stu- 
dent-run Community  Service 
Officer  (CSO)  and  Emergency 
Medical  Services  (EMS)  pro- 
grams. CSOs  are  assigned  through- 
out the  campus  to  provide  building 
security,  an  extra  set  of  eyes  and 
ears  to  prevent  crime,  and  escort- 
ing students  during  the  evening 
hours. 

EMS  runs  a  24-hour  ambulance 
responding  to  il]  and  injured  cam- 
pus members  (employment  appli- 
cations are  always  welcomed  from 
interested  students).  A  number  of     —^ 
UCPD  officers  are  UCLA  gradu- 

SceCIIBNSrEllt|Mgc41 


It's  our  job  to  know  the  campus 
and  community  services  well  so  that 
students  who  come  in  with  prob- 
lems, questions,  or  interests  can  get 
help  or  be  referred  to  the  right  place 
the  first  time.  We  are  a  good  place 
to  start  when  you  don't  know  where 
to  begin. 

Sometimes  students  have  ques- 
tions about  things  like  how  to  meet 
and  connect  with  others  on  such  a 
big  campus,  knowing  how  to  com- 
municate about  relationships, 
whether  or  not  you  are  ready  for 
intimate  sexual  activity.or  when  and 
how  to  tell  someone  if  you  have  a 
sexually  transmitted  disease  such  as 
herpes  or  HPV  (human  papillo- 
mavirus). No  matter  where  you  live, 
questions  can  arise  about  setting 
boundaries  and  how  to  communi- 
cate effectively  with  roommates,     . 
finding  privacy,  study  space  and     . 
time. 

The  Center  works  with  a  host  of 
other  student  services  to  offer  work- 
shops in  areas  such  as  assertion 
training,  communication  skills  and 
how  men  and  women  sometimes 
communicate  differently,  bitilding 
healthy  relationships,  staying 
healthy  and  fit,  stress  reduction, 
time-management,  and  active  par- 
ticipation in  the  classroom. 

In  addition  we  provide  drop-in 
counseling  and  referrals  on  every- 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Septmber  25-28,2000        33 


gives  way  to  educational  reform. 


^  jj 


:  •  • 


campus  resources 


RETENTION:  Groups  offer 
myriad  opportunities  for 
helping  students  succeed 

July  of  1995  was  a  period  of^ 
intense  student  activism.  Forces 
all  around  us  were  talking  about 
affirmative  action,  its  impact,  and 

__  its  elimination.  The  spotlight  was 
directed  on  former  Gov.  Pete 
Wilson  and  his 
attempt  to  sub- 
vert the  educa- 
tional system 
for  his  political 
gain.  He  used 
his  position  on 
the  UC  Board 
of  Regents  to 
end  affirmative 
action  and 
moved  to 
spread  dissolve 
it  in  all  of 
California's 

.  public  education  through 
Proposition  209. 

Since  then,  students  haVe  been 
calling  for  meaningful  educational 
reform  and  a  restoration  of  pro- 
grams that  once  brought  underrep- 
resented  students  to  the  university  at 
unprecedented  levels. 

While  students  have  demanded 
that  the  university  take  responsibili- 
ty for  its  actions  against  affirmative 
action,  students  have  also  continued 
their  mission  to  ensure  that  those 
limited  number  of  underrepresented 

Sandoval  is  a  fifth-year  political  science 
and  history  student.  He  will  serve  as  this 
year's  chairperson  for  the  Campus 
Retention  Committee.  E-mail  questions 
to  asandov@ucla.edu. 


Antonio 
Sandoval 


students  at  UCLA  graduate.  These 
student  efforts  are  collectively 
known  as  the  Student  Retention 
Center. 

The  Student  Retention  Center 
was  established  and  funded  by  the 
Campus  Retention  Committee  in 
1988.  The  SRC's  focus  was  on  spe- 
cific populations  on  campus,  which 
had  historical  evidence  of  low  reten- 
tion rates.  .    .;',,;'_  ■^-•.; 

Money  from  the  Special 
Education  referendum  was  used  to 
fund  the  SRC's  first  program,  the 
Academic  Supports  Program.  This 
innovative  program  was  established 
to  combat  high  attrition  rates  of 
African  American  students  at 
UCLA.  Realizing  that  admission 
into  UCLA  did  not  guarantee  suc- 
cessful completion  of  university 
requirements  and  graduation,  stu- 
dents felt  a  growing  need  to  take 
control  of  their  academic  future. 


The  SRC  projects  also 
strive  to  play  a  vital 

role  in  providing 
resources  that  allow 
for  personal  growth. 


The  creation  of  additional  pro- 
jects by  other  underrepresented 
communities  contributed  to  the 
expansion  of  the  SRC.  MEChA 
Calmecac  was  established  to  serve 
Chicana/o  and  Latina/o  students; 
Pilipino  students  created  SPEAR; 
American  Indian  students  created 
the  Retention  of  American  Indians 
Now  project;  and  Vietnamese  stu- 


dents created  the  South  East  Asian 
Campus  Learning  Education  and 
Retention  project. 

These  projects  started  with  a  chal- 
lenge that  fundamentally  sought  to 
redefine  the  paradigm  on  which  edu- 
cation was  based.  SRC  projects 
moved  away  from  the  conventional 
way  students  were  advised  and 
instead  implemented  a  broader 
approach  to  include  students'  per- 
sonal concerns,  worries  and 
strengths.  With  an  understanding 
that  there  was  more  to  a  student's 
academic  performance  than  Just 
will,  our  counseling  addressed  cul- 
tural, social,  political  and  personal 
issues  that  impacted  the  individual 
students'  goal  of  academic  and  per- 
sonal success. 

In  addition,  there  is  an  attempt  to 
redefine  power  structures  that  have 
served  as  obstacles  in  our  lives  as 
students. 

Today,  SRC  projects  specialize  in 
one-on-one  peer  counseling,  which 
still  refiects  the  original  goals  that 
were  established  to  combat  high 
attrition  rates  and  to  challenge  edu- 
cational norms.  In  addition,  the  pro- 
jects have  implemented  other  com- 
ponents such  as  mentorship  pro- 
grams that  seek  to  ease  the  transi- 
tion that  first  year  and  transfer  stu- 
dents have  at  UCLA.  ASP's  mentor- 
ship  program  is  called  African 
Brothers  and  Sisters;  MEChA 
Calmecac's  program  is  called 
Calpulli;  RAIN's  program  is  called 
Supporting  Undergraduate  Natives; 
SPEAR'S  program  is  called  One 
Step  Ahead;  and  SEACLEAR  is 
establishing  their  program  this  year. 

The  SRC  projects  also  strive  to 
play  a  vital  role  in  providing 
resources  that  allow  for  personal 
growth.  Examples  of  these  resources 


are  the  internship  and  study  group 
programs  provided  by  each  project. 
Internship  programs  allow  for  those 
who  use  the  services  provided  by  the 
projects  to  learn  more  about  the 
CRC,  the  SRC,  the  university  and 
the  community.  The  study  group 
components  allow  for  continual 
development  of  study  skills,  and  col- 
lective learning  techniques  while 
establishing  a  sense  of  community  at 
UCLA.  Overall,  these  programs 
provide  the  resources  to  create 
awareness  and  promote  growth. 


Since  1988  there  has 

been  a  conscious  effort 

to  provide  services  to 

students  that  will 

directly  impact  their 

retention  at  UCLA. 


The  projects  also  have  unique 
programs,  which  seek  to  address  a 
need  in  their  specific  community. 
ASP  has  the  Rights  of  Passage  pro- 
gram, which  assists  students  in  their 
development  of  personal  and  com- 
munity ties  as  they  progress  through 
their  first  year  at  UCLA.  MEChA 
Calmecac  has  the  Centro  Coatlicue 
program  which  works  to  address 
issues  of  gender  and  sexuality.  This 
program  also  works  with  student 
parents  and  coordinates  programs 
to  create  awareness  on  campus  on 
how  these  issues  impact  students. 

SPEAR  has  created  the  leader- 
ship development  component, 
which  strives  to  foster  growth  in 


skills  and  will  ultimately  benefit  stu- 
dents after  graduation.     ^ 

The  SRC  also  provides  general 
services  to  all  students.  There  are     .\ 
exam  files  that  help  students  learn 
ways  to  improve  test-taking  abilities. 
There  are  professor  and  class  evalu- 
ations available  for  students  to  know 
what  other  students  think  about  spe- 
cific professors  and  classes.  An  SRC 
study  list  exists  as  well.  An  expan-  — ' 
sion  of  a  resource  that  is  used  in  the 
residence  halls,  the  study  list  is  a 
detailed  list  of  all  students  who  are 
taking  part  in  a  SRC  project. 

Finally,  the  SRC  provides  a  study 
space  in  Ackerman  Union  year-  ...^  ■ 
round.  This  space  provides  an  envi- 
fonment  in  which  students  can  study 
individually  or  together.  This  year, 
the  SRC  will  implement  a  tutorial 
program  to  assist  students  in  various 
subjects.  All  students  will  be 
informed  about  this  service  and  it 
will  be  open  to  all. 

As  you  can  see,  students  have 
worked  hard  to  provide  a  service 
that  challenges  students  to  do  well     . 
and  become  informed  of  their  sur- 
roundings. 

Since  1988  there  has  been  a  con- 
scious effort  to  provide  services  to 
students  that  will  directly  impact 
their  retention  at  UCLA.  Since  the 
CRC's  creation,  retention  rates  have 
risen  and  students  have  played  a 
direct  role.  The  SRC  is  a  response  to 
the  results  caused  by  insufficient 
efforts  made  to  keep  students  that 
are  the  greatest  risk  of  falling  on 
academic  probation  or  being  dis- 
missed from  the  university. 

The  SRC  is  open  every  day  and  is 
willing  to  assist  you  with  any  con- 
cern that  you  might  have.  Stop  by 
and  see  for  yourselves.  SRC  is  here 
for  you. 


m 


IS 


coming  to 


ByDaliYu 

What  could  be  better 
than  Relaxtation  Boba 
in  West  LA? 

Relaxtation  Boba  in 
Westwood    and    West 


LA,  of  course.  Due  to 
overwhelming  demand, 
Relaxtation  has  decided  to 
bring  Boba  closer  to  their 
loyal  UCLA  customers. 


Happy  late-night  crowd  getting  their  Boba  fix  at  Relaxtation  West  LA. 


The  new  store  will  be  on 
Gaylcy  Avenue,  two  doors 
up  from-Shakey's  Pizza  and 
across  the  street  from 
Circuit  City.  11- is  conven- 
ient to  Lot  32,  so  there  will 
bt  plenty  of  parking  for 
students. 


Voted  Best  Boba 
on  the  Westside  by 
New  Times  LA, 

—  Dennis  Romero 


Address: 

1108  Gay  ley  Avenue 

Westwood,  CA 

Expected  to  open  in 
October,  2000.  Check 
www.relaxtation.com 
for  updated  information. 


U       September  25-28, 2000 


Ml^    -^     -»  .- 


Daily  Bniin  Viewpoint 


Concern  f()r  children^  success  puts  fight  against  illiteracy  into  action 


TUTORING:  BruinCon)s 
works  to  educate  kids  in 
inner^dty  public  schools 


By  Emily  Allen,  Mary  Cong,  Joyce  Liou 
and  Jash^  Williams 

Would  you  like  to  receive  work- 
study,  an  AmeriCorps  Education 
Award  and  help  children  struggling 
in  schooIJAVcll,  my  name  is  Emily 
and  I  recently  started  working  for 
UCLA  BruinCorps  as  an 
AmeriCorps  VISTA  (Volunteer  In 
Service  To  America)  and  I  can  tell 
you  how  you  can  do  just  that.  I've 
really  enjoyed  working  with 
BruinCorps  and  would  like  to  share 
some  of  what  I  've  learned. 

BruinCorps  pairs  UCLA  students 
with  children  from  East  Los  Angeles 
and  South  Central  Los  Angeles 
through  three  AmeriCorps  initia- 
tives: America  Reads,  America 
Counts  and  Jumpstart  L.A. 

These  programs  are  designed  not 
only  to  help  children  prepare  for  edu- 


P  ,  KtlTH  tNRlOUEZA)aily  Bruin  Senioi  SlaB 

Fronn  left  to  right,  Mary  Cong,  Emily  Allen,  Jash«  Williams  and  Joyce 

Liou  are  members  of  UCLA  BruinCorps  who  work  to  tutor  children. 


Allen,  Cong,  Liou,  and  Williams  encour- 
age you  to  join  BruinCorps.  If  you  would 
like  to  learn  more  stop  by  405  Men's 
Gym  or  call  (310)  794-4066. 


cational  success,  but  also  to  allow 
UCLA  tutors  a  chance  to  learn  more 
about  their  community  and  the  field 
of  teaching.  Tutors  work  with  chil- 
dren and  gain  valuable  first-hand 
knowledge  from  their  mentor  teach- 
ers. Thus,  being  a  BruinCorps  tutor 
offers  a  rewarding  and  challenging 
opportunity. 

BruinCorps  begins  with  a  pre' 


school  component  (Jumpstart)  and 
continues  on  through  elementary 
(America  Reads)  and  junior  high 
school  (America  Counts).  This  offers 
BruinCorps  members  an  opportunity 
to  work  with  children  in  a  variety  of 
age  groups.  As  a  Corps  member 
you'll  choose  the  age  group  that 
interests  you  and  then  work  one-on- 
one  with  a  child  who  needs  your  help. 


BruinCorps  members  commit  to 
working  with  their  chosen  program 
for  one  to  two  years.  This  commit- 
ment allows  Corps  members  to  cre- 
ate a  lasting  and  significant  relation- 
ship with  their  student. 

BruinCorps  provides  students 
with  the  opportunity  to  tutor,  but 
more  specifically,  the  chance  to  do  it 
efTectively.  BruinCorps  members 
participate  in  both  childhood  educa- 
tion classes  and  ongoing  BruinCorps 
training,  where  they  are  brought  up 
to  date  on  a  variety  of  different  cur- 
riculums  and  teaching  methods.  This 
mixture  of  both  practical  and  theoret- 
ical knowledge  prepares  tutors  well. 
All  of  their  jobs  are  important. 

We  all  know  that  there  are  prob^ 
lems  in  the  LA.  county  public  school 
system.  For  instance,  in  1998, 40  per- 
cent of  the  third-graders  in  the  coun- 
ty failed  to  attain  the  basic  level  of 
reading.  This  was  not  an  unprece- 
dented occurrence.  After  all,  in  1994, 
70  percent  of  children  in  the  United 
States  fell  below  the  proficient  level 
of  reading  on  the  National 
Assessment  of  Educational  Progress. 

In  response.  President  Clinton 
announced  the  America  Reads 
Challenge,  an  initiative  that  mobi- 
lizes public  and  private  resources  to 
ensure  that  all  children  can  read  well 


and  independently  by  the  end  of 
third  grade.  In  order  to  make  this  ini- 
tiative possible.  President  Clinton 
challenged  the  higher  education  com- 
munity (that  means  you!)  to  substan- 
tially increase  the  number  of  Federal 
work-study  students  engaging  in  tuto- 
rial services. 

UCLA  BruinCorps  responded  to 
this  challenge  by  launching  three  pro- 
grams: America  Reads,  America 
Coim's,  and  Jumpstart  LA.  All  of  ~^ 
these  pi  ograms  encourage  family 
and  community  involvement  in  the 
education  of  America's  children  by 
creating  collaboration  between 
trained  reading  professionals  and 
UCLA  tutors. 

BruinCorps,  located  in  the  Men's 
Gym,  began  during  the  summer  of 
1997  in  response  to  this  national 
focus  on  literacy  and  service  learn- 
ing. Its  mission  is  to  provide  synergy 
between  community  service  and  ser- 
vice learning  efforts,  to  build  collabo- 
ration and  partnerships  between 
UCLA  and  the  surrounding  commu- 
nity, and  to  connect  community  ser- 
vice with  instruction  and  research. 

Since  our  programs  are  affiliated 
with  AmeriCorps,  a  domestic  coun- 
terpart to  the  PeaceCorps,  UCLA 


S«eAUEN,page3S 


We  make  the  difference. 


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Admissions  Essays  •  Term  papers  •  Theses  •  Resumes  •  Translatior) 

_^___    ©  1999-2000  eduEdit  LLC 


JAPANESE!  Shop  online! 

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Sex  Wars 


PLAY  THE  GAME 


At  the  August  25,  2000,  Regular 
Meeting,  the  Associated  Students 
UCLA  Board  of  Directors  took  action 
on  the  following  matters: 

*  Appointment  to 
Personnel  Committee 


Daily  Bniin  Viewpoint 


Septemtwr  25-28, 2000        35 


ALLEN   ; 

Ffompage34     ^  '" 

BruinCorps  tutors  abide  by  the 
AmeriCorps  pledge: 

"I  will  get  things  done  for 
America  to  make  our  people  safer, 
smarter,  and  healthier.  I  will  bring 
Americans  together  to  strengthen 
communities.  Faced  with  apathy,  I 
will  take  action.  Faced  with  conflict, 
I  will  seek  a  common  ground.  Faced 
with  adversity,  I  will  persevere.  I  will 
carry  this  commitment  with  me  this 
year  and  beyond.  I  am  an 
AmeriCorps  member." 


Our  Jumpstart  LA.  program 
focuses  on  pre-school  children  and 
prepares  children  as  early  as  possible 
for  educational  success.  Jumpstart  is 
■  founded  on  three  integrated  prograjn 
areas:  School  Success,  Family        ''T 
Involvement  and  Future  Teachers. 
This  program  works  to  build  success- 
ful literacy  experiences  for  children 
through  individualized  instruction, 
and  by  engaging  families  in  the  learn- 
ing process.  To  date,  more  than  200 
UCLA  Corps  members  have  served 
in  under-resourced  communities 
working  with  12  preschool  centers. 

This  experience  of  tutoring  not 
only  helps  the  children,  but  also  the 


tutors.  Jumpstart  Corps  member 
Graham  Russo  said,  "The  program 
is  not  only  fun  but  j/tso  rewarding. 
Jumpstart  builds  a  lot  of  skills.  You 
have to  learn  to  work  with  your 
^caching  team  and  mentor  teachers." 
Jumpstart  is  a  great  program  for  stu- 
dents who  are  interested  in  public 
service. 

After  Jumpstart  the  kindergarten 
through  third  grade  component  fol- 
lows. UCLA  America  Reads 
engages  eligible  Federal  Work  Study 
students,  and  some  non-work  study 
students,  in  providing  tutoring  ser- 
vices to  children  in  grades  K-3. 

By  enrolling  in  Education  193A  at 


UCLA,  students  learn  techniques 
and  methods  to  prepare  these  chil- 
dren to  be  literate  by  fourth  grade. 
One  former  UCLA  America  Reads 
tutor,  Joyce  Liou,  who  now  works  as 
a  BruinCorps  Program  Coordinator 
said,  "It  was  the  most  incredible  and 
challenging  experience  I've  had.  It 
makes  me  realize  the  depth  of  the  ' 
problems  our  childrencan  face  and 
th?  impact  one  caring  person  can 
make. 

"But  the  benefits  were  not  just 
one-sided.  I  learned  as  much,  if  not 
more,  from  my  students.  It's  always 
refreshing  to  remove  yours.elf  from 
the  busy  bustle  of  a  college  campus 


to  see  the  smiling  faces  of  children 
■  who  wait  for  theirAmcrica  Reads 
tutor.  I  would  do  it  again  in  a  heart 
beat,"  '''■■''■'■■'■■.':'..     '',-.''; 

UCLA  BruinCorps  America  . 
Counts  begins  this  fall.  America     ' 
Counts  is  a  shift  from  elementary 
school  and  literacy  to  focus  instead 
on  junior  high  school  and  mathemat- 
ics. Advances  in  science,  technology, 
information  processing  and  commu- 
nication, combined  with  the  chang- 
ing workplace,  make  it  necessary  for 
all  students  to  learn  more  math.     -r^-. 

The  basics  are  changing. 


See  ALLEN,  page  37 


»:■' 


Lt- 


The  Department  of  Special  Collections,  UCLA  Library 

and 

The  Friends  of  the  UCLA  Library 

bring  you 


Nick  Bantock 


speaking  about  his  new  hook 

THE  ARTFUL  DODGER 
Images  and  Reflections 


Nick  Bantock  is  the  author  of  the  bestselling  Griffin  &  Sabine  trilogy,  as  well  as  other 
books  that  weave  together  text  arid  graphics  in  a  unique  manner.  He  has  also  created 
seven  pop-up  books,  along  with  postcard  books,  journals,  note  cards,  and  a  CD-ROM. 

■    f  Book  signing  to  foUou)  presentation.  '    •  •;     ^      ,. 


Thursday,  September  2S,  2000 

4:00 

RovceHall  ^14 


True  ove  is  waiting  for  uou 


U.C.LA      . 
Ackerman  Union 
Levell    -    ' 

Tel:  310  206-9395 
Fax:  310  206-8447 

www.pandaexpress.  com 


F   R 

VEGETABLE  SPRING  ROLL 

I    With  any  2-item  combo 
>    or  higher  purchase. 

I         Valid  only  at  UCLA. 
One  coupon  per  person  per  purchase. 
I        Q^r  expires  October  31.  2O00.  X^i^S^i^^j^* 


%♦  :-^.;V; 


,V'i^ 


36       $«(iinnber2S-»,2(IOO 


Daily  Bruin  ViewpoiM 


SOCIALIZING:  Students 
guaranteed  to  find  good 
time  around  campus 


W: 


AMYHAeER/OulyBfuin 


ticther  you're  the  stu- 
dent who  enjoys  listen- 
ing to  the  repetitious 
droning  of  dance  music  blaring 
through  the  dorm  windows  on 
any  given  Thursday  night  while 
trying  to  study,  or  you're  the  one 
"getting  down"  in  the  center  of 
the  grimy  dance  floor,  there  really 
is  something  fun  for  you  to  do  on 
the  UCLA  campus. 
There  is  almost  always  a  good 

Eiland  is  a  second  year  political  sci- 
ence student  Send  cbmnDents  to  kei- 
land@ucla.edu. 


time  to  be  had.  It  mi^t  require  a 
little  effort,  or  it  may  be  as  simple 
as  following  the  parade  of  scantily 
clad,  often  costumed,  girls  toward 
the  familiar 
sounds  com- 
ing from 
Strathmore 
and  Gayley, 
right  into  the 
party  of  your 
choice. 

All  of  the 
girls  of 
course  look 
as  if  they 
have  spent 
hours  and 
used  gallons 

of  glitter  and  gloss  preparing  for 
their  evening  out,  sporting  their 
fresh-off-the-runway  attire.  They 


Katrina 
Eiland 


are  ready  to  meet  the  charming 
men  of  UCLA,  so  dapper, 
dressed  in  flip  flops  and  cargo 
shorts,  already  a  few  beers  under. 
The  girls  wonder,  "This  is  what  I 
got  dressed  up  for?"  C'mon,  I 
know  you  know  what  I'm  saying. 

Despite  that,  I  have  enjoyed 
many  nights  of  fun  out  dancing  on 
those  grimy  floors.  I  have  often 
been  one  of  those  costumed  girls 
sauntering  down  the  hill  from  the 
dorms,  ready  to  leave  Rousseau's 
dissertations  and  "x"  and  "y" 
behind  for  a  night,     x  -    = -v  - 

But,  I  have  also  been  the  frus- 
trated scholar  attempting  to  write 
the  best  paper  of  my  life  while  one 
of  my  roommates  threw  all  three 
of  our  wardrobes  into  a  heap  on 
the  floor  of  our  already  cramped 
shoebox  of  a  room,  trying  to  find 


something  suitable  to  wear  out  to 
the  parlies  of  the  night.  The  final 
choice  is  usually  something  along 
the  lines  of  black  pants  and  a 
brightly  colored  halter-top,  whid) 
seems  to  have  become  a  uniform 
of  sorts. 

I  for  one,  really  enjoy  getting 
dressed  up.  It  enables  students  to 
escape  their  realities  for  a  night, 
maybe  even  the  next  morning  too, 
if  they  are  one  of  the  "incognito 
class"  who  enjoy  participating  in 
the  "walk  of  shame,"  trying  to 
return  to  his  or  her  place  of  resi- 
dence, still  dressed  in  their  rum- 
pled evening  wear  without  being 
detected.  I  hear  it's  becoming  an 
art  form. 

Now  that  I  have  gone  and 

.  .  ,     ;.      SeeEIUNP,pa9c40 


AGIVmES:  Everything  youVe 
ever  wanted  to  know  about  the 
capital  of 'SoCal,'  La-La  Land 

Wilkommen.  Bienvenue.  Welcome 
to  the  cabaret  that  is  Los  Angeles: 
the  City  of  Angels  (so  called  for 
all  the  people  that  get  shot  here  on  a  regular 
basis). 

For  those  of  you 
who  are  uninitiated  to 
Southern  California 
life,  it  is  "hella"  cool,  or 
"wicked  pissah"  to  the 
three  of  you  from 
Boston.  Like  all  big 
cities,  there  is  plenty  to 
do  in  L.A.,  provided 
you  have  the  right 
guide. 

The  first  thing  you'll 
need  is  a  crash  course 
in  So  Cal  geography.         ''~^~^~~~~~' 
First,  there  are  the  don'ts.  The  biggest  don't 
is  Orange  County,  a  vast  conservative  subur- 

Lief  is  a  third-year  psychology  and  English  major 
who  thankfully  comes  from  a  long  line  of  New 
Yorkers.  Contact  him  at  dlief@ucla.edu. 


ban  wasteland  between  L.A.  and  San  Diego, 
best  known  for  being  the  home  of  the  privi- 
leged, the  intolerant  and  the  Anaheim 
Angels. 

Running  a  close  second  to  Orange 
County  is  the  Valley,  which  has  all  the  excite- 
ment and  charm  of  Orange  County  at  1 19 
degrees  Fahrenheit.  In  these  dank  pits  of 
despair  all  the  houses  are  peach,  a  nod  to  the 
adobe-dwelling  Mexican  culture  who  are 
lucky  enough  to  trim  the  hedges  of  said 
houses.  There  may  be  Spanish  tile  on  the 
roof,  but  there's  Miracle  Whip  in  the  fridge. 

Once  you  get  out  of  Orange  County  and 
the  Valley,  the  places  that  put  the  South  in 
Southern  California,  you  can  get  on  to  San 
Diego.  San  Diego's  motto  is  "Hey,  we're 
real  close  to  Mexico!"  This  is  about  the  only 
advantage  it  has  over  any  other  major 
California  city. 

Then  again,  there  is  always  the  aquatic 
ghetto  known  as  Sea  World.  Here,  once 
proud  manta  rays  and  penguins  are  penned 
in  and  asked  to  jump  and  do  tricks  for  the 
man.  Sure  you've  heard  about  the  black 
panthers,  but  what  about  the  brown  walrus? 
How  can  a  bottle-nosed  dolphin  support  his 
family  with  his  nose  in  the  bottle? 

My  friends,  I  have  a  dream  that  one  day 
little  black  children,  little  white  children, 
and  electric  eels  will  be  able  to  walk  hand  in 


[■LiaiLmvwiQiaiiD 


hand  down  the  sidewalk.  This  is  the  dawn- 
ing of  the  age  of  aquariums!  Free  at  last, 
free  at  last!  Thank  God  almighty,  Willy,  you 
are  free  at  last! 

Allofthese 
places  are 
interesting, 
but  they  are 
not  the  real 
Los  Angeles. 
What  sets 
L.A.  apart 

from  other  cities  is  that  it  is  the  entertain- 
ment capital  of  the  world. 

It  is  one  of  the  few  places  on  Earth  where 
celebrities  frequent  the  streets.  This  means 
that  there  arc  plenty  of  celebrity-related 
sights  to  see.  You  can  drive  by  the  corner 
where  Hugh  Grant  was  caught  with  a  prosti- 
tute. Or,  you  could  drive  by  the  comer 
where  Eddie  Murphy  was  caught  with  a 
prostitute.  Or  you  could  even  drive  by  the  ' 
comer  where  Charlie  Sheen  was  caught  with 
a  prostitute.  The  possibilities  are  limitless. 

If  celebrity  crime  doesn't  grab  your  atten- 
tion, perhaps  celebrity  homes  do.  "Star 
Maps"  are  available  for  purchase  all  over 
the  city  and  can  be  your  instruction  manual 
to  view  the  dwelling  places  of  the  rich  and 
famous. 

Drive  up  to  the  Hollywood  Hills  or 


RODERICK  KMAS/DSiy  Brum 


'-^ — —  througlr 

Bel  Air  and  you  can  see  the  security  gate  in 
front  of  Barbra  Streisand's  house,  the  secu- 
rity gate  in  front  of  Jay  Leno's  house,  or  the 

~~~'  Sec  UB,  page  37 


Speaks  Out 


What  is  your  favorite  social  thing  to  do  in  Los  Angeles? 


MikePlacenda 

Fourth-year 
Biochemistry 


Cathy  Bui 

Alumna 
Ecortomia 


"Going  to  the  Gypsy  cafe  is  pretty 
neat.  Other  than  that,  I  just  like  going  out 
to  Hollywood  and  having  fun.  I  also  like 
attending  plays.  Westwood  is  great  for 
plays,  especially  at  UCLA  in  the  Freud 
theater.  I  haven't  been  to  the  Geffen  yet, 
but  I'd  like  to  try  that  out  some  day.  This 
week  I'm  going  to  'Death  of  a 
Salesman.*"  ■     ,     .     • 


"I  like  to  hang  out  on  Sunset 
Boulevard  because  a  lot  of  bars  and  a  lot 
of  the  dubs  are  there.  It's  a  lot  of  fun 
because  UCLA  students  and  other  col- 
lege students  go  there,  people  your  own 
age.  There  is  a  diverse  group  of  people 
there  from  students  to  older  people. 
Sunset  Boulevard  is  definitely  a  good 
place  to  go." 


DiMUrnum 

Rfth-yvar 

Political  science  and  history 


"There's  a  lot  of  fun  things  to  do  in 
L.A.  -  you  have  to  take  advantage  of  the 
resources  we  have  here.  We're  in  one  of 
the  most  diverse  areas  in  terms  of  geogra- 
phy and  people.  Where  else  can  you  go 
skiing  and  surfing  on  the  same  day?  Get 
out  of  Westwood!  Westwood  is  fine,  but 
make  sure  to  take  advantage  of  all  the 
other  opportunities  in  L.A." 


Mark  Hcnbergcr 

Fourth-year 

French  and  political  science 


Geneva  Robmson 

Third-year 
Biochemistry 


"Going  to  the  UCLA  football  and  bas- 
ketball games.  I've  never  had  more  fun  in 
my  life  than  going  to  those  games.  I  just 
like  the  atmosphere  of  it,  the  fact  that  it's 
my  school  and  my  team  out  there,  the 
same  people  you  might  see  around  cam- 
pus. I  plan  to  continue  attending  this  year. 
I  have  tickets  to  all  the  games." 


Sarah  Given 

Thifd-yeaf 

English 


Speaks  Out  is  compiled  by  Cuauhtemoc  Ortega,  Daily  Bruin  Senior 
Staff.  Photos  by  Bridget  aBrien,  Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


"I  go  to  church.  It's  really  fun  because 
it's  made  up  of  mostly  studenu.  We  have 
Friday  night  events  where  we  hang  out  at 
the  beach  to  socialize.  We  also  have 
Sunday  church,  which  is  more  formal 
with  the  minister  and  his  message.  I've 
been  involved  with  this  for  about  a  year 
and  I  would  definitely  recommend  that 
students  come  and  join.  There  are  a  lot  of 
different  nationalities;  everydne  is  there." 


"I  love  to  play  volleyball,  go  to  movies 
and  just  go  lo  Westwood  and  hang  out 
with  my  friends.  Anything  where  I'm 
hanging  out  with  a  big  group  of  people  is 
fun  for  me.  The  beach  is  great  too.  You 
can  go  there  in  the  morning,  be  there  all 
day,  and  play  volleyball  at  night." 


\ 


ALLEN 

;  From  pa9e  35       ^  ,  . 

Arithmetk  stcflts,  ahhbti^  impor- 
tant, arc  no  longer  enough.  To  suc- 
ceed in  tomorrow's  worid,  students 
must  be  able  to  solve  real-world 
problems,  explain  their  thinking  to 
others,  identify  and  analyze  trends 

.  from  data,  and  use  modern  technolo- 
gy- 

Our  first  America  Counts  tutors 
will  provide  tutorial  services  in  math 
and  science  lo  students  in  grades  6-8. 

.^Tutors  will  learn  techniques  and  1  ..  . 
methods  to  prepare  these  students  to 

:  be  proficient  in  math  by  eighth 

-     Altofour  programs  work  to  pre- 
pare children  in  under-resourced 
^communities  by  enhancing  their 
skills  for  educational  success.  And  I 
know  that  sounds  great,  but  really 
■  the  most  rewarding  part  of 
BminCorps  is  visiting  our  various 
sites  and  seeing  tutors  actually  work- 
mg with  diildren.      Y    .:      ' 

Although  our  programs  focus  on 
literacy  or  math  and  science,  the  ben- 
efits of  children  working  and  com- 
municating with  concerned  and  car- 
ing adults  are  immeasurable. 
:     A  tutor  once  told  us  about  a  child 
who  rarely  spoke  during  class.  The 
child  remained  silent  until  the  tutor 
discovered  that  the  child  had  a  fasci- 
nation with  trucks.  This  discovery 
got  the  child  and  tutor  talking.  The 
next  week  the  tutor  brought  in  a 
dozen  books  on  tmcks  from  the 
library  and  their  relationship  with 
reading  grew  from  there. 

Sadly  in  our  crowded  public 
school  system,  these  simple  connec- 
tions are  not  always  made.  So  if  you 
decide,  you  could  also  be  making 
this  kind  of  difference  in  a  child's 
life. 


UEF 

ffDmpage36 

security  gate  Gary  Busey  chews 
through  once  a  month. 

If  1  were  saying  this  columii  to 
you  out  loud  as  stand-up  comedy,  I 
would  now  mention  the  champion 
Lakers.  Everyone  clap  and  say, 
^**Wooooo!"  as  if  you  were  responsi- 
ble for  the  victory.  Okay,  that's 
enough,  you  look  like  an  idiot. 

You  can  also  visit  the  human 
menagerie  that  is  Venice  Beach. 
Here  you  can  see  black  militant 
Jews,  lesbian  militant  fisherwomen 
and  militant  crazy  militants.  You  can 
buy  spoons  with  Jesus  painted  on 
them,  or  you  can  see  Jesus  playing 
the  spoons. 

Perhaps  the  best  part  of  the  area  is 
Muscle  Beach.  This  is  where  homo 
sapiens  gather  to  lift  weights  until 
that  classification  no  longer  applies. 
Yes,  these  mighty  creatures  the 
homo-phobians  can  be  seen  all  over 
Los  Angeles,  excluding  West 
Hollywood. 

These  are  just  a  few  things  to  do 
around  the  city,  but  what  you  really 
want  to  know  is  'How  do  I  become 
an  L.A.  socialite?' 

First,  sell  your  soul.  Trade  it  in  for 
a  cellular  phone  and  set  the  ringer 
from  "Annoying"  to  "My  God, 
make  it  stop!"  Because  there  is  no 
discernible  public  transportation 
here,  you  will  also  need  a  car.  You 
can  get  a  used  one  real  cheap  from 
the  movie  studios,  but  they're  usually 
the  kind  that  explode  on  impact,  so 
watch  it  going  over  speed  bumps. 
Now  buy  some  really  skanky  clothes 
and  you're  ready  to  hit  the  town. 

When  it  comes  to  nightlife,  all 
major  cities  all  over  the  world  are 
exibctly  the  same.  There  are  build- 
ings, some  of  which  are  restaurants, 
some  of  which  are  bars,  and  some  of 
which  are  dubs.  They  all  play  the 
same  music  and  serve  the  same 
booze  as  every  other  gin  joint  in  the 
world.  Soon  you'll  be  drinking  the 


(My  Bruin  Viewpoint 


SetUSrpagtM 


September  25-28, 2000       37 


for  womensmen 


Intake 

Counseling  ft  Referrafs 

♦ 

Child  care 

:■■;■.■♦ 

Financial  Aid 

■■■■-'♦ 

Health  and  Wellness 

♦ 

Legal  Assistance  Referrals 

♦ 

Relationship  Issues 

...and  more! 

.   Rape  Services  Consultants 

♦  Counseling  &  assistance 

:  Personal  &  Leadership  Deve1ol)ment^^^^'^^'^^^^^"'^^ 
.♦     Gender  Issues  ^     '." 

♦  ;  Assertiveness  Training 

;      .♦     Women's  Leadership  Conference 

UCLA  CatalvstMentorship  Program 

♦  Mentorship  for  undergraduate  v«roraen 

.-;■:  ■■'"/■'■;■.'  in  the  sciences  ""^ 

♦  Workshops  on  academic  success, 

:  gender-based  roadblocks  and  career  options 


r^-  f 
^'^ 


«    »  V- 


Re-Enttv  &  Wontraditional  Student  Services 

♦  Counseling  &  assistance 

♦  Annual  Open  House 

♦  Brown  Bag  Lunch  Discussion  Groups 

♦  Workshops  and  support  groups 

Sexual  Violence  Prevention  &  Education  Services 

♦  Individualized  counseling  &  assistance 

♦  Self-defense  workshops 


Men's  Program  &  Outreach  Services 

♦  Counseling  &  assistance 

-   ♦     Workshops  &  discussion  groups 

♦  Eguy:  www.saonet.ucla.edu/eguy 

Sexual  Harassment  Information  Center 


ZDoddHall 

(310)825-3945 

www.thecenter.ucla.edu 


Attention! 


t 


All  Campus  Organizations! 

Registration  Week  for  all  organizations  is  4th  week  of  Fail  Quarter 

Get  started  on  another  exciting  year  of  campus  activities  and  programming 
by  registering  your  organization  at  one  of  the  23  registration  sessions  listed 
"below.  -—    ~  ~^—   ^~^-_-__> 


SAVE  THESE  DATES! 


Date 


Place 


Monday,  Oct  23  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Tuesday,  Oct  24  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Wednesday,  Oct  25  Ackerman  2nd  Floor  Lounge 

Thursday,  Oct  26  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Friday,  Oct  27  Viewpoint  Conference  Room 


Registration  Times 

9:30  11:0012:30  2:00  3:30 
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9:30  11:0012:30  2:00  3:30 
9:30  11:0012:30 


No  reservations  are  needed!  Simply  have  three  of  your  organization 
representatives  attend  one  of  the  registration  sessions.  Representatives 
must  be  UCLA  students,  staff,  faculty  or  a  combination  of  these  three.  All 
three  must  attend  the  same  registration  session  and  sign-in  at  the  same 
time  ten  minutes  before  the  session. 


•-■v: 


It  is  highly  recommended  that  you  come  earlier  In  the  week  since  the  later 
dates  and  times  fill  up  fast. 

For  further  infonnation,  please  call  the  Center  for  Student  Programming  at 
310-825-7041  or  e-mail  at  mveluz@saonet.ucla.edu 

THE  BEGINNINfi  OF  THE  YEAR  IS  THE  BEST  TIME  TO  REGISTER.  DON'T  MISS  OUT! 


3S       September  2S-%  2009 


DaiyBMiBWMHrt 


'  • ,    ", .  .    ' "    ■ ' ' , 


■'  -  ■>'. 


Be  a  televisioii  news  producer 

Student 

rCUlv  Nows.  a  new sludi'nl  |)n.j«Ml  latinchint,'  Ihis (|uarh!r.        Whil«'  some  back^roiiml  in  hi«h  «<h«)ol  or  «oll«i;(! journHlLsm 
IS  looking  lor  sludcnls  inlcnfsUHl  in  workinf,'  as  pnHluccrs  for     is  prrlorn-d,  (^xiMTicnrr  is  nol  mTc.ssary.  V\^>  providr 


a  ni^hlly  IcK'vision  m^ws  broaditasl  foalurinj,' <ani|uis  nm» 
arid  sports.  (ICLAtv  is  chann(>l  21)  in  lh((  dorms  and  olhcf 
(•am|)us  buildinjjs. 


training  in  workshops  laiijjhl  by  a  bM-al  lohwision  n<'ws 


Candidates  should  Ix-  nujjivalcd,  orfranlml,  arlirulalc.  and 

inlcrrsbid  in  n<ws.  Cancbdalcs  should  Ih;  «a|)abli'  ofworkinf,'      d<!la"ils. 

in  a  Imm  <;onl4'.\l  in  a  dynamic,  dcadlim'-drivt^n  (environment. 


.S4!lo<tion  isa«om|»<(titiv 
plieasr  contarl  us  at  ucia 


pnMcss.  Ifyou  arc  int('n!st<'<t. 
'V<^m<'dia.u<tla.<'<lii  for  appliivilion 


joumaiisin@ucla 


■1L.I.:  I 


iv 


Lost  cash. 

One  travel  adventure 
you  can  live  without 


i^ssmmmmmmmmmaBmaamu 


It 


Travel  smart. 

Carry  American  Express""  Travelers  Cheques. 

They're  safer  than  cash. 

Whether  you're  surfing  Baja.  backpacking  Europe,  or  just  getting  away  for  the 
weekend,  American  Express  Travelers  Cheques  are  the  way  to  go.  They're  accepted 
virtually  everywhere  around  the  world  -  at  hotels,  stores,  and  restaurants.  SimpV 
sign  the  Cheques  and  use  them  as  you  would  cash. 

American  Express  Travelers  Cheques  never  expire.  And  if  they're  lost  or  stolen  they 
can  be  replaced  quickly  -  usually  within  24  hours.  Pick  them  up  at  any  participating 
American  Express  Travel  Service  location,  bank,  credit  union,  or  AAA  office. 

American  Express  Travelers  Cheques. 
Dortt  leave  home  without  them* 


•  2000  Amadcan.ExprMs         TCST-flO 


Travdcn 


.«'.-— .„.t 


UEF 

From  page  S7 


same  Long  Island  iced  tea  and  dancy 
ing  to  the  same  Thong  Song  as  the 
one  you  left  at  home,  it's  a  never- 
ending  prom  out  on  the  Sunset  Strip. 

So  what  separates  L.A.  nightlife 
from  other  cities?  The  disttoce. 
Most  cities  are  planned  into  ceils, 
which,  like  the  cells  that  make  up 
your  organs,  are  specialized  into 
functional  districts  such  as  residen- 
tial, commercial  and  industrial.  Los 
Angeles,  however,  is  the  cancerous  , 
tumor,  sprawling  without  pattern, 
reproducing  at  random  and  doing  its 
best  to  spread  poison. 

The  result  of  L.A.'s  carcinogenic 
structure  is  that  no  two  places  you'll 
want  to  go  will  be  within  walking  dis- 
tance of  each  other,  if  you  want  to 
go  to  a  bar,  you'll  need  a  car.  Should 
that  bar  not  live  up  to  the  expecta- 
tions of  you  young  hipsters,  you 
might  try  a  club,  but  you'll  have  to 
drive  to  get  there,  and  pay  for  valet 
parking  (a  wonderful  service  for 
those  who  are  simply  too  busy  to 
turn  off  their  cars  themselves). 

After  getting  out  of  your  vehicle, 
do  the  famous  "turn  your  head  and 
coif  test  to  see  if  your  hair  has 
maintained  structural  integrity.  Now 
it  is  time  to  pretend  you  are  some- 
how involved  with  the  entertainment 
industry. 

The  best  way  to  accomplish  this  is 
to  neither  make  eye  contact  nor 
smile  at  anyone,  unless  of  course 
they  are  not  smiling  or  making  eye 
contact  with  you.  In  this  case  it  is 
permissible  to  wink,  but  only  if  the 
person  is  currently  on  their  cellular 
phone,  drinking  something  large  and 
blue,  or  kissing  someone  incredibly 
attractive.  Still,  this  can  only  be  done 
on  odd  days  of  the  month  with  a  T  in 
them. 

These  and  many  other  L.A.  social 
rules  will  ensure  that  you  never  actu- 
ally interact  with  another  person.  Of 
course,  you  could  just  strike  up  a 
conversation  with  someone,  but 
unless  you're  really  interested  in 
hearing  someone  talk  about  how 
their  shirt  is  meant  to  complement 
their  earth  tones,  I  strongly  advise 
against  it.  . 

Are  there  good  things  about  LA.? 
Of  course  there  are.  You  can  always 
find  good  food  from  almost  any  cul- 
ture imaginable,  even  cultures  that 
are  currently  starving  to  death  in 
their  home  countries,  in  fact,  a  good 
portion  of  Angelenos  belong  to  their 
own  starving  culture,  Anorexians  (a 
small  country  folk  nestled  between 
Greece  and  Italy). 

Ifyou  want  to  be  trendy,  you  can 
go  to  see  the  celebs  munch  at  Spago 
(an  old  Czech  word  meaning  "wallet 
rape").  Your  best  bet  is  to  head  over 
to  the  corner  of  La  Brea  and 
Melrose  and  grab  a  hot  dog  at 
Pink's. 

So  welcome  to  Los  Angeles,  a 
place  with  most  of  the  benefits  and 
flaws  of  any  other  big  city.  Don't 
think  it's  all  big  and  bad.  It's  really 
just  the  Matrix;  none  of  it  is  real,  but 
ifyou  keep  in  mind  there  is  no 
spoon,  you  win  be  on  your  way  to 
really  enjoying  yourself.  Whoa. 


VINES 

From  page  30 

Go  Greek. 

The  Greek  system  at  UCLA 
allows  you  to  celebrate  the  Fourth  of 
July  every  day,  because  its  founda- 
tion is  community,  ifyou  choose  to 
go  Greek,  you  may  do  so  for  a  vari- 
ety of  reasons.  You  may  want  to 
party  a  lot,  meet  lots  of  people,  get 
involved  in  community  service,  take 
advantage  of  alumni  resources,  or 
play  intranniral  sports.  But  what  you 
will  eventually  take  away  as  your 
reward  for  joining  is  the  fact  that  the 
minute  you  sign  your  life  away  in 


SMWMiS;Mft39 


il 


vniEs 

from  page  38 


V  tiifiit   i-i'.->  .ikiit,  .-.k.- 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


■>•■<,  '\i-y. 


blood  (You  know,  'cause  that's  how 
we  do  it!),  you  will  be  a  part  of  rich 
and  continued  tradition  at  UCLA 
and  around  the  country 

Critics  of  the  Greek  system  will 
claim  that  what  I  argue  as  communi- 
ty and  tradition  is  some  form  of  buy- 
ing one's  friends.  They  are  wrong. 
You  can't  buy  friends.  Just  ask  the 
~-     "fat  naked  guy"  who  won 

"Survivor."  He's  got  a  million  dol- 
lars and  still  no  one  likes  him. 
Friendship  is  based  on  common 
interests,  personality  similarities, 
and  possibly  the  alignment  of  the 
planets. 

';  When  you  join  the  Greek  system 
you  pay  money  for  someone  else  to 
do  your  planning  for  you  Want  to 
tailgate  at  a  football  game,  play  com- 
petitive sports,  have  a  great  party,  or 
go  on  a  ski  trip?  If  you  were  to  do 
any  of  these  activities,  it  would  cost 
you  money  and  time.  Wouldn't  it  be 
nice  for  someone  to  plan,  organize 
and  lead  these  tasks?  Wouldn't  it  be 
nice  if  there  was  a  tradition  associat- 
ed with  each  one?  Of  course  it    . 
would.  -" 

,'  Most  Greek  letter  organizations 
have  been  around  longer  than  your 
grandparents  have.  They  have  the 
experience,  connections  and,  most 
importantly,  the  drive  to  make  things 
happen.  As  a  freshman,  it  will  proba- 
bly be  the  only  thing  at  UCLA  that 
will  be  handed  right  to  you. 

Wouldn't  it  be  nice  to  have  an 
upperclassmen  show  you  the  ropes, 
teach  you  where  to  eat,  or  more 
importantly  where  to  park  in 
Wcstwood?  Wouldn't  it  be  great  to 
have  someone  to  tell  you  which  class- 
es are  best,  which  teachers  to  take 
and  what  time  Powell  or  Wooden 
closes?  Wouldn't  it  be  nice  to  have 
an  upperclassman  to  show  you  how 
to  get  to  the  Rose  Bowl  or  explain 
what  the  "walk  of  shame"  is?  There 
are  so  many  questions  that  could  be 
answered  if  someone  just  thought 
they  had  enough  in  common  with 
you  to  share  their  knowledge.  The 
Greek  system  is  the  forum  for  this 
exchange  of  information. 

The  real  point  here  is  that  you  will 
never  find  a  Greek  "house"  in  which 
everyt)ody  is  friends,  it  is  inconceiv- 
able. What  you  will  find  is  the 
Fourth  of  July  "feeling"  i  referred  to 
earlier.  Everybody  will  not  be  "best 
friends  forever"  in  any  house,  but 
they  all  have  something  in  common 
that  can  be  celebrated. 

The  most  important  information  I 
can  convey  to  any  potential  Greek  is 
that  four  years  of  college  go  extreme- 
ly fast.  Surprisingly,  I  have  been  told, 
five  years  of  college  go  even  quicker. 
In  this  short  time  you  will  want  to 
make  as  many  friends,  gain  as  much 
knowledge  as  you  can  and  expose 
yourself  to  a  multitude  of  experi- 
ences. You  can  do  this  without 
involving  yourself  in  any  activities. 

But  ifyou  want  to  accomplish 
more  in  your  first  year  than  most  do 
in  five,  the  Greek  system  is  your  tick- 
et. Listen  to  me  now  and  believe  me 
later,  being  Greek  will  open  doors  in 
all  walks  of  life.  Want  to  play  sports? 
Each  house  already  has  a  team. 
Want  to  do  some  good  deeds?  Each 
house  already  has  a  philanthropy. 
Want  to  party? 

UCLA  has  teachers  and  class- 
rooms so  students  can  learn.  UCLA 
provides  dorms  and  student  housing 
so  students  can  build  independence 
from  their  parents  and  families. 
UCLA  has  limited  parking  so  that  it 
can  make  money  from  parking  tick- 
ets. UCLA  has  an  intramural  field  so 
students  can  be  athletic. 

But  most  importantly.  UCLA  has 
a  Greek  system  so  students  can  be 
social,  in  this  extremely  diverse 
world  of  UCLA,  everyone  needs  to 
find  a  niche.  The  beauty  of  the 
Greek  system  is  that  as  different  as 
we  all  may  be,  we  can  come  together 
and  celebrate  our  version  of  the 
Fourth  of  July. 


Septemlwr  25-28, 2000       » 


TO  Evtry  CtnaraOon 
there  is  a  CNffsMotes 


Welcome  Back  UCLA! 


^^e  join  us  for  a  casual  (unchivith  a  cotkagut,  a  Sirtfidaif  celebration,  an 

offiu  gathering,  or  wfien  you  sunpfyroant  to  get  tt!UMy  from  ^campus  for  some 

truifOutfieiakltaDan  cuisine  or  a  glass  of 'Pinotgrigio  or  Cfiianti. 

-  Lunch  Hours:   ' 

Mondciy  through  Friday 
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Dihner  Hours: 

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Tel  3  10  208  0444  -V 

Fax  3  10  208  2344    • 

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'MgkdhfpwvidtZ  fiom  liMunfparfy^/or  (unck  in  aa-ViOagt  Tar^mg-fou.  (Loofijor  a  6(ut  si^  uHtfi  a  y^lim<  *P  ■}  CbseM  hi  is  'BrnfUmfarif^ 
Stmctum  1036  'Bmctc^vauu,  6*fiindour  restaunmt.  Iblet  paring  is  also  avai(ablt  Or  simpfy  takf  tfu  campus  shuttU  doum  to  t/ie  ViOi^.  Ciao! 


:»rW5 


mr^ 


/\v6»iat?ie 


-■x-srver:. 


■  -^      W"*^   .**«^  •-»*■  -•.  ^'  .4^  '- 


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p. 


40       S«p(nttber  25-28, 2000 


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'  made  the  whole  thing  sound  some- 
what unappealing,  I  must  admit  that 
the  parties  do  have  their  charm^ "  ' 
Finding  the  inexplicable  gray  goo 
caked  on  your  shoes  the  next  morn- 
ing after  a  night  of  dancing  (and  slid- 
ing around)  is  always  a  joy  Many 
people  wonder  what  the  delightfully 
mysterious  mixture  is  composed  of. 
I'd  wager  that  it's  a  little  bper,  sweat, 
maybe  some  "alternative  food  and 
beverage"  and  who  knows  what  else! 
The  parties  also  have  a  great  loca- 
tion, just  the  perfect  distance  so  that 
you  can  always  somdiow  find  your 
way  home  (Disclaimer  -  always 
make  sure  to  have  a  buddy. when 
returning  home  at  night.)    "" 

At  UCLA,  there  are  so  many 
things  to  do.  The  list  is  practically 
endless.  The  Greek  system  and  par- 
ties around  campus  are  an  integral 
part  of  the  social  scene  that  many 
people  enjoy  But  being  a  part  of  the 
Greek  system  is  not  just  about  par- 
ties, and  the  opportunities  for  enter- 
tainment are  by  no  means  limited  to 
them. 

I  have  also  enjoyed  nights  staying 
in  and  watching  a  good  Blockbuster 
movie,  going  to  a  movie  premiere,  or 
going  out  to  dinner  with  my  friends 
at  the  many  choice  Wcstwood 
restaurants.  I  have  attended  numer- 
ous cultural  events  and  plays  (we 
have  an  awesome  theater  depart- 
ment) and  lectures  held  by  famous 
authors  and  ha ve  sat  outside  of 
Starbucks,  enjoying  a  warm  Sunday 
afternoon. 

I  have  even  had  a  great  time  hang- 
ing out  in  the  study  lounge  with  my 
floormates  (Nobody  really  thinks  the  • 
study  lounge  is  for  studying,  do 
they?).  Those  rooms  become  the  site 
for  almost  anything  but  studying. 
They  feature  political  debates  of  all 
kinds,  male  exotic  dances,  deep  con- 
versations, talent  shows  or  just  sim- 
ply a  place  to  eat  the  pizza  you 
ordered.  Some  poor  students 
attempt  to  get  work  done  amidst  the 
clamor.  That  is  where  a  lot  of  my  real 
education  occurred.  Luckily,  no 
additional  books  were  required. 
The  other  flnique  thing  about 
UCLA  is  that  we've  got  excellent 
sports.  What  other  school  can  say       ^ 
they  combine  great  academics,  social 
activities,  and  athletics  into  one  uni- 
versity? Sporting  events  are  one  of 
the  most  popular  forms  of  amuse- 
ment among  all  kinds  of  students. 
Many  people  dislike  the  fact  that  our 
football  games  are  held  at  the  Rose 
Bowl  in  Pasadena.  Though  it  is  quite 
a  drive,  the  trek  over  can  become 
part  of  the  fun  while  the  excitement 
and  spirit  builds  as  the  minutes  spent     ' 
in  gridlock  traffic  pass. 

It  also  serves  as  a  way  for  fresh- 
men, stranded  without  a  mode  of 
transportation,  (a.k.a.  no  parking 
permit)  to  explore  the  world  outside 
of  campus.  Students  can  take  their 
own  cars  or  the  UCLA  transit  buses. 
Many  sororities  and  fraternities  even 
choose  to  take  chartered  buses 
together.  The  basketball  games  held 
at  our  very  own  Pauley  Pavilion  are  ^ 
a  little  more  convenient,  especially 
for  freshmen  living  in  the  dorms  and 
they're  just  as  enjoyable. 

Finally,  there  are  the  dining  halls, 
which  serve  as  great  places  to  eat 
and  socialize  with  people  you  don't 
otherwise  get  to  see  Where  else  can 
you  experience  experimental  dining 
options  that  you  can  create  yourself 
with  various  dining  hall  ingredients? 
Some  favorites  include  microwave 
Rice  Krispie  treats  and  milk  shakes. 
I've  heard  it's  very  easy  to  lose  track 
of  time  while  eating  in  the  dining 
halls,  especially  when  there  is  an 
impending  midterm  or  paper  that 
needs  to  be  studied  for  or  completed. 

There  arc  endless  possibilities  to 
divert  one's  attention,  have  fun, 
party  relax,  study,  satisfy  or  procras- 
tinate. Whatever  you  enjoy  doing 
and  whatever  you  want  to  call  it, 
you're  sure  to  find  it  at  UCLA. 


> 


■M<«*ifc;^^>>«wi 


GREENSTEIN  ^ 

,   FrompagtSJ    -  ^  ^ 

ates  who  began  their  careers  as 
CSOs.  In  addition  to  their  academic 
education,  these  officers  attend  the 
Sheriffs  Academy  and  return  to 
serve  the  campus  community  as  a 
police  officer. 

Let's  be  candid.  We  have  our 
unpopular  moments  even  if  it  is  a 
UCLA  alumnus  who  is  pulling  you 
^.  over  for  a  traffic  slop  or  jaywalking. 
This  is  a  congested  campus  and  there 
-  are  accideqis  injuring  pedestrians, 
bicyclists  and  individuals  in  motor 
vehicles.  We  cite  for  marijuana  and 
on  occasion  for  drjnking  in  public 
especially  if  it  looks  like  the  person 
may  be  going  to  drive. 

But,  rather  then  issue  citations  we 
often  prefer  to  work  with  staff  from 
the  Dean  of  Students  Office  to  use 
the  student  judicial  system  and  hope 
that  we  do  not  encounter  the  individ- 
ual violating  the  law  again. 

When  we  are  involved  in  student 
demonstrations,  our  profile  becomes 
much  higher. 

Participating  in  political  action  is 
an  important  component  of  the  uni- 
versity experience.  We  respect  the 
First  Amendment  rights  of  the  stu- 
dents and  while  sometimes  respec- 
tive roles  are  at  odds,  our  goal  is  to 
apply  the  principles  of  community 
policing  and  forge  partnerships 
where  we  can  be  supportive  and 
helpful  during  lawful  demonstrations 
and  respond  professionally  to  inci- 
dences of  civil  disobedience.  This 
goal  can  be  illusive  and  requires 
commitment  from  all  involved  to 
make  it  successful. 

,The  university  is  not  immune  to 
problems  facing  the  community  at 
large  such  as  intolerance  and  hate 
crimes.  Typically,  we  receive  five 
reports  of  hate  crimes  and  incidents 
each  year. 

Last  spring,  there  were  two  high- 
profile  occurrences  that  focused 
attention  to  the  issue.  The  police 
have  a  strong  and  progressive  policy 
regarding  hate  crimes  and  hate  inci- 
dents. We  work  collaboratively  with 
the  District  Attorney's  Hate  Crime 
Unit  and  campus  organizations.  We 
believe  there  may  be  underreporting 
in  this  area  and  are  working  with  the 
campus  community  to  ensure  report- 
ing so  we  can  identify  those  commit- 
ting the  crimes  and  educate  the  com- 
munity regarding  the  issue  and 
penalties. 
So,  what  is  the  problem  with 
.  yelling  at  midnight?  UCPD  has  no 
particular  problem  with  noise  at  mid- 
night, but  neighbors  do  -  and.  by 
law,  we  must  respond  to  the  calls  and 
pursue  violations  of  law. 
Unfortunately,  in  the  last  few  years, 
the  midnight  yell  behavior  has 
become  dangerous  to  many.  i.e.  set- 
ting fires,  throwing  objects. 

What  was  traditionally  a  simple 
yell  became  an  incident  responded  to 
|y  LAPD  last  year,  with  a  large 
ipumber  of  officers,  police  cars  and 
helicopters,  it  also  generated  multi- 
Die  complaints  from  neighbors  (stu- 
oents  and  non-students)  and  local 
officials.  Fortunately,  many  of  the 
students  in  the  neighborhood  under- 
stand the  potential  danger  from  the 
illegal  behavior  and  the  event  is 
returning  to  its  previous  peaceful 
nature. 

We  appreciate  the  opportunity 
provided  by  The  Bruin  to  share  some 
thoughts.  We  encourage  UCLA 
community  members  to  contact  us 
for  general  information,  to  discuss 
concerns,  to  request  presentations 
and  security  surveys,  to  provide  sug- 
gestions and  become  involved  in 
community  policing  partnerships. 
To  receive  periodic  e-mail  mes- 
sages regarding  public  safety,  crime 
prevention  and  police  bulletins,  e- 
mail  UCLACampusSafety-sub- 
scribei8egroups.com.  Our  web  site 
can  be  found  at  ucpd.uda.edu.  This 
site  contains  safety  information, 
crime  bulletins  and  our  annual  statis- 
tical reports. 


IMyBnMVitwpcilM 


September  25  28,2000       41 


Ihnninunii 


wince 


Commission 


The  largest  Student-run,  student- 
:   initiated  comn^unity  service 
group  in  tiie  nation 

Providing  service  to  ttie  Los  Angeles 
community  for  over  thirty  years 

Representing  more  than  twenty 
community  service  groups  on  campus 


405  Kerckhoff  Hall 

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http://students.asucla.  edu/csc 

csc_ucla@yahoo.com 


Paid  for  by  USAC 


.'rs,' ••■ 


Codege  is  an  art  and  a  science,    ,: 
Soon  enoi^,  youH  discover  the  proper  course  of  study 
is  figuring  out  the  brave  new  world  while  expending  as 
Utde  effort  as  possible, 
Which  brings  us  to  the  subject  of  CompuBank, 

'   ■  -  - 

CompuBank  isn*t  just  around  the  comer.  It's  iTJght  in 
your  room,  Rijght  on  your  computer.  You  get  free  basic 
checking,  free  savings  and  access  to  free  ATM  net- 
works.  You  get  a  CompuBank  check  card  to  use  any 
place  Visa  is  accepted. 


yl^r^t: 


And,  when  you  run  out  of  money  about  every  other 
week,  your  mom  and  dad  can  wire  you  more  -  free. 

Log  on  to  iiinfiiw.CompuBank.coni 

Click  on  Circle  ofFriends^^  to  learn  how  you  can 
earn  $40  for  each  friend  you  refer  who  opens  and  funds 
a  CompuBank  account. 

You  can  open  an  account  right  online  and  approval 
can  happen  within  minutes , 

Have  you  ever  tried  swallowing  a  goldfish? 


42       Septembw  25-28, 2000 


Daily  Bruin 


■»^ii«9*iMN 


imiiimmtmiiAAtmifmm-, 


Be  a  television  news  producer 

Students  needed  for  nightF^  news  broadcast  premiering  this  quarter    ; 

.     r(-Ulv  News,  H  nc'w sliidcnl  projcci  laumhinK Ihis (luarlcr.  Whil<? amir foirkjiround  in  hijjh  .sihm)!  or  (uilli!^! journalism  :-_ 

is  IcMtkiiiK  l«>r  »lii(l<'nls  inlfrcslcd  in  working'  hs  |»r(MhinMs  lor  is  iHclcrn'd,  (^xix'ricnn'  is  not  necessary.  \V<'  provide 

a  ni^hll)  lelevisiojj  news  broadcasi  lealurinK  <am|)us  ni'ws  Iraininjf  in  workshops  lanjjhl  hy  a  hnal  Icdevision  n«!ws 

ands|Mirls.   ICIiAlv  is  channel  29  in  lhedorr^'»jind  other  pniduwjr.  ;', 

campus  huildinp*.  _..    -'  ^      *^-  wr     v   \;,-  . ; -^J^^-.  -  ^  :.!■,; 

Seliirlion  is  a  ci)in|N!liliv(^  pnM:<;ss.  jfyou  an;  inleresled,      : 
Candidates  should  lx>  molivalwl.  orj^anized.  arliculalc.  and  please;  conlaci  us  al  uclalv@m((dia.ucla.iHhi  for  applic^lion 

inleresled  in  news.  Candidates  should  lx'c«|«l)le  of  working      deUils. 
in  a  liwmconh'.xl  in  a  (lynamic,  deadline-driven  environment. 


journalism@ucla 

iJhi^  liniin  •  'IlKiSlufcinl  Mj^Kieanis  •  ICI^v  News 


oih»  can^Hm  minbby 


Oikos  means  "temify^  in  Greek 

OIkos  Campus  Ministry  (OCM)  wishes  a  warm  welcome  to  al(  the  new  and  returning 
students  of  UCLAI  May  God  bless  you  tremendously  this  new  school  year.  Look  out  for 

these  fun  and  free  special  events.  All  are  invited  to  come! 

-Rse  BBQ  luncheon  at  The  Resoun:e  Fair- 
(9/26.  Tues.  11-2pm  #Ck>vel  Conwnons) 

V"       'Friday  Night  Bmontbaft' 
(9/29,  FrI.  MkJnIght) 


'i/r  .'- 


■  » 


'Jazz  Cafe- 

(1 0/3.  Tues.  7:30pm  ©The  Cooperage) 

-  "Survivor'  Contest  Night:  Win  a  Free  Razor  Scooterf  - 
(10/5,  Ttiurs.  6pm  ©CS  \bung  24) 

For  further  Information,  please  contact  AKjert  Wm  310,559.5381  (atoert.Wm©mall,com) 
or  Joyce  Chon  310.569.4719  (jchoneucla.edu).  You  can  also  check  out  our  vvebsite: 

www.uclaocm.<^net 

dkos  Campus  Ministry  (OCM)  is  an  outreach  ministry  of  WestsWe  Oikos  Community  Church 
Our  vfston  for  OCM  is  to  bring  the  good  news  of  the  gospel  to  the  students  on  the  UCLA  campus. 


OAKLAND 

From  page  32 

thing  from  relationship  problems, 
health  and  sexuality,  self-esteem,  and 
childcare,  to  car  repair  and  free  self 
defense  workshops  for  students, 
staff  and  faculty. 

We  also  offer  mentoring  pro- 
grams such  as  the  Catalyst 
Mentorship  Program  which  pro- 
vides faculty  and  graduate  student 
mentors  to  undergraduate  students    . 
in  the  life  and  physical  sciences.  In 
addition,  the  Center  has  been  prOi> 
viding  services  to  re-entry  and  non- 
traditional  (or  older)  students  for  the 
past  20  years  at  a  nominal  level.     • 
Thanks  to  the  wisdom  and  gen- 
erosity of  the  Student  Fee  Advisory 
Committee,  the  Center  is  now  enter- 
ing into  a  three-year  pilot  program 
to  provide  an  enhanced  level  of  sup- 
port, programs,  and  services  to  re- 
entry and  non-traditional  students 
(first-year  students  over  25  and  grad- 
uate students  over  29). 

Coming  back  to  school  can  create 
special  issues  for  returning  students. 
It's  easy  to  feel  isolated  from  others 
if  you  are  10, 20,  or  more  years  older 
than  the  students  around  you.  The 
Center  has  a  variety  of  services 
geared  to  the  special  interests  and 
time  constraints  of  re-entry  and  nop- 
traditional  students. 

For  students  who  don't  have  the 
time  or  who  are  more  comfortable 
with  Web4>ased  information,  the    • 
Center's  Web  page  at  www.thecen- 
ter.ucla.edu  provides  information 
and  referrals  on  a  variety  of  topics, 
and  www.saonet.ucla.edu/eguy  is  a 
great  way  for  men  to  ask  even  the 
most  private  questions  in  a  conv     ■ 
pletely  confidential  way.  There  are 
also  opportunities  to  get  information 
about  other  issues  of  interest  for 
men. 

The  Center,  formerly  called  the 
Women's  Resource  Center,  changed 
its  name  after  several  years  of  con- 
sideration. The  name  "Women's 
Resource  Center"  no  longer  seems 
appropriate  to  reflect  the  range  of 
services  which  are  provided  by  the 
Center  or  the  fj>ct  that  men  have  for 
many  years  been  an  active  part  of 
the  process  of  aeating  change  on 
our  campus,  especially  around  issues 
of  sexual  violence. 

We  are  now  entering  our  fourth 
year  with  a  Men's  Programming  and 
Outreach  Coordinator  whose  prima- 
ry responsibilities  involve  initiating 
programming  for  and  about  the 
interests  and  concerns  of  men. 

The  Center  has,  since  its  incep- 
tion, been  open  to  and  inclusive  of 
men  in  its  programming,  but  this  has 
been  enhanced  substantially  over  the 
years,  as  has  the  participation  of 
men. 

As  we  approach  the  21  st  century, 
much  of  the  national  and  even  global 
debate  has  centered  on  how  critical : 
it  is  that  problems  once  referred  to 
as  "women's  issues"  be  viewed  as 
part  of  the  national  agenda  for  l>oth 
women  and  men.  This  includes  such 
issues  as  childcare,  parenting,  rela- 
tionship violence,  and  academic  and 
workplace  equity,  to  name  a  few. 

It  seemed  the  time  was  right  for  a 
new  name  as  we  move  into  a  new 
millennium.  The  first  line  of  our  mis- 
sion states:  "The  Center  offers  ser- 
vices to  alt  UCLA  students,  with 
special  focus  on  gender-related 
issues."  The  Center  is  a  place  for  stu- 
dents to  share  their  experiences  and 
concerns.  Our  new  name  recognizes 
the  strides  the  Center  has  made  over 
the  past  years  toward  providing  a 
friendly  and  confidential  place  for 
both  women  and  men,  and  the  desire 
of  men  to  be  part  of  the  process  of 
creating  a  campus  environment  that 
supports  equality  for  all  students. 

Whether  you  are  new  to  the  cam- 
pus or  soon  to  graduate,  we  hope 
you  will  stop  by  the  Center  in  2 
Dodd  Hall,  visit  our  web  site  at 
www.thecenter.ucla.edu  and  check 
out  eguy  at 
http://www.saonet.ucla.edu/eguy. 


0«ly  Bnjin  Viewpoint 


September  25-28,2000       43 


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MINI' MINOR  SERVICE 


Recommended.eyery  3,750  miles  or  3  months, 
whicneVer  comes  first      ^ 


Our  Service  Excellence  Team  Will... 

•  Change  engine  oil 

•  Replace  oil  filter  w/genuine  Toyota  oil  filter 

•  Inspect  front  &  rear Vakes 

•  Inspect  belts  &  hoses 

•  Adjust  tire  pressure 

•  Inspect  tire  condition 

•  Insfwct  all  lights 

•  InsJMCt  windshield  wiper  blades 

•  Includes  "U  R  THE  •"  Ucense  frwne 
upon  request 


$ 


Save  $5 


INSPECT  &  BRING  TO  SPECIFICATIONS 
THE  FOLLOWING  FLUID  LEVELS: 

•  Transmission,  differential,  coolant,  clutch, 
brake,  power  steering  &  battery 


19 


95 

+tax 


Rag.(24.»5 


Includes  Vehicle  Inspection 


r<«M.  *-q«M»  iKam.  4.|k«mf.  Moot  U  a«MoM 
4Mt  paMUk.  M  k  M  tin  ot  Mi  MWf  iMMn  • 


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•  IM  IMManlrinlKTOranOF  HOUVWOOOStraotOtm  NM<iM« 


isimiMmmi^omjm^ 


MINOR  SERVICE 


Recommended  every  7,500  miles  or  6  months, 
whiche^r  comes  first 


Our  Senrice  Excellence  Team  Will... 

•  Change  engine  oil 

•  Replace  oil  filter  w/genuine  Toyota  oil  filter 

•  Clean  &  adjust  brakes  (when  applicable) 
•Rotate  tires 

•  Includes  "U  R  THE  •"  license  frame,  upon  request 


INSPECT  &  BRING  TO  SPECIFICATIONS  THE  FOLLOWING  FLUID  LEVELS: 

•  Battery,  transmission,  brake,  dutch,  master  cylinder,  differential  &  coolant 
INSPECT  &  ASSESS  CONDITION  0^  THE  FOLLOWltJG  COMPONENTS: 

•  Exhaust,  steering  &  shock  absorber  system,  belts  &  hoses 
ADJUST  &/0R  VERIFY  THE  FOLLOWING: 

•  Tire  condition,  tire  pressure  &  emergency  brake 


Save  $20 


t^a  e-iyM*  Tnaw.  4'numaf.  MOiri  V  ttMonH  M  lube 
addHMMl  linttttUn^cruivMOOBlMoMl  tacMn 
haartOMMMIntHriirtyntietoniUOF  HOlLywOOO 
SaMka  Ow.  NH  MM  «  pmiMB  dviM  V  wnti  loyoiK  01% 
I**  nil  II— III  1*1  lllllB  li  ■—  Inf  l»W-«t 


59 


64 

+tax 


INTERMEDIATE  SERVICE 


Reconvnended  every  15,000  miles  or  12  months, 
whichever  comes  first 

Our  Service  ExceHence  Team  WHL.. 

•  Change  engine  o«  •  Replace  air  filter 

•  Replace  eN  filter  w/genuine  Toyota  oN  fitter  •  Drain  &  refill  transmisskm 
•Cieaa&  adjust  brakes  •  Inspect  belts  &  hoses 
•Rotatatires  •Roadtest 

•  hidudes  "U  R  THE  •"  license  frame, 
k.  k  A  upenrequest 

MSPGCTft  BRMG  TO  SPGCnCATKMS  THE  FOLLOWING  PLWOifVaS: 

MSPECT*  ASSBSCOWfTWNdF  THE  FOLiOWiNG  CRITICAL  SAFETY 
COMPOWEMTS:  ^.    .    . 

•  Jin c maWom tiw > nwwi S  •MMMcvhratw 


MAJOR  SERVICE 


Recommended  every  30,000  miles  or  24  months, 
whichever  comes  first 


Our  Sen>to>  Excellence  Team  WIM... 

•  ttaptaca  oiTfitor  w/ganuine  Toyota  oil  fittsr 

•TkMIMlOfSodMM* 

•AaiHtGaffeidto(MMEFl)  .^"TTv 

•ltaelM«apMkph*«t(misiortype)*  ^TTO 

•  SinlMbaitanr  VMX 

•  Itaelact  Iran  a  MforaNtial  fluid 
I  a  a^mt  brakM  (Mhan  applicaMt) 


•  AaiMt  CMS  air/hMl  mixtiiro* 

•  SotM  a  a4|wt  MigiM* 

•  Rtpnoo  air  flRtr 


Free 
Car  Wash 


INSPECT  a  BRMGTOSPEaFICATIONS 
THE  FOUOWMG  RUIO  LEVELS: 

•  BatlHy,  tranmiasioii,  kralce,  dutdi, 
reaatar  cyBwto.  differatilial  a  coolanC 

tNSPECTS  ASSESS  CONDITION  OF 
THE  FOUOWMG  CRITICAL  SAFETY 
COMPONBfTS: 

•  ExIimhL  tiMriM  A  sliock  sbtofbcf 

ftfStMIIti  DiltS  &  hOSM 

AOJIBT&/ORVB)IFYTHE 
FOliOWMG: 

•  lira  condition,  tire  prassura  a  aniaraoncy 
Iwaka 


*137 


95 

•i-tax 


•  iMMct  baM  a  iMaat 
•i^JMtV-driMMta 
•Raad  taat  apanonaay  adviaa  you  o(  Oia  raanNi  or  t 
MNdi  vilai  aafvioa 

•  lacMaa  'U  R  THE  •*  licanse  frame,  upon  roqueat 


"^89 


95 

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MMMkiW.  «qil.En»MnniptigiaiM1  v*at4uMMMiMl 

tmim*i*ttm*»-*»**^i*»iowTAOf  Houniiooo s«i*c 
•  •**  ate  a  ■«■.  Mm  «»«Ma 


"MaaNtoMt  IWwi^iitmniiaiMI  ii4<m  an>icaU<-  RW4  4ii4  lunki  *  Land  Cruom.  e  cyl  Vt.  En  pMnun  plugi  t  ran  eMXmc  v«w.  Aewi 
**"T"**^  4>4lutaadiiMniliMiwll>urngr«adit4U>wtaaM1ailwiiMMI«MHIi<a««MMiklw^ 
WBUIWOaa«w*ieml«»«aw>wi»— dM|i»ipidat»>W»«i»  WKihhh  mw mn  atmrnrntmbittum-m 


BETTER  SERVICE    -    HAPPIEB  CUSTOMERS! 


TRANSMISSION  SERVICE 

•  Drain  RukJ  •  Refill  witti  quality  transmission  fluid 

$0095 

£9 -i-tax 

Complete  Automatic  TransmisskNi  Servk:e 

OrafeinaU  •MaiMaftMiri 

ANfeMMpaa 


l«rt,ljn«CnlMra 


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■  Mitin  tmttmmfiumtumrmtntnktomi  »>■««■■ 


i<li^ 


TUNE-UP  SPECIAL 


•  Install  genuine  Toyota  ipark  ptugs* 

•  (Slwck  timing  end  ignition  system 

•  Set  point  dweir 

•  Adjust  fuel  itijectkm/cartNiretor  le  Mie  spedflcatkm, 
wtwre  applicable 

•  Roadtest 

•  Analysis  of  all  other  related  needs 


ROTATE  BALANCE 
SPECIAL 


Save  $37 


Reg.'BS.SS 

•i-tax 


'49 


BRAKE  A  CLUTCH  REPAIR 
SUPER  SPECIAL 


% 


15 


DISCOUNT 


® 


15%  Discount  on  aN  brake  lining  replacements. 
Includes  macMning  or  replacing  drums  or  rotors 

and  ovartuNiNng  wheel  cylinders.  Includes 
replacement  of  any  clutch  assembly  components. 


bftmim-m 


Xiii 


!  PMnmKugt  W.  teuton  aNiMliiKlHMiilcli 
MonpmwutdiavaoriHdat  1ti$miti  HMi 


■  MT    OWpBOaMMC.HI 


TIMING  BELT  SPECIAL 

Factory  recommends  replacement  every  60,(XX)  miles.  If  ttiis 
breaks,  you're  stranded!  Protect  yourself  agaiiwt  aggravstioni 

ladMdaa  llMiiig  belt 


mNaawRMgoen  ^^TT^      IKtSBCaiTIP:  TbyaliiicaBi 

auiiLiMiiiH|>ni  CuO     —«»*"""«>> '■■■.'■  i"- 

kMpwl  a  aeuM  irivt  btk     ^Ob^      MtSMhbelRipHMa/i 


Reg.*s9s.oo  Csay«$135 

*119!f. 


Includes  Br II  &  Laboi 


•q«^.W«-*ac  »■*•.  MU  « IMnCnit  1 


l»*»w— Ii»«>w1iwe»litri*ii.  t«tmi 


jiUA 


INCLUDES  FREE  BRAKE 
INSPECTION 


•  Belance  four  wheels 

•  Rotate  tires 

•  Inspect  l)rakes 


Rea'80.06 


^39 


IMOM   toyoMonl*   MatpraM 
Somt  atiMk  rw  apgtcm 


coupon  ttkmitmmt 


iiua, 


GENUINE  TOYOTA 

FRONT-END 
<^  ALIGNMENT 

•  S«t  camber,  caster  A  toe  In  as  applicable 

•  Sblmming  &  ottier  suspenston  repairs 
additional  wtien  deemed  rtecassary 


Reg.*80.0S 


»49 


95 

•t-tax 


Save  $20 


MmM  pfVMM  OMpw  NftiA  ortfir  li  wiMn,  Eiplm  I^SI^S 


® TOYOTA 

HOLLYWOOD 


6000  Holtywood  Blvd. 
Hollywood,  CA  90028 


SERVICE  HOURS: 

M-F  7:00am  -  6:30pm 

first  come,  flist  served... 

reservations  erxx^graged 

SATURDAY  7:30am  -  5:00pm 

byappoimmentoniy 

Service:  (323)860-5575 

Visit  us  at  www.lacarguy.oom 


PARTS  & 
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TOYOIA   every  doy 


FREE  LOCAL 
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LIFFTlMf  GUARANTr 


Commitment  to  QmaUtf 


rmtmmtHmmtttm 


— rr^-T- 


.t>.n--~..    J      ■■>: 


44       September  25-28, 2000 


Da8yBniiflViewp«int 


mt^ 


WORLD  FAMOUS  FOR  26  YEARS 

Ye  Olde  Kings  Head 

ill'  British  Pub  &  RiSTAiJftANT 
Draught  British  Beer  •  full  Bar  •  Darts 

BREAKFAST  •  LUNCH  •  AFTERNOON  TEA  -DINNER 

in  a  cozy  British  atmosphere      -  y 


BUSINESS 


FAMOUS 
PUB  DRINKERS 


^. 


•«*. 


'^ 


B 


'•.Ipr 


iepinsHPU)si 


'I  '"g" 


RmSH  husincss  )us  always  hecn  ciwiducicj  in 

puhs  Lloyds  Insurance  was  uhI  lo  have  Uancd  in  a 

lily  uvcrn.  and  dealings  in  molIu  and  shorn  were 

iihpnally  conducted  in  ihc  same  way  Soliciiors' 

elcits  would  cam  csira  mcomc  drawin;  up  Icfal   ' 

diKumenls  in  puhs.  and  today  all  groups  ol  pub 

regulars  sUU  seem  in  conuin  al  least  one  har-nMini 

"lawyer" 

Nil  tHisincu  activity  is  more  Bntish  than  Punch 

Ma|a/jae  whKli  hcjan  in  a  puh  in  the  Strand  m 

I  It4 1  The  maga/jnc  stall  lr«(ucnted  die  Cn)wn  and 

Sugar  Loal  puh  in  Fleet  Street  in  suih  numhcrs  that 

Its  name  was  eventually  changed  ui  Punch's 

Tavern 


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ED 


BI 


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\J  REAT  aniaia  and  thinkcn  have  always  round 

InspuatMin  as  well  as  icf  naiHncnt  in  Uieit  local 

uvem  DC  urn  Shakcsficafc.  Marlowe  and  Johsoun  alT, 

rrnfucnicd  the  Falcon  Tavern  at  Banksidc  where  it's! 

said  a  'wit  comhat"  took  place  between  Skakespeaie 

and  Johason.  Samuel  Jotasun  wm  aba  a  devoted 

tavern  goer  ravoutinf  the  Mllfe.  scene  of  his  rm 

■ccung  with  Boswdl.  and  the  Devil  Tiivcfii  m  Fkct 

SUDci  OppoiMe  the  Devil  was  the  Cock  Tavern 

where  Samuel  Pcpys  got  "mighty  merry"  one 

evening,  and  Oliver  Gokisfflith's  favourite  uvem 

was  alsi>  in  Fleet  Siicct:  the  Gkihe  Tom  Pane  wniic 

The  Rights  or  Man"  in  a  puh  calk»l  tte  OM  Red 

Lioo.  and  Mart  and  Lcnin  at  diTleient  umcs  hoth 

drank  at  die  same  Luodnn  puh.  the  Pindor  and 

WaLcAcU  in  Grays  Inn  RutMi. . 


.^. 


9tj 


^^ 


'^, 


:^r 


's. 


o^i. 


PROVIDING  THE  PUBLIC  WITH  THE  FINEST 
OF  FOOD,  DRINK,  AND  CONVERSATION  SINCE  1974. 

•FOR  THE  PRICE  OF  A  GOOD  BRITISH  PINT  PARTAKE 
OR  OBSERVE  HISTORY  IN  THE  MAKING. 
ELWELL  2000 


^^"t^^^^ 


^/>"v. 


'^ 


'^"^> 


SOMETHING  FOR  EVERYONE 


SATURDAYS 

Damien  Joyce 

ON  HIS  2b<1  west  COAST  TOUR 


RESTAURANT 

Old  Time  Recipes 

Lite  &  Healthy  Dishes 

Daily  Specials 

Vegetarian  Options 

Breakfast,  Lunch, 

Afternoon  Tea,  Dinner 

"World  Famous 

Fish  &  Chips" 


^S"^^ 


Happy  Hours 
4:30-7:30pin 
Mon  thru  Fri 


PUB 

1 1  Beers  on  Tap 

Darts,  Dining  &  , 

Camraderie 

Happy  Hour 

M-F  4:30-7:00pm 

Karaoke 

Damien  Joice 

Sat.  10:00pm-l:30 


SUNDAYS 

David  Saunders 

SCARY-'OKE" 


AND 


Ye  Olde 


Britain^  r>ewest  sinser/sonswriter 


^m 


KIne  British  Gifts  &  Food 

BONK  CHINA 

Aynstey  •  Dtichess  •  Roynl  Crown 

Duchey  •  Royal  Graflon  •  Querns 

Collector  Tea  Potj  &  Complete  Tea  Sets 

miLCTRIES 

Fluiists  •  Woods  Of  Winsor  •  Taylor  Of  London 

GOURMET  FOODS 

Malhew  Walker  •  Fonnum  &  Mason 

Ridleys  •  Tip  Ttw  Scottish  Salmon 

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VIEWPOINT 


Should  underage  drink- 
ing be  legal?  See  page  30 


H^'   ARTS    &    ENTERTAINMENT 


First-time  director  Greg  Berlanti  tells  a 
story  of  love  and  friendship.  See  page  36 


WEATHER 


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Serving  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


Friday,  September  29, 2000 


«fTH  EN«QUEZ/Oaity  Bruin  Sentw  StaH 

USAC  Presicient  Elizabeth  Houston's  speech  at  Monday's  convocation  drew  ire  from  some  council  members. 

Houston's  speech  ruffles  feathers 


USAC:  Council  members, 
president  clash  over  her 
remarks  at  convocation 


By  Tmothy  Kudo 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Undergraduate  Students 

Association  Council  President 
Elizabeth  Houston  made  it  a  point  to 
discuss  race  relations  in  her  speech  at 
Monday's  Convocation. 

"We  need  to  focus  on  our  similari- 
ties rather  than  our  differences," 
Houston  said  in  her  speech. 
"Unfortunately,  not  everyone  on  this 


campus  holds  a  healthy  view  of  our 
diversity." 

Though  incoming  students  may 
have  thought  she  gave  just  a  welcoming 
address,  for  many  student  government 
members  the  speech  addressed  some  of 
the  tensions  between  Houston  and 
other  USAC  members  -  specifically 
members  of  the  Praxis  slate. 

"I  actually  was  hoping  that  some 
students  would  ask  me  about  what  I 
said,  because  I  think  a  lot  of  students 
are  not  really  aware  of  what  goes  on  in 
USAC  and  that  a  lot  of  people  are  real- 
ly intolerant  in  USAC,"  Houston  said 
Wednesday  night. 

While  council  members  have 
worked  together  on  many  issues,  and 


hope  to  do  so  in  the  future,  the  politics 
that  embroil  many  USAC  meetings 
continue  to  be  a  sore  point  for  Houston 
and  other  council  members. 

Some  members  of  USAC  have  criti- 
cized Houston,  claiming  she  is  insensi- 
tive to  issues  of  race  and  sexual  prefer- 
ence. But  Houston  also  said  some 
council  members  treated  her  with  intol- 
erance. 

At  several  meetings  this  summer, 
both  Houston  and  others  on  the  coun- 
cil have  leveled  accusations  of  racism 
against  each  other,  and  at  one  meeting 
tensions  flared  to  the  point  where  one 
council  member  walked  out  of  the 

Se«SPBCN,page16 


Bus  drivers  union  declines  $43  million  offer 


STRIKE:  Work  stoppage 
continues;  UCLA,  other 
transits  combine  efforts 


By  Michael  Falcone 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  ofTicial  start  of  fall  quarter 
may  prove  to  be  a  commuting  night- 
mare for  UCLA  faculty,  staff  and 
students  who  ride  Metropolitan 
Transportation  Authority  buses. 


New  program  for  bus  riders 


Pilot  program  allows  com- 
muters  to  swipe  BruinCard 
for  free  rides.  See  page  3 


ISrrHE^MOUE^A>a«y  Bruin  Scnkx  Staff 

■This  campus  van,  driven  by  Kathy  Harrington,  has  been  more  crowd- 
i      id  than  usual  since  the  MTA  strike  began. 


The  disruption  in  service  caused 
by  the  ongoing  strike  has  already 
taken  a  toll  on  thousands  who  have 
been  stranded  since  Sept.  16. 

In  response,  UCLA 

p'  SccEPFIC1S,pa9c1S 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


State  bill  will  prohibit  sale 
of  lecture  notes  on  Web 


LAW:  Faculty  members 
worry  students  may  get 
bad  information  online 


By  Hcmesh  Patd 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Starting  next  year,  students  at 
UCLA  and  any  other  public  college 
campus  in  California  will  not  be  able  to 
access  lecture  notes  from  commercial 
companies. 

AB  1773,  a  bill  Gov.  Gray  Davis 
signed  last  week,  prohibits  the  unau- 
thorized recording  and  publication  of  a 
professor's  lecture  at  any  UC,  CSU  or 
community  college  campus. 

Because  they  are  authorized  by  the 
university,  the  bill  does  not  affect  ASU- 
CLA  lecture  notes  sold  in  Ackerman. 

This  bill  is  the  first  of  its  kind  and 
states  including  Rorida,  New  York 
and  North  Carolina  have  inquired 
about  the  new  legislation,  according  to 
Dennis  Hall,  legislative  director  to 
assemblywoman  Gloria  Romero,  D- 
Monterey  Park,  the  bill's  author. 

"The  state  of  California  already  had 
a  civil  code  that  gives  the  right  of  a  fac- 
ulty member  to  own  his  or  her  lecture," 
Hall  said. 


He  said  this  new  bill  was  put  into 
effect  to  stop  the  commercial  exploita- 


tion of  what  is  said  during  lectures, 
which  are  owned  by  the  faculty. 

"Versitycom  would  recruit  students 
who  may  or  may  not  be  enrolled  in  the 
campus,"  he  said.  "They  would  get 
about  thirty  dollars  a  quarter." 

Officials  at  Versitycom,  an  online 
note-taking  company  which  recently 
merged  with  CollegeClub.com,  said 
they  are  not  sure  whether  or  not  they 
will  continue  to  post  lecture  notes  on 
the  Internet 

"We  are  currently  reevaluating  that 
piece  of  business,"  said  Lisa  Wayne, 
spokeswoman  for  CollegeClub.com. 
"No  lecture  notes  are  posted  yet." 
.  This  distribution  of  notes  on  the 
Internet  has  been  a  concern  for  the  uni- 
versity in  the  past. 

"At  UCLA  in  Spring  Quarter  2000, 
one  commercial  Web  site  company 
hired  approximately  30  students  and 
posted  course  lecture  notes  on  their 
Web  site  without  faculty  authoriza- 
tion," said  John  Sandbrook.  assistant 
provost  for  the  College  of  Letters  and 
Sciences. 

Sandbrook  said  at  least  twelve  facul- 
ty members  registered  complaints  with 
the  office  of  the  provost,  asking  for 
assistance  or  for  them  to  intercede  with 
the  offending  companies. 
— "The  company  refused  requests 

See  NOTiS,  page  16 


So  long,  kid 


ANNAAVIK 


First-year  undeclared  student  Laurrf  Turbin  hugs  her  father, 
Richard,  during  her  move  into  Sproul  Hall  last  weekend. 


t 


J'.: 


»  ■ 

>  1 


;  *  -k  ■»■>«" »'»>'>'i:'f»'» 


FfkUy,  September  29, 2000 


Pafly  Brain  Ntwi 


T^ 


COMMUNITY  BRIEFS  . 

Chancellor  misses 
convocation     -^^ 

Chancellor  Albert  Camesale  is  an  expert 
nuclear  physicist,  meaning  sometimes  he  has 
things  to  do  outside  UCLA. 

But  although  some  students  may  have 
thought  that  was  the  reason  he  wasn't  at 
Monday's  convocation,  they  are  wrong. 

It's  true  the  chancellor  was  at  a  meeting  of 
the  President's  Council  on  National  Labs  in 
Los  Alamos,  but  his  decision  to  let  Provost 
Brian  Copenhaver  give  the  welcoming  speech 
was  based  on  a  possible  change  in  his  policy. 

"The  principal  reason  is  that  this  is  a  College 
(of  Letters  and  Sciences)  event  and  should  be  a 
College  event,"  Camesale  said.  "One  of  the 
things  that  I've  learned  is  that  (students)  really 
are  not  very  aware  of  the  role  of  the  provost." 
"I've  been  thinking  of  crossing  the  line  that 
this  must  be  an  important  event  because  the 
chancellor's  here,  to  people  thinking  this  isn't 
an  important  event  because  the  chancellor's 
not  here,"  he  continued. 


When    time   for   convocation 
;  arose,  Camesale  said  he  was  plan- 
ning to  skip  the  President's  Council 
meeting  for  convocation. 

But  after  thinking  about  it,  he  said  he  real- 
ized  it  was  probably  best  for  the  provost  to  give 
the  speech. 

"It  wasn't  that  I  was  just  sitting  in  my  office 
ignoring  it,"  Camesale  said. 

"It  may  be  a  good  idea  from  time  to  time  to 
show  up  for  it,"  he  said. 

He  added  there  will  be  additional  times  to 
sec  him  around  campus  -  graduation,  for 
example. 

Church  seeks  students 
for  marrow  donation 

The  West  Los  Angeles  United  Methodist 
Church  is  looking  for  students  age  18  and  up  to 
participate  in  a  bone  marrow  drive  this  Sunday. 

The  predominantly  Asian  American  church 
is  hoping  to  find  young  people  of  Asian  descent 
or  those  of  mixed  heritage  whose  parents  are  of 


^Hwa 


Asian  descent  "•' 

"Asian  is  very  hard  group  to 
find     donors,"     Rev     Richard 
Kuyama  said.  "All  students  can  help  and 
participate. 

For  more  information,  call  the  West  L.A. 
United  Methodist  Church  at  (310)479-1349. 

Davis  adds  prograrhs 
to  curb  drinking 

Sending  electronic  birthday  cards  to  stu- 
dents on  their  21st  birthday  is  one  of  several 
new  programs  UC  Davis  will  introduce  this  fall 
to  address  high-risk  drinking. 

With  its  color  portrait  of  a  student  who  died 
of  alcohol  poisoning  in  April,  the  online  greet- 
ing wishes  students  a  happy  birthday  and  a  safe 
celebration  -  a  celebration  with  a  happier  end- 
ing than  David  Thornton's. 

Other  initiatives  include  a  program  encour- 
aging friends  to  be  responsible  for  one  another, 
a  social-norming  campaign,  a  peer  education 
program  for  the  Greek  system  and  a  peer  sup- 


portprogram.  ' 

Some  of  the  programs  have  come  in 
response  to  Thornton's  death,  while  others 
were  already  being  implemented.  But  they  all 
build  upon  an  already  well-established  array  of 
programs  that  help  students  make  wise  deci- 
sions about  alcohol. 

Preliminary  results  of  a  survey  of  UC  Davis 
students  last  spring  reported  that  15  percent  of 
respondents  engage  in  high-risk  drinking  while 
30  percent  don't  drink  at  all.  High-risk  drinking 
was  defined  for  men  as  more  than  five  drinks  in 
one  sitting  and  for  women  as  more  than  four 
drinks.  :  .  V,   ■  :  .^      , :  , 

For  example,  71  perceint  of  respondents 
reported  having  three  or  fewer  drinks  when 
partying,  24  percent  reported  having  four  to  six 
drinks,and  5  percent  reported  having  seven  to 
nine  drinks.  Only  33  percent,  however,  think 
others  have  three  or  fewer  drinks,  54  percent 
think  others  drink  four  to  six  drinks  and  13  per- 
cent think  others  have  seven  to  nine  drinks. 

Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  Staff  and  wire 
reports. 


ACADEMIC  ANNOUNCEMENTS 


Zero  Week 

Classes  begin  Thursday  of  Zero  Week 

Classes  dropped  if  Registration  Fee  payment  is  not  in  by  5  p.m. 
Friday  of  Zero  Week 

Textbooks  can  be  returned  to  UCLA  Store  until  Friday  of 
second  week 


CORRECTIONS 


The  article  titled  "Once  upon  a  hill"  (News,  Sept.  25),  contained  errors. 
The  first  quote  should  have  been  attributed  to  Laurie  Crumplar,  wife  of 
Tom  Crumplar.  The  article  also  should  have  identified  Bob  and  Blanche 
Campbell  as  husband  and  wife. 

Another  article  titled  "Race  relations  still  hot  topic  on  campus"  (News, 
Sept.  25),  contained  a  misspelling.  The  name  should  have  been  spelled  Lori 
Vogelgesang. 

The  column  titled  "Students  with  no  boundaries"  (Viewpoint,  Sept.  25), 
should  have  said  that  Ryan  Smith  was  one  of  only  41  African  American  men 
out  of  4,000  students  who  entered  UCLA  last  year. 


SKtyourBruIn 


Pmffmtt 

Dally  Bnjin  Classifieds ' 57-59 

Crossword  Puzzle ,„S7 

Movie  Guide 39 


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DAILY  BRUIN 


Editof  in  Chief:  ChnstiryByrd 
Managing  Editor  MIcM  Litschj    - 

News  Editor:  Barbara  Ortutay 

Assistant  News  Editors:  Dharshani 

Dharmawardena,  Michael  Falcone,  Timothy  Kudo, 

Linhlat 

News  VKrtter  Joy  McMaste(s,  Michael  Weinet 

Viewpoint  Editor:  Jonah  Lalas 
Assistant  Viewpoint  Editors:  AmyGolod, 
Cuauhtemoc  Ortega 

M£  Editor  Angela  Salazar 

Assistant  A&EEditon:  Emilia  Hwang,  Bartura 

McGuire,  Michael  Rosen-Molina 

Sports  Edfter  Pauline  Vu 

Assistant  Sports  Edfton:  Amanda  Fletchet, 

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Assis.  Photo  Editors:  Keith  Enriquez,  Bridget 

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Photo  Staff:  Nicole  Millet  Biad  Morikawa 

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f 


Oady  Bruin  News 


Friday,  September  29, 2000 


^T 


The  pressures  of        •  v 
college  life  can  alter 
students'  eating  habits 


By  Ohaishanj  Dharmawardena 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


For  many  students  attending  college  for 
the  first  time,  the  "freshman  15,"  the 
alleged  weight  gain  during  the  first  year,  is 
notjustamyth. 

Overeating,  binge  drinking  and  different 
stress  factors  associated  with  change  can  all 
contribute  to  the  problem. 

The  pressure  of  adjusting  to  a  variety  of 
changes  in  their  lives  -  like  trying  to  make 
new  friends  and  living  away  from  home  for 
the  first  time  -  as  well  as  readily  available 
food  from  the  dining  halls  can  cause  first- 
year  students  to  eat  more,  said  Christina 
Miller,  a  clinical  psychologist  at  Student 
Psychological  Services. 

"When  starling  college,  their  eating 
behaviors  may  change,"  she  said.  "When 
students  live  at  home  with  their  parents, 
they  may  have  more  routine,  controlled  eat- 
ing patterns.  Here  they  have  so  many  choic- 
es that  they  may  over-eat." 

Sheri  Albert,  a  dietician  at  the  Arthur 
Ashe  Student  Health  and  Wellness  Center, 
said  that  while  some  first-year  students  gain 
weight,  others  can  lose  weight  because  they 
eat  less  because  of  time  constraints  and  loss 
of  appetite  from  stress. 

Like  Miller,  Albert  said  students  gain 
extra  pounds  because  of  the  amount  of  food 
available  at  dining  halls  and  weekend  par- 
ties, but  the  change  can  also  result  from  a 
drop  in  exercise. 

"It  costs  3,500  extra  calories  to  gain  one 
pound  of  fat,"  Albert  said.  "Broken  down, 
that's  just  145  extra  calories  a  day  to  gain  15 
pounds  over  one  year." 

Although  some  food  at  the  cafeterias 
may  be  high  in  calories,  Albert  said  they 
offer  a  variety  of  healthy  food  as  well. 

"The  key  is  choosing  well  and  controlling 
portions,"  she  said.  "It's  okay  to  choose 
some  high-calorie,  high-fat  foods,  like  cook- 
ies, so  long  as  you  balance  them  out  with 
more  nutrient-rich  foods  like  fresh  fruits 
throughout  the  day" 

Both  Miller  and  Albert  said  the  freshman 


15  may  occur  for  a  variety  of  emotional  rea- 
sons. A  person  attempting  to  deal  with 
added  stress,  boredom,  loneliness  or 
depression  may  feel  better  by  holding  some- 
thing like  food  in  their  hands,  according  to 
Miller. 

Weight  gain  is  not  the  only  health  issue 
pressure  can  trigger.  As  freshmen  enter  col- 
lege, they  may  also  become  increasingly 
focused  on  their  weight. 

"They  see  everyone  around  them  dieting 
and  they  start  engaging 
in  activities  that  are 
really   harmful," 
Miller  said. 

The  pres- 
sure    of 
start- 


college  can  make  some  students  more  vul- 
nerable because  it  can  damage  self  esteem. 
Miller  continued.  As  a  result,  they  may 
develop  eating  disorders,  like  bulimia  or 
anorexia,  to  lose  weight  in  order  to  adhere 
to  societal  ideals. 

Although  the  desire  to  be  rail-thin  can 
start  as  early  as  high  school,  Albert  said 
many  students  develop  the  feeling  for  the 
first  time  in  college. 

"As  many  as  ten  percent  of  college  stu- 


dents have  some  form  of  serious  eating  dis- 
order," she  said.  "But  many  more  students 
find  their  lives  restricted  by  negative  body 
image,  food  or  weight  preoccupations, 
crazy  dieting  and  stress  eating." 

But  hinging,  purging  and  skipping  meals 
are  not  the  only  ways  through  which  many 
freshman  students  try  to  fit  in.  Traditionally, 
the  issue  of  alcohol  consumption  in  college 


See  HEALTH,  page  18 


ZACHlOPtZ 


Big  Blue  Bus  gives  free  rides  to  UCLA  students 


I  Students 
free  rides 


can  now  swipe  their  BrulnCards  to  get 
on  the  Santa  Monica  Big  Blue  Bus  lines. 


PROGRAM:  Year-long 
trial  part  of  attempt  to 
relieve  parking  woes 


ByLaoraRke 

Daily  Bruin  Contribtitor 

Bruins  no  longer  have  to  fum- 
ble through  their  bags  for  change 
when  boarding  the  bus. 

Introduced  Monday,  the 
Bruin  Go!  Santa  Monica  Big 
Blue  Bus  Pilot  Program  allows 
UCLA  commuters  to  swipe  their 
BruinCard  on  Santa  Monica  bus 
lines  in  exchange  for  free  rides 
on  all  routes. 

Transportation  Services 
launched  the  program  after  two 
years  of  development,  seeking  to 
decrease  demand  for  parking 
permits  and,  reduce  traffic  in 
Westwood. 

"In  this  one-year  pilot  pro- 
gram we  arc  exploring  new 
options  to  improve  commuting 


to   and   from   campus,"   said 
Transportation  Services 

Director  Mark  Stocki. 

"We  are  also  analyzing  the 
cost-effectiveness  of  a  subsidized 
bus  fare  program,"  he  contin- 
ued. 

The  bus  line  tallies  the  amount 
of  rides  Uken  by  BruinCard 
holders  at  the  end  of  the  month 
and  receives  compensation  from 
the  university  at  a  discount  rate 
of  45  cents  per  ride.  Parking 
Services  has  allocated  SI  million 
for  the  program. 

The  program,  subsidized  by 
parking  revenues,  could  contin- 
ue beyond  its  one-year  trial  peri- 
od if  parking  demand  decreases 
by  a  significant  amount,  Stocki 
said. 

Bus  line  officials  are  monitor- 
ing the  program's  ability  to 
attract  riders,  and  together  with 
the  .university  will  determine  its 
cost<ffectiveness  at  the  end  of 
the  trial  period. 

Dana    Randall,    marketing 


analyst  for  the  bus  line,  said  she 
received  several  phone  calls 
from  students  and  staff  interest- 
ed in  the  program. 

"It's  too  early  to  tell  if  there  is 
any  increase  in  student  ridership, 
but  people  arc  showing  an  inter- 
est in  the  program,"  Randall 
said,  noting  the  bus  line  could  be 
used  to  travel  as  far  as  downtown 
L.A.  or  Pacific  Palisades. 

Students  who  rely  on  public 
transportation  to  get  to  campus 
welcomed  the  program 

"I'm  happy  with  the  new  pro- 
gram. It  may  be  a  small  thing, 
but  it's  nice  to  save  the  dollar  a 
day  that  it  normally  would  cost 
to  take  the  bus,"  said  Andrea 
Grant-Friedman,  a  first-year 
graduate  student  in  sociology. 

Others  were  surprised  to  hear 
about  the  recently  implemented 
program.  » 

"I  didn't  know  about  the  pro- 
gram. Sometimes  I  park  off  cam- 
pus and  take  the  bus,  so  I  think  I 
will  do  it  more  often  now,"  said 


Dan  Ho,  a  second-year  graduate 
student  in  art. 

Transportation  Services 
worked  closely  with  the  UCLA 
Faculty  Welfare  Committee,  a 
group  that  advises  the  adminis- 
tration on  matters  relating  to  the 
economic  well-being  of  its  mem- 
bers, to  obtain  a  contract  with 
the  bus  line. 

Donald  Shoup,  a  professor  in 
the  department  of  urban  plan- 
ning and  School  of  Public  Policy 
and  Social  Research  who  is  also 
a  committee  member,  said 
UCLA  is  one  of  the  largest  gen- 
erators of  traffic  in  the  city,  sec- 
ond only  to  the  Los  Angeles 
International  Airport. 

He  said  the  program  is  a 
chance  for  the  university  to  alle- 
viate the  negative  environmental 
impact  caused  by  motor  conges- 
tion. 

"It  demonstrates  civic  respon- 
sibility on  the  part  of  UCLA, 
and  it  should  reduce  air  pollution 
and  congestion,"  Shoup  said. 


••  /. 


:>■  ■"  -f-' 


Friday,  September  29,2000 


Oil)rBn*iNiws 


TQFJ^cofflCiAj^MCijyiRAti 

Every  year,  the  UCdwncettors  and  other  top  level  administrators  recsHveiaJjes  to  k 
thm  at  the  univttsity  and  ecjwhhejr  pay  with  other  adrnlnboatws  at 

Cunentartary        0cLl,2M9 


Wdurd  Atkinson 
Mktuwl  Bishop 
Robert  BcrdthI 
Albert  CwMSile 
Ralph  Q(«on( 
Robert  Dynes 
Larry  Venderhoef 
Henry  Yang 
MJCOeenwood 
Raymond  Orbad) 
Carol  TomlJruon-Xeasey 

soma:  ucontooritehHidan 


UCPrAident 

ChancHkv-SMifrindsn 

Chanctllor-Seikeiey 

Chancelor-losAngdcs 

Chancelior4rvJne 

Chancellor-San  Diego 

Chancdor-Oivis 

. .  Piancdkir-Sania  Baiiwa 
-'  Chancellor-Santa  Cniz 

— <hancellof-Riv«olde 
Chancellor-Mefced 


$337^00 
$33Sje00 
$2H500 
$294,500 
$%0,0QO 
$262^ 
$262,000 
$261000 
$250000 
$250,000 
$235,000 


Sahry  Rate 

im.m 

$30U00 
$30MOO 
$271J00 
$2n,200 
$27J,2D0 
$271 JW 
$26aOQO 

imm 

$245,000 


Napster  not  blocked  from  UCLA  networks 


MAGGIE  woo 


Board  awards  pay  increases 
to  administrators  across  UC 


SALARY:  Raises  approved 
for  third  year  in  row,  with 
student  regent  dissenting 


By  Bimai  Rajkomar 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Because  many  university  employ- 
ees are  getting  raises  this  year,  most 
were  more  accepting  of  the  $1.6  mil- 
lion being  given  to  top  administrators 
than  they  were  in  past  years. 

The  UC  Board  of  Regents 
approved  salary  increases  for  the 
third  straight  year  during  the  Sept.  14 
meeting  at  UC  San  Francisco,  with 
only  Student  Regent  Justin  Fong  vot- 
ing against  it.  - 

To  raise  salaries  that  are  above 
$168,000,  a  regents'  vote  is  required. 

Chancellors  and  other  ofTicials 
earning  above  $168,000  were  eligible 


for  basic  merit  pay  increases  of  about 
3.5  percent,  which  are  given  to 
reward  good  work. 

UC  President  Richard  Atkinson 
received  a  $11,800  increase  to 
$349,100  and  UCLA  Chancellor 
Albert  Carnesale,  who  took  a  pay  cut 
coming  here  from  Harvard,  received 
a  $10,300  increase  to  $304,800. 

"Salary  has  never  been  a  major 
consideration  about  my  excitement  at 
being  at  UCLA.  As  with  any  employ- 
ee, I  think  its  important  for  people  to 
be  treated  fairly.  I  took  a  decrease  to 
come  here  and  I'm  very  glad  that  I 
did,"  Carnesale  said. 

UC  Merced  Chancellor  Carol 
Tomlinson-Keasey,  whose  campus  is 
still  being  built,  received  the  smallest 
raise  out  of  all  the  chancellors, 
$10,000. 

Frances  A.  Ridlehoover,  Chief 

ScelUUSES^pagelo 


LETTER:  Site  can  still  be 
accessed  from  campus, 
despite  lawyers'  pleas 


ByToddBdic 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

UCLA,  along  with  everyone  else, 
has  taken  a  side  in  the  ongoing 
Napster  controversy.  "■■'  ;■"  V."    ■'■:", 

Along  with  several  other  universi- 
ties, UCLA  has  decided  not  to 
restrict  students  from  accessing  the 
music-sharing  Web  site. 

The  decision  made  by  the  UC 
Office  of  the  President  comes  in 
response  to  letters  sent  by  attorney 
Howard  King  on  behalf  of  musi- 
cians Dr.  Dre  and  Metallica  asking 
the  university  to  block  Napster  from 
university  computer  networks. 


'I'm  disappointed  that 
UCLA  didn't  follow 

the  example  of 
(other)  universities." 

Howard  King 

Attorney 


"Given  the  fact  that  Napster  tech- 
nology may  be  used  for  legitimate 
purposes  and  that  the  university 
does  not  monitor  the  use  of  its  elec- 
tronic systems,  we  see  no  justifica- 
tion for  a  blanket  block  on  access  to 
Napster  technology,"  said  UC 
General  Counsel  James  E.  Hoist  in  a 
response  to  King's  request. 


UC  spokesman  Chuck 

McFadden  refused  to  comment  any 
further.    \^., •■..■■ 

In  the  request.  King  writes,  "I 
believe  that  you  can  easily  recognize 
the  irony  of  encouraging  your  stu- 
dents to  matriculate  in  the  creative 
arts,  while  engaging  in  behavior 
which,  if  unchecked,  will  make  it 
impossible  for  those  students  to  earn 
an  income  from  their  future  creative 
'  effort."  ^-r-"- — .-  .,  ;^  :... .  '  '  '  - 
King,  himself  a  graduate  of 
UCLA,  expressed  his  dismay  at  the 
university's  decision. 

"I'm  disappointed  that  UCLA 
didn't  follow  the  example  of  over  40 
percent  of  universities  and  stop  this 
copyright  infringement,"  King  said. 
He  also  discussed  the  impact  of 
the  decision  on  UCLA's  academic 
environment. 

"It's  like  the  guy  who  says  'Don't 
do  this*  but  then  winks  his  eye," 
King  said.  "It's  setting  a  horrible 
example,  especially  at  UCLA." 

"They  won't  let  you  copy  a  copy- 
righted book  in  Ackerman  but 
they'll  let  students  download  copy- 
righted songs  using  the  university's 
computer  system,"  he  continued. 

Napster,  which  began  in  May 
1999,  offers  a  free  downloadable 
program  from  their  Web  site  that 
allows  an  estimated  20  million 
Internet  users  to  exchange  music 
files  with  each  other  without  paying 
the  recording  artists  or  their  labels  - 
an  action  the  legal  implications  of 
which  have  yet  to  be  decided. 

Napster  representatives  lauded 
the  UC's  action. 

"These  letters  are  a  heavy-handed 
attempt  by  Metallica's  lawyers  to 
increase  university  bans  as  part  of 
their  effort  to  shut  down  Napster. 
Students  who  engage  in  person-to- 


person  file  sharing  are  hot  copyright 
infringers,"  a  Napster  official  said. 
>  "We  hope  that  while  the  litigation 
is  pending,  schools  would  not  be 
intimidated  by  Metallica  and  limit 
the  freedom  of  students  to  partici- 
pate in  the  Napster  community," 
said  the  official,  who  declined  to  give 
her  name  for  legal  reasons. 

The  Napster  controversy  is  not 
being  handled  uniformly  throughout 
the  academic  community.  ' 


The  Massachusetts 

Institute  of 
Technology,  Stanford 

and  Princeton  have 
refused  to  ban  the  site. 


While  universities  such  as  the 
Massachusetts  Institute  of 
Technology,  Stanford  and  Princeton 
have  refused  to  ban  the  site,  several 
other  prominent  universities  around 
the  nation  have  agreed  to  the  request 
to  have  Napster  blocked  from  cam- 
pus computers. 

Included  among  these  universi- 
ties are  Pepperdine,  New  York 
University,  Brown  and  the 
University  of  Chicago. 

In  April,  attorneys  filed  a  suit 
against  Napster  and  also  named 
Yale,  use  and  Indiana  University 
as  co-defendants. 

In  July,  courts  ordered  Napster  to 
stop  allowing  copyrighted  songs 
from  being  downloaded  from  their 
site.  That  ruling  was  stayed  until 
Napster  has  its  day  in  court  in  eariy 
October. 


Gala  Apples 


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Muster  Card 


Daly  Bruin  News 


Friday,  September  29, 2000    ^    5 


Union  celebrates  resblution 
of  casiial  worker  gnevsuioe 


LAWSUrr:  Ruling  could 
influence  future  status 
of  current  employees 


CATHERINE  JUN 

Pam  Conder  purchases  food  atTaco  Bell.  Although  taco  shells  across  the  U.S.  have  been  recalled  for  con- 
taining corn  fit  only  for  animal  consuniptlon,  the  Taco  Bell  at  UCLA  does  not  serve  the  same  shells. 

Taco  sliells  ring  bells  with  UCLA  group 

RECALL  Genetically  engineered  food  mishap  opens 
door  for  increased  awareness  of  altered  ingredients 


By  Melody  Wang 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor    , 

Students  stand  in  line  Tor  tacos  every 
day,  unaware  they  may  be  consuming  a 
potentially  harmful  product. 

After  discovering  that  taco  shells 
from  Taco  Bell  may  cause  health  prob- 
lems, one  environmental  group  plans 
to  educate  the  public  about  genetically 
engineered  foods  and  hold  the  Food 
and    Drug    Administration    more 


accountable. 

Merchants  are  removing  taco  shells 
from  grocery  stores  nationwide 
because  the  genetically  engineered 
com  used  to  make  them  is  believed  to 
cause  sickness. 

Cry9C,  the  com  marketed  under  the 
name  StarLink,  has  been  approved  by 
the  Environmental  Protection  Agency 
as  fit  only  for  animal  consumption. 

"It's  outrageous  that  you're  eating 
this  corn  that's  suitable  for  animal 


food,"  said  Merriah  Fairchild,  an  orga- 
nizer for  the  California  Public  Interest 
Group  on  campus. 

According  to  Julie  Miles, 
CALPlRG's  genetic  engineering  cam- 
paign director,  only  the  taco  shells  on 
grocery  store  shelves  were  found  to  be 
harmful,  but  Taco  Bell  decided  to 
replace  the  shells  in  all  7,000  restau- 
rants, including  the  one  at  UCLA. 

But  Dave  Nirenberg,  the  associate 
director  of  Outlying  Areas  and  North 
Campus,  said  he  has  not  been  informed 
of  any  of  UCLA's  Taco  Bell  shells 

S«cTACO,pa9«20 


By  Timothy  Kudo  ~~T~~~~~ 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff   . 

Christopher  Ivanyi  may  become 
a  household  name  among  UCLA 
employees. 

That's  because  this  summer, 
Ivanyi  won  a  grievance  filed  against 
the  university  challenging  his  status 
as  a  "casual  employee,"  and  in  some 
ways  chal- 
lenging every-  ^^^n^^...^. 
one's  status. 

"It's  a 
precedent-set- 
ting case  that 
we  think, 
based  on  that, 
we  can  file  a 
grievance  for 
as  many  as  a 
few  thousand 
employees 

across      the      

state,"     said 

Sean  Leyf,  an  organizer  for  the 
University  Professional  and 
Technical  Employees  union  which 
filed  the  grievance  for  Ivanyi. 

Recently,  union  organizers  have 
rallied  to  end  long-term  casual 
employment  in  which  employees 
work  for  364  days  a  year,  are  fired 
for  a  day,  and  then  rehired  for 
another  364  days  so  that  they  are 
not  eligible  for  t>enefits. 


After  the  UC  finishes 

revising  its  labor 

policies,  long-term 

casual  employment 

could  become 

a  non-issue. 


Fn  some  cases,  the  employees 
work  eight  hours  a  day  and  have 
been  at  UCLA  for  many  years. 

Though  Ivanyi  won  his  case,  it 
does  not  set  a  precedent  in  the  legal 
sense,  but  rather  shows  an 
increased  likelihood  for  similar  rul- 
ings to  be  handed  down  in  related 
cases,  both  union  and  UC  ofTicials 
said. 

In  labor  relations,  when  a  union 
feels  a  contract  violation  has 
occurred,  meetings  arc  held  and 
then  if  the  two  parties  don't  arrive 
at  a  resolution,  the  matter  goes 
before  an  arbitrator  from  the  Public 
Employment 
^^^^m^mm^^  RcUtions 
Board,  the 
state  body 
governing 
such  disputes. 
Barry 
Winograd, 
arbitrator  of 
the  grievance, 
declined  to 
comment  on 
the    implica- 

— ; —      tions   of  the 

ruling,  but 
university  oOidals  said  although  it's 
too  soon  for  either  side  to  make 
claims,  the  decision  could  be  signif- 
icant. 

"The  arbitrator  who  hears  the 
big  case  will  definitely  pay  attention 
to  the  Ivanyi  case,"  said  Bill 
Candella,  who  handled  the  arbitra- 
tion for  the  university.  "However, 

SceCASUiUS,page20 


UCLA  Students,  faculty  and  staff... 


It's  Your  Credit  Union. 


£^£   UNIVERSITY  CREDIT  UNION 


UCU  Main  Office 

1500  S.Sepulveda  Blvd. 

1  block  south  of  Wilshire  Blvd. 

Hours:  7  -  5  Mon.  -  Fri. 


Service  Center  On  Campus 

Ackerman  Union,  A-Level 

Across  from  textbooks 

Hours:  8  -  6  Mon.  -  Fri.,  11-3  Sat. 


www.ucu.org 


(310)  477-6628 


ucumail  @  ucu.org 


„.  -f 


t;,>- 


6         Friday,  Septwnbef  29, 2000 


DtHy  Bruin 


•^mt^mt^mimtmmm 


mUfHlllltimmt 


WORLD  &^  NATION 


Friday,  SetNember  29, 2000        7 


Dow  Jones  industnals 

up:  195.70 

close:  10,a^4.06       •:':^- 'r    '  ;■ 


up:  122.02 
dose:  3,778.32 


IMbr 

Yen:  107.64 
Euro:  1.1387 


Milosevic  loses  election,  refuses  to  step 


•  • 


YUGOSLAVIA:  Opponents 
threaten  general  strike  if 
loser  fails  to  leave  olTice 


By  Misha  Savic 

The  Associated  Press 

BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia  - 
Despite  opposition  threats  of  a  gener- 
al strike,  President  Slobocian 
Milosevic  confirmed  Thursday  he 
will  take  part  in  a  runoff  vote,  refus- 
ing to  recognize  an  apparent  first- 
round  victory  of  a  pro-democracy 
challenger.  It  was  his  first  public 
statement  since  the  election  Sunday. 

Summoning  his  closest  Socialist 
Party  associates,  Milosevic  pressed 
ahead  with  plans  for  the  Oct.  8 
runoff,  ignoring  appeals  at  home  and 
abroad  that  he  step  down  in  the  wake 
of  an  overwhelming  defeat  to  opposi- 
tion leader  Vojislav  Kostunica. 

His  defiant  move  signals  that  the 
Yugoslav  leader  has  no  intention  to 
back  down,  but  will  move  to  deepen 
the  political  crisis. 

Milosevic's  opponents  threatened 
on  Thursday  to  call  a  general  strike. 


sTiutting  down  schools,  olTlces  and 
other  public  institutions  until  he  rec- 
ognizes their  victory  and  steps  aside. 

Kostunica  earned  48.96  percent  of 
the  vote  to  38.62  percent  for 
Milosevic,  the  State  Election 
Commission  said  late  Wednesday. 
That  would  require  a  runoff.  The 
opposition,  using  figures  from  its  poll 
watchers,  claims  Kostunica  won 
52.54  percent  to  Milosevic's  32.01 
percent  -  figures  that  would  mean 
Kostunica  won  outright. 

Kostunica's  campaign  manager, 
Zoran  Djindjic,  called  the  govern- 
ment tally  'a  bad  joke."  He  vowed  to 
take  the  opposition  beyond  street 
protests  -  which  have  been  unsuc- 
cessful -  by  calling  "a  total  blockade 
of  the  system  and  institutions." 

"We  will  call  a  general  strike," 
Djindjic  said.  "We  shall  seek  to  para- 
lyze all  institutions,  schools,  theaters, 
cinemas,  offices ...  call  everyone  onto 
the  streets  and  stay  on  the  streets  until 
he  who  wants  to  be  president  by  force 
gives  up  his  post." 

Declaring  that  "Vojislav 
Kostunica  was  elected  Yugoslav  pres- 

SeeELKTI0N,page22 


The  Anociiled  Pwis 

An  estimated  200,000  banner-waving  opponents  of  Slobodan  Milosevic  swarmed  Belgrade's  main 
square  Wednesday,  protesting  the  Yugoslav  president's  efforts  to  avoid  an  electoral  defeat.  —   . 


RU-486  receives  approval 
after  years  of  controversy 

ABORTION:    Doctors  will        debate.      Republican      candidate 
.  T        •  »  ..!-•         George  W.   Bush,  whose  father's 

have  mifepristone  Within      administration     banned     RU-486 

month;  eroups  will  fight      '"'p°'"^  '"  '^^^'  opposes  abortion. 

'^  °  Vice  President  Gore  supports  the  pill 

option. 

The  pill,  known  chemically  as 
mifepristone  and  by  the  brand  name 
Mifeprex,  will  be  available  to  doctors 
within  a  month. 

Mifepristone,  which  blocks  a  hor- 
mone vital  to  sustaining  pregnancy, 
only  works  during  the  first  seven 
weeks  of  pregnancy,  when  an  embryo 
is  about  one-fifth  of  an  inch  long;  that 
is  earlier  than  surgical  abortions 
often  are  offered. 

Two  days  after  taking  mifepris- 
tone, women  take  a  second  drug  that 
causes  cramping  and  bleeding  as  the 
embryo  is  expelled,  much  like  a  mis- 
carriage. 

"For  those  who  choose  to  have  an 
early  termination  of  their  pregnancy, 
this  is  a  reasonable  medical  altema- 


6y  Lauran  Neergaard 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON,  D.C. 
Capping  a  bitter  12-year  battle,  the 
government  on  Thursday  approved 
use  of  the  abortion  pill  RU-486,  a 
major  victory  for  abortion-rights 
advocates  that  could  dramatically 
alter  abortion  in  this  country. 

The  long-expected  decision  by  the 
Food  and  Drug  Administration 
allows  Americans  an  early-abortion 
method  already  used  in  France, 
Britain,  China  and  10  other  coun- 
tries. The  action  is  expected  to  make 
abortion  in  the  United  States  more 
accessible  and  more  private. 

Coming  in  the  final  weeks  of  the 
presidential  campaign,  the  move  also 
is   sure   to   renew   fierce   political 


S«enLUpa9e22 


Danes  vote  not  to 
adopt  euro  as  new 
national  currency 

DENMARK:  Referendum  fails  by 
slim  margin;  other  nations  plan 
future  decision  on  joining  union 


The  Associated  Pttu 

Denmark's  Prime  Minister  Poul  Nyrup  Rasmussen 
takes  to  the  streets  in  a  pro-euro  campaign. 


ByKknGamd 

The  Assodated  Press 


COPENHAGEN,  Denmark  -  Voters  refused  to 
adopt  the  European  Union's  beleaguered  currency 
as  their  own  Thursday,  reflecting  Denmark's  tradi- 
tional go-slow  approach  toward  European  integra- 
tion. 

With  nearly  90  percent  of  referendum  votes 
counted,  53  percent  opposed  making  the  euro 
Denmark's  currency,  while  47  percent  favored  the 
switch,  according  to  the  Interior  Ministry. 

The  Social  Democratic-led  govemment,  which 
had  strongly  supported  the  euro,  conceded  defeat. 

"Democracy  has  spoken,  our  people  have  spo- 
ken," said  a  teary-eyed  Prime  Minister  Poul  Nyrup 

SecElliQ,pa9c24 


WORLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 

Airline  crew  may  have 
caused  traveler's  death 

SALT  LAKE  CITY  -  A  19-year-old  man 
who  fiew  into  a  rage  during  a  Southwest 
Airlines  flight  and  died  after  being  subdued  by 
passengers  may  have  been  provoked  by  the 
flight  crew,  passengers  told  police. 

"Several  passengers  stated  that  the  flight 
crew  antagonized  the  young  man  and  that 
intensified  his  anger,"  stated  the  Salt  Lake  City 
Airport  Police  incident  report,  obtained 
Thursday  by  The  Associated  Press.  Names  of 
the  passengers  were  not  disclosed. 

Jonathan  Burton  of  Las  Vegas  became  conv 
bative  20  minutes  before  the  flight  was  due  to 
land,  screaming  obscenities,  hitting  other  pas- 
sengers and  pounding  a  hole  in  the  locked  cock-' 
pit  door.  As  many  as  eight  of  the  plane's  120 
passengers  subdued  him  and  held  him  clown 
until  the  Aug.  1 1  flight  arrived  in  Salt  Lake  City. 

Burton  died  after  being  removed  from  the 
plane  and  an  autopsy  determined  that  he  was 


killed  by  the  passengers.  Federal 
prosecutors  have  said  they  will  not 
file  criminal  charges. 

One  passenger  contacted  Thursday 
agreed  that  flight  attendants  may  have  pro- 
voked the  man  after  his  initial  outburst. 

Greek  boat  crew        j 
charged  with  murder 

PAROS,  Greece  -  The  captain  and  three 
crew  members  of  a  Greek  ferry  boat  that  sank 
and  killed  at  least  66  people  were  charged 
Thursday  with  multiple  counts  of  murder. 

Investigators  were  focusing  on  reports  that 
the  ship,  loaded  with  more  than  500  passengers, 
was  apparently  on  automatic  pilot  minutes 
-before  striking  a  well-marked  rocky  outcrop- 
ping. The  reports  were  bolstered  by  survivors' 
accounts  that  crew  members  were  watching  a 
soccer  match  on  television  Tuesday  night  when 
the  ship  sank  two  miles  from  shore. 

Efforts  by  navy  divers  and  rescue  aews  to 


find  at  least  eight  missing  people 
were  hampered  by  a  fierce  gale  that 
has  stopped  all  boat  traffic  to  and 
from  the  holiday  island.  Rescue  teams 
said  there  could  be  up  to  14  people  miss- 
ing. 

Although  the  ship  had  just  passed  an  inspec- 
tion, a  prosecutor  was  also  investigating  accusa- 
tions that  the  34-year-old  Express  Samina  had 
propulsion  and  steering  problems.  Described  as 
^  "rusting  hulk  "by  the  Greek  Merchant  Marine 
Mechanics  Union,  the  ferry  was  to  be  decom- 
missioned next  year. 

Survivors  have  accused  the  crew  of  panick- 
ing and  failing  to  organize  the  evacuation  of  the 
ship,  saying  Hfe  boats  were  not  quickly 
deployed.  Many  attributed  their  rescue  to  the 
proximity  of  the  shore  and  a  small  fleet  of  fish- 
ing boats  that  sped  to  the  sinking  vessel. 

Premier  Costas  Simitis  held  an  emergency 
Cabinetmeeting  to  discuss  a  shipwreck,  and 
government  officials  said  no  mercy  would  be 
shown  to  those  found  responsible  for  the  sink- 
ing. 


Pope  John  Paul  II  to 
canonize  new  saints 

VATICAN  CITY  -  An  American  heiress 
who  gave  up  her  wealth  to  found  schools  for 
Native  Americans  and  poor  blacks,  a  former 
slave  from  Sudan,  and  120  Roman  Catholics 
killed  over  the  centuries  in  China  are  among  the 
church's  new  saints  who  are  to  be  canonized 
Sunday  by  Pope  John  Paul  II. 

Showing  there  is  more  than  one  route  to 
sainthood,  he  is  honoring  Philadelphia's 
Katharine  Drexd,  who  used  her  $20  million 
inheritance  to  establish  a  missionary  order;  the 
first  Chinese  Catholics  ever  raised  to  sainthood, 
and  Giuseppina  Bakhita,  a  Sudanese^m  nun 
known  for  her  kindness  and  generosity. 

"October  I  will  be  a  celebration  of  the 
catholic,  or  universal,  nature  of  the  church,  par- 
ticulariy  for  the  martyrs  in  China,"  said  the 
Vatican's  missionary  news  service  Fides. 


Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports 


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8         Friday,  Septrmbtf  29, 2000 


Diily  Bruin  News 


Ddily  Bruin  News 


Friday,  September  29, 2000         9 


STATED 


Proposal  could  boost  minority  admission 


STUDENTS:  UC  oflicials 
consider  new  program 
to  increase  transfers 


By  Michelle  Locke 

The  Associated  Press 

OAKLAND  -  University  of 
California  officials  are  proposing  a 
new  road  to  admissions  that  could 
bring  in  more  African  American  and 
Latino  students,  provided  they're 
willing  to  take  a  detour  through 
community  college. 


UC  officials  say  they 

have  the  capacity  to 

handle  up  to  3,500 

new  transfers  from  the 

new  program  by  2005. 


The  proposal,  which  requires 
approval  by  faculty  and  regents, 
would  expand  offers  of  guaranteed 
admission  from  the  current  top  4 
percent  of  each  high  school  to  the 
top  12.5  percent  at  each  high  school. 

The  additional  8.5  percent  would 
not  gel  immediate  entry  to  UC,  but 
they  would  be  simultaneously  admit- 
ted to  UC  and  to  a  community  col- 
lege and  told  what  courses  they  need 
to  complete  to  transfer  to  UC. 


Because  students  would  transfer 
as  upperclassmen,  the  new  program 
doesn't  take  away  freshman  seats. 
UC  officials  say  they  have  the  capac- 
^  ity  to  handle  up  to  3,500  new  trans- 
fers expected  from  the  new  program 
by  2005. 

The  new  approach  could  boost 
enrollment  of  African  American, 
Latino  and  American  Indian  stu- 
dents, whose  numbers  have  fallen 
since  UC  scuttled  affirmative  action 
five  years  ago. 

The  program  could  make  up  to 
12,700  more  students  eligible  for 
admission.  Of  those,  up  to  36  per- 
cent are  Latino,  African  American 
or  American  Indian,  the  three 
groups  considered  underrepresent- 
ed  minorities  at  UC.  By  contrast, 
underrepresented  minorities  make 
up  12  percent  of  the  current  pool  of 
UC-eligible  freshmen. 

"Clearly,  it  will  have  an  impact  on 
the  number  of  underrepresented 
minorities,"  UC  President  Richard 
Atkinson  said  at  a  news  conference 
Thursday.  He  said  the  new  program 
won't  violate  Proposition  209, 
which  forbids  affirmative  action  in 
public  education  because  it  doesn't 
select  by  race.  "But  the  sheer  fact 
that  we  will  be  reaching  out  to  these 
low-performing  high  schools  will 
guarantee  that  kind  of  additional 
increase." 

UC  now  accepts  the  top  12.5  per- 
cent of  all  high  school  students, 
which  means  high-performing 
schools  send  lots  of  students  to  UC 
campuses    while    low-performing 


schools  send  few  or  none. 

If  the  new  program  is  approved, 
students  will  be  identified  at  the 
beginning  of  their  senior  year  on  the 
basis  of  student  transcripts  and  invit- 
ed to  apply  to  the  program.  Once 
admitted,  UC  would  then  maintain 
individual  student  Web  pages  to  help 
keep  them  in  the  program. 

Lt.  Gov.  Cruz  Bustamante,  who  is 
also  a  regent,  called  the  plan  "it  good 
step  toward  re-establishing  the  UC's 
commitment  to  providing  equal 
access." 


"It  will  have  an  Impact 

on  the  number  of 

underrepresented 

minorities." 

Richard  Atkinson 

UC  president 


But  Regent  Ward  Connerly,  who 
wrote  UC's  new  race-blind  policies, 
said  he'd  need  some  assurance  UC's 
academic  quality  won't  slip  under 
the  proposed  change. 

He  also  wishes  officials  weren't 
running  demographic  breakdowns 
of  the  potential  new  students. 

"If  the  intent  is  to  somehow  influ- 
ence the  number  of  underrepresent- 
ed minorities,  then  1  thinic  that's 
breaking  the  law,"  he  said. 


It's  not  like 
we'll  give  you 
the  answers. 


Wei  I... yes  it  is. 

<2S>  <3ffiJ>  <3I!^  <®>  CiS^ 


Standardized  tests  are  predictable. 
Understanding  them  is  what  Kaplan  is  all  about. 

Classes  start: 

GMAT  -  October  9th,  17th  and  18th 

GRE- October  11th 

DAT  -  October  4th 

LSAT  -  October  6th  and  1 7th 


Call  today  to  enroll! 


KAPLAN 


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'Test  names  are  the  registered  trademarks  of  their  respective  owners. 


Ljos  Angeles  plans  to  Nre, 
train  1 00  new  paramedics 


PROPOSAL:  Increase  in 
medical  staff  will  create 
quicker  response  times 

The  Associated  Press    • 

In  the  wake  of  revelations  about 
strains  on  the  city's  medical  rescue 
system,  Los  Angeles  Mayor 
Richard  Riordan  and  top  officials 
have  announced  an  emergency 
measure  to  hire  100  new  para- 
medics. 

The  move  is  designed  to  shore  up 
a  department  that  has  come  under 
criticism  in  recent  weeks  for  disclo- 
sures including  a  link  between 
improper  dispatches  and  patient 
deaths. 

"When  Angelenos  call  for  emer- 
gency medical  services,  they  must 
have  the  confidence  that  our  para- 
medics will  be  there  to  respond, 
treat  them  and  rush  them  to  hospi- 
tals when  necessary,"  Riordan  said 
Wednesday. 

The  Fire  Department's  emer- 
gency care  system  has  come  under 
fire  from  the  media  and  elected  ofTi- 
cials  even  as  the  Fire  Commission 
and  county  regulators  have 
announced  inquiries. 

Paramedics  have  complained 
that  stress  and  burnout  is  depleting 
their  ranks,  forcing  them  to  work  up 
to  100  consecutive  hours,  and  a 


riecent  department  analysis  Tound 
paramedic  attrition  at  its  highest 
level  in  nearly  two  decades.  One 
recent  disclosure  linked  improper 
dispatches  to  at  least  five  cases  of 
patient  deaths  this  year. 

The  new  plan  includes  provisions 
to: 

•  Immediately  hire  up  to  100 
trained  paramedics  who  would 
begin  filling  vacancies  on  the  city's 
56  paramedic  ambulances  after  one 
month  of  training. 

*  Eliminate  a  requirement  that 
Fire  Department  recruits  live  in  Los 
Angeles. 

•  Intensify  training  and  upgrade 
computer  systems  to  make  Fire 
Department,  dispatchers  more 
closely  follow  scripted  medical 
questions. 

*  Modify. training  schedules  to 
get  paramedics  on  the  streets  faster. 

The  Fire  Department  has  seen  its 
role  evolve  in  recent  years  from 
focusing  on  fires  to  attending  most- 
ly to  medical  emergencies.  Calls  for 
medical  aid  now  account  for  80  per- 
cent of  the  department's  workload, 
and  the  Fire  Commission  is  consid- 
ering long-term  reorganization  of 
the  department  to  refiect  those 
changing  realities. 

The  mayor's  recruitment  plan 
must  be  approved  by  the  federal 
government  because  of  restrictions 
over  past  hiring  practices. 


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10       Friday,  September  29, 2000 


Daily  Brum  News 


Daily  BruinNcHff 


Friday,  September  29, 2000        11 


Merged  company  may  have  to  tet  rivals  online 


PROVIDERSi  FCC  looking 
at  requirement  for  more 
choice  of  Internet  service 


By  Kaplana  Srinivasan 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  The  Federal 
Communications  Commission  took 
the  first  step  Thursday  to  determine 
whether  cable  companies  offering 
high-speed  Web  connections  must 
allow  comfjeting  Internet  providers 
on  their  systems. 

The  efTort  to  develop  a  framework 
for  regulating  new  Internet  services 
comes  amid  the  FCC's  review  of  the 
merger  between  America  Online  and 
Time  Warner.  That  deal,  bringing 
together  the  nation's  top  Internet 
provider  and  second-largest  cable  sys- 
tem, would  create  a  powerhouse  in 
offering  high-speed  cable  connec- 
tions. 

FCC  officials  insisted  the  merger 
review  is  independent  from  the 
agency's  efTorts  to  craft  a  broader  pol- 
icy on  the  issue  of  cable  access.  Yet 
the  commission  reportedly  is  consid- 
ering requiring  as  a  condition  of 
merger  approval  that  the  companies 


'permit  fnternet  providers  -  other 
thart  AOL  -  on  their  cable  systems. 

The  staff  at  the  Federal  Trade 
Commission,  which  also  is  reviewing 

^  the  deal,  has  determined  that  it  will 
block  the  deal  unless  the  two  compa- 
nies agree  to  share  their  high-speed 
cable  lines. 


"The  FCC  should  have 

acted  on  the  issue  of 

cable  access  much 

sooner  than  this/ 

Dave  Baker 

Vice  president,  Earthlink 


Thus  far,  the  FCC  has  declined  to 
set  a  national  policy  requiring  that  all 
cable  Internet  providers  permit  rivals 
on  their  systems.  Chairman  William 
Kennard  has  said  repeatedly  that  he 
prefers  the  marketplace  to  resolve  the 
issue. 

On  Thursday,  though,  Kennard 
suggested  that  the  government  may 
need  to  intervene. 


Availability  of  DRAFT  Environmental  Impact  Report 

Notice  of  Public  Hearing 
UCLA  Southwest  Campus  Housing  and  Parking  Project 

To  address  ongoing  demand  for  student  housing  and  implement  a 
component  of  the  UCLA  1990  Long  Range  Development  Plan, 
UCLA  proposes  to  construct  a  residential  village  to  accommodate 
single  graduate,  professional  and  upper  division'  undergraduate 
students.  The  project  would  provide  approximately  2,000  beds  in 
two,  three  and  four-story  residential  buildings,  ancillary  facilities  and 
common  recreational  areas  above  partially  below-grade  parking 
structures  designed  to  accommodate  approximately  2,068  parking 
spaces.  The  residential  buildings  would  be  clustered  around  a  large 
central  green  with  smaller  courtyards  and  open  areas,  on  a  IS  acre 
site  on  Veteran  Avenue.  Existing  buildings  on  the  site  would  be 
demolished.  The  project  would  be  constructed  in  two  phases 
beginning  in  2001,  with  full  occupancy  anticipated  by  2008.  The 
proposed  project  will  assist  campus  traffic  mitigation  efforts  by 
reducing  the  number  of  vehicle  trips  to  campus  by  existing 
commuting  students  who  would  move  into  the  proposed  housing. 
The  UCLA  campus  shuttle  bus  system  would  provide  service 
between  the  residential  village  and  campus.  Finally,  the  project 
would  include  modifications  to  portions  of  adjacent  roadways 
(Veteran  and  Weybum  Avenues,  Weybum  Place/Midvale  alley)  to 
improve  traffic  flow,  and  vehicular  and  pedestrian  safety. 

To  analyze  the  potential  environmental  effects  of  the  project,  the 
University  has  prepared  a  Draft  Environmental  Impact  Report 
(DEIR).  The  purpose  of  the  DEIR  is  to  assess  potential 
environmental  effects  resulting  from  development  of  the  proposed 
project.  Even  with  implementation  of  the  proposed  mitigation 
measures,  short-term  construction  traffic,  air  quality  and  noise 
impacts  would  remain  significant  and  unavoidable.  With 
implementation  of  the  recommended  mitigation  measures,  the 
project  would  result  in  significant  long-term  visual  quality  and  traffic 
impacts. 

To  permit  the  public  an  opportunity  to  comment  on  the  DEIR,  copies 
of  the  document  are  available  during  the  45'-day  public  review  period 
from  September  18  to  November  1,  2000  at  the  following  public 
libraries:  Los  Angeles  Public  Library:  Palms-Rancho  Park  BraiKh, 
2920  Overiand  Ave.;  Brentwood  Branch,  11820  San  Vicente  Blvd.; 
and  West  Los  Angeles  Regional  Branch,  1 1360  Santa  Monica  Blvd.; 
and  the  Charles  E.  Young  Research  Library  and  Biomedical  Library 
on  the  UCLA  campus.  •     . 

On  October  18,  2000,  at  7  p.in.,  a  Public  Hearing  will  be  held  in 
the  West  Coast  room  of  Covel  Commons  on  the  UCLA  campus,  to 
accept  public  comments  on  the  potential  environmental  effects  of  the 
proposed  project.  Courtesy  parking  will  be  provided  in  the  Sunset 
Village  Parking  Structure  located  adjacent  to  the  Covel  Commons 
building  on  De  Neve  Drive  accessible  from  the  Bellagio  Drive  and 
Sunset  Boulevard  entrance  to  campus. 

Copies  of  the  DEIR  and  all  documents  referenced  therein  are 
available  for  public  review  at  UCLA  Capital  Programs  at  the  address 
below.  Written  comments  on  the  Draft  EIR  may  be  submitted  until 
5:00  p.m.,  on  November  1, 2000  to: 

Curtis  Zacuto  ».;  .,  ,  .   v.;^^*;,. ,. 

Principal  Environmental  Planner  ".     "    : 

UCLA  Capital  Programs  V— 

•         1060  Veteran  Avenue  . .      '  - 

.   Los  Angeles,  C A  90095-1365  ,^ 

Fax  (310)  2d6^  1 510  "^"'^ 


.•;#,■ 


"  **!  have  been  patient  in  allowing  dte 
marketplace  time  to' develop,  whfle 
monitoring  it  closely  to  assess  its 
openness,"  he  said.  "It  is  unclear, 
however,  whether  a  marketplace  solu- 
tion will  develop  absent  some  form  of 
intervention." 

OfTicials  said  the  broad-based 
inquiry  launched  Thursday  does  not 
guarantee  that  any  new  regulations 
will  be  placed  on  the  entire  industry. 
Even  if  the  agency  were  to  devise 
rules,  they  Kkely  would  not  coroe  until 
next  year,  after  the  i*kOL-Time 
Warner  review  is  complete. 

"The  FCC  should  have  acted  on 
the  issue  of  cable  access  much  sooner 
than  this.  We  hope  it's  not  too  little, 
too  late,"  said  Dave  Baker,  vice  presi- 
dent of  law  and  public  policy  for 
EarthLink,  the  nation's  second 
largest  Internet  provider  behind 
AOL. 

Companies  such  as  EarthLink 
want  to  ensure  that  they  can  offer 
their  service  on  cable  systems  under 
fair  terms.  They  and  consumer  advo- 
cates fear  that  cable  companies  -  like 
a  combined  AOL-Time  Warner  -  will 
only  offer  consumers  Internet  service 
from  affiliated  providers. 

S«elNTEIIIIET,pa9«24 


t^umber  of  Americans  | 
without  insurance  (Jrons 


CENSUS:  Clinton  asks 
some  states  to  expand 
programs  even  further 


ByGcnaroCAimas 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  The  number 
of  Americans  without  health  insur- 
ance declined  last  year  for  the  first 
time  since  the  Census  Bureau  began 
collecting  data  in  1987.  Health  care 
advocates  and  analysts  cited  the 
robust  economy  as  the  main  reason. 

About  42.5  million  people,  or 
15.5  percent  of  the  population, 
lacked  insurance  in  1999,  com- 
pared with  44.2  million,  or  16.3  per- 
cent, in  1998,  according  to  data 
released  Thursday. 

The  number  of  uninsured  chil- 
dren fell  by  1.5  percentage  points  to 
13.9  million,  according  to  the 
Census  Bureau's  annual  report  on 
health  insurance  coverage  in 
America. 

Analysts  attributed  the  overall 


drop,  in  large  part,  to  two  factprs: 
more  employers  offering  health 
coverage  as  a  way  to  lure  or  keep 
workers  in  a  tight  labor  market  and 
healthy  economy,  and  the  Child 
Health  Insurance  Program,  enact- 
ed by  Congress  in  1997  to  assist 
low-income  families. 

The  report  showed  that  62.8  per- 
cent of  Americans  had  coverage 
through  an  employment-related 
health  insurance  plan,  compared 
with  62  percent  in  1998.  The  per- 
centage of  those  covered  under 
Medicare  remain  constant  at  13.2. 
There  was  a  0.1  percentage  point 
decline  in  Medicaid  coverage,  to 
10.2  percent  in  1999. 

"Although  1  am  pleased  with 
today's  development,  there  is  much 
work  to  be  done,"  President 
Clinton  said  in  a  statement.  ''We 
need  to  encourage  states  that  are 
not  doing  as  well  to  accelerate  their 
activities  in  reaching  out  to  unin- 
sured children.  And  we  need  to  pro- 
vide targeted  programs  to  build  on 

See  UNINSURED,  page  24 


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Mushrooms  Spinach  Roma  Tomato 

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•Premium  Toppings  $.5o 

Any  Additional  Toppings 

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i^  Traditional  Sicilian  Style         Chicago  Style 

( 1 2  slices  of  thick  crust)  (6  slices  of  thick  crust) 

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Ham 


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:/  -^  Homemade  Lasagna  $4.95     ':^,'-^  -:^'.  ■■■:':.-'. I 

;    y  '    add  Meatballs  or  Sausage  $6.95  ' 

•  ;      •         ;.  ^  ^  Baked Zitti $4.95  ;:   ;.  ,:,^:-,-. 

•  (Italian  style  macaroni  &  cheese) 

add  Meatballs  or  Sausage  $6.95  \ 

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(pepperoni,  ham,  mozzarella  and  American  cheese  baked  in  pizza  dough) 

Pasta 

(Served  with  a  Salad,  Side  of  Pasta  and  Bread) 

SPAGHETTI  with  tomato  sauce  $4.25  add  Meatballs  or  Sausage  $6.25 
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Dinners 

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Cheese $4.95  *additional toppings $40 

Enzo^s  Favorites 

Spinach  $5.35  Pepperoni  $5.35  Mushroom  $5.35 


Desserts 

Tiramisu  $2.95 

N.Y.  Style  Cheese  Cake  $2.95 

Italian  Ice  $1.25 

(cherry  or  lemon) 


Beverages " 

Soft  Drink  (Mi  you  can  drink)  $  1 .00 
Bottled  Water  $1.25 
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1 2       Friday,  S«ptmber  29, 2000 


Dil)r  miin  News 


Violence  erupts  at  shrine  o\^  Sharonis  visit 


ISRAEL:  Students,  police 
clash;  contested  site  still 
liotbed  of  conflict  in  area 


By  Dina  Kraft 

The  Associated  Press  ,    ; 

JERUSALEM  -  Helmeled  Israeli 
riot  police  fired  rubber  bullets 
Thursday  at  hundreds  of  Palestinian 
stone-throwers  at  a  Jerusalem  holy 
site  revered  by  both  Muslims  and 
Jews  and  hotly  contested  in  Israeli- 
Palestinian  peace  talks. 

The  violence  broke  out  just 
moments  after  the  leader  of  Israel's 
hard-line  opposition,  Ariel  Sharon, 
left  the  compound.  Chants  of 
"Murderer,  get  out"  followed 
Sharon. 

Near  the  West  Bank  town  of 
Ramallah,  about  200  Palestinian  uni- 
versity students  angered  by  Sharon's 
visit  threw  stones  at  Israeli  troops 
who  fired  rubber-coated  steel  bullets. 
Four  Palestinians  were  injured,  para- 
medics said.  "Jerusalem  is  the  capital 
of  Palestine.  Sharon,  get  out,"  read  a 
banner  carried  by  the  group. 

Palestinian  leader  Yasser  Arafat 
said  Sharon's  visit  was  "very  danger- 


The  Associated  Preis 


Violence  erupted  in  Jerusalem  after  the  leader  of  Israel's  hard-line 
opposition,  Ariel  Sharon,  visited  a  holy  site  in  the  area. 


ous"  and  that  Arab  and  Islamic 
nations  should  "move  very  fast"  in 
protecting  the  shrine. 

Also  Thursday,  an  Israeli  soldier 
critically  injured  in  a  bomb  attack  on 
an  army  convoy  in  the  Gaza  Strip 
died  of  his  wounds. 

The  attack,  blamed  on  Palestinian 
militants,  occurred  late  Wednesday  as 


troops  were  escorting  a  convoy  of 
Jewish  settlers  to  the  isolated  settle- 
ment of  Netzarim,  just  south  of  Gaza 
City.  An  officer  was  slightly  injured  in 
the  attack. 

No  Palestinian  group  has  claimed 
responsibility.  Barak  demanded  that 

SeeVI0UNa,pa9c28 


t^servationists  worry 
about  extinction  rate 


REPORT:  Humans  face 
most  blame  for  damage, 
endangerment  of  species 


ByMaraO.Bc)Uby  -^ 

The  AtMdAed  Press 

LONDON  -  A  wild  cat  that 
roams  the  Iberian  Peninsula,  a  dol- 
phin off  the  New  Zealand  coast,  a 
caviar-producing  sturgeon  and  a 
red-flowered  shrub  clinging  to  the 
mountains  of  Mauritius  are  all  tee- 
tering on  the  edge  of  extinction. 

Some  1 1,046  plants  and  animals 
risk  disappearing  forever,  accord- 
ing to  the  most  comprehensive 
analysis  of  global  conservation  ever 
undertaken,  the  World 

Conservation  Union's  2000  Red 
List  of  Threatened  Species.  The 
report,  released  Thursday,  exam- 
ined some  18,000  species  and  sub- 
species around  the  globe. 

But  scientists  acknowledge  that 
even  a  study  of  this  magnitude  only 
scratches  the  surface.  Earth  is  home 
to  an  estimated  14  million  species  - 


and  only  1.75  million  have  been  doc- 
umented. 

Many  may  become  extinct 
before  they-  are  even  identified, 
much  less  assessed  by  scientists 

"Global  society  would  be  horri- 
fied if  someone  set  fire  to  the 
Louvre  in  Paris  or  the  Metropolitajj 
Museum  in  New  York,  or  if  some- 
one blew  up  the  Pyramids  or  the  Taj 
Mahal,"  said  Russell  Mittermeier, 
president  of  the  Washington,  D.C.- 
based  Conservation  International. 

"Yet  every  time  a  forest  is  burned  • 
to  the  ground  in  Madagascar  or  the 
Philippines,  the  loss  to  global  soci- 
ety is  at  least  as  great,  yet  no  one 
pays  very  much  attention  -  and 
sadly  it  happens  every  day.*; . 

Conservationists  estimate  that 
the  current  extinction  rate  is  1,000 
to  10,000  times  higher  than  it  should 
be  under  natural  conditions.  That 
means  that  in  the  first  decades  of 
the  21st  century,  many  creatures  - 
from  a  majestic  Albatross  to  Asian 
freshwater  turtles  -  may  join  the 
ranks  of  the  flightless  Dodo  bird. 

SeeSKaB,pa9e26 


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«    Fraby,  September  29, 2000       1) 


m 


WAISJTEI3: 


Visionaries 
Creators 
Evaluators 
Problem-Solvers  '*. 


.^C^'*'*" 


Yaakov's  attention  to  detail  is  critical  when  documenting  and  analyzing 
the  structures  of  derivative  trades.  On  weekends,  its  his  keen  eye 
that  helps  him  make  an  impression.  What  do  you  see? 


MnR. 


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Goldman,  Sachs  &  Cdi. 

Investment  Management  Division 


Information  Session 

Tuesday,  October  3,  2000 
5:00  p.m.  -  7:00  p.m.  - 


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^s^^  Interviews 

^Triday,  October  27,  2000 
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Daily  Bruin  News 


14       Friday,  September  29, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Ne«n 


Friday,  Septembef  29. 2000       15 


New  school  for  the  home-schooled 


:—    :,  -  :;^.__._«    ____W'1.«--    --    -    --'-■-'--<-!.-''»-:''^^^^ 


.*■    ■.  ^ 


COLLEGE:  University 
emphasizes  morality; 
90  students  enrolled 


The  Associated  Ptess 


Michael  Farris,  president  of  the  Home  School  Legal  Defense  Association, 
stands  in  front  of  Patrick  Henry  College,  built  for  home-schooled  students. 


By  Matthew  Barakat 

The  Associated  Press 

PURCELLVILLE,  Va.  -  The 
nation's  first  college  for  students 
who  were  schooled  at  home  is  not 
what  you  would  call  a  party 
school. 

The  90  students  who  will  begin 
classes  Monday  at  the  new  Patrick 
Henry  College  can  expect  course- 
work  with  a  Christian  perspective, 
mandatory  morning  chapel  ser- 
vices and  a  requirement  to  show 


"evidence  of  a  personal  relation- 
ship with  Jesus  Christ."  Men  and 
women  won't  be  permitted  in  each 
other's  dorm  rooms. 

"It'll  be  a  refuge  from  sex, 
drufes  and  rock  and  roll.  Well,  at 
least  sex  and  drugs,"  founder 
Michael  Farris  said. 

Farris'  home  schooling  associa- 
tion estimates  more  than  1.5  mil- 
lion children  are  taught  at  home 
-by  their  parents,  and  the  number 
increases  by  15  percent  each  year. 

Many  home-schooled  young- 
sters are  from  fundamentalist 
Christian  families  who  believe  the 
schools  are  not  inculcating 
morals.  Other  parents  -  some  of 
them  high  academic  achievers 
themselves  -  cite  dissatisfaction 


wKh  the  quality  of  public  educa- 
tion and  worries  about  violence 
and  drugs.       '•■  ;        V^ 

Home-schooled  youngsters  in 
recent  years  have  won  national 
spelling  bees  and  other  competi- 
tions. 

According  to  Farris,  the  aver- 
age combined  SAT  score  at 
Patrick  Henry  is  above  1,200  out 
of  a  possible  1,600.  Students  have, 
turned  down  Georgetown, 
William  and  Mary  and  other  top 
schools  to  come  to  the  college, 
which  is  in  Virginia's  Loudoun 
County  about  3i5  miles  from 
Washington. 

"The  only  thing  different  is  you 


See  HOME,  page  26 


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NOTES 

From  page  1  " 

frorii  me  and  from  membCTS  of  Uie  fac- 
ulty to  halt  this  practice,"  he  said. 

But  some  professors  don't  think  the 
commercial  distribution  of  lecture 
notes  on  the  Internet  is  a  problem. 

"I  certainly  use  lecture  notes  and  I 
think  they're  invaluable,"  said  Robert 
Brown,  professor  of  art  history.  "I 
would  think  the  bill  is  kind  of  not  nec- 
essary if  the  lec- 
ture notes  autho-  ^— ^^-^^^— 
rized  by  the  unk. 
versity  are  not 
getting  across  to 
the  students." 

Brown,  who 
writes  his  own 
lecture  notes, 
said  he  believes 
that  the  problem 
can  work  itself 
out  without  gov- 
ernment interfer- 
ence because  stu- 
dents are  capable  Of  distingui^ing 
between  poor  and , well-written  lecture 
notes. 

"If  they're  good,  then  who  cares?" 
he  said.  "But  if  the  professor  does  not 
review  the  notes,  then  there  could  be  a 
problem." 


"We  are  currently 

reevaluating  (the 

lecture  notes)  piece  of 

business." 

Lisa  Wayne 

CollegeClub.com 


Sandbrook  said  Several  faculty 
members  complained  to  him  that  the 
lecture  notes  on  the  Internet  were-infe- 
rior  and  in  some  cases,  absolutely 
incorrect. 

"Students  relying  upon  them  would 
be  learning  the  opposite  of  what  was 
being  taught,"  he  said. 

Hall  said  there  were  no  means  of 
checking  over  the  notes  for  precision. 
But  this  probfem  is  not  unique  to 
commercial  Web  sites,  as  students  have 
found  inaccuracies  in  the  university's 
notes  as  well. 
.  "Occasionally 

—  we  gel  com- 
plaints by  people 
who  are  really 
meticulous,"  said 
Roberta  Ross,  a 
third-year  mathe- 
matics student 
who  works  with 
Lecture  Notes  at 
the  UCLA  Store. 
She  added 
they  sometimes 
_get  a  bad  note- 
taker,  but  this  problem  is  taken  care  of 
earlier  on  in  the  quarter. 

"Sometimes  the  notes  are  not  as 
accurate  as  the  actual  lecture  is.  1  find  a 
lot  of  typos,  mostly  in  science  classes," 
said  Paolo  Daniele,  a  third  year  French 
and  political  science  student. 


SPEECH 

Froinpagel 

meeting. 

Houston  said  some  students  asked 
her  about  her  speech,  allowing  her  to 
elaborate  on  what's  happening  in 
USAC. 

"I  told  them  that  there  was  a  group 
in  student  government,  they  are  com- 
posed of  a  slate,  they  run  every  year, 
and  they  tend  to  act  this  way  and 
exclude  students,"  Houston  said. 

"It's  wrong,  and  we've  had  a  lot  of 
conflict  at  council  meetings  ...  and  I'm 
trying  to  bring  some  more  representa- 
tion in,"  she  continued.  "The  people 
need  to  know  this  because  they  are  vot- 
ing these  people  in." 

Praxis  members  denied  her  allega- 
tions. 

"She  wants  to  address  the  general 
campus,"  said  Elisa  Scqueira,  one  of 
three  general  representatives  who  sit 
on  USAC  and  a  member  of  Praxis. 
"We  address  communities  that  don't 
usually  tend  to  get  addressed  as  well  as 
the  genera!  campus." 

Praxis  is  a  slate  similar  to  a  political 
party,  composed  primarily  of  minority 
students  belonging  to  the  student 
groups  African  Student  Union, 
Samahang  Pilipino,  Raza  Women  and 
La  Familia. 

Though  those  groups  made  up 
Praxis  in  the  last  undergraduate  elec- 
tion, the  Asian  Pacific  Coalition  and 
MEChA  have  also  lent  their  unofTicial 
support  since  that  time,  according  to 
External  Vic^esident  PortiirFcdro,  a 
Praxis  meafl^!  -'^ 

Thed^  many  cou|i<|iKmcmbcrs  did 
njXapmd  conv^^irffi,  they  expressed 
.^Corrcern  overJlpRntent  of  Houston's 
speech,  agdP^accusations. 

that's  ridiculous,  that  in 
minimal  amount  of  time  we've 
working  together  that  she's  made 
such  a  strong  accusation,"  said 
Campus  Events  Commissioner  Jared 
Sdtzcr,  one  of  the  independent  mem- 
bers of  USAC. 

Additionally,  others  chided 
Houston  for  different  reasons. 
Throughout  much  of  the  conflict. 
Houston  has  stressed  the  need  to  move 
beyond  racial  politics. 

"Basically  at  the  coundl  table,  she 
has  told  me  and  other  council  members 
not  to  pull  the  race  card,  so  for  her  to 
pull  the  race  card  is  hypocritical," 
Pedro  said.  '>' 

Since  being  -elected  president, 
Houston  and  f^raxis  members  have 
butted  hea4».  On  the  night  of  her  victo- 
ry, fortKpr  USAC  President  Mike  de  la 
R09K1  said,  "Her  victory  is  the  epito- 
ra^ibf  white  privilege." 
^*  Praxis  members  have  criticized 


Houston  in  the  past  as  not  being  sensi- 
tive to  issues  important  to  ethnic 
minorities  and  the  lesbian,  gay  and 
bisexual  community.  Some  council 
members  also  criticized  her  by  saying 
Houston  -  who  is  a  member  of  a  cam- 
pus Christian  group  -  has  allowed  her 
religious  beliefs  to  influence  her  deci- 
sions on  these  issues. 

At  last  Tuesday's  meeting,  for  exam- 
ple. Internal  Vice  President  Elias 
Enciso  called  Houston's  criticism  of  a 
"Queer  life  on  campus"  program  in  the 
upcoming  USAC  Welcome  Week 
homophobic. 

Houston  denied  the  allegations,  not- 
ing that  minorities  work  in  her  staff. 

"I  can't  let  my  religious  beliefs  get  in 
the  way  of  what's  in  the  best  interests  of 
students,"  Houston  said. 

She  went  on  to  say  that  she  doesn't 
feel  homophobic  attitudes  are  a  prob- 
lem at  UCLA.  "I  don't  think  anyone 
on  this  campus  is  (homophobic); 
maybe  those  people  who  are  from . 
wacko  backgrounds  or  something 
are." 

In  the  middle  of  a  summer  USAC 
meeting  Enciso  called  Houston  a  racist 
after  she  opposed  an  appointment  to 
the  Associated  Students  of  UCLA 
Board  of  Directors.  Houston  said  she 
feared  the  candidate's  decisions  would 
be  influenced  by  his  affiliation  with  the 
student  group  Samahang  Pilipino. 

Houston's  conflict  with  USAC 
members  has  risen  to  such  a  level  that 
after  one  meeting,  she  said  the  events 
that  transpired  were  equivalent  to  a 
hate  crime. 

"I  don't  see  the  racism  on  campus 
that  I  see  in  KerckhofT,"  Houston  said. 
But  most  USAC  members  cited  the 
need  to  move  beyond  each  other's  dif- 
ferences and  accusations,  and  to  work 
together.  ~ 

"I  think  we  need  to  learn  from  each 
other  and  work  together  and  not 
instantly  dismiss  our  colleagues 
because  of  'racism,'''  Seltzer  said.  "I 
think  that's  incredibly  premature." 

In  some  respects  council  members 
were  also  syrnpathetic  to  Houston's 
position.  ' 

''Yini're  the  head  of  USAC  so  that 
lejKTs  to  a  lot  of  criticism,"  Pedro  said. 
"The  president  has  to  be  very  willing  to 
hear  criticisms  and  take  them  with 
some  meaning.  I  know  in  talking  to  her 
that  I  have  tried  to  help  her  understand 
how  things  she  says  will  be  viewed  by 
the  campus  community." 

The  council  has  been  working 
together  since  just  before  summer  and 
though  many  members  are  hopeful 
things  will  get  resolved,  it  will  be  difTi- 
cult,  they  say 

'I  realize  you  can't  turn  a  sUp 
around  really,  really  quickly,"  Howston 
said. 


^- 


PHAT  NEW  LEVI'S*  JEANS  &  KHAKIS 


Mr 


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EFFECTS 

From  page  1  * 

Transportation  Services  and  other 
agencies  have  taken  steps  to  provide 
alternatives  to  MTA  service  through 
its  emergency  ride  matching  pro- 
gram. .  ..'  ■  ■ 

"We've  put  out  word  lo  the  cam- 
pus community  that  if  you  need 
help,  give  us  a  call  and  we'll  try  to 
match  you  with  a  carpool,  vanpool 
or  other  bus  service,"  said  Mark 
Stocki,  director  of  Transportation 
Services. 

Stocki  said  in  the  two  weeks  since 
Transportation  Services  started  the 
emergency  program,  several  hun- 
dred ride-sharing  inquiries  have 
been  processed. 

Stocki  said  Transportation 
Services  currently  has  no  plans  to 
increase  or  reroute  UCLA  bus  ser- 
vice in  response  to  the  strike  -  as 
they  did  in  the  aftermath  of  the  1994 
Northridge  earthquake  when  UCLA 
buses  were  routed  to  various  loca- 
tions in  downtown  L.A. 

"Looking  at  the  resources  that  are 
available  to  us,  the  best  and  smartest 
thing  to  do  is  what  we're  doing 
now,"  Stocki  said.- 

But  Stocki  said  he  would  like  to 
see  more  alliances  between  UCLA 
and  other  public  transportation  ser- 
vices, such  as  the  recently  imple- 
mented program  allowing  riders  to 
swipe  their  Bruin  Card  on  the  Santa 
Monica  Big  Blue  Bus  lines  for  free 
rides. 

While  the  strike  has  taken  a  toll  on 
the  economic  well-being  of  both 
businesses  and  individuals,  it  has 
meant  a  significant  increase  in  rider- 
ship  among  other  bus  lines  that  serve 
the  L.A.  community. 

Ridership  on  the  Big  Blue  Bus  line 
10,  which  runs  west  from  downtown 
L.A.  to  Santa  Monica,  has  nearly 


doubled,  according  to  Big  Blue  B 
General      Operations      Manager 
Stephanie  Negrjff.^__^- ' — 

Negriff  saidsincc  the  MTA  has- 
decided  not  to  sell  monthly  bus  pass- 
es for  October  if  the  strike  continues 
past  this  week,  the  Big  Blue  Bus  will 
accept      MTA      riders'      expired^ 
September  passes  for  the  duration  of  ^ 
the  strike. 

With  the  strike  threatening  to 
enter  its  third  week,  MTA  and  union 
-  negotiators  have  been  unable  to 
reach  an  agreement. 

In  a  statement  .  released 
Wednesday,  Yvonne  Brathwaite 
Burke,  LA.  County  Supervisor  and 
chairwoman  of  the  MTA  board  of 
directors,  expressed  her  disappoint- 
ment with  the  union's  refusal  to  set- 
tle. 

"(Union  leadership)  walked  awa 
from  a  package  worth  $43  millio 
more  in  wages  and  benefits  than  th 
MTA  is  currently  paying,"  Burk 
said  in  the  statement. 

But  union  leaders  say  offers  for  a' 
settlement  on  the  part  of  the  MTA 
are  inadequate  and  they  will  stay  off 
the  buses  until  a  more  acceptable 
agreement  can  be  reached. 

"I  thought  we  had  some  basis  and  ' 
a  criteria  set  to  start  negotiations 
toward  settlement,but«that  didn't 
happen,"  said  James  Williams,  a 
spokesman  for  the  United 
Transportation  Union,  in  a  state- 
ment released  Wednesday  on  the: 
UTU  Web  site. 

Until  a  firm  agreement  is  reached 
MTA  riders  will  have  to  continu 
finding  alternative  transportation. 

But  at  a  time  when  no  one  know 
when  MTA  services  will  be  revived 
Stocki  was  optimistic  about  an  en 
to  the  inconvenience  the  strike  ha 
caused. 

"I  just  don't  see  the  MTA  strike  as 
lasting  for  months  and  months,"  he»! 
said. 


HEALTH 

From  page  3 

campuses  has  been  at  the  forefront  of 
media  attention  for  the  last  decade, 
said  Pam  Viele,  director  of  Student 
Health  Education  in  the  Ashe  Center. 
Despite  popular  images  of  college, 
the  statistics  at  UCLA  are  less  "bleak. 
"The  rates  of  high-risk  alcohol  use 
at  UCLA  has  steadily  declined  where 
we're  at  less  than  half  the  national 
average,"  she  said. 

Viele  said  experts  define  binge 
drinking  as  having  more  than  four 
drinks  in  one  sitting.  One  drink  can 
consist  of  four  ounces  of  wine,  one 
can  of  beer,  or  one  shot  of  hard  liquor. 
From  a  study  of  UCLA  students 
conducted       in 

1999,  only  21  ^— ^-^— ^ 
percent  of  those 
surveyed  said 
they  took  more 
than  four  drinks 
per  sitting. 
"The  number 
important 
because  above 
that  number  you 

see  negative  con-      __^ 

sequences 
increasing,"  Viele  added. 

But  Viele  said  she  disagreed  with 
some  of  the  researchers'  standardiza- 
tion because  she  sees  little  connection 
with  it  and  students'  definition  of 
binge  drinking. 

"I  find  that  when  I  go  out  and  talk 
to  students,  what  is  conjured  up  in 
their  minds  when  you  talk  about  binge 
drinking  is  very  different  from  what 
researchers  are  referring  to,"  she 
said. 

Some  negative  aftereffects  of  binge 
drinking  can  include  having  sex  one 
later  regrets  or  engaging  in  high-risk 
activities,  such  as  drinking  and  dri- 
ving. /' 

In  additipif  to  health  risks,  Viele 
Mid  drinking  excessively  may  also 
lead  to  weight  gain.  The  real  danger 
occurs,  however,  when  students  start 
substituting  alcohol  for  food. 


In  addition  to  health 
risks,  Viele  said 

drinking  excessively 

may  also  lead  to 

weight  gain. 


"It's  not  uncommon  for  individu- 
als who  have  problems  with  body 
image  and  disordered  eating  to  substi- 
tute alcohol,"  she  said. 

"Very  often,  the  eating  restriction 
is  used  as  a  way  of  controlling  feel- 
ings," Viele  continued.  "Alcohol, 
because  of  its  chemical  properties, 
also  fulfills  that  need,  as  sort  of  a 
chemical  mood  regulator." 

Despite  all  the  paranoia  concern- 
ing the  freshman  15,  Viele  offered 
another  solution  to  the  alleged  weight 
gain  during  the  first  year  in  college. 

"A  lot  of  students  are  still  growing- 
part  of  the  weight  gain  may  just  be 
one  aspect  of  their  maturing  into  their 
full  adult  size,"  she  said.       ■: 

"In  most  cases,  the  weight  gain 
may  be  uncomfortable  for  some  peo- 
ple because  of  ail 
"■■■^^^^™^^  the  pressure  to 
be  rail-thin," 
Viele  continued. 
"But  the  weight 
gain  isn't  typical- 
ly associated 
with  any  harm- 
ful health 
affects." 

For  students 
concerned  about 
weight  gain  and 


the  stress  associated  with  starting  col-j 
lege,  Albert  emphasized  the  impor-j 
tance  of  exercise. 

"Physical  activity  is  critical  during 
college,"  she  said.  "It  helps  manage 
stress,  k?eps  your  energy  up,  pro- 
motes deeper,  sounder  sleep  and  pre- 
vent* weight  gain. 

.  "Students,  like  all  busy  adults, 
don't  have  time  to  exercise.  They  have 
to  make  time"  Albert  continued.  "The 
key  is  planning  ahead  to  make  it  fit 
into  your  schedules." 

Linda  Huverserian,  a  first-year 
undeclared  student,  said  the  variety  of 
help  available  can  help  with  weight 
management.  She  also  said  she  isn't 
worried  about  the  freshman  15. 

"You  just  have  to  discipline  your- 
self, just  like  in  everything  else,"  she 
said.  "The  freshman  15  is  a  myth  that 
can  be  overcome." 


THIS  IS  WHERE  IT  GETS  GOOD 


mm^^mm^Hfi^n  igrj;.' 


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X 


RAISES 

Frompa9e4 


Operating  OfTicer,  Hospital  !5ysfems 
of  the  UCLA  Medical  Center 
received  the  largest  raise  at  UCLA  - 
$61,800. 

"It  is  an  effort  to  recognize  the 
achievements  of  top  leadership,"  said 
VC  spokesman  Brad  Hayward. 

Last  year,  Regent  Velma  Montoya 
voted  against  such  raises  because  she 
said  there  was  concern  over  the  rea- 
soning behind  some  of  the  raises. 

But  she  said  this  year  during  the 
closed  session  discussion  of  the  rais- 
es, those  same  fears  were  raised. 
Montoya  said  it  was  brought  to  her 
attention  that  one  of  the  regents  said 
there  was  comparison  data  provided 
this  year  for  people  working  in  the 
UC  Office  of  the  President  -  though 
this  later  turned  out  to  be  false. 

Comparison  data  is  used  to  deter- 
mine whether  employees  are  under- 
paid for  their  position. 

When  asked  if  she  would  have 
voted  differently  knowing  this,  she 
said,  "Right  now,  1  think  it's  more 
important  to  get  the  information." 

The  action  comes  after  the  state 
allocated  $  19  million  to  the  university 
to  give  raises  for  lower-paid  employ- 
ees. 

"It  is  a  broad  program  to  make  the 
university  more  competitive,  but  this 
year  the  real  emphasis  has  been  on 
iower-paid  employees,"  he  contin- 
ued. V 

But  Howard  Ryan,  an  organizer 


for  University  |V»<wsional  and 
'echnical  Employees  union,  said  he 
wishes  the  uniyersity  could  have 
shown  more  of  a  concern  for  lo^ei- 
paid  workers  in  the  past  few  year*. 

"I  think  it  should  be  pointed  out 
that  they  have  gotten  raises  over  the 
last  two  years,"  Ryan  said.  "They 
seem  to  have  more  of  a  concern  for 
the  top-level  administrators  than 
workers  at  the  other  end  of  the  UC 
hierarchy." 

Unlike  the  past  two  years,  this  year 
there  were  no  across-the-board  equity 
raises,  which  are  given  to  make 
salaries  more  comf>etitive.  Instead, 
top  administrators  were  eligible  for 
market-based  merit  raises  which 
account  for  inflation.  j 

According  to  an  independentsur- 
vey  by  William  M.  Mercer,  Inc.Jthc 
UC  chancellors'  average  Septeinber 
2000  salary  was  19.4  percent  below 
the  salary  average  at  26  compartfble 
public  and  private  universities.    \ 

This  is  even  more  than  last  ^ar, 
when  top  administrators  were  9.5 
percent  behind  other  universities, 
despite  two  years  of  equity  raises, 
because  the  other  universities  had 
raised  salaries  as  well. 

Because  UC  administrators  *ere 
being  paid  less  than  those  with  cbm- 
parable  jobs,  some  students  did  kiot 
have  a  problem  with  the  pay  incr^  isc 


'Its  important  for  people  U 


paid  what  they  are  worth,"  said  aul 
Killion,  a  first-year  electrical  <  igi- 
neering  student.  "It's  a  lot  of  mo  ley 
but  its  not  more  than  what  other  feo- 
ple  with  similar  jobs  are  making. 


TACO 

From  page  5 

being  replaced. 

"They  assured  us  that  none  of  that 
(harmful  product)  made  it  to  our 
store,"  said  Nircnberg,  who  oversees 
restaurants  on  campus  including  Taco 
Bell. 

He  also  said  UCLA's  Taco  Bell  has 
a  small  storage  space  and  only  keeps 
enough  food  to  be  sold  in  two  or  three 
days. 

Some  students  said  though  theTaco 
Bell  on  campus  does  not  serve  the 


be 


"■'1- 


ak 


..,mi^mJi^ 


Fri4^,  September  29, 2000       21 


'  ■ 


dents  to  hold  the  FDA  accountaW  by 
pushing  the  administration  to  tei  all 
genetically  engineered  food  ind 
require  all  processed  foods  to]  be 
labeled,  something  the  FDA  is  curtknt- 
ly  not  required  to  do.  | 

"I  think  it's  outrageous  that:  an 
agency  that's  set  up  to  protect  the  wel- 
fare of  the  American  public  is  not 
doing  its  job,"  said  Marc  Nickel,  ttate 
board  chair  of  CALPIRG. 

While  some  short-term  effects  of 
Cry9C  are  known,  such  as  nausea, 
there  are  still  many  mysteries  sur- 
rounding genetically  engineered  food. 
Miles  said.  ' 


same  shells,  it  should  in(<Jrm  students. ....por  instance,  no  studies  have  been 


of  what's  happened  nonalh<bless. 

"Personally,  I 
don't  really 
care,"  said  Jacob 
Zepeda,  a  fourth- 
year  history  stu- 
dent. "But  I 
think  being  that 
the  people  here 
at  UCLA  are  so 
delicate  about 
everything, 
(Taco  Bell) 

should  have  told         ■ 
them." 

The  Genetically  Engineered  Food 
Alert  group,  founded  in  part  by 
CALPIRG,  discovered  the  Kraft-pro- 
duced taco  shells  were  potentially 
harmful  during  a  random  testing  of  yel- 
low com. 

Fairchild  said  CALPIRG  will  begin 
educating  students  about  genetically 
engineered  food  as  a  result  of  this  inci- 
dent. 

"It's  such  a  new  issue,"  Fairchild 
said.  "Everyone  has  to  learn  about  it 
for  the  first  time." 

She  also  said  it  is  important  for  stu- 


>::Vv: 


"It's  outrageous  that 

you're  eating  this  corn 

that's  suitable  for 

animal  food." 

Merriah  Fairchild 

CalPIRG  organizer 


ma#SontheJong- 
terift  effects,  or 
Cr>'9C  consuinp- 
tion.  A  so, 

because  it  vas 
discovered  in  the 
taco  shells  du  ing 
a  random  i  m- 
pling,  hart  ful 
genetically  e  igi- 
neered  ingredi- 
ents may  exist  in 
other  processed 

foods.  * 

"This  very 
well  could  be  just  the  tip  of  the  ice- 
berg," Miles  said. 

CALPIRG  members  said  while! 
incidimt  is  unfortunate,  it  will  ho; 
ly  spark  improvement  in  govemr 
regulations. 

"I  think  it's  a  setback,  but  I 
think  it's  an  opportunity  to  educat 
public  about  this  new  technolo^." 
Fairchild  said. 


For  nnore  information  go  to 
www.ptrg.org/ge  or  wvAv.tacobell.C  m/ 
kraftfbods/indexhtm 


A 


CASUALS 

From  page  5 

he  doesn't  have  to  follow  it." 

Currendy,  the  union  is  looking  to 
file  a  group  grievance  on  behalf  of 
other  employees  unless  the  university 
will  grant  other  casual  employees 
career  itatus  without  legal  interven- 
tion, Lcyf  said. 

Additionally,  after  the  UC  finishes 
revising  its  labor  policies,  long-term 
casual  employment  could  become  a 
notMSSue,  Candella  said, 
y^ertainly  if  they  raised  an  issue 


which  we  didn't  think  we  could  lis 
pute,  we'd  try  to  resolve  it  shorf  of 
going  to  a  full-on  grievance," 
Lynne  Thompson,  manager  of  huifan 
resources  at  UCLA. 

The  university,  in  recent  contact 
negotiations,  has  offered  to  end 
possibility  of  casual  employment 
changing  its  policies,  union  organi:  ;rs 
said. 

But  organizers  are  still  lookini 
retroactive  benefits  for  casual  em|^y 
ees,  because  simply  getting  career 
tus  now  will  not  account  for  past 
worked,  which  can  determine  fu<|rc 
benefits,  like  retirement. 


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ELECTION 

-from  page  6 

iderit  in  the  first  round  of  the"-elw>- 
tions,"  the  opposition  leaders  once 
again  called  on  the  members  of  the 
State  Electoral  Commission  to  "pub- 
licly acknowledge  the  true  election 
results." 

The  influential  Serbian  Orthodox 
Church  recognized  Kostunica's  elec- 
tion victory  and  addressed  him  as 
"president-elect."  The  church  holds 
no  direct  political  power  in 
Yugoslavia,  but  its  dictates  hold  great 
moral  sway  in  a  population  that  rec- 
ognizes it  as  a  pillar  of  rectitude  in  a 
corrupt  society. 

Montenegro's  pro-Western  gov- 
ernment also  recognized  Kostunica's 
apparent  victory. 

European  Union  officials  said 
Thursday  the  15  EU  members  will 
not  back  a  second  round.  In  Brussels, 
EU  officials  said  the  organization 
will  hold  off,  for  now,  on  lifting  eco- 
nomic and  other  sanctions  against 
Serbia  until  Kostunica  has  been 
installed  as  president. 

The  statements  came  the  morning 
after  more  than  200,000  joyful 
Milosevic  opponents  swarmed  the 
capital's  downtown  district,  waving 
banners  and  chanting,  "He's  fin- 
ished." There  was  no  visible  police 
presence  near  the  crowd. 

The  biggest  demonstration  ever 
against  Milosevic  completely 
blocked  Belgrade's  main  streets 
around  Republic  Square.  Much  of 
the  downtown  area  teemed  with  peo- 
ple. 

The  victorious  atmosphere  sug- 
gested the  pro-democracy  Serbs  no 


longer  fear  Milosevic's^  autocratic 
government,  sensing  that  he  may  not 
be  able  to  hold  on  much  longer. 
j/  An  opposition  member  of  the  elec- 
toral comfnisisifon  said  the  head  of  the 
body  presented  the  f3  members  with 
the  returns  just  before  midnight  - 
shortly  after  the  crowds  had  scattered 
for  the  night. 

Opposition  members  were  not 
aHowed  to  inspect  the  returns,  but  the 
commission  voted  to  approve  them, 

'0-3.        ,  :.;•  ■,:::r^^■:. :■_■:<■: 

Some  members  of  the  election 
commission  reportedly  resigned 
from  their  posts  due  to  "pressures 
they  were  under  to  falsify  the 
results,"  the  media  reported.  Among 
them  was  Bojan  Pudar,  the  deputy 
head  of  the  commission,  FoNet  news 
agency  said. 

Sinisft  Nikolic  said  300  of  the  more 
than  10,000  polling  stations  never 
reported,  and  he  accused  the  com- 
mission of  reducing  the  overall  total 
by  600,000  votes. 

President  Clinton  and  other 
Western  leaders  have  dismissed  talk 
of  a  runoff.  "The  government's  offi- 
cial election  commission  has  no  cred- 
ibility whatever,"  Clinton  said. 

Richard  Holbrooke,  the  U.S. 
ambassador  to  the  United  Nations, 
said  the  United  States  will  move  to 
lift  economic  sanctions  against 
Yugoslavia  and  restore  its  rights  as  a 
U.N.  member  state  if  Kostunica  is 
installed  in  Belgrade. 

But  in  Moscow,  Russian  Foreign 
Minister  Igor  Ivanov  said  that  Russia 
will  not  join  western  governments  in 
calling  for  Milosevic  to  step  down. 

"Russia  won't  pressure  anyone  in 
Yugoslavia,"  Ivanov  said.  "This  is  an 
internal  affair  of  Yugoslavia." 


tive,"  said  FDA  Commissioner  Jane 
Henney,  who  approved  mifepristone 
based  on  studies  that  found  it  92  per- 
cent to  95  percent  effective  in  causing 
abortion 

Complications  arp  rare;  serious 
bleeding  occurs  in  I  percent  of 
women.  But  the  pill-caused  abortion 
requires  three  doctor  visits  and,  to 
ensure  it  is  performed  accurately,  the 
FDA  restricted  its  use  to  doctors  with 
certain  training  and  mandated  that 
detailed  patient-information 

brochures  be  given  to  every  woman. 

Proponents  hailed  FDA's  move. 
Although  some  doctors  already  use  a 
cancer  drug  called  methotrexate  to 
cause  abortion  -  legal  although  not 
formally  FDA-approved  -  they  said 
mifepristone  will  increase  access  to 
the  nonsurgical  method. 

"At  long  last,  science  trumps  anti- 
abortion  politics  and  medical 
McCarthyism,"  said  Eleanor  Smeal 
of  the  Feminist  Majority  Foundation. 

Mifepristone  may  "turn  the  tide 
against  anti-choice  intimidation," 
because  doctors  who  don't  offer  sur- 
gical abortion  can  use  the  pill  in  pri- 
vate offices  instead  of  protester-tar- 
geted clinics,  added  Planned 
Parenthood  president  Gloria  Feldt. 

But  anti-abortion  groups,  which 
fought  mifepristone  by  threatening 
U.S.  drug  companies  with  boycotts, 
pledged  to  continue  fighting. 

"We  will  not  tolej;*te  the  FDA's 
decision  to  apprawc  the  destruction 
of  innocent  luimin  persons  through 
chemical  jroortion,"  said  Judie 
Brown  opwie  American  Life  League. 

"Neyfer  before  has  the  FDA 
appnyved  a  drug  intended  to  kill  peo- 
ple/ said  Rep.  Tom  Cobum,  R- 
Olcla.,  who  promised  legislation  call- 
ing for  severe  limits  on  which  doctors 
could  adfninister  mifepristone. 

On  the  campaign  trail.  Bush  called 
the  FDA's  d*dsion  "wrong,"  saying 
^^".1  fear  thj|t  making  this  abortion  pill 
widespread  will  make  abortrans  more 
■-•nd  4fk)re  oormnon."  His  campaign 
said  if  elected.  Bush  wouldn't  have 
the  authority  to  overturn  the  FDA's 
decision,  but  he  would  order  a  pro^ 
of  whether  the  agency's  review  (was 


!.\K 


influenced  by  politics. 

Gore  praised  the  pill's  availability. 
"Today's  decision  is  not  about  poli 
tics,  but  the  health  and  safety  of 
American  women  and  a  woman's 
fundamental  right  to  choose,"  he 
said. 

Health  experts  note  abortions  did 
not  increase  when  RU-486  debuted 
in  France  in  1988,  or  later  across 
Europe. 

The  pilfs  journey  to  the  United 
States  began  in  1995.  when  French 
manufacturer  Roussel-Uclaf  turned 
over  U.S.  rights  to  the  drug  to  the 
nonprofit  Population  Council  of 
New  York.  The  council  began  clinical 
trials  needed  for  FDA  approval  and 
created  Danco  Laboratories,  a  small 
company  that  will  market  mifepris- 
tone. 

The  FDA  in  1996  declared 
mifepristone  a  safe  and  effective 
early  abortion  method,  but  delayed 
full  approval  because  Danco  had 
problems  satisfying  manufacturing 
and  other  final  requirements. 

President  Clinton  said  the  FDA's 
four-year  investigation  shows  the 
decision  was  "purely  one  of  science 
and  medicine."  He  said  the  FDA 
"bent  over  backward  to  do  a  lot  of 
serious  inquiries. ...  They  took  so  long 
to  try  to  make  sure  they  were  making 
a  good  decision." 

But  the  National  Right  to  Life 
Committee  condemned  the  FDA's 
unprecedented  decision  to  let  Danco 
keep  secret  the  identity  of  the  manu- 
facturer, reportedly  located  in  China, 
that  actually  makes  the  pills. 

"The  public  has  a  right  to  know 
whether  the  abortion  pill  will  be 
imported  from  the  People's  Republic 
of  China,  a  nation  that  is  a  leading 
source  of  tainted  drugs,"  NRLC  said. 
FDA's  Henney  cited  anti-abortion 
violence  in  her  decision  to  keep  the 
manufacturer  secret,  and  to  keep 
secret  the  names  of  FDA  employees 
who  scrutinized  the  drug.  The  FDA 
also  increased  security  in  some  of  its 
offices. 

"The  climate  around  the  reproduc- 
tive rights  issue  and  personal  safety 
issues  are  in  our  minds,"  she  said. 

But  FDA  inspectors  did  travel  to 
the  mifepristone  factory,  and  it 
passed  all  federal  safety  and  quality 
rules,  she  said. 


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EURO 

Froln  page  6 


Rasmussen,^"We  will  res|}ect  the 

resuJt."  "^./-^r-^-- :-■••.■-;■■;■.  ■;'-■■,;■}; 

Pia  Kjaersgaard,  the  leader  of  far- 
right  Danish  People's  Party,  called 
the  result  a  "great,  great  victory." 

It  was  the  Scandinavian  country's 
fifth  referendum  on  EU-related 
issues  since  it  joined  what  became  the 
European  Union  in  1973.  Despite  a 
reputation  as  EU  skeptics,  Danes 
have  only  said  "no"  in  one  of  those . 
referendums  -  in  1992,  when  they 
rejected  the  Maastricht  treaty  for  a 
common  currency  and  a  common 
defense. 

Danish  radio  reported  that  86  per- 
cent of  eligible  voters  cast  ballots  in 
the  referendum. 

"This  is  not  a  nationalistic  no,  it's  a 
popular  no,  it  is  a  European  n9," 
Holger  K.  Nielsen  of  the  Socialist 
People's  Party  told  supporters  in  par- 
liament as  he  held  a  glass  of  cham- 
pagne. 

Several  dozen  left-wing,  anti-euro 
activists  marched  toward  the  parlia- 
ment square  but  no  trouble  was 
reported. 

"They  call  it  a  joy  march."  police 
spokesman  Remming  Steen  Munch 
said.  "We'll  keep  an  eye  on  them." 

European  leaders  sought  to  mini- 
mize any  potential  damage  to  the  cur- 
rency, which  has  declined  more  than 
25  percent  in  value  against  the  dollar 
since  it  was  introduced  by  II  EU 
members  in  January  1999. 

French  Prime  Minister  Lionel 
Jospin,  whose  country  holds  the  six- 
month  rotating  EU  presidency,  said 
that  a  rejection  would  not  pressure 
the  euro  because  Denmark's  econo- 
my makes  up  only  a  small  part  of  the 
EU's  economy. 

"I  have  a  lot  of  respect  for  this 
country  but  its  size  for  the  European 
economy  is  not  major,"  he  said  in 
Paris.  "I  do  not  think  (a  rejection)  will 
be  a  problem  for  a  currency  which 
must  be  a  stable  currency  at  the 
appropriate  level." 

The  euro  took  effect  in  1 1  of  1 5  EU 
countries  in  January  1999  for  corpo- 
rate and  investment  transactions, 
with  coins  and  bills  to  be  introduced 
in  January  2002.  Denmark,  Britain 
and  Sweden  opted  out,  while  Greece, 
initially  barred  from  membership 
because  of  high  inflation  and  a  bud- 
get deficit,  will  join  on  Jan.  I. 


EU  officials  jijanned  to  meet 
FridSyTn  Brussels,  Belgium,  to  dis- 
cuss the  currency  after  the  Danish 
vote.  The  week  earlier  market  inter- 
vention by  central  banking  officials  in 
Europe,  the  United  States  and  Japan 
intervened  to  stop  its  slide  against  the 
dollar. 

Thursday's  vote  also  was  being 
closely  watched  by  Sweden  and 
Britain,  whose  governments  support 
joining  the  EU  but  plan  to  let  the  pub- 
lic decide  in  as-yet  referendums.  Even 
non-EU  member  Norway  was  watch- 
ing as  it  undergoes  renewed  debate 
on  whether  to  join  the  trading  bloc  at 
all. 

The  Swedish  and  British  prime 
ministers  played  down  the  potential 
impact  on  future  votes  in  their  coun- 
tries. 

"When  we  get  to  our  referendum, 
nobody  will  be  talking  about  the 
Danish  referendum,"  Swedish  Prime 
Minister  Goeran  Persson  said  at  a 
news  conference  in  Stockholm  after 
learning  of  the  opposition's  lead. 

Denmark  already  ties  its  fiscal  and 
monetary  decisions  to  those  made  by 
the  11 -member  euro  zone,  which 
forms  the  bulk  of  its  export  market. 
Supporters  say  membership  in  the 
European  Union  will  give  it  more 
influence.  - 

Many  opponents  say  the  euro 
threatens  Denmark's  extensive  wel- 
fare state  and  will  lead  to  an  erosion 
of  sovereignty,  as  more  powers  are 
ceded  to  EU  headquarters  in 
Brussels,  Belgium,  and  the  European 
Central  Bank  in  Frankfurt,  Germany. 
Social  worker  Fritz  Olsen  said  he 
made  up  his  mind  to  reject  the  euro  as 
soon  as  the  government  announced 
the  referendum  in  February. 

"If  you  say  yes,  you  change  to  a 
central  bank  where  you  haven't  got 
any  more  democratic  influence,"  said 
Olsen,  59,  as  he  waited  for  a  bus  on  a 
street  named  after  Danish  fairy  tale 
writer  Hans  Christian  Andersen. 

The  results  resembled  the  June 
1992  vote,  when  50.7  percent  of  vot- 
ers stunned  fellow  EU  nations  by 
rejecting  the  Maastricht  treaty,  while 
49.3  percent  were  in  favor.  The  tiny 
majority  led  to  another  plebiscite  the 
following  year  on  the  revised  treaty 
that  allowed  Danes  to  stay  outside  the 
euro  and  a  common  defense  clause. 

The  countries  that  accept  the  euro 
are  Germany,  France,  Italy,  Finland, 
Netherlands,  Belgium,  Luxembourg, 
Ireland,  Portugal,  Spain  and  Austria. 


INTERNET 

From  page  10 

"This  is  not  time  for  study.  This  is 
the  time  for  action  to  prevent  discrim- 
ination that  would  drive  up  prices  for 
consumers  and  limit  the  choices  that 
are  available,"  said  Gene 
Kimmelman  of  Consumers  Union. 

Both  companies  reiterated  this 
week  their  pledge  to  give  Internet 
providers  other  than  AOL  nondis- 
criminatory access  to  Time  Warner's 
high-speed  cable  systems. 

"We  think  it  would  be  better  for  us 
to  demonstrate  in  the  market  that 


these  things  work  ...  as  opposed  to 
having  a  piecemeal  approach  applied 
through  the  merger  review  process," 
said  AOL  Chairman  Steve  Case  at  a 
hearing  on  Capitol  Hill  Wednesday. 

But  FCC  Commissioner  Gloria 
Tristani  warned  that  the  ongoing 
examination  of  whether  to  regulate 
Internet  cable  access  does  not  pre- 
clude the  agency  from  imposing  con- 
ditions on  any  specific  case  under 
review. 

"Protection  of  the  public  interest  is 
our  touchstone,  and  I  will  not  hesitate 
to  act  while  the  answers  to  these  ques- 
tions are  still  meaningful  for 
America's  citizens,"  she  said. 


UNINSURED 

From  page  10 


v-ir.  •'. 


their  success." 

The  report  is  "a  good  news-bad 
news  situation,"  said  Diane 
Rowland,  executive  director  for  the 
Kaiser  Commission  on  Medicaid  and 
the  Uninsured.  "There's  a  decline  in 
the  kinds  of  increases  we've  seen.  The 
worst  news  is  we  still  hhve  42  million 
uninsured." 

Added  Census  Bureau  analyst 
Robert  Mills:  "The  driving  force 
behind  this  improvement  was  an 
increase  in  the  likelihood  of  people 
having  employment-based  health 
Ji^Urance." 

Both  health  care  reform  advocates 
and  industry  supporters  used  the 
report  to  promote  their  positions  on 


an  issue  that  has  drawn  attention  on 
Capitol  Hill  and  the  presidential  cam- 
paign. 

Chip  Kahn,  president  of  the 
Health  Insurance  Association  of 
America,  said  that  the  data  proved 
that  "a  private,  employer-based  sys- 
tem works." 

He  cited  figures  showing  that  since 
1993,  the  number  of  people  covered 
under  employment-based  policies 
increased  from  148  million  to  172 
million. 

"It's  a  function  of  more  jobs  being 
created  and  a  tight  labor  market 
which  is  encouraging  more  employ- 
ers to  offer  more  coverage,"  said 
Kahn.  placing  the  onus  on  Congress 
"to  reduce  that  number  by  tens  of 
millions." 

S««UNWSUI»,pa9c26 


.■  ..■  ■   .,    •■'-..     ■'■■■'■  ".,  ■;  L*f.-; 


^cd.:%'v:';.';;  •:'-.,■' ;■;;:;:  ■■■', 


Dtiiy  Brain  News 


F»Uy,  September  29, 2000       25 


The  University  Religious 

Conference  at  UCLA 

Welcomes  You! 

Contact  US  for  information  about  any  of  our  member  groups: 


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fiiiiiiit 


Spirited  Shabbat  Service  followecf  by  dinner  and 
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Friday,  October  6, 6:30  p.m. 

900  HUgard  Avenue,  Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 
RSVP  (310)  208-3081  V    , 

E-mail:  hillel(Sucla.cdu 
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Contemporary  Worship:  Sundays,  7:00  p.m. 

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Website:  www.ulc.la.ca.us 


University  Religious 
Conference  at  UCLA 


The  University  Religious  Conference  at  UCLA 

advances  ongoing  dialogue  and  action  that 

fosters  the  practice  of  the  various  religious 

traditions,  encourages  trust  and  respect 

among  diverse  religious  groups,  and 
promotes  religious,  spiritual,  and  ethical 
.         values  in  the  campus  community. 

*  <x  t  C 


'',"'* 


'^-  Islamic  Center 

of  Southern  California 

Sheik  Sadullah  Khan 

Imam  to  UCLA  students 

Office  at  the  University  Religious  Conference: 
900  Hilgard  Avenue,  Room  310,  Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 

The  Islamic  Center  of  Southem  California 
434  South  Vermont.  Los  Angeles,  CA  90020 

Telephone:  (213)  382-9200,  E-mail:  Sadullah@laofRcet.com 

WebtHe:  wMvw.islamctr.org/icsc 


THE  IINIYERSmr 


f 


ASSOCUnON 


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For  more  information,  please  contact 
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e)at  10:15. 

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] 


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Welcome  Barbecue 

Friday,  October  6,  6  p.m. 

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STUDIES 

RECOMMENDS 

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BL 


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UNINSURED 

From  page  24 

r 

The  report  was  not  entirely 
encouraging,  said  Ron  Pollack,  exec- 
utive director  of  the  Washington- 
based  consumer  group.  Families 
USA. 

For  instance,  he  said,  32.4  percent 
of  people  living  below  the  poverty 
line  remained  uninsured,  along  with 
47.5  percent  of  low-income,  full-time 
workers. 

"Many  people  lost  health  coverage 
when  they  moved  from  welfare  into 
entry-level  jobs  that  have  no  health 
benefits,"  Pollack  said.  "The  most 
sobering  part ...  is  that  these  very  hi^ 
numbers  come  at  a  time  when  the 
economy  is  doing  very  m^II." 

Among  the  states,  25.6  percent  of 
the  residents  in  New  Mexico  ware 
uninsured  in  1999,  the  highest  in  the 
country.  Texas  ranked  next-to-iast, 
with  23.3  percent;  in  1998,  it  was  50th 
at  24.5  percent. 

Rhode  island  had  the  smallest  per- 
centage of  uninsured  in  1999, 6.9  per- 


cent, followed  by  Minnesota  at  8  per- 
cent. 

Texas^Gov.  George  W.  Bush,  the 
Republican  presidential  nominee, 
has  proposed  a  number  of  health 
insurance  initiatives,  including  a  tax 
credit  of  up  to  $2,000  per  family  to 
help  low-income  working  Americans 
buy  health  insurance. 

Democratic  candidate  Al  Gore 
has  proposed  expanding  the  federal- 
state  health  plan  for  children  to  enroll 
more  children  and  allow  parents  to 
join.  < 

Among  the  report's  other  findings, 
more  Hispanics  (33.4  percent)  were 
likely  to  be  uninsured  than  any  other, 
major  racial  or  ethnic  group.  Still,  the 
percentage  fell  from  35.3  in  1998. 

In  addition^  adults  age  18  to  24 
remained  the  least  likely  to  be  unin- 
sured (29  percent),  but  the  figure  was 
30  percent  in  1998. 

The  percentage  of  uninsured  for- 
eign-born residents  also  declined 
from  34.1  percent  to  33.4  percent. 
The  percentage  for  U.S.-bom  resi- 
dents fell  nine-tenths  of  a  percentage 
point,  to  13.5  percent. 


HOME 

From  page  14 

don't  have  to  dumb  down  the  vocab- 
ulary when  you're  teaching  home- 
schooled  kids,"  said  Farris,  a 
Republican  nominee  for  lieutenant 
governor  in  1993  and  founder  of  the 
Home  School  Legal  Defense 
Association. 

As  for  the  students'  unfamiliarity 
with  classrooms,  Farris  said:  "The 
vast  majority  have  taken  a  class  or 
two  some  place.  They've  been  going 
to  Sunday  school  for  13  years.  It's  not 
like  they're  walking  out  of  the  jungles 
of  Papua  New  Guinea." 

Kerry  Medaris,  19,  of  Fairfax 
Station,  said  she  was  taught  largely 
by  her  mother  at  home  but  directed 
her  own  learning  as  she  grew  older, 
with  her  mother  administering  tests. 

"1  think  that's  why  colleges  are 
looking  at  home-schoolers  so  favor- 
ably," said  Kerry's  father,  John 
Medaris.  "They  are  self-motivated 
and  self-taught,  and  that  makes  for  a 
really  good  student." 

The  college  has  just  one  major, 
government.  Farris  said  he  wants  to 
expand  the  curriculum  to  business, 
journalism  and  law,  and  plans  to  seek 
accreditation  from  the  Southern 
Association  of  Colleges  and  Schools, 
a  process  that  could  take  a  few  years. 

Because  the  school  accepts  no  gov- 
ernment aid  and  prohibits  its  stu- 
dents from  doing  the  same,  it  has  the 
right  to  discriminate  on  the  basis  of 


religion. 

Joanna  Kurlowich  of  Columbia, 
S.C.,  said  she  chose  Patrick  Henry  so 
that  she  won't  have  to  spend  her  time 
defending  her  Christian  beliefs  to 
skeptical  professors. 

"If  a  professor  had  conflicting 
beliefs,  I  would  be  forced  to  spend  a 
significant  amount  of  time  defending 
my  own  beliefs  instead  of  learning," 
she  said.  "I  want  to  learn,  come  out 
strong  and  ready  to  stand  up  for  my 
beliefs." 

The  43-acre  campus  is  in  the  shad- 
ow of  the  Blue  Ridge  Mountains.  The 
dormitories  will  not  be  ready  until 
November,  and  students  will  stay 
with  host  families  in  the  meantime. 
The  main  campus  building  will  hold 
classes,  a  dining  hall  and  the  library. 
Plans  call  for  a  gymnasium  and  other 
buildings  in  the  years  to  come. 

The  construction  has  been  paid  for 
in  cash  from  the  S6  million  the  school 
has  raised,  largely  from  Farris'  home- 
schoolers  organization.  Farris  said 
the  college  refuses  to  borrow  "as  a 
matter  of  institutional  convictions." 

Paul  Houston,  executive  director 
.  of  the  American  Association  of 
School  Administrators,  which  repre- 
sents public-school  superintendents, 
said  he  is  concerned  that  students  at 
Patrick  Henry  won't  be  exposed  to 
people  of  different  philosophies. 

"When  does  this  child  learn  to  face 
the  real  worid?"  he  asked.  "They  cer- 
tainly have  the  right  to  do  this.  But  1 
wouldn't  want  my  kids  in  that  clois- 
tered environment." 


SPEaES 

Frompage12 

The  primary  reason:  humans. 
Everything  from  expanding  cities  to 
deforestation,  agriculture  and  fishing 
pose  a  significant  threat  to  the  plan- 
et's biodiversity.  In  the  last  500  years, 
some  816  species  have  disappeared  - 
some  permanently,  while  others  exist 
only  in  artificial  settings,  such  as  zoos. 

With  11,046  more  at  significant 
risk  of  being  confined  to  the  history 
books,  and  4,595  on  the  brink  of 
being  declared  threatened,  conserva- 
tionists are  gloomy-. 

"The  extinction  crisis  that  we've  all 
been  talking  about  for  a  long  time 
looks  as  if  it  is  fast  becoming  a  reali- 
ty," said  Craig  Hilton-Taylor,  of  the 
World  Conservation  Union's  British 
branch.  "And  it  is  a  far  more  serious 
problem  than  ever  antidpated." 

Since  the  last  assessment,  carried 
out  in  1996,  the  number  of  mammals 
identified  as  critically  endangered  - 
those  closest  to  extinction '-  increased 
from  169  to  180.  The  number  of  birds 
rose  from  168  to  182. 

According  to  the  2000  Red  List, 
6n(  in  every  four  mammals  and  one 
in  every  eight  birds  is  at  risk. 

Statistics  for  plants  are  more  diffi- 


cult to  assess  because  so  many  are  yet 
to  be  analyzed.  But  conifers,  the  most 
studied  group,  suggest  a  depressing 
trend  -  some  16  percent  are  at  risk, 
according  to  the  report. 

"This  time  we  were  scared  by  our 
own  results,"  said  Maritta  Koch- 
Weser,  director-general  of  the  Worid 
Conservation  Union,  in  an  interview 
from  her  office  outside  Geneva. 

"Our  worid  is  a  result  of  evolution 
over  3.5  billion  years  and  we  are  able 
in  just  four  years  to  do  away  with  so 
much.  The  magnitude  of  what  we've 
done  is  philosophically  hard  to  under- 
sund." 

The  Red  List  is  produced  by  the 
World  Conservation  Union's  Species 
Survival  Commission,  a  network  of 
some  7,000  species  experts  working  in 
almost  every  country  in  the  worid. 

The  conservationists  assign  each 
species  to  one  of  eight  categories, 
depending  on  such  factors  as  the  rate 
of  dedine,  population  numben  and 
the  size  of  the  geographic  area  where 
it  is  found. 

Species  facing  a  significant  threat 
of  extinction  are  classified  as  critically 
endangered,  endangered  or  vulnera- 
ble. Examples  range  from  the  Iberian 
lynx,  of  which  only  600  remain,  to  the 


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Friday,  Septnnlief  29, 2000       27 


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28       Friday,  September  29, 2000 


D«ly  Bqwi  Ncwrs 


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OPENS  FRIDAY.  SEPTEMBER  29  ATA  THfATRE  NEAR  YOU' 


SPECIES  - 

From  page  26  ■  >.    ^ 

Brazilian  Guitar  Fish,  whose  num- 
bers decliifed  by  96  percent  due  to 
overfishing.  \  v.  ,.';V  'v  .' . •  /  ^  V 

Indonesia,  India,  Brazit  and  China 
are  among  the  countries  with  the 
most  threatened  mammals  and  birds, 
according  to  the  2000  report.  The 
United  States  fell  out  of  the  top  20 
list,  replaced  this  time  by  Cameroon 
and  Russia.   . 


Conservationists  ...are 

seeking  more  legal 

protection  for  at-risk 

animals  and  habitats. 


The  United  States  did  rank  top  of 
the  chart  for  the  most  threatened 
species  of  fish  and  invertebrates.  But 
experts  said  that  is  slightly  misleading 
because  the  status  of  these  creatures 
has  been  more  closely  analyzed  in  the 
United  States  than  elsewhere. 

Malaysia,  which  has  lost  a  signifi- 
cant proportion  of  its  tropical  timber 
trees,  tops  the  list  foe  endangered 
plant  species.  Conservationists  said 
the  latest  report  can  be  used  to-edu- 
categovemments  and  people  world- 
wi^fe!^  Ultimately,  they  are  seeking 
more  legal  protection  for  at-risk  ani- 
mals and  habitats,  the  creation  of 
conservation  "hot  spots"  to  protect 
areas  facing  grave  danger  and  a  mas- 


Waoderjitg  albalrMS 


A  study  released  Thursday  of  same 
18,000  speaes  and  subspecies     around 
the  M*or<d  found  many  stand  a  Qood 
chance  of  Ijecoming  e«inct.  The  mam 
reason,  experts  say,  is  humans  — 
growing  cKies,  (arming,  hunting  and 
pollution  destroy  the  species  habitats 
and  threaten  the  planets  biodiversity. 

Species  ckxsesi  to  ' ' 
extinction  :  .        • 


a»lM«M 

2000 

MrO* 

Kmpm*9 

JMI 

mgm^Al 

ii 

iUo 


AinpMWafW 

tm  16 


Iberian  lynx 


Source:  The  World  Comerv*tton  Lfnton 


sive  increase  in  .spending  above  the 
estimated  $6  billion  currently  spent 
worldwide. 

"As  a  society  we  don't  care  what  : 
are  we  going  to  leave  behind  for  peo-  j 
pie  that  come  after  us,"  sai^  Koch-  \ 
Weser.  "In  many  cases,  we  don't  even  | 
know  what  we  are  losing."  j 


VIOLENCE 

From  page  12 

Arafat  do  more  to  rein  in  Islamic  mil- 
itants jwho  are  trying  to  sabotage 
Mideast  peace  efforts. 

In  the  clashes  at  the  Jerusalem 
shrine,  Palestinian  protesters,  many 
of  them  teenagers  still  carrying  their 
school  bags,  threw  stones,  bottles  and 
even  a  metal  trash  can  at  hundreds  of 
helrneted  police  in  full  riot  gear,  some 
huddling  behind  large  Plexiglas 
shields.  The  troops,  deployed  around 
the  shrine  to  protect  Sharon,  fired 
several  rounds  of  rubber  bullets  at  the 
protesters  and  struck  them  with  clubs 
to  push  them  back. 

At  least  three  Palestinians  were 
injured  by  rubber  bullets,  including  a 
teenager  who  pressed  his  hands  to  his 
bloodied  mouth  and  then  fell  to  the 
ground.  Four  Palestinians,  including 
two  senior  officials,  were  struck  in  the 
head  by  clubs.  Police  said  about  two 
dozen  offiogrs  were  injured  by  stones. 
One  was  rushed  to  a  nearby  ambu- 
lance on  a  stretcher. 

The  compound  is  the  fault  line  of 
the  Israeli-Palestinian  conflict. 
Deadly  clashes  erupted  in  1990  and 
1996,  as  rival  claims  to  the  site  heated 
up. 

The  shrine  is  known  to  Jews  as  the 
Temple  Mount,  site  of  the  former 
Jewish  Temple,  the  most  sacred 
shrine  of  Judaism.  Muslims  call  it 
Haram  as-Sharif,  or  Noble 
Sanctuary,  home  to  two  major 
mosques  -  Al  Aqsa  and  Dome  of  the 
Rock  -  that  mark  the  spot  where  tra- 
dition says  the  Prophet  Muhammad 
ascended  to  heaven.  The  compound 
is  the  third  holiest  site  of  Islam,  after 
Mecca  and  Medina. 

Israeli-Palestinian  peace  talks  are 
hung  up  because  of  a  dispute  over 
who  will  control  the  holy  shrine.  For 
now,  Muslim  clerics  have  autonomy 
in  administering  the  site,  although 
Israeli  police  remain  in  charge  of 
security. 

Palestinian  leaders  said  Sharon's 
visit,  intended  to  demonstrate  Israeli 
sovereignty  claims,  was  a  provoca- 
tion, but  proved  thai  Israel  has  no  real 
control  there.  "He  thought  that  this 
place  belongs  to  the  Israelis,  but  the 
way  he  entered,  with  thousands  of 
police  protecting  him,  was  clear 


. 5 

? 
proof  to  all  the  world  that  the  Israelis  ] 
have  no  sovereignty  here,"  said  Faisal 
Husseini,  a  senior  Palestinian  official 
in  charge  of  Jerusalem,  who  was 
struck  in  the  head  by  a  club. 

Sharon,  who  staunchly  opposes 
any  concessions  to'the  Palestinians  in 
Jerusalem,  denied  he  was  trying  to 
provoke  Muslim  worshippers.  "What 
provocation  is  there  when  Jews  come 
to  visit  the  place  with  a  message  of 
peace?"  he  said. 

"The  Temple  Mount  is  in  our 
hands,"  he  said,  using  the  phrase 
made  famous  by  the  late  Israeli  army 
officer  Motta  Gur  when  Israeli  ; 
troops  captured  Jerusalem's  Old  City 
and  the  holy  shrines  in  the  1967 
Mideast  war. 

When  Sharon  began  his  visit 
Thursday  morning,  accompanied  by 
members  of  his  Likud  party,  about 
1,000  Israeli  police  were  deployed. 

Young  Palestinians  defiantly 
shouted  "Allahu  Akbar"  (God  is 
great).  Some  tried  to  break  through  | 
the  pdlice  cordon  but  were  pushed 
back.  Mohammed  Abu  Hawa,  a  17-  . 
year-old  protester  carrying  a  black 
school  bag,  said  he  and  his  classmates  ' 
had  come  from  nearby  schools  to  try  • 
to  prevent  Sharon  from  entering  the  i 
shrine.  i; 

Sharon  is  one  of  the  most  feared  I 
and  reviled  figures  in  the  Arab  world, 
as  the  mastermind  of  Israel's  19821 
invasion  and  occupation  of  Lebanon.: 
He  was  forced  to  resign  in  1983  when 
an  Israeli  commission  found  he  bore< 
some  responsibility  for  the  massacre  I 
of  hundreds  of  Palestinians  in  Beirut! 
refugee  camps  by  Lebanese  militias; 
allied  with  Israel. 

After  his  Temple  Mount  visit,- 
Sharon  stopped  at  the  Western  Wall,', 
a  remnant  of  the  Temple  and  today' 
the  holiest  site  of  Judaism.  Some! 
Jewish  worshippers  cheered  andi 
clapped  when  they  spotted  Sharon. 

The  mosque  compound  has  been' 
the  site  of  bloody  clashes  in  the  past.  : 

In  1990,  rumors  that  Jewish  j 
extremists  planned  to  start  rebuilding; 
the  Temple  started  a  riot  in  which  17 
Palestinians  were  killed  and  scores 
wounded  by  police  gunfire.  In  1996, 
the  Israeli  government  opened  an 
archaeological  tunnel  just  outside  the 
compound,  sparking  riots  in  which  80 
people,  most  of  them  Palestinians, 
were  killed. 


i 


Daily  Bniin  News 


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Next  week 

Bill  Maher  on  animal 
cruelty  in  medical 
schools. 

Fridays  September  29, 2000   • 


ViewontheWeb^U 

See  all  this  and  • 

more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's  • 

Website:  • 

www.dailybruin.ucla.edu  * 


viewpoint@inedia.ucl3.edu 


University  sKOuld  encourage 


Megan 
Roush 


POLICY:  Making  alcohol 
'forbidden  fruit'  creates 
more  appeal  for  students 

It's  zero  week,  and  worrying  about 
getting  caught  with  alcohol  if 
you're  underage  is  a  waste  of 
time.  I  know  it  won't  prevent  me  or 
my  friends,  among  whom  there  are 
very  few  "legal"  drinkers,  from  going 
to  parties  where 
alcohol  is 
served.  We 
don't  take  the 
law  seriously 
because  it's  dif- 
ficult for  the 
police  to 
enforce  it,  and 
it's  difficult  to 
get  caught* 
unless  you're 
carelessly  walk- 
ing around  

Westwood  with 

an  open  container,  brandishing  your 

underage  driver's  license. 

I  think  the  nail  in  the  coffin  for  me 
was  when  a  friend  of  mine  was 
slapped  with.aminor-in-possession, 
and  went  to  court  only  to  discover 
that  the  UCPD  cop  who  busted  him 
still  hadn't  filed  the  charge  with  Los 
Angeles  County  even  though  the  inci- 
dent was  three  months  past.  Since  the 
cop  didn't  even  show  up  to  court,  my 
friend  was  basically  ofTthe  hook.  I'm 
left  to  believe  that  alcohol  policy 
enforcement  is  a  joke  at  our  school. 

Certainly  the  law  that  prohibits 
people  under  the  age  of  21  from  con- 
suming alfohol  will  not  be  a  major  ■ 
drinking  deterrent  to  students  during 
zero  week.  In  fact,  it  seems  to  be  the 
opposite.      '        '  ""■  ^ 

The  current  law  makes  the  act  of 
drinking  a  "forbidden  fruit"  for  some 
people.  According  to  many  studies, 
such  a  "forbidden  fruit"  mentality  is 
what  makes  freshmen  the  most  likely, 
people  to  bingetlrink  during  the  first 
weeks  of  school.  They  get  their  first 

Roush  is  a  third-year  American  literature 
and  culture  and  French  student  who 
loves  to  hear  from  readers.  E-mail  her  at 
meegan@>ucla.edu. 


taste  (no  pun  intended)  of  freedom 
and  independence  from  their  parents. 

Instead  of  teaching  children  how 
to  drink  respwnsibly,  the  law  (and 
many  parents)  reinforce  a  stigma  that 
alcohol  is  an  inherently  bad  thing, 
thus  making  it  even  more  of  an 
attractive,  rebellious  activity  to  young 
people.  With  only  the  words  "don't 
do  it"  ringing  in  their  ears,  some 
incoming  college  students  face  tough 
social  and  physiological  challenges  in 
their  first  days  as  students. 

Last  year,  a  freshman  came  to  one 
of  my  friend's  dorm  parties  during 
zero  week.  Having  never  had  a  drink 
before,  she  tossed  back  innumerable 
shots  of  vodka  and  ended  up  puking 
her  way  into  the  emergency  room 
with  alcohol  poisoning.  Luckily  she 


was  fine,  but  classes  hadn't  even 
started.  , ',-;  ■■:"  t;;;:" 

Some  proponents  of  the  law  might 
point  to  this  incident  as  an  example 
of  how  people  under  21  can't  handle 
alcohol  and  its  behavioral  responsibil- 
ities. I  would  turn  around  and  blame 
parents  or  junior  high  and  high 
school  programs  for  not  preparing 
students  for  the  decisions  they  will 
have  to  make  about  alcohol  as  they 
leave  home  for  college. 

Unfortunately,  the  Department  of 
Education  specifically  forbids 
instruction  in  "responsible"  drug  and 
alcohol  use  education  in  public  uni- 
versities by  the  Drug-Free  Schools 
and  Community  Act  Amendments  of 
1989.  This  act  states,  that  "universi- 
ties must  have  an  official  no-use  alco- 
hol policy  for  students  under  21  or 
risk  losing  federal  funds,  including 
student  financial  aid."-. 

Thus,  the  stance  of  the 
Department  of  Education  is  equally 
prohibitory.  This  might  explain  why 


the  program  is  called  DARE  (Drug 
Abuse  Resistance  Education)  and 
not  Don't  Drink  So  Much  In  College 
Or  You'll  Make  A  Fool  Of  Yourself 
And  Potentially  Have  Life-Long 
Health  Problems  Education. 

But  leaving  students  to  figure  out 
how  to  drink  on  their  own,  in  an 
"underground"  setting,  is  asinine. 
Universities  have  to  be  kidding  them- 
selves if  they  say  they  have  a  "dry 
campus."  Drinking  and  college  will 
be  associated  with  one  another  as 
long  as  they  continue  to  show 
Budweiser  commercials  during  col- 
lege football  games  and  the  Greek 
system  is  an  integral  part  of  universi- 
ty culture,  i.e.  forever. 

A  prohibitionist  stand  on  alcohol 
at  universities  isn't  working. 

Being  only  20, 1  have  my  personal 
issues  with  the  law.  I  agree  with  the 
stance  of  a  student  group  called 
Realistic  Alcohol  Legislation  for 
Legal  Youth,  which  feels  our  alcohol 
laws  discriminate  against  young  legal 
adults.  RALLY  argues  that  our  cur- 
rent law  associates  maturity  with 
drinking  rather  than  maturity  with 
responsible  drinking.  The  way  our 
government  restricts  teenage  alcohol 
use  is  completely  unrealistic,  and  it 
seems  like  the  restrictions  are  backfir- 
ing on  us. 

RALLY  uses  one  particular  study, 
"Preventing  Alcohol  Abuse,"  written 


by  sociologist  David  Hanson  of  the 
State  University  of  New  York,  to 
demonstrate  some  of  the  problems 
with  our  current  legislation.  The 
study  compared  the  treatment  and 
use  of  alcohol  in  different  cultures. 

Hanson  concluded  that  among 
cultures  in  which  alcohol  is  intro- 
duced to  people  at  a  later  age,  or 
where  alcohol  consumption  is  not 
associated  with  food,  religion  or  fam- 
ily events,  alcoholism  and  other  kinds 
of  alcohol  abuse  are  more  prevalent 
(www.rallyusa.org/Journal  I  /tack_on 
_alcohol.html). 

Qne  of  the  focus  groups  used  in 
the  study  were  the  Irish,  who  typical- 
ly drink  outside  of  the  home  and 
without  food,  and  subsequently  have 
high  rates  of  alcoholism.  American 
parents  who  forbid  their  children 
from  consuming  alcohol,  and  a  law 
that  reinforces  prohibition  for  young 
people  seem  to  create  a  (Hilture  of 
alcoholics  and  young  binge  drinkers. 

Thus.  I  believe  total  teenage  alco- 
hol consumption  prohibition  is  coun- 
terproductive. I  attribute  my  respon- 
sible drinking  habits  to  my  parents' 
approach  to  alcohol  throu^out  my 
childhood  and  adolescence.  For  me, 
the  laws  don't  make  alcohol  a  "for- 
bidden fruit."  Instead  it's  just  a  slight 
inconvenience  that  necessitates  the 

SeellOUSH,|Mgel3 


OKAPiNTOKMfBnm 


Trainers  play  important,  though  overiooi^ed,  role  in  UCLA  atWetics 


SPORTS:  Bruin  medical 
staff  works  overtime  to 
keep  athletes  healthy 

By  Nkolc  Buikfc  and  Kapil  SMnfNrt 

UCLA  is  one  of  the  top  -  if  not  the 
top  -  "jock"  schools  in  the  nation.  As 
a  part  of  the  medical  staff  for  UCLA, 
the  student  athletic  trainers  make 
sure  those  "jocks"  stay  on  the  field. 
Often  taken  for  granted,  the  athletic 

Bulick  and  Sampat  serve  as  student  ath- 
letic trainers  at  the  Acosta 
Intercollegiate  Athletic  Center. 


trainers  at  this  university  are  usually 
dubbed  "water  boys"  and  '"water 
girls"  who  tape  ankles  and  give  mas- 
sages. This,  however,  is  only  the  tip  of 
our  iceberg. 

Open  the  doors  of  the  Acosta 
Intercollegiate  Athletic  Center  and 
you  enter  one  of  the  top  Division  I 
training  rooms  in  the  nation.  This 
facility  coordinates  all  the  branches 
under  the  tree  that  is  sports  medicine 
at  UCLA:  orthopedic  surgeons,  fami- 
ly practice  physicians,  nutritionists, 
psychologists,  strength  and  condition- 
ing coaches,  and  our  athletic  trainers. 

An  overlooked  structure  to  this 
well-oiled  machine  is  the  student  ath- 
letic training  program.  This  three- 


year  internship  is  open  to  all  UCLA 
students.  The  application  process 
opens  during  the  spring  quarter  that 
precedes  the  academic  school  year  in 
which  the  internship  begins.  Students 
must  submit  a  simple  one-page  essay, 
two  letters  of  recommendation  and  a 
transcript,  and  must  be  CPR-certified 
to  be  considered  for  the  program. 

During  that  summer,  applicants  go 
through  a  two-day  orientation  work- 
shop to  familiarize  themselves  with 
the  day-to-day  procedures  of  the 
training  room.  A  probationary  fwri- 
od  begins  fall  quarter,  when  new  stu- 
dents are  required  to  work  ten  hours 
a  week.  During  fall  quarter,  students 
must  check  off  on  certain  required 


skills  and  are  constantly  evaluated  by 
the  staff.  This  culminates  with  a  final 
interview  in  which  the  staff  will  then 
choose  about  IS  new  student  athletic 
trainers  to  complete  the  three-year 
internship. 

All  this  said,  student  athletic  train- 
ers gain  hands-on  experience  working 
with  world-class  athletes  and  an 
amazing  sports  medicine  staff". 

Now,  with  all  of  the  administrative 
technicalities  taken  care  of,  we  would 
like  to  give  you  an  insight  into  a  typi- 
cal day  (warning;  no  day  is  ever  typi- 
cal) in  the  life  of  a  student  athletic 
trainer. 

We  arrive  at  least  one  hour  prior  to 
any  scheduled  practices  for  pre-prac- 


tice  treatments.  Such  a  treatment 
may  consist  of  heating  for  15  min- 
utes, ultrasound,  soft  tissue  massage, 
facilitated  stretching  and  any  addi- 
tional taping  that  is  required.  On  sec- 
ond thought,  we  usually  arrive  an 
hour  or  so  prior  to  our  scheduled 
team  treatments,  in  order  to  set  up 
aquatic  hydration  and  electrolyte 
replenishment  stations  (water  and 
Gatorade)  at  the  respective  practice 
facilities. 

We  arc  required  to  be  on  site  dur- 
ing all  scheduled  team  practices. 
Once  practice  is  over,  our  work  is  still 
not  finished.  Most  athletes  will  come 

SeelUUCK,pagc34 


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i'liuiU  \\{M — ' 


Miiy,S(pt(mber29,2000       31 

7         Uc 


MEDIA:  Marketing  tactics 
•  draw  children  to  explicit 
material,  says  new  report 

In  appropriately  dramatic 
Hollywood  style,  the  Federal 
Trade  Commission  recently, 
accused  the  entertainment  industry 
of  rape.  It  rapes  our  nation's  children 
by  willfully  gearing  adult-oriented 
entertainment  and  similar  advertise- 
ments toward  their  impressionable 
minds. 

According  to  the  FTC's  ludicrous 
104-page  report,  movie  studios, 
record  compa- 
nies and  video 
game  makers 
are  placing 
advertisements 
for  violent  and 
sexual  material 
in  magazines 
and  broadcasts 
that  consumers 
under  17  are 
likely  to  see. 
The  FTC  argues 

that  such  corn-       ■■ 

panics  are 

deceptive  in  their  advertising,  using 
cartoons  and  childlike  images  to  rein 
children  in,  and  claim  that  their 
graphic  media  is  responsible  for 
youth  violence  and  sexual  irresponsi- 
bility. 

A  sinister,  sinful  Hollywood  has 
moved  into  the  American  family 
room,  and  the  FTC  wants  to  stop  it. 
It's  funny  how  the  entertainment 
industry,  self-regulating  to  its  heart's 
content,  hasn't  been  lambasted  like 
this  since  Jerry  Falweli's  Teletubbie 
tirade  -  and  then  this  report.  What  is 
even  funnier  is  that  legislators  think 
they  can  and  must  use  the  findings  to 
censor  entertainment  marketing  - 
and  of  course,  entertainment  itself - 
in  America.  America,  the  bastion  of 
freedom,  home  of  the  First 
Amendment,  Eminem  and 
"Hustler." 

What  provoked  this  call  for 
reform?  Why  does  Congress  feel  it 

Kirk  is  a  fourth-year  political  science  stu- 
dent who  can  form  an  opinion  about 
anything,  but  always  gives  the  other 
side  a  fighting  chance.  She  looks  for- 
ward to  hearing  your  comments  aiKl 
opinions  at  trishakirk@hotmail.com. 


has  to  put  its 
foot  down  in 
Hollywood? 

Ifit'snotjust  ablur 
in  your  memory  by  now, 
you  might  remember 
the  tragedy  of 
Columbine  High 
School.  Fifteen  lives 
were  lost  at  the  ^.    ''['  -,  '  -  • 

Littleton,  Colo.,  school  - ; 

last  June  when  two  stur 
dents  in  black  trench- . 
coats  ojjened  fire  on  stu- 
dents and  teachers. 
Violent  media  suppos- 
edly influenced  the 
killers,  so  about  a  month 
after  the  massacre. 
President  Chnton 
ordered  that  the  enter- 
tainment industry  be  placed  under 
government  scrutiny  and  requested  a 
review  by  the  FTC. 

Over  a  year  later,  the  FTC 
responded  with  a  phone-book  sized 
sermon  declaring  that  Hollywood  is 


in  tragic  disrepair  and  must  be  fixed 
before  it  corrupts  any  more  kiddies. 
Explicit-lyric  warnings  on  CDs,  NC- 
17  film  ratings  and  the  video  game 
rating  system  apparently  aren't 
doing  enough  to  stop  Hollywood 


from  "targeting"  kids  with  adult 
material.  In  fact,  the  FTC  claims  that 
the  entertainment  industry  manipu- 
lates these  ratings  so  it  can  more  easi- 
ly reach  a  younger  audience. 
The  Columbine  shootings  were 


not  the  only  time  that  Hollywood 
was  blamed  for  youth  violence. 
Several  school  shootings  and  violent 
gang-related  acts  have  been  blamed 

See  nRK,  page  32 


Day  in  Bruin  life  can  make  global  waves 


IGNORANCL-  From  coffee 
%  to  campus  staff,  no  detail 
or  action  is  insignificant 


By  Kftstcfl  Isaaoon 

Ld's  look  at  the  daily  actions  of 
an  uffsuspecting  Bruin  and  how  he 
connects  to  the  world  beyond 
UCLA.  Joe  Bruin  rises  from  the  top 
bunk  in  his  closet-for-a-dorm-room 
and  tries  hard  not  to  wake  up  his 
other  two  roommates  as  he  stumbles 
over  the  remnaAts  of  a  pizza  fiasco. 
He  heads  off  to  the  bathroom  for  his 
zit-popping  ritual  and  then  transi- 

Isaacson  is  a  fourth-year  international 
development  studies  student  and 
njember  of  the  Environmental 
Coalition.  Call  the  EC  offke  at  206-4438 
with  questions.  •■«:„ 


tions  into  dental  hygiene  mode. 

C)iving  one  of  those  "waz  up" 
head  nods  to  the  custodian  cleaning 
the  showers,  Joe  Bruin  doesn't  real- 
ize that  the  gentleman  in  the  blue 
striped  uniform  just  went  through 
wage  negotiations.  He  and  his  union 
had  to  fight  tooth  and  nail  to  get  a  5 
percent  raise,  while  top  executive 
raises  for  1999  were  18.5  percent. 

After  barely  remembering  his 
keys,  Joe  Bruin  heads  down  the 
stairs  to  swipe  his  card  at  his 
favorite  cafeteria  with  the  smiling 
woman  up  front,  and  then  he  visits 
the  omelet  man.  What  Joe  doesn't 
notice  is  the  cafeteria  supervisor 
who  intimidates  the  employees  in 
order  to  prevent  them  from  joining 
the  union.  Without  organizing 
together  and  empowering  them- 
selves, the  cafeteria  workers,  like  so 
many  other  positions  on  campus, 
remain  temporary  employees  with 


poor  wages,  no  benefits  and  little  job 
security. 

Scurrying  down  the  hill  and  then 
up  the  steps  of  Bruin  Walk,  Joe 
Bruin  slides  into  his  padded  chair  in 
an  enormous  lecture  hall.  He  battles 
with  the  freezing  air  for  a  while  and 
then  drifts  off  to  sleep.  Rustling 
papers  and  desks  being  tucked  away 
break  Joe  Bruin  away  from  his 
dream  of  Saturday's  football  game 
and  he  decides  he  needs  coffee  to 
help  him  through  his  next  lecture. 

While  standing  in  Kerckhoffs 
enormous  line  and  listening  to  an 
outdated  Alanis  album,  his  mouth 
waters  while  looking  at  the  glass 
cases  full  of  pastries.  But  the  depths 
of  Joe  Bruin's  pockets  yield  only 
enough  change  for  a  cup  of  coffee. 
The  sweets  are  bypassed  and  at  the 
end  of  the  day  the  unsold  bagels. 

See  ISAACSON,  page  35 


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T 

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KIRK 

From  page  31 


)i0r>i 


on  violent  movies  ahd  video  games. 
The  game  Mortal  Kombat  was  the 
center  or  attention  when' it  was  con- 
sidered too  graphic  to  be  released 
without  a  rating.  The  first  night      "*' 
'interview  With  a  Vampire"  opened 
in  theaters,  there  were  incidents 
across  America  of  people  being  bit- 
ten on  the  tieck.  And  many  blame 
rapper  Tupac  Shakur's  drive-by 
murder  on  his  music's  violent  lyrics. 
While  these  incidents  appear  to   . 
have  a  connection  with  entertain- 
ment violence,  they  could  have 
occurred  for  many  reasons.  The 
blame  for  countless  shootings,  rob- 
beries and  carjackings  will  always  be 
slapped  on  entertainment,  but  will 
censoring  the  industry  really  curb 
youth  violence?  Not  a  chance  in 
Hollywood.  ' 


Billboards  covered 

with  busty  women  are 

hardly  advertising  a 

film  that  promises  to 

teach  moral  lessons  to 

a  10-year-old. 


While  she  agreed  that  entertain- 
ment marketing  strategies  must 
change,  California  Senator  Barbara 
Boxer  acknowledged  that  other  fac- 
tors causing  youth  violence  must  be 
considered  as  well.  At  the  congres- 
sional FTC  report  hearings,  she 
cited  the  availability  of  firearms  as  a 
potential  reason  that  youth  crime  is 
rising  (L.A.  Times.  Sept.  13.  2000). 
Drugs  and  violence  in  the  home 
have  also  been  cited  as  causes  of 
youth  violence.  In  these  cases,  cen- 
sorship will  not  work. 

The  FTC  and  Congress  think 
entertainment  and  its  advertise- 
ments are  causing  youth  violence, 
but  censoring  ads  for  adult  material 
because  children  may  see  them 
would  only  exacerbate  the  problem. 
Like  the  "War  on  Drugs,"  a  crack- 
down on  entertainment  marketing 
will  only  cause  an  underground 
realm  of  film,  music  and  gaming  to 
run  rampant.  If  entertainment  con- 
glomerates cannot  market  their 
product  the  way  they  want  to,  they 
will  sell  it  any  way  they  can.  It  will 
still  reach  an  audience  and  the  same 
people  seeing  those  ads  and  that 
media  now  will  find  a  way  to  do  the 
same  even  after  censorship  is 
imposed. 

Crossing  the  fine  line  that  sepa- 
rates regulation  and  censorship 
takes  away  artists'  right  to  express 
themselves.  Whether  it  be  Eminem 
rapping  about  killing  his  wife,  the 
hate  violence  in  "American  History 
X,"  or  lifelike  pools  of  blood  in 
countless  Sega  games,  these  graphic 
depictions  are  how  some  artists  per- 
forhti.  And  much  of  what  they  per- 
form is  based  on  the  realities  oPife 
in  America,  however  '^ult"  those 
realities  might  be. 

The  Bible  is  not  censored,  and  it 
contains  enough  murder  and  adul- 
tery to  rival  "Days  of  Our  Lives." 
Shakespeare  is  also  widely  read  and 
the  Bard  had  a  penchant  for  blood- 
shed unlike  any  director  in 
Hollywood.  Documentaries  about 
the  Holocaust  or  warring  tribes  in 
Africa  are  not  censored  and  they  arc 
the  truest  pictures  of  violence. 
Censoring  such  portions  of  our 
media  and  their  preceding  advertiM- 
ments  is  not  in  question,  so  .why 
should  the  marketing  of  other  reali- 
ty-based entertainment  face  censor- 
ship? 1 

It  is  true  that  Hollywood  pro- 
duces material  with  violence  and  sex 
appeal  and  for  a  good  reason  -  it's 


KIRK 

From  page  32 


\lf»IV 


guaranteed  to  sell.  It  is  also  true  that 
entertainment  executives  try  to  mar- 
ket their  products  to  as  many  con- 
sumers as  possible.  For  example, 
executives  responsible  for  the  recent 
movie  "Coyote  Ugly"  had  a  scene 
removed  from  the  film  to  avoid  an 
'R'  rating.  This  meant  that  a  wider, 
possibly  younger  audience  could  see 
the  film,  which  surely  didn't  change 
much  after  the  deletion  of  just  one 
scene. 

Some  have  argued  that  in  such 
cases,  Hollywood  is  sidestepping  its 
own,  outdated  rating  methods  (a  32- 
year-old  system),  and  that  merits 
reform.  But  that  doesn't  mean  they 
are  targeting  youths  by  marketing 
the  movie  with  billboards  and  com- 
mercials, and  it  doesn't  mean  their 
advertising  is  deceptive,  as  the  FTC 
claims.  Billboards  covered  with 
busty  women  are  hardly  advertising 
a  film  that  promises  to  teach  moral 
lessons  to  a  i  0-year-old.  It  is  up  to 
parents  to  prevent-their  children 
from  seeing  films  they  feel  are  too 
adult.  That  is  what  the  ratings  system 
is  for. 

Hollywood  is  not  disputing  the 
FTC's  accusations  and  seems  willing 
to  find  common  ground.  The 
Director's  Guild  of  America  recent- 
ly announced  that  it  welcomes  gov- 
ernment scrutiny  of  movie  market- 
ing as  long  as  its  measures  don't 
"cross  the  line  into  censorship" 
(Associated  Press,  Sept.  14,  2000). 
Some  directors  have  called  for  a 
new,  more  detailed  ratings  system 
that  would  include  all  entertainment 
media.  But  the  choice  and  imple- 
mentation of  a  new  system  should 
not  be  Washington's.  There  is  no 
congressional  action  to  be  taken 
here.  If  any  reforms  are  indeed  need- 
ed in  the  entertainment  industry's 
ratings  and  marketing  systems,  those 
reforms  belong  in  the  hands  of 
Hollywood  and  its  executives  and 
not  in  the  gray  area  of  government 
censorship. 


Otfly  Brain  Vi«wpoiiit 


Fiiday,  September  29, 2000       33 


ROUSH 

From  page  30 


formation  of  a  mental  list  of  my  - 
"legal"  friends  who  can  "hook  me 
up."  My  parents  never  explicitly  told 
me  that  I  couldn't  drink  when  I  lived 
with  them,  and  I  neve'r  had  any  inter- 
est in  drinking.  I  would  try  my  par- 
ents' drinks  on  occasion,  and  1 
thought  they  tasted  terrible.  When  I 
left  for  college.  1  cautiously  began  to 
test  my  tolerance  and  understand 
how  my  body  reacts  to  alcohol  rather 
than  binge  drinking  several  nights  a 
week. 

So  what's  up  with  the  magical 
number  21,  anyway?  Responsible 
drinking  cannot  be  attributed  to  a 
birthday.  According  to  a  RALLY 
pJblication,  the  last  state  to  pass  a 
**iN  "  law  was  Louisiana  in  1985,  but 
"cfaly  after  the  federal  government 
thipatened  to  cut  transportation 
money  to  the  state"  (David  Salina. 
Louisiana  Supreme  Court  Rules  18 
Legal.  1996).  Prior  to  this  date, 
Louisiana's  legal  drinking  age  was 
18,  and  the  amount  of  alcohol  con- 
sumed in  the  state  was  actually  lower 
per  capita  than  in  some  states  with  a 
legal  drinking  age  of  21.  Go  figure. 

The  law  against  underage  drink- 
ing is  unsuccessful  and,  as  I've 
shown,  an  inappropriate  method  for 
..curbing  teenage  alcohol  use.  Trying 
to  keep  4lcohol  out  of  underage 
hands  seems  like  a  lot  of  work,  and 
since  I've  never  had  any  problems 
scoring  a  drink  it  a  party,  whatever 
tactics  are  being  used  don't  seem  to 
be  working. 

Like  prohibition,  this  law  fosters 
underground  cri'ftie'such  as  the  fake 
ID  rings  you'll  find  anywhere  near  a 
college  campus.  This  leads  to  more 

SccllOIISH,page35 


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From  page  30  ' 


11?"*^^ 


into  the  training  room  for  post-prtic- 
tice  treatments.  These  treatments ': 
consist  primarily  of  icing  injured 
areas.  The  ice  may  l>e  accompanied 
by  electrical  stimulation  modalities. 
All  of  this  may  seem  very  cut  and 
dry,  but  at  a  facility  that  caters  to  21 
sports,  nearly  700  athletes,  this  is  a 
daunting  task  for  10  stafi" athletic 
trainers  and  35  student  athletic  train- 
ers. With  those  numbers ...  you  do 
the  math. 

Being  a  student  athletic  trainer 
does,  however,  have  its  perks. 
Second-  and  third-year  students  are . 
assigned  indfvidual  sports,  and  since 
our  teams  travel,  so  do  we.  \Vc  get  to' 
tag  along  on  trips  to  cities  in  the  Pac- 
10,  Hawaii  and  Canada,  just  to  name 
a  few.  Traveling  to  these  cities  is  an 
amazing  experience,  but  we  keep  in 
mind  that  we  are  there  to  "get  it 
done"  (our  motto,  meaning  to 
always  be  professional  and  on  the 
ball). 

The  student  athletic  training  pro- 
gram is  geared  to  students  who  strive 
to  be  successful  in  the  classroom  and 
toward  a  permanent  professional 
career.  Every  staff  member  we  have 
at  UCLA  was  once  a  student  athletic 
trainer  and  they  are  our  immediate 
role  models.  Jeff  Smith,  the  student 
program  director,  and  Debbie 
Iwasaki,  a  certified  athletic  trainer 
and  our  physical  therapist,  are  grad- 
uates from  this  program. 


As  we  learn,  we  gain 

confidence  ...and 

garner  a  huge  taste  of 

responsibility. 


We  have  seen  students  pursue 
careers  as  athletic  trainers  in  the 
NFL,  physical  therapists,  physicians, 
teachers,  etc.  On  the  surface,  student 
athletic  trainers  gain  basic  knowl- 
edge in  anatomy,  physiology,  pathol- 
ogy and  biomechanics,  but  on  a 
broader  scale  we  develop  a  process  * 
of  thinking  that  is  applicable  in  any 
arena. 

As  we  learn,  we  gain  confidence, 
cultivate  different  modes  of  commu- 
nication, learn  how  to  take  initiative 
in  any  situation,  and  gamer  a  huge 
taste  of  responsibility  In  this  medical 
facility  we  also  must  understand  the 
sensitivity  of  our  position.  Just  as 
physicians  have  their  Hippocratic 
Oath  to  always  be  an  advocate  for 
their  patienu,  we  athletic  trainers 
must  always  protect  the  privacy  of 
our  athletes.  This  is,  again,  an  intan* 
gible  responsibility  we  gain  as  stu- 
dent athletic  trainers. 

Coming  back  to  our  staff  athletic 
trainers,  we  want  to  take  a  para- 
graph (even  though  that  does  not  do 
them  adequate  justice)  to  acknowl- 
edge their  contribution  to  the  stu- 
dent athletic  trainers  and  the  UCLA   , 
athletic  community.  ; 

We  have  an  amazing  athletic 
training  staff  led  by  Hepd  Athletic 
Trainer  Geoff  Schaadtiand  assistant 
athletic  trainers:  Jeff  Smith,  Debbie 
Iwasaki,  Tony  Spino,  Liorita 
Granger,  Kim  AnMniO;  Mark 
Schoen,  Anne  Lindley,  Chris  Ferry 
and  Armando  Rivas.  This  staff  has 
the  additional  responsibiljti^  of 
communicating  with  coaches,  par-      > 
ents.  and  strength  and  conditioning     , 
coaches  on  top  of  their  given  job 
descriptions.  ,, 

As  a  dual  role,  they  must  also 
serve  as  teachers  to  show  usihe 
ropes.  All  the  student  athletic  train- 
ers arc  indebted  to  them.  Being  in 
this  program  demands  many  tireless 
hours,  lou  of  work,  and  a  consistent 
devotion  to  learning.  The  support  of 
this  staff  gives  the  UCLA  student 
athletic  training  prognun  an  edge 
that  is  both  rewarding  tnd  fiin 


-1 


ROUSH 

horn  pa^  is 


}i^\  nm 


,vi-? 


•>v 


work  for  the  police  and  more  liabili- 
ty risks  for  alcohol  vendors.  And, 
like  prohibition  in  the  1920s,  this  law 
just  ain't  working. 

I'd  like  to  add  that  I'm  not  advo- 
cating that  everyone  between  the 
ages  of  18  and  20  start  drinking.  I 
think  it's  also  important  to  mention 
that  these  laws  and  similar  alcohol 
legislation  have  helped  reduce  drunk 
driving  accidents  and  fatalities 
among  young  people.  I  just  think  it's 
time  we  start  being  honest  about  the 
failure  of  an  unfair  and  inappropri- 
ate law,  and  specifically  how  this  law 
has  failed  in  its  application  to  the 
university  environment. 

It'd  be  great  to  hear  more  from 
UCLA  than  just,  "When  you've 
done  four,  you're  done  for." 
Unfbrtunately,  since  UCLA's  a  pub- 
lic institution,  it  can't  publicly  advo- 
cate responsible  underage  drinking. 

Here's  to  zero  week.  Cheers! 


ISAACSON 

From  page  31 

cookies,  etc.  are  placed  into  black 
trash  bags  and  thrown  away  into 
dumpsters.  Perfectly  good  food 
throum  away,  while  students  who 
feed  Westwood's  hungry  through^"" 
program  called  Food  Not  Bombs 
receive  no  donations  from  UCLA's 
food  excess.    ■*• 

Even  Joe  Bruin's  cup  of  coffee 
has  issues  behind  it.  The  administra- 
tors of  UCLA  Restaurants  refuse  to 
purchase  coffee  from  companies 
who  provide  a  living  wage  to  their 
coffee  growers  in  Central  America, 
and  subsequently  they  encourage 
the  use  of  child  labor,  harmful  envi- 
ronmental practices,  and  rain  forest 
destruction. 

Joe  Bruin  sips  his  coffee  during 
yet  another  stimulating  lecture.  He 
learns  of  a  fascinating  woman 
named  Aung  San  Suu  Kyi,  who 
although  democratically  elected  by 
the  |}eople  of  Burma,  is  under  house 
arrest  by  the  military  and  forbidden 
to  assume  her  office.  There  is  hope 
for  this  small  nation  just  as  there 
was  hope  for  apartheid  South 
Africa.  Corporations  and  countries 
can  bind  together,  refusing  to  do 
business  with  a  military  dictatorship 
until  it  is  choked  out  of  the  land  and 
the  people  are  freed. 

"Wow,"  thinks  Joe  Bruin,  "what 
an  impressive  fight  for  democracy." 

Joe  Bruin  doesn't  realize  it,  but 
every  check  written  as  a  private 
donation  to  the  UC  Regents  is  sup- 
porting the  military  dictatorship  in 
Bo^a  and  helping  to  crush  the 
Burmese  people.  TTie  UC  Regents 
invest  money  in  corporations  that 
still  practice  within  the  small  coun- 
try.  ^ 

Ai  long  last  classes  are  done  for 
the  <j|^y,  and  Joe  Bruin  guzzles  down 
a  soAa  as  he  searches  for  a  place  to 
throng  his  newspaper  away  (after  all, 
he  completed  the  crossword  puzzle 
—  his  favorite  part  of  the  paper). 
Without  too  much  effort,  he  locates 
a  blue-topped  ^per-recycling  canis- 
ter, but  can't  s«em  to  locate  a  place 
to  recycle  his  bottle.  At  this  cutting- 
edge  universityhehas  to  wander  10 
minutes  to  find  a  place  to  recycle  an 
aluminum  can. 

So  at  the  end  of  Joe  Bruin's  day. 
what  have  we  all  learned?  Our  pres- 
ence and  actions  on  this  campus  are 
anything  but  innocent.  We  must 
ensure  that  the  world  we  are  shap- 
ing is  a  world  we  would  want  t6  live 
in,  with  wages  to  feed  a  family,  ben- 
efits to  ensure  medical  attention, 
political  freedoms  and  respect,  a 
clean  environment,  and,  most  of  all, 
justice  for  all  people. 

As  intelligent  studenu,  let's  rec- 
ognize that  our  Actions  have  conse- 
quences and  wc  need  to  act  appro- 
priately ratherlhan  ignorantly. 


Friday,  Septembcf  2^2000       35 


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THIS  YEAR  A 

LOT  OF 

COLLEGE 
SENIORS  WILL  BE 

GRADUATINC 
INTO  DEBT. 

Under  the  Army's  Loan  Repayment  program,  you 
could  get  out  fix)m  under  with  a  three-year  enlistment. 

Each  year  you  serve  on  aaive  duty  reduces  your 
indebtedness  by  one-third  or  $1,500,  whichever  amount 
is  greater,  up  to  a  $65,000  limit. 

>  The  offer  applies  to  Perkins  Loans,  Stafford  Loans, 
and  certain  other  federally  insured  loans,  which  are  not 
in  default. 

And  debt  relief  is  just  one  of  the  many  benefits 
you'll  earn  from  the  Army.  Ask  your  Army  Recruiter. 

I-SOO-USA-ARMY 
ARMY.  BE  AU  YOU  CAN  BEf 

www.goarmy.com 


Whm^'stlie 
UCLA  Journalism 


ment? 


Attend  our 

-       Orientation 

and  Open  House 

Tuesday  October  3 

at  6:30  p.m.  in 

Adffiraian  Union 

Grand  Ballroom 


MO  DEMRTIKn  JUST  JOUMMUSM 

The  Daily  liruin  i.s  om;  of  Ihc  Ixtsl 
■  plac.<!.s  in  {\\v  naliiin  lo  l(!ar;i  journal i.sm. 
II  WH.S  Ihc  lntininj,'>rr()und  for  I'lililzrr 
I*ri7.(!  winners  David  Shaw  and  Tlmy 
Aulh.  Olhors.  like  former  Hruin  <!(lilor.s 
.loci  Siejial.  "(j(mhI  Morninjj  America' 
enlf!rlainm(!nl  JHlilor,  and  hVank 
SiMilnily..  |»r<Mlua!r  of  "The  X-Fiks." 
w(!nl  on  lo  (•an!(!r.s  in  »\\wx  m<HiiH.  And 
lor  «!Hch  orihem,  Ihen;  wcjh?  hundn^d.s 
orolh(!rs  who  laum-hitd  (-.arwirx  with  Ihe 
.skill.s  Ihey  le^rmHl  wcjrkin^al  Ihe  Daily 
Bruin.  Il<!<4;nl  Daily  Uruin  slafTers  wnl 
on  lo  jolxs  al  \}Wv.»  like  the  I/m  Anj,'<!les 
Times,  Ihe  I'hiladelphia  ln«|nirer.  Ihe 
San  JojM!  Mercury  Newiv,  and  Fox 
'Hilevi.sion. 

Th«!  Daily  Hruin  oilers  o|itMirlunili(;K  Tor 
slud(!nl.s  inl(!reHle<l  in  ne.arly  ev«?ry 
aafMT.l  of  journalism — fmm  n;|»«»rlin}(  lo 
busimuss,  from  newsHMim  mHnHj,i'm«?nl 
lo  Inlernel  journalism.  And  w«'  do  il 
b«Uer  Ihan  any  class  Ixnvius<!  wt  olT<;r 
you  Ihe  chanc4*  lo  do  m«)r(;  Ihan  sludy 
Wi  olTi-r  rojil  ej(|N!ri(!n<t<;.  As  a  r«!|jorU5r 


or  pholo^'rapher  for  Ihe  Daily  Druin, 
you'll  \:y\  fronl-row  s<'hI  lo  Ihe  (^venls 
Ihal  shajH!  our  campus  and  C4)mmunily. 
Th«!r(!  isn'l  a  more  (!xcilin>,'  (ixlra- 
curricular  aclivily  in  collet;. 

II  d(M!sn'l  mailer  whal  your  major  is  or 
if  you  have  any  previous  ex|MTience  in 
n(!W3|»a|HTs.  W''ll  (rain  you  lo  n!|»orl, 
(hvsijjn.  or  sh<K)l  piclures  in  four 
we<'k(!nd  workshop.*!  Iau>,'hl  by  working,' 
journali.sls.  You  m\\^\\\  cmd  up  end  up 
like  many  who  cam<;  l)efore  you — wilh  a 
.solid  slarl  loward  a  canMT. 

■MiriDSCTIIMiuiED? 

If  you'd  like  lo  know  more,  come  lo  our 
()ri<!nlalion  ami  OjM'n  llou.s*-  Tuesday, 
()c.l.  H  Hi  OrMO  p.m.  in  Ackt^rman  Union 
(Jrand  liallnMim.  (lome  h<'ar  whal  m\ 
have?  lo  offer,  visil  our  olTM-tis,  and  mind 
Ihe  Hruin  slaiT. 

For  more;  informalion, 
c«llusalH2.')-2787. 


joumalism@ucla 


-11  I  M 


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A..'      .'1 


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t'':-':':t:[^'W''^i'^^^^^ 


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■•  t:".  ■■■*; — c- 


Girlfight! 

Check  out  Monday's  issue  for  an  interview 
with  Karyn  Kusama,  up  and  coming  director 
and  winner  of  the  Sundance  Grand  Jury 
Prize.  :-..'■■:■:,■■[■■,,■'-■■■. 


Friday,  September  29, 2000 


I 


D^^Brujn 


'  *.*—*^fc^    HI  1 1  I  aiiK       ■>! 


•;■  ■'-  .,^-i^.i^'i  :  V.  r 


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\V  hat  becbin^r 

■^^^ ^ _  — ^ .  _  H  ^^^^^         ^^bT 


a 


the  Droken 

hearted 


Dean  Cain  plays  Cole  in  "Broken  Hearts  Club,' which  opens  today. 


Photos  from  Sony  «ctu«e$  Oasslct 

The  romantic  comedy 'Broken  Hearts  Club"  focuses  on  Dennis' (Timothy  Olyphant)  search 
for  self-awareness  and  his  interactions  with  his  friends. 


By  Emilia  Hwang 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Whether  or  not  you've  spent  the  better  days  of 
your  life  folding  jeans  at  Structure  or  listening  to 
Karen  Carpenter,  you've  probaWy  experienced  a 
broken  heart  or  two.  And  whether  they  came  to 
your  rescue  with  the  movie  "Beadies"  or  a  pint  of 
Hagen  Daaz,  your  friends  have  always  been  Uicrc 
to  pick  up  the  pieces. 

Writer/director  Greg  Berlanti's  feature  debut, 
"The  Broken  Hearts  Club  -  a  romantic  comedy," 
focuses  on  a  group  of  gay  men  living  in  Los 
Angeles  and  how  crucial  their  friendships  are  to 
one  another  as  they  strive  to  become  independent 
and  find  a  sense  of  personal  identity. 


**  Friends  are  just  like  family,"  Berlanti  said  at  a 
recent  interview. 

The  film  is  centered  around  Dennis  (Timothy 
Olyphant),  a  photographer  who  reflects  on  his  life 
when  he  turns  28.  In  his  search  for  self-awareness, 
he  become  more  conscious  of  the  support  he 
receives  from  his  friends,  as  well  as  the  ciarliNi||B8 
they  pose. 

Berlanti  uses  universal  diemes  of  romance  and 
comedy  to  present  a  group  of  friends  that  do  not 
differ  too  much  from  a  group  of  straight  men. 

"There's  no  film  like  this  that  deals  with  these 
kinds  of  friends  -  friends  who  happen  to  be  gay," 
Berlanti  said. 

Homosexuality  may  seem  like  an  unlikely  per- 
spective for  a  romantic  comedy,  but  Berlanti 


hoped  to  fill  that  void  in  gay  cinema  by  making  a 
movie  about  everyday  life. 

"I  hadn't  seen  a  film  that  had  been  about  gay 
men  that  seemed  regular  and  fun,"  Berlanti  said. 

While  told  from  a  gay  perspective,  the  movie 
exfkites  familiar  themes  of  guilt,  jealousy  and 
tote,  and  according  to  Berlanti,  could  just  as  easi- 
ly b«j  a  heterosexual  movie. 

■nrhe  tendency  is  to  look  more  for  a  statement 
because  it  is  about  a  minority,  but  I  never  saw  it  as 
such,"  he  said.  "It  was  just  my  own  experiences 
and  they  seemed  so  regiikir  and  average  to  me." 

The  film  evades  stock  gay  characters  and 
stereotypes  in  favor  of  multifaceted  personalities. 

"A  lot  of  people  use  the  word  stereotypes 
because  it's  been  thrown  around  so  much  because 


there  really  have  been  stereotype  sort  of  charac- 
ters," Berlanti  said.  '*H<m  I  think  we're  moving 
more  toward  personalities,  and  Uiat's  what  real 
characters  are  to  me." 

For  Olyphant,  playing  Dennis  offered  him  a 
rare  experience  as  far  aft  Mng  the  lead  character. 

"I  tend  to  think  tfiitiead  characters  are  the 
most  boring  people  ia4ir  movie."  Olyphant  said. 
"This  is  not  the  case  llniB.  (Dennis)  had  a  great 
deal  of  range  and  furt." 

While  other  charadcfs  seemed  to  have  their 
qairky  hook,  Dennis  iMisjMt  hoping  to  transition 
sfMothly  into  his  30s.  Mr  is  not  as  flamboyant  as 
Tit^T  (Billy  Porter)  orasforgeous  as  Cole  (Dean 
Cain). 

"Everybody  else  Jwi  their  little  nidie," 


In  his  debut  script, 

Greg  Berlanti  brings 

the  Hves  of  a  group 

of  gay  men  to  the 

big  screen 


Olyphant  said.  "And  1  felt  that  Dennis  had  an 
opportunity  to  go  everywhere  in-between." 

One  of  Dennis's  romantic  interests  is  the 
group's  "Newbie,"  Kevin  (Andrew  Ke^an).  As  a 
recently  "out"  gay  man,  Kevin  is  cspcciaHy  sweet, 
inexperienced  and  destined  for  heartbreak. 

"He's  innocent,  very  naive  to  this  whole  world 
that  he's  coming  into,"  Keegan  said. 

For  Keegan,  playing  the  young  Kevin  offered 
him  a  new  experience. 

Keegan  admits  that  he  was  too  busy  to  read  the 
script  close  enough  to  realize  how  intimate  he 
would  get  with  oxtar  Dean  Cain. 

••Sfc  I  read  it  agm,"  Keegan  said.  "And  of 


ScellEMrn^pa9e48 


Mimes  step  outside  b(^  for  live  performances 


_,       T  »  J  SfMfciw  Troupe 

The  Tony  Award-winning  San  Francisco  Mime  Troupe  exaggerates  situations  with  song  and  dance. 


THEATER:  Travelling  troupe 
addresses  social  issues  by 
exaggerating  everyday  life 


ByBaibaraMcGuire 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  San  Francisco  Mime  Troupe  is 
anything  but  silent. 

An  acting  group  whose  performances 
arc  flavored  with  politics,  pop  cultural 
issues  and  comedy,  these  mimers  don't 
paint  their  faces  white  and  dress  in  black 
suits.  Performing  "City  for  Sale"  on 
Oct.  22  in  Santa  Monica,  the  Tony  Award 
winning  San  Francisco  Mime  Troupe  will 
be  making  quite  a  lot  of  noise  with  live 
musicians  and  singing  actors. 

"First  of  all,  the  San  Francisco  Mime 
Troupe  name  is  confusing  to  Americans 
because  of  the  narrow  concept  of  the  defi- 
nition of  mime,"  said  Veiina  Brown,  a 
member  of  the  troupe  since  19*2. 


"Actually,  we  are  not  silent  pan- 
tomimes," she  continued.  "We  do  politi- 
cal, musical  dieater  -  the  defiiMioa  of 
mime  is  the  exaggeration  of  everyday  life 
in  story  and  song." 

Ironically  ««ough,  their  style  of  acting 
is  actually  quite  loud  and  extravagant. 
With  usual  performances  in  varioiM  parks 
and  open  venues,  the  mime  trotfpe  has 
learned  to  make  a  lot  of  noise  to  fit  tome 
attention. 

"We  actually  have  a  portable  dbtdoor 
set,  a  stage  that  we  load  up  in  a  Brick,  set 
up  in  the  park  and  strike  and  put  lafcfc  in 
the  truck  every  show,"  said  directa^Keiko 
Shimosato. 

"We  have  a  sound  setup;  evea<thoagh 
we're  low  tech,  I  guess  we're  on  tk^ 
end,"  she  continued.  "We  also  ha 
phones  because  nowadays  when  w 
in  (San  FraMisco's)  Dolores  Pa 
example,  or  for  a  park  show,  we  can  have 
up  to  3,000  peaple  and  there's  no  v 
they  could  heir  us." 

The  mime  tnupe  is  a  collectii 


ing  that  everybody,  no  matter  what  his  or 
her  position,  helps  out  with  whatever 
needs  to  be  done,  especially  when  it  comes 
time  to  set  up  the  stage.  Shimosato  said 
that  because  of  the  needio  re-set  the  stage 
for  every  performance,  iMr  type  of  acting 
can  be  considered  an  athletic  style  and 
that  most  members  are  required  to  be 
strong  and  in  pretty  good  shape. 

"The  biggest  difference  between  work- 
ing in  a  theater  that  has  actual  usable 
space,  versus  taking  a  show  on  the  road 
and  doing  it  outdoors  or  doing  itin  a  dif- 
ferent theater  space  is  that  there  is  a  lot 
more  set-up  involved,"  said  stage  manager 
Karen  Runk,  of  the  difficulties  of  their 
outdoor  performances.  "You  can't  just 
leave  your  sUge  up  with  your  props  set  out 
and  come  back  the  next  day  and  maybe 
adjust  the  stage  and  then  be  ready  to  go  " 

"City  for  Sale"  is  their  current  show 
and  focuses  around  the  political  issue  of 
the  uprooting  and  dispiacement  of  certain 
artistic  communities  in  Sta  Francisco  due 
to       a       take       ovar       by       the 


**yuppie,"  upper  class. 

"The  underlying  theme  started  out 
being  just  about  the  gentrification  here  in 
San  Francisco  of  yuppies  wanting  to  live 
in  the  quote-unquote  hip,  funky,  multicul- 
turaHy  diverse  section  of  town,"  explained 
Shimosato.  "But.  just  by  the  nature  of  the 
fact  that  their  salaries  are  higher,  they  can 
afford  higher  rent  for  living  spaces,  the 
nature  of  the  same  neighborhoods  that 
they  wanted  to  move  into  are  changing. 
It's  becoming  a  universal  problem." 

Though  the  story  started  out  describing 
the  upscaling  of  San  Francisco,  this  same 
idea  can  be  applied  to  any  major  city.  The 
director  noted  that  these  performances 
are  relevant  to  Santa  Monica  because  of  a 
similar  uprooting  which  lias  been  taking 
place  for  about  a  year.  The  Drawing 
Room,  Drescherville  and  Santa  Monica 
Fine  Arts  Studios  are  some  local  places 
out  of  which  artists  have  been  forced  to 
move  due  to  increasing  rent  costs. 


A&EonlheWeb 

See  all  this  and  more  at 
:  the  Daily  Bruin^ 

Website:' 
J-www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

Friday,  September  29, 2000 


ii  f  I  '  ■ 


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gives  creative  ^ 
spin  to  impersohartechnology 


EXHIBIT:  Wight  Gallery  display 
brings  avant-garde  sensibilities 
to  digital  creations  from  Finland 


By  Midiael  Rosen-MoNna 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Digital  art  often  seems  as  cold  and  sterile  as  the 
technology  that  produced  it.  Not  so  with  F2F: 
New  Media  Art  from  Finland,  the  new  art  exhibi- 
tion in  the  Wight  Gallery. 

The  show  strives  to  put  a  human  face  on  intimi- 
dating technology.  Finland  has  long  been  a  pio- 
neer in  both  the  digital  and  wireless  communica- 
tions fields  and  a  home  to  avant-garde  art.  F2F 
bridges  the  two  divergent  fields  through  a  wide 
mix  of  interactive  art  projects. 

Aided  by  the  soothing  yet  strangely  unsettling 
call  of  seagulls  from  some  unseen  exhibit,  F2F 
transfornu  the  Wight  Gallery  into  an  eerie  nether- 
world of  white  planes  and  dark  comers.  Soft  music 
and  moody  sound  effects  further  heighten  the 
experience. 

Some  of  the  art  is  fun  and  playful,  like  Juha 
Huuskonen's  "Mirror  ++."  A  favorite  with  chil- 
dren, the  work  acts  as  a  blue-tinted  kaleidoscope 
that  captures  the  viewer's  image  and  projects  it, 
swirling  and  repeating,  onto  a  nearby  wall. 

Other  works  touch  a  deep  chord  within  the 
human  psyche.  ■     >■■ 

Heidi  Tikka's  "Mother,  Child,"  for  example, 
simulates  the  experience  of  cradling  a  new-born 
baby.  It  invites  the  viewer  to  sit  on  a  chair  and 
drape  a  white  towel  across  themselves,  as  an  over- 
head projector  casts  an  image  of  a  baby  on  his  lap. 
The  baby,  and  image  of  Tikka's  real-life  daughter, 
smiles  and  gurgles  in  response  to  the  movements 
of  the  person  "holding"  her. 

While  "Mother,  Child"  shows  technology's 
capacity  to  inspire  compassion,  other  works  warn 
of  how  impersonal  technology  can  drain  compas- 
sion from  a  society.  Spectators  watch,  unmoved, 
as  animated  figures  meet  their  doom  in  "Hit2mor- 
row." 

"Hit2morrow"  mocks  the  human  tendency 
toward  fatalism  with  a  prognostication  archery 
game.  Patrons  take  turns  firing  a  foam-tipped  bow 
and  arrow  at  a  virtual  target.  A  direct  hit  on  the 
bulls  eye  reveals  a  short  computer  animated  pre* 
diction  about  the  future. 

"Tomorrow,"  one  enigmatic  forecast  warns, 
leveryone  will  drown."  A  hapless  group  of  pastel- 
colored  people,  bearing  an  eerie  resemblance  to 
the  giant  stone  heads  of  Easter  Island  fame,  dance 
in  the  field  before  a  Kremlin-like  building.  Before 


the  viewer's  eyes,  the  water  level  starts  to  rise, 
slowly  but  surely  consuming  the  islanders,  who 
continue  their  relentless  capering  until  the  bitter 
end. 

"Hit2morrow's"  predictions  are  not  always  so 
dire,  ranging  from  the  strange  to  the  absurd  to  the 
disturbing.  When  the  piece  claims  that  "tomorrow 
the  chosen  one  will  arrive,"  it  is  accompanied  by  a 
film  of  the  same  animated  islanders  on  the  run 
from  tanks. 

At  the  last  second,  a  giant  fioating  cross  rips 
across  the  screen,  drops  bombs  on  the  pursuing 
tanks,  then  blasts  off  into  space.  "Tomorrow  we 
will  be  many"  features  the  same  islanders,  lined  up 
in  rows,  slowly  multiplying,  while  eerie  techno 
music  plays. 

Technology  can  be  used  to  fill  human  needs,  but 
often  its  excesses  encourage  people  to  label  their 
"wants"  as  "needs." 

"Need,"  Tuomo  Tammenpaa's  wry  comment 
on  consumer  culture,  caused  a  stir  when  it  first  pre- 
miered in  Los  Angeles.  Before  the  opening, 
Tammenpaa  posted  signs  and  distributed  leaflets 
at  restaurants  and  coffee  shops  around  town, 
advertising  an  imaginary  product  called  "Need." 
Although  the  concept  first  mystified  some 
patrons,  Tammenpaa's  intentions  became  clear 
when  customers  actually  began  calling  in  to  order 
"Need."  Although  they  had  no  idea  what  the  prod- 
uct was,  they  were  convinced  that  they  desperately 
needed  to  possess  it. 

The  sculpture  itself  consists  of  a  small  sterile- 
white  alcove,  lit  by  almost  blinding  white  lights. 
Neatly  arranged  stacks  of  CDs,  boxes,  bottles,  pill 
packs,  solution  vials  and  aluminum  cans,  each 
bearing  the  "Need"  logo,  line  the  surrounding 
glass  shelves.  Not  surprisingly,  each  box  is  empty 
and  every  CD  is  blank:  TTie  mysterious  "Need" 
that  everyone  needs  is  nowhere  to  be  found. 

A  computer  terminal  additionally  allows  view- 
ers to  visit  the  "Need"  Web  site,  become  members, 
and  "order"  nonexistent  "Need"  merchandise. 

The  Internet  is  also  an  integral  part  of 
"IceBorg,"  a  virtual  woHd  that  builds  on  the  same 
technology  as  do  Internet  chat  rooms,  allowing 
viewers  to  use  an  animated  avatar  to  explore  a  vir- 
tual world.  Andy  Best's  simulated  planet  repre- 
sents a  deserted  mining  asteroid,  over-exploited 
and  plagued  by  poUution. 

Apparently,  many  yeara  ago,  a  space  trsaipart 
crashed,  stranding  its  helpless  crew  on  the  desolate 
rock.  While  awaiting  rescue,  the  survivors  have 
built  a  new  civilization. 

The  audience  can  explore  the  intricacies  of  the 
asteroid  society  through  their  character,  a  leg-less 

See  F2F,  page  41 


•Alphabets' by  Leena  Saarto  is  one  of  the  contemporary  media  works  In  the  exhibit 
"F2F:  New  Media  Art  from  Finland"  which  is  showing  now  in  the  New  Wight  Gallery. 


38 ^Friday,  September  29, 2000 


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BOOKS:  Comic  strip  breathes  life, 
humor  into  non  sequitur  dreams 


By  Michael  Rosen-Molina 

Bally  Bruin  SeniQi  Staff 


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It's  just  one  of  those  days.  First,  you  show  up  to 
class  late,  only  to  realize  that  today  is  the  big 
midterm  that  you  totally  forgot  about.  Then,  you 
realize  that  you  don't  recognize  any  of  the  test 
material.  Then  you  realize  that  you're  completely 
naked. 

Then  you  wake  up. 

Dreamcatcher  Jesse  Reklaw  sifts  through  the 
nebulous  other  world  of  the  sleeping  psyche  to  cre- 
ate "Slow  Wave,"  a  comic  strip  that  celebrates  just 
such  bizarre  nightmare  situations. 

"Dreamtoons,"  a  collection  of  over  three  years  of 
the  popular  comic,  provides  a  hilarious,  disturbing 
glimpse  into  the  Freudian  depths.  Originally  an 
Internet  cartoon,  "Slow  Wave"  is  now  published  by 
12  weekly  newspapers  across  the  U.S. 

The  strips  are  all  based  on  actual  dreams,  sent  to 
Reklaw  by  readers  around  the  world.  The  cartoonist 
illustrates  the  stories,  using  personal  photos  provid- 
ed by  the  reader  to  draw  his  caricature  into  the  strip. 
The  strips  are  odd  and  surreal,  as  well  as  unset- 
thng,  but  still  follow  an  alien  internal  logic.  Their 
very  strangeness  makes  them  comforting  and  famil- 
iar, assuring  readers  that  these  are  real  dreams.  No 
wakmg  mind  could  ever  envision  such  spectacle. 

In  one  dream,  a  man  recalls  visiting  a  friend's 
house  to  view  a  brood  of  baby  porcupines.  The 
young  porcupines,  however,  look  more  like  snakes, 
squirming  around  in  the  backyard.  One  baby  then 
upsets  his  owner  by  drinking  from  a  nearby  lake. 

According  to  dream  science,  this  poor  porcupine 
would  not  have  as  many  quills  when  fully  grown. 
The  entire  scenario  boggles  the  mindTWhat  strange 
midnight  snack  could  possibly  have  produced  such 
a  vision? 

Other  stock  situations  crop  up  often  in  "Slow 
Wave."  Shadowy  pursuers  chase  hapless  dreamers 
down  blind  alleys,  while  unseen  accusers  put  them 
on  trial.  Teeth  fall  out,  students  attend  class  sans 
pants,  falling  people  wake  before  hitting  the 
ground. 

Reklaw's  matter-of-fact  delivery  puts  punch  into 
the  old  themes.  For  instance,  a  woman  visits  an 
interdimensional  mall.  Despite  the  exotic  sights,  her 


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Friday,  September  29, 2000       39 


www.angryflower.com 
www.angryfIower.com 

Bob  is  a  flower,  and  he's  angry.  Hence  the 
name,  Bob  the  Angry  Rower. 

The  brain  child  of  Stephen  Notley,  this 
enraged  plant  stars  in  his  own  comic  strip,  pub- 
lished in  See  Magazine.  He  also  appears  on  an 
Internet  site,  detailing  his  zany,  non  sequitur 
adventures. 

Bob  is  not  a  stereotypical  flower  character 
that  Disney-weaned  readers  might  expect,  full 
of  love  and  joy.  When  his  friends  are  a  phleg- 
matic tree  stump  named,  of  all  things,  Stumpy, 
and  a  naive  flying  fetus  named  Freddy,  it's  obvi- 
ous that  his  adventures  will  be  far  from  normal. 

Bob  does  everything  from  planning  world 
conquest  to  pulling  a  hat  out  of  a  rabbit.  He 
intervenes  in  a  fight  between  bears  and  robots, 
whom,  he  reminds  his  friends,  are  natural  ene- 
mies. He  also  defeats  an  evil  skeleton  by  playing 
on  the  skeletons'  little  known  fear  of  raisins. 

"Bob  the  Angry  Flower"  is  not  for  all  tastes. 
Bob's  arrogance  makes  him  an  unappealing 
character  and  his  mean-spirited  antics  could 
easily  be  construed  as  offensive  rather  than 
humorous.  Notley 's  brand  of  humor,  however, 
is  so  unabashedly  absurdist  that  it  is  difficult  to 
take  Bob  seriously  enough  to  dislike  him. 


Notley  conies  from  the  school  of  thought 
that  regards  the  non  sequitur  as  the  highest 
form  of  humor.  Bob's  carefree  sadism  might 
disturb  viewers  were  it  not  so  funny 

Michael  Rosen-Molina 
Rating:? 

www,seanbaby.com 


-«r- 


,*• 


A  total  mishmash  vanity  site,  Seanbabycom 
throws  in  every  aspect  of  late  '80s  consumer 
culture  kitsch. 

The  site's  curator,  Seanbaby,  shares  his  love 
for  Nintendo,  the  Superfriends,  Mr.  T,  and 
Hostess  snack  cakes  with  the  world. 

Taking  the  same  'Ratings'  strategy  that  made 
the  Brunching  Shuttlecocks  so  famous  one  step 
further,  Seanbaby  spends  a  disturbing  amount 
of  time  critiquing  every  aspect  of  the  antedilu- 
vian cartoon  series,  "The  Superfriends." 

Complete  with  clips  from  the  show, 
Seanbaby  speculates  on  everything  from  the 
behind  the  scenes  politics  of  this  league  of 
superheroes,  as  though  they  were  real  people 
rather  than  poorly  animated  cartoon  charac- 
ters. 

Seanbaby  does  not  shirk  from  passing  judge- 
ment on  the  unfortunate  characters.  The 
reviews  include  short  comic  strips,  taken  direct- 
ly out  of  the  "Superfriends"  comic  books,  with 
re-edited  dialogue  to  further  emphasite  the 
absurdity  of  the  series.  \ 

Although  the  "Superfriends"  page  Aay  be  lit- 
tle more  than  a  light-hearted  diversion,  the 
astute  satire  of  "The  Seanbaby  Probe"  rivals 
that  of  "The  Onion." 
Seanbaby  criticizes  the  legalistic  tendencies  . 


of  American  society  in  "Coffee  Drinkers  Sue 
Common  Sense  Again"  and  "Five  Children 
Suspended  for  Pointing  at  Each  Other."  Using 
scenes  from  the  old  '80s  action  series,  "A-Team 
Photo  Reminds  Us  of  More  Peaceful  Times" 
makes  a  point  about  violence  in  our  society 
Seanbaby  makes  no  apologies  for  his  strong 
opinions. 

He  does  not,  however,  refrain  from  obsceni- 
ty; in  fact  his  gratuitous  use  of  it  might  be  a 
valid  criticism.  Even  so,  Seanbaby  offers  a 
refreshingly  candid  look  at  the  world  today 

Michael  Rosen-Molina 
,  -  -■■.■..-■  Rating:/ 

www.fattyboombatty.com 

It's  often  hard  to  avoid  "schwag"  sites  on  the 
Web,  but  with  a  name  like  www.fattyboombat- 
ty.com,  the  contents  of  this  site  may  make  view- 
ers just  want  to  get  up  and  dance. 

Dedicated  toward  both  Generation  X  and  Y, 
a  demographic  which  they  feel  is  often  ignored, 
www.fattyboombatty.com  is  a  comprehensive 
site  which  features  information  and  links  on 
snowboarding,  skateboarding,  surfing,  music 
and  more. 

Promising  not  just  mainstream  news,  this  site 
offers  entertainment  links  as  well  as  reference 
links  when  it's  time  to  buckle  down  and  study 

'  .<  One  fun  area  called  "The  Mall."  offers  links 
to  various  skateboard  clothing  Web  sites,  such 
as  Pom  Star,  as  well  as  other  cool  shopping 

sites  like  Fossil,  while  just  a  little  bit  further    ' 

down  the  page  a  viewer  can  find  much  more  ' 

serious  content. 

Under  a  section  titled  "  Fatty  Boom  Batty 


Internet  Guide,"  one  can  find  links  to  "Arts  and 
Humanties,"  which  leads  to  various  art  gal- 
leries, "College  Life  101 "  which  features  news 
stories  of  importance  to  college  students,  as 
well  as  "Reference  Tools,"  where  one  can  find 
links  to  dictionaries  and  libraries. 

The  name  of  the  site  is  not  deceiving,  howev- 
er; there  are  tons  of  fun  things  to  look  at.;.,  .'.  - 

Especially  funny  is  a  section  titled  ' ; 

"Whatever  happened  too?"  that  currently  fea- 
tures links  to  Bob  Denver  and  Barry  Williams 
Web  sites.  Pictures  flash  of  the  actors  now  and 
then  that  provide  laughs. 

The  site  is  more  than  just  a  link  provider, 
Web  users  can  also  get  their  own  fattyboombat- 
ty  e-mail  address  as  well  as  search  engines  for 
the  site  and  the  world  wide  web  in  general. 

More  like  a  home  page  than  just  some  ran- 
dom site  to  visit,  www.fattyboombattycom 
offers  Internet  surfers  things  to  do  when  they 
need  some  fun,  such  as  an  arcade  and  entertain- 
ment links,  but  also  provides  more  sober  con- 
tent such  as  links  to  job  search  engines  and 
health  sites. 

Holding  true  to  it's  ideal  of  providing  a  Web. 
site  for  those  between  the  ages  of  13  and  30, 
www.fattyboombattycom  is  fat,  only  with  a 
"p-h." 

Barbara  McGuire 

.■■  ;.  ;, :  ..    -    Rating: 5 


MANN 


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Enjoy  the 
Movies!!! 


To  advertise 

in  the 

Bruin   ^ 

Movie 
Guide, 

call 
310.825.2161 


/ 


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t    ? 


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<0_friday,  S«ptcmbef  29, 2000 


IWly  Iruin  Art!  t  EatertaJmMM 


Internment  Wstoiy  war  llfr^ 


BOOKS:  Readers  empathize 
with  intricate  story  about 
generation  gaps,  secrets 


By  Sharon  Hori 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff  i' 

The  50th  reunion  of  Amache,  an 
internment  camp  in  Colorado  that 
housed  thousands  of  Japanese 
Americans  during  World  War  II,  became 
more  than  a  weekend  for  former 
internees  to  share  their  camp  experi- 
ences. 

The  1992  visit  became  an  inspiration 
for  Rahna  Reiko  Rizzuto  to  begin  her 
first  novel. 

Rizzuto,  born  to  a  Japanese  mother 
and  a  half-Italian/lrish  father.' resurrect- 
ed her  fictional  novel  "Why  She  Left  Us" 
after  she  and  her  mother  returned  to 
Amache.  The  result  of  a  year's  worth  of 
research  -  including  interviews  with  15 
Japanese-Americans  and  camp  stories  of 
former  internees  -  "Why  She  Left  Us"  is 
a  twisted  hybrid  of  love,  fear,  loyalty  and 
abandonment  during  three  generations 
of  Japanese  American  ancestry. 

Reciting  the  awkward  story  of  the 
Okada  family  could  never  seem  more 
natural  at  the  brink  of  war,  when  the 
United  States  precariously  developed  a 
national  disdain  toward  its  Japanese 
adversaries.  Rizzuto's  novel  extracts  the 
turmoil  embedded  in  war  and  its  efTects 
on  family  life. 

Japanese  tradition  dominates  the 
Okada  family,  since  "issei"  parents 
Mitsuo  and  Kaori  -  first-generation 
immigrants  of  Japanese  descent  -  were 
arranged  to  be  married  before  they  had 
ever  met  The  post-Pearl  Harbor  incar- 
ceration of  Japanese  Americans  at  relo- 
cation centers  durihg  the  early  '405  often 
united  parents  with  their  children  -  but 


not  for  the  Okadas. 

Emi,  who  struggles  with  her  family's 
disapproval  after  secretly  conceiving  two 
illegitimate  children,  becomes  the  center 
of  gossip  in  the  community  and  the  center 
of  disgrace  for  her  relatives.  After  Emi's 
shame  is  exposed  and  she  tearfully  con- 
fesses that  she  gave  her  first  child,  Eric, 
up  for  adoption,  Kaori  is  already  on  a 
quest  to  retrieve  him.  Legality  and 
birthright  become  oil  and  water,  and  the 
blood  of  family  is  thicker  than  the  ink  on 
the  adoption  paperir  -    -^^  v   ;^-  -;  " 


The  underlying  lesson  becomes  clear: 
the  pride  that  flows  through  the  family's 
umbilical  cord  must  be  salvaged  at  any 
cost.  Yet  in  attempt  to  escape  the  disgrace 
that  Emi  has  brought,  fleeing  seems  to  be 
the  only  solution  that  will  avoid  conflict. 

Watching  the  family  grow  up  and  grow 
apart  becomes  a  sad  metamorphosis, 
almost  like  watching  grass  mutate  into 
weeds.  Children  crawl  into  cocoons  of 


self-consciousness  and  isolation,  only  to 
leave  confused  about  their  identities.  The 
readers,  however,  will  journey  through 
the  novel  and  escape  touched  but 
unharmed,  changed  but  appreciative. 

"Why  She  Uft  Us"  succeeds  in  its 
endeavors  to  deliver  the  experience  of  liv- 
ing during  the  war  as  a  Japanese 
American.  The  family  maintains  strict 
ideals  of  unconditional  love  and  loyalty, 
but  the  government  proposes  threats  to 
arrest  and  detain  Japanese  American  citi- 
zens who  oppose  their  country.  The  war 
becomes  a  catalyst  for  the  family's 
demise.  The  real  emotional  tearing  hap- 
pens when  the  strained  family  needs  each 
others'  support,  but  ironically  the  charac- 
ters choose  to  become  more  distant. 

Generations  are  woven  together  in  a 
thread  of  secrets.  "There  are  secrets  that 
are  hard  to  keep  and  secrets  that  are  hard 
to  tell.  And,  in  our  family,  there  are  so 
many  because  we  never  told  the  truth.  It 
was  something  we  never  wanted  to  do,  to 
understand  what  had  happened  to  our 
lives,"  Kaori  recalls. 

In  revealing  the  family's  hidden  emo- 
tions and  judgments,  the  characters 
writhe  in  pride,  shame  and  dishonesty. 
The  story  moves  from  fictional  to  histori- 
cal, from  historical  to  authentic. 

Emi's  secrets  are  pieced  together  by 
the  whirlwind  of  characters  most  greatly 
impacted  by  her  actions  -  her  mother,  her 
brother  and  her  two  children.  The  four 
narrators  help  shape  the  awkwardness  of 
family  life,  when  unconditional  loyalty 
clashes  with  unfortunate  disgrace.  They 
add  honesty  ind  insight  that  enhance  the 
novel's  completeness. 

The  biographical  story  remains  least 
understood  for  Emi's  daughter,  Mariko, 
who  cannot  comprehend  why  her  mother 
has  secrets  so  private  she  cannot  even 
reveal  the  identity  of  her  biological  father. 


SeclNraWMEIir,pag«42 


MIME 

Frompag«37     «       \ 

"That  often  is  the  case, 
where  the  owner  dies  and 
then  their  kids  just  start  kick- 
ing everybody  out,"  said 
Brown,  relating  the  story  line 
of  "City  for  Sale"  to  events 
happening  around  the 
nation. 

"They're  not  terribly 
interested  in  the  history  and 
the  promises  that  were  made 
to  those  people,"  she  contin- 
ued. "They  just  go  'Oh  well,  I 
can  make  money  if  I  kick 
everybody  out  and  up  the 
rent,'  so  that's  basically 
what's  hap- 
pening."        "-— ■-^-■ 

The 
mime 
troupe  does 
not  convey 
these  strong 
messages 
through     a 
dry,  boring 
and    politi- 
cal manner.  Using  comedy 
as  a  tool  to  attract  the  inter- 
est  of  the   audience,   the 
lessons  learned  through  their 
performance    are    learned 
through        laughter,       as 
opposed  to  frowns. 

"Humor  is  a  very  effec- 
tive, powerful  way  to  reach 
someone,"  said  Brown.  "If 
you  think  about  your  own 
life,  if  someone  is  trying  to 
talk. to  you  or  teach  you 
about  something  and  they're 
very  serious  and  they're  very 
intense,  you  just  sort  of  go, 
'Oh  my  gosh,  what's  on  tele- 
vision?' 

"But,  ifthey're  able  to  tell 
you  in  a  way  that's  fun  and 


entertaining  and  still  if\Jbf 
information  in,  that's  going 
to  be  a  lot  more  effective." 

Keiko  also  feff  that  the 
San  Francisco  Mime  Troupe 
performed  in  a  style  which  in 
a  way  is  trying  to  give  theater 
a  new,  younger  face. 

"I  think  in  a  lot  of  ways, 
theater  has  been  given  a  bad 
name,"  she  said.  "If  you  ask 
most  young  20-somethings, 
what  they  do  for  entertain- 
ment,- 1  don't  think ,  that 
going  to  the  theater  would  be 
on  the  top  of  .their  lists.  It  " 
would  probably  be  a  movie 
or  going  for  a  beer  or  going 
to  see  a  band. 

"I  think  that  somewhere 
in  your 


Ironically  enough, 

(Mime  Troupe's)  style .. 

is  actually  quite  loud 

and  extravagant. 


mind 
it's  that 
the- 
ater's 
t     0     0 

expen- 
s  i  V  e 
and 

thatit'd 

proba- 
bly be  boring  and  you'd 
probably  fall  asleep,"  she 
continued.  "So,  I  think  that 
we  accomplish  the  'other,' 
when  we  bring  it  out  to  the 
park.  It's  available  to  every- 
body, it's  free  and  because 
it's  live  music  it's  got  kind  of 
a  rock  'n'  roll  energy  too."   ■ 


THEATER:  The  San  Francisco 
Mime  Troupe  will  be  perform- 
ing -City  for  Sale'  for  one 
night,  Oct.  2  at  6:30  p.m.  at 
Bergamot  Art  Station,  2525 
Michigan  Ave.,  Jh  Santa 
Monica.  The  performance  is 
free,  with  suggested  dona- 
tions of  $20.  Call  (310) 
251-4299  for  information. 


208-8048 

10916  KINROSS  AVE 
WESTWOOD  VILLAGE 


We  deliver:  Cakes,  Scoops, 

Shakes,  Sundaes, 

Cappuccino  Blasts, 

Nqn-Fat  Fruit  Smoothies,  etc. 


'T 


MHMIMtMhs 


i«>H>ri.i 


••    :'-■■<  ;■  ■•■>■" 


^^^-i^^^.y.-. 


UNyMhi  Atfi  C  tMcifitiiiiiiiiM 


■^um 


llif?  b(TK  Hninwli^ino 


bhie  humanoid  wearing  a  space  suit 
that  strolls  leisurely  across  landscapes 
of  burning  lava  and  frigid  ice  on  his 
unusually  long  arms.  The  wandering 
creature  can  stride  through  an  ocean 
of  molten  rock  just  as  easily  as  he  can 
float  above  it  and  his  calm  fluid  move- 
ments draw  the  viewer  into  his  (aim. 
reality.  ;  .-  ; 

Although  it  uses  real  actors,  Teijo 
Pellinen's  "Aquarium"  creates  a  worid 
no  less  "virtual."  The  piece  is  based  on 
a  popular  interactive  Finnish  televi- 
sion series  of  the  same  name. 

Set  up  to  resemble  a  living  room,  the 
viewer  sits  in  a  plush  arm  chair  to 
watch  a  television  show  about  a  bored 
Finnish  couple.  A  convenient  tele- 
phone allows  the  viewer  to  direct  the 
actions  of  the  characters  using  a 
choose-your-own-adventure  format  by 
pressing  different  buttons  to  perform 
various  actions. 

With  such  wildly  original  ideas,  the 
only  limits  on  the  show  arc  not 
imposed  by  lack  of  imagination,  but  by 
the  inherent  difficulties  of  dealing  with 
new  technology. 

Unfortunately,  not  every  piece  of 
art  goes  ofT  snag-free  and  a  couple 
pieces  are  still  under  construction. 
Even  so,  the  projects  look  promising 
and  minor  technical  difficulties  should 


lissed 

^atty  Bruin\ 
rerthe 


to  advertise  call 
825-2161 


3MIM  !    ^1.  *  ,;i; 


Friday,  September  29, 2000       41 


m^-"   m   ^fc 


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X  VorLr  mooH  nf  ,h        II  T^  technophobcs    the  atmosphere  an  exciting  and  thought-provoking  Dickson  Arts  Center  through  October. 

The  somber  mood  of  the  gallery  does  suit  an  exhibiUon  that  showcases  experience.                                 -  For  more  information  contact  Heather 

gives  tfje  exhibiuon  an  unsctUing  oth-  boththeyinandyangofnewtechnolo McC^e  ^^ZTTisssS  T^^^^ 

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42        Friday,  September  29, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertammem 


'Beautif  ur  shows  less-attractive  side  of  pageants 


MOVIE:  Flat  characters, 
writing  leave  ugly  mark 
on  talented  actors,  film 


By  Sheila  Norman-Culp 

The  Associated  Press 

Minnie  Driver  is  beautiful,  by 
any  definition.  Sally  Field  is  an 
uber-talent  in  the  film  world.  So 
why  is  their  film  "Beautiful"  -  a 
dark  comedy  about  the  world  of 
beauty  pageants  -  such  a  gawky  cre- 
ation? 

In  Field's  directorial  debut. 
Driver  stars  as  Mona  Hibbard,  an 
Illinois  girl  determined  from  age  12 
and  onward  to  rise  out  of  a  loveless, 
lower-middle  class  household  to 
become  "Miss  America  Miss." 
Nothing  and  no  one  is  going  to  stop 
Mona  from  reaching  her  goal,  and 
Driver  succeeds  in  creating  a  thor- 
oughly selfish,  unlikable  character 
who  is  so  self-absorbed,  she's  funny. 

But  the  film  lurches  between  the 
predictable  -  admittedly  funny  cat- 
fights  behind  the  scenes  at  pageants 
-  and  the  preachy:  Beauty  is  within. 
We  never  see  or  appreciate  the 
good  things  in  our  lives.  Little  kids 


with  mothers  who  don't  hug  them 
do  not  learn  to  love  others.  The  pop 
psychology  is  syrupy  enough  to  pro- 
duce a  toothache. 

Can't  some  people  just  be  mean 
and  unpleasant?  Is  it  always  their 
mother's  fault?  Do  we  re«»lly  believe 
the  mean-spirited  among  us  will 
experience  an  epiphany  and 
become  better  people,  just  when  all 
their  evil  ways  are  paying  off.' 

Joey  Lauren  Adams  plays  Ruby, 
Mona's  loyal  sidekick,  a  one-dimen- 
sional Goody-Two-Shoes.  It's  not 
Adams"  fault.  Her  dialogue  is 
insipid,  and  the  contrast  between 
her  goodheartedness  and  Mona's 
monomaniacal  focus  on  herself 
isn't  exactly  subtle. 

Hallie  Kate  Eisenberg,  the  wise- 
cracking know-it-all  with  dimples 
who  charmed  us  in  so  many  Pepsi 
commercials,  is  Mona's  7-year-old 
daughter  Vanessa.  But  having  a 
daughter  would  make  Mona  ineligi- 
ble for  the  contest,  so  Ruby  poses  as 
Vanessa's  mother. 

Eisenberg  is  oddly  flat  in  a  role 
that  needs  more  emotion.  No  tears 
when  "Mom"  (Ruby)  is  hauled  off 
to  jail?  Just  a  shout  or  two  when 

~~~  SeeBEAimFUt«page43 


The  Associated  Press 

Minnie  Driver  (left)  stars  as  Mona  and  Hallie  Kate  Eisenberg 

stars  as  Vanessa  in  Destination  Films'"Beautiful."        > 


INTERNMENT 

Frompage40  ::  - 

Thus,  a  weakened  Mariko  is  forced  to 
grow  up  isolated,  later  learnijj^she  was 
born  in  the  internment  camp,  not  know- 
ing she  had  a  brother. 

Rizzuto  keeps  readers  captivated  not 
by  reciting  the  downfall  of  the  Okada 
family,  but  instead  by  allowing  their  ^ 
ongoing  conflicts  -  miscommunication,, 
inability  to  admit  failure  or  mistake  -  to 
remain  unresolved.  The  story  delves 
into  the  family  secrets  and  generation- 
gaps  that  keeps   their  relationships 
uncomfortably  distant,  and  Rizzuto 
entices  a  denouement  to  bring  closure 
along  with  the  war. 


The  war  becomes  a 

catalyst  for  the  family's 

demise. 


And  it  works.  Rizzuto's  technique  to 
push  the  limits  of  comfortable  living 
leaves  no  truth  unturned.  She  weaves 
empathy  through  the  pages  of  her  work 
to  clothe  the  naked  truth  about  a  part  of 
American  culture  that  brewed  shame 
and  hatred.  The  novel  preys  hungrily  on 
drama  and  history,  and  readers  will 
leave  well-nourished  and  satisfied. 


"Tir^ 


welqom 
Dae 


You've 
waited  all 
summer 
long  and 
now  it's 
finally 
here... 


to  advertise  call 


oi 


"  ?l6l 


Daily  Brutn  Arts  &  Entertainment 


Friday,  September  29, 2000       43 


BEAUTIFUL 

Frompage42 

.Mona  (filling  in  for  Ruby)  forgets  to 
take  you  to  your  soccer  games?  Only 
meek  protests  when  you  are  confined  to 
a  hotel  room  for  days?  The  range  of  feel- 
ing for  most  7-year-olds  is  as  wide  as  the 
Sahara  and  just  about  as  predictable. 

Still,  the  movie  has  its  moments: 
Kathleen  Turner  delights  with  a  throaty, 
overblown  performance  as  a  beauty 
queen  manager.  Leslie  Stefanson  is  a 
TX)mic  gem,  playing  an  entertainment 
reporter  who  hounds  Mona.  Colleen 
Rennison,  playing  Mona  at  12,  turns  in 


a  portrait  of  a  self-centered,  preteen 
manipulator  that  vvould  make  any  par- 
ent smile  in  recognition. 

Costume  designer  Chrisi  Karvonides 
Dushenko  takes  an  over-the-top  subject 
-  beauty-pageant  costumes  -  and  prO" 
duces  a  grand  slam  of  fabric.  Mona's 
outfits  are  tacky,  hideous,  schmaltzy, 
kitschy.  They  are  sure  to  draw  anything 
from  a  chuckle  to  a  roar  because  they  so 
perfectly  capture  the  scene. 

Pawnee  Indian  beads  on  a  short  skirt 
never  looked  so  good  -  or  so  awful. 

FILM:  "Beautiful."'  a  Destination  Films 
release,  is  rated  PG-13  and  runs 
112  minutes. 


SLOW 

From  page  38 - 

most  vivid  memory  is  of  discover- 
ing a  wallet  full  of  cash,  but  calmly 
'deciding  to  turn  it  in  to  Lost  and 
Found,  because  "it  wasn't  earth 
money." 

Dressed  to  the  nines  in  suit  and 
tie,  in  another  comic  dream,  a 
paranoid  man  awkwardly  sips 
champagne  at  a  swanky  party.  His 
fear  is  justified:  "You  see,"  he 
explains  calmly,  "I  have  the  last 
belt  in  the  world  and  international 


terrorists  want  it."  i    "" 

The  terrorists  attack,  drug  him, 
and  steal  his  belt.  Upon  waking  in 
a  ditch  several  hours  later,  he  is 
horrified  to  find  that,  not  only  has 
the  precious  belt  been  stolen,  his 
hands  have  also  been  taken  and 
replaced  with  new  ones. 

"I  don't  know  how  I  knew,"  he 
says,  "there  weren't  any  stitches, 
but  I  just  knew  they  weren't 
mine." 

As  funny  as  the  familiar  stand- 
bys  are,  the  true  gut-busters  are  so 
impossibly  bizarre  that  the  reader 
simply  cannot  make  heads  or  tails 
of  them. 


A  giant  and  evil  hot  air  balloon 
named  Cornelius  chases  a  family 
across  a  desert.  An  elephant  has 
fantasies  of  being  a  secret  agent. 
Interrogators  force  an  unwilling 
victim  to  talk  by  threatening  his 
friends,  who  just  happen  to  be  a 
packet  of  fancy  ketchup  and  a 
packet  of  relish. 

Yes,  his  friends  are  talking 
condiment  packets. 

Reklaw  presents  even  these 
dreams  with  the  same  deadpan 
sincerity,  making  them  all  the  \nn-__ 
nier.  He  opts  to  draws  his  subjects 

~X~n~~"        See  SLOW,  page  48 


tothe  Neil 


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MOTonoL./x         SKYTEL 


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mm  -I  iftim 


44       Friday,  September  29, 2000 


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[he  Associated  Press  ^ 


Actor  Paul  Hogan,  right,  and  Aboriginal  actor  David  Njoombujarm^ 

are  shown  in  the  Australian  Outback  making  the  new  movie. 

Crocodile  Dundee  leaves 
for  LA.  from  the  Outbade 


FILM:  Paul  Hogan  brings 
popular  movie  sequel  to 
big  screen  after  12  years 


ByDcnnbPassa 

The  Associated  Press 

In  the  spirit  of  the  Sydney  Olympics, 
Paul  Hogan  compares  the  long-ago 
success  of  "Crocodile  Dundee"  to  an 
unlikely  win  in  the  100-meter  dash.  - 

"I've  always  said  it  was  like  going  to 
the  Olympics  in  your  jeans  and  bare 
feet  and  saying,  'Can  I  have  a  run  in  the 
100'?"  says  Hogan.  "You  win  the  gold 
medal  and  from  there  on  in.  nothing  is 
ever  going  to  match  it." 

The  1986  film  starring  Hogan  as  the 
laconic,  wisecracking  Outback  hero  of 
the  title  was  produced  for  $6  million 
and  grossed  $360  million  worldwide, 
eaming  an  Academy  Award  nomina- 
tion for  its  screenwriters  A  sequel  in 
1988  grossed  another  $250  million. 

If  the  first  glow  of  success  is  never 
going  to  be  repeated,  why  bring  Mick 
"Crocodile"  Dundee  back  to  life  14 
years  later  for  a  third  time  in 
"Crocodile  Dundee  in  LA."? 

A  good  story  line,  he  says,  and  a 
decision  by  him  and  co-producer 
Lance  Hool  to  independently  produce 
"CrocIII." 

"I  wanted  to  wait  until  there  was  a 
good  enough  idea,   ^ 
a    good     enough  ■^^^"™"^^" 
plan,"  says  Hogan 
in  his  trailer  during 
a  break  at  Warner 
Roadshow  studios 
on       Queensland 
sute's  Gold  Coast. 

"I'm  just  doing 

my  best  to  make  a  

good,  funny  movie 

and  we'll  see  how  it  turns  out." 

Five  weeks  of  shooting  in  Australia 
included  a  week-long  stay  in 
McKinlay,  in  northwest  Queensland, 
site  of  the  Outback  pub  from  the  origi- 
nal. "We  saw  the  same  people,  the 
same  town  drunk  and  the  same  dogs 
we  came  across  last  time  around," 
Hogan  says.  The  production  moves  to 
Los  Angeles  for  another  five  weeks  of 
filming. 

Los  Angeles^sed  Hool  secured 
mudi  of  the  movie's  $39  million  financ- 
ing, but  admits  to  lying  awake  some 
nights. 

"It  is  a  tough  act  to  follow,"  Hool 
says.  "Six  studios  turned  down  the  orig- 
inal, but  it  was  grossing  more  in  its  sixth 
wedc  in  the  U.S.  than  it  was  in  the 
first." 

The  third  installment  follows 
Hogan's  Dundee  from  Outback 
Australia  to  California,  where  his  part- 
ner. Sue  Charlton  (reprised  by  Hogan's 
wife,  Linda  Kozlowski).  has  been 
aatgned  to  run  the  Los  Angeles  bureau 
of  her  father's  newspaper. 

On  a  shooting  day  in  August  under 
sunny,   cloudless  Australian   skies, 


Hogan  was  working  with  a  chim- 
panzee flown  in  from  the  United  States 
-  while  fellow  cast  members  kept  their 
distance.  Australia's  quarantine  laws 
prevented  Hogan  from  coming  into 
contact  with  any  other  cast  members 
while  working  with  the  chimp,  which  . 
was  under  continuous  quarantine  dur- 
ing filming. 

■'I  was  like  a  radioactive  man  -  I'd 
say,  'E>on't  come  near  me,  don't  touch 
me,'"  says  Hogan,  his  sun-worn  fea- 
tures cracking  into  a  laugh.  "Anyone 
who  did  had  to  bum  their  clothes." 

Hogan  looks  fresh  now  in  a  new  pair 
of  jeans,  casual  shirt  and  boots;  the 
clothes  he  had  on  while  working  with 
Elly  the  chimp  had  to  be  set  alight 
moments  after  the  scene  was  shot. 

Hogan  is  hoping  the  new  film's  box- 
oflice  reception  will  be  equally  on  fire, 
to  help  erase  memories  of  some  clunk- 
ers in  the  past  eight  years  -  "Almost  an 
Angel,"  "Lightning  Jack"  -  and  the 
lukewarm  reception  for  the  movie  ver- 
sion of  "Flipper." 

A  painter  on  Sydney's  landmark 
Harbor  Bridge  before  he  turned  to 
stand-up  comedy  in  tfie  1970s  and  a  hit 
television  show,  Hogan  speaks  of  his 
roller-coaster  film  career  with  typical_ 
humor. 

"I  don't  think  that  a  movie  like 

'Flipper'  would  ever  be  a  blockbuster  - 

but  it  was  10  weeks  in  the  Bahamas 

swimming  with  dolphins,"  he  says. 

"After  I  did  the 

"'^^~"~^"~'  first     'Crocodile 

Dundee,'  anything 

I  did  wasn't  going 

to  match  it  and 

would  become  a 

failure  in  comparn 

son." 

More   than   a 
__________^__  decade  late, 

Hogan  says  he's 
had  a  chance  to  recharge  Mick 
Dundee's  batteries.  And  don't  expect 
anything  different  from  the  Australian 
bushman. 

"There's  no  real  character  art 
going  on  here,"  says  Hogan.  "Mick 
finds  there  are  other  things  to  being 
a  crocodile  hunter.  It's  not  a  mid-life 
crisis  -  he  wouldn't  have  one  of 
those. 

"You  wouldn't  want  him  to  be 
sophisticated.  He  still  doesn't  watch 
television,  he  has  no  computer,  no 
cell  phone." 

Hogan  lives  with  Kozlowski  in 
Santa  Barbara,  Calif.,  but  also  has  a 
multimillion-dollar  home  near  the 
Australian  resort  town  of  Byron 
Bay.  He  bristles  at  suggestions  that 
his  time  in  America  has  dulled  his 
Australian  sense  of  humor. 

"I  still  come  here  three  or  four 
times  a  year,  so  I  don't  think  any- 
thing major  happens  in  the  time  that 
I'm  not  here,"  he  says. 

"And  as  far  as  Mick  goes,  nothing 
has  changed  since  196*4  anyway. 
He's  older  and  uglier,  but  he  was 
never  cute  anyway." 


The  third  installment 

follows  Hogan's 
Dundee  from  Outback 
Australia  to  California. 


K  .  •  ■ 


-'     v.. 


t...i:f.,t*v%i,imiJ^*/'*\'lw'''''''f'i'-^.*V[^^  -.,■'■-'■«•■.■  .^  ^ 


•  ^^M^jlA^ti^^Jj-mifiH*-'-*'!* 


DXIyBniinAttsfcEiitetttiiiwwit' 


Fnday,  September  29, 2000       4S 


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(6        Friday,  September  29, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


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IMiMl  ba  a  oumnHy  mgMMWl  UCLA  tludwit 


'Big  Brother'  fans,  critics 
congregate  ori  Internet 


TELEVISION:  Popularity  of 
show  oii'^eB  Kelps  oflfset. 
disappointing  TV  ratings 


By  Anidi  Jcsdanun  -—r~-'  '''':  '  i 
The  Associated  Press  ^ 

Call  "Big  Brother"  boring  if  you 
wish,  but  many  fans  on  the  Internet 
will  miss  the  "reality"  game  show 
when  its  three-month  run  ends  Friday. 

Johnny  Fisher,  for  one,  will  have  to 
find  another  pastime.  The  retired  rail- 
road worker  watches  the  TV  show 
each  night, 

spends  another  10  ^■■■^^^.i.i. 
to  20  hours  a  day 
following  the  con- 
testants online 
and  has  posted 
more  than  1,200 
messages  since 
July  to  fellow 
fans. 

"The  Internet      

site       definitely 

enhances  the  enjoyment  of  the  pro- 
gram," said  Fisher,  53,  of  Enid,  Okla., 
who  is  known  online  as  Travin'  John. 
"I'm  not  entirely  sure  I'd  be  involved 
with  the  program  by  itself  on  televi- 


sion. 

Sure,  "Big  Brother"  has  been  a  rat- 
-  ings  disappointment  for  CBS.  But,  the 
audience  could  have  been  even  small- 
er without  the  internet  there  to  engage 
fans.        '    V 

This  has  been  the  most  ambitious 
television-internet  tie-in  to  date  in  the 
United  States.  The  show's  official  site, 
bigbrother2000.com,  offers  live  feeds 
of  the  contestants  24  hours  a  day, 
whether  they  are  sleeping,  eating  or 
shaving.  CBS  shows  less  than  four 
hours  of  footage  each  week,  most  of  it 
taped. 
Ten  strangers  agreed  to  live  in  the 
"Big    Brother" 
^..ii^^__      house  for  three 
months  with  no 
privacy  or  out- 
side     contact. 
Seven        have 
been  kicked  out. 
One     of     the 
remaining  con- 
testants 

Curtis,  Eddie  or 

Josh  -  will  win 

$500,000  on  Friday,  and  the  runners- 

up  will  get  $100,000  and  $50,000. 

The  show's  online  traffic  has  been 

See  BIG  BRO,  page  50 


This  has  been  the  most 
ambitious  television- 
Internet  tie-in  to  date 
in  the  United  States. 


Show  looks  to  anchor 
audience  with  gimmicic 


TV:  Contestant  that  earns 
most  votes  vnll  win  spot 
on  cable  news  program 


By  Karin  Meadows 

The  Assodated  Press 

Forget  the  consultants  and  focus 
groups.  The  audience  gets  to  choose 
the  anchor  for  PAX  television's  news 
show  about  the  Internet. 

Tune  in  this  week  to 
"MoneyWatchTV.com,"  a  television 
show  and  watch  five  different  women 
deliver  the  news.  Then  decide  which 
one  you'd  like  to  be  the  anchor,  go 
online  and  vote  for  your  favorite. 

In  Survivor-Iike  fashion,  four  of  the 
five  finalists  will  be  booted  off  until 
the  most  popular  contestant  remains. 

The  talking-head  wannabes  include 
an  actress,  a  producer  for  "The  Oprah 
Winfrey  Show,"  a  singer  and  a  couple 
of       television 

reporters.  Some  ■■^■^^■^^^_ 
deliver  the  news 
with  authority. 
One  has  a  soft, 
throaty  voice 
that  sets  her 
apart. 

"Each  one  has 
her  own  style," 
said  Mary  Mills, 
on-air  director  of 


"MoneywatchTV.com."  "To  me,  this 
is  the  ultimate  focus  group.  We  tried 
to  choose  different  types  of  people  for 
broad  appeal". 

The  womenV^ere  selected  from 
hundreds  of  hopefuls  who  mailed  in 
videotapes  after  an  ad  for  the 
$IOO,000-a-year  job  ran  in  Variety, 
Hollywood  Reporter  and  other  enter- 
tainment publications.  The  applicants 
included  a  former  "Saturday  Night 
Live"  regular,  a  chiropractor,  a  for- 
mer MTV  host,  a  CNBC  correspon- 
dent and  daytime  television  actors. 

It's  a  gimmick  the  show's  produc- 
ers hope  will  give  viewers  the  anchor 
they  want,  not  someone  selected  at 
random  by  a  news  director.  Of  course, 
it  can't  hurt  ratings,  either. 

"This  is  a  new  one,"  said  Barbara 


Cochran,  president  of  the  Radio- 
Television  News  Directors 
Association,  in  Washington.  She 
called  the  show's  approach  a  refresh- 
ing change. 

Audiences  are  astute  enough  to 
detect  whether  anchors  are  credible 
and  trustworthy,  and  whether  they 
understand  the  material  they  are  pre- 
senting, Cochran  said.  The  job  does- 
n't necessarily  require  a  news  report- 
ing background,  although  it  is  helpful, 
she  said. 

On  the  other  hand,  one  contes- 
tant's friends  could  just  go  online  and 
vole  repeatedly  to  knock  the  other 
contestants  out.  Cochran  said. 

The  contestants  said  they  prefer 
being  judged  by  the  audience  rather 
than  by  a  news  director. 

"I  feel  much  less  pressure,"  said  33- 
year-old  Melinda  Morrison  of 
Chicago  and  Seattle,  an  Emmy 
award-winning  producer  for  "Oprah" 
who  says  she  has  dreamed  of  being  a 
news  anchor 
..^_^^^«^      since  age  7. 

On  the  set, 
there's  no  lack 
of  primping,  but 
the  contestants 
seem  mostly 
down  to  earth. 
Toni  Redman 
walked  into  the 

studio  perfectly 

coiffed  and 
decked  out  in  a  hot  pink  suit  -  but 
barefoot  -  during  taping  one  day 
last  week.  The  actress  from  New 
York  City  has  no  reporting  experi- 
ence, and  delivering  the  news  has 
been  tougher  for  her  than  for  other 
contestants.  But  she  has  a  sense  of 
humor  to  go  with  her  Marilyn 
Monroe-like  voice. 

"That  sounds  bimbo-ish,"  she 
said  after  reading  one  line,  and 
asked  to  start  over. 

Win  or  not,  Redman  said,  she's   ■ 
happy  for  the  experience.  She  con- 
fides that  her  favorite  candidate 
isn't  herself,  but  she  won't  say  who  it 
is.  ^ 

"I  just  think  she  deserves  to  win," 
Redman  said.  "She  is  the  best  one 
here." 


The  job  doesn't  require 

a  news  reporting 

background,  although 

it  is  helpful. 


Daily  Bniin  Arts  &  Emertainmeiit 


Friday,  September  29, 2000       47 


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SLOW 

From  page 43         ^      j<.^  V     • 

as  subdued,  not  as  bug-eyed  carica- 
tures. The  realistic  drawings  and 
understated  prose  only  emphasize 
the  absurdity  of  the  subject  matter. 

Although  most  of  his  comics  tend 
to  be  more  realistic  and  the  less  tar- 
toony,'  Reklaw's  style  shifts  depend- 
ing on  the  dream. 

When  a  reader  recalls  a  dream 
where  her  enraged  father  abandons 
her  in  hardware  store,  Reklaw  is  able 
to  skillfully  exaggerate  her  feelings  of 
helplessness  while  at  the  same  time, 
diffusing  a  potentially  disturbing 
dream,  making  it  funny  by  adopting 
a  looser,  comic  style.  The  angry 
father  bears  a  striking  resemblance 
to  the  blustering  Bluto  of  Popeye  car- 
toons, while  the  hapless  child  is  a 
gangly  stick-thin  waif  that  recalls 
Popeye's  love  interest  Olive  Oyl. 

Sandwiched  between  uproarious 
cartoons  are  nugget's  of  wisdom 
from  psychologists  and  Zen  masters 
alike,  all  pontificating  on  the  mysteri- 
ous subject  of  dreams.  The  quotes  fit 
well  into  the  scheme  of  the  book, 
adding  to  the  almost  documentary 
tone  of  the  strips. 

"Dreamtoons"  is  a  fresh  new  idea 
in  cartoons  -  innovative  and  daring. 
A  rorshach  comic,  readers  can 
impose  any  interpretation  on  the 
confusing  storylines.  Although  inher- 
ently   voyeuristic,    "Dreamtoons" 


playful  irreverence  keeps  the  experi- 
ence from  becoming  dark  or  creepy. 
Rather,  it  feels  like  a  healing  exercise 
in  trust  and  acceptance:  complete 
strangers  lay  their  psyches  bare  for 
the  world  to  see,  warts  and  all. 

More  important  than  all  of  its 
social  and  psychological  ramifica- 
tions, though,  is  the  fact  that  it's  just 
plain  funny.  The  random  humor 
works  well,  sending  readers  into 
paroxysms  of  laughter. 

"Dreamtoons"  injects  a  much  need- 
ed dose  of  absurdity  ipto  this  dreary, 
work-a-day  world.  Besides,  if  you 
can't  laugh  at  a  chorus  line  of  danc- 
ing pigs  in  tutus,  then  what's  left? 

BOOK:  For  more  information  on  'Slow 
Wave,"  visit  www.slowwave.com. 


ft 

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1  11 

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11 

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Hn«:i)reanitoor                     H 

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""jTHjernAO/fSai^Bajif 

HEARTS 

From  page  37 


Sony  PIcimes  Classici 

(Left  to  right)  Matt  McGrath,  Ben  Weber,  and  Zach  Braff  star  in 
'Broken  Hearts  Club  -  a  romantic  comedy." 

the  film  isn't  sexual  preference. 
Beyond  the  concerns  of  gay  culture  is 
an  ordinary  story  about  friendship. 

"Everyone  has  a  certain  amount  of 
liberation  and  warmth  from  watching 
the  film,"  Berlanti  said.  "I've  been 
resistant  in  every  step  of  the  way  of 
just  pigeonholing  myself  (as  a  gay 
writer)  and  yet  the  opportunities  come 
up  and  they  just  feel  like  the  right  thing 
to  do." 

Far  from  appealing  strictly  to  gay 

audiences,  Berlanti's  work  includes 

the  TV  show 


course,  there  were  kissing  scenes." 

After  all,  what  would  a  romance  be 
without  a  few  intimate  love  scenes? 

"The  kiss  was  real  simple,"  Keegan 
said.  "It  wasn't  too  bad  at  all." 

The  challenges  of  casting  heterosex- 
ual actors  as  gay  characters  was  not  a 
problem. 

"(Berlanti)  knew  how  to  work  with 
actors,"     Keegan 

said.  "It  was  fun  ..,i,,__..m 
because  we  were  all 
in  on  the  same 
experience.  He  was 
the  leader,  and  we 
were  all  going  in  on 
this  together." 

According  to 
Keegan,  any  hesi- 
tation reserved  for 

playing  a  gay  char-      

acter  was  dis- 
missed by 
Berlanti's  openness  while  filming. 

"He  was  great,"  Keegan  said.  "He 
was  the  kind  of  director  who  really 
took  the  time  to  talk  everything  out,  to 
make  sure  that  you  were  very  comfort- 
able with  whatever  you  were  doing." 

According  to  Berlanti,  the  focus  of 


The  film  evades  stock 

gay  ...stereotypes  in 

favor  of  more 

multifaceted 

personalities. 


"Dawson's 
Creek"  and  the 
upcoming  film 
"Her  Leading 
Man." 

"When  I 
wrote  the  story 
(for  "Broken 
Hearts"),  I 
hadn't  sold  a 

script    in    my 

life,"  he  said. 
''•'  •  "••  - "  '  •  -■•.  "I  wasn't  really 
writing  it  for  any  other  reason  than  to 
try  to  write  something  that  was  true 
and  real  tome." 

FILM:  The  Broken  Hearts  Club  -  a 
romantic  comedy'  opens  today  in 
theaters  natkmwkle. 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


Friday,  Septefliber  29, 2000       49 


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■i."*'-?  S'iJ 


9 


:.:  ^ 


Friday.  September  29. 2000 


-:_^, -AayBryj^^i^frUfftiiiiiMt 


InCBRO 

From  page  46 


•Tespectabfe,  but  not  spectafcular. 

Though  it  was  the  top  new  site  in  July,  with 
more  than  4.2  million  visitors,  traffic  dropped 
by  half  to  2.3  million  in  August,  according  to 
Internet  measurement  company  Media 
Metrix.  Visitors  averaged  only  12  minutes  at 
the  site  in  August  and  not  every  visitor  came  to 
watch  the  video  feed. 

Unofficial  sites  also  saw  diminished  traffic. 
Paul  Sims  had  up  to  400,00e^  daily  visitors  to 
SurvivorSucks.com,  a  fan  site  for  CBS'  other 
"reality"  show  this  summer,  the  hit  "Survivor." 
He  estimates  that  fewer  than  100,000  are  com- 
ing each  day  to  BigBrotherBlows.com. 

The  fans  who  do  visit  these  sites  regularly 
lend  to  be  devoted. 

"This  is  a  show  that  is  perfectly  tuned  to  the 
Internet,"  said  David  Card,  an  analyst  with 
Internet  research  firm  Jupiter 
Communications.  "If  you're  really  interested 
in  watching  those  boring  guests,  you  can  watch 
them  all  day  long." 

Stella  Calvert,  51,  a  writer  in  San  Francisco, 
said  she  may  need  to  buy  an  ant  farm  soon  to 
replace  the  human  fishbowl  that  is  "Big 
Brother."  She  heard  about  the  show  online  and 


has  been  hooked  ever  since. 

In  Richmond,  Va.,  Web  designer  Tony 
Wittrien,  25,  said  he  may  get  his  fix  watching 
an  Italian  version  of  the  show,  "even  though  I 
can't  understand  what  they  are  saying." 

For  Tanya  Salazar,  17,  of  San  Antonio,  the 
show's  conclusion  will  be  a  good  opportuni- 
ty to  start  looking  for  a  job.  She  has  spent 
several  hours  each  day  running  a  Web  site 
devoted  to  ousted  contestant  Brittany. 

"You  really  feel  like  you  know  these  peo- 
ple," she  said.  "On  television,  they  can  edit  it 
to  show  the  most  interesting  parts.  Online, 
you  kind  of  see  when  they  are  being  them- 
selves." 

America  Online,  which  runs  the  official 
Web  site,  hosts  more  than  14,000  unofficial 
fan  pages.  Elsewhere,  there  are  sites  for  or 
against  Eddie,  George  and  other  contestants 
and  one  where  fans  take  turns  monitoring 
the  online  feeds  and  posting  summaries  for 
each  other. 

Even  those  who  find  the  show  boring  like 
to  complain  on  the  sites'  message  boards. 

"There's  a  strong  contingent  on  the 
Internet  that  loves  to  hate  Big  Brother  and 
apparently  watches  the  show  just  to  put 
down  the  houseguests,"  said  Susan  Cole,  45, 
a  free-lance  editor  and  teacher  in  Palo  Alto, 
Calif,  -and  a  fan.  .      ,, 


The  Assoc  iaied  Piess 

George  Boswell  leaves  the  "Big  Brother"  house  in  an  outfit  of  his  own  making  in  this 
Sept.  20  video  framegrab,  after  78  days  of  being  sequestered  on  the  CBS  reality  series. 


Soon  evieryone  will  be  asking  i 
Seilala  Sua  to  sign  on  the  dotted  line. 

Make  sure  vou  beat  the  nish. 


•  ..**'>»_  'v<**-  ■ 


Ck)i¥?atukions  to  Seilah  Sua,  Track  &  Field       '^,^.^1-: '^^ 
Unirasity  of  California,  Los  Aisles,  1999-2000  Honda  Awaid  Nominee 

>\^  too  bnft  and  you  may  haw  to  sorei  in  line  »  get  her  autnRiapK  BccaujK  with 
talent,  academic  inrliH  '"i"-.  and  community  invDivcmcnt,  she's  bound  to  nwkc  a  narnc  for  hcncIC 
k^  no  comckicnce  dwac  sainc  aitribiJtes  are  dK  leasom  she  wn  notninaied  far  a  Honda  Aw^ 
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i 


•aKm^m,mmt*m^,^^m»VM.1m. 


kanhjawn/mumik 


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Vacation  Paduiges 


services 


1-900  numbers 

Financial  Aid 

Insurance 
I  Computer  /  Internet 

Foreign  Languages 

Health  /  Beauty  Services 

Legal  Advice  /  Attorneys 

Movers  /  Storage 

Music  Lessons 

Personal  Services 
I  Professional  Services 

Resumes 

lalecomtnunications 
I  Tutoring  Offered 

Ikftoring  Wanted 

Typing 

Writing  Help 


furc^iil 


Business  Opportunities 
Career  OpportunHies 
Child  Cara  Offered 
Child  Cara  Warned 
HelpWkuited 
Housesltting 
Internship 

Personal  Assistance 
Temporary  Employmem 
Volunteer 


m^ 


W 


Apartments  for  Rent 
I  Apartments  Furnished 

Condo  /  Tbwnhouse  for  Rem 
I  Condo  /  Townhouse  for  Sale 

Guesthouse  for  Rent 

House  for  Rent 

House  for  sale 

Houseboats  for  Rent  /  Sale 

Housing  Needed 

Room  Iter  Help 

Room  for  Rem 

Roommates  -  Prhrate  Itoom 

Roommates  -  Shared  Room 
{Sublets 

Vacation  Rentals 


Friday,  September  29, 2000 


index 


118  Kerckhoff  Hair 
308  Westwood  Plaza 
Los  Angeles.  CA  90024 


E-Mail:  classifieds@media.ucla.eclu 
Web:  http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


Classified  Line:  (3 10]  825-2221 

Fax.  (310]  206-0528 
Classified  Display:  (310)  206-3060 

Fax:  (310)  206-0528 


One  issue,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
Weekly,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
Monthly,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
1 2  pt  headline 
16  pt  headline 
^Border 


$8.50 

0.65 

29.00 

2  15 

96.00 

5.75 

$1.60 

$2.25 

$5.00, 


Classified  Line  Ads: 

1  working  day  before  printing, 
at  12  noon 

Classified  Display  Ads: 

2  working  days  before  printing, 
at  12  noon. 

There  are  no  cancellations  after 
noon  of  the  day  before  printing. 


howfloimilto 
an  eflecUve  ad 

•  Start  your  ad  with  the 
merchandise  you  are  selling 
This  makes  it  easier  for  readei^  to 
quickly  scan  the  ads  and  Ibcate 
your  Items 

•  Always  Include  the  pnce  of  your 
Item.  Many  classified  readers 
simply  do  not  respond  to  ads 
without  pnces 

•  Avoid  abbreviations— make  your 
ad  easy  for  readers  to  understand 

•  Place  yourself  in  the  readers 
position,  ask  what  you  would  like 
to  know  atxiut  the  merchandise, 
and  include  that  in  the  ad    Include 
such  information  as  brand  names, 
colors  and  other  specific 

descnptlons 

Th«  ASUCLA  ConMimnicatioos  board  hilly  supports  the  Umversity  o)  CiHtomia's  policy  on  nondiscHmlnation.  No  medium  shall  accept  advertisements  wtiich  present  persons  o(  «iy  origin,  race,  sex  or  sexual  orientation  in  a 
dem«aning««y  or  imp^  ttial  they  are  limited  to  positions,  capabilities,  roles,  or  status  in  society  ^4elthor  the  Daily  Bruin  nor  the  ASUCl>  Communicalions  Board  has  investigated  any  of  the  services  advertised  or  the 
iS!I'S^!r^.'S?I2S!II??J!l'^'^2..^fJ2°"  beHevmg  that  an  advertisement  in  this  issue  violated  the  Board's  policy  on  nondtecrimination  stated  herein  should  communicate  complaints  ui  writing  to  the  Business  Manager 
i??oS?!r;-.„S!!r2?lI?^'  "■*JP??.™?:>^  *!SI'?'  ^*  '""^^  ^°'  '^^^^"^  **"  Iwusmg  discnmination  problems,  call  the  UCLA  Housing  Otlice  at  piO)  825-4271  or  caU  the  Westside  Fair  Housing  Office  at  (310) 
iSliSI  -r^S5?K"^j!5i!??^  °"'**  "  ^Jr^<^fi*>'^y^'^P'»x>''*r*  on-llne  is  oflered  as  a  compHmentaiy  service  tor  customers  and  is  not  guaranteed.  The  Daily  Bruin  is  responsible  for  the  first  incorr 
msaitlon  only.  Minor  typoyiphical  errors  are  not  allgfcle  for  leturtds.  For  any  lehind.  the  Daty  Brum  ClasslHed  Department  must  be  notified  of  an  error  on  the  first  day  of  publication  by  noon       ^^ 


Mon-Thu:  9:00am-3;00pm 
Fri:  9am-2 :30pm 


For  Classified  Display  ads. 

please  see  our  rate  card 

for  variable  rate  information. 

""^^^^^^^C^ 

M 

ra4 

fVlasTerCard  1 

^^^^^^^_j 

payment 


F'lease  make  checks  payable  to 
"The  UCLA  Daily  Brum."  We 
accept  Visa,  MasterCard,  and 
Discover  credit  cards.  Allow  5 
working  days  for  mail  payments. 


T  T  T  nf  T  p|  1 


Fraternities  •  Sororities 
Clubs  •  Student  Groups 

Earn  )l.000-$2,000  this  quarter  with  the  easy 
indraiser.com  three  hour  hindraising 


event  No  sales  required  Fundraisins  dates 
are  filling  quiddy,  so  call  lodayl  Contact 
Cainpusfiwdraiser.com  at  (888)  9233238,  or 
visil  www.campusfundraisef.com 


2200 

Research  Suhjects 


EARN  $$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  the  com- 
mon cold.  Male/female  18-55yrs.  oW,  non- 
smoker,  no  asthma  history.  Limited  availabil- 
ity Call  today  310-785-9121. 
EinaU:clinicalsubjects  Oyahoo.com 

PLAY  GAMES&EARN  money,  tool  Social 
psychoiogical  experiment.  1-hour  Average 
$10.  Undergraduate  only.  Call:3 10-825- 
3017.  sign-up  2624  Hersh«y,  or 
amaH:pbonaclchOyahoo.com,  leaving  your 
name,  phone  number,  and  availabte  times. 

SMOKERS  WANTED 

UCLA  resMircti  study.  Earn  $7.S0/hour  plus 
$30  bonus  tor  not  smoking  overnight  and  $5 
per  blood  draw.  794-9891. 1RB  •97-07-005- 
03 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


announcements 

1100-2600 


1100 

Camptis  Happefiinf)s  i 


1800 

MisrellaiKJoiis 


Beautiful  Asian  girls.  250+  Dally  FREE  sexy 
images  of  Asian  women.  Includes  UCLA  co- 
eds. Team  Asian,  http://www.teamasian.com 

ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-campus  &  on-lir>e  financial  services 
source  for  students,  faculty  &  staff.  Visit  us  at 
Actcerman  A-level,  orvline  at  www.ucu.org  or 
caM  310-477-6628. 


2000 

Personals 


NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT. Safe*  affordable'  effective'  visit  us  at 
www.figureplus.com  1-888-603-9800.  Dis- 
tributorships are  available. 

PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
year  oW  females  with  adventurous  and  open 
minded  spirits  wfK)  want  to  exparKl/explore 
their  sexuality  through  nude  modeling.  Free 
prints  for  modeling  time.  Call  Robert  at  310- 
463-5996  robWOatt.net 


2100 

Recreational  Activities 


VAMPIRE  Live  Action  Roie  Playing  gamel 
CaN  David  909-338-4621  or  visil  www.geoci- 
ties.com/LAbyNighf.  Games  every  other  Sat 
night  beginningi  0/7/00. 


Faber  Consulting  is 
seeking  the  brightest 
minds 

...to  help  transform  our  clients'  data  assets 
into  valuable  Business  Intelligence. 

Business  Intelligence  will  separate  the 
winners  from  the  losers  in  the  coming 
decade.  That's  why  Faber  is  looking  for  self- 
motivated,  intelligent  people  with  a 
computer  studies  background  to  contribute 
to  our  explosive  growth  and  become  our 
next  generation  of  consultants. 

We  offer  a  challenging  work  environment 
with  exceptional  opportunities  for  training 
and  career  advancement.  And  every 
'Faberite*  receives  an  equity  stake  in  our 
business. 

Use  InterviewTrak  via  JobTrak  to  sign  up 
immediately  -  the  schedule  fills  quickly. 
We're  interviewing  Tuesday,  October  17th  in 
the  Career  Center.  Or  attend  our  information 
session  on  Monday,  October  16th  from  7-8 
p.m.  in  the  Career  Center  Conference  Room. 
Refreshments  will  be  served. 

We  are  an  Equal  Opportunity  Employer 


Intelligent 


Minds 


Business 


Intelligence 


2000 

Personals 


'<^fabe 


FABfH  CONSULTING  LLC 


■leSuiie  1200 
•ate.lL  60181 


6i0i7 1-301' 


vww  fabeiconsiilting  com 


2000 

Personals 


How 


are  you? 


www  RateYourself  t^nm 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


SMOKERS,  EX-SMOKERS  4  NONSMOK- 
ERS  in  good  health,  at  least  18  years  ol  age, 
wanted  (or  UCLA  research  study  Subjects 
wiH  be  paid  up  to  $120  for  2  testing  days. 
Please  call  Dr.  Richard  Olmslead  at  310- 
478-3711  ext  44319,  leave  message 

WOMEN  AGES  18-40  WITH  and  WTrhOOT 
PREMENSTRUAL  SYNDROME  wanted  tor 
a  4-month  study  of  horanne  In  response  to 
progesterone  or  pmzac  challenge  The  study 
entails  mood  diaries,  blood  test  and  2  spinal 
taps,  and  taking  progesterone  or  prozac. 
May  be  paid  up  to  $200  for  your  Ume.  Con- 
tact Linda  Goldman.  RNP  UCLA  OBGYN 
310-625-2452 


Female  UCLA 

Undergrads  With 

Lupus  Needed 


for  interviews  regarding 
the  college  experience 

Contact:  Kristen  McKinney 

825-3180 

mckinneyOucla.edu 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


FREE 
DIABETES  SCREENING 

Genetic  study  of  Diabetes  recruits 

heaHhy  volunteers  (1 8-40  years  old)  for 

free  diat>etes  screening  with  standard 

oral  glucose  tolerance  test  (2.5  hours). 

Qualified  sut}jects  (wfio  pass  the  oral 

glucose  toierarKe  test  and  have  rnxmal 

blood  pressure)  will  be  invited  to 

participate  in  a  genetic  study  of 

diatietes.  Subjects  will  t>e  paid  $1 50 

for  participation. 

DeUils,  call  Or.Chlu  (310)206-9664. 


VOLUNTEERS  between  the  ages  of  18-30 
wanted  as  subjects  in  experiments  dealing  in 
balance  and  eye  movements.  Must  have 
normal  vision,  balance  and  be  in  good 
health.  $30-40/session.  Call  310-206-6354 
for  more  information. 


2300 

Sperm/Egg  Donors 


$50,000  FOR  EGG 
DONATION 

PLEASE  HELP  us  give  our  precious  t)aby 
tx}y  a  sibling.  We  seek  a  compassionate,  in- 
telligent, attractive,  honest,  energetic,  and 
fun-lovlr)g  Caucasian  woman,  under  32,  at 
least  5'5",  to  be  our  egg  donor  Please  con- 
tact us  at  egghunling©aol.com  or  PO  Box 
140-328,  Howard  Beach,  NY  11414. 

EGG  DONOR       ~ 

HISPANIC  COUPLE  SEEKING  EGG 
DONOR.  Healthy  women,  18-30  yrs.old  Call 
for  details  at  pre  and  ask  for  June.  310-376- 
7000 


EGG  DONOR  NEEDED.  Oriental 
call  310-397-0490. 


Please 


2600 

Wanted 


M/F  MODELS  WANTED  by  est.  photogra- 
pher for  commercial  portfolio.  Must  be  In 
shape  and  good  looking  call  Steven  818- 
733-0557. 


2700 

Appliances 


REFRIDGERATOR 

17.9  cu  ft  Top  condition.  Separate  upper 
(freezer)  and  tower  doors.  Kenmore.  $175. 
private  parly.  310-474-0929. 


31  DO 

Calling  Cards 


5  CENTS/MINUTE 
PHONE  CARDS 

No  Connection  fees!  No  miscellaneous  tax- 
es/fees! $20  card  =  400  minutes.  Sent  $20 
plus  $.50  shipping  to  HeartLand  Telecom 
20050  Addison  Ave.  AltaVista  Iowa  50603. 
888-661-7706. 


3400 

Computers/Software 


POWER  MAC  7100.  40  meg  RAM,  1  gig 
hard  drive,  cotor  monitor  &  printer,  zip  drive, 
software  complete,  modem.  $475.  310-825- 
1755. 


-  ■ 


';i    iv-M  'v-'j.  '■,>';...'.U 


;: 


^ Friday,  September  29, 2000 


.•,.■■;■ -v. 


J100 

Cnnipus  Happenings 


'.^ 


1100 

Campus  Happenuuis 


1100 

C.'unpus  HnppjMiiiuis 


1700 

Campus  Happonnujs 


2300 

Sp»!rm  /  Efjf,  Donors 


y-^^:"i:MM^Ssu^  Sophia  Cathedral 

'■^■-.■^■:'''-:'-r'-^i':r.'::,^:: '  -proudly  presents 

CATHEDRAL^EST 

A  Fabulous  Festival   ^^^^^^^     ;     -      X  ; 
As  only  the  GREEKS  can  do  it! 

"Come  celebrate  with  us.  i» 

*  Best  Greek  Food  in  L. A.  * 

*  Fabulous  Greek  Pastries  * 
*  Greek  Folk  Dancing  * 

Authentic  Greek  Music  by 
"The  OLYMPIANS" 


Special  Thespian  Production 
"Conversations  with  the  Ancients 

*  Greek  Art  &  Imports  * 

*Games  for  Kids  * 

*  Cathedral  Tours  * 


.99 


Plenty  of 


Parking! 


Shuttle  to  Lots  every  10  minutes. 

SAT,  SEPT.  30 

1 1  am  to  11  pm 


SIW,  OCT.  1 

II  am  to  10  pm 


SaSnt  Sophia  Cathedral 

1324  S.  Normandie  Av 

*  Corner  of  Pico  &  Normandie  ~ 

(1 1/2  ml  west  of  Staples  Center) 


^ALWAYS  THE  LAST  WEEKEND  IN  SEPTEMBER* 


3500 

Furniture 


^700 

Auto  Insurance 


COMPLETE  FORMAL 
DINING  ROOM  SET 

Hardwood;  brass  detailing  Oval  lable;opens 
to  seal  10.  Six  chairs;  large  glass-troni  hutch 
$2100  obo.  310-825-9176,  leave  message 


FOR  SALE:  2  couches,  1  bed  (with  mattress 
arxl  frame)  and  chairs  for  cheap  ($20  arxl 
up).  310-613-6211. 


^700 

Auto  Insurance 


Auto  Insurance 


Lowest  Rates  of  Top  Companies.  Young  Drivers  &  Foreign 
Students  OK.  In  Westwood.  No  Brokers  Fees. 
(310)208-3548 


FULL  SIZE  black  futon  couch.  Queen  Oak 
platform  bedfname,  and  Yamaha  five  CD 
player  with  remote.  $75  each.  310-441- 
5036. 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


COOL  GIFTS  FOR  CHICKS!  One-of-a-kind 
handbags,  jewelry,  recyclerT>ents,  and  more 
Secure  online  shopping  at  www.cucuz- 
za.com. 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1984  HONDA  ACCORD,  $1400, White 
w/blue  int.,  4-door,5-speed.power  windows, 
brakesilocks,  cruise  control,  all  main- 
tenance records,  good  conditkKi.  Call  Lara  at 
310-319-2011. 


1990  MITSUBISHI  ECLIPSE  GS  DOHC: 
excellent  conditton!  New  clutch  &  transmis- 
swnl  Car  is  a  GEM.  Must  drivel  $3000  obo 
310-394-1397. 


1989  MAZDA  626DX,  blue.  5-speed  stick, 
very  good  condition,  94K  miles,  NC, 
AM/FM/Cassette,  single-owner,  accident- 
tree.  $2500.  Call  x52910  or  310-470-71 52. 

1989  TOYOTA  COROLLA  GT  SPORT  eco- 
nomical/reliable grsat  for  school/work  New 
tires,  engine  1  yr  oW,  manual  trans  $2500 
323-810-8914  AkxKO. 


1992  ■'"OYOTA  TERCEL 

DX,  4door,  automatk:,  66.5K  miles,  blue 
AM/FM  stereo,  A/C  $4,000obO  310-209- 
6211. 


GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded  $40  lor  attorney  pre- 
pared application  John  Manley,  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd  #300  LA.  CA  90025 
310-820-7553  Deadline.  1 0/30/00 


Classifieds 
825-22?1 


1990  1/2  NISSAN  240SX  SE.  Burgundy,  al- 
toys,5-sp«ed,many  new  parts.  SE  wWon, 
loaded  with  extras  including  moonroof,  pow- 
er •werything,  etc  310-470-3615. 


1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4wd 
auto,  A«,  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  oondl- 
tkjn  Sell  for  $4700.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836 


1993  HONDA  DEL  SOL 

Automaiic/65K  miles  great  gas  mileage. 
$6500.  Alpine  stereo,  converttole,  fun  school 
car,  one  owner.  CaW  Jordana.310-3e3-170l. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS  Cars  as  low  as  $500 
for  listings  1  800-3 19-3323  ext.A214. 

'93  TOYOTA  PASEO,  airbag,  Wack.  manual 
franemission,  5  speed,  A/C.  am/Tm  CD,  very 
clean,  runs  great,  $3200  obo.  310-454-3621 


5200 

P.ifkintj 


NEEDED  PatWng  spot  for  scnool  year  2000- 
2001.  WM  pay  310-824-0997. 


5200 

Parkincj 


PARKING  NEEDED 

UCLA  STUDENT  LIVING  IN  RIEBER  HALL 
Fall  2000-Spring  2001  needs  a  parking  spot 
for  Fall  Quarter  and  possibly  beyond  Parking 
can  be  anywhere  somewhat  near  rosklence 
hall  skle  of  campus.  Call  661-297-8108  or 
emaH  sabruzzoOucla.edu. 


PARKING  SPACE  WANTED.  Near/on  Veter- 
an/Strathmore.  $50/mo  obo.  Can  sign  lease 
for  10-12  months.  Call  310-770-1225  or 
mgabrlelOuda.edu. 


5900 

Fin.in(;i.il  Aid 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Unton  (Lender  Code  832123).  We're  on 
campot  at  Ackerman  A-leval.  310-477-0628 
www.ucu.org 


61  DO 

eoinputer/lnternet 


P/Tto  complete  constructkm  and  maintain 
wetoaMe.  NattonwMe  whoteaale.  310-230- 
Otll.  Fax  310-230-4146 


(XBATWB 
CONOeFTIOH 

tvery  year  there  are  m6re 

ahd  wore  couples  dreaiNbig 

of  havJMg  a  child  iwt  eamiot 

duetolwfertllltYproblemilt 

is  only  through  the  help  of 

special  women  called  egg 

donors  that  these  couples 

have  a  chance  of  achieving 

their  dreawi  If  you  are 
between  the  ages  of  19- JO 

years  old,  healthy 
responsiile,andintefligent 
please  contact  our  office 


CompeHsation: 

♦4500  ♦ 

♦  1 50-«Z50 

(gas  expenses) 


AU  ETHNIC 
»ACK»ROUNPS  MS 


% 


Egg  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 
wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 
$5,000 
CALL  MiRNA  (818)  832-1494    4 


5700 

Travel  Tickets 


VICTORY  TRAVEL 


iMMicoGty  119  m»/»^PmmUaBt 

Gvodaiojoro  109  lima                          |M 

CoboSanUms    99 

EISatMMfer  309 

HondMns  319  logoto 

jCoMalko  30a  Quito 

I  Nkoraguo  33t  Mb* 

••"■fc  179  Corooa 


NEW  YORK 
•259  nn 


jSIXm, 


IftS/T 

a»a/T 

«»/r 


^Mexico  Escap«ir 

|$329  CQbo  Son  Lucas  -^^^ 

l$519  Cancun 
l$359  Puerto  Vollarta 


p/r  ootoafft 


wwMf.vi€torYtravcl.€om 

(323)  277-4595 


6200 

HfNilth  St.'f-vices 


MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Stwed- 
ish/Deep  Tissue  Massage.  $40/hr  w/student 
ID.  Monday-FrkJay  10am-8pm.  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6924.  Gift  Certificates  available. 

PERSONAL  TRAINERS  NEEDED.  No  expe- 
^ence  required.  Earn  $60/hr  National 
Trainer's  Assoc.  1-888-NTA-2338 


Japk  H.  Sllvrs,  MP 


jj^fi^  torgotfn  whmt  M't 
Ukm  to  f  m  tludttf 

•Acne«Mole  Removal  •Warts»Rashes» 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmentation* 

•Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  826-2081 

www.DrSU¥mrB,com 


Oisplciy 
206-3060 


6300 

Leyjil  Advice/Altofiieys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST  Sexual  harrassment,  Discrlmina- 
lion,  Auto-accidents,  Slips/falls.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  Westside,  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW'86). 
www.t)estlawyer.com  310-277-3000. 


Movers/Storage 


CREDIT  REPAIR 

LATE  PAYMENTS,  REPOSSESSIONS, 
CHARGE  OFFS.  STUDENT  LOANS,  BANK- 
RUPTCIES, COLLECTIONS,  FORE- 
CLOSURES, EVICTIONS.  JUDGEMENTS, 
TAX  LIENS.  QUICK,  GUARANTEED.  CALL 
KRISTY:323-868-4675. 


l^s^(  n()|^l:u\|»^ 


Caring  &  Confidential 

Counseling 

Depression,  Anxiety, 

Relationships,  Addictions  & 

Abuse 

Relieve  stress 

Improve  your  self-esteem 

Cope  with  lossArauma 

Heal  inner  wounds 

Work  through  Bi-cultural  barriers 

1st  Consultation  Free 

Sherly  Khodada,  MFT 

11850  Wislhire  Blvd.  #201 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90025 

(310)  479-8255 


ITALIAN  LESSONS 

LEARN  ITALIAN  at  own  pace  where&wtien 
you  wanti  We  offer  Italian  classes  tailored  on 
your  needs.  Call  310-442-6078 

PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  In 
several  pre-paid  legal  service  programs 
providing  quality  legal  services  to  plan  mem- 
t)ers  Robert  Moss,ESQ  310-260-7650 

SIGN  LANGUAGE 
CLASS 

Set  your  r^ands  free  by  learning  to  experi- 
ence a  language  of  beauty  through  visual  ex- 
praaaton.  Starts  Ocklber.  Loulsa:3lO-275- 
3809 


6700 

Professional  Services 


Ifa8rBnw»<b5sified 


6700 

Professional  Services 


—     BEST  MOVERS 

No  |ob  too  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-loot  trucks  fully  equipped  tor  large  moves. 
Call  24/7.  Available  on  short  notice.  License 
T1 63844.  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  w/14fl  truck  and  dolKes. 
small  jobs,  short  notice  ok.  SF,  LV,  SD. 
Student' discount.  Go  BruinsI  10th  yr.  310- 
285-8688. 

JERRY'S  MOVING&OELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packir>g.  boxes  available.  Also,  pick- 
up donations  lor  American  Cancer  Society. 
Jerry©310-391-5657. 


6500 

FVIiisic  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedicated  pro- 
fessk>nal.  At  your  home  or  WLA  studio  1st- 
lesson  tree.  No  drum  set  necessary. 
Neil:323-654-8226. 

GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professional  near  UCLA  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effortlessly! 
www.JWGS.com.  Call  Joan  at  310-476- 
4154. 

VOICE,  PIANO  LESSONS  by  professional 
Singer/pianist,  Juilliard  School.  MM.  All  levels 
wefcome.  310-544-1240. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW,  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Frustrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
professional  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultant.310-826-4445.  www.winning- 
per5onstatemenl.com. 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  lormatting,  tran- 
scribing. Personalized,  prolessional  assis- 
tance. Ace  WordS.Etc.  310-820-8830. 


PUBLIC  COMPANY  LOOKING  TO 

PROVIDE  CAPITAL  AND 

MANAGERIAL  ASSISTANCE 


To  startup  companies  or  entrepreneurs 

with  products  or  workable  concepts  in 

the  areas  of  internet  software/hardware, 

wireless  communications, 

fiberoptic  technology,  semiconductors 

or  medical  instrumentation. 

Please  contact  Modern  Technology  Corp. 

FAX  (718)  469-3292 

Phone  (718)  469-3132/4 

Email;  arthurjav@mindspring.com 


MimmmiiEanm 

Personal  Statements,  Papers,  Theses, 
Dissertations,  Books,  &  Proposals 

Comprehensive  help  by  PhD  from  UC 
International  Students  Welcome 

{923)  665-8145 


TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Union/Union.  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Compreiiensive  Oisssnation  Assrstance 
Theses.  Papers,  and  Personal  Statements 

Proposals  and  Books 

imernalKXial  Students  Welcome  Since  1985 

Sharon  Bear,  Ph.D.  (310)  470-6662 

www  Bear-Write  com 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


**ENGLISH  EXPERT 

DOES  WRITING  IN  ENGLISH  maKe  you 
crazy?  Assistance  in  basic  skills  to  major  re- 
search paper  completion.  ESL  experienced. 
310-839-9933/Adam. 


BOND  TUTORING 


All  subjects  6- 12th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  will  meet  your  individu- 
al needs.310-471-7628. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  tall  Seven-years 
experience  SAT/Calculus/Physics/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/FrenctVEnglish.  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 

MATH  TUTOR 

For  SAT  math,  Pre-Algebra.  Algebra  1  and  2, 
Geometry,  Trigorwmetry,  and  t>eginning  Cal- 
culus. UCLA  Student,  math  major  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  math  and  one  year 
teaching  experience  $25/hour  Call  (or  more 
information.  Staphan<e:310-702-6455. 


PRIVATE  TUTORING 

ALL  SUBJECTS,  all  levels,  affordable 
rates.  At  your  home.  Highly  qualified  tu- 
tors. Call  Admiral  Tutoring  310-477-9685. 


THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
term  paper  assistance,  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence.  History   Foreign  Students  Welcome. 
Call:310-452-2865 
www.thewritersco3ch.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate 
Help  with  the  English  language — for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels  310-440-3118. 

WWW  MY-TUTOR  COM  Math/Physics/Sta- 
tistics/English/Hebrew/chemistry/biology/as- 
tronomy/ Computer  programming  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
service  Call  anytime  800-90-TUTOR 


7100 

Tutoniui  W.inted 


BALDWIN    HILLS/CULVER    CITY   AREA 

Female  tutor  wanted  lor  8th  grader  lor  math, 
science,  etc  2hrs  evenings  Lenette  323- 
735-4588 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


COLLEGE  STUDENT  TUTORS  WANTED 
K-12  after  school,  in  WLA,  SM,  BH.  No  ex- 
perience necessary.  $10-15/hour  plus  bo- 
nus. The  Tutor's  Club:3 10-444-0449 

DRIVER/MATH  tutor  needed  after  school  tor 
8th  grader.  Pacific  Palisades  excellent  pay 
call  Gail  at  310-201-6159  •  . 

IMi 


SAT  Tiiraag 


Score!  Prep  needs 

tutors  w/high  SAT  & 

SAT  II  scores  tor  SAT  & 

Academic  subiect 

tutoring.  Relioole 

transportation 

required.  $16  per 

hour  +  bonus.  Flex 

'^^         schedules. 

CALL  NOW! 


calt  (310)  371-4500 

for  more  information 


DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  I2&16-yr- 
old  t>oys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED.  Must  be 
graduate  student  or  TA.  For  high  scfwol 
student  taking  second  year  Spanish  and 
math.  310-476-0766. 

GERMAN  NATIVE 

To  tutor  young  boy  In  German  once/wk.  (pre- 
ferably male).  Ventee.  310-392-4974 

MATH  TUTOR  WANTED 

FOR  HIGH  SCHOOL  JUNIOR  in  Pre-Calcu- 
lus.  Westwood  area.  2-3  altemoons/week 
310-470-3831 

SERIOUS  TUTOR  WANTED  lor  6th-graders. 
reading  and  writing.  2  hours/day.  M-F. 
Sunset/Crescent  Heights  area  Michelle 
home  323-851-7273  or  cell  323-816-9313. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homework  assist  for  two  boys,  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  l>ome  in  Laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  caH  evenings:310-401-O113  or  day- 
time 3 10-392- 1405 

TUTOR  NEEDED!  Primarily  in  Spanish,  pre- 
calc  a  plus.  For  16yr  okl  txiy,  2  days/wk, 
flexible  schedule.  Brentwood,  call  Kathy 
days;310-247-1777.  eve8;310-826-1876. 

TUTORING  WANTED  FOR  9th  grader.  In- 
home  Homework  tielp.  Brentwood.  310- 
472-7342. 

TUTORS  WANTED 

ALL  SUBJECTS,  especially  Chemistry, 
physk^s,  math.  Latin,  Greek.  Car,  Bachetors 
required.  $20+/hr  Fax  resume  to  310-914- 
4158  Attn:  Tania. 

TUTORS  WANTED:  AH  Subjects,  preK-12th 
grade,  computers,  languages,  instruments, 
PT  (WLA/SFV/MALIBU).  salary;  $10-15, 
must  have  car,  310-477-2669,  fax:  310-477- 
1359 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


WELL  PAID  TUTOR 

Tutor  needed  lor  HS  sophmore  In  Geometry 
$20^r  Provide  own  transportation. 
Previous  tutonng  experience.  310-275-5487 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertations,  transcription,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Monica,  310-828-6939.  Hollywood,  323-466- 
2888. 


7300 

Writing  Help 


GET  BETTER  GRADES!!  Professional  writer 
will  help  you  with  any  subject.  Editing  and  re- 
writes are  my  specialty.  Competitive  rates. 
310-285-3421. 


fiJAJiiil 


— employment 

7400-8300 


Business  Opportunities 


A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  It's  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35.  Refundable.  No  Risk 
http://abgib.com/phanya  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stephanie. 

~         GET  RICH!!!     -^w 

Make  10003+  weekly!  For  details,  send  one 
stamp  to:  GRQ  &  Co.,  PO.  Box  8690,  Austin, 
TX  78713 

MAKE  MONEY  for  you  or  your  school  orga- 
nization with  the  Lifetime  fleminder  Service 
Sign  up  online  today  http://www.thehot- 
pages.com\reminder2141500.htm. 

NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

Work  from  home  with  flexible  hours. 
www.homebusiness.to/emoney 

OUR  WEBSITE  OFFERS  the  ultimate  links 
to  business  and  income  opportunities,  shop- 
ping, sports  activities  and  tickets,  entertain- 
ment, romance  and  more.  It  will  take  time  to 
look  through  all  we  have,  but  it's  well  worth  it. 
Come  visit  NOW"  http.7/www.thecoolpag- 
es.com/merchandise/suite2 1 4 1 500 

START  A  DORM-BASED  business  in  the  e- 
commerceAelecommunications  industry  foi 
495.  Retum  on  investment  within  45  days. 
No  selling!  Bonus-tree  vacation.  1  -800-579- 
1225  ext77700. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


GET  YOUR  OWN  legitimate  home  business 
offering  products  people  REALLY  want  Owr 
your  own  900  number  service  and  othei 
unk^ue  cashmakers  While  everyone  else  Is 
trying  to  find  a  nde  to  work,  you'll  be  AT  work 
http://www.makJngmoneycata 
log.com/2141500. 

KOREATOWN  E-COMMERCE  businesi 
seeks  P/T  employee  for  computer  and  office 
work.  Fluent  in  Korean  and  English 
Resumes  to  namhee.hanOgte.net. 


RAND 


.__ilidi)tiej>to»b«29r?e6fr-     53 


ysoo 

Career  Opportunities 


B 


FIRST  CALL 
Staffing  Services 

College  Students! 
Earn  extra  money  for  school! 

Are  you  iookinj;  for  a  wiiy.io  pav  off  those  student 

loans?  Call  us  for  short  or  lone  '''fn  *'"■!* 
assignments.  We  luve  lots  of  fun  |obs  available' 

'  CaliJaclnSanUMuniai 
,  ,3  10.264.9914 
orCarrifinGlcndde 
8  18     2  4  2     9  9  8  8 

www.flrilrallsiaflciini 


LANDSCAPE  DESIGNER  F/T  position. 
Garden  design  company  located  in  Beverly 
Hills.  Will  be  involved  in  entire  Landscape 
Design  process  including:  creation  ol  initial 
conceptual  design;  development  of  drawing 
of  overall  site  plan  integrating  all  compo- 
nents ot  exterior  design  inclduing  plantings, 
garden  structures,  pools,  walls,  fences  and 
hardscaping  details;  supervision  and  coordi- 
nation of  every  phase  ot  production  and 
installation  ol  a  project  to  completion.  Fax 
resume  to  Melissa  Moore  310-542-8580. 

START  COLLECTING  A 
SALARY  IMMEDIATELY 

Worthing  in  films,  television  commercials, 
soap  operas.  Send  $l9.95-i-$3.65Shipping  to 
Extra-Rush  PO  Box  35891.  Los  Angeles,  CA 
90035. 

STOCK  BROKER.  Licenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars.  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216,  Woodland  Hills.  CA.  Instructor:  David 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  University). 
818-703-8889. 

TEACHER  ASSTNTS 

IJRIVATE  WLA  School  looking  lor  capable 
and  experienced  teacher  assistants  to  work 
with  elementary  level  students,  M-F,  8AM- 
3PM.  Begin  immediately  Proficient  in  Mac 
computer  technology.  Please  lax  re- 
sume:31 0-471 -1532. 


7600 

Child  Care  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  run  by 
UCLA  grads  Ages2.5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  730-5:30 Close  to  UCLA 
310-473-0772. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


ACTIVE  3  YR  OLD  BOY  needs  to  work  off 
some  energy  before  school.  7-9am,  5 
days/wk.  Westwood.  Please  call  Janet  at 
310-441-0383. 

AFTER  SCHOOL 
NANNY 

Afternoons  aprox.  3-8  and  some  evenings, 
flexible  hours.  Own  insured  car.  valid  driver's 
license  and  references  required.  Easy  kids. 
In  Santa  Monica.  Starting  $lO/hour  310- 
202-9240. 

AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  for  5-year-old 
boy.  1 :30-5:00PM  approximately 

14hours/week  M-F  $8/hour  (negotiable). 
Anne:310-458-6455 


7500 

Career  OnDortunities 


A  private  non-  profit  research  organization  located  in  Santa 
Monica  has  immediate  openings  for  a  Telephone  Center 
Supervisor  &  several  Telephone  interviewers. 


SUPERVISOR 


Recruits,  trains,  schedules,  supervises  &  monitors  telephone 
center  staff.  Generates  project  reports,  maintains  phones 
and  computers.  Requires  strong  computer  skills,  1-2  yrs 
supen/isory  &/or  call  center  experience.  $14-1 6/hr 


WLEraONE  SURVEY  INTERVIEWERS 

Conduct  computer-assisted  phone  interviews.  $9-11/hr 
Requires  familiarity  w/keyboard  &  computers.  Phone 
/interviewing  exp.  a  plus. 

Both  positions  have  flexible  schedules,  some  evern- 
ing/weekends.  20-35  hrs/wk.  Requires  excelent  verbal  com- 
munication skills.  Additional  compensation  for  bilingual  (En- 
glish/Spanish) skills.  y 

Fax  resumes  with  cover  letter  to        ^ 
SRG  Recruiting  @  (310)  451-6921 


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Clar,sifiefls 
825-2221 


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7700 

Child  Care  Wiintocl 


C/)//d  Development/  Speech 
Therapy  Student  wanted. 

Locsd  family  needs  help  with 
2  year  old  twin  girls. 


310.475.0308 


ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

P/T  JOB  working  with  sweet,  inteiligent 
handicapped  girl.  Child  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  in  kitchen  and  working  with  child 
on  improving  physical  skills.  Applicant  must 
be  sweet,  intelligenf,  reliable,  speak  English 
and  drive.  Maat  Elman:3 10-396-81 00. 

BABYSITTER  (or  2  Children  3&6  .  Sat  nights, 
early  evening.  Experience  required.  Must 
have  own  car.  Near  UCtJV.  $10/hr.  310-476- 
9394. 

BABYSITTER  NEEDED  tor  1  1/2  year  old 
boy  Various  aftemoons  and  evenings.  Some 
weekend  days.  Culver  City.  Call  Ruth  310- 
8380624. 

BABYSITTER  Experienced  outgoing,  athle- 
tic creative  female  UCLA  student  wanted  (or 
weekend  babysitting  9  year  old  and  dog. 
Reterences  Required  310-470-4662. 

BABYSITTER/ 
MOTHER'S  HELPER 

kids  8&4.  Experience,  references,  and  driv- 
er's license  required.  Must  enjoy  kids!  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Encino.  818-788-7886. 

BABYSITTER/DRIVER  (or  two  boys  9&12 
T,W,F.  3-6pm+possible  additional  time.  Mul- 
holland/Beverly  Glen.  English  speaking. 
Own  car  w/good  driving  record.  Referer^es. 
310-470-2047. 

BABYSITTING 
POSITION  AVAILABLE 

Seeking  bright,  playful  female  (or  occasional 
care  o(  two  chiWren,  ages  5  and  10  months 
in  Westvrood  $10/hour  310-553-0542. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


7700 

Chilli  Care  Wanted 


BABYSITTER/SATURDAY  EVENING. 

Weekly  commnmeni  requested.  Flexibility  for 
other  nights  a  plus.  Must  have  own  car  to 
drive  to  Pacilic  Palisades.  Two  fun,  easy 
boys,  6&7-yrs-old.  Must  like  playing  sports 
and  watching  MTV  and  movies.  Students 
only  References  required.  $10/hr.  Call  Alli- 
son 310-454-3650  or  email  GIE- 
DELOaol.com. 

BABYSITTING 

Knovirfedge  of  Finnish  or  Farsi  or  both  a  plus. 
Call  before  8pm.  310-202-6822. 

CAREGIVER  to  drive  10-yr-oW  from  school 
to  Santa  Monica  activity  Tuesdays.  Perhaps 
some  evenings.  Car,  DL,  insurance  neces- 
sary. Candyce  310-207-1227. 

CHILD  CARE  Permanent  P/T.  San  Fernando 
Valley.  $10/hour,approx.  20hours/week. 
Starting  after  3pm.  Flexible  hours.  Must 
have  car  Starts  immediately  818-905-1215. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


DRIVE  CHILD  from  sctwd  in  Pteo/Robert- 
8on  area  to  home  in  Pacific  Palisades  in  af- 
ternoons. Must  have  car  and  insurance.  310- 
454-7525.  _  _ 

DRIVER  &  CARE 

For  i  T»ys  ages  12&8.  M-F  3-6pm.  Non- 
smoker.  References.  Cail  310-839-2131 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/exceHont  study  habits  to  assist  12&16-yr- 
old  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353 

FEMALE  UCLA 
STUDENT  NEEDED 

To  babysit  in  Beverly  Hills  for  1-2  night/week. 
Must  have  car  non-smoker  female  preferred 
$8/hr  Greer  310-858-8839 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


MOTHER'S  HELPER  WANTED,  ^weekends. 
BH  family  kkls,  n>eals,  and  play  activities, 
swim,  athletk:,  crsattve,  COL.  serxl  resume 
323-957-9762  or  rgitHnOyahoo.com. 


.    NANNY/ 
HOUSEKEEPER 

for  normal  Weststde  family.  Warm,  good 
serfse  of  humor  exceltent  English,  valk) 
CDL.  12-8  M-F  Fax  only:310-476-8065. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


RELIABLE 
BABYSITTER  NEEDED 

For  alter  scf)ool  help.  Monday-Thursday,  2- 
6{>m  We're  kx)king  lor  a  student  who  Is  great 
with  kkte,  ages  7-6,  to  help  with  driving.. 
homework  and  light  housekeeping.  Hours 
and  salary  negotiable.  Car  and  references 
are  required.  Please  call  Joy  at  310-394- 
2342.  : 


Fun,  energetic,  &  Icind  babysitter 

needed  for  2  year  old  adorable  twins 

Saturday  evenings.  $l2Ar. 


Call  Carolyn 

310  252  3131 


CHILDCARE 

for  personable  8yr-old  girt.  Pick-up  from 
school/lessons.  CDL,  own  car,  insurance. 
Non-smoker  Monday/Wednesday/Friday  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thursday  2-6pm.  Expen- 
ence  and  references  required.  $10/hr  Call 
310-440-6738. 


CHILDCARE  FOR  11 -YEAR-OLD  girt.  After 
school  hours  ranging  from  2-e:30PM.  Driving 
and  homewortt  support.  Please  call:310-476- 
2469. 


CHILDCARE:  Empalhelic/energetic  student 
to  play  with  1-yr-old  boy  Approx  6-10  hrs/wk. 
Flexible.  Experience  necessary.  310-446- 
7019. 


7500 

Career  Oppurtiinities 


FUN/CARING  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  lor 
•  picking  up  &  caring  lor  Syr  old  girt  Must 
>iave  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-5days/wk. 
a(temoons-6pm.  Gayle  310-450-4109  (even- 
ings). 

Homework  Helper/Driver  needed  to  pickup  9 
yr  oW  (rom  Bel  Air  school  M,W,Thr.  com- 
mencing immediately  Own  car.  References. 
Call  Diane  818-781-1471. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

NEEDED.  P/T  sitter  needed  for  kids  10&7. 
Responsibilities:  Driving,  reading&playir>g. 
Good  pay!!  References  a  must!  Located  in 
Brentwood.  310-394-9781. 

MOTHERS  HELPER  Afternoon  driving, 
homework  help,  chikJ  care  and  light  kids' 
cooking  for  2boys,  ages  9&12  Must  have  ex- 
cellent driving  record  &  CA  driver's  license. 
Car  will  be  provkled.  Must  like  sports.  Male 
or  female.  Mon.  to  Fri.  Hrs.  approximately  3- 
8pm  (later  on  Fridays),  but  flexible.  Home  is 
in  Beverty  Hills.  $l0/hr.  Fax  resume  to  Deb- 
bie at  310-273-3748. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

Light  Cooking,  two  kkte  8  4  13.  1pm-6pm  M- 
F  Must  have  CADL/references.  $l0-$12/hr. 
Next  to  UCLA.  Call  310-208-6004. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


NEED  AFTER  SCHOOL  HELP  3  days/v>(k. 
5pm-6:30pm.  Female  preferred.  Please  call 
evenings  310-841-0829. 

OCCASIONAL  CHILDCARE  Are  you  willing 
to  spend  a  few  hours  each  week  or  an  even- 
ing with  a  six-year-old  boy  in  the  Westwood 
area?  This  vivackjus  boy  loves  books,  sci- 
ence experiments,  arxj  having  adventures. 
Please  call:  310-440-0725  or  enfiail 
piersi  ©concentric.net.  .•    '• 


P/T  BABYSITTER 
NEEDED 

For  7-yr-old  boy.  Must  be  available 
Mon&Thurs  2:30-8pm,  Tues&Wed  2:30- 
6pm,  plus  more  hours  if  needed.  ChiW  care 
experience  a  must.  10  min  from  UCLA.  $9/hr. 
Call  Hilary  310-858-5994. 

P/T  CHILD  CARE.  Two  children  ages  2&3.5. 
Afternoons  and  some  weekends,light  house- 
wori<.  Must  have  car,experierKe,and  refer- 
ences. $8/hr.  Email:  tinymarshns©earth- 
link.neL     310-864-6906. 

PART  TIME 
CHILD  CARE 

AFTER-SCHOOL  CHILD  CARE/DRIVER  for 
2  great  kids  (9&12).  M-F  3-7:30pm.  Bel  Air. 
Must  have  car  and  references.  Call  Elizabeth 
evenings:  310-472-9920  or  fax  310-472- 
9178. 

Part-time  babysitter  M-W  5:00-9:00. 
References.  2  kkte  $10/hour.  310-458-3587. 


7500 

Career  Opportuniti(>s 


RIDE  NEEDED 

To  pick  up  chiM  from  Bekerly  Hall  on  Mulhol- 
land  Drive  at  320  pm.  Call  310-271-4651  af- 
ter 6pm.  213-252-9437  From  9am-6pm. 

SANTA  MONICA.  2  POSITIONS-  MONDAY 
EVENINGS  6pm-9:30pm. 
AFTERSCHOOL  TEACHER'S  AIDE.  Mon- 
day-Friday approx.  2:30pm-5:30pm.  $9/hr. 
For  a  e-year  old  boy  310-399-9144. 

SATURDAY  BABYSITTER/MOTHER'S 
HELPER.  Sat.  evenings,  approx.  6-10:30pm. 
Babysitting  (or  2boys,  ages  9&12.  In  Beverty 
Hills  or  Malibu.  Must  have  excellent  driving 
record.  Car  will  be  provkJed  If  driving  is  nec- 
essary. Male  or  female.  $l2/hr.  Fax  resume 
to  Debbie  at  310-273-3748. 

UCLA  STUDENT  to  drive/supervise  HW  2 
kids.  Tues,  Wed,  Thurs,  3-6pm  Beverty 
Hills.  $10/lir  Car  wAinsurance.  RefererKes 
required.  Abigail  310-859-1255. 

WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILDCARE  For  12-year-old  girt,  SM/Brenl- 
wood.  M-F,  3:30-7ish  (approx:  15hrs/wk).  Car. 
with  insurance.  References  required. 
$10+/hour.  Night:310-828-6206.  Day:818- 
954-3276.  Start  ASAR 

WLA  CHILDCARE 

FOR  A  DELIGHTFUL  very  personable  11- 
year-okl  girt,  pk*-up  after  school,  drive  to 
activities,  supervise  homework,  Mon-Thurs. 
3:30-8:30PM(variable).  $11/hour.  CaH  Dr. 
Alan  Yasser  310-277-2796. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


1-  AkGO 


Take  your  career 

to  the  next  stage. 

We  have  full  and  part  time  positions  throughout  Los  Angeles  for 

y''-----":^  Tellers'  ::/..■'■ '^^ •';<■•■:-:." 
Customer  Service  Representatives 

Personal  Bankers 
Store  Managers 


"v 


•  Flexible  Hours 

•  Tuition  Reimbursement 

•  Competitive  Salary 


Call  today  for 
an  interview! 

1-800-392-4780 


\ 


Wells  Fargo  is  an  Equal  Oppotunity  Employer,  M/F/DA^ 


(( 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Display 
206-3060 


I 


7500 

Career  Opporliiiiities 


7500 

Car(M!r  Oppo'timities 


Southwest  College  of  Naturopathic 
Medicine  >  Healtli  Scterxes 


Interested  In  beooming  a  physician? 
Considefed  natumi  medicine?     v 


Graduate-level  program     7; 

in  naturopathic  medicine 

:.:   :.    '■:'    '  .   :-       '.      ■    •    ■   ,.;-;NUtHtJGn 

-}  '[:■-''■'}'  f^hysjcal  Medicine 

Botanical  Medone 

Homeopathy 

"%.:  fe      '  Coiirtsefing 

Acupuncture 


.:-~1«^ 


■■%. 


■^ 


^ntit  Ua  at  the  UCLA  Giaduate 
at  Dicicaoii  &  Perlafff  Plaza 

Odober  4,  2000  <10;00  am.  -  2:00  p.m.) 
Please  call  ua  for  cietaHs  4da85d.9l00 


7800 

Help  Wantful 


JNSIOE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPRE- 
SENTATIVE. Film  advertising.  Call  retail 
stores  lor  upcoming  releases  Coordlrwte 
store  visits.  Pn'-F/T-8am-12pm  or  12.30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $10/hr+tenus.  310-566-2555. 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  lemale  for  Beverly  Hills 
producer  Short,  flexible  hours.  Excellent 
pay.  310-278-6972. 

$10  PER  HOUR 

Looking  for  accounting,  business,  math,  and 
econ.  maKxs  with  computer  and  basic  Math 
and  English  skMIs  for  PT-FT  positions. 
Phones  and  general  office  duties.  Fax 
resume  and  DPR  (UCLA  students):  818-769- 
4694. 

$15-$23/MR  BRIGHT  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  leach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Acadamic 
Subjects.  Transportation  required.  We  wHI 
train.  Flexible  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, irK:iuding  test  scores  (SAT,  ORE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educational  Sen^ices,  AttnBar- 
ly,  9911  W.  Pico  Blvd.  Ste.1025,  LA,  CA 
90035:  Fax:310-282-6424.  Positions  avail- 
able throughout  LA  and  Xne  Valley. 

$1 500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  arculars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  information 
packet.  CaH  202-466-1639. 

$20/hr  FRENCH  TUTORS  wanted  to  con- 
verse with  high-scfxx)!  students.  Fluency  r»t 
required.  Travel  experience  a  plus.  5- 
20hr5/wk  plus  optional  summer  opportunity 
to  teach  in  France.  Contact  Scott  310-428- 
3680. 


7800 

H(,'lp  W;iiit(id 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Tin»e  field  sales,  flexibie  hours  +  com- 
mission ar>d  bonusi  Ambitious  salesperson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  support«fones- 
4all.com  Attn:Reld  Sales. 

ADMINISTRATIVE 
ASSISTANT 

WW  train.  In  medk»l  office  30-40hrs/M- 
F/9:00-€:00pm.  Computer  knowledge  man- 
datory. Qreat  job  for  Busir)8ss/Pro-li4ed/Pub- 
Hc-Health  majors.  l5-min  to  UCLA.  310-476- 
4205. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT  25-35 
hrs/wk.  Good  phone  votes.  1  year  commit- 
ment. Orgarteed.  Word.  Excell.  Account  Re- 
ceivabie/Payabie.  Fax  Resume  to  310-914- 
4158  Attn:  Scott. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER Exoalanl  hardware  and  soft 
ware  computer  aWto  rsquired.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours  $10-13/hr.  Tennis  a  plu^l 
We  are  national  lk>w«r  shippers  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


ADULT  RESPONSIBLE 
MALE 

For  personal  care  for  disabled  man.  Monday- 
Frlclay  Ihr/day  afVl  alternate  weekends.  Will 
train.  Strong  References.  Near  UCLA 
$300/mo.  310-475-5209. 


Zen  Zoo  Tea 


now  accepting  applications  for 

various  positions.  Perfect  for 

students.  Flexible  hours.  Fax 

resume  to  310-576-0685 


$8.5(VHR-t-BONUS.  Advertising  consulting 
firm  seeking  person<8)  to  set  appointments 
by  phone,  tor  our  oorieultanls.  Minimum  2- 
years  college.  Telephone  or  outside  sales 
experience  a  plus.  Immediate  openings. 
PT/FT  in  our  WestsMe  offtee  Call  Norman 
Becker.  Ad  Max  Consulting  Group.  310-441- 
7676 


^ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  VtaRey.  Holywood,  or  Santa  Montea 
oMm  needs  enargettc  paople.  SlO/hour 
plus  bonuSMi  310-305-7368. 


AMERICORPS  Posltton:Help  watch  hteracy 
devek)pment  program  for  prescfKX>lers  while 
eamir^g  money  for  scIkkjI.  30  fxHJrs/Week. 
Julie,  Connections  For  ChlWren.  310-452- 
3325ex.234. 

ANNOUf4CERS.  no  experierv;e  necessary. 
Host  muaic/lalk- shows  for  our  radk>  stations. 
P/T.  $10-1S/hr.  $200-fper/show,  plus  fantas- 
tte  benefits.  323-468-0080.  24-hours 

ANSWER  TELEPHONES/DATA  ENTRY 
Movie  maikat  research  fimi  seeks  people 
wtth  caN  taking  and  data  entry  skills.  We  pro- 
vide Ihe  pirra.  you  provide  the  computer  arxJ 
telephone  expertise.  Immediate  start  for 
weekend  work  al  year  tong.  Contact  Eliza- 
beth at  3ia«40-S800  ext2S1. 


*FfT  GENERAL  OFRCE* 

WESTWOOD  ENTERTAINMENT  LAW 
FIRM  SEEKS  F/T  OFFICE  CLERK  TO  DO 
COPYING.  FAXING,  AND  MAIL  PROCESS- 
ING MUST  HAVE  CLERICAL  OFFICE  EX- 
PERIENCE. SALARY  DOE+BENEFITS 
FAX  RESUME  TO  E.  KRAFT:  310-441-8010 

'MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beali  H»  )obe.  Start 
immadbitely.  Qreat  pay.  FurVEasy.  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  for  free  medteal  Cal-24/hrs 
i?3-85(M417. 


ClassifK  •! 
825-2221 


ASSISTANT  ART  CONSULTANT  Train  w/a 
pralaaatonal.  knowledge  of  baste  computer 
prograina.  Qood  daslgn.ooh)r  and  oompoel- 
tton  sWs.  lOhrAwfc  lo  etart.  31&«8-3964 

ASSISTANT  needed.  $10/hr  Temple  City,  f/t 
Oppoliunlly  to  laam  Via  ancient  art  of  Chi 
CXrang.  Canlonaaa/Englsh.  computer  liter- 
ate, people  skills,  detall-ortented.  Contact  Us 
310-571-6032. 

ATHLETTCS:  P/T  student  emptoyee  to  mxk 
copy/man  room  and  front  raoiptton  desk. 
Pay:$6.70mr,10-16  hrs^vk.  Must  be  friendly 
and  haid  wortdng.  Apply  at  JO.  Morgan 
Pic— as  OMoe  310-206-8662 


7800 

Help  WaiiKid 


7800 

H(!l|)  W;int(Hl 


cso 


OMMUNITY 
E  RVI C  E 
FFICE  R 

ROGRAMS 

'  $10.26 
per  hour 

Bike  Patrols, 
Evening  Vans, 
mpus  Escorts, 
ent  Hall  Patcob, 
ipatx:her  and  many 
dber  opportunities. 
Hiringt  825-2148 
Info:     825-9800 


Dooood  _ 

(and  get  paid  for  it). 


Questions!  enialit  cso@ucpd.ucla.edu 
Visit  our  new  website  at» 

fiSQEiaoLtiidaifidu 


BABYSITTER 

Some  evenings  and  weekends.  Experience 
with  toddlers,  references  a  must.  UCLA  area. 
310-470-8390. 

BABYSITTER/DRIVER  needed  for  2  girts 
ages  11.  Santa  Monica/WLA  area.  Must  be 
available  3-6pm  M-F  Must  have  car.  valkJ  li- 
cense and  irwurance.  $10/hr+gas.  Call  Les-. 
lie  310-277-8480. 

BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Union.  Excellent  pay.  hours  &  environment. 
Some  teller  experience  preferred.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd..  LA.  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.ucu.org/jobsiitm 


CLINICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  positk>n  immediately  available  lor  a  li- 
censed lalxjratory  scientist  in  a  private  clini- 
cal laboratory  in  Santa  Monica.  Lab  provides 
endocrine,  andrology.  serotogy  and  ijnmu- 
notogy  testing.  Incumtwnt  required  to  work 
in  weekend  rotations.  Salary  commensurate 
with  qualifications  and  experience.  Submit 
applteattens  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 
Technotogy  Laboratories.  1245  16th  Street. 
Suite  105.  Santa  Monica.  CA  90404  (Tel 
310-829-0102). 

CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HIRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  gel  paid.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$i0.26/hr  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/l  + 
academte  years  remaining  with  valkJ  driver's 
license.  Web:  www  ucpd  ucla.edu/ucpd/cso. 
Email:  cso©ucpd. ucla.edu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 


BEST-SELLING 
AUTHOR 

ASSISTAf^  to  psychotogist/author  Good 
typing/filing  skills.  Run  errands  Must  have 
own  car  w/insurance.  10-20hrs/wk,  flexible. 
$8/hr.  Some  research.31 0-205-0226 

BEVERLY  HILLS  AUTO  DETAIL  Shop  needs 
hard-working,  fast-paced,  agressive  people 
to  handle  top-notch  cars.  No  experience  re- 
quired Flexible  hours.  Ozzie:31 0-859-2870. 

BOOKKEEPER/ASSISTANT.  P/T.  8- 
lOhrs/wk  $l0/hr  Excel  and  Word  experi- 
ence required  Fax  resume  818-909-4991 

BOOKKEEPING/RECEPTIONIST/data  pro- 
cessor Development  company  kx)king  to  fill 
3  posittons  start  ASAP  tocatkxi-  Downtown 
LA  213-489-5540  ext  11 

CARE  TAKING  COMPANION  for  16-year  oW 
davetopmentally  disabled  girt  Involve  rieigh- 
boftwod  fieM  trips&activitles.playing 
boardgames. walks. etc.  Need  car  Hours 
flext)le.$12/hr  310-839-3732. 

CITY  OF  BEVERLY  Hills  Partdng  Attendants 
needed.  $9  11/hr.  Morning  and  Evening 
shifts  available  Seasor^l  Posittens  starting 
November  16.  2000  to  Janurary  5.  2001  All 
shifts  available  Apply  Nowlll  Dept.  of  Trans- 
portatton  455  N  Rexford  Dr.,  Room  130.  Ap- 
ply In  person.  310-285-2552. 

CLERK  TYPIST/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

Manage  small  medical  research  group 
Good  communteatton/wriling  skills,  word- 
processing,  Windows  95.  up  to  20/hours. 
weekday-mornings.  Starting-$fl  00/hr.  West- 
wood.  310-826-0679. 

CLERK.  P/T.  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  pertecttehtsi  with  typing 
skins  for  genaraf  offtee  cities.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  dataH-ortanted.  $1l/hour  to  start  Can 
Rhonda  310-286-2347. 


DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  is  hiring  van  driv- 
ers. Looking  for  energette.  unstoppable, 
positive  crew  Immediately  Flexible  hours, 
busy  weekends  Apply  in  person  M-Sat  till 
6pm.  Apply  al  937  Westwood  3 1 0-208- 1 1 80. 

DO  YOU  LOVE  GOOD 
FOOD? 

New  bakery/gounnet  take-out  shop  near 
Century  City  hiring  counter  help,  cooks,  bak- 
ers, dnvers.  CaH  310-552-1080 

DRIVER  FOR  MESSENGER  SERVICE.  F/T- 
P/T.  Salary+commission.  Valid  Driver's 
Lteense.  insurance,  and  motor  cyde  pre- 
ferred. Fax  resume  to  661-799-7755. 


DRIVER/COMPANION 

For  14-yr-oW  girl;  approx.  3:15-7:00pm,  M-F. 
westside;  at  least  college  jr.  excel, 
grades/study  habits/driving  record,  atm  car. 
Very  reliable,  flexible.  $10/hr  negotiable 
Call  Det>orah  days:310-312-3138.  even- 
ings:310-476-1310 

DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED  Full- 
time or  part-lime  Westwood  driving  and  tral- 
fte  school    Call  for  infomnatton.  310-824- 


ELEMENTARY  SCHOOL  INTERN 
SHIPO  UES  for  4units  credit  Fall  quar- 
ter-you  must  have  Jr/Sr  stand- 
ing43  0GPA  Requires  lOhrs/wk  in  the 
classroom,  3evening  seminars,  3p)a- 
pers&joumal.  To  enroll,  you  must  attend  1 
orioniatlon  In  the  UES  Conference  Rm: 
Mon  10/2O9AM:  Mon  ia'203PM;  Tues 
10/3O9AM  Info:  Frances©  310-825- 
2623/francesfOucla  edu. 


CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

F/T,  M-F  9-5  Century  City  tocatkjn  Seeking 
self-motivated,  energetic  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate, 
bilingual,  college  degree  prof.  Fax  resume 
310-553-3996. 


EXPERIENCED  BOOKKEEPER  Psychoto- 
gist's  Home  Beverty  HiNs.  CaN  310-205- 
0226 

FILING  AND  GENERAL  OFFCE  work  need- 
ed Computer  literate,  flexible  hours  offered, 
P/T.  $9/hr.  Fax  resume  310-859-0547  attn 
Mike. 

FT/PT  CUSTOMER  SERVICE  REPRESEN- 
TATIVE  Answering  telephones,  data  entry, 
filing,  near  campus.  Call  310-828-9900. 


■v..-:"-^U5-. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


FULL  TIME  RECEPTIONIST  lor  Westwood 
entertainment  law  finri.  Monday-Friday 
10AM-7PM.  Good  pixjne  manner  and  front 
office  apperarx:e  a  must.  Experience  pro- 
ffered. Fax  resume  to  E.  Kraft  310-441-8010. 

GET  PAID  TO  PLAY!' 

AFTERSCHOOL  DAY  CARE  needs  three 
new  staff  to  play  ball,  help  with  homewort<. 
interact  with  chiWren.  Grades  K-8th.  310- 
470-9747. 

GOOD  PAY!!! 

HARD-WORKING,  reliable,  athletic  persons 
for  p/t  work.  Good  pay  Work  outdoors.  Own 
car  a  plus.  Call  866-845-0946. 

HOME  CLEANERS.  P/T-F/T.  $8-$  11/hr  and 
up.  To  clean  in  Westside  areas.  Must  be  de- 
pendable and  have  car.  310-471-6212,  April. 

INBOUND  CALL  CENTER,  hard  work  will 
earn  you  up  to  $30  per  hourl  Sales  Experi- 
ence/Customer Service/  Multitasking  and 
computer  experience  needed  Wroking  shifts 
start  early  in  the  moming  and  in  the  after- 
noon. Call  800-980-4886  ext.  210.  Fax  Re- 
sume: 310-559-8078. 

INTERNATIONAL  FIRM  seeks  experienced 
telemarketers  lor  office  In  El  Segundo.  B2B 
professional  sales  In  fast  growing,  high-de- 
mand martcet.  Salary,  commission,  bonus, 
and  benefits.  F/T  and  P/T  available.  Call 
Rhonda  at  800-801-100/  and  fax  resume  to 
310-607-9852. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian) .  Customer 
Servtee  Representative.  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  vert}al  skills  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- i768-jspatterson®i]- 
ginc.com. 


INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  ReceptkKiist.  Entry  level  position  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrs/wk  MIN  F/T  pre- 
ferred. Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son 323-653-1768.  ispatterson«ijginc.com. 

INVESTMENT  BANKING 

Looking  for  student  who's  majored  in  this 
fiekl  to  teach  concepts,  valuations,  and  Ex- 
cel 310-858-4755. 

JEWISH  HEBREW 

And  Sunday  Schools  need  teachers  Good 
Jewish  educatten  and  k)ve  of  children  de- 
sired. Altee  Fasman:323-761-8605. 

LAW  OFFICE  ENVIRONMENT  Excellent 
opportunity.  Cleri<  positions  available.  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Minimum  20hrs/wk.  $6.50/hr.  Fax 
resume  and  proposed  available  hours  lo  Hu- 
man Resources  Dept  310-274-2798  or  Mall 
to:  Lurie  &  Zepeda  9107  Wilshire  Blvd.,  Su- 
ite 800.  Beverty  Hills.  CA  90210. 

LIBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties.  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start. 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Antigone  Kutay 
310-825-1084. 


MEDICAL  FRONT 
OFFICE  STAFF 

Ear.  Nose,  Throat,  Specialist.  Tues  8am- 
12:30  and  Thurs  1pm-6pm  To  start  ASAP 
Fax  resume  310-792-0066. 

MEDICAL  OFFICE 

Research  assistant  Premed/optometry. 
Freshman/soptwmore.  Tues&Thurs. 

16hrsA*k  Jules  Stein/UCLA.  Minimum  GPA 
3.5.  Call:310-825-4749  or  Fax  Resume:310- 
794-7904,  AttnVeronica . 


MLS  LIMOUSINE  SER- 
VICE 

WEEKEND  JOB/  PART-TIME,  data  en- 
try&some  billing,  no  experience  needed  will 
train,  call  9-5  310-271-8559. 

MODELS  WANTED  by  professional  photo- 
studto  for  upcoming  assignment  Male/Fe- 
male Pro/Non-Pro.  Fashion/Commer- 
clal/meatrical.  Call  for  appointment  818- 
966-7933. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  drive&work  w/2  funAgifted  kids  ages  5&7 
Pertect  schedule  for  student.  Must  have  car. 
P/T  pennanent.  Excellent  salary.  Judy:310- 
551-1145 

NONPROFIT  SEEKS  responsible,  outgoing 
people  to  support  children/adults  with  dis- 
abilities throughout  ttie  LA  area  Flexible 
hours.  Several  positkyis  availalbe.  UP  to 
$14/hr  Contact  Monica  0818-361- 
6400x129.  www.iaynolan.org 

OPPORTUNITY  OF  THE  MIUENNIUMtfl 
Interruttenal  Company  needs  help  expand- 
ing. Free  Training!  Set  own  hours!  Excellent 
Income!  $1500  PT-$7000FT.  800-335-8806. 
wwwconquerdreams.com. 

P/T  DATA  ENTRY/  DIS- 
PATCH  ASSISTANT 

10  30am-3:30pm,  M-F.  some  overtime. 
Computer,  heavy  phor>es,  and  knowledge  of 
LA  area  a  must.  Messenger  background  pre- 
fened.  Fax  resume  310-275-4439 


Display 
206-3060 


-»  ■  ..  ^.  .ii^>. 


assc 


»     , 


fndjy,  September  29, 2000 


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Nutrition  Classes 

For  detailed  information,  see  ad  on  page  60 

Visit  the  Ashe  web  site  for  more  information,  request 

an  appointment  or  ask  a  health  related  question- 

http://www/saonet.ucla.edu/health.htm  - 

or  call  825-4073' 

ucia  Ashe  Center 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWQRn  PI  1771 F 


ACROSS 

1  Location 
6  Textbook 

section 
10  Skewer 

14  —pants 

15  1492  ship 

16  "Be  quiet!" 

1 7  Elude  adroitly 

18  Diplomacy 

19  — Stanley 
Gardner 

20  Without 
loopholes 

22  Cast  a  sidelong 
glance 

23  Arizona  river 

24  Lacking  vigor 
26  Stopped 

^30  Uncommon      . 
92  Sandwich 

cookie 
33  Quiz 
35  In  existence 
40  Varying 
42  Worded 
44  Authority 
^5  Face  pari 
4?  Hosiery  problem 
48  "Dracula"  author 

Stoker 
50  Snuggle 
52  Nobelist  Mother 
56  Bring  in.  as 

salary 

58  Level 

59  Complainer 

65  Genial 

66  Author  Harte 

67  Grass  unit 

68  Shut  noisily 

69  Toward  the 
center 

70  Black-and-blue 

71  Glimpse 

72  Hardy  heroine 

73  Fencing 
weapons 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


IRIAICIE 


HHH    aSB    BHH 


s 

H 

A  R  K 

A 

L 

L  EIY 

P 

O 

OHH 

SiSIiliaSBlQC]    QSQSO 

HSH  DOS  ana 


i 


u 


lElT 


dusia   arara 


s  w 


R 


DOWN 

1  Exclamation  of 
relief 

2  Voteano 
product 

3  "I  smell  — !" 

4  Yield 

5  Come  forth 

6  Up  to 

7  —  Falls 

8  Part  of  a  foot 

9  Shred 

10  Bookcase 
unit 

1 1  Fruit  pulp 

12  Speck  in  the 
■    ocean 

13  Not  here 

21  Ocean  motions 

25  Terror 

26  Coal  scuttles 

27  Opera  song 

28  Impose  (a  tax) 

29  Foot  parts 
31  Elec  units 


34  TVs  Warnor 
Princess 

36  Young  woman 

37  ■•—  It 
Romantic?"  — ^ 

38  Wiener 
schnitzel 
ingredient 

39  Rim 

41  Steals  from 
43  Actor  Winkler 
46  Egg  dishes 
49  Cottontail 

51  Permit 

52  Past,  for  one 

53  Injurious  things 

54  Summarize 

55  Foe 

57  Choir  voices 

60  Seabird 

61  Barrette 

62  Own 

63  Singer 
Brickell 

64  Bright  colors 

TOTTTTTTTl 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


7800 

Holp  W.nilL-fJ 


PiT  OhlVERAJTILITY 
TRAINEE 

FlexIWo  hours.  $8/houf  Includes  gasoline 
Own  vehkHe,  valid  California  drivers  li- 
cense and  proof  of  insurance.  Non-srnok- 
ing  environment.  Clean-cut  individual 
Stephanie.  3 1 0-395-329 1 . 


^      Pn  FILE  CLERK 

Busy,  2-man  BH  law-firm  seeks  bright,  reli- 
able, pleasant  office  help.  10-15  hrs/wk 
$10/hr.  Some  typing.  Please  fax  contact  into 
to  Jim ©3 10-285- 1728. 


P/T  OFFICE  WORK.  Capable  person  to  do 
vanety  of  jobs  in  busy  retail  carpet  store 
WLA.  Call  Helen  31 0-444-0220. 

P/T  RECEPTIONIST/OFFICE  CLERK  for 
Century  City  firm.  General  office  duties.  Fax 
resume  to  Cindy:  310-553-1540. 

P/T  WRITER.  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neenng  Firm  seeks  perfectwnist  with  strong 
writing  skills  to  produce  miWIy  technical  re- 
ports for  internal  and  external  use.  $13/hr  to 
start.  Wage  increases  as  appropriate.  Mini- 
mum  15hrs/wk.  Fax  resume  ^10-286-9126. 

PERSONABLE 
FRONT  DESK 
^^    RECEPTIONIST 

With  some  sales  experience  for  West  Holly- 
wood  upscale  gym.  Janice.31 0-577-6773. 


7Ron 

ht.'ip  WaiUed 


SPANISH  SPEAKING  TEACHING  aMJ«- 
taots  needed  at  kx^al  elementary  school  Ap- 
P[2i*?:?^[ILEfi£!?^i310-473-2 1 7i 

STUDENTS  WANTED 

OUTGOING.  RESPONSBLE  STUDENTS 
with  own  car  Food  delivery.  11 -2pm.  P/T. 
Good  payl  |woilzy©earthlink.nel  or  call 
Stove  310-480-3247. 

SURVEY  ON  WEB 

Independent  researcher  needs  help  putting  a 
sunrey  on  website.  Fast  job,  fast  money 
Leave  message  310-312-0266. 

SWIM  INSTURCTOR 

P/T.  $10-12/hr.  310-472-7474  ext114. 


7800 

Help  Warned 


r««®^°°°  RETAILER  Sirt  from  campus 
(easy  bus  access)  needs  sales  personto 
start  immedtetefy  selling  printed  Christmas 

December.  Open  Mon-Sal.  WE  can  tram 
yoojaten^  negotiable.  Please  call  Cheri 


TANNING  SALON  POSITION  AVAILABLE 
Good  Pay  Apply  at  1 1 56  26th  St.  Santa  Mo- 
nica, CA  310-828-8028. 


TELEVISION    PRODUCTION    COMPANY 
looking  for  organized,  detail  oriented  person 
for  EQUIPMENT  ROOM  POSITION.  Duties 
include  propping  &  QCing  camera,  audio  & 
lighting  equipment,  as  well  as  pick-up  &  de- 
livery of  various  productwn  equipment   Ex- 
cellent job  for  a  college  student  taking  class- 
es dunng  the  day'  4pm- 1 0pm  Monday  thm 
Fnday  Hours  will  vary,  some  late  nights  and 
weekends  required.  Good  pay.  Great  entry- 
level  position  for  someone  interested  in  get- 
ting into  the  Television  Production  Industry 
Must  be  responsible,  trustworthy  &  able  to 
work  self-supervised.  Must  have  dependable 
vehicle.  Position  available  immediately  If  in- 
terested call  818-508-0888 


WORK  AT  HOME 

Interrjational  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888. 

www.AcaDemon.com 

is  looking  for  student  liaisons  to  serve  as  go- 
betweens  for  company  and  home  univeretty. 
Flex^hours,  good  pay.  To  apply  email 
lobsoacademon.com. 


8000 

Internships 


FOX  TV  STUDIOS  needs  interns.  Great 
learning  opportunity  for  television  devetop- 
ment/producing  process.  Please  fax  resume 
to:Zig  GauthierO  3 10-369-7378. 

FREE  ARTS  FOR  ABUSED  CHILDREN  IS 
SEEKING  UNPAID  INTERNS  PLEASE 
CONTACT  KARINAAT  310-313-4ART. 

INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
student  film  projects.  Call  Joel:3l0-828- 
2292. 


PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 


Detail-oriented  individual  needed  to  assist 
with  light  bookkeeping,  organizing  and  filfng 
Quk:ken  experience  helpful.  Work  in  home 
office  ctose  to  UCLA.  Flexible  hours  up  to 
$15hours/week.  Fax  resume  to.310-451- 
1785. 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  for  family  (of  inter- 
est to  young  filmmakers):  15-20hrs/wk- 
$1(Vhr.  3pm-8pm  Mon  ,  Tues,  Thurs  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  Filing/research 
Flexible  schedule/resourceful!!  Contact:  310- 
824-1444  (John).  Good  references  required 
Non-Smoker.  Must  have  own  car& insurance. 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  NEEDED  for 
young,  female,  quadripulegic  working  in  the 
entertainment  industry.  No  experience  nec- 
essary. Weekday  and  weekend  positions 
available.  310-829-2693. 

PHARMACY  CLERK.  Variable  hours  M-F 
$8.50/hour.  310-659-3887. 

^       POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience  exam 
info.  Call  1-800-391-5856  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar. 


VETERINARY  MEDICAL  ASSISTANT!  P/T. 
Sun-Sat.,  am/pm  shifts  available.  Future  ve- 
tennaiy  students  only  Win  train  Call  323- 
933-8406.  Ask  for  Nahalia. 

VIDEO  PRODUCTION 
WORK! 

In  an  on-campus  television  studto    Must 
quality  for  "work-study-  posiltons  (have  a  "iob 
referral").     Contact    Brian:3l  0-825-4 124 
bkmurphygucla.edu. 

VIDEOTAPE  TRANSCRIBERS  needed 
$l0/hr  min.  F/T-P/T  available.  45wpm  on 
Microsoft  Word.  Fax  resume  to  818-995- 
5544. 


PROMOTERS  WANTED  for  Westside  Club 
310-915-7595 


PT/FT  MESSENGERS  _ 
WANTED 

Make  yoor  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$600/week.  310-724-8360.  Days  only 

RECEPTIONIST  WESTWOOD  LAW  OF- 
FICES. MoniWed.  9-5.  $8/hour.  Can  do 
homework  on  job    310-470-3373. 


REGISTERED  US  nurses  wanted  NOW 
$20-45/hour  TAx-lree  per-diem.  exceptional 
benefits  package.  For  info,  email 
blessme43eregisterdnur5es.com 

RESTAURANT  IN  BEVERLY  HILLS  seeking 
person  to  answer  phones  and  pack  delivery 

VZl^.^^^^^  '^°"'*"9  ^"fs.  Call 
jiO-^71-0027. 

"I^'^'L  SALES.  Penny  Lane  Records  has 
K/r  night  positions  available.  l5-20hrs/wk 
$6.50/hr.  Apply  in  person.   10914  Kinross 


WANTED 

75people  will  pay  you  to  tose  weight  m  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended  100% 
natural/no  dojgs.  CaH  now.  323-993-3391. 

WANTED  AFTER  SCHOOL  TEACHER  P/T. 
3-6pm.  Must  have  car  and  valk)  driver's  li- 
cense^ 1 3-385-3 1 3 1 . 

WANTED:  MATURE  STUDENT  for  Pn  tutor 
and  mother's  helper.  V^iid  driver's  license 
and  references  required.  $15/hr.  SM  tax 
resume  310-859- 1 665. 

WESTLA  FILE  CLERK,  m.  $8-10Air.  Flexi- 
ble  hours  20-40hrs/wk.  Pleasant,  casual 
wort<ing  environment.  Contact  Jennifer  at 
310-268-0788. 


WESTWOOD 
PART-TIME  SALES 

Westwood  art  gallery.  310-208-1896. 


MEDIA  PRODUCTION.  Communication 
ilm.  broadcast  majors.  Zoom  Culture,  an  in- 
ternet broadcast  network,  is  seeking  enthu- 
siastic student  to  create  vkleo  programming. 
Incredible  opportunity  gain  hands-on  experi- 
ence. Email  jefferyOzoomculture  com 
www.zoorTKuHure.com. 

voluntary  internships  in  Banking,   Sales 
Mari<eting.  Accounting.  No  experience  nec- 
^saryl  Applfcattons  availattedlS^,^^, 


81 00 

Personal  Assistance 


ELDERLY  UCLA  ALUM 

Needs  help  and  companionship  Seeks  ma- 
ture, responsible,  English-speaker,  good- 
driver  to  do  errands  and  light  chores  310- 
270-4290. 

PHYSICAL 
ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  disabled  male  in  Reiber  Hall.  A  few 
hrs/day  Flexible  shedule.  $l0/hr  Call  Alex 
949-369-9871  or  310-267-8189 


8200 

Temporary  Employntent 


TEMPORARY  EMPLOYMENT  SlOftir  From 
2-4hrs/day  as  many  days  as  one  can  put  in 
Packing  figurines,  anfkioes.  bric-a-brac  No 
experience  necessary.  Murray  Manoff  310- 

YOUNG  DISABLED  PHYSICIAN  needs  UR- 
_  GENT  IMMEDIATE  ASSISTANCE  wi«pack- 
•ng  and  papenwrk.  Must  have  driver's  li- 
cense. shouW  be  dedicated.  Female  pre- 
(ened.  Spinal  injury— needs  walking  com- 
panionship for  about  hour/day  but  no  real 
personal  care  Goal:to  get  me  packed,  or- 
ganized, and  ready  for  acute  hospitalization 
at  Stanford  Some  references  needed.  Start 
ASAP!!!  Hours  flexible— 4-5  hours/day  $15- 
$20/hr+bonus  if  make  deadline.  Potential  to 
return  and  continue  wort<.  CaU  only  between 
8:00am- 10:00am.  or  after  6:30pm  310-441- 
9803. 


84^00 

Apartments  for  RiMit 


•WESTWOOD  VILLAGE.  MIDVALE  N  OF 
LEVERING.  LARGE  2-BDRM  APT  GAR- 
DEN VIEW,  DINING  ROOM.  UNIQUE 
CHARM.  FRONT  AND  REAR  ENTRANCE* 
310-839-6294.* 


:      SALES  CLERK 

57/hr  No  experience  necessary.  Cashiering 
wortting  with  patients.  UCLA  Hospital  2e- 
ventngs.  3-7:30PM  11:3O-6:0OPM   310-825- 

OUO9 


SALES  POSITION 

t-/T.  Growing  Century  City  company  seeks 
sales  person  who  are  energetk:  self-starters 
Our  company  is  the  leader  in  the  procure- 
ment of  liquor  licenses  and  use  permits  in 
California  Must  be  computer-literate.  Urban 
planning/legal  background^jilingual  applic- 
ants that  want  to  participate  in  our  exciting 
niche  business  call  our  offices  today  for  de- 
tails:310-553-6363  ext.18  or  fax  resume 
to:310-553-3996  Attn:Ctndy. 

SECRETARY  NEEDED  $lO/hr  F/T  M-F 
8:30-5  30  Handle  phone  calls,  basic  secre- 
tanal  duties.  Alex  Son  or  Connie  Son  21 3- 
252-1222 


SECRETARY,  halftlme,  mornings,  lo  RN  at 
VA  medkial  center,  WLA  Proficient  in  word 
and  excel  $ii/hr  Some  benefits.  Fax  re- 
sume  to  Susan  Orrange  310-268-4404 


Daily  News 


WRITE  THREE 

PARAGRAPHS, 

EARHfSO 

The  Los  Angetes  Daily  News  sports 
department  is  seeking  freeJarice  report- 
ers to  cover  high  school  sports,  prima- 
rily football.  ' 

Reporters  are  expected  to  take  com- 
plete statistics,  file  a  2-3  paragraph 
game  report  and  meet  difficult  dead- 
lines. We  pay  $50  tor  shorts,  $75  for 
longer  stories  and  27  cents  per  mile  for 
travel. 

For  more  information,  caH  sports  edi- 
tor Michael  Anastasi  at  (800)  888-6009 
ext.  3627  or  reporter  Lee  Barnathan  at 
ext.  3611. 


2&3BDRM.  LARGE,  bright,  view.  Mfcrowavo, 
oven,  refrigerator,  dishwasher,  washer/dryer 
in  unit.  21 -ft.  Jacuzzi  on  roof.  Walking  dis- 
tance  to  UCLA.  310-475-0807. 

BEV  HILLS  ADJ.  APT  2■^2,  bateony  h/w 
floors,  laundry,  parking  $1250.  818^23- 
4444.  W¥>rw.altofLA.com 

BRENIWOOD  ADJ  APT  2*1  1/4  Rig" 
^undry,  parking  included  $1435.  310-395- 
RENT  www  westskierentals.com 


Weslwootf  cpfaea 


Slnglew/  Shared  Bathroom 

^,      $930 -$965 

single  w/  Private  Bathroom 

$965  -  $1095 

^    1  Bedroom 

$1210 -$1500 

Parking  available  for 
1  Bedrooms  only 

3'0"2o8-85os 


Display 
206-30()0 


DiHy  Bruih'CbssjfM 


Friday,  September  29, 2016       57 


8400 

Apurtiiujiits  for  R«;iit 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ 

Charming  Spanish  duplex.  2bed/lbath.  Ex- 
cellent Locatton.  One  bkxk  from  Beverly 
Hills.  Hardwood  floors.  Living/dining  room. 
$1750/month.  310-858-8817. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  U2BE0ROOM 
$8954UP  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS. 
310-839-6294. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  CHARMING  APARTMENT 
_2+1.  hardwood  floors,  laundry,  garage 
$1400.  3lb-395-RENT  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 

BEVERLY  HILLS  GUESTHOUSE  w/full 
kitchen.  Iaur>dry,  lumished  or  unfurnished 
$1000.  310-395-RENT  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 

BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdmi/3bth.  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdrm/3bth.  $2950.  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alarm,  gated  paridng. 
Spacious,  carpet.  Pnme  location!  Near 
UCLA  310-474-1111. 


H 


M 


WESTWOOD  VILLAGE 

Walk  to  campus, 
locked  &  gated 
building  w/ 
subteiranean 
parking.  Large 
tndem  apt.  w/ 
dining  room  & 
built  in  kitchen. 

1  BR/ 1  Bath $1300 

2  BR/2  Bath $1800 

Available  immediately. 

691  Levering  Ave. 

310-208-3647 


01 


a 


CULVER  CITY  APARTMENT  1+1,  laundry, 
fresh  paint,  remodeled  kitchen.  $650.  310- 
395-RENT  wwwwestskjerentals.com 


8^00 

ApnrtuKMits  for  Rent 


BRENTWOOD  BACHE- 
LOR 
APARTMENT 

FOR  RENT.  Grad  student  prelen^ed.  Upper, 
front,  walk-in  ck>set,  tub  and  sfiower.  Close 
to  bus.  $695/month.  310-275-7139. 

CULVER  CITY  APARTMENT  in  4-plex.  2+1, 
enclosed  garage,  laundry,  private  and 
secure  parking.  $850.  310-395-7368. 
www.westsldwfwntaK  com 

LA  CRESCENTA  APARTMENT.5+2.5.  bal- 
cony, patk),  laundry,  gated  parking.  $1200. 
818-623-4444.  www.allofLA.com 

MAR  VISTA  TOWNHOUSE  2+2.  catok.  laun- 
dry, subterranean  parking  $1295.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.weslskJerentals.com 

MARINA  DEL  REY  ADJ.  APT  2+2.  bateony 
high  ceilings,  laundry,  sub.  parking.  $1150. 
310-395-RENT  www.westslderentals.com 

NEAR  UCLA 

Large,  furnished  bachelors,  fumished  with 
utilities  provkled.  Locked  entry,  good  k>ca- 
tk>n.  buses  sfiopping  centers.  $535/month. 
310-575-8987. 

PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $575.  $600deposit 
1-year  lease  only  Stove,  relrig. .carpets,  vert, 
blinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message  8am- 
5p«T>only 

PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT  2+1.5,  w/c 
pet,  large  ctosets,  pool,  laundry,  parking 
included  $995.  310-395-RENT  www. west- 
sklerentals.com 

PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT  2+1  3/4, 
laundry,,  garage  Won't  Last!  $1360.  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westsiderentals.com 

SANTA  MONICA  APARTMENT  private  room, 
bath,  R&S,  laundry,  patio,  fireplace.  $495. 
310-395-RENT.  www.westsklerentals.com 

SANTA  MONICA  APARTMENT  2+2,  bal- 
cony laurtdry,  padting  included.  $1425.  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westsKlerentais.com 

SANTA  MONICA  HOUSE  lumished,  private 
room,  bath,  h/w  fioors.  w/d  utilities  paid 
$480.  310-395-RENT.  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 

SANTA  MONICA,  fumished  private  room, 
bath,  near  beach,  R&S,  laundry.  $450.  310- 
395-7368.  www.westskJerentals.com. 


8/^00 

Apartments  for  Rent 


VENICE  APARTMENT  STUDIO  1  bath,  only 
steps  to  beach,  laundry,  utilities  paid,  parking 
included  $650.  310-395-RENT  www.west- 
siderentals  com. 

WEST  COVINA  HOUSE  3  bedroom,  hard- 
wood  Ikwrs,  yard.  $1500.  818-623-4444. 
www.allofLA.com 

WESTWOOD  APARTMENT  bachelor,  1 
bath,  laundry,  small  fridge.  $675.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.westskJerentals.com 

WESTWOOD  APARTMENT  2+1,  patio, 
laundry,  blinds,  garage  $1450.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.westskJerentals.oom 

WESTWOOD.  2BDRM/2BATH  $1450  AND 
UP  TILE  KITCHEN.  STEPDOWN  LIVING 
ROOM.  HIGH  CEILING.  CHARM.  1  MILE 
SOUTH  OF  WILSHIRE.  SOME  W/BAL- 
C0NY.3 10-839-6294. 


8600 

Conclo/Townhoiise  for  Rent 


1BDRM/2BTH,  security  building/garage, 
sunny  vtMe<M,  pool/jacuzzi,  suana/gym, 
large  closets,  vacant  11/15.  lease  $l275/mo. 
310-471-1335. 


8700 

Coiulo/Towiihouse  for  Sale 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


WESTWOOD-1/2  MILE 
FROM  UCLA 

Prime  locatkin.  share  house  $1200- 
1400/month.  www.lasolutions.com/rent.htm 
tiftany.kangOexcite.com 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


BRENTWOOD 

GUESTHOUSE 

1=0RHELP 

Private  entrance:  gated  property  with  pod. 
For  after-school  help  with  chiklren  (14412 
years),  including  driving  310-476-4297. 

LIVE  IN  BEV.HILLS 

Room  and  tioard  in  exchange  for  chiWcare  4- 
7PM  for  5&7-year  old  5  minutes  from  UCLA. 
310-859-1374  page:310-236-7555. 

ROOM  AND  BOARD  EXCHANGE  for  chikJ- 
care/dogsitting.  UCLA  female  student  want- 
ed for  weekend  babysitting/dogsitting. 
(Some  weeknights).  Excellent  childcare  ref- 
erences required.  Walking  distance  campus. 
310-470-4662. 


9^00 

Room  for  Rent 


.Vr.^. 


9^00 

Room  tor  Rent 


WESTWOOD 

Walk  to  UCLA.  Male-Only.  Large,  private  fur- 
nisfied  bdrm  w/bath.  Kitchen  privileges,  laun- 
dry parking.  $700/month.  Another  room 
$600/month.  310-473-5769. 

WESTWOOD.  1/2  mile  from  UCLA,  own 
room(s)  Share  clean  house.  Professional  or 
student.  $1200/month.  www.lasolu- 
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8800 

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WLA  female  roommate(s)  wanted  to  share 
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9700 

Sublets 


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Gateway  Christian  Church 

Los  Angeles.  CA  90064 
310-473-3191  ,  '  : 

email  GatewyCCOaol.com 
Worship  Sunday  at  10:45am, 
Children's  Sunday  School  and 
Choir  Rehearsal  at  9:30am. 
Tuesday  and  Wednesday  Groups. 
Share  in  our  country-style  atmos- 
phere, and  experience  the  blending 
of  traditional  and  contemporary 
worship.  Find  yourself  warmly  wel- 
comed as  you  seek  both  meaning 
and  joy  Near  student  housing. 

Christian 

Westwood  Hills  Christian 
Church 

lOSOBLeConieAve. 

Lot  Angetet,CA  90024      ' 

3l0-20e^7e 

ww»WHCC0melcbc.com 

Bibte  Study  9:00am.  Worship 

10:00am.  Tuesday  Evening  Bible 

Study  7:00pm. 

We  are  located  across  from  UCLA 

Medical  Center  at  Le  Conte  and 

Hilgard.  Students  are  welcome. 

Join  us  for  lunch  1st  SurKlay  each 

month  after  worship. 

Westside  Oikos  Community 
Church 

1943  Ocean  Park  Blvd. 
Santa  MoniM.  04  90405 
310^1-912$ 


www.  westsiOeoikos  org 

Sunday  worship  at  1:30pm, 
Thursday  UCLA  Oikos  Campus 
Ministry  (OCM)  meetings  at 
6:30pm  in  CS  Young  24. 
Come  and  share  the  joy! 
Encounter  God's  presence 
through  powerful  worship. 
Inspiring  messages,  and  genuine 
community.  Rides  for  Sunday 
worship  provided  at  Sproul  turn- 
around at  1pm. 

Roman  Cathgiic 


preparation,  education,  and  just 
plain  fun! 

Lutheran 


St.  Sebastian 

1453  Federal  Ave. 
LoeAngelea.CA  90025 
310^78-0136 

email:  rtngergmarOaol.oom 
Saturday  at  5pm  (English), 
Sunday  at  8am  (Spanish),  10am 
(English)  and  Noon  (Spanish). 
Located  on  Federal  between 
Wllshire  and  Santa  Monica. 
Neightwrhood  Catholic  parish 
where  all  are  welcome  to  worship 
with  us.  BienvenidosI 

University  Catholic  Cwitar 

633QayleyA}m.  :-..\'-' ■■ 

Lo6Anifelea,CA  90024 

310-208-5015 

wwwjKcla.org 

Sunday  Masses  at  10:30am,  7pm, 
and  9pm. 

Our  Catholic  community  welcomes 
all.  With  over  70  years  of  service 
to  UCLA  and  the  University 
ReKgious  Conference,  we  offer 
worship,  retreats.  sacFamenlsl 


St.  Paul's  Lutheran  Church 
(ELCA) 

958  Lincoln  Blvd 

Santa  Monica,  CA  90403 

310-451-1346 

Holy  Communion.  Sunday  at 
8:30am  and  10:45am.  Sunday 
School  for  aH  ages,  9:40am. 
Child  care  provided. 
St.  Paul's  is  an  inclusive  and 
intergenerational  Christian  com- 
munity. Come  and  be  fed  with 
God's  Word,  the  Sacraments, 
and  the  Fellowship  with  real  peo- 
ple. 

University  Lutheran  Chapel 

10915  Stralttmofe  Dr. 

Los  Angelas.  CA  90024 

310-208-4571 

www.ulc.la.ca.us 

10:30am,  tradition  7pm,  contem- 

PO 

rary. 

Join  us  in  experiencing  in  the 

context  of  word  and  sacrament 

in  small  groups  throughout  the 

weeit. 


310-828-4069 

Sunday  10am. 

Join  us  for  silent  worship  in  the 
manner  of  friends,  followed  by  fel- 
lowship and  refreshments. 
Children's  program  available.  All 
are  welcome! 


Christian  Science 

Tenth  Church  of  Christ, 
Scientist 

113  3.  Bandy  Or 

Los  Angeles.  CA  90049 

310-826-2229  '/ 

Sunday  10am  Church  SaMce  and 

Sunday  School  (up  to  20  years). 

Wednesdays  7:30pm  Testimonial 

Meeting.   Reading  Room  310-820- 

2014. 

All  are  welcome! 


Episcopal 


Foursquare 


/ 


Quaker 


Santa  Monica  Friends 
MMtIng 

Sam  »tanlBa.CA  90404 


New  Heart  Christian   /^ 

Fellowship  ■'.,■-" 

1941  S.Barrlngton  Ave. 

W.  LosAngaha.  CA  9002S 

310-478-3059 

email:  N9wHeartc10aol.com 

Sunday  10:30am.  Wednesday 

7:30pm  (Bible  Study). 

Come  share  the  excitement  of 

God's  House  through  New  Heart's 

dynamic  worship  and  relevant 

word.  Always  feel  welcomed  in  the 

wanri  atmosphere  of  heartfelt 

friendship. 


Canterbury  Westwood 

580  Hilgard  Ave. 

Los  Angeles.  CA  90024 

310-208-4830 

W¥m.stalbansvmstwood.com 

Tuesday  4pm  Eucharist,  5pm 
dinner  and  discussion. 
Sunday  Bam.  10am. 
We  are  an  open  and  inclusive 
community.  Join  us  Tuesdays 
for  worship,  dinner  and  discus- 
sion. 

Full  Gospei 

House  Upon  The  Rock 
Church 

4427  Overland  Ave  O  Farragut 

Culver  City 

310-839-1114 

Sunday  at  12:30pm. 
In  depth  Bible  teaching  for  the 
serious  student  of  scripture. 
Upbeat  Praise  and  Worship. 
Healing  Ministry. 


Thf  Jfelistious  Sen/t 
Dir  printed  evtry 

I  iiuuy.  Call 
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■S- 


Friday,  September  29, 2000       59 


JESSt  PORTER/Ddily  Biuin  SeriKX  S(aff 


Junior  flanker  Freddie  Mitchell  catches  a  pass  which  was  declared  out  of  bounds.  UCLA  was  defeat- 
ed 29-10  by  Oregon  State.  The  Bruins  face  Arizona  State  this  weekend  at  the  Rose  Bowl. 


FOOTBALL 

From  page  72 

and  how  he  performs  in  his  second 
stint  this  season. 

The  redshirt  sophomore  will  be 
looking  to  make  an  impact  on  a  Bruin 
defense  that  has  seemed  stagnant 
since  the  Alabama  game.  If  the  Bruins 
are  to  make  a  run  at  the  Pac-IO  title, 
Paus  will  have  to  lead  the  way. 

"Cory  looked  good,"  Toledo  said 
t)f  Pa»is'  practice  performance.  "He 
seemed  to  be  throwing  the  ball  pretty 
well." 


RECAP 

From  page  72 

game,  but  UCLA  pulled  away  from  the 
10-10  tie,  making  it  13-10.  Stanford  got 
no  closer  than  I  J- 11  and  Junior  Ashley 
Bowles  finished  the  match  off  with  her 
16th  kill  of  the  night,  handing  Stanford 
its  second  consecutive  Pac-IO  loss. 

Finishing  strong  for  the  Bruins  were 
sophomore  Lauren  Fendrick,  who  had 
a  match-high  .750  hitting  percentage 


Paus  will  have  to  the  throw  the  ball 
very  well  against  Arizona  State  if 
UCLA  is  to  have  success.  The  Sun 
Devils  intercepted  three  balls  last 
week  against  Utah  State.  Senior 
Nijreli  Eason  leads  the  team  with  two, 
and  ASU  has  had  at  least  one  in  each 
game  this  year. 

The  game  is  particularly  important 
for  UCLA  because  of  last  week's  poor 
showing  in  Eugene.  The  Bruins  want 
to  have  a  strong  showing  and  get  back 
on  track  in  the  Pac-IO. 

"The  Oregon  game  was  a  humbling 
experience,"  flanker  Freddie  Mitchell 
said.  "It's  going  to  be  a  lot  better  this 


week.  I  love  our  home  field.  The  stu- 
dents are  back  this  week.  It  should  be 
a  lot  better." 

Every  game  is  a  big  one  after  losing 
the  Pac-IO  opener.  Saturday's  game 
could  be  one  of  the  key  games  of  the 
season.  If  the  Bruins  are  able  to  right 
the  ship  after  the  Eugene  tempest,  it 
should  be  clear  sailing  until  Nov.  1 1, 
when  UCLA  travels  to  Seattle  to  face 
Washington. 

Who  knows  what  the  football  gods 
will  provide  Saturday.  The  Bruins 
hope  it  will  be  a  victory  and  much- 
needed  momentum  heading  into  the 
bye  week. 


W.VOLLEYBALL 

From  page  7^  '         ': 

didn't  put  them  away  when  we 
needed  to,"  said  UCLA  outside  hit- 
ter Kristee  Porter,  who  had  30  kills 
on  the  match.  "There  really  should 
not  have  been  a  fifth  game,  but  we 
didn't  play  with  the  same  intensity 
as  we  do  with  bigger  matches." 
V'The  Bruins  watched  a  four- 
match  winning  streak  fizzle  at  the 
hands  of  the  Beavers.  UCLA 
.  jumped  on  Oregon  State  in  game 
one  7-0,  sparked  by  excellent  net 
play  from  middle  blocker  Elisabeth 
Bachman  and  capped  with  a  service 
ace  by  defensive  specialist  Michelle 
Quon.  Head  coach  Andy 
Banachowski's  squad  looked 
focused  early,  proceeding  to  close 
out  the  game  15-4  and  seemingly 
giving  the  Bruins  a  false  sense  of 
security. 

"We  played  as  good  of  a  first 
game  as  we  could  out  there." 
Banachowski  said.  "We  passed 
well,  our  offense  was  working  and 
we  did  all  right  in  the  second  game, 
until  we  kind  of  hit  a  wall." 

The  Beavers  rebounded  from  1 1 
errors  and  a  -.059  hitting  percent- 
age in  game  one,  rallying  behind 
Angle  Shirley's  play  at  the  net.  Her 
five  kills  and  two  blocks  in  the  sec- 
ond game  helped  Oregon  State 
rally  back  from  a  10-5  deficit  after  a 
Porter  service  ace  to  win  15-10. 

"We  have  played  a  lot  of  five- 
game  matches  this  season,"  Shirley 
said.  "We  felt  if  we  kept  sideout  and 
moved  our  feet  out  there  -  as  far  as 
hustling  and  keeping  disciplined 
with  our  gameplan  -  we  knew  we 
would  keep  the  momentum  on  our 
side." 

UCLA  came  out  of  the  intermis- 
sion determined,  displaying  poise 


and  execution.  Ashley  Bowies'  five 
kills  in  game  three  shifted/the^ 
momentum  back  to  the  Bruins  as  a 
Lauren  Fendrick  kill  closed  out  the 
game  15-7  and  put  the  Beavers  on 
their  heels. 

Game  four  provided  the  turning 
point  for  Oregon  State.  After 
falling  behind  4-0,  the  Beavers 
knotted  the  score  at  10-10  and 
seemed  to  find  the  chink  in 
UCLA's  armor. 

After  Bruin  miscommunications 
and  22  kills  from  Oregon  State  in 
game  four  -  including  eight  from 
Gina  Schmidt  and  seven  from 
Joscelyn  Hannefor  -  the  Beavers 
captured  that  game  15-13  and  set  up 
the  pivotal  rally-scoring  game  five. 
"We  really  only  showed  up  for 
two  games  in  the  entire  match," 
Porter  said.  "So  far  this  season,  we 
have  gotten  ourselves  up  for  match- 
es against  ranked  teams  and  then 
have  let  down  and  not  played  with 
the  same  type  of  energy  against 
teams  we  know  we  should  beat." 

The  seesaw  battle  of  game  five 
seemed  to  pit  a  war  of  who  would 
cave  in  first.  Both  teams  continued 
to  struggle  offensively  and  errors 
allowed  the  door  to  swing  open  for 
Oregon  State. 

The  Beavers,  who  hit  a  meager 
.205  for  the  match  and  committed 
39  errors  to  the  Bruins'  24,  took  the 
lead  at  15-14  after  trailing  12-9. 

Porter's  number  was  called 
repeatedly  in  the  fifth  game,  but 
UCLA  was  unable  to  hold  onto  the 
match.  A  Shirley  crosscourt  kill  was 
followed  by  Schmidt's  team-leading 
23rd  kill,  which  turned  out  the 
lights  and  dropped  the  curtain  on 
the  Bruins. 

"Maybe  this  will  give  us  a  wake 
up  call,"  Banachowski  said.  "That 
we  need  to  play  with  more  intensity 
and  desire  in  every  game." 


"ir 


M.CROSS 

Frompage60 

be  Palo  Alto,  where  they  will  com- 
pete at  the  Stanford  Invitational 
Saturday.  In  addition  to  the  host 
Cardinal,  UCLA  will  face  other 
West  Region  powers  in 
Washington,  Cal  State  San  Luis 
Obispo  and  UC  Irvine. 

Peterson  was  encouraged  by  his 
squad's  performance  last  week  at 


the  Sun  Dodger,  but  he  is  warning 
his  athletes  not  to  get  ahead  of 
themselves. 

"We  can't  think  about  jumping 
in  the  rankings,"  he  said.  "We  lost 
to  Washington  and  lost  to 
Michigan.  We  were  close,  but 
we're  still  behind  them.  This  is  just 
the  starting  point. 

"We  need  the  guys^to  corrcen-^ 
trate  on  consistency.  We're  finally 
starting  to  look  like  a  cross  coun- 
try program." 


on  her  nine  kills,  and  Porter,  with  her 
26  kills  and  1 1  digs  on  the  nigjit. 

The  Bruins  (9-3  overall,  4-0  Pao-10) 
moved  up  two  spots  to  No.  5.  while 
Stanford  dropped  from  1 1  th  to  15th. 

Before  facing  the  Cardinal,  the 
Bruins  started  off  their  weekend 
against  unranked  Cal. 

The  Bears  were  the  first  Pac-IO  team 
to  fight  off  a  sweep  by  UCLA  by  taking 
the  first  game  of  the  match. 

Though-  the  Bruins  pulled  out  to  an 
8-5  lead,  the  Bears  scored  the  next  10 


points  to  win  game  one,  15-8. 

"We  kind  of  hit  a  flat  spot,  and  Cal 
plays  good  defense  and  digs  a  lot  of 
balls,"  Banachowski  said.  "I  think  that 
frustrated  us  a  little  bit,  especially  after 
we  had  scored  really  easily  for  awhile." 

But  the  first  game  wasn't  a  total  loss 
as  senior  middle  blocker  Bachman  tal- 
lied her  1,000th  career  kill.  She  later 
went  on  to  get  her  500th  career  block  to 
become  only  the  fourth  Bruin  and  I4th 
PaolO  player  to  do  both. 

In  the  second  game  the  Bruins  took 


a  quick  M  lead,  but  the  Bears  respond- 
ed by  fighting  back  to  a  score  of  7-6. 
Fendrick  stepped  to  the  service  line 
and  dropped  two  of  hei  seven  record- 
setting  service  aces  of  the  night  to  bring 
the  Bruins  to  13-8.  The  game  ended  on 
Porter's  lOth  kill  of  the  match  with  the 
score  of  1 5-9. 

Fendrick  ended  games  three  and 
four  on  powerful  plays. 

The  Bears  fell  1 5-4  in  the  third  game 
off  her  stuff  of  an  overpassed  ball  from 
Cal.  Game  four  was  closed  out  at  15-7 


with  the  last  of  Fendrick's  seven  aces. 
That  number  will  go  into  the  Bruin 
record  books  for  most  aces  in  a  four- 
game  match. 

Leading  the  way  for  the  Bruins 
again  were  Porter,  Bachman  and 
Fendrick. 

Porter  notched  a  match-high  tally  of 
17  kills.  Bachman's  II  kills  and  nine 
block-assists  sealed  her  name  in  the 
record  books  as  well,  while  Fendrick 
was  the  only  Bruin  to  earn  a  double- 
double  with  her  13  kills  and  1 1  digs. 


Rnd  out  how  you  can 

join  the  Daily  Brain  at  our 

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the  Da%  Bruin  staff 


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W.CROSS 

From  page  70 


Arizona  State  ( 140),  Arizona  ( 146)  and 
Providence  ( 159)  followed. 

UCLA  was  a  ways  behind  with  4<I3 
points.  ->' 

Last  year,  the  Bruins,  who  qualified 
for  the  NCAA  Championships,  fin- 
ished sixth  at  this  meet,  squeezing  three 
of  their  runners  into  the  top  30. 

Peterson,  who  expects  his  team  to 
return  t^the  national  finals  this  season, 
said  inexperience  played  a  big  factoriri 
thedroptrff.  ;, 


"Until  we  develop 
athletic  maturity,  we're 
susceptible  to  this  kind 

of  performance." 


Eric  Peterson 

Head  coach 


"Until  we  develop  athletic  maturity, 
we're  susceptible  to  this  kind  of  perfor- 
mance," he  said. 

Peterson  noted  that  his  team  ran 
wtll  in  races  in  which  the  runners  could 
all  see  each  other.  At  Griak,  where 
there  were  252  finishers,  they  were 
unable  to  do  so.  ...-•. 

That,  he  said,  was  a  sign  of  tfie 
team's  youth. 

Peterson  added  that  most  of  the 
runners  had  trouble  keeping  track  of 
where  they  were  in  the  field. 

"When  you're  40th,  what's  really 
the  difference  between  that  and  80th?" 
he  said.  "As  a  competitor,  there's  really 
no  difference.  You  just  know  you're 
getting  hammered.  It's  not  until  you 
see  the  results  that  you  realize  you  cost 
the  team  40  points.'' 

Nuanes,  however,  shrugged  off  the 
team's  poor  outing.  "Well,  we  can  pret- 
ty much  only  get  better  from  there.  We 
have  to  learn  from  this  race,"  she  said. 
UCLA's  first  chance  for  redemp- 
tion will  come  tomorrow,  when  they 
race  at  the  Stanford  Invitational. 

The  Bruins  will  face  six  of  the  top  25 
teams  in  the  country,  including  No.  1 
Stanford,  No.  2  Wisconsin  and  No.  3 
Kansas  State. 


M.CROSS 

Frompage69 

the  team  has  taken  me  in  really 
well." 

Among  UCLA  competitors,  only 
Green  (seventh,  24:33.5)  and  Muite 
(ninth,  24:36.6)  were  faster  than 
Rankin  that  day. 

Abbott,  meanwhile,  struggled  in 
at  25:01.1  for  26th,  but  managed  to 
tug  along  junior  Andrew  Wulf,  who 
was  the  Bruins'  fifth  and  final  scor- 
er at  30th  place  (25:05.4). 

Junior  Justin  Patananan  (37th, 
25:21.7),  senior  Mason  Moore 
(41st,  25:28.0),  sophomore  Phil 
Young  (46th.  25:37.9).  junior 
Martin  Brix  (55th,  26:13.1)  and 
senior  Jonathan  Lee  (73rd.  27:30.1) 
were  the  other  UCLA  finishers. 

Mark  Pilja  of  Michigan  was  the 
contest's  individual  winner  in 
23:52.0. 

"I  was  happy  with  the  result,": 
said    UCLA    head    coach    Eric' 
Peterson.  "But  this  isn't  as  well  as 
this  team  can  run. 

"Mason  Moore  and  Justin 
Patananan  are  a  little  off.  but  thank- 
fully, they're  closer  in  practice  to 
where  we'll  want  them  to  be  at  the 
end  of  the  season." 

Peterson  added  that  he  was 
pleased  that  his  team  got  to  run  on 
the  Lincoln  Park  course,  which  will 
be  used  for  the  Pac-IO  conference 
finals. 

The  next  stop  for  the  Bruins  will 


-jTJfc- ,  ^iv^'^  ■  :-*■ 


IW.SOCCER 

From  page  71 


«»^  »; 


even  blink,  v..      ••'  .     .' ;  ; 

One  of  bur  goals  for  the  game 
was  to  score  eariy,"  Shattuck  said.  "I 
think  1 1  seconds  is  pretty  early" 

USD  mustered  only  five  shots  in 
90  minutes,  but  Bruin  goalkeeper 
CiCi  Peterson  had  to  endure  more 
than  just  the  Torero  offense  en  route 
to  her  fourth  straight  shutout. 

"They  have  this  band.  They're 
kind  of  obnoxious,"  Peterson  said  of 
the  mischievous  musicians  taunting 
her  throughout  the  game.  "It  actually 
made  me  play  better.  It  was  kind  of 
funny  because  they  were  losing." 

With  a  blanking  of  the  Bulldogs 
tonight,  Peterson  can  own  the  UCLA 
record  for  consecutive  shutouts  with 
five.  At  four,  she  currently  shares  the 
mark  with  Gretchen  Overgaard  and 
Lindsay  Culp. 

The  Bruins,  who  boast  an  all-time 
mark  of  4-0  against  Loyola 
Marymount  (6-2-1),  will  head  across 
town  to  take  on  the  Lions  at  Sullivan 
Field  on  Sunday. 

Shattuck  emphasized  the  impor- 
tance of  consistent  play  from  her 
team  rather  than  playing  in  response 
to  the  competition. 

"We  approach  every  game  the 
same  as  far  as  that  we  have  to  win," 
Shattuck  said.  "I  don't  think  we're 
going  to  change  anything.  1  think  that 
our  formation  that  we're  usmg  and 
the  players  we  are  using  are  playing 
well,  and  I  don't  think  there's  any  rea- 
son to  change  anything." 

Change  can  be  good,  but  an  eight- 
game  winning  streak  would  be  even 
better.    • 


SMlUMS|,pa9eS9 


M.SOCCER 

From  page  71 

has  played  well,  almost  everyone 
believes  that  the  Bruins'  best  soccer  is 
still  ahead  of  them. 

"I  think  we  could  be  doing  a  lot  bet- 
ter," sophomore  defender  Scot 
Thompson  said.  "Our  potential  is  so 
much  higher  than  we've  played." 

UCLA  could  reach  that  potential 
by  restoring  Futagaki  and  Tsakiris  to 
the  Bruin  lineup. 

While  Futagaki  is  still  more  than  a 
week  away  from  returning  as  he  heals 
his  injured  knee,  Saldana  hopes  to 
play  Tsakiris  on  Sunday. 

"Shaun  is  a  playmaker,"  Saldafia 
said.  "He  can  go  get  the  ball  off  of  our 
defense,  pick  and  choose  the  right 
passes.  He  controls  the  rhythm  for 
us." 

Thompson  agrees  that  Tsakiris' 
addition  will  help  the  Bruins  tremen- 
dously. 

"He  connects  the  defense  to  the 
offense,"  he  said.  "Without  him  there, 
it's  kind  of  hard  to  bridge  that  gap." 

With  or  without  Tsakiris,  the 
Bruins  will  be  ready  for  the  Gaels  on 
Sunday 

■[While  St.  Mary's  has  a  losing 
record,  the  Gaels  know  they  can  make 
a  iiame  for  themselves  with  a  victory 
at  jUCLA.  They  are  led  by  freshman 
Alex  Monsalve.  who  has  three  goals 
on  the  year.  They  should  also  be  boost- 
ed by  the  debut  of  freshman  defender 
John  Duffy,  who  missed  the  first  seven 
games  because  of  an  injury. 

Saldafla,  for  one,  is  ready  for  his 
team  to  be  tested. 

"It  is  time  to  find  out  what  we're 
really  made  of,"  he  said.  "We  have  a 
tough  game  every  week  now." 

"But  we're  sitting  in  the  position 
that  we  wanted,"  he  added.  "The  guys 
know  that  we  still  have  a  lot  of  room 
for  growth.  I  think  that's  a  good  sign. 
If  I  was  saying  right  now,  'We've 
played  our  best  soccer  of  the  year,'  I 
would  be  concerned." 

The  process  of  molding  his  young 
team  into  champions  continues  on 
Sunday  If  the  Bruins  still  want  to  be  at 
the  head  of  the  pack  when  they  come 
down  the  homestretch,  they  will  have 
to  maintain  and  build  on  the  pace  they 
have  already  established. 


Daily  bniin  Sports 


Friday,  September  29, 2000       «1 


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RADUCAN 

From  page  67       ,. 

No  one  is  saying  that  the  rule  was- 
nlt- broken.  No  one  is  saying  that  the 
IOC's  fight  against  doping  isn't  valid. 
ir  the  transgression  was  deliberate  - 
and  even  the  IOC  doesn't  seem  to 
think  so  -  the  message  has  been  heard 
around  the  world.  If  it  wasn't  deliber- 
ate,  Tiriac  is  right:  The  mess  is  far,  far 
from  over. 

Even  now,  they're  marching  in 
Romania's  streets,  shouting  about 
injustice  and  foreign  plots.  On 
Bucharest  TV,  they're  broadcasting  a 
■'Song  for  Andreea  Raducan"  and 
assuring  her  of  their  love.  Her  gov- 
ernment has  even  promised  her  the 
prize  money  she  would  have  received 
in  Romania  for  winning  the  gold. 

Thus  this  strange  twist:  Now  she 
goes  home  even  more  of  a  hero.  Her 
gold  made  her  an  adored  champion. 
The  IOC  made  her,  at  16,  something 
even  more  formidable  a  martyr  with 
a  future. 

"My  heart  is  at  peace  that  I've 
done  everything  right  and  competed 
cleanly.  All  I  did  was  take  an  innocent 
pill,"  she  said.  "I  just  don't  under- 
stand why  everything  has  turned  out 
this  way." 

When  people  talk  about  gymnasts, 
especially  girls,  you  often  hear  this: 
They're  too  young,  too  single-mind- 
ed. Their  lives  are  too  focused.  Their 
success,  while  glorious'  cheats  them 
out  of  childhood. 

Indeed,  to  look  at  Raducan  is,  still, 
to  gaze  upon  a  child:  Her  face  is  one- 
third  the  size  of  Tiriac's.  At  her  news 
conference,  photographers  had  lens- 
es longer  than  her  legs.  You  could,  if 
you  were  so  inclined,  fit  four  Andreea 
Raducans  into  one  C.J.  Hunter. 

And  yet  when  it  ended,  as 
Romanian  reporters  threw 
Romanian  questions  at  her,  a  smile 
and  a  fiash  of  savviness  whooshed 
across  her  face  -  a  sense  that  she  was, 
as  in  the  arena,  in  control  for  a 
moment.  Reetingly,  the  tiniest  of  the 
tiny  was  walking  in  the  world  of 
grown-ups. 

It  passed  quickly.  And  suddenly 
Nadia  Comaneci  -  tiny  icon  of  a  gen- 
eration ago.  now  a  striking  presence 
in  scarlet  satin  -  was  there,  playing 
the  towering  grown-up.  She  threw  her 
arm  around  Raducan,  engulfing  the 
teenager. 

They  walked  off,  their  shared 
Romanian  and  gymnastic  heritage  a 
quiet,  mutual  comfort  among  all  the 
people  who  just  wanted  one  more 
question  and  all  the  cameras  that  just 
wanted  one  more  shot. 

The  sea  was  roiling,  but  Andreea 
Raducan  was  not  alone. 


ROUNDUP 

From  page  63 

woman  to  win  a  gold  in  singles  and 
doubles,  joining  1924  Olympian 
Helen  Wills  of  the  United  States. 


BASKETBALL:  In  another  sur- 
prisingly tough  game,  the  NBA  all- 
star  U.S.  team  beat  Russia  85-70  to 
advance  into  the  Olympic  semifinals. 
Though  the  Americans  cruised  in  the 
second  half,  they  led  by  just  five  at  the 
half — their  smallest  lead  ever  after  20 
minutes. 

Kevin  Gamett  led  the  Americans 
with  16. 

They  will  next  play  the  Lithuanian 
team  that  threw  a  major  scare  into  the 
Americans,  losing  by  the  closest  mar- 
gin ever  to  a  "Dream  Team"  -  nine 
points  in  a  preliminary  round  game. 

Host  Australia,  led  by  Andrew 
Gaze's  27  points,  advanced  to  the 
semifinals  with  a  65-62  victory  over 
Italy.  Gaze,  a  starter  on  the  1989 
Seton  Hall  NCAA  Final  Four  team, 
scored  J  3  of  the  last  15  Australian 
points  to  become  the  second-leading 
scorer  in  Olympic  history. 

The  Aussies  face  France  in  the 
other  semifinal. 


"t*^:uf- 


OLYMPICS 

From  page  66 


^,.^<r. 


responded:  "No,  I  don't  have  that 
fear,  because  the  people  who  know 
me,  coach  me,  train  me,  know  I'm  a 
clean  athlete." 

As  Jones  sped  around  the  turn  in 
the  200m  and  passed  by  Hunter,  he 
:was  on  his  feet,  still  shouting, 
"C'mon,  c'mon.  c'mon,"  though  she 
couldn't  possibly  hear  him  in  the  wall 
of  noise  that  accompanied  her  down 
the  stretch.  There  have  never  been 
track  crowds  as  large  and  as  loud  as 
those  at  the  Olympic  stadium  this 
past  week,  110,000  virtually  every 
night,  and  the  sound  of  them  cheer- 
ing is  almost  scary. 

They    were    roaring    for    the 
Australian  who  had  captured  their 
hearts  and  won  the  400m  gold,  Cathy 
Freeman,  and  they  were  roaring  for 
Jones  to  break  the  world  record,  and 
they  were  roaring  just  for  the  sake  of 
roaring  on  this  beautiful,  clear  night. 
Jones  kept  flying  and  won  her  sec- 
ond gold,  though  she  couldn't  break 
any  records.  Her  speed  of  21.84  was 
exactly  a  half-second  slower  than 
Florence  GrifTith-Joyner's  in  Seoul 
in  1988,  but  comfortably  ahead  of  sil- 
ver     medalist      Paulrne      Davis- 
Thompson   of  the   Bahamas  and 
bronze        medalist        Susanthika 
Jayasinghe  of  Sri  Lanka. 

Freeman,  who  had  gotten  off  to  a 
slow  start,  finished  far  back  in  sev- 
enth. 

Jones  grabbed  an  American  flag 
and  one  from  Belize,  her  mother's 
homeland,  and  ran  around  the  track 
in  a  victory  lap.  Hunter  moved  down 
a  few  rows  from  his  seat  to  wait  for 
her  to  come  by,  and  when  she  did  they 
kissed  a  couple  of  times  and  hugged. 
Just  two  days  earlier  they  had  sat 
side  by  side.  Hunter  in  tears  and 
pleading  innocence,  Jones  giving  him 
her  support,  as  they  responded  to  the 
drug  accusations. 

Now  they  couldn't  have  been  hap- 
pier. And  the  fans  who  snapped  pho- 
tos of  them,  and  patted  Hunter's 
broad  back  as  he  returned  to  his  seat, 
congratulating  him  on  his  wife's'  vic- 
tory, seemed  just  as  happy  to  forget 
that  anything  unpleasant  had  hap- 
pened. 


ROUNDUP 

From  page  65 

ing  from  the  stands,  Jones  took  an 
early  lead  before  blowing  the  field 
away  in  21.84  seconds.  After  winning 
by  the  biggest  margin  in  40  years, 
Jones  interrupted  her  victory  lap  to 
plant  two  kisses  and  a  hug  on  her  hus- 
band. 

Hunter,  the  world  shot  put  cham- 
pion, has  denied  knowingly  taking 
anabolic  steroid;. 

The  men's  200  was  a  washout  for 
the  Americans.  When  Coby  Miller 
;.and  John  Capel  finished  seventh  and 
■  eighth,  it  marked  the  first  time  since 
/I928  that  the  U.S.  team  was  shut  out 
'in  the  event  during  a  boycott-free 
llpunes. 

American  Chris  Huffins,  after 
leading  for  much  of  the  two-day 
decathlon,  wound  up  with  a  bronze. 

The  Americans  remained  atop  the 
medal  chart  with  76  (32  gold,  18  sil- 
ver, 26  bronze).  Russia  followed  with 
58  ( 19-18-21 ),  while  China  had  56  (26- 
15-15).. 

•  •  • 

TENNIS:  It  was  all  in  the  family 
for  Venus  and  Serena  Williams.  The 
sisters  teamed  up  to  take  the  Olympic 
gold  in  doubles,  easily  dispatching 
Dutch  players  Miriam  Oremans  and 
Kristie  Boogert  6-1,  6-1. 

One  day  earlier,  in  her  first 
Olympic  trip,  Venus  had  captured  the 
gold  in  singles.  The  straight-set  victo- 
ry made  them  the  first  sisters  to  cap- 
ture a  gold  in  Olympic  doubles. 

And  Venus  became  just  the  second 

~~~  S««IIOONOUf,pa9e62 


Daily  Bniin  Sports 


Friday,  September  29, 2000       63 


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64       Friday,  S«pt«nb«f  29, 2000 


Daily  Bnwi  Sports 


Ansfels  pourid  ^  S^  tWrd  base  homer  record 


BASEBALL  Playoff  picture 
unchanged  as  Cleveland, 
Spgttle  can't  gain  ground 


By  Greg  Beacham 

The  Associated  Press 


OAKLAND  -  Art  Howe  wasn't 
sure  why  Oakland  picked  such  a  terri- 
ble day  to  stop  hitting. 

Fortunately  for  the  Athletics,  their 
offensive  problems  didn't  cost  them 
any  ground  in  the  playoff  chase. 

Troy  Glaus  led  off  the  14th  inriing 
with  his  AL-leading  45th  homer  as  the 
Anaheim  Angels  beat  the  Athletics  6- 
3  Thursday  in  what  could  have  been  a 
bitter  defeat  in  Oakland's  quest  for  a 
playoff  berth. 

Instead,  Seattle  and  Cleveland  also 
lost,  leaving  the  playoff  picture  exact- 
ly the  same  for  another  day. 

The  Athletics'  potent  offense, 
which  scored  26  runs  in  the  previous 
three  games  against  Anaheim,  man- 


aged just  one  extra-base  hit  in  14  tiring 
innings.  What's  more,  the  extra 
innings  forced  the  Athletics  to  use 
seven  pitchers  -  14  over  their  last  two 
games  -  with  a  critical  weekend  series 
against  Texas  looming. 

"We  just  couldn't  cash  in  any  time 
we  had  opportunities,"  said  Oakland 
manager  Art  Howe.  "Sometimes  at 
this  time  of  the  year,  you  just  have  to 
reach  down  deep  and  pull  out  that 
extra  effort.  We're  going  to  need  that 
this  weekend." 

Oakland  (88-70)  lost  for  just  the 
second  time  in  nine  games,  but 
Seattle's  13-6  loss  to  Texas  kept  the 
A's  a  half-game  behind  the  Mariners 
(89-70)  in  the  West.  Oakland's  lead  in 
the  wild  card  race  also  stayed  at  1  1/2 
games  over  Cleveland  (87-72).  which 
lost  4-3  to  the  Twins  in  10  innings. 

Glaus,  who  hit  44  of  his  homers  as 
a  third  baseman,  broke  the  AL  record 
for  homers  by  a  third  baseman  set  by 
Al  Rosen  in  1953.  His  drive  off  reliev- 
er Scott  Service  ( 1-2)  was  the  Angels' 
first  run  since  the  fifth  inning  and  the 


first  homer  off  an  Oakland  reliever 
since  Aug.  20. 

"It's  nice  to  get  a  win.  but  4:42  is  a 
long  time,"  said  Glaus,  referring  to 
the  time  it  took  to  play  the  game.  "It's 
nice  to  have  a  say  as  far  as  the  playoff 
race  goes.  We  wish  we  were  in  their 
position,  battling  for  it,  but  it's  still 
nice  to  have  this  chance." 


"Wejust  couldn't  cash 

in  any  time  we  had 

;  opportunities," 

/  Art  Howe 
Oakland  As  manager 


Four  batters  after  Glaus'  homer, 
Orlando  Palnieiro  added  a  two-run 
double  as  the  Angels  avoided  a  four- 
gamesweep.  Mike  Holtz  (3-3)  pitched 
a   perfect    13th   inning,   and  Troy 


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Percival  struck  out  the  side  in  the  14th 
for  his  32nd  save  in  42  chances. 

Scott  Spiezio  homered  twice  to 
give  Anaheim  a  3-0  lead,  but  the 
Angels  gave  up  two  unearned  runs  in 
the  fifth  and  an  RBI  single  by  Miguel 
Tejada  in  the  eighth. 

Neither  team  could  get  a  runner 
past  first  in  the  extra  innings  until  the 
13th,  when  the  Angels  got  three  walks 
to  load  the  bases  but  couldn't  score. 

The  A's  scored  53  runs  in  their  pre- 
vious eight  games,  but  starter  Scott 
Karl  set  the  tone  for  Anaheim's  pitch- 
ing staff  with  five  strong  innings.  Karl 
allowed  only  the  two  unearned  runs 
when  he  mishandled  Mo  Vaughn's 
toss  while  covering  first. 

Spiezio,  dumped  by  the  A's  in  the 
offseason  and  signed  by  Anaheim  as  a 
free  agent,  hit  a  solo  shot  in  the  first 
and  a  two-run  homer  in  the  fifth,  his 
second  multihomer  game  this  season 
and  the  third  of  his  career. 

After  reliever  Shigetoshi 
Hasegawa  pitched  out  of  a  bases- 
loaded  jam  in  the  seventh,  he  walked 


two  starting  the  eighth.  Tejada  then 
drove  in  Porter  with  the  tying  run. 

The  run  came  at  a  price,  however. 
The  Athletics  lost  Jason  Giambi's  bat 
when  Porter  replaced  him  as  a  pinch- 
runner.  Giambi  is  hitting  .382  with  1 1 
homers  and  28  RBIs  in  September. 

"It  was  tough  to  sit  there  and 
watch,  but  I  was  cheering  and  rooting 
us  on,"  Giambi  said.  "We  couldn't 
push  anything  across,  but  we  didn't 
give  in.  We  need  to  take  the  same 
approach  that  we  applied  to  these 
guys  and  put  it  in  play  against  Texas." 
Kevin  Appier  kept  the  Athletics  in 
the  game,  allowing  just  seven  hits  in 
eight  innings.  After  an  inconsistent 
season,  Appier  has  been  strong  in  his 
last  four  starts,  going  3-0  with  a  2.86 
ERA. 

Howe,  who  said  he  was  screaming 
at  the  television  screen  while  watching 
Seattle  play  earlier  this  week,  wasn't 
watching  the  Mariners  on  Thursday 
night. 

"I'm  just  going  to  try  to  get  a  good 
night's  rest,"  Howe  said. 


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D«)yBrvin  Sports 


Friday,  September  29, 2000       65 


Golden  Bears  dogged  by  last  week^  Idss  to  F^ 


COLLEGE  Cal  prepares 
to  face  tough  conference 
teams,  reverse  slovi^  start 


By  Ann«  M.  Peterson 

The  Associated  Press 


BERKELEY  -  The  last  thing 
California  needs  right  now  is  linger- 
ing disappointment  over  their  loss  to 
Fresno  State. 

"I  would  probably  be  a  little  naive 
to  say,  'No  way.  that  won't  happen."' 
coach  Tom  Holmoe  said  about  his 
players  perhaps  feeling  a  bit  down. 
"But,  the  reality  is,  these  are  kids. 
Everybody  thought  Cal  should  have 
beat  Fresno  State." 

Holmoe  added  hopefully:  "1  think 
they  can  overcome  that." 

They  better.  And  quick. 

Cal  (1-2)  takes  on  Washington 
State  (!-2)  on  Saturday  to  open  its 
Pacific- 10  Conference  schedule. 


US.  women's 
4x1 00m  relay 
team  without 
Devers,  Miller 

OLYMPICS:  Stars'  injuries 
could  hurt  Marion  Jones' 
chance  to  win  five  golds 


,....». 


ByUrryMcShane 
Tne  Associated  Press 

SYDNEY,         Australia 
Subtracting  two  teammates  could 
add  up  to  disappointment  Down 
Under  for  U.S.  gold  medalist  Marion 
Jones. 

Jones,  winner  of  the  100  and  200- 
meter  sprints,  had  her  eye  on  five 
gold  medals  in  Sydney.  But  word 
came  down  Friday  (Thursday  night 
EDT)  that  half  of  the  U.S.  400^neter 
relay  team  -  Inger  Miller  and  Gail 
Devers  —  would  miss  the  race  with 
injuries. 

Miller  has  already  fiown  home 
from  Sydney,  while  Devers  leaves  this 
weekend.  Both  suffered  hamstring 
injuries. 

Losing  the  pair  leaves  the  U.S. 
team  vulnerable,  and  puts  Jones' 
hopes  for  an  unprecedented  Sydney 
sweep  in  danger.  She  hopes  to  win  the 
long  jump,  the  400-meter  relay  and 
the  1,600-meter  relay. 
.     On  Friday.  Jones  rested  for  the 
^ong  jump  while  her  healthy  team- 
^jnatcs  won  their  400  relay  heat.  Also 
^advancing  were  top  rivals  Jamaica 
^nd  the  Bahamas;  Australia  was  oust- 
ed by  a  dropped  baton. 

In  the  men's  50-kilometer  walk, 
Robert  Korzeniowski  of  Poland  com- 
pleted a  sweep  of  the  men's  walking 
medals.  Korzeniowski,  who  received 
gold  in  the  20-kilometer  walk  last 
week  when  Bernardo  Segura  of 
Mexico  was  disqualified,  finished  in  3 
hours,  42  minutes,  22  seconds. 

American  Maurice  Greene  and  his 
teammates  on  the  400-meter  relay 
squad  sped  to  a  time  of  38.15  seconds 
-  fastest  in  the  first  round  Friday. 
The  semifinals  were  set  for  later  in  the 
day. 

Jones  remained  unflappable  and 
unbeaten  in  Australia,  breezing  to 
her  second  gold  medal  in  the  200 
Thursday.  Unfazed  by  the  firestorm 
created  by  her  husband's  alleged 
steroid  use,  she  flashed  a  wide  smile 
after  an  easy  victory. 

With  husband  C-J.  Hunter  watch- 

--       -- 

See  MNINOQF,  page  63 


Cal's  non-conference  season 
included  a  home-opening  win  against 
Utah,  a  17-15  loss  to  then-No.  19 
Illinois,  and  that  disheartening  17-3 
thrashing  at  Fresno  State. 

"I  still  believe  in  this  team." 
Holmoe  said.  "I  really  do." 

Receiver  Charon  Arnold  suggest- 
ed Cal  was  making  small  mistakes  - 
that  can  be  corrected  in  time  to  sal- 
vage the  season. 

"1  don't  know  what  it  is.  I  don't 
know  why  we're  not  scoring,"  he 
said.  "I  think  we  have  the  talent  and 
we  have  the  plays.  We  just  can't 
score." 

Holmoe  said  perhaps  he  had  given 
sophomore  quarterback  Kyle  Boiler 
too  much  responsibility  for  reading 
the  opposition  and  calling  plays  in 
the  Fresno  State  game.  At  home, 
away  from  the  raucous  Bulldog 
crowd,  he'll  likely  fare  better. 

"To  be  honest  with  you,  we  have  a 
quarterback  who  has  only  played  a 
year  and  three  games,  and  maybe  he 


wasn't  ready  for  that,''  Hoirtioe  said. 

Boiler  might  be  given  reduced 
duties,  but  Cal's  new  no-huddle 
offense  is  here  to  stay  -  periodically. 

"Most  teams  don't  run  the  no- 
huddle  offense.  Most  defenses  there- 
fore haven't  seen  it,"  Holmoe  said. 


Washington  State  fell 

38-34  to  Idaho  last 

weekend,  a  defeat  that 

stings  as  much  as  Cal's 

Fresno  State  loss. 


Washington  State,  at  least  record- 
wise,  is  in  the  same  position  as  Cal. 
The  Cougars  opened  with  a  loss  to 
Stanford,  then  beat  Utah  38-21. 

But  Washington  State  fell  38-34  to 
Idaho  last  weekend,  a  defeat  that 


stings  as  much  as  Cal's  Fresno  State 
loss. 

Coach  Mike  Price  said  it  wasn't 
quarterback  Jason  Cesser's  fault. 
Cesser  completed  l5-of-31  passes 
against  Idaho  for  259  yards  and  two 
touchdowns. 

"I'm  pretty  high  on  him  right 
now,"  Price  said.  "I  think  he's  going 
to  be  an  exceptional  player  and  he's 
done  some  great  things  for  us." 

On  defense.  Price  would  like  the 
Cougars  to  play  more  like  Cal, 
anchored  by  formidable  defensive 
end  Andre  Carter. 

"We're  not  playing  very  good 
right  now.  We  have  to  be  better. 
We'd  like  to  be  playing  more  like 
Cal,"  he  said.  "They're  running  and 
hitting  and  they're  aggressive." 

But  Price  sees  reason  to  hope. 

"We're  a  young,  hopefully 
improving  team.  We're  very  disap- 
pointed about  the  loss  of  Idaho  and 
we  have  to  put  it  behind  us,"  he  said. 

The  Cougars'  defense  has  been  hit 


•by  the  loss  of  cornerback  Lamont 
Thompson,  who  has  not  played  so 
far  this  season  because  of  a  sore 
neck. 

Thompson,  who  has  not  redshirt- 
ed.  shared  the  school  record  of  14 
interceptions  going  into  the  season. 

"I  don't  think  he's  going  to  play 
this  year  -  based  on  my  opinioB,-'- 
Price  said.  . 

Linebacker  James  Price  also  will 
miss  Saturday's  game  at  California 
because  of  a  broken  hand  suffered  in 
the  loss  to  Idaho. 

"When  the  soreness  goes  away, 
we'll  pad  the  hand  up,  and  he'll  be 
able  to  play,"  the  coach  said.  "But 
probably  not  this  week." 

James  Price,  the  Cougars'  leading 
tackier  two  years  ago.  redshirted  last 
season  after  suffering  a  broken  wrist 
during  preseason  practice. 

"We'll  rotate  and  play  more  peo- 
ple on  the  defensive  line."  the  coach 
said.  "We  need  to  have  the  toughest 
guys  playing." 


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66       Friday,  September  29, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Jones  wins  200m 


TRACK:  Star  runner  gets 
second  gold;  Hunter,  still 
in  stands,  cheers  her  on 


By  Steve  Wllstein 

The  Associated  Press  • 

SYDNEY.  Australia  -  Stripped  of 
his  credential  but  far  from  an  outcast, 
C.J.  Hunter  leapt  from  his  trackside 
seat,  cupped  his  hands  and  bellowed 
into  the  jittery  silence  as  his  wife, 
Marion  Jones,  settled  into  the  start- 
ing blocks. 

It  was  a  cry  that  sounded  like, 
"Let's  fly!"  though  Hunter  smiled 
when  asked  exactly  what  he  shouted. 


ite  allegations  aboufliijiBahd 


"It's  a  secret,  just  betweeri  Marion 
and  me,"  he  said.  "SHe  knows  what  I 

said."    :,,v.:--->-.;.:-..-i:r:',v/.^ 
Whatever  it  was,  Jones  did  indeed 

fly- 

The  fastest  woman  in  the  world, 
winner  of  the  100-meter  last  week, 
Jones  sprang  from  the  blocks  at  the 
start  of  the  200m  Thursday,  bolted 
into  the  lead,  and  leaned  into  the  turn 
a  good  meter  ahead  of  the  field. 

"C'mon,  c'mon,  c'mon,  c'mon," 
Hunter  kept  shouting  from  his  spot 
50  meters  from  the  finish  line  as  she 
separated  herself  farther  from  the 
pack. 

Hunter  wasn't  accustomed  to 
watching  Jones  from  the  stands. 
Besides  being  her  husband,  he's  been 


Jones ...  refused  to  let 
her  husband's  troubles 
^:- get  in  her  way. 


her  personal  cdach  since  their  days 
together  at  North  Carolina.  He 
watched  her  100m  from  near  the  fin- 
ish line,  and  hugged  her  after  the  race 
in  the  tunnel  leading  to  the  locker 
room.  '  .'  •;.:  V.-'-'J."'"-;'.;-"  •.•'•>■.'■■'■■■■ 
But  that  was  when  he  still  wore  an 
athlete's  credential  around  his  neck  - 
and  before  IOC  and  track  federation 
officials  revealed  he  had  flunked  four 


drug  tests  this  summer  with  massive 
amounts  of  the  anabolic  steroid  nan- 
drolone  in  his  urine  samples. 

Hunter,  the  shot  put  world  cham- 
pion, pulled  out  of  the  Olympics  a 
few  days  before  the  opening  ceremo- 
ny, saying  his  surgically  repaired  left 
knee  hadn't  healed  enough  to  let  him 
compete.  But  he  kept  his  athlete's 
badge  and  stayed  at  Jones'  side,  help- 
ing her  prepare  for  one  of  the  great 
challenges  in  Olympic  history  -  a 
record  five  gold  medals  in  the  sprints, 
relays  and  women's  long  jump. 

Now,  with  his  credential  gone,  the 
330-pound  Hunter  came  in  with  a 
ticket,  courtesy  of  USA  Track  & 
Field,  and  sat  five  rows  up  from  the 
track.  He  wore  a  blue  USA  Track  & 


Field  cap  and  sweatshirt.  Before  and 
after  the  race,  fans  fiocked  to  him  to 
shake  his  hand,  pose  with  him  for 
photos,  and  ask  for  his  autograph. 
Rather  than  acting  like  a  man  dis- 
graced, he  seemed  like  a  hero,  oblig- 
ing hij  admirers,  y  •         '     ' 

And  Jones,  as  resolute  a  runner  as 
ever  has  appeared  in  the  g^mes, 
refused  to  let  her  husband's  troubles 
get  in  her  way. 


"To  let  one  event  in  your  life,  as 
dramatic  as  it  might  be,  ruin  this ...  no 
way,"  Jones  would  say  after  the  race. 

Asked  if  she  feared  that  people 
would  think  she,  too,  was  using  drugs 
to  boost  her  performance.  Jones 


SeeOLYMPia,pa9e63 


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Daily  Bfuin  Sports 


Friday,  September  29, 2000       67 


GAMES:  Team  exjifesses 
bitterness  with  IOC  for 
decision  to  take  medal 


gymnast  finds  sup 


0   010 


By  Ted  Anthony 

The  Associated  Press 


^  SYDNEY,  Australia  -  It  would  be 
easy  to  picture  her  alone  in  a  roiling 
sea,  flailing  to  stay  afloat  while 
unimaginable  forces  from  above  push 
her  tiny  body  down.  But  that  image 
would  be  unfair  to  Andreea  Raducan. 
She  is  more  than  that. 

That  much  was  clear  Thursday  for 
anyone  who  watched  her  endure  the 
third  of  what  she  has  called  "these 


nightmare  days." 

Her  voice  was  tiny  but  strong,  ten- 
tative but  even.  Her  chin  was  high. 
She  cracked  her  knuckles  and  picked 
her  fingernails.  Now  and  then,  she 
even  smiled,  but  that  was  the  excep- 
tion. 

"I  just  had  a  cold,"  she  said,  barely 
audible  at  first.  "I  still  don't  under- 
stand." 

The  facts  arc  these:  She  took  cold 
medicine.  She  won  a  gold  medal.  She 
urinated  into  a  specimen  jar.  A  group 
of  very  powerful  people,  the  ones  who 
make  and  enforce  the  rules,  decided 
something  wasn't  right.  And  she  had 
to  give  her  medal  back. 

Like  so  many  in  her  line  of  work, 
she  is  a  child  -  a  ponytailed,  1,312- 


ourice  package  of  grace  and  unease, 
two  days  shy  of  17.  And  now, 
Romania's  latest  gymnast-superstar 
sits  under  a  spotlight  far  different 
than  the  one  that  engulfed  her  when  a 
gold  disc  was  hung  around  her  neck 
only  a  week  ago.    ^ 

On  Thursday,  her  final' appeal  to 
the  Court  of  Arbitration  for  Sport 
exhausted,  she  spoke.  Her  gymnastics 
family  was  right  there  next  to  her. 

Her  protector,  Romanian  Olympic 
Committee  president  Ion  Tiriac,  was 
there.  So  were  her  teammates  and  fel- 
low medalists,  Simona  Amanar  and 
Maria  Olaru,  who  moved  up  to  gold 
and  silver  when  the  International 
Olympic  Committee,  trying  to  elimi- 
nate drugs  from  its  games,  disquali- 


fied her.  ;    .- 

They  were,  to  use  Tiriac's  Word, 
bitter. 

"We're  talking  about  an  aspirin," 
he  said.  "I  accept  procedures.  But 
somehow,  somewhere/don't  we  miss 
the  point?"-     ...iw 

They  demanded  to  be  heard,  these 
Romanians,  and  they  were;  more 
than  200  journalists  from  dozens  of 
nations  wanted  to  know  what  they 
had  to  say  And  they  said  this:  We  sup- 
porther.       ^      ,  ^    : 

Her  teammates  and  fellow  medal- 
ists, when  talking  about  "her,"  often 
used  the  word  "we."  And  to  her  left 
was  none  other  than  Nadia 
Comaneci,  her  direct  gymnastic 
ancestor,  who  tumbled  into  immortal- 


ity at  the  1976  Summer  Olympics  in 
Montreal.  A  line  of  gymnastic  talent 
from  two  eras  offering  support. 

From  Comaneci:  "It's  difficult  for 
me  to  explain  to  her  in  my  own  lan- 
guage that  you're  innocent,  but 
you're  still  not  going  lo  get  the 
medal." 

From    Amanar,    the    new    gold 
medalist:  "I  am  going  to  accept  this 
medal  because  it  belongs  to  Romania.  . 
The  Olympic  champion  that  day  was 
Andreea,  not  me." 

From  Olaru,  the  new  silver  medal- 
ist: "I  don't  understand  why,  always, 
the  little  people  have  to  suffer  for  the 
mistakes  of  the  big  people." 

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68       Friday,  September  29,2000 


Oaity  Brum  Sports 


aces 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Friday.Seplember  29,2000       69 


i 


W.GOLF:  Youth  of  team, 
bad  weather  adversely 
affect  Bruins*  showing 


::.i3£,^ 


-^fit. 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff     • 

No  one  was  satisfied  with  the 
results  of  the  UCLA  women's 
golf  team's  first  tournament. 

Not  the  coach. 

"I  wasn't  happy  with  ouf  per- 
formance there,"  head  coach 
Carrie  Leary  said. 

Not  the  senior. 

"None  of  us  played  as  well  as 
we  should've,"  Laura  Moffat 
said. 

Not  the  true  freshman  who 
ended  up  leading  the  team. 

"We  need  to  play  with  more 
fervor,"  Gina  Umeck  said. 

The  women,  ranked  No.  18  in 
the  nation,  finished  nmth  out  of 
18  teams  at  the 


behind  us,"  Leary  said.  --M^-  >'' 
But  the  overall  theme  ol"  the 
tournament  wasn't  who  the 
Bruins  beat  and  who  they  didn't  - 
it  was  that  none  of  them  played  as 
>yell  as  they  could  have. 

Umeck,  who  led  UCLA  with  a 
three-round  total  of  229  to  tie  for 
25th  place,  said  that  the  youth  of 
the  team  was 


the 


Dick  McGuire 
Invitational, 
which  ran 
tifrom  !|cpt,;r24*  a* 
23  at  ~  the 
University  of 
New  Mexico's 
Championship 
Course. 

Top-ranked  

Arizona  took 

first  with  a  54- 

hole  total  of  892,  and  No.  6  Tulsa 

(897)  and  No.   14  Pepperdine 

(904)  finished  second  and  third. 

UCLA  ended  with  a  score  of  914. 

The  results  were  mixed. 

"We  beat  a  few  teams  that 
were  ranked  ahead  of  us  and  lost 
to  a  few  teams  that  were  ranked 


"We  need  to  play 
with  more  fervor." 

Gina  Umeck 

UCLA  golfer 


part     of 
problem. 

"  (Our 
youth)  can't 
be  an  excuse, 
but  that's 
probably  one 
of  the  fac- 
tors,"       she      

said.  "We  had      ~"~"7~~~^ 
three      fresh- 
men. Probably  all  of  the  other 
teams  didn't  have  that  same  situ- 
ation." 

Umeck  didn't  find  much  con- 
solation in  being  a  true  freshman 
and  her  team's 
^_____^^^      top  scorer. 

"I  guess  in 
theory  it  was 
good,  but  I 
knew  I 

could've  done 
a  lot  better  per- 
sonally," she 
said. 

. Moffat  was 

"  -,-■'•-•:■  second  for  the 
team,  posting 
230  to  tie  for  27th,  and  junior 
Alicia  Um  scored  232  to  tie  for 
34th. 

The  other  freshmen,  Saki 
Uecki  and  Melissa  Martin,  shot 
238  and  242  to  tie  for  the  56th 
and  74th  places,  respectively. 
Vivian  Phosomran  competed  as 


iaiji  individual  and  scored  239  to 
tie  for  62nd.    i.,^^--—  .  _ 

~  The  poor  showing  walii't  just 
the  fault  of  the  team's  youth, 
either,  but  was  also  because  of  the 
rough  conditions  on  the  course. 
On  the  last  day  of  the  invitational, 
the  winds  were  blowing  at  about 
30  miles  an  hour. 

"  W  h 


UCLA  unable  to  opitaHze   I  Squad  fares  well  in  meet   t  Bruins  prepare  for  'huge  weetcencT 

after  promising  early  play  J  clespite  captain's  slow  run 


On  the  last  day  of 
the  invitational,  the 
winds  were  blowing 
at  30  miles  an  hour. 


e  n 
you're  playing 
in  such 

adverse  condi- 
tions, your 
own  personal 
standards  kind 
of  vary," 

Umeck    said. 

'-'^^'\      "A  75  was  a 

superb    score 
that  last  day." 
The  course  par  is  72. 
But  there  were  a  few  positives 
in  the  invitational. 

"It  was  the  first  time  that  the 
team  went  away  together," 
Moffat  said.  "We  got  to  know  the 
girls  that  traveled  better,  which  I 
think  will  help  us  (in  terms  of 
chemistry)  for  the  next  tourna- 
ment." 

Leary  laughed  when  asked  to 
name  the  positive  side  of  the  Dick 
McGuire. 

"We  did  a  lot  better  than  we 
did  last  year,"  she  said. 

Last  year  at  the  same  tourna- 
ment the  Bruins  got  disqualified 
when  Phosomran,  then  a  fresh- 
man, forgot  to  sign  her  score 
card. 

The  Dick  McGuire  tourna- 
ment, it  seems,  is  about  getting 
over  thosie  freshman  jitters. 

"We  got  our  season  opener 
done  with,  so  it  should  be  a  lot 
better,"  Umeck  said. 


M.GOLF:  Players  frustrated 
as  bad  ends  plague  strong 
starts  to  two  competitions 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


The  problem  with  the  men's  golf  team 
is  that  they  start  so  well  and  end  so  badly. 
For  two  tournaments  in  a  row  the 
unranked  men  have  been  near  the  top  of 
the  field  going  into  the  last  round,  only 
to  falter  when  it  matters  most. 

"We're  just   not   putting   up   low 
enough      scores,"      junior      Parker 
McLachlin  said. 
And  why  is  that? 

"I  don't  know,  that's  what  we're  try- 
ing to  figure  out,"  he  said. 

The  team  competed  in  the  Inverness 
Intercollegiate  from  Sept.  18-19.  There 
they  placed  sixth  out  of  13  teams  with  a 
team  total  of  901. 

But  the  Bruins  had  been  in  third  place 
until  that  last  day. 

"We  had  a  chance  to  finish  second," 
said  head  coach  Brad  Sherfy.  "We  were 
second  with  about  seven  holes  to  play." 
Overall,  McLachlin  and  sophomore 
Travis  Johnson  tied  with  a  score  of  224 
to  lead  the  Bruins.  They  finished  in  13th 
place.  Freshman  John  Merrick  and 
senior  Ross  Fulgentis  shot  228  to  tie  for 
27th,  and  Steve  Conway  rounded  out  the 
five  with  a  230  to  tie  for  37th  place. 

At  the  Bruins'  following  tournament 
on  Sept.  22-26,  the  Husky  Invitational, 
UCLA  finished  fourth  out  of  10  teams 
with  a  54-hole  total  of  1,122. 

But  they  went  into  the  final  round 
with  a  solid  grip  on  third  place. 

At   the   invitational,   Conway,   the 


team's  last  finisher  at  the  Inverness,  rose 
remarkably  to  lead  the  Bruins  with  a  per- 
sonal score  of  220,  good  for  A-fifth-place 
finish  overall.  ^  ^_ 

"We've  got  some  guys  who  are  step- 
ping up  and  shooting  some  .decent 
scores,"  McLachlin  said.  "I  think  that 
our  freshmen  are  getting  pretty  comfort- 
able with  playing  college  golf." 

McLachlin  came  in  second  for  the 
Bruins,  shooting  222  to  tie  for  13th 
place.  Johnson  was  next,  tying  for  32nd 
place  with  a  score  of  228. 

"McLachlin  and  Johnson  can  play 
better  than  they've  been  playing," 
Sherfy  said. 

McLachlin  expressed  the  same  dissat- 
isfaction. 

"Travis  and  I  are  at  the  point  where 
we're  sick  of  playing  bad  and  sick  of 
playing  bad  as  a  team,"  he  said.  "We're 
ready  to  step  it  up  a  notch  and  start  com- 
peting better." 

Next  for  UCLA  at  the  Husky 
Invitational  was  Fulgentis  and  sopho- 
more J.T  Kohut,  who  tied  for  37th  at 
229.  Merrick  placed  44th  at  233. 

In  Sherfy's  eyes,  the  Bruins  need  to 
pick  up  their  play. 

"Certainly  to  compete  with  the  better 
teams  we  have  to  put  it  together  a  little 
better  than  we've  been  doing,"  he  said. 

The  team's  next  tournament  is  the 
Carpet  Capital  at  Georgia  Tech  from 
Oct.  6-8.  It  will  include  10  of  the  top  25 
teams  in  the  nation. 

It  will  be  the  men's  fourth  tournament 
in  less  than  a  month. 

"It's  a  real  bang-bang  schedule,  a  bap- 
tism by  fire,"  Sherfy  said. 

"Obviously  we're  not  happy  with  how 
we're  doing,  but  there's  a  tremendous 
upside.  We're  not  going  to  get  worse, 
we're  going  to  get  better." 


HV 


M.CROSS;  Bruins  place  third 
due  to  unexpected  finishes 
by  team's  third,  fifth  scorers 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

By  running  slower  than  expected, 
Scott  Abbott  may  have  ended  up  helping 
his  team. 

Plagued  with  a  bad  back,  the  senior 
captain,  who  had  been  the  No.  2  man  on 
the  Bruins'  cross  country  team  in  the 
squad's  first  two  meets,  was  the  fourth 
UCLA  runner  to  hit  the  finish  line  last 
Saturday  at  the  Sun  Dodger  Invitational 
on  the  Lincoln  Park  course  in  Seattle. 

UCLA,  however,  received  an  unex- 
pectedly strong  push  from  its  third  and 
fifth  scorers  and  came  in  third  at  the 
\meet  with  63  points,  placing  behind  only 
Washington  (41  points)  and  No.  10 
Michigan  (58). 

"I  didn't  have  my  best  race,"  Abbott 
said.  "I'll  take  the  blame  for  us  not  beat- 
ing Michigan.  But  we  had  a  good  team 
race.  The  guys  did  what  they  had  to  do." 

While  seniors  Bryan  Green  and  Paul 
Muite  cleared  themselves  of  the  Bruin 
pack  midway  through  the  race  to  climb 
their  way  toward  the  leaders,  Abbott  was 
carrying  the  back  end  of  the  UCLA  scor- 
ers. 

About  three  miles  into  the  race,  true 
freshman  Jon  Rankin,  much  to  his  sur- 
prise, found  himself  near  Abbott.  A  half- 
mile  later,  he  was  right  on  him. 

As  had  been  the  case  in  his  first  two 
collegiate  races,  Rankin  hesitated  at  this 
point.  In  high  school,  he  had  never  been 
in  a  race  longer  than  5  kilometers  and 
was  unsure  if  he  could  make  a  move  with- 
out crashing  before  the  end  of  the  8,000- 
meter  run. 

Then  suddenly,  Rankin  heard  Abbott 
say  something  to  him. 

"Go  for  it,"  Abbott  told  him.  "Don't 


M.WATERPOLO:  Tough 
conference  opponents 
will  affect  tournament 


ByRekhaRao 

Daily  Bnjin  Contributor 

The  No.  3  UCLA  men's  water 
polo  team  will  try  to  defend  their 
championship  this  weekend,  when 
they  take  on  UC  Santa  Barbara  on 
Friday  and  Pepperdine  on  Sunday 
afternoon. 

"This  is  a  huge  weekend  for 
us,"  said  sophomore  attacker  and 
two-meter  defender  Matt  Resher. 

On  Friday  afternoon,  the 
Bruins  play  at  Santa  Barbara  for 
their  second  conference  game  of 
the  season. 

"These  two  games  count  for 
our  conference  record,"  said  head 
coach  Adam  Krikorian.  "We  play 
each  team  in  the  conference  once 
every  season  and  these  games 
determine  how  we  do  in  the  con- 
ference tournament  at  the  end  of 
the  year." 

This  weekend  will  be  a  key  one 
in  terms  of  conference  placement. 


"We  will  have  three  conference 
games  out  of  seven  out  of  our  way 
after  this  weekend^"  Flesher  said. 

The  Bruinswre  Confident  going 
into  their  opener  on  the  first 
important  weekend  of  the  season. 

"They  (Santa  Barbara)  arc  red- 
shirting  some  of  their  better  play- 
ers this  year,  so  they  are  not  as 
strong  as  they  usually  are," 
Krikorian  said.  "As  long  as  we  are 
playing  the  way  we  are  capable  of 
playing,  we  should  come  away 
with  victory." 


The  Bruins  will  need 
to  play  at  the  top  of 
their  game  to  finish 
this  weekend  ahead 
of  the  other  teams. 


The  team  is  greatly  anticipating 
the  game  on  Sunday  against  No.  8 
Pepperdine. 

"This  is  probably  the  biggest 
game    of    the    year    for    us," 


UtLA  Spcxis  Infoimaiion 

Paul  Muite  will  corr^pete  In  a  meet 
against  Stanford  this  weekend. 

be  afraid."  • 

"That  kind  of  woke  me  up,"  Rankin 
said. 

And  with  that.  Rankin,  a  4:10  1600m 
runner  as  a  high  school  senior  last 
spring,  blasted  his  way  through  the  fiat 
terrain.  He  moved  up  well,  covering  the 
circuit  in  24:49.4  for  18th  place. 

"I  really  liked  the  flat  course,"  he  said. 
"I  didn't  have  to  worry  about  hills  and 
stuff. 

"With  every  race,  I'm  gaining  a  little 
niore  confidence.  A  lot  of  it  is  because 


S«eMX10SS,pa9e60 


WTH.  ARMtNlAN/Daity  Brum  Semot  StaH 

Dan  Yeilding  fields  the  ball  with  authority  during  a  match 
against  Princeton  earlier  this  month. 


Krikorian  said.  "They  redshirted 
probably  three  of  their  besT  play- 
ers preparing  for  this  year.  They 
only  have  one  loss  against  them 
this  year." 

The  MiinS  will  need  to  plajj  at 
the  top  of  their  game  to  fuiish  this 
weekend  ahead  of  the  otkicr 
teams.  i  -  ^ 

"We  are  trying  to  go  3-0  in  the 
conference  heading  into  next 
week,"  Krikorian  said.  "We  will 
definitely  need  to  bring  in  our  'A' 
game  in  order  to  beat  these  guys." 
Junior  playmaker  Jeff  Pflueger 
added,  "Experience  is  key.  These 
aren't  just  teams  that  you  walk  by 
and  look  past,  because  every  team 
has  potential  to  get  you  on  your 
bad  days." 

Last  week.  UCLA  beat  No.  9 
University  of  the  Pacific  12-1,  and 
used  that  win  to  restore  its  confi- 
dence after  losing  the  sca$on 
opener  to  UC  Irvine. 

"Our  confidence  is  back  af\er 
our  losses  in  the  beginning  of  the 
season,"  Pflueger  said.  "We  are 
realizing  that  anything  can  hap- 
pen." 

"I  feel  really  confident  about 
our  team  right  now,"  Krikorian 
added.  "Whenever  you  go  into  the 
season  ranked  No.  1  and  drop  the 
first  games,  you  worry  about  how 
the  team  will  respond.  This  team 
has  responded  well  to  that."  '    "    " 

The  Bruins  expect  to  achieve 
their  anticipated  victories  by 
maintaining  their  level  of  play 
throughout  the  weekend. 

"We  just  have  been  getting  bet- 
ter every  game  because  of  good 
practices  and  we  have  been  get- 
ting used  to  playing  with  each 
other  again,"  Flesher  said. 

This  weekend's  play  is  key  for 
another  reason  -  to  maintain 
momentum  throughout  the  sea- 
son. 

"It's  important  for  us  to  play 
our  game  and  get  the  Ws,  especial- 
ly when  the  end  of  the  season 
comes  up,"  Pflueger  said. 


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70       Friday,  September  29, 2000 


Daily  Brain  Sports 


TJBam  starts  strong,  but  cant 
pace  at  Griak  Invitational 


W.CROSS:  Squad  finishes 
18th  after  falHng  behind 
in  final  stages  of  race 

By  Dylan  Memandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

It  looked  good  through  the  first 
mile. 

Then  it  got  ugly. 

Racing  at  the  Roy  Griak 
Invitational  in  Minneapolis  last 
Saturday,  the  UCLA  women's  cross 
country  team  got  out  to  a  good  start 
but  couldn't  maintain  its  early  jjace 
and  finished  1 8th  among  the  29 
schools  present. 

"They  just  didn't  carry  it 
through,"  Bruin  assistant  coach 
Helen  Lehman-Winters  said.  "They 
were  definitely  ready  to  run  faster 
than  they  did." 

Led  by  senior  captain  Tina 
Bowen,  the  Bruins  were  doing  well  in 
the  infant  stages  of  the  race.  Bowen, 
however,  fell  back  in  the  final  two- 
thirds  of  the  contest,  and  the  rest  of 
the  team  followed  her  into  the  back 
end  of  the  field. 

Senior  Katie  Nuanes  survived  the 
best,  completing  the  6,000-meter 
course  in  22;08  for  47th  place. 

Bowen,  who  was  UCLA's  No.  1 
runner  in  the  team's  first  two  compe- 
titions, was  next,  placing  68th 
(22:29). 

Sophomore  Kelly  Grimes  ( 1  lOth. 
22:59),  senior  Gina  Donnelly  { 1 15th, 
23:03),  and  sophomore  Melissa 
McBain  (123rd,  23:12)  rounded  out 
the  Bruins'  scoring  five. 

Freshman  Valerie  Rores  ( 148th, 
23:34),  the  squad's  third  runner  at 


'I  LA  Sporn  Inlofmation 

Gina  Donnelly  is  one  of  the 
Bruins  who  will  be  competing  at 
Stanford  this  weekend. 

both  the  FuUerton  and  Aztec  Invites, 
and  sophomore  Julie  Barbour 
(154th,  23:39)  were  the  remaining 
UCLA  finishers. 

"Bowen  and  Nuanes  are  normally 
so  consistent  and  that  makes  us  a 
good  team,"  head  coach  Eric 
Peterson  said.  "But  if  we  don't  get  a 
good  race  from  the  top  three  (Bowen, 
Nuanes  and  Flores),  our  ability  to  be 
competitive  is  going  to  be  dimin- 
ished." 

No.  13  Minnesota  won  the  meet, 
tallying  98  points.  Yale  (127),  No.  7 

See  W.aiOSS,  page  60 


T 


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from  Princeton  to  team 


M-BASKFTBALL  Gloger 
will  redshirt  next  season 
as  per  NCAA  regulations 


By  AJ  Cadman 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

UCLA  continued  to  build  for  the 
future  of  the  men's  basketball  pro- 
gram with  Tuesday's  announcement 
of  6-foot-7  sophomore  forward 
Spencer  Gloger's  transfer  from 
Princeton  to  UCLA. 

The  Santa  Margarita  High  prep- 
ster  had  initially  signed  a  grant-in-aid 
contract  at  UCLA  on  May  24,  1999, 
but  elected  to  play  for  former 
Princeton  head  coach  Bill  Carmody 
at  that  time.  A  grant-in-aid  contract 
is  not  structurally  binding  and  allows 
student  athletes  to  back  out. 

"Coach  Lavin  gave  me  an  oppor- 
tunity a  year  ago  and  now  he's  giving 
me  another  chance,"  Gloger  said  in  a 
statement.  "I'm  grateful  to  him  for 
this  second  chance." 

The  205-pound  Gloger  started  28 
games  last  season  for  the  Tigers  as  a 
true  freshman.  He  signed  a  grant-in- 
aid  agreement  to  return  to 
Westwood  on  Tuesday  and  is 
enrolled  in  classes  this  quarter. 
Because  of  NCAA  transfer  rules,  he 
will  have  to  redshirt  the  upcoming 
season  and  will  have  three  years  of 
eligibility  remaining. 

"We  are  happy  to  have  Spencer 
back  with  us,"  Lavin  said  in  a  state- 
ment. "At  Princeton  last  season,  he 
made  an  immediate  impact  with  the 
Tigers'  program  as  a  true  freshman." 

Last  season,  Gloger  tied  the  Ivy 


League  single-game  record  with  10 
three-pointers  against  Alabama- 
Birmingham,  writing  himself  into  the 
record  books  alongside  former  Penn 
standout  Matt  Maloney.  He  also  set 
the  Princeton  freshman  single-game 
record  with  34  points  against 
Alabama-Birmingham.     ■:.'  v-'-.:  ' 

Gloger  set  Tiger  freshman  records 
with  65  three-pointers  during  the 
1999-2000  season.  He  was 
Princeton's  second-leading  scorer, 
averaging  12.0  points  per  game  to  go 
along  with  a  3.4  rebound  average. 
He  shot  a  sizzling  43.8  percent  from 
the  field,  including  a  40.9  clip  from 
three-point  range  (65  of  159)  and  75 
percent  from  the  foul  line. 

Gloger  scored  in  double  figures  in 
20  games,  including  the  final  eight 
games  of  1999-2000,  and  earned  All- 
Ivy  League  honorable  mention. 

"Spencer's  size,  versatility,  court 
sense  and  deadly  shooting  stroke 
from  long  distance  will  be  great 
assets  to  our  program,"  Lavin  said. 
"In  Spencer,  we  are  getting  another 
quality  local  student-athlete  to  join 
our  Bruin  family." 

As  the  1999  Orange  County 
Player  of  the  Year,  Gloger  was  a 
standout  performer  at  Santa 
Margarita  under  coach  Jerry 
Debusk.  He  averaged  23.7  points 
and  6.0  rebounds  a  game  during  his 
senior  season.  He  returns  to 
Southern  California  to  play  at  Pauley 
Pavilion  in  front  of  familiar  faces. 

"UCLA  has  everything  I'm  look- 
ing for  in  a  school,"  Gloger  said, 
"including  a  great  team  with  nation- 
al-caliber academics  and  the  chance 
to  play  in  front  of  my  family  and 
friends." 


BRUIN  UPDA 


Saturday 

M.Cross  Country  @ 
Stanford  Invitational 

Stanford 

All  day 

p-oss  Country  @ 
rd  invitational 
Stanford 
Ail  day 

It  vs.  Arizona  St 
Rose  Bowl 
7:15  p.m. 


Sunday 

M.  Water  Polo  vs. 

Pepperdlne^ 
Suiisetitec 
12  p. 

W.  Soccer 

LM 

'  p.i 

M.iioccervs. 
DraVe  Star* 
2  p.n 


Student  television 

news  show  needs 

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I'dliAlv  News,  H  nnv  .sludcnl 
media  |iroj<'<-l  launching  I hi.s 
(|uaii(;r,  i.<4  IcMtkin);  for  .slud(>nl.<s 
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Consistent 
cbntributetD 

W50CCER:  No.  5  UCLA 
returns  from  successful 
road  trip  lo  face  Bulldogs 


ByJeffAgase 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


W-M  ^             ':*'■■. 

Friday,  September  29, 2000 

1 

71"    '■.■■:■•. 

Sconna 


.'.,,-.■  -»■-',.■  «# 


«    4ik  X  ^ 


success 


When  asked  to  describe  in  just  one 
word  her  team's  feeling  after  starting 
the  season  with  seven  consecutive 
road  games,  UCLA  women's  soccer 
player  Karissa  Hampton  answered 
without  hesitation. 

"Consistent,"  she  said. 

The  senior  defender  couldn't  have 
pegged  the  feeling  any  better.  The 
No.  5  Bruins(6-I  overall,  0-0  Pac-IO) 
are  riding  high,  owners  of  a  six-game 
winning  streak  and  their  highest  rank- 
ing in  school  history. 

And  with  their  first  home  game  of 
the  season  tonight  against  Fresno 
State  (7-3)  at  7:30  under  the  lights  of 
Spaulding  Field,  they  have  added 
incentive  to  continue  playing  like  one 
of  the  elite  women's  soccer  programs 
in  the  country. 

"We're  totally  psyched  that  we 


have  a  night  game  on  Spaulding," 
Hampton  said.  "It  is  going  to  add  so 
much  adrenaline  to  all  of  us  to  play  in 
front  of  our  home  crowd." 

Coming  home  never  felt  better. 
The  Bruins  have  been  unbeaten  at 
•home  for  nearly  two  years,  with  their 
last  loss  in  Westwood  on  Nov.  14, 
1998,  at  the  hands  of  BYU  in  an 
NCAA  Tournament  second-round 
match. 

The  Bruins  wrapped  up  their 
sevea-game  road  sojourn  on  Sept.  24 
with  a  3-0  win  over  the  University  of 
San  Diego  that  featured  a  near 
record-setting  pouncing  by  the 
UCLA  offense. 

Junior  forward  Stephanie  Rigamat 
took  the  opening  kickoffand  stormed 
down  the  field  in  just  1 1  seconds  to 
score  the  fifth-fastest  goal  in  NCAA 
history. 

Senior  forward  Tracey  Milburn 
added  two  goals,  and  the  Bruins  had 
their  fourth  consecutive  shutout. 

Assistant  coach  Lisa  Shattuck  said 
that  the  team  accomplished  one  of  its 
main  goals  before  the  Toreros  could 

S«eW.S0CCER,page61 


J^dfiast  Bruinslbrsee  challenges 


NICOIE  MIlLERAloly  Brum 

Lindsay  Greco  confronts  a  defender  during  a  recent  match 
against  Vanderbilt  University. 


M.SOCCER:  Seven-game 
win  Streak  boosts  team 
to  No.  1  ranking  in  U.S. 


By  Brian  Thompson 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

In  this  Olympic  year,  the  UCLA 
men's  soccer  season  can  be  com- 
pared to  Michael  Johnson's  running 
ofthe  400  meters  in  Sydney.    "'       ■} 

The  Bruins  shot  oul  of  the  blocks 
quickly,  stringing  together  a  7-0 
record  to  go  to  the  front  of  the  field 
and  earn  the  No.  I  ranking  in  the 
nation. 

But  now  they're  heading  down  the 
backstretch  of  their  season.  They 
know  that  they  must  maintain  a  high 
level  of  play  since  the  rest  ofthe  pack 
is  hunting  them  down. 


"It  is  time  to  find  out 

what  we're  really 

madeof.Wehavea 

tough  game  every 

week  now." 

Todd  Saldana 

UCLA  head  coach 


The  next  team  trying  to  catch 
UCLA  is  St.  Mary's  College,  which 
comes  to  Westwood  on  Sunday  for  a 
2  p.m.  game  at  Drake  Stadium. 

"I  think  we're  sitting  in  a  really 
good  position,"  UCLA  head  coach 
Todd  Saidaiia  said.  "Going  into  the 
season,  we  wanted  to  make  sure  we 
challenged  ourselves.  And  we're  at 
that  part  of  the  season  where  [chal- 
lenges] come  frequently." 

Since  the  fast  climb  to  the  top  of 
the  polls,  UCLA  has  maintained  its 
status  as  the  team  to  beat.  While  most 
observers  expect  this  type  of  play 
from  UCLA,  the  fact  that  the  team 
has  14  freshmen  on  the  roster  makes 
this  feat  even  more  impressive. 

"The  freshmen  are  really  stepping 
up,"  junior  midfielder  Ryan  Futagaki 
said.  "I  think  what's  helping  us  is  the 
work  rate  that  we're  all  putting  in.  All 
of  the  guys  are  hustling.  We  have  a 
strong  bench  and  that  makes  us  a  bet- 
ter team  than  last  year.  Last  year,  we 
didn't  have  as  much  depth  on  the 
bench." 

Last  week,  the  Bruins  downed  UC 
Irvine  and  UC  Santa  Barbara. 

On  their  home  field  last  week,  the 


♦  -. 


'-1 


j&#.-^^ 


^   ^^^ 


BMOGET  aB«EN/Oaily  Brum  bemof  bla« 


Scot  Thompson  attempts  to  head  the  ball  during  a  game  against 
LMU.  UCLA  narrowly  defeated  Santa  Clara  1  -0  in  overtime  Thursday 


Anteaters  took  the  Bruins  to  over- 
time, but  freshman  Adolfo  Gregorio 
scored  the  golden  goal  two  minutes 
into  the  extra  frame  to  preserve 
UCLA's  undefeated  streak. 

Last  Sunday  against  the  Gauchos, 
the  Bruins  started  off  slowly. 

Without  playmaking  midfielder 
Shaun  Tsakiris,  who  was  out  nursing 
a  back  injury,  UCLA  had  trouble 
gaining  any  rhythm  offensively.  The 
Bruins,  however,  were  able  to  pull 
away  in  the  second  half  with  goals  by 
forwards  McKinley  Tennyson,  Jr. 
and  Cliff  McKinley. 


Thursday  night  against  Santa 
Clara  the  Bruins  again  had  trouble  on 
the  offensive  front,  as  the  Broncos 
kept  the  game  scoreless  until  it  went 
into  overtime.  There  the  Bruins  man- 
aged to  notch  their  seventh  straight 
win  when  Tsakiris,  who  was  subbed 
into  the  game,  scored  the  team's  lone 
goal  on  a  penalty  kick. 

Coming  off  of  Thursday's  big 
game  on  the  road,  the  Bruins  enter 
that  part  of  the  year  when  their  sea- 
son comes  to  a  grind.  While  the  team 

SeeMJOCCEItpagcei 


LETTERS 


UCLA's  play-calling 

•heeds  work  i>:^' 

{••  ^-- 

•ii   Sept.  25 
j   As  a  Bruin  football  fan  for  years,  I  was  frus- 
trated by  some  ofthe  play-calling  in  UCLA's 
loss  to  the  Oregon  Ducks  this  past  Saturday. 
Continuing  to  run  Foster  up  the  middle  (with 
too  few  play  action  pass  calls)  into  a  "brick 
wall"  Oregon  defense  that  was  expecting  Foster 
to  do  so  was  hardly  imaginative  of  coach 
Toledo  and  offensive  coordinator  Al  Borges. 

Didn't  UCLA  learn  from  Fresno  State,  as  it 
wasn't  until  late  in  the  game  that  Foster  made  a 
couple  of  long  runs?  But  Oregon  wasn't  ready 
to  fold  at  home  like  Fresno  State  did  in  the 
Roce  Bowl. 

Abo,  why  didn't  Toledo  take  two  downs  (on 
third  and  fourth)  to  make  the  1 5  yards  late  in 
the  game  for  the  first  down?  Why  did  he  have 
an  inexperienced  quarterback  in  Ryan 
McCann  "go  for  broke"  on  a  longer  pass  play 
when  all  UCLA  needed  was  1 5  yards  or  so  to 
keep  the  drive  alive?  Going  for  long  on  first  or 
second  down  is  okay  in  such  a  situation,  but  on 
third-and-15?  And  then  not  going  for  the  first 
down  and  punting  away  on  fourth-and- 1 S  with 

'  just  minutes  to  go  in  the  game?  The  game  was 


basically  lost  anyway  by  that  point, 
so  why  not  go  for  broke  then 
instead  of  punting  yet  again? 

The  UCLA  special  teams  play  seemed  to  be 
inept  as  well  for  the  most  part. 

Didn't  coach  Toledo  know  that  Oregon 
defensive  coordinator  Nick  Aliotti,  who  was  in 
charge  ofthe  porous  UCLA  defense  that  blew 
the  1998  national  title  hopes,  would  be  "gun- 
ning" for  the  Bruins?  So  why  didn't  coach 
Toledo  and  Borges  respond  with  some  imagina- 
tion in  the  play  calling?  Except  for  the  fake 
option  with  [>rew  Bennett's  pass  to  Freddie 
Mitchell,  there  was  not  much  creativity  in  the 
play  calling,  with  Foster's  repeated  attempts  to 
run  up  the  middle! 

Granted,  there  were  some  dropped  balls  and 
Mitchell's  true  touchdown  catch  was  unfairly 
taken  away.  But  Aliotti  knows  the  UCLA 
offense  aAer  practicing  against  it  during  hi% 
stint  at  UCLA,  and  he  knew  that  UCLA  would 
continually  try  to  nin  up  the  middle  with 
Foster.  So  where  was  the  play  action  to  give 
McCann  a  chance  on  some  of  those  first  down 
calls?  Not  being  so  predictable  on  first  down 
might  have  enabled  Foster  to  break  free  a  little 
more  than  he  did. 

Last  weekend  turned  me  into  a  Washington 
Husky  fan  for  the  rest  of  the  season. 


vJJIElJ 


Washington  is  No.  6  in  the  coun- 
try in  the  AP  poll  and  has  already 
paid  back  Miami  earlier  this  sea- 
son for  what  Miami  did  to  the  Bruins  in  1998. 
After  former  UCLA  quarterback  and 
Washington  head  coach  Rick  Neuheisel  leads 
the  Huskies  to  the  national  title  this  year  (or  the 
Pac-IO  title,  at  least),  it  will  be  the  right  time  for 
him  to  return  to  UCLA  where  he  belongs.  At 
least  Neuheisel  should  be  able  to  win  on  the 
road,  which  Toledo  can't  get  the  Bruins  to  do! 

Jim  Morris  .■     .  ' ' 

Marina  del  Rey  -  ' 

Bruins  should  play 
games  later 

This  letter  was  directed  toward  football 
coach  Bob  Toledo     :     "y--  ,. 

Sept.  18  .   '■''■'  ^  "-^^'■ 

I  have  been  a  UCLA  fan  since  attending 
UCLA  in  1932. 1  was  sunburned  on  my  face 
and  hands  sitting  in  the  rooting  section  ofthe 
Rose  Bowl.  Today  I  am  more  aware  ofthe 
,  health  consequences  of  sunburn  and  heat. 


The  UCLA-Michigan  game,  played  in  1 10- 
degree  heat,  could  and  probably  did  cause 
health  problems  for  many  fans,  players,  coach- 
es and  officials  because  the  game  started  at 
12:30. 

Games  at  the  Rose  Bowl  in  September 
should  start  at  sundown.  The  game  with 
Alabama  was  also  a  skin  and  heat  problem. 

I  hope  that  in  the  future,  games  in  , 
September  and  early  October  start  in  the  late 
aftemoon  or  at  sundown  -  4:30  p.m.  or  7  p.m. 

Your  UCLA  fans  will  thank  you  and  your 
players. 

TV  has  to  recognize  these  hot  summer  days 
now  go  into  fall.  iCiy  30-year-old  granddaughter 
asked  me  to  leave  the  game  during  the  second 
quarter.  We  were  able  to  watch  the  second  half 
when  we  returned  home.  TV  did  us  a  big  disser- 
vice when  they  switched  to  a  commercial  a  split 
second  aAer  your  players  pumped  a  victory  of 
ice  water  on  you.  The  flavor  of  victory  was  lost. 

Edward  Kapitanoff 

Los  Angeles  ''  ! 

Sports  Letters  to  the  Editor  can  be  sent  to 
sports9media.ucia.edu.  Please  note  tetter'  in 
the  sutifect,  and  include  location,  contact  nun>- 
ber,  and  UCLA  affiliation,  if  any.  Letters  will  be 
edited  according  to  length  and  grammar. 


T<  ' 


^mam0mm9mmmmm 


■  »■    *!»ii...    {.m       ^ 


Tl^ 


,;-.. 


-ric 


The  winning  tradition 

This  weekend  both  the  men's  and 
women's  soccer  teams  will  attempt  to 
continue  their  seven-game  winning 
streaks.  See  page  71 

Friday,  September  29, 2000 


Daily  Bruin 


Sports  on  the  Web  (J    ^ 

1$  our  print  issue  not  • 
enough  for  you?  See  sto-  I 
ries  on  all  UCLA  sports  at  • 
www.dailybruin.ucla.edu  I 


Paus  returns  to  fa<£  undated  Wildcats 


FOOTBALL:  Anderson  out  for 
medical  procedure  as  Bruins 
hope  to  rebound  from  defeat 


By  Adam  Karon 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


FOOTBALL 


AnnfM  SUte 


The  football  gods  giveth,  and  the  football 
gods  taketh  away.  Cory  Paus  will  return  to 
take  center  stage  Saturday  against  Arizona 
State,  but  safety  Marques  Anderson  will  not 
suit  up  for  the  contest. 

Paus,  who  has  not  seen  action  since  the 
first    series    in    the 
Alabama  game,  says  -  -    -  -  " 

he  is  fully  recovered 
from  a  shoulder  injury 
suffered  on  the  first 
play  of  the  season. 

■'1  feel  good,"  he 
said  after  practice  on 
Tuesday.  "The  last  few 
days  Ive  been  throw- 
ing the  ball  a  lot  hard- 
er." 

The  redshirt  sopho- 
more looks  to  take  over  a  team  that  has  been 
struggling  with  the  passing  game.  Against 
Oregon,  the  Bruins  were  unable  to  throw 
against  a  Duck  defense  that  set  eight  men  on 
the  line  of  scrimmage,  virtually  neutralizing 
DeShaun  Foster. 

"This  is  not  a  panic  thing,"  UCLA  head 
coach  Bob  Toledo  said.  "We  are  not  worried 
or  panicked.  Cory  was  the  starter  before  he 
was  hurt,  and  now  that  he's  healthy  he  is  the 
starter  again." 

Paus  will  have  a  tough  task  at  hand  to 
beat  the  Sun  Devils.  Arizona  State  enters  the 
contest  undefeated,  with  victories  over  San 
Diego  State,  Colorado  State  and  Utah  State. 
Colorado  was  ranked  No.  25  when  the  Sun 
Devils  burned  them,  but  it  is  clear  that 
ASU's  preseason  schedule  was  slightly  easi- 


er than  UCLA's. 

In  addition,  UCLA  will  be  without  a  key 
defensive  starter.  Safety  Marques  Anderson 
will  miss  the  game  due  to  a  medical  proce- 
dure. Athletic  department  officials  declined 
to  specify  what  was  wrong  with  Anderson, 
saying  only  that  he  should  be  back  in  time 
for  the  game  against  Cal  in  two  weeks. 
Anderson  was  not  available  for  comment. 

The  Bruins  will  have  to  contend  with  a 
Sun  Devil  team  that  has  rushed  for  over  400 
yards  and  passed  for  over  700  yards. 

Anderson  has  been  one  of  the  anchors  of 
the  Bruin  defense  thus  far.  The  6-foot.  200- 
pound  junior  has  risen  above  olT-field  prob- 
lems to  become  one  of 
the  better  safeties  in  the 
Pac-lO.  Without  him, 
UCLA  will  need  to 
adapt  to  a  smash- 
mouth  Arizona  team. 

The  Bruins  are 
already  without  star 
defensive  end  Kenyon 
Coleman,  who  is  out  at 
least  four  more  weeks 
with  a  knee  injury. 
"Someone's  going 
to  have  to  step  up  and  fill  the  spot,"  junior 
linebacker  Robert  Thomas  said.  "They're 
going  to  come  out  and  try  and  run  the  ball 
down  our  throats.  We  have  to  try  and  force 
them  to  pass." 

The  Sun  Devils,  who  are  ofl'to  their  first 
3-0  start  since  1996,  have  shown  so  far  that 
they  can  pass  the  ball  efficiently.  There  were 
early  season  question  marks  surrounding 
the  availability  pf  seriior  quarterback  Ryan 
Kealy,  but  redshirt  freshman  Jeff  Krohn 
stepped  in  to  fill  the  void. 

Krohn  threw  four  touchdown  passes  last 
week  against  Utah  Slate,  but  Kealy  may  see 
time  as  well  on  Saturday. 

But  the  nation's  attention  will  be  on  Paus 


JACOB  LIAO/Daily  Brufn 


■■X'  i««"  —- 


I  .  . 


S«e  FOOTBMi,  page  59 


u    M^V .  ^      ^''^  ^  P^"^'^y  ^°'  ^  ^^^^  ""^'^  9'^^  ^y  senior  safety  iMarquM  Anderson  during 
the  UCLA-Oregon  game  last  Saturday. 


Beavers  send  UCLA  crashing  I  Bruins  ranked  fifth  after 

defeating  Cardinal,  Bears 


W.VOLLEYBALL  Bruins 
intensity  falters,  squad 
falls  to  unranked  OSU 


By  AJ  Cadman 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

'  ji 

The  UCLA  women's  volley- 

^■.•. 

ball  team  always  expects  a  tough 

,''•; 

schedule  to  await  them  in  the  Pac- 

•  t                     ♦       -T 

lO  conference  from  such  power- 

• * 

houses  as  Southern  California 

".• 

and  Arizona. 

Oregon  State  d. 
UCLA  4-1 5, 15-10, 
7-15,15-13,16-14 


But  with  the  Bruins  entering 
Thursday  with  a  perfect  4-0  con- 
ference record  alongside  the 
crosstown  rival  Trojans,  No.  5 
UCLA  (9-4  overall,  4-1  Pac-lO) 
fell  in  a  heartbreaking  two-and-a- 
half  hour  match  to  unranked 
Oregon  State  (11-3.  3-1)4-15.  15- 
10.  7-15.  15-13,  16-14  before  a 
stunned  crowd  of  481  at  Pauley 
Pavilion. 

"We  let  down  too  much  and 


RECAP:  Bachman  notches 
1,000th  career  kill,  500th 
career  block  against  Cal 


S«e  W.VOUfYBAU,  page  59 


•WGeTOW«f»MJ»»yB(U.nS«o«xSlj« 

Outside  hitter  Ella  Hari«y  (1 1 )  watches  as  setter  Erica  Sclsor 
leaps  for  the  ball  during  last  night's  match  vs.  Oregon  State. 


By  Christina  Teller 

Daily  Bfuin  Senior  Staff     , 

It's  never  easy  to  play  at  somebody 
else's  house,  especially  when  you 
haven't  won  there  in  seven  years.  This 
didn't    seem    to 

faze  the  Bruin  —— ^— — ^— 
volleyball  team 
who  entered 
Stanford's 
Maples  Pavilion., 
up  against  the 
drought,  and  left 
after  a  convincing 
three-game  sweep 
on  Sep.  23. 

"It     was     so      — 

exciting  because 

we  haven't  won  there  since  1993,"  mid- 
dle blocker  Elisabeth  Bachman  said. 
"It's  hard  to  play  up  there,  and  it's  nice 
to  be  able  to  come  off  the  floor  with  a 
win." 

The  teams  battled  through  the  first 
game,  as  Stanford  missed  Olympic 
team  members  sophomore  Logan  Tom 
and  senior  Kerri  Walsh. 


"It  was  so  exciting 

because  we  haven't 

won  there  since  1993/ 

Elisabeth  Bachman 

Middle  blocker 


UCLA  junior  outside  hitter  Kristee 
Porter  slammed  12  of  her  match-high 
26  kills.  With  Porter  leading  her  team 
with  a  .500  hitting  percentage  in  that 
game,  the  Bruins  powered  to  a  15-11 
win. 

Game  two  featured  the  hard-hitting 
Bruins  again,  who  snuck  away  to  a  14-0 
lead.  It  wasn't  until  they  failed  to  con- 
vert the  game  point  thai  Stanford 
scored  for  the  first  time.  Though  the 
Cardinal  held  UCLA  from  six  game 
point   attempts, 
they    were   still 
defeated      15-2. 
The    last    time 
Stanford 
notched  only  two 
points  in  a  game 
was      in      the 
NCAA  champi- 
onship      game 
against       Penn 
State  in  1999. 
It     becanK 


i 


more  of  a  ball-handling  game," 
Banachowski  said  of  the  long  rallies 
with  Stanford.  "I  think  that's  where  we 
can  cxcd,  where  we're  a  bit  better." 

In  the  final  game,  SUnford  battled 
back  through  the  tough  match.  The 
scored  was  tied  six  times  during  the 


SMnCM»pafeS9 


.^ 


"C^ 


Serving  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


Monday,  OaoBER  2, 2000 


www.ddilybruin.ucla.edu 


Stalled  by  regents 


USSA:  UC  counsel  says 
lobbying  group  can't  be 
funded  by  student  money 


By  Benjamin  Parlce 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  UC  Board  pf  Regents  stripped 
a  UCLA  student  referendum  of  a  pro- 
vision that  would  send  a  portion  of 
their  fees  to  a 

national  student      -i^^— — — — 
organization. 

UC  Deputy 
General 
Counsel  Gary 
Morrison  told 
the  regents  at 
their  Sept.  1.3-14 
meeting  that  the 
United  States 
Student 
Association 
appeared  to  be 
the  type  of 
group  to  which 
UC  students 
should  not  be  _^^____^^ 
compelled  to 
contribute. 

A  vote  on  the  USSA  portion  "of  the 
proposal  is  expected  to  come  back  to 
the  board  at  a  later  time. 

USSA  is  a  student  lobby  organiza- 
tion based  in  Washington.  D.C.  that 


"My  examination  of 

(USSA's)  Web  site 

suggested  it  was  an 

advocacy  organization ... 

that  should  be  funded 

principally  through 

voluntary  contributions." 

Gary  Morrison 

UC  deputy  general  counsel 


focuses  on  issues  like  financial  aid, 
campus  safety  and  retention  of  under- 
represented  students. 

The  allocation  of  student  fees  to 
organizations  was  an  issue  that  "has 
vexed  us  as  a  policy  and  legal  matter  for 
many  years,"  Morrison  said. 

The  referendum  was  passed  in 
May's  undergraduate  student  govern- 
ment elections  to  increase  the  amount 
of  money  given  to  USSA  and  to  the 
University  of  California  Students 
Association  - 
I  the  systemwide 

student  govern- 
ment aiid  bbby 
group. 

The  regents 
approved  the 
UCSA  portion 
of  the  referen- 
dum, increasing 
fees  by  90  cents 
per  quarter. 

"This  deci- 
sion was  not 
only  based  upon 
misinformation 
of  the  mission 

and  structure  of 

USSA,  but 
failed  to  consider  the  rights  of  UCLA 
students  who  voted  in  an  overwhelm- 
ing majority  in  favor  of  this  referen- 
dum,"   said    USSA  President    Ali 

SecFnttNa^pa9e24 


Th*  Aswcidted  Press 

UCLA's  Jason  Zdenek  celebrates  a  fumble  recovery  with  team- 
mate Steve  Morgan  (92),  after  recovering  a  fumble  late  in  the 
game. The  Bruins  beat  Arizona  State  38-31 .  See  back  page 


Council  looks  to  welcome  neW  students 


USAC:  Upcoming  week  to 
be  packed  with  festivities, 
both  fun  and  educational 


ByMdodyWang 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Students  new  to  UCLA  may  feel 
lost  at  such  a  populous  pjace,  but 
some  student  groups  are  hoping  to 
change  that. 

Welcome  Week,  sponsored  by  the 
Undergraduate  Students 

Association  Council,  seeks  to  expose 
students  to  campus  life.  It  starts 
today  and  will  feature  events  like  a 
movie  sneak  preview  and  spoken 
word  performance. 

"We  just  wanted  to  have  a  week  at 
the  beginning  of  the  school  year  with 
lots  of  programs  so  incoming  stu- 
dents can  get  involved,"  said  USAC 
internal  Vice  President  Elias  Enciso. 

USAC  President  Elizabeth 
Houston  said  council  members 
began  planning  Welcome  Week  two 
or  three  weeks  ago.  In  particular,  she 
said  she  is  excited  about  the  student 
voter  registration  program. 

"I  think  it's  gomg  to  be  really 
great  to  get   students  to   vote," 


CALENDAR  OF  EVENTS        ^__„„ 

The  Undergraduate  Students  Association  Coundl  has  sdieduled  events  ttmigU' 
week  designed  to  introduce  new  students  to  campus  life. 


10  a  jn,  •  3  p.m.  •  AK  oricntatkm  in  WestwoMl  Plata 


12  pji).  - 1  p.ni.  •  USAC  &  organizatwn  tabling  in  Westwood  Ptoza 
6  p.ni.  -  8  pjn.  •  LGBT/Que«r  Campus  Ufe  In  Roya  1S( 


1 1  a.m.  - 1  p.m.  •  Voter  registration  on  Bniin  Waft 
6  p.m.  -  8  p.m.  •  Spoken  word  at  the  Cooperage 


llajn.-lp.m.-  Voter  registration  on  Bniin  Walk 

m.  •  Movie:  'Dr.  T  and  the  Women'  in  Adttnnan  Grand  B^room 


1 2  p.m.  - 1  p.m.  •  Concert  in  Westwood  Plaza 


Houston  said.    ..'-'•-'"■ 

USAC  will  kick  off  the  week  with 
the  Asian  Pacific  Coalition  groups 
tabling  along  Bruin  Walk.  Other  stu- 
dent advocacy  groups  will  hand  out 
information  Tuesday. 
\  APC's  Orientation  Fair  will  con- 
sist of  live  performances  by  groups 
such  as  the  Indian  Student  Union. 

"The  goal  is  to  reach  out  to  fresh- 
men, transfers  and  even  people  still 


YU  WANG/D.i 

in  school  to  get  them  involved  with 
their  school  and  community,"  APC 
Chair  Kei  Nagao  said. 

"It's  about  the  whole  college  expe- 
rience, not  just  academics,"  she  con- 
tinued. 

In  addition  to  introducing  stu- 
dents to  different  groups  on  campus, 
USAC  is  hosting  a  spoken  word  per- 
formance where  artists  will  address 
various  issues  on  campus,  such  as 


racism  and  violence. 

"Spoken  word  is  a  combination  of 
poetry  and  hip  hop,"  said  Wepdy 
Sanchez,  one  of  the  performers.  "It's 
an  art,  but  it's  also  very  educational 
if  you  pay  attention  to  the  lyrics." 

The  IVP  office  and  La  Familia,  a 
Latino  LGBT  group,  will  attempt  to 
expose  students  to  lesbian,  gay, 
bisexual  and  transgender  issues  by 
co-sponsoring  a  workshop 
Wednesday. 

Enciso  said  the  purpose  of  the 
conference,  titled  LGBT/Queer 
Campus  Life,  is  to  let  all  students 
know  what  life  is  like  on  campus  for 
gays  and  lesbians. 

"It's  an  event  that  caters  to  all  stu- 
dents," he  said. 

But  at  the  last  council  meeting, 
Houston  disagreed  and  said  it  was 
inappropriate  for  U6AC  to  sponsor 
an  event  that  did  not  address  the 
needs  of  all  students. 

"I  don't  think  that  this  program  is 
going  to  be  very  beneficial  and  I 
regret  doing  it,"  Houston  said.  "Not 
that  I  don't  support  the  issue,  but  1 
don't  support  that  we  only  address 
that  one  i.ssue." 

Enciso  said  the  conference  was 

SecWEUOME,pa9e22 


Parties  agree 
vast  overhaul 
necessary  for 
school  system 

EDUCATION:  Bush,  Gore 
emphasizing  choice  and 
accountability  in  reform 


By  Karen  Matsuoka 

For  The  Daily  Bruin 

Earlier  this  month  an 
ABC/ Washington  Post  Poll  rated  it 
as  the  single  most  important  issue  to 
voters  in  the  November  election  and 
both  major  parly  candidates  can't 
slop  talking  about  it. 

With  George  W.  Bush's  now  well- 
known  tag  line,  "leave  no  child 
behind,"  and  Al  Gore's  signature 
education  Blue  Book,  which  outlines 
his  opinions,  the  candidates  have 
been  hard  at  work  developing  their 
policies  for  education  reform. 

Though  Bush  and  Gore  may  differ 
in  the  actual  measures  they  arc 
proposing,  both  are  emphasizing 
greater  accountability  and  choice. 
Some  of  their  proposals  arc  raising 
concern  among  school  administra- 
tors and  education  policy  analysts. 

"Gore  and  Bush  are  similar 
because  each  Imagines  greater  test- 
ing at  the  state  level  and,  to  some 
extent  at  the  national  level,  as  being  a 
prime  engine  for  reform,"  said  John 
Rogers,  Director  of  Research  at 
Center  X,  a  branch  of  UCLA's 
Gradi/atc  School  of  Education 
focusing  on  teacher  training  and  edu- 
cation policy  that  promotes  equity. 


JoAfin  Isken  ...said 
testing  is,  at  best,  an 

imperfect  measure  of 
school,  teacher,  and 

Student  performance. 


As  for  his  proposals,  Bush  has 
called  on  states  to  annually  test  stu- 
dents in  the  third  through  eighth 
grades. 

Gore  supports  voluntary  testing 
in  fourth  grade  reading  and  eighth 
grade  math.  He  proposes  to  increase 
funding  to  failing  schools  and  then 
shut  them  down  and  reopen  them 
with  a  new  principal  and  faculty  if 
they  continue  to  underperform. 

"Where  we  find  failure,  we  need 
to  take  immediate  action  to  increase 
accountability  and  put  in  place 
strong  remedies  to  ensure  failing  stu- 
dents are  not  left  behind,  improve  or 
remove  failing  teachers,  and  turn 
around  failing  schools,"  Gore  wrote 
in  a  statement  in  his  education  Blue 

SeeEDUaT10N,page20 


\ 


'^''^^itmmm 


..^  Jt-JM 


;v.)  ,•■  \. 


Monday,  October  2, 2000 


uaHy  Bruin  News 


L 


COMMUNITY  BRIEFS        ~^ 

Electrical  stimulants 
used  to  treat  epilepsy 

A  nationwide  team  of  researchers  led  by 
liCLA  neurologist  Dr.  Christopher  DeGiorgio 
found  that  electrically  stimulating  a  nerve  in  the 
neck  can  significantly  reduce  seizures  for 
epileptics  who  don't  respond  to  drug  treatment. 

The  therapy,  called  vagus  nerve  stimulation, 
alters  blood  flow  to  the  brain.  A  programmed, 
battery-powered  pulse  generator  implanted  in 
the  chest  sends  electrical  signals  through  a  wire 
to  the  neck. 

"Oi4  study  shows  that  the  effectiveness  of 
VNS,  modest  after  three  months,  is  substantial- 
ly improved  after  one  year  of  long-term  follow- 
up,"  DeGiorgio  said. 

■  While  about  one  irr  10  patients  experienced 
75  to  100  percent  fewer  seizures  after  three 
months  of  treatment,  one  in  five  patients 
reported  this  improved  condition  after  one 
year.  Overall,  seizures  dropped  45  percent  by 
the  end  of  the  study. 

Researchers  said  potential  side  effects  of 


VNS  ranged  from  mild  to  moder- 
ate. These  effects  include  hoarse- 
ness, cough,  and  pain,  but  conditions 
usually  improve  after  reducing  the  electri- 
cal current. 


birth  and  death,  indicate  patterns 
in  other  industrialized  nations. 


UC  students  to 


Maximurn  humari  life  ^^ '"  Philippines 


expectancy  rising 

Demographers  at  UC  Berkeley  are  finding 
the  oldest  age  at  death  for  humans  has  been  ris- 
ing for  more  than  a  century,  and  the  growth  is 
not  leveling  off. 

"We  have  shown  that  the  maximum  life  span 
is  changing.  It  is  not  a  biological  constant,"  said 
John  Wilmoth,  associate  professor  of  demogra- 
phy at  UC  Berkeley. 

The  finding  was  based  on  Swedish  national 
death  records  for  each  year  since  1861,  which 
showed  men  and  women  reached  a  maximum 
age  of  about  101  years  in  the  1860s  and  about 
108  years  in  the  1990s. 

Wilmoth  said  Swedish  demographic  statis- 
tics, considered  the  world's  best  records  on 


Beginning  in  spring  2001,  University  of 
California  students  can  study  in  the 
Philippines  for  nine  months  at  one  of  two 
universities. 

"A  UC  international  study  program  in  the 
Philippines  is  long  overdue,  given  the  strong 
interest  shown  for  many  years  by  a  large 
number  of  UC  students  and  faculty,"  said 
Peter  Wollitzer,  a  regional  director  of  EAR 

The  exchange,  offered  through  UC's 
Education  Abroad  Program,  will  allow  UC 
students  to  learn  about  the  economic,  demo- 
graphic and  cultural  aspects  of  the  country. 

The  program  will  consist  of  Pilipinolan- 
guage  study,  followed  by  a  semester  of  uni- 
versity course  work,  and  an  individual  eight- 
week  academic  internship  or  directed  field 
study. 


Director  of  language 
consortium  named 

Robert  J.  Blake,  a  professor  of  Spanish  and 
classics  at  UC  Davis,  began  his  position  as 
founding  director  of  the  new  UC  Consortium 
for  Language  Learning  and  Teaching  Sunday. 

"This  initiative  comes  at  a  time  when  our  stu- 
dents increasingly  need  an  expanded  knowl- 
edge of  the  world's  diverse  languages  and  cul- 
tures," Blake  said.  "A  UC  student  can  no  longer 
afford  to  be  monolingual  in  today's  internation- 
alized economy,." 

Blake  received  his  doctorate  in  Hispanic  lin- 
guistics from  the  University  of  Texas  in  Austin 
in  1980.  In  1992,  UC  Davis  recruited  Blake, 
who  served  most  recently  as  department  chair 
and  director  of  the  campus'  Second  Language 
Acquisition  Institute.         '' 

The  systemwide  Consortium  on  Language 
Learning  and  Teaching  will  be  housed  on  the 
Davis  campus.  .  .    '^  ., 

Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  Staff  and  wire  reports. 


.V:- 


DaHy  Bniin  News 


Mood«y,  October  2, 2000         i 


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CORRECTION 

In  the  Sept.  29  issue,  the 
story  "Paus  returns  to  face 
undefeated  Wildcats"  con- 
tained an  error.  The  head- 
line should  have  read  "Paus 
returns  to  face  undefeated 
Sun  Devils."  .    ,  .-.^•: 

In  the  article  titled 
"Union  celebrates  resolu- 
tion of  casual  worker  griev- 
ance," Sean  Leys'  name 
was  misspelled. 


Monday,  October  2, 2000 

www.clailybaiin.ucla.edu 


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■T  ■    ^"       ,  »•, 


the  doughnut  business  in 
and  stayed  there  for  30  years,  Becoming  a  VlAsst 


4- 


By  MianhMii  Dhanrnwirdciia 

.  OaHy  Bruin  S«ftlor  Staff 

Thirty-five  years  ago,  a  broken  hip 
and  $175  forever  changed  the  life  of 
Stan  Berman,  owner  of  Westwood 
Village's  Stan's  Donuts. 

In  the  mid  1960s,  an  elderly  couple 
ran  the  shop  Stan  occupies  toclay  when 
one  of  Berman 's  friends  received  an 
unlikely  business  ofTcr. 

"And  then  the  old  lady  slipped  and 
broke  her  hip,"  he  said.  "Then  their  son 
insisted  they  give  up  the  business. 

"My  friend  Bob  was  in  the  store  and 
they  said  'Bob,  you  want  it,  you  can  have 
it,'"  Berman  continued,  "'All  you  have 
to  do  is  give  us  the  last  month's  rent,' 
which  was  SI 75." 

Bob  then  came  to  the  annual  holiday 
party  Berman  and  his  wife  threw,  look- 
ing for  the  kind  of  baking  skills  Berman 
and  his  family  practiced  for  generations. 

"He  cornered  me,"  Berman  said. 
"He  says  'You  gotta  come  with  me 
tomorrow  morning.  I  want  you  to  see 
what  we've  got  and  you  can  be  a  part  of 


But  Berman  hesiuted  at  the  risk, 
unwilling  to  give  up  the  security  of  his 
job  as  a  baker  at  a  pizza  parlor. 

"But  I  came  down  and  1  really  liked 
what  I  saw,"  he  said. 

Still,  the  problem  of  financing  the 
$175,  a  large  sum  in  those  days,  lingered 
because  Berman  had  a  family  to  sup- 
port. 

"So  we  talked  to  the  son  and  he  sa; 
'Okay,  I'll  give  you  the  place  today  ai 
by  the  first  of  the  month  you  should 
taking  in  enough  money  to  pay  tl 
rent,'"  he  said.  "And  that's  what  ha 
pened." 

A  few  years  later,  Berman  becai 
sole  owner  of  Stan's  Donuts,  which 
today  has  expanded  to  include  a  variety 
of  doughnuts  ranging  from  the  staple 
glazed  at  60  cents  to  the  more  caloric 
Reese's  Peanut  Butter  Pocket,  which 
costs  S  1.25. 

Although  Berman  said  most  cus- 
tomers prefer  these  two  types  of  dough- 
nuts, he  himself  loves  anything  made  of 
apples. 


an  him 
ut  said 
ally  sin 
entofti 
is  is  my  li 
needed," 
Iding  and  so 
tygocsi'lTandthisa 
t  kind  of  involved 

tartingothei  Murej? 
nly     owns     Stan's     m 
ibut  lie  prefers  it  that  way 

wood  location,  the 

otheil^^^^^M||dofT inside  malls 

and  fe^^^^^^^|||||i2£d  them, 

Berman  sat 

^  Having  othe! 


s  and  restaurants  tba! 
»<-  ^^j^l^nuts  in  the  past  now  nid«t- 
ly  scntpKrispy  Kreme  doughnuts  since 
opening  of  the  store  on  campus. 
"Whenever  we  can  were  using 
Krispy  Kremes,"  s<ud  Adriaoa 
Cameiro,  who  works jJM,thc  Assodatiil 
Students  of  UC^^^pi-fnu  "Kiispy 
Kremes  are 


.page  22 


'■■■  ^i'::    --v: 


Mooday,  October  2, 2000 


0%  Brain  News 


D«iy  Bruin  News 


Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Third  parties  voice  oppositkm  to  commission  J^^  <&  NATION 


CANDIOATES:  Buchanan,  Nader 
hold  mini  debate  while  Gore, 
Bush  prepare  for  first  face-off 


By  William  C  Mann 

The  Associated  Press 


WASHINGTON  -  Ralph  Nader  and  Pat 
Buchanan  staged  a  mini  debate  of  their  own 
Sunday  and  groused  about  being  shut  out  of 
Tuesday's  face-off  between  George  W.  Bush 
and  Al  Gore. 


"What  are  they  affaid  of?**  asked 
Buchanan,  the  Reform  Party  nominee.  Green 
Party  candidate  Nader  said  he'll  be  in  Boston 
for  the  Bush-Gore  event  and  joked:  "Maybe 
I'll  crawl  up  on  the;  stage  there." 

The  bipartisan  Commission  on  Presidential 
Debates,  organizer  of  three  90-minute  debates 
this  month  between  the  Republican  Bush  and 
Democrat  Gore,  said  last  week  that  Buchanan 
and  Nader  had  failed  to  meet  its  criteria  for 
participation  Tuesday. 

Candidates'  names  must  appear  on  enougih 
state  ballots  to  have  a  chance  of  winning  a 
majority  of  Electoral  College  votes,  and  they 
'^-■- ::  •■';'•:  ■'■■  ■^^:\>-:.  ■■■■^•*^    . 


Dow  Jones  Industrials 

down:  173.14 
ctose:  10,650.92 


Nasdaq  Index 

down:  105.5 
dose:  3,672.82 


DoHar 

Yen:  108.12 
Eufo:  1.1324 


must  average  15  percent  support  in  five  major 
national  polls.  For  weeks.  Nader  and 
Buchanan  have  been  at  3  percent  or  below  in 
the  polls,  while  Gore  and  Bush  have  been  at  40 
percent  or  above. 

As  an  alternative,  Nader  and  Buchanan 
appeared  on  NBC's  "Meet  the  Press,"  where 
they  veheracntly  challenged  the  commission 
decision.        :.- 

Gore  and  Bush,  meanwhile,  continued 
studying  for  the  debate,  with  Gore  hunkered 
down  in  Sarasota,  Ra.,  where  he  prepared  for 
his  1996  vice  presidential  debate,  and  Bush  a,l 
his  ranch  ouuide  Waco,  Texas.  Bush  planned 


to  campaign  Monday  in  West  Virginia  bef(ye| 
heading  to  Boston.  ^ 

The  vice  presidential  candidates,  Joseph! 
Lieberman  and  Dick  Cheney,  also  spent 
Sunday  off  the  campaign  trail  in  preparatign 
for  thtiir  only  debate  Thursday  night  Jn| 
Danville,  Ky.  .::;    .    ,  ^        ^ 

Nader  said  the  debate  commission's  deci- 
sion means  Republicans  and  Democrats  "have 
a  monopoly  on  the  debate,  and  the  networks] 
have  allowed  them  to  have  a  monopoly." 

He  planned  a  rally  in  Boston  later  Sunday  I 


Sec  niEPAIUillON,  page  19I 


Uncredentialed  teachers 
prevalent  in  LA  sdiibbis 


EXPERIENCE:  District  says 
little  can  be  done;  impact 
felt  in  low-income  areas 


By  Cadonna  M.  Peyton 

The  Associated  Press 

Three  years  ago,  Xochitl 
.Rodriguez  left  her  human  resources 
job  and  decide^'she  wanted  to  teach. 
Without  classroom  experience  or 
teaching  courses,  Rodriguez  was 
hired  by  the  Los  Angeles  Unified 
School  District  and  placed  in  charge 
or20kindergartners. 

As  she  walked  into  the  Parthenia 
Elementary  School,  she  was  scared 
by  the  thought  "of  being  responsible 
for  so  many  kids."  She  began  taking 
teaching  courses  at  night  and  attend- 
ed occasional  workshops. 

Rodriguez's   situation    was   not 


unusual  for  the  nation's  second- 
largest  school  district.  Educators  say 
a  lack  of  qualified  teachers  for  the 
711,000  students  is  one  of  the  dis- 
trict's gravest  problems,  particularly 
for  poor  and  minority  students. 

The  problem  is  shared  by  New 
York,  Chicago,  Dallas,  Atlanta  and 
other  major  cities,  said  Michael 
Pons,  spokesman  for  the  National 
Education  Association. 

Of  Los  Angeles'  35,100  teachers, 
nearly  one-fourth  lack  the  course- 
work  and  in-class  experience 
required  to  obtain  a  permit.  District 
ofilcials  say  most  of  these  teachers 
are  assigned  to  low-income  commu- 
nities. 

"The  very  children  who  need  a 
fully  qualified,  effective  teacher  the 
most  are  the  least  likely  to  get  one," 


S«eTIAaiER,page19 


Marcdo  Avila  hands  homework  in  to  his  teacher,  Xochitl  Rodriguez,  on  Sept.  28,  at  the  Parthe^a''"""' ""' 
Elementary  School  in  Sepulveda.  Calif.  Credentialed  teachers  are  scarce  in  LA  Unified  School  District 


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Yugoslavia  prepares  for 

ILeCTION:  Milosevic  still 


defiant;  entire  country 
expected  to  shut  down 


«tK«tarinaKratovak         4 

The  Associated  Press 

BELGRADE,      Yugoslavia      - 
icouraged  by  cheering  crowds,  a 
invoy  of  60  trucks  blocked  a  key 
.■^'  'Wiy  Sunday  as  opposition  forces 
*^|pught  to  gather  support  for  a  nation- 
wide   strike    aimed    at    showing 
esident  Slobodan  Milosevic  he  must 
linquish  power. 

*■  The  trucks  -  taking  part  in  a*t!ress 

*  earsal"  for  a  series  of  full-scale 

;kades  planned  for  Monday  -  were 

teeted  by  jubilant  supporters  as  they 
issed  through  the  opposition  strong- 
hold Cacakin  central  Yugoslavia, 
•me  people  tossed  flowers  as  the 
icks  headed  to  an  important  l^i^'* 
ly  linking  Belgrade  with  sotRhern 
igoslavia. 

The  truckers  brandished  banners 
posters  of  Vojislav  Kostunica, 
om  the  opposition  and  Western 
iders  insist  trounced  Milosevic  in 
►t  24  elections.  Milosevic  rejects 
claims  and  says  a  run-off  election  is 
ded  Oct.  8. 

'Smaller,  trafiic-snarling  blockades 

ire  held  at  main  intersections  in  the 

ipital    Belgrade.    Drivers   honked 

Ijyrns  and  pedestrians  blew  whistles 

-and  shook  toy  rattles  -  playing  on  a 

local  expression  for  something  broken 

beyond  repair. 

"No  way  are  we  going  to  settle  for  a 
in-off  and  that  is  now  the  law  for 
iveryone  in  this  country,"  said  Velimir 
lie,  the  mayor  of  Cacak,  an  industrial 
:own  of  80,000  people.  Later  Sunday, 
ibout  10,000  opposition  supporters 
lathered  at  the  main  town  square  for  a 
eventh  consecutive  night  of  anti- 
Milosevic  rallies  there. 

"Our  victory  is  as  pure  as  a  dia- 
nond."  Ilic  told  the  crowd. 
'Kostunica  is  the  elected  president 
tnd  we  must  persist  in  our  resistance." 
^c  called  for  a  total  blockade  of  the 
own  Monday. 

Opposition  leader  Milan  Protic 

irged  people  to  come  out  into  the 

trects  Monday,  stay  away  from  their 

obs  and  keep  their  children  away 

rom  school.  Protic  acknowledged 

■bit  it  would  take  time  to  build 

momentum  among  a  public  drained 

bv  years  of  conflict  and  economic  mis- 

rProtic,  the  opposition  candidate 
or  Belgrade  mayor,  said  the  protest 
laders  would  try  to  escalate  the 


The  AsKxiatwJ  Pr«i 

Opposition  protesters  stop  cars  during  a  blockade  dress  rehearsal  in 
downtown  Belgrade  Sunday. 


tempo  systematically  "until  Milosevic 
realizes  that  he  is  no  longer  presi- 
dent." 

In  Washington,  the  National 
Security  Council  spokesman  P.J. 
Crowley  said  the  Milosevic  opposition 
is  "getting  stronger." 


Even  Russian  President 

Vladimir  Putin ... 

appeared  to  move 

toward  the  Western 

view  that  the  Yugoslav 
leader  was  finished. 


"They  are  sending  a  strong  mes- 
sage to  Milosevic:  'Your  time  in  office 
is  over,'"  he  said. 


But  the  cautious  pace  of  the  opposi- 
tion's campaign  raises  questions 
about  whether  they  will  have  the 
momentum  to  carry  out  their  threats 
of  bringing  the  entire  country  to  a 
complete  standstill. 

Authorities  in  Yugoslavia's  main 
republic,  Serbia,  warned  students 
against  Joining  the  Monday  strike, 
saying  "events  disrupting  school  activ- 
ities" for  political  purposes  "are  ille- 
gal." Students  in  Nis  and  other  cities 
walked  out  of  class  during  protests  last 
week. 

Workers  have  also  walked  out  in 
vital  sectors:  the  largest  coal  mine,  a 
key  oil  refinery,  railway  lines.  The 
strikes  raised  the  prospect  of  power 
and  fuel  shortages.  The  independent 
Beta  news  agency  said  about  1,000 
workers  in  another  coal  mine  in 
Kostoiac  joined  the  strikes  Sunday. 
The  government   urged   miners 

SceinK0SUVM,|»age19 


v!^ 


RLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 


Shot  fired  at 
Nader  campaign 
headquarters 


SACRAMENTO  -  A  shot  from  a  BB  gun  or 
.  air  rifle  was  fired  Saturday  at  the  local  campaign 
headquarters  of  Green  Party  presidential  candi- 
date Ralph  Nader.  There  were  no  injuries  and 
an  investigation  was  under  way. 

Campaign  worker  David  Shorey  said  the  shot 
was  fired  shortly  before  1  p.m.  into  the  glass 
front  of  the  office  near  1 0th  and  J  strecU  about 
three  blocks  from  the  stole  Capitol. 

Authorities  believe  the  shot  may  have  been 
fired  by  sonieone  in  a  passing  car. 

"There  was  a  "Snap'  sound,  and  I  heard  it  hit 
the  glass,"  said  Shorey,  who  was  the  only  person 
in  the  office.  Glass  fragments  were  strewn  on 
tables  and  the  floor 

Police  officers  were  conducting  an  investiga- 
r  Hon.  The  FBI  was  advised  of  the  incident  but  is 
L   not  conducting  pn  investigation,  said  a  police 

I 


department  employee  who  asked  not 
to  be  identified. 

-  \ ."'  -,  •      .w  ' 

Violence  in  Israel 
continues;  9  dead 

JERUSALEM  -  Palestinian  gunmen, 
cheered  by  rock-throwing  rioters,  fired  on  Israeli 
troops  from  rooftops  and  abandoned  buildings 
Sunday  in  clashes  aaoss  the  West  Bank  and 
Gaza  Strip.  Nine  Palestinians  were  kiHed  when 
IffaeUs  returned  fire,  for  a  total  of  29  in  three 
days  of  bloodshed  over  a  contested  Jerusalem 
shrine. 

An  Israeli  border  policeman  was  critically 
wounded  and  lay  trapped  for  houra  in  a  tiny 
Israeli  enclave  in  the  West  Bank  town  of  Nablus, 
as  Palestinian  fire  blocked  rescue  teams  from 
reaching  the  area.  Medics  eventually  got 
through,  but  the  officer  died  Sunday  night. 

The  latest  fighting  came  as  Israeli  and 
Palestinian  peace  negotiators  traded  harsh  accu- 
sations  instead  of  new  ideas  on  bow  to  solve  their 


Priest  aashes  car  into 
Illinois  abbrtjbn  dlhlc 


MaCK:  Rev;  John  Earl 
faces  felony  charge,  will 
be  reviewed  by  diocese 


By  Nicole  SeglcrDizon 

The  Assodated  Press 

ROCKFORD,       III        -  A 

Catholic  priest  smashed  his  car  into 
an  abortion  clinic  Saturday  morn- 
ing, then  chopped  at  the  building 
with  an  ax  until  the  owner  fired  two 
shotgun  blasts  to  stop  him,  police 
said. 

The  clinic  was  not  open  and 

nobody  was  injured  in  the  attack, 

which  came  just  two  days  after  fed- 

'eral  approval  of  the  abortion  pill 

RU486. 

The  man  drove  through  a  door  at 
the  Abortion  Access  Northern 
Illinois  Women's  Center  around 
8:15  a.m.  He  was  swinging  an  ax 
when  the  clinic's  owner  fired  a  12- 
gauge  shotgun  twice.  Neither  man 
was  injured. 

The  Rev.  John  Eari,  32,  was 
arrested  and  charged  with  burglary 
and  felony  criminal  damage  to 
property,  said  Deputy  Police  Chief 
Dominic     iasparro.     Earl     was 


released  later  Saturday  on  $10,000 
bond. 

Iasparro  would  not  comment  on 
statements  Earl  made  to  police 
about  a  possible  motive. 

The  building  owner,  Gerald  W. 
"Wayne"  Webster,  56,  has  rented 
space  to  the  clinic  for  15  years.  He 
sometimes  sleeps  in  the  building  for 
security.  No  one  else  was  inside 
Saturday  morning. 

Police  said  Webster's  weapon 
was  legal  and  no  charges  will  be 
filed  against  him. 

"He  came  at  me  with  an  ax  over 
his  head,"  Webster  told  reporters. 
"He  would  have  chopped  my  head 
off  if  I  wouldn't  have  been  armed 
with  a  12-gauge  shotgun." 

"I  thank  God  and  my  shotgun 
that  I'm  alive,"  he  said. 

Eari  is  the  pastor  at  St.  Patrick's 
Catholic  Church  in  Rochelle,  about 
30  miles  south  of  Rockford. 
Parishioners  gathering  for  Mass  on 
Saturday  evening  said  Earl  took 
over  about  a  year  ago  and  was 
respected  by  the  congregation. 

The  Diocese  of  Rockford  issued 
a  written  stotement  saying  Eari's 
activities  have  been  restricted  while 

SeeOINICpageie 


COURT:  Actors  contend 
affinity  with  characters 
means  they  own  rights 


By  Linda  Deutsdi 

The  Associated  Press 


In  one  of  the  most  popular  TV 
series  ever,  "Cheers"  was  the  neigh- 
borhood bar  where  everybody  knew 
your  name.  And  audiences  knew  the 
characters  by  name,  guys  like  Norm 
the  accountont  and  Qiff  the  post- 
man. 

But  what  about  the  actors  who 
portrayed  them?  Did  George  Wendt 
and  John  Ratzenbcrger  become  so 
closely  identified  with  their  fictional 


alter  egos  that  they  should  be  able  to 
control  any  commercial  use  of  the 
characters? 

The  Supreme  Court  could  decide 
as  early  as  Monday  whether  it  will 
hear  an  eight-year-old  lawsuit  by  the 
two  actors  that  asks  that  question.  If 
it  takes  the  case,  it  could  set  the  stage 
for  a  landmark  ruling  on  copyright 
law. 

The  court  battle  evolved  from 
Paramount  Pictures'  decision  to 
license  Host  International  to  open 
bars  with  the  "Cheers"  name  at  air- 
ports across  the  country.  The  bars 
reproduced  the  "Cheers"  ambiance 
and  even  featured  robots  who  resem- 
bled Norm  and  Cliff. 

See  CHEERS,  page  22 


disputes, 

In  an  ominous  sign  of  escalation 
across  the  West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip, 
Israeli  troops  fired  anti-tonk  missiles, 
hurled  grenades  and  shot  from  helicopter 
gunships.  Several  Israeli  tanks  rumbled  toward 
the  Palestinian-run  towns  of  Nablus  and 
Ramallah  in  a  warning  gesture,  but  did  rtot  cross 
the  lines  of  jurisdiction. 

After  nightfall  Sunday,  both  sides  said  an 
agreement  had  been  reached  to  cease  fire  at  8 
p.m.,  with  each  claiming  the  other  made  the 
offer.  However,  the  shooting  continued,  and  the 
army  reported  a  gun  battle  outside  the  Jewish 
settlement  of  Psagot. 

Thurmond  recovering 
after  collapse 

WASHINGTON  -  Sen.  Strom  Thurmond, 
at  97  the  oldest  person  to  serve  in  the  Senate, 
appeared  "to  be  doing  very  well"  at  a  hospital 
^turday  after  ooflapsing  at  a  restaurant  in  sub- 


urban Alexandria,  Va.,  his  spokeswoman  said. 

Doctors  have  not  determined  why  he  col- 
lapsed, but  "more  than  likely  his  condition  can 
be  attributed  to  dehydration,"  said  spokes- 
woman Genevieve  Emy. 

Thurmond,  R-S.C,  will  remain  hospitalized 
through  Sunday  for  observation,  but  "he 
appears  to  be  doing  very  well,"  Emy  said. 

Thurmond  has  been  hospitalized  several 
times  in  recent  years  for  various  problems, 
including  fatigue,  and  had  prostate  surgery  in 
1999  Emy  said  the  collapse  was  unrelated  to 
previous  illnesses. 

Alexandria  Fire  Department  spokeswoman 
Sandy  Rynn  said  Thurmond  was  taken  by 
ambulance  from  a  downtown  restaurant  to 
Inova  Alexandria  Hospital  at  1 :40  p.m.  EDT. 
He  was  later  transported  to  Walter  Reed  in 
Washington. 

Thurmond  was  lundiing  with  a  suffer  and  an 
acquaintance  when  he  began  to  feel  tired  and 
fainted,  Emy  said. 


With  reports  (rpm  Om^  Biuin  wk»  services. 


'Cheers'  lawsuit  could  set 
new  copyright  precedent 


1,1.;,.,  , ■  ^ ■-  •• .,. jl.  ,■  V ' .  •  f  .>^.'. 


,  ..;'»-. 


-!»•—: — -^i'  '■ ' '' . 


^  *      ... 

-iM'';.  .■■.■'•;'• 


6         Monday,  Odobff  2, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Stalled  MTA  negotiations  back  in 


STRIKE:  Parties  approach 
talks  to  resolve  walk-out 
with  'cautious  optimism' 


The  Associated  Press 

Contract  talks  resumed  Sunday 
in  an  elTort  to  end  a  two-week-old 
Los  Angeles  County  transit  strike 
that  has  left  450.000  people  without 
most  bus  or  rail  service. 

Chief  negotiators  for  the 
Metropolitan  Transportation 

Authority  and  three  unions  met  at  a 
Pasadena  hotel. 

"We're  prepared  to  stay  here  all 
day  and  night,"  said  MTA 
spokesman  Marc  Littman. 

Mayor  Richard  Riordan  met 
individually  with  negotiators,  carry- 
ing on  shuttle  diplomacy  between 
the  rooms,  MTA  spokesman  Marc 
Littman  said. 

The  talks  resumed  a  day  earlier, 
with  Riordan  putting  in  his  first  per- 
sonal appearance  and  announcing 
he  was  "cautiously  optimistic"  an 
agreement  would  be  reached. 

The  words  were  echoed  Sunday 
by  the  United  Transportation 
Union. 

"Beyond  cautiously  optimistic,  I 
would  not  say  a  word,"  said  Goldy 
Norton,  a  spokesman  for  thetinion 
representing  4,^00  bus  drivers  and 
rail  operators. 

Only  a  few  of  the  MTA's  bus 
routes  have  been  running  since  the 
strike  began  on  Sept.   16.  MTA 


Community  organizer  Yolanda  Soils,  right,  announces  Thursday  a  request  that  the  cost  of  lyJ^A  buT ''" 

passes  be  refunded,  during  a  news  conference  in  the  Echo  Park  area  of  Los  Angttes. 

clerks  and  mechanics  are  honoring  '    receipts. 

the  picket  lines.  "Everyone's  hurting."  Littman 


The  strike  has  hit  mainly  the 
county's  working  poor,  students, 
the  disabled  and  the  elderly  who 
cannot  afford  cars. 

Bus  drivers  are  losing  wages  of 
up  to  $1,000  each  per  week,  while 
the  MTA  says  it  is  forfeiting  about 
$2  million  per  day  in  fares  and  tax 


said.  "The  common  chord  today  is 
that  everyone  wants  to  end  the 
strike." 

Littman  said  that  even  if  a  tenta- 
tive agreement  was  immediately 
reached,  the  strike  would  probably 
continue  at  least  until  Tuesday 
because  rank-and-file  union  mem- 


bers were  unlikely  to  return  to  work 
until  they  had  ratified  it. 

It  would  take  a  day  or  two  after 
that  to  resume  service.  Buses  would 
have  to  be  fueled,  serviced  and 
inspected,  while  electricity  would 
have  to  be  restored  to  60  miles  of 
train  track,  Littman  said. 


See  MTA,  page  16 


Researchers  find 
twonewiaults 
running  through 

.  ■■■[i  iniiTy«»i^    I'jH' •      ■  '■'■'. ;■'  -  i  ■■■■■  ■;    ,  ■■■     ■ 

coastal  California 

GEOLOGY:  Scientists  say 
region  capable  of  quake 
as  big  as  magnitude-7.6 


By  Matthew  Fordhal 

The  Associated  Press 

Two  hidden  faults  capable  of 
unleashing  a  magnitude-7.6  earth- 
quake lie  off  the  coast  of  heavily  pop- 
ulated Los  Angeles,  Orange  and  San 
Diego  counties,  researchers  reported 
Sunday. 

Though  the  potential  for  catastro- 
phe  is  great,  the  chances  are  slim.  In 
the  worst-case  scenarios  detailed  in 
the  study,  the  biggest  quakes  occur 
once  every  960  to  2,300  years  on  one 
of  the  faults  and  every  8,800  years  on 
the  other.  -, 

It's  possible  the  faults  release  their 
energy  in  smaller  but  more  frequent 
spurts,  the  researchers  reported  in 
the  October  edition  of  the  journal 
Geology. 

"Because  this  is  new  and  we  can't 
access  it  easily,  we  don't  have  the 
knowledge  base  yet  to  decide 
whether  it  is  going  to  rupture  in  small 
pieces  or  in  one  single  event,"  said 


See  EARTHQUAKES,  page  20 


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8         Monday,  Oaober  2, 2000 


■^'^:' 


^t^i^i. 


Daily  Brum  News 


Sect  protests  at  national  celebratbh 


CHINA:  Tourists  shocked 
as  police  beat  members 
of  banned  Falun  Gong 


By  Martin  Fackler 

The  Associated  Press 

BEIJING  Police  beat  aiid; 
dragged  away  hundre(|$^  of  Faluri, 
Gong  followers  whcT'eniibrged  froni 
crowds  to  chant  and  unfurl  banners 
during  China's  National  Day  celebra- 
tions in  a  protest  that  forced  the  brief 
closure  of  much  of  Tiananmen 
Square. 

The  banned  sect's  protest  in 
Beijing's  main  square,  one  of  its 
biggest  acts  of  civil  disobedience,  was 
an  embarrassment  to  Chinese  leaders, 
showing  thai  the  medit-ation  group 
remains  unbowed  despite  a  brutal  14- 
month  crackdown. 

In  the  morning,  small  groups  of 
Falun  Gong  sect  members  seemed  to 
materialize  suddenly  from  among  the 
,  tens  of  thousands  of  Chinese  tourists 
who  gathered  on  the  square  to  mark 
the  51st  anniversary  of  communist 
rule. 

In  seconds,  police  zeroed  in  on 
them,  shoving  the  protesters  -  mostly 
middle-aged  women  -  into  white 
minivans.  As  they  were  grabbed, 
some  shouted  "Falun  Gong  is  good! 
Falun  Gong  is  good!"  while  others 
threw  sheets  of  printed  paper  into  the 
air,  which  police  immediately 
scooped  up. 

Police  were  seen  beating  most  of 
the  roughly  350  members  of  Falun 
Gong  who  were  detained  throughout 
the  day.  Most  of  the  arrests  came  dur- 
ing the  large  morning  protest  that 
ended  with  police  briefly  closing  more 
than  half  of  Tiananmen,  the  square 


Shell  casings  must  be 
registered  in  Maryland 


The  AssocliletJ  Press 

Police  wearing  new  unifornns  issued  on  Sunday  detain  a  Fatun  Gong 
protester  by  gagging  her  with  her  protest  banner.       , 


where  Mao  Tse-tung  proclaimed  the  • 
founding  of  the  People's  Republic  of 
China  on  Oct.  I,  1949. 

Thousands  of  Falun  Gong  follow- 
ers have  been  arrested  since  Chinese 
leaders  outlawed  the  group,  calling  it 
a  threat  to  communist  rule  and  as  a 
public  menace  that  cheated  members 
and  caused  1,500  deaths. 

Falun  Gong  says  it  seeks  no  politi- 
cal objectives,  just  the  right  to  prac- 
tice free  of  harassment.  Members 
maintain  the  group's  beliefs  -  an 
eclectic  mix  of  traditional  Chinese 
exercise,  Taoist  and  Buddhist  cosmol- 
ogy and  the  teachings  of  founder  Li 
Hongzhi  -  promote  health  and  moral- 
ity. 

In  the  morning  protest,  sect  follow- 
ers chanted  slogans  or  raised  yellow 


banners.  A  few  began  the  group's 
characteristic  meditative  exercises  in 
front  of  the  pole  where  just  a  few 
hours  before  a  military  color  guard 
had  raised  the  country's  red  flag  in  a 
nationally  televised  ceremony. 

They  appeared  up  to  a  dozen  at  a 
time,  and  just  as  police  subdued  one 
group  another  would  emerge  from 
the  crowd.  Punching  and  kicking 
many,  police  forced  protesters  into 
minivans,  packing  them  so  tightly  the 
doors  would  not  shut. 

One  middle-aged  woman,  blood 
running  from  her  mouth,  escaped  a 
clutch  of  officers  who  grabbed  her 
again,  slapping  her  head  and  pulling 
her  into  a  van. 

See  SEa,page14 


GUNS:  Some  merchants 
question  value  of  law, 
say  measure  not  needed 


By  Tom  Studcay  -     ,  .  _  - 

The  Associated  Press  '  .f "' ";'         •     "" 

ANNAPOLIS,  Md.  -  Beginning 
Sunday,  with  every  new  handgun 
sold  in  Maryland,  the  manufacturer 
will  have  to  give  state  police  a  spent 
shell  casing  carrying  the  weapon's 
ballistic  fingerprint. 

Under  the  law  -  the  first  of  its 
kind  in  the  nation  -  the  unique  mark- 
ings on  the  cas- 
ing will  then  be      — ^— — — 


even  if  manufacturers  do  not  pack 
shell  casings  with  the  weapons. 

State  Police  spokesman  Maj 
Greg  Shipley  said  manufacturer.s 
have  been  told  it  is  their  responsibili- 
ty  to   make   sure'  guns   sold   in 

jGun  owner  Jim  Purtillo  of  Silver 
Spring  questioned  (he  value  of  the 
law] "It's  about  nrtaking  it  harder  Ipi 
people  to  buy  guns,"  he  said.  "Bad 
guys  typically  don't  leave  shell  cas- 
ings from  a  revolver  at  a  criijie 
scene." 

The  National  Rifle  Association 
did  not  return  several  calls  for  com- 
ment. 


entered  intp  a 
database. 
When  detec- 
tives find  a  bul- 
let casing  at  a 
crime  scene, 
they  can  go  to 

the    computer     

and     instantly 

identify  the  gun  it  came  from. 

"Countless  hours  of  investigative 
work  can  now  be  eliminated  from 
the  process  of  identifying  the  crime 
gun  and  who  may  have  been  in  pos- 
session of  it,"  said  State  Police 
Superintendent  David  Mitchell. 

A  similar  New  York  state  law 
takes  effect  March  I. 

Five  months  after  the  Maryland 
law  was  signed,  questions  remain 
about  its  effectiveness. 

There  are  no  criminal  penalties 
for  noncompliance  by  manufactur- 
ers, and  state  police  have  told  deal- 
ers they  can  continue  selling  guns 


"The  chain  of 
custody  stinks." 

Sanford  Abrams 

Maryland  gun  dealer 


Maryland 
gun  dealers 
have  worried 
that  manufac- 
turers or  dis- 
tributors may 
stop  shipping 
guns  into  the 

state.    But    at 

least  two  major 
manufacturers  are  making  efforts  to 
comply:  Smith  &  Wesson,  the 
nation's  largest  maker  of  handguns, 
and  Beretta  USA. 

Beretta  USA  said  it  will  pack  shell 
casings  with  handguns  it  knows  will 
be  sold  in  Maryland,  but  warned 
that  its  distributors  are  scattered 
throughout  the  country  and  guns 
sent  elsewhere  could  wind  up  back 
here. 

"If  we  get  an  order  from  Rorida. 
we  don't  have  any  way  of  knowing 
that  gun  is  going  to  Maryland.  It  will 

SeeFIN6EIIPRIIfrS,pa9e14 


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Daily  Bniin  News 


Monday,  October  2, 2000         9 


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10       Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Oiiiy  Bruin  News 


■.r:^: 


areov 


SPENDING:  Congressional 
candidates  raising  record 
amounts  of  contributions 


By  Jonathan  D.  Salant 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  The  price  tag 
of  politics  keeps  getting  bigger. 
Candidates,  parties  and  special  inter- 
ests spent  more  than  S2  billion  by 
Labor  Day  in  pursuit  of  the  White 
House  and  Congress,  according  to  an 
Associated  Press  analysis  of  cam- 
paign spending  statistics. 

The  total,  coming  even  before  the 
traditional  fall  spending  splurge, 
nearly  equaled  what  was  spent  for  the 
entire  1996  election,  stunning  even 
the  most  veteran  political  observers. 

"We  have  lost  all  meaningful  barri- 
ers to  the  flow  of  money  in  elections," 
said  Anthony  Corrado,  a  professor  of 
government  at  Colby  College  in 
Waterville,  Maine. 

This  year  already  has  seen  new 
marks  set  for  the  most  money  raised 
by  a  presidential  candidate  (more 
than  $100  million  by  Republican 
George  W.  Bush)  and  spent  on  a 
Senate  campaign  ($35  million  by 


Democrat   Jon   Corzine-  in   New     unlimited  contributions  known  as  soft 


Jersey). 

Party  treasuries  are  swelling  and 
political  action  committees,  the 
donating  arms  of  special  interests, 
have  boosted  contributions  as  con- 
gressional candidates  rake  in  record 
amounts  of  money. ...; 


"The  average  person  Is 

looking  at  this  and 

doesn't  understand 

how  they  can  have 

influence." 

Scott  Harshbarger 

President,  Common  Cause 


The  net  effect  has  obliterated  the 
boundaries  Congress  set  in  the  wake 
of  Watergate  in  an  effort  to  restrain 
the  influence  of  money  on  politics. 

Critics  blame  the  spiral  on  court 
decisions  that  put  free  speech  ahead 
of  spending  limits,  and  on  the  Federal 
Election  Commission  for  not  crack- 
ing down  on  the  unregulated  and 


money. 

"This  is  a  S2  billion  investment, 
mostly  from  special  interests  and  very 
little  of  it  from  ordinary  Americans," 
said  Scott  Harshbarger,  president  of 
Common  Cause,  which  advocates 
campaign  finance  changes.  "The 
average  person  is  l(K>king  at  this  and 
doesn't  understand  how  they  can 
have  influence." 

An  Associated  Press  analysis  of 
.  FEC  records  and  special  interest 
spending  statistics  by  the  University 
of  Pennsylvania's  Annenberg  Public 
.Policy  Center  indicates  that  individu- 
als and  special  interests  doled  out  at 
least  $2.1  billion  for  the  20(X)  elections 
'  before  Labor  Day. 

The  total  excludes  the  $60  million 
in  taxpayer  assistance  the  presidential 
candidates  received  for  Uie  priifiaries, 
or  the  $67.6  million  in  federal  money 
that  Bush  and  Vice  President  Al  Gore 
each  received  for  the  fall  campaign. 

Experts  expect  spending  for  the 
2000  election  cycle,  beginning  Jan.  I, 
1999,  to  far  surpass  the  $2.4  billion 
spent  in  1996.  lliat  would  be  a  fmal 
high  watermark  in  a  year  that  already 
has  seen  new  records  set. 

-~~~~~~-       Sec  OMMKNS,  page  1* 


f^les  sold  to  Taiwan 
come  with  restrictions 


ARMS:  Deal  cautiously 
made  so  as  not  to  upset 
U.S.-China  trade  talks 


ByRebcrtBurm 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  A  U.S.  missile 
sale  to  Taiwan  includes  a  highly 
unusual  condition;  that  they  will  not 
be  turned  over  to  the  island  democra- 
cy unless  China  threatens  an  attack,  a 
senior  U.S.  defense  official  said 
Friday. 

The  arrangement  is  designed  to 
meet  a  U  .S.  arms  export  pledge  not  to 
introduce  new  ofTensive  military 
capabilities  into  Asia,  where  tensions 
between  Taiwan  and  China  are  a 
source  of  growing  U.S.  concern. 

Taiwanese  pilots  will  train  with  the 
missiles,  designated  the  AIM-I20C 
Advanced  Medium  Range  Air-to-Air 
Missile,  or  AMRAAM,  at  Air  Force 
training  ranges  in  the  United  States, 
the  defense  official  said,  speaking  on 
condition  he  not  be  identified.  Their 
F-I6s  will  be   updated  with   the 


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weapon  control  software. 

"It's  a  way  for  them  to  train  up 
and  be  ready  should' the  threat 
occur,"  without  provoking  China 
into  accelerating  its  pursuit  of  a  simi- 
lar capability,  the  official  said. 
China's  air-toair  missiles  are  far  less 
advanced,  although  a  Pentagon 
report  to  Congress  this  summer  said 
that  later  this  decade  China  is  likely  to 
fiekl  a  new  missile  that  would  give  its 
growing  fleet  of  new-generation  fight- 
ers an  AMRAAM-like  capability. 

The  AMRAAM,  in  use  by  U.S. 
aircraft  since  1991  and  built  by 
Raytheon  Co.,  allows  a  fighter  pilot 
to  launch  the  weapon  from  beyond 
visual  range  of  his  target.  It  also  pro- 
vides a  greater  capability  to  attack 
k>w-altitude  targets. 

The  Taiwan  arms  deal  comes  at  a 
particularly  delicate  moment  in  U.S.- 
China relations,  which  were  set  back 
last  year  when  the  U.S.  Air  Force 
bombed  China's  embassy  in 
Yugoslavia.  Just  last  week,  relations 
took  an  important  step  forward  when 
the  Senate  approved  legislation  to 
normalize  trade  relations  with 
Beijing. 


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Daily  Bniin  News 


Monday,  October  2. 2000       11 


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12       Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  New» 


■^^'■•■^■f*"'*" 


Poisoned  artifacts  prompt  conference 


ARCHAEOLOGY:  Ways  to 
clean  preservatives  from 
sacred  tribal  relics  sought 


By  Christine  Hanley  — - 

The  Associated  Press 

SAN  FRANCISCO  -  David 
Hostler  learned  the'  irixibling  new*  ■ 
when  he  journeyed  more  than  3,000 
miles  from  his  Hoopa  Valley  reserva- 
tion, California's^  iargfest,  to  dig 
through  tribal  artifacts  on  display  and 
in  storage  at  Harvard  University. 

Arriving  at  the  school's  Peabody 
Museum  of  Archaeology  and 
Ethnology,  which  owns  the  largest 
collection  of  American  Indian 
remains  outside  the  Smithsonian,  ofTi- 
cials  suggested  he  don  a  pair  of  gloves 
and  a  dust  mask  before  sifting 
through  the  collection. 

"That's  when  I  found  out  some  of 
the  artifacts  had  been  contaminat- 


e^.^satd  Hostler,  a  director  of  the 
Hoopa  museum  and  a  ceremonial 
leader  of  the  tribe,  which  has  4,000 
members  and  an  89,000-acre  reserva- 
tion about  40  miles  outside  Eureka. 

Two  years  later.  Hostler  and  fellow 
Indians  across  the  United  States 
remain  unsettled  because  human 
remains  and  sacred  objects  being 
returned  to  them  under  the  Native 
American  Graves  Protection  and 
Repatriation  Act,  or  NAG  PR  A,  may 
be  poisoned  with  heavy  metals  and 
pesticides  used  as  preservatives. 

On  Friday,  representatives  of 
Califohiia's  1 10  tribes  began  arriving 
at  San  prancisco  State  University  for 
a  thre^-day  workshop  aimed  at  raising 
awareness  about  the  potential  health 
risks  because  many  of  the  artifacts 
have  been  or  will  be  returned  to  their 
traditional  use. 

Pesticides  and  other  toxins,  includ- 
ing mercury  and  arsenic,  have  been 
routinely  used  on  all  kinds  of  artifacts 
to  preserve  them  and  keep  insects 


aWay,  witfi  the  idea  that  the  objects 
would  only  be  displayed  under  glass. 

But  that  changed  when  NAGPRA 
required  museums  to  return  artifacts 
to  their  rightful  tribal  owners. 

It  is  unclear  how  widespread  the 
contamination  may  be,  since  no  offi- 
cial empirical  studies  have  been  con- 
ducted to  determine  whether  the  tox- 
ins persist  in  harmful  levels. 

SFSU  released  preliminary  find- 
ings Friday  of  a  study  showing  traces 
of  mercury  in  items  returned  to  the 
Hoopa  tribe.  There  were  also  low  lev- 
els of  pesticides  on  some  samples, 
including  DDT  and  naphthalene. 

But  Peter  Palmer,  a  chemical  ana- 
lyst who  led  the  study,  questioned  its 
results,  saying  he  was  "not  sure  how 
they  would  hold  up  in  a  court  of  law." 

He  and  other  researchers  noted 
how  they  are  lunited  by  fmancial  con- 
straints andftK  types  of  tests  they  can 
do  since  tflot  of  die  artifacts  must 
remain  mtact,  and  removing  samples 
could  be  destructive. 


Th*  AuociMcd  PiCis 

Dav*  Hostl«r  waits  at  a  conference  in  San  Francisco,  where  tribal 
leaders  and  scientists  discussed  how  to  salvage  poisoned  artifacts. 


"There  are  no  easy  answen  -  a  lot 
of  uncertainties,"  Palmer  told  a  large 
group  Friday. 

Palmer  and  other  scientists  agree 
more  in-depth  studies  are  needed.  On 
Sunday,  organizers  planned  to  start 
drawing  up  a  cohesive  plan  to  address 
the  issues  raised  at  the  workshop. 


For  the  tribes,  the  waiting  could 
mean  sacrificing  tradition. 

"Repatriation  is  important  for  pre- 
serving our  culture  and  educating  our 
youth,  and  carrying  on  our  religion  as 
it  always  was,"Hostler  said.  "At  this 
time,  hopefully  we'll  fmd  solutions  on 
how  to  get  the  poisons  out." 


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Investment  Management  Division 


Information  Session 

Tuesday,  October  3,  2000 
5:00  p.mr^7:00  p.m.r" 
3rd  Floor  Conference  Room 
at  Career  Center 


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Resume  Drop 

September  19  -  October  10,  2000 

Interviews 

Friday,  October  27,  2000    > 
-  UCLA  Career  Center 


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MINDS.  WIDE  OPEN!^ 

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•  .■.^■  •♦••»■  c  ,■    -    >■'"   «  "^  I 


14       Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Oiiiy  Brum  Nmr 


i 


From  page  8 

As  police  cleared  the  square,  a 
woman  sprinted  across  the  open 
space  until  police  kicked  her  legs  out 
from  under  her.  Once  on  the  paving 
stones,  plainclothes  police  kicked 
her. 

A  few  onlookers  applauded'  as 
police  carried  her  away.  But  the  vio- 
lence stunned  most  of  the  Chinese 
tourists  -  young  children,  families, 
businessmen  in  suits  -  admiring  the 
floral  displays  set  up  in  the  square 
for  National  Day.  Some  were 
knocked  to  the  ground  as  officers 
chased  sect  members. 


Sporadic  protests  continued  in 
the  evening. 

China's  state-run  media  ran  only 
a  brief  statement  on  the  evening 
news  that  condemned  a  "small  nunv 
ber"  of  Falun  Gong  for  "illegally 
assembling  and  intentionally  dis- 
rupting order  on  Tij^nanmen 
Square."    ^  .^^  ■■■■•;  •  ■'■i-f'-;  .i,:,.-^:'-:' 

Falun  Gong,  in  a  letter  recently 
posted  on  the  group's  U.S.  Web  site, 
had  warned  of  protests  if  police  per- 
sisted in  detaining  followers  ahead 
of  National  Day.  The  American- 
based  activist  said  as  many  as  10,000 
followers  from  around  China  head- 
ed to.  Beijing  for  protests. 

Girding  for  trouble,  ^.police 
searched  vehicles  and  traniventering 


Beijing.  Nearby  provinces  detained 
600  followers  over  the  past  two 
weeks  to  prevent  them  Txom  stream- 
ing into  the  capital,  said  the 
Information  Center  for  Human 
Rights  and  Democracy,  a  Hong 
Kong-based  group. 

The  security  actions  appeared  to 
head  off  the  group's  initial  plans  for 
a  large-scale  protest  during  the  dawn 
flag-raising  on  Tiananmen  Square  - 
a  centerpiece  of  the  holiday. 

Some  200,000  spectators  mixed 
with  police  in  new,  blue  uniforms 
and  plainclothes  agents.  Military 
police  by  the  hundreds  ringed  the 
edges  of  the  square  and  hundreds 
more  waited  in  underground  walk- 
ways for  the  flag-raising. 


FINGERPRINTS 


From  page  8 


not  include  the  shell  casing,' 
Beretta  spokesman  Jeff  Reh. 

Neither  company  could  say 
whether  its  gun  prices  will  increase  as 
a  result.      '    "    ..  >. 

Sanford  Abrams,  vice  president  of 
the  Maryland  Licensed  Gun  Dealers 
Association,  said  the  ballistics  flnger- 
prints  may  have  little  legal  value 
because  a  shell  casing  will  travel 
through  so  many  hands  from  the  man- 
ufacturer to  state  police. 

"The  chain  of  custody  stinks,"  he 

Abrams  also  questioned  whether 


ballistic  flngerprints  will  have  any 
practical  value  because  the  markings 
left  on  shell  casings  by  firing  pins 
change  aAer  repeated  firings. 

The  requirement  is  part  of  sweep- 
ing new  gun  legislation  in  Maryland. 
Sunday  also  is  the  effective  date  for 
laws  prohibiting  handguns  from  being 
sold  without  an  external  trigger  lock 
and  barring  anyone  under  30  with  a 
juvenile  record  for  violent  crimes 
from  buying  a  handgun. 

Beginning  in  2002,  Maryland  resi- 
dents also  will  have  to  complete  a 
state-approved  gun  safety  course 
before  baying  a  weapon,  and  the  fol- 
lowing year,  all  handguns  sold  will 
have  to  be  equipped  with  built-in 
locks. 


•■.?; 


CAMPAIGNS 

From  page  10  .  '■ 

Overall,  congressional  fund-raising 
through  midyear  was  up  46  percent 
over  four  years  ago,  from  $447.7  to 
$652.7  million. 

The  political  parties,  too,  are  rais- 
ing record  sums.  Republican  Party 
committees  raised  $376  million 
between  Jan.  I,  1999,  and  June  30. 
2000  -  a  17  percent  boost  over  1995- 
96.  The  Republican  National 
Committee  added  $73  million  in  the 


next  two  months. 

Democrats  raised  $268  million 
through  midyear,  24  percent  higher 
than  the  same  period  four  years  ago. 

Soft  money,  the  unlimited  contri- 
butions to  the  parties  from  corpora- 
tions, labor  unions  and  individuals 
that  do  not  fall  under  federal  limits,  is 
up  even  more  -  from  $149  million  in 
1995-96  to  $254  million  in  1999-2000. 
That's  a  70  percent  jump. 

To  keep  up  in  the  money  chase,  the 
Democratic  National  Committee  set 
a  new  top  ticket  of  $500,000  for  its 
record-setting  $26.5  million  fund-rais- 


er in  May,  and  the  Republican 
National  Committee  created  a  new 
donor  category,  the  Regents,  for 
those  giving  at  least  $250,000. 

Meanwhile,  PACs  gave  $167  mil- 
lion between  Jan.  I,  1999,  and  June 
30, 2000,  up  32  percent  over  the  same 
period  in  1995-96. 

Republican  fund-raiser  Carolyn 
Machado  said  candidates  are  raising 
so  much  money  because  campaigns 
are  becoming  more  expensive  and 
outside  interest  groups,  such  as  labor 
unions  and  business  coalitions,  are 
spending  hundreds  of  millions  of  dol- 


lars themselves  trying  to  influence  the 
election. 

These  groups  have  spent  an  esti- 
mated $256  million  through  Aug.  31, 
according  to  the  Annenberg  Public 
Policy  Center. 

"That  makes  a  lot  more  noisain  the 
campaign,"  Machado  said.  "Fdr  your 
message  to  get  through,  you  have  to 
have  more  money." 

Corrado  cited  another  reuon  for 
the  fund-raising  explosion  -  lawmak- 
ers facing  no  real  challenge  to  re-elec- 
tion using  the  advantage  of  incum- 
bency to  fatten  their  bank  accounts 


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16       Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Datiy  Brum  News 


CLINIC 

From  pages        "  ' 

it  reviews  (he  matter. 

"While  it  is  the  policy  of  this  diocese  not  to  com- 
ment on  the  specifics  of  legal  matters,  it  has  never 
been  nor  is  it  the  policy  or  practice  of  the  Roman 
Catholic  Church  to  condone,  approve  or  promote 
violence  in  any  form  to  achieve  a  desired  end,"  the 
statement  said.  - 

Bill  Cipolla,  a  parishioner,  said  Earl  sometimes 
spoke  about  abortion  but  he  would  not  have  consid- 
ered him  a  radical.  "You  don't  look  for  priests  to  do 
that  type  of  thing,"  he  said. 

Abortion  providers  usually  are  on  alert  for  violence 
following  abortion-related  events  in  the  news,  such  as 
this  week's  approval  of  RU-486  by  the  U.S.  Food  and 
Drug  Administration,  said  Vicki  Saporta,  executive 
director  of  the  National  Abortion  Federation. 

"We  haven't  received  any  specific  threats,  but  any- 
time abortion  is  in  the  headlines  we  issue  an  alert  to 
our  clinics  to  take  precautions  because  there  is  the 
potential  for  increased  violence,"  she  said. 

The  Rockford  clinic  is  not  one  of  the  NAPs  360 
member  facilities,  but  "it's  just  kind  of  common  sense 
that  clinics  would  be  on  alert,"  she  said. 

Earl  did  not  reach  the  clinic  offices  with  the  ax,  so 
damage  was  confined  to  the  exterior  overhead  door 
he  crashed  through  and  woodwork  in  a  hallway, 
lasparro  said. 

The  clinic  houses  the  office  of  Dr.  Richard 
Ragsdale. 

Ragsdale  said  there  have  been  vocal  protests  out- 
side the  clinic  during  the  past  four  or  five  months,  but 
he  said  he  had  not  noticed  Earl. 

"I'm  not  surprised  that  something  happened  on 


The  AjsocHted  Press 


Wayne  Webster,  owftertrf  the  build'mg  that  houses  the  Abortion  Access  Northern  Illinois 
Women's  Center  in  Rockford,  III.,  talks  with  reporters  outside  the  center  on  Saturday. 


the  h^sUrihe  RU-486  announcement,"  he  said. 
"But  this  is  a  little  more  violent  than  we  were  expect- 
ing. 

Ragsdale  said  the  clinic  will  open  as  scheduled 
Monday. 

Ragsdale  filed  a  landmark  1983  lawsuit  challeng- 
ing Illinois  abortion  restrictions,  contending  that  they 


required  doctors  performing  abortions  to  conduct 
their  practices  in  buildings  that  in  effect  arc  hospitals. 
Under  a  settlement  that  was  upheld  by  the  U.S. 
Supreme  Court  in  1990,  women  fewer  than  18  weeks 
pregnant  may  undergo  abortions  in  clinics,  while 
those  beyond  that  term  require  full-service  surgical 
facilities. 


MTA 

From  page  6 


;*Weil  make  a  Herculean 
cftbrt,"  he  said. 

Talks  resumed  after  Gov. 
Gray  Davis  on  Saturday  signed  a 
bill  that  the  bus  drivers  had  said 
could  eliminate  a  major  obstacle 
to  ending  the  walkout. 

The  bill  keeps  workers'  collec- 
tive bargaining  agreements 
intact  for  at  least  four  years  if  the 
MTA  decides  to  split' up  into 
smaller  transit  zones. 

The  MTA  had  complained  for 
weeks  that  the  unions  had  not 
even  submitted  a  written  con- 
tract proposal,  but  Littman  said 
it  finally  arrived  Saturday. 

He  declined  to  go  into 
specifics. 

MTA  officials  have  offered 
the  union  a  S43  million  wage- 
and-benefit  increase  over  three 
years,  but  want  to  cut  spending 
by  reducing  bus  and  rail  opera- 
tors' overtime  work  by  15  per- 
cent. 

The  agency  also  proposes  cre- 
ating a  two-tier  work  force  by 
hiring  more  part-time  drivers, 
who  would  earn  lower,  entry- 
level  wages  and  would  not  be  eli- 
gible for  benefits  such  as  health 
coverage. 


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to  dramatize  his  demand  to  be 
admitted  to  the  debate.      ■- .. 

Buchanan,  whose  Reform  Party 
participated  in  the  1992  debates 
because  of  the  early  popularity  of 
party  founder  Ross  Perot's  ideas, 
said  the  recognized  parties  are 
Republican,  Democratic  and 
Reform.  Buchanan  received  $12.6 
million  in  federal  campaign  funds 
this  year  based  on  Perot's  8  percent 
showing  in  the  1996  election. 

"The  other  two  parties  are 
engaged  in  a  conspiracy  basically  to 
deny  me  access  to  ihe  debate  that's 
going  to  decide  the  election  and  the 


prtsfffetiCy,  ^nd  tSf^AVheritan  peb^- 
pie  are' being  denied  ...  the  ri^ht  to 
see  and  hear  a  candidate  tnty're 
paying  for,"  Buchanan  said. 

"That's  the  injustice. 
■■  I  "The  idea  that  these  two  parties 
have  some  automatic  lock  on  the 
White  House  ...  is  false,"  he  said. 
"What  are  those  parties  afraid  of  if 
they  won't  let  Ralph  and  me  in  the 
debate  argue  our  point  of  view?" 

Most  Americans  support  his  con- 
servative ideas  on  foreign  affairs, 
trade,  the  military  and  the  Supreme 
Court,  Buchanan  averred.  But 
"even-  if  they  don't,  we  at  least 
should  be  able  to  hear  those  argu- 
ments. You're  not  going  to  be  able 
to  hear  them  Tuesday  night,"  he 
said. 


TEACHER 

Frompage4 

said  Margaret  Gaston,  co-director  of 
the  Center  for  the  Future  of  Teaching 
&  Learning. 

The  district  says  little  can  be  done. 
It  checks  candidates'  education  back- 
grounds and  references,  but  is  largely 
powerless  to  prevent  the  most  quali- 
fied teachers  from  choosing  to  teach 
at  the  least  troubled  schools. 

"We  cannot  do  a  forced  transfer 
of  a  teacher,"  said  Superintendent 
Roy  Romer.  "It's  something  we  have 
to  encourage  with  incentives." 

The  issue  prompted  statewide  leg- 
islation in  July  and  September.  It 
offers  incentives  for  people  to  go  into 
-  or  return  to  -  teaching  in  poor-per- 
forming schools. 

It  provides  ■■"~~"^~"""""" 
block  grants  to 
school  districts 
to  pay  for  incen- 
tives, including 
signing  bonuses, 
pay  raises  and 
housing  subsi- 
dies for  teach- 
ers. 

Romer,     the 

former  governor 

V  of      Colorado, 

hopes  to 

improve  recruitment  to  keep  the 
problem  from  getting  worse.  In  Los 
Angeles,  enrollment  is  growing  by 
'about  10,000  students  a  year. 

In  1998-1999.  75  percent  of  the 
district's  new  hires  lacked  creden- 
tials; this  year,  the  figure  is"  57  per- 
cent. 

Regular  credentials  require  educa- 
tion courses,  an  exam  and  experience 
as  a  student  teacher,  while  an  emer- 
gency permit  requires  only  a  college 
degree  and  a  basic  skills  test.  Romer 
said  city  schools  could  not  function 
without  the  lesser  standard. 

"We  wouldn't  have  classroom 
staff  if  we  didn't  have  this,"  he  said. 


In  1998-1999, 

75  percent  of  the 

district's  new  hires 

lacked  credentials;  this 

year,  the  figure  is 

57  percent. 


"We  can't  get  along  without  it.  An 
emergency  credential  doesn't  mean  a 
bad  teacher,  it  just  means  inexperi- 
enced." 

John  Perez,  a  Los  Angeles  high 
school  teacher,  said  that  is  exactly  the 
problem. 

"The  emergency  permit  system  is 
terrible,"  said  Perez,  a  vice  president 
for  the  teachers'  union. 

"They  don't  know  what  they're 
doing,"  he  said.  "They  don't  have  the 
background  in  education,  in  child 
development.  It  took  me  five  years  to 
learn  how  to  teach,  and  it  took  me 
another  five  years  to  perfect  what  I 
learned  in  the  first  five  years." 

At  Parthenia,  in  a  working-class 
neighborhood,  37  percent  of  the 
teachers  have  emergency  permits. 
Most  of  the  school's  950  students  are 
Hispanic      and 
"■"■^■"■■■■■"^      more    than    75 
percent  partici- 
pate in  the  lunch 
program        for 
low-income  chil- 
dren. 

Lisa 
Gennovario, 
whose  son  is  a 
second-grader, 
was  shocked  to 
hear  the  number 
of     underquali- 
fied  teachers. 
"It's  not  right,"  she  said.  "This 
school  needs  quality  teachers.  And  1 
also  believe  they  should  tell  the  par- 
ents." Many  schools  don't  inform 
parents  of  teachers'  experience." 

Gennovario,  38,  said  her  son  often 
comes  home  with  piles  of  homework 
he  doesn't  understand.  Although  she' 
doesn't  blame  the  staff,  she  said,  "I 
just  don't  feel  he's  getting  what  he 
needs." 

After  three  years,  Rodriguez,  now 
28,  has  become  comfortable  in  the 
classroom  -  to  an  extent. 

"I  feel  I  have  to  work  twice  as  hard 
to  prove  I'm  giving  the  students  the 
maximum,"  she  said. 


;■$ 


YUGOSLAVIA 

Fror^rpage  5 

Sunday  to  return  to  work  because  a 
prolonged  stoppage  could  effect  elec- 
tricity supplies  since  the  country  relies 
heavily  on  coal-fired  power  plants. 

International  pressure  continued 
to  build  on  Milosevic,  who  had  reject- 
ed an  offer  of  high-level  mediation  by 
close  ally  Russia. 

The  president  of  neighboring 
Romania,  Emit  Constantinescu, 
urged  Milosevic  to  concede  defeat 
and  congratulated  Kostunica  for  his 
"historic  victory" 

Opposition  leaders,  using  figures 
from  their  poll  watchers,  claim 
Kostunica  won  the  election  with  51.34 
percent  to  36.22  percent  for 
Milosevic.  Bat  the  Federal  Electoral 
Commission,  in  a  tally  criticized  by 
the  United  States  and  other  countries, 
says  Kostunica  fell  short  of  Ihe  major- 
ity needed  to  avoid  a  runoff. 

Even  Russian  President  Vladimir 
Putin  -  one  of  Mitewvic's  fcst  msjor 


allies  -  appeared  to  move  toward  the 
Western  view  that  the  Yugoslav  leader 
was  finished. 

In  Berlin,  the  German  government 
said  Putin  and  Chancellor  Gerhard 
Schroeder  spoke  by  telephone  late 
Saturday  and  agreed  that 
"Kostunica's  election  victory  emphat- 
ically expresses  the  will  of  the  Serbian 
people  for  a  democratic  change  in 
Yugoslavia." 

There  was  no  comment  from  the 
Russians,  and  the  foreign  ministry 
Sunday  repeated  Moscow's  position 
that  Yugoslavs  themselves  should 
"decide  for  themselves"  the  outcome 
of  the  election. 

Milosevic  turned  down  an  offer  by 
Putin  to  send  his  foreign  minister, 
Igor  Ivanov,  to  Belgrade  to  meet  with 
both  sides.  But  two  senior  Russian 
diplomats  -  Vladimir  Chizhov  and 
Alexander  Tolkach  -  arrived  in  Serbia 
late  Saturday.  The  state  Tanjug  news 
agency  reported  Chizov  visited 
Kosovo  on  Sunday  and  was  to  have 
official  meetings  in  Belgrade  the  fol- 
lowing day. 


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EDUCATION 

From  page  1    ,      --■■■y-^-^.::-::.^. 

Book.  ''"-■'■'  ■'■'■■■ 

Both  candidates  want  lo  provide 
schools  with  financial  incentives  to 
boost  performance.  Bush  proposes 
to  set  aside  S500  million  to  reward 
states  with  improved  test  scores. 

But  Jo  Ann  Isken,  a  Principal  at 
MolTctt  Elementary  School  in  Los 
Angeles  and  a  faculty  advisor  at 
UCLA's  Center  X,  said  testing  is.  at 
best,  an  imperfect  measure  of  school, 
teacher,  and  student  performance. 

"When  a  student  arrives  at  school 
who's  been  abused  since  he  was  two 
years  old,  there  are  serious  issues  to 
be  dealt  with  prior  to  teaching  him 
how  to  read,"  isken  said.  • 

"He  may  not  start  reading  with  the 
other  kids,  but  with  counseling  for  his 
abuse,  he  will  start  to  read  eventually. 
But  all  that  the  test  scores  will  show  is 
this  kid  IS  not  reading  which  prompt 
questions  like  "What's  wrong  with 
the  school"  or  'Why  isn't  the  teacher 
trying  hard  enough?'"  she  continued. 

Despite  their  shared  emphasis  on 
accountability  and  choice.  Gore  and 
Bush  differ  when  it  comes  to  how 
they  pfopose  to  increase  choice. 

While  Gore  supports  greater  pub- 
lic school  choice  and  increasing  the 
number  of  charter  schools.  Bush  sup- 
ports providing  vouchers  to  students 
from  low-performing  schools  which 
can  be  used  to  transfer  out. 

The  voucher  issue  will  surface  this 
election  season  in  California,  when 
voters  will  decide  on  Proposition  38  - 
the  school  voucher  initiative. 

Rogers  claims  there  is  a  crisis  in 
public  education,  a  big  part  of  which 
is  caused  by  external  factors,  begin- 
ning with  insufficient  resources 

"A  Congressional"  Budget  study 
said  that  SI 00  billion  is  needed  just 
for  infrastructure  -  like  building  new 
schools."  Rogers  said.  "Without  that 
funding,  you  have  a  situation  where 
you  have  year-round  schools  in 
California  that  disadvantage  poor 
communities  with  dense  populations. 


EARTHQUAKES 

From  page  6 


Rogers  also  said  that  neither  can- 
didate is  talking  enough  about  equity 
in  education.  -  '    ;     •  • 

"Both  candidates  tiave  catchy 
moltos^but  neither  is  discussing  the 
funding  gap  between  students  who 
hve  in  poor  and  wealthy  neighbor- 
hoods," he  said. 

Bush  has  received  some  praise  for 
his  education  policies  in  Texas  by  a 
recent  RAND  study  which  ranked 
that  state  number  one  in  closing  the 
achievement  gap  between  minorities 
and* whites  as  well  as  improving  test 
-sa>f<s.overall. 


In  one  of  his  education  position 
papers.  Bush  addressed  the  issue  of 
educational  inequalities  among  cer- 
tain groups. 

"We  are  a  nation  ...  where  the 
achievement  gap  between  rich  and 
poor.  Anglo  and  minority  is  wide  - 
and  in  some  cases  growing  wider 
still,"  BuslTwrote  in  the  paper.  "My 
administration  will  do  things  differ- 
ently." 

No  matter  how  many  reform  poli- 
cies or  positions  papers  the  candi- 
dates produce.  Rogers  said  it  is 
important  for  the  future  president  to 
remember  that  there  is  more  to  edu- 
cation than  testing,  accountability 
and  vouchers. 

"Both  candidates  more  or  less 
look  at  education  as  a  discrete  policy 
area,  but  it's  essential  to  see  it  as 
embedded  in  a  whole  host  of  other 
social  policy  issues  related  to  address- 
ing the  needs  of  the  working  poor," 
Rogers  said. 

Still,  Isken  said  she  is  optimistic 
that  politicians  are  beginning  to  see 
'the  importance  of  a  more  holistic 
approach  to  education  policy. 
'  "People  are  beginning- to  under- 
stand ,lhe  family  and  conditions  at 
home  and  how  they  relate  to  academ- 
jc_ performance,"  she  .said.  "At  least 
the  Clinton-Gore  administration  has 
increased  funding  for  after-school 
programs  and  neighborhood-  ^jjd 
school-based  school  clinics."  ;    ,  .  -    • 

With  reports  frqm  Michael  Falcone, 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


study   author    John    H.    Shaw   of 
Harvard  University. 

"The  critical  issue  for  hazard 
assessment  is  really  Just  defining  the 
size  of  these  faults,"  he  added.  "The 
size  obviously  dictates  the  potential 
earthquake  magnitude." 

A  7.6-magnitude  quake  would  like- 
ly cause  widespread  damage  and 
injuries.  The  6.7-magnitude 
Northridge  quake  in  1994  killed  72 
people  and  caused  an  estimated  $35 
billion  in  damage 
in  Los  Angeles. 

The      ^— — — 

Thirtymile  Bank 
fault  runs  south 
from  Santa* 

Catalina  Island, 
and  '  the 
Oceanside  fault 
slices  south  from 
Laguna  Beach  in 
Orange  County. 
Both        extend 

south     to     San      _ 

Diego  and  possi- 
bly beyond  the  U.S.-Mexico  border. 

Both  faults  arc  the  same  type  that 
unleashed  the  Northridge  and  1971 
Sylmar  quakes.  Called  blind  thrust 
faults,  they  are  not  clearly  visible  on 
the  surface,  whether  on  land  or  on  the 
sea  floor,  and  are  usually  detected 
when  they  produce  quakes. 

"This  is  the  first  concrete  evidence 
that  we  have  large  thrust  faults  in  the 
offshore  region  here,"  said  Tom 
Henyey,  director  of  the  Southern 
California  Earthquake  Center.  "It  is 
a  significant  finding,  if  in  fact  it  is  the 
case." 

Other  offshore  faults,  such  as  the 
Newport-Inglewood  and  Rose 
Canyon  faults  are  strike-slip  faults. 


where  one  side  slides  horizontally 
past  the  other. 

Thrust  faults,  where  one  side 
mo^cs  over  the  other  as  if  on  a  ramp, 
could  pose  greater  threats  because 
their  quakes  tend  to  have  higher  verti- 
cal acceleration. 

"This  tends  to  be  very  destabiliz- 
ing for  many  types  of  structures, 
including  high-rise  buildings  ahd 
.  other  things,"  Shaw  said. 

And  below  the  ocean,  vertical 
movement  might  produce  tsunamis 
that  wash  over  coastal  areas,  Shaw 
said.  The  researchers  did  not  analyze 
tsunami  potential  of  the  faults. 

The 


,    "This  is  the  first 
evidence  that  we  have 
large  thrust  faults  in 
the  offshore  region." 

Tom  Henyey 

Earthquake  Center  director 


researchers 
from  Harvard 
and  the 

University  of 
Colorado  at 
Boulder  used 
data  collected 
by  oil  compa- 
nies exploring 
for  petroleum. 
The  seismic 
reflection    pro- 

files,  created  by 

measuring 
aspects  of  sound  from  small  explo- 
sions, are  sonograms  of  the  Earth. 

"In  this  picture,  you  see  the  layers 
of  rock,  and  in  some  cases  you  can 
see  the  faults  directly,"  Shaw  said. 

The  faults  have  little  historical 
record.  Just  one  magnitude-5.3  quake 
off  Oceanside  on  July  13, 1986,  likely 
originated  on  the  Thirtymile  Bank 
fault,  the  researchers  said. 

"We  have  such  a  short  history  with 
thrust  faults,  wc  just  don't  know  over 
the  long  term  how  these  things  go," 
Henyey  said.  "It's  possible  you'll  get 
small  earthquakes  now  and  then  on 
these  things  and  then  all  of  sudden 
the  whole  thing  will  just  go  in  one 
shot." 


Daily  Bniin  News 


Monday,  October  2, 2000       21 


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WELCOME 

From  page  1 

initially  to  be  part  of  Days  of 
Dialogue,  a  program  held  last  year 
where  difTerent  issues  were  discussed 
OT  debated  each  day.  But  USAC 
members  were  unable  to  work  out  the 
details  for  the  other  discussions  due 
to  time  limitations. 

Facilities  Commissioner  Steve 
Davey  said  USAC  should  simply  host 
one  day  of  dialogue  with  brief  discus- 
sions about  all  issues  concerning  stu- 
dents. 

"1  think  more  importantly,  the 
forum  should  be  inclusive  to  all  stu- 
dents," Davey  said.  "Why  should  we 
limit  the  issues?" 


■/^  But  Welcome  Week  does  not  only 
discuss  serious  campus  issues.  The 
events  offered  serve  to  create  »lively 
atmosphere  welcoming  new  students 
to  the  university. 

Campus  Events  Commissioner 
Jared  Seltzer  and  Cultural  Affairs 
Commissioner  Marselle  Washington 
have  arranged  for  live  bands  to  per- 
form during  the  week. 

Seltzer  has  also  set  up  a  free  sneak 
preview  of  the  movie  "Dr.  T  and  the 
Women,"  to  be  released  in  theaters 
Oct.  13. 

He  said  his  office  is  responsible  for 
showing  students  a  good  time  and  not 
worrying  as  much  about  other  issues. 

"We're  all  about  having  fun," 
Seltzer  said.  "Get  your  moral  fix 
somewhere  else."  .-,-■. 


DOUGHNUTS 


From  page  3 

Berman,  however,  said  both  busi- 
nesses have  good  products. 

"1  was  a  little  upset  at  first," 
Berman  said.  "I've  been  servicing  the 
campus  for  25-plus  years,  and  all  of  a 
sudden  they  call  me  and  cancel 
because  of  Krispy  Krcme." 

He  said  the  doughnut  craze  started 
by  Krispy  Kreme  helped  business  as 
weii. 

**They  do  a  lot  of  advertising  in 
doughnuts  and  they  talk  about  them 
all  over  these  TV  and  radio  shows," 
he  said. 

Ted  Aliado,  who  works  In  the 
physics  department  at  UCLA,  has 
patronized  SUn's  for  years  like 
dozens  of  others,  and  has  seen  the 
store  change  over  the  yean. 

But  he  and  his  family  still  consider 
a  doughnut  at  Sun's  a  treat. 

"The  doughnuts  are  the  best 
around,"  Aliado  said.  "They're  still 
home^nade,  not  like  Krispy  Kremes'. 
Those  seem  like  prefab  donuts." 

Berman  said  some  of  the  worst 
damage  to  local  business  occurred 
because  Westwood  is  no  longer  part 
of  UCLA  campus  life. 

"We  had  the  most  glorious  times 
between  the  time  I  got  here  until 


about  '86,"  he  said.  "As  far  as  I  was 
concerned,  we  were  part  of  the  cam- 
pus, not  excluded  from  it.         .C     . 

"You  would  sec  a  field  of  white  and 
green  coats  from  the  hospital,"  he 
continued.  "You  don't  see  that  any^ 
more." 

Berman  said  the  restaurants  and 
cafes  opening  up  at  UCLA  and  the 
dearth  of  parking  spaces  both  on-  and 
off"-campus  keep  studenu,  staff  and 
faculty  from  venturing  out  to 
Westwood  to  grab  a  meal. 

**The  few  that  live  on  the  perime- 
ter, they  can  walk,  but  the  others  deep 
in  the  campus  are  not  going  to  walk 
20  minutes  to  grab  a  sandwich,"  he 
said. 

Nonetheless,  Berman  said  he  fares 
well. 

With  the  operation  now  worth  a 
conservative  $250,000,  according  to 
Berman,  he  has  not  only  made  great 
profit,  but  has  realized  many  of  his 
dreams. 

Traveling  has  become  his  passion, 
and  Berman  and  his  wife  have  globe- 
trotted from  Paris  and  Switzerland  to 
China  and  Africa. 

"I  had  Chinese  food  in  Paris  25 
years  ago,"  he  said.  "It  was  most  like- 
ly, second  to  London,  the  best 
Chinese  food  I've  ever  had. 

"And  it's  all  because  of  the  dough- 
nuU." 


CHEERS 

From  pages 

Wendland  Ratzenberger  objected 
to  their  likenesses  being  used  on  (he 
robou  and  sued.  The  studio  went 
ahead  with  the  idea,  changing  the  char- 
acter names  to  Bob  and  Hank. 

The  acton  sued  for  damages  under 
California's  right  of  publicity  law. 
which  protects  celebrities  from 
unwanted  commercial  exploitation. 
The  law  spedTies 

that  no  one  has  a  ■"■■™""""'~" 
right  to  sefl  a 
product  by  using 
another  person's 
name,  signature, 
photograph  or 
likeness. 

Stan  includ- 
ing Dustin 
HofTman.  Bette 
Midler,  singer 
Tom  Waits  and 
game  show  host- 
ess Vanna  Whije     . . 

have  won  dam- 
ages and  prevented  use  of  their  voices 
or  images  in  ads  under  this  law. 
But  the  "Cheers"  issue  is  complex. 
It  raises  the  question  of  when  an 
actor  can  be  considered  so  closely  iden- 
tified with  a  character  that  they  are  one 
and  the  same  and  the  actor  can 
demand  control  over  the  character. 

"This  is  a  very,  very  important  deci- 
sion for  actors  and  for  studios."  said 
Dale  Kinsella.  the  lawyer  representing 
the  actors. 

Kinsella  doesn't  want  the  Supreme 
Court  to  decide  the  case  yet,  saying  he 
wants  the  case  argued  on  the  facts 
rather  than  the  overriding  l^al  princi- 
ples. 


The'Cheers'casehas 

been  before  two  courts 

twice.  If  the  Supreme 

Court  refuses  to  hear  it, 

the  case  could  be 

returned  to  California 

for  trial. 


Noted  First  Amendment  lawyer 
Royd  Abranu,  who  represenu 
Paramount,  wanu  the  Supreme  Court 
to  offer  a  legal  delineation  of  the  cre- 
ative process  in  HoHywood. 

"To  say  that  the  people  who  create 
characten  need  approval  of  various 
acton  is  to  significantly  denigrate  the 
creative  process  by  pUdng  people  who 
played  parts  in  control  of  the  charac- 
ters," Abrams  said. 

Iflhe  acton  prevail,  he  said,  it  would 
discourage  creativity. 

l-os    Angeles 

attorney  Douglas 
Mirdl,  who  spe- 
cializes in  copy- 
right and  Fint 
Amendment  law, 
said  a  ruling 
against 
Paramount  could 
have  far-reaching 
effects. 

For  instance, 
he  said  that  a 
company  pro- 
ducing toy  action 
figures       from 


movies  such  as  "Star  Trek"  might  have 
to  get  permission  frOm  actors  before 
they  could  depict  characten  such  as 
Captain  Kirk  and  Mr.  Spock. 

The  "Cheers"  case  has  been  before 
two  courts  twice.  If  the  Supreme  Court 
refuses  to  hear  it,  the  case  could  be 
returned  to  California  for  trial. 

U.S.  District  Judge  Manuel  Real 
first  dismissed  the  case  in  1993  saying 
Paramount  was  the  copyright  owner 
and  was  acting  legally  when  it  licensed 
the  use  of  "Cheers"  charaften.  The  9th 
US  Circuit  Court  of  Appeal  reversed 
him  saying  the  use  of  the  acton'  identi- 
ty was  a  violation  of  personal  property 
rights. 


Daly  Brain  News 


Monday,  October  2, 2000       23 


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FINANCE        ,. 

From  page  1  ^« 

Fisdier  in  a  letter  to  the  regents. 

The  provision  was  removed 
because  of  fears  of  litigation  from  dis- 
senting students,  Morrison  said. 

The  legal  implications  of  the  refer- 
endum stem  from  the  March  U.S. 
Supreme  Court  decision  on  University 
of  Wisconsin  v.  Southworth  that  con- 
firmed public  universities  can  collect 
student  fees  as  long  as  they  are  distrib- 
uted on  a  content-neutral  basis. 

As  a  matter  of  current  policy,  the 
university  permits  students  to  assess 
mandatory  fees  upon  themselves  to 
fund  organizations  like  the  University 
of  California  Student  Association,  the 
systemwide  student  government. 

Morrison  said  the  national  student 
group  USSA  appeared  to  promote 
only  one  viewpoint,  and  therefore 
could  not  receive  compulsory  student 
fees. 

"My  examination  of  its  Web  site 
suggested  it  was  an  advocacy  organiza- 
tion of  the  type  that  should  be  funded 
principally  through  voluntary  contri- 
butions," Morrison  told  the  regents  at 
the  meeting. 

But  in  her  letter,  Fischer  criticized 
the  university  for  not  investigating  the 
matter  fully. 

"To  date,  no  UCOP  representative 
has  contacted  any  UCLA  student 
about  this  matter,  or  shown  them  any 
policy  or  law  that  would  support  the 
decision  of  the  regents,"  she  wrote  in 
the  letter. 

Morrison  requested  the  provision 
be  pulled  from  the  regents'  agenda 
pending  further  discussion,  including  a 
meeting  of  the  vice  chancellors  of  stu- 
dent affairs  to  be  held  a  week  after  the 
regents'  meeting. 

Representatives  from  USSA  who 
attended  the  regents  meeting  used  the 
public  comment  period  to  tell  the 
regents  they  were  setting  a  dangerous 
precedent  by  dividing  a  student  refer- 
endum,   fy 

They  said  the  board  should  approve 
the  9l<ent  quarterly  assessment  for 
USSA  along  with  the  rest  of  the  refer- 
endum. 

USSA  Vice  President  Julia  Beatty 
said  the  group  works  to  improve 
access  to  higher  education,  and  over 
the  past  year  has  fought  for  and  won 
federal  grants  for  campus  child  care. 

"Just  from  getting  information  olT 
of  a  Web  site,  you  really  can't  get  a 
sense  of  the  history  of  an  organiza- 
tion," said  Beatty,  who  added  that  her 
group  was  never  contacted  by 
Morrison. 

USAC  External  Vice  President 
Portia  Pedro,  who  is  UCLA's  repre- 
sentative to  UCSA,  also  said  Morrison 
never  made  any  inquiries  with  UCLA 
student  government,  but  that  the  gov- 
ernment has  been  talking  to  campus 
administrators  on  the  matter. 

There  is  a  mechanism  by  which  stu- 
dents can  request  to  opt  out  of  paying 
fee  assessments  for  any  organization 
with  which  they  disagree,  Pedro  said. 

Since  the  UC  pays  for  its  own  lob- 
byists, students  .should  be  able  to  do  so 
as  well,  she  said. 

At  the  regents'  meeting,  a  few  mem- 
bers of  the  board  said  they  wanted  to 
make  sure  any  organization  receiving 
mandatory  student  fees  would  be  held 
accountable  for  the  use  of  those  funds. 
But  Student  Regent  Justin  Pong 
said  that  in  general,  such  fees  are  mon- 
itored and  accounted  for,  and  that  the 
outcomes  of  student  elections  should 
be  respected  by  the  Board. 

"Do  we  enter  into  objecting  to  offi- 
cers supported  by  students?"  Fong 
asked  of  the  other  regents. 

UC  General  Counsel  James  Hoist 
recommended  President  Atkinson 
make  a  report  to  the  Regents  before 
further  action  on  the  matter. 

Meanwhile,  a  letter  signed  by  the 
student  body  presidents  of  several  UC 
campuses  will  soon  be  sent  to  the 
regents  urging  them  to  approve  the 
provision. 

USSA  is  urging  the  regents  to 
approve  the  rest  of  the  referendum  at 
their  Nov.  15-16  meeting  at  UCLA. 


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:.j.^'-:._:-^<— i:SMB7T.7->,;.<ir..  ^-  i 


—  Daily  Bruin 


iw*i 


Tuesday 

Is  Westwood  losing 
touch  with  the  UCLA 
community? 

Monday,  October  2, 2000 


¥iewonth€Wel^^ 

Sec  all  this  and  • 

mote  at  the  Oiaily  Bruin's  * 

cool  Web  site:  I 

www.dailybnjin.uda.edu  * 


viewpoint@media.ucia.edu 


Good 


•If 


!  Hels  only  going  to  be  head  of  state 


REUGION:  Candidate  gets 
warned  'faith  no  more'  by 
Anti-Defamation  League 

Religion  and  politics  have 
always  had-an  awkward  rela- 
tionship. Religion  is  sort  of 
like  politics'  unemployed  uncle,  the 
guy  you  invite  to  the  Christmas  party 
because  you  have  to,  even  though 
he's  gomg  to  get 
drunk  and  make 
trouble  by  hit- 
ting on  one  of 
his  more  distant 
cousins,  maybe 
liberty.  The  only 
difference  in 
this  election  is 
that  instead  of  a 
Christmas  party, 
it's  a  Bris  gone 
awry. 

I  am  talking  '. 

about  the  recent 

controversy  over  the  orthodoxy  of 
Joe  Lieberman.  Lieberman  has  made 
much  of  his  faith,  and  his  faith  in  his 
faith,  and  that  he  has  faith  that  his 
faith  will  be  faithful  in  bringing  out 
faith  in  others.  Faith  Hill  declined  to 
comment,  as  she  was  naked  in  a 
desert. 

In  fact,  Lieberman's  faith  healing 
has  become  so  visible  that  the  Anti- 
Defamation  League  (which  annually 
competes  in  a  rousing^ftball  game 
against  the  League  of  Justice,  go 
Aquaman!)  publicly  issued  a  com- 
plaint, saying  they  were  against  reli- 
gion in  politics  in  any  form.  In  other 
words,  "Lieberman,  that's  not 

Lief  is  a  third-year  psychology  and 
English  student  who  doesn't  want  to  be 
born  again,  as  the  process  sounds  very 
painful  for  his  mother.  Contact  him  at 
dlief@ucla.edu. 


JASON  CHEN/DaHy  Brutn  Sfnkx  Staff 


kosher." 

What  the  ADL  did  was  utterly  stu- 
pid from  a  political  standpoint.  The 
ADL  is  going  to  support  the 
Democrats  anyway,  so  why  publicly 
damage  their  own  candidate?  They 
behaved  like  Ike  Turner,  smacking 
Tina  around  and  then  making  her 
sing  for  him.  Well  Joe,  it  looks  like 
you  better  follow  Tina's  lead  and  get 
those  hardest  working  legs  in  politics 
outofNutbush.  . 


Speaking  of  Nutbush,  G.W.  (the  C 
average  governor,  not  the  university) 
hasn't  exactly  kept  himself  free  of 
religion  either.  Remember  when 
John  McCain  said  he  wasn't  a  "Pat 
Robertson  Republican?"  G.W.  took 
the  more  traditional  and  convenient 
road  to  the  right,  to  the  people  who 
put  the  "mental"  in  fundamentalism. 
They're  the  ones  who  want  to  post 
the  Ten  Commandments  up  in 
schools,  as  if  the  Trenchcoat  Mafia 


would  have  stopped  at  Columbine's 
doors  and  said,  "Hey  guys,  we  can't 
kill  people.  They  put  up  a  sign." 
They're  the  ones  who  want  to  make 
sure  that  everyone  prays  to  their  per- 
sonal savior  before  a  football  game 
because  if  there's  one  thing  Jesus 
loves,  it's  gridiron  violence. 

Although  the  ADL's  tactics  were 
out  of  line,  their  message  was  right ' 
on  target.  While  faith  has  its  place  in 
American  life,  it  has  no  place  in 


American  politics.  While  I  do  not 
doubt  the  sincerity  of  the  candidates' 
piety,  its  movement  to  the  forefront 
is  an  obvious  ploy  to  attract  the 
swing  voters  in  the  states  where  God 
apparently  claims  residency  (though 
if  I  were  God  I  wouldn't  set  foot  in 
Mississippi). 

Why  has  religious  faith  become 
such  a  central  issue  in  this  race?  The 

See  UB,  page  28 


Candidates  show  little  actual  interest  In  'the  people' 


RHETORIC:  As  ever,  poor 
continue  to  be  ignored  in 
presidential  campaigning 


By  Adam  Arenson 

Harvard  Crimson 
University  Wire 

Much  has  been  made  in  this  year's 
presidential  campaign  about  Fighting 
for  "the  people."  Texas  Gov.  George 
W.  Bush  says  he  will  leave  no  child 
behind  and  will  end  what  he  has 
termed  the  education  recession  in  the 
midst  of  economic  progress.  Vice 
President  (and  newly  anointed  front- 
runner)  Al  Gore  has  laid  his  claim  to 
represent  "the  people,  not  the  power- 
ful." And  ever-fading  into  the  obscu- 
rity of  low  polling  percentages,  presi- 
dential hopefuls  Patrick  J.  Buchanan 
and  Ralph  Nader  claim  that  only 
their  stands  can  represent  Americans 
in  the  face  of  the  Republicral  system. 


Yet  who  are  "the  people"?  And  do 
they  vote?  On  Tuesday,  the  U.S. 
Census  Bureau  released  its  numbers 
on  income  and  poverty  for  1999, 
which  showed  a  median  household 
income  of  S40,8I6  and  an  1 1.8  per- 
cent poverty  rate  -  the  lowest  num- 
bers since  before 

the  recession  of        — — i— -■— 
the  early  1990s. 
These  are  good 
figures,  and  an 
important  affir- 
mation of  the 
strong  econo- 
my's ability  to 
reach  deep  into 
the  American 

landscape,  but  - 

for  33  million 

people,  still  not  enough  to  lift  them 

out  of  poverty. 

Following  historic  trends,  the  high- 
est poverty  rate  and  lowest  median 
income  were  those  of  African 
Americans,  followed  closely  in  both 


It  is  unfeeling  and 

immoral  not  to  include 

the  needs  of  the 

nation's  poorest  in 

>        your  plans. 


categories  by  Latinos.  Asian 
Americans  earned  significantly  better 
than  the  average  median  income, 
while  whites  hugged  the  national  line. 
These  are  most  obviously  the  peo- 
ple of  the  country  -  rural  whites, 
urban  blacks  and  Latinos.  A  call  to 

the  people 
■■■~~~'~"^^~      should  be  a 

promise  to  these 
economically, 
socially  and  cul- 
turally marginal- 
ized Americans 
that  the  candi- 
date will  bring 
them  along  on 
the  trip  to  the 

White  House. 

If  a  claim  for 
the  support  of  the  people  is  anything 
more  than  rhetoric,  it  can  be  a  gutsy 
one.  Because  these  people  are  not 
those  sought-afler  suburban  indepen- 
dent voters,  whom  the  campaigns  are 
wooing  somewhere  between  the  pri- 


vate school  door,  the  movie  theater 
and  the  gas  tank  of  the  SUV.  These 
people  are  more  likely  to  be  the  ones 
pumping  that  gas,  taking  the  ticket  or 
mopping  the  schoolroom  floor. 

These  are  people  who  may  not 
appear  in  the  polls  as  likely  to  vote 
because  the  five  minutes  of  civic  duty 
may  be  five  free  minutes  too  many  to 
ask  of  the  shift  manager,  the  childcare 
provider  or  the  overworked  spouse. 
For  these  men  and  women,  undecid- 
ed does  not  only  describe  their  status 
on  who  to  vote  for  -  it  describes  their 
feelings  on  whether  voting  is  worth 
their  time  at  all. 

Today,  there  are  33  million  votes 
up  for  grabs  -  and  no  one  is  paying 
any  attention.  ' 

Despite  positioning  themselves  as 
men  of  "the  people,"  Bush  and  Gore 
are  ignoring  the  poor  in  favor  of  the 
shoppers  at  the  suburban  strip  malls 
where  "the  people"  work  and  the 

S«eAIKNS0N,pa9«29 


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Daily  Brutn  Viewpoint 


Mondiy,  October  2, 2000       27 


Media 


tW-IT-  -^  '•' 


MTA;  Agency's  wasteful 
spending  forces  strike, 
not  underpaid  workers 

At  12:01  a.nfi.  on  Saturday  Sept. 
16,  workers  from  the  United 
Transportation  Union  walked 
off  their  jobs  m  Los  Angeles  when 
negotiations  with  the  Metropolitan 
Transportation 
Authority  failed 
to  produce  a  fair 
contract. 
Workers  imnte- 
diately  set  up  24- 
hour  picket  lines 
across  the  coun- 
ty. This  is  the 
seventh  time  in 
the  last  30  years 
that  MTA  work- 
ers have  been 
forced  to  go  on 
strike  in  order  to 
defend  their  standard  of  living. 

The  UTU  represents  4,400  bus  dri- 
vers and  rail  operators  who  provide 


places  blame  on  drivers,  not  costly  rail  projects 


daily  service  to  450,000  passengers. 
Clerks  and  mechanics  who  work  for 
the  MTA  are  also  honoring  the  picket 
line.  Some  surrounding  cities  are  still 
operating  their  own  bus  lines,  unaf- 
fected by  the  strike,  but  the  strike  has  - 
halted  virtually  all  public  transporta- 
tion in  the  county.  Make  no  mistake 
about  it,  the  MTA  bears  the  sole 
responsibility  for  this  strike. 

Our  support  should  be  with  these 
drivers  who  are  who  are  on  strike  to 


fight  for  their  livelihood.  The  MTA 
wants  more  work  to  be  done  for  lets 
pay.  Right  now  drivers  are  working 
lO^our  shifts  with  two  hours  paid 
overtime."  The  MTA  has  put  forward 
a  plan,  which  calls  for  its  employees 
to  work  13  hours  a  day,  four  days  a 
week,  but  with  absolutely  no  overtime 
pay. 

The  drivers  would  be  paid  regular 
wages  for  10  hours  each  day  and  the 
other  three  hours  would  count  as 


unpaid  breaks  or  preparation  time; 
The  union  estimates  that  this  new  pay 
system  would  cut  average  earnings  by 
15  percent.  The  MTA  also  wants  to 
replace  full-time  drivers  with  a  part- 
time  work  force  to  further  reduce 
costs. 

With  a  debt  that  will  total  $7  bil- 
lion over  the  next  30  years,  the  MTA 
is  trying  to  portray  itself  as  a  helpless 
agency  that  desperately  needs  to  cut 
costs.  Tim  Wekk),  the  MTA's  chief   -^ 


negotiator,  said  the  transit  agency     ^ 
needs  S23  million  in  savings  for  rail ' - 
and  bus  operations  over  the  next 
three  years,  and  they  need  the  conces- 
sions from  the  union.  Their  plan  is  to 
get  every  penny  from  cutting  "labor 
costs." 

Mayor  Richard  Riordan,  also      -  r 
chair  of  the  MTA  board,  said,  "We 
want  to  get  rid  of  the  antiquated  work 

.•-^;  "■•;;.■.-."       SceSanVMTlpageSO 


Midiael 
Sdiwartz 


Schwartz  is  a  fifth-year  sociology 
student  who  can  be  reached  at 
tiggertrot@hotmail.com. 


RODERICK  noXAS/Daily  Bium 


Speaks  Out 


For  more  than  two  weeks,  the  United  Transportation  Union,  which  represents  4,400  bus  and  rail  operators  in  the  Los  Angeles  area,  has  been  on  strike  against  the 
Metropolitan  Transportation  Authority.  This  has  had  a  major  impact  in  communities  all  over  Los  Angeles.  How  do  you  feel  about  the  MTA  strike?  .  ^7~ 


Stacy  Chu-Jones 

Third-year,  psychology 


"I  don't  know  so  much  about  it.  What 
I've  heard  is  that  both  sides  are  relatively 
unreasonable.  The  drivers  are  getting 
good  benefits  and  good  pay  and  they're 
still  not  happy  and  want  to  work  over- 
time. The  management  doesn't  want  to 
pay  them  for  all  of  that.  So  they  should 
just  probably  knock  off  some  of  the 
routes  that  are  not  so  busy  and  put  those 
workers  in  when  they  need  them  for  over- 
time as  opposed  to  hiring  new  ones  because  the  new  ones 
would  be  hard  to  train.  I  think  the  strike  should  just  stop 
because  the  people  who  are  suffering  are  the  poor  people  who 
have  to  get  on  the  bus  and  go  to  work.  They  are  already  part  of 
the  working  class  and  so  they  should  not  have  to  do  that." 


LeIobaPaM  

Fifth-year,  eogineering  and  9eok)gy 

"The  folks  behind  the  MTA  really 
aren't  being  fair  to  the  drivers.  They 
come  through  with  policies  that  aren't 
really  intact.  They  make  no  sense  to  the 
drivers  who  make  up  most  of  their  driver 
population  Fifty  percent  of  their  drivers 
haven't  been  with  them  more  than  five 
years.  They  make  policies  that  they  say 
will  give  $50,000  a  year  to  anybody  who 
has  worked  longer  than  15  years,  but 
nobody  has  worked  longer  than  15  years  and  they  call  this  their 
'remedy  package,'. which  is  not  working  and  not  sufficient.  I 
definitely  side  with  the  strikers." 


SinjMowjood 

Third-year,  psychobiology 


"To  tell  you  the  truth,  I'm  not  that 
informed  about  the  MTA  strikes,  but 
from  what  I've  heard,  it  seems  as  if  the 
workers  have  voiced  their  concerns.  Since 
they  have  been  striking  for  so  long,  it  is 
obviously  something  of  importance  to 
them.  It  just  goes  to  show  you  that  you 
can't  take  anything  for  granted.  L.A.  is 
not  a  pedestrian  town.  Many  people  own 
cars.  Still,  this  strike  has  created  a  huge 
problem  for  many  LA.  residents.  For  those  of  us  who  do  not 
take  the  bus,  just  looking  at  the  strike  goes  to  show  how  much 
we  need  to  realize  what  w^  have." 


Annabel  Abnosi 
Third-year,  political  science 


"I  don't  think  striking  is  the  right  way 
to  go.  Still,  the  MTA  workers  have  a  right 
in  this  country  to  do  just  that.  So  if  they 
feel  strongly  enough  about  it ,  then  that's 
what  they  should  do." 


V       1 


Rony  Dekemnenjian 

First-year,  undeclared 

"We  feel  that  there  is  too  much  traffic 
on  the  freeways  because  of  the  MTA 
strikes.  And  I  think  those  strikers  should 
sit  down  and  work  things  out.  It  affects 
everyone.  The  freeway  traffic,  the  low- 
income  workers,  the  people  in  my  com- 
munity who  come  in  and  clean  the  houses 
for  us.  I  live  in  Glcndale  in  the  mountain 
areas  and  a  lot  of  homes  that  seek  domes- 
tic help  have  to  actually  go  drive  down- 
town and  pick  the  maids  up  themselves. 


Josiah  Johnson 

First-year,  undeclared 


Speaks  Out  compiled  by  CuauhtenxK:  Ortega,  Daily  Bruin  Senior 
Staff.Photos  by  Dave  Hill.Daily  Bruin  SeniorStaff.      .-: 


"The  workers  have  not  gotten  a  pay 
raise  in  10  years,  so  I  think  it  is  good  thai 
they  are  a  special  part  of  the  community. 
My  uncle  actually  works  for  the  MTA,  so 
he's  striking  They're  upset  about  it  They 
need  to  get  paid  more  money  just  like  all 
people  who  get  undercut  by  society." 


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•  •III  I   VV     t" 


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LIEF  j 

F(orii|Mge2dTr  ^       ^- 

fact  is  that  in  the  mind  of  the  average 
religious  voter,  if  a  candidate  goes  to 
church  a  lot  and  can  quote  chapter 
and  verse,  he  must  be  raoral  and 
trustworthy.  "I'm  a  good  family 
man,"  say  the  candidates. 
Functioning  reproductive  organs 
aren't  much  of  a  yardstick  for  moral- 
ity. Just  because  a  politician  cloaks 
himself  in  holy  robes,  it  doesn't 
mean  he's  wearing  anything  under 
them.    "'~ -'■:".:  ."  •  ■  '.  ■  •■■;"■;":"■     ■ 

G.W.  even  claimed  his  favorite 
political  philosopher  was  Jesus 
Christ,  hardly  a  "subliminal"  nod  to 
the  Christian  Coalition  types.  Bush 
isn't  likely  to  pick  a  real  political 
philosopher  like  James  Madison, 
whom  Bush  believes  invented  the 
light  bulb.  In  fact,  Jesus  is  probably 
the  only  "philosopher"  G.W.  knows 
by  name.  I  say,  if  Jesus  is  a  political 
philosopher  then  Moses  is  a  hydro- 
dynamic  engineer. 

Some  have  said  that  the  fact  that 
people  are  more  tolerant  of 
Lieberman's  stumping  implies  a  dou- 
ble standard.  "If  it  was  a  Christian 
Ulking  about  their  faith,"  they  say, 
"people  would  be  up  in  arms." 
They're  right.  This  country  is  far 
more  nervous  about  a  Christian  fun- 
damentalist making  policy  decisions 
than  a  Jewish  one.  There  is  a  simple 
reason  for  this  difference:  Christians 
are  scary. 


You  will  never  hear  a 

knock  at  your  door  and 

find  a  rabbi  handing 

out  flowers  and  Torahs 

and  denouncing 

Darwin. 


Well,  that's  an  oversimplification. 
What  I  mean  by  that  is  that  there  is 
always  something  scary  about  an 
overwhelming  majority,  especially 
when  there's  an  accompanying 
dogma.  I  grew  up  as  one  of  a  handful 
of  Jews  in  a  highly  goyisha  (Yiddish 
for  "non-Jewish")  town,  and  let  me 
tell  you  that  when  Christmas  rolled 
around  I  felt  like  the  lone  straight 
guy  at  a  Cher  concert.  It's  intimidat- 
ing being  surrounded  by  a  mass  of 
people  who  believe  differently  than 
you,  particularly  when  they  organize 
to  affect  governmental  policy. 

Furthermore,  clergy  members 
seem  to  hand  out  far  too  many  fly-  "'• 
ers.  To  all  of  you,  religious  or  other- 
wise, who  feel  the  need  to  inundate    ' 
the  rest  of  us  with  flyers,  why  not  just 
throw  the  paper  in  the  garbage  can 
yourselves  and  leave  out  the  middle- 
man? 

Another  reason  for  the  double 
standard  is  that  for  a  long  time  now 
the  Christian  right  has  been  trying  to 
assume  a  missionary  position  with 
the  rest  of  the  country.  Jews,  on  the 
other  hand,  are  not  out  to  recruit. 
You  will  never  hear  a  knock  at  your 
door  and  find  a  rabbi  handing  out 
flowers  and  Torahs  and  denouncing 
Darwin.  Therefore  there  is  little  to 
fear  from  Lieberman  in  power, 
because  according  to  the  principles 
of  Judaism  itself  (which  don't 
require  membership  in  the  religion 
to  get  into  heaven),  he  will  not  make 
policies  that  force  his  religious 
beliefs  On  others. 

For  example,  had  Pat  Robertson's 
presidential  campaign  in  1988  suc- 
txeded,  it  would  be  a  safe  bet  he 
would  have  fought  hard  to  put  Jesus 
in  the  classroom.  But  if  elected,  I 
would  bet  Lieberman  doesn't  do 
anything  to  remove  pork  from 
school  cafeterias. 

A  side  note  to  all  those  who  want  ' 
prayer  in  schools:  it  already  exists.  I '"' 


SceUB,|M9e29 


■rtU^M  tm    I  r.j      ■  j^.^i   <■'— »M 


■■tftM   ■ 


LIEF  :^;\:: -;:;;  |.::.-:: 

From  page  28 

think  every  student  has  intoned  the 
following:  Oh  Lord,  in  Thy  grace 
and  mercy,  spare  me  Thy  wrath  in 
the  form  of  Thy  in-class  essays  of 
three.  Thy  interminable  logarithms, 
and  thy  memorized  primate  anato- 
my, and  deliver  us  from  Thy  judg- 
ment on  Finals  Week. 

Wouldn't  it  be  nice  to  have  faith 
in  our  politicians  before  we  worry 
how  much  faith  they  put  in  some- 
thing else?  I  want  to  hear  proof  of 
"honesty,  not  proof  of  church  atten- 
dance. I  don't  care  what  Jesus  has 
done  for  them.  I  do  care  what  they 
have  done  to  help  others  (Dick 
Cheney  only  gave  one  percent  of  his 
$20,000,000  earnings  to  chanty). 
Why  is  it  that  the  same  politicians 
who  tout  themselves  as  good 
Christians  are  the  same  ones  who  are 
quick  to  cut  the  most  charitable  pro- 
grams the  government  offers?  ' 
Maybe  we  can't  miraculously  feed  all 
the  homeless  on  some  fishes  and 
loaves,  but  that  doesn't  mean  we 
should  eliminate  food  stamps. 


If  elected,  I  would  bet 

Lieberman  doesn't  do 

-anything  to  remove 

pork  from  school 

cafeterias. 


I  am  not  insinuating  that  people's 
faith  in  God  is  worthless;  far  from  it. 
But  when  people  argue  that  the 
words  "In  God  We  Trust"  appear  on 
a  quarter,  I  feel  tempted  to  remind 
them  that  the  word  "Liberty" 
appears  on  the  quarter  in  far  larger 
letters  than  any  other  text  on  the 
coin.  Although  the  Declaration  of 
Independence  declares  people  are" 
"endowed  by  their  creator  with  cer- 
tain inalienable  rights,"  there  is  a 
very  good  reason  that  the  creator  is 
not  mentioned  by  name. 

The  last  time  we  let  religion  inter- 
fere heavily  with  American  politics 
nineteen  people  were  burned  as 

witches.  I  guess  if  you  love  God   

enough  you  have  no  compunction 
with  setting  granny  ablaze.  Whether 
you're  playing  for  Team  Jesus  or 
Team  Kreplach,  being  an  MVP  or  a 
bench  warmer  shouldn't  matter  off 
the  field. 


ARENSON 

From  page  26 

commuters  at  the  rail  station  where 
"the  people"  make  change.  Gore  has 
at  least  been  to  some  of  these  places, 
on  his  marathon  Labor  Day  tour,  but 

SD  candidate  has  focused  on  them 
nee  President  Clinton  took  his 
ooverty  tour  last  year.  Since  then,  as 
fcvelyn  Nieves  recently  wrote  in  the 
NJew  York  Times,  "the  poor  have 
coped  alone  " 

At  one  level,  you  can  hardly  blame 
the  major  party  candidates.  The 
shoppers,  the  commuters,  the  high- 
tech  employees  and  yes,  the  soccer 
moms  -  they  are  registered  voters, 
likely  to  vote  but  unsure  for  whom. 
They  may  be  fickle,  but  they  have 
influence  too;  not  quite  like  the 
AARP  and  its  waving  fields  of  gray, 
but  a  powerful  constituency  nonethe- 
less. It's  why  Medicare,  prescription 
drug  importation  and  income-tax 
credits  fill  the  candidates'  speeches, 
even  when  they  are  held  in  school 
auditoriums  and  on  city  streets. 

At  another  level,  however,  you  can 
hardly  excuse  the  candidates. 
Understanding  who  "the  people"  are 
may  be  a  Rorschach  test  of  American 
social  thought,  but  it  is  unfeeling  and 
immoral  not-  to  include  the  needs  of 

Sm  AIENSON,  page  31 


...•';,-    I 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Monday,  Octobef  2, 2000       29 


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SCHWARTZ 

From  page  27 


rules  that,  like  a  cancer,  are  destroy- 
ing our  transit  system."  The  "conces- 
sions" and  "compromises"  they  are 
seeking  would  be  devastating  to  these 
workers. 

What  the  MTA  doesn't  tell  the 
public  is  that  their  debt  is  a  result  or 
the  billions  of  dollars  it  has  wasted  on 
light  rail  projects  that  only  serve  a 
minority  of  its  riders.  The  MTA  has 
spent  billions  on  the  subway  and  left 
their  buses  to  fall  apart.  The  MTA 
was  found  guilty  in  a  federal  civil 
rights  lawsuit  for  this  policy  and  was 
ordered  by  the  judge  to  reduce  over- 
crowding and  improve  bus  services. 
The  MTA  sees  only  two  solutions  for 
their  problem:  either  cut  costs  by 
forcing  workers  to  make  concessions 
or  raise  fares  on  the  people  who  rely 
on  their  service  (Los  Angeles  Times, 
Sept.  19).  The  MTA  has  left  out 
important  facts  when  crying  their 
tale  of  poverty  to  the  public;  they 
don't  talk  about  the  money  they 
spent  on  their  headquarters. 

The  MTA  spent  almost  half  a  bil- 
lion dollars  on  their  brand-new  build- 
ing downtown.  The  26-story  office 
has  a  glass-domed  ceiling  with 
English  brick  and  Italian  granite. 
Waterfalls,  aquariums  and  murals 
decorate  it  along  with  hand-made 
Latin-themed  grilles.  (L.A.  Times, 
Sept.  17).  If  the  MTA  wanted  to  cut 
costs,  why  did  they  spend  half  a  bil- 
lion dollars  on  this  building?  Why  do 
they  continue  to  fund  costly  subway 
projects  that  only  make  wealthy  con- 
tractors even  richer?  Instead  of  sav- 
ing the  S23  million  in  areas  where 
they  could,  they  have  unleashed  a 
ruthless  attack  on  their  unionized  bus 
drivers.  ■. 


Drivers  I  spoke  with 

said  they  couldn't 

make  $50,000  even  if 

they  worked  every  day 

of  the  year. 


These  drivers  arc  portrayed  as 
extremely  well  offnnancially,  in 
order  to  make  them  appear  selfish, 
especially  in  contrast  with  the  low- 
income  riders. 

The  MTA  says  that  drivers  make 
an  average  of  SSO.OOO  a  year  and  an 
additional  S20,000  in  overtime. 
Mayor  Riordan  said  that  some  MTA 
workers  make  up  to  $80,(XX)  a  year. 
This  is  a  gross  distortion  of  the  truth. 
According  to  an  article  in  the  L.A. 
Times  on  Sept.  21,  entry-level  drivers 
are  only  making  $8  an  hour.  The 
average  worker  would  need  to  work 
56.5  hours  a  week  to  make  $50,000  a 
year,  and  only  3  percent  of  drivers 
make  over  $75,000  a  year. 

Drivers  I  spoke  with  said  they 
couldn't  make  $50,000  even  if  they 
worked  every  day  of  the  year. 

An  attempt  has  been  made  by  the 
MTA  and  the  media  to  pit  the  bus 
drivers  and  the  bus  riders  against 
each  other.  Drivers  are  also  shown  as 
uncompassionate  people  who  do  not 
care  about  the  "poor,  minority  rid- 
ers." 

Stories  run  in  the  L.A.  Times 
about  kids  not  being  able  to  go  to 
school,  people  missing  doctors 
appointments,  and  people  walking 
hours  upon  hours  to  get  to  work. 
But,  rather  than  blame  the  MTA, 
these  stories  put  the  blame  on  the  dri- 
vers. 

But  the  riders  are  not  falling  for 
this  game.  They  know  exactly  who  is 
to  blame  for  the  strike.  As  a  former 
public  transportation  commuter  1  am 
well  aware  of  what  the  drivers  and 
riders  face  daily.  Drivers  are  given 
schedules  that  are  impossible  to 
me<!t,  and  we  have  to  ride  in  buses 


s«csaiwiurn;iM9e3i 


~t — <»^», 


i 


■i-.i  ,i 


OaiiyBfum  Viewpoint 


Monday,  October  2,2000        1%:, 


SCHWARTZ 


From  page  3flh^ 


th4t  are  completely  unreliable.  I 
missed  two  midterms  because  my  bus 
broke  down  and  it  took  five  hours  a 
day  to  commute  from  Long  Beach  to 
school.  Meanwhile  the  MTA  lets 
their  buses  collapse  while  lavish  new 
light  rail  projects  that  s6rve  wealthy 
commuters  are  given  billions  of  dol- 
lars. 

Members  of  the  Bus  Riders  Union 
have  expressed  their  solidarity  with 
the  bus  drivers,  saying  things  like, 
"The  MTA  is  being  greedy  and  self- 
ish," and  "the  MTA,  they  got  all  the 
money  and  they  don't  want  to  cough 
up  nothing."  One  person  said, 
"Everyone  knows  they  need  better 
wages,  the  companies  are  always 
offering  less  than  what  the  workers 
really  need."  Other  riders  I  spoke 
with  expressed  sympathy  with  the  dri- 
vers saying  that  if  they  were  in  the 
drivers'  shoes,  they'd  be  on  strike 
also.  , 


The  3,000-member  Bus 

Riders  Union,  which 

also  has  50  thousand 

supporters  are  behind 

the  bus  drivers  in  their 

.       struggle. 


The  3,000-mcmber  Bus  Riders 
Union,  which  also  has  50,000  sup- 
porters are  behind  the  bus  drivers  in 
their  struggle.  They  know  that  the 
MTA  claiming  to  care  atx)ut  poor 
bus  riders  is  a  joke.  MTA  buses  are  in 
terrible  conditions,  and  workers  I 
spoke  with  told  me  that  many  buses 
are  unsafe. 

Service  cuts  are  a  regularity,  and 
buses  are  horribly  overcrowded.  A 
member  of  the  MTA  board  stated 
that  "if  the  MTA  fails  to  achieve  the 
savings  it  needs  from  the  drivers 
union,  it  will  mean  a  20  percent 
increase  in  the  basic  bus  and  rail 
fair."  So  much  for  their  consideration 
of  the  "poor  bus  riders." 

The  drivers  are  ready  for  a  long 
strike.  They  know  that  this  fight  is 
about  their  livelihood  and  are  resist- 
ing giving  into  the  MTA's  demands. 

The  MTA's  budget  problems 
should  not  be  balanced  on  the  backs 
of  the  bus  drivers  or  the  bus  riders. 
They  should  look  at  their  $500  mil- 
lion headquarters  a^  an  example  of 
how  they  could  >Tave  prevented  their 
$23  million  deficit.  Public  transporta- 
tion should  be  an  accessible  right  for 
everyone,  not  a  privilege.  MTA 
workers  deserve  fair  wages,  fair  bene- 
fits, decent  hours  and  safe  working 
conditions.  If  you  want  to  help  the 
workers  in  theiF  fight,  call  the  UTU 
local  headquarters  at  (626)  962-9980. 


ARENSON 

From  page  29 

the  nation's  poorest  in  your  plans. 
Policies  that  could  help  those  at  the 
margin  include  an  increase  in  the 
minimum  wage  to  a  livable  standard; 
guarantees  of  safety  for  their  children 
and  of  a  quality  education;  a  reform 
of  the  penal  system  and  its  rehabilita- 
tion programs;  and  support  for  fami- 
lies, whether  in  helping  them  retain  a 
family  farm  or  reunite  with  relatives 
wishing  to  immigrate  here. 

Sure,  the  people  to  whom  the  can- 
didates talk,  who  opine  on  private 
investment  of  Social  Security  funds 
and  consider  taking  public  funds  to 
pay  the  local  private  school  tuition, 
will  vote  in  November  and  will  likely 
decide  the  contest's  outcome.  But 
wouldn't  we  be  prouder  as  a  nation  if 
the  people  who  languish  at  the  base 
of  our  society  would  be  the  focus  of 
such  attention? 


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Team  effort 

Matt  Damon  and  Ben  Affleck  embark  on 
another  project  together,  working  with  an 
unknown  writer/director  on  their  new 
screenplay. 


Dajiy  Bruin 


Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Boxing  tcainer  Hector  (Jaime  TIrelll)  gets  Diana  (Michelle  Rodriguez)  hyped  up  before  a  match  in  the  new  film  -Girlflght." 


ITTING 


Photos  from  Scfeen  Gems 

■-.     ^■■■-'' 


Michelle  Rodriguez  takes  a  breal<  in  the  ring  in  Karyn  Kusama's  directorial  debut.  "Girlfight." 

■   .•■  <.   ■  ,     .        -    >■  ■  ,  •  .  •-         .  .    ' 

Karyn  Kusama*s  boxing  mo 
which  challenges  gender  ri 
isn't  just  another  'rocky' 


By  Sandy  Yang  - — 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

First-time  director  Karyn  Kusama  could  have 
metaphorically  portrayed  her  own  struggle  as  a  film- 
maker in  "Girlfight,"  her  debut  about  a  young  woman 
who  vents  her  anger  and  frustration  through  boxing. 

In  Kusama's  case,  as  with  any  untested  director  with 
a  personal  vision,  the  road  to  financing  and  putting  out 
a  movie  was  a  struggle  fraught  with  more  obstacles  than 
making  the  movie  itself. 

Today  these  struggles  and  their  outcome  mark  the 
ultimate  underdog  story  for  Kusama.  32,  who  won  the 
prestigious  Grand  Jury  Prize  at  the  2000  Sundance 
Film  Festival,  as  well  as  notice  by  leading  film  critics 
such  as  Roger  Ebert. 


And  really  every  Sundance  success  is  a  Cinderella 
story  for  beginning  filmmakers,  but  Kusama's  is  one 
that  blossomed  out  of  desperation. 

"Someone  bet  me  a  hundred  bucks  that  I  couldn't 
write  the  script  in  three  weeks,"  Kusama  said.  "For  me, 
I  was  desperately  trying  to  get  a  hundred  bucks,  which 
is  getting  an  idea  (of  the  situation  I  was  in)  four  or  five 
years  ago.  I  was  just  going  to  write  this,  and  uh,  this 
doesn't  have  to  be  good.  It  just  has  to  be  done." 

That  script  was,  of  course,  "Girlfight,"  which  tells  the 
story  of  Diana  Guzman  (Michelle  Rodriguez),  a  young 
woman  who  feels  confined  by  her  life  in  the  projects  and 
lashes  out  by  fighting.  When  Diana  happens  upon  a 
gym  and  witnesses  the  secret  world  of  boxing,  she  dis- 


SeeGIRLFKiHT,page39 


'King  Hedley  II'  fails  to  stand  on  its  own  merits 


THEATER:  Wilson's  look  at 
'80s  urban  neighborhoods 
lacks  coherence,  energy 


ByAlidaCheak 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  idea  of  a  cycle  of  plays  chroni- 
cling the  African  American  experi- 
ence across  each  decade  of  the  20th 
century  has  the  markings  and  length, 
of  an  historical  epic. 

Having  embarked  on  this  venture 
some  12  years  ago.  Pulitzer  Prize  win- 
ning playwright  August  Wilso_n  is  two 
plays  shy  of  completing  the  cycle. 
His  eighth  offering,  "King  Hedley  II, 
is  set  in  the  1980s  and  is.  by  far,  the" 


most  apocalyptic  in  outlook. 
"Hedley"  plays  at  the  Mark  Taper 
Forum  until  Oct.  22. 

The  story  is  set  in  Pittsburgh's  Hill 
District  in  1985,  a  time  of  economic 
hardships.  With  decreasing  federal 
support  and  readily  available 
cocaine,  communities  were  fast  on 
the  decline  and  by  mid-1980s  took  the 
form  of  anarchic  war  zones. 

Urban  neighborhoods  once  run 
down  yet  thriving  in  the  1970s  were 
nothing  more  than  ghost  towns  by 
the  1 980s.  Those  who  remained  in  the 
city  suffer  a  holocaust  of  spirit  for 
themselves  and  their  communities.  It 
is  under  these  conditions  that  we  first 
meet  King  Hedley 

Hedley  is  an  ex-con  who  is  hasten- 
ing to  meet  the  quota  for  selling  wash- 


Despite  generally 

strong  performances 

by  the  cast,  the  play 

lacks  the  coherence 

and  cogency  of 
Wilson's  earlier  works. 


ing  machines  before  the  supply 
moves  out  of  town.  It  is  a  shady 
undertaking  -  the  merchandise  is 
kept  in  an  undisclosed  place  until  an 
arrangement  can  be  made  and  pay- 
ment received  in  the  amount  of 
approximately  $200  for  its  purchase. 


King  Hedley  is  faced  with  a  moral 
dilemma.  He  has  aspirations  of  a 
legitimate  business,  a  video  store.  A 
pool  of  money  has  been  set  aside  for 
the  store,  but  his  pal  Mister,  who 
plays  the  tempter  and  instigator  role, 
is  eager  for  his  share  in  order  to  sal- 
vage his  own  nagging  furniture  busi- 
ness. 

In  desperation,  Mister  offers  a  jew- 
elry heist  as  a  quick  and  dirty  solu- 
tion. Tired  of  his  irresponsible  and 
reckless  ways,  Hedley's  wife,  Tonya, 
threatens  to  abort  th^r  unborn  child 
when  faced  with  the  pt^spect  of  rais- 
ing a  child  in  the  current  social  and 
economic  environment. 

Decisions  have  to  be  made. 
Should  Hedley  rob  the  jewelry  store 
and  risk  incarceration  for  the  sake  of 


improving  the  lives  of  his  expectant 
wife  and  unborn  child? 

Is  this  avenue  for  self-gain  justi- 
fied, given  a  larger  society  that  shows 
neither  concern  nor  offers  any  assis- 
tiince  to  alleviate  his  hardships? 
Despite  his  intentions  for  a  better  life, 
failure  seems  inevitable. 

How  can  one  look  beyond  the 
wasteland  of  one's  existence,  beyond 
a  life  of  death,  sirens  and  alley  cats- 
suggesting  life,  and  at  the  same  time  a 
lack  of  it  where  the  parched  loose  soil: 
on  which  one  lives  is  not  even  fit  fpr 
growing  things? 

All  this,  coupled  to  Wilson's  Hare 
for  poetic  language,  is  set  up  to  creau 
high  drama. 


See  HEDLfY,  page 


1 


/ ' 


A&EontheWeb 

See  all  this  and  more  at 
I   the  Daily  Bruiij^ 
•   Website:         " 
;  www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

■     '      Monday,  October  2, 2000 


ANDREA  KIM 


Patrons  wait  outside  Bread  and  Porridge  on  Wilshire  Boulevard  for 
a  taste  of  the  "world's  best  breakfast." 

Bread  and  Pdrridge  offers 
big  breakfast^  killer  coffee 

RESTAURANT:  Steep  prices      the  average  drinker,  suffice  to  say  it 

„^i     J         u      1    i     »      ..  ain't  no  Sanka. 

only  drawback  to  tasUllg  So  after  you've  pressed  your  first 

eatery's  delicious  dishes  '^"P-  '^''^  **  ^°°^  around.  The  dccor's  an 

odd  mix  of  Southern  Americana  and 

"  provincial  charm.  It's  like  a  coffee 

shop,  but  a  really  nice  one,  stylewise. 

Some  of  the  elements  arc  at  an  odd 
contrast  with  one  another.  Why  are  the 
Rolling  Stones  pictured  chowing  down 
on  one  wall?  Why  do  they  play  all  that 
hillbilly  country  music  in  a  place  called 
Bread  and  Porridge?  Why  are  there  so 
many  kinds  of  hot  sauce  on  the  table? 
Who  cares,  really?  The  hodgepodge  of 
styles  gives  the 


By  Brent  Hopkins 

Daily  Bmin  Senior  Staff 

Nine  times  out  of  10,  when  you  see 
the  term  "world's  best,"  it's  certain  to 
be  a  humongous  lie.  Nearly  everything 
that  claims  to  be  the  top  of  the  list  real- 
ly sucks.  In  the  case  of  Bread  and 
Porridge,  however,  the  "worid's  best" 
label  is  true. 

The  name  itself 
is  a  little  perplex- 
ing, seeing  as  how 
there's  not  that 
much  bread  and 
no  porridge  to  be 
found  on  the 
menu.  Perhaps 
that's  why  they 
have  to  add  on  the 
"world's  best 
breakfast"  tag  to 
the  name,  just  so 
patrons        don't 


REST 

Brea 

Address 


NT  REVIEW 


Hours: 


2315Wilsh 
Los  Angeles^ 

Open  dai] 

7i.in.  -  2  p.m. 

}io; 


Mafk  ^apfl  forum 

Lou  My«rs 

stars  in 
August 
Wilson's 
"King  Hedley 
ll/which  is 
directed  by 
Marion 
McClinton. 


think  they're  stumbling  into  the  dark 
cruel  world  of  Oliver  Twist.  Whatever 
the  case,  the  food  is  extraordinarily 
delicious. 

Whether  sitting  in  its  charming 
wooden  booths  for  an  early  bite  to  eat 
or  a  quick  lunch,  coffee  is  an  absolute 
must.  Even  if  it's  120  degrees  outside 
and  you're  getting  the  stew,  invest  in 
the  coffee  -  you  won't  regret  it. 

Served  in  a  black  and  silver  frcnch 
press,  the  Java's  rich  and  flavorful,  light 
years  away  from  what  Starbucks  could 
ever  conjure  up.  You  can  choose  how 
strong  you  want  to  make  your  brew  - 
the  longer  you  waif  to  press  the  handle 
down,  forcing  the  grounds  to  the  bot- 
tom and  the  coffee  to  the  top,  the  more 
forceful  the  drink  becomes.  As  tempt- 
ing as  it  seems  to  slam  it  down  right 
away,  it's  best  to  heed  the  waiters' 
advice  to  wait  at  least  three  minutes, 
unless  you're  a  fan  of  hot  brown  water. 
The  menu  claims  the  essence  of  the 
coffee  comes  from  "micro-roasting 
selected  green  coffee  beans  in  small 
batches  ...  right  here  several  times  a 
.week."  This  sounds  a  little  confusing  to 


restaurant     a 
unique  charac- 
ter of  its  own. 
When 
perusing    the 
b  r  ca  k  fa  s  t 
menu,  it  helps 
if  you're  a  fan 
of  eggs,  since 
two-thirds   of 
the  items  are 
egg       based. 
While        this 
might  not  win 
you  any  points  with  weight  watchers,  at 
least  you  get  a  tasty  breakfast  out  of  it. 
The  cajun  omelet's  a  highlight,  with 
sausage,  bell  peppers  and  cheddar  fold- 
ed in  some  awfully  fluffy  eggs.  Though 
its  $8.25  pricetag  is  high,  it's  fulfilling 
enough  so  it's  not  too  bad.  The  $7.95 
fresh  basil  scramble,  flavored  with  jack 
cheese  is  aptly  named,  tasting  both 
fresh  and,  indeed,  quite  basilly 

Those  more  in  the  mood  for  griddle 
items  should  ditch  the  eggs  and  go 
straight  for  the  banana-pecan  pan- 
cakes. While  most  hotcakcs  will  leave  a 
gross,  flour-y  aftertaste,  these  are  light 
and  tasty  At  $5.25,  they're  a  relative 
bargain.  The  flavoring  js  subtle,  too,  so 
even  the  most  diehard  banana-haters 
ought  to  dig  on  these. 

French  toast  is  a  good  choice,  as 
well.  Cough  up  $6.45,  and  you'll  be 
rewarded  with  fluffy  golden  slices  that 
look  like  something  out  of  a  movie.  As 
one  patron  was  overheard  saying, 
"They're  enough  to  satisfy  a  man  or  a 
little  giri  with  a  really   really  big 


See  PORRIDGE,  page  41 


/■I . 


I*.         iM'V  \ WiivrnViwAfco** 


34        Monday,  October  2, 2000 


:  ''^'— •'-■f*7-  A'i>ii'» 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


'Light'  delivers 
laclc  of  solid 


BOOKS:  Comic-fantasy 
world  on  turtle's  back 
offers  funny  moments 


By  Michael  Rosen-Molina 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


With  the  popularity  of  Terry 
Pralchett's  "Discworld"  series,  it . 
was  only  a  matter  of  time  until 
HarperCollins  decided  to 
re-release  the  original  adventures 
to  delight  a  new  generation  of 
readers. 

"The  Light  Fantastic," 
Pratchett's  second  foray  into  the 
literary  comic  fantasy  universe  of 
Discworld, 
may  display 
all  the  weak- 
nesses of  a 
new  writer, 
but  it  also 
showcases 
the  talent 
that  has 
made 
Pratchett  the 
celebrated 
author  of 
over  38 

books. 

The  story 
takes  place 
o  n 

Discworld, 
the  magical 
flat  planet 
that  travels 
through 
space  on  the 


BOOK  REVIEW 


^   Terry 
Pratchett 


THF  LiGHf 
FaNtASTIC 


Title:  The  Light  Fantastic 
Author  Terry  Pratchett 
Publisher:  Harper  Paperbacks 
Price:  $3.99  Pages:  241 
Rating:  7 


back  of  an  enormous  turtle.  Great 
ATuin,  the  celestial  reptile  that 
appears  as  incidental  background 
inforriiation  in  so  many 
Discworld  novels,  takes  center 
stage  in  "The  Light  Fantastic." 

The  entire  plot  revolves  around 
ATuin"s  final  destination,  a  riddle 
that  has  puzzled  Disc  philoso- 
phers and  scientists  alike. 

One  theory  claims  that  ATuin 
is  slowly  making  his  way,  through 
the  vast  wastes  of  space,  to  his 
ancestral  mating  grounds,  where 
he  will  fight  star  turtles  to  win  a 
mate.  Others  imagine  that  ATuin 
is  actually  a  female,  searching  for 
the  astronomical  spawning 
grounds,  where  she  will  deposit 


her  eggs.  Whfchever  theory  is  cor- 
rect, ATum's  goal  isjsure  foTiave 
far-reaching  consequences  for  the 
civilization  riding  on  its  shell. 

And  it's  on  that  flat  world  that 
the  real  story  begins.  TwoFlower, 
the  world's  first  tourist,  gets  it  into 
his  head  that  he'd  like  to  see  some 
of  that  civilization  before  its  immi- 
nent extinction.  With  nothing  but 
his  suitcase  -  a  fiercely  loyal 
wooden  trunk  known  only  as 
"The  Luggage"  that  scampers 
about  on  hundreds  of  little  feet  - 
he  sets  ofT  across  the  ocean  to  the 
fabled  city  of  Ankh-Morpork  to 
gaze  upon  its  wonders. 

Only  Ankh-Morpork  isn't  quite 
so  wondrous;  in  fact,  it's  pretty 
much  a 
sprawling 
metropolis  - 
polluted, 
decrepit  and 
riddled  with 
crime. 

But,  the 
awe-struck 
TwoFlower 
is  oblivious 
to  the  grime 
and  to  the 
fact  that  a 
naive  out-of- 
t  0  w  n  e  r 
would  be  the 
perfect  tar- 
get for  the 
city's 
lowlifes  if  he 
didn't  have 
two  friends 
on  his  side  - 


Site  offers 

INTERNET:  Online  radio, 
student  creations  part  of 
fun. for  aspiring  youth 


■I    I 


•   • 


IS  of  entertainment 


'/-y?! 


VU  WANCASilly  Uruin  Unlor  5t»ff 


his  homicidal  Luggage,  always 
eager  to  take  a  bite  out  of  some- 
one, and  his  hired  tour  guide,  the 
completely  incompetent  and  very 
cowardly  wizard  Rincewind. 

Together,  they  travel  to  the 
Disc,  and  where  they  repeatedly 
get  into  zany  misadventures, 
avoid  getting  killed,  and  ultimate- 
ly save  the  world  from  impending 
apocalypse.  All  the  while,  A'Tuin 
slowly  but  surely  paddles  ever 
closer  to  destiny  and  that  menac- 
ing new  star  on  the  horizon. 

"The  Light  Fantastic"  reads  as 
a  high  fantasy  parody,  gently 
mocking  the  absurd  conventions 


Se«  PIUTCIIETT,  page  36 


By  Barbara  McGuire 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

If  you  are  hungry  for  digital  enter- 
'tainment  on  the  Web,  feast  on  nib- 
blebox.com  to  fill  your  stomach,  as 
well  as  your  time. 

Nibblebox.com  is  an  entertain- 
ment Web  site  that  is  dedicated  to 
providing  current  college  students 
and  recent  graduates  with  an  arena 
to  air  their  creative  talents.  The  site 
features  eight  weekly  shows,  solely 
created  students.  The  site  also  offers 
links  to  live  college  radio  and  NBX 
radio,  nibblebox's  own  entourage  of 
what  it  considers  to  be  the  best  in 
college  radio. 

Though  the  shows  are  only  avail- 
able for  broadband  users  to  access, 
the  site  is  still  useful  for  dial-up  users 
to  get  access  to  a  wide  variety  of  col- 
lege radio  stations  ranging  from  the 
University  of  Utah  to  Northwestern 
University. 

Amazingly  enough,  nibblebox 
even  provides  viewers  with  the 
chance  to  listen  to  the  radio  station 
from  England's  London  School  of 
Economics,  Pulse. 

Just  for  kicks,  additional  informa- 
tion is  provided  about  this  U.K. 
school,  which  appears  to  have  been 
written  by  the  British  students.  A 
few  comical  tips  are  provided. 
According  to  the  author,  these  are 
essential  for  Americans  to  maximize 
their  listening  experience. 

The  first  of  these  tips  makes  refer- 
ence to  the  spelling  discrepancy 
between  the  American  "color"  and 
the  British  "colour,"  while  othprs 
point  out  other  cultural  differences. 
Nos.  5  and  6  are  exceptionally  sar- 
castic: 

"5.  If  you'd  only  just  called  it 
American  Football  like  the  rest  of 
us,  you'd  never  have  had  to  invent 
the  word  'soccer.' 

"6.  If  you  think  your  petrol  (gaso- 
line) is  expensive,  we  pay  $6  a  gal- 
lon."   ' 

Nibblebox.com  provides  web 
viewers  with  eight  different  shows  to 
snack  on,  all  of  which  are  new  this 
season.  These  shows  are  both  ani- 
mated and  filmed,  providing  some- 
thing for  everyone  to  enjoy. 

"Muffin  Films"  is  a  cartoon  creat- 
ed by  Amy  Winfrey,  who  hails  from 
UCLA,  and   provides  a  look  at 


"Muffin  Films"  by  Amy  Winfrey  takes  varying  perspectives  on  muffins. 
One  episode  features  a  little  girl  being  eaten  by  baked  goods. 


mufTins  in  a  way  few  viewers  have 
ever  seen.  Content  ranges  from  alien 
muffins  that  are  invading  the  earth, 
to  a  little  girl  who  is  being  eaten  by 
her  own  yummy  baked  goods. 

"Dot  Comic"  by  Jared  Stern  of 
Brown       University,       has       an 
"America's  Funniest  Home  Videos" 
appeal  to  it,  and  features  the  comedy 
of  students  from  across  the  country. 
Apparently  Stern  traveled  from  col- 
lege to  college  filming  various  stu- 
dents in  an  attempt  to  discover  the 
funniest  college  student  in  America. 
Other  shows  with  crazy  titles  such 
as  "100%  Ground  Beef,"  "Sorority 
Crime  Fighters"  and  "Spatula  City" 
promise  just  as  much  bizarre  and 
fun  entertainment,  while  at  the  same 
time  appearing  nothing  alike. 

"Virtual  Bob,"  for  instance,  isn't 
even  a  show,  but  more  a  barbie 
dress-up  video  game,  where  viewers 
are  allowed  to  control  Bob's  actions 
by  clicking  on  any  part  of  his  body 
or  on  anything  in  his  apartment. 
"Physical  Comedy"  is  promised,  as 
opposed  to  the  virtuality  of  messing 
with  Bob's  movements. 

Nibblebox.com    features    more 
than  just  access  to  college-created 
shows  and  radio  stations.  There  are 
numerous  affiliate  channels  which 
j:ome  complete  with  their  own  enter- 
tainment programming  and  content. 
Founded      by      Doug      Liman 
("Swingers,"  "Go"),  Dave  Bartis 
and  Liz  Hamburg,  nibblebox.com 
aspires  to  be  more  than  just  a  tool 
"which  provides  links  to  radio  sta- 
tions. 

The  site's  founders  are  more  con- 
cerned with  the  underlying  ideals  of 


their  creation:  providing  ^student 
affiliates  with  equipment  and  indus- 
try experts  to  hejp,  them  on  their 
way. 

Mentors  of  the  past  have  all  her- 
alded from  the  entertainment  indus- 
try and  nibblebox  guarantees  to 
have  many  more  such  as  "Clueless" 
director  Amy  Heckerling,  and  actor 
Minnie  Driver. 

These  mentors  assist  students 
whose  content  is  chosen  to  be  fea- 
tured oji  the  site,  just  to  ensure  the 
resulting  program  is  unique  and 
funny. 

Additionally,  the  site  would  not 
be  complete  without  its  share  of  pro- 
motional contest  opportunities.  Site- 
goers  currently  have  the  chance  to  " 
win  a  trip  to  Europe  and  to  have 
lunch  with  Matt  Damon  and  Doug 
Liman  while  they  are  on  the  set  of 
"The  Bourne  Identity,"  which  is  cur- 
rently in  production. 

The  founders  of  Nibblebox  are 
not  just  about  sitting  behind  a  desk 
and  updating  the  site.  On  Oct.  2, 
they  will  be  launching  their  first  bus 
tour  which  will  travel  to  30  different 
campuses  across  the  nation.  The 
tour  will  have  music  by  live  DJs  who 
are  Nibblebox  radio  affiliates, 
prizes,  various  interactive  entertain- 
ment, and  even  offer  the  opportuni-  - 
ty  for  some  fame. 

Nibblebox.com  is  more  than  just 
a  Web  site.  For  those  just  interested 
in  some  entertainment,  the  site  has 
more  than  plenty  to  offer;  however, 
for  Ujose  interested  in  creating  the 
entertainment,  the  nibblebox  experi- 
ence can  actually  lend  a  helping 
hand  in  the  process. 


U    hi  <■! 


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3^       Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertaiofnent 


■•■'■•.■•.{■•'  ""r. 


Sony  atteippte  to  r^^^        Walkman^  image 


MUSIC:  Company  hopes 
to  attract  younger  buyers 
with  marketing  campaign 


By  Michael  Liedtke 

The  Associated  Press 


The  Walkman  has  legs  again. 
Twenty-one  years  after  introduc- 
ing its  "personal  stereo"  and  seeing  it 
become  the  epitome  of  cool,  Sony 
Electronics  found  that  in  this  digital 
era,  younger  music  lovers  tended  to 
view  the  Walkman  with  the  same  sort 
of  disdain  that  baby  boomers  have 
for  eight-track  tape  decks. 

Now,  in  hopes  of  reversing  the 
trend,  Sony  is  stamping  the  hallowed 
Walkman  brand  on  all  60  of  its 
portable  music  devices,  from  the  CD 
players  once  called  Discman  to  the 
latest  portable  products  that  down- 
load digital  music  files  from  the 
Internet. 

To  create  a  new  buzz,  the  compa- 
ny engaged  in  a  summer-long  mar- 
keting onslaught  aimed  at  the  trend- 
setting  "Generation  Y"  -  the  age 
bracket  ranging  from  14  to  24  years 
old. 

"They  associated  the  name  with 
analog  tapes  and  clunky  yellow  tape 
players,"  said  John  D.  Hambrick, 
the  Sony  executive  in  charge  of 
restoring  the  Walkman  brand.  "Part 
of  it  was  our  fault.  We  hadn't  really 
protected  or  worked  the  franchise  as 
well  as  we  might  have.  The  brand 
was  frozen  in  time." 

Al  Ries,  a  marketing  strategist 
who  runs  his  own  firm  in  Roswell, 
Ga.,  thinks  Sony  should  have  kept 
the  Walkman  brand  under  wraps. 

"Brands  have  a  cycle,  especially  in 
technology.  They  live  for  a  while  and 


A  Sony  employee  holds  up  a  next-generation  walkman,  21  years  after  the 


then  they  die,"  he  said.  "When  you 
are  working  with  something  that  is 
perceived  as  yesterday's  technology, 
you  aren't  going  to  change  people's 
minds,  no  matter  how  much  money 
you  spend." 

Sony's  strategy  makes  sense  to 
Randall  Ringer,  director  of  technol- 
ogy and  communications  for 
FutureBrand,  a  brand  consultant. 

"They  let  the  Walkman  sort  of 
become  your  father's  stereo,  but  this 
is  a  smart  move,"  Ringer  said. 
"There  is  too  much  heritage  and 


equity  tied  up  in  the  brand  to  just  let 
it  go  now." 

Jennifer  Schmelzer,  a  member  of 
Generation  Y  from  Pleasanton, 
•Calif.,  disagreed. 

Schmelzer,  19,  said  Sony  should 
just  concentrate  on  making  good 
products.  "What  I  care  about  is  that 
a  CD  player  isn't  going  to  skip  on  me 
or  just  fall  apart,"  she  said. 

Sony  hired  Young  &  Rubicam  to 
develop  an  advertising  campaign 
called  "The  Walkman  Has  Landed,*' 
featuring  a  hip,  music-loving  space 


TbeAssoclaiedfVess 

personal  stereo  was  first  introduced. 

alien  named  Plato.  Sony  W  spent 
heavily  to  place  the  Plato-themed 
ads  in  youth-oriented  media  vehi- 
cles, such  as  MTV  and  Rolliog 
Stone. 

When  Sony  introduced  its  first  14- 
ounce  "personal  stereo"  in  1979,  the 
product  revolutionized  the  way  peo- 
ple listened  to  music  and  quickly 
became  a  ubiquitous  symbol  of  a 
mobile  society.  Sony  won't  say  how 
many  Walkmans  it  sells  annually,  but 
estimates  that  it  has  sold  about  100 
million  personal  stereos  in  21  years. 


UCLft    PERFORMING    RRTS 
Student  Committee 


We  ore  looking  for  approximately  24  undergraduate 

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♦  Produce  free  and  ticketed  performing 
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«Work  with  performers,  managers, 
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♦  Gain  first-hand  experience  in  the  field 
of  performing  arts  management. 


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or  on  our  website: 

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DEADLINE:  OctoberlO 


PRATCHETT      S 

From  page  34  ''-^'''^:\  ',v..'ip' '   • 

that  the  genre  routinely  iitisists  on 
shoving  at  iU  readers.  Rince^vind 
and  TwoFlower  meet  Cohen  the 
Barbarian,  a  thinly  veiled  spoofof 
the  famous  Conan. 

Cohen's  exploits  have  made 
him  a  legend  in  his  own  time,  and 
generations  have  grown  up  listen- 
ing to  bedtime  stories  about  him. 
He's  an  old  man  now,  in  his  late 
80s,  but  he  has  no  intention  of 
retiring.  Spindly  and  ancient, 
Cohen's  ferocity  still  inspires  fear 
in  the  hearts  of  his  enemies  -  who 
know  that,  in  the  world's  most 
dangerous  profession.  Cohen  has 
managed  to  live  for  a  long,  long 
time.  Something  to  think  about. 


Although  the 

humor  works  well, 

"The  Light  Fantastic' 

lacks  a  solid  plot 


While  it  lacks  the  keen  social 
satire  that  distinguishes  many  of 
Pratchctt's  later  works,  the 
author  still  peppers  his  text  with 
swipes  at  modern  foolishness.  A 
gaggle  of  druids  construct  a  giant 
"computer"  out  of  enormous 
stone  monoliths,  then  struggle  to 
work  out  all  the  bugs  before  ihe 
solstice  virgin  sacrifice.  The 
wicked  red  star  inspires  a  mil- 
lenarian  cult  convinced  that  the 
Disc  must  be  cleansed  of  magic  to 
prevent  catastrophe. 

"The  Light  Fantastic"  is  a  fun, 


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Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Emertainment 


New  series  aihfis  at  preschoolers  ! 


Monday,  October  2, 2000       37 


PBS:  Shows  star  ^colorful 
characters  from  popular 
children's  story  books 


--■■-'■'r-'  ^.„ 


ByFrazicrMoora 

The  Associated  Press 

A  stuffed  bear,  a  moose,  a  raccoon 
starting  kindergarten.  Seven  monster 
siblings,  a  tiny  boy  and  a  dancing 
horse  with  taps  on  his  (horse)shoes. 
What  do  they  all  have  in  common? 

Well,  starting  this  weekend  on 
PBS,  these  disparate  characters  lay 
claim  to  a  new  three-hour  block 
aimed  at  the  preschool  set.  Their  star 
power  -  and  that  of  the  books  that 
introduced  them  -  propel  the  six 
scries  making  up  the  PBS  Kids 


B^worm  Bunch/' v  School,"  in  which  our  carlbon  hero  a 

He^e,  the  roster  (al  times  EDT):  5-year-old  raccoon.  facesThe  thriils 

8  a.m..    Corduroy."  the  cartoon  and  trepidation  of  tartine  scLl" 

adventures  of  a  cuddle  toy  and  the  lit-  wonder  what  its  gonna  be  I   e  ° Lv 

Uegirlwhocuddleshim. AgenUefrol-  Timothy,  trying  and  failing  to  seen 

ic^^^rough  a  big  city  and  its  diverse  the  nig'ht  before    I t^cr'eaTedSy 

life.    Corduroy"  comes  from  Don  author-illustrator  Rosemarv  Wells 
Freeman's  best-selling  books  about         9. 15       am        Tv/n       L  ttle 

the  winsomely  upholstered  bear  Monster.  •'  an  ..nim^fi 

8  IS  a  i«   "Ell    .  ^M        «       .  iwonsiers,    an  animated  series  set  in 

hJJrZ    E"'°','V.°ose,"amixed  the  loving  household  ofMom  and  her 

sTe^T^n.^^  (note  how  this  young-  from  the  book  by  Nfaurice  Sendak 

ster  s  antlers  are  little  more  than  the    world-renowned    writer-artist' 


Mp3.cx)m  begins  e-h^^^^ 
campaignto 


-■■"   ...wv   iiiuic   man 

buds)  and  his  animal  friends.  What 
happens  when  King  Lionel  is  about 
to  receive  the  award  for  loudest  roar, 
but  then,  suffering  from  stage  fright, 
loses  his  voice?  Find  out  on  this 
series,  from  the  "Elliot"  books  by 
Andrea  Beck. 
8:45   a.m.:   "Timothy  Goes  to 


whose  "Little  Bear"  is  now  a  hit  series 
on  Nickelodeon. 

9:45  a.m.:  "George  Shrinks."  an 
animated  odyssey  about  a  boy  3  inch- 
ies  tall  whose  Lilliputian  stature  does- 
n't keep  him  from  standing  up  to  the 


INTERNET:  Web  site  faces 
copyright  dispute  with 
Universal  Music  Group 


Seet00KW0M|,page43 


Miniseries  shows  how  structures  are  built 


ENGINEERING:  Building, 
skyscraper  construction 
explained  in  lay  terms 


By  Frazicr  Moore 

The  Associated  Press 

You  take  it  all  on  faith.  ' 

The  skyscraper  where  you  work 
will  refuse  to  fall  over.  Tunnels  will  let 


you  pass  through  with  no  threat  of 
collapse.  A  bridge  will  carry  you  from 
here  to  there  and  never  let  you  down. 

As  for  dams  -  well,  obviously, 
experts  build  them  to  defy  the  crush^ 
ing  pressure  of  the  water  that  wants 
to  burst  through. 

But.  come  to  think  of  it,  how  does 
all  this  happen? 

David  Macaulay  tackles  such  big 
questions  in  "Building  Big,"  a  PBS 
miniseries  on  colossal  construction. 


Airing  every  Tuesday  at  8  p.m. 
Eastern  through  Oct.  31.  the  weekly 
"Building  Big"  hours  will  build  your 
understanding  of  (in  chronological 
order)  bridges,  domes,  skyscrapers, 
dams  and  tunnels. 

"I  think  we  should  be  able  to  count 
on  things,"  said  Macaulay,  the  series' 
host,  on  a  visit  to  Manhattan  last 
week.  "But  I  don't  think  it's  wise  to 


SeeBUIIJNIIC,page41 


ByGaryGentilo 

The  Associated  Press  -      - 

MP3.com  Inc.  is  launching  a 
political  campaign  to  support  a  bill 
that  would  make  it  legal  to  store 
music  digitally  and  listen  to  songs 
over  the  Internet. 

The  bill  could  end  a  legal  battle 
the  company  is  facing  over  charges 
of  copyright  infringement. 

Dubbed   the   "Million    E-mail 
March."  the  campaign  supports  a 
bill  introduced  this  week  by  Rep 
Rick  Boucher.  D-Va.  and  three 
Republican  co-sponsors. 

The  bill  would  amend  federal 
copyright  laws  to  make  it  legal  to 
create  a  digital  copy  of  a  recording, 
known  as  an  MP3  file,  after  first 
proving  ownership  of  the  music. 
Consumers  would  then  be  able  to 
send  that  file  ovep  the  Internet  and 
listen  to  the  digital  copy  from  a 
remote  location. 

It's  just  that  activity  that  resulted 
in  a  landmark  legal  case  brought  by 
the  five  major  music  labels  against 
San  Diego-based  MP3.com.  The 
company  introduced  its 

"My.Mp3.com"  listening  service 


earlier  this  year,  which  allowed  a  lis- 
tener to  briefly  insert  a  compact  disc 
mto  a  computer  to  prove  ownership 
of  the  CD,  then  listen  to  a  digital 
copy  of  the  music  already  stored  on 
a  computer  at  MP3.com's  head- 
quarters. 

:  Mp3.com  argued  it  should  only 
have  to  buy  and  store  one  copy  of  a 
CD  on  its  computers  and  allow  mul- 
tiple users  to  listen.  The  record  com- 
panies argued  the  system  short- 
changed them  and  violated  their 
copyrights  because  MP3.com  was 
allowing  millions  of  peoffle  to  listen 
to  one  CD. 

The  My.Mp3.com  service  differs 
from  the  music-sharing  Web  site 
Napster,  which  faces  legal  chal- 
lenges of  its  own,  because  it  merely 
sends  the  music  to  listening  devices, 
such  as  a  computer  or  a  wireless 
music  player.  Napster  lets  u^ers 
download  an  actual  computer  file 
and  make  copies  of  it. 

Four  of  the  five  record  labels  set- 
.  tied  the  case  and  granted  MP3.com 
licenses  to  continue  the  service.  The 
fifth.  Universal  Music  Group,  pur- 
sued the  case. 

Earlier  this  month,  a  federal 
judge  in  New  York  ruled  that 
MP3.com  violated  copyrights  of 
music  companies  and  awarded 
Universal  $25,000  per  CD  -  a 


See  MP3,  page  43 


review  program 

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■:,.—i^ 


Indeed/Kfni^Hedleyir 

doesn't  exist  as  a 

separate  piece,  but  is 

connected  to  the 

earlier  works. 


HEDLEY 

From  page  32 

And,  indeed,  Harry  Lennix  puts  in 
a  solid  performance  as  King  Hedley, 
portraying  him  as  a  man  embittered 
through  experience.  Despite  his  most- 
ly solitary  anger,  however,  which 
brims  over  ever  more  frequently  as 
the  play  progresses,  Hedley  can  be 
quite  jocular,  especially  in  his  interac- 
tions with  Mister,  played  by  Monte 
Russell. 

■  Perhaps  the  humor  and  absurdity 
interspersed  throughout  the  charac- 
ters are  necessary  defenses  against 
the  heavy-handed  themes  of  the  play. 
Another  poignant  performance 
comes  form  Moni  Walton,  who  plays 
Tonya,  the  most  compassionate  and 
hopeful  of  the  lot  of  characters.    -^^  >-. 

She  adds 
impetus  to  a  play  ■^■ia^_^..M 
that  is  driven 
largely  by  long 
monologues. 
These  mono- 
logues, though 
poet,  can  be 
rather  tedious 
especially  in  the 
second  act. 

Rounding  out      

the  cast  is 
Hedley's  self^  ^ 
absorbed  mother.  Ruby,  played  with 
the  typical  exactingness  of  mothers  by 
Juanita  Jennings,  and  her  slick  lover 
Elmore,  played  adequately,  although 
at  times  insincerely,  by  Charles 
Brown. 

Perhaps  the  most  entertaining  of 
the  lot  is  Lou  Myers'  Stool  Pigeon, 
Hedley's  eccentric  neighbor.  Stool 
Pigeon  is  the  local  prophet  of  reckon- 
ing, who  feeds  and  buries  stray  cats, 
Along  with  the  semblance  of  death 
which  surrounds  him.  Stool  Pigeon 
keeps  up  with  the  times  by  collecting 
newspapers  by  the  bushel. 

However,  despite  generally  strong 
performances  by  an  intimate  cast  of 
six  and  the  lyricism  of  the  various 
monologues,  the  play  lacks  the  coher- 
ence and  cogency  of  Wilson's  earlier 
works. 

It  falls  short  and  is  almost  trying  at 
times,  in  its  attempt  to  deliver  the  dis- 
illusionment and  subsequent  rage  of 
the  lead  character.  Not  withstanding, 
attempts  to  forestall  judgment  and  to 
experience  the  entire  piece  as  a  whole, 
in  hopes  of  a  worthwhile  end,  are 
amiss. 

Although  King  Hedley  is  rich  with 
themes  and  symbolism,  delving  into 
issues  of  family,  identity  and  responsi- 
bility amidst  a  merciless  environment 


of  crime  and  poverty,  the  numerous 
monologues  situate  the  play  in  the 
past  rather  than  the  present. 
,  The  highly  sentimental  overtones 
overshadow  the  urgency  and  force  of 
the  dilemma.  One  has  the  feeling  of 
looking  upon  a  scene  or  moment,  as  if 
it  were  an  historic  exhibit,  rather  than 
fully  engaging  in  it. 

And  it  is  rather  disconcerting  when 
the  author  abandons  the  languid  pace 
that  dominates  the  better  part  of  three 
hours  to  bring  the  story  to  a  climactic 
and  rather  brisk  end. 

The  lack  of  significant  interaction 

among  tl^e  characters  is  disturbing  as 

wdl,  for  each  seems  to  perform  on  a 

stage  of  their  ovhi.  Even  the  position 

of  the  charadfid,  with  one  speaking 

and  the  rest,  wben  present,  standing 

by,  unobtrusive  jind  listening,  works 

to  create  a  distance  not  only  among 

the     characters 

and  also  between 

the  cast  and  the 

audience. 

As  such,  it  is 
ofteg^^xas^  to 
drift  in  and  out 
ofinterestforthe 
characters  and 
as  such,  to  disen- 
gage  from   the 

. .^      story. 

But  perhaps 
full  appreciation 
of  the  play  comes  not  only  with  an 
understanding  of  the  context  in  which 
it  takes  places,  that  is  the  1980s,  but 
also  through  having  experienced 
some  of  Wilson's  earlier  pieces. 
Indeed  "KingHedley  H"  does  not 
exist  as  a  separate  piece,  but  is  con- 
nected to  the  earlier  works.  In  the 
absence  of  either,  the  play  on  its  own 
is  rather  uneventful  and  nothing 
extraordinary. 

"King  Hedley  II"  plays  like  an 
urban  tragedy  and  has  all  the  ingredi- 
ents for  being  so.  Although  rich  in 
material,  it  does  not  hold  its  own 
ground. 

Individual  moments  may  be  affect-: 
ing  and  enjoyable,  but  the  lack  of  any 
substantial  interaction  among  the 
characters  and  the  oftentimes  cum- 
bersome monologues  prevent  a  cohe- 
sive whole.  The  allusions  to  previous 
works  and  ideas  may  bode  well  for 
Wilson  aficionados;  for  others,  it  may 
be  less  than  satisfying. 

THEATER:  King  Hedley  II  by  August 
Wilson  plays  at  the  Mark  Taper  Forum,  — 
1 35  N.  Grand  Ave.,  Los  Angeles.  Sept  5- 
Oct.  22.  Tuesday-Sunday,  7:30  p.m; 
Saturday  and  Sunday  at  2  p.m.  Tickets 
are  $30-44.  For  rnore  information,  call 
(213)628-2772. 


MMk  Tap«(  Fofum 

Ch«rlM  Brown  and  Harry  Lmnix  take  a  seat  in  "King  Hedley  II,' the 
opening  production  of  the  2000-2001  season  at  the  Mark  Taper 
Forum. 


^^. ^ ! . ■  _       / 


I  te,'W''-.r^^*"r^.- *■-"." 


Screen  Gems 


Diana  Guzman  (Michelle  Rodriguez)  and  her  boyfriend  Adrian 
(Santiago  Douglas)  try  to  find  time  for  romance  in  'GIrlfight." 


GIRLFIGHT 

From  page  32 

covers  a  place  to  focus  her  energy  and 
anger  -  despite  her  father's  disap- 
proval. 

Without  knowing  it,  she  finds  the 
dignity  she  never  had  and  a  romance 
within  the  ring. 

Whether  Kusama  really  thought 
her  script  was  good  or  not,  she  fought 
for  financing  and  a  venue  to  show  her 
film.  Dealing  with  investors  who  did- 
n't seem  to  understand  they  had  to 
part  with  their  money  if  they  wanted 
the  movie  made,  Kusama  found  help 
from  her  executive  producer  John 
Sayles  (director  of  indie  darling 
"Lone  Star"),  who  lent  money  to  the 
project. 

Kusama,  how- 
ever, was  able  to      ■^"^■"~""~" 
pay  Sayles  back 
after  the 

Independent 
Film  Channel 
contributed 
money  to 

"Girlfight." 

Now  four 
years  after  writ- 
ing   the    script, 

Kusama  is  talking 

with  journalists  at 
the  25th  fioor  of 
.  her  publicist's  Wilshire  office  over- 
K  looking  Los  Angeles. 
pt      "There  is  such  a  constant  onslaught 
I  of  Hollywood  products  that  are  being 
j  forced  upon  to  the  public  ...  I'm  very 
sobered  by  how  muchof  a  struggle  it  is 
getting  those  smaller  films  out  to  the 
people,"  she  said. 

"I'm  really  lucky  that  people  will 
have  a  chance  to  see  this  movie  but 
God,  it  takes  a  lot  of  work.  You're 
competing  with  machines  and  corpo- 
rations," Kusama  said  to  the  knowing 
laugh  of  entertainment  journalists 
who  have  heard  the  familiar  story 
many  times. 

The  struggle  of  making  a  movie 
may  not  be  anything  new,  but  the 
film's  story  certainly  explored  a  world 
that  has  been  given  little  exposure  in 
the  media. 

This  boxing  story  was  no  rehash  of 
"Rocky"  for  female  crowds,  as 
Kusama  admits  she  hadn't  seen  the 
Sylvester  Stallone  staf  vehicle. 

"I've  seen  the  parts  when  he  drinks 
the  egg  and  when  he  runs  up  the 


stairs,"  Kusama  said. 

Instead,  the  movie  came  from 
Kusama's  own  experience  as  a  female 
boxer  in  her  early  20s.  Though 
Kusama  always  knew  filmmaking 
would  be  her  calling,  the  experience  in 
the  ring  gave  her  perspective  on  grow- 
ing up,  intimacy,  anger  and  transfor- 
mation -  especially  of  a  teenager  - 
and  rich  fodder  for  her  first  film. 

The  lack  of  authentic  Latino 
American  portrayals  in  the  movies 
also  spurred  Kusama's  interest  in 
bringing  this  slice  of  life  from  the 
Brooklyn  projects  to  audiences,  as 
well  as  paying  homage  to  great  Latino 
boxers.  Though  she's  half-Japanese, 
Kusama  drew  from  her  own  experi- 
ence growing  up  Asian  American  in  a 
largely  white  suburb. 

"I  wantedivto 

. find  a  way  to 

^^"""^"""■"■■^  create  a  voice 
for  those  not 
heard,  basically, 
and  that's  a  lot 
of  people  in  this 
country," 
Kusama  said. 

Rodriguez,  a 

former  full-time 

movie      extra, 

was  more  than 

happy  to  blast 

Hollywood  for 

its  canned  laughter,  plastic  surgery, 

sensationalism  and  overall  "fakeness" 

throughout  the  interview. 

The  outspoken  22-year-old  actress, 
however,  only  had  unadorned  praise 
for  "Girlfight,"  which  she  says  felt 
more  genuine. 

"It  felt  like  I  was  doing  something 
good  and  positive  and  beautiful  and 
strong  and  different,"  Rodriguez  said. 
According  to  Rodriguez,  even  the 
making  of  the  film  attests  to  the  real- 
ness  of  it  all.  The  actor  wasn't  given  a 
stunt  double  as  she  was  sparring  with 
opponents  in  the  ring. 

With  the  standard  headgear  and 
protection,  Rodriguez  learned  to  spar 
four  months  before  filming,  though 
she  had  never  before  touched  a  pair  of 
gloves  in  her  life. 

"It  turned  out  she  was  a  natural 
actor  and  a  natural  athlete,  and  that  is 
a  very  rare  combination,"  said 
Kusama,  who  auditioned  350  actress- 
es for  the  part.  "She  was  willing  to  get 
into  the  ring  and  spar  and  get  her  face 

See  CMLFKNT,  pafe  40 


"Someone  bet  me  a 
hundred  bucks  that  I 

couldn't  write  the 
script  in  three  weeks." 

Karyn  Kusama 

Director/Girlfight' 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainineiit 


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,        1  .  .  •■.5    ,"f 


GIRLFIGIfP 

From  page  39    :; 


MTis^^x 


beaten  in,  and  that's  just  a  very  rare 
type  of  person. "V      ,,-;.. 

For  Rodriguez,  that  was  much  bet- 
ter than  what  she  could  have  been.  "I 
went  to  business  school,  but  I  quit 
after  four  and  a  half  months  at  Drake 
(University)  and  \  decided  I  didn't 
want  to  be  a  puppeT  of  society,  sit  in  a 
office  and  wait  to  get  a  promotion  for 
an  ofTice  with  a  window,"  said 
Rodriguez,  who  had  a  bandage  on  her 
forehead  as  she  talked  to  journalists. 


(Rodriguez)  wasn't 

given  a  stunt  double  as 

she  was  sparring  with 

opponents  in  the  ring. 


Rodriguez  will  next  appear  in 
"3AM"  with  Danny  Glover  and  Pam 
Grier  and  "Redline"  with  Vin  Diesel. 
With  "Girlfight's"  success, 
Kusama  has  also  been  courted  to  take 
on  bigger  projects,  but  the  director 
hopes  to  hold  on  to  her  independence 
as  a  filmmaker  -  a  smart  move,  con- 
sidering her  relentless  push  to  find  an 
audience  for  "Girlfight"  has  already 
made  a  difference. 

As  the  film  slowly  finds  its  way  into 
theaters,  Kusama  can  always  look  at 
women's  boxing  and  know  her  film 
took  some  part  in  inspiring  young 
women  to  participate  in  a  field  they 
were  never  encouraged  to  go  into. 

"I  would  have  never  seen  a  10-year- 
old  girl  in  any  of  those  (boxing)  gyms 
until  now,  and  when  they  become  15, 
they're  going  to  become  good  and  at 
20  they're  going  to  be  scary,"  Kusama 
said.  "When  1  started,  there  was  no 
competition  among  women  and  there 
were  very  few  women ...  but  I  do  think 
we're  seeing  more  and  more  women 
and  that's  Wtiat's  going  to  be  changing 
the  face  of  the  sport." 


FILM:  'Girlfight"  is  now  playing  in 
select  theaters  nationwide. 


PRATCHEH 

from  page  36  . — -,- 


light  read  that  never  gets  bogged 
down  in  unnecessary  details. 
Characterization  is  conspicuously 
absent;  the  characters  pretty  much 
remain  fiat  stereotypes. 

Beyond  TwoRower's  naivete  and 
Rincewind's  paranoia,  nothing  much 
is  revealed  about  either  of  the  book's 
main  protagonists.  The  villain,  a 
weaselly  wizard  named  Trymon  who 
plans  to  play  on  apocalyptic  fears  in^ 
order  to  grab  leadership  of  the  Disc's 
wizards,'  makes  a  few  token  appear- 
ances yet  contributes  little  to  the 
story.  Mostly,  his  role  involves  lurk- 
ing  in  the  background,  acting  vaguely 
menacing  and  then  providing  a  con- 
venient opponent  for  Rincewind  to 
battle  at  the  nov«i'g  conclusion. 

Although  the  humor  works  well, 
"The  Light  Fantastic"  lacks  a  solid 
plot.  The  coming  apocalypse  serves 
mostly  as  a  device  for  bouncing  the 
heroes  from  one  wacky  adventure  to 
the  next.  Several  minor  adventures 
never  meet  a  satisfactory  conclusion, 
as  convenient  deus  ex  machina  allow 
Rincewind  and  TwoRower  to  make 
early  exits. 

Despite  all  these  failings,  though, 
the  excellent  description  brings  the 
myriad  oddities  of  Discworld  -  from 
mountain-sized  trolls  to  amazon  war- 
riors -  to  life.  The  jokes  don't  always 
work,  but  those  that  do  more  than 
make  up  for  their  failed  counter- 
parts. It  is  a  tribute  to  Pratchett's 
style  that  a  book  so  devoid  of  plot, 
character,  and.  at  times,  common 
sense,  still  captures  the  reader  and 
refuses  to  let  go.  .^ 


•A- 


Daily  Bniin  Arts  ft  EntertaimMiit 


PORRIDGE 

From  page  3| 

appetite."  You  can  spruce  %m  up  with 
some  genuine  100  percent  Vermont 
maple  syrup  for  $1.75,  but  whatever 
they've  got  in  the  table  dispensers 
serves  just  as  well. 

While  the  breakfast,  served  from  7 
a.m.  to  2  p.m..  is  the  restaurant's  true 
calling  card,  the  lunch  is  nothing  to 
sneeze  at,  either.  You'll  find  yourself 
picking  and  re-picking  your  meal  from 
the  wide  array  of  salads,  sandwiches 
and  hot  entrees,  not  wanting  to  miss 
out  on  any  of  the  delicious  choices. 

The  pasta  with  spicy  chicken 
sausage,  $9.45,  sounds  tempting,  but 
you  won't  want  to  pass  up  the  BBQ 
brisket.  It  brings  new  meaning  to  the 
word  delicious. 


Mondaji  October  2, 2000       41 


KMS 


BH  EYE  GUY 


1^^ 


SWITCH  YOUR  EXISTING  PAGER  "2"  US' 
mc/vM^Jf^SllXS  •  ''"ONE  ORDERS  •  CREDIT  CARD 
.PggOUNTS  ON  NEW  MOTOROLA  PAGERS  AND  VoEe  MAIU 


(318) 


■V-^i^i^-^^-. 


With  most  of  the 

breakfast  entrees 

costing  around  the  $8 

mark,  it's  not  going  to 

be  stealing  customers 

away  from  Denny's 

anytime  soon. 


AsianAvenue.coni 


(^    01?=D 


They  smoke  tri-tip  beef  for  1 2  hours, 
then  slap  some  barbecue  sauce  on  top, 
making  for  a  tender,  tasty  meal.  The 
baked  beans  aren't  really  anything  to 
write  home  about,  but  the  coleslaw 
sure  is.  It's  crisp  and  light,  a  nice  coun- 
terpoint to  the  full-bodied  beef.  It's 
only  available  weekdays,  but  it's  worth 
interrupting  your  schedule  to  get  a 
taste  ofthis  $9.95  entree. 

The  stew,  almost  as  tasty  as  the 
brisket,  is  well  worth  its  $9.95  price. 
It's  not  as  good  as  you  could  find  at 
home,  but  it's  a  damn  fine  pick  me  up 
on  a  cold  day  The  tender  beef,  firr^i, 
veggies  and  rich  red  wine  sauce  makca 
tou^o*eat  meal. 

The  only  knock  on  this  place  is  the 
price.  With  most  of  the  breakfast 
cntreej  costing  around  the  $8  mark, 
it's  not  going  to  be  stealing  customers 
away  from  Denny's  anytime  soon. 
Then  again,  considering  the  meal 
you're  getting  for  your  money,  it's 
worth  it.  Visits  every  day  will  send  you 
to  the  poorhouse  pretty  quickly,  but 
hey,  at  least  you'll  be  mighty  satisfied 
on  the  road  to  poverty. 


ucu 
tfcmnw 
yci 
mtmrnmm 

iKi 

MSMiNMUMtttt 


»•  *rtwA»M«iM«m  booth  *«Ni^  »•  eom,  te  «  o^ipu,  M«,  you 


nmm.     ^     ^A 


1    I)    V    •    R    t 


BUILDING 

From  page  37 

take  them  for  granted.  I  personally 
like  that  feeling  of  being  connected 
to  the  things  around  me  we  have 
built." 

No  surprise.  Based  in  Rhode 
Island,  Macaulay  is  a  best-selling 
author-illustrator  best  known  for 
"Th?  Way  Things  Work."  his  words- 
and^pictures  compendium  that 
maki;s  engineering  comprehensible. 


i'y)if 


^^Ai 


^ 

■ 

+ 


The  "Building  Big" 

films  prefer  a 

humanist  approach,  a 

social  history  of 

building  big. 


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Excludes  Sicillians 


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fc   ^   _   ^   ^  ^ '  I    '•^"►^""usiue  given  10  onver.    I  " 


Such  accessibility  pervades 
"Building  Big." 

In  "Bridges,"  for  instance, 
Macaulay  illustrates  the  principles 
behind  all  five  major  bridge  types 
with  a  few  strokes  of  his  pen,  sketch- 
ing how  tension  (a  stretching  force 
that  pulls  on  a  material)  and  com- 
pression   (a    pressing    force    that 


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42       Monday,  October  2, 2O0O  >-. 


(Mir  Bruin  Am  lintfrtaihimirt 


:^our  Word  is  Fire: 
The  Inner  World  of 


^      Rabbi  Chaim  Sel(Jle^Feller 

Begins  Oct.  2, 12  P.M.,  Law  School  2442 

^^^^^bday  only,  M«et  In  the  Courtyard 

^^y^  J5/A  Free  Food  &  Fun  Conversation 

Tuesdays,  Rieber  Multipurpose  Room 

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(310)208-3081 


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BUILDING 

Fromftage41 


3'!  #^^- 


squeezes  a  material  together)  mu& 

coexist  irr tlaTtfony  -  or  look  out' 
below! 

Now,  that's  not  so  hard  to  undsr. 
stand,  is  it? 

Though  the  series  tackles  major 
engineering  concepts,  it  Jeaves  the 
nuts  and  bolts  to  Macaulay's  com- 
panion book  (published  by 
Houghton  Mifflin).  As  he  states  in 
the  preface,  his  book  addresses  issues 
like,  'Why  this  shape  and  not  that? 
Why  steel  instead  of  concrete  or 
stone?  Why  put  it  here  and  not  over 
there?" 

Meanwhile,  the  "Building  Big" 
films  prefer  a  humanist  approach,  a 
social  history  of  building  big. 

For  "Bridges,"  Macaulay  begins 
with  Italy's  Ponte  Fabricio,  which 
after  2,000  years  still  spans  the  Tiber 
River.  He  examines  not  only  the 
bridge's  state-of-the-art  (at  least  for 
62  B.C.)  design,  but  also  its  impact 
on  the  people  it  originally  served. 

He  retells  the  saga  of  the  Brooklyn 
Bridge,  whose  creation  more  than  a 
century  ago  was  a  triumph  of 
courage  and  tenacity  as  much  as 
stone  and  mortar. 

He  visits  the  Golden  Gate  Bridge, 
perching  himself  more  than  700  feet 
high  atop  one  of  its  towers.  And  he 
introduces  you  to  the  latest  thing: 
Japan's  ingenious  new  Akashi- 
Kaikyo  suspension  bridge  which, 
with  a  central  span  of  I  1/4  miles,  ^ 
stands  as  the  world's  longest. 


'None  of  tilis  stuff  is 

magic.,..  It's  all 

common  sense." 

David  Macaulay 

Host  of  Building  Big" 


Macaulay  is  as  awe-struck  as  any- 
one on  seemg  Massachusetts' 
Hoosac  Tunnel,  the  19th-century 
railroad  passageway  whose  5-mile 
length  took  20  years  to  carve  through 
solid  rock.  Or  on  beholding  the  13th- 
century  Reims  Cathedral,  a  pioneer- 
mg  "skyscraper"  made  possible  by  its 
newfangled  flymg  buttresses. 

And  don't  forget  the  Houston 
Astrodome,  which  opened  in  1965. 

"The  challepge  to  the  builders  was 
clear,"  you  see  Macaulay  explain  in 
his  "Domes"  episode;  "Build  a  roof 
big  enough  to  cover  an  entire  base- 
ball field  and  grandstand  for  50,000 
players,  without  obstructing  the  play- 
ers or  the  views  of  the  spectators. 

"TTie  dome's  curve  was  the  key," 
he  notes  in  the  film.  "The  result  was 
an  unprecedented  expanse." 

Clearly,  the  Astrodome  proved  to 
be  an  engineering  home  run. 

"But  none  of  this  stuff  is  magic," 
Macaulay  says  now.  "It's  ail  really 
logical.  It's  all  common  sense. 

"TTicse  structures  do  get  sophisti- 
cated as  they  get  bigger,"  he  allows, 
"and  common  sense  on  a  grand  scale 
becomes  an  amazing  thing.  But  the 
underlying  principles  still  apply,  and 
they  can  still  be  accessible  to  peo- 
ple." ^ 

The  53-year-old  Macaulay  started 
small.  Born  with  a  fascination /or 
technology,  he  loved  constructing  ,' 
models  of  things  from  early  child- 
hood.  "I  liked  reducing  the  scale  to 
make  something  that  I  could  hold 
and  really  control."  .:>j 

He  studied  architecture  at  the 
Rhode  Island  School  of  Design.  But 
after  fiirting  with  an  architectural 
career,  he  found  the  pursuit  that 
would  win  him  worldwide  acccp- 
tance:  explaining  in  books  (some  18 
so  far)  the  designs  that  intrigue  him. 
"I  don't  think  1  have  a  particular- 
ly critical^eyc."  he  says  when  asked 
his  engineering  likes  and  dislikes. 
"I'm  just  fascinated  by  the  building 
process." 


BOOKWOitM 

:;  From  page  37 

-  ^^lomiakize  worid  he  inhabits. X)r,  for 
that  matter,  from  taking  care  of  busi- 
ness. When  nature  calls,  George 
straps  suction  cups  on  his  hands  and 
feet  and,  then,  like  a  mountaineer 
scaling  the  Matterhorn,  climbs  to  the 
rim  ofthe  toilet  bowl. 

"George  Shrinks"  springs  from 
the  nimble  mind  of  author-illustrator 
William  Joyce,  who  also  conjured  up 
the  irresistible  "Rolie  Polie  die "  for 
cable's  Disney  Channel. 

10:15  a.m.:  "Marvin  the  Tap- 
Dancing  Horse,"  whose  fleet-footed 
star  moves  like  Fred  Astaire  -  with 
twice  the  feet.  Marvin  has  an  equally 
quick  wit:  "I  can't  do  my  tribute  to 
'Singing  in  the  Reins'  without  reins," 
he  quips. 

This  cartoon  series  about  the  car- 
nival where  a  9-year-old  kid  takes  a 
summer  job  comes  from  Betty  and 
Michael  Paraskevas,  whose  books 
include  "The  Tangerine  Bear." 

10:45  a.m.:  A  second  15-minute 
segment  of  "Corduroy." 
.  The  current  "Bookworm  Bunch" 
slate  is  in  place  for  two  years,  says 
John  Wilson,  PBS'  senior  vice  presi- 
dent for  programming  services.  But 
"Bookworm  Bunch"  -  the  network's 
first-ever  foray  into  Saturday  morn- 
ing -  is  here  to  stay. 

"It's  absolutely  a  commitment," 
Wilson  declares.  And,  pointing  to  the 
seven  hours  of  children's  program- 
ming aired  each  weekday  by  PBS,  he 
adds,  "This  gives  us  a  great  opportu- 
nity to  identify  shows  that  we  might 
then  want  to  bring  out  to  the  full 
Monday-through-Friday  schedule." 
Produced  by  Toronto-based 
Nelvana  Communications  Inc., 
"Bookwortn  Bunch"  was  designed  to 
fill  a  void. 

"There's  a  lot  of  kids'  program- 
ming on  Saturday  mornings," 
Wilson  allows.  "But  it's  not  necessar- 
,  ily  agfriappropriate  for  a  preschooler. 
And  it  certainly  doesn't  carry  with  it 
the  age^ippropriate.  pro-social  cur- 
riculum that  you'd  expect  to  find  on 
PBS." 


MP3^ 

FnNn|»ge37 


penalty  that  oouki  reach  as  much  as 
$250  million.  The  company  plans  to 
appeal,  and  the  case  is  likdy  to  reach 
the  U.S.  Supreme  Court. 

Boucher  said  Thursday  that  if  his 
bill  becomes  law  before  a  final  ruling 
if  issued,  it  could  make  the  case 
against  Mp3.com  moot. 

'The  four  companies  that  have 
Koensed  this  technology  understand 
its  power  and  are  opting  to  use  it  to 
Hieir  advantage,"  Boucher  said. 
"One  company ...  has  decided  to  pur- 
«ue  the  extinction  of  this  company." 
^  Representatives  of  Universal  did 
"ot  immediately  return  a  call  for 
»mment. 

1  Boucher  said  the  kind  of  technolo- 
7  developed  by  MP3.com  and  made 
legal  by  his  bill  would  allow  music 
buyers  to  listen  to  their  stored  songs 
in  their  car  after  satellite  Internet 
access  is  perfected,  in  their  office  or 
from  a  friend's  computer.  The  bill 
would  only  apply  to  music  that  is 
sent,  or  "streamed,"  not  music  that  is 
downloaded. 

Boucher  said  his  bill  will  not  be 
considered  before  Congress  recesses 
in  several  weeks  but  he  will  reintro- 
duce it  when  the  next  session  con- 
venes in  January. 

The  MP3.com  campaign  is  aimed 
at  flooding  Congress  with  e-mails  in 
support  of  the  bill  and  mobilizing 
music  consumers  to  lobby  candi- 
dates, the  company  said. 

"The  goal  is  to  inform  politicians 
that  there  is  a  huge  audience  of  CD 
owners  that  this  is  an  important  issue 
to,"  said  Michael  Robertson,  chair- 
man and  chief  executive  of 
MP3.com. 


Daily  Bniin  Arts  &  EntcrtainiMnt 


Monday.  October  2, 2(X)0       43 


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Side  of  Meatballs  (2)  $2.00  Chicken  Caesar  Salad  $6  25 

Side  of  Sausage  (2)  $2.00  Grilled  Chicken  House  Salad  $6  25 

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Calzon^ 

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Homemade  Lasagna  $4.95 
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:    N.Y.  Style  Cheese  Cake  $2.95 

Italian  Ice  $1.25 
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Bottled  Water  $1.25 

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Coffee  or  Tea  $1.00 


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i-^^    (»aKnPnfui;!L^."L,     Open  Daily  Until  4:00  a.m.  H'^SSl^i 


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Monday,  October  2, 2000 


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Scooter  /  Cycle  Repair 
Scooters  for  Sale 
Vehicles  for  Rent 


Resorts  /  Hotels 
Rides  Offered 
Rides  Wanted 
Taxi  /  Shuttle  Service 
Travel  Destinations 
Travel  Tickets 
Vacation  Packages 


1-900  numbers 

Financial  Aid 

Insurance 

Computer  /  internet 

Foreign  Languages 

Health  /  Beauty  Services 

Legal  Advice  /  Attorneys 

Movers  /  Storage 

Music  Lessons 

Personal  Services 

Professional  Services 

Resumes 

Telecommunications 
I  Tutoring  Offered 

Tutoring  Wanted 
I  Typing 

Writing  Help 


rTi 


11 


mm 


Business  Opportunities 
Career  Opportunities 
Child  Care  Offered 
Child  Care  Wanted 
Help  Wanted 
Housesitting 
Internship 

Personal  Assistance 
Temporary  Employment 
Volunteer 


mtmj 


Apartments  for  Rent 
Apartments  Furnished 
Condo  /  Townhouse  for  Rent 
Condo  /  Townhouse  for  Sale 
Guesthouse  for  Rent 
House  for  Rent 
House  for  sale 
Houseboats  for  Rent  /  Sale 
Housing  Needed 
Room  for  Help 
Room  for  Rem 
Roommates  -  Private  Room 
Roommates  -  Shared  Room 
I  Sublets 
Vacation  Rentals 


tndex 


1 1 8  Kerckhoff  Hall 
308  Westwood  Plaza    ' 
Los  Angeles.  CA  90024 


E-Mail;  classifieds@media.ucla.edu 
Web:  http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


Classified  Une:  (310]  825-2221 

Fax:  C310)  206-0528 
Classified  Display:  (310)  206-3060 

Fax:  (310]  206-0528 

ollioehoun 

Mon-Thu:  9:00am-3:00pm   ■' .\ 
Fri:  9am-2 :30pm  ;      . 


One  issue,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
WeeWy,  up  to  20  words 
each  additional  word 
Monthly,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
12  pt  headline 
1 6  pt  headline 
VBorder 


$8.50 
0.65 

29  00 
2  15 

96.00 
5.75 

$1.60 

$2.25 

$5.ooy 


Classified  Une  Ads: 

1  working  day  before  printing, 
at  12  noon 

Classified  Display  Ads: 

2  working  days  tiefore  printing, 
at  12  noon. 

There  are  no  cancellations  after 
noon  of  the  day  before  priming. 


hoMftoiMrile 
an  dAecdve  ad 

•  Start  your  ad  with  the 
merchandise  you  are  selling. 
This  makes  it  easier  for  readers  to 
quickly  scan  the  ads  and  locate 
your  Items. 

•  Always  include  the  pnce  of  your 
Item  Many  classified  readers 
simply  do  not  resp)ond  to  ads 
without  prices. 

•  Avoid  abbreviations- -make  your 
ad  easy  for  readers  to  understand 

•  Place  yourself  in  the  readers 
position,  ask  what  you  would  like 
to  know  about  the  merchandise, 
and  include  that  in  the  ad.  Include 
such  information  as  brand  names, 
colors  and  other  speofic 
descriptions 

Tb*  ASUCLA  Communications  tx>an)  fully  suppoiU  ttia  Universily  of  CalHomia's  poKcy  on  nondecrimination.  No  medium  shal  acoapt  advartlsemants  wt*cti  present  panons  ol  any  origin,  race.  sex.  or  sexual  orientation  in  a 

demeaning  way  or  imply  thai  Ihey  are  limited  lo  positions.  capabiWies.  i  -  ..    -  .  - 

advertisements  represented  m  this  issue.  Any  person  believing  that  an  i 

Daily  Brum,  lie  Kerckhoff  Hall.  308  Westwood  Plaza.  Los  Angelas.  CAS  .  .  ^  .      . 

475-9671  Classified  ads  also  appear  on-line  at  tmpyAmnv.daitytxuinucla.edu.  Placement  on-line  is  olfored  as  a  complimanlary  service  lor  customers  and  is  not  guaranteed.  The  OaMy  Bruin  Is  responsible  for  the  first  incon 

insertion  only  Minor  typograpttical  errors  are  not  aligit>le  lor  ittunSi.  For  any  refund,  the  OaHy  Bruin  Classified  Department  must  be  notified  ol  an  error  on  Wie  firsi  day  of  publicalion  by  noon. 


For  Classified  Display  ads. 

please  see  our  rate  card 

for  variable  rate  information. 


^^ 


payment 


Please  make  checks  payable  to 
"The  UCLA  Daily  Brum."  Wfe 
accept  Visa.  f\/lasterCard.  and 
Discover  credit  cards.  Allow  5 
working  days  for  mail  payments. 


(nn^^^^ 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


U.S.  Green  Card 

Lottery 


announcements 

1100-2600 


1100 

Campus  Happenings 


DANCE  LESSONS 

SWING-SALSA-TANGO 

ballroom@ucla.edu 

MONDAYS  7-11PM  ©UCLA  Ackerman 
Union  2nd  Floor  Lounge  Room  2414.  Learn 
Fanrious  Line  Dances  09PM.  Learn  Cut>an 
style  Salsa  and  Merengue  @10pm.  BE- 
COME A  MEMBER!  Enjoy  40  hours  of  free 
dance  lessons  each  quarter  Universify- 
DanceClubs©usa  net  310-284-3636. 

DanceOanceDanceDancellll  Begins  Oct.  2 


Rej;istration  Period 

October  2nd  to 

November  1,2000 


to  be  Issued 

vailable  to  foreign  students  and  their  taniilies. 

For  a  free  information  package,  call  oiu* 
Lottery  Department  at  l-8()()-\'ISA-LA\V 

>^      Bernard  P.  VVolfsdorf 

.\  I'rol&sioiiiil  Law  Coi  |)(>r>iti(>n 


21 OO 

Recreational  Activities 


VAMPIRE  Live  Action  Role  Playing  game! 
CaH  David  909-338-4621  or  visit  www.geoci- 
ties.com/LAt)yNighl.  Games  every  other  Sat 
night,  t>eginning10^/00. 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


Female  UCLA 

Undergrads  With 

Lupus  Needed 


for  interviews  regarding 
the  college  experience 

Contact:  Kristen  McKinney 

825-3180 

mckinney@ucla.edu 


taom^^ 


i^St? 


1738i  Sunset  Blvd.  Suite  120.  Pacific  Palisades,  CA  90272 
(310)  573-4242  •  FAX  (310)  573-3093  •  visalau@vvolfsdorf.iom 

WW^V.VVOLFSDORI'.COM 


Fraternities  •  Sororities 
dubs  •  Student  Groups 

Earn  $1  000-$2.000  ihis  quarter  with  the  easy 
Ompusnindraisercom  three  hour  fundraising 
event.  No  sales  required.  Fundraisinc  dales 
are  Tilling  quickly,  so  call  todav*  Coniact 
Campusfundraisercom  at  (888)  9233238,  or 
visit  www.cainpusfundraiser.coni 


1300 

Campus  Recriiitnieiit 


1800 

Miscellnneoiis 


Beautiful  Asian  girls  250>  Dally  FREE  sexy 
images  of  Asian  women.  Includes  UCLA  co- 
eds. Team  Asian,  http://www.teamasian.com 

ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-campus  &  on-line  financial  services 
source  for  students,  faculty  &  staff.  Visit  us  at 
Ackerman  A-level.  on-line  at  www.ucu.org  or 
call  310-477-6628. 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


A  future  of  possihilities 


0,      * 

'  -i^  ■-£■ 


C/ioose  a  career  Oiut 

brUicje'i  htalimj  tnuiitions 

ami  modern  health  science 


Learn  about  Bastyr  University 

Graduate  &  Professional 

School  Fair 

Wednesday,  October  4 

Dickson  Plaza 

10  am    2  pm 


Crddiicilf  Proytcims  in 
Acupuncture  t*  Orientril  Mi-clicitie 
N.iturop.ithic  Medicine 
Nutrition 


1900 

Personal  Messages 


MICHELLE-UCLA 
PUBLIC  HEALTH 
PHD  CANDIDATE 

We  met  at  Teasers  in  Santa  Monica  9/15. 
Talked  about  C&O  Trattoria,  smarter  living 
and  Italy  airfares.  Seattle/Michigan.  Recent 
Cedars-Sinai  intern.  Please  contact  me.  tor- 
benrolfsenOhotmall.com  510-834- 

0972ext.115 


2000 

Personals 


NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT Safe*  affordable'  effective*  visit  us  at 
wwwfigureplus.com  1-886-603-9800.  DIs- 
tnbutorships  are  available. 

PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
year  old  females  with  adventurous  and  open 
mirvjed  spihts  who  want  to  expand/exptore 
their  sexuality  through  nude  modeling.  Free 
prints  for  modeling  time  Call  Robert  at  310- 
463-5996  rob4dOatt.net 


EARN  $$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  lor  the  com- 
mon cold.  Male/female  18-55yrs.  oW.  non- 
smoker,  no  asthma  history.  Limited  availabil- 
ity. Call  today  310-785-9121. 
EmailcllncalsubjectsOyahoo.com 

PLAY  GAMES&EARN  money,  tool  Social 
psychological  experiment.  i-hour.  Average 
$10.  Undergraduate  only.  Call:310-825- 
3017,  sign-up  2524  Hershey,  or 
email.pbonaachOyah(x>.com,  leaving  your 
name,  phone  number,  and  available  times. 

RESEARCH  PARTICIPANTS  NEEDED  for 
patients  experiencing  Hay  Fever/Allergk: 
Rhinitis.  Requires  4  visits  (6  hours  total)  over 
7-10days  Will  pay  up  to  $100  at  conclusion 
of  study.  Contact  Dr  Diaz-Sanchez  or 
Dr.Saxon  at  310-825  3699  or  310-825-9376. 

SMOKERS  WANTED 

UCLA  research  study  Earn  $7.50/hour  plus 
$30  bonus  for  not  snDoking  overnight  and  $5 
per  Mood  draw.  794-9691.  IRB  •97-07-005- 
03 

SMOKERS,  EX-SMOKERS  &  NONSMOK- 
ERS  In  gocxi  health,  at  least  18  years  of  age, 
wanted  for  UCLA  research  study  Subjects 
will  be  pakl  up  to  $120  for  2  testing  days. 
Please  call  Dr.  Rk:hard  Olmstead  at  310- 
478-3711  ext  44319,  leave  message. 

VOLUNTEERS  between  the  ages  of  18-30 
wanted  as  subjects  In  experiments  cieaUng  in 
balance  and  eye  rrKtvements.  Must  have 
normal  viston,  balar>ce  and  be  in  good 
health  $30-40/session.  Call  310-206-6354 
lor  rtKire  informatkxi. 


2000 

Personals 


HOW  promfecuou^re  y< 

wwwRateYourselfnnm 


CiHTipiis  just  north  ol  Seattle       li,\^'|'V'i? 


■ir 


Daily  Bniin  Classified 


Monday,  October  2, 2000       45 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


Who  keeps 
Deloitte  &  louche 
on  FORTUNE'S  list 
of  the  100  Best 
Companies 
to  Work  for  in 
America? - 


For  more 

information  on 

exciting  career 

opportunities  at 

Deloitte  &  Touche, 

or  to 

find  out 

when  we'll  be 

on  campus, 

please  contact 

your 

Career  Placement 

office. 


Deloitte 
&Touche 


The  answer  is  ttie  people 
of  Deloitte  &  Touche 


www.us.deloitte.com 


€)2CK)0  Delottte  &  Touche  LLR  DetoJtte  &  Touche  refers  to  DeJottte  &  Touche  LLP,  end  releted  entities. 

OeJoitte  &  Toycha  i»  an  equal  opportunity  f\rxti.  We  recruit,  employ,  train,  compenaate,  and  promote  without 

regard  to  race,  relHiion,  creed,  color,  nationei  origin,  age.  gander,  sexual  orientation,  marital  etatus,  disability. 

veteran  etatus  or  any  other  basis  protected  by  applicable  federal,  state  or  local  law. 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


\         FREE 
DIABETES  SCREENING 

I  Gertetic  study  of  Diabetes  recruits 

healthy  volunteers  (18-40  years  old)  for 

free  diabetes  screening  with  standard 

oral  glucose  tolerance  test  (2.5  hoors). 

Qualified  subjects  (who  pass  the  oral 

glucose  tolerance  test  and  have  normal 

trfood  (xessure)  will  t>e  invited  to 

participate  in  a  genetic  study  of 

diabetes.  Subfects  wNI  be  paid  Si  50 

for  participation. 

DMaHs,  cafl  Or.Cbiu  (310)-206-9664. 


2300 

Sperm/Egg  Donors 


$50,000  FOR  EGG 
DONATION 

PLEASE  HELP  us  give  our  precious  baby 
boy  a  sitting.  We  seek  a  compassionate,  in- 
telligent, attractive,  honest,  energetic,  and 
fun-loving  Caucasian  woman,  under  32.  at 
least  5'5",  to  be  our  egg  donor.  Please  con- 
tact us  at  egghuntingOaol.com  or  PO  Box 
140-328.  Howard  Beach.  NY  11414. 


EGG  CXDNOR  NEEDED 
call  310-397-0490 


Oriental.  Please 


WOMEN  AGES  18-40  WITH  and  WITHOUT 
PREMENSTRUAL  SYNDROME  wanted  for 
a  4-month  study  of  hormone  in  response  to 
progesterone  or  prozac  cfwllenge.  The  study 
entails  mood  diaries,  blood  test  and  2  spinal 
taps,  and  takir>g  progesterone  or  prozac 
May  be  paid  up  to  $200  for  your  time  Con- 
tact Unda  GoMman,  RNP  UCLA  OBGYN 
310-825-2452 


EGG  DONORS  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 

wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

S5,000 

Df    Call  MiRNA  (818)  832-1494    ^ 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


Pay  your  tuition 
with  eggs. 


If  you're  a  woman  between  18 
and  35,  you  can  earn  money  east> 
ly,  anonymouilyL  Donate  your 
egss  to  an  infertile  couple. 

$3,500  and  up,  depending  on 
your  education  and  other  qualifi- 
cations. Gill  today. 

ThI  CiNTER  FOR  EOG  OPTIONS 

310/546-6786 

♦  T>ie  C«ntef  far  Eg  Optiotu.  LLC 


'his%  p<4f>W  fl- 

paijerro; 


0  rhiti  pKpfif  re. 
»  (his  f  >afM-Y  rc" 


r'si>ef»rycie  Uii 


2600 

Wnnted 


M/F  MODELS  WANTED  by  est.  photogra- 
pher for  commercial  portfolio.  Must  be  in 
•tiape  arxl  good  looMng  can  Steven  81B- 
733-0557. 


2700 


REFRIDGERATOR 

17.9  cu  it.  Top  condMort.  Saparata  upper 
(freezeO  and  lower  doors.  Ksftmore.  (175. 
prtvate  party.  310-474-062% 


31  OO 

Calling  Cards 


5  CENTS/MINUTE 
PHONE  CARDS 

No  Connection  fees!  No  miscellaneous  tgx- 
es/fees!  $20  card  -  400  minutes  Sent  $20 
plus  $.50  shipping  to  HeartLand  Telecom 
20050  Addison  Ave.  AltaVista  Iowa  50603. 
888-661-7706. 


3^00 

Computers/Software 


POWER  MAC  7100  40  meg  RAM.  1  gig 
hard  drive,  color  monitor  &  printer,  zip  drive, 
software  complete,  modem.  $475.  310-825- 
1755. 

SONY  SUPERSLIM  N505VE  notebook. 
333MHz/64MB/6.0GB/56k/TFT.  Mint  condi- 
tion. Including  Sony  CD-rom.  new  Sony 
Vario  laptop  case  and  USB  hub.  $1400 
Email  for  more  Info.  thiuclaOfx>tnrtail.com 


3500 

Furniture 


COMPLETE  FORMAL 
DINING  ROOM  SET 

Hardwood;  brass  detailing.  Oval  table:opens 
to  seat  10.  Six  chairt:  large  glaas-frortt  hutch 
$2100  otoo.  310i825-917e,  leave  message 


CiiLS^illLUb 

825-2221 


3500 

Furniture 


FOR  SALE:  2  couches.  1  bed  (with  mattress 
and  frame)  and  chairs  lor  cheap  ($20  and 
up)  310-613-6211 ..  ..-  y^ 

MATTRESSES!!!       V 

SEALY,  STEARNS  &  FOSTER  Also  tv*rtn- 
sets-$79  95.  Fulls-$99.95,  Queens-$139  95. 
Kings-$199.95  Queen  Pillowtops  $19995. 
Beacon  Open  7-dayS.  1309  Westwood 
Blvd  310-477-1466. 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


COOL  GIFTS  FOR  CHICKS!  One-ot-a-kino 
handbags,  jewelry,  recyclements,  and  more. 
Secure  online  shopping  at  wwwcucuz- 
za.com. 

GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

.55,000  Visas  awarded.  $40  lor  attorney  pre- 
pared application  John  Manley,  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd.  #300  LA.  CA  90025 
310-820-7553.  Deadline;  10/30/00 


f»«»#e»E^ 


Wansportauo 

4600-5500 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1983  BMW  3201 

5-speed.  clean.  well-niaintaine3,  second 
owner  $2195obo.  310-452-2334 

1983  JAGUAR  XJ6,  12500  miies  Good  con- 
diiion  $2900  obo  Coniact  thiucla@hol- 
mail.com  or  call  310-20'6-485l. 


1984  HONDA  ACCORD,  $14oO.White 
w/blue  int.,  4-door.5-speed, power  windows, 
brakes&locks,  cruise  control,  all  main- 
tenance records,  good  condition.  Call  Lara  at 
310-319-2011 

1989  MAZDA  626DX,  blue,  5-speed  slick 
very  good  condition,  94K  miles,  A/C, 
AM/FM/Cassette,  single-owner,  accident- 
free,  $2500.  Call  x52910or  310-470-7152. 

1989  TOYOTA  COROLLA  GT  SPORT  eco- 
nomical/reliable great  for  school/wort<.  New 
tires,  engine  1  yr  old,  manual  trans  $2500. 
323-810-8914  Alonso. 


1990  1/2  NISSAN  240SX  SE  Burgundy,  al- 
loys,5-speed, many  new  parts.  SE  edition, 
loaded  with  extras  including  moonrool,  pow- 
er everything,  etc.  310-470-3615 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4wd, 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  condi- 
tion. Sell  for  $4700.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836. 

1990  MITSUBISHI  ECLIPSE  GS  DOHC: 
excellent  condition!  New  clutch  &  transmis- 
sion! Car  is  a  GEM.  Must  drivel  $3000  obo. 
310-394-1397. 

1992  TOYOTA  TERCEL 

DX,  4door,  automatic,  66. 5K  miles,  blue, 
AM/FM  stereo,  A/C  $4,000obo.  310-209- 
6211. 

1993  HONDA  DEL  SOL 

Automatic/65K  miles  great  gas  mileage. 
$6500.  Alpine  stereo,  convertible,  fun  school 
car,  one  owner  Call  Jordana:310-383-1701 

CONVERTIBLE  1976  Alfa  Romeo  5-speed, 
red,  low  miles,  AM/FM/Casette,  leather 
seats  $2800  obo.  Call  Dave  310-440-4149. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Cars  as  low  as  $500 
for  listings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214. 


VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990 
84000mi,  good  condition,  power  windows, 
black,  A/C,  registration  paid  lor  one  year 
$4500.  Call  Vicente  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerOucla.edu 

"93  TOYOTA  PASEO,  airbag,  black,  manual 
iransmlsskjn,  5  speed,  A/C,  am/fm  CD,  very 
clean,  runs  great.  $3200  obo  310-454-3621 

'95  EAGLE  TALON  TSI  AWD.  18ln.  Konig- 
monsson  rims,  Eibach  springs,  JVC  CD  play- 
er, one  owner  $9,700,  $1,000  less  than 
KBB,  call  Antonio  310-539-6516, 
www.mvsampson.attfreeweb.com. 

■97  TOYOTA  4RUNNER  SR5  4X4  5sp  wht, 
Ithr,  16ln  wheels,  sunrf.  perfect.  39M 
$22,950.  310-470-0010. 


5200 

Parkint) 


NEEDED  Parking  spot  for  school  year  20Q0- 
2001.  WtH  pay.  310-824-0997 


Display 
206-3060 


'\-r:Xfr^' 


•1 


St?*.    :. 


46       Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Daily  BnimOauifM' 


2300 

Sperm  /  Eyy  Donors 


2300 

Sperni  /  Efjtj  Donors 


2300 

Sporni  /  E(j(j  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Eijy  Donors 


6200 

Heiilth  Services 


Special  Egg  Donor  Bi^eded 

Preferred  Donor  will  meet  the  following  critpria! 

•Height  Approximately  5'6 "  or  Taller  •Caucasian  •SAX 
Score  around  1300  or  fflgh  A.C.T.  •CoUege  Student  or 
Graduate  Student  Under  30  •No  Genetic  Medical  Issues 


eitsation 


Paid  to  you  and/or  the  chaSty^fyour^oice. 


All  related  expenses  will  be  paid  in  addition  to 

your  compensation.  ..,■..,  :■^--■:,^'^^■'^ 

(Extra  compensation  available  for  someone  who  might  be  especially 
gifted  in  athletics,  science/mathematics  or  music.) 


For  more  information  or  to  obtain  an  application  please 
contact  Michelle  at  the  Law  Office  of  Greg  L.  Eriksen 

(800)  808-5838 
or  email  EggDonorInfo@aol.com. 


*This  ad  is  being  placed  for  a  particular  client  and  is  not  soliciting  effis  for  a  donor  bank. 


5200 

Parking 


PARKING  NEEDED 

UCLA  STUDENT  LIVING  IN  RIEBER  HALL 
Fall  2CX)0-Spnng  2001  needs  a  parking  spot 
tor  Fall  quarter  and  possibly  beyond.  Parking 
can  be  anywhere  somewhat  near  residence 
lall  Side  of  campus.  Call  661-297-8108  or 
email  sabruzzoOucIa  edu. 


Scooters  for  Sale 


S700 

Travel  TickeK 


PARKING  SPACE  WANTED.  Near/on  Veter- 
an/StrathrDore.  $50/mo  obo.  Can  sign  lease 
for  10-12  months.  Call  310-770-1225  or 
ngabrlelOucla.edu. 


5400 

Scooters  for  Sale 


986  HONDA  AeroSO  scooter  runs  great, 
ew   battery,    only   3K   miles   $700/obo 
""811:310-479-7276. 


Scooters  For  Less  i  VICTORY  TRAVEL 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


STUDENT  LOANS 


ELITE  50  $54.99 
orless/mnth. 

EUTE  80^,99 

or  ^ess/mim 

977  m  Hyde  ParTBlvd 
B^EWOOD 


WE  DELIVER! 


LATIN  MmtKM  StmOALtSTS 


MaxiceCly 

Gooddoiuiu  

I  Cobo  Son  lutm    99    Iummm  Aira* 
I  El  SoKrodar         209    $.  {>•  ClHlt 
219 


>««M.^k^W<^p 


119    mm/»*»PmuU»B»\ 
109    Ufflo  169 

299 
209 
togoto  220 

30*    QuHo  259 

228    Mom  ao* 

179    Caracas  1991 


NEW  YORK 

*259ra 


PfRF5RMANCE  FIRST^ 

(310)677-5800x107 


J*  ■■•¥'!'■         M9»/T 


rl.  NOW  i,  >o>r   $$ 


.^Mexico  Escapes! 

|$329  Cobo  Son  Lucas       ^^1% 
l$519  Concun  gl^E^M 

|$359  Pu«rteVollorta  Wg^l^^ 

'/r  aaoccPrnflimAk--      " 


(323)  277-4595 


6100 

Computer/Internet 


JAPANESE! 

Shop  Online! 

Bonif.    MrfRs.J.POP 
R.-imon.  An>mo  At  Morr' 

wwwfuilsancom 


6200 

Health  Services   ' 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 


el  your  Stafford  LoanJrom  University  Cred- 
Union  (Lender  Code  832123).  We're  on 
impus  at  Ackerman  A-level.  310-477-6628; 
<'ww.ucu.ofg 


^mm 


61 OO 

Computer/Internet 


NEED  t»E^P  coonecling  iMac  to  Umax  scan- 
ner $25/hr.  Norma  323-932-1553.  call 
evenirnje. 


61  OO 

Computer  /  Internet 


"«•  hamt  torgotfn  what  n't 
Ilka  to  baa  ttudant " 

•Acne»Mole  Removal -Warts -Rashes  • 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmentation* 

•Laser  Ablation  o(  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  826-2051 

www.DrSllv9n.eom 


P/T  to  complete  construction  and  mainlain 
'••bsfte.  Nationwide  wtwiesala.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


ISaS^sage 

i^K^  YOURSELF  to  a   relaxing  Swed- 
"•^^  Tissw,  Massage.  $4(Vhf  w/student 

310-575^924.  Qm  CarWIctaa  avHabia 


C 


Be  Beautiful 


Porcelain  Bonding 

$590  Each,  Lass  10%  for  Students 
Open  evenings 

Petsr  Wylsn,  DDS 

Bsllflower  Dental  Group 

(562)  925-3765 

1 031 8  RosMrans     Batmowar  90706 

30  min.  from  campus 


PERSONAL  TRAINERS  NEEDED.  No  expe- 
rience required.  Earn  $60/hf.  National 
Trainef's  Assoc.  1-d86-NTA-2338. 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Attorneys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST  Sexual  harrassment,  Discrimina- 
tion, Auto-accWents,  Slips/falls.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  Wostside.  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW'86). 
www.bestlawyer.com  310-277-3000. 


6^00 

Movers/Storage 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-foot  truct(s  fully  equipped  for  large  moves. 
Call  24/7  Available  on  short  notice  License 
T1 63644.  B00-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  w/14ft  truck  and  dollies, 
small  jobs,  short  notice  ok.  SF,  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  BniinsI  10th  yr  310- 
285-8688. 


JERRYS  MOVING4DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers  Expenenced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery Packing,  boxes  available.  Also,  pick- 
up donations  for  American  Cancer  Society 
JerryO310-391-5657. 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedcated  pro- 
fessranal.  At  your  homa  or  WLA  studio  1$t- 
lesson  free  No  drum  set  necessan/ 
Neil:323-«54-8226. 


GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professtonal  near  UCLA.  AH  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effoniesslyi 
www.JWQS.com  Call  Jean  at  310-478- 
4154. 


VOICE,  PIANO  LESSONS  by  professkxial 
Singer/pianist,  Juilliard  School.  MM.  All  levels 
wateome,  310-544-1240. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW  MEDITai 
SO^  APPLICANTS,  plrat^L'S 
o»«ng  yoof  cnidal  personal  statements?  Get 
^J^^^   '•"'   ""-^   well-known   .u 

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Uispj.iy 
POb-JObO 


•^i''*^■'.■•t■ 


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Daily  Bruin  ClassHM 


Monday,  October  2, 2000       47 


2300 

S|j(.'rm/E()()  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


For  A  Limited  Time 


GET  $1,500.00  BONUS 

IN  ADDITION  TO  A 
$3,500.00  DONOR  FEE 


when  you  are  chosen  by 

a  couple  within  the  first 

month  of  being 

accepted  by  our 

:  program 

THE  EGG 

DONOR 

49ROCRAM 

Help  a  couple  achieve  their  dreaTh  and 
you'll  receive  the  highest  compensation 
and  most  personalized  attention  from  the 
oldest  donor  program  In  L.A. 

We  screen  recipient  parents,  too 

Shelley  smith  m.a..  m.f.c.c 
323-933-0414 

The  Eoo  Donor  ProoranvThe  Surrooacy  Program 
e-mali  ssmtthMFCCOaol.com-istabllshed  In  looo 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


Council 


Travel 


Council  Travel  invites  you  to  our 


October  7th  •  l-Spm 

prize  cMveavA/aus  • 

everu  hour  on  the  nour^  • 


THE  WORLD  FAMOUS  KROQ  VAN  WILL  BE  THElie  WrfH  GIVEAWAYS 
AND  MEET  KROQ  DJ  STYKERI 

prizes  Include : 

TICKETS  TO  UNIVERSAL  STUDIOS  •  QUEEN  MARY'S  SHIPWRECK  HALLOWEEN 
HAUNT  •  SPRING  BREAK  PACKAGES  TO  CLUB  MED  SONOflA  BAY  MEXICO 
•ATRIP  FOR  TWO  TO  HAVWVII  •  AIRLINE  TICKETS  TO  EUROPE  ON  VIRGIN 

ATLANTIC  WITH  A  CONTIKI  TOUR  •  EURAILPASSES  •  AND  MUCH,  MUCH  MOREM 


Come  nnd  meet  IVIelissa  from  MTVs 
"Tfie  Real  World"  from  3:30pm-5:30pm  ! 


Join  U8  Fon  music:  and  Fun  and 

let  council  travel  takie  uou    |gf 

around  trie  w/tarld  !  virgm 

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531  Santa  Monica  Blvd.    310-656-9991 

corner  of  Santa  Monica  and  6th 
M,  T.  W,  F  10-7     TH  11-7     SAT  11-5 


6700 

Professional  Services 


PSYCHOTHERAPY 


I  iiriii^  \  (  (mlHk'iitiiil 
(  oiinsc'lin^ 

l)cpn.'>Mi>i).  .Amml'In. 

I"''  l.lllnllships,  AJllkiUMIv  \ 
\hii>.^' 


6700 

Professional  Serv'ces 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COV^R  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  formatting,  tran- 
scribing, personalized,  protessiorul  assis- 
tance. Atr^  Vyp'ds.Etc.  310-820-8830. 


^h:»:< 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Seiviues 


6200 

Health  Servic.es 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  ( ^Br«cesV 


3E?SL  Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

•^    Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 

Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


m\.  i)is(()i  \i 


Deliver  Brilliant  Results 

•  Cosfnefic  Porcelain 

•  Surgi'cal  Orthodonitcs 

•  RennovQble 

■*  Traditional 

•  Invisible 

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(310)  826    7494 

IIMiWlMiirrBlvd  1(102 
los  Aiigcin  C  A  90025 

552    5890 

l8JNCulvnUi    tk 
IrWw.CA  92715 


m^M  Teeth  Whitening   $«'=;oo 

HBt""  gIPBf  upper  or  lowCT  *^        ^^  %J  \^ 


6700 

Professional  Services 


crai<>UCii»i(v 


dalell>3iO0 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


uiWRirmiEDmHG 

Personal  Statements,  Papers,  Theses, 
Dissertations,  Books,  &  Proposals  ' 

Comprehensive  help  by  PhD  from  DC 
International  Students  Welcome 

(323)  665-8145 


TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  NOn- 
Union/Union.  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day.  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
pers.com 

THESIS/DISSERTATION  COACH-  LEARN 
HELPFUL  TECHNIQUES.  Get  emotional 
support.  Dorothy  Imai,  PhD.  MFCC.  11110 
Ohio  Ave.  Ste  202.  WLA.  310-474-0942. 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


**ENGLISH  EXPERT 

DOES  WRITING  IN  ENGLISH  make  you 
crazy?  Assistance  in  basic  skills  to  major  re- 
search paper  completion.  ESL  experienced 
310-839-9933/Adam. 


Score!  Prep  needs 

tutors  w/high  SAT  & 

SAT  II  scores  tor  SAT  & 

Academic  subject 

tutoring.  Reliable 

transportation 

required.  $16  per 

hour  -f-  bonus.  Flex 

schedules. 

CALL  NOW! 


call  (310)  371-4500 

for  more  information 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


TUTORS  WANTED 

ALL  SUBJECTS,  especially  Chemistry, 
physics,  math.  Latin,  Greek.  Car,  Bachelors 
required.  $20+/hr.  Fax  resume  to  310-914- 
4158  Attn:  Tama. 

TUTORS  WANTED:  All  Subjects,  preK-12th 
grade,  computers,  languages,  instruments. 
PT  (WLA/SFV/MALIBU),  salary:  $10-15. 
must  have  car,  310-477-2669,  fax:  310-477- 
1359. 

WELL  PAID  TUTOR 

Tutor  needeid  for  HS  sophmore  in  Geometry 
$20/hr.  Provide  own  transportation 
Previous  tutoring  experience  310-275-5487 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertations,  transcription,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Monwa,  310-828-6939.  HollyvwKXl,  323-466- 
2888. 


BOND  TUTORING 

All  subjects  6-1 2th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees  We  will  meet  your  indivklu- 
alneeds.310-471-7628. 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results. 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall.  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Cateulus/Physics/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/English.  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 

MATH  TUTOR 

For  SAT  math,  Pre-Algebra.  Algebra  1  and  2, 
Geometry,  Tngonometry,  and  beginning  Cal- 
culus. UCLA  Student,  math  major.  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  math  and  one  year 
teaching  experience.  $25/hour.  Call  for  more 
information.  Stephanie:3 10-702-6455. 

MATH  TUTOR.  Math  Major  at  UCLA  $25/hr. 
Any  math  to  Calculus  References  upon  re- 
quest. 310-828-6291  miopez©  ucla.edu. 
Ask  for  Richard. 


COLLEGE  STUDENT 
TUTORS  WANTED 

K-12  after  school,  in  WLA.  SM,  BH  No  ex- 
perience necessary.  $10-15/hour  plus  bo- 
nus. The  Tutors  Club;310-444-0449. 

DRIVER/MATH  tutor  needed  after  school  for 
8th  grader.  Pacific  Palisades  excellent  pay 
call  Gail  at  310-201-6159. 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  hatMts  to  assist  12&16-yr- 
old  boys  w/HW  and  tests  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED  Must  be 
graduate  student  or  TA.  For  high  school 
student  taking  second  year  Spanish  and 
math.  310-476-0766. 

MATH  LOVERS 
WANTED  " 

For  math  tutoring  sen^ice.  Flexible  schedule. 
Must  have  a  great  understanding  of  subject. 
$15/hour.  Call:310-560-9561. 


7300 

Writing  Help 


GET  BETTER  GRADES!!  Professk>nal  writer 
will  help  you  with  any  subject.  Editing  and  re- 
writes are  my  specialty.  Competitive  rates 
310-285-3421. 


rrromi 


~^ 


NEED  A  GENERAL  A  TUTOR  for  11 -year- 
old-boy  in  BH.  Must  be  nice  &  patient 
Please  call  Lily  310-274-3929  or  310-600- 

4707. 


PRIVATE  TUTORING 

ALL  SUBJECTS,  all  levels,  affordable 
rales.  At  your  home  Highly  qualified  tu- 
tors. Call  Admiral  Tutoring  310-477-9685. 


THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
teriri  paper  assistance,  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  Weteome 
Ca  11:310-4  52-2865 
www.thewriterscoach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate 
Help  with  the  English  language— for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages'levels  310-440-3118. 


EXCEPTIONAL 
TUTORS  WANTED 


High  quality  center  in  Pacific 

Palise»des  has  immediate  P/T 

openings  for  1  on  1  tutoring.  AJI 

sut)jects  &  levels  up  thRXjght  high 

sctXJOl.  BA/AIA,  positive  atitude 

and  effective  tijtdring  skills  required. 

Call  for  interview 

(310)459-4125 


employment 

7400-8300 


Business  Opportunities 


$WORK  FROM  HOMES 

$500-2500  P/T,  $3000-15000-(-  F/T,  No 
investment.  Real  Opportunity!  Call  Stewart 
310-234-0338 

A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  Its  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35,  Refundable  No  Risk. 
http://zibgib.com/phanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stepfianle. 

GET  RICH!!! 

Make  I000's+  weekly!  For  details,  send  one 
stamp  to:  GRQ  &  Co  ,  PO  Box  8690,  Austin, 
TX78713 


MATH  TUTOR  WANTED 

FOR  HIGH  SCHOOL  JUNIOR  in  Pre-Calcu- 
lus.  Westwood  area.  2-3  aftemoons/week 
310-470-3831 


Slut  In  Kli(.(l;ifl;i,  Ml  I 

I  lN.->n  Wi-ll.iu'  Bl\.l.  «:(i| 

(310)47'>-S255 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Compreri«nsive  Dissertatkxi  AMistance 
Th»«««,  Paperi.  and  Personal  Stata«n«ntt 

Proposals  and  Books 

Intamalional  Sludwits  W«kX)m«  SifKe  1985 

Sharon  Baar,  Pt\.0.  (SIO)  470-«««2 

loww.B— r-Wnla.com 


ITALIAN  LESSONS 

LEARN  ITALIAN  at  own  pace  wtiereAwhen 
you  want!  We  offer  Italian  cla«M>  tailored  on 
your  needs  Call  310-442-«078. 


Ckissifieris 


PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pre-paid  ^  legal  service  programs 
provtdlng  quaWy  legal  sanncas  to  plan  mem- 
bers. Robert  MoS8.ESQ.:3t0-260-7650 


WWWMY-TUTOR.COM  Mafh/PhysicVSfa- 
ttstics/EngHsh/Hebrew/  chemlstry/bk>logy/as- 
tronomy/  Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
service  Call  anytime.  800-90-TUTOfl. 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE  Tutoring,  com- 
panion, driving.  Active  7y/o  twy  and  lly/o 
girt  Athletic  female  preferred.  BH.  $8-12/hr. 
4days/wk.  2-4hrs/day  ASAP  CaH  31Q-273- 
3663,  310-753-3535.      ...  email 

lonz320aol.com. 


BALDWIN  HILLS/CULVER  CITY  AREA 
Fanuile  tutor  wanted  for  8th  grader  for  math, 
science,  etc.  2hrs  evenings.  Lenette  323- 
735-4588 


SERIOUS  TUTOR  WANTED  for  6th-graders 
reading  and  writing  2  hours/day  M-F 
Sunset/Crescent  Heights  area.  Michelle 
home  323-851-7273  or  cell  323-816-9313. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homework  assist  lor  two  boys,  2nd  and  3td 
grade  in  private  home  in  Laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  caH  evenings:310-401-0113  or  day- 
time:310-392-1405. 

TUTOR  NEEDED!  Primarily  in  Spanish,  pre- 
calc  a  plus  For  16yr  oW  boy,  2  days/wk, 
flexible  schedule,  Brentwood,  call  Kathy 
days:310-247-1777,  eves:310-826-ia76 

TUTOR  NEEDED:  7th  grade  boy  Mon-Thurs 
4-6pm  Must  be  patient.  Help  in  all  subjects 
and  homework  Glendale  area.  Own  trans- 
portatkxi.  Call  310-865-4123.  daytime 

TUTORING  WANTED  FOR  9th  grader  In- 
home.  Homewortt  help  Brentwood  310- 
472-7342. 


MAKE  MONEY  lor  you  or  your  school  orga- 
nization with  the  Lifetime  Reminder  Sen^ice. 
Sign  up  online  today  http //www.thehot- 
pages.com\reminder214l500  htm 

NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

•    Work    from    home    with    flexible    hours, 
www.homebusiness  to/emoney 

OUR  WEBSITE  OFFERS  the  ultimate  links 
to  business  and  income  opportunities,  shop- 
ping, sports  activities  and  tickets,  entertain- 
ment, romance  and  more  11  will  take  time  to 
look  through  all  we  have,  but  its  well  worth  it. 
Come  visit  NOW!  http://www  thecoolpag- 
es.conVmerchandise/suite2 1 4 1 500 


..START  A  DORM-BASED  business  in  the  e- 
■  commerce/telecommunications  industry  for 

495.  Return  on  investment  wthin  45  days. 

No  selling!  Bonus-free  vacation.  1  -800-579- 

1225  ext77700. 

WANT  CASH? 

Sign-up  your  classmates  for  cool  Internet 
sites,  and  receive  a  minimum  of  $1  per  per- 
son!! There  is  no  easier  way  to  make  nDoneyl 
Log  onto  TEAMMAGMA.COM  or  call  1-877- 
866-2462  


vec-^cfe 


Display 
106-3060 


i«C«S 


a- 


48       Monday,  October  2, 2000 


7500 

Cnn;er  Opportunities 


GET  YOUR  OWN  legitimate  home  txjslness 
ottering  products  people  REALLY  want.  Own 
your  own  900  number  service  and  otfier 
unique  cashmakers.  While  everyone  else  is 
trying  lo  find  a  ride  to  work,  you'll  be  AT  work. 
http://www.maklngmoney6Bta- 
log.conV2l4l500. 

KOREATOWN  E-COMMERCE  business 
seeks  P/T  emptoyee  for  computer  and  office 
work.  Fluent  in  Korean  and  English. 
Resumes  to  namhee.hanOgte.net. 


B 


FIRST  CALL 
Staffing  Services 

College  Students! 
Earn  extra  money  for  school! 

Are  vou  looking  for  a  way  to  pay  off  those  student 

loans'  Call  us  for  short  or  long  lerm  work 
assignments  We  have  lots  of  fun  jote  available' 

CiUJaeinSanttMonia 

310.264.99H 

srOnteinOmUe 

8  18    2  4  2.9988 

w«w./lril(tlti(arr.c«n 


LANDSCAPE  DESIGNER.  FfT  positton. 
Garden  design  company  kx»led  in  Beverly 
Hills.  Will  be  invotved  In  entire  Landscape 
Design  process  Including;  creatton  of  Initial 
conceptual  design;  devetopment  of  drawring 
of  overall  site  plan  integrating  all  compo- 
nents of  exterior  design  incWuIng  plantings, 
garden  structures,  pools,  walls,  fences  and 
tiardscaping  details;  supenrfsion  and  coordi- 
natkxi  of  every  phase  of  producfton  and 
installatkxi  of  a  project  to  completion.  Fax 
resume  to  Melissa  Moore  310-542-8580. 

STOCK  BROKER.  Licenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars.  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216.  Woodland  Hills.  CA.  Instructor  DavW 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Han/ard  University) 
818-703-6889. 

TEACHER  ASSTNTS 

PRIVATE  WLA  School  looking  for  capable 
and  experienced  teacher  assistants  to  work 
with  elementary  level  students.  M-F.  8AM- 
3PM.  Begin  immediately.  Profk»ent  in  Mac 
computer  technotogy.  Please  fax  ra- 
8ume:310-471-1532. 


7600 

Child  Care  Offered 


NA6<LA  PR€SCHooL 


Lovely  W.LA  IMWy.  doM  to  UCtA 

FT  a  PT,  Aqm  2-6. 

Cai  (310)207-4543  or  vWt  In  p«rson 

at  1620  S.  Bundy. 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  run  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5.30.Ck)se  to  UCLA. 
310-473-0772. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


ACTIVE  3  YR  OLD  BOY  needs  to  woi1(  off 
some  energy  before  school.  7-9am,  5 
days/v>rk.  Westwood.  Please  call  Oanet  at 
310-441-0383.       ' 


AFTER  SCHOOL 
NANNY 

AfterrKxms  aprox.  3-8  and  some  evenings, 
flexible  hours.  Ovwi  Insured  car,  valW  driver's 
license  and  references  required.  Easy  kkJs. 
In  Santa  Monica.  Starting  $lO/hour.  310- 
202-9240 


AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  for  5-year-oW 
boy.  1;30-5:OOPM         approximately 

14hours/week   M-F   $8/hour  (negotiable). 
Anne:310-4  58-64  55. 


AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  WANTED  for  9- 
yr-oW  gin.  Bring  to  atterschool  activities.  2  or 
3  days/wk.  Santa  Monica.  Must  have  car 
Will  reimburse  for  gas+salary.  Call  Philip 
310-360-1981. 


AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tutoring.com- 
panwn.driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
girl,  Athletk;  female  preferred  BH.  $8-12/hr 
4days/wk,  2-4hrs/day.  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663.310-753-3535.  Email  k)n232©aol.com 


Mother's  Helper 


Aftomoon  driving,  bonwwoilc  Mp, 
cMM  car*  and  igM  Uds'  cooking  for  2 

boys,  agas  9  and  12.  Must  hava 

axcallefit  driving  rsoord  ft  GA  drivor^ 

liconsa.  Car  williio  provldod.  Miiat  Mia 

sports.  Mats  or  fsmaie.  Mon,  to  FrI. 

Hrs.  approiimatsty  3-8p.in.  (latar  on 

Fridays),  but  tiaxitito.  liom*  ia  in 

tavoriyHiUs.SlO/hOHr. 

Fax  rMuma  to  Dabbia  at 

(310)273-3748. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


Saturday  Babysitter/ 
Mother's  Helper 


Sit  ovmingt,  ipprox.  V-IO-JOpm. 
Babysitting  for  2  boys,  agas  9  and 

12.  InBevortyHlhsorlNallNi. 

Must  tiave  excallent  driving  record. 

Car  will  be  provided  if  driving  is 

necessary.  Male  or  female. 

$12/hour. 

Fax  resume  to  Debbie  at 

(310)273-3748. 


CHILDCARE 

for  personable  8yr-oW  girl.  Ptek-up  from 
school/lessons.  CDL.  own  car.  Insurance. 
Non-smoker  Monday/Wednesday/Frklay  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thursday  2-6prn.  Experl- 
erKe  and  references  required.  SKVtir.  Call 
310-440-6738. 

CHILDCARE  FOR  11 -YEAR-OLD  girl.  After 
school  hours  ranging  from  2-8:30PM.  Driving 
and  homework  support  Please  call:3l0-476- 
2469. 

CHILDCARE/DRIVER 

for  12-yr-okl  boy.  Non-smoker  Likes  kkte 
and  dogs.  Help  w/HW.  M-Thurs,  4:15- 
5:45pm.  $10/hr  Call  310-828-5144. 

CHILDCARE:  Empathetkyenergetk:  student 
lo  play  with  1  -yr-oW  boy.  Approx  6-10  hrs/wk. 
Flexible.  Experience  necessary.  310-446- 
7019.  

DRIVE  CHILD  from  school  In  PkxVRoberl- 
son  area  to  home  in  Pacifk:  Palisades  in  af- 
ternoons. Must  have  car  and  insurarwe.  310- 
454-7525. 

DRIVER  &  CARE 

For  2  boys  ages  1248  M-F  3-6prn.  Non- 
smoker  References  Call  310-839-2131 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  12416-yr- 
otd  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed  Approx  20hf6/vvk.  $10-$12/hr  310- 
472-7353. 

FEMALE  UCLA 
STUDENT  NEEDED 

To  babysit  In  Beverly  Hills  for  1-2  night/week. 
Must  have  car  oorvsmoker  female  prs<frBd. 
Mffv.  Oraer  310-ase-e838 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


FUN  TWINS! 

Someone  wIk)  knows  Hebrew  and  piano  to 
work  with  twins  at  horrw  In  Brentwood  home 
for$15/hour.  310-476-5265.  310-429-0123. 

FUf^AiARlNG  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  for 
poking  up  &  caring  tor  9yr  oW  girl.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-5days/wk. 
aftemoons-6pm.  Gayle  310-450-4109  (even- 
ings). 

Homework  Helper/Driver  needed  to  ptekup  9 
yr  oW  from  Bel  Air  school  M.W.Thr  com- 
mencing immediately.  Own  car.  References. 
Call  Diane  818-781-1471. 


ClassiliccJb 
825-2221 


ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

-P/T  JOB  working  with  sweet.  Intelligont 
handkapped  girl.  ChiW  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  in  kitchen  and  working  with  chiW 
on  improving  physkal  skills.  Applteant  must 
be  sweet.  Intelligent,  reliable,  speak  English 
and  drive.  Meat  Elman:3lO-396-8inn 

BABYSITTER  for  2  chiWren  3&6 .  Sat  nights, 
early  evening.  Experience  required.  Must 
have  own  car.  Near  UCLA.  $lQ/hr.  310-476- 
9394. 

BABYSPTTER  for  4-yr-oW  boy  wfw  toves  to 
read  and  meet  new  friends.  Occask>nal 
evenings.  $ia/hr.  References  required.  310- 
573-9892. 

BABYSfTTER  NEEDED  for  1  1/2  year  oW 
boy  Various  afternoons  and  evenings.  SorT>e 
weekend  days.  Culver  City.  Call  Ruth  310- 
838-0624. 

BABYSITTER/ 
MOTHER'S  HELPER 

kkJs  844.  Experience,  references,  and  driv- 
er's Ik^ense  required.  Must  enK>y  kidsl  Flexi- 
tAe  hours.  Encino.  818-788-7886. 

BABYSITTER/DRIVER  for  two  boys  9412 
TW.F.  3-6pnrHpossible  addittonal  Ume.  Mul- 
holland/Beveriy  Glen.  English  speaking. 
Own  car  w/good  driving  record.  References. 
310-470-2047. 

BABYSITTER/SATURDAY  EVENING 

Weekly  commitment  requested.  FlextoHity  for 
ottier  nights  a  phjs.  Must  have  own  car  to 
drive  to  Pacifk:  Palisades.  Two  fun.  easy 
boys,  647-yrs-oW.  Must  like  playir^  sports 
and  watching  MTV  and  movies.  Students 
only.  References  required.  $10/hr.  Call  Alli- 
son 310-454-3650  or  email  GIE- 
DELOaol.com. 

BABYSITTING 
POSITION  AVAILABLE 

Seeking  bright,  playful  female  for  occasional 
care  of  two  chiWren,  ages  5  and  10  months 
in  Westwood.  $10/hour  310-553-0542. 

BABYSITTING 

Knowledge  of  Bnnish  or  Farsi  or  both  a  plus. 
Call  before  8pm.  310-202-6822. 

CAREGIVER  to  drive  lO-yr-oW  from  school 
to  Santa  Morw^a  activity  Tuesdays.  Perhaps 
sonrte  evenings.  Car.  DL,  insurance  neces- 
sary. Candyce  310-207-1227. 

CHILD  CARE  Permanent  P/T.  San  Fernando 
Valley.  $10/hour.approx.  20t)ours/week. 
Starling  after  3pm.  Flexft)le  hours.  Must 
have  car  Starts  immediately.  818-905-1215. 


MOM'S  HELP  NEEDED.  We  live  right  In  the 
UCLA  'hood.  Need  help  w/HW  and  driving  for 
our  4  ChiWren  (12.10,  8,  5)1  Last  year  2 
friends  shared  this  Job.  We  provkJe  car. 
$1Q^r  M-F  3-8..  Call  Elaln  475-4336. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

NEEDED.  PfT  sitter  needed  for  kids  1047. 
Responsibilities:  Driving.  reading4piaying. 
Good  pay!  I  References  a  musti  Located  in 
Brentwood.  310-394-9781. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER  Afternoon  driving, 
homewori<  help,  chik)  care  and  light  kkJs' 
cooking  lor«)oys,  ages  9412.  Must  have  ex- 
cellent driving  record  4  CA  driver's  Iteense. 
Car  will  be  provMed.  Must  like  sporis.  Male 
or  female.  Mon.  to  Fri.  Hrs.  approximately  3- 
8pm  (later  on  Fridays),  but  flexible.  Home  is 
in  Beveriy  HHIs.  $10/hr  Fax  resume  to  Deb- 
bie at  310-273-3748. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER  WANTED,  weekends. 
BH  family,  kkte,  meals,  and  play  activrfies. 
swim,  athletk:.  creative,  CDL.  send  resume 
323-957-9762  or  rgitln«yahoo.oom. 


NANNY/ 
HOUSEKEEPER 

lor  normal  Westskle  family.  Warm,  good 
sense  of  hunwr  excelleni  EngNsh,  vaNd 
CDL.  12-8  M-F  Fax  only:3 10-476-8065. 


NEED  AFTER  SCHOOL  HELP  3  days/wk. 
5pm-€:30pm  Female  preferred.  Please  call 
evenings  310-841-0829. 

OCCASIONAL  CHILDCARE.  Are  you  wWIng 
to  spend  a  few  hours  each  week  or  an  even- 
ing with  a  six-year-old  boy  in  the  Westwood 
area?  This  vivackHJS  boy  kjves  books,  sci- 
ence experiments,  and  having  adventures. 
Please  call:  310-440-0725  or  email 
piersi  Oconcentric.net. 

P/T  BABYSITTER 
NEEDED 

For  7-yr-oM  boy.  Must  be  available 
Mon4Thurs  2:30-8pm.  Tues4Wed  2:30- 
6pm.  plus  more  hours  If  needed.  Chikj  care 
experience  a  must.  10  min  from  UCLA.  $a/hr. 
Call  Hilary  310-858-5994. 

P/T  CHILD  CARE.  Two  chiWren  ages  243.5. 
Aftenrxxxis  and  some  weekends, light  house- 
work. Must  ftave  car.experience.arW  refer- 
ences. $8/hr.  Email:  UnymarshnsOearth- 
link.net     310-864-6906. 

Part-time  babysitter  M-W  5:00-9:00. 
References.  2  kWs  Siomour.  310-458-3587. 


REUABLE 
BABYSITTER  NEEDED 

For  after  school  help,  Monday-Thursday.  2- 
6pm.  We're  kx>king  for  a  student  who  Is  great 
with  kWs.  ages  7-6,  to  help  with  driving, 
fwmewori*  and  light  housekeeping.  Hours 
and  salary  negotiable.  Car  and  references 
are  required.  Please  call  Joy  at  310-394- 
2342. 


REUABLE/FUN  P/T  NANNY  NEEDED  tor  2 
girts  (5  4  8).  3-6pm.  2,3.or  5  daysAvk.  Driv- 
ing. HW.  light  cooking/housewortc.  Near 
UCLA.  Please  can  310-824-9609.  evenings 
or  310-206-0669.  day. 

RIDE  NEEDED 

To  ptek  up  chlW  from  Befceriy  Hall  on  Mulhol- 
land  Drive  at  3:20  pm.  CaH  310-271-4651  af- 
ler6pm.  213-252-9437  From  9Bm-epm. 


SANTA  MONICA.  2  POSITIONS-  MONDAY 
EVENINGS  6pm-9:30pm. 
AfTERSCHOOL  TEACHER'S  AIDE.  Mon- 
day-Friday approx.  2:30pm-5:30pm.  $9i/hr. 
For  a  6-year  oM  boy.  310-393-9144. 

SATURDAY  BABYSITTER/MOTHERS 
HELPER.  Sat.  evenings,  approx  6-10:30pm. 
Babysitting  for  2boy8,  ages  9412.  In  Beveriy 
HiMs  or  Mallbu.  Must  have  excellent  driving 
record.  Car  will  be  provided  if  driving  is  nec- 
essary. Male  or  female.  $l2/hr.  Fax  resume 
to  Debbie  at  310-273-3748. 


UCLA  STUDENT  to  drtve/supenrise  HW.  2 
kWs.  Tues,  Wed,  Thurs,  3-6pm.  Beveriy 
Hills.  $l0/hr.  Car  w/insurance.  References 
required.  Abigail  310-859-1256. 

WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILDCARE  For  12-year-oW  girt,  SM/Brent- 
*»ood.  M-F,  3:30-71sh  (approx:  15hr8/wk)  Car 
with  insurance.  References  required. 
SlOWhour  Nighl:310-82e-6206,  Oay:818- 
876.  Start  ASAp.     , 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


WLA  CHILDCARE 

FOR  A  DELIGHTFUL  very  personable  11- 
year-oW  girt,  pk:k-up  after  school,  drive  to 
activities,  supervise  homewort<,  Mon- Thurs. 
3:30-8:30PM(variable).  $11/hour.  Call  Dr. 
Alan  Yasser  310-277-2796. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPRE- 
SENTATIVE. FUm  advertising.  Call  retail 
stores  tor  upcoming  releases.  Coordinate 
store  visits.  P/T- F/T-8am- 12pm  or  12:30pm- 
4;30pm-flex  $10/hr+bonus.  310-566-2555. 


^ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  Valley.  Hollywood,  or  Santa  Monk:a 
office  needs  erwrgetk:  people.  $10/hour 
plus  bonuses!  310-395-7368. 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  fleW  sales,  flexibie  hours  +  com- 
mlsston  and  bonus!  Ambittous  salesperson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  supportOfones- 
4all  com  Attn:FieW  Sales. 

ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT.  25-35 
hrs/wk.  Good  phone  votee,  1  year  commit- 
ment, Organized.  Word.  Excell.  Account  Re- 
ceivable/Payable. Fax  Resume  to  310-914- 
4 158  Attn;  Scott. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  FlexUe. 
part-time  hours.  $10-13/hr.  Tennis  a  plusi 
We  are  natkxial  ttov^r  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  female  for  Beveriy  Hlls 
producer.  Short,  flexible  hours.  Excelleni 
pay.  310-278-6972. 

$1,000'S  WEEKLY!! 

STUFF  ENVELOPES  at  homo  tor  $2.00 
each  plus  bonuses.  FfT.  PfT.  Make  $80af 
weekly  guaranteed!  Free  supplies.  For  de- 
tails send  one  stamp  to:  N-33.  PMB  552. 
12021  Wilshlre  Blvd.,  Los  Angeles.  CA 
90025. 

$10  PER  HOUR 

Looking  tor  accounting,  business,  math,  and 
econ.  majors  with  computer  and  bask:  Math 
and  English  skills  for  PT-FT  posittons. 
Phones  and  general  offk:e  duties.  Fax 
resume  and  DPR  (UCLA  students):  818-769- 
4694. 


$15-$23/HR  BRIGHT,  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academe 
Subjects  Transportatkxi  required.  We  will 
train.  Flexible  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resunoe.  includlr)g  test  scores  (SAT.  GRE. 
etc.)  to  ACE  EducatWnal  Servwes.  Altn:Bar- 
ry.  9911  W.  Pteo  Blvd.  Ste.1025.  LA.  CA 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424.  Posittons  avail- 
able throughout  LA  and  tt>e  Valley. 

$1500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  circulars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  informatton 
packet.  Call  202-466-1639. 


$20/hr  FRENCH  TUTORS  wanted  lo  con- 
verse with  high-school  students.  Fluer>cy  not 
required.  Travel  experience  a  plus.  5- 
20hrs/wk  plus  opikxial  summer  opportunity 
to  toach  In  France.  Contact  Scott  310-428- 
3680. 

$8.50/HR-t-BONUS.  Advertising  consulting 
fimi  seeking  person(s)  to  set  appointments 
by  phone,  for  our  oonsuftants.  Minimum  2- 
years  coisge.  Telephorw  or  outside  sales 
experience  a  plus.  Immediate  opantngs, 
PT/FT  In  our  WestsWe  offtoe.  CaH:  Norman 
Becker.  Ad  Max  Consulting  Group.  310-441- 
7678. 


*F/T  GENERAL  OFFICE* 

WESTWOOD  ENTERTAINMENT  LAW 
FIRM  SEEKS  F/T  OFFICE  CLERK  TO  DO 
COPYING,  FAXING,  AND  MAIL  PROCESS- 
ING. MUST  HAVE  CLERICAL  OFFICE  EX- 
PERIENCE. SALARY  DOE-fBENEFITS. 
FAX  RESUME  TO  E.  KRAFT:  310-441-8010. 

'MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK'  Beats  all  jobs.  Start 
immediately.  Great  pay.  FurVEasy.  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  for  free  medk:al  Call-24/hrs 
323-850-4417. 

ADULT  RESPONSIBLE 
r:        MALE        —  - 

For  personal  care  for  disabled  man.  Monday- 
Friday  Ihr/day  and  alternate  weekends.  WIN 
train.  Strong  References.  Near  UCLA. 
$300/nw.  310-475-5209. 

AMERICORPS  Positk)n:Heip  watch  literacy 
devetopment  program  for  prescffoolers  while 
earning  rrnxiey  for  school.  30  hours/week. 
Julie.  Connecttons  For  ChiWren.  310-452- 
3325ex.234. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary, 
htost  musto/talfc-showrs  for  our  radto  stattons. 
P/T.  $l0-15/hr.  $2004{>er/show.  ptos  fantas- 
tk;  benefits.  323-468-0080.  24-hours. 

ANSWER  TELEPHONES/DATA  ENTRY. 
Movie  nuritet  research  firm  seeks  people 
with  call  taking  and  data  entry  skils.  We  pro- 
vWe  the  pizza,  you  provWe  the  computer  arxl 
telepfx>ne  expertise.  Immediate  start  tor 
weekend  wortt  al  year  tong.  Contact  EHza- 
bett)  at  310-840-5800  ext251 . 

ASSISTANT  ART  CONSULTANT  Train  Wa 
professtonal.  knowledge  of  bask:  computer 
progianw.  Good  deeign,cotor  and  composi- 
tton  skills.  lOhr/wk  to  start.  310-828-3964. 

ASSISTANT  needed.  $10/hr.  Temple  City.  «A. 
Opportunity  to  leam  the  ancient  art  of  Chi 
Quong.  Canionesa/Engiish.  computer  Mer- 
ale,  people  skills,  detail-oriented.  Contact  Us 
310-571-6032. 

ATHLETICS:  P/T  student  en^yee  to  «wxk 
copy/mail  room  and  front  receptton  desk. 
Pay:$6.7aA)r.10-16  hrs/wk.  Must  be  friencfly 
and  hard  wortdng.  Apply  at  J.D.  Morgan 
Facilities  Otftoe  310-206-6662. 

BABYSITTER 

Some  evenings  and  weekends.  Ei^Mrience 
with  toddlefs.  references  a  must.  LX^LA  area. 
310-470-8390. 

BABYSITTER/DRIVER  needed  for  2  girts 
ages  11.  Santa  Montoa/WLA  area.  Must  be    - 
avalable  3-«pm  M-F.  Must  have  car.  vaM  I- 
cense  and  Insurance.  $10^-»gas.  CaH  Lea* 
lie  310-277-8480. 

BANKING 

PfT  teller  posittons  at  University  Credit 
Unton.  ExceOenl  (My,  hours  4  environment. 
Some  teller  experierv:e  preferred.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepuiveda  Blvd..  LA.  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.ucu.oro^obs.htm 

BEST-SELUNG 
AUTHOR 

ASSISTANT  to  psychotogist/author.  Good 
typlng/Wng  skMs.  Run  errands.  Must  hava 
own  car  iialnouiance.  I0-20hrs/wk,  flexibie.  > 
$a/hf.  Some  feooarch.31 0-206-0226 

BOOKKEEPER/ASSISTANT.  PfT.  iT 
lOhrs/wk.  Siomr.  Excel  and  Word  experi- 
ence required.  Fax  resume  818-909-4991. 


Notetakers  Wanted 

'^Lecture  Notes 


Get  paid  $220  -  480  per 
quarter  for  each  class. 

Benefits  include  UClA  Store  discounts 


Call  or  sfop  by  for  a  lisf  of  available  classes  ' 
ASAP  Bring  your  DPR  or  fronscripf  and 
a  sample  of  your  own  i 


310.825.8016 


Lecture' 


UCLfe 


-h 


\ 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


7800 

Help  Wiuiti.'d 


7800 

H(;lp  Wiintt.'d 


$$$  Calling  all  Students!!  $$$ 
UCLA  Concessions  is  hiring!! 

Convenient  location 

on  campus  at  all  UCUV  athletic  events  and  otfier  special  evints 


-":\ 


i 


Flexible  schedule 

sign  up  for  as  many  or  as  few  hours  as  you  want  ' 
no  set  weekly  scfiedule 
shifts  available  during  the  week/weekend,  day/night 
„.__,: while  school  is  both  In/out  of  session 


¥ 


Make  money 

many  management  trainir>g  opportunities 

bonus  program  during  Men's  Basketball  season 

recruiting  txanus-  get  paid  by  getting  your  friends  to  worki 

Save  money 

i  discount  at  UCI-A  Store         .       '      • 

\.^,y         half  off  meals  at  all  ASUCl_A  restaurants    - 

-;       ,        -i    Great  environment 
;  friendly  people 

fast  pace 

For  more  Info  or  an  application, 
contact  Sean  at  (310)  206-0736 


7800 

Help  Wiuitcd 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  |ot>s  available  al  Campus  Comer. 
We  work  with  your  schedule.  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-8133. 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  iobs  available  at  Cooperage.  We 
work  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals,  man- 
agement training  opportunity.  Call:310-206- 
0740. 

CENTURY  CITY 
SHOPPING  CEN- 


TER 


Eam  $$  for  the  HoBdays!  F/T,  P/T  positions 
available  at  Cusomer  Servtee.  Apply  in  per- 
son at  cart  in  center  court  outside 
Crate&Barrel.  10250  Santa  Monk^a  Blvd.  No 
phone  calls  please. 


BEVERLY  HILLS  AUTO  DETAIL  Shop  needs 
hard-working,  fast-paced,  agressive  people 
to  handle  top-notch  cars.  No  experience  re- 
quired.  Flexibie  hours.  02zie:31 0-859-2870. 

BOOKKEEPlNG/RECEPTIONIST/data  pro- 
cessor. Devek)pment  company  kxiking  to  fW 
3  positions,  start  ASAP.  k>catk>n-  Downtown 
LA.  213-469-5540  extll. 


CARE  TAKING  COMPANION  for  16-year  old 
devek>pmentally  disabled  girl.  Involve  neigh- 
borhood flekl  trlps&actlvltles.piaylng 
boardgames. walks. etc.  Need  car  Hours 
flexible,$12/hr  310-839-3732. 

CASHIER  for  busy  piueria.  Must  have  great 
customer  skillsl  $8/hr.»^tip,  DOE.  CaH 
Oagwood's  Pizza:  Venk:e  310-392-1450  or 
Santa  Monk»  310-899-3030. 


¥ourjouma]ism 

career  begins 

tomorrow  iMit 


\ 


JOM IHE  DMLY  BRUM  STAFF 

-The  Daily  nriiin  istmi'  orilir  IxrsI  plaa^s In Tho 
nalion  lo  Ic^rn  journalism.  It  whs  Ihc  IrainiriK 
Knmnd  for  I'ulilzor  IVizi'  winners  David  Shaw 
and  Tony  Aulh.  (Hhors.  like  litrmer  Hiuin 
iwlilors  J(M!l  Sit^nil,  "(JimmI  Morninj,' Amcrityi" 
(•nlertHinm<!nl  nJilor.  and  hVaiik  .S|)olnily„ 
pnKltieer  or'The  X-Files,"  wenl  on  lo  canrers 
in  olhtit  media.  And  for  «wh  of  Ihem.  Iht^re 
w«!ni  htin<ir<Hls  of  others  who  laiinehiMl  cartMirs 
with  Ihe  skills  Ihey  lejirmHJ  worklnjjal  the 
Daily  IJruin.  Um;nl  Daily  Uriiin  slalTers  wenl 
on  lojobs  al  plae4;s  IiIm;  the  Uts  An^'elits  Timiis. 
the  I'hiladt'lphia  ln(|iiiror.  the  iSan  .losi* 
Mercury  Nt^ws^inil  F«)x  'H^liwision. 

Till!  Daily  IJruin  offers  op|M)rlunili(!si»r 
slutlenls  inl(!r(;Hl(Hl  in  nearly-<'v«!ry  as|MTl  of 
journalism— from  n!|)orlrn},'  to  business,  from 
n<wsr(M>m  manaKeinonI  lo  Inliirmil  journalism. 
And  w«' do  il  Im'IIjt  Ihan  any  ilass  l)<;<vius<'  we 
olTer  you  lln;  nhancc'  lo  do  mon?  than  sUidy.  )tk. 
offer  iiial  e.t|M!rieni-e.  As  a  re|M)rler  or 
pholof^mpher  for  Ihe  Daily  IJniin.  you'll  jjel  a 


front-row  seal  lo  the  (wnis  thai  sha|M'  our 
campus  anil  community.  Then'  isn't  a  mon? 
exciting  extra-curricular  activity  in  colle>,'e. 

II  do<\sn'l  malliir  what  your  miyor  is  or  if  you 
havi!  any  |)n!vious  ex|M?rien<:<i  in  newsfrnpers. 
W''ll  train  yoii  lo  report.  d«!si>;n,  or  shtMil 
piclun?s  in  four  w«M?kend  workshops  laujflil  by 
working  journalists.  You  mijjhl  (!nd  up  end  up 
like  many  who  cami;  iMifon;  you — wilh  a  solid 
start  lowani  a  can?«;i. 

WWrroCETHMOUIED? 

cow  TO  OUR  ORSMnmoM  nMnHMMr 

If  you'd  like  lo  know  mon?,  comt?  lo  our 
Orientation  and  Ofien  llouiM!  Tuti-sday,  (kl.  :J  al 
(i:;M)  p.m.  in  Ackerman  Union  Crand  JJallniom. 
dome  h<!ar  what  wt;  haw;  to  offer,  visil  our 
offices,  and  m<?el  the  JJriiin  sUIT. 

For  more  informalion.  lall  us  al  825-2787. 


<i 


Find  out  how  you  can  join  the  Daily  Brain  at  the 

Student  Media  Orientation  and  Open  House 

Tuesday,  Oct  3  at  6:30  p.m.  Ackennan  Union  Grand  Ballrooni 

The  UCLA  Daily  Bniin 


^1'.. 


??21 


Monday,  Octol)er  2, 2000       49 


Qualiiy 
Health  Care 

« 

youVe  already 
Daici  for  .  .  . 

Yes,  OS  a  registered  UCLA  student  you  hove 
paid  for  the  use  of  the  Arthur  Ashe   Student 
Health  and  Wellness  Center,  where  most  ser- 
vices are  FREE.  So,  visit  our  Web  site  for  more 
information,  request  an  appointment  or  ask  a 
health  related  question  - 

http;//www/saonet. ucla.edu/health  htm  - 
or  call  825-4073 

ucia  Ashe  Center 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PUZZLE 


ACROSS  ; 

1  Steam 
6  Li'lAbner's 

creator 
10  Crow's  relative 

13  Century  plant 

14  Type  of  molding 

15  Walking  stick 

16  Trick  or  — 

17  Novelist  Vidal 
Yfr-Qptfee  servers 

19  Ck,  or  catbird — 

20  Bony  and  lean 
22  RkJdIe 

24  Fitted  -^  ' 

28  Apolk>  at  Delphi, 
for  one 

31  Australian 
animal 

32  "I  Love  Lucy" 
co-star 

34  Important  penod 

36  Herring's  cousin 

37  Shade 

38  Dam  buiMers 

41  "—  Clear  Day" 

42  Dutch  cheese 

44  Pre-Easter  buy 

45  Meditated 
47  Italian  coins 
49  Royal  (ur 

51  Play  — :  feign 

sleep 
53  Beginnir>gs 
56  First 

performance 
59  Cowgirl 

Evans 
61  Valley 

64  Bandleader 
Lawrence  — 

65  Monastery 

66  l8Sk:k 

67  Supenor,  e.g. 

68  Ontario's  — 
Point 

69  Expression  of 
disapproval 

70  Remain 

n 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


QaQia[§  mcina  sbdd 
sieaDSQDDSiaD  bssq 

SOBES    SBBSas 
[EDDBBSEi    BQQDSBS 

^□os@  c]@SB  mmum 

[DQQIS]    (SBSOBIl 
DBQBSQ    BdQC] 
BIQBm    mBBBDQBiaBIi] 

masB  mQBo  [dbdqb 

SBQIZ]    DS]a@    BDQDS 
BBHO    OBSS    BBBBS 


71 


Dramatist 
Clifford 


DOWN 

1  Tanks 

2  Match 

3  Hymn  of  praise 

4  Standing  — 

5  Soak  (flax) 

6  French  brandy 

7  Excited 

8  Llama  country 

9  Rinds 

10  Bottle 

11  Actress  Jilllan 

12  "Absolutely!" 
15  Souvenirs 

20  Astonished 

21  Razor-billed  — 
23  Seize 

25  Nevada 
resort 

26  Large  antetope 

27  Baby's  first 
words? 

29  Crovybar 

30  Previously,  in 

T 


poems 

32  Sound 

33  Raises 

35  Providing  for 

defense 
37  Assist 

39  Response  on 
deck 

40  —  oneself: 
basks 

43  Stoneworkers 
46  Garden  pk>t 
48  Dine 
50  Baboon 
52  Whimpers 

54  Chair's 
mate 

55  Ice  pellets 

57  Like  a  pin? 

58  Columnist 
Chase 

60  Looks  at 

61  Pistol:  slang 

62  Fleur-de 

63  Broad-antlered 
deer 

65  Gl's  address 


Display 

206-3060 


■  f  '>'» 


50       Mon<by,  October  2, 2000 


Daily  Brain  OmNM 


7800 

HvAp  W:int(:cl 


CHILOCARE  ASSISTANT/GHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR 

CHILDCARE  .ASSISTANT  SALARY:  $7.03- 
$8.65/hr^parflal  benefits.  CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR  SALARY:  $8.65- 

$1 1  .go/hr+partial  benefits.  Under  general  su- 
pervision, plans,  implements  recreational, 
educatlona- 
I  and  sports  activities  for  5-12  year  olds,  such 
as  arts  and  crafts,  Leaming  groups,  outdoor 
games  and  playing  Intramural  sports.  RE- 
QUIREf^ENTS  FOR  CHILDCARE  ASSIS- 
TANT: Higfi  Scfwoi  Graduation;  enrollment  in 
college  preferred.  Six  months  paid  recreation 
wor1<  experience  (3months  of  volunteer  ex- 
perience In  a  childcare  program  can  be  sub- 
stituted for  Smonths  of  paid  experience). 
Proof  of  High  School  diplonw  must  be  sub- 
mitted with  a  City  application.  REQUIRE- 
MENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR: 
Completion  of  one  year  of  college,  majoring 
in  Recreation,  Education  or  relked  field. 
Must  have  12  units  in  Early  Childhood  Edu- 
cation and  3  additional  units  in  Administra- 
tion or  Staff  Relations.  One-year  pari(  recrea- 
tion work  experience.  Proof  of  one  year  col- 
lege and  required  unit^  must  be  submitted 
with  a  City  application.  Call  310-550-4265. 
EOE. 

CITY  OF  BEVERLY  Hills  Periling  Attendants 
needed.  $9.l1/hr  Morning  and  Evening 
shifts  available.  Seasonal  Positions  starting 
November  16,  2000  to  Janurary  5,  2001.  All 
shifts  available  Apply  Now!!!  Dept.  of  Trans- 
portation. 455  N.  Rexford  Dr..  Room  130.  Ap- 
ply in  person.  310-285-2552. 


CLERK  TYPIST/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

Manage  small  medical  research  group. 
Good  communication/writing  skills,  word- 
processing,  Windows  95,  up  to  20/hourSi 
weekday-mornings.  Staning-$8.00/hr  West- 
wood.  310-826-0679. 

CLERK.  P/T,  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  pertecttonist  with  typing 
skills  for  general  office  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  detail-oriented.  $1 1/hour  to  start.  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2347. 

CLINICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  position  immediately  available  for  a  H- 
censed  laboratory  scientist  in  a  private  clini- 
cal laboratory  in  Santa  Monica.  t!ab  provkles 
endocrine,  andrology,  serotogy  and  immu- 
nology testing.  Incumbent  required  to  wort< 
in  weekend  rotations.  Salary  commensurate 
wtth  qualifications  and  experience.  Submit 
applications  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 
Technotogy  Laboratories,  1245  16th  Street, 
Suite  105,  Santa  Monica,  CA  90404  (Tel 
310-829-0102). 


COACHES  NEEDED 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 

•  2000-2001  school  year.  Girts  Soccer,  Varsi- 
ty and  JV  Lacrosse,  JV  Boys  Basketball. 
PakJ  positions  310-391-7127.  Call  Nate  ext. 
247  lor  boys'  positkjns.  Call  Gail  ext.  248  for 
giris'  positk>ns. 

COOL  LADY  seeks  driver  for  occasional  er- 
rands. Own  car  required.  $7/HR  310-826- 
9150. 

CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HIRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$l0.26/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/U 
academic  years  remaining  with  valid  driver's 
Ikiense.  Web:  wwwucpd.ucla.edu/ucpd/cso. 
Email:  csoOucpd  ucia  edu.  Phone  310- 
8252148 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

F/T.  M-F  9-5.  Century  City  k)cation  Seeking 
self-motivated.  energetic  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate, 
bilingual,  college  degree  pref.  Fax  resume 
310-553-3996. 

DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  is  hiring  van  driv- 
ers Looking  for  energetic,  unstoppable, 
positive  crew  immediately.  Flexible  hours, 
busy  weekends  Apply  in  person  M-Sat  till 
6pm.  Apply  at  937  Weslwood  310-208-1180. 

DELIVERY  DRIVERS  WANTED!  Weekday 
mornings,  friendly,  good  driving  record,  fa- 
miliar with  entertainment  indsulry  and  LA 
area.  $10-$12/hour.  Call  310-456-6891. 


Classifieds 
<'25-2221 


7800 


DENTAL  OFFIC^  receptkx>isVoffkw  rrunag- 
er  needed  for  MWF  9-6.  Must  know  typing, 
be  familiar  w/Mterosoft  Word,  have  good 
communk^tk>n  skills,  be, committed,  have 
desire  to  make  a  difference.  Excellent  salary. 
310-826-7494. 

DO  YOU  LOVE  GOOD 
FOOD? 

New  bakery/gourmet  take-out  shop  near 
Century  City  hirir>g  counter  help,  cooks,  bak- 
ers, drivers.  Call  310-552-1080. 

DRIVER  FOR  MESSENGER  SERVICE.  F/T- 
P/T.  Salary+commission.  Valid  Driver's 
Ucense,  InsurarKe,  and  motor  cycle  pre- 
ferred. Fax  resunfw  to  661-799-7755. 

DRIVER/COMPANION 

For  14-yr-oU  girt;  appn>x.  3:15-7:00pm.  M-F. 
westsider  at  least  college  jr.,  excel, 
grades/study  habits/driving  record,  own  car. 
Very  reliable,  flexible;  $lO/hr  negotiable. 
Call  Deborah  days:310-312-3138.  even- 
ings:310-476-1310 

DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED.  Full- 
time  or  part-time.  Westwood  driving  and  traf- 
tk;  school.  Call  for  infomriatkjn.  310-824- 


7800 

H.;l()  W.int(;(i 


NEW  FACES  WANTED 

ALL  AGES  «JL  TYPES 

FOR  UPCOMWG  TV  FUVI,  COMMEROAL. 

MUSC.VCE06 

AND  PRWT,  NO  FEES,  r«  EXP  REO'D 

PLEASE  CALL  FOR  AUOmON  T1V1E 

AUOmOMNQ  NOW 

(818)  379-7070 


EARN  $3000  + 
3  CANCUN  TRIPS! 

All  Expenses  pakJ  for  2.  Set  your  own  hours. 
310-638-1371 


ELEMENTARY  SCHOOL  INTERN- 
SHtPO  UES  lor  4units  credit.  Fall  quar- 
ter-you  must  have  Jr./Sr.  stand- 
ingA3.0GPA.  Requires  lOhrs/wk  in  the 
classroom,  3evening  seminars,  3pa- 
pers&ioumal.  To  enrofl,  you  must  atterKi  1 
orientatton  in  the  UES  Conference  Rm: 
Mon  10/2O9AM:  l^n  ia/203PM;  Tues 
10/3©9AM.  Info:  Frances©  310-825- 
2623/f  rancesfOucla.edu. 


EXPERIENCED  BOOKKEEPER.  Psychoto- 
gist's  Home.  Beveriy  Hills.  Call  310-205- 
0226. 


Exc«ll«nt  Pa]^  Fl«xii»l«  Part-tinM  Hours,  Oraat  Kxpoftonc*, 
ProtassioiMl  Environnwnt.  Send  ItosunMS  Today  To: 

Fax:  (310)  793-9894;  T*l:  (310)  793-7704 
Email:  HOUMANOACFRIEND8.cbM 


Entry  Level. 
Will  Train! 


$35,CMM>440,CMX> 


to  start 


Nothing  to  sell 


•Faid  Meals. 

•Miisf  V 
weeKena.^ 


Good  math  skills  a  plus. 


Fax  Resume:  (323)  263-0556 


7800 

Ht;lp  Wiiiitetl 


7800 

Help  Wiinted 


1^' 


FAST  PACE  Real  Esate/Finaixse  Company 
seeks  responsible,  energetic  student.  Office 
experience  required.  Fax  resume  to  310- 
275-5227. 

FIUNG  AND  GENERAL  OFFICE  vwjrV  need- 
ed.  Computer  literate,  flexible  hours  offered. 
P/T.  $9/hr.  Fax  resume  310-859-0547  attn: 
Mike. 

FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

Needed  for  private  health  club.  Permanent 
hours  available  Health  insurance  offered. 
Please  ask  for  Allison:31 0-659-5002. 

FULL  TIME  RECEPTIONIST  lor  Weshivood 
entertainment  law  finm.  Monday-Friday 
10AM-7PM.  Good  phone  manner  and  front 
office  apperance  a  must.  ExperierKe  pre- 
ffered.  Fax  resume  to  E.  Kraft  310-441-8010. 

GET  PAID  TO  PLAY!! 

AFTERSCHOOL  DAY  CARE  needs  three 
new  staff  to  play  ball,  help  with  homewort<. 
interact  with  chikJren.  Grades  K-8th.  310- 
470-9747. 

GOOD  PAY!!! 

HARD-WORKING,  reliable,  athletic  persons 
for  p/t  wort<.  Good  pay  Wort<  outdoors.  Own 
car  a  plus.  Call  866-845-0946. 

HOME  CLEANERS,  P/T-F/T,  $8-$11/hr  and 
up.  To  clean  in  Westside  areas.  Must  be  de- 
pendable and  have  car.  310-471-6212.  April. 

INTERNATIONAL  FIRM  seeks  experienced 
telemart<eters  for  office  in  El  Segundo.  B2B 
professkjnal  sales  in  fast  growing,  high-de- 
rrwnd  market.  Salary,  commission,  bonus, 
and  benefits.  F/T  and  P/T  available.  Call 
Rhonda  at  800-801-1007  and  fax  resume  to 
310-607-9852. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Service  Representative.  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  vertwl  skills  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1 768-jspatterson  9  ij- 
ginc.com. 

INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Receptionist.  Entry  level  position.  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrs/wk  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
ferred. Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son 323-653-1768.  jspattersonOijginc.com. 

INVESTMENT  BANKING 

Looking  for  student  who's  majored  in  this 
fieW  to  teach  concepts,  valuations,  and  Ex- 
cel. 310-858-4755. 

LAW  OFFICE  ENVIRONMENT  Excellent 
opportunity.  Cleric  positions  available.  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Minimum  20hrs/wk,  $6.50/hr.  Fax 
resume  and  proposed  available  hours  to  Hu- 
man Resources  Dept  310-274-2798  or  Mail 
to:  Lurie  &  Zepeda  9107  Wilshire  Blvd.,  Su- 
ite 800,  Beveriy  Hills.  CA  90210. 

LIBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties,  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start. 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Antigone  Kutay 
310-825-1084. 

MEDICAL  FRONT 
OFFICE  STAFF 

Ear,  Nose,  Throat.  Specialist.  Tues  8am- 
12:30  and  Thurs  1pm-6pm.  To  start  ASAP. 
Fax  resume  310-792-0066. 

MEDICAL  OFFICE 

Research  assistant  Premed/opfometry. 
Freshman/sophomore.  Tues&Thurs. 

16hrs/wk.  Jules  SteinAJCLA.  Minimum  GPA 
3.5.  Call:310-825-4749  or  Fax  Resume:310- 
794-7904,  Attn:Verortca  . 

MLS  LIMOUSINE  SER- 
VICE 

WEEKEND  JOB/  PART-TIME  data  en- 
try&some  trilling,  no  experience  needed,  will 
train,  call  9-5  310-271  -8559. 

MODELS  WANTED  by  professtonal  photo- 
studto  for  upcoming  assignment.  Male/Fe- 
male Pro/Non-Pro.  Fashion/Commer- 
cial/Theatrlcal.  Call  for  appointnrwnt  818- 
986-7933. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  driveAwork  w/2  funAgitted  kids  ages  5A7. 
Perfect  schedule  for  student.  Must  have  car. 
Prr  permanent.  Excellent  salary.  Judy:310- 
551-1145 

NONPROFIT  SEEKS  responsible,  outgoing 
people  to  support  ctiMdrerVadults  with  dis- 
abilities throughout  ttw  LA  area.  Flexible 
hours.  Several  positkxis  avaHalbe.  UP  to 
$14/hr.  Contact  Monica  0818-361- 
6400x129.  www.jaynoten.org 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Pan-tinw  jobs  available  at  LuValle  Com- 
mons. We  work  virtth  your  schedule,  1/2  off 
meals,  management  training  opportunity. 
Call:310-825-1177. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  avaMabto  at  North  Campus. 
We  work  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  CaH:310- 
206-0720. 


P/T  DRIVER/UTILITY 
TRAINEE 

Flexible  hours,  $8/hour  includes  gasoline. 
Own  vehicle,  valid  California  driver's  li- 
cense and  proof  of  insurar>ce.  Non-smok- 
ing environment.  Clean-cut  individual. 
Stephanie:31 0-395-3291 . 


P/T  OFFICE  WORK.  Capable  person  to  do 
variety  of  jobs  in  busy  retail  carpet  store, 
WLA.  Call  Helen  310-444-0220. 

P/T  RECEPTIONIST/OFFICE  CLERK  for 
Century  City  firm.  General  offk;e  duties.  Fax 
resume  to  Cindy:  310-553-1540. 

P/T  WRITER.  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  perlectonist  with  strong 
writing  skills  to  produce  miklly  technk:al  re- 
ports for  internal  and  external  use.  $l3/hr  to 
start.  Wage  increases  as  appropriate.  Mini- 
mum 15hrs/wk.  Fax  resume  310-286-9126. 

PARK  RANGER 

$8.65-$11.90/hr  with  partial  benefits.  En- 
force part*  rules  and  regulations;  disseminate 
inforrrwtion  ar>d  assist  public  in  the  park;on- 
site  supervision  of  commercial  film  compa- 
nies and  work  department  special  events; 
assist  with  office  duties  Requires  one  year 
of  college  majoring  in  Recreation,  Outdoor 
Educatwn,  Park  Ranger  or  reteted  fieW;  or 
one-year  paid/volunteer  experience  in  a  cus- 
tomer service  oriented  position.  Must  have  a 
valW  Calitomia  C  driver's  \icense  and  must 
be  able  to  obtain  CPR  and  First  /VkJ  certHi- 
cates.Apply  immedialely-OPEN  UNTIL 
FILLED.  City  of  Beveriy  Hills,  455  N.  Rexford 
Dr.  #210,  Beveriy  Hills,  CA  90210.  310-285- 
1071  EOE. 

PART-TIME  CHILDCARE/TUTOR  needed 
for  1st  and  2nd  grader  Encino  Mulholland 
and  405  adjacent.  Must  have  car  Call  Jack- 
ie:310-826-2466. 


No  ExperietKe  Nectssary 

Men,  WMncn,  diMdRn,  all  iRH,  lias. 

races  TV-  nhm - Commacliyt -  Mafi^nes 

for  personal  Ituervieii'  call  nuir 

310.659.7000 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTION/TECHNICAL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  has  one  opening  for  clerical  positions. 
$7/hr.  Mornings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Mk:helle:31 0-474-7771 

PERSONABLE 

FRONT  DESK 

RECEPTIONIST 

with  some  salM  experience  for  West  Hotf- 
wood  upacale  gym.  Jank:e:310-577-6773. 


Display 
206-3050 


OFFICE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CE0. 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company-West- 
wood.  10am-2pm/Full-time,  flexible  hours. 
Need:excellent  telephone  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed. admirVcomp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
ferred. Benefits/advancement  FaxRes2Mar- 
ina:  310-475-1533. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
working  at  various  or)-campus  events.  We 
offer  flexible  hours  tttat  vary  from  week  to 
week.  Call:31 0-206-0735. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Concessk>ns  has  great  part-time  jobs 
worthing  at  Athletk;  events.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive borjus  program  lor  those  who  can  com- 
mit to  work  the  Men's  Baskett)all  Season. 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  set  every  week. 
Call:31 0-206-0736 


[^.^i  tf.^ji^iy 


Receptionist  needed  for  small  Salon/ 
Day  Spa  phones  and  light  office  work. 

please  call  Julia  (310)  474-2524 

s,^ 2041  westvyood  b^d. ^ 

OPPORTUNITY  OF  THE  MILLENNIUM!!! 
International  Company  needs  help  expand- 
ing. Free  Training!  Set  own  hours!  Excellent 
Income!  $1500  PT-$7000FT.  800-335-8806. 
www.conquerdreams.com. 

P/T  DATA  ENTRY/  DIS- 
PATCH  ASSISTANT 

10:30am-3:30pm,  M-F.  some  overtime. 
Computer,  heavy  phones,  and  knowledge  of 
LA  area  a  must.  Messenger  t>ackground  pre- 
ferred. Fax  resume  310-275-4439 


I   , 


7800 

Hol|i  W.iiitt.'d 


PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

OetaU-oriented  IndMdual  needed  to  assist 
w*h  Nghl  booMiMplng.  organizing  and  filing. 
Quteken  experience  helpful.  Work  In  home 
offk:e  ctose  to  UCLA.  Flexble  hour*  up  to 
$15hours/week.  Fax  resume  to:310-451- 
178S. 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  for  family  (of  inter- 
est to  young  filmmakers).  15-20hr8/wk- 
$ia/hr.  3pm-8pm  Mon..  Tues,  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  Filing/research. 
Flexible  schedule/resourceful!!  Contact:  310- 
824-1444  (John).  Good  references  required. 
Non-Smoker.  Must  have  own  cariinsurance. 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  NEEDED  for 
young,  female,  quadripulegte  wortdng  In  the 
entertainment  industry.  No  experience  nec- 
essary. Weekday  and  weekend  positwns 
available.  310-829-2693. 

PHARMACY  CLERK.  Variable  hours.  M-F, 
$8.50i/hour.  310-859-3887. 


POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Phis  Federal  Benefits  No  Experience,  exam 
info.  Call  1-800-391-5856  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar. 

PROMOTERS  WANTED  for  WestsWe  Ck*. 
310-915-7595     ' 


PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  Insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$600/week.  310-724-e360.  Days  only. 

RECEPTIONIST  WANT- 
ED 

BEVERLY  HILLS  SALON  seeks  energetk: 
recepttonist.  FfX  of  P/T.  To  start  ASAP.  310- 
278-1191. 

RECEPTIONIST  WANTED  P/T  for  hair 
saton.  Ask  for  Liana.  310-208-0101. 

RECEPTIONIST  WESTWOOD  LAW  OF- 
FICES. MoniWed.  9-5.  SBAwur.  Can  do 
homework  on  job.  310-470-3373. 

REGISTERED  US  nurses  wanted  NOW. 
$20-45/hour  TAx-free  per-diem,  exceptk>nal 
benefits  package.  For  info,  enuiil 
btessme43  O  registerdnurses.com 

RESTAURANT  IN  BEVERLY  HILLS  seeking 
person  to  answer  phories  and  pack  delivery 
orders.  P/T  positkxi.  Morning  hours.  Call 
310-271-0027. 

RETAIL  SALES.  Penny  Lane  Records  has 
P/T  night  poslttons  available.  15-20hrs/wk. 
$6.5(Vhr  Apply  in  person.  10914  Kinross 
Ave. 

SALES  CLERK 

$7/hr.  No  experience  necessary.  Cashiering, 
wortdng  with  patients.  UCLA  Hospital  2e- 
venings.  3-7:30PM  11:30-6;00PM.  310-825- 
6069 

SALES  POSITION 

F/T  Growing  Century  City  company  seeks 
sales  person  who  are  energetic  self-starters 
Our  company  is  the  leader  in  the  procure- 
ment of  liquor  licenses  and  use  permits  in 
Califomia  Must  be  computer-literate.  Urban 
planning/legal  background/bilingual  applk:- 
ants  that  want  to  partk:ipate  in  our  exciting 
rvctie  business  call  our  offices  today  for  de- 
tails:310-553-6363  ext.18  or  fax  resume 
to:31 0-553-3996  Attn:Clndy. 

SECRETARY  NEEDED.  $10/hr.  F/T.  M-F, 
8:30-5:30.  Handle  phone  calls,  basic  secre- 
tarial duties.  Alex  Son  or  Connie  Son  213- 
252-1222. 

SECRETARY,  halftime,  nwmings.  to  RN  at 
VA  modteal  center,  WLA.  Proficient  in  word 
and  excel.  $11/hr  Some  benefits.  Fax  re- 
sume  to  Siyn  Orrange  310-268-4404 . 

SMALL  SA(1TA  MONICA  UW  FIRM  seeks 
secretary/a^nlstrative  assistant.  Must  be 
computer  titrate.  Fax  or  email  resume  310- 
395-9880  or  |kxx>lfk»mngrO  earthlink.net 


riccoff 

SOUTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-tirtM  jobs  available  at  Bombshelter.  We 
wort(  with  yours  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
managenr>ent  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-0727 

SPANISH  SPEAKING  TEACHING  assls- 
tants  needed  at  k>cal  elementary  school.  /Vp- 
prox  $8  83/hr  Call  Steve  310-473-2172. 

STUDENTS  WANTED 

OUTGOING,  RESPONSIBLE  STUDENTS 
with  own  car.  Food  delivery.  11 -2pm.  P/T. 
Good  pay!  jwoitzyOearthlink.net  or  call 
Steve  310-480-3247. 

SURVEY  ON  WEB 

Independent  researcher  needs  help  putting  a 
survey  on  website  Fast  job,  fast  money. 
Leave  message  310-312-0266. 


WANTED 

75people  will  pay  you  to  tose  weight  In  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  drugs.  Call  now.  323-993-3391. 

WANTED  AFTER  SCHOOL  TEACHER  P/T 
3-6pm.  Must  have  car  and  valid  driver's  li- 
cense. 213-385-3131. 

WANTED  ENTHUSIASTIC  BIOLOGY 
MAJORS  interested  in  worthing  with  animals 
and  educating  chiWren.  $10/hr.  Flexible,  P/T, 
call  The  Animal  Guys  310-392-5909 

WESTLA  FILE  CLERK.  F/T  $8-10/hr.  Flexi- 
t)le  hours  20-40hrs/wk  Pleasant,  casual 
wori<ing  environment.  Contact  Jennifer  at 
310-268-0788 

WESTWOOD 
PART-TIME  SALES 

Art  gallery  seeks  PfT  sales  people.  One 
btock  from  campus.  Pteture  trawing  experi- 
ence a  plus.  310-208-1896 

WESTWOOD  RETAILER  3mi  from  campus 
(easy  bus  access)  needs  sales  person  to 
start  immediately  selling  printed  Christmas 
cards  in  the  store-  lA  or  p/t.  Wortt  into  test 
December.  Open  Mon-Sat.  WE  can  train 
you.  Satery  negotiable.  Please  call  Cheri 
310-441-7595. 

WILDLIFE  JOBS 
$8-19/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits  Parte  Rangers,  Secur- 
ity, and  MaintenarK:e.  No  experience  for 
some.  For  info  call  1-800-391-5856  ext. 
0615.  8am-9pm.  Local  not  guar. 

WORK  AT  HOME 

Intematkxial  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo. 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  Will  train  310-558- 
5888. 


Oiiy  Brain  OusIM 


7800 

Help  W.iiKcJ 


SWIM  INSTURCTOR 

P/T.  $10-12/hr.  310-472-7474  ext114. 

TANlviiNG  SALON  POSITION  AVAILABLE. 
Good  Pay  Apply  at  1156  26th  St  Santa  Mo- 
nk».  CA  310-828-8028. 

TELEMARKETING.  No  COM  calls.  $16- 
20+/hr,  bonuses.  F/T-P/T  Must  have  desire 
to  make  tiig  $$$.  Flexiblu  schedule.  Great  for 
students.  Near  UCLA.  310-096-6701 
ext.298. 

TELEVISION  PROOUCTK)N  COMPANY 
kx>king  for  organized,  detail  oriented  person 
for  EQUIPMENT  ROOM  POSITION.  Duties 
iTKkide  prepping  &  QCing  camera,  audio,  & 
lighting  equipment,  as  well  as  pck-up  &  de- 
livery of  various  production  equipment.  Ex- 
cellent job  for  a  college  student  tekirtg  ctess- 
es  during  Vne  day!  4pm- 10pm  Monday  thru 
Friday  Hours  will  vary,  some  tete  nights  arxl 
weekeryfe  required.  Good  pay  Great  entry- 
level  positkxi  lor  someor>e  interested  in  get- 
ting into  the  Televt8k>n  Productk)fi  Industry. 
Must  be  responsible,  trustworthy.  &  able  to 
worit  self-supervised.  Must  have  dependable 
vehicJe.  PositkKi  available  immedtetely.  If  in- 
terested call  818-506-0688. 

UPSCALE  SANTA  MONICA  RESTAURANT 
NEEDS  HOSTESS  Friday  and  Saturday 
night.  5-10pm.  $a/hr.  310-449-4000. 

VETERINARY  MEDICAL  ASSISTANT!  P/T. 
Sun-SaL,  am/pm  shifts  avaitebte.  Future  ve- 
terinary students  only  Will  train.  Call  323- 
933-8406.  Ask  lor  Nahalte. 

VIDEO  PRODUCTION 
WORK! 

In  an  on-campus  televiskKi  studto.  Must 
qualify  for  'wortt-study'  posittons  (have  a  "job 
referral*).  Contact  Brten:310-825-4124, 
bkmurphyOucte.edu. 

VIDEOTAPE  TRANSCRIBERS  needed 
$10/hr  min.  F/T-P/T  available.  45wpm  on 
Mterosoft  Word.  Fax  resume  to  818-995- 
5544. 

W.LA.  R.E.  Inv.  FIRM.  5  minutes  to  UCLA. 
PART-TIME  Administrative  Assistant  lor  of- 
Itee  wort<.  From  1:00-6:30pm.  M-F  Fax  310- 
471-6770. 

WAITRESS/WAITER 

Must  have  resteurant  experierKe  and  be  fa- 
mlter  with  tuN  American  menu.  3-4  hjnch 
shifts/wk  tor  a  busy,  upscale  cafe  in  West- 
wood.  CaH  DavM  310-473-5045. 


8000 

Inlnrnships 


FREE  ARTS  FOR  ABUSED  CHILDREN  IS 
SEEKING  UNPAID  JMSERNS  PLEASE 
CONTACT  KARIN  A  AT  31 0-51 3-4  ART 


INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
Student  film  projects.  Call  Joel:310-828- 
2292. 

MEDIA  PRODUCTION,  Communication, 
film,  broadcast  majors.  Zoom  Culture,  an  In- 
ternet broadcast  networte,  is  seeking  enthu- 
stestlc  student  to  create  vkJeo  programming. 
Incredible  opportunity  gain  hands-on  experi- 
ence Email  JefleryOzoomculture.com. 
www.zoomculture.com. 


CInssifieds 
B2f>-?221 


.««# 


housing 

8400-9800 


8^00 

Apnrlinonts  for  Rent 


•WESTWOOD  VILLAGE,  M1DVALE  N.  OF 
LEVERING.  LARGE  2-BDRM  APT,- GAR- 
DEN VIEW,  DINING  ROOM,  UNIQUE, 
CHARM.  FRONT  AND  REAR  ENTRANCE 
310-839-6294.' 

1  MIN  TO  UCLA 

WESTWOOD.  Furnished.  Single: 
$850/month  Carpeted.  Gated  complex 
Quiet.  Pool.  Laundry,  lyr  lease.  310-824- 
1830. 

2&3BDRM.  LARGE,  bright,  view  Mcrowave, 
oven,  refrigerator,  dishwasher,  washer/dryer 
In  unlL  21 -ft.  Jacuzzi  on  roof.  Walking  dis- 
tance to  UCLA.  310-475-0807. 

BEV.  HIUS  ADJ.  APT  2+2.  bak»ny.  hA* 
fkx>rs,  laundry,  p^rtdng.  $1250.  818'623- 
4444.  www.alk3fLA.com 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ 

Charming  Spanish  duplex.  2t>ed/lbath.  Ex- 
cellent Location  One  block  from  Beveriy 
Hills.  Hardwood  floors.  Living/dining  room. 
$1750/month,  310-858-8817. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  U2BEDROOM 
$8954UP  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS. 
310-839-6294. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  CHARMING  APARTMENT 
2-fl.  hardwood  floors,  laundry,  garage. 
$1400.  310-395-RENt  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 

BEVERLY  HILLS  GUESTHOUSE  w/tull 
kitcf>en,  teundry.  tumisfwd  or  unfurnished 
$1000.  310-395-RENT.  www.westsideren- 
tels.com 

BRAND  NEW  BUILDING  3bdrTn/3bth,  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdrm/3bth,  $2950  W/D  in  unit 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alarm,  gated  partdng 
SpackMJS.  carpet.  Prime  k>cation!  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 

"  BRENTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

Luxury  buikHng.  pool,  partdng.  gated  entry, 
laundry,    one   and   two   bedrooms    from 

$1500/month  310-312-1223. 

> 

BRENTWOOD  ADJ.  APT  2+1  1/4.  R&S. 
teundry,  partdng  included.  $1435.  310-395- 
RENT.  www  westsWerentels.com 

BRENTWOOD  BACHE- 
LOR 
APARTMENT 

FOR  RgNT.  Grad  student  preferred.  Upper, 
front,  wfk-ln  ckwet.  tub  and  shower.  Close 
to  bM.  leBMlMKl.  310-275-7130. 


^^^*W&y,  October  2. 2000      il 


8000 

lntt.'rnsl)i()s 


MOLECULAR  BIOLOGY 

INTERN.  Smart  biochemistry  undergrad 
needed  lor  UCLA  research  project  in  compu- 
tational molecuter  biology/bioinformatk;s 
Must  know  bask:  biocherrustry.  Computer 
skiNs  needed,  (preferabte  UNIX)  Dr.  Pet- 
111,310-206-4748. 

TV    PRODUCTION    CO 

Seeks  interns  lor  martteting  and  production. 
May  lead  to  paM  positk>n  for  right  candktete. 
Fax  resume  818-846-7961. 

WESTWOOD  STUDENT  Credit  Unton  offers 
voluntary  internships  in  Banking,  Sales  . 
Marinating.  Accountir>g.  No  experience  nec- 
essary! Applicattons  avaitebte  0 124  Kerckh- 
off. 


81 OO 

Personal  Assist.ince 


PHYSICAL 
ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  disabled  male  in  Reiber  Hall.  A  few 
hrs/day  Flexible  shedule.  $lO/hr.  Call  Alex 
949-360-9671  or  310-267-8189. 


8200 

TempnratY  EmployiiKMJt 


TEMPORARY  EMPLOYMENT.  $10ffir  From 
2-4hrs/day.  as  many  days  as  one  can  put  in. 
Packing  figurines,  antiques,  bric-a-brac.  No 
experience  necessary.  Murray  Ma.oofl  310- 
939-3518. 


8^00 

ApiirtnuMU    for  Rent 


CULVER  CITY  APARTfulENT  U1,  teundry, 
fresh  paint,  reirxxleied  kitchen.  $650.  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westsiderentels.com 

CULVER  CITY  APARTMENT  in  4-plex.  2+1. 
enctosed  garage,  laundry,  private  and 
secure  partdng.  $850.  310-395-7368. 
www.westsk1erentals.com. 


LA  CRESCENTA  apartment  2+2.5.  bal- 
cony, patk),  teundry,  gated  partdng.  $1200. 
818-623-4444.  www.altofLA.com 

LOOKING  FOR  A  PLACE  TO  LIVE? 
wwwtKXisinglOl  net...  Your  move  off  cam- 
pus! Search  for  sumrrwr  sublets. 

MAR  VISTA  TOyjJflHOUSE  2+2,  calok,  teun- 
dry,  subterrarieah' part(ing  $1295.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.westsiderenlals.com 

MARINA  DEL  REY  ADJ.  APT  2+2.  bakxjny. 
high  ceilings,  laundry,  sub.  partdng.  $1150. 
310-395-RENT.  www.westsiderentals.com 


'^Wcstwoorf  tpfaza 


Single  w/  Shared  Bathroom 

$930  -  $965 
single  w/  Private  Bathroom 

$965 -$1095 

1  Bedroom 

$1210 -$1500 

Pairing  available  for 
1  Badrooim  only 

310-208-8505 


NEAR  UCLA 

Large,  furnished  bachetors.  furnished  with 
utilities  provkled.  Locked  entry,  good  toca- 
tton,  buses  shopping  centers.  $535/rtx)nth. 
310-575-8967. 

PALMS.  Singte  apt  from  $575.  $e00deposit 
1 -year  tease  only  Stove,  relrig.. carpets,  vert, 
blinds.  310-637-1502  leave  message.  8am- 
5pm  only. 

PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT  2+1.5.  w/c 
pet,  terge  ctosets,  pod,  teundry,  partdng 
included  $995.  310-395-REhfT.  www.west- 
slderemals.com 

PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT  2+1  3/4. 
laundry,  garage.  Won't  Last!  $1360.  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westS4derentels.com 

SANTA  MONICA  APARTMENT  private  room, 
bath.  R&S,  teundry,  patio,  fireptece  $495. 
310-395-RENT  www.westsklerentels.com 

SANTA  MONICA  APARTMENT.  2+2,  bal- 
cony,  teundry,  partdng  included  $1425.  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westsk1erentals.com 

SANTA  MONICA  HOUSE  furnished,  private 
room,  bath,  h/w  fkx>rs,  w/d  utilities  pakl. 
$480.  310-395-RENT  www.westsideren- 
tels.com 


SANTA  MONICA,  furnished  private  room, 
bath,  near  beach,  R&S,  laundry.  $450.  310- 
395-7368.  www.westskJerentals.com 

VENICE 

1BDRM  $1390+  2BDRM  $1680+Specia!  pri- 
vate garden  apartments.  Ibdrm-$1650 
2bdrm-$2200.  Lincoln  Place  Garden  /^pts. 
Can  310-450-8119. 

VENICE  APARTMENT  STUDIO:  1  bath,  only 
steps  to  beach,  teundry,  utilittes  pakl,  paridng 
included  $650.  310-395-RENT  www.west- 
sktorentels.com. 

WEST  COVINA  HOUSE  3  bedroom,  hard- 
wood  fkwrs,  yard.  $1500.  818-623-4444. 
www.altofLA.com 

WEST  LA  GUESTHOUSE  for  rent.  $675/mo, 
utilities  Irwiuded  Ctose  to  bus  stop.  15  min- 
utes from  UCLA.  Female  preferred.  Call  310- 
312-0460  for  an  appt. 


WESTWOOD 

New  1+1  apartment.  2  miles  to  campus. 
Prime  tocatton.  Private  entry.  $850  Femate 
preferred.  310-475-9145. 

WESTWOOD  APARTMENT  bachetor,  1 
bath,  teundry.  small  fridge.  $675.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.westsklerentels.com 

WESTWOOD  APARTMENT.  2+1.  patio, 
teundry,  blinds,  garage.  $1450  310-395- 
RENT  www.westskterentels.com 

WESTWOOD  BEAUTIFUL  BACHELOR 
FOR  RENT  Walk  to  UCLA.  1  btock  from 
campus.  Paridng,  security  buikJing,  refrigera- 
tor,etc  $700/mo  310-476-8090. 

WESTWOOD.  2BDRM/2BATH.  $1450  AND 
UP.  TILE  KITCHEN,  STEPDOWN  LIVING 
ROOM,  HIGH  CEILING.  CHARM.  1   MILE* 
SOUTH  OF   WILSHIRE.   SOME   W/BAL- 
CONY310-839-6294. 


8600 

Coiulo/Townliotise  for  RtMit 


1BDRM/2BTH.  security  building/garage, 
sunny  w/view.  pool/jacuzzi,  suana/gym. 
terge  clotete.  vacant  11/15.  lease  $1275/mo. 
310-471-1335. 


8700 

Cdiulo/Towiihous*'  ti)i  Sail,- 


IMAGINE  OWNING  WILSHIRE  Corndor/Hi- 
Rise  single.  1or2bdrm  $75K-$150K.  Walk  to- 
UCtA/Vlltege,  24hr/security.  Spectacular 
views,  pool,  Jacuzzi,  sauna,  valet  servk;e. 
Ag^-eot>  310-478-183Sext.109. 


8800 

G(i<:sihaiis(:  for  Kent 


CULVER  CITY 
GUESTHOUSE  _^ 

Single  guesttKiuse  in  great  neighborhood. 
Easy  partdng,  near  Overiand  arid  Jefferson. 
$600/month.  Utilities  included.  10-572-1239. 


8900 

House  fur  RfMit 


WESTWOOD-1/2  MILE 
FROM  UCLA 

Prime  tocation,  share  house  $1200- 
1400/month.  www.tesolutkDns.com/rent.htm 
tiffany  kang  Oexcite.oom 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


A  BEAUTIFUL  ROOM  4min  from  UCLA  in 
exchange  lor  tutoring  (lOhrs),  some  driving. 
Kkis-14&12.  Female  UCLA  students  only. 
310-271-7575. 

BRENTWOOD 

GUESTHOUSE 

FOR  HELP 

Private  entrance:  gated  property  with  pod. 
For  after-school  help  with  chiWren  (14&12 
years),  inchiding  driving.  310-476-4297. 


9/*00 

Room  for  Rrnl 


BRENTWOOD,  room  in  qutet  home.  Kitchen 
and  teundry  privileges.  Private  tjath  and  en- 
trance. Fully  fumishednv.  Female,  non- 
smoker  only.  $600/month.  310-472-2568. 

WESTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

bedroom  furniture  opttor«l.  1  roommate,  fe- 
male/non-smoker. Off-street  partting.  $650, 
includes  utilittes.  310-231-8200  ext.  333. 

WESTWOOD 

Walk  to  UCLA.  Male-Only  Large,  private  fur- 
nished txlrm  w/balh.  Kitchen  pnvileges,  laun- 
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OlYMPICS 

Frompage61 

Prince  Alexander  de  Merode  said 
Sunday. 

De  Merode  also  formally 
announced  that  Russian  400-meter 
runner  Svetlana  Pospeiova  tested 
positive  for  the  steroid  stanozolol  in 
an  out-of-competition  test  at  the 
games. 

Eight  athletes  tested  positive  in 
Sydney  since  the  games  began  Sept. 
16,  with  more  than  50  others  caught 
in  pre-games  tests  around  the  worid, 
including  a  charge  that  Marion 
Jones'  iiiisband,  C.J.  Hunter,  tested 
positive  for  nandrolone.  That  figure 
doesn't  include  allegations  that  U.S. 
officials  ignored  positive  tests  for  up 
to  15  of  its  athletes. 

The  eight  drug  positives  are 
quadruple  the  two  recorded  at  the 
Atlanta  Games  in  1996  and  the  most 
at  a  Summer  Games  since  10  in 
Seoul  in  1988. 

•  Water  Polo:  A  10-8  loss  to  Italy 
left  the  U.S.  squad  with  a  siMh-place 
finish  in  Sydney  -  one  spot  up  from 
1996,  but  still  a  disaopointment. 
The  United  States  finished  with  a 
record  of  2-5-1  in  the  competition. 

•  Track:  Michael  Johnson  and 
Marion  Jones  wrapped  up  their 
Olympics  the  same  way  they  started 
them:  in  spectacular  sprints  to  gold- 
medal  finishes. 

For  the  U.S.  track  team,  it  started 
and  finished  with  Jones,  who 
thrived  in  the  Sydney  spotlight.  She 
leaves  with  three  golds  and  two 
bronzes  -  falling  short  of  her  goal  of 
five  golds  but  still  becoming  the  first 
woman  to  win  five  medals  in  a  single 
Olympics. 

She  also  became  the  first  woman 
since  Florence  Griffith  Joyner  in 
1988  to  win  three  track  golds  in  one 
games.  And  she  did  most  of  it  while 
shrugging  off  allegations  that  her.; 
husband,  shot  putter  C.J.  Hunter, 
had  used  steroids. 

Jones  won  the   100-  and  200-.! 
meter  sprints,  took  a  bronze  in  the 
long  jump  and  a  bronze  in  the  400m 
relay,  then  closed  out  Saturday  with 
a  gold  in  the  1,600  relay 

Johnson,  in  his  farewell  Olympic 
appearance,  anchored  the  men's 
1,600  relay  team  to  capture  his  fffth 
gold  medal  over  three  Summer 
Games.  Across  an  amazing  career, 
Johnson  has  won  nothing  but  gold  - 
five  Olympic  and  nine  world  chanv 
pionship  medals. 

He  earlier  won  the  400m  in 
Sydney. 

Led  by  100m  champion  Maurice 
Greene  on  the  anchor  leg,  the 
Americans  won  the  400m  relay  - 
but  the  four-man  team  drew  more 
attention  with  their  post-race  antics,  : 
an  assortment  of  WWF-style  pose« 
and  muscle-flexing. 

In  the  1,500-meter,  Suzy  Favor 
Hamilton's  bid  to  become  the  first 
American  medalist  in  the  event 
ended  when  she  collapsed  about  73 
meters  from  the  finish  line  and  fin- 
ished last.  Suffering  from  dehydra-  - 
tion,  she  was  taken  off  the  track  in  a 
wheelchair. 

•  Women's  Basketball:  Talk 
about  winning  on  the  road. 

The  U.S.  hoopsters  faced  host 
Australia  before  a  rabid  crowd 
eager  to  see  the  gold  medal  come 
home  -  and  sent  the  locals  home  dis- 
appointed. The  Americans,  winners 
of  the  Atlanta  Games,  took  their 
second  straight  gold  with  a  76-54 
thrashing  of  Australia. 

The  Americans  won  with 
rebounding  and  defense,  holding 
Australia  to  31  percent  shooting 
while  winning  the  battle  of  the 
boards  48-27.  Leslie  and  Natalie 
Williams  led  the  Americans  with  15 
points  each,  while  Yolanda  GrifTith 
added  13  points  and  12  rebounds. 

The  U.S.  team  has  now  won  the 
last  two  Olympics  and  the  1998 
world  championships.  Australia's 
silver  medal  marked  the  nation's 
highest  finish  ever  in  women's  bas- 
ketball. 


m: 


i;«?' 


»>...ii  ji* 


use 

From  page  6  J. 


•  than  anyone  but  Penn  State's  Curtis 
Ennis,  who  had  241  in  1996-: 

"Is  this  a  big  game?  Yeah.  Is  it  the 

biggest  game?  No.  This  is  the  first  of 

,  many  big  games,"  Simonton  said. 

"It's  no  limits.  It's  what  we  belife've  we  I 
•tan  do.  We're  finally  a^e  to;  get  the 
big  plays."  -^ 

Simonton  scored  oti  a  2-yard  run 
>vith  11:14  le^^^ve  Oregon  State  a 
iil-141cad. 

Southern  Cal  had  a  49-yard  pass 
negated  by  an  illegal  procedure  penal- 
ty and  was  forced  to  punt,  with  T.J. 
Houshmandzaddi  returning  the  ball 
36  yards  to  the  Trojans*  27. 

Ryan  Cesca  then  connected  on  his 
first  fieldfoal  attempt  of  the  year,  a 
4I-yarder  that  made  it  24-14  with  8:04 
left. 

Southern  Cal  closed  to  24-21  after 
Oregon  Sute's  punter  hobbled  the 
ball  and  had  to  fall  on  it  on  the 
Beavers'  12. 

Canon  Palmer  completed  an  1 1- 
yard  pass  to  Malaefou  Mackenzie  and 
a  1-yard  TD  pass  to  Chad  Pierson  to 
bring  the  Trojans  within  three  wiA 
2: 1 6  left. 

With  the  Beavers  trying  to  run  out 
the  dock,  Simonton  bolted  dovmfield 
for  a  36-yard  TD  run  that  made  it  3I- 
2I  with  1 :36  left. 

The  dock  was  still  ticking  down  its 
final  seconds  when  orange-and-black 
dad  Beavers  fans  rushed  onto  the 
fidd  -  hugging  each  other,  mobbing 
the  players  and  jumping  up  and  down. 
"This  win  was  for  the  alumni,"  said 
Oregon  State  linebacker  Richard 
Seigler.  "Oregon  State  has  life  right 
now." 

Oregon  State's  Jonathan  Smith 
completed  10  of  29  passes  for  157 
yards  and  one  touchdown.  USC's 
Carson  Palmer  was  19-of-38  for  282 
yards,  two  touchdowns  and  three 
interceptions. 

Simonton's  second  touchdown  was 
set  up  when  Oregon  State  downed  a 
punt  on  the  Trojans'  I.  On  the  next 
play,  the  Beavers  forced  tailback 
Petros  Papadakis  to  fumble  on  the  6 
and  Oregon  State's  Calvin  Carlyle 
recovered  it. 

Three  plays  later,  Simonton  scored 
his  second  TD  of  the  game. 
-^-  "They  played  hard.  They  played 
wdl.  They  played  with  great  emo- 
tion," Trojans  coach  Paul  Hackett 
said.  "The  bottom  line  is  we  couldn't 
make  the  plays  we  had  to." 

use  was  haunted  by  penalties.  Its 
offense  also  sputtered  after  losing 
rushing  leader  Sultan  McCullough  to 
an  injury  two  minutes  into  the  third 
quarter. 

At  the  beginning  of  the  third  quar- 
ter. Palmer  threw  an  apparent  4-yard 
touchdown  pass  to  Antoine  /larris, 
but  the  Trojans  were  called  for  delay 
of  game.  David  Newbury's  26-yard 
field-goal  try  then  hit  the  right  upright. 
A  49-yard  pass  after  the  Beavers' 
go-ahead  toudKlov^  was  called  back 
for  illegal  proc^ure. 

Oregon  Statft  had  a  productive  first 
quarter,  rackiitt  up  202  total  yards 
and  taking  a  1^  lead  in  the  first  10 
minutes.  :  '—' 

The  Beavers  scored  on  Jonathan 
Smith's  15-yard  TD  pass  to  Chad 
Johnson  and  a  20-yard  run  by 
Simonton.  Simonton  broke  an  arm 
tackle,  spun  away  from  a  defender 
and  sprinted  14  yards  through  three 
other  Trojans  to  score. 

Southern  Cal  cut  the  lead  to  14-7 
with  just  over  two  minutq^  left  in  the 
quarter  on  an  eight-play,  71 -yard  drive 
that  ended  with  Palmer's  12-yard  pass 
to  Matt  Nickds. 

The  Trojans  tied  it  early  in  the  sec- 
ond quarter  when  linebacker  Zeke 
Moreno  returned  Patrick  McCall's 
fumble  80  yards  for  a  touchdown. 

Terrence  Carroll,  who  had  two 
interceptions,  is  a  fifth-year  senior 
who  has  seen  four  of  the  26  losses  to 
Southern  Cal. 

"I'm  just  happy  to  have  that  streak 
over,"  he  said.  "I'm  just  so  proud.  I'm 
just  ecstatic  ri^t  now." 


\--^ 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Monday,  October  2, 2000        S3 


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KATHRVN  CXitE 

Elisabeth  Bachman  goes  up  for  a  hit  off  the  dish  from  Erika  Salsor 

in  UCLA's  three-game  sweep  over  Oregon. 


W.VOLLEYBALL 

Frompage62 

age  of  .556  and  scrappy  play  at  the 
net. 

"Cira  had  a  good  warm-up  and  I 
started  lier  and  she  did  so  well  out 
there  that  I  left  her  out  there  a  little 
longer  than  I  had  planned,"  said 
UCLA  head  coach  Andy 
Banachowski.  "It  was  good  playing 
time  for  her  and  she  held  her  own  out 
there  very,  very  well  —        — 

"To  give  Cira  some  playing  time 
out  there  is  only 

going  to      ^_^_^__^___ 

strengthen     the 

team." 
The      Bruins 

held  Oregon  to 

just  one  point, 

while  they 

racked  up  three 

more. 
But        once 

UCLA    earned 

their  ninth,  the 

Ducks  went  on  a 

4-0  rally  to  bring  the  score  to  9-5  and 

UCLA  called  a  timeout. 
The  Bruins  then  rallied  the  score  to 

13  and  Wright  executed  two  key  kills 

to  give  UCLA  sideouts.  while  the 

score  held  at  13-5.  The  Ducks  only 

earned  one  more  point  as  the  game 

ended  15-6  ofT  of  an  ace  serve  by 

Stacey  Lee,  her  second  of  three  on  the 

night. 

In  the  third  game  the  Bruins 
jumped  out  to  a  3-0  lead,  and  held  the 


Ducks  at  one  for  the  rest  of  the  match. 
Posting  four  more  kills,  Lauren 
Fendrick  brought  her  total  to  1 1,  with 
a  hitting  percentage  of  .450.  Erika 
Selsor  served  UCLA  from  eight 
points  to  1 1.  and  the  Bruins  closed  the 
match  out  15-1. 

The  match  gave  Banachowski  the 
opportunity  to  rotate  in  some  of  the 
younger  player*.  Freshman  Krystal 
McFaHand  and  sophomore  Lauren 
Hogan  also  made  their  Pao-10  debuts, 
with  Hogan  and  Ella  Harley  combin- 
ing for  a  big  block  in  game  three  with 
the  score  at  12-L 

According  to 
^_^_H^  Banachowski,  it 
was  the  Bruins' 
focus  and  inten- 
sity that  carried 
them  to  their 
fifth  Pac-10  vic- 
tory. 

"We    played 

well  from  start  to 

finish  and  that's 

something     we 

didn't  do  (in  the 

previous  game)," 

Banachowski  said.  "We  talked  about 

being  able  to  concentrate  throughout 

each  and  every  game  and  we  did  a 

good  job  at  that." 

Bowles  agreed.  "It  was  a  group 
win.  We  maintained  our  consistency 
and  we  had  an  all-around  game,"  she 
said. 

Having  had  a  wake-up  call  from 
Oregon  State,  4he  Bruins  realized  that 
not  only  do  they  need  physical  play 
but  intensity  throughout. 


The  match  gave 

Banachowski  the 

opportunity  to  rotate 

in  some  of  the 

younger  players. 


M.WM'ERPOLO 

From  page  62    ,- 

I  was  the  open  guy.  I  just  got  lucky," 
Rcshcr  said. 

Brooks  had  13  saves  against  the 
Waves  and  controlled  the  defense 
from  the  goal. 

"I  take  it  one  practice  and  game  at 
a  time.  Without  the  other  players,  I 
don't  matter  at  all,"  Brooks  said. 
,.  The  Bruins  are  stiH  missing  co4jcad 
coach  Guy  Baker  and  senior  Sean 
Kerns  because  of  the  2000  Olympic 


Games  In  Sydney,  Kerns  has  scored 
three  goals  for  the  Olympic  team. 

Krikorian  sees  this  team  playing  as 
well  as  the  championship  team  last 
year.  With  so  many  pre-season  expec- 
tations, they  have  rebounded  from 
their  last  loss  in  the  Southern 
California  Tournament,  which  was  tp 
No.  I  use  on  Sept.  17.  ■'     v:. 

"I  think  we  are  only  going  to  get 
better.  We  are  showing  the  same 
hunger  and  desire  to  win  it  again," 
Krikorian  said. 

UCLA's  next  game  is  away  against 
USGonOct,7^itlOa.m. 


)-.,  >  ■• 


^ 


k 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Monday,  October  2, 2000       55  , 


FOarSALL^     V 

From  page  60       '■;/ 

Before  the  third  quarter  was  over, 
however,  Paus  connected  with 
Mitchell  once  again,  this  time  for  an 
incredible  80-yard  touchdown 
sprint.  The  Bruins  took  the  lead  for 
good  at  35-28. 

The  fourth  quarter  saw  only  one 
field  goal  of  offense  for  each  team, 
and  was  dominated  by  both  defens- 
es. UCLA's  Ryan  Nece  forced  a' 
crucial  turnover  with  3:31  remain- 
ing, and  Jason  Zdenek  recovered, 
the  clincher  of  a  long-fought  battle 
by  UCLA.  With  the  clock  run  down 
to  less  than  a  minute  on  their  next 
series,  the  Sun  Devils  could  only 
hopelessly  throw  a  Hail  Mary  in  the 
final  seconds  of  the  game. 
The  come-from-behind  victory 
jwss  vital  for  the  Bruins  in  their  quest 
for  a  Pac-lO  championship,  and  it 
was  particulariy  sweet  in  light  of 
losses  by  conference  powerhouses 
Washington  arid  USC  earlier  in  the 
day.  Paus  finished  the  day  a  success, 
completing  17  of  30  passes  for  267 
yards  and  two  touchdowns.  More 
importantly,  the  offense  did  not  turn 
the  ball  over  in  the  second  half. 


MARY  CIECEK/Daily  Bfuin  Sonior  Staff 


Ricky  Manning  helped  the  Bruin  defense  cut  dovi/n  on  ASU's 
offensive  production  in  the  second  half. 


"We  were  faced  with  adversity 
and  had  a  few  injuries,  but  we  got 
Cory  back  and  did  what  we  had  to 
do,"  said  sophomore  corncrback 
Ricky  Manning.  "We  -started  out 
slow,  but  like  the  first  three  weeks, 


we  came  out  in  the  second  half  and 
put  it  down." 

With  a  4-1  record  heading  into 
their  bye  week,  the  Bruins  have  "put 
it  down"  better  than  any  of  their  crit- 
ics expected  they  would. 


DRUGS 

.   ■"-'  J  .■  -■■■  -V^  ,-:i-. 

From  page  60  .  :    -^ 

ly  denied  any  covtr-ups  and  said 
USATF  followed  correct  procedures. 
He  said  the  USATF  abides  by  confi- 
dentiality rules  prohibiting  the  disclo- 
sure of  names  of  athletes  who  lest 
positive  until  due  process  has  run  its 
course. 

"The  big  proBlem  in  the  US.  is  two 
things,"  Ljungqvist  said.  "They  don't 
inform  us  at  all  until  the  case  is  con- 
cluded. And  if  they  conclude  in  favor 
of  the  athlete,  we  will  not  even  know 
the  name." 

The  credibility  of  the  entire  U.S. 
drug  testing  system  has  been  under 
intense  scrutiny  at  the  Sydney 
Games. 

USATF  commissioned  an  inde- 
pendent panel  Saturday  to  examine 
the  federation's  drug-testing  proce- 
dures, and  offered  to  turn  over  its 
entire  doping  control  programs  to  the 
World  Anti-Doping  Agency. 

"Our  credibility  has  been  under 
attack,"  Masback  said.  "The  reputa- 
tion of  the  U.S.  Olympic  team,  in  par- 
ticular the  track  and  field  athletes,  has 
been  besmirched.  This  is  wrong." 

Masback  declined  to  comment  on 

- / 


specifics  of  the  Hunter  case,  other 
than  to  say,  "We  beheve  we  have  fol- 
lowed the  proper  legal  course." 
'  Ljungqvist  cited  the  nandrolone 
case  in  Germany  involving  former 
Olympic  5,000-meter  champion 
Dieter  Baumann,  who  tested  positive 
in  October  1999.  He  claimed  his 
toothpaste  was  spiked,  but  an  lAAF 
arbitration  panel  rejected  his  defense 
and  suspended  him  for  two  years. 

"Had  the  Baumann  case  happened 
in  the  U.S.,  it  would  never  have  been 
known  by  anyone,"  Ljungqvist  said. 

Masback  insisted  it  was  the 
lAAF's  responsibility  to  announce 
positive  tests. 

"That  is  a  bad  excuse,"  Ljungqvist 
said.  "It's  their  jurisdiction.  The 
lAAF  rules  say  a  member  federation 
has  jurisdiction  over  their  athletes." 

Jacques  Rogge,  vice  chairman  of 
the  IOC  medical  commission,  said  he 
was  pleased  that  USATF  was  being 
put  under  pressure  to  open  its  drug 
testing  records. 

"I'm  very  glad  that  controls  will  be 
more  transparent  and  accountable," 
he  said.  "I  think  it  was  about  time  for 
leading  persons  in  the  United  States 
to  stop  pointing  fingers  at  others  and 
to  tackle  the  problems  in  their  own 
country." 


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■y--: 


S6       Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Quarterback  Cory 
Pau$,  sidelined  for 
the  first  four 
games  of  the  sea- 
son with  a  sepa- 
rated shoulder, 
helped  carry  the 
Bruins  to  a  come- 
back win  over 
ASU,  completing 
1 7  of  30  passes  for 
267  yards  and  two 
touchdowns. 


KMIOTEK 

From  page  64 

about  it,"  Mitchell  said. 

Considering  Paus  returned  to 
the  lineup  earlier  than  expected, 
there  was  some  concern  he  would 
get  re-injured,  but  he  survived  rela- 
tively unscathed.  Paus  swore  he  felt 
fine  during  the  game  and  said  he 
gained  confidence  after  getting  hit 
hard. 

"It  was  good  to  see  I  could  get 
up  and  play  again."  he  said.    ' 

He  was  still  a  bit  sore  from  get- 
ting sacked  with  an  illegal  spearing 
hit  in  the  third  quarter,  however,  in 
which  a  Sun  Devil  dove  into  Paus' 
ribs  helmet-first. 

But  the  play  did  give  the  Bruins 
a  first  down. 

"Exactly,  so  I'll  take  it,"  Faus 
said,  displaying  his  grit.      ^- '; 

Otherwise,  the  night  went 
smoothly  for  Paus. 

"I  felt  good  right  ofT  the  bat  and 
I  was  pretty  comfortable,"  he  said. 
JtSometimes  I  have  to  step  into  the 
throws  a  little  more  because  1  don't 
have  all  my  strength  back  yet,  so  I 
can't  just  hang  back  and  throw  as 
hard  as  I  normally  would." 

Another  positive  aspect  of  Paus' 
return  is  his  ability  to  spread  the 
ball  around  and  utilize  the  play- 
book.  Coach  Bob  Toledo  said  he 


cut  down  the  piaybook  by  about 
two4hirds  for  McCann,  but  it  wai 
opened  back  up  for  Paus.  He<:an 
find  second,  third  and  fourth 
options  better  than  McCann,  and 
it  was  apparent  Saturday  night. 

"He  knows  the  offense  well  and 
he's  the  kind  of  guy  to  get  every- 
body involved,"  said  split  end 
Brian  Poli-Dixon,  who  benefitted 
with  eight  catches.  "He  tends  to 
look  all  over  the  field  so  it  brings 
the  confidence  level  up." ;       ;   , 

Paus'  comeback  also  aidis  the 
running  game,  as  defenses  can't   — 
stack  the  line  to  stop  the  run  as 
they  did  before.  With  Paus  consis- 
tently hitting  open  receivers, 
UCLA's  offense  becomes  very 
explosive. 

McCann  also  had  trouble  read^ 
ing  defenses  and  calling  audibles  at 
the  line,  something  Paus  showed 
he  could  do. 

"We  made  a  lot  of  audibles  that 
we  might  not  have  made  in  the 
past,"  Saffer  said. 

So  while  Lewis  and  Akfl  Harris 
stepped  up,  Saturday's  game  ball   . 
goes  to  Paus. 

"He's  a  playmaker  and  he's  got 
a  lot  of  heart,"  Poli-Dixon  said. 
"So  that's  the  outcome  right  there 
for  you." 


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%:  jMowtoy,  Octobw  2, 2000       57 


CROS^ 

From  page  63 


UCLA  Spoas  Infof  mation 

Mason  Moore  performed  well  at  the  Stanford 
Invitational,  helping  the  Bruins  finish  third. 


"Everyone's  pretty  pleased,"  Green  added.  "It 
was  a  little  disappointing  to  lose  lo  Santa  Bartera 
though."  Z^- 

The  UCLA  women's  team,  meanwhile,  recovered 
from  their  catastrophic  outing  the  previous  week  at 
the  Roy  Griak  Invitational  by  placing  sixth  among 
the  21  squads  at  Stanford.  '*;.>!  '■:-■  .-,;  ■ 
The  Bruins  finished  behind  five  nationafly  ranked 
teams  -  including  the  Nos.  I,  2  and  3  squads  -  and 
avenged  an  early  season  loss  to  No.  20  UC  Irvine. 

"We're  really  happy,"  said  sophomore  Kelly 
Grimes.  "We  performed  very  well  as  a  team." 

Unlike  the  UCLA  men,  the  women  were  able  to 
keep  contact  with  each  other  in  the  early  going. 

Over  the  second  half  of  the  hilly  5,000-meter 
course,  seniors  Tina  Bowen  and  Katie  Nuanes 
moved  up  strongly.  Bowen  came  inT4th  at  18:16  and 
Nuanes  was  24th  at  18:26. 

Junior  Bridie  Hatch  (40lh,- 18:43),  freshman 
Valerie  Flores  (52nd,  19:03)  and  Grimes  (57th, 
19:05)  were  the  other  Bruin  scorers. 

Senior  Gina  Donnelly  (72nd,  19:21),  sophomore 
Julie  Barbour  (81st,  19:26),  sophomore  Melissa' 
McBain  (96th,  19:39),  freshman  Michelle  Barrack 
(118th,  20:05)  and  freshman  Jessica  Marr  (139th, 
20:36)  were  the  remaining  UCLA  finishers. 

Stanford,  the  country's  No.  I  team,  won  the  meet 
comfortably  with  a  tally  of  61  points.  No.  17 
Washington  was  second  with  91  points. 

No.  3  Kansas  State,  No.  2  Wisconsin  (which  rest- 
ed defending  national  champion  Erica  Palmer)  and 
No.  13  Arkansas  rounded  out  the  top  five. 


M.SOCCER 

From  page  63  - 


goal  and  theij  I  felt  we  kind  of 
backed^. off,"  Bruin  freshmap 
Adolfo  GYegorio  said.  "They  got 
two  goals  on  us  that  they  shouldn't 
even  have  got  in." 

The  second  goal  also  marked  the 
entry  of  senior  Shaun  Tsakiris.  the 
hero  from  Thursday  night's  game. 
The  midfielder  had  been  hampered 
by  back  injuries  and  it  was  not  cer- 
tain if  he  would 

play  at  all  dur-      -i^— —i.^ 
ing  the  game. 

"I'm  about 
60  or  70  per- 
cent right  now," 
Tsakiris  said.  "I 
know  we  wanjL 
ed  to  rest  some 
players  but  it  is 


The  Bruins  roared  out 

ofthe  gates  in  the 

second  half. 


always  good  to  get  a  win." 

The  Bruins  roared  out  of  the 
gates  in  the  second  half.  At  the  54th 
minute,  Tsakiris  sent  a  corner  kick 
flying  into  the  box  and  senior  Scot 
Thompson  managed  to  get  a  head 
on  the  ball  and  send  it  past  Wilson 
to  the  left. 

After  close  misses  by  freshmen 
Leonard  Griffin  and  Matt  Taylor, 
Tsakiris  struck  again.  Taking  a  ball 
in  the  middle  ofthe  box  and  evading 
a  defender,  he  punched  the  ball  into 


the  right  of  the  goal.       -.  V;      ;^ 
That  was  all  the  Bruins  needed. 
Countess  clamped  down  after 
that  and  the  Bruins  were  the  only 
team  to  make  any  offensive  gains. 

The  Bruins  showed  they  can  stay 
up,  even  after  an  emotional  win 
,  such  as  one  they  had  against  Santa 
Clara. 

"I  think  it  is  good  to  win  two 
games  in  a  week,"  Saldai\a  said. 
"We  will  certainly  have  weeks  like 
that  where  you  have  to  play  a 
Washington  and  an  Oregon  State 
and  you  have  to 
■~'~''"-~'^—  get  up  for  both 
games.  It  has  to 
become  a  habit 
for  us."  ,^ 
Though  the 
team  has 

looked  impres- 
sive in  the  early 
going,  the 


Bruins  have  yet  to  show  the  intensi- 
ty of  last  year's  squad  and  have 
seemed  lackluster  at  times  since  the 
Indiana  game.  With  the  No.  I  rank- 
ing, opponents  having  been  gearing 
up  for  the  games  and  the  Bruins  will 
have  to  work  on  their  focus  in  the 
coming  weeks. 

"The  last  couple  of  games  we 
haven't  been  playing  the  best  we 
can,"  Gregorio  said.  "We  can  play  a 
lot  better  so  hopefully  we  can  just 
get  our  act  together  and  play  well." 


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58       Monday,  October  2, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


A' 
*  t 

^ 

V 


W.SOCCER 

Frompag€64''  -      • 

goal  lead.  ;    ' 

Rigamat  said  the'  squad  has  a  strong  front 
line,  but  its  reaj  strength  lies  in  its  depth. 

"The  people  who  don't  start  have  the  same 
intensity,"  Rigamat  said.  "1  think  that's  the 
strong  point  of  this  team." 

Katherine  Bjazevich  sealed  the  deal  in  the 
79th  minute  with  a  header  offa  Tracey  M  ilbum 
croSs.  It  was  the  fourth  goal  of  the  year  for  the 
freshman,  who  came  off  the  bench  to  add  an 
offensive  spark. 

UCLA  head  coach  Jillian  Ellis  said  she  likes 
the  duality  of  her  offense,  but  envisions  better 
play  in  specific  areas. 

"We're  a  possession  team,  but  we  have  great 
explosiveness  up  top,  which  allows  us  to  be  a 
counter  team  as  well,"  she  said.  "There  are  still 
things  we  need  to  improve  upon.  We  need  to 
get  better  service  from  our  back  line  and  more 
movement  off  the  ball." 

On  Sunday  at  LMU  the  Bruins  once  again 
made  Peterson's  day  enjoyable.  The  junior 
keeper  faced  five  shots,  only  one  of  which  was 
^ \ 


on  goal,  en  route  to  her  sixth  straight  shutout. 
UCLA  offiense  supplied  its  usual  firepower. 

Junior  Bethany  Bogart  assisted  on  two  goals 
off  of  comer  kicks,  the  first  scored  by  Courtney 
•Wright  in  the  23rd  minute  and  the  second  reg- 
istered by  Staci  Duncan  in  the  3 1st  minute. 
Senior  Tracey  M  ilbum  drove  the  nail  into  the 
coffin  with  a  goal  in  the  84th  minute. 

The  only  dark  point  in  the  game  came  in  the 
82nd  minute  when  Ellis  received  a  red  card  for 
language  conceming  a  hard  foul  on  M  ilbum  by 
LMU's  Stacy  Roberts.  According  to  NCAA 
rules,  Ellis  will  have  to  sit  out  the  first  of  this 
weekend's  matches. 

"It  was  blatant.  She  grabbed  her  from 
behind  and  threw  her  down.  Naturally,  I  was 
upset  and  told  the  referee  what  I  told  and  I'm 
not  proud  of  it  at  all,"  Ellis  said. 

UCLA  finishes  up  its  non-conference  sched- 
ule against  Marquette  on  Friday  night  and  then 
travels  across  town  for  a  monumental  confer- 
ence opener  against  USC. 

"We  need  to  keep  on  keeping  on,  but  con- 
tinue to  improve,"  Ellis  said.  "Ultimately  we 
want  to  peak  near  the  playoffs." 

The  only  thing  leff  in  question  at  this  point  is 
if  a  higher  peak  exists. 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Moftdayi  October  2, 2000       59 


f*TILAflM£NlAHOaily  Brum  SenW  Staff 

Freshnnan  Sarah  Gayle-Swanson  dribbles  past  a  Fresno  State  defender. 


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11 


60       Monday,  October  2, 2006 


Daily  Biun  Sports 


■y:^: 


FOOTBALL 

From  page  64 

Bruins  entered  the'locker  room  with 
the  boos  of  a  disgruntled  home  crowd 
at  their  backs. 

"We  just  went  into  the  locker 
room  and  said  'We  know  what  we 
can  do,  we  know  what  we  need  to  do,' 
and  decided  to  just  go  out  there,  exe- 
cute, and  play  Bruin  ball  like  it's  sup-  • 
posed  to  be  played,"  said  safety 
Audie  Attar. 

.     It  was  in  th^  secortjd  half  that  Paus 
and  the  Brums  finally  found  their 


comfort  zone,  playing  more  like  the 
team  that  beat  Michigan  and 
Alabama  and  less  like  the  team  that 
was  dominated  by  Oregon. 
-  On  the  first  play  ofthe  second  half, 
Lewis  continued  his  hot  play,  burst- 
ing off  the  line  of  scrimmage  to  sprint 
foj  a  57-yard  touchdown  run.  It 
seemed  to  spark  the  Bruins  for  the 
r6st  of  the  gara©i.as  they  outscored 
the  Sun  Devils  31-10  in  the  second 
half  ■'.-.» 


With  the  bitense  moving  the  ball 
consistently,  the  Bruin  defense 
seemed  to  improve  as  well,  limiting 
the  explosivfirtss  that  Arizona  State 


had  demonstrated  in  the  first  half  of 
play.  Three  minutes  into  the  half  an 
interception  by  Bruin  corjierback  Joe 
Hunter  at  the  ASU  21-yard  line  set  up 
another  touchdown  run  by  Harriii 
which  tied  the  game  at  21. 

In  UCLA's  next  oflcnsive  series, 
Paus  threw  an  eight-yard  strike  to  a 
wide-open  Freddie  Mitchell  to  take 
.  the  first  UCLA  lead  of  the  game  »t 
28-21.  But  Arizona  State  struck  right  ' 
back  With  a  60-yard  touchdown  pass 
to  Richard  Williams  to  tie  the  game 
22  seconds  later. 


Anti-doping  chief  attatte 
US.  confidentiality  policy 


SteraOIBiUtpageSS 


TESTING:  lAAF  asks  for 
details  about  10  athletes 
who  failed  drug  exams 


mfiiii 


GAME  SUMMARY  BOX 


defeated 
38-31 


.*;   «  '    ' 


(v. . 


JERMAf  NE  lEWIVAKIl  WUmiS 
The  two  combined  for  215  yarA    " 
nishing  and  thnt  tevdidowtit  as 
nplKtiMfits  for  DeShim  Fotttr  latt 
in  tiM  first  haH  of  play. 

On  tbt  first  play  of  ttw  second  half, 
Jwmaint  Invis  sprinted  for  a  57-yaid 
touchdown  run,  brinynj  th«  Bruins 

within  saven  points,  and  cataputtinf  a 
strong  socond  half. 

2<,  the  amount  of  points  scortd  by 
IKIA  in  the  third  quarter.  It  was  their 
■wst  in  a  quarter  since  scoring  28  in 
the  second  quarter  against 
Washington  in  1997.    i. 

*l  want  to  compliment  UCU  on  tiw 

way  they  ame  back.  They're  very 

Ulented.  The  third  quarter  was  Rhc 

an  avalaache,  and  it  was  a  imI  tribute 

toUClJL' 

-ASU  koBd  coach  Bruce  Snyder 

Uwis  and  Harris  beame  the  first  pair 
•f  imiMluiHh  fw  100  yards  each  in  a 
lina  Bwrtl  Price  (1 10)  and  Skip 
il1996n.NorthMst 


UCLA         0 
ASU  14 


1ST  ASU 
ASU 

2ND  ASU 
UCLA 

3R0  UOA 
UOA 
UCLA 
ASU 
UCU 

4TN  ASU 
UCU 


M.Wiltiaiiis,tD(39y4) 

R.  Williams,  TD  (2  yd) 

M.WiliaNis,TD(5y<l) 

A.Hanis,TD(23yd) 

Lewis,  TD(S7  yd) 

A.  Harris,  ID  (7  yd) 

MitdMli,TD(8yd) 

R.Wiiliains,TD(60yd) 

Mitd)ell,TD(80yd) 

B«rth,F6{49yd) 

Griffith,  K  (46  yd) 


Net  Yards  Rushing 
Net  yards  Passing 
Penalties:  Number-Yards 
Possession  Fme 
First  Downs 
FumUes:  Number-Lost 


The  Associated  Press 

--  SYDNEY.  Australia  -  USA 
Track  &  Field  continues  to  suppress 
details  on  at  least  10  positive  drug 
tests,  including  three  for  the  same 
steroid  allegedly  used  by  C.J. 
Hunter,  the  sport's  top  anti-doping 
ofTicial  said  Sunday. 

Arne  Ljungqvist,  medical,  com- 
mission   chier 

of  the      — 

International 
Amateur 
Athletic 
Federation, 
said  last  week 
that  USATF 
had  failed  to 
report  up  to  15 
positive  cases 
in  the  past  two 
years. 


three  for  high  testosterone- 
epitestostcrone  levels,  and  three  for 
the  steroid  nandrolone,  Ljungqvist 
said. 

In  two  of  the  nandrolone  cases, 
the  athletes  were  exonerated  by 
USATF,  he  said. 

"We  have  no  reason  why,*^ 
Ljungqvist  said.  "The  Americans 
have  taken  the  privilege  on  them- 
selves to  exonerate  without  inform- 
ing us  who  (the  athletes)  are,  and 
saying  this  is  confidential." 

Nandrolone  is  the  sacne  sub- 
stance for  which  Hunter,  husband 
of  sprint  star  Marion  Jones,  tested 
„:^i^  positive  in  four 
separate   tests 


^  _:'"''    ^' in  Europe  this 

The  reputation  ofthe     summer 
U.S.  Olympic  team...       ""^'*"« 
has  been  besmirched' 


Craig  Masback 

USATF  executive  director 


UCLA 
233 

4-52 
34:16 
23 
3-3 


ASU 

M 

MS 

i-n 

'39it$--. 

2-2 


CONNI€  WU/0»»y  Bruin  Smior  Staff 


Since  then,  Ljungqvist  said,  the 
lAAF  has  been  notified  that  five 
cases  have  been  concluded.  The  ath- 
letes, who  were  not  identified,  were 
found  guilty  of  using  the  banned 
stimulants  ephedrine  and  pseu- 
doephedrine. 

"There  are  still  10  outstanding 
cases,"  Ljungqvist  said.  "We  don't 
have  any  names,  information,  expla- 
nation or  anything." 

Doping  lab  reports,  however, 
indicate  that  four  ofthe  cases  are  for 
ephedrine  or  related  stimulants, 


I 

to 
the  lAAF.  The 
positives  were 
confirmed  only 
after  leaks  in 
the  media.  '.'' 
Hunter 
■^— — — — ^_  withdrew  from 
the  U.S. 

Olympic  team 
on  Sept.  1 1,  eight  days  after  imder- 
going  knee  surgery.  ■■-,:  \fi 

Ljungqvist  said  the  lAAF  had 
told  USATF  to  suspend  Hunter  and  ■ 
make  sure  he  did  not  compete  in  ^ 
Sydney. 

USATF  executive  director  Craig 
Masback  could  not  be  reached  for 
comment  Sunday  Messages  left  on 
his  ceil  phone  were  not  immediately    " 
returned. 

However,  Masback  has  repeated- 


See  OtIMS,  page  SS 


\ 


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■.-C  »i.. 


Golden 


<»AMES!  U.S.  baiseiy  wins 

basketball  medal,  loses 
out  in  boxing,  wrestling 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


f^mtindi^ 


M<>fiday,Octobw2,2000       6T 


V^  SYDNEY.  Australia  -  High 
hopes  gave  way  to  harsh  reality  on 
the  last  day  of  the  Sydney  Games. 

For  the  U.S.  boxers  and  freestyle 
wrestlers,  that  meant  an  Olympic 
gold  medal  shutout-for  the  first 
time  m  decades.  For  the  French 
basketball  team,  it  meant  a  chas- 
tened U.S.  "Dream  Team- 
reasserting  its  Olympic  superiority 
in  a  gold  medal-winning  85-75  per- 
formance. 

After  staggering  off  with  a  two- 
pbint  semifinal  victory  against 
Lithuania,  the  NBA  all-stars  sprint- 
ed to  an  early  finals  lead  against 
France.  The  Americans  faltered  in 
the  second  half,  when  the  lead  was 
cut  to  four,  but  Vince  Carter's  dou- 
ble-pump dunk  with  1:40  left 
sparked  a  closing  9-3  U.S.  run 

'•It  wasn't  a  Cakewalk,"  said 
U.S.  center  Alonzo  Mourning.  "I 
think  that  will  make  us  appreciate  U 
even  more."  ■  \ 

While  nowhere  nfi^s  imposing 
as  in  the  past,  the*U.J.  team  still 
went  undefeated  in  Australia  and 
brought  home  a  gold  for  the  third 
consecutive  Olympics.  Carter  and 
Ray  Allen  led  the  Americans  with 
13  points  apiece.  ' 

"Now  we  have  the  ultimate 
championship,"  Allen  said.  "We 
won  a  gold  medal  with  the  whole 
worid  watching." 

Lithuania,  a  two-point  semifinal 
loser  to  the  Americans,  won  its 


third  consecutive  bronze  by  beating 
host  Australia  89-71  on  Sunday. 

With  the  final  day  under  way,  the 
Americans  were  poised  to  collect 
the  most  medals,  leading  the  pack 
with  94  (39  gold,  ^24  silv^fcr,  31 
bronze).  Running  second  was 
Russia  with  79  (29-24-26),  followed 
by  China's  59  (28-16-15). 

•  Boxing:  The  U.S.  boxing  team, 
which  arrived  in  Sydney  hoping  to 
reverse  its  recent  Olympic  for- 
tunes, wound  up  without  a  single 
gold  medal  for  the  first  time  since 
London  in  1948. 


Eight  athletes  tested 

positive  in  Sydney 

since  the  games 

began  Sept.  16. 


U.S.  boxer  Ricardo  Juarez  lost 
Sunday  to  125-pounder  Bekzat 
Sattarkhanov  of  Kazakstan,  22-14, 
giving  him  a  silver  medal  and  leav- 
ing the  American  team  with  one 
last  shot  at  winning  its  only  gold  in 
Australia.  h-    . 

Ricardo  Williams  wasn^p  to 
the  task.  He  was  defeated  27-20  by 
Mahamadkadyz  Abdullaev  of 
Uzbekistan  in  his  gold  medal  bout 
at  139  pounds. 

The  United  States  protested  the 
decisions  in  both  bouts,  with  a  rul- 
ing expected  later  in  the  day. 

In  each  of  the  past  two 
Olympics,  U.S.  boxers  had  won  just 
a  single  gold  medal,  in  Australia, 
they  failed  to  reach  even  that  mod-' 


est  toul  -  ending  up  with  two  silver 
and  two  bronze,  two  less  than  the 
•  one  gold  and  five  bronze  won  in 
Atlanta,      V' - 

•  Wrestling:  Disaster  struck 
quickly  with  four  straight  loWs 
Sunday,  dashing  any  hopes  of  a 
U.S.  gold  -  the  first  time  that's  hap- 
pened since  Mexico  City  in  1968. 

Ex-Iowa  wrestlers  Terry  Brands 
and  Lincoln  Mcllravy  lost  close 
semifinal  matches;  Brands  and 
Mcllravy  won  later  to  each  take  a 
bronze.  Kerry  McCoy  and  Charies 
Burton  lost  tight  quarterfinal 
matches  and  were  shut  out  of  the 
medals. 

On  Saturday,  U.S.  wrestlers 
Brandon  Slay  and  Sammie  Henson 
won  silver  after  tough  defeats  in 
the  finals. 

Greco-Roman  gold  medalist 
Rulon  Gardner,  who  ended  the  13- 
year  undefeated  streak  of  Russian 
super  heavyweight  Alexander 
Karelin,  will  carry  the  U.S.  flag 
during  the  Olympic  closing  cere- 
mony Sunday. 

•  Drugs:  The  last  day  of  the 
Sydney  Olympics  started  with  an 
all-too-famrliar  refrain:  three 
Olympians,  one  a  bronze  medalist, 
busted  for  steroids. 

Armenian  lifter  Ashot 
Danielyan  was  stripped  of  his 
medal  after  a  positive  test  for  the 
steroid  nandrolone.  becoming  the 
fourth  weightlifter  to  test  positive 
in  the  Summer  Games. 

Greco-Roman  wrestler  Fritz 
Aanes  of  Norway  also  tested  posi- 
tive for  nandrolone  after  losing  a 
bronze-medal  match  Wednesday, 
IOC  medical  commission  chairman 


SWIMMING  BRIEF 


Team  competes  in 
intersquad  meet 

The  swim  team  had  its  first 
competition  of  the  year,  albeit  an 
unofficial  one.  In  an  intersquad 
meet  on  Friday  afternoon  at  the 
Men's  Gym.  the  Blue  team  faced 
the  Gold  team,  though^ bo  Scores 
were  recorded.  ^v ' 

There  were,  however,  some  dis- 
tinctive results. 

The  incoming  freshman  class 
proved  themselves  early  on  to  the 
veterans,  and  junior  Jen  Noddle, 


who  missed  the  Canadian 
Olympic  trials  eariier  in  the  sum- 
mer because  of  food  poisoning, 
won  two  events. 

Noddle  won  the  200m  breast- 
stroke  (2:17.96)  as  well  as  the 
200m  IM  (2:07.88).  Freslwan 
iarah  Platzer  ,won  the  the  100m 
free  (52.53),  freshman  Naoko 
Watanab-e  won  the  200m  back 
(2:06.30)  and  senior  Katie 
Younglove  won  the  200m  fiv 
(2:07.40).  -^ 


Notes  compiled  by  Pauline  Vu,  Daily 
Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


Beavers  Wast  past  trojan^ 
end  26-game  losing  streak 


FOOTBALL  First  loss  for 
No.  8  use  not  pretty  as 
Simonton  runs  234  yards 


S«eOUfl»K5,pa9e52 


The  Associated  Press 

CORVALLIS,  Ore. -The  last  time 
Oregon  State  beat  Southern  Cal,  the 
Beavers  brought  down  O.J.  Simpson 
before  he  could  reach  the  end  zone 
and  ruin  their  3-0  victory. 

No  one  could  stop  Oregon  State's 
Ken  Simonton  as  he  ran  for  a  career- 
high  234  yards  and  three  touchdowns 
as  the  Beavers  beat  No.  8  Southern 
Cal  31-21  on  Saturday  to  break  a  26- 
game  losing  streak  against  the 
Trojans. 

Oregon     State     coach     Dennis 


Erickson.  who  won  two  national 
championships  at  Miami,  said  the  vic- 
tory is  as  big  as  he  has  experienced. 

"I've  never  been  so  proud  of  a  foot- 
ball team  in  my  life."  Erickson  said 
"It's  as  high  as  I've  ever  been.  This  was 
right  up  with  any  of  them.  You  keep 
hearing  about  the  streak.  I  didn't  want 
to  hear  it  any  longer." 

When  the  Beavers  (40,  1-0  Pac-10) 
last  beat  Southern  Cal  (3-1.  0-1)  in 
1967.  the  Trojans  went  on  to  win  the 
national  championship,  and  Oregon 
State  began  its  long  decline. 

Last  season,  Oregon  State  ended 
another  embarrassing  streak  with  its 
first  winning  season  in  29  years. 

Simonton  had  37  carries  and  ran 
for  more  yards  against  Southern  Cal 


e 


62       Monday,  Oaober  2, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


■  '"  '..'r 


■H« 


1\ 


t.  i 


V 


M.WATERPOLa  Matches 
offer  little  to  challenge 
Bruins  during  weekend 


two  in  quest  for  title  |  Bruins  get  back  on  track 

with  dominating  victory 


ByRekhaRao 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor    • 

The  UCLA  men's  water  polo  team 
continued  their  quest  for  a  repeat 
championship  this  weekend,  with 
back^o-back  yictpries  over  UC  Santa 
Barbara,  II -3,  on  Friday  and  a  13-6 
win  over  rival  Pepperdine  on  Sunday. 

On  Friday,  the  No.  2-ranked 
Bruins  started  the  game  with  a  6^  run 
against  the  Gauchos  in  the  first  quar- 
ter. 


UCLAd.UCSB, 

11-3 

UCLA  d.  Pepperdine, 

13-6 


"We  have  been  emphasizing  com- 
ing out  strong  at  the  beginning  of  the 
game  and  not  leaving  everything  for 
the  end,"  said  head  coach  Adam 
Krikorian. 

The  only  goal  UCLA's  sophomore 
goalie  Brandon  Brooks  allowed  came 
at  the  end  of  the  second  quarter. 
Defensively,  Brooks  leads  the  team  by 
limiting  their  opponents  to  few  goals 
in  the  beginning  quarters. 

"We  came  out  and  knew  what  we 
needed  to  do.  I  think  we  took  care  of 
business  early  and  that  is  what  gave  us 
the  win,"  Brooks  said. 

But  the  Bruins  shut  out  the 
Gauchos  in  third,  and  led  10-1  going 
into  the  fourth  Quarter. 


W.VOLLEYBAUJ  Squad 
sweeps  Ducks,  avenges 
Thursday's  loss  to  OSU 


ByOvistinalUler 

Oatly  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


.  EDWARD  LIN 

Senior  defender  Andrew  Bailey  takes  control  in  the  men's  waterpo- 
lo  1 3-6  win  over  Pepperdine  on  Sunday. 


On  Sunday,  UCLA  used  its  home- 
town advantage  to  limit  the 
Pepperdine  Waves  to  only  six  goals. 

"We  were  emotionally  charged, 
this  was  an  important  game  for  us. 
We  executed  perfectly  in  the  first 
quarter,"  Krikorian  said. 

Emotion  and  successful  counter- 
attacks gave  UCLA  an  optimistic  alti- 
tude and  a  strong  showing  over 
Pepperdine. 

The  Bruins  controlled  the  Waves  in 
the  first  quarter  with  an  early  8-2  lead, 
scoring  on  the  first  five  possessions. 

They  continued  their  domination 


through  the  three  remaining  quarters, 
slowly  inching  the  score  to  13-6  by  the 
end  of  the  game. 

Matt  Flesher  lead  the  team  with 
three  goals,  all  in  the  first  quarter. 

"A  lot  of  scoring  goals  is  being  at 
the  right  place  at  the  right  time.  Matt 
was  on  fire,  but  everyone  was  on  fire," 
Krikorian  said. 

Resher  attributed  his  goals  to  his 
fellow  players  and  the  gamei>l»». 

"The  counter-attack  was  open,  and 


Ft  was  time  to  redeem  themselves. 

It  didn't  matter  that  it  was  a  dif- 
ferent Oregon  team  on  the  other  side 
of  the  net  on  Friday  night  -  the 
UCLA  Bruins  reiterated  their  domi- 
nating volleyball  1.  ,  ,  , 
ability  by  sweep-  ^■-iiH^i_.iiH 
ing  the  Oregon 
Ducks  15-6,  15- 
6,  15-1  in  a  one 
and  a  half  hour 
matck^ 

"Last  night  we  were  having  a 
problem  coming  into  the  game  pre- 
pared and  being  reatty  to  play,"  out- 
side hitter  Kristee  Porter  said  of 
Thursday's  loss  to  Oregon  State. 
"And  this  game  we  were  ready  to 
play.  We  came  out,  played  hard,  got 


ahoid  and  got  a  couple  of  points  in." 
in  fact,  the  Ducks  didn't  score 
until  the  Bruins  had  run  away  with 
1 1  points,  and  it  was  a  UCLA  hit  just 
long  of  the  back  line  that  finally  put 
Oregon  on  the  board. ' 

Once  UCLA  reached  the  14- 
point  mark,  the  Ducks  posted  two  . 
more  points  and  held  the  Bruins  ofT 
from  three  game-point  attempts 
before  finally  falling  15-6.  Ashley 
Bowles'  only  kill  in  that  game  was 
the  1,000th  of  her  career. 

UCLA  jumped  out  to  an  early  6-0 
/:^'^  ■.';■:  V  lead  in  game 
"  two,  and  from 

there  the  Ducks 
battled  through 
several  sideouts 
,  to  put  a  point 
. :  on  the  board.  In 
her  Pac-IO  debut,  freshman  middle 
blocker  Cira  Wright  left  her  mark  on 
the  match.  Playing  the  first  two 
games  of  the  match,  Wright  con- 
tributed five  kills,  a  hitting  percent- 


UCLA  d.  OregOn, 

15-6,15-6,15-1 


$<«W.V0UlTMU,pa9e54 


Se«M.WilTEIIPOlO,pa9e54 


WTHflVNOGlE 

Kristee  Porter  powers  through  the  block  in  a  victory  over  Oregon. 


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O    N    U    I    N    E 


Uaily  Urwn  Sports 


Wins  close  one  over  St.  Mary% 

M.SOCCER;  Gaels  give  ^ 

top-ranked  Bruins  scare; 
team  focuses  o^  intensity 


Monday,  October  2, 2000        63 


ByJimGuthrie 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

-T-Thc  No.  I  UCLA  men's  soccer 
team  had  to  claw  its  way  back,  but  it 
still  managed  to  get  the  3-2  victory 
over  St.  Mary's  at  Drake  Stadium  on 
Sunday  afternoon. 

After  Thursday's  thrilling  win  over 
Santa  Clara,  Sunday's  game  against 
lowly  St.  Mary's  was  supposed  to  be  a 
blowout.  Apparently,  someone  forgot 
to  tell  the  Gaels  as  the  Bruins  found 
themselves  trailing  2-1  in  the  first 
half. 


UCU3 
St.  Mary's  2 


'They  got  two  goals  on 

us  that  they  shouldn't 
even  have  got  in." 

-     Adolfo  Gregorio 
"•  UCLA  soccer  player 


enjoy  comeback 
at  Stanford  Invitationaf 


CROSS:  Men  close  third 
out  of  18,  women  finish 
sixth  of21  on  hilly  field 


Bruin  midfielder  Sl«un  Tsaklrls  kicks  the  ball  ;rtrS;rNI^^^ 
Marcum  to  score  the  game-winning  goal  in  the  second  half  of  play. 


"I  was  very  frustrated  with  the  first 
half,"  said  head  coach  Todd  Saldaila. 
"I  brought  that  up  lo  them  and  told 
them  they  were  playing  at  a  casual 
style  and  not  getting  the  job  done." 

That  was  all  the  motivation  the 
Bruins  (8-0)  needed  as  they  stormed 


out  of  the  locker  room  to  collect  two 
■goals  before  the  60th  minute. 

The  Bruins  led  the  game  early. 
During  the  seventh  minute  sopho- 
more  midfielder   Jimmy    Frazelle 
headed    the    ball    up    to    senior 
McKinley  Tennyson,  who  exploded 
by  a  St.  Mary's  defender.  Tennyson 
then  waited  for  Gael  goalkeeper 
Kellan  Wilson  to  leave  the  net  before 
sending  a  shot  into  the  top  of  the  net. 
The  Bruins  didn't  have  a  chance  to 
savor  their  lead  as  a  quick  foul  just 
outside  the  box  in  the  eighth  minute 


set  up  a  free  kick  for  Gaels  midfielder 
Eric  Reed.  Reed  took  the  kick  and 
punched  it  in  to  the  left,  past  diving 
goalie  D.J.  Countess. 

UCLA  could  not  convert  on  a 
series  of  shots,  and  a  cross  over  the 
middle  by  Gaels  midfielder  Oscar 
Bueno  fed  the  ball  right  to  defender 
Nick  Marcum.  who  fired  it  past 
Countess.  That  gave  St.  Mary's  a  one- 
goal  lead  at  the  break. - 

"We  came  out  and  got  that  first 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Mason  Moore  is  back. 
Moore,  a  fifth-year  senior  on  the 
UCLA  cross  country  team,  had 
trained  lightly  over  the  summer  to 
recover  from  his  draining  spring 
track  campaign.  And  in  this  sea- 
son's early  race,  his  lack  of  prepa- 
ration showed,  as  he  ran  several 
paces    behind 
where  he  was 
expected  tp  be .  '    '  ' 

But  racing 
at  the  Stanford 
Invitational  on 
Saturday, 
Moore 
regained  his 
old  form,  com- 
ing in  16th  out 
of  139  run- 
ners. 

Coupled 
with      junior 


At  the  start"  of  the  race,  the 
Bruins  found  themselves  in  some 
trouble,  as  the  number  of  runners 
on  the  course  prevented  them  from 
staying  in  a  pack.  —————— 

"We  didn't  get  into  our  plan," 
said  senior  team  captain  Scott 
Abbott.  "Maybe  it  cost  us  the  race 
to  Santa  Barbara." 

The  Bruins,  however,  kept  their 
poise  and  ran  strongly  over  the  8- 
kilometer  course,  enabling  them  to 
beat  1999  NCAA  Championship 
qualifiers  .Cal  Poly  San  Luis 
Obispo  and  Southern  Utah. 

Green   hit   the  finish   line  at 
25:26,  while  Moore  ran  through  at 
25:49. 


"Our  plan  fell  apart  but 

we  still  ran  well.  It's  a 

huge  confidence 

boost." 

Scott  Abbott 

Cross  country  captain 


SeeM.$OCCBI,page57 


Bryan  Green's  seventh-place  run, 
Moore's  performance  catapulted 
the  Bruins  to  a  third-place  finish  in 

a  field  of  18  teams. 

Host  Stanford,  ranked  second 

in  the  country,  won  the  race  with 

28  points.  UC  Santa  Barbara  and 

UCLA  trailed  with  118  and  142 

points,  respectively. 

"It   feels  good  to  be  back," 

Moore  said.  Tm  starting  to  come 

into  myself.", 


Senior  Paul 
Muite  (30th, 
26:09),  true 
freshman  Jon 
Rankin  (44th, 
26:30)  and 
junior  Justin 
Patananan 
(49th,  26:34) 
were  next. 

Junior 
Andrew  Wulf 

■ (50th,  26:35), 

Abbott  (71st, 
27:05),  and  sophomore  Phil  Young 
(78th,  27: 18)  were  the  other  UCLA 
finishers. 

Stanford  All-American  senior 
Jonathan  Riley  won  the  individual 
contest  in  24:44,  leading  a  1-2-3 
sweep  by  the  Cardinals. 

"Our  plan  fell  apart  but  we  still 
ran  well,"  Abbott  said.  "It's  a  huge 
confidence  boost."  .      . 


See  CROSS,  page  57  'mi 


NOT  lOMISS! 


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Spikers  take  it  out  on  Ducks 

One  day  after  ah  upset  loss  to  Oregon 
State,  the  UCLA  women's  volleyball 
team  easily  swept  fellow  statesmen 
Oregon.  See  story  on  page  62 

Monday,  Ortober  2, 2000 


■%,. 


Sports  on  the  Web 

See  all  this  and  niore  at 

thf  Daily  Bruln^ 

masterful  Web  site: 

www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


UCLA  comes  from  beNnd  to  beat  ASU 


FOOTBALL:  Paus  returns 
victorious  afler  surviving 
neiTC-wracking  first  half 


By  Josh  Mason 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Gut-wrenching  finishes  seem  to 
have  become  the  trademark  of  the 
2000  UCLA  roolball  squad. 
Saturday's  38-31  victory  over  the 
Arizona  State  Sun  Devils  was  no 
exception. 

The  game  itself  was  billed  as  a 
challenge  for  a  Bruin  team  that  was 
shut  down  against  Oregon  only  a 
week  earlier.  A  loss  would  have 
burkfi  UCLA  in  the  trenches  of  the 
Pac- 10  standings. 


UCLA  38 
ASU  31 


There  was  also  the  fact  that  star 
safety  Marques  Anderson  was  not 
playing  because  of  an  undisclosed 
medical  procedure,  and  sophomore 
quarterback  Cory  Paus  was  being 
thrown  into  a  starting  role  only  four 
weeks  after  separating  his  shoulder. 

Krom  the  start  of  the  game,  the 
No  LSliruins  appeared  to  be  prov- 
ing their  critics  right. 

The  Sun  Devils  capitalized  on  a 
DeShaun  Foster  fumble  in  UCLA's 
opening  scries  by  driving  down  the 
field  for  69  yards  on  eight  plays,  cli- 


maxed by  Mike  Williams'  39-yard 
run  for  the  first  score  of  the'game. 

The  trend  continued  as  UCLA 
turned  the  ball  over  three  more 
times.  ASU  scored  on  drives  of  77 
and  52  yards,  all  within  the  first  20 
minutes  of  play.  It  was  a  21-0  game 
through  one  and  a  half  quarters,  and 
the  Bruins  knew  exactly  what  had 
caused  their  daunting  deficit. 

"It  was  a  lack  of  execution  on  our 
part  in  the  first  half,"  said  senior 
running  back  Jermaine  Lewis.  "We 
were  fumbling  the  ball  and  we  just 
couldn't  click  as  a  unit.  After  those 
first  three  scores,  we  began  to  feel  a 
sense  of  urgency." 

Ironically,  the  turning  point  for 
the  Bruins  seemed  to  come  at  a  time 
when  all  hope  seemed  to  be  lost. 

Early  in  the  second  quarter, 
Foster,  UCLA's  top  offensive 
threat,  fractured  his  right  hand,  forc- 
ing the  BruiBS  to  turn  to  Lewis  and 
freshman  Akil  Harris. 

As  part  of  a  95-yard  drive  for 
UCLA's  first  score  of  the  game,  the 
duo  combined  to  rush  for  63  yards, 
including  a  23-yard  touchdown  run 
by  Harris.  It  was  only  his  second 
time  touching  the  ball  this  season. 

"I  told  (Jermaine)  before  the 
game  that  he  was  going  to  play," 
head  coach  Bob  Toledo  said.  "And 
when  DeShaun  went  down,  I  told 
him  it's  time.  He  gave  me  a  big  smile 
and  went  in  and  got  it  done." 

Though  the  Bruins  had  another 
chance  to  try  for  points  before  the 
half  was  over,  they  opted  to  run  the 
first  half  clock  out.  Trailing  21-7,  the 

See  FOOTBAU,  page  60 


NKTOLT  MIILER/Daity  Bruin 

Tailback  Akil  Harris  ran  for  100  yards  and  scored  two  touchdowns  in  the  Bruins' win  over  the  Sun  Devils. 


Three  proves  magic  number  for  Bruins 


W.SOCCER:  Dual  shutouts 
continue  team's  streak  of 
consecutive  games  won 


ByJeffAgase 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

These  days,  simply  scoring  against 
the  UCLA  women's  soccer  team  is  a 
daunting  task. 

The  No.  5  Bruins  (8-1 )  won  their  sev- 
enth and  eighth  consecutive  games  this 
weekend,  with  a  3-0  shutout  of  Fresno 
State  Friday  night  at  Spaulding  Field 
and    a    3-0    blanking    at    Lqyola 

arymount  Sunday! 


X.f^^' 


UCLA  d.  Fresno  State, 

3-0 

UCLA  d.  LMU, 

3-0 


UCLA  came  home  Friday  for  the 
first  time  this  season  and  did  not  disap- 
point the  Westwood  faithful.  The 
Bruins  dominated  the  Bulldogs  in 
every  facet  of  the  game,  with  goalkeep- 
er CiCi  Peterson  setting  a  single-season 
school  record  with  her  fifth  consecutive 
shutout. 

Peterson  acknowledged  the  accom- 
plishment as  she  cradled  the  game  ball, 
but  diverted  the  credit  to  the  other  10 
players  on  the  pifTtf* 

"This  is  a  team  record,"  she  said.  "I 
can't  take  all  the  credit  for  it.  The 
defense  has  worked  hard  and  I  haven't 


Paus  returns,  brings 
Bruins  bacic  with  him 


PHTll  ARMfMAMCIailyBiuin  Senioi  Staff 

Freshman  defender  Kathryn  Lee  heads  the  bail  out  of  the  defensive 
zone  en  route  to  UCLA's  3-0  win. 


had  to  do  all  that  much." 

The  Bruin  net  minder  faced  only 
two  shots  from  a  Fresno  State  ofTensc 
that  was  anemic  at  best.  It  was  a  sharp 
contrast  to  the  Bruin  attack  that  con- 
trolled the  ball  for  nearly  three-fourths 
of  the  game  in  the  Bulldog  zone,  and 
brought  the  noise  early  and  oflen  with 
1 2  shots. 


Stephanie  ^igamat  darted  through 
a  bewildered  Bulldog  defense  to  hook  a 
shot  around  the  goalkeeper  in  the  ninth 
minute  for  the  game's  first  goal.  Krista 
Boling  came  up  from  right  defensive 
back  to  score  just  over  ten  minutes  later 
and  give  the  Bruins  a  comfortable  two- 

S«eW.SOCCBtpa9e58 


COLUMN:  Quarterback 
successfully  leads  teanT 
after  shoulder  improves 

The  Bruins  played  a  wild  game 
Saturday  night,  but  the  real 
story  was  Cory 
Coming  back  from  a  separated 
shoulder,  Cory  Paus  shouldered  the 
load  and  showed  he  is  UCLA's  best 
quarterback  this  year.  Paus  had  a 
;^ood  day  stat- 
wise,  throwing 
for  26t'yards 
and  two  touch- 
downs, but  he 
did  the  things 
that  don't 
show  up  in  the 
box  score, 
which  UCLA 
had  been  lack- 
ing in  the  past. 

"Cory's  a 
great  leader. 
He's  nice  and 

calm  in  the  huddle.  He  gets  us  fired 
up  and  he  knows  his  stufT,"  said 
offensive  lineman  Brian  Polak. 
"And  he  executes  it  well,  so  having 
that  back  is  really  a  big  boost  for  our 
offense." 

The  keyword  in  the  locker  room 
after  the  game  was  definitely 
"leader,"  a  quality  necessary  in 
bringing  a  team  back  from  a  21- 
point  deficit.  And  while  most  play- 


Jeff 
Kmiotek 


ers  made  sure  to  throw  in.some 
praise  for  the  job  Ryan  McCann  did 
filling  in,  UCLA  is  obviously  better 
off  with  Paus  at  the  helm. 

"Cory  brings  a  lot  of  leadership 
to  the  team,  and  he  was  in  control 
tonight,"  said  offensive  lineman 
Oscar  Cabrera.  "Coming  into  this 
game  he  was  really  confident  -  kind 
of  weird  for  a  guy  who  hasn't  played 
in  10  months.  He  was  tough  and  it 
showed." 

With  DeShaun  Foster  in  the  lock- 
er room,  the  defense  allowing  big 
plays  and  the  Bruins  down  21-0  in 
the  second  quarter,  UCLA  needed  a 
shot  in  the  arm  and  Paus  provided 
it.  He  led  the  Bruins  on  a  95-yard 
drive  to  cut  the  deficit  to  14  points. 

"In  the  first  quarter  we  dropped  a 
lot  of  passes,"  Hanker  Freddie 
Mitchell  said.  "Corj  came  to  us  and 
said,  'Hey,  stick  in  there,  we  got 
three  quarters  left.'"  \^^- 

And  just  like  that,  the  Bruins 
were  back.  With  two  blockers  cele- 
brating Rosh  Hashanah,  Jermaine 
Lewis  opened  the  second  half  with 
UCLA's  Rush  Hashanah  (rush  of 
the  year),  scoring  on  a  57-yard  scanri' 
p>er. 

AtkI  then  Paus  continued  the 
onslaught,  rifling  two  touchdowns 
to  Freddie  Mitchell  to  give  UCLA 
the  lead  for  good. 

"It  was  amazing  for  him  to  come 
out  and  make  throws  and  feel  secure 

S««  miOTEIL  RMK  S6 


^^ 


u  c:  I.  A 


Sewing  the  UCLA  community  sirice  1919 


Court  allows  race  as 
factor  in  admissions 


SCHOOL  Ruling  against 
family's  case  continues  to 
allow  freedom  in  research 


By  IMoniqtic  Simpson 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor     ..•;      .•    ;, 

The  VS.  Supreme  Court  let  stand  a 
lower  court's  ruling  Monday  that 
Corinne  A.  Seeds  University 
Elementary  School,  located  on  the 
UCLA  campus,  can  continue  using 
race  as  a  factor  in  admission. 

The  lower  court  ruled  in  Hunter  v. 
Regents  of  University  of  California 
that  because  the  school  has  a  justiriable 
reason  for  considering  race,  it  does  not 
violate  the  rights  of  students  not  admit- 
ted. 

UCLA's  Graduate  School  of 
Education  &  Information  Science  uses 
the      elementary 


school  to  study 
racial  groups' 
learning  skills  and 
recommend  new 
teaching  methods. 

As  a  "laborato- 
ry school,"  school 
officials  consider 
applicants*  ethnici- 
ty, sex,  family 
income  and  domi-  — — — — 
nant  language  to 

create  an  environment  that  can  be  stud- 
ied for  its  diversity. 

The  lawsuit  was  filed  by  James 
Hunter  afler  his  4-year-old  daughter 
Kedy  Tatsuyo  was  not  admitted  to  the 
school  in  1995. 

Deborah  Stipek,  director  of  the 
school  was  pleased  with  the  court's 
decision. 

"The  ruling  frees  the  school  to  con- 
tinue to  function  as  a  laboratory,  as  it 
was  intended  to  function,"  Stipek  said. 
TThe  ruling  gives  our  group  control 
dver  scientific  research." 
k  The  appeal  argued  against  the  afTir- 
niative  action-style  police  by  saying, 
"Once  the  downhiM  slide  has  started, 
there  is  no  delineated  stopping  point 
until  the  slide  bottoms  out  in  race- 
based  preferences  in  all  sectors  of  soci- 


"The  ruling  gives  our 
group  control  over 
scientific  research." 

Deborah  Stipek :; 

Director  of  University  school 


ety."-    ■-     ■  .■■'■'/;-\.' •■:,-■:■■■-:.■ - 

But  Stipek  said  the  "narrow  tailored 
ruling,"  would  have  "no  broad  implica- 
tions. 

University  of  California  lawyers 
could  not  be  immediately  reached  for 
comment. 

On  the  school's  application. 
Hunter's  daughter  identified  herself  as 
Caucasian  and  Japanese,  which 
Hunter  felt  contributed  to  his  daughter 
not  being  admitted. 

The  appeal  claims  that  the  use  of 
race  in  admission  violated  his  daugh- 
ter's constitutional  right  of  equal  pro- 
tection under  the  law. 

Stipek  said  many  students  are 
turned  away  because  of  the  school's 
limited  capacity. 

"The  portion  of  applications  we 
accept  is  small,"  Stipek  said.  "There 
are  many  disappointed  parents,  but 
this  is  the  first  parent  that  I'm  aware  of 

to  sue." 
"^^^^"■■■^  Hunter's  attor- 

ney John  H. 
Findley  filed  a  writ 
of  certiorari,  or 
petition,  for  the 
Supreme  Court  to 
hear  the  case  in 
July.  That  petition 
was  denied 

Monday      which 
———'■^-^—     means  the  court 
will  not  hear  the 
case  during  it's  October  2000  term. 

Before  reaching  the  Supreme 
Court,  a  three  judge  panel  of  the  9th 
Circuit  Court  ruled  in  support  of  the 
school's  practice.  The  panel  called  the 
school  "a  valuable  resource  to 
California's  public  education  system." 
The  panel  also  equated  the  school's 
use  of  race  and  ethnicity  as  similar  to  a 
medical  school's  use  of  African 
American  patients  to  study  sickle<ell 
anemia. 

But,  in  the  2-1  appellate  decision, 
the  dissenting  judge,  Robert  Beezer, 
said  the  ruling  betrayed  "a  disquieting 
renewed  tolerance  for  the  use  of  race  in 
government  decision-making." 

With  reports  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  ser- 
vices. 


TuESWW,OaDeER3,2000 


www.dailybruin.ucld.edu 


De  Ne^  (iipmpi^  pn)blem^ 


DORMS:  Elevators,  trash 
chutes  among  many  of 
occupants  complaints 


By  Laura  Rico 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Students  living  in  the  long-await- 
ed De  Neve  Plaza  housing  complex 
must  wait  a  bit  longer,  as  the  com- 
plex suffers  from  a  variety  of  main- 
tenance problems. 

Such  problems  range  from  bro- 
ken elevators,  inoperable  trash 
shoots  and  poorly  installed  closets. 
-  The  excitement  of  move-in  day 
turned  to  frustration  as  residents 
arrived  to  broken  elevators. 

"I  had  to  climb  up  two  flights  of 
stairs  with  a  dolly  carrying  some 
very  heavy  boxes,"  said  Darolyn 
Striley,  a  third-year  English  stu- 
dent. "I  did  this  for  all  three  days  it 
took  me  to  move  in." 

According  to  Housing  Director 
Michael  Foraker,  the  elevators  are 
taken  care  of  by  independent  man- 


ufacturing companies.  He  said  they 
may  be  fixed  by  the  end  of  the 
week. 

Move-in  day,  scheduled  for  Sept. 
23,  had  to  be  postponed  one  day  for 
general  contractors  to  finish 
installing  doors  and  cabinets. 


"I  had  to  climb  up  two 
flights  of  stairs  with  a 
dolly."      « 

Darolyn  Striley 

De  Neve  resident 


Despite  these  last  minute 
improvements,  residents  found 
their  rooms  in  unsatisfactory  con- 
ditions. One  student  voiced  con- 
cern over  the  instability  of  a  pair  of 
sliding  closet  doors. 

"My  doors  fell  off  their  rails 
when  my  roommate  was  trying  to 


pull  them  open,"  said  Eric  Davis,  a 
second-year  linguistics  student. 

"They've  been  sitting  outside  of. 
my  room  for  a  few  days,  waiting  to 
be  repaired,"  he  said. 

De  Neve  Plaza  is  scheduled  for 
completion  in  spring  2001.  The 
addition  of  614  rooms  will  house 
1,258  residents.  Aside  from  hous- 
ing units,  a  dining  hall  is  scheduled 
to  open  in  the  complex  as  well. 

According  to  Foraker,  architects 
and  the  housing  staff  have  surveyed 
students  and  turned  in  a  list  of  their 
most  pressing  concerns  to  the 
buildings'  contractors. 

"Students  can  trust  that  housing 
and  the  contractors  will  stay  on  top 
of  all  items  on  their  lists,"  Foraker 
said.  I 

Attributing  the  problems  to  con- 
struction crews  not  having  enough 
time  to  fully  inspect  every  detail  of 
the  complex,  Foraker  said  the  prob- 
lems were  temporary. 

Nonetheless,  he  said  students 
are  thankful  for  the  extra  housing 

.  See  HOUSING,  page  8 


8RI0GET 0BRI6N/0aily  Biuin  Senmr Staff 

Although  four  buildings  in  De  Neve  Plaza  opened  this  fall,  construction  on  the  rest  of  the  plaza 
continues  and  is  expected  to  be  fully  open  and  operational  in  Spring  2001 . 


State  allocates  $6  million  to  increase  institutes'  studies  funding 


LABOR:  UC  Berkeley, 
UCLA  to  split  money;  will 
expand  worker  programs 

ByTlnMtlqrKiNio 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Currently  existing  university  pro- 
grams that  study  labor  issues  will  be 
expanded  due  to  a  $6  million  alloca- 
tion from  the  state,  UC  officials 
announced  last  week. 

The  money  will  expand  programs 
at  what  are  currently  known  as 


Institutes  for  Industrial  Relations  at 
UCLA  and  UC  Berkeley,  which 
research  labor  trends  in  the  state  atul 
reach  out  to  organized  labor. 

The  institutes  serve  both  students 
and  faculty  in  addition  to  labor 
groups  who  are  the  target  of  the  insti- 
tutes outreach  programs. 

"We've  been  severely  constrained 
by  a  limited  budget  so  we  haven't 
been  able  to  support  as  much  out- 
reach as  we'd  like,"  said  Paul  Ong,  co- 
directory  of  the  new  UC  Institute  for 
Labor  and  Employment  at  UCLA, 
which  the  two  institutions  will  now 
become. 


Right  now,  the  budget  for  UCLA's 
Institute  for  Industrial  Relations  con- 
sists of  a  little  over  $500,000  from  the 
campus  and  SI -2  million  in  other 
funding. 

Though  the  $6  million  v^ll  be  split 
with  the  UCB  institute,  which  cur- 
rently receives  about  SI  million  from 
the  state,  the  increase  is  significant. 

"Some  of  the  money  will  go  to  uni- 
versity wide  programs,  but  certainly 
there  will  be  a  significant  portion 
going  here,"  On^  said. 

The  institutes  previously  did  stud- 
ies on  the  state  of  labor  in  California 
but  the  cost  of  doing  large  scale  sur- 


veys was  too  expensive. 

With  the  new  funds,  for  example, 
the  UCB  institute  will  begin  a 
statewide  survey  costing  about 
$400,000. 

The  director  of  the  UCB  institute, 
James  Lincoln,  said  the  focus  of  each 
institute  is  to  improve  policy  relating 
to  labor. 

"We're  trying  to  keep  our  Tingers 
on  how  labor  issues  are  changing  to 
give  policy  makers  in  the  state,  the 
public,  and  the  press  a  read  on  how 
employment  conditions  are  chang- 
ing." Lincoln  said. 

He  said  the  goal  is  to  mirror  similar 


labor  studies  programs  at  the 
University  of  Wisconsin  and  the 
Massachusetts  Institute  of 
Technology,  though  with  the  $6  mil- 
lion the  UC  program  will  be  better 
funded. 

Additionally,  funds  will  expand 
grant  programs  -  ranging  from 
$l5,00a$90,000  -  and  outreach  pro- 
grams where  the  institutes  give  train- 
ing to  current  union  members. 

Currently,  the  institutes  give  occu- 
pational health  and  safety  training  to 
various  unions  throughout  the  state. 

SccCENUR,  pages 


.•..-,-- 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


Od)r  Bruin  Ntws 


/ 


^SlimeWat 


Petty  th^ 

Five  bicycles  and  seven  cellular 
phones  were  stolen  on  campus  this  past 
period. 

Last  week,  seven  parking  permits 
were  stolen. 

A  $200  cellular  phone  was  stolci 
from  a  vehicle  in  Lot  32  Friday  mor 

Grand  theft 

Police  received  a  report  q] 
last  week. 

Someone  reported  a  sj 
to  police  on  Saturd 
charged  an  estimated^ 

Eight  or  nine  ba] 
reported  stolen  froi 
on  Sept.  25.  The 
unknown. 

SowterUnivefdty  Rota  Dept  Log 


Neurc^>sydiiatric  Center  on  Thui^y. 

Police  reoeivod  a  report  Thursday  that  a 
computer  in  Ri^r  HaU  was  vandalized. 

An  unauthorized  subject  threatened  to 
pui)  the  life  support  from  a  patient  in  the 
Center  for  Health  Sciences  on  Wednesday. 
Abo  on  Wednesday,  an  unidentified  per- 
son was  caught  on  tape  prying  open  mail- 
l  complex  on  the  700 
ue. 

pe^ngmtothe 

ton  the  600 Mock 

on  Sept  26. 

ken  nmning  naked  through 

6p.m.<»iSept25. 

le  night,  a  man  threatened 

with  a  knife  on  the  600  block 

ived  a  secondhand  report  of  a 

out  in  Tommy's  of  Westwood 

aim.  on  Sept.  25.  The  fi^t  was 

stwecn  one  person  and  a  group  of  six 

other  people. 

Compiled  from  UCPD  media  reports 
between  Sept  25  and  Oct  2  fay  WIHiam  D. 
Braxdale,  Daily  Bruin  Contributor. 


Join  the 
Daily  Bruin  ! 

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Media  orientation 


TutSDAY,  Oct.  3 

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Crossword  Puzzle..^... r.ii:.:?S. ...27  "     " 

Movie  Guide .'....;. , 21 


Tuesday,  October  3j  2000 

www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


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Tuesday,  October},  2000  >        3 


Th«  Dally  Bruin  (ISSN  lOaO-SOM)  It  published  and  copyr««rt««d  by  tt>«  ASUCLA 
Communlcatloni  Board.  All  rtghti  arc  r«<?n»d.  Reprinting  of  any  iruiterlal  In  iNs  pubitcadon 
wKtKMJl  the  wrttten  permltilon  of  the  <^>mmonlcatlon»  Board  Is  «r»ct«y  prohtMted  The  ASUCLA 
^mmunlcattons  Board  fu«y  support,  the  Untvanky  of  CaWornU's  poHcy  on  f»r».dlK:rtrT*«tton 
The  student  rrvedta  reserve  the  right  to  refect  or  modtfy  advertlslr^  wtywe  content  discriminates 

^^."c.^A'T"^'  '°*~'  ™*°^  '^'"-  ""■  '**^^-  ««"»**«y.  -f.  »•»  or  sexual  ortenta- 
tton  The  ASUCLA  ComniMinlcatlons  Board  has  a  media  grIevarKe  procedure  for  resotvtng  coov 
pUmts  against  any  of  tts  publtcattons^  For  a  copy  of  the  complMe  proc«lui%  contact  thW  pubM- 
cattom  omce  at  1  U  Kerckhoff  HII  AN  .ns«ts  that  are  prIntMi  In  th.  [My  Brum  are  (nd^^ 
dently  paid  publtcatlora  and  do  no<  reflect  the  views  of  the  Editortal  Board  or  the  staff   ^^ 

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Clusterin 


to£(ethe 


General  education 

classes  become  more 

interesting  and 

comprehensive  in 

freshmen  courses 


*!'^>i"iw'" 


GE  CLUSTER  COURSES  FALL  2000 

Ouster  MA: 

iirteiTadal  OyMMia  in  «M<f{ca«  Caiunk  Sodity  aiMl  liMfttm:  inMiiiMt 

iMo  cMHtfvctiMi  and  pofitiMi  in  20tii  oMiwy  taeito  tln«gli  Milival  tiida;. 


T»wnht:ltf»*ictienttnM<efidiiiliavpMnipiiiij;«w 
laid  tiie  HmUAmi  fee  ■liim  ii  #liu. 


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llnsioK  Cognitive  PtydMlofy,UtefMmaMlitrtliMriMltlw 
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penpoctivt  on  tiM  itBNiican  IMS  and  bow  tlNM  y«n  duped 
Mdal,  (BHarat,  poKlical  and  econoMic  ordon  of  today. 

aiisterTOA: 

EvolatianoftiwCaunMMdUfKFocaMion  woMion  of  tiie  anivene,  galny, 

solar  syit  em  and  the  eartli,  as  vmI  as  tiie  ovelation  af  if e. 


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Clokal  EnvirMiment,  a  Mattidbdptti^ferspMtiv*:  AddrttMs  the 
betwMO  the  wofld'i  rapidhr  groirtlig  population  and  the  global 
envirenniMt  that  ptfmits  hnman  Mittenc*. 


jama  ucuin^ir-ionce 


JACOB  LIACVDally  Bruin 


By  Stella  Chu 

Dally  Bruin  Contributor 

With  topics  ranging  from  interracial 
dynamics  in  American  culture  and  cog- 
nitive psychology,  to  cosmos  evolution, 
the  General  Education  Cluster  pro- 
gram is  ofTering  some  Tirst-year  stu- 
dents a  giimpse  into  courses  that  resem- 
ble upper  division  classes.  ..  ■  ,.  ; 

"I  thought  that  the  course  was  going 
to  be  about  basic  history,"  said  second- 
year  economics  student  Dean  Sage, 
who  was  enrolled  in  the  GE  cluster  class 
21  ABC:  History  of  Modern  Thought 
cluster  last  year.  "It  ended  up  to  be 
much  more." 

The  cluster  program,  offered  only  to 
incoming  freshmen,  consists  of  a  choice 
of  themed  courses  over  the  course  of  a 
year.  * 

During  the  fall  and  winter  quarters, 
alternating  professors  from  different 
disciplines  lecture  on  one  theme,  offer- 
ing different  views  on  the  same  subject 
areas. 

Then,  during  spring,  each  student 
must  enroll  in  one  of  a  number  of  semi- 
nars offered,  focusing  on  topics  relating 
to  the  cluster  theme.  ^     - 

Many  of  the  professors  lead  some  of 
the  seminars,  as  well  as  teaching  assis- 


tants, giving  discussion-section  intima- 
cy to  a  lecture  format. 

"The  course  gave  the  students  a 
glimpse  of  the  unique  structure  of  a 
seminar  class  that  we  would  not 
encounter  until  we  enrolled  in  upper 
division  courses,  if  at  all,"  Sage  said. 

Other  cluster  topics  include  global 
environment,  the  history  of  modern 
thought  and  culture,  and  a  history 
course  specifically  tailored  to  study  the 
period  in  America  from  1963-1974. 

Mark  Sawyer,  who  teaches  the  GE 
cluster  20ABC:  Interracial  Dynamics, 
said  the  cluster  program  involved 
addressing  issues  in  a  unique  teaching 
environment. 

"The  purpose  of  the  GE  cluster  pro- 
gram is  to  introduce  students  to  a  topi- 
cal area,"  said  Sawyer.  "And  at  the 
same  time,  introduce  them  to  a  variety 
of  disciplinary  approaches,"  he  contin- 
ued. 

Students  not  only  receive  four  GE 
course  credits  for  taking  a  three-quarter 
cluster,  but  they  can  also  receive  honors 
credit  for  all  three  quarters.  '^ 

If  students  fail  to  complete  the  three 
quarters,  however,  they  will  not  receive 
any  honors  credit. 

S««  OUSTER,  page  8 


tesidential  candidates  ready  to  square  off  over  issues 


DEBATE:  Discussion  hopes 
to  grab  undecided  voters, 
first  airing  of  three  parts 


By  DavM  Dnidier 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Republican  nominee  George  W. 
Bush  and  Democrat  Al  Gore  square 
off  tonight  in  the  first  of  three  presi- 
dential debates  that  could  determine 
the  closest  election  in  forty  years. 

With  most  polls  showing  the  candi- 
dates in  a  statistical  dead-heat,  their 
battle  from  behind  lecterns  at  Boston 
Univereity,  beginning  at  6  p.m.  and 
moderated  by  PBS  Newshour's  Jim 
Lehrer,  could  solidify  the  choice  of 
undecided  swing-votera. 

"The  entire  series  of  debates  is 
extremely  crucial,  and  will  determine 


who  wins  the  election,"  said  Bruin 
Republicans  Chair  Vartah 
Djihanian. 

Political  science  Professor  David 
O.  Sears,  co-author  of  a  book  on  the 
1976  presidential  debate  and  a  spe- 
cialist in  politics  and  the  media,  said 
the  candidates'  biggest  challenge  is  to 
present  their  message  in  a  way  that's 
understandable  to  the  electorate. 

"They  will  be  competing  for  the 
center,  and  stressing  the  issues  that 
play  most  to  their  strengths,"  he  said. 
"For  Gore,  that  would  be  safety-net 
issues,  and  for  Bush,  that  would  be 
people  suspicious  of  big  govern- 
ment." 

Sears  said  each  candidate  has  to 
overcome  their  perceived  weak- 
points  if  they  hope  to  be  considered 
the  "winner"  of  the  debate. 

"Bush  is  a  likable  guy,  but  accord- 
ing to  some,  he  comes  across  as  a 


lightweight,  so  he'll  want  t^  dispel 
that  by  focusing  heavily  on  issues," 
Sears  said.  "If  Gore's  going  to  win, 
he  needs  to  make  sure  his  opinions 
aren't  too  complicated  for  the  aver- 
age voter." 

The  format  of  tonight's  formal 
debate  allows  for  two  minute  state- 
ments and  one  minute  rebuttals,  with 
further  discussion  allowable  at 
Lehrer's  discretion. 

"It's  hard,  because  you  have  a  set- 
ting that's  confrontational,"  said 
Bruin  Democrats  President  Melanie 
Ho.  "But  Gore  is  an  excellent 
debater,  and  he  knows  how  to  stay  on 
the  issues."  ■ 

But  Djihanian  is  equally  confident 
in  Bush's  debating  skills,  and  he  said 
the  candidate  he  supports  is  prepared 
to   steer   clear   ot  the  campaign 

See  CANMBirB,  page  10 


DEBATING  SEASON  OPENS 

Tuesday  night's  presidential  debate  in  Bostui  is  the  first  of  three  debates  between  the 
major  party  candidates.  The  vice  pr^si^enfiai  debate  takes  place  on  Thursday. 


First  Preiidential  Debate         Vice  Preiidential  Debate  I  Second  Presidential  Debate 
Oct.  3  Oct  5  I  Oct.  11 


CantreCoMoga, 

WateForattUnlvanlly, 

Boston,  MA 

DanvM«,KY 

Wlmten-SaiMn,NC 

Candidates  Standing  at  Podktmt 

Candidates  Se«e«lw)th 

Candkiate*  Seated  with 

Both  candidate!  get  a  two  minute 

Moderator 

Moderator 

response  to  the  moderator's 

2  mia  response  with 

2  min.  response  with 

question.  Each  candidate  then 

moderator  havir>g 

moderator  having  discretion  to 

gets  a  one  minutes  rebuttal  to  the 

discretion  to  extend  tti« 

extend  the  discussion. 

opposing  candidates  response. 

discussion. 

^^^^^ 

Third  Presidential  Debate 

^^^^^^^^ 

Oct.  17 

^m  i 

;      ■'/      -      •                           ,.          *  • 

St.  Louis,  MO 

■ 

■     '•             ,           ■                "■-'.'* 

Town  Meetlr>g 

^H 

'      T         ,     ,     '           -    ■  ■• 

2  min.  response  with 
moderator  having  discretion 
to  eiftend  the  diKussion. 

y/ 

Wtj 

■  ■.  -  .1- 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


Daily  Brum  News 


New  regulations  rriay  affect  UCLA 


NURSES:  Overtime,  rest 
breaks  among  Issues  to 
be  dealt  with  at  hospital 


By  Mason  Stodcstill  . 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

New  statewide  labor  regulations 
for  registered  nurses  went  into  eWect 
Sunday,  though  it  is  unclear  how  they 
will  impact  nurses  at  UCLA  and 
other  DC  hospitals. 

The  regulations  penalize  employ- 
ers who  deprive  workers  of  their  state- 
mandated  rest  break  or  meal  period 
by  requiring  them  to  pay  a  penalty 
equal  to  one  hour's  pay  to  each  afTect- 
ed  employee. 

"Chronic  hospital  understafTing 
means  that  registered  nurses  regularly 
are  unable  to  take  their  rest  breaks 
and  meal  periods,"  said  Kay  McVay, 
president  of  the  California  Nurses 
Association  union,  in  a  statement 

"The  result  is  more  fatigued  nurses 
which,  especially  when  combined 
with  the  dangerous  practice  of 
mandatory  overtime,  can  lead  to 
increased  medical  errors  and  acci- 
dents and  injuries  to  nurses,"  she  con- 
tinued. 

The  new  regulations  were  institut- 
ed by  the  Industrial  Welfare 
Commission,  a  statewide  regulatory 
agency  that  sets  standards  for 
employees  throughout  California. 

The  commission  also  instituted 
new  regulations  regarding  mandatory 
overtime  for  employees  who  work  12- 
hour  shifts,  though  the  CN  A  objected 
to  certain  provisions  of  these  regula- 
tions. 

Nurses  working  12-hour  shifts  may 
be  required  to  work  an  additional 
hour  of  overtime  if  their  replacement 
is  late  showing  up  or  does  not  report 
for  duty,  under  the  new  guidelines. 

Also,  in  emergency  situations, 
employers  can  require  health  care 
workers  to  work  an  additional  four 
hours,  bringing  their  total  to  16  hours 
straight. 


R  RULES 


The  California  ffy  V^  Association  is  concemed  with  some  provisions  in 
approvedhy  the  ln)|ustrial  Welfare  Commission, 


^S,^.^  mj^^mwo,  private  heaffli  care  workers  may  be  reared 
T'^*'"^^-hour  shifts  in  certain  drcumstarKes. 


•  Health  care  entpioyers  may  (iedare  an  emergi 
workmtowofkm»)4MSEMfMirhours,fora1 


.<>^ 


IWC  regvlatitms  offer  no  provision  for  en 


WKk  OtthKbmnaktoiii^ 


CNA  official  Richard  Holober 
said  the  overtime  regulations  give 
employers  too  much  discretion  in 
defining  an  emergency,  which  could 
lead  to  nurses  being  forced  to  work 
overtime  too  often. 

David  Johnson,  who  handles  UC 
issues  for  the  CNA,  said  excessive 
overtime  has  been  a  problem  at  UC 
hospitals. 


"Mandatory  overtime 
should  not  be  used  as 
a  method  for  staffing 
hospitals ...  It's  unsafe." 

David  Johnson 

UC  liaison  to  California 
Nurses  Association         . 


"AH  mandatory  overtime  is  bad, 
particularly  where  mandatory  over- 
time erodes  the  competence  of 
patient  care  providers,"  he  said.  "Our 
position  is  ttiat  mandatory  overtime 
should  not  be  used  as  a  method  for 
staffmg  hospitals,  including  UC  hos- 


JACOBLlAO/DillyBiuin 

pitals.  We  believe  it's  unsafe." 

University  officials  did  not  imme- 
diately know  whether  the  guidelines, 
which  had  only  recently  taken  effect, 
would  govern  nurses  at  UC  hospitals. 

UC  spokesman  Dan  Kier  said  it 
was  too  soon  to  be  able  to  tell  how  the 
new  guidelines  -  which  only  specifi- 
cally mention  privately  employed 
nurses  -  would  affect  the  university. 

The  changes  to  the  guidelines  were 
the  result  of  legislation  Gov.  Gray 
Davis  signed  in  July  1999  asking  the 
commission  to  reconsider  the  laws 
regarding  the  12-hour  workday. 

The  commission  began  its  research 
in  January,  holding  several  public 
hearings  to  gauge  opinions  on  the 
issue. 

"There  was  overwhelming  support 
for  the  12-hour  workday,  from  both 
employers  and  employees,"  said 
Michael  Moreno,  an  analyst  with  the 
commission. 

But  the  CNA  is  pushing  for  legisla- 
tion to  tighten  up  the  current  over- 
time regulations.  Rep.  Tom  Lantos, 
D-Calif.,  introduced  a  bill  that  would 
ban  mandatory  overtime  beyond  8 
hours  a  day  or  80  hours  in  any  14-day 
work  period,  except  in  the  case  of  a 
natural  disaster  or  an  emergency 
declared  by  government  officials. 


lilircise  reduces  riskf 
of  erectile  disf  unctioini 


IMPOTENCE:  Study  finds 
physicaLactivity  helps 
i^ftprove  sexual  health 


By  Ira  Dicyfiiss 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  If  men  ever 
needed  a  reason  to  exercise,  this  may 
be  it.  A  study  finds  that  exercisers  are 
less  likely  to  become  impotent. 

Compared  with  men  who  did  not 
exercise,  men  who  burned  200  calo- 
ries or  more  a  day  in  physical  activity 
-  a  level  that  can  be  met  with  as  little 
as  two  miles  of  brisk  walking  -  had 
far  less  risk  of  erectile  dysfunction. 

"If  you  do  at  least  that,  you  can 
reduce  your  risk  by  hsilf,"  said 
researcher  Carol  A.  Derby  of  New 
England  Research  Institutes  of 
Watertown,  Mass.,  a  private  health 
research  firm.  "Men  who  were  seden- 
tary had  the  highest  risk." 

Derby  and  her  colleagues  looked 
at  data  on  593  men  in  the  long-run- 
ning Massachusetts  Male  Aging 
Study.  The  men,  who  were  40  to  70 
years  of  age  at  the  study's  start,  com- 
pleted a  mail-in  questionnaire  about 
their  sexual  health.  None  reported 
erectile  dysfunction  at  the  start  of  the 
neariy  nine^ear  study;  at  the  end,  17 
percent  did. 

The  study,  which  experts  said  was 
the  first  long-term  look  at  how  to  pre- 
vent impotence  through  a  healthy 
lifestyle,  found  a  benefit  in  taking  up 
exercise.  Even  those  who  started 
exercise  during  the  study  period  low- 
ered their  risk,  said  the  report  in  the 
journal  Urology. 

"Even  if  you  were  sedentary  at  the 
beginning,  the  men  who  were  active 
at  the  followup  had  a  much  lower  risk 
...  comparable  to  the  people  who 
were  active  at  both  time  points," 
Derby  said. 

The  researchers  also  found  that 


the  more  exercise  the  men  did,  the 
lower  the  chances  were  that  the  men 
would  develop  impotence.  But  there 
were  too  few  vigorous  exercisers  in 
the  study  to  give  the  scientists  great 
confidence  that  they  could  tell  exactly 
how  nuich  the  risk  falls  as  exercise 
rises,  Derby  said. 

The  findings  make  physiological 
sense,  said  Dr.  Drogo  K.  Montague, 
a  urologist  and  head  of  the  Center  for 
Sexual  Function  at  the  Cleveland 
Clinic  Foundation.  Regular  aerobic 
exercise  fights  vascular  disease, 
■  including  fat  clogs  that  narrow  the 
arteries,  said  Montague,  who  is  not 
connected  to  the  study.  . 

Such  clogs  can  impede  blood  flow 
through  arteries  that  engorge  the 
penis,  so  exercise  should  help  to  keep 
those  arteries  healthy  and  dear, 
Montague  said. 

The  study  did  not  look  at  whether 
exercise  could  defeat  impotence  after 
the  problem  develops.  But  another 
urologist  who  is  not  connected  with 
the  study  doubted  that  it  could.  Few 
studies  have  found  that  exercise  can 
reduce  the  amount  of  fat  in  already- 
clogged  blood  vessels. 

"There's  no  evidence  that  exercise 
is  a  treatment,"  said  Dr.  Ira  Shariip  of 
the  University  of  California,  San 
Francisco,  president-elect  of  the 
Society  for  the  Study  of  Impotence. 
"Even  though  it  has  not  been  studied, 
I  would  very  seriously  doubt  that  a 
guy  who  develops  erectile  dysfunc- 
tion and  goes  on  an  exercise  pro- 
gram, his  erections  would  come 
back." 

But  if  men  start  exercise  while  they 
don't  have  erectile  disfunction,  they 
not  only  may  raise  the  chances  of 
retaining  their  sexual  health,  they  get 
all  the  other  healthful  benefits  of  exer- 
cise, the  doctors  say.  For  instance, 
exercise  reduces  the  risk  of  cardiovas- 
cular disease  and  diabetes,  and  both 
conditions  raise  the  risk  of  impo- 
tence. 


NO 


In  recent  tests,  4  out  of  5 
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,  ,#•■■■     ,.' 

D«^  Bruin  News 


Tu«$d«y,  October  3, 2000 


DQl^Jone;  Industrials 


up:  49.21  "*' 

dose:  10,700.13 


Nasdaq  IndcK 

down:  103.92 
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Doilar 

Y^:  108.88 
furo:1.T410 


.;v^-"^> 


dinton  disputes  claim  tb^  uS.  in 


rece^ion 


LOANS:  President  emphasizes 
progress  made  during  past  two 
terms,  hopes  for  more  change 


BySonyaRoss 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  President  Clinton 
lashed  back  Monday  at  George  W.  Bush's 
criticism  that  the  nation  is  in  an  education 
recession,  and  cited  improved  performances 
by  minority  students  as  proof  of  "an  educa- 
tion revival." 

Clinton  said  the  country  has  made  strides 
in  education  during  his  two  terms,  and  could 
make  even  more  progress  if  Congress  would 
approve  his  plans  for  school  construction, 
teacher  hiring  and  performance  standards. 
His  remarks  came  during  a  White  House  cer- 
emony to  announce  the  number  of  students 
defaulting  on  college  loans  is  at  a  record  low. 

"There  are  lots  and  lots  of  challenges  still 
out  there,  and  what  I  believe  we  should  be 
doing  is  to  emphasize  further  changes  in  the 
direction  we  have  been  moving,"  Clinton 
said. 

In  unveiling  his  new  focus  on  education 
last  week.  Bush,  the  Republican  presidential 
nominee,  said  standardized  test  scores  of 
American  students  are  hardly  competitive 
with  students  in  other  industrialized  nations. 

For  example,  he  said,  68  percent  of  fourth 
graders  in  the  poorest  schools  have  difficulty 


reading  a  simple  children's  book.  "America  is 
in  the  midst  of  an  education  recession,"  Bush 
declared. 

Clinton  disputed  that  Monday,  saying 
math  and  reading  scores  are  on  the  rise,  with 
"some  of  the  greatest  gains  in  some  of  the 
most  disadvantaged  schools."  He  said  the 
number  of  black  and  Hispanic  students  in 
advanced  placement  courses  are  up  500  per- 
cent and  300  percent  respectively,  and  college 
entrance  exam  scores  are  up  too.  "even  as 
more  students  from  more  disadvantaged 
backgrounds  take  the  test." 

"That  is  not  an  education  recession,  that  is 
an  education  revival,"  Clinton  said.  "On  the 
other  hand,  no  serious  person  believes  that 
American  education  is  where  it  ought  to  be." 

White  House  spokesman  Jake  Siewert  said 
the  president  was  simply  stating  facts,  not 
picking  a  fight  with  Bush. 

"We've  seen  some  success  in  turning 
around  schools,  and  it's  just  the  kind  of 
hyperbole  and  rhetoric  you  hear  on  the  cam- 
paign trail."  Siewert  said.  "It  doesn't  serve 
the  American  people." 

He  accused  Republican  congressional 
leaders  of  deliberately  thwarting  his  plan  to 
take  up  nationally  the  reforms  that  have  been 
proven  effective  locally  in  bringing  failing 
schools  up  to  par. 

"The  majority  in  Congress  is  pushing  a 
budget  that  would  neither  increase  invest- 
ment or  accountability,"  Clinton  said.  "The 
least  we  can  do  is  adequately  invest  in  educa- 
tion." 


The  Associated  Press 

President  ainton  looks  on  at  left  as  Prince  George's  County,  Mcj.,  substitute  teacher 
RaquelTalley,  28,  speaks  about  achieving  her  nnaster  of  arts  in  early  childhood  education. 


■House  considers  new  crime  bills 


LEGISLATION:  Rape  victims 
could  demand  that  suspect 
be  tested  Ibr  HIV,  AIDS 


ByJtmJ.Hoaand 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Rape  victims 
could  demand  HIV  tests  of  their  sus- 
pected assailants  upon  arrest,  and 
adults  could  be  jailed  for  10  years  for 
sending  pornography  to  1 7-ycar-olds  or 
younger  under  a  last-minute  (lurry  of 
bills  in  the  House. 

Currently,  rape  victims  have  no  legal 
right  to  demand  that  a  suspect  be  tested 
to  find  out  whether  the  person  has  HI  V, 
the  virus  that  causes  AIDS,  lawmakers 
said.  Under  the  bill  introduced  by  Rep. 
Dave  Weldon,  R-Fla.,  a  person 
accused  of  rape  must  be  tested  for  HIV 
or  AIDS,  if  the  alleged  victim  adcs. 
within  48  hours  of  an  indictment  and 
the  results  given  to  the  alleged  yictim.  . 
„     "No  longer  will  a>ictirtj  have  to  wait 


for  months  or  years  for  such  a  test  of 
the  accused,"  Weldon  said.  "No  longer 
will  the  perpetrators  of  these  crimes  be 
allowed  to  bargain  for  lighter  sentences 
in  exchange  for  undergoing  HIV. test- 
ing. This  bill  puts  the  rights  of  the  vic- 
tim ahead  of  that  of  the  sexual  preda- 
tor." 

While  Democrats  say  they  support 
the  idea.  Rep.  Bobby  Scott,  D-Va.,  said 
Weidon's  bill  was  rushed  through  with- 
out giving  them  a  chance  to  study  it  and 
perhaps  offer  amendments  he  says 
would  have  made  the  bill  better. 

Under  the  bill,  an  accused  person 
has  no  chance  to  prove  innocence 
before  having  to  take  an  AIDS  lest.  "It 
requires  a  person  to  be  subjected  to  an 
AIDS  test,  even  if  they're  innocent," 
Scott  said. 

Also,  the  test  results  would  be  given 
immediately  to  the  alleged  victim  and 
the  victim's  lawyers,  who  are  not 
required  under  the  bill  to  keep  the 
results  confidential.  "Before  you  can 
say,  'It  wasn't  me,'...it's  spread  across 
the  world."  Scott  said         „^v. 


"A  probable<ause  hearing,  I  feel, 
would  be  an  unacceptable  delay." 
Weldon  argued. 

The  rush,  Weldon  said,  is  to  take 
advantage  of  new  Al  DS  drugs  that  can 
reduce  chances  by  about  8Q  percent  of 
getting  the  disease  if  taken  shortly  after 
the  infection.  According  to  the  Centers 
for  Disease  Control  and  Prevention, 
the  infection-preventing  AIDS  drugs 
are  useful  only  when  taken  shortly  after 
H IV  exposure,  not  days  or  weeks  titer.  ^ 

"This  is  clearly  a  case  of  finding  the 
greater  good,"  Weldon  said. 

Also  on  tap  for  the  House  is  a  vote 
on  a  bill  prosecuting  people  for  sending 
pornographic  material  to  16-  and  17- 
year-old  children. 

The  bill  is  aimed  at  closing  a  loop- 
hole in  the  1998  Protection  of  Children 
from  Sexual  Predators  Act,  which  spec- 
ified >I0  years  in  prison  and  fines  for 
anyone  who  knowingly  gives  pornogra- 
phy by  e^nail,  telephone  or  mail  to 
juveniles  younger  than  16.  The  age  of 

"""  SeeOdME.page'li 


Palestinian  casualties  rise, 
fuels  fury  against  Israelis 


RIOTS:  Violence  between 
groups  leave  httle  hope 
for  Mideast  peace  accord 


By  Laura  King 
The  Associated  Press 


'  RAMALLAH.  West  Bank  - 
Israeli  troops  rolled  out  tanks  in  a 
show  of  force  and  sent  helicopter 
gunships  aloft  Monday  to  battle 
Palestinians  wielding  rocks  and 
automatic  rifies,  as  riots  raged 
through  the  West  Bank  and  Gaza 
Strip,  leaving  scarcely  a  Palestinian 
town  or  village  untouched. 

The  spiraling  violence,  now  in  its 
fifth  day,  has  killed  at  least  51  peo- 
ple and  injured  more  than  1,000, ' 
nearly  all  the  casualties  Palestinian, 
and  left  hopes  for  a  Mideast  peace 
accord    in    tatters.    Both-   sides 


acknowledged  that  talking  peace 
was  becoming  untenable  with  a  full- 
scale  war  being  waged  in  the  streets. 

Even  as  pleas  for  restraint 
poured  in  from  around  the  world, 
the  climbing  casualty  count  fueled 
Palestinian  fury  and  spurred 
revenge  attacks  against  Israeli  civil- 
ians, particularly  Jewish  settlers. 

On  the  road  to  the  Jewish  settle- 
ment of  Ariel  in  the  West  Bank,  a 
24-year-old  Israeli  was  shot  and 
killed  -  reportedly  when  he  stopped 
to  change  a  tire.  A  school  bus  on  its 
way  to  the  Jewish  settlement  of 
Shiloh  came  under  fire,  but  no  one 
was  injured. 

Fighting  also  boiled  over  into 
Arab  towns  in  Israel  proper,  rat- 
tling the  nerves  of  Israelis  who  have 
long  feared  an  intefadeh,  or  upris- 
ing, by  Arab  citizens  of  the  Jewish 

SeeBMEL.page12 


Ji. 


yORLP 


&  NATION  BRIEFS 

^Protesters  question 
Milosevic's  legitimacy 

BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia  -  In  his  first 
address  to  the  nation  since  a  disputed  election, 
Slobodan  Milosevic  on  Monday  branded  his 
opponenu  puppeU  of  the  West.  A  wave  of 
unrest  aimed  at  driving  him  from  power  swept 
Yugoslavia,  and  the  government  responded  by 
arresting  dozens  of  strike  leaders. 

The  general  strike  and  road  blockades 
brought  Yugoslavia  to  a  virtual  halt  in  the  most 
serious  challenge  yet  to  Milosevic's  13-year 
rule.  Even  the  government  weather  bureau 
said  it  would  stop  issuing  forecasts  until  he 
concedes  defeat  in  the  Sept.  24  presidential 
election. 

In  at  least  two  towns,  protesters  broke  into 
television  stations  -  among  the  pillars  of  the 
Milosevic  regime. 

The  strikes  even  spread  to  Milosevic's  birth- 
place, Pozarevac,  where  about  20,000  protest- 
ers blocked  roads  and  stopped  public  services, 


^5^,. 


the  independent  Beta  news  agency 
said. 

A  spokesman  for  the  opposition 
coalition.  Cedomir  Jovanovic,  report- 
ed several  incidents  including  a  clash  with 
police  in  Surcin,  12  miles  west  of  Belgrade,  in 
which  four  people  were  injured. 

Dozens  of  strike  leaders  were  arrested, 
opposition  officials  said.  The  opposition  called 
for  people  to  converge  on  the  capital  Thursday 
in  a  push  to  drive  Milosevic  from  power. 

Albright  seeks  to  quell 
violence  in  Middle  East 

PARIS  -  U.S.  Scaetary  of  Sute  Madeleine 
Albright  urged  Israelis  and  Palestinians  on 
Monday  to  end  their  latest  outbreak  of  vio- 
lence, calling  it  "a  perhaps  even  greater 
tragedy  than  usual"  because  it  has  flared  when 
the  possibility  of  peace  seems  real. 

After  meeting  with  French  and  European 
Union  officials,  Albright  also  addressed  the. 


showdown  in  Yugoslavia,  saying  the 
Sept.  24  presidential  victory  of 
Vojislav  Kostunica  must  be  "sup- 
ported and  vindicated,"  while 
President  Slobodan  Milosevic  "belongs 
in  The  Hague"  before  the  U.N.  tribunal  that 
has  indicted  him  for  war  crimes. 

She  said  it  was  her  understanding  that 
Milosevic  had  turned  down  an  invitation  to 
Moscow  for  Russian  mediation. 

A  democratic  Yugoslavia  would  see  sanc- 
tions lifted,  Albright  said.  "We  would  all  figure 
out  a  way  to  help." 

Albright  was  in  Paris  for  a  meeting  on  U.S- 
EU  relations  that  was  dominated  by  the  crisis 
in  Yugoslavia  and  the  fighting  in  the  Middle 
East  that  has  killed  dozens  of  people  over  the 
past  four  days. 

French  President  Jacques  Chirac  eariier 
blamed  the  violence  on  an  "irresponsible 
provocation,"  referring  to  a  visit  last  week  by 
Israel's  hawkish  opposition  leader  Ariel 
Sharon  to  a  Jerusalem  shrine  revered  by 
Muslims  and  Jews. 


Buchanan  attempts  to 
siphon  votes  from  Bush 

MANCHESTER,  N.H.  -  Reform  Party 
presidential  candidate  Pat  Buchanan 
returned  to  a  state  that  gave  him  big  lifts  in 
the  past  to  urge  conservatives  not  to  "throw 
away"  their  votes  on  Republican  George  W. 
Bush. 

Buchanan,  who  won  New  Hampshire's 
1996  GOP  primary  and  made  a  strong  show- 
ing there  in  1992,  said  Bush  has  abandoned 
conservative  principles.  He  urged  voters  to 
support  his  own  bid  to  create  "a  fighting  new 
conservative  party." 

Complaining  that  he  was  unfairly  shut  out 
of  Tuesday's  presidential  debate,  Buchanan' 
said  he  isn't  trying  to  take  votes  away  from 
the  Republican  Party  by  attacking  Bush.  The 
Texas  governor  is  driving  votes  away  himself, 
he  said. 

Cdhf>piled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


':  '.'>■*;.  ■%,. 


^^^^^^^^^^l^lA 


,  —    —  -i«  '     >■  *r 


-—""^ 


'6         Tuesday,  Octobef  3, 2000 


Daily  Brain  News 


STATE  &  LOCAL 


one- 


walkout 


STRIKES:  Employees  from 
animal  control,  clerk's 
office  want  new  contracts 


By  Judy  Lin 

The  Associated  Press 

Workers  who  issue  marriage  licens- 
es and  corral  stray  dogs  staged  a  one- 
day  walkout  Monday,  the  first  in  a 
series  of  rolling  strikes  by  the  union  rep>- 
resenting  47,000  Los  Angeles  County 
employees. 

About  900  workers  struck  animai 
control  facilities  and  the  Department 
of  Registrar-Recorder/County  Clerk. 
If  no  contract  is  reached,  other  depart- 
ments will  be  struck  daily,  leading  up  to 
a  general  strike  on  Oct.  1 1. 

The  job  actions  come  amid  a  widen- 
ing trend  by  labor  in  the  region's  public 
and  private  sectors  to  take  to  the  picket 
lines  or  use  the  threat  of  a  strike  in  cur- 
rent negotiations. 

In  Pasadena,  talks  resumed  to  end  a 
17-day  walkout  by  bus  and  rail  opera- 


Appeals  court  reviews 
rulin^gainst  Napster 


The  Associated  Press 


loria  ritoria  and  her  children  Mario,  1 2,  right,  and  Merenly,  7,  find  Los 
Angeles  County  Register  workers  picketing  outside  their  offices  Monday. 


tors  against  the  Metropolitan 
Transportation  Authority.  The  strike 
has  forced  about  450,000  people,  main- 
ly the  county's  poorest  residents,  to 
find  other  transportation.       »: ,, 


Both  sides  were  cautiously  opti- 
mistic that  the  strike  could  end  this 
week. 


S«c  WOMBS,  page  10 


LAWSUIT:  Judges  ask 
recording  industry  why 
injunction  should  stand 


By  Ron  Harris 

The  Associated  Presj  "- 

SAN  FRANCISCO  -  Three 
federal  appeals  judges  put  the  onus 
on  the  recording  industry  Monday, 
grilling  its  attorneys  with  questions 
about  why  a  lower  court's  injunc- 
tion against  Napster  Inc.  should  be 
reinstated  and  the  song'sharing 
service  shut  down. 

The  panel  of  the  9th  U.S. 
Circuit  Court  of  Appeals  peppered 
recording  industry  lawyers  with 
queries,  trying  find  out  exactly 
how  Napster's  service  should  or 
could  be  monitored  to  weed  out 
the  trafficking  of  copyrighted 
music  among  its  32  million  users. 


Judge  Robert  Beezcr  told 
~Russell  Frackman,  a  lawyer  repre- 
senting the  Recording  Industry 
Association  of  America,  that  ask- 
ing Napster  to  keep  tabs  on  all  the 
music  traded  by  all  its  users  might 
be  too  tall  a  task  to  handle. 

"How  are  they  supposed  to  have 
knowledge  of  what  comes  off  of 
some  kid's  computer  in 
Hackensack,  N.J.,  to  a  user  in 
Guam?"  Beezer  asked. 

Frackman  said  the  answer  lied 
in  Napster's  ability  to  take  a  list  of 
copyrighted  song  titles  and 
redesign  its  service  not  to  transmit 
those  MP3  files. 

The  hearing  was  part  of  the  con- 
tinuing legal  battle  between 
Napster  and  the  RIAA,  which 
alleges  that  Napster  contributes  to 
copyright  infringement  by  allow- 
ing millions  of  users  to  search  for 

$eellAPSm,page12 


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8         Tuesday,  Octobcf  3, 2000 


Daily  Brain  NcM 


HOUSING 

Frompagel  '    ,  - 

units  in  general. 

"Many  students  were  informed 
or  the  availability  of  housing  two  to 
three  weeks  prior  to  fall  move-in," 
Foraker  said. 

Residents  are  also  concerned 
with  the  trash  chutes,  which  are  out 
of  service  in  all  four  residential 
units. 

"We  have  to  leave  our  trash  bags 
out  in  the  hallways,  and  wait  for 
maintenance  to  come  by  and  pick 
them  up,"  said  Greg  Peterson,  a 
third-year  biochemistry  student. 

Foraker  said  he  expects  the  trash 
chutes  to  be  in  full  operation  within 
the  next  two  days. 

Custodial  workers  have  also  been 
affected  by  residents'  concerns. 

"Residents  complain  every  day 
about  the  elevators  and  trash 
chutes,  but  there  is  nothing  we  can 
do  about  it,"  said  Efrain  Ortiz,  an 
employee  of  Diamond  Contract 
Services,  Inc.,  which  hires  custodi- 
ans. 


CENTER 

ffqm  pa9e  1     , 


-|t*snQt  cntirdy  aotdemic,  it's  an  out- 
reach program,"  Lincoln  said  about  the 
institute's  role,  v  r/  '     '     , '  V  ■  .     ,  .^  V 

In  addition  to  focusing  on  labor,  the  Insti- 
tutes study  management  because  the  two  arc 
intertwined,  the  (lirectors  said. 

Belying  fears  that  the  institutes  are  parti- 
san in  any  way,  Lincoln  said  the  issues  they 
focus  on  are  universal  and  mostly  academic. 

In  the  DC  Berkeley  business  school,  "I 
offer  a  course  in  bargaining  and  negotiation, 
is  there  anything  partisan  about  that  particu*'^ 
larly?"  he  said. 

"The  labor  institutes  work  with  employee 
constituencies,  unionized  and  sometimes 
non-union,"  Lincoln  added. 

Sean  Leys,  an  organizer  for  the 
University  Professional  and  Technical 
Employees  union,  first  became  involved  in 
the  union  as  part  of  his  studies  at  the  original 
Institute  for  Industrial  Relations. 

He  said  he  remembers  the  institute  being 
underfunded  when  he  was  there. 

"Hopefully  they'll  be  big  enough  to  hold 
the  university  accountable  for  how  it  treats 
its  own  employees,"  Leys  said. 


CLUSTER  : 

^ompageS        .v 

To  Chiristinii^fEarhart,^  sec- 
ond-year biology  student. who 
took  GE  21  ABC,  the  History  of 
Modern  Thought  and  Culture 
last  spring,  the  credit  benefits 
were  added  incentives  for  tak- 
ing the  course. 

"Because  I'm  a  biology 
major,  the  idea  of  receiving  GE 
credits  in  humanities  as  well  as 
the  honors  credit  was  very 
appealing,"  she  said.  "I  think 
it's  a  great  concept  and  a  great 
opportunity  for  a  science  major 
to  get  the  feel  of  a  humanities 
course." 

Justin  Williams,  a  second- 
year  life-science  student  who 
took  the  same  cluster,  agreed. 

"It  balanced  out  my  heavy 
science  schedule,  and  the  extra 
humanities  credits  were  a  defi- 
nite advantage,"  he  said. 

Because  they  are  year-long, 
the  clusters  have  the  freedom  to 
be  comprehensive. 


Robert  WaUon,  who  coordi- 
nates the  GE  Cluster  60ABC, 
The  United  States:  1963-1974, 
Politics,  Society  and  Culture 
said  the  extra  time  allows  him  to 
discuss  specific  aspects  of  his' 
course  that  aren't  normally  dis- 
cussed. 


"What  drew  me  to 

the  course  was  the 

idea  that  it  was  a 

subject  that  would 

last  the  entire  year." 

Dean  Sage 

Former  cluster  student 


"The  faculty  arc  from 
English,  political  science,  histo- 
ry, and  American  studies,"  he 
said.  "But  we'll  be  touching 
extensively  on  music  history,  art 
history,      Chicano      studies. 


African  American  studies,  and 
Asian  American  studies." 

Some .  students  said  they 
enjoyed  the  familiarity  of  hav- 
Tng4fac  same  class  year-round. 

"What  drew  me  to  the  course 
was  the  idea  that  it  was  a  subject 
that  would  last  the  entire  year," 
Sage  said.  "And  give  me  at  least 
one  constant  amidst  my  con- 
stantly changing  schedule." 

Similarly,  the  lengthy  time 
span  allowed  more  faculty  and 
student  interaction,  allovying 
them  to  become  better 
acquainted  with  one  another. 

"Every  quarter,  it  was  the 
one  class  where  I  knew  the  stu- 
dents and  teachers,  and  had  a 
good  idea  of  what  to  expect  in 
the  way  of  lectures  and  exams," 
Sage  said.  "It  did  indeed  pro- 
vide me  with  a  comfort  zone  at 
the  start  of  every  new  quarter." 

But  because  the  professors 
who  actually  taught  the  courses 
changed,  some  students  didn't 
share  the  same  sense  of  comfort. 

See  OJBTBt  page  1 0 


NOTES 

DIARYU^EAS) 


suajEcr  ^     / 


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I  awoke  to  a  thunder 
storm  at  3  a.m. 

That's  when  the        ^ 

LIGHTNIN" 
STRUC 


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ngh!  VC  or  angel  investor  to  |      naTcs  i;  ;■ 

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on  ttie  Internet  got  their  start 
with  11^ 


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flease  read  tliese  instructions  carefully: 

Student  tickets  for  the  UCLA-USC  Football 

game  will  be  distributed  in  accordance  with 

the  procedures  outlined  below.  The  Game  will 

be  played  on  Saturday,  November  18,  2000,  at  the 

Rose  Bowl.   Student  tickets  are  priced  at  $25.00  each 

and  all  are  reserved  seats. 

The  student  tickets  for  the  UCLA-USC 
Football  game  will  be  sold  on  the  basis  of 
the  prepaid  randomly  generated  priority  numbers 
issued  with  each  students'  Student  Sport  Package  and 
the  additional  priority  numbers  issued  at  the  Central 
Ticket  Office. 

The  priority  numbers  will  serve  as  the 
method  of  admission  to  the  area  where  the 
ticket  windows  are  located.  Each  priority 
number  issued  specifies  the  time  and  date  when  the 
holder  of  that  priority  number  is  to  report  to  Pauley 
Pavilion  to  obtain  the  actual  admission  ticket  to  the 
game.  STUDENTS  ARE  URGED  TO  REPORT  TO 
PAULEY  PAVILION  ONLY  AT  THE  TIME 
SPECIFIED  ON  THEIR  PRIORITY  NUMBERED 
TICKET 

OEACH  STUDENT    WITH  ONE  PRIORITY 
NUMBER     WILL     BE      ALLOWED    TO 
PURCHASE  ONE  (1)  USC  STUDENT  TICKET 
THE  STUDENT  MUST  ALSO  PRESENT  HIS  OR  HER 
CURRENT  UCLA  BRUIN  CARD  AT  THAT  TIME  IN 
ORDER  TO  GET  THE  GAME  TICKET 

Students  who  did  not  obtain  season  tickets 
but  still  desire  to  purchase  USC  Football 

tickets  may  obtain  a  priority  number  now  at  the 

Central  Ticket  Office. 

The  best  seats  in  the  student  section  will  be 
sold  first.  Distribution  of  these  seats,  as  well 
as  the  other  seats,  will  be  made  equally  among 
all  ticket  sellers.  One  student  may  purchase  two  tick- 
ets together  providing  he/she  brings  two  priority  num- 
bers AND  two  current  Bruin  Cards  and  arrives  at  the 
latest  time  designated  on  the  priority  numbers.  If 
more  than  two  persons  wish  to  sit  together,  then,  on 
the  day  of  the  sale,  they  should  arrive  at  the  latest  time 
designation  on  the  priority  numbers  they  hold  and 
they  will  be  issued  tickets  together  by  standing  in  line 
behind  the  same  ticket  seller.  Since  the  assignment  of 
priority  numbers  was  done  randomly,  students  who 
desire  seats  together  will  have  to  decide  whether  they 
wish  to  pass  up  th«^  lower  priority  number  in  order  to 
sit  together. 

Students  should  report  to  Gate  3,  Pauley 

Pavilion  at  the  time  designated  on  their 

priority  number  ticket.     As  the  priority 

numbers  are  called,  the  students  must  show 

their  number  to  the  gate  attendant  and  are  admitted  to 

the  area  where  the  tickets  are  purchased. 

When  the  student  is  at  the  window,  he  or  she 
must  present  all  of  the  following: 
ji|    a.    Priority  numbered  ticket,  which  is  retained  by  the 
,  ^  ticket  seller. 

I P    b.    Current  UCLA  Bruin  Picture  Card,  which  is  vali- 
'  jdated  by  the  ticket  seller,  and  must  also  be  presented  at 
Ithe  game. 

c.  Amount  of  cash  required  to  purchase  game  ticket 
($25.00  per  ticket).  No  Checks  will  be  accepted. 
CASH  ONLY.  PAYMENT  IS  NOT  REQUIRED 
FOR  THOSE  WHO  PREPAY  FOR  THEIR  USC 
TICKET  THROUGH  THE  STUDENT  SPORTS 
PACKAGE. 

^^^^  Those  students  who  are  not  present  at  the 
^^^  time  their  priority  number  is  called  should 
report  to  Gate  3,  Pauley  Pavilion,  at  their  earli- 
est convenience  after  their  priority  number  time  and 
get  in  line  with  the  current  time  priority  numbers. 


t  cntr.il 


VMrUOAi 


DaUy  Brum  News 


':'.'*" 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000         9 


toniSht 


career 

Find  o|it  how  you  can  join  tlie  Daily  Bruin,  UClAtv  News,  uclaradio.com, 
"^tkaltjf  Brum  Online  and  the  rest  of  the  student  media  at  the 

Student  Media  Orientation  and  Open  House 

Ibn^lht,  Tuesday,  Oct  3  at  6:30  p.m.  Ackennan  Unioii  Grand  Ballroom 


.d— kia.-ii^a.rf- 


.irn'."  I  11    >i 


Graduate  &  Professional  School  i 

Information  Fair     • 


Are  you  considering  an  advanced 
degree  program?  Now  is  your  chance 
to  get  firsthand  information  on  a  wide 
range  of  graduate  and  professional 
programs!  -/^ 


Representatives  from 
over  1 25  schools  will  be 
discussing  their 
programs  and  your 
interests!  Don't  miss  out 
on  this  exciting  event! 


*•-?-»  -  -i--*^f 


V 


Wednesday,   October  4,    2000 
Dickson   Plaza 

f       10  am  >r  2  pm  ^]Kl/-A'- 


Visit  career.ucla.edu  to  see  a  complete  list  of 
participating  institutions!  . 


m 


:^:^«^IJ•l^l^l^J^l^J^l^lJ■I^^^J^>}•^^|^^}•|^IJ•l^I^«^I)■|^^}■l^l^>}•I}■lO•J^I*■*J^)}•«)■^^lJ■*>^x)•J}■J^|^l}■I^^J•l}•)5•^)■>5^ 


IT  TOOK  WOMEN  144  YEARS 
TO  GET  THE 

VOTE 

EXERCISE  YOUR  RIGHT! 

Did  you  know:  v 

The  i  9th  Amendment  (granting  women  the  right  to  vote) 
was  not  signed  until  August  26,  1 920. 

1n  order  to  get  the  right  to  vote  women  petitioned,  had  conferences,  , 
had  bonfires,  picketed,  paraded,  held  hunger  strikes,  were  arrested, 
were  mobbed,  lobbied  Congress,  made  pleas  to  the  President  of  the  U.S. 

You  must  register  to  vote  every  time  you  change  residence. 

The  deadline  to  register  to  vote  In  order  to  vote  In  the 
November  election  Is  October  10,  20001V         '      ; 

The  presidential  election  is  on  Tuesday  November  7,  2000. 

The  Center  for  Women  &  Men  has  fise  voter  registration 
applications  especially  for  UCLA  women  and  men. 

Exercise  your  right.  Register  to  vote  at: 

Must  turn  In  application  by  October  9,  2000.  For  more  Information,       ,/ 
please  call  825-3945  or  visit  us  at  2  Dodd. Hall.  ' 


h 


J?- 

t 

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.#■, 

J 

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>: 
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J 


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i^Sponsored  by  the  UCLA  Center  for  Women  A  Men  *  www.thccenter.ucla.edu    jj. 


•^  ".'-t^  i;  -T  -r  *    -    r^ 


10       Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


Ml)r  Brain  News 


CLUSTER 

FrompageS  _^        '      . 

"Maybe  there  could  have  been- 
more  of  a  continuity  between  the 
professors  and  more  of  a  connec- 
tion," said  Williams.  "1  guess  some 
students  got  used  to  the  lecturer's 
style  for  that  quarter,  so  when  a  new 
quarter  came  around,  we  weren't 
used  to  listening  to  a  new  profes- 
sor." 

Nevertheless,  others  still  like  the 
idea  of  alternating  professors. 

"I  really  liked  the  changing  pro- 
fessors," said  Earhart.  "It  made  the 
course  more  interesting  because  of 
the  different  perspectives  we  were 
given  jabout  the  same  topic." 

Many  students  were  surprised 
and  excited  to  find  themselves  sur- 
rounded by  such  a  large  number  of 
distinguished  faculty  members 
involved  in  the  program. 

"I  was  watching  television  the 
other  day  and  saw  my  former  cluster 
professor  on  this  program  dis- 
cussing her  new  book,"  Earhart 
said.  "I  was  very  impressed." 

At  the  end  of  some  lectures,  stu- 
dents even  applauded  the  speaker, 
according  to  Sage. 

"The  expertise  and  the  great  style 
of  the  lecture  presentations  was 
probably  one  of  the  best  aspects  of 
the  course,"  he  said. 


CANDIDATES 


From  page  3 


some   past 


rhetoric    for    which 
debates  are  famous. 

"Bush  isn't  going  to  blow  the 
debate,"  he  said.  "He's  prepared, 
he  knows  the  issues,  and  this  debate 
will  show  just  how  good  he  is." 

Sears  said  the  press  coverage 
could  be  just  as  important  as  Bush 
and  Gore's  reactions  to  Lehrcr's 
questions. 

The  debate  result  is  likely  to  be 
debated  in  and  of  itself,  with  the 
media  casting  the  deciding  ballot  in 
the  form  of  sound  bites  recorded 
and  errors  endlessly  analyzed. 

"The  candidates  will  cover  a  lot 
of  facts,  so  it's  hard  for  the  average 
viewer  to  understand  everything," 
Sears  said. 

"If  the  press  picks  up  oa  a  boo 
boo,  their  delayed  reaction  is  what 
could  be  important,"  he  continued. 

Though  the  debate  will  air  on 
most  major  networks,  NBC  will  not 
show  it  due  to  their  contractual 
commitment  to  the  Major  League 
Baseball  playoffs. 

According  to  Sears,  lower  televi- 
sion ratings  and  viewership  will 
only  enhance  the  role  the  press  and 
pundits  will  play  in  determining 
each  candidate's  viability  with  the 
coveted  swing  voters  in  battle- 


ground states  such  as  Missouri, 
Michigan  and  Pennsylvania. 

"Only  a  small  audience  will 
watch  the  entire  debate,"  Sears 
said.  "Some  of  the  undecided  vot- 
ers won't  watch  at  all,  and  that's 
why  the  media's  reaction  is  some- 
thing to  watch  for." 

Ho  said  that  the. debates  don't 
necessarily  have  a  significant  effect 
on  the  race,  but  rather  tend  to  rein- 
force existing  political  leanings. 

"I'm  skeptical  of  one  event 
changing  the  American  electorate," 
Ho  said.  "And  it  still  remains  to  be 
seen  how  many  people  will  actually 
tune  in." 

Paul  Backstrom,  a  fifth-year  psy- 
chology student  and  member  of 
Bruins  for  Nader,  said  he  would  be 
tuning  in  to  the  debate,  but  expects 
it  to  be  a  disappointing  hour-and-a- 
half. 

"We're  not  going  to  see  serious 
debates,  we're  going  to  see  scripted 
debates,"  said  Backstrom,  who  crit- 
icized the  exclusion  of  Green  party 
presidential  candidate  Ralph 
Nader  and  other  non-major  party 
candidates  like  Reform  Party  presi- 
dential hopeful  Pat  Buchannan. 

But  despite  his  personal  predic- 
tion, Backstrom  said  he  will  watch 
Gore  and  Bush  spar,  and  is  "hope- 
ful that  there  will  be  lively  debate 
and  some  real  issues  will  be  dis- 
cussed." 


WORKERS 

From  page  6  .  :'K-:  ^/' >'.'4;' 

Meanwhile,  marriage  licenses, 
deeds  and  other  services  including 
voter  registration  were  on  hold  as 
Service  Employees  International 
Union  Local  660  struck  the  county 
clerk's  division. 

Welfare  offices,  public  works  and 
children's  services  were  targeted  for 
Tuesday. 

Protesters  carrying  signs  reading 
'bn  strike  for  our  fair  share"  marched 
outside  the  main  county  clerk's  office 
in  Norwalk. 

James  Fields,  40,  of  Seattle,  Hew 
down  to  obtain  his  ex-wife's  birth  and 
marriage  certificates.  She  died 
recently  and  he  needed  them  for  an 
estate  claim,  he  said. 

He  was  told  the  applications 
would  not  be  processed  until  at  least 
Tuesday. 

"This  pushes  everything  back.  I 
didn't  plan  on  staying  here  this  long," 
he  said. 

Araceli  Cruz,  28,  of  Chino,  was 
trying  to  pick  up  a  birth  certificate  for 
her  boyfriend's  sister  -  a  document 
needed  for  a  trip  to  Mexico.  She  was 
told  to  come  back  Tuesday. 

Fewer  than  300  of  the  usual  1,000 
employees  were  working,  Registrar- 
Recorder  Conny  B.  McCormack 
said. 


"We're  wounded  but  we're  not 
dead,"  McCormack  said. 

County  spokeswoman  Judy 
Haminond  said  56  oT  77  animal  care 
workers  failed  to  report  at  six  shel- 
ters. Managers  cleaned  cages. 

Dozens  of  workers  picketed  a 
Downey  shelter  that  houses  about 
360  animals  a  day.  People  looking  for 
strays  were  allowed  among  the  ken- 
nels but  pet  adoptions  were  canceled. 

The  SEIU  has  rejected  the  coun- 
ty's offer  of  a  9  percent  wage  hike 
over  three  years.  The  offer  was 
accepted  by  other  unions  represent- 
ing about  25,000  workers,  iriduding 
sheriffs  deputies,  lifeguards  and 
other  safety  employees. 

The  union  wants  at  least  a  1 5.5  per- 
cent increase.  The  union  says  mem- 
bers deserve  a  greater  share  of  the 
healthy  economy  after  going  without 
raises  during  the  1990s  recession. 

"Now  that  there  is  a  surplus  there 
is  money  out  there,"  union  spokes- 
woman Donna  Meredith  said. 

County  officials  said  they  must  still 
contain  costs  in  the  face  of  a  project- 
ed $500  million  deficit  by  2006. 

Another  possible  strike  could 
come  as  early  as  mid-November, 
involving  about  43,000  teachers, 
librarians,  counselors  and  nurses 
employed  by  the  Los  Angeles  Unified 
School  District.  They  authorized  a 
walkout  if  contract  talks  fail  to 
progress. 


College  is  an  art  cmd  a  science. 
Soon  enough^  you'U  discover  the  {rroper  course  of  study 
is  figurir^  out  the  brave  new  ivorld  while  expending  as 
'  little  effort  as  possible. 
Which  brings  us  to  the  subject  ofCompuBank, 

CompuBank  isn*t  just  around  the  comer,  lt*s  right  in 
your  room.  Right  on  your  computer.  You  get  free  basic 
checkingf  free  savings  and  access  to  free  ATM  net' 
works.  You  get  a  CompuBank  check  card  to  use  any 
place  Visa  is  accepted. 


z 


And,  when  you  run  out  of  money  about  every  other 
week,  your  mom  and  dad  ccm  wire  you  more  -  free. 


Logon  to 

Click  on  Circle  ofFriends"^^  to  learn  how  you  can 
earn  $40  for  each  friend  you  refer  who  opens  and  funds 
a  CompuBank  account,  ■  '  ■  .-■<  ■-  --'-ihr^gcyt^-''-^' 

You  can  open  can  account  right  online  and  approval 
can  happen  within  minutes* 

Have  you  ever  tried  swallowing  a  goldfish? 


Student 

television 
news  show 

needs 
reporters, 

camera 

operators, 

producers 

and 

anchors. 


Emrytlifaia  yM  don^  Hn 


lICLAlv  Nkw8,  a  nrw  student 
mediA  projn;\  launching  this  quar- 
ter, is  l(H)kinf;  for  sludcnLs  inlcr- 
c8lod  in  wurking  as  prudw-^^rs, 
reporters,  (-.amitra  oiieralors, 
^rH|)hic  arlisLs,  And  anchors  for  a 
ni^rhlly  l(;levision  n(;ws  broadcast 
fealurinif  r^npus  news  and  s|)orls. 
HCLAIV  is  channel  20  in  the 
dorms  and  olh<!r  camiHis  build- 
ings. 

YOU  DOfn  NEED  EXPERKNCE 
IF  YOU  HAVE  THE  OMVE 

(^ndidales  shouldih*  molivalcid, 
orj,'aniz(!<l,  arlirulalc,  and  kn«)wl- 
(Mlf^-al)l(^  about  ncw.s  or  N|K)rLs. 
(]andidal(>s  should  Im>  c^|>abl(!  of 
working;  in  a  learn  coniexl  in  a 
dynamic,  doadlimt-driven  (snviron- 
menl.  Whil(!  some  backi^round  in 
hi^  sch<Kil  or  colh^i-  journalism 
is  preferred,  cx|M;ri(!nc<!  is  noi 
n(H(;ssary.  Vk^  provide  Irainin);  in 
workshops  lau^d)!  by  local  televi- 
sion n(!ws  |>r(Miuc(!rs  and 
n!|K)rt(!rs. 

■  Visit  uk  in  Arkerman  Vnum  (Jrand 
liallnMim  loni^.'hi,  T(i(\sday  Oct. :] 
al  (i::<U  p.m.  lo  find  oul  how  you 
can  join  up. 


TOMORROW 

Wednesday,  October  4th 

BRUIN  PLAZA  O0am<2pm 


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•  Minimal  travel  time 

Work  right  on  campus. 

•  Flexible  schedules 

We  adjust  to  your  class  schedule. 

•  Fast  Track  Promotions 

Management  training  and 
multiple  supervisory  levels. 

•  Employee  discounts  ^ 

20%  off  BearWear  and  many 
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»;»j 


S^-T  you  isk«<i.  Sirv^  W. 


■  mMmiiiliii^i  iVliyJliirtiiliM"!' 


12       Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


Oiil)r  Brain  Nun 


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Palestinian  youths  throw  stones  at  Israeli  soldiers  during  continued 
clashes  in  the  West  Bank  city  of  Bethlehem  on  Saturday.  - 


ISRAEL 

From  pages 

state.  Eight  Israeli  Arabs  were  killed 
in  Monday's  clashes  alone. 

Police  and  Arab  rioters  fought  a 
three-hour  battle  in  the  alleyways  of 
the  Israeli  town  of  Akko.  Rioters 
trashed  shops  in  the  Israeli  Arab 
town  of  Nazareth,  Jesus'  childhood 
home.  In  the  coastal  city  of  Haifa  - 
often  cited  as  a  model  of  harmonious 
coexistence  of  Jews  and  Muslims  - 
Israeli  Arabs  staged  a  general  strike 
in  sympathy  with  Palestinian 
brethren.  ^r~r. 

The  Palestinian  lands,  though, 
remained  the  epicenter  of  violence, 
with  a  shifting  battlefront-  that  hop- 
scotched  from  north  to  south  and 
back  again.  In  the  West  Bank  and 
Gaza,  Israeli  soldiers  fought  dozens 
of  running  battles  -  many  with  live 
ammunition  -  with  Palestinian 
youths  wielding  stones  and  fire- 
bombs. 


Near  the  West  Bank  town  of 
Tulkarem,  rioters  set  ablaze  eight 
Israeli-owned  factories  Monday 
night,  including  two  which  manufac- 
tured insect  spray.  The  fire  sent 
clouds  of  noxious  fumes  over  the 
northern  West  Bank,  and  Israeli 
police  said  Palestinian  gunfire  pre- 
vented firefighters  from  reaching  the 
area. 

The  detritus  of  conflict  could  be 
seen  everywhere.  Jagged  rocks,  spent 
shells,  and  broken  glass  littered  road- 
ways. Black  smoke  from  piles  of 
burning  tires  mixed  with  a  white  haze 
of  acrid  tear  gas.  The  wail  of  Quranic 
verses  from  mosque  loudspeakers 
mingled  with  the  crackle  of  gunfire. 

Israeli  civilians  were  forbidden  to 
travel  the  main  thoroughfares  in  the 
West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip.  At  the 
isolated  Gaza  settlement  of 
Netzarim,  the  army  sent  a  helicopter 
to  retrieve  Israelis  who  had  been  vis- 
iting for  the  Jewish  New  Year  holi- 
day. Army  convoys  escorted  others 
out. 


NAPSTER      V 

From  page  6 

music  with  its  MusicShare  directory 
and  then  download  directly  from 
each  others  computers  -  known  as 
peer-to-peer  file-sharing. 

The  recording  industry  considers 
this  case  pivotal  in  its  battle  against 
online  piracy. 

The  appeals  panel,  through  its 
questioning,  suggested  that  U.S. 
District  Court  Judge  Marilyn  Hall 
Patel's  injunction  shutting  down 
Napster  prohibited  legal  uses  of  the 
music-sharing  software,  such  as  the 
trading  of  noncopyrighted  music. 

David  Boies,  who  successfully 
prosecuted  the  government's 
antitrust  case  against  Microsoft, 
said  reinstating  Patel's  injunction 
would  cripple  Napster's  service  and 
stifie  the  non-infringing  uses  of 
Napster's  program. 

Patel's  injunction  against 
Napster  in  July  said  the  small 
Redwood  City-based  company  was 
encouraging  'Wholesale  infringing" 
against  music  industry  copyrights. 


But  hours  before  Napster's  com- 
puter servers  were  to  power  down, 
the  appeals  court  stayed  the  injunc- 
tion, keeping  the  company's  service 
alive. 

Napster  alsou:laimed  the  promo- 
tion of  artists  who  permit  their  songs 
to  be  shared  would  be  hurt  by  rein- 
stating the  injunction,  adding  that 
the  1984  Supreme  Court  decision 
allowing  Sony  to  continue  manufac- 
turing VCRs  which  can  duplicate 
copyrighted  materials  also  covers 
Napster's  service. 

But  Frackman  argued  that 
Napster  was  specifically  created  to 
aid  users  engaging  in  copyright 
infringement.  Frackman  said  the 
music  industry  is  not  "trying  to  stop 
the  Internet,"  but  wants  to  stop 
Napster  from  allowing  its  users  to 
swap  pirated  music. 

"Napster  really  is,  and  was 
designed  to  be,  the  gatekeeper  of  the 
whole  system,"  Frackman  said, 
arguing  that  the  illegal  trade  of 
MP3s  could  only  happen  with  the 
aid  of  Napster's  service.  "No  one 
can  get  that  material  without 
Napster." 


CRIME 

From  pages 

consent  normally  is  considered  18. 

The  Stop  Material  Unsuitable  for 
Teens  Act,  or  SMUT  bill,  introduced  in 
March  by  Rep.  Tom  Tancredo,  R- 
Colo.,  changes  the  definition  of  a 
minor  in  the  bill  to  someone  under  the 
age  of  1 8,  instead  of  someone  under  the 
age  of  16. 

"We  should  make  sure  that  those 
who  would  seek  to  spread  this  fildi 
knowingly  to  our  children  be  ready  to 
pay  the  price  of  up  to.  10  years  behind 
bars,"  Tancredo  said. 

Scott  complained  again  that 
Democrats  had  been  given  too  little 
time  to  study  the  bill,  and  it  might  have 
unroTMcen  consequences.  "If  an  18- 
year-old  were  to  have  consensual  sex 


with  a  17-year-old,  that  would  not  be  a 
federal  crime  nor  a  crime  in  most 
states,"  Scott  said.  "But  if  they  shared 
dirty  pictures,  that  would  be  a  federal 
crime." 

Bills  the  House  passed  unanimously 
Monday  include  the  Enhanced  Federal 
'Security  Act,  which  makes  it  a  federal 
crime  to  use  a  fake  police  badge  or 
identification  to  enter  federal  property 
like  an  airport  or  a  courthouse.  It  also 
makes  it  a  federal  crime  to  sell  fake  or 
real  police  badges,  punishable  by  a  fine 
and  six  months  in  prison. 

This  bill  stems  from  a  federal  inves- 
tigation this  year  where  officials  using 
false  police  badges  easily  penetrated 
restricted  areas  at  the  FBI,  the 
Pentagon,  the  CIA,  the  Justice 
DqMftment  and  the  State  Department 
with  briefcases  large  enough  to  carry 
exfriosives  and  firearms. 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000       13 


,r>; 


■:v:-r.^- 


■-■■■  /^-i. 


Which  is  more  than  you 
can  say  for  your  underwear. 


^L 


■  As 


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Daily  Bruin 


-^•mm^ 


Wednesday 

Are  vouchers  the 
best  way  to  reform 
our  school  system? 


^^ 


View  on  the  Web 

See  all  this  and  • 

• 

more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's  • 

Website:  • 

www.daiiybniin.uda.edu  * 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


viewpoint@media.ucia.edu 


UC  protects  student  rights 

Thumbs  up  to  UCLA  for  refusing  to  restrict  student  access  to 

f^  Napster  through  campus  computer  networks.  Letters  from 
Howard  King,  attorney  to  musicians  Dr.  Dre  and  Metallica, 
encouraged  several  universities  to  block  access  to  the  site,  but  UC 
refused. 

The  university  should  not  censor  the  Web  or  abridge  students'  access 
to  the  Internet  unless  the  state  legislates  it.  The  freedom  of  a  student  at 
an  on-campus  network  should  be  equivalent  to  that  of  a  student  across 
the  street  using  their  computer,  as  long  as  the  activities  are  legal. 

Though  we  believe  in  the  importance  of  the  copyright  law  and  think 
that  artists  should  be  recognized  for  their  work,  students  should  not  be 
prohibited  from  an  activity  that  is  not  defmed  by  law  as  a  violation  of 
copyright. 

It  is  the  duty  of  the  state  -  not  the  university  -  to  determine  what 
infringes  on  copyright  laws.  Students  are  adults  and  should  have  the 
freedom  to  choose  what  to  see  and  download  from  the  Web,  regardless 
of  content,  so  long  as  it's  legal. 

Bill  fails  to  note  professors 

r^  Thumbs  down  to  the  state  of  California  for  passing  AB  1773, 
J  ^  I  a  bill  that  makes  it  illegal  for  companies  not  affiliated  with  the 
^^^  university  to  publish  lecture  notes.  This  new  law  applies  to  all 
of  California's  public  colleges  and  universities.  Thus,  at  UCLA,  only 
the  Associated  Students  of  UCLA  lecture  notes  will  be  available  for 
student  purchase.  " 

Though  this  legislation  attempts  to  protect  professors'  intellectual 
property,  it  also  limits  an  instructor's  choice  to  have  the  information 
circulated.  Rather  than  banning  outside  companies  from  distributing 
lecture  notes,  the  law  should  have  centered  on  giving  professors  the 
ability  to  control  what  they  want  published  and  by  whom. 

Protecting  the  professors  from  exploitation  should  not  involve  lim- 
iting their  ability  to  choose  the  right  note-taking  service  for  their 
class. 

Those  in  favor  of  banning  lecture  notes  produced  by  outside  com- 
panies argue  it  protects  students  from  poor  quality,  unauthorized 
note  services,  but  it  also  eliminates  competition  between  note-taking 
services,  which  could  have  encouraged  higher  quality  and  less  expen- 
sive notes  for  students. 

Professors  should  have  the  freedom  to  decide  which  company  pro- 
vides the  most  suitable  note-taking  service  for  their  classes  and  stu- 
dents. 

Forum  stifles  free  speech 

r^l  Thumbs  down  to  UCLA  for  allowing  Iranian  foreign  minis- 
1^1  ter  Kamal  Kharrazi  to  speak  on  campus  in  a  forum  closed  to 
^^  opposing  viewpoints.  Members  of  the  state  department  and 
administrators,  including  Chancellor  Albert  Carncsale,  stated  that 
the  closed  forum  represented  an  effort  to  maximize  the  dignitary's 
safety  and  to  prevent  embarrassing  situations  for  the  diplomat, 
especially  amid  the  scheduled  protests. 

Kharrazi  spoke  about  Iranian-U.S.  relations  and  oil  to  faculty, 
students  and  guests  invited  by  the  foreign  minister's  ofTicc. 

While  it  is  reasonable  to  expect  that  foreign  dignitaries  be  pro- 
tected from  possibly  violent  opposition,  it  also  reasonable  to 
demand  that  persons  holding  other  points  of  view  be  allowed  to 
attend  and  express  themselves. 

Outside,  people  protested  human  rights  violations  in  Iran  and 
the  decision  to  allow  the  foreign  minister  to  speak  at  a  closed  meet- 
ing at  UCLA,  a  public  university  with  an  Iranian  population. 

Allowing  people  with  opposing  ideas  to  speak  at  the  forum  does 
not  jeopardize  the  minister's  security.  Rather,  it  ensures  that  free- 
dom of  speech  is  extended  to  people  on  all  sides  of  an  issue. 

ThumbsUp/Thumbs  Down  represents  the  majority  opinion  of  the 
Daily  Bruin  editorial,  board.  Send  feedback  to 
viewpoint@media.ucla.edu. 


TlrWkT   T>r\     CWnkAm         •V<«t«»tlH«^tofour-pige,opWo«-«yte 
XjIUW      JL\J     ^XJEjIVIIm.      '♦*•'»•«'«»••»«'<»  current  event  on  c»mpuj 

or  In  the  wotM  at  large,  or  write  •  rctpofMc  to 
wmatMrtg  that  you  have  alraady  read  bt  The 

TO  vIEWPOI^f^   ';;%::^!;^:;^« 


AMYHAaER^DailySrum 


Spend  time  with  our  chancellor 


CARNESALE:  Keepinmtnd 
big  picture,  discuss  issues 
with  UCLA  administrators 


We  all  get  those  e-mails  from 
Chancellor  Camesale  with 
an  invitation  to  his  office 
hours.  I  usually  respond  to  them  and 
get  rejected.  I  was  able  to  talk  with  the 
chancellor  after  I  wrote  a  Viewpoint 
article  which 
accused  the 
UCLA  adminis- 
tration of  being 
too  displaced 
from  students. 
Imagine  my  sur- 
prise when, 
shortly  after  the 
article  ran,  I 
found  that  the 
chancellor  hinv 
self  had  read  my 
column  and 
wanted  to  meet 
with  me  to  discuss  my  aiticism. 

Grimacing  at  the  remembrance  of 
referring  to  him  as  "Big  AI"  once  in 
the  column,  I  called  his  assistant  to 
schedule  an  appointment.  After  meet- 
ing with  Chancellor  Camesale  and 
speaking  with  him  about  what  I 
thought  to  be  pressing  issues  on  cam- 
pus (student  apathy,  declining  diversi- 
ty among  students,  the  dual  role  of 
professors  as  teachers  and 
researchers),  I  gained  a  new  respect 
for  him. 

We  met  in  his  office  for  about  an 
hour  that  first  tinK,  and  we  talked 
about  the  benefits  and  drawbacks  of  a 
large  university.  Obviously,  UCLA 
has  a  wonderful  reputation  and  an 

Carberry  is  a  third-year  political  science 
student  E-mail  her  at  maegs@ucla.edu. 


Maegan 
Carberry 


enumerable  number  of  avenues  avail- 
able for  students  to  pursue.  But  peo- 
ple also  have  a  tendency  to  feel  like 
numbers,  that  their  efforts  will  not 
make  a  difference,  and  that  they  will 
graduate  without  the  sense  of  cama- 
raderie that  others  get  from  smaller 
colleges.  We  tried  to  think  of  ways  to 
combat  that  feeling,  and  have  met 
since  then  with  others  to  discuss  these 
issues  further. 

One  of  the  things  I  like  most  about 
the  chancellor  is  his  ability  to  see 
UCLA  in  all  of  its  capacities.  This 
campus  is  very  broad.  It  is  a  research 
university,  a  forum  for  undergradu- 
ates, a  place  to  train  in  professional 
schools,  an  athletic  powerhouse,  and  a 
symbol  of  the  Los  Angeles  communi- 
ty. It  is  his  job  to  be  constantly  atten- 
tive to  each  of  these  demanding  com- 
ponents. I  think  we  oftentimes  forget 
the  complexity  of  this  campus. 

Camesale  referred  to  UCLA  in  our 
meeting  and  in  a  recent  Viewpoint  col- 
umn (Daily  Bruin,  Sept.  25)  as  a 
"research  university."  I've  heard  this 
term  used  in  the  past  and,  before  I 
really  thought  it  out,  it  left  a  bad  taste 
in  my  mouth.  It  is  the  kind  of  term 
that  is  oftentimes  used  as  an  excuse  to 
justify  ignoring  undergraduates,  nour- 
ishing the  "let's  take  their  tuition 
money  and  leave  their  education  to 
the  TA's"  mentality. 

It's  great  that  we  have  Nobel  prize 
winning  professors,  but  when  you 
only  have  20  minutes  to  get  help  with 
a  paper,  is  it  more  logical  to  seek  out 
our  resident  rocket  scientist  or  meet 
with  the  graduate  student  who  is  going 
to  be  grading  it?  A  lot  of  students  are 
so  busy  working  in  order  to  afford  our 
faculty's  costly  expertise  that  there  is 
little  time  left  over  to  utilize  it. 

That's  my  gut  reaction.  But  then  I 
think,  "Since  when  has  research 
become  chopped  liver?"  And  when 


did  we  become  so  lazy  that  everything 
has  to  be  dropped  off  at  our  feet? 
That's  how  you  separate  yourself  at 
UCLA 

Everytxxiy's  working  hard,  but 
there  are  a  lot  of  students  who  still 
find  a  way  to  get  to  office  hours  and 
make  an  effort  to  connect  with  faculty. 

At  UCLA,  there  is  a  lot  of  pressure 
to  be  a  frontrunner  in  the  technologi- 
cal/information explosion  of  the  mil- 
lennium. I  think  it's  a  good  thing  that 
we  are  focused,  as  the  chancellor 
noted  in  his  Viewpoint  column,  on 
being  at  the  head  of  the  pack.  We 
would  not  be  a  very  competitive  uni- 
versity without  a  commitment  to 
being  on  the  cutting  edge  of  what  is 
happening  and  changing  in  our  soci- 
ety. I  also  agreed  with  our  commit- 
ment to  expanding  outreach  in  the 
Los  Angeles  community  as  well  as  our 
efforts  to  be  involved  in  academic  and 
artistic  endeavors.  I  enjoyed  much  of 
what  the  chancellor  had  to  offer  in  his 
column  and  I  thought  he  gave  a  very 
positive  and  goal-oriented  outlook  on 
the  future  of  UCLA. 

What  troubles  me  is  the  way  in 
which  the  administration  is  painted  to 
the  student  body.  I've  been  referring 
to  the  chancellor's  contribution  to  the 
Viewpoint  section.  The  column  was 
inU'oduoed  as  a  butting  of  heads 
between  the  chancellor  and  the  stu- 
dent regent,  Justin  Fong.  It  led  you  to 
believe  that  they  saw  progress  at 
UCLA  in  two  different  lights,  when 
what  I  saw  were  two  excellent  obser- 
vations about  our  campus. 

Justin  Fong  pointed  out  the  horri- 
bly disappointing  information  that 
underrepresented  minority  admis- 
sions have  dropped  from  the  thou- 
sands to  the  lower  hundreds.  I  agree 
that  the  figures  are  outrageous  and  I 

S«eCMIBdnr,pa9c16 


copy  artd  paste  your  wbrnhslon  Into  the  body 
of  ttw  e-maH,  or  drop  off  a  Kard  copy  of  your 
(ubmbtton  at  the  (My  Bruin  omce  (1  IS 
Itordihoff  HaN),  can  of  Joitah  Lalat. 

•  Apply  to  be  a  Vle««polm  ootumnkt  dur- 
ing WMa  7  and  •  of  aKh  quartw. 

•  Apply  to  bt  a  cartDonM  or  arUiL  Sand  an 


e-rnaH  expressing  your  Interest  to  tt»e 
Viewpoint  address. 

A  few  things  to  ntnttvhtf. 

'  All  lubmlttlora  iMMt  Include  your  name, 
phone  nwrtbar  and  aMMton  wMh  UCLA.  V 
you  aw  a  fludenc  they  muR  alw  Indudc  your 


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dwy  art  accurate. 

•  VIewpoM  knot  in  advertising  space  for 
JMiy  group  or  organlatianE  be  sure  to  have 
clearly  amodnid  opiBloM. 

*  wa  itiaanM  sw  figM  to  edR  suBnwMons 
for  darftji  gfMMiwr  and  langih. 


I" 


OiiiyBniin  Viewpoint 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000       15 


Village  community  neglects  common  interests  with  students 


WESTWOOD:  Zoning  restrictions 
responsible  for  stagnation,  keep 
area  from  regaining  former  glory 


ByYasharEttckal 

To  the  many  frwhThan  who  will  call  UCILA 
home  for  the  next  four  or,  if  you're  like  me,  five 
years,  September  marks  the  beginning  of  a 
sometimes  tumultuous,  sometimes  intellectually 
exasperating,  yet  always  fruitful  saga.  This  jour- 
ney takes  many  freshmen  through  last  minute 
cram  sessions,  unforgettable  parties,  changes  of 
majors,  and  ultimately,  connection  with  the 
UCLA  community. 

For  those  of  you  who  have  dared  to  venture 
into  the  uncomfortably  dull  waste  of  land 
known  as  Westwood  Village,  you  will  under- 
stand the  facts  I  am  about  to  lay  out.  For  those 
who  haven't,  here  is  why  Westwood  cannot  feel 
like  a  "college  town." 

Although  you  would  not  guess  from  the 
proximity  of  Westwood  to  the  campus,  the  vil- 
lage ofl'ers  very  little  to  its  "community."  This 
community,  which  is  composed  of  the  nearly 
60,000  students  and  staft"  who  stream  into 
UCLA  everyday,  is  separated  by  an  iron  curtain 
which  lies  somewhere  on  Le  Conte  Avenue.  It 
prevents  the  campus  and  Westwood  from  devel- 
oping a  symbiotic  relationship  similar  to  those 
found  at  many  other  schools.  \r\  this  sort  of  rela- 
tionship, the  students  offer  the  community  a 
large  market  and  the  students,  in  return,  have 
the  convenience  of  being  able  to  fulfill  their 
needs  simply  by  walking  across  the  street  from 
UCLA. 

Ettekal  is  a  third-year  business-economics  student 


The  lack  of  unity  is  a  problem  easily  traced 
to  both  sides  of  the  Le  Conte  dividing  line.  Yet," 
the  scales  seem  to  tip  toward  Westwood  as  the 
culprit  who  has  done  more  to  stunt  the  growth 
of  this  budding  relationship,  compared  to  the 
relatively  inactive  and  passive  UCLA  campus. 

Only  10  years  ago,  Westwood  was  a  thriving 
night  spot,  frequented  by  many  Angelinos, 
much  like  today's  Third  Street  Promenade  or 
Old  Town  Pasadena.  This  period  saw 
Westwood  businesses  fiourish  while  catering  to 
a  diverse  crowd  composed  of  families,  affluent 
westsiders,  teenagers,  UCLA  students  and 
eventually,  gangsters. 

The  boom  period  came  to  a  sudden  halt  with 
the  1988  killing  of  a  woman  outside  a  trendy 
restaurant.  The  overnight  end  of  Westwood's 
thriving  economy  ushered  in  a  period  of  failed 
attempts  at  wooing  back  the  crowds,  scared 
away  to  other  popular  destinations.  Each  of 
these  attempts  to  renew  the  village  aimed  to 
establish  Westwood  as  a  must-see  Los  Angeles 
spot(L.A.  Times,  "Westwood,  the  sequel," 
Aug.  4, 1996).  Yet  unlike  the  old  village,  the 
new  plans  included  very  few  visible  attempts  at 
integrating  UCLA's  enormous  student  body 
into  Westwood. 

The  Westwood  of  the  past  included  five  mar- 
kets (as  opposed  to  the  one  we  have  now),  a 
bowling  alley,  pizza  joints  and  something  incon- 
ceivable for  a  college  town:  a  bookstore.  The 
student-friendly  atmosphere  of  the  past  was 
replaced  by  plans  that  included  upscale  bou- 
tiques and  family  restaurants.  Why  not  cater  to 
the  thousands  strong  neighboring  student 
crowd  waiting  to  spend  money?  It  makes  sense 
to  target  UCLA  because  not  much  innovation 
is  needed  to  handle  crowds  that  need  the  basics 
such  as  coffee  shops,  markets,  eateries,  and 
trendy  clothing  store's.  This  resolves  the  prob- 


HINGY1  KHONG/Daily  Bf  cm 


lem  of  parking  and  perceived  crime  problems. 

While  efforts  such  as  the  Thursday  afternoon 
Farmer's  Market  and  the  blue  and  gold  motif 
on  Broxton  Avenue  are  very  welcome,  the 
empty  storefronts  need  to  be  filled.  I  admit  that 
the  problem  is  not  easily  solved,  but  Westwood 
merchants  and  especially  councilman  Mike 
Feuer  need  to  step  aside  by  revising  the  one 
piece  of  legislation  that  keeps  retailers  and 
spenders  out  of  Westwood. 

This  legislation,  known  as  the  Westwood 
Village  Specific  Plan,  dictates  how  Westwood 
may  develop,  while  preserving  the  character  of 
the  village.  Preservation  is  a  fine  idea,  but  it 


simply  stands  in  the  wayisf  progress  in  a  con-    • 
stantly  growing  and  developing  city  such  as  Los 
Angeles.  If  these  buildings  were  located  in  the 
middle  of  the  desert,  keeping  the  architecture    ■' 
would  not  displease  anybody  and  would  make  a 
fine  tourist  attraction.  But  thousands  of  square 
feet  of  prime  real  estate  remain  empty  in 
Westwood.  The  reactionaries  holding  back  the 
modernization  fiood  need  to  vacate  and  let      — 
somebody  fill  the  empty  space  instead  of  wait- 
ing for  the  perfect  tenants  to  come  along. 

Without  the  myriad  of  rules  governing  the 
placement  of  such  things  as  signs  and  outdoor 
tables,  a  merchant  looking  for  space  might  not 
be  scared  away.  Even  at  a  time  of  high  vacancy 
rates,  and  with  everybody  clamoring  for  a  new 
and  improved  village,  the  same  people  looking  , 
to  replace  "For  Lease"  signs  with  "Help 
Needed"  signs  are  busy  freeing  up  more  space. 
This  may  be  pure  optimism  on  Feuer's  part  and 
others  who  are  expecting  more  people  than 
there  is  space  to  house  them,  but  in  reality  this 
selectivity  is  what  keeps  Westwood  from  leav- 
ing its  stagnation  behind. 

The  ongoing  Duet  Restaurant  and  Nightclub 
fiasco,  which  led  to  its  closing,  exemplifies  the 
attitude  held  by  the  decision-makers  illustrating 
how  they  do  not  embrace  success  unless  it  neat- 
ly fits  into  their  concept  of  a  successful  village. 
This  is  one  reason  why  the  village  cannot 
become  the  sensation  it  once  was. 

Based  on  an  asinine  and  anachronistic  zon- 
ing law  and  with  help  from  the  support 
Westwood  Village  Specific  Plan,  dancing  in 
Westwood  is  only  allowed  if  approved  by  a  spe-  . 
cial  zoning  administrator.  Since  this  administra- 
tor, who  is  basically  the  dancing  god  of 
Westwood,  is  only  inftuenced  by  the  likes  of 

SceETTEKAlfpagel? 


Coundl  agenda  does  not  cater  to  majority  of  incoming  freshmen 


USAC*  First  impressions 
key  to  dissecting  politics 
behind  Welcome  Week 


By  J«son  R.  Krausc 

I'm  writing  in  response  to  com- 
ments made  in  Timothy  Kudo's  arti- 
cle, "Houston's  speech  ruffles  feath- 
ers" (Daily  Bruin,  Sept.  29)  Although 
I  'm  an  alumnus  (class  of  '99),  I  've 
been  following  the  Houston  cam- 
paign via  the  Daily  Bruin  since  it 
began  back  in  May.  Having  had  my 
interest  piqued  by  the  tension  sur- 
rounding Elizabeth  Houston's  elec- 
tion to  the  office  of  President  of 
USAC,  I  decided  to  attend  the  fresh- 

Krause  graduated  from  UCLA  in  1999 
with  a  degree  in  business  economics. 


man  convocation  to  hear  from 
Houston  directly. 

It  strikes  me  as  odd  that,  accord- 
ing to  Kudo,  "many  council  mem- 
bers did  not  attend  convocation." 
Indeed,  council  members,  whawere 
elected  to  represent  the  incoming 
freshmen,  weren't  there  to  greet  and 
support  them.  Not  a  great  first 
impression. 

Let  me  challenge  you  to  evaluate 
the  importance  and  impact  of  a  first 
impression.  Think  about  it.  You  only 
get  one  chance  to  make  a  first 
impression.  One  chance.  And, 
whether  or  not  it's  fair,  our  thoughts 
toward  others  throughout  the  course 
of  future  interactions  are  shaped  by 
that  first  impression.  Houston  made 
her  first  impression  at  the  freshman 
convocation.  Based  on  what  I  heard 
during  her  speech,  I  concluded  that 
she  values  racial  and  intellectual 
diversity,  personal  character  develop- 


ment, morally-based  decision  mak- 
ing, and  the  pursuit  of  truth. 

Similariy,  I  concluded  that  she 
despises  racism  (which  would  divide 
the  campus  community  along  color 
lines)  and  narrow,  self-serving  agen- 
das that  would  unfairly  promote  one 
campus  organization  over  another. 
These  conclusions  aren't  set  in  stone, 
but  they'll  serve  as  a  starting  point 
for  future  discussion. 

Whether  or  not  you  think  it's  fair 
for  me  to  draw  these  conclusions 
based  on  one  speech,  prepare  your- 
self for  the  "harsh"  reality  of  a  first 
impression. 

Using  the  "first  impression" 
framework,  I  want  to  share  my 
thoughts  on  the  proposed 
LGBT/Queer  Campus  Life  confer- 
ence slated  to  take  center-stage  dur- 
ing Freshman  Welcome  Week.  The 
contentious  issue  with  this  event  is 
not  homophobia,  nor  is  it  religious 


fanaticism.  The  primary  issue  is  the 
timing  and  appropriateness  of  an 
event  that  alienates  more  than  90  per- 
cent of  the  incoming  freshmen. 

In  Melody  Wang's  article 
"Council  looks  to  welcome  new  stu- 
dents," (Daily  Bruin,  Oct.  2),  USAC 
Internal  Vice  President  Elias  Enciso 
states  that  the  purpose  of  the  confer- 
ence is  to  let  all  students  know  what 
life  is  like  on  campus  for  gays  and  les- 
bians. He  added,  "It's  an  event  that 
caters  to  all  students." 

I  disagree. 

According  to  Webster's  dictio- 
nary, "cater"  is  defined  as  "seeking  to 
gratify  another's  desires."  I  submit  to 
you.  Enciso  is  forcing  USAC  to  put 
its  muscle  behind  this  Welcome 
Week  event,  not  because  it  benefits 
all  of  the  students,  but  because  it 
advances  his  own  agenda. 

I  agree  with  Houston  that  it  does- 
n't make  any  sense  for  USAC  to 


sponsor  an  event  that  addresses  one 
narrow  issue.  It  makes  even  less 
sense  in  light  of  knowing  that 
Enciso's  LGBT/Queer  Campus  Life 
program  was  "unanimously"  agreed 
upon  by  council  (with  the  exception 
of  Houston),  to  replace  Days  of 
Dialogue,  a  discussion  forum  wel- 
coming freshmen  to  voice  their  ideas 
and  concerns  regarding  campus  life  - 
and  student  issues. 

The  program.which  was  held  last 
year,  encouraged  new  students  with 
fresh  ideas  to  share  them  with  fellow 
classmates  and  student  government 
leaders  to  determine  some  important 
issues  USAC  should  address 
throughout  the  year.        ;  \ 

USAC  had  initially  proposed  to 
make  efficient  and  strategic  use  of 
their  Welcome  Week  activities  by 
demonstrating  to  the  student  body 

SeenUUSE,pagel6 


LETTER 


Uplifting  speech 
appreciateci 


I  read  the  article  "Houston's 
Speech  RufTles  Feathers"  (Daily 
Bruin,  Sept.  29)  and  was  immediate- 
ly outraged.  I  was  at  convocation 
(for  the  third  year  in  a  row),  and  I 
was  thrilled  by  the  speech  given. 
This  was  the  first  year  in  a  very  long 
time  that  there  was  no  Praxis  presi- 
dent shouting  at  the  podium,  con- 
demning the  school,  and  telling  peo- 
ple how  awful  the  administration  is. 

After  Houston's  speech  one  of 
my  friends  noted,  "This  is  the  first 
time  that  I  don't  want  to  kill  some- 
one after  convocation."  The  USAC 


president's  speech  has  scared 
incoming  freshmen  for  years,  and 
for  once  it  was  a  respectful,  uplifting 
speech.  I  welcome  the  change. 

I  would  also  like  to  express  my 
disappointment  with  select  mem- 
bers of  the  USAC  cabinet  who 
preach  tolerance,  and  then  attack 
Houston  as  "homophobic"  because 
of  religious  convictions.  It  is  ridicu- 
lously hypocritical  to  say  everyone 
has  to  be  accepting  of  everything, 
but  it  is  okay  to  insult  Christians 
because  of  what  they  believe. 

And  as  a  general  statement  to 
USAC,  I'd  just  like  to  say  that  I  am 


embarrassed  that  the  student  gov- 
ernment at  this  school  spends  so 
much  time  bickering  about  racial 
issues.  If  everyone  was  as  enlight- 
ened and  colorblind  as  they  pretend 
to  be,  then  they  would  not  spend  so 
much  lime  turning  everything  into 
spiteful,  bitter,  us-vs.-them  contro- 
versy. 

Most  of  the  people  on  this  cam- 
pus function  as  adults.  It's  a  shame 
that  the  "leaders"  on  campus  are 
setting  such  a  poor  example.  Not 
everything  is  about  race  and  preju- 
dice. You  are  USAC,  not  the 
ACLU. 

JcffHaie 

ThM-jfcar 

Ptitiaiisdcnce 


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CARBERRY       - 

From  page  14  !  C  ■  <  ^  ^ 

was  disturbed  by  them.  But  was  he 
really  conducting  an  argument  with 
the  chancellor?  It  seemed  like  they    ; 
were  work  ing  off  of  two  different 
prompts.  The  chancellor  was  address- 
ing what  lies  ahead  for  UCLA  and 
Fong  was  evaluating  how  campus 
demographics  would  play  out  ifi  the 
future.  Granted,  both  are  issues  that 
UCLA  will  be  facing,  but  the  last    " v^ 
thing  we  need  is  an  "us  vs.  them" 
mentality. 

I  originally  took  an  interest  and 
wrote  about  the  administration 
because  I  felt  that  in  this  large  univer- 
sity it  is  easy  to  lose  sight  of  what  our 
purposes  are  and  become  just  another 
number.  It  is  also  easy  to  let  the 
administration  take  on  the  role  of  a 
large  cloud  of  bureaucracy  that  can- 
not be  utilized  or  is  too  busy  to  make 
time  for  students  and  their  concerns. 
When  these  two  things  happen  we  get 
what  we  have:  the  protagonistic  stu- 
dents versus  the  evil  empire. 

But  we  all  need  to  remind  our- 
selves of  something  very  important: 
the  administration  is  composed  of 
incredibly  intelligent  people  and  who 
became  involved  in  education    ' 
because  they  like  students.  I'm  sure 
that  Chancellor  Carnesale's  having 
been  a  presidential  aide  and  an  expert 
in  nuclear  physics  makes  his  brain 
worth  a  lot  more  than  his  UC  salary. 
He  and  all  of  the  other  administrators 
chose  this  path  because  they  want  to 
work  with  us,  talk  to  us,  and  learn 
from  us.  I  have  heard  from  the  chan- 
cellor himself  that  he  cannot  do  his 
job  without  knowing  what  is  impor- 
tant to  us  -  and  that  he  values  our 
opinions  immensely. 

I  believe  him.  And  I  don't  think  we 
are  going  to  win  any  battles  for  affir- 
mative action  or  diversity  at  UCLA 
by  putting  the  administration  in  the 
other  comer  of  the  ring. 

Remember,  UCLA  is  much  big- 
ger than  any  of  us  and  it  serves  many 
roles.  Administrators  know  and  care 
about  the  declining  diversity  here  on 
campus.  They  would  like  to  see  it 
change,  but  thisis  a  very  political  sit- 
uation (as  Justin  Fong  pointed  out). 
I  know  that  we  would  like  them  to 
take  more  of  a  stand,  but  we  have  to 
view  the  big  guys  pulling  the  strings 
irin  different  way.  They  are  not  a 
roadblock  in  our  journey.  They  are 
more  like  a  freeway  onramp. 

We  can't  just  take  side  streets 
around  them,  bitch  about  how  the 
freeway  is  always  jammed  up  with 
traffic,  never  allowing  us  to  go  any- 
where, and  expect  to  get  to  our  desti- 
nation all  the  same.  We  need  to  uti- 
lize them.  If  you  want  to  talk  about 
how  wc  can  make  it  better,  then 
make  some  noise.  There  really  are 
eager  and  influential  ears  waiting  to 
listen. 


KRAUSE 

From  page  15 

their  genuine  desire  to  listen  and, 
ultimately,  address  issues  that  con- 
cern the  students  they  were  elected 
to  represent. 

It  follows  that  if  during  the  Days 
of  Dialogue,  freshmen  had  expressed 
genuine  interest  in  knowing  what  life 
is  like  on  campus  for  gays  and  les- 
bians, then  by  all  means  this  issue 
should  be  addressed  by  the  elected 
student  government.  But  the  fact 
that  USAC  has  voted  to  proceed 
with  a  Welcome  Week  program  that 
supports  the  overwhelming  minority 
damages  its  credibility  as  a  body  of 
leaders  elected  to  represent  the 
majority  interest  of  students. 

And  in  light  of  first  impressions, 
the  majority  of  freshmen  will  be 
forced  to  conclude  that  USAC  Is  out 
of  touch  with  their  Immediate  con- 
cerns and  simply  wants  to  promote 
its  own  agenda.  I  submit  to  you, 
USAC  is  already  doing  this  without 
the  support  of  their  president. 


i^"^^"'^' 


..■^' 


EnEKAL         - 

From  page  15 

Fetter  and  local  activists,  nobody  can 
enjoy  Sisqo's  "Thong  Song"  outside 
of  frat  parties  or  their  apartments. 

Duet  was  undoubtedly  one  of  the 
most  successful  businesses  in  the  vil- 
lage for  the  past  few  years,  but  this 
siiccess  scared  many  who  essentially 
did  not  like  the  crowds  that  poured 
in  for  the  weekly  salsa,  swing,  or  hip- 
-hop  dancing.  Week  after  week,  the 
■  LAPD  was  anonymously  called  in  to 
separate  the  men  and  women  who 
were  breaking  a  law  mirrored  by 
many  orthodox  or  militant  countries. 

While  fears  of  resurgent  violence 
are  somewhat  valid  (I  say  somewhat 
because  people  only  feared  the  gen- 
erally upscale  African  American  hip- 
hop  nights  and  not  the  weekly  swing 
dancing),  it  should  be  noted  that  the 
police  were  not  even  once  called  in 
for  any  drug  violations,  violence,  or 
other  unruly  behavior  at  Duet  (L.A. 
Weekly,  "Wcstwood  Can't  Dance," 
April  10, 1998). 


Those  who  have  visited 
other  college  towns 

will  undoubtedly 

recognize  the  lack  of 

unity  that  has  existed 

here  for  most  of  the 

past  10  years. 


Besides  taking  up  the  LAPD's 
precious  time,  crowds  looking  to 
spend  money  in  a  ghost  town  were 
told  to  leave.  This  apprehensive,  take 
no  risks  approach  to  growth  and 
development  will  not  elevate  the  vil- 
lage into  night  spot  stardom.  Instead, 
it  will  only  lead  to  further  isolation. 

Those  who  have  visited  other  col- 
lege towns  will  undoubtedly  recog- 
nize the  lack  of  unity  that  has  existed 
here  for  most  of  the  past  10  years.  A 
visit  to  New  York  University's 
Greenwich  Village  or  Columbia 's 
Momingside  Heights  reveals  a  quite 
lacking  factor  here  in  Westwood: 
community  appreciation  of  an  estab- 
lished institution. 

A  most  obvious  welcome  symbol 
for  any  business  near  a  college  is  the 
word  "university"  in  the  store  name. 
Renaming  a  few  stores  "University 
Newsstand"  or  "Univenity  Pizza" 
will  show  students  that  they  are  in  a 
friendly  environment  and  bring  their 
business  back  to  Westwood.  Instead, 
we  see  the  rise  of  restaurants  like 
Eurochow  which  cater  to  most 
groups  except  the  stereotypical  starv- 
ing college  student.  The  fact  that 
Baja  Fresh  and  Roll-Inn  Sandwiches 
(otljerwise  known  as  "Buck-fifty 
f)  are  thriving,  should  shed  some 
f  as  to  where  the  economic  sue- 
3f  Westwood  lies. 
I>r  the  village  to  step  into  the 
limelight  again,  or  for  it  to  even 
crawl  out  of  the  economic  gutter,  it 
needs  to  look  for  a  pragmatic 
approach  instead  of  a  supposedly 
well-planned  expansion  aimed  at  cer- 
tain societal  niches  guided  by  the  use- 
less Westwood  Village  Specific  Plan. 
The  people  responsible  for  develop- 
ment have  listened  to  every  voice  but 
those  of  the  students. 

Communication  channels  need  to 
be  built  that  bring  the  campus  into 
discussion  with  the  community  so 
that  our  needs  are  represented  in  the 
Westwood  model  of  the  future.  As 
soon  as  Westwood  stops  blocking 
these  channels.  UCLA  students  need 
to  stop  sitting  by  the  wayside  waiting 
for  the  village  to  miraculously 
become  a  huge  hangout  full  of  bars, 
clubs,  and  places  to  eat. 

Otherwise,  the  iron  curtain 
between  UCLA  students  and 
Westwood  will  only  become 
strodfer. 


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Honk  if  you  like  Barenaked  Ladies 

A  new  rockumentary  about  the  Barenaked 
Ladies  shows  the  band's  evolution  from 
Canadian  cult  success  to  Ameriun  main- 
stream popularity.  ^  :       '     : 

Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


A&EontheWeb 

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Website:     ;;,'> 
www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

,..-;;  Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


niiramax,  uittti  Oscar-uiinning  screenuirtters  Ben  Affleck 

and  matt  Damon,  uiill  be  gluing  one  aspiring  fllmmaiier  tlie 

chance  to  meke  an  odglnal  mouie  on  a  $1  million  budget 


By  EmSia  Hwang 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


Ben  Affleck  (left)  and  Matt  Damon,  shown  here  In  'Good  Will  Hunting," are  letting  an  unknown 
which  they  will  star  in.  This  movie-making  process  will  be  shown  "Real  TV  style  on  HBO. 


Mtramax  Flms 

writer  direct  his  own  screenplay. 


ffc  are  filming  a  documentary  TV  xries  in  this 
room.  Your  presence  here  acknowledges  your  consent 
to  he  videotaped,  interviewed  and  voice  recorded  for 
a  television  series  produced  hy  Mirtmux  and  promo- 
tion there  of. 

The  cameras  have  already  began  railing  for  an 
HBO  series  chronicling  the  experience  of  a  first- 
time  filmmaker  slated  to  air  beginniag  January 
2002.  At  the  Four  Seasons  Hotel  in  Beverly  Hills,  a 
television  crew  crowds  around  Ben  Affleck  and 
Matt  Damon  as  they  discuss  their  latest  joint  ven- 
ture.     -  ' 

The  Academy  Award-winning  writers  of  "Good 
Will  Hunting,"  along  with  Miramaw  Films,  are  giv- 
ing the  "greenlighf  to  the  winner  of  an  Internet- 
based  contest  in  which  one  aspiring  filramaker  will 
be  chosen  to  produce  his  or  her  original  screenplay 
with  a>]  million  budget. 

The  movie-making  process,  from  the  submission 
of  the  screenplay  through  production  and  the  even- 
tual release  of  the  final  product,  will  be  chronicled 
in  a  documentary-style  series. 

"We  wish  there  was  something  like  tkis  when  we 
were  trying  to  break  through,"  Damon  said. 

Through  Oct.  22,  amateur  filmmakers  can  sub- 
mit original  screenplays  electronioally  to  the 
"Grcenlight"  project's  Web  site.  The  winner  of  the 
contest  will  be  announced  on  March  I,  2001  and 
will  get  to  direct  the  film  based  on  his  or  her  screen- 


play. 

While  Affleck  and  Damon  will  executive-pro- 
duce the  movie,  they  do  not  decide  which  filmmak- 
er will  ultimately  receive  the  greenlight. 

"To  put  your  own  screenplay  on  (the  Web  site), 
you  have  to  read  three  oUners  and  you  have  to  cover 
them  and  critique  them,"  Damon  said. 

Contestants  will  by  obliged  to  read  and  review 
other  screenplays  in  competition  and  finalists  will 
be  chosen,  in  part,  based  on  the  coverage  results. 

"It's  a  democratization  of  the  process  of  decid- 
ing who  gets  to  make  a  movie  and  who  doesn't," 
Affleck  said.  "The  people  who  decide  who  gets  to 
make  movies  are  very  few." 

According  to  Affleck,  young  filmmakers  may 
find  it  difflcult  to  break  into  an  industry  in  which 
only  a  handful  of  companies  makes  most  of  the  stu- 
dio movies,     i 

Although  there  will  only  be  one  winner,  Damon 
hopes  Uiat  many  aspiring  filmmakers  will  gain  expo- 
sure as  other  major  studios  cover  the  screenplays. 
He  anticipates  that  major  studios  will  also  be  cover- 
ing the  non-winning  screenplays  posted  on  the  site. 

In  addition  to  giving  rookie  writers  exposure, 
Damon  sees  the  "Greenlight"  project  as  an  oppor- 
tunity to  use  new  technology  to  exchange  ideas. 

"The  idea  is  really  to  create  a  community  of  v«-it- 
ers  knd  people  interested  in  film  who  can  look  at 
each  other's  work  and  trade  ideas,"  Damon  said. 

"(They)  aren't  bound  by  where  they  live  and 


Se«aKBIUaiT,pa9c21 


V* 


;'. 


JASON  CHEN/Ddly  Brum  Scfitor  Stiff 


'Cuckoo'  revival  won't  drive  audiences  crazy 

THEATER^    PrnHimtinn  ic  the  nHffinal  cmrv  u/itKnut  nr^.,:^:^..      r...  .u.  l-h r    .,      ...  ^ 


THEATER;  ProducUon  is 
good,  but  does  nothing 
fresh  with  known  story 


By  Barbara  McGuirc 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  term  "cuckoo"  is  often  used  to 
describe  an  individual  who  appears 
to  not  quite  be  all  there,  and  the  char- 
acters of  "One  Flew  Over  the 
Cuckoo's  Nest"  seem  to  have  lost 
their  marbles  mid-fiight. 

Currently  onstage  at  the  Stella 
Adier  Theatre  in  Hollywood  through 
Oct.  15,  "One  Flew  Over  the 
Cuckoo's  Nest,"  Ken  Kesey's  tale  of 
patients  rebelling  against  conformity 
in  a  mental  institution,  proves  to  be  a 
workable  story  in  literature,  film  and 
theater. 

The  new  production  stays  true  to 


the  original  story  without  providing 
any  drastic  changes.  Randle  Patrick 
McMurphy,  played  by  Rick 
Reardon,  is  still  eccentric,  rebellious 
and  loudmouthed,  Chief  "Broom" 
Bromden  is  still  the  dark,  silent  type, 
and  Nurse  Ratched,  well-played  by 
Glenda  Morgan  Brown,  is  still  fright- 
eningly  strict. 

This  production,  however,  has 
something  which  other  versions  may 
lack  -  a  heartfelt  history. 

Actor  Robert  McCuller  has 
dreamed  about  taking  part  in  the 
play  since  first  reading  the  novel. 
Now,  his  dreams  are  fulfilled 
through  his  role  ^*-eh^f  Bromden. 
One  look  at  McCuller  and  it's  no 
Nvonder  he  wanted  to  play  Chief 
Bromden. 

Not  only  is  Chief  Bromden  an 
instrumental  player  in  the  tale  whose 
unconventional  ideas  on  society  res- 
onate to  this  day,  but  McCuller  also 


fiu  the  bill  perfectly.  He  is  a  tall, 
imposing  man  who  brings  Chief 
Bromden  to  life  with  his  perfor- 
mance. 

McCuller  isn't  the  only  outstand- 
ing actor  in  the  show.  Mark  Schrier 
impressively  portrays  Billy  Bibbit,  a 
stuttering,  simple-minded  man  who 
fears  his  mother.  Schrier  performs 
exceptionally  well,  winning  the  audi- 
ence's sympathy  when  he  begs  Nurse 
Ratched  not  to  tell  his  mother  of  his 
misbehavior. 

Additionally,  Brown's  perfor- 
mance of  Nurse  Ratched  is  as  terrify- 
ing as  Jack  Nicholson's  performance 
in  the  1975  movie.  Not  only  does  she 
use  her  powers  of  intimidation  to 
scare  the  members  of  the  ward  into 
cooperation,  but  also,  just  as  Schrier 
moves  the  audience  to  tears.  Brown 
riles  them  into  anger  and  frustration 
with  her  constant  manipulation. 

She  appears  to  be  an  evil  woman 


who  isn't  really  trying  to  help 
patients  get  well,  but  actually  wants 
to  make  them  feel  guilty  for  their  dif- 
ferences and  problems.  Ratched  suc- 
cessfully manipulates  Billy  into  back- 
stabbing  McMurphy,  who  has  done 
more  for  the  patients  than  their  doc- 
tors. The  result  is  shocking,  as 
McMurphy,  who  enters  the  ward 
seemingly  sane,  trying  to  dodge  a 
prison  sentence,  receives  treatment 
usually  reserved  for  the  most  severe- 
ly psychotic  patients. 

Aiding  the  show  is  an  incredible 
set  that  looks  as  though  set  designer 
Ken  G.  Nakamura  simply  stole  a 
wing  from  a  real  mental  hospital  and 
placed  it  in  the  theater. 

The  nurse's  station  has  a  working 
microphone,  in  addition  to  a  utility 
closet,  rest  room  and  two  doors. 
Each  of  these  has  an  opening  that 
does  not  simply  lead  to  a  backstage 
area,  but  actually  has  it's  own  little 


room  into  which  actors  can  retreat, 
resulting  in  a  more  believable  perfor- 
mance. When  someone  goes  into  the 
bathroom  it  actually  looks  as  though 
they  are  going  into  a  stall,  instead  of 
simply  walking  backstage. 

Though  the  novel  was  written 
almost  40  years  ago.  the  themes  of 
"One  Flew  Over  the  Cuckoo's  Nest" 
are  still  socially  relevant  and  easHy 
understood.  The  audience  is  remind- 
ed how  the  differences  from  one  par- 
son to  the  next  are  actually  good 
things  and  help  make  the  world  col- 
orful. 

Though  entertaining  and  mean-, 
ingful,  the  theatrical  production  oil 
"One  new  Over  the  Cuckoo's  Nest"; 
may  not  be  the  best  thing  for  oae 
who  remembers  the  storyline  from 
when  they  read  the  novel  and  saw  the 
movie  in  high  school. 


S«ffCUamkpa9e22 


An  exuberant  Randle  Patrick  McMurphy  (Ride  lUarclon,  right)  first  greets  the 
hospital  to  which  he  has  been  admitted. 


Cuckoo'i  NM  Aeducltom 


patients  of  the  memal 


»  ( It  It 

'  i  1(1    • 


/  Jllil  \  'l±iil*\        '<! 


Don  Antonlos  Pizzeria  is  located  on  11 36  Westwood  Blvd. 


PHy^SHARMA 


Don  Antbnios  provides 
delicious,  cheap  dining 


RESTAURANT:  Westwood 
eatery's  tasty  food  rivaled 
only  by  excellent  service 


By  Leila  Mobayen 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Anyone  who  has  lived  in 
Westwood  for  more  than  one  week 
has,  at  one  point  or  another,  received 
a  filer  for  Don  Antonios  pizza  under 
their  door.  Most  likely,  these  pleas  to 
consume  cheap  Italian  food  have 
evoked  the  image  of  just  that:  cheap, 
and  thus  bad,  food. 

The  reality  of  Don  Antonios  is 
quite  difTerent.  Anyone  in  search  of 
an  affordable  yet  fairly  authentic 
Italian  eating  experience  need  look 
no  further  than  this  quaint  Westwood 
pizzeria. 

Located  on  Westward  Boulevard 
between  Lindbrook  and  Kinross, 
Don  Antonios  is  a  relatively  painless 
walk  from  campus.  This  little  restau- 
rant is  dark  and 
cozy,  with 

attractive  little 
red-and-white- 
checkered  table- 
cloths, definitely 
giving  it  a  gen- 
uine old-world 
Italian  feel. 
There  are  also 
some  tables  on 
the  sidewalk  for 
all  those  who 
either  desire 
fresh  air  or  are 
inclined  to  peo- 
ple-watch while 

eating.  This  place  ofTcrs  Italian  home 
cooking  at  near-fast  food  prices;  the 
prices  border  on  amazing  consider- 
injg  how  good  the  food  really  is. 

Although  Italian  food  has  never 
been  famous  for  being  low  fat  or  low 
in  carbohydrates,  Don  Antonios 
does  offer  a  low  fat  pizza,  topped 
with  PoIly-0  Non-Fat  Mozzarella, 
garlic,  fresh  roma  tomatoes,  and 
basil. 

To  counter  the  typical  meal  loaded 
with  thick  saiices  and  heavy  cheese, 
Don  Antonios  menu  has  a  variety  of 
salads,  including  Caesar, 

Mediterranean,  Antip^sto,  and  Don 
Antonios  own  house  sptciality. 

Don  Antonios  does  not  cater  to 
fans  of  fancy  dressings;  Italian  and 
ranch  art  the  only  choices  to  be 
found,  but  the  salads  are  still  great.  A 
regular  salad  runs  from  $2.50  to 
$3.50,  and  a  large  runs  from  $3.95  to 


$6.25. 

The  restaurant  offers  a  number  of 
different  lunch  specials  including 
pizza,  hot  submarine  sandwiches, 
and  calzone,  along  with  a  salad  and  a 
soda,  all  for  under  six  dollars. 

Lunch  specials  are  available  from 
11:00  a.m.  to  3:00  p.m.  One  giant 
slice  of  cheese  pizza  costs  $3.99,  but 
its  "giant"  label  is  no  exaggeration. 

A  small  pasta,  complete  with  zesty 
marinara  sauce  and  a  soft  breadstick, 
is  a  bargain  at  $4.99.  A  variety  of 
unique  sandwiches,  such  as  eggplant 
parmigiana,  BBQ  chicken  and  Italian 
sausage  and  peppers,  are  available,  as 
well  as  old  favorites  like  turkey  and 
Italian  cold  cuts.  Sandwiches  fall  into 
the  $4  -  $6  range. 

The  salad  is  large  for  a  starter  and 
is  dressed  with  a  uniquely  tangy  sauce 
that  compliments  it  well.  They  have  a 
similar  dinner-special  menu  as  well. 

The    food    comes    in    sizeable 
(although  not  enormous)  portions 
and  is  prepared  rather  quickly.  A 
guest  can  begin  his  or  her  meal  with  a 
variety  of  appe- 
tizers, including 
a  garlic  bread 
that    is    quite 
tasty.       Other 
unusual  starters 
are  Don 

Antonios 
famous   spiced 
garlic       bread 
with       cheese, 
and  new  items 
like         freshly 
baked  Foccacia 
bread  and  moz- 
zarella     mari- 
nara. 
The  Bruschetta  Checca  may  not  be 
familiar  to  many  students,  but  this 
satisfying  dish  is  a  welcome  addition 
to  the  menu.  Bruschetta  checca  con- 
sists of  juicy  tomato,  zesty  basil,  and 
fresh  garlic  on  toast.  The  spinach  cal- 
zone is  served  right  out  of  the  oven, 
and  could  rival  that  of  any  restaurant. 

For  dessert  there  is  not  a  whole  lot    - 
of  variety:  the  only  option  is  tiramisu. 
Nevertheless,  it  is  definitely  an  excel-     . 
lent  piece  of  rich  chocolate  pastry  for   . 
those  who  enjoy  such  delicacies.  The 
menu  entices  diners  to  ask  about  the 
mysterious  "Dessert  of  the  day,"    .. 
although  no  indication  is  given  of 

what  this  strange  surprise  might '~ 

entail. 

The  coffee  is  also  exceptional, 
making  it  worth  your  while  to  stay  for 
dessert.  Don  Antonios  boasts  the 


VU  WAFOJiUy  Uruln  UnJor  SulT 


Sec 


page  22 


'  f  '  *  >  '  ■  I  i  '  *  '  ,  t  t  f  t  t  i  t  f  f  I 
I  II II  i  f  t  III  \  ( *  I  I  I  f  t  I  i  t  I 

III    ')'    I'l-i'T    ,  ,>,■,,•,-,■■,,,,, 


I     f     (     I     I      I  I 


i**- 


"W" 


20       Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


DaHy  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


A&E  BRIEFS 


Chris  Elliot  plays 'Mark 
ofZorro'.  ,' /^:  ■•^'■■■■-■^■"^ 


Celebrated  pianist  Chris  Elliot  will  accom- 
pany the  classic  1920  silent  film  "The  Mark  of 
Zorro"  at  7:30  p.m.  on  Oct.3  at  Royce  Hall. 
Elliot  is  known  for  his  performances  of  classic 
film  scores,  as  well  as  his  recitals  on  BBC 
Radio  and  at  the  Hollywood  Bowl.  "Mark  of 
Zorro"  stars  Douglas  Fairbanks  as  the  Spanish 
landowner-turned-masked-crime-fighter  Don 
Diego  Vega  (a.k.a.  Zorro)  who  fights  the  tyran- 
ny of  Napoleonic  invaders  on  the  behalf  of  the 
oppressed  masses.  This  is  the  first  of  a  series  of 
organ  recitals  by  different  organists,  scheduled 
throughout  the  school  year.  For  tickets,  call 
the  Central  Ticket  Office  at  (310)  825-2101. 


Dancers  perform  at 
Royce  Hall 

The  David  Parsons  Dance  Project  per- 
forms at  Royce  Hall  Oct.  6-7  at  8  p.m. 
Regarded  as  one  of  the  premiere  dancers  of  his 
generation,  Parsons'  works  have  received 
praise  for  their  elaborate  choreography  and 
refined  dancing. 

The  program  includes  well-known  works  by 
Parsons  as  well  as  a  West  Coast  premiere  by 
Robert  Battle.  For  ticketing  information,  call 
the  Central  Ticket  OfTlce  at  (310)825-2101. 

Bergman  and  Morrow 
to  appear 

Singer/songwriter  Alan  Bergman  performs 
selected  songs  from  his  repertoire  with  award- 
winning  actress  Karen  Morrow  Oct. 7  at  Ostin 
Hall.   Bergman  is  the  recipient  of  three 


■iT-. 


.■■■/ 


Choreographer  David  Parsons  leads  the  Parsons  Dance  Company. 


UCLA  Petloimmg  Arti 


Academy  Awards,  four  Emmys  and  two 
Grammys,  for  scores  to  such  notable  films  as 
"The  Way  We  Were"  and  "Yentl."  Morrow 
has  performed  on  Broadway,  appearing  in  "I 
Had  A  Ball,"  "Joyful  Noise,"  "I'm  Soloman" 
and  the  award-winning  "Drood."  For  ticket- 
ing information,  contact  the  Central  Ticket 
Office  at  (310)825-2101. 


Live  Dangerously 

"Live  Dangerously"  is  on  display  at  tf»e 
UCLA  Hammer  Museum,  curated  by  Sylvia 
Lavin,  Chair  of  the  Department  of 
Architecture  and  Urban  Design.  The  show  fea- 
tures the  work  of  faculty  members  Dana  Cuff, 
Wes  Jones,  Greg  Lynn,  Thorn  Mayne,  and 
Dagmar  Richter,  among  others.  Offering 
designs  for  life  in  the  twenty-first  century,  the 
show  concentrates  on  ways  to  integrate  new 
technology  into  the  home,  modem  and  future 
manufacturing  and  the  shifting  relationship 


between  public  and  private  space.  The  exhibit 
runs  Oct.4  -  Jan.7,  2000.  For  information  call 
(310)443-7000. 


'Un-Private  House'  on 
display  at  Hammer 

The  UCLA  Hammer  Museum  wilT  be  run- 
ning "The  Un-Private  House,"  a  study  of  26 
avant-garde  houses  designed  by  a  group  of 
international  architects,  from  Oct.4  -  Jan.7, 
2000.  Organized  by  Terence  Riley,  Chief 
Curator,  and  the  Department  of  Architecture 
and  Design  at  the  Museum  of  Modem  Art  in 
New  York,  "The  Un-Private  House"  features 
contributors  Shigeru  Ban,  Michael  Bell,  and 
Preston  Scott  Cohen.  For  more  information, 
call  (310)443-7000. 


Compiled  by  Michael  Rosen-Molina,  Daily  Bruin 
Senior  Staff. 


Radiohead  wants 
fans  to  take  time 
IP  really  listin  to 
their  new  album  i 

,  MUSIC  MTV2,  several  radio  i<i 
stations  choose  to  play  CD  ini,  • 
full  as  part  of4)aiid's  strategy' 


By  David  Bauder 

The  Associated  Press 

For  nearly  an  hour  recently,  the  video 
channel  MTV2  aired  a  film  of  something 
many  viewers  had  probably  never  seen:  a 
record  album  spinning  on  a  turntable,  the 
needle  inching  toward  the  center. 

To  accompany  the  visual,  MTV2  played 
"Kid  A,"  a  new  album  by  the  rock  band 
Radiohead  that  arrives  in  stores  Tuesday. 
N  01  just  one  song,  but  1 0  of  them .  The  whole 
album. 

About  a  dozen  radio  stations  are  also 
playing  the  album  from  stari  to  finish. 

The  approach,  a  quaint  throwback  to  the 
days  of  giant  headphones  and  shag  carpets, 
is  a  sign  of  respect  for  Radiohead  and,  per- 
haps, of  a  backlash  in  the  music  industry 
against  short  attention  spans  and  the  domi- 
nance of  hit  singles. 

Radiohead  is  encouraging  listeners  to 
treat  the  album  as  a  unified  piece  of  art.  They 
aren't  releasing  a  single,  or  making  a  video 
to  accompany  any  of  its  songs. 

"We  don't  have  time  like  we  used  to,"  said 
Chris  Hufford,  Radiohead's  manager. 
"There  are  certain  things  that  are  great  for 
moving  fast.  But  Radiohead  is  all  about  tak- 
ing things  slowly  and  getting  people  into  it 


IWI)r  BnAi  Arts  t  Entertaimncnt 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000       21 


^w 


'Big  BrotKer'  bbne  finally  comes  to  Irid 


/ 


No  Fees! 
No  Shipping  Involved! 

BooksOnAuction.com  is  a  FREE 

student  to  student  auction  site 

for  used  textbooks.  There  are 

no  fees  to  sell  or  buy  books 

and  no  shipping  involved. 

To  learn  more  visit 

BooksOnAtiction,C€nn . 


I  volunteer") 


HAIRCUTTING 


WESTWOOD 


_  @  UCLA's  Aquarium  in  Santa  Monica! 

The  ,    .  -  c.y'-    ■       '■;•■ 

UCLA  Ocean 
Discovery  Center 

is  looking  for 
energetic  and 

enthusiastic  people  who  love 

the  ocean  and  want  to  help  conserve  It. 


We  are  an  education  aquarium 

that  offers  the  general  public  and  school 

kids  the  chance  to  see,  touch  and 

learn  atx)ut  the  Santa  Monrca  Bay  marine 

life.  Volunteers  enjoy  great  benefits. 

Internships  also  available. 

Must  t>e  16  years  of  age  or  older  to  volunteer 


d6^ 


Tues-Sat  9-7 

•  Free  Consultation    •  Perms/Bodywaves 
•  Colorist  on  staff 

1st  time  clients  15%  off  student  rate 

824-2711  ^1001  Gayley 

(NEXT  TO  COFFEE  BEANi 


Orientation:  Octot}er3, 2000 

6.-00  to  8.iX)  p.m. 

Training:  October  10,12,17,19,24,26. 

UCLA  Extension  credit  optional. 


/oTSro'"*"'®  information,  contact  the  Volunteer  Coordinator  at 
(310)393-6149  ext.  223  •  kocain@ucla.edu  •  www.odc.ucla.edu 


Volunf  r  Opportunltl«» 

•  DOCENTS 
•AQUARiSTS 
•OFFICE  WORK 

•  MULTI-MEDU  DESIGNERS 
•FUNDRAI8INQ 


T>»UCtA  Oo«n  Dl«w«y  C««w  is  loc««»  b«ow  the  eawuid  UTKl^r  lt»  Sa^ 


TELEVISION:  Houseguest 
Eddie,  cancer  survivor, 
finally  takes  grand  prize 


By  Judy  Lin 

:The  Associated  Press    .  „  ,    . 

V  "  ■  ■  ••;.""  -.'■^. '  >■ 

_  The  88-day  endurance  test  i$  over. 
Eddie  McGee,  the  blunt  New  Yorker 
who  lost  1)is  lert  leg  to  cancer,  won  a 
half  million  dollars  as  the  sUrvivor  on 
the  CBS  reality  show,  "Big  Brother." 

Fans  of  the  show  overwhelmingly 
chose  the  University  of  Texas- 
Arlington  student  over  the  other  two 
remaining  contestants,  New  York 
lawyer  Curtis  Kin  and  Californian 
Josh  Souza,  in  a  live  telecast  on 
Friday. 

"Ft's  wild,"  he  said  after  learning  he 
won.  "My  heart  is  pumping  so  hard.  I 
have  to  remind  myself  to  breathe." 

He  outlasted  nine  other  contestants 
who  entered  the  specially-built  house 
July  5  on  a  California  soundstage. 
Their  every  move  was  followed  by 
cameras  and  microphones,  with  the 
frequently  dull  results  airing  as  much 
as  six  nights  a  week  on  CBS. 

Souza,  who  gave  McGee  a  warm 
hug,  won  $  100,000  as  the  second-place 
Tmisher.  Kin  won  SSO,000. 

The  brash  McGee,  a  wheelchair 
basketball  star,  alienated  some  of  his 
fellow  contestants  with  his  blunt  talk 
and  determination.  He  said  Friday, 
though,  that  he  never  expected  to  win. 
,  McGee  said  he  hoped  to  pay  off 


some  debts  and  help  his  brother  with 
his  college  education. 

"I'm  going  to  look  forward  to  hav- 
ing a  real  great  holiday  season,"  he 
said. 

All  10  contestartts  attended  a  rau- 
cous post-show  celebration.  Some  of 
4he  housemates  said  they  were  happy 
Eddie  won  -  even  if  they  weren't 
pulling  for  him. 

"I  couldn't  have  asked  for  anything 
better  for  anyone  else.  He  has  a  dis- 
ability but  he  doesn't  look  at  it  that 
way.  I  admire  that.  He  doesn't  let  any- 
one get  him  down,"  said  George,  the 
show's  "Chicken  Man." 

George,  who  like  the  other  also- 
rans,  would  not  give  out  his  last  name 
Friday,  came  to  the  post-show  party 
dressed  as  a  chicken,  his  hair  dyed 
orange.  He  said  he's  looking  for  a  job. 

As  the  contestants  shed  tears  and 
shared  hugs,  the  first  person  voted  out 
said  he,  too,  was  giad  to  be  back. 

The  argumentative  William 
Collins,  28,  had  set  the  tone  early  as 
the  house's  angry  young  man  before 
he  was  bounced. 

"This  is  the  last  hurrah  and  for 
everyone  to  say  goodbye  to  each 
other,"  he  said.  "This  is  my  chance  to 
show  that  I  wasn't  the  mad,  angry,  bad 

guy" 

It  brings  to  an  end  a  series  that 
never  proved  as  successful  in  the 
United  States  as  it  did  in  other  cour>- 
tries,  largely  because  American  view- 
ers never  warmed  to  the  cast  members 
and  were  bored  with  their  daily  lives. 

While  a  critical  bust,  "Big  Brother" 


was  a  modest  fmancial  success  for 
CBS.  Ovfcr  its  run,  the  show's  average 
of  9.1  million  viewers  was  9  percent 
higher  than  summer  reruns  fared  in 
the  same  time  slots  a  year  ago.  But  it 
did  much  better  among  young  viewers 
that  advertisers  love  and  CBS  often 
can't  attract. 

The  more  interesting  contestants 
were  voted  out  quickly.  First  to  go  was 
Collins,  who  engaged  the  gang  in 
provocative  racial  discussions  and  was 
later  found  to  be  a  member  of  the  New 
Black  Panther  Party  for  Self-Defense. 

Hoping  for  romance  and  conflict, 
producers  found  little  of  cither.  The 
only  kiss  shared  by  McGee  in  a  high- 
light reel  shown  Friday  was  with  a 
dog. 

Earlier  this  month,  producers  tried 
to  entice  someone  to  leave  the  house 
with  an  offer  of  $50,000.  They  hoped 
to  replace  a  less  exciting  contestant 
with  an  attractive  and  combative 
young  blonde  woman,  but  none  of  the 
occupants  took  the  bait. 

At  one  point,  six  remaining  house- 
guests  talked  about  walking  out  en 
masse.  That  idea  fizzled,  too. 

When  the  fmal  female  contestant, 
former  Seattle  beauty  contest  winner 
Jamie,  was  voted  out  on  Wednesday, 
viewers  were  left  to  choose  by  tele- 
phone vote  among  the  three  men. 

Still,  CBS  and  the  show's  producers 
were  reportedly  discussing  a  second 
"Big  Brother"  run  for  sometime  next 
year.  Networks  are  trying  to  stockpile 
reality  shows  in  anticipation  of  a 
potential  actors  strike  next  year. 


I.i  1 '.■;.! 


our 


HMtAMAX         HDO 


^.  o  p 


xeraa?' 


*"«T'iJ» 


GREENUGHT 

From  page  18 

aren't  bound  by  the  fact  that  they 
don't  have  access  into  these  four  or 
five  offices  that  can  green-light 
their  movies."  Damon  added. 

The  Web  site  will  feature  oppor- 
tunities for  people  interested  in 
writing  and  filmmaking  to  network 
and  chat. 

"A  lot  of  times  you  feel  like 
you're  on  an  island  as  a  writer," 
Damon  said. 

For  Damon  and  Affleck,  collab- 
orating on  "Good  Will  Hunting" 
allowed  them  to  bounce  ideas  off 
each  other.  However,  for  other 
writers  who  may  be  geographically 
isolated,  the  "Greenlight"  Web  site 
will  enable  them  to  have  access  to 
other  screenplays,  as  well  as  pro- 


vvww^foj(:fCigfeeriliyIu.,orr. 

vide  them  with  a  forum  to  talk  and 
exchange  ideas  and  advice. 

"Not  everyone's  movie  will  get 
made,"  Affleck  said.  "At  the  very 
least  you  get  feedback." 

He  expects  that  the  site  will  help 
to  create  a  community  of  writers, 
in  addition  to  inspiring  first-time 
filmmakers  who  lack  accreditation 
or  practical  experience  in  the  field. 

"It's  a  de-mystification  of  the 
process  (of  filmmaking),"  Affleck 
said. 

Since  Hollywood  can  be  intimi- 
dating or  simply  impossible  for 
most  young  filmmakers  to  break 
into,  Damon  hopes  to  create  a  por- 
tal of  access  for  writers  who  have 
interesting  ideas. 

"There's  also  so  much  hocus 
pocus  in  filmmaking  that  hopefully 

SeeGltEENUfiHT,pa9e22 


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GREENLIGHT       A^ 

From  page  21  ■   ,  •  .^   .  ;  A 

the  whole  project  will  be  enlightening 
to  young  filmmakers  out  there," 
Damon  said.  "You're  eliminating  a 
lot  of  the  theory  and  you're  actually 
seeing  practically  wh^t  il  takes  (to 
make  a  movie)."  '■/.:■" 

While  the  Web  site  gives  users 
access  to  numerous  screenplays,  the 
"Greenlight"  show  will  document  the 
highs  and  lows  of  making  an  indepen- 
dent movie  for  $1  million. 

"Part  of  this  is  to  show  what  it 
takes  to  make  a  movie  for  that 
amount  of  money,",  Damon  said. 
"And  we  think  we're  going  to  help  a 
lot  more  people  if  you  show  what  it 
takes  to  make  a  movie  for  this  kind  of 
money,  the  sacrifices  you  have  to 
make." 

While  they  have  not  decided  on  the 
exact  format  of  the  TV  series,  or  how 
they'll  augment  the  process  of  docu- 
menting, the  duo  expects  that  the 


movie-making  process  will  make  for 
good  entertainment  on  its  own. 

"In  some  ways,  a  documentary  is 
always  going  to  be  more  interesting 
than  a  fictional  work  because  of  the 
fact  that  you  know  it's  real  because 
you're  watching  real  human  drama  as 
opposed  to  manufactured  drama," 
Affleck  said. 

By  giving  the  "greenlight"  to  a 
total  unknown.  Damon  hopes  the 
project  will  help  the  next  Wes 
Anderson  or  Paul  Thomas  Anderson 
gain  access  and  understanding  into  an 
otherwise  privileged  and  enigmatic 
industry. 

"It's  a  response  to  really  believing 
that  there  are  great  writers  out  there 
and  that  they  really  don't  have  access 
and  we're  going  to  miss  them," 
Damon  said.  "This  is  the  biggest  kind 
of  net  that  we  can  throw  out  there." 


TV:  To  participate  in  the  "Greenlight* 
contest  or  to  find  out  more  about  the 
project  check  out  www.projectgreen- 
light.com. 


Cuckoo's  N«t  Produciions 


Candy  Starr  (Nancy  Calabrese)  is  greeteci  by  Martirii  (Christopher 
Bosen),  Billy  Bibbit  (Mark  Schrier),  and  McMurphy  (Ride  Reardon). 


CUCKOO 

From  page  18 

Enjoyable  for  fanatics  as  well  as 
those  who  haven't  been  exposed  to 
the  story  before,  the  play  doesn't 
offer  any  unexpected  twists  or 
reworkings,  which  makes  it  trust- 
worthy and  a  great  production,  but 
potentially  repetitive. 

Besides  McMurphy's  sideburns, 
which  are  obviously  fake  and  don't 
match  his  hair  color,  the  acting,  cos- 
tumes and  set  are  flawless  and  make 
for  a  well-spent  evening. 

The  classic  story  is  paid  homage 
to  through  a  well-rehearsed  and  laid 


out  production  and  results  in  such 
realism  that  one  feels  as  if  they  are 
actually  looking  in  at  the  happenings 
at  a  mental  ward,  instead  of  watch- 
ing a  theatrical  production. 


THEATER:  "One  Flew  Over  the 
Cuckoo's  Nest"  is  currently  showing  at 
the  Stella  Adier  Theatre,  6773 
Hollywood  Blvd.,  through  Oct.  IS. 
Shows  are  Thurs.  through  Sat.  at  8 
p.m.,  with  a  3  p.m.  showing  on  Sun. 
Tickets  are  $  1 0  for  Thurs.  and  Sun.  and 
$15  for  Fri.  and  Sat.  and  can  be  pur- 
chased by  calling  (323)  655-TKTS.  Half 
price  tickets  are  also  available  for  stu- 
dents and  seniors  with  ID  15  minutes 
before  curtain. 


DONANTONiO 

From  page  19 

finest  Torrefazione  Italia  coffees, 
but,  even  without  the  fancy  name,  the 
coffee  stands  out  above  the  competi- 
tion. 

Although  the  food  at  Don 
Antonios  is  good,  and  the  prices  are 
even  better,  the  factor  that  should  put 


this  eatery  high  on  your  list  is  their 
exemplary  customer  service. 

No  matter  how  busy  the  restaurant 
gets,  each  customer  is  greeted  with  a 
smile  and  helped  with  the  menu,  and 
also  sent  off  with  a  hearty  invitation 
to  come  again.  This  added  effort 
makes  eating  at  Don  Antonios  more 
like  being  a  guest  than  a  customer, 
and  they  definitely  feed  their  guests 
well. 


MUSIC 

From  page  20 

slowly." 

The  British  band's  last  album, 
"OK  Computer,"  was  critically 
hailed  as  a  rock  landmark  and,  with- 
out the  benefit  of  a  hit  single,  sold  1.7 
million  copies.  This  week's  release  of 
the  follow-up  has  been  eagerly  await- 
ed. 

Led  by  the  eerily  beautiful  voice 
of  Thom  Yorke  and-vaguely  reminis- 
cent of  Pink  Floyd,  Radiohead's 
music  can  sound  strange,  yet 
rewards  repeated  listening.  Rolling 
Stone  magazine  describes  "Kid  A" 
as  a  "space-rock  opera." 

Musicians  still  make  albums,  of 
course,  even  concept  albums.  Yet 
with  so  many  entertainment  options 


competing  for  attention,  if  there's 
no  hit  single  being  played  on  the 
radio,  albums  frequently  go 
unheard. 

Long  popular  in  Europe,  compi- 
lation discs  that  string  together  hit 
singles  of  various  artists  have  recent- 
ly started  selling  well  in  the  United 
States. 

CD  players  also  give  listeners  the 
chance  to  skip  over  songs  they  don't 
like  at  the  press  of  a  remote  control 
button,  or  to  program  out  the  unfa- 
miliar altogether.  With  records,  such 
a  chore  required  getting  up,  going 
over  to  the  turntabU^nd  moving 
the  needle.  /"         ] 

'*Kid  A"  isn't  a  corijjept  album. 
But  it  was  programmed  to  flow 
smoothly,  and  tracks  with  more  com- 
mercial potential  were  left  off  it  they 
didn't  fit  the  sound,  Hufford  said. 


r 


Daily  Bnitn  Arts  &  Entertainment 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000        23 


■:V»    ,;■  .     •  >.': 


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Office  Equipment 

Pets 

Remals 

Sports  Equipment 

Stereos  /  TVs  /  Radios 

TiEible  Sports 


miMSun 


Auto  Accessories 
Auto  Insurance 
Auto  Repair 
Autos  for  Sale 
Boats  (or  Sale 
Motorcycles  for  Sale 
Parking 

Scooter  /  Cycle  Repair 
Scooters  for  Sale 
Vehicles  for  Rent 


Resorts  /  Hotels 
Rides  Offered    - 
Rides  Wanted 


Tiaxi  /  Shuttle  Service 
Travel  Destinations 
I  Travel  Tickets 
Vacation  Packages . 


1-900  numbers 

Financial  Aid 

Insurance 

Computer  /  Internet 

Foreign  Languages 

Health  /  Beauty  Services 

Legal  Advice  /  Attorneys 

Movers  /  Storage 

Music  Lessons 

Personal  Services 
I  Professional  Services 

Resumes 

Telecommunications 
I  Tutoring  Offered 

Tlitoring  Wanted 

Typing 

Writing  Help 


Business  Opportunities 
Career  Opportunities 
Child  Care  Offered 
Child  Care  Wanted 
Help  Wanted 
Housesitting 
Internship 

Personal  Assistance 
Temporary  Employment 
Volunteer 


p5ffiE7 


Apartments  for  Rent 
I  Apartments  Furnished 

Condo  /  Townhouse  for  Rent 
I  Condo  /  Townhouse  for  Sale 

Guesthouse  for  Rent 

House  for  Rent 

House  for  sale 
I  Houseboats  for  Rent  /  Sale 

Housing  Needed 

Room  for  Help 

Room  for  Rent 

Roommates  -  Private  Room 

Roommates  -  Shared  Room 
I  Sublets 

Vacation  Rentals 


1 1 8  Kerckhoff  Hall 
308  Westwood  Plaza 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 


E-Mail:  classifieds@media.ucla.edu 
Web:  hup://www.aailybruin. ucla.edu 

phone 

Classified  Line:  (3103  825-2221 

Fax:  C310)  206-0528 
Classified  Display:  (310)  206-3060 

Fax:  C31 0)206-0528 

uiHuehouts 

Mon-Thu:  9:00am-3:00pm         ...... 

Fri:  9arn-2:30pm  ;    ' 


One  issue,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
WeekJy,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
Monthly,  up  to  20  words 
...each  additional  word 
1 2  pt  headline 
16  pt  headline 
^Border 


$8.50 
0.65 

29.00 
2.15 

96.00 
5.75 

$1.60 

$2.25 

$5.ooy 


Classified  Line  Ads: 

1  working  day  before  printing, 
at  12  noon 

Classified  Display  Ads: 

2  wori<ing  days  before  printing. 
at  12  noon. 

There  are  no  cancellations  after 
noon  of  the  day  before  printing. 


howtDiwHe 
an  csflodhpe  ad 

•  Start  your  ad  with  the 
merchandise  you  are  selling 
This  makes  it  easier  for  readers  to 
quickly  scan  the  ads  and  locate 
your  items. 

•  Always  include  the  pnce  of  your 
Item  Many  classified  readers 
simply  do  not  resp)ond  to  ads 
without  phces 

•  Avoid  abbreviations- -make  your 
ad  easy  lor  readers  to  understand 

•  Place  yourself  in  the  readers 
position,  ask  what  you  would  like 
to  know  at>out  the  merchandise.   ' 
and  include  that  in  the  ad    Include 
such  information  as  brand  names, 
colors  and  other  specific 

I    descnptions. 

The  ASUCLA  Communications  board  lu«y  supports  th»  University  of  Caifomia's  policy  on  nondiscrimination.  No  medium  Shan  accept  advarUsamenls  which  present  persons  o(  any  ormin.  race  sen  or  seniri  oricnIMIan  In  a 
demeaning  way  or  Imply  that  they  are  limited  to  positions,  capabilities,  roles,  or  status  in  soci«y.  Neither  the  Oaity  Bruin  nor  the  ASUCl>  Commur»calioos  Bo»d  has  investigaled  «w  of  the  sarvicas  ad»«ttsad  or  the 
advertisements  represented  in  this  issue  Any  person  believing  thai  an  advenoamanl  In  this  Issue  vidaled  the  Board's  policy  on  noralsoilniinatlon  slated  herein  should  communicate  complainls  In  «MWng  to  ttw  Buainass  IMaiaoar 
Daily  Bruin.  1 18  KerckhoN  Hall.  308  Weslwood  Plaza.  Los  Angeles,  CA  90024.  For  assisiance  with  housing  dbcrimination  problems,  cat  the  UCLA  HouAig  Office  at  (310)  825-4271  or  ctf  the  VmiiKlnTili  Houskw  OfUca  al  Oioi 
475-9671.  Classified  ads  also  appear  on-line  at  http7A»(ww.daifybruin.ucia.edu.Placeitienlon-lme  is  offered  as  a  compimentaryserviM  lor  the  flrsi  mcorr 

insertion  only.  Mnor  typographical  errors  are  (lot  eligible  for  refunds.  For  any  refund,  the  Daly  Bruin  OnsinadOaparlnianl  must  be  no(«a^  fkst  day  of  puMcsHon  by  noon 


For  Classified  Display  ads, 

please  see  our  rate  card 

for  variable  rate  information. 

MosterCard 

^ 

VK^ 

L^^^^^KJ 

pflymenl 


Please  make  checks  payable  to 
"TTie  UCLA  Daily  Bruin."  Wte 
accept  Visa,  MasterCard,  and 
Discover  credit  cards.  Allow  5 
working  days  for  mail  payments. 


1800 

Miscellaneous 


Beautiful  Asian  girls.  250+  Daily  FREE  sexy 
images  ol  Asian  women  Includes  UCLA  co- 
eds. Team  Asian.  http://www.teamasian.co(n 

ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-campus  &  on-line  financial  sen/ices 
source  for  students,  faculty  &  staff.  Visit  us  at 
Ackeiman  A-levet,  on-line  at  www.ucu.org  or 
call  310-477-6628. 


J900 

Personal  Messages 


MICHELLE-UCLA 
PUBLIC  HEALTH 
PHD  CANDIDATE 

We  met  at  Teasers  in  Santa  Monica  9/15. 
Talked  about  C&O  Trattoria,  smarter  living 
and  Italy  airfares.  Seattle/Michigan.  Recent 
Cedars-Sinai  intern.  Please  contact  me.  tor- 
benrollsenOhotmail.com  510-834- 

0972ex1.115 


2000 

Personals 


NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT Safe'  affordable*  effective*  visit  us  at 
www.figureplu8.com  1-888-603-9800.  Dis- 
tributorships are  availattle. 

PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
year  old  females  with  adventurous  and  open 
minded  spirits  who  want  to  expand/explore 
their  sexuality  through  nude  modeling.  Free 
prints  for  modeling  time.  Call  Rct>ert  at  310- 
463-5996  robldOatt.net 


2100 

Recreational  Activities 


VAMPIRE  Live  Action  Role  Playing  game! 
Call  David  909-338-4621  or  visit  www.geocl- 
ties.com/LAbyNlgrit.  Games  every  otrier  Sat 
night,  beginningi  0^/00. 


2200 

Research  Siihjccts 


Female  UCLA 

Undergrads  With 

Lupus  Needed 


for  interviews  regarding 
the  college  experience 

Contact:  Kristen  McKlnney 

825-3180 

mckinney@ucla.edu 


2200 

Research  Siihjects 


EARN  $$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  the  com- 
mon coW.  Male/female  18-55yrs.  oW,  non- 
smoker,  no  asthma  history.  Limited  availabil- 
ity. Call  today  310-785-9121. 
Email:clinicalsut>jects  Oyahoo.com 

PLAY  GAMES&EARN  money,  toot  Social 
psychokjgical  experiment.  1-hour.  Average 
|10.  Undergraduate  only  Call:310-825- 
3017,  sign-up  2524  Hersbey,  or 
emailpbonacichOyahoo.com,  leaving  your 
name,  pt>one  number,  and  available  times. 

RESEARCH  PARTICIPANTS  NEEDED  for 
patients  experiencing  Hay  Fever/Allergic 
Rhinitis.  Requires  4  visits  (6  hours  total)  over 
7-lOdayS.  Will  pay  up  to  $100  at  conclusion 
of  study  Contact  Dr  Diaz-Sanchez  or 
Dr Saxon  at  310-825-3699  or  310-825-9376. 

SMOKERS  EX-SMOKERS  AND  NON- 
SMOKERS  in  good  health,  at  least  18  years 
of  age,  wanted  for  UCLA  research  study. 
Subjects  will  be  paid  up  to  $120  for  2  testing 
days.  Call  Dr.  Rich  Olmstead  at  310-478- 
3711  ext.44319,  leave  message. 

SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH,  18-45,  want- 
ed for  nicotine  research  study  administered 
by  UCLA.  Both  heavy  and  occasional  smo*(- 
ers  needed.  Participants  will  t>e  paid  up  to 
$395  for  four  visits.  Call  Richard  Olmstead  at 
310-312-0565,  leave  message. 

SMOKERS  WANTED 

UCLA  research  study  Earn  $7  50/hour  plus 
$30  bonus  tor  not  smoking  overnight  and  $5 
per  blood  draw.  794-9891.  IRB  #97-07-005- 
03 

SMOKERS.  EX-SMOKERS  &  NONSMOK- 
ERS  in  good  health,  at  least  18  years  of  age, 
wanted  for  UCLA  research  study.  Subjects 
will  be  paid  up  to  $120  lor  2  testing  days. 
Please  call  Dr  Richard  Olmstead  at  310- 
478-3711  ext  44319,  leave  message. 

WOMEN  AGES  18-40  WITH  and  WITHOUT 
PREMENSTRUAL  SYNDROME  wanted  for 
a  4-month  study  of  hormone  in  response  to 
progesterone  or  prozac  challenge.  The  study 
entails  mood  diaries,  t>k>od  test  and  2  spinal 
taps,  and  taking  progesterone  or  prozac. 
May  be  paid  up  to  $200  lor  your  time.  Con- 
tact Unda  GoldfTtan.  RNP  UCLA  OBGYN 
310-825-2452 


2600 

Wanted 


M/F  MODELS  WANTED  by  est  photogra- 
pher for  commercial  portfolio.  Must  be  in 
shape  and  good  kxjking  call  Steven  818- 
733-0557. 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


COOL  GIFTS  FOR  CHICKS!  One-of-a-kInd 
handbags,  jewelry,  recyclements,  and  more. 
Secure  online  shopping  at  www.cucuz- 
za.com. 

GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded.  $40  for  attomey  pre- 
pared application.  John  Manley  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monk»  Blvd.  «300  LA,  CA  90025. 
310-820-7553.  Deadline;  10/30/00. 


2300 

Spertn/E(jf|  Donors 


$50,000  FOR  EGG 
DONATION 

PLEASE  HELP  us  give  ow  preckMJS  baby 
boy  a  siting.  We  seek  a  coinpHSionats,  in- 
telligent, attractive,  honest.  snafgaUc,  and 
fun-k>ving  Caucasian  woman,  under  32,  at 
least  5'5',  to  be  our  egg  donor  Please  con- 
tact us  at  egghuntlngOaol  com  or  PO  Box 
140-328,  Howard  Beach,  NY  11414. 


EGG  DONOR  NEEDED. 
call  310-397-0490. 


Oriental.  Please 


EGG  DONORS  NEEDED* 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 

wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

$5,000 

^    CAUMlttNA  (818)  832-1494    ^ 


FANG- 
LUPUS.COM 


31 OO 

Callintj  Cards 


5  CENTS/MINUTE 
PHONE  CARDS 

No  Connection  fees!  No  miscellaneous  tax- 
es/lees! $20  card  =  400  minutes.  Sent  $20 
plus  $.50  shipping  to  HeartLand  Telecom 
20050  Addison  Ave,  AltaVista  Iowa  50603. 
888-661-7706. 


3^00 

Compiiters/Softwait! 


POWER  MAC  7100.  40  meg  RAM,  1  gig 
hard  drive,  color  monitor  &  printer,  zip  drive, 
software  complete,  modem.  $475.  310-825- 
1755. 


3500 

Furniture 


COMPLETE  FORMAL 
DINING  ROOM  SET 

Hardwood;  brass  detailing.  Oval  tabtoiopens 
to  seat  10.  Six  chairs;  large  glass-front  hutch. 
$2100  obo.  310-825-9176,  leave  message. 

FOR  SALE:  2  couches,  1  bed  (with  mattress 
and  frame)  and  chairs  for  ctieap  ($20  and 
up).  310-61 3-«211. 

FURNITURE  FOR  SALE-  Extra  large 
sofa/hide-8-t)ed.  excellent  condition,  tan, 
$150.  Swivel  des)(  chair,  blacl(,  high  back, 
excelleni  corxMlon,  $25.  310-202-8726. 

MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY  STEARNS  &  FOSTER.  Also  twrin- 
sets$79.95.  Fulls-$99 9S,  Queens-$  139.95. 
Klngs-$199.95.  Queen  PUIowlops  $199.95. 
Beacon.  Open  7-days.  1309  Westwood 
Blvd.  310-477-1466. 

SOFA.  7ft.  e-way  hand-tied  springs, 
roaeA)lua/ftoral  pattern,  $250.  ChannaMMCk 
chair  iM/ottoman,  rose.  $160.  Ftoundad  otto- 
moa  blue,  $60,  310-369-1078. 


A900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1983  BMW  3201 

5-speed,  clean,  well-maintained,  second 
owner  $2195obo.  310-452-2334. 

1984  HONDA  ACCORD.  $1400,White 
w/blue  Int.,  4-door,5-speed,power  windows, 
brakes&locks,  cruise  control,  all  main- 
tenarKe  records,  good  condition.  Call  Lara  at 
310-319-2011. 

1989  MAZDA  626DX,  blue,  5-speed  stk:k. 
very  good  condition.  94K  miles.  A/C, 
AM/FM/Cassette.  single-owner,  accident- 
free,  $2500.  Call  X52910  or  310-470-7152. 

1989  TOYOTA  COROLLA  GT  SPORT  eco- 
nomk:al/reliable  great  lor  schoot/work  New 
tires,  engine  1  yr  oW,  manual  trans  $2500. 
323-810-8914  Atonso. 

1990  1/2  NISSAN  240SX  SE.  Burgundy,  al- 
k)ys,5-speed,many  new  parts.  SE  edition, 
k>aded  with  extras  including  moonroof,  pow- 
er everything,  etc  310-470-3615. 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4wd. 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player  red-grey  great  condl- 
tk>n.  Sell  lor  $4700.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836. 


1990  MITSUBISHI  ECLIPSE  GS  DOHC: 
exceient  condMonl  New  clutch  &  transmie- 
sioni  Car  is  a  OEM.  Must  drive!  $3000  obo. 
310-394-1397. 

1992  TOYOTA  TERCEL 

DX.  4door,  automatic,  66.5K  miles,  blue, 
AM/FM  stereo,  A/C  $4.000obo.  310-209- 
6211. 

1993  HONDA  DEL  SOL 

Automalk:/65K  miles  great  gas  mileage. 
$6500.  Alpine  stereo,  conveitMe.  fun  sctiool 
car,  or>e  owner.  CaH  Jordana:3l  0-383- 1701. 

1993  TOYOTA 
CELICA  GT 

70K,  white,  automatic.  fuHy-k)aded,  excellent 
cornMion.  dealer-pampered,  60K  dealer- 
servtee  done.  $7000.  310-476-8267/949- 
609-4471. 


Daily  Bniin  Classified 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000       25 


2300 

Sperni  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


Special  Egg  Donor  Needed 


■yMt^.MU.'VAa- *<•*:■*■  -i 


Preferred  Donor  will  meet  the  following  criteria;  I 

•Height  Approximately  5'6"  or  Taller  •Caucasian  •S.A.T. 
Score  around  1300  or  High  A.C.T.  •College  Student  or 
Graduate  Student  Under  30  •No  Genetic  Medical  Issues 


Compensation 


Paid  to  you  and/or  the  charity  of  your  choice. 
All  related  expenses  will  be  paid  in  addition  to 

your  compensation. 

(Extra  compensation  available  for  someone  who  might  be  especially 
gifted  in  athletics,  science/mathematics  or  music.) 


For  more  information  or  to  obtain  an  application  please 
contact  Michelle  at  the  Law  Office  of  Greg  L.  Eriksen 

(800)  808-5838 
or  email  EggDonorInfo@aoLcom. 


*This  ad  is  being  placed  for  a  particular  client  and  is  not  soliciting  eggs  for  a  donor  bank. 


^900 

Atitos  for  Sale 


CONVERTIBLE  1976  Alfa  Romeo  5-speed. 
red.  low  miles,  AM/FM/Casette.  leatlier 
seats.  $2800  obo.  Call  Dave  310-440-4149. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Carr  as  low  as  $500 
for  listings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214. 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertlt)le  1990. 
84000ml,  good  condition,  power  windows, 
t)iack,  A/C,  registration  paid  for  one  year. 
$4500.  Call  Vicente  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerOucla.edu 

93  TOYOTA  PASEO,  airbag,  black,  manual 
transmission,  5  speed.  AJC,  am/fm  CD,  very 
clean,  oins  great,  $3200  obo.  310-454-3621. 

■95  EAGLE  TALON  TSI  AWD,  18ln.  Kontg- 
monsson  rims,  Eitiacli  springs,  JVC  CD  play- 
er, one  owner  $9,700,  $1,000  less  than 
KBB,  call  Antonio  310-539-6516. 
www.mvsampsonattfreeweb.com. 

•97  TOYOTA  4RUNNER  SR5  4X4  58p  wtit. 
Ilhr,  16in  wheels,  sunrf,  perfect,  39M 
$22,950.  310-470-0010. 


5200 

Parking 


PARKING  NEEDED 

UCLA  STUDENT  LIVING  IN  RIEBER  HALL 
Fall  2000-Spring  2001  needs  a  parking  spot 
for  Fall  quarter  and  possibly  beyond.  Parlung 
can  be  anywtiere  somewhat  near  residence 
hall  side  of  campus.  Call  661-297-8108  or 
email  sabruzzoOucla.edu. 

PARKING  SPACE  WANTED.  Near/on  Veter- 
an/Strathmore.  $50/mo  obo.  Can  sign  lease 
for  10-12  months.  Call  310-770-1225  or 
mgabrielOucla.edu. 


Scooters  for  Sale 


1986  HONDA  Aero50  scooter  runs  great, 
new  battery,  only  3K  miles  $700/obo. 
Call;310-479-7276. 


61  OO 

Computer/ Internel 


NEED  HELP  connecting  iMac  to  Umax  scan- 
ner. $25/hr.  Norma  323-932-1553,  call 
evenings. 

P/T  to  complete  construction  and  maintain 
website.  Nationwide  wholesale  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 


6200 

Health  Services 


HAIR  COLOR  MODELS  NEEDED  by  li- 
censed hair  dresser  at  Beverly  Hills  Salon. 
$15-25  Wednesday  appointments.  Hannah 
323-461-8178. 


6200 

Health  Services 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 

BoMd  CMtNtod  dwina«.le«i«t. 

"Me  hannt  forgottun  what  It's 
Ilka  to  ba  a  studmnt." 

•Acne'Mole  Removal  "Warts •Rashes* 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•LipAugmentation^ 

•Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  826-2081 

www.DrSlhfers.  com 

'Qfffce  locMtrnd  In  Bf»fih«oorf-> 


6200 

Health  Services 


MASSAGE- 
TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  Massage.  $40/hr  w/student 
ID.  Monday-Friday  I0am-8pm.  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Certificates  available. 

PERSONAL  TRAINERS  NEEDED  No  expe- 
rience required.  Earn  $60/hr.  National 
Trainer's  Assoc.  1 -888-NTA-2338 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Atlorneys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST.  Sexual  harrassment.  Discrimina- 
tion, Auto-accidents,  Slips/falls.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  Westside,  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW86). 
www.bestlawyer.com  310-277-3000. 


eikoo 

Movers/Storage 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-foot  trucks  fully  equipped  for  large  moves. 
Call  24/7.  Available  on  sfiort  notice.  License 
T163844.  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  w/14lt  truck  and  dollies, 
small  jobs,  short  notice  ok.  SF,  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  Bruins!  10th  yr.  310- 
285-8688 

JERRY'S  MOVING&DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available.  Also,  pick- 
up donations  for  American  Cancer  Society. 
Jerry  ©31 0-391 -5657. 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedicated  pro- 
fessional. At  your  fiome  or  WLA  studio.  Ist- 
lesson  free.  No  drum  set  necessary. 
Neil:323-654-8226 

GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professional  near  UCLA.  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effortlessly! 
www.JWGS.com.  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW,  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Fmstrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
professional  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultant.31 0-826-4445.  www.winning- 
personstatement.com..  •   • 

CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  formatting,  tran- 
scribing. Personalized,  professional  assis- 
tance Ace  WordS,Etc.  310-820-8830. 

ITALIAN  LESSONS 

LEARN  ITALIAN  at  own  pace  where&when 
you  want!  We  offer  Italian  classes  tailored  on 
your  needs.  Call  310-442-6076. 

PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pre-paid  legal  service  programs 
providing  quality  legal  services  to  plan  mem- 
bers Robert  Moss,ESQ..310-260-7650. 

SIGN  LANGUAGE 
CLASS 

Set  your  hands  free  by  teaming  to  experi- 
ence a  language  of  beauty  through  visual  ex- 
pression. Starts  October.  Louisa:310-275- 
3809. 

TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Unton/Union.  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 


6200 

Health  Services 


5200 

ParkiiKi 


NEEDED  Parljing  spot  for  school  year.  2000- 
2001.  Win  pay  310-824-0997. 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Code  832123)  We're  on 
campus  at  Ackerman  A-level.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.org 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  ( ^?  50.V 


or: 


ST 


UCLA  FACULTY  MEMBER 


Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


Deliver  Brillianl  Results 

•  Cosmetic  Porcelain 
'  Surgical  Ortfiodonitcs 

•  Removable 

•  Traditional 
'      •  Invisible 

•European 


^(1  .,I)1S(()1\I 


iJ^^^^a^«ferf^^^ 


(310)  { 

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826    7494 

l|l>4'.WllshtrpBI«1  tmt 
l.at  Aiiitcin  (A  90025 

(949)  552    5890 

ISlNCalmDi    lA    ' 
lr.lnfrA  M7I5 


Teeth  Whitening  SSS""  tS 


>«  na  oi  MioM    I'tUDOD 


■  I'ODIXf  In  arar  nwnm  « 


naatm  10-31 03 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Display 
206-3060 


'•^'.-i^       ',^,-^■'■1  i"'*^.i 


Tr~7. j'T  ''■' 


26       Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


■•..^■*i« 


■■■••■■■■,il 


I 


> 


^.^ — RCTtravel 


920  Westwood  Blvd. 

3ia-UCLA-FLY 


ww\A/. statravel.com 


5700 

Travel  Tickets 


5700 

Travel  Tickets 


Council 


Travel 


Council  Ttavel  invites  you  to  our 


biQpest  Qnand  f 

openinn  pantij  ever   • 


October  7th  •  1-8pm 

prize  QlveaxvBUB  t 

every  hour  on  the  hour  • 

THE  WORLD  PAiaOUS  KROQ  VAN  WILL  BC  THERE  WITH  GIVEAWAYS 
AND  MEET  KROQ  DJ  STYKERI 

prizes  Include : 

TICKETS  TO  UNIVERSAL  STUDIOS  •  QUEEN  MARVS  SHIPWRECK  HALLOWEEN 
HAUNT  .  SPRING  BREAK  PACKAGES  TO  CLUB  MED  SONORA  BAY  MEXICO 
•  A  TRIP  FOR  TWO  TO  HAWAII  •  AIRLINE  TICKETS  TO  EUROPE  ON  VIRGIN 

ATLANTIC  WITH  A  CONTIKI  TOUR  •  EURAILPASSES  •  AND  MUCH,  MUCH  MOREH 


Come  and  meet  Melissa  from  MTV's 
'The  Real  World"  from  3:30pm-5:30pm  ! 


Join  us  For  music:  and  Fun  and 


^ij^^etz  council  travel  t:al-ie  you    ^ 
fMC'  around  trie  world  !  virgm 

sl^  atkmtii 

^^_   «Ai    n_   III     I ^^7y 


531  Santa  Monica  Blvd.    310-656-9991 

coxwGx  of  Santa  Monica  and  6th 
M.  T.  W,  F  10-7     TH  11-7     SAT  11-5 


oun  c  1  I  t  f  J  V  e  I  .  c  (xn 


6700 

Professional  Services 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Comprehensn/s  Ditsaftation  Assistance 
Th«8«s.  Papers,  and  Personal  Slalemenis 

Pro()o*als  and  Books 
Inlemaiional  Students  Welcome  Since  1985 
Sharon  Bear.  Ph.D.  (310)  4704662 
www.Bear-Wnte.com 


TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

ExperierKed  writing  arxj  research  assistant. 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
pers.com 

THESIS/DISSERTATION  COACH-  LEARN 
HELPFUL  TECHNIQUES  Get  emotional 
support.  Dorothy  Imai.  PhD.  MFCC.  11110 
Ohio  Ave  Sle  202,  WLA,  310-474-0942. 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


BOND  TUTORING 

All  subjects  6-1 2th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  will  meet  your  irxJividu- 
alneeds.310-471-7628. 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABI.E  TUTOR  ttiat  will  get  results 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fail  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Calculus/Physics/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geomelry/French/English  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 


7000 

TiitfJMtuj  Offered 


**ENGUSH  EXPERT 

DOES  WRITING  IN  ENGLISH  make  yoa 
crazy?  Assistance  in  basic  skills  to  major  re- 
search paper  completion.  ESL  experienced 
310-e39-9933/Adafn. 


MATH  TUTOR 

For  SAT  math,  Pre-Algebra,  Algebra  1  and  2, 
Geometry,  Trigonometry,  and  beginning  Cal- 
culus. UCLA  Student,  math  major.  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  math  and  one  year 
leaching  experience.  $25/hour  Call  lor  more 
information.  Stephanie:3i0-702-6455. 


MATH  TUTOR.  Math  Major  at  UCLA  $25/hr 
Any  math  to  Cateulus.  References  upon  re- 
quest. 310-828-6291  mlopezOucla.edu 
Ask  for  Rk;hard. 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


PRIVATE  TUTORING 

ALL  SUBJECTS,  all  levels,  affordable 
rates.  At  your  home.  Highly  qualified  tu- 
tors Call  Admiral  Tutoring  310-477-9685. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
term  paper  assistance,  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, Htetory.  Foreign  Students  Welcome. 
Call.31 0^52-2865 
www.  th^MIe  ric6ach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  with  trie  English  language— for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW.MY-TUT0R.COM  Math/Phystes/Sta- 
tlstics/EnglislVHebrew/chemistry/biok)gy/as- 
tror>omy/  Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
service.  Call  anytime,  800-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


5TH  GRADE.  Mon-Thurs,  7-8pm.  Responsi- 
ble, knows  how  to  teach.  Very  ctose  to 
UCLA.  $15/hr.  Call  Rosy:31 0-44 1-9388. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tutoring,  com- 
panion, driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
giri.  Athletic  fennale  prefen-ed.  BH.  $8-12Aif. 
4days/wk.  2-4hrs/day.  ASAP.  Call  310-273- 
3663.  310-753-3535.  Email 

k}nz32  Oaol.com. 

BALDWIN  HILLS/CULVER  CITY  AREA. 
Female  tutor  wanted  for  8th  grader  for  math, 
science,  etc.  2hrs  evenings.  Lenette  323- 
735-4588. 

COLLEGE  STUDENT 
TUTORS  WANTED 

K-12  after  school,  in  WLA,  SM,  BH  No  ex- 
perience necessary  $l0-l5/hour  plus  bo- 
nus. The  Tutors  Club:3 10-444-0449. 

DRIVEFl/MATH  tutor  needed  after  school  for 
8th  grader.  Pacific  Palisades  excellent  pay 
call  Gall  at  310-201-6159. 

DRIVER/TUTOR       ' 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  I2&l6-yr- 
old  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED.  Must  be 
graduate  student  or  TA.  For  high  school 
student  taking  second  year  Spanish  and 
math.  310-476-0766. 

MATH  LOVERS 
WANTED 

For  math  tutoring  sen^ice.  Flexible  schedule. 
Must  have  a  great  understanding  of  subject 
$15/hour.  Calt:310-560-9561. 

MATH  TUTOR  WANTED 

FOR  HIGH  SCHOOL  JUNIOR  in  Pre-Calcu- 
lus.  Westwood  area.  2-3  afterrxxjns/week. 
310-470-3831 

SERIOUS  TUTOR  WANTED  for  6th-graders. 
reading  and  writing.  2  hours/day,  M-F. 
Sunset/Crescent  Heights  area.  Mtehelle 
home  323-851-7273  or  cell  323-816-9313. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homework  assist  for  two  boys,  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  In  Laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  caU  evenings:310-401-0113  or  day- 
time:3 10-392- 1405. 

TUTOR  NEEDED!  Primarily  in  Spanish,  pre- 
cate  a  plus.  For  16yr  old  boy  2  dayis/wk, 
flexible  schedule,  Brentwood,  call  Kathy 
day8:3 10-247- 1777,  eves:31 0-826-1 876. 

TUTOR  NEEDED:  7th  grade  boy  Mon-Thurs 
4-6pm.  Must  be  patient.  Help  in  all  subjects 
ar>d  homework.  Glendale  area  Om\  irans- 
portalkxi.  Call  310-665-4123,  daytime      '^ 


Wif^ 


run 


TfJTrrr- 


Score!  Prep  needs 

tutors  w/high  SAT  & 

SAT  ri  scores  tor  SAT  & 

Academic  sn^nect 

tutoring.  Reliable 

transportation 

required.  $16  per 

Hour  +  bonus.  Flex 

schedules. 

CAU  NOW! 


€all  (310)  371-4500 

for  more  information 


7100 

Tutoring  Wjinted 


TUTORING  WANTED  FOR  9lh  grader.  In- 
home.  Homework  help  Brentwood  310- 
472-7342.         .  i', 

TUTOFtS  NEEDED 

All  subjects,  levels,  ages.  Flexibte  days  and 
hours.  $10-13/tK)ur  Tutor  in  WLA  or  SFV. 
Totally  Tutored.  310-397-0999. 

TUTORS  WANTED 

ALL  SUBJECTS,  especially  Chemistry, 
physics,  math,  Latln„Greek.  Car,  Bachetors 
required.  $20+/hr.  Fax  resume  to  310-914- 
4158Attn:Tania. 

WELL  PAID  TUTOR 

Tutor  needed  for  HS  sophmore  In  Geometry 
$20/hr.  Provide  own  transportation 
PrevHXJS  tutoring  experience.  310-275-5487 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertatkjns,  transcription,  resumes,  fil- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Montea,  310-828-6939.  Hollywood,  323-466- 
2888. 


7300 

Writing  Help 


GET  BETTER  GRADESII  Professtonal  writer 
will  help  you  with  any  subject.  Editing  and  re- 
writes are  my  specialty.  Competitive  rates. 
310-285-3421. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


GET  YOUR  OWN  legitimate  home  business 
offering  products  people  REALLY  want.  Own 
your  own  900  number  service  and  other 
unique  cashmakers.  While  everyone  else  is 
trying  to  find  a  ride  to  work,  you'll  be  AT  wor*. 
http;//www.makingmoneycaha 
k)g.com/2141500.  \; 

LANDSCAPE  DESIGNER.  F/T  position. 
Garden  design  company  located  in  Beverty 
Hills.  Will  be  involved  in  entire  Landscape 
Design  process  Including,  creatton  of  initial 
conceptual  design;  devetopmeni  of  drawing 
of  overall  site  plan  integrating  all  compo- 
nents of  exterior  design  inclduing  plantings, 
garden  structures,  pools,  walls,  fences  and 
hardscaping  details;  superviston  and  coordi- 
nation of  every  phase  of  production  and 
installation  of  a  project  to  completton.  Fax 
resume  to  Melissa  Moore  310-542-8580. 

STOCK  BROKER.  LkMnses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216,  Woodland  Hills,  CA,  Instaictor  Davki 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  University), 
818-703-6889, 

TEACHER  ASSTNTS 

PRIVATE  WLA  School  kx)king  for  capable 
and  experienced  teacher  assistants  to  wori( 
with  elementary  level  students,  M-F,  8AM- 
3PM,  Begin  immediately  Proficient  in  Mac 
computer  technology.  Please  fax  re- 
sume:310-471-1532. 


BARTENDERS 


»  » 


•  Earn  $100-$200  a  day 

•  2  week  training  A  Job 

Placement  induded 

•  tt-a  not  a  job -It-s  a  PARTY1II 

National  Bartenders  School 


1   (800)  64G  -  MIXX  (6499) 


? 


employment 

7400-8300 


7600 

Child  Cat(.'  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  run  by 
UCLA  grads,  Ages2,5/6years,  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Ck)se  to  UCLA.. 
310-473-0772. 


Business  Opporlunities   I    NAGiLA  PR€SCH00L 


$WORK  FROM  HOME$ 

$500-2500  P/T,  $3000-15000+  F/T,  No 
investment.  Real  Opportunity!  Call  Stewart 
310-234-0338, 

A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  It's  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35,  Refundable,  No  Risk, 
http://zlbgib  conVphanya,  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stephanie, 

GET  RICH!!! 

Make  1000's-f  weekly!  For  details,  send  one 
stamp  to:  GRQ  &  Co..  PO,  Box  8690.  Austin, 
TX  78713, 

MAKE  MONEY  for  you  or  your  sctwol  orga- 
nizatton  with  the  Lifetime  Reminder  Sen/tae. 
Sign  up  online  today  http/Zwwwthehot- 
page8,com\feminder2 1 4 1  SOOhtm, 


LoMly  W.LA  facility,  <kin»  to  UCLA, 
FT  4  PT,  Agas  2-«. 

CaN  (310)207-4543  or  vtsH  in  parson 
•t  1620  S.  Bimdy. 


NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

Work  from  home  with  flexible  hours, 
www,  homebusiness.  to/emoney 

OUR  WEBSITE  OFFERS  the  ultimate  links 
to  business  and  Income  opportunities,  shop- 
ping, sports  activities  and  tk^ets,  entertain- 
ment, romance  and  nwre.  It  will  take  time  to 
took  through  all  we  have,  but  It's  well  worth  It, 
Come  visit  NOW!  htlp://www,thecoolpag- 
e3,com/merchandisa/suite2 1 4 1 500 

START  A  DORM-BASED  business  m  the  e- 
commerce/telecommunfcattons  industry  for 
495,  Relum  on  investment  within  45  days. 
Uo  selling!  Bonus-free  vacatkin.  1-800-579- 
1225  ext77700. 


UNIQUE  BUSINESS 
OPPORTUNITY 

BECOME  a  persorul  trainer.  Earn  up  tp 
$1S0/hr.  Order  business  manual  to  leam 
how.  310-4S3-9675. 


7500 

Cnreer  Opportunities 


KOREATOWN  E-COMMERCE  business 
seeks  P/T  emptoyee  for  computer  and  ofTice 
work.  Fluent  in  Korean  and  English, 
Resumes  to  namheehanOgte net. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


ACTIVE  3  YR  OLD  BOY  needs  to  work  off 
some  energy  before  school.  7-9am,  5 
days/wk  Westwood.  Please  call  Janet  at 
310-441-0383 

AFTER  SCHOOL 
NANNY 

ARamoons  aprox.  3-8  and  some  evenings, 
flexMe  hours.  Own  insured  car,  valW  driver's 
iKense  and  references  required  Easy  kkls. 
In  Santa  Monk»,  Starting  $l0/hour,  310- 
202-9240. 

AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED. 
Mon-Fri,  2pm-7pm,  Own  transportatton  a 
must,  Brentwood,  310-979-7103. 

AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  for  5-year-okJ 
boy.  1:3O-5:0OPM  approximately 

14hours/week  M-F,  $8/hour  (negotiable). 
Anne:310-458-6455. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE,  Tutoring.com- 
panion.drivlng.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
giri,  Athletk;  female  preferred  BH  $8-12/hr. 
4day8/wk,  2-4hrs/day  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663.310-753-3535,  EffwII  k)nz320aol.com. 

ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

P/T  JOB  working  with  sweet.  Intelligent 
harKKcapped  giri.  ChlM  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  In  kitchen  and  «w)rtilng  with  chikj 
on  improving  physical  aMIa.  Appltoant  must 
be  sweet,  intelligent,  reliable,  speak  English 
and  drive.  Maat  Elman:310-396-8100, 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


Harbor-UCLA  medical  Center,  Department  of  Orthopaedic  Surqcrv 

R'"'--^.Trrh  Cn<-')rr|inatni  J.ti  ni,.s,rintion 


Pufpoaa:  The  purpose  of  this  position  is  to  facilitate  the  research  pro^s  o(  the 
Orthopaedic  Surgery  Department  A  secondary  purpose  Is  to  maintain  the  ooaiputer 
systems,  databases  and  other  technologteal  equipment  of  the  departrrient 
Spaclflcationa:  A  candWate  for  this  posltton  must  be  self  motivated,  a  creattva  problem 
solver,  familiar  with  computers  (Macintosh  and  PC),  mterestad  m  a  ralatad  nakt  and 
willing  to  commit  at  least  a  year  to  the  posltton, 

Oiitlaa:  The  duties  of  iNs  posltton  inchxte.  but  are  not  limited  to,  dally  upkeep  of  several 
data  tMises,  worthing  on  various  research  projects  incMk^a  »«  reviewing  of  charts  and  X- 
Rayliles,  developing  new  programs  to  help  the  dapartmanl  further  its  reaaaich  Interasts 
tawog  an  activa  rola  m  ml«»llanao«js  dapartmenw  pfojecls  and  provwmg 
ganaraviacnnical  supped  tor  offloa  and  cNnk:al  staff 

Call  Sue  Rizzo  at  310-222-2716 


Display 
206-3060 


Daily  Bmin  Classified 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


Saturday  Babysitter/ 
Mother's  Helper 


Sat  mntags,  afiprox.  6-10:30|Nn 
Babysitting  for  2  boys,  ages  9  and 

12.  In  Bavwty  HiUs  or  MalMiu. 
Must  have  excellent  driving  record 
Car  will  be  providad  if  driving  is 
Male  or  femala. 
$T2/lKNir.         , 
Fax  resume  tolTrtbie  al  | 

(310)273-3748. 


t 


} 


BABYSHTER  for  4-yr-oW  boy  wrtx)  toves  to 
read  and  meet  new  friends.  Occasional 
evenings.  $10/hr.  References  required,  310- 
573-9892. 


BABYSITTER/ 
MOTHER'S  HELPER 

kWs  844.  Experience,  references,  and  driv- 
er's Itoense  required  Must  enjoy  kids!  Rexl- 
We  hours  Encino,  818-788-7886, 

BABYSITTER/DRIVER  lor  two  boys  9412 
T.W.F.  3-6pm+pos8tt)le  additkjnal  time.  1^1- 
holland/Beverty  Glen.  English  speaking. 
Own  car  wTgood  driving  record.  References. 
310-470-2047. 

BABYSITTER/SATURDAY  EVENING, 

Weekly  commitment  requested,  Flextoility  for 
other  nights  a  plus.  Must  have  own  car  to 
drive  to  PadfK  Palisades,  Two  fun.  easy 
boys.  647-yr5-oW,  Must  Nke  playing  sports 
and  watching  MTV  and  movies.  Students 
only.  References  required.  $1Q/hr.  CaU  AHi- 
son  310-454-3650  or  email  GIE- 
DELOaoi.com. 

BABYSITTING 

Knowledge  of  Finnish  or  FarsI  or  both  a  plus. 
.Ca«  before  8pm.  310-202-6822. 


CAREGIVER  to  drive  10-yr-oW  from  school 
to  Santa  Monica  activity  Tuesdays  Perhaps 
some  evenings.  Car.  DL,  Insurance  neces- 
sary. CarxJyce  310-207-1227. 

CHILD  CARE  Pemwnent  P/T,  San  Fernando 
VaUey.  $lO/hour.approx.  20hours/week. 
Starting  after  3pm.  Flexible  hours.  Must 
have  car.  SUitt  immediately.  818-905-1215. 


CHILDCARE 

for  personable  Syr-okt  girt.  Ptek-up  from 
sc»xx)l/lessons.  CIX,  own  car,  insurance. 
Non-smoker  Morxlay/Wednosday/Friday  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/TTiursday  2-6pm,  Experi- 
ence and  references  required.  $10/hr.  CaU 
310-440-6738. 

CHiLDCARE  IK)H  11 -YEAR-OLD  gW,  After 
school  hours  ranging  from  2-8:30PM,  Driving 
and  hooiework  support.  Please  call:310-476- 
2469. 

CHILDCARE/DRIVER 

for  12-yr-oW  boy.  Nofvsmoker.  Likes  kWs 
and  dogs  Help  w/HW.  M-Thurs.  4:15- 
5:45pm,  $10/hr  Call  310-828-5144. 

CHILDCARE:  EnvMthatkysnargelfc:  studant 
to  play  witfi  1-yr-oid  boy.  Approx  6-10  hrs/wk. 
Flaxl>le.  ExpertarKsa  nacassaty.  310-446- 
7019, 

DRIVE  CHiLO  from  school  m  PkxVRobort- 
son  area  to  home  In  Padfk:  F>aHsades  In  af- 
terix>ons.  Must  have  car  and  Insurance.  310- 
454-7S2S. 

DRIVER  &  CARE 

For  2  boys  agas  1248  M-F  3-6pm.  Noo- 
snwker.  References.  CaN  310-839-2131 

DRIVER/TUTOR 


w/exceRent  study  habits  to  aasial  12416-yr- 
oM  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  piua  Ineurance 
needed,  Approx  20nrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353, 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

NEEDED  P/T  sitter  needed  lor  ktos  1047, 
Responsibilities:  Driving,  readlng4playing. 
Good  pay!!  References  a  irxjstl  Located  in 
Brentwood  310-394-9781. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER  Afternoon  driving. 
homewofV  help.  chIM  care  and  light  kMs' 
cooking  for  2tx}ys,  ages  9412  Must  have  ex- 
cellent driving  record  4  CA  driver's  license 
Car  will  be  provtoed.  Must  like  sports  Male 
or  leniale.  Mon.  to  Fri.  Hrs,  approximately  3- 
Spm  (later  on  Fridays),  but  flexible.  Home  is 
In  Beverty  Hills.  $10^r.  Fax  resume  to  Deb- 
bie at  310-273-3748. 

MOTHERS  HELPER  WANTED,  weekends! 
BH  family,  kkis,  meals,  and  play  activities, 
swim.  atNetK,  creative.  COL.  send  resume 
323-957-9762  or  rgitlin  Oyahoo.com. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILtXJARE  For  12-year-oW  girt,  SM/Brent- 
wood,  M-F.  3:30-7ish  (approx:  15hrs/wk).  Car 
with  Insurance,  References  required, 
$10+/hour,  Nlght:310-828-6206.  Oay818- 
954-3276,  Start  ASAP 

WEEKEND  NANNY  needed,  7am  Sat-9pm 
Sun,  Uve-in,  Bel-air  Call  31O-889-1840, 


BABYSrrTER  NEEDED  for  1  1/2  year  oW 
boy  Vdrtous  afternoons  and  evenings.  Some 
weekend  days.  Culver  City,  Call  Ruth  310- 
838-0624, 


NANNY/ 
HOUSEKEEPER 

for  normal  Westslde  family.  Wann.  good 
sense  of  humor  excellent  Er>glish.  valid 
CDL.  12-8  M-F  Fax  only:310-476-8065. 


WLA  CHILDCARE 

FOR  A  DELIGHTFUL  very  personable  11- 
year-oM  giri,  pick-up  after  school,  drive  to 
activities,  supervise  homewortt,  Mon-Thurs 
3:30-8:30PM(variable).  $11/hour.  Call  Dr. 
Alan  Yasser  310-277-2798. 


7800 

Hf.'lp  Wanted 


NEED  AFTER  SCHOOL  HELP  3  days/wk, 
Spm-6:30pm.  Female  preferred.  Please  call 
evenings  3 1 0-84 1  -0629, 

OCCASIONAL  CHILDCARE,  Are  you  willing 
to  sper>d  a  few  hours  each  week  or  an  even- 
ing with  a  six-year-old  boy  in  the  Westwood 
area?  This  vivactous  tx>y  toves  books,  sci- 
ence experiments,  and  having  adventures. 
Please  call:  310-440-0725  or  email 
piersi  Oconcentrk;,net, 

P/T  BABYSITTER 
NEEDED 

For  7-yr-okj  boy.  Must  be  available 
Mon4Thurs  2:30-8pm,  Tues4Wed  2:30- 
6pm,  pius  riftore  hours  If  needed,  ChlM  care 
experience  a  must,  10  min  from  UCLA.  $gi/hr. 
Cal  Hitary  310-858-5994. 

P/T  CHILO  CARE,  Two  cWWren  ages  243.5, 
Afternoons  and  some  weekerxls, light  house- 
work. Must  have  car,experience,and  refei- 
ences,  $8/hr.  Email:  tinynwrshnsO earth- 
link,  net,     310-664-6906, 

P/T  NANNY  for  2-yr-okl.  Wed  evenings  5- 
8:30pm;  5-10pm  on  Thurs,  Occasiooal  wee- 
kends w/advanced  nottoe.  Palisades,  Must 
have  own  transportatk>n  and  have  prevtous 
chikj  care  experiefv:e,  $l5/hr  Please  cal! 
Laura  at  310-454-9995. 

Part-time  babysitter  M-W  5:00-9:00. 
Refererxses.  2  kkls  $iaTtour.  310-458-3587. 


Mother's  Helper 


cMM  0H«  and  l|M  kMi' ooMh  for  2 

boyt,  ages  9  and  1 2.  Mnthava 

driviiif  raoard  4  CA  ihiifw's 

Car  ««  ba  prwMad.  Mot  Mn 

sports.  Mala  or  faHMia.  Man.  to  Fri. 

Hrs.  apprwdMaMy  3-<pjn.  (lalar  on 

rridays),  bal  tadMo.  Noaio  is  la 

Umilfmh.$iMmr. 

FaxrasmnotoOabMeat 


(310)273-3748. 


FEMALE  UCLA 
STUDENT  NEEDED 

To  babysit  In  Beverty  HIHs  for  1-2  nlghl/Woai(. 
Must  have  car  norvsmoker  lenrtale  prefarrad. 
$8/tir.  Qraar  310-858-8839 

FUNADARINQ  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  for 
picking  up  4  caring  for  9yr  okj  giri.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver,  3-5days/wk 
aftemoons-6pm.  Qayla  310-450-4109  (even- 
ing*)^  

FUN/REPSONSIBLE  SITTER,  Westwood 
family  Wed  l:30-7:30pm.  Boys  8.5,2.  UgtM 
housakeeping,  malio  dknar,  drtvar's  Hoonoo 
a  pius,  $iOAir  Laova  masaaoe  310-441- 
4078, 

Homeworit  Helper/Driver  needed  to  pickup  9 
yr  oW  from  Bel  Air  school  M,W,Thr  com- 
mencing immadiately.  Own  car.  References, 
Cal  Diana  818-781-1471. 

MOMS  HELP  NEEDED,  We  live  right  in  the 
UCLA -hood.  Need  help  w/HW  and  driving  lor 
our  4  ctMran  (12.10.  8.  5)1  Ust  yMr  2 
friands  shared  this  job.  We  provide  oar 
tKVhr.  M-F  34..  Cal  Elain  475-4338. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


PT  CHILDCARE 

For  Very  special  Syr  okl  daughter  Interna- 
tional or  bilingual  background  preferred. 
car4references  required.  Grand  Piano.  Bev- 
erlywood.  Lalrd:3 1 0-287- 1 677. 

RELIABLE 
BABYSITTER  NEEDED 

For  after  school  help,  MorxJay-Thursday  2- 
6pm.  We're  tooking  for  a  student  who  is  great 
with  kkls.  agas  7-6.  to  help  with  driving, 
homework  and  light  housekeeping.  Hours 
and  salary  negotiable.  Car  and  references 
are  required.  Plaasa  caN  Joy  at  310-394- 
2342. 

RELIABLE/FUN  P/T  NANNY  NEEDED  for  2 
girts  (5  4  8),  3-6pm  2,3,or  5  days/wk,  Driv- 
irig.  HW.  light  cooking/housework.  Near 
UCLA.  Please  can  310-824-9609,  evenings 
or  310-206-0669.  day 

RIDE  NEEDED 

To  pfck  up  chik)  from  Bekerty  HaM  on  Mulhol 
land  Drive  at  3:20  pm.  Call  310-271-4651  af- 
ter 6pm  213-252-9437  From  9am-6pm. 

SANTA  MONICA  2  POSITIONS-  MONDAY 
EVENINGS  6pm-9:30pm. 
AFTERSCHOOC  TEACHER'S  AIDE,  Mon- 
day-Friday approx,  2:30pm-5:30pm,  $9^r. 
For  a  6-year  oM  boy  310-393-9144. 

SATURDAY  BABYSITTER/MOTHER'S 
HELPER  Sat,  evenings,  approx,  6-10:30pm 
Babysitting  for  2boys.  ages  9412,  In  Bevarty 
HMa  or  Malibu,  Must  have  excellent'driving 
record.  Car  will  be  provkjed  if  drivin(||  is  nec- 
essary, Male  or  female  $i2/hr,  Faa'raaunk^ 
to  Dabble  at  310-273-3748, 

UCLA  STUDENT  to  dilva/Su«)anHse  HW  2 
kkls,  Tues.  Wed,  Thurs,  3-6pm.  Beverly 
HHIs.  SlWhr  Car  w/lnsurarKe.  Refersrwes 
raquirad.  AbigaU  310-650-1256. 


INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPRE- 
SENTATIVE. Film  advertising.  Call  retail 
stores  for  upcoming  releases.  Coordinate 
store  visits,  P/T-F/T-8am-12pm  or  12:30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $1Q/hr>bonus,  310-566-2555. 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  female  for  Beverty  HIHs 
producer  Short,  flexible  hours.  Excellent 
pay,  310-278-6972, 

$1,000'S  WEEKLY!! 

STUFF  ENVELOPES  at  home  tor  $2.00 
each  plus  bonuses,  F/T,  P/T.  Make  $800+ 
weekly  guaranteed!  Free  supplies.  For  de- 
tails send  one  stamp  to:  N-33,  PMB  552, 
12021  Wilshlre  Blvd.,  Los  Angeles.  CA 
90025. 

$10  PER  HOUR 

Looking  for  accounting,  business,  math,  and 
econ  majors  with  computer  and  bask:  Math 
and  English  skills  for  PT-FT  positions. 
Phones  and  general  offtoe  duties.  Fax 
resume  and  DPR  (UCLA  students):  818-769- 
4694. 

$15-$23/HR  BRIGHT,  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academk: 
Subjects,  Transportation  required.  We  will 
train.  Rexible  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  test  scores  (SAT,  GRE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educattonal  Sendees,  Attn:Bar- 
ry,  9911  W.  Pfco  Blvd,  Ste  1025,  LA,  CA 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424.  Posittons  avail- 
able throughout  LA  and  the  Valley, 

$1 500  weekly  potential  maWng  our  circulars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  infottnatton 
packet,  Cal!  202-466-1639, 

$20/hr:  FRENCH  TUTORS  wanted  to  con- 
verse with  high-school  students,  Ruency  not 
required.  Travel  experience  a  plus,  5- 
20hrs/wk  pius  opttonal  summer  opportunity 
to  teach  In  France.  Contact  Scott  310-428- 
3680. 

SS.SO/HR-t-BONUS.  Advertising  consulting 
firm  aaaldng  person(s)  to  set  appointments 
by  phorta,  lor  our  consultants.  Minimum  2- 
years  college.  Telephone  or  outsUe  sales 
experience  a  plus.  Immediate  openings, 
PT/FT  In  our  Waatside  offtee.  CaU:  Norman 
Bacitar,  Ad  Max  Consuiting  Group,  310441- 
7676. 


'ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  Valley,  Hollywood,  or  Santa  Montoa 
offtoe  needs  energetto  people.  $1(Vhour 
phis  bonusesi  310-395-7368. 


•F/T  GENERAL  OFFICE* 

WESTWOOD  ENTERTAINMENT  LAW 
FIRM  SEEKS  F/T  OFFICE  CLERK  TO  DO 
COPYING,  FAXING,  AND  MAIL  PROCESS- 
ING. MUST  HAVE  CLERICAL  OFFKJE  EX- 
PERIENCE. SALARY  DOE+BENEFITS. 
FAX  RESUME  TO  E.  KRAFT:  310-441-8010. 

•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beats  all  jobs.  Start 
immediately  Great  pay  Fun/Easy,  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  for  free  medical  Call-24/hrs 
323-850-4417, 


A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

DO  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  in  the  afternoons  dur- 
ing school  (M-F)?  All  day  Saturday,  too!  Full- 
time durir>g  Quarter  Breaks  and  Summer  Vd- 
cattonsl  Work  expenence  not  necessary.  Ap- 
ply today  at  Westwood  Sportir>g  Goods. 
1065  Gayley  Ave.  Westwood  Village. 

A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Tlma  fWd  sales,  fiextole  hours  +  com- 
mission  and  twnusi  /Ambitious  salesperson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  support  Of  onae- 
4all.com  Ann:FleW  Sales. 


/■^  :^- 


Tuwday,Qciobef3,2000       27 


>*- 


Just 


en  us 


Check  out  thii  Ashe  Center 
Women's  Clinic, 


Most  routine  services  ore  free.  It's  absolutely  confidential. 
It's  not  just  for  illness  -  whether  you're  ready  for  intimacy 
(or  not),  or. just  need  to  know  you're  ok,   the  Women's  Clinic 
has  something  for  you , 

Whatever  is  on  your  mind  about  the  miracle 
of  being  female  .  .  .  feel  free  to  call  us, 
moke  an  appointment,  talk  it  over. 

For-informarion  or  an 
appointment  call   310  825-4073, 
or  vist  the  Ashe  web  site  to 
request  an  appointment  or 
ask  a  health  related  ques- 
tion http://y^n^rv^.saonet. 
uela.edu/health.htm 


uc  a  Ashe  Center 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PUZZLF 


ACROSS 

1  Geronimo  was 

one 
7  Bleat 

10  Unsuccessful 
play 

14  Lounged 

1 5  Building  addition 

16  Weak,  as  an 
excuse 

17  Achieve 

18  Night  liefore 

19  Russia's  — 
Mountains 

20  Signal 

23  Vegas  machines 

26  Stimpy's  pal 

27  Notions 

28  Cat's  prey 

29  Cape  —  cottage 

30  Reply  to  a  ques, 

31  Indy  racer 
Fittipaldi 

33  UtMl 

34  Coffee  cup 

37  Emban'assed 

38  Spaghetti-sauce 
Uetb 

40  Director  (Howard 

41  TV  spots 

42  Tangiers  locale 

43  —  and  downs 

44  —Jose 

45  Sir)ger  Jerry — 

46  Tea  cake 

49  Feign 

50  Donald  Ducit's 
nephew 

51  Wedding 
attendants 

54  Capital  of 
Norway 

55  Wort(  in  ttw 
garden 

56  HistoricaJ 
records 

60  Eager 

61  Pop's  mate 

62  Haitian  religion 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


IVIAIPIOIRHCJAIPIPI 


□^□□(1    BBSS    SDCIS 
SSESD    □CISDIIIDQ 


[SIU 

IoiriaicilieWk 


BSSSmC]       B]S]S[iDS 


□DBS  OaOS  QSHSS 


IbiriAjY^OIDIEITISI 


63  "Jane  — " 

64  Fr.  holy  woman 

65  Fool's  — : 
pointless  trip 

DOWN 

1  Pie  —  mode 

2  Kitchen  utensil 

3  DIst.  atx>ve  sea 
level 

4  Bangs 

'  5  Beneficiaries 

6  —  St,  Vincent 
MiHay 

7  Con>plained 

8  Singing 
Chipmunl( 

9  Actor  Guinness 

10  Liquids 

11  Big 

12  Old  cattle  town 

13  Animal  skins 

21  Fem  leaves 

22  Tarry 

23  Smudge 

24  West  Indies 
dance 


25  Dolptiin's  home 

29  Sorority 
members 

30  Tori's  dad 

32  Forms 

33  Pan  of  a  BLT 

34  Pan-ot 

35  Dad's  brother 

36  StKky 
39  Patalti  or 

Whitman 

43  Raw 

44  Intrigue 

46  Fume 

47  Baseball's 
Ster>gel 

48  Edmonton 
tKx:i(ey  player 

49  Walking 

50  ContritMJtor 

52  Electrical 
units 

53  Church  part 

57  Palindromic 
name 

58  Actor  Cttaney 

59  Turf 


Display 
206-3060 


28       Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


Daily  Bmin  Cbssified 


7800 

Help  Warned 


7800 

Help  W.inled 


IVeb  MarfcetJng  S  IVeb  Dei^efopment  Pos/t/ons 


Excellent  Pa]^  Flexible  Part-time  Hour*,  Qreat  Experience, 
Professional  Environment.   Send  Resumes  Today  To: 

Fax:  (310)  793-9894;  T»l:  (310)  793-7704 
iiTMil:  HOUMANeACFRIEND8.COM 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT.  25-35 
hrs/wk.  Good  0hone  voice,  1  year  commit- 
ment, Organized,  Word,  Excell,  Account  Re- 
ceivable/Payable. Fax  Resume  to  310-914- 
41 58  Attn:  Scott. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours.  $10-13/hr.  Tennis  a  plus! 
We  are  ndtional  flower  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


ADULT  RESPONSIBLE 
MALE 

For  personal  care  for  disabled  man.  Monday- 
Friday  1  hr/day  and  altemate  weekends.  Will 
train.  Strong  References.  Near  UCLA. 
$300/mo.  310-475-5209. 

AMERICORPS  Posilk)n:Help  watch  literacy 
development  program  for  preschoolers  while 
eaming  money  for  school.  30  hours/week. 
Julie,  ConnectiorK  For  Children.  310-452- 
3325ex.234. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary. 
Host  music/talk-shows  for  our  radio  statkHis. 
P/T.  $10-1 5/hr,  $200-t-per/show,  plus  fantas- 
tic benefits.  323-468-0080,  24-hours. 

ANSWER  TELEPHONES/DATA  ENTRY. 
Movie  rrurket  research  fimn  seeks  people 
with  call  taking  and  data  entry  skills.  We  pro- 
vkje  tf>e  pizza,  you  provMe  the  computer  and 
telephone  expertise.  Immediate  start  for 
weekend  work  all  year  king.  Contact  Eliza- 
beth at  310-840-5800  ext251. 

ASSISTANT  ART  CONSULTANT  Train  w/a 
professional  krwwtedge  of  basic  computer 
programs.  Good  destgn.cotor  and  composl- 
tk>n  skills.  lOhr/wfc  to  start.  310-828-3964. 

ASSISTANT  needed.  $10/tir.  Temple  City,  f/t. 
Opportunity  to  leam  the  ancient  art  of  Chi 
Quong.  Cantonese/English,  computer  liter- 
ate, people  skills,  detail-oriented.  Contact  Lis 
310-571-6032. 

ATHLETICS:  P/T  student  empk)yee  to  work 
copy/mail  room  arvj  front  receptkin  desk. 
Pay:$6.70/hr.10-16  hrs/wk.  Must  be  friendly 
and  hard  woridng.  Apply  at  J.D.  Morgan 
Facilities  OffKe  310-206-6662. 

BABYSITTER 

Some  evenings  and  weekends.  Experience 
with  toddlers.  referer>ces  a  must.  UCLA  area. 
310-470-8390. 

BABYSITTER/DRIVER  needed  for  2  girts 
ages  11.  Santa  Monk:a/WLA  area  Must  t>e 
available  3-6pm  M-F.  Must  have  car,  valid  li- 
cense and  insurance.  SlO/hr+gas.  CaH  Las- 
lie  310-277-8480. 

BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Unton.  Excellent  pay,  hours  &  environment. 
Some  teller  experierKe  preferred.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Seputveda  Blvd.,  LA,  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.  ucu .  org/jobs .  htm 

BEST-SELLING 
AUTHOR 

ASSISTANT  to  psychokjgist/aultwr.  Good 
typing/filir^  skills.  Run  errands.  Must  have 
own  car  w/irwurance.  10-20hrs/wk,  flexible. 
$8/hr.  Some  research.31 0-205-0226 

BEVERLY  HILLS  AUTO  DETAIL  shop  needs 
hard-wortdng,  fast-paced,  agressive  people 
to  handle  top-rvstch  cars.  No  experierK:e  re- 
quired Flexible  hours.  Ozzie:31O-859-2870 

BOOKKEEPER/ASSISTANT.  P/T.  8- 
lOhrs/wk.  $lQ/hr.  Excel  and  Word  experi- 
ence required.  Fax  resume  818-909-4991. 

BOOKKEEPING/RECEPTIONIST/data  pro- 
cessor. Devek>pment  company  kx>klng  to  fill 
3  posittons  Stan  ASAP,  kxalwn-  Downtown 
LA.  213-489-5540  extlt. 

CARDIO  INSTRUCTOR 

PALMS  RECREATION  CENTER  seeks  an 
energetk;  person  to  teach  arxj  adult.  k)w-im- 
pact  cardk)  class  Mon  &  Thurs  night.  310- 
838-3838 

CARE  TAKING  COMPANION  for  16-year  oW 
devek>pmentally  disat)led  giri.  Involve  neigh- 
borhood field  trips&activities.playlng 
boardgames. walks, etc.  Need  car.  Hours 
flexible,$12/hr.  310-839-3732. 

CASHIER  for  busy  pizzeria.  Must  have  great 
customer  skills!  $8/hr-ftip,  DOE.  Call 
Dagwood's  Pizza:  Ventee  310-392-1450  or 
Santa  Monk:a  310-899-3030. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jot>s  availat>le  at  Campus  Comer. 
We  work  with  your  schedule.  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity  Call:3l6- 
206-6133. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Cooperage.  We 
wori<  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals,  man- 
agement training  opportunity  Call:310-206- 
0740. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Campus  Comer. 
We  work  with  yours  schedule.  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:3lO- 
206-8133. 

CENTURY  CITY 
SHOPPING  CEN- 


TER 


Earn  $$  for  the  Holidays!  F/T.  P/T  positkxis 
available  at  Cusomer  Servk:e.  /Vpply  in  per- 
son at  cart  in  center  court  outside 
Crale&Baael.  10250  Santa  Monk:a  Blvd.  No 
phone  calls  please. 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT/CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT  SALARY:  $7.03- 
$8.65/hr+partial  benefits.  CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR  SALARY:  $8.65- 

$1 1 .90/hr+partial  benefits.  Under  general  su- 
pervisk)n.  plans,  implements  recreational, 
educationa- 
I  and  sports  activities  for  5-12  year  okls,  such 
as  arts  and  crafts,  Leaming  groups,  outdoor 
garr>es  and  playing  intramural  sports.  RE- 
QUIREMENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  ASSIS- 
TANT: High  ScfKX)!  GraduatHxi;  enrollment  in 
college  preferred.  Six  months  paki  recreatkxi 
wort(  experience  (3months  of  volunteer  ex- 
perience in  a  chiktcare  program  can  be  sub- 
stituted for  3months  of  pakj  experience). 
Proof  of  High  Sct>ool  diptoma  must  be  sub- 
mitted with  a  City  applkatton.  REQUIRE- 
MENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR: 
Completton  of  one  year  of  college,  majoring 
in  Recreatton.  Educatk>n  or  related  fiek). 
Must  have  12  units  in  Early  ChikJtKXKJ  Edu- 
catton  and  3  additk>r»l  units  in  Administra- 
tk>n  or  Staff  Relattons.  Or>e-year  part<  recrea- 
tion work  experience.  Proof  of  one  year  col- 
lege and  required  units  must  be  submitted 
with  a  City  applk^tkm.  Call  310-550-4265. 
EOE. 

CITY  OF  BEVERLY  Hills  Partdng  Attendants 
needed.  $9.11/hr.  Morning  and  Evening 
shifts  available.  Seasor^l  Positkxis  starting 
November  16,  2000  to  Janurary  5,  2001.  Ail 
shifts  available,  /^pply  rtowlll  Oept.  of  Trans- 
portatkxi.  455  N.  Rexford  Dr.,  Room  130.  Ap- 
ply in  person.  310-285-2552. 

CfTY  OF  TEMPLE  CITY  SEEKS  Community 
Devek)pment  Akie.  $10-$12/hr.  Call  planr)ir>g 
department  for  nwre  details.  626-285-2171 . 

CLERK  TYPIST/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

Manage  small  medical  research  group. 
Good  communeatkKVwriting  skills,  word- 
processing,  Windows  96.  up  to  20/hours. 
weekday-mornings  Starting-$8.00/hr.  West- 
wood.  310-826-0679. 

CLERK.  P/T,  Pleasant  Century  City  Engl- 
rwering  Firm  seeks  pertectk)nist  with  typing 
skills  for  general  oflk:e  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  detail-oriented.  $11/hour  to  start.  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2347. 


No  Ej^terlenc*  Necessary 

Mm,  Women,  (MUrai,  iilMB,tei, 

races.  TV  -  niim  -  Commociiii -M^nes 

for  personal  interview  catt  notv 

310.659.7000 


CUNICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  positwn  immediately  available  for  a  li- 
censed laboratory  scientist  In  a  private  clini- 
cal lalx)ratory  in  Santa  Monk:a  Lab  provkJes 
endocrine,  androtogy,  serotogy  arxl  immu- 
notogy  testing.  Incumbent  required  to  work 
in  weekend  rotatwns.  Salary  commensurate 
with  qualificatkxis  and  experience.  Submit 
applicatk>ns  to  Bronte  Storw,  Reproductive 
Technology  Laboratories,  1245  16th  Street, 
Suite  105.  Santa  Montoa.  CA  90404  (Tel 
310-829O102). 

COACHES  NEEDED 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 

2000-2001  achool  year.  Girts  Soccer.  Varsi- 
ty and  JV  Lacrosse.  JV  Boys  Basketball. 
PaW  positkxia.  310-391-7127.  Call  Nate  ext 
247  for  boys"  positiorM.  Call  Gall  ext  248  for 
girts' poeWons. 


7800 

Help  W;ii\lofl 


COOL  LADY  seeks  driver  for  occaswnal  er- 
rands. Own  car  required.  $7/HR  310-826- 
9150. 

CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HIRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$10.26/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/1  + 
academic  years  remaining  with  valid  driver's 
license.  Web:  www.ucpd  ucla.edu/ucpd/cso. 
Email:  csoOucpd.ucia.edu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

F/r,  M-F  9-5.  Century  City  location.  Seeking 
self -motivated,  energetic  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate, 
bilingual,  college  degree  pref.  Fax  resume 
310-553-3996. 

DATA  PROCESSORS/ 
TYPISTS 

A  RAPIDLY  GROWING  COMPANY  needs 
quality  home-based  data  processors  and 
typists.  High  irx»me  potential,  advancement 
opportunities.  1-800-773-4339  or  941-351- 
5514  or  visit  www.thelawclub.com 

DELIVERY  DRIVERS  WANTED!  Weekday 
mornings,  friendly,  good  driving  record,  fa- 
miliar with  entertainment  indsutry  and  LA 
area.  $10-$12/hour.  Call  310-458-6891. 

DENTAL  OFFICE  receptionist/offk;e  manag- 
er needed  tor  MWF  9-6.  Must  krww  typing, 
be  familiar  w/Mk:rosoft  Word,  have  good 
communk:atk>n  skills,  be  committed,  have 
desire  to  make  a  difference.  Excellent  salary. 
310-826-7494. 

DO  YOU  LOVE  GOOD 
FOOD? 

New  bakery/gourmet  take-out  shop  near 
Century  City  hiring  counter  help,  cooks,  bak- 
ers, drivers.  Call  310-552-1080. 

DRIVER  FOR  MESSENGER  SERVICE  F/T- 
P/T.  Salary-t^commission.  VaM  Driver's 
Lk:ense,  insurance,  and  motor  cycle  pre- 
ferred. Fax  resume  to  661-799-7755. 

DRIVER/COMPANION 

For  14-yr-old  girt;  approx.  3:15-7:00pm,  M-F, 
westskle;  at  least  college  jr.,  excel, 
grades/study  habits/driving  record,  own  car. 
Very  reliable,  flexible:  $10/hr.  negotiable. 
Call  Deborah  days:310-312-3138.  even- 
ings:310-476-1310 

DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED.  Full- 
time or  part-time.  Westwood  driving  and  tnaf- 
fk:  school.  Call  tor  informatkKi.  310-824- 


EARN  $3000  + 
3  CANCUN  TRIPS! 

AH  Expenses  pakj  for  2.  Set  your  own  hours. 
310-638-1371 


ELEMENTARY  SCHOOL  fNTERN- 
SHIPO  UES  for  4units  credit.  Fall  quar- 
tar-you  must  fiave  Jr./Sr.  stand- 
ing&3.0GPA.  Requires  lOhrs/wk  in  the 
classroom,  3evening  seminars,  3pa- 
pers&jouirud.  To  enroll,  you  must  attend  1 
orientatmn  in  the  UES  Conference  Rm: 
Mon  10/2O9AM:  IMon  10/2O3PM:  Tues 
10/3O9AM.  Info:  FrancesO  310-825- 
2623/francesf«ucla.edu. 


EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

AU  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  sales.  Make  up  to 
$l50/day  Part  or  full-Ume  wortt.  CalhDavM 
310-441-0394. 

EXPERIEI^ED  BOOKKEEPER  Psychoto- 
gist's  Home.  Beverty  HiUs.  Call  310-205- 
0226.  i 

FAST  PACE  Real  Esaie/Finance  Company 
seeks  responsible,  energetk:  student.  Offk:e 
experience  required.  Fax  resume  to  310- 
275-5227. 

FILING  AND  GENERAL  OFFICE  wort(  need- 
ed.  Computer  literate,  flexible  hours  offered, 
P/r.  $9/hr.  Fax  resume  310-859-0547  attn: 
Mike. 

FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

Needed  for  private  health  club  Permanent 
hours  available.  Health  insurance  offered. 
Please  ask  for  Allison:3l0-659-5002. 

FULL  TIME  RECEPTIONIST  for  Westwood 
entertainment  law  nrm.  Monday-Friday 
10AM-7PM.  Good  phone  manner  and  front 
offk:e  apperance  a  must.  Experience  pro- 
ffered. Fax  resurrie  to  E.  Kraft  310-441 -8010 

GET  PAID  TO  PLAY!! 

AFTERSCHOOL  DAY  CARE  needs  three 
new  staff  to  play  ball,  help  with  fwmework. 
interact  with  chiklren.  Grades  K-8th.  310- 
470-9747. 

GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  cKit>s  in 
WLA.  Conver3atk)n  only.  No  afcohol.  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Eam  top  $$$.  323-441-0965 


7800 

Help  W;int».d 


GOOD  PAY!!! 

HARD-WORKING,  reliable,  athletk:  persons 
tor  p/t  wortt.  Good  pay  Wortc  outdoors.  Owr 
car  a  plus.  Call  866-845-0946. 

HOME  CLEANERS,  P/T-F/T,  $8-$11/hr  anc 
up.  To  clean  in  Westskle  areas  Must  be  de- 
pendable and  have  car  310-471-6212,  April. 

INTERNATIOf<A(-  FIRM  seeks  experienced 
telemartseters  foKofftee  if\  El  Segundo.  B2B 
professional  sales  in  fast  growing,  high-de- 
mand market.  Salary,  commission,  tx)nus, 
and  benefits.  F/T  and  P/T  available.  Call 
Rhonda  at  800-801-1007  and  fax  resume  to 
310-607-9852. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilir)gual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Service  Representative.  Fuir  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  vert>al  skills  required)  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653-1768-jspatterson©ij- 
ginc.com. 

INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Receptk}oist.  Entry  level  position.  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrs/wk  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
ferred. Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son 323-653-1768.  jspattersoneijginc.com. 

INVESTMENT  BANKING 

Looking  for  student  wty>'s  majored  In  this 
fiekl  to  teach  corK:epts,  valuattons,  and  Ex- 
cel. 310-858-4755. 

LAW  OFFICE  ENVIRONMENT  Excellent 
opportunity.  Clerk  positions  available.  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Mininwm  20hrs/wk,  $6.50/hr.  Fax 
resume  and  proposed  availatile  hours  to  f-Ki- 
man  Resources  Dept  310-274-2798  or  Mail 
to:  Lurie  &  Zepeda  9107  Wlishire  Blvd.,  Su- 
ite 800,  Beveriy  Hills,  CA  9021 0. 


IfM  If.^AHy 


Receptionfst  needed  for  small  salon/ 
Day  Spa  phones  and  light  office  work. 

please  caN  Julia  (310)  474-2524 

>.  2041  westwood  btvd.  ^ 

LIBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  ottier  stacks 
duties,  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start. 
STUDENTS  ONLY  af)fjt^  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  caN  Antigone  Kutay 
310-825-1084. 

MEDICAL  FRONT 
OFRCE  STAFF 

Ear,  Nose,  Throat,  Specialist.  Tues  8am- 
12:30  and  Thurs  1pm-6pm.  To  start  ASAP. 
Fax  resume  310-792-0066. 

MEDICAL  OFFICE 

Research  assistant  Premed/optometry. 
Freshman/soply>more.  TuesAThurs. 

16hrs/wk.  Jules  Stein/UCLA.  Minimum  GPA 
3.5.  Call:310-825-4749  or  Fax  Resume:310- 
794-7904.  Attn:Verootea  . 

MLS  UMOUSINE  SER- 
VICE 

WEEKEND  JOB/  PART-TIME,  data  en- 
try&some  biUing.  no  experience  needed,  will 
train,  call  9-5  310-271-8559. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  drive&work  w^  funAgHted  kkls  ages  5&7. 
Pertect  schedule  k>r  student.  Must  have  car. 
P/T  permanent.  ExceHant  salary.  Judy:3l0- 
551-1145 

NONPROFIT  SEEKS  responsible,  outgoing 
people  to  support  chiMren/adults  with  dis- 
abilities throughout  the  LA  area.  Flexible 
hours.  Several  positkxis  availalbe.  UP  to 
$l4/hr.  Contact  Monica  081 8-361  • 
6400x129.  www.jaynolan.ofg 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  LuValle  Com- 
mons. We  work  with  your  schedule.  1/2  off 
ineals,  managenrant  training  opportunity. 
Cal.310-e25-1177. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  North  Campus. 
We  wortt  with  your  schedule,  1/2  oW  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Caa:310- 
206-0720 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  LuVWIe  Com- 
mons. We  wort(  with  your  schedule,  1/2  of 
meals,  management  training  opportunity. 
Ca»:310-e25-1177. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  North  Campus. 
We  wort(  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-0720. 

OFFICE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CEO 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company-West 
wood.  lOam-2pm/Full-tlme,  Haxible  hours 
Need:e)tcellarti  tataphone  sMNa.  daM-ortonl 
ed,  adrnkVcomp  skHls,  science  Inlecest  pre 
ferred  Benefits/advancement.  FaxRes2Mar 
Ina:  310-475-1533. 

OFFICE-EXCELLENT  OPPORTUNITY  2 
Pn  poaWona  avMabla.  Flaxfcle  hours.  Retail 
store  m  WaatKNMd  VMage.  310-208-8404 
from  12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 


7800 

Help  Wnntcd 


ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
worthing  at  various  on-campus  events.  We 
offer  flexible  fx>urs  that  vary  from  week  to 
week.  Call:310-206-0735. 

ON  CAMPUS  J0B3 

UCLA  CorKessuns  has  great  part-Hnoe  jobs 
woriung  at  Athletk;  events.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive twnus  program  for  those  who  can  com- 
mit to  wprk  the  Men's  B^skett>ali  Season. 
Hours  are  per  event,'  not  set,.9yery  week. 
Ca«;3T0-M6'6>36 /'. ;;;,'-    ''■    ' 

: — u , — __j_ : J^ 

OPPOfltUNITY  OF  THE  MILLENNIUM!!!  ~ 
IntematkMial  Corripany  needs  help  expartd- 
ir>g.  Free  Training!  Set  own  hours!  Excellent 
Income!  $1500  PT-$7000FT.  800-335-8806. 

www.corxjuerdreams.com. 

ti •     . 

OPTICIAN  for  beautiful  Westwood  village 
optometric  otftee.  PfT,  flex  hours.  Must  be 
friendly,  outgoir>g,  and  cheertul.  Sales  ex- 
perience helpful.  310-208-1384. 

P/T  DATA  ENTRY/  DIS- 
PATCH  ASSISTANT 

I0:30am-3:30pm,  M-F,  some  overtime. 
Computer,  heavy  phones,  and  knowledge  of 
LA  area  a  must.  Messenger  t)ackground  pre- 
ferred. Fax  resume  310-275-4439. 


P/T  DRIVER/UTILITY 
TRAINEE 

FlexUe  hours,  $8/hour  includes  gasoline. 
Own  vehteie,  valkJ  California  driver's  li- 
cense and  proof  of  insurance.  Non-smok- 
ing environment.  Clean-cut  individual. 
Stephanie:  3 1 0-395-3291 . 


pn  OFFKJE  WORK.  Capable  person  to  do 
variety  of  jobs  in  busy  retail  carpet  store. 
WLA.  Call  Helen  310-444-0220. 

P/T  RECEPTIONIST/OFFICE  CLERK  for 
Century  City  firm.  General  offk»  duties.  Fax 
resume  to  Cindy:  310-553-1 540. 

P/T  WRtTER.  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  pertectkMiist  with  stror)g 
writing  skills  to  produce  mlklly  techrtk:al  re- 
ports for  lnterr»l  and  external  use.  $13/hr  to 
start.  Wage  increases  as  appropriate.  Mini- 
mum IShrs/wk.  Fax  resume  310-286-9126. 

PARK  RANGER 

$8.65-$ll.90/hr  with  partial  benellia.  En- 
force parte  rules  and  regulatkins;  disseminate 
ir^foTTTutkxi  and  assist  publk:  in  fhe  park;on- 
site  superviskxi  of  commercial  film  compa- 
nies and  wortt  department  apaoM  events; 
assist  with  offce  duties.  Requires  one  year 
of  college  rrfajorlng  in  Recreatk>n,  Outdoor 
Educatnn,  Park  Ranger  or  related  fiek);  or 
one-year  pakVvolunteer  experierv^e  in  a  cus- 
tomer seryk:e  oriented  positkm.  Must  have  a 
vaHd  Callfomta  C  drivafs  iKense  and  must 
be  able  to  obtain  CPR  and  First  AM  certlfi- 
cates.Apply  immediately-OPEN  UNTIL 
FILLED.  City  of  Beveriy  Hills,  455  N.  Rexford 
Dr.  #210,  Beverty  Hills,  CA  90210.  310-285- 
1071  EOE. 

PART-TIME  CHILDCARE/TUTOR  needed 
lor  1st  and  2nd  grader  Erx:ino  Muiriolland 
and  405  adjacent.  Must  have  car  Call  Jack- 
ie:310-826-2466. 

PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTKJN/TECHNK^AL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  has  one  opening  for  clerical  positkins. 
$7/hr  Mornings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Mk;he«e:310-474-7771 

PERSONABLE 

FRONT  DESK 

RECEPTIONIST 

With  some  salee  experience  lor  West  Holy- 
wood  upscale  gym.  Jank;e:31 0-577-6773. 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

OetaN-oflenled  IndMdual  needed  to  assist 
with  light  t)ookkeeping,  organizing  and  IINng. 
Quk:ken  experience  helpful.  Work  in  home 
offk^e  ck>se  to  UCLA.  Rexible  hours  up  to 
$1snoure/week.  Fax  resume  lo:310-451- 
1785. 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  lor  family  (of  inter- 
est to  your>g  filmmakers).  15-20hrs/wk- 
$10/hr  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues,  Ttxjrs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  Filing/research. 
Flexible  schedule/resourceful!!  Contact:  310- 
824-1444  (John).  Good  references  required. 
NorvSmoker  Must  have  own  car&in8urar«:e. 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  NEEDED  lor 
young,  female,  quadripulegic  working  in  the 
entertair>rr>ent  industry.  No  experience  nec- 
essary. Weekday  ar>d  weekend  posittons 
available.  310-829-2693. 

PHARMACY  CLERK.  V&riable  hours.  M-F, 
$a.5QftX)uf.  310-859-3887. 

POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
into.  Can  1-800-391-5856  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar. 

PROMOTERS  WANTED  for  WestsWe  Club. 
310-915-7S6S 


Display 
'06-;i060 


Daily  BnimCbsfified 


Tti«sday,Oct()bw3,2O00       » 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED. 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$600/week.  310-724-8360  Days  only 

RjECEPTIONIST  WANT- 

-^     '■    ^~        ED        -  ^  "-r^;- 
BEVERLY  HILLS  SALON  seelcs  energetk: 
receptkjnist.  F/T  or  P/T.  To  start  ASAP.  310- 
278-1191. 

RECEPTIONIST  WANTED  P/T  for  hair 
■akxi.  Ask  for  Liana.  310-208-0101. 

RECEPTIONIST  WESTWOOD  LAW  OF- 
FICES.  Mon&Wed.  9-5.  $8/hour.  Can  do 
homework  on  job.  310-470-3373. 

REGISTERED  US  nurses  wanted  NOW. 
$20-45/hour  TAx-free  per-diem.  exceptional 
benefits  package.  For  info,  email 
blessme430  reglsterdnurses.com 

RESTAURANT  IN  BEVERLY  HILLS  seeking 
p)erson  to  answer  phones  and  pack  delivery 
orders.  P/T  position.  Morning  hours.  CaR 
310-271-0027. 

RETAIL  SALES.  Penny  Lane  Records  has 
P/T  night  posittons  available.  15-20hrs/wk. 
$6.50/hr.  Apply  in  person.  10914  Kinross 
Ave. 

SALES  CLERK 

$7/hr.  No  experience  necessary.  Cashiering, 
wortung  with  patients.  UCLA  Hospital.  2e- 
venings,  3-7:30PM  11:30-6:0OPM.  310-825- 
6069 

SALES  POSITION 

F/T.  Growing  Century  City  company  seeks 
sales  person  who  are  energetk:  sell-starters. 
Our  company  is  the  leader  In  the  procure- 
ment of  IkHior  teerues  and  use  permits  in 
CaNfomia.  Must  be  computer-literate.  Urban 
planrHr>g/legal  background/bilingual  applic- 
ants that  want  to  participate  In  our  excttlrig 
nk:he  business  call  our  offk:es  today  for  de- 
tails:3i 0-553-6363  ext.  18  or  fax  resume 
10:310-553-3996  Attn:Cindy 


SALES.  Popular  Westwood  ViHage  jewelry 
store  seeks  2  P/T  sales  associates.  Excel- 
lent opportunity.  310-208-8404  phone  from 
12-6.  Mr  Rogers 

SECRETARY  NEEDED.  $10/hr  F/T.  M-F 
8:30-5:30.  Handle  phone  calls,  bask:  secre- 
tarial duties  Alex  Son  or  Connie  Son  213- 
252-1222. 

SECRETARY,  halftime.  mornings,  to  RN  at 
VA  med«al  center,  WLA.  Profk:ient  in  word 
and  excel.  $11/hr  Some  benefits.  Fax  re- 
sume to  Susan  Orrange  310-268-4404. 

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST.  Small  WLA 
law  office  seeks  p/l  or  f/t  bilingual  (Spanish) 
Individual.  Must  have  experience  with  word 
pertect  and  type  min  40Wpm  Call  Neil  310- 
445-1100  or  send  resume  310-445-7779 

SMALL  SANTA  MONICA  LAW  FIRM  seeks 
secretary/administrative  assistant.  Must  be 
computer  literate.  Fax  or  email  resume  310- 
395-9880  or  iccofficemngrOearthlinknel 

SOUTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Bombshelter  We 
wori(  with  yours  schedule.  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-0727 

SPANISH  SPEAKING  TEACRiNG  assis- 
tants needed  at  k)cal  elementary  school.  /Vp- 
prox  $8  83/hr  Call  Steve  310-473-2172. 

STUDENTS  WANTED 

OUTGOING,  RESPONSIBLE  STUDENTS 
with  own  car  Food  delivery  11 -2pm.  PfT. 
Good  pay!  jwoitzyOearthlinknet  or  call 
Steve  310-480-3247. 

SURVEY  ON  WEB 

Independent  researct)er  needs  help  putting  a 
survey  on  website  Fast  job,  fast  nraney 
Leave  message  310-312-0266. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


TELEVISION  PRODUCTION  COMPANY 
kxjking  for  organized,  detail  oriented  p)erson 
lor  EQUIPMENT  ROOM  POSITION  Duties 
include  prepping  &  QCIng  camera,  audk>,  & 
lightirtg  equipment,  as  well  as  pick-up  &  de- 
livery of  various  productk)n  equipment.  Ex- 
cellent job  for  a  college  student  taking  class- 
es during  the  day!  4pm- 10pm  Monday  thru 
Friday  Hours  will  vary,  some  late  nights  and 
weekends  required.  Good  pay.  Great  entry- 
level  position  tor  someone  Interested  in  get- 
lir)g  into  the  Television  Production  Industry 
Must  t>e  responsit)le,  trustworthy,  &  aUe  to 
wortc  self-supervised.  Must  have  dependable 
vehicle.  Positran  available  immediately.  II  in- 
terested call  818-508-0888. 

UPSCALE  SANTA  MONICA  RESTAURANT 
NEEDS  HOSTESS  Friday  and  Saturday 
night.  5-10pm.  $8/hr  310-449-4000 

VALET  PARKING 
ATTENDANTS 

Flexible  hours,  great  tips,  Santa  Monk»  and 
Marina  Del  Rey  areas.  310-214-1886.  Leave 
message. 

VETERINARY  MEDICAL  ASSISTANTI  P/T, 
Sun-Sat.,  anVpm  shifts  availatjie.  Future  ve- 
terinary students  only.  Win  train.  Call  323- 
933-8406.  Ask  tor  Nahalia. 

VIDEO  PRODUCTION 
WORK! 

In  an  on-campus  televiston  studio.  Must 
qualify  for  '\vori<-study'  positk>ns  (have  a  "job 
referral").  Contact  Brian:310-825-4124, 
bkmurphyOucla.edu. 

VIDEOTAPE  TRANSCRIBERS  needed 
$10/hr  min.  F/T-P/T  available.  45wpm  on 
Mterosoft  Word.  Fax  resume  to  818-995- 
5544. 

WLA.  RE.  Inv.  FIRM.  5  minutes  to  UCLA 
PART-TIME  Adrrwnistrative  Assistant  for  of- 
ftee  work.  From  1:00-6:30pm.  M-F.  Fax  310- 
471-6770. 

WAITRESS/WAITER 

Must  have  restaurant  experience  and  be  fa- 
miliar with  full  American  menu.  3-4  lunch 
shifts/wk  for  a  busy,  upscale  cafe  in  West- 
wood.  Call  Davkl  310-473-5045. 

WANTED 

75people  will  p>ay  you  to  k)se  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  drugs.  Call  riow.  323-993-3391. 

WANTED  AFTER  SCHOOL  TEACHER  P/T. 
3-6pm.  Must  tiave  car  and  valid  driver's  li- 
cense 213-385-3131. 

WANTED  ENTHUSIASTIC  BIOLOGY 
MAJORS  interested  in  woricing  with  animals 
and  educating  chiklren.  $10/hr  Flexible.  P/T, 
call  The  Animal  Guys  310-392-5909. 

WANTED:  7th  &  8th  grade  Cross  Country 
Coach.  Martborough  SctKX3l.  250  S.  Ross- 
more  Ave.  Start  ASAP-Nov  8.  $1200  for  sea- 
son. Call  Julie  Napoleon  323-935-1147 
ext467  or  email  napolejOmaritx>r- 
ough.ia.ca.us 

WEB  DESIGNER.  Must  be  proficient  in 
HTML,  some  Javascript/CGI  experience  de- 
sired. Make  your  own  hours.  $12/hr  A  great 
start-up  opportunity!  Contact  rebec- 
casOucla.edu 

WESTLA  FILE  CLERK  F/T.  $8-10/hr  Flexi- 
ble hours  20-40hrs/wk.  Pleasant,  casual 
wort(ir>g  environment.  Contact  Jennifer  at 
310-268-0788. 

WESTWOOD 
PART-TIME  SALES 

Art  gallery  seeks  P/T  sales  people.  One 
bkx:k  from  campus  Pk:ture  framing  experi- 
ence a  plus.  310-208-1896 

WESTWOOD  RETAILER  3mi  from  campus 
(easy  bus  access)  needs  sales  person  to 
start  immediately,  selling  printed  Christmas 
cards  in  the  store-  f/t  or  p/t.  Wort<  into  last 
December  Open  Mon-Sat.  WE  can  train 
you.  Salary  negotiable.  Please  call  Cheri 
3>0-44 1-7595. 

WORK  AT  HOME 

International  business  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo. 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888. 


8000 

Internships 


FINANCIAL  CONSULTANT  INTERNS.  Gain 
valuable  finance  and  Wall  Street  experience. 
Great  resume  bulkier.  Westwood  kx»tk>n 
Fred  Ayazi  310-234-2132.  Allen  310-234- 
2138. 

FREE  ARTS  FOR  ABUSED  CHILDREN  IS 
SEEKING  UNPAID  INTERNS.  PLEASE 
CONTACT  KARINA  AT  310-313-4ART 


SWIM  INSTURCTOR        INTERNSHIP  POSITION 


P/T.  $10-12/hr.  310-472-7474  ext114. 

TANNING  SALON  POSITION  AVAILABLE. 
Good  Pay  Apply  at  1156  26th  St.  Santa  Mo- 
nk^, CA  310-828-8028. 

TELEMARKETING.  No  COM  calls.  $16- 
20+/hr.  txsnuses  F/T-P/T  Must  have  desire 
to  make  big  $$$  Flexible  schedule.  Great  for 
students  Near  UCLA  310-996-6701 
ext.29e 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
student  film  projects  Call  Joel:3 10-828- 
2292 

MEDIA  PRODUCTION,  Communication, 
film,  broadcast  majors.  Ztmm  Culture,  an  in- 
ternet broadcast  network,  is  seeking  enthu- 
siastk:  student  to  create  vkleo  programming 
lncredlt)le  opportunity  gain  hands-on  experi- 
ence. Email  jefferyOzoomculture.com. 
www.2oomcullure.com. 


8000 

internships 


MOLECULAR  BIOLOGY 

INTERN.  Smart  biochemistry  urKlergrad 
r>eeded  for  UCLA  research  project  in  compu- 
tational molecular  biology/bioinlormatics. 
Must  know  bask;  tMochemistry.  Computer 
skills  needed,  (preferable  UNIX)  Dr  Pet- 
tit,310-206-4748. 

TV    PRODUCTION    CO 

Seeks  interns  lor  mariceting  and  production 
May  lead  to  pakJ  position  for  right  candidate. 
Fax  resume  818-846-7961. 

WESTWOOD  STUDENT  Credit  Unton  offers 
voluntary  internships  in  Banking.  Sales  , 
Maricetir>g,  Accounting.  No  experierice  rtec- 
essaryl  ApplKations  available  0 124  Kerckh- 
off. 


81 OO 

Personal  Assistance 


PHYSICAL 
ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  disat)led  male  in  Reiber  Hall.  A  lew 
hrs/day  Flexible  shedule.  $10/hr  Call  /Mex 
949-369-9871  or  310-267-8189 


housing 

8400-9800 


8^00 

Apartments  for  Rent 


•WESTWOOD  VILLAGE.  MIDVALE  N.  OF 
LEVERING.  LARGE  2-BDRM  APT  GAR- 
DEN VIEW,  DINING  ROOM.  UNIQUE, 
CHARM.  FRONT  AND  REAR  ENTRANCE 
310-839-6294.' 

1  MIN  TO  UCLA 

WESTWOOD           Furnished  Single: 

$850/monlh    Carpeted      Gated  complex 

Quiet.  Pool.  L^urHlry.  1yr  lease.  310-824- 
1830. 

2&3BORM.  LARGE,  bright,  view  Microwave, 
oven,  refrigerator,  dishwasher,  washer/dryer 
in  unit.  21 -ft.  Jacuzzi  on  roof.  Walking  dis- 
tance to  UCLA.  310-475-0807. 

BEV.  HiaS  ADJ.  APT  2+2,  balcony  h/w 
floors,  laundry,  parting.  $1250  818-623- 
4444.  www.allofLA.com         » 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ 

Charming  Spanish  duplex.  2bed/1bath.  Ex- 
cellent Location.  One  block  from  Beveriy 
Hills.  Hardwood  floors.  Living/dining  room. 
$1750/month.  310-858-8817 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  1+2BEDROOM 
$895AUP  LARGE  UNUSUAL  CHARM 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  P\CO  BUS. 
310-839-6294. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  CHARMING  APARTMENT 
2'«-1,  hardwood  floors,  laundry,  garage. 
$1400.  310-395-RENT.  vwwv  westsideren- 
tals.com 

BEVERLY  HILLS  GUESTHOUSE  w/full 
kitchen,  laundry,  furnished  or  unfurnished 
$1000.  310-395-RENT  wvirw.westsideren- 
tals.com 

BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdrm/3bth.  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdrm/3blh.  $2950  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alarm,  gated  partdng. 
Spacious,  carpet.  Prime  location!  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 

BRENTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

Luxury  buikling,  pool,  partdng,  gated  entry, 
laundry,  one  and  two  bedrooms  from 
$1500/month.  310-312-1223. 

BRENTWOOD  ADJ  •  APT  2+1  1/4.  R4S, 
laundry,  partying  included-  $1'«35^  310-395- 
RENT  wwvtf.westsiderentals.cc 


corm 


BRENTWOOD  BACHE- 
LOR 
APARTMENT 

FOR  RENT.  Grad  student  preferred.  Upper, 
front,  walk-in  closet,  tub  and  shower  Ctose 
to  bus  $695/month  310-275-7139. 

CULVER  CITY  APARTMENT  1+1,  laundry, 
fresh  paint,  remodeled  kitchen  $650  310- 
395-RENT  www  westsklerentals  com 

CULVER  CITY  APARTMENT  in  4-plex,  2+1. 
enclosed  garage,  laundry,  private  and 
secure  parking  $850.  310-395-7368 
www  westsklerentals  com.  * 

LA  CRESCENTA  APARTMENT  2+2.5,  bal- 
cony, patio,  laundry,  gated  parking.  $1200. 
818-623-4444.  www.sttoA>.oom 


8^^00 

Apartments  for  Rent 


MAR  VISTA  TOWNHOUSE  2+2.  calok,  laun- 
dry, subterranean  partdng  $1295.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.westsiderentals.com 

MARINA  DEL  REY  ADJ.  APT  2+2,  balcony 
high  ceilings,  laundry,  sub.  partdng.  $1150. 
310-395-RENT.  www.westsk1erentals.eom 

NEAR  UCLA 

Large,  fumished  bachek^rs,  fumished  with 
utilities  provkjed.  Locked  entry,  good  k)ca- 
tion,  buses  shopping  centers.  $535/month. 
310-575-8987. 

PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $575,  $600deposit 
1-year  lease  only  Stove,  refrig, carpets,  vert, 
blinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message.  8am- 
5pm  only. 

PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT  2+1.5,  w/C 
pet,  large  ctosels,  pool,  laundry,  paridng 
included  $995.  310-395-RENT  www.west- 
siderentals.com 

PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT  2+1  3/4, 
laundry,  garage.  Won't  Last!  $1360.  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westsiderentals.com 

Santa  Monica  Ibd/lbth,  living  room,  partdng 
space,  storage,  kitchen  w/oven  &  refridg. 
$1150/mo.  Zay  310-541-2887. 

SANTA  MONICA  APARTMENT  private  room, 
bath,  R&S.  laundry,  patio,  fireplace.  $495. 
310-395-RENT.  www.westskJerenials.com 

SANTA  MONICA  APARTMENT  2+2.  bal- 
cony, laundry,  partying  irx;luded.  $1425.  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westsk1erentals.com 

SANTA  MONK^A  HOUSE  fumished,  private 
room,  t}ath,  fVw  floors,  w/d  utilities  paid 
$480.  310-395-RENT.  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 

SANTA  MONICA,  fumished  private  room,  ■ 
bath,  near  beach,  R&S,  laundry.  $450.  310- 
395-7368.  www.westskJerentals  com. 

VENICE 

1BDRM  $1390+  2B0RM  $1680+Special  pri- 
vate garden  apartments.  1bdrm-$1650 
2bdrm-$2200.  Lincoln  Place  Garden  Apts. 
Call  310-450-8119. 

VENICE  APARTMENT  STUDIO.  1  bath,  only 
steps  to  beach,  laundry,  utilities  paki.  periling 
included.  $650.  310-395-RENT.  wv«v.west- 
siderentals.com. 

WEST  COVINA  HOUSE  3  bedroom,  hard- 
¥raod  fkx)rs.  yard.  $1500.  818-623-4444. 
www.allofLA.com 

WEST  LA  GUESTHOUSE  for  rent.  $675/mo, 
utilities  included.  Close  to  bus  stop.  15  min- 
utes from  UCLA.  Female  preferred.  Call  310- 
312-0460  for  an  appt. 

WESTWOOD 

New.  1  +  1  apartment.  2  miles  to  campus 
^  Prime  k)cation.  Private  entry.  $850.  Female 
preferred.  310-475-9145. 

WESTWOOD  APARTMENT  bachelor,  1 
t)ath,  laundry,  small  fridge  $675.  310-395- 
RENT.  .www.westsiderentals.com 

WESTWOOD  APARTMENT.  2+1.  patio, 
laundry,  blinds,  garage.  $1450.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.westsiderentals.com 

WESTWOOD  BEAUTIFUL  BACHELOR 
FOR  RENT  Walk  to  UCLA.  1  bkjck  from 
campus.  Paridng,  security  buikling.  refrigera- 
tor.etc.  $700/mo.  310-476-8090. 

WESTWOOD.  2BDRM/2BATH  $1450  AND 
UP  TILE  KITCHEN.  STEPDOWN  LIVING 
ROOM.  HIGH  CEILING.  CHARM.  1  MILE 
SOUTH  OF  WILSHIRE.  SOME  W/BAL- 
CONY310-839-6294. 


8600 

Conclo/Townhoiise  for  Rent 


1BDRM/2BTH,  security  building/garage, 
sunny  w/view,  pool/jacuzzi,  suana/gym, 
large  ctosets,  vacant  11/15.  lease  $i275/mo. 
310-471-1335. 


8700 

Condo/Townhoiise  for  Sale 


IMAGINE  OWNING  WILSHIRE  Corridor/Hi- 
Rise  single.  1or2bdrm  $75K-$150K.  Walk  to- 
UCL/V/Village.  24hr/security  Spectacular 
views. 'pool,  Jacuzzi,  sauna,  valet  service 
Agent-Bob  310-478-1835ext.109 


8800 

Giiestliouse  for  Rent 


'^     CULVER  CITY 
GUfeSTHOUSE 

Single  guesthouse  in  great  neightx>mood. 
Easy  paridng,  near  Overtand  and  Jefferson. 
$600/month  Utilities  included.  10-572-1239 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


SANTA  MONICA  -2bd/1bth.  Cooler.  2  partc- 

ing  spaces  +   storage    Breakfast  room 

Kitchen  w/  oven.refrtdg.  $1450/mo.  Zay  310- 

541-2887. 
J — 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


WESTWOOD-1/2  MILE 
FROM  UCLA 

Prime  location,  share  house  $1200- 
1400/month.  www.lasolutions.com/rent.htm 
tiffany.kangOexcite.com 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


A  BEAUTIFUL  ROOM  4min  from  UCLA  in 
excliange  for  tutoring  (lOhrs),  some  driving. 
Kkjs-I4&i2.  Female  UCLA  students  only 
310-271-7575. 

BRENTWOOD 

GUESTHOUSE 

FOR  HELP 

Private  entrance:  gated  property  with  pool. 
For  after-school  help  with  children  (14&12 
years),  including  driving.  310-476-4297. 


9AOO 

Room  for  Rent 


LOOKING  FOR  PVT  ROOM  lor  rent.  Max 
$350.00/mo  +utililres  in  Santa  Monica/West- 
wood.  Clean, organized, responsible  senior 
student.  Paridng  needed.  Call  John  626-201- 
6553. 

WESTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

bedroom  lurnlture  optional.  1  roommate,  fe- 
male/non-smoker Off-street  paridng.  $650, 
includes  utilities.  310-231-8200  ext.  333. 

WESTWOOD 

Walk  to  UCLA.  Male-Only  Large,  private  fur- 
nished txirm  w/bath.  Kitchen  privileges,  laun- 
dry, partying.  $700/month.  Another  room 
$600/month.  310-473-5769. 

WESTWOOD.  1/2  mile  from  UCLA,  own 
room(s).  Share  clean  house.  Professional  or 
student.  $1200/month.  www.iasolu- 
tions.com/rent.htm,  tiffany.kangOexc- 

ite.com. 


9500 

Roommates-Private  Room 


APARTMENT  to  Share.  Sherman  Oaks. 
Private  bedroom  w/hardwood  floors, 
kitchen&laundry.  Non-smoking  female,  no 
pets.  $550/mo  includes  utilities.  Available 
Octl.  818-632-0584. 

ASIAN/QUIET/CLEAN.  Bus  in  front  house, 
Westwood/Pico.  3-mo.  min  stay  Required  2 
good  references.  Private  bedroom  share- 
bath.  $550/month.  share  bed/bath  includes 
utilities.  $40/day  310-475-8787. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  private  room  and  bath  in 
2t>drm/2bth  bright,  upper  apt.  Redwood 
floors,  antique  and  contemporary  furniture, 
nice  kitchen,  neighbors.  Female  student  or 
professional.  $950.  310-990-1781. 

WEST  LA/PALMS  Looking  lor  female  non- 
smoker  to  share  2bed,  2  1/2  bath  condo, 
$600/month  each.  Water  and  trash  paid, 
dishwasher,  washer/dryer.  Partially  fur- 
nished. 310-478-5677. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt  Fun,  outgoing 
female  looking  for  female  roommate!  Own 
bed/bath  in  2bdrm/2bth  apartment,  gated 
paridng,  jacuzzi  on  root,  security  building. 
Available  i/Oi,  $900/mo.  310-209-2665. 

WLA  female  roommate(s)  wanted  to  share 
one  large  room  (okay  for  two)/prlvate  bath  in 
a  2bdrm/2bth  apt.  Gated  parking, 
$697. 50/mo+ 1  /2utilities.  3 1 0-508-2783 
Cathy  Lin. 


9600 

Roommates-Shared  Room 


WESTWOOD-  phat  pad.  548  Kelton.  3bdrm, 
need  one  male  to  share  room.  $4l7/month. 
No  psychos  310-209-1882 


9700 

Sublets 


AVAILABLE  NOW!!!  Sepulveda&National. 
Share  2bdrm/2bth.  Furnished  room:bunk 
bed,  dresser,  closet,  desk  Until  end  of  quar- 
ter Deo^.$600+half  utilities.  310-610-2925. 


FREE 


ADVERTISING? 


YES!!! 

BRUIN  BARGAINS 

OFFERS  FREE 

ADVERTISING  FOR 

ANY  ITEI^  WORTH 

$100  OR  LESS!* 

For  more  info  call  (310)  825-2221 

or  come  by  the  Daily  Bruin 

at  118Kerckhoff  Hall 

•For  items  between  $101 -$500,  $2  extra 


Display 
206-3060 


,C'-« 


CJ 


30       Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Shorts 


INDIVIDUALS 

From  page  36 

■    ■   '  '■'     ■' 

Mebrahtom  Keflezighi  in  the  10.000, 
Suzy  Powell  and  Seilala  Sua  in  the  dis- 
cus, and  Nada  Kawar,  who  hurled  the 
shot  put  for  Jordan. 

Shakedia  Jones  was  an  alternate  in 
the  400m  relay.  Dawn  Dumble  made 
the  national  team  but  did  not  have  an 
Olympic  qualifying  toss  in  the  shot  put 
and  Bridget  Pearson  was  Ireland's 
best  pole  vaulter,  but  did  not  meet  the 
qualifying  Olympic  height. 

Keflezighi  was  one  of  the  youngest 
runners  in  the  field  and  managed  a 
personal-best  time  of  27:53.63,  good 


enough  for  12th  place.  ' 

,  .  Devers  was  also  slated  to  run  in  the 
400m  relay,  but  pulled  her  hamstring 
in  a  qualifying  round  of  the  hurdles. 

UCLA  also  sent  five  beach  volley- 
bailers  to  the  Olympics,  two  from  the 
men's  side  and  three  for  the  women. 

USA's  Kevin  Wong,  teaming  with 
Rob  Heidger,  lost  in  the  quarterfinals, 
a  much  higher  Finish  than  many 
expected.  ^  ■;'■■"■■"   -■;  ^\  •'"■:■'.'•.■  ,:-.v-r. 

Competing  for  Norway,  Bjorn 
Maaseide  was  eliminated  by  Wong 
and  Heidger  on  the  third  day  of  the 
tournament. 

Both  USA  women's  teams  were 
expected  to  contend  for  medals,  but 
both  disappointed.  UCLA's  Annett 


Buckner  Davis  and  Jenny  Johnson 
Jordan  teamed  together  and  lost  in  the 
quarterfinals  to  a  Japan. 

UCLA's  Holly  McPeak  paired  up 
with  Misty  May  (Long  Beach  State)  to 
form  a  medal  favorite  duo  but  also  lost 
in  the  quarterflnals  to  a  team  from 
Brazil.     >  •  V 

Four  freshman  made  the  U.S.  and 
Canadian  national  gymnastics  teams, 
two  of  them  alternates.  Kristen 
Maloney  and  Jamie  Dantzscher  com- 
peted for  the  United  States,  but  nei- 
ther earned  a  medal.  Alyssa 
Beckerman  and  Yvonne  Tousek  were 
alternates  for  the  U.S.  and  Canada, 
respectively.   .•  s.  /'■  '> 

The  U.S.  team  improved  from  a 


poor  showing  at  qualifying  that  saw 
them  barely  squeeze  into  fmals,  and 
rebounded  there  to  place  fourth  over- 
all. 

"I  think  we  went  in  there  with  a  dif- 
ferent attitude,"  Maloney  said.  "We 
just  wanted  to  go  out  there  and  have 
fun." 

Asked  if  she  was  disappointed  with 
a  fourth-place  showing,  Maloney 
responded  in  the  negative. 

"We  did  about  the  best  we  could, 
and  we  were  happy,"  she  said. 

Steve  McCain  of  the  disbanded 
UCLA  men's  gymnastics  (1993) 
placed  fifth  in  the  high  and  parallel 
bars,  but  missed  the  team  all-around 
due  to  a  sprained  ankle. 


Other  Bruins  who  cornpeted  in  indi- 
vidual events  in9lude  current  junior 
Marilyn  Chua,  v^o  fmished  third  in 
her  qualifying  heat  of  the  SOm 
freestyle,  which  was  not  good  enough 
to  advance  to  the  next  round. 

Tawny  Banh  competed  on  the  OS. 
table  tennis  team,  and  Mark  Knowles 
of  the  Bahamas  dropped  a  heartbreak- 
er  in  doubles  tennis,  losing  to  the  fifth- 
seeded  team  from  South  Africa  in  the 
quarterflnals,  4-6, 6-2, 1 4- 1 2. 

Sally  Scovel  was  an  alternate  for  the 
U.S.  rowing  squad. 

Although  Bruin  individuals  only 
earned  four  medals,  UCLA  still  tied 
the  University  of  Texas  for  the  most 
overall  medals  by  one  school  with  18. 


XJCLA 

Affiliated  with  the  Time  Warner  Corporation 


If  you  can  read  this, 
tutor  someone  who  can't! 

§  Tutors  work  one-on-one  with  a  child,  teen,  or  §  Volunteer  4  hours  a  week  for  3  quarters, 

adult.  §  Transportation,  materials,  &  training  are 

§  Choose  between  the  Watts  Library,  Vernon  provided!     ... 
Library,  or  Mar  Vista  Gardens  in  Culver  City. 


Come  to  an  Orientation  Session! ! ! 


Tuesday 

Wednesday 

Thursday 

Friday 

Tuesday 

Wednesday 

Thursday 

Friday 


10/3/00 

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10/6/00 

10/10/00 

10/11/00 

10/12/00 

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With  >8  overall  medals  and  eight  gold  medals.  UCLA  wa«  rh#  mott  tf 
on  the  medal  stand  at  the  Sydney  Games. 


iftaL 


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TEAM 

From  page  35 

China,  to  advance  to  the  medal  round. 

In  the  gold  medal  game  against 
Norway  however,  the  defense  broke 
down  in  the  final  minute  of  play, 
allowing  the  Nords  to  tie  the  game  at 
two. 

The  U.S.  outplayed  Norway  for 
most  of  the  game,  but  came  up  short, 
allowing  a  golden  goal  in  overtime 
and  taking  home  the  silver. 

The  Olympics  were  probably  the 
last  for  Fawcett,  who  won  gold  in  '96. 
Ellis  traveled  around  Australia  for 
most  of  the  tournament,  scouting  the 
United  States'  upcoming  opponents. 

"It  was  a  great  and  unbelievable 
experience,  not  just  the  soccer  side  of 
it  but  the  atmosphere,"  Ellis  said. 
"Just  to  be  around  those  elite  athletes 
was  a  tremendous  honor." 

On  the  men's  side,  Pete  Vagenas, 
Sasha  Victorine,  Frankie  Hejduk  and 
Brad  Friedc!  helped  the  U.S.  to  iu 
best  ever  Olympic  finish.  The  men  lost 
to  Chile  in  the  bronze  medal  game. 

Like  the  women,  the  men's  team 
outplayed  the  competition  for  most  of 
the  game,  but  still  came  up  short. 

"I  don't  think  there's  any  question 
that  we  were  definitely  the  dominant 
(team)  in  terms  of  physicality.  Games 
like  that  when  you  have  the  run  of  play 
for  the  first  20-25  minutes  and  you 
don't  score,  it's  bound  to  shift  the 
other  way.  They  really  didn't  get  that 
much  of  the  ball  or  that  much  of  the 
play  up  until  the  end,"  Vagenas  said. 

Most  people  expected  the  men's 
volleyball  team  to  contend  in  the 
medal  round,  but  it  was  not  to  be. 

UCLA  head  coach  Al  Scates  sent 
Bruins  Dan  Landry,  JeffNygaard  and 
Erik  Sullivan  to  Sydney,  but  their  per- 
formances were  disappointing,  espe- 
cially because  Nygaard  was  suffering 
from  the  effects  of  mono  and  strep 


throat.  The  team  hit  a  low  point  in  the 
fourth  game,  losing  to  winless  South 
Korea  to  eventually  place  1 1  th. 

"It  was  very  disappointing,"  Scates 
said.  "That  team  could've  won  a 
medal,  and  if  they'd  played  well,  we 
could've  done  a  gold  medal.  We 
weren't  expected  to,  but  if  we  were  at 
the  top  of  our  game  we  could've  won  a 
gold  medal." 

Ironically,  fans  and  family  mem- 
bers at  the  tournament  were  wonder- 
ing if  Scates,  the  winningest  coach  in 
NCAA  history,  would  ever  accept  a 
spot  as  the  national  team's  head 
coach. 

"Well,  I'm  not  interested  if  they're 
going  to  continue  on  in  Colorado 
Springs,"  Scates'^id  of  the  national 
team's  training  center. 

"That's  why  I  turned  the  job  down 
the  last  time." 

UCLA  senior  Mark  Williams  com- 
peted for  the  hometown  Aussie 
squad,  which  also  failed  to  make  the 
medal  round,  though  they  ended  up 
placing  eighth. 

The  UCLA  men's  water  polo  team 
started  its  season  without  senior  Sean 
Kern,  as  he  and  former  Bruin  Dan 
Hackett  battled  traditional  men's 
water  polo  powera  Russia,  Yugoslavia 
and  Spain  to  a  sixth  place  finish  at  the 
Olympics. 

Natalie  Williams,  who  also  tried 
out  for  the  U.S.  volleyball  team, 
scored  a  teanv4iigh  IS  points  to  help 
secure  an  undefeated  record  and  the 
gold  medal  for  women's  basketball. 

Part  of  the  reason  Sports 
Illustrated  chose  UCLA  as  the  No.  1 
athletic  school  in  the  country  in  1997 
was  because  of  its  longstanding  tradi- 
tion of  training  Olympic  athletes. 
With  13  medals  in  team  sports, 
UCLA  continued  their  custom  of  cul- 
tivating top-level  athletes. 

'  — -^ 

With  contributions  from  Jeff  Ague  ar>d 
PauMne  V^  Dally  Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Tuesday,  October  3, 2000       33 


..  •  '  ■■  V. 


Cordially  invites  UCLA 
Seniors  to  a 


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and  Reception 
On- 


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Wednesday,  October  4*^,  2000 


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34       Tuesday,  October  3, 2000 


D«iy  Bruin  Sports 


LEWIS 

From  page  36 

compared  to  reality.  The  city 
is  almost  perfectly  clean, 
every  building  is  different 
and  more  creative  than  the 
one  next  to  it.  Every  street  is 
bright,  a  pleasure  to  walk 
down. 

Bondi  and  Manly  beaches 
are  beautiful  white  sand 
expanses,  enclosed  on  both 
sides  by  cliffs  that  rival  any 
Mediterranean  island. 

After  a  train  ride  of  less 
than  an  hour  (and  over  100 
murals  of  Ian  Thorpe),  you 
can  pet  koalas,  kangaroos 
and  echidnas  in  the  wild. 

I  guess  I  have  to  admit  the 
Olympics  were  not  perfect 
this  year.  Just  ask  the 
Russian  gymnasts  who 
scolTed  at  the  results  of  the 
vault  after  it  was  set  to  the 
wrong  height. 

Also,  NBC  failed  in  their 
part  to  show  the  games  to 
the  world. 

On  Saturday,  Sept.  27, 1 
watched  Ato  Bolden  and 
Marion  Jones  win  their  heats 
of  the  200-meter  at  10:30 
a.m.,  Sydney  time.  My  plane 
left  at  6  p.m. 


The  flight,  plus  the  delay,' 
took  16  hours.  Customs  and 
finding  a  ride  home  from  the 
airport  took  another  two 
hours. 

When  I  finally  got  home^,! 
flipped  on  the  TV  to  watch 
more  Olympics.  A  few  hours 
later,  I  saw  the  same  races  I 
had  watched  in  Sydiiey  24 
hours  before. 

And  NBC  exec  Dick 
Ebersol  wonders  where  the 
ratings  went.  If  viewers 
respond  as  slow  as  NBC,  he 
should  check  the  next  ratings 
period. 

But  back  to  the  Games. 
Some  have  speculated  that  if 
Athens  cannot  get  back  on 
schedule  with  its  planning 
for  the  2004  games,  Sydney 
should  be  the  default  city 
because  it  last  hosted  the 
Olympics. 

Anybody  who  was  in 
Sydney  this  time  around 
won't  be  able  to  help  won- 
dering exactly  when  is 
Greece's  deadline. 

Lewis  returns  sadly,  as  he  is 
without  the  pet  echidna  that 
would  have  made  his  apart- 
ment complete.  If  you  have  an 
extra  one,  e-mail 

greglewis@uclabruins.com 


MilOOP  NOTEBOOK 


Rush 

becomes  CBA 
draftee 

Former  UCLA  forward 
JaRon  Rush  was  drafted  in 
the  third  round  of  the 
Continental  Basketball 
Association  draft  by  the  Fort 
Wayne  Fury  two  weeks  ago. 
The  6-foot-7  Kansas  City 
native  declared  himself  eligi- 
ble for  the  NBA  Draft  back 
in  early  May,  but  was  not 
selected. 

He  joins  the  Fury  along- 
side other  NCAA  stars  from 
this  past  season,  including 
Fort  Wayne's  first  round 
choice,  6-10  center  Malik 
Allen  from  Villanova,  6-1 
guard  A.J.  Guyton  from 
Indiana  and  5-9  guard  Andre 
Patteron  from  Appalachian 
State. 

UCLA  hoop 
news 

Saturday,  Oct.  14  marks 
the  first  official  day  of  prac- 


tice. Currently,  players  are  in 
conditioning  after  a  strenu- 
ous oflseason  that  saw  many 
players  play  summer  league 
and  rigorously  work  out  in 
Westwood. 

The  Bruins  open  the  2000- 
2001  campaign  on  the  road 
as  they  take  on  Roy 
Williams'  Kansas  Jayhawks 
on  Nov.  9  at  6:30  p.m.  EST  at 
the  IKON  Coaches  vs. 
Cancer  Classic  at  Madison 
Square  Garden  in  New  York. 

Bruins  in  the 
pros 

With  the  start  of  NBA 
training  camps  this  week, 
many  former  UCLA  players 
are  vying  to  solidify  profes- 
sional roster  spots  this  sea- 
son. 

Two  weeks  ago,  1995 
Wooden  Award  winner  Ed 
O'Bannon  signed  a  contract 
with  the  Orlando  Magic  to 
attend  camp  and  compete 
for  a  position  on  a  ballclub 
that  added  Tracy  McGrady 
and  Grant  Hill  to  its  roster  in 
the  offseason. 


Meanwhile  Ed's,  brother 
Charles  played  last  season  in 
Japan  and  is  looking  to 
return  to  the  NBA  after  ini- 
tially being  drafted  by  the 
Detroit  Pistons.  His  former 
Bruin  teammates  George 
Zidek  and  Tyus  Edney 
played  together  in  Italy,  with 
Edney  earning  MVP  honors 
in  the  Italian  League. 

Toby  Bailey  became  an 
unrestricted  free  agent  after 
two  seasons  with  the  Phoenix 
Suns.  The  6-6  guard  was  slat- 
ed to  signed  a  contract  with 
the  Chicago  Bulls,  but  nego- 
tiations have  stalled  and  no 
agreement  has  been  reached. 
Bailey  played  in  46  games 
this  past  season,  shooting  41 
percent  for  a  3.5  ppg  aver- 
age. 

The  1 1  th  pick  in  the  2000 
NBA  Draft,  6-10  forward 
Jerome  Moiso,  recently 
signed  a  three-year  deal  with 
the  Boston  Celtics.  Due  to 
NBA  statutes  prohibiting  the 
release  of  rookie  contract 
terms,  no  information  is 
known  about  annual  salary 
or  incentives  to  the  deal. 

Former  UCLA  forward 


Greg  Foster,  who  played  for 
one  season  with  Reggie 
Miller  in  1986  before  trans- 
ferring to  Texas-El  Paso  to 
join  Tim  Hardaway  and 
Antonio  Davis,  was  acquired 
by  the  Los  Angeles  Lakers. 
The  6-1 1  center  averaged  3.4 
points  in  60  games  in 
1999-2000. 

1992  UCLA  graduate 
Don  MacLean  signed  a  deal 
in  the  offseason  to  join  the 
Miami  Heat,  while  teammate 
and  former  Bruin  Tracy 
Murray  was  traded  from 
Washington  to  the  Denver 
Nuggets.  The  6-7  guard  aver- 
aged 10.2  -points,  3.4 
rebounds  and  shot  43  per- 
cent from  beyond  the  arc. 

Darrick  Martirt,  a  5-11 
guard,  appeared  in  71  games 
last  season  for  the 
Sacramento  Kings,  backing 
up  Jason  Williams  and  Tony 
Delk.  The  82-percent  free 
throw  shooter  averaged  5.7 
points  per  contest  for  the 
team  in  last  year's  playoffs. 

Notes  compiled  by 
AJ  Cadman,  Daily  Bruin  Senior 
Staff. 


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Tuesday,  October  3, 2000       35 


TEAM  ■"'Iv-"::?:::;/:-:;: 

From  page  36       ;  VV         !'  ' 

altcmatefor  the  U.S.  team.  She  made 
the  trip  to  Sydney  and  was  pulled  out 
of  the  stands  to  celebrate  after  the 
gold-medal  victory. 
"In  women's  water  polo,  four 
Bruins  lost  the  closest  gold  medal 
game  in  Olympics  history,  as 
Australia  beat  the  U.S.  on  a  long 
range  shot  with  less  than  half  a  second 
left. 

The  contest  was  a  rematch  of  a  pre- 
liminary game  in  which  the  Aussies 
won  7-6.  UCLA  head  coach  Guy 
Baker  coached  the  Americans, 
Nicolle  Payne  was  the  tournament's 
best  goalkeeper,  and  senior  Coralie 
Simmons  also  played  strong,  scoring 
nine  goals. 

Sophomore  Robin  Beauregard 
scored  six  goals  for  the  U.S.  squad. 

The  two  USA-Australia  games 
were  the  two  highest-attended 
women's  water  polo  games  in  history. 

The  women's  soccer  team  featured 
two  of  the  last  three  UCLA  head 
coaches:  Joy  Fawcett  playing  at  the 
midfield  spot  and  current  coach 
Jillian  Ellis  as  an  assistant  coach. 

Team  USA  came  out  of  the 
Games'  toughest  bracket,  going 
unbeaten  against  the  world's  second- 
and  third-best  teams,  Norway  and 

~  See  TEAM,  page  32 


■\    ^a: 


FOOTBALL  NOTEBOOK 


A-„ 


Paus  recovers 

Quarterback  Cory  Paus's  arm  is 
fine.  After  10  months  without  play- 
ing an  entire  game,  Paus  says  his 
arm  is  sore,  but  no  more  sore  than  it 
would  be  after  any  game. 

Paus  missed  four  weeks  with  a 
separated  shoulder  that  he  got  on 
the  first  play  of  UCLA's  opening 
game  against  Alabama. 

"It's  not  perfect,  but  it's  pretty 
good,"  he  said.  "I  really  had  to  step 
in  to  some  of  the  longer  throws,  but 
I  should  be  100  percent  by  next 
game."    -^  ■    -v^ 

The  next  game  is  two  weeks  away 
at  Cal.  This  Saturday  is  the  ^ruins' 
bye  week,. 

Timely  rest 

The  bye  week  comes  at  a  perfect 
time  for  the  Bruins. 

"We're  a  beat  up  football  team 
right  now,"  head  coach  Bob  Toledo 
said.  "We're  going  to  use  this  to  rest 
some  of  the  guys  who  are  hurt,  and 
build  quality  depth  with  our  back- 
ups." 

Some  key  Bruin  starters  will  use 
the  time  to  recuperate  from  injuries. 
Among  the  players  who  will  miss  all 
or  parts  of  practice  over  the  next 


two  weeks  are  Paus,  running  backs 
DeShaun  Foster  (broken  hand), 
Jermaine  Lewis  (tweaked  ankle), 
defensive  lineman  Kenyon 
Coleman  (knee  surgery).  Ken 
Kocher  (sprained  ankle)  and  Rusty 
Williams  (shoulder  sprain),  as  well 
as  defensive  backs  Jason  Bell 
(pulled  hamstring)  and  Marques 
Anderson  (undisclosed  shoulder 
injury)^  ,._^  ....... .     _ 

Despite  loss  of 
Foster,  offense 
remains  the  same 

For  the  third  year  in  a  row  star 
running  back  DeShaun  Foster  has 
sustained  an  injury  that  will  force 
him  to  miss  action. 

"He's  one  of  the  great  backs  In 
the  country,"  Toledo  said.  "Without 
him,  we're  missing  a  lot  from  the 
team." 

Toledo  said  that  he  will  not 
change  his  ofTense  at  all.  "We 
recruit  players  to  the  system  and  I 
think  you  guys  saw  that  on  Saturday 
with  Jermaine  (Lewis)  and  Akil 
(Harris)  each  gaining  over  100 
yards." 

Toledo  and  Paus  both  said  that 


they  expect  teams  to  sUck  eight  men 
on  the  line  of  scrimmage,  as  they 
have  done  all  season,  despite  Foster 
being  out.      ..;  ^  ; .   '■ 

"I  was  real  excited  to  come  back 
and  get  a  chance  to  play  with 
DeShaun."  Paus  said.  "But  I  know 
how  he  feels,  because  I  just  came 
back  myself." 


Polls  unkind  to~ 
Bruins 

"I  can't  really  get  caught  up  in 
that,"  Toledo  said  about  this 
week's  polls. 

Despite  a  38-31  win,  UCLA 
dropped  a  spot  in  each  poll,  even 
though  teams  ranked  ahead  of  the 
Bruins  have  lost  to  them.  ESPN 
has  the  Bruins  ranked  No.  17,  and 
the  AP  ranks  them  16th. 

"Michigan  is  10  spots  ahead  of 
us?"  Toledo  asked  at  Monday's 
news  conference. 

UCLA  beat  the  Wolverines  23- 
20  two  weeks  ago  at  the  Rose 
Bowl. 

"Maybe  the  game  was  on  too 
late,  and  (they)  voted  when  we 
were  down  21-0,"  Toledo  said. 

The  Pac-10  now  has  five  schools 
in  the  Top  25,  with  Oregon  at  No. 


9,  Washington  at  No.  13,  USC  at 
No.  18  and  Oregon  State  No.  23. 

Further  examination  of  poll 
logic  yields  the  following: 
Washington  and  Miami  both  have 
one  loss,  Washington  has  played  a 
tougher  schedule,  Washington 
beat  Miami  two  weeks  ago,  but  the 
Huskies  are  ranked  seven  spots 
lower  than  the  Hurricanes. 

Lewis  to  Start ... 
for  now 

The  saga  of  running  back 
Jermaine  Lewis  continues.  This 
will  be  the  third  time  in  his  four 
years  that  he  has  the  starting  spot. 

"He's  a  good  player  who's  had 
his  place  taken  from  him  by  some 
great  players,"  Toledo  said 

Skip  Hicks  was  the  first  back  to 
take  over  the  starting  role  from 
Lewis,  and  now  Foster  has  sup- 
planted him  as  the  No.  1  running 
back. 

"Skip  Hicks  is  in  the  NFL  now, 
and  DeShaun  Foster  will  be  play- 
ing in  that  three-letter  league  too," 
Toledo  said. 

Notes  compiled  by  Greg  Lewis,  Daily 
Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


^.  ,.  .     _« 


UCLffer 


36 — 

I  Update  on  and  off  the  gridiron 
After  Saturday's  comeback  ;; 

victory  over  the  Sun  Devils,  the; 
Bruins  have  a  bye  week,  and 
they're  taking  full  advantage  of  It. 
See  page  35  for  football  notes 

Tuesday,  October  3, 2000  ' 


—  Daily  Bruin 


Sports  on  the  Web  Q    q 
See  all  this  and  more  at  i 
the  DaHy  Bruin's  : 

Website:  • 

• 

www.dailybruin.ucla.edu  I 


Bruins  boost  U.S.  teams  during  Games 


The  AswciMrd  ffm 

USA's  Lisa  Fernandez  jumps  into  the  arms  of  Jennifer  McFaib,  who 
scored  the  gold-medal  winning  run  vs.  Japan  at  the  2000  Olympics. 


OLYMPICS:  TVadition  of 
UCLA  athletics  continues 
as  alumni  earn  18  medals 


By  Greg  Lewis 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

SYDNEY,  Australia  -  Every 
Oiympics,  UCLA  sends  more  ath- 
letes to  the  games  than  any  other  uni- 
versity. This  year  was  no  exception 
with  SO  Bruins  competing  and  coach- 
ing For  eight  difTerent  countries. 

Olympic  team  sports  are  well- 
stocked  with  Bruins  who  have  been 
responsible  for  many  of  the  school's 
103  national  championships.  Of 
UCLA's  18  medals,  14  were  awarded 
in  team  sports,  seven  gold,  four  silver 
and  three  bronze. 

Softball,  where  UCLA  has  domi- 
nated the 
NCAA,  was 
the  most  well- 
represented 
of  the  team 
sports.  Eight 
Bruins  played 
Softball  in 
Sydney,  five 
winning  gold 
medals  for  the 
United  States 
and  three 
earning  bronze  for  the  Aussies. 

For  the  second  Olympics  in  a  row, 
pitcher  Lisa  Fernandez  asserted  her- 
self as  the  best  player  in  the  world, 
pitching  in  the  team's  most  important 
games,  including  the  extra-inning 
gold  medal  game  against  the  previ- 
ously-undefeated Japanese  squad. 

The  Softball  team  had  won  112 
games  in  a  row  before  the  Japanese 
beat  USA  in  the  preliminary  round, 
also  in  extra-innings.  In  the  next  game 
the  U.S.  lost  to  fourth-place  China  in 
an  Olympic-record  14  innings.  That 
brought  on  a  matchup  with  the  home- 
town Aussies,  the  only  team  to  beat 
the  United  States  in  Atlanta  four 
years  ago. 

That  game  went  13  innings,  with 
Fernandez  striking  out  an  Olympic 
record  25  of  the  40  batters  she  faced. 
UCLA's  Christie  Ambrosi  singled 
home  Team  USA's  only  run  of  the 


game  in  the  top  of  the  13th. 

In  the  bottom  of  the  inning,  how- 
ever, Australia's  Peta  Edebone  hit  a 
two-run  home  run  to  left  field  to  win 
the  game. 

"1  made  two  mistakes  the  whole 
game,"  Fernandez  said.  "That  one 
was  a  dropbail  that  didn't  drop." 

The  game  was  almost  identical  to 
the  United  States'  loss  in  19%,  in 
which  Fernandez  was  perfect 
through  10  innings  before  relinquish- 
ing a  home  run  to  lose  the  game. 

The  U.S.  came  back  to  win  the 
next  two  games  in  preliminary  play, 
drawing  a  medal  round  matchup 
against  the  Chinese.  UCLA  junior 
catcher  Stacey  Nuveman.  the  only 
current  collegian  on  the  squad,  prac- 
tically won  the  game  by  herself. 

She  picked  two  runners  off  first 
base,  including  one  in  the  top  of  the 
14th.  In  the  bottom  of  the  inning,  she 
hit  a  three-run  home  run  to  win  the 
game  for  the  U.S. 

The  win  forced  a  rematch  with 
Australia,  with  the  loser  taking  home 
the  bronze,  and  the  winner  facing  the 
powerful  Japanese  squad.  Fernandez 
struck  out  13  Aussies  in  USA's  only 
game  against  a  medal-round  team 
that  did  not  go  into  extra  innings. 
After  the  gold  medal  game,  the  U.S. 
played  a  total  of  five  extra  inning 
games. 

Nuveman  and  Fernandez  again 
starred  in  the  gold  medal  game. 
Nuveman  went  2-for-3,  including  an 
RBI  single  in  the  fifth  to  tie  the  score 
at  one  and  a  single  in  the  bottom  of 
the  eighth  that  ended  up  being  the 
winning  run  after  Jennifer  McFalls 
took  on  the  pinch  running  duties. 

Third  baseman  Jennifer 
Brundage,  second  baseman  Dr.  Dot 
Richardson  and  first  baseman  Sheila 
Comell-Douty,  who  each  started 
every  game,  also  earned  gold  medals 
for  UCLA  and  the  United  Sutes. 

Former  UCLA  players  Tanya 
Harding,  who  pitched  Australia  to  its 
preliminary  round  victory  over  the 
United  States,  catcher  Kerry  Dienelt 
and  right  fielder  JoAnne  Brown  all 
earned  bronze  medab  while 
representing  Australia. 
Junior  Amanda  Freed  was  an 

SccTEMipagcJS 


UCLA  atNetes 
crowd  ^ney 
in  individual 
competitions 

GAMES:  Solo  efforts  net 
four  medals,  place  Bruins 
in  international  spotlight 


By  Greg  Lewis 

Daily  Bruin  SenkK  StafF 

SYDNEY,  Australia  -  Bruins  excel 
not  only  in  team  sports  such  as  soft- 
ball,  volleyball,  soccer  and  water  polo, 
but  are  typically  some  of  the  higher 
profile  athletes  in  individual  sports,  as 
well. 

The  most  visible  Bruins  are  in  track 
and  field,  which  featured  1 1  UCLA 
athletes  this  year. 

Ato  Boldon,  representing  Trinidad 
&  Tobago,  was  the  most  successful 
Bruin,  winning  silver  in  the  100  meters 
and  bronze  in  the  200m. 

-Boklon  clocked  the  fastest  qualify- 
ing time  in  the  200m  at  20.52  seconds, 
and  was  the  favorite  entering  the  final 
as  well,  but  lost  to  surprise  winner 
Konstantinos  Kenteris  of  Greece. 
Kenteris  was  the  first  man  from  his 
country  to  win  a  sprinting  gold  since 
the  ancient  Olympics.  Darren 
Campbell  of  Great  Britain  placed  sec- 
ond. 

"  I  didn't  do  what  I  came  here  to  db, 
which  was  win  a  gold  medal,"  Boklon 
said  in  a  TV  interview  after  the  200m 
race.  "I'm  happy  and  disappointed  at 
the  same  time ." 

Andrea  Anderson  was  UCLA's 
only  track  and  field  goki  medal  win- 
ner, helping  the  U.S.  l,600flieter  relay 
team  defeat  Jamaica  and  the  Russian 
Federation  teams. 

Shot  putter  John  Godina  was  the 
first  Bruin  to  medal  in  Sydney,  earn- 
ing the  bronze  with  a  throw  of 
69-6  3/4. 

Other  Bruins  who  competed  were 
Amy  Acuff  in  the  high  jump,  Shelia 
Burrell  in  the  hcplathalon,  Gail 
Devers  in  the  100  meter  hurdles, 

SMliaiMMNUS,pa9e30 


Australia  wins  gold  with  the  Olympics  coming  in  a  dose  second 


COLUMN:  City  ambiance,  people 
make  for  memorable  Games  by 
catering  to  tourists,  sports  fans 

If  Sydney  was  a  basketball  team,  it  certainly 
would  have  been  coached  by  John 
Wooden. 

Before  I  left,  I  referred 
to  my  10  days  in  Australia, 
as  "my  trip  to  the 
Olympics." 

Now,  it's  "my  trip  to 
Sydney."  As  a  sports  fan,  I 
never  thought  that  would 
happen.  I  did  not  think 
some  city  where  the  toilets 
flush  backward  would  be 
more  memorable  than 
watching  the  fastest  man 
on  Earth  one  day,  and  a 
gold  medal  softball  game       ^———^— 
the  next 

After  all,  the  Olympics  are  the  essence  of 
sports.  How  could  they  compete  with  a  city 
known  for  its  Opera  House? 

But  Sydney  is  just  like  a  Wooden  team. 


Everything  about  it  works. 

The  first  step  the  Australian  Olympic 
Committee  took  to  walk  the  walk  in  making 
2000  the  best  Olympic  games  yet  was  actually 
offering  spectator-friendly  events. 

Sit  in  row  35,  and  there's  an  empty  seat  in 
row  20?  No  problem.  Just  sit  there.  At  the 
USA-Australia  softball  gold  medal  game,  I 
moved  up  from  row  38  to  row  I. 

See  your  favorite  athlete  on  the  wrestling 
mat,  and  you  are  stuck  in  the  far  comer?  Run 
right  down  to  the  floor  and  take  a  snap  shot. 

This  is  a  far  cry  from  UCLA  game  manage- 
ment, where  they  cane  you  if  you  look  at  a  seat 
two  rows  down. 

Step  two  by  the  AOC  -  Olympic  event  tick- 
ets doubled  as  passes  to  ride  the  Sydney  rail 
system  for  free. 

The  Sydney  buses  were  an  event  in  them- 
selves. Three  times  1  rode  a  bus,  three  times  I 
heard  the  whole  bus  singing  in  harmony  The 
songs  "Waltzing  Matilda,"  "The  Star  Spangled 
Banner"  and  "The  wheels  on  the  bus  go  round 
and  round ..."  were  the  most  popular. 

Another  quirk  that  many  travellers  noticed 
and  nicknamed  "Aussie  advice"  was  the  some- 
times troublesome  politeness  of  the 
Sydneysiders. 


If  you  ask  an  Australian  for  advice,  they  will 
be  more  than  happy  to  give  it.  Unfortunately, 
they  are  not  always  right.  Getting  directions  to 
something  that  turns  out  to  be  right  around  the 
corner  can  be  much  more  complicated  than 
necessary. 

After  exploring  the  city  for  eight  days,  I  was 
on  my  way  to  Darling  Harbour  to  watch 
wrestling.  Two  rather  large  men  wearing 
Estonia  National  Team  jackets  appeared  lost, 
so  I  asked  them  where  they  were  trying  to  go. 

One  responded  by  waving  his  arms  around 
for  several  seconds,  pantomiming  a  giant  bear 
hug,  before  finally  picking  out  the  right  word  - 
"Rassling,"hesaid. 

After  I  pointed  him  in  the  right  direction,  I 
felt  that  I  knew  the  city  better  than  most  of  the 
people  who  lived  there. 

Tliat's  the  other  thing  about  the  Olympics. 
The  athletes  are  people.  Although  the  Dream 
Team  demanded  to  stay  in  a  luxury  hotel,  most 
athletes  were  walking  around  the  city,  looking 
just  as  much  like  a  tourist  as  any  other  vaca- 
tioner. 

I  sat  next  to  the  Slovenian  delegation  at  the 
world's  largest  IM  AX  and  talked  about  their 
efforts  to  field  an  Olympic  team  despite  a  hor- 
rible national  eoooomy. 


On  more  than  one  occasion,  I  ran  into 
United  States  athletes  shopping  for  CDs  or 
picking  out  a  boomerang  to  bring  home  to 
their  family. 

After  gold-medal  wrestler  Rulon  Gardner's 
semifinal  match,  we  struck  up  a  conversation, 
and  he  asked  if  I  wanted  a  picture  together. 

Athletes  were  all  over  the  place  -  in  bars,  in 
museums  at  the  Opera  House,  climbing  the 
Sydney  Harbour  Bridge. 

Watching  all  the  competiton  have  the  time 
of  their  lives  at  the  closing  ceremonies,  this 
much  was  obvious: 

"This  was  the  best  Olympic  games  ever," 
International  Olympic  Committee  Chairman 
Juan  Antonio  Samaranch  said. 

What  really  made  the  Olympic  games  great 
was  Sydney. 

Sports  lllustrated's  Rick  Reilly  was  right. 
He  wrote,  "I  know  where  the  2008  Olympics 
should  be.  Sydney  The  2012  Olympics? 
Sydney." 

Besides  live  events,  the  one  thing  you  cannot 
possibly  find  out  from  NBC  is  how  perfect  a 
city  Sydney  is. 

The  pictures  on  the  television  are  nothing 


M 


;.■■••>%-'■; 


u  c:  I  A 


Serving  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


Wednesday,  OaoBER  4, 2000 


www.dailybruin.ucld.edu 


Suspect  wanted  for  sexual  assault 


UCPO 


Police  are  looking  for  a  Latino  or  African  American  man  with  a  stocky 
build  who  is  believed  to  be  sexually  assaulting  women  in  Lots  2  and  3. 


SAFETY:  Campus  police 
suggest  women  walk  to 
parking  lots  in  groups 


ByLinhl^ 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Police  are  looking  for  a  man  they 
believe  is  responsible  for  a  series  of 
sexual  batteries  on  campus. 

In  each  incident,  the  suspect 
approached  women  -  all  under  the 
age  of  30  -  from  behind  as  they 
walked  to  their  cars  alone  in  Lots  2 
and  3.  The  suspect  reportedly 
grabbed  the  victims'  breasts  before 
fleeing  the  scene. 

The  last  incident  occurred 
Saturday,  making  this  the  seventh 
case  reported  since  Aug.  22. 

The  suspect  is  described  as  a 
Latino  or  African  American  man  in 


his  early  twenties  with  a  stcKky  build 
and  closely  shaven  hair.  He  is 
between  5  feet  8  inches  and  5  feet  10 
inches  tall.  On  one  occasion,  he 
reportedly  wore  a  hooded  shirt. 

Though  most  incidents  took  place 
on  a  Tuesday  or  Wednesday  between 
4  and  4:30  p.m.,  Saturday's  case  was 
the  first  time  the  assault  occurred 
over  the  weekend. 

"This  was  one  day  we  were  very 
limited  on  manpower,"  said  Sgt.  Phil 
Baguiao  of  the  university  police 
department. 

According  to  Baguiao,  there  are 
usually  fewer  cars  parked  in  the  lot  on 
Saturdays.  He  said  police  were  sur- 
prised to  hear  the  incident  occurred 
that  day. 

During  the  most  recent  case, 
which  occurred  at  2:25  p.m.  in  Lot  2, 
the  suspect  reportedly  placed  his 

See  CRIME,  page  12 


Impact  of  gun  violence 
sparks  panel  discussion 


CONFERENCE  Speakers 
recall  tragic  experiences, 
offer  potential  solutions 


By  Bimal  Rajkomar 
Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  force  of  a  bullet  sends  a  vic- 
tim sprawling  to  the  floor.  The  vic- 
tim has  a  chance  of  living  if  it  hasn't 
punctured  their  heart  or  a  major 
artery. 

But  if  the  victim  is  shot  in  the 
head,  things  are  different. 

"Their  face  could  be  destroyed," 
said  Dr.  Carolyn  Sachs,  assistant 
^professor     at     the     Emergency 
tWedicine  Center. 

jf  Some  scream  in  agony  and  others 
Vpry,  not  out  of  pain,  but  fear  of 
fying. 

"They're  scared,"  Sachs  said. 
"It's  a  life-threatening  event." 

The  paramedic  takes  the  victim 
to  the  hospital.  Ifit's  UCLA,  the  vic- 
tim is  taken  to  the  "resuscitation 


suite,"  where  they're  stripped  of 
their  clothes  while  doctors  try  to 
save  the  victim's  life. 

"It's  not  glamorous,"  Sachs  said. 
"They're  lying  flat  on  their  back 
looking  up  at  five  to  10  people." 

Yet  in  many  movies  and  through- 
out America,  perceptions  of  gun 
violence  are  different.  The  hero  kills 
the  bad  guys,  and  though  injured, 
goes  on  to  live.  In  real  life,  those 
lines  are  more  often  blurred,  and 
gun  violence  can  affect  all  facets  of 
life. 

"I  buried  my  84th  young  person 
on  Friday  -  killed  in  a  gang  shoot- 
ing," said  Father  Gregory  J.  Boyle, 
director  of  Jobs  for  a  Future  and 
Homeboy  Industries. 

Boyle  was  one  of  several  mem- 
bers of  a  round-table  discussion 
titled  "First  Monday  2000:  United 
to  End  Gun  Violence,"  at  the 
UCLA  School  of  Law  on  Monday. 

The  discussion,  part  of  a  national 
campaign  promoting  educition  and 

SeeCUNS,pa9e14 


Pholo  illuiiration  by  DAVt  HILlTOarty  Bruin  Senioi  Staff 

Handguns  are  the  most  commonly  used  weapon  in  homicides  in 
the  United  States,  according  to  the  U.S.  Department  of  Justice. 


Candidates  remain 


wNle  addressing  platform  issues 


DEBATE:  No  clear  victor 
apparent  in  match-up  as 
voters  remain  unswayed 


ByOmMPradwr 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Republican  George  W.  Bush 
sparred  with  Democrat  Al  Gore 
Tuesday  night  in  the  first  presiderh 
tial  debate  of  the  2000  campaign. 

PBS  Newshour's  Jim  Lehrer 
moderated  the  90-minute  event  at 


the  University  of  Massachusetts' 
Boston  campus,  with  both  candi- 
dates answering  his  questions  from 
behind  a  podium  on-stage. 

In  one  of  the  more  cordial 
debates  in  recent  memory.  Gore 
generally  appeared  more  fluid  while 
Bush  at  times  showed  signs  of  ner- 
vousness. 

But  neither  candidate  scored 
what  could  be  termed  a  decisive  vic^ 
tory. 

Gore  reiterated  his  commitment 
to  a  "woman's  right  to  choose,"  and 
made  the  most  of  Bush's  recent 


statements  criticizing  the  Food  and 
Drug  Administration's  approval  of 
the  controversial  abortion  pill  RU- 
486.  "7 

But  Bush  firmly  rebutted  Gore, 
twice  arguing  that  despite  opposing 
abortion,  his  position  would  not  be 
used  as  a  "litmus  test"  when 
appointing  justices  to  the  Supreme 
Court. 

Political  science  Professor  John 
Zailer,  who  follows 'elections,  said 
neither  candidate  appeared  to  com- 
mit a  major  faux  pas,  and  that  the 
public's  reaction  to  their  perfor- 


mance is  unpredictable. 

"I  saw  Gore  as  the  aggressor 
with  more  facts  and  figures,  but 
Bush  approached  the  debate  with 
more  philosophical  answers,"  he 
said.  "It'll  be  interesting  to  see 
which  style  worked." 

With  two  presidential  and  one 
vice  presidential  debate  scheduled 
for  the  coming  weeks,  supporters  of 
both  Bush  and  Gore  said  they  were 
pleased  with  their  candidates' 
debut. 

SMNMP,pa9e14 


Health  insurance 
soon  to  become 
mandatory  for 
undergraduates 

REGENTS:  Policy  to  take 
effect  next  fall;  coverage 
will  be  subsidized  by  UC 


By  Benjamin  Parke 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Beginning  fall  2001,  all  students 
at  the  University  of  California  will 
be  required  to  have  health  insurance 
as  a  condition  of  their  enrollment. 

The  UC  Board  of  Regents  adopt- 
ed the  new  policy  at  their  Sept.  13-14 
meeting  in  San  Francisco  after  it 
was  recommended  by  the  UC 
Advisory  Committee  on  Student 
Health,  due  to  concerns  over  grow- 
ing numbers  of  undergraduates 
lacking  sufficient  coverage. 

An  estimated  40  percent  of  stu- 
dents lack  adequate  health  care, 
according  to  UC  campus  surveys. 

Another  concern  was  that  stu- 
dents are  increasingly  living  out  of 
their  plan's  area  of  coverage  since 
they  leave  home  to  come  to  college. 
Students  who  do  not  already  have 
health  insurance  will  still  be  able  to 
purchase  it  through  UC. 

"The  new  undergraduate  health 
insurance  is  intended  to  respond  to 
the  crisis  in  student  health  care  and 
meet  the  needs  of  high  numbers  of 
students  who  are  dropping  out  for 
medical  reasons,"  said  UC 
President  Richard  Atkinson  in  a 
statement. 

Premiums  for  the  plans  would  be 
separate  from  the  poFtions  of  the 
registration  fees  all  students  pay 
toward  campus  health  centers  that 
provide  basic  services,  testing  and 
referrals. 

Since  1963,  all  international  stu- 
dents have  been  required  to  have 
health  insurance,  and  a  similar  man- 
date has  existed  for  graduate  stu- 
dents for  the  last  10  years.  But  only 
UC  Berkeley  and  UC  Santa  Cruz 
require  undergraduates  to  have 
insurance  -  policies  that  were  initi- 
ated by  student  referenda. 

Costs  of  the  UCB  and  UCSC 
plans  averaged  $415  per  student 
over  the  past  year,  but  premiums 
from  campus  to  campus  will  vary 
due  to  local  health  care  market  con- 
ditions and  other  factors. 

A  model  plan  for  the  rest  of  the 
campuses  was  expected  to  cost 
between  $400  and  $500  per  year, 
with  schools  getting  better  rates  as  a 
result  of  more  students  participat- 
ing. 

UCLA's  health  plan,  which  is 
separate  from  the  registration  fees 
that  partially  fund  the  campus 
health  center,  costs  about  $700  a 
year. 

Currently,  two-thirds  of  UCLA 
undergraduates  are  covered  under 

SccMSMMNapagcU 


'>■•-  ■■-■ 

i  ■■./' 
» ■  ■ 


V 


'Xr- 


Wednesday.  October  4, 2000 


Daily  Brum  Nhm 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


COMMUNITY  BRIEFS 


School  of  Public  Health 
hosts  Web  cast  today 

A  panel  of  professors  from  the  UCLA 
School  of  Public  Health  will  present  "Public 
Health  ...  Live/Online,"  today  as  an  Internet 
and  local  cable  broadcast. 

The  event,  which  begins  at  6:30  p.m.,  seeks  to 
provide  public  health  professionals  and  others 
interested  in  the  topic  with  an  overview  of 
today's  public  health  issues. 

The  Web  cast  can  be  accessed  at 
www.ph.ucla.edu  or  on  public  access  Channel 
36  in  Los  Angeles,  and  on  UCTV. 

Project  coordinators  will  seek  feedback  from 
Internet  and  television  viewers  in  order  to  tailor 
future  broadcasts. 

"Internet  technology  offers  exciting  oppor- 
tunities to  reach  vast  new  audiences  efficiently 
and  inexpensively,"  said  V.  Gale  Winting,  asso- 
ciate dean  of  the  schcwl.  "The  School  of  Public 
Health  wants  to  use  this  technology  to  help 
meet  the  training  and  continuing  education 
needs  of  public  health  practitioners,  particular- 


ly those  in  remote  areas  without 
easy  access  to  a  university  setting, 
and  to  reach  out  to  the  community  at 
large."  •;. 


undergraduate    education    at 
UCI. 

The  program  will  be  tested  at 
both  UCI  and  Irvine  Valley  College. 


UC  Irvine  to  tiest  new       New  textile  seeks  io 
online  writing  program  freshen  stinky  socks 


UC  Irvine  has  received  a  $113,000  grant 
from  the  U.S.  Department  of  Education  to  test 
a  new  online  program  called  Grammar  From 
the  Ground  Up. 

The  program  will  allow  students  online 
access  to  writing  specialists  who  correct  and 
comment  on  their  work.  . '.  r   . 

The  grant  will  help  UCI  assess  the  program's 
effectiveness  in  improving  students'  skills  and 
confidence  and  its  suitability  for  use  at  other 
colleges  and  universities. 

"By  integrating  online  writing  practice  with 
feedback  from  writing  specialists,  this  program 
encourages  students  to  become  fully  engaged  in 
developing  strong  writing  abilities  during  their 
first  years  at  UCI,"  said  Meredith  Lee,  dean  of 


Locker  rooms  and  student  dorms  every- 
where coukl  soon  be  a  little  more  fragrant, 
thanks  to  an  invention  by  UC  Davis  textile 
chemist  Gang  Sun:  odorless  sports  socks. 

The  same  technology  could  be  used  to 
make  everything  from  odor-free  diapers  to 
hospital  gowns  that  repel  bacteria  and  viru»- 
es. 

"Textiles  make  great  media  for  growing 
bacteria,"  Sun  said. 

Bacteria  and  yeasts  in  clothing  break  down 
perspiration,  which  has  little  odor  by  itself, 
and  cause  the  smell. 

Sun  said  he  wore  the  socks  for  a  couple  of 
days,  with  no  obvious  smell.  After  use,  the 
socks  need  only  a  machine  wash  with  house- 


hold chlorine  bleach  to  recharge  the  bacteria- 
killing  capacity. 

The  technology  works  by  attaching  chlo- 
rine-containing molecules  called  halamines  to 
textile  fibers,  using  a  method  patented  by  Sun. 
Chlorine  in  the  form  of  halamines  has  power- 
ful bacteria-killing  properties,  used  for  exam- 
ple to  disinfect  swimming  pools.  Unlike  chlo- 
rine gas,  there  are  no  adverse  effects  as  toxic 
chlorinated  carbon  atoms  are  notgenerkted. 

By  sticking  halamines  to  the  cellulose 
fibers  in  cotton,  the  bacteria-killing  effect  can 
be  bonded  to  the  material  and  used  again  and 
again. 

Eventually,  the  chlorine  is  used  up  and  can 
be  regenerated  with  a  wash  in  chlorine  bleach. 

The  key  to  this  invention  was  finding  a 
practical  way  to  bind  the  halamines  to  the  cot- 
ton. 'Obviously,  one  limitation  is  that  you 
can't  destroy  the  fabric  during  manufacture,' 
says  Sun.  The  finished  product  has  to  be  as 
robust  as  regular  textile,  and  the  process  has 
to  be  economical. 

Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


Time  IS 

running  out! 

Apply  to  work  at 

the  Daily  Bruin 

today. 

Applications  due  by 

5  p.m.  on  Friday,  Oct.  6 

in  118  Kerckhoff  Hall 


CORRECTIONS 


The  article  "Green  means  go"  (Arts 
and  Entertainment,  Oct.  3)  contained 
an  error  in  the  photo  caption.  Ben 
Affleck  and  Matt  Damon  are  letting  an 
unknown  writer  direct  his  own  screen- 
play and  the  movie-making  process 
will  be  documented  on  HBO. 

The  article  "Clustering  together" 
(News,  Oct.  3)  also  contained  an  error. 
The  story  should  have  stated  students 
do  not  necessarily  have  to  complete  all 
three  quarters  in  order  to  receive  hon- 
ors credit;  they  will  receive  credit  for 
whatever  quarters  they  complete.  They 
will  not  receive  four  GE  course  credits 
if  they  do  not  complete  the  full  year. 


A  €fuick  LQ'Qk: 
atyour  Bruin 


^Jfednesck)^  October  4, 2()(» 

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Dally  Bruin  Classifieds 23-40 

Crossword  Puzzle 35 

Movie  Guide 27 


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Student  translators  help  keep  the 

lines  of  communication  open  at 

the  UCLA  Medical  Center 


ByJuKcYoshMia 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

For  some  people,  a  trip  to  the  hospital 
can  be  traumatizing  enough  without  hav- 
ing to  worry  about  (xtmmunicating  with 
hospital  stafTin  another  language. 

In  an  attempt  to  case  this  concern. 
Students  Society  LINC  for  UCLA 
Hospital  Patients  was  founded  in  spring 
2000  to  facilitate  communication  between 
patients,  doctors  and  nurses. 

"It  can  be  such  an  impersonal  experi- 
ence," said  Esther  Melamed,  LINC  presi- 
dent and  co-founder.  "Imagine  going  to 
the  hospital  and  not  being  able  to  under- 
stand what  your  doctors  and  nurses  are 
saying  to  you." 

LINC,    which    stands    for    Library 
.  Interpreting  Caretaking,  offers  interpret- 
ing services  to  hospital  patients  who  can 
not  speak  English. 

"I  have  quite  a  few  relatives  who  can't 
speak  English  well  and  I've  had  to  inter- 
pret for  them  before,"  said  third-year  phys- 
iological science  student  Shirleen  Loloyan. 

"It's  not  fair  to  patients  to  be  in  an  unfa- 
miliar setting  who  can't  speak  the  lan- 
guage," she  continued.  "I  wanted  to  help 
out  with  that." 

It  also  gives  students  the  chance  to  work 
with  doctors  and  nurses  on  a  personal  level 
and  to  witness  doctor-patient  interaction 
first-hand. 

The  idea  for  LINC  formed  while 
Melamed  worked  as  an  interpreter  for  the 
hospital. 

In  search  of  a  meaningful  clinical  expe- 
rience where  she  could  see  patients  and 
doctors  interact,  Melamed  joined  the  hos- 
pital's Interpreter  Services,  which  is  now 
directly  afTiiiated  with  LINC,  where  volun- 


teers wait  for  hospital  officials  to  call  for 
their  services. 

"I  enjoyed  it  a  lot,"  Melamed  said.  "I 
would  Ulk  to  a  lot  of  patients,  but  I  felt  like 
I  could  do  more  than  just  wait  for  an 
appointment." 

Although  the  hospital  already  provided 
some  interpreters,  the  services  were  limit- 
ed, according  to  Melamed. 

"Many  patients  were  either  left  without 
an  interpreter  or  had  to  talk  on  the  phone 
with  interpreters,"  she  said. 

Before  founding  LINC,  Melamed  sUrt- 
ed  a  library  of  foreign  languages  for  the 
hospital,  realizing  that  often  when  patients 
would  ask  for  reading  material  in  their 
native  language,  the  hospital  would  have 
little  or  nothing. 

"I  looked  on  the  Internet  and  found  on- 
line magazines  and  printed  them  out," 
Melamed  said.  "I  also  asked  professors  if 
they  had  any  materials." 

Professors  donated  books  and  maga- 
zines in  Russian,  French,  Hebrew,  Spanish 
and  German.  Since  then,  the  library 
received  additional  donations  of  materials 
in  Persian  and  Arabic. 

After  continuing  to  interpret  for  the 
hospital,  Melamed  decided  to  expand  the 
translating  services  offered  by  students. 

She  then  talked  to  fellow  students  Lori 
Panossian,  vice  president  of  internal 
affairs,  and  Amber  Misseiger,  who  agreed 
to  help  form  the  club. 

"I  wanted  to  get  involved  in  a  program 
to  interact  more  with  doctors  and 
patients,"  Panossian  said.  "I  also  wanted 
to  help  patients  who  spoke  my  native  lan- 
guage." 

Students  interested  in  LINC  must  fint 
attend  an  orientation  session  at  the  hospi- 
tal where  they  learn  more  about  the  pro- 


gram and  the  interpreting  process,  and 
take  language  proficiency  tests. 

"We  ask  them  to  do  an  oral  interpreta- 
tion of  a  variety  of  medical  sentences  and 
phrases,"  said  Tony  Padilla,  director  of 
patient  relations  and  volunteer  for  the 
Medical  Center.  "Then  we  ask  individuals 
who  are  experts  in  those  languages  to  see 
how  accurate  the  oral  interpretation  is." 

"Our  goal  is  to  get  a  large  group  of  ded- 
icated students  who  are  excited  to  help 
patients,"  Melamed  said. 

Although  it  is  not  necessary  to  be  a 
native  speaker,  volunteers  must  have  pro- 
ficiency in  the  language  they  want  to  inter- 
pret. 

"We  use  mainly  common  words,  but  it 
could  get  technical  depending  on  the  situa- 
tion," said  Panossian. 

LINC  members  must  also  be  registered 
as  hospital  volunteers,  which  gives  them 
health  clearance. 

Once  accepted  into  the  program,  they 
must  pay  a  $10  membership  fee,  which 
helps  buy  books  for  the  library,  and  com- 
mit to  volunteering  80  hours  during  the 
year.  They  also  interview  with  a  patient 
liaison  and  shadow  a  translator  to  familiar- 
ize themselves  with  the  program. 

"This  is  designed  so  that  volunteers 
have  an  appropriate  level  of  maturity  and 
communication  skills  to  visit  patients  in 
the  hospital,"  Padilla  said.  _. 

After  the  training,  LINC  volunteers  are 
able  to  help  hospital  officials  who  seek  spe- 
cific translators  from  Interpreters 
Services. 

LINC  has  now  grown  to  a  membership 
of  30  interpreters  who  speak  Spanish, 
Russian,  Armenian,  Farsi,  Korean, 
Japanese,  '  Mandarin,  Tagalog, 
Viettomese,  Portuguese  and  Cantonese. 


Currently,  Spanish  is  the  most  widely 
utilized  language,  with  American  Sign 
Language  as  second,  according  to 
Interpreter  Services. 

For  many  members,  the  prospect  of 
interaction  with  patients,  doctors  and 
nurses  seems  to  be  a  common  reason  for 
joining  LINC. 

"One  of  the  main  reasons  why  I  got 
involved  was  because  I  wanted  to  help 
break  down  the  language  barrier  between 
doctors  and  patients,"  said  Richard 
Omelas,  third-year  biology  student.  "I  also 
got  to  see  how  patients  and  doctors  inter- 
act." 

The  acronym  LINC  is  symbolic  of  the 
attempt  between  doctors  and  patients  in 
trying  to  understand  one  another,  accord- 
ing to  Melamed  Additionally,  it  also  links 
students  and  doctors  because  it  allows  stu- 
dents to  see  if  they  want  to  actually  go  into 
the  medical  profession. 

"It  is  the  perfect  clinical  environment," 
she  said.  "You  can  see  what  it  feels  like  to 
be  the  doctor  and  the  patient.  It's  a  good 
experience  for  pre-med  students  and  you 
get  to  really  help  people." 

With  their  interpreting  skills,  LINC 
members  have  assisted  patients  and  doc- 
tors in  communi'cation  during  medical 
examinations,  surgical  consent  situations, 
and  in  labor  and  delivery  rooms. 
.  "Students  learn  a  great  deal  about  what 
it's  like  to  be  a  physician  and  what  physi- 
cians do,"  Padilla  said.  "It  also  helps  them 
enhance  their  medical  terminology  and 
help  them  discover  for  themselves  whether 
this  is  actually  the  field  they  want  to  pur- 
sue." 

To  find  out  more  inforntation  about  LINC 
e-mail  enf>elamed#ucla.edu. 


'H    .- 


"^  -  ■ 


*-,■■:  ^■ 


WF(lne«by,0ctobef4,2000 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Daily  Bruin  N«w$ 


V\«(dneMlay,  October  4, 2000         S 


Oiinia  issuing  neW  online  regulations 


INTERNET:  Rules  reveal 
country  remains  heavily 
controlled  by  government 


By  Joe  McDonald 

The  Associated  Press 

SHANGHAI,  China  -  China  has 
issued  a  new  list  of  rules  for  Internet 
use,  ordering  access  providers  to 
guard  against  online  political  activity 
and  reinforcing  limits  on  foreign 
investment. 

The  rules,  part  of  broad  regula- 
tions on  the  telecomrnunications 
industry,  add  little  to  how  China 
already  regulates  the  Web.  But  the 
announcement  could  cause  a  chill  in  a 
field  dependent  on  foreign  financing. 
Companies  had  hoped  for  a  more 
liberal  climate  after  China's  planned 
entry  into  the  World  Trade 
Organization. 

The  announcement  Sunday  by 
state  media  also  affirms  Beijing's 
resolve  to  keep  the  Web  from  being 
used  to  spread  opposition  to  commu- 
nist rule. 

"This  is  a  reality  check  that  China 
is  a  heavily  regulated  market  and  will 
remain  that  way  for  some  time,"  said 
Nicholas  Spratt,  who  follows  the 
industry  for  Lehman  Brothers  Asia  in 
Hong  Kong. 

In  one  of  the  few  explicit  new 
requirements,  Internet  Service 
Providers  are  required  to  keep 
records  on  users  and  the  material  they 
post  online. 

If  they  discover  prohibited  con- 
tent, providers  are  required  to 
remove  it  and  turn  over  their  records 
to  the  authorities.  Those  who  posted 
the  prohibited  material  could  be  pros- 
ecuted. 

The  regulations  say  content 
providers  must  have  approval  from 
the  Ministry  of  Information  Industry 
to  receive  investment  or  collaboration 
from  abroad. 

Chinese  companies  already  oper- 
ate under  such  a  requirement. 


I^edific  Sites  identified 
as  big  dioxin 


WASTE:  U.S.  industries 
account  for  one-third 
of  build-up  in  Arctic 


Mh.^ 


The  AisodRcd  Press 

Chinese  police  wearing  new  uniforms  issued  on  Oct.  1  detain  a 
Falun  Gong  protester  by  gagging  her  with  her  protest  banner. 
Announcing  the  prohibition  could     jar  service  providers  into  helping  to 


be  a  warning  of  impending  enforce- 
ment by  the  ministry  against  dozens 
of  companies  with  unauthorized  for- 
eign owners,  investors  or  partners. 

The  ministry  tried  last  year  to  ban 
all  foreign  Web  investment.  China 
later  agreed  to  let  foreigners  own  49 
percent  of  Web  companies  once  it 
joins  the  Wofld  Trade  Organization, 
and  50  percent  after  two  years.  There 
is  no  firm  date  yet  on  China's  WTO 
entry. 

Beijing  also  appears  to  be  trying  to 


police  security-related  content  restric- 
tions. 

Regulators  in  August  shut  down  a 
Web  site  run  by  pro-democracy 
activists  on  a  Beijing  service  provider. 
The  company  said  it  hadn't  looked  at 
the  site's  content  until  alerted  by 
police. 

Spratt,  of  Lehman  Brothers,  said 
he  expected  the  subversion  rule  to  be 
"watered  down"  but  noted  that  Web 
companies  already  are  playing  an 
enforcement  role. 


By  Matt  Crenson 

The  Associated  Press-:  - 

NEW  YORK  -  For  the  first 
time,  scientists  say  they  have  pirv 
pointed  many  of  the  industrial  pol- 
luters responsible  for  the  dioxin 
that  is  ending  up  in  the  Arctic. 

To  perform  the  study,  scientists 
at  New  York  City's  Queens 
University  modified  a  computer 
program  originally  designed  to 
track  fallout  in  the  event  of  a 
nuclear  accident. 

They  found  that  35  municipal 
waste  incinera-        ..  -  -        <,' 
tors,     cement      — i^__».i_ 
kilns  and  steel 
plants  in   the 
eastern      and 
central  United 
States  account 
for    one-third 
of  the  dioxin 
reaching 


Nunavut  Territory  in  the  Canadian 
Arctic. 

For  example,  during  the  one- 
year  study  a  single  municipal  waste 
incinerator  in  Harrisburg,  Pa., 
accounted  for  nearly  5  percent  of 
the  dioxin  reaching  Broughton 
Island,  just  north  of  the  Arctic 
Circle  on  Baffin  Bay. 

Another  waste  incinerator  in 
Ames,  Iowa,  contributed  about  5 
percent  of  the  dioxin  reaching 
Chesterfield  Inlet  on  Canada's 
Hudson  Bay,  2,000  miles  away. 

"I  think  the  study  demonstrates 
that  we  should  revise  our  concept 
of  neighbors,"  said  Greg  Block, 
director  of  the  North  American 
Commission   for   Environmental 


Cooperation.    The    organization 
funded  the  study 

Dioxin  is  of  particular  concern 
in  the  Arctic  because* it  is  an 
extremely  long-lived  pollutant  that 
tends  to  build  up  in  the  fat  of  ani- 
mals and  people.  Native  people  in 
the  Arctic  consume  a  diet  high  in 
fish  and  sea  mammals,  so  on  aver- 
age their  bodies  carry  about  twice 
as  much  dioxin  as  a  person  living  in 
southern  Canada  or  the  United 
States.-^  ..■:^!"'"'' •  ■■. 

Dioxin  has  been  shown  to  cause 
cancer,  brain  damage  and  repro- 
ductive abnormalities  in  animals, 
but  the  degree  of  its  threat  to 
humans  remains  unclear. 

"We  are  increasingly  worried 
about  this  situation,"  said  Sheila 
Watt-Cloutier,  the  Canadian  presi- 
dent   of    the 
— — — — ^      I     n     u     i     t 
Circumpolar 
Conference. 
"The  environ- 
ment is  actual- 
ly our  super- 
market." 
'      ' '.  The     com- 

puter program 
used  in  the  study,  developed  by  the 
National  Oceanic  and 

Atmospheric  Administration,  sim- 
ulates the  weather  across  North 
America  on  an  hour-by-hour  basis. 
Researchers  entered  into  the 
program  detailed  information 
about  releases  from  more  than 
40,000  dioxin  sources,  then  fol- 
lowed individual  "puffs"  of  conta- 
minated air.  Once  the  air  had 
reached  the  Arctic,  they  estimated 
the  dioxin  fallout. 

The  study  showed  that  most  of 
the  dioxin  reaching  the  eastern  part 
of  the  Canadian  Arctic  comes  from 
the  eastern  United  States.  Dioxin 
released  in  the  Midwest  tends  to 
end  up  farther  west. 


Dioxin  has  been 

shown  to  cause 

cancer  in  animals. 


rz 


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■n  II  N^    iiaw  im*iwii-^»   "pill        ■     I  ^^M^Mi  ■  fci^i   ■      I 


The  Associated  Press 


Palestinians  throw  stones  at  an  Israeli  Army  outpost  in  the  Netzarim  settlen>ent  crossing,  south  of  the 
Gaza  strip,  on  Tuesday. 


BLOODSHED:  Israel's  use 
of  real  bullets  claimed 
excessive  by  dissidents 


By  Laura  IQng 

The  Associated  Press 

NETZARIM  JUNCTION,  Gaza 

Strip  —  This  violent  crossroads,  scene 
of  some  of  the  bloodiest  battles  in  six 
days  of  Israeli-Palestinian  clashes,  is 
ground  zero  in  a  growing  debate: 
How  much  force  is  too  much  force? 

Israeli  military  doctrine  is  simple: 
When  soldiers'  lives  are  threatened, 
deadly  force  is  justified.  But  in  places 
like  Netzarim,  where  teenage 
Palestinian  stone-throwers  are  being 
felled  by  live  bullets  and  machine-gun 
fire  from  helicopter  gunships,  the 
unequal  matchup  has  Israelis  on  the 


defensive.    ': 

Israel  argues  that  the  presence  of 
Palestinian  gunmen  among  the 
demonstrators  -  even  if  they  are  only 
a  tiny  minority  in  the  crowd  -  leaves 
its  soldiers  with  no  choice  but  to  use 
live  ammunition. 

"Wherever  we  are  fired  upon,  we 
will  fire  back,"  Ephraim  Sneh,  the 
deputy  defense  minister,  told  Israel 
radio  on  Tuesday.   " 

Since  the  unrest  began  last  week, 
56  people  have  died.  Two  of  the  dead 
were  Israeli  soldiers  and  one  was  a 
Jewish  Israeli  civilian,  but  43  were 
Palestinians  and  the  other  10  were 
Israeli  Arabs. 

"It's  not  a  war.  We're  not  shooting 
at  them;  they're  shooting  at  us  and 
we're  dying,"  said  senior  Palestinian 
negotiator  Saeb  Erekat. 

SeeR)RCE,pag«16 


Couple  hoping  test-tube 
baby  can  save  sister's  life 


PROCEDURE:  Newborn 
genetically  chosen  to  be 
.sibling's  marrow  donor 


By  Margaret  Taus 

The  Associated  Press 

MINNEAPOLIS  -  In  the  first 
known  case  of  its  kind,  a  Colorado 
couple  created  a  test-tube  baby  who 
was  genetically  screened  and  selected 
-in  the  hope  he  could  save  the  life  of 
his  6-year-old  sister. 

The  sister,  Molly  Nash,  has  a  rare 
genetic  disease,  Fanconi  anemia,  that 
prevents  her  body  from  making  bone 
marrow.  But  last  week,  doctors  gave 
her  an  infusion  of  umbilical-cord 
blood  from  her  newborn  little  broth- 
er, Adam,  to  try  to  correct  the  dis- 
ease. 

Doctors  should  know  in  a  couple 
of  weeks  whether  the  infusion  is  help- 
ing Molly  develop  healthy  marrow 
cells.    ; 

Screening  laboratory-created 
embryos  for  genetic  diseases  before 
implanting  them  in  a  woman  is  not 
qew.  But  this  is  the  first  known 

n 


instance  in  which  parents  screened 
and  selected  an  embryo  in  order  to 
find  a  suitable  tissue  donor  for  an  ail- 
ing sibling. 

"People  have  babies  for  lots  of  rea- 
sons: to  save  a  failing  marriage,  to 
work  the  family  farm,"  said  Dr. 
Charles  Strom,  director  of  medical 
genetics  at  the  Reproductive 
Genetics  Institute  in  Chicago,  where 
Adam  was  conceived.  "I  have 
absolutely  no  ethical  problems  with 
this  whatsoever." 

Molly  was  just  beginning  to  show 
signs  of  leukemia,  which  is  frequently 
associated  with  the  disease,  when  she 
had  the  transplant,  said  Dr.  John 
Wagner,  her  physician  at  the 
University  of  Minnesota.  The  infu- 
sion procedure  between  siblings  has  a 
90  percent  success  rate. 

"Molly's  doing  very  well," 
Wagner  said  Tuesday,  although  she 
had  a  slight  cold.  She  was  playing  on 
a  computer,  he  said. 

As  part  of  her  disease,  Molly  was 
born  without  thumbs,  but  surgeons 
built  some  from  a  finger  on  each 
hand.  She  also  had  no  hip  sockets  but 

SceNOTHEltpagelO 


Firearm-related 
expulsions  take 
downward  turn 
in  recent  report 

GUNS:  Thousands  of  students 
thrown  out  in  '98-99;  officials 
pleased  at  number's  decrease 


The  Atsociated 

Molly  Nash,  who  has  Fanconi  anemia  and  cannot  produce 
bone  marrow,  gives  her  brother  Adam  a  kiss. 


Pr«j 


By  Bruce  Sdireiner 
The  Associated  Press 


LOUISVILLE,  Ky- Student  expulsions 
for  bringing  firearms  to  school  declined 
nationally,  but  the  confiscation  of  several 
hundred  weapons  in  even  the  earliest 
grades  shows  more  vigilance  is  needed. 
Education  Secretary  Richard  W.  Riley  said 
Tuesday. 

A  report  issued  by  the  Education 
Department  showed  there  were  3,523 
expulsions  of  weapon-toting  students  in  the 
50  states,  the  District  of  Columbia  and  four 
U.S.  territories  in  the  1998-99  school  year. 
That  figure  is  down  4  percent  from  3,658 
the  previous  school  year.  Some  46.6  million 
students  attend  U.S.  public  schools  from 


S«eSaK>0L,page16 


rORLP  &  NATION  BRIEFS 

Race  issue  questioned 
in  Wen  Ho  Lee  case 

WASHINGTON  -  The  Energy 
Department's  former  intelligence  chief  denied 
Tuesday  that  racial  considerations  led  him  to 
target  Wen  Ho  Lee  in  a  probe  of  alleged 
Chinese  spying  at  the  Los  Alamos  nuclear  lab- 
oratory. 

Notra  Trulock  told  a  Senate  Judiciary  sub- 
committee that  two  former  co-workers  are 
lying  when  they  accuse  him  of  racial  bias. 

"I  stopped  efforts  by  (Energy  Department) 
managers ...  to  compile  a  database  on  the  eth- 
nicity of  American  citizens  with  access  to  clas- 
sified nuclear  information,"  Trulock  said. 

Former  Los  Alamos  counterintelligence 
chief  Robert  Vrooman  stood  by  his  claim  that 
Trulock  and  other  officials  investigated  the 
Taiwan-bom  Lee  because  he  is  ethnic  Chinese. 
Trulock 's  predecessor,  Charles  Washington, 
also  has  accused  Trulock  of  racial  bias. 

Tuesday's  hearing  was  the  latest  of  several 


held  after  Lee  pleaded  guilty  last 
month  to  one  count  of  mishandling 
nuclear  secrets  and  was  released 
from  jail. 


Canadians  mourn 
former  prime  minister 

MONTREAL  -  Thousands  of  Canadians 
wept  and  applauded  at  former  Prime  Minister 
Pierre  Trudeau's  funeral  Tuesday  as  his  son 
remembered  his  father's  love  of  country,  told 
the  nation  to  carry  on  his  work  -  and  then 
buried  his  tearstained  face  in  the  flag  draping 
his  father's  coffin. 

"The  woods  are  lovely,  dark  and  deep.  He 
has  kept  his  promises,  and  earned  his  sleep," 
Justin  Trudeau  said,  near  tears  as  he  para- 
phrased the  American  poet  Robert  Frost  to 
close  his  eulogy.  "Je  t'aime  (I  love  you).  Papa  " 

Inside  and  outside  Montreal's  ornate 
Notrc-Dame  Basilidb,  dignitaries  including* 
Jimmy  Carter  and  Fidel  Castro  and  a  swarm 


of  Canadians  gathered  to  pay  their 
respects  to  Trudeau,  the  dashing 
former  prime  minister  who  boosted 
a  nation's  pride  with  his  charisma,  his 
willingness  to  buck  the  United  Stales  and 
his  dedication  to  Canadian  unity. 

Trudeau,  who  died  last  Thursday  of 
prostate  cancer  at  the  age  of  80,  served  as 
prime  minister  from  1968  to  1984  with  a  short 
interruption.  Justin  Trudeau  challenged 
Canadians  to  keep  his  father's  dream  of  a  unit- 
ed, tolerant,  bilingual  and  multicultural  nation 
alive,  saying.  "It's  all  up  to  us,  all  of  us  now." 

CDC  report  reveals  new 
HIV  infection  statistics 

ATLANTA  -  African  Americans  and 
Latinos  accounted  for  nearly  70  percent  of 
new  HIV  infections  from  July  1999  to  June  of 
this  year,  a  striking  change  in  what  was  once 
known  as  a  disease  of  gay  white  men,  the  U.S. 
surgeon  general  said  Tuesday 


Part  of  the  problem  is  that  the  groups  hard- 
est to  reach  in  prevention  campaigns  -  high 
school  dropouts,  former  inmates  and  the 
homeless  -  are  disproportionately  African 
American  and  Latino,  said  Dr.  David  Salcher. 

Of  an  estimated  40,000  new  infections  over 
the  1999-2000  period,  African  Americans 
accounted  for  more  than  50  percent  and 
Latinos  accounted  for  19  percent,  according 
to  the  Centers  for  Disease  Control  and 
Prevention. 

"When  the  AIDS  epidemic  started  in  this 
country  in  1981,  it  was  viewed  as  an  epidiemic 
of  white  gay  men,  and  that  was  partially  true.  It 
is  not  true  anymore,"  Satcher  said  after  the 
report  was  issued  at  the  U.S.  Conference  on 
AIDS  in  Atlanta. 

The  CDC  report  did  not  say  what  propor-  - 
tion  of  the  new  infections  involved  gay  men. 
Improved  access  to  health  care  and  a  renewed 
push  to  educate  minority  groups  could  slow 
the  rate  of  new  infections,  Satcher  said. 


Conr^iled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


^.>1^-v. 


WMnesbjr,  October  4, 2000 


*•— r 


D«iy  Bruin  News 


<&LOGAI 


Rampart  stp^phofficB^'  trial  to  begin 


POLICE:  Case's  outcome 
could  influence  future 
settlements  for  victims 


By  Linda  Deutsdi 

The  Associated  Press  „  ., 

The  police  department  scandal 
that  has  tormented  Los  Angeles  for  a 
year  bursts  into  the  open  this  week 
with  a  trial  of  four  policemen  whose 
freedom  hinges  on  the  credibility  of 
their  accuser,  disgraced  officer 
Rafael  Perez. 

Perez,  who  bought  leniency  for 
himself  by  informing  on  others,  has 
opened  a  floodgate  of  cases  which 
had  to  be  dismissed  because  he  said 
officers  had  lied,  planted  evidence, 
shot  suspects,  committed  perjury  and 
filed  false  reports. 

So  far,  some  100  cases  have  been 
thrown  out.  But  few  charges  have 
been  filed  against  the  supposedly 
crcx)ked  cops. 

Whether  there  will  be  more  cases 
and  whether  they  can  be  won 
depends  on  the  case  which  begins 
Wednesday  with  jury  questionnaires 
being  distributed. 

Four  officers  -  Edward  Ortiz, 
Brian  Liddy,  Paul  Harper  and 
Michael  Buchanan  -  were  accused  by 
Perez  of  planting  evidence,  filing 
false  reports  and  committing  perjury. 
All  say  they  are  not  guilty  and  their 
lawyers  portray  Perez  as  a  liar  whose 
credibility  will  be  destroyed  on  aoss- 
examination. 


"This  case  has  always  been  about 
Perez.  It's  Perez  on  trial,"  said 
defense  attorney  Harlaiid  Braun, 
who  represents  Buchanan,     ^  : 

The  Rampart  scandal  takes  its 
name  from  the  inner-city  police  sta- 
tion where  an  elite  squad  of  officers 
known  as  the  CRASH  unit  operated 
in  a  gang-infested  neighborhood. 

"We  were  out  there  fighting  a 
war,"  Perez  has  said.  "We  felt  that  in 
our  own  way  we  saved  lives." 

But  they  also  broke  laws  and  vio- 
lated the  rights  of  many  they  arrested. 
Perez  said  a  full  75  percent  of  their 
cases  were  tainted  by  misconduct. 
One  man,  Javier  Ovando,  was  left  a 
paraplegic  in  a  police  shooting  that 
Perez  suggested  was  "a  mistake." 
Another  officer  has  been  charged 
with  attempted  murder  in  that  case. 

According  to  Perez,  the  officers  of 
the  CRASH  unit  had  their  own  tat- 
toos and  their  own  slogan:  "We  intim- 
idate those  who  intimidate  others." 

Perez,  who  had  admitted  to  steal- 
ing cocaine  from  an  evidence  locker, 
agreed  to  inform  on  others  after  his 
first  trial  ended  in  a  deadlock.  Since 
then,  stories  have  flooded  the  city 
about  the  misconduct  of  policemen, 
and  the  district  attorney  has  dis- 
missed case  after  case  largely  on  the 
.  basis  of  Perez's  information  about 
tainted  pdioe  work. 

The  city  expects  up  to  27S  iawsuiU 
as  a  result  of  the  burgeoning  scandal, 
and  the  verdict  in  this  week's  trial 
could  determine  the  course  other 
cases  take. 
.  'This  is  a  key  test  For  the  prosecu- 


tion and  for  Perez,"  said  Laurie 
Levenson,  a  Loyola  University  law 
school  professor.  "If  the  prosecutors 
can't  win  this  one  ...  you  probably 
won't  see  many  other  cases  against 
police  officers  in  Rampart." 

District  Attorney  Gil  Garcetti, 
while  declining  to  discuss  specifics  of 
the  case  or  Perez's  credibility,  said  the 
prosecution  sees  the  case  as  a  tough 
challenge  because  of  its  subject  mat- 
ter. 

"Anytime  you're  bringing  cases 
against  police  officers  the  jurors  want 
a  lot  of  credible  evidence,"  Garcetti 
said.  "In  general,  they  don't  like  to 
convict  policemen." 

But  he  said  his  office  would  not  be 
going  forward  if  it  did  not  have  sub- 
stantial evidence  to  corroborate 
Perez. 

In  the  final  pretrial  hearing 
Tuesday,  Superior  Court  Judge 
Jacqueline  Connor  chastised  the 
prosecution  for  turning  over  hun- 
dreds of  thousands  of  pages  of  docu- 
.ments  and  the  names  of  witnesses  too 
late  for  the  defense  to  investigate. 

Defense  Attorney  Barry  Levin 
said  the  bulk  of  material  belatedly  dis- 
closed is  So  voluminous  it  would  take 
a  person  reading  200  pages  a  day  17 
years  to  digest  the  entire  file. 

The  judge  upheld  defense  objec- 
tions to  about  20  witnesses,  some  of 
them  because  they  had  been  disclosed 
t(X)  late  and  some  because  she  found 
their  testimony  woukl  be  irrelevant. 
She  said  she  believed  the  prosecution 
should  have  had  their  evidence  ready 
when  they  filed  charges  in  April. 


Daily  Bruin  Ncwi 


Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


^!Xf  !JJ^]V'if^'''»J^^^  '1.  fty^^'' ' 


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Dtt  Associated  Preu 

An  estimated  1,000  nriennbers  of  the  Service  Employees  IntematJonal 
Union  and  other  supporters  rally  in  support  of  striking  MTA  bus  drivers. 

Solidarity  among  ranks 
continues  in  MTA  strike 

LABOR:  Mechanics  stay  home  even  though  called 
back;  mayor  hopeful  that  strike  will  end  this  week 


ByRobcrtlaMon 

The  Assodated  Press  ^ 

Mechanics  refused  to  cross  bus 
and  rail  operators'  picket  lines 
Tuesday  despite  their  union's  call  to 
go  back  to  work  on  the  18th  day  of  the 
Los  Angeles  County  transit  strike. 

The  show  of  rank-and-file  solidari- 
ty in  the  strike  against  the 
Metropolitan  Transportation 

Authority  came  amid  growing  activity 


by  local  organized  labor. 

Tlie  union  representing  47,000 
county  workers  pushed  contract 
demands  by  conducting  a  second  one- 
day  walkout,  this  time  targeting  wel- 
fare, children's  services  and  public 
works  offices,  and  staging  a  rally  out- 
side the  county  Hall  of 
Administration. 

In  Pasadena,  talks  resumed  in  an 

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-■&    IT'S TiME-FOR ACTioivrl^::;,:::;.: 
UCLA  WORKER  MARCH  TO 


MURPHY  HALL  FOR  FAIR  WAGES 

Friday,  October  6th  12:00  Noon 


Meet  at  the  Bruin  Bear  statue  in  Westwood  Plaza 


(UiJiJ. 


^r 


Dear  Chancellor  Carnesale,         '  ;      ^ 

We  are  writing  on  behalf  of  more  than  six  thousand  UCLA  employees  represents  by  CUE  (Coalition  of 
University  Employees)  and  UPTE  (University  Professional  and  Technical  Employees),  who  are  cun-ently  in 
contract  negotiations  with  the  University.  The  University  has  acknowledged  that  UC  clerical  employees 
earn  an  average  of  21  %  less  than  non-UC  employees  who  work  in  comparable  jobs.  Many  UC  research, 
technical,  and  health  care  professk>nals  have  similarly  fallen  below  market  standards.  These  inequities 
cdhtrlbute  to  the  staff  retention  problems  now  rampant  at  UG.  High  staff  turnover  undermines  the   ^  "- 
University's  pursuit  of  teaching,  research  and  community  service.  -      ;;:^f  : ,      /  " ' ' 

In  state  legislative  hearings  and  in  its  publications,  the  University  has  declared  its  commitment  to 
achieving  pay  equity  for  staff  and  improving  University  relations  with  employee  unions.  Yet  CUE  has 
spent  two  long  years  at  the  bargaining  table.  Both  CUE  and  UPTE  face  continuing  struggles  for 
cooperation  from  University  representatives  who  do  not  seem  to  understand  the  meaning  of  good-faith 
bargaining.  This  behavior  is  what  caused  Dion  Aroner,  State  Assemblywoman  from  Berkeley,  to  call  UC 
<*THE  WORST  PUBLIC  EMPLOYER  IN  THE  STATE." 

We  employees  have  dedicated  ourselves  to  the  University  mission,  and  have  sacrificed  during  difficult 
financial  times  to  help  the  campus  and  medical  center  remain  solvent.  Now  the  University  acknowledges 
It  has  the  funding  to  fix  our  pay  Inequities,  and  our  unions  seek  resolution  of  these  issues  at  the 
bargaining  table.   ~.-    -  ;'■  ,■.  ;■.,  ■-.  r  ~~"~"  .>-; 

We  call  on  you,  as  chancellor  of  aAvorld-class  university,  to  exercise  leadership  on  behalf  of  your  staff. 
Contact  President  Atkinson  to  urgetiim  to  bring  bargaining  with  CUE  and  UPTE  to  swift  and  satisfactory 
conclusion.  ./ 

On  Friday,  October  6,  at  noon,  concerned  UCLA  employees,  students,  and  other  campus  organizations 
will  gather  at  Westwood  Plaza  and  then  proceed  to  Murphy  Hall.  We  look  fonward  to  discussing  these 
issues  with  you  then.  -       ^ 

Sincerely, 


'    ''  ■  -'-     : 

.•'';'•, 

'''  '' 

'■■'■  ■-:■■ 

'-■  •'  -■. 

■''--■■; 

WMnes(tey,  October  4, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  N«M 


Denver  i^idents  construct  UFO  watchtower,  attract  tourists 


SITE:  Alien  buffs  from 
across  country  hoping 
to  glimpse  flying  saucer 


ByJudhhKoMcr 

The  Associated  Press 

HOOPER,  Colo.  -  "I  want  to 
believe."  It's  the  message  plastered  on 
the  office  wall  of  UF04iunting  FBI 
agent  Fox  Mulder  in  television's  "The 
X-Files."  It  also  could  be  Judy 
Messoline's  personal  mantra. 

She  wants  to  believe,  like  the  people 
who  visit  her  San  Luis  Valley  ranch  in 
search  of  the  mysterious  lights  and 
other-worldly  craft,  rumored  for 
decades  in  the  area. 

Messolinc,  a  big  fan  of  "The  X- 
Files,"  admits  she  has  seen  strange 
lights  in  the  sky.  As  for  believing  in 
UFOs,  she  said:  "It  would  take  one 
landing  so  I  could  take  a  look." 

Messoline,  55,  and  partner  Stan 
Becker  have  built  a  10-foot-high  UFO- 
watching  platform  on  their  620-acre 
ranch  near  Hooper,  a  town  of  about 
120  residents  220  miles  southwest  of 
Denver. 

They  charge  S2  admission  and  rent 
binoculars  for  the  faithful  and  the  curi- 


The  Associated  Press 


Judy  Messoline  ancj  her  partner  Stan  Becker  have  built  a  10-foot- 
high  UFO-watching  platform  on  their  ranch  south  of  Denver. 


ous  to  watch  the  skies.  The  randi  also 
offers  rustic  campsites  and  a  domed 
gift  shop  stocked  with  "alien  dust," 
posters,  pyramid  candles  and  big-eyed, 
shiny  extraterrestrial  dolls. 

Stories  of  supernatural  phenomena 
abound  in  this  naturally  spectacular 
50-mile-wide,  125-mile-long  valley, 
which  is  7,600  feet  in  altitude  and 
ringed  by  the  San  Juan  and  Sangre  de 


Cristo  mountains. 

Messoline's  watchtower  offers  a 
view  of  the  Great  Sand  Dunes 
National  Monument,  with  its  TSO-Toot- 
tall  dunes. 

The  book  "The  Mysterious  Valley," - 
by  Christopher  O'Brien,  examines 
reports  through  the  years  of  cattle 
mutilations,  mysterious  helicopters 
and  oddly  shaped  aircraft  hovering 


over  the  San  Luis  Valley. 

O'Brien,  who  lives  in  the  tiny  valley 
town  of  Crestone,  said  his  1993  stories 
about  unexplained  phenomena  in  a 
local  paper  inspired  normally  reticent 
residents  of  the  ranching  and  farming 
area  to  tell  him  about  their  experi- 
ences. 

Messoline  got  the  idea  to  build  the 
watchtower  after  putting  up  with  ET 
enthusiasts  camping  on  her  property. 
She  also  needed  to  make  some  money 
because  cattle  ranching,  which  drew 
her  to  the  valley  five  years  ago,  was 
foundering. 

The  green,  glow-in-the-dark  ET 
cutouts  that  point  the  way  to  the  look- 
out tower  attest  to  Messoline's  sense  of 
humor.  So  does  the  big  chunk  of  land 
she  and  Becker  roped  off  as  designated 
UFO  parking. 

The  watchtower  opened  for  busi- 
ness Memorial  Day  weekend.  Becker 
and  Messoline,  who  live  in  a  log  house 
on  their  spread,  planned  to  keep  it 
open  Fridays  and  Saturdays  during  the 
fall  because  business  has  been  so  good. 
A  steady  stream  of  visitors,  including 
some  tour  groups,  kept  them  busy  last 
summer. 

"It  really  did  work  out  okey^lokey," 
said  Messoline,  who  is  delighted  by  the 
fascination  with  UFOs. 


People  who  read  articles  about  the 
Watchtower  or  heard  radio  reports  in 
other  parts  of  the  country  visitwi  out  of 
curiosity.  For  others,  it  has  been  a  stop 
on  a  circuit  that  included  Roswell, 
N.M.,  scene  of  an  alleged  UFO  crash 
in  1947  anB  the  site  of  the  annual  UFO 
Encounter,  which  draws  tens  of  thou- 
sands of  people. 

"1  didn't  realize  I  could  work  II 
hours  a  day,  seven  days  a  week  and  gig- 
gle the  whole  time,"  she  said. 

Fbr  some,  though,  it  is  no  laughing 
matter.  Messoline  has  recorded  hours 
of  conversations  with  people  seeking  a 
place  to  tell  their  tales  of  extraterrestri- 
al encounters  without  fear  of  ridicule. 

Messoline's  UFO  watchtower  is 
another  outlet. 

"A  lot  of  residents  in  the  valley  say, 
'We  know  we  can  come  here  and  dis- 
cuss it.  If  you  tell  anybody  around 
town,  they  think  you're  crazy,"'  she 
said. 

Saguache  County  Undersheriff 
Mike  Norris  said  his  office  doesn't  get 
frequent  reports  about  mysterious 
lights  or  crafts.  "But  people  talk  and  it 
gets  out,"  he  said. 

Norris  has  seen  people  stake  out 
parts  of  the  valley  for  hours,  waiting 

$MWMTCIfroWBI,page16 


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10       Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  News 


BROTHER 

From  page  5  »       •■ 

can  now  walk  thanks  to  the  use  of 
heavy  braces. 

Her  parents,  Jack  and  Lisa 
Nash  of  Englewood,  Colo.,  want- 
ed more  children  but  were  afraid 
to  conceive  because  both  carry  a 
faulty  version  of  the  Fanconi 
gene,  meaning  each  child  would 
have  a  25  percent  chance  of  devel- 
oping the  disease. 

The  Nashes  used  a  process 
called  pre-implantation  genetic 
diagnosis,  or  PGD:  Embryos 
were  created  from  Ms.  Nash's 
eggs  and  her  husband's  sperm. 
Then  fertilized  eggs  were  ana- 
lyzed, and  when  one  was  found  to 
be  disease-free  and  a  tissue 
match,  it  was  implanted.  The  cou- 
ple had  to  try  the  procedure  sev- 
eral times  before  she  became 
pregnant. 

Ms.  Nash,  who  works  as  a 
neonatal  nurse,  said  she  and  her 
husband  could  not  knowingly 
bring  another  child  into  the  world 


with  the  disease.    ;.  " 

"We  wanted  a  healthy  child," 
she  told  the  Star  Tribune  newspa- 
per last  month.  "And  it  doesn't 
hurt  him  to  save  her  life." 

Adam  was  born  Aug.  29.  On 
Sept.  26,  umbilical  cord  blood 
cells  from  Adam  were  given  to 
Molly  at  the  University  of 
Minnesota. 

If  the  transplant  doesn't  take, 
the  next  step  could  be  to  repeat 
the  process  with  Adam's  bone 
marrow.      ^ 

Among  the  first  couples  to 
acknowledge  publicly  that  they 
conceived  a  child  as  a  transplant 
donor  were  Abe  and  Mary  Ayala 
of  Walnut,  Calif.  But  they  could- 
n't select  an  embryo  a  decade  ago 
and  had  only  a  one-in-four  chance 
that  their  daughter  would  be  a 
suitable  donor  of  bone  marrow  to 
fight  her  teen-age  sister's 
leukemia.  The  baby,  born  in  1990, 
turned  out  to  be  a  suitable  donor, 
and  her  big  sister  recovered  from 
the  disease. 

Arthur  Caplan,  director  of  the 
Center    for    Bioethics    at    the 


University  of  Pennsylvania,  said 
he  doesn't  see  anything  morally 
wrong  in  the  Nash  case,  but  it 
raises  interesting  questions. 

"The  first  issue  is,  is  it  right  to 
design  anybody  as  a  tissue 
source?"  he  said.  "And  some- 
times it  can  be.  In  this  case, 
there's  no  harm  or  danger  to  a 
person." 

But  the  practice  can  become  a 
"slippery  slope,"  Caplan  said, 
"What  about  a  parent  who  says, 
'Hey,  I'd  like  to  do  that  for  my 
Child  who  needs  a  kidney,  or  a 
piece  of  lung?"' 

The  procedure  also  raises  the 
question  of  whether  children  will 
be  "designed"  for  specific  traits. 

"To  what  extent  are  doctors 
and  parents  going  to  be  free  to 
design  whatever  they  want  in 
their  kids?"  Caplan  asked. 
"That's  not  going  to  happen 
tomorrow,  but  this  is  a  baby  step 
down  that  road." 

When  Molly  is  healthy,  the 
Nashes  plan  to  have  more  chil- 
dren through  test  tube  fertiliza- 
tion, Strom  said. 


STRIKES  ; 

Frompageft  '       ;    > 

effort  to'settle  the  transit  strike,  which  has 
left  450,000  people  without  most  bus  or 
train  service. 

Los  Angeles  Mayor  Richard  Rior^n, 
who  sits  on  the  MTA's  board  of  directors, 
said  he  was  confident  an  agreement  could 
be  reached  by  Wednesday. 

"I  am  somewhat  optimistic  that  per- 
haps we  have  finally  got  on  the  right 
road,"  said  James  Williams,  head  of  the 
United  Transportation  Union,  which  rep- 
resents 4,300  bus  drivers  and  light  rail 
operators.         : 

The  union  afso  planned  a  meeting 
Wednesday  to  consider  a  request  by  Gov. 
Gray  Davis  that  they  return  to  work  for  a 
week  while  negotiations  continue. 

The  drivers  struck  on  Sept.  16.  Qcrks, 
mechanics  and  supervisors,  honored  the 
picket  lines.  However,  unions  represent- 
ing 1,861  mechanics  and  494  supervisors 
recommended  Monday  that  members 
return  to  work  for  a  seven-day  "cooling- 
ofT'  period. 

That  decision  infuriated  drivers  and 
was  widely  ignored  by  mechanics. 


>We  felt  betrayed."  said  Raul 
Delgado,  who  has  driven  MTA  buses  fof 
25,  years. 

At  an  East  Los  Angeles  bus  yard,  strik- 
ers surrounded  entering  cars  for  the  legal 
limit  of  45  seconds  each.  Some  mainte- 
nance supervisors  drove  in  but  delivery 
vans  refused,  protesters  said.  So  did 
about  10  mechanics. 

"Nobody  crossed  the  line,"  said 
Wayne  Miller,  an  MTA  mechanic  since 
1984.  "We  will  go  back  when  the  drivers 
go  back.  Wc  are  gorma"  support  the  dri- 
vers to  the  end." 

"If  you're  on  strike,  you  stay  out  on 
strike.  What's  the  use  of  sending  your 
people  back  without  a  contract?"  said  bus 
driver  and  strike  captain  Ray  Zepeda. 

The  back-to-work  decision  by  leaders 
of  the  Amalgamated  Transit  Union  was  a 
commitment  to  Davis  for  signing  a  bill 
protecting  union  contracts  if  the  MTA 
splits  into  semiautonomous  zones,  said 
Michael  Bujosa,  a  shop  steward  and  for-, 
mer  union  president. 

"I  think  it  would  show  a  very  sincere, 
conscious  effort  on  our  part  ...  that  we  , 
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12       Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


•  I. 


Daily  Bruin  Newt 


CRIME 

From  page  1 

hand  between  the  victim's  legs. 

After  the  Iburth  assault,  on  Aug.  29, 
university  police  began  stationing  plain- 
clothes olTicers  in  the  two  lots  during  the 
hours  they  suspected  the  man  to  attack. 
This  went  on  for  about  three  weeks, 
according  to  Baguiao. 

UCPD  posted  a  notice  warning  the 
public  about  the  incidents  on  Sept.  7. 
They  are  advising  the  public  to  be  aware 
of  their  surroundings  and  to  walk  with 
friends. 

"Just  because  you're  at  UCLA,  it 
doesn't  mean  crimes  that  occur  ofT-cam- 
pus  don't  occur  on-campus,"  Baguiao 
said. 

Police  surveying  the  lots  noticed  that 
many  women  were  still  walking  to  their 
cars  alone. 

"We  suggest  people  walk  with  friends 
because  the  people  being  approached 
are  alone,"  said  Nancy  Greenstein, 
director  of  community  services  for 
UCPD 

Some  students  who  have  seen  the  bul- 
letins posted  said  they  are  being  more 


careful.  "I  try  to  park  as  close  to  the 
entrance  as  I  can  for  safety  reasons," 
said  Laura  Stone,  a  third-year  business- 
economics  student  who  parks  in  Lot  2. 

Baguiao  said  anyone  who  has  been  a 
victim  of  sexual  battery  -  defined  as  hav- 
ing a  sexually  offensive  contact  with 
another  person  without  their  consent^ 
should  contact  police  immediately. 

He  said  in  some  of  these  groping  inci- 
dents, the  victims  did  not  report  the  case 
to  police  until  a  day  later. 

"Our  chances  for  apprehension  are 
better  the  closer  to  the  incident  it  gets 
reported,"  he  said. 

Though  violent  crimes  do  not  happen 
every  day,  this  isn't  the  first  time  UCPD 
has  dealt  with  cases. 

In  1999,  UCPD  received  five  reports 
of  sex  offenses  in  which  there  was  physi- 
cal contact  and  none  without,  such  as 
flashing  -  down  from  a  total  of  28  inci- 
dents in  1998. 

"Crimes  in  the  parking  structure  are 
not  a  daily  occurrence,"  Baguiao  said. 
"Crimes  against  persons  such  as  these? 
Yes,  we  do  get  those  on  occasion." 

To  report  an  incident,  call  UCPD  at  (310) 
825-1491. 


INSURANCE 

From  page  1  . 

their  parents'  plans,  according  to 
Albert  Setton,  deputy  assistant 
vice  chancellor  for  student  devel- 
opment and  health. 

He  said  the  inclusion  of  dental 
and  eye  care  in  UCLA's  plan  over 
the  past  year  was  responsible  for 
about  a  $100  increase  in  its  cost. 

"I  don't  think  (the  mandated 
health  plan)  will  be  anywhere  near 
as  low  as  $400  to  $500,"  said 
Setton,  adding  that  costs  are  rela- 
tively high  in  Los  Angeles. 

Health  insurance  vendors  will 
be  contacted  in  the  winter,  and  the 
final  cost  of  next  year's  plan  will 
be  known  in  the  spring,  Setton 
said. 

The  scope  of  the  benefits  will 
not  be  reduced  from  what  is 
already  provided  in  the  current 
plan,  he  added. 

Included  in  financial  aid  pack- 
ages is  an  allowance  for  health 
care  that  will  cover  the  entire  pre- 
mium, according  to  Steve  Luslig, 


executive  director  of  university 
health  services  at  UCB,  who  pre- 
sented the  new  policy  to  the 
regents. 

But  Setton  said  despite  the 
recent  increases  in  financial  aid, 
he  could  not  specifically  say 
whether  all  of  the  plan's  costs 
would  indeed  be  covered. 

The  issue  of  additional  costs 
imposed  upon  students  was  one 
brought  up  by  some  of  the  regents 
in  a  brief  discussion  prior  to  last 
month's  approval  of  the  policy.. 

Regent  Judith  Hopkinson  said 
the  mandatory  health  insurance 
requirement  would  mean  that 
5ome  students  wouldn't  come  to 
the  University  of  California. 

"We're  not  helping  them  - 
we're  requiring  them  to  have 
insurance,"  Hopkinson  said.  "It's 
an  extremely  good  rate,  but  to  a 
student  it's  a  lot  of  money." 

Student  Regent  Justin  Fong 
echoed  Hopkinson's  concerns, 
saying  he  was  wary  of  mandating 
an  additional  cost  of  $400  without 
knowing  what  kind  of  coverage 
students  would  get  for  it 


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The  University  of  California 
Students  Association  supported 
the  requirement,  saying  it  would 
improve  access  to  health  insur- 
ance, although  they  also  had  con- 
cerns over  costs  and  implementa- 
tion, according  to  Stacy  Lee, 
UCSA  organizing  director. 

Students  who  already  have  ade- 
quate health  insurance  of  their 
own  will  be  able  to  exempt  them- 
selves from  having  to  get  the  cov- 
erage offered  by  UC  through 
UCLA's  Web  site.  This  process  is 
already  in  place  for  international 
and  graduate  students. 

Full  health  care  coverage  used 
to  be  provided  at  UCLA  through 
"incidental  fees,"  which  later 
became  what  are  now  called  regis- 
tration fees. 

There  was  even  a  special  ward 
for  UCLA  students  in  the  medical 
center,  Setton  said. 

"It  was  really  primarily  a  health 
fee  at  the  time,"  he  said.  "At  one 
point,  as  late  as  the  '60s,  student 
health  care  came  out  of  the  regis- 
tration fee,  which  paid  for  every- 
thing." 


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14       Wednesday,  OOobef  4, 2000 


'Daily  Bniin  News 


NOt  TO  MKSf 


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SPECIAL  ISSUfg 


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PNYASHARMA 

Professor  Susan  Soranson  speaks  at  a  conference  focusing  on  the 
legal  aspect  of  gun  violence  at  the  UCLA  School  of  Law  on  Monday. 


GUNS 

From  page  1 

action  to  reduce  gun  violence,  intro- 
duced hypothetical  legislation  to 
members  of  the  panel . 

Boyle  apologized  to  the  more  than 
100  attendees  for  being  late  because 
he  had  to  break  up  a  gang  fight  where 
one  member  pulled  out  a  gun. 

Some  people  are  faced  with  the 
reality  of  gun  violence  on  a  daily 
basis,  and  are  looking  for  an  end  to 
what  they  see  as  the  cause  of  the  prob- 
lem. 

"You  take  law-abiding  citizens, 
you  put  them  .in  their  homes  when 
they  are  angry  and  there's  a  gun  there 
-  there's  a  higher  risk  of  there  being  a 
dead  person  than  when  there  isn't  a 
gun."  said  Susan  Sorenson.  UCLA 
professor  of  public  health. 

She  said  a  woman  is  2.5  times  as 
likely  to  be  shot  by  her  male  partner 
as  she  is  to  be  shot,  stabbed,  strangled, 
bludgeoned,  or  killed  any  other  way 
by  a  stranger. 

While  many  speakers  on  the  panel 
supported  most  of  the  hypothetical 
legislation  designed  to  curb  gun  vio- 
lence, the  main  voice  of  opposition 
was  Eugene  Volokh,  UCLA  constitu- 
tional law  professor  and  gun  scholar. 

An  expert  on  the  Second 
Amendment,  Volokh  supported  the 
public's  right  to  own  guns  and  said 
that  a  ban  on  handguns  could  result  in 
more  fatal  gun  shootings  as  higher- 
caliber  shotguns  would  be  used 
instead. 

"Criminals  will  always  be  able  to 
get  guns  if  they  want  to."  he  said, 
adding  that  prohibition  did  not  stop 
alcohol  consumption  and  the  present 
war  on  drugs  has  not  stopped  their 
use. 

To  show  the  media's  portrayal  of 
gun  violence,  one  segment  featured 
scenes  from  Quake  II,  The  Matrix 
and  lyrics  by  rap  artist  Eminem. 


But  in  light  of  recent  government 
investigations  into  the  marketing  of 
media  violence,  some  panelists  said 
they  had  deeper  concerns.   ■■        *   . 

"We  couldn't  even  afYbrd  those 
things,"  said  Gilbert  Salinas, 
Program  Coordinator  of  Teens  on 
Target,  a  program  to  train  youths  at 
risk  to  become  peer  educators  on  vio- 
lence prevention. 

Acknowledging  the  media's  influ- 
ence, Salinas  stressed  the  importance 
of  parental  involvement  and  educa- 
tion. 

Salinas  has  been  confmed  to  a 
wheelchair  since  being  accidentally 
shot  by  another  gang  member.  When 
he  was  10  years  old,  he  saw  his  older 
brother  get  shot  and  killed. 

Most  panelists  agreed  the  problem 
starts  much  earlier  and  that  the  focus 
should  be  on  paying  more  attention  to 
children  and  trying  to  steer  them 
away  from  guns. 

"What  you  need  is  parents  who 
pay  attention  to  both  kids  and  the 
degree  of  difficulty  to  raise  kids  in  a 
community  like  mine,"  Boyle  said. 
"The  one  thing  that  connects  both 
rich  and  poor  kids  is  the  absence  of 
adult  influence  on  their  lives." 

Boyle  stressed  the  need  for  com- 
munity and  police  involvement  in  the 
community. 

U.S.  Attorney  Alejandro  N. 
Mayorkas  expressed  similar  senti- 
ments when  he  advocated  a  more 
involved  probation  system  and 
emphasized  the  importance  of  creat- 
ing jobs  for  young  people. 

"You  disarm  them  and  put  them  in 
custody  and  when  they  come  out,  you 
actually  have  something  for  them," 
Mayorkas  said. 

Another  discussion  on  gun  legislation 
will  be  held  Oct  16  from  6-8  p.m.  at 
Room  1 447  in  the  UCLA  School  of  Law. 
For  more  information,  call  the  Center 
for  Public  Interest  Programs  at 
(310)-794-4061. 


■   if.  '••: 


WRAP 

From  page  1 

"Bush  was  articulate,  and  did 
extremely  well,"  said  Bruin 
Republicans  Chair  Vartan 
Djihanian. 

"He  was  able  to  touch  on  points 
important  to  all  Americans,  such  as 
social  security,  education  and  health 
care,"  he  said. 

Bruin  Democrats  President 
Melanie  Ho  said  she  felt  Gore's 
closing  remarks  accurately  defmed 
the  core  of  his  message, 

"This  country  is  enjoying 
unprecedented  prosperity  thanks  to 
eight  years  of  Clinton-Gore,"  she 
said.  "I'm  happy  that  he  plans  to 
enable  all  Americans  to  take  part  in 
it." 

Political  science  doctoral  candi- 
date Christopher  Blunt,  who  spe- 
cialises in  American  politics,  said 
both  candidates  did  an  adequate  job 
focusing  on  the  issues. 

"I  think  what  we're  seeing  in  pol- 
itics is  a  reaction  to  the  public's  dis- 
tifste  for  personal  attacks,"  he  said. 


"For  that  reason,  I  think  they  made 
an  effort  to  avoid  swiping  at  each 
other  unnecessarily." 

Andrea  Oxman,  a  first-year 
undeclared  student,  agreed  that  the 
discourse  was  friendly,  but  said  she 
would  have  preferred  more  specific 
explanations  of  the  candidates'  poli- 
cy proposals.  ,:,'    u 

"It  was  a  lot  of  regurgitating  the 
same  thing  over  and  over,  very  simi- 
lar to  what  I  heard  in  their  conven- 
tion nomination  acceptance  speech- 
es," she  said. 

Long  Ngod,  a  graduate  student  at 
The  Anderson  School  at  UCi-A, 
said  he  supported  Gore  bef^e  the 
debate,  and  his  position  reinained 
unchanged. 

"I  agree  with  Gore's  stance  on 
the  issues  that  matter  to  me,"  he 
said.  "And  Bush  didn't  impress  me." 

But  Blunt  said  Bush  was  able  to 
stay  on  message,  which  was  impor- 
tant. "He  needed  to  draw  a  contrast 
with  his  vision  of  government's  role 
versus  Gore's.' 

"Though  Gore  framed  his  issues 
well.  Bush  was  able  to  do  that,"  he 
continued. 


Daily  Bruin  News 


We<ine«iay.Octot>er4,2000       15 


On  Sundays,  you  know  you're  not  getting 
out  oi  bed  before  noon  anyway. 


■# 


■s. 


Kick  bacl(  with  the  Sunday 
Los  Angeles  Times. 
And  hit  the  books  later. 


■V  .   *--; 


16       Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


fTf^ 


use    STUDENT 

FOOTBALIj 

TICKETS 


Please  read  these  instructions  carefully: 

Student  tickets  for  the  UCLA-USC  Football 

game  will  be  distributed  in  accordance  with 

the  procedures  outlined  below.  The  Game  will 

be  played  on  Saturday,  November  18,  2000,  at  the 

Rose  Bowl.   Student  tickets  are  priced  at  $25.00  each 

and  all  are  reserved  seats. 

The  student  tickets  for  the  UCLA-USC 
Football  game  will  be  sold  on  the  basis  of 
the  prepaid  randomly  generated  priority  numbers 
issued  with  each  students'  Student  Sport  Package  and 
the  additional  priority  numbers  issued  at  the  Central 
Ticket  Office. 

The  priority  numbers  will  serve  as  the 
method  of  admission  to  the  area  where  the 
ticket  windows  are  located.  Each  priority 
number  issued  specifies  the  time  and  date  when  the 
holder  of  that  priority  number  is  to  report  to  Pauley 
Pavilion  to  obtain  the  actual  admission  ticket  to  the 
game.  STUDBiW^S  ARE  URGED  TO  REPORT  TO 
PAULEY  PAVILION  ONLY  AT  THE  TIME 
SPECIFIED  ON  THEIR  PRIORITY  NUMBERED 
TICKET 

OEACH  STUDENT    WITH  ONE  PRIORITY 
NUMBER    WILL     BE      ALLOWED    TO 
PURCHASE  ONE  (1)  USC  STUDENT  TICKET 
THE  STUDENT  MUST  ALSO  PRESENT  HIS  OR  HER 
CURRENT  UCLA  BRUIN  CARD  AT  THAT  TIME  IN 
ORDER  TO  GET  THE  GAME  TICKET 

Students  who  did  not  obtain  season  tickets 
but  still  desire  to  purchase  USC  Football 

tickets  may  obtain  a  priority  number  now  at  the 

Central  Ticket  Office. 

The  best  seats  in  the  student  section  will  be 
sold  first.  Distribution  of  these  seats,  as  well 
as  the  other  seats,  will  be  made  equally  among 
all  ticket  sellers.  One  student  may  purchase  two  tick- 
ets together  providing  he/she  brings  two  priority  num- 
bers AND  two  current  Bruin  Cards  and  arrives  at  the 
latest  time  designated  on  the  priority  numbers.  If 
more  than  two  persons  wish  to  sit  together,  then,  on 
the  day  of  the  sale,  they  should  arrive  at  the  Mssi  time 
designation  on  the  priority  numbers  they  hold  and 
they  will  be  issued  tickets  together  by  standing  in  line 
behind  the  same  ticket  seller.  Since  the  assignment  of 
priority  numbers  was  done  randomly,  students  who 
desire  seats  together  will  have  to  decide  whether  they 
wish  to  pass  up  the  lower  priority  number  in  order  to 
sit  together. 

O    Students  should  report  to  Gate  3,  Pauley 
Pavilion  at  the  time  designated  on  their 
priority  number  ticket.     As  the  priority 
numbers  are  called,  the  students  must  show 
their  number  to  the  gate  attendant  and  are  admitted  to 
the  area  where  the  tickets  are  purchased. 

^^^    When  the  student  is  at  the  window,  he  or  she 
must  present  all  of  the  following: 

a.  Priority  numbered  ticket,  which  is  retained  by  the 
ticket  seller. 

b.  Current  UCLA  Bruin  Picture  Card,  which  is  vali- 
dated by  the  ticket  seller,  and  must  also  be  presented  at 
the  game. 

c.  Amount  of  cash  required  to  purchase  game  ticket 
r$25.00  per  ticket).  No  Checks  will  be  accepted. 
CASH  ONLY,  PAYMENT  IS  NOT  REQUIRED 
FOR  THOSE  WHO  PREPAID  FOR  THEIR  USC 
TICKET  THROUGH  THE  STUDENT  SPORTS 
PACKAGE. 

^^M    Those  students  who  are  not  present  at  the 
time  their  priority  number  is  called  should 
report  to  Gate  3,  Pauley  Pavilion,  at  their  earli- 
est convenience  after  their  priority  number  time  and 
get  in  line  with  the  current  time  priority  numbers. 


tcnir.il 


rHOAE 


Fticket 
office 


IMy  Bruin  Newt 


tickets  to 

•£1 


you  can't 
goto 


spedate 


hav<B  In  oommofi? 


you  can  sell  them 

all  in  the 

Daily  Bruin's 


BRUIN 

BARGAINS 


*adB  for  Hems  over  $200  ana  $2 


■*i>""^"^ 


I  I  I  It. 


FORCE 

From  page  9 

At  Netzarim  Junction,  a  highway 
crossroad  in  the  scrubby  flatlands  of 
the  central  Gaza  Strip,  a  lone  army 
outpost  guards  the  access  road  to  a 
Jewish  settlement  by  the  same  name. 

Like  many  other  settlements  in  the 
Gaza  Strip  and  the  West  Bank, 
Netzarim  is  loathed  by  Palestinians 
living  in  nearby  towns  and  refugee 
camps  as  a  symbol  of  oppression  and 
occupation. 

The  Israeli  soldiers  at  Netzarim 
Junction,  many  of  them  teenage  con- 
scripts, are  far  outnumbered  by  mobs 
of  rioten  who  have  besieged  their  iso- 
lated post  each  day. 

Given  their  state  of  hair-trigger 
jumpiness,  it  sometimes  is  only  a  mat- 
ter of  moments  before  a  lower-level 
confrontation  -  stone-throwing 
repelled  by  rubber  bullets  and  tear  gas 
-  turns  into  a  full-scale  battle  with  live 
ammunition. 

On  Tuesday,  at  the  junction,  a 
chaotic  scene  erupted  when  a  rioter 
on  a  warehouse  rooftop  adjacent  to 
the  army  outpost  was  struck  by  a  mis- 
sile. 

Onlookers  said  the  man  -  identi- 
fied as  28-year-old  Fahmi  Abu 
Amounah  -  was  throwing  stones.  But 
the  army  said  he  was  probably  shoot- 
ing toward  the  soldiers. 

Friends  who  jumped  to  his  aid  saw 
that  his  brains  had  literally  been 
blown  out,  sending  them  into  a  frenzy 
of  shock,  rage  and  grief. 

"Allahu  Akhbar  (God  is  great)!" 
they  said,  screaming.  One  of  the 
group  seized  a  handful  of  bloody 
brain  matter  and  waved  it  wildly  in  his 
bare  hands. 

Palestinian  police  tried  to  block  the 
group  from  charging  the  Israeli  out- 
post, but  they  snatched  up  rocks  and 
furiously  stoned  the  police,  quickly 
breaking  through  their  lines. 

As  firing  broke  out,  some  shots 
appeared  to  come  from  a  building  on 
the  Palestinian  side,  pocked  with  bul- 
let holes.  Smoke  biUowed  from  piles 
of  burning  tires  in  the  street. 

Israeli  helicopters  circled  overhead 
as  dozens  of  youths  ran  through  the 
street,  one  waving  a  Palestinian  flag. 

A  veiled  Palestinian  woman  stum- 
bled as  she  tried  to  get  out  of  the  line 
of  fire. 

Demonstrators  rushed  to  carry 
wounded  to  arriving  ambulances. 


One  drove  off  so  fast  that  a  roll  of  sur- 

an- 

gical  tape  unwound  out  its  open  back 
doors. 

At  least  41  people  were  hurt  and 
two  other  men  killed  in  the  daylong 
battle,  according  to  hospital  officials. 
The  army  acknowledged  the  use  of 
live  fire  and  said  helicopter  gunships 
fired  rockets. 

Hospital  emergency  room  director 
Moawia  Hassan  said  a  gaping  wound 
like  Abu  Amounah's,  which  blasted 
away  a  huge  dtunk  of  bone,  <vould 
likely  have  come  from  a  high-caliber 
weapon,  but  he  could  not  say  what 

type. 

More  than  2,000  people  packed  the 
narrow  concrete  alleys  of  Nusseirat 
for  Abu  Amounah's  funeral,  held  only 
an  hour  after  he  was  killed.  ** My 
brother,  my  only  brother,"  said  his  20- 
year-old  sister,  Palestine,  weeping. 

Netzarim  Junction  has  been  the 
scene  of  some  of  the  most  wrendiing 
events  in  neariy  a  week  of  fighting.  On 
Saturday,  a  12-year-old  Palestinian 
boy  was  shot  dead  and  his  father  seri- 
ously wounded  as  the  two  huddled, 
terrified,  trying  to  find  shelter  from  a 
hail  of  bullets. 

The  army  acknowledged  Tuesday 
its  soldiers  had  apparently  fired  the 
fatal  shots  and  expressed  sorrow  over 
the  incident  -  but  blamed  Palestinians 
anew  for  "cynical  use"  of  children  in 
the  confrontation  with  Israeli  troops. 

Speaking  specifically  of  that  inci- 
dent, but  referring  generally  to  prob- 
lems faced  by  soldiers  manning  out- 
posts under  siege,  a  top  Israeli  com- 
mander said  the  troops'  field  of  vision 
was  often  limited.  At  the  bunker-like 
outpost  at  Netzarim,  for  instance,  sol- 
diers are  aiming  through  smalt  slits, 
said  Gen.  Giora  Eiland. 

On  Monday,  nearly  three  dozen 
Palestinians  were  hurt  by  a  single  anti- 
tank missile,  one  of  several  fired  at 
Netzarim. 

Word  of  Tuesday's  gruesome  fatal 
shooting  spread  swiftly  to  the  ranks  of 
the  young  stone-throwers  massing  for 
a  new  wave  of  attacks  against  the 
Israeli  outpost. 

"We're  a  little  terrified,"  said 
Yasser  Abu  Assi,  19.  He  and  his 
friends  were  regrouping,  having  scat- 
tered when  a  helicopter  gunship  Hew 
overhead. 

"We  have  stones,  and  they  have 
that,"  he  said,  gesturing  toward  it. 
"They  are  using  much  more  force. 
But  it's  our  land,  and  if  I  die.  my  death 
is  a  good  one." 


SOIOOL 

From  page  5 

kindergarten  to  1 2th  grade. 

"The  downward  trend  tells  us  that 
we're  moving  in  the  right  direction," 
Riley  said  in  announcing  the  annual 
findings  during  a  visit  to  Iroquois 
High  School  in  Louisville. 

The  report  monitors  implementa- 
tion of  the  Gun-Free  Schools  Act,  a 
1994  federal  law  that  requires  states 
receiving  federal  education  aid  to 
pass  their  own  laws  ordering  school 
districts  to  expel  for  one  year  any  stu- 
dent who  brings  a  firearm  to  sdu>ol. 
All  50  states  have  passed  such  laws. 

The  report  showed  that  about  330 
elementary  school  pupils  were 
expelled  nationally  in  1998-99  for 
being  caught  with  weapons. 

Riley  stressed  that  most  of  the 
nation's  public  schools  are  safe. 

"School  is  often  the  only  place  in 
the  world  that  is  safe  for  children 


from  troubled  homes  or  dangerous 
neighborhoods,"  he  said.  "But  we 
must  keep  working  together  until  all 
schools  and  communities  are  free  of 
violence." 

Texas  had  the  largest  number  of 
gun-related  expulsions,  294,  followed 
by  California  at  290,  Georgia  with 
208  and  New  York  206. 

Several  states  had  just  a  few  expul- 
sions. Vermont  and  North  Dakota 
each  had  three  expulsions,  Rhode 
Island  had  four,  Hawaii  five,  Maine 
six.  South  Dakota  and  Delaware  nine 
each  and  Connecticut  1 1. 

More  than  half  the  expulsions 
nationally  occurred  in  high  sdhools.  A 
third  occurred  in  junior  high  schools 
and  10  percent  in  elementary  schools, 
the  report  found. 

More  than  half  the  confiscated 
weapons  were  handguns,  while  at 
least  12  percent  involved  rifles  or 
shotguns.  Other  weapons  found  in 
schools  included  bombs,  grenades, 
starter  pistols  and  rockets. 


WATCHTOWER 

From  page  8 

« 

for  a  glimpse  of  something  sensation- 
al. In  1967,  the  sensation  was  the  death 
of  Snippy  the  horse. 

According  to  O'Brien's  book,  the 
horse,  whose  real  name  was  Lady,  was 
found  stripped  of  part  of  its  flesh, 
drained  of  fluids  and  with  its  hind 
quarters  removed. 

O'Brien  said  the  carcass  was  found 


about  the  same  time  UFOs  were 
reported  in  the  area  and  the  incident 
became  part  of  the  lore  surrounding 
other  strange  deaths  of  animals. 

Candace  Knowlan,  who  owns  a 
shop  in  Hooper,  has  seen  strange 
things  in  the  sky  since  moving  to  the 
San  Luis  Valley  six  years  ago.  She's 
not  sure  if  the  area  is  a  magnet  for 
extraterrestrials  or  if  city-dwellers  are 
perhaps  blind  to  other-wordly  visions 
because  of  bright  lights  at  night  and 
busy  lives. 


Daily  Brain 


Wednesday,  Oaobef  4, 2000       17 


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Cordially  invites  UCLA 
Seniors  to  a 


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Presentation  and  Reception 


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K      V 

Students  interested  in  interviewing  for  Investment  Banking  should 

send  resumes  and  cover  letters  by  mail  to: 


.V 


.-  Basil  A.  Bliss,  Vice  President 
Lazard  Freres  &  Co.  LLC 
30  Rockefeller  Plaza 
New  York,  NY  10020     ■ 
FAX:  (212)  332-5975     2 


:.  ^^-c-   v^^f..^  .,^ 


Positions  available  in  New  York,  Chicago,  San  Francisco 
Visit  our  web  site:  www.lazard.com    . 
Summer  Internships  Available 


Daily  Bruin 


Thursday 

A  former  sorority 
girl  reflects  upon 
her  experiences. 

Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


J^^ 


View  on  the  Web 

Se^  all  this  and  • 

more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's  ; 

•  Website:  I 

www.dailyfonjin.ucla.edu  * 


viewpoint@media.ucta.edu 


Don't^  be  quick  to  dismiss  sch< 


tit 


ERICA  PINTO/Daity  Brum 


INITIATIVE:  Voting  for 
Prop.  38  allows  student 
choice,  better  education 

For  the  last  several  election 
cycles,  we  Califomians  have 
been  treated  to  some  of  the 
most  insignificant  ballot  proposi- 
tions in  recent  memory.  Indeed,  not 
since  Proposition  209  have  we  had  a 
chance  to  so 
profoundly 
correct  a 
major  prob- 
lem in  our 
state. 

Fortunately, 
the  powers 
that  be  have 
decided  to 
grant  us  a 
great  opportu- 
nity once  again 
in  the  form  of 
Proposition 
38,  the  school  voucher  initiative. 

I  am  disturbed,  however,  by  the 
way  the  debate  on  this  issue  seems  to 
be  unfolding.  The  truth,  in  this  case, 
has  been  sacrificed  for  one  reason  or 
another  by  those  opposed  to  the 
innovative  and  promising  idea  of 
school  vouchers.  Therefore,  it's 
about  time  we  had  a  little  lesson  in 
education  policy. 

As  pathetic  as  it  seems,  we  need 
to  begin  by  defining  that  which 
many  of  us  so  blindly  loathe.  School 
vouchers,  the  subject  of  this  proposi- 
tion, are  special  state-provided 
grants  that  are  intended  to  help 
those  families  of  lower  socioeconom- 
ic status  (although  Proposition  38 
would  provide  vouchers  for  all) 

Levi  is  a  second-year  history  and  polit- 
ical science  student.  He  welcomes 
your  comments  at  swingkid181@hot- 
mail.com. 


afford  better  schooling.  The  amount 
of  the  voucher  is  based  on  a  percent- 
age of  the  average  cost  of  educating 
a  student,  K- 1 2,  in  a  state-nin 
school.  ::=■..■.-,  ■.^  ■ 

But  wait?  Doesnt  that  deprive  the 
public  schools  of  desperately  needed 
cash?  Hardly.  Allow  nte  to  elaborate. 
Let  us  take  two  hypothetical  institu- 
tions: Public  School  District  X  and 
Private  Sch<x)l  Y.  Imagine  that 
District  X  has  twenty  students, 
which  cost  a  total  of  $200,000,  or 
S  10,000  per  student.  Now  let  us 
assume  that  these  students  are 
olTered  vouchers  of  $5,000  to  attend 
the  far  superior  Schcx)l  Y.  If  ten  of 
these  children  opt  out  of  District  X, 
the  district  is  left  with  only  $  150,000, 
as  critics  of  schcx)l  choice  would 
argue. 

This  attitude,  however,  is  quite 
intellectually  dishonest  and  a  deliber- 
ately incomplete  analysis.  In  examin- 
ing this  policy,  we  must  go  a  step  fur- 
ther. While  the  funding  for  District 
X  has  indeed  dropped,  so  has  the 
enrollment.  All  of  a  sudden.  District 
X  is  averaging  $15,000  per  student, 
certainly  better  than  before.  It  is  this 
argument  that  demonstrates  the 
cracking  of  the  anti-choice  egg.  As 
with  many  other  liberal  positions, 
proponents  of  a  more  centralized, 
bureaucratically  controlled  educa- 
tion system  are  dearly  nwre  interest- 
ed in  "the  system"  than  the  students 
who  are  supposed  to  benefit  from 
that  system. 

Perhaps  the  most  overused  and 
under-rationalized  argument  used  by 
anti-choice  proponents  is  that  vouch- 
ers represent  some  sort  of  surrender, 
the  act  of  giving  up  on  the  public 
schools.  Intellectual  dishonesty?  You 
bet.  Take  the  competition  argument, 
for  example.  As  we  all  know,  the 
general  theory  behind  the  allocation 
of  funds  to  public  sch<x>ls  involves 

S«eL£Vlpa9e21 


LETTERS 


Comments  on 

doughnuts 

inappropriate 

Not  since  1984  during  my  days  as  a 
summer  school  student  at  UCLA 
have  I  taken  the  time  to  write  a  letter 
to  the  Daily  Bruin.  This  is  in  regards 
to  "Twist  of  fate"  (Daily  Bruin,  Oct.  2) 
and  Adriana  Cameiro's  remark  about 
Stan's  Donuts.  To  say  that "  Krispy 
Kremes  arc  better,  of  course"  is  not 
only  ludicrous,  but  mean  and  insult- 
ing. Ms.  Cameiro,  if  you  wish  to  take 
a  cheap  shot  at  a  Westwood  Village 
merchant  that  is  your  business,  but  to 
do  so  to  try  and  defend  the  use  of 
Krispy  Kremes  doughnuts  over  Stan's 
Donuts  is  nothing  short  of  silty. 

Having  tasted  Krispy  Kremes  and 
Stan's  Donuts  I  can  say  that  both  are 
very  tasty,  so  I'm  not  going  to  take  any 
cheap  shots  at  Krispy  Kremes  dough- 
nuts. I  will  say  that  Stan's  Donuts  are 
recognized  by  individuals  and  food 


^^^^P^^  '     I 


critics  as  being  some  of 
the  best  doughnuts 
around.  Just  this 
month,  Los  Angeles  magazine  singled 
out  Stan's  Donuts  as  having  some  of 
the  best  doughnuts  in  Southern 
California.  I  have  talked  to  many  peo- 
ple who  come  from  miles  around  just 
to  have  a  Stan's  apple  fritter. 

Ms.  Carneiro's  comments  just 
serve  to  drive  a  wedge  between  the  vil- 
lage and  the  UCLA  community  This 
is  especially  disappointing  because 
many  merchants  are  working  hard  to 
welcome  the  UCLA  community  to  the 
village  and  we  appreciate  the  impor- 
tance of  UCLA  to  the  village.  Finally, 
if  ASUCLA  wishes  to  replace  a  local, 
family-owned  vendor  such  as  Stan's 
Donuts  for  a  national  corporate  chain 
vendor  they  have  every  right  to  do  so, 
but  I  find  it  hard  to  believe  that  both 
Stan's  and  Krispy  Kremes  could  not 
co-exist  on  campus. 

nMlpLUBfM 

Owner  of  Scraks  UniWM 


Don't  forget  Negrete,  missing  adults 


LEGISLATION:  Support 
for  Rristen's  Act  needed 
to  help  family  searches 

By  Mary  NcgraCit 

My  name  is  Mary  Negrete,  and  I 
am  writing  to  urge  all  UCLA  stu- 
dents and  all  of  their  families, 
friends,  and  acquaintances  to  sup- 
port Kristen's  Act,  HR  2780. 

My  son,  Michael  Negrete,  is  a 
missing  person.  A  few  montfis  after 
his  18th  birthday,  on  Dec  10, 1999, 
Michael  vanished  from  Dykstra 
Hall,  his  dorm  at  UCLA,  and  has 
not  been  found  yet.  His  disappear- 
ance b  a  mystery  and  a  source  of 
deep  frustration  and  sadness  to  all 
his  family  and  friends. 

At  the  time  of  his  disappearance, 

Mary  Negrete  is  the  mother  of 
Michael,  the  student  who  disap- 
peared last  year. 


we  launched  a  massive  search  for 
Michael.  We  asked  for  help  from 
many  missing  persons  organiza- 
tions, aitd  were  told  by  several, 
including  the  National  Center  for 
Missing  and  Exploited  Children, 
that  Michael  was  over  18  and  they 
could  not  list  him  on  their  national 


The  most  effective 

way  to  find  missing 

"adults"  is  by  massive 

publicity. 


databases.  He  is  legally  classified  as 
an  adult  who  does  not  need  to  be 
found  by  his  parents.  But  Midiael 
is  far  from  being  ready  to  function 
as  a  mature  adult.  When  he  van- 
ished he  was  a  young,  first-year  col- 
lege student,  barely  beginning  his 


life  and  still  very  depeiKlent  on  his 
parents  and  family. 

The  most  effective  way  to  find 
Michael  and  other  missing  "adults" 
is  through  massive  publicity.  There 
must  be  at  least  one  person  in  the 
worid  who  knows  what  happened  to 
Michael.  Imagine  how  many  people 
would  see  him  if  his  picture  could 
be  distributed  on  mailers,  milk  car- 
tons, and  other  fiyers  nationally.  We 
have  tried  to  publicize  his  disap- 
pearance as  much  as  possible  our- 
selves, but  as  a  grieving  family,  our 
distribution  network  is  more  or  less 
a  hit-or-miss.  We  need  the  help  of 
national  organizations. 

Kristen's  Act  (H  R  2780)  is  a  bill 
introduced  to  the  Houk  of 
Representatives  in  Wa^ington  by 
Sue  Myrick,  Republican  congress- 
woman  from  North  Carolina.  The 
bill  is  named  in  honor  of  Kristen 
Modafleri,  a  North  Carolina  State 
student  who  vanished  in  1997  a  few 

Sec  MMCII,  |MfC  23 


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"/i 


MJ-486  is  rtittt  solution  to  unwanted 


Approval  of  drug 
may  raise  abortion  rates; 
students  should  be  careful 


My  girlfriend  is  pregnant, 
and  the  two  of  us  are 
scared  out  of  our  minds. 
I'm  neurotically  re-thinking  how  all 
of  this  happened  when  1  should  real- 
ly be  concentrating  on  where  to  go 
from  here.  She's  having  an  abortion 
next  week.  That's  what  we  decided 
would  be  best  for  the  both  of  us 
right  now.  Still,  I  can't  help  wonder- 
ing if  there  will  ever  be  a  next  time. 

Will  I  ever  get  my  girlfriend  preg- 
nant again,  while  we're  still  not 
ready  to  start  a  family?  Will  I  use 
protection  next  time? 

I  kick  myself,  because  I  know 
that  somewhere  deep-down  inside 
of  me  -  in  a  place  I  deny  exists  with- 
in my  own  physical  frame  -  I  didn't 
use  a  condom  because  the  worst 
case  scenario  wasn't  scary  to  me. 
Before,  I  wasn't  scared  of  surgical 
abortion.  I'm  terrified  by  it  now. 

I'm  sorry  to  burst  the  bubbles  of 
young  men  across  the  country,  but 
I'm  not  the  only  one  who  hesitates 
his  use  of  birth  control  because  the 
alternatives  aren't  "real"  enough. 
And  women  are  guilty  of  this  too. 
Young  adults,  on  campuses  nation- 
wide, aren't  scared  enough  of  abor- 


tion to  curb  their  sexual  promiscu- 
ity. .  ..v-.'-'  >:;;■-.:.■;■-.;: 

The  recent  legislation  to  approve 
the  Use  of  RU-486  isn't  going  to 
solve  this  problem  either. 
Unfortunately,  abortions  -  as  a    ' 
whole  -  will  rise.  RU-486  is  the 
"birth-control"  pill.  Developed  in 
France  12  years  ago,  it  is  now  wide- 
ly used  throughout  12  of  the  15 
countries  constituting  the 
European  Union.  It  has  been  a 
huge  success. 

The  pill  works  like  this.  Simply,  it 
stops  the  flow  of  progesterone  to 
the  fetus,  killing  the  lifeline  from 
mother  to  baby  and  ultimately 
resulting  in  an  induced  miscarriage. 
The  pill  is  set  to  be  administered, 
only  by  doctors  "approved"  by  the 
government,  to  women  as  an  alter- 
native to  surgical  abortion. 

The  success  it  has  had  in  Europe 
is  a  tad  tainted,  however.  The  num- 
bers stack  up  like  so:  In  France,  14 
percent  of  all  abortions  in  1990 
were  done  through  the  use  of  RU- 
486,  while  20  percent  of  abortions 
in  1998  were  done  with  "the  pill."  In 
Sweden,  more  than  33  percent  of  all 
abortions  in  1999  were  done  using 
RU-486.  The  pill  is  sure  to  be  quite 
popular  in  America.  That's  what 
I'm  afraid  of 

It  seems  so  much  easier  to  take  a 
pill  than  to  have  a  surgical  abortion, 
but  that's  not  truly  the  case.  It 
seems  that  couples  are  beginning  to 
think  that  abortion  is  less  painful, 
traumatizing  and  dramatic  by  leaps 
and  bounds  since  the  birth  of  this 
new  "abortion  pill." 

Don't  think  that  a  woman  just 
swallows  a  pill  with  her  glass  of 
water  before  bed  one  night  and 
wakes  up  un-pregnant.  Quite  the 
contrary. 


Women  opting  to  use  RU-486 
must  receive  counseling  and  three 
mandatory  visits  to  their  doctor. 
One  to  administer  the  pill,  the  sec- 
ond for  a  follow-up  pill,  and  the 
third  to  ensure  that  the  abortion  has 


been  completed  in  a  manner  so  as 
not  to  jeopardize  the  health  of  the 
woman. 

This  pill  isn't  a  reason  to  stop 
using  condoms.  I  know  that  the 
hard  way.  I  just  hope  that  men  and 


C5RACE  HUANG/Oaily  Brum 


women  who  don't  take  birth  control 
will  understand  that  abortion  has 
not  become  any  easier  because  of 
this  new  pill.  ,  •; 


See  ABORTION,  page  20 


Speaks  Out 


Members  of  ttie  Undergraduate  Student  Association  Council  disagreed  over  the  necessity  of  conducting  an  LGBT/Queer  Campus  Life  conference  rather  than  an  event 
that  may  have  been  applicable  to  a  wider  margin  of  students.  How  do  you  feel  about  this  issue? • .'"     - "    "     '■  ■' 


Peter  De  Guzman 

Thirrf-yeaf 

Anthropology,  work)  arts  artd  cultures 

"I  think  that  these  students  should  be 
free  to  do  whatever  they  want  to  do.  If 
they  want  to  have  more  of  those  types  of 
meetings,  then  that's  fine  for  them.  It's 
up  to  the  LGBT  community  to  promote 
awareness  about  their  own  meetings 
and  services.  I  don't  think  the  university 
has  to  do  some  big,  special  program 
because  specific  organizations  do  that. 
If  they  really  want  to  make  these  issues 
known,  they  should  advertise  it  themselves." 


Creed  Poubon 

Fourth-year 

Communication  studies 

'*The  event  promotes  awareness.  It's 
necessary  especially  at  UCLA  because  we 
pride  ourselves  in  being  a  liberal  campus. 
We  need  to  celebrate  the  diversity  of  peo- 
ple in  one  way  or  another.  With  those 
hate  crimes  that  we  had  here  last  year,  it's 
obvious  that  the  problem  hasn't  stopped. 
If  some  of  the  members  of  USAC  oppose 
such  events,  then  they're  just  ignoring  a 
problem  that  exists  on  campus.  It  would 

be  really  naive  to  not  acknowledge  that  fact." 


!  

I  BtherChol 
Second-year 
Undedared 


1 


AlanBcnlttz 

Fourth-year 
Psychobmlogy 


t; 


"I  don't  think  that  just  because 
they're  a  smaller  group  of  people  they 
should  not  be  funded.  It's  not  as  if  all 
the  other  groups  or  causes  people 
belong  to  are  going  to  include  every- 
body. I  think  a  bigger  event  would  be 
better,  one  that  is  campus-wide.  But  I 
don't  think  that  it's  wrong  to  help  a 
smaller  cause  either." 


Speaks  Out  compNed  by  Cuauhtemoc  Ortega,  Daily  Bruin  Senior 
Staff.  Photos  by  Catherine  Jun. 


"More  students  need  to  be  aware  of 
gay  and  lesbian  issues.  A  lot  of  people 
don't  believe  that  homophobia  exists. 
These  programs  and  committees  help 
people  become  aware  of  the  homophobia 
problem.  If  some  members  of  the  Council 
don't  agree  with  that  type  of  event,  how 
are  other  people  supposed  to  know? 
Those  Council  members  shouldn't  be 
opposed  to  such  events  just  because  they 
focus  on  a  minority.  Elizabeth  Houston  needs  to  keep  her 
mind  open.  She's  got  a  closed  mind  thinking  that  everytxxly  is 
living  in  a  happy,  integrated  world.", 


Trihscha  Burke 

Fourth-year 

Psychok)gy 

"If  they're  funding  these  types  of 
events  with  our  money,  then  those 
events  shouldn't  be  so  specific.  It 
shouldn't  be  something  that  only  a 
certain  amount  of  people  are  inter- 
ested in;  it  should  be  broader.  If  not, 
then  they  should  give  funding  to  all 
the  different  groups  that  ask  for  it. 
Funding  should  be  neutral  and  all 
groups  and  causes  should  get  equal 
money  or  nothing  at  all." 


Stevoime  Ratfiff 

Rrst-year 
Undedared 

"I  think  that  its  good  that  the  gay 
and  lesbian  community  has  the  oppor- 
tunity to  get  their  issues  out  through 
USAC,  but  I  think  that  it  wasn't 
appropriate  for  them  to  have  done  it 
during  Welcome  Week.  Maybe  they 
should  have  done  it  some  other  time 
during  the  year.  In  order  for  it  to  be 
Welcome  Week  for  everybody,  it's  just 
not  appropriate.  Maybe  every  year 

they  should  have  something  different  if  that's  the  way  they 

want  to  start  running  things." 


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ABORTIONS    S: 

From  page  19  3  -^ 

What  young  adults,  on  this  cam- 
pus, and  on  campuses  worldwide 
must  be  sure  of  is  that  sex  is  as  risky 
as  it  has  ever  been.  Babies  and  dis- 
eases are  wide-spread  repercussions 
of  unsafe  sex,  and  they  always  will 
be.  ■■:.■•.■  ;-^^.':.-'-; 

The  mediit  will  pay  a  lot  of  atten- 
tion to  this  subject,  and  we  will  all 
read  about  the  wonderful  miracle   . 

ofRU-486.         ^  ;:;• 

Do  not  be  bramwashed  into 
automatically  using  this  method  for 
an  abortion  if  you  should  decide  to 
have  one.  Be  as  leery  about  RU-486 
as  you  have  been  about  abortidn  in 
general  -  it  is  the  same  thing. 

I'm  not  knocking  RU-486.  The 
fact  of  the  matter  is  that  it  has  been 
a  wonderful  alternative  for  thou-  ., 
sands  of  women. 

I  just  worry  about  the  effect  it 
will  have  on  young  people  having 
sex  already.  If  not  for  my  girlfriend 
getting  pregnant,  I  think  that  I  may 
have  perceived  RU-486  a5  an 
"easy"  way  out  of  knocking  her 
up. 


This  pill  isn't  a 

reason  to  stop  using 

condoms. 


The  legislation  behind  this  pill 
isn't  what  frightens  me.  Rather  I 
worry  about  how  our  generation - 
will  handle  the  media  attention  that 
will  be  given  to  this  issue. 

I  fear  that  young  Americans  (no 
pun  intended)  may  be  misled  into 
convincing  themselves  that  this  new 
abortion  pill  is  like  ear-infection 
medication:  you  swallow  it,  and 
hope  it  works. 

Abortions  will  never  be  easy,  and 
RU-486  docs  not  make  it  easier.  It 
is  simply  an  alternative,  and  right 
now  it  is  the  road  less  traveled. 

Maybe  I'm  ju^t  paranoid  about 
how  18-  to  25-year-olds  watch  the 
news,  or  maybe  I  don't  trust  my 
own  generation  enough  to  make  — 
serious  decisions  on  their  own. 
Maybe  I  worry  too  much. 

But  then  again,  it's  no  news  that 
sex  among  college  students  is  of  the 
most  promiscuous  in  nature.  Men 
and  women  have  multiple  partners 
during  their  tenure  at  school,  and 
very  few  of  us  ever  reach  that  point 
in  our  lives  where  we're  tbtally 
monogamous  before  hitting  21 
years  of  age.  Very  few  of  ui  want  to 
be  with  one  partner  -  emotionally 
and  sexually. 

Having  said  this,  RU-486  is 
shaping  up  to  be  the  new  scapegoat 
for  over-sexed  teens  at  UCLA  and 
Americans  in  general.  Be  sure  that 
abortions  using  the  new  drug  will 
be  extremely  popular.  And  just  as 
in  France,  over  the  next  few  years 
we  will  witness  a  dramatic  increase 
in  the  use  of  this  pill  for  abortions. 
Coupled  with  this,  abortions  as  a 
whole  will  be  on  the  rise  in  steep 
fashion  as  well. 

If  not  for  my  experience  with 
abortion,  I  may  have  been  among 
the  populous  that  views  this  recent 
legislation  as  an  excuse  to.  keep  hav- 
ing bare-back  sex.  A  pessimist  since 
conception,  I  don't  trust  my  peers 
enough  to  be  conHdent  that  they 
will  be  unaffected  by  this  introduc- 
tion of  new  science  into  the  realm 
of  abortions. 

America  isn't  ready  to  introduce 
a  drug  like  this  into  our  society.  The 
results  will  prove  me  right  years 
down  the  line. 

Before  giving  the  "OK"  for  RU- 
486  this  nation  needs  to  be  more 
careful  in  their  sexual  behavior.  We 
need  teenage  pregnancies  to  curb, 
AIDS  to  subsist,  and  the  mentality 


1iM|f  Brain  Vwwpotat 


.f^S'  Wltd»Bd»(kiflli«4.iW      21 


23 


LEVI- ;::.?:■.;;..:  ;vv,:^':«:.^:i 

From  page  !•:;;. 

the  student  population  at  those 
schools.  So  what  happens  when  stu- 
dents leave  the  public  school  system 
for  superior  private  institutions?«The 
individual  public  school  loses  funding. 

So,  for  all  those  public  officials  who 
have  the  patience  level  of  a  two-year- 
old,  thi^  represents  th^  gradual 
destruction  of  the  system.  But,  if  given 
time,  a  public  school  will  be  forced  to 
'  spend  what  money  they  have  more 
wisely,  hiring  better  teachers,  spend- 
ing more  on  books  and  less  on  bureau- 
crats, and  so  on. 

A  perfect  example  of  this  argument 
at  work  is  the  Florida  public  school 
system.  That  state  passed  a  form  of 
voucher  program  two  years  ago,  and 
almost  immediately  saw  results.  The 
program  stated  that  vouchers  could 
be  awarded  to  students  who  attended 
schools  that  received  an  "F"  rating 
from  the  state  two  years  in  a  row. 

In  1998,  the  year  the  law  was 
passed,  78  schools  throughout  the 
state  received  such  a  rating.  This 
resulted  in  students  leaving  the  public 
schools  for  private  schools.  For  exam- 
ple, over  the  course  of  the  next  year. 
138  students  left  the  Pensacola  school 
system,  with  53  going  to  private  insti- 
tutions. The  next  year,  only  four 
schools  received  failing  grades,  and 
interestingly  enough,  none  of  those 
original  78  was  among  the  four 
("School  Choice  Tide  Turning?" 
Washington  Times,  July  27, 2000). 

So  what  happened?  Was  it  some- 
thing just  short  of  a  miracle?  Not  like- 
ly. Faced  with  the  prospect  that  they 
might  lose  students  and  funding,  the 
failing  public  schools  bit  the  prover- 
bial bullet  and  improved. 

Competition  produces  results,  peri- 
od. Without  competition,  what  is  the 
school  system's  motivation  for 
improvement?  As  long  as  the  perpetu- 
al pocket  lining  scheme  between  the 
anti-choice  politicians  and  the  teach- 
ers' unions  continues,  not  much. 


(Voucher  laws)  are 

purely  within  the  spirit 

of  the  separation  of 

church  and  state. 


So  what  are  the  results? 

According  to  a  Harvard  University 
study,  elementary  voucher  students  in 
Milwaukee,  by  their  fourth  year  of  the 
program,  were  scoring  five  and  1 1 
percentage  points  higher  on  math  and 
reading,  respectively,  than  counter- 
parts who  were  turned  down  for  the 
vouchers.  In  Qeveland.  a  greater 
improvement  (five  and  15  percent) 
was  recorded,  and  two-thirds  of  par- 
eats  reported  being  "very  satisfied" 
with  the  results.  Surprise?  Not  really. 
t^This  column,  of  course,  would  be 
boeA  of  any  substance  if  it  did  not 
tadcle  perhaps  the  most  controversial 
aspect  of  the  voucher  debate:  civil 
rights  and,  primarily,  the  possibility  of 
public  funds  going  to  religiously  based 
educational  institutions, 
ji  The  Supreme  Court,  in  order  to 
prevent  any  confusion,  has  devised  a 
formula  for  determining  the  extent  to 
which  the  separation  of  church  and 
state  should  be  measured  with  respect 
to  this  and  many  other  issues.  Known 
as  the  Agostini  test,  this  formula  could 
potentially  indicate  that  voucher  laws 
do  indeed  have  a  secular  purpose,  do 
not  inhibit  or  advance  religion,  and 
are  neutral  programs  available  to  all 
and  able  to  be  dispersed  to  any  form 
of  educational  institution.  Therefore, 
they  are  purely  within  the  spirit  of  the 
separation  of  church  and  state. 

More  importantly,  perhaps,  is  the 
perception  that  vouchers  are  some- 
how racially  discriminatory,  as  public 
school  systems  contain  higher  per- 

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Involved  In  Community  Service 


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Proposal 
Due 


Hearing 
Date 


Mandatory 
Meeting 


Events  Must 
Fall  Between 


Oct  19 

Jan  18 
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May  10 


Oct  24 

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Apr  17 
May  15 


Oct  25 

Jan  24 
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Nov  1' Jan  30 

Jan  31 -Feb  27 
Feb 28  -Apr 24 
Apr 25  -May 22 
May 23  -June 8 


^i<  Eligible  Organizations 

Must  be  an  undergraduate  student  organization  involved  in  community  service  programs  which  contribute  to  the 

eiimimination  of  poverty  and  social  problems  and/or  provide  services  such  as  the  improvement  of  education  and 

health  for  disadvantaged  groups  ♦  Must  be  registered  with  the  Center  for  Student  Programming 

Proposal  Forms  available  throughout  the  year  at: 

Center  for  Student  Programming  (CSP)  105  Kerckhoff  Hall  ♦  Community  Programs  Office  (CPO)  102  Men's  Gym 

Community  Service  Commission  (CSC)  Office  405  Kerckhoff  Hall    :: 
•  USACommunity  Service  Mini  Fund  Office  300B  Kerckhoff  Hall       ^    : :     >>  ;  v 

'    Templates  available  at:  102  and  203  Men's  Gym;  314  Kerckhoff;  CPO  and  CSC 
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>    Submit  completed  proposals  to  mailbox  #41  (3"*  floor  Kerckhoff  Hall) 

no  later  than  5:00PM  on  the  due  date 
If  you  have  any  questions,  page  Jessica  Alvarado  at  (310)  535-1230 

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LEVI 

Frompage  21 


centages  or  minority  students  than  do 
private  schools.  Chalk  one  up  for 
intellectual  dishonesty.  A  further 
examination  reveals  that  private 
schools  are  generally  more  integrated 
than  public  schools,  irrespective  of  the 
ethnic  breakdown  of  an  entire  district, 
while  private  institutions  contain  stu- 
dents from  a  larger  urban  or  suburban 
community.  To  achieve  racial  integra- 
tion, anti-choicers  need  not  apply 

It  is  important  to  recognize  that  a 
majority  of  African  Americans  favor 
school  vouchers,  and  for  precisely  the 
reason  that  more  blacks  are  likely  to 
find  themselves  in  failing  schools. 
Unfortunately,  the  liberal,  big-govern- 
ment sect  of  politics  prefers  to  dictate 
to  minorities,  especially  blacks,  on 
what  is  best  for  them,  including  views 
on  education.  Therefore,  it  is  assumed 
that  blacks  are  overwhelmingly 
opposed  to  school  choice.  What  non- 
sense! 


To  understand  the 
benefits  of  vouchers, 

the  average  voter 

must  understand  the 

Importance  of 

individual  choice. 


l.  illll|.|IIJ.  UJI'M  .     .}.,\\  » 

The  j<tea  thatbccausc  of  skin  color, 
certain  citizens  ^re  incapable  of  mak- 
ing their  own  decisions  is  not  only 
insulting,  but  bordcriine  racist  as  well. 
In  order  to  understand  the  inUngible 
benefits  of  vouchers,  the  average 
voter  must  understand  the  impor- 
tance of  individual  choice  -  decisions 
made  without  the  watchful  eye  of  Big 
Brother  Uncle  Sam. 

When  examining  this  issue,  one 
must  ask  why  critics  of  school  choice 
consistently  argue  tliat  vouchers  take 
money  away  from  'the  public  school 
system,"  rather  than  from  the  students 
themselves?  Answer;  because  they  will 
lose  their  much  coveted  bureaucratic 
control  over  a  key  area  of  public  poli- 
cy. Vouchers  do  not  promise  private 
education  to  all,  as  those  students 
must  still  meet  the  academic  require- 
ments of  admission,  but  the  school 
choice  movement  is  certainly  a  long 
overdue  beginning  to  curing  the  ails  of 
the  public  school  system. 


WANT  TO 

BE  THE 

NEXT 

PAUL 

CONRAD? 

If  SO,  pick  up  an 
application  to 

be  a  Viewpoint 
political  car- 
toonist in  118 

Kerckhoff  Hall. 
Applications  are 

due  October  6 

at  5  p.m.  in 

JonahLatfM* 

mailbox^ 


NEGRETE 


FrompagclS      ^; 

weeks  aAer  her  1 8th  birthday,  and 
whose  family  was  also  denied  help 
from  national  organizations. 

The  legislation  would  authorize  the 
attorney  general  to  provide  grants  to 
organizations  attempting  to  locate 
missing  adults.  It  would  also  include 
expanding  the  National  Center  for 
Missing  and  Exploited  Children  to 
help  authorities  locate  people  between 
18  and  21  years  of  age  at  the  time  of 
their  disappearance.  Currently,  the 
center  receives  federal  funding  to 
assist  only  those  under  the  age  of  1 8. 
According  to  Sue  Myrick,  it  is  pos- 
sible that  the  bill  will  be  voted  on 
before  Congress  adjourns  in  October 
of  this  year.  Therefore,  it  is  necessary 
that  you  write  for  support  as  soon  as 
possible.  Our  congressman  from  San 
Diego,  Brian  Bilbray,  has  already 
signed  on  as  co-sponsor  of  the  bill. 


Please  send  a  note 

to  senators  and 

congressmen  urging 

support  of  Kristen's  Act. 


I  am  asking  as  many  people  as  pos- 
sible to  please  send  a  note  to  both 
their  senators  and  congressmen  in 
Washington  urging  support  of 
Kristen's  Act  (HR  2780). 

Names  and  addresses  of  senators 
and  congressmen  may  be  found  at 
www.Congrcss.com. 

More  information  about  Kristen's 
Act  may  be  found  at: 
www.nmco.org/Iegislation/, 
www.house.gov/myrick/kristenJitni, 
or  www.modlink.com. 

More  information  about  Michad 
N^rete  may  be  found  at 
www.FmdMikeNow.com. 

Michael  was  a  wonderful,  intelli- 
gent and  talented  boy.  One  day  we 
were  making  plans  with  him  to  come 
home  from  college  for  the  Christmas 
holidays,  and  the  next  he  was  gone  for 
no  reason.  I  am  sure  you  can  imagine 
the  anguish  we  feel  and  the  depth  of 
our  desperation  at  the  loss  of  our  son. 
Please  help  us  by  supporting  Kristen's 
Act  (HR  2780). 


ABOimON 

From  page  20^ 

of  young  America  to  make  a  bit  of 
a  U-turn. 

The  young  people  of  America 
must  show  our  government  that  we 
make  rational  decisions  about  sex. 
We  must  show  our  leaders  that  we 
are  worthy  of  a  pill  that  provides  an 

i ^tentative  to  surgical  abortion. 
When  we  do  this,  we  will  be  ready 
^r  RU-486. 
'  Consider  this  new  drug  hke  a 
;ret  superpower,  similar  to  the 
ones  that  provided  the  backdrop 
for  every  cartoon  you  ever  saw  as  a 
child. 


Abortions  will  never  be 

easy,  and  RU-486  does 

not  make  it  easier. 


"In  the  hands  of  the  good,  the 
superpower  brings  sanctity  and 
security  into  the  lives  of  those 
around  it;  but  when  in  the  hands  of 
evil,  the  superpower  corrupts  and 
ruins  those  same  lives." 

I'm  not  saying  that  sexually 
active  young  Americans  are  evil ... 
but  we  are  far  from  virtuous  -  and 
are  not  worthy  of  being  rewarded 
RU-486.  Not  yet,  anyway. 


0«iyBnmView|MJiit 


WedneMby,  October  4, 2000       23 


!:..••. 


the  check  your  grandma  sent 

you  for  ymtr  birthday  wasn^  am 

big  as  you  had  hoped... 


Vv 


ini. 


Saving  you  $$$ 

every  8th  «  10th  Week. 


sc?:>^!i5rc;i>-^3^!^$-oi>^5C^ 


fake 


Norwegian^ 
JA  JA  JA! 

Strive  For 
Xfigher  Goals! 

O 


fake 


Norwegian^ 
JA  JA  JA.r 

Commune  With 
Gods  and  TrollsL 


O 


Elementary  Norwegian 

MTWR  2-2:50  1329  PubUe  PloUcy 

Instructor:  Prof  MK  Norseng 

206-6858  Or  norseng@hiinmet.ucla.edu 

^^      >         C^  218-033-200 


S^^'^iQ^LI.^-^C'^i^^^^.jKC^^^OL^^-CtC^^ 


feC^iOS 


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'-.•_•-•-•  •  • 


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fyWMWW.V. 


••:  /• 


Artmwr  qu«aeien«.  Earn  oaaK. 
www.inforookae.cem/ua 


;;  *• ;- 


What  goes  into  a  millionaire? 

What  goes  on  behind  the  scenes  of  the  hit 
I  game  show  "Who  Wants  to  be  a  Millionalrer 
See  Thursday's  issue  for  the  real  story. 

Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


Dail^  Bruin 


^: 


_A&EontheWeb       V 
;•  See  all  this  and  more  at 
:  the  Daily  Bruin's       ;   .. 

*  Web  site: 

• 

;  www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


The  Canadian  rockers  are  back  with  a  new  album  and  a  rockumentary 
documenting  the  early  years  in  the  history  of  the  band's  long  career 


'^::!:^t!:!::^::^^X^:^  "^'^ "-  '"*^' " ""— *-"  '•'•■  -"  •«"'"  h-™  <-«  m^^^^n--'' 


By  Emilia  I 

Daily  Bruin  Sewof  Staff 

Instant  bands  and  manufactured  singing  sensa- 
tions will  inevitably  disfigure  the  face  of  U.S.  pop 
history.  Talk  about  making  the  band  and  the  word 
"band"  suddenly  denotes  the  just-add-water  boys  of 
O-Town. 

Well,  America,  you've  heard  the  cookie^utter 
gingerbread  bands  with  their  industry-fabricated 
cheese  and  it's  time  to  free  your  mind  and  make 
room  for  the  genuine  artifact. 

Not  exactly  a  household  name,  the  Barenaked 
Ladies  have  been  around  since  1988,  but  only 
recently  broken  into  the  American  mainstream  with 
their  1998  release  "Stunt." 

"Barenaked  in  America"  takes  an  unabashed 
look  at  the  band  during  two  weeks  of  their  U.S.  tour 
in  support  of  "Stunt."  The  rockumentary,  directed 
by  Jason  Priestly,  (who  also  directed  the  band's 
music  video  for  "The  Old  Apartment")  gives  fans  a 
privileged  panorama  of  BNL's  unique  world 


through  rare  footage  from  the  early  parts  of  their 
.  career,  interviews  and  viewer  witnesses. 

The  film  also  provides  concert  footage  and  an  all- 
access  pass  to  the  band,  documenting  its  mischief 
onstage  as  well  as  its  antics  ofTstage. 

To  those  familiar  with  their  live  act,  the  boys  of 
BNL  are  known  as  consummate  entertainers.  Their 
magical  connection  to  fans  supercedes  their  easy 
blend  of  spontaneous  repartee  and  crafty  improvi- 
sation. The  movie  documents  the  inherent  chem- 
istry of  the  boys  of  BNL  as  they  challenge  each 
other  night  after  night  to  be  creative  performers  and 
skillful  musicians.  (Not  to  mention,  for  the  die-hard 
BNL  fan,  catching  close-up  shots  of  Page's  pelvic 
thrusts  on  the  big  screen  is  a  must-see). 

The  popularity  of  the  band  in  its  native  country 
has  brought  it  much  success,  but  the  documentary 
deals  with  the  lingering  question  -  how  far  will  BNL 
go  outside  of  Canada? 

With  hints  of  folk,  country,  hip  hop  and  funk,  the 


Se«MIIEIUKE0,pa9«29 


Brooks  brings  back  magkal  world  of  'Shannara'  after  eight-year  hiatus 


BOOK:  Freedom  of  fantasy  genre 
lures  author  back  into  popular 
chronicle  after  'Star  Wars'  novel 


Tirry  Brooks  revives  his  Sharmara' series. 


By  Leila  Mobayen 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor  -.1; 

For  die-hard  fans  of  fantasy/non-fiction  writ- 
ing, the  1977  release  of  "The  Sword  of 
Shannara,"  written  by  Terry  Brooks,  marked 
the  beginning  of  a  new  era.  Not  only  was  it  the 
launch  of  a  long  and  fruitful  career  for  the 
writer,  but  it  was  also  the  beginning  of  an 
extremely  successful  series. 

Now  finally,  after  a  nearly  eight  year  hiatus, 
fantasy  author  Terry  Brooks  has  returned  to  the 
world  of  Shannara,  the  one  for  which  he  is  most 
loved. 

"The  Voyage  of  the  Jerle  Shannara  Isle 


Witch,"  the  first  in  a  five-book  series,  was 
recently  released  to  the  public,  an  event  many  of 
Terry  Brooks'  fans  haVe  been  eagerly  anticipat- 
ing. 

According  to  the  story,  30  years  ago,  the 
elven  prince  Kael  Elessedil  left  on  a  quest  to  find 
a  legendary  magic  said  to  be  the  most  powerful 
in  the  world.  His  entire  expedition  vanished 
mysteriously  and  no  one  has  heard  from  the 
Prince  since. 

But  now  a  lone  survivor  has  delivered  to 
Walker  Boh.  the  last  of  the  druids,  a  mysterious 
map  leading  to  that  same  magic.  The  dreaded 
Use  Witch,  however,  a  beautiful  but  dangerous 
woman  with  magical  powers  which  rival 
Walker's  own,  also  knows  of  the  map.  She  will 
stop  at  nothing  to  poaiess  it  -  and  the  magic. 

Brooks  is  best  known  for  his  books  about  the 
magical  world  of  Shannara.  but  hasn't  written  a 
book  in  that  series  since  1993.  He  spent  several 
yean  focusing  on  another  series,. "The  Word 


and  the  Void,"  and  most  recently  was  chosen  by 
George  Lucas  to  write  the  novel  version  of 
"Star  Wars,  Episode  One:  The  Phantom 
Menace." 


"This  is  not  a  surprise.  I  always 
knew  I  would  come  back." 

Terry  Brooks 

'Shannara'  series  author 


The  author  speaks  veryhighly  about  his  expp 
rience  working  with  Lucv  and  the  amount  •( 
freedom  he  was  allotted  t*  expand  the  storyliae 
while  adding  his  own  touck  to  the  epic  tale. 

"It  was  a  really  good  experience,  being  a  pnt 


ject  where  I  could  go  beyond  the  plot  given  with- 
out having  any  restrictions  put  upon  me. 
Actually,  (Lucas)  specifically  asked  me  to 
expand  upon  the  character  of  Anakin  a  little, 
which  was  interesting." 

Despite  his  enthusiasm,  Brooks  decided  not 
to  take  the  job  again  for  Episode  2. 
"It  was  my  choice  not  to  do  the  book.  It  was  a 
great  project  to  do,  but  now  I've  already  done  it 
and  it's  time  to  move  on,"  he  said. 

Among  other  things.  Brooks  entered  into  a 
five-year-long  commitment  to  this  series  of 
Shannara  books,  with  one  being  released  on  the 

,  first  Tuesday  of  every  Septcmtjer  for  the  next 
five  years. 

The  author  is  extremely  excited  about  his  cur- 
rent work  and  speaks  candidly  of  his  "strong 
commitment  to  the  project  and  the  material." 

Since  it  has  been  a  while  since  his  last  book  in 
the  series,  many  begun  to  wonder  if  he  left  the 

;  series  for  good.  Responding  to  these  thoughu, 


Brooks  said,  "This  is  not  a  surprise.  I  always 
knew  I  would  come  back." 

Terry  Brooks  actually  spent  his  first  two 
decades  out  of  college  as  a  practicing  attorney 
until  1986,  by  which  time  four  of  his  novels  had 
become  bestsellers. 

The  former  lawyer  sees  his  writing  as  much 
more  than  child's  play  For  him,  fantasy  is  a  way 
to  get  across  his  ideas  concerning  broader 
issues.  His  latest  novel,  about  a  perilous  journey 
through  unknown  lands  in  search  of  an  unprece- 
dented form  of  magic,  has  themes  which  run 
much  deeper. 

"I'm  dealing  with  issues  and  characters  that  I 
feel  strongly  about,"  said  Brooks.  "This  one  is 
about  redemption." 

He  also  mentioned  how  pertinent  the  subject 
of  redemption  should  be  given  our  "current  ♦ 
political  environment,"  referring  to  what  he  per- 


taps  weal  reserves  J 
in  hilarious  bne-man  pja/ 


THEATER:  'Fully  Committed' 
offers  glimpse  into  ruthless 
world  of  restaurant  business 


at    The    Coronet 


By  Barbara  McGuire 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Getting  reservations  at  a  restaurant  seems 
simple,  but  for  some  it's  cutthroat  competi- 
tion. 

At  some  of  the  most  prestigious  restau- 
rants in  New  York,  the  competition  for  tables 
can  be  down  right  deadly.  "Fully 
Committed,"  a  comedy  written  by  Becky 
Mode  and  directed  by  Nicholas  Martin, 
focuses  on  one  such  restaurant  in  which  vari- 
ous tactics,  such  as  large  sums  of  money,  are 
used  by  the  rich  and  famous  to  get  reserva- 
tions. 

Currently    showing 
Theater,  "Fully 

Committed"  Is  a  one 
man  show  staring  Mark 
Setlock  as  Sam,  an  aspir- 
ing theater  actor  who  is 
working  as  a  reservations 
clerk  at  the  most  popular 
four-star  restaurant  in 
New  York. 

While  at  limes  things 
get  so  crazy  it  seems  Sam 
needs  to  be  "fully  com- 
mitted" to  an  insane  asy- 
lum, "fully  committed"  is      

really  the  posh  phrase  the 
chef  wishes  Sam  to  use  when  the  restaurant  is 
booked  up.  Of  course,  the  audience  soon 
learns  that  there  are  ways  to  get  reservations 
if  one  has  the  means  and  the  desire. 

Mode's  first  play,  "Fully  Committed"  is 
loosely  based  on  real  life  experiences  from  her 
job  as  a  waitress  and  from  Setlock 's  job  as  a 
reservations  clerk  at  a  hip  restaurant. 

"Well,  Becky  Mode  is  a  friend  of  mine  and 
she  wanted  to  write  a  play  about  restaurants 
and  I  wanted  to  do  a  one-man  show," 
explained  Setlock  in  a  recent  phone  interview. 
"She  worked  as  a  waitress  a  lot,  so  she 
wanted  to  tell  a  restaurant  story  and  I  worked 
as  a  reservationist  in  a  fancy  place,"  he  said. 
"She  came  up  with  the  idea  that  we  could  both 


Setlock  mentioned 

that  creating  the 

voices  wasn't  the  hard 

part,  as  it  is  something 

that  comes  naturally 

to  him. 


do  our  thing  -  she  could  write  this  play  for  me 
to  do  and  I  could  do  all  the  characters." 

And  all  the  characters  is  what  Setlock  does; 
Though  "Fully  Committed"  is  a  one-man 
show,  over  30  different  voices  can  be  heard 
from  the  stage  as  Setlock  seamlessly  fiows 
from  one  character  to  the  next.  The  entire 
play  takes  place  in  the  basement  of  the  restau- 
rant where  Sam  interacts  with  other  charac- 
ters (which  are  various  versions  of  his  voice) 
through  the  phone  and  intercom  system. 

Setlock  changes  not  only  his  voice,  but  also 
his  facial  features  and  body  language  from  • 
one  sentence  to  the  next  with  amazing  fluidity. 
He  literally  transforms  into  different  people, 
such  as  Bryce,  Naomi  Campbell's  gay  assis- 
tant, a  sobbing  New  York  woman  who  claims 
to  have  made  a  reservation,  and  a  timid 
Japanese  woman  who  insists  on  spelling  her 
name  every  time  Sam  says  hello. 

Toward  the  end  of  the  play  things  get  crazy  " 
at  the  restaurant  as  the  Zagat's,  a  prestigious 

couple,  are   forced   to  . 
^■"^— ^-^~'      wait  for  a  table  and  it 
seems  like  a  miracle  that  ' 
Setlock  doesn't  mix  up 
the  voices. 

"I  don't  know,  I  guess 
I  don'f  have  a  choice," 
said  Setlock  of  his  ability 
to  use  the  right  voice  at 
the  right  time. 

"I   (messed   up   the 

voices)  a  few  times  when 

I  first  started  because  I 

~      wasjust  learning  it,  but  I 

haven't  done  that  in  a 

long  time,"  he  said.  "I  know  it  really  well 

because  when  you  do  something  every  night, 

it's  like  the  pledge  of  allegiance  or  something, 

you  just  know  it  backward  and  forward." 

After  having  performed  "Fully 
Committed"  over  400  times  between  Los 
Angeles  and  New  York,  one  could  assume 
that  Setlock  knows  Sam  inside  and  out. 
Additionally,  through  his  performance  as 
Sam,  Setlock  has  won  the  Outer  Critics 
Award  and  a  Drama  Desk  nomination. 

Setlock  mentioned  that  creating  the  voices 
wasn't  the  hard  part,  as  it  is  something  that 
comes  naturally  to  him.  Making  Sam  into  a 


SeeCOMMirnEO,page30 


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RACHEL  REILOVOiily  Bniin 


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26_VIWnesday,  OrtoJwf  4, 2000 


■^^f 


■•  -4»,; 


Daily  Bruin  Am  t  Entertainimm 


FILM:  Despite  cast's  talent, 
unrealistic  portrait  of  '90s 
can't  save  cliched  storyline 


trips  up  on  originality 


By  Sh«iU  Norman-Culp 

The  Associated  Press  ; 

A  young  man  decides  he  doesn't 
want  to  spend  the  rest  of  his  life  in  a 
_    hardware  store/steel  mill.  Against 
the  wishes  of  his  friends/father,  he 
turns  to  his  first  love,  dancing.  With 
no  one  else  believing  in  his  dreams, 
he  must  win  the  contest/pull  off  the 
big  show  to  become  a  local  hero. 
Have  we  seen  this  picture  before? 
The  answer  is  yes. 
Hoping  to  capitalize  on  all  things 
Aussie,   Fox  Searchlight  presents 
"Bootmen,"  the  story  of  Scan  Okden 
(Adam  Garcia),  a  young  Australian 
who  is  determined  to  escape  the  grit- 
ty blue-collar  life  that  has  swallowed 
up  his  widowed  father. 

Sean,  his  brother  Mitchell  (Sam 
Worthington)  and  his  father  Gary 
(Richard  Carter)  work  at  a  failing 
steel  mill  in  Newcastle,  New  South 
Wales,  Australia.  They  go  to  rugby 
^games  and  drink  six-packs  in  front  of 
the  television  as  they  inarticulately 
mourn  their  lost  mother/wife. 

Sean  has  a  ticket  out  if  only  he  can 
control  his  tendency  to  be  a  showoff. 
Can  he  do  it? 
Ofcourse  not. 

Plan  B  for  Sean  is  to  put  on  a  show 
and  persuade  his  skeptical  buddies 
to  join  him.  Not  just  any  tap  dancing 
show,  but  his  show,  his  way  Metal 
cleats  on  work  boou,  sets  made  of 
leftover  steel  plates  and  pipes,  and 
dancing  to  the  beat  of  hard-driving 
rock  music.  Oh.  and  by  the  way,  Sean 
and  his  brother  fall  for  the  same  girl 
(Sophie  Lee). 

"Bootmen"  is  based  on  director 
Dcin  Perry's  experiences  growing  up 
in  Newcastle.  Perry,  a  dancer  and 
choreographer  who  created  the  high- 
energy  dance  shows  "Tap  Dogs"  and 


Killer  of  John  LSnhb^^^^^^ 
loses  first  bid  for  parole 


HEARING:  Board  notes 
fan's  need  for  notoriety; 
Yoko  Ono  lauds  decision 


By  Girolyn  Thompson 

The  Associated  Press 

ATTICA,  N.Y.  -  The  man  who 
gunned  down  John  Lennon  20 
years  ago  lost  his  first  bid  for 
parole  Tuesday  after  the  ex- 
Beatle's  widow  wrote  that  setting 
him  free  would  "bring  back  the 
nightmare,  the  chaos  and  confu- 
sion once  again." 

Mark  David  Chapman  was 
interviewed  for  50  minutes  by 
three  parole  board  members  dur- 
ing a  closed  hearing  at  Attica 
prison.        Four 


Christopher  Horsey  (Angus).  Ad.m  G.rc«  (Sean),  and  M^I^ " 
(Johnno).  star  in  Fox  Searchlight  Pictures'-Bootmen.- 


"Steel  City,"  wrote  the  role  of  Sean 
specifically  for  his  former  student 
Garcia,  who  was  just  coming  off  a 
stint  in  London  where  he  starred  in 
the  stage  production  of  "Saturday 
Night  Fever." 

Although  set  in  the  present, 
"Bootmen"  is  so  retro,  it  feels  more 
like  the  late  '70s.  Young  men  battle 
consuntjy  with  their  fists  (what,  no 
guns?)  and  beat  each  other  bloody 
with  no  police  intervention.  Young 
women  can't  remember  their  sexual 
encounters  of  the  previous  night.  No 
computers,  no  cell  phones,  no  con- 
doms. Toughs  drive  around  in  hot 
rods  instead  of  SUVs.  Is  this  really 
modem  Australia? 


And  while  it's  always  fun  to  root 
for  the  underdog  and  see  a  plumber 
dancing  on  toilets,  the  we-gotta-put- 
on-a-show  schtick  has  been  done  to 
death.  Any  bets  on  whether  they  suc- 
ceed? 

Garcia  and  his  crew  are  engaging 
dancers  and  the  childlike  joy  of  Up- 
ping  up  and  down  a  steel  staircase  in 
metal  boots  is  infectious,  but  even 
they  cannot  resuscitate  a  stilted 
story. 


FUJI:  'Bootmen' opens  Friday  in  New 
York,  Los  Angeles  and  San  Francisco.  It 
is  produced  by  Hilary  Linstead.  The 
film  is  rated  H  with  a  running  time  of 
93  minutes. 


hours  later,  he 
was  given  a  one- 
page  determina- 
tion that  began: 
"Parole  is 

denied." 

"Your  most 
vicious  and  vio- 
lent act  was 
apparently 
fueled  by  your 
need  to  be 
acknowledged." 
the  board  said. 
"During      your 

parole  hearing,  this  panel  noted 
your  continued  interest  in  main- 
taining your  notoriety." 

Chapman.  45,  is  serving  20 
years  to  life  at  the  maximum-secu- 
rity prison  in  upsUte  New  York. 
He  pleaded  guilty  to  second- 
degree  murder  in  1981  for  faUlly 
shooting  Lennon  as  the  rock  star 
and  his  wife,  Yoko  Ono,  were 
entering  their  ManhatUn  apart- 
ment building  following  a  record- 
ing session  on  Dec.  8, 1980. 


^     -After  Tuesday's  decision.  Ono 
spokesman  Eliot  Mintz  released 
a  letter  the  widow  wrote  to  the 
parole     board     in     which     she 
described    the  pafn    of   losing 
Lennon    and    how    Chapman's 
release  would  unravel  her  life. 
;      "f  am  afraid  it  will  bring  back 
the  nightmare,  the  chaos  and  con- 
fusion  once  again.   Myself  and 
John's  two  sons,  would  not  feel 
safe  for  the  rest  of  our  lives,"  Ono 
wrote. 

She  also  said  Chapman  might 
face  retribution  from  angry  fans. 

"They  would  feel  that  it  is  unfair 
that  the  'subject'  is  rewarded  with 
a  normal  life  while  John  lost  his," 
she  wrote.  "Violence  begets  vio- 
lence. If  it  is  at  all  possible,  I  would 
like  us  to  not  create  a  situation 
_____^^^^  which  may 
bring  further 
madness  and 
tragedy  to  the 
worid." 

A  transcript 
of     Tuesday's 


"(Fans)  would  feel  that 
It  is  unfair  that  the 
'subject' is  rewarded 
with  a  normal  life  while  '"'^f^iew  with 

I    1       ,  1  .    „  Chapman     by 

John  lost  his.  the    board    is 

. .  .,;  :^^  expected  to  be 

/.:lM(oOno  made  available 

Widow  "  ",.    later  this  week. 

But  in  its 
statement,  the 
board  called 
the  killing  "calculated  and  unpro- 
voked." In  addition  to  being  one  of 
the  woHd's  most  famous  musi- 
cians, the  board  said.  Lennon  was 
a  "husband  and  a  father  of  two 
young  children." 

Chapman  recently  said  he 
believed  that  Lennon  would  have 
approved  of  his  release.  But  the 
board  concluded  that  releasing 
Chapman  now  would  "deprecate 


■  ifj 


Now  you  can  ^et  the  food  and  grocarie,  you  naad  dalivarad  until  3AM. 

^DOOICIC.COM     1-Ma.POQUICK 


l"mfmm^    ^     mwwt^M 


.-•v-r' 


4Miy  Brum  Arts  t  Entertaimnefll 


WMnesdJiy,  October  4, 2000       27 


SotlND  Bites 


MEST 
"Wasting  Fime* 


Mest 

"Wasting  Time" 
Mavericic  Records 

Mest  has  emerged  on  the  punk 
scene,  sounding  perilously  close  to 
Green  Day,  wailing  on  about  love  in 
a  fashion  that  is  part  Sid  and  Nancy 
and  part  junior  high. 

In  songs  such  as  "What's  the 
Dillio"  and  "Drawing  Board,"  listen- 
ers are  confronted  with  the  infatua- 
tion that  is  part  and  parcel  with 
puppy  love  and  irrational  childhood 
crushes. 

"Change,"  on  the  other  hand,  is 
more  ska-inspired  and  has  a  laid-back 
Sunday  picnic  feel  that  explodes  into 
fast.guitars  and  pounding  drums. 
Tony  Lovato  (on  lead  vocals)  ques- 
tions what  he  can  do  to  salvage  a 
relationship  that  is  constantly  chang- 
ing at  the  hands  of  a  fickle  woman. 
Half  of  the  song  has  listeners  bop- 
ping along,  with  its  easy  rhythms     •'-*'' 
while  the  other  half  has  them  rocking 


Mest  delves  into  familiar  subject 
matter  in  a  very  trite  and  pedestrian 
fashion,  but  that  is  not  where  the 
value  of  this  band  lies.  The  energy    . 
and  passion  with  which  they  pound 
out  their  infectious  rhythms  is  what 
will  hook  nearly  anyone  in  favor  of 
moshing  and  punk  appeal. 

The  intros  of  many  of  the  songs 
show  a  hint  of  how  eclectic  the  band 
can  be,  but  the  music  always  reverts 
back  to  the  same  urgent  pounding. 
"Wasting  My  Time"  starts  off  in 
the  form  of  a  ballad  with  light  and 
airy  guitars  and  light  tapping  of  the 
drums  in  the  background.  It  could 
easily  be  mistaken  for  the  likes  of  a 
Celine  Dion  pop  masterpiece,  if  not 
for  Lovato's  vocals.  Ofcourse,  all  of 
this  comes  crashing  down  in  a  fury  of 
noise. 

"Random  Arrival"  has  an  electric 
guitar  intro  that  is  quite  obviously 
heavy  metal,  but  it  all  gives  way  to 
the  same  Green  Day-inspired  feroci- 
ty- 
Tony,  Matt,  Jeremiah  and  Nick 
are  four  punkers  who  look  and  sound 
more  SoCal  than  their  true  south-side 
Chicago  roots  reveal.  Their 
Midwestern  roots  cannot,  however, 
be  forgotten,  especially  since  the 
band  found  the  inspiration  for  its 
name  from  a  case  of  Milwaukee  beer. 
•    Mest's  "Wasting  Time"  is  one 
album  that  may  not  make  the  politi- 
cal statement  of  the  moment  ^ut  it  «. 


will  definitely  set  the  mood  for  those 
raucous  and  light-hearted  moments. 
Aphrodite  Manousos 
Rating:  5 


Biack  Eyed  Peas 
"Bridging  the  Gap" 
Interscope  Records 


The  Black  Eyed  Peas  are  back 
again  with  its  long-awaited  sopho- 
more release. 

Its  1998  debut,  "Behind  the 
Front,"  yielded  the  party  pleaser 
"Joints  &  Jams,"  in  which  the  Peas 
weaved  rhymes  and  tossed  down 
beats  like  nothing  else.  Their  new 
album,  "Bridging  the  Gap,"  is  itself 
just  as  enjoyable  an  experience  with  a 
funky  blend  of  jazz,  soul,  hip  hop  and 
Latin  beats. 

Guest  appearances  include  Wyclef 
Jean,  rap  powerhouse  De  La  Soul, 
Grammy  winner  Macy  Gray  and  a 
repeat  performance  by  Kim  Hill 
("Joints  &  Jams"). 

The  subsequent  cuts,  like  the  rest 
of  the  record,  are  upbeat  bits  of  musi- 
cal genius.  The  Peas  are  quick  to 
point  out  that  the  guest  appearance 
of  Gray  is  not  a  publicity  stunt.  As 
group  member  Will  I  Am  was  quick 
to  point  out  to  MTV  News,  Gray 
appeared  on  the  trio's  first  album, 
which  was  released  before  her  soIq^..., 

yjnf^^uf^^^ijhp  record  is  not 


without  its  rough  spots,  but  thankful- 
ly these  are  not  too  frequent.  It 
would  be  wise  to  skip  "On  My  Own" 
and  the  title  track,  "Bridging  the 
Gap,"  both  of  which  lack  the  individ- 
uality of  the  rest  of  the  album. 

The  singles  "  BEP  Empire"  and 
"Weekends,"  however,  were  made 
for  dancing  -  but  then  again,  so  is  the 
rest  of  the  album. 

Overall,  this  strong  sophomore 
effort  bridges  the  gap  between 
various  musical  genres. 

DriaFearn 
Rating:8 

Papa  Roach 
"Infest" 
Dreamworks  Records 

Infestation  is  a  common  problem 
with  ants  and  other  insects,  but  with 
Papa  Roach's  latest  release,  infest  is 
what  this  band  is  doing  to  the  world. 

"Infest,"  the  apt  title  of  its  CD. 
contains  1 1  songs  for  listeners  to 
feast  on,  including  such  already- 
released  hits  as,  "Last  Resort"  and 
"Broken  Home."  Both  songs  are 
very  personal  to  lead  singer  and 
songwriter  Coby  Dick,  and  appear  to 
be  reflective  of  other  songs  on  the 
album,  all  of  which  have  meaningful 
lyrics.  » 

,.  While  its  latest  release,  "Broken 
Home,"  concerns  the  always  promi- 
nent issue  of  divorce  and  its  effects 


on  children, "  Between  Angels  and 
Insects"  focuses  on  consumer  cul- 
ture. 

Variety  is  the  spice  of  the  album, 
with  each  song  presenting  different 
themes  and  beats.  The  song  titled 
"Revenge,"  for  instance,  is  about  i 
woman  stuck  in  an  abusive  relation- 
ship whose  only  way  out  is  through 
eventually  killing  her  boyfriend. 

Overall  it  appears  as  if  Papa 
Roach's  lyrics  grapple  with  many  of 
the  myths  and  questions  found  in 
modern  culture.  "Binge"  focuses  on 
an  alcoholic's  need  to  drink,  while 
"Tightrope"  deals  with  the  pressures 
of  young  adults  and  walking  the  fme 
line  between  what  is  considered  right 
and  what  is  considered  wrong. 

With  Jerry  Horlon  on  guitar. 
Tobin  Esperance  on  bass  and  Dave 
Buckner  in  control  of  the  drums, 
Papa  Roach  seems  to  have  risen 
from  the  doldrums  of  rock  music 
into  the  limelight.  Its  tour  schedule 
reflects  such  popularity:  the  band  just 
finished  a  tour  with  Korn  and 
Powerman  5000,  and  is  already  start- 


See  SOUNOBfTES,  page  29 


rii  .  v  II'- J 


i>  m.i 


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28       Wedn«day,  October  4, 2000 


Daiy  Bnrin  Arts  ft  EirtcftaiiimcM 


NERVOUS? 
TENSE? 


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on  life,  political  views 


LITERATURE:  Interview 
offers  glimpse  into  ideas 
behind  notorious  writer 


By  Lyiui  Elbcr 

The  Associated  Press      .. 

If  anyone  can  swagger  while  pro- 
pelling himself  across  a  room  with 
the  aid  of  two  canes,  it's  Norman 
Mailer 

Maybe  it's  the  unshakable  memo- 
ry of  Mailer,  the  brash  young  writer, 
that  gives  the  illusion  this  77-year-old 
version  remains  invulnerable.  If  his 
body  is  hobbled  by  arthritis  and  age, 
his  eloquence  and  intricate  turns  of 
thought  are  not. 

That,  coupled  with  his  honesty,  is 
what  made  the  producers  of 
"American  Masters"  decide  to  offer 
an  unprecedented  episode  in  which 
Mailer  alone  explains  himself,  his 
work  and  his  view  of  America. 

His  fascinating  torrent  of  words  is 
accompanied  by  readings  from  his 
works,  including  the  Pulitzer  Prize- 
winning  "TTie  Executioner's  Song" 
and  his  breakthrough  World  War  II 
novel,  "The  Naked  and  the  Dead." 

The  90-minute  film,  "American 
Masters:  Mailer  on  Mailer,"  airs  10 
p.m.  EDT  Wednesday  on  PBS  sta- 
tions (check  local  listings). 

"There  are  no  other  interviews  in 
the  program.  His  interview  is  so 
interesting,"  said  Susan  Lacy,  series 
executive  producer.  "He's  very  hon- 
est about  his  whole  life  and  every 
aspect  of  it.  He  talks  about  rage, 
about  depression,  about  stabbing  his 
ex-wife. 

"But  it's  also  very  interesting  polit- 
ically because  he  goes  through 
decade  by  decade,  talking  about  his 
view  of  American  political  history," 
Lacy  said,  which  is  why  PBS  decided 
to  air  the  film  in  proximity  to  the 
presidential  debates. 

In  a  recent  interview  with  The 
Associated  Press,  Mailer  proved 
charmingly  blunt  about  himself  and 
others.  Time  has  eroded  his  writing 
skills,  he  said,  but  he's  developed 
other  strengths.  And  he's  working  on 
a  new  book  (the  subject  is  a  secret), 
but  it  won't  be  the  great  American 
novel. 

Q:  In  "American  Masters,"  you 
describe  your  relationship  with 
America  as  a  marriage  that  tv  shaped 
hy  the  person  who  is  president.  How 
did  you  perceive  the  marriage  during 
the  Clinton  years'^ 

A:  I  feel  he  was  very  slack  in  fight- 
ing all  the  things  that  were  bad.  From 
my  point  of  view,  one  of  the  bad 
things  is  corporate  welfare.  It's  a  dis- 
grace to  cut  down  on  the  welfare  to 
the  poor,  the  ignorant,  the  uneducat- 
ed, the  helpless,  and  make  them  go 
out  and  get  jobs  and  keep  giving  wel- 
fare to  the  rich.  I  think  that's  odious. 
If  he  wanted  to  end  welfare  let's  end 
it  for  the  rich  as  well.  They  can  also 
use  a  little  striving  through  the  diffi- 
culties of  things.  He  skimmed  the 
cream  politically  and  it's  hard  to  for- 
give him  for  that.  He  took  the  easy 
route,  he  did  not  bite  the  bullet  ... 
how  do  you  like  my  cliches? 

Q:  tVhat  would  America  he  like 
under  a  George  W.  Bush  or  Ai  Gore 
presidency? 

A:  I  don't  know.  They  change  once 
they  become  president,  for  one  thing. 
The  man  you  vote  for  is  not  the  man 
you  get.  Sometimes  you're  surprised 
favorably,  often  unfavorably. 
Technically,  I'd  probably  have  to  vote 
for  Gore  because  of  the  Supreme 
Court.  I  think  the  court's  getting 
more  interesting.  With  the  exception 
of  a  couple  of  people  on  the  right  who 
are  predictable,  the  rest  of  the  court 
is  not.  So  1  'm  not  so  sure  a  Bush  pres- 
idency would  wreck  the  court  — 
wreck  the  court  in  the  sense  of  stack 


it.  I'm  not  so  sure  that  Gore,  who's  a 
political  animal  through  and  through 
and  through,  wouldn't  put  in  some 
right-wingers  on  the  court  to  show 
the  Republicans  he's  really  a  good 

guy- 

Q:  How  would  you  describe  your^  - 
self pditically?  As  a  liberal?      '  \. 

A:  No.  Never.  I'm  a  left-conserva- 
tive. People  ask  me  to  explain  that 
and  it  takes  up  the  entire  interview. 
What  I'm  getting  at  is  I  think  there's 
a  great  deal  in  the  conservative  tradi- 
tions that  are  extraordinary  and 
they're  deep.  And  the  trouble  is  that 
most  right-wingers  don't  have  a  clue 
■fts  ta  what  real  conservatism  is.  The 
average  right-winger  would  cut  down 
a  stand  of  the  finest  t,rees  if  he  could 
make  a  profit  off  it,  and  that's  not 
conservatism.  Conservatism  is  the 
notion  that  the  world  is  larger  and 
more  mysterious  than  you  think  it  is. 
therefore  you  have  to  respect  all  sorts 
of  irrational  prejudices  that  people 
have  about  protecting  elements  in 
nature. 

Q:  In  the  "American  Masters  '  fdm 
and  in  interviews,  you  describe 
America  as  having  violent  roots,  and 
we  are  considered  a  violent  society.  Is 
there  any  hope  of  this  becoming  a 
more  peaceful  country? 

A:  I  think  we  are  an  immensely 
peaceful  country  with  savagery  at  the 
edges  but  very  far  away  from  most , 
people.  I  think  the  average  person  in 
America  may  never  see  a  violent 
occasion  in  life.  They  might  go  to  a 
prizefight,  or  they  might  watch 
wrestling  on  television  but  they  won't 
have  it  in  their  own  lives.  But  the  fear 
of  violence  is  immense,  and  part  of  it 
is  the  media.  You  can  hardly  blame 
the  media,  in  a  way,  because  violence 
is  always  interesting  to  write  about 
and  read  about  and  see.  But  it  has  this 
odd  effect  (that)  the  country  is  much 
more  aware  of  violence  than  it  is  pre- 
sent in  daily  life.  And  that's  one  of  the 
odd  little  contradictions  in  American 
life.  ...  There  are  two  things  I  love 
about  America:  One  is  the  freedom 
of  expression.  The  other  is  you  can't 
understand  it  in  a  hurry. 

Q:  Writers  are  known  for  getting 
involved  in  tiffs  (among  Mailer's 
famous  clashes  was  one  with  Gore 
Vidal  on  Dick  Cavett's  talk  .show). 
What's  the  nature  of  the  beast  that  . 
causes  writers  to  get  embroiled  in 
these  public  brawls,  verbal  or  other- 
wise? 

A:  People  think  it's  so  wonderful 
to  be  a  writer  and  live  that  kind  of  cul- 
tivated life.  They  tend  to  see  writers 
as  being  nicer  than  other  people. 
Well,  if  you're  much  nicer  than  other 
people,  you're  usually  not  a  very 
good  writer  to  begin  with  because 
there's  a  lot  of  things  you  just  don't 
understand.  The  other  thing  is  that 
writers  are  immensely  competitive. 
They're  as  competitive  as  top  ath- 
letes. That's  an  element  that's  rarely 
understood. ...  If  I'm  reading  another 
novelist  who's  very  good,  I'm  read- 
ing them  competitively.  I  read  some- 
thing, I  feel,  a  stab  in  the  heart:  'My 
God,  I  can't  equal  that.'  A  little  later, 
*0h,  ho,  ho,  I  know  what  they're  hid- 
ing here.  They're  not  that  good.' ...  in 
that  sense,  the  reason  the  spats  occur 
is  the  reason  they  occur  between  ath- 
letes. It's  the  intense  competitiveness 
of  it. 

Q:  You've  said  you  rely  more  on 
wisdom  and  less  on  writing  prowess  as 
you  age. 

A:  I  can't  pretend  my  command  of 
language  is  what  it  was.  I'm  hoping  it 
won't  matter.  You  can  write  a  major 
novel  in  more  ways  than  one.  You 
can  write  it  for  sheer  beauty  and  wit 
and  surprise  in  the  language.  And  the 
other  way  is  a  structure  that's  deep 
enough  so  that  people  are  pulled  in. 


7^ 


v.".  I.  •;  .  • 


Daily  Bruin  Am  t  Entertainincnt 


Wednesday,  Odofcief  4, 2000       29 


Barenake^i  Ladies  are  profiled  in  the  movie  "Barenaked  in  America." 


BAItfNAkED 

From  page  24  • 

Canadian  pop  group  has  gone  from  a 
modest  cult  following  to  mainstream 
popularity  with  the  success  of  its 
No.  1  hit  single  "One  Week."  From 
its  humble  beginnings  when  mem- 
bers couldn't  afford  to  record  a  demo 
for  a  song  called  "Be  My  Yoko  Ono," 
to  a  large  venue  tour  with  projection 
and  animation,  the  documentary 
uncovers  the  method  behind  BNL's 
madness. 

The  outgoing  musical  personali- 
ties of  frontmen  Ed  Robertson  and 
Steven  Page  guarantee  a  sponta- 
neous and  unpredictable  musical 
escapade        at 

every  perfor-  — — ^— — 
mance.  And  get- 
ting up  close 
and  personal 
has  never  been 
so  easy. 

The  movie 
takes  you  back 
stage  to  witness 
the  band's  pre- 
•how      rituals, 

including  Page  applying  ear  rouge 
and  Robertson's  last  minute  "bath- 
room blasts"  to  relieve  his  nerve  pee. 
You  can  even  hear  accounts  from 
BNL's  tour  manager,  who  breaks  up 
late-night  dance  party  trips  and  tells 
the  band  to  go  to  sleep. 

Beneath  all  the  mad  cap  capers  of 
the  band,  however,  is  the  serious 
story  of  BNL's  keyboardist  and  his 
fight  against  cancer.  Kevin  Hearn 
was  diagnosed  with  leukemia  shortly 
after  the  release  of  "Stunt." 

A  huge  inspiration  to  the  band, 
Hearn  was  sorely  missed  on  tour  by 
his  bandmates  for  both  his  musical 
gifts  and  personal  contributions. 
Fortunately,  his  story  has  a  happy 
ending,  as  in  the  eloquent  words  of 
Robertson,  Hearn  eventually 
"kicked  cancer's  ass." 


The  rockumentary  also  sheds  light 
on  BNL's  theory  of  songwriting. 
According  to  Robertson,  the  band's 
songs  may  sound  deceptively  simple 
when  obscured  under  the  guise  of 
pop  music,  however,  the  light-heart- 
ed face  of  BNL's  giddy  tempos  and 
melodies  often  artfully  shroud  true 
intentions. 

For  example,  many  listeners  may 
be  surprised  to  find  out  that  "Straw 
Hat  and  Old  Dirty  Hank"  is  a  song 
about  a  farmer  who  loves  Anne 
Murray  and  his  serious  transgression 
-  stalking.  Similarly,  "Alcohol"  is  a 
fun  song  that  fans  love  singing  along 
to,  but  it  often  takes  listeners  awhile 
to  realize  that  they're  actually  singing 
about  the  darkness  of  alcoholism. 

"Barenaked 
■■^-^— i^i— "^      in  America"  is 
sometimes  glam- 
orous,      some- 
times sentimen- 
tal,    sometimes 
hilarious,      but 
always  provides 
a  candid  look  at 
the    hard-work- 
"      ing    and    hard- 
playing  boys  of 
BNL. 

Accounts  from  celebrities  like  Jeff 
Goldblum,  Jon  Stewart  and  Conan 
O'Brien  add  to  the  humorous  story 
of  the  cult  Canadian  band  as  they 
travel  across'America. 

From  performing  the  "Star 
Spangled  Banner"  at  a  hockey  game 
in  Philadelphia,  to  playing  large  are- 
nas filled  with  passionate  fans  who 
fervently  throw  boxes  of  Kraft  din- 
ners on  stage,  the  Barenaked  Ladies 
round  off  their  spirited  saga  of  music 
making  with  the  serious  challenges 
faced  by  bands  who  don't  conform 
to  the  typical  defrost-and-serve 
recipe. 

And  the  rest,  as  they  say,  is  history. 

FILM:  'Barenaked  in  America*  is  now 
playing  in  theaters  nationwide. 


The  movie  takes  you 

back  stage  to  witness 

the  band's  pre-show 

rituals. 


SOUNDBITES 


From  page  27 

Mg  anew  with  an  aggression-manage- 
ment tour  starring  Limp  Bizkit  and 
uninem. 

A  unique  sound  that  mixes  punk- 
like aspects  with  rock.  Papa  Roach's 
style  is  the  perfect  companion  after  a 
long,  hard,  not  to  mention  bad,  day. 
Its  songs  are  loud  and  upbeat  with 
enough  variety  to  keep  the  CD  play- 
ing from  one  song  to  the  next. 

Barbara  McGuire 
Rating:  9 

Shaggy 
"Hot  Shot- 
MCA 

Shaggy's  latest  album  offers  an 
eclectic  compilation  that  combines 
reggae  rhythms,  hip  hop  influence 
and  pop  appeal. 

The  native  Jamaican  is  assisted  by 
the  writing  and  producing  team  of 
Jimmy  Jam  and  Terry  Lewis  (who 
have  worked  with  the  likes  of  Mariah 
Carey  and  Janet  Jackson).  Jam  and 
Lewis's  contributions  include  the 
dub-driven  single  "Dance  and 
Shout." 


Shaggy's  lyrical  ability  comple- 
ments the  wonderfully  chosen  sam- 
pled hooks,  resulting  in  quite  a  musi- 
cal accomplishment.  He  is  joined  by 
a  slew  of  artists,  including  T-Lo  (of 
the  R&B  trio  Next)  and  up-and-com- 
ing pop  singer  Samantha  Cole. 

Shaggy  last  garnered  the  attention 
of  the  mainstream  Top  40  scene  in 
1998,  when  he  appeared  on  the  origi- 
nal motion  picture  soundtrack  for 
"How  Stella  Got  Her  Grove  Back" 
with  the  Jam  and  Lewis-produced 
"Luv  Me,  Luv  Me,"  which  also 
appears  on  this  release. 

Other  standouts  are  the  title  track 
"Hot  Shot,"  the  pop-infused  slow 
jam  "Angel"  and  the  socially  con- 
scious "Keep  'n  It  Real."  The  slow 
jams  are  gems,  but  unfortunately  the 
album's  strengths  are  in  the  upbeat 
dance  cuts,  of  which  there  are  too 
few,  leaving  the  listener  wanting 
more. 

Ultimately,  Shaggy  has  the  natural 
ability  to  lay  down  vocals  in  rhythmi- 
cally satisfying  ways,  making  the 
record  enjoyable,  but  the  missing 
dance  tunes  leaves  something  to  be 
desired. 

Dria  Fearn 
Rating:? 


UCC  PL  YMPICS  WELCOME  PICNIC 

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633  Gaylcy  Avenue,  Los  Angeles,  CA  9O0Z4 


Come  join  fellow  UCLA  students  at  the  UCC  Welcome 
picnic!  Tliere  will  be  free  food,  fun,  festivities  and 
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<t^flt5:45i 


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Ready  for 
law  school? 

Attend  a  mock  first-year  law  class 
with  a  leading  law  school  expert. 


Tuesday,  October  1 0th  at  7  pm 

Westwood  Kaplan  Center 

1 133  Westwood  Blvd,  Suite  201 

Presenter:   Noted  author  &  legal  expert, 
Dr.  Paul  M.  Llsnek,  JD,  PhD 


To  register  today,  call  1-800-KAP-TEST 
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JO       Wednesday,  Oftober  4,2000 


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digitai  mturtminoMnt  in  aHoit,  tasty  bytm. 


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COMMITTED. 

Frompage2?  :;       ' 

likable,  honest  character,  however, 
was  really  a  challenge.  In  the  end, 
however,  Sam  is  a  likable  fellow.  He 
starts  off  the  play  already  having  a 
bad  day,  which  slowly  progresses  into 
a  worse  day,  until  suddenly  be  comes 
out  on  top. 

The  audience  is  in  tears  with  laugh- 
ter, throughout  the  show  as  Sam 
attempts  to  calm  several  irate  callers. 
One  of  the  funnier  moments,  (which 
Setlock  admitted  is  his  favorite), 
occurs  when  a  senior  citizen  calls  to 
complain  about  the  price  of  the  food. 
Sam  is  forced  to  talk  to  her,  as  she 
babbles  on  and  on  about  how  horrible 
her  meal  at  the  restaurant  the  previ- 
ous evening  was.  She  even  goes  so  far 
as  to  tell  Sam  that  when  she  went  to 
the  bathroom  she  sat  in  a  puddle  of 
urine  on  the  toilet  seat. 

That  wasn't  the  only  bathroom 
problem  of  the  evening.  Sam  reaches 
an  ultimate  low  when  the  chef  forces 
him  to  clean  up  the  women's  bath- 
room after  someone  lost  control  -  out 
of  their  lower  end. 

Apparently  they  couldn't  make  it 
to  the  toilet,  and  Sam  has  to  get  rid  of 
the  mess  because  all  the  bus  boys 
magically  disappeared. 

Comical,  shocking  moments  such 
as  these  fill  the  entire  play,  providing 
the  audience  with  non-stop  laughs. 
According  to  Setlock,  however. 
"Fully  Committed"  isn't  all  fun  and 
games,  there  is  something  of  thematic 
usefulness  which  can  be  derived  from 
the  story  line. 

"It's  not  'War  and  Peace.'  but  it's 
also  not  like  the  Three  Stooges,"  he 
said.  "I  think  there  is  a  message  and 
that  is  to  look  how  far  people  will  go 
just  for  status,  to  get  what  they  want, 
or  how  they'll  treat  people. 

"It's  about  power  and  the  power 
that  these  people  have  over  Sam  and 
the  power  that  he  has  over  them, 
whether  they  want  to  admit  it  or  not," 
he  continued.  "It  also  has  to  do  with 
the  certain  way  that  people  treat  other 
people  when  they  just  have  a  phone 
relationship,  how  they  don't  treat 
people  as  they're  human." 


Carat  (toiegg  Photography 

MarlcSetlock  stars  as  a  reserva- 
tionist  in  the  oneman  play,  "Fully 
Committed,"  which  is  performing 
at  the  Coronet  Theatre. 

Though  such  thoughts  most  likely 
won't  be  going  through  the  audi- 
ence's heads  during  the  play,  upon 
reflection,  such  a  theme  is  applicable. 
"Fully  Committed"  is  a  funny  play, 
unlike  the  standard  interpretation  of 
plays  as  serious  -  this  play  is  young, 
upbeat,  amusing  and,  above  all,  enter- 
taining. It  almost  has  a  really  good 
movie-like  quality  to  it  -  when  it's 
over  one  wishes.  Ihge,. was  more  to 
come.  '  '  ■ 

"I  would  like  to  say  that  I'm  really 
surprised  with  the  audiences  in  L.A., 
how  great  they  are,"  said  Setlock  of 
the  reception  "Fully  Committed"  has 
received.  "Everybody  says  L.A.  is  not 
a  theater  town  and  not  to  expect  too 
much,  but  they've  been  so  great,  not 
necessarily  the  fullness  (of  the  the- 
ater), but  just  the  response,  just  very 
generous  and  I'm  happy  about  it." 


THEATER: 'Fully  Committed"  is  playing 
at  The  Coronet  Theatre,  366  N.  La 
Cienega  Blvd.,  through  Nov.  19, 
Tuesday  through  Friday  at  8  p.m., 
Saturdays  at  5  and  8  p.m.  and  Sunday 
at  3  and  7  p.m.  Tickets  cost  $25  to  $45 
and  can  be  purchased  by  calling  (310) 
657-7377  or  online  at 

yvww.fullycommitted.com. 


BROOKS 

From  page  25 

ceives  as  the  diminishing  moral  values 
of  today's  politicians.  Despite  the 
grave  undertones  in  his  work,  it  is 
clear  to  anyone  who  has  read  his  sto- 
ries that,  at  the  core,  Terry  Brooks  is 
an  intelligent  man  with  a  fascinating 
imagination^^|#'liovels  enter  the 
worlds  and  minds  of  creatures  from 
distant  lands  and  far-off  times,  trans- 
porting readers  into  another  world  to 
escape  the  harsh  realities  of  this  one. 
The  ability  to  carry  a  message  in  his 
work  without  the  restrictions  of  reali- 


ty is  one  of  the  reasons  that  Brooks" 
has  stuck  to  his  genre  over  the  years. 

When  asked  how  he  comes  up  with 
such  a  constant  flow  of  creativity, 
Brooks  explained,  "You  live  with  one 
foot  in  the  world  of  your  writing. 
You're  out  of  it  half  of  the  time. 

"But  I  just  love  to  write,"  he  said. 
"I  have  always  loved  it  and  every  new 
book  is  a  different  kind  of  challenge." 


BOOKS:  Fans  of  his  work  can  learn 
more  about  Terry  Brooks  and  his  writ- 
ing on  the  Web,  at 
www.terrybrooks.net,  his  personal 
Web  site,  and  www.shannara.com,  the 
official  Web  site  of  the  series. 


PAROLE 

From  page  26 

the  seriousness  of  the  crime  and 
serve  to  undermine  respect  for  the 
law." 

The  parole  board  noted  that 
Chapman  has  an  "exemplary  disci- 
plinary record"  in  prison.  But  it«aid 
he  has  been  unable  to  seek  "anti-vio- 
lence and/or  anti-aggression  pro- 
gramming" because  he  is  in  special 
custody. 


Parole  board  hearings  with 
inmates  are  closed  to  the  public. 
The  Associated  Press  and  85  other 
media  organizations  filed  Freedom 
of  Information  Law  requests  to  get 
the  board's  determination. 

Robert  Gangi  of  the  state 
Correctional  Association,  a  prison- 
er advocacy  group,  speculated  that 
parole  for  Chapman  is  unlikely  even 
years  from  now. 

"As  long  as  that  crime  is  in  the 
collective  memory,  he  has  no  chance 
for  parole,"  he  said. 


MAILER 

From  page  2§ 

Q:  h  the  idea  of  a  great  American 
novel' a  silly  conceit? 

A:  By  now  it's  an  impossible  con- 
ceit. The  country's  too  developed  in 
its  comers.  ...  If  you  want  to  write  a 
panoramic  novel  like  John  Dos 
Passos  did,  you'd  have  to  live  for  200 


years  to  get  it  all  together  If  you're 
going  to  write  the  gffiaT^merican 
novel  you  really  have  to  get  an  idea  of 
what  all  American  society  is  like. 
You've  got  to  know  how-  a  gang 
leader  in  the  ghetto  speaks.  You  have 
to  know  how  a  corporate  executive 
who's  really  sensational  does  it.  How 
can  you  do  all  that?  It  can't  be  done. 
You  can  fake  it,  which  is  what  bett- 
sellen  do. 


(f 

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03 

SMOKERS.  EX-SMOKERS  &  NONSMOK- 
ERS  in  good  health,  at  least  18  years  of  age. 
wanted  for  UCLA  research  study  Subjects 
will  be  paid  up  to  $120  for  2  testing  days 
Please  call  Dr  Richard  Olmstead  at  310- 
478-3711 -ext  44319.  leave  message. 

WOMEN  AGES  18-40  WITH  and  WITfiOUT 
PREMENSTRUAL  SYNDROME  wanted  for 
a  4-month  study  of  hormone  in  response  to 
progesterone  or  prozac  cfiaHenge.  Ttie  study 
entails  mood  diaries,  bk>od  test  and  2  spinal 
taps,  and  taking  progesterone  or  prozac 
May  be  paid  up  to  $200  for  your  time  Con- 
tact Unde  Goldman.  RNP  UCLA  OBGYN 
310-825-2452 


AOVFRTTSH 


Pay  your  tuition 
with  eggs. 


If  you  re  a  woman  between  18 
and  35,  you  can  earn  monqr  eaii- 
If  anonymouily.  Donate  your 
eggi  to  an  infieitile  couple. 

$3,500  and  up,  depending  on 
your  education  and  other  qualifi' 
cations.  Call  today. 

Thi  Cintm  for  Ecc  OmoNS 
310/546-6786 

•  TKa  Center  (or  E(g  Op«ion(.  LLC 


ISliSlI^  ISIiSI  £31 


■^uii 


<#^^" 


Will  you  increase  your  skills? 
Your  knowledge?  Your  wisdom? 

At  Arthur  Andersen,  you  will  operate 
at  the  heart  of  the  business  world. 
Creating  and  managing  value  in  the 
WeW  economy.  Developing  equity  in 
your  career. 

Accept  the  challenge.  Learn  more 
about  Arthur  Andersen. 


.,> ''. 


)      V 

'i.h  - 


www.arthurandersen.com 


ARTHUR  Andersen 


3000 

Books 


FANG-LUPUS.COM 


®^P=«ac*  QS^ 


Assurance  •  Business  Consulting  •  Corporate  Finance  •  eBusiness  •  Human  Capital 
Legal  Services  •  Outsourcing  •  Risk  Consulting  •  Tax  Services* 


Note:  The  services  offered  In  particular  areas  nriay  depend  on  local  regulations.  In  some  locations,  legal  and/or  tax  services  are  provided  by  Andersen 
Legal,  the  international  network  of  law  firms  that  is  associated  with  Andersen  Worldwide  SC. 

Arthur  Andersen  refers  to  the  U.S.  firm  of  Arthur  Andersen  LLP  and  other  members  of  the  Arthur  Andersen  global  client  service  network.  ©2000  Arthur  Andersen. 
All  rights  reserved.  EOE. 


i;  .■•■■- 


VV  •  ■     '  •     ', '.     ,; 


~V 


34       Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


^•^im 


Daily  Bniin  Classified 


Daily  Bni'mClMtifM 


Wednesday,  Ortober  4, 2000       35 


..,,-j! 


1300 

Campus  Recruittiient 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruilfueut 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


i-*-. 


....  -W- 


y-r;r^'^  ...    .. 


BARRAT 


■.>^'. 


■-.:;■ 


BARRA  is  the  leader  ih  risk  management  technology.  BARRA  enjoys  a  strong  history  of 
delivering  industry  standa«f  investment  risk  management  products  and  services  to  the 
worlds  leading  investment  institutions.  Our  team  of  sales  and  support  specialists  as  well  as 
our  innovative  financial  and  technical  engineers  work  with  our  diverse  client  base  to  build 
leadership  products  for  managing  investment  risk. 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


N 


Please  join  BARRA's  recruiting  group  at  the 

UCLA  Career  Center  ^ 

October  4,  2000  at  6:00  pm 

Meet  your  fellow  Alumnus  and  learn  more  about  the  future  of 

investment  risk  management.  ^ 


.-A,.^ :-S^f 


-     For  more  information  sign  Up  for  BARRA  s 

on-campus  interviews  ^^^^^^^^^^^  .^  ^ 

October  17,  2000. 

www.barra.com 

Berkeley  CapeTown  New  Jersey  Frankfurt  Hong  Kong  London  Mexico  City  New  York  niode  Janeiro  Sydney  Tokyo 

Equal  Opportunity  Employer  ;' 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


Degrees  of  Freedom 

Lovi/  Cost  Student  Airfares*  Youth  Hostel  Cards 
lall/Bus  Passes  •  Language  Prpgrams*  Spring  Brealc 
Hotel  Accomodations  •  IVavel  insurance 


31 OO 

Calling  Cards 


5  CENTS/MINUTE 
PHONE  CARDS 

Mo  Connection  lees!  No  miscellaneous  tax- 
es/lees! $20  card  =  400  minutes.  Sent  $20 
plus  $.50  shipping  to  HeartLand  Telecom 
20050  Addison  Ave.  AltaVista  Iowa  50603. 
888-661-7706. 


3ikOO 

Computers/Software 


POWER  MAC  7100.  40  meg  RAM,  1  gig 
hard  drive,  color  monitor  &  printer,  zip  drive, 
software  complete,  rrxxlem.  $475.  310-825- 
1755. 


3500 

Furniture 


COMPLETE  FORMAL 
DINING  ROOM  SET 

Hardwood;  brass  detailing  Oval  table;opens 
to  seat  10.  Six  chairs;  large  glass-lront  hutch. 
$2100  obo.  310-825-9176,  leave  message 

FOR  SALE:  2  couches,  1  bed  (with  mattress 
and  trame)  and  chairs  lor  cheap  ($20  and 
up)  310-613-62Vr 

FURNITURE  FOR  SALE-  Extra  large 
sola/hide-a-bed,  excellent  condition,  tan, 
$150.  Swvel  desk  chair,  black,  high  back, 
excellent  condition.  $25.  310-202-8726. 

MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY,  STEARNS  &  FOSTER  Also  twin- 
S«l»-$79.95,  FuH8-$99.95.  Que«ns-$139.95 
King»-$199.95  Queen  PWowtops  $199.95. 
Doaccin  Open  7-<lays.  1309  Westwood 
Blvd  310-477-14«> 

SOFA  BED  tor  sale  Beige,  almost  new  «B0. 
310-210-7336. 

SOFA.  711.  8-way  hand-lied  springs. 
rose/Mue/noral  pattern.  $250  Channel-back 
chair  w/ottoman,  rose,  $150  Rounded  otto- 
mon,  blue.  $50  310-393-1078. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


COOL  GIFTS  FOR  CHICKS!  One-of-a-kind 
handbags,  fewelry.  recyclements.  and  more. 
Secure  online  shopping  at  www.cucuz- 
za.com. 

GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded.  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared application.  John  Manley.  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd.  #300  LA.  CA  90025. 
310-820-7553.  Deadline:  10/30/00. 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1990  1/2  NISSAN  240SX  SE.  Burgundy,  al- 
toys.5-speed.many  new  parts.  SE  edition, 
loaded  with  extras  including  moonrool,  pow- 
er everything,  etc.  310-470-3615. 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO.  4wd, 
auto.  A/C.  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  condi- 
tion. Sell  for  $4300.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836. 

1990  MITSUBISHI  ECUPSE  OS  DOHC: 
excellent  condrtioni  New  clutch  &  transmis- 
sion! Car  is  a  GEM.  Must  drive!  $3000  obo. 
310-394-1397. 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


•97  TOYOTA  4RUNNER  SR5  4X4  5sp  wht. 
Ithr.  16ln  wheels,  sunrf,  perfect,  39M 
$22,950.  310-470-0010. 


(O  o  o  o  o  o 


5200 

Parkiiuj 


/SSSSSSra      1 992  TOYOTA  TERCEL 

•W  "^r  '^r  ^T  ^^  ▼^  Ui       ox,  4door,  autoowtk;,  66  5K  miles,  blue 


ox  4door,  autoriwtk;,  66  5K  miles,  blue. 
MJUfM  stereo.  fiJC  $4.000obo.  310-209- 
6211. 


transportation 

4600-5500 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1983  BMW  3201 

5-speed.  clean,  well-maintained,  second 
owner.  $2195obo.  310-452-2334. 

1964  HONDA  ACCORD.  $1400.White 
w/blue  Int..  4-<Jooc,5-speed.powef  windows, 
brakes&locks,  cruise  control,  all  ntain- 
tenance  records,  good  condWon.  Cal  Lara  at 
310-319-2011. 


1069  MAZDA  «2eDX,  Uue.  5-speed  slick. 
very  good  condition,  94K  miles,  A/C, 
AM/FM/Cassene.  single-owner,  acckJent- 
♦we.  I2S00.  Ca«  «S2910  Of  3t0h47O-71 52. 

1980  TOYOTA  COROLLA  GT  SPORT  eco- 

nomfcal/reliable  great  for  school/work  New 
tires,  engine  1  yr  oW.  awnual  trans  $2500. 
323-810-8914  AkxiSO. 


1993  HONDA  DEL  SOL 

Automatic/65K  miles  great  gas  mileage. 
$6500.  Alpine  stereo,  convertible,  fun  school 
car.  one  owner.  Call  Jordana:31 0-383- 1701. 

1993  TOYOTA 
CELICAGT 

70K.  white,  automatk;.  fully-toaded,  excellent 
condition,  dealer-pampered,  60K  dealer- 
sen/ice  done.  $7000.  310-476-8267/949- 
609-4471.  ___^ 

CONVERTIBLE  1976  Alfa  Ronfieo  5-speed. 
red  low  miles,  AM/FM/Casette.  leather 
seats.  $2800  obo.  Call  Dave  310-440-4149. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Cars  as  tow  as  $500 
for  listings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214. 

VW  CABRKXET  Converllblo  1990. 
84000ml,  good  condttton,  power  windows. 
Mack.  A/C.  regiatrstton  paW  for  one  year 
$4500.  Cat  Vlcento  310-398-4123  or  emal 
)contrer»uc»a.adu 

•93  TOYOTA  PASCO,  mtaQ.  Mack,  nwnual 
ttwn^ton.  S  speed.  A^.  am/tm  CO.  vety 
dean,  wna  ym.  $3200  obo.  310-454-3621 

•96  EAGLE  TALON  TBI  mO.  ^»n.  KortQ- 
monsson  rtms.  Efcach  sprtngs,  JVC  CD  pMy- 

er,  one  owner  $9,700.  $1,000  less  than 
KBB,  call  Antonio  310-539-6516. 
www.mv8ampson.attfreewob.com. 


** 


**PARKING** 
AVAILABLE!!! 


** 


Having  trouble  finding  parking  in  West- 
wood?  It  doesn't  have  to  be  so  painful 
There  is  no  need  for  you  to  spend  anoth- 
er year  cariess  and  stir  crazy.  There  are 
10  fabulous  and  convenient  parking  spots 
available  in  a  tot  on  Landfair  and  Strath- 
more.  Ctose  to  campus  Just  $60/month 
Call  Stephanie  at  310-267-8491  or  email 
sabaizzo9ucla.edu  for  further  informa- 
tion. 


W^s^ 


TRAVEL 


310-UCLA-FLY 

9SO  V\/est;u/ood  Blvd. 


\A/\A/v\/ .  s  t  a  t  r  a  V  e  I .  c  o  m 


Council 


Travel 


5700 

Travel  Tickets 


VICTORY  TRAVEL 


NEEDED  Parking  spot  for  school  year.  2000- 
2001 .  Will  pay.  310-824-0997. 

PARKING  NEEDED 

UCLA  STUDENT  LIVING  IN  RIEBER  HALL 
Fall  2000-Spring  2001  needs  a  parking  spot 
for  Fall  quarter  and  possibly  beyond.  Parking 
can  be  atiywhere  somewhat  near  residence 
hall  skle  of  campus.  Hope  to  pay  less  than 
what  UCLA  charges.  Call  310-267-8491. 

P/kRKING  SPACE  WANTED  Near/on  Veter- 
an/Stralhmore.  $50/mo  obo.  Can  sign  lease 
for  10-12  months.  Cad  310-770-1225  or 
(ngabrielOucia.edu. 


5^00 

Scootets  for  Sale 


1986  HONDA  Aan>50  sooolar  nms  great, 
new  banary,  only  3K  mUes  $700A*o. 
Cal:310-479-727e. 


"  LATM  AMBBfC*  SI>KaM.lSTS  ^ 

IMnicoCily 

Guodolaiora 

109    limo                           l«V 

CoboSonlucai 

99    iMMMAim              299 

n  Solvooof 

209    S.D*CM*                209 

Hemlurat 

219    Sogaki                       230 

CoitaMco 

2M    Quilo                        259 

Nkwikmo 

22«    Mn                     aO« 

CuuHwuii. 

179    Caracn                    "• 

NEW  YORK 

•259r£t 


1I«I/T 

ni/T 


Council  Itavel  invites  you  to  our 


tiiQQest  pnand  | 

oppnlnn  PcjrtLj  even   • 


October  7th  •  1-8pm 

prize  QlveoNA/BUS  f 

evenu  Jioun  on  tfie  hour  • 

THE  WORLD  FAMOUS  KROO  VAN  WILL  BE  TNBRC  WITH  OIVBAWAYS 
AND  MBET  KROQ  DJ  STYNBRI 

pnlzes  Include : 

TICKETS  TO  UNIVERSAL  STUDIOS  •  QUEEN  MARrS  SHIPWRECK  HALLOVWEEN 
HAUNT  •  SPRING  BREAK  PACKAGES  TO  CLUB  MED  SONORA  BAY  MEXICO 
•  A  TRIP  FOR  TWO  TO  HAWIAII  •  AIRLINE  TICKETS  TO  EUROPE  ON  VIRGIN 

ATLANTIC  WtTH  A  CONTIKI  TOUR  •  EURAILPASSES  •  AND  MUCH,  MUCH  MORE!! 


Como  and  moet  IVIelissn  from  MTV's 
'The  Real  World"  from  3:30pm-5:30pm  ! 


Join  UB  far"  music  and  Fun  and 
let:  council  t^navel  t:Eil-ie  you    ^ 
en^ound  trie  \A>dnld  !         ^'ffti^ic 


6100 

Computer/Internet 


NEED  HELP  connecting  iMac  to  Umax  scan-, 
ner.  $25/hr.  Norma  323-932-1553,  call 
evenings.  

P/T  to  complete  construction  and  maintain 
website.  Nationwide  wholesale.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 


icaSsiK 


rtllHIBlHlWH 


531  Santa  Monica  Blvd.    310-656-9991 

corner  of  Santa  Monica  and  6th 
M.  T.  W.  F  10-7     TH  11-7     SAT  11-5 

r  o  u  n  c  i  I  t  r  <3  V  p  I  .  c  o  m 


JAPANESE! 

Shop  Onlinel 

I        Omf.    M.uv.JPOP 
I  R.trTv-n  An. mi-  &  More' 

run  s  M  -  CJ-.  ix'-,'.  ot 

www.tuiisan.com 


6200 

Health  S(!rvi(:(?s 


HAIR  COLOR  MODELS  NEEDED  by  li- 
censed hair  dresser  at  Beverly  Hills  Salon. 
$15-25.  Wednesday  appointments.  Hannah 
323-461-8178. 

MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  Massage.  $40/hr  w/student 
ID.  Monday-Friday  10am-8pm.  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Certificates  available. 

PERSONAL  TRAINERS  NEEDED.  No  expe- 
rience required.  Eam  $60/hr.  National 
Trainers  Assoc.  1 -888-NTA-2338. 


Mexico  iscopM^ 

|$329  Gibo  Scm  Lucas    ^^^fl^ 
l$519  Concun  ^^Bp^ 

|$359  Puerto  VoNorta  ^^^^ 

>/v .  m  OK  P  ■«**  •  Ar  -  taMfcfa) 


v/vi/w. victory  travel. com 

(323)  277-4595 


Display 
206-3060 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Coda  832123).  We're  on 
campus  at  Ackerman  A-iavei.  310-477-6628: 


6000 

Insiit.inco 


Cyclrrimr  lrv;ur,inco  Spfvicw 


Motorcycle  •  Motor  Scooter  •  Moped  g 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 

■  C  I  II  aiil  ■  ■!  aiA«^M^AM^»^A«ft 


"M*  hm»nt  forgotfn  whmt  H'9 
Mr*  to  b«  •  •tticfofit' 

•Acne* Mole  Removal •Warts*Rashes 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal  • 

•Lip  Augmentation^ 

•Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  826-2051 

iiiniifMf.DfSllvefv.com 


services 


5800- 73nn 


INSURANCC  IS  THE  tJkW 
rrs  LitS  T>MN  YOU  THMK) 

Cal  tor  ■  frM  quoM 
(310)275-6734 

CactMng*  ad  tor  minimum  tlO.OO 
dkcouTH  «*»  mmMwncm  pwcha— 


6300 

LonJ'l  A(lvic«;/Attornoys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST  Sexual  harrassment,  Discrimina- 
tion, Auto-accidents,  Slips/falls  MYER  LAW 
FIRIi4,  Westside.  Scott  D  Myer{UCLAW86). 
www.bestlawyer.com'  310-277-3000 


J I 


Classifiods 
825-2221 


Men's 

Health 

Clinic 


Evaluation  and  treat'rmnt  of  all  i$siJ9|H 
related  to  sexual  and>reproductive  health 

-for  non-symptoiriunt  sexually 
-transmitted  diseases  (STDs) 

Diagnosis  and  treotmeflTot  symptomatic 
STDs 


Counseling  to  assist  in 
sexual  health  and  to  re^ 

Counseling  and  support 
relating  to  sexual  function, 
or  orientation 

Anonymous  HIV  testing 

For  information  or  on 
310  825-4073,  or  visit  tl 
sit*  to  roquost  on  oppoiii' 
health  rolotod  question: 
http://www.aai 

*/D  is  checked  to  cfoi 


a  nee  of 
of  STDs 


u/hoalth.htm 


ligibility  to  use  Ashe 


uclfl^he  Center 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PUZZLE 


ACROSS 

1  Fuml>ler's  cry 
5  Speltt>ound 
9  Turn  (over) 

13  Lustrous  fabric 

14  Pianist  Blake 

15  Autobahn 
vehicle 

16  Jai  — 

1 7  First  prize 

1 9  Barbie's  t)eau 

20  Help  (a  thief) 

21  Gourmet 
mushrooms 

22  Moon  goddess 

24  Green-fleshed 
fmit 

25  Stimpy's  pal 

26  Digestive  aids 
30  Storefront 

^  tSheltpr 

33  Viewed       '  . .  •  . 

34  Sigh"6f 
satisfaction 

35  Manner 

36  Stretch  the  tmth 

37  Taj  Mahal  site 

38  Lupino  of  tlie 
movies 

39  Lump  of  clay 
41  Moved  a  certain 

boat 
43  Go  different 
ways 

45  Mort('s  home 

46  Fresh 
information 

47  Comfortable 
stK>e 

51  Sailirtg  vessels 

54  Rocky 
Mountain    - 
people 

55  Mine  contents 

56  One  way  to  quit 
smoking 

58  Uniform 

59  Stieriff  Taylor's 
kkl 

60  Articles 

61  Lotion 

T 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


□QQSQS  [DQE3  BBEIB 
DSDIlllB  SUB  DQISIS 
ESaDESDCl    [IDS    [HQEaD 


■I 

RAF  F 
sMR  E 

iMl 

1 

GH 

T 

oTr 

NMI 

D  EIAISI 

mas  saca  □□qb 


IMIA  I   D  S  O  F  H  O  N  O  RI 


B]SB@  laSB  □miSQBS 
□BBC]  [SlEllS]  QBISQISB] 
BQQB    SDB    BQQESGSB] 


Ingredient 

62  Decades 

63  "—  of  the 
D'Urtjervilles" 

64  Gala  event 

DOWN 

1  Japanese  port 

2  OPEC  vessel 

3  Ftoweror 
vegetable 

4  Slalom  need 

5  Regulations 

6  Border  upon 

7  Apple  — 

8  White  ant 

9  Cotton  or  ilnen 

10  Grease  job 

1 1  Matinee  man 

12  Fastens 
14  Waning 

18  Des  Moines 

resident 
20  Prayer  end 

23  Actress  Moran 

24  Type  of  jerk? 

26  Put  — :  save 

27  Othelkj's  foe 


28  Challenge 

29  Herring's 
cousin 

30  "Jake's  Thing" 
author 

31  Vast 

32  A  tide 

36  Many 

37  "My  Way" 
composer 

39  Crawled 

40  Court  case 

41  Pikas 

42  Mars,  to  the 
Greeks 

44  Battery  posts 

47  Goblet  parts 

48  Eucalyptus 
eater 

49  Actor  Flynn 

50  Defy  authority 

51  Glasgow 
native 

52  Jaunty  stride 

53  Lena  of  film 

54  Luau  strings 

57  Map  abbr. 

58  Chatter 


Display 
206-3060 


36       Wednesday,  (ktobef  4, 2000 


Diily  Bruin  OassifM 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


Special  Egg  Donor  Weeded 

Pi'eferred  Donor  will  meet  the  lollowiBg  ^rtoia: 

•Height  Approximately  5'6"  or  Taller  •Caucasian  •S.A.T. 
Score  around  1300  or  High  A.C.T.  •College  Student  or 
Graduate  Student  Under  30  •No  Genetic  Medical  Issues 


:t, — -e^ 


^W^r    :^5fr-2^, 


Compensatioii 


Paid  to  you  and/or  the  charity  of  your  choke. 
All  related  expenses  will  be  paid  in  addition  to 

your  compensation. 

(Extra  compensation  available  for  someone  who  might  be  especially 
gifted  in  athletics,  science/mathematics  or  music.) 


For  more  information  or  to  obtain  an  application  please 
contact  Michelle  at  the  Law  Office  of  Greg  L  Eriksen 

(800)  808-5838 
or  email  EggDonorInfo@aoLcom. 


*This  ad  is  being  placed  for  a  particular  client  and  is  not  soliciting  eggs  for  a  donor  bank. 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Services 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  O^^.^ 


OR 


mmUF  Dr.  Nader  Davani 

UCLA  FACULTir  MEMBER  •■^*  •    .^^  •■««*'»     MMmm.j  mm.mm.m. 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


Deliver  Brilliant  Results 

•  Cosmetic  Porcelain 

•  SufQlcal  OrttxxJonitcs 

•  Removable 

•  Traditional 

•  Invisible 

•European 


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(310)  826    7494 

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livlm  CA  927 IS 


Teeth  Whitening   $85^^ 


upfpr  or  tower 


(MOM  w«w  f^rw^r  o**  "^ 


Movers/Storage 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  5-plece  special  $102.  Two 
24-toot  trucks  fully  equipped  lor  large  moves. 
Call  24/7  Available  on  short  notice.  Lfcense 
T163844  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 


HONEST  MAN  w/14ft  truck  and  dollies, 
smaM  jobs,  short  nolico  ok.  SF.  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  BruinsI  10th  yr.  310- 
28S-8688.     •, 


6^00 

Movers  /  Storage 


JERRY'S  MOVING&DELIVERY.  The  carelul 
movers.  Experienced,  reliatMe,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available.  Also,  pick- 
up donations  for  American  Cancer  Society. 
Jeny«310-391-5657. 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

AU.  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedteated  pro- 
Irolonal  At  your  home  or  WLA  studio.  1st- 
lesson  free  No  drum  set  necessary. 
N««:323-«54-a226 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professional  near  UCLA  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effoniesslyl 
www.JWGS.com.  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 

PIANO  AND  VOICE  LESSONS  by  UCLA 
singer/planistl  Call  Laura  310-210-7336. 


AOVt  RT  ISE 


6700 

Professional  Services 


ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW,  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Frustrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
professional  help  from  well-known  au- 
ttior/cor»uttant. 31 0-826-4445.  www.wlnnlng- 
personstatemenl.com. 


PSYCHOTHERAPY 

riiiinji  \  (  (>iitl(k-ii(i;il 

('oiiiisi'liii«i 

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(3l(h479.S255 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


6700 

Professional  Services 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES  : 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  formatting,  tran- 
scribing. Personalized,  professional  assis- 
tance. Ace  WordS.Etc  310-820-8830. 

ITALIAN  LESSONS 

LEARN  ITALIAN  at  own  pace  wt>ere&when 
you  want!  We  offer  Italian  classes  taitored  on 
your  needs.  Call  310-442-6078. 

PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pre-pakj  legal  service  programs 
provkling  quality  legal  servk:es  to  plan  mem- 
bers Robert  Moss,ESQ.:310-260-7650. 

SIGN  LANGUAGE 
CLASS 

Set  your  hands  free  by  learning  to  experi- 
ence a  language  of  beauty  through  visual  ex- 
presswn.  Starts  October  Louisa:310-275- 
3809. 

TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Unk}n/Unk}n.  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Comprehensive  Dissaitatioo  Assistance 
Theses.  Papers,  and  Personal  Statemenls 

Proposals  ar>d  Books 

Interrwtior^al  Students  Wefcome  Snce  1985 

Sharon  Bear,  Ph.D.  (310)  470-6662 

www  Bear-  Write,  com 


TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

ExperierKed  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa^ 
p)e  rs.com 

THESIS/DISSERTATION  COACH-  LEARN 
HELPFUL  TECHNIQUES.  Get  emotkXMll 
support.  Dorothy  Imai,  PhD.  MFCC.  11110 
00k>  Ave.  Ste  202.  WLA.  310-474-0942. 

WRITER'S  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlining,  research,  ar>d  productk>n 
assistarKe  for  academk:  or  professkxial  writ- 
ing. Experienced  writing  instructor.  Harvard 
Univeristy  M.A.  Jon/310-367-5666 


7000 

Tiitoriitg  Offered 


**ENGLISH  EXPERT 

DOES  WRITING  IN  ENGLISH  make  you 
crazy?  Assistance  in  basic  skills  to  major  re- 
search paper  completk>n  ESL  experienced. 
310-839-9933/Adam. 

BOND  TUTORING 

All  subjects  6- 12th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  will  meet  your  indivklu-' 
al  needs.310-471-7628. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results. 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall.  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Cateulus/Phystes/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geonwtry/French/English.  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 

MATH  TUTOR 

For  SAT  math.  Pre-Algebra,  Algebra  1  and  2. 
Geometry,  Trigonometry,  and  beginning  Cal- 
culus. UCLA  Student,  math  major  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  math  and  one  year 
teacrting  experience.  $25/lx}ur  Call  for  more 
information  Stephanie:310-702-6455. 

MATH  TUTOR.  Utoth  Major  at  UCLA.  $25/hr 
Any  math  to  Cak:ulus.  References  upon  re- 
quest. 310-828-6291.  mlopezOucla.edu. 
Ask  for  Rk:t)ard. 


PRIVATE  TUTORING 

ALL  SUBJECTS,  all  levels,  affordable 
rates.  At  your  home.  Highly  qualified  tu- 
tors Call  Admiral  Tutoring  310-477-9685. 


THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
term  pap>er  assistance,  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  Wekx>me. 
Call:310-4  52-2865 
www.thewriterscoach  .com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  with  the  English  language— for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW  MYTUTOR  COM  Math/Phystes/Sta- 
tlstk:s/EnglisrVHebrew/  chemistry/l}iok}gy/as- 
tronomy/  Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistk^al  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
service.  Call  anytime  800-90-TUTOR. 


Display 
206-3060 


1 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


Wednesday,  October  4, 2000        37 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


-6TH  GRADE.  Mon-Thurs,  7-8pm.  Responsi- 
ble, knows  how  to  teach  Very  dose  to 
UCLA.  $15/hr  Call  Rosy:310-441-9388. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE  Tutoring,  com- 
panion, driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  11y/o 
giri.  Athletic  female  preferred.  BH  $8-12/hr 
4days/wk.  2-4hrs/day  ASAP.  Call  310-273- 
3663,  310-753-3535.  Email 

k>nz320aol.com. 

BALDWIN  HILLS/CULVER  CITY  AREA. 
Female  tutor  wanted  for  8th  grader  for  math, 
science,  etc.  2hrs  evenings.  Lenette  323- 
735-4588. 

DRIVEFVMATH  tutor  needed  after  school  for 
8th  grader  Pacific  Palisades  excellent  pay 
call  Gail  at  310-201-6159. 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/toxcellent  study  habits  to  assist  12&16-yr- 
okl  boys  w/HW  ar>d  tests  Car  plus  insurar>ce 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $l0-$l2/hr  310- 
472-7353 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED.  Must  be 
graduate  student  or  TA.  For  high  school 
student  taking  second  year  Spanish  and 
math.  310-476-0766. 


MATH  LOVERS 
WANTED 

For  math  tutoring  service.  Flexible  schedule. 
Must  have  a  great  understanding  j3f  subject. 
$15/hour  Call:310-560-9561. 

MATH  TUTOR  WANTED 

FOR  HIGH  SCHOOL  JUNIOR  in  Pro-Cateu- 
lus.  Westwood  area.  2-3  afternoons/week. 
310-470-3831 

MATH,  SAT.  Experienced  Grad  student  or 
Senk>r  preferred.  Private  WLA  school.  Fax 
resume  to  562-404-6141  or  call  818-831- 
2809. 

SERIOUS  TUTOR  WANTED  lor  6th-graders. 
reading  and  writing.  "^  hours/day,  M-F. 
Sufwet/Crescent  Heights  area.  Michelle 
home  323-851-7273  or  cell  323-816-9313. 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


WELL  PAID  TUTOR 

Tutor  needed  for  HS  sophmore  in  Geometry 
$20/hr  Provide  own  transportation. 
Previous  tutoring  experience.  310-275-5487 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  speciahzing  in  thes- 
es, dissertations,  transcription,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports  Santa 
Monica,  310-828-6939.  Hollywood,  323-466- 
2888. 


SAT  TUTOOS 


TUTO 
hobe 
47Si-7 


EXCEPTIONAL 
TUTORS  WANTED 


High  quality  center  in  Pacific 

Palisades  has  immediate  P/T 

openings  for  I  on  1  tutoring.  AH 

subjects  &  levels  up  thnaught  high 

school.  8A  /  VW  positive  atitude 

and  effective  tutoring  skills  required. 

Can  for  interview 

(S10I4S9.4125 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


7300 

Writing  Help 


GET  BETTER  GRADESI!  Professwnal  writer 
will  help  you  with  any  subject.  Editing  and  re- 
writes are  my  specialty.  Competitive  rates. 
310-285-3421. 


Score!  Prep  needs 

tutprs  w/high  SAT  & 

SAT  fr^res  Tor  SAT  & 

fitsffOififntc  suoiect 

tutoring.  RetioDle 

trarispoftotion 

^"required.  $16  per 

hour  +  bonus.  Rex 

schedules. 

CALL  NOW! 


call  (310)  371-4500 

for  more  information 


TUTOR  NEEDED 

HorT>ewori(  assist  for  two  boys,  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  in  Laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  call  evenings:310-401-0113  or  day- 
time:310-392-1405. _^ 

TUTOR  NEEDED!  Primarily  in  Spanish,  pre- 
cate  a  plus.  For  16yr  oW  boy  2  days/wk, 
flexible  schedule.  Brentwood,  call  Kathy 
days;310-247-1777,  eves  310-826-1876. 

TUTOR  NEEDED:  7th  grade  boy  Mon-Thurs 
4-6pm.  Must  be  patient.  Help  in  all  subjects 
and  homeworit  Glendale  area.  Own  trans- 
pohalion  Call  310-865-4123,  daytime 

rORING  WANTED  FOR  9th  grader  In- 
Homework  help.  Brentwood.  310- 
47*7342. 


TUTORS  NEEDED 

Ml  subjects,  levels,  ages.  Flexible  days  and 
hours.  $10-13/hour  Tutor  in  WLA  or  SFV. 
TotaMy  Tutored.  310-397-0999. 

TUTORS  WANTED 

ALL  SUBJECTS,  especially  Chemistry, 
physics,  math.  Latin,  Greek.  Car,  Bachelors 
required.  $20+/hr  Fax  resuoie  to  310-914- 
4158  Attn:  Tania. 


i  iA  AAS\ 


ISmployment 

7400-8300 


Business  Opportunities 


$WORK  FROM  HOMES 

$500-2500  P/T,  $3000-15000+  F/T,  No 
investment,  Real  Opportunity!  Call  Stewart 
310-234-0338 ^^^^ 

A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  Us  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35,  Refundable.  No  Risk. 
http://zibgib.com/phanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stephanie.  :  f  '  *  " 

GET  RICH!!! 

Make  1000's-f  weekly!  For  details,  send  one 
stamp  to:  GRQ  &  Co..  P.O.  Box  8690,  Austin, 
TX  78713^ 

MAKE  MONEY  for  you  or  your  school  orga- 
nization with  the  Lifetime  Reminder  Service. 
Sign  up  online  today  http://www.thehot- 
pages.com\remirxler214lS00.htm. 

NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

Work  from  home  with  flexible  hours, 
www.  homebusiness .  to/emor>ey 

OUR  WEBSITE  OFFERS  the  ultimate  links 
to  business  and  income  opportunities,  ship- 
ping, sports  activities  and  tickets,  entertain- 
ment, romance  and  more.  It  will  take  time  to 
look  through  all  we  have,  t>ut  it's  well  worth  It. 
Conie  visit  NOW!  http://www.thecoolpag- 
es.com/mercharKJisa/suite2 1 4 1 500 

START  A  DORM-BASED  business  In  the  e- 
commerce/telecommunications  industry  for 
495.  Return  on  investment  wittiin  45  days. 
No  selling!  Bonus-free  vacatk)n.  1-800-579- 
1225  ext77700. 

UNIQUE  BUSINESS 
OPPORTUNITY 

BECOME  a  personal  trainer  Earn  up  tp 
$150/hr.  Order  business  manual  to  learn 
how,  310-493-9675. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


GET  YOUR  OWN  legitimate  home  business 
offering  products  people  REALLY  want.  Own 
your  own  900  number  senrtce  and  other 
unique  cashmakers  While  everyone  else  is 
trying  to  find  a  ride  to  wortt,  you'll  oe  AT  wortt. 
http://www.makingmoneycala- 
tog.com/2141500. 

KOREATOWN  E-COMMERCE  business 
seeks  P/T  emptoyee  for  computer  and  offkie 
work.  Fluent  in  Korean  and  English. 
Resumes  to  namhee.fwnOgte.net. 


BARTENDERS 


•  Earn  $1«»-«200  ■  tfay   ^  -    ■  .^ 

Placement  Maudad  .f 

•  trs  not  a  tab -m  •  PAfrrrin  I 

National  Bartendefs  School  -i^ 


1  (noo)  r,.io  -  rviixx  (g-499) 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


LANDSCAPE  DESIGNER.  F/T  position. 
Garden  design  company  located  in  Beverty 
Hills.  Will  be  involved  in  entire  Landscape  ' 
Design  process  including:  creation  of  initial 
conceptual  design;  development  of  drawing 
of  overall  site  plan  Integrating  all  compo- 
nents of  exterior  design  inclduing  plantings, 
garden  structures,  pools,  walls,  fences  and 
hardscaping  details;  supervision  and  coordi- 
nation of  every  priase  of  production  and 
installation  of  a  project  to  completion.  Fax 
resume  to  Melissa  Moore  310-542-8580. 

STOCK  BROKER.  Licenses  and  Internet 
Tradir>g  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Bivd.  Suite 
316,  W«odland  Hills,  CA.  Instructor  David 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  University). 
818-703-8889. 

TEACHER  ASSTNTS 

PRIVATE  WLA  School  looking  for  capable 
and  experienced  teacher  assistants  to  work 
with  elementary  level  students,  M-F,  8AM- 
3PM.  Begin  immediately  Proficient  in  Mac 
computer  technology.  Please  fax  re- 
sume:310-471-1532. 


7600 

Child  Care  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  run  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2  5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards  Open  7:30-5:30.Close  to  UCLA. 
310-473-0772. 


NAGiLA  PR€SCHooL 


Lovely  W.LA  facility,  dose  to  UCIA 
FT  &  PI,  Agu  2-6. 

Can  (310)207-4543  or  visit  In  person 
at  1620  S.  Bundy. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


ACTIVE  3  YR  OU)  BOY  needs  to  wort<  off 
som»  %tfdrgy  before  school.  7-9am,  5 
days/wk  Westwood  Please  call  Janet  at 
310-441-0383. 

AFTER  SCHOOL 
NANNY 

Afternoons  aprox.  3-8  and  some  evenings, 
flexlt)le  hours.  Own  insured  car.  valid  driver's 
license  and  reierences  required.  Easy  kids. 
In  Santa  Montoa.  Starting  $10/hour  310- 
202-9240.  

AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED. 
Mon-Fri,  2pm-7pm.  Own  transportation  a 
must.  Brentwood.  310-979-7103. 

AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  for  5-year-okl 
boy.  1:30-5:00PM  approximately 
14hours/week  M-F.  $8/hour  (negotiable). 
Anne:310-458-64S5. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tutortng.com- 
panton.driving  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
girt.  Athletk;  female  prefened.  BH.  $8-l2/hr 
4days/wk.  2-4hrs/day  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663,310-753-3535.  Email  lonz32©aol.com. 

ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

P/T  JOB  wortting  with  sweet,  intelligent 
handtoapped  girt  Chito  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  in  kitchen  and  worthing  with  chlW 
on  improving  physical  skills.  Applicant  must 
be  sweet,  intelligent,  reliable,  speak  English 
and  drive.  Maat  Elman:310-396-8100. 

BABYSITTER  for  2  children  3&6  .  Sat  nights, 
eariy  evening  Experience  required  Must 
have  own  car  Near  UCLA.  $10/hr  310-476- 
9394. 

BABYSITTER  for  4-yr-okl  boy  who  toves  to 
read  and  meet  new  friends.  Occastonal 
evenings.  $10^r  References  required.  310- 
573-9692. 

BABYSITTER  for  smart,  ntee  5-yr-oW  boy  In 
Sherman  Oaks  Hours:2;30-6:30pm.  Must 
have  safe  car  w/insurance  and  CDL.  Refer- 
ences required.  $8-10/hr  DOE.  310-449- 
7182. 

BABYSITTER  NEEDED  for  1  1/2  year  oM 
boy.  Vtirtous  afternoons  and  evenings.  Some 
weekend  days.  Culver  CHy.  Call  Ruth  310- 
838-0624. 


7500 

Career  0(iportuiiiti('s 


L 


Harbor-UCLA  medical  Center,  Deparlment  of  Orthopaedic  Suiyery 

P.  •-'■■.trch  Coordinntnr  Joh  Drsmpticn 


Purpose:  The  purpose  of  this  position  is  to  facilitate  the  research  projects  of  the 
Orthopaedic  Surgery  Department  A  secondary  purpose  Is  to  maintain  the  computer 
systems,  datatjases  arxl  other  technologk»l  equipment  of  the  department. 
Specifications:  A  candidate  for  this  posltkyi  must  be  self  motivated,  a  creative  problem 
solver,  familiar  with  computers  (Macintosh  and  PC),  interested  in  a  related  field,  and 
willing  to  commit  at  leas*  a  year  to  the  position 

Duties:  The  duties  of  this  positton  Include,  but  are  not  limited  to,  daily  upkeep  of  several 
dais  bases,  working  on  various  research  projects  including  the  revleiMng  of  charts  and  X- 
Ray  files,  developing  new  programs  to  help  the  department  further  its  research  Interests, 
taking  an  active  role  in  miscellaneous  departmental  projects  and  providing 
general/technical  support  lor  office  and  clinical  staff 

Call  Sue  Rizzo  at  310-222-2716  ■__ 


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•  Description . 

(20  chancten  maximum,  including  q>aca) 

•  Pner 

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•  Phone:  ( ) - 


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Display 
206-3060 


38       Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  CbssifM 


.  • 


7700 

Child  C;ire  Wnntod 


■       BABYSITTER/ 
MOTHER'S  HELPER 

kids.8&4.  Experience,  relerences,  and  driv- 
er's license  required.  Must  enjoy  kidsl  Flexi- 
ble hours.  EncifW.  818-788-7886. 

BABYSITTER/DRIVER  tor  two  boys  9412 
T,W,F.  3-6pm+possible  additional  time.  Mul- 
holland/Beverly  Glen.  English  speaking. 
Own  car  w/good  driving  record.  References. 
310-470-2047. 

BABYSITTER/SATURDAY  EVENING. 

Weekly  comoMtment  requested.  Rexibility  lor 
other  nights  a  plus.  Must  have  own  car  to 
drive  to  Pacifk:  Palisades.  Two  lun,  easy 
boys,  6&7-yrs-okl.  Must  Uke  playing  sports 
and  watching  MTV  and  movies.  Students 
only.  References  required.  $10/hr.  Call  Alli- 
son 310-454-3650  or  email  GIE- 
OELOad.com. 

BABYSITTING 
POSITION  AVAILABLE 

Seeking  bnght,  playful  female  for  occasional 
care  of  two  children,  ages  5  and  10  months 
In  Westwood.  $10/hour.  310-553-0542. 

BABYSITTING 

Knowledge  of  Rnnish  or  Farsi  or  t>oth  a  plus. 
Call  before  Bpm.  310-202-6822. 

CAREGIVER  to  drive  10-yr-oW  from  school 
to  Santa  Moruca  activity  Tuesdays  Pertiaps 
some  evenings.  Car,  DL,  irwurance  neces- 
sary. Candyce  310-207-1227. 

CHILD  CARE  Permanent  P/T.  San  Fernando 
Valley.  $10/hour,approx.  20hours/week. 
Starting  after  3pm.  Flexible  hours.  Must 
have  car.  Starts  immediately.  818-905-1215. 


P/T  NANNY  for  2-yr-okJ  Wed  evenings  5- 
6:30pm:  5-10pm  on  Thurs.  Occasksnai  wee- 
kends w/advanced  notne.  Palisades.  Must 
fiave  own  transportation  and  have  previous 
chikt  care  experience.  $15^L  Please  call 
Laura  at  310-454-9995-  

PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  for  10  yr/okl 
giri.  Need  help  6:45-8:30AM  MTW.  2-7:30pm 
MT.  Must  riave  car,  experience  with  cfiiMren 
and  help  with  errands.  310-441-9766. 

Part-time  babysitter  M-W  5:00-9:00. 
References.  2  kkte  SlO/hour.  310-458-3587. 

PART-TIME  BABYSITTER.  Responsible, 
experier>ced,  child  devek>pment  preferred. 
Energetk:,  for  2-year-ok)  and  5-year-old. 
Own  car.  310-273-4900. 

PT  CHILDCARE 

For  Very  special  Syr  okj  daughter.  Intema- 
tk>nal  or  bilingual  background  preferred, 
car&references  required.  Grand  Piano.  Bev- 
ertywood.  Laird:310-287-1677. 

RELIABLE 
BA&YSITTER  NEEDED 

For  after  sctwol  help,  MorxJay-Thursday,  2- 
6pm.  We're  k>oklng  for  a  student  wtw  is  great 
with  kkls,  ages  7-6,  to  help  with  driving, 
homewori(  and  light  housekeeping.  Hours 
and  salary  negotiable.  Car  and  references 
are  required.  Please  call  Joy  at  310-394- 
2342. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wauled 


DRIVE  CHILD  from  school  In  PkxVRobert- 
son  area  to  horrw  in  Pacific  PaHsades  In  af- 
ternoons. Must  have  car  and  Insurance.  310- 
454-7525. £_ 

DRIVER  &  CARE 

For  2  boys  ages  12&8.  M-F  3-6pm.  Non- 
smoker.  RefererKoe.  Call  310-839-2131 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/exceOent  study  habits  to  assist  12&16-yr- 
oM  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

FEMALE  UCLA 
STUDENT  NEEDED 

To  babysit  In  Beverty  HiMs  for  1-2  night/week. 
Must  tiave  car  rK>r>-srTX>ker  female  preferred. 
$8/hr.  Greer  310-858-8839 

FUN/CARING  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  for 
pk:king  up  &  caring  for  9yr  old  girl.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-5(taya/wk. 
afterTX)ons-6pm.  Gayle  310-450-4109  (even- 
ings)^  

FUN/REPSONSIBLE  SITTER.  Westwood 
family.  Wed  1:30-7:30pm.  Boys  8,5,2.  Light 
fK>usekeeping,  make  dinner,  driver's  Ncense 
a  plus.  $10/hr.  Leave  message  310-441- 
4078. 

Homewort(  Helper/Driver  needed  to  ptokup  9 
yr  oW  from  Bel  /Mr  sctwol  M,W,Thr.  com- 
mencing immediately.  Own  car,  ReferarKes. 
CalDiarw  818-781-1471. 


Mother's  Helper 


FREE 


ADVERTISING? 


YES!!! 

.    BRUIN  BARGAINS 

OFFERS  FREE 

ADVERTISING  FOR 

ANY  ITEM  WORTH 

$100  OR  LESS!* 

For  nrwG  Info  call  (310)  825-2221 

or  come  by  ttie  Daily  Bruin 

at  IIBKerckfioff  Hall 

'For  items  between  $101-1500,  $2  extra 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


■sySi  M9"  wtfHt  12a  MmI  Iww 

.  GarwH  !•  pravMtd.  Mm!  Hw 
sports.  Msls  cr  Imnte.  MoAi  to  Fri. 
Nn.  ippnudnntaly  3-Spjii.  (Iiltr  m 

IINWySli  DM  INlDBWi  INHM  IS  M 

Bcvtrty  HMs.  $1Q/Ihiiv. 
Fax  rMtiim  to  ItaMiii  at 

(310)273-3748. 


CHILDCARE 

for  personat>le  8yr-okl  giri.  Pk:k-up  from 
scfiool/lessons.  CDL,  own  car,  insurance. 
Non-smoker  MorxJay/Wednesday/Friday  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thursday  2-6pm.  Experi- 
ence and  references  required.  $10/hr.  CaH 
310-440-6738. 

CHILDCARE  FOR  11 -YEAR-OLD  girt  After 
school  hours  ranging  from  2-8:30PM.  Driving 
and  homewort(  suppori  Please  call:310-476- 
2469. 

CHILDCARE/DRIVER 

for  12-yr-okj  boy.  Non-smoker.  Likes  kUs 
and  dogs.  Help  w/HW.  M-Thurs.  4:15- 
5:45pm.  $10/hr.  Call  310-828-5144. 

CHILDCARE:  EmpathetkVenergetk:  student 
to  play  with  1-yr-oW  boy.  Approx  6-10  hrs/wk. 
Flexible.  ExperierKe  necessary.  310-446- 
7019. 


MOM'S  HELP  NEEDED.  We  live  right  in  the 
UCLA  'hood.  Need  help  w/HW  and  driving  lor 
our  4  chiWren  (12.10,  8,  5)1  Last  year  2 
friends  shared  this  Job.  Ws  provWe  car. 
$10/hr  M-F  3-8..  Call  Elaln  475-4336. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

NEEDED.  P/T  sitter  needed  for  kkls  1047. 
Responsibilities;  Driving,  readlng&playing. 
Good  pay!  I  References  a  must!  Located  in 
Brentwood.  310-394-9781. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER  Afternoon  driving, 
homework  help,  chiM  care  and  light  kkls' 
cooking  lor  2boys.  ages  9&  1 2 .  Must  havs  ex- 
OsOsnt  driving  record  &  CA  driver's  Hosnsa. 
Car  will  be  provkled  Must  like  sports  Male 
or  female.  Mon.  to  Fri  Hrs.  approximately  3- 
8pm  (later  on  Fridays),  but  flexible.  Home  is 
in  Beveriy  Hills.  $10/hr.  Fax  resume  to  Deb- 
bie  at  310-273-3748. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER  WANTED,  wsfcsnds. 
BH  fanilkd  kkls,  meals,  and  play  aclMMs. 
swim,  athletk:.  creative,  CDL.  send  (Mumo 
323-957-9762  or  rgitlinOyahoo.com. 

NANNY  POSmON-P/T  Must  have  experi- 
ence with  chiMren  ages  3  arvl  younger.  ChUd 
Devek>pement  educatkxi  a  plus.  Must  have 
references&car.  310-234-1188 


NANNY/ 
HOUSEKEEPER 

for  normal  WestsMo  tamily.  \N»m,  good 
sense  of  hunrar  excelleni  EngNsh.  vaM 
COL.  12-8  M-F  Fax  only:310-47ft40e6. 


NEED  AFTER  SCHOOL  HELP  3  dsys/wk. 
5pm-6:30pm.  Female  preferred.  Please  caR 
evenings  3 1 0-84 1  0829^ 

OCCASIONAL  CHILDCARE.  Are  you  wUHng 
to  sperxl  a  few  hours  each  week  or  an  even- 
ing with  a  six-year-oM  boy  in  ttie  Westwood 
area?  This  vivackxjs  boy  k>ves  books,  sci- 
ence experiments,  and  havir^g  adventures. 
Please  caH:  310-440-0725  or  emaH 
piersi  Oooncemric.net. 

P/T  BABYSITTER 
NEEDED 

For  7-yr-okl  boy.  Must  be  available 
MonAThurs  2:30-8pm.  Tues&Wed  2:30- 
6pm,  pkis  more  hours  if  needed.  Chikl  care 
experience  a  must  10  min  from  UCLA.  $9/hr. 
Call  Hilary  310-858-5994. 

P/T  CHILD  CARE.  Two  chiWren  ages  2&3  5. 
Afternoons  and  some  waakandsjghi  house- 
worit  Must  have  car.a)cpartonca.and  refer- 
erfces.  $8/hr.  Errrail:  tlnymarshnsOearih- 
llnk.net.     310-864-6906. 

P/T  DRIVER  CHILD- 
CARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  TtaMs  drop-off  (6:45-8am)  A  ptek- 
up^errands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only  Must  have 
car,  Irwurance&valid  license.  Brentwood. 
Ptaasa  call  Sarah  310-385-6766. 


7700 

Chilrl  Cnrr;  \A/anU;tl 


Saturday  Babysitter/ 
Mother's  Helper 


Sat  avaningi,  approx.  e-IOrSOpm. 
■alqrsitting  for  2  boya,  agaa  t  and 

12.  InBovarlyNMaarMalftu. 

Mmt  hava  oxcaHant  driving  racord. 

Car  will  ba  providad  if  driving  ia 

nacaaaary.  Mala  or  famaia. 

$12/lMNir. 

Fax  raauma  to  DabMa  at 

(310)273-3748. 


RELIABLE/FUN  P/T  NANNY  NEEDED  lor  2 
girts  (5  &  8).  3-6pm.  2,3.or  5  days/wk.  Driv- 
ing. HW,  light  cooking/housework.  Near 
UCLA.  Please  call  310-824-9609.  evenings 
or  310-206-0669,  day 

RIDE  NEEDED 

To  pfck  up  chiW  from  Bekerty  Hall  on  Mulhol- 
land  Drive  at  3:20  pm.  Call  310-271-4651  af- 
ter 6pm.  213-252-9437  From  9am-apm. 

SANIA  MONICA.  2  POSITIONS-  MONDAY 
EVENINGS  6pm-9:30pm. 
AFTERSCHOOL  TEACHER'S  AIDE.  Mon- 
day-Friday approx.  2:30pm-5:30pm.  $9/hr. 
For  a  6-year  old  boy.  310-393-9144. 

SATURDAY  BABYSITTER/MOTHER'S 
HELPER.  Sat.  eveninge.  approx.  6-10:30pm. 
Babysitting  for  2boys.  ages  9&12.  In  Beverly 
HHte  or  Malibu.  Must  have  excellent  driving 
record.  Car  will  be  provided  It  driving  Is  nec- 
essary. Male  or  fenrule.  $12/hr.  Fax  resume 
10  Debbie  at  310-273-3748. 

TUTOfVBABYSITTER  Glendale,  12  year  old 
boy.  Every  weekday  4-9pm.  $l0/tw.  Need 
Car.  CaH  818-S48-S896.      — 

UCLA  STUDENT  to  drive/supervise  HW.  2 
kkls.  Tues,  Wed,  Thurs.  3-6pm.  Beverty 
Hills.  $10/hr.  Car  w/insurance.  References 
required.  Abigail  310-859-1255. 

WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILDCARE  For  12-year-okl  giri,  SM/Brent- 
wood.  M-F,  3:30-7i8h  (approx:  15hrs/wk).  Car 
with  insurance.  References  required. 
$10>/hour.  Night:310-828-6206,  Day:818- 
954-3276.  Start  ASAP 

WANTED:  Responisble  indivklual  needed  to 
help  after  school  with  2  small  chiklren 
Mondays  4-8pm  arxl  sofT«e  weekends.  Must 
Drive.  References.  Call  310-446-1438. 

WEEKEND  NANNY  needed.  7am  Sat-9pm 
Sun.  Live-in.  Bel-air.  Call  310-889-1840 

WLA  CHILDCARE 

FOR  A  DELIGHTFUL  very  personaWa  11- 
year-otd  giri,  pk:k-up  after  school,  drtva  to 
activfties,  supervise  homework.  MorvThurs. 
3:30-8:30PM(variable).  $11/hour.  CaH  Dr. 
Alan  Yasser  3 1 0-277-2796. 

Wonderful  Nanny  needed  3-5  aftemoorts  per 
week.  Boy  9,  giri  12.  Need  Own  car 
Weekends  a  plusi  Pstoadis  area.  310-573- 
1010. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  female  for  Beveriy  Hills 
producer.  Short,  flexible  hours.  Excellent 
pay  310-278-6972. 

$1,000'S  WEEKLY!! 

STUFF  ENVELOPES  at  horrw  for  $2  00 
each  plus  bonuses.  F/T.  P/T.  Make  SSOOf 
waaMy  guaranloedt  Free  supplies.  For  de- 
ttls  sand  one  stamp  to:  N-33,  PMB  552, 
12021  WllsMre  Blvd.,  Los  Angales,  CA 
90025. . 

$10  PER  HOUR 

Looking  for  acoounUng,  business,  math,  and 
econ.  majors  with  computer  and  bask;  Math 
and  English  skills  for  PT-FT  positkins. 
Phones  and  general  offk;e  duties.  Fax 
resume  and  DPR  (UCLA  students):  818-760- 
4694. 

$1S-$23/HR  BRIGHT.  ENTHUSIASTIC  pao- 
ple  to  taach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Acadamk: 
Sub|ects.  Transportatkxi  required.  We  will 
train.  Flexible  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume. Irtduding  test  scores  (SAT,  ORE. 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educatk>nal  Servtoes.  Altn:Bar- 
ry.  9911  W.  Pfco  Blvd.  Ste.1025.  LA^X* 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424.  PosWons  mvM 
able  throughout  LA  and  the  Vallay. 

$1 500  weekly  poMnM  iwaWng  our  circulars. 
140  experience  raquirad.  Free  inlornuilk>n 
packet.  Call  202-466-1639. 

$20A>r.  FRENCH  TUTORS  wanted  to  con- 
verse wHh  high-school  students  Fkjsrtcy  not 
required.  Travel  experteiKe  a  phjs.  5- 
20hrs/wk  plus  oplkmal  summar  opportunity 
to  leach  In  France.  Contact  Scott  310-428- 
3680. 


7800 

Help  W.iiiU;il 


$8.50/HR>BONUS.  Advertising  consulting 
firm  seeking  person(s)  to  set  appointments 
by  phone,  for  our  consultants.  Minimum  2- 
years  college.  Telephone  or  outsMa  sales 
experience  a  plus.  Immediate  openings. 
PT/FT  in  our  Wastslda  offk».  CaM:  Nonnan 
Becker,  Ad  Max  ConauWng  Group.  310-441  - 
7678. 


f|:i';^jp.ir>'' 


^ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  vaNey,  HoRywood,  or  Santa  Monk:a 
once  needs  energetic  people.  $10/hour 
plus  bonusesi  310-395-7368. 


*F/T  GENERAL  OFFICE* 

WESTWOOD  ENTERTAINMENT  LAW 
FIRM  SEEKS  F/T  OFFICE  CLERK  TO  DO 
COPYING.  FAXING.  AND  MAIL  PROCESS- 
ING MUST  HAVE  CLERCAL  OFFICE  EX- 
PERIENCE. SALARY  DOE+BENEFITS. 
FAX  RESUME  TO  E.  KRAFT:  310-441-6010. 

'KitOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beats  aR  |ota.  Start 
immediately.  Great  pay  Fun/Easy.  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  for  free  rr^edteal  Call-24/hr5 
323-850-4417. 

*XLNT  OPPORTUNITY! 
$1(VHR  -I-  BONUSES 

PART  TIME  for  sales/related  feHd  work.  Must 
have  Car  and  good  telephone  skills.  Call 
310-476-9069. 

A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

DO  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  in  the  afternoons  dur- 
ing school  (M-F)7  AH  day  Saturday,  tool  Full- 
time durir)g  Quarter  Breaks  and  Summer  Vb- 
catkxtsl  Worit  experience  not  necessary.  Ap- 
ply today  at  Westwood  Sportirg  Goods. 
1065  Gayley  Ave.  Westwood  ^ 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  fiekl  sales,  flexible  hours  *  com- 
missk>n  and  borxjsl  AmbitkxJS;  salesperson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  emaN:  support  Of  ones- 
4atl.com  Ann:Fiekl  Sales. 

ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT.  25-35 
hrs/wk.  Good  phone  voice.  1  year  commit- 
ment, Organized,  Word,  Excell,  Account  Re- 
ceivable/Payable. Fax  Resume  to  310-914- 
4 158  Attn:  Scott. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours.  $10-13/hr.  Tennis  a  pkiSi 
We  are  natonal  fk>wer  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  reeuma;  310-230-4146. 


ADULT  RESPONSIBLE 
MALE 

For  personal  care  for  dlsat>led  ntaa  Monday- 
Friday  Ihr/day  arxl  alternate  weekends.  WiN 
train.  Strong  References.  Near  UCLA. 
$300/mo.  310-475-5209. 

AMERICORPS  Posttton:Help  watch  meracy 
devetopment  program  for  prescfKJOlers  while 
earning  money  for  school.  30  hours/week. 
Julie.  Corvtecttons  For  Chiklren.  310-452- 
332Sex.234. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary 
Host  mu8k:/talk-shows  for  our  radto  statkxfs. 
P/T.  $10-l5/hr.  $200+per/show.  phJS  fanlas- 
tk:  benefits.  323-468-0080.  24-hours.- 

ANSWER  TELEPHONES/DATA  ENTRY. 
Movie  maitcel  rssaarch  Arm  seeks  people 
with  caN  Wdng  and  data  entry  shMa.  Wa  pro- 
vide tha  pizza,  you  provWa  the  oompuler  and 
lalaphone  expertise.  Immediate  start  lor 
waakerxl  ^Notk  al  year  kxig.  Contact  Eliza- 
beth at  310-840-5800  ext2S1. 

ASSISTANT  ART  CONSULTANT.  Train  w/a 
professk>ruil.  knowledge  of  bask:  computer 
programs.  Good  dasign.cok>r  and  comfioai- 
tk>n  skills.  lOhr/wk  to  start.  310-828-3964. 

ASSISTANT  needed.  SIQ^r.  Temple  City,  IA. 
Opportunity  to  laam  the  andanl  art  of  Chi 
Ouong.  Cantonasa/Englsh.  compular  Nter- 
ate.  peopia  sMIto.  detaN-oriented.  Contact  Us 
310-571-6032. 

ATHLETICS:  P/T  student  amployaa  to  work 
copy/maN  room  and  front  rscepVon  desk. 
Pay;$6.70/hr.lO-16  hrs/wk.  Must  be  friendly 
■and  hard  wortcing.  Apply  at  J.D.  Morgan 
I  Offtee  310-206-6662 


BABYSITTER 

Some  evenings  and  waaitands.  Experience 
with  toddtora,  raiafsrcas  a  must.  UCLA  area. 
310-470-8390 

IfYSfTTER/DRtVER  naaded  tor  2  girts 
agM~1i.  Santa  Monk»/WLA  area.  Must  be 
1 3-«pm  M-F.  Must  have  aMr,  valid  I- 
cansa  and  mauranoe.  $io/hr-fgas.  Cal  Laa- 
le  310-277-e4a0. 

BANKING 

P/T  teNer  poalttons  al  Unlvarslty  Credit 
Unton.  ExcaOanl  pay.  hours  &  environment 
Sonoe  telar  expartenoe  preferred  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepuiveda  Blvd..  LA.  90025  Fax  r«- 
sunie  310-477-2666  or  on 
www.ucu.or|y|obs.hlm 


7800 

Help  W.inled 


BEST-SELUNG 
AUTHOR 

ASSISTANT  to  psychotoglst/author.  Good 
typing/filing  skills.  Run  errarHls.  Must  hava 
own  car  w/lnsurance.  10-20hrs/wk.  flexibii.: 
$a/hr.  Some  research.31 0-205-0226 

BEVERLY  HILLS  AUTO  DETAIL  Shop  needs 
hard-wori(ir>g.  last-paced,  agresslve  people 
to  ftandle  top-rxxch  cars.  No  experience  re- 
qulrad.  Flexible  hours,  Ozzle:31 0-859-2870.  , 

BOOKKEEPER/ASSISTANT.  P/T.  8- 
lOhrs/wk.  $lC/hr.  Excel  and  Word  experi- 
ence required.  Fax  resume  818-909-4991. 

BOOKKEEPINOmECEPTIONIST/data  pro^ 
cesser.  Devek>pment  company  kx>king  to  fill 
3  positkxis.  start  ASAP.  kx:atk>n-  Downtown 
LA.  213-489-5540  extll. 

CARDIO  INSTRUCTOR 

PALMS  RECREATION  CENTER  seeks  an 
energetk:  person  to  teach  and  adult,  kjw-lnv 
pact  cardto  class  Mon  &  Thurs  night.  310- 
838-3838. 

CARE  TAKING  COMPANION  foe  1 6-year  oW 
devetopmentalty  disabled  girt  Involve  nelgh- 
bortvxHl  fiekl  trips&activttles.playing 
boardgames.walks.etc.  Need  car.  Hours 
flexlble.$12/hr.  310-839-3732. 

CASHIER  for  busy  pizzeria  Must  have  great 
customer  skillsl  $8/hr-»-tip.  DOE.  Call 
Dagwood's  Pizza:  Venice  310-392-1450  or 
Santa  Monka  310-899-3030. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 


Part-tkne  )t>be  avalaWe  at  Campus  Comer. 
We  work  wUh  yours  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
martagement  training  opportunity.  CaM:310- 
206-6133. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-tinfie  jobs  available  at  Campus  Comer. 
We  wort(  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Caii^^- 
206-8133.  p 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-lime  jobs  available  at  Cooperage.  We 
wort(  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals,  man- 
agement training  opportunity.  Cail:3i  0-206- 
0740. 

CENTURY  CITY 
SHOPPING  CEN- 


TER 


Earn  S$  tor  the  HoMaysl  F/T.  P/T  posittons 
avaRable  at  Cusotner  Servk:e.  Apply  in  per- 
son at  cart  In  center  court  outskle 
Crate&Barral.  102S0  Santa  Monka  Blvd.  No 
phone  cala  piaasa. 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT/CHILOCARE 
COUNSELOR 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT  SALARY:  $7.03- 
$8.65/hr^partlal  benefits.  CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR  SALARY:  $8.65- 

$1 1 .9(Vhr^partial  banaMs.  Under  general  su- 
parviskKi.  plana,  bnplemanlB  rscrsattonal. 
educatlona- 
I  and  sports  acdvWas  tor  5-1 2  year  oMe.  such 
as  arts  and  crafts.  Laainir>g  groups,  ouldoor 
games  and  playing  kitramural  spoila.  RE- 
QUIREMENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  ASSIS- 
TANT High  School  Qraduatton;  eraoament  in 
ooNege  preferred.  Six  monltw  pahl  racrsatton 
worit  axper1erx:e  (Smooths  of  voluntoar  ex- 
perience in  a  chiMcare  program  can  ba  sub- 
stituted lor  3rTwnlh6  of  pakl  experience). 
Proof  of  High  School  dipkjma  rtHist  be  sut>- 
mitted  with  a  CHy  appik^atkxi.  REQUIRE- 
MENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR: 
Completton  of  one  year  of  doNega,  majoring 
In  Recreatton.  Education  or  raiatsd  flato. 
Must  have  12  units  in  Eariy  Chldhood  Edu- 
calton  and  3  addittonal  units  in  AdmMslra- 
tton  or  Stall  Relaltons.  Ona-yaar  park  racraa- 
tton  wort(  aMpadanoa.  Piool  oi  one  year  col- 
lege and  required  unKs  must  be  submHted 
with  a  City  appltaatton.  Cal  310-550-4265. 
EOE. 

CITY  OF  BEVERLY  HHh  ParMng  Allendanis 
needed.  $9.t1/hr.  Mooting  and  Evening 
shuts  avaliaUa.  Seasonal  PosMons  starting 
November  IS.  2000  to  Janumry  5,  2001 .  All 
shifts  avatabto.  Apply  NowlH  Dept.  of  Trans- 
portatton.  455  N.  Raxtord  Dr.,  Room  130.  Ap- 
ply In  person.'310-285-2552. 

CITY  OF  TEMPLE  CITY  SEEKS  Coowunlty 
Devetopment  Akle.  $10-$12/hr.  CaN  planning 
department  tor  more  detaUs.  626-285-2171. 

CLERK  TYPIST/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

Manage  small  rT>edk;aT  research  group. 
Good  oommurticatkMVwriting  skWs,  word- 
prooaaaina  Windows  96.  up  to  20/hours. 
weekday  mominga.  Slartlng-$8.00/hr.  West- 
wood.  310-626-0679.      ) 

CLERK.  P/T.  Pleasant  Cenluiy  City  Engi- 
neering Finn  saaka  paitacltoniat  wMh  typing 
skMs  tor  ganaral  oNloa  du«as.  Musi  abaolute- 
ly  be  detaN-ortanisd.  $tl/hour  to  start.  Can 
Rhonda  310-a8e4347. 


Display 

2:)6-3fr  ! 


A  *;■ 


J 


•  Ml' 


Daiy  Bruin  dassified 


V 


1 


/ 


7800 

Holp  Wiinted 


CLERK/TYPIST 

Must  type  min.  70wpm  and  be  able  to  tran- 
scriiM.  Full-time  positkxi.  Salary-ft>eneflts. 
Fax  resume  to  E.  Kraft.  310-441-8010. 

CLINICAL 
V    LABORATORY 
—     TECHNICtAN- 
r     SUPERVISOR 

FT  positton  immediatety  available  for  a  U- 
censed  laboratory  scientist  In  a  private  cM-  i 
cal  laboratory  in  Santa  MonKa.  Labprovkles 
erKlocrino.  arxlrotogy.  serok>gy  and  immu- 
notogy  testing.  Incumt>ent  required  to  wor1( 
in  weekerKl  rotatkxis.  Salary  commensurate 
with  quaMfKatkxis  and  experience.  Submit 
applk:atk)ns  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 
Technotogy  Laboratories,  1245  I6th  Street, 
Suite  105,  Santa  Monks,  CA  90404  (Tel 
310-e2»0102). 

COACHES  NEEDED 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 

2000-2001  school  year.  Girts  Soccer,  varsi- 
ty and  JV  Lacrosse.  JV  Boys  BasketbaU. 
Pakl  posittons.  310-391-7127.  Call  Nate  ext. 
247  for  boys'  posittons.  Call  Gall  ext.  248  for 
girts' positions. 

COMPANION-for  active  sentor.  poet-stroke. 
Accompany  to  movies,  museums,  restau- 
rants Must  be  friendly  patient,  engage  In 
stimulating  conversatton  (politkJts.business). 
Payrate  $12-$15/hr.  BOE.  Contact  Lau- 
ra O323-M3^588ax1012^ 

COMPUTER  PROGRAMMING  COURSE 
READER  needed.  Profk:ient  in  C  &  VB. 
CorrpSci  UD/Grad  preferred.  Grade  via  In- 
ternet. llOff^r.  323-402-1230x1692 

COOL  LADY  seeks  driver  for  occaswnal  er- 
rands. Own  car  required.  VMfK  310-826- 
9150. 

CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HIRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  gel  paid.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$10.26/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/U 
acadarrtc  years  rsmakimg  with  vaM  driver's 
Hcanea.  Wab:  www.ucpd.ucla.edu/ucpcl/cso 
Email:  csoOucpd.ucia.edu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

F/T.  M-F  9-5.  Century  City  tocatton.  Seeking 
self-nrativaled.  energetic  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate. 
bMngual,  ootage  degree  pref.  Fax  raaume 

310-S53-3996. 

OEUVERY  DRIVB^S  WAHTEDI  Waeislay 
mornings,  Mandly,  good  driving  racom.  la- 
nUtor  wtt)  amarlBinmanl  todMitty  and  LA 
araa.  $10-$12^wur.  Cal  310-458-6891. 

DENTAL  OFFICE  rsoepttonist/offtoe  manag- 
er needed  tor  MWF  9^.  Must  know  typing, 
be  familar  w/Mlcroaoft  Wonl.  have  good 
communtoatton  eUBs.  be  oommittad.  have 
dasirs  to  make  a  dMIeranca.  Excatoni  salary. 
310«»-7494. _^_ 

DO  YOU  LOVE  GOOD 
FOOD? 

New  bakery/gourmat  tafca-0(M  shop  near 
Century  City  hWng  oountar  help,  ooQto.  bak- 
ers.  drivers.  Cal  310-562-1060. 

DRIVER  FOR  MESSENGER  SERVICE  F/T- 
P/T.  Salary-HMnMniaaton.  vaikl  Driver's 
Ltoansa.  Insurance,  and  motor  cyde  pre- 
tenad.  Fax  resume  to  661-799-7755. 

DRIVER/COMPANION 

For  14-yr-old  girt;  approx.  3:15-7:00pm.  M-F, 
waalalde;  at  laast  college  jr,  excel 
yadeafiliirty  hablM/drtving  racord.  own  car 
Very  ratatata.  Itoidbie,  $10/hr.  negotiable. 
Call  DebJilh  days:310-312-3138.  sven- 
ings:31 0-4^-1 310 

DRIVING  SjjSTRUCTOR  WANTED.  Fu»- 
time  or  part-time,  Westwood  drivtog  and  traf- 
fk:  school.  Cal  tor  Intonnalton.  310-824- 


EARN  $3000  -I- 
3  CANCUN  TRIPS! 

Al  Eivenaaa  paw  tor  2.  Set  your  own  hours. 
310-638-1371 


""Stel 


7800 

Help  Wiintetl 


7800 

Help  Wfinted 


$$$  Calling  all  Students!!  $$$ 
UCLA  Concessions  is  hiring!! 


4.1 


ConvniMt  location 

on  OamfMs  at  aN  UCLA  athletic  events  and  othar  special  events 

(  ^     ■'."''         ■-'.■•  - 

FhxIbI*  •ch9<tul» 

no  set  weekly  schedul*- 


shifts  availatile  during  the  weei(/weekend,  dayAilght 
wtiile  school  is  both  in/out  of  session 

Matnmonay 

mary  management  training  opportunities    , 
tx>nus  program  during  Men's  Baskett>all  season 
recruiting  bonus-  get  paid  by  getting  your  friends  to  worki 

Savgmonay 

discount  at  UCLA  Store 
half  off  meals  at  aU  ASUCLA  restaurants        . . 

Gnat  mvlronmBnt 

,  friendly  people 

fast  pace 

For  more  Info  or  an  application, 
contact  Sean  at  (310)  206-0736 


^r 


ExeeH—t  Pan  n«dble  Parl-Unw  Hours,  Qreat  bperience, 
ProtosekNial  ■nvlromiwiit.  Send  Resunias  Tbday  Ito: 

Fax:  (310)  793-9894;  T»l:  (310)  793-7704 
■mail:  HOUMAflOACPfllUIDS.COII 


EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSrrONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER r>eeded.  Catering  sales.  Maice  up  to 
$1  so/day  Part  or  fuH-time  worle  CalrDavid 
310-441-0394. 

FAST  PACE  Real  Esale/Finance  Company 
seeks  responstoia.  energetic  student.  Office 
experiertoe  required.  Fax  resume  to  310- 
275-5227. 

RUNG  AND  GENERAL  OFFICE  work  need- 
ed. Computer  Marata.  flexftile  hours  ottered. 
P/T.  $amr.  Fax  rasunw  310-659-0547  atin: 

FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

Needed  lor  pitvale  health  dut).  Pemtanent 
hours  avalsbla.  Health  insurarwe  oRarsd. 
Please  asi(  tor  Aaeon:3 10-659-5002. 

FULL  TIME  RECEPTKMIST  tor  WSalWOOd 
entertainment  law  firm.  Monday-Friday 
10AM- 7PM.  Good  phone  mannar  and  front 
office  apperance  a  must  EjtparlerKe  pre- 
ffered.  Fax  raauma  to  E.  Kraft  310-441-6010. 

QARDENER/MAINTENANCE/HANDYMAN 
in  the  Loa  Felz,  Los  Angelas  araa.  WW  pay 
$ia/hr.  For  regular  anploymanL  Cal  Joey 
310-399-4826.  4033  Sunset  Drive.  LA 
90027. 

GET  PAID  TO  PLAY!! 


AFTERSCHOOL  DAY  CARE 

new  staff  to  play  bal.  help  wNh  homawortt, 

interact  with  children.  Oradas  K-8lh.  310- 

470-9747. 

GIRLS  wanted  at  awiuaiva  social  dutM  in 
WLA.  Conversatton  only.  No  aicahol.  Flexi- 
ble  hours.  Earn  top  $$$.  323-441-0965 

GOOD  PAY!!! 

HARD-WORKING,  reliable,  athletk:  persons 
tor  p/l  work.  Good  pay  Work  outdoors.  Own 
car  a  pkis.  Cal  666-645-0946. 

HOME  CLEANERS.  PfT-ffT.  $8-$11/hr  and 
up.  To  dean  to  Westskte  areas.  Must  be  de- 
pendaMs  and  hava  car.  310-471-6212.  April. 

INFORMATION  SYS- 
TEMS ASSISTANT 
$27.067-$32,978 

COOROINATES  COMPUTER  USAGE  and 
rsadima  syslemAjser  problems  on  the  IBM 
AS400  arKl  mtorooomputer  systems.  Assists 
to  rsooncMng  and  audWng  vartous  compular 
reports  and  data  fMes.  KrKNvledge  of  practto- 
ee  and  prindpiaa  in  oparattng  and  maimato- 
ing  mini  microcomputer  syMHtts.  AbMy  to 
proAdenUy  operate  a  lOleay  catouMor  and 
type  40WPM.  Ability  to  aMdanlly  petfomn  de- 
tail andtor  lechntoal  Oflantad  tasks.  Two 
years  of  advanced  educatton  in  a  computer 
subject  (AA.AS.  Cartiftoate  program.etc.) 
and  one-year  computer  upateltof  experl- 
erx;e  on  mini  or  mtoro  systems.  QariarBl 
business  luiowrledBa  and  abMy  to  Nl  and 
move  SOtoa.  dsairabls.  Subatanlal  aqulvai- 
enis  may  ba  subaMMad  tor  tm  above.  Send 
resume  ta  Human  naaourcea.  Frank  0.  Lan- 
terman  Ragionai  Canter  3303  WMshlrs  Blvd.. 
Suite  700  Los  Angeles,  CA  90010  EOE. 


INTERNATIONAL  FIRM  seeks  experienced 
tetemarketers  for  office  in  El  Segundo.  B2B 
professtorul  sales  in  fast  growing,  high-de- 
mand market.  Salary,  commission,  bonus, 
and  benefits.  F/T  and  P/T  available.  Call 
Rhonda  at  800-601-1007  and  fax  resume  to 
310-607-9852. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR   RRM 

seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Service  Representative.  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  verbal  skiHs  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1768-|spattersonOii- 
girK.oom. 

INTERNATIONAL  PR  RRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  ReceptioniaL  Entry  level  position.  ItaH- 
an  a  plus.  $g[^-30hrs/wk  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
ferred. Fax  or  emaH  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son 323^653-1768^^atterTOnOljglncxo^ 

INVESTMENT  BANKING 

Looking  for  student  who's  ma)ored  in  this 
fleU  to  teach  concepts,  valuations,  and  Ex- 
cal.  310-656-4755. 

LAW  OFRCE  ENVIRONMENT.  ExcalenI 
opportunity.  Clerk  posittons  avalabto.  Flexi- 
bia  hours.  Minimum  20hrsAMk,  $6.S0/hr.  Fax 
resume  and  propoaad  avalabto  hours  to  Hu- 
man Raaourcaa  Oapl  310-274-2796  or  Mall 
to:  Lurle  ft  Zapeda  9107  Wlshira  Blvd.,  Su- 
ite  900.  Beverly  HIto,  CA  90210 

UBRARY  JOBS.  ShaMng  and  other  stacks 
dutias,  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start. 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Ubrary  Rm.  11617  or  caN  AnUgona  KiMay 
310-825-1064. 

MEDICAL  FRONT 
OFRCE  STAFF 

Ear,  Noaa,  Throat,  SpedaHst.  Tues  8anr)- 
12:30  and  Thurs  1pnv6pm.  To  start  ASAP. 
Fax  resume  310-792-0066. 

MEDICAL  OFRCE 

Research  assistant  Premed/optometry. 
Freshman/sophomore.  TuasftThurs. 
16hrs/wk.  Jules  Stem/UCLA.  Mtoimum  QPA 
3.5.  Cal:310-625-4749  or  Fax  Resunw:310- 
794-7904.  Attn:Verontea 

MLS  UMOUSINE  SER- 
VICE 

WEEKEND  JOB/  PART-TIME  data  en- 
tryftsome  billing,  no  experience  needed.  wHI 
tram,  cal  9-5  310-271-8559. 

MODELS  WANTED  by  profaastonal  photo- 
studto  for  upcoming  assignmanl.  Maia/Fa- 
male  Pro/Non-Pro.  Faahton/Commar- 
cial/Theatrical  CaH  for  appoimmanl  818- 
966-7933. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  drlveftwork  w/2  fun&gifted  kMs  ages  567. 
Perfect  scheduto  for  student.  Must  have  car. 
PfT  permananL  Excailani  salary.  Judy:310- 
561-114S 


seUihosc 


I    h 


7800 

Help  Wiiiited 


[^b'i  t^'jl^V 


Receptionist  needed  for  snuH  salon/ 
Day  Spa  phones  and  light  office  work. 

please  caH  Julia  (310)  474-2524 

1^ 2041  westwood  bivd. 


NONPROFIT  SEEKS  responsible,  outgoing 
people  to  support  chiklren/adults  with  dis- 
abilities througfKHJt  the  1^  area  Flexit>le 
hours.  Several  posittons  availalbe.  UP  to 
$14/hr.  Contact  Monica  0818-361- 
6400x129.  www.jaynolan.org 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  LuValle  Com- 
mons. We  work  with  your  schedule.  1/2  off 
rT>eals.  rruinagement  trainir>g  opportunity. 
Cal:310-625-1177. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  )obs  available  at  North  Campus. 
We  work  with  your  scf>edule.  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  CaU:310- 
206-0720. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  LuValle  Com- 
morra.  We  wori(  with  your  schedule.  1/2  of 
meals,  management  training  opportunity. 
Call:310-825-1177. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  North  Campus. 
We  work  with  your  schedule.  1/2  off  meals, 
management  trainirvg  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-0720 

NOW  HIRING 

COUNTER  HELP  POSITION  in  cafe. 
$7+tips/hr.  Part  Time/Full  Time.  Contact 
Roberto  310-247-1112  11am-6pm. 

OFFICE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CE0. 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company-Wesl- 
wood.  l0am-2pm/Full-time,  flexible  hours. 
Needexcellent  tetepfmne  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admlrVcomp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
ferred. Benefits/advancement.  FaxResZMar- 
ina:  310-475-1533. 

OFFICE-EXCELLENT  OPPORTUNITY  2 
P/T  posittons  available.  Flexible  hours.  Retail 
store  In  Westwood  Village.  310-208-8404 
from  12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
working  at  vartous  on-campus  events.  We 
offer  flexible  hours  that  vary  from  week  to 
week.  Cal:310-206-073S. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Conceaatona  has  great  part-time  jobs 
woriting  at  AthieMc  evarVs.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive txvHJS  program  for  tttose  who  can  com- 
mit to  wori<  tr>e  Men's  Baskett>aH  Season. 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  set  every  week. 
Call:310-206-0736 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Concesstons  has  great  part-time  jobs 
wortdrtg  at  Athletic  events.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive bonus  program  tor  ttx>ee  wtx)  can  com- 
mit to  wort(  trie  Men's  Basketball  Season. 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  sat  every  week. 
Cal:310-206-0736. 

OPPORTUNmr  OF  THE  MILLENNIUM!!! 
Inlamattonai  Company  needs  help  expand- 
ing. Free  TrainingI  Sat  own  hours!  ExcaBent 
Income!  $1500  PT-$7000FT.  800-335-6806. 
www.cortouerdraams.com. 

OPTICIAN  for  beautiful  Westwood  vHage 
optometric  offtoe.  P/T,  ftox  hours.  Must  be 
friendly,  outgoing,  and  cheerful.  Saiaa  ex- 
perience  helpful.  310-206-1384. 

P/T  ASSISTANT 

Private  home  otttoe,  data  entry.  Mac/Outok- 
en.  Accuracy  important.  Good  English  Own 
transporiatton.  Flextole  scheduto.  Weekdays 
only.  8-12hrs/wk.  310  394-2933. 

P/T  DATA  ENTRY/  DIS- 
PATCH  ASSISTANT 

10:30am-3:30pm.  M-F,  some  overtime. 
Computer,  heavy  phones,  and  knowledge  of 
LA  area  a  must.  Messenger  background  pre- 
ferred. Fax  resume  310-275-4439. 


Wednesday,  October  4, 2000        39 


7800 

Help  Wanleil 


P/T  RECEPTIONIST/OFFrcE  CLERK  for 
Century  City  firm  General  office  duties.  Fax 
resume  to  Cirxfy:  310-553-1540 

P/T  WRITER  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  perlectwnist  with  stror>g 
writing  skills  to  produce  mikjiy  technk^l  re- 
ports lor  interr^l  and  exterr^al  use.  $1 3/hr  to 
start.  Wage  increases  as  appropriate.  Mini-" 
mum  15hrs/wk.  Fax  resume  310-286-9126. 

PAID  INTERN  NEEDED  for  small  music 
mart(eting  co  I0-20/hrs/wk.  Good  phone 
personality,  org,  skills.  310-281-7812 

PARK  RANGER 

$8.65-$11.90/hr.  with  partial  benefits.  En- 
force pari(  rutes  and  regulatiorw;  disseminate 
inlormatton  and  assist  putJiic  in  the  part<:on- 
site  superviskjn  ol  commercial  film  compa- 
nies and  worit  department  special  events; 
assist  with  offtoe  duties.  Requires  one  year 
o(  college  majoring  In  Recreatton,  Outdoor 
Education,  Pari<  Ranger  or  related  fieW;  or 
one-year  paid/volunteer  experience  In  a  cus- 
tomer servtee  oriented  position.  Must  have  a 
valW  California  C  driver's  license  and  must 
be  able  to  obtain  CPR  and  First  AkJ  certifi- 
cates.Apply  immedialely-OPEN  UNTIL 
FILLED.  City  of  Beverty  Hills,  455  N.  Rextord 
Jjr.  #210,  Beverty  Hills.  CA  90210.  310-285- 
^071  EOE. 

PART-TIME  CHILDCARE/TUTOR  needed 
for  1st  and  2nd  grader.  Ertcino  Mulholland 
and  405  adjacent  Must  have  car.  Call  Jack- 
ie:31 0-826-2466. 


P/T  DRIVER/UTILITY 
TRAINEE 

Rexibto  hours,  $8/hour  Indudes  gasoline. 
Own  vahtoto.  vaNd  CaHfomia  driver's  H- 
cense  arto  proof  of  insurartoe.  ftorvsritok- 
ing  environment.  Clean-cut  indivklual. 
Staphante:310-395-3291 . 


P/T  General  Ofltea  Aaaittant.  CSA  Architects 
to  Westwood.  Fax  resume  to  310-624-8715. 

P/T  OFRCE  ASSISTANT 

WANTED  lor  family  owned  Real  Estate  Man- 
agement Company.  Proleaatonai,  RaMabie. 
Mature  Person  sought.  PC  akMs  a  plus.  323- 
850-5726 

P/r  OFFK:e  work.  CapaWe  person  to  do 
variety  of  jobs  In  busy  ratait  carpet  store, 
WLA.  Cal  Halan  310444-0220. 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTION/TECHNICAL  Bookstore  in 
WU^  ftas  one  opening  for  clerical  jwsittons. 
$7/hr.  Mornings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Michelte:310-474-7771 

PERSONABLE 
■   FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

With  some  sales  experience  for  West  Hoj||(r 
wood  upscale  gym.  Janice:31 0-577-6773. 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Detail-oriented  irxlivkjual  needed  to  assist 
with  light  bookkeeping,  organizing  and  filing. 
Quicken  experience  helpful.  Wori<  in  home 
offtoe  ctose  to  UCLA.  Flexible  hours  up  to 
$15hours/week.  Fax  resume  to:310-451- 
1785. 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  tor  family  (of  inter- 
est to  young  filmmakers).  15-20hrs/wk- 
$10^r.  3pm-6pm  Mon.,  Tues,  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  Filing/research. 
Rexibto  schedule/resourceful!!  Contact:  310- 
824-1444  (John).  Good  references  required. 
Non-Smoker.  Must  have  own  car&insurance. 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  NEEDED  lor 
young,  female,  quadrtputegk:  working  in  the 
entertainment  industry.  No  experience  nec- 
essary. Weekday  and  w^end  posittons 
available.  310-829-2693. 

PHARMACY  CLERK,  variabto  hours.  M-F, 
$8.50/hour.  310-859-3887. 

POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benaflls.  No  Experience,  exam 
info.  Cal  1-800-391-6656  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar. 

PROMOTERS  WANTED  tor  WeslsWe  Club. 
310-915-7595 

PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$600i/week.  310-724-6360.  Days  only. 

^CEPTIONIST  WANT- 
ED 

BEVERLY  HILLS  SALON  seeks  enargetfc 
recepttonisl.  F/T  or  P/T.  To  start  ASAP  310- 

278-1191. 

RECEPTIONIST  WANTED  P/T  for  hair 
saton.  Ask  for  Liana.  310-206-0101. 

RECEPTIONIST  WESTWOOD  LAW  OF- 
FKJES.  MonAWed.  9-5.  $8/hour.  Can  do 
homewortc  on  job.  310-470-3373. 

REGISTERED  US  nurses  wanted  NOW. 
$20-45AK>ur.  TAx-free  per-diem,  excepttonal 
benefits  package.  For  info,  email 
blessme430  reglsterdnurses.oom 

RESEARCHER 

For  Busirwss  Plan.  Thorough  research  skills, 
oorKise  writing,  organized,  and  reliable.  Fa- 
miliarity with  PC.  console,  and  arcade  games 
helpful,  spgreeneearthlink.net 

RESPONSIBLE  DRIVER  with  own  car  to 
drive  15yr.  oW  and  llyr  oM  from  St.  Moni- 
ca's to  Culver  CHy.  2:45pm  3-5  daya/wk. 
$150-250/wk.  I^re  $$  If  availabto  lor  physi- 
cal or  academk:  activities  until  4pm.  310- 
838-9448. ,1  ' 

RESTAURANT  IN  BEVERLY' HILLS  seeking 
person  to  answer  phones  and  pack  delivery 
orders  PfX  positton.  Morr^ing  hours.  Call 
310-271-0027. 


Display 
206-3060 


-i 


40       Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Chssffied 


\-  ,:■ 


7800 

Help  Wnnted 


RETAIL  SALES.  PT/FT.  WestvwxxJ  Blvd.  De- 
signer weddlng/evening  gowns.  Experience 
preferred,  motivated  and  friendly.  Great  op- 
portunity. Salary/commissions/bonuses.  Ex- 
cellent $$.  310-474-7808  Pauline. 

RETAIL  SALES.  Penny  Lane  Records  has 
P/T  night  positions  available.  15-20hrs/wk. 
$6.50/hr.  Appty  in  person.  10914  Kinross 
Ave. 

SALES  CLERK 

$7/hr.  No  experience  necessary.  Cashiering, 
working  with  patients.  UCLA  Hospital.  2e- 
venlngs,  3-7:30PM  11:3O-6:O0PM.  310-825- 
6069 


Dental  Assistant/ 
Receptionist 


Dental  Assistant/ReceptKxiist  needed  fof  dental 

orthodontjc  office  in  West  LA  with  excellent 

communication  slulls  Men..  Wed  ,  Fn  9  00AM- 

6:00PM  Experienced  preferred  $9  00    $1 1  00 

an  hour  (lease  call  (310)826-7494 

or  lax  resume  to  (310)826-9564 


SALES  POSITION 

F/T.  Growing  Century  City  company  seeks 
sales  person  wfx)  are  energetic  self-starters. 
Our  company  is  the  leader  in  the  procure- 
ment of  liquor  licenses  and  use  permits  in 
California.  Must  be  computer-literate.  Urban 
planning/legal  background/bilingual  applic- 
ants that  want  to  partk:ipate  in  our  exciting 
niche  business  call  our  offices  today  for  de- 
tails:31 0-553-6363  ext.18  or  fax  resume 
to:310-553-3996  Attn:Clndy. 

SALES  Popular  Westwood  Village  jewelry 
store  seeks  2  P/T  sales  associates.  Excel- 
lent opportunity.  310-208-8404  phone  from 
12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 

SCREENWRITERS 

Production/Management  Company  seekir>g 
writers  to  develop  concepts  for  in-house  pro- 
ducers. Send  samples  to:  Flexi-Film  Produc- 
tions. PO  Box49314,LA,CA  90049. 

SECRETARY  NEEDED.  SlO^r.  F/T.  M-F. 
8:30-5:30.  Handle  ptxxie  calls,  basic  secre- 
tarial duties.  Alex  Son  or  Connie  Son  213- 
252-1222. 

SECRETARY,  halftlme,  mornings,  to  RN  at 
VA  medical  center,  WLA.  Profkaent  in  word 
and  excel.  $11/hr.  Some  benefits.  Fax  re- 
sume to  Susan  Orrange  310-268-4404. 

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST  Small  WLA 
law  office  seeks  p/t  or  f/t  bilingual  (Spanish) 
individual.  Must  tiave  experience  with  word 
perfect  and  type  min  40wpm.  Call  Neil  310- 
445-1100  or  send  resume  310-445-7779. 

SELF-MOTIVATED  SALESPERSON  for  a 
fumiture  store  on  the  westslde.  Hours  flexi- 
ble. 310-477-5995. 

SMALL  SANTA  MONICA  LAW  FIRM  seeks 
secretary/administrative  assistant.  Must  t>e 
computer  literate.  Fax  or  email  resume  310- 
395-9880  or  iccoffk;emngr©earthlink.net 

:  SOUTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Bombshelter.  We 
work  with  yours  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-0727 

SPANISH  SPEAKING  TEACHING  assis- 
tants needed  at  kx:al  elementary  school.  Ap- 
prox  $8.B3/hr.  Ca»  Steve  310-473-2 1 72. 

STUDENTS  WANTED 

OUTGOING,  RESPONSIBLE  STUDENTS 
with  own  car.  Food  delivery.  11 -2pm.  P/T. 
Good  payl  jwoltzyOearthlink.net  or  call 
Steve  310-480-3247. 

SURVEY  ON  WEB 

lr>deperKlent  researcher  needs  help  putting  a 
survey  on  website  Fast  job,  fast  rtKxiey. 
Leave  message  310-312-0266. 

SWIM  INSTURCTOR 

P/r,  $10-12/hr.  310-472-7474  ext114. 

TANNING  SALON  POSITION  AVAILABLE. 
Good  Pay  Apply  at  1156  26th  St  Santa  Mo- 
nk;a,CA  310-828-8028. 

TELEMARKETING.  No  cold  calls.  $16- 
20+/hr,  bonuses  F/T-P/T  Must  have  desire 
to  make  big  $$$.  Flexible  schedule.  Great  for 
students.  Near  UCLA.  310-996-6701 
ext.298. 

TELEVISION  PRODUCTION  COMPANY 
kxjking  for  organized,  detail  oriented  person 
for  EQUIPMENT  ROOM  POSITION  Duties 
include  prepping  &  OCing  camera,  audio.  & 
lighting  equipment,  as  well  as  pick-up  *  de- 
livery of  various  productwn  equipment.  Ex- 
cellent job  for  a  college  student  taking  class- 
es during  the  day!  4pm- 10pm  Monday  thru 
Friday  Hours  will  vary,  some  late  nights  and 
weekends  required.  Good  pay  Great  entry- 
level  position  for  someone  Interested  in  get- 
ting into  the  Television  Production  Industry. 
Must  be  responsible,  trustworthy,  &  able  to 
wort<  self-supervised.  Must  have  dependable 
vehicle.  Position  available  Immediately  If  in- 
terested call  818-508-0888. 


Mr»  Expeiietice  Necessary 

Mov  Vomn,  dKUmi.  an  anslai. 

raoB  TV  -  Hlffls  -  Comnaddi  -  MifuinB 

/or/)ersonal  ituenHeiv  call  noir 

310.659.7000 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


7800 

Ht;l|)  Wanted 


TUTOR  for  active  senior,  post-stroke.  Needs 
help  with  Photoshop,  Pagemaker,  Qukdcen. 
Must  be  patient  and  frierxSy  Pay  rate  $40- 
50/hr.  BOE.  CaU  Laura  at  323-933-5880 
X1012. 

UPSCALE  SANTA  MOU\C^  RESTAURANT 
NEEDS  HOSTESS  Friday  and  Saturday 
night  5- 10pm.  $a/hr  310-449-4000. 

VALET  PARKING 
ATTENDANTS 


Flexible  hours,  great  tips,  Santa  Monica  and 
Marina  Del  Rey  areas.  310-214-1888.  Leave 
message. 

VETERINARY  MEDIAL  ASSISTANTI  P/T, 
Sun-Sat.,  anVpm  shifts  available.  Future  ve- 
terinary students  only  Will  train.  Call  323- 
933-8406.  Ask  for  Nahalia. 

VIDEO  PRODUCTION 
WORK! 

In  an  on-campus  television  studto.  Must 
qualify  for  "worit-study"  positions  (have  a  "job 


referral").     Contact 
bkmurphy@ucla.edu. 


Bnan:3 10-825-4 124, 


VIDEOTAPE  TRANSCRIBERS  needed 
$lO/hr  min.  F/T-P/T  available.  45wpm  on 
Microsoft  Word.  Fax  resume  to  818-995- 
5544. 

WLA.  RE.  Inv.  FIRM.  5  minutes  to  UCLA. 
PART-TIME  Administrative  /distant  for  of- 
fice wort<.  From  1:00-6:30pm.  M-F  Fax  310- 
471-6770. 


WANTED 


75people  will  pay  you  to  tose  weight  In  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  dmgs.  Call  now.  323-993-3391 . 

WANTED  AFTER  SCHOOL  TEACHER  P/T. 
3-6pm.  Must  have  car  and  valkl  driver's  li- 
cense. 213-385-3131. 

WANTED      ENTHUSIASTIC      BIOLOGY  . 
MAJORS  Interested  in  working  with  animals^ 
and  educating  children.  $lO/hr  Flexible,  P/T, 
call  The  Animal  Guys  310-392-5909. 

WANTED:  7th  &  8th  grade  Cross  Country 
Coach.  Martborough  School.  250  S.  Ross- 
more  Ave.  Start  ASAP-Nov  8.  $1200  for  sea- 
son. Call  Julie  Napoleon  323-935-1147 
ext467  or  email  napolejOmaribor- 
ough.la.ca.us 

WEB  DESIGNER.  Must  be  proficient  In 
HTML,  some  Javascript/CGI  experience  de- 
sired. Make  your  own  hours.  $12/hr  A  great 
start-up  opportunity!  Contact  rebec- 
casOucla.edu 

WESTLA  FILE  CLERK.  F/T.  $8-10/hr.  Flexi- 
ble hours  20-40hrs/wk.  Pleasant,  casual 
working  environment.  Contact  Jennifer  at 
310-268-0788. 

WESTWOOD 
PART-TIME  SALES 

Art  gallery  seeks  PR  sales  people.  One 
bk>ck  from  campus.  Pk:ture  framing  experl- 
er^ce  a  plus.  310-208-1896. 

WESTWOOD  RETAILER  3mi  from  campus 
(easy  bus  access)  needs  sales  person  to 
start  immediately,  selling  printed  Christmas 
cards  in  the  store-  lA  or  p/t.  Wort<  Into  last 
December.  Open  Mon-Sat.  WE  can  train 
you.  Salary  negotiable.  Please  caH  Chert 
310-441-7595. 

WORK  AT  HOME 

Intematkinal  business.  P/T:  $S0O-$200(Vmo. 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  WHI  train.  310-558- 
5888. 


8000 

Internships 


Dr  MARTEN'S  AIRWAIR 

INTERNSHIP  Leading  footwear  manufac- 
ture seeks  ambitk)us,  creative  intems  for 
street  mart<etlng  team  For  more  Info  call  Ja- 
net 310-450-5398. 


8000 

lnt(;riishi|) 


TV    PRODUCTION    CO 

Seeks  intems  for  matfcating  and  productkm. 
May  lead  to  pakl  positkxi  for  right  candWate. 
Fax  resume  818-846-7961. 

WESTWOOD  STUDENT  Ci^  Unton  offers 
vokintary  internships  in  Bankir^g.  Sales  , 
Martteting,  Accounting.  No  experience  nec- 
essaryl  AppHcattons  available  01 24  Kerckh- 
off. 


81 OO 

Personal  Assistance 


PHYSICAL  • 

ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  disabled  male  in  Reiber  Hall.  A  few 
hrs/day  Flexible  shedule.  $10/hr  Call  Alex 
949-369-9871  or  310-267-8189. 


Aparlnienls  for  Rent 


FREE  ARTS  FOR  ABUSED  CHILDREN  IS 
SEEKING  UNPAID  INTERNS.  PLEASE 
CONTACT  KARINA  AT  310-313-4ART 


INTERNSHIP  POSITION 


POST-PRODUCTION 
student  film  projects 
2292 


INTERNSHIP    and 
Call  Joel:3 10-828- 


MEDIA  PRODUCTION.  Communication, 
film,  broadcast  majors.  Zoom  Culture,  an  in- 
temet  broadcast  networt<,  is  seeking  enthu- 
siastic student  to  create  video  programming. 
Incredible  opportunity  gain  hands-on  experi- 
ence. Email  jefferyOzoomculture.com. 
www.zoomculture.com. 


MOLECULAR  BIOLOGY 

INTERN.  Smart  biochemistry  undergrad 
r>eedad  for  UCLA  research  project  in  compu- 
tational molecular  biology/blolnformatics 
Must  know  basic  biochemistry.  Computer 
skills  needed  (preferable  UNIX)  Dr  Pet- 
lit.310-206^748. 


•WESTWOOD  VILLAGE.  MIDVALE  N.  OF 
LEVERING.  LARGE  2-BDRM  APT  GAR- 
DEN VIEW.  DINING  ROOM,  UNIQUE, 
CHARM.  FRONT  AND  REAR  ENTRANCE 
310-839-6294.* 

1  MIN  TO  UCLA 

WESTWOOD.         Furnished.  Single: 

$850/nf>onth.  Carpeted.  Gated  complex. 
Quiet.  Pool.  Laundry,  lyr  lease.  310-824- 
1830. 

2&3BDRM.  LARGE,  bright,  view.  Microwave, 
oven,  refrigerator,  dishwasher,  washer/dryer 
in  uniL  21 -ft.  Jacuzzi  on  nx>f.  Walking  dis- 
tance to  UCLA.  310-475-0807. 

BEV  HiaS  ADJ.  APT  2-f2.  balcony,  hA« 
fkwrs,  laundry,  paridng.  $1250.  818-623- 
4444.  www.altofLA.com 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ 

Charming  Spanish  duplex.  2bed/1bath.  Ex- 
cellent Location.  One  bkx*  from  Beverty 
Hills.  Hardwood  fkxxs.  Living/dining  room. 
$165Q'nfK)nth.  310-858-8817. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  U2BEDROOM 
$8954UP  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM. 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS.  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS. 
310-839-6294. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  CHARMING  APARTMENT. 
2-t-l.  hardvirood  fkx>rs,  laundry,  garage. 
$1400.  310-395-REI^.  www.westskleren- 
tals.com 

BEVERLY  HILLS.  GUESTHOUSE  w/full 
kitchen,  laundry,  furnished  or  unfurnished. 
$1000.  310-395-RENT.  www.westsideren- 
tals.oom 

BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdmV3bth.  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdrm/3bth,  $2950.  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alarm,  gated  parking. 
Spacious,  carpet.  Prime  kx:aUonl  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 

BRENTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

Luxury  bulMing.  pool,  parking,  gated  entry, 
laundry,  one  and  two  bedrooms  from 
$1500/month.  310-312-1223. 

BRENTWOOD  ADJ  APT  2+1  1/4,  R«S. 
laurvlry,  partting  Included  $1435.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.westsklerentals.com 

BRENTWOOD  BACHE- 
LOR 
APARTMENT 

FOR  RENT.  Grad  student  preferred.  Upper, 
front,  walk-In  closet,  tub  and  shower  Ck>se 
to  bus.  $695/rTX)nth.  310-275-7139. 

CULVER  CITY  APARTMENT  1+1.  laundry, 
fresh  paint,  remodeled  kitchen  $650  310- 
395-RENT  www.westsiderentals  com 

CULVER  CITY  APARTMENT  in  4-plex.  2+1, 
enclosed  garage,  laundry,  private  and 
secure  parking.  $850.  310-395-7368 
www.westsiderentals.com. 

LA  CRESCENTA  APARTMENT  2+2.5,  bal- 
cony, patio,  laundry,  gated  parting.  $1200. 
818-623-4444.  www  allolLA  com 

MAR  VISTA  TOWNHOUSE  2+2,  catok,  laun- 
dry, subterranean  part<ing.  $1295  310-395- 
RENT.  wwwwestslderental8.com 

MARINA  DEL  REY  ADJ  APT  2+2,  bateony 
high  ceilings,  laundry,  sub  partdng.  $1150 
310-395-RENT  www.we5tskJerentals.com 


8/*00 

Apartments  for  Rent 


NEAR  UCLA 

Large,  furnished  t>achek>rs.  fumisfied  with 
utilities  provkJed.  Locked  entry,  good  k>ca- 
tk>n.  buses  shoppir^  centers.  $53S/month. 
310-575-8987. 

PALMS.  Smgie  apt  from  $575.  $600deposlt 
1-year  lease  only  Stove,  refrig. .carpets,  vert, 
btinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message.  8am- 
5pm  only. 

PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT  2+1.5,  w/c 
pet.  large  ck>sets,  pool,  laundry,  partdrig 
Inckjded.  $995.  310-395-RENT.  www.west- 
skterentals.com 

PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT.  2+1  3/4. 
laundry,  garage.  Wont  LastI  $1360.  310- 
395-RENT  www.westsk1erentals.com 

Santa  Monica  1bd/1bth,  living  room,  partdng 
space,  storage,  kitchen  w/oven  &  refridg. 
$  1 1 00/mo.  Zay  3 1 0-54 1  -2887. 

SANTA  MONICA  APARTMENT  private  room, 
t>ath,  R&S,  laurxlry,  patio,  fireplace.  $495. 
310-395-RENT.  wvtrwwestslderentals.com 

SANTA  MONICA  APARTMENT  2+2.  bal- 
cony laundry,  paridng  included.  $1425.  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westskJerentals.com 

SANTA  MONICA  HOUSE  furnished,  private 
room.  bath,  fi/w  fk>ors,  w/d  utilities  pakJ. 
$480.  310-395-RENT.  www.westsideren- 
tals.com  * 

SANTA  MONICA,  furnished  private  room, 
bath,  near  beach,  R&S,  laundry.  $450.  310- 
395-7368.  www.westsiderentals.com. 

VENICE 

1BDRM  $1390+  28DRM  $1680+Spectal  pri- 
vate garden  apartments.  1bdrm-$1650 
2bdnn-$2200.  Lincoln  Place  Garden  Apts. 
Call  310-450-8119. 

VENICE  APARTMENT  STUDIO.  1  bath,  only 
steps  to  t>each,  laurxJry.  utilities  pakJ.  paridng 
included.  $650.  310-395-RENT.  www.west- 
skJerentals.com. 

WEST  COVINA  l-KXJSE  3  bedroom,  hard- 
wood  fkwrs,  yard.  $1500.  818-623-4444. 
www.aHo(LA.oom 

WEST  LA  GUESTHOUSE  for  rent  $675/mo. 
utilities  irx:luded.  Ck>se  to  bus  stop.  1 5  min- 
utes from  UCLA.  Female  preferred.  Call  310- 
312-0460  for  an  appt. 

WESTWOOD 

New.  1+1  apartment.  2  miles  to  campus. 
Prime  k)cation.  Private  entry.  $850.  Female 
preferred.  310-475-9145. 

WESTWOOD  APARTMENT  bachelor,  1 
bath,  laundry,  small  fndge.  $675.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.westskterentals.com 


^Westwootf  cpfaga 


Singly  w/  Shared  Bathroom 
$930 -$965 

Single  ml  Private  Bathroom 

$965  -  $1095 

1  Bedroom 

$1210 -$1500 

PirkingavaUaMefor 
1  Btdrooms  only 

310-208-8505 


WESTWOOD  APARTMENT  2+1.  patio, 
laundry.  Winds,  garage.  $1450.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.westskterentals.com 


WESTWOOD  BEAUTIFUL  BACHELOR 
FOR  RENT  Walk  to  UCLA.  1  bk)ck  from 
campus.  Partying,  security  buikJIng.  letrigera- 
tor.etc.  $700/mo.  310-476-8090. 

WESTWOOD.  2BORM/2BATH.  $1450  AND 
UP  TILE  KITCHEN,  STEPDOWN  UVING 
ROOM.  HIGH  CEILING.  CHARM.  1  MILE 
SOUTH  OF  WILSHIRE.  SOME  W/BAL- 
CONY.310-839-6294. 


860G 

Coiulo/Townlioiise  (or  Rent 


1BDRM/2BTH,  security  bulWlng/garage, 
sunny  w/view,  pool/jacuzzl.  suana/gymi 
large  ctosets.  vacant  11/15.  lea»es$1275/mo 
310-471-1335.  VJ 


8700 

Conrio/Townhoiiso  for  Sale 


IMAGINE  OWNING  WILSHIRE  Corrtdor/Ht- 
Rise  single,  1or2bdrm  $75K-$150K.  Walk  to- 
UCLA/Village,  24hr/socurity.  Spectacular 
views,  pool,  Jacuzzi,  sauna,  valet  senrice 
Agent-Bob  310-478-1835ext.109 


8800 

Giicsthoiisn  for  Rent 


CULVER  CITY 
GUESTHOUSE 

Single  guesthouse  in  great  neighborhood 
Easy  periling,  near  Overiand  and  Jefferson. 
$600/month.  Utilities  included  310-572- 
1239. 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


SAhnA  MONICA  -2bd/1bth.  Cooter.  2  park- 
ing spaces  +  storage.  Breakfast  room. 
Kitchen  w/  oven.refridg.  $1350/rTX).  Zay  310- 
541-2887. 

WESTWOOD-1/2  MILE 
FROM  UCLA 

Prime  k)catlon.  share  house  $1200- 
1400/month.  www.lasolutions.com/renthtm 
ttffany.kangOexcite.com 


9^00 

Jlooni  for  Rent 


BEVERLYWOOD,  $500/MO.  Bedroom  for 
rent  in  private  home.  Own  enterance  and 
bathroom.  Kitchen  Prtvelages  and  Utilites 
included.  310-839-9802 

LOOKING  FOR  PVT  ROOM  for  rent.  Max 
$350.00/mo  +utilittes  in  Santa  Monna/West- 
wood.  Clean.organized.responsible  senior 
student.  Partdrg  needed.  Call  John  626-201- 
6553. 

WESTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

bedroom  fumiture  optional.  1  roommate,  fe- 
male/non-smoker Off-street  partdng.  $650, 
includes  utilities.  310-231-8200  ext  333. 

WESTWOOD 

Walk  to  UCLA.  Male-Only.  Large,  private  fur- 
nished bdrm  w/bath.  Kitchen  privileges,  laun- 
dry, partdng.  $700/month.  Another  room 
$600/month.  310-473-5769. 

WESTWOOD.  1/2  mile  from  UCLA,  own 
room(s).  Share  clean  fKxise  Professkxtal  or 
student  $1200/month.  www.lasolu- 
tion8.corrVrent.htm,  tiffany.  kangOexc- 
ite.com. 


9500 

Roommates-Private  Room 


APARTMENT  to  share  Shentwn  Oaks. 
Private  bedroom  w/hardwood  fk>ors, 
kitctienAlaundry.  Non-smokir^g  female,  no 
pets.  $550/nx)  Inckjdes  utilities.  Avaiiabie 
Octl.  818-632-0584. 

ASUN/QUIET/CLEAN/MALE.  Bus  in  front 
house.  Westwood^kx).  3-mo.  min  stay.  Re- 
quired 2  good  references.  Private  bedroom 
sharabalh.  $5S0/month,  share  becVtMth  in- 
dudea  uMWes.  $40iWay  310-475-8787. 

BEVERLY  HtUS  private  room  and  bath  in 
2bdrm/2bth  bright,  upper  apt.  Redwood 
fkxjrs.  antique  and  contemporary  fumiture. 
t*M  kitchen,  neighbors.  Female  student  or 
profesatonal.  $950.  310-990-1781. 

PARK  LA  BREA  Urge  ibdnn/lbth.  Very 
dean,  one  neat  person.  $600/mo.  213-391- 
4044. 

WEST  LA/PALMS  Looking  lor  female  non- 
smoker  to  share  2bed.  2  1/2  bath  condo. 
$600/rtx)nth  each  Water  and  trash  pakJ. 
dishwasher,  washer/dryer.  Partially  fur- 
nished. 310-478-5677. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt  Fun,  outgoing 
female  kx>king  for  female  roommatel  Own 
bed/t>ath  in  2txJnTi/2bth  apartrmnt,  gated 
partdng.  Jacuzzi  on  roof,  security  buikJing. 
Available  1/01,  $900/mo  310-209-2665. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE:  Furnished  Room  In 
great  2bd,  1/3rd  mi  campus.  Historic 
Bkxjk.Flreplace.  Books.  Music  Mature  per- 
son to  mind  apartment,  cats  when  other 
occupant  travels.  Makf.  Utilities  included. 
$670.  310-208-6606. 

WLA  female  roommate(s)  wanted  to  share 
one  large  room  (okay  lor  two)/private  bath  in 
a  2bdrm/2bth  apt  Gated  partting, 
$697.50/mo+1/2u«llties.  310-508-2783 
Cathy  Lin 


9600 

Roommatf;s-Share(l  Room 


WESTWOOD-  phat  pad,  548  Kelton.  3bdrm. 
need  one  nnale  to  share  room.  $4l7/month. 
No  psychos.  310-209-1682. 


9700 

Stil)l.;tS 


AVAILABLE  NOWlll  Sepulveda&Nattonal 
Share  2bdnn/2bth.  Furnished  room:bunk 
bed.  draeeer.  ctoset.  desk.  UntH  end  of  quar- 
ter Dec  $600+haif  utilities.  310-610-2925. 


Display 
206-3060 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


A  BEAUTIFUL  ROOM  4min  from  UCLAJn 
exchange  for  tutoring  (lOhrs),  some  drivlrig. 
KkJs-14412.  Female  UCLA  stiitenu  only 
310-271-7575. 

BRENTWOOD 

GUESTHOUSE 

FOR  HELP 

Private  entrance:  gated  property  with  pool. 
For  after-school  help  with  chiWren  (14&12 
years).  Including  driving.  310-476-4297 

f^REE  PRIVATE  ROOM+BATH.  Single  father 
needs  mature  student  for  p/t  help  v^lth  4-yr- 
old  twins.  20hrs/wk.  must  own  car+in- 
surance.  310-838-5720,  jahanOmedi- 
aone.net. 


:9r 


FENDRICK       ^     - 

from-|a9e4«-  ■^■^■■■C^\ ',  ''■,0, 

dachinan. 

"She's  very  intense,  but  when  times 
come  when  we're  really  excited,  she' 
does  a  really  good  job  celebrating  her 
excitement  and  getting  other  people 
to  have  a  good  time  out  there." 

This  is  one  of  the  things  that 
Fendrick  strives  to  do  on  the  court. 

"If  we're  ever  down  or  everyone 
looks  like  they  have  long  faces,  I  try  to 
make  a  joke  to  lighten  the  mood  and 
bring  everyone  together,"  she  said. 

She  entered  a  team  chock-full  of  tal- 
ented veteran  players  and  earned  her- 
self a  starting  position.  At  the  time, 
Banachowski  was  looking  for  a  way  to 
better  balance  his  team's  offensive 
attack  -  and  by 

ntqving  Ashley  — — i^^^-^— 
Bowles  to  the 
right  side  and 
starting  Lauren 
on  the  left,  he 
found  what  he 
was  looking  for. 

"She  proved 
herself  to  be  the 
best  in  the  com- 
petition during 
the  preseason,"  ____^___^^^^ 
Banachowski 
said.  "She  has 
the  skills  to  hold  down  position." 

It's  not  just  her  hitting  or  her  block- 
ing, but  her  digging,  serving,  and  abil- 
ity to  step  in  and  set  that  makes  her 
such  a  threat  to  the  team  on  the  other 
side  of  the  net.  Fendrick  is  second  on 
the  Bruin  squad  in  digs  with  1 27,  and 
leads  the  team  with  28  aces,  four  more 
than  she  had  in  the  1999  season. 

"She's  a  solid  passer  and  defensive 
player  as  well  as  hitting,  and  does  a 
great  job  blocking,"  Bachman  said. 
"She  does  really  well  all  around." 

Bruin  setter  Erika  Selsor  agrees. 

"She's  a  very  solid  player  for  us. 
She's  a  great  blocker  and  hitter,"  she 
said.  "Things  have  been  a  little  differ- 
ent for  us  because  she's  moved  to  the 
right  side  recently,  but  it  seems  to  be 
working  out  really  well  for  her  right 
now." 

In  the  game  of  volleyball,  the  glory 
comes  with  the  position  at  the  left 
front  of  the  court.  This  player  gets  the 


"She's  a  very      . 
solid  player  for  us. 
She's  a  great  blocker 
and  hitter." 

Erika  Selsor 

Teammate 


better  on  the  right. 
-  It  turned  out  to  be  aj)erfect  fit. 
■  '  "We* look  to  her  fo  be  a  power  hit- 
ter for  us  and  a  big  blocker,  and  she's 
come  up  with  some  big  blocking  plays 
and  her  hitting  has  been  rapidly 
improving  as  she's  getting  stronger," 
Banachowski  said. 

•  Fendrick  is  dubbed  in  the  UCLA 
media  guide  as  a  player  capable  of 
both  right  and  left  side  play.  And  after 
careful  consideration  about  which 
side  is  better,  she  gives  her  final 
answer. 

"I,  really  like  the  right  side  because  I 
feel  like  it's  a  more  all-round  posi- 
tion," Fendrick  said.  "You  get  to 
block  a  lot  of  balls,  and  you  dig  a  lot  of 
hard  balls,  and  there's  the  setting  too." 
It's  this  fast-paced  action  that  keeps 
Fendrick  coming  back  for  more  and 
it's    the    moves 
■■■'■■■^~^""""      that  go  unrecord- 
ed on  the  Stat 
sheet  that  bring 
her  the  most  sat- 
isfaction. 

"I  really  love 
anything  that 
doesn't  happen 
very  often,  the  lit- 
tle things." 
Fendrick  said.  "I 
.'•    •  love  picking  up  a 

ball  that's  an 
overpass  or  get- 
ting a  ball  that  everyone  thinks  is  defi- 
nitely down,  or  blocking  a  ball  that 
you're  solo  blocking  on  or  getting  an 
ace. 

Games  like  the  one  against  Cal, 
when  Fendrick  did  damage  across  the 
board  with  a  .417  hitting  percentage, 
1 1  digs  aiKl  a  school  record  seven  aces 
in  a  four-game  match,  show  why  she  is 
a  starter  on  the  UCLA  squad. 

And  with  the  UCLA  jersey  comes 
another  kind  of  pressure.  When  teams 
face  off  against  the  Bruins,  they  face 
off  against  one  of  the  premier  volley- 
ball programs  in  the  nation. 

But  instead  of  letting  this  pressure 
intimidate  her,  Fendrick  uses  it  as  fuel. 
"I  feel  like  I  want  to  make  a  mark." 
Fendrick  said.  "I  want  to  keep  the  tra- 
dition going.  I  like  how  every  team  is 
fired  up  to  play  you." 

This  week's  match  against  the 
Trojans  may  be  the  most  telling  of  the 
conference  season.  With  USC  holding 


most  sets,  the  most  kills,  and  the  most     strong  at  No.  5,  the  eighth-ranked 


attention  from  the  blockers. 

The  right  side  is  a  different  chal- 
lenge. This  player  must  put  up  the  big 
block  against  the  other  team's  left 
side,  and  this  is  just  what  Fendrick 
does. 

She  played  on  the  left  through  her 
rookie  year,  and  moved  to  the  right 
side  this  year,  mostly  because  of  an 
ankle  injury  she  suffered  over  the 
summer.  Fendrick  lost  some  training 
time  due  to  the  injury  and 
Banachowski  thought  she  would  do 


-Bruins  have  a  challenge  waiting  due 
east  of  Westwood. 

But  like  always,  Fendrick  will 
approach  the  game  v^th  a  realistic 
mindset  and  clear  objective. 

"We  want  to  be  the  best  team  we 
can  be  in  there."  she  said.  "We've 
been  going  over  our  mental  routines  - 
what  we're  going  to  do  if  we  get  down 
a  point.  Play  each  play,  point  by  point 
and  don't  think  about  the  outcome, 
don't  think  about  ranking." 

And  take  it  as  it  comes. 


KARON 

From  p(^  4S 


addition.  Wild  Man  has  had  the  bene- 
fit of  working  with  a  UCLA  tumbling 
coach,  and  I'll  tell  you.  there's  noth- 
ing more  impressive  than  a  64  guy 
doing  a  back  fiip. 

However,  cheering  is  not  all  fun 
and  flips  (and  hoisting  attractive 
ladies).  It  also  involves  serious 
strength  and  conditioning.  Many 
nights  Wild  Man  has  returned  com- 
pletely exhausted  from  double  days,  a 
coiKept  usually  restricted  to  football. 
He  endures  excessive  abuse  from  fans 
on  both  sides  of  the  ball,  and  has  been 
harassed  in  Minnesota,  Ohio, 
Oregon,  Arizona  and  Washington. 

"Most  comments  have  to  do  with 
male  cheerieaders  being  gay,  or  some- 
thing stupid  about  athletic  support- 
ers." Wild  Man  said.  "It's  easy  for  me 
to  ignore  these  comments  because  I 
get  to  spend  all  my  time  with  some  of 
the  hottest  giris  in  the  school. 
Besides,  most  people  yell  from  a  dis- 
tance. No  one's  gonna  say  anything 
when  they're  within  reach  of  a  64, 
22S  pound  guy." 


Wild  Man  speaks  the  truth.  At  a 
recent  game  in  Eugene,  4S.000 
Oregonians,  many  of  whom  had 
spent  too  much  time  in  the  sun  and 
way  too  much  time  from  civilization, 
took  to  the  field  to  congratulate  their 
team. 

Not  a  good  time  to  be  wearing 
blue  and  gold. 

Wild  Man  and  his  troop  of 
resilient  cheerleaders  stood  their 
ground,  absorbing  untold  abuse,  but 
smiling  in  the  face  of  danger. 

After  the  game  they  were  forced  to 
wade  through  a  sea  of  Green  and 
Yellow  for  a  mile  and  a  half  until  they 
reached  their  hotel. 

A  certain  reporter  took  the  easy 
way  out,  donning  neutral  colon  and 
hiding  behind  the  wheel  of  a  rental 
car.  Not  Wild  Man.  He  walked  the 
whole  way  with  a  smile  on  his  face 
and  a  pom-pom  in  his  hand. 

You  can  e-mail  Adam  Karon  at 
akaron^media.ucla.edu.  If  you  want 
your  response  to  be  considered  for 
Sports'  Letters  to  the  Editor,  please  e- 
mail  those  responses  to 
sports#nf)cdia.ucla.edu  and  note. 
'Letter'in  the  subject 


OaflyBnimSiMrts 


Wednesday,  October  4, 2000       41 


every  S^8l 

■L  lb**'' 


for  advertising 
information,  please  call 
825-2161 

watch  for  It  on  newstands 


mater M* SfriM ttMitcr fai Ifec HalioB's Capitol!   ^QQ  1 

HBrefs  your  (^Kinoe  to  Irwestfgate  your  career  opHor^ 

arnJ  gairt  work  experlerxse  as  a  Ml-Hrrte  entry  level  professkxKil  for  ten  weeks. 


^  Wed,Oct4-12:00Dooii-lK)0pin 
^  ThuTB,  Oct  5  -  5:00piii-6:00pm 
~y^  IVies,  Oct  10  -  S:00piii-6:00inii 
^  Wed,  Oct  11  -  12:00noon-l:00pm 
[yf  Tlnirs,  Oct  12  -  S:00iHii-6:00pni 
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i^  Wed,  Oct  18  -  12:00noon-l :00pm 

DIAMIMIS 

^  Friday.  Octo^K.20. 2000.  Spm 


Honsing,  UC  Preridcat's  SchoUnhip  Stipend  Prognmi,  and  a 

loan  program  are  avaflable. 

There  is  also  a  $3000  stipend  stndent  director  position 

available 

Meetings  ate  held  at  EXPO,  Roran  200,  StratlimOTe 
Building  in  fitont  of  Lot  8.  Any  questions  call  Dane  at 

(310)  206-9980  or  dbrayo@saoDet.acla.eda. 
'  Applications  and  info  aboat  die  Washingtmi  D.C,  ' 
program  will  be  given  out  at  the  meetings.  ' 


!* 


vfl 


'^^ 


42       Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


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OlYMPICS:  V 

/From page 44..,,^  ^''''-.-n.-v  ■■■■^'i'- 
Sattarkhanov  of  Kazakstan,  22-14, 
giving  him  a  silver  medal  and  leav- 
ing the  American  team  with  ondarst 
shot  at  winning  its  only  gold  in 
Australia. 

Ricardo  Williams  wasn't  up  to 
the  task.  He  was  defeated  27-20  by 
Mahamadkadyz  Abdullaev  of 
Uzbekistan  in  his  gold  medal  bout  at 
139  pounds. 


The  United  States  pfotested  the 
decisions  in  both  bouts,  with  a  ruling 
expected  later  in  the  day. 

In  each  of  the  past  two  Olympics, 
U.S.  boxers  had  won  just  a  single 
gold  medal.  In  Australia,  they  failed 
to  reach  even  that  modest  total  - 
ending  up  with  two  silver  and  two 
bronze,  two  less  than  the  one  gold 
and 'five  bronze  won  in  Atlanta. 

•  Wrestling:  Disaster  struck 
quickly  with  four  straight  losses 
Sunday,  dashing  any  hopes  of  a  U.S. 
gold  -  the  first  time  that's  happened 
since  Mexico  City  in  1968. 

Ex-Iowa  wrestlers  Terry  Brands 
and  Lincoln  Mcllravy  lost  close 
semifinal  matches;  Brands  and 
Mcllravy  won  later  to  each  take  a 
bronze.  Kerry  McCoy  and  Charles 
Burton  lost  tight  quarterfinal  match- 
es and  were  shut  out  of  the  medals. 
On  Saturday,  U.S.  wrestlers 
Brandon  Slay  and  Sammie  Henson 
had  won  silver  after  tough  defeats  in 
the  finals. 

Greco-Roman  gold  tnedalist 
Rulon  Gardner,  who  ended  the  13- 
year  undefeated  streak  of  Russian 
super-  heavyweight  Alexander 
Karain,  will  carry  the  U.S.  flag  dur- 
ing the  Olympic  closing  ceremony 
Sunday.     ^.«»^^^ 

/  Drugs:  The  last  day  of  the 
Sydney  Olympics  started  with  an  all- 
too-familiar  refrain:  three 
Olympians,  one  a  bronze  medalist, 
busted  for  steroids. 

Armenian  lifter  Ashot  Danielyan 
was  stripped  of  his  medal  after  a 
positive  test  for  the  steroid  nan- 
drolone,  becoming  the  fourth 
weightlifter  to  test  positive  in  the 
Summer  Games. 

Greco-Roman  wrestler  Fritz 
Aanes  of  Norway  also  tested  posi- 
tive for  nandrolone  after  losing  a 
bronze-medal  match  Wednesday, 
IOC  medical  commission  chairman 
Prince  Alexander  de  Merode  said 
Sunday. 

De  Merode  also  formally 
announced  that  Russian  400-meter 
runner  Svetlana  Pospelova  tested 
positive  for  the  steroid  stanozolol  in 
an  out-of-comp^tition  test  at  the 
games. 

Eight  athletes  tested  positive  in, 
Sydney  since  the  games  began  Sept. 
16,  with  more  than  50  others  caught 
in  pre-games  tests  around  the  world, 
including  a  charge  that  Marion 
Jones'  husband,  C.J.  Hunter,  tested 
positive  for  nandrolone.  That  figure 
doesn't  include  allegations  that  U.S. 
officials  ignored  positive  tests  for  up 
to  1 5  of  its  athletes. 

The  eight  drug  positives  are 
quadruple  the  two  recorded  at  th^ 


Atlanta  Games  in  1996  and  the  most 
at  a  Summer  Games  since  10  in 
Seoul  in  1988. 

•  Water  polo:  A  10-8  loss  to  Italy 
left  the  U.S.  squad  with  a  sixth-place 
finish  in  Sydney  -  one  spot  up  from 
1996,  but  still  a  disappointment.  The 
United  States  finished  with  a  record  . 
of  2-5-1  in  the  competition. 

•  Track:  Michael  Johnson  and 
Marion  Jones  wrapped  up  their 
Olympics  the  same  way  they  started 
them:  in  spectacular  sprints  to  gold-*^ 
medal  finishes.       .  ''■;:•-;.  -  >'-r'-'   '"■  ■ 


DRUGS 

From  page  45 

administered  by  the  USOC  in  1999, 
there  were  207  positives  -  158  for  stim- 
ulants, 29  for  steroids  and  20  others. 
Only  10  resulted  in  suspensions. 

USATF,  which  has  denied  any 
cover-ups,  has  commissioned  an  inde- 
pendent panel  to  examine  the  federa- 
tion's drug-testing  procedures.  It  has 
also  offered  to  turn  over  its  entire  dop- 
ing control  programs  to  the  World 
Anti-Doping  Agency. 

"Our  credibility  has  been  under 
attack,"  USATF  executive  director 
Craig  Masback  said  Saturday.  "The 
reputation  of  the  U.S.  Olympic  team, 
in  particular  the  track  and  field  ath- 
letes, has  been  besmirched.  This  is 
wrong." 


For  the  U.S.  track  team,  it  started  - 
and  finished  with  Jones,  wbj^hrived 
in  the  Sydney  spotlight.  She  leaves 
Australia  with  three  golds  and  two 
bronzes  -  falling  short  of  her  goal  of 
five  golds  but  still  becoming  the  first  * 
woman  to  win  five  medals  in  a  single 
Olympics. 

She  also  became  the  first  woman 
since  Florence  Griffith  Joyner  in 
1988  to  win  three  track  golds  in  one 
games.  And  shedid"  most  of  it  while 
•shrugging  off^^/^gations  that  her 
husband,  shot  putter  C.J.  Hunter, 
had  used  steroids. 

Jones  won  the  100  and  200  meter 
sprints,  took  a  bronze  in  the  long 
jump  and  a  bronze  in  the  400-meter 
relay,  then  closed  out  Saturday  with 
a  gold  in  the  1,600  relay. 

Johnson,  in  his  farewell  Olympic 
appearance,  anchored  the  men's 
1,600  relay  team  to  capture  his  fifth 
gold  medal  over  three  Summer 
Games.  Across  an  amazing  career, 
Johnson  has  won  nothing  but  gold  - 
five  Olympic  and  nine  world  cham- 
pionship medals. 

He  earlier  won  the  400  in  Sydney. 
Led  by  100-meter  champion 
Maurice  Greene  on  the  anchor  l<ig, 
the  Americans  won  the  400-rhetcr 
relay  -  but  the  four-man  team  drew 
more  attention  with  their-post  race 
antics,  an  assortment  of  WWFrStyle 
poses  and  muscle-Hexing. 

In  the  1.500  meters,  Suzy  Favor 
Hamilton's  bid  to  become  the  first 
American  medalist  in  the  event 
ended  when  she  collapsed  about  75 
meters  from  the  finish  line  and  fin- 
ished last.  Suffering  from  dehydra- 
tion, she  was  taken  off  the  track  in  a 
wheelchair. 

•  Women's  basketball:  Talk  about 
winning  on  the  road. 

The  U.S.  hoopsters  faced  host 
Australia  before  a  rabid  crowd  eager 
to  see  the  gold  medal  come  home  - 
and  sent  the  locals  home  disappoint- 
ed. The  Americans,  winners  of  the 
Atlanta  Games,  took  their  second 
straight  gold  with  a  76-54  thrashing 
of  Australia. 

The     Americans     won     with' 
rebounding  and  defense,  holding 
Australia  to  31   percent  shooting 
while  winning  the  battle  of  the 
boards  48-27. 

Leslie  and  Natalie  Williams  led 
the  Americans  with  15  points  each, 
while  Yolanda  Griffith  added  13 
points  and  12  rebounds. 

The  U.S.  team  has  now  won  the 
last  two  Olympics  and  the  1998 
world  championships.  Australia's 
silver  medal  marked  the  nation's 
highest  finish  ever  in  women's  bas- 
ketball. 


Masback  said  the  commission, 
headed  by  Canadian  law  professor  and 
arbitrator  Richard  McLaren,  would 
review  USATF's  testing  records  from 
Jan.  1,  1999,  to  the  start  of  the  Sydney 
Games  on  Sept.  1 5.  He  said  the  inquiry 
would  be  privately  funded. 

Masback  declined  to  comment  on'' 
specifics  of  the  Hunter  case,  other  than 
to  say,  "We  believe  we  have  followed 
the  proper  legal  course." 

Exum  filed  suit  on  July  18,  charging 
that  USOC  leaders  hampered  his  anti- 
drug battle  and  denied  him  promotions 
and  opportunities  because  he  is  black. 
He  also  claimed  the  USOC  evaded  its 
responsibility  to  screen  and  discipline 
athletes  for  drugs  in  its  quest  to  win 
medals. 

Exum,  who  has  not  identified  specif- 

SMMNie.pagcli 


.  ■••■    ■•  ■•    ^  '      ■'     ■..  ..•'. 


y 


Fighting  Irish  seaitft  for 
best  quarterback  combo 

FOOTBALL:    Offense  and       ^^'^  '"^'^  offense  so  far  this  season,  will 

,  .         return  this  season. 

plays  reach  new  lows;  So,  the  Irish  desperately  need  to 

freshman  mav  start  iraiTiP  '"'"'^  '^  quarterback  who  can  spark  their 
^"*^^  ^"^^  ^  ■  "^  offense.  Notre  Dame  has  averaged 

.  .  224  yards  total  offense  the  past  three 

games,  their  lowest  production  in 
three  consecutive  games  in  35  years. 

The  Irish  are  rated  106th  overall  in 
total  offense  in  Division  l-A  at  249.75 
yards  per  game.  The  combined  record 
of  the  eight  teams  behind  them  in  total 
offense  is  1-34.  Notre  Dame's  passing 
offense  is  ranked  No.  113  at  98.50 
yards,  ahead  of  Navy  by  two-tenths  of 
a  yard.  ':" '    ■  \   ■"  "'•- 

"Let's  be  honest,  we're  floundering 
a  little  bit  right  now  at  quarterback," 
Davie  said.  "I'm  in  no  way  comfort- 
able with  our  quarterbacks  right  now. 
We're  not  comfortable  with  our 
offense  right  now."        .     .    ■      . 

Godsey  started  against  Michigan 

State  two  weeks  ago  before  a  week  off 

and  both  he  and  LoVecchio  played  in 

the  second  half 


Daily  Brain  Sports 


Wednesday,  October  4, 2000       43 


como 


The  Associated  Press  -^^ — — — ^ 

SOUTH  BEND,  Ind.  -  The  big 
question  among  Notre  Dame  fans  this 
week  is:  Who  will  start  at  quarterback 
against  Stanford?  Coach  Bob  Davie 
has  a  bigger  one:  Who  will  finish? 

"The  reality  is  that  a  bunch  of  guys 
will  probably  get  a  chance  to  play  if 
things  don't  go  well,"  Davie  said. 
"Somebody  needs  to  step  up  and  take 
advantage." 

Freshman    Matt    LoVecchio    is 
expected  to  start,  giving  the  25th- 
ranked  Irish  (2-2)  their  third  starting 
quarterback  in  five  games.  Davie  did- 
n't name  a  starter  at  his  weekly  news 
conference  Tuesday,  but  said  the  Irish 
need  to  get  the  option  back  in  their 
offense.     Gary 
Godsey.       the 
starter  the  past 
two  weeks,  can't 
run  the  option. 

"We're  an 
offense  that 
needs  to  get  pro- 
ductivity out  of 
our  quarterback 
running  the  foot- 
balL"  Davie 
said. 

That    leaves     ,^^_________ 

the  three  fresh- 

m      e      n      : 

LoVecchio,  Jared  Clark  and  Carlyle 

Holiday.  Davie  said  LoVecchio  is  die 

best  prepared. 

LoVecchio  would  be  only  the 
fourth  freshman  to  start  at  quarter- 
back at  Notre  Dame  since  1952.  Kent 
Graham  started  one  game  in  1987, 
Steve  Beuerlein  became  the  starter  in 
the  Irish's  fourth  game  in  1983  and 
Blair  Kiel  started  the  last  nine  games 
in  1980. 

Davie  said  he's  not  sure  LoVecchio 
is  ready. 

"In  football  sometimes  you  have  to 
take  tiie  test,  unfortunately,  before 
you've  had  a  chance  to  do  the 
lessons,"  he  said. 

About  the  only  sure  thing  at  quar- 
terback is  that  Arnaz  Battle,  who  start- 
ed the  first  two  games  before  breaking 
his  wrist,  won't  play.  It  is  doubtful 
Battle,  who  still  accounts  for  a  third  of 


"Sometimes,  when  you 

have  a  bunch  of 

quarterbacks,  you 

don't  have  one." 

Bob  Davie 

■   Notre  Dame  head  coach 


Godsey  was  4-of- 
15  passing  for  20 
yards  with  one 
touchdown  and 
one  pass  inter- 
cepted in  the 
game.  LoVecchio 
had  a  12-yard  run 
then  completed  a 
43-yard  pass  to 
set  up  a  2-yard 
touchdown  run. 
■  He  ran  for  21 

yards  on  four  car- 
ries and  complet- 
ed his  only  pass,  a  43-yard  throw  that 
set  up  a  touchdown. 

Davie  warned,  though,  that  it  is  too 
early  to  write  off  Godsey. 

"He  needs  to  be  prepared  to  go  in 
there  and  win  a  football  game  for  us 
and  win  the  quarterback  position 
again.  It's  just  too  early.  When  it's  time 
for  him  to  do  something  different  or  to 
play  another  position,  I'll  be  the  first  to 
tdl  him,"  Davie  said. 

Davie  said  while  he  may  play  sever- 
al people  at  quarterback,  he  doesn't 
want  to  make  the  changes  too  quickly. 
"Sometimes,  when  you  have  a 
bunch  of  quarterbacks,  you  don't  have 
one,"  Davie  said.  "I  don't  want  to  get 
in  that  situation  where  you're  spread- 
ing yourself  so  thin  and  you're  trying 
to  look  at  everybody  and  all  of  a  sud- 
den you  haven't  had  a  chance  to  look 
at  anyone."  .  .  , 


DRUGS 

From  page  42 

ic  athletes,  said  the  proof  will  come  out 
in  courll  He  said  he  knows  of  competi- 
tors wlfb  tested  positive  for  perfor- 
mance-dihancing  drugs  in  Olympic  tri- 
als and  Went  on  to  win  medals.  He  said 
that  abcfit  half  the  U.S.  athletes  who 
have  tested  positive  for  prohibited  sub- 
stances have  gone  unpunished. 

The  thrust  of  Exam's  allegations 
were  supported  in  Voy's  affidavit. 

"The  USOC's  doping  control  pro- 
gram is  generally  perceived  by  those  in 
the  sports  medicine  community  to  con- 
tribute to  an  environment  that  encour- 
ages the  use  of  performance  enhancing 
drugs  by  Olympic  level  athletes,"  Voy 
said  in  court  papers. 

"Despite  the  USOC's  representa- 
tions to  the  contrary,  the  USOC's  con- 
duct indicates  that  it  is  not  seriously 
interested  in  reducing  the  use  of  perfor- 
mance enhancing  drugs. 

"I  believe  that  the  USOC  publicly 
represents  that  it  is  committed  to  elimi- 
nating the  use  of  banned  performance 
enhancing  drugs  in  Olympic  sport,  but 
that  in  reality  it  has  pursued  policies 
that  ignore'  the  use  of  banned  perfor- 
mance enhancing  drugs  among 
American  Olympic  level  athletes." 

Blackmun  said  he  had  contacted 


Voy  three  months  ago  to  ask  about  any 
weaknesses  in  the  U.S.  doping  control 
system. 

"Basically  he  said  he  didn't  think  the 
USOC  was  taking  doping  seriously," 
Blackmun  said.  "But  when  I  asked  him 
whether  the  USOC  has  acted  inappro- 
priately and  failed  to  disclose  positive 
tests,  he  said,  'No.' 

"It's  one  thing  to  say  we  don't  have 
an  effective  program,  and  quite  anoth- 
er to  say  we  have  actively  concealed 
results.  I  don't  find  any  evidence  of  that 
and  he  didn't  provide  any  evidence  of 
that." 

Blackmun  said  Exum  had  offered  to 
resign  from  his  USOC  post  nine 
months  ago,  saying  he  would  not  sue 
the  organization  on  condition  that  it 
paid  him  S5.5  million. 

Blackmun  said  the  offer  was  made 
in  late  December  or  early  January 
when  Exum's  job  was  put  in  jeopardy 
by  an  independent  U.S.  anti-doping 
agency  that  was  being  aeated  to  han- 
dle athletes'  tests. 

"He  basically  threatened  us  with 
exposure  on  all  kinds  of  unspecified 
reasons,"  Blackmun  said.  "Through 
his  lawyers,  he  said  he  would  keep  the 
allegations  to  himself  if  we  paid  him 
S5.5  million.  He  has  said  his  principle 
interest  in  all  this  is  to  help  dean  up  the 
doping  program.  1  think  his  demand 
for  $5.5  million  speaks  for  itsdf." 


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44        Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Olympia'  end  marked  by  drug  contrtjver^)^  fl^^^^ 


GAMES:  U.S.  shines  in 
track,  basketball;  boxers, 
wrestlers  stumble  in  ring 

The  Associated  Press 

SYDNEY,  Australia  -  High 
hopes  gave  way  to  harsh  reahty  on 
the  last  day  of  the  Sydney  Games. 

For  the  U.S.  boxers  and  freestyle 
wrestlers,  that  meant  an  Olympic 


gold  medal  shutout  for  the  first  time 
in  decades.  For  the  French  basket- 
ball team,  it  meant  a  chastened  U.S. 
"Dream  Team"  reasserting  its 
Olympic  superiority  in  a  gold  medal- 
winning  85-75  performance. 

After  staggering  off  with  a  two- 
point  semifinal  victory  against 
Lithuania,  the  NBA  all-stars  sprint- 
ed to  an  early  finals  lead  against 
France.  The  Americans  faltered  in 
the  second  half,  when  the  lead  was 
cut  to  four,  but  Vince  Carter's  dou- 


ble-pump dunk  with  1 :40  left 
sparked  a  closing  9-3  U.S.  run. 

"It  wasn't  a  Cakewalk,"  said  U.S. 
center  Alonzo  Mourning.  "I  think 
that  will  make  us  appreciate  it  even 
more.".-:    .■:.-;""■■'/■  ^:.^y.-'  '.:'*:■" 

While  nowhere  near  as  Imposing 
as  in  the  past,  the  U.S.  team  still 
went  undefeated  in  Oz  and  brought 
home  a  gold  for  the  third  consecu- 
tive Olympics.  Carter  and  Ray  Allen 
led  the  Americans  with  13  points 
apiece. 


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^Now  we  have  the  ultimate  cham- 
pionship," Allen  said.  "We  won  a 
gold  medal  with  the  whole  world 
watching." 

Lithuania,  a  two-point  semifinal 
loser  to  the  Americans,  won  its  third 
consecutive  bronze  by  beating  host 
Australia  89-71  on  Sunday. 

With  the  Tinal  day  underway,  the 
Americans  were  poised  to  collect  the 
most  medals,  leading  the  pack  with 
94  (39  gold,  24  silver,  31  bronze). 
Running  second  was  Russia  with  79 


(29-24-26),  followed  by  China's  59 

(28-16-15). 

■,;■.■■,■■■  :<!■:♦«:■:-.;,  .;;:•      /■■'•; 

•  Boxing:  The  U.S.  boxing  team, 
which  arrived  in  Sydney  hoping  to 
reverse  its  recent  Olympic  fortunes, 
wound  up  without  a  single  gold 
medal  for  the  first  limp  since 
London  in  1948. 

U.S.  boxer  Ricardo  Juarez  lost 
Sunday    to    125-pounder    Bekzat 


SeeOLVMPia,page42 


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Daily  Bnwi  Sports 


Wednesday,  Octot>er  4, 2000       45 


^fVf^^  US.  Olympic  Committee  drug  mishandling,  ^c^ 


DRUGS:  USOC  denies 
accusations,  suggests 
Exum  tried  blackmail 


The  Associated  Press 


SYDNEY.  Australia  -  U.S. 
Olympic  athletes  commonly  used 
banned  drugs,  and  the  U.S.  Olympic 
Committee  covered  up  positive  tests, 
the  U.S.  Olympic  Committee's  former 
medical  chief  alleged  in  a  sworn  afTl- 
davit. 

Dr.  Robert  Voy  chief  medical  offi- 
cer from  1983  to  1989,  also  said  the 
USOC  had  no  interest  in  curbing  the 
use  of  such  drugs.  Its  doping  program, 
he  said,  encouraged  the  use  of  perfor- 


mance-enhancingdrugs. 
;    A  USOC  official  said  the  statements 
were  "opinion  not  fact"  and  presented 
a  "misleading  picture." 

,  The  allegations  are  contained  in  a 
signed  affidavit  filed  Wednesday  in 
U.S.  District  Court  in  Denver,  Colo.  A 
copy  of  the  document  was  obtained  by  - 
The  Associated  Press.  _ 

"Based  on  my  experience  and  exper- 
tise, I  believe  the  use  of  performance 
enhancing  drugs  is  commoh  among 
American  01ympic4evel  athletes,"  Voy 
said. 

"Based  on  my  experience  and  exper- 
tise, I  believe  that  the  USOC  and/or  the 
various  NGBs  (national  governing 
bodies)  have  covered  up  evidence  of 
American  Olympic  level  athletes  test- 
ing positive  for  banned  performance 


enhancing  drugs.' 


"There's  no  indication  of 
coverup  by  the  USOC." 


Scott  Blacknum 

Senior  managing  director  for 
sports  resources 


The  affidavit  was  submitted  in  sup- 
'port  of  Dr.  Wade  Exum,  the  USOC's 
former  director  of  drug  control  pro- 
grams. Exum  filed  a  federal  suit  in  July 
against  the  USOC,  accusing  the  organi- 


zation of  encouraging  the  ddping  of 

athletes.  « 

The  USOC,  which  has  repeatedly 
denied  any  wrongdoing,  dismissed 
Voy's  allegations. 

"I  always  thought  affidavits  were 
supposed  to  be  based  on  facts."  said 
Scott  Blackmun,  the  USOC"s  former 
general  counsel  and  current  senior 
managing  director  for  sports  resources. 
"That  affidavit  appears  to  represent 
opinions  not  facts." 

"He's  painting  a  very  hiisleading 
picture,"  Blackmun  said.  "There's  no 
indication  of  a  coverup  by  the  USOC 
or  anybody  else.  He's  going  to  have  to 
come  up  with  some  facts.  In  my  view, 
he's  come  up  with  absolutely  nothing." 

Reached  by  telephone  in  Las  Vegas 
and  asked  to  elaborate  on  his  allega- 


tions, Voy  said:  "F'm  not  going  to  com- 
ment. It's  a  legal  affidavit,  i'lii  going  to 
leave  it  at  that."   ■■■     .       , 

Disclosure  of  Voy's  court  statement 
comes  at  a  lime  when  the  credibility  ot 
the  entire  U.S.  drug  testing  system  is 
under  inten.se  scrutiny  at  the  S;  Jney 
Games. 

USA  Track  &  Field  has  been* 
accused  of  suppressing  up  to  15  posi- 
tive tests  in  the  past  two  years.  News 
that  shot  putter  C.J.  Hunter,  husband 
of  sprint  superstar  Marion  Jones,  failed 
four  separate  drug  tests  in  Europe  this 
summer  was  confirmed  only  after 
media  leaks. 

According  to  records  submitted  to 
thf  court  by  Exum,  of.  5,355  tests 


See  DRUGS,  page  42 


II 


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46 Wednesday,  October  4, 2000 


Daly  8niin  Sports 


PAC-10  NOTEBOOK 


Beavers  shake 
upPac-10 

Coming  off  their  best  start  in  43 
years,  the  Oregon  State  Beavers  (4- 
0,  1-0  Pac-IO)  forced  the  rest  of  the 
football  world  to  acknowledge 
them  after  last  week's  31-21  upset 
victory  over  then-No.  8  USC. 

The  victory  left  the  Beavers  as 
the  only  remaining  Pac-IO  team 
that  is  undefeated.  Especially  sweet 
for  the  Beavers  was  the  fact  that  the 
win  ended  a  26-game  losing  streak 
to  the  Trojans,  dating  all  the  way 
back  to  the  playing  days  of  O.J. 
Simpson  in  1967.  It  positiotis  the 
team  to  play  conference  spoiler 
once  again  this  week,  this  time 
against  the  I3th'ranked  Huskies. 

"Tradition  doesn't  work  any- 
more," linebacker  Nick  Barnett 
said  in  a  statement  after  the  win,  in 
anticipation  of  another  big  game. 

"This  is  just  one  step  in  the  pro- 
gram. We're  not  done  yet." 

Pac-10  teams 
slip  in  latest  AP 
poll 

Though  it  was  conference  losses 
that  plagued  them,  Washington 
and  USC  dropped  significantly  in 
the  latest  AP  poll  standings. 
Washington  (3-1,  0-1)  dropped 
from  the  No.  6  spot  to  No.  13, 
while  USC  (3-1, 0-1)  fell  from  No.  8 
to  No.  18. 

UCLA  (4-1,  I-l),  despite  win- 
ning Saturday's  38-31  contest 
against  ASU  in  dramatic  fashion, 
also  fell  a  spot  in  the  standings, 
from  No.  15  to  No.  16.  Elsewhere 


■A-^ 


ftelfe.2J  SWIHW  « the  fk-KCj  iOic  u.wrfc«< 

tewL  Thty  looktt  nayiM  my  IS  ^  be«(«p  to 
Se*tfetofew*eHoin(«OHBjk)«.  Ustwedc 
OSU  iipset  U$C » c^  cMitfencf  pjiiy  wftiif ' 
Wjjhlngion  becam*  »eth«f  vKtim  ef  Owgw'5 
AatzeaSljUioRi. 


PAC-10  FOOTBALL  STANDINGS 


OregoA 


Arinoa 


Stanford 


Arizona  St 


CWKI.       OVBttU 

2-0 
1-0 

i-l 
1-1 
1-1 

0-1 

0-1 
0-1 
0-1 


SATURDAY'S  SCHEDULE 


[^  US 

Arizo(U#USC  12:30pim. 

California  #  Arizona  St  230  pm 

Boise  Sl#  Washington  St  2|im. 

Sunfoid#Nolr«Danw  10:30  pini. 

Source:  Pk-  1 0  Cof»ftt»n<« 


CONNIE  WU/D*ity  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

in  the  conference,  Oregon  (4-1,  2- 
0),  after  consecutive  upsets  over 
UCLA  and  Washington,  moved  up 
1 1  spots  in  the  standings,  from  No. 
20  to  No.  9. 

Previously  unranked  Oregon 
State  took  hold  of  the  No.  23  spot 
after  their  victory  over  USC,  mark- 
ing the  first  time  this  season  that 
five  Pac-IO  schools  were  voted  into 
the  AP  top  25. 


Pac-10  vs.  the 

nation •':;;-;,!::;v- .;;:•;- i^ 

Stanford  quarterback  Randy 
Fasani  ranks  sixth  in  the  nation  in 
passing  efficiency  with  155.7  yards, 
while  Jason  Cesser  of  Washington 
Slate  is  the  next  Pac-10  QB  on  the 
list,  at  21  with  140.5  yards. 

Allan  Amundson  of  Oregon, 
which  is  fifth  overall  in  kickoff 
returns,  is  eighth  on  the  list  of  kick- 
off  returns  with  an  average  of  29.33 
yards,  while  Ricky  Walker  of 
Oregon  State,  that  ranks  23rd  as  a 
team,  is  10th  with  an  average  of 
28.80  yards. 

Pac-10  weekly 
honors 

After  a  stellar  performance 
against  a  strong  Trojan  defense. 
Ken  Simonton  of  Oregon  State  was 
voted  Pac-10  Offensive  Player  of  the 
Week  for  the  third  time  in  his  colle- 
giate career.  The  junior  tailback 
rushed  for  234  yards  against  USC, 
and  scored  three  touchdowns. 
Simonton's  rushing  performance, 
was  the  second  highest  in  Oregon 
State  history. 

Also  earning  honors  on  the  week 
was  Arizona  defensive  end  Idris 
Horoon,  who  was  named  Pac-10 
Defensive  Player  of  the  Week  for  his 
part  ip  leading  the  Wildcat  attack 
against  Stanford.  The  Cardinal  were 
limited  to  a  mere  three  points  of 
offense.  Oregon  punter  Kijrtis 
Doerr  was  named  Pac-IO  Special 
Teams  Player  of  the  Week.    -, 


W.VOUEYBALL  NOTEBOOK 


Notes  compiled  by  Josh  Mason,  Daily 
Bruin  Contributor. 


Oregon  teanis  • 
win,  lose  at  Pauley 

The  Bruins  split  their  matches 
against  the  Oregon  schools,  remain- 
ing undefeated  by  one  while  losing  to 
the  other.  Since  their  first  meeting  in 
1970,  OSU's  Beavers  had  never 
defeated  UCLA  until  last  Thursday 
night  at  Pauley  Pavilion.  The  two 
teams  played-  once  in   1970,  and 
began  twice-yearly  meetings  in  1986. 
The  Bruins  did  keep  intact  their 
undefeated  record  versus  the  Oregon 
Ducks  in  Los  Angeles.  The  only 
other  loss  to  Oregon  in  33  meetings 
was  in  1987  at  Eugene. 

Against  Oregon  State  Thursday, 
the  Bruins  lost  their  third  five-game 
match  of  the  season.  As  a  consola- 
tion, however,  it  was  the  lowest  num- 
ber of  points  they  have  allowed  in  a 
five-game  loss.  In  contrast,  in  the  fol- 
lowing night's  win,  the  Ducks'  13 
points  were  the  fewest  allowed  by  the 
Bruins  since  November  1 1  of  last  sea- 
son, also  against  the  Ducks. 

Personal  bests 
intersect 

Career  single-match  marks  for 
juniors  Erika  Selsor  and  Kristee 
Porter  crossed  paths  versus  Oregon 
State.  Selsor  totaled  69  assists,  near- 
ing  another  entry  in  the  elite  70-assist- 
per-match  club.  She  has  achieved  the 
mark  eight  times  coming  into  the  sea- 
son, her  car^r  high  being  88  in  a 
match  versus  UC  Santa  Barbara  in 
1998.  Also  in  Thursday's  match, 
junior  Porter  notched  30  kills.  Porter 
has  achieved  the  30or-better  mark 
eight  times  in  her  Bruin  career  com- 
ing into  the  season. 


JGrosstown 
showdown 

UCLA  has  played  this  week's 
opponent,  crosstown  rival  USC, 
more  than  any  other  team  in  the 
NCAA.  The  Bruins  have  also  suf- 
fered more  losses  to  the  Trojans  tJjan 
to  any  other  team,  35. 

Current  Bruin  volleyballers  have 
not  seen  much  success  versus  USC. 
UCLA  is  3-5  since  1996  against  the 
Trojans,  despite  having  won  the  last 
two,:-  .       >  .  ::-,.;  ■.■'■■.-'■.      . 

Bruins  at  their 
personal  bests 

The  past  two  Fridays  for  the  team 
have  seen  three  Bruins  achieve  per- 
sonal career  milestones. 

Senior  Elizabeth  Bachman 
reached  her  500th  block  and  1,000th 
kill  against  California  on  Friday,  Oct. 
22,  and  Friday,  Oct.  29,  versus 
Oregon,  respectively.  Junior  Ashley 
Bowles  earned  her  1,000th  kill  while 
junior  Kristee  Porter  scored  her 
1,500th. 

Looking  out  for 
Number  1,  and  2 

The  Bruins'  next  two  opponents, 
USC  and  Arizona,  are  first  and  sec- 
ond in  the  Pao-10.  They  are  both 
undefeated  with  a  combined  1 1  con- 
ference wins  and  a  23-1  combii^^d 
overall  record.  Since  1988,  the  Bruihs 
have  lost  to  the  Wildcats  only  twice, 
both  in  1995. 


Notes  compiled  by  Andrew  Borders, 
Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


UCIA 


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Daily  Bruin  Sports 


We*wsday,  October  4, 2000       47 


BRIEF 


Bruins  nomi- 
nated for 
Honda  Award 

Four  UCLA  athletes 
were  nominated  in  the 
1999-2000  school  year  for 
the  prestigious  Honda 
Award.       i...v  .-t'..,^/  ;.., , . 

For  track  and  field, 
Seilala  Sua  ('00),  who  won 
four  consecutive  discus 
titles  and  was  the  win- 
ningest  track  and  field  ath- 
lete in  UCLA  history,  and 
junior  pole  vaulter  Tracy 
O'Hara,  who  won  both  the 
indoor  and  outdoor 
NCAA  championships, 
were  nominated.  It  was 
the  second  consecutive 
year  that  Sua  was  nomi- 
nated. 

All-American  gymnast 
Heidi  Moneynjaker  (*00), 
who  won  an  NCAA  title 
during  each  of  her  four 
years,  and  women's  tennis 
player  sophomore  Sara 
Walker,  who  has  earned 
the  No.  3  national  pre-sea- 
son  rank,  were  also  nomi- 
nees. 

Though  the  winners 
selected  were  not  UCLA 
students,  the  Bruin  athlet- 
ic department  is  still 
receiving  a  grant  from 
Honda  for  the  women's 
athletic  program. 

Notes  compiled  by 
Christina  Teller,  Daily  Bruin 
Senior  Staff.  lb- 


Nebraska  falls  behind  Florida  State  in  stlriings 


Ml:  Associated  Press 
drops  Cornhuskers  due  to 
repeated  poor  showings 

The  Associated  Press 

.^  LINCOLN,  Neb.  -  The  492  yards 
Nebraska  allowed  to  Missouri  cost  the 
Cornhuskers  an  even  bigger  number. 
Nebraska  dropped  from  No.  I  to 
second  in  The  Associated  Press  Top 
25  poll  Sunday,  a  day  after  an  alarm- 
ing defensive  performance  against  one 
of  the  lowest-rated  offenses  in  the 
country. 

Although  the  Cornhuskers  (4-0) 
held  on  for  a  42-24  win,  the  71  sports 
writers  and  broadcasters  who  make 
up  the  AP  panel  voted  defending 
national  champion  Rorida  State  No. 
I,  one  spot  ahead  of  Nebraska. 

The  Seminoles  collected  42  first- 
place  votes  and  1,745  points,  while  the 
Cornhuskers  had  28  first-place  votes 
and  1,731  points  after  a  third  consecu- 
tive harder-than-expected  victory. 
Rorida  Slate  defeated  Maryland  59-7 
Thursday  night. 

Missouri  (1-3)  gained  nearly  100 
yards  more  than  any  other  team  has 
against  Nebraska. 

Cornhuskers  coach  Frank  Solich, 
who  said  his  preseason  vote  in  the 
coaches'  poll  went  to  Rorida  State, 
isn't  worrying  about  the  first  poll  of 
October.  It's  the  December  polls, 
which  play  a  large  role  in  deciding  who 
will  play  for  the  national  champi- 
onship, that  matter. 

"I  think  it's  still  anybody's  guess  as 
to  who  the  best  team  in  the  country  is 
and  I  think  people  understand  that," 
Solich  said  Sunday.  "There's  a  lot  of 
games  to  be  played." 

Nebraska  remained  No.  1  in  the 


freedom  of 
expression 
thought 
religion 
choice 


USA  Today/ESPN  coaches  poll,  but 
another  game  like  Saturday  could  cost 
the  H  uskers  that  spot  as  wel  1 . 

Missouri  was  No.  90  nationally  in 
offense  coming  into  the  game  with  a 
291.7-yard  average.  The  Tigers' 
yardage  Saturday  was  the  most 
allowed  by  the  Cornhuskers  since  San 
Jose  State  had  343  in  the  season  open- 
er. 

It  was  the  third  time  this  season 
Nebraska  had  a  rough  time  on 
defense,  where  it  lost  six  starters  from 
,last  season.  The  defense  has  usually 
tightened  in  the  second  half  and  the 
offense  has  played  well  enough  to 
make  all  but  one  victory  lopsided. 


"I  think  It's  Still 
anybody's  guess  as  to 
who  the  best  team  in 

the  country  Is." 

Frank  Solich 

Nebraska  head  coach 


As  far  as  the  rankings,  Solich  said 
Nebraska's  unbeaten  record  is  what 
really  matters  at  this  point. 

"We  just  feel  good  that  we're  4-0 
and  still  in  the  ballpark,"  Solich  said. 

It's  rare  for  a  No.  I  team  to  fall 
after  winning  and  Nebraska  waS  the 
beneficiary  one  of  the  last  times  it  hap- 
pened. In  1994,  the  Cornhuskers  won 
a  national  title  after  moving  into  the 
No.  1  spot  late  in  the  season  when 
Penn  State  fell  to  No.  2  despite  beating 
Indiana  35-29.  .    ;; 

The  last  time  it  happened  was  1997, 


when  Penn  State  dropped  from  the 
top  spot  twice,  once  after  a  57-21  win 
against  Louisville  (Rorida  took  over), 
and  again  after  a  16-15  win  over 
Minnesota  (Nebraska  took  over);  and 
Nebraska  dropped  after  an  overtime 
win  over  Missouri  (Michigan  took 
over  and  won  the  AP  national  title  in 
•97). 

Last  week,  Nebraska  had  39  first- 
place  votes  and  1,743  points  to  Rorida 
State's  30  first-place  votes  and  1,732 
points.  In  the  new  poll,  Rorida  State 
gained  12  first-place  votes;  Nebraska 
lost  1 1  first-place  votes. 

In  addition,  Oregon  State  moved 
into  the  AP  poll  for  the  first  time  since 
Jan.  4,  1969.  The  Beavers  (4^),  who 
beat  USC  31-21  for  their  first  win  over 
the  Trojans  after  26  consecutive  losses 
to  them  in  a  33-year  span,  are  ranked 
No.  23. 

The  Top  25  underwent  a  top-to-bot- 
tom shakeup  as  nine  teams  ranked  last 
week  were  beaten  -  seven  by  unranked 
teams. 

Virginia  Tech  (4-0),  a  48-34  winner 
at  Boston  College,  moved  up  to  No.  3, 
replacing  Florida,  a  47-35  loser  to 
Mississippi  State.  The  Gators  (4-1) 
tumbled  to  No.  12. 

Kansas  State  (5-0)  moved  up  a  spot 
to  No.  4  after  a  44-21  win  at  Colorado, 
followed  by  No.  5  Clemson,  No.  6 
Michigan,  No.  7  Miami,  No.  8  Ohio 
State,  No.  9  Oregon  and  No.  10 
Oklahoma.  Kansas  Stote  received  one 
first-place  vote. 

Florida  State's  ascent  to  No.  1 
comes  a  week  before  the  Seminoles 
play  at  Miami,  which  moved  up  three 
places  after  a  64-6  rout  of  Rutgers.  . 
"It  doesn't  mean  a  thing  at  this 
time,"  -Rorida  State  coach  Bobby 
Bowden  said  Sunday.  "Especially 
when  we're  going  to  a  place  like 
Miami  this  week.  It  just  gives  them 


more  fuel  for  the  fire.  Playing  down  at 
their  place  is  always  tough,  and  this 
will  give  them  extra  incentive.  But  our 
goal  is  to  end  up  No.  1." 

Texas  was  No.  1 1,  followed  by  No. 
12  Rorida,  No.  13  Washington,  No. 
14  TCU,  No.  15  Auburn,  No.  16 
UCLA,  No.  17  Southern  Mississippi, 
No.  18  USC,  No.  19  Georgia  and  No. 
20  Mississippi  State.  USC  dropped  10 
places  after  its  loss  to  Oregon  State. 


The  Top  25  underwent 

a  top-to-bottom 

shakeup  as  nine  teams 

ranked  last  week  were 

beaten. 


Tennessee,  a  38-3 1  overtime  loser  at 
LSU,  was  No.  21  -  down  10  places  - 
followed  by  No.  22  Northwestern, 
Oregon  State,  No.  24  Wisconsin  and 
No.  25  Notre  Dame. 

Michigan  moved  up  three  spots  to 
No.  6  with  a  13-10  win  over  Wisconsin 
(3-2),  which  fell  seven  places;  and 
Oregon  leaped  1 1  spots  to  No.  9  with 
its  23-16  win  over  Washington  (3-1), 
which  fell  seven  places. 

Northwestern,  a  37-17  winner  over 
Michigan  State,  returned  to  the  Top 
25  for  the  first  time  since  early  in  the 
1997  season. 

Dropping  out  of  the  poll  this  week 
were  Illinois,  Michigan  State,  Purdue 
and  South  Carolina  (4-1 ),  which  lost  at 
Alabama,  27-17. 

The  top  five  in  the  coaches  poll 
were  Nebraska,  Florida  State, 
Virginia  Tech,  Kansas  State  and 
Clemson. 


Get  Your  Vote  On  Voter  Registration  Week 

OCTOBER  2-6  AT  THE  BRUIN  WALK 

— "— -'— '—^ Co-Sponsored  by  lvote2.com, 

USAC  External  VP  Office, 

UC  Student  Association,  and 

Southern  California  Youth 

Vote  2000  Projea 


.com 


register  to  vote 


register  to  vote,  get  information  on  current  Issues,  and  express 


your  views 


'.  -   «-- 


Daily  Bruin 


And  the  rankings  are ... 

The  Associated  Press  Poll  features  five 
football  teams  from  the  Pac-10 
conference  for  the  first  time  this 
season.  See  page  12 

Wednesday,  October  4, 2000  v 


Sports  on  the  Web  Q    ]) 

S«e  all  this  and  more  at  i 
:  >  the  Daily  Bruin^  Z 

"■""■■•■•■'■■;■■■■:»■ -Web site:  f-:'';:^ 
www.dailybruin.Mcla.edu  ; 


T 


Sophomore 

Lauren 

Fendrick 

continues  to 
be  one  of 
the  Bruins' 
hard-hitting 
weapons  in 
the  starting 
lineup. 


un 


*nicp(  Staff 


f 


Outsicf e  hitter  Lauren  Fendrick 

enjoys  the  challenges  presented 

by  her  position 


JtSSf  PORTlfVOally  Bfuin  Seoiof  Staff 

Right  side  hitter  Lauren  Fendrick  steps  in  and  sets  the  ball  during 
UCLA's  match  against  Oregon  State  last  week. 


By  Christina  Tdlcr 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

She's  cool,  calm,  collected  and  every- 
thing is  set  out  in  front  of  her. 

UCLA  volleyball  player  Lauren 
Fendrick  is  taking  it  one  day  at  a  time 
and  enjoying  the  experience  along  the 
way  -  even  when  the  outside  hitter  is 
about  to  face  cross-town  rival  USC  in 
one  of  the  team's  biggest  matches  of  the 
season. 

"We  don't  talk  about  it,  but  it's  in  the 
back  of  everyone's  mind,  I'm  sure," 
Fendrick  said. 

"We're  going  to  think  about  how 
we're  playing  at  that  point.  Were  going 
to  be  a  team  and  be  focused  and  hope- 
fully the  outcome  will  be  a  win,"  she 
said. 

This  is  the  mindset  that  landed 
Fendrick  a  starting  position  in  her  fresh- 
man year.  And  this  is  why  she's  enjoying 
where  she  is,  because  she  looks  at  the  sit- 
uation for  what  it  is  and  takes  it  one  step 
at  a  time. 

Having  only  played  volleyball  since 
her  sophomore  year  in  high  school, 
Fendrick  is  relatively  new  to  the  sport. 
When  it  came  time  to  choose  what 
direction  she  wanted  to  go  athletically, 
she  chose  the  one  she  was  best  at. 


Ironically,  in  her  senior  year  of  high 
school,  her  softball  coach  forbade  her 
from  playing  both  volleyball  and  soft- 
ball.  Her  solution  was  to  pick  up  a  golf 
club  instead  of  a  bat  and  get  right  back 
out  on  the  court. 

"I  like  the  teamwork  concept  of  it 
all,"  Fendrick  explained. 

"There  are  intense  pressure  situa- 
tions and  you  have  to  perform  -  it's  a  lot 
about  quick  performance." 

She  was  recruited  by  UCLA  for  vol- 
leyball, but  that  didn't  stop  her  from 
assummg  her  position  in  the  pitching 
circle  once  spring  rolled  around. 

"I  talked  to  Andy  (Banachowski,  the 
volleyball  coach)  before  Christmas 
break  and  told  him  I  wanted  to  play 
Softball.  I  ended  up  trying  out  after 
break  and  she  (ctfach  Sue  Enquist)  said 
she  wanted  me  as  part  of  the  team.  It 
was  a  spur-of-the-moment  kind  of 
thing,"  she  said. 

But  it's  not  just  her  athletic  talent 
that  has  her  on  two  Bruin  rosters,  it's 
her  approach  to  the  game  and  to  life  -  a 
realistic  approach  mixed  with  a  sense  of 
humor. 

"Fendi  is  a  really  funny  person,"  said 
senior      team      captain      Elisabeth 

SceFDIBncX,pa9c41 


Male  dieerleading  tougher  than  it  looks 


'^ 


-^ 


COLUMN:  Men  in  spirit 
groups  endure  ridicule 
for  taking  pari  in  'sport' 


Mi 


%'i — 


'y  roommate  is  a  cheer- 
leader He  wears  tiny  pow- 

>der-blue  shorts  and  prances 
around  the  football  Tield.  He  has  been 
known  to  bleach  his  hair,  wax  his 
chest,  and  is  learning  to  do  a  toe- 
touch. 

He  is  also  6-foot-4,  was  a  recruited 
high  school  football  player,  can  eat 
four  Subway  footlongs  in  one  sitting, 
drink  three  Colt  .45s,  and  turn  a 
taunting  Trojan  fan  into  a  human 
pretzel.  To  protect  his  anonymity  we 


.:\: 


will  call  him  Wild  Man,  because  after 
all,  it  takes,a  crazy  guy  to  do  what  he 
does. 

Male  cheer- 
leaders have 
been  subject  to 
harassment 
since  they  first 
became  secure 
enough  in  their 
masculinity  to 
join  their  female 
counterparts. 
I'm  not  arguing 
that  we  stop 
teasing  these  -^-^— — ^— 

No.  I  fans.  All  I 

ask  is  that  you  understand  what  they 
go  through  in  order  to  gain  the  honor 


of  wearing  those  flattering  low-cut  V- 
necks.  Heck,  after  you  learn  some  of 
the  perks  of  the  job,  you  may  dash 
down  to  the  Wooden  Center  during 
practice  to  try  your  hand  at  a  back 
flip  or  two. 

The  process  of  being  a  cheerleadec 
cannot  even  l>egin  until  your  sopho- 
more year.  You  see,  freshman  are 
simply  ill-prepared  to  deal  with  the 
time  commitment,  let  alone  possess 
the  mental  strength  needed  to  force  a 
smile  when  a  kid  a  foot  shorter  than 
you  launches  a  stale  hot  dog  bun  at 
your  head. 

Additionally,  there  is  an  extensive 
tryout  period  during  which  one  is 
tested  in  various  aspects  of  the  job. 
Strength,  conditioning,  flexibility  and 


endurance  are  all  important  to  the 
"sport"  of  cheerleading. 

Which  brings  up  a  good  question  - 
why  do  I  use  quotations  marks 
arounc)  the  word  sport?  The  partici- 
pants are  strong,  fast  and  have  to 
think  quickly  on  their  feet.  ESPN 
televises  the  national  cheerleading 
championships  every  year.  Then 
again,  ESPN  also  airs  pool  tounuh 
ments,  dog  shows  and  spelling  bees. 

Whether  cheerleading  is  a  sport  is 
up  for'debate.  But  you  cannot  argue 
that  cheerleaders  themselves  are 
tremendous  athletes.  Ncariy  each  has 
a  background  in  gymnastics,  football 
ordanoe. 

Wild  Man  entered  the  hard-nosed 
sport  of  college  cheerleading  on  a 


dare.  As  a  football  player  and  track 
star  he  poked  fun  at  the  guys  who  got 
to  spend  hours  after  school  hoisting 
some  attractive  young  ladies  above 
their  heads.  While  his  logic  may  origi- 
nally have  been  flawed,  he  quickly 
realized  a  genuine  opportunity. 
Months  later  he  helped  the  team  win 
their  division  at  the  USA  nationals. 

"I  guess  I  won  that  bet,"  said  Wild 
Man. 

That's  not  all  he  won.  As  a  cheer- 
leader, he  gets  a  truckload  of  UCLA 
clothing,  appears  in  Adidas  commer- 
cials and  is  regulariy  on  national  teie^ 
vision.  Did  I  mention  hoisting  attrac- 
tive young  ladies  above  his  head?  In 


'     Senrtng  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


Thursday,  October  5, 2000 


5choenl)€rg  Building  houses  thenewly  rented  txtirv  Hall,  in  >ionor  of  donors  Mo  and  Evelyn  Ostln. 

UCLA  blunder  leads  to  renaming 


SCHOENBERG:  Officials 
claim  hall  was  nameless; 
documents  say  otherwise 


By  Moniqut  Simpson 

Daily  Bruin  Contribijtor 

When  Randol  Schoenberg 
opened  the  newspaper  on  Sept.  5,  he 
was  surprised  to  read  that  UCLA's 
concert  hall  was  "ofTicially"  being 
named  Ostin  Hall. 

For  45  years  the  hall  had  been 
known  as  Schoenberg  Hall  in  honor 
•f  his  legendary  grandfather,  com- 
poser Arnold  Schoenberg.  -  " 
?  Inside  what  is  still  named 
Khoenberg  Building  is  the  music 


hall  now  named  after  Mo  Ostin,  a 
UCLA  alumnus,  and  his  wife 
Evelyn. 

"I  was  shocked,"  Randol  said. 
"It's  a  historical  hall.  The  auditorium 
put  UCLA  on  the  map  because  he  is 
one  of  the  most  important  com- 
posers." 

The  Ostins,  who  could  not  imme- 
diately be  reached  for  comment, 
recently  donated  $5  million  to 
UCLA.  Consequently,  the  proce- 
dure to  name  the  hall  in  their  honor 
began. 

UCLA  officials  said  the  hall  was 
never  officially  named  after 
Schoenberg,  though  the  building  the 
hall  resides  in  was. 

"The  building  was  named  after 
Schoenberg,  but  not  the  large  audito- 


rium," said  Carolyn  Campbell,  direc- 
tor of  communications  for  the 
School  of  Arts  and  Architecture.  "It 
was  never  named." 

But  documentation  from  45  years 
ago  says  otherwise.  In  February  of 
1955,  Arnold's  wife  Gertrud 
received  a  letter  from  former 
Chancellor  Raymond  Allen 
announcing  the  music  hall's  naming. 

The  letter  states  "that  at  their 
meeting  on  Jan.  21  the  Regents  of  the 
University  of  California  officially 
named  the  auditorium  in  the  new 
music  building  on  the  Los  Angeles 
Campus  'Arnold  Schoenberg  Hall." 

Additionally,  a  program  dated 
May  15^  1956,  for  a  concert  dedicat- 

S«elUU,page12 


Center  receives  grant  to  study  brain  tumors 


CANCER:  Research  looks 
to  isolate  genes  in  hopes 
of  improved  treatments 


ByHcmtshPatd 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter  ^> 

Brain  cancer  is  seen  by  the  med- 
ical community  as  a  death  senteB«e, 
but  a  $3  million  grant  to  UCLA's 
Jonsson  Cancer  Center  may  change 
the  way  the  disease  is  treated. 

After  nearly  six  years  of  anticipa- 
tion, the  National  Cancer  Institute 
awarded  the  funds  to  the  center  yes- 
terday, for  the  research  of  genetic 
profiles  of  brain  tumors. 

"The    ultimate    result   of   this 


research  would  be  finding  new  ways 
to  diagnose  and  treat  tumors^early," 
said  Stanley  Nelson,  associate  profes- 
sor in  human  genetics. 

Of  the  16,500  patients  in  the 
United  States  who  will  be  diagnosed 
with  brain  cancer  this  year,  80  per- 
cent will  die,  according  to  officials  at 
the  center. 

There  are  a  number  of  different 
treatments  available,  but  so  far  doc- 
tors arc  unable  to  pinpoint  which 
medication  would  best  suit  individual 
patients. 

"We  have  to  guess  right  now;  we 
don't  know  which  treatment  will 
work  on  a  particular  patient,"  said 
Timothy  Cloughesy,  director  of  the 
ncuro-oncology  program.  "Brain 
cancer  patients  are  always  battling 


against  time." 

"We  are  very  hopeful  this  will 
have  a  major  impact  on  survival  with 
patients,"  said  Judith  Gasson,  direc- 
tor of  the  UCLA  Jonsson  Cancer 
Center.    , 

Brain  cancer  is  one  of  the  deadliest 
diseases,  usually  inflicting  patients  in 
their  .10s  and  40s.  Those  diagnosed 
with  brain  cancer  are  treated  with  dif- 
ferent types  of  chemotherapy  on  a 
trial-and-error  basis. 

"Right  now,  patients  are  able  to 
Survive  one  year  or  less  after  diagno- 
sis, and  it's  those  patients  we'd  like  to 
target,"  Gasson  said. 

The  cancer  causej  the  body  to  lose 
control  of  speech  and  strength  and 

SteCMICEB,pa9tU 


www.dailybnjin.ucld.edu 


LiGBT  workshop  attracts 
crowd  with  professors 


USAC:  Panelists  mediate 
discussion  on  gay  issues 
as  part  of  Welcome  Week 


By  Melody  Wang 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Tuesday's  "Queer  Life  on 
Campus"  workshop,  held  as  part  of 
the  Undergraduate  Students 
Association  Council  Welcome  Week, 
caused  heated  debate  at  last  week's 
USAC  meeting. 

XochitI  Marquez,  a  member  of  La 
Familia,  a  lesbian,  gay,  bisexual, 
transgender  Latino  group,  said  at  the 
meeting  that  she  was  "disgusted  and 
disturbed"  that  the  council  even 
questioned  the  issue. 

"It  may  be  difficult  for  you  to 
understand  as  a  straight  white 
woman,  but  it  is  extremely  important 
to  create  a  safe  space  for  queers, 
specifically  of  color,  at  this  institu- 
tion," Marquez  said  to  USAC 
President  Elizabeth  Houston  at  the 
meeting. 

Mediating  the  workshop  a  week 
later,  Marquez  said  the  event  was 
meant  to  create  a  safe  environment 
where  students  could  learn  about  life 
at  UCLA  as  a  LGBT  student  -  but 
Houston  said  at  the  council  meeting 
that  the  panel  would  make  many  stu- 
dents uncomfortable. 

"What  I  envision  is  for  more  peo- 
ple to  come  and  have  a  discussion," 
Houston  said  at  meeting.  "USAC 
should  not  hold  this  issue  and  pro 
mote  it  above  the  rest.  This  is  USAC 


Welcome  Week  and  I  don't  think  that 
this  is  the  time  or  place  to  do  it." 

The  workshop,  co-sponsored  by 
USAC's  Internal  Vice  President's 
office  and  La  Familia,  featured  a 
panel  of  five  professors  and  students 
who  shared  their  positive  and  nega- 
tive experiences  as  members  of  the 
LGBT  community. 

"One  of  the  most  negative  experi- 
ences was  not  only  feeling  unwanted 
and  attacked  by  the  media  and  other 
sources,  but  also  feeling  attacked  by 
my  own  Chicana/o  community,"  said 
'98  alumnus  Richard  Villegas,  Jr. 

Villegas  said  he  was  only  able  to 
survive  these  attacks  because  of  sup- 
portive faculty  and  friends. 

Panelists  discussed  other  issues, 
like  dealing  with  being  gay  while 
retaining  one's  religion  or  spirituali- 
ty 

"To  me,  being  gay  is  an  advantage. 
To  me,  being  of  color  is  an  advan- 
tage. It  allows  me  to  see  things  others 
don't,"  said  Eric  Avila,  a  professor  in 
the  Chicano  studies  department. 

Those  who  attended  the  workshop 
were  free  to  ask  panelists  questions 
and  make  comments.  Some  students 
said  the  presence  of  professors  on  the 
panel  was  encouraging.  ^ 

1  think  it  was  very  beneficial,"^ 
said  Joey  Frank,  a  fourth-year 
English  and  Chicano  studies  student. 
"It's  very  important  for  our  profes- 
sors to  provide  a  positive  example, 
because  a  lot  of  the  time  we  get  nega- 
tive ones." 

But    Houston    has    questioned 

SeenwETpageli 


KATHERYN  CXSLE 


Chicana/o  studies  professors  Eric  Avila  and  Aiida  Caspar  da  Alba 

participated  in  the  "Queer  Life  on  Campus"  workshop  Tuesday. 


• 

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::.  ■■':■"• 

-.-^  /: 

2 

Thursday,  October  5, 2000 

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College  Brieis 


Students  protest  at    f 
UMass  during  debates 

BOSTON,  Mass.  -  As  George  Bush  and  Al 
Gore  took  to  the  stage  Tuesday  night  at  the 
University  of  Massachusetts  at  Boston's  Clark 
Athletic  Center,  students  took  to  die  streets, -The 
Daily  Free  Press  reported. 

Students  -  whose  concerns  spanned  a  wide 
array  of  causes  from  affordable  housing  to 
Zapatista  repression  -  made  up  more  than  half  of 
the  4,000  protesters. 

Billed  as  a  'Street  festival  jdemonstration"  by 
protest  organizers,  the  majority  of  student  orga- 
nizers utilized  nonviolent  protest.  The  demon- 
stration soon  turned  when  the  crowd  jeered  and 
eventually  storme^  police  barriers  when  the 
debate  ended.  As  the  police  continued  to  try  and 
restrict  the  crowd,  protesters  then  began  to  sit 
down  and  refused  to  move,  making  the  peace 
sign  with  their  hands. 

The  university  dosed  Tuesday  for  the  debates. 


use  mascot  causes 
Trojan  war 

There's  a  trademark  battle  over  the  USC  mas- 
cot, the  galloping  white  steed  Traveler  seen  at 
Trojan  football  games,  according  to  the 
Associated  Press. 

University  of  Southern  California  attorneys 
are  trying  to  block  CasUic  rancher  Patricia 
Saukko  from  obtaining  a  trademark  for  the  name 
Traveler,  the  monicker  attached  to  the  family's 
horses  that  have  served  as  USC  mascots. 

Saukko  Tiled  for  a  federal  lustration  of  the 
trademark  Traveler,"  asking  that  she  be  recog- 
nized as  the  sole  owner  of  the  name.  To  her  sur- 
prise, the  university  filed  an  opposition  to  the 
trademark  request. 

"I  didn't  think  it  would  be  a  problem.  I  didn't 
think  'SC  would  oppose  me,  but  promote  me," 
she  said  Tuesday. 

University  lawyer  Steve  Yamagudii  said  "It's 
simply  our  job  to  preserve  our  tradition." 


Abortion  pill  not  at 
Northwestern  U. 

EVANSTON,  lU.  -  After  the  Food  and  Drug 
Administration  approved  a  controversial  abor- 
tion pill  Thursday,  the  director  of  Searle  Student 
Health  Services  said  the  health  center  wiD  not 
prescribe  the  drug  to  students. 

Director  Mark  Gardner  said  Searle  does  not 
have  enough  stafTmg  or  resources  to  prescribe  the 
pill.  Searle  currently  offers  birth  control  and  the 
morning-after  pill,  but  refers  studen);s  »^o  need 
abortions  to  Chicago  dinics.  The  FDA  approved 
RU-486,  a  non-surgical  alternative  to  traditional 
abortions,  after  about  a  decade  of  inflghting  and 
delays.  Although  abortion  opponents  denounced 
the  approval,  the  decision  marked  a  significant 
victory  for  abortionhrights  supporters,  who  argue 
the  pill  win  give  poor  and  rural  women  more 
access  to  services  without  the  protests  that  often 
take  place  outside  abortion  dinics. 


National  DUI  law 
becomes  tougher   TS;~ 

MISSOULA,  Mont.  -  Montana  drivers  may 
have  to  get  used  to  having  a  few  less  drinks  before 
hitting  the  road,  reported  the  Mcmtana  Kaimin. 

Congress  passed  legislation  TUesday  to  lower 
the  drunkeiKlriving  standard  nationwide  to  .08 
blood  alcohol  content.  States  that  do  not  comply 
with  the  law  by  2004  will  begin  to  lose  a  percent- 
age of  federal  highway  funding. 

Montana  and  30  other  states  define  drunken 
driving  at  0.10  BAC.  Albert  Goke,  chief  of  the 
Montana  traffic  safety  bureau,  said  he  doesn't 
bdieve  Montana  will  adopt  the  new  law  that 
many  people  may  see  as  blackmail. 

"I  would  not  expect  dropping  to  .08  as  likely  to 
make  a  big  difference,"  Goke  said.  But  he  added 
he  didn't  think  the  .08  level  is  unreasonable. 

Compiled  from  Unhwrsity  Wire  »nd  Daily  Bruin 
wire  reports. 


Tlimsday,  October  5, 2000 

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Daily  Bniinficm 


Tbwstiiy,  October  5, 2000        3 


road 


.Vj.-jij ;•■.■.■       ■"'*<.;■•;  ■'•■: 


ife'>    -i*.- .'.  ■  ■'  '■■ 


most  traveled 


on 

Bruin  Walk 
helps  many 
-  clubs  and 
groups  reach 
prospective 
members  at 
the  start  of 
fall  quarter 


,  NILOLtl 

At  the  peak  of  the  day  around  lunch-time,  students,  dubs  and  organizations  congregate  on  Bruin  Walk. 


NICOLE  MLLEIVDaily  Bruin 


By  Dharshani  DIumnuwanlciM 

Daily  Bruin  S«nior  Staff 

For  many  entering  students,  not 
knowing  their  way  around  campus  can 
be  an  asset. 

Taking  the  most  familiar  path  to  cam- 
pus, climbing  the  hills  of  Bruin  Walk,  can 
give  students  the  opportunity  to  discover 
campus. 

"When  you're  a  freshman,  and  you 
come  down  Bruin  Walk,  you're  new, 
you're  young  and  you're  looking  for  a 
group  to  identify  with,"  said  fourth-year 
biology  student  Desiree  de  la  Torre,  a 
member  of  Chicanos  and  Latinos  for 
Community  Medicine. 

"It's  the  only  way  far  most  people  to 
get  to  class,"  she  continued.  "This  is  the 
basic  (route)  for  a  lot  of  first-years. 
They've  learned  it  during  orientation." 

Many  campus  organizations  and  clubs 
take  advanuge  of  this  foot-traffic  during 
Tirst  week  and  grab  a  table  on  Bruin  Walk 
to  recruit  new  members. 

"The  tables  are  on  a  rirst-come-Tirst- 
serve  basis,"  said  Nathan  Wang,  presi- 
dent of  the  UCLA  Badminton  Club.  "So, 
we  start  getting  here  at  7  in  the  mom- 
mg. 

During  fall  i)uarter,  Brurn  Walk 
becomes  one  of  the  best  places  on  cam- 
pus to  find  new  members,  said  Justine 
Miu,  a  fourth-year  business  economics 
student  and  ambassador  for  Delta  Sigma 
Pi,  a  professional  business  fraternity. 

"It's  the  beginning  of  the  year  and 
everyone  is  out  here  looking  for  new 
organizations  to  join,"  she  said.  "People 
are  interested  in  being  a  part  of  some- 
thing." 

Many  of  these  organizations,  especial- 
ly the  cultural  clubs,  look  for  a  variety  of 
students,  said  Erica  Takeuchi,  a  fourth- 
year  sociology  student  and  member  of 
Nikkei  Student  Union. 

Other  groups,  like  Delu  Sigma  Pi  and 
CCM,  target  specific  audiences.  Delta 
Sigma  Pi  seeks  economics  students  while 
ecu  look's  for  pre-med  and  health-ori- 
ented students 


"A  lot  of  the  time,  we  have  transfer 
students,  so  they've  been  with  other  orga- 
nizations at  other  schools  or  know  they 
want  to  get  involved  with  something," 
Miu  said. 

She  also  said  because  they  seek  out 
economics  students,  the  organization  is 
looking  for  people  decided  on  their 
major  and  willing  to  contribute  to  the  fra- 
ternity. 

In  addition  to  meeting  new  people, 
joining  one  of  these  groups  can  help  stu- 
dents make  connections  with  others  who 
can  help  them  find  a  job  after  college. 

"It  is  important  if  they're  focused  and 
they  know  what  they  want  to  do,'*^iu 
said.  "It  helps  them  get  a  head  start  on 
things,  whether  it  be  networking  with  cer- 
tain firms,  or  taking  classes  with  people 
that  they  know."  V  , 

Despite  the  amount  of  time  they  spend 
tabling  on  Bruin  Walk,  different  organi- 
zations have  varying  degrees  of  success 
recruiting  students. 

Although  some  groups,  like  the 
Badpiinton  Club,  can  receive  up  to  SO 
percent  of  their  recruits  from  tabling  on 
Bruin  Walk,  according  to  Wang,  others 
have  less  rewarding  experiences. 

"I  can  say  for  the  most  part,  the  major- 
ity of  people  that  come  out  to  our  events 
have  heard  about  us  through  classroom 
announcements,"  Miu  said. 

But  she  said  she  likes  to  continue  the 
tradition  of  tabling. 

"Not  to  say  this  doesn't  help  at  all," 
Miu  said.  "It's  a  formality  we  do  because 
everyone  else  is  out  here." 

Other  organization  recruiters  said  the 
combination  of  advertising  on  Bruin 
Walk  as  well  as  word-of-mouth  help 
spread  news  about  their  groups. 

"What  we  found  out  throughout  this 
past  week  is  that  people  who  come  to 
sign  up  have  heard  about  us  from  a 
friend,"  de  la  Torre  said. 

Despite  the  degrees  of  success,  most 
who  table  agreed  being  on  Bruin  Walk 
helped  them  meet  people  on  a  more  per- 
sonal level. 

"In  classroom  announcements,  I  just 


give  them  a  run-down  of  what  Delta 
Sigma  Pi  is  about,  but  I  don't  really  get  to 
talk  to  anyone,"  Miu  said. 

"Here,  people  who  come  to  the  table 
really  want  to  find  out  stuff,  so  I  could 
talk  to  them  one-oi>-one,  find  out  about 
them,"  she  continued. 

Although  some  students  said  belong- 
ing to  specific  organizations  can  some- 
times create  cliques,  Hun  Ly,  a  second- 
year  American  literature  student  and  sec- 
reury  of  the  United  Cambodian 
Students  of  UCLA,  said  being  part  of  a 
small  group  is  beneficial. 

"I  think  being  on  campus  you're 
already  with  a  variety  of  people,"  she 
said.  "For  me,  I  kind  of  needed  to  find 
my  own  little  niche." 

As  many  students  walk  on  Bruin 
Walk,  most  of  them  have  little  time  to 
stop  and  listen  to  group  recruiters. 

To  make  the  most  of  their  time  on 
Bruin  Walk,  organization  members  hand 
out  flyers  and  other  information.  This 
type  of  literature  can  cost  as  much  as  tens 


of  dollars  a  day  for  a  group. 

"Every  day  we  make  copies,  and  we 
run  out  and  we  have  to  go  back,"  said 
third-yeaf  sociology  student  Erik  Chan, 
co-culture  show  producer  of  the 
Association  of  Chinese  Americans.  "We 
spend  about  $40  a  day  on  fiyers." 

Most  campus  groups,  however, 
depend  on  friendly  attitudes,  and  outgo- 
ing personalities  to  attract  members. 

"We  try  to  show  them  what  we're  real- 
ly like,"  Takeuchi  said.  "A  lot  of  clubs 
giving  out  candy  have  a  lot  of  people 
coming  in,  but  they're  not  able  to  make 
that  personal  connection. 

"Our  strategy  is  that  all  of  our  staff 
members  are  really  outgoing,"  Chan 
said.  "One  thing  we  don't  do  is  shove  fiy- 
ers in  your  face.  Just  being  courteous  to 
people,  they  really  respect  that." 

Sometimes,  people  they  approach 
aren't  so  friendly. 

"When  somebody's  rude  to  you,  we 
just  shrug  it  off  and  move  on,"  Chan  said. 
"That's  all  you  can  do." 


MCOlf  Mlli  R/0»IV  Brum 

Students  dodge  flyer  distributors  along  Bruin  Walk  on  their  way  to  class  Wednesday 


***j~ 


I  .  ■  •  ■' 


I-'m..;'»V.t;"j  '.'''  •<     "■ 


'.•'      I 


4    -  Thuf«by,  October  5, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  N«M 


t 


Niy -'ii    II  iinnwi-»^ 


^^«««*  ^'^  MM^-  4--  ^ 


Watershed  endangered,  study  say* 


Malibu  Lagoon 

;AS0NCHENA3aily  Bfuin  Senkx  Slaff 


MAUBU:  Urban  runoff 
waves  create  breeding 
ground  for  parasites 


BylMduMlFakoM 

Dally  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

,  A  study  spearheaded  by 
UCLA  researchers  may  give 
surfers  in  Malibu  more  to  worry 
about  than  catching  the  next 
wave. 

Those  waves,  along  with 
urbanization,  constant  construc- 
tion and  the  physical  geography 
of  the  Malibu  watershed  all  con- 
tribute to  an  increasingly  conta- 
minated coastal  zone. 

UCLA  professors  Richard 
Ambrose  and  Antony  Orme  led  a 
team  of  researchers  from  UCLA 
and  the  University  of  Arizona  in 
a  two-year  study  that,  was 
released  in  May.  "■..''. 

The  report,  commissioned  by 
the  California  Coastal 
Conservancy,  focused  on  the 
causes  of  environmental  prob- 
lems and  human  health  risks  in 
the  Lower  Malibu  Creek  and 
Malibu  Lagoon  areas. 


Ambrose  said  at  first 
researchers  were  looking  for  evi- 
dence of  human  pathogenic 
viruses,  but  did  not  find  them. 

What  they  found  instead  were 
traces  of  two  types  of  parasites  - 
giardia  and  cryptosporidum  - 
both  of  which  can  cause  adverse 
reactions  in  humans,  including 
stomach  cramps,  vomiting  and 
diarrhea. 

Marti  Witter,  a  biologist  for 
the  city  of  Malibu,  said  the  prob- 
lem partly  stems  from  the  physi- 
cal processes  which  take  place  in 
the  Malibu  Lagoon. 

The  lagoon  is  the  main 
drainage  point  for  the  Malibu 
Creek  which  carries  urban  runoff 
from  areas  upstream  as  well  as 
treated  water  from  the  Tapia 
Wastewater  Treatmeiit  Plant. 

Ocean  waves  create  a  sand 
barrier  in  the  lagoon,  trapping 
water  inside.  This  natural 
process  becomes  problematic 
during  the  summer  when  low 
rainfall  prevents  the  flow  of 
runoff  from  the  lagoon  into  the 
ocean. 

"Under  normal  circumstances 
the  lagoon  would  stay  closed  all 
summer  long,  and  none  of  the 


polluted  water  gets  out  into  th 
surf  zone,"  Witter  said. 

But  when  water  remains  sta 
nant  for  extended  periods 
time,   the  lagoon  becomes 
breeding  ground  for  the  kinds 
dangerous  parasites  the  researc 
team  identified. 

Besides  the  trapped  water  i 
the  lagoon,  Ambrose,  said  a  ge^ 
graphic  division  between  tw 
watersheds  in  Malibu  also  mean 
those  who  live  in  the  uppej 
watershed  don't  realize  that  th 
contaminants  they  dump  trickl 
into  the  lower  watershed,  mor 
than  IS  miles  away. 

"Most  of  the  people  living  i 
the  upper  watershed  probabi 
don't  realize  that  it's  connecte 
to  the  Malibu  lagoon  and  th 
ocean  because  they  live  mile 
away,"  Ambrose  said. 

Urban  development  nea 
Highway  101,  leakage  frofn-fault 
septic  systems,  and  domestic  po 
lution  contribute  to  contaminal 
ed  water  which  enters  Maiib 
Creek  and  its  tributaries  ani 
makes  its  way  into  the  ocean. 

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Gore,  Bush  voice  feelings; 


over  first  debate  In  series 


The  Associated  Press 

Palestinians  run  for  cover  as  a  rocket  fired  from  an  Israeli  Army  helicopter  hits  a  building  at  the 
Netzarim  Junction  in  southern  Gaza  Strip  Wednesday. 

Rounds  of  talks  held  to  end  violence 


MEETINGS:  Arafat  wants 
inquiry,  Barak  says  nay  at 
conferences  with  Albright 


ByBanySdiwcid 

The  Associated  Press 

PARIS  -  Amid  fresh  bloodshed  in 
the  West  Bank  and  Gaza,  Secretary  of 
State  Madeleine  Albright  brought 
Israeli  Prime  Minister  Ehud  Barak 
and  Palestinian  leader  Yasser  Arafat 
together  on  Wednesday  to  try  to  get 
them  to  return  to  "the  psychology  of 
peacemaking." 


Barak  said  talks  won't  resume  until 
the  violence  ends. 

Albright  held  two  rounds  of  sepa- 
rate meetings  Wednesday  with  the 
two  Mideast  leaders  and  then  con- 
vened a  three-way  session.  An 
Albright  news  conference  was 
delayed  as  the  meeting  with  Barak 
and  Arafat  stretched  past  the  two- 
hour  mark. 

Arafat  condemned  the  "virulent 
attacks  against  our  people"  and  said 
he  would  see  Barak  only  if  there  was  a 
guarantee  that  Palestinians  would  be 
protected  and  an  inquiry  was 
launched  into  violence  on  the  West 
Bank  and  Gaza. 


In  weeklong  strife,  more  than  60 
people  have  died,  most  of  them 
Palestinians  in  exchanges  with  Israeli 
soldiers  and  police. 

Asked  about  the  importance  of  a 
Barak-Arafat  meeting.  Palestinian 
Legislative  Council  member  Ziad 
Abu-Zayyad  said,  "I  believe  that  if 
people  do  not  talk  together,  they  will 
lose,  but  if  they  talk,  they  will  have  a 
chance  to  win." 

Arafat  and  Barak  also  met  sepa- 
rately with  French  President  Jacques 
Chirac. 

"We  accepted  American  ideas  that 

SeelMmELpa9e14 


RESULTS:  Ratings  best 
1990  Clinton-Dole  event 
with  32  million  viewers 


By  Walter  ILMcMS 

The  Associated  Press 

BOSTON  -  "Feeling  pretty 
good"  after  the  first  presidential 
debate,  George  W.  Bush  stuck  with 
his  tax-cut  theme  Wednesday,  saying 
Al  Gore's  performance  proved  he 
would  be  "the  biggest  government 
spetider  we've  seen  in  decades." 

"It  is  clear  that  the  era  of  big  gov- 
ernment being  over  will  be  over  if  he 
becomes  the  president,"  Bush  said 
before  leaving  town  to  campaign  in 
West  Chester,  Pa.,  and  Ohio.  Bush 
said  he  wanted  taxpayers,  not  gov- 
ernment, to  spend  more  of  their  own 
money. 

Also  campaigning  in  Ohio,  Gore 
appeared  at  a  rally  of  about  5,(XX) 
people  in  the  Warren  courthouse 
square,  accompanied  by  a  stringj;^ 
upbeat  songs,  and  suggested  Bush 
was  too  negative  during  their  face-  • 
off. 

"Did  you  see  the  debate  last 
night?"  he  asked.  "I  don't  know 
about  you,  but  I  think  even  though 
Gov.  Bush  and  I  have  a  lot  of  differ- 
ences, personally  I  think  it's  better  to 


spend  time  attacking  America's 
problems  than  attacking  people  per- 
sonally" 

Gore  rejected  Bush's  accusation 
that  he  was  using  "fuzzy  math"  to 
describe  the  Texas  governor's  tax 
plan.  On  CBS's  "Early  Show."  Gore 
repeated  his  assertion  that  almost 
half  of  the  money  in  Bush's  tax  cuts 
would  go  to  the  wealthiest  I  percent 
of  Americans,  and  urged  voters  to 
"add  up  the  numbers  for  them- 
selves." 

Bush,  asked  on  ABC's  "Good 
Morning  America"  whether  he  could 
dispute  Gore's  figures,  said,  "I  think 
what  people  have  got  to  understand 
is  wealthy  people  pay  a  lot  of  taxes 
today  and  if  everybody  gets  tax  relief, 
wealthy  people  are  going  to  get  tax 
relief" 

Later,  at  a  rally  in  West  Clhester, 
Pa.,  a  Philadelphia  suburb.  Bush 
renewed  his  criticism  of  Gore's  calcu- 
lations and  the  crowd  broke  into  a 
chant  of  "no  fuzzy  math,  no  fuzzy 
math." 

"I  enjoyed  that  debate  because  it 
gave  Americans  from  all  walks  of  life 
a  chance  to  sec  us  directly,"  Bush  said 
enthusiastically,  "America  got  to  see 
a  difference  in  philosophy." 

During  the  debate.  Bush  chal- 
lenged Gore's  character  and  credibil- 

SeeDEBA1I,pa9e17 


Court  voids  parts  of  election,  buys  Milosevic  time 


The  AssocKwd  Press 

Opposition  candidate  Vojislav  Kostunica  greets 
workers  at  the  Kolubara,  Yugoslavia  coal  mine. 


PROTESTS:  Police  forced  back 
by  10,000  opposition  supporters 
rushing  to  aid  striking  miners 


ByJovanaGcc 
The  Associated  Press 

BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia  -  In  an  appar- 
ent attempt  to  buy  time  for  Slobodan 
Milosevic,  Yugoslavia's  highest  court  invali- 
dated parts  of  the  presidential  election  on 
Wednesday  after  thousands  of  opposition 
supporters  forced  police  to  back  off  from  seiz- 
ing a  strikebound  mine. 

The  constitutional  court  ruling,  reported 
by  the  state  news  agency  Tanjug,  came  in  a 
case  brought  by  the  opposition  -  which  sought 
to  have  Vojislav  Kostunica  declared  the  win- 
ner of  last  month's  election. 

Instead,  the  court,  dominated  by  loyal 


Milosevic  supporters,  annulled  "parts"  of  the 
election,  the  agency  said,  adding  details  of  the 
ruling  would  be  made  public  Thursday  If  the 
presidential  vote  -  or  even  parts  of  it  -  must  be 
repeated,  it  means  Milosevic  retains  power 
longer. 

"At  first  this  may  seem  like  a  concession  by 
Slobodan  Milosevic,  but  I'm  afraid  this  is  a  big 
trap."  Kostunica  said.  "In  any  case,  I  believe 
Milosevic  is  weaker  than  ever  before,  which  is 
clear  from  the  fact  that  he  has  to  do  various 
tricks  to  gain  time," 

The  announcement  was  issued  after  a  stun- 
ning and  swift  turn  of  events  at  the  strike- 
bound Kolubara  mine,  the  largest  of  the 
protests  that  the  opposition  launched  to  force 
Milosevic  to  accept  defeat. 

It  began  with  riot  police  swooping  down  on 
the  compound.  But  they  were  forced  to  back 
off  when  lO.OCX)  townspeople  swarmed  to  the 
complex  to  "defend"  the  strikers.  The  turnout 
gave    opposition    forces    hope    that    the 


Milosevic  regime  was  mortally  wounded, 

"The  battle  for  Serbia  was  won  here,"  cried 
one  jubilant  opposition  leader,  Dragan 
Kovacevic.  The  independent  Beta  news 
agency  reported  police  left  the  compound  late 
Wednesday. 

The  confrontation  at  Kolubara,  one  of  the 
country's  major  mines  with  7,000  workers, 
was  unprecedented  in  Yugoslavia,  a  former 
communist  nation  with  no  history  of  major 
worker  uprisings.  It  dramatically  illustrated 
the  commitment  of  those  seeking  to  topple 
Milosevic's  regime. 

It  caught  even  top  opposition  figures  off 
guard.  They  rushed  to  join  more  than  10,000 
protesters  at  the  mine  and  predicted 
Milosevic's  quick  demise. 

The  court  announcement  was  made  on  the 
eve  of  a  planned  mass  rally  in  Belgrade  that 
the  opposition  hoped  would  force  Milosevic 

SeeYUCOSUVU,pa9e16 


WORLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 


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^hite  House  e-mail 
nnalfunctions 

WASHINGTON  -  The  Clinton  White 
House  has  a  new  problem  with  its  e-mail  system 
which  affects  roughlyone  in  every  100  comput- 
er messages,  a  spokesman  confirmed 
Wednesday 

The  problem  outlined  in  a  three-paragraph 
memo  circulated  in  the  Executive  Office  of  the 
President  this  week  comes  amid  a  criminal 
investigation  and  a  congressional  probe  into  a 
possible  White  House  cover-up  of  an  earlier 
computer  problem.  Presidential  aides  deny  a 
cover-up, 

"Until  this  problem  is  resolved  ...  all  EOP 
employees  must  save  and  not  delete  all  non-per- 
sonal e-mail  messages  presently  on  your  com- 
puter," White  Houie  counsel  Beth  Nolan  said 
in  the  memo  addressed  to  "All  EOP  Users"  and 
computer  users  in  the  U.S.  trade 
Representative's  ofTice. 

After  being  informed  that  The  Awociated 


Press  had  a  copy  of  the  memo.  White 
House  spokesman  Elliot  Diringer 
confirmed  that  the  "error"  in  the  ©• 
mail  system  results  in  about  I  percent 
of  e-mail  tralTic  dating  from  April  15  not 
being  propeHy  stored  in  White  House  comput- 
er archives  or  being  recorded  with  an  incorrect 
header. 

Keith  gains  strength, 
threatens  Mexico 

MEXICO  CITY  -  Tropical  Storm  Keith 
gained  strength  as  it  moved  across  the  Gulf  of 
Mexico  Wednesday,  threatening  to  build  again 
into  a  hurricane,  forecasters  said, 

Keith  weakened  into  a  tropical  depression 
Tuesday  after  soaking  much  of  the  Yucatan 
peninsula  over  the  weekend,  cutting  a  path  of 
destruction  through  Central  America  and 
southeastern  Mexico,  and  causing  at  least  a 
dozen  deaths. 

The  itonn's  center  was  about  220  miles  east- 


southeast  of  Tampico,  Mexico  on 
Wednesday  evening,  and  it  was  mov- 
ing west-northwest  near  14  mph. 
With  winds  of  65  mph.  Keith  was 
gaining  strength  as  it  moved  toward  the 
northeast  Mexican  coast,  and  was  likely  to 
regain  hurricane  status  ovemight,  according  to 
the  National  Hurricane  Center  in  Miami, 

The  Mexican  government  issued  a  hurricane 
warning  from  the  port  cities  of  Tuxpan  to  La 
Pesca,  and  a  hurricane  watch  was  raised  from 
La  Pesca  north  to  Matamoros,  on  the  Texas 
border. 

Voter  registration  in 
state  near  all-time  high 

SACRAMENTO  -  California  is  close  to 
setting  a  record  in  voter  registration  this 
year,  with  a  week  to  go  before  the  deadline 
for  signing  up  to  cast  ballots. 
.  The  state  had  15,1  million  registered  vot- 
ers as  of  eariy  September^  the  most  recent  fig- 


ures available  from  the  secretary  of  state's 
office. 

Although  California  reached  a  new  high 
with  15,6  million  registered  before  the  1996 
presidential  election,  that  figure  included 
about  1  million  people  who  had  moved  out  of 
California  or  died.  Secretary  of  State  Bill 
Jones  said  Wednesday, 

Those  names  have  been  taken  off  the 
roles,  he  said. 

That  makes  California's  current  figures 
the  true  record.  Jones  said,  adding  that  he 
would  not  be  surprised  if  the  state  surpassed 
15.6  million  over  the  next  week. 

Jones  is  holding  get-out-the-vote  activities 
around  the  state  this  week  for  Voter 
Registration  week. 

Tuesday  is  the  registration  deadline  for 
those  who  want  to  vote  in  next  month's  elec- 
tion. At  least  20  county  election  offices  plan 
to  stay  open  until  midnight  that  day  to  accept 
last-minute  registrations. 

Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


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Thunday,  October  5, 2000         7     " 


STATE  &(  LOCAL 


MIA  v^^    reject  governor^  request 


WALKOUTS:  Employees 
on  strike  want  contract 
before  returning  to  jobs 


By  Robert  JaMon 

The  Associated  Press 

LOS  ANGELES  -  TTiousands  of 
striking  transit  drivers  on  Wednesday 
rejected  Gov.  Gray  Davis'  request  that 
they  return  to  work  without  a  contract 
for  a  cooling  o(T  period,  and  county 
workers  pressing  contract  demands 
staged  more  walkouts.     ' 

As  some  450,000  commuters  were 
forced  to  seel^^^emate  ways  to  get 
around  Los  Angeles  County  for  a  I9th 
day,  the  Metropolitan  Transportation 
Authority  said  it  had  made  an  impor- 
tant new  ofTer  but  claimed  union  lead- 
ers were  lengthening  the  strike. 

The  question  of  whether  the  MTA's 
4,300  bus  and  rail  operators  should 
return  to  work  for  a  week  was  shouted 
down  in  a  rally  at  the  Olympic 
Auditorium. 

"Do  we  go  back  to  work?"  asked 
James  Williams,  leader  of  the  United 
Transportation  Union,  drawing  thun- 
derous shouts  of  "No!  No!"  to  the  gov- 
ernor's request. 

**He  is  one  powerful  man,  but  1 
think  your  voice  is  even  more  power- 
ful," WUIiams  said. 

MTA  Chief  Executive  Officer 
Julian  Burke  immediately  faulted  the 
UTU  leadership,  saying  an  offer 
Tliesday  night  "broke  new  ground  and 
included  significant  improvements  in 


California  legislators  fend 
off  federal  hazard  proposal 


The  AssociMcd  Pr«s 

Los  Angeles  County  service  workers  walk  the  picket  line  during  a 
demonstration  in  front  of  the  county's  Twin  Towers  jail  downtown. 


employees'  current  pension  contribu- 
tions." 

UTU  leaders  had  a  chance  to  pre- 
sent members  "this  deal  to  end  the 
strike,"  Burke  said  in  a  statement. 
"Instead,  UTU  leaders  used  the  meet- 
ing to  probng  this  strike  and  cause 
additional  hardship  for  the  people  in 
our  community  who  depend  on  public 
transportation  to  get  to  work,  to 
school  and  to  medical  appointments." 

The  strike  began  Sept.  16  as  the 
MTA  took  the  position  that  it  needed 
to  cut  operating  costs  that  are  higher 
than  thc«e  of  other  transit  agencies  in 
the  region. 

Leaders  of  tfie  smaller  mechanics 


and  supervisors  unions  agreed  earlier 
this  week  to  the  governor's  request 
after  he  signed  a  bill  to  protect  the 
unions'  contracts  if  the  MTA  follows 
through  on  suggestions  that  it  split  up 
into  semiauto(K>mous  transit  zones. 

Most  mechanics  and  supervisors 
continued  to  honor  drivers'  picket 
lines,  however. 

Williams  said  that  originally  he  was 
asked  to  "be  on  board"  with  an  agree^ 
ment  for  a  temporary  return  to  vwrk, 
but  he  could  not  cut  such  a  deal. 

"This  is  a  pk>y ...  and  it's  not  gonna 
work,"  said  Andy  Carter,  a  17-year 

See  UIBMI,  page  U 


INSURANCE:  Opponents 
say  disaster-prone  states 
would  bear  unfair  costs 


ByBartJanscn 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Officials  in 
earthquake-prone  California  have 
won  their  fight  -  at  least  for  now  - 
against  federal  legislation  that 
would  have  required  hazard  insur- 
ance for  all  public  buildings. 

Despite  Senate  support  for  the 
requirement,  the  House  removed  it 
late  Tuesday  after  vigorous  opposi- 
tion from  the  state's  entire  52-menh 
ber  congressional  delegation. 

"The  requirement  to  insure  all 
public  structures  would  have  been 
prohibitively  expensive,  and  it 
would  have  been  impossible  to  find 
the  insurers  to  provide  enough  cov- 
erage at  any  cost,"  U.S.  Rep.  Jerry 
Lewis  of  Redlands,  head  of  the 
state's  GOP  delegation,  said  in  a 
written  statement. 

The  proposal  by  Republican 
Sens.  Christopher  Bond  of 
Missouri  and  James  Inhofe  of 
Oklahoma  would  require  cities, 
counties  and  states  to  insure  every- 
thing from  schools  to  hospitals 
against  disasters  such  as  earth- 
quakes, floods  and  hurricanes. 

Local  governments  would  lose 


federal  aid  unless  they  bought  the 
insurance. 

Proponents  say  the  requirement 
would  save  federal  taxpayers 
money. 

Lewis  contends  that  it  would 
shift  the  cost  to  Califomians  and 
"other  states  where  residents  must 
already  cope  with  the  need  to  pre- 
pare their  own  property  against 
earthquakes  and  other  disasters." 

The  Federal  Emergency 
Management  Agency,  which  also 
considered  requiring  such  hazard 
insurance  nationwide,  will  continue 
studying  whether  such  a  mandate  is 
possible,  given  the  expense  and  a 
lack  ofunderwriten. 

"We  want  to  be  helpful,  not 
harmful,"  said  Director  James  Lee 
Witt,  who  announced  the  move  ear- 
lier this  week. 

Future  U.S.  losses  from  earth- 
quakes could  total  $4.4  billion  a 
year,  FEMA  estimated  in  a  study 
released  two  weeks  ago. 

Three-quarters  of  that  damage  is 
expected  in  California,  with  one- 
third  in  the  Los  Angeles  area  alone. 

Witt  said  the  risks  are  growing 
not  from  more  frequent  seismic 
activity,  but  because  more  people 
are  living  and  building  in  hazardous 
places. 

Governments  typically  rdy  on 
self-insurance  to  repair  their  build- 

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OaiiyBniinNews 


Moon  exploration  may  be  in  China^  future  |Drtjg  test  jjolki^re^ 

pr^n|nt  with  (pmplexk^^^ 


PROGRAM:  Nation  views 
space  dealings  as  needed 
for  international  stature 


By  Charies  Hutzier 

The  Associated  Press 

BEIJING  -  China's  budding  space 
program  plans  to  explore  the  moon  for 
commercially  useful  resources  and 
hopes  one  day  to  take  part  in  an  inter- 
national expedition  to  Mars,  members 
of  the  secretive  program  said 
Wednesday. 

Speeches  at  a  bland  forum  by  the 
head  of  the  State  Aerospace  Bureau 
and  a  key  researcher  gave  rare  glimpses 
into  the  military-dominated  program. 

Although  details  were  few,  the 
experts  made  one  thing  clear:  China 
sees  manned  space  flight  as  key  to 
securing  its  international  stature  and 
economic  survival. 

"If  China  since  the  1960s  had  not 
had  the  atomic  bomb  and  hydrogen 
bomb  nor  launched  its  own  satellites, 
China  would  not  be  regarded  as  an 
influential,  powerful  country,"  bureau 
director  Luan  Enjie  told  the  audience 
of  foreign  dignitaries  and  school  chil- 
dren at  the  start  of  U.N  .-declared 
"World  Space  Week." 

Started  in  the  1970s,  the  Chinese 
space  program  successfully  tested  a 
spacecraft  for  manned  exploration, 
putting  the  unmanned  Shenzhou,  or 
"Sacred  Vessel,"  in  orbit  last 
November. 

China  hopes  to  send  astronauts 
aloft,  joining  the  United  States  and 
Russia  as  the  only  nations  with  domes- 
tic manned  space  programs. 

Previous  state  media  reports  indi- 
cated a  second  test-flight  could  come 
before  the  year's  end  and  a  manned 


The  Associated  Press 

Visitors  to  a  Chinese  space  exhibitiofi  view  the  various  models  of 
Chinese  Long  March  rockets  at  the  military  museum  in  Beijing. 


mission  may  soon  follow.  Luan 
revealed  little  about  a  timetable,  saying 
only  that  manned  missions  will  follow 
"successful  flights  of  the  unmanned 
experimental  spacecraft." 


China's  manned  space 
program  ...has 

gathered  momentum 
in  recent  years. 


He  was  more  specific  about  the  pro- 
gram's long-term  goals:  "We  will  con- 
duct exploration  of  the  moon  and 
actively  join  intemational  activities  for 
Mars  exploration." 

Zhuang  Fenggan,  a  rocket  scientist 
and  vice  chairman  of  the  China 
Association  of  Sciences,  added  that 
one  day  the  moon  may  house  perma- 


nent ports  for  spacecraft  and  astro- 
nauts may  find  fluids  there  that  can 
generate  electricity  on  Earth. 

Rights  of  fancy  aside,  both  said  the 
Chinese  space  program  would  yield 
short-term  practical  economic  and  mil- 
itary benefits.  Among  the  spinoffs, 
Luan  said,  will  be  a  new  generation  of 
rockets  and  the  marketing  of  Chinese- 
rnade  communications  satellites  to  for- 
eign clients. 

Helping  to  realize  those  plans,  Luan 
said,  was  an  integrated  nationwide  web 
of  skilled  scientists,  technicians  and 
managers. 

China's  manned  space  program, 
given  the  secret  designation  Project 
921,  has  gathered  momentum  in  recent 
years,  getting  help  from  a  more  experi- 
enced Russia  and  bigger  budgets  from 
a  government  eager  not  to  fall  further 
behind  the  West.  The  exact  size  and 
scale  of  the  program  are  unknown. 

Sketchy  state  media  accounts  said  a 
batch  of  Chinese  astronauts  were 
recently  sent  to  Russia  for  training. 


RESULTS:  Court  debates 
legality  of  arrests  made 
after  mothers'  deliveries 


BylaurieAsseo 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Hearing  a 
case  in  which  women  were  arrested 
from  their  hospital  beds.  Supreme 
Court  justices  Wednesday  vigorously 
debated  whether  hospitals  can  test 
pregnant  women  for  drug  use  and 
turn  the  results  over  to  police. 

"This  is  being  done  for  medical 
purposes,"  suggested  Justice 
Antonin  Scalia.  "The  police  didn't 
show  up  at  the  hospital  and  say, 
'We'd  like  to  find  a  way  to  bust  your 
patients.'" 

But  Justice  Ruth  Bader  Ginsburg 
said  she  did  not  see  how  arresting 
women  after  they  gave  birth  would 
protect  the  fetus,  the  primary  con- 
cern of  a  South  Carolina  public  hos- 
pital. "I  looked  at  the  (hospital)  con- 
sent form;  it  doesn't  say  anything 
about  police,"  she  said. 

Women  treated  at  the  Medical 
University  of  South  Carolina  con- 
tend that  the  hospital's  former 
cocaine-testing  policy  violated  preg- 
nant patients'  privacy  and  their  con- 
stitutional protection  against  unrea: 
sonable  searches. 

The  women  "were  searched  by 
their  doctors  for  evidence  of  crimes 
and  then  arrested,  seven  of  them 
right  out  of  their  hospital  beds,"  said 
Priscilla  Smith,  the  lawyer  for  the 
women  who  sued. 


The  hospital's  attorney,  Robert 
Hood,  said  the  women  were  jailed 
"not  only  for  the  illegal  use  of  the 
drug  but  for  what  they  were  doing  to 
their  child. ...  We  are  trying  to  stpp  a 
woman  from  doing  irreparable, 
major  harm  to  her  child  in  utero. 

**Law  enforcement  was  not  the 
purpose  of  this  thing  at  all,"  Hood 
added. 

A  federal  appeals  court  upheld  the 
tests  as  legitimate  efforts  to  reduce 
crack  cocaine  use  by  pregnant 
women.    - 

The  Supreme  Court's  ruling, 
expected  by  July,  could  determine 
whether  the  hospital  reinstates  the 
policy  or  whether  other  hospitals 
consider  adopting  similar  tactics. 

Ten  women  who  sued  the 
Charleston  hospital  in  1993  said  test- 
ing pregnant  women  for  drugs  and 
giving  the  results  to  police  violated 
the  Constitution's  Fourth 
Amendment,  which  generally 
requires  that  searches  be  authorized 
by  court  warrant  or  based  on  reason- 
able suspicion  that  a  crime  has  been 
committed. 

The  justices  questioned  both  sides 
closely. 

Justice  David  H.  Souter  suggested 
to  Smith  that  doctors  might  have  "a 
special  need  to  know"  whether  their 
patients  are  using  drugs.  But  he  also 
asked  Hood  whether  doctors  who 
reported  positive  test  results  had 
become  agents  of  the  police. 

Scalia  compared  the  hospital's 
policy  to  a  requirement  in  many 
states  that  doctors  tell  police  when 
they  encounter  evidence  of  a  crime, 
such  as  a  gunshot  wound. 


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10       1lMrHtair,OctoberS,2000 


flaik  llii^  I^^K 

■^^^  ^WwW  I^KHw 


^ ;^;  Vi , 


lest  SGoiislmr^^  schools 


RANKINGS:  State  offered 
$677  million  as  incentive 
for  boosted  performances 


By 

The  Associated  Press 

SACRAMENTO  -  More  than  two- 
thirds  of  California  public  schools, 
including  some  of  last  year's  lowest- 
scoring  rural  schools,  improved 
enough  to  share  in  $677  million  in  state 
rewards,  test  score  rankings  released 
Wednesday  show. 

The  state  Department  of  Education 
released  the  2000  Academic 
Performance  Index  numbers  for  6,209 
schools  and  calculated  how  much  they 
rose  since  1999. 

State  Superintendent  of  Schools 
Delaine  Eastin  said  Wednesday  that 
the  department  expected  about  60  per- 
cent of  schools  to  improve  and  she  was 
thrilled  that  the  percentage  was  above 
that  mark. 

"I'm  here  to  tdl  you  we're  doing 
very  well,"  she  said  at  a  press  confer- 
ence at  Bannon  Creek  Elementary 
School  in  Sacramento.  "This  is  a  long 
process.  We  haven't  fixed  everything  in 
public  education  in  the  last  few  years. 


But  we  have  nude  very  fine  progress." 
The  number  that  improved  their 
scores  enough  to  daim  rewards  as  high 
as  S2S.000  per  teacher  surprised  even 
Gov.  Gray  Davis,  who  made  the  incen- 
tives part  of  his  school«nprovcinent 
crusade. 

"I  frankly  did  not  expect  70  percent 
of  schools  to  rite  and  meet  the  chal- 
lenge, but  that's  what  happened,"  he 
said  Tuesday  in  a  teieph(»)e  conference 
with  reporters.  "I  could  not  be  happi- 
er." 

The  department  said  4,180  schools 
are  eligible  for  the  reward  system  creat- 
ed by  Davis  and.  the  legislature  to 
boost  test  scores  that  lagged  behind  the 
nation  in  nearly  aO  grades  and  subjects. 
The  department  will  further  check 
their  eligibility  between  now  and 
January,  when  checks  are  expected  to 
go  out 

The  Academic  Ptrformance  Index 
or  API  is  based  on  a  school's 
Standardized  Testing  and  Reporting 
exam  scores.  It  ranges  from  a  k>w  of 
200  to  a  high  of  1000.  Davis  wants  all 
schools  to  hit  at  least  800. 

The  1999  API  was  the  baseline  for 
measuring  growth.  Each  sdK)ol's  goal 
was  5  percent  of  the  difference  between 
its  1999  API  and  800.  Those  already 
over  800  had  to  increase  at  least  one 


point 

All  schoob  that  met  their  growdi  tar- 
geu  will  share  in  $577  million  in 
rewards.  The  achoob  wil  get  more  dian 
$150  per  student  to  be  used  as  the 
KhooF  site  committee  determines;  all 
staff  at  the  school  win  also  get  an  esti- 
mated $800  pCT  employee. 

The  state  will  dedicate  $100  miflion 
for  die  biggest  individual  bonuses, 
$5,000  to  $25,000  for  about  12.250 
teachers  and  princqnb  in  scfaoob  in  the 
bottom  half  of  the  state  whose  APIs 
went  iq>  the  most 

Elementary  schools  had  the  greatest 
growth,  with  131  of  them  increasing 
their  APIs  by  100  poinU  or  more, 
according  to  a  computer-assisted 
analysis  by  The  Associated  Press. 

At  die  top  of  the  list  is  Lincoln 
Elementary,  a  kindergarteri-dirou^ 
second-grade  school  in  the  Exeter 
Union  District  in  rural  Tulare  County, 
which  went  up  189  points  from  504  to 
693. 

The  school's  thre&dozen  teachers 
are  cautiously  excited  about  the  possi- 
bility of  getting  the  top  bonuses  of 
$25,000  each,  said  principal  Miriam 
Smith. 

"When  we  finally  hear  the  news  for 
sure,  then  it  will  become  a  reality,"  she 
said. 


Panel 


•  If 


voucher 


program  for  online  use 


INTERNETS  CouncU  also 
urges  Congress  to  hold 
individuals  responsible 


ByaiMltapMr 

The  AssodMed  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Surveying  the 
future  of  cyfoerspaoe,  a  sdendfic  advi- 
sory panel  on  Wednesday  suggested 
diat  Congress  consider  a  voucher 
program  to  help  needy  families  get 
connected  to  dK  Internet  The  group 
also  proposed  a  flat  tax  for  states  to 
collect  revenue  from  Web  sales. 

The  advice  runs  contrary  to  some 
of  die  OOP-led  Congress's  recent 
regulatory  efforts  dtat  have  tried  to 
mandate  spectTic  solutions  to  con- 
cerns such  as  privacy,  encryption  and 
pornography. 

In  its  new  report,  The  Internet's 
Coming  of  Age,  the  National 
Academy  of  Sciences'  National 
Research  Council,  which  advises 
Congress,  urged  lawmakers  not  to 
force  die  Internet  to  change  die  way 
it  operates  in  an  effort  to  address  con- 


cerns such  as  pornography  and  gam- 
bUog.  Such  prevention  shoukl  focus 
on  laws  and  enforcement  dwt  target 
individual  responsMlity,  one  of  die 
audionsaid. 

"If  gambling  is  illegal  in  a  state, 
and  people  in  duU  sute  choose  to 
gamble,  we  shouldn't  hold  die 
Intamet  responsftiie  for  die  acdvitics 
of  its  users,"  said  Andrew  Biau.  a 
member  of  academy's  National 
Research  Council. 

"L^  responses  shouM  be  direct- 
ed at  die  activities  of  people,  radier 
dian  trying  to  change  die  Internet 
and  its  underiying  architecture  in 
order  to  respond  to  a  series  of  social 
policy  questions,"  he  said 

An  Internet  policy  group  cheered 
die  recommendations. 

"We  don't  want  a  backlash  diat 
destroys  die  fundamental  structure 
(of  die  Internet),"  said  Ari  Schwartz 
of  die  Center  for  Democracy  and 
Technok)gy.  He  said  his  group  wants 
to  avoid  laws  diat  tensor  from  a 
national  level"  and  prefen  '^  global 
solution  diat  puts  die  individual  in 


See 


page  19 


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VISSIT  THESE  GHbAI  WbHStfTES.,, 


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THURSDAY.  OCTOBER  5 

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MariiDoty 

Am 

Author  of  iaie  Ixuks  of  poems. 
Smet  Machine  (1996):  Atlantis  (1995). 
which  ncawed  the  Ambassador  Book 
Awanl.  Ihe  Bingham  Poetry  Pri^e.  and  a 
Lambda  Utorary  Amrd. 

FRIDAY.  OCTOBER  6 

UCIA  tafonTing  Arts 
prestnts 

Tfea  Paiiant 
Danca  Company 

Gali(fii9i*7pa,liyci190 

•MilMd 


oHMrai,  000,  SMMl  ICMIII 

PHt'MinMEi  temiw 

Earned  critical  acclaiffl  and  audience 
adiMon  throughout  Ihe  world  for  its 
axixadkigly  polished  dancers  and  thrilling 
choraography. 

DepL  of  Design/Media  Arts 
presents 


In  Milt  Mtof  I  Mem  Att  CMttr 

FrM-UtrMi;iMii-7»n 

SoMRlnii,  uMbttons  and  medto  arts 
emts.  caUxxaaon  tfirough  the  Intamet 
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SATURDAY.  OCTOBER  7 

UCIA  Perfcmtig  Arts 
presents 

TheParsoAt 
Danca  Compaay 

CMartl«i«7pB.lna190 


fHfiiiaRflpa,ta|CiM  : 
GMmMtMMiuMia  :   -: 

See  10/6  bangs  lor  descriptton 

?      UCIA  Perfonning  A(ts 
presents        \. 

'  AlaaBaranum 
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HmsaslheWayWbWve-and-YM.' 

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MMn  IniM^s  BraiA^r  tntb  Indudi 
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Sfllsmon.'  -Music.  Music'  and  the  biy- 
_  'Drood; 

UCIA  Fiin)&  Television  An^ 
presents 


TbeyOrivoByNigM 
TlioManlLova 

7d6M,JaMilrtiKTIaar  -■ 

^^^.^^^^   ^^^^^r^^w   ^^^v^p^^F     VIV^MPS^W 

16  gnml  $4  Mudnb  (iiJdi  ItQ  Md 


SUNDAY.  OCTOBER  8 


UCIA  Hammer  Museum . 
presents 


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tae 

Discussion  on  Fanage's  aipidBMi  if 
iabikaiing  naM  Harts  arf  edktenlni 
N*  te  anMKb  If  fti  LA  Sdiad: 
Frank  0.  Gehry.  Eric  (hnn  Moss.  Ihom 
Mayne.  MkJiael  Rotmdl  and  Frank  Israel. 

.4  UCLA  Hammer  Museum  -     ^ 
presents 

CaurtyartlMk 


Am 

Ri|b  nI  ihcuss  issues  surroundhi  Ihi 
cuhn  and  diaign  of  boi  ia  hnn  and 
imnt  yard  m  East  Us/ 


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UCLA  Performing  Arts 
Student  Committee 


Website  Coordinator  •  Graphic  Designer 
•  Marketing  Director  •  Producers 

•  Computer  Services  Director 

•  Ticket  Manager  -  and  more! 

Aiiiilioations  arn  rinw  avaiiablf!  nn  tlii!  website: 
v.'wvvsra.iinla  1,'flii  rir  in  Rnvrp  RHR 


MONDAY.  OCTOBER  9 

UCLA  PBriormmg  Alts 
presents 

Karon  Mommr  .t 

NNllliAflist 

S4'J0|B,  M  Pippir  TiMla', 


in  the  spotlight 


toOa7 


OepntmntofOoign/IMtaArts 
presents 

Andy  Best 
Holla  Pmsttoen 


ns  Dance 
Company 


Bpa.1473 

Rm 


Discussions  on  30  world  and  avatar 


TUESDAY.  OCTOBER  10 


UCLA  Performing  Arts      ' 
U;  Presents 

Ralaa  TMyan's  Gtoras 


llttir  Pityiamhl* 
(TIN  Hnl  laMMa) 


October  6  &  7*  Spin 
Royce  Hall 

General  $40,  Student  Tickets 


CeKBrttqe  •  7|iin  witii  David  Parsons,  AnistJc  Diredor 


103fl-1130M,l1nlwa. 


A  panoramk:  meditation  on  war  and  peace 
by  acdalmed  Indian  dkactor  Ratai 
Thiyam.  His  SO^nanbar  Ihaakr  is 
intomatignally  known  kx  creating  works  of 
sMmmaiag  color  and  baauly.  pulsing  with 
muafcanlpdpeiipwiaa 


UCLA  Performing  Arts 

student  Tickals 

_l; www.sca.ucla.edu 


tinftaikiteataHMaai 


Your  Bruin  Card  Is  Your  Ticket  to  Great  Seats! 

auder«  ndids  m  xnoog  jonie  of  the  Bf  SI  sols  in  the  house  to  UCIA  Pertoirtjig  Arts 
Events  and  they  are  beiflg  held  exdusnely  lor  UCIA  Students! 

Shidents  can  purchase  tickets  OIIUNE  at  Hucuduii  or  IN  PERSON  at  cm 

Your  Brum  Card  will  be  your  ticket  to  the  event  On  the  day  of  the  event  you  will  I 
simply  swipe  your  Bruin  Card  at  the  specifically  m^d  entraice 


UCLA  Fikn  &  liilevision  Archive 
presents 


Jli.t4f; 

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*  ^^^^^%  ^^^^99  ^oM^^a  I w^aH 
a  PMOl  t4  MMii  (ri*  n)  Md 


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WEDNESDAY.  OCTOBER  11 

Department  of  Music 
presents 

NoMyltodtal 
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Bi«pa.  ^_ 

MMoien:  tlO  gmnl.  17  ilgdenii  a  leniort 


Kaplan    wi    perform    JS 
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Oct  21 
Oct  21 
Oct  22 

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Oct  25 
Oct  26 
Oct  26 
Oct  27 
Oct  27 
Oct  27 
Oct  28 
Oct  28 
Oct  28 
Oct  29 
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12       Thursday,  October  5, 2000 


Oaiiy  Bruin  News 


^iiii 


An  alternative  t6  moving  baclchomllf 


UCIA 

Daily  Bruin 


EALL  2000  GUIDE 


Publication  Date;  October  13,  2Ck)0 

Reservation  Deadline:  October  10,  2000  at  12  noon 

To  Advertise  call  (310)  825-2161 


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Exam  &  Contacts 


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(310)828-2010 


review  program 

...continues  to 

set  the  standards 

that  others  want 

to  follow! 


Sij;n  lip  hv  \'<uii  solf   hofoi  c» 
()c  lohoi    I  U  h  .nul  I  otfix'tv 


Sij^n  lip  with  «i  f  rioiul  hcforo 
Otloher  Hthniui  rot oivtv 


uuMDUiHinnni 


I 


(Certdin  Restrictions  Apply.) 


ERKELEY 


R-E-V-I-E-W 

T^  in  MCAT  rrep.ircition 


i  15  Weeks  Of  Review  And  Testing  Of 
Important  MCAT  Concepts^^^^^^ 

1100  Hours  Of  Scheduled  Lecture  Topics 
In  The  Classroom4,,/^;uf444,f^ 

1 200  Hours  Of  Office  Hours  To  Supplement 
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1 20  Hours  Of  Supplemental  MCAT-Style 
I  Problem  Solving  Sesslons,/.,/44^^L44 

1 10  Full-Length  Mock  MCAT  Exams 
I  During  The  Program ,f4,f4,/_^u^4u/ 

5  Scheduled  Full-Length  Mock  MCAT 
Exam  Testing  Dates,/_f^,f,/.,f,|4^. 

2800  Pages  Of  Review  Notes  Covering 
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1400  MCAT-Style  Passages  With  Clear 
And  Detailed  Solutions»f^_^^  ,f,f^f 

Exceptional  Instructors  For  Each  Of 
The  Six  Topic  Areas  Of  The  MCAT^^«_^ 

Excellent  Review  Materials  That  You 
Get  To  Keep  And  Take  Home^^^,/^ 

Application  Assistance,  Interview 
Workshops,  And  Mock  Interviews,/.,/^/., 


■mm7 

www.berkeley-review.com 


PANEL    ^^v 

From  page  1  [:,:J:\]/^';  V.,'-  ^;.'^v■■■:■'-• 
whether  LGBT  issues  would  be  bet- 
ter presented  in  an  open  forum 
where  all  students  could  voice  thejr 
opinions.;   '      ;:    ;     :   V, '-.       ^ 

"It  shouldn't  be  about  one  issue," 
she  said.  "If  everyone  at  this  school 
was  homosexual,  it  still  wouldn't  be 
right." 

She  said  she  has  received  e-mails 
from  students  who  share  her  views. 

Other  council  members,  however, 
felt  the  workshop  was  completely 
appropriate  for  Welcome  Week. 

"I  think  it  would  be  very  impor- 
tant for  USAC  (to  address  this 
issue),  especially  since  Welcome 
Week  is  to  welcome  everyone. 
There's  no  better  time  than  to  start 
now,"  said  Community  Service 
Commissioner  Fannie  Huang  at  the 
meeting. 

Council  members  also  strongly 
opposed  Houston  and  said  the  work- 
shop should  not  be  made  broader. 

"I  think  it  is  what  it  is,"  Pedro 
said.  "Some  students  will  come  and 
some  students  won't.  No  matter 
what  you  call  it,  you'll  have  to  nar- 
row it  down  somewhere." 

She  added  that  the  workshop  was 
not  intended  to  be  exclusive  and  that  ' 
students    of   any    sexuality    were 
allowed  to  attend. 

USAC  Alumni  Representative 
Kathy  J.  Gill,  who  attended  the 
wor|(shop  along  with  other  USAC 
members,  said  she  felt  welcomed. 

"The  workshop  was  open  to 
everyone,"  Gill  said.  "I  thought 
there  was  a  pretty  good  turnout  so 
obviously  there  was  an  interest  in  the 
issue." 

While  Houston  did  not  support 
the  workshop  as  part  of  USAC 
Welcome  Week,  she  said  she  wants 
to  address  LGBT  issues  later  on  in 
the  year  by  inviting  an  objective 
speaker  to  campus.  She  said  the 
speaker  she  hopes  to  get  works  for 


the  government  and  analyzes  LGBT 
government  polices  and  how  they 
affect  the  community. 

At  last  week's  meting.  Campus 
Events  Commissioner  Jared  Seltzer 
said  there's  a  need  to  provide  work- 
shops as  long  as  LGBT  students  are 
on  campus. 

"Certain  students  on  campus  are 
offended  by  homosexuality,  and  cer- 
tain students  on  campus  are  homo- 
sexuals," Seltzer  said. 

"USAC  is  here  to  facilitate  fjiscus- 
sion  between  the  different  groups  to 
promote  greater  tolerance,"  he  con- 
tinued. 

Seltzer  added  that  council  mem- 
bers may  never  personally  agree  on 
LGBT  issues,  but  they  need  to  create 
a  safe  space  where  all  students  can 
voice  their  opinions. 

Though  council  members  were 
angered  during  last  week's  meeting. 
Facilities  Commissioner  Steve 
Davey  said  he  feels  it  is  in  fact  valu- 
able for  council  members  to  have 
different  opinions. 

"It's  not  good  to  have  just  one  ide- 
ology on  council,"  Davey  said. 
"Unfortunately,  that  happened  until 
this  year.  I  think  our  differences  will 
make  us  stronger." 

But  Internal  Vice  President  Elias 
Enciso,  who  walked  out  of  last 
week's  meeting  because  he  felt  per- 
sonally attacked  by  Houston,  said 
there  is  no  room  for  USAC  to  dis- 
agree on  this  issue. 

"We're  not  talking  about  a  propo- 
sition or  even  what  changes  to  make 
to  the  USAC  Constitution,"  he  said. 
"We're  talking  about  the  well  being 
of  a  group  of  people.  To  people  like 
myself  it  has  always  been  a  matter  of 
life  and  death." 

Panelists  at  the  workshop  said 
more  LGBT  courses  are  necessary 
to  help  all  students  understand  the 
issue. 

"Personally  in  my  world,  I  would 
love  to  sec  LGBT  studies  educating 
individuals  who  are  least  aware  of 
these  issues,"  Avila  said. 


HALL 

From  page  1 


ing  the  hall  states,  "the  department  of 
music  acted  unanimously  in  the  spring 
of  1955  to  recommend  to  the  regents 
of  the  university  that  the  concert  hall 
in  the  new  music  building  bear  his 
name." 

UCLA  ofndals  said  the  new  name 
of  the  hall  came  as  a  result  of  a  dona- 
tion. 

"A  gift  came  in  and  there  was  a 
request  for  a  naming  of  a  hall,"  said 
Theresa  De  Maria,  coordinator  of 
endowed  chairs  and  naming. 

Randol  said  he  is  displeased  by 
what  he  sees  as  poor  judgment  by 
UCLA. 

"If  we  could  have  raised  $5  million 
and  $1,  would  UCLA  have  kept  the 
name 

Schoenberg?"  he      

said.  "This  is  a      "^~"^"'^~'"" 

bad     move     by 

UCLA. 

"It  sets  a  bad 
precedent. 
What's  to  stop 
the  same  hall 
from  being 

bought    again?" 

he  continued.  

But      UCLA  ~ 

officials    affirm 

that  the  naming  of  Oslin  Hall  fol- 
lowed the  correct  procedure. 

"The  Ostin  naming  was  thoroughly 
reviewed,"  said  Michael  C.  Eicher, 
vice  chancellor  of  external  affairs. 

"Major  namings  go  through  a  for- 
mal and  exhaustive  review  process 
that  includes  senior  campus  leader- 
ship and  the  chancellor,"  he  said. 

Eicher  added  that  "the  Schoenberg 
name  is  still  the  name  of  the  music 
building." 

Naming  campus  facilities  after 
major  donors  is  not  new  a  phenome- 
non at  UCLA.  In  1999,  UCLA 
announced  the  naming  of  the  dance 


"What's  to  Stop  the 

same  hall  from  being 

bought  again?" 

Randol  Schoenberg 

Composer's  son 


building  to  "Glorya  Kaufman  Hall" 
after  philanthropist  Glorya  Kaufman 
donated  $18  million  toward  the  reno- 
vation of  the  building. 

In  April  2000,  UCLA  came  under 
scrutiny  for  naming  the  new  medical 
complex  after  former  President 
Ronald  Reagan,  after  receiving  a 
donation  of  $150  million. 

Randol  said  he  hopes  UCLA  will 
reconsider  the  name  change  because 
his  grandfather  was  an  important  fig- 
ure in  music. 

For  many,  Arnold  Schoenberg's 
music  was  complex  and  beyond  his 
time. 

In  1933,  he  was  forced  to  flee 
Europe  by  the  Nazis,  resulting  in  his 
move  to  America.  He  went  on  to 
teach  music  at  UCLA  from  1936  to 
1944. 
"He  opened  up  the  possibility  for 
latter  composers 
_^^^_^_^^_  to  use  all  the 
tones  of  the  scale 
in  a  comprehen- 
sive way,"  said 
Leonard  Stain, 
Arnold's  assis- 
tant at  UCLA. 

T  h  e 
Schoenberg 
family  plans  to 
continue  voicing 
their  disappoint- 
ment   with    the 


hall's  name  change  with  the  wish  that 
someone  with  authority  will  give  back 
the  auditorium  its  original  name. 

"It  should  stay  Schoenberg  Hall," 
Randol  said.  "There's  a  statue  of 
Schoenberg's  head  in  the  hall.  What 
are  they  going  to  do  with  that?" 

Lawrence  Schoenberg.  Arnold's 
son,  plans  to  attend  the  next  UC 
Regents'  meeting  to  inform  them 
about  this  problem. 

"UCLA  should  say  to  Ostin  that 
they  made  a  mistake,"  Randol  said. 
"Maybe  they  can  name  the  music 
library  after  Ostin.  There  must  be 
other  naming  opportunities." 


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IN  THEATRES  OCTOBER  13 


CANCER 

From  page  1 

eventually  destroys  the  brain. 

Researchers  plan  to  use  the  funds 
to  study  genetic  profiles  of  brain 
tumors,  which  will  lead  to  more  efTi- 
cient  methods  of  treating  and  diagnos- 
ing cancer. 

Gasson  said  the  university  is  the 
first  to  initiate  this  kind  of  research  for 
brain  cancer  and  expects  a  worldwide 
impact  in  the  near  future. 

"TTiis  is  a  pretty  sizable  grant  to  do 
some  initial  work,"  Nelson  said. 

Nelson  said  the  center  has  been 
working  with  gene  profiling  for  a  year 
and  the  award  will  significantly 
expand  the  amount  of  research. 

Through  genetic  profiling,  scien- 
tists can  find  certain  genes  that  lead  to 
cancer,  using  nfarkers  that  attach  to 
genes  of  interest 

Nelson  said  researchers  may  soon 
receive  a  more  thorough  picture  of 
genetic  mutations  that  ultimately  lead 
to  brain  tumors. 


"With  the  use  of  this  tedinique,  we 
can  eventually  determine  which 
method  of  chemotherapy  would  bci 
the  best  in  treating  a  particular 
patient,"  Nelson  said. 

Treatments  for  brain  cancer  are 
currently  available  intravenously,  oral- 
ly or  through  radiation. 

He  said  he  expects  there  are  hun- 
dreds of  these  mutations  out  there  and 
said  that  only  about  a  dozen  have  been 
isolated  already.  The  funds  will  allow 
researchers  to  analyze  cancerous 
tumors  they  have  been  collecting. 

"We  have  been  backlogging  tumors 
for  the  past  six  years  in  anticipation  of 
this,"  Qoughesy  said. 

With  this  collection  of  tumors, 
accurate  records  of  chemotherapy 
from  previous  patients,  and  research 
with  genetic  profiling,  scientists  will  be 
able  to  correlate  which  treatment  will 
best  suit  a  tumor  based  on  its  genetic 
makeup. 

"There  is  a  limited  arsenal  of  drugs 
available,"  he  added.  "This  is  extreme- 
ly exciting  and  we  are  ready  to  move 
forward." 


CREEK 

Fiompage4 


mental  groups,  surfers,  and  the  city 
of  Malibu,  among  others,  all  have  a 
stake  in  whichever  policy  solutions 
are  eventually  adopted. 

Ambrose  said  it  is  because  many 
groups  arc  interested  in  the  future  of 
the  Malibu  watershed  that  the  study 
was  commissioned  in  the  first  place. 

"If  it  were  easy  for  them  to  agree 
on  what  should  be  done  we  wouldn't 
have  done  the  study,"  Ambrose  said. 

Mark  Abramson,  Stream  Team 
manager  of  the  Santa  Monica-based 
non-profit  environmental  group 
Heal  the  Bay,  criticized  one  company 
currently  interested  in  developing  an 
area  of  Malibu. 

"There's  a  huge,  horrible  project 
sponsored  by  Washington  Mutual 
Bank  to  build  350,00  homes,  two  golf 
courses  and  a  hotel  at  the  very  top  of 
the  Malibu  creek  watershed." 
Abramson  said. 

"It  jeopardizes  much  more  than 
the  plants  and  animals  that  live  there; 
it's  just  a  stupid  place  to  build,"  he 


added. 

But  development  has  been  on- 
going in  the  wealthy  Malibu 
area  since  the  turn  of  the  century  and 
more  people  often  means  more  pollu- 
tion and  contamination. 

"All  those  houses  and  commercial 
Malibu  colonies  turn  out  to  be  a 
major  factor  in  pollution  on  Malibu 
Surfrider  Beach,"  Abramson  said. 

The  beach,  which  Abramson  said 
is  used  by  more  than  1.5  million  peo- 
ple every  year,  received  an  "F"  grade 
from  Heal  the  Bay's  Beadi  Report 
Card. 

Abramson  said  parties  involved 
would  reach  an  agreement  about  how 
to  control  the  creek  and  coastal  cont- 
amination problem  in  Malibu  based 
on  findings  in  the  UCLA  study. 

He  said  the  study  does  not  spell 
out  exactly  what  should  be  done,  but 
instead  provides  "assessments  of  the 
pros  and  cons  of  the  different  alter- 
natives." 

"We  can't  really  tell  them  what  to 
do  because  it's  a  dilTicult  problem 
and  there's  no  one  scientific  solutiojt 
that's  going  to  solve  the  whole  thing," 
Ambrose  said. 


ISRAEL 

Front  page  5 

each  side  will  examine  its  own  activi- 
ties, that  our  security  teams  will  sit 
together  to  clarify  what  happened  and 
then  we'll  sit  with  the  American  part- 
ners to  see  what  happened  and  to  try 
and  make  sure  that  better  coordina- 
tion will  be  in  the  future  and  that  such 
events  could  not  be  repeated  in  the 
future,"  Barak  said  after  the  Chirac 
meeting. 

In  his  two-hour  session  with 
Albright  at  the  residence  of  U.S. 
Ambassador  Felix  Rohatyn,  the 
prime  minister  told  the  secretary  of 
state  that  the  Palestinians  were  violat- 
ing agreements  with  Israel  by  acquir- 
ing illegal  arms  and  shooting  at  sol- 
diers, Barak's  office  said. 

"The  prime  minister  said  at  the 
meeting  that  cessation  of  violence  is  a 
precondition  for  any  continuation  of 
the  negotiations,  and  asked  Arafat  to 
choose  between  the  road  to  an  agree- 
ment or  the  slidny  down  lo  violence. 
and  that  he  (Arafat)  cwnes  the 
ropooMbaity  for  *c  rewltt,"  uid  a 
statMMRt  iMued  by  Barak's  ofTioe. 

Afterward,  Albright  met  with 
Arafat  for  90  minutes. 

The  State  Department,  meanwhile, 
issued  a  "worldwidtB  caution"  warning 
Anericam  to  be  Vigitant  itmil  their 
penoMl  aecttrity  in  light  of  tfie  vio- 
lence in  the  Middle  East.  These  events 
"have  rwed  the  poi^ility  that  there 
may  be  pnteau  in  support  of 
Palestinians  throughout  the  Oulf 
region  and  elsewhere,"  the  depart- 
ment said. 

Earlier  Wednesday,  Arafat  told 
reporters  after  a  session  with  Chirac 


that  the  three-way  meeting  was  not  a 
certainty.  "The  meeting  will  depend 
on  the  one  I  will  have  with  Albrigbt," 
Arafat  said. 

Asked  what  his  conditions  were,  he 
said.  "Protection  and  an  intematiomi 
inquiry  commission."  Arafat  did  not 
elaborate. 

A  senior  Palestinian  official  has 
said  an  international  inquiry  into 
Israel's  actions  would  be  a  condition 
of  reviving  the  peace  talks.  But 
Barak's  office  has  said  he  "totally 
rejected  the  call  for  an  international 
investigation." 

"I  think  that,  if  there  are  questions 
and  if  there  are  queries,  we  can 
answer  them  ourselves.  We  don't 
need  a  committee  biased  against 
Israel  to  investigate  things,"  Justice 
MiMler  Yossi  Beilin  told  Israel  radio 
WMneMlay. 

Barak  told  reporters:  "We  accept 
American  ideas  that  each  side  will 
examine  its  own  activities,  that  our 
security  teams  wiH  sit  together  to  clar- 
ify what  happened." 

AlMight  it  attempting  to  salvage 
%ainatfy4taUed  Middle  East  peace 
pMben,  which  has  been  set  back  fur- 
ther by  1hel«e«  outf>reak  of  wolenoe. 
She  was  lo  be  joined  by  CIA  Dn^ector 
George  1!mk(,  who  was  planning  to 
lake  part  in  discussions  on  security 
issues. 

Fighting  broke  out  last  week  after 
an  Israeli  hard-line  leader,  Arid 
Sharon,  visited  one  of  Jerusalem's 
moit  hotly  contested  holy  sites,  a  spot 
rweredbybolh  Jews  and  Muslims. 

As  diplomatic  efforts  gained 
momentam.  there  were  no  signs  of  the 
violence  abating.  Two  Palestinians 


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ISRAEL 

From  page  14 

were  shot  dead  early  Wednesday  in 
the  West  Bank,  and  three  Israeli  mili- 
tary outposts  in  the  Gaza  Strip  came 
under  attack  overnight.  In  northern 
Israel,  a  large  forest  fire  raged 
Wednesday,  one  of  more  than  100 
blazes  that  police  believe  have  been 
set  by  Arab  arsonists.  Most  have  been 
extinguished. 

Europe  has  pointed  the  frnger  of 
blame  at  Sharon,  v/ho  visited  a  shrine, 
known  to  Jews  as  the  Temple  Mount 
and  to  Muslims  as  Al  Haram  As- 
Sharif,  or  Noble  Sanctuary.  The  dis- 
pute over  who  will  control  the  site  is 
the  main  obstacle  to  a  peace  agree- 
ment. :':■  -^i:' "'■ ': '"--  -' ■■: ■  '■'  '^.-^v ■•',-"■•:  - ■• 

Chirac  has  blamed  the  violence  on 
an  "irresponsible  provocation"  -  a 
dear  reference  to  Sharon's  visit  to  the 
hdy  site. 

Sharon,  notorious  among 
Palestinians  for  laundiing  the  bloody 
war  against  Arafat's  forces  in 
Lebanon  in  1982,  denied  responsibili- 
ty and  blamed  Arafat. 

After  the  Paris  talks,  Egyptian 
President  Hosni  Mubarak,  a  key  play- 
er in  the  Middle  East  peace  process,  is 
planning  a  leadership  summit  on 
Thursday.  Barak  and  Arafat  have 
both  agreed  to  come,  Mubarak  said 
Tuesday. 

Officials  said  the  Paris  talks  would 
be  more  than  just  a  bid  to  stem  the 
violence. 

"The  meeting  ...  is  a  step  in  the 
direction  of  the  renewal  of  the  negoti- 
ations and  not  just  the  end  of  violence 
here,"  acting  Foreign  Minister 
Shiomo  Ben-Ami  told  Israel  radio. 

A  diplomatic  drive,  led  by 
President  Qinton,  to  forge  an  Israeli- 
Palestinian  peace  agreement  had  lost 
momentum  even  before  the  recent 
violence,  stalling  after  a  July  summit 
in  Camp  David,  Md. 


YUGOSLAVIA 

From  page  5 

to  concede  defeat,  and  opposition 
leaders  saw  the  ruling  as  a  desperate 
attempt  to  undercut  their  campaign. 
Milosevic  acknowledges 

Kostunica  finished  first  in  a  Hve^aiv 
didate  field  on  Sept.  24  but  without  a 
majority  needed  to  avoid  a  runofT 
Sunday.  The  opposition  has  rejected  a 
runoff. 

"He  saw  that  he  cannot  push 
through  the  second  round  against  the 
majority  of  the  people,"  opposition 
campaign  manager  Zoran  Djindjic 
told  reporters.  "His  solution  is  ...  to 
create  a  new  situation  for  totally  new 
elections ...  (so)  he  can  stay  In  power 
for  two  or  three  more  months  and 
then  try  to  organize  new  elections." 

Opposition  ofTicial  Goran 
Svilanovic  said  he  believes  the  opposi- 
tion will  also  not  agree  to  take  part  in 
a  rerun  of  the  first  round. 

"We  have  our  elected  president," 
he  said.  "These  are  things  we  can  dis- 
cuss, but  my  initial  reaction  is  that 
there  can  be  no  bargaining." 

The  opposition,  challenging  the 
official  findings  of  the  Federal 
Electoral  Commission,  went  to 
Yugoslavia's  highest  court  eariier 
Wednesday,  appealing  to  the  justices 
to  grant  them  victory  in  the  presiden- 
tial elections. 

The  court  met  in  emergency  ses- 
sion Wednesday  to  hear  complaints  • 
by  the  18-party  opposition  coalition, 
maintaining  Milosevic's  supporters 
manipulated  election  results  by  using 
a  sophisticated  software  program. 

Opposition  leaders  said  they  had 
obtained  a  copy  of  the  program  and 
would  use  it  to  illustrate  how  the  vote 
was  rigged  to  favor  Milosevic's  candi- 
dacy. 

In  advance  of  Thursday's  rally, 
opposition  leaders  issued  an  "ultima- 
tum" for  Milosevic  to  resign  by  3  p.m. 
(9  a.m.  EOT)  Thursday  -  the  time  set 


•**f 


TF 


DEBATE 

Frompage5 


'^' 


.v>  ••' 


ity,  and  Gore  said  he  wanted  to  avoid 
making  attacks.  But  both  contestants 
tried  it  both  ways,  dueling  on  issues 
and  also  on  personal  performance  and 
qualifications  Tuesday  night  in  the  first 
of  three  debates  that  could  prove  cru- 
cial in  their  virtually  even  match  for  the. 
White  House. 

Bush  told  CBS  he  benefitted  from 
"being  on  the  stage  with  a  man  who 
has  had  the  reputation  as  a  very  strong 
debater,  and  being  able  to  hold  my 
own." 

The  Bush  campaign  complained 
that  Gore  was  wrong  when  he 
described  visiting  the  site  of  Texas  fires 
with  Federal  Emergency  Management 
Agency  chief  James  Lee  Witt  and 
exaggerated  in  telling  the  story  of  a 
Sarasota,  Ra.,  student  forced  to  stand 
because  there  weren't  enough  desks  in 
her  overcrowded  dassroom.      .    ^ 

On  Wednesday,  Gore  acknowl- 
edged his  own  Texas  visit  might  not 
have  been  at  the  same  time  as  Witt's, 
but  said  he  had  toured  many  disasters 
with  him  and  his  remark  was  meant  ip 
compliment  FEM A.         . .      -: 

Sarasota  High  School  principal 
Dan  Kennedy  said  the  student  whose 
father  wrote  Gore  about  her  crowded 
science  class,  Kailey  Ellis,  was  without 
a  desk  only  one  day  and  could  have  sat 
on  a  lab  stool. 

"It's  another  in  a  disturbing  pattern 
of  the  vice  president  simply  making 
things  up,"  said  Bush  spokeswoman 
Karen  Hughes. 

After  their  running  mates  debate 
Thursday  in  Danville,  Ky.,  Bush  and 
Gore  meet  again  Oct.  1 1  in  Winston- 
Salem.  N.C.,  followed  by  a  third 
debate  Oct.  17  in  St  Louis.  Their  first 
90^inute  confrontation  set  lines  that 
may  be  drawneven  more  harshly  when 
they  meet  again. 

In  three  out  of  four  quick  network 
public  opinion  polls,  Gore  was  rated 
the  better  debater.  In  a  CBS  News  poll, 
56  percent  said  he'd  done  better,  42 
percent  said  Bush.  A  CNN- 
USAToday-Gallup  survey  made  it 
Gore,  48-41,  and  NBC's  poll  said 
Gore,  46-36.  An  ABC  poU  rated  them 
about  even. 

A  group  of  five  high  school  and  col- 
lege debate  coaches  assembled  by  The 
Assodated  Press  couldn't  agree  on  a 
winner.  Four  picked  Gore;  one  picked 
Bush. 

Early  ratings  show  ABC  and  CBS 
got  32  million  viewers  for  the  debates, 
more  than  watched  the  two  networks 
for  the  first  1996  debate  between 
President  Clinton  and  Bob  Dole. 
Ratings  for  PBS  and  cable  networks 
weren't  yet  in. 

Bush  hardened  the  tone  in  the  dos- 
ing minutes  when  moderator  Jim 
Lchrer  asked  about  character.  Bush 
said  he  was  discouraged  by  the  vice 
president's  conduct  and  comments 
about  Democratic  fund  raising  for  the 
1996  campaign,  then  targeted  Qinton 
without  Using  his  name,  or  mentioning 
his  scan^  and  impeachment. 

"I  fere  there  needed  to  be  a  better 
sense  ofj  responsibility  of  what  was 
going  on  in  the  White  House,"  he  said. 
"I  believe  they've  moved  the  sign  the 
buck  stops  here  from  the  Oval  Office 
desk  to  the  buck  stops  here  at  the 
Lincoln  Bedroom 

"We  need  to  have  a  new  look  about 
how  we  conduct  ourselves  in  office," 
he  said. 

Bush  came  with  the  goal  of  showing 
presidential  stature  and  his 
Republican  cheerleaders  said  he  had 
succeeded.  He  avoided  the  kind  of  ver- 
bal stumbles  that  have  sometimes  been 
a  problem. 

Gore,  the  more  seasoned  debater, 
hammered  at  his  chosen  issues  but 
avoided  the  attack  tactics  he  has  used 
against  other  rivals. 

They  argued  about  Medicare  and 
prescription  drug  benefits  for  the 
elderly  and  disputed  formulas  for  the 
future  of  Social  Security.  They  sharply 
debated  abortion,  Bush  repeating  that 
he  was  disappointed  at  the  FDA's 


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YUGOSLAVIA  , 

From  page  16 

for  the  Belgrade  demonstration. 

"This  flame  will  engulf  the  whole 
of  Belgrade,"  said  Vladan  Batic,  an 
opposition  leader.      ,.      .•:  ^, 

In  an  open  letterWiSlltidKlayio 
Milosevic  before  the  court's  ruling, 
Kostunica  said  "it  will  be  better  for 
you  to  recognize"  electoral  defeat  or 
risk  "the  danger  of  open  dashes" 
nationwide. 

From  the  beginning  of  the  civil  dis- 
obedience campaign  launched  this 
week  to  force  Milosevic  to  concede 
defeat  in  the  election,  the  mine  was.a 
pivotal  point.  It  employs  7,000  work- 
ers and  supplies  major  power  plants. 

On  Tuesday,  the  Milosevic  govern- 
ment had  threatened  "special  mea- 
sures" against  leaders  of  strikes  and 
road  blockades,  and  Belgrade's  pros- 
ecutor issued  arrest  orders  for  13 
opposition  leaders  involved  in  orga- 
nizing the  walkout  at  the  Kolubara 
mine.  None  of  the  arrests  has  been 
carried  out 

The  mine  walkout  was  the  forerun- 
ner of  other  strikes:  the  state  telecom- 
munications company  workers 
announced  they  would  stay  off  the  job 
and  city  bus  drivers  and  garbage  col- 
lectors in  Belgrade  refused  to  work. 

"This  is  (Milosevic's)  end,"  said  a 
Kolubara  mine  worker,  Dragan 
Stamenkovic.  "Now  the  workers 
have  risen." 

Prime  Minister  Momir 
Bulatovic,  meanwhile,  repeated  the 
position  that  regardless  of  the  elec- 
tion outcome,  Milosevic  can  remain 
in  office  until  his  current  term 
expires  in  June. 

There  were  also  signs  that 
Milosevic's  control  over  the  media, 
until  now  the  principal  propaganda 
pillar  of  his  regime,  was  fraying. 

The  main  state-run  daily  in  the 
northern  province  of  Vojvodina 
declared  Wednesday  that  its  editori- 
al policy  would  switch  from  follow- 
ing the  government  line  to  reporting 
on  events  objectively.  Its 
Wednesday  edition  for  the  first  lime 
carried  numerous  reports  on  oppo- 
sition activities. 


LABOR 

From  page  6 

MTA  veteran. 

Bus  driver  Barbara  Mortvedt,  a 
mother  of  three  who  makes  $12  an 
hour,  held  her  9-montl>old  daughter 
in  her  arms  as  she  vowed  support  for 
the  strike  despite  hardship. 

"I  work  paycheck  to  paycheck.  I 
have  to  ask  my  parents  to  help  me  out 
with  food  to  eat  for  my  children,"  she 
said.  "I  can't  make  my  rent  payment.  I 
can't  pay  some  of  my  utilities." 

The  separate  job  action  by  the 
union  representing  47,000  Los 
Angeles  County  workers  involved 
clerical  staffs  at  libraries,  jails,  internal 
services  and  the  offices  of  the  public 
defender,  district  attorney,  tax  asses- 
sor and  auditor-controller,  among  oth- 
ers. 

It  was  the  latest  rolling,  one-day 
walkout  by  members  of  Service 
Employees  International  Union  Local 
660.  Talks  with  the  county  collapsed 
Friday  and  there  could  be  a  general 
walkout  Oct.  II  if  no  agreement  is 
reached. 

Sherifl^s  deputies,  who  guard  the 
jails,  as  well  as  prosecutors  and  public 
defenders  were  not  involved  in  the 
walkout. 

At  the  Twin  Towers  jail,  meals  and 
security  for  6,400  inn\ates  were  not 
interrupted,  said  sheriffs  Lt.  Richard 
Dinsmoor,  head  of  jail  operations. 

"There  are  some  inmates  that  arc 
just  not  getting  their  medications 
today  because  we  don't  have  the  nurs- 
ing staff  available,"  Dinsmoor  said. 

Some  county  offices  dosed  for  lack 
of  secretaries,  receptionists  and  clerks. 
Most  continued  to  function,  although 
p»opl<  Backing  services  found  long 
waits. 


EARTHQUAKE 

From  page  6 

ings,  basically  paying  out  of  podcet . 
when  damage  occurs.  • 

However,  when  the  president 
declares  a  disaster  area,  the  federal 
government  usually  covers  three- 
quarters  of  the  cost  of  rebuilding  pub- 
lic buildings,  with  the  state  picking  up 
the  rest.  That  includes  local  govern- 
ment buildings. 

California  paid  $521  million  dur- 
ing the  past  decade  for  its  share  of 
earthquake  damage  in  federal  disas- 
ters, said  Tom  Mullins,  a  spokesman 
for  the  state  Office  of  Emergency 
Services. 

That  included  $362  million  for  the 
massive  Northridge  quake  in  1994, 
when  the  federal  government  went 
further  than  usual  and  covered  90 
percent  of  the  damage,  he  said. 

All  54  California  members  of 
Congress  signed  a  letter  opposing  the 
legislation.  Gov.  Gray  Davis  and  lob- 
byists for  cities  and  counties  also 
fought  it. 

Conditioning  federal  disaster  aid 
on  insurance  would  greatly  increase 
the  costs  for  schools,  universities  and 
hospitals  without  increasing  public 
safety,  Davis  contended. 

"We  are  obviously  pleased  that  the 
entire  California  congressional  dele- 
gation worked  together  to  make  sure 
that  the  rules  that  are  passed  here 
make  sense  for  California,"  Davis 
spokesman  Roger  Salazar  said 
Wednesday. 

Although  the  Senate  passed  the 
Disaster  Mitigation  Act  of  2000  with 
a  provision  requiring  the  insurance, 
the  House  removed  it  Tuesday  from 
the  version  ultimately  expected  to 
become  law. 

In  a  related  action,  FEMA  backed 
off  proposed  regulations  in  February 
to  require  that  governments  get  haz- 
ard insurance  on  public  buildings. 
Nearly  two-thirds  of  about  300  com- 
ments on  the  regulations  came  from 
California,  voicing  concerns  about 
the  expense  and  availability  of  earth- 
quake insurance. 

The  University  of  California  esti- 
mated it  would  cost  $36  million  a  year 
for  insurance  premiums  and  Los 
Angeles  County  estimated  it  would 
cost  $25  million  a  year,  for  example. 


VOUCHERS 

From  page  10 

control." 

Weighing  in  for  the  first  time  in 
three  years,  the  panel  said  the  Internet 
was  "healthy"  in  its  "adolescent"  stage 
but  cautioned  that  lawmakers  still 
faced  many  thorny  issues  tied  to  its 
growth. 

It  identified  several  possiUe  solu- 
tions to  the  pressing  issues  but  stopped 
short  of  endorsing  any  particular  one. 

.For  instance,  the  panel  addressed 
th^  "digital  divide"  that  has  kept  many 
low-income,  rural  and  minority 
Aotericans  from  using  the  Internet  - 
and  suggested  the  nation  should  try  to 
mtoce  Web  access  as  widespread  as 
telephones. 

"Equity  in  access  to  and  use  of  the 
Internet  is  a  matter  of  values  and  sodal 
policy,"  the  report  said. 

It  laid  out  several  possible  options 
for  Congress,  including  a  tax  on  phone 
service  to  help  schools,  libraries  and 
hospitals  pay  for  Internet  access,  or  the 
creation  of  a  subsidy  program  to  help 
needy  Americans  get  onto  the 
Internet. 

Such  a  program  would  be  "some- 
thing more  akin  to  food  stamp  pro- 
grams," the  scientists  wrote. 

Sen.  John  McCain,  R-Ariz.,  chair- 
man of  the  Senate  Commerce 
Committee,  said  he  had  not  seen  the 
report  and  could  not  comment. 

The  report  also  addressed  possible 
solutions  in  the  battle  between  states 
and  localities  that  want  to  collect  taxes 
on  an  e-commerce  purchases  and 
those  who  fear  such  taxes  would  jeop- 


aiUize  gi  uwili  uf  ilie  liiiei  iiei. 


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Thursday,  October  5, 2000       19 


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Thursday,  October  5, 2000 


Daily  Bruin 


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more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's  • 

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^tematic  sisterhood  promotes  intolerance 


GREEK:  Former  membership 
in  sorority  involved  ridicule, 
rating  of  prospective  'friends' 

By  Kirra  Stcd 

I  received  an  e-mail  from  a  friend  telling 
me  that  I  was  in  a  photograph  used  in  a  Go 
Greek  supplement  of  the  Daily  Bruin's 
back  to  school  issue  (The  Greek  Guide, 
Fall  2000).  We  laughed  at  the  irony  and 
stupidity  that  a  picture  with  a  deactivated 
member  of  a  sorority  was  used  in  an  ad  to 
promote  joining  the  Greek  system  at 
UCLA. 

But  as  I  rode  the  train  home  from  work 
I  stopped  laughing.  Actually,  I  felt  sick  to 
my  stomach.  My  face  was  being  used 
(without  my  permission)  to  promote  a  sys- 
tem I  find  morally  reprehensible,  elitist 
and  divisive.  My  face,  my  picture,  my  iden- 
tity, was  being  associated  with  a  group  that 
does  not  personify  me.  I  managed  my 
senior  year  to  escape  my  sorority  (many 
do  not)  and  be  my  true  self.  You  may  be 
thinking,  "C'mon.  There  are  bigger  prob- 
lems than  going  Greek." 

What  people  fail  to  see  is  that  sororities 
and  fraternities  at  UCLA  are  really  a  part 
of  the  same  institutions  and  mind-sets  that 
promote  racism,  hate  and  social  inequity 
throughout  the  country.  The  Greek  system 
fundamentally  is  an  elitist  institution 
because  it  does  not  let  everyone  join,  even 
though  they  say  they  are  so  diverse,  racially 
harmonious  and  willing  to  give  Hnancial 
support  to  the  indigent  who  want  to  join. 

While  the  Greek  system  promotes  the 
magic  spark  of  "unity,"  how  it  sdects  its 
members  goes  to  show  how  exclusionary  it 
is.  They  claim  there  is  a  house  for  every- 
one. But  what  if  you  arc,  according  to  their 
standards,  not  "everyone"  and  perceived  to 
be  too  fat,  ugly  or  poor?  The  Greeks  will 

Steel  graduated  from  UCLA  in  2000  with  a 
degree  in  English  with  a  minor  in 
Germanic  languages. 


argue  these  are  not  the  reasons  they  don't 
let  people  in;  rejection  is  due  to  "personali- 
ty conflicts."  Let  me  take  you  into  rush, 
and  you  can  decide  for  yourself  if  potential 
members  are  being  judged  and  selected  for 
their  "personalities." 

After  each  "party,"  we  sorority  girls 
frantically  grabbed  our  pens  and  marked 
little  slips  of  paper,  dutifully  ranking  the 
rushee  we  just  talked  to.  On  a  scale  of  one 
to  five,  we  circled  the  numbers  wc  felt 
described  her  hair,  nails,  outfit,  skin,  make- 
up, ethnicity,  height  and  (the  big  one) 
weight.  Afterward,  we  gave  an  overall 
score  of  the  girl  from  one  to  five. 


No  paper  evidence 

remained  of  the  blatant 

discrimination  and  cruelty 

that  occur  during  the 
member  selection  process. 


Once  we  signed  our  names  on  the 
sheets,  we  tallied  up  all  of  the  rushee's 
scores  and  placed  them  on  a  nice  graph  for 
reference  when  we  were  voting  who  should 
be  dropped.  This  is  how  we  choose  our 
"new  friends." 

Our  new  friends  are  not  even  people, 
though,  just  brief  impressions  and  numbers 
all  calculated  to  hopefully  create  a  large 
pledge  class.  Many  ignored  the  reason  why 
our  advisors  collected  and  destroyed  these 
score  sheets  and  our  rush  handbooks.  If 
anyone  found  these  sheets  or  the  detailed 
descriptions  of  how  we  pick  members,  they 
would  be  horrified  and  sue  the  sorority.  No 
paper  evidence  remained  of  the  blatant  dis- 
crimination and  cruelty  that  occur  during 
the  member  selection  process. 

Why  are  rush  and  the  selection  process 
secret?  Why  were  we  subtly  threatened  and 
told  never  to  repeat  what  was  said  in  these 
meetings?  Because  it  is  so  blatantly  wrong 


and  they  know  there  would  be  hell  to  pay  if 
it  got  out.  No  one  ever  dared  challenge  this 
rule;  I  do  not  know  exactly  what  would 
have  happened  if  someone  did.  But  severe 
consequences  were  hinted  at.  They  have 
you  so  brainwashed  that  you  begin  to  ques- 
tion your  own  beliefs  and  morals  to  the 
point  that  you  find  it  okay  to  call 
someone  horrible. 

The  cruelty  and  hate  live 
on,  though,  in  my  conscience, 
memory  and  heart.  My 
favorite  sorority  activity  that  I 
am  proud  to  have  taken  part 
in  was  when  we  spoke  about 
and  secretly  voted  on  the 
rushees.  We  had  to  give  a  pos- 
itive description  ("Oh  my 
gawd  she  is  so  cute,  loves  to 
party  and  super-sweet!")  and 
a  negative  description. 

Some  of  my  favorite  "nega- 
tives" are  "We  need  to  get  rid 
of  her  because  she  will  scare 
other  girls  away  if  she  is  seen 
on  our  porch,"  and  "I  will  die  and 
then  deactivate  if  I  see  her  on  campus  in 
my  letters!"  There  were  much  worse  neg- 
ative descriptions  and  I  still  have  to  deal 
with  the  guilt  of  saying  such  horrible 
things  about  young  women  I  barely 
knew. 

One  member  selection  meeting  I  will 
never  forget  coincided  with  the  time  I 
brought  my  friend,  who  I  will  call 
"Gloria,"  to  dinner  at  the  house.  Little 
did  I  know,  this  was  an  open  rush 
ploy  to  try  and  recruit  new  members. 
I  was  proud  that  my  sorority  sisters 
were  known  as  the  "nice  girls"  on 
the  row  and  I  wanted  to  disprove 
Gloria's  skepticism. 

Gloria  was  working,  on  scholar- 
ship, active  in  our  fioor  govern- 
ment and  her  church  group,  and 
seemed  to  know  everyone  on 
campus.  She  had  a  life  already 
and  had  no  interest  in  join- 


See  SrEEI,|Mge24 


Affirmative  action  arguments  miss  economic  angle 


EDUCATION:  CoUege  admissions 
too  often  favor  rich  applicants; 
candidates  not  addressing  issue 

Affirmative  action  is  unfair,  right?  In 
California,  we  have  already  had  a  refer- 
endum mandating 
the  end  of  affirmative 
action.  Many  daim  that  it 
is  "reverse  discrimination' 
and  that  it  only  impedes 
justice  instead  of  granting 
it.  The  idea,  however,  that 
college  admissions  is  fair 
without  affirmative  action 
sounds  a  little  too  naive  to 
be  true.  Is  it  true  that  the 
UC  system  grants  uccep- 
Umces  only  on  merit  now? 
And  with  this  issue  as 


Blaidon 
NonellvftDMin 


Nemeth-Brown  is  an  international  economics  af>d 
political  science  student  who  can  be  reached  at 
t)nt}0iicla.edu. 


controversial  as  it  has  ahmys  been,  why  do  both 
Al  Gore  and  George  W.  Bush  shy  away  from  it? 
They  may  bicker  over  prescription  oosu  and 
their  tax  cut  plant,  but  I  don't  bdieve  I've  ever 
heard  either  of  them  utter  the  words  'Wfimiative 
action." 

To  verify  this  hundi.  I  went  to  both  Gore  and 
Bush's  Web  sites  (www.algore.com  and 
www.georgewbush.com).  Bush  has  a  small  cap- 
tion at  the  bottom  of  his  "issues"  page  which 
basically  says  he's  against  quotas  and  racial  pref- 
erences. The  words  lifilrmative  action"  are 
nowhere  to  be  found  on  Gore's  Web  page.  Why 
is  it  that  neither  of  these  candidates  take  affirma- 
tive action  seriously?  Maybe  both  candidates  are 
afraid  to  tackle  explosive  issues.  Maybe  both 
candidates  are  so  afraid  of  screwing  up  that  in 
the  process  nothing  worthwhile  gets  said. 

I  might  have  completely  forgotten  about  the 
issue  if  it  wasn't  for  my  sister.  A  different  kind  of 
affirmative  action  became  apparent  to  me  aAer 
hearing  about  her  first  day  of  school  My  sister  is 
a  high  school  senior  and  attends  a  private  school 
just  north  of  San  Francisco.  Obviously,  this  is  a 
stressful  time  in  her  life  because  she  wants  to  go 


to  a  respected  coliege.  She  came  home  from 
school  inTuriated,  one  day,  ranting  that  some- 
thing was  unfair. 

I  asked  her  what  the  matter  was,  and  she 
responded  that  her  good  friend  had  been  admit- 
ted into  Princeton  without  so  much  as  an  appii- 
cation  on  his  part,  but  with  a  verbal  confirma- 
tion from  the  director  of  admissions.  Another 
friend  of  hen  received  a  similar  letter  from 
Stanford,  also  offering  admittance.  She  felt 
worthless,  for  her  friends  and  peers  were  being 
guaranteed  admittance  into  the  top  universities 
without  the  same  academic  achievements  that 
she  felt  she  had  garnered. 

Now,  I  will  admit  these  cases  are  rather  rare, 
for  one  would  need  a  substantial  amount  of 
money  and  power  to  have  those  kinds  of  connec- 
tions. But  that  does  not  take  away  from  the  fact 
that  these  rich  kids  are  not  playing  by  the  same 
rules  that  you  and  1  play  by.  There  will  always  be 
cracks  in  the  college  admissions  process.  I  don't 
expect  it  to  be  perfect,  but  I  do  expect  it  to  recog- 
nize its  flaws. 

This  "white"  affirmative  action  grants 
already-privileged  students  an  unmerited  break. 


I  don't  blame  the  parenu  of  these  students,  for 
I'd  do  the  same  thing.  What  parents  wouidnt 
want  to  do  anything  for  their  child?  It's  just  that 
some  parents  are  more  capable  of  pulling  these 
admission  strings  than  othen.  Schoob  like 
Harvard  do  not  achieve  $4  billion  endowments 
by  accepting  underprivileged  students. 

With  this  flaw  in  mind,  how  can  one  doubt 
the  good  intentions  of  affirmative  action?  Even 
opponents  of  it  bdieve  something  has  to  be  done 
differently.  But  I  am  dissatisfied  by  just  toeing 
the  party  line  and  doing  nothing.  By  doing  noth- 
ing, the  gap  between  the  rich  and  the  poor  will  > 
only  loom  larger.  Education  is  the  only  way  out 
for  lower  dass  students,  and  to  hold  them  to  the 
same  standard  as  a  privileged  student  is  ludi- 
crous. 

Money  provides  security  and  a  superior  edu- 
cation that  poorer  students  can't  afford.  In  a 
capitalist  society  there  will  always  be  gaps  in      '- 
wealth,  but  that  does  not  excuse  the  wealthy 
from  not  aiding  the  poor.  ^ 

A  compromise  has  been  offered  by  some 


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Daily  Brain  Viewpoint 


Thursday,  October  5, 2000       21 


Police  should  get  lo  know  the  communities  they  serve 


LAPD:  Stress  on  oflBcers  could  be 
alleviated  via  interaction;  crime 
can  also  be  reduced  by  program 

Veteran  Los  Angelenos  think  we  know 
what's  going  on  with  cops.  We  saw  the 
Rodney  King  beatings  and  the  Rampart 
police  scandal.  We  can  list  unarmed  victims  of 
police  slayings,  racial  profiling  and  general  bru- 
tality in  our  sleep.  These 
terrors  enacted  on  our 
doorsteps  and  sensational- 
ized in  the  media  all  lead 
to  one  overwhelming  ques- 
tion: ■:■  \- :  '-'•.. y.: 

What  is  wrong  with  the 
Los  Angeles  Police 
Department? 

Wild  guesses  are  easy  to 
make.  Maybe  urban  crime 
is  so  insidious  that  it  even- 
tually wears  down  the 
most  honest  officer's  psy- 
che. Or  maybe  po-po  hope- 
fuls  are  forced  to  plant  dope  on  ex-cons  and 
beat  unarmed  kids  to  prove  their  merit  during 
cadet  initiation. 

Whatever  our  conjectures,  no  accurate  diag- 
nosis of  the  problem  has  been  recognized,  and 
while  massive  government  agencies  roar  about 
"finding  a  cure,"  an  effective  remedy  for  crime 
and  corruption  still  seems  far  off. 

The  obvious  fact  is  that  the  LAPD  is  in  des- 
perate need  of  reform.  Tens  of  L.A.'s  finest  left 
duty  this  year  when  former  officer  Rafael  Perez 
admitted  to  a  unit-wide  corruption  scandal 
involving  planted  evidence,  doctored  crime 
scenes  and  false  arrests. 

Elonai  is  finisNng  her  last  quarter  as  an  English  stu- 
dent at  UCLA  Like  a  good  columnist  she'll  stick  her 
nose  in  anybody's  business.  Feel  free  to  return  the 
^vor  at  enwiisha@hotnrtail.com.  ,  y^   . 


Maisha 
Elonai 


In  response,  the  U.S.  Justice 
Department  threatened  a  lawsuit  for  civil 
rights  violations  unless  the  LAPD  agreed 
to  a  consent  decree  implementing  wildly 
novel  reform  policies  such  as  tracking 
problem  cops  and  improving  officers' 
psychological  screening. 

But  while  the  departments  bicker  over 
the  fine  details  of  a  plan  that  will  probably 
only  make  small  reforms,  police  corrup- 
tion and  violence  continues  to  run  amok 
on  the  streets.  Just  last  month,  Los 
Angeles  police  officer  Ronald  Orosco  was 
charged  with  shooting  an  unarmed 
motorist  in  the  back.  That  same  week, 
three  more  officers  from  the  depart- 
ment's Northeast  division  shot  and 
killed  a  man  they 
were  pursuing 
for  a  traffic  vio- 
lation. 

According  to  a 
police  statement, 
the  officers 
believed  the 
unidentified  man 
was  armed  witfi 
a  gun,  but,  as 
with  the  slaying 
of  Amadou 
Diallo  in  New 
York,  no  such 
weapon  was 
retrieved  at  the 
scene. 

Have  coffee 
and  doughnuts 
wired  the  LAPD 
so  high  that  , 
they'll  shoot  at 

air?  Is  an  extra  ' 

Rorschach  test  really  the  solution  to  those  itchy 
trigger  fingers? 

Maybe  officers'  violence  and  susceptibility 
to  corruption  is  not  the  problem  we  should  be 
working  on.  Maybe  it's  just  that  Los  Angelenos 


JARRETT  CXXDN/Oafly  Biuin 


and  the  LAPD  are  looking  at  policing  from  the 
wrong  angle. 

It  doesn't  seem  possible  that  so  many  offV 
cers  could  be  corrupt,  hyper-aggressive  authori- 
tarians. Certainly  there  are  a  few  bad  cops  and 


other  officers  easily  pushed  across  the  fuzzy 
line  between  law  and  lies. 

It  might  just  have  something  to  do  with  the 


SceBiOIIAI,page25 


Campus  events  depend  on  input 


ISSUES:  Council  can't  be 
expected  to  appeal  to  all 
24,000  students  at  once 


By  Jarcd  Seltzer 

Jason  Krause  states  in  his  sub- 
mission ("Council  agenda  does  not 
cater  to  majority  of  incoming  fresh- 
men". Viewpoint,  Oct.  3)  that 
Undergraduate  Students 
Association  Council  members  gave 
a  bad  impression  by  failing  to 
attend  freshman  convocation.  I 
completely  agree  with  Jason  that 
first  impressions  are  extremely 
important,  and  I  would  like  to 
explain  the  reason  that  I  did  not 
attend  convocation:  I  was  not  invit- 
ed. 

As  far  as  I  know.  President 
Houston  was  the  only  USAC  mem- 

!  invited  to  the  event.  I  believe 
t  no  person  from  USAC  or  even 

[^Associated  StudenU  of  UCLA 
was  invited,  including  the  executive 
director.  So  credit  USAC's  absence 
at  convocation  to  a  mailing  mix-up. 
I  would  have  loved  to  attend,  and 
maybe  it  was  my  responsibility  to 
crash  the  party,  but  the  day  passed 
without  so  much  as  a  whisper  at  the 
council  table. 

The  president  and  internal  vice- 
president  attended,  but  failed  to 
discuss  the  details  of  convocation 
before  it  occurred  as  has  been  done 

Schzcr    is    the     Campus     Events 
Commissioner  of  USAC 


in  previous  years.  So  the  rest  of  us 
were  left  to  read  about  it  in  the 
paper  the  next  day  and  hope  that 
they  represented  us  well.  I  believe 
that  I  speak  for  other  council  mem- 
bers in  sincerely  apologizing  for 
our  absence. 

Like  many  other  council  issues, 
this  entire  Welcome  Week  discus- 
sion has  been  excessively  compli- 
cated and  dramatized.  I'm  not 
interested  in  personal  agendas  and 
petty  debate,  and  I  believe  that 
council  is  obligated  to  serve  the 
needs  of  all  students.  How  can  we 
accomplish  this?  It  is  my  opinion 
that  students  are  best  served 
through  a  range  of  programs,  some 
of  which  inevitably  target  specific 
segments  of  the  student  body. 

As  campus  events  commission- 
er, I  think  it  would  be  wonderful  if 
we  could  throw  a  98  Degrees  con- 
cert and  have  everybody  show  up. 
Unfortunately  many  students 
would  not  attend,  some  would  be 
offended  by  the  very  notion,  and  I 
wouldn't  be  surprised  to  see  certain 
Bruins  use  the  student  refund 
mechanism  available  to  redaim 
their  membership  fees. 

For  that  reason.  Campus  Events 
makes  an  attempt  to  program  hip 
hop,  jazz,  rock,  pop,  international 
music  and  a  host  of  other  genres  to 
serve  the  incredible  diversity  of 
tastes,  backgrounds  and  opinions 
that  are  encouraged  at  UCLA. 

We  do  not  appeal  to  everybody 
at  once,  but  we  try  to  empower 
every  voice  and  never  try  to  silence 
ideu.  Recently  there  has  been 


debate  in  council  about  whether  or 
not  it  is  appropriate  for  USAC  to 
sponsor  the  LGBT/Queer  Campus 
Life  event  as  a  part  of  Welcome 
Week.  Does  serving  a  minority 
population  necessarily  neglect  the 
majority? 

I  believe  that  a  queer  life  on 
campus  meeting  is,  in  one  way  or 
anotfier,  of  benefit  to  every  student 
on  campus.  But  I'm  still  interested 
in  learning  how  to  make  one  event 
appeal  to  everyone.  How  could  we, 
as  suggested  by  another  council 
member  in  an  earlier  Daily  Bruin 
article,  "host  one  day  of  dialogue 
with  brief  discussions  about  all 
issues  concerning  students?"  All 
24,000  of  them?  Are  students  really 
interested  in  being  served  up 
bland,  shallow,  inoffensive  tripe 
tfiat  skirts  issues  without  ever 
exploring  their  deeper  meaning?  I 
hope  not. 

I  want  to  see  USAC  challenge 
students  to  voice  their  opinions 
without  ever  making  them  feel 
threatened  or  unwanted.  1  under- 
stand that  a  number  of  Bruins  feel 
ostracized  by  USAC,  and  I  wel- 
come input  from  them  regarding 
this  issue. 

Hopefully  every  Bruin  will  lake 
the  time  to  voice  his  or  her  own 
opinion.  I  feel  that  USAC  is  here  to 
enable  that  communication,  and  I 
firmly  believe  that  every  council 
member  feels  the  same  way.  Come 
to  a  council  meeting,  held  every 
Tbesday  at  6  p.m.  in  41 7  KerckhofT 
Hall.  All  of  USAC  looks  forward 
to  seeing  you  there. 


Minority  issues  aren't  just 
important  to  minorities 


IGNORANa:  Information 
could  combat  prejudice, 
decrease  hate  violence 

ByEliasEndso 

I'm  writing  in  response  to  the 
Viewpoinu  written  by  Jason  Krause 
and  Jeff  Hale.  ("Council  agenda  does 
not  cater  to  majority  of  incoming 
freshman,"  and 

"Uplifting  _^^^___ 

speech  appreci- 
ated," Daily 
Bruin, 
Viewpoint, 
October  3). 

My  duty  as 
the 

Undergraduate 
Student 
Association 
Council  Internal 

Vice  President         ' 

and  my  commit- 
ment to  social  responsibility  as  part 
of  Praxis  is  to  strive  for  a  safe,  inclu- 
sive, accessible,  welcoming  and  richly 
educational  environment  for  the 
UCLA  community.  This  commit- 
ment is  especially  greater  to  the  conv 
munities  who  have  long  been  ren- 
dered invisible  and  expendable,  and 
to  the  aggrieved  communities  of 
greater  Los  Angeles. 

Endso  is  the  Internal  Vice  IVcsident  of 
USAC 


I  am  appalled,  but  not  surprised 
that  some  students  like  Krause  do  not 
see  the  dire  need  for  an  event  such  as 
Queer  Campus  Life.  Krause  states 
that  I  forced  USAC  to  produce  this 
event.  He  goes  on  to  assume  that  this 
event  is  not  beneficial  to  all  students, 
even  though  he  has  not  attended  it. 

First  ofall,  the  Office  of  the 
Internal  Vice  President,  in  collabora- 
tion with  La  Familia,  sponsored  this 
event  legitimate- 
^■■■"■■"^^      ly  and  no  one 
has  the  right  to 
deny  student 
programming. 
And  for  the 
record.  Queer 
Campus  Life 
did  not  replace 
Days  of 
Dialogue. 
Moreover,  Days 
of  Dialogue  is 
"——-———     an  event  invent- 
ed  and  pro- 
duced by  Praxis. 

Secondly,  Queer  Campus  Life  is 
beneficial  for  everyone,  especially  for 
students  who  identify  themselves  as 
heterosexual.  Heterosexism  and 
homophobia,  perpetuated  by  hate 
and  ignorance,  are  the  driving  forces     , 
behind  hate  crimes  like  the  brutal 
murder  of  Matthew  Shepard  and  38 
other  reported  brutal  murden  since. 
The  perpetrators  of  these  brutal  mur- 


As  idealistic  and  as 

desirable  as  a 

'colorblind' society  is, 

the  fact  is  that  racism 

and  prejudices  are 

everywhere. 


Sec 


23 


DAIIY  BRUIN 

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22       Thurtday,(ktober  5,2000 


Daly  Bruin  Viewpoinl 


BF 


The  Department  of  Applied  Linguistics  and  TESL 

announces  a  special  distance  learning  course  in  collaboration  with  Kyoto  University,  Japan: 

Applied  Linguistics  and  TESL  C119: 

Current  Issues  in  Language  Education  -  How  People  Learn  Languages 

What  is  language?  How  do  people  learn  languages?  What  effect  does  language  have  on  a  people  and  Its  culture?  Language  is 
arguabh^  the  most  important  human  characteristic  -  the  medium  through  which  we  think  and  communicate  -  and  yet  most  of 
us  hardly  ever  think  about  it.  We  all  easily  acquired  our  native  language  by  the  time  we  were  five  years  old  yet  second 
language  learning  seems  to  be  much  more  difficult.  What  is  the  difference?  These  are  a  few  of  the  topics'that  will  be 
examined  in  this  course,  which  explores  second  language  learning  with  a  focus  on  the  acquisition  of  English  as  a  second 
anguage.  The  course  covers  two  general  areas:  the  structure  of  English  and  the  nature  of  second  language  learning  Other 
opics  to  be  discussed  include  what  all  native  speakers  implicitly  know  about  the  structure  of  English,  interlanguage  systems 
he  psychological,  social  and  linguistic  factors  that  influence  second  language  development,  individual  differences  in  second 
language  learning,  and  the  effect  of  instruction  on  the  acquisition  process. 

This  is  a  joint  course  between  Kyoto  University  and  UCU.  The  latest  Distance  Learning  technology  will  connect  the  two 
campuses  so  that  the  students  in  Japan  and  UCLA  will  be  able  to  interact  and  leam  together.  The  format  of  the  class  will  be 
lecture  discussion,  and  group  presentations.  For  the  final  project,  each  student  at  UCLA  will  be  paired  with  a  Japanese 
student  at  Kyoto  University  and  they  will  together  analyze  a  speech  sample  from  a  non-native  speaker  of  English  and  write  up 
a  collabora  ive  report  Chatrooms.  bulletin  boards,  class  assignments,  interactive  exercises  and  electronic  communication 
will  be  available  for  this  class  on-line  through  Interactive  Media  Education  at  a  Distance  (IMED)  developed  at  UCLA  bv  the 
Center  of  Digital  Innovation  (CDI).  ,vvv- .:.  .■     7"  ;; ,-  -■  ;  ^ 

Professor  Cheryl  Fantuzzi  Fall  2000 
Tuesdays  &  Thursdays,  6:30  -  7:50  pm    ■  ■''\:-\':''' ■''''''■''''''■-■'':■■■-'''■■■':■  ^ , ■'- 
(after  10/29/00.  5:30  -  6:50  pm) 
Room:  Knudsen1240B  ^       •'    Please  call  x54631  for  more  details 


•  s  ...■ 


■:^- 


Will  you  outwit,  outplay,  and  outlast? 
The  Survivor  wins  a  new  Razor  Scooter 

10/5.  Thursday.  6pm.  CS  Young  24 

FREE  DINNER  &  BOBA  !!! 


NEMETH-BROWN 

From  page  20 

scholars  that  promote  a  socioeconom- 
ic afTirmative  action.  It  would  give  aid 
to  needy  students,  but  not  based  on 
race.  I  first  heard  this  idea  two  years 
ago  when  I  attended  a  speech  given 
by  Dinesh  D'Souza,  a  beat-selling    .  , 
author  who  attended  Dartmouth   ^ 
College.  It  made  sense  to  me  at  the  '. 
time,  for  D'Souza  rejected  the  idea 
that  American  society  is  racist  -'  he 
believes  individuals  are  racist  and  the 
media  has  propagated  the  fallacy  that 
the  entirety  of  society  is  racist. 

The  logic  follows  that  a  poor  white, 
Hispanic,  black  or  Asian  student 
should  have  an  equal  right  to  aid.  But 
this  idea  is  contingent  on  the  fact  that 
there  is  a  commonality  with  being 
poor.  Is  this  really  true?  Does  a  poor 
white  student  in  San  Bernardino 
County  have  a  lot  in  common  with  a 
poor  black  student  from  south  central 
Los  Angeles?  I  don't  just  mean  what 
kind  of  music  they  listen  to,  but  do 
they  face  the  same  social  pressures?  It 
would  be  completely  subjective  to 
determine  which  race  has  more  hard- 
ships to  overcome  than  others  do,  but 
something  still  needs  to  be  done. 

A  consensus  will  probably  never  be 
reached  that  a  poor  white  student  is 
less  needy  than  a  poor  black  student, 
for  there  is  too  much  gray  area  to  surf 
through.  How  does  one  define  need? 
How  can  you  weed  out  prejudices    . 
from  the  individuals  determining 
need?  Or  is  this  all  too  confusing? 
Isn't  there  an  easier  answer  to  this 
problem?  Maybe  not. 

So  where  does  this  leave  us?  What 
arc  we  to  do  when  we  can't  live  with 
or  without  affirmative  action?  I 
would  suggest  this:  even  if  you  don't 
believe  in  affirmative  action,  you 
must  grant  me  that  the  college  admis- 
sion process  is  not  completely  based 
on  merit.  Simply  to  even  out  the  cor- 
ruption, one  could  support  affirma- 
tive action. 

As  a  white  male,  this  hurts  me  but 
at  the  same  time  it  helps  me.  I  may 
attend  the  25th  best  university  instead 
of  the  15th,  but  my  social  education"" — 
will  be  all  the  greater  I  realize  now 
how  foolish  I  was  when  I  applied  to 
colleges.  I  applied  to  many  schools 
that  were  not  as  racially  diverse  as 
UCLA.  I  found  myself  caught  in  a 
white  bubble  of  sorts  where  I  didn't 
realize  not  everybody  is  a  white 
Anglo-Saxon  Protestant.  In  the  end,  I 
couldn't  have  chosen  a  more  diverse 
and  academically  stimulating  place 
than  UCLA. 

But  as  I  see  minority  admissions 
decline  over  the  last  few  years  and  the 
amount  of  white  and  Asian  students 
increase,  1  feel  saddened  that  my  real 
learning  is  waning.  Most  of  you  who 
read  this  right  now  would  concede 
that  the  best  discussions  you've  had  at 
this  school  have  come  outside  of 
class.  Books  can  teach  you  a  lot  of 
useful  information,  but  they  can't 
teach  you  how  to  relate  to  someone 
from  a  different  culture. 

Assimilation  is  a  gradual  process 
that  needs  to  be  propagated  by  col- 
lege admissions.  Although  people  of 
the  same  race  will  always  feel  more 
comfortable  with  one  another,  over- 
lap with  other  races  is  needed  to  pro- 
mote general  social  concern.  GPAs 
and  SATs  are  imperfect,  but  still  are 
important  aiteria  for  college  admis- 
sion. 

More  attention  needs  to  be  drawn 
to  the  human  element  of  the  student. 
I  believe  that  the  college  application 
essay  should  count  as  much  if  not 
more  than  the  preceding  items  men- 
tioned. The  risk  here  is  greater  subjec- 
tivity in  admissions,  but  the  upside  is 
that  disadvantaged  students  will  get  a 
break. 

There  is  a  human  element  missing 
from  the  admissions  process,  and  if  it 
continues  to  neglect  minorities  we 
will  be  living  in  a  two-tiered  society 
where  the  rich  will  mean  well  but 
won't  put  their  money  where  their 
mouth  is  -  unless  it  means  getting 
their  own  children  into  coHege. 


;V-, -"■     .»■ 


~^■k',^ir..■J':ii■^^>^:J^i  ■:.' 


ENCISO  1       S, 

From  page  21         '"  .:i.p'- }';':'' '■ 

ders  happen  to  be  in  the  90th  per- 
centile that  Krause  mistakenly 
assume  this  event  excludes. 

I  adamantly  urge  Krause  to  attend 
_  educational  forums  such  as  Qucej 
"^   Campus  Life  to  combat  his  own    ; 
hypocrisy,  ignorance,  heterosexism 
and  any  other  "isms"  that  we  tend  to 
,   think  we  are  not.  Jason  is  correct  in 
his  belief  that  I  am  "advancing  my 
own  agenda";  that  is,  to  contribute  to 
the  education  of  people  like  USAC 
President  Elizabeth  Houston,  who 
claim  not  to  be  homophobic  while  at 
the  same  time  wishing  LGBT  conv 
munities  didn't  exist. 

Remember,  racism,  sexism  and 
heterosexism  have  been  able  to  per- 
sist throughout  generation.s  by  seem- 
ing not  to  be  what  they  truly  are. 
Although  incorrect  when  stating  that 
"the  contentious  issue  with  this  event 
is  not  homophobia,"  he  is  correct 
when  he  states  that  the  contentious 
issues  do  not  have  to  do  with  reli- 
gious fanaticism. 

In  terms  of  the  well-being  of 
LGBT  communities,  Christianity  has 
never  been  the  problem.  In  fact, 
Christianity  and  Jesus  himself  are  all 
about  love  and  acceptance,  especially 
loving  and  accepting  peoples  who  are 
marginalized. 

Think  about  it.  The  problem  lies 
within  individuals  who  are  too  hate- 
ful, too  hypocritical,  too  misled  and 
too  unconscious.  Let's  not  forget 
that  slavery  of  African  people  in  this 
country  lasted  as  long  as  it  did  largely 
because  "Christians"  claimed  it  was 
the  morally  right  thing  to  do.  But 
truth  always  prevails.  Just  as  the  lega- 
cy of  slavery  and  imperialism  have 
distastefully  embarrassed  the  present 
Christian.communities,  so  will  the 
legacy  of  exclusion,  discrimination 
and  murder  enacted  against  LGBT 
peoples. 

Krause  goes  on  to  state  that  from 
Elizabeth's  convocation  speech  he 
concluded  "she  values  racial  and 
intellectual  diversity,  personal  char- 
acter development,  morally-based 
decision  making,  and  the  pursuit  of 
truth."  Once  again  he  has  assumed 
too  much.  Did  you  know  that 
Elizabeth  denied  an  appointment  to 
the  ASUCLA  Board  of  Directors 
because  of  the  candidate's  associa- 
tion with  Samahang  Filipino? 
Did  you  know  that  USAC 
President  Elizabeth  Houston  has  not 
done  much  to  produce  Welcome 
Week? 

As  for  Elizabeth's  convocation 
speech,  I  found  it  to  be  lacking  a  crit- 
ical assessment  of  campus  issues.  I 
also  find  it  disheartening  that  Hale, 
stated  in  his  letter  to  the  Daily  Bruin, 
"Not  everything  is  about  race  and 
prejudice.  You  are  USAC,  not  the 
ACLU."  As  idealistic  and  as  desir- 
able as  a  "color  blind"  society  is,  the 
fact^s  that  racism  and  prejudices  are 
cve^here.  For  example,  here  at 
UCLA  an  African  American  woman 
wauicked  while  being  called  a  "nig- 
ger"|in  front  of  Campbell  Hall  last 
spring.  We  need  to  pay  attention  to 
such  social  injustices. 

Hale  may  not  think  so,  but  then 
again  Hale's  racial  identity  affords 
him  privileges  beyond  his  compre- 
hension, privileges  that  are  100  per- 
cent dependent  on  the  oppression  of 
racialized  Others.  He  goes  on  to  state 
that  he  enjoyed  the  speech  because 
there  wasn't  a  Praxis  president 
"telling  people  of  how  awful  the 
administration  is"  and  his  friend 
noted,  "This  is  the  first  time  I  don't 
want  to  kill  someone." 

Not  calling  out  to  the  administra- 
tion for  injustices  against  underrep- 
resented  students  only  goes  to  show 
how  much  knowledge  some  people 
need  to  acquire,  i  conclude,  from 
Hale  and  his  angry  friend,  that  what 
makes  them  uncomfortable  about 
mentioning  race  and  prejudice  is  the 
deconstruction  of  a  racist  structure, 
one  that  protects  the  possessive 
iwywtwent  in  whitewew. 


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STEEL 

From  page  20 

ing. 

It  was  tots  of  fun  until  we  went  to 
a  meeting  where  it  was  announced 
that  Gloria  was  going  to  be  evaiuat* 
ed  for  membership.  Two  of  my  "sis- 
ters" proceeded  to  give  negative 
descriptions  so  awful  1  had  to  leave 
the  room.  Gloria  was  called  "fat, 
dumpy,  disgusting"  and  they/elt 
they  would  die  if  they  saw  her  in 
our  sorohity  letters.  These  hateful 
words  are  still  with  me,  but  what 
haunts  me  the  most  is  that  I  did  not 
deactivate  right  then.  No.  1  went  on 
to  become  vice  president  of  the 
sorority  and  obviously  I  am  still 
used  to  this  day  as  a  poster-child  for 
the  Greek  system. 


You  see, "diversity"  in 

other  houses  means 

you  have  a  brunette  in 

your  pledge  class. 


How  did  they  select  members  in 
other  houses  that  were  more  selec- 
tive and  "better"  than  ray  sorority? 
You  see,  "diversity"  in  other  houses 
means  you  have  a  brunette  in  your 
pledge  class.  Gloria  did  not  even 
want  to  join  and  even  if  she  did, 
where  would  she  get  the  money? 
TheOreek  system  likes  to  talk 
about  how  they  offer  fmancial  assis- 
tance to  members,  but  as  a  former 
pledge  educator,  I  saw  girls 
depledge  because  no  one  offered 
them  monetary  aid. 

So  why  call  Gloria  fat  and  ugly 
for  no  reason?  Simple.  Someone 
who  does  not  look  exactly  like 
them,  have  the  same  skin  color, 
fmancial  status  or  clothes  threatens 
the  Greek  system.  I  guess  Gloria 
and  90  percent  of  UCLA  students 
do  not  have  the  right  "personali- 
ties." But  it  doesn't  matter  if  you  do 
fit  the  physical  mold  of  a  sorority 
girl,  because  iTyou  are  different  in 
any  way,  you  will  be  ostracized. 
This  one  story  only  begins  to 
explain  why  I  left  the  Greek  system. 

When  faced  with  what  I  would 
do  in  my  last  year  at  UCLA  and  for 
the  rest  of  my  life,  I  decided  to  be 
true  to  my  soul  that  believes  "all 
men  are  created  equal"  and  that  it 
is  wrong  to  judge  people  and  to 
choose  my  "frien<ls"on  qualities 
fudi  as  looks,  skin  color  and  family 
background,  physical  health  -  all  of 
the  things  that  people  can't  control 
-just  to  make  me  fed  better  about 
myself.  I  can  control  how  I  act 
toward  other  people  and  how  I 
think. 

I  have  no  hard  feelings  for  my 
''ex-sisters,"  and  1  wish  them  all  the 
luck  with  fall  rush  because  hey, 
sometimes  out  of  darkness  you  get 
real  "Disneyland  fireworks"  and 
light. 

Out  of  my  mistakes  I  have 
become  a  stronger  and  better  per- 
son. To  all  of  you  new  freshman  or 
lost  Bruins  who  need  someone  to 
plan  the  party  for  you  (if  you  join 
you  will  soon  be  doing  all  the 
work),  need  friends  or  a  dose  of 
self-confidence,  take  some  advice 
from  the  reluctant  poster  child  of 
the  Greek  system. 

Don't  let  your  years  at  UCLA  be 
filled  with  regret  and  shame  by 
going  Greek.  Ask  yourself,  "Do  I 
and  can  I  be  a  part  of  a  system  that 
promotes  such  backward  values 
and  elitist  attitudes?" 

Do  not  wait  until  senior  year  to 
raise  these  crucial  questions.  It  is 
not  worth  it  to  sacrifice  your  Bruin 
pride  and  human  compassion  to  an 
organization  that  violates  the  very 
MMQce  of  our  com^ion  humanity. 
Go  to  *SC  if  you  rei^y  want  to  be  a 
frat  boy  or  sorority  girl.  You  are  a 
Bruin  and  way  too  smart! 


ELDNAI 

From  page  21 

constant  stress  that  police  are 
exposed  to.  Officers  face  the  poten- 
tial of  dealing  with  life-threatening 
risks  any  given  day.  Citizens  go 
postal  and  cops  get  shot  -  that's  a 
reality  as  present  as  corruption  in 
law  enforcement  agencies. 

We  only  compile  that  stress  with 
our  unrealistic  expectations  of  what 
a  good  officer  should  be.  The  public 
and  police  management  both  make 
high  demands  on  cops.  We  want  our 
streets  cleared  of  crime,  and  we 
expect  the  police  to  deliver,  quick. 
Is  it  any  wonder  that  some  cops 
cradc? 

A  real  officer's  job  is  to  "serve 
and  protect"  as  far  as  the  law  allows. 
If  cops  can't  do  that  with  guns,  we 
should  try  another  system. 

Police  deserve  a  beat  with  fewer 
life-threatening  activities,  instead  of 
being  hurled  into  sudden,  inexplica- 
bly violent  situations,  it  might  be 
helpful  if  they  were  familiarized  with 
the  communities  and  people  they 
serve. 

Fantastic  as  it  sounds,  such  a 
policing  program  does  exist. 

Once  upon  a  time  in  faraway 
Redlands,  Police  Chief  Jim 
Bueermann  came  up  with  a  new 
policing  program.  An  outgrowth  of 
the  Community  Oriented  Policing 
movement,  this  program  targets 
areas  in  San  Bernardino  County 
where  young  residents  have  the  high- 
est exposure  to  gang  violence,  pover- 
ty, domestic  instability,  drugs  and 
other  factors  believed  to  lead  to 
criminal  behavior. 

Officers  visit  the  troubled  area 
once  a  week  to  offer  recreation  and 
educational  activities  such  as  mini- 
camivali,  neighborhood  clean-ups, 
parenting  classes  and  study  groups 
held  in  SWAT  buses. 

Not  only  have  the  officers  been 
able  to  form  friendlier  relationships 
with  their  community,  but  according 
to  Bueermann,  crime  in  the  county 
has  dropped  by  36  percent  as  a  result 
of  the  program.  Officers  report  that 
formerly  uncooperative  locals  finally 
trust  them  enough  to  describe  suspi- 
cious activity,  making  it  easier  to 
solve  crime.  And  kids  have  begun  to 
actually  like  the  officers,  according 
to  a  story  by  the  Associated  Press. 
(Associated  Press,  Sept.  23) 

Perhaps  this  program  is  exactly 
what  the  LAPD  needs.  Strcssed-out 
cops  might  do  well  to  enjoy  a  potato 
sack  race  with  elementary  school 
kids  every  once  in  a  while.  And  if 
they  talk  with  high-schoolers  about 
their  growing  pains,  maybe  those 
frustrated  students  will  be  more  like- 
ly to  overcome  their  difficulties 
rather  than  resort  to  criminal  solu- 
tions. 

it  might  be  difficult  to  organize, 
but  this  program  could  have  multiple 
benefits  on  a  large  urban  scale. 

Ibbould  serve  as  an  educational 
booA  for  students  in  an  area  where 
outrnch  is  sorely  needed. 

It  jpuld  provide  poverty-level 
teens  with  friends  and  mentors,  and 
maybe  help  them  overcome  life  chal- 
lenges. 

Most  importantly,  it  might  give 
police  officers  enough  exposure  to 
their  community  so,  when  cops  are 
up  against  frustrated  criminals,  they 
can  relate  with  their  targets  instead 
of  shooting  them. 

Yes,  community-oriented  pro- 
gramming is  a  drastic  change  in 
police  officer's  traditional  duties,  but 
maybe  it  could  help  the  LAPD 
become  good  guys  again. 

If  the  public  learns  to  recognize 
our  officers  as  human  beings,  while 
officers  learn  to  recognize  their  tar- 
gets as  human  beings,  perhaps  the 
overwhelming  streMet  and  pressures 
of  police  work  would  ease  up  a  little. 
Communities  would  see  the  benefit, 
education  could  take  a  boost,  and 
oops  could  liv«  up  to  their  motto. 
The  fairy  tale  just  might  be  worth 


-rtryr 


IMfySramVliwpeiiit 


Thunday,  October  5, 2000       2S 


WriGONW 


Friday,  October  6, 6:30  pm 

at  Hillei,  900  Hilgard 


Join  us  for  service  and  a  lecture  by 

RaiOyi  Chaim  Seidler-Feller 

'nhe  White  Knight  with  the  Kippah: 

Joseph  Uetierman's  CancTidacy  and 

the  Status  of  American  Jews" 


All  students  welcome! 
Parents  are  invited  too! 


Yom  Kippiir  Services 

Trculitional  Services      V 

Led  by  Rabbi  Chlllm  Seidler-FeUer 


JKol  Ifldre  Sunday,  October  8 

6:1 5pm  ®Xovet£pininons 


MO! 


eleber  9 


KolNidre  teidiqr.  October  8 

■':■  7:30pim#Hillel    V 

Morning  Service  Monday,  October  9 

9:30am  @  HiUel 


Yom  Kippur-Break  the  Fast-Meal 

.All  .Stii'lrllt~.     (ilM(hl,il(s  ,111-1   I    rHlcim-.l'lll.tlr--     \\rl(  nliu' 


Students  FREE,  Parents  $10 

RSVP  208-3081  or  hiliel@ucla.edu 


Monday.  October  9.  8:15  pm 

at  the  Bayit,  619  Landfair  Ave. 

RSVP  208-3081 


*         Attention! 

AH  Campus  Organizations! 

Registration  Week  for  all  organizations  is  4th  week  of  Fall  Quarter 

Get  started  on  another  exciting  year  of  campus  activities  and  programming  ~~ 
by  registering  your  organization  at  one  of  the  23  registration  sessions  listed 
below. 


SAVE  THESE  DATES! 


Date 


Piace 


:.*' 


Monday,  Oct  23  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Tuesday,  Oct  24  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Wednesday,  Oct  25  Ackerman  2nd  Floor  Lounge 

Thursday,  Oct  26  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Friday,  Oct  27  Viewpoint  Conference  Room 


Registration  Times 

9:30  11:0012:30  2:00  3:30 

9:30  11:0012:30  2:00  3:30 

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9:30  11:0012:30  2:00  3:30 

9:30  11:0012:30 


No  reservations  are  needed!  Simply  have  three  of  your  organization 
representatives  attend  one  of  the  registration  sessions.  Representatives 
must  be  UCLA  students,  staff,  faculty  or  a  combination  of  these  three.  All 
three  must  attend  the  same  registration  session  and  sign-in  at  the  same 
time  ten  minutes  before  the  session.  • 

We  will  start  on  time....  DONT  be  LATE! 

It  is  highly  reconrimended  that  you  come  earlier  In  the  week  since  the  later 
dates  and  times  fill  up  fast. 

For  further  Infomriatlon,  pleaise  call  the  Center  for  Student  Programming  at  c     : 
310-825-7041  or  e-mail  at  mveluz@saonet.ucla.edu 

THE  BEfilNNIHfi  OF  THE  YEAR  IS  THE  BBT  TIME  TO  REGISTER.  DOMT  MI.SS  miTt 


-"  '•■■•-  ■■   ■"    'l~  if^ 


I.  -■  -  -.1.  .i.  — 


:,  ..» 


Suffering  from  stress?  So  is  WiHy 

"Death  of  a  Salesman,"  by  Arthur  Miller, 
takes  an  close  look  at  the  psychotic  episodes 
ofan  exhausted  salesman.  :     ' 

For  those  who  can  relate,  see  Friday's  paper 


n 


ENTERTAINME 


Thunday,  Octobers,  2000 


:^ 


A&EontheWeb 

See  all  this  and  more  at 
the  Daily  Bruin's      r 
Website; 
www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

Thursday,  Octobw  5,2000 


I  wani  to 


a 


HINGYI  KHONG/tXily  Bruin 


Riches  await  those  waiting  in  line 


COLUMN:  Screening 
process  puts  reporter's 
brain,  patience  to  test 

When  looking  around  at 
my  fellow  Angelcnos,  I'd 
like 
to  think  that 
we  all  have 
our  own  spe- 
cial talents, 
something 
that  sets  us 
apart  from  all 
the  other  folks 
out  there. 
Maybe  you 
can  tango  like 
there's  no 
tomorrow. 
Maybe  you  ,    ': '  *  ^ . 

can  dinerentiate  comptet  equations 
in  seconds.  Maybe  you  speak  nine 


Brent 
Hopkins 


languages.  Maybe  you're  the 
world's  best  surgeon. 

Me?  Yeah,  I've  got  a  talent,  too. 
Something  that  puts  me  head  and 
shoulders  above  everyone  else. 
Something  that  makes  me  an 
absolute  superstar.  Want  to  know 
what  it  is? 

Trivia. 

Sad,  isn't  it?  Whereas  all  those 
other  skills  I  ticked  ofT  have  real, 
practical  applications,  my  gift  is 
useful  at  parties  and  just  about 
nowhere  else.  Since  I'm  a  big  geek 
and  I  grudgingly  go  to  about  two 
parties  a  year,  my  little  talent  is  par- 
ticularly worthless.  My  chance  to 
be  an  Einstein  or  Martin  Luther 
King  Jr.  has  dried  up,  because  the 
section  of  my  brain  that  could  go  to 
big  important  things  has  instead 
been  devoted  to  the  study  of  point- 
less, random  facts.  Finally,  though, 
after  years  of  bemoaning  my  sorry, 
misdirected  skill,  I'm  beginning  to 


see  the  light. 

Thanks  to  those  deep-pocketed 
folks  at  ABC.  I  can  finally  put  my 
trivial  brain  to  work  and  be  hand- 
somely compensated.  That's  right 
kids.  I'm  gonna 

win  me  a  mil-         __^.m 
lion  dollars.  At 
least  I  sure 
hope  I  will. 

Last 
Saturday  morn- 
ing, while  you 
were  all  sound 
asleep  in  your 
beds,  I  dragged 
myself  out  of 
the  comfort  of 

mine  to  try  out       

for  "Who 

Wants  to  Be  a  Millionaire."  At  the 
ungodly  hour  of  7  a.m.,  neck  stift" 
with  sleep  deprivation,  I  hauled 
myself  and  my  colleague,  Terry, 
down  to  the  Beverly  Hilton  in  an 


At  7  a.m.,  I  hauled 

myself  and  my 

colleague  down  to  the 

,  Beverly  Hilton  in  an 

attempt  to  begin  the 

quest  for  opulence. 


iWilii 


attempt  to  begin  the  quest  for  opu- 
lence. I'm  not  sure  how  it  went  yet, 
but  maybe  if  we  all  cross  our  fingers 
and  think  good  thoughts,  the  pro- 
ducers will  deem  me  charming 

enough  to  get  a 
—s-i^iM^— ^      shot  at  a  million 
bucks. 

Terry  and  I, 
with  our  intre- 
pid photogra- 
pher Lisa 
recording  the 
whole  event, 
strode  boldly 
into  the  Hilton 
at  7:45,  a  full 
hour  and  15 

minutes  before 

we  were  even 
supposed  to  be  let  in.  Not  being  a 
morning  person,  I  grumbled  the 
entire  way,  still  foiv^y  remember- 

'    See  HOPKINS,  page  31 


n  'II  ini-i 


and  that's  tny 


f  i  n  a  I 


answer 


'Who  Wants  to  Be  a  Millionaire'  draws 

into  LA.  West  coast  college  students 

in  pnrsuit  of  the  chance  to  win  big 


By  Terry  Tang 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


On  most  days,  one  wotM  be  hard- 
pressed  to  spet  college  students  hanging 
out  in  the  lobby  of  the  elegant  Beverly  Hills 
Hilton.  But  on  this  particular  Saturday 
morning,  clusters  of  them  are  waiting  in  a 
line.  Some  even  have  their  backpacks  in 
tow.  And  almost  alt  are  sinliing  into  the 
throes  of  boredom. 

"I  could  go  back  to  the  car  and  get  my 


'Harry  Potter'  book  and  read  it  aloud." 
said  Roger  Reese,  a  fourth-year  philosophy 

major  from  UCSB.  — ; — 

No,  he  has  not  been  waiting  for  author 
J.K.  Rowling.  Reese  and  many  other  uni- 
versity students  rose  bright  and  early,  hop- 
ing to  Hex  their  brain  muscle  at  the  9  a.m. 
tryouts  for  the  college  edition  of  ABC's  rat- 
ings-grabber, "Who  Wants  to  Be  a 
Millionaire."  While  getting  up  early  on  a 
weekend  sounds  almost  painful  to  some 
students,  the  chance  to  win  $1  million 


makes  the  task  a  no-brainer. 

"I  figured  it  wouldn't  hurt,"  said  Jamis 
Medeiros,  a  first-year  biology  student  from 
Mesa  College  in  San  Diego  who  woke  up  at 
5  a.m.  to  make  it  on  time.  "I  could  hook  my 
family  up  with  some  cash,  depending  on 
how  much  there  was." 

Although  "Millionaire"  advertised  these 
tryouts  on  TV  and  the  Web,  most  students 
heard  about  them  from  friends.  Some  were 

SeeMllllOIUME,pa9e30 


LrSA\«W*ANOtR 

Coordinating  producer  NHdd  Webster  interviews  Robert  Magce,  a  fourth-year  electirical  engineering  student  at  UCLA. 
Participants  were  intervieMKd  only  after  they  passed  a  written  test. 


Villjfd  Books 

Sabrina  Ward  Harrison's  writing,  artwork  and  emotion  fill  all  the 
pages  of  her  book  "Spilling  Open:  the  Art  of  Becoming  Yourself." 

'Spilling  Open'  reveals  life 
of  author  during  college 

ART:  Opening  readers  to     for  just  about  anyone. 

Spillmg  Open,  is  a  compilation 
problems,  art-filled  book  of  the  actual  journals  she  wrote 
^■^^,riA^^  ,^r^^^^^u,  :»^:»Uf  between  the  ages  of  18  and  21,  but 
provides  womanly  mSlght     ^^  j^^jg^ts  iS  the  journals  seem 

ages  ahead  of  their  time. 

The  book  opens,  "We  all  at  our 
own  age  have  to  claim  something, 
even  if  it's  only  our  own  confusion.  I 
am  in  the  middle  of  growing  up  and 
into  myself. 

"This  book  is  my  life  in  progress. 
A  growing  expedition  through  the 
tangled  and  unfilled  in  parts  of 
understanding  my  life,  my  truth,  and 
myself." 

With  such  words,  the  pace  for  the 

book   is  set.   "Spilling  Open"   is 

Harrison's 


BOOK  REVIEW 


By  Bartura  McGuire 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

College  is  supposed  to  be  the  best 
time  of  your  life,  but  for  Sabrina 
Ward  Harrison,  author  of  "Spilling 
OpcB,  The  Art  of  Becoming 
Yourself,"  it  wasn't. 

With  questions  about  the  world 
and  about  herself,  Harrison  began 
creating  a  journal  that  wasn't  com- 
prised of  just  words  on  a  piece  of 
paper,  but  was 
an  artist's 

adventure  into 
her  deepest 
thoughts. 

"I  would  say 
it  was  the  book  I 
most  needed  to 
read,"  she  said 
in  a  recent  inter- 
view prior  to  an 
in-store  book 
reading.  "I  cre- 
ated the  book 
that  I  wanted  to 
find  in  a  book- 
store, especially 
in  my  early 
twenties  in  col- 
lege." 

"People 
would  look  back 
on  college  and 
that  time  and  be 

like,  'Oh,  that  was  just  the  greatest 
time  in  my  life,'  and  I  was  18,  19, 
going,  'Dm,  this  so  isn't,'"  she  con- 
tinued. "It's  so  confusing  and 
there's  so  many  questions  that  I 
don't  know  where  to  even  begin." 

Harrison,  now  24-years  old,  never 
wanted  to  publish  her  journals,  she 
never  wanted  to  be  a  "self-help"  guru 
for    women. — btrt; — somewhat — by- 
default,  she's  become  a  role  model 


story. 

All  the  confu- 
sion she  was 
feeling  as  she 
ended  a  rela- 
tionship or  dis- 
covered her 
path  in  life.  At 
the  same  time, 
however,  it  can 
be  anybody's 
story. 

"The  whole 
time  I  was  like 'I 
can't  admit  any 
more,  I  can't 
say  this,'"  she 
said. 

"I  thought  I 
was  going  to  be 
so  embarrassed, 
but  it's  a  really 
empowering 
feeling  because  as  soon  as  you  write 
it  all  out  there  ...  a  woman,  someone 
you  don't  even  know  will  read  it  and 
be  like,  '1  feel  like  you're  reading  my 
own  journal,'"  Harrison  said. 

"It  connects  me  so  much  more  to 
people  and  makes  me  realize  I'm  not 
alone  in  this,"  she  continued.  "I 
think  I  would've  lived  at  least  the 


TMe:  Spilling  Open 
Author  Sabrina  Ward  Hanison 
Publisher  Random  House 
Price:  $22.9S  Pages:  88 
Rating:  9 


SteSAtmilA,|M9«33 


f 


28   Thursday,  October  5, 2000 


;-r^;^ 


DaHy  Brum  Am  &  EntcrtainflwfN 


Surfing 


www.theonion.com 


The  Onion 
www.theonion.com 

Most  people  read  the  paper  to  get  the  news, 
the  facts.  For  readers  of  "The  Onion,"  howev- 
er, the  truth  is  one  of  the  last  things  you'll  get. 
According  to  its  Web  site,  "The  Onion" 
(www.theonion.com),  is  the  most  popular 
humor  periodical  in  the  world  and  after  one 
look  at  the  opening  page,  it's  no  wonder  why. 
Full  of  pop  cultural  parodies,  the  stories 
contained  on  site  deal  with  issues  in  the  media 
today,  but  not  in  the  same  manner  of  other 
publications.  For  instance,  the  first  story  of 
their  "News  In  Brief  involves  the  Olympics, 
something  very  timely,  considering  the  recent 
games  in  Australia. 

This  story,  however,  does  not  list  the 
newest  gold  medal  winners,  or  latest  gymnas- 
tics drama.  Instead,  Web  viewers  get  a  comi- 
cal story  on  how  the  International  Olympic 
Committee  is  launching  an  investigation  into 
the  accusations  that  Olympic  viewers  arc 
using  various  narcotics  to  enable  them  to  sit 
through  the  games  -  not  quite  what  might  be 
expected. 

It  is  important  for  viewers  to  remember 
that  these  stories  are  far  from  the  truth,  at 
least  theoretically,  and  are  more  like  April 
Fool's  jokes.  The  authors  of  these  tall  tales 
make  up  the  content  of  their  stories,  giving 
the  issue  a  pop  cultural  sarcastic,  cynical  twist 
that  provides  laughs  for  just  about  anyone. 

Not  all  stories  on  the  site  are  up  to  date. 
Some  are  just  plain  funny,  such  as  one  titled. 


"Bathroom  Smells  Like  Shit."  Coming  to 
readers  from  Galena  Park,  Texas,  this  article 
focuses  on  a  supposed  incident  in  which  some- 
one takes  a  foul  dump  in  the  men's  rest  room 
of  an  office  building. 

"The  Onion's"  main  Web  site  has  links  to 
locations  where  their  actual  newspaper  can  be 
purchased,  like  Barnes  and  Noble  and 
Borders.  It  also  lists  radio  stations  where 
some  of  their  30-second  newscasts  are  broad- 
casted. 

Onion  fans  can  also  sign  up.  for  a  subscrip- 
tion for  $50  for  a  year,  which  includes  46 
issues,  as  well  as  various  Onion  merchandise. 
"The  Onion"  published  its  own  book,  "Our 
Dumb  Century,"  a  New  York  Times  No.  1 
best  seller,  as  well  as  winner  of  the  1999 
Thurber  Prize  for  American  Humor,  that  you 
can  buy  ofT  the  site.  T-shirts,  mugs  and 
bumper  stickers  are  also  available. 

Not  recommended  for  viewers  under  18 
years  of  age,  www.theonion.com  is  great  for 
laughs  when  the  seriousness  of  the  world  is 
just  too  much. 

,      \  Barbara  McGuire 

:v  ;v  Rating:8 

Pop  Gossip  on  the  Net 
www.popgossiponthenet.com 

Gossip  is  a  staple  in  the  world  of  the  rich 
and  famous,  fueling  tabloids  like  Star  and 
sometimes  even  boosting  the  popularity  of  the 
stars  in  the  headlines. 

At  www.popgossiponthenet.com,  a  viewer 
can  catch  up  on  ail  the  latest  star  gossip  with- 
out even  leaving  their  home  to  go  to  the  gro- 
cery store  for  the  newest  tabloid.  Though  con- 
taining stories  that  are  not  as  flashy  as  some 
tabloids,  this  site  features  quick,  short  articles 
on  music  stars,  namely  regulars  on  MTV's 
Total  Request  Live. 

The  articles  are  short,  easy  to  read  and 


seem  to  feature  more  factual  information,  as 
opposed  to  rumors  heard  from  a  mother's 
cousin's  best  friend's  dog.  The  news  is  updat- 
ed daily  and  consists  of  stories  dealing  with 
what  various  stars  are  up  to. 

For  instance,  a  viewer  can  find  a  story  on 
how  ♦NSYNC  is  going  to  make  an  appear- 
ance on  "The  Simpsons"  later  this  season, 
which  seems  not  too  gossipy.  Then  you  can 
learn  about  how  Moby  is  attempting  to  stop 
the  release  of  a  porn  film  called  "Porno" 
which  he  shot  with  once  good  frieod  Paul 
Yates,  a  story  that  screams  rumor. 

After  clicking  on  the  title  of  an  article,  visi- 
tors are  also  provided  with  additional  links  to 
other  articles  the  site  has  run  on  that  artist. 
After  clicking  on  the  latest  Eminem  drama, 
one  can  find  an  array  of  other  stories  the  site 
has  run  on  him,  such  as  how  his  wife  filed  a 
$10  million  lawsuit  against  him,  as  well  as  how 
he  may  play  a  cop  killer  in  an  upcoming 
Denzel  Washington  movie. 

Besides  having  up-to-date  stories  on  the 
happenings  in  famous  music  artists'  lives,  the 
site  also  has  two  other  categories.  "Regulars" 
features  listings  of  the  Billboard  Top  10,  as 
well  as  "Artists  A  to  Z,"  where  a  listing  of 
many  popular  artists  can  be  found  with  links 
to  their  Web  sites. 

The  second  category,  "Profiles,"  features 
biographies  on  various  pop  stars.  Provided 
with  the  profiles  is  a  photo,  corresponding 
information  and  tidbits  fans  may  like  to  know 
about  their  favorite  star,  such  as  sign,  birth- 
day, etc.,  as  well  as  a  short  story  of  the  artist's 
past. 

A  teenybopper  obsessed  site,  www.popgos- 
siponthenet.com  may  not  be  for  everybody. 
The  scope  of  music  stars  featured  is  limited  to 
the  pop  genre  and  many  of  the  stories  seemed 
to  be  dedicated  to  the  current  and  late  mem- 
bers of  the  Spice  Girls.  Regardless,  the  site 
holds  true  to  its  name,  providing  inside  infor- 


mation on  musical  stars  that  you  won't  find  in 
the  local  papen  '  -  --^-^— --—-  —  -  -  ™ 

Barbara  McGuire 
Rating:5 

Vibe    '""''''' '\-\\  ■;)"/-"■  ^      :  '     . 
www.vibe.com 

Vibe  supercedes  its  printed  version  as  a  site 
so  comprehensive  that  a  viewer  could  spend 
hours  investigating  just  one  link. 

Stories  on  any  hit  hip-hop  artist  can  be 
found  here,  as  well  as  movie  and  sports  infor- 
mation. The  site's  opening  page  is  full  of 
scrolling  story  headlines  which  viewers  can 
click  on  to  get  transferred  to  the  story.  This 
page  contains  photos  of  various  artists  who 
are  featured  on  the  site  and  has  so  much  going 
on  that  it's  easy  to  become  lost. 

"Vibewire"  is  the  first  listed  link  and  is  use- 
ful in  providing  links  to  what  the  vibe  consid- 
ers "Today's  Headlines." 

Stories  here  are  newsy  as  well  as  entertain- 
ment related,  ranging  from  a  story  on  how 
Boston  Celtic  Paul  Pierce  was  stabbed  at  a 
club,  to  a  feature  on  "Urban  Legends:  The 
Final  Cut." 

Another  interesting  link  is  "Virtual 
Revolutions,"  which  contains  reviews  of  the 
latest  CDs  released  by  hip-hop  artists  as  well  - 
as  sound  clips  of  a  few  of  the  songs  on  the 
actual  CD.  Artists  such  as  C-Murder.  KRS- 
One  and  Wyclef  Jean  are  just  a  few  of  the 
comprehensive  listing. 


Sec  NB,  page  31 


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RIGHARD  6[R[  DfllVfRS  A  GARY  RRANf-CAllRIR  PERFORMANCI, 


Dpr»riiis...lllliii's  list  {riwi-plMsiii 


NISII 


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V    1    V.»^  ENTEaTAINMENT 


HD  Gtei 

HiKN  HUKT  rARRAH  rAWC[II 

lAURA  D[RN  SH[ll[y  lONG 

lARA  R[ID  KAT[  HUDSON  IIV  m[R 


Invite  You  and  a  Guest 

To  A  Special  Advance 

Screening  Of 


^< 


^cmen/ 


ROeERIAlIMAN 


S^^^ 


MRitiantc 


ITtl"1~r     >i**a«katMBkM 
•  1  •  iTTT  eumm 


\mBKBm 


»ci 


aROBfRi 


Thursday,  October  5^"  2000 

at  8:00  p.m.  in  the 
Ackerman  Grand  Ballroom 


For  your  free  pass 

stop  by  tiie  Campus  Events  Office 

(319  Kerckiioff  Hall) 


■  '     '■     f     •.•','■■: 


.i     »•     •:■♦. 


Daily  Brain  Arts  A  EnterUinment 


Can/ilie's  loyalty  seems 
scattered,  albeit  genuine 


Thursday,  October  5. 2000       29 


.BOOK:  Democrat  devotee 
fails  to  define  virtue  with 
haphazard  topics,  issues 


ByHovvardHo 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


As  tlie  author  of  three  bestselling 
books.  Carville  begins  "Stickin"' 
where  the  others  left  off,  namely  in 
defense  of  the  Democratic  I*arty  and 
Clinton. 

Carville's  attacks  on  Republicans, 
such  as  Newt  Gingrich  and  New  York 


County  buys  trestle  featured  on  R.E.M.  album 


MUSIC:  Fans  applaud 
decision,  say  landmark 
should  be  preserved 


Loyalty  has  received  a  bad  wrap 
lately. 

Novels  such  as  "The  Three 
Musketeers,"  romanticized  loyalty  in 
the  past,  but  today  it  blends  in  with  its 
despised  cousin,  conformity.  While 
love,  patience  and  kindness  are  still 
revered,  loyalty  sounds  like  an  archaic 
term  of  a  chivalry  that  has  become 
obsolete. 

In  his  new  book,  "Stickin":  The 
Case  for  Loyalty,"  James  Carville 
speaks  about  modern-day  loyalty, 
especially  his  own  loyalty  to  Bill 
Clinton  for  which  he  is  often  criti- 
cized. Carville,  who  led  Qinton's  pres- 
idential campaign  to  victory  in  1992,  is 
known  for  his  fast-talking,  confronta- 
tional style  -  a  Democratic  Rush 
IJmbau^  if  you  will. 

He  promises,  in  his  book,  to  pro- 
vide his  readers  with  "a  recipe  or  two, 
a  few  anecdotes  and  not  a  lot  of  high 
falutin  philosophizing." 

Even  though  he  delivers  such 
promised  goods,  it  doesn't  amount  to 
a  cohesive  study  of  a  largely  unstudied 
virtue. 


BOOK  REVIEW 


fitte:  Stiddn';  The  Case  for  Loyalty 

Author  James  Carville 
Publisher  Simon  &  Schuster 
Prke:  $16.95  Pages:  222 
Rating:6 


AOAM  BNOWNA)M<y  Bruin 

mayor  Rudy  Guiliani,  are  spirited  and 
show  a  genuine  flair  for  painting  char- 
acters. Meanwhile,  his  devotion  to  his 
party,  his  president  and  his  family  are 


S6cCMVIlIE,|M9e32 


By  Slierri  Cliunn 

The  Associated  Press         "•     - 

Talk  about  the  passion.  In  a 
victory  f6r  fans  of  R.E.M..  the 
county  has  voted  to  buy  an 
abandoned  train i  trestle  fea- 
tured on  the  back  6f  the  band's 
breakthrough  album  and  save  it 
from  demolition. 

At  a  packed  meeting  that 
stretched  to  I  a.m.  Thursday, 
Athens-Clarke  County  commis- 
sioners voted  9-1  to  pay  CSX 
Transportation  $25,000  for  the 
trestle. 

Pictured  on  R.E.M.'s 
"Murmur"  album,  the  trestle  is 
part  of  a  series  of  landmarks 
treasured  by  fans  of  the  Athens- 
based  rock  group,  whose  popu-. 
larity  has  spread  from  this  col- 
lege town  like  kudzu  over  the 
past  18  years.  The  structures 
"came  to  symbolize  the  mythol- 
ogy of  R.E.M.  and  the  town  that 
R.E.M.  lives  in,"  said  21-year- 
old  Ethan  Kaplan,  owner  of  an 
unofficial  Web  site  devoted  to 
the  band. 

Kaplan,  a  student  at  the 
University  of  California  San 
Diego,  had  posted  the  e-mail 
address      of     Athens-Clarke 


See  KM,  page  32 


c  «orkj  Tt>e  Associated  Pi«i 

i-ans  Of  R.E.M.  say  an  abandoned  train  trestle  featured  on  the  back  of 
the  group's  breakthroiigh  album, -Murnf)ur,'' Is  a  Southern  landmark. 


!!!!B!HBSffi9BW!W! 


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Crowds  of  wanna-be  contestants  wait  patiently  in  line  at  the  Beverly 
Hills  Hilton  for  a  chance  to  be  on  "Who  Wants  to  be  a  Millionaire." 


MILLIONAIRE 


From  page  26 


told  by  their  professors.  Ironically, 
word-of-mouth  was  the  only  way 
Michael  Meeder,  who  was  at  the 
head  of  the  line,  could  have  been 
informed. 

"There  were  a  couple  of  people  at 
4:30  a.ni.  Bui  I'm  first  in  line  ... 
That's  where  the  special  skills  come 
in,"  said  Meeder,  a  biology  student 
at  Santa  Barbara  Community 
College,  who  drove  from  Ventura.  "I 
don't  even  have  a  TV." 

Since  mid-September,  the  game 
show  behemoth   has   been   on   a, 
nationwide  hunt  for  college-age  con- 
testants.    Other     cities     on     the 
"Millionaire"  trail  were  Washington 
D.C.,  Chicago,  Atlanta  and  Boston. 
In  each  city,  the  crew  held  three  audi- 
tions at  9  a.m..  2  p.m.  and  7  p.m.  for 
one  day.  According  to  associate  pro- 
ducer J.  P.  Buck,  the  staff  has  already 
tested  more  than  1,500  students.  But 
the  City  of  Angels,  the  last  destina- 
tion on  the  list,  marks  the  sole  West 
coast  stop.  As  a  result,  aspiring  mil- 
lionaires  drove    from    as   far   as 
Stanford  University.  One  potential 
contestant  flew  in  from  Dallas,  Tex. 
"We'll  see  how  this  works.  In  the 
ruture,  this  may  expand  to  other 
cities,"  Buck  said.  "In  Boston,  one 
guy  flew  all  the  way  from  Arkansas. 
Luckily,  he  passed." 

Getting  on  the  show  could  prove 
almost  as  difficult  as  the  show  itself. 
Only  the  first  125  people  at  an  audi- 
tion can  take  the  written  exam.  No 
exceptions. 

At  this  9  a.m.  tryout  alone.  60  peo- 
ple arc  turned  away.  Meanwhile, 
everyone  else  is  ushered  into  a  con- 
ference room  where  rows  of  seats  are 
lined  with  clipboards  holding  a  pen- 
cil and  application.  With  an  S.A.T.- 
like  atmosphere,  the  exams  are  hand- 
ed out  face-down.  Coordinating  pro- 
ducer Nikki  Webster  explains  that 
each  person  will  be  assigned  a  num- 
ber that  goes  on  their  application 
and  lest.  Students  have  15  minutes  to 
complete  30  questions. 

"Then  we'll  separate  you  into  two 
groups  -  pass  and  what  I  like  to  call 
'not  pass,'"  Webster  said. 

Similar  to  the  "Millionaire"  round 
of  "Fastest  Finger."  the  test  has 
applicanu  rank  four  given  items  in  a 
certain  order.  The  questions  range 
from  the  somewhat  obvious  (Rank 
each  number  by  its  disUnce  from  the 
pound  button  on  a  telephone  starting 
with  the  closest)  to  the  very  obscure 
(Rank  each  bird  by  iu  beak-to-Uil 
length  starting  with  the  shortest). 

It  does  take  more  than  book 
smarU,  however,  to  climb  into  the 
hot  seat  across  from  Regis.  After  it  is 
revealed  which  people  passed  the 
first  test  -  typically  about  half  the 
group  -  those  still  sUnding  will  go 
through  a  short.  video4aped  inter- 
view with  a  staff  member.  The  inter- 
views help  producers  and  the  show's 
sponsors  find  contestanu  with  an 
appealing  television  presence. 
"We're  looking  for  contestants 


with  good  energy,"  Webster  said, 
advising  those  who  made  it  to  the 
second  round.  "If  you're  not  the  type 
who  jokes  and  clowns  around,  don't 
force  it." 

Meanwhile,  the  disappointed  stu- 
dents who  didn't  pass  must  hand 
over  their  applications  before  filing 
out  of  the  room.  Steeped  in  more 
secrecy  and  security  than  the  White 
House,  the  "Millionaire"  audition 
process  abides  by  a  strict  set  of  rules. 
Producers  remain  mum  about  what 
constitutes     a     passing     score. 
Furthermore,  applicants,  pass  or 
fail,  are  not  permitted  to  see  their 
tests  or  an  answer  sheet  afterwards. 
After  producers  and  sponsors 
review   audition   tapes   from   the 
nationwide  pool,  30  finalists  will  be 
notified  by  telephone  on  Oct.  20.  The 
contestants  will  then  be  flown  to 
New  York  City  in  November  to  tape 
three  episodes  which  will  air  Dec.  19- 
21.  "Millionaire"  contestants  are 
always  shadowed  by  certain  staff 
members  at  the  studio.  To  avoid  any 
implication  of  unethical  behavior, 
contestants  are  not  allowed  to  come 
in  contact  with  cameramen,  crew 
and  even  Regis  until  the  actual  tap- 
ing. 

"If  someone  from  the  staff  goes 
into  a  rest  room  at  the  same  time 
with  someone  who  wins  a  lot  of  * 
money,  people  could  complain," 
Webster  said.  "So,  we  even  have 
rules  that  no  one  can  be  in  the  rest 
room  with  them.  It's  kind  of  awk- 
ward for  adulu  to  be  walked  to  the 
rest  room." 

Webster,  Buck  and  other  staff 
who  work  primarily  with  contestants 
are  also  strictly  forbidden  to  ever 
have  contact  with  the  show's  writing 
staff.  Only  the  writing  department, 
which  u  situated  in  a  different  build- 
ing, knows,  before  the  taping,  what 
questions  will  be  asked. 

But  the  producers  running  tryouts 
have  enjoyed  coming  in  contact  with 
college  students.  Usually  relegated  : 
to  a  studio  in  New  York  City,  Buck 
likes  being  able  to  chat  with  viewers. 
"We're  not  usually  in  touch  with 
whoever  watches,"  Buck  said. 
"College  students  are  just  a  lot  more 
rriendly.  It's  been  hard  work  but  a 
fun  process." 

"I've  seen  so  many  people  of  all 
different  ethnicities,  styles,  majors. 
It's  been  great,"  Buck  continued. 
"We  don't  want  the  same  cookie<ut- 
ter  contestant  all  the  time." 

But.  like  every  contestant  before 
them,  the  students  in  line  cannot 
keep  from  daydreaming  about  what 
winning  a  million  dollars  would  fed 
like.  Yet,  studenu  do  seem  to  have 
similar  priorities  in  mind  when  it 
comes  to  spending  prize  money. 

"I  would  pay  ofT  my  bills.  That's 
number  one,"  said  Robert  Magee.  a 
UCLA  fourth-year  electrical  engi- 
neering student.  "An  elaborate  trip 
to  Vegas  would  be  number  two." 

And  that's  when  it  comes  time  to 
phone  a  friend. 


With  contrttHiting  reports  from  Brent 
Hopkins,  n«fly  Rniin  Senior  Staff. 


.1  *ti^\^mi^~^4^^\.i-  -f.  f^   .^u 


HOPKINS 

From  page  26 

entire  way,  still  fondly  remembering 
the  warm,  soft  pillow  that  had  been 
softly  cupping  my  head.  Thankfully, 
however,  our  early  arrival  netted  us  a 
place  halfway  through  the  liiie. 

Apparently,  some  horridly  crazed 
individuals  had  gotten  there  at  4:30 
a.m.,  an  hour  which  I've  always 
thought  was  best  reserved  for  either 
sleeping  or  not  waiting  in  the  lobby  of 
the  Beverly  Hilton.  By  the  time  we 
took  our  places  in  line,  it  was  a  good 
50  people  deep,  stretching  through  a 
-^^     now-empty  bar  and  snaking  towards 
the  concierge.  These  would-be  mil- 
lionaires take  this  seriously,  I  quickly 
learned. 

Some  studied 

philosophy 
books,  some 
quizzed  one 
another  and  oth- 
ers worked  them- 
selves into  Zen- 
like trances.  We 
had  the  good  for- 
tune to  be  stuck 
in  line  by  the 
only  three  jack- 
asses  in  the 

whole  line,  whose  preparation  routine 
consisted  of  stringing  together  cre- 
ative chains  of  expletives  and  adding 
them  to  the  name  "Regis  Philbin." 
Standing  near  these  titans  of  intellect, 
I  began  to  feel  a  bit  better  about  my 
chances  of  taking  home  my  million 
dollars. 

At  9  a.m.,  they  ushered  the  first 
125  people  into  a  small  conference 
room  filled  with  chairs.  We  dutifully 
walked  in,  not  wanting  to  stray  out  of 
line  and  risk  our  chances  of  nabbing 
the  dough.  Soon,  a  very  nice  man 
with  a  very  ugly  tie  started  listing  off 
all  the  rules  of  the  test  that  we  were  all 
hungrily  awaiting. 

At  this  point,  when  I  really  should 
have  been  pay- 
ing attention,  i^.i_MiMi.»ii_« 
my  mind  began 
—to  wander. 
"What  would  I 
do  with  a  million 
bucks?"  1  won- 
dered. In  retro- 
spect, I  guess  it 
was  a  tad  arro- 
gant to  expect 
that  I'd  get  the 

whole  enchilada,  but  hey,  no  one 
wants  to  speculate  about  what  they'd 
do  with  S 100. 

Suddenly,  that  oil  leak  in  my  rapid- 
ly aging  Honda  and  the  dearth  of 
laundry  quarters  didn't  seem  like 
sudi  a  big  deal.  After  all,  I  was  about 
to  take  the  first  step  towards  ungodly 
riches.  I  mean,  if  I  wound  up  taking  it 
aD,  I'd  suddenly  have  as  mudi  money 
as  a  mediocre  baseball  player  makes 
in  two  months. 

When  I  eventually  phased  back  in, 
the  guy  with  the  aforementioned  odd 
tiji  told  us  that  we'd  have  a  30<]ues- 
tjin  test  based  on  the  "Fastest 
Fpiger"  segment  of  the  show.  This 
coiiunent  brought  a  hail  of  laughter 
frrni  the  Jackass  Posse,  who  had  no 
doubt  figured  out  some  extraordinari- 
ly clever  insult  involving  the  word 
"finger."  Sinking  lower  in  my  seat,  I 
prayed  that  they  didn't  go  to  UCLA 
and  hoped  that  we'd  get  the  test  soon. 

I  may  have  sounded  a  little  cocky 
before,  I  realize.  Not  that  some  of  the 
questions  on  "Millionaire"  aren't 


If  I  wound  up  taking  It 

all,  I'd  have  as  nnuch 

money  as  a  mediocre 

baseball  player  makes 

In  two  months. 


Jow  was  our  moment 

to  shine  or  go 
back  with  our  tails 
between  our  legs. 


interviewed  and  videotaped,  cast  into 
a  pool  of  thousands  of  other  hopefuls. 
Now  I've  got  three  weeks  of  sitting 
and  waiting,  hoping  they'll  call. 
Chances  are,  they  probably  won't, 
and  this  will  be  the  last  of  my 
"Millionaire"  columns.  I've  got  a  feel- 
ing that  I'm  lacking  in  the  "pwise" 
that  they  list  as  a  required  quality  in 
the  rules.  But  who  knows,  maybe  my 
luck  will  keep  riding. 

There's  probably  a  lesson  to  be 
learned  here,  but  I  can't  really  think 
of  what  it  is.  Study  hard  and  you'll  be 
rewarded?  Good  things  come  to 
those  who  wait?  The  early  bird  geu 
the  worm? 

Nah.  Study  up  on  your  random, 
pointless  information,  kid,  so  maybe 
one  day  it'll  make  you  rich.  That 
sounds  like  a  good  enough  moral  to 
me. 

Hopkins  Is  now  holding  auditions  for 
"Who  Wants  to  be  a  Soon-to-be 
Millionaire's  Friend."  e-mail  him  at  afrop- 
ic@ucla.edu  for  your  application. 


WEB 

Froni  page  28 

The  site  also  features  more  than 
just  a  text  for  its  feature  stories. 
Under  the  link  "Vibe  A/V,"  a  view^ 
cr  can  find  not  only  an  interesting 
story  on  hip-hop  artists  such  as  LL 
Cool  J  and  Lit'  Kim,  but  also  video' 
clips  from  the  actual  interview  the 
writer  had  with  the  artist. 
— Such  prrks  arc  what  seem  to 


make  this  site  worth  looking  at  over 
the  actual  magazine. 

Featuring  articles  and  informa- 
tion on  today's  most  popular 
African  American  stars, 

www.vibe.com  is  a  useful  site,  pro- 
vifling  interesting  stories,  as  well  as 
phqtos,  sound  and  video  clips. 

Web  viewers  get  a  taste  of  just 
about  every  bit  of  entertainment 
media  on  www.vibe.comi, 

Barbara  McGuire 
Ratiiiy.  8 


BN)r  frain  Ms  C  GniMilnMiit 


tough  and  all,  but  let's  just  say  that 
most  aren't  exactly  difficult  to  figure 
out.  1  mean,  jeez,  you  don't  have  to 
be  a  genius  to  know  that  the  saying  is 
"Blood  is  thicker  than  water,"  not 
"Motor  oil  is  thicker  than  water." 
Suffice  to  say,  I  saw  myself  whipping 
through  the  questions  in  about  2  miih 
utes.  tossing  it  aside  and  going  to  grab 
a  cup  of  coffee.  In  my  arrogant  little 
mind,  I'd  already  won. 

So  when  we  actually  got  the  test,  I 
just  about  had  a  heart  attack.  Holy 
cow,  those  were  just  about  the 
strangest  questions  I'd  ever  read, 
about  9,000  times  tougher  than  any- 
thing they  ever  have  Regis  reading 
off.  What  order  are  the  Olympic  rings 
in,  dockwise?  Which  American  Sign 
Language  letter  has  the  most  fingers 

pointing  up? 
_^._.„^.^^.      Which  Morse 
code  symbol  has 
the  most  dash- 
es? I  mean,  I 
know  a  lot  of 
trivial  stuff,  but 
I  was  guessing 
like  a  maniac. 

After  the 
allotted  time,  I 

grudgingly 

handed  mine  in, 
embarrassed  at 
my  dumbness.  I  knew  that  as  soon  as 
they  graded  mine,  they'd  probably 
hang  it  on  the  wall  with  a  big  sign 
reading  "Moron:  Best  of  Show." 
Olympic  rings  -  who  knew? 

Following  an  eternity  of  waiting, 
the  producer  returned  with  the  list 
Now  was  our  moment  to  shine  or  go 
back  with  our  tails  between  our  legs. 
Just  as  I  was  envisioning  the  break- 
fast I'd  soon  be  enjoying,  a  mirade 
occurred.  My  number  was  called. 
Now  let  me  tell  you.  I've  been 
humbled.  I'm  not  going  to  chalk  this 
up  to  my  genius  or  anything.  This  was 
pure,  blind  luck.  Terry  probably 
passed  on  brain  power,  but  me,  I  just 
coasted  by  on  Lady  Luck's  coaltails. 

Whatever  I 
■"■~~"^-—      guessed  on  all 
those  questions 
randomly  hap- 
pened to  be 
right,  and  now 
I've  made  the 
cut  to  be  a  mil- 
lionaire wanna- 
be. 

Those  of  us 
who  passed  were 


Thursday,  October  5, 2000       31 


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CARVILLE 

From  page  29 


treated  with  equal  attention  and  sin- 
cerity. 

Many  of  his  anecdotes  come  from 
personal  experiences.  He  writes  of 
how  he  was  an  unemployed  41  year 
old,  how  his  clothes  were  drenched  in  a 
mudpuddie  and  how  the  two  cam- 
paigns he  previously  worked  for  lost. 

His  life  was  in  shambles  until  he 
joined  Clinton's  presidential  cam- 
paign. He  later  was  assigned  by 
Qinton  himself  to  head  the  campaign 
to  victory,  achieving  national  attention 
in  the  documentary  "The  War 
Room." 

He  consistent-  "■"■"""■■■■'"' 
ly  cites  Qinton's 
positive  role  in  his 
life  as  why  he  did- 
n't "abandon  a 
guy  over  sex." 

Car  ville '  s 
sense  of  loyalty 
originated  from 
his  family.  He  was 
theoldest  of  eight 
and  often  had  to 

cover  for  his  siUings  to  avoid  his  moth- 
er's wrath,  who  he  affectionately  calls 
"Miss  Nippy." 

The  Carville  family,  which  lives 
aptly  in  Carville,  Louisiana,  is  pictured 
on  the  back  of  the  dust  jacket  For  the 
record,  they  number  an  impressive  38 
(40  if  you  count  their  two  pet  dogs). 

Of  all  his  siblings,  Carville  explains, 
he  is  the  only  one  to  move  away  from 
Louisiana.  The  rest  of  his  siblings  still 
live  near  where  they  grew  up,  and  keep 
in  constant  contact  out  of,  you  guessed 
it,  loyalty  to  each  other. 

Outside  of  family  and  politics, 
Carville  attempts  more  ambitious  for- 
ays iiito  loyalty  as  a  philosophical  con- 
cept. He  cites  famous  authors,  such  as 
Satre,  Machiavelli  and  Josiah  Royce, 
who  saw  loyalty  as  the  core  of  morality 
and,  incidentally,  whose  moniker  dons 
Royce  Hall.  While  CarviUe  is  obvious- 
ly well-read,  he  makes  sure  his  own 


Ultimately,  Carville  adds 

nothing  new  to  the 

subject  except  to 

describe  where  his  own 

personal  loyalties  lie. 


The  railroad  trestle  that  runs  through  Dudley  Park,  that  was  on  RJEM.'s 
'Murmur' altHjm  cover,  was  puchased  by  Athens-Qarfce  County. 


REM 

From  page  29       ■.:, 

County  Mayor  Doc  Eldridge  on  the 
site,  urging  fans  to  protest  the 
planned  destruction  of  the  trestle. 

"1  have  been  inundated  with  e- 
maiis,"  laid  Eldridge,  who  supports 
the  preservation.  "People  from  lit- 
erally all  over  the  world  are  wanting 
to  hdp." 

The  mayor  obtained  a  $5,000 
option  this  summer  to  buy  the  par- 
tially dismantled  trestle,  which  sits 
just  east  of  campus  in  kudzu 
groves,  along  a  muddy  brook. 

Now  the  commission  will  negoti- 
ate with  the  railroad  to  buy  the 
accompanyiof  19  mites  of  ri^t'Of- 


way  for  a  pedestrian  and  bike  trail 
linking  downtown  and  the 
University  of  Georgia  campus. 

If  the  commission  does  not  pur- 
chase the  right-of-way,  the  trestle 
would  have  to  be  moved  or  disman- 
tled. 

Kaplan  said  his  Web  site  had 
sold  about  SO  T-«hirts  for  SIO  each 
since  Monday,  and  would  donate 
the  proceeds  to  the  county  for  the 
right-of-way. 

Bertis  Downs,  manager  and 
attorney  for  R.E.M.,  said  the  band 
was  surprised  by  the  outpouring 
and  supports  historic  preservation. 

"We  have  great  fans.  It's  neat 
that  people  care  that  much  about 
our  little  part  of  the  world,"  he 
said. 


musings  never  alienate  the  lowest  com* .  : 
mon  denoniinator. 

Of  Royce's  philosophical  tone,r  '  ; 
Carville  writes,  "This  book  was  probjh  ;,  '-'h- 
bly  not  a  best-seller.  I  guess  it  couki  use| 
some  recipes  and  nowhere  does  Royop  '  / ' 
mention  seventh-grade  recess." 

There  is  a  certain  irony  to  this  state- 
ment as  he  tries  to  make  difficult 
works  accessible,   thus   not  really 
detracting  from  them  but  actually"  ■''■'"" 
encouraging  their  perusal. 

Ultimately,  Carville  adds  nothing' 
new  to  the  subject  except  to  describe 
where  his  own  personal  loyalties  lie. 
His  section  on  sports  is  mostly  sec- 
ondary knowledge  paraphrased  from  . 
books  and  lacks 
the  enthusiasm 
^■"■""■""■'^  and  vigor  that 
mark  his  per- 
sonal stories. 

His  recipes 
for  a  "Louisiana 
Loyalty 
Lunch,"  while 
being  cute  (and 
a  staple  of  his 
other  books), 
— — ^— — — —  obviously  have 
nothing  to  do 
with  the  subject  of  loyalty.  Carville 
seems  to  have  written  the  book  out  of 
demand,  a  free-ticket  from  publisher 
Simon  and  Sdiuster  to  say  whatever 
he  wants  on  anything  he  wants. 
Indeed,  chapters  even  read  like  a 
Carvillean  moiudogue. 

By  the  conclusion,  Carville  is  more 
like  the  teacher  who  talked  about  him- 
self than  the  teacher  who  actually 
taught.  "Stickin"'  is  another  book  in 
the  wave  of  new  titles  that  attract  read- 
ers through  celebrity  authors. 

For  those  who  want  to  know  more 
about  Carville,  look  no  further.  For 
everyone  else,  the  book  can  be  simv 
marized  in  CarviUe's  Last  Rule  of 
Loyalty:  "Stick  with  your  friends.  And 
stick  it  to  your  enemies." 

Carville  will  be  speaking  at  Royce  Hall 
Oct  15.  at  7  p.m.  For  information  call 
(310)825-2101. 


Daily  Bniin  Arts  A  Entertafamcnt 


Thun(by,0ctob«r5,2000       3) 


Advertise  in  the 


Photographic  images  pervade  Sabrina  Ward  Harrison's  book 
'Spilling  Open,' engaging  the  reader  In  her  inner  dialogue. 


VillMd  Books 


SABRINA  : 

From  page  27 

rest  of  my  life  always  thinking  'I 
have  so  many  issues.  I'm  so  crazy." 
Filled  with  photos  of  both  family, 
friends  and  children  drawings  as 
well  as  color  and  emotion,  the  jour- 
nal is  nothing  like  the  popular  teen 
journal  "Go  Ask  Alice." 

"I  would  just  be  sitting  at  school, 
or  I'd  be  sitting  at  a  cafe,  or  I'd  be 
home,  trying  to  go  to  bed,"  Harrison 
said  of  her  cre- 
ative process.  "I 

would  just  be  — — — ■^^— 
talking  about 
life  as  it  was 
happening  and  I 
wouldn't  think, 
'Oh,  this  is  what 
I'm  going  to 
publish  in  a 
book,' I  was  just 
letting  it  out.'" 

And  letting  it 
out  is  '  exactly 
what    "Spilling 

Open"  encour-     — 

ages  its  readers 

to  do.  It  tells  the  reader  to  take 

action  and  not  to  stay  between  the 

lines  and  do  everything  as  everyone 

else  does  just  because  it's  safe  and 

secure. 

One  of  the  main  goals  of  her  book 
is  to  help  readers  realize  that  what 
they  may  be  unhappy  and  troubled 
with  in  their  lives  is  normal  and  OK. 
Her  mother,  who  often  appears  in 
various  entries,  aided  Harrison's 
discovery  of  this  goal. 

"Mom  and  I  were  walking  on  the 
rbeach  and  I  was  explaining  to  her 
"how  I  wanted  to  get  over  all  my  inse- 
||  curities,  and  la,  la,  la,  and  she  looked 
*M  me  and  said,  'Sabrina,  does  any- 
|one  really  ever  feel  good  about 
themselves  for  more  than  five  min- 
utes?'" ;;., 

"Spilling  Open"  relates  the  good 
and  bad  in  peoples  lives  to  issues  of 
self  confidence  and  image  percep- 
tion, helping  readers  learn  from 
Harrison's  experiences. 

'  "The  Art  of  Becoming  Yourself  is 
the  dark  and  the  light,"  Harrison 
explained.  "There's  so  much  in  our 
lives  -  there's  tragedy  and  so  many 
expressions,  but  there's  also  so 
much  delicate  and  simple  beauty 
around  us  everywhere." 

Though  written  by  a  woman, 
from  a  woman's  perspective,  the 
book  doesn't  pigeonhole  itself  into  a 
same-gender  readership.  It's  about 
insecurities  and  learning  how  to  deal 
with  them  and  how  they  aren't  all 
bad  -  a  topic  HafrisoD  fedi  is  uni- 

veifstf.' "'■ 


Though  written  by  a 

woman,  from  a 
woman's  perspective, 

the  book  doesn't 

pigeonhole  itself  into  a 

same-gender 

readership. 


fiti  writers  responding  to  it,  to  13- 
year-old  girls,  to  60-year-old  women 
who  are  transitioning  in  their  lives," 
she  said.  "I  think  whenever  you 
write  about  the  human  experience 
and  the  human  condition  we  can  all 
connect  to  it  if  we're  open  to  it." 

"Spilling  Open"  breaks  rules  that 
most  books  follow  and  its  colorful, 
varied  pages,  make  for  a  book  read- 
ers win  find  hard  to  put  down. 

Looking  through  the  book  is  like 
peering  through  a  friend's  vacation 
photo  album  into  some  place  excit- 
ing.       - 

It's  hard  to 

put  down  until 
every  picture 
has  been  scruti- 
nized. 

Many  may 
recognize  the 
pages  in 

Harrison's  book 
from  the  Six 
Pence  None  the 
Richer  music 
video  "There 
She  Goes." 
Harrison  was 
commissioned 


"You  have  everything  fVom  graf- 


to  create  huge  replicas  of  her  jour- 
nal, after  the  band  spotted  her  book 
and  loved  it. 

"They  wanted  to  be  inside  my 
book,  playing  their  music  as  if  they 
were  inside  my  pages,"  she  reveled. 
"They  were  supposed  to  be  at  my  art 
opening,  so  I  was  there  and  I  looked 
totally  disheveled,  exhausted  from 
painting  it  all. 

"But  it  was  fun;  it  was  one  of 
those  things  I  never  thought  I'd  be 
doing." 

Currently  Harrison  is  working  on 
ribbon  skirts  which  she  will  seU  at 
varioiu  boutiques  and  on  a  follow- 
up  journal  to  "Spilling  Open,"  she 
says  focuses  on  the  fact  that  just 
because  she  published  a  book,  does- 
n't mean  all  her  troubles  are 
answered. 

Harrison  explained  how  suddenly 
there  was  extra  pressure  on  her  to  be 
this  great  person,  and  she  became  so 
stressed  out  she  actually  got  ulcers. 
A  cheap  plane  ticket  to  Italy  and  a 
few  months  later,  she  already  had 
another  journal. 

"Spilling  Open"  doesn't  try  to 
solve  everyone's  problems,  but  it 
does  try  to  open  readers  up  to  the 
experience  of  these  problems  and 
share  with  them  the  experienbe  of 
someone  else  who  faced  the  same 
issues. 

"There's  a  great  line  that  says, 
'We  rpad  to  know  we're  not  alone,' 
and  that's  what  I  wanted  to  make  -  a 
book  that  made  us  breathe  a  littk 
easier  when  we're  trying  to  get 
through  it  all,"  Harrison  said. 


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SEVERE  PRE-MEN- 

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STUDY 

UCLA  is  conducting  a  study  using  an  investi- 
gational    mediation     for     women     with 
SEVERE  Pre-menstrual  symptoms.  You  may 
qualify  for  this  study  if  you  experience  some 
ol  the  following  symptoms  during  the  week 
belore   your  menslnjal   cycle:    'depressed 
mood,  'tension,  'irritability,  'teeling  suddenly 
sad  or  tearful,  'increased  sensitivity  to  rejec- 
tion. Qualifying  participants  must:  'have  reg- 
ular rrwnthly  menstrual  cycles,  'be  between 
the  ages  ol18  and  45,  'not  be  using  medica- 
tions for  the  treatment  of  PMS  (including  an- 
tidepressants, heitjal  treatments  or  birth  con- 
trol pills).  All  study  related  evaluations  and 
medication  wiil  be  provided  at  no  cost  to  you. 
You  will  be  paid  $175  if  you  complete  the  7- 
8  month  study.  Some  women  will  receive 
only  inactive  dnjg  (placebo) 

INTERESTED?  CALL 
LINDA  GOLDMAN,  RNP. 

UCLA  DEPT  OF 
OB/GYN  310-825-2452 


Are  you 


a  difficult  dam 

wwwRateYourseffrnm 


My  Brain  OatsMed 


Thtnday,  October  S,2iD00       IS 


Nortel  Networks  is  a  great  place  to  build  your  own  unique  career  As  a  global  leader  we  can  offer  vou  »im,.raiui-^ 
oppojtuni«es  to  work  with  cutting-edge  technology  thJls  changing  <^t  J^l^ZZ^TooZsZa 
full-time  posrtion  upon  graduation  or  some  practical  experience  while  you  are  in  school  this  isO^e  bert  d1«. 
to  get  your  foot  In  the  door  Positions  range  from  software  design  Z  system  a^ysis  to  hard^^re 
englneenng  and  product  marketing.  Imagine  how  many  doors  you  can  open  WTu,  CeCySt 

Submit  your  persorul  profile  to  www  nortelnetworks  com/career,  by  October  9th  and  come  visit  us 
at  the  Tech  Career  Fair  on  October  27th  Well  be  hosting  an  hrformation  session  on  October  30th. 


NofUl  NttmrtMM  N<«.l  N«w«ta  ta,.,  »W  Mrt»m.lK  .nd -^ 


N^TEL 

NETWORKS' 

n<>rtalTMtMorks.coni/cai«cn 


2100 

Rficrcationiil  Activltins 


VAMPIRE  Live  Action  Role  Playing  garnet 
Can  David  909-338-4621  or  visit  wwwgeoci- 
ties.com/LAt>yNight.  Games  every  other  Sat 
night,  beginning  i(V7AX) 


2200 

.iicli  Siil)j(M:ts 


J 


2200 

Rosenrch  Siihjects 


EARN  $$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  the  com- 
mon cold.  Mala/lemaie  18-55yrs.  oW,  norv 
smol(er,  no  asthma  history.  Limited  availabU- 
ity.  Cal  today  310-785-9121 . 
Email  clinlcalsutitectsOyahoo.com 

RESEARCH  PARTICIPANTS  NEEDED  for 
patienis  expedencing  Hay  Fever/ARergk: 
RNnMs.  Requires  4  visits  (8  hours  loUl)  over 
7-lOdays.  Wl  pay  up  to  $100  at  conclusion 
of  study  Contact  Dr.  Diaz-Sartchez  or 
Dr  Saxon  at  310-825-3699  or  310-625-9376. 


■x:-f 


Classifiecis 
82b-^^^i 


SMOKERS  EX-SIUIOKERS  AND  NON- 
SMOKERS  in  good  health,  al  least  18  years 
of  age.  wanted  for  UCLA  research  study 
Subjects  will  be  paid  up  to  $120  for  2  testing 
days.  CaH  Dr  Rich  Olmstead  al  310-478- 
3711  ext.44319.  leave  message. 

SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH.  18-45,  want- 
ed for  nicotine  research  study  administered 
by  UCLA.  Both  heavy  and  occastonal  smok- 
ers needed.  ParHeipanis  will  ba  paid  up  to 
$395  lor  lour  visits.  CaH  FUchard  .Otmstead  al 
310-312-0565,  leave  message. 

SMOKERS,  EX-SMOKERS  &  NONSMOK- 
ERS  in  good  health,  at  least  18  years  of  age 
wanted  for  UCLA  research  study.  Sublets 
will  be  paid  up  to  $120  for  2  testing  days 
Please  cat  Dr  Rtehaid  Olmstead  at  310- 
478-3711  exi  44319.  leave  message 


2200 

Research  Siil)ji!(;ts 


3500 

Furniliirt; 


A900 

Autos  lor  SiiU: 


WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60-f  w/kyphosis 
(fonrard  tjending  of  spine)  needed  lor  re- 
search program  investigattng  whettier  Yoga 
can  improve  kyptwsis.  Study  being  conduct- 
ed by  GaU  Greendale.  MD  in  the  UCLA  Dept. 
of  Madkane.  Please  call  310-794-9055. 


2300 

Sperm/Egg  Donors 


BROKEN  HEARTED  COUPLE  SEEKING 
Caucasian  egg  donor.  Up  to  $15,000.  Previ- 
ous donors  wek»me.  858-554-0888  or  E- 
mail:  susanplace1dhotrtiail.com. 

EGG  DONOR  NEEDED.  Asian.  Please  caH 
310-397-0490. 


SIMMONS  EXTRA  SUPER  FULL  (double) 
inattress,  boxspring  and  frame.  $100  OBO. 
310-745-2445  or  X47501. 

SOFA  BED  for  sale.  Beige,  almost  new.  $80. 
310-210-7336. 

SOFA,  7tt,  8-way  hand-tied  springs. 
rose/t>lue/noral  pattern,  $250.  Channel-back 
chair  w/ottoman,  rose,  $150.  Rounded  otto- 
mon.  blue,  $50.  310-393-1078. 

WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

Sleigh  beds.  Rustic  pine  furniture,  armolres, 
mattress  sets,  slip  covered  &  upholstered  so- 
fas/chairs. Leather  sofas  &  chairs  310-745- 
2253. 


'93  TOYOTA  PASEO,  airbag,  black,  manual 
transmisswn,  5  speed,  A/C,  artVfm  CD,  very 
dean,  runs  great.  $3200  ot)o  310-454-362 1 . 

'95  EAGLE  TALON  TSI  AWD,  18in.  Konig- 
monsson  rims,  Eibach  springs,  JVC  CD  play- 
er, one  owner.  $9,700,  $1,000  less  than 
KBB,  call  Antonio  310-539-6516, 
www.mvsampson.attfreeweb.com. 

'97  TOYOTA  4RUNNER  SR5  4X4  5sp  wht, 
Ithr,  I6in  wheels,  sunrt,  perfect,  39M 
$22,950,310-470-0010. 


5200 

Parking 


Pay  your  tuition 
with  eggs. 


If  you're  a  woman  between  18 
and  35,  fou  can  earn  money  east- 
ll^  anonynwuilf  Donate  your 
egSi  to  an  in£eicile  couple. 

$3,500  and  up,  depending  on 
your  education  and  other  qualift* 
cations.  Call  todays 

The  Cnmt  pot  Ecc  OmoNs 
310/546-€786 

♦  TheC«ntef  fiBrEHOptioeu.LLC 


3800 

Misct-'lUineous 


GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared applicatton  John  Manley,  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd.  #300  LA,  CA  90025. 
310-820-7553.  Deadline:  10/30/00. 


**PARKING**   ^ 
"AVAILABLE!!!** 

Having  trout>le  finding  parking  in  West- 
wood?  It  doesn't  have  to  be  so  painful 
There  is  no  need  for  you  to  spend  anoth- 
er year  earless  and  stir  crazy  There  are 
10  fabulous  and  convenient  parking  spots 
available  in  a  k}t  on  Landfair  and  Strath- 
more.  Close  to  campus.  Just  $60/month 
Call  Stephanie  at  310-267-8491  or  email 
sabivizzoOudaedu  for  further  informa- 
tion. 


A«»«»«»«»^^ 


Egg  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 

wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

$5,000 

^    Call  Mirna  (8 1 8)  832- 1 494    ^ 


transportation 

4600-5500 


2600 

Wanted 


M/F  MODELS  WANTED  by  est.  photogra- 
pher for  commercial  portfolio.  Must  be  in 
stiape  and  good  looking  call  Steven  818- 
733-0557. 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1983  BMW  3201 

5-speed,  clean,  well-maintained,  second 
owner  $2195otio.  310-452-2334. 

1984  HONDA  ACCORD,  $1400,White 
w/blue  int.,  4-door,5-speed,power  windows, 
brakes&locks,  cruise  control,  all  main- 
tenance records,  good  conditkjn  CaH  Lara  al 
310-319-2011. 

1987  HONDA  ACCORD.  Drives  great,  5spd, 
4dr,  recent  clutch,  tires,  bells,  and  hoses. 
155K,  $2000obo  310-449-3712. 

1989  CONVERTIBLE  FORD  MUSTANG  LX 
for  sale  for  $1,500.  Automatic.  Cruise  Con- 
trol, Power  windows  and  tocks.  Newer  en- 
gine and  top  New  paint  job.  Runs  well.  Call 
Tino  at  323-653-6923. 


NEEDED  PaiVing  spot  for  school  year.  2000- 
2001.  Will  pay  310-824-0997. 

PARKING  NEEDED 

UCLA  STUDENT  LIVING  IN  RIEBER  HALL 
Fall  2000-Spring  2001  needs  a  parking  spot 
for  Fall  quarter  and  possibly  beyond  Partcing 
can  be  anywhere  somewhat  near  residence 
hall  side  of  campus.  Hope  to  pay  less  than 
what  UCLA  ctwrges.  Call  310-267-8491. 

PARKING  SPACE  WANTED.  Near/on  Veter- 
an/Sfrathmore.  $50/mo  obo.  Can  sign  lease 
for  10-12  months.  Call  310-770-1225  or 
mgabrielOucla.edu. 


CycleTime  Company   Si 


Motorcycle  •  Motor  Scooter  •  Moped 
Sales  •  Repairs  •  Insurance 

■  •  EXCHANGE  AD  FOR  FREE  PICK-UP  ■ 

■  •  OR  PURCHASE  DISCOUNT 


3000 

Books 


FANG-LUPUS.COM 


3/^00 

Conipiitrrs/Soffwiire 


POWER  MAC  7100.  40  meg  RAM,  1  gig 
hard  drive,  colof  monitor  &  printer,  zip  drive, 
software  complete,  modem.  $475.  310-825- 
1755. 


TOSHIBA  TECRA  8100  laptop.  P3  600  Mhz, 
14  r  TFT  256  Ram.  16.8  GB  HD.  5mo8.  oW 
w/receipt.  3  year  on-site  no  fault  warranty. 
$4600.  310-338-0688. 


3500 

Furniture 


COMPLETE  FORMAL 
DINING  ROOM  SET 

Hardwood:  bran  detailing.  Oval  table;opens 
to  seat  10.  Six  chairs;  large  glass-front  hutch. 
$2100  obo.  310-825-9176.  leave  message. 

FURNITURE  FOR  SALE-  Extra  large 
sofa/hide-a-t)od,  excellent  condition,  tan, 
$150.  Swivel  desk  chair,  Wack,  high  back, 
excellent  conditton,  $25  310-202-8726. 

MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY,  STEARNS  &  FOSTER.  Also  twln- 
»et8-$79.96,  Fulls-$99.95,  Queens-$139.95. 
Kings-$199e5  Queen  PiHowtops  $199  95 
Beacon  Open  7-days  1309  Westvvood 
Blvd.  310-477-4466 


1989  MAZDA  626DX,  Wue,  5-speed  stck. 
very  good  condition.  94K  miles,  A/C, 
AM/FM/Cassefte,  single-owner,  accident- 
Iree,  $2500  Call  x52910  or  310-470-7152. 

1989  TOYOTA  COROLLA  GT  SPORT  eco- 
nomical/reliable great  for  school/wort«.  New 
tires,  engine  1  yr  oW.  manual  trans  $2500. 
323-810-8914  Alonso. 

1990  1/2  NISSAN  240SX  SE  Burgundy,  al- 
ioys,5-speed,many  new  parts  SE  edition, 
loaded  with  extras  includirtg  rrxjonroof,  pow- 
er everything,  etc.  310-470-3615. 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4wd, 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player,  red-grey  great  corKli- 
tton  Sell  for  $4300.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836 

1990  MITSUBISHI  ECLIPSE  GS  tX)HC; 
excellent  conditton!  New  clutch  &  transmis- 
sionl  Car  is  a  OEM.  Must  drive!  $3000  obo. 
310-394-1397. 

1992  TOYOTA  TERCEL 

DX,  4door,  automatk:,  66.5K  miles,  blue, 
AM/FM  stereo.  A/C  $4,000obo.  310-209- 
6211. 


(310)275-6734  . 

1632  S.  La  Cienega  Bvd  Six  Blocks  South  o(  Pico  ■ 


S/kOO 

Scooters  for  Sale 


1986  HONDA  Aero50  scooter  mns  great, 
new  battery,  only  3K  miles  $700/obo. 
Call:31 0-479-7276 


Scooters  For  Less 


E&TE  50  $54.99 
orless/mnth. 

EUti  80  $64.99 
or  less/^lhth: 


977 


'Blvd. 
.EWOOD 


WE  DELIVER! 


P&lStS8lCEnR^ 

(310)677-5800x107 


1993  HONDA  DEL  SOL 

Aulomatic/65K  miles  great  gas  mileage. 
$6500  Alpine  Stereo,  convertible,  fun  school 
car,  one  owner.  Call  Jordana:310-383-l701. 

1993  TOYOTA 
CELICAGT 

70K,  wtille,  automatk:,  lully-toaded.  excettent 
condition,  dealer-pampered,  60K  dealer- 
senrtee  done.  $7000.  310-476-8267/949- 
609-4471. 

CONVERTIBLE  1976  Alfa  Romeo  5-speed. 
red.  low  miles,  AM/FM/Casette,  leather 
seats.  $2800  obo  Call  Dave  310-440-4149 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Unton  (Lender  Code  832123).  We're  on 
campus  at  Ackerman  A-level  310-477-6628: 
www.ucu.org 


61  OO 

Conipiiter/lntoriu.'t 


NEED  HELP  connecting  IMac  to  Umax  scan- 
ner. $25/hr.  Norma  323-932-1553,  call 
evenings. 


POLICE  IMPOUNDS  Cars  as  tow  as  $500 
tor  listings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990 
84000mi,  good  ooodHton,  power  windows, 
black,  A/C,  regMralton  pakt  for  one  year. 
$3900.  CaH  Vteente  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerOucia.edu 


P/T  to  complete  constructton  and  maintain 
website.  Naltonwtoe  wholesale  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 


6200 

Health  Services 


HAIR  COLOR  MODELS  NEEDED  by  li- 
censed hair  dresser  at  Beverty  Hills  Salon 
$15-25.  Wednesday  appointments.  Hannah 
323-461-8178. 


206-3060 


■  Ml  I  i.-|prln'l|^ni_i    ,,i 


■  |M.,  M»ii»  ^-^'i 


*j  I.    ]i.l  >  It 


36        Thursday,  October  5, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Oassificil 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sf)erni  /  Egg  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


SpedaJ^^^onoiv^feeded 

Preferred  Donor  will  meet  the  following  criteria! 

•Height  Approxunately  5'6"  or  T^ler  •Caucasian  -S-A-T 
Score  around  1300  or  High  A.C.T.  •College  Student  or 
Graduate  Student  Under  30  •No  Genetic  Medical  Issues 


Compensatioii 


Paid  to  you  and^r  the  charity  of  your  choice.  ^ 
All  related  expenses  will  be  paid  in  addition  to 

your  compensation. 

(Extra  compensation  avaUable  for  someone  who  might  be  especiaUy 
gifted  in  athletics,  science/mathematics  or  music.) 


I 


For  more  information  or  to  obtain  an  s^^^m  please 
contact  Michelle  at  the  Law  Office  of  Greg  L.  Eriksen 

(800)808-5838 
or  email  EggDonqrInfo@aol.com. 


This  ad  is  being  placed  for  a  particular  client  and  is  not  soUciting  e^  for  a  donor  bank. 


5700 

Travel  Tickets 


VICTORY  TRAVEL 


LATIN  AMsnCA  SrsOALISTS 


119    •!•/•*•  I 


I  MaxicoGly 

ftwdofajuiu       109  Umo' 

S^**?*^"    "  »««"OiAitw 

I  tl SoWodui         209  S.I>*CMi 

319  logotD 

Coriolica  301  Quito 

NkoregiM  2}|  Mn 

|Q<"**"«*|  179  Corocoj 


NEW  YORK  SSL         ^,\ffr 


'R/T 


SaMhanam 


i  liekfit  NOW  a   ,o,,    4< 


Mexico  Escapes 

I  $329  Cobo  San  Uk«       ^^f^ 
|$519  CotKun  M^^V 

|$359  PuerlD  Vallarta  wBP'^ 


vfvfv/.vittoryfravel.tom 

(323)  277.4595 


61 OO 

Compijtot/lntoriujt 


JAPANESE! 

Shop  Online! 

I        rigotis    Wiluv  J  POP 


wwwfurisancom 


6200 

Health  Services 


MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  Massage  $40/hr  w/sludent 
ID  Monday-Friday  lOam-Bpm  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Certilicales  available 


6200 

Health  Services 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 

Bewd  CarWtod  r 


'•Hm  htnt  forgottmn  what  tt'a 
Mkmtobma  atudant' 

•Acne«Mole  Removal»Warts»Rashes 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmentation* 

•Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  826-2051 

www.DrSllvers.com 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Attorneys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST  Sexual  hariBSsment,  Discrimina- 
tion, Aulo-acctdenis,  Slips/faHs.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  Westside.  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW86). 
www.bestlawyer.cofn  31 0-277-3000. 


>nsc^cfe 


6^00 

Movers/Storarje 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  loo  small.  5-piec6  special  $102  Two 
24-»ool  trucks  fully  equipped  fof  large  moves. 
CaB  24/7  Available  on  short  notice  License 
Tl63g44  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.1 


6200 

Mc.ilth  S<;rvi(:('s 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  (-^Braces^ 


UCU  FACULTY  MEMBER   ''Me     lUtftllCr    MMSkySkMMM. 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 
_Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


IIMsWlWilfTl 
lxii«ii(rin.C 

(949)  552  -  5890 

lllSCalmDr  M 


u  7494 

lxii«ii(rin.CA  aOOZi 


IrrtM.U  W7IS 


E9 


Teeth  Whitening   $R^oo 


Deliver  Bhillani  Results 

•  Cosnr>etfc  Porcelain 

;•  Surgtcol  Ortfiodonitcs 

•  RerTKDvoble 

•  TradltlofXJl 

•  Invistole 

•Eufopeon 


''^■■Ig ««■■«.  «— .!»  . 


6200 

Health  Services 


Be  Beautiful 

Porcelain  Bonding 

$590  Each,  Less  10%  for  Students 

Open  evenings 

Peter  Wylan,  DOS 

Bellflower  Dental  Group 

(562)  925-3765 

10318  Roaecrans     Belinower  M706 

30  min.  from  campus 


Movers  /  Storac|e 


HONEST  MAN  w/14ft  truck  and  doUies, 
small  jobs,  short  notice  ok.  SF.  LV,  SO. 
Student  discount.  Go  BnjinsI  10th  yr.  310- 
285-8688. 

JERRY'S  MOVING4DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available.  Also.  ptcK-. 
up  donatkyts  for  American  Carxwr  Society 
JerryO310-391-5657. 


6500 

Music  Lt?ss()iis 


DRUM  LESSONS 

AU.  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedk^ted  pro- 
fesstonal.  At  your  home  or  WLA  studto.  1st- 
lesson  free.  No  drum  set  necessary 
Ne«:323-654-8226. 

GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professtoruil  near  UCLA.  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Leam  to  play  efforttesslyt 
www.JWGS.cofn.  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 


PIANO  AND  VOICE  LESSONS  by  UCLA 
singer/pianisll  CaH  Laura  310-210-7336. 

VOICE  AND  PIANO  COACHING;  Broadway 
show  tunes.  $2Q'hr.  Studto  410  N.  Rossmore 
Ave.  323-461-5204.  DavW  Rishton.  Begin- 
ning, intermediate,  and  advanced. 


6600 

Personal  Seivictis 


Menage  a  trois?  I  do  translattons  in  German. 
English,  or  French.  Call  JuNa  310-826-8917. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Co«np'*«n«(v»  D(t„rt«lof<  AMUianee 
"nmm.  Papw*.  and  PMonX  SUMm«nl* 

PropOMltandBookt 

l«*n>«lo»»«iaud«.Wrtcom«  Smc  1985 

SHaiw*  Baar,  Ph.D.  (310)  47»4««3 

www.Btr-Wrila  cnm 


(  iMin;^  iV:  (tmlHkiilial 
C  <)iinstliiii» 

IVpiVsslol).    \ll\ICl\. 

KcLilH.nsliips,  .AildKlKMis  A 
Ahiis 


Shtrlx   Klio«|;,(liicl,  Mr  I 


-M(h47«>-S2-r 


J; 


emy  Brain  OassMM 


Thursdiy,  October  5, 2000       37 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Tiavel  Dt;stmations 


5680 

Travel  Destinalions 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


Degrees  of  Freedom 

Low  Cos«  Student  Airfares*  Youth  Hostel  Cards 
lall/Bus  Passes*Language  Programs*  Spring  Brealc 
Hotel  Accomodations  •  l>avel  Inaurance 


Not  looking  for  another  diet?  Get  fit  the 

Bruin  Weigh 


For  9  weeks,  beginning  10  October 
Nutrition  Classes  Tuesday,  3:30  to  5:00  pm 
Fun  Fitness  Classes  Thursdoy,  3:30  to  5:00  pm 
Social  Support  If  you  ore  30  lbs.  or  more  over 

weight  and  want  to  feel  better, 
call  825-4073  for  Evalua- 
tion and  Referral 

For  more  information  call 
Sfieri  Albert,  MPH,  RD 
at  310  794-4180 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PU77I  F 


UiWmiKHEDmHG 


Pefx>nal  Statements,  Papers,  These*, 
Dissertations,  Books,  &  Proposals 

Comprehensive  help  by  PhD  trom  UC 
InlerrKitional  Students  Welcome 

(323)  $65^145 


WRITER'S  REPAIR 


Editing,  outlining,  research,  and  productton 
assistance  for  academic  or  prolasstonal  writ- 
ing ExperierKed  writing  mstructor.  Harvard 
Univeristy  M.A.  Jon/31 0-367-5666 


ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW,  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPUCANTSI  Fnjstrated  devel- 
oping your  cnjcial  personal  statements?  Get 
professtonal  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultan(.31 0-826-4445.  www.wirviing- 
personstatemenl.com. 

CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Wrtting.  editing,  dsasnatfon  fonnening.  tran- 
scribing Personateod.  proiesHonal  assis- 
Unce.  Ace  Worda.Etc.  310-820-8830. 

ITAUAN  LESSONS 

LEARN  ITALIAN  at  own  pace  where&wt)en 
you  wantl  We  offer  Italian  classes  taltored  on 
yourjheeds.  Call  310-442-6078. 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


BOND  TUTORING 

All  subiscts  6-12th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  will  meet  your  indlvklu- 
al  needs.310-471-7628. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  wHI  get  results 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  faW.  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Cateulus/Physfcs/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/EngKsh.  Call 
Win  310-701-8969. 


EXCEPTIONAL 
TUTORS  WANTED 


High  quality  center  in  Pacific 

Palisades  has  immediate  P/T 

openings  for  1  on  t  tutoring.  AJI 

subjects  &  levels  up  throught  high 

school.  BA/M^  positive  atitude 

and  effective  tutoring  skills  required. 

CaH  for  interview 

|»10|4S9-4f2S       I 


MATH  TUTOR 

For  SAT  math,  Pre-Algobra.  Algebra  1  and  2, 
Geometry,  Trigonometry,  and  beginning  Cal- 
culus. LKJLA  Student,  nrwlh  major.  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  rtiath  and  one  year 
teaching  experience.  $25/hoor.  Call  lor  more 
infonnatkxi.  Stephanie:3 10-702-6455. 


ACADEMIC  COACHm/TOR  for  freshman 
Santa  Montaa  College  student  w«h  learning 
disabillfy.  Help  organize,  support  and  tutor 
baste  subjects.  3-5hfs/wk.  %20n\f.  Maureen 
310-459-1600. 


AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE  Tutoring,  com- 
panion, driving  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
girt  Athletic  female  prefen^ed.  BH.  $8-l2/hr 
4daysMk  2-4hrs/day  ASAP.  Call  310-273- 
3663,  310-753-3535.  Email 

kxiz32eaol.com. 


\ 


PREPAID  LEGAL 


■STS 


^      SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pfe-paM  legal  sen^e  programs 
providing  quaWy  legal  servtees  to  plan  mem- 
bers. Robert  Moss,ESO.:310-260-7650. 

SIGN  LANGUAGE 
CLASS 

Set  yoof  hands  free  by  learning  to  experi- 
ence a  language  of  beauty  through  visual  ex- 
pression. Starts  Octotwr.  Loul8a:31 0-275- 
3809. 

TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Unton/Unkxi.  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Cal  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  In  Westwood.  310-206-0464. 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professtonal  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day.  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
perscom 

THESIS/DISSERTATION  COACH-  LEARN 
HELPFUL  TECHNIQUES  Get  emotional 
support.  IJorothy  Imai,  PhD.  MFCC  11110 
Ohk>  Ave.  8te  XZ.  WLA.  310<474'<19«2. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


PRIVATE  TUTORING 

AU  SUBJECTS,  an  levels,  affordable 
rates.  At  your  home  Highly  qualified  tu- 
tors. Call  Admiral  Tutoring  310-477-9685 


BALDWIN  HILLS«;ULVER  CITY  AREA. 
Female  tutor  wanted  for  8th  grader  lor  math, 
science,  etc.  2hrs  evenings.  Lertette  323- 
735-4588. 


THE  WRITERS  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
term  paper  assistance,  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, History   Foreign  Students  Wekx)me. 
Call:310-4  52-2865 
www.thewriterscoach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  Mdth  the  English  language— for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels  310-440-3118. 

WWWMY-TUTOR.COM  Malh/Phystes/Sta- 
tisttes/English/Hebrew/  chemistry/biology/as- 
Ironomy/  Computer  programmir>g  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
servtee.  Call  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

Tiitoniuj  Wanted 


5TH  GRADE.  Mon-Thurs,  7-8pm  Responsi- 
ble, knows  how  lo  teach.  Very  dose  to 
UCLA  $15/hr.  Call  Rosy:310-44i-9M8 


DRIVER/MATH  tutor  needed  after  school  for 
8th  grader.  Pactfte  Palisades  excefleni  pay 
call  QaN  at  310-201-6159 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/exceHent  study  habits  to  assist  12&l6-yr- 
oW  boys  w/HW  and  tests  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $lO-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 


ACROSS 

1  Mot}y  Dick's 

pursuer 
5  Okj  cattle  town 
10  Quick 

14  Dull  person 

15  Gift  giver 

16  Pierre's  airl 

1 7  Trusted  female 

19  —avis 

20  Frighten 

21  A  different  one 
23  Legal  matter 

25  Moat 

26  Type  of  deck 
or  measure 

29  Row 
31  Jeweled 
fieaddress 

35  —  roll:  winning 

36  Camival 
attraction 

37  Fireplace  shelf 

38  Horizontal 
t>eams 

40  Flubbed 

41  Storage  places 

42  Like  house  pets 

43  Lemon  drink 

44  Authority 

45  Relative  of  POQ 
46Soc. 

47  Grouch 
49  Turf 
51  Strikingly 
54  River  nymph 

58  Above 

59  Unnecessary 
project 

63  Auctkm  off 

64  Betow 

65  Small  amount 

66  Oak  or  maple 

67  Substantial 

68  CXit  k)ud 

DOWN 

1  Fundamentals 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLf  SOLVED 


HHH0  

SaOQ    SfflQOS    □OQEED 

□nan  QarasQammgim 


DIED    SIIB](E    samssQ] 

sgiDisoigQQsa  samro 
BBDs  nasizis  □BSS 
asms  Dssm     i 


2  Hula-  — 

3  Fk>rence's  river 

4  Ere 

5  Not  even 

6  Extinct  bird 

7  DearAt)by's 
sister 

8  KindofbaHoon 

9  -—  You  Glad 
You're  You?" 

10  Old  British  coin 

1 1  Asian  nurse 

12  Father 

13  Rip 

18  Eisenfiower's 

nickname 
22  Fuel  rating 

24  ComnrK)tk)ns 

25  Poor  grade 

26  Roman 
garments 

27  Actress  Ekt)erg 

28  Celebration 
30  Psyche  parts 
32  Book  of  maps 


HAILIl 


33  Rivertank 
plants 

34  Pilgrim  John  — 

36  Music-buffs 
purchase 

37  Kid's  illness 

39  Active  adf>erent 

40  Farm  sound 
42  "For  shame!" 

45  Unspecified 
person 

46  Ballet  duet 
48  Prcture  holder 

50  Singer  Yoko 

51  Boundless 

52  Caesar's  road 

53  Mouse  cousin 

55  Composer 
Stravinsky 

56  Can.  province 

57  Wheel's 
partner 

60  Harem  room 

61  Volleyball  need 

62  Kind  of  humor 


MATH  LOVERS 
WANTED 

For  math  tutoring  sendee.  Flexible  schedule 
Must  have  a  great  understanding  of  subject 
$15/hour  CaM:310-560-956 1 , 

MATH  TUTOR  WANTED 

FOR  HIGH  SCHOOL  JUNIOR  In  Pre-Cateu- 
lus.  Wastwood  area  2-3  afternoons/week 
310-470-3831 


MATH.  SAT  Experienced  Grad  student  or 
Senior  preferred  Private  WLA  school  Fax 
resume  to  562-404-6141  or  caN  818-831- 
2809. 

MATH.  SPANISH.  FRENCH.  LATIN.  CHEM- 
ISTRY tutors  wanted.  Must  have  own  car. 
Artfculate.  no  experienca  required.  SM.  BH, 
CC$15/hr.  310-679  2133 


Hn^             1'^ 

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U       Thunday,  Octoi>«  5, 2O0O 


Daily  Bruin  Oassified 


J'^-v^.^;':  : 


*•  'r      ■  •  •.  >  i 


^^!" 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


7100 

Tutorinc)  Wanted 


MATH,  SPELLING, 

READING 
COMPREHENSION 

Tutor  wanted  tor  3rd  grader.  2-3  times/week, 
evenings.  $15/hour.  Must  come  to  twuse 
323-954-7433. 

NEED  A  GENERAL  A  TUTOR  for  11-year- 
old-t)oy  in  BH.  Must  be  nice  &  patient 
Please  call  Lity  310-274-3929  or  310-600- 
4707. 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


TUTORS  NEEDED 

AJI  subjects,  levels,  ages.  Flexible  days  and 
hours.  $10-13/hour.  Tutor  in  WLA  or  SFV. 
Totally  Tutored.  310-397-0999. 

TUTORS  WANTED 

ALL  SUBJECTS,  especially  Chemistry, 
physics,  math.  Latin.  Greek.  Car.  Bachetors 
required.  $20+/hr.  Fax  resume  to  310-914- 
4158  Attn:  Tania. 


TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homework  assist  for  two  boys.  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  in  Laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  caH  evenings:310-401-0113  or  day- 
time:310-392-1405. 


TUTORS  WANTED:  All  Subjects,  preK-12th 
grade,  computers,  languages,  instruments 
PT  (WLA/SFV/MALIBU),  salary:  $10-15. 
must  have  car,  310-477-2669,  fax:  310-477- 
1359. 


Remember  when  you  got 

that  job  and  told  yourself 

that  it  was  only  for  the 

summer... 

Need  a  career? 


7^00 

Busnif;ss  0|i|)(»r1unilies 


Business  Op|)on 


7AOO 


Don't  call  your  parents 
for  extra  cash. 

Call  us. 


TUTOR  NEEDED!  Primarily  in  Spanish,  pre- 
calc  a  plus.  For  I6yr  old  boy,  2  days/wk, 
flexible  schedule.  Brentwood,  call  Kathy 
days:310-247-1777.  eves:310-826-1876. 

TUTOR  NEEDED:  7th  grade  boy  Mon-Thurs 
4-6pm.  Must  be  patient.  Help  in  all  subjects 
and  homework.  Glendale  area.  Own  trans- 
portatlon.  Call  310-865-4123.  daytime 

TUTORING  WANTED  FOR  9th  grader  In- 
home.  Homework  help.  Brentwood  310- 
472-7342. 


WELL  PAID  TUTOR 

Tutor  needed  for  HS  sophmore  in  Geometry 
$20/hr.  Provide  own  transportation. 
Previous  tutoring  experience.  310-275-5487 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertations,  transcription,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  maHing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Monica.  310-828-6939.  Hollywood,  323-466- 
2888. 


needg 

nommale? 


7300 

Writiiuj  Help 


GET  BETTER  GRADESII  Professional  writer 
wi«  help  you  with  any  subject.  Editing  and  re- 
writes are  my  specialty.  Competitive  rates 
310-285-3421. 


>^OVERTISE 


CAREER 

FALL  2obo  Guide 


UCLA 

Daily  Bruin 


October  13,  2000 


TO  ADVERTISE:   --   -- 

Call:  310.206.3060 
Fax:  310.206.0528 
E-mail:  dbcareer^media.ucla.edu 


FOR  PEOPLE  WHO  WANT  TO  PARTICIPATE: 

Do  you  get  along  well  with  othersP 

Then  join  the  q^ed  S^^tm. 


tu  ORmjTWIWI 


/^A  dechf  ff-o^f^'X^  o^Come4^ 


IF  you  are 

whonibly  UNftTTRftCTIVE 

and  WCK 
then  Gonsiifer  your 

for  comedy  at 


TAUNT, 

for 


■«■. 


km;  kit  m'n-o^. 

"The  Show." "" 


Monday,  October  9.  8PM 
NORTHWEST  CAMPUS  AUDITORIUM 


If  you're  male,  in  college  or 
have  a  college  degree,  and 
would  like  a  flexible  job 
where  you  can  earn  up  to 
$600  per  m^nth.  call  for 
details  on  our  anonymous 
sperm  donor  program. 
You'll  receive  free 
comprehensive  health 
screening  .  Plus  you  can 
help  infertile  couples 
realize  their  dream  of 
becoming  parents.  So  if 
you're  looking  for  a  great 
job  and  little  extra  cash, 
call  us  first. 


310-824-9941 

or  e-mail  us  at 
donors@ccb.com 


-*.'  J' 


7500 

Career  Opponuiiitics 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


Harbor-UCLA  medical  Center,  Department  of  Orthopaedic  Surgery 
Research  Coordinator  Job  Description 


cltopBryMaaftMs 
A 


it  to  taoiNMMc  rMMRk  praiMis  af  Mm  OrMopaaMc 
ia  to  iMMatn  ft*  comiNitar  qniMn,  databaaM 

of  dM  tfOPAftftlML 

f«nlltaf  wid,  o««p«.r,  (M«da,art  a«l  PQ. !,.«.,,«,  h  .  ^e,  „^,,  .JJ3^^ 
commtt  at  laaM  a  nar  to  Ika  paMlaa. 

•e««  rata  la  ail^MtaiMa..  d,p«to„«W  ^n,,^  ^  ^.^^  j,,,,,^,,^^ 


alS1§MLin§ 


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employment 

7400-8300 


7400 

Business  Oppoiluiiities 


$WORK  FROM  HOMES 

$500-2500  P/T.  $3000-15000+  F/T,  No 
investment,  Real  Opportunity!  Can  Stewart 
31 0-234 -Qasa. 


FIRST  CALL 
I  Staffing  Services 

College  Students! 
Earn  extra  money  for  school! 

Are  TDu  looking  fcr  a  way  to  pay  o«F  those  sudeni 

loam?  Call  us  for  short  Of  long  tem  work 
assigninaits  Wfe  have  lo6  of  fun  jobs  available! 

QiUieinSaMaMontai 

3  1(r2  6  4.99H 

trCMritloGtoidilt 

8  I  8  .  2  4  2.9988 
"•■/imetHniff.cBi 


A  6-FlGIJJRE  INCOME  by  2002?  It's  possi- 
ble. Invlst  $35,  Refundable  No  Rlsl< 
http://zlbf|b.com/phanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
lor  StecMnie. 


GET  RICH!!! 

Make  1000'»*-  waeklyl  For  (totalis,  sand  orra 
stamp  to:  QflO  ft  Co..  P.O.  Box  8690,  Austin 
1X78713. 

NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

Work  from  home  with  flexible  hours 
www.hortwbualness.Kyemoney 

UNIQUE  BUSINESS 
OPPORTUNITY 

BECOME  a  personal  irainar.  Earn  up  tp 
$150/hr.  Order  businass  manual  to  learn 
how.  310-493-9675. 


7500 

Ciiri  (;r  Oppottuiiiiics 


KOREATOWN    E-COMMERCE    business 
seeks  P/T  employee  for  computer  and  office 
work.    Fluent    in    Korean    and    English 
Resumes  to  namhee.hanOgte  net. 

LANDSCAPE  DESIGNER  F/T  position 
Garden  design  company  located  in  Beverly 
Hills.  Will  be  involved  in  entire  landscape 
Design  process  inckjding:  creation  o(  initial 
conceptual  design,  devetopmeni  of  drawing 
of  overall  site  plan  integrating  all  compo- 
nents of  exterior  design  incWutng  plantings 
garden  structures,  pools,  walls,  fences  and 
haidscaping  details:  supwviston  and  coordi- 
nation of  avvry  pfwae  of  production  and 
InstaHatkxi  ol  a  pro^  lo  completk>n.  Fax 
rwuma  to  Mlitsa  Moorg  310-542-8580. 

STOCK  BROKER.  Lteansas  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Blvd  Suite 
216.  Wbodtond  HIMs,  CA.  Instoictor:  Davkt 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Hansard  Universltv) 
818-703-8889 


7600 

ChiltJ  Care  Offeree! 


NAG{i^  PR€SCHooL 


LxMMly  W.LA.  tacHlty,  doM  to  UCLA, 

FT  4  PT,  Agw  2-«. 
CiMI  (310)207-4543  or  visit  in  person 
at  1620  S.  Bundy. 


QjPpCac^  W^ 


7700 

Cliilcl  Care  Wanted 


CAREGIVER  to  drive  10-yr-okJ  from  school 
to  Santa  Monica  activity  Tuesdays.  Perhaps 
some  evenings.  Car.  DL,  insurance  neces- 
sary.  Candyce  310-207-1227. 

CHILD  CARE 

for  2  girls,  ages  5&11.  Brentwood.  Tues  & 
Thurs  evenings,  5-9:30pm.  Duties  include: 
light  meal  prep,  reading,  playing,  bathing. 
Must  have  car.  Excellent  references  and  en- 
Joy  children  Salary  neg.  Please  call  Linda 
476-4728. 


7700 

Child  Care  W;iiitcd 


Mother's  Helper 


Aftoraoon  drhring,  hoRiMnrfc  iMlp, 
cMid  cara  SMl  HgM  kMs' ooddng  (or  2 

boys,  agM  9  Mdl^  Must  haw 

axodtont  driving  ncori  «  CA  driv«r% 

Hcansa.  CarMMlM  providMf .  Must  liiu 

sports.  Mais  or  famale.  Men.  to  Fri. 

Hn.  approximately  3-8p.ni.  (later  on 

Frittays),  but  flexible.  Home  is  in 

Be«artyNills.$10/liour. 

Fax  resume  to  Debbie  at 

(310)273-3748. 


CHILD  CARE  NEEDED  for  7-year-oW  boy 
2:30-7:30  Wednesday,  Thursday  afternoons. 
Must  drive,  have  reliable  car,  references  re- 
quired.  Pay  negotiable.  Mary:3 10-828-2624. 
CHILD  CARE  Permanent  P/T.  San  Fernando 
Valley.  $10/hour,approx.  20hours/week. 
Starting  after  3pm.  Rexible  hours.  Must 
have  car  Starts  immediately.  818-905-1215. 


Thursday,  October  5, 2000       39 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


P/T  BABYSITTER 
NEEDED 

For  7-yr-old  boy.  Must  be  available 
MoniThurs  2:30-8pm,  TuesiWed  2:30- 
6pm,  plus  more  hours  if  needed.  Child  care 
experience  a  must.  10  min  from  UCLA.  $9/hr 
CaH  Hilary  310-858-5994. 

Prr  CHILD  CARE.  Two  children  ages  2&3.5 
Afternoons  and  some  weekends,lighi  house- 
work. Must  have  car,experience,and  refer- 
ences. $a/hr  Email:  tinymarshns©earth- 
link.net.     310-864-6906 


CHILDCARE 

for  personable  8yr-oW  girt.  Pick-up  from 
school/lessons.  CDL,  own  car,  insurance 
Non-smoker  Monday/Wednesday/Friday  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thursday  2-6pm.  Experi- 
ence and  references  required.  $1Q/hr  Call 
310-440-6738. 


P/T  DRIVER  CHILD- 
CARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  needs  drop-off  (6:45-8am)  &  pick- 
up+errands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only.  Must  have 
car,  insuranceAvalid  license.  Brentwood 
Please  call  Sarah  310-385-6766. 


P/T  NANNY  for  2-yr-old  Wed  evenings  5- 
8:30pm;  5-10pm  on  Thurs.  Occasional  wee- 
kends w/advanced  notice.  Palisades.  Must 
have  own  transportation  and  have  previous 
chiW  care  experience.  $l5/hr  Please  call 
Laura  at  310-454-9995. 


ABSOLUTELY 
AWESOME 

AFTERNOON  assistant  for  2  wonderful  girls 
(5.8yrs)  Driving,  playing,  HW.  Near  UCLA. 
Mon-Thurs,3-6pm,some  evertngs.  Day  310- 
206-0669;  night.  310-824-9609. 

AFTER  SCHOOL 
NANNY 

Afternoons  aprox.  3-8  and  some  evenings, 
Hexibte  hours.  Own  Insured  car,  valW  driver's 
license  and  references  required.  Easy  kids. 
In  Santa  Montea.  Starting  $lO/hour  310- 
202-9240. 


CHILDCARE  FOR  11 -YEAR-OLD  girl.  After 
school  hours  ranging  from  2-8:30PM.  Driving 
and  homework  support.  Please  call  310-476- 
2469. 

CHILDCARE/DRIVER 

for  12-yr-oW  boy  Non-smoker.  Likes  kkJs 
and  dogs.  Help  w/HW.  M-Thurs.  4:15- 
5:45pm.  $10/hr.  CaH  310-828-5144. 

DRIVE  CHILD  from  school  in  PkxVRobert- 
son  area  to  home  in  Padfk:  Palisades  in  af- 
ternoons. Must  have  car  and  insurance.  310- 
454-7525. 


PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  for  10  yr/oW 
girt.  Need  help  6:45-8:30AM  MTW,  2-7:30pm 
MT  Must  have  car,  expenence  with  children 
and  help  with  errands.  310-441-9766. 

Part-time     babysitter     M-W     5:00-900 
References.  2  kids  $10/hour  310-458-3587. 


PART-TIME  BABYSITTER  Responsible, 
experienced,  chiW  development  preferred. 
EnergetK.  for  2-year-old  and  5-year-old 
Own  car  310-273-4900. 


AFTER  SCHOOL  CARE  NEEDED  4 
daysAvk.  2  boys  ages  6&8.  WLA,  Car  neces- 
sary. Must  be  available  245-5 45pm  Call 
Stacey  310-449-5765. 

AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED. 
Mon-Fri,  2pm-7pm.  Own  transportation  a 
must.  Brentwood  310-979-7103. 


DRIVER  &  CARE 

For  2  boys  ages  12&8  M-F  3-6pm.  Non- 
snwker  References.  Call  310-839-2131 

DRIVERA-UTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  12&16-yr- 
old  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr  310- 
472-7353. 


RELIABLE 
BABYSITTER  NEEDED 

For  after  school  help.  Monday-Thursday,  2- 
6pm.  Were  tooking  for  a  student  who  is  great 
with  kWs,  ages  7-6,  to  help  with  driving, 
homework  and  light  housekeeping.  Hours 
and  salary  negotiable  Car  and  references 
are  required.  Please  call  Joy  at  310-394- 
2342. 


AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  for  5-year-oW 
boy  1:30-5:0OPM  approximately 

14hours/week  MF   $8/hour  (negotiable) 
Anne:310-458-6455 


FEMALE  UCLA 
STUDENT  NEEDED 

To  babysit  in  Beverty  Hills  for  1  -2  night/week 
Must  have  car  non-smoker  female  preferred. 
$8/hr  Greer  310-858-8839 


1 


AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  WANTED  lor  9- 
yr-oW  girl  Bring  to  afterschool  activities.  2  or 
3  days/wk,  Santa  Monica.  Musi  have  car 
Will  reimburse  for  gas+salary.  Call  Philio 
310-360-1981. 


FUN  TWINS! 

Someone  needed  to  pick  up  twins  from 
school  and  bring  home.  4-5pm  $9-l3/hr 
Bonus  if  you  know  Hebrew  and  Piano  310- 
476-5265.  310-429-0123. 


RELIABLE/FUN  P/T  NANNY  NEEDED  lor  2 
girts  (5  &  8).  3-6pm.  2,3,or  5  days/wk  Driv- 
ing, HW,  light  cooking/housework.  Near 
UCLA.  Please  call  310-824-9609,  evenings 
or  310-206-0669,  day. 

RIDE  NEEDED 

To  ptek  up  chiW  from  Bekerty  Hall  on  Mulhol- 
land  Drive  at  320  pm  Call  310-271-4651  af- 
ter 6pm.  213-252-9437  From  9am-epm 


AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE  Tutoring,com- 
pan«on,driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
giri  Athletk;  female  prefen^ed.  BH.  $8-12/hr 
4daysA»k.  2-4hrs/day  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663.310-753-3535.  Email  tonz32«aol.com 

ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

P/T  JOB  wortdng  with  sweet,  intelligent 
handcapped  giil  ChiW  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  in  kitchen  and  worthing  with  chlW 
on  improving  physical  skills  Applicant  must 
be  sweet,  intelligenl,  reliable,  speak  English 
and  drive  Maat  Elman:310-396-8l00. 

BABYSITTER  for  4-yr-oW  boy  who  toves  to 
read  and  meet  new  friends.  Occastonal 
evenings  $10/hr  References  required  310- 
573-9892. 


FUN/CARING  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  tor 
picking  up  &  caring  tor  9yr  oW  giri.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver  3-5days/wk 
aftemoons-6pm.  Gayle  310-450-4109  (even- 
ings). 


FUN/REPSONSIBLE  SITTER.  Westwood 
family  Wed  1:30-7:30pm  Boys  8,5,2  Light 
housekeeping,  make  dinner,  driver's  lk:ense 
a  plus.  $10/hf.  Leave  message  310-441- 
4078. 


Homewort<  Helper/Driver  neediid  to  pickup  9 
yr  oW  from  Bel  Air  school  M.W.Thr.  com- 
mencing immediately  Own  car,  References 
Call  Diane  818-781-1471. 


Saturday  Babysitter/ 
Mother's  Helper 


Sat  cvmingt.  approx.  6-10-.30pin. 
Babysitting  for  2  boys,  afpea  9  and 

12.  iRBMerty  Hills  or  MallNi. 

Maat  bavB  oxceliont  drivtaf  rMord 

Car  wM  be  provided  if  drivkig  is 

■Mcessary.  ""-   -  fiairti 

$12/hoiir. 

Fax  resume  to  Debbie  at 

(310)273-3748. 


BABYSITTER  for  smart,  ntoe  5-yr-oW  boy  in 
Shemian  Oaks  Hours:2:30-6:30pm  Musi 
have  safe  car  w/insurance  and  CDL.  Refer- 
ences required.  $8-10/hr  DOE  310-449- 
7182. 


MOMS  HELP  NEEDED.  We  live  right  in  the 
UCLA  'hood.  Need  help  w/HW  and  driving  lor 
our  4  chiWren  (12.10,  8.  5)1  Last  year  2 
fnends  shared  this  job.  We  provWe  car 
$10/hr  M-F  3-8..  Call  Elain  475-4336, 

MOTHERS  HELPER 

NEEDED  Pn  sitter  needed  (or  kids  1047 
Responsibilities  Driving,  reading&playing 
Good  payll  References  a  must!  Located  in 
Brentwood.  310-394-9781. 


BABYSITTER  NEEDED  tor  1  1/2  year  oW 
boy  Varkjus  afternoons  and  evenings.  Some 
weekend  days.  Culver  City.  Call  Ruth  310- 
838-0624 

BABYSITTER/DRIVER  for  two  boys  9«12 
TW.F.  3-6pm+possible  addittonal  time  Mul- 
holland/Beveriy  Glen  English  speaking 
Own  car  w/good  driving  record.  References 
310-470-2047. 


MOTHERS  HELPER  Afternoon  driving. 
homewori<  help,  child  care  and  light  kkJs' 
cooking  lor  2boys,  ages  94 12  Must  have  ex- 
cellent driving  record  4  CA  driver's  license 
Car  will  be  provided.  Must  like  sports  Male 
or  female  Mon  to  Fri.  Hrs.  approximately  3- 
8pm  (later  on  Fridays),  but  flexible  Home  is 
in  Beveriy  Hills  $1C/hr  Fax  resume  to  Deb- 
bie at  310-273-3748 


GET  YOUR  OWN  leglUmate  home  buainess 
oaertng  prtxfcirti  people  REALLY  ti^it  Dim 
your  own  900  number  sen^ica  end  other 
unique  cashmekers.  While  everyone  else  is 
tn^HJ  to  imd  a  ride  to  work,  youl  be  AT  worit 
nltp://wwwmaklngmoneycata- 
tog.com/2141500 


TEACHER  ASSTNTS 

PRIVATE  WLA  School  tooking  lor  capable 
and  experienced  teacher  assistants  to  wort< 
with  elementary  level  students,  M-F,  8AM- 
3PM.  Begin  immediately  Profteienl  In  Mac 
computer  technotogy  Please  fax  re- 
sume:310-471-1532. 


7600 

Child  Cnrr  Oflcrud 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  >un  by 
UCLA  grads  Ages2  5«years.  Two  large 
play-yanls.  Open  7:30-6:3O.Cloee  to  UCLA 

310-473-0772 


BABYSITTER/SATURDAY  EVENING 

Weekly  commilmeni  requested.  FlexMHy  for 
other  nights  a  plus.  Must  heve  own  car  to 
drive  to  PacMc  PaHsedes.  TWo  fun.  easy 
boys,  647-yrs-old.  Must  Nke  playing  sports 
and  watching  MTV  and  movies.  Students 
only.  Relerences  required.  $10^  CaH  AW- 
son  310-454-3650  or  email  GlE- 
DELOaol.com 

BABYSITTING 
POSITION  AVAILABLE 

Seeking  bright,  pieyful  (amele  tor  occastonal 
care  ol  two  children,  ages  5  and  10  months 
in  Westwood.  Honour.  310-S53-0S42. 

BABYSITTING 

Knowledge  ol  Finnish  or  Fersi  or  both  e  plus. 
Call  before  apm.  310-202-0022. 


NANNY  POSmON-P/T.  Must  have  expert 
enwwtth  ChiWren  ages  3  and  younger  ChiW 
Davelopement  educatkxi  a  plus  Must  have 
rt*9nnomtc»r  310-234-1188 


NANNY/ 
HOUSEKEEPER 

for  normal  WestsWe  family  Warm,  good 
sense  of  humor  excellent  English,  valW 
COL.  12-8  M-F  Fax  only:3 10-476-8065. 


NEED  AFTER  SCHOOL  HELP  3  daysAivk 
5pm-6:30pm.  Female  preferred.  Please  call 
evenings  31 0-84 1  -0629 

OCCASIONAL  CHILDCARE.  Are  you  willing 
to  spend  a  few  hours  each  week  or  an  even- 
ing i^  a  six-year-old  boy  in  the  Westwood 
a/»B?  This  vivacious  boy  toves  books,  sci- 
ence ei^Mriments,  and  having  adventures 
Pteese  call  310-440-0725  or  email 
piersl  Oconcentric.net. 


SANTA  MONICA.  2  POSITIONS-  MONDAY 
EVENINGS  6pm-9:30pm 
AFTERSCHOOL  TEACHER'S  AIDE    Mon- 
day-Friday approx.  2:30pm-5:30pm.   $9/hr 
For  a  6-year  oW  boy  310-393-9144. 

SATURDAY  BABYSITTER/MOTHERS 
HELPER  Sat  evenings,  approx.  6-10  30pm 
Babysitting  (or  2boys,  ages  9412  In  Beverty 
Hills  or  Malibu  Must  have  excellent  driving 
record  Car  will  be  provided  if  driving  is  nec- 
essary Male  or  female  $12Air  Fax  resume 
to  Debbie  at  310-273-3748. 

TUTOR/BABYSITTER  Glendale,  12  year  oW 
boy  Every  weekday  4-9pm.  $lO/hr  Need 
Car  Call  818-548-5896. 

UCLA  STUDENT  to  drive/supervise  HW  2 
kWs  Tues,  Wed,  Thurs,  3-6pm.  Bew«y 
HiHs  $iai^r.  Car  w/insurance  References 
required  AbigaM  310-859- 1 255. 

WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILDCARE  For  12-yoar-oW  girl,  SM/Brent- 
»wood.  M-F.  3;30-7ish(app«t)x:15hr8A»*).Cer 
with  insurance.  References  required 
$10+/hour  Night:310-828-620e  Day818- 
954-3276  Start  ASAP 

WANTED:  Responisble  indivWual  needed  to 
help  after  school  with  2  sma«  cNWren 
Mondays  4-apm  and  some  weekends  Must 
Drive.  References.  Can  310-446-1438. 

WEEKEND  NANNY  needed   7am  8ei-9pm 
Sun  Uve-ln.  Bei-air  Call  310-689-1840. 

_  WLA  CHILDCARE 

FOR  A  OEUQHTFUL    very  personat>to  11- 
year-oW  girt,  pick-up  after  school,  drive  to      ' 
activities,  supen^iae  homewort<,  Mon-Thurs 
3:30-8:30PM(v8riebte).   $ll/hour  CaH   Dr 
AJan  Yasser  310-277-2796 


i-'iofiiciy 

206-3060 


40       Tlwrsday,  October  5. 2000 

-       ,   t 

r'  ':■'•    "^  ;,'.\: -jr ,]  . 

\                   Child  C;iie 

7700 

Wanted 

M^BhiinClaidlM' 


7800 

Help  W.intcd 


7SOO 


Wonderful  Namy  needed  3-5  afternoons  per 
week.  Boy  9,  girl  12.  Need  Own  car. 
Weekerxte  a  plusi  Palisades  area.  310-573- 
1010. 


7800 

Hulp  Waiittnl 


INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS.  REPRE- 
SENTATIVE. Film  advertising.  Call  retail 
stores  tor  upcoming  releases.  Coordinate 
store  visits.  P/T-F/T-8am-l2pm  or  12:30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $10/hr-»bonus.  310-566-2555. 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  female  for  Beverly  Hills 
producer  Short,  fiexibie  hours.  Excellent 
pay.  310-278-6972. 

$1,000'S  WEEKLY!! 

STUFF  ENVELOPES  at  home  for  $2.00 
each  plus  tonuses.  F/T,  PfT.  Make  $8004- 
weekly  guaranteedl  Free  suppHes.  For  da- 
taHs  send  one  stamp  to:  N-33,  PMB  552. 
12021  Wllshire  Blvd.,  Los  Angeles,  CA 
90025. 

$15-$23/HR  BRIGHT  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academk: 
Subjects.  Transportation  required.  We  will 
train.  Flexible  hours  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  test  scores  (SAT,  GRE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educational  Servces,  Attn:Bar- 
ry,  9911  W.  Pico  Blvd,  Ste.1025,  LA,  CA 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424.  Posittons  avail- 
able  throughout  LA  and  the  Valley. 

$1500  weekly  potential  iiiailing  our  circulars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  informatton 
packet.  Call  202-466-1639. 

$20/hr  FRENCH  TUTORS  wanted  to  con- 
verse with  high-school  students.  Fluency  not 
required.  Travel  experience  a  plus.  5- 
20hrs/wk  plus  optional  summer  opportunity 
to  teach  in  France.  Contact  Scon  310-428- 
3680. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required  Flex4)le, 
part-time  hours.  $10-13/hr  Tennis  a  plus! 
We  are  nattonal  fk>wer  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


ADULT  RESPONSIBLE 
MALE 

For  personal  care  lor  disabled  man  Monday- 
Friday  1  hr/day  and  alternate  weekends.  Will 
train.  Strong  References.  Near  UCLA 
$300/mo.  310-475-5209. 

AMERICORPS  PosJtlon:Help  watch  Uterecy 
devetopment  program  for  presctxx)lers  while 
eaming  money  for  school.  30  hours/week. 
Julie,  Connecttons  For  ChiWren.  310-452- 
3325ex.234. 


CENTURY  CITY 
SHOPPING  CEN- 
TER 

Earn  $$  lor  the  HoMaysl  F/T,  P/T  posltkxis 
avaliable  at  Cusomer  Service.  Apply  in  per- 
son at  cart  in  center  court  outside 
Crate&Barrel.  10250  Santa  Montea  Blvd.  No 
phone  caRs  please. 


7800 

Hfl|)  Wiiiitt'd 


COOL  LADY  seeks  driver  tor  occaskxtai  er- 
rands. Own  ctf  raquirad.  $7/HR  310-626- 
9150. 


ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary. 
Host  music/talk-shows  (or  our  radk)  statkxis. 
P/T.  $10-1 5/hr,  $200+per/show,  plus  fantas- 
tk:  benefits.  323-468-0080.  24-hour8. 

ANSWER  TELEPHONES/DATA  ENTRY 
Movie  market  research  firm  seeks  people 
with  caH  taking  and  data  entry  skiHs.  We  pro- 
vkJe  the  pizza,  you  provkJe  the  corrputor  and 
telephone  expertise.  Immediate  start  (or 
weekend  work  all  year  tong.  Contact  Eliza- 
beth at  310-840-5800  ext251 . 


$8.50/HR+BONUS.  Advertising  consulting 
firni  seeking  per5on(s)  to  set  appointments 
by  phone,  (or  our  consultants.  Minimum  2- 
years  college.  Telephone  or  outskJe  sales 
experience  a  plus.  Immediate  opertings, 
PT/FT  in  our  WestskJe  offtee.  Call:  Norman 
Becker.  Ad  Max  Consulting  Group,  310-441- 
7676 


•ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  Valley,  Hollywood,  or  Santa  Monka 
offfce  needs  energetk:  people  $l0/hour 
plus  bonusesi  310-395-7368. 


•F/T  GENERAL  OFRCE* 

WESTWOOD  ENTERTAINMENT  LAW 
FIRM  SEEKS  F/T  OFFICE  CLERK  TO  DO 
COPYING,  FAXING.  AND  MAIL  PROCESS- 
ING. MUST  HAVE  CLERICAL  OFFICE  EX- 
PERIENCE. SALARY  DOE+BENEFITS. 
FAX  RESUME  TO  E.  KRAFT:  31(M41  -8010. 

•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beatt  aH  Jobs.  Start 
tmmedialefy.  Great  pay  Fun/Easy  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  (or  free  medtoal  Cal-24/hr» 
323-850-4417. 


ARTISTIC  GALLERY  Exhibit  nudes,  $75/hr. 
Rne  art  photographer  seeks  (omale  models 
18-28  (or  B&W  photo  exhibits.  High  inte-"tty 
work.  Attractive,  toned,  dance/gymnastic/ar- 
tistte  background  preferred.  Call  lor  more 
info  and  check  my  webpage  818-623-6470. 

ASSISTANT  needed.  $10/hr  Temple  CHy,  M. 
Opportunity  to  leam  the  ancient  art  of  Chi 
Quong.  Cantonese/English,  computer  liter- 
ale,  people  skills,  detail-oriented.  Contact  Lis 
310-571-6032. 

ATHLETICS:  P/T  student  emptoyee  to  vwrk 
copy/mall  room  and  (ront  receptk>n  desk 
Pay:$6.70/hr,10-16  hrs/wk.  Must  be  (riendly 
and  hard  working.  Apply  at  J.D.  Morgan 
Facilities  Office  310-206-6662. 

BABYSITTER 

Some  evenings  and  weekends  Experience 
with  toddlers,  reterences  a  must  UCLA  area 
310-470-8390. 

BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Union.  Excellent  pay,  hours  &  environment. 
Some  teller  experience  preferred.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd.,  LA,  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  Of  on  web 
www.ucu.of|>^ob8.htm 

BEAUTIFUL  WOMEN  for  upscale  dating 
agency.  E«elont$$$.  Mail  bio,  pic  (5x7  to 
5x16),  concact  lr«o:11054  Ventura  Blvd  #365, 
Stu(«o  City  91604.  Assistant  also  wanted. 
310-388-2803. 


CHEVIOT  HILLS-STUDENT  WANTED  TO 
DRIVE  4-year-oM  boy  to  school  and  tqhelp 
wHh  general  enands.  FRIDAYS.  8:30am- 
12:30pm.  $ia'hr  310-836-8960. 


CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT/CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT  SALARY:  $7.03- 
$8.e5/hr+partial  benefits.  CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR  SALARY:  $8.65- 

$11 .90/hr+partlal  benefits.  Under  general  su- 
pen/lskxi.  plans,  implements  recreational. 
•  ducatlona- 
I  and  sports  activifles  (or  5-12  year  okJs.  such 
as  arts  and  crafts,  Learning  groups,  outdoor 
games  and  playing  intramural  sports.  RE- 
QUIREMENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  ASSIS- 
TANT: High  School  Graduatkjn;  enrollment  in 
college  prelened.  Six  months  paki  recreatton 
work  experience  (Smonths  o(  volunteer  ex- 
perience in  a  chiWcare  program  can  be  sub- 
stituted (or  3montf«  o(  paM  experience). 
Proof  of  High  School  diptoma  must  be  sub- 
mitted with  a  City  applteatkxi.  REQUIRE- 
MENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR: 
Completkxi  o(  orw  year  of  college,  majoring 
In  RecreatkK),  Educatkxi  or  related  (ieW. 
Must  have  12  units  in  Early  ChikJhood  Edu- 
catkxi and  3  addltkjnal  units  in  Administra- 
tton  or  Stafi  Relatwns.  One-year  park  recrea- 
tton work  experience.  Proof  o(  one  year  col- 
lege and  required  units  must  be  submitted 
with  a  City  application.  CaU  310-550-4265 
EOE. 


CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HIRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$l0.26/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/U 
academk:  years  remaining  with  valM  driver's 
license.  Web:  www.ucpd.uda.edu/ucpd/cso. 
EmaH:  csoOucpdudaedu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 


CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

F/r,  M-F  9-5.  Century  City  tocatton.  Seeking 
sell-motivated,  energetic  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate, 
bWngual,  college  degree  praf.  Fax  resume 
310-553-3996. 


7800 

Help  Wiii)t(;d 


DOG-WALKER  NEEDED.  MWF.  mornings: 
TR  afternoons.  Close  to  can^xis.  Borvile: 
310-474-9969. 

DRIVER  FOR  MESSENGER  SERVICE.  F/T- 
P/T  Salary ■K:ommlsston.  Valkj  Driver's 
Licanse,  insurance,  and  motor  cyde  pra- 
ferwd.  Fax  resume  to  661-799-7765. 

DRIVER/COMPANION 

For  14-yr-oW  girl;  approx.  3:15-7:00pm.  M-F. 
weststoe;  at  least  college  jr.  excel, 
gradea/study  hablts/drtving  record,  own  car. 
Very  reliable,  flexible;  $1Q^r.  negotiable. 
Call  Deborah  day8:3l0-3l2-3l38,  even- 
ings:3l0-476-1310 

DRIVING  INSTR1X:T0R  WANTED.  Fu«- 
ttme  or  part-time.  Westwood  driving  and  traf- 
fte  school.  CaH  tor  Informattoa  310-824- 


CITY  OF  BEVERLY  Hills  Parking  Attendants 
needed.  $9.ll/hr  Morning  and  Evening 
shifts  available.  Seasonal  Posittons  starting 
November  16,  2000  to  Janurary  5.  2001.  All 
shifts  available  Apply  Now!!!  Dept.  of  Trans- 
portatton.  455  N.  Rexford  Dr..  Room  130.  Ap- 
ply  In  person.  310-285-2552. 

CITY  OF  TEMPLE  CITY  SEEKS  Community 
Devetopment  Atoe.  $10-$12/hr.  Call  planning 
department  (or  more  details.  626-285-2171. 


NEW  FACES  WANTED 

AU.  AGES  ALL  TYPES 

FOR  UPCOMWG  TV  FIM.  COMMBCIAU 

MUSC.VCEOS 

AfO  PHNT.  NO  FEES,  NO  EXP  REOT) 

PLEASE  CAa  FOR  AUOmON -nME 

AUCXnOMNQNOW 

(818)  379-7070 


•XLNT  OPPORTUNITY! 
$10/HR  -I-  BONUSES 

PART  TIME  (or  sales/related  leikl  work.  Must 
have  Car  and  good  telephone  skills.  Call 
310-476-9089. 

A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

DO  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  In  the  afterrxxxis  dur- 
kig  school  (M-F)?  All  day  Saturday,  too!  Full- 
thno  cfcjring  Quarter  Breaks  and  Summer  va- 
calionsi  Work  experience  not  necessary.  Ap- 
ply today  at  Westwood  Sporting  Goods. 
1065  Gayley  Ave.  Westwood  Village. 


BEST-SELLING 
AUTHOR 

ASSISTANT  to  psychotogisVauthor  Good 
typmg/nHng  sidto.  Run  errands.  Must  have 
own  car  w/lnsurance.  10-20hr8/wk.  (lexMe. 
$e/hf.  Some  res<arch.3l0-20S-0226 

BEVERLY  HHXS  AUTO  DETAIL  shop  needs 
hard-worWng,  last-paced.  agreMive  people 

to  handto  top-noteh  cars.  No  w^wtenoe  r»- 
quired.  Flextole  hours.  Ozzie:310-8S9-2870. 

BOOKKEEPER/ASSISTANT  PH.  8^ 
lOhrs/wk.  $ici^r.  Excel  and  Wbrd  experi- 
ence  required.  Fax  resume  818-909-4991. 

CARDIO  INSTRUCTOR 

PALMS  RECREATION  CENTER  seeks  an 
energotK  person  to  teach  and  adult,  tow-im- 
pact cardto  class  Mon  S  Thurs  night  310- 
838-3838 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-TVne  (iekJ  sales,  flexible  hours  ♦  com- 
misston  and  bonusi  Ambitious  salesperson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  emaN:  support Olones- 
4all  com  Attn:Fiekj  Sates. 


CARE  TAKING  COMPANION  tor  16-year  old 
devetopmentiiy  dtaabted  girl.  Involve  neigh- 
bortKXxJ  field  tr1p8aactivlties,playing 
boardgames,walks,etc.  Need  car  Hours 
flexWe.$12/hr  310-839-3732. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT  25-35 
hrs/wk  Good  phorw  votee,  1  year  commit- 
ment. Organized,  Word,  Excel.  Account  Re- 
ceivable/Payable Fax  Resume  to  310-914- 
41 58  Attn;  Scott. 


seUtiiose 


I  h 


CASHIER  lor  busy  pizzeria.  Must  have  greet 
customer  sklllsl  $«/hr*tip,  DOE.  CaH 
Oagwood's  Pizza:  Ventoe  310-392-1450  or 
Santa  Monka  310-899-3030. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  fobt  avaHabie  at  Campus  Comer 
We  work  <tMr\  yours  achedult.  1/2  ofl  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-8133. 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Pan-tkne  joba  avalabli  at  Cooperage.  We 
Kvork  with  your  schedule.  1/2  off  meals,  man- 
agement training  opportunity.  Call:310-206- 
0740. 


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aper  rocycio  this  paper rocyci*  this 
•"■"vr^yjjJi?  *^' 


'  Jh«  pab«r  rec^cjo  this  paperWcycie  flR? 
3  uiis  papty  fo'.-yclr  tfiic  pop«f  wcycte  fhio 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  avaHabto  at  Campus  Comer 
We  work  with  your  schedute.  1/2  off  meals, 
tnanaoament  training  opportunity.  Ca«:310- 
206-8133. 


CLERK  TYPIST/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

Manage  small  medtoal  research  group. 
Good  communteatton/wrlting  skills.  wonJ- 
processing.  Windows  95,  up  to  20/houre. 
weekday-mornings.  Staning-$8.00/hr  West- 
wood.  310-826-0679. 

CLERK.  P/T,  Pleasant  Century  City  Engl- 
naartng  Fimi  seeks  pertecltonist  with  typing 
■Mas  for  general  office  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  deM-ortenied.  $ll/hour  to  start.  CaH 
Rhonda  310-286-2347. 

CLERK/TYPIST 

Must  type  min.  70wpm  and  be  abte  to  tran- 
scribe. Full-time  positton.  Salary+beneftts. 
Fax  resume  to  E.  KrafL  310-441-8010. 

CLINICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  poeitton  immedtately  avaHabte  tor  a  li- 
censed laboratory  scientist  In  a  privato  clini- 
cal laboratory  in  Santa  Montoa.  Lab  provides 
endocrine,  androiooy,  serotogy  and  Immu- 
notogy  tasting.  Incumbent  raquitBd  to  work 
to  weekend  rotattons.  Salary  commensurate 
wHh  quaMcattons  and  experience.  Submit 
appMcatfons  to  Bronte  Stone.  Reproductive 
Technology  Laboratories.  1245  leth  Street. 
Suite  105,  Santa  Monica.  CA  90404  (Tel 
310-a2»0102). 

COACHES  NEEDED 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 

2000-2001  school  year  Girts  Soccer,  Vkral- 
ty  and  JV  Lacroase,  JV  Boys  BaattaVMl. 
Pato  poailons.  310-391-7127.  Cal  Nate  ext 
247  tor  boyf  poaiBons.  Cal  Gall  ext.  248  for 
girts*  poaittone. 

COMPANK>N-tor  active  swiior,  poet-stroke. 
Accompany  to  movies,  mueeuma.  restau- 
mtt.  Mum  be  Mendly  pMant  eng^^  to 
•tmiuMIng  oonveraatlon  (poMkAs.busineaa). 
Payraie  $12-$15/hr.  BOE.  Contact  Uu- 
raO323-933-5880.  x1012. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


COMPUTER  PROGRAMMING  COURSE 
READER  needed  Proflcieni  to  C  4  VB 
CompSci  UD^rad  preferred.  Grade  via  In- 
ternet. $ia(hf.  323-402-1230x1692 


DEUVERY  DRIVERS  WANTED!  Weekday 
nwmings,  friendly,  good  driving  record,  fa- 
miliar with  entertainnient  indsutry  and  LA 
area.  $10-$12/hour  Call  310-458-6891. 

DENTAL  OFFICE  rBcepttonist/o(flce  manag- 
er needed  lor  MWF  9-6.  Must  know  typing, 
be  lamiliar  w/Mterosolt  Word,  have  good 
communkatton  skills,  be  committed,  have 
desire  to  make  a  difference.  ExceNent  salary 
310-826-7494. 


V    EARN  $3000  •!• 
3  CANCUN  TRIPS! 

All  Expenses  paw  for  2.  Set  your  own  houra. 
310-638-1371 


DO  YOU  LOVE  GOOD 
FOOD? 

New  bakery/gourmet  takenxit  shop  near 
Century  CHy  hiring  counter  help,  cooks,  bak- 
ers, driven.  Call  310-562-1080. 


EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSrrONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  sates.  Make  up  to 
$150/day  Part  or  fuH-dme  wortc.  Call:DavM 
310-441-0394. 

FAST  PACE  Real  Esate/Finance  Conpany 
seeks  responsMe,  energetk;  student  Office 
experiertce  required.  Fax  resume  to  310- 
275-5227. 


Display 
206-3060 


Daily  Bniin  Classified 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


b^HMit  Pa^  nufti*  Part-ttoM  Hours.  QiMt  KlqtMfMie*. 
Prof— lonal  Knviromiiwrt.  Sond  ftosumoo  TMay  lb: 

Fa«  (310)  793-98M;  Trt:  (310)  703-7704 

■milt  MOUiUilOACPRMMIOSXOil 


FILING  AND  GENERAL  OFFICE  work  need- 
ed. Computer  literate,  flexibte  hours  offered, 
PIT.  $»hr  Fax  resume  310-859O547  attn 
Mike. 


FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

Kiaaded  for  private  health  ckib.  Permanent 
hours  available  Health  insurance  offered. 
Please  ask  (or  Allison  310-659-5002. 

FUl  TIME  RECEPTIONIST  tor  Westwood 
entertainment  law  (imi.  Monday-Friday 
10AM-7PM.  Good  phone  manner  and  (ront 
otfic^apperance  a  must.  Experience  pre- 
((ered.  Fax  resume  to  E.  Kraft  310-441-8010. 

GARDENER/MAINTENANCEA^ANDYMAN 
in  the  Los  Feliz,  Los  Angeles  area.  Will  pay 
$18/hr.  For  regular  emptoyment.  Call  Joey 
310-399-4826.  4033  Sunset  Drive.  LA 
90027. 


MEDICAL  OFFICE 

Research  assistant  Premed/optometry. 
Freshman/sophomore.  TuesAThurs 

16hrsA*fk.  Jutes  Stein/UCLA.  Minimum  GPA 
3.5.  Call:31 0-825-4749  or  Fax  Resume:310- 
794-7904,  Attn:Verontea  . 

MESSENGER 

STRONG  BRUIN  SUPPORTER4well  estab- 
lished Westwood  law  firm  seeks  2-pan-time 
messengers(MWF  or  TR.  9:30-6:30)  to  work 
to  our  offtee  servtoes  department.  Must  have 
reliabte  car,  insurance&good  driving  record 
Addittonal  duties  include  mail,  photocopying 
taxing,  switchboard,  etc  Prefer  Bruin  stud- 
ents who  are  also  responsible&detail-orienl- 
ed.  Ptease  call  Robin  Barnes  310-478-2541. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


OPPORTUNITY  OF  THE  MILLENNIUM!!! 
International  Company  needs  help  expand- 
ing. Free  Training!  Set  own  hours!  Excellent 
Incomel  $1500  PT-$7000FT.  800-335-8806. 
www.corx^uerdreams.com. 

OPTICIAN  for  beaulHul  Westwood  vMage 
opiometrto  offtee.  P/T,  ftex  hours.  Must  be 
(riertoly,  outgoing,  and  cheerful.  Sales  ex- 
perience  heiplul.  310-208-1384. 

Pn  ASSISTANT 

Private  home  offkie,  data  entry,  Mac/Quk*- 
en,  Accuracy  important.  Good  English.  Own 
transportatton.  Flexible  schedule.  Weekdays 
only  812hrs/wk  310-394-2933. 

P/T  DATA  ENTRY/  DIS- 
PATCH  ASSISTANT 

10:30am-3:30pm,  M-F,  some  overtime. 
Computer,  heavy  pfwnes,  and  knowledge  o( 
l-A  area  a  must.  Messenger  background  pre- 
ferred. Fax  resume  310-275-4439. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Pkjs  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
info.  Call  1-800-391-5856  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar 

PROMOTERS  WANTED  (or  Westslde  Club 
310-915-7595 


Thursday,  October  5, 2000       41 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


SELF-MOTIVATED  SALESPERSON  tor  a 
furniture  store  on  the  westsWe.  Hours  (lexi- 
bte.  310-477-5995. 


PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$600/week.  310-724-8360.  Days  only 

RECEPTIONIST  WANT- 
ED 

BEVERLY  HILLS  SALON  seeks  energetic 
receptionist.  F/T  or  P/T.  To  start  ASAP  310- 
278-1191. 


SMALL  SANTA  MONICA  LAW  FIRM  seeks 
secretary/administrative  assistant  Must  be 
computer  literate.  Fax  or  email  resume  310- 
395-9880  or  iccofficemngrOearthlink.nel 

SOUTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  availabte  at  Bombshelter  We 
work  with  yours  schedute.  1/2  o((  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-0727 


GET  PAID  TO  PLAY!! 

AFTERSCHOOL  DAY  CARE  needs  three 
new  staB  to  play  ball,  help  with  homeworK 
toteract  with  chMdren.  Grades  K-8th.  310- 
470-9747. 


MLS  LIMOUSINE  SER- 
VICE 

WEEKEND  JOB/  PART-TIME,  data  en- 
try&some  billing,  no  experience  needed,  will 
train,  call  9-5  310-271-8559. 


P/T  DRIVER/UTILITY 
TRAINEE 

Flexible  hours,  $8/hour  includes  gasoline. 
Own  vehicle,  valkl  Calilomia  driver's  li- 
cense and  prool  o(  insurance.  Non-smok- 
tog  environment.  Clean-cut  individual. 
Stephanie:310-395-3291. 


GIRLS  wanted  at  exduslve  social  clubs  to 
WLA.  Conversatton  only  No  ateohol.  Rexi- 
bte  hours.  Eam  top  $$$.  323^441-0965 

GRAPHICWEB  DESIGNERIII  Grant  writer 
Non-profit  multi-racial  arts  company.  Em- 
power youth  through  theater,  film,  dance,  po- 
etry.  rtKiSk:.  Prj.  310-208-8012. 

HOME  CLEANERS,  P/T-F/T,  $8-$11/hr  and 
up.  To  clean  in  Weststoe  areas.  Must  be  de- 
pandabte  and  have  car  310-471-6212.  April. 

HOST/HOSTESS 

FRIENDLY  EXPERIENCED  hoM  tor  Jade 
West  Restaurant.  Century  CHy.  CaH  after 
2:30.  310-556-3388. 

INFORMATION  SYS- 
TEMS ASSISTANT 
$27,067-$32,978 

COORDINATES  COMPtJTER  USAGE  and 
resolves  systenVuser  problems  on  the  IBM 
AS400  and  mterocomputer  systems.  Assists 
in  reconciling  and  auditing  various  corrputer 
reports  and  data  files.  Knowledge  of  praclto- 
es  and  principles  in  operating  and  matotato- 
Ing  mini  mterocomputer  systems  Ability  to 
proddanWy  operate  a  lOkey  cateutetor  and 
type  40WPM.  Ability  to  effkaently  perform  de- 
tail arxl/or  technical  oriented  tasks.  Two 
years  of  advanced  educatkxi  in  a  cotrputer 
•ubject  (AA,AS.  Certllfcate  program.ete.) 
and  one-year  computer  opanHorw  axpari- 
ance  on  mini  or  mtero  syaleme.  Ganetal 
business  knowrtedge  and  ability  to  Ml  and 
move  50lbs.  desirabto.  Substantial  oquival- 
ants  may  be  substituted  for  the  above.  Send 
resume  to:  Human  Resources,  Frank  D.  Lan- 
terman  Regtonal  Center  3303  Wtlshire  Blvd. 
Suite  700  Los  Angeles,  CA  90010  EOE. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
iaaks  bMngual  (English-Italian)  Cuatomer 
Service  Representative.  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  vert>al  skills  required  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  Jofin 
Patterson  323-653-1788-j8pattersonOij- 
girK.com. 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  drive4wort<  w/2  (unAgifted  kids  ages  5*7. 
Perfect  schedute  (or  student.  Must  have  car 
P/T  permanent.  Excellent  salary.  Judy:310- 
551-1145 


NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT.  Mostly 
runs  errands,  some  Hght  houseworic  and 
cooktog.  good  pay  near  UCLA.  4-5 
hours/day  310-788-4727. 

NONPROFIT  SEEKS  responsibte,  outgoing 
peopte  to  support  chitorer^adults  with  dis- 
abiiittes  throughout  the  LA  area.  Ftexibto 
hours.  Several  posittons  avaliatoe.  UP  to 
$14/hr  Contact  Monica  0818-361- 
6400x129.  www.jaynolan.org 


P/T  General  Office  Assistant.  CSA  Architects 
to  Westwood.  Fax  resume  to  310-824-8715. 

P/T  OFFICE  ASSISTANT 

WANTED  (or  (amily  owned  Real  Estate  Man- 
agement Company  Protesstor>al,  Reliabte, 
Mature  Person  sought,  PC  skills  a  plus  323- 
850-5726. 


RECEPTIONIST  WANTED  P/T  (or  hair 
salon.  Ask  (or  Liana.  310-208-0101. 

RECEPTIONIST  WESTWOOD  LAW  OF- 
FICES. MoniWed.  9-5.  $8/hour  Can  do 
horneworkonjob.  310-470-3373. 

RESEARCHER 

For  Business  Plan  Thorough  research  skills, 
concise  writing,  organized,  and  reliable  Fa- 
mikarity  with  PC,  consote,  and  arcade  games 
helpful.  spgreenOearthlink.net 

RESPONSIBLE  DRIVER  with  ovwi  car  to 
drive  15yr.  oW  and  llyr.  oW  from  St.  Moni- 
ca's to  Culver  City.  2:45pm  3-5  days/wk. 
$150-250/wk.  More  $$  if  available  (or  physi- 
cal or  academte  activities  until  4pm.  310- 
838-9448. 


SPANISH  SPEAKING  TEACHING  assis- 
tants needed  at  tocal  elementary  school.  Ap- 
prox  $8.83/hr  Call  Steve  310-473-2172. 


STUDENTS  WANTED 

OUTGOING,  RESPONSIBLE  STUDENTS 
with  own  car.  Food  delivery.  11 -2pm.  P/T. 
Good  pay!  jwoit2yOearthlink.net  or  call 
Steve  310-480-3247. 

SURVEY  ON  WEB 

Independent  researcher  needs  help  putting  a 
survey  on  website.  Fast  job,  last  money 
Leave  message  310-312-0266. 

SWIM  INSTURCTOR 

P/r,  $10-12/hr.  310-472-7474  ex1114. 


NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

f»art-tlme  Jobs  available  at  North  Campus 
We  wort<  with  your  schedute,  1/2  ofl  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  CaH:310- 
206-0720. 


NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  avaitabte  at  North  Campus. 
We  wortt  with  your  schedute,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:3l0- 
206-0720 


NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  availabte  at  LuValle  Com- 
mons. We  wort<  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off 
maais,  management  training  opportunity 
Cal:310-825-1177. 


INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Recepttonist  Entry  level  positton.  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrs/wk  MIN  F/T  pre- 
(arred.  Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
aon  323-653- 1768  jspatlersonOijginc.com 


^M  fc-ii'lv 


Receptionist  needed  for  small  salon/ 
Day  Spa  phones  and  light  office  work 

please  caH  Julia  (310)  474-2524 

v 2041  westwood  blvd.  . 


INVESTMENT  BANKING 

Looking  (or  student  who's  majored  in  this 
(lew  to  teach  concepts,  valuations,  and  Ex- 
cel 310-858-4755 


LAW  OFFICE  ENVIRONMENT  Excellenl 
opportunity  Clerk  positions  availabte  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Minimum  20hrs/wk,  $6.50/hr.  Fax 
resume  and  proposed  available  hours  to  Hu- 
man Resources  Dept  310-274-2798  or  Mall 
to:  Lurte  &  Zepeda  9107  Wilshlre  Blvd  Su- 
Ite  800.  Beveriy  Hllte,  CA  90210 

LIBRARY  JOBS  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties,  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6  70/hr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm  11617  or  call  Antigone  Kutay 
310-825-1084. 


NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  availabte  at  LuValte  Com- 
nwns.  We  worts  with  your  schedule,  1/2  o( 
maals,  management  training  opportunity 
Ca>:3lO-82S-1177. 

NOW  HIRING 

COUNTER  HELP  POSITION  to  ca(e. 
$7+tips/hr  Part  Time/Full  Time.  Contact 
Roberto  310-247-1112  11am-6pm. 

OFFICE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CE0. 
Growtog  Biotechnology  CompanyWest- 
wood.  10am-2pm/Full-time,  (texible  hours. 
Needexcellent  telephorw  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admin/comp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
lened  Benefits/advancement,  FaxRes2Mar- 
ina:  310-475-1533. 

OFFICE-EXCELLENT  OPPORTUNITY  2 
P/T  posittons  available  Flexible  hours  Retail 
store  in  Westwood  Village  310-208-8404 
(rom  12-6.  Mr  Rogers. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
worthing  at  various  on-campus  events.  We 
D((er  (lexible  hours  that  vary  Irom  week  to 
week.  Call:3 10-206-0735. 


P/T  OFFICE  WORK.  Capabte  person  to  do 
variety  o(  jobs  to  busy  retail  carpet  store, 
WLA.  Call  Heten  310-444-0220. 

P/T  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  100  Medrcal  Plaza.  Dermatotogy  prac- 
ttee.  Hours  can  vary  w/ctesses.  F/T  during 
summer  $8/hr  Ptos  (ree  partong.  Assist 
manager,  computer  skills  necessary,  math  or 
business  majors  pfelerred.  Fax  resurtie  after 
6:30pm.  310-206-4010. 

pn*  OR  F/T  SERVER 

AND  ANSWERING  phones  tor  diner  to  Bev- 
eriy Hilte.  Win  train.  Great  tips!  CaH  Roni:310- 
772-0044  (rom  8am-5pm. 

P/T  WRITER.  Pleasant  Century  Qty  Engi- 
neering Finm  seeks  perfecttonlst  with  strong 
writing  skills  to  produce  mikHy  technteal  re- 
ports (or  internal  and  external  use.  $13/hr  to 
start.  Wage  increases  as  appropriate.  Mini- 
mum  15hrs/wk.  Fax  resume  310-286-9126. 
PAID  INTERN  NEEDED  for  smaH  muste 
marinating  co.  10-20/hrs/wk.  Good  phone 
personality,  org,  skills.  310-281-7812 

PARK  RANGER 

$8.65-$11.90mr.  with  partial  benefits.  En- 
(orce  park  mles  and  regulattons;  disseminate 
inlormatton  and  assist  put)lk:  in  the  part<;on- 
site  supennston  o(  commercial  fikn  conipa- 
nies  and  wortt  department  spectel  evanis; 
assist  with  offtee  duties  Requires  one  year 
o(  college  majoring  In  Recreatton,  OuWoor 
Educatton,  Part<  Ranger  or  reteted  fteW;  or 
one-year  paid/volunteer  experience  in  a  cus- 
tomer servtee  oriented  position  Musi  have  a 
valW  Calilomia  C  driver's  Iteense  and  must 
be  able  to  obtain  CPR  and  First  Aid  certili- 
cales.Apply  immediately-OPEN  UNTIL 
FIUED.  City  o(  Beveriy  Hills,  455  N  Rexford 
Dr  #210,  Beveriy  Hills,  CA  90210.  310-285- 
1071  EOE. 


RESTAURANT  IN  BEVERLY  HILLS  seeking 
person  to  answer  phones  and  pack  delivery 
orders.  P/T  positton.  Moming  hours.  Call 
■310-271-0027. 


TANNING  SALON  POSITION  AVAILABLE. 
Good  Pay  Apply  at  1156  26th  St.  Santa  Mo- 
ntea,  CA  310-828-8028. 

TELEMARKETING,  No  cold  calls.  $16- 
20-t^/hr,  bonuses.  F/T-P/T  Must  have  desire 
to  make  big  $$$  Flextole  schedule.  Great  (or 
students.  Near  UCLA.  310-996-6701 
ext.298. 


RETAIL  SALES,  PT/FT.  WesNvood  Blvd  De- 
signer wedding/evening  gowns.  Experience 
prelerred,  rrwtivated  and  (riendly  Great  op- 
portunity Salary/commissionsAonuses.  Ex- 
ceWent  $$.  310-474-7808  Pauline. 

RETAIL  SALES.  Penny  Lane  Records  has 
P/r  night  posittons  availabte.  15-20hrs/wk. 
$6.5(yhr  Apply  in  person.  10914  Kinross 
Ave. 


SALES  CLERK 
WANTED 

Ftorist  seeking  P/T  sates,  phone  assistnat. 
Simple  typing^administratton  skills  heiplul. 
Ftextote  hours/(un  environment.  Fax  resume 
to:323-8S2-0749. 

SALES  CLERK 

$7/hr.  No  experience  necessary  Cashterir>g, 
working  with  patients.  UCLA  Hospital  2e- 
venings,  3-7:30PM  11:3O-6:00PM.  310-825- 
6069 


TELEVISION  PRODUCTION  COMPANY 
kwktog  (or  organized,  detail  oriented  person 
(or  EQUIPMENT  ROOM  POSITION.  Duttes 
include  propping  &  QCing  camera,  audto,  & 
lighling  equipment,  as  »vell  as  ptek-up  &  de- 
livery of  various  productton  equipment  Ex- 
celtent  job  (or  a  college  student  taking  class- 
es during  the  day!  4pm- 10pm  Monday  thru 
Friday  Hours  will  vary,  some  late  nights  and 
weekends  required.  Good  pay  Great  entry- 
tevel  positten  (or  someone  interested  in  get- 
ting into  the  Television  Production  Industry. 
Must  be  responsibte,  toistworthy,  &  able  to 
wortc  self-supervised.  Must  have  dependabte 
vehicte.  Positton  available  immediately.  l(  in- 
terested call  818-508-0888. 

TUTOR  (or  active  sentor,  post-stroke.  Needs 
help  with  Photoshop,  Pagemaker,  Quicken. 
Must  be  patient  and  (riendly  Pay  rate  $40- 
50/hr  BOE.  Call  Uura  at  323-933-5880 
X1012. 


TUTOR  (or  web  design.  $ia^r.  806-723- 
4756  key  enter  #. 


PART-TIME  CHILDCAREmJTOR  needed 
(or  1st  and  2nd  grader  Encino  Mulholland 
and  405  adjacent.  Must  have  car  Call  Jack- 
ie:310-826-2466. 


SALES.  Popular  Westwood  VINage  jewrelry 
store  seeks  2  P/T  sales  associates.  Excel- 
lent opportunity.  310-208-8404  phone  Irom 
12-6.  Mr  Rogers. 

SCREENWRITERS 

Pro(hJctton/Management  Company  seeking 
writers  to  develop  concepts  (or  in-house  pro- 
ducers. Send  samples  to:  Flexi-Film  Produc- 
ttons,  PO  80x4931 4,LA,CA  90049. 

SECRETARY,  halftime,  mornings,  to  RN  at 
VA  medteal  center,  WLA  Proflctent  to  word 
and  excel.  $ll/hr  SorT>e  benefits.  Fax  re- 
sume  to  Susan  Orrange  310-268-4404. 

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST  Small  WLA 
tew  offtee  seeks  pA  or  l/t  bilingual  (Spanish) 
indivtoual.  Must  have  expenence  with  word 
perfect  and  type  min  40wpm.  Call  Neil  310- 
445-1100  or  send  resume  310-445-7779 


UPSCALE  SANTA  MONICA  RESTAURANT 
NEEDS  HOSTESS  Friday  and  Saturday 
night.  5- 10pm.  $8/hr  310-449-4000. 


VALET  PARKING 
ATTENDANTS 

Flexibte  hours,  great  tips,  Santa  Monica  and 
Manna  Del  Rey  areas.  310-214-1888.  Leave 
message. 


VETERINARY  MEDICAL  ASSISTANT!  P/T, 
Sun-Sat ,  anVpm  shifts  avaUable,  Future  ve- 
tennary  students  only.  Will  train  Call  323- 
933-8406  Ask  (or  Nahalte 


VIDEO  PRODUCTION 
WORK! 

In  an  on-campus  tetevision  studto.   Must 
qualify  (or  "wort<-study'  posittons  (have  a  "tob 
reterral")      Contact     Brian:310-825-4l24 
bkmurphyOucIa  edu 


ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Concessions  has  great  part-time  jobs 
worttlng  at  Athletk;  events.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive bonus  program  (or  those  who  can  com- 
mit to  wort<  the  Men's  Basketball  Season 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  set  every  week 
Call:310-206-0736 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTIONA-ECHNICAL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  has  one  opening  (or  clerical  posittons 
$7/hr  Mornings  or  atternoons.  Call 
Mk;heHe:3 10-474-7771 

PERSONABLE 

FRONT  DESK 

RECEPTIONIST 

With  some  sales  experience  (or  West  Holly- 
wood  upscale  gym  Janice  310-577-6773. 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Detail-orienied  individual  needed  to  assist 
with  light  bookkeeping,  organizing  and  (illng. 
Quicken  expenence  heiplul.  Wort(  in  home 
office  ctose  to  UCLA  Flexible  hours  up  to 
$15hours/week  Fax  resume  to:310-45l- 
1785 


MEDICAL  FRONT 
OFFICE  STAFF 

Ear,  Nose.  Throat.  Specialist  Tues  8am- 
12:30  arxJ  Thurs  ipm-epm.  Tb  start  ASAP. 
Fax  resume  310-792-0066 


ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Concesstons  has  great  part-time  jobs 
worthing  at  Athletk;  events  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive bonus  program  (or  those  who  can  com 
mit  to  work  the  Mens  Basketball  Season. 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  sat  every  week 
Cal:3 10-206-0736 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  tor  family  (o(  inter- 
est to  young  (ilmmakers)  15-20hrs/wk- 
$10/hr  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues,  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands  Filing/research 
Flexibte  schedule/resourcetuM!  Contact:  310- 
824-1444  (John).  Good  relerences  required 
Non-Smoker  Must  have  own  cariinsurance. 

PHARMACY  CLERK.  Variabte  hours,  M-F 
$8  50/hour  310-859-3887 


$$$  Calling  all  Students!!  $$$ 
UCLA  Concessions  is  hiring!! 

Convenient  location 

on  campus  at  ail  UCLA  athletic  events  and  other  special  events 

Flexible  schedule 

sign  up  for  as  many  or  as  few  hours  as  you  want 

no  set  weekly  schedule 

shifts  available  during  the  viwek/weekend,  day/night 

while  school  is  both  in/out  of  session 

Make  money 

many  management  training  opportunities 

bonus  program  during  Men's  Basketball  season 

recruiting  bonus  -  get  paid  by  getting  your  friends  to  work! 

'    .  Save  money 

/    '  discount  at  UCLA  Store 

half  off  meals  at  all  ASUCLA  restaurants 

Great  environment 

friendly  people 
fast  pace 

,    "  *      ■■■  ■  '■**'  '■■  •     "   '  '"        •■'  ■  :; 

For  more  Info  or  an  application, 
contact  Sean  at  (310)  206-0736 


uispiay 
206-3060 


»"• 


I,    i 


C      Ihratoy,  October  S,  2000 


Daily  Bruin  datdfierf 


)c  a  pare  oi  chc  stuff  rhar  puts  toi;eth. 


Hruitililt.-  V(.MrlH>()k  is  K 


lor  II; 


No  Experience  Necestary 

Men,  Wman.  diOihcn.  dl  VI,  das. 

raoB  IV  FMim  -  CofiMMrdili  -  M^dns 

forpenotuti  intervleu)  call  nav 

310.659.7000 


WANTED:  PAID 
COACHES 

Girts  frosh/soph  JV  basketbaH.  girts  JV  soft- 
ball.  Palisades  Charier  High  School  Contact 
T.  Tamora  310-454-0611  ext32e0  or  ext3450. 

WESTLA  RLE  CLERK.  F/T.  $8-1(Vhf.  Rexi- 
ble  hours  20-40hrs/wk.  Pleasant,  casual 
wort<ir)g  environment.  Contact  Jennifer  at 
310-268-0788. 

WESTWOOD 
PART-TIME  SALES 

Art  gallery  seeks  P/T  sales  people.  One 
block  from  campus  Pteture  framing  experi- 
ence a  plus  310-208-1896. 

WORK  AT  HOME 

International  business.  P/T:  fSOO-tZOOWrrw. 
Fn.  $2O0O-WO00/mo.  WHI  train.  310-558- 
5888. 


8000 

Internships 


Dr  MARTEN'S  AIRWAIR 

INTERNSHIP  Leading  footwear  manufac- 
lure  seeks  ambitkMis,  creative  interns  lor 
street  marketing  team.  For  more  into  can  Ja- 
net 310-450-5398. 

FREE  ARTS  FOR  ABUSED  CHILDREN  IS 
SEEKING  UNPAID  INTERNS.  PLEASE 
CONTACT  KARINA  AT  310-313-4ART. 

INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
student  film  projects.  Call  Joel:310-828- 
2292. 


A  Inter 


7800 

Help  WiinttM) 


W LA.  RE.  Inv.  FIRM.  5  minutes  to  UCLA. 
PART-TIME  Administrative  Assistant  tor  of- 
fice work.  From  1 :0O-6:30pin.  M-F.  Fax  310- 
471-6770. 

WANTED 

75people  will  pay  you  to  tosa  weight  In  ttie 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  drugs.  Cal  now.  323-993-3391. 

WANTED  AFTER  SCHOOL  TEACHER  P/T. 
3-6pm.  Must  have  car  and  valid  dnver's  li- 
cense. 213-385-3131. 

WANTED  ENTHUSIASTIC  BIOLOGY 
MAJORS  interested  in  working  with  animals 
and  educating  chiklren.  $l0Wir.  Flexible,  P/T, 
call  The  Animal  Guys  310-392-5909. 

WANTED:  7th  &  8th  grade  Cross  Country 
Coach.  Martborough  School.  250  S.  Ross- 
more  Ave.  Start  ASAP-ltov  8.  $1200  for  sea- 
son. Can  Julie  Napoleon  323-935-1147 
ext467  or  email  napole|Omartbor- 
ough.la.ca.us 


8000 

liHi,MHship 


lliMi«r  111  I'.JIK  s  (  mil  I  rt>  III  « itl  ^ 

1-  iMif  ol  (III   l.irutsi  iiiimii  |ir 

lion  i<tni|i.irM('s  m  du  |s  |iiiikiii<.> 
lor  iiiliriis  i  \  (I. us  .1  VM(  U  III  \.iri- 
«>iis  ill  |i.irtiiu  Ills  lor  lolji  t;i  I  mill 


l.lsl     p.lll'll 


prolii  II  III   ill   «uiil   .iiul 
li.iM  (III  (i'.:lil  .illitiitli  ,111 


8^00 

Apartments  for  Hv.wX 


MEDIA  PRODUCTION,  Communicatton, 
film,  broadcast  majors.  Zoom  Culture,  an  in- 
ternet iKoadcast  network,  is  seeking  enthu- 
siastic student  to  create  video  brogramming. 
Incredtole  opportunity  gain  hands-on  experi- 
ence. Email  jelteryOzoomcuMure.com. 
www  zoomculture.com. 

MOLECULAR  BIOLOGY 

INTERN  Smart  biochemistry  urKlergrad 
needed  for  UCLA  research  project  in  compu- 
tational molecular  biotogy/btoinformatlcs 
Must  know  bask:  biochemistry  Computer 
skills  needed  (preferable  UNIX)  Dr.  Pei- 
tit.3 10-206-4748. 

SALES  ASSISTANT/INTERN  Short  term. 
Make  screening  calls,  assistance  Flexible 
morning  hours  Will  train  Great  lor  business 
rrwjor  or  MBA  grad  student  Pay  $10-$12/hr. 
Culver  City  Julia  310-998-0417 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


•WESTWOOD  VILLAQE.  MIDVALE  N.  OF 
LEVERING.  LARGE  2-BDRM  APT.  GAR- 
DEN VIEW,  DINING  ROOM.  UNKXiE, 
CHARM  FRONT  AND  REAR  ENTRANCE. 
310-839-6294.' 

1  MIN  TO  UCLA 

WESTWOOD.         Fumishwl.  Single: 

$850/month.  Carpeted.     Gated  complex. 

Quiet.  Pool.  Laundry,  lyr  lease.  310-824- 
1830. 

2&380RM.  LARGE,  bright,  view.  Mk:n>wave, 
oven,  refrigerator,  dishwasher,  washer/dryer 
in  unit.  21 -ft.  Jacuzzi  on  roof.  Walking  dis- 
tance to  UCLA.  310-475-0607 

BEV  HILLS  ADJ.  APT  2+2,  bateony,  hA* 
ftoofs.  laundry,  pertung.  $1250.  818-623- 
4444.  www.altofLA.oom 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ 

Charming  Spanish  duplex.  2bed/lbath.  Ex- 
cellent Location  One  btock  from  Beverty 
Hills  Hardwood  ftoors  Living/dining  room. 
$1650/0)001^  310-858-8817 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  U2BEDR0OM 
$8954UP  LARGE  UNUSUAL  CHARM. 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS. 
310-839-6294. 

BEVEPLY  HILLS  CHARMING  APARTMENT 
2+1,  hardwood  floors,  laundry,  garage. 
$1400.  310-395-RENT  www  westsJdarwv 
tals.com 


.il.ihh' 


'''"-'  8IOo.246X.200 


TV    PRODUCTION    CO 

Seeks  interns  for  marketing  and  productton. 
May  lead  to  pakj  posltton  for  right  candktote. 
Fax  resume  818-646-7861 . 

WESTWOOD  STUDENT  CredH  Union  o«m 
voluntary  hMmahlps  In  Banking.  Salw  , 
Mailcettrig.  AooounUng.  No  experience  rtec- 
essaryt  Appitoattoas  avallabtoOl24  Kerckh- 
off. 


81 OO 

Personal  Assistance 


PHYSICAL 
ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  dtsat)led  mate  In  Relber  Han.  A  few 
hrs/day  Flexible  shedule.  $lO/hr.  Caw  Alex 
949-369-9871  or  310-267-8189. 


CULVER  CITY  APARTMENT  in  4-ptex,  2+1 . 
enclosed  garage,  laundry,  private  and 
secure  parking.  $850.  310-395-7368. 
www.westsWerentals.com. 


LA  CRESCENTA  APARTMENT  2+2.5.  bal- 
cony patto,  laundry,  gated  partdng.  $1200. 
818-623-4444  wwwaltofLA.com 


LOOKING  FOR  A  PLACE  TO  LIVE? 
www.hooaing101.net..  Your  move  oM  cam- 
puel  Search  for  sunwner  sublets. 

MAR  VISTA  TOWNHOUSE  2+2,  catok,  laun- 
dry, subterranean  paridrig.  $1295.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.we8tsklerentals.oom 

MARINA  DEL  REY  ADJ  APT  2+2,  bak»ny. 
high  ceHingB,  laundry,  sub.  partung.  $1150. 
310-39S-RENT.  ¥kww. westalderBntate.com 

NEAR  UCLA 

Large,  furnished  bachelors,  fumlehed  with 
uWMm  provMed.  Locked  entry,  good  toca- 
ttoa  buses  shopping  canters.  $636/monih. 
310-575-8967. 

PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $575,  $600dapoall 
1-yeer  tease  only.  Stove,  rofrtg  .carpete.  vert, 
blinds.  310^37-1502  teavo  message.  8am- 
5pm  only. 


PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT  2+1.5,  wfc 
pet,  terge  ctoaets,  pool,  laundry,  partdng 
Inctoded.  $999.  310-395-RENT.  www.west- 
siderenlato.com 

PLAYA  DEL  REY  APARTMENT,  2+1  3^4. 
taundry,  garage.  Wont  Last!  $1360.  310- 
395-RENT  www  weetelderemate.oom 

Santa  Monloa  Ibd/lMh,  Hvlng  room,  partdng 
space.  Morage.  kitchen  wtaven  &  relridg. 
$l100/tno.Zay  310-541-2887. 

SANTA  MONX:a  APARTMENT  private  room, 
bath.  RAS.  laundry,  petto.  Hnpteoe.  $495. 
310-39S-RENT  www.wefmderentete.com 

SANTA  MONTCA  APARTMENT  2+2,  bal- 
cony,  laundry,  partclrig  inctudad.  $1425.  310- 
395-RENT  www.wettHdeTentete.com 

SANTA  MONICA  HOUSE  fumtehed.  privete 
room,  bath,  h/w  ftoors,  w/d  uMWes  peW 
$480.   310-395-RENT   wvmv.weetaMeren- 

tals.com 

SANTA  MONICA,  lumlshed  private  room, 
bath,  near  beach.  RAS.  laundry.  $450.  310^ 
395-7368.  wwwwestsiderentate.com. 

VENICE 

1BDRM$1390+  2BDRM  $1660+Spectel  pri- 
vate garden  apartments.  Ibdrm-$16S0 
2bdmi-$2200  Lincoln  Place  Garden  Apis. 
Can  310-450-8119. 


ihle 


8l»00 

A|).Htin(MJls  for  Rent 


Ba/ERLY  HILLS  GUESTHOUSE  w/full 
kHchen.  laundry,  fumtehed  or  unfumtehod. 
$1000.  310-395-RENT.  www.weststetoren- 
tate.com 

BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdnTV/3bth,  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdmV3bth.  $2950.  W/D  in  unit 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alamn.  gated  partdng. 
Spacious,  carpet.  Prime  tocationi  Near 
UCt>.  310-474-1111. 

BRENTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

Luxury  buidtog,  pool,  perMng.  gated  entry, 
toundry.  one  and  two  bedrooms  from 
$1500/month.  310-312-1223. 

BRENTWOOD  ADJ.  APT.  Z+l  1/4,  R«S. 
laundiy,  partdng  Included.  $1435.  310-395- 
RENT.  »i>»iniif.«i»eetsklerentate.com 

BRENTWOOD  BACHE- 
LOR 
APARTMENT 

FOR  RENT  Qiad  akidant  preferred.  Upper, 
front.  wa«(-ln  ctouet,  tub  and  shower.  Ctoee 
to  bus.  $695/month.  310-275-7139. 


CULVER  CITY  APARTMCNT  1+1,  teundry. 
fresh  paint,  remodeled  hMchen.  $650.  310- 
395-RENT  www.westaMerentate.com 


8800 

Guestlioiise  /or  Rent 


CULVER  CITY 
GUESTHOUSE 

single  guesthouse  in  great  netghboihood. 
Easy  pariting,  near  Overtand  and  Jefferson. 
$600/month  Utilities  included.  310-572- 
1239. 


8900 

House  fiji  Ktiii 


SAMTA  MONICA  -2bd/1bth.  Cooter.  2  partc- 
Ing  spaces  +  storage.  Breakfast  room. 
KMchen  w/  oven.reMdg.  $13S(Vrno.  Zay  310- 
541-2887. 


WESTWOOD-1/2  MILE 
FROM  UCLA 

Prime  tocathxi.  share  houae  $1200- 
140Q/monlh.  www.laaoluttons.conVrant.htm 
tiffany.kangOexclte.com 


9200 

Hoiisint)  Needed 


LOOKING  TO  ROOM  wWt  aomeone  to  an 

apartment  ASAP  Cloee  to  Campus.  Down 
to  earth  gentleman  needs  help.  Wortdng  On 
Gempus  0310-625-4183 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


A  BEAUTIFUL  ROOM  4mto  from  UCLA  in 
exchange  lor  tutoring  (lOhrs).  some  driving. 
Kkte-14412.  Femeto  UCLA  studentt  only. 
310-271-7575. 


8^00 

Apartments  foi  Rem 


VENICE  APARTMENT  STUDIO.  1  bath,  only 
steps  to  beach,  taundry,  utwites  pato,  partdng 
inckidad  $650.  310-395-RENT.  wwwLweet- 
Siderentate.oom. 

WEST  COVINA  HOUSE  3  bedroom,  haid^ 
wood  ftoors,  yard.  $1500.  ei8-623-«444. 
www.aHod^.com 

WESTWOOD 

New.  U1  apartment,  2  milea  to  campus. 
Prime  tocatton.  Private  entry.  $850.  Female 
preferred.  310^75-9145. 

WESTWOOD  APARTMENT  bachetor.  1 
beth.  teundry.  smel  fridge.  $675.  310-396- 
RENT.  www.weetildeieniate.com 

WESTWOOD  APARTMENT  2+1.  patto. 
teundry,  binds,  garage.  $1450.  310-395- 
RENT.  www.we6tslderenlate.com 

WESTWOOD  BEAUTIFUL  BACHELOR 
FOR  RENT.  WaHc  to  UCLA.  1  btock  from 
campus.  Paifclng.  security  buHdtog.  raf rigera- 
tor.etc.  $70(Vrno.  310-476-6090. 

WESTWOOD.  2eORM/2BATH.  $1450  AND 
UP.  TILE  KITCHEN.  STEPDOWN  LIVING 
ROOM.  HIGH  CEIUNG.  CHARM.  1  MILE 
SOUTH  OF  WILSHIRE.  SOME  W/BAL- 
CONY310-839-6294. 

WESTWOOD/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2bdrm/lbth.  Large,  taundry  endoeed 
garage.  bakx>ny,  targe  ckjsets.  near  bueea, 
blinds.  Charming,  bright  quiet  bulWtog.  310- 
474-1172. 


9^^00 

Room  fill  Hi'iit 


BEVERLYWOOO,  $500*40.  Bedroom  lor 
rent  to  pilvate  honoe.  Own  enlerance  and 
baWoom.  KNchen  Pnvelages  and  UdNtes 
included.  310-839-9602 

LOOKING  FOR  PVT  ROOM  for  rent.  Max 
$350.00/mo  +utilllies  in  Santa  Mor*::a/West- 
wood.  Ctoan.organlzed.reeponeMe  senior 
student.  Partdng  needed.  Cal  John  626-201- 
6553. 

WANTED:  Qutet  nwte  giadute  student. 
Lovely  bedroom  wAmlcraweve  and  fridge. 
A/C.  near  bus.  Leaae,  qutet,  references. 
$450/mo.  310-312-0669. 


WESTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

bedroom  tumNurB  opftonel.  iroomntate.  le- 
male^non-einolcer.  Off-street  partdng.  $650. 
Includes  uMMee.  310-231-6200  ext.  333. 


WESTWOOD 

Wak  to  UCLA.  Mato-Omy.  Large,  prtvale  kir- 
mehed  bdmi  wA>ath.  Kitohen  privitoges,  laun- 
dry, partdng.  $700/monih.  Another  room 
$60(yimonlh.  310-«73-«7a9. 


9500 

Roommatr.'s-Private  Room 


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opportunities  in  Investment  Banking  at  Bear  Stearns. 

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information  Sessions 


Date 

Time 

Location 

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KenMioff  Hail  408 

Tues,  10/10 

2-4pm 

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12-2pm 

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WARNING 


HERNANDEZ 

From  page  52 

team,  midnelder  Shaun  Tsakiris, 
entered  the  game  in  the  second 
half. 

They  moved  the  ball  around  the 
field  well,  not  always  making  the 
obvious  pass.  They  slowed  it  doww 
when  they  had  to  and  quickened 
the  pace  when  it  favored  them, 
showing  they  had  brains.  Thty  took 
chances  on  the  attack  and  even 
though  they  got  burned  a  few  times, 
it  made  the  game  interesting. 

With  the  exception  of  Tsakiris, 
no  one  on  the  field  displayed  excep- 
tional skill,  but  at  least  everyone 
had  the  right  idea. 

The  height  of  creative  soccer,  it 
is  generally  agreed,  came  around 
1 970,  when  the  emphasis  of  the 
game  was  still  to  outbomb  the 
opponent.  Defense  was  almost  non- 
existent and  as  a  result,  the  game 
was  much  more  open  than  it  is  now. 
Players,  not  as  conscious  of  an 
opponent's  counterattack,  weren't 
afraid  to  be  creative  in  the  center  of 
the  pitch.  After  all,  if  they  were 
scored  on,  all  they  had  to  do  was 
get  the  goal  back.  ' 

As  the  game  evolved  over  the 
years,  an  added  emphasis  was  put 
on  defense.  Less  skillfull  teams 
began  limiting  their  attack  to  quick 
counters  or  to  those  down  the  side- 
lines, where  errors  weren't  as  cost- 
ly. 

In  the  '80s,  Maradona,  the  great- 
est player  in  the  history  of  the 
game,  revived  imagination  in  soc- 
cer. 

That  only  lasted  so  long. 
Argentina's  national  team,  which 
did  a  good  job  of  surrounding 
Maradona  through  the  1986  World 
Cup  (which  it  won),  fell  apart  in  the 
following  years.  Furthermore, 
Maradona  was  slowed  by  injuries 
and  drug  use. 

By  the  1990  World  Cup, 
Argentina,  which  along  with  Brazil 
had  been  the  only  country  playing 
watchable  soccer,  joined  the  rest  of  — 
the  world  in  playing  chess-match- 
like games. 

Noberto  Longo,  the  color  conv- 
mentator  for  Spanish  TV.  station 
Telemundo,  was  disgusted. 

"There  are  people  who  like  this 
kind  of  soccer,"  Longo  said  during 
the  broadcast  of  the  Argentina- 
Yugoslavia  World  Cup  game.  "It 
seems  intelligent  to  them.  They 
think  that  the  results  are  more 
important  than  the  show. 

"That's  fine.  Everyone  has  a 
right  to  an  opinion." 

Then,  speaking  on  behalf  of  him- 
self and  play-by-play  man  Andres 
Cantor,  he  added,  "But  personally, 
we  don't  like  it.  We  like  soccer  as 
show,  as  art,  as  a  skill." 

In  Cantor's  1996  book  on  soccer, 
"Goooal!,"  Maradona  said  the  fol- 
lowing in  an  interview  concerning 
the  modern  state  of  soccer: 

"Today,  the  central  issue  to 
everyone  who  thinks  they  know 
something  about  soccer  is  physical 
training.  'It's  a  physical  game,'  they 
say. 

"But  when  are  we  going  to  touch 
the  ball  in  this  physical  game? ...  All 
right,  I  agree  one  has  be  be  in  good 
shape,  but  let's  not  let  it  surpass 
ball-handling  skills  and  imagina- 
tion! Because  if  everyone  who  gets 
the  ball  is  going  to  go  100  meters  in 
nine  seconds,  let's  forget  about  this 
game,  which  is  great  for  a  reason." 
As  a  fan  of  tlie  sport,  I  like  what 
SaldaAa's  team  is  doing  He's  letting 
his  players  play  soccer,  instead  of 
conducting  track  meets  on  grass. 
It's  a  step  in  the  right  direction. 
Too  often,  I've  seen  young  kids 
discouraged  from  playing  the  ball 
through  the  middle.  They're  taught 
to  make  the  safe  play  from  the  time 
they're  six  or  seven.  .  > 

And  that's  what  killed  the  game. 


Dylan  Hcmafidtt  can  be  rwchtd  at 


BASKETBALL  S 

FrompageSO 

players  received  discounts  of  25  per- 
cent to  40  percent  and  interest-free 
credit. 

Linton,  who  averaged  4.5  points 
and  2.7  rebounds,  is  expected  to  be 
-the  team's  starting  small  forward. 
Davis  averaged  2.1  points  last  sea- 
son and  likely  will  be  the  backup 
point  guard. 

They  must  serve  their  suspen- 
sions within  the  opening  eight 
games,  not  counting  exhibition 
games.  But  the  university  has 
appealed  to  the  NCAA  to  allow  the 
suspensions  to  be  staggered  over  the 
first  half  of  the  season:  13  games. 

Linton's  mother,  Cynthia,  said 
the  suspensions  were  "totally  ridicu- 
lous" and  the  whole  issue  had  been 
blown  out  of  proportion.  :.  . . 


"We  will  have  to  deal 

with  the  sanctions  (by 

breaking)  it  into  small 

amounts." 

Jane  Albright 

Women's  basketball  coach 


"I  think  my  son  might  have  gone 
a  little  bit  too  far  in  getting  the  gym 
shoes,  but  I  think  he  has  nothing  to 
be  ashamed  of,"  she  said.  "If  he  has 
lo  serve  his  time,  he  has  to  serve  his 
^time.  But  he  has  nothing  to  be 
ashamed  of  because  he  did  nothing 
wrong." 

The  NCAA  allowed  football  play- 
ers to  serve  their  suspensions  over 
the  first  four  games  of  the  season. 

NCAA  spokeswoman  Jane 
Jankowski  said  she  did  not  know  if  a 
meeting  had  been  scheduled  to  hear 
an  appeal  on  when  Davis  and  Linton 
must  serve  their  suspensions. 

Because  Bird  was  the  lone  sus- 
pended women's  basketball  player, 
Wisconsin  can't  appeal  to  the 
NCAA  for  an  extension,  school  offi- 
cials said.  Bird,  a  6-foot-3  senior  cen- 
ter, was  not  expected  to  start  this 
season  after  averaging  1.8  points  last 
season. 

Women's  coach  Jane  Albright 
declined  an  interview  request 
Wednesday  but  released  a  statement 
that  read:  "We  will  have  to  deal  with 
the  NCAA  sanctions  as  we  do  with 
all  adversity  in  life;  break  it  into 
small  amounts  that  we  can  handle 
and  spread  it  over  time  for  the  least 
effect  on  all  concerned." 

The  school  still  must  complete  its 
self-report  to  the  NCAA.  If  the  vio- 
lations constitute  a  major  rules  vio- 
lation, it  would  be  the  university's 
third  such  infraction  within  the  last 
d^de.  '.'■ 

IfThe  wrestling  program  was  put 
oi  probation  in  1994  for  improper 
u4  of  booster  funds  that  included 
inroermissible  benefits  to  athletes. 

Last  year,  the  NCAA  found  the 
athletic  department  committed  a 
major  rules  infraction  because 
coaches  and  staff  members  received 
reimbursement  for  expenses  from  a 
boosters  fund  without  approval 
from  the  chancellor.  That  probation 
was  scheduled  to  end  in  November. 
Still,  the  NCAA  didn't  punish  the 
university  as  a  repeat  offender,  in 
part,  because  it  self-reported  those 
violations. 

Associate  athletic  director  Vince 
Sweeney  said  the  school  hoped  the 
NCAA  would  take  its  cooperation 
in  the  latest  violations  into  account. 
"We're  always  concerned  about 
institutional  control,"  he  said. 
"We're  always  concerned  about 
extra  benefits  issues.  It's  part  of 
what  you  live  with  yvhen  you  have 
750  student-athlete's  and  /du  have  a 
highly  visible  athletic  program  with 
lots  of  boosters  and  season  ticket 
holders." 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Thunday,  Octot)er  5,2000       4$ 


keep  an  eye  out. 


the  daily  bruin:  at  newsstands 


FROM      THE      DIRECTOR      OF 


ELLEN  BURSTYN 

JARED  LETO     JENNIFER  CONNELLY 

MARLON  WAYANS 


A  FILM  BY  DARREN  ARONOFSKY 


If  OHiy  I  were  a  squirell 

at  UCLA.  I  could  read 

The  Paily  lr\i\Yi 


PAILY 

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Read  by  over 
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FOR  A 


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Get  involved  in 
Student  Government 

Join",:-  -'■■■■■■■/-'  ■■'■■■■■^■■■■■■'-' 

Cmmnmskm 

Help  organize  various 
types  of  projects! 

Such  as: 

Health/Nutrition/Fltness, 
Multicultural  Awareness, 
Campus  Retention,  CRP/SFA  classes, 
Sexual  Assault  Awareness, 
AIDS  Awareness,  Substance  Abuse 
Awareness,  Campus  Safety  Awareness, 
..       Quarterly  Blood  Drives, 

Children's  Walk  for  Ufe,  and  more! 


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Kerckhoff  413  or 

http://8tudents.a8ucla.ucla.edu/5wc/ 

For  more  information: 

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or  Email:  usaswc@asucla.ucla.edu 


Paid  For  By  Undergraduate 
Students  Association  Council 


4  ' 


46       Thunday,  October  5, 2000 


Daly  Bruin  Spom 


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information,  please  call 
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watch  for  it  on  newstands 


Hurricanes  hope  to  topple 
No.  1-ranked  Rorlda  State 


tWyBramS^. 


ThwyJay,  Octobers,  2000       47 


PICKS:  Rivalry  dates  back 
to  late  '80s;  Miami  holds 
all-time  series  lead,  23-20 


The  Associated  Press 


MEET  OSCAR  DE  LA  HOYAI 


UCLA  Parking  Services  is  looking  for  friendly,  courteous  people 
to  assist  our  customers  with  their  parking  and  Information  needs.* 

(Previous  customer  service  and  cash  harvlllng  experier)ce  preferred) 


*  fior  mon  Mormation  and  an  applleatlon,  stop  by  tha  Parking  Sarvict  olflca 
kttha  Strathmora  Building  (atf/mcant  to  Parking  Stnictura  t) 
.  . ,.   Orcan(310)B25-138». 

*MlMl  ba  •  cunwMhr  nigWMii  UCLA  ttudwD 


If  nothing  else,  history  is  on  Miami's 
side. 

When  Rorida  State  (SO)  lines  up 
against  Miami  (3-1)  on  Saturday,  the 
seventh-ranked  Hurricanes  will  have 
the  top-ranked  Seminoles  just  where 
they  want  them  -  in  the  Orange  Bowl. 
Miami  has  played  a  No.  I  team  eight 
times  at  its  ancient  home  and  has  come 
away  with  six  wins,  including  31-0  over 
Horida  State  in  1988. 

From  I985-I994,  the  Hurricanes 
were  unbeatable  in  the  Orange  Bowl, 
winning  an  NCAA-record  58  games,  a 
streak  that  included  four  wins  against 
No.  1  teams  -  Oklahoma  twice, 
Florida  State  and  Notre  Dame.  The 
other  two  were  before  the  streak  - 
against  Penn  State  in  1981  and 
Nebraska  in  1983. 

TVw  of  the  victories  -  over  the  '88 
Sooners  and  '83  Comhuskers  -  were  in 
the  Orange  Bowl  game  and  sealed 
national  titles  for  the  Hurricanes. 

In  the  "908,  Miami  played  host  to 
No.  1  just  once  -  a  24-1 7  loss  to  nation- 
al champion  Nebraska  in  the  '95 
Orange  Bowl. 

Miami-Florida  State  was  among  the 
glamour  rivalries  in  the  late  I980»eariy 
1990s,  but  the  Hurricanes  have  lost  the 
last  five  meetings  -  by  an  average  of  22 
points  per  game  -  while  trying  to 
regroup  from  NCAA  penalties  that 
resulted  in  31  k>8t  scholarships. 
The  'Canes  say  they're  back. 
"We've  got  all  the  athletes  we  need 
now,"  linebacker  Dan  Morgan  said. 
"We've  got  no  excuses." 

The  Miami  machine  is  directed  by 
19-year-old  Ken  Dorsey,  who  has 
thrown  for  969  yards  and  nine  touch- 
downs for  the  nation's  top  scoring 
team  (50.3  ppg)  and  fourth-best 
offense  (486.3  ypg).  The  defense, 
which  has  five  TDs,  allows  1 6  ppg. 

Florida  State,  led  by  28-year-old 
Chris  Weinke,  is  similar.  Weinke, 
expected  to  start  despite  missing  prac- 
tice time  with  a  sprained  left  ankle,  has 
thrown  for  1,478  yards  and  12  TDs  for 
an  offense  that  leads  the  nation  (514.6 
ypg)  and  ranks  seventh  in  scoring  (41.6 
ppg).  The  defense,  led  by  end  Jamal 
Reynolds  ( 10  sacks),  allows  1 1.3  ppg. 

"They  look  better  than  they  have  in 
a  long  lime,  especially  in  the  last  five 
years,"    Bowden   said    Wednesday 
"They  really  look  for  real." 
Davis  hopes  so. 

In  case  his  players  aren't  up  on  their 
Miami-Rorida  State  history,  Bowden 
plans  to  remind  them  of  games  past, 
such  as  the  tosses  in  '91  and  '92  when 
last-second  field  goal  attempts  went 
wide  right. 

"Five  years  ago,  these  kids  were  in 
elementary  school  and  high  school  and 
stuff,"  Bowden  said.  "Some  of  them 
mi^t  remember  the  battles  we  had 
against  Miami,  but  1  guarantee  you  our 


kids  respect  them." 

M  iami  leads  the  series  23-20.     ;    :^_ 
The  picks:  No.   I   Rorida  State' 

(minus  6)  at  No.  7  Miami 

Bad  timing  for  'Noles  to  hit  the 

Orange  Bowl  ranked  No.  1. ...  MIAMI. 

31-30. 

No.  2  Nebraska  (minus  15  1/2)  at 
Iowa  State 

Battle  of  unbeatens,  but  Cyclones 
have  one  win  in  last  22  meetings  vs. 
Huskers.  ..  NEBRASKA,  33-24. 

Temple  (plus  30)  at  No.  3  Virginia 
Tech 

Vick  wasn't  around  last  time  Owls 
came  to  town  -  and  won!  ...  VIR- 
GINIA TECH,  45-21. 

No.  4  Kansas  State  (minus  23)  at 
Kansas 

K-State  has  won  last  five  by  average 
margin  of  36.2  points.  ...  KANSAS 
STATE,  35-20. 

North  Carolina  State  (minus  20 1  /2) 
at  No.  5  Clemson  Battle  of  Bobby 
Bowden  disciples  -  son  (Tommy)  vs. 
protege  (Chuck  Amato).  ...  CLEM- 
SON, 42-28. 

No.  6  Michigan  (plus  2)  at  Purdue 
Boilermakers'  Brees  vs.  Wolverines' 
Henson. ...  MICHIGAN,  34-31. 

No.  8  Ohio  State  (minus  I  1/2)  at 
No.  24  Wisconsin 

The  Buckeyes  stop  here.  ...  WIS- 
CONSIN, 24-20. 

No.  10  Oklahoma  (plus  3  1/2)  vs. 
No.  1 1  Texas  (at  Dallas)Last  time  both 
were  in  top  15  ('84),  No.  I  Horns  and 
No.  2  Sooners  tied. ...  OKLAHOMA, 
42-35. 

LSU  (plus  16)  at  No.  12  Rorida 
Tigers  still  sky^iigh  after  win  over 
Vols.  ...FLORIDA,  31-13. 

No.  23  Oregon  State  (plus  1 0)  at  No. 
13  Washington  Beavers  seek  end  to  k»- 
ing  streak  -  0-12,  22  of  last  23  vs. 
Huskies  WASHINGTON,  37-31. 
Hawaii  (plus  37)  at  No.  14  TCU 
Frogs'  Tomlinson  needs  to  pick  up 
pace  in  Heisman  race. ...  TCU,  44-13. 

No.  15  Auburn  (plus  I)  at  No.  20 
Mississippi  State 

Bulldogs  scored  two  TDs  in  fmal 
2:28    to    pull    out    '99    game 
AUBURN,  28-21. 

South  Rorida  (no  line)  at  No.  17 
Southern  Mississippi 

I-AA  Bulls  coming  off  win  over  No. 
I  team  -  I-AA  Troy  State. ...  SOUTH- 
ERN MISSISSIPPI,  45-7. 
Arizona  (plus  6  I  /2)  at  No.  1 8  USC 
'Zona  defense  allows  9  points  per 
game. ...  until  now. ...  USC,  27-17 

No.  21  Tennessee  (plus  4 1/2)  at  No. 
19  Georgia 

Vols  may  be  bitten  again,  this  bme 
by  good  team. ...  GEORGIA,  31-28. 

Indiana  (plus  5  1/2)  at  No.  22 
Northwestern 

Are  Wildcats  for  real?  ...  INDI- 
ANA, 31-23. 

Stanford  (plus  12  1/2)  at  No.  25 
Notre  Dame  Irish,  with  freshman  QB, 
out  to  avenge  last-play  loss  in  '99. 
NOTRE  DAME,  27-17. 


Last  week:  16-6  (straight);  8-13  (vs. 
points) 

Season:  79-22  (straight);  52-45  (vs, 
points) 


WOODEN 

From  page  47 

conflict,  he  does  agree  that  the 
crowded  gym  affects  his  schedule. 

"I  try  to  lift  around  three.'"  Stem 
said.  "This  way  I  can  avoid  the 
crowds.  But  it  usually  starts  to  fill  up 
as  I'm  finishing." 

Shapiro  agrees.  He  say»  that  in 
addition  to  dictating  the  times  he  can 
lift,  the  crowded  weight  room  con- 
trols the  length  of  his  workouts. 

"It's  just  not  worth  it  soitietimes  to 
spend  all  day  in  there  and  only  get  a 
few  exercise  done,"  he  said. 

But  all  this  will  change  soon. 


According  to  Koehne,  the  initiative 
to  improve  the  Wooden  Center  needs 
to  be  approved  by  the  UC  Board  of 
Regents  before  it  can  be  enacted 
This  should  be  done  as  soon  as  spring 
and  construction  could  begin  by  fall 
quarter  2001. 

It  will  be  a  huge  lift  for  students 
once  the  new  weight  room  is  com- 
pleted. While  there  are  flo  promises 
being  made  as  to  the  date  of  comple- 
tion, chances  are  this  year's  incoming 
students  will  be  able  to  enjoy  the  ben- 
efiu  the  new  facility  has  to  offer. 

Until  then,  UCLA  wcighi-lifters 
will  have  to  deal  with  the  overcrowd- 
ing the  John  Wooden  Center  weight 
ronm  is  known  for, 


WOODEN 

From  page  52 

years  old.  However,  there  arc  three 
machines  that  exist  from  the  first 
days  of  the  Wooden  Center. 

"Every  time  we  try  to  get  rid  of 
them,  people  write  letters  to  the  chan- 
cellor," Koehne  said.  "1  guess  you 
just  can't  replace  some  things." 

The  current  Wooden  Center  is 
about  96,000  square  feet.  Following 
the  improvements,  this  number  will 
grow  to  neariy  155,000  square  feet. 

Some  might  wonder  why  UCLA, 
named  the  No.  I  jock  school  in  the 


nation  by  Sports  Illustrated  in  1997, 
could  have  such  an  inferior  weight 
room.  UCSD  and  UC  Santa  Cruz 
both  received  the  funding  to  improve 
their  weight  rooms  within  the  last  six 
years.  But  UCLA  has  had  to  make  do 
with  one  of  the  smaller  facilities  in  the 
state. 

"It's  hard  to  get  donor  money  foTT' 
building  that's  already  named," 
Koehne  said.  "Because  we're  acade- 
mic, we  are  not  entitled  to  state 
money,  so  our  only  option  was  to  go 
to  the  students." 

The  initiative  to  improve  the 
Wooden  Center  failed  in  1999,  its 
first  year  on  the  ballot,  but  perhaps 


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too  many  crowded  nights  or  full 
benches  swayed  the  popular  vote. 

The  overcrowded  wei^t  room  has 
an  impact  on  who  lifts  and  when  they 
go.  In  fact,  some  students  opt  not  to 
work  out  because  they  cannot  stand 
the  crowd. 

"Some  people  cut  their  work  outs 
flown,"  Wooden  Center  staff  mem- 
ber Becky  Couch  said.  "Some  show 
up,  look  at  the  crowd,  and  turn 
around  and  leave." 

Couch,  a  third  year  political  sci- 
ence student,  says  four  to  seven  in  the 
evening  is  the  busiest  time.  Some  stu- 
dents try  going  to  the  gym  late  or  very 
early  to  avoid  the  rush  In  this  way. 


the  gym's  size  alTepts  students'  sdicd- 
uling.  .;  •.■.;/:-:r' '?•■■■.■  ■:'''■■'  :^-- 

**l  try  go  to  at  night,"  third-year 
student  Samuel  Slomowitz  said.  "It 
just  gets  too  crowded  during  the  day 
and  it's  hard  to  Hnd  a  bench." 

Second-year  student  An  Shapiro 
agrees.'^ :".■■■'■■-;'■■■■■■■' .•.•,■■•:■'■■•;•  '.■ 

"The  crbwds^are  to'iigTi  to  deal 
with,"  he  said.  "1  want  to  be  able  to  go 
and  focus  on  working  out,  not  beat- 
ing someone  to  a  machine." 

Couch  claims  the  crowded  quar- 
ters have  not  led  to  conflict  between 
students,  at  least  not  on  her  shifts. 

"I  haven't  seen  any  major  prob- 
lems," Couch  said.  "But  size  is  defi- 


nitely a  problem." 

v  The  center  even  has  a  sign  outside 
posted  during  peak  hours  that  pre- 
vents additional  patrons  from  enter- 
ing the  stuffed  facility.  Some  students 
believe  that  when  the  gym  is  packed, 
it's  everyone  for  themselves. 

"Sometimes  1  can't  even  get  a 
drink  without  someone  taking  my 
machine,"  second-year  student 
Garrett  "Ogre"  Stern  said,  it's  pret- 
ty disconcerting  to  come  back  and 
find  some  guy  a  lot  smaller  than  me 
taking  all  the  weights  ofTthe  barbell." 

While  Stern  has  managed  to  avoid 

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48 Thunday,  October  5. 2000 


W^Bfuin  Sports- 


"i**- 


'■l»*^!li^-»*-  V* 


FOOTBALL  NOTEBOOK 


Back  to  basics  ^ 

The  Bruins  are  getting  back  to 
the  basics  this  week  in  practice. 

Following  a  four-turnover  game 
last  week,  UCLA  is  looking  to 
focus  on  the  simpler  points  of  the 
game. 


"We're  getting  back  to  the  fun- 
damentals," head  coach  Bob 
Toledo  said  Tuesday  at  practice. 
•'Starting  next  week  we'll  focus  on 
the  specifics  for  Cal." 

Double  trouble 
onD 

Two  key  defensive  players  have 


not  practiced  this  week.  Both 
Marques  Anderson  and  Ken 
Kocher  sat  out  practice  Monday 
and  Tuesday,  but  both  plan  on 
playing  next  week  against  Cal.  \ 
Anderson  is  recovering  from  a 
recent  shoulder  surgery  while 
Kocher  has  been  struggling  with  a 
high  ankle  sprain. 

"It  feels  better,"  Kocher  said  of 
the  injury  he  sustained  before  the 
Alabama  game.  "I'm  just  riding 
the  bike  and  getting  ready  for  next 
week." 


injury  suffered  against  Arizona 
State,  but  he  wasn't  the  only  one 
who  came  home  sore. 

Audie  Attar,  who  played  every 
defensive  snap,  as  well  as  in  special 
team  plays,  was  one  of  a  group  of 
Bruins  who  is  looking  forward  to 
the  bye  week. 

"I'm  a  little  sore,"  Attar  said. 
"But  so  are  the  rest  of  these  guys. 
We  just  have  to  get  out  there  and 
do  what  we  have  to  do.  We  can't 
afford  any  more  losses." 


Bruised  Bruins       Little  Sigbro 


fall  into  the  powerful  arms  of  the 
strongest  running  back  on  the 
team  makes  landing  much  simpler. 
Fifth-year      senior      Jermain 
Lewis,  who  has  been  named  start- 
ing tailback  for  the  third  time,  is 
taking   redshirt    freshman    Akil 
Harris  under  his  powerful  wing. 
The  5-foot-7  Lewis  has  been  help- 
ing the  6-0  Harris  adjust  to  the  idea 
of  increased  playing  time. 

"I  just  told  him,  'Go  out  there 
and  do  what  you  have  to  do,'" 
Lewis  said.  "He  just  has  to  play 
like  he's  capable  of  playjn^." 


DeShaun    Foster's    fractured 
wrist  might  be  the  most  serious 


Getting  pushed  out  of  the  nest  is 
not  always  easy,  but  being  able  to 


Notes  compiled  by  Adam  Karon, 
Daily  Bruin  Reporter     .   - 


TRYOUT  BRIEF 

Baseball     |- 

tryoutsthis 

Sunday 

There  will  be  open  tryouts 
for  the  UCLA  baseball  team 
this  Sunday,  Oct.  8,  at  noon  at 
Jackie  Robinson  Stadium. 
Players  must  bring  their  own 
gear. 

The  stadium  is  located  off- 
campus  at  the  Veteran's 
Administration  Facility  on 
Constitution  Ave.  off  of 
Sepulveda  Blvd.  For  more 
information,  call  coach  Gary 
Adams  at  (310)  824-8210. 


-• 


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\    , 


Daily  Brain  Sports 


Thursday,  Octobers,  2000       49 


FOOTBALL  LoVecchio's 
style  of  play  best-suited 
to  Notre  Dame's  offense 


The  Associated  Press 

SOUTH  BEND,  Ihd!-  Matt 
LoVccchio  is  about  to  do  something 
Paul  Hornung,  John  Huarte,  Joe 
Theismann  and  Joe  Montana  never 
did  at  Notre  Dame:  sUrt  at  quarter- 
back asa  Freshman. 

Coach  Bob  Davie  made  it  official 
after  practice  Wednesday  and 
announced  that  LoVecchio  will  start 
Saturday  against  Stanford,  making 
him  just  the  fourth  Irish  quarterback 
since  1952  to  start  as  a  freshman 
without  a  redshirt  season. 

"If  any  freshman  is  prepared  to 
handle  this  kind  of  situation.  Matt  is 
prepared  as  he  possibly  can  be,"  said 
Fred  Stengel,  who  coached 
LoVecchio  at  Bergen  Catholic  High 


BRUIN 
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quarterback  to  lead  jrish  agalnist  Stanford 


School  in  Oradell,  N.J 

"He's  very  even-keeled.  He  never 
gets  too  high,  he  never  gets  too  low. 
He  just  has  the  ability  to  keep  his 
wits  about  him  when  everybody 
around  him  is    ■   ■,  ■ '   -■    .     ■    ^. 


their 


losing 
heads." 

LoVecchio 
led  Bergen 
Catholic  to  a  22- 
1  record  and 
two  state  cham- 
pionships the 
past  two  years, 
amassing  3,400 
career  passing 
yards  and  48 
touchdowns.  He  '^ 
wasn't  expected 
to  play  this  year, 

but  a  broken  wrist  by  Arnaz  Battle 
and  ineffectiveness  of  the  offense 
under  Gary  Godsey  led  to  his 
chance. 

Davie  said  LoVecchio's  grasp  of 


the  Irish  ofTense  put  him  ahead  of 
fellow  freshman  quarterbacks  Jarcd 
Clark  and  Carlylc  Holiday.      , 

"He's  smart  and  he's  on  it.  And 
the  players  know  he's  on  it,"  Davie 
:'.■  ••]'::•',  "■■■'•.v^ ;'";■"  said.  "He  has 
M«.M,.M^  those  intangi- 
ble things  that 
puts  him  ahead 
of  those  other 
freshmen  right 
now." 

Irish  players 
say  they  are 
comfortable 
with 
LoVecchio. 
"Matt 

— .— — — .      LoVecchio  fits 

better  with  this 

scheme      and 

he's  more  reminiscent  of  Arnaz  than 

Gary,"  Irish  tight  end  Dan  O'Leary 

said. 

Battle  ran  for  157  yards  the  first 
two  games  as  the  Irish  averaged  217 


LoVecchio  has  statistics 
on  his  side. The  last 

three  freshman 
quarterbacks  for  the 

Irish  ...all  won  their  first 
starts. 


yards  rushing.  The  past  two  games 
with  Godsey,  the  Irish  have  aver- 
aged 113.5  yards.  Godsey  ran  for  2 
yards  on  nine  carries. 

LoVecchio  played  the  second  half 
in  the  27-21  loss  to  Michigan  State 
and  ran  for  21  yards  on  four  carries 
and  threw  a  43-yard  pass  that  set  up 
a  touchdown. 

Davie  said  the  Irish  had  limited 
game  plans  the  past  two  games 
because  of  Godsey's  lack  of  mobili- 
ty, but  said  there  will  be  no  limita- 
tions against  Stanford. 

"We're  going  into  this  game  as  if 
Arnaz  Battle  is  our  quarterback  as 
far  as  checks  and  as  far  as  what  we 
do,"  Davie  said. 

LoVecchio  said  his  focus 
Saturday  is  to  stay  confident. 

"I  have  to  know  my  responsibili- 
ties and  just  make  sure  everything  is 
smooth,"  he  said. 

LoVecchio  has  statistics  on  his 
side.  The  last  three  freshman  quar- 
terbacks for  the  Irish  -  Blair  Kiel  in 


1980,  Steve  Beuerlein  in  1983  and 
Kent  Graham  in  1987  (before  trans- 
ferring to  Ohio  State)  -  all  won  their 
first  starts.  The  Irish  also  are  1 1-| 
since  1985  with  quarterbacks  mak- 
ing their  first  starts. 

LoVecchio  said  he  never  thought 
much  about  starting  as  a  freshman. 
But  his  boyhood  friend,  Texas  quar- 
terback Chris  Simms,  said  he  saw 
LoVecchio  over  the  summer  and 
LoVecchio  talked  of  playing. 

"He  was  working  hard  and  hop- 
ing he  was  going  to  get  his  chance. 
He  wasn't  going  in  predicting  any- 
thing or  expecting  anything,"  Simms 
said.  "He  was  just  going  to  let  it  play 
out  and  do  his  deal." 

LoVecchio  and  Simms  grew  up  in 
Franklin  Lakes,  N.J.,  playing  bas- 
ketball, baseball  and  football  togeth- 
er. They  attended  different  high 
schools  but  never  faced  each  other. 
Asked  who  the  better  quarterback 
is,  Simms  replied:  "Hey,  he's  sUrt- 
ing." 


NOTES 

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50       Thursday,  Qctobef  5. 2000 


DalyfinHhSporti 


»»      V 


M30CCER  NOTEBOOK 


Tsakiris  returns  In 
grand  style 

A  week  ago,  it  was  doubtful  whether 
or  not  senior  midfielder  Shaun  Tsakiris 
would  even  play  in  last  week's  games  vs. 
Santa  Clara  and  St.  Mary's. 

Not  only  did  he  play,  he  was  the 
deciding  factor  in  both  contests. 
Tsakiris  came  of  the  bench  to  score  the 
game-winning  goals  in  both  games. 

He  had  been  nursing  a  painful  back 
injury  sustained  in  a  Sept.  21  game  at 
VC  Irvine. 

Tsakiris,  who  also  pickedup  an  assist 
against  the  Gaels  on  Scot  Thompson's 
game-tying  goal,  was  named  Pac-IO 
Player  of  the  Week.  This  is  the  second 
time  the  playmaking  midfielder  has 
taken  home  this  award. 

Tennyson  up  for 
MAC  award 

Another  two-time  Pac-IO  Player  of 
the  Week,  forward  McKinley  Tennyson 
Jr.,  learned  this  week  that  he  has  been 
named  as  a  candidate  for  the  presti- 
gious Missouri  Athletic  Club  Player  of 
the  Year  Award.  The  senior  leads  the 
Bruins  with  nine  goals  this  season. 

Tennyson,  who  is  also  a  finalist  for 
the  Hermann  Trophy,  is  hoping  to  be 
the  second  Bruin  in  as  many  years  to 
bring  home  the  MAC  Award.  Former 
Bruin  standout  Sasha  Victorine  won  the 
award  a  year  ago. 

Tennyson  will  face  stiff  competition 
for  the  honor.  Other  players  vying  for 
the  award  include  Ali  Curtis  of  Duke, 
Ryan  Trout  of  Virginia,  Ryan  Mack 
and  Pat  Noonan  of  Indiana,  and  Chris 
Gbandi  and  Brent  Rahim  of  UConn. 

Along  with  naming  its  player  of  the 
year  candidates,  the  Missouri  Athletic 


Qub  also  posts  a  list  of  "Players  to 
Watch,"  on  which 

UCLA  freshman  defender  Alex  Yi 

appears.-cv'    ■[■:  ■^"  ■:■-)' -.^.^  ■■■■■. , 

Team  faces  new 


opponent   .:...  :-i :'}",. 

While  on  the  road  in  Northern 
California  last  week,  at  least  10  players 
came  down  with  food  poisoning.  The 
team  caught  the  bug  Thursday  in  Santa 
Clara. 

The  rash  of  illnesses  caused  head 
coach  Todd  Saldafia  to  cancel  practices 
on  Friday  and  Saturday.  The  team's 
sluggishness  was  apparent  Sunday 
against  St.  Mary's  as  the  Gaels  built  a  2- 
I  lead  at  halftime. 

The  Bruins  were  able  to  rally  in  the 
second  half,  however,  and  pull  out  a  3-2 
victory. 

Former  Bruins  lead 
U.S.  to  fourth-place 
finish  In  Sydney    v 

The  U.S.  men's  soccer  team  turned 
heads  with  their  impressive  fourth- 
place  showing  at  the  Olympics.  The 
upstart  Americans  made  it  into. the 
medal  round,  losing  the  bronze  medal 
game  to  Chile  2-0. 

Former  UCLA  stars  Peter  Vagenas 
('99),  Sasha  Victorine  ('99),  Brad 
Friedel  ('92),  and  Frankie  Hejduk  ('94) 
all  played  on  the  U.S.  squad. 

Both  Vagenas  and  Victorine  were 
largely  responsible  for  the  Americans' 
quarterfinal  victory  over  Japan. 
Vagenas  scored  the  game-tying  goal  late 
in  regulation,  while  Victorine  converted 
the  deciding  penalty  kick  dial  sent  the 
U.S  into  the  semifinals. 


Cameroon  won  the  gold,  Spain  took 
the  silver,  and  Chile  claimed  the  bronze. 

UCLA  begins  Pac-IO 

'play     /^^:^■    ■::;,.;..:■.: 

■^—  This  weekend's  game  on  the  road 
against  Stanford  (No.  4  Soccer 
America,  No.  12  NCSAA)  will  mark 
UCLA's  first  ever  Pac-IO  conference 
game. 

Due  to  the  lack  of  respect  given  to 
the  Mountain  Pacific  Sports 
Federation,  UCLA,  Stanford,  Cal, 
Washington,  and  Oregon  State  all  left 
the  MPSF  and  began  play  in  the  Pac-IO, 
which  is  sponsoring  men's  soccer  for 
the  first  time.  - 

Joining  the  Pac-IO  allows  each  of  the 
schools  to  play  tougher  schedules.  It 
was  thought  that  the  weaker  schedules 
the  five  schools  were  forced  to  play  in 
the  MPSF  hurt  their  chances  of  receiv- 
ing bids  in  the  NCAA  Tournament. 
Case  in  point  was  last  year's  Bruin 
team,  which  had  a  No.  3  national  rank- 
ing, but  was  unseeded  by  the  NCAA 
selection  committee  and  forced  to  play 
all  but  one  tournament  game  on  the 
road. 

Still,  the  conference  winner  will  have 
to  earn  an  at-large  bid  into  the  tourna- 
ment. Automatic  bids  are  only  eligible 
to  the  winners  of  conferences  with  at 
least  six  teams.  It  is  hoped  that  the  other 
five  Pac-IO  schools  will  consider  adding 
men's  soccer  programs  now  that  the 
well-respected  conference  is  sponsoring 
the  sport. 

In  the  first  ever  Pac-IO  game  last 
Sunday,  Washington  (No.  12  Soccer 
America)  beat  Oregon  State  I-O  in 
Seattle. 


Wisconsin  disciplines 
more  student-atNetes 


Notes  comptlediby  Bran  Thompson,  Daily 
Bruin  Reporter '    ^     " 


BASKETBAUj  Players 
receiving  discounts  at 
shoe  Store  suspended 

The  Associated  Press 

MADISON,  Wis.  - 
Wisconsin  suspended  three 
basketball  players 

Wednesday,  including  two 
from  its  Final  Four  team,  for 
eight  games  for  receiving 
unadvertised  discounts  at  a 
shoe  store. 

Men's  basketball  players 
Maurice  Linton  and  Travon 
Davis,  and  women's  player 
Krista  Bird  must  sit  out  the 
first  eight  games  this  season, 
close  their  open  accounts  at 
the  Shoe  Box  and  repay  more 
than  $500  in  benefits  they 
each  received  to  restore  their 
eligibility,  the  school  said. 

Another  37  winter  and 
spring  student-athletes  who 
received  extra  benefits  at  the 
store  won't  miss  any  games. 
But  they  must  close  out  their 
accounts  and  repay  the 
amount  of  the  extra  benefit  to 
a  local  charity. 

Sixteen  of  those  athletes 
who  received  benefits  of 
between  $100  and  $299  also 
must  perform  24  hours  of 
community  service.  They 
include  Roy  Boone.  Andy 
Kowske  and  Mark  Vershaw. 
all  senior  starters  on  the  men's 
basketball  team. 


Fellow  starter  Mike  Kelley 
received  extra  benefits  of  less 
than  $100  and  will  only  have 
to  close  his  account  and  make 
a  donation  to  charity. 

The  university's  action 
Wednesday  brings  the  number 
of  Badgers  athletes  disciplined 
for  receiving  substantial  dis- 
counts on  shoes  and  clothing 
at  the  Shoe  Box  to  121. 


The  newspaper 

reported  players 

received  discounts 

of  25  percent  to  40 

percent  and 
interest-free  credit. 


In  August,  26  football  play- 
ers  received  suspensions  rang- 
ing from  one  to  three  games 
for     the     discounts     they,     ^i 
received.  Also,  a  women's  soo- "   '? 
cer  player  was  suspended  for  , 
two  games  as  part  of  the  in  ves-       I 
tigation  that  began  after  a-ji: 
report  in  the  Wisconsin  Sute  .f    , 
Journal  this  summer  detailed 
purchases  by  eight  members 
of  the  Badgers'  Final  Four 
basketball  team  and  1 4  players 
from  the  Rose  Bowl  champion 
football  team. 
The  newspaper  reported 


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Giants  take  one-game  lead  over  Mets 


BASEBALL  S.F.  strikes 
first  in  division  series: 
Bonds  silences  critics 


The  Associated  Press 

SAN  FRANCISCO  -  Livan 
Hernandez  was  his  usual  postsea- 
son self.  Barry  Bonds  was  a  dif- 
ferent man. 

Hernandez  held  the  Mets  to 
five  hits  over  7  and  2/3  innings 
and  Bonds  fought  back  his  play- 
off demons  with  an  RBI  triple 
and  a  key  single  as  the  San 
Francisco  Giants  beat  New  York 
5-1  Wednesday  in  the  opener  of 
their  NL  division  series. 

Ellis  Burks  hit  a  three-run 
homer  as  the  Giants  gave  both 
manager  Dusty  Baker  and 
Pacific  Bdl  Park  their  first  post- 
season wins. 

"Livan  was  the  guy  we 
thought  he  would  be  as  a  playofT 
starter  ...  and  Barry  was  just 
Barry,"  Baker  said.  "None  of 
that  surprised  me.  We  know  what 
our  guys  can  do." 

The  new  park  even  played  a 
role  in  the  victory:  Bonds'  triple 
took  a  fortuitous  bounce  off  a 
low  wall  in  right,  while  Burks' 
homer  hit  the  foul  pole  in  left. 

"When  you  see  41,000  people 
in  the  stadium,  it's  great," 
Hernandez  said.  "This  is  a  great 
stadium.  The  fans  here  are  very 
good,  very  loud." 

Hernandez  wasn't  dominant, 
but  he  picked  up  where  he  left  oft" 
in -the  postseason  three  years  ago. 
Hernandez,  the  NLCS  and 
World  Series  MVP  in  1997  while 


leading  the  Florida  Marlins  to 
the  title,  retired  the  Mets'  first 
seven  hitten  and  pitched  out  of 
two  jams,  allowing  his  only  run 
on  a  sacrifice  fly  in  the  third. 

"He  did  what  we  thought  he 
would  do,"  Mets  manager  Bobby 
Valentine  said.  "He  used  his 
changeup  and  breaking  ball  and 
slider  when  he  got  behind." 

Hernandez  improved  to  S-0 
lifetime  in  the  postseason,  the 
same  mark  as  his  older  half- 
brother.  Orlando,  of  the  New 
York  Yankees.  On  Monday 
night,  with  the 

Yankees      in  i 

Oakland  for 
the  AL  play- 
offs, Livan 
and  EI  Duque 
got  together 
for  dinner. 

"When  you 
go  to  the  play- 
ofTs,  you've 
got  to  play 
hard," 
Hernandez 
said.  "A  lot  of 


"When  I  go  out  I  say, 

1  want  to  throw 

good,!  want  to  win 

my  game/" 

Livan  H«mand«z 

Giants  pitcher 


players  play  15,  20  years  waiting 
for  this  chance.  When  I  go  out,  I 
say,  'I  want  to  throw  good,  I  want 
to  win  my  game."' 

Hernandez  struck  out  five  and 
walked  five,  but  he  got  into  trou- 
ble in  the  eigjith,  allowing  a  single 
by  Edgardo  Alfonzo  and  walking 
Mike  Piazza  with  one  out. 

After  Robin  Ventura  moved 
the  nmners  along  with  a  ground- 
out,  Hernandez  walked  Todd 
Zeile.  Baker  brought  in  top  setup 
man  Felix  Rodriguez,  who  struck 
out  Darryl  Hamilton  amid  rau- 
cous dieers. 


Robb  Nen  dosed  out  the  Mets 
in  the  ninth. 

For  Bonds,  the  three-time 
MVP,  whose  career  has  been 
defined  by  regular-season 
prowess  and  postseason  prob- 
lems, his  2-for-3  performance 
was  an  eariy  answer  to  his  critics. 
He  hit  .200  in  four  previous  trips 
to  the  playoffs,  but  he  had  the 
fourth  multi+it  playoff  game  of 
his  career. 

Bonds'   triple   during   San 

Francisco's  four-nin  third  inning 

ricocheted  crazily  off  the  wall  in 

right,  scoring 

— —     Bill  Mueller. 

After      Jeff 

Kent  walked, 

Burks  hit  a 

long  drive  to 

left         that 

clanged    off 

the  pole. 

Asked  ifhe 
felt  like 

Cariton  Fisk, 
whose 
famous  extra- 
inning  homer 


down  the  line  at  Fenway  Park 
won  Game  6  of  the  1976  World 
Series,  Burks  said:  "Definitely. 
Everything  but  the  body  lan- 
guage." 

Burks'  honter,  his  first  in  post- 
season play  since  1993,  sent  the 
Pac  Bell  crowd  into  a  frenzy.  He 
made  a  curtain  call  moments 
later. 

It  was  the  Giants'  first  playoff 
victory  in  eight  seasons  under 
Baker,  twice  the  NL  Manager  of 
the  Year.  The  Giants,  whose  97 
regular-season  victories  were  the 
most  in  baseball,  won  in  their 


first  postseason  game  at  Pac  Bell, 
which  opened  in  April. 

While  all  of  the  Giants'  stars 
lived  up  to  their  billing.  New 
York's  most  important  players 
didn't. 

Mets  starter  Mike  Hampton, 
9-0  previously  against  the  Giants, 
couldn't  get  out  of  the  sixth 
inning.  He  allowed  six  hits  and 
five  runs  and  walked  three,  and 
reliever  "Hirk  Wendell  bailed  him 
out  of  a  bases-loaded  jam  in  the 
sixth  with  two  strikeouts. 

Alfonzo,  Piazza  and  Ventura 
-  the  Mets*  3-5  hitters  -  went  hit- 
less  in  their  first  nine  at-bats. 
Piazza,  a  career  .21 1  hitter  in  the 
playoffs,  was  (Wor-3 

Bonds,  who  singled  in  the  first 
inning,  also  had  two  hits  in  games 
5  and  6  of  the  1992  NL  champi- 
onship series  and  in  Game  2  of 
the  1997  NL  division  series.  He 
even  stole  second  base  after 
being  walked  in  the  seventh 
inning  Wednesday.  ' 

The  Mets'  outfielders  spent 
extra  time  Tuesday  studying  the 
eccentric  dimensions  of  Pac  Bell, 
but  it  didn't  help  right  fidder 
Derek  Bell.  Bonds'  triple  car- 
omed so  sharply  that  Bell 
sprained  his  right  ankle  while  try- 
ing to  reverse  direction. 

He  left  the  game  for  X-rays, 
which  were  negative.  But 
Valentine  said  Bell,  who  was  on 
crutches  after  the  game,  wouldn't 
play  in  Game  2  on  Thursday 
night. 

San  Francisco  scored  first  on 
Kent's  RBI  groundout  after 
Bonds  singled  in  the  first  inning. 
New  York  tied  it  up  on  Jay 
Payton's  sacrifice  fly  in  the  third. 


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Thursday,  October  5, 2000       51 


CLUB  BRIEFS 


Field  hockey 


Athletes  looking  to  be  a  part  of  a  winning  team 
can  come  out  and  join  the  UCLA  women's  field 
hockey  team.  The  team  has  coaches  who  can  both 
teach  the  basics  to  beginners  and  help  improve 
existing  skills. 

Practice  times  are  Tuesdays  and  Thursday  from 
3:30  to  5:30  pm  on  the  southwest  end  of  the  IM 
field.  For  more  information  and  game  times,  e- 
mail  Marissa  Sandoval  at  playhard@ucla.edu  or 
visit  the  team's  official  Web  site:  www.student- 
groups.ucla.edu/fieldhockey. 

Women's  lacrosse 

Fall  practice  for  the  UCLA  women's  lacrosse 
team  begins  Monday  of  fourth  week,  Oct.  22,  and 
is  open  to  players  of  all  levels  of  experience. 
Practice  will  focus  on  teaching  the  game  to  begin- 
ners and  reinforcing  the  skills  of  returning  players. 
The  team  finished  last  season  as  the  top  club 
team  in  the  Western  Women's  Lacrosse  League, 
with  a  9-2  record. 

Practices  arc  Monday,  Wednesday  and  Friday 
from  3:30  to  5:30  p.m.  on  the  IM  field.  The  season 
begins  winter  quarter,  with  practices  running 
T\jesday  through  Friday.  3:30  to  5:30. 

League  games  begin  in  January  and  end  in  early 
May,  with  one  or  two  a  weekend.  Two  tourna- 
ments have  been  scheduled  for  the  season,  both  of 
which  are  all-weekend  events.  Qub  dues  are  $200 
for  the  season.  Installment  plans  can  be  worked 
out,  if  necessary.  Additional  costs  include  stick 
(about  $50)  and  uniform  (about  $75)  and  miscella- 
neous travel  expenses  throughout  the  season. 

There  will  be  an  information  meeting  third 
week,  time  and  location  to  be  announced.  For 
more  information,  look  for  team  representatives 
out  on  BruinWalk  or  contact  Alison  Lee  (824- 
7834),  Victoria  Bohannan  (824-9896),  or  Jenn 
Evans  (208-8730). 


Club  presidents  can  send  information  about  their 
clubs  to  sports@media.ucla.edu  by  Wednesday,  2 
pm.  Please  note  'Club'  in  the  subject 


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Winners  at  home  and  abroad 

Men's  soccer  stars  of  the  past  and 
present  are  earning  awards  and 
Olympic  medals.  See  page  50. 

Thursday,  October  5, 2000 


Daily  Bmin 


Overcrowdlr^g  at  UCLA  used  to  be  limited  to  residence  halls,  but  lately  even  the  weight  room  at  the  Wooden  cZ^^s^'::'"" 
.ncrease  m  attendance.  But  changes  are  on  the  horizon  once  the  UC  Board  of  Regents  approves  renovations  to  incTeai  ^zl 

Weight  room  looks  to  bulic  up 


hr^ 


FITNESS:  RenovaUon  of 
Wooden  Center  to  ease 
crowding,  help  students 


By  Adam  Karon 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Ever  try  to  squeeze  120  people 
into  a  room  fit  for  90?  Not  a  pleas- 
ant experience. 

Now,  add  sweat,  grunts  and  gal- 
lons of  testosterone,  and  the  cxperj- 
ence  becomes  downright  unbear- 
able. 

Such  has  been  the  situation  in 


the  weight  room  at  the  John 
Wooden  center  for  nearly  two 
decades.  The  building  opened  in 
1983,  and  by  1984  the  weightroom 
had  already  become  crowded. 

"The  weightroom  is  too  small," 
Wooden  Center  assistant  manager 
Dennis  Koehne  said.  "When  it  was 
being  designed,  everyone  looked  at 
the  plans  and  said,  'Why  is  it  so 
big?'" 

The  room  is  3,486  square  feet,  a 
far  cry  from  the  12,000  set  aside  for 
UC  San  Diego's  facility.  In  addi- 
tion, UCLA's  larger  enrollment 
contributed  to  the  overcrowding. 

Ironically,  the  original  design, 


which  included  bicycles  and 
stretching  areas  within  the  existing 
room,  was  considered  way  too  big. 
Sixteen  years  later,  the  weight  room 
is  ready  for  a  major  face  lift. 

Last  year  students  voted  to 
improve  the  Wooden  Center  by 
increasing  student  fees  $28  per 
quarter.  Ten  of  that  will  go  toward 
the  weight  room. 

"The  new  design  will  be  L- 
shaped,  going  out  toward  the 
Intramural  field  and  toward  the 
north,"  Koehne  said.  "What  we 
have  been  asking  for  was  to  expand 
the  courtyard,  but  the  estimates  we 
got  were  ungodly." 


As  enrollment  increases  each 
year,  the  Wooden  Center  must 
adapt  to  meet  the  students'  needs. 
As  many  as  4,000  students,  faculty 
and  guests  visit  the  building  each 
day,  with  the  numbers  varying 
based  on  the  season. 

According  to  Koehne,  the 
weight  room's  capacity  will 
increase  from  90  to  *\i8  much  as  we 
need." 

Another  concern  of  some  stu- 
dents is  the  equipment.  Many  will 
be  surprised  to  learn  that  most  of 
the  weights  are  between  two  to  four 

SWW0MII.|>a9M7 


Saldafia  brings  imagination  to  soccer 


,f^ 


ANNA/MK 

Shaunlsaklris  helped  spark  the  UCLA  men's 


COLUMN:  Refreshing  Bruin  play 
contrasts  with  stagnant  strategy 

I  went  to  last  Sunday's  UCLA  men's  soccer 
game  ready  to  sink  my  teeth  into  Bruin 
coach  Todd  Saldafia. 

"The  gloves  are  coming  off,"  I  told  a  friend. 
"These  guys  are  debauch- 
ing the  sport  and  even 
though  I  don't  really  care,  I 
have  a  column  to  write,  so 
I'm  going  to  rip  them." 
Well,  Saldaiia  never 
gave  me  the  opportunity.  I 
had  to  delete  everything  I 
had  prc-written  on  my 
Toshiba  laptop 

The  Bruins  didn't  play 
their  best  of  games.  They 
barely  squeezed  by  lowly 
St  Mary's,  which  went  into 
the  game  with  a  2-6  record. 

Nonetheless,  it  was  a 
good  show. 

UCLA,  to  my  surprise,  played  an  aesthetical- 
ly pleasing  soccer  game,  something  which  has 


Dylan 
Hernandez 


highest  levels  -  ever  since  the  cocaine-quick- 
ened retirement  of  Argentine  Diego  Mafadona. 

Since  Saldafia  was  a  Sigi  Schmidt  proteg^,  I 
thought  I'd  be  treated  to  another  exhibition  of 
the  unimaginative  football  that  had  become 
popular  around  the  worid  over  the  last  two 
decades.  ' 

A  few  weeks  ago,  I  watched  Schmidt,  who 
won  three  national  championships  while  at  the 
helm  of  UCLA  from  1980-98,  coach  the  Los 
Angeles  Galaxy  to  a  playoff  win  over  the 
Tampa  Bay  Mutiny. 

By  large,  the  Galaxy  attack  was  predictable 
and  cautious,  as  had  been  the  Bruins'  when 
Schmidt  was  in  Westwood. 

For  most  of  the  game,  the  Galaxy  shot  the 
ball  down  the  sidelines  arid  chased  it  into  the 
corners,  where  they  would  usually  get  stuck. 
Fearing  a  counterattack  up  the  gut,  Los 
Angeles  refused  to  play  through  the  middle 

Play  seemed  redundant.  I  got  bored  quickly 
and  spent  much  of  the  remainder  of  the  contest 
scanning  the  stands  for  good-looking  girls. 

Saldai^a's  team,  though,  wasn't  so  bland. 

Although  sloppy  and  disorganized  at  first, 
the  Bruins  settled  down  once  the  center  of  their 


soccer  team  against  St.  Mary's  Sunday.  become  mcreasmgly  rare  -  even  at  the  sport's 


Sm 


PW44 


Sports  on  the  Web  Q    ^ 

See  all  this  and  more  at  • 

the  Daily  Bruin's  : 

Website:  • 

www.dailybnjin.iida.edu  : 


Bniinsplanto 
partidpate  in 
battle  of  sexes 
for  first  time 

TENNIS:  Tournament 
should  prove  interesting, 
give  chance  for  scouting 


ByPaulkwVa 

Dally  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

For  the  first  time  ever,  the  UCLA 
men's  and  women's  tennis  teams  will 
compete  as  one  team  when  play 
starts  Friday  at  the 

Wingspanbank.com/World  Team 
Tennis  National  Collegiate 
Championships. 

The  Championships,  which  take 
place  from  Oct.  6-8  at  Stanford, 
include  16  of  the  top  men's  and 
women's  college  teams  based  on 
their  combined  season-ending  rank- 
ing. 

This  event  started  last  fall,  but 
UCLA  didn't  have  a  high  enough 
ranking  to  qualify  After  last  season, 
however,  the  men  finished  fourth  in 
the  nation  and  the  women  came  in 
fifth. 

"We  missed  it  last  year,  so  both 
Billy  and  I  wanted  to  see  what  it  was 
like,"  women's  head  coach  Stella 
Sampras  said,  referring  to  men's 
coach  Billy  Martin.  "We  heard  from 
a  lot  of  teams  that  it's  a  great  event." 
Representing  UCLA  will  be 
sophomore  Sara  Walker  and  junior 
Zana  Zlebnik  -on  the  women's  side. 
For  the  men,  junior  Chris  Sands  and 
freshman  Jean-Julien  Rojer  will  com- 
pete. Sampras  will  coach  the  team. 

They  will  participate  in  singles  and 
doubles  matches  for  women  and 
men,  as  well  as  mixed  doubles. 

"It  should  be  pretty  good," 
Walker  said.  "It's  more  intense  with 
the  guys  out  there.  You  do  play  well 
because  you  get  nervous  playing  with 
the  guys." 

She  added  that  the  tournament, 
which  doesn't  count  toward  records 
or  rankings,  should  be  fun  because  of 
what  makes  it  different  from  regular 
tournaments. 

"We  never  travel  with  the  guys  or 
play  tournaments  with  the  guys," 
Walker  said. 
Sampras  echoed  this  sentiment'- 
"It's  different  from  any  tourna- 
ment that  we'll  play  in  college.  I'm 
sure  the  guys  will  make  it  very  excit- 
ing for  them,"  she  said  of  her  own 
players.  "They  get  into  it  a  lot  more 
than  giris  do." 

The  Bruins  start  on  Friday  against 
Mississippi  State.  Tliey  play  Virginia 
Commonwealth  on  Saturday  and 
Illinois  on  Sunday  Finals  will  also  be 
played  on  Sunday 

Practice  for  the  women  started 
just  last  week. 

"It'll  give  us  an  opportunity  to 
play  some  matches,"  Sampras  said. 
"We'll  get  to  see  Sara  and  Zana  play 
some  doubles  together." 

Walker's  lost  her  doubles  partner 
last  year,  Amanda  Basica,  fo  gradua- 
tion. 

The  event  should  also  allow  some 
early  season  scouting. 

"It's  a  chance  to  see  how  other 
players  are  playing,"  Sampras  said. 

Other  schools  that  will  be  at  the 
tournament  include  USC,  Tulsa, 
Texas  AAM,  SUnford,  Notre  Dame 
and  Louisiana  State.  


J 


Serving  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


Actors  benefit  cultural  program 


HISTORY:  Filipino  group  celebrates 
people's  contribution  in  live  exhibit 


ByUnhTat 

Daily  Bnjin  Senior  Staff  . .  r    '^  ' 

Lapu-Lapu  stood  proudly  before  his  people  about 
500  years  ago. 

As  chief  of  Mactan,  an  island  in  the  Philippines,  he 
gathered  his  soldiers  to  fight  against  Spanish  invaders 
and  killed  Magellan  in  1521.  No  one  knows  what  hap- 
pened to  the  chief  after  the  battle. 

But  Wednesday  night.  Lapu- 
Lapu  reappeared  at  the 
Kerckhoff  Art  Gallery  as  part  of 
a  living  museum. 

The  event,  put  on  by  the  stu- 
dent group  Samahang  Pilipino, 
was  the  first  of  several  programs 
scheduled  throughout  October  to 
celebrate  Pilipino  American 
History  Month. 

"Veryseldom  is  our  history  ever  told,"  said  Joann 
Baso,  historian  for  Samahang.  "We  wanted  to  focus 
on  the  strengths  that  occur  in  our  community,  not  just 
outside  of  them." 

Pilipinos  are  the  largest  Asian  Pacific  Islander 
group  in  California,  according  to  data  compiled  by 
Paul  Ong,  a  professor  at  the  School  of  Public  Policy 
and  Social  Research. 


"Our  agricultural  industry  in  California  was  built 
primarily  from  Pilipino  labor  early  in  the  century," 
said  Dennis  Arguelles.  assistant  director  of  the  Asian 
American  Studies  Center. 

Besides  farm  work,  he  noted  that  many  Pilipinos 
have  risen  to  the  ranks  of  doctors,  lawyers  and  politi- 
cians today,  but  they  aren't  always  recognized  for 
their  accomplishments. 

"Even  among  Asians,  we  tend  to  be  the  invisible 
Asian  minority,"  Arguelles  said.  "People  don't  real- 
ize our  contribution." 

The  museum  featured  exhibits  of  11  characters 
recognized  as  heroes  among  the  Pilipino  community. 

Students,  dressed  like  the  characters  they  repre- 
sented, posed,  while  tour  guides  read  aloud  brief 
biographies  of  the  heroes. 

"It's  better  for  students  to  comprehend  the  strug- 
gle when  they  see  a  person  acting  out  what  (the  char- 
acter) had  to  do,"  said  Lynda  Manalang.  outreach 
coordinator  for  Samahang  and  actor  in  one  of  the 
scenes. 

Among  the  characters  depicted  was  Lapu-Lapu; 
Marcela  Marino,  who  sewed  the  Pilipino  flag;  and 
Agueda  Kahabagan  y  Iniquito.  the  only  woman 
enlisted  in  the  Pilipino  army  in  1899. 

'Because  we  were  trying  to  showcase  a  lot  of 
heroes,  we  really  tried  to  recognize  the  women  as 
well,"  Baso  said. 

The  final  exhibit  showcased  "Mom  and  Dad." 


See  MUSEUM,  page  4 


ttlTH  ChMQUEZADaily  Brum  Seno.  UiH 

Ryan  Bulatao  is  Lapu-Lapu  in  one  of  the— 
living  exhibits  in  Kerckhoff  Art  Gallery. 


^^^no 


Sersel,; 

^'garettesany 
more!!  -  J^ 

Sorry!!!  cSf 

rr-gOttagOlO 


-stwood 


Dual  admission  plan  may 
improve  campus  diversity 


„  S>MK  m.\AMy  Brum  Senior  Sl«ff 

Th^  SEAS  Cafe  in  Boelter  Hall  posts  a  sign  announcing  the  absence 
of  dgarettes.  SEAS  was  the  last  place  on  campus  to  sell  cigarettes, 

SEAS  Cafe  changes  policy, 
no  longer  sells  cigarettes 

BAN:    Tobacco  products        banned  the  sale  and  consumption  of 
.,    ,  ,  tobacco  products  at  all  Associated 

unavailable  on  campus,     students  of  ucla  facilities 
students  may  take  action       ^* '"''  p'*'*'*  °"  "'"P"'  •*'^'  ''^'^ 

•^  cigarettes.       the       Society       of 

______^ Engineering  and  Applied  Sciences 

Cafe  in  Boelter  Hall  discontinued  the 
sale  of  tobacco  products  last  spring. 
"Basically  it  was  a  health  hazard 
and  we  certainly  did  not  want  to  be 
promoting  it,"  said  Lydia  Kowalski, 
assistant  dean  for  administration  in 
the  engineering  department. 

"We  didn't  want  to  be  a  holdout  to 
the  rest  of  the  campus,"  she  said. 


CHANGES:  Conununity 
college  attendance  will 
increase,  resemble  '60s 


By  HMMsh  Patd 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Some  studenu  at  UCLA  are  out- 
raged that  cigarettes  are  no  longer 
being  sold  anywhere  on  campus  -  but 
many  don't  know  that  they  may  have 
the  ability  to  bring  them  back. 

UCLA  joined  the  bandwagon  of 
antiitobacco  campaignt  at  the  begin 


ning  of  the  last  decade  when  it 


SeeClfi«IIETm,pa9e4 


ByNmall 

Daily  Bmin  Contributor 

A  new  proposal  could  make  uni- 
versity admission  more  attainable 
for  California  students,  and  possi- 
bly boost  minority  enrollment  in 
the  UC. 

But  the  effect  on  more  competi- 
tive campuses,  like  UCLA  and 
Berkeley,  are  still  uncertain. 

Last  month,  UC  President 
Richard  Atkinson  proposed  a  plan 
to  grant  UC  admission  to  the  top 
12.5  percent  of  every  high  school 
graduating  class  in  the  state,  pro- 
vided they  satisfactorily  finish  a 
transfer  prograin  at  a  community 
college.  The  proposal  must  still  be 
approved  by  the  UC  Board  of 
Regents. 

"The  purpose  of  the  proposal  is 
to  increase  the  number  of  transfers 
and  expand  educational  opportuni- 
ties for  all  students,"  said  UC 
spokesman  Terry  Lightfoot. 

The  new  proposal  will  not  add  to 
Tidal  Wave  II,  an  expected  influx  of 
oO.OOO  students  by  2010.  olTicials 
said. 

"It  appears  that  there  will  not  be 
further  growth  than  what  was  pre- 
dicted earlier.  ^We  are  already 
straining;  to  add  even  more  stu- 
denta  wouM  be  impossible."  said 


Paula  Lutomirski,  Associate  Vice 
Chancellor  of  institutional 
Planning.  - 

No  students  currently  eligible 
would  be  made  ineligible,  because 
of  the  "dual  admissions"  policy. 

"I  think  it  is  likely  that  more 
minorities  will  be  admitted  based 
on  estimates  done  on  potential  stu- 
dents." Lutomirski  said,  referring 
loTidalWavell. 

According  to  the  UC  Office  of 
the  President,  the  majority  of 
expected  dual  admissions  students 
arc  predominately  white  and 
Asian. 

The  new  pool  of  students,  how- 
ever, will  be  more  diverse  than  cur- 
rent eligibility  pools,  with  34-36  per- 
cent of  them  being  underrepresent- 
ed  minorities.  This  is  more  than  the 
current  pool's  underrepresented 
minority  population,  which  is  at  12 
percent. 

Lightfoot   said    the   proposal 
,  should  benefit  lower-income  and 
rural  students  as  well. 

Although  under  the  new  plan, 
high  school  students  are  guaran- 
teed admission  to  a  UC  school,  it 
does  not  mean  they  will  get  their 
first  choice  campus. 

All  UC  schools  are  expected  to 
participate,  but  Lightfoot  said  how 
the  proposal  could  afTect  individual 
schools,  particularly  the  more  com- 
petitive ones  like  UCLA  and  UC 
Berkeley,  is  still  unclear. 
The  new  plan  would  require  the 


-sw 


pageT 


Benjamin  works 
to  reach  out  to 
students  in  bid 
for  Senate  seat 

SPEECH:   Environmental 
hazard,  criticizing  writers 
focus  of  candidate's  talk 


By  Michael  Falcone 

Daily  Bmin  Senior  Staff 

Though  she's  up  against  the  politi- 
cal might  of  Dianne  Feinstein  and 
Tom  Campbell,  -  two  powerhouses  of 
California  politics  -  Medea  Benjamin, 
the  Green  Party  candidate  for  U.S. 
Senate  isn't  fiinching. 

Benjamin,  who  spoke  at  UCLA 
Thursday  night,  criticized  political 
writers  and  others  who  called  her 
grassroots  effort  to  win  the  Senate 
seat  "old  fashioned"  and  "illegiti- 
mate." 

_  "  Had  non-violence  not  been  a  basic 
tenet  of  the  Green  Party.  I  would  have 
strangled  one  of  them  in  an  editorial 
board  meeting,"  Benjamin  said. 

Speaking  to  a  group  of  about  50 
students  in  1200  Rolfe  Hall,  Benjamin 
was  joined  by  Sara  Amir,  Green  Party 
candidate  for  State  Assembly  in  the 
42nd  district,  at  an  event  sponsored 
by  Bruins  for  Nader  and  Medea. 

Benjamin,  the  founder  of  San 
Francisco-based  human  rights  organi- 
zation Global  Exchange,  built  her 
campaign  on  issues  such  as  promoting 
workers'  rights,  campaign  finance 
reform,  and  environmental  protection 
issues. 

While  waiting  nearly  an  hour  for 
the  candidates  to  arrive,  some  of  those 
at  the  event  read  the  Socialist  Worker 
newspaper.  Others  signed  a  petition  to 
let  Green  Party  presidential  candidate 
Ralph  Nader  into  the  renjaining  two 
debates. 

Amir,  who  is  campaigning  while 
keeping  her  job  as  a  scientist  with  the 
California  Environmental  Protection 
Agency's  Department  of  Toxic 
Substances  Control,  said  her  job  expe- 
rience led  to  her  vested  interest  in  the 
environment.        '  .  » 

Thursday  night  she  discussed  the   : 
the  hazards  of  chromium  6  water  con- 
tamination -  an  issue  she  has  worked   • 
on  at  the  EPA. 

Chromium    6.    a    metallurgical 
byproduct  which  may  be  toxic  to 
humans  in  high  concentrations,  was    ' 
recently  found  in  abnormal  levels  in 
Los  Angeles  tap  water. 

"If  elected  to  the  state  Assembly, 
the  first  bill  I  would  introduce  is 
mandatory  pollution  prevention," 
Amir  said. 

The  event  was  Benjamin's  seventh 
visit  to  a  college  campus  in  the  past 
two  days  -  near  the  end  of  a  five  day 
campaign  swing  through  the 
Southland. 

Her  daughter,  Arlen  Benjamin- 
Gomez,  a  third-year  International 
Development  and  Latin  Ameriran 


SeetIIU*MIII,payg 


Ffkby,  October  6, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Newt 


>;\,;:.w  •■••;,.•• 


''_.>'.;.  ■■^; 


Daily  Bruin  Ncwi 


■^■■"■'■'■■'^ 


Fridays  Octotter  6. 2000         l 


\ 


COMMUNITY  BRIEFS 


Report  calls  for  new 
immigration  policies 

California  policy  makers  need  to  recognize 
that  immigration  is  here  to  stay  and  develop 
strategies  to  encourage  and  hasten  the  integra- 
tion of  immigrants  into  the  state's  economy  and 
society,  say  the  authors  of  a  report  to  be  pub- 
lished Oct.  5  by  the  University  of  California's 
California  Policy  Research  Center. 

The  report,  "Immigration  and  Immigrant 
Integration  in  California:  Seeking  a  New 
Consensus,"  is  written  by  Philip  Martin,  a  pro- 
fessor of  agricultural  and  resource  economics  at 
the  UC  Davis,  and  Manuel  Garcia  y  Griego,  an 
associate  professor  of  political  science  and  direc- 
tor of  the  Center  for  Mexican  American  Studies 
at  the  University  of  Texas,  Ariington. 

"The  state's  ability  to  integrate  immigrants 
and  their  children  will  shape  the  California  of 
2025  and  beyond,"  Martin  said.  "Immigrants 
today  are  the  taxpayers  and  citizens  of  tomor- 
row." 

According  to  the  authors,  demographic  reali- 


ties, alone,  make  it  clear  that  immi- 
grant integration  is  one  of  the  most 
important     policy     issues     facing 
California. 

For  example,  no  longer  does  any  one  ethnic 
group  or  national-origin  group  comprise  a 
majority  of  the  state's  population.  According  to 
the  book,  46  percent  of  CaJifomians  are  cither 
immigrants  or  have  at  least  one  foreign^wm 
parent. 

Anderson  forecast  sees 


ios  for  the  future.  In  the  first,  the 
"Old  Economy"  models,  growth 
comes  from  putting  people  to  work. 
According  to  these  models,  the  current 
low  unemploymoit  rate  leaves  no  one  to  hire, 
which  makes  a  U.S.  downturn  long  overdue.  In 
the  second,  the  "New  Economy"  models,  it  is 
not  people  who  make  the  product,  but  micro- 
processors. These  models  see  a  continuation  of 
current  conditions  with  high  productivity 
growth,  low  unemployment  and  low  inflation. 


for  responding  to  radio  calls,"  Mayor  Richard 
Riordan  said.  "I  have  had  an  opportunity  to 
review  this  modified  SLO  program.  After 
careful  consideration,  I  have  concluded  that 
we  must  restore  and  enhance  our  SLO  pro- 
gram." 


more  economic  growth    "-APD  seeks  to  activate 


Since  1995,  the  U.S.  economy  has  performed 
well  beyond  the  limits  suggested  by  the  historical 
data.  Among  the  remarkable  features  are  the 
length  of  the  current  expansion,  the  size  and  tim- 
ing of  the  productivity  improvements  anri  the 
very  low  unemployment  rate  with  very  low  infla- 
tion. These  unusual  times  call  for  special  care 
when  looking  into  the  future. 

Professor  Edward  Learner,  director  of  the 
UCLA  Anderson  Forecast,  offers  three  scenar- 


community  policing 

Nearly  two  years  after  dismantling  a  com- 
munity policing  program  and  putting  168  of  iU 
senior  ofTicers  back  on  regular  crime  patrol, 
the  mayor  and  police  chief  decided  Thursday 
to  fully  reinstate  and  even  expand  the  pro- 
gram. <LJ 

"In  February  1999,  the  role  of  Senior  Lead 
Officers  changed.  They  were  assigned  to  full- 
time  patTQi  duties,  with  primary  responsibility 


Police  Chief  Bernard  Parks  said  he  soippotts 
the  mayor's  recommendations. 

"The  No.  1  priority  of  the  Los  Angeles 
Police  Department  is  to  provide  the  Highest 
level  of  service  to  the  people  of  the  communi- 
ty," he  said. 

"The  driving  philosophy  to  providing  this 
service  is  community  based  policing-govern- 
ment  which  includes  territorial  imperative, 
partnerships,  problem  solving,"  he  added. 

"The  department  supports  the  mayor's  rec- 
ommendations." 

LAPD's  reputation  has  been  tarnished 
since  an  internal  investigation  last  year 
revealed  misconduct  and  a  pattern  of  abuse  of 
power  by  some  anti-gang  unit  oflicers  in  its 
Rampart  station. 

Connpiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


A  quk^  U^^ 
at  your  Bruin 


ODDOOiB 

Daily  Bruin  Classifieds 23-29 

Crossword  Puzzle 28 

Movie  Guide £1 


Friday,  October  6, 2000 

www.dailybniin.ucla.edu 


Mum 


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DAILY  BRUIN 


Editor  in  Owf :  Christine  Byrd 
Managing  Editor:  Michael  lltsdii 

News  Editor:  Barbara  Ortutay 
Assistant  News  Editon:  Dharshani 
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Women 


_  Court«y  of  Unrversity  Arcfwves 

Two  Studious  male  students  occupied  this  Dykstra  room  in  the  1960s.  Back  then, 
the  top  floors  of  the  hall  were  fenrwle-only,  while  men  lived  In  the  bottom  six. 


By  OhwdiMii  OhaniuwanlcM 

Daily  Bruin  S«nk>r  Staff 

For  most  students,  college  means  free- 
dom, but  during  the  early  1960s,  a  female 
student  returning  to  the  residence  halls  past 
midnight  on  a  school  night  would  be  locked 
out  of  her  dorm. 

In  1963,  then  associate  dean  of  students 
Nola  Stark  Cavette  defended  this  stringent 
policy  of  "closing  hours"  for  women  resi- 
dence halls  in  the  February-March  issue  of 
UCLA  Alumni  Magazine. 

Lockout  "doesn't  mean  what  it  says  -  at 
least  not  on  the  UCLA  campus,"  she  wrote. 
"If  a  girl  returns  aAer  closing  hours,  she 
finds  the  door  locked  and  must  ring  the 
doorbell  for  the  late  proctor." 

According  to  Cavette,  whose  official  title 
was  "Dean  of  Women,"  a  judicial  board 
then  considered  the  reason  for  tardiness, 
either  dismissing  the  case  or  issuing  her  a 
warning. 

During  this  time  of  separating  the  sexes 
and  strict  curfews  for  women,  Clarence 
Dykstra  Hall,  completed  in  1959,  became 
the  nation's  first  co-ed  dormitory  in  I960. 

For  people  in  the  UCLA  community,  the 
integration  marked  a  momentous  occasion. 
"Many  just  wanted  to  try  it,"  said  1962 
alumna  Gloria  Jacobs.  "They  thought  the 
time  had  come  and  that  it  would  be  good  for 
women's  rights." 

Although  Jacobs  initially  disapproved  the 
concept,  she  said  many  people  on  campus 
approved  it. 

"California  has  always  been  the  trendiest, 
always  changing  things,  for  the  most  part  for 
the  better,"  Jacobs  said,  "Everyone  wanted 
to  be  part  of  that  lifestyle." 

Before  Dykstra  Hall  was  built,  UCLA 
only  ran  Mira  Hershey  Hall,  an  all-female 
residence,  because  most  students  commuted 
to  school  and  did  not  need  accommodations. 
Others  wishing  to  live  near  campus  found 
housing  in  fraternity  and  sorority  houses  and 
privately  owned  residence  halls,  according 


to  the  UCLA  General  Catalogue  of  1954-55. 
For  women,  living  in  these  establishments 
meant  supervision  even  away  from  their  par- 
ents. 

Robert  Robinow,  who  graduated  in  I960, 
recalled  that  lock-out  policies  stifled  many 
sorority  members'  freedom. 

"We  grew  up  with  that  «ystem,"  he  said. 
"But  we  were  a  little  bit  opposed  to  it 
because  my  wife  lived  in  a  sorority." 

To  avoid  having  to  break  curfew, 
Robinow's  wife  would  spend  the  weekends 
with  his  family. 

During  the  1960-1961  academic  year, 
Dykstra,  originally  meant  to  house  only 
men,  began  to  accept  women  because  of  a 
lack  of  rooms  at  Hershey  Hall,  hinting  at 
future  liberties  for  college  women. 

But  integration  did  not  mean  living  next 
door  to  male  neighbors.  In  its  second  year  of 
operation,  women  only  occupied  the  top 
three  floors  of  the  building  while  men  lived 
in  the  other  six,  according  to  the  1961  UCLA 
Southern  Campus  Yearbook. 

Although  the  idea  of  living  in  the  same 
building  as  men  stocxl  out  as  a  revolutionary 
idea,  women's  floors  were  designed  similar 
to  sorority  houses  at  the  time,  according  to 
Alan  Hanson,  director  of  residential  life. 

Sporting  such  names  as  Argo,  Valhalla 
and  Manhattan  Houses,  each  women's  floor 
in  Dykstra  participated  in  floor  sports,  com- 
petitions and  other  activities,  including  floor 
government,  and  went  to  proms. 

While  enjoying  this  social  gala  and  togeth- 
erness similar  to  a  sorority  house,  women  liv- 
ing in  Dykstra  also  found  some  of  the  same 
restrictions,  including  the  lock-out  proce- 
dures. 

"This  was  based  on  a  very  old  model, 
probably  a  sorority  concept,"  Hanson  said. 
"It  had  a  negative  effect  in  several  ways." 

Although  women  had  curfews,  men  could 
come  and  go  as  they  pleased. 

"They  were  applying  a  different  standard 
to  men  than  women.  The  reason  it  looked 
especially  odd  was  that  in  Dykstra,  men 


*    ■  ■>  —  ■  ■— *■. 


RisinHinHMM^oraen  residents 
in  ihXmmeWHKLA  to  be  the  first 
in  the  nation  to  create  a  co-ed  dorm 


Every  other  Friday,  The  Bruin  will  highiigbt  sodai,  politi- 
cal and  sdentific  advancements  that  ori(^bated  at  UOA 
and  set  standards  for  both  the  univers^  wi  the  nation. 


CATHFflMF  NM 

{left  to  right)  Micah  Ting,  Mark  Ahn  and  ThKy  Lou  laugh  in  one  of  Dykstra's 
triple  rooms.  Residents  still  live  In  same-sex  rooms  but  rarely  segregated  floors. 


were  not  locked  out,"  Hanson  said. 

"We  wanted  to  make  some  changes,"  he 
added. 

With  the  changing  times  of  the  1960s, 
which  saw  much  advancement  in  civil  rights 
issues,  the  lock-out  procedure  at  Dykstra 
ended. 

Complete  integration,  where  both  men 
and  women  co-habited  the  same  floors, 
occurred  in  the  eariy  1970s,  Hanson  said. 

Students  can  still  live  on  same-sex  floors 
today,  but  it  is  not  a  requirement. 

Presently,  Dykstra  residents  continue  to 
occupy  the  40-year-old  building,  along  with 
the  added  noise  of  construction  and  over- 
crowded rooms. 


Carol  Vitali,  a  first-year  undeclared  stu- 
dent and  Dykstra  resident,  said  floors  con- 
tinue the  highly  social  traditions  started  in 
the  early  1960s. 

But  she  said  she  could  relate  little  to  the 
concept  of  sex-segregated  floors. 

"I  think  it  would  be  weird,  like  Catholic 
school  segregation,"  she  said. 

To  Vitali,  learning  that  Dykstra  was  origi- 
nally built  to  house  men  cleared  up  one  mys- 
tery, though. 

"That  explains  why  there  are  urinals  in  the 
girls  restroom."  she  said. 


With  reports  from  Barbara  Ortutay  Daily  Bruin 
Senior  Staff. 


c.       .        ^  .,  ,  ,  Coofte^yoTUniyersityArchrKes 

students  and  faculty  chat  over  coffee  in  a  Dykstra  Hall  lounge  in  the  eariy  '605 
Dykstra.  completed  in  1 959.  was  the  first  co-ed  residence  hall  in  the  nation. 


.•:,^--:Vr, 


4        RUi|iOdoker6^2000 


■i  >  »  « • 


.'iv : 


Od^  train  Nms 


ADMISSIONS 

Fiompagel 

university  and  community  coHeges  to 
work  together  more  than  they  have  in 
the  past.  Onkials  from  both  the  UC 
and  community  colleges  agreed  that 
they  would  have  to  work  together  to 
create  rigorous  programs  which  fulfill 
the  university  requirements. 

Both  community  colleges  and  the 
university  have  looked  favorably  at  the 
proposal.       •  ■.}•••-     -      -v 


"I  think  it  will  Improve 
the  quality  of  lower 
division  programs  in 

community  colleges." 

Paula  Lutomirski 

Institutional  Planning 


"We  welcome  it  with  open  arms," 
said  Cheryl  ArmsUong,  director  of  the 
transfer  center  at  Los  Angeles  City 
College.  "Since  we  already  have  exist- 
ing pre-major  and  general  education 
programs,  these  students  would  fit 
right  into  the  plan." 

Lutomirski,  who  noted  that  UCLA 
has  exceeded  expected  transfer  rates  in 
the  past  years,  also  supports  the  pro- 
posal. 

"I  think  it  will  increase  student  qual- 
ity and  improve  the  quality  of  lower 
division  programs  in  community  col- 
leges. It  looks  like  everyone  benefits,*' 
she  said,  adding  that  most  of  the  find- 
ings are  still  preliminary. 

The  dual  admission  plan  would 
make  UC  admissions  more  like  what 
they  were  in  the  '60s,  when  most  stu- 
dents entered  university  through  two 


JfCADDSA 

<|ualified  fbradmhsion  thioH(|l» 
liian'wmikltM  able  to  receive  conditior 
<DtTwminit]fC0|H|eKtheyMinibetDp4-i 


f  Path!    j 


souKtuciy 


MUSEUM 

Froinpagel 

Samahang  members  said  this  was 
their  way  of  recognizing  their  parents 
for  the  sacrifices  made,  for  example 
in  leaving  the  Philippines  to  come  to 
America. 

"We  wanted  to  make  students 
aware  that  our  heroes  are  also  our 
parents."  Baso  said.  "There  are  a  lot 
of  heroes  that  are  never  spoken  of" 

Because  this  was  the  first  time 
Samahang  had  sponsored  a  living 
museum,  board  members  said  they 
were  surprised  by  the  relatively  high 
turnout. 

She  said  they  had  expected  about 
40  students  at  the  event,  but  more 
than  60  attended. 

Board  members,  however, 
weren't  the  only  ones  surprised. 
Based  on  evaluations  visitors  filled 
out  aAer  walking  through  the  muse- 
um, Baso  said  most  students  com- 
mented on  how  they  weren't  expect- 
ing the  live  exhibits. 

''Because  it  was  so  visual,  maybe  it 
was  a  little  more  powerful,"  she  said. 


They  were  able  to  lee  history  first- 
hand." 

Students  who  attended  the  work- 
shop also  had  a  chance  to  sign  a  peti- 
tkxi  to  have  more  than  one  Ta^dog 
class  taught  at  UCLA.  Tagalog  is  one 
of  the  predominant  Filipino  lan- 
guages. 

"StudenU  come  to  UCLA  and 
expect  that  there's  a  class  available  to 
them,  but  there  isn't."  Quindara  said. 

Currently,  students  can  sign  up  for 
two  classes  focusing  on  the  Filipino 
community  through  the  Asian 
American  studies  department 

Arguelles  said  though  classes  are 
limited,  students  have  other  options 
for  learning  about  the  Filipino  com- 
munity, and  cited  Samahang  as  an 
example. 

"It's  great  the  student  groups  are 
initiating  programs  about  their  histo- 
ry and  their  culture,"  Argudies  said. 
"We  need  more  educational  support 
for  such  aaivities." 

For  more  information  about  events 
during  Pilipino  Anrterican  History 
Month,  call  Samahang  Pilipino  at  82^ 
2727. 


TERESA  woo 


year  institutions. 

Currently,  students  are  eligible  for 
UC  schools  by  ranking  in  the  top  4  per- 
cent of  their  high  school  class  or  in  the 
top  12.  S  percent  of  all  high  school  grad- 
uates statewide. 


Atkinson  proposed  the  plan  to 
maintain  the  viability  of  the  California 
Master  plan  for  Higher  Education, 
which  promises  a  high  quality  alTord- 
able  college  education  to  all  California 
high  school  graduates  who  seek  one. 


OGARETTES 

From  page  1 

Jerry  Mann,  director  of  the 
Student  Union  and  Student 
Support  Services,  said  there  is  cur- 
rently no  place  on  campus  that  sells 
cigarettes. 

He  said  there  was  no  pressure 
placed  on  the  SEAS  Cafe  to  stop 
selling  cigarettes,  even  though  it 
had  sold  tobacco  products  for  the 
past  10  years. 

"We  don't  have  anything  to  do 
with  them."  he  said.  "We  have  a 
couple  of  video  games  there  but 
other  than  that,  there's  no  connec- 
tion." 


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Kowalski  said  the  decision  to 
stop  the  sale  of  cigarettes  was  a  col- 
lective one  between  the  dean  of  the 
school  of  engineering  and  applied 
sciences,  A.  R.  Frank  Wazzan,  and 
students. 

She  said  the  store  waited  this 
long  because  tobacco  products 
were  a  major  source  of  income  for 
the  cafe. 

The  process  to  ban  cigarettes  at 
ASUCLA  facilities  10  years  ago 
was  similar  to  the  process  that  was 
carried  out  with  the  engineering 
department. 

"We  have  a  fairly  active  student 
majority  board  of  members  who 

SecCMMEms^pageS 


Chances 

are,  if  you 

walk  up 

these 

steps  you 

read 

the 

DAILY 
BRUIN 


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Running  mates  face  off  in  debate 


CANDIDATES:  Opponents 
present  personal  views 
on  issues  for  campaign 


ByBiigitltGratnbMng 

Th«  Associated  Press 


DANVILLE,  Ky.  -  Republican 
Dick  Cheney  and  Democrat  Joseph 
Lieberman  disagreed  firmly  but 
poUtdy  Thursday  night  about  military 
readiness,  tax  cuts  and  the  future  of 
Social  Security  in  a  gentlemanly 
debate  of  campaign  understudies. 

Sitting  a  few  feet  apart  around  a 
small  taUe,  the  vice  presidential  can- 
didates agreed  that  President 
Slobodan  Milosevic  should  give  up 
power  in  Yugoslavia  after  an  election 
loss,  but  both  opposed  the  use  of 
American  troops  to  force  him  out. 

In  a  debate  that  ranged  broadly 
over  campaign  issues,  Lieberman,  a 
two4erm  Connecticut  senator,  said 
Republicans  want  to  "raid  the 
Medicare  trust  fund  to  pay  for  their 
tax  cuts."  But  Cheney  said  there  was 
more  than  enough'  money  to  go 
around,  and  it  is  "totally  reasonable" 
to  give  relief  to  all  taxpayers. 

The  two  men  sparred  as  they  sat 
together  for  their  only  debate  of  the 
fall  campaign.  The  atmosphere  the 
was  far  more  relaxed  than  Tuesday 
night  when  presidential  candidates  A! 
Gore  and  George  W.  Bush  met  in 
Boston: 

Each  man  pledged  at  the  outset  to 
avoid  persona]  attacks.  Cheney  took 
that  one  step  further.  "I  promise  not 
to  bring  up  your  singing,"  he  said  to 
Lieberman. 

"And  I  promise  not  to  sing," 
Lieberman  replied  with  a  smile. 


The  Assocuird  Press 


S*n.  Joseph  Lieberman,  right,  and  Dick  Cheney  shake  hands 
before  their  vice-presidential  debate  Thursday  night. 


But  even  good-natured  comments 
reflected  the  widely  difTerihg  views  the 
two  men  hold  about  the  role  of  gov- 
ernment in  the  21st  century. 

Pointing  to  a  strong  economy, 
Lieberman  said  most  people  would 
say  they  are  better  off  than  they  were 
eight  years  ago.  "I  am  pleased  to  see 
from  the  newspapers  that  you're  bet- 
ter off  than  you  were  8  years  ago  too," 
he  said  to  Cheney,  a  reference  to  the 
multHTiillion  dollar  separation  pack- 
age the  former  oil  company  executive 
received  when  he  left  to  join  the  GOP. 


"And  I  can  tell  you,  Joe.  that  the 
government  had  nothing  to  do  with 
it,"  Cheney  said  -  a  remark  that  over- 
looked that  his  firm  had  received 
more  than  $2  billion  in  federal  con- 
tracts for  support  of  American  troops 
on  peacekeeping  missions. 

When  the  subject  turned  to  legal- 
ized gay  marriage,  the  rivals  respond- 
ed gingerly.  Lieberman  said  "my  mind 
is  open."  Cheney,  who  has  an  openly 
gay  daughter,  said  people  should  be 
open-minded  of  gays  but  the  issue  is 
"not  a  slam  dunk." 


Ten-year-old  Sabrin  Abu-Asy  is  comforted  as  she  weeps  over  death 
of  herl  2-year-oid  brother  Muhammad  Abu-Asy  in  the  Gaza  Strip. 

Violence  persists  despite 
tentative  Mideast  tiuce 


People  voice  desire  for  Milosevic's  exit 


PROTESTS:  Demonstrators  storm  capital,  overtake 
State-run  television  building,  set  fire  to  parliament 


ByMWiaSavk 
The  Associated  Press 

BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia  - 
I>emonstrators  took  control  of  par- 
liament, hurling  pictures  of 
President  Slobodan  Milosevic  into 
the  streets,  and  police  fought  protest- 
ers amid  clouds  of  tear  gas  Thursday 
as  hundreds  of  thousands  of  people 
swarmed  Belgrade  to  demand  that 
If 


Milosevic  accept  electoral  defeat. 

In  the  largest  anti-Milosevic 
protest  since  his  13-year  rule  began, 
ftres  burned  inside  the  parliament 
building  and  the  state-run  television 
headquarters,  one  of  Milosevic's 
propaganda  mainstays. 

Demonstrators  who  stormed  parlia- 
ment quickly  established  control  of 
the  building,  with  police  fleeing  or 
surrendering. 


Protesters  said  dozens  of  police  at 
the  state  TV  building  and  at  federal 
parliament  had  joined  crowds  taking 
control  of  both  buildings. 

The  takeover  of  the  TV  building 
came  after  shots  were  heard  outside 
its  studio.  A  bulldozer  apparently 
commandeered  by  demonstrators 
broke  into  the  building,  and  demon- 
strators poured  inside.  Police  fled 
out  the  back. 

Later,  both  state  television  chan- 
nels went  off  the  air,  leaving  TV 


CONFLICT:  Tensions  run 
high  as  rioting  leaves 
two  dead,  nine  injured 


By  Laura  King 

The  Associated  Press 

BETHLEHEM.  West  Bank  -  A 
fragile  U.S.-brokered  truce  appeared 
to  take  hold  Thursday,  as  Israel  rolled 
back  tanks  from  sensitive  positions 
near  several  West  Bank  cities.  But  one 
Palestinian  was  killed  in  a  clash  near 
the  West  Bank  town  of  Bethlehem, 
and  another  died  at  a  Gaza  Strip 
crossroads. 

In  both  the  West  Bank  and  Gaza, 


SMVUMSUVUWpagcU 


Committee  to  explore  cause 
of  Israeli-Palestinian  dashes 

SUMMIT:  As  religious  violence  continues  to  erupt, 
officials  separate  troops  and  call  for  investigation 


Byl 

The  Assodated  Press 

SHARM  EbSHEIK,  Egypt- After 
two  days  of  summit  talks  on  two  conti- 
nents. Secretary  of  State  Madeleine 
Albright  called  Thursday  for  a  fact-find- 
ing committee  to  investigate  the  causes 
of  deadly  Israeli-Palestinian  clashes. 

Moving  to  curb  the,  bloodshed, 
Israeli  Prime  Minister  Ehud  Barak  and 


Palestinian  leader  Yasser  Arafat 
ordered  their  military  commanders  to 
separate  their  forces  at  three  flashpoints 
in  the  weekiong  confrontation  and  there 
were  signs  of  compliance  on  the  ground. 
But  efforts  to  move  a  Paris  round  of 
trilateral  talks  to  the  region  failed  when 
Barak  reversed  a  decision  to  join 
Albright  and  Arafat  at  the  Egyptian 


See  mis,  page  12 


? 


ORLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 


NASA  calls  off  space 
shuttle  launch 

CAPE  CANAVERAL.  Fla.  -  NASA  called 
off  Thursday's  launch  of  space  shuttle 
Discovery  because  of  last-minute  concerns  over 
bolts  on  the  external  fuel  tank. 

Within  a  few  hours,  another  problem 
cropped  up,  this  one  involving  a  valve  in 
Discovery's  main  propulsion  system.  The  valve, 
which  controls  the  flow  of  fuel,  appeared  to  be 
shiggith.  To  replace  it  would  take  three  days. 

The  space  agency  aimed  for  a  Friday  night 
liftoff  but  strened  that  both  problems  must  be 
taived  before  Discovery  can  fly. 

This  lOOth  space  shuttle  flight  is  a  crucial 
•pace  station  constractioo  miision. 

'*We  think  it's  prudent  to  stand  down  for  a 
day."  said  shuttle  maiMger  Jamei  HaiMli.  "In 
other  wonb.  wc  do  not  want  to  fet 'fo  fever."' 

The  bolt  proUen  Mcuiied  Sept.  8  during 
tpace  tbaok  Athnlii*  launch  but  was  diaoov- 
acd  only  Wednesday. 


While  analyzing  ftlm  returned  to 
Earth  aboard  Atlantis  two  weeks  ago, 
engineers  noticed  that  one  of  the  three 
bolts  between  the  shuttle  aftd  the  exter- 
nal fuel  tank  did  not  retract  properly  eight 
minutes  into  the  flight.  Photog^phs  showed  2 
1/4  inches  of  the  14-inch  bolt  sticking  out  on  the 
tank. 

Engineers  reviewed  the  film  again  Thursday 
but  oouM  not  figure  out  what  happened.  So  the 
Discovery  countdown  was  halted,  just  before 
the  suut  of  ftiebng.  The  seven  astronauts  had  not 
yet  boarded  the  shuttle. 

Research  finds  no  harm 
in  fluoride  additive 

LONDON  -  The  first  csiamination  of  SO 
yean  ofresearch  on  the  safety  of  adding  fluoride 
to  drinking  water  found  no  evidence  of  harm, 
and  some  experts  said  the  frndings  shouk)  allay 
lingerini  fean  h  couU  cause  cancer,  octeopofvh 
sis  or  Down  syndrome. 


The  review,  published  this  week  in 
the  British  Medical  Journal,  involved 
214  studies  and  was  the  most  compre- 
hensive since  fluoridation  was  first 
introduced  in  the  United  States  after 
WortdWarlL 

Ruoride  opponents  dismissed  the  research, 
saying  it  ignored  some  studies  showing  adverse 
effects,  such  as  an  increase  in  bone  fractures 
among  the  elderiy,  and  did  not  account  for  fluo- 
ride from  other  sources. 

"This  is  not  the  last  word  on  fluoride."  said 
Paul  Connett,  a  professor  of  chemistry  at  St. 
Lawrence  University  in  New  York  and  a  fluori- 
dation opponent 

"This  is  a  superficial  look  and  you've  got  to 
put  this  in  the  context  that  we  can't  control  the 
dose.  You  have  to  test  the  fluoride  level  in  peo- 
ple's bones."  he  added. 

Woridwide.  more  than  360  million  people 
live  in  areas  with  fluoridated  water.  In  the 
United  States,  about  I4S  million  people  drink 
fluoridated  water. 


Ozone  hole  reaches 
population  center 

WELLINGTON,  New  Zealand  -  The  hole 
in  the  ozone  layer  over  Antarctica  stretched 
over  a  Chilean  city  when  it  ballooned  to  a 
record  size  last  month,  the  first  time  it  has 
reached  a  population  center,  scientists  said 
Thursday. 

Previously,  the  hole  had  only  opened  over 
Antarctica  and  the  surrounding  ocean. 

Citing  data  from  the  U.S.  space  agency 
NASA,  atmospheric  research  scientist  Stephen 
Wood  said  the  hole  covered  1 1.4  million  square 
miles  on  Sept.  9  and  10. 

For  those  two  days,  the  hole  extended  over 
Punta  Arenas,  a  southern  Chik  city  of  about 
120.000  people,  exposing  residents  to  very  high 
levds  of  ultraviolet  radiation.  Too  much  UV 
radiation  can  cause  skin  cancer  and  destroy  tiny 
plants  at  the  beginning  of  the  food  chain. 

Compied  from  Oaly  Bniin  wire  itporti 


T>i«  Associated  Press 


emotional  funerals  for  victims  of 
clashes  with  Israeli  troops  set  off  new 
skirmishes.  And  both  sides  braced  for 
the  possibility  of  large-scale  trouble 
on  Friday,  when  officials  feared  that 
noon  prayers  -  the  most  important  of 
the  Muslim  week  -  could  become  a  ■  ?; 
new  call  to  battle. 

One  of  Thursday's  two  deaths 
came  at  Netza^im  Junction  in  Gaza,  ^v 
the  scene  of  repe'ated  battles  as,v4^ 
Palestinian  mobs  have  besieged  a  lone     "  ' 
Israeli  outpost  that  guards  the  access 
road  to  a  Jewish  settlement.  At  least 
nine  other  Palestinians  were  hurt. 

The  ferocious  street  riots  that 
swept  the  Palestinian  lands  beginning 

SeeBMEUpageli 


6        MdqiOctabcr6.2000 


(My  Bruin  Ncurs 


STATE  &  LOCAL 


Hospital  staff  strikes  to  amend  contract 


LABOR:  While  workers 
hope  for  change,  center 
must  turn  away  patients 


By  Robert  JaMon 

The  Associated  Press 

Nurses  and  other  workers  struck  a 
major  public  hospital  Thursday  in  the 
most  dramatic  job  action*  yet  by 
47,000  Los  Angeles  County  employ- 
ees who  are  threatening  a  countywide 
strike  next  week  if  pay  demands 
aren't  met. 

The  one-day  walkout  forced  the 
Martin  Luther  King  Jr./Drew 
Medical  Center  to  send  new  trauma 
cases  elsewhere,  close  outpatient  clin- 
ics and  cease  many  other  services. 

Patients  and  their  relatives  com- 
plained about  not  getting  assistance 
while  nurses  on  a  picket  line  strug- 
gled with  the  issue  of  leaving  patients 
to  press  their  contract  demands. 

With  197  patients  in  the  hospital, 
the  walkout  sharply  illustrated  the 
stakes  of  a  possible  Oct.  1 1  strike. 
Earlier  walkouts  bit  mostly  paper- 
work functions  of  the  county. 

The  county  was  also  enduring  its 
20th  day  of  a  separate  strike  that  shut 
down  Metropolitan  Transportation 
Authority  buses  and  rail  lines  used  by 
450,000  people.  Talks  were  to  resume 
Thursday  evening  with  drivers  and 
management  still  far  apart.    ' 

At  the  medical  center  in  the  hard- 
scrabble  Willowbrook  territory 
between  Watts  and  Compton,  picket- 


State  board  endorses  rules 
to  control  water  pollution 


TheAs9ocimdn«is 

CMbcrt  Walts,  suffering  from  a  gunshot  vwund  to  the  ankle,  is  turned 
away  yesterday  at  the  Martin  Luther  King  Jryprew  Medical  Center. 


ing  nurses  marched  in  support  of 
contract  demands  that  include  a  IS. 5 
percent  raise  over  three  years  com- 
pared to  the  county's  offer  of  9  per- 
cent. 

"That  ain't  God's  way.  You  don't 
do  God's  children  like  that.  You  sup- 
posed to  help  the  sick.  That's  their 
job,"  said  Debbie  Foster,  41,  a  knee- 
replacement  patient  who  rolled  her- 
self in  a  wheelchair  past  chanting 
pickets. 

Foster  said  she  waited  hours  for 
attention  during  the  night. 

"1  had  to  walk  on  my  crutches 
back  and  forward  to  the  nurses'  sta- 
tion asking  about  my  medication  and 


they  didn't  do  it  until  about  2  o'clock 
this  rooming,"  Foster  said. 

The  walkout  began  at  midnight. 
Officials  said  65  percent  of  the 
assigned  day  shift  sUfT  did  not  report 
to  work,  including  93  percent  of  the 
nursing  staff. 

The  trauma  ward,  which  sees  the 
most  critical  cases  -  gunshots,  head 
wounds,  massive  injuries  -  stopped 
accepting  patients  and  diverted  them 
to  County-USC  Medical  Center  and 
other  hospitals.  The  emergency  room 
was  open  for  less  serious  cases. 

"It's  been  a  big  struggle  for  the 

- 

SccSmnS^pageS 


RUNOFF:  Regulations  aim 
to  reduce  oil,  pesticides, 
waste  in  storm  drains 


ByUonDradnMlh 

The  Assodated  Press 

The  state's  water-quality  board 
Thursday  approved  Los  Angeles- 
area  r\iles  that  require  de\dopen  to 
keep  polluted  rain  water  out  of  storm 
drains,  where  it  would  otherwise  foul 
the  ocean  and  possibly  sicken  beach- 
goers. 

The  Stote  Water  Resources 
Control  Board  eUminated  tome  ele- 
ments of  the  rules,  which  require  new 
developments  in  Los  Angdes  County 
to  treat  the  first  threoquaiten  oTan 
inch  of  the  rain  water  that  hits  their 
property,  or  to  design  their  structures 
ao  water  percolates  into  the  ground. 

Even  with  the  cuts,  offidals  with 
the  state  board,  the  Los  Angeles 
Regional  Water  Quality  Control 
Board  and  environmental  groups 
said  the  4^  vote  is  an  important 
endorsement  of  a  poUution-controi 
measure  that  they  expect  other 
regional  water-quality  boards  to  soon 
emulate. 

"They  did  carve  out  some  exemp- 
tions, but  the  big  picture  is  that  the 
state  of  California  has  put  its  stamp  of 
approval  on  a  significant  new 
approach  to  controlling  runolT  pollu- 


tion," said  David  Beckman,  an'  attor- 
ney for  the  Natural  Resources 
Defense  Council,  an  environmental 
group. 

"We  have  to  build  in  a  way  that's 
friendly  to  the  ocean,"  Beckman  said. 
"If  we  don't,  there's  going  to  be  some 
serious  trouble  in  the  future." 

The  rules,  which  will  take  effect  in 
February,  are  intended  to  tackle  the 
tainting  of  storm  water  by  a  host  of 
contaminants,  including  gasoline, 
motor  oil,  pesticides  and  human  and 
animal  waste. 

Another  concern  is  the  sheer  vol- 
ume of  storm  water;  the  amount  of 
precipitation  headed  for  the  ocean 
instead  of  Southern  California 
aquifers  grows  as  roofs,  concrete  and 
pavement  proliferate. 

Polluted  storm  runoff  makes 
coastal  areas  more  hazardous  for 
marine  life,  wildlife  and  people. 
Studies  have  indicated  beachgoen 
who  swim  near  storm  drains  risk  get- 
ting ailments  ranging  from  fevers  to 
chills  to  gastrointestinal  problems, 
although  the  long4erm  effects  of  such 
exposure  have  not  been  thoroughly 
studied. 

The  rules  apply  to  constriiction  or 
extensive  renovation  of  hillside 
homes,  housing  developments  with 
10  or  more  units,  comniercial  devel- 
opments of  100,000  square  feet  or 
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Daily  Bruin  News 


CIGAREHES 

Frompage4 

contributed  to  a  well  defined  social 
responsibility  policy,"  Mann  said. 

ASUCLA  expected  a  decrease  in 
revenue,  to  the  tune  of  $80,000  when  it 
decided  to  stop  the  sale  of  cigarettes. 

"The  $80,000  loss  was  from  ciga- 
rette sales  alone,"  Mann  said.  "Some 
customers  came  back  and  bought 
more  merchandise  because  of  the  dis- 
continuance." 

ASUCLA  ended  last  fiscal  year  $1.6 
million  below  expected  revenues. 

Felipe  LaM'ud,  assistant  manager 
of  the  SEAS  cafe,  said  sales  had 
dropped  significantly  since  the  ciga- 
rette ban. 

"A  lot  of  north  campus  students 
came  here,  they  would  be  disappoint- 
ed when  they  found  out  ther-e  were  no 
cigarettes  after  their  aerobic  work- 
out." he  said. 

Mann  said  he  doesn't  smoke  him- 
self and  that  he  is  glad  that  he  can  work 
in  a  smoke  free  environment. 

Some  students  and  faculty  support 
the  decision  made  by  the  engineering 
department  to  stop  selling  tobacco 
products. 

"I'm  glad  that  they  don't  sell  ciga- 
rettes anymore,  it  keeps  a  group  of 
allegedly  intelligent  people  from'  doing 
something  stupid,"  said  Glen  Glazer.  a 
graduate  student  in  computer  science. 


But  many  students  and  stafT,  includ- 
ing the  engineering  school  dean's  sec- 
retary, are  upset  with  the  decision. 

"Some  of  our  customers  did  not 
realize  that  cigarettes  were  not  being 
sold,"  said  Lauren  DeMore,  a  third- 
year  economics  student  who  works  at 
the  SEAS  Cafe.  "Its  frustrating  for 
people  to  go  to  Westwood;  I  think  a  lot 
ofthem  are  angry." 

One  in  four  American  aduHs 
smoke,  but  only  1 1  percent  of  college- 
educated  adults  indulge  in  cigarettes 
according  to  a  survey  released  yester- 
day by  the  Centers  for  Disease  Control 
and  Prevention. 

Some  students  would  like  to  see  cig- 
arette sales  back  on  campus  and  said 
the  new  inaccessibility  adds  to  their 
stress  levels. 

"Its  just  a  convenience  taken  away 
from  students  at  UCLA  -  I  think  it 
sucks,"  said  David  Jeong,  a  third-year 
computer  science  and  engineering  stu- 
dent. 

"If  they're  trying  to  get  people  to 
quit,  that  ain't  going  to  work,"  he  said. 

Mann  said  there  is  a  possibility  ciga- 
rettes will  come  back,  depending  on 
student  input. 

"It  is  a  legal  product  and  we 
respond  to  the  campus  climate.  If  stu- 
dents want  us  to  sell  cigarettes  then  we 
will  sell  them,"  he  said. 


BENJAMIN 

From  page  1 

Studies  student  at  UCLA 
was  in  the  audience. 

She  said  it  is  exciting  to 
see  her  mother,  who  has 
always  been  a  political 
activist,  run  for  public  office. 

After  her  speech 
Benjamin  answered  the 
question  of  one  audience 
member  who  -  despite 
pledging  her  support  for 
Benjamin  -  criticized  the 
Green  Party  for  failing  to 
adequately  address  race 
issues. 

"I  think  it's  terrible,  but 


the  question  is  what  are  you 
going  to  do  about  it?" 
Benjamin  said. 

Akilah  Monifa/ 

Benjamin's  campaign  press 
ofTicer,  stressed  the  impor- 
tance of  gaining  support 
among  college  students  and 
speculated  on  his  boss's 
chances  for  victory  in 
November.  ' 

"The  one  way  to  increase 
voter  turnout  is  to  reach  new 
voters,"  Monifa  said. 
"Statistics  show  that  15  per- 
cent of  people  don't  vote  at 
all,  if  those  people  voted,  and 
voted  for  a  third  party  candi- 
date, the  tide  would  certainly 
shift." 


With  reports  by  Marjorie  Hernandez, 
Daily  Bruin  Contributor.  • 


EDWAKOliU 

Medea  Benjamin  speaks  about  her  candidacy. 


STRIKERS 

v.  Frompage6        ■  -;  ''-'-^j^'.^^ ■'-',■': :'"'-:''■' 

people  who  have  stayed  on  at  work  and 
worked  16  hour  shifts."  said  John  Wallace, 
spokesman  for  the  Department  of  Heahh 
Services. 

Patients  coming  in  for  regular  checkups, 
minor  ailments,  diabetes  checkups  or  treat- 
ment of  chronic  illnesses  could  not  be  seen. 

Michelle  Davis  was  turned  away  from  the 
trauma  unit  when  she  tried  to  visit  a  friend 
who  had  been  shot  in  the  head. 

"They  said  there's  no  one  back  there  to 
help  us,"  Davis  said. 

Yet  she  was  sympathetic  to  the  strikers. 

"I  think  they  need  to  pay  the  people  what 
they  want  so  that  they  can  serve  the  people 
that  are  in  the  hospital,  'cause  there  are  peo- 
ple sick  here  and  dying,  and  there's  no  one 
there  to  attend  them,  there's  no  one  there  to 
help  them,"  Davis  said. 

Janine  Thornton,  42,  waited  in  the  lobby 
to  see  her  husband,  Kenry  Hutchinson,  30, 
who  was  robbed  and  shot  Monday  night.  She 
said  he  called  her  to  come. 

"He  just  kept  saying,  'I  need  you  up  there 
because  nobody's  seeing  about  me,'"  said 
Thornton,  a  lab  technician  at  a  private  hospi- 
tal. 

Thornton  said  she  saw  the  nurse  who  cared 
for  her  husband  out  on  the  picket  line. 

"I  can't  see  a  nurse  walking  out  on 
patients,"  she  said,  but  added.  "I'm  still  on 
their  side.  ...  Four  years  they  haven't  had  a 
raise." 


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,    12        Friday,  October  6, 2000 


Daly  BniJn  News 


TALKS 

from  page  5 

resort  town  of  Sharm  El-Sheik. 

Egypt  and  others  have  blamed  hard- 
line Israeli  opposition  leader  Ariel 
Sharon  for  the  chaos  that  began 
moments  after  his  visit  last  Thursday  to 
a  site  in  Jerusalem  that  is  sacred  to  both 
Muslims  and  Jews.  The  visit  sparked 
anger  among  Palestinians  who  began 
riots  that  led  to  deadly  clashes  with 
Israeli  troops. 

Albright  described  Sharon's  visit  as 
counterproductive  and  a  mistake.  She 
said  Barak  had  expressed  regrets  to 


Arafat  over  the  loss  of  Palestinian  lives 
in  ensuing  demonstrations. 


Israel  wanted  a  joint 

Israeli-Palestinian 

investigation. 


Working  to  end  the  violence  and 
restore  peace  talks,  Albright  called  for  a 
committee  that  could  "build  a  bridge 
between  where  we  are  and  where  we 
need  to  be." 

"There  should  be  a  fact-finding  com- 


mittee that  looks  at  causes  of  this  crisis, 
what  has  gone  wrong  and  how  we  can 
ensure  that  it  never  happens  again," 
Albright  said  after  the  talks. 

No  agreement  has  been  reached  on 
such  a  committee.  The  Palestinians  have 
called  for  an  international  investigation 
into  the  violence.  A  senior  U.S.  official, 
speaking  on  condition  of  anonymity, 
said  Israel  wanted  a  joiat  Jtfaeli- 
Piilestinian  investigation.     -  " 

In  Washington,  President  Qinton 
said  Albright's  talks  with  Arafat  and 
Barak  were  productive,  adding:  "The 
most  important  thing  is  to  stop  people 
dying  and  then  to  get  back  to  the  negoti- 
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From  page  5 

screens  black. 

Meanwhile,  clashes  spread 
through  the  streets  of  the  capital, 
which  echoed  with  the  sound  of  stun 
grenades  and  tear  gas  fired  to  break 
up  the  crowds.  Dozens  of  people 
were  injured,  according  to  witness- 
es, and  the  Beta  news  agency  report- 
ed that  "several  dozen"  were  admit- 
ted to  emergency  wards. 

The  melees  erupted  at  the  start  of 
a  huge  rally  the  opposition  called  to 
force  Milosevic  to  accept  electoral 


defeat  by  Vojislav  Kostunica  m  the 
Sept.  24  election.  Hundreds  of  thou- 
sands of  people  had  assembled  in 
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more  were  streaming  into  the  city. 

"The  people  are  trying  to  get 
their  country  back."  President 
Clinton  said  at  the  White  House. 
"We  believe  in  democracy.  ...  The 
opposition  candidate  obviously  won 
the  election." 

By  late  afternoon,  opposition: 
supporters  who  had  been  inside  the 
parliament  building  were  climbing 
through  the  windows  and  onto  the 
complex's  balconies,  waving  flags  as 
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October  20, 2000 


TheRobertJ. 
Stoller  Foundation 

Proudly  presents  the 
Annual  Robert  J.  Stoller 
Memorial  Lecture 

Dr.  Gil  Herdt 

Dr.  Herdt  is  Director  of  Human  Sexual  Studies,  Director  of 
the  Institute  on  Sexuality,  Social  Inequality  and  Healtti,  as 
well  as  Professor  of  Human  Sexuality  and  Professor  of 
Anthropology  at  San  Francisco  State  UniverBity.  Or.  Herdt 
a  Guggenheim  f^How,  and  William  S.  Vaughn  Fellow 
(1997-1998)  has  written  over  70  articles  and  25  t)ooks 
on  sexuality,  l)isexuality,  homosexuality  and  culture.  The 
Stoller  Foundation  is  certain  you  will  find  Or.  Herdt's    : 
lecture  fascinating.  It  is  titled: 

■niM  Magical  Age  of  10  and  the  Devetopment 

of  Sexual  Excttement  A  Lecture  in  Honor  of  the 

work  of  Robert  J.  Stdier" 


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The  Robwt  J.  Staler  Foundation  iB  a  non  prom 

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Monration  contact  meimindalOman.oom 


•  Admission  is  free 

•  Public  is  welcome 

•  Friday.  October  20, 2000 

•  8:00  p.m. 
•UCU--NPI  Auditorium 


ISRAEL  V 

From  page  5  :'  ' 

Sept.  28  have  claimed  at  least  68  lives 
and  injured  nearly  1.900  people,  near- 
ly all  of  them  Palestinian. 

Friday's    prayers    at    Al    Aqsa 
Mosque,  the  Jerusalem  shrine  at  the 
— -     center  of  the  current  outbreak  of  vio- 
lence, were  expected  to  be  particular- 
ly fraught  with  danger.  Weekly  ser- 
mons at  Al  Aqsa  often  consist  of  fiery 
calls  from  the  imam,  or  Muslim  cler- 
ic, to  defend  to  the  death  Arab  con- 
trol of  the  compound.  Islam's  third- 
holiest  site. 
;     J  A  visit  to  Al  Aqsa  last  week  by 
rightist  Israeli  politician  Ariel  Sharon 
set  olT  this  convulsive  bout  of  clashes, 
the  most  intense  and  sustained  fight- 
ing since  the  1987-93  intefadeh,  or 
Palestinian  uprising  against  Israeli 
military  occupation.  The  compound 
-  known  to  Jews  as  the  Temple 
Mount  -  is  also  Judaism's  most 
sacred  site,  and  Sharon  says  he  was 
defending  Jewish  rights  by  visiting  it. 
In  advance  of  Friday  prayers, 
Israeli  police  were  heavily  deployed 
in  Jerusalem  neighborhoods,  and  the 
nearest  hospital  to  Al  Aqsa  said  its 
staff  was  on  alert  for  potentially 
heavy  casualties.  Israeli  media  said 
authorities  were  considering  banning 
worshippers  under  35.  who  are  con- 
sidered to  better  fit  the  profile  of 
potential  rioters. 

Israeli  Prime  Minister  Ehud 
Barak,  returning  to  Israel  after  turbu- 
lent U.S.-brokered  talks  in  Paris, 
expressed  determination  to  halt  the 
fighting  and  get  the  battered  peace 
process  back  on  track. 

But  on  both  sides,  mistrust  and  bit- 
terness were  readily  apparent,  despite 
an  agreement  that  field  commanders 
would  seek  to  exercise  restraint. 

"Yesterday  in  Paris,  we  continued 
to  turn  every  stone  on  the  way  to 
peace,  and  try  to  stop  the  violence." 
Barak  said.  "I  am  not  convinced  that 
at  this  moment  we  have  a  partner  for 
peace,  but  it  is  our  obligation  ...  to 
pursue  this  to  the  end." 

At  a  memorial  service  for  para- 
troopers slain  in  past  wars.  Barak,  a 
former  general,  said  "the  time  has  not 
yet  come  to  beat  our  swords  into 
ploughshares"  But  he  pledged  to 
"seek  any  way  to  bring  true  security 
and  peace  to  this  tortured  and  suffer- 
ing land." 

Later,  he  told  a  news  conference: 
"It  will  be  a  long  struggle.  There  will 
be  ups  and  downs."  A  statement  from 
his  office  said  Barak  sent  a  message 
to  about  100  world  leaders,  calling  on 
them  to  pressure  Palestinian  leader 
Yasser  Arafat  to  stop  the  violence 
and  return  to  the  path  of  negotia- 
tions. 

Arafat,  returning  to  Gaza,  was 
asked  whether  the  door  remained 
open  to  future  peace  negotiations. 

"We  hope  so. "  he  replied.  "But 
first  of  all.  we  have  to  stop  the  mas- 
sacres against  our  people  ...  against 
our  ^udents  and  youth  and  children 
and  iifomen." 

Tie  Palestinian  Cabinet  decided  to 
ask  tffe  U.N.  Security  Council  to  pass 
a  resdution  condemning  Israel. 

The  Security  Council  began  nego- 
tiations on  a  draft  resolution 
Thursday  condemning  the  violence 
committed  by  Israeli  security  forces 
against  Palestinians  and  calling  for  a 
cessation  of  hostilities  and  the 
resumption  of  peace  talks.  Malaysia 
formally  introduced  the  draft  on 
behalf  of  the  Non-Aligned 
Movement  of  mostly  developing 
nations. 

Despite  consistently  blaming  one 
another  for  the  carnage,  the  two  sides 
were  beginning  to  work  together  to 
contain  it. 

Israel  rolled  battle  tanks  away 
from  the  West  Bank  towns  of 
Ramallah.  Bethlehem  and  Nablus  on 
Thursday  in  an  efTort  to  calm  ten- 
sions. Although  the  army  had  not 
used  the  tanks  to  fire  on  rioters,  their 
deployment  on  the  very  edge  of 
major  Palestinian  population  centers 
had  deeply  alarmed  the  Palestinians 


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Next  week's  forum 

Does  Bush's  education 
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Friday,  October  6, 2000 


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Active  parenting  equals  more  literary  freedom 


David 
Rigsby 


BOOKS:  Challenging  a  children's 
series  due  to  elements  of  fantasy 
can't  solve  most  prominent  issue 

All  right,  as  embarrassing  as  this  might 
be,  I'll  admit  it.  Over  this  past  summer  I 
gave  in  to  temptation  and  actually  read 
"Harry  Potter  and  the  Sorcerer's  Stone,"  the 
first  installment  of  the  popular  children's  book 
series  by  J. K.  Rowling. 
The  only  reason  I  can 
give  as  to  why  I  started 
reading  the  book  was  that 
it  was  right  in  front  of  me; 
my  1 1 -year-old  sister  left  it 
out  on  the  coffee  table. 
But  I  can  give  many  rea- 
sons why  I  finished  the 
book.  The  most  important 
of  those  reasons  is  that 
Rowling  was  able  to 
accomplish  what  very  few 
authors  have  been  able  to 
do  for  me  recently,  and 
that  is  to  be  able  to  transport  me  back  in  time 
to  my  childhood. 

As  I  read  about  Harry's  adventures  at 
Hogwarts,  his  school  for  wizardry,  I  remem- 
bered the  imaginary  adventures  of  my  youth  to 
places  like  Oz,  Narnia,  Gotham  City  and 
Wonderland,  just  to  name  a  few.  But  my  story 
is  not  unique.  Over  the  past  year,  millions  of 
college  students,  adults,  parents,  grandparents, 
and,  yes,  even  children,  have  been  pouring  into 
libraries  and  bookstores  to  get  their  hands  on 
the  Harry  Potter  series.  Immediately  after 
reading  the  first  book,  I  was  convinced  that  the 
young  wizard  had  been  able  to  save  the  printed 
word  with  one  swoosh  of  his  magic  wand. 
Rowling  did  the  near-impossible  -  she  lured  a 
whole  new  generation  into  a  world  of  chapters 
and  subplots. 

My  interest  in  Harry  Potter  grew  so  much 

Rigsby  is  a  second-year  political  science  student 
who  encourages  Muggles  to  broaden  their  mirxis. 
You  can  reach  him  at  drigsby@uda.eda 


that  I  would  take  time  out  from  my  online 
clicking  and  page  turning  to  read  hype  articles 
about  the  author  and  the  popularity  of  the 
series.  One  article  that  I  came  across  was  from 
the  Associated  Press  (Sept.  19, 2000).  The  arti- 
cle focused  on  a  set  of  statistics  that  the 
American  Library  Association  released  just 
prior  to  the  20th  annual  Banned  Books  Week, 
which  ran  this  year  from  September  23-30.  The 
ALA,  the  American  Booksellers  Association 
and  the  American  Society  of  Journalists  and 
Authors  were  among  the  sponsors. 

Half  of  me  was  surprised  to  read  about  how 


CASf  Y  CROV»€A>aity  Brum 


the  Harry  Potter  series  had  topped  the  list  of 
books  that  parents  wanted  removed  from 
library  shelves  in  1999.  But  then,  the  other  half 
of  me  had  been  expecting  a  negative  backlash 
to  happen  sooner. 

Religious  groups  are  up  in  arms  because, 
apparently,  the  books  are  confusing  children's 
senses  of  what  is  real  and  what  is  not.  Now,  I 
thought  that  the  purpose  of  the  fantasy  genre 
was  to  stretch  our  imaginations  into  new 
dimensions.  Action  against  the  Potter  series 
has  already  been  taken  in  a  public  school  in 
Bridgeport  Township,  Mich.,  because  of  the 


', 'themes  of  witchcraft  and  wizardry."  <■■ 
The  AP  article  prompted  me  to  visit  the 
ALA's  Web  site  (www.ala.org).  At  the  Web 
site,  I  looked  over  the  list  of  the  100  books  that 
received  the  most  complaints  supporting  their 
removal  from  library  shelves  in  the  '90s.  On 
this  list,  the  Potter  series  ranks  48th.  Even 
though  the  ALA  refers  to  the  list  as  the  "Top 
100  Banned  Books,"  not  all  of  the  books  are 
actually  banned.  The  ALA  refers  to  the  books 
as  "challenged,"  which  is  just  an  attempt  to 
remove  or  restrict  materials.  Banning  is  an 
actual  removal  of  those  materials.  Even 
though  the  list  includes  books  for  the  old  and 
young,  children's  (and  teens')  books  took  most 
of  the  slots,  including  the  top  ten. 

Judith  Krug,  director  of  the  ALA's  Office 
for  Intellectual  Freedom,  reports  that  about 
five  percent  of  all  challenges  lead  to  a  book 
being  banned.  "Usually  when  the  rest  of  the 
community  hears  about  a  complaint,  it  speaks 
out  in  support  of  keeping  the  book,"  she  said 
in  the  article.  The  ALA  reports  on  their  Web 
site  that  more  than  5,000  complaints  were 
recorded  at  school  and  public  libraries  in  the 
19908.  The  number  of  complaints  against  listed 
books  has  decreased  slighUy  over  the  years, 
"because  a  lot  of  people  are  now  spending 
more  time  thinking  about  Internet  content," 
Krug  said.  Books  being  "sexually  explicit"  was 
the  most  common  objection  raised  at  libraries, 
followed  by  their  being  "unsuited  to  age 
group"  and  having  "occult  theme  or  promoting 
the  occult  or  Satanism."  Other  objections 
included  violence,  promotion  of  same-sex  rela- 
tionships, racism  and  anti-family  values. 

Some  of  the  books  that  made  the  list 
shocked  me.  "James  and  the  Giant  Peach"  by 
Roald  Dahl  was  ranked  50th,  and  it  remains 
one  of  my  favorite  books.  When  I  was  in  the 
fourth  grade,  Dahl  was  aWe  to  excite  my  imag- 
ination with  images  of  man-sized  insects, 
house-sized  peaches,  and  the  giant-sized  heart 
of  a  child.  So  what  if  James  was  a  mistreated 
orphan?  So  what  if  the  bugs  might  not  have 
gotten  along  all  the  time?  That's  what  made 
the  book  seem  real.  James  didn't  live  in  a  per- 


Sc«IKSItpa9c16 


LETTERS 


Security  concerns 
justified 

Your  recent  editorial  in  which  you  criti- 
cize UCLA  for  allowing  Iranian  foreign 
minister  Kamal  Kharrazi  to  speak 
("Forum  stifles  free  speech,"  Daily  Bruin, 
Viewpoint,  October  3),  was  grossly  out  of 
touch  with  the  reality  of  Iranian  politics. 

While  I'm  sure  you  didn't  know,  an 
interview  wiOi  Uie  protesters  would  have 
revealed  that  many  were  representative  of 
the  People's  Mujahedin  Organization  of 
Iran,  which  the  State  Department  identi- 
fies as  a  terrorist  organization. 

Your  claim  to  allow  these  guerrillas  to 
speak  at  the  forum  ignores  the  fact  that 
this  group  is  waging  a  battle  not  only 
against  the  Iranian  government,  but  also 
against  the  Iranian  people  -  as  exemplified 
by  their  recent  artillery  attack  that  wound- 
ed innocent  people.  Also,  the  Mujahedin 
has  claimed  responsibility  for  attempted 
assassinations  of  Iranian  government  offi- 
cials Thus,  to  claim  that  terrorists  should 
share  a  stage  with  an  elected  official,  sup- 
ported by  the  Iranian  people  and  not  by 


expatriates,  is  wrong  and  defies  all  logic. 

The  fact  that  the  Stale  Department 
labels  this  group  as  a  terrorist  organization 
and  that  the  Secret  Service  was  on  campus 
highlight  the  need  for  security  Freedom  of 
speech  is  an  inherent  right,  but  some 
deserve  to  have  their  rights  revoked. 


Logic  for  overturning 
decision  flawed 

As  a  freshman  on  UCLA's  campus,  I 
find  myself  nearly  overwhelmed  while 
walking  down  Bruin  Walk.  The  student 
activism  is  deariy  apparent  and  quite 
frankly,  was  one  of  the  deciding  factors  in 
my  choosing  UCLA  over  several  other 
academic  institutions. 

But  1  found  the  article  "Voter-approved 
fee  stalled  by  regents"  (Daily  Bruin,  News, 
October  2)  addressing  the  rejection  of 


voter-approved  fees  for  USSA  a  red  flag 
warranting  student  feedback  on  the  sub- 
ject matter  therein.  I  see  it  as  a  matter  of 
muffling  student  voices  by  smashing  the 
proverbial  piggy  bank. 

UC  deputy  general  counsel  Gary 
Morrison  lades  the  logic  needed  to  indoc- 
trinate me  with  his  arguments.  Essentially, 
Morrison  suggests  that  a  student  rights 
advocacy  group,  funded  by  a  consenting 
student  body,  should  be  forced  to  stress 
with  equal  conviction  why  those  very 
rights  should  be  suppressed 

An  analogy  would  be  to  ask  an  African 
American  group  on  campus  to  advocate 
white  supremacy.  Similarly,  to  ask  student 
organizations,  such  as  USSA,  to  promote 
both  sides  of  every  argument  defeats  the 
purpose  of  advocacy,  as  activism  is 
replaced  with  neutrality  How  Morrison 
can  justify  singling  out  USSA  from  other 
groups  who  also  promote  one  viewpoint 
remains  a  riddle  to  me.  I  know  contradic- 
tion when  I  see  it,  and  Morrison's  stand- 
point is  no  exception. 

MaraleMdMi* 

PsRlfcal  idMCC  m4  CMMMMicMiMS  StMiflS 


Don't 


Wl 


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it 


Write  us  at 
viewpoint®media .  ucla .  edu . 


ll^JW     ISj     OUOMII      «*"***«  »»»o««»curf»nt«vwrt  on  ej«npus 

Of  In  Hm  ivofM  at  large  or  writ*  a  mpora*  to 

TO  VIEWPOINT 


larg«,« 
MmatMng  that  you  hava  akMrfy  rtad  In  nw 
Bruin. 

•  E-mail  wbmtailons  to 
vtM«polni«madla.udaadu.  Ramcmbar  to 


copy  and  pan*  your  (ubmlHlon  Into  the  body 
of  iltt  filial  or  drop  off  a  hard  copy  of  your 
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Karckhoff  NaN).  cart  of  Jonah  Lalai. 

•  Apply  to  be  a  Vlawpolm  columnM  dur- 
ing WMu  7  and  •  of  aadi  quartar. 

■  Appty  to  bt  a  cartoonist  or  arti$t.  S«nd  an 


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VlwMpointaddratt. 

A  faw  ttiingt  to  ramamlMr: 

•  Al  tiAmlMiont  mun  Induda  your  namt, 
phona  numlMr  and  aMMon  wHtt  IXLA.  IT 
you  M  a  MudaiK,  Ihn  RMMl  atw  mduda  your 
student »  numbat  fiar  and  m^. 


■  Vour  facts  wM  ba  chccliad;  malcc  sura 
thay  ara  accurate. 

•  Vlawpoim  Is  not  an  advertising  space  for 
any  group  or  organmtloa  be  sure  to  have 
dearly  arUnMad  opMons. 

•  We  reserve  the  rtgtN  to  adk  tubmtalora 
for  clarity,  grammar  and  lenglh. 


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■'4.^*'i '. 


My  Brain  Vi«^pii« 


,  .  'f''a'!V- 


Fri%0ctobfre,2000       15 


Student  government  shows  signs  of  improvement 


USAC  Differences  offer 
opportunities  for  council 
to  compromise,  improve 

ByllanisiA}Mni  ""^       "v^ 

It  has  been  all  too  common  to 
expect  members  of  Dw 
Undergraduate  Students  Association 
Council,  our  student  body  govern- 
ment, to  clash  over  one  point  or 
another.  Whether  the  disagreements 
are  over  petty  differences  in  opinion 
or  well-substanti- 
ated concerns,         

they  usually  end 
up  escalating  to 
what  seems  to  be 
a  partisan 
impasse. 

The  meeting  I 
attended  had  its 
fair  share  of  dis- 
agreements as 

well,  as  council         

members  argued 
over  the  extent 

of  exposure  the  meetings  should  have 
to  the  student  body  through  the 
Daily  Bruin.  President  Elizabeth 
Houston  upheld  that  proceedings  in 
council  meetings  are  important,  and 
the  student  body  has  a  right  to  know 
what's  going  on  in  their  student  gov- 
ernment and  not  simply  its  results. 
Others,  though,  felt  that  it  would  be 
unhealthy  for  the  student  body  to  see 
headline  after  headline  of  council 
conflict. 

But  the  meeting  on  Tuesday  night 
was  slightly  different  from  what  has 
become  the  sad  norm,  despite  such 
disagreements  in  opinion.  At  this 

Ajami  is  a  tMrd^ear  psychoiogy  stu- 
dcfit 


meeting,  collaboration  from  all 
parties  was  eventually  shown, 
and  progress  was  made  which, 
however  shortly,  generated  a 
consensus  in  our  student  body 
government. 

I  won't  drone  on  about  the 
details  about  the  case;  instead, 
I'll  only  include  the  highlights. 
A  decision  on  who  should  be 
on  a  particular  committee  was 
being  made.  While  it  seemed  for 
a  while  that  another  partisan 
vote  would  conveniently  circum- 
vent the  president's  recommen- 
dations, and 
■^^■■■'~'"^'     while  tem- 
pers fiared 
for  a  good 
long  time, 
no  vote  was 
cast.  And 
then,  from 
the  disagree- 
ment the 
public  has 
——————      sadly 

seemed  to 
grow  accustomed  to  even  this 
early  on  in  the  year,  a  very 
strong  sign  of  collaboration 
enierged,  ik  both  sides 
managed  to  agree  over 
an  inclusive  alterna- 
tive that  would  sat 
isfy  everyone. 

My 
enthusi- 
asm over 

this  gesture  may  very  well  have  read- 
ers experiencing  two  very  different 
reactions.  Some  may  criticize  my  sur 
prise,  claiming  that  we  should  expect 
this  from  our  student  government 
anyway.  Others,  who  have  probably 
followed  the  last  election  dosdy,  will 
appredate  that  such  collaboration  is 
indeed  enough  to  make  even  the 


;    Cblfeiboration, 

promoted  by  virtually 

all  members  of  council, 

should  be  welcomed 

by  the  student  body. 


most  cynical  student  think  twice 
about  the  direction  in  which  our  stu- 
dent government  is  heading. 

To  the  flrst  group  I  say  this: 
However  idealistic  the  notion  of 
bipartisanship  in  student  govern- 
ment is,  it  has  not  been  shown  to  be 
anything  close  to  a  reality  in  the  past 
aeveral  months.  It  is  very  common  to 


expect  the  president's  recommenda- 
tions to  be  overturned  or  voted 
against  for  reasons  many  students 
would  criticize,  as  it  is  equally  cono- 
mon  to  expect  the  president  to  voice 
concern  over  the  current  climate  in 
student  government. 

Collaboration  then,  ultimately 
promoted  by  virtually  all  membere  of 


nOOenCK  ROXAS/CMy  Brum 


council,  should  be  welcomed  by  the 
student  body. 

It  does  not  mean  that  all  differ- 
ences have  been  set  aside  -  and  why 
should  they?  It  is  the  differences  and 
diversity  on  council  that  allow  for  the 
personal  growth  and  learning  of  indi- 


SccAMMlpageU 


Speaks  Out 


Recently,  third-party  candidates  sudi  as  Ralph  Nader  and  Pat  Buchanan  have  been  exduded  from  the  presidential  debates.  How  do  you  feel  about  this  issue? 


JoiwAdair 

Fourth-year 
Gxnmunicatiom 


Victoria  Higiitoim 

Second-yw 

English  and  poRtial  sdence 


"The  only  forum  that  the  candidates 
have  right  now  is  throu^  the  debates. 
And  cleariy,  their  monev  speaks  for  them- 
selves. Here  you  have  Nader  and 
Buchanan  who  need  to  get  their  views 
out,  but  they  don't  have  the  money  or  the 
publicity  I  think  it  is  a  bad  thing  that  they 
are  not  there  at  the  debates  to  introduce 
their  ideas." 


Caralyn  McCoy 

Fourth-year 
PoKtical  science 


"A  third-party  candidate  doesn't  have 
a  chance  because  they're  not  as  publi- 
cized as  everybody  else.  Plus,  they  don't 
have  similar  representation  in  the  Senate 
or  enough  support  to  get  electoral  votes 
like  the  major  parties.  I  think  that  they 
should  defmitely  be  included.  I  would 
vote  for  a  third-party  candidate,  but  I 
don't  think  they  have  a  chance." 


"I  think  our  country  would  be  a  lot  bet- 
ter if  we  had  a  third-party  candidate.  It's 
unfortunate  that  Ralph  Nader  and  Pat 
Buchanan  don't  get  to  speak  their 
(minds).  The  debates  would  give  them  a 
better  chance  of  getting  into  the  campaign 
legitimately.  We're  dominated  by  these 
two  parties  that  gravitate  towards  the  cen- 
ter; a  third  party  would  encompass  issues 
that  more  people  are  concerned  about." 


Ifecond-year 
Tobioiogy  and  molecular  genetics 


"I  think  all  third  parties  should  go  to 
hell  because  all  they're  doing  is  bother- 
ing us.  They're  coming  up  with  a  bunch 
of  campaigning  that  has  no  support; 
they  should  get  the  message.  I  think  that 
they're  a  complete  waste  of  time,  not  to 
mention  a  waste  of  money.  I'm  not 
going  to  vote  for  them." 


JocManho 

Fourth-year 

History  political  sdenct  socx>k)gy 


"I  love  third-party  candidates:  I'm  a 
Green  myself.  I  think  it's  unfortunate 
that  the  system  is  structured  as  such,  but  I 
think  it's  impossible  to  change.  People 
will  always  think  that  they've  wasted  their 
vote  on  a  third-party  candidate,  even 
though  it  is  important  that  their  views  get 
out  there.  They  bring  in  a  diversity  of 
opinion  that's  different  from  the  main- 
stream." 


JoimBofrfeii 

Computer  programmer 
Astronomy  department 


Td  like  to  see  the  third-parly  candi- 
dates like  Nader  and  Buchanan  includ- 
ed. If  there's  17  other  parties,  then  that 
would  be  too  many.  There's  a  lot  of 
things  that  the  two  major  candidates 
agree  on,  things  that  I  don't  approve  of. 
I'd  like  to  see  them  take  on  corporations 
a  little  more  since  they  have  too  much 
power.  Gore  and  Bush  are  not  addres»- 
ing  this  issue;  Nader  would." 


Speaks  Out  compiled  by  Jonah  Lalas,  Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff. 
Photos  by  Dave  Hill,  Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


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rkOMir 


UmlgrMd  •dhortah  fapmani  a 
mulority  opMon  of  the  tMly 
■nilnEdNorW  Bowd  AN  oMmt 
cotuinm.  Mtan  and  artwork 
wpfwni  tha  opMont  of  thtk 
auttwrs.  ^ 

AN  submittal  mataftal  mutt 
the     auHtor^     ctama. 


ragtttratian  rMimbar  or  affllia- 
tkM  «vlih  UOA.  Nanrn  wM  not 
b«  twtthhaW  aiKtpt  In  aMrwna 
casM. 

Tha  Iruln  compllat  with 
tha  Communication  Board's 
poJIcy  prohibWng  tha  publi- 
catton  of  arttda*  that  pa*patu- 
ai*  darogatory  cultural  or  ath- 


nk  ttaraotypa*. 

Whan  mMhlpla  author* 
submit  matarial,  soma  rtamas 
may  b*  kapt  on  flia  rathar  than 
pubUthad  with  tha  matarial. 
Tha  Bruin  rasarvai  tha  right  to 
adK  aubmlttad  matarial  ar>d  to 
datawnint  Hi  plactnant  In  tha 
paper.  AM  tubmhslons  bacoma 


tha  property  of  The  Bruin.  Tha 
Communications  Board  has  a 
madia  grievance  procedure 
for  resolving  complaints 
against  any  of  Its  publications. 
For  a  copy  of  the  complete 
procedure.  contact  tha 
PiihUratlont  nfflca  at  11  a 
KarckhoffHaN. 


-fv 


Iia'  I  -■^t^^- 


16   '  Fridiy,October6,2000 


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RIGSBY 

From  page  14 

feet  world;  we  don't  live  in  a  perfect 
world.  But  hey,  that  doesn't  mean 
that  we  still  can't  believe  in  a  little 
magic  now  and  then. 

The  article  gave  specific  reasons 
why  some  of  the  books  were 
removed  from  library  shelves.  In 
1997,  the  superintendent  of  the 
Marysville  Joint  Unified  School 
District  in  California  banned 
"Catcher  in  the  Rye"  "so  that  we 
didn't  have  polarization  over  a 
book."  Harper  Lee's  "To  Kill  a 
Mockingbird"  was  removed  in  1996 
from  an  advanced  placement 
English  reading  list  in  Lindale,  Tex., 
because  it  "conflicted  with  the  val- 
ues of  the  community."  "Scary 
Stories"  by  Alvin  Schwartz  was 
ranked  at  the  top  of  the  list.  One 
complaint  from  the  school  <listrict  in 
Campbell  County,  Wyo.,  said  the 
books  made  kids  believe  that 
"^osts  are  actually  possible." 


"To  Kill  a  Mockingbird* 

was  removed  because 

It  "conflicted  with  the 

values  of  the 

community." 


I  don't  understand  why  parents 
feel  the  need  to  go  after  literature 
when  it  conflicts  with  the  particular 
set  of  beliefs  that  they  are  instilling 
in  their  children.  Shouldn't  parents 
grasp  the  opportunity  to  discuss  the 
particular  book  with  their  child  and 
show  the  child  why  the  book  might 
be  objectionable,  or  "wrong?"  Betsy 
Heame,  in  "Choosing  Books  for 
Children:  A  Common  Sense 
Guide,"  writes,  "It's  a  lot  more 
effective  to  express  reasoned  opin- 
ions of  what  (children  are)  reading, 
than  to  hide  or  confiscate  books."  If 
we  confront  the  differences  between 
fantasy  and  reality,  and  compare 
one  belief  system  and  another  with 
our  children  when  they  are  at  a 
young  age,  aren't  we  making  it  easi- 
er for  them  to  undersund  what  they 
believe  in? 

I  wonder  why  it  is  that  parents 
are  more  willing  to  go  to  a  school 
board  meeting  and  complain  about 
a  book  than  to  sit  down  and  take  a 
more  active  role  in  their  child's  edu- 
cation by  discussing  schoolwork 
with  them.  And.  i  am  sensitive  to  sit- 
uations where  it  might  be  against  a 
child's  religion  to  read  a  ceruin 
book.  A  simple  solution  is  to  request 
an  alternate  assignment. 

Libraries  and  bookstores  across 
the  country  have  been  encouraged 
by  the  ALA  to  put  "banned"  chil- 
dren's  books  on  display  for  children 
and  parenu  to  see.  The  next  time 
you  have  time  to  do  some  recre- 
ational reading,  take  advantage  of  it 
by  reading  a  book  on  the  list.  Who 
knows,  it  might  be  your  last  chance. 


AJAMI 

FfompagelS  ,■ 

vidual  students  in  and  out  of  student 
government,  as  long  as  such  differ- 
ences are  addressed  in  a  healthy 
manner. 

What  this  collaboration  does 
mean,  though,  is  that  our  student 
government  is  capable  of  mobilizing 
together  for  some  causes.  It  means 
that^r  council  and  our  president 
are  capable  of  making  good-faith 
efforts  to  work  together  for  our  stu- 
dent body.  It  means  that  critics  and 
advocates  of  the  "she  vs.  them"  men- 
tality of  council  will  be  forced  to 


SMAMMIrlMgtl? 


t^m^fftm 


AJAMI 

From  page  16 

.-'. '  ■ .-' .'.^  .  ■  . '.  ■'^■ 
think  twice  before  making  assump- 
tions of  a  lack  of  willingness  from 
either  party.  And  it  also  means  that 

,  having  to  use  words  like  "sides"  may 

^someday  be  unnecessary. 

My  enthusiasm  and  praise  of 
council's  conduct  is  sincere,  but  cau- 
tious. 

One  sign  of  collaboration  does 
not  mean  that  all  members  are  guar- 
anteed to  be  overeager  to  work  with 
one  another.  But  several  members 
did  explicitly  state  that  dissension  in 
student  government  not  only  gives  it 
a  bad  image  and  is  hurtful  to  individ- 
ual council  members,  but  may  very 
well  hurt  the  student  groups  relying 
on  our  student  government's  suc- 
cessful function.  And  these  concerns 
arc  absolutely  legitimate. 

Many  students  have  lost  faith  in 
USAC  and  feel  that  the  majority  on 
council  is  simply  trying  to  control 
the  president,  and  many  students 
have  embraced  misconceptions 
about  both  parties,  successfully 
destroying  any  possibility  of  appreci- 
ating what  they  have  to  offer.  But  it 
is  my  hope  that  these  students  will 
not  give  up  on  our  student  govern- 
ment. Attitudes  do  seem  to  be 
changing,  and  an  increased  atmos- 
phere of  willingness  is  becoming 
apparent.    •  -.      - 


A  loss  of  respect  is 

hard  to  regain  from  a 

student  body  that  may 

be  cynical  about  the 

political  climate. 


If  you've  already  bought  into  a 
certain  generalization  about  one 
group  or  another  on  council,  I 
encourage  you  to  reconsider  it.  This 
goes  for  supporters  of  a  group  as 
much  as  it  does  for  its  critics. 
Question  where  you  heard  this  label, 
and  consider  that  perhaps  you  are 
not  as  well-informed  as  you  would 
like  to  believe.  Take  the  time  to  real- 
ly understand  and  appreciate  what 
individual  members  on  council  have 
to  offer  by  attending  their  otTice 
hours;  don't  just  focus  on  one  or  two 
of  their  actions  and  policies  and 
immediately  form  a  hasty,  mistaken 
generalization  about  what  sort  of 
people  they  are  and  what  motiva- 
tions they  have. 

I'm  not  sure  how  long  this  collab- 
oration wilt  last.  Ideally,  a  new 
precedent  has  been  set;  but  realisti- 
cally, my  cautious  optimism  and 
faith  in  council  may  very  well  be 
challenged  at  next  week's  meeting. 
This  singular  sign  of  working  togeth- 

Sr  is  so  welcomed  because  it  is, 
nfortunately,  rare  Let  us  hope  that 
't  can  occur  again,  and  perhaps  even 
sain. 

So  to  council  I  give  this  encour- 
agement, and  this  admonition:  you 
have  earned  new  respect  from  others 
and  myself  for  your  respectable,  rea- 
sonable decision  to  work  together,  as 
this  campus  and  all  its  students 
expect  you  to;  but  keep  it  up,  not 
only  for  our  sakes,  but  for  yourselves 
as  well.  Many  of  us,  as  you  very  sen- 
sibly acknowledged,  are  relying  on 
your  strong  function  for  our  activity. 

A  loss  of  respect  is  hard  to  gain 
from  a  student  body  that,  unfortu- 
nately, may  already  be  cynical  of  the 
political  climate  at  hand.  Again,  no 
one  expects  ideological  consensus. 
You  can  disagree  over  points,  as 
long  as  you  do  so  without  attack;  but 
if  partisan  politics  is  seen  again  in 
deliberations  and  decisions,  then 
despite  council  members'  insistence 
that  no  ulterior  motives  are  at  work, 
the  student  body  may  inflict  the 
greatest  possible  harm  on  both  you 
and  itself:  it  will  cease  to  care. 


MIy  Bruin  Viewpoint 


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:   :J  ^: :  .  ii::      Friday,0ctober6,2000 


-.'fc.  • 


In  Arthur  Miller's  classic  play,  Willy 

Loman  chases  the  American  Dream  until 

it  leads  to  the  'DeatlT^f  a  Salesman' 


ATimjntan  ThcMr* 


Brian  Dcnnchy  and  Elizabeth  Franz  reprise  their  Tony  Award-winning  roles  in 
the  50th  anniversary  production  of  Arthur  Miller's 'Death  of  the  Salesman. 


By  Barbara  M<fiiiir« 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff    '  .-         : 

Willy  Loman  thought  he  could  live  the 
American  Dream  -  the  ideal  that  anyone,  no  mat- 
ter what  stature,  race  or  gender,  can  accomplish 
anything  in  hfe. 

A  traveling  salesman  and  the  main  character  in 
Arthur  Miller's  "Death  of  a  Salesman,"  Loman 
viewed  the  American  Dream  as  something  to  hold 
onto,  to  strive  for,  to  look  forward  to,  and  to 
believe  in.  But  when  the  dream  and  its  false  reali- 
ties were  obliterated,  Loman  didn't  know  what  to 
do. 

In  the  Ahmanson's  new  production  of  "Death 
of  Salesman, "  Loman,  played  by  Brian  Dennehy, 
and  his  family  are  what  can  be  considered  the  "all- 
American"  family  He  has  two  sons,  Biff  and 
Happy,  played  by  Ron  Eldard  and  Ted  Koch,  and 
a  loving  wife,  Linda,  played  by  Elizabeth  Franz. 

As  a  young  family,  the  Lomans  were  content. 
Willy  was  a"  successful  traveling  salesman  and  his 
two  sons.  Biff  and  Happy,  loved  him.  BifTwas  the 
star  quarterback  of  his  high_s0hool  football  team 
and  had  three  colleges  already  scouting  him. 
Happy,  on  the  other  hand,  lived  in  his  brother's 
shadow,  never  really  being  recognized  by  his  faU>er 
-  but  like  his  nickname,  he  was  happy  nonetheless 

The  play,  however,  Ukes  place  quite  a  few  years 
later.  When  Willy  is  60  years  old  and  is  a  failing 
salesman  who  has  to  borrow  $50  from  his  neighbor 
every  week  just  to  get  by.  The  audience  learns  of 
the  family's  good  old  days  through  flashbacks  that 
Willy  begins  having  when  Biff  returns  home  from 
the  West. 

Biff  never  graduated  from  high  school,  never 
ended  up  going  to  college  and  has  freeloaded 
around  since  he  leA  home.  He  jumps  from  job  to 


job,  which  is  difficult  for  Willy  to  deal  with  because 
of  his  idealization  of  the  American  Dream.  Willy 
wants  his  eldest  son  to  become  a  success  in  life, 
making  good  money. 

When  Biff  comes  home.  Willy  can't  stand  what 
he's  turned  into,  in  part  because  he  knows  he  is  par- 
tially to  blame.  A  series  of  almost  psychotic 
episodes  in  which  Willy  relives  the  good  and  the 
bad  moments  of  his  past  follows. 

Dennehy,  a  Tony  Award-winner  for  his  perfor- 
mance as  Willy,  is  nothing  less  than  intense.  His 
intonations,  his  facial  expressions  and  his  hunched- 
over,  exhausted  body  language  all  speak  the  hope- 
lessness and  tragedy  of  Willy's  story.  Franz,  also  a 
Tony  Award-winner,  is  equally  spellbinding. 

By  the  end  of  the  play,  not  only  are  the  charac- 
ters tired  of  the  emotional  roller  coaster  they  are 
on,  but  the  audience  members  feel  the  exhaustion 
as  well. 

The  performances  are  all  equally  striking.  The 
audience  feels  hate  when  Biff  geu  angry  at  his 
father  for  not  letting  him  ever  finish  a  sentence, 
and  sorrow  for  Linda  as  she  is  constantly  playing 
referee  between  her  two  sons  and  her  husband. 

The  set,  like  the  acting,  is  one-of-a-kind  With 
multiple  rooms  which  are  turned  and  moved  on 
and  off  the  stage,  Uie  audience  is  Uken  from  the 
kitchen  to  a  local  restaurant  in  seconds. 

Directed  by  Robert  F»n$,  also  a  Tony  Award- 
winner  for  this  show,  dils  performance  of  "DeaUi 
of  a  Salesman"  marks  the  50th  anniversary  of  the 
play's  production.  This  was  Miller's  third  play, 
written  when  his  was  only  33  yean  old  and  has 
since  changed  the  course  of  American  theater.  It 
was  the  first  of  its  kind  and  remains  a  unique  das- 
tic. 

"Death  of  a  Salesman"  has  aJso  won  the  Tony 
Award  for  Best  Revival  of  a  Drama  and  it  won 


Ron  EMard  (left)  and  Brian  Dannchy  star  in  "Death  of  a  Salesman,"  which  is  playing  at  the 
Ahmanson  Theatre  Performing  Arts  Center  in  downtown  Los  Angeles  through  Nov.  5. 

Miller  a  Pulitzer  Prize,  a  Tony  Award  and  the  New 
York  Drama  Critics  Circle  Award  when  it  was  first 
written.  It  is  an  amazing  tale  of  a  man's  endless 


struggle  up  Uie  social  ladder,  only  to  eventually  fall. 

Though  a  dark  ending  may  prove  hopeless,  U»e 
irony  of  the  tale  lies  in  that,  even  in  his  darkest 
hour.  Willy  sUU  can't  give  up  his  grasp  on  the 
American  dream  and  neither  will  the  audience 
aAer  seeing  this  play. 

By  the  end,  it's  uncertain  what  is  real  and  what 
can  be  believed.  For  Willy,  it  was  always  the 
American  Dream.  He  believed  in  it  so  much  that 


even  his  own  family  began  to  lie  to  each  other  and 
to  themselves. 

Willy  turns  out  to  not  be  the  only  "fool"  who 
believes  in  this  ideal  of  American  society,  and  in 
the  end,  he  isn't  the  only  oiivwho  is  going  to  be  let 
down. 


THEATIR:  'Death  of  a  SaleafUn'  is  pUyk>g  at  the 
Ahn>«nson  Theatre  in  dovfntown  Los  Angeles 
through  Nov.  5.  For  ticket  pricing,  show  dates  aixi 
time  and  information,  call  (213)  628-2772  or  go  to 
www.TaperAhmanson.com . 


Cho  celebrates  s^lf^Gceptance^^^ 


FILM:  Comedian  hopes  to 
encourage  young  women 
to  confront  weight  issues 


ByAngdaSalazar 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Margaret  Cho  defies  ail  boundaries. 

In  her  concert  film,  "I'm  The  One 
That  I  Want,"  Cho  explores  many  of 
the  issues  that  have  affected  her  life. 
From  hi^  school  expulsion  to  drug 
addiction  to  eating  disorders,  Cho  talks 
frankly  about  what  she  has  learned. 

"It's  really  a  universally4oved  film 
because  it  deals  with  things  that  every- 
body can  relate  to.  It's  all  about  self- 
love  and  self-esteem  and  sdf-rdiance  in 
the  face  of  adversity,"  Cho  said  in  a 
recent  interview. 

She  explained  that  the  film  is  told  in 
the  language  of  stand-up  comedy,  but 
takes  on  serious  topics  such  as  racism, 
lookism  and  sexism,  and  appeals  to  a 
wide  audience. 

She  feels  the  film  is  especially  impor- 
tant for  teenage  and  college-age  giris 
because  of  the  messages  it  sends  about 
body  image. 

"(It's)  really  an  issue  for  me,  talking 
about  weight  and  talking  about  the  pol- 
itics of  weight  and  looks  and  how  we 
are  viewed,"  Cho  said. 

Her  personal  experiences  with  such 
issues,  starting  at  a  young  age,  are  what 
supplied  her  with  the  material  for  the 


film.  •■'=-.;:••••■■  \^:  -■■ 

At  16,  Cho  began  doing  stand  up 
comedy,  mainly  because  of  the  trials 
she  was  facing  at  home. 

"I  was  a  really  bad  student  because  I 
was  rebelling  against  my  parents. 
(They)  didn't  want  me  to  be  a  per- 
former and  that  was  always  my  truest 
desire,"  Cho  said. 

After  being  expelled  from  her  San 
Francisco  performing  arts  high  school 
for  juvenile  delinquency,  Cho  was  left 
without  the  support  of  her  family  or 
friends. 

"I  started  doing  stand-up  because  I 
had  no  choice  but  to  follow  my  dreams. 
1  was  forced  to  do  exactly  what  1  want- 
ed to  do  because  I  destroyed  the  rest  of 
my  life  and  that  was  it  for  me,"  Cho 
said. 

She  quickly  achieved  success  in  the 
stand-up  comedy  circle,  and  was  given 
the  opportunity  to  do  her  own  televi- 
sion show.  The  short-lived  "All 
American  Giri"  boasted  the  first  Asian 
American  family  on  TV.  But  disputes 
with  executives  of  the  show  led  to  its 
eventual  cancellation. 

"It  was  an  incredibly  harrowing 
experience,  being  this  person  that's  not 
really  represented  by  Hollywood  ... 
dealing  with  executives  and  with  race 
and  gender  and  wei^t  issues,"  Cho 
said. 

The  show's  difficulties  were  as 
much  personal  as  they  were  profes- 

SMai0^pigc21 


Margaret  Clio's  concert  film,  "I'm  the  One  that  I  Want",  chronicles  her 
rise,  fall  and  recovery  during  and  after  the  airing  of  her  sitcom. 


Fraternity  hosts  Arthritis  Foundation  benefit 


AID:  Event  will  feature 
live  music,  food,  prizes 
donated  by  merchants 


By 

Daily  Bniin  Senior  Staff 

Although  many  people  might  think 
of  arthritis  as  a  minor  ailment  suffered 
exclusively  by  the  dderiy,  it  affects  a 
much  more  significant  part  of  the  pop- 
ulation. Forty-three  million  Americans 
suffer  from  any  of  120  forms  of  arthrn 
tis,  including  some  300,(XX)  children 
under  the  age  of  18.  Although  it  is  a 
problem  that  afflicts  millions,  few  peo- 
ple really  know  the  true  nature  of  the 
ailment. 

On  Saturday,  UCLA  alumnus  Josh 
Covitt  is  organizing  a  charity  benefit 
for  arthritis  awareness  at  the  Theta  Chi 
house  at  UCLA,  All  proceeds  will  be 
donated  to  the  Arthritis  Foundation 
and  to  Joints  in  Motion,  a  team  of  vol- 
unteers who  plan  to  raise  additional 
money  by  running  in  this  year's  Dublin . 
Marathon  in  Ireland. 

"Theta  Chi  was  cool  enough  to  host  " 
the  benefit  for  free,"  Covitt  said. 
"Everyone  else  wanted  to  charge 
$S00."  Although  Theu  Chi  will  host 
the  evening,  the  event  is  not  a  fraternity 
party.  All  proceeds  go  to  the  Arthritis 
Foundation. 

"Josh  first  approached  me  with  this 
idea  over  the  summer,"  said  Theta  Chi 
president  Dana  Jackson,  a  fifth-year 
English  student.  "It  sounded  like  a 
good  idea,  a  great  time  for  a  great 
cause." 

The  alcohol-free  event  will  feature  a 
variety  of  free  food  as  well  as  live  enter- 
tainment for  a  tax-deductible  cover 
charge  of  S 10.  All  food  and  door  prizes 
wtn  donatsd  by  loeal  wefehants;  with 


night  will  go  to  the  Arthritis 
Foundation  through  the  Joints  in 
Motion  Team. 

"Local  Westwood  merchants  have 
been  reafly  great,"  Covitt  said.  "A  cou- 
ple weeks  ago  things  were  pretty  low. 
We  were  all  playing  phone  tag,  but  we 
finally  got  in  touch  ar)d  now  every- 
thing's coming  together.  Piapa  John's 
and  Don  Antonios  were  kinid  enough 
to  provide  food.  Trader  Joe's  donated 
insane  amounts  of  water  and  chips. 
That  was  a  relief;  we  have  lots  of  pizza, 
but  what  are  people  going  to  ^k?  It's 
goingtobeaiealsiiMpsbord:* 


BJ's  and  Tower  Records,  are  also 
involved,  donating  gift  certificates  for 
the  raffle.  Also  involved  are  Pavilion's, 
Westwood  Brewing  Co.,  Starbucks, 
Breadstiks,  Baja  Fresh,  In-N-Out, 
Stan's  Donuu,  Nathan's  Bagels, 
Digital  Playground  and  Native  Foods, 
among  others. 

Guests  who  pay  $15  at  the  door 
receive  both  entry  and  a  raftle  ticket 
($20  value).  The  grand  prize  is  a  week- 
k)ng  vacation  to  Palm  Springs,  Florida, 
although  the  winner  may  exchange  the 
ticket  for  an  equivalent  trip  to  Las 

VciiB,  Ai  town  (H  Uie  Bahamu. 


EftCA  PlNTO/0»i)y  Bfum 


involved,"  said  Covitt,  "We  pushed  the 
date  back  until  after  school  started,  so 
that  we  could  get  more  students  to 
conne.  It's  eariy  in  the  quarter,  there's 
no  football  game,  it's  the  perfert  time. 
It's  a  win-win  situation." 

Besides  an  all-you-can-eat  buffet, 
entertainment  comes  courtesy  of  a  full 
lineup  of  local  bands.  Rock  band  FL 
will  perform,  as  will  Max  the  Cat, 
whose  sound  is  a  mix  between 
Counting  Crows,  Live,  and  the  Dave 
Matthews  Band.  Local  band  Kara's 
Flowers,    frequent   players    at    the 


no  overhead,  all  proceeds  from  the         Other  local  businesses,  Kke  Subway,         "We  want  to  get  UCLA  people 


Sm  MmminS^  page  22 


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«  '4    1     :•  . 


20       Friday,  October  6, 2000 


Daifjr  Bruin  Arts  A  EntertainmcM 


Screen 


Univefial  Piaures 

Robert  DeNiro  and  Ben  Stiller  star  in  the 
new  comedy  "Meet  the  Parents." 

"Meet  the  Parents" 

Starring  Robert  DeNiro  and  Ben  Stiller 

Directed  by  Jay  Roach 

Every  super-villain  needs  a  trusty  critter  to 
help  him  carry  out  his  evil  deeds  and  to  com- 
fort him  when  his  plans  don't  work  out  perfect- 

ly- 

Just  as  Austin  Powers'  archenemy  Dr.  Evil 
had  a  hairless  kitty  named  Mr.  Bigglesworth, 
Jack  Byrnes  (Robert  DeNiro)  of  "Meet  the 
Parents"  has  a  longhaired  Himalayan  named 
Jinx.  Together  (though  Jinx  does  so  unknow- 
ingly during  a  supposedly  routine  visit)  the  two 
work  to  destroy  Greg  Focker  (Ben  Stiller)  and 
Pam  Byrnes'  (Ten  Polo)  perfect  relationship. 

Unsuspectingly,  Greg  agrees  to  go  on  the 
trip  with  the  hopes  of  asking  good  ol'  dad  if 
he'll  approve  of  Greg's  desire  to  marry  Pam. 
Unfortunately  for  Greg,  Jack  is  not  just  a  run- 
of-the-mill  father.  In  actuality,  he  is  a  retired 


CIA  agent  whose  former  job  involved  per-  !: .  ' 
forming  psychoanalysis  on  suspicious  individu- 
als within  the  agency. 

Little  does  Greg  know,  he  is  about  to  be  put 
to  the  test  of  his  life  and  completely  fail.  From 
practically  burning  the  Byrneses'  house  down 
to  flooding  the  septic  tank,  Greg  completely 
embarrasses  himself  in  front  of  the  parents  and 
friends  of  the  woman  he  wants  to  marry. 

Jack's  protective,  fatherly  attitude  is  utterly 
unnerving  as  he  proceeds  to  watch  every  move 
Greg  makes,  from  his  trips  to  the  bathroom  to 
his  score  on  the  MCAT.  Who  would've 
guessed  that  meeting  the  parents  could  be  such 
a  trial?  From  the  start,  Greg  makes  a  horrible 
impression  when  he  admits  to  liking  dogs  bet- 
ter than  cats,  and  his  relationship  with  Jack 
goes  downhill  from  there. 

The  plot  of  the  almost  urban-legend-like  - 
story  gets  somewhat  out  of  hand  as  Greg  con- 
tinually flops  with  Pam's  family,  but  the  mis- 
takes he  makes  and  the  damage  he  causes  are  a 
riot.  Bringing  the  audience  to  an  especially  har- 
monious laugh  was  a  scene  in  which  Greg  acci- 
dentally gives  Pam's  sister  a  black  eye  during  a 
"friendly"  game  of  water  volleyball. 

The  entire  movie  is  full  of  such  comedic 
moments  and  it's  no  wonder,  considering  the 
movie  comes  from  the  director  of  "Austin 
Powers,"  Jay  Roach.  From  the  amazing  cat 
Jinx  who  knows  how  to  pee  in  a  toilet,  to 
Greg's  name  (whose  pronunciation  strongly 
resembles  a  well-known  epithet),  "Meet  the 
Parents"  makes  for  a  successful  spoof  on  a 
familiar  dreaded  event,  as  well  as  satirizing  a 
few  other  facets  of  society,  such  as  the  airport. 

Greg  is  unbelievably  accident-prone 


..throughout  the  film,  which  has  viewers  ques- 
tioning why  Pam  even  likes  him,  but  makes 
"  Meet  the  Parents"  a  great  movie  to  see  for 
those  looking  for  a  laugh.  v:'\  ='».%; 

:^'-■v.;■^■•^^■>•■v^., Barbara  McGuire 
..  ^■•'    .•'■'.■:v^-   -"^■- ■■■;  .     Rating: 8 

Two  Family  House" 

Starring  Michael  Rispoli  and  Kelly 

Macdonald 

Directed  by  Raymond  Felitta       ...        -: 

Dreaming  the  impossible  dream  has  never 
been  so  laughable  and  inspiring  at  the  same 
time. 

Buddy  Visalo  (Michael  Rispoli)  is  a  '50s 
visionary  who  lives  in  Staten  Island  with  his 
disgruntled  wife,  Estelle  (Katherine  Narducci). 

You'd  be  disgruntled,  too,  if  your  husband 
endlessly  plunged  your  life  savings  into  failed 
money-making  schemes.  After  less-than-suc- 
cessful  stints  running  a  painting  company,  a 
pizza  business  and  then  a  limo  service,  Buddy 
decides  to  buy-a  two  family  house,  where  he 
and  Estelle  will  live  upstairs  while  they  convert 
the  downstairs  to  a  neighborhood  bar. 

A  talented  singer.  Buddy's  gift  goes  unap- 
preciated. After  passing  up  his  one  chance  at 
the  big  time,  he  decides  that  the  perfect  place 
to  relive  his  days  as  an  entertainer  would  be  at 
his  very  own  bar. 

Buddy  dreams  of  sweet  success  after  years 
of  failing,  but  once  again,  his  plans  are  foiled. 
He  is  taken  by  surprise  when  he  finds  unwant- 
ed tenants  in  the  upstairs  apartment.  Pregnant 
Mary  O'Neary  (Kelly  Macdonald)  and  her 
alcoholic  husband  Jim  (Matt  Servitto)  prove 


that  they  aren't  going  to  leave  the  premises 
without  a  fight. 

Just  as  his  dreams  are  beginning  to  fall  far- 
ther out  of  reach.  Buddy  finds  the  missing  link 
to  his  vision.  A  stark  contrast  to  his  pessimistic 
wife,  Mary  offers  Buddy  something  that  he  jias 
never  had  before  -  someone  who  believes  in 
him. 

After  Jim  abandons  Mary  and  her  newborn 
baby.  Buddy  helps  Mary  find  a  little  apart- 
ment. A  very  unlikely  love  story  ensues,  and  an 
already  convoluted  tale  takes  even  more  twists 
and  turns. 

Buddy's  determination  and  ambition, 
despite  all  the  bumps  in  the  road  to  realizing 
his  vision,  easily  endear  him  to  Mary,  as  well  as 
to  the  audience.  Seeing  him  rehearsing  his 
stage  act  in  front  of  a  mirror  or  performing 
"Papa  Loves  Mambo"  in  the  bar  are  definite 
highlights  of  the  film. 

Capturing  Buddy's  vibrancy  as  well  as  the   ■ 
rich  sounds  of  the  period,  the  movie's  sound-    1 
track  provides  a  wonderful  complement  to 
many  of  the  most  evocative  scenes  in  the 
movie.  The  John  Pizzarelli  Trio  provides  mov- 
ing renditions  of  classics  like  "I'm  Confessing" 
and  "Wouldn't  Trade  You." 

With  an  emphasis  on  simple  story-telling. 


••V  ••  ■;' 

SeeSaiKNSCHIE,pa9«22 

^[PJMrtiwiewsirtattdoniKaleoftjJ^^B 
Mptime               ptoyiinw             II^^H 

JOYCE  CHdhlSPRK 

iM/ji/  :Si 


Where  it  matters  most. 


As  one  of  the  vwrkfs  leadng  dversified  tectvwiogy  companies  we're  breaking  new  ground  In  evety- 
thing  from  defense  and  commercial  electfonics»  and  business  aviation  and  special 
mission  aircraft  As  a  Raytheon  employee,  you'll  contribute  to  the  development  of  exciting, 
revolutionary  technology  designed  to  make  life  better,  easier,  and  safer  throughout  the  work). 
Such  as  our  STARS  air  traffic  control  system.  And  our  avwrd-winning  Mij/jtSig^f"*  technotogy. 

But  it  all  starts  with  you.  Your  creativity.  Your  knowledge  and  innovation.  And  enthusiasm 
about  the  future  In  return,  we  offer  exceptional  training  and  professional  development  oppor- 
tunities. A  supportive,  down  to-carth  work  environment.  And  inaedible  benefits  mcbding  flexi- 
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We  have  a  lot  to  tell  you  about  Raytheon  and  the  exciting  opportunities  we  have  available. 
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Raytheon  Company^  Attn:  National  Staffing  Data  Center,  P.O.  Box  66024«,  MS-201, 
Dallas,  TX  75266.  U.S.  Citizenship  may  be  required.  We  are  an  equal  opportunity  employer. 


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Check  out  our  Website  at  WWW.rayjollS.COIIl/CanipUS  for  further  information  including  a  calendar 
of  recruiting  events.  At  Raytheon,  we  strive  to  be  the  emptoyer  of  choice  for  a  diverse  workforce  by  atuacting,  retaining,  and 
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Bringing  technology  to  the  edge 


Raytheon 


M)rBn*)  Arts  AEMMtakMNCflt 


Friday,  October  6, 2000       21 


Band^  debut  an  all-around  success 


MUSIC:  A  Perfect  Circle 
has  long  history  behind 
the  'overnight  sensation' 


By  Chris  Moriates 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


There  are  many  difTerent  paths  to 
the  forefront  of  the  music  industry. 
Some  musicians  work  local  club  cir- 
cuits for  years  before  becoming 
"overnight  stars"  and  some  hit  it  big 
while  still  attending  high  school,  but 
Billy  Howerdel  took  a  path  that  is  truly 
unique.  While  his  new  hard  rock  band, 
A  Perfect  Circle,  has  erupted  onto  the 
music  scene  at  an  astonishing  pace, 
Howerdel's  success  was  a  long  time  in 
the  making. 


Keenan  ...got  down  to 

the  bare  bones  of  his 

feelings  on  this  album. 


Virgin  Records 

A  Perfect  Circle,  a  new  hard  rock  band,  showcased  their  talent  in 
San  Diego  and  Los  Angeles  earlier  this  nr^onth. 


As  the  lights  exploded  and  the  see- 
through  black  curtain  dropped  to  fully 
reveal  the  band  during  the  climax  of  the 
show's  opening  song,  "MagdaJena," 
the  majority  of  the  crowd  Tilling  up  the 
arena  at  UCSD  was  unaware  where 
this  powerful  band  actually  originated. 
Sure,  most  of  them  knew  lead  singer 


Maynard  James  Keenan  and  his  origi- 
nal band  Tool,  but  what  they  didn't 
know  was  that  the  catalyst  of  the  band 
was  the  bald,  mellow  guitarist  in  the 
comer,  Billy  Howerdel. 

Howerdel  fought  his  way  into  the 

music  industry  any  way  he  could, 

working  as  a  guitar  technician  for 

many  bands,  like  Guns  n'  Roses, 

Smashing  Pumpkins,  and  Tool.  All  the 

while  he  maintained  his  vision  of  being 

the  one  who  remains  on  stage  when  the 

curtain  rises.  He  wrote  and  recorded 

the  songs  found  on  A  Perfect  Circle's 

successful  debut,  "Mer  de  Noms," 

(translated  as  "Sea  of  Names")  minus 

the  vocals,  which  later  came  courtesy  of 

his  friend,  Keenan. 


"Hearing  Billy's  music,  I  just  had  to 
sit  down  and  clear  my  head  and  listen  to 
where  it  takes  me,"  explained  Keenan 
when  asked  to  talk  about  his  approach 
to  writing  the  songs  on  "Mer  de 
Noms."  Keenan  said  that  he  aban- 
doned all  the  books  and  just  got  down 
to  the  bare  bones  of  his  feelings  on  this 
album,  instead  of  employing  his  usual 
less  emotional,  more  intuitive  "writing 
from  a  left-brain  function." 

While  the  album  is  full  of  hard-rock- 
ing, guitar-driven  music,  the  live  show 
incorporates  the  music  with  lighting 
and  stage  props. 

The  atmosphere  of  the  concert  was 


$eeaiKLE,|M9e22 


From  page  19  ;.     ;\:^ 

sional.     '■'       1  ''  - 

"The  executives  of  my  show 
thought  that  I  was  too  overweight  to 
play  the  part  of  myself."  Cho  said. 
"I  became  incredibly  anorexic  and 
was  hospitalized.  Since  I  was  so 
focused  on  my  weight  I  couldn't 
really  focus  on  the  comedy." 

After  "All  American  Girl" 
ended,  Cho  became  depressed  and 
addicted  to  drugs  and  alcohol. 

"I  was  so  hungry  I  had  to  have 
something  to  take  the  edge  off  but 
there  was  nothing  that  I  could  eat 
and  I  felt  like  I  was  dying,"  Cho 
said.  "I  really  needed  something  to 
make  me  feel  better  and  I  fell  in  love 
with  this  rock-and-roll  fantasy  of 
being  a  touring  stand-up  comedian 
and  being  addicted  to  drugs  and 
alcohol." 

Through  her  film  and  tour,  Cho 
has  finally  begun  to  heal  and  con- 
front her  problems  in  a  positive  way, 
letting  all  her  frustrations  out  and 
hoping  to  help  others  with  theirs. 

"I  think  this  film  is  a  great  way  to 
find  healing  because  we  are  seeing 
somebody  on  screen  that  has  been 
through  it  and  is  really  talking  about 
it,"  Cho  said.  "I  think  weight  issues 
are  incredibly  shameful  for  women 
to  talk  about." 

To  ensure  that  her  message 
reaches  as  many  young  people  as 
possible,  Cho  is  visiting  college  cam- 
puses as  part  of  her  film  tour. 

"To  really  recognize  (body 
image)  as  a  political  issue  is  what 
I'm  concerned  about  when  I  go  into 


Hype- 

Cho  hopes  to  reach  women 
with  topics  like  weight  issues. 

different  universities,"  Cho  said. 
"When  you  feel  bad  about  your 
body  ...  you  are  going  to  be  much 
less  likely  to  report  sexual  harass- 
ment or  ask  for  a  raise  or  do  what- 
ever is  going  to  require  you  to  be 
strong.  There  is  going  to  be  hesita- 
tion and  in  that  moment  of  hesita- 
tion so  much  political  power  is 
going  to  be  gained." 

Currently  Cho  is  working  on 
completing  her  memoir,  also  titled, 
"I'm  The  One  That  I  Want,"  which 
is  due  out  next  June.  She  would  like 
to  continue  using  the  film  as  an  edu- 
cational tool  in  universities. 

FILM: 'I'm  The  One  That  I  Want" 
shows  toni^t  at  the  Mann  Four 
Plex,  located  1050  Gayl^  Ave.  in 
Westwood.  For  show  times  call 
(310)208-7664. 


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SCREENSCENE 

From  page  20 

the  narrative  fs  sometimes  less  than 
engaging.  Serious  matters  of  misce- 
genation and  adultery  are  treated 
with  so  much  ease  that  they  are 
often  reduced  to  mere  plot  vehicles. 

Nevertheless,  the  love  story  rings 
true  as  an  old-fashioned  "Romeo 
and  Juliet,"  with  the  Irish  and  Italian 
communities  colliding  in  the  late 
'50s. 

All  the  chaos  that  takes  place 
under  one  roof  provides  a  good 
laugh,  but  any  dreamer  will  revel  in 
the  film's  poetic  ending  -  an  impos- 
sible dream  is  only  a  mattear  of  find- 
ing the  love  and  perseverance  to 
make  it  possible. 

Emilia  Hwang 
Rating:  7 

"The  Broken  Hearts  Club  -  a 
romantic  comedy" 
Starring  Dean  Cain  and 
Timothy  Olyphant 
Directed  by  Greg  Berlanti 

"The  Broken  Hearts  Club  -  a 
romantic,  comedy"  delivers  exactly 
what  its  title  implies.  There  are 
numerous  dramatic  finales,  plenty  of 
passionate  inceptions  and  an  abun- 
dance of  laughs. 

Not  to  mention,  the  film  is  led  by 
an  ensemble  of  Hollywood  heart- 
breakers.  Leading  the  cast  is  Dean 
Cain  as  Cole,  the  gorgeous  actor 
who  habitually  breaks  up  using  audi- 
tion monologues. 

The  movie,  however,  is  not  your 
typical  romantic  comedy  The  story 
focuses  on  the  the  personal  struggles 
of  a  group  of  gay  men  living  in  Los 
Angeles. 

Dennis  (Timothy  Olyphant),  a 
West  Hollywood  photographer,  is 
about  to  transition  into  his  30s.  His 
life  takes  a  heavily  introspective  turn 


as  he  examines  the  dynamics  of  his 
relationships. 

After  celebrating  his  28th  birth- 
day, Dennis  realizes  that  his  casual 
relationships  aren't  satisfying  him 
anymore.  He  decides  he  needs  to 
look  for  the  right  person  -  someone 
to  share  his  mornings  and  Karen 
Carpenter  with. 

Told  from  a  gay  perspective,  the 
movie  celebrates  the  highs  and  lov 
of  friendship,  exploring  the  chal- 
lenges of  relationships  through  unk 
versal  themes  of  jealousy  and  guilt. 
You  don't  have  to  know  that  an 
OCT  is  short  for  "obviously  gay 
trait"  to  enjoy  this  thoughtful  and 
light-hearted  romance. 

Though  much  of  the  humor  is 
related  to  gay  culture,  the  film  has  a 
wide  appeal,  offering  a  comedy  that 
deals  with  serious  issues  relating  to 
family  and  friends. 

Sharp  characters  caught  in  their 
everyday  interactions  are  easily  cap- 
tivating. Cain  plays  Cole  with  grace- 
ful ease,  making  it  look  easy  to  be 
beautiful.  His  charm  is  evident  in  a 
priceless  smile  that  allows  him  to  get 
away  with  being  a  villainous  heart- 
breaker. 

Andrew  Keegan  is  convincing  as 
the  especially  sweet  and  inexperi- 
enced "Newbie."  A  recently  out  gay 
man,  Keegan's  character  is  destined 
for  heartbreak  and  must  rely  on  his 
friends  to  help  him  through. 

John  Mahoney  gives  another 
memorable  performance  as  Jack,  the 
paternal  figure  of  the  group,  whose 
acquired  wisdom  through  the  years  is 
evident  even  when  he's  in  drag. 

Directed  by  Greg  Berlanti.  co- 
executive  producer  of  Dawson's 
Creek,  the  film  has  just  as  much  self- 
analysis  and  self-conscious  banter  as 
the  teen  drama. 

For  all  of  us  destined  for  heart- 
break, join  the  club. 

Emilia  Hwang 
Rating:  9 


Frompage21 

defined  by  the  small  toudies,  such  as 
the  mid-show  placement  of  candles 
around  the  stage  by  Keenan  and  the 
bursts  of  bright  lights  contrasting 
with  the  dark  setting. 


The  music  df  A  Perfect 
Circle  has  gained  its 
own  status  ...as 'the 

shape  of  rock  to  come.' 


The  music  of  A  Perfect  Circle  has 
attracted  a  great  deal  of  attention. 
Beginning  as  what  many  have 
described  as  "Maynard  from  Tool's 
side  project,"  the  music  of  A  Perfect 
Circle  has  gained  its  own  status, 
becoming  regarded  by  "Guitar  One" 
magazine  as  "the  shape  of  rock  to 
come." 

The  first  single  from  "Mer  de 
Noms,"  the  hard-rock  "Judith,"  with 


its  soaring  guitars  and  vocals,  has 
invaded  the  airwaves  of  many  popu- 
lar radio  stations,  including  Los 
Angelo|^ownKROQ. 

Perhaps  this  eruption  of  populari- 
ty has  come  too  fast  for  a  band  whose 
members  are  used  to  being  more  in 
the  shadows  than  being  mainstream 


rock-'n'-roll  heroes. 

Keenan  all  too  wittingly  admitted 
this  fact  at  the  show,  stating  ever-so- 
bluntly,  yet  with  a  touch  of  mocking 
sarcasm,  to  the  crowd.  "That's  it,  we 
don't  have  that  many  songs.  You 
guys  made  us  popular  before  we  had 
time  to  write  any  more." 


Although  Maynard  James  KMnan  from  Tool  is  one  of  the  members 
of  A  Perfect  Circle  (pictured),  they  are  completely  separate  projects. 


ARTHRITIS 

Frompagcl9 

Westwood  Brewing  Co.,  appears,  and 
comedy  musicians  The  Bicycling 
Mariachis,  famous  for  their  extrava- 
gant grand  finales,  perform  song  and 
spoof 

Joints  in  Motion  is  a  group  of  peo- 
ple who  have  dedicated  themselves  to 
raising  $4,200  each  for  the  Arthritis 
Foundation  and  running  in  the  2000 
Dublin  Marathon  on  Oct.  30  in 
Ireland. 

-Josh  has  been  just  great,"  said 
Director  of  Campaign  Development 


Krista  Conti,  "We  suggest  that  people 
interested  in  fund-raising  just  run  let- 
ter-writing campaigns,  but  Josh  has 
done  letter-writing,  yard  sales,  and 
much  more.  His  energy  is  what  we 
look  for  in  this  sort  of  program." 

The  Arthritis  Foundation  is  a 
nationwide  organization,  with  eight 
branch  offices  in  California,  dedicat- 
ed to  supporting  research  and  educa- 
tion on  arthritis,  and  improving  the 
quality  of  life  for  arthritis  sufferers. 
The  foundation  runs  numerous  other 
programs,  including  Aqua,  a  water 
exercise  series,  and  a  Big  Bear  camp 
retreat  for  children  with  arthritis. 

Covitt  was  inspired  to  pursue 


arthritis  fund-raising  by  his  mother,  an 
arthritis  sufferer,  to  whom  Covitt  ded- 
icates all  his  efforts. 

Covitt  has  been  tireless  in  organiz- 
ing the  benefit.  Although  today  is  his 
22nd  birthday,  he  has  been  too  busy 
with  the  event  to  make  any  plans.  "111 
probably  just  skip  it,  and  just  pretend 
that  the  Saturday  festival  is  my  party," 
he  joked. 

"You  can't  get  a  better  value,"  said 
Covitt,  "We  plan  to  give  everyone 
their  money's  worth." 

The  benefit  takes  place  at  UCLATheta 
Qv  house,  663  Gayley  Awe,  on  Oct  7, 
from  730  pjn.  to  1  a.m. 


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Army  ROTO  may  not  be  a  fraternity  or  sorority,  but  at  times  it  can  feel  like  one.  After  all,  you'll 
find  the  same  kind  of  teamwork,  camaraderie  and  friendship.  Plus,  you'll  get  to  do  challenging 
stuff  like  this  that  can  help  make  you  tougher,  mentally  as  well  as  physically.  Confe  talk  to  us  at 
tfie  Army  ROTC  department.  We  won't  rush  you.  :  < 

ARMY  ROTC   Unllke  any  other  college  coqtto  yoax^n  take. 

Contact  >!aJor  Berry  at  ^-825-7381 

4 


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2200 

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2600 

Wan  led 


1100 

Campus  Happeninns 


THE  LICLA  School  o(  Nursing  Is  scheduled 
for  accreditation  site  visit  by  the  Commission 
on  Collegiate  Nursing  on  Oct  30,  31,  and 
Nov  1,  2000.  The  puWic  is  invited  lo  attend 
the  site  visit  and  express  their  opinion  on  tfie 
Iwccalaureate  and  masters  degree  pro- 
grams For  further  Info,  contact  Eloise  Luera 
310-825-5884. 


SMOKERS  EX-SMOKERS  AND  NON- 
SMOKERS  in  good  healtfi,  at  least  18  years 
of  age,  wanted  for  UCLA  research  study. 
Subjects  will  be  paid  up  to  $120  tor  2  testing 
days.  Call  Or  Rich  Olmstead  at  310-478- 
3711  9xt.443l9,  leave  message. 

SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH,  18-45,  want- 
ed for  nicotine  research  study  administered 
by  UCLA  Both  heavy  and  occasional  smok- 
ers needed.  Participants  will  be  paid  up  to 
$395  for  four  visits.  Call  Richard  Olmstead  at 
310-312-0565,  leave  message. 


ADOPTION 


Baby  is  our  dream.  We  can  provide  love&se- 
curity.  All  expenses  paid.  Attomey  involved. 
Confidential.  Call  Gina  &  Frank.  888-676- 
1995. 


SOLAR  ENERGY 

Experimenters  Needed.  Direct  many  mir- 
rors at  various  objects.  Spectacular  dis- 
plays?High  temperature  physics  studies 
galore?  Call  Edward  Vbndegrfftred- 
dievanOpactMll.net 


Fraturnities  •  Sororities 
Clubs  •  Student  Groups 

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fto  Salat  taqulTMl.  FindraMig  dalai  are  flWng  4iuicUy, 
to  cat  lodml  Contact  CMpMkmdriMrlcam  al 
SZ3-»M.ar«iiK 


1800 

Miscollaiu.'oiJs 


WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60+  w/kyphosis 
(fonward  bending  of  spine)  needed  for  re- 
search program  investigating  wfiether  Yoga 
can  improve  kyphosis.  Study  being  conduct- 
ed by  Gail  Greendale.  MD  in  the  UCLA  Dept. 
of  Medk:ine.  Please  call  310-794-9055. 


2300 

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BROKEN  HEARTED  COUPLE  SEEKING 
Caucasian  egg  donor  Up  lo  $15,000.  Previ- 
ous donors  wek»me.  858-554-oe88  or  E- 
mail:  susanpiacel  OhotmaU.oom. 


3000 

Books 


FANG-LUPUS.COM 


3^00 

Computers/Software 


TOSHIBA  TECRA  8100  laptop.  P3  600  Mhz, 
14. r  TFT.  256  Ram.  16.8  GB  HD.  5  mos.  oW 
w/receipt.  3  year  on-sHe  no  fault  warranty. 
$4600.  310-338-0688 


3500 

Fiiriiitiirc 


NEED  TWO  TTCKETS  for  tXJLA  vs. 
football  Game.  Call  310-572-1958 


use 


ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-campus  &  on-line  financial  sen/ices 
source  for  students,  faculty  &  staff.  Visit  us  at 
Ackerman  A-4eval,  on-Une  at  www.ucu.0fg  or 
can  310-477-6628. 


EGG  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 

wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

$5,000 

^    CauMirna  (818)  832-1494    ^ 


2000 

Personals 


NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT. Sale*  affordable'  effective*  visit  us  at 
www.flgureplus.com  1-888-603-9800  Dis- 
tributorships are  available. 

PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
year  oM  females  with  adventurous  and  open 
minded  spirits  wtx)  want  to  expartd/explore 
their  sexuality  through  nude  modeling  Free 
prints  for  nKxlellng  time  Call  Robert  at  310- 
463-5896  robidOatt  net 


21 OO 

Rtn;rnalional  ActJvHi<?s 


VAMPIRE  Live  Actton  Role  Playing  game! 
Call  David  909-338-4621  or  visit  www.geoci- 
tles.conVLAbyNlght.  Games  every  other  Sat 
night.  beginningl0/7A)O. 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


EARN  $$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  (he  com- 
mon cold.  Male/female  l8-55yre.  oM,  non- 
smoker,  no  asthma  history.  Limited  availat)il- 
Ity.  Cal  today  310-785-9121. 
Emal:cilnlcalsul]tects  O  yahoo.com 

RESEARCH  PARTICIPANTS  NEEDED  lor 
patients  experiencing  Hay  Fever/Allergk: 
Rhmmt.  RequltM  4  v«tits  (6  hours  total)  over 
MOdayt.  WM  pay  up  to  $100  at  conctuaion 
of  itudy  Contact  Dr  DIaz-Sancttez  or 
Df.Oanan  al  91»M»3atl  m  aiO«5-m;B. 


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'  good  enough  even 
ibr  Uncle  Scrooge." 


1900 

Personal  Messages 


FURNITURE  FOR  SALE-  Extra  large 
sofa/Mde-a-bed,  excellent  condition,  tan, 
$150.  Swivel  desk  cttair,  black,  high  back, 
excaHent  conditton,  $25.  310-202-8726 

MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY,  STEARNS  &  FOSTER  Also  twin- 
sets-$79.95,  Fulls-$99.95,  Queens-$139  95 
King8-$1 99.95.  Queen  PiUowtops  $199.95 
Beacon.  Open  7-day8.  1309  Westwood 
Blvd.  310-477-1466. 

SIMMONS  EXTRA  SUPER  FUa  (double) 
mattress,  boxspring  and  frame.  $100  OBO. 
310-745-2445  or  x47501. 

SOFA  BED  for  sale.  Beige,  almost  new.  $80. 
310-210-7336. 

SOFA.  7ft.  8-way  hand-tied  springs, 
rDsa/Mua/ftoral  pattem,  $250.  Channel-back 
chair  w/ottoman,  rose,  $150.  Rounded  olto- 
mon,  blue,  $50.  310-393-1078. 

WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

SMgh  beds.  Rustk:  pine  furniture,  armoires, 
mattrasa  aets.  slip  covered  &  upholstered  so- 
fas/chairs. Leather  aofas  &  chairs.  310-745- 
2253. 


1900 

P(?rsonal  M«?ssa(jes 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded.  $40  for  attomey  pre- 
pared application.  John  Manley  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd  #300  LA,  CA  90025. 
310-820-7553.  Deadline:  10/30/00. 


4900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1979  450 
MERCEDES  SLC 

Excellent  condition.  150K,  AM/FM  cassette. 
AC,  $8500obO.  310-828-9111. 

1980  HONDA  ACCORD  5  speed.  4  door. 
Good  transportation  car  $850  obo.  Call  310- 
820-8247  or  page  310-840-5554. 

1983  BMW  3201 

5-speed,  clean,  well-maintained,  second 
owner  $2195obo.  310-452-2334. 

1987  HONDA  ACCORD.  Drives  great,  5spd. 
4dr,  recent  clutch,  tires,  belts,  and  hoses. 
155K,  $2000ot>o.  310-449-3712. 

1989  CONVERTIBLE  FORD  MUSTANG  LX 
for  sale  lor  $1,500.  Automatk:.  Cnjise  Con- 
trol. Power  windows  and  kx*s.  Newer  en- 
gine and  top.  New  paint  job.  Runs  well.  Call 
Tino  at  323-653-6923. 

1989  GEO  METRO  LSI  Blue.  $2200  obo. 
2D/fiatchback.  automatic,  excellent  condi- 
tton. 80,000  miles,  A/C.  AM/FM.  310-478- 
5663. 

1990  HONDA  CIVIC  LX 

Red.  4dr,  fully  kwded,  80K,  serviced  last 
week,  $5000  call  Marllyn:3 10-57 1-0084. 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4wd, 
auto,  AAC.  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  condi- 
tton. Sell  for  $4300.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836. 

1993  TOYOTA 
CELICAGT 

70K.  wf>lte,  automatk;,  fully-toaded,  excellent 
condition,  dealer-pannjered,  60K  dealer- 
sen/ice  done.  $7000.  310-476-8267/949- 
609-4471. 


1900 

Personal  Messages 


'm 


Chi  Alphd  Deltd 

proxA^  presents  its  2006-2001  Cheetdh  V\edqe  Oass 


Kciren  Chen 
Elieen  Chu 
iH    Rosemary  Espejo 
Mimi  Hd 
Alice  Hm  j 

Mansa  Hwey       * 
Felicia  Hwi 


Ym  Hwang 
lenny  Iwe 
Christine  Le 
Jennifer  Lee 
Jennifer  Lw 
Christine  Lmm 
Trang  Ngwyen 


Iran  Ngo 

Therese  Nolasco         ^ 

Ritchelle  Quiambao 

Teresa  Suen 

lennie  Wong 

Stephanie  Wong 


■  •■ « • 

^   i   I    • 


""^'-^Ti"*-  ** 


»   ./•    / 


,    ,   .  ,   . 


'^        24       Fri(tay,0ttobff6,2000 


r  «* 


A900 

Autos  for  Snie 


Scooters  for  S;ilo 


1994  NISSAN  SENTRA.  All  power,  First 
owner,  Low  Milage,  Automatic,  Burgandy, 
BlueBook  Value  $6400  Asking  $5200  OBO. 
310-613-8770. 

CONVERTIBLE  1976  Alta  RoiDeo  5-speed, 
red,  low  miles,  AM/FM/Casette,  leather 
seats.  $2800  obo.  Call  Dave  310-440-4149. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Cars  as  low  as  $500 
for  listings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214. 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990. 
84000mi,  good  condition,  power  windows, 
black,  A/C,  registration  pakj  for  one  year 
$4500.  Call  VKonte  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerO  ucia.edu 

•97  TOYOTA  4RUNNER  SR5  4X4  58p  whi. 
Ithr.  16in  wheels,  sunri,  perfect,  39M 
$22,950.  310-470-0010. 


1986  HONDA  Aen>50  scooter  runs  great, 
new  banery,  only  3K  miles  $700/ot>o. 
Call:310-479-7276. 


5200 

Parking 


PARKING  NEEDED 

UCLA  STUDENT  LIVING  IN  RIEBER  HAU 
Fall  2000-Spring  2001  needs  a  paiiang  spot 
for  Fall  quarter  and  possibly  beyond.  Parking 
can  be  anywhere  somewhat  near  reskJence 
hall  sMe  of  campus.  Hope  to  pay  less  than 
what  UCLA  charges.  Call  310-267-8491. 


o  o  o 


travel 

5600-5720 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


Get  it. 
Monday 
June  5*^.. 


to  advertise  call  310.825.2l6l 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


You  can 

get  lost  at 

a  huge 

investment 

bank, 


MfBnkQmMti 


6200 

Health  ScMvices 


6200 

Health  Servictjs 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Umon  (Lender  Code  832123).  We're  on 
campus  at  Ackerman  A-level.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.org 


61 OO 

Computer/Internet 


NEED  HELP  connecting  iMac  to  Urrwx  scan- 
ner $25/hr.  Norma  323-932-1553.  call 
evenings. 

P/T  to  complete  constructton  and  maintain 
website.  Natk>nwKle  wfx>lesale.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 


HAIR  COLOR  MODELS  NEEDED  by  li- 
censed hair  dresser  at  Beverly  Hills  SakX). 
$15-25.  Wednesday  appointments.  Hannah 
323-461-8178. 

MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  retaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  Massage.  $40/hr  w/student 
ID.  Monday-Frktey  10am-8pm.  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Certificates  available. 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Attorneys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST.  Sexual  fiarrassment,  Discrimina- 
tton,  Auto-acckJents.  Slips/falls.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  Westside,  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW86). 
www.bestlawyercom  310-277-3000. 


PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pre-pak)  legal  sen/tae  programs 
provkling  quality  legal  servk:es  to  plan  mem- 
bers. Robert  Moss(UCLAW71).:310-260- 
7650. 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 

Bowd  CarlMI^  4MiiMtaiegM. 

"M*  haant  forgotten  what  It'* 
Hko  to  bo  a  atudont' 

•Acne»Mole  Removal  •Warts»Rashes 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmcfitafion* 

•Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  82e.2051 

www.DrSUven.com 


6^00 

fVlovers/Storayt; 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  5-ptece  special  $102.  Two 
24-(oot  trucks  fully  equipped  for  large  moves. 
Cat  24/7.  Avaiiat)le  on  short  notice.  LJcense 
fl63844.  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  W/14H  truck  and  doUies. 
small  jobs,  short  notk»  ok.  SF,  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  Bniinst  10th  yr  310- 
285-8688. 


JERRY'S  M0VING4DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available.  Also,  pk;k- 
up  donatkxis  for  American  Cancer  Society. 
JenyO310-391-5657. 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedteafed  pro- 
lessk>nal.  At  your  home  or  WLA  studio.  1st- 
lesson  free.  No  drum  set  necessary. 
Neil:323-654-8226. 

GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professional  near  UCLA.  Ail  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effortlesslyl 
www.JWQS.com.  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 

PIANO  AND  VOICE  LESSONS  by  UCLA 
singer/^nist!  CaH  Laura  310-210-7336. 

VOICE  AND  PIANO  COACHING;  Broadway 
show  tunes.  $20/hr.  Studk)  410  N.  Rossmore 
Ave.  323-461-5204  Davkl  Rishton.  Begin- 
ning, intermediate,  and  advanced. 


6600 

Person.il  Services 


6700 

Professional  Seivices 


ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW.  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Faislrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
professional  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultant.3l  0-826-4445.  www.wlnning- 
personstatement.com. 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  fomriatting,  tran- 
scrlbirig.  Persorfalized,  professk>nal  assis- 
tance. Ace  Words,Etc.  310-820-8830. 

TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  No«V-V 
Unk)n/Unik)n.  For  current  fall  season  and; 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMQ ' 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day  1-888-774-9994,  www.abcpa- 
pers.com 

THESIS/DISSERTATION  COACH-  LEARN 
HELPFUL  TECHNIQUES.  Get  emotional 
support  Dorothy  Imai,  PhD.  MFCC.  11110 
Ohto  Ave.  Ste  202.  WLA.  310-474-0942. 

WRITER'S  REPAIR 

Editirtg.  outHninQ.  research,  and  production 
assistance  for  academic  or  professk>nal  writ- 
ing. Experienced  writirig  instructor.  Harvard 
Univeristy  M.A.  JorV31 0-367-5666 


7000 

Tutoriiuj  Oflered 


BOND  TUTORING 


AM  suttjects  6-12th  grade.  AH  our  tutors  have 
Menage  a  trois?  I  do  translatkxn  in  German  coHege  degrees.  We  wiH  meet  your  indivWo- 
EngHsh.  or  French.  Call  JuHa  310-826-8917.    alneeds.3 10^7 1-7628. 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


^f^n  us 
find 
out  how 


W^  Will  be  off'campuik 
intBrvlmyiflng  for 
Investment  Benking 
Analyet  pomltlanm. 

If  Interested  please 
suinnlt  your  resunte 
hy  Oct €»l>er  fSth 
to  Mellory  Coffin  et 
nuaory_€XJflk'i^prussc.€XHn 


For  more  information  visit  our  website  at 

www.prudentialsecurities.com/ 

investment  banking/careers. titm 


Prudential 

Securities 


OMOO  PnidMiil  StcurWM 
PrudMMMSMurWM 


IncofponM.  Memter  SIPC 

!•  in  Equal  Opportunity  Employar  (M/F/D/V) 


-rU^ 


Daily  BniioCbnMtd 


Friday,  October  6^  2000       2S 


7000 

Tutoriiuj  Offered 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  «vM  get  r«6uMs. 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fal.  Sflvan-yMis 
•xpwience.  SAT/Cateulus/Physk:s/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/FrencfVEnfllish.  Call 
WW  310-701-8966. 

MATH  TUTOR 

I  tutor  SAT  math,  Pre-Algebm.  Algebra  1  and 
2.  Geometry,  Trtgonorrwtty,  and  beginning 
Cak:ulus.  UCLA  Student,  math  major.  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  math  and  one  year 
teaching  experience.  You  come  to  me. 
$25/hour  Call  for  more  Information.  Stepha- 
nie:310-702-6455. 

THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
tenn  paper  assistance,  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  Wekxjme. 
CaM:31 0-452-2865 
www.thewriterscoach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  witti  ttw  English  language — for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW.MY-TUTOR.COM  Math/Phystes/Sta- 
tistfcs/Engllsh/Hebrew/  chemistry/lxotogy/as- 
tronomy/  Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistk:al  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
service.  Cat  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


6700 

Pi(.»t(;ssioiuil  Servict.'s 


6200 

Health  SerA/i(;(;s 


6200 

Ht.'iilth  Services 


6200 

Health  Services 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Compfthwhia  DliteiiaHon  A««iwn<» 
ThMM.  Papar*.  and  l>waonal  SiawnMnti 

PiQpOMit  and  Book* 
kOrriaHonI  Sbdana  MWooma.  Sinoa  ises 
Slaran  Baar,  PIU).  (310)  47fr«0«2 
»wwiiBaaf-WWia.coin 


7100 

Tutoriiuj  Wanted 


5TH  GRADE.  Mon-Thur».  7-epm.  Responsi- 
bie,  knows  how  to  teach.  Very  ctose  to 
UCLA.  $15mr.  Call  RoeySI  0-44 1-9388. 

ACAOemC  COAOVTUTOR  tor  frMhman 
Santa  Monica  Cotoga  atudanl  wtth  learning 
dtoabny.  Ha^  organtaa,  aupport  and  tutor 
basic  aubjactt.  3-5ta»M(.  $2tVhr.  Maureen 
310-459-1600. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tutoring,  com- 
panion. (kMnit.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
giri.  AthiaMc  tamaia  pialanud  BH  $8-l2/hr. 
4day«Ai((L  2-4hraMay.  ASAP.  Cay  310-273- 
3663.  310-753-3535.  Email 

kx)z320aol.oom. 

DRIVER/rUTOR 

Wexcalant  study  hiMa  to  aaaiat  I2&16-yr- 
old  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  pius  Insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hr«/wk.  $l0-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED  Must  be 
gnduate  student  or  TA.  For  high  school 
student  taking  second  year  Spanish  and 
math.  310-476-0766. 

MATH  LOVERS 
WANTED 

For  math  tutoring  sen«ica.  Flaidbte  schedule. 
Must  have  a  great  undaretandtog  of  subiacL 
$15/hour  Cal:310-€60-9S61. 

MATH.  SAT  Experienced  Grad  student  or 
Senior  praianad.  Private  WLA  school.  Fax 
resume  to  562-404-6141  or  call  818-831- 
2809. 

MATH,  SPELUNG, 

READING 
COMPREHENSION 

Tutor  wanted  for  3rd  grader.  2-3  times/week, 
avanings.  $15/hour.  Must  come  to  house. 
323-954-7433. 

MATH/SCIENCEA>NGUAGE  tutors  needed 
tor  gmdaa  6-12.  Algabra,  Geometry,  Pttyaics, 
ChanMiy,  Spanish  1/2.  $i5/hr  Ei^srt- 
encode  Must  have  car  Fax  rssuma:310-474- 
7413  ASAP 

TOR  NEEDED 

t  tor  two  ix>ys.  2nd  and  3nl 
)  honw  in  Laural  Canyon.  Af- 
hours  appwwimaialy  10 
L«aMMe  achsduto.  Some  driving. 
Ptaaaa  cal  a««nlnga:3l0-40i-0li3  or  day- 
tlme.310-392-1405. 

TUTOR  NEEDED:  7lh  gmda  boy  Mon-TYmrs 
4-6pm  Must  be  paianL  Hstp  In  aa  subfacts 
and  homework.  Glandala  araa.  Own  trana- 
portaBon.  Cal  31»aea-4123.  <«iy1lma 

TUTORING  WANTED  FOR  9th  grwler.  In- 
home.  Homework  ha^.  Braniwood.  310- 
472-7342. 


TUTORS  NEEDED 

Al  subiacts.  levels,  agas.  Flaidbia  days  and 
hours.  $10-13/hour  Tutor  m  WLA  or  SFV. 
IMMy  Tutored.  310-387-0999. 


7200 


worn  WWCWWIO  spyHiilBg  >i  i 

as.  dtasafMtana»  Imnaofptlon*  taauiDaat  flh 
era,  tNOOlWfaa,  mMng  Mis,  raports.  Santa 
Montoa.  910-aie  IQOS.  Hollywood.  323-466- 


TTTTTT 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  (^ 


tTiM^i^SL  Dr.  Nader  Daydiii 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


Braces^ 

Deliver  Brilliant  Results 


.''li      i)lS(()l  \1 


(310)  826  -  7494 

lieisWlhMrrBM.inj 
L«An(cki.  CA  90021 

(949)  552    5890 

ISlNCulm  Di.iA 
Irvine.  LA  927 IS 


R  Teeth  Whitening   $8S^® 


•  Cosnnetic  Porcelain 

'  Surgical  Orthodonlfcs 

.  ,  •  RemovalDle 

•  Traditional 

•  Invlsibte  . 

•European 


liWUB  PM  t  I3UD  pw  .iwiAin  o 

II  iifinr  rill  Hull  HI  iiiBBi^ii 


— employment 

7400-8300 


Biisinfjss  0|)portiinitiL's 


7500 

Ccireer  Opporttinitios 


STOCK  BROKER.  Licenses  and  Internet 
Trading  semirwrs,  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216,  Woodland  Hills,  CA.  Instructor  David 
Shu  (Master  Degree.  Hanrard  University). 
81 B- 703-8889. 


6700 

ProfessionnI  Sen/ices 


6700 

Professional  Services 


$WORK  FROM  HOMES 

$500-2500  P/T.  $3000-15000+  ffX.  No 
investment,  Real  Opportunityt  Call  StevMrt 
310-234-0338. 

A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  It's  possi- 
t>ie.  Invest  $35.  Refundable.  No  Risk. 
http7/zibglb.com/phanya.  213-739-0994  ksk 
for  Stepfianie. 

NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

Wor1(  from  home  with  flexible  hours, 
www.homebusiness.to/emorwy 

UNIQUE  BUSINESS 
OPPORTUNITY 

BECOME  a  personal  treirter.  Earn  up  tp 
$l50imr.  Order  businen  manual  to  team 
how.  310-493-9675. 


7500 

C;ir»!or  Op()ortiinities 


KOREATOWN  E-COMMERCE  business 
seeks  P/T  emptoyee  lor  computer  and  offtee 
work.  Fluent  in  Korean  and  English. 
Resumes  to  namhee.hanOgte.neL 

SECRETARY/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

Light  tmng.  computer,  phones  in  Beverly 
Real  Estate  Cornpany  Part-tlme/Fuil-time. 
Fleidble  hours.  Starting  pay  $1l/hr  w/great 
future  job  opportunittes.  Fax  resume:310- 
278-6801  Attn  Anda. 

TEACHER  ASSTNTS 

PRIVATE  WLA  School  looWng  for  capabte 
and  w^Mffenced  taacher  ■ulitwo  to  work 
wHh  elementary  tevel  students,  M-F,  8AM- 
3PM.  Begin  immedtetely  Proftelem  In  Mac 
computer  lechnok>gy.  Please  fax  re- 
surTW:310-471-1S32. 


1300 

Campus  Rocruilmcnt 


7600 

ChilcJ  Care  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  mn  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6year8.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Cto8e  to  UCLA. 
310-473-0772. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanti.-d 


ABSOLUTELY 
AWESOME 

AFTERNOON  assistant  for  2  wonderful  girts 
(5.8yr8).  Driving,  playing,  HW.  Near  UCLA. 
Mon-TJiurs,3-6om.some  evenings.  Day.  310- 
206-0669;  night,  310-824-9609. 

AFTER  SCHOOL  CARE  NEEDED  4 
days/wk.  2  boys  ages  6&8.  WLA.  Car  neces- 
sary. Must  be  avaliaMe  2:45-S:4Spm.  Call 
Stacey  310-449-5765. 

AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED^ 
Mon-Fri,  2pm-7pm.  Own  transportatton  a 
must.  Brentwood.  310-979-7103. 

AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  WANTED  for  9- 
yr-oW  girl.  Bring  to  afterschool  actMties.  2  or 
3  days/wk,  Santa  Monica  Must  have  car. 
WiU  reimburse  tor  gas+salary.  CaH  Philip 
310-360-1961. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tutorlng.com- 
panion.drtvlng.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
girl.  Athletk:  female  preferred  BH.  $8-12/hr 
4day8/wk.  2-4hr8/day  ASAP.  CaH  310-273- 
3663.310-753-3535.  Email  ton232«aol.com. 

ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

P/T  XJB  working  with  sweet,  intelligent 
handfcapped  gid.  ChiW  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  in  kitchen  and  wofWng  with  chiM 
00  improving  phystoal  sldk.  AppNcant  must 
be  swsat.  misMgent.  reliable,  speak  English 
and  drivs.  Maat  Elman:3l0-396-8l00. 


1300 

Campus  Rerruitmt'iu 


PUBLIC  COMPANY  LOOKING  TO 

PROVIDE  CAPITAL  AND 

MANAGERIAL  ASSISTANCE 


To  startup  companies  or  entrepreneurs 

with  products  or  workable  concepts  in 

the  areas  of  internet  software/hardware, 

wireless  communications, 

fiberoptic  technology,  semiconductors 

or  medical  instrumentation. 

Please  contact  Modem  Technology  Corp. 

;  V  FAX  (718)  469-3292 

Phone  (718)  469-3132/4 
Email:  arthur|av@ mindspring.com 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


BABYSITTER  for  4-yr-okl  boy  who  toves  to 
read  and  meet  new  friends  Occastonal 
evenings.  $1Q/hr  References  required  310- 
573-9692. 


BABYSITTER  for  smart,  nfce  5-yr-old  boy  In 
Shemian  Oaks.  Hours.2:30-6:30pm.  Must 
have  safe  car  w/insurance  and  CDL.  Refer- 
ences required.  $8-10/hr  DOE.  310-449- 
7182. 


CHILD  CARE 

for  2  gins,  ages  Mil.  Brentwood.  Tues  & 
Thurs  evenings,  5-9:30pm.  Duties  include: 
Hght  meal  prep,  reading,  playing,  bathing. 
Must  have  car  Excellent  references  and  en- 
joy chiWren.  Salary  neg.  Please  call  Linda 
476-4728. 


1300 

Ciimpiis  Recruitment 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


CHILD  CARE  NEEDED  for  7-year-oid  boy. 
2:30-7:30  Wednesday,  Thursday  allemoons. 
Must  drive,  have  reliable  car,  relerences  re- 
quired. Pay  negotiable.  Mary:310-828-2624. 

CHILDCARE 

for  personable  8yr-ofcj  girl.  Pick-up  from 
sctwol/lessons.  CDL,  own  car,  insurance. 
Nofvsmoker.  Monday/Wednesday/Frxlay  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thursday  2-6pm.  $10mr 
Cal  310-440-6738. 

CHILDCARE/DRIVER 

for  12-yr-oW  boy.  Non-smoker  Likes  kkte 
and  dogs.  Help  w/HW.  M-Thurs,  4:15- 
5:45pm.  $10/hr.  Call  310-828-5144. 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


What  do 


want  the 


Th«N«w 
Internet 


you 

Internet  to  be? 

tjS^^  ^  *^*^  ^^"'"^  ^^  ^°"'^'  "^^  been  one  to  accept  the  status  quo  And  we 
^«uWnt  h«««  It  any  oth«T  way.  Were  Nortel  Networks.  And  we  know  ft  Ukes  daring  ideas  like  yours 
Z^!^^  **V  '*~P'*  "^"^  '""'•  •"**  communicate.  Today,  we're  building  the  new  high-performance 
^^y^ll^^^S^  ^  *°  '^?:'^T'  '"^^  ^^^^^^  -»•«'%  ^  security 


htortd  Network,  is  a  great  place  to  bulW  your  own  unique  career  As  a  global  leader,  we  can  offer  you  unparaHeled 
apportunitiesto  work  with  cutting-edge  fchnok,gy  that  is  changing  the  world  Whether  you'r.  locJZ  S? 
Ml-tlme  posrttofi  upon  graduation  or  some  practical  experience  while  you  are  in  school,  this  is  the  best  place 
-ISTJ^  foot  in  the  door.  Pbsttlons  range  from  software  design  and  system  analysis,  to  hardware 
engineering  and  product  marlwMng.  Imagine  how  many  doors  you  can  open  with  us  behind  you. 
Submit  your  personal  profile  to  www  norteMetworks  com/careers  by  October  9th  and  come  visit  us 
at  the  TWi  C«iser  Fair  on  Oetobw  OTh.  Well  be  hosting  an  Infbnnatkm  seseten  on  October  90th. 


N0RTEL 

NETWORKS 

norteliMtMforics.coin/carMn 


Display 

iUU-OUDU 


V   «    ..  .<     . 


■   ■  ;■> 


26       Friday,  October  6, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  ClissJfM 


'L.^.-^y 


2300 

Spenn  /  Eqc)  Donors 


2300 

S|)(!rcn  /  Efjcj  Ocjiiois 


2300 

S|)(!fm  /  EfjfJ  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Ef)(j  Donors 


Special  Egg  Donor  Needed 


referred  Donor  will  meet  the  following  criteria^ 

•Height  Approximately  5'6"  or  Taller  •Caucasian  •S.A.T. 
Score  around  1300  or  ffigh  A.C.T.  ^College  Student  or 
Graduate  Student  Under  30  -No  Genetic  Medical  Issues 


Compensation 


Paid  to  you  and/or  the  charity  of  your  choice. 
All  related  expenses  will  be  paid  in  addition  to 

your  compensation. 

(Extra  compensation  available  for  someone  who  might  be  especially 
gifted  in  athletics,  science/mathematics  or  music.) 


■s? 


For  more  information  or  to  obtain  an  application  please 
contact  Michelle  at  the  Law  Office  of  Greg  L  Eriksen 

(800)808-5838 
or  email  EggDonorInfo@aol.com. 


*This  ad  is  being  placed  for  a  particular  client  and  is  not  soliciting  eggs  for  a  donor  bank. 


7700 

Child  C;it(<  Wjintud 


DRIVER/TUTOR 

^/Bticetmt  study  habKs  to  assM  12&1&-yr- 
oW  boys  w/HW  and  teeU.  Car  pkM  insurarx:* 
needed  Approx  20hrs/wfc.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

FUN/CARING  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  lor 
picking  up  «  caring  for  9yr  o(d  gM.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  drtvar.  3-5daya/wti. 
aftemoona-flpm.  Gayle  31(M8(Ml0e  (evan- 

mgs). 

FUh4/REPSONSIBLE   SITTER.  Waslwood 

lamMy.  Wad  1:30-7:30pm.  Boys  8.5.2.  li^ 

housekaapin0.  make  dhmer.  driver's  Hcenae 

a  plus.  $10^.  Leave  maaaaga  310-441- 

4078. 

a 


Mother's  Helper 


7700 

Child  C;ir(.' W.intcd 


MOM'S  HELP  NEEDED  We  live  rtglK  in  Vw 
UCLA  'hood.  Need  help  w/HW  and  driving  lor 
our  4  children  (12.10,  8,  5)1  Last  year  2 
Mands  shared  this  job  We  provide  car. 
$10^.  M-F  3-8..  Ca»  Elam  475-4336. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

NEEDED.  Pn  aMer  needed  lor  liidB  108.7. 
RasponsWMea:  Drtvino.  ra««ngAp«aying. 
Good  paytt  References  a  muaa  Located  in 
Brsntwood.  310-394-9781 . 

NANNY  POSmON-P/T.  Must  have  expwt- 
ence  with  cNMren  agaa  3  and  younger.  CNU 
Devetapemem  educaUon  a  piue.  Muat  have 
>»terencea*c«r.  310-234-1168 

PfT  DRIVER  CHILD- 
CARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  nMds  drop-off  (e:4&«am)  «  picfc- 
t^Hertands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only.  Must  have 
car.  inauranoaAvaHd  license.  Brentwood 
Pleaae  cat  Sarah  310-388-0766. 


7700 

Child  Ciir..' W.int(Ml 


P/T  NANNY 
DRIVER/HELPER 

Pacffic  Palsadaa  proteaaional  Mom  neoda 
permanent  nanny  to  drive  llyr.  old  dauglar 
to  schoovappoinnwnta  and  supervlae  home- 
\«ori«/actlvlties.  7-9anit((la)dble)  and  3-7pm. 
M-F.  avery-other-waak.  UveKJot.  Perfect 
long-term  oppoHunMy  tor  mature  student  or 
pan-time  wortwr.  Must  have  ratable  car/exp. 
drtving-record,/excellem  judgmenVmaturi- 
ty/posltive  personality.  310-573-1170. 
FAX310-573-0130. 

P/T  NANNY  lor  2-yr-old.  Wad  evemnga  5- 
8.30pm;  5-1 0pm  on  Thors.  Oooaaional  WM- 
kends  w/advanced  notice.  Pataadaa.  Muat 
have  own  tranapottatton  and  have  pravloua 
cMd  care  ai^pertence.  $is/hr.  Plaaae  oat 
Laura  at  310-454-9005. 

PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  lor  10  yr/old 
gW.  Naad  ha^  6:46-8:30AM  MTW,  2-7:30pm 
MT.  Muat  have  car.  experianoa  wNh  chiidran 
and  help  with  errands  3 10-44 1-9766. 

PART-TIME  BABYSITTER.  Responsible, 
experienced,  child  devetopment  pralenad. 
Energedc,  lor  2-year-oM  and  5-year-oM. 
Own  car.  310-273-4W0. 


7700 

Z.wv.  W.iiilcd 


PT  CHILDCARE 

For  V^  special  Syr  old  daug^r  Intema- 
Oonal  or  bMngual  background  preferred, 
cararafarancaa  (aqukad.  Qrand  Ptano.  Bev- 
ertywood.  Lafcd;310-287-1677. 


REUABLE 
BABYSITTER  NEEDED 

For  aAar  school  help,  Monday-Thuradayi  2- 
epm.  We're  looking  lor  a  student  wfto  is  great 
wNh  kWs.  ages  7-«,  to  help  wkh  driving, 
homewort(  and  Ight  housekeeping.  Hours 
and  salary  nagoWable.  Car  and  refererces 
are  required.  Please  can  Joy  at  310-304- 
2342. 

REUABLE/FUN  P/T  NANNY  NEEDED  for  2 
girta  (5  &  8).  3-6pm.  2.3,or  5  days/wk.  Driv- 
ing, HW.  RgM  oooMng/houaework.  Near 
UCLA.  Pleaae  cat  310424-9609.  evenings 
or  310-206^)669.  dayi 

RIDE  NEEDED 

To  pick  up  chikl  from  Bekedy  Halt  on  Mutm- 
land  Drive  at  3:20  pm.  CaN  310-271-4661  af- 
tar6pm.  213-2S2-9437  From  9af^6pm. 

TUTOR/BABYSITTER  Qiandale.  12  year  oM 
boy  Evaiy  waskdiy,  4-9pm.  |10/Tir.  Need 
Car.Caa>ia^4e-6a66.         

WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHN.OCARE  For  1»-year-«M  gM.  SM«ranl- 
wood.  M-F.  3:30-7lah  (approx:  IShre/Wk).  Car 
with  insurance.  References  required. 
$10mour.  Nlghr310-828-6206.  Day:818- 
9S4-3276.  Stan  ASAP 


Cl.issifiL'ds 


7700 

Child  C;)r(,'  W;inli;d 


Saturday  Babysitter/ 
Mother's  Helper 


BakysMiiHI  for  2  toys.  HW  •  ^ 

12.  liilmrlyH«sorMa»u. 

Must  h«tw  weMmd  driving  rMord, 

Car  wHI  be  pmMMl  if  drivMto  is 

Mcassary.  Mais  or  flsmale. 

$12/koar. 

FUrwaiiMlolMiMtat 

(310)273-3748. 


Seeking  bright,  active  person 

with  college  degree  to  assist 

with  2  children  ages  6  &  8, 

part  time,  for  school  related 

tutoring,  computer 

assistance,  and  extra 

curricular  activities.  Excellent 

personal  references  required. 

Resumes  to:  Rose  Cooper 
510  N.  Robartaon  Blvd. 
Los  Angelas,  CA  90048 


WANTED:  Responist)le  individual  needed  to 
help  after  school  with  2  small  children. 
Morxlays  4-8pm  and  some  weekends.  Must 
Drive.  References.  CaH  310-446-1438. 

WEEKEND  NANNY  needed.  7am  Sat-9pm 
Sun.  Live-tfi  Bel-air  Call  310-889-1840. 

Wonderful  Nanny  needed  3-5  afternoons  per 
week.  Boy  9,  girt  12.  Need  Own  car. 
Weekends  a  plus!  Palisades  area.  310-573- 

1010. 


7800 

Help  Wnntod 


INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPRE- 
SENTATIVE Film  advertising.  Call  i«laM 
stores  lor  upcoming  releases.  Coordbiala 
store  visits.  P/T-F/T-8am-12pm  or  12:30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $10/f>r+bonus.  310-566-2555. 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  female  tor  Beverly  HMs 
producer.  Shod,  nexible  hours.  ExceNant 
pay  310-278-6972. 


$$$$  

Teachers  lor  model  educational  and  enitch- 
ment  co.  Need  axftenence  «voriuiig  with  ani- 
mals. Certificaied/norHsenWcaied  ok.  Earth, 
Life  or  Physical  science  background.  Interest 
In  woftcir)g  with  elementary,  and  middle 
sctiool  students.  Great  pay,  hours  availabto 
during  and  alterschooi.  $2S/hour  Fax  re- 
sume: 310-445-5628 

$1(VH0UR 

Accounting,  business,  math,  and  econ. 
majors  wilMak:  Math&English  sMIls  needed 
TuaactoyaAThuradays  lor  PT-FT  posittons 
Eitoaient  oi^wrtenoa  lor  future  CPAs  or  busi- 
ness owmers.  Fax  rasume(UCLA  students, 
also  send  DPR):818-769-46e4. 


f*>  Ei^ierience  Necessary 

Men,  Vmooi.  driMMi.  iBsM^dsi 

nu  TV  -  Rkis  -  GMMMRiili  -  M^BM 

for  personal  tntenHetv  call  noiv 

310.659.7000 


$15-$2a/HR  BRIGHT,  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
pla  to  teech  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academic 
Subiects.  Transportatton  required.  We  wW 
trato.  Flaidbto  houra.  Sertd  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter^reaume.  Irvkidtog  lest  scores  (SAT.  ORE, 
eto.)  (o  ACE  Educattonal  Sen^toes.  Atto:ear- 
ry.  9911  W  Ptoo  Blvd.  Ste.102&,  LA.  CA 
900315:  Fax:310-2S2-6424.  PosMona  avaH- 
abki  »NDUf)fwut  LA  and  the  \May. 

$1 500  WMkiy  potonM  maWng  our  ckcularB. 
No  experience  required.  Free  Intormatton 
packet.  Cal  202-466-1639. 

'MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK' Beats  al  tote.  SlWt 
Immadtotely.  Qnat  pay.  FunCacy.  No  ouy 
fees.  Program  tor  tree  medtoal  Cal-24/hfB 
323-850-4417. 


•XLNT  OPPORTUNITY! 
$10/HR  -i^  BONUSES 

PART  TIME  lor  sataaAalated  MM  wOffc.  Muat 
have  Car  and  good  telaphane  akMa.  Cat 
310-476-9089. 


[t'Vi  l'/ilM> 


KBcapqonmnssaidforwmiUjiioiy 
Osy  t(M  pftonM  tnX  llQht  office  work. 

piMfle  CM  JUM  (810)  474-2524 

>-  20»i  wwtwood  txvd. ^ 


f>K|)l-1V 


i.v  :' 


OiiyBnm  Classified 


Friday,  October  6, 2000       27 


7800 

Holp  W;mt(d 


A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

DO  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  in  the  afternoons  dur- 
ing school  (M-F)?  AN  day  Saturday,  too!  Full- 
tuna  during  Quarter  Breaks  and  Summer  Va- 
cattonsl  Wdrtc  expertonce  not  necessary.  Ap- 
pty  today  at  Westwood  Sporting  Goods. 
1065  Gaytey  Ave.  Westwood  Vtnage. 

A  PERFECT  JOBI 

Part-Time  HeW  sales.  Itoxtole  hours  *  com- 
mission and  txxiusi  Ambitious  saleaperaon, 
Fax-.8 18-223-3247  or  emaH:  supportOfones- 
4all.com  Attn:Field  Sales. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. ExceOent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours.  $10-1 3/hr.  Tennis  a  plusi 
We  are  national  flower  shippers.  310- 
2300811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASST 

■^■■■:     PfT 

(M-TH.  9-3:30)SM.  Pediatric  therapy  offc. 
medrcal  termir>ok)gy  heto>ul.  Multiple  tasks, 
detail  oriented,  self-motivated.  Good  veitMi 
skills,  MAC:  Word.  Qutokbooks  exp.  req'd. 
FAX  resume  inctodtog  salary  history.  310- 
582-1165. 


ANNOUNCERS,  no  ei9>erience  necessary. 
Host  musto/lalk-stx>ws  lor  our  radk)  stations. 
P/T.  $10-15/hr.  $20O»per/show,  plus  fantas- 
tte  banalHs.  323-468-0080,  24-hourB. 

ART  NUDES  IN  NATURE.  $75Air  UCLA 
Grad  fine  art  photographer  seeks  female 
models  18-28.  BSW  galery  exhMts.  High 
Wegrtty  wortt.  Allracttve.  toned.  danc«^gym- 
nastk^artistic  background  preferred.  Cat  tor 
more  into  and  cfieck  my  webpage  816-623- 
6470. 


ASSISTANT  needed.  $lQ/hr  Temple  City.  1ft. 
Opportunity  to  toam  the  ancient  art  of  Chi 
Ouong.  Cantoneaa/EngNah.  computer  Mer- 
■ta,  people  sMRs,  detaH-oriented.  Contact  Us 
310-571-6032. 


ATHLETICS:  PfT  student  emptoyee  to  wortt 
oopy^niaa  room  and  front  receplton  desk. 
Pay:$e.70A)r,lO-16  hrsMik.  Must  be  friendly 
and  hard  woiklng.  Apply  at  J.D.  Morgan 
FacMies  Office  310-206-6662. 


;  BABYSITTING  A  NINE  MONTH  OLD  BABY 
eoma  regular  and  some  random  times.  2- 
4hours  2-3  tknes  a  week.  MUST  be  some- 
«<»at  Waidbto  with  scheduling.  310-471-3604 

BANKING 

-  P/T  teHar  poaWona  at  University  Credit 
Unton.  Excellent  pay,  hours  &  environment. 
Some  leNer  eiperience  preferred.  Apply  at 
1S00  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd.,  LA,  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  wab 
««ww.ucu.or{y)obe.htm 

BEAUTIFUL  WOMEN  for  upccale  dating 
egency.  C«calant$|$.  MaH  bto.  pk:  (5x7  to 
5x16),  contact  lnto:11054  Ventura  Blvd  #365. 
Sludto  CNy  91604.  Assistant  also  wanlad. 
310-388-2803. 


7800 


CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT/CHILOCARE 
COUNSELOR 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT  SALARY:  $7.03- 
$8.65Au-t-partial  benefits.  CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR  SALARY:  $8.65- 

$1 1 .90/hr-t^rtial  benefits.  Under  general  su- 
perviston,  plans,  implements  recreattonal. 
educationa- 
I  and  sports  activities  lor  5-12  year  okte,  such 
as  arts  and  crafts,  Leamirtg  groups,  outdoor 
games  and  playing  Intramural  sports.  RE- 
QUIREMENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  ASSIS- 
TANT: High  Scfxxjl  Graduation;  enroHmenl  In 
coNege  preferred.  Six  months  paid  recreation 
work  experience  (3rrK>nths  of  volunteer  ex- 
perierK:e  in  a  chiklcare  program  can  t>e  sub- 
stituted lor  Smonths  of  paid  experience). 
Proof  of  High  School  diptoma  must  be  sub- 
mitted with  a  City  appinaiion.  REQUIRE- 
MENTS FOP  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR: 
Completk>n  of  one  year  of  college,  majoring 
in  Recreatk>n,  Education  or  related  fiekj. 
Must  have  12  units  in  Eariy  Childhood  Edu- 
catton  and  3  additiortal  units  in  Administra- 
tton  or  Staff  Relattons.  One-year  parit  recrea- 
tton  work  experience.  Proof  of  one  year  col- 
lege and  required  units  must  be  submitted 
with  a  City  afipOcation.  Call  310-550-4265. 

Eoe. 

CITY  OF  BEVERLY  Hills  Partdng  Attendants 
needed.  $9.l1/hr.  Morning  and  Evenir>g 
shifts  available.  Seasonal  Positkxts  startlr>g 
Novemtjer  16,  2000  to  Janurary  5.  2001  All 
shifts  available.  Apply  Nowlll  Dept.  of  Trans- 
portatkxi.  455  N.  Rextord  Dr..  Room  130.  Ap- 
ply in  person.  310-285-2552. 

CITY  OF  TEMPLE  CITY  SEEKS  Community 
Devetopment  Akle.  $10-$l2/hr.  Call  planning 
department  for  more  details.  626-285-2171 

CLERCAUCUSTOMER  SERVICE  M-F.  FfT 
pemtanent.  Good  phone  and  English  skills, 
detail-oriented,  reliable.  WLA.  $9-$10/hr 
310-826-3759ext229. 

CLERK.  P/T.  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Fkm  aaeks  perlocttonist  with  typing 
sMRs  tor  general  office  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  detaH-orienled.  $l1/t>our  to  start.  CaN 
Rhonda  310-286-2437. 

CLERKHYPIST 

Must  typo  mto.  70wpm  and  be  able  to  tran- 
acrftw.  Fut-Ume  posftkx).  Salary+t)en6Wa. 
Fax  resume  to  E.  Kraft  310-441  -801 0. 

CUNICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  positk>n  immediately  avaUabto  tor  a  li- 
ceneed  laboratory  scientisi  in  a  private  clini- 
cal laboratory  in  Santt  Montoa.  Lab  provides 
erxtocrine.  androtogy,  sarotogy  and  immu- 
notogy  testing.  Incumbent  required  to  worit 
in  weekerxl  rotations.  Salary  commensurate 
with  qualifk^ttons  and  experience  Suixnit 
appNcaltons  to  Brome  Stone.  Reproductive 
Tochnotogy  Laboratories,  1245  I6th  Street, 
Suite  105,  Santa  Montoa,  CA  90404  (Tel 
310-829^102). 


7800 

Help  WiintiM) 


DOG-WALKER  NEEDED.  MWF.  mornings; 
TR  afterTKXxis.  Ctose  to  census.  Bonnie: 
310-474-0989. 

EARN  $3000-1- 
3  CANCUN  TRIPS! 

All  Expenses  paM  (or  2.  Set  your  own  hours. 
310-638-1371 

EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  sales.  Make  up  to 
$l50/day  Part  or  fuM-time  wortt.  Call:DavW 
310-441-0394. 

F/r&P/T  OFFICE  ASST 

For  dynamk:  property  management  firm. 
Must  have  car.  be  organized,  and  reliable. 
Fax  resume:31 0-470-6755  or  call:310-470- 
1970 

FAST  PACE  Real  Esate/Finance  Company 
seeks  responsit>le,  energetic  student.  Oflce 
experience  required.  Fax  resume  to  310- 
275-5227. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


MESSENGER 

STRONG  BRUIN  SUPPORTERiwell  estab- 
lished Westwood  law  firm  seeks  2-parttime 
me8sengers(MWF  or  TR,  9:30-6:30)  to  wort< 
In  our  office  servk:es  department.  Must  have 
raUaUe  car,  insuranceAgood  Jriving  record 
AddHtoiul  duties  ir>clude  mail,  photocopying 
faxing,  switchboard,  etc.  Prefer  Biuin  stud 
ents  who  are  also  responsible&detail-orient 
ed.  Please  call  Robin  Barnes  310-478-2541 


7800 

Help  Wnnled 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTION/TECHNICAL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  has  one  opJBning  lor  clerical  positions. 
.47/hr.     Mornings     or    afternoons.     Call 
Mtehelle:310-474-7771 


MODELS  WANTED  by  professtonal  photo 
studto  for  upcoming  assignment.  Male/Fe 
male  Pro/Non-Pro.  Fashwn/Commer 
clal/Thealrical.  Call  lor  appointment  818 
966-7933. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  drive&wod(  w/2  fun&gifted  kkte  ages  5&7. 
Perfect  schedule  for  student.  Must  have  car. 
P/T  permanent.  Excellent  salary.  Judy :3 10- 
551-1145 

NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  Mostly 
runs  errands,  some  light  housewori(  and 
cooking,  good  pay.  near  UCLA.  4-5 
hours/day.  310-788-4727. 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  for  family  (of  inter- 
est to  young  filmmakers).  15-20hrs/wk- 
$1Whr.  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues.  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  Filing/research. 
Flexible  schedule/resourcefulll  Contact:  310- 
824-1444  (John).  Good  references  required. 
Non-Smoker.  Must  have  own  car&insurance. 

PERSONAL  ASST 
DETAIL-ORIENTED 

person  to  manage  orders  for  small  upscale 
retail  shop.  Make  sure  orders  are  coned 
when  placedAfoltow-up  w/suppiiers  to  Insure 
corTect&on-tioie  delivery.  Handle  light  InAoul 
shipments.  F/T.  including  Saturdays.  Must 
have  excelleni  knowledge  of  English.  Call 
Bill:31 0-278-5620. 


FEMALE  ATTENDANT  10 

HOURS/WK:$10/hr:10mins  UCLA.  Help 
disabled  woman  with  laundry,  shopping, 
medfcal  appointments  and  misc.  errands. 
Must  have  car.  CaW:3lO-828-4686. 

FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

Needed  for  private  health  chjb.  Permanent 
hours  available.  Health  msurance  offered 
Please  ask  tor  Alli8on:310-6S9-5002. 

QARDENERA4AINTENANCE/HANDYMAN 
in  the  Los  Feiiz.  Lo«  Angeles  area.  Will  pay 
$18/hr.  For  regular  emptoyment.  CaU  Joey 
310-399-4826.  4033  Sunset  Drive,  LA 
90027. 


—     NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 


BOOKKEEPING  ASST  Needed  for  cool, 
small  honte  office.  Must  be  competem, 
proactive  and  fun.  Qutokan.  Word.  Excel. 
FtoidMe.  Cal  Monkjue  310-204-3359. 

CAROIO  INSTRUCTOR 

PALMS  RECREATION  CENTet  eeeks  an 
energaMc  peraon  to  teach  and  adull.  tow-im- 
pact caidto  dees  Mon  A  Thurs  nighL  310- 
838-3838. 


\ 


CARE  TAKING  COMPANKM  tor  1 6-yoer  oW 
devatopmantally  dtoabiad  giri.  Involve  neigh- 
boihood  IMd  tripa«actlvl««a4)laytog 
boardgamM,wan(a.eto.  Need  car.  Houre 
■wdble.|iayhr.  31000-3732. 

CASHIER  tor  busy  pizzarie.  Muat  have  great 
Kustonoer  skMat  $8/hr-ftto,  DOE.  CaH 
!l>egMiood-s  Pizza:  Vsntoe  310-392-1450  or 
■pama  Monica  310-899-3030. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Pert-tlma  Joba  e^nlaMi  at  Campua  Comer. 
Wa  MWk  wM)  your  achwMa,  1/2  off  meals, 
manaoemani  uaMng  opportunity.  Cal:310- 
208-8133.    

CENTURY  CITY 
SHOPPING  CEN- 
TER 

Earn  $1  tor  the  HoUayal  F/T.  Pnr  posNtons 
avalleble  et  Cuaomer  Servtoe.  Apply  ki  per- 
aon  at  cart  in  center  court  outsMe 
CratoManH.  102S0  Sania  Montoa  Blvd.  No 


CHEVIOT  HNJ.S-STUOENT  WANTED  TO 
DRIVE 4-yaar-oW boy  toschodand  tohalp 
tm\  gmitwl  errands.  FRIDAYS,  8:30am- 
12:30pm.  fiomr.  310O848B0. 


r  thia  paper  recy<^  this  peperrecyole  this 
■*" —  recycle  *ls *"*- 


till',  popwi 
'  tfiw  pooeri 


COACHES  NEEDED 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 

2000-2001  school  year.  Girts  Soccer,  varsi- 
ty and  JV  Lacroeae,  JV  Boys  Basketball. 
PaW  posWons.  310-391-7127.  Call  Nate  ext. 
247  tor  boys'  poeWone.  CaH  QaH  ext.  248  for 
gkis' poeWons. 

COACHES  NEEDED!  Qlris  Varsity 
Baake«>aa  and  QMa  Freslvnan  Baakelban 
Team.  Starts  Nov  Ist-mkl  Feb.  P/T  5  days  a 
week.  Frsahman  hours:  3-4:30pm  evwyday 
Variety  hours:  4:30-6:30.  Prevtous 
Expertence  Naceaaaiy.  AUe  to  coach  HS 
girts,  varaity:  $200Wsaason.  Freshman 
$120Q%eaaoa  Contact  Maureen  323-461- 
3651 

COMf>ANION4or  acUva  aantor.  pool-etroke 
Accompany  to  movlae,  muaaume,  rsstau- 
ranla.  Must  be  Mandly  paltont.  engege  to 
stimulating  oonvarsatton  (polUcks,buslneea). 
Payrato  $l2-$is/hr.  BOE.  Contact  Lau- 
>a»323-933-Sa80.  K1012. 

COMPUTER  PROGRAMMING  COURSE 
READER  needed.  Prdtolent  to  C  &  VB. 
CompSd  UO/Qrad  pralanad.  Grade  via  In- 
lemat  $10/hr.  323-402-1230x1892 

COOL  LADY  saeka  ddvar  for  oocask)(wl  ar- 
lande.  Own  car  raqukad.  $7/HR  310-826- 
9150. 

CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HIRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  gat  paM.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$10.2fimr.  Muat  be  a  UCLA  student  w/U 
acadamto  yaara  rematoing  w«h  vaHd  driver's 
loenae.  Web:  www.ucpd.ucla.odu^K:p(M:so. 
Emal:  C8oOucpd.ucla.edu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 

DEUVERY  DRIVERS 

BAUOON  CELORATION  ie  Nfing  «wi  drtv- 
ers.  Looking  tor  enaige«e.  unetoppabto. 
poaWva  crew  bnmadMelyL  FtouMe  hows, 
buay  weeliends.  Apply  to  person  M-Sat  W 
6pm.  Apply  at  937  WaetwooA  310-208-1180. 

DENTAL  OFFK^  laoapaonMtoffioe  manag- 
er needed  for  MWF  »«.  Muat  know  typtog. 
be  lamllar  wiWXtoioaaH  Wtord.  have  good 
oommuntoaiton  akMa.  be  commlttad,  haw 
daeka  to  make  a  dMarenoa.  Exoaaenl  selwy. 
310-828-74M. 


GET  PAID  TO  PLAY!! 

AFTERSCHOOL  DAY  CARE  needs  three 
new  staff  to  play  baU.  heto  with  homewortt. 
interact  with  ctilklren.  Grades  K-8th.  310- 
470-9747. 

GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  ckjt>s  in 
WLA.  Conversatton  only.  No  ateohol.  Flexi- 
bte  hours.  Earn  top  $$$.  323-441-0965 

GRAPHIOWEB  DESIGNERM!  Grant  writer 
Non-profit  multi-racial  arts  company.  Em- 
power youth  through  theater,  film,  dance,  po- 
etry, musk:.  P/T.  310-208-8012. 

HOST/HOSTESS 

FRIENDLY  EXPERIEI^ED  host  lor  Jade 
West  Restaurant.  Century  City.  CaN  after 
2:X.  310-556-3388 

INFORMATION  SYS- 

TEMS  ASSISTANT 

$27,067-$32,978 

COORDINATES  COMPUTER  USAGE  and 
resolves  system/user  problems  on  the  IBM 
AS400  and  microcomputer  systems.  Assists 
to  reconcMng  and  aucMing  various  computer 
reports  and  data  Mas.  Knowledge  of  practk:- 
es  and  prindptos  in  operating  and  maintato- 
Ing  mini  mk:rocomputer  systems.  AbWty  to 
proftoiendy  operate  a  lOkey  caknilator  and 
type  40WPM.  AbNity  to  effteientfy  pertonn  de- 
M  and^or  techntoal  oriented  tasks.  Two 
yaais  of  advanced  education  In  a  computer 
subfect  (AA.AS,  Certiftoate  program.etc.) 
arxl  one-year  computer  operattons  experi- 
ence on  mtoi  or  mtoro  systems.  Qensral 
bustoess  towMadge  and  abMty  to  Mt  and 
move  SOKw.  deeirabto.  Substantiai  equival- 
ents may  be  aubstltuted  for  the  above.  Send 
resume  to:  Human  Resources,  Frank  D.  Lan- 
tamnan  Ragtonal  Center  3303  WIehire  Blvd.. 
Sulla  700  toe  Angalee.  CA  90010  EOE. 

INTERNATKXAL  MARKET1NO/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bMngual  (Engish-ltalan)  Customer 
Senrice  Representatlva.  FuH  tkne;  excelent 
Italian  wiWan  «  verbal  shMa  raqukad.  Medl- 
cel  BenalNa.  Fax  or  e-me«  leeume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653-1768-lepatteraon«li- 
gtoccora 

INTERNATIONAL  PR  RRM  saeka  Front 
Desk  Racepttoniet.  Entry  level  poMton.  Nal- 
an  a  ptos.  $9^-^0hrs^»k  MIN.  FfT  pre- 
tenad.  Fax  or  amaN  laaume  to  John  Patter- 
eon  323-6S3-1768.  )spalterson  OHgtoc.com. 

LIBRARY  JOBS  Shelvtog  and  other  stacks 
duttos.  12-19  hra^vk.  $6.70mr  to  sUrt. 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Ytoung  Reeaan:h 
Ubrary  Rm.  11617  or  call  AnHgone  Kutay 
310-825-1084. 

MEDK^AL  BRUNO  SUPERVISOR  WANT- 
ED by  dynamto,  OME  «  Rahab  daeter.  Ex- 
pertise wNh  Madtoara,  MadCal  A  Ineurance 
raqukad.  EiqMrtenoe  with  Team  DME  Soft 
wara  a  Mg  phis.  Part-tkne  leadtog  qutoMy  to 
fuM-tkna.  Hourty  companealton  commanau- 
rato  ««h  aifiaiienoe.  Fax  laauma  to  310- 
575-1506. 

PfT  DATA  ENTRY/  DIS- 
PATCH ASSISTANT 

iO:30am-3dQpm,  M-F.  eome  ovartlma 
Compmar,  heavy  phonae,  and  Mtowtodga  of 
LA  arsa  a  nueL  Meeeenger  baekBiound  pre- 
lenad.  Fax  rsaume  310-275-4438. 


Part-time  jobs  available  at  North  Campus. 
We  wort(  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-0720. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  LuVaHe  Com- 
mons. We  wort<  with  your  schedule.  1/2  of 
meals,  management  training  opportunity. 
Ca>:310-825-1177. 

NOW  HIRING 

COUNTER  HELP  POSITION  to  cafe. 
$7-«4ps/hr.  Part  Time/Full  Time.  Contact 
Roberto  310-247-1112  llam-Opm. 

OFFICE  ASSISTANT  for  general  filling,  bill- 
ing irtsurarKe.  tovotoing,  troubleshootir>g 
bUls.  and  entering  data  into  Qutoken  and 
Ouickbooks.  iday  a  week  Monday-Thurs- 
day MUST  have  references  and  prefferable 
some  experience.  310-471-3604. 

OFFICE  MANAQER/ASSISTANT2CE0. 
Growing  Btotechnotogy  Company- West- 
wood.  l0am-2pm/Full-ttoie.  Hextoto  hours. 
Need:excellent  telephone  skills,  detaH-orient- 
ed,  admin/comp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
ferred. Benefits/advancement.  FaxRes2Mar- 
Ina:  31(M75-1533. 

OFFICE-EXCELLENT  OPPORTUNITY  2 
P/T  posittons  available.  Flexible  hours.  Retail 
store  to  Westwood  Village.  310-206-8404 
from  12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Concesstons  has  great  part-time  jobs 
wortdng  at  AtNetic  events.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive bonus  program  for  ttwse  wtw  can  com- 
mit to  work  the  Men's  Baskett>all  Seaeon. 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  set  every 
CaB:310-206-0736 

OPTICIAN  for  beautiful  Westwood ,. 

optometric  office.  P/T,  Hex  houre.  Muet  be 
friendly,  outgotog.  and  cheerful.  Sales  ex- 
perience helplui.  310-208-1384. 

P/T  ASSISTANT 

Private  home  offfce,  data  entry.  Mac/Quk*- 
en.  Accuracy  important.  Good  English.  Own 
traneportaOon.  Flextoto  schedule.  Weekdays 
only.  8-12hr8/wk.  310-384-2933. 

PfT  General  Office  AasMant.  CSA  Architactt 
In  Westwood.  Fax  raeunta  to  310-824-6715. 

PfT  OFRCE  ASSISTANT 

WANTED  for  lamMy  owned  Real  Estate  Man- 
agement Company.  Pralesstonat,  RaHaUe, 
Mature  Parson  sought,  PC  skMs  a  ptos.  323- 
850-5726. 

P/T  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  100  Medtoal  Plaza.  Dennatotogy  prac- 
tice. Houre  can  vary  wi^dasaes.  F/T  during 
summer.  $8^.  Ptos  free  paridng.  Assist 
manager,  computer  sfcMe  necessary,  math  or 
buatoaeemaloreprelened.  Fax  rssume  after 
6:30pm.  310-206-4010. 


POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
info.  Call  1-800-391-5856  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar. 

PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knovvledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$60Qftiveek.  310-724-8360.  Days  only. 

RECEPTIONIST  WANT- 
ED 

BEVERLY  HILLS  SALON  seeks  energetic 
receptionist  FfT  or  PfT.  To  start  ASAP.  310- 
278-1191. 

RECEPTIONIST  WANTED  P/T  for  hair 
saton.  Ask  for  Liana.  310-206-0101. 

RESEARCHER 

For  Business  Plan.  Thorough  research  skills, 
concise  writing,  organized,  and  reliable.  Fa- 
mMiartty  with  PC,  console,  and  arcade  games 
helplui  spgreenOearthlink.net 

RESPONSIBLE  DRIVER  with  own  car  to 
drive  15yr.  oW  and  llyr.  oW  from  St.  Moni- 
ca's to  Culver  City.  2:45pm  3-5  days/wk. 
$l50-250^»k.  More  $$  If  available  for  physi- 
cal or  acaden>ic  activities  until  4pm  310- 
838-9448. 


RESTAURANT  in  WLA  now  hiring  servers, 
cashiers,  prep  personnel.  F/T  or  P/T,  apply  iri 
person.  9411  W.  Pico  Blvd.  Sun-Thurs. 

RETAIL  SALES.  PT/FT.  Westwood  Blvd.  De- 
sigrwr  weddtog/evening  gowns.  Experience 
preferred,  motivated  and  friendly.  Great  op- 
portunity. Salary/commlsskxis/bonuses.  Ex- 
caltent  $$.  310-474-7808  Pauline. 


SALES  CLERK 
WANTED 

Ftorist  seeking  P/T  satos.  phone  assistnat 
Sknpto  typtog^administratton  skills  helpful. 
Flextole  hours/lun  environment.  Fax  resume 
10323-852-0749. 

SALES  POSITION 

F/T.  Growing  Century  City  company  seeks 
sales  person  who  are  energetic  sefl-starters. 
Our  company  is  the  toader  to  the  procure- 
ment ol  Hquor  Itoenees  and  use  pennlts  to 
CaKomia.  Must  be  oomputer-Hierate.  Urt)an 
ptonntog/legal  backgroundMHngual  applto- 
ants  that  want  to  parttoipato  to  our  excMng 
ntehe  bustoess  can  our  offtoes  today  lor  de- 
talh:310-553-6363  ext.18  or  fax  resume 
to:310-553-3996  Alto:Ctody. 

SALES.  Popular  Westwood  VWage  jewelry 
store  seeks  2  P/T  sales  associates  Excel- 
tent  opportunity.  310-206-6404  phone  from 
12-6.  Mr  Rogare. 


P/T  or  Career  Opportunities)  Private 
tutorsAnetruotore  for  K-12  and  Educational 
Consutonis  torcoNage  praparalon  san^teas. 
Seeking  Undergradualas-PhO's.  Experience 
prelenad.  strong  communtoattons  skills 
required.  Future  Ybuth  lnc./Mlndllfe 
Consulting  Group.  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329 

PfT  OR  F/T  SERVER 

AND  ANSWERING  phones  tor  dtoar  to  Bev- 
sfty  HMs.  Win  trato.  Great  tipsi  CaN  Ronl:310- 
772-0044  from  BanvSpm. 

P/T  WRITER.  Plaaaant  Century  Cky  Engi- 
neering Fkm  seeks  patlecltonlst  wMh  strong 
writing  sk«s  to  produce  m«dly  lacfwitoal  re- 
ports tor  iniomal  and  axtemal  uee.  $i3/hr  to 
start,  wage  tociaaise  as  apprapdaie.  Mtoi- 
mum  l5hraAwk.  ftx  raeuma  310-288-9126. 

PAID  INTERN  NEEDED  tor  smal  musk: 
marttettng  oo.  10-2Qlftws^»k.  Good  phone 
personally,  org.  skMs.  310-281-7812 

PART-TIME  CHILDCAREm/TOR  needed 
tor  1st  and  2nd  grader.  Enoino  MutooHand 
and  405  a^aoent  Must  have  car  Cal  Jack- 
to;310-828-2486 


SECRETARY,  haWme.  roomings,  to  RN  at 
VA  medtoal  canter.  WLA.  Proftotont  to  woni 
and  excel.  $l1Air.  Some  benefits.  Fax  ra- 
sume  to  Susan  Orrar^ge  310-268^4404. 

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST  SmaU  WLA 
law  office  aeeks  prt  or  Irt  bMngual  (Spanish) 
todivkJual.  Muat  have  ei«>arience  wNh  word 
perfect  and  type  mto  40wpm.  Cal  Nal  310- 
445-1100  or  send  resume  310-445-7779. 

SELF-MOTIVATED  SALESPERSON  tor  a 
furniture  store  on  the  wastsMe.  Houre  ffexl- 
bte.  310-477-5995. 


PARK  RANGER 

$8.65-$1l.9Qifir.  with  partial  bensflts.  En- 
force pertc  nies  and  regulations;  dtosemtoate 
tofonnatton  and  assist  pubic  to  tta  partqon- 
sKe  euperelston  oi  commercial  Mm  oonvw- 
nles  and  wo«k  department  special  eventt; 
aaaM  «4lh  oMoe  duties.  Raqulras  one  year 
of  oologe  majoring  to  Recrsattoa  Outdoor 
Educatton.  Park  Ranger  or  related  Md;  or 
one-yeer  pakVwitonteer  expartance  to  a  cus- 
tomer een4oa  ortenied  poelttoa  Muat  haw  a 
vald  Caflfomla  C  driver's  loense  and  must 
be  able  to  obtato  CPR  and  FIrat  AM  oertM- 
catas-Apply  toimadiately-OPEN  UNTIL 
FILLED.  City  ol  Baveriy  HMs,  455  N.  Raxtord 
Dr.  #210,  Bevarty  HMa.  CA  90210.  310-285- 
1071  EOE. 


* .-'  ^ 


28       Friday.  October  6, 2000 


Dlljl  Bfuhi  CiMBMid 


Got  a  health  question? 
Need  an  appointment? 

E-rnail  the  Ashe  Center  and  they  il 

fix  you  right  up  by  e-mailing  you 

back  with  answers  and  appointment 

time  suggestions  vsrww.saonet. 

ucla.edu/heaith.htm 

//'s  a  setwice  that  is  part  of  the  health 

care  you've  already  paid  for 

ucia  Ashe  Center 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PI  J77IF 


ACROSS 

1  Baseball  play 
5  Type  of  energy 
10  Ankles' srtes 

14  Toast  topper 

15  Tolerate 

16  Miss  Cinders, 
of  tt>e  comics 

17  Soon 

18  Airline 
employee 

19  Glass  bottle 

20  Gets  some  sun 

21  —  Forest 

23  Suffix  meaning 
"sort  or 

25  Dried-up 

26  Praise 
30  Delete 

34  Cow  sound 

35  ^4octumal 
'movie" 

38  Cancels 
40  Spheres 
42  Follow 

44  Great 
achievement 

45  Gold  weight 
47  Likewise 

49  Airport  info 

50  Basketball  shot 
52  Fur  dealer 

54  Encircle 

57  E.T.'s  transport 

58  Old-fashioned 
documentaries 

62  -Mask"  star 

66  Sub  stK)p 

67  Tomato  jelly 

68  High  flyer? 

69  Clumsy 
vessels 

70  Aquarium 
fish 

71  Sea  eagle 

72  Medicinal 
amount 

73  Actor  HawKe 

74  Furniture  wood 


PftEVKMiS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


ssciQnsQiaDs  qqqd 

SBBSO  □GUBDmSQ 

Sims    QODSIS 
DQBB    anSQ    DDDQa 

Bcia  QOQs  iziaciaBii 
□Doaas  uamm  asm 

aaoDQiia        laaaaQ 

OBBB    mBBDH    SBQIi 


6-10-98 


O  1996.  Unilwl  Faalure  Syrxkcate 


DOWN 

1 
2 
3 
4 


Gravy  dish 
Arm  bone 
Gas  for  signs 
Mass  of 
lymphoid  tissue 

5  Blue  gemstor>e 

6  Emmy's  relative 

7  Swingy  tunes 

8  Cherish 

9  Hit  the  hay 

10  Clothier  Strauss 

11  Writer  Wiesel 

12  Happy 

1 3  Actor  Mineo 
22  Houseplant 
24  Gkxjmy 

26  One  way  to 
run? 

27  Reef  sight 

28  Hooded  snake 

29  Heal 

31  — 
Wiedersehen 

32  Doze 

33  Make  happy 


36  "—  was  going 
to  St.  Ives  . .  " 

37  "—  and  Jer 
39  Part  of  a 

constellation 
41  Utter 
43  Pre-Ftoman 

culture 
46  Puhs  hard 
48  Dundertiead 
51  Long  John 

Silver,  e.g. 
53  Skirt  feature 

55  Fix  the  clock 

56  Thickness 

58  Detective 
Wolfe 

59  Wapitis 

60  Like  an  owl? 

61  Italian  money 

63  Put  to  work 

64  Famous 
volcano 

65  Smell  strongly 

66  June 
horx>ree 


'^'m 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


7800 

Help  W;iiu»'{l 


US  International  Co. 

Work  at  home  position  immediately!  P/T 
$500-2000/mo,  F/T  $2000-6000/mo.  Lan- 
guages/computer skills  a  plus,  www.rteh- 
fromhome.com/intemet 


VALET  PARKING 
ATTENDANTS 

Flexibie  hours,  great  tips,  Santa  Monk:a  and 
Martna  Del  Rey  areas.  310-214-1888.  Leave 
message. 

W.LA.  R.E.  Inv  FIRM.  5  mirHites  to  UCLA. 
PART-TIME  Administrative  Assistant  for  of- 
fKe  work.  From  1 :00-6:30pm.  M-F  Fax  310- 
471-6770. 

WANTED 

75people  will  pay  you  to  tose  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  drugs.  Call  now.  323-993-3391. 

WANTED  ENTHUSIASTIC  BIOLOGY 
MAJORS  interested  in  working  with  animals 
and  educating  ch.kJren.  $10/hr  Flexible,  P/T, 
call  Tlie  Animal  Guys  310-392-5909. 

WANTED:  7th  &  8th  grade  Cross  Country 
Coach.  Marlborough  School.  250  S.  Ross- 
rTK>re  Ave.  Start  ASAP-Nov  8.  $1 200  for  sea- 
son. Call  Julie  Napoleon  323-935-1147 
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INTERNSHIP.  Leading  footwear  manufac- 
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MOLECULAR  BIOLOGY 

INTERN.  Smart  bk>chemlslry  undergrad 
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Part-time  jobs  available  at  Bombshelter.  We 
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1830. 

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Charming  Spanish  duplex.  2bed/1bath.  Ex- 
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FOR  RENT  Grad  student  preferred.  Upper, 
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WESTWOOD 

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preferred.  310-475-9145. 


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$930  -  $965 

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(My  Brum  Sports 


OlYMPia 

From  page 35  ■.     ./'.-;:;  ;/?::v'-:f  ■'•.■:>:•> 

program  since  he  graduated. 

"I've  been  able  to  see  the  progress  of  the  ath- 
letes as  a  group,"  he  said.  'The  athlete  base  that 
we  have  here  has  pretty  much  stayed  the  same. 
To  be  able  to  watch  them  grow  has  probably 
been  the  most  satisfying  part." 

Hayashi  has  seen  the  nature  of  the  program 
itself  change  in  one  significant  way. 

"When  I  started,  the  Association  of  Special 
Olympics  was  more  like  the  volunteer  buggers 
at  the  finish  line,"  he  said. 

Back  then  it  was  all  practice  for  just  a  few 
competitions. 

"It's  evolved  to  a  more  athletic  endeavor  and 
coaches  can  actually  see  the  end  result  in  the 
competition,"  Hayashi  added. 

Two  years  ago  practices  only  took  place"  two 
or  three  times  a  quarter,  aod  competitions  took 
place  about  once  a  year.  Now  practices  are 


every  Saturday  and  UCLA  Special  Olympics 
goes  to  about  five  tournaments  a  year. 

That's  why  you  can  find  basketball,  soccer, 
Softball  and  tennis  coaches  and  athlete  every 
weekend.  •■;•  ,":.<■-;■;■;.   ':.;  ■■■^..■-  ],. 

That's  why  die  UCLA  Special  CMympics 
team  will  travel  as  far  away  as  San  Diego  to 
compete  in  a  Softball  tournament 

That's  why  the  UCLA  program  is  putting  on 
its  own  tournament. 

A  lot  has  changed,  but  the  central  message  of 
the  Special  Olympics  hasn't. 

"If  they  win,  they  have  a  sense  of  satisfac- 
tion," LaFemina  said  of  Special  Olympic  ath- 
letes. "And  if  they  lose,  they  still  have  a  great 
time." 

This  meaning  is  what  keeps  the  coaches  com- 
ing back. 

"1  guess  people  think  they'll  be  doing  a  really 
good  thing  by  doing  Special  Olympics  when 
they  join,"  LaFemina  said,  "but  once  you  get 
out  there,  you  really  love  it.  You're  going  to 
want  to  come  back  every  week." 


M.GOLF 

From  page  35 

his  team.''- .'  '-v:., -■::."' ,/J:; 

"We've  definitely  got  a  lot  of  ifirepower.  The 
chemistry  on  the  team  this  year  is  a  lot  stronger 
than  in  the  past,"  he  said.  "It  seems  like  the  guys 
this  year  are  more  motivated.  Our  work  ethic's 
better.  We're  starting  to  get  acquainted  better." 

The  Bruins  were  unranked  in  the  preseason 
and  are  unranked  now.  Of  course,  third,  fourth 


and  sixth  place  finishes  in  mediocre  tooma- 
ments  wouldn't  help  them  earn  a  higher  rank* 
tng,  anyway. 

"That  has  nothing  to  say  about  how  much  tal- 
ent we  have  on  the  team,"  Johnson  said.  "If  we 
played  as  we  rfiould  we  could  be  in  the  top  15. 
We'll  earn  our  ranking  back." 

And  they  intend  to  start  on  this  quest  at  the 
Carpet  Capital.  /,.,..   j:     i;    ;;     % 

"If  we  gel  as  a  team,  good  things  can  hapn 
pen,"  McLachlin  said.  "This'll  be  good  for  the 
rest  of  the  year." 


W.  CROSS 

From  page  34  ■_,     ^      ..^_.  J  .  • 

want  a  strong  team  performance  and  to  worry 
less  about  the  results." 

Expected  to  lead  the  pack  once  again  is 
Bowen,  who  finished  14th  at  Stanford.  She  has 


been  the  Bruins'  top  finisher  in  four  of  the  five 
meets  the  team  has  run. 

Senior  Katie  Nuanes,  24th  at  Stanford,  has 
been  close  to  Bowen  ail  season. 

Also  making  to  trip  to  Penn  State  are  senior 
Gina  Donnelly,  junior  Bridget  Hatch,  sopho- 
mores Barbour,  Kelly  Grimes  and  Melissa 
McBain,  and  freshman  Valerie  Flores. 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


SANTA  MONICA  -2txl/1bth.  Cooler,  2  park- 
ing spaces  ■•-  storage.  Breakfast  room. 
Kitchen  w/  oven.refrklg.  $l200/mo.  Zay  310- 
541-2887. 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


9^00  ■  9500  I  9500 

Room  for  Rent   B     Roommates-P..v/ate  Room   I     RoomnuHes-Private  Room 


9200 

Housing  Needed 


LOOKING  TO  ROOM  with  someone  in  an 
apartment.  ASAP.  Close  to  Campus.  Down 
to  earth  gentleman  needs  help.  Working  On 
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9300 

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MOTHERS  HELPER  in  exchange  for  room 
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No  experience.  Time  arranged.  Val  310-471- 
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9^00 

Room  for  Rent 


BEVERLYWOOD.  $500/MO.  Bedroom  lor 
rent  in  private  home.  Own  enterance  and 
bathroom.  Kitchen  Privelages  and  Utilites 
included.  310-839-9602 


A  BEAUTIFUL  ROOM  4min  from  UCLA  in 
exchange  for  tutoring  (lOhrs),  some  driving. 
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310-971-7S7S 

FREE  PRIVATE  ROOM-i-BATH.  Single  father 
needs  nuiture  student  for  p/t  ftelp  with  4-yr- 
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student.  Parking  needed  Call  John  626-201- 
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Lovely  bedroom  w/microwave  and  fridge, 
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$450/mo.  310-312-0669. 


WESTWOOD 

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nished bdrm  w/t>ath.  Kitchen  privileges,  laur)- 
dry,  partying.  $700/nx)nth.  Another  room 
$600/month.  310-473-5769. 


9500 

Roommates-Private  Room 


ASIAN/QUIET/CLEAN/MALE.  Bus  in  front 
house,  Westwood/Plco.  3-mo.  min  stay.  Re- 
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shareljath.  $550/month,  share  bed/bath  in- 
cludes utilities.  $40/day.  310-475-8787. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  private  room  and  bath  in 
2bdrm/2bth  bright,  upper  apt.  Redwood 
ftoors,  anlkiue  and  contemporary  furniture, 
nice  kitchen,  neighbors.  Female  student  or 
pfpfesstonal.  $950.  310-990-1781. 

KILLER  VIEW — share  Wilshire  Blvd. 
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gym,  pod,  bakx>riy,  $82S/mo.,  male  pref. 
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Brentwood  apt.  High  ceihng,  bakxmy,  non- 
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PARK  LA  BREA  Large  IbdntVlbth.  Very 
dean,  one  neat  person,  female.  $600/nx) 
213-391-4044. 


ROOMMATE  WANTED  Private  room/,  bath- 
room. 3mi.  from  UCLA.  Upper  front  unit 
apartment,  nfce  kxatton,  near  Beverly  Hills 
Can  Arash,  310-567-3085. 


WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt.  Fun,  outgoing 
female  kxjking  for  female  roommate!  Own 
bed/bath  in  2bdrTn/2bth  apartment,  gated 
parking,  Jacuzzi  on  roof,  security  building. 
Available  1A)1,  $900/mo.  310-209-2665. 


WLA  ROOMMATE  needed  to  share 
2bdrnV2.5bth  cotkJo.  Private  bath,  under- 
ground parking,  kitchenilaurxlry,  2  bateonies 
(upstairs  and  downstairs),  $750.  310-446- 
6105. 


9600 

Roommates-Shared  Room 


WESTWOOD:  gorgeous  Wilshire  apartment 
10  minutes  from  UCLA.  Huge  bedroom  to 
share  in  2br.  apartment.  Available  now!  CaH 
310-234-8627. 


9700 

Suhlt.'ts 


WESTWOOD  VILLAGE:  Furnished  Room  In 
great  2bd,  1/3rd  mi  carrjpus.  Historic 
Block.nreplace,  Books,  Muste.  Mature  per- 
son to  mhid  apartment,  cats  when  other 
occupant  travels.  Makl,  Utilities  InchJded 
$670.  310-20e-«606. 


Private  room  &  Bath  in  large  TowrVxwse 
Apartment.     Newly    Decorated.Fireplace, 
Hardwood  Fkwrs.Batoonies,  Totally  Fur- 
nished! Available  All  of  November.  $600 
310-837-2575 


nAHYBRULX 


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-<3v' 


Disciples  of  Christ 


Gateway  Christian  Church 

11 760  Gammy  avd. 
L06Ang9ltS.CA  90064 
310^73-3191 

amat:  GmwyCCOaol.com 
Worship  Sunday  at  10:45am. 
Children's  Sunday  Schooi  and 
Choir  Rehearsal  at  9:30am, 
Tuesday  and  Wednesday  Groups. 
Share  in  our  country-style  atmos- 
phere, and  experience  the  blending 
of  traditional  and  conteniporary 
worship.  Firxj  yourself  warmly  wel- 
comed as  you  seek  both  meaning 
and  joy  Near  student  housing. 

Christian 


Westwood  Hills  Christian 
Church 

10606  La  Coi*e  A\n. 

L08Angalas,CA  90024 

310-206-6576 

www  WHCC  0malcbc.com 

Bible  Study  9:00am.  Worship 

10:00am.  Tuesday  Evening  Bible 

Study  7:00pm. 

We  are  located  across  from  UCLA 

Medical  Center  at  Le  Conte  and 

Hilgard.  Students  are  wekx)me. 

Join  us  for  lunch  1st  Sunday  each 

month  after  worship. 

Westside  Oikos  Community 


Church 

1343  Ocean  Park  Blvd. 
Santa  Monica.  CA  90405 
310-441-2125 
www.westsideolkoa.oqj 
Sunday  worship  at  1:30pm, 
Thursday  UCLA  Oikos  Campus 
Ministry  (OCM)  meetings  at 
6:30pm  in  CS  Young  24. 
Come  and  share  the  joy! 
Encounter  God's  presence 
through  powerful  worship. 
Inspiring  messages,  and  genuine 
community.  Rides  for  Sunday 
worship  provided  at  Sproul  tun> 
aroundat  1pm. 

Romqn  Catholic 

Unhrarslty  Catholic  Canter 

633QaylayAva. 
LoaAngalaa.CA  90024 
310-206-5015 
www.uccla.oit 

Sunday  Masses  at  I0:30am,  ^om, 
ar}d9pm. 

Our  Catholic  community  wel- 
comes all.  With  over  70  years  of 
sen^ice  to  UCLA  and  the 
University  Religious  Conference, 
we  offer  worship,  retreats,  sacra- 
mental preparation,  education, 
and  just  plain  fun! 


lutheran 


St  Paul's  Lutheran  Church 
(ELCA) 

9S8UncoinBM. 
Santa  »/k)nkm.CA904O3 
310-451-1346 

Holy  Communion,  Surniay  at 
8:30am  and  10:45am.  Sunday 
School  for  all  ages,  9:40am.  ChUd 
care  provided. 

St.  Paul's  is  an  inclusive  arxJ 
intergenerational  Christian  conv 
munity.  Come  and  be  fed  with 
Gods  Word,  the  Sacraments,  and 
the  Fellowship  with  real  people. 

Unh^ersity  Lutheran  Chapel 

10815  Smmmora  Dr. 
LoaAfigalaa,CA  90024 
310-20B-4S71 
www.ulcla.ca.ua 

10:30am,  tradition  7pm,  contem- 
porary. 

Join  us  in  experiencing  in  the 
context  ol  word  and  sacrament  in 
small  groups  throughout  the 

fVUUIV* 

Christian  Scleni^g 


Testimonial  h4eeting.  Reading 
Room  310-820-2014. 
AH  are  welcomel 

Foursquare 


Tenth  Church  of  Christ, 
Scientist 

113  S.  BunOy  Dr. 

Loa  Angalaa.  CA  90049 

310-826-2229  ! 

Sunday  10am  Church  Sennce 
and  Sunday  School  (up  to  20 
years),  Wednesdays  7:30pm 


Christian 
Fellowship 

1941  SBarrkigton  Ave. 

W.  Loa  Angahs.  CA  90025 

310-478-90S9 

•mail:  NawHeartef0aol.com 

Sunday  10:30am.  We(kwsday 

7:30pm  (Bible  Study). 

Come  share  the  excitement  of 

Gods  House  Ihrough  New  Heart's 

dynamic  worship  and  relevant 

word.  Always  feel  welcomed  in  the 

wanm  atmosphere  of  heartfelt 

frierxjship. 


Full  Gospel 

House  Upon  The  Rock 
Church 

4427  0venanaA¥a.  OFarragut 

CutverClty 

310-839-1114 

Sunday  at  12:30pm. 
In  depth  Bit>le  teaching  for  the 
serious  student  of  scripture. 
Upbeat  Praise  and  Worship. 
Healing  Ministry. 

Seventh-day 
Adventist 


Episcopal 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


CantertMjry  Westwood         '  ^ 

580  HUgarrJ  Ave. 
Los  Angeles.  CA  90024 
310-208-4830 

www.slatmnswesfwood.com 
Tuesday  4pm  Eucharist.  5pm  din- 
ner and  discussion.  Sunday  dam, 
10am. 

We  are  an  open  and  inclusive  com- 
munity. Join  us  Tuesdays  for  wor- 
ship, dinner  and  discussion. 


Santa  Monica  Seventh-Day 
Adventist  Church 

1254  19lhSt 
Santa  khnkm.  CA  90404 
310829-1945 

www.aanlamonteaaaa.homapaga.eom 
Saturday  9:30,  Worship  11am. 
Small  groups  throughout  the 
weei<.  Collegiate  group  Thurs.  at 
UCLA.  We  invite  you  to  join  us 
to  worship  and  grow,  and  experi- 
erKe  God's  love  in  a  SG  and 
Sabbath  morning  worship. 


Daily  BniflSfMrts 


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M.WATERPOL0 

From  page  36 

currently  stand  at  No.  2  and  if  they 
beat  the  Trojans,  they  could  easily 
take  over  the  No.  1  spot.       ' 

"This  game  is  important  because 
it  is  a  game,  not  because  it  is  USC," 
Krikorian  added.  . ...  •■  :■'■' — .■.•'■ 


"Rankings  don't 
really  matter." 

Adam  Wright 

Senior  playmaker 


The  Bruins  are  looking  forward, 
rather  than  backwards,  at  the  season 
and  rankings. 

"Rankings  don't  really  matter,  it 
is  all  about  wins  and  losses.  Sure  it  is 
nice  to  be  ranked  No.  1,  but  it  gives 
us  more  motivation  to  do  well," 
Wright  said. 

The  Bruins  also  face  the  difficult 
task  of  playing  at  the  Trojans'  home 
pool,  where  both  teams  face  intimi- 
dation. 

"Obviously  it  is  difTicult  to  play  at 
there,"  Krikorian  said.  "They  get 
really  fired  up,  and  they  always  have 
a  good  crowd." 


DMy  Brain  Sptm 


Sophomore  goalie  Brandon  Brooks  blocks  a  goal  against  the  Pepperdine  Waves  In  a  game  earlier 
this  season.  The  Bruins  face  the  Trojans  at  USC's  McDonald  Swim  Stadium  this  Saturday  at  1 0  a.m. 


w.socaR 

y'  i*.i' 

From  page  M 

beat  us,"  she  said. 

Despite  all  of  the  intense  and 
sometimes  acrimonious  jabber 
between  the  storied  rivals, 
UCLA  is  not  overlooking 
tonight's  game  at  7:30  p.m. 
against  Marquette  at  Spaulding 
Field.  The  Golden  Eagles  enter 
the  game  with  an  1 1-1  record  and 
an  impressive  No.  19  national 
ranking. 

Because  of  a  red  card  she 
received  in  last  Sunday's  match 
at  Loyola  Marymount,  Ellis  is 
prohibited  from  attending  the 
match.  The  head  coach  loathes 
her  NCAA-imposed  absence  but 
knows  her  team  will  respond  well. 
"Soccer  is  a  player's  game  and 
it's  really  about  getting  it  done  on 
the  field,"  she  said.  "A  coach 
doesn't  have  a  whole  lot  of  con- 
trol over  the  game." 

Friday's  match  marks  the  first- 
ever  meeting  between  UCLA  and 
Marquette,  but  Ellis  knows  from 
head  coaching  at  the  University 
of  Illinois  that  the  Golden  Eagles 
are  not  to  be  taken  lightly. 

"I  know   Marquette  and   I 
know  that  they  are  a  good  team  : 
and  a  playoff  team,"  Ellis  said. 
"They're  not  fiuff  at  all." 


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frompage34 

No.  I  rated  offense  (4.2  goals  per  game) 
and  No.  1  rated  defense  (0.11  goals 
against  average). 

In  fact,  Cardinal  goalkeeper  Adam 
Zapala  has  only  yielded  one  goal  the 
entire  season.  Their  back  line  is  led  by 
defender  Lee  Morrison,  who  is  a  nomi- 
nee for  both  the  Hermann  Trophy  and 
MAC  Award. 

Offensively,  Stanford  boasts  five  play- 
ers who  are  in  double-digits  in  the  point 
column.  Of  those  five,  midfielder  Scott 
Leber  leads  the  Cardinal  with  nine  goals 
and  three  assists. 

Last  weekend,  Stanford  won  its  home 
tournament,  the  Stanford/Nike. 
Invitational.  Not  only  did  they  win  both 
of  their  games,  they  destroyed  their 
opposition.  They  beat  Seton  Hall  last 
Friday  5-0  and  won  the  championship 
game  last  Sunday  over  Cincinnati  4-0. 

Before  playing  UCLA  on  Sunday, 
Stanford  will  commence  its  conference 
season  today  versus  Washington. 

"It's  a  great  start,  but  for  any  good 
team  to  survive  the  season  they  must 
keep  building  on  each  performance," 
Cardinal  forward  Luke  Rust  told  the 
Stanford  Daily. 

Rust  has  three  game-winning  goals  on 
the  year  and  was  named  Offensive  MVP 
of  the  Stanford/Nike  Invitational. 

"Great  teams  can  come  out  of  a  week- 


end like  we  had  and  still  find  room  for 
improvement,"  he  added.  "I  think  every- 
one on  the  team  knows  that  the  hardest 
part  of  the  weekend  still  lies  ahead  and 
there  is  still  a  lot  we  can  work  on  if  we 
want  to  go  all  the  way" 

Of  course,  if  Stanford  is  to  go  all  the 
way,  it  will  have  to  go  through  UCLA. 
The  Bruins  struggled  a  bit  in  the  first  half 
.  last  Sunday  against  St.  Mary's  and  actu- 
ally found  themselves  trailing  at  the  half. 
But  most  attribute  that  play  to  the  food 
poisoning  that  struck  the  team  a  few 
days  before  rather  than  to  a  lack  of 
focus. 

While  both  sides  recognize  the  impor- 
tance of  Sunday's  match-up,  Lee  has 
tried  to  keep  things  in  perspective  for  his 
teammates. 

"Our  short-term  goal  is  to  win  each 
game  that's  upcoming,  but  our  long- 
term  goal  is  always  to  prepare  for  the 
tournament  and  have  us  playing  our  best 
soccer  for  the  tournament,"  the  defend- 
er said.  "This  is  just  another  stepping- 
stone  for  us.  We  hope  to  continue  to  win 
all  of  our  games  and  if  that  means  we  win 
our  conference,  we  win  our  conference. 

"But  our  ultimate  goaf  is  to  win  a 
national  championship." 

The  quest  for  national  championship 
number  four  continues  in  Palo  Alto  this 
weekend.  Tagged  as  the  No.  1  team  in 
the  nation,  the  Bruins  know  that  every- 
one is  gunning  for  them. 

And  Stanford  believes  it  can  st^  up 
to  the  challenge. 


W^VOUEYBALL 

From  page  36 

their  place,"  Bachman  said. 
"With  the  rivalry  and  fan  support 
-  to  go  along  with  what  can  happen, 
it's  a  unique  place  to  play" 

USC  returns  five  starters  to  the 
lineup,  including  the  talented  hit- 
ting duo  of  Antoinette  Polk  and 
Jennifer  Pahl.  Polk  was  sixth  in 
the  Pao-iO  last  season  with  a  3.82 
kill  average  and  fifth  with  a  3.19 
digging  clip. 

Pahl,  meanwhile,  was  tenth  in 
the  conference  in  hitting  with  a 
.293  percentage,  along  with  her 
heralded  service  game.  Both  have 
been  mainstays  in  each  category 
and  have  been  a  huge  reason  for 
the  Trojans'  early  success. 

But  this  has  not  forced  a  deter- 
mined UCLA  ballclub  to  do  any- 
thing differently. 

"We've  tried  to  work  within 
our  own  system  and  not  look  too 
closely  at  trying  to  shut  down  a 
certain  player,"  said  freshman 
defensive  specialist  Stacey  Lee. 
"But  we  will  expect  something 
exciting  to  happen  when  we  go 
over  there." 

UCLA  features  a  similar  one- 
two  punch  in  junior  outside  hit- 
ters Ashley  Bowles  and  Porter. 
Both  1999  AII-Pac-10  team  hon- 


orees.  Porter  and  Bowles  com- 
bined to  average  eight  kills  per 
game  last  season. 

Bowles  recently  joined  tlie 
1 000th  kill  club  at  UCLA  with  a 
seven-kill  performance  in  last 
Friday's  sweep  of  the  Ducks, 
becoming  the  18th  Bruin  to 
eclipse  the  mark.  Porter  topped 
1,500  career  kills  the  ni^t  before 
against  Oregon  State. 


"We  want  to  start  out 

strong  and  remain  a 

cohesive  unit." 

Elisabeth  Bachman 

Senior  middle  blocker 


The  Trojans  also  feature  5- 
foot-7-inch  setter  Tracy 
Lindquist,  who  was  tenth  in  the 
Pac-IO  last  season  in  set  assists, 
with  7.68  per  game.  Look  for  her 
to  keep  an  up-tempo  and  off-bal- 
ance offensive  attack  similar  to 
that  of  UCLA's  Erika  Selsor,  the 
top  setter  in  the  conference  last 
season  with  14.12  set  assists  per 
contest. 

Despite  the  importance  of  such 
a  big  game,  UCLA  heads  towards 


the  middle  of  the  season  knowing 
that  they  have  the  personnel  to 
win  a  Pac-IO  title  and  more. 

"We  definitely  need  to  come 
out  and  maintain  a  high  level  of 
consistency,"  said  junior  opposite 
hitter  Ashley  Bowles.  "This  is  a 
big  match  and  we  need  to  come  in 
yith  an  all-around  game."*——' 

Practice  this  week  has  the 
Bruins  mentally  preparing  for  the 
little  things  that  can  become  road- 
blocks in  their  quest  for  a  nation- 
al championship. 

"We  have  focused  on  playing 
hard  and  coming  together  as  a 
team  this  week,"  Bachman  said. 
"We  want  to  start  out  strong  and 
remain  a  cohesive  unit  through- 
out the  match." 

"The  coaches  have  tried  to 
help  us  concentrate  on  shaking 
off  errors  and  not  dwelling  upon 
them  for  the  rest  of  the  match," 
Lee  said.  "If  a  mistake  is  made, 
we  just  have  to  look  towards  the 
next  point."  '  ■ 

In  a  game  against  cross-town 
rivals,  controlling  emotions  will 
be  difficult.  But  the  Bruins  under- 
stand the  impact  a  win  tonight 
against  the  top  team  in  the  Pac-IO 
could  have.  ="  ; 

"I  have  heard  so  much  about 
(playing  USC)  and  we  know 
many  of  the  girls  over  there,"  Lee 
said.  "It  is  definitely  a  rivalry." 


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34       Friday,  October  6, 2000 


fUtiMnSptm 


dbals  will  be  harder  fought  than  before 


M.SOCCER:  Tough  match-up 
expected  against  improving 
opponent,  Stanford  Cardinal 


Relaxed  Bruin  team 
awaits  invitationals 


By  Brian  Thompson     —. „.,  .;.■.':■■. 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Histoi7  indicates  that  the  UCLA  men's 
soccer  team  should  not  have  any  trouble 
in  its  game  Sunday.  After  all,  the  Bruins 
hold  a  commanding  24-1-2  all-time  mark 
against  its  next  opponent. 

That  opponent  is  Stanford,  one  of 
UCLA's  biggest  West  Coast  rivals.  But 
the  Cardinal  doesn't  worry  too  much 
about  all-time  records.  The  past  is  the 
past. 

Here,  in  the  year  2000,  the  Cardinal  (S- 
0-1)  is  quickly  climbing  the  national  polls 
and  garnering  attention  from  the  colle- 
giate soccer  world. 

Stanford  has  cracked  the  top  5  in  two 
polls,  with  Soccer  America  putting  the 
team  at  No.  4  and  SoccerTimes.com  rank- 
ing the  Cardinal  at  No.  5.  The  NSCAA 
poll  has  them  at  a  respectable  No.  12. 

So,  any  way  you  put  it,  Sunday's  game 
at  Stanford's  new  Maloney  Field  is  a  big 
game  for  the  consensus  No.  1  team  in  the 
nation,  UCLA  (8-aO). 

"We've  had  a  few  strong  days  of  prac- 
tice."  said  Bruin  captain  Ryan  Lee. 

"I  think  we're  starting  to  climb  out  of  a 
valley  We  were  kind  of  in  a  lull.  We  were 
practicing  at  one  pace,  and  it  seems  like 
it's  been  picking  up  this  week,"  he  said. 

And  senioi'  midfielder  Shaun  Tsakiris 
has  also  noticed  that  his  squad  has 
stepped  up  its  intensity  this  week.  After 
all,  Sunday's  game  isn't  just  against  a 
ranked  team,  it's  also  against  one  of 
UCLA's  new  conference  rivals.  The  game 
will  be  UCLA's  first-ever  Pac-IO 
Conference  game. 

"We  only  have  one  game  this  week,  and 


■^^^mt^-mmmmmto" 


^■■^^mmmm»mk^ 


"^  % 


'    ^ 


hreshman  midfielder  Joey  YUsunas  attempts  to  gain  control  of  the  soccer 
ball  during  a  game  against  St.  Mary's  last  Sunday  afternoon. 


usually  we  have  two  games  in  a  week." 
Tsakiris  said.  "We  know  it's  a  big  game.  I 
think  we're  all  excited." 

Stanford  is  off  to  its  best  start  since  the 


1997  season,  which  they  began  with  a  I W)- 
2  mark.  UCLA  will  be  facing  the  nation's 


PREVIEW:  Top  finish 
hopes  at  Penn  State; 
Bowen  to  lead  squad 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff     .    ' 

As  they  boarded  the  bus 
that  would  take  them  to  the 
airport  Thursday  morning, 
Eric  Peterson's  runners 
were  unusually  relaxed. 

The  UCLA  women's 
cross  country  team,  who  will 
compete  at  the  Penn  State 
Invitational  on  Saturday, 
felt  certain  they  will  do  well 
in  their  upcoming  meet.  The 
self-doubt  which  had  built 
up  after  the  first  meets  early 
in  the  season  was  gone. 

Last  weekend,  the  Bruins 
finished  sixth  at  the  presti- 
gious Stanford  Invitational, 
losing  only  to  teams  that 
were  ranked  13th  or  higher 
in  the  NCAA. 

"Before  Stanford,  our 
confidence  was  about  this 
much,"  said  senior  Team 
Captain  Tina  Bowen,  hold- 
ing her  thumb  and  index  fin- 
gers about  a  centimeter 
apart  from  each  other. 

"Stanford  was  awe- 
some," she  continued.  "We 
gained  a  lot  of  confidence 
from  it." 

Peterson  said  recent 
workouts  have  benefitted  as 
a  result. 


"The  more  competent 
they  feel  about  themselves, 
the  more  enthusiastic  they 
will  be,"  he  said.  "In  the 
workouts,  you  need  tp  have 
a  high  level  of  energy  and 
concentration  and  in  the  la$t 
week,  they've  had  that." 

At  this  weekend's  meet, 
the  Bruins  will  face  a  strong, 
but  not  spectacular  field, 
which  includes  host  Penn 
State,  Central  Michigan  and 
Navy.  None  of  the  teams  in 
the  race  are  ranked  in  the 
top  25. 

"We're  hoping  to  get 
first,"  said  sophomore  Julia 
Barbour. 

Bowen  added  that  a  win 
over  Penn  State,  a  team  that 
may  qualify  for  the  NCAA 
Championship  meet  as  the 
No.  3  team  from  the  Great 
Lakes  Region,  would  give 
the  Bruins  great  leverage  to 
get  an  at-large  bid  to  the 
national  finals. 

With  weak  early-season 
performances  probably 
hurting  UCLA  in  the  eyes  cjf 
the  NCAA  selection  com- 
mittee, some  team  members 
say  they  are  feeling  a  sense 
of  urgency  to  do  favorably 
against  other  bubble  teams. 
Peterson,  however,  wants 
his  runners  to  focus  on 
themselves. 

"Our  goal  is  to  race  better 
every  week,"  he  said.  "We 


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■..  • " 

■  ■■  ♦« '  '■ .' 
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',"     .■  t,V  -i'  ■  f 

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■  /  >■"■•■•    ':'■-     >'  ■'  •■■'■  .  ■::■  '.■ ,  . 

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.'. .    ■;  'J  »■■■  :;■■••:'/. -1 .'  'r.  ''  \  '••    ."    ' 
Daily  BnHnSJMrts 

"■■'-■           '  '■    r'-.- 

'  ■^.  "'■ 

.■■-■-■^' .     ■'. ■•- ,. 

Friday,  October  6/2006 

JS 

BRUIN  UPDAH 


Program  to  offer  first  soccer  tournament 


M.WaterPolovs.USC 
McDonald  Swim  Stadium, 
^  use,  10  am 

W.Cross  Country  at  Penn 
State  Invitational 

sity  Park,  PA,  All  day 


unday 


cer  vs.  use 

L.AJCbliseum,  l  pm 

cer  vs.  Stanford 
Stanford,  2  pm 


JSSim 


SPEQAL:  Coaches,  teams 
hope  to  build  on  success 
of  previous  competitions 


ByPauiineVy 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff    ;  •       ^  ,  : 

The  Sydney  Games  may  be  over,  but 
you  don't  have  to  wait  another  two 
years  for  some  Olympic  action. 

All  day  this  Sunday  at  the  IM  Held, 
UCLA  Special  Olympics  will  host  its 
first-ever  soccer  tournament.  Eight 
teams  and  more  than  100  athletes  and 
coaches  will  be  participating. 

"It's  a  chance  for  everyone  to  put 
the  skills  they've  been  practicing  to 
use,"  said  UCLA  Special  Olympics 
director  and  fourth-year  French  stu- 
dent Lisa  Levin. 

Three  teams  hail  from  the  UCLA 


program,  two  are  from  the  Los  Angeles 
area,  two  are  from  San  Diego,  and  the 
last  is  from  Encino. 

The  idea  for  this  tournament,  which 
its    planners     ""'.,  '...,'';■■","''   "  ■ 


will 


hope 

become  an 
annual  event, 
came  shortly 
after  the  pro- 
gram hosted 
its  first-ever 
basketball 
tournament  in 
Pauley 
Pavilion  last 
spring. 

"We'd  got- 
ten       good     ^———^—^ 
responses 

from  the  other  tournament,"  Levin 
said. 

Games  will  last  45  minutes.  Every 


"It's  evolved  to  a  more 

athletic  endeavor  and 

coaches  can  actually  see 

the  end  result  in  the 

competition." 

John  Hayashi 

Special  Olympics  coach 


team  is  guaranteed  three  games  in  the 
preliminary  round,  and  from  there, 
teams  advance  until  only  two  make  it  to 
the  championship  game.  There  will 

^^""■""''■■"'■■^      s  0  I  a  t  i  o  n 
game. 

.:  There  will 
be  five  players 
to  a  team, 
with  two 
coaches  per 
team  on  the 
field  and  three 
athletes.  The 
Special 
Olympics 
serve  athletes 
— — — — ^^—  who  live  with 
some  form  of 

mental  retardation. 
These  tournaments  are  part  of  a 

larger    plan    to    help    the    Special 


Olympics  program  at  UCLA  grow. 

"We're  really  excited  just  to  keep 
expanding,"  Levin  said.  "We're  creat- 
ing opportunities,  broadening  con- 
tacts. We  are  also  working  on  expand- 
ing our  athlete  pool." 

From  the  1 998-99  school  year  to  that 
of  1999-2000,  the  number  of  athletes 
and  coaches  in  the  program  doubled. 

Fellow  director  Steven  LaFemina,  a 
second-year  biochemistry  student,  said 
that  this  year  the  interest  has  been 
tremendous. 

This  weekend,  21  of  the  program's 
50  athletes  -  whose  ages  range  from  1 5 
to  50  -  are  expected  to  play.  There  will 
also  be  20  coaches  at  the  tournament, 
though  the  program  has  about  40 
coaches,  who  are  also  UCLA  students. 

One  of  the  coaches.  Bruin  alumnus 
John  Hayashi  ('92)  has  been  with  the 

S«e  OLYMPICS,  page  30 


Tourney  could  put  Bruins  on  course  to  ranking 


Baseball  tryouts 

There  will  be  open  tryouts  for 
the  UCLA  baseball  team  this 
Sunday,  Oct.  8,  at  noon  at  Jackie 
Robinson  Stadium.  Players  must 
bring  their  own  gear. 

The  stadium  is  located  ofT-cam- 
pus  at  the  Veteran's 
Administration  Facility  on 
Constitution  Avenue  off  of 
Sepulveda  Boulevard.  For  more 
information,  call  coach  Gary 
Adams  at  (310)  794-8210. 


M.GOLF:  Stronger  individual  play 
may  prove  difference  for  UCLA 

By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Heading  into  the  toughest  golf  tournament  of 
the  fall  quarter  this  weekend,  the  Carpet  Capital  at 
Georgia  Tech,  members  of  the  UCLA  men's  team 
aren't  exactly  intimidated  by  the  higher  ranks. 

Sure,  No.  1  Georgia,  No.  2  Qemson  and  No.  3 
Arizona  State  will  be  there.  In  fact,  of  the  15  teams 
playing,  UCLA  is  just  one  of  four  teams  that  is 
unranked. 

"This  is  probably  the  strongest  field  that  we  play 
against  until  Regionals  or  NCAAs,"  said  sopho- 


more Travis  Johnson. 

But  the  men  aren't  thinking  about  the  competi- 
tion. They're  thinking  about  themselves. 

"It's  really  just  you  against  the  golf  course,"  said 
sophomore  J. T  Kohut. 

For  a  Bruin  team  that  has  admitted  to  under-per- 
forming throughout  its  first  three  tournaments,  the 
Carpet  Capital  is  a  test  to  see  if  they're  as  good  as 
they  think  they  are  -  and  a  chance  to  finally  prove 
that  to  the  collegiate  golfing  world. 

"If  we  do  play  well  this  weekend,  that's  going  to 
make  everyone  in  the  nation  know,"  Kohut  said. 

But  that's  a  pretty  big  "if." 

So  far  the  men  have  choked  in  two  tournaments 
coming  down  the  stretch.  At  both  the  Inverness 
Intercollegiate  and  the  Husky  Invitational  the 
Bruins  entered  the  final  round  placed  in  the  top 


three,  but  then  failed  to  keep  it  up  on  the  final  holes 
and  finished  sixth  and  fourth,  respectively,  at  the 
two  tournaments. 

And  then  there's  the  youth  factor. 

Already,  three  true  freshmen  have  had  a  chance 
to  play  for  UCLA.  This  time  it's  one  junior  (Parker 
McLachlin),  two  sophomores  (Kohut  and 
Johnson)  and  two  freshmen  (Steve  Conway  and 
John  Merrick)  who  represent  UCLA  as  the  scoring 
five. 

"We're  real  young,"  McLachlin  said.  "Travis 
and  I  are  the  only  ones  to  see  this  golf  course.  It's  all 
a  little  bit  of  a  question." 

But  then  again,  with  three  tournaments  under 
their  belts  already,  Johnson  sees  a  lot  of  potential  in 

See  M.GOLF,  page  30 


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<  \  .  •  I 


■  ,    »  ••  :.  :.'.'.   1 


'-■'   '-;-- '',  "\  '    •*      •/■","-■ 


—  Daily  Bruin 


Beat 'SC  week.  Part  I 

Each  day  this  weekend  showcases  a 
crosstown  showdown.  Read  about 
volleyball,  water  polo  and  women's 
soccer  as  they  prepare  for  battle. 


SPORTS 


Ffidayi  October  6, 2000 


Sports  on  the  Web  I)    }) 

You  can  also  read  about 

men's  soccer,  golf  and  the 

Special  Olympics  at: 

www.dallybrutn.ucla.edu 


i 


use 


W.  SOCCER*  Team  hopes 
to  capitalize  on  refined 
skills  in  upcoming. game 


ByJeff  Agase 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

UCLA  fans  are  used  to  seeing 
their  Bruins  square  off  against 
detested  cross-town  rival  DSC  late  in 
the  season  with  both  pride  and  the 
Pac-IO  tide  at  stake. 

This  Sunday,  as  the  No.  5  UCLA 
women's  soccer  team  travels  up  the 
110  freeway  to 
the  Los  Angeles 
Coliseum  to 
take  on  the  No. 
21  Trojans  (8-1- 
I)  in  both 
schools'  confer- 
ence opener, 
the  calendar 
may  read  Oct. 
8,  but  the  inten- 
sity and  impor- 
tance of  the 
contest  will 
make  it  seem 
November. 

The  Pac-10  boasts  of  five  teams  in 
the  latest  NSCAA  Top  25  poll.  Road 
victories,  therefore,  are  precious 
commodities,  especially  in  the  ran- 
corous environment  the  Bruins  will 
surely  face. 

"Even  when  they  came  here  last 
year,  they  had  a  lot  of  people  here 
and  they  were  hostile,"  said  UCLA 
head  coach  Jillian  Ellis.  "I've  only 
been  here  one  year,  but  I've  heard 


WOMEN^S  SOCCER 

Marquette  vs.  UOA 
Friday  at  7:30  p.in. 
S|taulding  Field 

UCLA  vs.  use 
Sunday  at  1p.m. 
Los  Angeles  Coiiseum 


more    like    mid- 


about  past  games  and  they're  just 
roller  coasters." 

Ellis  hopes  that  the  play  of  her 
defense  and  especially  her  goalkeep- 
er, CiCi  Peterson,  continues  to  be 
steady,  yet  exciting.  Peterson  has  not 
allowed  a  goal  in  544  minutes  and 
the  UCLA  defense  has  limited  the 
opposition  to  a  paltry  39  shots. 

"Our  back  line  is  playing  very  well 
and  that  includes  our  goalkeeper," 
Ellis  said.  "I  think  our  mentality  has 
gotten  better  defensively.  We're 
starting  to  come  in  for  bails  that  last 
year  we  let  bounce  or  last  year  would 
shy  away  from." 

Haunting  the 
Bruins  as  they 
make  their 
twice-yearly 
sojourn  to  USC 
is  a  two-game 
road  losing 
streak  in  the 
series.  The 
Bruins  won  last 
year  at  the 
North  Athletic 
Field  in  con- 
vincing fashion, 
3-0,  but  have  not  won  across  town 
since  1994.  UCLA  owns  a  7-2  record 
in  the  series,  with  the  two  losses  com- 
ing in  1996  and  1998  at  USC. 

Freshman  forward  Sarah-Gayle 
Swanson  said  she  has  heard  the  usual 
rumblings  about  rivalry. 

"1  heard  that  they  were  talking  a 
little  trash  at  USC,  that  they  have  a 
good  team  this  year  and  that  they're 
ready.  I  know  they  think  they  can 

;..:"•  ■:        SceW40CCEII,pa9c32 


ADAM  8flOWN/D«ily  Brutn 


mn.  A(IMCNIAN/CM)f  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Senior  forward  Traccy  Milburn  pushes  past  a  Fresno  State  defender  in  a  game  last  Friday. 


Team  looks  forward  to  match 


M.WATERPOLa  Win 

could  avenge  earlier 
loss,  lead  to  top  spot 


ByRddiaRao 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Every  year,  a  game  stands 
before  the  UCLA  men's  water 
polo  team  that  stems  from  years 
of  unparalleled  rivalry  and  past 
grievances. 

This  weekend,  in  its  third  con- 
ference game  of  the  season,  the 
team  plays  cross-town  rival  No. 
1  USC. 

The  Bruins  come  into  the 
weekend  on  a  four-game  win- 
ning streak.  Last  weekend,  they 
beat  UC  Santa  Barbara  11-3  on 
Friday  and  Pepperdine  13-6  on 
Sunday. 

The  last  times  the  two  teams 
met  this  season  on  Sept.  17,  USC 
prevailed,  5-4. 

"We  beat  them  in  Hawaii, 
and  we  might  have  been  a  little 
overconfident  the  first  time  we 
played  them,"  said  senior  Dave 
Parker.  "It  was  kind  of  an  eye- 
opener.  I  didn't  realize  how 
good  they  were." 

Taking  that  loss  into  consid- 
eration, the  Bruins  hope  to 
improve  and  change  the  out- 
come in  this  game. 

"We  won't  be  as  lackadaisi- 
cal."  Parker  said.  "We  will  be 
sharp  right  ^rom  the  beginning. 


We  won't  take  them  as  lightly  as 
we  did  last  time." 

UCLA  is  looking  at  the  last 
loss  for  motivation  to  win  this 
time  around. 

"We  know  we  made  mistakes 
the  first  time  we  played  them," 
said  senior  playmaker  Adam 
Wright.  "We  saw  a  video  on  it, 
but    as    of 
lately      we      __i______ 

have  been 
playing 
really  well. 
If  we  do  the 
right  things, 
we  will  do 
fine." 

USC 
usually 

starts   with      

about    five 

European 

players  who  have  played  water 

polo  since  childhood  and  show 

that  experience  in  their  game. 

"They  are  a  fundamentally 
sound  team,"  said  Bruin  head 
coach  Adam  Krikorian.  "They 
have  some  good  shooters,  and 
some  good  two-meter  men  that 
we  need  to  prepare  for." 

The  Trojans  lost  to  Cal  last 
weekend  in  overtime.  9-8.  If 
ther  prepare,  the  Bruins  have 
the  opportunity  to  catch  the 
Trojans  on  the  heel  of  a  loss. 

"It  should  slow  their  momen- 
tum down,"  Wright  said.  "They 
had  eight  wins  and  no  losses,  but 


"This  game  is 

important  because 

it  is  a  game." 

:  Adam  Krikorian 

Water  polo  coach 


Bruins  have  been  doing.  They 
have  been  practicing  for  this 
game  for  a  majority  of  the  sea- 
son. 

"In  big  games,  it  comes  down 
to  who  wins  the  6-on-5,  5-on-6 
battle.  We  just  have  to  keep 
doing  the  things  that  we  have 
been  doing,"  Krikorian  said. 

Defense 

__^_^___     seems  to  be 

the        key 

with      the 

Bruins  this 

season. 

They 

;■  allowed 

only    three 

goals  in  the 

game 

^«__«_^__      against 

UCSB  and 

just        six 

against  Pepperdine. 

Sophomore  goalie  Brandon 
Brooks  leads  the  defense  that 
Krikorian  said  is  the  key  to  the 
team's  success. 

Although  the  rivalry  between 
the  two  schools  is  strong,  most 
players  don't  see  the  game  as  a 
defining  moment  in  the  season. 
"We  have  rivalries  with 
everyone.  We  only  have  two 
teams  in  the  conference  that  get 
to  go  to  the  NCAAs  so  every 
game  is  a  rivalry,"  Krikorian 
said. 

The  No.  I  ranking  couWbe  at 
stake  in  this  game.  The  Bruins 


Squad  prepares  to  serve  up 
tough  game  against  Trojans 

W.  VOLLEYBALL'    Players  focus     and  a  20-minute  fire  alarm  delay. 

.    ,  .       .  "You  definitely  have  to  take  North 

on  mental  game,  prOjecUng        Cym  into  consideration  when  playing  at 

Strong,  consistent  team  effort    


St«II.V0llfVBMl.pa9t33 


ByAJCadman 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

For  the  UCLA  women's  volleyball 
team,  tonight's  showdown  with  USC 
means  much  more  than  calling  out  the 
neighbors  for  a  showdown  in  their  own 
backyard. 

Tonight's  match  against  the  Trojans 
could  either  inch  the  No  8  Bruins  (10-4 
overall,  5- 1  Pac-10)  one  game  closer  to  No. 
4  USC  (11-0,  6^)  in  the  Pac-10  sUndings 
or  drop  them  even  further  after  the  Bruins 
split  matches  against  the  Oregon  schools 
last  weekend. 

"This  game  is  huge."  said  UCLA  senior 
middle  blocker  Elisabeth  Bachman.  "The 
top  of  the  Pac-10  (standings)  rest  on  this 
game.  They  are  undefeated  and  our  cross- 
town  rivals,  which  helps  us  focus  on  want- 
ing to  beat  them  more.** 

Last  year,  1999  conference  Coach  of 
the  Year  Jerritt  Elliott  lost  both  contests  to 
the  Bruins  in  her  first  year  at  the  helm  of 
the  USC  team. 

The  Trojans  dropped  a  tough  3-1  deci- 
sion to  the  Bruins  last  year  to  give  UCLA 
a  share  of  the  conference  championship 
and  a  17-1  Pac-10  record.  The  two-hour- 
S2-minute  thriller  featured  a  25-kill  perfor- 


>    .'. 


»  .  .fv.  ;: 


V  (.1  .■  ■ 


I 


manee  by  UCLA  mitside  hitter  Kristee 
Porter,  a  draining  19-17  game  four  victory. 


BRKXn  0«KNA}My  Brutn  Santor  Sl^ 


i 


Erika  S«lsor  bumps  the  ball  during  a 
recent  match  against  Oregon  State. 


ARTS    &    ENTERTAINMENT 


BattleBots  duke  it  out  for  robot  suprema- 
cy on  Comedy  Central.  See  page  30 


WEATHER 


Sunny 
High  75* 
Lower 


Tomorrow 

Sunny 

High  70* 

Lower 


U    C   I.   A 


Serving  the  UOA  community  since  1919 


Monday,  OaoBER  9, 2000 


www.daitybruin.ucld.edu 


UC  apparel  production 
may  violate  labor  laws 


ANOREAKIM 

Coalition  of  University  Employees  and  University  Professional  and  Technical  Employee  workers  protest 
at  Westwood  Plaza  Friday.  Union  leaders  later  met  informally  with  Chancellor  Albert  Carnesale. 

Chancellor,  union  leaders  chat 


LABOR:  Carnesale  offers 
support  of  some  issues 
during  informal  session 


By  Timothy  Kudo 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Union  organizers  met  informally 
with  a  sympathetic  chancellor  on 
Friday  after  leading  a  protest  from 
Westwood  Plaza  to  the  Faculty 
Center. 

Organizers,  who  criticized 
Chancellor  Albert  Carnesale  in  the 
past  for  his  reluctance  to  meet  with 
them,  celebrated  the  first  meeting 


with  him  since  he  became  head  of 
UCLA. 

In  the  meeting,  Carnesale 
expressed  his  support  for  some  of  the 
unions'  causes. 

"That's  the  closest  we've  ever  got- 
ten in  terms  of  public  support  from 
the  chancellor,"  said  Claudia 
Homing,  president  for  the  Coalition 
of  University  Employees. 

CUE  and  University  Professional 
and  Technical  Employee  union  orga- 
nizers are  considering  striking  if  they 
don't  arrive  at  a  contract  soon. 

The  UPTE  technical  unit,  consist- 
ing of  lab  assistants,  lab  mechani- 
cians, computer  operators  and  other 
employees,  will  walk  out  and  protest 


in  other  ways  during  the  next  couple 
of  weeks,  organizers  said. 

At  the  end  of  the  approximately  75 
person  march,  the  two  union  leaders 
broke  ofT  for  the  meeting  in  the  chan- 
cellor's Murphy  Hall  office. 

Because  neither  party  was  autho- 
rized to  bargain  on  behalf  of  their 
organizations,  the  informal  meeting 
let  organizers  plead  with  the  chancel- 
lor to  use  his  "bully  pulpit"  and  exert 
influence  in  the  UC  in  favor  of  a  good 
contract  for  the  unions. 

"One  thing  I  learned  is  never  make 
a  proposal  that's  not  in  your  authority 
to  accept,"  Carnesale  said.  "But  I  do 

SccniOTEST,page22 


REPORT:  Despite  strict 
code  of  conduct,  rules 
prove  difficult  to  enforce 


By  Barbara  Ortutay 

Daily  Bniin  Senior  Staff 

Forced  overtime, '  dangerous 
health  and  safety  cokle  violations, 
mandatory  pregnancy  testing  and 
low  wages  are  just  some  of  the  condi- 
tions workers  may  face  in  factories 
manufacturing  University  of 
Califomia  apparel. 

A  team  of  independent  consul- 
tants, commissioned  by  the  UC  and 
four  other  universities,  released  a  147- 
page  report  Friday  based  on  investi- 
gations into  faaory  and  sweatshop 
conditions  in  seven  countries. 

The  report,  titled  "Independent 
University  Initiative,"  found  that  sub- 
par  working  conditions  exist  in  all  the 
countries  surveyed,  and  that  codes  of 
conduct  and  monitoring  efforts  are 
often  inefficient. 

Harvard,  Ohio  State  University, 
the  University  of  Michigan  and  the 
University  of  Notre  Dame  also  par- 
ticipated in  the  report,  which  for  a 
year,  sampled  countries  where  a  sub- 
stantial poriion  of  university-licensed 
products  are  made. 

"This  came  in  response  to  con- 
cerns from  students,  faculty  and  the 
university,"  said  UC  spokeswoman 
Mary  Spletter.  "We  needed  this 
report  before  we  could  determine  the 
scope  of  the  problem." 

The  report  did  not  make  a  distinc- 
tion between  the  five  participating 
universities,  so  it  is  unclear  what  part 
of  the  findings  were  specific  to  UC- 


licensed  products. 

Patricia  Eastman,  executive  direc- 
tor of  the  Associated  Students  of 
UCLA,  which  licenses  the  UCLA 
logo,  said  Friday  ASUCLA  was  not 
prepared  to  comment  on  the  report. 

"We  have  a  very  strict  policy  that 
^  requires  manufacturers  to  comply 
'  with  a  whole  host  of  labor  standards," 
she  said. 

The  UC  revised  its  code  of  con- 
duct for  trademark  licensees  in 
January,  mandating  that  all  licensees 
and  their  contractors  disclose  the 
locations  of  their  factories,  let  their 
workers  unionize,  ensure  women's 
rights,  and  avoid  discrimination. 

"The  UC  already  has  the  strongest 
code  of  conduct  in  the  country  for  the 
manufacture  of  university-licensed 
apparel,"  said  UC  Senior  Vice 
President  Joseph  Mullinix  in  a  state- 
ment Friday 

"As  a  result  of  joining  the 
Independent  University  Initiative,  we 
now  know  that  much  more  work  is 
needed  to  address  the  widespread 
existence  of  substandard  working 
conditions,"  he  continued. 

Part  of  the  report's  findings,  how- 
ever, showed  that  workers,  unions 
and  non-govemmental  organizations 
in  each  of  the  countries  were  oflen 
unaware  of  codes  of  conduct,  and 
generally  doubted  their  efficacy. 

In  one  El  Salvador  factory,  for 
example,  the  plant's  general  manager 
said  she  did  not  know  about  the 
licensee's  60  hour  workweek  limit 
even  though  a  poster-size  copy  of  the 
code,  which  included  the  workweek 
limit,  was  posted  behind  her  in 
Spanish,  the  report  said. 

Se«  A^AREL,  page  23 


'Bruin  on  the  Go'  program  fills  some  gaps  for  campus  residents 


^SERVICES:  De  Neve  project,  input 
from  Students  prompts  expanded 
dining  hours,  menus  at  eateries 


1 


By  Laura  Rico 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

UCLA  Dining  Services  welcomed  on-canv 
pus  residents  with   new  menu  items  and 
increased  operation  hours 
at  two  of  its  restaurants     i^»._iMii.._i 
this  year. 

Puzzle's  Eatery  is  now 
open  for  breakfast  from 
7-10:45  a.m.  Caruso's  Deli 
in  Sproul  Hall  is  open  for 
lunch  from  11:30  a.m.  to 
2  p.m. 

Last     year,     students 
could  only  take  sack  lunch-      — — ^— — — 
es  from  the  dining  halls, 
but  now  Puzzle's  allows  them  to  order  break- 
fast to  go  as  well. 

"Students   requested   more  options  for 
break  fML  ipecificiillv  fait  food  "  «aiH  rh.rlPt 


Changes  made  to  the 

fast  food  eateries  are 

part  of  a  new  "Bruin 

on  the  Go"  program. 


"Many  students  are  in  a  hurry  to  get  to  class 
in  the  morning,  so  they  don't  want  to  go  to  the 
dining  halls  and  wait  for  an  omelette  to  cook," 
he  said. 

Wilcots  said  because  the  De  Neve  Plaza  din- 
ing hall  is  not  complete,  eateries  must  stay 
open  longer  to  accommodate  residents. 

"The  Office  of  Residential  Life  was  expect- 
ing De  Neve  to  be  complete  by  fall  quarter,  so 
the  menu  additions  and  extra  hours  are  in  part 
due  to  the  lack  of  a  dining  hall,"  WilcoU  said. 
ORL  made  additions 
i^BMBMB^BiBKB      to    its    dining    services 
based  on  feedback  from  a 
food    and    environment 
committee  last  year. 

The  committee  meets 
weekly  in  residence  halls. 
It  is  made  up  of  residents, 
resident    advisors    and 

housing      and      dining 

'~~"'^"~~~~~~"      administrators. 

Changes  made  to  the 
fast  food  eateries  are  part  of  a  new  "Bruin  on 
the  Go"  program,  which  seeks  to  accommo- 
date students  who  don't  have  time  to  sit  down 
and  eat  in  the  dining  halls  rvry  m<ali 


Juan  Alcman  hands  a  breakfast  to  go  to  Jeffrey  Wang  at  Puzzle's  Eatery. 


CHUB  BAcia.fr 


cessful  in  meeting  the  dining  needs  of  stu- 
dents. 

"The  program  is  doing  great,"  Wilcots  said. 
Our  rwidtntg  and  guests  appfceiale  the  new 


Besides  Puzzle's,  Caruso's  has  also  extend- 
ed its  hours. 

Caruso's  lunch  menu  features  panini  sand- 


•A    I 


--^' 


'S 


this  loss  IS  key.' 
And  preparing  is  what  the 


$«cM.W«nilfOlO,pa9c32 


WilcoU.  assitunt  director  of  Dining  Services.         WilcoU  said  Dining  Services  has  been  sue-     features." 


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Monday,  October  9, 2000 


Oa#BiuiRNc«i 


COMMUNITY  BRIEFS 


Researchers  examine 
literacy  in  new  century 

Pacific  Bell  donated  $1  million  to  UCLA's 
Graduate  School  of  Education  and 
Information  Studies  to  finance  a  project  exam- 
ining the  meaning  ofliteracy  in  relations  to  new 
technologies,  unfiltered  information,  and 
increasing  diversity. 

"An  information-literate  society  means 
more  than  just  having  access  to  the  new  tech- 
nologies that  deliver  an  overwhelming  volume 
of  information  and  images.  You  have  to  be  able 
to  understand  how  to  process  it  and  learn  from 
it,"  said  Aimee  Dorr,  dean  of  the  Graduate 
School  of  Education  and  Information  Studies. 

The  new  project,  the  Pacific  Bell/UCLA 
initiative  for  21st-century  Literacies,  will  focus 
on  educating  students,  teachers  and  librarians, 
the  predominant  end-users  of  information; 
improving  the  information  system  and  address- 
ing policy  issues. 

"This  initiative  will  help  teachers  and  stu- 
dents realize  the  full  benefit  of  21  st-century  lit- 


.'•racies,  to  obtain  the  skills  neces- 
sary for  successful  processing  and 
use    of    information,"    said    Bob 
Campbell,  a  vice  president  of  Pacific  Bell. 

UCLA  researchers  will  compile  data  on 
existing  knowledge  and  practices  in  informa- 
tion literacy  and  examine  current  curricula  in 
schools.  The  project  will  identify  best  practices, 
describe  present-day  conceptualizations,  and 
assess  skills  currently  taught  in  schools, 
libraries  and  other  institutions. 

As  part  of  the  initiative,  UCLA  will  host  a 
summit  on  21  st-century  literacies  on  Oct.  21. 

UC  botanist  awarded 
for  work  in  Africa 

UC  Riverside  plant  scientist  Anthony  Hall 
received  the  Chair's  Award  for  Scientific 
Excellence  on  Friday,  forbis  woik  to  alleviate 
hunger  in  Africa.  - ,  .  .:.^-  - ' 

The  award  was  given  by  the  presidentially 
appointed  Board  for  International  Food  and 
Agricultural  Development,  which  advises  the 


U.S.  Agency  for  International 
Development 

"Tony  has  succeeded  as  both  an 
accomplished  basic  scientist  using  cow- 
pea  as  a  model  system  to  uncover  substantial 
new  information  about  drought  adaptation 
and  heat  and  chilling  tolerance  and  as  a  plant 
breeder  and  agronomist  making  use  of  this 
information,"  said  Michigan  State  Professor 
Irvin  Widders,  who  nominated  Dr.  Hall  for  the 
award. 

Hall  worked  since  the  '70s  on  blackeye 
beans  providing  solutions  to  some  of  the 
drought  and  fertility  problems  facing  Africa 
and  also  make  the  bean  more  profitable  to 
grow  in  California. 

He  trained  teams  of  African  researchers, 
who  have  since  developed  several  of  these  cow- 
pea  varieties  for  Africa,  by  combining  an  eariy 
bloom  with  drought  resistance,  heat  tolerance 
and  resistance  to  pests  and  diseases.  Dr. 
Ndiaga  Cisse.  the  lead  breeder  of  this  effort  in 
Senegal,  received  a  1999  Presidential  Prize  for 
Science  and  Technology  from  the  President  of 
Senegal  for  developing  cowpea  varieties. 


'Mouride'and'Mfelakh.' 

Scientists  discover  new 
irnmune  molecule 

A  team  of  scientists  at  the  UC  San  Francisco 
and  Compugen,  Ltd.  has  discovered  a  new 
molecule  of  the  immune  system  -  a  member  of. 
a  family  of  proteins  called  chemokines  which 
recruit  the  body's  army  of  defensive  immune 
cells  to  sites  of  invasion.  The  new  chemokine  is 
only  the  second  one  pver  detected  that  is  "teth- 
ered" within  the  membrane  of  cells  rather  than 
being  made  in  a  diffusable  form. 

The  research  team  used  the  chemokine  as  a . 
molecular  probe  to  identify  its  receptor. 
Although  its  association  with  a  cheimokine  was 
a  discovery,  the  receptor  turned  out  to  be  one 
that  had  already  been  isolated  by  other 
researchers  in  cell  studies  as  one  of  the  recep- 
tors exploited  by  invading  HIV  viruses  to  gain 
entry  into  human  cells. 

Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


WHAT'S  BREWIN' 


Today  5  p.m. 


Student  Business  Union 

Houlinan,  Lokey,  Howard,  &  Zukin 

Info  Session 

UCLA  Career  Center  (Conference 

Room) 

6:15  p.m. 

BOC/IFDC  Performing  Dance 

Group 

Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

(310)284-3636 

7  p.m. 

Ballroom  Dance  Qub 
Tango/Waltz  Lessons 
KerckhofTGrand  Salon 
(310)284-3636 
ballroom@uda.edu 


8  p.m. 

GALA 

Women's  Discussion  Group 

Kerckhofri33 

(310)825-8053  ^; 

GALA 

Men's  Discussion  Group        "  ,  . 

Kerckhoff  131  ,;   "• 

(310)825^53 

9  p.m. 

International  Folk  Dance  Qub 
Line  Dances/Cuban  Salsa  Lessons 
@  10:00  pm 

Kerddioff  Grand  Salon 
(310)284-3636 

Tuesday  1  p.m. 

Project  Literacy  Orientation 
Ackerman  3508 
(310)825-2417        •      .  •- 


4  p.m. 

Bruin  Partners 
Orientation 
Ackerman  2408 

Project  WILD 
Orientation  for  tutors 
417  Kerckhoff  HaU 


5  p.m. 

Asian  Pacific  H^th  Corps 
First  General  Meeting 
Ackerman  3517 

Student  Business  Union 
KPMG  Information  Session 
Ackerman  2412 

630  pjn. 

Golden  Key  International  Honor 
Society,  General  Meeting 
Royce 156 


Monday,  October  9, 2000 

www.clailybnun.uda.edu 


at  your  Bruin 


QOHftKS 


Pmsf* 


Daily  Bruin  Classifieds.: 42-49 

Crossword  Puzzle 47 

Movie  Guide.. 33 


Deal  of 
the  Day! 


%nzo'^ 


FALL 


9  m      9 


S  1I>P  L  E  M  E  NT  S 

Coupon  Pages  (5th  &  10th  Week), 

and  Dining  Guide  issues  are  coming 

J^our  newsstands  soon! 

^HAace  AN  ad 
"^tHP  please  call: 


EXTERNAL  825-2161  INTERfJAL  206-7562    CWSSlFIEDS  825-2221 


tUM^BRlA 


«« 


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Forget  About  It!" 


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#2  Spaghetti  or 

Pennc  Pasta,  Salad 

(house  or  Caesar)  and 

'^-u-can-drink  soda" 

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1 1  aui  -  3  pm 


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Dady  Bruin  News 


Monday,  October  9, 2000         I 


ITNESS 


Photos  by  PniYA  SHARMA 


The  John  Wooden  Center  offers  several  different  fitness  activities  and  classes, 
including  indoor  rock  climbing. 


.i« 


By  Dhanhani  Dharniawardena 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

It's  five  minutes  past  9  a.m.  on 
Sunday,  and  the  lulling  drone  of  a 
treadmill  permeates  the  momen- 
tarily unsaturated  air  of  the  John 
Wooden  Center. 

Feisai  Alibhat,  a  graduate  stu- 
dent at  The  Anderson  School  at 
UCLA,  said  he  visits  the  Wooden 
Center  early  two  days  a  week  to 
avoid  the  crowds  packing  the  gym. 

"It  works  off  the  beer  from  the 
night  before,"  Alibhai  said  with  a 
laugh.  "Seriously,  though,  I  think 
it  makes  you  feel  good  about  your- 
selfand  you  have  more  energy  dur- 
ing the  (lay." 

Despite  the  apparent  inunda- 
tion of  students  and  factUty  at  the 
center,  some  people  in  the  UCLA 
community  don't  know  about 
Wooden,  according  to  Dennis 
Koehne,  assistant  manager  of  the 
Center. 

"We  just  did  some  interviews  to 
hire  new  staff  and  some  people 
didn't  even  know  it  was  here  until 
the  spring  of  last  year  even  though 
they've  been  here  two  or  five  quar- 
ters up  until  then,"  he  said. 

They  also  aren't  aware  of  the 
type  of  facilities  and  fitness  classes 
oflfered  through  the  center.  Before 
construction,  Koehne  said  just 
walking  by  the  center  attracted 
students  who  would  otherwise 
never  have  used  the  facilities,  but 
now  fewer  such  students  come  by. 

"It's  not  always  the  simplest 
thing  to  get  the  word  out.  especial- 
ly with  Bruin  Walk  closed  off," 
Koehne  said.  "Students  no  longer 
naturally  walk  by  here." 

According  to  Koehne,  the  cen- 
ter has  a  variety  of  programs  fit  for 
a  college  campus  and  is  different 
from  other  athletic  facilities. 


"People  wKo  tend  to  end  up  at 
other  gyms  are  people  who  are 
looking  for  something  that's  a 
more  premium-type  service,"  he 
said.  "They're  aiming  at  a  real  spe- 
cific part  of  the  population." 

The  Wocxlen  Center's  quarterly 
catalogue,  Recreational  Quarterly, 
shows  a  variety  of  classes  offered, 
including  swimming,  horseback 
riding,  yoga  and  step. 


"In  addition  to  the 

present  classes  we 

have  ...we're  offering 

many  more 

introductory  classes, 

like  how  to  use  all  the 

cardio  machines." 

Dennis  Koehne 

Wooden  Center  asst.  nrwnager 


More  recently,  however,  the 
Wooden  Center-sponsored  "Res 
Fett"  took  place  on  Friday  and 
targeted  students  living  in  the  resi- 
dence halls  who  might  not  Icnow  of 
the  activities  offered  by  the  center. 

"We  had,  by  our  count,  2,300 
people  come  in,"  Koehne  said. 
"We  looked  at  it  as  a  cooperative 
venture  that  gets  the  people  in 
dorms  aware  that  this  place  is  even 
here  and  they  can  climb  a  rock 
wall,  play  basketball,  take  Tae-bo 
and  do  various  things  like  that." 

The  center  ran  "Res  Fesl"  from 
10  p.m.  to  I  a.m.  through  the  spon- 
sorship of  various  businesses  and 
cost  nothing  to  attend. 

"We  turned  Pardee  Gym  into  a 
rave-type,  disco  thing,"  Koehne 


said.  "We  had  martial  arts  demon- 
strations, we  had  various  individ- 
ual and  group  activities  going  on, 
and  some  dance  classes." 

At  the  event,  students  received 
free  food,  water  bottle  samples 
and  coupons,  all  to  promote  the 
fitness  options,  old  and  new,  avail- 
able through  the  center. 

"In  addition  to  the  present 
classes  we  have  -  the  Tae-bo  and 
those  types  -  we're  offering  many 
more  introductory  classes,  like 
how  to  use  all  the  cardio 
machines,"  Koehne  said.  "Some 
are  offered  cooperatively  through 
the  Recreation  Class  Program  and 
the  building,  the  informal  recre- 
ation, when  people  can  come  in 
and  do  the  free-play  kind  of 
thing." 

Another  addition  includes  hav- 
ing a  persortat  trainer  in  the  weight 
room. 

"We  do  have  personal  trainers 
people  could  pay  for,"  Koehne 
said.  "Starting  this  quarter,  we're 
also  having  a  personal  trainer  for 
free  who  can  run  people  through 
the  programs  and  give  them  basic 
sorts  of  instruction  in  addition  to 
what  our  weight  room  supervisors 
are  able  to  provide." 

Dr.  Jaime  Villablanca,  a  profes- 
sor in  the  department  of  psychia- 
try and  neurobiology,  comes  to  the 
center  at  least  (wo  times  a  week 
and  said  the  new  services,  especial- 
ly the  new  trainer,  will  benefit 
most  people  going  to  work  out. 

"That's  an  interestifig  idea,  but 
I've  been  doing  this  for  25  years, 
so  maybe  1  donl  need  a  trainer," 
he  said  with  a  laugh.  "But  it  is  a 
very  good  idea  for  people  at  the 
beginning." 

For  most  people  who  take  fit- 
ness classes  at  the  center,  the  vari- 
ety of  times  during  which  they  are 


<  r 
J. 

i) 


-.C-        1- 


The  John  Wooden  Center 

provides  students  with 

a  convenient  and  fun 

alternative  to  more 

commercialized  gyms 


V 


Azalea  Park,  a  first-year  law  student,  exercises  on  a  treadmill 
at  the  Wooden  Center. 


offered  fit  students'  busy  sched- 
ules, according  to  Reena  Patel,  a 
fourth-year  biochemistry  student. 
"I  usually  go  to  the  evening 
ones  only  because  they  cater  to  my 


schedule,"  she  said.  "They  wqrk- 
out  every  sort  of  body  muscle 
there  is." 

See  FIfNESS,  page  20 


V.'-l^ 


•■f^i'^:'^'^ 


»•.  •  »'•  "i  -  ■*  ;■  f.. 


■ ;  I  h. 


.Monday,  October  9, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Ne«n 


Daily  Brain  News 


Monday,  October  9, 2000 


Davis  vetc^  online  voting  legislation 


INTERNET:  Some  say  possible 
increase  in  votes  supercedes 
problems  of  security,  access 


By  Mary  Hoang 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

At  a  time  when  nearly  every  aspect  of 
life  has  been  relocated  to  the  Internet,  one 
more  task  could  soon 
find  a  place  on  the 
Web  -  voting. 

Internet  voting 
has  recently  become 
a  hot  topic  in  the  state 
legislature,  but  online 
voting  systems  have 
yet  to  be  secure 
enough  to  prevent 
fraud  from  occurring 
in  a  serious  election. 

Last  week  Gov.  Gray  Davis  vetoed  leg- 
islation that  would  have  created 
California's  first  state-sponsored  simula- 
tion of  Internet  voting  technology,  citing 
security  concerns. 

But  residents  in  four  California  coun- 
ties will  have  the  opportunity  to  take  part 
in  an  online  voting  test  this  week. 

Electronic  voting  booths  will  be  avail- 
able at  courthouses,  community  centers 


REMINDER 


The  last  day  to  register  to  vote  Is  Tuesday,  Oct.  10,  Ail  voter  registration 

forms  rmist  be  postmarked  by  that  date.  Forms  are  available  online  at  the 

Califomla  Secretary  of  liiiiliistte: 


./A. 


Pumped  up  passion 


H^i^ 


and  city  halls  in  Contra  Costa, 
Saaamento,  San  Diego  and  San  Mateo 
counties  this  week  for  the  trial,  .r..  ■ 

The  California  Internet  Voting  Task 
Force,  commissioned  by  the  Secretary  of 
State's  office  and  headed  by  Alfie  Charies. 
examined  the  feasibility  of  electronic  vot- 
ing. 

A  report  published  by  the  task  force 
indicated  technological  threats  to  the 
security,  integrity  and  seaecy  of  Internet 
ballots  are  significant,  and  that  there  is  a 
real  possibility  of  "Virus"  and  "Trojan 
Horse"  software  attacks.  These  threats 
could  result  in  a  number  of  problems 
ranging  from  a  denial  of  service  to  the  sub- 
mission of  electronically  altered  ballots. 

"At  this  time,  it  would  not  be  legally, 
practically  or  fiscally  feasible  to  develop  a 
comprehensive  remote  Internet  voting 
system  that  would  completely  replace  the 
current  paper  process  used  for  voter  regis- 
tration, voting  and  the  collection  of  initia- 


tive, reierendum  and  recall  petition  signa- 
tures," Charles  said. 

But  at  least  two  online  voting  compa- 
nies -  VoteHere.net  and  Electiojicom  - 
say  they  have  developed  "hack-proof 
software  to  ensure  e-ballots  will  be  as 
secure  as  paper  ballots. 

According  to  the  VoteHere.net  Web 
site,  it  operates  using  Secure  Socket  Layer 
protection  currently  used  in 
e-commerce  transactions. 

Arizona's  Democratic  Party  held  its 
March  primary  election  with  the  opportu- 
nity to  cast  votes  online  with  the  help  of 
VoteHcre.net. 

In  addition  to  security  concerns,  anoth- 
er problem  with  Internet  voting  is  access. 

The  digital  divide,  or  gap  between 
those  who  have  Internet  access  and  those 
who  don't,  means  some  people  will  not  be 
able  to  take  advantage  of  the  opportunity 


S«cVOniK,page23 


MCOlfMllflV  Daily  Bnjin 

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Yen:  108.8 
Euro:  1.151 


Kostunica  must  rebuild,  balance  new  administration 


A  child  holding  a  lollipop  looks  at  burnt-out  police  vehicles  outside  the  parliament  building  in  thTmain" 
center  of  Belgrade.  New  Yugoslav  President  Vojislav  Kostunica  assumed  power  In  a  low-key  ceremony,  v 


GOVERNMENT:  War  crime 
trial  for  Milosevic  could 
be  resolved  in  Yugoslavia 


By  George  Jahn 

The  Associated  Press 

BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia  -  Fresh 
from  engineering  the  ouster  of 
Slobodan  Milosevic,  backers  of 
President  Vojislav  Kostunica  wrestled 
Sunday  with  a  daunting  new  task  - 
creating  a  government  free  of  power- 
ful Milosevic  allies  without  alienating 
them. 

Even  though  Kostunica's  authority 
was  cemented  by  his  inauguration  as 
Yugoslav  president  Saturday,  poten- 
tial resistance  to  him  remained  on  two 
levels:  from  Milosevic  appointees  still 
in  place  in  federal  ministries  and  from 
the  powerful  government  of  the 
Serbian  republic. 

Serbia,  one  of  two  Yugoslav 
republics,  makes  up  90  percent  of 
Yugoslavia's  population  of  10  million. 
Its  pro-Milosevic  parliament  -  who  by 
law  has  more  powers  than  Kostunica 
-  controls  about  100,000  police  and. 


indirectly,  much  of  Serbia's  economy. 

The  challenge  facing  Kostunica 
and  his  advisers  Sunday  was  how  to 
form  a  federal  government  quickly  to 
replace  the  pro-Milosevic  administra- 
tion, while  attempting  to  coexist  with 
the  Serbian  republic's  leadership. 

"We  need  a  government  of  conti- 
nuity," said  opposition  leader  Zoran 
Djindjic,  who  helped  manage 
Kostunica's  rise  to  power. 

Also,  the  new  leadership  must  deal 
with  Milosevic  himself,  who  has 
vowed  to  try  to  stage  a  comeback,  say- 
ing he  will  remain  in  Yugoslavia. 

Kostunica  scored  a  stunning  upset 
over  Milosevic  in  the  Sept.  24  presi- 
dential election.  The  strongman's 
attempt  to  deny  Kostunica's  victory 
sparked  a  national  uprising,  and 
Milosevic  conceded  defeat  on  Friday. 

Kostunica  has  refused  to  extradite 
Milosevic  to  the  U.N.  war  crimes  tri- 
bunal in  The  Hague,  Netherlands, 
'  which  indicted  him  last  year  for  atroc- 
ities committed  by  his  forces  in 
Kosovo.  But  there  were  demands 
Sunday  for  Milosevic's  trial  ^t  home. 

Kostunica's  18-party  bloc  lacks  a 

~~~  SeeYUGOSUVU,page20 


Barak  gives  ultimatum 
to  Arafat:  end  violence 


Parties  spend  resources  targeting  voters 


TAUCS:  Negotiations  stop 
if  conflict  doesn't  end  by 
Yom  Rippur,  Israel  says 


By  Ron  Kampeas 
The  Associated  Press 

JERUSALEM  -  Israel  on 
Sunday  pressed  its  ultimatum  to 
Palestinian  leader  Yasser  Arafat: 
order  an  end  to  the  violence  within  a 
day  or  the  peace  talks  are  over  -  and 
what's  more,  Palestinian  comman- 
ders could  become  targets. 

Israelis  settled  down  to  fast 
through  Yom  Kippur  wondering 
whether  their  Day  of  Atonement, 
which  ends  at  sundown  Monday, 
would  carry  echoes  of  the  same  terri- 
fying day  27  years  ago  when  a  sur- 
prise Arab  attack  launched  a  devas- 
tating war.  The  United  Sutes 
stepped  up  its  efforts  to  get  the  sides 
talking  again. 

The  days  of  rage  that  have  con- 


i 


sumed  Israel,  the  West  Bank  and  the 
Gaza  Strip  since  Sept.  28  have 
spread  elsewhere:  Israel  was  building 
up  its  forces  on  its  northern  border 
after  Lebanese  guerrillas  seized 
three  Israeli  soldiers,  shattering  the 
calm  that  has  prevailed  there  since 
Israel  withdrew  from  Lebanon  in 
May. 

The  Iranian-backed  Hezbollah 
militia  dedicated  Saturday's  opera- 
tion to  the  Palestinians  who  have 
died  in  the  recent  clashes.  The  fight- 
ing has  claimed  82  lives  so  far,  most 
Palestinian. 

Touring  the  northern  border. 
Prime  Minister  Ehud  Barak  had  a 
simple  message  for  the  Palestinians, 
for  the  Lebanese,  and  for  the  Syrians 
who  are  the  real  power  in  Lebanon: 
It's  up  to  you  to  stop  this  from  esca- 
lating. 

"Syria  has  supreme  responsibility 
to  ensure  that  there  will  not  be  hos- 
tile  actions   against    Israel    from 

ScelHMEUpayll 


VOTING:  Special  interest 
groups  also  take  active 
role  in  election  outcome 


By  Jonathan  D.Salant 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  If  you're  a 
senior  citizen  in  Rorida,  a  union 
worker  in  Michigan,  a  businessman 
in  Ohio,  a  gun  owner  in  California  or 
an  abortion  rights  supporter  in 
Missouri,  the  political  parties  and 
their  allies  plan  to  spend  more  than 
$100  million  to  get  you  to  cast  a  bal- 
lot next  month. 

With  polls  showing  tight  races  for 
the  White  House,  Senate  and  House, 
Republicans  and  Democrats,  joined 
by  numerous  interest  groups,  are 
focusing  on  some  two  dozen  states  in 
their  effort  to  get  out  the  vote  Nov.  7. 

"A  few  votes  here  or  there  will 
make  a  big  difference,"  said 
Gregory  Casey,  president  of  the 
Business-Industry  Political  Action 
Committee,  which  is  directing 
Project  2000.  an  effort  by  the  busi- 
ness community  to  get  company 


executives  and  their  employees  to 
vote  for  pro4)usiness  candidates. 

The  Republican  National 
Committee  has  earmarked  $50  mil- 
lion for  its  effort  to  get  GOP  voters 
to  the  polls  -  more  than  twice  as 
much  as  the  GOP  spent  in  1996,  the 
last  presidential  election  year.  The 
Democratic  National  Committee 
expects  to  spend  slightly  more  than 
$20  million,  one4hird  more  than 
1996.  . 

Last  July,  as  George  W.  Bush  pre- 
pared to  travel  to  Philadelphia  to 
accept  the  Republican  nomination 
for  president,  hundreds  of  GOP  sup- 
porters traveled  to  Austin,  Texas,  to 
plan  the  fall  campaign.  In  the  follow- 
ing months,  thousands  of  volunteers 
were  trained  and  put  to  work  mak- 
ing phone  calls,  distributing  litera- 
ture and  knocking  on  doors. 

"There  has  to  be  people  willing  to 
knock  on  those  doors,"  said  Terry 
Holt,  a  spokesman  for  Victory  2000, 
the  joint  effort  between  the  RNC 
and  the  Bush  campaign.  "We  know 
who  we  need  to  talk  to.  We  just  need 
to  get  their  friends  and  neighbors 
involved  in  the  campaign  so  those 
conversations  will  take  place." 


Democratic  National  Committee 
officials  are  coordinating  their 
efforts  with  Senate  and  House 
Democrats.  From  Gore  on  down, 
the  party's  candidates  are  focusing 
on  the  same  issues,  such  as  prescrip- 
tion drugs  and  the  right  of  patients 
to  sue  their  managed-care  health 
maintenance  organizations. 

Most  of  the  competitive  Senate 
and  House  races  are  in  the  states  that 
the  Gore  campaign  has  targeted.  In 
Rorida,  for  example.  Democrat  Bill 
Nelson  is  running  for  an  open 
Senate  seat  while  Linda  Chapin  and 
Elaine  Bloom  represent  two  of  the 
party's  best  hopes  for  picking  up 
Republican-held  House  seats. 

"It's  really  easy  to  construct  a 
piece  of  coordinated  campaign  mail 
for  the  Democratic  Party,"  DNC 
spokeswoman  Jenny  Backus  said. 

Their  efforts  are  being  backed  up 
by  outside  groups. 

The  National  Rifle  Association 
has  placed  election  coordinators  in 
most  of  the  435  congressional  dis- 
tricts. People  for  the  American  Way 
makes  400  to  500  phone  calls  twice  a 


SccELEaM)N,pag«18 


RLD&  NATION  BRIEFS 


iolumbus  Day  parade 
sparks  protests 

DENVER  -  More  than  140  American 
Indian  activists  were  arrested  while  protesting 
Saturday's  Columbus  Day  Parade,  the  first  in 
the  city  since  1991. 

American  Indians  assert  that  Christopher 
Columbus  was  a  slave  trader  who  committed 
genocide  against  their  ancestors.  Their  clashes 
with  Italian-Americans  during  the  city's  1991 
parade  forced  the  parade's  cancellation  for  the 
remainder  of  the  decade. 

This  year,  Indian  activists  and  Italian- 
Americans  reached  an  agreement  that  there 
would  be  no  protests  if  the  parade  was  limited 
to  an  Italian  pride  parade  with  no  mention  of 
Columbus,  but  several  representatives  of  the 
lulian  community  later  disavowed  the  deal. 

On  Saturday,  police  cut  down  a  section  of  a 
fence  that  had  been  erected  to  block  protests, 
and  permitted  demonstrators  to  take  up  spots 
on  the  street  used  for  the  parade.  But  after  a 


brief  demonstration,  police  moved 
back  in,  giving  the  Indians  the 
choice  of  leaving  or  being  arrested. 

No  one  resisted,  said  police  spokes- 
woman Mary  Thomas.  They  were  arrest 
ed  on  misdemeanor  charges  including  loiter- 
ing and  failure  to  obey  a  lawful  order,  which 
can  bring  penalties  of  up  to  a  year  in  jail  and 
fines  up  to  $1,000. 

Poland's  president  wins 
second  term 

WARSAW,  Poland  -  Polish  President 
Aleksander  Kwasniewski  won  a  second  term 
Sunday  with  56  percent  of  the  vote,  according 
to  exit  polls,  avoiding  a  runoff  in  Poland's 
third  presidential  election  since  shedding  com- 
munism a  decade  ago. 

Kwasnieski,  an  ex-communist,  defeated  1 1 
challengers,  including  legendary  Solidarity 
founder  Lech  Walesa  and  a  number  of  fringe 
candidates  frotn  the  far  right.  Walesa,  whom 


Kwasniewski  ousted  from  the  presi- 
dency in  a  close  election  in  1995, 
was  a  long-shot  challenger  this  time 
around;  he  won  just  0.8  percent  of  the 
vote,  according  to  the  exit  polls. 
Kwasniewski.  46,  once  a  sports  minister  in 
the  old  communist  regime,  successfully  cast 
himself  as  a  champion  of  average  Poles  who 
have  struggled  to  cope  with  the  painful  shift  to 
a  market  economy  Casting  his  vote  in  Warsaw 
on  Sunday  afternoon,  he  said  he  was  confident 
he  would  win  a  majority  in  the  first  round, 
.  avoidmg  a  runoff. 

McDonald's  pickle 
bums  woman,  she  sues 

KNOXVILLE,  Tenn.  -  A  woman  who 
claims  she  was  permanently  scarred  after  a 
hot  pickle  from  a  McDonald's  hamburger 
fell  on  her  chin  is  suing  the  restaurant  for 
;nore  than  $100,000. 

Veronica  M.  Martin  claims  in  a  lawsuit 


filed  in  Knox  County  Circuit  Court  that  the 
burn  also  caused  her  physical  and  mental 
pain.  She  is  seeking  $1 10,000.  Her  husband. 
Darrin  Martin,  is  seeking  $15,000,  because 
he  "has  been  deprived  of  the  services  and 
consortium  of  his  wife." 

The  hamburger  "was  in  a  defective  condi- 
tion or  unreasonably  dangerous  to  the  gener- 
al consumer  and  in  particular  to  (Veronica 
Martin),"  according  to  the  two-page  lawsuit, 
which  was  reported  in  The  Knoxville  News- 
Sentinel  on  Saturday. 

The  lawsuit  says  the  Martins  bought  ham- 
burgers at  the  McDonald's  on  Oct.  6,  1999. 

"While  attempting  to  eat  the  hamburger, 
the  pickle  dropped  from  the  hamburger  onto 
her  chin,"  the  lawsuit  reads.  "The  pickle  was 
extremely  hot  and  burned  the  chin  of  (Mrs 
Martin)." 

Veronica  had  second-degree  burns  and  is 
permanently  scarred,  according  to  the  law- 
suit. 


Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports 


<. 


6         Mon(by,October9,2000 


0«ly  Bruin  News 


STATE  <&  LOCAL 


Officer  credibility  buM  c^    case 


POLICE:  Observers  say 
unreliable  sources  could 
lead  to  acquittals  in  trial 


By  Linda  Deutsdi 

The  Associated  Press 

The  first  trial  in  the  city's  largest 
police  scandal  may  determine  more 
than  the  fate  of  the  four  policemen 
charged  with  framing  gang  members 
for  crimes  they  didn't  commit. 

Legal  observers  say  the  chances  of 
convictions  are  slim.  And  acquittals 
could  make  prosecutors  reluctant  to 
bring  more  corruption  cases  to  trial, 
intensifying  already  solid  public  cyni- 
cism about  whether  police  officers  are 
immune  from  the  justice  system. 

The  prosecution  may  have  chosen 
the  wrong  case  to  lead  off"  its  attack  on 
police  corruption,  said  Gigi  Gordon,  a 
defense  attorney  coordinating  writs 
seeking  to  dismiss  gang  convictions 
that  have  been  tainted  by  the  scandal 
centered  on  the  Rampart  police  sta- 
tion. 

"Of  all  the  cases,  the  selection  of  this 
one  to  prosecute  seems  completely 
arbitrary,"  said  Gordon.  "It's  as  if 
someone  threw  a  dart  at  a  board  and 
picked  this  one." 

Prosecutors  refuse  to  comment  on 
the  trial.  Jury  selection  began  last  week 
and  is  to  resume  Tuesday. 

The  defendants  are  four  veteran 
policemen  -  Sgt.  Edward  Ortiz,  Sgt. 
Brian  Liddy  and  officers  Paul  Harper 
and  Michael  Buchanan  -  who  are 


transit  talks  move  slow 
in  effort  to  stop  strike 


Th»  AuocWed  Pwss 

Rafael  Perez  looks  back  at  his  family  as  he  is  led  from  court  after  an 
emotional  reading  of  a  written  apology  at  a  hearing  in  LA.  in  February. 


accused  of  planting  evidence,  filing 
false  police  reports  and  committing 
perjury  in  order  to  frame  gang  mem- 
bers. In  one  instance,  a  gun  was 
allegedly  planted.  In  another,  a  reput- 
edly false  report  alleged  assault  on 
police  officers. 

Their  accuser  is  a  former  colleague, 
disgraced  officer  Rafael  Perez,  whose 
name  has  become  anathema  in  the 
LAPD.  Charged  with  stealing  drugs 


from  an  evidence  locker,  he  negotiated 
a  deal  for  immunity  which  exploded  in 
headlines  when  he  spilled  out  a  story  of 
police  deceit  that  triggered  dismissal  of 
some  1 00  cases. 

But  Perez's  reputation  grows  dirtier 
by  the  day  News  reports  have  linked 
him  to  the  murder  of  a  man  and  his 
mother  and  federal  investigators  have 
been  searching  a  dump  in  Tijuana, 
Mexico,  for  remains. 


NEGOTIATIONS:  47,000 
L.  A.  County  employees 
plan  walkouts  this  week 


By  CadonnaM.  Peyton 

The  Associated  Press  ^ 

Participants  in  transit  talks  have 
reported  no  progress  as  commuters 
face  a  fourth  work  week  without  pub- 
lic transportation.  Meanwhile, 
47,000  Los  Angeles  County  employ- 
ees are  looking  toward  a  midweek 
general  strike. 

Bus  drivers  and  light  rail  operators 
refused  to  work  Saturday  for  the 
22nd  day  as  the  county  employees* 
week-old  rolling  walkouts  targeted 
county  beaches  from  Point  Dume  to 
Cabrillo  Beach. 

Beach  maintenance  workers 
refused  to  clean  bathrooms  and 
boardwalks  Saturday  Instead  of 
woricing,  about  200  union  members 
attended  a  two4iour  rally  at  Venice 
Beach. 

County  offices  are  closed  on  today 
for  Columbus  Day,  but  walkouts  are 
planned  Tuesday  for  County-USC 
Medical  Center,  the  region's  largest 
county  hospital,  Olive  View-UCLA 
Medical  Center  in  Sylmar  and  other 
health  care  facilities. 

Sunday's  county  worker  job 
action  was  a  rally  scheduled  for  the 
Los  Angeles  County  Museum  of  Art 


west  of  downtown. 

There  was  little  to  show  for  negoti- 
ations Saturday  between  the  United 
Transportation  Union  and  the 
Metropolitan  Transportation 

Authority.  Talks  were  set  to  resume  at 
4  p.m.  Sunday. 

"It's  a  snail  pace,  and  the  snail's 
going  backwards,"  MTA  spokesman 
Gary  Wosk  said. 

Union  spokesman  Goldy  Norton 
agreed  that  the  two  sides  remained 
far  apart. 

"I  think  it'll  take  pressure  on  both 
sides  to  tr^  and  figure  out  a  solution, 
and  I  have  no  idea  where  that  pres- 
sure might  come  from,"  Norton 
said. 

The  sides  met  for  I  1/2  hours 
Saturday  affemoon  before  reconven- 
ing for  just  18  minutes  in  the  evening. 
Norton  said  UTU  general  chairman 
James  Williams  cut  the  meeting  short 
because  he  didn't  think  the  four  MTA 
negotiators  present  had  the  authority 
to  sign  off"  on  an  agreement. 

The  strike  has  affected  some 
450,000  commuters  since  it  began 
Sept.  16,  and  the  county's  labor  woes 
seem  destined  only  to  deepen. 

A  countywide  walkout  by  47,000 
county  workers,  members  of  the 
Service  Employees  International 
Union  Local  660,  is  set  for 
Wednesday  SEIU  wants  a  15.5  per- 
cent pay  hike  over  three  years,  while 
the  county  offer  is  9  percent.  No  talks 
are  scheduled. 


Your 


brain 


says 


^' 


Visit  Us  at  the  UCLA  Study  Abroad  Fair  on  October  10 


Registration  begins  November  1 ! 

INTERNATIONAL  TRAVEL  Is  an  education  in  itself,  but  imagine 
being  able  to  combine  it  with  full  credit  courses.  This  year 
UCLA  Summer  Sessions  offers  1 7  Travel  Study  programs,  offering 
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Reduced  fees  for  :• 

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For  more  information,  contact  UCLA  Summer  Sessions  at 
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SUMMER      2001      PROGRAMS 


UCLA 

SUMMER    SESSIONS 


ASIAN  AMERICAN 
STUDIES 

HONaULU.  HAWAI'I 

HISTORY 

GREECE                  ,/ 

■  -• 

ITALIAN 

FLORENCE.  ITALY 

SPANISH 
PUEBLA,  MEXICO 

ENGLISH 

STRATFOfn>UPONV^VON, 
ENGLAND    . 

FRENCH 

PARtS.  FRANCE          ;  ,- 

HISTORY       jir'  ■ 
ROME,  ITALY 

HISTORY 

SPAIN  AND  MOROCCO 

HISTORY 

MARINE  ECOLOOY 

HMIt^/  ■-■■■•-■■v.--. 

POLITICAL  SCIENCE 

LONDON,  BRUSSELS. 
AMSTERDAM  AND  PARIS 

SPANISH 

MAORC,  GRANADA  AND 
BARCELON^  SPAIN 

THEATER     . 

ROME  AND  VERONA,  fTALY 

HISTORY                     ■• 
GETTYSBUfW;      ^ 

SOt/TH  AFRICA 
HISTORY/SPANISH 

PORTUGUESE 

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8RAZL 

THEATER 

BALI,  INDONESIA 

".-'''■       ■■'..'.         "'»       • 

FRANCE  AND  SPAW     .  . 

»_ 

THIS  IS  WHERE  IT  GETS  GOOD 


Monday,  October  9, 2000 


I  '  II  ii 


Oily  Brain  News 


Albright  pleased  at  Milosevic's  fall 


NEGOTIATIONS:  Violence 
in  Middle  East  troubles 
U.S.  secretary  of  state 


By  George  Gcddi 

Associated  Press       ;';,.■■■ 

WASHINGTON  -  Thumbs  point- 
ed skyward  and  a  triumphant  look  on 
her  face,  Madeleine  Albright  savored 
the  moment  as  she  stood  on  the  State 
Department's  second-floor  balcony. 

"Great  news,"  the  secretary  of  state 
said  when  word  came  that  Russia  had 
swung  around  to  the  U.S.  view  that 
Yugoslav  President  Slobodan 
Milosevic  was  Hnished. 

That  elation,  however,  was  tem- 
pered by  peace  setbacks  in  the  Middle 
East  as  violence  escalated  between 
Israelis  and  Palestinians.  And  on 
Saturday,  as  Vojislav  Kostunica  pre- 
pared to  complete  a  bloodless  change 
of  power  in  Yugoslavia,  even  Lebanese 
guerrillas  entered  the  Middle  East  fray 
on  Israel's  northern  border. 


Nowhere  has  Albright 

devoted  more  energy 

than  in  the  6all<ans  and 

in  the  Middle  East. 


Overall,  it  was  a  decidedly  mixed 
week  for  Albright,  and  her  boss. 
President  Clinton. 

Less  than  three  months  ago, 
Palestinian  and  Israeli  leaders  had 
joined  Clinton  at  Camp  David  in  a 
quest  for  a  Hnal  peace  settlement. 


Measure  G  could  legalize 
home-grown  marijuana 


TheAssoclaicdPms 


Secretary  of  State  M«<M«in«  Albright  meets  reporters  at  the  State 
Department  in  Washington  Friday,  Oct.  6, 2000,  to  discuss  Yugoslavia. 


Hopes  for  peace  now  seem  as  distant  as 
they  have  been  in  years. 

At  the  White  House,  Clinton 
worked  the  telephone  Saturday,  hold- 
ing urgent  consultations  with  Israeli 
Prime  Minister  Ehud  Barak  and 
Palestinian  leader  Yasser  Arafat.  More 
calls  to  other  world  leaders  were 
expected. 


With  the  rising  casualty  toll,  particu- 
lariy  among  Palestinians,  Albright  had 
invited  Barak  and  Arafat  to  Paris  last 
Wednesday. 

At  Camp  David,  with  U.S.  prod- 
ding, the  parties  had  grappled  with  the 
core  issues  that  divided  them,  particu- 

S«eALMKIIT,|M9Cl6 


BALLOT:  Proposal  would 
also  limit  small  busts  by 
law  enforcement  oflBcers 


ByMdMHeLodw 

The  Associated  Press 

MENDOCINO  -  The  burning 
issue  on  Mendocino  County's  bal- 
lot, a  grow-your-own  marijuana 
measure,  is  a  bit  of  a  moot  point 
since  state  and  federal  anti-drug 
laws  will  still  apply. 

Still,  backers  have  high  hopes  for 
Measure  G,  which  could  become 
the  first  such  law  in  the  country. 
Alaska  voters  also  will  vote  on  legal- 
izing pot  but  there  is  considerable 
contention  over  that  measure, 
which  includes  offering  restitution 
for  time  spent  in  prison  for  marijua- 
na crimes. 

Mendocino  County's  cannabis 
campaign  faces  no  organized  oppo- 
sition. 

"Measure  G  is  a  political  state- 
ment by  the  people  of  Mendocino 
County  that  we  think  that  the  war 
on  marijuana  is  hugely  wasteful.  We 
want  to  move  political  opinion  and 
that's  really  what  this  initiative  is  all 
about,"  said  Dan  Hamburg,  a  for- 
mer Democratic  congressman 
turned  Green  Party  activist  who  is 
among  the  marijuana  measure's 
backers. 

Lovely  and  remote.  Northern 
California's  Mendocino  County  is 
the  land  of  a  thousand  postcards. 
But  beyond  the  white-gabled  inns 
and  soaring  redwoods  is  another 
country. 


The  "Emerald  Triangle,"  where 
Mendocino,  Humboldt  and  Trinity 
counties  converge  about  150  miles 
north  of  San  Francisco,  produces  a 
pot  crop  with -a  street  value  of 
around  $1  billion  annually.  And*  it's 
no  ordinary  smoke.  Prized  by  con- 
noisseurs. Emerald  Triangle  mari- 
juana commands  up  to  SS,000  a 
pound. 

Last  year,  state  anti-marijuana 
forces  raiding  Mendocino's  illicit 
pot  farms  seized  more  than  63,900 
plants  valued  at  more  than  $250  mil- 
lion. 

Measure  G  would  prohibit  sale 
or  transportation  of  marijuana.  But 
it  would  legalize  uncounted  pot 
YIMBYs  -  Yes  in  my  backyard  -  by 
allowing  residents  to  grow  up  to  25 
plants  for  their  own  use.  It  also 
would  direct  county  law  enforce- 
ment to  make  busting  small-time 
growers  a  low  priority. 

Authorities  here  already  <lo  that; 
Sheriff  Tony  Craver  is  among  the 
5,900  residents  -  twice  the  required 
number  -  who  signed  the  petition  to 
get  Measure  G  on  the  ballot. 

Pass  or  fail,  Craver  said  he  will 
enforce  state  and  federal  bans  on 
marijuana  -  something  he  suspects 
will  come  as  an  unpleasant  surprise 
to  would-be  pot  farmers  who  inter- 
pret Measure  G  as  a  license  to  till. 
"I'm  sure  there'll  be  some  political 
turmoil  surrounding  this  issue." 

Most  expect  Measure  G  to  pass, 
considering  that  voters  were  64.5 
percent  in  favor  of  the  1996  state  ini- 
tiative allowing  use  of  marijuana  for 
medical   reasons.   That   measure 

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liJtllLM  -^xitL^ii  ^s-il  k.& 


I  iinni'ftiii^tfili 


10       Monday  October  9, 2000 


s";^:'i^'- 


M|)r  Brain  News 


Medical  laui^te  piizei 
to  l^e  giyeaJ^  week 


NOBEL  Science  awards 
to  precede  literature  this 
year  after  decision  stalls 


By  Kim  Gamd 

The  Associated  Press 


STOCKHOLM,  Sweden  -  A 
person  deemed  to  have  made  the 
most  significant  discovery  in  medi- 
cine will  become  a  Nobel  laureate 
on  Monday,  kicking  off  a  week  of 
prize  announcements  culminating 
with  the  prestigious  peace  award. 

The  prizes,  each  worth  $915,000 
this  year,  are  always  surrounded  by 
speculation.  The  suspense  for  the  lit- 
erature award  -  usually  the  first 
announced  -  was  heightened  last 
week  when  the  Swedish  Academy 
failed  to  reach  a  decision,  leaving 
the  timing  of  that  announcement 
uncertain  and  bumping  medicine 
into  the  top  slot. 

"Sometimes  they  come  to  a  deci- 
sion very  quickly,"  Svante  Fregert, 
an  editor  at  the  daily  newspaper 
Svenska  Dagbladet  said.  "But  they 
probably  have  two  or  three  names 
and  if  the  vote  is  even,  then  they 
have  to  do  it  again." 

The  winners  of  the  prizes  for 
physics  and  chemistry  will  be 
announced  Tuesday  and  for  eco- 
nomics -  the  only  one  not  estab- 
lished in  Nobel's  will  -  on 
Wednesday  in  Stockholm.  The 
peace  prize  is  to  be  announced 
Friday  in  Oslo,  Norway. 

Alfred  Nobel,  the  Swedish  indus- 
trialist and  inventor  of  dynamite, 
left  only  vague  guidelines  in  his  will 


establishing  the  prizes.  The  selec- 
tion committees  deliberate  in  strict 
secrecy 

The  only  public  hints  available 
are  for  the  peace  prize.  The  five- 
■  member  awards  committee  never 
reveals  the  candidates,  but  some- 
times  those  making  the  nominations 
announce  their  favorites. 

This  year  that  includes  President 
Clinton  and  former  President 
Jimmy  Carter  for  wide-ranging 
peace  efforts,  as  well  as  former  U.S. 
Sen.  George  Mitchell  for  his  efforts 
to  resolve  conflict  in  Northern 
Ireland. 

Other  reported  nominees  arc  for- 
mer Finnish  President  Martti 
Ahtisaari  and  former  Russian 
Prime  Minister  Viktor 

Chernomyrdin  for  their  Balkan 
peace  efforts;  South  Korean 
President  Kim  Dae-jung  for  pro- 
moting good  relations  in  Asia;  and  a 
town,  northern  Albania's  Kukes, 
for  accepting  150,000  refugees  dur- 
ing the  Kosovo  conflict. 

The  academy  traditionally  keeps 
the  date  of  the  literature  prize  secret 
until  a  couple  days  before  it 
announces  the  winner,  but  it  is 
always  a  Thursday,  usually  in 
October.  Last  year,  they  caught 
prize-watchers  ofT  guard  by 
announcing  the  literature  winner  on 
the  last  day  in  September. 

Paolo  Mauri,  culture  editor  of 
the  Rome-based  daily  Repubblica, 
has  suggested  -  as  many  others  have 
-  that  Chinese  writer  Bei  Dao  or 
Belgian  writer  Ugo  Claus  would  be 
named  the  winner. 

SeeNOKWpagelS 


Finance  reform  receives  high  priority 


.'  •'.'  ■«ii^>»if.<t;ii.;a..»^-u*.»-«i^.'. 


CAMPAIGNS:  Many  states 
to  vote  on  initiatives  that 
limit  fund-raising  tactics 


ByMidieNcDeArmond 

The  Associated  Press 

Sen.  John  McCain  turned  a 
national  spotlight  on  campaign 
finance  reform  this  year,  and  fellow 
politicians  aren't  the  only  ones  trying 
to  capitalize  on  it  in  November. 

Reform  advocates  put  campaign 
finance  measures  on  the  Nov.  7  bal- 
lot In  four  states  including 
California,  where  Proposition  34 
aims  to  limit  campaign  donations 
and  spending  in  a  state  where  unlim- 
ited, record-setting  campaigns  are 
the  norm. 

Initiatives  in  Oregon  and  Missouri 
would  allow  for  taxpayer-funded 
campaigns  -  which  voters  have  tradi- 
tionally resisted.  Since  1996,  publicly 
funded  systems  have  been  adopted  in 
McCain's  state  of  Arizona,  plus 
Maine,  Massachusetts  and  Vermont. 
Wisconsin  voters  will  be  asked  in 
an  advisory  referendum  if  they  want 
stricter  campaign  finance  laws. 

"I  think  voters'  disgust  over  this 
issue  has  risen  to  new  heights.  How 
could  it  not?  Which  makes  very  fer- 
tile ground  for  these  initiatives,"  said 
Ellen  Miller,  president  of  Public 
Campaign,  a  Washington-based 
group  pushing  the  Oregon  and 
Missouri  measures. 

McCain  plugged  reform  after 
leaving  the  presidential  race, 
reproaching  his  fellow  Republican, 
Texas  Gov.  George  W.  Bush,  for 
refusing  to  ban  soft  money  from  the 
race. 
Vice  President  Al  Gore  agreed  to 


a  ban,  but  got  criticized  for  fund-rais- 
ing practices  McCain  said  "debased 
the  institutions  of  government." 

McCain  has  not  endorsed  any  of 
the  ballot  measures.  But  reform 
advocates  say  his  attention  to  the 
issue  could  make  a  difference. 

Chagrined  opponents  agree. 

"I  think  that  the  public  is  very 
frustrated  by  the  current  system.  The 
public  may  be  willing  to  substitute 
any  system  to  deal  with  that  frustra- 
tion," said  John  Di  Lorenzo,  an  attor- 
ney fighting  Oregon's  Measure  6  as 
leader  of  No  Taxpayer  Handouts  to 
Politicians. 


Initiatives  in  Oregon 
and  Missouri  would 
^^allow  for  taxpayer- 
funded  campaigns  - 
which  voters  have 
traditionally  resisted. 


Under  Measure  6,  candidates 
could  get  public  funds  by  raising  a 
certain  number  of  $5  donations  from 
Oregon  residents  and  agreeing  to 
limits  on  who  may  contribute. 
Minimum  numbers  for  $5  contribu- 
tions range  from  200  for  House  races 
to  3,000  for  governor. 

If  a  candidate's  opponent  does  not 
opt  for  restrictions,  that  candidate 
could  get  as  much  as  three  times  the 
limit  in  matching  funds. 

The  Oregon  Political 

Accountability  Campaign  behind 
Measure  6  raised  $427,605  through 
July  7.  The  opposition  was  only 


recently  organized  and  no  figares 
were  available. 

Missouri  voters  will  consider  a 
similar  measure.  Candidates  who 
abide  by  restrictions  on  private  con- 
tributions could  receive  public  fimds. 
Under  that  Proposition  B,  candi- 
dates would  qualify  by  accepting 
donations  totaling  no  more  than 
$1,000  to  $10,000,  depending  on  the 
race.  In  return,  a  candidate  could 
receive  public  money  of  $15,000  for  a 
state  House  race,  $50,000  for  a  state 
Senate  race  or  up  to  $1  million  in  the 
governor's  race.  ^;  . 

The  measure  is  "a  tax  increase 
masked  as  campaign  finance 
reform,"  argued  opponent'  Dan 
Mehan,  who  heads  the  Missouri 
Chamber  of  Commerce. 

Missouri  Voters  for  Fair 
Elections,  sponsor  of  the  measure, 
reported  raising  $414,939  by  the  end 
of  June,  the  latest  figures  available. 
The  opposition  No  Tax  Dollars  for 
Politicians  raised  $3,236. 

California  voters  will  consider  a 
very  different  approach  in 
Proposition  34.  Attacked  by  many 
reformers  as  inadequate,  the  mea- 
sure would  limit  individual  donations 
to  $20,000  for  governor.  $5,000  for 
other  statewide  candidates  and 
$3,000  for  legislative  candidates. 

Candidates  could  then  opt  for 
spending  limits  -  ranging  from  $16 
million  for  gubernatorial  candidates 
to  $1.1  million  for  the  Assembly -and 
be  guaranteed  mention  in  an  infor- 
mational pamphlet  for  voters. 

Wisconsin's  advisory  referendum 
will  ask  voters  in  59  of  the  state's  72 
counties  if  they  would  support  legis- 
lation to  limit  campaign  spending, 
tighten  contribution  limits  and 
require  full  and  fast  disclosure  of 
election-related  activities. 


Daily  Brain  News 


K<.**^f*^ V^'"^.  if-fi^"")^: ,';■-' -: r^ •  VT' * 


Itenday,  October  9, 2000       11 


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Hi,  s^;;-    -   ih^— ''■•-;     J. 


...  *-;.'■  .  i'3-," '. 


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Student  Sweepstakes  online  and  you  could 
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12       Mondi|r,0do6er9,2000 


IM^lMiiNHli 


Daily  Bniin  News 


Monday,  October  9, 2000        13 


,«^  *  itwufl'.-Vrl) 


Weather  becoming  less  predictable 


NINA:  Neutral  activity  in 
tropical  Pacific  Ocean 
leaves  forecasters  baffled 


By  Matthew  Fordhal 

The  Associated  Press 

Roods  in  Los  Angeles?  Blame  it  on 
El  Nino.  Drought  from  the  Great 
Plains  to  the  Southeast?  Sounds  like  La 
Nina.  Nervous  climate  forecasters? 
Mustbe-LaNada." 

For  the  first  time  in  three  years,  the 
tropical  Pacific  Ocean  isn't  running 
unusually  hot  or  cold,  and  the  neutral 
conditions  are  leaving  climatologists 
with  fewer  pieces  of  the  puzzle.  Gone 
are  the  heady  days  of  confident  predic- 
tions months  into  the  future. 

"There  comes  a  time  when  you  have 
to  admit  your  understanding  is  not 
complete  and  not  to  say  more  than  you 
know,"  said  William  Patzert,  an 
oceanographer  at  NASA's  Jet 
Propulsion  Laboratory.  "It's  hard  after 
three  years  of  being  a  hotshot.  It's  real- 
ly hard." 

Unlike  El  Nino  and  La  Nina  years, 
nothing  appears  strong  enough  to 
dominate  the  complex  climate  system. 

That  means  the  effects  of  relatively 


ihlennessee 


discover  hope  at  center 


TheAsjodatedPreis 

William  Patzert  an  oceanographer  at  NASA's  Jet  Propulsion 
Laboratory,  poses  with  a  satellite  image  showing  the  Pacific  Ocean. 


small  forces  such  as  the  moisture  of  an 
individual  storm  could  determine 
whether  an  area  is  wetter  or  drier  or 
warmer  or  cooler  than  usual. 

"So  the  forecast  problem  becomes 
much  more  difficult,  much  more  chal- 
lenging," said  Vernon  Kousky,  a 
research  meteorologist  with  the 
National  Oceanic  and  Atmospheric 
Administration's  Climate  Prediction 
Center. 


"We  don't  anticipate  that  we  will 
have  such  a  high  level  of  skill  as  we  had 
in  recent  years,"  he  said. 

Forecasters  are  having  to  focus  on 
historical  records  and  weaker  signals 
from  the  oceans  for  hints  to  the  upcom- 
ing stormy  season  and  beyond. 

For  the  record,  climatologists  pre- 
dict a  slightly  warmer-thaiMiormal  win- 


Sec  WEATHER,  page  18 


AIDS:  Children  affected, 
afllicted  by  disease  have 
day-care  options  at  house 


ByWoodyBaU 

The  Associated  Press 

MEMPHIS,  Tenn.  -  Toys  litter 
the  playroom  at  Hope  House,  books 
such  as  "Jiggle,  Wiggle,  Prance"  fill 
the  shelves.  Outside,  children  climb 
the  jungle  gym  and  push  each  other 
on  the  swings. 

The  sights  and  sounds  are  typical 
of  any  day-care  center,  but  not  so  the 
dientde.  Hope  House  is  one  of  a 
handful  of  centers  in  the  nation  dedi- 
cated to  children  who  live  vntti  AIDS 
or  whose  parents  struggle  with  the 
deadly  virus. 

Its  mission  is  to  provide  a  haven 
from  bias  and  fear  -  a  comfort  not 
always  found  at  their  homes  or  in  reg- 
ular day-care  programs. 

"Some  of  them  are  living  under 
such  prejudice  and  stigma  that  they 
and  their  children  would  be  kicked 
out  if  others  did  know,"  said  Hope 


House  nurse  Andriana  VanBreda. 

Alona  Denton,  41,  knows  that  fear 
of  rejection. 

She  learned  she  was  HIV  positive 
«^ile  pregnant  with  her  second  son, 
Darrd,  who  is  20  months  old. 
Doctors  couldn't  determine  whether 
he  was  virusiree  until  1 8  months  after 
his  birth. 

Ndther  he  nor  his  3-year-old  broth- 
er, Stephen,  have  HIV,  but  "that  wait 
was  rougher  than  when  I  found  out 
about  myself,"  said  Denton,  whose 
husband  died  of  AIDS  in  April. 

She  said  Hope  House  employees 
encouraged  her  during  that  tough 
time  -  something  they  still  do  as  she 
contemplates  her  boys'  future  with  an 
HIV-positive  mother. 

"It's  damaging  to  them  mentally. 
It's  like  setting  them  apart,"  said 
Denton,  who  is  unemployed. 
"They're  not  infected  and  I  don't 
want  them  treated  that  way." 

Hope  House  is  the  only  daynare 
center  in  Tennessee  for  HIV  families. 
It  cares  for  32  children,  from  infants 
to  5-year-olds.  Three  are  infected  with 

See  HOPE,  page  14 


Over  400 

Pages  of 

UCLA 

History 

(And  it's 

not  for 

class.) 


Join  the  I  (J. A 
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14     iiiM4»tMittt^ 


HOPE 

>.  from  page  12 

HIV  and  four  others  may  be.  The  rest 
:    have  parents  who  are  infected. 

Most  of  the  children  are  from  low- 
income  families,  with  no  father  at 
home.  A  half-dozen  draw  government 
daycare  subsidies  paying  up  to  $83  a 
week  per  child.  The  rest  are  from 
working  families  that  are  ineligible  for 
welfare;  Hope  House  charges  them  $5 
a  week. 

"AIDS  is  beo»ning  a  disease  of 
poverty,  so  our  parents  are  dealing 
with  poverty,  too,"  VanBreda  said. 

AIDS  robs  its  victims  of  their  ability 
to  resist  infection.  It  is  most  often 
spread  through  sexual  contact,  conta- 
minated needles  or  syringes  shared  by 
drug  abusers  or  infected  blood.  It  can 
be  passed  from  mother  to  child. 

Nationally,  the  Centers  for  Disease 


Control  estimate  up  to  900,000  people 
are  infected  with  HIV.  About  40,000 
are  infected  eadi  year,  30  petxxnt  of 
them  women. 

Up  to  10,000  of  the  HIV  carriers 
across  the  country  are  children  under 
12. 

Since  1992,  Tennessee's  health 
department  has  recorded  12,1 14  cases 
of  HIV  infection,  including  2,751 
women  and  121  chydren  under  13. 

Hope  House  was  founded  in  1994 
by  the  Junior  League  of  Memphis.  The 
organization  sought  advice  from  Hale 
House,  a  group  home  establidwd  in 
1969  in  New  York  City  for  children  of 
drug  addicts.  The  home  now  accepts 
HIV  children  whose  mothers  are  in 
prison. 

Hale  House  Director  Lorraine 
Hale  said  no  one  keeps  a  national 
count  on  how  many  day  care  centers 
focus  on  children  of  HIV  famiKes. 
"But  I  think  if  you  have  five,  you  have 


a  kn,"  she  said. 

Most  of  Hope  House's  S400.000 
operating  budget  comes  from  dona- 
tions. Supporters  abo  provide  diapers, 
toys  and  food. 

The  nonprofit  organization  that 
runs  the  center  started  a  Si  miOion 
fundraising  drive  so  it  can  expaxid  to 
include  a  house  next  door.  Two  donors 
have  pledged  $250,000  each  if  the  rest 
of  the  money  is  raised  by  year's  end. 
After  expansion,  there  will  be  room  for 
70  children. 

Betty  Dupont,  Hope  House  direc- 
tor, said  up  to  400  youngsters  in  Shelby 
County  need  the  kind  of  care  her  cen- 
ter provides  and  any  vacancies  arc 
quidcly  filled. 

Doctors  and  nurses  from  St  Jude 
Children's  Research  Hospital  train 
Hope  House  workers  on  how  to 
administer  medicines.  One  youngster 
gets  medication  daily  through  a  tube  in 
his  stomach. 


/  The  A$«x:i»t«d  Prej5 

ChHdffn  at  Hope  House  In  Memphis,  Tenn.,  take  a  lunch  break.  Hope 
Hou%^  is  a  day-care  center  dedicated  to  children  who  live  with  AIDS. 


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Chedc  out  our  Websrte  at  ¥in»W.rayjobS.COIIl/CampUS  for  further  information  inck^ 

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':-'-:  ■■'*  ;.'.>■ ..  ■■).. 


:9^'.- 


Daily  Bnin  News 


Monday.  October  9, 2000       IS 


WAMTED: 


Visioriaries 
Creator'^ 
Evaluators 
Problem. Solvers    ». 


...^   s 


Yaako\/s  attention  to  detail  is  critical  wtien  documentinn  and  analyzing 
the  siriictiires  of  derivative  trades.  On  weekends  it  s  fiis  kefin  eye 
tiiat  lielps  him  make  an  impression.  What  do  you  see? 


^Hl 


Goldman,  Sachs  &  Co. 

Information  Session 

Kerckhoff  Grand  Salpn 

Monday,  October  16,  2000 

6:00  p.m.  -  8:00  p.m. 


Investment  Banking  Fair  ^ 

Bradley  International  Center,  International  Room 

Thursday,  October  19,  2000 

7:00  p.m.  -  10:00  p.m. 

Send  Cover  Letter/Resume/Transcript  By  October  24 

Goldman,  Sachs  &  Co.  V>. 

Fox  Plaza,  Suite  2600 

2121  Avenue  of  the  Stars 

Los  Angeles,  CA  90067 

Fax:  310-407-5555 

Attn:  Joel  Werner 


V^jr  ■••• 


■rt. 


OR 

JobTrak, 

Via  the  Career  Center's  website 

Www.car6er.ucla.edu 


If  you  have  any  questions,^please  feel  free  to  contact  Joel  Werner  (310-407-5704)  or  Jill  Axelrod  (212-902-7286) 


■»■% 


(ioiditt.'in 


...      .   #«■»•- 


\ 


MIN08.  WIDE  OPEN?^ 
wWw.ga.6onn 

Qolilmin  Sachs,  an  equal  oppo»tw*y  ernptoyer.  do«  not  dhcfirnln««  in  employrnwil  on  a^ 


2000  Goldman,  Sactts  &  Co. 


IS       Monday,October  9,2000 


POT    ;:V,::->>;v:;,--::--'--''- 

From  pages    \;;; 

passed  tNit  is  still  being  fought  over  in  the 
coifrts. 

But  support  is  not  universal. 

"I  think  it's  going  to  give  a  mixed  mes- 
sage to  kids.  And  I  think  it's  a  bad  mes- 
sage," said  Ukiah  schools  superintendent 
Gary  Brawley. 

During  lunch  hour  at  the  outdoor  deck 
of  a  cafe  in  rural  Boonville,  some  residents 
expressed  mixed  opinions. 

County  resident  Eddie  Pardini  is 
against  it.  "Sure,  there  may  be  people  that 
need  it  for  medicinal  purposes  or  whatev- 
er, but  somewhere  down  the  line  it's  going 
to  be  abused.  Kids  are  going  to  get  it,"  he 
said. 

One  table  over,  Hugh  Hamilton  thought 
he'd  vote  for  it. 

"I  would  say  "why  not?'  I  think  there  are 
good  cases  for  medical  use  and  1  really 
think  a  lot  of  time  and  money's  being  wast- 
ed in  the  war  on  drugs  in  going  after  the  lit- 
tle stuff.  I  kind  of  see  it  as  Prohibition  all 
over  again,"  Hamilton  said. 

Measure  G  backer  Ann  Deirup  is  old 
enough  at  82  to  remember  Prohibition. 

A  tree  farmer  near  the  seaside  village  of 
Mendocino,  Deirup  has  never  smoked  a 
joint.  But  she  thinks  the  current  approach 
to  marijuana  makes  no  sense. 

"I  am  not  into  the  thing.  I  don't  grow  it. 
I  don't  smoke  it.  But  I  don't  think  it's  as 
dangerous  as  alcohol,"  she  said. 


OaMy  Brain  News 


The  Associated  Prns 

Anne  Deirup  sits  in  front  of  her  honrie.  Deirup  signed  a  peti- 
tion to  legalize  the  growing  of  nnarijuana  for  personal  use. 


ALBRIGHT 

From  page  8 

larly  the  future  of  Jerusalem,  in  Paris, 
Albright  had  a  far  more  modest  agenda: 
an  end  to  the  violence  and  a  return  to 
the  "psychology  of  peacemaking"  evi- 
dent at  Camp  David. 

The  marathon  talks  in  Paris  and  later 
discussions  in  Egypt,  which  Barak 
shunned,  had  little  effect  on  the  vio- 
lence. Albright  headed  home  Thursday, 
her  disappointment  over  the  Middle 
East  assuaged  by  the  mass  revoh  against 
Milosevic  that  day  in  Belgrade. 

Qinton  captured  the  dichotomy  of 
the  extraordinary  week  when  he  said 
Friday,  "It's  been  kind  of  an  emotional 
and  intellectual  roller  coaster;  so  much 
good  news  in  one  place,  and  so  much 
trouble  in  another." 

Nowhere  has  Albright  devoted  more 
energy  than  in  the  Balkans  and  in  the 
Middle  East. 

As  a  child  of  Central  Europe,  she 
roamed  the  streets  of  Belgrade,  the  city 
where  her  father  was  posted  as  a  diplo- 
mat. Steeped  in  the  region's  history,  she 
believes  Milosevic  is  the  product  of  an 
authoritarian  tradition  that  has  caused 
much  grief  and  suffering. 

Her  former  spokesman,  James  P. 
Rubin,  recalled  Albright's  distress  over 
what  he  described  as  the  "Milosevic- 
inspired  Bosnia  war"  in  1992. 

Albright  was  very  conscious  of  the 


evil  that  his  brand  of  nationalism  repre- 
sented," Rubin  said  Friday  from  his 
home  in  London.  As  U.S.  ambassador 
■  to  the  United  Nations  beginning  in 
1993,  Albright  found  the  administra- 
tion's policy  toward  Milosevic 
appallingly  timid. 

Albright  was  an  enthusiastic  backer 
of  the  late  summer  bombing  campaign 
in  1995  that  brought  Milosevic  to  the 
negotiating  table.  As  secretary  of  «tate 
almost  four  years  later,  at  the  time  of  the 
NATO  bombing  campaign  against 
Yugoslavia,  her  identification  with  the 
policy  was  such  that  some  called  it 
"Madeleine's  War." 

Rubin  said  Albright  has  tended  to  be 
more  fatalistic  about  the  Middle  East 
peace  process  than  she  is  about 
Yugoslavia. 

"One  has  to  recognize  there  are  lim- 
its to  what  she  can  do  to  bring  about 
agreements  between  the  parties"  in  the 
Middle  East,  Rubin  said.  As  she  herself 
has  said  many  times,  "It's  up  to  the  par- 
ties themselves  to  make  the  hard  deci- 
sions." 

On  the  other  hand,  Rubin  said 
Albright  recognized  from  the  outset 
that  the  United  States  and  Europe  had 
far  more  opportunity  to  shape  events  in 
the  Balkans. 

"Western  decisions  have  been  cru- 
cial," Rubin  said.  "The  two  situations 
arc  a  reflection  of  where  America  can 
be  decisive  and  where  America  can  only 
help  those  who  help  themselves." 


Ing  to  blend  in? 


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Monday,  October '9, 2000       17 


'  .\.--  ... 


As  a  23-year-old  investment  banker  with  Salomon  Smith  Baoroy,  Paul  tetiiig 
and  his  team  were  asked  to  compile  a  list  of  suggestions  that  would  illustrate 
how  the  firm  could  improve  in  the  eyes  of  its  junior-level  analysts^.  Ifeiul  wrote 
a  blunt  memo  highlighting  36  different  ways  the  firm  could  increase  the  qualitv 


of  life  for  its  analysts.  Among 


the    firm's     dress    cod 
between  senior  and  junio 


can  relax  when  things  get 
have  laughed  in  his  face  right 


^^e  suggestions:  an  easing  of 

sail,  .^..i-JiUjMgf  WW  ;j 

'  proving       relationships 
nkers,  and  a  place  "where  we 


razy."  While  most  firms  would 


before  calling  security, 
Salomon  Smith  Barney  responded  by  meeting  some  of  the  requests  immediately 
and  refusing  to  dismiss  any  outright.  To  Paul's  surpris.e,  the  memo  was  leaked 
around  Wall  Street.  He  soon  found  himself  in  "a  press  storm— 77ie  i\rew  York 
Times,  The  Wall  Street  Journal  CBS,  and  CNN  all  wanted  to  talk  to  this  brash 
young  man  who  had  inspired  the  Street  to  adopt  a  casuaMess  policy.  Paul  was 

.<  .  ..      /r  -^  ^^,- 

asked  to  voice  his  opinion.  He  took  that  directive  seriously,  speakingltis  n^t 
the  only  way  he  knew  how,  with  passion  and  distinction.  And  while  some  of 
Wall  Street's  old-boy  network  might  not  Uke  it,  at  Salomon  Smith  Barney,  impact 
is  not  dependent  upon  job  title.  V 


t 


^'"' 


-Pr^. 


Undergraduates"  On  October  1 1  th.  Come  Shakl  Our  Han:  ,  &  Discover  The  Difference 


When  you  meet  us  face-to-face,  you'll  understand  what  sets  us  apart  from  the  field.  We  Invite  you  to 
attend  our  recruitment  presentation  beginning  at  6:00pm  on  Wednesday,  October  11*  at  the  Career  Center.  Check 
with  your  career  placement  office  for  exact  details,  or  visit  us  on  the  web  at  www.ssmb.com/carctrs/ 


■^■s 


'■'i,^'*-- 


SaumjnSmith 


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Imagine  No  Limits'" 


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M       Monday,  October  9, 2000 


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iprinl  IS  not  responsible  tor  loss,  iheft,  or  unoulhorized  use  o(  ihu  cord.  Coll  1-800-3660707  lot  mora  dgoilt. 

Essentials 


310.206  0820 
www.uciastore.com 


S^-f  you  Kl«e(i.  Sirv^  Hfl.' 


ELEQION      -  ,^ 

From  page  5  ^j-' '/ ^^^^^ 

week  to  progressive  voteire,  remind- 
ing them  that  the  direction  of  the 
Supreme  Court  rests  on  who  the  next 
president  will  be.  "It's  not  just  the 
next  four  years,  it's  the  next  40  years," 
PFAW  President  Ralph  Neas  said.  -:— 

Democratic  efforts  are  expected  to 
get  a  big  boost  from  the  AFL-CIO, 
which  has  targeted  71  congressional 
districts  in  25  states.  The  labor  federa- 
tion is  trying  to  distribute  literature  to 
more  than  one-fifth  of  the  13.5  million 
union  members,  double  the  percent- 
age of  1998.  More  than  three-fourths 
of  union  members  who  get  candidate 
information  tend  to  support  the 
labor-backed  candidate. 

Thousands  of  volunteers  are  hand- 
ing out  literature  at  work,  knocking 
on  doors  of  fellow  union  members,  or 
making  phone  calls. 

"The  most  effective  role  we  can 
play  is  to  mobilize  union  members 
arowid  the  union  program,"  AFL- 
CIO  political  director  Steve 
Rosenthal  said. 

Also  backing  the  Democratic  side 
is  People  for  the  American  Way, 
which  is  using  a  Web  site,  TV  ads,  a 
16-page  organizing  guide,  50,000 
doorhangers  and  1,000  phone  calls  a 
week  to  target  progressive  voters  and 
tell  them  that  the  next  president  may 


make  several  nominations  to  the 
Supreme  Court. 

"One  or  two  more  right-wing 
Supreme  Court  justices  would  mean 
the  curtailment  or  abolition  of  many 
fundamental  constitutional  rights  and 
liberties  that  we've  taken  for  granted 
for  decades,"  said  Ralph  Neas, 
PFAW's  president. 
-—•The  group  is  targeting  12  states, 
including  Washington  and  Oregon, 
where  consumer  advocate  Ralph 
Nader  hopes  to  do  well. 

"There  are  substantial  differences 
between  the  major  party  candidates," 
Neas  said.  "We're  trying  to  get  that 
information  into  everyone's  hands. 

On  the  other  side,  business  groups 
are  pushing  company  executives  to 
spread  the  word  among  their  employ- 
ees. At  least  2,000  companies  have 
downloaded  voting  records  and  other 
information  from  the  Project  2000 
Website. 

In  addition,  BIPAC  is  focusing  on 
convincing  about  18,000  top  business 
executives,  whose  travel  plans  may 
keep  them  away  from  the  polling 
places  in  November,  to  vote  absentee. 

The  National  Rifle  Association  has 
placed  election  coordinators  in 
almost  every  congressional  district, 
and  has  used  its  three  magazines  to 
inform  its  more  than  4  million  mem- 
bers. Overall,  the  group  hopes  to 
spend  SI5  million  to  $20  million  on  its 
election  effort. 


NOBEL  - 

From  page  10 

Other  possibilities  include  usual 
suspect  V.S.  Naipaul,  a  Trinidad-bom 
writer  living  in  London,  two  of  the 
world's  great  short  story  writers, 
Canada's  Alice  Munro  and  Ireland's 
William  Trevor.  Among  other 
favorites  mentioned  in  speculation 
are  Salman  Rushdie,  Peruvian  Mario 
Vargas  Llosa;  Israel's  Amos  Oz; 
Nigerians  Chinua  Achebe  and  Ben 
Okri;  South  Africa's  J.M.  Coetzee; 
Canadian  novelist  Margaret  Atwood 
and  Americans  John  Ashbery,  Philip 
Roth,  Joyce  Carol  Oates  and 
Norman  Mailer. 

The  prizes  bring  heavy  media 
attention,  and  the  winners  can  expect 
their  lives  to  change. 

"It's  a  mixed  blessing  having  the 
prize,"  says  Swedish  publisher  Jonas 
Ellerstroem,  who  has  had  contact 
with  many  Nobel-winning  writers. 


.  "They  will  have  to  spend  quite  some 
:  time  being  this  year's  winner." 
,  ,  iThe  literature  and  peace  laureates 
arc  usually  the  most  visible,  but  the 
new  adjective  often  also  brings  scien- 
tists more  attention  from  outside  their 
laboratories. 

As  for  the  first  announcement, 
Nobel's  direction  that  a  prize  be 
awarded  to  the  person  who  made  "the 
most  important  discovery  within  the 
domain  of  physiology  or  medicine"  is 
interpreted  by  a  committee  of  50  pro- 
fessors from  the  world-renowned 
Karolinska  Institute  in  the  Swedish 
capital. 

The  Nobel  Assembly  at  Karolinska 
invites  nominations  from  previous 
recipients,  professors  of  medicine 
and  other  professionals  woridwide 
before  whittling  down  its  choices  in 
the  fall,  as  do  the  other  selection  com- 
mittees. 

The  awards  always  are  presented 
Dec.  10,  the  anniversary  of  Nobel's 
death  in  1896. 


WEATHE|{ 

From  page  12/ 

ter  for  mucJT  of  the  United  States. 
They're  less<Jertain  about  the  Northern 
border  stales,  where  decisions  must  be 
made  on  whether  to  stock  up  on  home 
heatingoii  and  road  salt. 

Durng  El  Nino  years  like  the  winter 
of  1997-98,  westward-blowing  trade 
winds  weaken,  allowing  a  mass  of 
/arm  water  in  the  western  equatorial 
/Pacific  to  flow  eastward  toward  South 
America..  Sea  sur- 
face tempera-  — ■— ^i^— -■ 
tures  can  surge  as 
much  as  14 
degrees  above 
normal. 

in  a  compli- 
cated  chain    of 

events,  the 

warmer      water 

leads  to  record  rainfall  in  California, 
tornadoes  and  flooding  in  the 
Southeast,  flooding  in  Peru,  and 
drought  and  wildfires  in  Indonesia.    -'. . 

La  Nina  occurs  when  the  trade 
winds  strengthen  and  the  equatorial 
Pacific  cools  as  much  as  8  degrees.  The 
La  Nina  pattern  has  dominated  since 
the  end  of  the  last  El  Nino  in  1998. 

The  signal  isn't  as  strong  as  an  El 
Nino,  but  forecasters  can  confidently 
predict  storms  will  be  pushed  farther 
north,  creating  drought  conditions  in 
the  Southeast  and  Central  United 


Forecasters 

on  historical 

insight  on 


States. 

Patzert,  who  studies  sea  surface 
temperatures  with  the  U.S.-French 
Topex-Poseidon  satellite,  calls  the  cur- 
rent condition  that  developed  in 
August  "La  Nada."  Others  joke  about 
"No  Nina."  Oflicially,  it's  "El  Nino 
Southern  Oscillation  Neutral." 

Researchers  are  looking  to  other 
systems  that  could  influence  the  cli- 
mate, such  as  the  Arctic  Oscillation 
that  appears  to  flip-flop  between  high- 
er-than-normal  pressure  and  lower- 
than-normal  pressure  over  the  polar , 
region.  1 

"""■■'"—"■"■  One  phase  is  i 

suspected        of^ 
steering     ocean  i 
storms     farther ; 
north  and  carry- 
ing wet  weather 
to  Alaska, 

'  Scotland       and 

Scandinavia  but 
drier  conditions  to  California,  Spain 
and  the  Middle  East.  The  negative 
phase  has  opposite  results. 

The  problem  this  year  is  that  the 
Arctic  Oscillation  also  appears  to  be  in 
a  neutral  mode,  and  there's  no  way  to 
forecast  when  it  will  change. 

"It  jumps  around  a  lot,"  Kousky 
said.  "It  sometimes  locks  into  a  certain 
phase  in  January  and  continues 
through  March,  but  there's  no  way  we 
can  anticipate  that  in  advance.  At  least 
we  haven't  found  one  yet.  We're  work- 
ing on  it." 


must  focus 
records  for 
weather. 


"'^ly^LAsVECAs'' Information  Session -Tuesday.  October  10th 

Cii^ND Horizon  Room,  Sunset  Village.  7:00pm- 9:30pm  ^     -  — 

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P^ICMfElH)Use(dOPERS  9 

join  us.  Together  we  can  change.Uie  world."* 


•jm»> 


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Gi^pm  ur  W  iMr  MMNlni  ar*i  liMM*  miM 


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irftn 


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DINING 

From  page  1 


wiches,  Italian  submarine  sandwich- 
es and  salads,  according  to  Josue 
Cruz,  facilities  manager  of  Puzzle's 
and  Caruso's. 

."The  menu. rotates  weekly,  and 
we  offer  a  variety  of  salads,  sand- 
wiches and  soups,"  Cruz  said. 

New  menu  items  at  Puzzle's 
include  breakfast  burritos  and  an 
egg  and  sausage  sandwich  called  the 
"Egg  McUCLA."  Combination 
meals  include  sides  such  as  bacon, 
hash  brown  or  sausage.  Doughnuts, 
muffins  and  assorted  fruits  are 
among  the  new  desserts  added  to  the 
menu. 

Residents  hoping  to  start  their 
day  on  a  healthier  note  can  order 


smoothies  made  with  fruit  juice  and 
non-Tat  yogurt. 

"1  like  coming  here  for  the 
smoothies,  but  burritos  are  a  bit  too 
heavy  for  breakfast,"  said  Nancy 
Samra,  a  second-year  psychology 
student. 

Whether  they  come  for  smoothies 
or  fast  food,  Cruz  said  students  are 
taking  advantage  of  the  additional 
hours. 

"On  Friday,  we  served  453  stu- 
dents at  Puzzle's  for  breakfast, 
which  was  more  than  the  totals  for 
Rieber  and  Hedrick  combined,** 
Cruz  said. 

"They  usually  serve  about  150 
people  each  for  breakfast." 

Cruz  attributes  the  popularity  of 
Puzzle's  to  smoothies,  which  make 
up  "80  percent  of  sales  during  the 
last  45  minutes  of  operation." 


mlf^mm    inimi  wiliiMi    an    iTfc  iJ  .i  ,  h,i^  I .,|.. 


«'  ,■!■  t  '  in  i*>iii.i  I 


YUGOSLAVIA 

From  p^ge  5 

majority  in  the  federal  parliament, 
and  will  probably  be  compelled  to  cut 
deals  with  the  Socialist  People's  Party 
of  Montenegro,  the  smaller  Yugoslav 
republic. 

That  party  backed  Milosevic  until 
his  downfall  and  now  seeks  to  have 
one  of  its  own  appointed  as 
Yugoslavia's  prime  minister.  The  con- 
stitution says  that  if  the  president  is 
from  Serbia,  the  prime  minister  must 
be  Montenegrin. 

Kostunica's  camp  has  suggested  a 
nonpartisan  government  of  experts, 
but  this  appears  to  stand  little  chance 
of  approval  in  the  existing  pariiament. 
Kostunica  advisers  have  said  they 
would  push  for  new  elections  in 
Serbia  in  hopes  the  general  disen- 
chantment with  Milosevic  on  the  fed- 
eral level  would  be  reflected  in  a 
Serbian  vote  as  well. 

But  that  can  only  happen  if  the 
party  now  supporting  Milosevic's 
Socialists  in  the  separate  Serbian  par- 
liament agrees.  And  that  party's 
leader,  ultranationalist  Vojislav 
Seselj,  is  opposed  because  he  fears 
new  elections  now  would  hurt  his 
Radical  party  and  only  benefit  the 
Kostunica  camp. 

Meanwhile,  Norway's  Foreign 
Minister  Thorbjoern  Jagland,  and 
Mladjan  Dinkic,  head  of  an  influen- 
tial group  of  pro-Kostunica  econo- 
mists, demanded  on  Sunday  that 
Milosevic  be  prosecuted  for  vote-rig- 
gjng 

"We  now  expect  state  prosecutors 
to  bring  charges  against  Slobodan 
Milosevic,"  Dinkic  said.  A  human 
rights  group  in  Yugoslavia,  the 
Humanitarian  Law  Fund,  also 
demanded  punishment  for  the  ousted 
autocrat,  issuing  long  lists  of  his 
alleged  misdeeds. 


'  •»1JM»» 


FITNESS 

From  page  3 


■    For  others,  though,  the  center's 
open  hours  still  create  conflicts. 

"I  work  some  really  fortg  and  odd 
hours  and  I'll  see  people  try  the  lock 
and  seem  surprised  that  it's  locked," 
Koehne  said. 

He  said  the  "" 
time  issue  will  be 
addressed  when 
the  Men's  Gym 
and  Kaufmann 
Hall  close  for  seis- 
mic renovation 
and  people  will 
have  one  less  gym  _^_^___^^ 
to  occupy.  _^_^_____« 

But  the  center  will  not  be  open  24 
hours  a  day.  Since  the  center's  open- 
ing, Koehne  said  it  has  added  more 
hours. 

Like  Villablanca,  many  find  that 
during  the  momenu  they  can  spare 
for  exercise,  the  center  is  too  crowd- 
ed. 
"1  lilte  to  come  three  times  a  w»i.k 


Milosevic  is  blamed  by  the  West 
for  starting  four  Balkan  wars  that 
broke  out  in  the  last  decade  when 
paru  of  Yugoslavia  began  to  seek 
independence.  Those  conflicts  were 
marked  by  horrific  violence  against 
civilians,  which  prompted  Western 
governments  to  impose  sanctions  and 
isolate  Belgrade. 

Dinkic  also  called  for  a  donor's 
conference  on  Yugoslavia  with  the 
aim  of  injecting  at  least  $500  million 
into  the  cash-strapped  country  over 
the  next  year. 

Cleaning  house  at  top  levels  is  con- 
sidered important  for  Yugoslavia  as  it 
attempts  to  break  out  of  a  decade  of 
sanctions  and  international  isolation 
designed  to  undermine  Milosevic. 

Kostunica's  coalition  was  also 
scrambling  to  assume  control  over  the 
country's  central  bank  and  other  fed- 
eral financial  institutions. 

A  new  government  should  "be  able 
to  show  up  in  Brussels  and 
Washington  and  say:  'the  country  has 
democratized  ...  we  ask  from  you  to 
lift  the  sanctions,"'  said  Djindjic,  the 
Kostunica  ally. 

Both  the  United  States  and  the 
European  Union  have  said  they  wiH 
lift  sanctions  once  the  new  govern- 
ment is  in  pl4ce. 

Germany,  however,  already  began 
sending  financial  aid.  Its  Foreign 
Ministry  said  Sunday  it  had  given 
$435,000  to  help  clear  the  Danube 
River,  a  vital  shipping  route,  of  debris 
from  NATO  bombing  raids  last  year. 
The  EU  is  lining  up  an  emergency  aid 
package  worth  $1.7  billion,  according 
to  European  Commission  President 
Romano  Prodi. 

Kostunica,  a  56-year-oId  legal 
scholar,  has  promised  to  return 
Yugoslavia  to  "the  family  of  democra- 
tic nations,"  secure  a  lasting  peace 
and  end  economic  devastation  that 
marked  the  13  years  of  Milosevic's 
rule. 


but  it  has  nothing  to  do  with  the 
opening  schedule  here,"  he  said. 

"1  get  a  little  upset  sometimes 
when  the  room  is  taken  by  groups 
because  it  is  the  only  time  I  have  dur- 
ing the  week  and  then  I  cannot  use 
it." 

Although  some  people  complain 
about  the  especially  busy  times,  like 
the        evenings. 


For  others,  though,  the 

(Wooden)  center's 

open  hours  still  create 

conflicts. 


Koehne  said  he  is 
not  worried 

about  the  amount 
of  people  the  new 
programs      may 
attract. 

"When      you 
offer  a  program, 
____^_______  people  come  in  at 

a  specific  time," 
he  said. 

He  also  there  is  no  student  fee 
increase  to  pay  for  the  added  classes, 
much  of  which  take  place  because  of 
contributions  from  businesses. 

"Part  of  what  we're  here  for  is  to 
keep  everybody  healthy  and  the 
other  part  is  to  give  everybody  a 
rhangc  to  play,"  Kothnt  said. 


The  Astociated  Preis 


A  Palestinian  with  his  face  covered  holds  his  machine  gun  as  he 
attends  a  burial  in  the  town  of  Rafah  In  southern  Gaza  Saturday. 


ISRAEL 

From  pages 

Lebanon,"  Barak  said. 

To  Arafat,  he  repeated  the  ultima- 
tum he  delivered  Saturday  night:  end 
the  violence  by  Monday  evening, 
when  Yom  Kippur  ends. 

"If  we  will  not  see  the  difference 
actively  implemented  on  the  ground, 
and  a  calming  down  of  the  situation 
really  occurring,  we  will  draw  the 
conclusion  that  Arafat  deliberately 
has  decided  to  abandon  the  negotia- 
tions," Barak  said. 

He  did  not  specify  what  Israel 
would  do,  but  one  of  his  top  military 
aides  said  Israel  would  move  from  a 
defensive  to  an  offensive  posture, 
and  could  target  Palestinian  com- 
manders. 

"We  could  ... 
as  far  as  I  am  ^^mm^^m^^,^ 
concerned,  even 
attack  the  head- 
quarters of  those 
responsible  for 
the  situation," 
Maj.  Gen.  Uzi 
Dayan,  Barak's 
national  security 
adviser,  told 
Israel  radio. 
Deputy  Defense 
Minister 

Ephraim    Sneh  '         

said  Israel  had      """"""""""""" 
barely  used  "I 

percent"  of  its  force  in  dealing  with 
the  Palestinians. 

The  Palestinians  said  it  was  up  to 
the  Israelis  to  stop  the  shooting,  and 
laid  down  their  own  condition: 
accept  a  U.N.  Security  Council  call 
for  an  international  commission  to 
investigate  the  violence. 

"Get  out  and  stop  firing,"  Nabil 
Shaath,  a  top  aide  to  Arafat,  advised 
the  Israelis.  "When  this  is  done,  an 
international  committee  can  start 
really  finding  the  facts  and  then  we 
can  move  on  to  instigate  business 
and  negotiations." 

Israelis  -  even  the  most  dovish 
among  them  -  rejected  the  Security 
Council  statement,  saying  it  resur- 
rected the  organization's  bias 
against  the  Jewish  state. 

"It  happened  that  we  survived  the 
harsh  language  of  the  U.N.  many 
times  in  the  past,"  said  Avraham 
Burg,  the  speaker  of  the  Israeli  par- 
liament. "If  they  want  to  continue 
with  their  rhetoric,  it's  beautiful,  it's 
no  problem,  but  at  some  point  it  will 
become  irrelevant." 

In  truth,  Israelis  were  sorely  dis- 
appointed that  the  United  States  did 
not  vote  rather  than  using  its  veto  to 
quash  the  statement. 


The  U.S.  ambassador  to  the 
United  Nations,  Richard 
Holbrooke,  said  the  United  States 
abstained  with  "clear  distaste,"  but 
that  it  had  little  choice  if  it  wanted  to 
infiuence  all  sides,  citing  "great  dan- 
gers that  exist  in  the  region  of  the 
Middle  East  today." 

The  anger  has  spread  through 
much  of  the  Arab  world,  with  pro- 
testers in  Iraq,  Syria,  Egypt  and 
Jordan  focusing  their  fury  on  the  act 
that  set  off  the  rioting  in  Jerusalem;  a 
visit  by  hard-line  opposition  leader 
Ariel  Sharon  to  a  shrine  holy  to 
Muslims  and  Jews. 

President  Clinton  scramblq^  to 
prevent  the  crisis  from  escalating 
into  war,  canceling  other  engage- 
ments and  calling  Barak  and  Arafat 
throughout  the  day.  Barak's  Cabinet 
secretary,   Yiuhak   Herzog,   said 
Clinton       had 
■-^— ^— ^— •     invited  the  sides 
to  a  summit  on 
Tuesday.    U.S. 
officials      said 
they  knew  of  no 
such  invitation. 
Secretary  of 
State  Madeleine 
Albright     said 
both  sides  had  a 
responsibility  to 
end     the     vio- 
lence. She  told 

NBC's     "Meet 

the  Pfess"  she 
'   '  '  ■  '  understands 

Barak's  "incredible  sense  of  frustra- 
tion" but  added:  "We  need  to  try  to 
break  the  violence.  That  just  hasn't 
happened.  ...  There  has  to  be  disen- 
gagement." 

In  one  conciliatory  sign,  senior 
Israeli  and  Palestinian  officen  met 
under  U.S.  auspices  in  the  Gaza 
Strip  and  agreed  to  coordinate  secu- 
rity issues  -  restoring  a  degree  of  the 
cooperation  that  existed  before  the 
violence  began. 

Israeli  Maj.  Gen.  Yom  Toy  Samia 
told  Abdel  Razek  Majaida,  a  Gaza 
security  chief,  that  he  expected  an 
immediate  stop  to  the  shooting. 
Majaida  was  noncommittal,  saying 
he  wanted  to  see  a  "total  Israeli 
cease-fire"  first. 

Hours  later,  stone-throwers 
besieged  an  Israeli  army  outpost 
near  the  isolated  Jewish  settlement 
of  Netzarim  in  Gaza,  while 
Majaida's  Palestinian  police  looked 
on  -  but  for  the  first  time  in  days,  no 
Palestinian  gunmen  were  present. 

Such  agreements  have  dissolved 
within  hours  in  the  past  week,  but 
this  one  appeared  to  be  holding  into 
the  evening,  with  minor  clashes 
reported  only  in  a  Jerusalem  suburb 
and  in  Bethlehem. 


The  Iranian-backed 

Hezbollah  militia 

dedicated  Saturday's 

operation  to  the 

Palestinians  who  have 

died  in  the  recent 

clashes. 


MjiBniillnii 


llwi^t(kmw>,20ID      21 


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Financial  £iccesi 

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PROTEST 

From  page  1 

support  a  fair  resolution  and  I  think  a 
fair  resolution  is  not  the  status  quo." 

The  meeting  was  cordial  as  the 
organizers  thanked  the  chancellor  for 
meeting  with  them  and  abandoned 
the  forceful  chants  of  the  protest  for  a 
more  pleading  tone. 

But  at  times,  the  two  sides  jabbed 
at  each  other  politely,  as  when  the 
organizers  congratulated  the  chancel- 
lor on  his  recent  pay  raise.  Likewise, 
ttie  chancellor  responded  to  sugges- 
tions that  the  university  was  hard- 
nosed  at  the  bargaining  table  by  say- 
ing, "It  does  take  two  to  sign  a  con- 
tract." 

Union  organizers  said  they  appre- 
ciated the  public  stance  taken  by  the 
chancellor  but  hoped  that  action 
would  follow  his  words. 

CUE  is  currently  in  the  second 
year  of  bargaining  for  their  first  con- 
tract and  UPTE  is  also  in  negotia- 
tions for  a  contract  that  expired 
Sept.  4. 

"We're  going  to  make  the  chancel- 
lor's life  miserable  until  they  give  us  a 
contract,"  said  Qifr  Fried,  an  UPTE 
organizer. 

But  some  CUE  members  are  upset 
with  the  lengthy  negotiations. 


According  to  CUE 
figures,  the  university 

underpays  clerical 

enriployees  by  as  much 

as  20  percent. 


"I  don't  understand  how  people 
can  let  this  happen  for  two  years," 
said  Pam  Blair,  a  CUE  member  and 
employee  in  fleet  and  transit  services. 
Some  of  the  employees,  including 
Blair,  were  calling  for  a  walk  out  at 
the  protest. 

Homing  defended  her  decisions 
regarding  the  union  by  noting  how 
much  the  labor  movement  changed 
in  the  past  couple  years. 

"Maybe  we  should  have  struck 
two  years  ago,  but  if  we  did  we  would 
have  had  four  people  with  picket 
signs  outside  of  campus,"  she  said. 

In  UC  contracts  there  is  a  no-strike 
clause  that  prevents  workers  from 
walking  out  while  their  contract  is 
still  in  effect.  Because  CUE  has  no 
contract.therc  is  nothing  legally  pre- 
venting them  from  striking. 

According  to  CUE  figures,  the 
university  underpays  clerical  employ- 
ees the  union  represents  by  as  much 
as  20  percent  when  compared  with 
figures  on  similar  jobs  in  surrounding 
areas. 

UC  figures  also  show  that  clerical 
workers  are  underpaid. 

This  has  been  a  major  rallying 
point  for  CUE  employees  who  say 
they  work  for  free  on  Fridays  because 
ofthc  pay  differential. 

In  the  wake  of  recent  raises  of  the 
UC  chancellors,  some  of  the  employe 
ees  were  upset  about  the  university's 
commitment  to  equating  the  pay  dis- 
crepancy. 

"There  was  a  group,  they  orga- 
nized and  they  got  a  pay  raise," 
Horning  said.  "Who  am  I  talking 
about?  The  chancellors." 

Stddents  also  supported  the 
protest,  including  fourth-year  sociol- 
ogy student  Joanna  Vaker  of  UC 
Irvine  who  came  to  protest  as  a  part 
of  the  group  Youth  for  Socialist 
Action. 

"We  always  support  the  labor 
issues,"  she  said. 

The  UCLA  labor  movement 
recently  garnered  increased  support 
from  students.  During  the  past  year, 
some  of  those  supporters  went  on  to 
continue  working  with  the  unions  as 
organizers  after  graduation. 

"I  think  students  are  such  a  big 
part  of  making  change,"  Vaker  tud. 


APPAREL 

Ffompagel 

Although  a  commonly  held  image 
of  sweatshops  is  that  they  exist  only  in 
developing  nations,  the  report  found 
that  labor  law  violations  are  also  wide- 
spread in  the  United  States. 


Discrimination  against 

women,  especially 

pregnant  women, 

surfaced. 


These  violations,  according  to  the 
report,  include  faihire  to  pay  minimum 
wage  or  overtime,  falsification  of  pay- 
roll records,  as  well  as  the  use  of  child 
labor.  Because  a  large  number  of  gar- 
ment workers  in  the  U.S.  are  ill^ 
immigrants,  it  is  difficult  to  enforce 
state  or  federal  labor  standards. 

One  manufacturing  plant  in  the 
greater  Los  Angeles  area,  the  report 
found,  employed  a  mix  of  documented 
and  illegal  workers,  according  to  the 
report,  and  routinely  engaged  in  viola- 
tions of  overtime  laws,  and  working 
without  compensation.  The  factory  in 
question  is  still  in  business,  and 
employs  about  70  people. 

"Anything  you  can  expect  to  fmd 
overseas,  you  can  find  here  at  home," 
the  report  quoted  Katie  Quan.  director 
of  the  John  F.  Henning  Center  for 
International  Labor  Relations  al  UC 
Berkeley  as  saying. 

In  addition  to  (he  U.S..  the  report 
surveyed  factories  in  South  Korea, 
Pakistan,  China,  El  Salvador,  Mexico 
and  Thailand.  Discrimination  against 
women,  especially  pregnant  women, 
surfaced  in  all  seven  countries  except 
Pakistan,  where  women  are  not 
allowed  to  work  in  factories. 

In  several  countries,  women  were 
forced  to  undergo  pregnancy  testing  as 
a  condition  of  their  employment 

Although  he  has  not  read  the  report. 
Cliff  Fried,  organizer  for  the 
University  Professional  and  Technical 
Employees,  said  the  union  supports 
nationwide  efforts  of  students  improv- 
ing working  conditions,  and  that  the 
report  is  a  step  in  the  right  direction. 

"I  think  it's  good  that  (the  universi- 
ty) is  feeling  so  defensive  that  they 
made  the  information  public,"  he  said. 

To  read  the  report  in  its  entirety  go  to 
httpy/www.ucop.edu/ucophofne/coor- 
drev/policy/initiative-report.pdf. 


VOTING 

Fn)mpage4 

to  vote  online. 

'We  are  trying  different  methods 

dose  the  divide  and  make  voting 
[jore  accessible  for  everyone," 
lessaid. 

Though  Internet  voting  has  primar- 

been  a  national  issue,  on  the  local 
level  the  city  of  Los  Angeles  is  looking 
to  implement  internet  voting  for  city 
issues,  but  funding  problems  may  hin- 
der the  efforts. 

"The  city  is  always  looking  to  stay 
on  the  cutting  edge  of  technology  but 
ttiere  are  not  enough  available  funds 
within  the  budget  to  pursue  Internet 
voting  at  this  time,"  said  Frank 
Matcljan,  press  secretary  for  L.A. 
mayor  Richard  Riordan. 

Some  students  said  the  option  to 
vote  on  the  Internet  would  help 
increase  voter  turnout  rates  ,  especial- 
ly among  18-25  year  olds  who  partici- 
pate in  activities  over  the  Internet  and 
are  thus  more  likely  to  be  technologi- 
cally savvy. 

"Internet  voting  would  be  awe- 
some, only  if  it  were  completely 
secure,"  said  Bryan  Matsumoto.  a 
fifth-year  design  student.  "It  would 
energize  our  entire  population 
hmuir  it  can  make  voting  so  much 


euitr  and  accessible.' 


(MyBniiaNcw 


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Does  your  Resume  need  a  Supercharge? 

Apply  for  the 


Fight  for  Truth,  Justice  and  the  Career  Center  Way! 

^Put  valuable  marketing  experience  on  YOUR  resume!^ 

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Tuesday 

Women  should  not 
use  fertility  drugs. 


Daily  Irijin 


•■''  V",   •,  ■>  ■•.'* 


■>•"'•■; 


nii'iri-i     "iiiii 


Monday,  October  9, 2000 


ViewontheWe^JJU 

See  all  this  and  • 
more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's  • 
Website:  •* 
www.dailybniin.ucla.edu  * 


viewpotnt^med  ia.ucla.edu 


Buslfs  tough  love'  proposal  raises  troubling  ideas 


Daily  BnwiViewpoht 


Monday,  October  9, 2000       2S 


EDUCATION:  Implementation 
I    of  policy  would  treat  schools 
like  capitalistic  investment 


By  Ramin  Farahmandpur  and  P«ttr 
McLaren 

On  Jan.  1 1,  in  Florence,  S.C,  George 
W.  Bush  stated  in  his  speech,  "Rarely  is 
the  question  asked:  Is  our  children  leanv 
ing?" 

He  also  stated  last  year,  "A  public  edu- 
cation whose  students  don't  test  well 
would  lose  some  funds  unless  its  score 
improves.  If  cutting  funds  won't  help  the 
kids  advance,  we  could  prohibit  lunch,  or 
take  their  shoes"  ("George  W.  Bush's  edu- 
cation plan,"  The  Nation,  Oct.  4, 1999). 


"If  cutting  funds  won't 

help  the  kids  advance, 

we  could  prohibit  lunch, 

or  take  their  shoes." 

George  W.  Bush 

Presidential  candidate 


Education  will  clearly  be  one  of  the 
hotly  contested  issues  in  this  year's  presi- 
dential election,  particularly  for 
Republican  presidential  nominee  Bush. 
He  has  vigorously  defended  his  education 
record  by  boasting  significant  improve- 
ments in  his  state's  education  system.  As 
evidence,  he  cites  an  increase  in  standard- 
ized test  scores  during  his  tenure  as 
Governor  of  Texas. 

Although  Bush  attempted  to  portray 
himself  as  the  future  "education  president' 
during  the  nightly  choreographed 
Republican  National  Convention  meeting 


f 

s  ■   . 


■^mt' 


•  f  s  • 


See  MUHMANDPUR,  page  26 


CRAa  HUANG/Daily  Brum 


Racially-based  politics  Nnder  progress 


.;     ■( 


Farahmandpur  is  a  doctoral  student  and 
McLaren  is  a  professor  at  the  Graduate  School 
of  Education  and  Information  Studies.        ■"  -* 


»^  •  >•■* .-., 


RACH€L  flEHICfVDaily  Bruin 


Steel's  negative  experience  doesn't  represent  entire  Greek  family 


SYSTEM:  Sorority  member 
urges  UCLA  community  to 
look  beyond  misconceptions 

By  Kyla  Ann  Hokomb 

I  am  writing  this  as  a  response  to 
Kirra  Steel's  Viewpoint  article, 
"Systematic  Sisterhood  Promotes 
Intolerance"  (Daily  Bruin,  Oct.  5). 
As  a  proud  member  of  the  Greek 
system.  1  feel  that  some  clarification 
is  needed  in  order  to  avoid  a  miscon- 
ception among  UCLA  students. 

The  Greek  system  is  about  unity. 
It  is  about  making  this  campus  a 
smaller  and  more  intimate  place.  It 
is  about  friendship  and  love  and 


deiflg  good  thing^tbr  others  and  the 
world  around  us.  Steel  may  have 
h^  a  negative  experience,  but  it  is 
only  fair  to  print  a  rebutul  to  allow 
ihib  voices  of  those  of  us  who  have 
had  positive  experiences  be  heard. 
Being  involved  in  a  sorority  is  in 
no  way  my  "life."  I  am  interested  in 
an  array  of  other  issues  and  involved 
in  many  other  activities.  But  I  am 
proud  of  the  amazing,  talented  and 
aware  students  that  I  am  lucky  to 
call  my  sisters.  The  selection  process 
that  Steel  describes  may  have  been 
true  for  her  sorority,  but  it  is  by  no 
means  the  same  process  that  I  am 
familiar  with.  But  1  am  writing  this 
to  let  the  campus  know  that  not  all 
members  of  the  Greek  system  are 
judgmental  and  elite. 


I  never  once  heard  one  negative 
comment  about  a  girl  during  Rush. 


If  or>€  group  is  to  unify 

because  they  share 

things  in  common, 

other  organizations 

are  quick  to  judge  and 

stereotype  the  group. 


Steel's  comments  about  "negative 
descriptions"  are  completely  false. 


Neither  myself  or  others  in  my 
house  would  ever  comment  on  a 
girl's  looks  because  we  are  more 
interested  in  depths  of  personality. 

The  references  to  girls  being 
described  as  "too  fat  or  too  ugly" 
made  me  sick.  I  am  a  part  of  a  group 
of  gn-ls  who  are  intelligent,  motivat- 
ed and,  most  importantly,  want  to 
see  hate,  racism,  and  social  inequali- 
ty erased  from  society.  We  are  proud 
of  who  we  are,  but  we  are  also 
accepting  and  tolerant  of  our  peers. 

Organizations  abound  all  over 
campus  that  are  divisive.  This  is  the 
inherent  problem  with  unity.  If  one 
group  is  to  unify  because  they  share 
things  in  common  (whether  it  is  reli- 
gion, culture,  politics,  etc.),  other 
organizations  that  do  not  have  the 


same  opinions  are  quick  to  judge 
and  stereotype  the  group  as  being 
divisive  and  elitist.  What  is  the  solu- 
tion to  this?  Would  not  having  any 
groups  or  organizations  that  join 
together  around  shared  values  be 
the  answer?  I  don't  tWnk  so,  unless 
somehow  the  entire  diverse  campus 
could  come  together  and  unite  just 
for  the  sole  purpose  of  "unity." 

Instead,  what  we  need  is  respect 
and  tolerance  for  all  groups  and 
organizations  on  campus,  including 
the  Greek  system.  If  it  is  not  for  you, 
as  in  the  case  for  Steel,  then  by  all 
means  do  not  be  a  part  of  it.  Join 
something  where  you  are  able  to 
unify  with  others.  One  girl's  experi- 


DIVERSITY:  Conflicts  in 
USAC  only  aggravates, 
adds  to  campus  tension 

Elizabeth  Houston's  speech  at 
the  freshman  convocation  on 
Sept.  25 
was  a  pointed 
and  accurate 
reminder  to  a 
small  minority 
of  radicals  still 
in  power  at 
UCLA  that 
artificial  ten- 
sions between 
ethnic  groups 
will  no  longer 
be  accepted. 
While  Houston, 


Jones  can't  stand  to  look  at  you  liberals. 
E-mail  comments  at  rfFan34#uda.edu. 


as  a  leader  for  all  UCLA  students, 
had  to  veil  her  statements  to  avoid 
the  appearance  of  "pointing  fingers" 
at  particular  students  and  student 
groups,  those  who  follow  student 
politics  knew  exactly  who  she  was 
talking  about. 

In  fact,  it's  not  even  necessary  to 
really  follow  student  politics  to  get  a 
sense  of  the  hatred  issuing  forth 
from  the  back  rooms  of  Kerckhoff 
Hall.  A  quick  look  at  the 
Registration  Issue  of  the  Daily  Bruin 
told  the  whole  story.  Houston's 
counterparts  on  the  Undergraduate 
Student  Association  Council,  with- 
out even  meaning  to  do  so,  accurate- 
ly identified  the  source  of  the 
remaining  racial  tension  on  campus 
-  themselves.  Just  review  the  words 
of  external  vice-president  Elias 
Encisco  and  his  analysis  of  "white 
American  ...  society",  "white  racial 
identity"  and  overall  "whiteness." 
("University  crusaders,"Daily  Bruin, 


Viewpoint,  Sept.  25).  Encisco  is  truly 
a  worthy  successor  to  last  year's 
USAC  President,  Mike  de  la  Rocha. 
The  rhetoric  remains  the  same  -  only 
the  face  has  changed. 

The  revolution  for  equality  in 
which  so  many  people,  of  all  races, 
invested  so  much  has  been  soiled  by 
these  sorry  excuses  for  "future  lead- 
ers." The  cause,  in  fact,  has  lost  its 
way,  and  the  results  range  from  the 
sinister,  such  as  unearned  racial  pref- 
erences disguised  as  "affirmative 
action,"  to  the  merely  ridiculous,  like 
the  national  thirst  for  "diversity"  at 
all  costs. 

What  of  affirmative  action?  The 
name  alone  holds  some  clues.  It  cer- 
tainly takes  action.  But  affirmative? 
The  only  value,  if  it  can  be  called 
one,  that  it  afTirms,  is  the  power  of 
victimhood.  But  affirmative  action  is 
a  broken  premise  -  and  California, 

SceJ0NtS,pa9e28 


PRESS  POUND 

By  Scott  Comuiada 


Scell0ta)MI,|M9e27 


or  In  th*  world  <t  large,  or  write  a  response  to 
sontetMng  that  you  have  already  read  In  The 


TO  VIEWPOINT 


Bruin. 

■  E.«naN  submissions  to 
vtewpoM«im«H*.uda««iu.  Rerntmbw  to 


copy  and  paste  your  submission  Into  the  body 
of  the  e-maH,  or  drop  off  a  hard  copy  of  your 
submhsion  at  the  Diily  Bmln  office  (1 1< 
Kwddwff  Hafl),  care  oflooah  Latot. 

•  Appty  to  be  a  Viewpoint  columnist  dur- 
ing Weetis  7  artd  t  of  each  quarter. 

•  Appfy  to  bt  a  cartoonist  or  artist.  Send  an 


e-mail  cxprtning  your  Interest  to  the 
Viewpoint  address. 

A  few  tMngf  to  remember. 

•  AN  submistions  mutt  include  your  name, 
phone  number  and  afflliation  with  UCLA.  If 
you  are  a  student  they  must  also  include  your 
student  10  nuntber,  year  and  major. 


■  Your  fKts  wilt  be  checked;  make  sure 
they  are  Kcurate. 

•Viewpoint  It  not  an  advertising  space  far 
any  group  or  organtoHoiv  bt  sure  to  have 
clewty  artculaM  opiniom. 

•  We  reiarv*  the  right  to  edh  Hibmlisions 
for  clarity,  grammar  and  length. 


•■••■»• 


««*a***a**a*e»*>**aee** 
'•••••••••■••*e«««««»> 


LETTERS 


RU-486 
gives  safe 
choice  to  women 

There  are  a  few  points  I'd  like 
to  make  in  response  to  the 
Viewpoint  article,  "RU-486  is 
not  solution  to  unwanted  preg- 
nancies" (Daily  Bruin,  Oct.  4). 
Are  you  aware  that  85  percent  of 
counties  in  the  United  States 
don't  have  an  abortion  provider? 
Are  you  aware  that  of  the  few 
existing  clinics,  one  in  five  has 
been  faced  with  violence  and/or 
threats  and  harassment? 

For  a  woman  with  an  unwant- 
ed pregnancy,  the  abortion  pro- 
cedure alone  is  terrifying  enough 
without  having  to  deal  with 
harassment  by  protesters,  or  the 
fear  of  a  bomb  going  off  while 
she  goes  to  a  doctor  for  legal 
health  care. 

Mifepristone,  also  known  by 
its  French  name  RU-486,  will 
diffuse  the  radical  right's  ability 
to  use  strong-arm  scare  tactics 
such  as  these  to  dissuade  women 
from  accessing  their  right  to  an 
abortion.  By  making  medical 
abortion  available  in  many  doc- 
tor's offices,  a  woman  can  take 
the  pill  and  go  home,  where  she 
feels  comfortable  and  safe  with 
her  loved  ones  and  family. 

The  article  argues  that  with 
the  approval  of  mifepristone,  the 
abortion  rate  will  increase.  Is  it 
better  that  more  unwanted  chil- 
dren are  bom  into  neglect  and 
an  impoverished  educational 
system?  The  article  goes  on  to 
argue  that  medical  abortions  are 
going  to  become  "popular."  An 
unplanned  pregnancy  is  a  mis- 
take, not  something  motivated 
by  a  desire  to  be  "cool."  It  is  a 
mistake  that  will  dramatically 
and  permanently  alter  the  course 
of  a  person's  life.  Many  women, 
whether  15, 21,  or  36  years  of 
age  aren't  in  a  position  or  ready 
to  have  a  child.  To  force  them  to 
do  so  is  inhumane. 

It  has  taken  over  10  years  for 
women  in  the  United  States  to 
have  access  to  a  drug  that  was 
proven  safe  and  effective  over 
twelve  years  ago.  That  is  absurd. 
What's  more  absurd  are  people 
trying  to  impose  restrictions 
upon  its  availability  and  creating 
public  doubt  regarding  its  bene- 


fit by  writing  articles 
such  as  this  one. 
I  refuse  to  believe 
that  having  any  kind  of  abortion 
is  going  to  become  trendy  or 
popular.  Deciding  whether  or 
not  to  abort  an  unplanned  preg- 
nancy is  a  very  personal  and  try- 
ing decision  that  should  be 
respected  and  protected. 

.       .   April  Beebe 

Fourth-year 

Design 

'Conhectfbhs'^ 
help  few  admits 

After  reading  Brandon 
Nemeth-Brown's  piece, 
"Affirmative  action  arguments 
miss  economic  angle"  (Daily 
Bruin,  Oct.  5),  I  am  reminded  of 
what  Francis  Edgeworth  said- 
about  Alfred  Marshall's  discov- 
ery of  the  Giffen  good:  "Only  a 
very  clever  man  would  discover 
that  exceptional  case;  only  a  very 
foolish  man  would  take  it  as  the 
basis  of  a  rule  for  general  prac- 
tice." 

Nemeth-Brown  apparently 
takes  the  stance  that  because  a 
small  handful  of  students  each 
year  are  guaranteed  admission 
to  certain  universities,  that  to 
"even  out  the  corruption,  one 
could  support  affirmative 
action." 

One  could  write  at  great 
length  about  the  inherent  insta- 
bility of  this  argument,  but  in  the 
interest  of  brevity,  let  me  offer 
the  simple&t  counterpoint. 

Before  coming  to  the  fine  law 
school  here  at  UCLA,  1  attended 
a  large  private  university  with 
affirmative  action.  One  day  I 
realized  that  the  building  next  to 
my  dorm  was  named  after  the 
grandmother  of  my  friend  living 
a  mere  two  doors  down.  Point 
being,  an  admissions  committee 
could  require  that  admits  be  able 
to  eat  uranium,  and  those  with 
"connections"  will  still  be  admit- 
ted. 

To  use  this  "exception  case"  as 
the  basis  for  a  system  of  discrim- 
inatory preferences  for  all  the 
non-exceptional  cases  is,  as 
Edgeworth  noted,  "foolish" 
indeed. 

ToanTran. 

Second-year 

Law 


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FARAHMANDPUR 

From  page  24 

in  Philadelphia,  a  number  of  trou- 
bling questions  have  surfaced 
recently,  casting  a  shadow  of  doubl  • 
over  his  compassionate  conservative 
education  policies.  These  questions 
have,  by  and  large,  been  ignored  by 
the  mainstream  media  and  press. 

For  example,  in  the  state  of  Texas 
there  arc  nearly  1.4  million  children  • 
without  health  care  insurance.  The 
state  also  ranks  second  in  the  num- 
ber of  children  that  are  living  in 
poverty.  It  is  unclear  how  Bush's     v 
"tough  love"  education  policies, 
such  as  his  support  for  ending  social 
promotion,  will  alleviate  the  afore-  'f  , , 
mentioned  issues  and  help  the  stag-  ./ 
gering  dropout  rate  of  high  school  * 
students  in  Texas,  currently  at  42 
percent. 

Bush's  school  reform  agenda  foW''^ 
lows  in  the  wake  of  neoiiberal  social 
and  economic  policies  that  became  : . 
popular  during  the  1980s  and  1990«.  * 
Such  policies  supported  deregula- 
tion of  the  gas,  telephone  and  elec-  . 
trie  industries,  downsizing  of  the 
labor  force,  "just-in-time"  produc- 
tion methods,  and  greater  flexibility 
and  mobility  for  capital. 


Bush's  education  policy 

mirrors  the  principles  of 

the  free  market 

economy:  investing 

capital  in  enterprises 

which  follow  the  logic 

of  profitability,  while 

averting  capital  from 

markets  which  fail. 


One  of  Bush's  education  reform 
plans  is  to  require  public  schools  to 
have  "measurable  goals,"  quantirt 
able  outcomes  and  a  particular 
emphasis  on  back-to-basics  teaching 
methods.  Maybe  this  is  why  he  is 
quoted  as  saying:  "Laura  and  I  real- 
ly don't  realize  how  bright  our  chil- 
dren are  sometimes  until  we  get  an 
objective  analysis"  (Meet  the  Press, 
April  15,  2000). 

Bush  favors  phonics-based 
instruction  for  teaching  children 
how  to  read,  claiming,  "Reading  is 
the  basics  for  all  learning"  (speech 
announcing  his  "Reading  First"  ini- 
tiative in  Rcston,  VA.,  March  28, 
2000).  He  goes  on  to  announce: 
**We  want  our  teachers  to  be  trained 
so  they  can  meet  the  obligations, 
their  obligations  as  teachers.  We 
want  them  to  know  how  to  teach  the 
science  of  reading.  In  order  to  make 
sure  there's  not  this  kind  of  federal 
cumink"  (speech  at  Fritsche  Middle 
School,  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  March  30, 
2000). 

Bush  is  also  pushing  for  standard- 
ized testing  to  ensure  that  the  goals 
set  out  by  schools  are  achieved. 
Thus,  he  aims  at  tying  educational 
improvement  and  funding  closely  to 
measurable  results  and  outcomes. 

It  therefore  comes  at  no  surprise 
that  Bush  focuses  on  'Accountabili- 
ty," which  will  hold  schools,  teach- 
ers, parents  and  students  responsi- 
ble for  the  academic  success  or  fail- 
ure of  students.  He  also  threatens  to 
divert  education  funds  from  public 
schools  to  other  educational  pro- 
grams (i.e.  charter  schools  and 
voucher  plans)  if  public  schools  fail 
to  demonstrate  substantial  improve- 
ment in  the  academic  performance 
of  their  students. 

Part  of  Bush's  program  is  to  give 
parents  S  1.500  of  federal  money  to 
be  used  toward  a  charter  school  or 
voucher  program.  But  what  remains 


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^^9  g^WW^Ww^^^^H^  p>^#  27 


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FARAHMANDPUR 

From  page  26 

largely  overlooked  is  that  charter 
schools  are  primarily  managed  by 
the  private  sector.  Thus,  the  danger 
lurking  beneath  Bush's  education 
policy  supporting  private-for-profit 
schools  is  that  they  primarily  oper- 
ate outside  of  the  jurisdiction  of 
state  and  federal  regulation.  As  a 
result,  they  can  easily  "screen  out 
problem  kids,"  particularly  students 
who  have  special  needs  or  require 
additional  resources  which  may  not 
be  cost-efficient  for  private  school. 

By  focusing  on  rewarding 
"Schools  whose  performance  is 
.  improving,  and  (imposing)  conse- 
quences on  scbool»^hose  perfor- 
mance is  stagnati^,"  Bush's  educa- 
tion policy  mirrors  the  very  same 
operating  principles  of  the  free  mar- 
ket economy:  investing  capital  in 
enterprises  which  follow  the  logic  of 
;    profitability,  while  averting  capital 
from  markets  which  fail  to  be  prof- 
itable. 

In  addition.  Bush  seeks  to  align 
public  schools  with  the  logic  of  the 
.    free  market's  flexibility  and  autono- 
my from  federal  and  government 
regulation.  He  deHnes  "flexibility" 
as  emancipating  schools  from  gov- 
ernment control  by  transferring 
power  to  the  state  and  local  school 
boards. 

Along  with  raising  education 
standards  and  enforcing  account- 
ability, Bush  plans  to  place  public 
schools  at  the  forefront  of  competi- 
tion. In  this  scheme,  parents  will 
have  the  freedom  to  choose  which 
school  they  want  their  children  to 
attend. 

In  short.  Bush's  proposal  will  pri- 
marily focus  on  funneling  public 
money  intended  for  educational  pur- 
poses to  the  private  sector  (i.e.. 
Charter  schools  and  voucher  pro- 
grams). In  addition,  his  education 
policies  seek  to  abolish  or  drastically 
reduce  government  funding  for  edu- 
cational programs  such  as  Head 
^  Start  ($4.4  billion)  and  Title  I  ($7.7 
billion)  that  are  primarily  targeted 
for  minorities  and  the  poor.  He  also 
plans  to  reduce  the  role  of  the 
Department  of  Education,  particu- 
larly the  Office  of  Educational 
Research  and  Improvement  which 
has  an  annual  budget  of  $510  mil- 
lion. 

Educators  across  the  country  will 
experience  a  tough  four  years  if 
Bush  is  elected.  For  a  governor  who 
warns  that  he  will  not  stand  for  the 
"subsidization  of  failure"  (speech  at 
Rorence,  S.  C,  Jan.  1 1.  2000),  his 
vision  of  education  recycles  the 
same  disastrous  type  of  challenges 
as  those  advanced  by  his  predeces- 
sors. 


HOLCOMB 


i  From  page  24 


ence  in  her  sorority  should  not 
defme  the  attitude  toward  the 
Greek  system  for  the  entire  campus. 


There  are  those  of  us 

who  have  had  positive 

experiences  and  believe 

in  the  unity  that  the 

UCLA  Greek  system 

exemplifies. 


I  am  a  proud  member  of  not  only 
my  sorority,  but  of  the  UCLA  stu- 
dent body.  We  need  to  respect  one 
another  and  formulate  our  opinions 
based  on  our  own  experiences.  So  I 
would  like  to  encourage  my  UCLA 
peen  to  get  tp^now  people  in  the 


I^BruiflVlcwpoiM 


Monday,  October  9, 2000       27 


Express  Vourself 


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Join  us  and  leam  how  to  develop  your  assertive  potential  through  a  discussion 
facilitated  by  Lisa  Frankel,  Ph.D.,  M.F.C.C. 


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12:00-1:30  p.m. 

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Sponsored  by  the  UCLA  Center  for  Women  &  Men 
www.thecenter.ucla.edu  ,.,       ^ ...    ;.   4.'  ^ 


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our  exciting  career  opportunities: 


Information  Session 

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Bradley  Center,  6:30  pm 


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t  I 


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28       Monday,  October  9, 2000 


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JONES 

From  page  25  .w     ...  - 

with  its  approval  of  Proposition  209, 
is  again  leading  the  way  in  disman- 
tling unjust  racial  legislation. 

The  determination  in  some 
groups  to  preserve  affirmative 
action  borders  on  Fanaticism.  And 
why  not? 

To  quote  UCLA  political  science 
professor  Victor  Wolfenstein  "Those 
who  beneFit  from  an  existing  social 
order  don't  voluntarily  surrender 
their  advantages.  They  use  all  means 
possible  to  retain  them,  including  the 
ideological  masking  of  their  inter- 
ests" ("An  Unfinished  Revolution," 
Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint,  Sept.  25). 

The  quote  alone  is  not  remark- 
able. That  the  article  also  describes 
the  "controversy"  over  the  modern 
system  of  racism  masquerading  as 
"good  works"  social  advancement, 
shows  how  very  wrong  the  system  is. 

At  UCLA,  a  breeding  ground  of 
liberal  theory  and  its  handmaiden  of 
fantasy,  students  who  speak  out 
against  racial  preferences  are  stifled 
by  an  efieclive,  Stalin-esque  psycho- 
logical stratagem.  Those  who  by 
wo^ls  or  actions,  argue  against 
racially-focused  politics,  are  dis- 
missed as  "in  denial." 


Is  UCLA  mixing  up 
some  sort  of  diversity 

cake  that  has  to 
be  a  suitably  neutral 

color,  neither  too 
light  or  dark? 


A  fine  example  of  this  comes 
again  from  our  friend  Encisco.  He 
notes  how  "difficult  it  is  to  maintain 
a  positive  state  of  mind  when  one  is 
constantly  surrounded  with  only 
people  who  do  not  see  how  they  are 
racist,  sexist,  classistj  homophobic, 
xenophobic  and/or  heterosexist." 

This  statement  shrewdly  counter- 
acts the  possibility  that  these 
unnamed  people  aren't  any  of  these 
things.  They  simply  "do  not  sctf* 
their  supposed  flaws.  So,  you  once 
made  an  innocent  jibe  about  a  close 
friend  who  happens  to  be  a  different 
race  from  you?  You're  racist,  xeno- 
phobic, classist  and  probably  a  closet 
Nazi,  come  to  think  of  it.  You  are  in 
denial! 

So  what  if  you  demonstrate  your 
worth  with  charitable  works,  a  posi- 
tive demeanor,  and  a  kind  word  for 
everyone?  No,  the  argument  that 
someone  is  "blind"  to  the  "real 
world"  is  rhetorically  irrefutable  - 
because  every  denial,  no  matter  how 
complete,  reasoned  and  correct,  is 
just  more  denial  of  the  true  situation. 
Praxis  members,  if  they  learned 
nothing  else  at  UCLA  -  a  likely 
proposition  at  that  -  have  learned 
well  the  art  and  effective  nature  of 
psychological  warfare. 

Affirmative  action,  and  the  poli- 
tics of  "duh-versity"  are  startlingly 
similar.  Both  dictate  the  idea  that 
race  is  all  that  matters.  Brown  skin, 
black  skin,  white  skin,  yellow  skin  -  ;. 
they  all  have  deep  and  exclusive 
meanings.  Are  the  current  victim 
politics  of  today  the  dream  that 
Martin  Luther  King,  Jr.  spoke  of 
from  the  steps  of  the  Lincoln 
Memorial? 

King  called  for  a  day  in  which  all 
Americans  might  "live  in  a  nation 
where  they  will  not  be  judged  by  the 
color  of  their  skin  but  by  the  content 
of  their  character."  Did  King  also 
hope  for  a  day  in  which  his  chil- 
dren's ethnicity  might  qualify  them 
for  admission  into  a  school  they  did 
not  otherwise  deserve  to  attend?  I 
can't  recall  ever  reading  that  speech. 


n 


"V'^^JTT"? 


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JONES 

From  page  28 

Yet  because  of  the  triumph  of 
race-based  politics,  there  is  no  longer 
time  for  such  niceties  as  struggle  and 
triumph  -  free  rides  are  the  order  of 
^     the  day.  Outside  of  the  California 
■     public  higher  educational  system, 

"enlightened"  social  policy  dictates 
•     that  race  trumps  merit  on  every 
count. 

UCLA  is  indeed  a  unique  cam- 
pus. For  only  here  do  racial-identity 
groups  (at  least  one  fully-funded 
group  for  each  race,  except  those 
pesky  Caucasians)  hold  such  vast 
power  to  polarize  and  create  ten- 
sion. Even  in  these  times  of  relative 
equality,  minority  groups  avoid 
^    racial  unity,  instead  withdrawing  to 
^     nurse  grievances,  ranging  from  very 
petty  to  extremely  petty. 

The  concerns  of  Ryan  Smith,  a 
member  of  the  African  Student 
Union,  epitomize  this  situation.  He 
notes  that  upon  arriving  at  UCLA, 
the  "dire"  situation  confronting  him 
was  a  "dwindling"  black  presence  on 
campus  ("Students  with  no  bound- 
aries," Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint,  Sept. 
25).  Is  UCLA  mixing  up  some  sort 
of  a  diversity  cake  that  has  to  turn 
out  a  suitably  neutral  color,  neither 
too  light  or  dark?  Do  we  need  a 
greater  "black  presence"  to  appro- 
priately tinge  the  too-white  batter? 
No,  this  is  more  idiotic  racial  identi- 
fication in  which  minority  students 
don't  feel  comfortable  unless  they're 
around  other  students  of  their  race. 
Reduce  the  number  of  minority 
students  based  on  that  crazy,  out- 
moded notion  of  "merit."  and  a  cam- 
pus supposedly  "re-segregates."  You 
see,  re-segregation  is  what  happens 
when  more  white  students  show  up 
.  at  a  school  -  but  it's  duh-versity  at  its 
finest  when  black  students  have 
enough  other  black  students  around 
to  feel  comfortable  about  the  color 
of  their  skin. 

Some  might  categorize  this  dis- 
trust of  white  students  simply  for 
-  their  ethnicity  as  racism,  but  as  we 
all  know,  only  white  people  can  be 
racist.  It's  called  "progress"  when 
minorities  practice  racial  discrimina- 
tion. 

The  president  of  the  Latin 
American  Student  Association, 
Celia  Lacayo,  is  rather  blunt  about 
her  views  on  race,  "UCLA  puts  out 
the  leaders  in  this  community,  and 
the  leaders  should  look  like  their 
constituency"  ("Race  relations  still 
hot  topic  on  campus,"  Daily  Bruin, 
News,  Sept.  25).  Would  she  trust  a 
leader  who  is  a  different  color  from 
her  own?  She  may  be  one  of  thou- 
sands who  speak  with  one  voice: 
color  should  matter  at  UCLA,  color 
should  matter  in  the  job  market, 
color  should  matter  in  where  a  per- 
son lives.  Color  should  continue  to 
be  an  important  deciding  factor. 

The  only  difference  between  these 
"modern"  views  and  those  of  Jim 
Crow  legislation?  I  can't  think  of  a 
single  one. 


HOLCOMB 

From  page  27 

Greek  system,  or  to  go  through  the 
process  for  yourself.  This  will  hope- 
fully breed  more  tolerance,  under- 
standing and  awareness  -  qualities 
that  our  diverse  society  today  is  in 
dire  need  of 

While  I  commend  Steel  for  shar- 
ing her  experience,  I  think  it  is 
important  for  this  campus  to  know 
that  what  she  said  is  not  entirely 
correct,  and  that  there  are  those  of 
us  who  have  had  positive  experi- 
ences and  believe  in  the  unity  that 
the  UCLA  Greek  system  exempli- 
fies. 

Hopefully  we  can  all  learn  to 
respect  the  other  organizations  that 
we  may  not  individually  be  a  part 
of,  for  this  is  what  will  lead  to  a 


-nrorrnsignmTiociefy: 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Monday,  October  9, 2000 


•'i- 


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Death  by  Stereo! 

Check  out  A&E  tomorrow  to  find  out  what 
Death  by  Stereo  is  all  about,  with  news  about 
the  concert  and  an  interview  with  members 
oftheband.  : 

Monday,  October  9, 2000 


Daily  Bruin 


ENTERTAINMENT 


A&E  on  the  Web 

See  all  this  and  more  at 
the  Daily  Bruin^ 
Website: 
www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

Monday,  Ortober  9, 2000 


V*,'  .     .,•> 


robots 


.:■■  y 


BattleBots  come  in  a  variety  of  different  shapes  and  sizes. 


Comedy  Central 


Innouatiue  metal  machines  meet  the 
rough-and-tumble  world  of  wrestling  in 
Comedy  Central's  new  series/'BattleBots" 


JAHREn  QUOfVDaily  Bfum 


By  Sarah  Monson 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Only  Comedy  Central  would  bring 
together  tattooed,  mullet-sporting  auto 
mechanics  with  Palo  Alto  computer 
nerds,  face  them  off  against  each  other 
in  a  ring  and  produce  a  surprisingly 
fair  fight. 

Say  hello  to  "BattleBots,"  Comedy 
Central's  newest  brainchild.       » 

Three  rounds,  six  robotf  and 
approximately  ten  laughs  occuivy  the 


\ 


half  hour  time  slot  for  the  quirky  show, 
which  airs  every  Wednesday  at  10:30 
p.m.  and  again  on  Saturday  at  5  p.m. 
and  II  p.m. 

Each  "BattleBots"  episode  consists 
of  two  designers  sending  their  home- 
made killer  robots  to  duke  it  out,  via 
remote  control,  in  a  gladiator-style 
ring. 

"It's  like  WWF  wrestling  meets  the 
Indy  500,"  said  Donna  D'Errico,  one 
of  the  shows  hosts,  in  a  recent  phone 
interview.  "The  sUrs  of  the  show  are 


not  human,  it's  really  unique." 

She  also  said  that  the  show  is  a  rare 
and  pleasant  relief  from  the  monotony 
of  bad  acting  and  poor  sportsmanship 
in  regular  wrestling. 

On  "BattleBots,"  competitors  come 
from  all  over  the  country  for  a  chance 
to  strut  their  mechanical  superiority  in 
front  of  a  live  audience,  who  enjoy  the 
action  from  behind  a  giant  glass  wall, 
appropriately  named  the  "BattleBox." 


fasadena  Playtxxjse 

June  Angela  (left)  and  Una  Patel  star  in  "Ikebana  (Living  Flowers)' by 
Velina  Hasu  Houston.The  show  will  run  through  Oct.  22. 

Balance  between  freedom,  _ 
tradition  sougiit  in  licebana' 


Sm  MmOOfS^  page  36 


Darryl  Sivad's 
pictures  try  to 
capture  the 
relationship 
between  the 
old  generation 
and  the  new. 
Shown  here  is 
3-year-old 
NHjasin 
Zakariya 
Quach  Phyakul 
with  a  portrait 
of  his  maternal 
great-grandfMf- 
ents.  Sivad's 
exhibit 'Twice- 
Taken  Pictures," 
is  on  display  at 
UCLA's  Fowlpr 


Photographer  captures  family  Nstory  through  picture-in-picture  exKbit 


ART:  Generations  connected  in 
photos;  unique  stories  emerge 
despite  some  unclear  captions 


^BfMitHaHiim 

Daily  Bruin  SenkK  Staff 

After  months  of  dominating  the  walls  of  the 
Fowler  Museum,  Muhammad  Ali  is  now  taking 
a  bit  smaller  role. 

in  photosrapher  Darryl  Sivad't  "twice- 
Taken  Pictures"  exhibit,  now  currently  running 
at  the  Fowler,  the  famous  boxer  shows  up  again, 
but  in  a  vastly  different  setting. 

initead  of  bursting  from  prints,  larger  than 
life,  snarling  out  his  glory  to  the  world,  he 


Museum. 


appears  small,  almost  overshadowed  by  his 
own  daughter.  As  Maryum  Ali  stands  amid  a 


row  of  palm  trees,  beaming  brightly,  the  champ 
waves  a  finger  from  a  Newsweek  cover  in  her 
hands.  His  awesome  fame  is  almost  an  after- 
thought when  compared  with  her  radiant  smile. 

Sivad's  concept  is  an  interesting  one.  With  a 
series  of  31  photographs,  he  arranges  a  variety 
of  subjects  before  his  lens,  posed  holding  a  pho- 
tograph of  a  relative. 

Some,  like  Ali  and  author  Quincy  Troupe, 
were  already  known  far  before  Sivad  arranged 
them  in  front  of  his  camera.  The  true  interest  of 
the  exhibit  does  not  lie  here,  however.  While  it  is 
iniiraatiac  10  see  familiar  faces,  the  TDd  pewBT 
of  "Twk»-T»kevl"  is  in  the  stories  it  teits  of  the 
unknowns. 

SonK  aren't  readily  oiyvious,  but  require  in- 
depth  reading  of  the  captions. 

Benjamin  Franklin  Thomas  holds  his  moth- 


his  cars,  it's  not  as  hard-hitting  unlil  the  caption 
reveals  that  his  mother  was  a  slave  and  that 
Thomas  built  the  house  with  his  own  hands. 


(Sivad)  arranges  a  variety  of 
subjects  before  hib  lens, 

posed  hoidingsa 
photograph  of  a  relative. 


er's  partrait  while  resting  in  his  garage.  While 
the  rtwl  is  interesting, «  num  relaxing  in  front  of 


it's  a  ipoignant  tale  -  a  man  laboring  to  build 
a  refuge^ter  a  lifetime  of  hard  wA  i^g>H  on 


by  the  presence  of  his  mothau  who's  no 
stranger  to  perseverance,  either.  ^ 


Tlie  shot  of  Salvador  Sandoval  and  its 
accompanying  test  are  arresting.  The  reformed 
pachuco  turned  teacher  shoots  out  of  the  dark- 
ness, revealed  by  a  bright  swath  of  light.  He 
hoUs  a  photo  taken  soon  after  his  family's  emi- 
gration from  Mexico,  which  portrays  them  as 
well-dressed  and  formal.  Apparently,  this  is  all  a 
carefully  constructed  illusion. 

"We  were  so  poor,  we  had  to  borrow  the 
clothes  and  shoes  we  were  wearing  in  this  pic- 
ture," he  says  in  the  caption. 

The  captions  prove  to  be  a  douMe^ed 
sword  for  Sivad.  While  some  enhance  the  qaal- 
ity  of  the  art,  explaining  otherwise  unclear  sub- 
jects, most  are  of  little  help.  The  hanv-Tisted 
writing  that  pervades  many  of  ll»  captiom 
detracts  from  the  pictures, 
like  M  junior  hifli 


l#another  photo,  Suiiman  Muhammad 
standi  in  a  hiiway,  holding  his  young  daughter, 


surrounded  by  row  after  row  of  framed  pho- 
tographs. It's  an  arresting  image,  but  its  caption 
fails  to  do  it  justice. 

"It  helps  to  have  these  photos  displayed  in 
the  hallway,"  it  reads  "They  date  from  the  early 
1930s  to  the  present  and  help  him  thread  togeth- 
er a  story  of  their  lives.  This  enables  him  to  see 
where  they  came  from  and  more  vividly  know 
who  they  are." 

This  is  all  well  and  good,  but  it  really  doesn't 
do  the  photo  justice.  The  caption  seems  to  be 
merely  filling  space,  rather  than  actually  hclp- 
mg  convey  meanmg. 

Some  images,  however,  are  so  visually  com- 
manding that  they  don't  need  the  captions. 

Tin  ttriliing  eyes  of  Yuki  Mizukane^Hai|. 
don't  WMlMiaiiuAibliuii- her  rdentf 
into  the  —wwa  is  |iip|Jiiig  WKwigli  vr 

SMT1IKK,|M9t39 


THEATER:  Play  describes 
journey  of  self-discovery 
for  two  Japanese  women 


By  Carolyn  Browm 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Many  people  will  go  to  great 
lengths  to  honor  traditions. 

The       theatrical      production, 
"Ikebana  (Living  Flowers),"  set  in 
1957  Tokyo  and  written  by  Velina 
Hasu  Houston,  brings  together  two 
young  women  struggling  to  under- 
stand the  changes  that 
are  propelling  Japan 
from  its  traditional 
culture  into  a  more 
westernized  one. 
Themes  of  racial 
identity  and  personal 
freedom      are      interwoven      in 
"Ikebana,"  directed  by  Shirley  Jo 
Finney,  through  the  lives  of  five  char- 
acters trying  to  make  sense  of  their 
place  in  the  ethnocentric  and  rapidly 
changing  post-World  War  II  society 
of Japan. 

Hanako,  played  by  Una  Patel,  a 
stunningly  beautiful  woman  with 
mixed  European  and  Japanese  fea- 
tures, struggles  with  the  prejudices 
and  abuse  she  faces  in  Japanese  soci- 
ety Other  women  are  appalled  by  her 
mixed  race,  while  men  are  enchanted 
by  her  beauty  Both  reactions  result  in 
her  being  treated  as  less  than  human. 
When  the  story  begins,  Hanako 
has  been  sold  into  aervitude  to  Or. 
Itamura,  who  is  intoxicated  by  her 
beauty  and  sees  her 
as  an  exotic  rep- 
resentation of 
■*^^^ — the- 


•«• 


I 


meeting 
between  East  and 
West.  Through  Hanako,  Dr.  lumura 


revels  in  his  fascina- 
tion with  Western 
culture. 

Dr.  Itamura's 
daughter  Ayame, 
played  by  June 
Angela,  is  a 
Japanese  woman  with 
all  the  privileges  of  money  and  posi- 
tion. Her  movements  and  activities, 
however,  are  restricted  by  her  domi- 
neering and  traditional  father  who 
insists  on  selecting  a  husband  for  her. 
Dr.  Itamura,  performed  by  Dana 
Lee,  clings  to  his  traditional  Japanese 
beliefs,  even  as  they  threaten  to  bring 
down  his  stable  home. 

The  contrast  between  Hanako  and 
Ayame  is  not  only  about  Japanese 
culture,  but  serves  as  a  universal 
statement  of  personal  freedom  of 
spirit.  While  Hanako  is  trapped  in 
prejudice  and  servitude,  her  physical 
features  have  set  her  apart  from  the 
restraints  of  Japanese  society.  She  is 
able  to  dream  and  to  believe  in  her 
own  ability. 

For  instance,  she 
dreams  of  climb- 
ing Mt.  Fuji  and 
tells      Ayame, 
"Fujiyama     is 
not  so  high  - 
you  climb  it  one 
step  at  a  time, 
until  you  reach  ' 
^-      the  top." 

Ayame's  person- 
al plight  is  symbolized., 
by  the  art  of  ikebana,  fiower  arrang- 
ing, which  is  a  painstaking  and  highly 
prescriptive  means  of  creating  "per- 
fectly balanced  beauty"  Her  stable, 
quiet  life  of  beauty  and  the  love  of  her 
father  have  left  her  spirit  stilted  and 
without  dreams,  k  a  Hauaku,  wlium 


Kv 


S«cKEIiUU,pa9t40 


>/'.-*■■- 


•»■''•' . 


32       MoncUy,  October  9, 2000    ' 


Daily  Bruin  Am  ft  Enteruinimnt 


B-Real's  group,  Cypress  Hill  hosted  their  3rd  Arinual  Smokeout. 


we$   .:--';;i. 

BorUnd, 

guitarist  for 
Limp  Bizkit, 
performs  in 
his  signature 
eerie  face 
paint. 


f*.*v^**1«**' '*•"*;••".*'•' J*   ».«-''«r''   *fii*^- 


■*  ■*  :  •fii-"-.>^,  if^ 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


Monday,  October  9, 2000       33 


Phoio  illuMwtion  by  Mindy  (toss/Oaily  Bfuin  Senxx  Staff 


A  variety  of  performers,  over- 
flowing outhouses,  a  barrage 
of  security  guards,  and  a 
mediocre  fireworks  display  which 
only  a  stoner  could  appreciate  char- 
acterized the  3rd  Annual  Cypress 
Hill  Smokeout. 

The  event  was  touted  by  its  pro- 
moters as  a  "14-hour  mind  opening 
music  festival,"  but  besides  paying 
homage  to  marijuana,  it  was  not 
much  dilTcrent  than  other  festivals  of 
its  type. 

With  more  than  45,000  concert- 
goers  filling  the  fairgrounds,  long 
lines  were  the  norm  and  the  prices 
were  as  high  as  the  piles  of  trash. 

Despite  the  throngs  of  people,  the 
scene  was  relatively  mellow  through- 
out the  day. 

"I  don't  smoke  weed,  but  I'm  hav- 
ing a  great  time  here,"  said  concert- 
goer  Michael  Madsen.  "It's  a  good 
example  of  younger  people  of  all 
races  getting  along." 

The  mellow  atmosphere  changed 
toward  the  evening  when  the  over- 
flowing crowd  flocked  to  the  main 
stage  to  see  the  high-energy  acts  of 
Pennywise,  Liretp  Bizkit,  and,  of 
course.  Cypress  Hill. 

At  times,  the  security  guards 
appeared  to  be  enjoying  the  show 
more  than  managing  the  crowd. 
Many  of  them  threw  their  hands  up 
and  danced  behind  the  blockades. 

Emergency  Medical  Service  was 
kept  busy  with  a  steady  flow  of 
injuries,  from  the  typical  cuts  and 
sprains  to  the  atypical  nipple  crushed 
in  the  barricade. 

While  people  were  discrete  about 
using  drugs,  EMT  reported  overcon- 
sumption  of  psychadelics  such  as  acid 
and  mushrooms. 

Other  predicaments,  such  as  the 
one  Manuel  Garcia  experienced  were 
not  as  serious.  He  ended  up  losing  his 
pants  in  the  pit  during  Limp  Bizkit's 
set. 

Although  the  security  guards 
would  not  let  him  retrieve  the  pants, 
he  still  enjoyed  the  show  and  found  a 
substitute  for  his  missing  clothing..-,a 
huge  plastic  poster. 

Overall,  the  festival  ran  smoothly 
and  according  to  first-time  security 
guard  Tony  Ruiz,  it  was  all  just  "one 
big  adventure." 


Photos  and  Story  by  Minay  Ross 
Ikiily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Smoked 

out  in 

Sm  Bernardino 


SA.  Martinez  of  311  entertains  a  loud  crowd  with  his  rhythmic  gyrations 


Redman  enet- 

gized  the 
crowd  during 
his  set  with 
Erick  Sermon. 


Bobo  of  Cypress  Hill  jumped  around  the  stage  during  their  set 
at  the  end  of  the  night. 


AOAM  BROWNA>*ily  Bruin 


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34       Monday,  October  9, 2000 


,  OiiiyBniinAroarfmertainimiit 


t^mmmm 


D«iy  Bniin  Arts  ft  Emertainmeflt 


Monday,  October  9, 2000       35 


PKbrings  live  stage  into  living  room     Networks  fix  up  faU  season  lineup  |  Bestsella^tumed-opeta 

IcLEVISION:  UDroarious      splendid  cast  of  21  more.  And  it  mark*  the  debut  of  "Staae  on  ■  1^  ■ 


Ihe  Associaied  Pr«s 

Federal  Drug  Enforcement  Agency  officer  Robert  Barrett  guards 
5,1 37  pounds  of  cocaine  on  the  Miami  River  docks  Aug.  19, 1998, 


'Frontline'  r 


shows 
U.S.  losing  war  on  drugs 


DOCUMENTARY:  Policies 
based  on  treatment  may 
be  most  effective  solution 


By  Fraiicr  Moore 

The  Associated  Press 

After  three  decades,  the  wht  on 
drugs  is  largely  a  bust. 

That's  one  finding  of  "Drug 
Wars,"  an  epic  exploration  into  the 
United  Stales  government's  battle  to 
stem  the  flow  of  illegal  drugs. 

Examinations  of  the  drug  problem 


are  usually  framed  from  the  perspec- 
tive of  the  users  or  the  cops  who  bust 
them  on  the  street. 

The  four-hour  "Frontline"  report, 
which  PBS  airs  Monday  and  Tuesday 
at  9  p.m.  EDT,  lets  viewers  hear  from 
high-level  government  officials  and 
traffickers,  drug  agents  and  drug 
lords,  including  men  who  once  head- 
ed Colombia's  notorious  Medellin 
cartel,  which  the  film  identifies  as  the 
world's  largest-ever  criminal  syndi- 
cate. 

More  than  a  year  in  the  making, 

~~~~~~~       See  NWS,  page  39 


TELEVISION:  Uproarious 
Broadway  show  will  be 
broadcast  this  Saturday 


By  Frazicr  Moor* 

The  Associated  Press 

Here's  one  way  to  look  at  it:  Just 
by  tuning  in,  you  save  $70.  That's 
the  price  of  a  ticket  to  "The  Man 
Who  Came  to  Dinner"  in  its  cur- 
rent Broadway  run.  Plus,  you'd 
have  to  pay  for  parking. 

So  park  yourself  in  front  of  your 
TV  Saturday  night  and  share  this 
comic  romp  right  along  with  its 
sold-out  house  on  42nd  Street. 
Airing  live  on  PBS  at  8  p.m.  EDT, 
"The  Man  Who  Came  to  Dinner" 
is  an  uproarious  good  time  starring 
Nathan  Lane,  Jean  Smart  and  a 


splendid  cast  of  2 1  more. 

And,  unlike  ticket-holders  at  the 
American  Airlines  Theatre,  you'll 
have  plenty  of  legroom. 


Both  urbane  and 
madcap,  ("Dinner") 

embodies  a  comedic 
style  that ...  sitcoms 
would  be  aping  for 

the  next  half-century. 


The  broadcast  captures  the  next- 
to-last  performance  of  this 
acclaimed  revival  by  the 
Roundabout  Theatre   Company. 


And  it  marks  the  debut  of  "Stage  on 
Screen,"  a  series  of  classic  and  con- 
temporary drama  from 
Thirteen/ WNET. 

"The  Man  Who  Came  to 
Dinner"  introduces  you  to 
Sheridan  Whiteside  (Lane),  a  critic, 
radio  personality,  sharp-tongued 
bon  vivant  and  high  priest  of  the 
1930s  smart  set.  • 

After  dining  with  a  prominent 
family  in  tiny  Mesalia,  Ohio,  during 
a  cross-country  lecture  tour, 
Whiteside  has  slipped  on  his  hosts' 
doorstep  and  injured  his  hip.  Stuck 
in  their  home  during  six  weeks  of 
convalescence,  the  irascible 
Whiteside  commandeers  the 
premises  and,  from  his  wheelchair, 
plays  ringmaster  to  colorful  visitors 
and  zany  situations  that  turn  the 


Soe 


P»9«M 


'Dream'  explores  reality  of  addictions 


FILM:  Aronofeky  delivers 
shockingly  vivid  glimpse 
into  world  of  drug  abuse 


ByOwKtyLcmirc 
The  Assodated  Press 

-Requiem  for  a  Dream"  is  not  a 
movie  for  the  faint  of  heart.  Please 
take  that  warning  seriously. 

Rim  critics  see  a  lot  of  movies, 
sometimes  several  in  one  day.  It's 
rare  to  walk  out  of  one  feeling  so 
physically  and  emotionally  stunned. 
"Requiem  for  a  Dream"  has  that 
effect,  both  for  its  shocking  visuals 
and  its  subject  matter. 


The  word  "Weak"  barely  begins  to 
describe  this  story  of  four  Coney 
Island  drug  addicts.  And  yet  this  sec- 
ond film  from  Darren  Aronofsky, 
writer-director  of  I998*s  "Pi,"  is 
incredibly  alive.  He  proves  once 
again  what  a  tremendous  young  tal- 
ent he  is  -  he's  only  31  -  with  an 
artist's  eye  for  detail  and  imagery. 

Aronofsky  also  succeeds  in  draw- 
ing brave  performances  from  a 
strong  cast. 

Ellen  Burstyn  plays  Sara 
Goldfarb,  a  widow  who  lives  alone  in 
a  small,  dingy  apartment.  Sara  is 
hooked  on  pie-in-the-sky  tV 
infomercials,  chocolates  and  diet 
pills. 

Jared  Leto  plays  her  son,  Harry,  a 


slacker  who  only  visits  when  he  needs 
to  steal  her  TV  set  to  pawn  it  for  drug 
money.  He  is  hooked  on  heroin. 

Marlon  Wayans,  in  a  rare  dramat- 
ic role,  plays  Harry's  best  friend, 
Tyrone.  He  uses  pot  and  heroin 
recreationally,  but  is  hooked  on  the 
money  and  power  that  come  from 
dealing  drugs. 

Jennifer  Connelly  plays  Harry's 
girlfriend,  Marion,  who  dreams  of 
being  a  dress  designer.  She  is  hooked 
on  cocaine. 

The  film  follows  all  four  as  they 
fall  deeper  into  their  addictions, 
degrading  themselves  to  get  their  fix. 

In  the  beginning,  there  is  hope  for 

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CHANGES:  Many  shows 
given  major  makeovers 
in  preparation  for  debut 


By  David  Bauder 

The  Associated  Press 

A  new  fall  television  season  is  a 
lot  like  opening  day  in  baseball. 
Each  team  theoretically  begins  the 
season  evenly,  with  the  sanie  chance 
of  making  the  World  Series. 

In  reality,  one  team's  pitcher  has 
a  sore  arm.  The  cleanup  hitter's 
been  striking  out  an  awful  lot.  And 
that  kid  in  right  field?  Overmatched. 
You  know  better  than  to  make 
October  plans  for  this  club. 

Similarly,  some  new  television 
series  seem  to  start  their  runs  with 
two  strikes  against  them. 

The  original  producer  leaves  the 
series,  miffed  at  the  network's  med- 
dling. Half  the  cast  is  fired.  The 
show  changes  its  setting,  or  its  title. 
Writers  doctor  the  script. 

Every  year  one  or  more  of  the 
above  seems  to  envelop  a  show  in 
dread.  Before  they've  even  gone  on 
the  air,  it  feels  like  Dead  Show 
Walking. 

This  year,  the  red  flags  are  fiying 
over  four  shows  in  particular: 

NBC's  "The  Michael  Richards 
Show"  has  received  a  complete 
makeover.  After  NBC  discovered 
that  the  former  Kramer  on 
"Seinfeld"  had  trouble  carrying  a 
series  on  his  own,  it  beefed  up  the 
cast  with  the  addition  of  actors 
William  Devane.  Amy  Farrington 
and  Tim  Meadows.  Now,  like 
"Seinfeld,"  it's  more  of  an  ensem- 
ble. 
The  executive  producer  of  Fox's 


questions  death  penalty 


MUSIC  Author  approves 
latest  adaptation  of  novel, 
hopes  to  influence  viewers 


The  AuoctMed  Pr«s 

Michael  Richards,  recognized  for  his  character  role  as  Kramer  on 
'Seinfeld,*  plays  Vic  Nardozza  on  NBC's  "The  Michael  Richards  Show.' 


"Freakylinks"  left,  citing  creative 
differences,  after  he  was  ordered  to 
inject  more  levity  into  the  dark 
drama. 

NBC  recruited  a  former 
"Friends"  producer  to  take  over  on 
"Cursed"  after  the  show's  co^re- 
ators  left  with  bad  feelings.  New 
writers  were  brought  on,  the  show 


changed  its  name  from  "The  Steven 
Weber  Show"  and  a  handful  of 
episodes  already  filmed  were  thrown 
out. 

"Normal.  Ohio"  features  John 
Goodman  as  a  middle-aged 
divorced  man  who  comes  out  of  the 

,        SceniMMNUpageJ? 


By  Karen  Gaudctte 

The  Associated  Press 

Never  has  the  modem  ethical 
debate  over  capital  punishment 
been  addressed  so  lyrically. 

"I'm  soiry.  I  didn't  think  I  could 
cry  anymore,"  sings  Frederica  von 
Stade  as  the  mother  of  a  death-row 
convict  appealing  to  her  son's  par- 
don board.  "I  just  don't  know  what 
good  my  Joe's  being  dead  will  do. 
Will  it  satisfy  you?" 

Two  years  in  the  making,  the 
opera  "Dead  Man  Walking"  has  its 
world  premiere  Saturday  night  at 
the  San  Francisco  Opera. 
Composer  Jake  Heggie  and  award- 
winning  playwright  Terrence 
McNally  adapted  the  story  from 
Sister  Helen  Prejean's  best-selling 
novel  of  the  same  name. 

"It's  about  people  who  are  deal- 
ing with  the  most  explosive  and 
most  painful  feelings  we  can  deal 
with  as  humans,"  Heggie  said 
Friday. 

"This  is  about  you,  this  is  about 
your  mother,  this  is  about  your 
neighbor  down  the  street.  This  is 
not  a  fairy  tale,  it's  real  -  not  some- 
thing happening  in  a  far-off  land." 

"Dead  Man  Walking,"  which 
also  was  made  into  a  1995  film  star- 
ring Susan  Sarandon,  chronicles 
the  experiences  of  Prejean,  a 
Louisiana  nun  who  acted  as  a  spiri- 
tual adviser  to  a  convicted  murder- 


er on  death  row  in  the  1980s. 
In  the  opera,  mezzo-soprano 
'  Susan  Graham  -  fresh  from  her 
role  as  Jordan  Baker  in  the  pre- 
miere of  "The  Great  Gatsby"  at 
New  York's  Metropolitan  Opera  - 
stars  as  Prejean.  Baritone  John 
Packard  portrays  the  condemned 
inmate,  played  by  Sean  Penn  in  the 
film. 

This  latest  version  of  "Dead 
Man  Walking"  comes  at  a  time 
when  many  states  are  reevaluating 
their  use  of  the  death  penalty. 
Illinois,  for  example,  halted  execu- 
tions this  year  after  13  of  its  death- 
row  inmates  were  exonerated. 

Meanwhile,  David  Paul 
Hammer,  scheduled  to  die  by  lethal 
injection  on  Nov.  15,  would  become 
the  first  person  executed  by  the  fed- 
eral government  since  1963.  (In 
July,  President  Clinton  postponed 
the  execution  of  another  federal 
inmate,  Juan  Raul  Garza,  after 
Garza's  lawyers  called  the  death- 
penalty  system  "grossly  biased 
against  black  and  Hispanic  defen- 
dants") 

Prejean,  who  started  her  own 
prison  ministry,  wrote  "Dead  Man 
Walking"  after  witnessing  the  elec- 
trocution of  three  killers  she  coun- 
seled.  It  was  published  in  1993.  The 
opera,  she  said,  will  make  people 
reflect  again  on  why  they  oppose  or 
support  the  death  penal  ty. 

"It's  very  much  based  on  conflict 
and  bringing  the  opposing  forces 
together  to  really  sound  out  the 
depth  of  the  complexity  of  the 
issue,"  she  said. 


See  OraU,  page  40 


JOIN  ^--— — — 

^^^UCLA    PERFORMING    ARTS 

Student  Committee 


We  are  looking  for  approximately  24  undergraduate 

and  graduate  students  interested  In  producing 

and  promoting  the  performing  arts  at  UCLA. 


♦  Produce  free  and  ticketed  performing 
arts  events  for  the  UCLA  cofflmunity. 

♦Work  with  performers,  manogers, 
ogents,  production  crew  and  the  media. 

♦  Gain  first-hand  experience  in  the  field 
of  performing  arts  management. 

APPLY  NOW 
Applications  are  now 
available  in  Royce  B96, 
or  on  our  website: 
www.sca.ucla.edu 

DEADLINE: 


Positions  include: 

Website  Coordinator 

Graphic  Designer 

Marketing  Director 

Producers 

Computer  Services  Director 

Ticket  Manager     " 

AND  MORE!  :         — 

No  experience?  No  problem! 

Questions? 

CALL     310.825.3253 
e-MAZL    sca@ucla.edu 


UCL, 


M 


-*-V 


as= 


•-.■  *?•.*,     - 


,■^^  ...w— .v    *.j^  ', 


«-.MVi.'e  .  i-».ii»*a' 


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r  V.Ai.^'., 


36       Monday,0ctober9,2000 


DiHy  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


BAHLEBOTS 

From  page  30 


,  Co(n«dy  Central 

BattleBot  engineers  must  inspect  their  robots  to  make  sure  that  they  are  ready  for 
combat. 


These  remote  controlled  monsters  have 
three  minutes  to  strike  blow  after  hideous  blow 
to  its  opponent  inside  this  48-foot-square 
arena.  More  trouble  awaits  the  dueling  Bots.as 
the  Door  opens  up  with 
pop-up  hazards  such  as  the  — — — ^— — 
"Ram  Rod"  and 
"Hacksaw,"  that  can  be 
deployed  at  any  time  to 
further  obstruct  the  play- 
ers. 

"BattlcBots,"  however, 
isn't  merely  low-brow 
entertainment.  Bill  Nye  the 
Science  X3uy  serves  up 
some  intellectual  stimula-  ' ';  ^■[- 

tion  as  he  describes  the  z:*"' 

technicalities  of  the  robots.  And  D'Errico,  a 
former  "Baywatch"  babe,  interviews  the  chal- 
lengers ringside  after  the  fight  and  offsets  his 
goofball  flare. 

Also,  the  play-by-play  action  is  humorously 
covered  by  the  show's  commentators,  Bill 
Dwyer  and  Sean  Salisbury, 
who  rattle  off  classic  one-     ^i^^m^^,^,^ 
liners  that  fit  the  battling 
Bots  as  they  make  fools  or 
heroes  of  themselves. 

It  is  Comedy  Central 
after  all. 

Although  they  only 
appear  for  a  brief  time, 
comedic  twins  Randy  and 
Jason  Sklar,  former  stars 
of  MTVs  "Apartment  2- 
F,"  get  in  their  share  of 

funny  remarks  with  their      

ringside  reporting,  but  oth- 
erwise appear  to  only  be  present  to  add  to  the 
show's  eccentricity. 

The  masterminds  behind  these  metallic  mis- 
chief-makers also  make  comedy  of  their  own. 

"You  have  to  make  the  other  robot  your 
bitch,"  remarked  Morgan  Tilford,  the  owner  of 
"Mauler,"  a  UFO-shapcd  spinning  robot  with 
knives  sticking  out  of  its  body. 
A  strong  statement,  but  indeed  he  did  exact- 


The  play-by-play  action 

is  humorously  covered 

by  the  commentators ... 

who  rattle  off  classic 

one-liners. 


This  unique  formula  of 

comedic  demolition  has 

yielded  the  highest 

ratings  for  a  premiere 

show  in  Comedy 

Central's  history. 


ly  that  in  his  battle.  "Nightmare,"  described  as 
a  "wheel  of  misfortune,"  got  knocked  out  in 
less  than  a  minute  by  "Mauler,"  with  it's  spin- 
ning wheels  of  death  that  gave  no  mercy  to  the 
less  fortunate  BattleBot. 

The  audience  seems  thoroughly  excited  as 

well,  holding  posters  and  shouting  obscenities 

at  the  challenger.  "BattleBots"  plays  out  like 

any.     normal      sporting 

''^~''-"~^"'~     event. 

Unfortunately,  the  real 
stars  of  the  sho\v  cannot 
sign  autographs.  . •-  ; 
Built  for  bludgeoiinng, 
innovative  design  is  the 
key  to  a  champion  Bot.  A 
typical  robot  may  have 
pickaxes,  chain  saws  or 
gigantic  knife  blades  mak- 

7 '  ing  up  the  bulk  of  its 

frame.  And  even  the 
meanest  looking  robot  can  be  tamed  by  a  less 
imposing,  but  more  craftily  designed  robot. 

In  three  separate  rounds,  the  most  effective 
annihilator  proved  to  be  Tilford's  robot, 
"Mauler." 

Hailed  as  the  "mother  of  all  robot  fighting 
tournaments," 
^— — —  "BattleBots"  is  actually 
about  the  only  one  out 
there.  Still,  this  unique  for- 
mula of  comedic  demoli- 
tion has  yielded  the  highest 
ratings  for  a  premiere 
show  in  Comedy  Central's 
history. 

With  13  new  episodes 
green-lighted  for  next  sea- 
son and  a  tournament  later 
this  year  in  Las  Vegas, " 

"BattleBots"  will  continue 

trying  to  lure  in  audiences. 
So  dust  off  that  rusty  lawn  mower,  glue  on  a 
chainsaw  and  see  what  wonders  can  create; 
perhaps  you  could  be  the  next  "BattleBots" 
uberkind.  At  least  you  can  say  you  cleaned 
your  garage. 


TELEVISION:  'BattleBots'  airs  Wednesdays  at 
10:30  p.m.  and  Saturdays  at  5  p.m.  and  11  p.m. 
on  Comedy  Central. 


Programming      Fund$ 
Now      Available 


Undergraduate  Students  Association  Programming  Fund 


Fall  Quarter  Deadline 

October  19th 


Hearing  Dates 

October  23r(l  -  25th 


Eliaibilitv  Requirements 

Must  be  a  UCLA  undergraduate  student  organization, 
registered  with  the  Center  for  Student  Programming. 
Must  provide  on-campus  cultural  or  educational  programs. 


'}■:<, 


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'< 


^i' 


M/yicrg  To  Get  Application  Forms 

USA  Finance  Committee/Budgetlleview  Office  300BKerckhoffHall 

Community  Programs  Office  (CPO)      '  io2  lien's  Gym 

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For  More  Inforniatini^ 
Call  Janet  Quindara,  USA  Programming  Chair, 
825-501 7  or  email  usaficom@asucla.ucla.edu 


y 

'*.■■'■:- 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Enteftamment 


Monday,  October  9, 2000       37 


TURMOIL 

From  page  35 

closet  as  gay.  It  was  originally  set  in 
Los  Angeles  co-starring  Anthony 
LaPaglia.  But  LaPaglia  was  axed, 
the  show  changed  settings  to  middle 
America  and  now  it  is  more  of  a  fam- 
ily comedy  than  originally  envi- 
sioned. Oh.  and  the  title  was 
changed  from  "Don't  Ask." 

Can  a  series  work  its  way  through 
the  bad  vibes  and  survive? 

It's  possible.  The  pilot  for  the  cur- 
rent critical  and  commercial  favorite 
"Buffy,  the  Vampire  Slayer"  was 


thrown  out  and  some  of  the  actors 
recast  before  the  show  got  on  the  air, 
said  Gail  Berman,  Fox's  entertain- 
ment chief,  who  was  in  charge  of 
"Buffy"  when  she  ran  Regency 
Television. 

Every  one  of  the  shows  she's  been 
involved  with  has  been  revamped  to 
some  extent  in  the  early  days,  she 
said. 

"These  are  situations  that  have 
gone  on  always,"  she  said.  "It's  just 
that  we  hear  more  about  it  because 
everybody  is  looking  for  a  story." 

There  arc  few  things  mofc  frus- 
trating -  and  panic-inducing  -  to  a 
network  executiv#-tJ»an  the  realiza- 


tion that  a  concept  that  looked  good 
on  paper  isn't  working  on  tape. 

"The  Michael  Richards  Show"  is 
"300  percent  better"  because  of  the 
extra  work  put  in,  said  Garth  Ancier, 
NBC  entertainment  president.  "I 
think  it's  going-to  be  a  decent  show," 
"  Ancier  said.  "Decent  to  good." 
*The  most  important  thing  is  to 
put  the  best  show  on  the  air  for  the 
public  to  see,"  he  said,  "The  last 
thing  you  want  to  do  is  go  on  the  air 
and  say,  'Only  kidding.  We're  going 
to  go  away  for  four  weeks  and  do  it 
differently." 

The  original  "Don't  Ask"  felt 
"like  a  forced  situation,"  Berman 


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said.  Now  she  feels  the  comedy  is 
better  able  to  use  Goodman's  tal- 
ents. 

That's  their  opfnion,  of  course. 
The  graveyard  of  failed  television 
series  is  littered  with  headstones  that 
have  too  many  names,  shows  ulti- 
mately pulled  apart  because  too 
many  people  had  too  many  opin- 
ions. The  former  producers  of 
"Cursed"  and  "Freakylinks"  may 
feel  differently  about  how  things 
have  turned  out,  but  so  far  are  keep- 
ing it  to  themselves. 

Berman  laughed  when  asked 
when  legitimate  network  concern 
crosses  the  line  to  meddling. 


"I'm  sure  (producers)  felt  like- 
I've  meddled,"  she  said.  "I'd  like  to 
think  that  now  I'm  here  I  become 
part  of  the  process  from  the  get-gQ 
instead  of  inserting  myself  at  a  later 
date." 

The  consequences  of  failure  -  or 
success  -  seem  greater  now  that  net*  ^ 
works  are  increasingly  taking  finan-— 
cial  stakes  in  shows  with  production 
companies. 

"If  I  was  spending  millions  of  dol- 
lars on  a  show,  I'd  want  to  have  con- 
trol over  what  comes  out,"  said  Roy 
Rothstein,  vice  president  and  direc- 
tor of  national  broadcast  research 
for  Zenith  Media  Services  Inc. 


MEET  OSCAR  DE  LA  HOYA! 


Get  involved  in 
Student  Government 


Join 


SMiMtrmifsn 


Help  organize  various 
tsfpes  of  projects! 

Such  as: 

Health/Nutrition/Fitness, 

Multicultural  Awareness, 

Campus  Retention,  CRP/SFA  classes, 

Sexual  Assault  Awareness, 

AIDS  Awareness,  Substance  Abuse 

Awareness,  Campus  Safety  Awareoess, 

Quarterly  Blood  Drives, 

Children's  Walk  for  Life,  and  morel    '" 


First  General  Meeting; 

Tuesday,  October  10: 6pm-7pm 
Ackerman3516 

EvBiyotf  Is  Mfwleom*...  80  be  thermlll 


Pick  up  an  application  from 

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For  more  information: 

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'-'       organic  coffees  &  teas 
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•     I 


»  . 


4' 

y 


1  , 


y> 


38       Monday,  Octo()er  9, 2000 


IMyBrahiMi 


DINNER 

Frompa9e34 

household  upside  down. 

One  Whiteside  scheme  requires 
the  charms  of  his  pal  Lorraine 
Sheldon  (a  hilarious  portrayal  by 
Jean  Smart  of  TV's  "Designing 
Women,"  who  took  a  night  off  in 
September  to  pick  up  her  Emmy  for 
a  "Frasier"  guest  performance).  A 
glamorous  movie  star,  Lorraine  is 
summoned  from  Europe  by 
Whiteside  for  what  becomes  a  wild 
goose  chase.  .i:  -<••:: 

Written  by  Moss  Hairt  and  George 


S.  Kaufman,  "The  Man  Who  Came 
to  Dinner"  was  a  smash  when  it  pre- 
miered just  a  couple  of  blocks  away 
and  61  years  ago  almost  to  the  night. 

Saturday  you'll  see  why;  Both 
urbane  and  madcap,  it  embodies  a 
comedic  style  that,  with  TVs  arrival 
a  decade  hence,  sitcoms  would  be 
aping  for  the  next  half-century. 

Indeed,  Whiteside  shares  a  key 
trait  of  sitcom  heroes:  a  taste  for 
insult  humor,  with  his  nurse  a 
favorite  target. 

He  calls  her  "Miss  Bed  Pan,"  ban- 
ishes her  by  saying,  "Don't  stand 
there.  Miss  Preen  -  you  look  like  a 
frozen  custard,"  and  declares  that 


when  his  100-year-old  great-aunt  had 
been  dead  three  days,  "she  looked 
better  than  you  do  now."  (Shades  of 
Drew  and  Mimi,  Hawkeye  and 
Frank,  Buddy  and  Mel!) 

All  in  all,  the  play  translates  well 
to  TV,  says  "Stage  on  Screen"  pro- 
ducer Judy  Kinberg. 

"Television  is  all  about  the  dose- 
up,"  she  notes,  '\ind  you  can  use  that 
in  comedy  to  tremendous  advantage. 
It  gives  viewers  an  advantage  that 
you  don't  have  sitting  in  the  theater." 

The  trick  is  for  the  cameras  ( 10  of 
them)  to  stay  on  top  of  the  antics. 
Kinberg  and  her  team  are  taping  sev- 
eral earlier  performances,  then  ana- 


^     If  all  you  want  from  church  is  hell,  fire  and  brimstone,  bum  this  ad 


V 


\.---i 


Member  of  ttie  Univefsity  Religious  Conference  at  UCLA 


Canterbury  Westwood,  the  Episcopal  Chaplaincy 
serving  UCLA  invites  you  to  a  welcome  back  barbecue. 

Tuesday,  October  10 
4  pm  Holy  Eucharist 


5  pm  Barbecue  on  the  patio 

We  are  located  at  St.  Alban's  Parish  580  Hilgard  (at  Westholme) 
Contact  us  at  310/208.4830  or  www.stalban.swestwood.com  for  more  information 


Free  Textbooks 

The  Financial  Supports  Commision  and  USAC  is  proud  to  present. 

Students  First!  Book  Lending  Program 


Texibooks  AwaHaNe  For* 

G.E.  Cluster  21 A 
Chemistry  14C 
Chemistry  130A 
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French  4 

Political  Science  10 
History  125A 
History  201 H 
Sociology  M1 75 

•limited  quantities 


PhUasophy 

The  purpose  of  the  Students 

Rrst!  Book  Lending  Program 

is  to  provide  relevant  and 

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financial  need.  The  program 

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and  affordable. 


BROUGinm  YOU  BY  WE  FtNAMOML  SUPPORTS  COMMISSIOM 
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Books  will  be  awarded  on  a  FUtST  COME  HRST  SERVE 

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i---. '^- ■•.•.-.>»»«.-' •■ 


lyzing  each  test  to  fine-tune  camera 
angies  and  placement.  And  choosing 
the  shots  is  a  veteran  of  TV  comedy, 
director  Jay  Sandrich,  winner  of  two 
Emmys  for  "The  Mary  Tyler  Moore 
Show"  and  another  for  NBC's  "The 
Cosby  Show  •• 

But  when  airtime  arrives,  count 
on  seeing  more  than  what's  onstage. 

Before  the  curtain,  you'll  get  an 
introduction  to  the  play  and  its  era, 
with  a  refresher  on  the  names  that 
Whiteside  drops  (a  prewar  "who's 
who"  ranging  from  Oscar  Wilde  and 
Mahatma  Gandhi  to  movie  queen 
Katharine  Cornell). 

Then,  during  the  two  intermis- 


sions, you  won't  have  to  sit  leafing 
througii  your  program.  Each  break 
will  feature  intervi'ews  including 
Kitty  Carlisle  Hart  (widow  of  Moss 
Hart)  and  Anne  Kaufman  (daughter 
of  George  S.  Kaufman),  as  well  as 
the  production's  director,  Jerry 
Zaks,  and  set  designer  Tony  Walton. 

Masters  of  Ceremonies  for  the 
evening:  Natasha  Richardson  and 
Liam  Neeson. 

Broadway  theater  broadcast  live  is 
highly  unusual.  But  it's  par  for  the 
course  for  Jac  Venza,  "Stage  on 
Screen"  executive  producer  as  well 
as  director  of  cultural  and  arts  pro- 
grams for  ThJrteen/WNET 


COMPLIMENTARY 
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Braces^^, 
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ORTHODONTIST 

SINCE  1980 

UCLA  FACULTY  MEMBER 


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Member  American  A-ssoriation  of  Orthodontists 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


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for  metal  broce*.  $900.00  plus  S 100  00  for  eoch 

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■■•V  >  ■•  *.-. 


UCLA  fowter  Museum  of  CuHoral  History 

Amccr  Am«tt  Brown,  Jr.  and  Paul  Anthony  Brown  pose  with  a 
photograph  of  their  grandmother,  Hekn  Elizabeth  Ramey  Brown. 


Twia 

From  page  30 

its  own.  The  contrast  of  her  jet  black 
hair  with  her  white  cotton  shirt  makes 
for  an  interesting  photograph,  one  of 
the  most  eye^rabbing  in  the  series. 

The  same  runs  true  for  Eugene 
Crosby,  who  poses  above  a  wrinkled, 
weathered  thumbnail  portrait  of  his 
mother.  The  cracked  lines  of  the 
photo  mirror  the  wearied  contours  of 
his  face,  with  the  white  flecks  of  his 
hair  echoing  the  creases  of  the  picture. 
Even  given  the  upbeat  nature  of  the 
picture,  Nellie  Crosby's  proud  beauty 


isn't  diminished  in  the  least. 

Though  Sivad's  work  is  not  going 
to  turn  the  art  world  on  its  ear,  he  has 
put  together  an  interesting  compendi- 
um. If  the  written  accompaniment 
approached  the  emotion  shown  in 
Crosby's  face,  however,  "Twice-Taken 
Pictures"  would  be  quite  an  accom- 
plishment. 

Twice-Taken  Pictures'  is  currently  on 
display  at  the  Fowler  Museunrv  open 
Wednesday  through  Sunday,  noon  to  5 
p.m.  Thursday  from  noon  to  8  p.m. 
Admission  is  $1  for  UCLA  students  wfith 
ID.  For  more  infornrwtion,  call  (310)  825- 
4361. 


V  I 


DRUGS 

From  page  34 

'  "Drug  Wars"  takes  an  inside  look  at 
the  drug  business,  including  footage 
of  the  ambush  of  an  entire  division  of 
Mexico's  federal  drug  police  by  a 
unit  of  the  Mexican  army  protecting 
a  drug  operation. 

The  story  begins  in  the  first  days  of 
Richard  Nixon's  presidency. 

"You  can  imagine  the  challenge 
trying  to  lay  out  for  an  audience  the 
last  30  years,"  says  reporter  and  co- 
producer  Lowell  Bergman,  adding, 
"I  think  people  will  be  surprised  that 
Nixon  turns  out  to  be  the  most  effec- 
tive in  terms  of  getting  control  of  a 
particular  drug,  in  this  case  heroin." 
In  1970,  a  controversial  program 
of  dispensing  to  addicts  the  new  syn- 
thetic opiate,  methadone,  was 
launched  by  a  White  House  con- 
cerned that,  outside  its  door,  the 
nation's  capital  had  become  the 
nation's  crime  capital.  A  year  after 
methadone  clinics  opened  around 
Washington,  burglaries  had  dropped 
by  41  percent. 

The  message  seemed  clear.  With 
treatment,  addicts  could  be  helped  to 
overcome  their  habit.  And  while  they 
were  helped,  they  no  longer  had  to 
steal  to  support  that  habit. 

Even  so,  Nixon  wasn't  ready  to 
launch  a  national  methadone  treat- 
menfiprogram.  Then,  a  year  later,  he 
was  ihocked  to  learn  of  raging  heroin 
use  Kr  American  troops  in  Vietnam. 
This  tut  a  far  more  sympathetic  face 
on  thi  junkie. 

With  that,  the  law-and-order  presi- 
dent unveiled  a  drug  program  that 
addressed  drug  abuse  as  a  sickness, 
not  a  crime.  And  as  the  sonorous 
"Frontline"  narrator  declares,  "For 
the  first  and  only  time  in  the  history 
of  U.S.  drug  policy,  treatment  sup- 
planted law  enforcement  for  most  of 
the  attention  and  most  of  the 
money." 

While  Bergman  insists  that  "Drug 
Wars"  draws  no  particular  conclu- 
sions, he  says  he  and  his  collabora- 
tors were  struck  by  an  unexpected 
argument  echoed  by  virtually  every 
drug  enforcement  official  they  talked 
to:  The  better  strategy  is  trying  to 
reduce  demand  rather  than  shut  off 
supply  and  punish  consumers. 
Nixon,  it  seems,  had  started  on  the 
right  track. 

In  the  film,  former  Drug 
Enforcement  AdminUtration  b«ad 


Jack  Lawn  calls  for  a  new,  central- 
ized anti-drug  foroe  that  devotes  a 
full  90  percent  of  its  budget  to  educa- 
tion, treatment  and  prevention. 

"Would  that  work?  We  won't 
know  unless  we  try  it,"  Lawn  says. 
"But  20  years  of  doing  it  the  other 
way  certainly  has  not  worked." 

In  reporting  "Drug  Wars," 
Bergman  stays  safely  out  of  camera 
range  (as  usual,  "Frontline"  has  no 
use  for  an  on-camera  personality). 
But  not  long  ago,  his  anonymity  was 
shattered. 

He,  of  course,  is  the  former  CBS 
News  producer  whose  struggle  to  get 
a  report  about  a  tobacco  industry 
whistle-blower  on  "60  Minutes" 
became  the  subject  of  an  Oscar-nom- 
inated film,  "The  Insider."  Al  Pacino 
played  Bergman  in  the  1999  drama. 

Now  a  free-lance  investigative 
reporter,  Bergman  is  speaking  from 
"Frontline"  headquarters  in  Boston 
as  he  puts  the  final  touches  on  his 
film  and  rushes  to  finish  the  accom- 
panying, information-rich  Web  site. 
"This  is  an  issue  that  becomes  very 
polarized  very  quickly,"  he  says  of 
drug  policy.  "One  person  says 
decriminalize  them  all.  Another  per- 
son says  shoot  them  all." 

What  happened  to  derail  Nixon's 
treatment-oriented  strategy?  As  the 
1972  election  approached,  the  White 
House  reverted  to  a  more  voter- 
friendly  approach:  Get  tough  on 
drugs  and  anyone  who  does  them. 

With  few  departures,  that  has 
summed  up  the  nation's  drug  policy 
ever  since. 

"No  one  wants  to  be  seen  as  soft 
on  crinte,"  Bergman  explains. 

The  film  compiles  some  of  the  con- 
sequences. The  United  States  fights 
the  drug  war  with  a  bureaucracy  that, 
next  year,  will  total  51  government 
agencies  spending  some  S20  billion 
in  federal  money 

The  U.S.  prison  population  has 
doubled  since  1994  to  nearly  2  mil- 
lion inmates.  The  global  narcotics 
business  is  worth  an  estimated  S400 
billion,  and  rapidly  expanding. 

"Have  we  really  looked  this  situa- 
tion straight  in  the  face,"  Bergman 
muses,  "where  we  can  figure  out 
what  to  do?" 

That  is  what  he  hopes  "Drug 
Wars"  will  arm  us  for. 

•Drug  Wars'  Web  site  (launches 
Monday  at  9  p.m.  EOT): 
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/fro 
ntNne/shows/drugs 


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IKEBANA 

From  page  31 


Ayame  is  initially  suspicious  of  due  to 
her  beauty,  who  opens  a  window  of 
light  and  air  into  Ayame's  life. 

The  contrast  between  the  lives  of 
the  two  women  is  further  accentuat- 
ed through  the  eyes  of  two  men  who 
are  chosen  as  suitors  for  Ayame  by 
her  father.  While  these  young  men 
speak  eloquently  of  their  desire  to 
And  the  stability  inherent  in  tradi- 
tional society,  both  are  attracted  to 
Hanako  for  what  she  represents  -  the 
new,  exotic  and  free. 

Likewise,  Ayame's  ikebana 
arrangements  draw  no  compliments 
from  the  suitors,  but  Hanako's  ran- 
dom flower  arrangements  are 
admired  by  both  men.  Hanako 
explains  her  creations  as  "free 
expression  ikebana." 

Hanako's  unsettling,  but  intoxicat- 
ing presence  in  the  lives  of  Dr. 
Itamura  and  the  two  young  suitors  of 
Ayame,  acts  to  bring  the  fragile  bits 
of  order  in  their  lives  to  a  chaotic  cli- 
max, while  leaving  the  two  struggling 
women  to  pursue  their  dreams  in  an 
uncertain  future. 

Shirley  Jo  Finney's  direction  uses 
choreographed  movement  of  the 


ctMracten  and  a  sparse  stage  setting 
to  create  a  stylized  production  that  is 
Informed  and  influenced  by  Japanese 
theatrical  style.  Along  with  the  set, 
passionate  physical  acting  brings  to 
life  the  play's  emotionally<harged 
dialogue. 

Houston  is  a  multi-genre  author  of 
plays,  films,  television,  cultural  criti- 
cism, poetry  and  prose.  Much  of 
Houston's  repertoire  reflects  her 
understanding  of  cultural  and  racial 
identity  as  the  child  of  a  Japanese 
mother  and  an  African-American 
father.  She  is  currently  at  work  on 
three  other  worid  premieres. 

"Ikebana"  is  not  an  intellectual 
journey  into  Japanese  culture,  but  an 
emotional  experience  of  the  discov- 
ery of  personal  freedom  and  identity. 
It  is  a  window  of  insight  into  the  com- 
plicated aggregation  of  Eastern  and 
Western  cultures,  which  is  still  very 
much  a  part  of  modem  life. 


THEATER: 'Ikebana  (Living  Flowers)' is 
playing  at  The  Pasadena  Playhouse,  39 
S.  El  Molino  Ave,  Pasadena,  through 
Oct  22.  Performances  are  Tuesday  - 
Friday  at  8  p.m,  Saturday  at  5  p.m.and 
9  p.m.and  Sunday  at  2  p.m.and  7  p.m. 
Tickets  are  $15  -  $42.50  and  can  be 
purchased  through  Telecharge  at 
(800)233-3123. 


DREAM 

From  page  34 

them.  They  still  have  dreams,  but  they 
use  drugs  in  hopes  of  achieving  them. 
Sara  learns  she  has  been  chosen  to 
sit  in  the  audience  of  her  favorite 
infomercial  and  begins  popping  diet 
pills  four  times  a  day  to  lose  weight. 
This  provides  some  small,  funny 
moments  -  like  when  she  frets  over 
her  grapefruit  diet  and  envisions 
doughnuts    and 

pies  flying  at  her  ^^^_^_^^__ 
from  die  ceiling. 
Harry  and 
Tyrone  scheme 
to  sell  enough 
drugs  to  live  the 
good  life  and  to 
help  Marion 
open  a  dress 
shop. 

Aronofsky 
and  cinematog- 

rapher  Matthew      — — — — 
Libatique     use 

every  trick  imaginable  to  show  the 
characters'  descent:  split  screen, 
quick  edits,  repeated  sequences,  slow 
motion.  We  see  them  at  high  speeds, 
through  body-mounted  cameras  and 
on  surveillance  video.  This  is  definite- 
ly Short  Attention  Span  Theater. 

The  film  is  visually  fascinating,  and 
the  original  score  by  Qint  Mansell, 
played  by  the  Kronos  Quartet,  adds 
the  right  amount  of  energy  and  ten- 
sion. 

Even  without  sudi  a  surreal,  stylis- 
tic approach,  the  story,  adapted  from 
a  1978  novel  by  Hubert  Sdby,  Jr., 
would  still  be  fascinating.  These  peo- 


ple are  incredibly  flawed.  We  should- 
n't care  about  them,  but  they  are  so 
real,  so  human,  it's  impossible  not  to. 
Aronofsky  goes  for  shock  value  to 
get  his  anti-drug  message  across.  At 
times,  this  tactic  seems  gratuitous,  but 
it  has  a  powerful  effect.  Some 
moments  are  so  painful  and  raw,  you 
have  to  physically  look  away.  Harry 
taps  into  the  same  vein  into  his  left 
arm  so  many  times,  for  instance,  that 
it  becomes  purple  with  infection;  as  he 
continues  to  use  it,  Aronofsky  doesn't 
hold  back  show- 
.M_^.,_..^  ing  the  hideous 
details. 

The  film's 
final  minutes  are 
a  stunning, 
seamless  mon- 
tage of  sight  and 
sound,  in  which 
the  four  charac- 
ters' addictions 
reach  a  thunder- 
ing climax. 
,  "I  wanted  to 

create  a  punk 
movie  and  I  wanted  to  bombard  the 
audience  with  an  intense  roller-coast- 
er ride,"  Aronofsky  told  indieWIRE. 
The  Motion  Picture  Association  of 
America  wanted  to  slap  the  film  with  - 
the  dreaded  **NC-17"  rating,  spccifn 
cally  for  a  graphic  orgy  during  the 
final  sequence.  Artisan 

Entertainment  chose  to  release  it 
without  a  rating,  which  means  the  film 
will  remain  intact  but  appear  on  fewer 
screens. 

"Requiem  for  a  Dream' opens  Friday  in 
New  York,  Oct  20  In  Los  Angeles  and 
into  wider  release  later  this  month. 


"I  wanted  to  bonnbard 

the  audience  with  an 

intense  roller-coaster 

ride." 

Darren  Aronofsky 

Director 


OPERA 

Frompage35 

Heggie  and  McNally  were 
approached  by  the  opera  company's 
general  director,  Lotfi  Mansouri,  in 
1998  and  asked  to  find  and  tell  a 
story  that  would  grip  today's  audi- 
ences. 

McNally,  who  has  won  three  Tony 
awards,  has  written  lyrics  for  a  num- 
.  ber  of  musical  adaptations,  including 
"Kiss  of  the  Spider  Woman"  and 
"Ragtime."  This  is  the  first  opera  for 
Heggie,  composer  in  residence  at 
San  Francisco's  opera  house. 

The  score  reveals  a  variety  of 
musical  influences,  from  gospel  and 
blues  to  traditional  opera,  Heggie 
Mid. 

"It  is  an  American  story  per- 
formed by  American  singers,"  he 
said.  "I  think  we  have  a  tot  to  say  as  a 


people." 

"Dead  Man  Walking"  is  the  latest 
in  a  wave  of  bestsellers-turned- 
operas  -  beginning  in  San  Francisco 
last  year  with  Andre  Previn's  adapta- 
tion of  Tennessee  Williams'  "A 
Streetcar  Named  Desire."  Arthur 
Miller's  play  "A  View  From  the 
Bridge,"  F.  Scott  Fitzgerald's  novel 
"Gatsby"  and  Olive  Ann  Bums' 
"Cold  Sassy  Tree"  have  also  inspired 
recent  operas. 

Prejean  plans  to  attend  the  pre- 
miere of  "Dead  Man  Walking,"  as  do 
Penn,  Sarandon,  who  won  an  Oscar 
for  best  actress  for  the  movie,  and 
Tim  Robbins,  who  directed  the  fihn. 


Death  penalty  foes  plan  a  candlelight 
vigil  after  the  performance  to  pro- 
mote  Moratorium  2000,  a  nr>ovcment 
founded  by  Prejean  to  end  the  death 
pwwKy.  Vy  opera's  eight  perfor- 
mtncM  run  HMNi^h  Oct  2t. 


n7i7zz222Z222Zl& 

I  Campus  Happenings 
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""iMonday,  October  9, 2000 


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INFORMATION  SESSION 

OctobiH  12. 5-7FM  Caren  Certa  Confeience  Roni 


CAREER  FAIR 

October  13.  Adcennan  Student  Union 


announcements 

1100-2600 


11  GO 

Campus  Happenings 


DANCE  LESSONS 

SWING-SALSA-TANGO 

ballroom  @  ucla.edu 

TONIGHT  7- 11PM  OUCLA  KerckhoW  Grand 
Salon.  Salsa-Merengue  9 10pm  BECOME 
A  MEMBER!  Enjoy  40  hours  of  free  dance 
lessons  each  quarter  UniversltyDance- 
ClubsOusa.net  310-284-3636.  Oance- 
DanceDanceDanceOanceDancellMII! 

THE  UCLA  SCHOOL  OF  NURSING  is 
scheduled  for  accreditation  site-visit  t>y  the 
Commission  on  Collegiate  Nursing  on  Oct. 
30,  31,  and  Nov  1,  2000.  The  public  Is  invit- 
ed to  attend  ttie  site  visit  and  express  their 
opinion  on  the  baccalaureate  and  master's 
degree  programs.  For  further  info,  contact 
Eloise  Luera  310-825-5884. 


Fraturnities  •  Sororitjes 
Clubs  •  Student  Groups 

Earn  $1 ,000-S2.000  this  quarter  witfi  the  easy 
CampiafundraiMrcom  three  hour  fundrasing  event. 
No  SMa  required.  FinkMing  dMM  are  fiNng  quIcUy, 
ao  cal  kidqrt  Contact  CMpwlMiilratar.cam  at  fMS) 
a29-323a,  or  visit 


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SpontMMous  Goofs  and  Furaiy  Plwlaa 

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18  GO 

Miscellaneous 


NEED  TWO  TICKETS  for  UCLA  vs. 
football  Game.  Call  310-572-1956 


use 


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Your  on-campus  A  «v«ne  flnandal  services 
source  tor  studenta.  faouKy  &  staff.  VMt  us  at 
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21  GO 

Recreational  Activities 


VAMPIRE  Live  Action  Role  Playing  game! 
Call  David  909-338-4621  or  visit  www  goocl- 
tlescom/LAbyNight.  Games  every  other  Sat 
night,  t)flginnlr>g10^AX>. 


21GG 

Recreational  Activities 


WILD  HEART  OF  LA:  Santa  Monica 
Mountains.  Sierra  Club  meeting  7:30  pm 
Wednesday  Oct..  11.  Naturalist  Margaret 
Hoffman  will  present  a  slide  talk  "Wild  Heart 
ot  Los  Angeles:  Santa  Monica  Mountains', 
Emphasizing  interaction  of  dlmate,  plants, 
wMWe  and  humans.  Helms  Hall,  Westwood 
Umied  Methodist  Church,  10497  WHshirv 
Blvd.  at  Warner  Ave.  Entrance  on  Warner, 
W  mw  WW.  Fr»e.  323-553-9586. — 


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Our  vision  is  to  be  </>e  partner  for  success  in  the  new  economy.  We  know  it  wilt  take 
a  number  of  things  to  achieve  this  vision.  Connectivity.  Teamwork.  Wtorld-class 
CTBrtsntiab.  A  worW-dass  reputation.  New  ways  of  kxAing  at  traditional 
chaUeriges.  But  nrost  importantly,  it  will  take  great  people.  Talented  people. 
Resourceful  people.  Inventive  people.  Confident  people.  Fulfilled  and  in^irad 
people. 

To  achieve  our  vision  we  need  (he  best  people. 

Many  opportunities  are  available  to  upcoming  December.  May.  and  August 

international  graduates  at  Arthur  Anderson.  A  minimum  requirement  for  positkjns 
and  in  any  of  our  nine  service  lines  is  a  Bachekxs  or  Masters  degree  in  a  businese, 
engineering,  or  computer  science  related  fieW  with  an  above  average  record  of 
performance.  A  Kmited  number  of  US  training  experiences  are  available  in 
Assurance.  Existing  teoat  wortt  authorization  in  one  nf  the  countries  listed  below  is 
fnandatOfV  for  home  countn/amnloymt^pt  Ptease  use  reference  number  Y01-IRG01 
when  applying  for  these  positions. 

Tobe  considered  for  an  interview,  pletaae  e-mail  your  resume  to: 
intBmatit?nal.recruitinQQiis.arthur^nriBr!»on,CTm 


*•.>>'■ 


www.arthuraitdaraon.com 


.a^ 


Arthur  Andersen 


Hong  Kong.  Taiwan.  Indonesia.  Malaysia.  Korea.  Singapore.  Japan.  Thailand.  United  Unodom 

Germany.  Belgium.  8«Ki  Arabia  .  Egypt .  Kuwait .  Jordan  .  United  Arab  Emirate.  •  Syria  .  Bahrain  .Lebanon 

A««inwice  •  Business  Consulting  i  Corporate  Rnance  •  eBusiness  .  Human  Capital  •  Legal  Services  •  Outsourcing  .  Risk  Coo«*lng  •  Tax  Sen«oe- 


TIN 


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EPOCH 


E   R  S 


A  new  era  in  investment  banking. 


/. 


Please  stop  by  our  presentation  to  learn  about  undergraduate 
opportunities  in  Investment  Banking  at  Bear  Stearns. 

The  Career  Center  Conference  Room 
6:00pm  on  Tliesday/ October  10. 


InfOrtTIc!;  u".  0'J^S:^:■'• 

Thursday,  October  12,  7  -  9pm 
Career  Center 

First  Round  Interview 
Tuesday.  October  17 

Investment  Banking  Night 
Thursday,  October  19 

Please  bring  resume,  unofficial  transcript 
(DPR)  and  cover  letter 


Epoch  Partners  is  a  technology-enabled  investment  bank 
focused  on  high-growth  companies  and  electronically 
connected  institutional  and  individual  investors.  Epoch 
has  assembled  a  team  of  experienced  investment 
banking,  research,  trading  and  technology  professionals 
to  build  the  next  generation  investment  bank.  Epoch  is 
looking  for  financial  analysts  and  equity  research 
associates.  Please  view  our  BruinView  job  descriptions. 

Through  partnerships  with  Charles  Schwab.  Ameritrade 
and  TD  Waterhouse,  Epoch  has  exclusive  access  to  a  fast 
growing,  electronically  connected  investor  base  that 
consists  of  more  than  10  million  accounts.  Epoch's 
industry-leading  venture  capital  partners  include 
Benchmark  Capital,  Kleiner  Perkins  Caufield  &  Byers  and 
Trident  Capital. 


www.epoch.com 


C  2000  m  BmrSkmmm  Cmfmm,  he..  _, 


naniwmwdimJnmmitfThg 


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San  Francisco    •    Ca 


941  ^^ 


2000 

Personals 


2000 

P«'fs()n;ils 


www  RgtBYfti  irself  rnml 


2200 

Roseiirch  Siibjt.-cts 


:  S  3100 


2200 

Rt.'search  Subjects 


^  •   ^«  * 


Bargains 


I  good  enough  even 
Ibr  Uncle  Scrooge." 

Hwy  Wadn—dmy  4  frtdmy 


2200 

1^    (   irch  Subjects 


EARN  $$$$$    X 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  tor  »w  com- 
nton  COM.  IMMrnntk  18-5Syi%  oM,  norv 
smoksr,  no  aMtwiw  hMofy.  LIrrtiM  avakaM- 
tty.  C««  today  310-7S54121. 
Emal:cinicalaumacteOyahoo.oo«n 

neSEAnCH  participants  needed  for 
pattonta  axpartandng  Hay  Fava</Aitoraic 
RhMHa.  Raqukw  4  «M>  (B  houn  loW)  ovar 
7-l(Miya.  \MM  pay  up  to  S100  ai  oonduaton 
of  study.  Contact  Dr.  Dtaz-Sanchaz  or 
OrSaxon  at  91O-aSS-3809  or  310425-9376. 


FREE 
DIABETES  SCREENING 

/GanaUc  study  or  Diabalaa  racfuNs 
haaWiy  volunlaarB  t1B-40  yaws  old)  for 


SMOKERS  EX-SIUIOKERS  AND  NON- 
SMOKERS  tn  good  healtti.  at  least  18  yaars 
ot  age.  ««r«ad  lor  UCLA  raeearch  study. 
SubfacH  w«  bafaid  up  to  $120  for  2  tasttog 
days.  Ca«  Dr  Mch  dmatoad  at  310-478- 
3711  ext.44319,W 


oral  gtocoaa  tolaranca  last  (2J  hours). 

QuaMlad  sublacts  (who  pass  tlie  oral 

«hiooaa  totsranoa  taat  and  have  rtomi^ 

t>toed  pNsiuia)  %»■  ba  fcWad  to 

parttoipala  ki  •  gsnaMe  study  ol 

diitetaa.  8uli)actaw«ba  paid  $190 

PHaJ^agPtCMajSHhW-WM- 


SMOKES  IN  GOOD  HEALTH,  18-45.  »»ant- 
ed  for  nlcotlrte  resaarch  study  administered 
by  UCt>.  Both  heavy  and  occasional  smolt- 
ers  needed.  Padiclpants  wM  be  paid  up  to 
$395  for  tour  vtaMs.  CaH  RIcturd  Otmatoad  at 
310-312-0565.  laava  message. 


RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for 
UCLA  Biain  Mapping  study.  Wear  goggles 
for  MO  wasia  tial  turn  ttie  world  upside 
down.  Must  be  rtght-tvinded.  normal  hearing, 
vision  good  or  carraciabia.  $1000  payment 
Contact  Richard  at  (|utinleOucla.edu  for 
more  into.  * 


SOLAR  ENERGY 

Expertmenters  Needed.  Direct  many  mir- 
rors at  various  obiacts.  Spectacular  dis- 
plays7HK)h  temperature  physics  studies 
gatora?  Call  Edvrard  Vandegnfted- 
dtovanOpact>ell.net 


2200 

Resoiirch  Subjects 


WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60+  w/kyphosis 
(fomrard  bending  of  spine)  needed  lor  re- 
search program  investigating  whether  Yoga 
can  improve  kyphosis.  Study  tteing  conduct- 
ed by  Gail  Greendale,  MD  in  the  UCLA  Depl. 
ot  Medicine.  Please  call  310-794-9055.  - 


2300 

Sperm/Egg  Donors 


Egg  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 
wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

$5,000 
t    CALL  MIRNA  (818)  832-1494    m 


BROKEN  HEARTED  COUPLE  SEEKING 
Caucasian  egg  donor.  Up  to  $1 5,000.  Previ- 
ous donors  welcome.  858-554-0888  or  E- 
mail:  susanpiacel  OhotmaH.oom. 

EGG  DOf^R  NEEDED.  Asian.  Ptease  ^ 
310-397-0480. 

If  you  are  male,  in  college  or  have  a  college 
degree,  you  can  earn  up  to  $600^mo,  call  for 
details  on  our  arxxiymous  sperm  donor  pro- 
gram. Receive  free  comprehensive  health 
screening  &  help  infertile  couples.  So  if 
you're  looking  tor  a  great  job  and  a  little  extra 
cash,  cal  us  first  310-824-9941. 


CUATIVC 
tNO. 


Every  yeai:  there  are^iore 

and  more  eooples  dreaming 

of  having  a  child  l)ut  eamiot 

doe  to  infertttty  proUemi  it 

is  only  through  the  he|)  of 

special  women  called  egg 

donors  that  these  couples 

have  a  chance  of  achieving 

their  dreamt  if  you  are 
between  the  ages  of  1 9-10 

years  old,  healthy 
responsible,  and  intelligent 
please  contact  our  office: 


CoiHpeHsation: 
♦4500* 

(gas  expenses) 


AU  ETHNIC 
NEEPEP! 


2600 

Wanted 


ADOPTION 

Baby  is  our  dream.  We  can  provkle  k>ve&se- 
curlty.  Ail  expenses  pakl.  Attorney  involved 
Confidential.  Call  Gina  &  Frank  888-676- 
1995 


3000 

Books 


FANG-LUPUS.COM 


'?.^-^' 


44       Monday,  (ktober  9, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  CbssiM 


«*•■■- 


Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown  identifies  the  US  investment  banking  and  brolcerage  activities  of  DB  Alex  Brown  LLC  and 
Deutsche  Bank  Securities  Inc.,  whrch  are  indirect  sut)sidiaries  of  Deutsche  Bank  AG 
•Tradennark  application  pending       ,.     .....    :^  .-;,-,    v-  ■■-■■■.'    .■ 


Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown 


>t « 


TUming  chang*  into  opportunity 


Juniors  and  seniors  welcorhe 


'■^vVi  ■ 


Global  reach  is 


f 
/• 

r, 


Please  join  us  to  learn  about  career  ■ 
opportunities  in  investment  banking. 

Analyst  Panel  Discussion 

Wednesday.  October  11.  2000 
7:00  p.nn. 

Bradley  Center,  Third  Floor 

Visit  our  booth  at  the  -  ' 

Job  Fair 

Friday.  October  13,  2000 

Investment  Banking  Night 

Thursday.  October  19,  2000 
7:00  p.m. 

Bradley  Center.  Third  Floor 
(Please  note  room  change) 

Casual  attire. 

Students  interested  in  U.S.  opportunities 
should  fax  resume  and  cover  letter 
with  area  of  interest  to  (212)  469-3872 
or  (212)  469-3660. 

To  learn  more  about 
Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown, 
visit  our  website  at 
www.db.com/careers 


leading  to  results.^' 


Deutsche  Bank 


m 


H- 


.  '1 1. 1  1  m 


Oiily  Bruin  Classified 


Mon(by,0ctober9,2000       45 


1300 

Campus  RecrmtiiKjiit 


1300 

Campus  Rc.'criiitmem 


Faber  Consulting  is 
seelcing  the  brightest 
L  minds 

...to  help  transform  our  clients'  data  assets 
;    into  valuable  Business  Intelligence. 

Business  Intelligence  will  separate  the 
winners  from  the  losers  in  the  coming 
decade.  That's  why  Faber  is  looking  for  self- 
motivated,  intelligent  people  with  a 
computer  studies  background  to  contribute 
to  our  explosive  growth  and  become  our 
next  generation  of  consultants.       ' 

We  offer  a  challenging  work  environment 
with  exceptional  opportunities  for  training 
arid  career  advancem^t.  And  every 
"Faberite"  receives  an  equity  stake  in  our 
business. 

Use  InterviewTrak  via  JobTrak  to  sign  up 
immediately  -  the  schedule  fillj  quickly. 
Wfe're  interviewing  Tuesday,  October  17th  in 
the  Career  Center.  Or  attend  our  information 
session  on  Monday.  October  16th  from  7-8 
p.m.  in  the  Career  Center  Conference  Room. 
Refreshments  will  be  served. 

We  are  an  Equal  Opportunity  Employer 


Intelligent 


Minds 


Business 


Intelligence 


M  faber 


PABERCC 

•  U  '.  11  I   I  1  N  (, 

One  Tower 

......  f.„... 

'Onsullmgio"' 

3400 

Computers/Software 


TOSHIBA  TECRA  8100  laptop,  P3  600  Mh/, 
14.1- TFT.  256Ram.  16.8  GB  HD.  5  mos.  oW 
w/receipt.  3  year  on-site  no  fault  «varranty. 
$4600.  310-338-0668. 


3500 

Furniture 


FURNITURE  FOR  SALE-  Extra  large 
sofa/hide-a-be<J,  excellent  condition,  tan. 
$150.  Swivel  deck  chair,  black,  high  back. 
excellent  condWon.  $25.  310-202-8726. 

MATTRESSESm 

SEALY,  STEARNS  &  FOSTER  Also  twin- 
8ets-$79.95,  Fulls-$99  95.  Queens-Si 39. 95, 
King8-$1 99.95.  Queen  PiUowtops  $199.95 
Beacon.  Open  7-days.  1309  Westwood 
BMJ.  310-477-1466. 

SIMMONS  EXTRA  SUPER  FULL  (double) 
mattress,  boxspring  and  lraa>e,  $100  060. 
310-745-2445  or  X47501. 

SOFA  BED  for  sale  Beige,  almost  new.  $80. 
310-210-7336. 

SOFA,  7»t.  8-way  hand-tied  springs, 
rose/blue/fk>ral  pattem.  $250.  Channel-t>ack 
chair  w/ottoman,  rose,  $150.  Rounded  otto- 
mon.  blue.  $50.  310-393- 1 078. 

WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

Sleigh  beds.  Rustic  pine  furniture,  armolres, 
rruttren  Mis,  liip  covered  &  uphotstered  so- 
fas/chairs. Leather  sofas  &  chairs.  310-745- 
2253. 


A900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1989  CONVERTIBLE  FORD  MUSTANG  LX 
for  sale  for  $1,500  Automatic,  Cruise  Con 
troi.  Power  windows  and  tocks.  Newer  en- 
gine and  top.  New  paint  job.  Runs  weH.  Call 
Tine  at  323-653-6923. 


1989  GEO  METRO  LSI  Blue.  $2200  obo 
2D/hatchback.  automata,  excellent  condi- 
tion. 80.000  miles.  A/C,  AM/FM.  310-478- 
5663. 

1990  CHEVROLET  LUMINA.  Runs  great! 
Blue  ext/int.  New  suspension.  3.1  Liter.  4dr. 
150Kmiles.  very  dependable.  Must  sell. 
$1800obo  Jeff  323-469-8438. 

1990  HONDA  CIVIC  LX 

Red.  4dr.  fully  toaded.  80K.  servk;ed  last 
week.  $5000  caM  Mar1lyn:310-571-0084. 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4wd, 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player,  red-grey  great  corxJi- 
tton.  Sell  for  $4300.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836. 


1994  NISSAN  SENTRA,  Alt  power.  First 
owr»er.  Low  Milage,  Automatk:.  Burgandy 
BlueBook  Value  $6400  Asking  $5200  OBO 
310-613-8770. 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


r""REEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 
I  awaided.  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared appScatton.  John  Manley  Esq  12304 
Santa  Monk»  Blvd.  #300  LA.  CA  90025 
310-820-7553.  Oeadlne:10/30AX) 


^900 

Autos  for  S.ile 


1dd3  TOYOTA 

CELICA  GT 

70K.  white,  automatic,  lully-toaded.  excellent 
conditkxi.  dealer-pampered.  60K  dealer- 
servtee  done.  $7000.  310-476-8267/949- 
609-4471. 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990. 
84000mi.  good  cor>dltk>n.  po¥»er  windows, 
black,  AA3,  registratkxi  pakl  for  one  year 
$4500  Call  Vicente  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrer  O  ucia ,  edu 


Scooters  for  Sale 


Scooters  For  Less 


•  lesMlft. 


1930  FORD  MODEL  A.  $10,000  obo.  5-wln- 
dow  coupe,  rumble  seat,  original,  good  con- 
dftkm.  310-342-7414. 

1979  450 
MERCEDES  SLC 

Exceleni  coodltkm.  150K.  AM/FM  cassene. 
AC,  $e500obo.  310-828-9111. 

1980  HONDA  ACCORD  5  ipeed.  4  door, 
Good  transportatton  car.  $880  obo.  CaN  310- 
820-8247  or  page  310-840-5SS4. 

1987  HONDA  ACOOno.  Ortvet  great.  5«pd, 
4dr.  recenl  cMo^  9m.  belli,  and  hoees. 
155K.  |2000obo  310-449-3712. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Car*  a*  knv  as  $500 

for  Mings  1-800^1»-3323  •ICLA214. 


Clos<-.|{icf(j 


977 


f 


le  PanPblvd. 
EWOOD 


5680 

Travel  Deslinations 


S680 

Travel  Oestinations 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


6300 

Leyal  Advir;i:/Attori)eys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST.  Sexual  harrassment.  Discrimina- 
tion. Auto-accidents.  Slips/falls.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM.  Westside,  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW86). 
wwwbesllawyer.com  310-277-3000. 


920  Westwood  Blvd. 

310-UCLA-FLY 


w/w/w.statravel.com 


5700 

Travel  Tickets 


6200 

Health  Sen/ices 


VICTORY  TRAVEL  1  PERFECT  SKIN 


LATW  AMbBK:A  SS>saM.ISTS 


MnkbGly  119 

Gvaddaiara  109 
CaboSanLwm    99 

eSotvodor  209 

Hondurn  }I9 

OMtaRko  208 

Nkaraoua  22S 

Guotwnaki  179 


tuwKM  Airw 
S.O«CM* 


169 
299 
209 
220 
259 


Caracal 


199 


NEW  YORK 

«259r/t 


21*  I/I 
nR/T 


Mexico  Escapes 

$329  Gibo  San  Lucas  "^ 

$519  Concun 
$359  PiMTto  VoHana 


r/r  ■  DM  ooc  d  n^tft  ■  Ar -; 


Kcap«s 

ir-Trmhri 


(310)  288-6684  24  Hrs. 


wvrw.yfittoryf  ravel. torn 

(323)  277-4595 


5900 


WE  DELIVER! 


(310)677-5800x107 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  application  fees,  high  approval  rate,  low 
interest  rate,  all  applicants  welcome.  CaH 
toll-free:  1-e66-427-2677. 

STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Code  832123).  Were  on 
campus  at  Ackerman  A-level.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.ofg 


61 OO 

Compiiter/lnteriHJt 


P/T  to  compMs  consmxrtton  and  maintain 
wabstt*.  Nationwide  wholesale.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 


Be  Beautiful 

Porcelain  Bonding 

$590  Each.  Lms  10%  for  Students 

Open  evenings 

P«t*f  Wylan,  DOS 

B«llfiow«r  Dental  Oroup 

(562)  925-376S 

10318  RoMcrans     Battfloww  90706 

30  min.  from  campus 


6200 

llf.'.iltli  Services 


HAIR  COLOR  MODELS  NEEDED  by  I- 
censed  hair  dresser  at  Beverly  Hills  Salon. 
$15-25.  Wednesday  appolrttments.  Hannah 
323-461 -81 78. 


MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep  Tissue  Massage.  $40^  w/siudent 
ID.  Monday-Friday  I0am-8pm.  Maxkw  CMT 
3l0-S75-«294.  Gift  C«flMc*tes  avrilabts. 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 


"H*  hmwnt  torgottmn  whmt  H'a 
Mlw  to  ft*  a  •tiNfant'' 

•Acne»Mole  Removal  •WartS'Rashes 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmentation  • 

•Laser  Ablation  ol  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  826-2051 


PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  In 
several  pre-paid  legal  service  programs 
providing  quality  legal  sen/ices  to  plan  mem- 
bers. Roben  Moss{UCLAW'71).:310-260- 
7650. 


6400 

Movers/Storage 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-foot  trucks  fully  equipped  for  large  moves. 
Call  24/7.  Available  on  short  notice.  License 
T163844.  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  w/14ft  tmck  and  dollies, 
small  jobs,  short  nottee  ok.  SF.  LV.  So! 
Student  discount  Go  Bruins!  10th  yr  310- 
285-8688. 


JERRY-S  MOVING4DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available.  Also,  pick- 
up donattons  lor  American  Cancer  Society 
Jerry«310-391-5657. 


6500 


iv'ijiiic  Les«Giis 


GUITARLESSONS 

by  professtonal  near  UCLA.  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effortlessly! 
www.JWGS.com.  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 


PIANO  AND  VOICE  LESSONS  by  UCLA 
singer/pianist!  Call  Laura  310-210-7336. 

VOICE  AND  PIANO  COACHING;  Broadway 
show  tunes.  $20/hr.  Studk)  410  N.  Rossmore 
Ave.  323-461-5204.  DavW  RIshton.  Begin- 
ning, intermediate,  and  advanced. 


6600 

Personal  Services 


Menage  a  frois?  I  do  translations  in  German, 
English,  or  French.  Call  Julia  310-826-8917. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


PSYCHOTHERAPY 

C';irin«i  ^S;  ('onlKkntial 

(  t>UIlSlIJll«» 

l)c|1|VNsi(MI.  .\ll\ICl\. 

kclalionships.  AJJiciions  \ 
Abuse 

ki'llC\t.-  stii.'vs 


IKmI  iiinoi  ui'uikK 
U.iik  ihiouL'ii  Hi-ciiltiir.il  h 


Sherly  Kh<»da(l;id.  MM 

1 1x50  Wiviiiiiv  ni\ii  t*n\\ 

l.os.\iii.'v.-)cN.  (  .\'HH):S 

(310)479-8255 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  for  de- 
presskxi,  anxiety,  obsessk>ns,  post-traumat- 
te  stre8s,etc.  Couples/Individuals.  Crime  vk;- 
tims  may  be  eligible  for  free  treatment.  CaH 
Liz  GouW(MFC#32388)©  31 0-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  consultatton 

ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW.  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Fmstrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
professional  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultant.310-826-4445.  www.winning- 
per9onstatement.com. 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  formatting,  tran- 
scribing. Personalized,  professional  assis- 
tance. Ace  Words.Etc.  310-820-8830. 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Gon\Qntm\»lKf  Diwrtalton  AnWencn 
ThaaM.  Papart.  artd  Paraonal  Statamant* 

Propoaala  and  Book* 
InMmaNonal  StudanU  Wakxxna.  Sinca  1965 
Sharon  Saar,  Pti.O.  (310)  4704M2 
lar-Wrilaconi 


Display 
206-3060 


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46       Mondays  October  9, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  CtassifM  - 


6200 

He:)lth  Services 


6200 

Henlth  Services 


6200 

Hciilth  S(:rvicr;s 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  (^Brac«V) 

V    Deiwer  Brilliant  Restttts    y 

nRTHnrw^NTi«!T    —  _  ^*-  ■  —-r 


^'^Tisms'^ 


SI> 


uciXFAc-um-MrMBER  Dr.  Nftdcr  Dayani 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


Braces 

Miver  Brilliant  i 

•  Cosmettc  Pofcetain 

•  SufQical  OrttxKlonttcs 

•  Removaiate 

•  TrcxStkxxj) 

•Invtatote 

•European 


L'(r„  DlSCol  NT 


(310)  826  -  7494 

ll««SWill>imBM.Ma3 
UtAnftlct.CA9002S 

(949)  552  -  5890 

18124  Culver  Dr,  tA 
Irviin.CA  «715 


Teeth  Whitening  $«S 

upper  or  towtr  ^^  V-/  X^ 


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6700 

Professional  Services 


TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
UniorVUnton.  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day.  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
pefs.com 

WRITER'S  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlirvng,  research,  and  production 
assistance  for  academic  or  professional  writ- 
ing. Experienced  writing  instructor,  IHarvard 
Univertsty  MA.  JorV3 10-367-5666 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


BOND  TUTORING 

All  sutjjects  6-1 2th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  wiH  meet  your  individu- 
al needs.310-471-7628. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall.  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Calculus/Physics/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/English.  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 

MATH  TUTOR 

I  tutor  SAT  math,  Pre-Algebra,  Algebra  1  and 
2,  GeorDetry,  Tfigorx)metry,  and  beginning 
Calculus.  UCLA  Student,  math  major  Four 
years  expenence  tutoring  math  and  one  year 
teaching  experience.  You  come  to  me. 
$25/hour.  Call  for  more  information.  Stepha- 
nie:31 0-702-6455. 

PHD  GRADUATE  tutors  French  language  tor 
all  levels  beginning,  advanced  and  conver- 
sational French.  Excellent  service  aixl  rates. 
Cad  Liza:310-575-3874. 

SCIENCE  AND  ANY  HIGH  SCHOOL  or  ju- 
nior high  subjects  tutoring-  UCLA  Molecular 
Biology  Grad  Previous  tutoring  experiertce. 
1-323-874-5980. 

rL 

THE  MATHEMAGICIAN 

Your  on-line  math  tutor  On-line  assistance 
with  your  math  problem.  Pre-Algebra,  Alge- 
bra. Pre-Calculus,  Calculus.  310-452-0655 
or,  go  to:www.tf>emathemagician.com 

THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
term  paper  assistance.  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  Welcome. 
Call  310-452-2865 
www.thewrilerscoach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  with  tf>e  English  lartguage— for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW  MY-TUTOR  COM  Math/Physics/Sta- 
tistics/English^ebrew/  chemist  ry/biology/as- 
ironomy/  Computer  programming  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
service.  Call  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

Tiitoridf)  IVaiih.'fl 


5TH  GFIADE.  Mon-Thurs,  7.«^.  Responsi- 
ble, knows  how  to  teach.  Very  close  to 
UCLA.  $15/hr  Call  RogyS  10-44 1  -9388. 

ACADEMIC  COACHH-UTOR  lor  freshman 
Santa  Monica  College  student  with  learning 
disability.  Help  organize,  support  and  tutor 
basic  subjwM.  3-5hii/wlc.  %20H\t.  Maureen 
310-459-1800. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE  Tutoring,  com- 
panion, driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
girl.  AtMelic  female  preferred.  BH.  $8-12/hr 
4day«/*(fc.  2-4hrs/aay  ASAP.  Call  310-273- 
3663.  310-753-3535.  Email 

lonz320aoi.co(n. 

DRIVERmJTOR 

w/axcelani  slwly  habUs  to  MiM  12Aie-yr- 
old  boys  w^W  and  lasts.  Car  plua  InHiiance 
needed.  Approx  20nrs^vk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED.  Must  be 
graduate  student  or  TA  For  high  school 
student  taking  second  year  spaniah  end 

math  '<if>-476-0766 


v'^iasMfiuds 
825-2221 


7100 

Tutorjnrj  Wanted 


MATH,  SAT.  Experienced  Grad  student  or 
Sentor  preferred.  Private  WLA  school.  Fax 
resume  to  562-404-6141  or  can  818-831- 
2809. 

MATH.  SPANISH,  FRENCH.  LATIN.  CHEM- 
ISTRY  tutors  wanted.  Must  have  own  car. 
Articulate,  no  e^rience  required.  SM,  BH, 
CC.  $15/hr  310-679-2133.'  *«->    - 

WATH,  SPELLING, 

READll 
COMPREHE 

Tutor  wanted  for  3rd  grader  2 
evenings.  $15/hour.  Must  com 
323-954-7433. 

MATH/SCIENCE/LANGUAGE  tulorsVeded 
for  grades  6-12.  Algebra,  Geometry,  Physics, 
Chemistry,  Spanish  1/2.  $15/hr.  Experi- 
enced-*^ Must  tiave  car  Fax  resume:3l  0-474- 
7413  ASAP. 

NEED  A  GENERAL  A  TUTOR  for  11-year- 
oM-boy  in  BH.  Must  be  nk:e  &  patient. 
Please  call  Lily  310-274-3929  or  310-600- 
4707. 

STUDENT  TEACHERS 
NEEDED:Assistant  to  EducatkHwl  ttierapist. 
Must  be  Stror>g  in  Math  AND  Chemistry.  PM 
and  eariy  evening  hours.  SlO/hr.  ASAP.  Must 
have  Education  Background.  323-653-6965. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homework  assist  for  two  boys,  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  in  Laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  caN  evenings:310-401-0113  or  day- 
time:3 10-392- 1405. 

TUTORS  NEEDED 

All  subjects,  levels,  ages.  Flexibte  days  and 
hours.  $10-13/hour  Tutor  in  WLA  or  SFV. 
TolaHy  Tutored.  310-397-0999. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


KOREATOWN  E-COMMERCE  business 
seeks  PfT  employee  lor  computer  and  office 
work.  Fluent  in  Korean  and  English. 
Resumes  to  namhee.hanOgte.net. 

SECRETARY/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

Ught  filing,  computer,  phor>es  in  Beveriy 
Real  Estate  Company.  Part-time/Full-time. 
Flexible  hours.  Starting  pay  $11/hr  w/great 
future  job  opportunities.  Fax  resume:310- 
278-6801  Attn  Anda. 

STOCK  BROKER.  Licenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216.  Woodland  Hills.  CA.  Instojctor  David 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  University). 
818-703-8889. 


u 


FIRST  CALL 
Staffing  Services 

College  Students! 
Earn  extra  money  for  school! 

Are  you  looldng  for  a  way  to  pay  off  those  student 

loans?  Call  u$  for  short  or  long  term  writ 
assignments  We  have  lots  of  fun  jobs  available! 

CiBJaeinSnixMoaka 
3lO.264.99H 

818.242.9988 

«ww  firtuillatuff .<«■ 


AM  Si 


TUTORS  WANTED.  All  Subjects.  preK-l2th 
grade,  computers,  languages,  instruments, 
PT  (WLA/SFV/MALIBU),  salary:  $10-15, 
must  have  car.  310-477-2669,  fax:  310-477- 
1359. 


7200 

Typing 


TYPING/SECRETARIAL  servtees.  Typing 
$2.  50/page.  Photocopying,  answering  sen^- 
ice.  $50/month.  Personal  mailbox, 
$50/month.  Car  garage.  Personal  answering 
service  also  provided.  310-475-8787. 

WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertations,  transcription,  resunws,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Sar^ta 
Monica.  310-828-6939.  Hollywood,  323-466- 
2888. 


7600 

Child  Care  OfhMcd 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  mn  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6year8.  Two  targe 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Ck)Se  to  UCLA. 
310-473-0772. 


N^G{l^  PR€SCNooL 


Lotwly  W.LA  fKNNy.  dOM  to  UCLA, 
FT  4  PT.  Aqm  2-«. 

CaN  (310)207-4543  or  «M(  In  parson 
•t  1620  S.  Bimdy. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


Seeking  bright,  active  person 

with  college  degree  to  assist 

with  2  children  ages  6  &  8, 

part  tinie,  for  school  related 

tutoring,  computer 

assistance,  and  extra 

curricular  activities.  Excellent 

personal  references  required. 

Resumes  to:  Rose  Cooper 
510  N.  RotMrtson  Blvd. 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90048 


7/iOO 

Riisiness  Opportimilies 


A  6-FlOURE  INCOME  by  2002?  Its  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35,  Refundable.  No  Risk, 
httpy/zljgb.oom/tihanya.  213-730-0994  Ask 
for  Stephanie. 

NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

Work  from  home  with  flexiWe  hours. 
www.hofnat)usirie8s.lo/emoney 

UNIQUE  BUSINESS 
OPPORTUNITY 

BECOME-  a  personal  trainar.  Earn  up  Ip 
$i50/hr  Onlar  buainaas  manual  to  learn 
how.  310^99-9875. 


ABSOLUTELY 
AWESOME 

AFTERNOON  aaaisiant  lor  2  wontierfuf  girts 
(5.8yr8)  Driving,  playing,  HW.  Near  UCLA. 
Mon-Trturs.3-6pm,some  evenings.  Day,  310- 
206-0669;  night,  310-824-9609. 

AFTER  SCHOOL  CARE  NEEDED  4 
daysAivk.  2  boys  ages  6A8.  WLA,  Car  neces- 
sary. Must  be  avaiaMe  2:45-5:45pm  Call 
Stacey  310-449-5765. 

AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED. 
Mon-Frt,  2pm-7pm.  Own  transportation  a 
must.  BrerNwood.  310-979-7103. 


AFTERNOON  CHILD  CARE  WANTED  for  9 
-yr-oMgirl.  Bring  to  aftacschool  adMllaa.  2  or 
3  days/wk.  Santa  Monica.  Mual  have  car 
W«  reimburse  tor  gasfsalary.  Cal  PhNIp 
310-360-1961. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tuto«lng,com- 
panion.drtWng.  Active  7y/o  boy  arid  lly/o 
gM.  AMeiiclamale  preferred.  BH.  $8-l2/hr. 
4dayaAi«fc.  2-4f>r8/day  ASAP.  CaH  310-273- 
3663.310-753-3985  Entail  k>nz320aol.cam. 


xx 


7500 

Career  Opportiiimics 


7500 

Career  Opp()rT'.'ii'!i.,-, 


Harbor-UCLA  medical  Center,  Department  of  Orthopaedic  Surgery 
Research  Coordinator  Job  Description 


a(  Ms  pasMaa  Is  ta  facWiats  Hm  rssaarck  prajacts  sf  tks  Of«wMa«e 
A  aaasaianr  parpess  Is  to  maMala  Hm  camiMlar  systems,  databases 
aad  aOMr  taatMologlcal  squlemsal  ef  tka  dopartmant 

A  eartlMa  Isr  Ws  posWoa  mast  be  salt  mothratad,  a  creative  proMoffl  talvii; 
wNk  compatsrs  (Madatasb  sad  K),  latarsstad  to  s  ratotad  fMd.  and  wiNlao  to 
canvnit  at  toast  a  year  to  tka  pesMaa. 

OaltoK  Tka  Dvtlas  ol  Ms  pasWaa  toctode,  but  are  not  llmitod  to,  dsMy  upkeep  of  sovoral  data 
baase,  WDfUaa  aa  vartaas  rasaardi  protocta  iodudtag  too  ravtowtog  of  cbaito  and  X-fsy  fltos. 

davatoplag  BOW  programs  to  bato  the  dapaitiimN  tortbar  Hs  rsssardi  totoresto,  taking  an 
adiva  rsto  la  misosHaaaevs  dspailmsntal  proiocta  aad  pnivMing  gonoral/lecfcnical  support  for 

office  sad  Gilatoal  staff. 

alS1tL221.t71B 


7700 

Chil(iC;ife  Wanted 


ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

P/T  JOB  wori<ing  with  sweet,  intelligent 
handicapped  giri.  Chikl  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  in  kitchen  and  wortting  with  chiW 
on  iniproving  phystaal  skiHs.  Applicant  nwst 
be  sweet,  intelligent,  reliable,  speak  English 
and  drive.  Meat  Elman:3l0-396-8l00. 

BABYSITTER  for  smart,  nice  5-yr-oW  boy  In 
Sherman  Oaks.  HourB:2:30^:30pm.  Must 
have  safe  car  w/insurarKe  and  CDL.  Refer- 
ences required.  $8-ia/hr  DOE.  310-449- 
7182. 

CHILD  CARE 

for  2  giris.  ages  5&11.  Brentwood.  Tues  & 
Thurs  evenings.  5-9:30pm.  Duties  include: 
light  nteal  prep,  reading,  playing,  bathing. 
Must  have  car  Excellent  references  and  en- 
joy chiMren.  Salary  neg.  Please  call  Linda 
476-4728. 

CHILD  CARE  NEEDED  for  7-year-oW  boy. 
2:30-7:30  Wednesday,  Thursday  afternoons. 
Must  drive,  have  reliatMe  car,  references  re- 
quired. Pay  negotiable.  Mary:3 10-828-2624. 

CHILDCARE 

for  personaUe  Syr-oW  girt.  Pek-up  from 
schooMessons.  CDL,  own  car.  insurance. 
Non-smoker  Monday/Wednesday/Friday  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thursday  2-6pm.  $10/hr 
Caa  310-440-6738. 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  12ai6-yr- 
oW  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hr8^vk.  $10-$12A)r.  310- 
472-7353. 

FUI^/CARING  BABYSrrTER  NEEDED  lor 
picking  up  &  caring  for  9yr  oM  giri.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver  3-5days/wk. 
aftamoons-6pm.  Gayto  310-450-4109  (even- 
Ir^)- 

FUN/REPSONSIBLE  SITTER.  Westwood 
family.  Wed  1:30-7:30pm.  Boys  8.5.2.  Light 
housekeeping,  make  dinner,  driver's  Iteense 
a  plus.  $10/hr.  Leave  message  310-441- 
4078. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

NEEDED  P/T  sifter  needed  for  kkte  1047. 
Responsibilities:  Driving,  reading&playing. 
Good  pay!!  References  a  musti  Located  in 
Brentwood.  310-394-9781. 

NANNY  POSmON-P/T.  Must  have  experi- 
ence »vlth  chiWren  ages  3  and  younger.  ChlW 
Devetopement  education  a  plus.  Must  have 
references&car  310-234-1188 

P/T  DRIVER  CHILD- 
CARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  needs  drop-off  (6:45-8am)  &  pick- 
up+enands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only.  Must  have 
car.  insurance&valM  Ircdr^se.  Brentwood. 
Please  caU  Sarah  310-385-67B8. 


P/T  NANNY 
DRIVER/HELPER 

Padfk:  Palisades  professional  Mom  ^eeds 
permanent  nanny  to  drive  llyr.  oW  daugiar 
to  schooUappoinmento  and  aupen^se  homie,- 
wort</activities.  7-9an)(fto>dtito)  and  3-7pm.' 
M-F;  every-other-week.  Lh^e-out.  Perfect 
tong-temi  opportunity  for  mature  studertt  or 
part-time  wort<er  Must  have  reliable  car/exp. 
driving-record./excellent  judgment/maturi- 
ty/positive personality.  310-573-1170. 
FAX310-573-0130 

P/T  NANNY  for  2-yr-oW.  Wed  evenings  5- 
8:30pm;  5-i0pm  on  TT)urs  Oocastonel  wee- 
kends w/advanced  notice.  PaNsadea.  Must 
have  own  transportatton  and  have  previous 
chiU  care  exparience.  $15/hr.  Please  call 
Laura  at  310-454-9995. 

PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  for  10  yr/oU 
gkt.  Need  halp  6:45-8:30AM  MTW,  2-7:30pm 
MT.  Must  have  car,  ai^erience  with  chiWren 
and  help  wMi  enrands.  310-441-9766. 

PARTTIME  BABYSrrTER.  Reaporwibto, 
experienced,  chMd  devetopmeK  praterred. 
Energetk:.  for  2-year-old  and  5-year-oW. 
Own  car.  310-273-4900. 


recycle 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


RELIABLE 
BABYSITTER  NEEDED 

For  after  school  help,  Morxlay-Thursday,  2- 
6pm.  We're  tooking  for  a  student  who  is  great 
with  kkJs,  ages  7-6.  to  help  with  driving, 
homewori(  arxl  light  housekeeping.  Hours 
and  salary  negotiable.  Car  and  references 
are  required.  Please  call  Joy  at  310-394- 
2342. 

RESPONSIBLE,  RELIABLE  DRIVER  for  15- 
yr-ok]  boy  to  arx)  from  school  and  to  appoint- 
ments. UCLA  area.  323-468-2632.  ask  for 
Norma. 

RIDE  NEEDED 

Tb  pick  up  chikl  from  Bekerty  Hall  on  Mulhol- 
land  Drive  at  3:20  pm.  Call  310-271-4651  af- 
ter 6pm.  213-252-9437  From  9am-6pm. 

THERAPEUTIC 
COMPANION 

To  wori<  PfT  w/12-year-oW  boy  w/autlsm. 
Evenings  arxj/or  weekends  5-10hours/week. 
MWmum  6-monttM.  Courseworic  and/or  ex- 
perience w/autism  rtecessary.  $lO+/hr.  310- 
559-7384. 

TLrrOR/BAeYSrfTER  Qlendato.  12  yearoW 
boy.  Every  weekday.  4-9pm.  $lO/hr.  Need 
Car  CaH8l8-S^-58»6. 

WANTED:  Respinisbto  individual  needed  to 
help  after  school  with  2  smal  chiklren. 
Mondays  4-8pm  and^ome  weekends.  Must 
Drive.  References.  Cal  ^10-446-1438. 

WEEKEND  NANNY  needKl.  7am  Sat-9pm 
Sun.  Uve-in.  Bel-air.  CaH  310^9-1840. 

WOndertuI  Nanny  needed  3-5  al^tmoons  per 
week.  Boy  9.  girt  12.  Need  Own  car. 
WaekarMte  a  pkisi  Palisades  area.  310-573- 
1010. 


7800 

H<!lp  Wanted 


INSTRUCTOR  WANTED  for  private  tossons 
In  freestyle  dancing.  CaH  Stanley  310-585- 
9894. 


PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  ferrtate  for  Beverty  Hills 
producer  Short,  flexibte  hours.  Excellent 
pay  310-278-6972. 

Teachers  for  model  educatk>nal  and  enrich- 
ment 00.  Need  experianoe  wortdng  with  ani- 
mals. CertlficaladMorvoefWtoaled  ok.  Earth. 
Life  or  Physteal  science  background.  Interest 
In  wori(ing  with  elementary,  and  mkJdIe 
school  studento.  Great  pay  hours  availabte 
during  and  aftorschool  $25/hour.  Fax  re- 
sume: 310-445-5628 

$1,000'S  WEEKLY!! 

STUFF  ENVELOPES  at  home  lor  $2.00 
each  plus  bonuses.  F/T,  P/T.  Make  $800)- 
weekly  guaranieedt  Free  suppltes.  For  de- 
tails send  one  stomp  to:  N-33,  PMB  552. 
12021  Wilshlre  Blvd.,  Los  Angetes.  CA 
90025. 

~         $1(VHOUR 

AcdBunting.  business,  math,  and  econ. 
major*  w/baaic  MathAEngltah  aidlto  rweded 
TuesdayMThuradays  lor  PT-FT  poaWona. 
Expelanieiqpartence  for  future  CPAs  or  busl- 
naee  owners.  Fax  resume{UCLA  studento, 
also  send  DPr^):81 8-769-4694. 

$12/HR,  Hours  Flexible 

P/r.  IndMdual  needs  aaaiatoni  in  ooritocUng 
property  owners.  Musi  have  car  CaH  310- 
476-9069. 


$15-$23*4R  BRIGHT,  ENTHW$IASTIC  peo- 
pto  to  leach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Acadamte 
Sut^lecto.  Tranaportotton  required.  We  wNI 
train.  Fleidbto  hour*.  Send  or  fat  cover  tot- 
tectaaunw,  Including  Mat  aooras  (SAT.  ORE." 
a(c.)  to  ACE  Educational  Senrtces.  AitnBar- 
fy,  9011  W.  Pico  Blvd,  Ste.1025,  LA,  CA 
90035;  Fax:310-282-0424.  PoaMons  avail- 
abte  miDughout  LA  and  the  Valley. 

$1 500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  drcwtor^ 
No  experience  required.  Free  Information 
packet  Call  202-46e-1630. 


Display 

:^06-3060 


'WTOS* 


My  Bruin  CbHdM 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


$TUDENT$ 

You  can  earn  $20K  this  semester  No  gim- 
mk*s.  Totally  on  the  tevel.  ABSOLUTELY 
NO  COST  TO  YOU.  We  win  provide  you 
w/free  training  and  support.  Go  to 
http://nils.go.coolebiz.nel  and  watch  the  on- 
line flash  presentation. 

•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK'  Beato  all  Jobs.  Start 
immedtotely.  Great  pay.  Fun/Easy.  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  for  free  medteal  CaN-24/hrs 
323-850-4417. 


*XLNT  OPPORTUNITY! 
$10/HR  +  BONUSES 

PARTTIME  for  sales/retatad  feiM  wortc  Must 
have  Car  and  good  telephone  skills.  Call 
310-476-9089. 

A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

DO  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  In  the  afternoons  dur- 
ing school  (M-F)?  All  day  Saturday,  tool  Full- 
time during  Quarter  Breaks  and  Summer  Va- 
catkins!  Wortc  experience  rmt  necessary.  Ap- 
ply today  at  Westwood  Sporting  Goods. 
1065  Gayley  Ave,  Westwood  Village. 

A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  riekj  teles,  flexible  hours  +  com- 
misskxi  and  bonus!  AnHiitious  salesperson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  eniaH:  supportOfones- 
4all.com  AttnrFteid  Sates. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  Rexibte, 
part-time  hours.  $10-13/hr.  Tennis  a  plusi 
We  are  natkxwl  ftower  shippers.  310- 
230^)611  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASST 
P/T 

(M-TH,  0-3:30)SM.  Pedtetric  therapy  o«lc. 
medtoal  Mnnlralogy  helpful.  MiMpte  tasks, 
dotal  oftonted,  salf-moNvated.  Good  vert>al 
sMIs,  MAC:  Word,  Quk:kbdoks  exp.  req'd. 
FAX  resume  including  satory  history.  310- 
582-1165. 

ADULT  RESPONSi0LE  MALE.  Personal 
care  for  disatMed  man.  Monday-Friday 
Ihr/day,  altemdto  weekends.  Will  train. 
Strong  ReleraHcas.  Near  UCLA.  $300/mo. 
310-475-5^. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  experier>ce  necessary. 
Host  riwsicAalk-shows  for  our  radk)  stations. 
P/T.  $10-1 5/hr,  $200+per/show,  plus  fantas- 
benellts.  323-488-0080.  24-hours. 


^ 


T  NUDES  IN  NATURE,  $75/hr.  UCLA 
Grad  fine  art  photographer  seeks  fen^le 
nrKxtols  18-28.  B&W  gallery  exhibits  High 
integrity  worV.  Attractive,  toned,  dance/gym- 
ftastic/artistk:  t>ackground  preferred.  Can  for 
man  info  and  check  my  wetipsge  818-023- 
6470 

ASSISTANT  needed.  $lQ'hr.  Temple  City,  l/l. 
Opportunity  to  learn  the  ancient  art  of  Cfv 
Ouong.  Cantonese/English,  computer  Hter- 
ata,  peopte  skills,  detaU-oriented.  Contact  Us 
310-571-6032. 


ASSISTANT  TO  EDITOR 

Responstoto -energetk;,  writing  and  computer 
skMa.  knowledge  of  Page  Maker  6.0  halptul. 
Fast-gvadng  nwtion  pk:ture  and  tatovlsion 
'.iTSO^hour  Hours  negoito«e.Coo- 
toCI  8iMn  Moore  at  Canooo  PubbaNng, 
310-47i-2287. 

LUDIO  VISUAL 
OPERATORS  WANTED 

tor  deliveiy  and  oparationa,  throughout  cam- 
pus. Computer  and  ouctomer  skUto  pre- 
ferred. AV  expeitonce  not  requlrad.  Open 
schaduto  needed.  Musi  be  abto  to  Ml  35 
pounds.  Tivo  poaWone  avaMMr  Operator. 
$8.90/hr,  Techntotan  $11.40/hr.  CaM  Juan 
310-206-8002. 


BABYSITTING  A  NINE  MONTH  OLD  BABY 
some  ragutor  and  some  random  times.  2- 
4hours  2-3  tones  a  week.  MUST  be  aome- 
what  ftextoto  wWh  achedullng.  310-471-3804 

BANKING 

P/T  teller  peslttons  at  Unhrerslty  Credit 
Unton.  Exoaltonl  pay,  hours  &  anvlranment. 
Sorite  leller  experience  prelerrad.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd..  LA,  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.ucu.org/Jobs.htm 

BEAUTIFUL  WOMEN  for  upscate  dating 
agency.  Exoeltont$t$.  Ma»  bto,  pic  (5x7  to 
9x16),  contact  lnto:11094  VWNun  Blvd  «36S, 
Studto  Cliy  91004.  Aaatotoni  atoo  wanted 
310-368-2803 


7800 

Help  W.iKled 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


Don't  call  your  parents 
for  extra  cash. 

Call  us. 


If  you're  male,  in  college  or 
have  a  college  degree,  anij 
would  like  a  flexible  job 
where  you  can  earn  up  to 

details  on  our  anonymous 
sperm  donor  program. 
You'll  receive  free 
comprehensive  health 
screening  .  Plus  you  can 
help  infertile  couples 
realize  their  dream  of 
becoming  parents.  So  if 
you're  looking  for  a  great 
job  and  little  extra  cash, 
call  us  first. 


310-824-9941 

or  e-mail  us  at 
donors@ccb.com 


BOOKKEEPING  ASST  Needed  lor  cool, 
smaH  home  office.  Must  be  competent, 
proactive  arxl  fun.  Quicken.  Word.  Excel. 
Ftextoto.  Call  Monknje  310-204-3359. 

CARDIO  INSTRUCTOR 

PALMS  RECREATION  CENTER  seeks  an 
erwrgetk;  person  to  teach  ar)d  adult,  tow-im- 
pact caidk)  ctass  Mon  &  Thurs  night.  310- 
838-3838. 

CARE  TAKING  COMPANION  for  16-year  oto 
devetopnwntolly  disabled  giri.  Involve  neigh- 
t>orhood  field  trips&activities. playing 
boardgames.walks.etc.  Need  car  Hours 
nexibie,$12/hr  310-839-3732. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

PART-TIME  jobs  available  at  Cooperage. 
We  wortt  with  your  sclwdule,  1/2-off  meato. 
mngmnt  tratoing  opptnty,  CaN  310-206-0740 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-lime  jobs  availabte  at  Cooperage.  We 
work  with  your  schedule,  1/2  olf  meals,  man- 
agement training  opportunity.  Cail:310-206- 
0740. 


CHEVIOT  HILLS-STUDENT  WANTED  TO 
DRIVE  4-year-oW  boy  to  school  and  to  help 
with  general  errands  FRIDAYS,  8:30am- 
12:30pm.  $10/hr  310-836-8980. 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT/CHILOCARE 
COUNSELOR 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT  SALARY:  $7.03- 
$8.65/hr-fpartlal  benefits.  CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR  SALARY:  $8.65- 

$11.90^r^partial  benefits  Under  general  su- 
pervlston,  ptens,  implements  recreatkxtel, 
educatlona- 
I  and  sports  actMttes  for  5-1 2  year  olds,  such 
ea  arto  and  crafts.  Learning  groups,  outdoor 
gMiwa  and  playing  Intramural  sporto.  RE- 
OmREMENTS  FOR  CHILDCARE  ASSIS- 
TANT; High  School  Graduation;  enroHment  In 
coNega  pretoned.  Six  moniha  piaU  racrsatton 
wort(  ai^rience  (3mon0is  o(  volunlaer  ex- 
piwlenca  in  a  childcare  program  can  be  sub- 
sllluled  lor  3inonlhs  ol  paM  experiertce). 
Proof  of  High  School  dtoloma  must  be  sub- 
mitted wUh  a  City  appltoation.  REQUIRE- 
MENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR: 
Comptetton  of  one  year  of  college,  nr»joring 
in  Recrealton.  Educatkxi  or  retated  fteM. 
Must  have  12  unite  in  Earty  Chitohood  Edu- 
catton  and  3  addWoraH  unite  In  AdrnMstrs- 
tton  or  Stoff  Relattona.  One-yeer  parte  racraa- 
tton  wori(  experierKe.  Proof  of  one  year  col- 
lege and  required  unite  must  be  submitted 
with  a  CHy  appNcatton.  Can  310-550-4265. 
EOE. 

CITY  OF  BEVERLY  HHIs  Parking  Attendants 
needed.  $0.11/hr.  Morning  and  Evening 
shifts  .avallaUa.  Seasonal  PosNtons  storting 
Novarnber  16.  2000  lo  January  5.  2001.  All 
shifts  Bvallabto.  Apply  Nowfll  Dept.  of  Trans- 
portatton. 455  N  Rexford  Dr.  Room  130.  Ap- 
ply in  pereon.  310-285-2552. 


CITY  OF  TEMPLE  CITY  SEEKS  Conununlty 
Devek)pn>ent  AMe.  $10-$12/hr  Call  planning 
department  for  nxire  detoils.  626-285-2171. 

CLERICAL/CUSTOMER  SERVICE  M-F,  F/T 
permanent.  Good  phone  and  English  skills, 
detail-oriented,  reliable.  WLA,  $9-$10/hr 
310-826-3759ext229. 

CLERK  TYPIST/RECEPTIONIST  Manage 
small  ntedical  research  group.  Good  com- 
munication/writing skills,  word-processing, 
Wirxjows  95,  up  to  20/hours,  weekday-morn- 
ings. Starting-$8.00/hr  Westwood.  310-826- 
0679.  ^ 

-S 

CLERK.  P/T,  PleasadI  Century  City  Engi- 
rwering  Firm  seeks  pertectk>nist  with  typirig 
skills  for  general  office  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly t)e  detail-oriented.  $1i/houf  to  start.  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2437. 

CLERK/TYPIST 

Must  type  min.  lOMpm  arxl  be  able  to  tran- 
scritje.  Full-time  position.  Salary+twnefits. 
Fax  reyime  to  E.  Kraft  310-441-8010. 

c^        CLINICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR   * 

FT  position  Immediately  available  for  a  li- 
censed latx>ratory  scientist  in  a  private  clini- 
cal latx>ratory  in  Santa  Monica.  Lab  provktos 
erKtocrine,  andrology,  serotogy  and  immu- 
notogy  testing.  Incumt>ent  required  to  work 
In  weekend  rototior^.  Salary  commensurate 
wNh  qualifk^tlons  and  experience.  Submit 
appHcattons  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 
Techrratogy  Laboratories,  1245  16th  Street, 
Suite  105.  Santo  Monk».  CA  90404  (Tel 
310-829-0102). 

COACHES  NEEDED 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 

2000-2001  school  year.  Girts  Soccer,  Varsi- 
ty and  JV  Lacrosse,  JV  Boys  Basketball. 
Pak)  poslttons.  310-391-7127.  Call  Nate  ext. 
247  tor  boys'  posMtons.  Call  QaH  ext.  248  for 
girts' posWona. 


No  experience  Necessary' 
Mm.  ItaM.  dUMm.  ril  irb;,  lias. 
■.  TV  -  Moa  -  QumMdA  -  Magaanet 
forpertonal  Inlenietr  call  iimi- 

310.659,7000 


NEW  FACES  WANTED 

Aa  AGES  ALL  TYPES 

FOR  UPOOMWQ  TV  FIM  COMMERCIAL, 

MUGIC.VOE06 

AND  PRWT.  NO  FEES.  NO  EW>  REOD 

PLEASE  CAa  FOR  AUDmON  T»4E 

AUOmONNGfOW 

379-7070 


jsm. 


COACHES  NEEDEDI  Giris  Varsity 
Basketball  and  Girts  Freshman  Basketball 
Team.  Starts  Nov  ist-mkl  Feb.  P/T  5  days  a 
week.  Frestiman  hours:  3-4:30pm  everyday 
Vartsty  hours:  4:30-6:30.  Prevtous 
Experience  Necessary.  Abto  to  coach  HS 
giris.  Varsity:  $2000/season.  Freshntan 
$1200/season.  Contoct  Maureen  323-461- 

3651 

I 

COMMUNICATION  COMPMti  seeks  busi- 
ness student  to  wortt  P/T.  Experierwe  in  w- 
seaich  and  business  pten  writing  Pay  nego- 
ttobte.  Contact  Jason.  310-551-2292.  . 

■         ■IIMI  ■■!■  ■■!■  1^  ■ 

COMPANK}N-for  active  sentor.  post-stroke. 
Accompany  to  movtos,  museuots,  restau- 
rante.  Must  be  friendly  patleM,  engage  In 
stimulating  oonversatton  (poNHcks.business) 
Payrate  $12-$lS/hr  BOe.  Contact  Lau- 
ra •323-933-5880  X101.2. 


Moraby,  October  9, 2000       47 


Nutrition  Classes 

For  detailed  information,  see  ad  on  page  58 

Visit  the  Ashe  web  site  for  more  information,  request 

on  appointment  or  ask  a  hieolth  related  question- 

http.//www/saonef. ucla.edu/hiealth. htm  - 

or  call  825-4073 

ucia  Ashe  Center 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PUZZLE 


ACROSS 

1  Alter  (a  skirt) 

6  Understand 

10  Kind  of  roast 

14  With  no  help 

15  Measure  of  time 

16  On  the  Adriatic 

17  Suburban  sights 

1 8  —  spumante 

19  Words  used 
after  flower  or 
taste 

20  Naval  off 

21  Most  sensible 

23  Naughty 
youngster 

24  Ties  (the  score) 
26  Baseball  hit 

28  Woodland 
30  Hudson  Bay 
people 

32  "—  for  All 
Seasons" 

33  Nantucket,  e.g. 
35  Sault  —  Marie 
38  (^sert  plants 

40  Can.  province 

41  Railroad  station 

43  Before,  to  a  bard 

44  Sudden  storm 

47  Rave's  partner ' 

48  Pleasure  trip 

49  Locust  tree 

51  Kansas  capital 

54  Extinguish  a  fire 

55  Lion's  sound 

56  Frank 

59  Used  a  chair 

62  Ostriches' 
cousins 

63  Store  sign 

64  Avoid  adroitly 

66  Church  area 

67  Whale  herds 

68  Grab 

69  •—  Were 
Sisters" 

70  Loafer,  for  one 

71  —pole 

T 


pnevious  puzzle  solved 


BBSB    □[DDBIl    SaDES 
□mSIZ]    QDHBD    DDQIi 


ITIAINISMPIEITIRI I  IF!  I  lElDl 


asms  [imisQis  bsqd 


IKIAIRIAITMDII ITJT 101 


BDEaraB       DQESBBSQ 

SDBd]    GQBS 


D  E 


DO 


■ASP  J.  CM 
T E T R aM 
eItIhIaInM 


K 

1 

T 

E 

E 

R 

N 

E 

T 

E 

A 

K 

DOWN 

1  Comedienne 
Martha 

2  Oash 

3  Derby  or 
Preakness 

4  Finish 

5  Clutters 

6  Mongol  rulers 

7  It  smells! 

8  Big  League 
events 

9  " — ontfie 
Wind* 

10  Synagogue 
leaders 

1 1  Take  (power) 
by  force 

12  Award 

13  Kindergarten 
staple 

22  Con 
25  Air 

27  Actor  Foxx 

28  Look  toward 

29  Actor  Sharif 


30  Athletic-shoe 
feature 

31  Banister 

34  Made  yarn 

35  Shuttle  attire 

36  Writer  Morrison 

37  Kett  of  the 
comics 

39  Writer  Dinesen 
42  Important  times 

45  Clams 

46  Thailand's 
neighbor 

48  Casual  shirt 

50  Most  adorable 

51  Oct.  31  word 

52  Get-up-and-go 

53  VCR  button 

54  Thicit 

57  Brilliant  fish 

58  Verne's  captain 

60  Woodworking 
tool 

61  Pour 

65  DiCaprio's 
nickname 


.VvV-'- 


4S       Momby,  October  9, 2000 


t*       own  V  ivJnnt!  vxnrwu 


7800 

Help  Wonti.d 


7800 

Help  W;n!t.Hi 


Entry  Level. 
Will  Train! 


> 


'%%:% 


to  start 


v.W, 


Good  math  skills  a  plus. 


Fax  Resume:  (323)  263-0556 


COMPUTER  PROGRAMMING  COURSE 
READER  needed.  ProficienJ  In  C  4  VB. 
CompScJ  UO/Grad  pfeferred.  Grade  via  In- 
ternet. $1(yhr.  323-402-1230x1692 

COOL  LADY  seeks  driver  for  oocaatonaTeT 
rands.  Own  car  required.  S7/HR  310-826- 
9150. 


CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HfRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  gel  paid.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$10.2fimr.  Must  tM  a  UCl>  student  WU 
■cademfc  years  remainInQ  w«h  vaNd  driver's 
■oanae.  Web:  www.ucpd.uda.eduAicpd/cso. 
Email:  csoOucpd.ucla.edu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 


DEUVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  Is  hfcino  v«i  drlv- 
era.  Looking  fof  energetic,  unstoppebie. 
posWve  atm  lmmedMe»y.  Rexfcle  hours, 
busy  wsetonds.  Apply  m  person  M-Sat  tM 
6pm.  Apply  at  937  WesiWDOd.  310-206-1180. 

DOG-WALKER  NEEDED.  MWF.  momlngs; 
TR  afterrwons.  Close  to  cainpus.  Bonnie: 
310-474-9969. 

EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed  Catenng  sales.  Make  up  to 
$15<yday.  Pan  or  full-time  »»ork.  Call:Davld 
310-441-0394. 


F/T  or  Pn.  Chddren's  retaN  store.  Hours:  sat 
required.  $6-10/hr  DOE.  On  Santa  Monica 
Blvd  In  Westwood  310-234-9564. 


CInssitieds 
825-2221 


FEMALE  ATTENDANT  10 

HOURS/WK:$10/hr10mlns  UCLA.  Help 
disabled  woman  with  laundry,  shopping, 
medk:ai  appointments  and  misc.  errands. 
Must  have  car.  CaN:31 0-828-4686. 

44 . 

FINE  JEWELRY  STORE  In  Westwood  VH- 
lage  needs  P/T  sales.  Computer  liter- 
ate.frfendly.cheerfui.  wsiking  distance  to 
campus.  31 0-824-5036.  nanvfipm.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-824-2738.  EnwftgfaoeiewelOhot- 
maM.oom. 

FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

Needed  for  private  health  ciub.  Penrr«anent 
houre  available.  HaaMh  Insurance  offered. 
Plaaaa  aafc  tor  A«9on:31(V659-5002. 

QARDENERA4AINTENANCE/HANDYMAN 
In  the  Los  FeMz.  Loe  Angelee  area.  WM  pay 
$ia^r.  For  regular  empk)yn>ent.  Call  Joey 
310-399-4626.  4033  Sunset  Drive.  LA 
90027. 

QIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  clubs  m 
WLA.  Conversatton  only.  No  akxihol.  Flexl- 
bie  hours.  Eam  top  »$$.  323-441-0985 

GRAPHICWEB  DE8IGNERIII  Grant  writer. 
Non-profit  muW-radal  arts  company.  Em- 
power youth  through  theater.  Him.  dance,  po- 
etry, musk;.  PtT  310-208-8012. 

GREAT  OPPORTUNITY 

Assistant  M-F  2-3/hr8  afternoons.  Exciting. 
growing  company  seeks  detail-oriented, 
sharp  indfvMiH  who  Nkes  ak>t  of  responsM- 
Ity.  CaR  Mona  Andrews  310-278-3349. 


Daily  Bruin  OassifM 


■^-f^ 


M;»»«1'>«i«n9vf<M) 


7800 

Help  W.ii.tiil 


7800 

Hr;l[)  W.]iilt!(l 


HOST/HOSTESS 

FRIENDLY.  EXPERJENCED  host  lor  Jade 
West  Rastaurait.  Century  City.  CaH  alter 
2:30.  310-55»3388. 

INFORMATION  SYS- 

TEMS  ASSISTANT 

$27,067-$32,978 

COORDINATES  COMPUTER  USAGE  and 
resolves  system/user  problems  on  the  IBM 
AS400  and  microcomputer  systems.  Assists 
in  recorKiling  and  auditing  various  computer 
reports  and  data  files.  Knowledge  of  practte- 
es  and  principles  in  operating  and  maintain- 
irig  mini  microcomputer  systems.  At>ility  to 
profteiently  operate  a  lOkey  cateulator  and 
type  40WPM.  Ability  to  effntentty  perform  de- 
tail and/or  technk»l  oriented  tasks.  Two 
years  of  advanced  education  in  a  computer 
subject  (AA,AS,  Certificate  program.etc.) 
and  one-year  computer  operatkxis  experi- 
ence on  mini  or  micro  system*.  General 
business  knowledge  and  ability  to  lift  and 
move  50lt)s.  desirable.  Substantial  equival- 
ents may  be  substituted  for  the  above.  Send 
resume  to:  Human  Resources,  Frank  D.  Lan- 
temian  Regtonai  Center  3303  Wilshire  Blvd., 
Suite  700  Los  Angeles,  CA  90010  EOE. 

INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPRE-- 
SENTATIVE.  Film  advertising.  Call  retail 
stores  for  upcoming  releases.  Coordinate 
store  visits.  P/T-F/T-8am-l2pm  or  12:30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $10/hr+bonus.  310-566-2555. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Servtee  Representative.  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  vert>al  skills  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1768-)spatterson  Oij- 
girK.com. 

INTERNATK)NAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Receptionist.  Entry  level  positkxi.  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/rir-30hrs/wk  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
ferred. Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son 323-653-1768.  JspattersonOijginc.com. 

INTERNET  ENTERTAINMENT  COMPANY 
seeks  research  assistants.  Must  be  fluen:  In 
Japanese.Korean  or  Chirwse.  Pay  based  on 
experience.  Fax  resumes:  323-993-0810. 

LIBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties,  12-19  hrs/virk.  $6.70/hr  to  start. 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Antigone  Kutay 
310-825-1084. 

LOVE  CUTE  DOGS? 

SEEKING  CARING,  rBspons«>ie,  non-smok- 
er to  dog  sit  evenings/weekends.  Must  have 
own  car  and  experience.  Please  caH  310- 
459-7631. 

medk;al  billing  supervisor  want 

ED  by  dynamk:,  DME  &  Rehab  dealer.  Ex- 
pertise with  Medk»re,  MediCal  &  Insurance 
required.  Experience  with  Team  DME  Soft- 
ware a  big  plus.  Part-time  leading  qutekly  to 
full-time.  Hourly  compensatkxi  commensu- 
rate with  experier)ce.  Fax  resume  to  310- 
575-1505. 

MESSENGER        ^ 

strong  bruin  SUPPORTERiwell  estab- 
lished Westwood  law  Arm  seeks  2-pan-time 
messengers(MWF  or  TR,  9:30^:30)  to  wofl 
In  our  ofRce  sen/k:es  department.  Must  ha/e 
reliable  car.  insurance&good  driving 
Addltiortai  duties  include  maH, 
faxing,  switchboard,  etc.  Prefer  Bftiin  stud- 
ents who  are  also  responsMe^dral-orient- 
ed  Please  call  Robin  Barnes  310-478-2541. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  drlveAwork  w/2  lunAgined  kids  ages  5A7. 
Perfect  sctiadule  for  student.  Must  have  car. 
P/T  permanent.  Ewreaent  salary.  Judy:310- 
551-1145 


Clerical  Assistant 

.  %•%.  MiM,  itata 
offlo*  worfc.  Start  — 
poaaMa  $6-10/ hour. 
KWum*  310-477-7M0 
\  can  9KM77^«272 

Vflnl  Miy 


NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT.  Mostly 
runs  errands,  some  Ighl  housework  and 
cooking,  good  pay  near  UCLA.  4-S 
hours/day  310-788-4727. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Pan-tlma  Jobs  available  at  North  Can^xM. 
We  vwrk  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  maals. 
managemem  tiammg  opportunNy.  CalrSIO- 
2060720. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-Hma  (oto  available  at  LuVUe  Corrv 
mons.  we  HMMtt  wNh  your  schedule,  1/2  ol 
meals,  management  training  opportunity. 
Cal:310«2S-1l77. 


PAID  INTERN  NEEDED  tor  small  music 
marltetlng  co.  10-20/hrs/wk.  Good  phone 
personaiHy.  org.  akHls.  310-281-7812 

PARK  RANGER 

$8.68-$11.9Q^.  wUh  paiHal  banallts.  En- 
force park  niae  and  reguiattons;  dtoaanHnaie 
Monnatton  and  asaM  public  m  the  partqon- 
sNe  supanMon  of  oommarclal  Mm  oon^- 
nies  and  work  dapartmani  apacW  events; 
■MM  wiffi  offtoa  duUaa.  Requlraa  one  year 
of  ootoga  maiortng  In  Recreation.  Outdoor 
EikJcalion,  Park  Ranger  or  reMad  HaW;  or 
one-year  pald^atunlaer  expeitenoe  In  a  oua- 
tomer  sarvtoa  orlenled  poeWoa  Muat  hM«  a 
vaHd  Caatomla  C  ditver's  Icansa  and  muet 
be  awe  10  obtain  CPR  and  First  Aid  oanM- 
catesApply  knmedialely-OPEN  UNTIL 
FU.ED.  CHy  of  B«wly  HMs,  456  N.  HaKtord 
Dr.  #210.  Bevwty  MM.  CA  80210.  310-286- 
1071  EOe. 


7800 


OFFICE-EXCELLENT   OPPORTUNITY   2 

P/T  positk)ns  available.  Flexljle  hours.  Retail 
store  in  Westwood  Village.  310-208-6404 
from  12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
working  at  various  on-campus  events.  We 
offer  flexible  hours  that  vary  from  week  lo 
week.  Can  310-206O735. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
wortung  at  various  on-campus  events.  We 
offer  flexible  hours  that  vary  from  week  to 
week.  Cail:31 0-206-0735. 

OPTTCIAN  for  beautiful  Westwood  village 
optometric  offtoe.  PfT,  flex  hours.  Must  be 
friendly,  outgoing,  and  cheerful.  Sales  ex- 
perience helpful.  310-208-1384. 

P/T  ASSISTANT 

Private  home  offk:e.  data  entry,  Mac/Quick- 
en.  Accuracy  important.  Good  English.  Own 
transportatk)n.  Flexible  schedule.  Weekdays 
only.  8-12hr8/wfc.  310-394-2933. 

P/T  DATA  ENTRY/  DIS- 
PATCH  ASSISTANT 

10:30am-3:30pm,  M-F  some  overtime. 
Computer,  heavy  phones,  and  knowledge  of 
LA  area  a  n>ust.  Messenger  tMckground  pre- 
fen«d.  Fax  resurrw  310-275-4439. 

P/T  General  Offtoe  AasistanL  CSA  Architects 
in  Westwood.  Fax  reeume  to  310-824-8715. 

PAT  LAW  OFRCE  ASST 

Word  Processor/Secretarial  for  Westwood 
law  offtoe.  PC  and  Internet  adept. 
Compensatton  depends  on  skills.  Flexible 
hours.  Fax  resume  310-443-4223. 

PfT  OFFICE  ASSISTANT 

WANTED  for  family  owned  Real  Estate  Man- 
agement Company  Professtonal,  Reliable. 
Mature  Person  sought,  PC  skills  a  plus.  323- 
850-5726. 

PfT  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  100  Medtoal  Plaza.  Oermatotogy  prac- 
tice. Hours  can  vary  w/classes.  F/T  during 
summer.  $a/hr.  Plus  free  partOng.  Assist 
nunager,  computer  skills  necessary,  math  or 
business  majors  preferred.  Fax  resume  after 
6:30pm.  310-206-4010. 

P/T  or  Career  Opportunities!  Private 
tutors/Instructors  for  K-12  and  Educattonal 
Consultants  for  college  preparatkxi  servtees 
Seeking  Undergraduates-PhD's.  Experience 
preferred.  8tror>g  communicattons  skills 
required.  Future  Youth  Inc/MlndWe 
Consulting  Group.  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329 

P/T  OR  F/T  SERVER 

AND  ANSWERING  phones  for  diner  in  Bev- 
erty  Hills.  Will  train.  Great  tips!  Call  Roni:310- 
772-0044  from  8am-5pm. 

P/T  WRITER.  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Rmi  seeks  perlecttonist  with  strong 
writing  skills  to  produce  miWIy  technical  re- 
ports (or  internal  and  external  uaa.  $13/hr  to 
start,  wage  Increases  as  appropriate.  Mini- 
mum I5hr8/wk.  Fax  resume  310-286-9126. 


PERSONAL  ASST 
DETAIL-ORIENTED 

person  to  manage  orders  for  small  -upscale 
retail  shop.  Make  sure  orders  are  correct 
when  placed&foltow-up  w/suppUers  to  Insure 
correct&on-time  delivery.  Handle  light  In&out 
shipments.  F/T,  including  Saturdays.  Must- 
have  excellent  knowledge  of  English.  Call 
BiM:3 10-278-5620. 

POSTAL  JOBS      ^ 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  ".  ieral  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
info.  Call  1-800-391-5856  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar. 


PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Eam  up  to 
$600/Week.  310-724-8360.  Days  only. 

RECEPTIONIST  WANT- 
ED 

BEVERLY  HiaS  SALON  seeks  energetic 
receptionist.  F/T  or  P/T.  To  start  ASAR  310- 
278-1191. 


RECREATION  ASSISTANT  NEEDED.  P/T 
nightwork.  Approx  ta.SOnv.  Stoner  Recrea- 
tton  Center.  310-479-7200  ask  for  Valerie  or 
Jason. 


RESEARCHER 

For  Business  Plan.  Thorough  research  skills, 
concise  writing,  organized,  and  reliabie.  Fa- 
miNartty  with  PC.  console,  and  arcade  games 
helpful.  spgreenOearthlink.net 

RESPONSIBLE  DRIVER  with  own  car  to 
drive  15yr.  oM  and  I1yr.  oM  from  St.  Moni- 
ca's to  Culver  City.  2:45pm  3-5  days/wk. 
$150-2SOMc.  Mora  $$  If  avaHabie  for  physi- 
cal or  academto  activities  untH  4pilL  310- 
838-9448. 

RESTAURANT  In  WLA  now  hiring  servera. 
cashiers,  prep  personnel.  F/T  or  P/T.  apply  In 
person.  941 1  W.  Ptoo  Blvd.  Sun-Thurs. 

RETAIL  SALES.  PT/FT.  Westwood  Blvd.  De- 
signer wedding/ev^ng  gowra.  ExperierK:e 
preferred,  motivated  arid  Irtandly.  Great  op- 
portunity. Salary/comfnMons/tx>nuses.  Ex- 
cellent $$.  310-474-7808  PauNne. 

SALES  CLERK 
WANTED 

Fk>rist  seeking  P/T  sales,  phone  aasistnaL 
Simple  typtng/admkHstratkxi  shMs  helpfui. 
Flexible  hours/fun  environment.  FM-rasume 
10:323-852-0749. A   . 

SALES  POSITION 

F/T.  Growing  Century  City  company  seeks 
saiee  person  who  are  energetto  aeff-etarler^' 
Our  company  Is  the  leader  ti  the  procure- 
ment of  Uquor  Kcenses  and  use  permits  In 
Cakfomia.  Must  be  computer-Uterate.  Urtwn 
planning/legal  backgrourxMilllngual  appito- 
ants  that  want  to  parttolpate  In  our  exciting 
ntohe  business  caN  our  offtoes  today  for  de- 
tails:3l0-553-63e3  ext.18  or  lax  resume 
to.310-553-3996  Attn:Clndy. 

SALES.  Popular  Weatwood  VWage  Jewelry 
store  seeks  2  P/T  sales  asenrlalaa  Excel- 
lent opportunity.  310-208-8404  phone  from 
12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 

SECRETARY,  hafftime.  mon^iga,  to  RN  at 
VA  medtoal  canter.  WLA.  PtoAcient  m  word 
and  excel.  $il/hr.  Some  beneffts.  Fax  re- 
sums  to  Susan  Onange  310-268-4404. 

SECRETARY/RECEPTKMIST.  Sma*  WLA 
law  offtoe  aaetcs  p/l  or  M  bMngual  (Spanish) 
mdMdual.  Must  have  expertance  wWi  word 
peilect  and  type  mm  40wpm.  Gal  NeN  310- 
445-1100  or  aend  resume  31^446-777^ 

SELF-MOTIVATED  SALESPERSON  tor  a 
fumltura  store  on  the  weetMe.  Houre  flexi- 
ble. 310477-5995. 


NOW  HIRING 

COUNTER  HELP  POSITION  In  cafe. 
$7*tlps/hr.  Part  Time/Full  Time.  Contact 
Roberto  310-247-1112  1lam-epm. 

OFFICE  ASSISTANT  for  general  flHng,  bM- 
Ing  Insurance,  krvotolng,  ln>ubleehoo6ng 
biffs,  and  entartng  data  Into  Qutekan  and 
OutoWtooks.  iday  a  week  Monday-Thure- 
day  MUST  have  references  and  preffarable 
some  experience.  310471-3604. 

OFFKiE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CEO 
Growing  Btotechnotogy  Company-West- 
wood.  T0am-2pm/FuMlma,  laidbla  hours. 
Ne«d:exce<tont  telephone  skMs,  dataff-oilanl- 
ed.  adminAiomp  akMa.  science  Interest  pre- 
fened.  Beneflts/advancament.  FaxRes2Mar- 
me:  310475-15a3u 


PART-TIME  CHILDCAHEmiTOR  needed 
for  1st  and  2nd  grader.  Endno  Muffioffand 
and  405  ae|aoent.  Muet  have  car.  Cal  Jack- 
ia:310<26-2466. 

PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTROCTK>N/TECHNICAL  Bookstore  In 
WLA  has  one  opening  for  dedcal  posiltona. 
$7/hr.  Mornings  or  attemoona.  Can 
Mtohete:310474-7771 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  for  family  (of  Inter- 
esi  to  young  fUmmakere).  15-20hrs/wk- 
$10i'hr  3pm-8pm  Mon..  Tues,  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  FMing/rasearch. 
Flexfole  schedula/reeourcalum  Contact:  310- 
824-1444  (John).  Good  referenooe  required. 
Non-Smoker.  Must  have  own  caitlnsurenoa. 


SITE  ACQUISITIONS  CONSULTANT. 
Fui^rt  lime.  Seff-staitac  craattve.  Ma*- 
gent  Acquire  land  sNee  tor  oeffutar.  Sataiy 
«mwnenaufate  wi«wtp«lence.  Fax  rasume. 
310-737-4226. 

TEACHER'S  ASSIS- 
TANT 

IMMCOUnrE  POSmON.  Senta  Montoa  pre- 
achool.  20hraAMk.  Mon-T>n»s  afternoon.  Ear- 
ly cMdhood  unltsA  some  expertaoe  working 
w^young  chNAan  requited.  310-3»4-0463. 

TELEMARKETINQ,  No  ooU  caHs.  $.16- 
20Whr.  bonueaa.  RTT-P/T  Muat  have  desire 
to  make  big  $W.  FlmdMe  schedule.  Great  tor 
students.  Near  SMC/UCLA.  310-6«6«f01 
axL29e. 


T>tE  HIDOEN  GARDEN  Ftower  Shop  needs 
people  who  tove  ffowera.  Help  process,  prep 
conteiners.  etc.  MWF  $8/hr.  7an»-3pm.  No 
•xperience  necesaary.  Near  UCLA.  310475- 
4647. 


TUTOR  for  active  sentor.  post-stroke.  Needs 
hefo  wNh  Photoehop,  Pagamaker.  Ojioken. 
Muat  be  patient  and  frieridly.  Pay  rate  $40- 
eofhr.  BOE.  Cal  Laura  at  323-933-5660 
X1012. 


Displ.iy 


■'A     '  ..•   ,.■;'.• 


Moa<b)t0clofctf9,2000       4> 


7800 

H<!l|)  IV.iiitcd 


Apjittnicnts 


8400 


8AOO 

Apnrtim.Mits  for  R(mH 


US  International  Co. 

Wortt  at  home  poeWon  knmedlatelyl  P/T 
$500-2000/mo.  F/T  $2000-6000/mo.  Lan- 
guages/computer skills  a  plus,  www.rich- 
fromhome.com/lntemel 


8800  ■  9500 

Guesthouse  foi  Ri;„t    ■  Roomniiitcs  -  Priv;M(;  Room 


VALET  PARKING 
ATTENDANTS 

Flexible  hours,  great  tips,  Santa  Montoa  and 
Marina  Del  Rey  areas.  310-214-1868.  Leave 
message. 

WANTED 

75people  wiU  pay  you  to  fose  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  drugs.  CaH  now.  323-993-3391. 

WANTED:  7th  &  8th  grade  Cross  Country 
Coach.  Mariborough  School.  250  S.  Ross- 
more  Ave.  Start  ASAP-Nov  8.  $1200  for  sea- 
son. Call  Julie  Napoleon  323-935-1147 
ext467  or  email  napolejOmaribor- 
ough.la.ca.us 

WANTED:  PAID 
COACHES 

QMS  fiosh^soph  JV  baskatoal.  gMs  JV  soft- 
bal.  Paffsades  Charter  High  School.  Contact 
T  Tamura  310454-0611  ext3290  orext34S0. 

WEB  DESK3NER/PROGRAMMERS  NEED- 
EDI  Afflbittoua  company  seeks  saff  motivat- 
ed people.  Knowledge  of  FLASH  HTML,  and 
Programming  a  plus.  Call  Teri  O  562-622- 
0729. 


WALK  TO  UCLA 

www.keltontowers.com 

310-208-1976 


<^Vcst\vootf  <^p[aza 


Single  w/  Shared  Bathroom 

$930-$965 

Single  w/  Private  Bathroom 

$96541095 

1  Bedroom 

$1210-$1500 

Parking  available  for 
1  Bedrooms  only 

_3ip-208-8505 


BRENTWOOD  BACHE- 
LOR 
APARTMENT 

FOR  RENT.  Qrad  student  preferred.  Upper, 
front,  walk-in  closet,  tub  and  shower.  Ctose 
to  bus.  $695/month.  310-275-7139. 

FfiEE  RENTAL  SERVICE.  WestsWe  .  1  and 
2bdrm  available.  Call  The  Roberts  Compa- 
nies. 310-829-1700. 

LOOKING  FOR  A  PLACE  TO  LIVE? 
www.housinglOl  net...  Your  move  off  cam- 
pus! Search  for siimmersubiets. 


CULVER  CITY 
GUESTHOUSE 

Single  guesthouse  In  great  neighbortiood. 
Easy  paridng,  near  Overiand  and  Jefferson. 
$600/month.  Utilities  included.  310-572- 
1239. 


8900 

HousL'  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJACENT  2bdmV2Wh 
home,  yard,  unfurnished,  hardwood  floors. 
Ref.  req.  Approx.  $1900/mo.  310-271-0826. 

SANTA  MONICA  -2bd/1blh.  Cooler,  2  party- 
ing spaces  ■¥  storage.  Breakfast  room. 
Kitchen  w/  oven,refridg.  $120(Vmo.  Zay  310- 
541-2887. 


bve  MUSlC^'^ 


1^    Kill      Ol    llll 


II  ii>iii|i,inu  N  III  tin    I  S.  lodkiiiu 
iiiK  ni>  1    '^  il.i\-  .1  «t(k  III  \.irj 


•  Ml-"  III  p. Hi 


I  i>ll<  'j(  III  (III 


piissi  Sv 
skills      h. 


>>iiril   .1 


8iO  246  E200 


8100 


PHYSICAL 
ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  diaablod  male  m  fMber  HaN.  A  few 
hr^day.  naxtile  ahaduM.  $lO/hr.  CaM  Alex 
949-369-9671  or  310-267-8189. 


8200 

TiMnj)or;iry  f.m ploy nu; lit 


AIRLINE  WORK! 


ATS  it  UMig  al  LAX  for  Ramp  Aganl 
poiMam.  iyMftatoMrarkoulrida 
and  gat  a  workool,  tMt  ut  far  an 
Marvlew  on  Montfay  Oct  9  or  Ibasday, 
Oefobarie  Itam  8am  to  Spm  at  tiM 
Naoiwda  HoM.  B28 IL  Sapulvaia. 

W¥fWm&t99HmGOtn    en 


Recycle, 


1  MIN  TO  UCLA 

WESTWOOD.  Furnished.  Single: 
$850/month.  Carpeted.  Gatad  convex 
Quiet.  Pool.  Laundry,  lyr  lease.  310-824- 
1830. 


ONE  BLOCK  TO  CAM- 
PUS 

2bdrm  suite.  Hardwood,  private  patio,  one 
partdng,  wam  to  UCLA.  $1350.  10966 
RoebBng  Ave.  310-208-4253  or  310-824- 
2595. 


9200 

Hoiisiiu)  N(.'(-(l(:(l 


LOOKING  TO  ROOM  with  someone  In  an 
apartment  ASAP.  Close  to  Campos.  Down 
to  earth  gentleman  needs  help.  Wortdng  On 
Campus  0310-825-4183 


WORK  AT  HOME 

Intemelional  buainess.  PfT:  $500-$2000/mo. 
F/T:  $200046000i/mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888.       

YMCA  NOW  HIRING  After  School  teachers 
and  drivers.  Must  have  3-6  units  in  educa- 
tion^related  Held.  Fax  Resume  to  Laura  310- 
575-0271. 


8000 

IntrHiiships. 


Dr  MARTEN'S  AIRWAIR 

INTERNSHIP  Leading  footwear  manufac- 
ture saaks  ambitious,  creative  interns  for 
street  mwhadng  team,  for  nr>ore  info  call  Ja- 
net  310-450-6396.  - 

FREE  ARTS  FOB  ABUSED  CHILDREN  IS 
SEEKING  UNPAID  INTERNS.  PLEASE 
CONTACT  KARINAAT  310-313-4ART 

INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

P0ST-P»*ODUCTlON  INTERNSHIP  and 
student  f«m  projects.  CM  Joel:310-828- 
2292. 

INTERNSHIP.  PUBLISHING  HOUSE. 
PR/MMgTEd.  Relaxed,  fun  atmosphere. 
JrJSr.  dass  credit.  Fax  323-939-1855.  e-mail 
pubboofcsOaol.com. 

SALES  ASSISTANT/INTERN.  Short  term. 
Maka  screening  calls,  assistance.  Flextole 
morning  hours.  WIN  train.  Great  for  business 
major  or  MBA  grad  student.  Pay  |10-$12Air. 
Culver  City.  Julia:3 10-996^)4 17. 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  1+2BEDROOM 
$895«UP  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM. 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS.  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PKX)  BUS 
310-639-6294. 


*   PALMS   • 


280,  aSA  TOWNHOME,  FP. 

CENTRAL  AIRACM;  GATED 

GARAGE.  SEC.  ALARM.  CAT  OK 

3614  FARIS  DR. 

$139S/MO 


*    MAR  VISTA   * 


2  BO,  2  BATOWNHOME.  FP, 

CENTRAL  AHVHEAT,  GATED 

GARAGE.  SEC.  ALARM.  CAT  OK 

11931  AVON  WAY 
$1295/MO 

(310)391-1076 

Onoho  Managor 

(310)  837-0906 

i^anMDuee  Mon-Sal  10  -  4  PM 


PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $575.  $600deposit 
1 -year  lease  only  Stove,  refrig., carpets,  vert 
blinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message.  8am- 
5pm  only. 

Santa  Moriica  Ibd/IWh,  living  room,  partdng 
space,  storage,  kitchen  w/oven  &  refridg 
$1000/mo.  Zay  310-541-2887. 

SPECTACULAR  OCEAN  VIEW.  Ibdmi.  up- 
per. Hardwood  floors,  2  bioda  from  Main 
St.4  beach.  2627  3rd  St  #4.  Santa  Monica 
$1700.  310-899-9580. 

WALK  TO  UCLA.  WESTWOOD.  Large  1+1, 
2+2.  Pool,  Jacuzzi,  walk-in  ctosets,  fireplace! 
full-kitchen,  gated  garage.  Instant  broadband 
avail,  www.keltontowers.oom.  310-208- 
1976. 


^ESJWOOD/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2bdmrV1bth.  Largo,  laundry  enctosed 
^rage.  bateony,  large  ctosets,  near  buses 
bhn(te  Charming,  bright,  quiet  buiidtoig.  310- 


d 


BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdmV3bth.  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdmV3bth.  $2950.  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heaL  Alarm,  gated  partdng. 
Spacious,  carpet.  Prime  tocationi  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 


BRENTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

Luxury  buiWIng,  pool,  partdng,  gated  entry, 
laundry,  one  and  two  bedrooms  from 
$1500/month.  310-312-1223. 

BRENTWOOD 

North  of  Wishire,  spactous  3B0/26ath.  w/ 
aeparale  patto.  New  dishwasher,  refrigerator. 
stowa,  etc.  Quiet  8-unlt  bidg.  w/  garden  sun- 
deck.  $2300.  11921  Goshen  Ave.  #1.  Open 
Sat/Sun  or  by  appt.  310-571-0293. 


WLA  ONE  BEDROOM  one  bath.  Ohto  and 
Butler.  Large  Hving  room.  Carpet  and  drapes 
Rofridge  and  stove.  Laundry,  Secured  buiW- 
^.  2m«le8  from  UCLA.  Near  shopping  and 
bus.  $770/mo.  310^70-2122. 


8600 

Condo/Towiihoiise  for  Rout 


BRENTWOOD  1B0RM«BTH.  securtty 
buikflng^rage,  sunny  w/view.  pool/Jacuzzi, 
suana/gym.  large  doaels.  vacant  11/5.  lease 
$1275Mk).  310-471-1336. 


8700 

Coiulo/Trnvnhotise  for  S.ik; 


IMAGINE  OWNING  WILSHIRE  Cortdor/HI- 
Rise  single,  lor2bdrm  $75K-$150K.  Walk  to- 
UCLA/Village,   24hr/security.   Spectacular 
views,  pool,  Jacuzzi,  sauna,  valet  aaririce 
Agent-Bob  310-478-1835ext.109. 


8800 

Giiosttioiiso  for  P^.'iit 


9300 

R(jom  for  Help 


FREE  PRIVATE  ROOM+BATH.  Skigle  lather 
needs  mature  student  lor  p/l  help  with  4-yr- 
oM  twins.  20hrs/wl(,  must  own  car+in- 
surance.  310-838-5720.  JahanOmedl- 
aone.net. 

-~^.      FREE  ROOM 
AND  BOARD 

In  exchange  for  bat>y8ltting  ll-year-oM  giri 
approximately  10  hours/week.  Century  City 
area.  Females  only.  310-277-8480  (even- 
ings)^  

MOTHER'S  HELPER  in  exchange  tor  room. 
Shop,  cook  for  family  6-iOhra^vk.  1-2days. 
No  experience  Time  arranged.  Msl  310-471- 
1671,  evenings  best. 


9AOO 

Room  for  RimU 


LOOKING  FOR  PVT  ROOM  lor  rent  Max 
$350.00/mo  -HJtllMes  In  Santa  Monka/West- 
wood.  Clean,o(ganlzed.responsa>le  sentor 
student.  Partdng  needed.  CaH  John  626-201- 
6553. 

WANTED:  Quiet  male  gradute  student. 
Lovely  bedroom  w/mtorowave  and  fridge. 
A/C.  near  bus.  Lease,  quiet,  references. 
$450/mo.  310-312-0669. 

WtSTWOO.  Walk  to  UCLA  Male-Only. 
Large,  private  furnished  bdrm  w/bath. 
Kitchen  privileges,  laundry,  partdng. 
$700/month.  Another  room  $600/month 
310-473-5769. 


9500 

Rooiniii.iKjs-Priv.iti;  Room 


ASIAN«UIET/CLEAN/MALE.  Bus  In  front 
house,  Westwood'Pteo.  3-mo.  min  stay  Re- 
quired 2  good  references.  Private  bedroom 
sharebath.  $650mionth.  share  bed^th  In- 
dudes  utiiities.  $40/day  31 0-475-8787. 

FREE  RENT  FOR  PSYCH/MEO/SPECIAL 
ED  graduate  student  to  share  2bdrm/2bth 
apartment  with  learning  disabled  adult  in 
WestLA.  Call  Stan  1-800-843-3658. 


OWN  BED  AND  BATH  In  bright  and  upper 
Brentwood  apt.  High  ceiling,  bakx)ny  non- 
smoker,  tove  cats,  street  partdng.  $658/ma 
310-820-9660.  .^ 

PARK  LA  BREA  Large  IbdmVIWh.  Very 
cjean,  one  neat  person,  female.  $600/mo. 
213-391-4044. 

ROOMMATE  WANTED  Private  room/,  bath- 
room. 3mi.  from  UCLA.  Upper  front  unit 
apartment,  ntee  locatkxi,  near  Beveriy  Hills. 
CailArash,  310-567-3085. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt.  Fun.  outgoing 
female  tooking  tor  female  roommate!  Own 
bed/bath  in  2bdnn/2bth  apartment,  gated 
partdng.  Jacuzzi  on  roof,  security  buiWing. 
Available  1A)1,  $900/mo.  310-209-2665. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE:  Fumished  Room  in 
great  2bd,  1/3rd  mi  campus  Historic 
Btock,Fireplace,  Books,  Musk;.  Mature  per- 
son to  mind  apartment,  cats  when  other 
occupant  travels.  Maid,  Utiiities  included. 
$670.  310-206-6606. 


9600 

Roomm;il<;s-Sli;ir(!(l  Room 


MAR  VtSTA.  Roommate  wanted,  male. 
Large  2bdrm  apt.  FuHy  fumished.  #14  SM 
Bus  line.  $300/mo.  310-302-1258. 

WESTWOOD.  KeHon  Ave.  2+1.  Hardwood 
floors,  large  bedroom,  living,  kitchen. 
$450/mo.  Well  fumished.  Smoking  OK.  310- 
443-9585. 

WESTWOOD:  gorgeous  Wdshlre  apartnoent 
10  minutes  from  UCLA.  Huge  bedroom  to 
share  in  2br.  apartment  AvaHabie  nowl  CaH 
310-234-8627. 


9700 

Sublets 


Private  room  &  Bath  In  large  Townhouse 
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KILLER  VIEW— share  Wilshire  Blvd 
2BR/2BA  hi-riso  apt.  w/  prof,  male  securtty, 
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For  more  info  call  (310)  825-2221 

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.It  118  Kerckhoff  Hall 


Allergy  Sufferers 


Uv  ;>  \  Arm  you  of  Japanoso  DomeoniT 

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50       Monday,  Ortobff  9, 2000 


w->*vi! 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


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liinif  GRADES  .Mi.  BOOSTP 

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I 


Hh  I 


CU  student  A( 

presents 


Society 


The  Twentieth  Annual 


IMeet  file  Rrms  NigM 


Wednesday,  October  18,  2000  at  7:00 p.m. 

Starlight  Grand  Ballroom 
Fairmont  Miramar  Hotel  in  Santa  Monica 


Attending  this  event  wUI  lie 
Tiie  Big  Hve,  Mid-ller,  and  Local  Finns. 

RSVP  by  Friday,  October  13tb 

Invitations  are  available  in  Anderson  D413 
For  more  information,  please  contact  Patty  at  pkclover<ikiu 

PrinHng  Courtesy  of  ^Qtfl&i 


v 


,     V 


11835  Wilshire  Blvd. 

(310)477-7550 

21  &  Over  with  ID 


VISIT  YOUR  CAMPUS  MSEUEII  FOR 

SPfCUL  BUOmON  MtfCmo  ON 
ADOBT  PRODUCm 


Catch  all  NFL 

Games  on  Satellite 

20  TVs 


Sunday,  10am-6pm 

$7.50  Import  Pitchers    ' 
$5.50  Domestic  Pitchers 

Breakfast  Specials 
6pm  to  close  FREE  POOL 

Monday-Friday 

$7.50  Import  Pitchers 

$5.50  Domestic  Pitchers 

$4.50  Lunch  Special 

11:30-4pm  ^    ^ 

"  Ihr FREEPOOL    .. 

Monday 

Monday  Night  Football 
1/2  price  Beer  Pitchers 
FREE  Hot  Dogs  5-8pm 

Tuesday 

Starving  Student  Night 
$3.00  Burger  w/fries 
$2.00  Beer  Special 
(Manager's  Choice) 

lirs  Available  for  Private  Parties 


■^?W" 


FOOTBALL 

From  page  51 

-At  Blacksburg,  Va.,  Michael 
Vick  had  a  subpar  day  -  one  TD  rush- 
ing, one  passing  and  217  total  yards  - 
but  the  Hokies  easily  avenged  a 
shocking  home  loss  to  the  Owls  in 
1998.  Vick  threw  two  interceptions, 
lost  a  fumble  and  was  sacked  four 
times. 

Freshman  cornerback  Eric  Green, 
in  his  first  start,  intercepted  two  pass- 
es and  Tech  held  Temple  to  1 16  yards. 

"Sometimes  things  just  weren't 
coming  together,"  Vick  said.  "The 
first  interception  was  a  bad  read.  The 
second  one,  I  was  trying  to  make  too 
much  happen.  The  fiimbles,  I  don't 
know  what  to  say  about  that." 


NFL  ■"^::;;::r':/..;..::  ,:^ 

From  page  55     ! 

goal. 

After  Owens'  touchdown  put  the 
49ers  up  7-6,  Garcia  found  Rice  with 
a  5-yard  scoring  pass  before  half- 
time.  The  scoring  drive  was  marked 
by  Garcia's  33-yard  pass  to  Tai 
Streets. 

Whcatley's  I -yard  scoring  run 
and  Gannon's  scamper  on  the  2- 
point  conversion  it  at  14  midway 
through  the  third  quarter. 

The  49ers  were  threatening  on  the 
next  series,  but  Garner  again  fum- 
bled the  ball  and  Grady  Jackson 
recovered  on  the  Oakland  20.  On  the 
same  scries,  Gannon  hit  Andre 
Rison  with  a  35-yard  pass,  and  then 
hit  Brown  with  the  30-yard  TD  pass. 
Gannon,  who  had  a  similar  sec- 
ond-half against  Indianapolis  earlier 
this  season,  opened  the  final  quarter 
with  a  13-yard  touchdown  run. 

Owens  kept  his  "celebration  in 
check  again  on  a  31 -yard  canth-and- 
run  in  the  final  quarter,  as  the  49ers 
mounted  their  comeback.  Then, 
after  Pierson  Prioleau's  intercep- 
tion. Gamer  caught  a  9-yard  pasii. 
from  Garcia  to  tie  it  at  28. 

With  less  than  five  minutes  to  go, 
Janikowski  missed  a  41 -yard  field 
goal  that  went  wide  left,  > 


CAL 

From  page  55 

longest  run  of  his  career.  "We  drive 
the  ball  and  do  all  the  right  things,  but 
we  can't  finish." 

Arizona  State  got  out  to  its  45 
before  the  drive  stalled,  and  Cal  got 
the  ball  back  with  time  to  score  when 
John  Klotsche  blocked  a  punt. 

Goodman's  inexperience  showed 
in  an  1  l-of-28  performance,  including 
an  interception.  But  he  averaged 
nearly  36  yards  per  completion  - 
almost  as  many  has  his  42-yard  total 
in  the  bowl  game  10  months  earher. 


"I've  never  had  a 

player  throw  almost 

400  yards  on  11 

completions.* 

Bruc«  Snyd«r 

Arizona  State  coach 


"I've  never  had  a  player  throw 
almost  400  yards  on  1 1  completions," 
Snyder  said.  "And  the  receivers  did  a 
nice  job  of  running  through  the  sec- 
ondary to  make  those  catches." 

Cal's  Kyle  Boiler  passed  the  Bean 
to  a  24-23  upset  of  Arizona  State  last 
year  in  his  first  collegiate  start.  But  he 
was  only  12^-27  for  127  yards  in  this 
game,  and  the  Bears  hurt  thenueKct 
with  12  penalties,  10  in  the  first  half 
when  the  Sun  Devils  opened  a  16-3 


\ 


FOOTBALL 

From  page  58 

nine  teams  have  at  least  two  losses. 

Ohio  State  finishes  against  No.  18 

Michigan  on  Nov.  18;  Northwestern 

;  plays  host  to  the  Wolverines  on  Nov. 

■•■■4. 

Big  12 

,  V  Nebraska  (5-0,  2-0),  Kansas  State 
(6^,  2-0)  and  Oklahoma  (5-0.  2-0) 
still  have  to  go  head-to-head.  The 
Sooners  visit  the  Wildcats  on 
Saturday;  the  Huskers  are  at 
Oklahoma  on  Oct.  28,  then  travel  to 
Kansas  State  on  Nov.  1 1.  After  the 
Big  12  division  champs  are  decided, 
two  of  these  three  teams  likely  will 
meet  for  the  conference  crown  on 
Dec.  2. 

P«C-10  "'-■■■'■'■'',:■■[■'■■■■ 

■:';  The  wacky  Pac-10  ran  out  of 
unbeatens  when  Washington  held  off 
No.  23  Oregon  State  33-30  late 
Saturday  night.  Two  teams  -  No.  22 
Arizona  (4-1,  2-0)  and  Oregon  (4-1,  2- 

0)  -  are  left  unbeaten  in  league  play. 
The  Wildcats  are  at  the  Ducks  on 
Oct.  21.  Don't  count  out  the  Beavers 
(4-1,  1-1)  or  the  Huskies  (4-1,  1-1)  in 
the  Rose  Bowl  race.  . " 

SEC 

The  SEC  is  out  of  unbeatens,  too, 
after  No.  15  Mississippi  State's  17-10 
victory  over  No.  19  Auburn  on 
Saturday.  The  SEC  East  looks  like  it 
will  be  decided  when  Florida  (5-1,  3- 

1)  and  No.  14  Georgia  (4-1.  2-1)  play 
on  Oct.  28  in  Jacksonville,  but  don't 
forget  about  No.  24  South  Carolina 
(5-1,  3-1).  Lou  Holtz's  Gamecocks, 
who  have  beaten  Georgia,  play  at 
Florida  on  Nov.  1 1.  The  SEC  West  is 
wide  open  with  Auburi)  (5-1,  3-1), 
Mississippi  State  {4-1,  2-1)  and 
Mississippi  (4-1,  2-1)  leading  the 
pack. 

TCU,  led  byyHeisman  Trophy 
hopeful  LaDainiui  Tomlinson, 
remained  unl?eaten  with  a  41-21  win 
over  Hawaii,  and  have  a  clear  path  to 
an  11-0  season.  However,  a  weak 
schedule  will  hurt  the  Homed  Frogs 
in  the  BCS  standings  and  probably 
ke^p  them  out  of  the  title  game  even 
if  they  are  the  only  team  left  without  a 
loss. 

On  Saturday: 

-Another  classic  was  staged  at  the 
Orange  Bowl  as  Ken  Dorsey  threw  a 
13-yard  touchdown  pass  to  Jeremy 
Shockey  with  46  seconds  left  and  the 
Hurricanes  survived  when  Matt 
Munyon  missed  a  49-yard  field  goal 
attempt  -  wide  right,  what  else?  -  on 
the  game's  final  play. 

"How  much  better  a  feeling  can 
there  be  after  all  the  losses,  all  the 
heartbreak?"  linebacker  Dan 
Morgan  as  the  Canes  ended  a  five- 
game  losing  streak  against  the 
Seminoles.  "This  is  the  best  feeling  of 
my  life." 

Dorsey  was  27-of-42  for  328  yards 
and  two  TDs,  while  the  Seminoles' 
Chris  Weinke,  playing  with  a  protec- 
tive covering  over  his  sore  left  ankle, 
was  29-of-59  for  496  yards,  three  TDs 
and  two  interceptions. 

"It's  a  hard  one  to  swallow," 
Weinke  said  after  the  Canes  ended 
the  Seminoles'  17-game  winning 
streak  and  his  personal  25-game  win- 
ning streak  as  a  starter. 

-At  Ames,  Iowa,  Eric  Crouch 
totaled  302  yards  and  ran  for  a  late 
TD  as  the  Huskers'  pass  defense 
looked  shaky  again. 

Sage  Rosenfels  threw  for  346 
yards  and  two  TDs  for  Iowa  State  (4- 
1. 1-1 ),  which  is  still  off  to  its  best  start 
in  20  years.  But  Nebraska  had  four 
TDs  in  the  fourth  quarter  to  pull 
away.  The  Huskers  have  now  allowed 
each  of  their  last  three  opponents  to 
pass  for  more  than  250  yards. 

"We're  still  undefeated  and  I  feel 
our  players  have  responded  really 
well,"  Huskers  coach  Frank  Solich 
said.  "There's  only  about  half  of  the 
season  gone.  We've  got  a  lot  of  foot- 
ball to  play.  There's  a  lot  of  them 
dropping  by  the  wayside  as  far  as 
undefeated  teams  go." 


V 


Daily  Bniin  Sports 


Mond«y,0ctobef9,2000       51 


I  Call  825-21 61  to  aftverttse 


Coming  soon.. 


Fifth 
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W.SOCCER 

From  page  60 


So  we  talked  about  that  at  halftime. 
We  didn't  it  want  it  to  be  a  'woulda- 
coulda-shoulda'  icind  of  deal." 

There  was  a  feeling  that  it  would 
only  be  a  matter  of  time  before  one  of 
the  Bruin  chances  would  land  in  the 
net,  and  in  the  69th  minute,  it  did. 
Freshman  Lindsay  Greco  parked  one 
in  the  left  side  of  the  net  after  a  con- 
voy of  four  Bruin  forwards  sliced 
through  the  Trojan  defense. 

UCLA  outshot  use  30-14  but 
could  muster  only  one  goal.  The  lack 
of  capitalization  disappointed  Greco, 
"i  thought  we  should  have  done 
better.  It  feels  like  a  loss,"  she  said.  "I 
thought  we  were  the  better  team.  We 
had  more  opportunities." 

After  90  minutes  of  regulation 
without  a  winner,  the  teams  were 
noticeably  lethargic  as  the  pace  of  the 
game  turned  from  frantic  to  sluggish. 
"Whenever  these  teams  get  togeth- 
er, it's  a  war,"  USC  head  coach  Jim 
Millinder  said.  "(When  overtime 
began)  I  said,  'the  game  is  about  guts 
right  now.  Everybody's  tired,  but 
mentally  you've  got  to  prepare  your- 
self because  it  could  be  another  30 
minutes,'  which  it  was  today." 

Both  teams  moved  the  ball  into  the 
opposing  zone  well  in  the  two  over- 
time periods,  but  it  was  the  Bruins 
who  were  unable  to  score  off  of  two 
direct  kicks  from  Tracey  Milburn,  the 


second  sailing  just  above  the  cross- 
bar. 

"Both  teams  created  a  lot  of 
chances,  and  it's  just  a  knock-down- 
drag-out,  which  it  usually  is  with  these 
two  teams,"  Ellis  said.  "I  think  any 
time  you  play  against  a  good  team,  it 
stretches  us.  We  now  know  that  we 
have  to  play  well  to  get  results." 

UCLA  was  once  again  unable  to 
win  at  USC,  something  the  team  has- 
n't done  since  1994.  Ellis  said  the  tie 
means  that  her  team  will  have  to  win 
the  rest  of  its  games  to  win  the  Pac-10. 
In  the  first  of  its  two  weekend 
matches,  UCLA  disposed  of 
Marquette  5-1  Friday  night  at 
Spaulding  Field  behind  goals  from 
five  diftierent  players. 

Milburn,  Breana  Boling, 
Stephanie  Rigamat,  Brittany  Whalen 
and  Staci  Duncan  all  joined  in  on  the 
scoring  brigade  as  the  Bruins  closed 
out  the  non-conference  season  with 
their  ninth  consecutive  win. 

"The  level  doesn't  drop  when  we 
make  subs,"  UCLA  assistant  coach 
Lisa  Shattuck  said.  "It's  a  luxury  that 
we  have  and  we're  utilizing  it." 

Junior  goalkeeper  CiCi  Peterson 
gave  up  her  first  goal  in  her  last  seven 
games,  but  the  Bruins  had  already 
jumped  out  to  a  4^  lead  over  the 
Golden  Eagles. 

After  a  frustrating  start  to  the  con- 
ference season  with  the  tie  against  the 
Trojans,  UCLA  returns  home  next 
weekend  for  matches  against  Oregon 
State  and  Oregon. 


Krista  Boling  strealcs  past  a  Marquette  player  in  a  5-1  win.  The 
Bruins  also  tied  USC  1-1  on  Sunday. 


EOMMOLM 


PLAYOFFS 

From  page  59 

days'  rest  or  using  left-hander 
Glendon  Rusch  in  Game  4,  but  stuck 
with  Jones. 

"If  he  needed  vindication,  I'm 
glad  he  got  it,"  Valentine  said. 
"People  like  to  look  at  the  speed  gun 
and  say  he's  not  an  upper-echelon 
pitcher.  But  it's  what  he  does  with 
that  84  mph  fastball  that  torments 
people." 

Jones  made  the  decision  pay  off. 
He  baftled  the  Giants  with  big  break- 
ing curveballs  that  didn't  even  reach 
70  mph.  He  struck  out  Bonds  twice  - 
both  to  big  ovations  -  and  retired  the 
first  12  batters  before  Kent's  double 
over  Ventura's  head  down  the  left- 
field  line. 

"1  figured  we  would  pop  one," 
Giants  manager  Dusty  Baker  said. 
"It  wasn't  a  one-hitter  where  he  was 


completely  dominating.  We  hit  some 
balls  hard.  He  pitched  a  great  game 
and  pitched  to  his  defense." 

One  of  the  biggest  decisions  in  the 
game  came  in  the  fifth  inning.  San 
Francisco  loaded  the  bases  with  two 
outs  and  Gardner  coming  up.  With  a 
weary  bullpen,  Baker  chose  to  let  his 
pitcher  hit,  and  Gardner  popped  out 
to  second  base. 

"I  figured  we'd  get  some  runs," 
Baker  said.  "I  don't  regret  it.  If  you 
don't  have  a  full  bullpen,  you  don't 
have  a  full  bullpen." 

Making  the  move  even  worse,  the 
Mets  knocked  Gardner  out  with  two 
runs  in  the  bottom  of  the  fifth.  With 
one  out,  Jones  swung  and  missed  at 
strike  three  in  the  dirt,  but  reached 
first  on  a  wild  pitch. 

Late-season  callup  Timo  Perez  fol- 
lowed with  a  double  to  the  right-field 
corner,  his  fifth  hit  of  the  series. 
Edgardo  Alfonzo  hit  a  two-run  dou- 
ble to  center  to  make  it  4-0. 


W.CROSS 

From  page  59 

Stanford  restored  much  of  the  team's 
confidence.  There,  the  Bruins  fin- 
ished fifth,  losing  only  to  teams 
ranked  13th  or  higher  in  the  country. 
"We  had  just  run  terrible  at 
Minnesota  and  there  was  a  consider- 
able amount  of  pressure,"  Bowen 
said.    "Quite   honestly,    we   were 


scared. 

"For  some  teams,  if  you  run  poor- 
ly once,  it  could  be  the  season.  What 
was  so  cool  about  Stanford  was  that 
we  were  able  to  come  back.  It 
showed  confidence." 

The  Bruins  will  rest  next  weekend 
before  competing  at  the  FuUerton 
Invitational  on  Oct.  20. 

The  Pac-10  Championships  are  on 
Oct.  28  and  the  Western  Regionals 
will  be  on  Nov.  1 1. 


W.VOLLEYBALL 

From  page  60 

game  winning  streak,  the  match  still 
goes  down  as  a  loss  in  the  UCLA 
record  book. 

"Probably  our  sole  consolation  is 
taking  a  game  off  of  'SC," 
Banachowski  continued.  "They  were 
pretty       proud 

about    the    fact      ^ 

that  they  hadn't  ^ 

lost  a  game  yet, 

though  I  would 

have    liked    to 

have    gotten    a 

couple  more." 

The      match 
started  with  'SC 
rattling  off  four 
unanswered 
points  before  the 
Bruins     posted 
their  first  point 
of  the  match. 

With  Porter  on  the  sideline  for  the 
game's  first  fourteen  points  because 
she  violated  team  rules,  the  Bruins 
mixed  up  their  offensive  positions  to 
accomiai33ate  the  change  in  line-up. 

Freshman        setter        Krystal 
McFarland  stepped  into  the  line-up 
and  posted  three  kills,  seven  digs  and 
one  block  assist  in  her  first  start  as  a 
Bruin. 

"Krystal  is  one  of  our  next-best  ball 
handlers  and  that's  what  we  wanted, 
to  be  a  better  ball-handling,  digging 
team  out  there  on  the  court  tonight," 
Banachowski  said. 

Though  Porter  didn't  step  onto  the 
court  until  the  score  was  11-3,  she 
swung  for  a  match-high  30  kills,  the 
12th  time  she's  done  so  in  her  career. 
But  even  Porter's  numbers  could- 
n't bring  UCLA 
to  victory.  '  ' 

Game      one 
highlighted  hard 
hitting  from  the 
Trojans   and^/a 
battle  from<'the 
Bruins  ^con- 
vert   a^  point. 
Aftcp-     posting 
onf  point  on  the 
board,     UCLA 
did    not    earn     ________^__ 

another  until 
USC  took  nine 
away  from  them. 

Outside  hitter  Ashley  Bowles  pow- 
ered away  at  the  back  line,  serving  for 
seven  of  the  Bruins'  1 1  total  points, 
including  two  aces.  Bowles  also  added 
four  kills  and  five  digs  in  game  one. 
Middle  blocker  Elisabeth  Bachman 
also  established  herself  as  a  steady 
force  in  game  one,  consistently  nail- 
ing the  quick  back  set  from  Erika 
Seisor  and  racking  up  six  kills  and  one 
solo  block  in  the  game. 

USC  took  the  second  game  15-11 
as  well,  despite  the  quick  5-1  lead  that 
the  Bruins  had.  Once  the  Trojans  took 
the  lead  at  6-5,  they  never  looked 
back. 

But  after  the  break  in  between 
nes  two  and  three,  the  Bruins  came 
ck  to  play  like  they  knew  they 
)»uld. 
It  was  Porter's  time  to  shine  and 


"Once  we  took  a  game, 

I  thought  we'd  be  able 

to  steam  roll  that  and 

take  the  match." 

Andy  Banachowski 

Head  coach 


she  seemed  to  use  the  crowd  to  pump 
her  up. 

Tallying  12  of  her  30  kills  in  game 
three  alone.  Porter  was  all  over  the 
court,  and  notched  five  digs,  one  solo 
block  and  one  block  assist  along  the 
way. 

UCLA  took  game  three  15-8, 
which  featured  the  highest  UCLA 
team  hitting  percentage  of  that  night 

at  .400. 
_^^__^__  Breaking 

'SC's  38-game 
winning  streak 
and  holding  off  a 
defeat,  the 

Bruins    entered 
game  four,  again 
with  their  backs 
against  the  wall. 
"We      made 
good^-  runs    at 
them      and      I 
thought  we  Were 
ready  to  take  a 
Banachowski  said, 
took  a  game,  I 


"The  Bruins  played 

an  outstanding  match 

and  we  played  well 

ourselves." 

Janae  Henry 

USC  outside  hitter 


game  from  them, 

"And  once  we  took  a 
thought  we'd  be  able  to  steam  roll  that 
and  take  the  match,  but  I  think  we  got 
a  little  tired  and  'SC  tightened  up  their 
defense  and  played  very  well." 

The  two  teams  kept  it  close,  UCLA 
tying  up  the  score  again  and  again  as 
the  numbers  climbed  to  five.  But  then 
the  Trojans  went  on  a  3-0  run  after  a 
series  of  widely-hit  balls  and  one  into 
the  block. 

USC  kept  scoring  and  the  Bruins 
kept  following  but  never  got  quite 
close  enough  to  take  the  game  away. 
Though  UCLA  held  the  Trojans  off 
from  nine  straight  game-point 
attempts,  while  the  Bruins  scored 
their  own  10th  and  11th  points,  the 
Trojans  proved  victorious  at  home. 
"It's  the  last  time  we  play  the 

Bruins  at  home. 

'~'"~^""^""""  As  a  senior,  it's 
big,"  USC  out- 
side hitter  Janae 
Henry  said.  "The 
Bruins  played  an 
outstanding 
match  and  we 
played  well  our- 
selves. I  don't 
have  a  word  to 
describe  how  I 
feel.  I'm  so  excit- 
ed." 
The     Trojan 


blockers  were  key  to  their  win,  finish- 
ing the  night  with  15  blocks  to 
UCLA's  nine.  For  USC  it  paid  off  to 
play  with  a  6-2  offense  where  a  taller 
player  rotates  in  when  a  setter  gets  to 
the  front  row. 

Though  the  Bruins  suffered  their 
second  conference  defeat,  they  played 
well  under  duress.  With  the  fans  and 
the  band  and  the  yellow  lights  that  are 
more  fitting  in  a  1950s  high  school 
gym,  the  UCLA  women's  volleyball 
team  proved  they  were  a  challenge  for 
a  very  talented  Trojan  squad. 

"I  think  we  showed  what  possibili- 
ties lie  ahead  for  us,"  Banachowski 
said. 

"(USC)  hit  really  well  and  got 
themselves  out  of  trouble.  We  put 
them  in  trouble  and  you've  got  to  give 
the  Trojans  credit  for  that." 

But  there's  always  next  time. 


W.GOLF 

From  page  58 

was  mainly  freshmen.  They  were  ner- 
vous." 

But  since  then,  she  has  played  up 
the  school's  name  and  made  the  team 
realize  that  being  the  gutty  little 
Bruins  is  something  UCLA  is  known 
for. 

"I  tried  to  get  them  to  understand 
that  this  is  UCLA  and  we  expect 
great  things  here,"  Leary  said.  "They 
seem  more  prepared  and  more  know- 
ing of  what  to  expect,  which  is  always 
helpful." 

Moffat  expects  that  the  practice 
they've  had  since  then,  as  well  as  the 
experience  the  Bruins  gained  at  that 
tournament,  will  help  them  be  ready 


for  the   Edean    Ihlanfeldt  in   the 
upcoming  days. 

"We're  pretty  confident  that  we 
can  do  well,"  she  said.  "We're 
putting  behind  us  our  finish  last  time. 
We  want  to  prove  to  ourselves  that 
we  are  a  better  team  than  we 
showed." 

And  even  though  they're  playing 
against  a  tough  field  and  must 
rebound  from  a  poor  finish,  the 
Bruins  have  still  set  their  goals  high 

"We're  always  aiming  to  win  the 
tournament,"  Moffat  said. 

This  will  be  difficult.  The  defend- 
ing champions  are  back  and  leading 
the  polls.  Last  year,  it  was  the  Women 
of  Troy,  now  ranked  third,  who  look 
the  tournament.  They  had  a  three- 
day  total  of  878,  lower  than  the  previ- 
ous tournament  record  of  881. 


finiy  Bruin  Sports 


Monday,  October  9, 2000       53 


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M.WATERPOLO 

From  page  60 


Kern  said.  "We 


better  all  around," 
were  letting  them 
get  possession  of 
the  ball  too  much. 
Once  we  overcame 
our  defensive  flaws, 
we  pushed  it  on  the 
counter  attack  and 
took  over." 

But  the  Bruins 

explain  their  defen-     ^ 

sive  failings  to  the  "  ~ 

high  emotions  of     '  ;  •;   ;.•■■. 
playing  such  a  game. 

"We  had  our  mental  lapses  in  our 


The  Bruins 

(attribute)  their 

defensive  fallings  to 

high  emotions. 


defense,  but  it  happens  sometimei 
when  you  have  a  game  like  this," 
Flesher  added. 

Next  weekend,  UCLA  faces  Cal  on 
Saturday  ind  Stanford  on  Sunday, 

when  they  travel  up 

"■''~"^— ""      to  the  Bay  Area. 

"This  is  one  of 
the  hardest  week- 
ends that  you  can 
have,  facing  these 
teams.  They  are  two 
of  the  top  teams  in 
the  country," 

Krikorian  said. 

But  the  Bruins 
will  head  into  the 
next  weekend  riding  high  on  the 
momentum  from  this  one. 


-4- 


"I  had  heard  someone 

say/Kristee  sucks/ and  I 

just  looked  back  at 

them." 

Kristee  Porter 

Junior  outside  hitter 


SIDEBAR  ' 

Frompage60       v   ^" -i:     v.- 

Trojans.  UCLA  expected  USC  to  try 
and  dissolve  any  confidence  they  had 
from  the  very  start.  But  Porter's  mere 
presence  on  the  court  ignited  her  team- 
mates to  battle  back  from  near  annihi- 
lation to  close  the  margin  to  14-11 
before  the  Bruins  lost  that  game  15-11 

Porter  tried 
to  find  her  — — ■^— n^— 
comfort  zone 
in  game  two, 
notching  nine 
of  the  Bruins' 
16  team  kills 
and  making 
four  key  defen- 
sive digs  to 
keep  rallies 
alive.  But 

use's  strong     

net  play  result-  "~~~~~^~'~~~ 
ed  in  a  carbon 

copy  result:  15-11  in  favor  of  the 
Trojans.  The  Bruins  knew  that  they 
would  have  to  dig  deep  to  climb  out  of 
this  hole. 

"We  have  to  play  hard  every  point," 
Porter  said.  "We  need  to  stay  level- 
headed and  not  forget  what  our  assign- 
ments are.  We  can't  get  carried  away 
right  out  of  the  block." 

Looking  to  avoid  a  sweep.  Porter 
decided  to  take  matters  into  her  own 
hands  -  with  a  little  help  from  the 
crowd.  Midway  through  the  crucial 
third  game,  the  USC  student  body 
began  the  chant  of,  "Kristee  sucks." 

Pbrter  received  a  set  on  the  ensuing 
possession  from  junior  Erika  Selsor 
and  hammered  it 

home      for      a 

wicked  kill.  It  was 
a  phenomenal  hit 
for  the  first-time 
observer,  but 
anyone  who  has 
seen  her  knows 
that  hit  is  a  Porter 
trademark  that 
brings  the  back- 
row  of  opposing 
defenses  to  their 
knees. 


Wildcat  player  screamed  through  the 
net  direcdy  into  Porter's  face  during  a 
match,  stating  a  negative  opinion  of  the 
Bruins.  The  Tyler,  Texas  native  took 
the  Arizona  player's  words  to  heart  as 
Porter  had  36  kills,  a  .409  hitting  aver- 
age and  19  digs  as  UCLA  defeated 
then-No.  18  Arizona  3-2  to  maintain  an 
undefeated  conference  record. 

Few  opponents  since  have  dared 
tried  the  tactic  of  fueling  a  fire  within 
Porter  as  a  means 
of  mentally  psych- 
ing  out   the   AII- 
American. 

"I    had    heard 
someone  say, 

'Kristee  sucks,'  and 
that  kind  of  got  me 
mad,"  Porter  said. 
"For  some  of  us, 
the  crowd  is  a  big 
deal  and  for  some 
_^_________      of  us  it's  not.  But 

that  upset  me  and  I 
just  looked  back  at 
them." 

Porter  had  an  amazing  12  kills 
against  the  Trojans  in  game  three  alone 
on  23  attacks. 

And  all  of  sudden,  the  Bruins  were 
charging  the  net,  catching  breaks  and 
playing  with  a  sense  of  confidence  that 
had  the  Trojans  on  their  heds.  UCLA 
looked  to  completely  overw^lm  the 
USC  attack  and  with  a  go-to  hitter  in 
Porter,  the  Bryins  seemed  in  control  in 
a  match  against  the  conference  leader. 

UCLA  started  game  four  in  similar 
fashion,  with  a  mini-nm  of  6-3  to  get 
out  of  the  blocks.  The  Bruins  continu- 
ally went  to  Porter,  punishing  USC  for 
seven  kills  in  game  four.  But  the 
Trojans  adjusted 


Regardless,  UCLA 
served  notice  to  the 

rest  of  the  country 
that  they  are  a  team 
to  be  reckoned  with. 


Not  to  be  shown  up  by  the  crowd. 
Porter  turned  and  conducted  a  quick 
staredown. 

The  crowd  quickly  uproared,  won- 
dering what  ri^t  she  had  to  do  this. 
Meanwhile.  UCLA  associate  athfetic 
director  Betsy  Stephenson,  on-hand  to 
observe  the  contest  on  Friday,  immedi- 
ately located  Pac-IO  olTicials  to  inform 
them  that  these  actions  had  no  place  in 
the  game.  Several  fans  were  escorted 
out  of  the  building  in  response. 

Meanwhile,  an  unfazed  Porter  and 
the  rest  of  the  Bruins  proceeded  to  turn 
around  game  three  with  consistent 
defense,  great  setting  and  clutch  put- 
awaysenroutetoa  1 5-8  game  victory - 
ending  a  38^ame  winning  streak  for 
the  Trojans.  The  last  time  Southern  Cal 
had  a  longer  streak,  that  also  fell  at  the 
hands  of  their  cross-town  rivals. 

"I  thought  it  was  great.  It  got  me 
pumped  up,"  Harley  said  of  Porter's 
play.  "We  should  get  lifted  when  some- 
one scores  a  big  point  or  someone 
makes  a  big  play." 

A  similar  incident  occurred  at 
Arizona  on  Oct.  22  of  last  year.  One 


to  the  change  in 
UCLA's  game- 
plan. 

Porter  began 
to  find  herself 
double-teamed  at 
the  net.  Twenty 
defensive  digs  by 
USC  showed 
their   intent    to 

- contain    Porter 

and  force  anoth- 
er Bruin  to  step 
up  and  beat  them.  But  eight  kills  by 
Lauren  Fendrick  were  just  not  enough 
to  stop  the  bleeding.  The  Trojans 
rebounded  to  capture  the  match- 
dinching  fourth  game  15-11  and  keep 
an  undefeated  record  of  1 3^  overall,  7- 
0  in  the  Pac-10. 

"I  don't  think  we  need  one  individ- 
ual to  get  us  into  that  mindset,"  Harley 
said  of  the  team's  lack  of  consistent 
intensity  at  key  points  of  the  match. 
"We  know  other  teams  are  going  to 
come  at  us  with  that  intensity,  so  we 
need  to  respond  with  the  same  on  our 
own." 

The  decision  for  Porter  to  not  start 
may  have  afiected  the  outcome  of  the 
match.  Regardless,  UCLA  served 
notice  to  the  rest  of  the  country  that 
they  are  a  team  to  be  reckoned  with. 

"It  definitely  won't  happen  again." 
Porter  said  of  the  violation  of  team 
rules  and  being  unable  to  start  the 
match. 

"We  all  know  (the  rules)  and  I  made 

a  mistake.  I  felt  really  bad  that  I  let 

.  down  the  team  like  that,  bittgave  it  my 

all  once  I  got  into  the  match,"  the  aaid. 


;;•■• 


// 


f 


■<M.  3«y*<^.>.-r  -^  -    J^J  fj.  ^ 


Raiders  plunder  fieid  in 
'Battle  of  the  Bay'  win 


FOOTBALL:  Both  lose  out 
on  missed  opportunities; 
49ers  gain  bacli  Owens 


By  AniMm  Peterson    . 

The  Associated  Press     '■     "•  ^^  -   ; ' 

SAN  FRANCISCO  -  While 
Terrell  Owens  poked  fun  at  himself, 
Tim  Brown  unassumingly  won  the 
Battle  of  the  Bay. 

Brown  caught  a  31 -yard  pass  from 
Rich  Gannon  in  overtime  Sunday  as 
Oakland  beat  San  Francisco  34-28 
for  the  Raiders'  best  sUrt  since  1995. 
Brown  had  seven  catches  for  172 
yards,  including  a  30-yard  TD  catch 
in  the  third  quarter. 

The    Raiders    won    soon    after 
Anthony   Dorsett   blocked   Wade 
Richcy's  29-yard  field-goal  attempt. 
The  game  could  have  been  called 
the  Blunder  of  the  Bay. 

The  game  was  marred  by  missed 
opportunities  and  mistakes,  includ- 
ing a  pair  of  missed  field  goals  by 
Sebastian  Janikowski  that  could 
have  given  the  AFC  West-leading 
Raiders  (4-1)  the  winning  edge  a  lot 
earlier. 

Tyrone  Wheatley  scored  on  a  1- 
yard  run.  Rich  Gannon  had  a  13- 
yard  keeper,  and  Janikowski  did  hit 
from  23  and  35  yards. 

Janikowski,  the  Raiders'  top  draft 
pick,  missed  a  41-yarder  with  less 
than  five  minutes  to  go  that  would 
have  broken  the  tie. 

Then  he  missed  35-yarder  in  over- 
time, a  questionable  attempt  that 
came  on  second-and  2.  The  kick 
went  wide  right. 

For  San  Francisco  (2-4),  Owens 
scored  on  31-  and  4-yard  passes  from 


Jeff  Garcia,  and  finished  with  176 
yards  on  12  receptions.  Jerry  Rice 
added  a  5-yard  TD  catch,  and 
Chariie  Gariux  bad  a  9-yard  scoring 
catch.  "'  ■  >  •; 

In  an  unusually  lighthearted 
moment,  Owens'  4-yard  touchdown 
catch  midway  through  the  second 
quarter  put  the  49ers  up  7-6.  He 
started  to  run  for  the  middle  of  the 
field  -  like  he  had  two  weeks  ago 
against  Dallas  -  then  he  abruptly 
stopped  and  shook  his  head  no.  The 
crowd  roared. 

It  was  Owen's  first  game  back 
since  a  weeklong  suspension  for  two 
fiamboyant  touchdown  celebrations 
against  the  Cowboys,  when  he  ran  to 
the  midfield  star  logo  at  Texas 
Stadium  and  taunted  the  fans. 
Owens  sat  out  the  49ers'  win  over 
Arizona. 

On  the  first  series  of  the  game,  the 
Raiders  recovered  Garner's  fumble 
on  the  49ers'  26.  But  the  49ers  stalled 
on  the  5,  and  Janikowski  kicked  a  23- 
yard  field  goal. 

The  Raiders  missed  a  chance  on 
their  next  possession.  On  first-and-IO 
at  their  own  29.  Napoleon  Kaufman 
was  completely  alone  on  the  left  side. 
But  the  speedy  running  back  could- 
n't hold  onto  Gannon's  pass. 

Later  in  the  first  quarter,  with  the 
Raiders  at  first-and-goal  on  the  9. 
Kaufman  fumbled  and  the  ball  was 
picked  up  by  49er  Bryant  Young.  ' 
Oakland  linebacker  Bobbie 
Brooks  blocked  Chad  Stanley's  punt 
and  the  Raiders  got  as  close  as  the  17. 
but  Gannon  didn't  see  Zack 
Crockett  wide  open  in  the  end  zone 
on  third  down  and  the  Raiders  set- 
tled for  Janikowski's  35-yard  field 

See  NH,  page  50 


Arizona  State  dominates 
Cal  Bears  in  i^c-1 0  game 


CONFERENa:  Goodman 
fills  in  as  quarterback; 
Sun  Devils  prevail,  30-10 


ByMdRciMMr 
The  Associated  Press 

TEMPE.  Ariz.  -  With  two  quarter- 
backs already  out.  Arizona  State 
coach  Bruce  Snyder  had  some  ques- 
tions about  No.  3. 

Griffin  Goodman  answered  them 
with  a  flourish, 
passing  for  394       '' 
yards  and  three      — — — — ^—i 
touchdowns  as 
the  Sun  Devils 
beat  California 
30-10  on 

Saturday. 

A  senior 
whose  only 
other  start  was 
in  a  23-3  loss  to 
Wake  Forest  in 
the  1999  Aloha 


"We  drive  the  ball  and 

do  all  the  right  things, 

but  we  can't  finish." 


Joe  lgb«r 

Cal  football 


Bowl.  Goodman  regained  the  job  by 
default  when  Jeff  Krohn  developed 
mononucleosis,  and  Ryan  Kealy  blew 
out  a  knee  in  a  38-3 1  loss  at  UCLA  last 
week. 

"We're  kind  of  expecting  Jeff  back 
next  week,  but  it's  comforting  to  know 
that  Griff* can  play  some  ball,"  Snyder 
said.  "There  are  some  things  we  want 
him  to  stay  away  from,  but  he  can 
throw  the  deep  ball." 

Goodman  has  the  strongest  arm 
among  the  quarterbacks,  and  the  Sun 
Devils  went  in  planning  to  throw 
deep. 

Goodman's  aeoring  passes  went  50 


yards  to  Todd  Heap.  68  to  Shaun 
McDonald  and  50  to  Donnie  O'Neal. 
He  also  had  a  54-yard  completion  to 
McDonald  that  set  up  Todd  Pace's  7- 
yardTDrun. 

He  didn't  get  to  play  quarterback  at 
nearby  Mesa  (Ariz.)  Mountain  View 
High  School  because  he  was  behind 
Joe  Germaine.  who  starred  at  Ohio 
State.  Then  Krohn.  a  redshirt  fresh- 
man, beat  Goodman  out  in  spring 
practice. 

He  said  he  went  into  the  game  with 
something  to  prove. 

"I've  always 
^^^^^^^^^      felt  I  could  do 
""""^"■""^     this." 
Goodman 
said. 

Mike  Barth 
had  a  35-yard 
field  goal  for 
Arizona  State 
(4-1.  1-1  Pac- 
10). 

Joe  Igber 
had  181  yards 
on    15  carries 


for  the  Golden  Bears  (1-4.  0-2).  but 
they  managed  only  a  27-yard  field  goal 
by  Mark  Jensen  until  Joseph  Schema 
capped  a  short  drive  with  a  I -yard 
plunge  with  6:05  left  in  the  game. 

The  Bears  lost  three  fumbles,  the 
last  after  an  80-yard  burst  by  Igber  to 
the  I -yard  line.  On  the  next  play,  Ryan 
Stanger  coughed  up  the  ball  when  hit 
by  Terrell  Suggs,  and  Nijrell  Eason 
recovered  for  the  Sun  Devils. 

"That's  just  our  season  in  a  nut- 
shell." said  Igber.  who  tripped  trying 
to  avoid  one  last  defender  on  the 


SMC«,M4e5ir 


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S6        Monday,  October  9, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


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Arizona  shuts  down  Trojan  iflfii^^ 


PAC-IO;  Wildcat  defense 
leads  to  five  turnovers, 
sacks;  USC  rank  drops 


By  Ken  Peter 

The  Associated  Press 

Arizona's  defense  played  like 
"Desert  Swarm"  again,  and  the 
Wildcats'  ofTense  also  came  up  big. 

Evoking  memories  of  the 
Wildcats'  dominant  defenses  during 
several  seasons  in  the  1990s,  Arizona 
held  No.  18  Southern  California  to  10 
yards  rushing,  logged  five  sacks  and 
forced  five  turnovers  in  a  31-15  victo- 
ry Saturday. 

Ortege  Jenkins  and  Clarence 
Fanner  provided  offensive  spark  for 
the  Wildcats  (4-1,  2-0  Pacific- 10) 
against  the  bumbling  Trojans  (3-2,  0- 
2),  who  were  booed  by  their  own  fans 
as  the  game  went  on. 

Jenkins  ran  for  two  scores  and 
hooked  up  with  Bobby  Wade  on  a  75- 
yard  touchdown  pass,  and  Farmer  -  a 
quick,  hard-running  freshman  - 
scored  on  an  80-yard  run  and  finished 
with  134  yards  on  22  carries. 

Jenkins'  long  scoring  pass  came  on 
the  third  play  of  the  game  and  started 
the  Wildcats  rolling  toward  a  21-0 
first-quarter  lead. 

"We  wanted  to  set  the  tone  for  the 
game  early,"  said  Jenkins,  who  ran  1 
yard  for  the  Wildcats'  second  TD  and 
added  a  4-yard  scoring  run  in  the 
third  quarter.  "It  has  usually  been  our 
defense  that  has  done  it,  but  we  want- 
ed to  this  time." 

Jenkins  passed  sparingly  after 

Arizona  took  its  big  lead,  finishing 

with  six  completions  in  12  throws. 

with  one  interception. 

Arizona  coach  Dick  Tomey  liked 


the  Wildcats'  fast  start,  but  worried  a 
bit  afterward. 

"I  thought  we  flattened  out  in  the 
second  quarter,  but  our  defense  still 
played  well.  It  looked  sometimes  that 
they  were  going  to  get  back  in  the 
game,  but  that  just  never  happened," 
Tomey  said. 

Arizona  defensive  end  Idris 
Haroon,  who  had  one  sack  and  recov- 
ered a  fumble,  said,  "We  are  attack- 
ing offenses.  We  just  want  to  bury 
them,  put  them  in  the  dirt." 

use's  Carson  Palma-  threw  three 
interceptions  -  two  made  by  Michael 
Jolivette  -  and  lost  a  fumble.  Palmer 
was  26-of-50  for  321  yards. 

The  Trojans  also  missed  two  field 
goals  and  had  both  their  PAT  kicks 
blocked. 


The  Coliseum  crowd 

booed  as  USC  lost  to 

an  underdog  for  the 

second  week  in  a  row. 


Many  in  the  Coliseum  crowd  of 
49,342  booed  as  USC  lost  to  an 
underdog  for  the  second  week  in  a 
row.  The  Trojans  were  ranked  eighth 
nationally  before  a  31-21  defeat  at 
Oregon  State  the  previous  weekend, 
their  first  loss  to  the  Beavers  in  33 
years. 

"There  is  not  a  whole  lot  to  say," 
Trojans  coach  Paul  Hackett  said.  "It 
was  the  same  scenario.  We  just  didn't 
come  out  in  the  first  quarter  and  play 
the  kind  of  football  that  we  need  to 
play. 

"It's  not  complicated.  We  just 


need  to  play  better.  At  this  point  in 
the  season,  there  is  no  excuse  for  it." 
The  Trojans'  scoring  came  on  a  1- 
yard  run  by  Petros  Papadakis  in  the 
second  quarter,  a  27-yard  field  goal 
by  John  Wall  in  the  third,  and  a  7-yard 
pass  from  Palmer  to  Matt  Nickels 
with  29  seconds  left  in  the  game. 

Wall  took  the  kicks  for  USC  after 
David  Newbury  missed  two  field 
goals  and  had  a  PAT  try  blocked  in 
the  first  half 

On  Arizona's  long  touchdown 
play  that  stunned  the  Trojans  early  in 
the  game.  Wade  got  a  step  behind  cor- 
nerback  Kris  Richard,  caught  the  ball 
in  stride  and  sprinted  the  final  30 
yards  to  the  end  zone.  It  was  the 
longest  completion  of  Jenkins' 
career,  and  also  Wade's  longest 
reception. 

Jenkins  gave  the  Wildcats  a  14-0 
lead  when,  on  fourth-and-goal  at  the 
USC  1,  he  faked  a  handoff  to  the  right 
and  sprinted  left,  going  untouched 
into  the  end  zone  with  6:59  left  in  the 
opening  quarter. 

Farmer,  a  6-foot,  224-poundcr, 
widened  Arizona's  lead  to  21-0  when 
he  took  a  handoff  and  started  to  his 
left,  cut  back  off  tackle  and,  slicing 
between  a  wall  of  blocks  by  the 
Wildcats'  offensive  left  side,  broke 
into  the  secondary  and  easily  outran 
the  USC  defenders. 

Jenkins'  second  scoring  run,  out  of 
the  shotgun,  made  it  28-9  with  5:10 
left  in  the  third  quarter,  and  Sean 
Keel  added  a  29-yard  field  goal  for 
Arizona  in  the  final  quarter.        " 

USC  was  without  leading  receiver 
Kareem  Kelly,  who  is  out  with  a  leg 
injury.  The  Trojans  also  lost  wide 
receiver  Marcell  Allmond  to  a  broken 
shin  bone  during  the  game.  He  is 
expected  to  be  sidelined  for  three 
months. 


Europeans  pull  out  well 
with  long  awaited  win 


SOLHEIM:  American  team 
accused  for  poor  display 
of  sportsmanship  in  loss 


The  Associated  Press 

LUSS,  Scotland  —  Europe  won  the 
Solheim  Cup  for  the  first  time  since 
1992,  beating  the  United  States  on 
Sunday  in  the  women's  version  of  the 
Ryder  Cup. 

Carin  Koch  of  Sweden  made  a  10- 
foot  birdie  putt  on  the  17th  hole  to 
secure  the  13  1/2  points  needed  to  beat 
the  Americans. 

Europe  won  the      — i^— .i^._, 
cup    14    1/2-11 
1/2  in  the  closest 
finish  in 

Solheim  history. 
"No  individ- 
ual champi- 
onship can  top 
this.  It's  the 
U.S.  Open  and 
British      Open 


The  Europeans  held 

on  after  taking  an 

unprecedented  4-0  lead 

in  Friday's  first  session. 


rolled  into  one,"  said  Laura  Davies, 
one  of  five  European  players  who  have 
participated  in  all  six  Solheims.  "It 
looked  like  we  had  blown  it,  it  looked 
like  we  had  buckled." 

The  Europeans  ended  the  possibili- 
ty of  a  U.S.  comeback  in  the  final  12 
singles  matches.  The  Americans 
trailed  by  five  points  going  into 
Sunday's  singles  but  rallied  to  tic  1 1 
1/2-11  1/2  with  three  matches  still  on 
the  course. 

But  in  the  space  of  a  minute, 
Sweden's  Catrin  Nilsmark  parred  the 
18th  to  defeat  Rosie  Jones  1-up.  Koch, 


one  of  six  Swedes  on  the  team,  sank  the 
winning  putt  the  IZth. 

The  only  other  European  victory  in 
this  event  also  came  in  wet  weather  in 
Scotland  eight  years  ago,  in 
Edinburgh.  The  United  States  leads 
the  series  4-2.  ii 

The  Europeans  held  on  after  taking  , 
an  unprecedented  4-0  lead  in  Friday's 
first  foursome  (alternate  shot)  session 
and  never  trailed. 

The  Americans  not  only  lost  but 
were  accused  of  poor  sportsmanship 
by  Annika  Sorenstam. 

After  the  Swedish  star  chipped  in 
for  an  apparent  birdie  on  No.  13  dur- 
ing her  fourball 
■^— — — —  match,  the 
Americans 
asked  to  have 
her  shot 

replayed 
because  she 
went  out  of  turn. 
She  just  missed 
from  25  feet  on 
the  replay. 
"It    is    just 


really  sad  when  you  have  tournaments 
like  this,"  a  tearful  Sorenstam  said. 

Sorenstam  said  she  had  not  been 
told  to  play  and  assumed  it  was  her 
turn. 

"The  more  time  I  have  to  think 
about  it  the  more  mad  I  am,"  she  said. 
"It  makes  you  ask  the  question:  'What 
would  have  happened  if  I  didn't  make 
it?'  I  stand  for  sportsmanship  and  I  still 
have  my  honor  left.  I  can't  believe  they 
would  call  it  after  the  fact,  that's  what 
gets  me  the  most." 

U.S.  captain  Pat  Bradley  made  the 
decision  on  the  replay. 


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Na  1  ranking  proves  slippiery  position 


COLLEGE:  Undefeated  , 
record  scarce  at  halfway 
point  of  football  season 


The  Associated  Press 


Will  the  real  No.  1  team  in  the 
nation  please  stand  up,  please  stand 
up? 

Florida  State  sat  down  for  now 
after  losing  to  Miami  27-24  on 
Saturday,  allowing  Nebraska  to  step 
right  back  up  to  No.  1  again  a  week 
after  relinquishing  the  top  seat  to  the 
Seminoles. 

The  Cornhuskers  (5-0),  though, 
have  to  be  considered  a  shaky  No.  1 
at  best  after  another  less-than-over- 
powering  49-27  win  over  Iowa  State 
in  which  the  Cyclones  led  by  a  point 
at  halftime. 

With  just  seven  of  115  I-A  teams 
unbeaten  as  the  season  reaches  the 
midway  point,  there  are  others 
poised  for  a  shot  at  No.  1,  starting 
with  Nebraska's  Big  12  rivals  -  No.  2 
Kansas  State  (6-0)  and  No.  8 
Oklahoma  (5-0). 

K-State  beat  Kansas  52-13  and 
has  outscored  its  first  six  opponents 
by  a  combined  254-51;  Oklahoma 
beat  No.  25  Texas  63-14  in  the  sec- 


.  ond  most  lopsided  outcome  in  the 
95-year  history  of  the  Red  River 
Shootout. 

Virginia  Tech  (5-0),  which  played 
for  the  national  title  a  year  ago. 
slipped  to  No.  3  this  week  after  a  35- 
13  win  over  Temple,  with  No.  5 
Clemson  (6-0),  No.  6  Ohio  Stale  (5- 
0)  and  No.  12  TCU  (5-0)  the  other 
undefeateds. 

Several  one-loss  teams,  led  by  No. 
4  Miami,  also  have  dead  aim  on  No. 
1.  Others  include  Florida  State,  now 
No.  7,  No.  9  Oregon,  No.  10  Florida 
and  No.  1 1  Washington. 

Folks  at  Nebraska  feel  like  this: 
"No  doubt  about  it.  If  we're  not  No. 
1.  I  don't  know  who  is,"  Correll 
Buckhalter  said  after  running  for 
two  TDs  against  Iowa  State. 

While  the  polls  give  fans  a  good 
idea  of  the  best  teams,  it's  the  Bowl 
Championship  Series  standings  that 
determine  who  plays  in  the  national 
title  game  -  this  year  in  the  Orange 
Bowl  on  Jan.  3.  The  first  BCS  stand- 
ings will  be  released  Oct.  26,  and 
when  the  polls,  schedule  strengths 
and  computer  ratings  are  crunched 
together,  the  computer  could  spit 
out  a  few  surprises. 

Until  then,  a  conference-by-con- 
ference look  at  why  the  second  half 
of  the  season  promises  to  be  better 


than  the  first  half  -  and  why  it's  pos- 
sible there  may  be  no  unbeatens  left 
when  it  comes  time  to  pick  the  top 
two  teams: 
ACC 

Clemson  (6^,  4-0)  visits  Florida 
State  (5-1, 3-0)  in  Bowden  Bowl  II  on 
Nov.  4.  And  this  time,  both  teams 
might  be  playing  for  a  spot  in  the 
title  game,  not  just  Bobby's 
Seminoles.  Last  year.  Tommy's 
Tigers  nearly  spoiled  the  Seminoles' 
perfect  season  before  FSU  prevailed 
17-14.  Florida  State  also  plays 
Florida  on  Nov.  18. 
Big  East 

Virginia  Tech  (5-0,  3-0)  and 
Miami  (4-1,  2-0)  meet  at  the  Orange 
Bowl  on  Nov.  4,  with  not  only  the 
Big  East  title  at  stake,  but  also  a  shot 
at  the  national  title  game.  Miami 
coach  Butch  Davis  is  0-5  against  the 
Hokies.  The  Hurricanes  lost  to 
Washington  on  Sept.  9. 
Big  Tea 

Ohio  State  (5-0,  2-0)  is  the  Big 
Ten's  lone  unbeaten,  although  the 
Buckeyes  are  a  half  game  behind  sur- 
prising No.  17  Northwestern  (5-1,  3- 
0).  The  Wildcats  and  Buckeyes  do 
not  meet,  but  anything  can  happen 
in  this  league  where  each  of  the  other 


UCLA  tees  off,  prepares 
for  Pacrl  0  caliber  field 


W.GOLF:  Team  rebounds 
from  disappointing  loss, 
preparing  mental  game 


SecFOOn/UUpajeSI 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  No.  16  UCLA  women's  golf 
team  is  in  Washington  to  play  in  the 
22nd  annual  Edean  Ihlanfeldt 
Invitational,  which  runs  from  today 
to  Wednesday. 

The  field  is  like  a  Pac-10  preview, 
with  every  conference  school  partici- 
pating except  for  Arizona.  Some  of 
the  top  teams  include  Pac-10  schools 
No.  3  use  and  No.  5  Stanford,  as 
well  as  No.  10  Pepperdine  and  No.  1 1 
Tulsa. 

"We're  practicing  pretty  hard. 
Everyone's  ready  for  it,"  Bruin 
senior  Laura  Moffat  said. 

For  their  second  tournament,  the 
Bruins  slightly  changed  their  scoring 
rotation.  Going  once  again  is  MofTat, 
junior  Alicia  Um,  sophomore  Saki 
Uechi  and  true  freshman  Gina 
Umeck.  The  newcomer  to  the  travel- 


ing group  is  true  freshman  Johanna 
Andersson,  who  just  came  to  the 
States  from  Sweden. 

"She's  played  really  well  in  the  last 
week,"  head  coach  Carrie  Leary  said. 
"Initially  she  was  12th  out  of  14 
(golfers).  She's  moved  herself  back 
into  the  top  five." 

The  tournament  is  held  at  the 
Sahalee  Country  Qub.  In  1998,  the 
course,  which  means  "heavenly 
ground"  in  Chinook,  was  the  site  of 
the  PGA  Championship. 

"It's  one  of  the  most  famous  golf 
courses  in  the  Pacific  Northwest," 
Leary  said.  "One  of  the  best  courses, 
one  of  the  most  challenging,  most 
beautiful  ...  it's  really  a  great  venue 
for  the  event." 

The  team  must  get  over  their  poor 
ninth  place  finish  at  their  last  tourna- 
ment, the  Dick  McGuire 
Invitational. 

"Everybody's  (problem)  was  a  lit- 
tle bit  different."  Leary  said.  "It  was 
a  lot  more  mental  than  it  was  about 
anybody  having  problems  with  their 
game.  The  team  that  we  had  out  there  - 


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Daiiy  Bnitn  Sports 


Jones  hits  target  in  postseason 


Mondaji  October  9, 2000       59 


BASEBALL  Mets'  pitcher 
faces  challenge  despite 
recent  drop  from  roster 


ByJoshOubow 

The  Associated  Press 


NEW  YORK  -  Bobby  J.  Jones 
made  a  name  for  himself  and  carved 
out  a  place  in  postseason  lore. 

Known  as  much  for  being  one  of 
two  Bobby  Joneses  on  the  Mets  as 
for  his  own  pitching,  Jones  threw  the 
sixth  complete  game  one4jitter  in 
postseason  history  as  the  Mets  elim- 
inated the  Giants  with  a  4-0  win  in 
Game  4  of  their  NL  division  scries 
Sunday. 

Left  off  last  year's  playoff  roster 
and  sent  to  the  minors  in  June,  Jones 
pitched  the  first  one-hit  shutout  in 
the  postseason  since  Boston's  Jim 
Lonborg  in  the  1967  World  Series 
against  St.  Louis. 

"At  that  time  I  was  not  helping 
the  ballclub,"  Jones  said  of  his  two- 
week  trip  to  Triple-A  Norfolk. 
"After  experiencing  the  playoffs  last 
year  and  not  being  a  part  of  it,  I 
wanted  to  come  back  in  the  best 
shape  and  have  a  great  year.  The 
way  I  pitched  was  obviously  not  the 
way  I  was  capable  of  throwing." 

Jones  limited  the  Giants  to  a 
clean,  fifth-inning  double  by  Jeff 
Kent  as  the  wild  card  Mets  won  the 
final  three  games  of  the  series  to 
avoid  a  cross-country  trip  and  a  deci- 
sive Game  5  in  San  Francisco. 

New  York  earned  themselves  two 
days  off  before  opening  the  NLCS 
in  St.  Louis  on  Wednesday.  The 
Mets  were  6-3  against  the  Cardinals 
this  season. 

"It's  not  going  to  be  easy,"  Jones 


said.  "They're  a  great  team  and  play 
.great  baseball.  We  just  have  to  go 
out  and  play  the  best  we  can." 

The  Giants  (97-^5),  who  finished 
with  the  best  record  in  the  majors, 
had  their  magical  season  end  with  a 
whimper,  in  part  because  Barry 
Bonds  was  a  postseason  bust  again. 

Bonds  dropped  to  0-5  in  playoff 
series  -  three  with  Pittsburgh,  two 
with  the  Giants  -  with  a  .196  batting 
average  overall.  Fittingly,  the  three- 
time  MVP  made  the  final  out  of  the 
series,  hitting  a  fly  ball  to  center  field 
that  left  him  3-for-17  against  the 
Mets.  -  ;■ 


Jones' teammates 

chanted  his  name 

as  they  doused 

each  other  with 

champagne. 


Fireworks  shot  out  from  behind 
the  center-field  fence  and  the  Mets 
shot  out  of  their  dugout  to  mob 
Jones  on  the  infield.  The  Baha 
Men's  "Who  Let  The  Dogs  Out"  - 
the  song  that  blared  throughout 
Pacific    Bell     Park    when    San 
Francisco  clinched  the  NL  West  - 
played  as  the  Bonds  and  the  Giants 
glumly  walked  to  the  clubhouse. 
"I'll  keep  trying^"  Bonds  said. 
After  a  few  minutes,  a  leaping 
Lenny  Harris  led  the  Mets  to  a  cele- 
bration in  the  clubhouse.  Jones' 
teammates  chanted  his  name  as  they 
doused  each  other  with  champagne. 
"I'm  so  happy  for  Bobby  Jones," 


Al  Leiter  said.  "I'm  so  proud  of  him. 
To  go  out  and  pitch  the  best  game  of 
his  life  and  dismiss  all  the  critics  who 
thought  this  was  a  bad  decision  ... 
He  went  out  and  nailed  it." 

Shea  Sudium  was  still  filled  with 
electricity  from  Saturday  night's  3-2 
Mets  win  in  13  innings.  Fans  chant- 
ed Benny  Agbayani's  name  as  he 
stretched  before  the  game,  about  18 
hours  after  his  homer  had  brought 
the  Mets  one  win  away  from  the 
NLCS. 

That  was  New  York's  fifth 
straight  postseason  win  in  the  last  at- 
bat,  including  a  5-4,  10-inning  victo- 
ry in  Game  2  at  San  Francisco. 

Mets  fans  didn't  need  to  wait 
neariy  as  long  this  game.  Jones 
struck  out  Bonds  on  a  hi^  fastball 
to  end  the  first,  drawing  an  ovation 

from  a  crowd  ready  for  another  cele- 
bration. 

Robin  Ventura  gave  them  much 
more  to  cheer  about  in  the  bottom 
half.  After  Mark  Gardner  walked 
Mike  Piazza  with  two  outs,  Ventura 
turned  on  a  first-pitch  fastball  and 
hit  it  off  the  scoreboard  in  right  field 
for  just  his  second  hit  in  the  series. 

"He's  an  aggressive  pitcher  and 
tries  to  jump  ahead,"  Ventura  said. 
"I  was  a  little  lucky." 

That  would  be  all  Jones  needed, 
pitching  his  first  shutout  since  1997. 
After  struggling  to  a  1-3  record  with 
a  10.19  ERA  after  eight  starts,  the 
right-hander  was  banished  to  the 
minors  and  bashed  in  the  newspa- 
pers. He  returned  two  weeks  later 
and  won  10  of  his  final  13  decisions. 
Jones  wasn't  even  certain  to  start 
in  this  series.  Manager  Bobby 
Valentine  toyed  with  the  idea  of 
starting  Mike  Hampton  on  three 


Bowen,  Nuanes  lead  Bruins 
to  first  place  at  Pfenn  State 


WeCROSS:  Recent  nihs  put 
UCLA  back  in  good  position 
for  NCAA  championship  bid 


Penn  State  Invitational 

1.  UCLA  38 

2.  Central  Michigan  48 

3.  Penn  State  61 


Se«njniOFK,page52 


By  Dylan  Htmandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

With  a  win  on  Saturday  at  the 
Penn  State  Invitational,  the  UCLA 
women's  cross  country  team  kept 
itself  in  contention  for  an  at-large  bid 
to  the  NCAA  Championships. 

Just  two  weeks  ago,  the  Bruins  had 
a  disastrous  race  at  the  Roy  Griak 
Invitational  in 

Minnesota, 

where  they  fin- 
ished 18th  of 
29  squads  and 
temporarily 
slipped  off  the 
bubble. 
"Obviously, 

I'm    excited,"     ~ 

Bruin      head  . 

coach  Eric  Peterson  said  following 
his  team's  performance  at  Penn 
State.  "Plain  and  simple,  we  went  to 
win  the  meet. 

"The  team  was  certainly  aware  of 
the  position  we  were  in." 

The  Bruins,  paced  by  seniors  Tina 
Bowen  and  Katie  Nuanes.  scored  38 
poinu  to  beat  Central  Michigan  (48 
points),  host  Penn  State  (61).  Navy 
(74)  and  St.  Francis  (145). 

In  the  early  stages  of  the  race,  the 
situation  didn't  look  good  for 
UCLA,  which  failed  to  press  on  the 
course's  fast  opening  mile. 

As  the  lead  pack  -  consisting  of 
Bowen,   Nuanes,   Navy's   Melissa 


Foon  *  anrf'  ftnn  Staie*s  Susahne 
Heyer  -  started  to  pull  away  after  800 
meters,  the  remaining  Bruins  found 
themselves  well  behind  the  pack  of 
Central  Michigan  runners. 

The  leaders  hit  the  first  mile  at 
5:27,  while  Central  Michigan's  bunch 
crossed  the  checkpoint  at  5:40.  The 
crowd  of  Bruins  trailed  at  5:46. 

"That  was  a  mistake  we  made," 
Peterson  said.  "We  shouldn't  have 
spotted  them  six  seconds." 

Over  the  remainder  of  the  6-kilo- 
meter circuit,  however,  UCLA  was 
able  to  overcome  its  deficit. 
Sophomore  Kelly  Grimes  moved 
up  to  finish  sev- 
1— i^.»_^.^     enth  among  the 
69       runners, 
covering      the 
hilly  course  in 
22:12.1.  Fellow 
sophomore 
Melissa 
_^________^      McBain    came 

in  shortly  after 
•'  -    -  at    22:117    to 

place  tenth. 

Senior  Gina  Donnelly  (I6th. 
22:34.0)  was  the  Bruins'  final  scorer. 

Up  ahead,  Bowen  (21:27.3)  and 
Nuanes  (21 :28.9)  kept  their  positions 
among  the  leaders,  finishing  second 
and  third,  respectively. 

Foon  won  the  contest  in  21 :23.4. 

"It  was  great,"  Bowen  said.  "The 
team  performed  awesome.  We  trav- 
elled well,  which  is  something  we 
weren't  sure  we  could  do  after 
Minnesota." 

Bowen  added  that  the  team's  per- 
formance   the    week    before    at 


Appetizerg 

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Cross  country  wins  meirt    ■;:] 

With  Bruins  placing  2nd,  3rd  and  7th, 
the  women's  cross  country  team  is 
still  in  contention  for  an  NCAA  berth. 
Read  more  on  page  59 


n 


Monday,  Octobef  9, 2000 


Sports  on  the  Web 

Tomonrow  read  about  the  • 

men's  soccer  team's  first  I 

loss  ofthe  season  at:  * 

• 

www.dailybfuin.ucla.edu  I 


Bruins  end  dry  spelt  deliver  defeat  on  1Vx)jan  turf 


M.WATERPOLO:  Team 
effort  helps  maintain 
lead  throughout  game 


ByRekhaRao 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Before  a  taunting,  full-house 
crowd  at  USC's  McDonald 
Swim  Stadium,  the  top-ranked 
UCLA  men's  water  polo  team 
beat  No.  3  USC  Saturday  morn- 
ing by  a  score  of  7-5,  ending  a  six- 
year  drought  in  which  the  Bruins 
failed  to  win  at  the  Trojans' 
house. 


UCLA  7 

uses 


"We  were  really  fired  up  and 
really  pushing  it  for  this  game," 
Sydney  Olympian  and  senior 
Sean  Kern  said. 

His  coach  agreed. 

"We  showed  a  lot  of  heart, 
this  is  always  a  hard  game  to 
play,"  Adam  Krikorian  said. 

The  last  time  the  Bruins  beat 
the  Trojans  at  USC's  McDonald 


Swim  Stadium  -  which 
Krikorian  said  was  one  of  the 
hardest  places  to  play  in  -  was 
1994. 

But  things  were  difPerent  this 
time  around  for  the  Bruins,  who 
held  a  safe  lead  throughout  the 
game. 

UCLA  came  out  strong,  lead- 
ing 2-1  after  the  first  quarter, 

"We  executed  our  game  plan 
very  well,"  Krikorian  said. 

A  major  scare  for  the  Bruins 
came  from  Trojan  junior  Ivan 
Babic,  who  scored  two  goals  for 
the  Trojans,  the  second  of  which 
came  with  just  two  minutes  left  in 
the  game  to  close  the  gap  to  7-5. 
Babic  is  one  of  five  starting 
European  players  who  came 
from  either  Yugoslavia  or 
Hungry  to  play  at  USC. 

Early  in  the  game,  both  teams 
got  in  foul  trouble.  As  a  result  of 
the  increased  fouls,  many  players 
who  usually  don't  play  were  put 
in  the  game. 

This  win  was  a  total  team 
effort  for  us,"  Krikorian  said. 

After  the  third  quarter,  the 
Bruins  led  7-4.  They  just  used  the 
fourth  quarter  to  finish  off  the 
Trojans, 

"We  came  in  here  with  some- 
thing to  do  and  we  did  it,"  sopho- 
more attacker  Matt  Flesher  said. 


Kern  returned  for  UCLA  and 
played  as  a  Bruin  for  the  first 
time  after  competing  on  the  U.S. 
water  polo  team  in  the  Sydney 
Games. 

"I  was  looking  forward  to 
coming  back.  I  was  actually  a  lit- 
tle bit  nervous  for  it.  I  haven't 
been  on  campus  since  winter 
quarter,  and  I  felt  like  a  fresh- 
man," Kern  said. 

But  he  scored  four  goals  to 
lead  the  team  physically,  and 
demonstrated  a  presence  that  led 
them  emotionally. 

"It  was  a  good  lift  for  the 
team,"  Krikorian  said.  "He  has 
practiced  with  us  for  two  days 
and  gave  us  a  big  boost.  Imagine 
not  practicing  with  the  team  for 
eight  months,  and  coming  back 
to  win." 

Although  Kern  has  been  back 
for  only  two  days,  Krikorian  said 
the  team  feels  more  together  and 
whole. 

"The  team  does  feel  more 
whole,  but  we  definitely  have 
more  to  work  on,"  the  coach 
said.  "We  are  not  done  yet." 

This  was  obvious  in  the  Trojan 
game,  as  UCLA's  defense  was 
found  to  be  a  little  faulty. 

"Our  defense  could  have  been 

S«cM.W«nitP0iapa9c54 


Senior  defender  Andrew  Bailey  looks  to  pass 
This  past  Saturday  the  Bruins  defeated  USC  7- 


EDWAflD  irN 


against  Pepperdine  last  weekend. 
5. 


UCLA  falls  despite  break 
in  USCs  38-game  streak 


W.VOLLEYBALL  Squad  puts 
up  tough  fight  against  foe, 
snatches  away  one  game 


By  Christina  TeNer 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  battle  started  even  before  the 
match  began.  It  was  a  match  that 
spanned  four  games  and  more  than  two 
and  a  half  hours,  in  which  the  Bruins 
eventually  lost  to  rival  USC  I5-1 1, 15-1 1, 
8-15,15-11. 

With  most  fans  packed  into  the  small 
North  Gyrnnasium  sporting  red,  it  was 
fitting  that  while  the  Trojan  warm-up 
hits  were  each  capped  by  loud  cheers, 
those  ofthe  Bruins  elicited  boos. 

"We  knew  we  had  to  start  the  game 
focused  and  play  well  to  get  the  crowd 
out    of    it,"     Kristee     Porter    said. 


"We  just  didn't  come  ready  to  play.  It 
wasn't  in  our  preparation  this  week." 

USC  was  bigger,  they  were  in  their 
house,  and  the  1,057  fans  lining  the  court 
were  mostly  theirs.  The  Bruins  gave  it  all 
they  had,  but  in  the  end  they  came  up 
short. 


UiCd.UCLA 
15-11,15-11,8-15,15-11 


"It's  disappointing  to  lose  a  match, 
especially  to  'SC,  but  I  thought  we  did  a 
lot  of  good  things  in  the  face  of  adversity 
over  here,"  UCLA  head  coach  Andy 
Banachowski  said. 

Despite  snapping  the  Trojans'  38- 


Team  frustrated 
after  exhausting 
match  with  rival 
wraps  up  in  tie 

W.SOCCER:  First  game  of 
Pac-10  conference  proves 
draining  experience  for  both 


ByJcffAgasc 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


S«cW.V0UiVBAIi.|Mg«S3 


BHOGtT  O-BWCN  /Daily  Bfuln  Seniof  Staff 

KristM  Porter,  shown  blocking  against  Washington, 
tallied  30  kills  against  USC  on  Friday. 


Squad  drops  match  to  tough 


•  •  III 


i^r 


SIDEBAR:  Porter  out  of 
starting  lineup,  may 
have  affected  outcome 


ByAJCadknan 

Dally  Bruin  SenkK  Staff 

The  No.  4  USC  womerTs  volley- 
ball team  breathed  a  huge  sigh  of 
relief  before  and  after  Friday 
night's  grueling  two  and  a  half  hour, 
four-game  victory  over  the  No.  8 
Bruins. 

With  the  noticeable  absence  of 


junior  outside  hitter  Kristee  Porter 

from  UCLA's  starting  lineup  -  for 

a  violation  of 

team  rules  -  the     ^"^■~""~~' 

Trojans  jumped 

out  to  quick  9-1 

advantage  over 

their  aosstown 

rivals.  Misconv 

munication  and 

return     errors 

were  not  what  "" 

the         Bruins 

expected   in  a 

match  that  they  built  up  as  one  that 

would  require  focus  and  consisten- 


cy. 


"We  had  been  talking  about  stay- 
ing focused, 
ignoring  the 
crowd  and 
the  other 
team."  red- 
shirt  fresh- 
man outside 
hitter  Ella 
Hariey  said. 

With     an 

11-3  lead  in 

game      one, 

Southern  Cal  and  the  I,0S7  fans 

who  were  a  part  of  the  standing 


Luckily  for  the  Trojans 

and  their  fans,  they 

escaped  with  a  victory 

and  a  reminder. 


lent,  aowd 


room  only  crowd  at  North  Gym 
began  to  witness  a  change  in  the 
match. 

That  was  when  UCLA  head 
coach  Andy  Banachowski  put 
Porter  into  the  game. 

Luckily  for  the  Trojans  and  their 
fans,  they  escaped  with  a  victory 
and  a  reminder  -  don't  anger  one  of 
the  best  female  collegiate  volleyball 
players  in  the  country  today. 

Emotions  ran  high  in  the  city 
showdown.  With  the  boisterous  sea 
of  cardinal  and  gold  backing  the 


The  women's  soccer  teams  from  UCLA 
and  USC  played  their  respective  hearts  out 
for  120  minutes  Sunday  afternoon,  but  nei- 
ther will  be  able  to  claim  supremacy  until 
next  season. 


UCLA1 
USC1 


SccSlKM|,pa9tS4 


The  No,  5  Bruins  (9-1-1,  OO-j  Pac-10) 
and  the  No.  21  Trojans  (8-1-2, 0-0-1  Pac-10) 
played  to  a  physically  draining  and  mental- 
ly exhausting  l-l  stalemate  before  1,351  at 
the  Los  Angeles  Coliseum. 

The  Bruins  had  all  of  the  opportunities 
early  in  the  first  half,  but  it  was  Southern 
Cal  that  first  lit  up  the  scoreboard  in  the 
22nd  minute  with  a  rebound  goal  by  Jessica 
Edwards. 

Prior  to  the  Trofan  goal,  the  Bruins  rang 
two  shots  off  of  the  goalposts  and  kept  the 
ball  in  the  USC  zone  for  the  brunt  of  the 
time  but  had  nothing  to  show  for  it,  much 
to  the  chagrin  of  head  coach  Jillian  Ellis. 

"In  the  first  half  we  created  some 
chances,  but  that's  the  sign  of  a  good 
team."  she  said.  "You've  got  to  finWi  those. 


JlLLil-,!).! 


Serving  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


TuEsiMy,OciDeER  10,2000 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


Excavation 
near  Franz, 
Knudsen  may 
finish  Friday 

PROJECT:  Building  phase 
of  construction  expected 
to  start  in  spring  of  2001 


By  HcRMsh  Patel  and  Unh  Tat 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

A  temporary  road,  enclosed  by 
two  fences,  separates  the  area 
between  Knudsen  and  Franz  Halls, 
inconveniencing  many  students  on 
their  way  to  class. 

That's  because  construction 
workers  frequently  close  off  the 
pathway  between  the  ends  of  the 
fence  to  let  trucks  hauling  away  dirt 
drive  past. 

"When  they  close  the  gates  to 
direct  traffic,  I  feel  like  I  am  part  of 
a  herd  of  cattle  being  led  to  the 
slaughterhouse  -  it's  ridiculous," 
said  Dan  Garcia,  a  third-year  micro- 
biology and  molecular  genetics  stu- 
dent. 

Each  fence  features  a  gate  that 
allows  students  to  pass  through,  but 
when  trucks  are  driving  by,  workers 
close  off  the  road  to  pedestrians. 

According  to  Ron  Enholm,  prin- 
cipal project  manager  of  Campus 
Capital  Programs,  the  university 
decided  this  road  would  be  the  best 
route  for  trucks  entering  the  con- 
struction site. 


The  gates  are  not 

that  much  of  an 

inconvenience 

because  there  are 


two  entrances." 

Mike  Huang 

Third-year  student 


"It  was  determined  and  agreed 
there  would  be  less  general  impact 
to  create  a  temporary  access  road 
on  the  north  side  of  Franz,"  Enholm 
said. 

Though  construction  activities 
currently  pose  an  inconvenience  to 
students,  university  officials  recog- 
nize the  long-term  benefits  of  the 
project. 

Enholm  said  the  university  is 
excavating  land  near  Knudsen  Hall 
to  prepare  for  construction  of  a  new 
S27  million  physics  and  astronomy 
building. 

Currently,  classes  and  offices  for 
that  department  are  housed  in  sev- 
eral different  tmildings,  including 
Knudsen  and  Kinsey  Halls  and  the 
Mathematical  Sciences  building. 

"The  project's  primary  intent  is 


S«cC0IISnNICI10N,pa9«13 


Ji: 


to  the  occasion 


Online  gradebook 
to  land  tHs  winter 


MTU  ARMEMAN/Oiffy  Bruin  Scntoc  Sijff 

Ryan  Smith,  internal  public  relations  director  ofthe  African  Student 
Union,  recites  a  poem  in  Westwood  Plaza  about  the  history  and  experi- 
ences of  African  Americans.  The  event  was  sponsored  by  ONYX  and  the 
African  Arts  Ensemble. 


REGISTRAR:  Students 
will  be  able  to  check 
scores  on  My.UCLA 


By  Benjamin  Parlce 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Students  who  can't  wait  until 
the  next  class  meeting  to  find 
out  if  they  squeaked  by  with  a 
C-minus  on  that  last  paper  may 
soon  be  able  to  turn  to  an  elec- 
tronic gradebook  for  the 
answer. 

Beginning  winter  quarter, 
faculty  will  have  the  option  of 
sending  final  grades  to  the  reg- 
istrar electronically.  Students 
will  be  able  to  see  how  they  did 
on  a  particular  test  or  paper  by 
going  to  their  My.UCLA  Web 
page. 

Instructors  will  have  the 
option  of  including  comments 
to  appear  alongside  the  grade 
for  any  particular  piece  of 
coursework. 

Jeffrey  Lew,  assistant  resi- 
dent lecturer  of  atmospheric 
sciences,  was  one  of  the  faculty 
members  who  tested  the  feature 
over  the  past  year.  He  said  the 
gradebook  made  things  easier 
for  his  classes,  which  can  con- 
tain up  to  three  hundred  stu- 
dents. 

"We  didn't  have  to  post 


scores  in  the  hallway  and  get 
confidentiality  waiver  forms 
and  all  that,"  Lew  said. 

"It  really  streamlined  the 
process,"  he  added. 

The  gradebook  will  be  inte- 
grated with  the  calendar  that  is 
already  part  of  students' 
My.UCLA  page.  Due  dates  for 
assignments  can  be  marked  on 
the  calendars  of  every  student 
in  a  participating  faculty  mem- 
ber's class. 

John  Sandbrook,  assistant 
provost  of  the  College  of 
Letters  and  Sciences,  said  the 
electronic  gradebook  was 
designed  with  greater  efficiency 
in  mind  for  faculty  and  stu- 
dents. 

The  University  Records 
System  Access  -  in  which  stu- 
dents can  register  for  classes, 
check  their  financial  aid  and 
access  final  grades  -  has  been 
around  since  Fall  1996. 

My.UCLA,  which  provides 
students  with  a  calendar  and 
schedule  of  classes,  among 
other  things,  was  launched  a 
year  later.  As  a  result  of  such 
changes,  students  no  longer 
have  to  wait  in  long  lines  to  reg- 
ister for  classes. 

"Someone  was  saying  how  it 
was  a  shock  to  enter  Murphy 
Hall  recently  -  compared  to 

S«cfiM0B,pa9e17 


RU-486  will  be  available  at  Medical  Center 


ABORTION:  Pill  won't  be 
dispensed  at  Ashe;  FDA 
rules  restrict  distribution 


ByBaibaraOrtatay 

Daily  Bmin  Senior  Staff 


About  200  pregnant  students 
visit  the  Arthur  Ashe  Student 
Health  and  Wellness  Center  each 
year,  and,  according  to  Director 
Edward  Wiesmeicr,  most  of  them 
choose  to  terminate  their  pregnan- 
cy. 

While  the  Food  and  Drug 
Administration's  recent  approval 
of  mifepristone  may  not  make  this 
decision  any  easier,  hospitals  and 
clinics  across  the  country  are  now 
deciding  whether  and  how  to 
implement  the  ''Abortion  pill's"  use. 

At  the  UCLA  Medical  Center, 
the  pill,  also  known  as  RU-486,  will 
be  available  to  women,  but  the  Ashe 
Center  is  not  equipped  to  prescribe 
it,  according  to  Wiesmeier. 

Students  interested  in  using  the 
pill  will  be  referred  to  the  Medical 
Center. 

"There  are  some  rigid  restrictions 


The  FOA  approved  Mlfe|Mi«DW!,fom)ertyRU-4«6on^  ^ 

when  administeRd  In  early  pregnancy.  At>ortion  using  mifepristone  requires  three  visits  l 
thedinWart.  — — — -^ 


I.AttiwIintyWta 
MKMIMn  rics^vM  • 
msmtatad  mediation 
guktoprovtdadbytfM 
manufacturer,  Oanco. 
ThagutdewM 
Informat 

tha  jpnication  woks,  as 
lit  as  informatton 
about  posiiMosMt 
afVactt. 


swaliowsadosaof 
SOOmiMgramsof 

Ittooaundarth* 
guMancaofhar 
phystcian. 


3.  Thra*  d«rs  iatar,  ttMT  returns  for 
a  doM  of  400  mioognim  of 
THOmiaopfoatol 
uhMlrM  contractiem,  and 
ItM'^Hntiiyo  or  embryo  and 
tbMW  that  devalaiM  during 
are  paaaed  out  through 
the  vagina. 


placed  on  who  can  prescribe  it," 
Wiesmeier  said. 


"We  would  still  like  to  see  any 
women  students  who  think  they 
might  be  pregnant,"  he  continued, 
adding  that  the  center  has  counsel- 
ing available  for  students. 

Only  doctors  who  can  provide 
surgical  intervention  in  cases  of 
incomplete  abortion  or  severe  bleed- 
ing may  prescribe  mifepristone, 
according  to  FDA  regulations.  This 
is  because 


AOAM  BROWNyl><tly  Biuin 


according  to  Alan  DeCherney,  pro- 
fessor and  chair  of  the  Obstetrics  & 
Gynecology  Department  at  the 
Medical  Center. 

In  U.S.  clinical  trials  of  the  pill, 
7.9  percent  of  the  827  women  who 
participated  received  surgical  inter- 
vention -  mostly  for  excessive  bleed- 
ing, according  to  the  FDA. 

Mifepristone  is  an  antiproges- 


about   10  par6»n>  of — terone  drug    which 


women  who  Ukc  the  drug  will 
require  some  surgical  intervention. 


means  it  blocks 
receptors  of  progesterone,  a  hor- 
mone that  aids  in  the  establishment 


and  maintenance  of  pregnancy, 
according  to  the  FDA. 

The  FDA  requires  that  women 
who  choose  to  take  mifepristone 
sign  an  informed  consent,  provided 
by  the  drug's  manufacturer,  before 
they  can  begin  treatment. 

To  start  treatment,  the  patient 
swallows  a  dose  of  600  milligrams 
of  mifepristone  and,  three  days 
later,  returns  for  a  dose  of  400 
micrograms  of  misoprostol. 

Mi.soprostol  induces  contrac- 
tions of  the  uterus,  and  the  pre- 
embryo,  embryo  or  other  tissue  that 
develops  during  pregnancy  is 
passed  out  through  the  vagina. 

"This  isn't  going  to  change  things 
quite  as  much  as  people  think," 
Wiesmeier  said. 

\    He  added  there  might  still  be 
women  who  prefer  surgical  abor- 
tions, which  may  be  done  within  ,; 
houra,  while  using  the  pill  can  take 
about  2-3  days. 

Women  should  return  for  a  fol- 
low-up visit  to  their  physicians 
whether  they  use  the  pill  or  undergo 
surgical  abortion. 

Mifepristone  was  first  approved 
for  use  in  France  in  1988.  Since  then, 

Mioie    than    620,000   European 


-••J 


SttmCpaftlC 


MoiKUK  ScpMnbcrSO,  T996 


Daily  Brain  Newt 


Vwmf  DRNA  PMwS 


Toesday,  October  10, 2000 


^i£ime  Wat 


Petty  thefts 

Five  parking  permits,  two  bit^des,  a  ce^ 
!ular  phone  and  several  wallets  were  stolen 
last  week,  amounting  to  a  total  loss  of 
$1,095. 

Someone  broke  into  a  locker  in  a  laun- 
dry room  on  the  3000  blodc  of  Sawtdli 
Boulevard  and  stole  $20  in  cash 

Police  received  a  report  W( 
someone  charged  $299  to  anothj 
credit  card. 

GrMMttiiefts 

A  w^Iet,  watch 
total  d"  $3,700  WCTC 
m(a)tonthe600Ui 
onFri(kyorSaturda 

Someone  stole  a 
Cor(^la  on  Frklay. 

SpmK(Mwn»yftifaH>tiittag 


Avenue.  They  also  received  a  report  on 
Oct  3  that  someone  had  stolen  furniture 
worth  a  total  of  $4,278  from  the  School  of 
Law. 

Miscdteneous 

Shots    were    fired    near    Olympic 
Boulevard  and  Bundy  Drive  where  a  man 


WHAT'S  BREWIN' 


Tuesday  1  pjn. 

Project  Literacy  Orientation 
Ackerman  3508 
(310)825-2417 

4  p.m.      ~ 

Bruin  Partners 
Orientation 
Ackerman  2408 

Project  WILD 
Orientation  for  tutors 
417  Kerckhoff  Hall 

5  p.m. 

Asian  Pacific  Heahh  Corps 
First  General  Meeting 
Ackerman  3517 

Student  Business  Union 


KPMG  Information  Session 
Ackerman  2412 

630  p.m. 

Golden  Key  International  Honor 

Society 

General  Meeting 

Roycel56  :' 

7  p.m.        ~ 

Delta  Sigma  Pi 

Viva  Las  Vegas!  Casino  Night 

Covel  Commons  Grand  Horizon 

Room 

284-3533    ;:        - . 

Spartacus  Youth  Qub 

Intro,  to  Revolutionary  Marxism 

Math-Science5ll7 

(2I3)38(«239       -''.:.;:■■  ■- ; 


ACADEMK 
ANNOUNCEHJENTS 

Week2 

Last  week  to  drop  impacted 
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through  URSA  without  a  fee 

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for  courses  through  URSA 

Last  week  to  declare 
bachelor's  degree  candidacy 
for  current  term 

Last  week  to  return  textbooks 
to  UCLA  Store  for  full  refund 


Tuesday,  October  10, 2000 

www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


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Crossword  Puzzle 33 


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DAILY  BRUIN 


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For  college  students, 

all-nighters  are  routine, 

but  they  interfere  with  the 

necessary  7  hours  of  sleep 


By  Dhaniiani  DhanmaKrardcM 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Sleepy  drivers  are  as  dangerous  as 
drunic  drivers,  said  Dr.  Frisca  L  Yan- 
Go,  medical  director  of  the  UCLA 
Sleep  Disorders  Center. 

"Sleepiness  can  kill,"  she  said. 
"You  can  fall  asleep  driving,  and 
motor  vehicle  accidents  are  one  of  the 
leading  causes  of  death  for  college  stu- 
dents, and  failing  asleep  while  driving 
is  one  of  the  main  reasons." 

College  students  tend  to  neglect 
sleep,  and  this  self-deprivation  isn't  a 
new  phenomenon,  said  Ronald 
Harper,  a  UCLA  Neurobiology  pro- 
fessor. 

"I  think  there's  just  too  much  going 
on  in  Kfe  ^ese  days,"  he  said.  "Lives 
are  getting  more  and  more  busy  and 
sleep  is  considered  a  waste  of  time." 

When  Harper  attended  college, 
many  of  his  friends  used  ampheta- 
mines to  stay  awake  -  a  substarKe  that 
can  cause  paranoid  psychosis,  accord- 
ing to  Harper. 

He  recalled  that  one  of  his  friends 


wanted  to  stay  awake  so  badly  while 
driving  across  the  country  that  he  took 
amphetamines. 

"He  got  so  paranoid  that  that  he 
actually  pulled  over  to  a  patrolman 
and  told  him  that  someone  was  follow- 
ing him,"  he  said. 

But  today,  the  popularity  of  using 
amphetamines  to  stay  awake  has 
waned.  Harper  said. 

In  their  place,  however,  drugs  such 
as  caffeine  have  found  a  following  in 
the  student  population. 

Staying  up  late  to  study  and  main- 
tain a  social  life  leads  some  students 
drink  coffee  and  take  caffeine  pills  to 
extend  their  hours  of  wakefulness. 
Harper  said. 

But  students  also  pay  a  high  price 
for  the  extra  hours,  he  said.  Not  only 
can  their  bcxiies  generate  a  high  toler- 
ance for  the  substance,  but  they  can 
also  develop  a  drug  dissociation  state. 

"When  you're  studying,  you  can 
remember  things  while  you're  under 
the  drug,"  Harper  said.  "But,  when 

SMSira»,page1S 


;  BRAIN  CONTROLS  Sypo 

)  is  generated  in  at) area  of  the  t,„.., 

I  t>aul  forebrafn,  wtikh  Ties  n 


kWITW   Lflt. 


Forebrain 

Hypothai<mu$ 
Pituitary 


MWg:  IKIIIthgiili^iamW 


JACOeLIAO/Djl)yB>uln 


CWly  Bfum  File  Photo 

Students  spend  time  studying  in  the  Terrace  Food  Court  over  the  summer.  With  increasing  academ- 
ic and  other  pressures,  many  college  students  suffer  from  sleep  deprivation,  which  may  lead  to 
decreased  school  performance. 


The  Dally  Bruin  (ISSN  lOao-SOM)  Is  publlshMJ  and  copyrighted  by  the  ASUCLA 
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wNhoul  the  writtan  pennisitan  of  the  CotTwnunlcationi  Board  Is  Mrlctly  prahltMecf  The  ASUCLA 
CoriirnuiileaCloiif  Bowd  fuBy  Mjpporti  the  University  or  Caaibrn«a»  policy  on  nor>^lho1mln«loo 
The  au«M«  media  imarve  the  right  to  reject  or  modiry  advvrttting  whose  contwK  dtaoliiitnMM 
on  the  bailt  or  ancestr)c  color,  natlooal  origin,  rac%  reBgtotx  dhabHItx  age.  sak  or  SMual  ortenla- 
lion.  The  ASUCLA  Communications  Board  has  a  madia  grIcvarKC  procadura  for  laiolMliM  com- 

ptalntt  against  any  oTRs  pubOcatlom.  For  a  copy  of  the  compiate  procedural  contact  Mm  pubB- 
caMoru  ofllca  i«  1 1S  Kerckhoff  HaM.  Al  Inserts  that  are  printed  m  the  CMly  Bruin  are  Indainii 

ilaiialiii  mill  I  ■  *■"  A .  .i .J. t  .A-- m..^^^.    .  m.  .  _  ''  ~" 

>BIS- 


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daiMly  paid  pubBcacians  and  do  not  reflect  the  views  of  the  EdRorial  BoaNi  or  the  (lair 
D— |»il^MBIfafCl*.irMaa,HBWaWwai<W»UaMiiUi.C*  M«M.<aiO» 
MM^  liHpitfww,daa|[fciMlii.uilaya<»  Aw  OlO|  ao»-OBBB 


Jewish  observances  coincide  with  latest  violent  attacks 


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HOUDAY:  Surrenderor 
land  provides  no  peace 
for  Israel  or  Palestine 

The  Associated  Press 

As  Jews  throughout  Southern 
CaliFornia  observed  Yom  Kippur, 
the  holiest  of  Jewish  holidays,  they 
aDd  Palestinians  remained  focused 
on  the  violence  raging  halfway 
across  the  world. 

For  many,  the  deadly  clashes  hit 
cloK  to  home. 

"I  can't  work.  I  can't  sleep.  I  am 
checking  my  cell  phone  for  news 


wires.  I  am  watching  the  news,  read- 
ing the  newspapers,"  said  Mustafa 
Mohammad,  an  Anaheim  business- 
man who  said  his  cousin  was  among 
84  people  killed  so  far  in  the  conflict 
in  the  Middle  East. 

Members  of  Orange  County's 
large  Palestinian  community 
marched  with  a  mock  cofTin  in 
Anaheim  on  Sunday  to  protest  the 
violence,  as  Jews  and  supporters  of 
Israel  sang  and  waved  blue-and- 
white  Israeli  flags  at  a  separate  raHy 
in  the  Westwood  neighborhood 
around  UCLA. 

"Israel  is  for  peace  Israel  is  giv- 
ing land  back  for  peace  and  in  return 
wf 're  gatting  ■tiack>d/'  said  deiwoi* 


strator  Sigal  Erez. 

At  a  cemetery  in  the  Hollywood 
Hills  where  Jews  made  traditional 
visits  to  the  graves  of  loved  ones, 
Barry  Bender  said  the  issues  are  dif- 
ficult to  decide. 

•*The  Israelis  are  right.  The 
Palestinians  are  right.  They  don't 
realize  the  harm  that  they're  doing 
to  everybody,"  Bender  said. 

Violence  erupted  in  Jerusalem 
and  the  occupied  territories  1 1  days 
ago  when  a  leader  of  Israel's  hard- 
line Likud  Party,  Ariel  Sharon,  visit- 
ed a  disputed  site  in  Jerusalem's  Old 
City. 

Palestinians  rioted  against  what 
they  ealled  an  affront,  and  Isiadi 


police  and  troops  responded  with 
force.  The  vast  majority  of  those 
killed  and  injured  have  been 
Palestinians. 

In  Anaheim,  hundreds  swarmed 
to  an  Arabic  shopping  area. 

The  crowds  chanted  "Palestine  is 
in  our  blood!"  and  "No  justice,  no 
peace!"  Many  waved  photographs 
of  a  12-year-old  Palestinian  boy 
killed  by  Israeli  gunfire  last  week, 
and  some  youths  wore  T-shirts  splat- 
tered with  blood-colored  paint. 

The  organizers  said  they  did  not 

time  the  protest  to  coincide  with 

Yom  Kippur,  the  Jewish  Day  of 

Atonement. 

— Bui  o>gani/er  Dolly  Hlshwth,  bb. 


said,  "They  should  be  atoning  more 
for  their  sins." 

Yom  Kippur  began  at  sundown 
Sunday  and  ended  at  sundown 
Monday.  Jews  traditionally  mark  the 
holiday  with  fasting  and  prayer.  But 
Jewish  community  leaders  took  the 
opportunity  to  speak  out  about  the 
violence  in  the  Mideast. 

"The  Jewish  community  will 
stand  With  the  state  of  Israel  in  this 
terrible  hour  of  need,  in  which 
Israelis  and  Palestinians  are  need- 
lessly being  exposed  to  the  threat  of 
war  because  Israel  took  the  gamble 
for  peace,"  said  Rabbi  Abraham 
Cooper  dean  at  the  Simon 
Wiesenthal  Center. 


'  •■  ''..'. 


'■'ii 


Tuctday,  October  10, 2000 


Daily  Brain  Newt 


•  If 


avoid  religion 


JUDAISM:  Orthodox  law 
defines,  limits  roles  for 
women  following  faith 


ByBrigittcGiccnbcrg 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  In  accordance 
with  Jewish  law,  vice  presidential  can- 
didate Joseph  Lieberman  used  to 
thanic  God  each  morning  for  not  hav- 
ing made  him  a  slave  or  a  woman. 

in  his  Orthodox  synagogue, 
Lieberman  and  his  wife,  Hadassah, 
must  stand  apart.  In  counting  the  quo- 
rum to  begin  -  called  the  minyan  - 
Hadassah  is  left  out;  a  quorum  is  10 
men.  The  daughter  of  a  rabbi, 
Hadassah  could  never  become  one  her- 
self in  the  Orthodox  tradition. 

These  are  some  of  the  differences  in 
how  women  are  treated  in  Orthodox 
Judaism  compared  with  more  liberal 
strains  of  the  religion. 

What  of  Lieberman 's  own  views? 
Nowadays,  he  says  a  revised  version  of 
the  traditional  prayer  that  docs  not 
mention  slaves  or  women. 

"Hadassah  and  I  go  to  an  Orthodox 
synagogue  in  both  Washington  and 
New  Haven  because  that's  sort  of  the 
tradition  that  we  grew  up  with  and  it 
works  for  us,  but  look  at  my  record  in 
politics,"  the  Connecticut  senator  said 
in  a  recent  interview.  "By  any  stan- 
dard, I  believe  it's  fair  to  say  that  I've 
been  supportive  of  women's  causes." 

Both  he  and  his  wife  were  home  and 
not  campaigning  Monday,  which  was 
Yom  Kippur,  the  Jewish  Day  of 
Atonement. 

Mrs.  Lieberman  said  they  consider 
themselves  more  as  "observant"  Jews 
than  Orthodox.  She  seemed  of  two 
minds  about  how  her  religion  regards 


Democratic  principles 
make  waves  in  Poland 


The  Anodated  fteu 

Democratic  vice  presidential  candidate  S«n.  Joseph  LMbcrman  and 
his  wife  Hadassah  are  greeted  by  Rabbi  Neil  Turk  (far  right). 


women. 

While  saying  she  is  comfortable 
with  the  role  of  women,  she  supports 
the  views  of  one  of  Orthodoxy's  lead- 
ing feminists,  Blu  Greenberg,  who 
prods  Jewish  leaders  to  allow  women 
greater  roles.  Mrs.  Lieberman  called 
Greenberg  a  mentor  and  role  model. 

"I'm  just  so  pleased  that  people  like 
Blu  Greenberg  are  out  there  fighting 
the  battles,  but  they're  not  my  battles  to 
fight,"  Mrs.  Lieberman  said  in  a  tele- 
phone interview.  "It's  really  not  for  me 
to  say  anything  negative." 

Greenberg,  president  of  the  Jewish 
Orthodox  Feminist  Alliance  and  a 
longtime  family  friend,  says  that  like 
many  other  families,  the  Liebermans 
are  struggling  to  square  some  of  their 
faith's  teachings  with  modem  life. 


"Both  Joe  and  Hadassah  are  in  the 
same  place  as  many  other  modem 
Orthodox  Jews,  which  is  that  you  stay 
within  the  system  and  you  appreciate 
the  blessings  of  the  system,  and  you 
make  certain  tradeoffs  in  some  areas," 
said  Greenberg,  who  wrote,  "On 
Women  and  Judaism:  A  View  From 
Tradition." 

Greenberg  said  she  believes  the  sen- 
ator looks  beyond  his  religion  to  make 
decisions.  She  noted,  for  example,  that 
while  Orthodox  Judaism  allows  abor- 
tion when  a  woman's  life  is  in  danger, 
Lieberman  has  espoused  a  much  more 
liberal  view. 

The  Liebermans'  Washington 
rabbi,  Barry  Freundel  of  the  Kesber 

SeeLIEKMMII,|»ge11 


ELECTION:  President,  a 
former  commmiist,  wins 
against  11  challengers 


ByAndmjStyiindii 

The  Associated  Press 

WARSAW,  Poland  -  Poland's  ex- 
communists  exulted  Monday  in 
President  Aleksander  Kwasniewski's 
easy  re-election,  saying  it  puts  them 
in  a  strong  position  to  wrest  parlia- 
mentary control  from  the  weakened 
Solidarity  bloc  in  national  elections 
next  year.  ',  .:  : 

Kwasniewski,  an  ex-commimist, 
won  Sunday's  presidential  election 
with  53.90  percent  of  the  vote,  leav- 
ing his  11  challengers  far  behind, 
according  to  final  results. 

The  closest  were  Andrzej 
Olechowski,  an  independent  econo- 
mist, who  gained  17  percent  of  the 
vote,  and  the  embattled  Solidarity 
leader  Marian  Krzaklewski,  with 
15.6  percent.  Lech  Walesa,  the  leg- 
endary Solidarity  founder  and  for- 
mer president,  received  1.01  percent. 
The  tumout  was  60  percent. 

The  lopsided  result  was  a  blow  to 
.Krzaklewski,  who  managed  to  unite 
splintered  parties  under  the 
Solidarity  umbrella  three  years  ago  to 
win  parliamentary  elections  and  take 
control  of  the  government  from  the 
former  communists.  It  also  con- 
firmed poll  results  that  for  months 
have  shown  the  ex-communists  back 
on  the  upswing  and  support  for 
Solidarity  waning. 

Kwasniewski  said  he  was  "greatly 
moved"  by  the  vote  and  delighted 


that  elections  were  becoming  a  nor- 
mal part  of  life  in  his  country. 


We  see  that  democracy  wotlcs 
perfectly  in  Poland  and  it  can  serve  as 
an  example  to  others,"  he  s^id. 

Kwasniewski  will  be  sworn  in  for 
his  second  term  on  Dec.  23. 
•  Bolstered  by  Kwasniewski's  victo- 
ry, ex-communists  who  make  up  the 
Democratic  Left  Alliance  said  Prime 
Minister  Jerzy  Buzek  should  dismiss 
the  Solidarity-led  Cabinet  and  call 
early  elections,  which  are  not  due 
until  next  fall. 

Buzek  -  who  has  been  working 
without  a  majority  in  parliament 
since  another  party,  the  Freedom 
Union,  bolstered  its  coalition  \i^th 
Solidarity  -  retorted  that  the  presi- 
dent's victory  '*must  not  be  used  to 
destabilize  the  country's  situation." 

Under  Poland's  post-communist 
constitution,  most  executive  power 
rests  with  the  prime  minister  and  his 
supporters  in  the  pariiament.  But  the 
president  can  influence  foreign  and 
defense  policies  and  veto  legislation. 

A  change  in  government  would 
not  dramatically  alter  Poland's  for- 
eign or  economic  policy  -  all  major 
parties  generally  agree.  But  some 
conservatives  argue  it  would  leave 
too  much  power  in  the  hands  of  the 
ex-communists. 

In  conceding  defeat,  Krzaklewski 
said  the  vote  was  a  warning  that 
Solidarity  must  regroup  for  parlia- 
mentary elections.  The  media  and 
even  his  political  allies  went  a  step 
further,  suggesting  that  it  is  time  few- 
Solidarity  to  nudge  Krzaklewski 
aside  and  quash  political  infighting 
that  has  made  voters  weary  and  cyni- 
cal. --:- 


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Daily  Bniin  News 


Tuesday,  Octobef  10, 2000         5 


WORLD  &.  NATION  I  # 


Dow  Jones  Industrials 

down:28.11 

do$e:ia568.43    f::  ;    ; 


NasdMi  Indci 

down:  5.45 
dose:  3,355.56 


Dollar 

Yen:  108.77 
Euro:  1.1516 


Peacs  disGOuragect 


conflict  still  rciges 


The  Associated  Press 

A  masked  Palestinian  burns  a  U.S.  flag  as  others  cheer  during  a  demonstration  in  Gaza  City  on  Thursday, 
Oct  5,  amid  an  outbreak  of  violence  that  has  swept  the  West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip. 


MIDEAST:  Barak  drops 
ultimatum;  Clinton  tries 
to  jumpstart  negotiations 


ByDafnaLimcr 

The  Associated  Press 

JERUSALEM  -  Prime  Minister 
Ehud  Barak  on  Tuesday  backed  away 
from  a  deadline  for  the  Palestinians  to 
stop  violence  that  continued  to  rage 
in  Israel  and  the  West  Bank  and 
agreed  to  attend  a  U.S.-hosted  sum- 
mit if  one  was  called,  his  spokesman 
said. 

But  many  Palestinians  continue  to 
express  growing  bitterness  toward  the 
United  States  -  sentiments  that  could 
complicate  the  long-running 
American  bid  to  broker  a  Mideast 
peace. 

Israel,  of  course,  is  the  primary  tar- 
get of  Palestinian  fury  over  the  clash- 


es that  have  left  dozens  dead,  neariy 
all  of  them  Palestinians.  But  the 
United  States,  as  Israel's  closest  ally 
and  chief  protector,  is  seen  by  many 
Palestinians  as  bearing  a  heavy  share 
of  responsibility  for  the  methods 
Israel  has  used  to  try  to  quell  the  vio- 
lence. 

"With  one  word  from  America,  all 
this  would  stop  -  the  tanks,  the  heli- 
copters, the  live  ammunition,"  said 
Mohib  Barghouti,  a  Palestinian  jour- 
nalist, speaking  as  gunfire,  apparently 
from  both  sides,  rang  out  during  a 
clash  Monday  on  the  outskirts  of  the 
West  Bank  town  of  Ramallah. 

As  soon  as  the  Jewish  holy  day  of 
Yom  Kippur  ended  at  sunset 
Monday,  the  West  Bank,  which  had 
been  relatively  calm,  flared  into  vio- 
lence, with  a  gun  battle  erupting  in 
Hebron  and  Jewish  settlers  throwing 
stones  at  Palestinian  homes  around 

SecMIUItpagel? 


Gore  campaigns  in  Horida; 
Bush  heads  for  Tennessee 


CANDIDATES:  As  race 
winds  down,  both  men 
prepare  for  next  debate 


ByMihtGlovtr 

The  Associated  Press 


SARASOTA.  Ra.  -  With  atten- 
tion shifting  to  the  next  presidential 
debate,  Al  Gore  began  a  new  assault 
on  George  W.  Bush's  record,  while 
Bush  aides  said  the  Democratic  nom- 
inee "consistently  and  repeatedly" 
makes  things  up  while  campaigning. 

Both  candiclates  eased  their  cam- 
paign schedules  Monday  for  debate 
preparation  -  Republican  Bush  at  his 
Texas  ranch  and  Gore  in  Rorida  - 
with  limited  public  events  before 
Wednesday  night's  confrontation. 

Gore  made  a  brief  appearance  at  a 
Sarasota  bookstore  and  said  he  was 
"enjoying  the  process"  of  preparing 
for  the  second  debate.  "I  just  had  a 
long  conference  call  with  my  debate 
advisers  around  the  country,"  he  said, 
referring  to  the  13  citizens  his  cam- 
paign recruited  to  help  critique  his 

I 


style. 

Gore  bought  a  children's  book  for 
his  grandson  and  two  novels  -  "Sick 
Puppy"  by  Cari  Hiaasen  and  "Open 
House"  by  Elizabeth  Berg  -  before 
returning  to  the  resort  where  he  is 
practicing. 

He  planned  an  event  Tuesday  in 
-Bradenton  to  promote  his  S  10,000  tax 
credit  for  college  tuition.  On  Tuesday, 
Bush  was  heading  to  Gore's  home 
state  of  Tennessee  -  which,  like 
Rorida,  is  a  state  where  the  race  is 
surprisingly  close. 

There  were  harsh  exchanges 
between  campaign  strategists.  Gore 
stepped  up  his  assault  on  Bush,  dis- 
patching running  mate  Joseph 
Lieberman  to  Texas  for  a  "failed  lead- 
ership tour"  later  this  week  bashing 
Bush's  record  as  governor. 

That's  part  of  a  coordinated 
assault,  in  which  surrogate  campaign- 
ers will  be  sent  to  battleground  states 
sounding  the  same  theme. 
Democratic  National  Committee 
officials  said  they  also  will  step  up 
advertising  criticizing  Bush  on  envi- 

Sg<amMUiH,pi9e16 


Milosevic  loyalists  out;  Kostunica  allies  in 


GOVERNMENT:  Support 
for  new  president  edges 
top  ofilcials  from  office 


By  Dusan  Stojanovk 
The  Associated  Press 

BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia  -  Key 
remnants  of  Slobodan  Milosevic's 
regime  crumbled  Monday  after 
Yugoslavia's  prime  minister  and  the 
country's  most  powerful  police  chief 
resigned.  Early  elections  were  set  for 
the  Serbian  parliament,  a  last  bastion 
ofthe  old  order. 

Riding  the  wave  of  public  support 
that  brought  him  to  power.  President 
Vojislav  Kostunica  moved  swiftly  to 
drive  out  remaining  Milosevic  stal- 
warts. The  government  in  Serbia,  the 
main  Yugoslav  republic,  was  expect- 
ed to  be  dissolved  Tuesday. 

Just  two  days  after  formally  taking 
office,  Kostunica  was  also  putting  his 
supporters  in  charge  ofthe  country's 
most  important  institutions,  includ- 
ing the  police,  judiciary,  banks  and 
state-run  companies. 

A  key  Kostunica  aide,  Zoran 
Djindjic,  signaled  the  new  govern- 
ment's desire  for  closer  ties  to 


The  Associated  Press 

Yugoslav  President  Vojislav  Kostunica  shakes  hands  with 
Belgraders  in  front  ofthe  Serbian  parliament  building  yesterday. 


Washington  after  an  election  cam- 
paign in  which  the  opposition  sought 
to  distance  itself  from  the  United 
States  because  of  public  anger  over 
last  year's  NATO  bombing  cam- 
paign. 

"Without  a  strategic  partnership 
with  America,  there  is  no  solution  for 
the    Serbian    national    interests," 


Djindjic  said. 

Milosevic,  who  has  been  holed  up 
at  one  of  the  president's  oftlcial  resi- 
dences in  a  Belgrade  suburb, 
remained  out  of  public  view 
Monday. 

But  two  of  his  key  allies,  federal 

SeeVUG0SUVU,page12 


ORLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 


Ford  tries  to  put  brakes 
on  Explorer  criticisms 

DETROIT  —  A  newspaper  report  that  said 
Ford  Explorers  have  a  higher  rate  of  tire-related 
accidents  than  other  sport  utility  vehicles  was 
criticized  Monday  as  flawed  by  company  offi- 
cials. 

Ford  has  blamed  Firestone  tires  for  any 
increase  in  Explorer  accidents,  and  6.5  million 
Firestones  have  been  recalled  after  they  were, 
linked  to  101  deaths  and  hundreds  of  injuries. 

The  tires  were  standard  on  many  Exploren. 
But  experts  said  a  Washington  Post  analysis 
printed  Monday  suggested  the  Explorer  itself 
may  play  a  role  in  accidents,  even  when  other 
tires  are  involved. 

The  analysis  gives  '^n  indication  that  there 
may  be  a  factor  with  the  Ford  Explorer  beyond 
the  tire  issue,"  said  James  Fell,  a  former 
research  diief  for  the  National  Highway  and 
Traffic  Safety  Administration.  "It's  a  first  indi- 
cator that  they  nnay  have  a  stability  problem." 


The  Post  kx>ked  at  fatal  crashes 
nationally  from  1997  to  1999  and  at 
fatal  and  nonfatal  crashes  in  Florida 
during  the  same  period. 

The  newspaper's  analysis  of  2,000  fatal 
accidents  involving  SUVs  nationwide  conclud- 
ed that  Explorers  with  Goodyear  tires  had  a 
higher  rate  of  tire-related  accidents  than  did 
other  SUVs.  It  could  be  a  statistical  fluke 
because  the  database  was  so  small,  the  Post  said. 

Aristide  may  return  to 
presidential  seat 

PORT-AU-PRINCE.  Haiti  -  Former 
President  Jean-Bertrand  Aristide  registered 
Monday  to  run  in  a  presidential  election  that  all 
major  opposition  parties  arc  boycotting,  virtu- 
ally guaranteeing  him  victory. 

Outside  the  electoral  council  office  where 
Aristide  filed  his  candidacy,  his  supportere 
danced  to  a  carnival  band  and  shouted 
Arittide's  campaign  liogBn:  "Peace  of  Mind!* 


Peace  in  the  Belly!" 

"Today  we  have  taken  a  historic 
step  on  the  road  toward  peace," 
Aristide  said  as  he  left. 
He  had  waited  until  the  last  day  to  reg- 
ister for  the  Nov.  26  elections,  which  will 
include  nine  Senate  seats  and  one  in  the  House 
of  Assembly. 

Aristide's  victory  is  an  almost  foregone  con- 
clusion with  the  opposition  boycott,  which 
leaves  only  four  other  little-known  candidates  in 
the  race.  The  opposition  parties  charge  May- 
July  legislative  elections  were  rigged  to  favor 
candidates  allied  to  Aristide,  who  they  daim  is 
plotting  to  return  Haiti  to  dictatorship. 

California  democrats 
lead  GOP  in  funding 

SACRAMENTO  -  Tapping  both  business 
and  labor,  the  Legislature's  Demoaatic  leaders 
have  buih  more  than  a  4-1  edge  over  their 
Republican  counterparts  in  campaign  fund- 


raising. 

Assembly  Speaker  Robert  Hertzbcrg,  D-Van 
Nuys,  and  Senate  President  Pro  Tem  John 
Burton,  D-San  Francisco,  reported  raising 
$1 1.5  million  through  Sept.  30,  according  to  the 
most  recent  reports  available. 

The  top  Republican  leaders,  Senate 
Minority  Leader  Jim  Brulte,  R-Rancho 
Cucamonga.  and  Assembly  Minority  Leader 
Scott  Baugh,  R-Huntington  Beach,  raised  a 
total  of  S2.6  million.  ,.     ., 

The  four  leaders  are  traditionally  major 
sources  of  campaign  money  for  candidates  run- 
ning in  tough  racte. 

Democratic  candidates  have  outspent 
Republicans  in  recent  elections. 

GOP  leaders  say  they  could  face  a  bigger  dis- 
advantage this  year  because  Democrats  hold 
the  governor's  office  and  control  both  houses  of 
the  Legislature  for  the  first  time  in  16  years, 
making  them  more  attractive  to  special-interest 
donors. 

Compiled  from  Da^  Bruin  wire  reports 


.'-  !\' 


TiMsdiy.OctotMr  10^2000 


STATE  ^  LOCAL 


,  i>t  ..v.- 


Buchanan  takes  on  'excess'  immigration 


CAMPAIGN:  StiU  trailing 
Nader,  Reform  candidate 
will  televise  'Meatball'  ad 


By  Scott  Lindlaw 

The  Associated  Press 

SACRAMENTO  -  Reform 
Party  presidential  candidate  Pat 
Buchanan  aired  his  first  TV  ad 
Monday,  a  spot  decrying  what  he 
described  as  excessive  immigration 
and  the  erosion  of  English  as  the 
nation's  dominant  language. 

With  four  weeks  until  Election 
Day,  Buchanan  chose  two  polariz- 
ing issues  to  energize  his  campaign. 
Polls  show  him  mired  at  the  bottom 
of  the  presidential  field,  behind 
Green  Party  contender  Ralph 
Nader. 


TheAsMdandftess 

Reform  Party  presidential  candidate  Prt  Buchanan  watches  a  com- 
mercial to  be  aired  for  his  campaign  during  a  news  conference. 


Gore  has  opposed 
English-as-officJal- 
language  efforts. 


"Unrestricted  immigration  could 
make  you  a  bilingual  and  a  multilin- 
gual country,"  Buchanan  said  in  an 
interview.  "Those  countries  don't 
seem  to  be  staying  together  too 
well." 

His  new  ad.  titled  "Meatball," 


depicts  a  man  who  begins  to  choke 
when  he  hears  of  a  government 
move  to  strip  English  of  its  status  as 
the  "national  language." 

The  ad  cites  an  executive  order 
signed  by  President  Clinton  in 
August  making  it  easier  for  non- 
English-speaking  citizens  to  gain 
access  to  federal  programs  and  ser- 
vices. 

The  man  calls  911  and,  eyes 
bulging  from  the  meatball  stuck  in 
his  throat,  hears  an  automated 
menu  of  languages  to  choose  from. 

He  drops  dead  before  getting  to 
English,  though  it's  not  clear  what 
the  choking  man  would  have  done 


had  he  reached  an  English^peaking 
dispatcher. 

"That's  a  good  question," 
Buchanan  said  at  a  news  confer- 
ence. 

"Do  you  ever  miss  English?"  an 
announcer  asks  in  the  ad. 
"Immigration  is  out  of  control. 
Bush  and  Gore  arc  writing  off 
English  for  good."  >>'  ? 

Gore  has  opposed  English-as- 
official-language  efforts;  Bush  has 
taken  no  stand  on  the  maHer,  but 
supports  teaching  children  to  be 
proficient  in  English  while  respect- 

SMlUaUIUN,|Mge14 


Talks  stalled  on  both_ 
L.A.-area  labor  actions 


TRANSPORTATK)!^  MTA 
walkout  moves  into  4th 
week  without  progress 

The  Associated  Press 

The  union  representing  4,300  strik- 
ing bus  and  rail  operators  in  Los 
Angeles  offered  a  contract  proposal 
Monday  as  attempts  to  end  the  24- 
day  strike  continued. 

Union  officials  would  not  disclose 
details  of  their  proposal,  which  was  a 
counteroffer  to  one  made  Friday  by 
the  Metropolitan  Transportation 
Authority. 

"There's  movement,  but  I  don't 
know  if  it  is  enough,"  said  Goldy 
Norton,  a  spokesman  for  the  United 
Transportation  Union.  "If  we  can 
actually  get  anywhere,  we'll  have  to 
see." 

MTA  officials  reviewed  the  coun- 
terproposal Monday  afternoon,  said 
agency  spokesman  Ed  Scannell. 

The  strike  began  Sept.  16  and  has 
left  450,000  commuters,  many  of 
whom  are  among  the  region's  work- 
ing poor,  searching  for  alternate 
transportation.  The  two  sides  have 
differed  over  reducing  overtime  pay 
and  the  use  of  part-time  drivers, 
among  other  issues. 

As  the  transit  walkout  entered  its 
fourth  week,  negotiators  for  Los 


koznfio  -com 


TM 


Angeles  County  and  the  union  repre- 
senting 47,000  county  workers  were 
trying  to  head  off  a  separate  general 
strike  planned  for  Wednesday. 

Union  leaders  and  county  Chief 
Administrative  Officer  David 
Janssen  have  been  involved  in  behind- 
the-scene  talks  in  hopes  of  avoiding  a 
massive  labor  action  at  county  hospi- 
tals, libraries,  registrar's  offices  and 
elsewhere,  county  spokeswoman 
Judy  Hammond  said. 

"Neither  side  wants  to  have  the 
general  strike,"  she  said.  "They're 
hoping  to  resolve  it" 

A  union  representative,  however, 
said  the  two  sides  aren't  talking. 

"There  are  no  negotiations,"  said 
Mark  Tamawsky,  a  spokesman  for 
Service  Employees  International 
Union  Local  660.  "The  county  has 
not  budged  on  its  position  not  to 
return  to  the  bargaining  table  unless 
we  call  off  the  strike." 

The  union  called  a  series  of  one- 
day  strikes  at  selected  county  build- 
ings last  week  in  preparation  for 
Wednesday's  possible  walkout.  On 
Sunday,  members  rallied  outside  the 
county's  Museum  of  Art  in  an  infor- 
mational picket,  passing  out  leaflets 
about  their  "Fair  Share"  message. 

The  union  wants  a  15.5  percent 
pay  hike  over  three  years,  while  the 
county  has  offered  9  percent. 

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IMyBruiflNew 


Tuesday,  October  10, 2000 


Sweet  &  Crispy 
Fuji  Apples 


/lb. 

Reg.  990/lb. 


Discount  Shoppers 
pay  only  350  /lb. 


Sparkletts* 

•  CItVSTAL  niESH  MINKINO  WATER 

•  MOUNTAIN  SPRINQ  WATER 

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Discount  Shoppers 
pay  only  530 


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Just  buy  $35  or  more  of  groceries*  and  we'll 

take  10%  off  your  bill. 

"^--  ''''■■  ^Excluding  alcohol  and  tobacco. 


Breidstiks       Ralphs 

DnoMShopptr  EmydiyPiioel 


Breadstiia 

Grocery  Ewr^fWa 

Treetop  Apple  Juice  64oz. $3.19 $2.87....    |2  99 

Langers  Cranberry  Juke  (Asa. 3.29 2.96 2.99 


1.34. 


.1.29 


Gatorade  32oz 1.49 

Heinz  Ketchup  36oz 2.69."!..""  2  42 2  59 

Best  Foods  Mayonnaise  32oz. 3.69 3  32         2  99 

General  Mills  Cheerios  l5oz 3.99.         359         359 

Kellotgs  Raisin  Bran  Cnindi  I80Z. 4.19 ..ill 3  89 

Pest  Grape  Nuts  24o2 3.69 3.32         3  39 

C  &  H  Granulated  Sugar  lib 0  99  089 

Skippy  Peanut  Butter  ISoz 2.89 .1  2^60 

Sunmaid  Seedless  Raisins  15oz. 2.47 2  22 


0.99 
2.67 

_ _  __         239 

Hershey  Chocolate  Syrup  24oz 2.29."..!!!1"2.06!.."!.....2.27 


Discount 

Good  Thru 
Dec  ZV 


Breadstjks       Ralphs 

Discounl Shopper  EwrydwPrice 


Starbucks  Fresh  Roa.st  Coffee  12oz 8.89 

ride  Ultra  Liquid  50oz 539 

Viva  Ultra  Paper  Towel  ea. ^ 2.29!! 


ISorthem  Bath  Tissue  4pk.. 
Dixie  Everyday  Plates  24ct. 


1.69. 
2.89. 


.8.00.... 
.4.85.... 
.2.06.... 
.1.52.... 
.2.60. 


8.39 

4.99 

1.99 

1.55 

2.77 


Breadstiks 
EvHyday  Price 

Louis  Rich  "Rirkey  Bacon  12oz 2.49 2.24  2  29 

Tropicana  Pure  Premium  O.J.  32oz 2.77....       2  49 2  69 

Tropicana  Pure  Premium  O.J.  64oz 4.09 I3  68 3  89 

Donald  Duck  Orange  Juice  64oz 3.29  2  96 3  07 

Springfield  Butter  8oz 1.69 152 167 

Laughing  Cow  Chee-se  Wedges  6oz 3.37 303  349 

Pillsbury  Choc.  Chip  Cookies  ISoz 3.19 2  87 2  97 

Foster  Farms  "Hirkey  Franks  l6oz I.79  161 169 

Category  Total 34.68 31.i9Z..33.78 

Frozen 

Kraft  Cool  Whip  80Z 1.77  159  179 

Eggo  Homestyle  WaflBes  12.3oz l.V)..'.". 206 9iq 

Swan.son  Chicken  Pie  7oz 0.99. 

Stouffer  Macoroni  &  Cheese  12oz. 2.49 


2.06. 
0.89. 
2.24. 


.2.19 
.0.99 
.2.39 


Sparkletts  Waer  2.5Gal ."2.59!!...".""2!33!......"!.2!59 


Sparidetts  Water  IGal 0  87 

SoBe  2O02 „ 1.29. 

Mars  Snickers  Bar  2.07oz. 0.59. 

Jumbo  Red  Vines  1600. 1.95., 

Pringles  7oz. „ 1  79 

■        "         "  4.15!: 

3.15.. 
3.19.. 


NabKcoOreos  20oz.. 

Nabisco  Wheat  Thins  lOoz 

Orowheat  Cntry.  Buttermilk  Bread  24o2 

Doritos  Chips  3.5oz .„ 599 

.1.99. 


.0.78 
.1.16 
.0.53 
.1.76 
.1.61 
.3.74, 
.2.84. 
.2.87. 
.0.89. 
.1.79 


Lays  Classk:  Potato  Chips  7.5oz. 

JRed  Bull  Energy  Drink  8.3oz 2.17 .."  i  95 2  07 

fcua  Lee  Plain  Bagels  20oz. 3.29 296         2  99 

.rey Poupon Mustard  8oz 3.15 2  84         305 

'  Total 87.17 78.44 

ludsen  Homogenized  Gaflon 3.65 3  29         3  75 

Knudsen  2%  Lowfat  (paper)  1/2 GaUon 2.29 2.06         207 

Knudsen  l%Lowtat  Quart 1.39 125  l  64 

Knudsen  Nonfat  (ps^jer)  1/2  GaUon 2.09 1.88 203 

Category  Total 9.42 8.48.... ..■■9.49 

Soda 

Coca  Cola  2ltr 1.29 1  16  i  29 

Coca  Cola  6pk.-12oz.cans „ 1.99....       179 150 

Dr  Pepper  illr. „ 1.29 1.16 ;..i:29 

7-Up  6pk.-12oz.  cans — 2.19 1.97....      2  49 

C^egofy  Total.. 6.76 6.0« 6.57 

DcU 

I  Can't  Believe  It's  1^  Butter  lib 1.89...       170  177 

Fleischman's  EggBeaters  12oz 2.97 2.67         297 

Mocha  Mix  Non  Dairy  Creamer  Quart. 1.89 170         185 

DannonYoairt  8oz. 0.98 0.88 ."".o;89 

Mountain  High  Plain  Yogurt  I60Z. 1.98 1  78  1  95 

"  -  -  ^2.29 12.06 $2.59 


Minute  Maid  Orange  Juice  12o2 207  186 199 

Category  Total 9.6l......."!iB.64!!.....;9.35 

Ice  Cream 

Dreyer's  l/2Galk)n 539  4gs 


.5.39 


Ben  &  Jerry's  Pint 349    314 357 

HaagenDaz  PinL _ 3.39 ;;."."3.05;.;;";"  ■3'57 

Category  Total 12.27 11.04 12.53 

Produce 

^^  '•>■•••-•: • 0.69 0.62 0.63 

Strawberries  Basket 2.59 2.33 2.29 

Grapes,  Red  lb 2.49 2  24  179 

Granny  Smith  Apples -Sm  lb 1.29  116  169 

Fuji  Apples  lb o.99 0.89    179 

Romaine  Lettuce  ea. 1.39 1.25.         1  29 

Large  Tomatoes  lb i  99 179 1'oo 

Roma  Tomatoes  lb 1^69."."!!!."..  l!52!!..."    169 


.0.41. 

0.80. 

....0.44.. 
....1.97., 
....1.43.. 
...0.62.. 
....0.62.. 
.18.09.. 


.0.69 

0.79 

0.49 

1.99 

1.39 

0.89 

0.79 

.20.19 


Lemons  ea. , o.45 

Cut  Cantak)upe  lb ....o!89 

Cut  Watermelon  lb ........0.49 

Avocado  ea. .................2.19 

Broccoli  lb 1  59 

Ru.ssett  Potatoes  lb ...........O.69 

Brown  Onions  lb 069 

C^egory  Total .J."20.1  li 

Sushi 

California  Roll  8pc 419  377  395 

Mixed Sashi  5pc 4 99 449 479 

Mixed Sashi  8pc „ 799 719 770 

C^'SO'y  Total ...17.17::..;'.i5.45:Z.  16.44 

Chicken/Hambur^r 

Foster  Farms  Boneless/Skinless  Breasts 5.79  5  21  S  QQ 

Whole  Chickens 1  19 i  07 j  49 

Hamburger   Not  to  exceed  15%  fitt 2.69.  2  42 3  29 

Category  Total 9.67 .::8.7o!.....  10.77 

GRAND  TOTAL 206.86 186.11....201.77 


VISA 


Open  'til 


Midnight 


at  1057  Gayley  Ave.  20Q-1 111 


:/•••■;:•:«    :';. 


Tuesday,  October  10, 2000 


imy  DnMiRCwS 


,,f- *•-'■" 


Brain  researchers  awsirded  Nobel  Prize 


MEDiaNE:  Discoveries  in 
treating  Parkinson's  and 
depression  are  rewarded 


ByKimGanMl 

The  Associated  Press 

STOCKHOLM,  Sweden  -A 
Swede  and  two  LI.S.  researchers  won 
the  Nobel  Prize  in  medicine  Monday 
for  discoveries  about  how  messages 
are  transmitted  between  brain  cells, 
work  that  has  paid  off  for  treating 
Parkinson's  disease  and  depression. 

Arvid  Carlsson,  Paul  Greengard 
and  Eric  Kandel  will  share  the 
$915,000  prize  for  their  pioneering 
discoveries  concerning  one  way  brain 
cells  send  messages  to  each  other, 
called  "slow  synaptic  transmission." 


The  medicine  prize  was 

the  first  announced  in  a 

week  of  awards. 


These  discoveries  have  been  cru- 
cial for  understanding  how  the  brain 
normally  works.  In  addition,  the 
work  laid  the  groundwork  for  devel- 
oping the  standard  treatment  for 
Parkinson's  disease  and  contributed 
to  the  development  of  a  class  of  anti- 
depressants that  includes  Prozac,  the 
Nobel  Assembly  at  Karolinska 
Institute  said. 

Carlsson,  77,  is  with  the  University 
of  Goteborg  in  Sweden,  Greengard, 
74,  is  with  Rockefeller  University  in 
New  York  and  Kandel,  70,  is  an 
Austrian-born    U.S.    citizen    with 


Lee  irKJdent  produces 
racial  profiting  concern 


mm> 


n^iht  Bo^a  1^^^^ 

t^Hlj  OTHR  PWW> 


Tuesday,  October  10,2000 


the  AnodMed  Pms 

P»ul  Greengard,  of  Rockefeller  University  In  New  York, was  one  of 
the  winners  of  the  2000  Nobel  Prize  in  Physiology  and  Medicine. 


Columbia  University  in  New  York. 

The  medicine  prize  was  the  first 
announced  in  a  week  of  awards. 

The  winners  of  the  prizes  for 
physics  and  chemistry  will  be 
announced  Tuesday  and  for  econom- 
ics -  the  only  one  not  established  in 
Nobel's  will  -  on  Wednesday  in 
Stockholm. 

The  awards  culminate  Friday  with 
the  coveted  peace  prize  in  Oslo, 


Norway.  The  date  for  the  literature 
prize,  also  announced  in  Stockholm, 
has  not  yet  been  set. 

Carisson  said  he  was  thrilled  to 
learn  Monday  morning  that  he  had 
won. 

"What  shall  I  say,  you  get  glad  of 
course,  overwhelmed,"  he  said  in  an 
interview  with  Swedish  radio. 

StfcNOtEUpageii 


CASE'  Asian  Americans 
mobilize  amid  growing 
controversy  over  issue 


ByH.J«MfH«b«rt 

The  Assodated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Amid  linger- 
ing resentment  among  Asian 
Americans  over  the  Wen  Ho  Lee 
case.  Energy  Secretary  Bill 
Richardson  announced  safeguards 
Monday  to  guard  against  racial  pro- 
filing within  the  department  or 
among  its  private  contractors. 

Richardson  said  he  would  "not 
tolerate  even  hints"  of  racial  profil- 
ing and  ordered  his  inspector  gener- 
al to  investigate  whether  any  such 
activity  has  occurred. 

"We  have  made  progress 
addressing  concerns  of  racial  profil- 
ing, but  more  needs  to  be  done," 
Richardson  said. 

Richardson  said  in  an  interview 
that  he  rwnains  convinced  that  Lee, 
Taiwan-born  former  Los  Alamos 
nuclear  weapons  laboratory  scien- 
tist, was  not  singled  out  in  an  espi- 
onage investigation  because  of  his 
Asian  background. 

Still,  said  Richardson,  there  are 
"enough  instances  throughout  the 
complex"  to  raise  suspicion  that 
such  discrimination  may  have 
occurred  in  other  circumstances. 

"I  want  to  eliminate  once  and  for 
all  any  future  suspicions,"  he  said, 
although  not  elaborating  on  specific 
cases.  "I  will  not  tolerate  even  hints 
of  racial  profiling." 


In  addition  to  the  inspector  gen- 
eral's probe,  Richardson  ordered 
revision  of  outside  contracts  to 
include  guarantees  against  racial 
profiling;  and  he  ruled  that  a  con- 
tractor can  be  forced  to  pay  for  fail- 
ing to  deal  with  profiling. 

Richardson  acted  against  a  back- 
drop of  resentment  among  Asian 
Americans  about  handling  of  the 
Lee  case,  an  issue  that  could  have 
political  overtones  just  weeks 
before  the  presidential  election. 

"This  case,  perhaps  more  than 
any  other  cause  we've  seen,  has  real- 
ly galvanized  the  (Asian  American) 
community,  more  than  campaign 
finance  reform,  more  than  welfare 
reform,"  said  Victor  Hwang,  an 
attorney  for  the  San  Francisco- 
based  Asian  Law  Caucus. 

Hwang,  whose  group  has  joined 
a  lawsuit  Lee  filed  against  the  gov- 
ernment charging  privacy  infringe- 
ment, said  he  views  the  additional 
actions  by  Richardson  "as  a  way  to 
defiect  an  external  investigation." 

Asian  Americans  have  joined 
into  a  growing  political  force,  espe- 
cially in  such  key  states  as 
California.  Many  Asian  American 
activists  have  b^n  outspoken  crit- 
ics of  the  Clinton  administration's 
treatment  of  Lee,  from  singling  him 
out  eariy  on  as  virtually  the  only  tar- 
get in  a  lengthy  espionage  investiga- 
tion to  confining  him  for  nine 
months  without  opportunity  for 
bail. 

Last  month  Lee,  60,  was  freed 
from  jail  after  the  government 
dropped  all  but  one  of  59  security 
violation  charges. 


Two   free   sneaks,    a   free   concert,    and   two   more   free   films   for   Coming   Out   Week! 


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\     I   CAMPUS  F: VENTS. 
CAMPUS  i     P''o-F''o  for  over  a  century! 


FBI  promotes  instilling  of  CDmputer  ethics  in  cNldren 


CYBERSP^E:  Educators, 
parents  should  stress  the 
impact  of  online  crimes 


ByUlM  Hopper 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Thou  shalt  not 
vandalize  Web  pages. 

Thou  shalt  not  shot  down  Web 
sites. 

Thou  shalt  not  covet  thy  neighbor's 
MP3s. 

FBI  agents  are  spreading  a  new 
gospel  to  parenu  and  teachers,  hop- 
ing they'll  better  educate  youths  that 
vandalism  in  cyberspace  can  be  eco- 
nomically costly  and  just  as  criminal 
as  ntailbox  bashing  and  graffiti  spray- 
ing. 

The  Justice  Department  and  the 
Information  Technology  Association 
of  America,  a  trade  group,  have 
launched         the         Cybercitizen 


Partnership  to  encourage  educators 
and  parents  to  talk  to  children  in  ways 
that  equate  computer  crimes  with  old- 
fashioned  wrongdoing. 

The  nascent  effort  includes  a  series 
of  seminars  around  the  country  for 
teachers,  classroom  materials  and 
guides  and  a  Web  site  to  help  parents 
talk  to  children. 

"In  a  democracy  in  general.  We 
can't  have  the  police  everywhere," 
said  Michael  Vatis,  director  of  the 
FBI's  National  Infrastructure 
Protection  Center,  which  guards 
against  computer  attacks  by  terror- 
ists, foreign  agents  and  teen  hackers. 

"One  of  the  most  important  ways 
of  reducing  crime  is  trying  to  teach 
ethics  and  morality  to  our  kids.  That 
same  principle  needs  to  apply  to  the 
cyber  world,"  he  said. 

Vatis  and  other  FBI  agents  attend- 
ed a  kickoff  seminar,  titled  the 
National  Conference  on  Cyber 
Ethics,  last  weekend  at  Marymount 
University  in  Arlington,  Va. 


Part  of  the  challenge:  Many  teens 
still  consider  computer  mischief 
harmless.  A  recent  survey  found  that 
48  percent  of  students  in  elementary 
and  middle  school  don't  consider 
hacking  illegal. 

Gail  Chmura,  a  computer  science 
teacher  at  Oakton  High  School  in 
Vienna,  Va.,  makes  ethics  a  constant 
in  her  curriculum,  teaching  kids  about 
topics  such  as  computer  law,  software 
piracy  and  online  cheating. 

She  has  argued  with  students  who 
don't  see  that  stealing  from  a  comput- 
er with  bad  security  is  as  wrong  as 
stealing  from  an  unlocked  house. 

"It's  always  interesting  that  they 
don't  see  a  connection  between  the 
two,"  Chmura  said.  "They  just  don't 
get  it." 

The  FBI's  Vatis  tells  students,  "Do 
you  think  it  would  be  OK  to  go  spray- 
paint  your  neighbor's  house  or  the 
grocery  store  down  the  street?  On  a 
Web  site,  it's  the  same  sort  of  thing. 
It's  somebody's  storefront  or  an 


extension  of  themselves!" 

Chmura  tries  similar  messages. 
For  instance,  she  asks  a  budding  com- 
poser how  he  would  feel  if  his  music 
was  stolen  and  given  away  online. 
■  *TT»ey  do  sometimes  realize  that 
when  they're  copying  someone's 
product,  it's  not  just  that  5-cent  disk, 
but  someone's  work  that  they're 
copying,"  she  said.  "I  think  they  do 
come  to  appreciate  the  fact  that  it's 
somebody's  salary  they're  stealing." 

Vatis  cites  a  long  list  of  cyber 
crimes  perpetrated  by  minors,  includ- 
ing attacks  on  defense  department 
computers  in  1998  and  the  February 
jamming  of  major  Web  sites  such  as 
Amazon.com  and  eBay. 

He  tries  to  drive  home  the  conse- 
quences of  hacking  -  including  the 
resources  it  drains  from  his  center,  as 
law  enforcement  scrambles  to  find 
who  is  responsible  at  the  outset  of  an 
attack. 

Authorities  "don't  know  if  it's  a  ter- 
rorist or  a  foreign  military,"  Vatis 


said.  "It  diverts  very  scarce  resources 
of  people  who  are  trying  to  focus  on 
crime,  warfare  and  terrorism." 

And  children  aren't  the  only  ones 
in  need  of  training.  College  students 
and  parents  also  are  frequently  unde- 
cided about  what  CTOsses  an  ethical 
boundary  in  cyberspace,  where  any- 
one can  download  pirated  musical 
recordings. 

"We  had  some  discussion  about 
the  legalities  of  whether  you're  shar- 
ing something  with  your  friend  or 
burning  CDs  to  sell  at  your  school," 
said  Deborah  Price  of  Lewisville, 
N.C.,  parent  of  a  14-year-old  daugh- 
ter. "I'm  not  real  certain  about 
Napster  ethics  myself." 

Price  -  whose  daughter  uses 
Napster,  the  music-sharing  service 
considered  a  threat  to  the  recording 
industry  -  feels  that  computer  ethics 
are  an  important  issue. 

"1  think  it  should  be  part  of  the  dis- 
cussion at  the  school,"  Price  said. 
"It's  only  going  to  get  bigger." 


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10       Tuesday,  Odaber  10,2000 


■%'■■. 


Hotels  reprimanded  for  |  Prostitutes  ne^ected  in  sex  studies 
lack  of  improvement 


INDUSTRY:  NAACP  report 
issues  grades  based  on 
franchise  opportunities 


ByRonZapata 

The  Associated  Press 

BALTIMORE-Thehotd  industry 
has  not  lived  up  to  promises  to  improve 
its  treatment  of  blacks  in  hiring,  con- 
tracting and  marketing,  the  NAACP 
said  Monday. 

The  nation's  largest  and  oldest  civil 
ri^ts  organization  gave  the  1 1  major 
hotel  chains  a  grade  of  C-minus  in  its 
fourth  annual  report  card.  Last  year, 
the  NAACP  had 

said    the    hotel     ■^■^■.i^^^^ 
chains  improved 
somewhat 

NAACP 
President  Kweisi 
Mfume  urged 
people  "to  avoid 

spending  dollars      

in      failing     or 
underperforming  hotd  chains." 

"What  we've  seen  is  a  one-way  rela- 
tionship. Over  the  last  three  years,  after 
our  first  report  ended,  the  hotel  indus- 
try has  changed  very,  very  little," 
Mfume  said. 

"Sustained  progress  has  not  been  as 
fast  as  we  had  hoped,  nor  has  it  been  as 
fast  as  it  has  been  promised." 

Marriott  International  earned  a  B 
from  the  NAACP;  Cendant  Hotels,  B- 
minus;  Hilton  Hotels  Corp.,  C-plus; 
and  Hyatt  Hotels  Corp,  C-plus. 

But  the  NAACP  issued  grades 
below    C    to    four    hotel    chains: 


Starwood,  C-minus;  Radisson 
Hospitality  Worldwide,  D-pUis;  Omni, 
D-plus;  arid  Wyndham,  D. 

Last  year,  no  chain  earned  lower 
thanaC. 

The  NAACP  based  the  grades  on 
the  hotels'  hiring  practices,  diaritable 
donations  and  advertising.  Hotels  were 
also  graded  on  whether  franchise 
opportunities  are  offered  to  blacks  and 
wither  the  hotds  use  black  contrac- 
tors. 

"We  are  disappointed  with  the 
grade  and  we  pledge  to  do  better,"  said 
Fred  Stem,  a  spokesman  for 
Wyndham.  "We  don't  have  a  question 
with  the  survey.  We  think  it  is  a  valu- 
able service  that  is  helpful  to  the  indus- 
try as  a  whole." 
t^^^^m^m,^^  Stem  also  said 
their  grade  suf- 
fered because 
their  perfor- 
mance bar  had 
been  raised  by 
other  chains. 

Spokesmen 

for  other  low- 
rated  chains  either  were  not  immedi- 
ately available  or  had  no  immediate 
comment. 

An  executive  with  Marriott,  which  is 
based  in  Bethesda,  Md.,  acknowledged 
that  the  chain  still  has  "more  work  to 
do"  in  this  area,  even  though  it  scored 
the  highest  in  this  report  card. 

"We're  pleased  with  the  B,  but  we're 
still  striving  for  an  A,"  Marriott  vice 
president  David  Sampson  said. 

When  the  first  survey  was  conduct- 
ed in  1997,  the  NAACP  and  55  other 
black  organizations  urged  a  boycott  of 
10  national  hotd  chains. 


SURVEY:  Skewed  figures 

for  male  sexual  activity 

may  be  due  to  oversight 


Hotels  were  graded  on 

...whether they  use 

black  contractors. 


By 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  For  yean  sci- 
entists have  puzzled  over  why  sur- 
veys show  that  the  overall  popula- 
tion of  men  has  more  sex  partners 
than  does  the  women's  population. 
It  should  come  out  even. 

Now  they  think  they  have  the 
answer:  the  surveys  didn't  measure 
the  activity  of  prostitutes. 

"The  number  of  partners  that 
(heterosexual)  men  have  had  must 
be  equal  to  the  number  of  partners 
that  (heterosexual)  women  have 
had,"  said  Devon  D.  Brewer  of  the 
University  of  Washington.  "Each 
new  partner  for  a  man  is  also  a  new 
partner  for  a  woman.  So,  in  reality,  it 
must  be  equal.  By  definition." 

But  the  General  Social  Surveys, 
conducted  by  the  University  of 
Chicago,  and  the  National  Health 
and  Social  Life  Survey,  funded  by 
private  foundations,  found  that  men 
were  claiming  up  to  74  percent  more 
partners  than  women. 

The  government  uses  this  data  to 
design  public  health  programs  to 
combat  sexual  diseases.  y   ■    . 

Brewer  said  social  scientist 
scrambling  to  explain  the  embanws- 
ing  inconsistency,  suggested  one  of 
two  basic  problems  -  survey  subjects 
were  lying,  or  there  was  some  funda- 
mental flaw  in  the  way  the  data  was 
being  collected. 

"One  explan^on  was  that  men 
are  boasting  j^r'bragging  about  their 
number  of^jjartners  and  that  women 


were  being  modest,"  said  Brewer. 

That  may  be  a  factor,  he  said,  but 
a  study  he  co-authored  in  the 
Proceedings  of  the  National 
Academy  of  Sciences  says  the 
biggest  cause  of  the  discrepancy  is 
that  the  surveys  ignored  the  profes- 
sionals: women  who  perfomvsex  for 
profit. 

''We  found  these  high^ctivity 
women,  prostitutes,  were  inadver- 
tently excluded  by  the  design  of  the 
surveys,"  said  Brewer,  whose  study 
appears  Tuesday  in  PNAS. 

Brewer  said  the  national  surveys 
sought  answers  froni  people  who 
lived  in  "households,"  and  left  out 
dwellings  like  jails,  motels,  shelters 
and  rooming  houses  where  prosti- 
tutes are  more  apt  to  be. 


"There  is  not  a  big 
market  out  there  for 
women  to  buy  sex  .* 

Devon  D.  Brewer 

University  of  Washington 


Also,  in  order  to  find  people  in  the 
households,  the  surveyors  rang 
doorbells  during  evening  hours,  and 
on  weekends  and  holidays.  Although 
those  are  the  times  when  most  peo- 
ple are  at  home,  but  it  is  also  the  time 
when  most  prostitutes  are  working, 
said  Brewer. 

To  test  this  theory,  Brewer  and  his 
colleagues  analyzed  other  studies  to 
gain  an  estimate  that  there  are  about 
23  prostitutes  for  every  100,000  peo- 
ple in  America. 

A  second  study.  Brewer  said,  con- 


cluded that  the  average  prostitute 
had  694  male  partners  a  year. 

"That  is  an  average,"  said  Brewer. 
"Some  have  far  more  and  some  have 
far  fewer,  but  that  is  a  representative 
sample." 

Applying  these  estimates  of  pros- 
titute activity  to  the  national  surveys 
put  the  final  numbers  for  sexual  part- 
ners about  into  equal  balance 
between  the  genders,  said  Brewer. 

Male  prostitutes,  he  said,  were 
not  included  because  '\ve  believe 
that  is  quite  rare.  There  is  not  a  big 
market  out  there  for  women  to  buy 
sex  from  men." 

Tom  Smith,  director  of  the 
General  Social  Survey  at  the 
University  of  Chicago,  said  Brewer's 
study  "offers  a  likely  explanation  for 
at  least  part  of  the  discrepancy,"  but 
that  there  are  also  other  factbrs. 

Smith  said  that  about  10  percent 
of  the  discrepanQT  may  be  because 
the  survey  did  not  get  responses 
from  sexually  active  juveniles.  This 
would  create  a  bias,  for  example, 
because  males  over  18  mi^t  report 
sex  with  young  females,  but  the  sur- 
vey would  not  include  balancing 
reports  from  underage  girls. 

Also,  Smith  believes  that  another 
10  percent  of  the  bias  may  come 
from  gender-based  attitudes  toward 
sexual  surveys. 

"We  believe  there  is  an  overre- 
porttng  (of  sex  partners)  by  men  and 
an  underreporting  by  women,"  said 
Smith. 

The  GSS,  first  published  in  1988, 
is  paid  for,  in  part,  by  the  National  • 
Science  Foundation.  Smith  said  that 
the  Centers  for  Disease  Control  and 
Prevention  uses  the  data  to  help 
design  and  target  public  health  cam- 
paigns to  control  sexually  spread  dis- 
eases. 


T 


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Daily  Brain  New 


liiKday,  October  10,2000       11 


Marching  band  could  lose  routine 


COMPLAINT:  Student  says 
re-enactment  insensitive; 
board  to  review  videotape 


Byl 

The  Associated  Press 

SPOKANE,  Wash.  -  A  high  school 
marching  band's  rendition  of  "The 
Death  of  Custer"  may  be  axed  after 
drawing  criticism  from  a  Native 
American  student 

School  district  leaders  were  to 
decide  Monday  afternoon  if  the  Lewis 
and  Clark  High  School  Marching 
Band  will  be  allowed  to  perform  the 
halflime  show  again. 

The  music  for  "The  Death  of 
Custer"  was  written  in  1905  and 
depicts  The  Battle  of  the  Little  Bi^m 
of  1876.  The  band  used  it  as  a  center- 
piece for  a  halftime  extravaganza  that 
includes  Custer  dying  of  an  arrow 
wound  and  Indians  performing  a  war 
dance  afterward. 

Vickie  Countryman,  director  of 
equity  for  Spokane  School  Distria  81, 
said  the  district  received  just  the  one 
complaint,  but  that  is  enough. 

"Respect  of  staff  and  students  is  our 
top  priority,"  Countryman  said.  **No 
matter  what  we  do.  it  needs  to  be 


t 


An 
Alternative 

to 
i  Moving 
Back 
Home. 


Deadline: 

Oct  10, 2000  @  noon 
Publication: 

Oct  13, 2000 

To  advertise  call 
310.206.3060. 


respectful  of  everybody." 

She  said  the  student  complained 
about  the  lack  of  authenticity  in  the 
Indian  costumes  and  what  the  student 
called  a  "cartoonish"  depiction  of 
Indians. 

Members  of  the  district's  equity 
committee  will  review  a  videotape  of 
the  routine  and  then  decide  if  it  is 
allowed.  Countryman  said. 

The  show's  last  stand  may  have  been 
a  band  competition  in  Pasco  last  week- 
end, which  Lewis  and  Qark  won,  band 
director  Larry  Jay  said.  The  band 
hoped  to  perform  it  a^n  at  a  football 
game  on  Friday  and  at  the  Pacific 
Northwest  Marching  Band 
Championship  in  Spokane  next 
Saturday. 

Jay  said  the  band  has  worked  on  the 
show  for  nearly  a  year,  and  the  ambi- 
iious  staging  was  well-received. 

"This  thing  is  perceived  as  being 
extremely  welklone,"  Jay  said. 

The  band  performed  the  routine 
Sept  28  at  the  school's  football  game 
against  Spokane's  Shadle  Park  High. 

Dylan  Lodge,  a  student  at  Shadle 
Park,  was  offended  by  the  band's 
depiction  of  Native'Ameiicans. 

"I  thought  (Native  i^ericans)  were 
not  accurately  portrayed,"  Lodge,  16, 
told  The  Spokesman-Keview  newspa- 
per. "They  had  braids  and  fake  beads.  1 


thought  they  looked  gaudy." 

Lodge,  a  member  of  the  Gros 
Ventre  Tribe  from  Montana,  com- 
plained td  the<school  district. 

"The  Death  of  Custer"  lasts  for 
about  6  1/2  minutes  -just  a  bit  shorter 
than  the  actual  Battle  of  the  Little 
Bighorn  -  and  depicts  the  annihilation 
of  U.S.  Army  Lt.  Col.  George 
Armstrong  Custer  and  more  than  200 
of  his  troops  by  Sioux  and  Cheyenne 
warriors. 

"It's  a  musical  melodrama,"  Jay 
said. 

It  begins  with  the  serenity  of  an 
Indian  village,  moves  to  a  gathering  of 
troops,  a  battle  scene,  a  playing  of 
"Taps,"  and  then  a  singing  of  "Nearer 
My  God  to  Thee"  to  dose  the  perfor- 
mance. Jay  said. 

Students  act  out  a  scene  in  which 
Custer  is  shot  with  an  arrow  and  killed. 
The  student  playing  Custer  fires  a  cap 
gun  several  times  in  the  air,  then  falls  to 
the  ground.  Afterward,  students  dance 
in  a  circle  that  symbolizes  a  war  dance. 

The  37  musicians  are  augmented  by 
a  dozen  dancers  who  help  act  out  the 
parts. 

Jay  was  mystified  that  any  Native 
Americans  would  object  to  the  perfor- 
mance. 

"Nobody  called  me  with  a  com- 
plaint," he  said. 


UEBERMAN 

From  page  4 

a* 

Israel  synagogue,  disputes  the  idea 
that  Orthodoxy  discriminates  against 
women.  "You  have  to  look  at  it 
through  the  eyes  of  Jewish  law,  which 
doesn't  talk  about  rights.  It  talks 
about  responsibilities."  Freundel 
said. 

Mrs.  Lieberman  said,  "I  don't 
think  it  makes  Orthodoxy  any  less 
caring  about  women,"  and  she  noted 
that  women  who  want  to  become 
rabbis  have  other  options  in  the 
Reform  and  Conservative  move- 
ments of  Judaism. 

Said  her  husband:  "I  just  would 
observe,  without  getting  into  the  the- 
ological details,  that  there's  change 
going  on  and  there  are  also  options." 

He  noted  that  their  three  adult 
children  -  Matthew,  Rebecca  and 
Ethan  -  all  attend  a  more  liberal  syn- 
agogue of  the  conservative  branch 
and  "we  worship  with  them  some  of 
the  time." 

Jeffrey  S.  Gurock,  professor  of 
American  Jewish  history  at  Yeshiva 
University,  said  that  years  ago 
women  were  forbidden  to  study 
sacred  Jewish  texts. 

"Orthodox  Jews  of  all  stripes  are 
producing  a  far  more  educated, 
learned  group  of  women  who  are 
studying  the  same  type  of  texts  and 
sometimes  with  the  same  rigor  as  do 


their  male  counterparts,  so  that's  a 
change,"  Gurock  said. 

One  insight  into  the  Liebermans' 
thinking  on  the  issue  may  be  the  fact 
that  their  12-year-old  daughter, 
Hana,  recently  had  a  bat  mitzvah,  a 
ceremony  to  demonstrate  maturity 
by  reading  from  the  Torah  -  the  word 
of  God.  Such  a  ceremony,  common 
for  boys,  would  have  been  unthink- 
able for  a  girl  SO  years  ago. 

"We  gave  her  an  option.  She 
could  do  it  elsewhere  if  she  wanted  to 
do  it.  She  chose  to  do  it  in  an 
Orthodox  synagogue,"  Mrs. 
Lieberman  said.  "She's  a  very  inde^ 
pendent  little  kid." 

Gurock  said  the  different  gender 
roles  are  a  product  of  2,000-year-old 
traditions. 

"The  question  is,  to  what  extent 
do  you  want  to  accommodate  your- 
self socially  to  the  worid  around  you 
while  maintaining  a  degree  of  fidelity 
to  Jewish  tradition?"  Gurock  said. 

For  Letty  Cottin  Pogrebin,  a 
founding  editor  of  Ms.  magazine, 
making  accommodations  is  part  of 
the  problem.  "There's  no  such  thing 
as  separate  but  equal,"  said 
Pogrebin,  who  wrote  "Deborah, 
Golda  and  Me:  Being  Female  and 
Jewish  in  America." 

Lieberman  said,  "My  own  vision 
of  the  effect  of  my  religion  on  my  atti- 
tude toward  women  is  that  it  has 
taught  me  to  not  only  respect  but  to 
treat  women  at  least  equally,"  he  said. 


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12       Tuesday,  October  10, 2000 


D«ly  Brum  News 


YUGOSLAVIA 

From  pages        ^ 

Prime  Minister  Momir  Bulatovic  and 
Serbian  Interior  Minister  Vlajko 
Stojiljkovic  -  who  controlled  about 
100,000  policemen  -  both  stepped 
down. 

All  major  Serbian  parties  agreed  to 
early  parliamentary  elections  in 
December  -  a  move  that  could  spell 
the  end  of  Milosevic  supporters'  con- 
trol of  the  republic's  government  and 
legislature.  Given  the  current  popular 
support  for  Kostunica,  his  allies  are 
likely  to  win  a  strong  majority  in  the 
new  parliament. 

Serbia  is  home  to  more  than  %  per- 
cent of  Yugoslavs,  and  whoever  rules 
it  holds  the  balance  of  authority  in  the 
country,  which  includes  one  other 
republic,  Montenegro.  If  the  current 
Serbian  government  and  the  parlia- 
ment remain  in  place,  they  could  block 
many  pro-democracy  reforms  pushed 
by  Kostunica  on  the  federal  level. 

Serbia's  president  and  parliament 
are  elected  separately  from  federal 
posts  and  were  not  involved  in  the 


contentious  federal  vote  Sept.  24. 
Serbian  President  Milan  Milutinovic 
and  other  Serbian  government  leaders 
were  elected  in  1998  to  four-year 
terms. 

Still,  Milosevic's  hard-line  allies  in 
the  Serbian  parliament  were  trying  to 
keep  the  current  legislature  in  place 
until  the  new  elections,  despite  calls 
for  its  immediate  dissolution. 

"This  is  a  highway  robbery,"  said 
Vojislav  Seselj,  Serbia's  ultranational- 
ist  deputy  prime  minister  who  has 
been  allied  with  Milosevic.  "You  will 
not  get  our  blessing  for  a  coup,"  refer- 
ring to  alleged  forceful  removal  of 
Milosevic's  cronies  from  all  major 
state  institutions. 

Seselj  accused  pro-democracy 
forces  of  using  "lynching  methods"  to 
force  out  rivals.  Seselj,  for  the  first 
time,  ackno\\^edged  that  Serbia's  par- 
liament had  lost  control  of  the  repub- 
lic's police  to  pro-Kostunica  forces. 

As  Seselj  was  leaving  Serbia's  par- 
liament, he  was  jostled  by  an  irate 
crowd.  One  of  his  bodyguards  fired 
shots  in  the  air,  and  a  photographer 
was  punched  and  kicked  in  the  head 
by  a  bodyguard.  No  one  was  seriously 


hurt. 

In  the  streets,  factories  and  other 
public  places,  anger  against 
Milosevic's  cronies  sometimes  boiled 
over  into  violence. 


Milosevic's  allies  have ... 

referred  to  Kostunica 

and  his  followers  as 

Western  lackeys. 


A  mob  of  workers  attacked 
Radoman  Bozo  vie,  a  close  Milosevic 
aide  and  the  director  of  a  major 
Belgrade  trading  corporation.  He 
tried  to  flee  from  his  car,  but  he  was 
caught  and  beaten.  His  bodyguards 
snatched  him  and  moved  him  into  a 
nearby  building  for  safety.  Later, 
Bozovic  resigned  as  the  head  of 
Genex,  the  biggest  state-run  import- 
export  operation. 

In  the  city  of  Nis,  workers  stormed 
the  state-run  textile  factory,  Nitex, 


demanding  the  management  be  fired. 
Employees  of  Investbanka  demanded 
that  Borka  Vucic,  a  top  financial  asso- 
ciate of  Milosevic,  leave  the  Belgrade 
headquarters  of  the  state-run  bank 
because  "her  safety  is  jeopardized." 

Serbian  Health  Minister  Milovan 
Bojic,  considered  by  many  to  be  the 
most  reviled  of  Milosevic's  support- 
ers, also  resigned  Monday,  the  Tanjug 
news  agency  reported. 

As  the  vestiges  of  the  old  regime 
were  being  cleared  away,  the 
European  Union  lifted  economic 
sanctions  against  Yugoslavia  and 
offered  it  $2  billion  in  aid  to  help 
rebuild  the  country,  as  well  as  lifting 
key  anti-Milosevic  sanctions. 

The  decision  marked  a  turning 
point  in  Yugoslavia's  relations  with 
the  rest  of  Europe  and  was  seen  as  a 
first  step  toward  integrating  the  coun- 
try into  the  European  mainstream. 

Still,  obstacles  remained  for  the 
Kostunica  camp. 

Yugoslavia's  defense  minister 
attempted  Monday  to  rally  opponents 
of  the  new  government,  issuing  a  last- 
ditch  appeal  to  Milosevic's  shaken 
supporters  not  to  abandon  the  ousted 


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Enter  by  October  31.  2000 


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leader.  :"':■[>  ■:-'-^-  .'■'  ':■.'-■-':./.!  'A  - 
Gen.  Dragoljub  0jdanic  said  that 
"the  disunity  among  the  Serbs  is  incit- 
ing the  plans  of  our  proven  (foreign) 
enemies"  to  occupy  the  country. 
Milosevic's  allies  have  consistently 
referred  to  Kostunica  and  his  follow- 
ers as  Western  lackeys  bent  on  taking 
over  the  Serb  state. 

Ojdanic,  a  dose  Milosevic  ally  who 
has  also  been  indicted  for  war  crimes, 
has  not  formally  recognized 
Kostunica  as  the  new  Yugoslav  presi- 
dent and  is  not  expected  to  keep  his 
position  in  the  new  government.  He 
has  no  direct  control  of  the  military, 
which  has  'fallen  under  Kostunica 's 
command. 

Still,  he  retains  influence  among  the 
military  brass,  and  any  call  he  might 
make  to  rally  pro-Milosevic  forces 
could  be  problematic  for  the  new 
regime. 

The  military  leadership  -  which 
consist  mostly  of  Milosevic  loyalists  - 
has  only  grudgingly  endorsed 
Kostunica  as  the  new  head  of  state. 
The  top  generals  will  likely  be  all 
replaced  as  part  of  a  sweeping  purge 
of  Milosevic  supporters. 


DaNy  Bruin  News 


Tuesday,  Octobff  10,2000        13 


A  student 
surveys  the 
area  near  the 
Knudsen 
construction 
site  Monday. 


CONSTRUaiON 

From  page  1 

to  allow  for  the  consolidation  of  the 
physics  and  astronomy  depart- 
ment," Enholm  said. 

In  addition  to  excavating  land, 
the  physics  research  lab  in  Kinsey 
Hall  will  eventually  b^-demolished 
and  replaced  in  Knudsen  Hall. 

The  excavation,  which  began 
June  26,  is  scheduled  to  be  complet- 
ed by  Friday,  but  Enholm  said 
there's  a  chance  activities  will 
extend  to  the  middle  of  next  week. 

The  university  decided  to  start 
excavating  the  land  -  the  most  dis- 
ruptive part  of  construction  -  over 
the  summer  when  fewer  students 
were  around  to  feel  its  impact, 
Enholm  said. 

The  second  phase  of  the  project, 


which  involves  the  actual  construc- 
tion of  the  building,  is  slated  to 
begin  in  spring  2001. 

Enholm  said  the  time  gap 
between  the  two  phases  is  necessary 
for  the  architect  to  draw  up  plans  for 
the  project. 

Though  the  fence  will  remain  in 
place  until  the  new  building  is  com- 
plete, not  everyone  is  worried  about 
the  inconvenience  it  may  cause  for 
the  next  two  years. 

"I  pass  by  Knudsen  regularly  and 
the  gates  are  not  that  much  of  an 
inconvenience  because  there  are  two 
entrances,"  said  Mike  Huang,  a 
third-year  aerospace  engineering 
student. 

"1  time  my  route  meticulously  so 
when  one  gate  is  closed,  I  will  be  on 
the  way  to  the  other  gate  and  that 
will  be  open  by  the  time  1  get  there," 
he  continued. 


EDWARD  LIN 


NOBEL 

From  pages 

Carlsson's  studies  during  the  late 
1950s  led  to  the  development  of  the 
drug  L-dopa,  still  the  most  important 
treatment  for  the  disease,  the  com- 
mittee said.       , , '  i     :\^  :^':'} 

His  research  also  shed  light  on 
how  other  drugs  work,  especially 
antipsychotic  drugs  used  against 
schizophrenia. 

Carlsson's  work  has  contributed 
strongly  to  the  development  of  a  gen- 
eration of  anti-depression  drugs 
called  SSRIs  (selective  serotonin 
reuptake  inhibitors),  which  includes 
Prozac,  the  Nobel  committee  said. 

"The  discoveries  of  Arvid 
Carlsson  have  had  great  importance 
for  the  treatment  of  depression, 
which  is  one  of  our  most  common  dis- 
eases," the  citation  said. 


Greengard  was  awarded  for  show- 
ing how  brain  cells  respond  to 
dopamine  and  other  chemical  mes- 
sengers. 

Kandel  was  cited  for  his  research 
on  the  biology  of  memory,  showing 
the  importance  of  changes  in  the 
synapse,  the  place  where  chemical 
messages  pass  from  one  brain  cell  to 
another. 

Tim  Bliss,  head  of  neuroscienbe  at 
the  National  Institute  for  Medical 
Research  in  London,  said  Kandel's 
work  -  ongoing  since  the  1960s  - 
could  someday  lead  to  new  treat- 
ments for  Alzheimer's  disease  and 
other  conditions  involving  memory 
loss. 

'Mt's  a  very  major  piece  of  work 
and  he's  been  an  outstanding  leader 
in  the  field  for  many  years,"  Bliss 
said.  "He  identified  the  physical 
embodiment  of  learning  and  memory 
in  the  brain." 


This  year's  award  for  medicine 
was  bumped  to  the  top  slot  after  the 
academy  failed  to  reach  a  decision 
last  week  on  the  literature  prize  -  usu- 
ally the  first  announced. 


The  suspense  for  the 

literature  award  was 

heightened  last  week 

when  the  academy 

didn't  reach  a  decision. 


The  Swedish  Academy,  which  tra- 
ditionally keeps  the  date  of  the  litera- 
ture prize  secret  until  a  couple  days 
before  it  announces  the  winner,  has 
not  set  a  time  yet,  but  H  is  always  a 
Thursday,  usually  in  October. 


The  suspense  for  the  literature 
award  was  heightened  last  week 
when  the  academy  failed  to  reach  a 
decision. 

Alfred  Nobel,  the  Swedish  indus- 
trialist and  inventor  of  dynamite,  left 
only  vague  guidelines  in  his  will  estab- 
lishing the  prizes.  The  selection  com- 
mittees deliberate  in  strict  secrecy. 

The  only  public  hints  available  are 
for  the  peace  prize.  The  five-member 
awards  committee  never  reveals  the 
candidates,  but  sometimes  those 
making  the  nominations  announce 
their  favorites. 

This  year  that  includes  President 
Clinton  and  former  President  Jimmy 
Carter  for  wide-ranging  peace 
efforts,  as  well  as  former  U.S.  Sen. 
George  Mitchell  for  his  efforts  to 
resolve  conflict  in  Northern  Ireland. 

As  for  the  first  announcement, 
Nobel's  direction  that  a  prize  be 
awarded  to  the  person  who  made 


"the  most  important  discovery  within 
the  domain  of  physiology  or  medi- 
cine" is  interpreted  by  a  committee  of 
50  professors  from  the  world- 
renowned  Karolinska  Institute  in  the 
Swedish  capital. 

The  Nobel  Assembly  at 
Karolinska  invites  nominations  from 
previous  recipients,  professors  of 
medicine  and  other  professionals 
worldwide  before  whittling  down  its 
choices  in  the  fall,  as  do  the  other 
selection  committees. 

Last  year's  winner  was  Dr. 
Guenter  Blobel,  64,  a  German  native 
and  U.S.  citizen  who  discovered  how 
proteins  find  their  rightful  places  in 
cells  -  a  process  that  goes  awry  in  dis- 
eases like  cystic  fibrosis  and  plays  a 
key  role  in  the  manufacture  of  some 
medicines. 

The  awards  always  are  presented 
Dec.  10,  the  anniversary  of  Nobel's 
death  in  1896. 


Association  for  Careers  in  Technology 


Oct.  11,  ll-3pm 
TOMORROW 

Shouldn't  a  smart  person 
like  you  have  a  great  job? 


Ackerman  Grand  Ballroom 


'Any  clly  in  tta  woftd  Mrvhxd  by  a  ma^  U.S.  bntd  ilr  urrlar.  not  to  ncwd  $3000  per  ticM. 

. • 


•mil  at  11.^  PM 
pubNoMom  an 
rnoiaGeniNi, 
Aa 
and 


Secure  a  job  for  your 


AMD  Yah( 

L3  Communications  Arth 

LSI  Logic  Edis 

Xilinx  Inro 

^     Raytheon  PWC 

Next  Engine  Xerc 

Broadcom  Inte 

■:     Compaq  App 

Plutus  Enterprises  Dra^ 

I     ViaSat  Sapi 

;     Bilmorphic  VLSI  Maci 

Guidance  IQne 

IBM  Horn 

Microsoft  TR\/\/ 

TAOS  Agik 

,     Ambell  Lock 
Cambridge  Technology    Nov; 

Cisco  Systems  Horn 

Andersen  Consulting  Redi 

Scient  and 
Deloitte  &  Touche  Consulting 

future  at  the  ACT  Tech  Fair 


Yahoo! 

Arthur  Andersen 

Edison 

Inroads 

PWC 

Xerox 

Intel 

Applied  Materials 

Draker 

Sapient 

Macromedia 

IQnest  r 

Honda 

TRW 

Agilent  Technologies 

Lockhead  Martin 

Novacoast 

Homestore.com 

Redspark 

and  More 


■  \ "  ■• 


»   .,  ■    !  »      " 


14       Tuesday,  October  10'2000 


Daily  BiuinNcwf 


Get  in  touch  with  your  spiritual  side. 


BeOQgaiicDs  S^wQaoe 


Runs  every  Friday  in  the  Classified  section. 


•»!sBssii»^ssgemsai« 


*lss^i*ifasiSi>eiassBgS 


Ortho-  MCNEIL  Pharmaceutical  is  a  Member  of  the 
Johnson  &  Johnson  Worldwide  Family  of  Companies. 

Terpetual  Motion.Tins 

describes    the   Ortlio-McNeil    Pharmaceutical    Sales   & 
Marketing   organization.      We're   growing    -    sometimes   in 
size,  always  in    knowledge,   skills,   products   and   services. 

We    encourage    the   entrepreneurial    spirit.    We    offer 
challenging    job    opportunities   to    people,  looking   for        ' 
career   growth    in    an    environment    that    recognizes        -     - 
individuals    for    their   contributions.    Our    sales 
representatives    promote   our   products    in    the    areas    of 
Women's    Health    Care.    Anti- Infectives,    Centi^al   Nervous 
System    and    Wound    Healing   franchises.  .  '-" 

If  you    are   considering  Joining   our   team,    we    will   be 
conducting   an    information   session    on    campus      -.  / 

Wednesday.    October    11    in   The    Career   Center  -V  J 

Conference   Room   from   6:00    -    8:00   pm. 

OI^HOA^cNEIL  V 

W«  ««  «n  Equ»l  Oppottunrty   Emplov«  M/F/D/V 
■nd  committed  to  dsvertity   In  thf'  workplK*. 


Another  valuable  lasson 
learned  from  Hollywood: 


^4'"''*J 


EwBryone 
speaks  EngHsh. 

^GclaUy  Russians, 


Introducins  NibWeboK.coin.  Tomorrow's  entertainment  today. 

Ugonto  original  aptMidk  tiMMra,  ifrtmKrth^ 

■tudMitt  with  halp  from  pMpto  liw  John  Laguizamo  (actor.  Summer  of  S»m\.  Doug  Urnrn  ( 
andOol,  and  Amy  H«*ariing  (dbwtor.  ChMhu^.  Baeauaa  whHa  It't  fun  making  cynical 
•Martainmant  cicMa,  If  a  mora  fwTW  aao  »v«iat  atudanta  ara  actualty  doing  about  it. 


.V*4i 


nibbl^boxacom 

digital  entertainment  in  short,  tasty  bytes. 


PROPOSALS 

From  page  6 

"We  are  trying  to  inform  (the  pub- 
lic) ...  that  the  board  (of  county  super- 
visors) won't  negotiate."  Tamawsky 
said,  "ir  there  is  no  bargaining,  we 
have  to  escalate  the  strike  and  exert  as 
much  pressure  as  possible."     '      : 

The  county  has  filed  an  unfair 
labor  practices  complaint  with  the 
Employee  Relations  Commission 
that  will  be  heard  Tuesday  morning. 
The  county  is  asking  the  commission 
to  order  employees  back  to  work.  The 
county  Board  of  Supervisors  also  will 
meet  in  closed  session  early  Tuesday 
to  discuss  the  issue. 


County  offices  were  closed 
Monday  for  the  Columbus  Day  holi- 
day, but  job  actions  by  nurses,  techni- 
cians and  others  are  planned  Tuesday 
for  County-USC  Medical  Center,  the 
region's  largest  hospital,  Olive  View 
Medical  Center  in  the  San  Fernando 
Valley  and  other  health  care  facilities. 

The  walkouts,  which  started  Oct.  2, 
have  hit  services  ranging  from  animal 
control  facilities  to  the  offices  that 
issue  birth  certificates  and  marriage 
licenses.  On  Saturday,  maintenance 
workers  refused  to  clean  bathrooms 
at  county  beaches. 

The  general  strike  could  affect  a 
vast  array  of  public  services  in  the 
4,083-square-mile  county,  affecting 
many  of  its  10  million  residents. 


Daily  Brain  Nmi 


BUCHANAN 

From  page  6 

ing  diversity  in  language  and  her- 
itage. 

The  ad  will  air  in  at  least  24  states 
through  the  election  and  cost 
Buchanan's  campaign  "millions"  of 
dollars,  said  spokesman  K.B.  Forbes. 
He  would  not  elaborate  on  the  bud- 
get or  the  targeted  markets,  though 
he  said  the  effort  would  emphasize 
border  states. 

The  spot  will  appear  in  every 
major  media  market  in  California, 
"from  Eureka  to  San  Diego,"  he  said. 

Buchanan,  who  received  $12.6 
million  in  federal  election  subsidies 
last  month,  also  is  airing  radio  spots 
around  the  nation.  Those  ads  cover 
such  issues  as  abortion  and  immigra- 
tion. 

Buchanan  has  promised,  if  elect- 
ed, to  reduce  new  entry  visas  to 
250,000  a  year.  In  recent  years,  the 
United  States  has  admitted  between 
700,000  and  800,000  legal,  perma- 
nent residents  each  year. 


English  should  be  the  official  U.S. 
language,  he  said. 

English  is  the  official  language  of 
government  in  at  least  20  states. 
Many  of  the  laws  are  symbolic  and 
do  not  prevent  government  from 
using  other  languages. 

In  Denver,  Buchanan  accused 
Native  Americans  who  tried  to  block 
a  Columbus  Day  parade  there  of 
"cultural  Marxism." 

"I  think  what  is  going  on  here  is  an 
intolerant,  militant  left-wing  group  is 
attempting  to  deny  Italian 
Americans  their  right  to  march  under 
a  banner  of  their  hero,  who  is  also  a 
hero  of  Western  civilization," 
Buchanan  said  in  an  interview  there. 

"It's  all  part  of  a  political  correct- 
ness, which  is  another  name  for  cul- 
tural Marxism.  It  is  anti-European 
and  anti-Western  civilization,"  he 
said.  "We  have  a  right  to  our  heroes 
and  they  to  theirs." 

Denver  police  arrested  147  Indian 
and  Hispanic  activists  who  tried  to 
block  Italians  from  holding  a  parade, 
Saturday,    honoring    Christopher 

Columbus.         '  •       ■;  :  ,  ;;     •"';•'.; 


AdNsnk^. 


call  825  2161 


Lucent  Tedinologies 

Bell  Ubs  Innovations 

Presents  a  Special 
Advanced  Screening 


^^UniversHy  of  California,  Los  Angeles 
Thursday,  October  1 2,  aOO  p.m. 
Aclcerman  Grand  Ballroom 

Get  your  free  passes  at  the 
Compus  Events  Office,  319  KerdchoffHall 


SLEEP 

From  page  3 

you're  taking  the  test,  you  won't  be 
able  to  remember  it  because  you're  no 
longer  under  the  drug." 

Other  substances,  like  alcohol,  can 
also  cause  sleep  deprivation.  Although 
it  can  initially  make  people  fall  asleep, 
alcohol  consumption  may  also  lead  to 
a  condition  called  rebound  insomnia, 
according  to  Yan<jo. 

Because  of  the  way  alcohol  metabo- 
lizes, Yan-Go  said  it  causes  people  to 
wake  up  prematurely  and  keeps  them 
from  going  back  to  sleep. 

There  are  two  kinds  of  sleep,  called 
rapid  eye  move- 
ment   sleep    and  i 
nonraptd        eye 
movement  sleep. 

During  REM 
sleep,  which  is  con- 
trolled by  the  pons 
regioa  of  the  brain- 
stem, people  can 
experience  vivid 
dreams. 

Generated  by 
neurons  in  the 
basal     forebrain, 

NREM  sleep  accompanies  slower 
breathing  and  heart  rates  as  well  as 
lowered  body  temperature  and  blood 
pressure.  Most  adults  spend  80  per- 
cent of  their  sleep  time  in  the  NREM 
state. 

Although  researchers  lack  an  exact 
explanation  as  to  why  people  sleep, 
Harper  said  it  appears  essential  for 
good  mental  health. 

YaMjo  said  sleep  deprivation  can 
mean  a  lack  of  sleep  both  quantitative- 
ly and  qualitatively,  and  can  hinder 
other  body  rhythms  and  mechanisms 
as  well. 

Often,  body  temperature  regula- 
tion;  hormone  secretion,  and  other 
bodily  functions  respond  negatively  to 
lack  of  sleep  or  irregular  sleeping  pat- 


*What  you  owe  your 
brain  at  night,  you 

need  to  pay 
during  the  day." 

Dr.  Frisca  L  Yan-Go 

UCLA  Sleep  Disorders  Center 


terns,  she  said. 

It  can  also  cause  physical  aches  and 
pains  as  well  as,  in  some  people,  lead  to 
depression  and  lack  of  interest  in  life. 
Third-year  design  student  Graham 
Haynes  said  he  believes  he  is  sleep- 
deprived,  but  has  never  been  in  any 
such  accident. 

"But  1  have  done  things  and  don't 
really  remember  doing  them,"  he  said. 
"It  really  scared  me." 

Haynes,  who  sometimes  sleeps  as 
little  as  two  hours  a  night,  noted  he  has 
trouble  paying  attention  in  class  after  a 
short  night  of  rest. 

"Surprisingly,  I  don't  fall  asleep  in 

dass,"  he  said.  "But  I  spend  more 

energy  trying  to  look  like  I'm  being 

active  rather  than 

-^— — «— —  actually       being 

active." 

To  remedy  the 
problem  of  sleep 
depravation,  or  to 
avoid  it  in  the  flrst 
place,  both  Harper 
and  YanOo  rec- 
ommended taking 
naps  during  the 
day. 

"What  you  owe 

your  brain  at  night, 
you  need  to  pay  during  the  day,"  Yan- 
Go  said. 

She  said  she  advises  her  patients  to 
take  "power  naps,"  which  last  15  to  20 
minutes  at  a  time,  as  offen  as  they  need 
them.  She  also  recommends  that  peo- 
ple refrain  from  varying  their  sleeping 
habits,  and  go  to  bed  within  two  hours 
ofa  regular  set  time. 

Harper  said  although  die  amount  of 
sleep  people  need  varies  according  to 
metabolism  and  age,  most  people, 
especially  college  students,  need  at 
least  seven  hours  of  sleep. 

"It's  ahvays  preferable  to  sleep  in 
blocks,"  he  continued.  "But  they 
should  pull  off  time  and  take  a  nap, 
and  try  to  compensate  in  the  afternoon 
for  what  they  miss  at  ni^L" 


iyei^,Octol)er10,2000       15 


I 


njf     If  all  you  want  from  church  is  hell,  fire  and  brimstone,  bum  this  ad 


k  .„ . 


Member  of  the  University  Reiigtous  Conference  at  UCLA 

,,,._■.  ►  ■  - 

Canterbury  Westwood,  the  Episcopal  Chaplaincy 
serving  UCLA  invites  you  to  a  welcome  back  barbecue. 

^' ^  ^'     Tuesday,  October  10         ;       |&^ 

4  pm  Holy  Eucharist  . 

-i  5  pm  Barbecue  on  the  patio 


We  arc  located  at  St  Alban's  Parish  580  Hilgard  (at  Westholme) 
Contact  us  at  310/208.4830  or  www.stalbanswestwood.com  for  more  information 


■■<        l-iH^fh.-    "    .  N.- 1»  J:  Sj^r,^ 


OwnYour  Career 

Management  Consulting 

''Sibson  &  Company 

Information  Session 


.^;d-- 


.*■  i  '■', 


Career  Center  Conit;ieni;e  Room 


Come  iea 


r\i  ! 


^  US  and 


about  Management  Consulting 


Cbmeseeusatthe 
lergraduate 
Business  Society  insulting  Ni^^^ 

October  11  at  7pm 

Grand  Horizon  Room 

(Sunset  Viitage) 

Visit  our  website  at 

www.slbson.com 

or  our  Recruiter  Interview  at 

www.wetfeet.com 


SfRsoN  ^  Company 


ilJi 


W 


11 


16       Tuesday,  (ktob«r  10,2000 


Daily  Bniin 


Memories  in  your  heart 

...and  a  book  on  your  shelf. 


join  rhc  [ 'CI.A  Bminlifc  Yearbook  Sraff  and 
create  the  memories  that  woukl  lasr  a  literime. 

Pick  up  an  j|>plKatii)ii  today  ar  tlu-  .SriukiH  Midia  Iroiu  IVsk  in  KL-rckliott. 
Applaarions  arc  diit-  by  Iri(la\  Ocrol^.-r  I  mU. 

General  Intormarion  Meecinir: 

TOMORROW-  WT-DNESDAY,  October  I  Itli 

at  "^i^Opm  in  1  IS  KerckhofV. 

Call   ^ln..SJ=>._V.  10  lur  moiv  inlormatioii. 


r  'M 


UCLA 

Departnient  of  Music 

Faculty  Recitals  2000-2001 


TheUCU 
Department  of 
Music 

inaugurates  a 
new 

Wednesday 
evening  recital 
series  featuring 
our  outstanding 
roster  of  faculty 
artists. 


October  11  &  18 
Mark  Kaplan,  violin 

J.S.  Bach  unaccompanied 
sonatas 


COMPLIMENTARY 
CONSULTATION 


Braces^^. 
.Deliver  Brilliant  Results. 


Ostin  Hall 

8:00  pm       r  ^ 
$10,  $7 

(students  and  seniors) 


November  15 
Walter  Ponce  and  Evan  Wilson 

Music  for  Piano  and  Viola, 

including 

Sonatas  by  Brahms  and  Glinka 


January  31 
Faculty  Wind  Quintet 

Charles  Coker,  Marion  Kuszyk, 
Gary  Gray,  Sherldon  Stokes, 
and  Brian  O'Connor 


February  28 
Tom  Beghin,  fortepiano 

An  all-Haydn  recital 


April  17 
Walter  Ponce  and 
Jon  Robertson,  duo  pianos,  and 
Mitch  Peters  and 
Jennifer  Judkins.  percussion 
An  all-Bartok  program 


Mayl 
Julia  Gondek,  soprano 
accompanied  by  Jon  Robertson 

Program  includes:  Handel; 
Szymanowski; 
Chopin/Pauline  Viardot- 
Garcia;  Richard  Strauss; 
Granados;  and  Ricky  Ian  Gordon. 


ORTHODONTIST 

SINCE  1980 

UCU  FACULTY  MEMBER 


Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

Member  American  Association  of  OrthnHnntJ|;tfr 
Specializing  In  braces  for  adults  8i  children 


InvisJiDle 
European 


Removable 
Traditional 


(310)  826  -  7494 

11645  Wilshire  Blvd.  #802 

Los  Angeles,  CA  90025 


•  CosTDetic  Porcelain 

•  Surgical  Orthock>ntics 


(949)  552  -  5890 

18124  Culver  Dr.,  #A 

Irvine,  CA  92715 


Teeth  Whitening 

upper  or  lower 

$85"" 


(Rtg.  $200.00) 


The  treafm«nt  wd  be  ex  folow»:  $1000.00  plus 

SIOOOO  fcx  eoch  monm  o»  treofment  renctefed 

for  metal  brocei.  S900.00  plui  S  100.00  for  eoch 

monm  of  treatment  rendered  for  removable 

b«aC6«  and  S 1 700.00  pkji  $126.00  pet  mootti  for 

Mfomte  braces.  $200  00  for  dtaor>o«ltc  study 

model  and  $  1 75  00  for  torrrxjl  consultotlon. 

expJrcrtton  date  1  CM  1-00 


UCLA  School  of  Law 


Fall  2001 


Application  and  Financial  Aid 
Information  Session 


Please  join  us  for  one  of  ttie  following  dates: 


Wednesday,  October  11,  2000    4:00pm-5:00pm 


Wednesday,  November  1,  2000    4:00pm-5:00pm 


This  sessions  will  be  held  in  Room  1357 
in  the  School  of  Law  Building 


m 


PILL 

From  page  1 


x-'tf^y 


women  have  used  it  to  terminate 
pregnancy,  according  to  the  FDA.  In 
the  U.S.,  it  has  taken  more  than  a 
decade  and  heated  political  debate  to 
approve  its  use. 

In  1999,  the  House  passed  a  bill 
that  prevented  the  FDA  from  using 
government  funds  to  approve  drugs, 
including  mifepristone,  that  induce 
abortion. 

The  Senate  version  of  the  bill  did- 
n't include  the  ban,  known  as  the 
Coburn  amendment,  and  it  was  later 
removed  from  the  bill's  language. 

Because  it  is  restricted  by  the 
FDA,  mifepristone  will  not  be  avail- 
able through  pharmacies;  it  is  direct- 
ly supplied  to  physicians  who  are 
authorized  to  prescribe  it. 


CAMPAIGN 

From  page  5 

ronmental,  health  and  gun-control 
issues,  where  they  see  him  as  vulnera- 
ble. 

In  addition,  Democrats  are 
launching  a  new  assault  on  Bush's 
sometimes-jumbled  campaign 

rhetoric  by  issuing  daily  "Bush  bloop- 
ers." 

Campaign  officials  said  a  portion 
of  the  campaign's  Web  site  will  be 
devoted  to  attacking  Bush  for  those 
flubs,  and  the  DNC  will  launch  a 
"Bush  light"  campaign  designed  to 
raise  questions  about  his  intellectual 
capacity. 

Lieberman  will  be  sent  to  Texas 
after  Wednesday's  debate  in 
Winston-Salem,  N.C.,  second  in  a 
series  of  three  presidential  face-offs. 
Bush  and  Jiis  aides  have  made 
much  of  what  they  see  as  Gore's  ten- 
dency to  exaggerate  on  his  accom- 
plishments, which  they  argue  raise 
questions  about  his  credibility.  The 
new  Gore  offensive  is  designed  to 
blunt  Bush's  attack. 

"The  vice  president  has  consistent- 
ly and  repeatedly  made  up  things, 
exaggerated,-  embellished  facts," 
Bush  spokeswoman  Karen  Hu^es 
said  on  "Fox  News  Sunday." 

A  new  USA  Today-CNN-Gallup 
tracking  poll  published  Monday  had 
good  news  for  the  Bush  camp.  The 
telephone  survey  conducted 
Thursday  through  Saturday  found 
the  Texas  governor  moving  ahead  of 
Gore,  49  percent  to  41  percent;  Gore 
had  led  by  as  much  as  1 1  percentage 
points  last  week.  The  new  poll  sur- 
veyed 769  likely  voters  and  had  a 
reported  margin  of  error  of  4  per- 
centage points. 

Gore  campaign  spokesman  Chris 
Lehane  denied  that  tiie  vice  president 
was  turning  the  race  negative  with  his 
new  assault. 

"We  have  always  said  we're  going 
to  have  a  compare  and  contrast  on 
the  public  policy  issues,"  Lehane 
said.  He  said  the  timing  was  designed 
to  sharpen  differences  between  Gore 
and  Bush  in  the  campaign's  final 
month,  when  many  voters  tune  in  for 
the  first  time. 

"It's  been  our  assumption  that  this 
will  be  a  time  period  when  people  are 
paying  particularly  close  attention  to 
the  race,  and  someone's  record  as 
governor  is  a  great  indicator  of  what 
type  of  choices  they  would  make  as 
president,"  Lehane  said. 

He  said  health,  environmental  and 
gun-control  issues  were  picked 
because  Bush  is  vulnerable.  The  gun 
issue  centers  on  a  Texas  law  granting 
permits  for  concealed  weapons  and 
revelations  last  week  that  hundreds  of 
convicted  criminals  and  people  with 
mental  problems  were  able  to  obtain 
those  permits. 

Democrats  argue  that  Republican 
charges  about  exaggeration  come 
because  he  offers  few  new  ideas. 

"What  you  have ...  is  a  Republican 
campaign  that  is  out  of  gas  and  out  of 
ideas,"  said  Gore  adviser  Paul 
"BcsBtz: 


GRADES 

From  page  1 

five  or  ten  years  ago  -  because  of 
what  URSA  can  do  for  you," 
Sandbrook  said. 

Although  the  gradebook  was 
developed  by  information  Services 
in  the  College  of  Letters  and 
Science,  the  feature  will  be  available 
to  all  UCLA  faculty. 

It  will  be  up  to  the  individual 
instructor  whether  or  not  to  use  the 
gradebook. 

Although  it  won't  be  available  for 
general  use  until  next  quarter, 
Sandbrook  said  some  students  have 
already  asked  their  instructors  why 
they  weren't  using  the  electronic 
gradebook. 

It  turned  out  that  instructors  in 
the  students'  previous  classes  had 
been  involved  in  testing  the  feature. 

Some  final  bugs  are  being  worked 
out,  but  the  main  task  now  facing 
developers  is  preparing  for  the  ques- 
tions about  using  the  gradebook. 
Since  the  software  was  developed 
entirely  in-house.  College 
Information  Services  and  the  Office 
of  the  Registrar  are  compiling  their 
own  user's  manual. 

"Just  like  whenever  anybody 
introduces  new  software,  technical 
support  can  be  an  issue,' 
Sandbrook  said. 


BARAK 

From  page  5 

Nablus. 

In  Tel  Aviv,  hundreds  of  Jews, 
some  chanting  "Death  to  the  Arabs," 
descended  into  the  streets,  smashing 
car  windows,  while  in  other  Israeli 
towns,  Jews  and  Arabs  attacked  each 
other  in  perhaps  the  worst  civil  strife 
in  years. 

Barak  met  with  his  cabinet  in  an 
emergency  session  as  the  initial 
_  Monday  night  time  limit  on  his  ulti- 
matum to  Palestinian  leader  Yasser 
Arafat  wound  down.  The  Israeli 
leader  had  demanded  Arafat  stop  the 
violence  or  face  the  end  of  the  peace 
process  and  a  tougher  Israeli  military 
response. 

Just  before  the  session,  Barak 
spoktf'by  phone  to  President  Clinton, 
who  also  spoke  with  Arafat  amid  a 
flurry  of  diplomatic  activity  trying  to 
cobble  together  a  summit. 

Clinton  was  not  the  only  world 
leader  trying  hard  to  get  Arafat  and 
Barak  to  talk.  U.N.  Secretary- 
General  Kofi  Annan  and  Russian 
Foreign  Minister  Igor  Ivanov  were 
also  shuttling  in  the  region. 

After  the  meeting  ended  before 
dawn  Tuesday,  Cabinet  Secretary 
Isaac  Herzog  said  in  a  statement,  that 
the  decision  to  roll  back  the  deadline 
was  taken  in  part  because  of  intema- 
lional  pressure.  The  Cabinet  did  not 
iannounce  a  new  deadline. 

i  "There  are  many  requests  from 
lany  world  leaders  to  the  prime  min- 
ter  and  the  government  to  give  the 
peace  process  a  chance,"  Herzog 
said,  adding,  "Negotiations  with  the 
Palestinian  Authority  on  a  final 
peace  agreement  will  not  continue 
until  the  violence  stops.  Other  issues 
between  Israd  and  the  IHdestinians 
will  be  dealt  with  on  merit." 

Government  spokesman 

Nachman  Shai  said,  "We  will  act  to 
restore  calm  to  the  extent  that  it 
depends  on  us,  while  airo  giving 
Yass«r  Arafat  a  c«rtam  additional 
tii^e  to  do  what  he  needs  te  do 


iMjfBhiinflnH 


Tuesday,  OctoberlO,  2000       17 


He 

sumn 
"If  111 

SliOQu; 


efwasreidjrtogotoa 
1  inflon  oonvtned  one 
JSident  invites,  it  isn't 


T!ne.  hufj-fi.1 


^■gfc.1Mli 


October  20, 2000 


The  Robert  J. 
Stoller  Foundation 

Proudly  presents  the 
Annual  Robert  J.  Stoller 
Memorial  Lecture 

Dr.  Gil  Herdt 

Dr.  Herdt  is  Director  of  Human  Sexual  Studies,  Director  of 
the  Institute  on^xuality,  Social  Inequality  and  Health,  as 
well  as  Professor  of  Human  Sexuality  and  Professor  of 
Anthropology  at  San  Francisco  State  University.  Or.  Herdt, 
a  Guggenheim  f=ellow,  and  William  S.  Vaughn  Feltow 
(1 997-1998)  has  written  over  70  articles  and  25  books 
on  sexuality,  bisexuality,  homosexuality  and  culture.  The 
Stoller  Foundation  is  certain  you  will  find  Dr.  Herdt's 
lecture  fascinating .  It  is  titled: 


"The  IMagical  Age  of  10  and  the  Development 

of  Sexual  Excttement:  A  Lecture  in  Honor  of  the 

work  of  Robert  J.  Stoller" 


The  RotMrt  J.  StDNer  Foundatkmis  a  non  profit 

organization  dedicated  to  promoting  psychoanalytically 

informed  research  in  the  social  sciences,  biobehavioral 

sciences  and  other  reialed  fields.  Visit  our  web  page  for 

upcoming  events.  Htlp:/Avww.stolter-foundation.org 

information  contact  melmandel@msn.com 


•  Admission  is  free 

•  Public  is  welcome 

•  Friday,  October  20. 2000 

•  8:00  p.m. 
•UCLA-NPI  Auditorium 


Do  you  have  ndiat  it  takes 
to  be  on  the 


UCLA 


AD  TEAM? 

FIND  OUT 


Info  session 

Wednesday,  Oct  1 1,  7-9pm 
Anderson  School,  rm.  BSOi 


Look  for  us  on  Bruin  Walk. 


Questions?  Email  caneeij^writeme.com 


EXPO 

Internships  &  Study  Abroad  Services 

Presents 


Academic  Programs  IntemationaV  API 

ACCENT  >      . 

AIFS 

American  Intercontinental  University 

American  University  inParis 

AmeriSpan 

Amigos  de  Las  Americas 

Ardeo  Theatre  Project 

AustraLeam 

Australian  Eudcalion  Connection,  AEC 

Beaver  College  ~ 

Boston  Universllir'- 

British  Tourist  AulfKXity 

Bnjin  Walk  Travel 

BUNAC 

Butler  Univflfsity  '""     "  '  '  '  "" 

CEA  Traveiabfoed.com 

Centerior  Cross-Cultural  Studyl 

COUNCIL-lntemational  Study  Programs 

DIS:  Denmark  International  Study  Program 

EducAsian 

EF  International  Language  Schools 

GoAtiroad.com 

Gonzaga  University 

ICADS/lnsMutB  for  Central  American  Development  Studies 

lES 

InstJtutB  for  American  Universities 

Institute  for  Culturai  Ecology 

Intamattmal  Cooperative  Education 

Intemationat  Studies  Atroad,  ISA 

Intemabonai  Vbhmtaar  Progranr 

Intamationai  Voluoteer  Programs  Assodallon 

iSiSfofHani  SUto  University 

JET 

Jewish  Federsflon 

La  Escuela  Oe  Idiomas  O'Amore 

Lanouage  Studfes  International 

LEXW"" 

Loyola  MarymounI  University 

Northern  Wnois  University 

Pepce  Corps 


THE  FOORIEENTH  JMNIIAL 


HESMY.  emm  n 
lUHAM-AdlO 


'twni&T  i 


EiV-at 


Roam  200 


.'*^Vv-'^--.     ■• 


L 


Wednesday 

Who  is  to  blame  for  the 
violence  occurring  in 
the  Middle  East? 


Daily  Bruin 


Tuesday,  Octobff  10, 2000 


VJewontheWe^^C 

See  all  this  and  more  • 

at  the  Daily  Bruin's  • 

Website:  • 

www.dailybfuin.uda.edu  * 


Cigarette  sales  finally  at  an  end 

Thumbs  up  to  the  Society  of  Engineering  and  Applied  Sciences 
Cafe  for  stopping  cigarette  sales  last  spring  despite  financial  loss- 
es. The  SEAS  Cafe  remained  the  only  on-campus  vendor  of 
tobacco  products  since  the  Associated  Students  of  UCLA  banned  ciga- 
rette sales  10  years  ago. 

The  decision  to  smoke  is  a  personal  one,  but  selling  cigarettes  on  cam- 
pus was  ironic  because  the  university  dedicates  so  much  research  to  con- 
ditions that  may  result  from  smoking,  sudi  as  cancer,  heart  disease  and 
emphysema.  Furthermore,  the  ban  on  cigarettes  should  be  university- 
wide,  and  for  10  years,  SEAS  had  the  monopoly  on  sales. 

The  decision  to  stop  cigarette  sales  does  not  limit  a  student's  freedom 
to  smoke,  since  cigarettes  are  still  available  off-campus,  but  it  ensures 
UCLA  does  not  sell  carcinogens  right  next  to  medical  research  centers. 

UCOP  puts  students  on  back  burner 

Thumbs  down  to  the  University  of  California  Office  of  the 
President  for  the  insufficient  research  that  resulted  in  the  stalling 
of  a  student-approved  measure. 

Last  spring,  85  percent  of  voting  UCLA  students  approved  a  referen- 
dum to  give  91  cents  per  quarter  to  the  United  States  Students' 
Association,  a  national  organization  that  lobbies  on  behalf  of  students. 

UC  Regents  must  approve  student  referenda,  however,  based  on 
research  from  UCOP.  The  decision  to  approve  or  deny  the  referendum 
was  put  off  until  November  due  to  insufficient  research  by  UCOR 

UCOP  never  contacted  members  of  UCLA  student  government 
about  the  measure  and  officials  admitted  to  only  researching  USSA 
through  the  Internet.  If  the  regents  reverse  a  decision  approved  by  a 
majority  of  the  student  body,  then  they  need  to  provide  dear  justification 
for  doing  so  -  such  as  that  it  violates  a  Supreme  Court  decision. 

Failure  to  adequately  research  the  referendum  and  its  implications  is 
not  an  excuse  for  stalling  approval  and  it  suggests  the  regents  do  not  take 
students'  interests  seriously. 

Health  plan  ensures  problems 

m  Thumbs  down  to  the  UC  Regents  and  to  the  UC  Office  of  the 
4T[  President  for  proposing  that  health  insurance  be  mandatory  for 

^-^  all  undergraduates  beginning  next  fall.  Surveys  say  40  percent  of 
UC  students  do  not  have  "adequate"  health  insurance. 

While  addressing  the  health  concerns  of  students  is  important,  the 
regents  and  UCOP  should  realize  that  the  additional  fees  could  place 
UCLA  beyond  the  financial  grasp  of  some  students.  Currently,  UCLA 
health  insurance  is  $700.  Students  from  lower  socioeconomic  back- 
grounds may  not  be  able  to  afford  the  extra  costs  and  will  be  hit  hard. 

Added  to  this  problem  is  the  ambiguity  of  the  plan  itself  The  regents 
have  not  specified  how  much  the  insurance  will  cost,  whether  financial 
aid  will  cover  it,  and  though  the  plan  will  provide  "adequate"  coverage  for 
students,  there  is  no  definition  of  "adequate." 

Student  health  is  important,  but  it  should  not  make  UCLA  more  diffi- 
cult to  attend. 

Money  is  the  name  of  the  game 

r^l  Thumbs  down  to  UCLA  for  renaming  Schoenberg  Auditorium 
4T|  after  Mo  Ostin.  UCLA's  decision  to  rename  the  hall  came  after 
^^    Ostin  made  a  $5  million  donation  to  the  university.  '    ' 

Unfortunately,  administrators  feel  securing  a  large  donation  takes 
precedence  over  preserving  an  honor  bestowed  on  an  accomplished  com- 
poser and  UCLA  professor.  Also,  the  university  should  have  respected 
the  Schoenberg  family  by  informing  them  of  the  decision  before  it  was 
made  public. 

UCLA  seems  to  be  establishing  a  pattern  of  selling  buildings  to  die 
highest  bidder.  Academic  accomplishments  and  contributions  to  society 
have  taken  a  back  seat  to  financial  power  Who  knows  how  many  times 
UCLA  will  change  the  names  of  buildings  for  the  sake  of  money? 

So  long  as  the  price  is  right,  it  seems  anyone  can  buy  recognition  from 
UCLA. 


Thumbs  Up/Thumbs  Down  represents  the  nrwjority  opinion  of  the  Daily 
Bruin  editorial  board.  Send  feedback  to  viewpoint@n>edia.uda.edu. 


viewpoint@media.ucld.edu 


How  TO  SUBMIT 
TO  VIEWPOINT 


•  Wrtt«  a  rtwee- to  four  -  ptge,  opWof»-«tyt» 
MiboilsjkKi  tbo\a  »  current  event  on  campus 
or  In  the  world  at  large,  or  write  a  respome  to 

KMncthIng  that  you  have  already  fMd  in  The 
Brutn. 

•  E-flMM  fubmltilom  to 
i4«w|N>bK#iiiMRa4ida4du.RcnMfnbw  to 


CASfY  CROWt/Dafly  Biuin 


Fertility  drugs  dangerous,  unetNcal 


CHOICE-  Multiple  births 
risky  for  mother,  babies; 
adoption  a  better  option 


Th 
V 
bi 


iree  weeks  ago,  Mariella 
Mazzara  Pirerra  of  Italy  gave 
birth  to 
octuplets.  One 
of  them  died 
shortly  after 
birth  and  two 
others  died  with- 
in a  few  days. 
This  is  only  the 
most  recent  in 
high-profile  mul- 
tiple-birth sto- 
ries, such  as  that 
ofNkem 
Chukwu  of 
Texas,  who  gave 

birth  to  eight  babies,  seven  of  whom 
survived,  and  the  McCaughey  septu- 


Nicole 
Seymour 


Seymour  is  a  fourth-year  American  liter- 
ature and  culture  student  She  loves 
reruns  of  9021  Con  FX  and  hates  phys- 
ical exertion.  E-mail  comments  to  saint- 
blue#hotmail.com. 


plets  of  Iowa.  All  three  of  these 
women  used  fertility  drugs  to  con- 
ceive. 

It  may  sound  surprising  that  as  an 
ardent  pro-choice  feminist,  I  would 
condemn  women  for  making  choices 
regarding  their  own  fertility,  but  I  find 
the  parents'  actions  in  these  cases  to 
be  careless  and  unethical. 

Using  fertility  drugs  significantly 
risks  the  health  of  both  mother  and 
child  and  creates  multiple  complica- 
tions, all  while  circumventing  such 
worthy  options  as  adoption  and  foster 
parenting.  And  what's  almost  as  dis- 
turbing to  me  is  the  glaring  lack  of 
criticism  from  both  the  lef\  and  the 
right  of  the  practice  of  using  fertility 
drugs. 

Feminists  such  as  Katha  Pollitt 
have  written  extensively  about  the 
importance  of  women  being  able  to 
do  whatever  they  want  with  their  bod- 
ies and  their  fertility,  arguing  against 
such  measures  as  drug-testing  and 
incarcerating  pregnant  addicts 
because  they,  as  she  says,  "privilege 
the  fetus"  over  women.  While  these 
sorts  of  reductions  of  women's  rights 
are  a  very  dangerous  and  very  real 
trend  in  the  law,  I  find  something  lack- 


ing in  Pollitt's  logic. 

Being  a  woman  does  mean  that  you 
should  be  afforded  autonomy  and 
power  over  your  own  body,  but  not 
necessarily  at  the  expense  of  others. 
When  your  actions  begin  to  harm  oth- 
ers, then  not  only  are  you  being  an 
irresponsible  woman,  but  you  are 
being  a  reproachable  human  being  as 
well.  But  the  irresponsibility  inherent 
in  the  use  of  fertility  drugs  is  rarely 
addressed,  as  the  media  gives  glowing 
hype  to  these  "miracle"  births  (which 
are  anything  but). 

I  consider  Ms.  Pirerra  to  be  a  diild 
abuser  at  best,  and  a  baby  killer  at 
worst,  leading  three  babies  to  die  and 
five  to  survive  in  questionable  health. 
Such  cases  are  not  uncommon  with 
fertility  drugs.  When  they  do  work, 
which  is  rare,  they  often  result  in  dan- 
gerous multiple  births. 

As  fertility  doctor  Bradley  Van 
Voorhis  told  the  Iowa  City  Gazette; 
after  the  birth  of  the  McCaughey    * 
babies,  fertility  drugs  make  multiple 
births  15  times  more  likely.  This 
means  users  are  willingly  running  the 
risk  that  instead  of  having  one  or  two 


S«cSmiOlfR,|Mgc20 


copy  and  paste  your  tubmlMlon  Into  the  body 
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Taad))iOctoi)eria2000       19 


Proposition  38  threatens,  undemiin^s  public  education 


FUNDING:  Voters  beware: 
argument  for  vouchers  is 
misleading,  full  of  errors 


ByJ.ManiidUmitia 

The  column  by  Justin  Levi  ("Don't 
be  quick  to  dismiss  school  vouchers," 
Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint,  Oct.  4)  was 
remarkable  for  not  being  based  on 
reality.  Levi's  column  consisted  not  of 
facts  but  of  nostrums  passed  around 
by  conservative  activists  about  public 
education  and  their  panacea  of  the 
moment:  vouchers. 

With  the  exception  of  a  single  sen- 
tence ("Proposition  38  would  provide 
vouchers  for  all"),  none  of  Levi's 
creed  applies  to  Proposition  38,  which 
was  misleadingly  named  "The 
National  Average  School  Funding 
Guarantee  and  Parental  Right  to 
Choose  Quality  Education 
Amendment"  by  its  creator,  Silicon 
Valley  venture  capitalist  Tim  Draper. 

Urnjtia  is  a  research  scientist  in  the 
departments  of  physics  and  astronomy. 


Like  Levi.  I  am  Idisturbed  by  the 
way  the  debate  on  this  issue  seems  to 
be  unfolding."  His  first  misleading 
statement  is  when  he  implies  that 
Prop.  38  will  provide  vouchers  "based 
on  a  percentage  of  the  average  cost  of 
educating  a  student,  K-12,  in  a  state- 
run  school."  Proposition  38  grants  a 
$4,000  "Scholarship,"  with  no  provi- 
sions for  this  amount  being  revised  in 
the  future  to  account  for  inflation. 

Levi's  next  mistake  is  his  explana- 
tion of  school  financing.  It  is  simply 
not  true  in  light  of  the  actual  text  of 
the  proposition.  Specifically,  Section 
8.3  of  the  proposition  is  very  clear  as 
to  how  school  districts  will  be  funded 
by  the  state  if  Proposition  38  is  adopt- 
ed. 

According  to  this  section,  the  state 
is  only  obligated  to  provide  funds  to  a 
district  so  that  its  per-pupil  expendi- 
tures are  at  least  equal  to  a  "national 
average  dollar  per  pupil  funding."  The 
catch  is  that  all  other  funding  sources 
of  that  district  (local,  donations,  feder- 
al, bond  proceeds,  etc.)  must  be 
counted  first.  This  formula  says  not 
one  word  about  the  mythical  savings 
Levi  alludes  to  in  his  tirade. 


Does  Levi  seriously  believe  that  the 
funds  the  s^te  currently  provides  will 
remain  untouched  by  the  legislature, 
especially  with  Section  8.3  as  part  of 
California's  Constitution?  - 


Private  schools  (would 

be)  free  to  do  anything 

they  want  with 

taxpayers' money. 


Such  a  funding  formula  mandates 
that  poor  school  districts  spend  no 
more  money  than  this  "national  aver- 
age." This  ensures  mediocrity  and  a 
least-common-denominator  educa- 
tion. This  is  a  major  crack  in  the 
"school  choice"  egg. 

But  that  is  not  all.  Proposition  38  is 
patently  unfair  to  wealthy  districts 
since  they  will  be  denied  any  state 
money  as  their  per-pupil  spending  is, 
by  definition,  above  the  average.  This 
is  an  invitation  to  protracted  litiga- 
tion. 


Levi's  dissembling  is  most  outra- 
geous when  he  examines  "competi- 
tion." He  claims  that  competition  pro- 
duces results  and  then  cites  a  flawed  - 
Harvard  "study."  Well,  what 
Proposition  38  offers  is,  at  best,  a 
rigged  competition. 

Let  me  explain  why.  Under  current 
state  law,  private  schools  are  almost 
free  of  any  regulation:  their  curricula 
does  not  have  to  follow  the  mandates 
of  the  State  Board  of  Education,  their 
teachers  do  not  have  to  be  state  certi- 
fied, and  their  facilities  do  not  have  to 
meet  the  same  building  codes  as  pub- 
lic schools.  This  is  because  they  serve 
a  very  specific  and  demanding  clien- 
tele. More  importantly,  they  do  not 
receive  any  public  funding. 

Proposition  38  will  make  it  possible 
for  these  and  any  new  private  schools 
to  receive  public  money  but  with  one 
important  difference:  private  schools 
are  not  obligated  to  meet  any  and  all 
the  requirements  that  public  schools 
have.  In  other  words,  the  competition 
that  Levi  advocates  does  not  exist:  pri- 
vate schools  are  free  to  do  anything 
they  want  with  the  taxpayers'  money, 
not  even  provide  an  education. 


Is  this  what  competition  means  to 
Levi?  Not  when  there  are  no  over- 
sights placed  on  voucher-  accepting 
^«dKK>ls. 

Levi  makes  other  equally  prepos- 
terous claims  as  well  as  accusing 
assorted  bugaboos  of  the  conservative 
camp  -  teachers,  politicians,  liberals  - 
of  being  responsible  for  the  current 
state  of  public  education.  Rebutting 
each  and  every  one  of  them  would  be 
simple,  but  it  is  not  necessary.   ,  _ 

Instead,  I  urge  the  UCLA  commu- 
nity to  do  what  an  educated  and 
involved  citizenry  must  always  do: 
study  the  text  of  the  proposition  and 
form  your  own  opinion.  It  is  available 
at 

http://vote2000.ss.ca.gov/VoterGuide 
/text/text_proposedJaw_38  htm. 

Do  not  let  misguided  individuals 
like  Levi  sell  you  snake  oil.  Public  edu- 
cation, of  which  UCLA  is  a  part,  is 
the  crown  jewel  of  our  nation,  emulat- 
ed all  over  the  worid.  It  should  not  be 
undermined  for  the  ideological  benefit 
of  people  who  don't  believe  that  our 
society  has  the  right  to  offer  a  quality 
public  education  to  all  its  children. 

Please  vote  no  on  Proposition  38. 


Propaganda  reinforces  stereotypes  about  fraternity/sorority  life 


GREEKS:  New  friendships, 
experiences  await  those 
who  put  aside  prejudice 

ByNoahBUicff 

As  much  as  I  want  to  ignore  Kirra 
Steel's  unfounded  attack  on  the 
Greek  system,  I  simply  cannot  allow 
it  to  go  unchallenged  ("Systematic 
sisterhood  promotes  intolerance," 
Daily  Bruin,  Oct.  5).  I  am  a  third-year 

BIshoff  is  a  third-year  political  science 
student 


student  and  have  been  a  member  of  a 
fraternity  since  fall  quarter  of  fresh- 
man year.  My  experiences,  as  well  as 
those  of  the  people  around  me,  are 
completely  different  than  the  experi- 
ences described  by  Steel. 

First,  I  must  start  by  refuting  some 
of  the  stereotypes  to  which  Steel  adds 
fuel.  The  Greek  system  is  not  "moral- 
ly reprehensible,  elitist,  and  divisive," 
and  certainly  does  not  "promote 
racism,  hate,  and  social  inequity."  In 
fact,  the  opposite  is  true. 

I  am  Jewish.  I  have  never  felt  one 
bit  of  racism  because  of  my  being  a 
Jew  in  the  Greek  system,  nor  have ! 
ever  seen  racism  directed  at  any  of 


my  fraternity  brothers.  In  my  frater- 
nity alone,  we  have  Hispanics, 
African  Americans,  Persians, 
Indians,  Asians,  Jews,  Catholics, 
Mormons,  as  well  as  many  other 
minority  groups. 

We  also  have  people  from  many 
different  social  backgrounds.  I  am 
not  rich.  I  have  a  part-time  job  during 
school,  a  fulkime  job  during  vaca- 
tions, and  I  pay  my  own  fraternity 
dues.  Nobody  ever  looks  down  on  me 
for  that.  According  to  Steel,  we  are  all 
brainwashed  and  oblivious  to  the  fact 
that  we  are  part  of  a  racist  and  social- 
ly unequal  system.  What  an  absolute- 
ly ridioilous  assertion!  It  seems  a  lit- 


tle egotistical  for  Steel  to  claim  that 
the  rest  of  us  are  all  brainwashed,  and 
she  is  the  only  one  who  has  "managed 
to  escape." 

I  also  take  serious  issue  with  Steel's 
claim  that  the  Greek  system  has  you 
"so  brainwashed  that  you  begin  to 
question  your  own  beliefs  and 
morals."  Again,  the  opposite  is  true. 
My  fraternity  has  enabled  me  to  rein- 
force my  beliefs  and  morals,  and  be 
proud  of  who  I  am.  Having  long  con- 
versations with  an  African  American 
fraternity  brother  about  the  similari- 
ties and  differences  in  our  experi- 
ences and  our  lives  has  been  one  of 
the  most  important  things  I  have 


done  here  at  UCLA.  Conversations 
like  those  make  me  proud  of  who  I 
am,  and  who  I  surround  myself  with. 
My  fraternity  has  Uught  me  things 
that  no  class  at  UCLA  can  teach  me. 
It  has  taught  me  about  life. 

Another  issue  Steel  has  with  the 
Greek  system  is  the  method  used  by 
sororities  during  rush.  What  she 
neglects  to  mention  is  that  this 
method  is  dictated  to  them  by  the 
Greek  Council.  Just  about  every 
sorority  member  you  ask  will  tell  you 
how  much  she  wishes  rush  was  con- 
ducted differently.  They  simply  do 


SeeBISII0fF,page21 


FOREVER  FRESHMAN 


By  Amy  Haber 


*NcAH  /«0M  Mhib  pAd, 
APAltrMewT  UPE  IS     ..^ 


'X'M  C00l^lM€)NurClT(0(;2 


*  UJ6  HAVE  SO  /^\fa^ 


•AMO  XTS  A  LOT  ^hsiBt  fd 
focus    ohi  StHoo^\** 


DAILY  BRUIN     "*-"•"- 


118  Kerckhofr  Hall 

308  Westwood  Plaza 

Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 

010)825-9898 

httpj'/'www.djityUiuin.uga.Wu 


UNlMM^M 

MdMtlUlidii 


Untign«d  cdftorUlt  reprMcnt  a 
majority  opinion  of  ttx  OaHy 
•luin  EdHorlal  Board  All  other 
coHimni,  latteri  and  artwork 
npnMt*  the  opMom  of  thtlr 
•lithoit.      * 

An  MbmRisd  mMMW  muM 
ttir- 


-tlHI 

•ddrtu. 


numbw, 


registration  number  or  affilia- 
tion wtth  UCLA.  Hatnn  mtHI  not 
be  withheld  eHcepi  In  extreme 
cases. 

The  Bruin  complies  with 
the  Communication  Board's 
poMcy  prohlbltlrtg  the  publi- 
cation of  artldet  that  perpetu- 
ate  derogatory  cultural  or  eth- 


nic stereotypes. 

When  multiple  authors 
submit  nrtaterial,  some  nanoes 
nr»ay  be  kept  on  file  rather  than 
published  with  the  material. 
The  Bruin  reserves  the  right  to 
t<<lt  submitted  material  and  to 


determine  lU  placement  In  the 
paper.  All  submissions  become 


the  property  of  The  Brula  The 
Communications  Board  has  a 
media  grievance  procedure 
for  resolving  complaints 
against  any  of  Its  publications. 
For  a  copy  of  the  complete 
protedurei tqwte<t th»- 


Publications    office    at    IIS 
KerckhofTHall. 


20       Tuesday,  October  10, 2000 


MIyBnimVinvpoint 


HIGH  SCHOOL  OUTREACH 

TUTORING/MENTORING 

HOMELESS 

SPORTS  ~^ 

HEALTH 

KIDS 


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Center 


SEYMOUR 

From  page  18 

healthy  and  normal  kids,  they  will  end 
up  with  several  who  will  have  severe 
health  problems  for  the  rest  of  their 
lives.  These  problems  include  mal- 
formed organs,  developmental  dis- 
abilities, and  frail  immune  systeijis  - 
that  is,  if  they  survive. 

In  fact,  according  to  the  Web  site 
"Facts  About  Multiples" 
(http://mypage.direct.ca/c/csam- 
son/multiples.html),  of  the 
McCaughey  septuplets,  who  weired 
an  average  of  three  pounds  each  at 
birth,  Nathan  and  Alexis  have  'Spe- 
cial needs"  -  he  suffers  from  spastic 
diplegia,  while  she  has  hypotonic 
quadriplegia.  But,  it  notes,  they  are 
''making  progress  thanks  to  Botox 
injections  and  physical  therapy." 


Apparently,  giving 

birth  ...automatically 

makes  you  "pro-life*  no 

matter  what  the ... 

outcome. 


Meanwhile,  both  Alexis  and 
Natalie  continue  to  suffer  from  reflux 
(chronic  regurgitation  of  die  stom- 
acJi's  contents).  AH  seven  arc  not  yet 
even  three-years  old.  People  seem  to 
gloss  over  these  facts;  they  forget  that 
once  you  have  an  abortion,  whether 
that's  "murder"  or  not  (that's  a  whole 
other  column!),  that's  the  end  of  it 
But  in  the  case  of  fertility  dntg  preg- 
nancies, the  children  can  face  a  life- 
time of  health  problems. 

Consider  thie  fact  that  the  one 
Italian  baby  who  died  was  alive  for  a 
while;  it  had  a  chance  to  live,  and  a 
reason  to  live,  and  other  peoples' 
desires  for  it  to  live  -  unlike  an  abort- 
ed fetus.  But,  ultimately,  it  couldn't 
live,  ail  because  of  its  parents'  deci- 
sion. Right  about  now,  it's  probable 
that  an  anti-abortion  person  reading 
this  is  saying,  "what  do  you  care?  You 
think  baby  killing  is  okay  anyway." 
Well,  it's  a  little  more  complicated 
than  that. 

I  think  all  children  should  be  want- 
ed -  otherwise  they  will  most  likely  be 
neglected,  abused,  or  left  in  orphan- 
ages or  foster  homes  for  much  of  their 
lives.  Therefore,  if  a  pregnaiKy  is 
unwanted,  I  contend  it  should  be 
aborted.  But  on  the  other  hand,  if  a 
child  is  wanted,  she  or  he  should  be 
cared  for.  This  means  that  if  you 
decide  to  have  a  baby,  you  should  not 
neglect,  abuse  or  otherwise  mistreat  it 
-  but  this  is  just  what  this  Italian 
woman  and  other  fertility  drug-taken 
have  done. 

Knowing  that  these  are  the  effects 
of  fertility  drugs  (insupportable  or 
barely-supportable  fetuses),  these 
women  went  ahead  and  risked  the 
lives  and  health  of  seven  or  more 
fetuses,  a  choice  that  seems  to  be 
quite  "anti-life,"  although  that  label  is 
only  applied  to  pro-choice  people  or 
women  who  have  abortions. 
Apparently,  giving  birth  or  attempt- 
ing to  give  birth  automatically  makes 
you  "pro4ife"  no  matter  what  the  cir- 
cumstances or  outcome. 

So,  what  is  the  benefit  of  all  these 
risks  and  complications?  Why  are 
such  women  taking  fertility  drugs?  Is 
it  because  they  are  too  arrogant  or 
selfish  to  accept  the  fact  that  they 
can't  naturally  or  normally  have  kids, 
and  that  perhaps  they  should  just 
respect  their  bodies'  limitations  and 
be  happy  without  diildren? 

Or  is  it  because  they  just  couldn't 
bring  themselves  to  actually  save  a 
child's  life  and  happiness  by  adopting 
one,  such  as  a  child  from  an  abuiive 
background,  or  one  who's  been 
bounced  from  foster  home  to  foster 
home  for  her  or  his  whole  life?  It 
aeemt  aa  if  some  people  believe  that 


/ 


^ 


21. 


DaiiyBniin  Viewpoint 


SEYMOUR 

From  page  20 

having  their  own  flesh  and  blood  off- 
spring, at  any  cost  to  themselves  or  to 
the  ofTspring,  is  somehow  more  valid. 
Another  infuriating  aspect  of  such 
fertility  drug  cases  is  that  the  parents 
often  have  the  same  self-righteous  atti- 
tude about  what  they  could've  done  to 
help  their  children.  Doctors  asked  the 
McCaugheys  if  they  would  abort  one 
or  some  of  the  fetuses  so  that  the 
other  babies  could  end  up  healthier, 
but  they  refused. 

According  to  the  Associated  Press, 
Kenny  McCaughey  explained  that 
neither  his  nor  his  wife's  religious 
beliefs  would  allow  any  of  the  fetuses 
to  be  aborted.  As  he  told  reporters, 
"God  gave  us  those  kids ...  He  wants 
us  to  raise  them"  (www.gazetteon- 
line.com/special/babies/seps001.htm). 
The  hyj)ocrisy  here  is  almost  laugh- 
able. If  you  believe  in  God,  and  you 
believe  "He's"  the  one  that  makes 
things  happen,  and  that  they  do  so 
because  he  wants  it  that  way,  why 
would  you  take  fertility  drugs  in  the 
first  place?  ^ 

It's  also  a  typically  illogical  anti- 
abortion  stance  to  rail  against  abor- 
tion, and  then  so  pointedly  ignore  the 
opportunity  to  promote  other  options 
-  namely,  adopting  a  child  that  might 
otherwise  have  been  aborted  -  to 
instead  spend  incredible  amounts  of 
time,  money  and  effort  conceiving 
children  through  drugs.  I  can  respect 
that  certain  people  think  abortion  is  a 
sin,  but  it's  hard  to  accept  that  some 
believe  inflicting  pain  on  children, 
risking  their  lives,  and  not  accepting 
what  God  gave  (or  didn't  give)  isn't. 

I  would  like  to  see  more  people 
from  a  religious  standpoint  (who 
protest  outside  of  abortion  clinics,  but 
not  fertility  doctors*  clinics!)  stop 
being  so  hypocritical  and  begin  to 
question  the  use  of  fertility  drugs  and 
the  ethics  of  women  like  Maridla 
Mazzara  Pirerra. 

And  while  it's  unlikely,  I  would  also 
like  to  see  pro-choice  women  interro- 
gate their  conception  of  reproductive 
rights.  Maybe  then,  more  will  stand 
up  and  say  that  women  shoukl  have 
control  over  their  bodies,  but  not  nec- 
essarily the  bodies  of  the  children  they 
dioose  to  bear  -  especially  when  the 
end  results  are  potentially  so  tragic. 


BiSHOFF 

From  page  19 

not  have  a  choice  in  the  matter. 

Many  people  outside  the  Greek 
system  feel  that  the  friendships  we 
talk  about  are  superficial.  Those  are 
the  beliefs  of  people  who  are  unin- 
formed. In  two  years,  I  have  been 
through  so  much  with  my  fraternity 
brothers,  that  I  am  as  close  to  many 
^  of  them  as  1  am  to  my  friends  back 
I  home,  who  I  grew  up  with.  I  came  to 
I.  realize  that  it  is  not  about  how  long 
F  you  have  known  someone,  but  what 
^  you  go  through  together. 
1     Fraternities  and  sororities  are 
designed  so  that  a  lifetime  of  experi- 
ences can  be  attained  in  only  four 
short  years.  It  is  unfortunate  that 
Steel  was  unable  to  have  the  same 
experience  that  most  Greeks  do. 
That  is  her  loss,  but  it  is  certainly  not 
characteristic  of  the  Greek  system. 
I  am  not  trying  to  be  naive  here. 
Every  college  campus  has  a  few  "ani- 
mal houses,"  and  every  fraternity 
and  sorority  has  some  members  who 
are  stereotypical  Greeks.  But  the 
Greek  system  is  so  much  deeper  and 
better  than  Steel  gives  it  credit  for. 

Steel  urges  readers  to  not  "let  your 
years  it  UCLA  be  filled  with  regret 
and  shame  by  going  Greek."  How 
sad  that  because  of  her  unfortunate 
experiences,  Steel  is  trying  to  rob  oth- 
ers of  an  incredible  college  experi- 
ence. Do  not  be  swayed  by  the  pro- 
paganda of  the  few.  Check  it  out  for 
ywweeir,  and  you  will  see  the  virtues 
gfioing  Greek. 


TueKby,Oaober  10,2000       21 


Love  Me  Not:  Stalk  Me  Not 

Wednesday,  October  18 
4:30-5:30  pm,  2  Dodd  Hall 

Have  you  or  a  friend  ever  received  unwanted  telephone  calls  or  emails? 
Is  someone's  behavior  making  you  feel  uncomfortable? 

Stalking  is  a  crime!  1 .4  million  women  and  men  are  victims  of  stalking  each  year 
^,..  {■'::;[     Learn  about  how  to  prevent,  respond  to  and  get  help  if  you  or  a  friend  is  stalked. 

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For  more  information,  please  contact  The  Center  at  3 10-825-3945. 

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DESTHUnRNTS 


Daily  Bruin 


-23 


War  and  peace 

Ratan  Thiyam's  Chorus  Repertory  Theater  of 
Manipur  delivers  a  spectacle  of  music,    v 
chanting,  singing,  movement  and 

monologues  at  Royce  Hall.     ; 


Tuesday,  October!  0,2000 


A&EontheWeb 

See  all  this  and  more  at 
theDailyBruin^    V  ;:f^^^^^^^ 
Website: 
www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

Tuesday,  October  10, 2000 


Daniel  Stem  and  Rita  Wilson  star  in  the  Pulitzer  Prize-winning  "Dinner  with  Friends. 


Strong  actors 
breathe  life  into 
Pulitzer  Prize- 
winning  drama 

that  explores 

marriage  and 
commitment  in 

today's  world 


Phocot  hom  Cj«fl«i  Ptoyhoow 

(Left  to  right)  Daniel  Stern,  Rita  Wilson,  Kevin  Kllner,  and  Dana  Delany  explore  marriage  In  the  play  "Dinner 
With  Friends,"  a  rueful  comedy  about  friendship  in  the  age  of  divorce,  playing  now  in  the  Cjeffen  Playhouse. 


ByTenryTang 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Just  like  philosophers  and  self-help 
gurus,  writers  -  whether  it's  in  literature 
or  theater  -  have  questioned  time  and 
again  whether  the  American  dream  of 
marriage,  a  house  and  2.5  kids  inevitably 
turns  into  a  nightmare  or  a  big  snooze  al 
best. 

In  "Dinner  With  Friends,"  which 
opened  the  fifth  season  of  the  Geffen 
Playhouse,  playwritfit  Donald  Margulies 
explores  whether  nusbands  and  wives 
can  survive  the  test  of  time  and  retain 
even,  a  glimmer  of  the' sparks  that  first 
ignited  them  into  wedded  passion. 

Though  a  breezy  comedy  at  times,  the 
Pulitzer  Prize-winning  drama  is  more 
than  just  a  light  supper.  The  play  delves 
deeper,  rousing  the  audience  to  wonder 
why  spousal  communication  seems  to  get 
harder  instead  of  easier  as  the  years  go  by 

Although  the  play  opens  with  a  casual 
dinner  get-together,  the  conversation  is 
anything  but  carefree. 

Gabe  (Daniel  Stem)  and  Karen  (Rita 
Wilson),  both  cultured  and  renowned 


food  critics,  are  happily  married,  as  solid 
and  well-balanced  as  one  of  the  gourmet 
meals  they  encounter.  Of  course,  an  inte- 
gral part  of  their  couplehood  is  spending 
dinners  and  even  vacations  at  Martha's 
VitKyard  with  their  best  friends,  Tom 
(Kevin  Kilner)  and  Beth  (Dana 
Ddaney). 

So,  it  comes  as  an  earth-shattering 
shock  when  Beth  tearfully  breaks  down 
at  their  kitchen  table  and  reveals  that 
Tom  has  left  her  for  another  woman  and 
wants  out  of  their  marriage.  As  Gabe  and 
Karen  try  to  counsel  both  without  choos- 
ing sides,  they  must  confront  the  idea  that 
their  marriage  may  be  reaching  stagna- 
tion as  well. 

One  surprising  and  provocative  effect 
of  "Dinner  With  Friends"  is  that 
Margulies*  writing  doesn't  let  Tom 
become  a  convenient  target  for  the  bad- 
guy  label.  Through  the  buddy-to-buddy 
scenes  between  Tom  and  an  understand- 
ing Gabe,  the  audience  listens  to  where 
Tom  is  coming  from. 

His  affair  doesn't  come  out  of  spite 
but  a  need  to  feel  validated  after  years  of 
loneliness.  Although  his  disclosures  may 


not  elicit  pity,  they  give  him  a  wider 
dimension. 

As  Tom  and  Beth  evolve  into  different 
people  months  after  their  break-up,  their 
new  perspectives  and  new  dating  lives 
affect  their  friendships  with  Gabe  and 
Karen,  respectively.  Part  of  their  bond 
was  that  they  were  all  married  and  going 
through  the  same  trivial  things. 

While  the  play  examines  the  unholy 
side  of  matrimony  through  both  couples, 
the  story  gains  more  steam  when  focused 
on  Gabe  and  Karen.  Their  distinctive 
appeal  is  due  to  the  charming  and  subtly 
strong  performances  of  Stern  and 
Wilson.  Both  their  characters  seem  made 
for  each  other. 

For  example,  in  one  scene,  they  fold 
the  bed  covers  together  in  an  impeccable 
rhythm  without  missing  a  beat  at  the 
same  time  finishing  each  other's  sen- 
tences. Yet,  once  in  bed,  they  cannot  find 
the  right  words  when  it  comes  to  dis- 
cussing their  own  intimacy. 

Wilson,  who  has  made  a  steady  career 
out  of  playing  the  loyal  and  wisecracking 

See  DINNER,  page  30 


'Uving'  exhibit  re-examines  domestic  space 


ART:  Projects  offer  critique 
of  society's  consumer  values, 
sentimental  view  of  the  home 


By  Andie  Dingman 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

It's  the  House  of  the  Future.  Sound  inter- 
esting? Even  before  the  Jetsons  graced  our 
television  screens,  we've  been  obsessed  with 
predicting  the  future's  effect  on  our  architec- 
ture and  life.  "  .■    ..; .  ».    . 

The  current  exhibit  at  the  Armand  Hammer 
museum  in  Westwood,  "Live  Dangerously." 
dares  visitors  to  suspend  their  current 
thoughts  of  the  function  and  aesthetic  of  the 
house  today  and  imagine  the  many  possible 
directions  architecture  might  tak«-in  the 
future. 

Sylvia  Lavin,  the  curator  of  the  exhibit,  is 
also  the  chairwoman  of  the  UCLA  depart- 
ment of  architecture.  She  earned  her  doctoral 
degree  in  architectural  history  from  Columbia 

UnivyrsiiY 


"The  goal  of  the  show  is  to  try  to  suggest  the 
kinds  of  things  that  we're  doing  now  in  the 
department  and  to  emphasize  the  kind  of 
experimentation  and  research  that  can  be 
done  in  architecture  in  the  context  of  the  uni- 
versity." Lavin  said  of  the  exhibit. 

Four  prestigious  architects  who  are  also  fac- 
ulty at  UCLA  worked  with  UCLA  graduate 
students  to  produce  the  four  projects  in  the 
show,  "Domesticity,"  "This  End  Up,"  "The 
Embryological  House,"  and  "(A  View  to  the 
Other  Side)." 

The  show's  title  deals  with  the  danger  of  dis- 
turbing the  sentimental  view  of  the  home  so 
prevalent  in  American  society,  particularly 
since  the  1950s. 

"Since  at  least  the  Victorian  age.  the  home 
has  been  a  kind  of  storehouse  for  many  nosUil- 
gic,  sentimental  values,"  Lavin  said.  "To  live 
dangerously  is  to  try  to  release  the  house  from 
those  nostalgic  and  sentimental  values  and 
permit  instead  a  kind  of  critical,  experimental 
and  innovative  style  of  living. 

"It's  always  dangerous  to  give  up  things  that 
you  know."  Lavin  said. 

"Domesticity,"  the  project  led  by  Dagmar 


Richter,  began  as  a  research  project  investigat- 
ing the  ways  in  which  people  today  have  in 
effect  spread  the  rooms  of  their  homes  all 
around  the  city  and  world,  from  using 
Starbucks  as  their  breakfast  nook  to  using  a 
local  hotel  as  a  guest  room. 

The  team  then  constructed  an  air  map  and 
model  of  the  "house"  of  a  family  on  Highland 
Street,  which  spread  all  over  Los  Angeles. 

"We  looked  at  how  tiie  house  actually 
spilled  entirely  into  the  public  realm  and  also 
how  the  public  itself  started  to  domesticize 
more  or  less  its  space,"  Richter  said.  "They 
turn  (public  places)  into  a  domestic  aesthetic 
in  the  sense  that  they  diminish  themselves, 
make  themselves  small.  For  example,  you 
don't  go  to  one  large  super-restaurant,  but  you 
go  to  millions  of  little  tiny  McDonald's  each  of 
which  looks  like  a  dinner  room." 

After  showing  how  few  activities  are  exclu- 
sive to  the  traditional  home.  "Domesticity" 
showcases  the  house  of  the  future  as  serving 
the  exclusive  purposes  of  displaying  material 
possessions  in  the  front  and  performing  very 
domestic  activities  in  the  secluded  "backyard." 

The  prototypes  for  Richter's  house  are  col- 


orful,  rounded  computer  images  like  some- 
thing out  of  "Star  Trek,"  with  bubbles  for  the 
neighbors  to  see  what  things  they  don't  have. 
Gone  are  the  kitchen  table,  living  room  couch, 
and  all  of  the  normally  cozy  aspects  of  homes. 

However,  while  the  nostalgic  and  tradition- 
al functions  of  the 'home  are  abandoned  in 
"Domesticity,"  both  Richter  and  Lavin  see 
benefits  in  the  change. 

'^There's  a  lot  more  exchange  going  on 
between  the  blocks  and  between  the  buildings 
and  within  the  city,  and  people  meet  each  o^er ' 
again  at  Starbudcs,"  Richter  said.  "So  tfttre 
are  new  units  which  are  not  just  lost,  but 
there's  a  recombination  where  the  local  neigh- 
borhoods become  the  house." 

While  "Domesticity"  looks  at  how  people 
adopt  the  city  into  their  lives,  "This  End  Up" 
looks  at  how  they  adapt  their  homes  to  their 
own  unique  personalities.  "This  End  Up,"  pro- 
duced by  Wes  King,  is  an  amusing  model  of  a 
do-it-yourself  home  that  one  would  buy  online. 

The  houses  are  constructed  of  20  foot  stor- 
age containers  resembling  boxcars  that  are 

SeeLIV1Nfi,|M9«29 


mill  AftMiNIAN/ U*lly  8(Uin  !>«ntor  Staff 

Wes  Jones'Thls  End  Up"  is  a  model  of  a  post-atomic  family  home  which  illustrates  the  Pro/Con  •'•'ackage 
Home  System's  ability  to  expand  and  re-orient  to  maet  the  changing  needs  of  the  family 


Hollywood's  current  crop 
fails  tp  scar^  moviegoers 


Emilia 
Hwang 


FILM:  Life  experiences 
can't  be  based  on  images, 
plotlines  from  big  screen 

In  October  of  2000,  two  UCLA 
students  disappeared  in  the 
woods  near  Van  Nuys,  Calif, 
while  writing  a  story.  Three  days 
later,  their  notes  were  found. 

"We're  not  lost.  I  don't  need 
directions  -  I'm  a  man." 

Famous  last  words. 

The  two  travellers  dressed  warm 
and  brought 
flashlights,  but 
that  did  not  pre- 
pare them  for 
the  horrors  that 
awaited  them 
beyond  the 
entrance  gates 
to  the  Lost 
Adventures 
Corn  Maze. 

So  you've 
never  been  to  a 
corn  maze,  eh? 
Well,  allow  me 

to  enlighten  you.  It's  eight  terrifying 
acres  of  corn  shaped  like  the  bear 
from  the  California  state  flag.  The 
convoluted  pathways  inside  the 
maze  are  approximately  five  and  a 
half  miles  in  length,  (the  correct 
path  about  one  and  a  half  miles 
long).  ;'  :  .    :  -': 

You  enter  the  maze  and  you  are 
immediately  consumed  by  corn 
stalks. 

Suddenly,  you  — ■■-— — ^.« 
feel  them  clos- 
ing in  on  you. 
You  can't  see 
through  the 
corn  jungle.  You 
can  hardly 

breathe. 

All  you  have 
for  protection  is 
the  useless  safe- 
ty flag  they  carelessly  handed  you  at 
the  corn  maze  orientation.  You  can 
flail  it  around  all  you  like. 

But  remember:  No  one  can  see 
you  wave  your  flag  ...  in  the  maize. 

Who  am  I  kidding?  The  maze  was 
cake.  In  the  beginning,  you're  given 
a  chance  to  look  at  the  blueprint  of 
the  maze.  Additionally,  while  you 
are  given  a  blank  map  to  start,  10 
pieces  of  the  map  are  missing  and 
you  can  collect  one  at  each  check- 
point you  fmd. 

So  my  trusty  sidekick  and  I  navi- 
gated our  way  through  the  rough  ter- 
rain of  the  corn  field  with  the  ease  of 
intrepid  maze  masters. 

I  have  to  say  that  I  was  slightly 
disappointed  to  discover  that  our 
corn  maze  experience  would  not 
hold  a  candle  to  "The  Blair  Witch 
Project,"  and  it  certainly  wouldn't 
be  of  "Children  of  the  Corn"  pro- 
portions. 

Unlike  the  1988  classic  horror 
flick,  there  was  no  malevolent  force 
in  the  com  fields  of  Woodley  Park. 
There  weren't  even  any  of  the 
town's  children  to  'kill  all  the 
grownups.  Talk  about  low  budget. 

The  scariest  thing  about  the  corn 
maze  was  the  trivia  you  had  to 
answer  at  each  check  point. 

Questions  like  "How  many  days 
did  it  take  for  the  Grand  Bear  Maze 
to  grow  from  day  of  planting  to  day 
of  cutting  -  in  days,  hours  and 
ygars?"  tent  chills  down  my  spine. — 


Movies  may  mirror 
aspects  of  our  lives,  but 
we  can't  expect  them  to 
be  the  basis  of  our  lives. 

■''■■."  *         '  ■■  ■     ■ ■■■     11    II       ■    ■■    I  ■      I     ■       ■■         .■■         !■! 


Though  it  was  dark,  we  never 
slipped  in  the  muddy  patches. 
Despite  the  cold  night  air.  we  never 
had  to  build  a  fire.  Though  we  were 
surrounded  by  corn,  there  was  no 
popcorn  for  miles. 

Not  to  mention,  we  never  got  lost. 
I  think  a  part  of  me  wanted  my  part- 
ner in  crime  to  feel  the  emasculation 
of  having  to  admit  that  he  had  no 
idea  where  we  were  (this  is  a  guy 
who  gets  disoriented  in  the  mall). 
But  above  all,  there  was  the  part  of 
me  that  felt  the  need  for  a  good 
scare. 

Our  journey,  however,  was  not  a 
"lost  adventure"  like  the  name 
promised.  It  was  more  like  a  tame 
excursion  of  after-school  special 
proportions.     * 

Moreover,  it  doesn't  take  much  to 
spook  the  timid  and  jumpy  little  girl 
in  me.  So  it's  a  wonder  that  she's 
been  left  unfulfilled  by  both  the  corn 
maize,  as  well  as  the  scary  movie 
world  of  late. 

Now  all  you  need  to  make  a  scary 
movie  is  a  16mm  camera,  a  HiS 
video  camera,  and  a  DAT  recorder 
that  will  disorient  audiences  with 
nauseating  footage. 

It's  no  wonder  the  shaking  bed 
and  spinning  head  of  "The  Exorcist" 
has  been  brought  back  to  the  big 
screen.  The  1973  horror  classic  has 
grossed  over  $24  million  at  the  box 
office  in  its  rerelease  so  far. 

Since  horror  Hicks  these  days 
aren't  what  they  used  to  be,  I  felt  an 
overwhelming  urge  to  create  my 
own    real    life 
""■■""■"■"■""■      scream-a-thon. 
The        corn 
maze,  however, 
couldn't  deliver 
the  same  chill- 
ing sensation  of 
a  graphic  exor- 
cism.   Like   all 

_; our  nation's  ills. 

my  disappoint- 
ment had  to  be 
blamed  on  Hollywood. 

The  movies  promise  adventure 
around  every  corner.  You  pick  up 
the  phone  and  there's  a  stalker  on 
the  other  end.  Urban  legends  are 
revisited,  and  you  drive  home  from 
the  theater  checking  your  rearview 
mirror  for  an  axe-murderer  in  the 
back  seat. 

I'm  not  complaining,  but  I've 
never  woken  up  to  find  my  liver  cut 
out  after  drinking  the  night  away.  I 
guess  that  kind  of  stuff  only  happens 
in  the  movies. 

I  don't  want  to  write  off  the  corn 
maze  as  a  total  loss,  however,  since  it 
taught  me  a  valuable  lesson.  While 
movies  may  mirror  many  aspects  of 
our  lives,  we  can't  expect  to  base  our 
life  experiences  on  them. 

Perhaps  it  was  wrong  of  me  to 
anticipate  that  I  would  find  terrify- 
ing children  of  the  corn  in  the  maze. 
The  only  children  in  this  corn  field 
held  hands  with  parents  who  guided 
them  through  the  Grand  Bear.  . 

So  enough  of  this  real-life  adven- 
turer stuff  for  me.  I  think  this  Friday 
the  13th.  I'm  going  to  stay  at  home 
and  let  the  professionals  scare  the 
living  daylights  out  of  me.  Jason  will 
be  there  and  there  will  be  loads  of 
popcorn. 

If  you  want  to  spook  Hwang,  shock 
her  with  the  fact  that  you  read  her 
column  and  e-mail  your  thoughts  to 

pmilia(3>ijrla.pdu. \ 


■j.ii  »i..i  .   r- 


24 Tuesday,  October  10, 2000 


Strung  Out  is  a  band  of 
collective  experiences 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  ft  Entcrtaininent 


-  - 


MUSKJ  Group  reflects 
on  contributions  to  its 
success,  new  projects 


By  Mariko  Obrero 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


Strung  Out's  luxurious  gold 
tour  bus  doesn't  signify  that  the 
melodic  punk  band  has  aban- 
doned its  bohemian  roots.  Nor 
does  the  fact  that  the  Simi  Valley 
natives  sold  out  two  shows  Friday, 
Oct.  6,  and  Saturday,  Oct.  7.  at  The 
Palace  alongside  The  Deviates, 
Death  by  Stereo  and  No  Motiv. 
Success  is  certainly  not  an  end 

result  for  the 

five-mem-      —— ^— ^^.^ 

bered  outfit. 

They     have 

come  a  long 

way    in    the 

seven   years 

they've  been 

together,  but 

Strung    Out 

also    has    a 

limitless 

future  musi- 


"More  money  doesn't 

necessarily  mean  a 

better  product." 

Jake 

Vocalist,  Strung  Out 


cally  as  well  as  the  perspective  of  a 
realist. 

"We  want  to  keep  growing  and 
maintaining  originality.  We  want 
to  keep  reinventing  ourselves," 
said  guitarist  Jake,  in  a  recent 
interview.  The  band  does  not  use 
last  names. 

"There  are  no  limits,"  Jake  con- 
tinued. "We  also  want  to  avoid 
being  pigeonholed.  We've  only 
just  started  reaching  our  poten- 


tial- 
One  way  the  band  is  able  to 
expand  themselves  musically  is  by 
collectively  contributing  to  writ- 
ing lyrics  and  music.  Strung  Out  is 
influenced  by  other  artists,  like 
Sweden's  Refused  whose  "The 
Shape  of  Punk  to  Come."  is  an 
album  the  band  listens  to  along- 
side bands  like  Snapcase  and  the 
Deftones. 

Another  way  in  which  the  band 
has  picked  up  other  musical  ele- 
ments is  by  learning  from  tour 
mates.  Tours  with  The  Vandals 
and  NOFX  has  allowed  for  obser- 
vation, which  teaches  the  group 
stage  techniques  allowing  them  to 
..      .  ;        play  with  pre- 
' '       •"'        cision    while 
■"— "■~"""     giving    them 
the    freedom 
to   play    fast 
and       move 
about        the 
stage. 
':     Experience 
has  definitely 
been  the  best 
teacher      for 
the  Fat  Wreck 
Chords 


Death  by  Stereo  isn't  too  hardcore 


artists.  ..  •    .^. 

"We've  learned  a  lot  about  bud- 
geting and  have  made  albums 
both  ways:  spending  a  lot  and  also 
cutting  corners  too.  More  money 
doesn't  necessarily  mean  a  better 
product,"  Jake  said.  "We're  lucky 
to  have  made  a  lot  of  the  right 
decisions  regarding  who  to  work 
with  and  how  to  go  about  making 


MUSIC:  Band  offsets  grim 
moniker  with  humorous 
personahties  in  interview 


SeeSrailllCpa9e29 


rk/>,»k  U,    c*  I-         .       -.       .     .  DAVE  HlH7D*llyMjlnS«ntof  Staff 

Death  by  Stereo  bassist  Paul  shows  off  his  vertical  bass  skills  to  a 
crowd  at  The  Palace  last  Friday  night.  Death  by  Stereo  has  several 
tours  lined  up  for  the  next  several  months. 


By  Mariko  Obrero 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Death  by  Stereo's  humoi'  was  evi- 
dent right  from  the  very  beginning 
of  the  interview. 

"Dan's  mom  dated  Joe  Cocker 
and  he's  from  the  same  town  as  Def 
Leppard,"  was  the  first  thing  Jim 
Miner  from  Death  by  Stereo  told 
me  about  the  group's  guitarist. 

Whether  or  not  it  is  true,  it  made 
me  laugh,  something  I  did  for  most 
of  the  chaotic  interview,  which  took 
place  at  The  Palace  Friday  night 
after  the  band's  performance. 

The  Fullerton  based  group  plays 
a  mix  of  hardcore,  metal  and  punk. 
Influenced  heavily  by  Iron  Maiden 
and  Van  Halen,  it  plays  like  legends 
though  the  group  only  forined  two- 
and-a-half  years  ago. 

Friday  night  was  the  first  time 
the  band  played  The  Palace. 
Perhaps  this  was  the  reason  for  the 
chaos. 

Cameramen,  friends  and  family 
wandered  in  and  out  of  the  dressing 
room  as  well  as  the  band  members. 
But,  for  the  most  part,  guitarists  Jim 
Miner  and  Dan  Palmer  who  don't 
go  by  last  names  offered. 

They  began  speaking  of  the  nos- 
talgia they  experienced  watching 
bands  with  whom  they've  played. 

"J  remember  going  to  shows  and 
listening  to  Strung  Out  in  high 
school,"  Jim  explained.  "This  ts  not 


SeeOEITH,pa9«30 


:  ■ ;;. v^^ ; /^^^^^^^^^    JOIN        ;^.--';l;- 

^  U  C  L  in>  E  R  F  0  R  M  ING    RRTS 

Student  Committee 


We  are  looking  for  approximately  24  undergraduate 

and  graduate  students  interested  in  producing 

and  promoting  the  performing  arts  at  UCLft. 


♦  Produce  free  and  ticketed  performing 
arts  events  for  the  UCLfl  community. 

«  Work  with  performers,  managers, 
agents,  production  crew  and  the  media. 

♦  Gain  first-hand  experience  in  the  field 
of  performing  arts  management. 

APPLY  NOW 
Applications  are  now 
available  in  Royce  B96^ 
or  on  our  website: 
www.sca.ucla.edu 


DEADLINE:  Today! 


Positions  include: 

Website  Coordinator 

Graphic  Designer 

Marketing  Director 

Producers 

Computer  Services  Director 

Ticket  Manager 

AND  MORE! 

No  experience?  No  problem! 

Questions? 

CALL     310. 82S. 3253 
i-MAZL    sca@ucla.edu 


'A; 


UCLi 


9B| 


\ 


\ 


\. 


Catty  Bruin  Arts  &  EntcftaiiNMRt 


Tuesday,  October  10;  2000       25 


A&E  BraEFS 


Eileen  Ivers  set  to 
play  at  Ostin  Hall 


Known  as  the  star  musician  of 
"Riverdance,"  fiddler  Eileen  Ivers 
takes  to  the  Ostin  Hall  stage  in  a  violin 
recital  on  Saturday.  Oct.  14  at  8  p.m. 
Ivers  will  perform  pieces  from  her  lat- 
est album,  "Crossing  the  Bridge," 
whidi  combines  elements  of  her  well- 
known  Irish  music  with  a  myriad  of 
world  sounds,  including  those  from 
Cuba,  Africa,  Spain  and  the  West 
Indies.  Before  the  show,  Ivers  will 
hold  a  center-stage  discussion  at 
7  p.m.  Attendance  is  free  to  ticket 
holders  and  promises  interesting 
background  information  on  Ivers. 


Cotsen  Institute 
event  examines 
Maya  underworld 
via  archaeology 


The  Cotsen  Institute  of 
Archeology  at  UCLA  presents  the 
seventh  annual  Maya  Weekend  at  the 
Lenart  Auditorium  in  Fowler 
Museum  of  Cultural  History. 
Beginning  Saturday,  Oct  14,  the  two- 
day  event  features  a  variety  of  lectures 
and  seminars  on  ancient  Mayan  ideas 
of  death  and  the  afterlife.  Topics  dis- 


cussed range  from  the  archeology  in 
the  mountains  of  Belize  which  offer 
insight  into  the  underworld  to  the 
proper  burial  methods  for  Copan 
kings.  The  event  starts  at  8  a.m, 
Oct  14  and  ends  at  noon,  Oct.  15.  For 
more  information,  call  the  Maya 
Weekend  hotline  at  (310)  825-8064. 


Mark  Kaplan  will 
open  first  of 
weekly  recitals 


Mark  Kaplan  performs  Johann 
Sebastian  Bach's  unaccompanied  vio- 
lin sonatas  in  a  special  concert  com- 
memorating the  250th  anniversary  of 
the  composer's  death.  Kaplan's 
recital  is  the  first  in  a  new  Wednesday 
evening  series  featuring  different  fac- 
ulty musicians.  Kaplan's  perfor- 
mance takes  place  at  8  p.m.Oct.  1 1 
and  18,  in  Ostin  Hall  in  the 
Schoenberg  Music  Building. 
Admission  is  $10  general,  and  $7  for 
seniors  and  UCLA  students  with  ID. 
For  more  information,  contact  the 
music  department  at  (310)825-4761. 


Roundtable  to 
focus  on  "Live 
Dangerously^ 


-.  .  ,,       _„  .     .  UCLA  Pef fofming  Afts 

Fiddler  Eileen  Ivers  brings  her  Irish-based  music  to  Ostin  Hall  at  UCLA  Saturday,  Oct.  14th. 


■■  A  roundtable  discussion  will 
critically  examine  current  issues  in 
domestic  architecture  raised  in  the 
Hammer  Museum's  "Live 
Dangerously"  exhibit  The  exhibit 
features  the  work  of  numerous 


UCLA  faculty  members,  looking 
at  design  research  into  new  archi- 
tecture styles  for  the  new  millenni- 
um. Department  Chair  Sylvia 
Lavin  moderates. 

The  event  is  set  for  Oct.  16,  6:30 
p.m.     in     1302     Pcrloff    Hall. 


Admission  is  free.  For  more  infor- 
mation, call  the  department  of 
architecture  and  urban  design  at 
(310)825-7858. 

Compiled  by  Michael  Rosen-Molina, 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


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W*fn«f  Bioj.  Pictures 

SylvMtar  StaHoM  stars  in  Warner  Bros.  Pictures"Get  Carter.' 

'Get  Carter'  fails  to  grab 
audiences'  full  attention 


FILM:  Poor  script  fails  to 
bring  anything  new  to 
third  adaptation  of  story 


By  Bob  Thomas 
The  Associated  Press 

The  credits  for  Sylvester  Stallone's 
new  movie  "Get  Carter"  list  three  pro- 
chicers,  three  co-producers,  six  execu- 
tive producers  and  one  associate  pro- 
ducer. What  do  these  high-paid  people 
do?  Who's  minding  the  store?  How 
does  a  numbing  mishmash  of  a  movie 
like  this  get  made? 

This  is  the  third  time  around  for 
"Get  Carter."  Adapted  from  Ted 
Lewis'  novel  '*Jack's  Return  Home,"  it 
first  resulted  in  a  smart,  tough  1970 
British  melodrama  directed  by  Mike 
Hodges  and  sUrring  Michad  Caine. 
Two  yean  later,  it  was  converted  to  a 
blaxpioitation  film,  "Hit  Man,"  with 
Bemie  Casey  and  Pamela  Grier. 

The  latest  version  opens  with 
Stallone  beating  up  a  helpless  man  who 
failed  to  pay  offhis  debt  to  a  Vegas  casi- 
no. He  is  a  hired  enforcer,  though  he 
prefers  to  call  himself  a  "financial 
adjuster."  He  tells  his  victim:  "My 
name  is  Jack  Carter,  and  you  don't 
wamtoknowme." 

By  the  end  of  the  movie,  the  audi- 
ence doesn't  want  to  know  him  either, 
though  he  is  on  the  screen  most  of  the 
time.  He  might  as  well  be  the  Man  with 
No  Name,  who  bursts  in  and  out  of 
people's  lives,  often  leaving  them  dis- 
abled. 

Carter  has  a  mission.  His  brother, 
whom  he  hasn't  seen  in  five  years,  has 
died  in  a  Seattle  car  accident,  reported- 
ly having  driven  drunk.  Carter  needs  to 
know  more,  so  he  leaves  Las  V^as  for 
Seattle,  where  most  of  the  action  takes 
place  (though  of  course,  because  of 
money  matters,  the  movie  was  dtot  in 
Vancouver).  He  travels  by  train,  since 
his  hardware  wouldn't  pass  preflight 
inspection. 

Arriving  in  Seattle  (Vancouver), 
Carter  attends  his  brother's  funeral 
and  is  rebufTed  by  the  widow  (Miranda 


Richardson)  for  his  long  neglect  His 
niece  (Rachel  Leigh  Cooke)  is  not 
much  help  either.  He  starts  sniffing 
around  the  city  and  encounters  an 
underworld  type  and  old  acquaintance 
(Mickey  Rourke),  who  has  entered  the 
Internet  world  with  a^rtual  pomo  dot- 
com. 

Carter  also  meets  up  with  Michael 
Caine,  playing  the  owner  of  the  night- 
club that  the  dead  man  managed.  And, 
keeping  up  with  modenvday  Seattle, 
Carter  finds  a  computer  billionaire 
(Alan  Cumming)  with  some  kinky  pas- 
times. 

All  of  this  might  have  made  for  pass- 
able melodrama  if  the  plot  had  been 
presented  in  an  understandable  man- 
ner. But  David  McKenna's  script 
seems  like  an  unconnected  series  of 
vignettes,  and  the  dialogue  is  standard 
tough^y  with  abundant  expletives. 

Much  of  the  film's  failure  must  be 
attributed  to  the  director,  Stephen  Kay, 
whose  only  other  feature  was  the  for- 
gettable "The  Last  Time  1  Committed 
Suicide."  Like  many  new  directors,  he 
seems  determined  to  put  his  directorial 
imprint  on  the  film.  The  result  is  quick 
cuts,  slow  motion,  white  flashes  and 
other  techniques,  long  ago  discarded. 
The  excitement  of  two  lengthy  car .; 
chases  is  deadened  by  split-second  edit- 
ing, dos^4lps  and  other  distractions. 

Stallone  has  been  a  long  time  gone  , 
from  the  screen,  and  "Get  Carter"  is  * 
no  way  to  get  back  in  thi  flow.  With  a 
(rimmed  goatee,  dark  glasses  andi. 
classy  suits,  he  makes  an  impressive  ' 
presence,  as  ahvays.  Happily,  he  has 
three  more  projects  in  the  works,  so 
maybe  one  will  connect. 

Two  standouts  in  the  cast:  Rachel 
Leigh  Cooke  as  the  mixed-up  niece; 
Alan  Cumming,  one  of  Britain's  most 
delicious  villains.  Caine  has  four  brief 
but  telling  scenes.  His  paycheck  for 
two  days'  work  was  probably  more 
than  the  budget  for  the  first  "Get 
Carter." 

The  platoon  of  producers  was  headed 
by  Mark  Cantoa  Elie  Samaha  and  Neil 
Canton.  Rated  R  for  language  beatings^ 
shootktgs^drug  use  and  sexual  scenes. 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertaimnent 


PBS  concert  series  begins 
^ith  Geveland  Orchestra 


MUSIC  Conductor  with 
injured  arm  leads  group 
at  Carnegie  Hall  opening 


ByMaryCaiMMll 

The  Associated  Press 

Geveland  Orchestra  music  director 
Christoph  von  Dohnanyi  was  leaving 
his  home  to  catch  a  flight  to  New  York 
for  the  taping  of  Carnegie  Hall's  open- 
ing night.  He  was  carrying  a  heavy 
suitcase  filled  with  musical  scores  as  he 
slipped  going  down  some  stairs. 
V  Dohnanyi  was  able  to  grab  the  ban- 
ker with  his  right  hand.  He  didn't  fall, 
but  he  did  dislocate  his  shoulder.  His 
24-year-old  son  Benedikt  brought  him 
some  ice  packs  and  a  harness  with  two 
straps  across  the  back  to  hold  the  arm 
motionless  in  front,  bent  at  the  elbow. 
The  conductor  missed  his  flight  (he 
caught  a  later  one),  but  he  didn't  miss 
the  concert,  which  was  taped  for  PBS's 
Great  Performances  series. 

At  a  rehearsal 
the  night  before  — >— — — 
the  Oct.  3  con- 
cert, Dohnanyi 
told  the  orches- 
tra, "If  you  fed 
ray  arm  is  not 
giving  you 

enough  help,  tell 
me  and  we'll  find 
somebody  to 
substitute." 

A  spokesman      ^^^_^_^___ 
for  the  musicians 
replied,  "Even  if 

you  only  stand  there,  it  is  more  than 
anybody  else." 

Viewers  of  "Carnegie  Hall  Opening 
Night  2(XX),"  airing  this  week  on  most 
PBS  stations  (check  local  listings), 
won't  see  the  music  director's  right 
arm  and  shoulder  in  a  harness. 
-  .  "I'll  use  my  right  hand,  even  if  the 
doctor  doesn't  like  it,"  Dohnanyi  said 
in  an  interview  in  his  dressing  room 
before  the  concert.  "You  can  do  a  lot 
with  your  left  hand;  it  just  looks  a  little 
bit  silly  sometimes. 

"And  the  closer  ycyi  are  to  an 
orchestra,  as  1  am  with  Cleveland, 
where  I've  been  since  1982  when  I  was 
appointed  designated  conductor, 
you're  not  so  dependent  on  the  beat  of 
tempo.  They  know  my  Schumann  and 


"I'm  for  capturing  as 

many  live 

performances  of  music 

as  possible." 

Christoph  von  Dohnanyi 

Cleveland  Orchestra  director 


I  know  how  they  play  it.  We  know 
where  we  need  each  other  and  where 
we  help  each  other.  It's  a  special 
thing." 

The  concert  is  a  production  of 
Thirteen/WNET  and  Carnegie  Hall. 
Schumann's  "Symphony  No.  2"  is  fol- 
lowed by  Brahms's  "Piano  Concerto 
No.  2,"  with  Maurizio  Pollini  as 
soloist. 

"I'm  for  capturing  as  many  live  per- 
formances of  music  as  possible," 
Dohnanyi  said.  "The  time  of  compul- 
sive perfection,  I  think,  is  a  littie  passe. 
We  have  to  make  music  and  let  people 
see  that  we  are  doing  it  right  now." 

And  it  helps  if  it's  a  special  occa- 
sion, like  opening  night  at  Carnegie 
Hall,  he  said. 

Dohnanyi,  71,  will  leave  his  post  as 
music    director   of  the   Cleveland 
Orchestra  in  2002.  His  successor  is 
Franz  Welser-Most,  an  Austrian. 

"1  did  not  interfere  in  any  way  with 

who  was  chosen  as  my  successor,"  he 

said.  "I  didn't  even  talk  about  it.  All 

my  nice  younger  colleagues  might 

think  1  preferred 

~~— ■""■■^■~     one  to  the  other.  I 

don't  think  it  is 

right  to  mingle  in 

these  things.  I  left 

it  to  the  board." 

He  has  high 
praise    for    the 
ordiestra. 

"The 

Cleveland 

Orchestra      has 

^__________     always    been    a 

wonderful 
orchestra,  even 
before  Georg  Szell,"  Dohnanyi  said. 
"The  community  cares  very,  very 
much.  There's  a  marvelous  spirit 
between  the  city  and  the  orchestra,  and 
the  music-making  is  very  special." 

Dohnanyi,  who  headed  the 
Frankfurt  Opera  from  1968  to  1978 
and  the  Hamburg  State  Opera  from 
1978  to  1984,  is  principal  conductor  of 
London's  Philharmonia  Orchestra. 

He  has  been  conducting  an  opera  or 
two  a  year.  He  will  continue  to  do  that 
in  London,  Salzburg  and  Zurich,  and 
he'll  take  the  Philharmonia  to  Paris  for 
operas  at  the  Theatre  du  Chatelet. 

"I  was  head  of  opera  companies  for 
16  years,"  he  said.  "I  wouldn't  want  to 
do  that  again,  but  guest-conducting  is 
nice." 


Tuesday,  October  10,2000       27 


WNET 


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_  Artsa  Records 

Country  srnger  Sara  Evans  has  a  new  album  titled  "Born  to  Fly.'The 
title  song  from  "Born  to  Fly"  made  its  debut  in  the  Top  20  of 
Billboard's  country  chart  a  week  before  the  album's  Oct  10  release. 

Country  mom  retums  with 
new  look  and  strong  tunes 

MUSIC  Musician's  third         overweight  because  of  what  they  eat 

album  reOects  happy  life,    ^S^"  "^  ""°°  "•"*  '°° 

success  of  Christian  diet  ^*^  P"^  everything  on  this  Earth 

for  us  to  enjoy,  not  to  torture  us.  But, 
God  gave  us  a  natural  mechanism  to 
tell  when  we  need  to  eat  and  that's 
when  we're  growling,"  she  said. 

That  sometimes  gets  her  band 
growling  because  she  doesn't  like  to 
stop  her  tour  bus  until  she's  hungry, 
and  that  keeps  the  boys  in  her 
entourage  asking,  "Are  you  gnowling 
yet?" 

Fans  get  a  chance  to  see  the  new, 
improved  Evans  in  the  video  for  "Bom 
to  Ry"  Drawing  from  the  opening 
phrase,  "I've  been  tellin'  my  dreams  to 
the  scarecrow,"  she's  Dorothy  in  a  styl- 
ized "Wizard  of  Oz,"  dressed  in  a 
miniskirt  and  knotted  calico  shirt. 

"I  wanted  the  video  to  be  colorful 
and  (pause)  sexy  I  wanted  to  show  my 
tummy  in  this  video.  I  was  always 
afraid  to  do  that  before,"  she  said. 
"Definitely,  this  video  is  the  farthest 
I've  ever  pushed  it,  but  I  felt  really  good 
about  my  body  and  I  sort  of  wanted  to 
kind  of  show  it  ofTa  little  bit." 

She  also  shows  off  what  she  can  do 
vocally  on  the  new  CD. 

"Three  Chords  and  the  Truth,"  her 
first  album,  was  traditional.  Her  sec- 
ond album,  "No  Place  That  Far,"  was  a 
little  more  representative  of  her  Wue- 
grass-counlry  upbringing  -  with  a  hint 
of  pop.  Now,  there's  a  definite  pop 
undercurrent  running  through  all  1 1 
tracks  (six  of  them  co-written  by 
Evans)  of  her  new  album. 

"Bom  to  Ry"  marks  the  Nashville 
debut  of  drommer  Matt  Chamberlain, 
who  has  worked  with  the  WaflfJowcrs, 
Macy  Gray,  Fiona  Apple  and  Tori 
Amos.  His  9-9ccond  rilT opens  the  title 
cut  and  sett  the  tone  for  the  rest  of  the 
CD,  partktdariy  -Let's  Dance" 

The  music  is  defmlMy  more  edgy 
and  progfttaivt  than  my  previous 
recordingi,"'  she  add,  "but  my  voice  is 
so  countrj;  ttae'a  just  no  way  I  couM 
ewr  nat  Sdnkt  cowilry,  although  I 
Iwve  a  roclB.dnunnwr.' 


.Ufk»tfi 


Ji 


By  Tom  Gardner 

The  Associated  Press 

You  can't  fit  the  word  "sad"  and 
Sara  Evans  into  the  same  sentence 
unless  you're  talking  about  one  of  her 
few  somber  songs. 

"I'm  so  happy  about  everything,  it's 
hard  to  describe,"  Evans  said  in  a 
phone  interview  from  her  home  in 
Nashville,  Tenn.  "Having  a  baby  just 
changed  everything." 

Yes,  Evans  is  a  mom.  Her  son, 
Avery  Jack  Shelske,  was  bom  on  Aug. 
21,  1999.  Avery  is  one  reason  it  took 
Evans  so  long  to  release  her  third 
album  "Boni  to  Ry"  (RCA).  The  CD 
just  arrived  in  stores,  18  months  after 
the  title  single  from  her  "No  Place  That 
Far"  album  went  gold. 

"Now,  I  just  look  at  singing  as  some- 
thing that  I  get  to  do  that's  a  blessing, 
that  I  get  to  do  for  fun,"  she  said,  "but 
it's  not  the  most  important  thing  to  me. 
I  finally  realized  my  calling  in  life,  and 
that  is  to  be  a  mother." 

Another  reason  for  the  gap  between 
albums:  Evans  is  a  perfectionist. 

"We  went  into  the  studio  with  it  in 
January  and  worked  on  it  until  May 
nonstop.  I  really,  really  took  my  time.  1 
decided  I'm  not  going  to  come  out  with 
anything  until  I  sound  the  best  that  I 
can  and  this  is  the  best  record  that  we 
can  possibly  make,"  she  said. 

Meanwhile,  Evans  was  working  on 
another  project. 

"It  was  sort  of  brought  on  by  the 
pregmncy,"  she  said.  "I  had  guned 
more  weight  than  I  wanted  to  with  the 
bat^  and  so  I  started  losing  the  wetgfcL 
"There  were  two  things  i  dtddMf  I 
wanted.  I  wanted  long  hair  and  I  wanv 
ed  to  be  skinny  So  what  If  1  am  29?  I'm 
gonna  go  buckward  I've  pretty  rmich 
accomplished  that 

She  credits  the  wcign  uov/u  u»ci 
^evtkiptA  by  Mlow  Tnmeswan  0*en 
ShamMmforthesk 

"fnevareal  until  in 
fw  sJWHWnh  mncliiir 

n  UK  wuriu,  »aa  aow,  i  aAmk« 
■jftdi  lighter  than  I  xras  Tiefiw  ' 

im  can: 


Backffr<bind  vrvititi«t«  i'n.<t>./]. 

'«»  I'fifHiiitrily  at  (he  begm- 

rrwirfKricf'  **THai  ,-.^.,.1..  ~. 


*>#ptv  HftiJ 


1'  T  KK 


UCIA  Oep«nmcn(  of  Architecture  »nd  Urbin  Design 

This  Is  one  of  various  student  projects  currently  showing  in  the 
'Live  Dangerously"  exhibit  at  the  Armand  Hammer  Museum. 

custom,  all  at  the  same  time." 

"(A  View  to  the  Other  Side),"  led 
by  Thorn  Mayne,  is  concerned  pri- 
marily with  the  blurred  line  between 
public  and  private.  A  normal  room  is 
given  four  telescope  spaces  that  allow 
the  outside  to  look  in. 

"It's  mostly  about  the  undoing  of 
privacy,"  Lavin  said.  "If  you  think  of  a 
window  as  a  fiat  screen  that  allows  a 
certain  amount  of  transgression 
between  inside  and  outside.  He's  got 
four  enormous  window  spaces  that 
you  can  occupy,  and  it's  like,  'What 
would  it  mean  to  live  inside  a  win- 
dow?' 

"You're  neither  inside  nor  out- 
side," Lavin  continued.  "People  out- 
side are  sort  of  invited  in.  It  produces 
this  whole  in-between  zone  that  really 
confuses  the  relationship  between 
inside  and  outside  and  therefore 
between  public  and  private." 

However,  just  as  the  Jetsons  never 
turned  out  to  be  our  future,  the  pro- 
jects in  "Live  Dangerously"  probably 
won't  be  the  cxaa  representation  of 
our  future  homes. 

"The  house  of  the  future  is  not  real- 
ly a  Utopian  projection  into  the  future, 
because,  of  course,  nobody  can  tell 
what  the  future  is,  and  if  you  try  you 
fail,"  Lavin  explains.  "But  thinking 
about  the  house  of  the  future  is  a  way 
of  making  a  superconcentrated  ver- 
sion of  the  house  of  today." 


LIVING 

From  page  22 

already  used  as  emergency  bousing  in 
developing-nations.  The  compart- 
ments are  stacked  and  fitted  together 
like  Legos,  allowing  one  to  have  a 
mass-produced,  yet  customized  home. 
"It  comes  from  a  tradition  of  think- 
ing about  the  house  not  as  a  piece  of 
architecture  filled  with  appliances,  but 
rather  as  an  appliance,"  Lavin  said. 
"You  don't  get  sentimental  about 
your  washer-dryer." 

The  billboard-like  corporate  logos 
on  the  outside  of  the  homes  are  evi- 
dence of  the  fact  that  everything  now 
has  become  part  of  a  corporate,  glob- 
al culture,  as  well  as  an  ironic  com- 
mentary on  consumerism. 

"You  yourself,  are  advertising  your 
allegiance  to  these  companies,"  King 
explained,  "You're  basically  saying, 
that  you  are  a  Nike  family,  for  exam- 
ple ...  so,  if  you're  Solofiex,  the  neigh- 
bors mi^t  be  Nike,  and  you  start  to 
have  this  kind  of  dialogue  that  other- 
wise would  be  hidden." 

Similar  to  "This  End  Up,"  "The 

Embryological  House,"  is  a  mass-pro- 

.;  duced  yet  customized  house.  The  pro- 

T-ject,  supervised  by  Greg  Lynn,  has 


already  been  chosen  to  represent  the 
United  Sutes  at  the  Venice  Bienalle 
festival,  a  prestigious  event  held  once 
every  six  years. 

"The  Embryological  House" 
throws  out  the  traditional  rules  of 
building,  using  rounded  shapes,  bright 
colors,  plastic  shingles,  "soft  ball 
rooms"  resembling  bean  bags,  and  an 
X-ray  wall  system. 

"A  bean  bag  is  interesting  because 
every  bean  bag  looks  exactly  the  same 
when  it  comes  out  of  the  factory. 
When  you  sit  on  it,  it's  always  dilTer- 
ent,"  Lavin  said.  "So  it's  customized 
in  that  sense;  it's  both  standard  and 


ARCHITECTURE:  "Live  Dangerously" 
will  be  on  display  at  the  Armand 
Hammer  Museum  through  Jan.  7. 
Hours  are  1 1  am.  to  7  pim.  Tuesday, 
Wednesday,  Friday  and  Saturday,  11 
a.m.to  9  p.m.  Thursday,  and  1 1  a.m.to  5 
p.m.  on  Sunday.  Adnnission  is  $4.50  for 
adults  and  seniors,  $3  non-UCLA  stu- 
dents, UCLA  faculty/staff,  and  UCLA 
Alumni  Association  members  with  ID, 
$1  UCLA  students,  and  free  to  all  on 
Thursdays. 


STRUNG 

Fn)(npage24   -. 

«f 
albfims."  ■.■■,^>  ;■,.'•..■;: 

iftiings  haven't  always  immediate- 
ly mien  into  place  for  Strung  Out. 
"Wtf'vc  had  our  dysfunctional  times. 
A  few  years  ago  there  was  uncertainty 
and  I  didn't  know  what  was  going  to 
happen.  But,  we're  healthy  again  and 
this  is  the  best  we've  been.  We  have 
good  chemistry.  We  know  what  each 
member  does  well." 

The  band  also  offered  insight  into 
its  success,  something  it  has  spent  a 
lot  of  time  refiecting  on. 

"What  people  don't  understand 
when  you  become  successful  is  that 
you  give  up  everything  -  your  family 
and  careers.  And,  when  you  first  start 
out,  your  life  is  in  limbo  and  you  ques- 
tion why  you  do  it.  We  started  out  in  a 
van  with  no  money  and  food  for 
months  and  bad  equipment,"  Jake 
explained. 

And,  although  Strung  Out  has 
toured  throughout  Europe,  Japan. 
Australia,  Canada,  and  the  United 
States  multiple  times  and  have  gone 
on  the  road  with  Pennywise  and 
ALL,  Jaka  rcaliaas  that  it  won't  last 


forever. 

"You  have  to  appreciate  the 
opportunity  because  it  will  pass  you 
by,"  he  said.  "It's  short  term  and 
we're  lucky  to  have  gotten  to  do  what 
we've  done." 

The  group  also  has  ideas,  branch- 
ing off  from  the  band,  that  it  is  inter- 
ested in  pursuing.  One  idea  involves 
starting  its  own  silk-screening  T-shirt 
company  to  produce  its  own  mer- 
chandise. 

"Our  singer  Jason  is  an  amazing 
artist.  He  designs  all  of  our  art  work 
and  logos,"  Jake  said.  "Producing 
and  starting  our  own  record  label  is 
something  we've  thought  about  loo, 
things  that  will  make  us  self-suffi- 
cient." 

But  for  now,  the  band  will  con- 
clude a  two-month  long  tour.  Then 
they  will  return  to  the  studio  to  com- 
plete the  next  full-length  album, 
which  will  be  out  in  the  next  six  to 
seven  months. 

Strung  Out  truly  has  made  it,  not 
merely  in  superficial  terms,  but  by 
gaining  insight  and  practicality.  The 
band  continues  to  refine  and  expand 
itself  thanks  to  a  variety  of  experi- 
ences which  the  group  uses  to 
increase  its  own  uUeut. 


■".r  •^— -*--^,v-.*.*i^«i?.-...  -.-.i^v.-.  ;  /.-.:"?7 


Oiiiy  Bruin  Arts  &  EntcrUiaiiient 


Tuesday,  October  1012000       » 


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of  our  lifetime. 


SCI 


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The  eiiisiness  Systems  Innovators 

Scient  builds  breakthrough 
eBusinesses  for  legendary  clients. 


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Information  Session:  Sunday,  October  15,  2000 

UCLA  View  Point  Conference  Room,  Adcerman  Union 

Interviews:  October  16*^  and  17***. 


Piease  send  resumes  to:  Uz  McCall:  lmccaii0>scient.t;;om  nrfnr 

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GEMS  AND  JEWELRY  101 

1055  westwood  bivd.  •  westwood  village 
(310)208-3131 

Sopportlr^  UCLA  Acodemtcs.  AttHetlcs  and  Per  for  nrWig  Arts 


Presented  by 


fin*  jeweltrs" 
Where  QuoSty  and  Elhlcs  Come  Hrst...  since  1946 


Popular  Westwood  Jeweler 
Begins  Education  Column. 

WELCOME  TO  GEMS  AND  JEWELRY  101. 

While  this  is  not  yet  part  of  the  official  curriculum, 
we  arc  lobbying  to  have  it  included  as  a  GE 
requirement!  Hello,  I'm  Dean  Abell.  Some  of  you 
may  know  me  as  David  from  my  undergrad  days  - 1 
graduated  in  1998  as  a  proud  Bruin  with  a  degree  in 
English. 

Since  then  I  have  joined 
my  family's  business, 
SARAH  LEONARD  Fine 
Jewelers,  and  would  like  to 
take  a  few  minutes  to  tell 
you  about  it  and  the 
purpose  of  this  colunm. 

Friends  of  mine  often 
visit  me  at  work  looking  to 

Don  Abefl.BA.  UCLA.  M  .  ....  ,r         j 

Of«tiiMeo«noki»»..o.iA.  99  ^^^V  '"cir  boy-  or  girlfnend 
a  special  gift...  or  want  to 
look  at  diamonds  for  that  "big  event."  So  many  of 
these  visits  end  with  my  friends  commenting  on  how 
lucky  they  are  to  have  a  jeweler  on  whom  they  can 
rely  and  trust.  That  got  me  to  thinking...  How  many 
people,  then,  DON'T  have  a  jeweler  that  is 
knowledgeable,  helpful,  and  ethical...  a  jeweler  that 
they  consider  a  friend...  not  just  someone  with  whom 
to  do  business.  Not  a  day  goes  by  in  our  store  without 
hugs  and  kisses  between  our  staff  and  clients...  I  can't 
think  of  a  better  atmosphere  in  which  to  work. 

Does  your  jewelry  need  cleaning?  The  only  charge 
for  that,  as  my  grandpa,  Lenny,  always  says  is,  "a 
smile  and  a  thank  you!"  Do  you  have  some 
questions?  Or  need  a  suggestion  to  help  find  that 
perfect  gift?  Whatever  it  is.  we're  here  for  you. 

SARAH  LEONARD  Fine  Jewelers,  the  oldest 
merchant  in  Westwood  Village-  established  in  1946- 
has  thrived  since  Day  One  because  of  dedication,  hard 
work,  and  lots  of  love  for  each  other,  the  business, 
and  our  cManii  (just  ask  anyone  who  knows  us!) 


We  have  built  an  extremely  close  relationship 
with  the  UCLA  community  over  the  years 
(including  five  family  members  that  are  UCLA 
alumni)  giving  decades  of  support  to  UCLA 
academics,  athletics  and  performing  arts.  We  know 
that  the  best  way  to  give  back,  though,  is  to  provide 
superior  customer  service  backed  by  professional 
know-how.  That  is  why  three  generations  of  our 
family  have  earned  the  title  of  'Graduate 
Gemologist"  (G.G.)  from  the  Gemological  Institute 
of  America  and  why  we  are  proud  members  of  the 
American  Gem  Society  (AGS),  an  organization  of 
fine  jewelers  dedicated  to  the  highest  ethical 
standards,  gemological  knowledge  and  consumer 
protection. 

All  in  all.  nine  members  of  our  sufT  (five  family) 
are  G.G.s.  That's  probably  more  than  any  other 
single  store  in  the  country!  But  all  that  gemological 
expertise  only  helps  if  we  can  get  that  information 
to  you.  As  members  of  the  AGS  it  seemed  only 
natural  to  share  what  we  know  of  gems  and  jewelry, 
through  this  column,  to  make  you  a  more  informed 
and  confident  consumer. 

Each  month  I  will  be  addressing  a  new  topic,  such 
as  diamond  and  gemstone  treatments,  watch  and 
jewelry  care.  and.  of  course,  what  you  should  know 
when  buying  a  diamond.  So  look  for  my  column 
again  soon...  or  don't  wait  until  then!  Come  down  to 
SARAH  LEONARD  Fine  Jewelers  at  1055 
Westwood  Blvd.  and  introduce  yourself,  or  call  me 
at  208  -  3131  with  your  questions.  You  can  also 
reach  me  via  e-mail  at  thedea@iuno.cnm  (Please 
allow  a  few  days  for  response). 

Finally,  when  you  come  in,  be  sure  to  tell  us  that 
you're  a  Bruin.  All  UCLA  students,  faculty  and 
staff  receive  a  SPECIAL  DISCOUNT  on  all 
purchases,  all  repairs,  all  the  time.  It's  our  way  of 
saying  "Thank  You"  to  a  community  that  has  been 
so  supportive  of  us  for  so  long.  And  be  sure  to  ask 
for  me.  I'd  love  to  help  you! 


.;•    r   •»•• 


30       Tuesday,  (ktober  10,2000 


Daily  Brum  Arts  t  EntertaJmncnt 


"Check  under  the  hood"  and 
great  savings  on  the 
-'  latest  hooded  sweatshirts 
from  Russell  Athletic. 


(VM  HUL/DaNy  Brum  Senior  SUir 

Deatti  by  Stereo  members  (left  to  right)  Jim,  Efr«n,  Dan,  Paul,  arul 
Jared  goof  off  backstage  after  a  show  at  The  Palace. 


DEATH 

From  page  24 

going  to  sink  in  for  a  while.  We're 
still  just  a  bunch  of  kids  having  fun." 

Vocalist  Efrem  Schulz  joined  the 
conversation  when  it  turned  to  the 
subject  of  food. 

"1  like  anything  you  can  put 
ketchup  on,  which  is  anything."  said 
Schulz. 

Miner  and  Palmer  explained  that 
they  both  love  Chinese  vegetarian 
food.  The  two  band  members  said 
that  they  became  vegetarians 
because  the  conversion  would  make 
them  appear  sensitive,  and  thus 
attractive  to  women. 

"Half  of  us  in  the  band  are  vege- 
Urians  and  the  other  half  are  dirty," 
said  Palmer. 

"We're  enjoying  life,"  explained 
Miner.  "We're  lucky  to  play  shows, 
we  don't  Uke  it  for  granted. 

"We  all  have  regular  jobs,"  he 
continued.  "I  work  in  a  tattoo  shop 
called  'Inflictions'  in  Covina. 

"Dan  is  a  waiter;  Paul  works  in  a 


recording  studio,  making  very  beau- 
tiful music;  Efrem  can't  work 
because  he's  an  illegal  alien,"  Miner 
continued.  "Oh,  and  Jared  the 
drummer  is  a  long  shoreman  who 
works  at  the  dodcs,  or  should  I  say  a 
short  longman  since  he's  only  S- 
foot-l." 

Meanwhile,  Jared  walked  in  and 
out  of  the  room,  either  unaware  of 
Miner's  comments  or  choosing  tQ 
ignore  them. 

The  humorous  but  grounded 
Death  by  Stereo  will  tour  relentless- 
ly in  the  upcoming  months.  A 
Canadian  tour  with  Good  Riddance 
will  take  place,  as  well  as  a  few  dates 
with  7  Seconds  and  Portland's 
Berzerk. 

A  northeast  tour  will  follow,  with 
Snapcase  and  Boy  Sets  Fire.  Finally, 
a  December  tour  will  bring  them 
back  to  the  West  Coast  with  Faded 
Grey  and  Count  Me  Out.  The  band 
will  release  a  7"  vinyl  record  with 
Indecision  Records  on  Halloween 
and  a  full  length  album  on  Epitaph 
Records  will  be  out  on  Jan.  23  titled 
"Day  of  Death." 


CWWt  t«LyO»l(y  Brutn  Vntor  Sraff 

Efrem,  lead  singer  of  Death  by  Stereo,  shouts  his  lyrics  to  the 
crowd  during  the  hardcore  band's  performance  at  The  Palace. 


310.206.0810 
www.uclastor«.com 


Ass6dicct«<J  S^vxWs. 

S^ofT /oo  Ki««i.  S*»\^  lift 


UCLfe 


DINNER 

From  page  23 

best  friend  ("The  Story  of  Us," 
"Sleepless  In  Seattle^')  brings  the  same 
skills  to  Karen.  Under  Daniel 
Sullivan's  direction,  the  actor  tones 
down  the  tension  just  by  using  body 
language  or  facial  expressions. 

She  also  portrays  a  no-nonsense 
demeanor  that  convincingly  crumbles 
when  she  realizes  Beth'*  troubles  have 
invaded  her  secure,  middle-class  life. 

Although  Stern  (perhaps  best 
known  as  the  voice  of  an  adult  Kevin 
on  "The  Wonder  Years")  plays  the 
dutiful  and  well-meaning  husband,  he 
serves  as  more  than  just  comic  relief. 

The  moments  when  he  quietly  con- 
templates the  evolution  of  his  marriage 
provide  some  of  the  most  poignant 
scena. 

Deianey  ("China  Bead)")  gives  a 
warm  performance  as  the  troubled  mm! 


neurotic  Beth.  Meanwhile,  Kevin 
Kilner  fares  well  as  Tom. 
Unfortunately,  his  characterization 
brings  a  smugness  instead  of  sympathy 
when  Tom  feels  better  than  he  has  in 
years  because  he  is  somebody  else's 
"boy  toy"  at  43. 

Still,  at  a  time  when  the  divorce 
rate  is  close  to  50  percent  and  fami- 
lies are  trying  to  figure  out  how  to 
keep  having  it  all,  the  play  brings  up 
many  relevant  and  sobering  points 
concerning  romance  and  commit- 
ment. Though  not  a  fine  wine. 
"Dinner  With  Friends"  gives  you 
plenty  of  food  for  thought. 


THEATBl!  'Dinner  With  Friends'  runs 
through  Oct.  29  at  the  Geffen 
Playhouse.  Tickets  are  $20  to  $42. 
Student  Rush  tickets  may  be  available 
1 5  minutes  prior  to  curtain  for  $10.  For 
more  information,  call  (310)  208-5454 
w  Ticketmaster  at  (213)  365-3500  or 
vHIt  www.9efyenplayh0use.com. 


Daily  Bruin 


Tuesday,  October  10,2000 


hUht^f^nr^jifti 


ni'o 
woo 

Campus  HappMiioM 
Campus  OrBWiizations 

i:)(Hi 

IxdO 

Campus  S«(vloM 

ifi(i(; 

Birthdays 

It. (1(1 

Legal  notices 

1700 

Lost  &  Found 

UiOO 

Miscellaneous 

I'.IOf) 

Personal  Messaget 

20(10 

Personals 

2().'.0 

Preonancy 

21110 

Recreational  Activities 

2200 

Research  Subjects 
Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 
TIcfceu  Offered 

2J00 
2'tOO 

2r)0() 

Tidtets  Wanted 

2(.00 

VWairted 

Appliances 
Alt  /  Paintings 
Bicycles  /  Skates 
Boolts 

Calling  Cards 
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Collectibles 
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Furniture 

Garage  /  Yard  Sales 
I  Health  Products 
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lable  Sports 


TSMUD 


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travel 


Resorts  /  Hotels 
Rkles  Offered 
Rides  VHanted  - 

laxi  /  Shuttle  Servtee 
Travel  Destinations 
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I  Vacation  Packages 


services 


1-900  number* 

FhUHicialAM 

Insurance 

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HeaMn  /  Beauty  Services 

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Movers  /  Storage 

Musk:  Lessons 

Personal  Services 

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Tutoring  Mtonted 
I  lypinQ 

Writing  Help 


TPTTT? 


Business  Opportunities 
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Help  Warned 
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l*eraonal  Assistance 
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Vokinteer 


Apartments  for  Rent 

Apartments  Furnished 

Condo  /  Townhouse  for  Rent 
I  Condo  /  Tbwnhouse  for  Sale 

Guesthouse  for  Rem 

House  for  Rem 
I  House  for  sale 

Houseboats  for  Rem  /  Sale 

Housing  Needed 

Room  for  Help 

Room  for  Rent 
I  Roommates  -  Private  Room 

Roommates  -  Shared  Room 

Sublels 
1  Vacation  Rentals 


index 


Hi 


hoMftoiMrile 
aneflecfhieail 

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to  know  about  the  merchandise, 
and  include  that  in  the  ad.  Include 
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Classified  Line  Ads: 

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at  12  noon. 

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at  12  noon. 

Then?  are  no  cancellations  after 
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please  see  our  rate  card 

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Please  make  checks  payable  to 
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accept  Visa.  MasterCard,  and 
Discover  credit  cards.  AHow  5 
working  days  for  mail  payments. 


advert  isenwiU  represented 
Oaiy  BnHn.  lis  Kardchofl  Hal, 
475-9671.  Class«ed  ads  tku> 


1300 

Campus  RecriiitmcMit 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


s  in  writing  to  the  Business  Manager. 
■  Westside  Fair  Housing  Otfice  at  (310) 
responsibie  lor  ttie  nrH  incotr 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


EARN  $$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  the  com- 
mon cold.  Male/female  l8-55yrs.  old,  non- 
smoker,  no  asthma  history.  Limited  availabil- 
ity. Call  today  3tb-785-9121. 
Emall:clinicalsu|ijects  O  yahoo.com 
-^ 


1100 

Campus  Happoniiujs 


THE  UCLA  SCHOOL  OF  NURSING  Is 
scheduled  lor  accreditation  site-visit  by  the 
Commission  on  Collegiate  Nursing  on  Oct. 
30,  31,  and  Nov  1,  2000.  The  put)lic  is  invit- 
ed to  aflerxl  (he  site  visit  and  express  their 
opinion  on  the  baccalaureate  and  master's 
degree  programs  For  further  Info,  contact 
Eloise  Uiera  310-825-5884. 


SHOW  YOUR  STUFF  ON  TV! 


MPE6S,QMlGk- 
■M  aimiv  er  naeoe  •  rnoMn 


WMlhnnyPlMlH 


MMH  must  b0  origiral  and  HOI  SUfiBL 
NoaKond-handstufT-IMUST  BE  YOUR&* 

tlMlttlllM 


ti—OeiiMjeltxw 
IM  tK  CMiNir  ItaH  -  143i  IMh  Goww  81 - 
ta  » -  Ha%«md,  CA.  «MBa 

NUDE  TOA  NNCM»CSS  MO  FHINE  NUMBl 


>"!• 


«<HtnyW<ll»iigplia^daj»i^w»ui 
|iwey  jSu  gwnnl^  ttn  imfw 


Fratumities  •  Sororities 
Clubs  •  Student  Groups 

Earn  S1,0OO-S2,0OO  this  quarter  writn  ttia  easy 
Campuiiundraiier.coffl  three  hour  fundminB  event. 
No  Saloa  raquited.  Fundming  (Mm  in  Mbig  qiAMy, 
so  at  lodiirt  Contact  Cantpusfundrasar.com  at  (MM) 
923-3238.  Of  nMt  ■nnwxamPMhaidraiw.coni 


Disneyland  Resort's 
Hospitality  Job  Fair 

Featuring  roles  at  The  Disneyland  Hotel.  Disne/k  Paradise  Pier  Hotel 
"■  and  our  newest,  Disney's  Grand  CaJHbmian  Hotel  -  '»' 

the  first  hotel  within  aTheme  Parld 

The  Disneyland  Hptel 

Exhibit  Hall 

October  1 7  &  18,  2000 

Sam  -  6pm 


Get  ready  to  explore  exciting  full-time  and  part-tinne  roles  in: 

•  Bell  Services  •  Convention  •  Houselceeping 

*  Binslnf/Stewards 
•Cashiers 


EARN  $150.00 


Reteareti  Institute  needs 
healltiy  men,  ages  21 -40 
for  2-day  alcoltol  study. 

Must  be  a  licensed  driver 
and  wilHiig  to  drinit  alcoliol. 

CaN  la  Ma  N  you  quaMy.  AakforSuoae. 
M-F,  ftOO  am  -  4:00  pm 

ET-  Ph:  310-390-8483 


n 


«,rv,^«.  .  Laundry 

•  Culinary  .  PaHdng/Valet 

•Certified  •  Food  *  Beverage  -Recreation 

Ufeguards  •  Front  Desit  •  Servers 


1800 

Miscellaiieoiis 


NEED  TWO  TICKETS  for  UCLA  vs.  USC 
football  Game.  Call  310-572-1958 

ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-canipus  &  on-line  financial  services 
source  for  students,  faculty  &  staff  Visit  us  at 
Ackerman  A-level,  orvllne  at  www.ucu.org  or 
call  310-477-6628. 


2000 

Prrsoiuils 


MAJOR 

ENTERTAINTMENT 

INDSUTRY  EXEC 

Seeks  t)eautiful  woman  to  date/attend  major 
industry  events.  Great  adventure.  Single, 
wt>tte,  nrtale,  40,  tall,  very  attracUve/sucoess- 
ful  (resembles  Michael  Douglas).  Safe.  310- 
777-0204. 

-       ■-  -     ■  — .    ..  ... 

NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT. Sale*  aftordabte'  effective'  visit  us  at 
www.flguesphiS.com  1-668-e03-M00.  Dis- 
ti»MtawWpa  aw  aoalafcla 


That's  not  all! 

Disney  recruiters  will  be  interviewing  and  hiring  for  hourly  roles 

thrcxjghout  the  entire  Disr>eyland  Resort  That  means  you're  sure 

to  find  plenty  of  niagical  opportunities,  whatever  your  interest! 

Plus,  check  out  the  opportunities  at  ESPNZONE.  the  ultimate  sports 

dining  and  entertainment  complex,  located  in  Downtown  Disney. 

Or  visit  us  at  www.espnzorw.com. 

For  more  information  call  die  Disneyland  Resort  Jobline  at  800-766-0888, 

or  visit  DisneyCareers.com  for  professional  opportunities.  Then  get  ready  to 

Experience  The  Magic  At  Work! 


RESEARCH  PARTICIPANTS  NEEDED  lor 
patients  experiencing  Hay  Fever/Allergic 
Rtiinitis.  Requires  4  visits  (6  hours  total)  over 
7- todays.  WIN  pay  up  to  $100  at  conclusion 
of  study.  Contact  Dr.  Diaz-Sanchez  or 
Dr.Saxon  at  310-825-3699  or  310-825-9376 

RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for 
UCLA  Brain  Mapping  study  Wear  goggles 
for  two  weelis  that  turn  the  world  upside 
down.  Must  t>e  right-handed,  normal  hearing, 
vision  good  or  correctable,  $1000  payment. 
Contact  Richard  at  qulxote9ucla.edu  for 
more  Info 


SOLAR  ENERGY 

Experimenters  Needed.  Direct  many  mir- 
rors at  various  objects.  Spectacular  dis- 
plays?Hlgh  temperature  physics  studies 
galore?  Call  Edward  Vandegrift:ed- 
dievanOpacbell.net 


^fejtgj 


^wnpldnd 

-— ^"M  I  •  O  I  I. 


EOE  •  Creating  Magic  Through  Oiversif/  •  OOitntf 


WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60+  w/ljyphosis 
(lonvard  bending  of  spine)  needed  for  re- 
search program  investigating  whether  Yoga 
can  improve  kyphosis  Study  being  conduct- 
ed by  Gail  Greendale,  MD  in  the  UCLA  Depf. 
ol  Medicine.  Please  call  310-794-9055. 


2300 

Sperm/Egg  Donors 


BROKEN  HEARTED  COUPLE  SEEKING 
Caucasian  egg  donor  Up  to  $15,000  Previ- 
ous donors  welcome.  858-554-0888  or  E- 
mail:  susanplace10holmail.com. 

If  you  are  male,  in  college  or  have  a  college 
degree,  you  can  eam  up  to  $600/mo,  call  for 
details  on  our  anonymous  sperm  donor  pro- 
gram. Receive  free  comprehensive  health 
screening  &  help  infertile  couples.  So  if 
you're  looking  tor  a  great  job  and  a  little  extra 
cash,  call  us  lirsl.  310-824-9941 


2000 

i*(!rson.-ils 


PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18  35 
year  oM  females  with  adventurous  and  open 
minded  spMts  «»ho  want  to  expendAsj^jlore 
Iheir  sexualily  Ihnxyi  nude  modelng.  Free 
prtnls  for  modeling  time  Call  Robed  at  310- 
463-5096  robMOatt  net 


21 OO 

Recreatioiml  Activities 


VAMPIRE  Live  Action  Role  Playing  game! 
Call  David  909-338-4621  or  visit  www.geoci- 
ties  conVLAbyNighl  Games  every  other  Sat 
night,  beginning  10,^/00. 


EGG  DONORS  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 
wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

$5,000 
t.    CAUMlRNA  (818)  832-1494    « 


AOVERTISE 


*(fc-tM.'->t«>».«i4«st„i^bv.^.  -Ji.^*   4^ 


DaityBniinOatsificd 


2300 

Sperm/Egg  Donors 


Pay  your  tuition 
with  eggs. 


If  you're  a  woman  between  18 
and  35,  you  can  earn  money  easi- 
ly, anonymously  Donate  your 
eggs  to  an  infertile  couple. 
,  $3,500  and  up,  depending  on 
your  education  and  other  qualifi' 
cations.  Call  today: 

The  Center  for  Egg  Options 
310/546-6786 

♦  TVCenw  for  Er  Opcioni.  LLC 


Aulos  for  Sale 


1979  450 
MERCEDES  SLC 

Excellent  condition.  150K,  AM.'FM  cassette, 
AC,  $8500ot)O.  310-828-9111. 

1980  HONDA  ACCORD  5  speed.  4  door, 
Good  transportation  car.  $750  obo.  Call  310- 
820-8247  or  page  310-840-5554. 

1987  HONDA  ACCORD.  Drives  great,  5spd. 
4dr,  recent  clutch,  tires,  belts,  and  hoses. 
155K,  $2000obo.  310-449-3712. 

1989  CONVERTIBLE  FORD  MUSTANG  LX 
for  sale  for  $1,500.  Automatic,  Cruise  Con- 
trol. Power  windows  and  locks.  Newer  en- 
gine and  top.  New  paint  job.  Runs  well.  Call 
Tino  at  323-653-6923. 


5680 

Travel  Destinalions 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


Counci 


Travel 


2600 

Wanted 


ADOPTION 

Baby  is  our  dream.  We  can  provide  love&se- 
cuftty.  All  expenses  paid.  Attorney  involved. 
Confidential.  Call  Gina  &  Frank.  888-676- 
1995. 


1989  GEO  METRO  LSI  Blue.  $2200  obo. 
2D/hatchback,  automatk:,  excellent  condi- 
tion, 80.000  miles.  A/C.  AM/FM.  310-478- 
5663. 

1990  CHEVROLET  LUMINA.  Runs  greatl 
Blue  ext/int.  New  suspension.  3.1  Liter.  4dr, 
ISOKmiles,  very  dependable.  Must  sell! 
$1800obo.  Jeff  323-469-8438. 

1990  HONDA  CIVIC  LX 

Red.  4df,  fully  loaded,  80K,  servk:ed  last 
week,  $5000  call  Marilyn:310-571-0084. 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO.  4¥k1, 
auto.  A/C,  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  condi- 
tion. Sell  for  $4300.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836. 

1994  NISSAN  SENTRA.  All  power,  First 
owner,  Low  Milage,  Automatic,  Burgandy, 
BlueBook  Value  $6400  Asking  $5200  OBO 
310-613-8770. 


Council  Itavel  invites  you  to  our 


tiJQQest  pnand  f 

npeninrj  Pcintij  fj!ven   • 


October  7th  •  1-8pm 

pmize  alvea\A/BUB  f 

everu  haun  an  the  hour-  • 

TMB  WOKLO  MMOUS  KROQ  VAN  WILL  M  THRRC  *WTM  OIVKAWAVS 
AND  MRBT  KROQ  DJ  STYKBRI 

pnlz:es  inckJcJe : 

TICKETS  TO  UNIVERSAL  STUDIOS  •  QUEEN  MARYS  SHIPWRECK  HALLOWEEN 
HAUNT  .  SPRING  BREAK  PACKAGES  TO  CLUB  MED  SONORA  BAY  MEXICO 
•  A  TRIP  FOR  TWO  TO  HAWIAII  •  AIRLINE  TICKETS  TO  EUROPE  ON  VIRGIN 

ATLANTIC  WITH  A  CONTIKI  TOUR  •  EURAILRASSES  •  AND  MUCH,  MUCH  MOREM 


Come  and  meet  fVlelissa  from  MTVs 
The  Real  World"  from  3:30pm-5:30pm 


Join  us  Pan  music  and  Fun  and 
^let  council  tnavel  tzakie  you    ^ 
anounO  tne  vvonld  !  virgm 

atkmtic 


WltWw^B 


1996  FORD  ASPIRE  71500mi.,  auto,  a/c, 
airbag,  red  excellent  conditwn,  $2950  obo. 
Leaving  Country  Call  Andras  310-825-4585 
or  after  6pm  310-208-4345. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Cars  as  k)w  as  $500 
for  listings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214. 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990. 
84000m),  good  condition,  power  windows, 
black,  A/C,  registratwn  pak)  for  one  year. 
$4000.  Call  Vteente  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerOucla.edu 

•96  CHEVY  CAVALIER.  -68,000mi.  CD.  sun- 
roof, standard.  NC.  Must  sell  $4900  obo 
310-428-2345. 


531  Santa  Monica  Blvd.    310-656-9991 

corner  of  Snntn  Monica  and  6th 
M.  T.  W.  F  10-7     TH  11-7     SAT  11-5 


r  a  V  t^  I   .  r  0  m 


3^00 

Com j  i  If ors/Software 


TOSHIBA  TECRA  8100  laptop.  P3  600  Mhz. 
14.1"  TFT.  256  Ram.  16.8  GB  HD.  5  mos.  old 
w/receipt.  3  year  oo-site  no  fault  warranty. 
$4600.  310-338-0688. 


0= 


tL 


Recycle     1 


61 OO 

C()ni(jiiter/lnternet 


FREE  WEBSITE!!! 

YOUR  OWN  5-page  website  ABSOLUTELY 
FREE.  Easy,  fast,  quality  NO  banner  ads  to 
watchf  Wtpy/eengen  go  coolebiz.net 

P/T  to  complete  constructk>n  and  maMain 
website.  Nattonwkle  wholesale.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 


3500 

Furniture 


MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY  STEARNS  &  FOSTER  Also  twin- 
8«tS-$79.95,  Fulls-$99.95,  Queens-$139  95 
KJnQS-$l9995  Queen  Pillowtops  $19995. 
B«8Con  Open  7-days.  1309  Westwood 
Btvid.  310-477-1466. 

SIMMONS  EXTRA  SUPER  FULL  (double) 
mattress,  boxspring  and  frame  $100  OBO. 
310-745-2445  or  X47501. 

SOFA  BED  for  sale.  Beige,  almost  new.  $80. 
310-210-7336. 

"         WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

Sleigh  l)eds.  Rustic  pine  furniture,  arrrwires, 
mattress  sets,  slip  covered  &  upholstered  so- 
faa/cfiairs  Leather  sofas  &  chairs.  310-745- 
2253. 


5900 

FinancinI  Aid 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  appttcatton  fees,  high  approval  rate,  tow 
Interest  rate,  all  applteants  wekx)me.  Call 
toll-free:  1-866-427-2677. 

STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Code  832123).  Were  on 
campus  at  Ackemian  A-level.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.org 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


6200 

Health  Services 


MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  Massage.  $40/hr  w/student 
ID.  Monday-FrkJay  lOam-epm.  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  CertifKates  available. 


•)^i\i 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded.  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared application.  John  Manley,  Esq  12304 
Santa  Monk:a  Blvd.  #300  LA,  CA  90025. 
310-820-7553.  Deadh>e:  1 0/30/00 


A  A  A  #  A  m^ 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


tenfljgJjjtTQ' 


Jack  H.  Slivers,  MD 

■ • 1«wiMMecM. 


"tH  haant  forgottmn  what  H'a 
Ukm  tobma  atudmnL' 

•Acne -Mole  Removal -Warts -Rashes 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal- 

•LipAugmentation^ 

•Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  826-2051 

www.DrSllven.com 

-iQffllM  Inrmlmd  In  «>»««w,ww^ 


6300 

Lerjal  Advice/Attorneys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST.  Sexual  hanvssment,  Discrtmina- 
tton,  Auto-accklents.  Slips/falls.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  WestsMe,  Scon  D.  Myer(UCLAW86). 
www.bestlawyercom  310-277-3000. 


Tuesby,  October  10,2000       32 


PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  In 
several  pre-pakJ  legal  swvtee  programs 
providing  quality  legal  services  to  plan  mem- 
bers Robert  Mos8(UCLAW71).:310-260- 
7650. 


^900 

Atitos  for  Sale 


1930  FORD  MODEL  A.  $10,000  obo  5-win- 
dow  coupe,  rumble  seat,  original,  good  con- 
dHton  310-342-7414. 


920  Westwood  Blvd. 

310-UCLA-FLY 


www.statravel.com 


GJiOO 

IVIov(;rs/Stoia()(! 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  5-plaoa  apadal  $102.  Two 
24-fool  trucks  fuHy  aquippad  for  large  moves. 
Can  24/7.  AvatatXa  on  stwrt  noOce.  Ucanse 
T1 63844.  800-2GO-flEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  w/14lt  truck  and  doHles. 
smaH  jobs,  short  nottee  ok.  SF,  LV.  SD. 
Student  discounl.  Go  BniinsI  10th  yr.  310- 
285-8668. 

JERRY'S  MOVING4DELIVERY  The  careful 
mown.  Experiencaa  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  avaHaMa.  Also,  ptek- 
up  donattons  for  Amartcan  Cancer  Sodaty 
JaRy«310-391-6657. 


6500 

IVInsic  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedk^led  pro- 
fesskinal.  At  your  home  or  WLA  studk).  1st- 
lesson  free.  No  drum  set  necessary. 
Neil:323-654-8226. 


GUITAR  LESSONS     ~ 

by  professk)nal  near  UCLA.  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effortlessly! 
www.JWGS.com.  Call  Jean  at, 310-476- 
4154. 

PIANO  AND  VOICE  LESSONS  by  UCLA 
singer/pianisti  Call  Laura  310-2 1 0-7336. 

VOICE  AND  PIANO  COACHING;  Broadway 
show  tunes.  $20/hr.  Studio  410  N.  Rossnwre 
Ave.  323-461-5204.  David  Rishlon.  Begin- 
ning, intermediate,  and  advanced. 


6600 

Personal  Services 


Menage  a  trois?  I  do  translatwns  in  German. 
English,  or  French.  Call  Julia  310-826-8917. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  for  de- 
pression, anxiety,  ot}sessk>ns,  post-traumat- 
k:  stress,etc.  Couples/lndivkluals.  Crime  vk- 
tims  may  be  eligible  for  free  treatment.  CaH 
Liz  Goukl(MFC#32388)  031 0-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  consultatk>n 

ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW.  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Fmstrated  devel- 
qptng  your  cmcial  personal  statements?  Get 
professk}nal  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consuttant.31 0-826-4445.  ¥»ww.winning- 
personstatement.com. 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertatkx)  formatting,  tran- 
scritjing.  Personalized,  professk)nal  assis- 
tance. Ace  Words.Etc.  310-820-8830. 

SIGN  LANGUAGE 
CLASS 

Set  your  hands  free  by  learning  to  experi- 
ence a  language  of  t>eauty  through  visual  ex- 
pression. Starts  October  Louisa:310-275- 
3809. 

TALENTED     ACTORS     WANTED     Non-" 
UntofVUrton.  For  cunent  tan  season  and 
beyond.  CaH  SdTah  or  Marguax  at  PMQ 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 


TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day.  1-888-774-9994.  *vww.abcpa- 
pers.com 

WRITER'S  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlintng,  research,  and  productk>n 
assistance  for  academk:  or  professkxial  writ- 
ing. Expenenced  wrWng  Instructor.  Harvard 
Unlvertely  M.A.  JorV31 0-367-5666 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Comprahanalve  DisMiutton  Auictanc* 
Tymn,  P«p«fi.  and  Partonal  Sutamants 

PropOMl*  artd  Bookf 

iTYtamationa)  StudKit*  W*kx>n)«.  Sine*  1985 

SKaren  ■•»,  Pti.O.  (310)  47l>4es2 

www.B—r-Write  com 


7000 

Tutoring  Offeroil 


BOND  TUTORING 

AM  »ub^»a»  6-12th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degraaa.  Wa  «wM  meet  your  individu- 
al needs.310-471-7628. 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results. 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  laN.  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Cafculus/Phystes/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/English  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 


MATH  TUTOR 

I  tutor  SAT  math,  Pre-Algebra.  Algebra  1  and 
2,  Geometry,  Trigonometry,  and  beginning 
Cafcukjs.  UCLA  Student,  trwth  major.  Four 
years  experience  tuk>ring  math  and  one  year 
leaching  experience.  You  come  to  me 
$25/hour  CaN  tor  more  Intormatton.  Stepha- 
nie:31 0-702-6455. 


PHD  GRADUATE  tutors  French  languaga  for 
aN  tenntt  beginning,  advanced  and  oonver- 
satkxwl  French.  Excellent  senrk:e  and  rates 
CaN  Liza.310-575-3874 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


SCIENCE  AND  ANY  HIGH  SCHOOL  or  Ju- 
ntor  high  subjects  tutoring-  UCLA  Mdacuiar 
Blotogy  Qiad.  Prsvkxjs  tutoring  expattanoa. 
1-323-874-MeO. 


Display 
-:l)b-.<()h(J 


33       Tuesday,  October  10,2000 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Services 


Daily  Bruin  Oassiflctf 


6200 

Health  Services 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  6^^bII^ 

•■}-  ORTHODONTIST    .^„      ^.         .  _  .  \j>eliver BnlUan, Results  J 


UCU  FACULTY  MEMBER 


Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


(310)  826  -  7494 

llt4sWildiii«IM.tWB 
LM*i<idM.CA  Mns 

(949)  552  -  5890 

18IMClllvtrDr..M 
IrvicK.  CA  92715 


Teeth  Whitening   $8^00 

upper  or  lower  ^^  KJ  %J 


Braces 

Delii>er  Brilliant  i 

» Cosmetk;  Porcelain 

•  Surgical  Orthodonltcs 

•  Removable 

•  TroditkxKil 

•  Invisible 

'European    •■ 


1)00  00  tw    iiii>    nwimi   «    k« 
(IfOBaOfUfiaotpwiiWCtlWa 


•WMONondal*  10^141} 


7000 

TiitoriiKj  OffertMl 


THE  MATHEMAGICIAN 

Your  on-line  math  tutor.  On-line  assistance 
with  your  math  protdem.  Pre-Algebra,  Alge- 
tKa,  Pre-Calculus,  Calculus.  310-452-0655 
or,  go  to:www.themathemagician.com 

THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  o«ers  tutoring, 
term  paper  assistance,  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  Welcome 
Call:310-452-2865 
www.tt>ewriterscoach.com 


7100 

Tiitorinrj  Wanted 


TUTORS  NEEDED 

All  subjects,  levels,  ages.  Flexible  days  and 
hours.  $10-13/hour.  Tutor  in  WLA  or  SFV. 
Totally  Tutored.  310-397-0999 

TLTTORS  WANTED:  AH  Subjects,  preK-12th 
grade,  computers,  languages,  instruments 
PT  (WLA/SFV/MALIBU),  salary:  $10-15,' 
must  have  car,  310477-2669,  fax:  310-477- 
1359. 


WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  with  the  English  language — for  stod- 
ents  of  aM  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WRITING  TUTOR 

Kind  and  patient  Stanfonl  graduate.  Help 
with  tt)e  English  language— for  students  of 
all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW.MY-TUTOfl.COM  Math/Physlcs/Sta- 
tistics/EnglisfVHebrew/  ct>emislry/b«ology/as- 
trofwmy/  Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available.  Tutorirtg 
sennce.  CaH  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

TiitoriiKj  Wanted 


ACADEMIC  COACH/TUTOR  for  freshman 
Santa  Monica  College  student  vwth  learning 
disability.  Help  organi2e.  support  and  tutor 
basic  subjects.  3-5hrs/wk.  $2Q^r.  Maureen 
310-459-1600. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tutoring,  com- 
panion, driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
girt.  Athletic  female  preferred.  BH.  $8-12/hr. 
4days/wk.  2-4hrs/day  ASAP.  Call  310-273- 
3663,  310-753-3535.  Email 

lonz320aol.com. 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  12&16-yr- 
oW  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED.  Must  be 
graduate  student  or  TA.  For  high  school 
student  taking  secorxl  year  Spanish  and 
math.  310-476-0766. 

MATH,  SAT.  Experienced  Grad  student  or 
Senior  prefened.  Private  WLA  school.  Fax 
resume  to  562-404-6141  or  call  818-831- 
2809. 

MATH,  SPELLING, 

READING 
COMPREHENSION 

Tutor  wanted  for  3rd  grader  2-3  times/week, 
evenings.  $15/hour  Must  come  to  ho«ise. 
323-954-7433. 

MATH/SCIENCE/LANGUAGE  tutors  needed 
for  grades  6-12  Algebra,  Geometry,  Phystes, 

-Chemistry,  Spanish  1/2.       $1S/hr  Experi- 

liMtcw^f  Must  have  car  Fax  resume:310-474- 

:7413ASAP 

« 

[UBED  A  GENERAL  A  TUTOR  for  11-year- 
bM-boy  in  BH.  Must  be  nk:e  &  patient. 
flease  CaH  LHy  310-274-3929  or  310-600- 
4707. 

TUTOR  NEEDED  for  2  boys  (ages  648).  Job 
WDuW  include  the  following:  Pick  up  boys 
from  Falrbum  Elementary  Sctiool  (approx 
2ml  from  UCLA)  at  2:35pm  M-Thurs, 
12:10pm  on  Fri.  Take  boys  to  Century  City 
condo.  do  HW,  tutor  vartous  subjects,  give 
them  snack,  swim  in  Olympk:  size  pool,  play 
ball,  etc.  Parents  wiU  amve  home  at  approx 
6:30pm  everyday.  •"Important  to  note  this 
job  is  every  other  week  only.  $300/»vk.  Ad- 
justments up  if  more  work  or  hours  neces- 
sary. Reply  to  Anthony  Brooklier  310-273- 
7166  or  Fax  info  310-277-3006 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertations,  transcriptkxi,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Monica,  310-828-6939.  Hollywood,  323466- 
2888. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


ABSOLUTELY 
AWESOME 

AFTERNOON  assistant  for  2  wonderful  girfs 
(5,8yrs).  Driving,  playing.  HW.  Near  UCLA. 
Mon-Thurs,3-6pm,some  evenings.  Day.  310- 
206-0669;  night,  3 1 0-824 -9609. 

AFTER  SCHOOL  CARE  NEEDED  4 
days/wk.  2  boys  ages  6&8.  WLA.  Car  neces- 
sary. Must  be  available  2:45-5:45pm.  Call 
Stacey  310-449-5765. 


AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED. 
Mon-Fri.  2pm-7pm.  Own  transporiaUon  a 
must.  Brentwood.  310-979-7103. 


employment 

7400-8300 

^ ^ 


7^00 

Business  Opportunities 


A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  It's  possi 
ble.  Invest  $35,  Refundable.  No  Risk 
httpy/zitjgib.com/phanya  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stephanie. 


AFTERr«X)N  CHILDCARE.  Tutoring.com- 
panton.drivlng  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
girl.  Athletk;  lemale  preferred.  BH.  $8-12/hr. 
4days/wk.  24hrs/day.  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663,310-753-3535.  Email  k)nz32e  aol.com. 

ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

P/T  JOB  worthing  with  sweet,  intelligent 
handteapped  girt.  ChiW  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  in  kitchen  and  working  with  cfiiW 
on  improving  physkal  skills.  /Vpplrcani  must 
be  sweet,  intelligent.  reUable,  speak  English 
and  drive.  Maat  Elman;3 10-396-8 100. 

BABYSITTER  for  smart,  nice  5-yr-oW  boy  in 
Sherman  Oaks.  Hours:2:30-6:30pm.  Must 
have  safe  car  wAinsurance  and  CDL.  Refer- 
ences required.  $8-10/hr  DOE.  310-449- 
7182. 


NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

Worit    from    home    with    flexible    hours. 
www.homebusiness.to/emoney 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


GET  AN  "A'  on  your  health  testlll  Detoxify 
your  system  fast  or  double  your  $$  backlll 
Call  toll  free  877-696-4541  ext:UC100. 
www.faroutpromotk)ns  com 

KOREATOWN  E-COMMERCE  business 
seeks  P/T  emptoyee  for  computer  and  office 
work.  Fluent  In  Korean  and  English. 
Resumes  to  namhee.han0gte.net. 


BARTENDERS 


•  Earn  $100-<200  ■  day 

•2wMklraMnga  Job 
nacamam  indudad 

•  irt  nol  a  job  -Wm  a  PARTYIK 

Nattgnal  Bartenders  SdMMil 


1    (HOC)  r.4fV  -  MIXX  (M09) 


T 

I  -A. 


SECRETARY/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

Light  flHng.  computer,  phones  in  Beverty 
Real  Estate  Company.  Part-time/FuM-time 
Flexible  hours.  Starting  pay  $li/hr  w/great 
future  job  opportunities.  Fax  resume:310- 
278-6801  Attn  Anda. 


CHILD  CARE 

for  2  giris,  ages  5&11.  Brentwood.  Tues  & 
Thurs  evenings,  5-9:30pm.  Duties  include: 
light  meal  prep,  reading,  playing,  bathing. 
Must  have  car.  Excellent  references  and  en- 
joy chiWren.  Salary  neg.  Please  call  Linda 
476-4728. 

CHILD  CARE  NEEDED  for  7year-oW  boy 
2:30-7:30  Wednesday.  Thursday  afternoons 
Must  drive,  have  reliable  car,  references  re- 
quired.  Pay  negotiable.  Mary:310-828-2624. 

CHILD  CARE  Wanted  Tues  3-8.  Thurs  3-6 
AND/OR  Sat  12-9  in  Santa  Monica. 
Someone  to  help  full  time  Mom  w/  kkte  ages 
4,6,10.  Must  have  experience.  Good  pay. 
Call  Doug  310-888-0163.  Fax  310-451- 
6050. 

CHILDCARE 

for  personable  8yr-oM  girt.  Pfck-up  from 
school/lessons.  COL.  own  car,  insurance. 
Non-smoker.  Monday/Wednesday/Friday  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thursday  2-6pm.  $ia/hr 
Call  310-440-6738. 

CHILDCARE/DRIVER  for  12-yr-old  boy. 
Non-smoker  Likes  kids  and  dogs.  Help 
w/HW  M-Thurs.  4:15-545pm.  $1Q^r.  Call 
310-828-5144. 

DRIVER/rUTOR 

w/exceNent  study  habits  to  assist  12416-yr- 
oW  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

FUNADARINQ  BABYSfTTER  NEEDED  for 
pteWng  up  &  caring  for  9yr  oW  gM.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-5days/wk. 
aftemoons-6pm.  Gayle  310-4504109  (even- 
ings). 


STOCK  BROKER    Lteenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars.  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216,  Woodland  HiNs.  CA.  Instnxaor  DavW 
Shu  (Master  Degree.  Hansard  University) 
818-703-8889. 


7600 

Child  Care  Offi-ted 


TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homewort*  assist  for  two  boys,  2nd  arxt  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  in  Laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  cal  evsnings:31O-401-0113  or  day- 
time:310-392-1405. 

TUTOR  WANTED  for  4th  grade  boy  BHIn- 
gual  (French-English)  American  prelened. 
SUnMaA^A  lor  2  hours.  Must  have  own  car 
Bel-air  310-471-0032  or  dbtwanty4sev- 
anttaolxom 


ififrfS 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  mn  by 
UCLA  grads  Ages2  5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30  Ctose  to  UCLA 
310-473-0772. 


NA6<LA  PR€SCNooL 


Lovely  W.LA.  facNHy,  doee  to  UCLA, 
FT  «  PT.  Horn  24. 

Cat  (310)207-4543  or  «Wt  In  parMn 
•1 1620  S.  Bundy. 


MOTHERS  HELPER 

NEEDED.  P/T  sitter  needed  lor  kids  1047. 
Responsibilities:  Driving,  re?KJingAplaying 
Good  pay!!  References  a  must!  Located  in 
Brentwood.  310-394-9781. 

NANNY  POSmON-P/T  Must  have  experi- 
er>ce  with  chlWren  ages  3  and  younger  ChlW 
Devetopemeni  education  a  plus.  Must  have 
referencesAcar.  310-234-1188 

P/T  DRIVER 
CHILDCARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  needs  drop-off  (6:45-8am)  &  pick- 
up>enands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only  Must  have 
car,  insurance&valid  license  Brentwood. 
Plaase  call  Sarah  310-385-6766. 


recycle 


Not  looking  for  another  diet?  Get  fit  the 

Bruin  Weigh 


For  9  weeks,  beginning  10  October     ;^ 
Nutrition  Classes  Tuesday,  3:30  to  5:00  pm 
Fun  Fitness  Classes  Thursday,  3:30  to  5:00  pm 
Social  Support  If  you  are  30  lbs.  or  more  over 

weight  and  want  to  feel  better, 
call  825-4073  for  Evalua- 
tion and  Referral 

For  more  information  call 
Sheri  Albert,  MPH,  RD 
at  310  794-41 80 


Co-Sponsored  by  UCLA  Ashe  Center  &  UCLA  Recreation 


TODAY'S       J 
CROSSWORD  PUZ2LE 


ACROSS 

1  Code  inventor 
6  By  means  of 
9  Certain  ruling 
group 

14  Diva's  songs 

1 5  —  and  outs 

16  Negative  panicle 

1 7  Type  of  blouse 

1 9  Marathon  units 

20  Fashion 
accessory 

21  Com  Belt  state 

22  Partnered 

23  His  and  — 

24  Luau  fare 

25  Sudden 
contraction 

27  Alley  denizens 

31  Sorrowful 
exclamation 

32  Strong  —  ox 
34  Assortment 

36  Bursts 

37  Scruffs 

39  Cathedral  part 

40  October  stones 

42  Enumerate 

43  Utopia 

44  Like  a  niodel 
46  Relieved        i   • 

48  Purpose  .' 

49  Sofa  parts    ,; 

50  Hobbles      . 

53  Popular      * 
cookie 

54  Civil  War 
general 

57  Spring  bloomer 

58  Parlor 
ftjmishing 

60  Bread  unit 

61  Bandleader 
Brown 

62CliffS4de 
home 

63  Beseech 

64  Employ 

65  Dipper 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


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[icis  somssD  miiiQa 

QlSaC]    OSOQCIQ    SOS 
SQSDD    QSD    BSQSD 


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DOWN 

1  AkJa  series 

2  Killer  whale 

3  Uprising 

4  —Paulo  - 

5  Glimp'-es 

6  Vistas 

7  Andes  native 

8  Question 

9  Kingston's 
place 

10  Platoon  or 
squadron 

1 1  Long  river 

12  —the  line: 
obeyed 

13  Reply:  abbf. 
18  Illustrator 

Rockwell 

22  Dad's 
companion 

23  Bother 

24  Combread 
k>aves 

25  Feeds  pigs 

26  Of  pontiffs 

27  Nocturnal 


animal 

28  "Gunsmoke" 
star 

29  Swap 

30  Rescued 

31  Gl's  address 
33  Oregon  capital 
35  Craving 

38  Beginning  for 

type"  , 

41  Lost  it  ■ 
45  Be  nide:  slang 
47  With  no  sense 
of  ethics 

49  Came  up 

50  Quiet 

51  —  Nastase 

52  Celadonite. 

eg 

53  Bullfight  cheers 

54  Embellish 

55  Actor  Jannir>gs 

56  Fencing  sword 

57  Cookbook  amt 

58  Cokj-weather 
malady 

59  Meadow 


Display 
2Ub-JU60 


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Daily  Bruin  Cbssifictf- 


Tuesday,  October  10,2000       34 


35       l»«djy,Octolierl6,20» 


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7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


PfT  NANNY 
DRIVER/HELPER 

Pacific  Palisades  professional  Mom  needs 
permanent  nanny  to  drive  11  yr.  old  daugter 
to  scfxx)l/appoinmenis  and  supervise  home- 
worVactivities.  7-9am(flexible)  and  3-7pm. 
-  M-F;  every-other-week.  Live-out.  Perfect 
long-term  opportunity  for  mature  student  or 
part-time  worker.  Must  have  reliable  car/exp. 
driving-record./excellent  judgment/maturi- 
ty/positive personality.  310-573-1170. 
FAX3 10-573-01 30. 

PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  for  10  yr/oW 
gn.  Need  help  6:45-8:30AM  MTW,  2-7:30pm 
Mt.  Must  have  car,  experierKe  with  chiklren 
an^ihelp  with  errands.  310~441-9766. 

PART-TIME  BABYSITTEfl.  Responsible, 
experienced,  child  development  preferred. 
Energetic,  for  2-year-old  and  5-year-old. 
Own  c»r.  310-273-4900. 

RELIABLE 
BABYSITTER  NEEDED 

For  after  school  help,  Monday-Thursday,  2- 
6pm.  Went  k)oking  for  a  student  who  is  great 
with  kids,  ages  7-6,  to  help  with  driving, 
homework  (iixj  light  housekeeping.  Hours 
and  salary  negotiable.  Car  and  references 
are  required  ^  Please  call  Joy  at  310-394- 
2342. 

RESPONSIBLE  RELIABLE  DRIVER  for  15- 
yr-old  boy  to  and  from  school  and  to  appoint- 
ments. UCLA  afea.  323-468-2632,  ask  for 
Norma.  * 

RIDE  NEEDED 

To  pick  up  chiM  from  Bekeriy  Hall  on  Mulhol- 
land  Drive  at  3:20  pm.  Call  310-271-4651  af- 
ter 6pm.  213-252-9437  From  9am-6pm. 

THERAPEUTIC 
COMPANION 

To  work  Pnr  w/12-ye44-oW  boy  w/autism. 
Evenings  and/or  weekends  5-10hours/week. 
Mirtrtwm  6-rix)nths.  Cou^work  and/or  ex- 
perierxie  w/autism  neces^ry.  $10+/hr.  310- 
569-7384.  "; 

TUTOR/BABYSITTER  GleiyJale,  12  year  oW 
boy.  Every  weekday  4-9pnL  $ia/hr.  Need 
Car.  Call  818-548-5OT5^        ^^ 

■- 

WANTED:  ResponisWe  individual  needed  to 
help  after  school  with  2  small  children. 
Mondays  4-8pm  and  some  weekends  »^ust 
Drive.  References.  Call  310-4461438 

Wonderful  Nanny  needed  3-5  afternoons  per 
week.  Boy  9,  girl  12.  Need  Own  car. 
Weekends  a  plus!  Palisades  area.  310-573- 
1010. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


INSTRUCTOR  WANTED  for  private  lessons 
in  freestyle  dancing.  Call  Stanley  310-585- 
9894 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  female  for  Beverly  Hills 
producer  Short,  flexible  hours.  Excellent 
pay  310-278-6972. 


$$$$ 


Teachers  for  rrxxlel  educational  and  enrich- 
ment CO.  Need  experience  working  with  ani- 
mals. Certificated/non-certlficated  ok.  Earth, 
Life  or  Physical  science  background.  Interest 
in  working  with  elementary,  and  mkldle 
school  students.  Great  pay,  fx)urs  available 
during  and  afterschool.  $25/fK)ur.  Fax  re- 
sume: 310-445-5628 

$10/HOUR        ~~ 

Accounting,  business,  math,  and  econ 
majors  w/bask:  Math&English  skills  needed 
TuesdaysAThursdays  lor  PT-FT  positions. 
Excellent  experience  for  future  CPAs  or  busi- 
ness owners  Fax  resume(UCLA  students, 
also  send  DPR):818-769-4694. 

$12/HR,  Hours  Flexible 

P/T  Individual  needs  assistant  in  contacting 
properly  owners  Must  have  car.  Call  310- 
476-9089 

$15-$23/HR  BRIGHT  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  leach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academic 
Subjects  Transportation  required.  We  will 
train.  Flexible  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  test  scores  (SAT,  GRE. 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educational  Services.  AttnBar- 
ry,  9911  W.  Pico  Blvd,  Sle.1025,  LA.  CA 
90035:  Fax  310-282-6424  Positions  avail- 
able throughout  LA  and  the  Valley. 

$1500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  circulars. 
No  expenence  required  Free  information 
packet.  Call  202-466-1639 

STUDENTS 

You  can  earn  $20K  this  semester  No  gim- 
mkiks  Totally  on  the  level  ABSOLUTELY 
NO  COST  TO  YOU  We  will  provkle  you 
w/free  training  and  support.  Go  tcr 
http  //nils  go  cootebiz  net  and  watch  the  on- 
line flash  presantatkHi 


Oi.i'^silieds 
82rj-?221 


7800 

Help  W.-mted 


7800 

Help  W.intfd 


$$$  Calling  all  Students!!  $$$ 
UCLA  Concessions  Is  hiring! ! 

''  - .  Convenient  location 

on  campus  at  alt  UCLA  athletic  events  and  other  special  events 

;' iv    '  FiBxibie  schedule     '  -v-     U 

sign  up  for  as  many  or  as  few  hours  as  you  want 
no  set  weekly  schedule 
shifts  availat)le  during  the  week/weekend,  day/night 
while  school  is  twth  in/out  of  sesston       . 

Make  money 

many  management  training  opportunities  -  ' 

bonus  program  during  Men's  Basketball  season 
recruiting  bonus-  gel  paid  by  getting  your  friends  to  work! 

Save  money 

discount  at  UCLA  Store 
half  off  meals  at  all  ASUCLA  restaurants     . 

Great  environment 

friendly  people 
faist  pace 

For  more  info  or  an  application, 
contact  Sean  at  (310)  206-0736 


'MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beats  all  jobs.  Start 
immediatefy.  Great  pay.  Fun/Easy.  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  for  free  medial  Cali-24/hr5 
323-850-4417. 


*XLNT  OPPORTUNITY! 
$10/HR  +  BONUSES 

PART  TIME  for  sales/related  feikl  work.  Must 
have  Car  and  good  telephone  skills.  Call 
310-476-9069. 

2  HASHERS  NEEDED  ASAP  for  Monday 
Nights  onlyll  Please  call  Miriam  310-208- 
9005. 

A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

DO  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  in  the  afternoons  dur- 
ing school  (M-F)?  All  day  Saturday,  tool  Full- 
time during  Quarter  Breaks  and  Summer  Va- 
cations! Work  experience  not  necessary.  Ap- 
ply today  at  Westwood  Sporting  Goods 
1065  Gayley  Ave,  Westwood  Village. 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  Held  sales,  flexible  hours  *  com- 
misston  and  bonus!  Ambitious  salesperson. 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  supportOfones- 
4all.com AttnField  Sales. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hanJware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  requtred.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours.  $10-13/hr  T*inis  a  plus! 
We  are  national  ftower  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


ADULT  RESPONSIBLE  MALE.  Personal 
care  for  disabled  man.  Monday-Friday 
Ihr/day,  alterruite  weekends.  Will  train. 
Strong  References.  Near  UCLA.  $300/mo. 
310-475-5209. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  r)ecessary. 
Host  musk:Aalk-sfK)ws  for  our  radk)  statkxis. 
P/T.  $10-1 5/hr,  $200+per/show,  plus  fantas- 
tk:  benefits.  323-468-0080,  24-hours. 

ART  NUDES  IN  NATURE,  $75/hr  UCLA 
Grad  fine  art  photographer  seeks  female 
models  18-28.  B&W  galery  exhibits.  High 
integrity  work.  Attractive,  toned,  dance/gym- 
nastk:yartistic  background  preferred.  Call  for 
rrrare  Info  and  cfieck  my  webpage  818-623- 
6470. 

ASSISTANT  needed.  $10/hr.  Temple  City,  f/t. 
Opportunity  to  leam  the  ancient  art  of  Chi 
Quong.  Cantonese/Er>gNsh,  computer  liter- 
ate, people  skills,  detail-oriented.  Contact  Lis 
310-571-6032. 


ASSISTANT  TO  EDITOR 

Responsible-energetic,  writing  and  computer 
skills,  knowledge  of  Page  Maker  6.0  helpful. 
Fast-growing  motwn  picture  and  televiskw 
directory.  $7  50/hour.  Hours  negotiable.  Con- 
tact Susan  Moore  at  Canoco  PuWishing, 
310-471-2287. 

ATTRACTIVE  FEMALE  MODELS  needed 
for  internet  virork,  18-22  years  old  only. 
$250/day.  Email  clint880model8.com  for 
more  info. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASST 

(M-TH,  9-3:30)SM.  Pediatric  therapy  offc. 
medical  lenninotogy  h«Jpful.  Multiple  tasks, 
detail  oriented,  self -motivated.  Good  verbal 
skills,  MAC:  Word,  Quickbooks  exp  req'd. 
FAX  resume  including  salary  history.  310- 
582-1165. 


AUDIO  VISUAL 
OPERATORS  WANTED 

for  delivery  and  operattons,  throughout  cam- 
pus. Computer  and  customer  skills  pre- 
ferred. AV  experience  not  required.  Open 
schedule  needed.  Must  be  able  to  Hft  35 
pounds.  Two  positions  available:  Operator 
$8.90/hr,  Technteian  $11.40/hr.  Call  Juan 
310-206-8002. 


BABYSITTING  A  NINE  MONTH  OLD  BABY 
some  regular  and  soma  random  times.  2- 
4hour5  2-3  times  a  week.  MUST  be  some- 
what flexible  with  scheduling.  310-471-3604. 


Call  or  Stop  by  for  a  list  of  available  classes 

ASAP  Bring  your  DPR  or  transcript  and 

a  sample  of  your  own  notes. 

GREAT  PAY! 

Get  paid  as  much  as  $480 
per  quarter  for  each  class. 

Benefits  include  UCLA  Store  discounts 


Call  the  Lecture  Notes  office  at 
310.825.8016 
LectureNoteS       Located  on  A-Level  Ackerman  Union 


7800 

Help  WiiiUtHl 


BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  Untverstty  Credft 
Unton.  Excellent  pay,  hours  &  environmefU. 
Some  teller  experierxw  preferred.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd.,  LA,  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
«*ww.ucu.org/)obs.htm 

BEAUTIFUL  WOMEN  for  upscale  dating 
agency.  Excellent$$$.  Mail  bk),  pta  (5x7  to 
5x16),  contact  lnfo:11054  Ventura  Blvd  #365. 
Studk}  City  91604.  Assistant  also  wanted. 
310-388-2803. 

BOOKKEEPING  ASST  Needed  for  cod. 
small  home  office.  Must  be  competent, 
proactive  and  tun.  Quicken,  Word.  Excel. 
Flexible.  Call  k4onk^ie  310-204-3359. 

CARE  TAKING  COMPANION  for  16-year  old 
devetopmentaHy  disabled  girt  Involve  neigh- 
borhood field  trips&activltles.playing 
boardgames,walks,etc.  Need  car  Hours 
flexit)le,$12/hr.  310-839-3732. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-tlnw  jobs  available  at  Cooperage.  We 
wort<  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals,  man- 
agement training  opportunity.  Call:31 0-206- 
0740. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

PART-TIME  jobs  available  at  Cooperage. 
We  work  with  your  schedule,  1/2-o«  meals, 
mngmnt  training  opptnty.  Call  310-206-0740 

CHEVIOT  HILLS-STUDENT  WANTED  TO 
DRIVE  4-year-oW  boy  to  school  arx)  to  help 
with  general  errands.  FRIDAYS,  8:30am- 
12:30pm.  $10/hr.  310-836-8980. 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT/CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT  SALARY:  $7.03- 
$8.65/hr-t-pariial  benefits.  CHILIX:ARE 
COUNSELOR  SALARY:  $8.65- 

$11.90/hr'fpartial  benefits.  Under  general  su- 
perviston,  plans,  implements  recreatwnal. 
educationa- 
I  and  sports  activities  for  5-12  year  oWs,  such 
as  arts  ar)d  crafts.  Learning  groups,  outdoor 
games  and  playir^g  intramural  sports.  RE- 
QUIREMENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  ASSIS- 
TANT: High  Scfwol  Graduation;  enrollment  in 
college  preferred.  Six  months  pakj  recreatkm 
wort<  experience  (3months  of  volunteer  ex- 
perience in  a  childcare  program  can  tse  sub- 
stituted for  3monttis  of  paid  experience). 
Proof  of  High  School  diploma  must  be  sub- 
mitted ¥irtth  a  City  applteatlon.  REQUIRE- 
MENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR: 
Completk>n  of  one  year  of  college,  majorir>g 
in  Recreatk>n,  Educatk)n  or  related  fiekJ. 
Must  have  12  units  in  Earty  Childhood  Edu- 
cation and  3  additional  units  in  Administra- 
tion or  Staff  Retetk)ns  Or>e-year  pari*  recrea- 
tk)n  wori<  experience.  Proof  of  one  year  col- 
lege and  required  units  must  be  submitted 
with  a  City  applk:atk>n.  Call  310-550-4265. 
EOE. 

Cmr  OF  BEVERLY  HMIs  Partcing  Attendants 
needed.  $9.11/hr.  Morning  and  Evening 
shifts  available.  Seasonal  PosHkxis  starting 
November  16,  2000  to  January  5,  2001.  All 
shifts  available.  Apply  Now!!!  Depl.  of  Trans- 
portatton.  455  N.  Rexlord  Dr.,  Room  130.  Ap- 
ply In  person.  310-285-2552. 

CLERICAL/CUSTOMER  SERVICE  M-F,  F/T 
penrwnent.  Good  phone  and  English  skills, 
detail-oriented,  reliable.  WLA,  $9-$10/hr 
310-826-3759ext229. 

CLERK  TYPIST/RECEPTIONIST  Manage 
small  medk:al  research  group.  Good  com- 
munteattorVwTiting  skills,  word-processing, 
Windows  95,  up  to  2a/hoors,  weekday-rrwrn- 
Ings.  Starting-$8.00/hr.  Westwood.  310-826- 
0679. 

CLERK.  Pn,  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  pertectwnist  with  typing 
skills  for  general  offk:e  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  detail-oriented.  $ll/hour  to  start.  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2437. 

>       CLERK/TYPIST 

Must  type  min.  70wpm  and  be  a!CAe  to  tran- 
scribe. Full-time  positton.  Salary+benefits 
Fax  resume  to  E.  Kraft.  310-441-8010. 

CLINICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  positk>n  Immediately  available  for  a  li- 
censed laboratory  scientist  in  a  private  clini- 
cal laboratory  in  Santa  Monka.  Lab  provkJes 
endocrine,  androtogy.  serology  and  immu- 
nology testing.  lncurT>t)ent  required  to  work 
in  weekend  rotations.  Salary  commensurate 
with  qualifk::atk)ns  and  experience.  Submit 
applk;atlons  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 
Technology  Laboratories,  1245  16th  Street, 
Suite  105,  Santa  Monfca,  CA  90404  (Tel 
310-829-0102). 

COACHES  NEEDED 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 

2000-2001  school  year  Girts  Soccer.  Varsi- 
ty and  JV  Lacrosse,  JV  Boys  Basketball 
Pakl  positkxts.  310-391-7127.  Call  Nate  ext 
247  for  boys'  posMons.  Call  Qafl  axt.  248  for 
QMS' posKtons. 


7800 

Hfl|)  Wiiiilcd 


Seeking  bright  active  person 

with  college  degree  to  assist 

with  2  children  ages  6  &  8, 

part  time,  for  school  related 

tutoring,  computer 

assistance,  and  extra 

curricular  activities.  Excellent 

personal  references  required. 

Resumes  to:  Rose  Cooper 
510  N.  Robertson  Blvd. 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90048 


COACHES  NEEDEDI  Girts  Varsity 
Basketball  and  Girls  Freshman  Basketball 
Team.  Starts  Nov  Ist-mkJ  Feb.  P/T  5  days  a 
week.  Freshman  hours:  3-4:30pm  everyday. 
Variety  hours:  4:30-6:30.  Prevk>us 
Experience  Necessary.  /Vble  to  coach  HS 
girts.  Varsity:  $2000/sea8on.  Freshman 
$120(Vseason.  Contact  Maureen  323-461- 
3651 

COFFEE  BAR  ATTENDANT,  the  best  stud- 
ent  job.  You  must  be  responsible,  reliable, 
experience  a  plus.  Duttons  11975  San  Vi- 
cente. 

COMMUNICATION  COMPANY  seeks  busi- 
ness student  to  work  P/T.  Experience  in  re- 
search arKf  busirwss  plan  writir^.  Pay  r^ego- 
tiaWe.  Contact  Jason.  310-551-2292. 

COMPANION-for  active  senk>r,  post-stroke. 
Accompany  to  movies,  museums,  restau- 
rants. Must  be  frierxlly  patient,  engage  in 
stimulating  conversatkin  (poUtkd(s,business). 
Payrato  $12-$15/hr.  BOE.  Contact  Lau- 
ra ©323-933-5880.  X1012. 

COMPUTER  PROGRAMMING  COURSE 
READER  needed.  Prork:lent  In  C  &  VB. 
CompScI  UD/Grad  prefeaed.  Grade  via  In- 
temet.  $10i/hr  323-402-1230x1692 

COOL  LADY  seeks  driver  for  occasional  er- 
rands. Own  car  required.  $7/HR  310-826- 
9150. 


/Vn  Experiettce  Necessary 

>4en,  Vomen.  children,  nil  ago.  size. 
nca  T\  ■  Films  •  Contmaciak  ■  Miganne 
forpernnial  iiilenieif  call  iioti 

310.659.7000 


CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HIRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$10.26/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/U 
academk;  years  remaining  with  valid  driver's 
license.  Web:  www.ucpd.ucla.edu/ucpd/c:so. 
Email:  csoOuepd.ucla.edu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 

DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  Is  hiring  van  driv- 
ers. Looking  for  energetic,  unstoppable, 
positive  crew  immediately.  Flexible  hours, 
busy  weekends.  Apply  in  person  M-Sat  till 
6pm.  Apply  at  937  Westwood.  310-208-1180. 

DOG-WALKER  NEEDED.  MWF,  mornings; 
TR  aftemcxKis.  Ctose  to  campus.  Bonnie: 
310-474-9969. 

EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  sales  Make  up  to 
$150/day.  Part  or  full-time  work.  CallDavW 
310-441-0394. 

F/T  or  P/T.  ChikJren's  retail  store  Hours:  sat 
required.  $8-10/hr  DOE.  On  Santa  Monk:a 
Blvd  in  Westwood.  310-234-9554. 

FAT&P/T  OFFICE  ASST 

For  dynamk:  property  management  fimi. 
Must  have  car,  be  organized,  and  reliable. 
Fax  resume:310-470-675S  or  call:310-470- 
1970 


FEMALE  ATTENDANT 

10  HOURS/WK:$10mr10mins  UCLA.  Help 
disabled  woman  with  laundry,  shopping, 
medkjal  appointments  and  misc.  errands. 
Must  have  car.  Call:3 10-828-4686. 

FINE  JEWELRY  STORE  in  Westwood  Vil- 
lage  needs  P/T  sales.  Computer  liter- 
ate,friendly,cheerful.  Walking  distance  to 
campus.  310-824-5036,1 1am-6pm.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-824-2738.  EmaihgracejewelO  hot- 
mail. com. 

FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

Needed  for  private  health  club.  Permanent 
hours  available.  Health  insurance  offered. 
Please  ask  for  Allison:3 10-659-5002. 

GARDENER/MAINTENANCE/HANDYMAN 
in  the  Los  Feilz.  Los  Angeles  arae.  WW  pey 
$l8/hr  For  regular  employment.  Can  Joey 
310-399-4826.  4033  Sunset  Drive.  LA 
90027. 

GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  dubs  in 
WLA.  Conversatton  only.  No  aioohol.  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Earn  top  IS$.  323-441-0066 


Display 

206-. limn 


DilyBniinCbnilM 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


GRAPHIC/WEB  DESIGNERIII  Grant  writer 
Non-profit  mufti-racial  arts  conxMny.  Em- 
power youth  through  theater,  film,  dance,  po- 
etry, muste.  P/T.  310-206-8012. 

GREAT  OPPORTUNITY 

Assistant  M-F  2-3/hfs  afternoons.  Exdting. 
growing  company  seeks  detail-oriented, 
sharp  Indivklual  who  Ukss  ak>t  of  responsibil- 
Ity.  Gel  Mona  Andrews  310-278-3349. 

HOST/HOSTESS 

FRIENDLY.  EXPERIENCED  host  lor  Jade 
West  Restaurant.  Century  City.  CaM  after 
2:30.  310-556-3388. 


7800 

Help  Wiiiited 


INFORMATION 

SYSTEMS  ASSISTANT 

$27,067-$32,978 

COORDINATES  COMPUTER  USAGE  and 
resolves  system/user  problems  on  the  IBM 
AS400  and  mk;rocomputer  systems.  Assists 
in  reconciling  and  auditing  various  computer 
reports  artd  data  files.  Knowledge  of  practK- 
es  and  principles  in  operating  and  maintain- 
ing rnini  mkn>computer  systems.  Ability  to 
proficiently  operate  a  lOkey  cataulator  and 
type  40WPM.  Ability  to  effkaently  pertonn  de- 
tail and/Of  technical  oriented  tasks.  TWo 
years  of  advanced  educatkin  in  a  conputer 
subject  (AA,AS,  Certifk»te  program.etc) 
and  one-year  computer  operattons  experi- 
ence on  mini  or  micro  systems.  General 
business  knowledge  and  ability  to  lift  and 
move  50tos.  desirable.  Substantial  equival- 
ents may  be  substituted  for  the  above.  Send 
resume  to:  Human  Resources,  Frank  D.  Lan- 
temian  Regional  Center  3303  Wilshire  Blvd.. 
Suite  700  Los  Angeles,  CA  90010  EOE. 

INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPRE- 
SENTATIVE.  Film  advertising.  Call  retaH 
stores  for  upcoming  releases.  Coordinate 
store  visits.  P/T-F/r-8am-12pm  or  12:30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $iamr-fbonus.  310-566-2555. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Servtae  Representative.  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  vertjal  skills  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653-1768-jspattersOn«ij- 
glncoom. 


INTERNATIONAL  PR  RRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Receptionist.  Entry  level  positton.  Itali- 
an a  .plus.  $9/hr-30hrs/wk  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
ferred. Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son  323-653-1768.  ispattersonOijginc.com. 

INTERNET  ENTERTAINMENT  COMPANY 
seeks  research  assistants.  Must  be  fluent  in 
Japanese.Korean  or  Chinese.  Pay  based  on 
experience.  Fax  resunws:  323-993-0810. 

LA  P/T  MORNINGS  BILINGUAL  SPANISH 
Graphic  design  for  teacher.  Adobe,  Photo- 
shop, Illustrator.  Pagemaker,Quari<press, 
Premiere,  and  Internet  Explorer.  Fax  resume 
310-441-9216. 

UBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties,  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  mpfy  at  Young  Research 
Ubrary  Rm.  11617  or  can  Antigone  Kutay 
310-825-1064. 


LOVE  CUTE  DOGS? 

SEEKING  CARING,  responsible,  non-smok- 
er to  dog  sit  evenings/weekends.  Must  have 
own  car  and  experience.  Please  cal  310- 
459-7631. 


NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  North  Campus. 
We  work  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-0720. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  Jobs  available  at  LuValle  Com- 
morts.  We  wort(  with  your  schedule.  1/2  of 
meals,  management  training  opportunity. 
C«l:310-825-1177. 

NOW  HIRING 

COUNTER  HELP  POSITION  In  cafe. 
$7+tlpe/»ir.  Part  Time/Full  Time.  Contact 
Roberto  310-247-1112  1lam-6pm. 

OFFICE  ASSISTANT  for  general  IHling,  bill- 
ing insurarwe,  invotoing,  troublesfwoting 
bills,  and  entering  data  into  Qutoken  and 
Quickbooks.  Iday  a  week  Monday-Thurs- 
day. MUST  have  references  and  prefferable 
some  experience.  310-471-3604. 

OFFICE  HELP 

Established  Brentwood  computer  co  needs 
help  with  MS  Word,  phones,  email,  clerical 
stuff.  Flexible  hours;  great  tor  students;  leam 
the  bizf  Email  resume  to  jkenne- 
dyOantSI  .com 

OFFICE  MANAQER/ASSISTANT2CE0. 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company-West- 
wood.  l0am-2pm/Full-time,  flexible  hours 
Need: excellent  telephone  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admirVcomp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
ferred. Benefits/advancement.  FaxRes2Mar- 
ina:  310-475-1533. 

OFFICE-EXCELLENT  OPPORTUNITY  2 
P/T  positions  available.  Flexible  hours.  Retail 
store  in  Westwood  Village.  310-208-8404 
from  12-6.  Mr  Rogers. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  tobs 
woridng  at  various  on-campus  events.  We 
offer  flexible  hours  tfiat  vary  from  week  to 
week.  Call:3l  0-206-0735. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  groat  part-time  Jobs 
wortdng  at  various  on-campus  events.  We 
offer  flexible  hours  that  vary  from  week  to 
week.  Call  310-206-0735. 

PfT  ASSISTANT 

Private  home  offtee,  data  entry,  Mac/Qutek- 
en.  Accuracy  important.  Good  English.  Own 
transportatton.  Flexibie  sctwdule.  Weekdays 
only.  8-12hr8/wk.  310-394-2933. 

P/T  DATA  ENTRY/  DIS- 
PATCH ASSISTANT 

10:30am-3:30pm.  M-F.  some  overtime. 
Computer,  heavy  phonos,  and  knowledge  of 
LA  area  a  must.  Messenger  background  pre- 
ferred.  Fax  resume  310-275-4439. 


7800 

Help  W.iiited 


P/T  WRITER.  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  perfectionist  with  strong 
writing  skiH»  to  produce  mikJIy  technical  re- 
ports for  internal  and  external  use.  $1 3/hr  to 
start.  Wage  increases  as  appropriate.  Mini- 
mum  15hn>/wk.  Fax  resume  310-286-9126. 

PAID  INTERN  NEEDED  for  smaH  music 
martceting  co.  10-2(yhrs/wk.  Good  phone 
personality,  org.  skWs.  310-281-7812 

PARK  RANGER 

$8.65-$ll.90mr.  with  partial  benefits.  En- 
force part<  rules  and  regulattons;  disseminate 
inlormation  and  assist  publk:  in  the  pari<;on- 
slte  superviston  of  commercial  film  compa- 
nies and  wortc  department  special  events; 
assist  with  ofltee  duties.  Requires  one  year 
of  coliege  majoring  in  Recreatton,  Outdoor 
Educatton,  Part<  Ranger  or  related  fieW;  or 
one-year  pato/volunteer  experience  in  a  cus- 
tomer sen^toe  oriented  positton.  Must  have  a 
valkl  California  C  driver's  license  and  must 
be  able  to  obtain  CPR  and  First  AM  certifi- 
cates.Apply  Immedlately-OPEN  UNTIL 
RLLED.  City  of  Beverty  Hills,  455  N.  Rexford 
Dr.  #210,  Beveriy  Hills,  CA  90210.  310-285- 
1071  EOE. 


7800 

Help  W.-iiited 


SALES  Le  Beach  Club  Tanning  Resorts. 
Happy,  friendly  people.  $l2-2Q^hr  Call  bet- 
ween 3-10pm.  310-820-2710  ask  lor  Yas- 
mine. 


8000 


INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
student  film  projects.  Call  Joel:3 10-828- 
2292. 


PART-TIME  CHILDCAREmnrOR  needed 
lor  1st  and  2nd  grader  Endno  Mulholland 
and  405  adjacent.  Must  have  car  Call  Jack- 
16:310-826-2466. 

PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
^  FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTIONnrECHNICAL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  has  one  opening  for  clerical  positkms. 
$7/hr  Mornings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Mtohene:31 0-474-7771 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  tor  family  (of  Inter- 
est to  young  filmmakers).  l5-20hrs/wk- 
$1(Vhr.  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues,  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands  Filing/research. 
Flexible  schedule/resourceful!!  Contact:  310- 
824-1444  (John).  Good  references  required 
Non-Smoker.  Must  have  own  cariinsurance. 

PERSONAL  ASST. 
DETAIL-ORIENTED 

person  to  manage  orders  for  small  upscale 
retail  shop.  Make  sure  orders  are  con^ect 
when  placed&foltow-up  w/suppliers  to  insure 
correct&on-time  delivery.  Handle  light  iniout 
shipments.  F/T,  including  Saturdays.  Must 
have  excellent  kno»»ledge  of  English.  Call 
Bill:31 0-278-5620. 


SALES  POSITION 

F/T.  Growing  Century  City  company  seeks 
sales  person  who  are  energetto  sett-starters. 
Our  company  is  the  leader  in  the  procure- 
ment of  Ikjuor  licenses  and  use  pennits  in 
CaNfomia.  Must  be  computer-literate.  Urban 
planning/legal  background/bilingual  applto- 
ants  that  want  to  partk^ipate  in  our  exciting 
ntehe  business  call  our  oflices  today  for  de- 
tails:3l0-553-6363  ext.  18  or  fax  resume 
to:310-SS33996  Attn:Cindy. 

SALES.  Popular  Westwood  Village  jewelry 
store  seeks  2  P/T  sales  associates.  Excel- 
lent opportunity.  310-208-8404  phone  from 
12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 

SECRETARY,  halftime,  mornings,  to  RN  at 
VA  medtoal  center.  WLA.  Profkaent  in  word 
and  excel.  $11/hr  Some  benefits.  Fax  re- 
sume  to  Susan  Orrange  310-268-4404. 

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST  SrrMll  WLA 
law  offtoe  seeks  pA  or  f/t  bilingual  (Spanish) 
individual.  Must  have  experience  with  word 
perfect  and  type  min  40wpm.  Call  Neil  310- 
445-1100  or  send  resume  310-445-7779. 

SELF-MOTIVATED  SALESPERSON  tor  a 
furniture  store  on  the  westskle.  Hours  flexi- 
ble. 310-477-5995. 


INTERNSHIP  PUBLISHING  HOUSE. 
PR/MktgTEd.  Relaxed,  fun  atmosphere. 
Jr./Sr  dass  credit.  Fax  323-939-1855,  e-mail 
pubbooksOaol.com. 


SALES  ASSISTANT/INTERN.  Short  term. 
Make  screening  calls,  assistance.  Flexible 
morning  hours.  Will  train.  Great  for  business 
major  or  MBA  grad  student.  Pay  $10-$12/hr 
Culver  City.  Julla:310-998-0417. 


8100 

Personal  Assistance 


PHYSICAL    ; 
ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  disabled  male  in  Reiber  Hall.  A  few 
hrs/day.  Flexible  shedule.  $10/hr.  Call  Alex 
949-369-9871  or  310-267-8189. 


8200 

Jempornry  Einplrjynient 


AIRLINE  WORK! 


SfTE  ACQUISITIONS  CONSULTANT 
FuU/part  time.  Self-starter,  creative,  intelli- 
gent. Acquire  land  sites  for  cellular.  Salary 
commensurate  w/experierKe.  Fax  resume 
310-737-4228. 


TEACHER'S  ASSIS- 
TANT 

IMMEDIATE  POSITION.  Santa  Monka  pre- 
school. 2Ghrs/wk,  Mon-Thurs  afternoon.  Ear- 
ly childhood  units*  some  experiece  wortdng 
w/young  chiklren  required.  310-394-0463. 

TELEMARKETING.  No  coW  calls.  $16- 
20+/hr,  bonuses.  F/T-P/T  Must  have  desire 
to  make  big  $$$.  Flexible  schedule.  Great  for 
students.  Near  SMCAJCLA.  310-996-6701 
ext.298. 


ATS  it  Mrfng  at  LAX  for  Rotv  Agent 
poeitions.  If  you  like  to  iiroilt  outakte 
and  get  a  wofluMit,  visH  us  for  an 
interview  on  Monday  Oct  9  or  Ikiesday, 
OctoiMT  10  from  Sam  to  Spm  at  the 
Hadenda  Hotel,  525  N.  Sepulveda. 
.Check  us  out  at 

www.at8stl.com 


EOE 


POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
info.  Call  1-800-391-5856  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar 

PROFESSIONAL  COLLECTOR.  Saban  Pla- 
za near  UCLA.  "Best  servKe  company*. 
$9/hr  Flexible  scheduling  Weekends  and 
evenings  available.  Perfect  tor  students.  NO 
experience  needed.  Fax  resume  310-477- 
7694. 


THE  HIDDEN  GARDEN  Ftovwr  Shop  needs 
people  who  tove  ftowers.  Help  process,  prep 
containers,  etc.  MWF  $8/hr,  7am-3pm.  No 
experience  necessary.  Near  UCLA.  310-475- 
4647. 


TUTOR  for  active  senior,  post-stroke.  Needs 
help  with  Photoshop,  Pagemaker,  Quk*en. 
Must  be  patient  and  friendly.  Pay  rate  $40- 
50/hr  BOE.  Call  Laura  at  323-933-5880 
X1012. 


MEDICAL  BILLING  SUPERVISOR  WANT- 
ED by  dynamte,  DME  &  Rehab  dealer  Ex- 
pertise with  Medk^re,  MediCal  &  Insurance 
required  Experience  with  Team  DME  Soft- 
ware a  big  plus  Part-time  leading  qutekly  to 
full-time.  Hourty  compensatkw  comrrwnsu- 
rate  with  experience.  Fax  resume  to  310- 
575-1505. 

MESSENGER 

STRONG  BRUIN  SUPPORTER4we«  eetab- 
iished  Westwood  law  Arm  seeks  2-part-time 
ff»es8engera(MWF  or  TR,  9:30-6:30)  to  work 
)ri  our  offlce  senrices  department.  Must  have 
MMiable  oar,  ineuranoeAgood  driving  record. 
wMMonal  duiiee  Include  mail,  photocopying, 
lixing,  switchboard,  elc.  Prefer  Bniin  stud- 
ents who  are  also  rssponoMe&deialHMlent- 
ed.  Please  caB  Robin  Bamte  310-478-254 1 

MODELS  WANTED  by  professkxial  photo- 
studto  for  upcon^ing  assignmem.  Male/Fe- 
male Pnj/NonPro.  Fashton/Conwner- 
dal/Theatrical.  Can  for  appolntmeni  818- 
006-7933. 


P/T  DRIVER/UTIUTY 
TRAINEE 

Flextole  hours.  $8/hour  includes  gasoline. 
Own  vehicle,  vaW  CaHfomia  driver's  li- 
cense artd  proof  of  insurance.  Non-srtx>k- 
Ing  environment  Clean-cut  individual. 
Stephanie:310-395-3291 . 


PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowrledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$600/week.  310-724-8360.  Days  only. 

RECEPTIONIST  WANT- 
ED 

BEVERLY  HIUS  SALON  seeks  energetk: 
recopttonist.  F/T  or  P/T.  To  start  ASAP  310- 
278-1191. 


US  International  Co. 

Wort<  at  home  positkjn  immediately!  P/T 
$500-2000/mo.  F/T  $2000-6000/mo.  Lan- 
guages/computer skiMs  a  plus,  www.rtch- 
fromhomecom/mtemet 


housing 

8400-9800 


8^00 

A|).-irtinems  for  Rent 


1  MIN  TO  UCLA 

WESTWOOD.  Furnished.  Single: 
$850/month.  Carpeted.  Gated  complex. 
Quiet  Pod.  Laundry,  lyr  lease.  310-824- 
1830. 


PfT  General  Office  Assistant.  CSA  Architects 
In  Westwood.  Fax  resume  to  310-624-8715. 

PfT  LAW  OFRCE  ASST 

Word  Processor/Secretarial  for  Westwood 
law  offtee.  PC  and  Intemet  adept. 
Compensatton  depends  on  skills.  Flexible 
hours.  Fax  resume  310-443-4223. 

P/T  OFRCE  ASSISTANT 

WANTED  for  famNy  owned  Real  Estate  Man- 
agement Company.  Professtonal.  Reliable. 
Mature  Person  sought,  PC  sMHs  a  pkjs.  323- 
850-5726. 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  drivsAworic  w/2  funAgifted  kkte  ages  5&7. 
Perfect  schedule  for  student.  Must  have  car. 
P/T  permanent.  ExceNenl  salaiy.  Judy:310- 
S5M14S 


MUSIC  MARKETING  company  seeks  FuR- 
Thne  onOne  marketing  assistant  Entry-ievsl 
poaMon  ssiisllng  onflne  martreUng  dhrision 
geared  towanis  ffw  entertainment  corT^any. 
Must  have  eaoeHenl  computer  skills/knowl- 
edge of  the  Intemet.  Call  Rob  M  323>030- 
3141  tor  mora  info  or  visit  www.noizepolu- 
lton.oom 


NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT.  Mostly 
nins  errands,  some  light  housawortr  and 
cooking,  good  pay.  near  UCLA  4-5 
hours/day  310-788-4727 


.idcds 


PfT  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  100  Medteal  Plaza.  Dermatotogy  prac- 
ttee.  Hourt  can  vary  w/classes.  F/T  during 
summer.  $a/hr.  Pkw  free  partdng.  Assist 
manager,  oomputer  skMs  naoessaty,  math  or 
business  majors  preferred.  Fax  resume  after 
6:3Qpm.  310-206-4010. 

P/T  or  Career  Opportunities!  Private 
Mon/kmyCton  for  K-12  and  Educational 
Corwjkants  tor  college  preparatton  senrices. 
Seeking  Undergraduates-PhO's.  Experience 
preferred;  strong  communications  skills 
required.  Future  Youth  Inc./Mlndllle 
ConeuWng  Group.  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329 

PfT  OR  F/T  SERVER 

AND  ANSWERING  phones  tor  diner  in  Bev- 
erly H«s.  Vm  train.  Great  tips!  Call  Ronl:3l0- 
772-0044  from  8am-5pm 


RECREATION  ASSISTANT  NEEDED.  P/T 
nightwortj.  Approx  $9.50/hr.  Stoner  Recrea- 
tkxi  Center.  310-479-7200  ask  for  Valerie  or 
Jason. 

RESEARCHER 

For  Business  Plan.  Thorough  research  skMls, 
concise  writing,  ofganized,  and  reliable.  Fa- 
mlKarily  with  PC,  console,  arxl  arcade  games 
helpful.  spgreenOearthlink.net 

RESPONSIBLE  DRIVER  with  own  car  to 
drive  I5yr.  oW  and  llyr  oW  from  St.  Moni- 
ca's to  Culver  City.  2:45pm  3-5  days/wk. 
$1SO-2S0iM(.  More  $$  if  available  for  physi- 
cal or  academte  activities  until  4piT).  310- 
838-9448. 

RESTAURANT  In  WLA  now  hiring  servers, 
cashiers,  prep  personnel.  FTTor  PfT,  apply  in 
person.  9411  W.  Pico  Blvd,  Sun-Thurs. 

RETAIL  SALES,  PT/FT.  Westwood  Blvd.  De- 
signer wedding/evening  gowm.  Experience 
preferred,  motivated  and  friendly.  Great  op- 
portunity. Salary/oorrtmisslons/bonuses.  Ex- 
cellent  $$  310-474-7808  Pauline. 

SALES  CLERK 
WANTED 

Ftorist  seekiry  P/T  sales,  phone  asalslnat. 
^'administratton  skMs  helpful, 
un  environment.  Fax  resume 
to:323-«fe-0749. 


VALET  PARKING 
ATTENDANTS 

Flexible  hours,  great  tips,  Santa  Montoa  and 
Marina  Del  Rey  areas.  310-214-1888.  Leave 
message. 

WANTED 

75people  will  pay  you  to  tose  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
naturai/no  drugs.  CaM  now.  323-993-3391. 

WANTED:  PAID 
COACHES 

Girts  frosfVsoph  JV  basketball,  giris  JV  soft- 
ball.  Palisades  Charter  High  School.  Contact 
T  Tamura  310-454-061 1  ext3290  or  ext3450. 

WEB  DESIGNER/PROGRAMMERS  NEED- 
ED! AmWtkxJS  company  seeks  self  motivat- 
e<J<Jeopie.  Knowrledge  of  FLASH  HTML,  and 
programming  a  plus.  Call  Teri  O  562-622- 
0729. 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  U2BE0ROOM 
$895AUP  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE^'W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS.  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS 
310-839-6294. 


BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdrm/3bth,  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdmi/3bth,  $2950.  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alami,  gated  partdng. 
Spacious,  carpet.  Prime  location!  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 


WORK  AT  HOME 

Intemattonal  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000i^mo 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  WHI  tram.  310-558- 
5888. 


YMCA  NOW  HIRING  After  School  teachers 
and  drivers.  Must  have  3-6  units  in  educa- 
ttorvralated  fieto.  Fax  Resume  to  Uura  310- 
575^71. 


8000 


BRENTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

Luxury  buitoing,  pod,  partcing,  gated  entry, 
laundry,  one  and  two  bedrooms  Irom 
$1500/month.  310-312-1223. 

BRENTWOOD 

North  of  Wishire,  spactous  3BO/2Bath,  w/ 
separate  patto.  New  dishwasher,  refrigerator, 
stove,  etc.  Quiet  8-unit  bidg.  w/  garden  sun- 
deck.  $2300.  11921  Goshen  Ave.  #1.  Open 
Sat/Sun  or  by  appt.  31 0-571  -0293. 

BRENTWOOD 

BACHELOR 

APARTMENT 

FOR  REf^.  Grad  student  prefenwj.  Upper, 
front,  walk-In  ciosel,  tub  and  shower.  Ctoso 
to  bus.  $69S/month.  310-275-7139. 

FREE  RENTAL  SERVICE.  WestsWe  .  1  and 
2bdrm  available.  Call  The  Roberts  Compa- 
nies. 310-829-1700. 


Dr  MARTEN'S  AIRWAIR 

INTERNSHIP  Leading  footwear  manufac- 
ture seeks  ambittous,  creative  interns  lor 
straat  martteting  team.  For  more  info  can  Ja- 
net 310-450-S30e. 


ONE  BLOCK  TO 
CAMPUS 

2tx}nm  suite  Hardwood,  private  patto  one 
part<ing,  walk  to  UCLA.  $1350.  10966 
Roebling  Ave.  310-208-4253  or  310-824- 
2595. 


FINANCIAL  CONSULTANT  INTERNS.  Gain 
vatoaWe  finance  and  Wall  Street  experience. 
Great  rasume  bulkier  Westwood  tocatton 
Frsd  Aya2i  310-234-2132  Alien  310-234- 
2138. 


PALMS.  1BDRM/BATH  $895/month.  Newfy- 
painted,  tvwo  gated  partdng  spots,  intercom 
Jacuzzi.  Close  to  UCLA  Bus.  Kay  310-842- 
9127. 


FREE  ARTS  FOR  ABUSED  CHILDREN  IS 
SEEKING  UNPAID  INTERNS.  PLEASE 
CONTACT  KARINA  AT  310-313-4ART. 


PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $575,  $e00depo8it 
1 -year  lease  only  Stove,  refrig.,ca(pets.  vert 
blinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message  8am- 
Spm  only. 


Dhpldv 
206-3050 


36       Tuesday,  October  m  2000 


Diily  Bruin  Sports 


f- 


8^00 

Apartments  tor  Rent 


Sania  Monica  Ibd/lbth.  IMng  room,  parking 
space,  storage,  kitchen  w/oven  &  refrkJg. 
SlOOO/mo.  Zay  310-541-2887. 

SPECTACULAR  OCEAN  VIEW.  Iljdrm.  up- 
per. Hardvwxxl  tkwrs,  2  bk)cks  from  Main 
St.&  tieach.  2627  3rd  St  «4.  Santa  MonKO. 
$1700.  31O«99-9580.        — -  ^-•' -:  - 

WALK  TO  UCLA.  WESTWOOD.  Large  1+1. 
2+2.  Pool,  Jacuzzi,  walk-in  closets,  fireplace, 
fuH-kitchen,  gated  garage,  instant  broadband 
avail,  www.keltonlowers.com.  310-208- 
1976. 


8600 

CoiuJo/ Towiiliouse  (or  Rent 


BRENTWOOD  1BDRM/2BTH.  security 
t)uikiir>g/garage,  sunny  w/view,  pool/(acuzzi, 
suana/gym.  large  ctosats,  vacant  11/5.  lease 
$1275/mo.  310-471-1335. 


8700 

Cotuln/Tnwnhoiise  for  Snl(! 


8800 

Guesthouse  for  Rent 


.^•■^     ^- 


92 00  ■  9 500 

Hoiismrj  Nc'.clful   ■  Rooninintes  -  Privjitf  l^ioiu 


WESTWOOD/NEAR      CENTURY      CITY 

$1290.  2txlrm/1btfi.  Large,  laundry  enclosed 
garage.  bakx)ny,  large  ctosets,  near  buses, 
blinds.  Channing,  bright,  quiet  buikSng.  310- 
474-1172. 


Westwood  Condo  Penthouse 

by  owner.  k>w  rise  bak>w  market  value. 

3br  ♦  daa  Over  2000  sq.  ft.  $450,000 

310-502-3636  or  818-990-3273 

AsklwBen 


WLA  ONE  BEDROOM  one  bath.  Ohto  and 
Butler.  Large  living  room.  Carpel  ahd  drapes. 
Refridge  and  stove.  Laundry,  Secured  buiW- 
ing.  2miles  from  UCLA.  Near  shopping  and 
bus.  $770/mo.  310-470-2122. 


8800 

Guesthouse  for  Rent 


BRENTWOOD  ESTATE  9  minutes  from 
campus.  Single  occupancy,  prefer  medrcal 
resktent  or  grad  student.  $800.  Cal«:31 0-472- 
9226. 


CULVER  CITY 
GUESTHOUSE 

single  guesthouse  in  great  neighborhood. 
Easy  parking,  near  Overland  and  Jefferson. 
$600/month.  Utilities  Included.  310-572- 
1239. 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJACENT.  2bdrm«)th 
home.  yard,  unfurnished,  hardwood  fkxws. 
Ref.  req.  Approx  $1900/mo.  310-271 -0826. 

SANTA  MONICA  -2bd/1bth.  Cooler.  2  park- 
ing spaces  +  storage.  Breakfast  room. 
Kitchen  w/  pven.refridg.  $l200/mo.  Zay  310- 
541-2887. 


LOOKING  TO  ROOM  with  someone  In  an 
apartment  ASAP.  Ciooe  lo  Campua.  Down 
to  earth  ganHeman  ntads  help.  WOfWng  On 
Campus  •310-82&-4183 


9300 

Rootn  (or  H(.'lp 


FREE  PRIVATE  ROOM+BATH.  Single  father 
needs  mature  student  for  pi  help  with  4-yr- 
old  twins.  20hrs/wfc,  must  own  car+in- 
surance.  310-838-5720,  jahanOmedi- 
aone.nel 


Recycle  ^ 


£>reation 


'-1-, 


Now  slioiiM  «M  pratact  tlw  rigfcn 
•r  artists  in  a  d|i^  vmnW?  G«t 
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ARTISTS 
AGAINST 
PIRACY 

•'•''"'•ArtfslMfaliMt^acyxMi 


e    I 


FREE  ROOM 
AND  BOARD 

In  exchange  for  babysitting  l1-year-okt  girl 
approximately  10  hours/week.  Century  City 
area.  Females  only.  310-277-8480  (even- 
Ings). 

MOTHER'S  HELPER  In  exctiange  for  room. 
Shop,  cook  for  family.  6-10hr»/¥»k,  l-2day5. 
No  experience.  Time  arranged.  \M  310-471- 
1671.  evervngs  t)est. 


9^00 

f^ooin  (or  Rent 


MV  Shared  2+1  garden  apartment.  Quiet. 
safe  4-plex.  off  the  Main  St.  DSL  access. 
$500/month.  utHities  included.  Call  Pamela 
310-915-5052. 


NEAR  WESTWOOD.  Beautiful,  sunny  room 
for  rent  Nov/Dec.  $500/nx)+u1ilities.  females 
preferred.  Please  call  Katie  510-326-6809  or 
310-559-0185. 

ROOM  in  large  Beverty  Hills  house,  grad 
student  preferred.  Kitchen  privileges,  wash- 
er/dryer, pool,  needs  car  Can  Abby  310-275- 
3831  or  818-783-5151. 

WANTED:  Quiet  male  gradute  student. 
Lovely  bedroom  w/mk:rowave  and  frWge. 
A/C,  near  bus.  Lease,  quiet,  references. 
$450/mo.  310-312-0669. 

WESTWOO.  Walk  to  UCLA.  Male-Only. 
Large,  private  fumished  bdrm  w/bath. 
Kitchen  privileges,  laundry,  parking. 
$700/month.  Another  room  $600/month. 
310-473-5769. 


9500 

Roontniiites-Private  Room 


ASIANA3UIET/CLEAN/MALE.  Bus  in  frent 
house,  Wesfwood/Pteo.  3-mo.  min  stay.  Re- 
quired 2  good  references.  Private  bedroom 
sharebath.  $65Q/month.  share  bed^th  in- 
dudea  uMW—.  $40/day.  31 0^75-8787 


FREE  RENT  FOR  PSYCH/MED/SPECIAL 
ED  graduate  student  to  share  2bdrm/2bth 
apartment  with  leamirig  disabled  adult  in 
WestLA.  Call  Stan  1-800-843-3658. 

OWN  BED  AND  BATH  in  bright  and  upper 
Brentvwxxl  apt.  High  ceiling,  bateony.  non- 
smoker.  k}ve  cats,  street  pariUng.  $658/mo. 
310-820-9660. 

PARK  LA  BREA  Large  IbdnrVlbth.  Very 
clean,  one  neat  person,  female.  $600/mo. 
213-391-4044. 

Quiet,  responsible  roommate  for  private 
space  in  back  of  house.  Non-smoker,  share 
utflizes.  Avail/Nov  1.  $55C^month+1  month 
deposit.  CaU  Warren  310-737-9120  .v 

ROOMMATE  WANTED  Private  roorrV,  bath- 
room. 3mi.  from  UCLA.  Upper  front  unit 
apartment,  nice  tocatkm.  near  Beverty  HWs, 
Can  Arash,  310-567-3085. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt.  Fun.  outgoing 
female  kwking  for  female  roomnwtel  Own 
bed/bath  in  2bdrm/2bth  apartment,  gated 
partUng,  Jacuzzi  on  roof,  security  buiWing. 
Available  1/01,  $900/mo.  310-209-2665. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE:  Fumished  Room  in 
great  2t)d,  l/3rd  mi  campus.  Historic 
Bk)ck.Fireplace.  Books.  Musk;.  Mature  per- 
son to  mind  apartment,  cats  when  other 
occupant  travels.  MaW,  UtiWies  inck»ded 
$670.  310-206-6806. 


9600 

Roomin.'it<;s-Sh;ue(I  Room 


MAR  VISTA.  Roommate  wanted,  male. 
Large  2bdrm  apt.  Fully  fumished.  #14  SM 
Bus  Hne.  taooimo.  310-3021 258. 

WESTWOOD.  Kelton  Ave.  2+1.  Hardwood 
floors,  large  bedroom,  living,  kitchen. 
$450/hX).  Well  fumished.  Smoking  OK.  310- 
443-9585. 


WESTWOOD:  gorgeous  Wilshire  apartment 
10  minutes  from  UCLA.  Huge  bedroom  to 
share  in  2br  apartment.  Available  now!  Call 
310-234-8627. 


9700 

Sublets 


Private  room  A.Bath  In  large  Townhouse 
Apartment.    Newly    Decorated.Fireplace, 
Hardwood  Fkwrs.Balconies,  Totally  Fur- 
nishedl  Available  AM  ot  November.  $600 
310-837-2575 


Don't  fofget  to  purchase  your  copy  of  the 
2000-2001  Bruinlife  Yearbook. 

Call  310.825.2640 
to  order  your  yearbook  today. 


Siac«  1919. 


HoaE 


•  .-*%■■  • 


doesn't  he  play 


PARKER 

FnNnpage44 

Wait  a  minute 
water  polo? 

Sure  he  does.  Only  after  he  tore  his 
ACL  and  meniscus.  Playing  the  sport 
for  fun  while  he  waited  for  basketball 
season  to  start  again,  the  two-meter 
man  got  his  start  as  a  goalie. 

"(Basketball  and  water  polo)  both 
were  really  fun  and  kind  of  similar 
because  both  are  very  big  on  ball  haiv- 
dling,"  Parker  said.  "But  water  polo 
is  a  little  more  interactive  because 
you  are  outdoors  and  in  the  sun." 

Parker's  water  polo  prowess 
resulted  in  offers  from  local  schools 
SUnford  and  Cal,  but  he  picked 
UCLA  because  he  was  ready  to  try 
something  new. 

It  was  not  water  polo,  however, 
tfiat  Parker  played  when  he  first  came 
to  the  Westwood  campus.  He  had  his 
sights  set  on  playing  the  sport  the 
school  is  famous  for  -  basketball. 

"(Bruin  football  player)  Drew 
Bennett  and  f  were  going  to  try  out 
for  the  basketball  team  together,"  he 
said.  "We  went  to  talk  to  Steve  Lavin 
at  the  time  and  1  ended  up  playing 
basketball  the  entire  y^." 

Basketball  had  alwaj's  been  part  of 
his  life,  but  playing  for  UCLA  was  a 
new  experience. 

"Basketball  is  a  much  more  high- 
profile  sport  than  water  polo,"  Parker 
said.  "When  we  traveled  to  the 
NCAA  Championship  games,  we 
had  first  class  seats  on  planes  and  ate 
shrimp  cocktail.  It  was  a  fun  year." 

The  next  year  Parker  redshirted 
for  water  polo  and  played  in  nine 
games,  but  it  was  hard  for  him  to 
choose  between  the  two  sports.  The 
basketball  team  was  invitiiig  to 
Parker,  but  in  the  end  he  chose  water 
polo  because  of  his  teammates. 

"I  knew  a  lot  of  the  water  polo 
team  better  than  the  basketball 
team,"  Parker  said.  "Even  after  the 


games  and  practices  we'd  hang  out 
together.  It  was  more  like  a  family 
camaraderie." 

The  team  gave  him  companion- 
ship, but  Parker  had  something  for 
them  in  return:  two  years  of  junior 
national  team  experience  in  Cuba 
and  Europe.  But  his  European  trip 
the  summer  after  his  freshman  year, 
however,  was  cut  short,  when  Parker 
caught  mononucleosis. 

"I  still  wanted  to  play,  but  my  body 
just  couldn't  do  it,"  Parker  said. 

Although  he  saw  a  great  deal  of 
playing  time  during  his  first  and  sec- 
ond years  of  water  polo,  Parker 
believed  that  he  didn't  play  up  to  his 
full  potential. 

"I  was  still  battling  mono  and  I 
don't  think  I  was  focused.  I  couldn't 
balance  my  schedule,  and  I  was  hav- 
ing so  much  fun  my  freshman  year 
and  it  became  too  much,"  he  said. 

His  coach  noticed  that  Parker 
needed  work  his  first  year. 

"He  struggled  during  his  early 
years,  but  he  has  come  such  a  long 
way  from  being  a  freshman," 
krikorian  said. 

As  Krikorian  said,  he  has  matured, 
learning  to  balance  his  schedule  with 
his  social  life.  It  all  culminated  into  an 
incredible  junior  year  for  Dave 
Parker,  one  that  resulted  in  the 
NCAA  Championship  for  the 
Bruins. 

This  year,  led  by  seniors  Scan  Kern 
and  Adam  Wright  in  addition  to 
Parker,  the  team  is  aiming  to  defend 
its  title. 

"If  we  keep  working  hard,  we  have 
the  potential  to  do  it  again,"  Parker 
said. 

One  day,  Parker  wants  to  become 
a  pediatrician  or  open  his  own  busi- 
ness. 

"Parker  Enterprises  sounds  really 
nice  to  me,"  he  said. 

But  pediatrics  and  business  have  to 
wait.  Because  first  comes  water  polo. 
And  after  graduation,  Parker  plans 
on  becoming  the  next  Mr.  Rogers. 


-GUTHRIE 

From  page  39 


and  traditional  bad  play  calling 
forced  them  to  punt  and  pushed  the 
game  into  the  dreaded  overtime. 

3)  The  Raiders  took  the  kickofT 
down  to  the  49ers'  24  before  250- 
pound  butterbal!  and  cop-briber 
Sebastian  Janikowski  rocketed  his 
field  goal  attempt  right  of  the  goal- 
post. 

4)  After  the  Niners  had  taken  the 
ball  to  the  Raiders  12,  Wade  Richey 
(known  in  some  circles  as  Wide 
Righty)  launched  a  field  goal  right 

~^.4nto  the  hands  of  Anthony  Dorsctt, 
;..ivho  blocked  it  to  the  ground. 
*    Whoa,  Nellie. 


Apparently,  two  collapses  per 
team  is  all  the  NFL  allows  because 
the  Raiders  capitalized  on  their  next 
possession  of  the  sudden-death  for- 
mat. 

In  perhaps  the  worst  day  in  sports 
history  for  my  professional  teams, 
the  mighty  Niners  watched  Tim 
Brown  slide  into  the  end  zone  for  the 
gam&«nding  score. 

Oh  well,  I  guess  we  Niners  fans 
are  just  going  to  have  to  console  our- 
selves by  polishing  our  five  trophies 
and  waiting  for  next  time. 


Jim  Guthrie  still  does  not  endorse 
Southern  California  sports,  especially 
the  Dodgers  and  the  Lakers.  You  can  try 
to  convert  him  by  e-mailing  him  at 
jguthrle@media.uda.edu 


I.GOLF 


Irom  page 


i  worse. 

"We  played  real  well  the  first 
round,"  McLachlin  said,  "and  then  the 
weather  changed." 

The  temperature  fell  to  about  40 
degrees.  The  wind  picked  up.  On  the 
final  day,  only  one  team  scored  under 
300. 

The  Bruins  were  among  those  who 
fared  the  worst.  UCLA  and  Tennessee 
shot  313,  the  highest  score  of  the  final 
round.  So  the  Bruins,  who  had  entered 
the  final  round  in  fourth  place,  came 
out  ofit  in  sixth  place. 

Although  the  field  was  tou^,  not 
all  the  Bruins  were  satisfied  with  their 
finish.  Unranked,  they  need  to  start 
getting  some  tournament  wins  to  get 
themselves  in  the  polls  and  earn  a  spot 
in  the  NCAA  regionals  later  in  the  sea- 
son 

"I  really  don't  know  how  the  rank- 
ings work,"  McLachlin  said.  "I  think 
w«*ve  got  to  do  something  a  little  bit 
better  than  getting  sixth  glace." 
^iH  Ml' I  lilt  Mi^ilyVl  "rtTtntif- 


additional  experience  gained  by  the 
team. 

"By  the  way  we  played,  we  know 
what  it  takes  to  compete  at  the  top 
level,"  he  said.  "(This  tournament) 
gave  me  more  confidence  too,  because 
I  didn't  really  see  the  other  players  to 
be  that  much  better  than  us." 

Youth  and  inexperience  was  no 
longer  the  problem,  as  it  had  been  in 
the  past.  This  time  it  was  weather,  sick- 
ness (in  addition  to  Conway's  cold, 
both  Johnson  and  McLachlin  have 
back  problems)  and  fatigue. 

The  Carpet  Capiul  was  UCLA's 
fourth  tournament  in  five  weeks. 

"It's  pretty  grueling,"  McLachlin 
said  of  the  schedule  "We're  all  just 
really  exhausted  and  drained. 

"The  first  round  we  all  concentrat- 
ed. By  the  second  and  third,  we  men^ 
tally  warmed  down  a  little." 

Earlier  in  the  year,  head  coach  Brad 
Sherfy  also  mentioned  that  the  sched- 
ule was  a  tough  one. 

"It's  a  real  bang-bang  schedule,  a 
baptism  by  fire,"  he'd  said. 

The  team  now  has  a  breai^,' howev- 
er, with  their  next  tournament  fouf 


Oily  Brain  Sports 


Tuesday,  October  10, 2000       37 


"  .  ,  I   c  r , , ,  TT7-    ■ 


^^      I  salonselectives-| 


PuUnh  a 


FREE  ADVANCE  SCREENING 


lOMtTIMIS  THI  SIMrifiT  IDt* 

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Nescafe 


6:00pm  9  Freud  Playhouse  -  Macgowan  Hall 

Free  passes  available  at  the 
Campus  Events  Office,  319  Kervkhoff  Hall. 


PassM  raqulrvd .  SMting  Is  Hmited 
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(•' 


38       TuBday,  October  10, 2000 

ARIZONA 

From  page  42 

has  done  it,  but  we  wanted  to  this 
time." 

use's  Carson  Palmer  threw 
three  interceptions  -  two  made  by 
Michael  Jolivette  -  and  lost  a  fum- 
ble. Palmer  was  26-of-50  for  321 
yards.  :,<j  '■'    ■'■;.■■■■;.'.:■• 

The  Trojans  ako  missed  two  field 
goals  and  had  both  their  PAT  kicks 
blocked. 

Many  in  the  Coliseum  crowd  of 
49,342  booed  the  Trojans  as  they 
lost  to  an  underdog  for  the  second 


Daily  BfuinSpwts 


week  in  a  row.  USC  was  ranked 
eighth  nationally  before  a  31-21 
defeat  at  Oregon  State  a  week  earli- 
er. 

"There  is  not  a  whole  lot  to  say," 
Trojans  coach  Paul  Hackett  said. 
"It  was  the  same  scenario.  We  just 
didn't  come  out  in  the  first  quarter 
and  play  the  kind  of  football  that  we 
need  to  play. 

"It's  not  complicated.  We  just 
need  to  play  better.  At  this  point  in 
the  season,  there  is  no  excuse  for 
it." 

Hackett  made  one  significant 
decision  during  the  game.  After 
David  Newbury  missed  two  field 


goals  and  had  a  PAT  kick  blocked, 
Hackett  replaced  him  with  fresh- 
man John  Wall.  Wall  made  his  only 
field  goal  attempt,  a  27-yarder,  but 
also  had  a  PAT  kick  blocked. 

"I  cannot  continue  to  watch  it 
anymore,"  Hackett  said,  referring 
to  Newbury's  struggles.  "We  will  go 
with  John  Wall  for  the  rest  of  the 
season." 

USC  was  without  leading  receiv- 
er Kareem  Kelly,  sidelined  by  a  leg 
injury.  The  Trojans  also  lost  wide 
receiver  Marcell  Allmond  to  a  bro- 
ken shin  bone  during  the  game.  He 
is  expected  to  be  sidelined  for  three 
months. 


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■♦  Friday,  October  20, 2000. 5pm 


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GIANTS 

From  page  41 

their  field  leader  has  failed  again,  gen- 
eral manager  Brian  Sabean  must 
address  the  future  of  his  team's 
dugout  leader. 

Baker's  contract  expires  on  Dec. 
31.  and  it's  widely  thought  the  Giants 
will  have  to  pay  him  around  $2  mil- 
lion per  season  to  get  him  back  for 
spring  training. 

Before  the  playoffs  even  ended, 
there  were  reports  the  Dodgers  were 
interested  in  Baker.  He  is  likely  to 
show  up  on  wish  lists  across  the  coun- 


try -  including  that  of  NL  West  rival 
Arizona,  which  fired  Buck  Showalter. 

Baker  has  said  all  the  right  things 
about  wanting  to  sUy  with  the  Giants. 
Most  inside  the  organization  think 
he'll  be  back  for  a  ninth  season,  when 
he'll  try  to  improve  on  his  1-6  playolT 
record.  r- 

"We're  all  young,  and  hopefully 
this  is  the  sUrt  of  a  long  good  run  for 
us,"  Baker  said.  ;    ' 

Bonds'  future  is  another  issue. 
He's  signed  through  2001  and  is  com- 
ing ofi'one  of  his  best  regular  seasons, 
but  most  superstars  these  days  don't 
play  through  the  final  year  of  their 
contract  without  an  extension. 


miy  otIiw  spsfti 


baaeunmSy 


UCLA 


A  Bruin's  Life  is 
Never  Forgotten. 


GVTHRIE 

Fn>mpage44 

met  the  Niners  from  the  South. 
Don't  get  me  wrong ,  I  followed  the 
two  fine  baseball  teams  until  the  tear- 
ful end,  but  until  you  start  talking 
about  football,  you  haven't  seen  the 
passion  of  the  Bay. 

I  must  preface  this  next  part  by 
saying  I  have  been  a  die-hard  Niners 
fan  since  I  popped  out  of  the  womb 
and  the  last  couple  of  years  have  not 
left  us  with  much  to  be  proud  of.  But 
I  was  going  to  be  damned  if  we  lost 
to  the  frigging  Raiders. 


The  two  teams  are  dearly  from 
different  backgrounds  and  play  with 
conu-asting  styles.  The  Raiders  of  sil- 
ver and  Made  with  the  "Commitment 
to  Excellence."  fans  with  spikes  on 
their  heads,  and  a  tradition  as  rich  as 
...  Bo  Jackson? 

The  Niners,  on  the  other  hand,  are 
the  class  of  the  Bay,  patenting  their 
West  Coast  offense  under  the  tute- 
lage of  the  legendary  Bill  Walsh. 
Despite  the  fading  glow  of  the  glory 
days  that  has  been  ever  present  the 
last  couple  of  years,  the  South  Bay 
can  still  console  itself  by  polishing  its 
five  Super  Bowl  trophies  and  think- 
ing about  Montana.  Young.  "The 


Tuesdaji  October  10,2000       39 


Catch,"  etc. 

The  two  teams  hadn't  met  when 
they  were  both  in  the  Bay  Area  since 
1979  (the  Raiders  had  that  brief 
interlude  in  L.A.).  And  believe  me,  • 
when  the  NFL  schedules  were 
released,  both  teams  were  circling 
October  8th. 

It  is  not  so  much  that  the  two 
teams  dislike  each  other;  it's  more 
likehate. 

Then  it  was  game  time.  With  the 
spirits  of  Joe  Montana  and  Kenny 
Stabler  looming  over  the  3Com 
Stadium  roof,  the  lesser-known  Jeff 
Garcia  and  Rich  Gannon  led  their 
respective  squads  into  battle. 


I  (  l..\  Mrumlitt  V 


What  took  place  over  the  next 
three  and  a  half  hours  will  go  down 
as  one  of  the  best  games  in  Bay  Area 
history. 

J.   The  NFL's  leading  taunter.  Terrell 
Owens,  caught  a  4-yard  touchdown 
pass  and  Jerry  Rice  added  another  to 
give  the  Niners  a  14-6  lead  at  the 
break. 

After  that  the  Raiders  remem- 
bered that  they  could  in  fact  play 
football,  scoring  22  unanswered 
points  to  take  a  28- 1 4  lead  in  the 
fourth  quarter. 
Game  over,  right? 

Not  for  my  Niners,  who  stormed 
back  to  tie  the  game  on  a  key  play  by 


Owens  and  an  interception  by  die 
NFL  leader  for  weirdest  name, 
Pierson  Prioleau. 

What  was  to  follow  was  one  of  the 
greatest  series  of  chokes  in  recorded 
history.       '.■/  ::-\f^      ;■■-■-'■-,"■''; 

I )  The  Nmers  were  threatening 
for  their  third  fourth-quarter  score 
when  they  were  forced  to  recover     v 
two  fumbles  and  then  failed  to 
advance  the  ball  on  fourth  and  inch- 
es.       '■■  .-;:.  ■■  -rr..,:  ■■;  '■'■■:\:\  -':■. 

2)  The  Raiders  got  possession  at 
midfield  and  with  1 :30  left  looked 
like  a  lock  to  score  when  penalties 


a 


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40       Tuesday,  October  10, 2000 


R^fVMPrspWtS 


GEORGIA 

Ffoinpage42 

•*Ifs  going  to  be  ugly,"  athletic  direc- 
tor Vince  Dooley  said  Monday.  "We 
hope  this  will  be  a  good  lesson  Tor  the 
future." 

I>ooley  criticized  those  who  took 
part  in  the  postgame  melee,  which  left 
one  student  seriously  injured,  a  dozen 
others  with  minor  injuries  and  the  sta- 
dium itselfwith  at  least  $70,000  in  dam- 
age. 

Fans  ripped  out  seats,  vandalized 
alarm  systems  and  destroyed  wheel- 
chair ramps  in  the  hoopla  over  a  21-10 
victory  that  ended  a  nine-game  losing 
streak  to  the  Volunteers.    ' '' T^.'X "c 

"What  really  disappoints  me  is  the 
destruction  of  other  parts  of  our  stadi- 
um," Dooley  said.  "You  could  see  a 
total  disregard  for  the  pride  and  tradi- 
tion we  have  in  our  own  place." 

The  mob  scene  at  Georgia  was  only 
the  latest  in  a  series  of  incidents  plagu- 
ing Southeastern  Conference  schools 
thisseason.  ■  :-^'  ■:■        ;;• 

South  Carolina  fans  have  twice 
stormed  the  field  at  Williams-Brice 
Stadium,  while  LSU  and  Mississippi 
State  have  cleaned  up  from  similar  cel- 
ebrations. 

SEC  presidents  discussed  the  issue 
during  a  regularly  scheduled  meeting  in 
Atlanta  on  Monday.  They  announced  a 
spring  summit  involving  athletic  direc- 


.  tors  and  coaches  to  discuss  ways  of 
controlling  unruly  fans. 

"It's  a  concern,"  SEC  commissioner 
Roy  Kramer  said.  "We're  going  to  take 
a  hard  look  at  it.  We  need  to  work  with 
student  bodies  aiul  fans.  There's  not  a 
magic  potion  here." 

In  addition  to  being  a  revered  part 
of  Georgia's  football  history,  the  4- 
foot-high,  l,4004bot-long  hedge  served 
as  a  buffer  to  keep  celebrating  fans  off 
the  field. 

Dooley,  who  came  to  Georgia  as 
football  coach  in  1964,  said  he  could 
remember  only  one  other  time  when 
fans  got  around  the  hedge  -  a  21-0  vic- 
tory over  Bear  Bryant-coached 
Alabama  in  1976. 

"About  20  people  came  on  the  field 
and  started  to  tear  the  goalposts 
down,"  Dooley  recalled.  "They  got  one 
part  of  the  way  down  and  we  asked 
them  to  stop.  They  did." 

But  thousands  of  fans  stormed  the 
field  Saturday  night,  overwhelming 
about  60  uniformed  police  officers  and 
some  250  members  of  the  stadium 
security  force. 

Dooley  defended  the  school's 
preparations,  saying  more  officers 
wouldn't  have  made  a  difference. 

"You  would  have  to  use  police  dogs 
and  horses  to  keep  that  many  fans  off 
the  field,"  he  said.  "We  don't  want  to 
go  to  that." 

The  English  privet  hedge  received 
minor  damage  in  1998  from  Georgia 


Tech  fans  celebrating  a  victory  over  the 
Bulldogs. 

Georgia  replaced  the  damaged  sec- 
tions with  reserves  grown  for  the  19% 
Olympics,  when  the  original  hedge  was 
removed  to  accommodate  a  larger  field 
for  soccer.  A  new  hedge  was  planted  in 
time  for  football  season. 

This  time,  there's  nothing  left  to 
plant.  On  Tuesday,  worken  will  b^n 
cutting  back  the  damaged  remains. 

"We're  going  to  have  stubble,"  said 
associate  athletic  director  Ray 
McEwen,  the  main  hedge  caretaker  for 
24  years.  "How  would  you  feel  if  some- 
one came  into  your  home  and 
destroyed  it?" 

The  hedge  was  almost  totally 
destroyed  in  front  of  the  Georgia  stu- 
dent section.  Large  chunks  were  miss- 
ing in  other  areas.  The  only  section  that 
didn't  have  major  damage  is  behind  the 
Georgia  bench;  it  will  be  left  intact. 

On  Monday,  a  few  people  stopped 
to  look  at  the  damage  as  they  walked 
along  a  bridge  that  runs  behind  the 
west  stands. 

"I  understand  everybody  being 
excited,"  said  22-year-old  Chuck 
DurKanson,  a  senior  who  watdied  the 
game  on  television.  "I  wish  people  had 
shown  a  little  more  respect  for  the 
hedges." 

The  injured  student,  18-year-old 
Kristine  Yu  of  Roswell,  was  upgraded 
to  good  condition  Monday,  at  St. 
Mary's  Hospital. 


ATHLETICS 

Frompage41 

and  23  RBIs.  He  finished  with  43 
homers,  including  four  grand  slams. 

"We  had  an  incredible  year," 
Giambi  said.  "No  one  expected  us 
to  win.  Barring  injuries,  this  team  is 
going  to  be  around  for  a  long  time. 
We  could  have  rolled  over,  but  we 
didn't.  We've  done  this  all  year.  We 
were  resilient." 

Giambi  led  the  way  as  the  A's  hit 
239  home  runs  this  season,  the  sec- 
ond-best total  in  franchise  history, 
and  they  set  a  major  league  record 
with  14  grand  slams. 

"That  was  our  thing,"  Giambi 
said.  "Get  the  long  ball  and  get  out 
of  the  way." 

Their  pitching  staff  featured 
three  IS^ame  winners  -  Tim 
Hudson  (20^),  Gil  Heredia  (15-1 1) 
and  Kevin  Appier  ( 1 5- 1 1 )  -  and  two 
of  the  game's  top  young  starters  in 
Hudson  and  Barry  Zito,  the  rookie 
who  bamboozled  the  Yankees  in  an 
11-1  victory  in  Game  4.  Neither  is 
old  enough  to  rent  a  car,  but  both 
should  be  outstanding  performers 
for  years  to  come. 

The  A's  were  baseball's  best  team 
in  September,  when  they  blew  past 
the  Seattle  Mariners  for  the  AL 
West  title  with  22  wins  in  their  last 
29  games.  They  only  reached  first 


place  after  winning  five  games  in  a 
dramatic  six-game  homestand  to 
end  the  season,  finally  attnuAing 
large  crowds  to  the  Coliseum. 

The  A's  had  just  six  players  on 
their  roster  with  postseason  experi- 
ence. Most  of  their  struggles  this 
season  were  due  to  their  youth:  the 
A's  committed  1 34  errors,  second  in 
the  AL,  and  sometimes  failed  to  get 
consistent  pitching  from  a  staff  with 
a  flaky  bullpen. 

And  the  team  couldn't  draw  frt>m 
Oakland's  notoriously  lackadaisical 
fan  base.  Their  attendance  ranked 
1 1  th  in  the  AL  -  but  they  drew  more 
fans  this  season  than  they  had  since 
1993. 

All  this  on  a  $32  million  payroll, 
by  far  the  lowest  among  the  eight 
playoff  contenders,  and  with  nearly 
every  critical  component  of  the 
team  sewed  up  in  a  long-term  con- 
tract. 

Qearly,  General  Manager  Billy 
Beane  is  doing  something  right. 
Neariy  every  important  player  will 
be  back  next  year,  and  Art  Howe  is 
likely  to  return  as  manager  despite 
occasionel  philosophical  clashes 
with  Beane. 

"I'm  personally  looking  forward 
to  being  a  human  being  again,  but  I 
can't  wait  for  spring  training," 
Beane  said  moments  after  the 
Athletics'  season  ended.  "This  is  the 
start  of  something  here." 


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Daily  Bnwi  Shorts 


AtNetics  anticipate  bright 
future  with  young  squad 


Tuwday,  October  10.2000       41 


BASEBALL  Offense  buUt 
aroand  Giambi;  Oakland 
nearly  eliminates  Yanks 


ByGregBeadiam 

The  Associated  Press 

OAKLAND,  Calif.  -  Not  many 
teams  freshly  eliminated  from  the 
playoffs  have  felt  Iwtter  about  the 
future  than  the  Oakland  Athletics. 

After  giving  the  New  York 
Yankees  a  serious  run  for  their  cham- 
pionship rings  in  a  five-game  division 
series  that  ended  with  New  York's  7-5 
victory  Sunday  night,  the  Athletics' 
clubhouse  was  requisitely  quiet  -  but 
there  was  a  soft  buzz  of  good  feeling 
that  couldn't  be  dampened  by  the 
result. 

The  Athletics  came  tantalizingly 
close  to  knocking  off  the  three4ime 
champions  and  making  a  run  for  a 
World  Series  title  of  their  own  -  years 
before  their  inexperience  suggests 
they  would  be  ready. 

"It  was  a  great  year,  and  I  think 
we're  all  proud  of  what  we  did,"  third 


baseman  Eric  Chavez  said.  "In  spring 
training,  who  thought  we'd  be  here? 
And  the  thing  is,  we're  getting  better. 
We're  going  to  learn  a  lot  from  this, 
and  we're  going  to  use  it  against  peo- 
ple next  year." 

The  Athletics  of  1999  were  young, 
fun  and  carefree.  They  prospered 
with  a  green  but  fearless  pitching  staff 
and  an  offense  with  an  uncanny  pen- 
chant for  getting  what  Jason  Giambi 
called  "the  jimmy-jack"  -  a  game- 
breaking  homer,  to  the  uninitiated  - 
when  it  mattered  most. 

Like  the  great  Athletics  teams  of 
the  past  -  from  Chariie  Finley's  title- 
winners  featuring  Reggie  Jackson 
and  Catfish  Hunter  in  the  1970s  to  the 
A's  of  a  decade  ago  with  the  Bash 
Brothers,  Rickey  Henderson  and  the 
Eck  -  these  Athletics  weren't  short  on 
characters. 

Their  offense  was  built  around 
Giambi,  the  stringy-haired  slugger 
who  emerged  as  one  of  the  game's  top 
run-producers  with  an  electrifying 
final  month  in  which  he  had  batted 
.400  in  September  with  13  home  runs 

See  imUTKS,  page  40 


Giants'  postseason  a  swing  and  a  miss 


PUYOFFS:  Poor  offense 
spells  end  for  team  with 
best  record  in  baseball 


ByGragBMdiam 

The  Associated  Press  .  ^ 

SAN  FRANCISCO  -  There  was 
no  playoff  baseball  at  Pacific  Bell 
Park  on  Monday.  Instead,  there 
were  stunned  ballplayers  exchanging 
goodbyes  and  filing  out  of  their 
brand-new  park  into  an  early  winter. 

The  Giants'  season  ended  so 
abruptly  that  a  day  later,  the  players 
were  still  trying  to  piece  together 
how  everything  they  worked  six 
months  to  earn  could  be  taken  away 
so  swiftly. 

"It's  going  to  eat  at  you,"  said  Jeff 
Kent,  one  of  the  few  Giants  who  did- 
n't endure  a  three-game  hitting 
slump  that  cost  San  Francisco  its 
division  series  with  the  New  York 
Mets. 

'"(Manager)  Dusty  (Baker)  is 
going  to  run  through  every  play  of 
this  series,  and  I'm  going  to  run 
through  every  opportunity  that  I  had 
and  didn't  respond.  I  hope  everyone 
docs  the  same  thing.  You  have  to  ask. 


'What  in  the  heck  did  I  do  wrong, 
and  what  can  I  do  to  fix  the  prob- 
lem?"' 

In  a  word,  the  problem  was 
offense.  The  Giants  hit  .205  against 
the  Mets.  Amazingly,  they  couldn't 
score  once  in  their  final  18  innings  - 
including  all  of  Game  4  on  Sunday, 
which  was  won  4^  by  New  York  on 
Bobby  J.  Jones'  one-hitter. 

In  the  regular  season,  San 
Francisco  scored  900  runs  for  the 
second  time  in  franchise  history  and 
broke  a  club  record  with  226 
homers.  While  winning  the  NL  West 
title  and  piling  up  97  victories,  San 
Francisco  honed  a  potent  offense 
based  around  Kent  and  Barry 
Bonds. 

But  for  the  fourth  time  in  his 
career.  Bonds  added  to  his  reputa- 
tion as  a  playoff  underachiever.  The 
Giants'  moody,  enigmatic  slugger 
started  the  series  against  New  York 
with  two  hits  -  a  key  single  and  a  run- 
scoring  triple  -  and  then  vanished 
into  the  San  Francisco  fog,  going  I- 
for-15. 

Bonds  made  the  last  out  of  an 
inning  II  times,  and  he  made  the 
final  out  of  games  2  and  4.  His  career 
postseason  batting  average  dropped 
to  .1%,  including  a  3-for-29  mark  in 


two  playoff  series  with  the  Giants. 

"A  lot  of  us  didn't  hit,  but  if  you 
want  to  blame  me,  go  ahead,"  Bonds 
said.  "It's  not  a  Bonds  thing.  It's  not 
about  me  all  the  time,  even  though 
(the  media  tries)  to  make  it  that.  We 
win  as  a  team  and  we  lose  as  a  team." 

Granted,  Bonds  wasn't  the  only 
offender.  Leadoff  hitters  Marvin 
Benard  and  Calvin  Murray  went  2- 
for-19  with  no  runs  scored. 
Emotional  leader  Ellis  Burks  went  2- 
for-11  after  winning  Game  1  with  a 
three-run  homer.  Rich  Aurilia,  the 
NL's  top  run-producing  shortstop, 
went  2-for-15.  Catchers  Bobby 
Estalella  and  Doug  Mirabelli  went  I- 
for-14. 

But  as  Bonds  goes,  so  go  the 
Giants.  When  Bonds  got  hot  midway 
through  the  season,  San  Francisco 
passed  Arizona  in  the  division  stand- 
ings. When  Bonds  reached  his  peak 
in  August  and  September,  the  Giants 
raced  past  everyone  in  baseball  on 
their  way  to  the  game's  best  record. 

"He's  a  big  key  to  our  success,  but 
there's  nine  guys  in  the  lineup  every 
day."  Baker  said.  "It's  all  part  of 
everything  else." 

Now  that  the  Giants  are  out  and 

Sec  CUNTS,  pagHs 


You  have  thousands  of  memories  at  UCLA. 
WeVe  bounding  it  up  in  less  than  500  pages. 

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42       Tuesdiji  October  10, 2000 


Daly  Brain  Sports 


Get  Porter 


UCLA  junior  outside  hitter 
Kristee  Porter's  30  kills  in  FViday 
night's  match  against  Southern 
California  marked  the  fourth  tjme 
she  had  eclipsed  that  mark  this  s^ea- 
son.  Destroying  a  Pac-IO  conference 
record  previously  held  by  Natalie 
Williams  ('92)  with  six.  Porter  now 
has  12  30-kill  matches  to  her  credit. 
Before  the  inception  of  the  confer- 
ence, the  only  other  players  to  have 
nearly  that  many  were  USC's  Tracy 
Clark's  ('85)  seven  career  30-kill 
matches  and  the  Bruins'  Liz 
Masakayan's  ('85)  six. 

The  last  time  the  Trojans  felt  the 
wrath  of  a  Porter  304cill  match  was 
during  her  freshman  campaign, 
when  she  recorded  36  kills  in  a  five- 
game  thriller  against  then-No.  II 
use  on  October  30,  1998. 
Pepperdine  is  the  only  other  school 
Porter  has  notched  30-kills  against  on 


Vblleyball  Noteba 


two  occasions. 


Rewriting  the 
record  books 


Porter  entered  the  match  against 
Southern  Cal  with  1,504  career  kills, 
ninth  on  the  UCLA  charts.  Her  30 
kills  on  Friday  bring  her  to  1,534, 41 
away  from  Kim  Krull  ('96)  in  eighth 
place. 

Junior  outside  hitter  Ashley 
Bowles,  who  became  the  1 8th  Bruin 
to  top  1,000  career  kills  in  last  week- 
end's match  against  Oregon,  record- 
ed 17  kills  against  the  Trojans  to 
bring  her  career  mark  to  1,023.  With 
that,  Bowles  passes  Kathy  Herse 
('81)  to  reach  17th  on  the  career  kill 
list.  Bowles  is  currently  chasing  front- 
row  teammate  Elisabeth  Bachman. 


"Wiz"  checked  in  with  14  kills  on  the 
evening  to  bring  her  career  total  to 
1,055,  one  spot  ahead  of  Bowles. 

Bachman  currently  leads  the  Pac- 
IO  with  a  1.45  block  per  game  average 
and  is  18th  in  the  country  in  the  same 
category.  She  sits  in  second  place 
with  108  on  the  career  solo  block  list 
including  her  four  against  USC.  With 


14  matches  left  with  a  three  game 
minimum  each,  the  senior  middle 
blocker  only  needs  to  stay  within  her 
season  averages  to  move  into  the  top 
three  in  career  solo  blocks,  block 
assists  and  total  blocks.  Currently, 
she  is  second  in  solo  blocks,  fifth  in 
block  assists  (418),  and  fourth  in  total 
blocks  (526). 

Erika  Sclsor  currently  sits  atop  the 
list  for  active  conference  setters.  Her 
school-record  10th  career  70-assist 
match  against  the  Trojans,  with  79, 
brings  her  career  total  to  3,840 
assists.  Third  on  the  UCLA  charts  in 
this  category,  Selsor  is  249  away  from 
Julie  Bronncr  ('93). 

Match  notables 

The  Bruins  are  now  6-4  against 
ranked  opponents  following  their 


four-game    loss    last    Friday    to 
crosstown  rival  No.  5  USC. 

The  second  game  seems  to  be  cru> 
cial  for  UCLA  .  The  Bruins  hold  a 
record  of  1-4  when  having  lost  the 
second  game,  but  are  9-1  when  the 

they  win  game  two.  .«     .  . 

■  ■•■».. 

Upcoming  for  the 
team  ^ 

UCLA  returns  to  action  next 
week  by  traveling  east  to  the  Valley  of 
the  Sun  to  take  on  AVCA/USA 
Today  No.  6  Arizona,  Thursday  at  7 
p.m  in  Tucson.  The  Bruins  then  jump 
over  to  Tempe  for  a  7:30  p.m.  match 
at  Arizona  State  on  Friday.  The 
match  with  the  Sun  Devils  will  be 
broadcast  live  in  the  Los  Angeles 
area  on  FOX  Sports  West  2. 


Notes  compiled  by  AJ  Cadman,  Daily 
Bruin  Senior  Staff.   -.  •  .      .:•  • 


l.V'>  .;■:■, 


Arizona  earns  Na  22  spot  In  rarilangs 


PAC-IO:  USC  falls  from 
top  25,  sees  chances  for 
championship  crumble 


By  Ken  Peters 

The  Associated  Press 

Arizona  is  in  and  USC  is  out. 

The  Wildcats  moved  into  the 
national  rankings  and  remained  in 
the  thick  of  the  Pacific- 10  race.  The 
Trojans  dropped  out  of  the  top  25 
and  virtually  out  of  the  run  for  the 
Roses. 

"A  lot  of  people  didn't  respect 
us,"  Arizona  coach  Dick  Tomey 
said.  "We'll  see  how  we  respond 
with  a  little  respect." 


The  Wildcats  earned  notice 
Saturday  with  a  convincing  31-15 
victory  over  USC.  The  win  vaulted 
Arizona  (4-1,  2-0)  into  the  rankings 
at  No.  22. 

The  Trojans  (3-2,  0-2)  dropped 
from  No.  18  to  out  of  the  rankings, 
and  also  saw  their  hopes  for  a  Pac- 
IO  championship  almost  completely 
dashed  in  only  their  second  confer- 
ence game  of  the  season. 

Arizona's  defense  held  the 
Trojans  to  10  yards  rushing,  logged 
five  sacks  and  came  up  with  five 
turnovers. 

"We  are  attacking  offenses.  We 
just  want  to  bury  them,  put  them  in 
the  dirt,"  said  Wildcats  defensive 
end  Idris  Haroon,  who  had  one 
sack  and  recovered  a  fumble. 


Arizona's  offense  wasn't  too 
shabby,  either,  taking  control  with 
21  points  in  the  first  quarter. 

Ortege  Jenkins  ran  for  two 
scores  after  he  had  hooked  up  with 
Bobby  Wade  on  a  75-yard  touch- 
down pass  on  the  third  play  of  the 
game. 

Arizona  freshman  Clarence 
Fanner  scored  on  an  80-yard  run 
and  finished  with  134  yards  on  22 
carries. 

"We  wanted  to  set  the  tone  for 
the  game  early,"  said  Jenkins,  who 
ran  I  yard  for  the  Wildcats'  second 
touchdown  and  added  a  4-yard 
scoring  run  in  the  third  quarter.  "It 
has  usually  been  our  defense  that 


Georgia  fans  stomp  hedge 
during  victory  celebration 


roOTBAli:  Many  students 
injm^d,  one  seriously,  in 
melee  after  win  over  Vols 


See  AHZOIM,  page  3S 


Byl 

The  Associated  Pres 

ATHENS,  Ga.  -  When  Georgia 
fans  mobbed  the  field  to  celebrate  a 
memorable  victory  over  Tennessee, 
they  also  damaged  one  of  college  foot- 
ball's most  hallowed  traditions. 

The  hedges  that  have  surrounded 
Sanford  Stadium  since  it  opened  in 


1929  will  be  cut  back  to  stubble  after 
getting  trampled  Saturday  night. 

For  the  final  three  home  games, 
including  this  weekend's  homecoming 
contest  against  Vanderbilt,  the 
Bulldogs  win  take  on  their  opponents 
"Between  the  Chain  Link  Fence" 
instead  of  "Between  the  Hedges." 

The  damaged  shrubs  will  be  pruned 
so  they  can  grow  back  in  time  for  next 
season.  In  the  meantime,  an  unsightly 
chain^ink  fence  that  used  to  be  hidden 
from  view  will  provide  a  barrier 
between  fans  and  the  field. 


Se«CfOMU,|M9e40 


In  recent  tests,  4  out  of  5 


stuff, 


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■■«•  i^  ■ '  '■.«'" 


Tuesday,  October  10,2000       43 


POTBALL  NOTEBO 


Memories  of  Cal 


With  the  upcoming  game  against 
Cal,  quarterback  Cory  Paus  easily 
recalls  the  disaster  of  their  1999 
meeting. 

The  Bears  defeated  the  Bruins 
17-0,  which  was  UCLA's  first  score- 
less game  since  1993.  That  was  only 
the  third  time  in  28  years  the  Bruin 
football  team  was  shut  out. 

Describing  it  as  "the  worst  game 
I've  ever  played  in,"  Paus,  who 
went  9-28  for  81  yards,  looks  to 
improve  on  last  year's  perfor- 
mance. 

"We  don't  ever  play  for 
revenge,"  head  coach  Bob  Toledo 
said.  "But  it's  important  that  we 
realize  (we've)  got  to  win  this  foot- 
ball game  if  we  want  to  continue  to 
reach  some  of  the  goals  we've  set 
for  ourselves." 

The  tables  have 
turned  ...in 
UCLA's  favor 

While  UCLA  was  injury-ridden 
when  facing  Cal  last  year,  this  time 
it  seems  that  Cal  is  the  struggling 
team.  Four  of  Cal's  five  projected 
starters  have  missed  games  due  to 
injuries  this  season.  Their  only  con- 
sistent starter  has  been  redshirt 
freshman  Mark  Wilson,  who  plays 
right-tackle. 

Off  the  Bruin  injury  list  for  this 
weekend's  game  are  strong  safety 
Marques  Anderson,  defensive  tack- 
le Ken  Kocher,  strong  safety  Jason 
Stephens.  They  will  be  given  as 
much  playing  time  as  they  can  han- 
dle while  comerback  Jason  Bell  will 
play  a  limited  role.  Out  for  the  game 


Top-ranked  Bruins  shut  out  by  Cardinal 


M.SOCCER:  Stanford  ends 
UCLA's  winning  streak; 
hopes  still  alive  for  title 


are  linebacker  Dennis  Link  with  a 
hamstring  pull,  linebacker  Asi  Faoa 
with  a  sprained  ankle,  defensive  end 
Kenyon  Coleman  with  an  injured 
knee  and  tailback  DeShaun  Foster 
with  a  broken  hand.    -■ 

Going  up  and 
down  in  the  polls 

Oddly  enough,  the  bye  week  was 
beneficial  for  the  Bruins  in  more 
ways  than  one.  While  UCLA  fell  a 
spot  in  both  the  AP  and  the  ESPN 
poll  after  defeating  Arizona  State 
38-31  two  weeks  ago,  they  climbed 
up  three  notdies  this  week  in  the  AP 
poll  to  No.  13  and  two  places  in  the 
ESPN  poll  to  No.  15. 

At  the  mansion 

Paus  and  senior  wide  receiver 
Freddie  Mitchell  have  more  in  com- 
mon than  playing  football  far  from 
their  hometovras.  Both  have  also 
been  to  the  Playboy  mansion, 
Mitchell  as  a  guest  and  Paus  as  a 
cook. 


Note  compiled  by  Amanda  Fletcher 
and  Christina  Teller,  Daily  Bruin 
Senior  Staff. 


By  Jim  Guthrie 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  No.  I  UCLA  men's  soccer 
team  suffered  a  major  setback  in  its 
hunt  for  a  national  championship  on 
Sunday  when  it  lost  to  No.  4 
Stanford  1-0  in  Palo  Alto  for  the 
team's  first  loss  of  the  season. 

The  Bruins  (8-1, 0-1  Pac-IO)  strug- 
gled on  offense,  managing  only 
seven  shots  on  goal,  and  defensively 
could  not  keep  the  pressure  off  true 
freshman  goalie  D.J.  Countess  when 
Cardinal  forward  Johannes  Maliza 
scored  the  deciding  goal. 

"They  brought  a  physical  aspect 
of  the  game  and  we're  not  up  to  the 
challenge  yet,"  said  senior  forward 
McKinley  Tennyson  Jr.  "We  are  a 
young  team  and  sometimes  you  are 
going  to  have  to  get  these  experi- 
ences to  help  you  learn  and  grow 
during  the  season." 

Countess  had  played  outstanding- 
ly throughout  the  eariy  part  of  the 
game,  tying  a  UCLA  record  with  1 1 
saves  on  21  shots.  But  the  Bruins  let 
one  slip  away  in  the  61  st  minute. 

Stanford  midfielder  Sean  Sylvis 
took  the  ball  from  a  UCLA  defender 
near  the  penalty  box  and  passed  it 
across  the  field  to  Maliza,  who  head- 
ed it  past  Countess  into  the  net. 

UCLA  had  some  opportunities  of 
its  own  but  missed  on  two  crucial 
occasions  earlier  in  the  game. 
Tennyson  had  a  chance  in  the  19th 
minute  but  his  12-yard  header  sailed 
wide  ofTthe  right  post. 

The  next  opportunity  came  from 
senior  midfielder  Shaun  Tsakiris, 
last  week's  Pac-IO  player  of  the 
week,  whose  free  kick  in  the  26th 
minute  was  stopped  by  Stanford's 
Hermann  Trophy  candidate  defend- 
er Lee  Morrison. 
"It  was  frustrating."  Tsakiris  told 


ANNAAVIK 


Senior  Ryan  Lee  makes  a  run  with  the  ball  during  a  game  against  St. 

Mar/s  earlier  this  season.  The  Bruins  lost  1-0  to  Stanford  on  Sunday. 

the  San  Jose  Mercury  News.  "We     not  play  the  offensive  game  we  are 


had  our  chances  to  score.  I  thought  I 
had  a  goal  on  that  free  kick  but  it 
went  off  their  defender." 


"I  think  from  now  on 

every  game  is  our 

biggest  game." 

McKinley  Tennyson  Jr. 

Senior  forward 


Many  factors  contributed  to  the 
loss.  The  usually  potent  UCLA  for- 
wards managed  only  two  shots  and 
the  team  was  outshot  21-10.  The 
defense  could  not  stop  the  Stanford 
attack  from  taking  shots  at  the  fresh- 
man stopper.  A  talented  Sunford 
team  played  very  well,  improving  to 
9-1-1  on  the  season. 

"We  did  not  play  our  best  game," 
said  coach  Todd  Saldafia.  "We  did 


known  for  It  is  a  bump  in  the  road 
and  a  good  indication  of  the  Pao-10 
season." 

With  the  eight-game  winning 
screak  snapped,  the  Bruins  learned 
the  Pac-IO  season  will  be  a  trying 
one.  Though  they  have  not  been 
playing  up  to  their  potential,  this  is 
the  first  match  where  the  Bruins 
haven't  been  able  to  squeak  by  with  a 
win. 

The  Bruins  will  most  likely  slip  in 
the  polls,  but  their  championship 
hopes  are  far  from  over  . 

"I  think  from  now  on  every  game 
is  our  biggest  game,"  Tennyson  said. 
"That's  the  attitude  we  have  to  take 
for  the  rest  of  the  season.  We'll  start 
regrouping  and  preparing  and  treat 
every  team  like  they're  number  one 
in  the  country." 

The  Bruins  will  look  to  finish  the 
Pac-IO  season  strong  starting  with 
Friday's  game  against  Oregon  State.  ' 
The  Bruins  also  will  be  looking  for- 
ward to  Nov.  10,  their  rematch  with 
Stanford  on  home  turf 


^^^^^^^^^^^^^ft       •  W^ '  il^^'Wi^lPflTff^^^^^WP^^HI 


S?!!S?f 


UCLA 


Oct.  11  Ca 
Oct.  13  hj^ 


Oct.  24 


mmons,  7.00  p.m.-  10:00; 
10  a.m.  -  3:00  p.m.  Oct.  17  :  ■ 
LKMoff  Hall  State  Rooms,  b.uu  p.m 


Oct.  12  UBS  Info  Session,  Bradley  Intemationai,  6:00  p.m.  -  9:00  p.m 
'■     . :    -•  '/zd  Party,  Boelter  Hall  -  Penthouse,  6:00  p.m.  -  8:00  p  m 
Ti  -  BOO  p.m   Oct.  25  Resume  Drop  Date 


I  move  ever  forward 


There  is  rio  barrier 


impom'tr3ble  to  mt 


immune  to  my  will 


will  find  new  pdthways 


!hi'  Ady 


THE  FREEDOM  TO  BE  OUTSTANDING 


Cap  Gemim 
Ersst&cYoisg 


i: 


■  *■ 


% 


%: 


;*'■■■■.: 

•i 
■»."■ 


44 ___ 

I  First,  the  worst 
The  men's  soccer  team  learns  that 
there  is  a  first  time  for  everything  as 
they  fell  to  Stanford  in  their  only  loss 
of  the  regular  season.  See  page  43 

Tuesday,  October  10,2000 


Daily  Bruin 


**- 


'.*.'  Ill  1 1 1. 1 


Sports 


Sports  on  the  Web  <J    \ 

See  ail  this  and  more  at  * 

the  Daily  Bruin's  : 

Website:  • 

www.daiiybruin.ucla.edu  : 


♦  • 

♦  V 
<   ,. 


-/v 


nei 


•  Parkers 

orhood 


Senior  ^w^ater  polo  player 


ve  Parker  leads  the 


team  in  personality 


ByRekhaRao 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


7 —7 


Dave  Parker  has  definitely  made  the  most 
ofhistimeasaBruin. 

And  if  you  ask  his  water  polo  teammates, 
the  light-hearted  senior  does  it  with  a  style  all 
his  own. 

"He  is  the  nicest  person  you  will  ever  meet, 
and  the  funniest,"  said  head  coach  Adam 
Krikorian. 

His  teammates  agree  that  Parker  is  an  indi- 
vidual. 

"Dave  is  the  most  unique  man  I  have  ever 
met  in  my  life.  He  has  more  character  than 
anyone  I  know,"  said  sophomore  Matt 
Resher. 

He  has  made  nicknames  for  everybody  on 
the  team,  including  "B-Dubs"  for  senior 
Brian  Brown.  He  has  an  obsession  with  Elvis 
Presley  and  has  been  known  to  belt  out  songs 


by  the  King  during  practice.  And  he  watches 
children's  shows. 

"Well,  there  is  an  opening  for  a  new  Mr. 
Rogers,"  he  said  when  asked  what  he  wanted 
to  do  after  graduation.  "I  really  like  Sesame 
Street." 

But  despite  his  unique  character  out  of  the 
pool,  Parker  is  all  business  when  it  comes  to 
water  polo. 

Last  year  he  won  a  national  championship 
with  the  currently  top-ranked  men's  water 
polo  team,  and  appears  well  on  track  toward 
doing  it  again. 

"We  all  worked  so  hard  to  win  that  cham- 
pionship. Ft  was  great,"  Parker  said.  "We 
plan  on  doing  that  again  this  year." 

Parker  got  his  start  at  Miramonte  High 
School  in  Orinda,  where  he  was  a  basketball 
and  baseball  star. 


SeePAmER,pa9e37 


Senior  offensive  water  polo  player  Dmw  Parlwr  brings  a 
light-hearted  attitude  to  the  top-ranked  Bruins  squad. 


As  A^,  Gants' 
seasons  end, 
football  holds 
Battle  of  Bay 

COLUMN:  Raiders-49ers 
matchup  full  of  expected 
thrills,  disappointments 


While  my  beloved  Giants 
were  ending  their  season 
in  the  Big  Apple,  and 
shortly  before 
the  A 'showed 
out  to  the 
Yankees,  the 
real  game  of  the 
Bay  Area  was 
taking  place  at 
the  stadium  for- 
merly known  as 
Candlestick 
Park. 

The  Bay 
Bridge  Series 

made  an  emo- 

tional  and 

unusual  stop  in  the  NFL  season  yes- 
terday u  the  Raiders  from  the  North 


Bruins  improve,  finish  sixth  in  Georgia  tournament 


M.G0LF:  Bruins  overcome 
higher-ranked  teams;  weak 
final  round  proves  decisive 


more  enthusiastic.  Asked  if  he  considered 
the  team's  flnish  a  good  one,  he  awwcrcd 
Nvith  a  defmitive  yes. 

"It  was  a  really  solid  finish  for  us.  We 
beat  some  top  20  teams  in  the  nation."  he 
said. 

The  freshmen  paved  the  way  for  the 

Bruins.  Merrick  finished  tied  for  1 8th  at 

r\..    e        ,■     ^  ..  2^'  *"<*  Steve  Conway,  battlinc  flu-like 

unr^L^  UcTa   '""  °'  ',r  '^''  "^^    '^'P'"™*'  ^^  ^^^'^  seconLighcs 
unranked  UCLA  men's  golf  team  took  1  finisher  (23rd,  222)         \ 

sixth,  p^acmg  behind  four  ranked  teams  "|  was   pretty   confident   about   mv 

while  beating  su  others  at  last  weekend's  game,"  MeLk  Lid.  "I  kept  mrcmotiom 

Carpet  Capital  Gassic  in  Georgia^  jncact  a  litUe  better  in  this  t^mamTnt^ 

The  Brums  posted  a  threen-ound  toUl  of  Sophomores  Travis  Johnson  (3 1  st,  224) 


ByPaoRncVu 
OaUyBniin  Senior  Staff 


Sm 


39 


e„^i ....       .  .  UCLA  Seem  Wbimnion 

Freshman  John  M«rrkfc  competed  in  a  tournament  this 
wcekenc^  wherg  the  men's  gntf  team  came  In  tixth  place. 


891  at  the  tourna- 
ment. Host  No.  6 

Georgia  Tech  took 

the      tournament 

with  a  score  of  870, 

No.  2  Clemson  was 

second,  just  one 

stroke  behind,  and 

top-ranked 

Georgia      placed 

third  at  874. 

"It  was  just  a 
really  good  experi- 
ence," said  junior 
Parker  McUlchlin.  "In  the  second  round 
we  got  to  play  with  the  number  one  and 
number  two  teams  in  the  country,  and  we 
realized  that  their  games  aren't  that  difTcr- 
ent  from  the  games  we're  playing." 
True  fre»hman  John  Merrick  was  a  little 


and  J.T  Kohut 
(42nd,  227)  and 
McLachlin  (51  st, 
230)  rounded  out 
the  scoring. 

The  team  had  a 
MeUar  first  round, 
placing  just  three 
strokes  behind 
Georgia  with  a  7- 
under   par    team 

.^____      total  of  281.  After 

the  second  day,  in 

which    the    team 

shot  297,  the  Bruins  were  still  playing  weM, 

only  fourth  behind  the  eventual  top  three* 

finishers. 

But  that's  when  things  took  a  turn  for 


Georgia  Tech  870 

Qemson  871 

Georgia  874 

Florida  883 

E.Tenn  State  884 
UCLA  891 


-U» 


it»- 


Sming  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


budoet 


Wednesday,  October  11,2000 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


RESOURCES:  Many  unaware  of 
situation;  ongoing  questioning 
may  affect  use  of  groups'  funds 


•  • 


ling  review 


The  way  USAC  distributes  the  foltewing  resources  could  change  significantly  in  order  to  implement  recent  US 
Supreme  Court  dedswns 


By  Melody  Wang 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Two  months  after  its  approval,  administra- 
tors continue  to  question  the  fairness  of  the 
Undergraduate  Students  Association  Council's 
base  budget. 

Administrative  Representative  Lyie 
Timmerman  froze  the  budget  shortly  after 
USAC  approved  it  this  summer,  citing  that  the 
Budget  Review  Committee  failed  to  provide 
sufficient  evidence  that  it  allocated  funding  to 
student  groups  on  a  content-neutral  basis. 

Though  the  money  has  since  been  unfrozen, 
it  is  not  dear  how  council's  ongoing  review  of  its 
budget  may  alTect  student  advocacy  groups  who 
are  already  using  the  money. 

XochitI  Marquez,  a  member  of  La  Familia,  a 
Chicano  lesbian,  gay,  bisexual  and  transgender 
group,  said  the  budget  review  has  not  afiected 
them  so  far,  but  members  are  still  cautious 
about  spending  money  since  the  budget  is  not 
finalized. 

"Most  of  our  activities  are  in  November  and 
winter  quarter,"  she  said.  "It  could  really  hurt 
our  large  conferences." 

External  Vice  President  Portia  Pedro  said 
council  members  agreed  at  the  last  ad  hoc  meet- 
ing to  give  the  BRC  two  weeks  to  answer 
remaining  questions  from  administrators. 
Information  presented  will  be  reviewed  by  the 
committee  at  that  time. 
Though  some  groups  are  aware  of  the  situa- 


HARSHA  RAO/D*l(y  Bruin  Senkx  Su« 


tion,  neither  the  director  of  BRC  nor  other  stu- 
dent groups  realized  what  is  happening. 

"I  haven't  received  any  e-mails  about  it,"  said 
BRC  Director  Marykay  Tsuji. 

Tsuji  said  she  was  unable  to  attend  the  first  ad 
hoc  meeting  because  of  a  previous  engagement 
and  was  not  informed  of  the  last  meeting. 

Nevertheless,  USAC  President  Elizabeth 
Houston  said  all  student  groups  should  be 
aware  of  what  is  going  on  since  her  office  sent 


out  e-mails. 

But  because  of  possible  computer  problems, 
some  groups  may  never  have  received  the  e- 
mail,  said  Financial  Supports  Commissioner 
Cynthia  Rabuy. 

"Not  all  groups  know  about  it,"  she  said. 
"But  I  think  it's  also  up  to  the  group  to  find 
out." 


Se«RIN0NW,pa9e16 


CSO  celebrates  23  years 
of  public  safety  at  UCLA 


SECURITY:  Safeguarding 
Students,  officers  provide 
nightiy  campus  services 

ByiKsicaKvviik 
DaiN  Bruin  Contributor 

From  escort  services  and  evening 
van  pools  to  access  control,  UCLA 
participates  in  several  programs  to 
help  students  feel  safe  on  and  around 
campus. 

fn  its  23rd  year  of  existence,  the 
Community  Service  Officers  pro- 
gram now  employs  about  80  students 
to  patrol  bicycles  around  UCLA's 
419-acre  campus. 

"CSOs  act  as  the  eyes  and  ears  of 
the  police  department,"  said  Matt 
Ellis,  assistant  manager  of  the  CSO 
programs. 

The  officers  escort  students  walk- 
ing home  from  dusk  until  I  a.m.  year- 
,  round.  They  serve  students  living 
within  the  area  roughly  bounded  by 
Sunset  and  Wilshirc  Boulevards  and 
Veteran  and  Hilgard  Avenues. 

According  to  Ellis,  a  CSO  usually 

responds  to  a  call  within  15  minutes. 

Besides  an  escort,  some  students 

opt  for  the  evening  van  service, 

whicli  lei  »Bil  more  Umn  100.000  nd- 


ers  last  year,  Ellis  said. 

Evening  vans,  which  pick  up  and 
drop  students  off  at  designated 
points  along  a  set  route  on  campus 
•  and  in  Westwood,  run  from  6  p.m.  to 
midnight  Monday  through  Thursday. 
During  tenth  and  finals  weeks,  the 
vans  rurt  on  weekends  as  well. 

Ellis  said  students  are  encouraged 
to  use  the  escort  service  because  it 
goes  door  to  door,  unlike  the  vans. 

In  addition  to  making  sure  stu- 
dents return  home  safely,  CSOs 
patrol  other  areas  owned  by  the  uni- 
versity, including  apartments,  the 
medical  center  and  parking  facilities. 
"When  the  escorts  are  not  actually 
walking  with  someone,  they  patrol 
the  campus  looking  for  suspicious 
activity,  safety  hazards  and  anyone  in 
need  ofhelp."  Ellis  said. 

According  to  CSO  Brad  Stein, 
about  30-35  student  officers  patrol 
campus  each  night. 

While  CSOs  provide  services  to 
the  entire  UCLA  community,  other 
organizations  like  the  Office  of 
Residential  Life  have  their  own  pro- 
grams or  policies  to  ensure  safety. 

"I  felt  living  in  the  residence  halls 
was  an  extremely  safe  experience," 
said  Jennifer  Eskin,  a  third-year  his- 


SMSARrXpave14 


.  EDWARD  LIN 

CSO  Brian  TVoutman,  a  third-year  psychology  stucJent, 
escorts  third-ytar  philosophy  stiirlprit  Tawny  Bauman 
back  to  her  apartn^ent 


Opening  of  liver 
cancer  center 
benefits  patients, 
brings  many  hope 

HEALTH:  TVeatment,  research 
to  increase;  optimism  for  future 
advances  springs  from  facility 


By  Hemcsh  Patel 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 


Liver  cancer  affects  more  than  a  million 
people  a  year,  and  the  new  Dumont-UCLA 
Liver  Cancer  Center,  which  opened  last 
month,  hopes  to  lower  the  number  of  deaths 
caused  by  the  disease. 

The  center  allows  for  new  research  and 
treatment  to  take  place,  and  as  a  result  some 
patients  have  managed  to  escape  this  can- 
cer's wrath. 

"I  was  diagnosed  with  liver  cancer  in 
March,  and  my  tumor  was  removed  after 
eight  days,"  said  David  McCullough,  a  visual 
effects  producer  from  Woodland  Hills,  who 
was  treated  at  UCLA.  "At  the  moment  I  am 
cancer  free,  and  I  feel  no  discomfort." 

McCullough  said  he  is  looking  forward  to 
visit  the  center  for  a  checkup. 

Earlier  this  year,  he  was  told  by  his  routine 
physician  that  there  were  two  surgeons  who 
were  not  willing  to  operate  on  the  liver 
because  they  believed  the  cancer  had  spread 
too  far. 

But  one  doctor,  director  of  the  UCLA 
liver  transplant  program  Dr.  Ronald 
Busuttil,  successfully  operated  on 
McCullough  eight  days  after  his  diagnosis. 

Despite  McCullough's  success  story, 
some  physicians  say  that  very  little  is  known 
about  the  cancer  and  one  of  the  goals  of  the 
center  is  to  improve  the  current  understand- 
ing of  the  disease  through  clinical  research. 

"There  really  is  no  headway  in  terms  of 
treating  the  cancer,"  said  Rafael  Amado, 
assistant  professor  in  the  hematology  and 
oncology  department.  "Treatment  is  unsatis- 
factory and  the  problem  is  only  going  to  get 
worse." 

Amado  said  liver  cancer,  probably  the 
most  common  cancer  in  world,  is  an  incredi- 
ble health  care  issue.  •• ' " 
He  said  in  developing  areas,  such  as  China 
and  Southeast  Asia,  Hepatitis  B  is  more  like- 
ly the  cause  for  the  disease.  As  a  result,  the 
high  incidence  of  the  cancer  in  Asian 
Americans  continues  to  grow  because  they 
are  carriers. 

But  in  more  developed  areas  such  as 
Europe  and  the  United  States,  Hepatitis  C 
develops  into  cancer,  he  said. 

Patients  are  commonly  infected  with 
Hepatitis  C  during  blood  transfusions, 
Amado  said. 

Officials  say  providing  treatment  will 
occur  more  frequently  now  that  the  universi- 
ty houses  a  center  specializing  in  liver  cancer. 
"There's  a  desperate  need  for  a  liver  can- 
cer center  because  it  is  the  number  one  can- 
cer in  the  world,"  Busuttil  said  in  a  state- 
ment. 

"We'll  be  one  of  the  few  centers  around 
the  world  solely  committed  to  liver  cancer 
and  we'll  be  using  a  multidisciplinary  treat- 
ment approach  and  cutting-edge  clinical  tri- 


SceCEIfrB|,pa9e14 


'■'.-.    !v      <    ''-:, 


2        «MiKday,0ctob«r11,2000 


MiyBnAiNcws 


3 Wedn«sta)i  October  11,2000 


IMir  Brain  Nms 


COMMUNITY  BRIEFS 

Center  receives  $1.2 
million  for  research 

The  Centers  for  Disease  Control  and 
Prevention  in  Atlanta  has  awarded  a  $1.2  mil- 
lion grant  to  the  UC  Riverside  Presley  Center 
for  Crime  and  Justice  Studies  to  research  the 
causes  of  youth  violence,  and  to  create  and  put 
in  use  community  programs  to  prevent  it. 

The  three-year  grant  makes  UCR  one  of  10 
national  Academic  Centers  for  Excellence  on 
Youth  Violence.  It  supports  a  center  focused 
on  creating,  implementing  and  evaluating 
youth  violence  prevention  programs  and  train- 
ing health  care  professionals  and  community 
groups.  "  - 

The  CDC  grant-funded  cfTorts  will  benefit 
youth  in  Riverside,  the  Inland  Empire  and 
Southern  California.  CDC  officials 
announced  the  award  on  Sept.  27. 

UCR  Psychology  Professor  Nancy  G. 
Guerra,  associate  director  of  the  Presley 
Center,  led  the  effort  to  secure  the  grant  with 
UCR  Sociology  Professors  Kirk  R.  Williams 


and  Robert  Nash  Parker. 

"The  project  will  foster  greater 
cooperation  among  a  number  of  uni 
versities  and  community  agencies  con- 
cerned with  youth  violence  in  Southern 
California,"  said  Parker,  director  of  the 
Presley  Center. 

Part  of  every  activity  at  the  UCR  center  will 
be  a  commitment  to  cultural  and  ethnic  diver- 
sity and  the  impact  these  factors  have  on  youth 
violence  and  violence  prevention,  Guerra 
said. 

UC  extension  seeks  to 
help  welfare  recipients 

Responding  to  a  national  initiative 
designed  to  move  thousands  of  parents  off 
welfare  rolls  and  into  jobs,  the  University  of 
California  Cooperative  Extension  has  created 
a  curriculum  that  teaches  people  with  little  or 
no  work  experience  the  skills  for  getting  a  job, 
staying  employed  and  balancing  the  demands 
ofwork  and  home. 


"The  best  way  to  keep  people 
out  of  poverty  is  to  give  them  a 
chance  to  cam  a  living,"  said 
Karen  Varcoe,  consumer  science  spe- 
cialist based  at  UC  Riverside  and  chair  of  the 
committee  that  created  the  curriculum.  "We 
can  teach  people  how  to  get  jobs  and  keep 
them." 

"Gateway  To  a  Better  Life"  is  an  interactive 
program  that  doesn't  require  high  literacy 
skills.  Many  aspects  of  life  that  change  to 
accommodate  a  new  working  routine  are  cov- 
ered in  nine  modules,  each  with  two  to  five 
lessons,  written  in  both  English  and  Spanish. 

The  program,  designed  to  be  sold  to  organi- 
zations implementing  welfare-to-work  pro- 
grams, is  already  being  used  in  nioe  Califoraia 
counties.  ■  ■/■■  /     ■-  -Iv',-;  '■■'.  ^-i/  ■ '  .• 

Mexico  connected  to 
faster  Internet 

Mexico's  scientific  and  scholarly  institu- 
tions are  now  connected  via  a  high-perfor- 


mance network  to  the  UC  and  other  major 
research  universities. 

The  new  connection  to  California's  portion 
of  Intemet2,  called  CalREN-2,  links  Mexico 
with  more  than  180  universities,  industry  and 
government  agencies  at  speeds  100  to  1,000 
times  faster  than  allowed  by  previous  tech- 
nologies. 

The  bi-national  advance  flows  out  of  a  1997 
agreement  of  cooperation  in  higher  education 
and  research  between  the  UC  and  Mexico's 
equivalent  of  the  National  Science 
Foundation  (Consejo  Nacional  de  Ciencia  y 
Technologia  or  CONACYT). 

"In  the  spirit  of  cooperation  that  followed 
the  agreement,  the  CalREN-2  connection 
delivers  on  a  promise  that  UC  President 
Richard  Atkinson  and  California  Governor 
Gray  Davis  made  later  to  Mexico's  President 
Ernesto  Zedillo  Ponce  de  Leon,"  said  Juan- 
Vicente  Palerm,  director  of  the  University  of 
California  Institute  for  Mexico  and  the  United 
States,  with  headquarters  at  UC  Riverside. 


Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


WHArS  BREWING 

Today  11a.m. 

Association  for  Careers  in 

Technology 

Fall  Technology  Fair 

Ackerman  Grand  Ballroom 

12  p.m. 

Project  Literacy 
Orientation 
Ackerman  3508 
825-2417 

12:30  p.m. 

Project  MAC 

Orientation 

Kerckhoff407 


4  p.m. 

UCLA  Book  Zone  -  ,.         ' 

Book  Signing 

Charles  E  Young  Grand  Salon 

206-0764 

Project  WILD 
Orientation  for  tutors 
417  Kerckhoff  Hall 

Bruin  Partners 
Orientation 
Ackerman  2412 

5:30  p.m. 

Bruinlife  Yearbook 

Orientation 

Kerckhoff  1 18  -  Conference 

Room 

825-2640 


6  p.m. 

Bruin  Republicans 
Meeting  on  election  involvement 
Viewpoint  Conference  Room  #2, 
Ackerman  A-level 


7  p.m. 

UCLA  Ad  Team 
General  Info.  Session 
Anderson  B30I 


7:30  p.m. 

Melnitz  Movies 
Apocalypse  Now 
James  Bridges  Theatre 
206-8170 


A  QUICK  LOOK 
^v^BRUIN 


Page  # 
Daily  Bruin  Cla88iried8_32:i0 

Crossword  Puzzle 25 

Movie  Guide  p/ 


^^^!SSpA^f    amazon 

1.  Graok  Mythology.  A  mambcr  of  a  nMton  of  wonMn 
wanton  rapulad  to  hawa  lw«d  in  Scylhia. 

2.  Often  amazoa  A  taBagnBaaiva.strong-wMed  woman. 

(Middit  EnglWi.  ftcm  LMta  Amnoa  Itam  (VMk.  PratMMy  IfMiiM  ortglnl 

* Jiml*  Lm  gimaty  doM  MM  *•  can  wtth  har  rtdteulou*  chwacMr 
fdokig  aom*  mily  impi«wl<«  Muni  wok  tor  IIM  roltl.  but  Hatw  I* 
•quilp«1tpMyandanwzan.  And  Ih*  mta  )Mt  doMnt  worti.- 

-KaiN  Mato.  Ortv*.  Stw  8M: -Au*  Um  and  SpMd.  SoiounMr 
IbaWtonMn^FoMm.Sapao.  1M4  ^ 


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STATE  &  LOCAL 


state  bills  require  study  into  historical  effects  of  slavery 


MEASURES:  UC  scholars 
to  examine  gained  profits 
from  insurance  policies 


ByMidiadFakoiM 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Scholars  from  the  University  of 
California  are  being  asked  to  study 
the  economicrs  of  slavery. 

Two  bills,  sponsored  by  California 
State  Senator  Tom  Hayden,  D-Santa 
Monica,  are  aimed  at  researching 
and  reporting  the  extent  to  which 
businesses,  including  insurance  com- 
panies, profited  from  slavery. 

SB  1737,  the  UC  Slavery 
Colloquium  bill,  requires  the  UC  to 
put  together  a  group  of  experts  to 
hold  a  conference  and  draft  a  propos- 
al to  study  those  issues. 

The  other  Hayden-sponsored  mea- 
sure, SB  2199.  requests  California 
insurance  companies  to  turn  over 


records  regarding  slaveholder  insur 
ance  policies.  Gov.  Gray  Davis 
signed  both  bills  into  law  late  last 
month. 

Rocky  Rushing,  Hayden's  chief  of 
staff,  said  both  bills  developed  from 
"revelations"  regarding  insurance 
policies  taken  out  by  slave  owners  on 
slaves  in  the  Old  South. 

"(The  slave  owners)  certainly 
weren't  taking  out  workers  compen- 
sation policies  for  the  slaves." 
Rushing  said. 

While  both  bills  enjoyed  broad 
support  in  the  Senate  and  the 
Assembly,  a  contingent  from  the  leg- 
islature's Republican  caucus  was 
unsupportive  of  the  bills. 

"There  are  problems  in  our 
nation's  history,  but  asking  people 
today  to  pay  for  the  sins  of  yesterday 
and  the  sins  of  our  forefathers  is  a 
logistical  nightmare,"  said  Steve 
Lesher,  a  spokesman  for 
Assemblywoman  Lynne  Leach,  R- 
Walnut  Creek, 


"Some  of  these  companies  may 
not  even  have  records  that  go  bacJc 
1 50  years,"  Lesher  continued. 


"Asking  people  today  to 

pay  for  the  sins  of 
yesterday  and  the  sins 
of  our  forefathers  is  a 
logistical  nightmare." 

,         Steve  Lesher 
Spokesman 


Leach,  along  with  a  group  of  1 1 
other  assembly  Republicans,  voted 
against  SB  1737  when  it  was  heard  on 
the  assembly  floor  Aug.  23. 

Some  lawmakers  questioned  why 
this  bill  was  introduced  in  the  legisla- 


ture of  California,  which  was  not  a 
major  slaveholding  state. 

But  Rushing  said  the  issues  this  bill 
will  examine  are  important  for 
Californians.  especially  those  who 
have  an  ancestral  connection  to  for- 
mer slaves.  ■     - 

"There  are  plenty  of  descendants 
of  slaves  from  the  South  living  here 
in  California  and  certainly  here  in 
Los  Angeles,"  Rushing  said. 

"Just  because  the  matter  is  taken 
up  by  a  state  legislature  far  removed 
from  the  South  doesn't  mean  it  does- 
n't have  an  impact  here,"  he  contin- 
ued. 

Neither  bill  expNcitly  mentions 
what  will  be  done  with  the  findings, 
although  the  information  will  be  pre- 
sented to  the  state  legislature. 

SB  2199  was  endorsed  by 
California  State  Conference  of  the 
NAACP,  the  American  Civil 
Liberties  Union  and  the  Rainbow 
Push  Coalition. 
The  Southern  Christian  leadership 


Conference  of  Greater  Los  Angeles 
also  expressed  their  support  for  the 
bill  in  a  letter  submitted  to  the  Senate 
Rules  Committee. 

"The  truth  that  Africans  in 
America  were  dehumanized  to  the 
level  of  beasts  of  burden  ...  is  more 
than  a  sad  chapter  in  our  national 
past,"  the  letter  said.  "It  is  an  awful 
reality  that  has  shaped  the  collective 
life  of  ancestors  of  slaves." 

Mary  Spletter,  a  spokeswoman 
for  the  UC  office  of  the  President, 
said  UCOP  is  in  the  process  of  send- 
ing out  queries  to  various  UC  cam- 
puses to  gauge  interest  from  faculty 
members  who  may  want  to  take  part 
in  the  colloquium. 

Spletter  said  the  funding  for  the 
conference  and  study  will  come  from 
the  UC's  General  Fund. 

Officials  at  the  UCLA  and  UC 
Berkeley  Departments  of  History 
could  not  comment  immediately  on 
whether  or  not  they  were  asked  to 
take  part  in  the  study. 


Restraining  order  prevents  nurse  wallc-outs 


WORKERS:  Judge  says  strike 
by  health-care  professionals 
is  threat  to  pubhc  health 


ByfBmHanigMi 
The  Associated  Piess 


A  Superior  Court  judge  Issued  a  tem- 
porary restraining  order  Tuesday  pre- 
venting nuraes,  lab  technicians  and 
other  medical  employees  from  walking 
off  the  job  today,  saying  it  is  a  danger  to 
public  health. 

Judge  Dzintra  Janavs  issued  the 
order  just  before  courts  closed  for  the 
day,  county  spokeswoman  Judy 
Hammond  said. 

The  order  affects  4,000  to  5,000 
employees. 

"We  are  quite  pleased,"  Hammond 
said.  "Our  concern  was  for  public  safe- 
ty." 


The  strike  is 

endangering  public 

safety  and  the  health  of 

the  people." 


■f 


Judy  Hammond 

County  spokeswoman 


i 


Jnion  ofncials  representing  47,000 
cointy  workers  said  they  were  disap- 
pointed with  the  ruling  but  said  it  will  not 
prevent  today's  planned  general  strike 
by  other  employees. 

"We  feel  the  way  the  judge  handled 
the  case  was  wrong.  We  think  there 
should  have  been  an  evidentiary  hear- 
ing. The  judge  did  not  allow  witnesses  to 
testify,"  said  Bart  Diener,  assistant  gen- 
eral nianager  for  Service  Employees 
International  Union  Local  660.  "But  the 
decision  was  not  unexpected." 

County  negotiators  agreed  Tuesday 
to  resume  contract  talks,  but  union  ofTi- 
cials  didn't  expect  a  resolution. 

Bart  Diener,  assistant  general  manag- 
er of  Service  Employees  International 
Union  Local  660,  noted  that  until 
Tuesday,  the  county  had  refused  to  nego- 
tiate while  the  union  was  planning  a  gen- 
eral strike  and  holding  on»<lay  walkouts 
at  specific  county  operations. 

The  effect  on  the  county's  hospitals 
and  dinics  from  a  strike  was  made  clear 
i-^WwwMinds  of  wupsea 


Proposal  gives  dtizenship  to 
incapadtated  without  oath 

LAWSUTT:  Family  says     i«"" 

„„»         !•      ..  Vijai  Rajan,  who  was  bom  in 

natUrallZaUOn  process     India,  suffers  from  cerebral  palsy. 

exclusionary  to  disabled    "^"scular  dystrophy,  seizures  and 

Crohn  s  disease,  a  severe  intestinal 
ailment.  She  uses  a  wheelchair  and 


Lillian  Cabral,  a  patient  resource  worker  at  County-USC  Medical 
Center,  protests  Tuesday  in  front  of  the  facility  In  Los  Angeles. 


and  related  health  workers  staged  a  one- 
day  walkout  at  four  large  hospitals,  a 
dozen  clinics,  the  county's  health  agency 
and  the  coroner's  office. 

Approximately  60  percent  to  70  per- 
cent of  nurses  did  not  show  up  for  work 
at  the  hospitals  and  clinics,  said  county 
spokeswoman  Judy  Hammond.  About 
12,000  of  the  county  personnel  who 
would  be  involved  in  a  general  strike 
work  in  health  fields. 

"We  are  saying  that  the  strike  is 
endangering  public  safety  and  the  health 
of  the  people,"  Hammond  said  of  the 
move  to  have  a  judge  issue  a  temporary 
restraining  order  banning  a  strike  by 
some  employees,  particularly  nurses 

Thg  lininn  tmJA 


ByBartJanscn 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Spurred  by 
the  pli^t  of  a  California  woman, 
the  House  passed  legislation 
Tuesday  to  allow  disabled  immi- 
grants to  become  citizens  without 
taking  an  oath  of  allegiance. 

If  the  Senate  agrees,  the  bill 
passed  by  voice  vote  in  the  House 
would  open  the  door  to  citizenship 
for  Vijai  Rajan,  24,  of  Anaheim. 
Republican  Rep.  Christopher  Cox, 
who  sponsored  the  bill,  had  called 
the  Immigration  and 

Naturalization  Service's  handling 
of  the  case  "iappalling"  because  the 
woman  suffers  from  cerebral  palsy 

and  other  ailments. 

"Unfortunately  when  the  system 

of  justice  does- 
n't work,  it  is     — _ii___^.^ 

heartbreaking 

for         those 

involved." 

Cox  told  the 

House  before 

the  vote.  "This 

legislation  also 

sends  a  strong 

signal       that 

long     delays 

and  bureau- 


Immigration  experts 

say  Rajan's  case 

illustrates  a  problem 

facing  about  1,000 

disabled  applicants. 


problems  due  to  strike-related  activities. 

"We  are  disappointed  the  county  has 
not  taken  serious  steps  in  this  regard." 
Diener  said.  "Our  goal  is  not  to  leave 
people  without  necessary  trauma  care. 
We're  not  going  to  leave  a  premie  (pre- 
mature infant)  in  a  neonatal  unit  without 
care." 

Other  one<lay  walkouts  this  month 
involved  employees  at  welfare  offices, 
jails,  beaches,  libraries  and  agencies 
which  deal  with  such  things  as  marriage 
licenses,  property  records  and  elections. 

Uniformed  Sheriff's  Department 
and  county  Fire  Department  personnel 
are  in  other  bargaining  units  not 
involved  in  the  vtalkout  plans  Doctors 


it  askfd  the  county  to — wpfesemed  by  two  utliei  uiiiuns  were 


identify  trauma-care  facilities  having     not  part  of  the  strike  plans 


cratic  impediments  are  not  the 
greetings  that  this  great  nation 
would  send  to  its  new  citizens.  I 
thank  the  Rajan  family  for  never 
losing  hope." 

The  Senate  earlier  passed  a  simi- 
lar measure  from  Sen.  Dianne 
Feinstein.  D<:alir.  so  that  chamber 
is  expected  to  approve  Cox's  bill 
before  the  session  ends. 

Sunder  Rajan.  the  woman's 
father,  expressed  concern  about  the 
need  for  a  second  Senate  vote 
because  the  remainder  of  the  ses- 
sion is  measured  in  days  rather  than 
weeks. 

"With  so  little  time  lefl  in  the  ses- 
sion, I'm  afraid  if  it  doesn't  happen 
now,  it  won't  happen  or  it  won't 
happen  for  a  long  time,"  he  said.  "If 
everybtydy  agrres  this  should  be 


receives  24-hour  care.  She  cannot 
understand,  recite  or  raise  her  hand 
to  take  the  oath. 

The  bill  would  allow  the  attorney 
general  to  waive  the  requirement 
for  the  oath  for  "ian  individual  with  a 
disability,  or  a  child,  who  is  unable 
to  understand  or  communicate  an 
understanding  of  the  meaning  of 
the  oath." 

Immigration  experts  say  Rajan's 
case  illustrates  a  problem  facing 
about  1,000  disabled  applicants. 
Although  the  agency  grants  waivers 
for  those  applicants  who  cannot 
take  the  citizenship  test,  it  requires 
that  they  be  able  to  make  a  "mean- 
ingful allegiance." 

Her  father  filed  a  federal  dis- 
crimination lawsuit  in  April  to  force 
the  Immigration  and 

Naturalization 
-^-— — ^»  Service  to 
grant  her  citi- 
zenship. The 
lawsuit  is 

pending  as  he 
awaits 
approval  of 
the  bill. 

Two  similar 
cases  were 
decided  last 
year.  In  Utah, 


a  federal  judge  ordered  a  mentally 
handicapped  man  be  granted  citi- 
zenship without  taking  the  oath.  In 
Hawaii,  a  federal  judge  upheld  the 
INS'  oath  requirement.  Both  rul- 
ings have  been  appealed. 

Bom  when  her  mother  was  visit- 
ing in  India.  Rajan  has  lived  in  the 
United  States  since  she  was  a  baby 
and  has  a  green  card.  Her  father 
became  a  naturalized  citizen  in 
1980,  her  mother  in  1994.  Her  older 
sister  was  bom  in  the  United  States. 
Rajan's  parents  sought  citizen- 
ship for  their  daughter  in  1994. 
when  she  tumed  18.  But  officials 
denied  the  application  in  1998  and 
rejected  an  appeal  the  following 
year,  citing  "applicant's  inability  to 
comprehend  the  oath  of  allegiance 
due  lo  medical  certi/ied  condition," 


done,  I  hope  there  will  be  no  prob-     according  to  INS  documents. 


WBdMsdiKOODberl  1,2000 


tW^MnNcwi 


Six  sc^ntists  receive  Nobel  Prizes  in  physics,  cliemistry  I   WORT  D  /^  M  ATinisJ 

fflNNERS:  Honorees  contributed ....,....,  I  ▼    ▼  V^XVL/X^     0(     1  >l/l.l  IV^IN 


MMne«b)iOaober1 1,2000 


WINNERS:  Honorees  contributed 
to  technology  that  helped  bring 
about  Infonnation  Revolution 


By  Joseph  B.  Verrengia 

The  Associated  Press 


The  Nobel  Prizes  in  physics  and  chemistry 
were  awarded  Tuesday  to  six  scientists  who 
helped  bring  about  the  Information  Revolution 
of  ever-smaller  and  faster  personal  computers, 
pocket  calculators,  cell  phones,  CD  players, 
lifelike  TV  screens  and  Gameboys. 

The  physics  prize  went  to  Jack  Kilby,  who 
invented  the  first  integrated  circuit  while  at 
Texas  Instruments  in  1958,  and  two  physicists 
whose  work  contributed  to  satellite  and  cell 
phone  technology:  Herbert  Kroemer  of  the 
University  of  California-SanU  Barbara  and 
Zhores  Alfcrov  of  the  A.F.  loffe  Physico- 
Technico  Institute  in  St.  Petersburg,  Russia. 

The  chemistry  prize  went  to  Alan  Heeger,  64, 
of  the  University  of  California-Santa  Barbara, 
Alan  MacDiarmid.  73,  of  the  University  of 
Pennsylvania  and  Hideki  Shirakawa,  64,  of  the 
University  of  Tsukuba  in  Japan. 

The  three  modified  plastics  so  they  can  con- 
duct electricity;  the  pioneering  work  with  "bril- 
liant plastics"  could  someday  lead  to  computers 
as  small  and  light  as  a  wristwatch. 

"1  am  doubly  proud  that  Professors  Alan  J. 
Heeger  and  Herbert  Kroemer  have  been  award- 
ed Nobel  Prizes  for  their  landmark  scientific 
research,"  said  UC  President  Richard 
Atkinson. 

"Their  work  fulfills  one  of  the  great  missions 
of  university-based  research  -  to  make  a  real  dif- 
ference in  the  everyday  lives  of  millions  of  peo- 
ple around  the  worid,"  Atkinson  continued. 

The  prizes  awarded  by  the  Royal  Swedish 
Academy  of  Sciences  are  each  worth  $915,000. 
The  chemistry  prize  will  be  split  three  ways, 
while  Kilby  will  receive  half  of  the  physics 
award  and  his  co-winners  will  get  the  rest'. 

Recent  Nobels  have  celebrated  basic 
research  into  the  behavior  of  subatomic  parti- 
cles and  chemical  reactions  -  highly  arcane  sub- 
jects with  few  real-world  applications.  This 
year's  winners  conducted  experiments  and 
developed  products  that  changed  everyday  life 
in  the  largest  cities  and  the  most  remote  villages. 
"These  guys  have  controlled  the  properties 


AlmHMgwand  his  wlf^|fc<lv  admire  flovvers  from  the  Vice  CharKdlorof  the  UnivereityS 
Califomia,  Santa  Bart>ara,after  Heeger  won  the  2000  ^k^be^  Prize  in  Chemistry  on  Tuesday. 


of  materials  in  ways  that  nature  wouldn't  do  on 

its  own,"  said  Louis  Bloomfield,  author  of 

"Why  Things  Work"  and  a  University  of 

Virginia  physicist.  "They  made  it  complicated 

and  incredibly  precise. 

They  make  cities  possi-     ■^~*~"— — ^m- 

ble." 

Kilby's  fingernail- 
sized  integrated  circuit, 
a  forerunner  of  the 
microchip,  replaced 
bulky  and  unreliable 
switches  in  the  first 
computing  devices.  The 
Nobel  panel  said  his 
work  allowed  electron- 
ics to  become  smaller,  faster,  cheaper  and  more 
powerful.  He  also  co-invented  the  first  pocket 
calculator. 

"It's  a  wonderful  thing,"  Kilby  said  of  his 
Nobel.  He  said  he  thought  the  microchip 
'•would  be  important  for  electronics  as  we  knew 
it  then,  but  I  didn't  understand  how  much  it 
would  permit  the  field  to  expand." 

Kilby  and  Robert  Noyce,  an  industrial  pio- 
neer in  the  Silicon  Valley,  are  considered  the  co- 


The  prizes  awarded  by  the 

Royal  Swedish  Academy 

of  Sciences  are  each 

worth  $915,000. 


inventors  of  the  integrated  circuit.  Kilby  built 
the  first  circuit,  but  Noyce  received  the  first 
patent  for  a  microchip,  in  1961,  three  years 
before  Kilby.  Noyce  died  in  1990. 

"We  shared  credit 
■'^'■^"■^■■'^■~~  for  the  invention  over 
the  years  ...I'm  sorry  he 
is  not  alive.  I'm  sure  if 
he  were,  he  would  share 
in  this  prize,"  Kilby 
said. 

Texas    Instruments 
named  its  SI54  million 

research  complex  after 

Kilby  and  endowed  a 
professorship    at    the 
University  of  Texas  in  his  name.  Kilby,  76,  start- 
ed a  foundation  that  distributes  science  and 
technology  awards. 

Alferov,  70,  and  Kroemer,  a  72-year-old 
German-bom  U.S.  citizen,  independently  pro- 
posed the  heterostructure  laser,  made  of  semi- 
conducting material  as  thin  as  a  few  atoms 
apiece.  The  technology  has  been  used  in  mobile 
phones  and  satellite  links,  and  used  to  build 
laser  diodes,  which  drive  the  flow  of  informa- 


tion on  the  Internet  and  are  found  in  compact 
disc  players,  bar-code  readers  and  ISser  point- 
ers. 

Alferov,  who  cdebratied  with  colleagues  in 
St.  Petersburg,  hinted  at  the  decline  of  his  coun- 
try's once-extraordinary  scientific  community 
amid  the  upheaval  in  post-Soviet  society. 

"Without  science,  Russia  will  not  revive. 
Here's  to  our  science,  to  our  physids,"  Alferov 
said,  raising  a  glass  of  champagne. 

The  three  chemistry  prize  winners  were  cited, 
for  discoveries  that  fundamentally  altered  how 
we  think  of  plastic  and  how  we  use  it. 

The  three  developed  conductive  polymers 
that  have  been  used  to  reduce  static  electricity 
and  interference  on  photographic  film  and  com- 
puter screens.  They  have  been  used  in  the  devel- 
opment of  color  television  screens,  cellular 
phone  displays  and  "smart  windows"  that 
reflect  sunlight,  and  they  are  employed  in  oper- 
ating rooms  to  reduce  static  duu-ges  that  could 
endanger  patients  during  surgery. 

"My  colleagues  all  over  the  world  have  said, 
'One  of  these  days  ...,'  but  it's  still  a  fantastic 
surprise,"  Heeger  said.  "You  can  take  simple 
things  like  polymers  that  are  made  of  plastics 
and  from  that  one  can  make  many  different 
applications  and  technologies." 

The  three  scientists  created  polyacetylene,  a 
plastic  that  acts  much  like  a  very  fine  aluminum 
foil  and  can  be  made  in  a  lab  without  mining 
raw  materials. 

Lighter  and  more  flexible,  the  new  plastics 
are  being  used  in  cheaper  and  easier-to-manu- 
facturc  versions  of  many  electronic  products, 
including  light  emitting  diodes  in  digital  dis- 
plays. Sheets  of  conductive  plastic  films  are 
being  incorporated  into  thin,  flat  TV  screens, 
low-static  computer  monitors  and  traffic  signs 
that  glow  without  bulbs. 

On  the  horizon:  molecular  computers  using 
plastic  molecules  to  carry  electrical  current. 

"The  physics  prizes  are  about  the  electronics 
of  today  and  the  chemistry  prizes  are  about  the 
electronics  of  the  future,"  academy  member  Per 
Ahlberg  said. 

The  Nobel  Prize  in  medicine  was  awarded 
Monday  to  a  Swede  and  two  Americans  for  dis- 
coveries about  how  brain  cells  communicate. 

The  economics  prize  will  be  announced 
Wednesday  and  the  literature  prize  Thursday 
The  peace  prize  will  be  announced  Friday  in 
Oslo,  Norway.  The  prizes  will  be  presented 
Dec.  10. 


Dow  Jones  tndustriats 


down.  44.03 
dose:  10,524.40 


^****» 

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in 
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FREE  ADVANCE  SCREENING 

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Freud  Playhouse  In  Macgowan  Hall 

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INFO?:  call  310-825-1958 

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Decrease  in  fighting  not  felt  in  Jerusalem 


VIOLENCE:  Appeals  from 
U.N.  official,  Clinton  ring 
to  gather  peace  summit 


By  Laura  King 
The  Associated  Press 


JERUSALEM  -  Amid  scattered 
but  ugly  new  outbreaks  of  violence  in 
the  West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip,  the 
U.N.  secretary-general  appealed 
Tuesday  to  Israel  and  the 
Palestinians  to  get  back  to  the  bar- 
gaining table  and  end  the  cycle  of 
killing.  "The  region  has  suffered 
enough,"  he  said. 

Israeli  Prime  Minister  Ehud 
Barak  said  it  was  too  soon  to  tell  if  the 
relative  calm  of  recent  days  would 
hold  after  a  series  of  ferocious  clash- 
es that  have  left  88  people  dead  since 
Sept.  28,  most  of  them  Palestinians. 
Tuesday  was  a  day  of  intense  diplo- 
matic activity,  with  President  Clinton 
calling  Barak  and  Palestinian  leader 
Yasser  Arafat  in  an  attempt  to  gather 
support  for  a  summit.  In  the  region 


The  Associaied  Press 

An  Israeli  guard  trains  his  gun  on  Palestinian  stone-throwers  from 
behind  a  barricade  in  the  West  Bank  town  of  Hebron. 


to  meet  with  both  sides  were 
Secretary-General  Kofi  Annan. 
Russian  Foreign  Minister  Igor 
Ivanov  and  European  Union  securi- 
ty chief  Javier  Solana. 

Annan,  seeking  to  resolve  the  cri- 
sis that  has  brought  the  Israeli- 


Palestinian  peace  process  to  the 
brink  of  extinction,  has  taken  on 
another  difticult  task  as  well:  trying 
to  broker  the  release  of  three  Israeli 
soldiers  captured  on  the  Lebanon 
border  by  the  Shiite  Muslim  guerril- 
las of  Hezbollah. 


The  secretary-general,  who  goes 
to  Lebanon  on  Wednesday,  said  the 
soldiers  were  believed  to  be  alive  and 
well,  and  called  their  capture  a  viola- 
tion of  international  law.  Israel  has 
massed  troops,  including  elite  com- 
mando units,  along  the  border  and 
has  warned  of  drastic  consequences 
if  the  soldiers  are  not  freed. 

In  the  West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip, 
fighting  between  Israeli  troops  and 
Palestinian  stone-throwers  and  gun- 
men has  fallen  off  in  recent  days, 
after  last  week's  raging  street  battles. 
Tuesday  again  saw  isolated  clashes, 
near  the  West  Bank  town  of 
Ramallah  and  the  Gaza  Strip  town  of 
Rafah,  on  the  Egyptian  border.  The 
Israeli  army  issued  a  statement  not- 
ing a  "significant  drop  in  violent  inci- 
dents in  the  West  Bank." 

But  even  a  lowered  level  of  inten- 
sity exacted  a  terrible  toll.  At  Rafah, 
12-year-old  Sami  Abu  Jazar  was 
declared  brain  dead  after  being  shot 
in  the  head  during  a  stone^hrowing 
clash,  hospital  officials  said. 


S«elSIUEl.p49e12 


Ousted  Yugoslav  leader,  wife 
plot  to  regain  political  power 


MILOSEVIC  Former  president 
in  seclusion  after  uprising, 
but  refuses  to  accept  defeat 


By  Dhsm  Stojanevic 

The  Associated  Press 


BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia  -  Abandoned 
by  his  closest  allies  and  living  under  virtual 
house  arrest,  Slobodan  Milosevic  and  his 
wife,  a  once  formidable  politician  in  her  oWn 
right,  are  sitting  out  Yugoslavia's  pro- 
democracy  tidal  wave  in  a  government  villa. 

Despite  being  overthrown  in  last  week's 
popular  uprising,  which  brought  democratic 
President  Vojislav  Kostunica  to  power, 
Milosevic  and  his  ambitious  neo-communist 
wife,  Mirjana  Markovic,  haven't  given  up. 
Although  dozens  of  former  Milosevic  loyal- 
ists switch  stripes  or  are  ousted  by  angry 
crowds  daily,  the  pair  is  plotting  to  regain 
political  control,  say  officials  of  Milosevic's 
Socialist  party  who  visited  them  recently. 

"Mira  is  furious,"  said  one  official,  refer- 
ring to  Markovic,  believed  to  be  the  architect 

S 


of  many  of  the  strategies  that  kept  Milosevic 
in  power  for  13  years.  "She  suffered  a  ner- 
vous breakdown  when  generals  last  week 
told  her  and  Slobo  that  they  were  finished." 
The  party  officials  -  who  all  spoke  on  con- 
dition of  anonymity  -  said  Milosevic  looks 
like  a  shadow  of  the  formidable  dictator  who 
brooked  no  resistance  to  his  rule. 

Pale  and  tired,  he  frequently  hangs  his 
head  as  he  walks  slowly  through  the  white 
brick  house  on  Uzicka  Street  in  Belgrade's 
upscale  Dedinje  district. 

The  former  ruling  couple  rarely  venture 
outside  the  building,  where  they  are  guarded 
by  a  paramilitary  force  of  some  100  well- 
armed  men,  headed  by  police  Gen.  Scnta 
Milenkovic,  Milosevic's  longtime  personal 
bodyguard.  Their  daughter  Marija  is 
believed  to  be  staying  with  them. 

The  house  is  in  a  complex  of  renovated  vil- 
las that  used  to  be  attached  to  Milosevic's 
official  residence,  which  was  destroyed  by 
NATO  bombs  last  year.  It  has  a  spacious  liv- 
ing room  with  a  green  marble  wall,  small 
bedrooms  upstairs  and  a  large  garden  they 


SecWCOSUVM^pagelO 


The  Associated  Press 

MbjaiM  Markovic  the  leader  of  JUL-Vugoslav  Leftist 
Union,  and  her  husband  and  partner  in  ruling  coali- 
tion, Yugoslav  President  Slobodan  Milosevic,  wait  to 
vote  Sept  24  at  polling  station  in  Belgrade. 


down:  115.02 
dose.  3,240  J4 


Yen:  107.75 
Euio:1.147S 


? 


ORLP  &  NATION  BRIEFS 


Dr.  Laura  apologizes  to 
gay  community 

Laura  Schlessinger  used  the  Jewish  Yom 
Kippur  holiday  -  the  Day  of  Atonement  -  to 
apologize  to  gays  and  lesbians  for  "poorly  cho- 
sen" words  she  said  have  been  perceived  as  hate 
speech. 

"On  the  Day  of  Atonement,  Jews  are  com- 
manded to  seek  forgiveness  from  people  we 
have  hurt,"  the  radio  and  TV  talk  show  host. 
who  is  Jewish,  said  in  a  newspaper  ad.  *  I  deeply 
regret  the  hurt  this  situation  has  caused  the  gay 
and  lesbian  community." 

The  ad,  in  the  form  of  a  letter  signed  by 
Schleuinger,  was  included  in  a  special  "Gay 
Hoflywood"  edition  of  the  trade  paper  Daily 
Variety.  The  Wednesday  issue  examines 
progress  by  gays  and  lesbians  in  the  entertain- 
ment industry 

Yom  Kippur,  during  which  Jews  fast  and 
seek  forgiveness  for  sins,  was  Monday. 

SchicMinger  has  been  criticized  by  yay  rights 


activists  for  referring  to  homosexual- 
ity as  a  "biological  error"  and 
"deviant."  In  March,  she  said  she  was 
sorry  her  radio  comments  have  hurt 
people. 

Her  words  of  contrition  then  and  now  failed 
to  placate  her  aitics. 

"Laura  Schlessinger  once  again  blames  oth- 
ers for  the  impact  of  her  rhetoric,  refusing  to 
take  responsibility  for  her  precisely  chosen,  sci- 
entifically inaccurate  descriptions  of  gay  and 
lesbian  lives."  said  Joan  M.  Garry,  executive 
director  of  the  Gay  &  Lesbian  Alliance  Against 
Defamation,  in  a  statement. 

Buchanan  Web  sites 
contain  links  to  porn 

SAN  FRANCISCO  -  Some  Web  sites 
about  presidential  candidate  Patrick  Buchanan, 
the  Reform  Party  nominee,  are  baring  more 
than  politics.  ' 

— Somt  of  the  addrmci  link 


Spending  fimits^ 
provote  debate 
over  free  speech 
impediments 

COURT:  Removing  green 
from  politics  is  still  issue; 
'hard  money'  increasing 


ByAimeGearan 

The  Associated  Press  *- 

WASHINGTON  -  The  Supreme 
Court  waded  into  the  debate  over 
money  in  politics  Tuesday,  agreeing  to 
decide  whether  some  federal  spending 
limits  on  political  parties  are  an  uncon- 
stitutional crimp  on  free  speech. 

A  ruling  in  the  case  could  erase 
spending  limits  on  party  "hard 
money,"  the  cash  raised  under  federal 
law  that  can  be  used  for  direct  help  to 
candidates.  Without  limits,  parties 
would  be  free  to  funnel  huge  amounts 
to  chosen  candidates  early  on,  or  lavish 
last-minute  cash  on  the  closest  races. 

The  court  will  look  at  the  caps  on  a 
political  party's  spending  done  in  con- 
cert with  a  particular  campaign.  Such 
party  money,  called  coordinated 
expenditures,  usually  goes  for  such 
things  as  mass  mailings  and  ads  pro- 
moting an  individual  candidate. 

The  court  eariier  struck  down  limits 
on  party  money  spent  independently 
of  the  candidate's  campaign.  In  both 
instances,  the  party  money  is  not  con- 
sidered a  campaign  contribution  since 
it  remains  separate  from  the  candi- 
date's coffers. 

"Depending  on  how  the  court  sides, 
the  parties  could  be  given  yet  another 
device  for  contributing  even  greater  - 
amounts  of  money  to  the  political  . 
process,"  said  Steven  Weiss, 
spokesman  for  the  nonpartisan  Center 
for  Responsive  Politics,  which  tracks 
campaign  money. 

"This  would  remove  any  remaining 
obstacle  that  parties  now  face  to  spend- 
ing as  much  hard  money  as  they  want, 
whenever  they  want  and  wherever  they 
want,"  Weiss  said. 

Reducing  the  influence  of  money  in 
politics  was  the  hallmark  of  Sen.  John 
McCain's  insurgent  candidacy  in  the 
Republican  presidential  primary,  and 
campaign  finance  has  remained  an  . 
issue  in  the  presidential  campaign. 
At  the  first  presidential  debate  last 


Se«SPEN0IIW,|Mg«14 


sites,  which  is  irking  Buchanan  and 
running  mate  Ezola  Foster. 
The  two  are  suing  the  Durham, 
N.C.,  firm  of  Rendina  Solutions,  which 
has  registered  Web  addresses  that  link  to 
pornographic  material,  the  Natural  Law  Party, 
the  National  Abortion  and  Reproductive 
Rights  Action  League  and  Democratic  nomi- 
nee Vice  President  Al  Gort's  site. 

Buchanan's  attorney.  Mark  T.  Clausen  of 
Wirulsor,  Calif,  wants  the  sites  shut  down  or  for 
them   to   have   a  disclaimer  and   link   to 
Buduman's  official  site,  buchananreform.org. 
"We  want  this  stopped,"  Qausen  said. 

States  apply  parental 
consent  laws  to  RU-486 

COLUMBIA,  S.C.  -  A  growing  number  of 
states  plan  to  apply  parental  notification  laws  to 
the  abortion  pill  RU-486  before  it  is  given  to 
girls  wanting  to  end  pregnancies. 


one  parent  be  notified  before  a  minor  has  an 
abortion.  So  far,  state  officials  in  Arkansas, 
Georgia,  Idaho,  Nebraska,  Rhode  Island, 
South  Carolina,  Tennessee,  Texas  and  Virginia 
have  all  said  their  notification  laws  likely  would 
be  applied  to  RU-4g6. 

"I  know  the  parents  of  South  Carolina  would 
want  to  be  notified  whether  it's  an  office  proce- 
dure or  a  pill,"  South  Carolina  Attorney 
General  Charlie  Condon  said  TUesday. 

Condon  plans  to  ask  the  South  Carolina 
Medical  Association  to  remind  doctors  that  at 
least  one  parent  or  legal  guardian  has  to  be  noti- 
fied when  a  girl  younger  than  17  seeks  an  abor- 
tion. 

The  association  has  no  problems  with 
Condon's  request,  said  general  counsel  Aaron 
Kozloski. 

"South  Carolina  law  clearly  defines  what  an 
abortion  is,"  Kozloski  said.  "It  docs  not  distin- 
guish between  a  chemical  and  surgical  proce- 
dure." 


to  pomographtB Thirty<we  sUtes  liave  laws  requiring  ai  Itest     ZiXnptled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reporte 


WMncsbji  OcioiMf  tt, '2M 


OOfMdUmt 


tm^mmmt 


I^Hj  MM  ^Kw> 


MMnesdjy,  Octobcf  1 1, 2000        7 


NASA  forced  to  delay 
1 00th  shuttle  launch 


Th«  Associated  Press 


A  young  Vietnamese  girl  makes  her  way  through  the  flood  waters  in  Dong  Thap  Province  of 
Vietnam's  Mekong  Delta  on  Sunday. 


daim  lives  of  cNldren 


VIETNAM:  Many  young  become  victims  due  to  lack 
of  parental  supervision;  little  can  be  done  to  help 


ByTiniTran 

The  Assodated  Press 

CAO  LANH.  Vietnam  -  She 
recounts  it  numbly:  Nguyen  Thi 
Hop's  one-room  hut  had  filled  chest- 
high  with  water,  so  she  went  to  get 
tree  trunks  to  build  a  bridge  to  the 
road.  She  called  her  16-year-old 
daughter,  who  was  minding  the  baby. 


to  come  help  for  a  moment. 

When  Hop  ran  back  into  the 
house,  the  baby  had  disappeared  - 
fallen  into  the  murky  water  beneath 
the  raised  wooden  bed. 

"1  don't  know  why  1  wasn't  more 
careful,"  said  Hop,  39,  weeping  as 
she  recalled  the  death  of  her  I -year- 
old  daughter,  Bui  Thi  Diem. 
"Normally  I  watdi  over  her  with  spe- 


cial care.  1  don't  know  why  I  didn't 
that  day" 

The  tragedy  has  been  repeated 
over  and  over  in  Vietnam's  Mekong 
Delta,  hit  by  the  worst  flooding  in 
four  decades.  An  astounding  75  per- 
cent of  the  fatalities  -  236  of  319  so 
far  -  have  been  children,  most  under 
age  3. 

"The  situation  is  tragic  -  the  more 
so  because  there  is  very  little  we  can 
do  to  help,"  said  U.N.  Children's 
Fund  spokesman  Damien 
Personnaz.  ... 


SPACE:  Workers  discover 
metal  pin  on  fuel  line, 
postpone  Discovery  liftoff 


By  Marda  Dunn 

The  Associated  Press 

CAPE  CANAVERAL.  Fla.  - 

NASA  was  forced  to  call  ofTTuesday 
night's  planned  launch  of  space  shut- 
tle Discovery  because  of  a  small 
metal  pin  found  on  a  fuel  line  a  few 
hours  before  liftoff. 

The  4-inch  pin  was  discovered 
after  the  seven  astronauts  had  board- 
ed Discovery  and  the  countdown  was 
underway  for  NASA's  100th  space 
shuttle  launch.  Workers  conducting  a 
routine  inspection  of  the  shuttle  spot- 
ted the  pin  on  the  liquid-oxygen  line 
between  Discovery  and  its  external 
fuel  tank. 

Engineers  feared  the  pin  could 
blow  into  Discovery  during  liftoff 
and  possibly  damage  the  shuttle. 

"We  just  can't  get  comfortable 
with  the  pin,"  said  launch  director 
Mike  Leinbach.  He  said  another 
launch  attempt  would  be  made 
Wednesday  evening  -  provided  the 
pin  can  be  removed  by  then. 

It  will  be  the  fourth  launch  attempt 
in  less  than  a  week.  The  previous 
delays  were  caused  by  gusty  wind  and 
mechanical  problems. 

The  pin,  apparently  a  piece  of 
ground-support  equipment,  weighs 
about  8  ounces,  has  a  3-inch  handle 
across  the  top.  and  is  attached  to  a  10- 
ind)  cord,  said  launch  commentator 
Joel  Wells. 

NASA  considered  smding  out  a 


team  to  try  to  remove  the  pin,  but  did 
not  have  tools  long  enough  to  reach 
it,  Wells  said.  Managers  discussed 
the  possibility  of  dislodging  the  pin 
with  streams  of  water  or  air,  but  to  no 
avail. 

NASA  must  launch  Discovery 
with  two  new  segments  for  the  space 
station,  and  the  pieces  must  be 
installed  before  the  outpost  can  be 
occupied  full-time.  The  first  perma- 
nent crew  is  scheduled  to  lift  off  from 
Kazakstan  on  Oct.  30. 

Aboard  Discovery  is  a  boxy 
framework  that  contains  motion-con- 
trol gyroscopes  and  antennas  for  the 
space  station,  and  a  shuttle  docking 
port  to  be  used  for  future  linkups. 

Giant  electricity-producing  solar 
wings  will  be  mounted  on  the  frame- 
work, or  truss,  during  a  visit  by  space 
shuttle  Endeavour  in  December. 

Four  of  Discovery's  astronauts 
will  take  turns  going  outside  to  wire 
up  the  truss  and  docking  port.  Four 
spacewalks  are  planned  over  four 
consecutive  days,  making  this  one  of 
the  most  complicated  construction 
missions  ever  attempted  by  NASA. 

The  astronauts  have  had  plenty  of 
time  to  get  ready  for  their  1 1-day  mis- 
sion -  three  years,  three  times  longer 
than  most. 

Russia's  economic  problems 
threw  the  space  station  construction 
schedule  into  disarray;  it  wasn't  back 
on  track  until  the  Russians  launched 
the  living  quarters  in  July. 

Six  of  the  seven  astronauts  aboard 
Discovery  are  space  veterans.  The 
lone  rookie  is  Air  Force  Lt.  Col. 
Pamela  Melroy,  only  the  third 
woman  to  serve  as  a  space  shuttle 
pilot. 


--\  Fall  E^nts  ^ 

University  ^tholic  Center 

633  Gayley  AvenuelLo^  Angeles,  CA  90024 


comj^  Event 


Pizza  and 

Election  2000:  A  Wi 

Teaching  ap/l^'zxu 
Wednesday,  Ckbfe      9-ypin 


atholic 


Confirmatioii  ClasflP^^^^  Qctober  16 
from  ^^pm 

Inquiry  Classes  (RClKy  start  October  24 
from  7-8:30r)m 

Bible  Stud^ 

Tuesdays,  7 -8: 30pm 


Weekend  Retreat 

at  the  beach 

\g  for  an  Intimate  Lifestyle 

Friday  EvcfllC  October  27  - 
Sunday,  October  29 


mm Schedule  of  Services: 

^K      Sunday  Masses:      10:30am,  7:00pm  and  9:00pm 
4 mw^     Mon.,  We4,^||ass:      12JQ^ Ackennan  2410 (on campus) 
Wiiurs.  Communion  Seh4qg|gg||impm  Ackerman  2410  (on  campus) 


For  more  information,  please  call  the  UCC  at  (310)  208-5015 

The  UCC  is  a  member  of  the  University  Religious  Conference  at  UCLA  for  over  70  years! 


J .  ■ 


WANjTEO: 


Visional 
Creators. 
Evpluatorhi 
Problem-Solvers  '^v 


r*^-*2!ii 


Yaakov  s  attention  to  detail  is  critical  ivlien  documenting  and  analyzing 
tlie  structures  of  derivative  trades.  On  weekends,  its  his  keen  eye 
ttiat  lielps  him  make  an  impression.  V\/hat  do  you  see? 


OR^N. 


Goldman,  Sachs  &  Co. 

Infomiation  Session 

Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Monday,  October  16,  2000 

6:00  p.m.  -  8:00  p.m. 


Investment  Banking  Fair 

Bradley  International  Center,  International  Room 

Thursday,  October  19,  2000 

7:00  p.m.  -  10K)0  p.m. 

Send  Cover  Letter/Resume/Transcript  By  October  24 

Goldman,  Sachs  &  Co. 

Fox  Plaza,  Suite  2600 

2121  Avenue  of  the  Stars 

Los  Angeles,  CA  90067  ~ 

Fax:  310-407-5555 

Attn:  Joel  Werner 


«> 


,;■  -  ^:  .; 


OR 

JobTrak, 

Via  the  Career  Center's  website 

www.career.ucla.edu 


.'v-Tj. 


■-I*'. 


If  you  have  any  questions,  please  feel  free  to  contact  Joel  Werner  (310-407-5704)  or  Jill  Axelrod  (212-902-7286) 


(ioldilwiil 
SacJis 


MIND8.  WIDE  OPENf^ 
MnAnnr.ga.oonn 

GoUman  Sachi.  an  equal  opportinlly  employw.  doM  nrt  dlwto^ 


8         Wednesday,  October  11, 2000 


Daily  Brum  News 


Environmentalist  Kennedy  files 
to  stop  U.S.  militaiy  exercises 


NAVY:  Puerto  Rican  bomb 
range  infringes  on  rights 
of  endangered  species 


By  Chris  Hawley 

The  Associated  Press 

SAN    JUAN,    Puerto    Rico 
Environmental       activist       Robert 
Kennedy  Jr.  asked  a  federal  judge 
Tuesday  to  stop 

U.S.  Navy  exer-      ^^^^.^.i..^ 
cises  on  Puerto 
Rico's   outlying 
island  of 

Vieques,  charg- 
ing that  six 
decades  of  explo- 
sions have 
harmed  endan- 
gered sea  crea- 
tures and  conta- 
minated land. 

Kennedy,  act- 


The  lawsuit  says  there 
are  13  endangered 

or  threatened  species 

near  the  bombing 

range. 


ing  as  senior  counsel  for  the  New  York- 
based  National  Resources  Defense 
Council,  filed  a  55-page  complaint  and 
hundreds  of  pages  of  evidence  asking 
for  a  temporary  restraining  order  as 


the  Navy  prepares  for  a  new  round  of 
exercises  around  Vieques  this  month. 

Kennedy  lold  reporters  his  case  con- 
tended that  the  Navy  had  violated  the 
Endangered  Species  Act  with  its  bomb- 
ing. "The  law  is  so  dear ...  there  is  no 
doubt  that  the  Navy  broke  the  law,"  he 
told  reporters  after  a  three-hour  meet- 
ing in  the  chambers  of  federal  Judge 
Juan  Perez  Gimenez  to  argue  the  case 
with  U.S.  attorneys. 

"They  wouldn't  get  away  with  this  in 
the  U.S.,"  he  said. 
^— i— .^_  "If  they  tried  to 
do  this  in  New 
York,  people 
would  be  all  over 
them." 

Kennedy  said 
Perez  Gimenez 
promised  to 
decide  by 

Wednesday 

whether  to  issue 

the    order    and 
"  scheduled  an  in- 

depth  hearing  Oct.  20. 

Navy   spokesman    Jeff  Gordon 
called  the  accusations  unfounded. 


prepaid  lor  next  det^ 


Omqt  Brain  Newt 


Wednesday,  October  11, 2000 


ELECTION:  Candidates 
target  education  issue, 
each  other's  campaigns 


S«e  KENNEDY,  page  10 


ByMikeGlover 

The  Associated  Press ;  '■ 

BRADENTON,  Ra.  -  Al  Gore 
called  for  "bold  steps"  to  improve 
education  and  George  W.  Bush  pro- 
moted himself  as  a  Republican  who 
appeals  to  "discerning  Democrats." 
while  sniping  between  their  two 
camps  continued  Tuesday.    . 

Taking  a  break  from  preparation 
for  Wednesday  night's  debate.  Bush 
showcased  the  support  of  Griffin 
Bell,  who  served  as  U.S.  attorney 
general  under  Jimmy  Carter.  "It's  so 
important  for  this  campaign  to  reach 
across  the  partisan  divide,"  he  said  at 
a  rally  Tuesday  in  Blountville,  Tenn., 
his  Democratic  rival's  home  state. 

Gore,  who's  been  practicing  for 
the  debate  in  Rorida,  visited  a  com- 
munity college  in  Bradenton  to  tout 
his  proposal  to  make  $10,000  per 
year  in  college  tuition  lax  deductible. 
He  said  that  would  move  the  nation 
toward  an  era  where  at  least  two 
years  of  college  is  "pretty  much  an 


The  Associated  Press 


Republican  presidential  candidate  Texas  Gov.  George  W.  Bush, 
flanked  by  secret  service  agents,  holds  a  baby  at  a  rally  Tuesday. 


expectation." 

Gore  sought  to  bring  the  cam- 
paign's focus  to  education,  an  issue 
that  traditionally  works  for 
Democrats,  but  where  Bush  has 
made  some  inroads.  He  rejected  crit- 
icism that  Democrats  simply  want  to 
throw  more  money  at  schools. 

"I   don't  think   the  answer  is 


money  alone,"  Gore  said  at  Manatee 
Community  Colleges.  "We  need 
new  ideas,  but  you  still  can't  get  the 
results  we  need,  without  new 
resources." 

After  taking  Monday  off  to  pre- 
pare   for    the    debate    in    North 


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INFORMATION  SESSION 

Wednesday,  October  18,  2000   •   6:00  p.m. 

UCLA.  The  Career  Center.  2nd  Floor 


TEACH  AMERICA 


UCLA  fllumnus  and 

r     pastor  of  worship  at 

the  Lanqlei;  Vinegard 

For  more  Info,  email 
freshuiind®mail.com  or 
brouise  uiuiui.upcla.org 


10       Wednesday,  October  11,2000 


Daily  Brum  News 


■— ^■— ^"^-^-^^  ■    I     ^  . Ill  II 


IMI^  DfWi  NCWS 


Wednesday,  October  11,2000       11 


YUGOSLAVIA 

From  page  5 

don't  dare  enjoy. 

The  former  first  couple  rarely 
receive  visitors,  and  communicate 
with  close  aides  and  their  remaining 
friends  by  telephone. 

Those  who  have  managed  to  see 
them  since  last  Thursday's  street 
riots  say  Markovic  is  blaming  her 
closest  neo-communist  allies  for  her 
husband's  Sept.  24  election  loss. 

Milosevic  is  using  words  such  as 
"street  coup"  for  the  riots  that  top- 
pled him.  while  Markovic  is  cursing 
military  generals  for  failing  to  use 
force  against  the  demonstrators. 
They  have  pinned  their  hopes  for  a 
return  to  power  on  the  secret  service 
and  its  head,  Rade  Markovic,  who 
still  has  not  publicly  endorsed 
Kostunica  as  the  new  Yugoslav  presi- 
dent. 

Markovic,  no  relation  to 
Milosevic's  wife,  commands  a  force 
of  red  berets  and  a  Special  Anti- 
Terrorist  Unit.  Their  loyalties  are 
unclear,  however  -  at  least  some 
refused  to  use  force  during 
Thursday's  pro-democracy  riots. 

Faced  with  increasingly  vocal  calls 
for  his  arrest  for  corruption,  econom- 
ic mismanagement  and  four  wars 
that  made  Yugoslavia  a  pariah  state, 
Milosevic  is  also  considering  fleeing 


to  Russia  or  China  -  among  the  few 
countries  that  might  accept  him  -  if 
his  comeback  plans  are  quashed. 

"If  Milosevic  is  found  responsible 
for  all  those  misdeeds  he  is  accused 
of,  of  course  he  will  have  to  go  on 
trial,"  said  Milan  Protic,  the  new 
opposition  mayor  of  Belgrade. 

Even  though  Kostunica  has  fre- 
quently said  he  would  not  extradite 
Milosevic  to  the  U.N.  tribunal  in  The 
Hague,  Netherlands,  where  he  is 
wanted  for  war  crimes  in  Kosovo, 
Milosevic  is  convinced  Kostunica 
will  change  his  mind  and  hand  him 
over  once  he  takes  full  control  of  the 
country. 

Last  Friday,  when  -Milosevic 
announced  in  a  TV  address  that  he 
was  stepping  down,  he  said  he 
planned  to  devote  time  to  his  family 
and  grandson. 

But  the  next  day  his  son,  Marko, 
left  Belgrade  for  Moscow  together 
with  his  wife  and  the  grandson,  indi- 
cating Milosevic  might  follow. 

On  Monday,  China,  once  a 
staunch  Milosevic  supporter,  refused 
to  let  Milosevic's  son  into  the  coun- 
try and  he  was  put  on  a  return  flight 
back  to  Moscow,  Russian  reporters 
said. 

"it  is  doubtful  that  Milosevic  will 
be  able  to  enjoy  a  peaceful  life  with 
privileges  of  an  ex-president  for  very 
long  time  in  Belgrade,"  said  analyst 
Ljubodrag  Stojadinovic. 


Tr-ain  to  be  a  Listener- 


UCLA  PEER  HELPLINE 


Help  otKer^wKtlc^lco/Kiamgp 

The  UCLA  Peer  Helpline  is  a  volunteei 

organization  that  recruits  and  trains 

new  hsteners  every  Fall  and  Spring 

quarter.  If  you're  interested,  come  to 
our  Fall  Quarter  Orientation: 

Wednesday,  October  1 1 

CHS  63-105 

6  pm  to  8pm 

Or  call  825-HELP  for  more  information. 


825-HELP 


KEHHtm 

From  page  8  ;  :    -  '  i  -   h  ' 

"Attempts  to  portray  tilie  Navy's  land  as 
destroyed  or  the  Navy's  operations  as  destroying 
the  environment  are  completely  out  of  proportion 
and  inappropriate,"  he  said. 

Kennedy  said  that  during  the  meeting  the  Navy 
agreed  to  shut  down  a  pit  used  for  disposing  unex- 
plodcd  bombs  on  the  Vieques  bombing  range.  The 
lawsuit  claims  the  Navy  has  no  permit  for  the  facil- 
ity. ,..;,v.;    •- 

Long-simmering  opposition  to  the  Navy's  prac- 
tices erupted  in  April  1999  after  a  jet  dropped  two 
bombs  off  target,  killing  a  civilian  guard  on  the 
range. 

At  the  heart  of  the  lawsuit  are  claims  that  the 
Navy  violated  the  Endangered  Species  Act  with  its 
bombing  and  strong-armed  the  Fish  and  Wildlife 
Service  and  other  federal  agencies  into  ignoring 
the  violations.  >■ 

The  lawsuit  says  there  are  13  endangered  or 
threatened  species  near  the  bombing  range  but  that 
"biological  opinions"  prepared  before  each  round 
of  exercises  have  failed  to  study  them  closely 

In  1999,  it  says,  the  Fish  and  Wildlife  Service 
reported  that  sea  turtles  were  nesting  in  areas 
where  the  Navy  previously  said  there  were  none. 

Gordon  said  the  Navy  marks  sea  turtle  nests  as 
simulated  mines  during  exercises  so  they  will  not 
be  disturbed. 

The  complaint  also  cites  Fish  and  Wildlife 
Service  reports  of  dead  sea  turtles  and  complaints 
by  the  agency  that  the  exercises  interfered  with 
attempts  to  investigate  the  deaths  of  threatened 
pelicans.  .,^'.„    :-.. 


Ttie  AsKxaieJ  Press 

Environmental  activist  Robert  Kennedy  Jr.  recently  filed 
a  complaint  against  the  Navy  for  bombing  exercises.       — 


Washington  br. 
Internship 

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12     •  WMnesday,  October  11,2000 . 


Daily  Brain  News 


*;*;. 


ISRAEL 

FrompageS         '       ^     ^    '   *: 

The  army  said  its  troops  opened  fire 
after  a  firebomb  was  thrown  into  its 
outpost,  burning  a  soldier.  It  expressed 
sorrow  but  criticized  Palestinians  for 
putting  children  in  harm's  way  in  the 
clashes. 

On  the  edge  of  Ramallah,  black 
smoke  from  burning  tires  billowed  into 
the  air  as  about  200  Palestinians 
massed  on  the  road  near  an  Israeli  out- 
post. In  a  confrontation  that  lasted 
hours,  protesters  hurled  stones  at 
Israeli  troops,  who  responded  with 
tear  gas  and  rubber-coated  steel  bul- 
lets. 

The  army  also  said  two  Palestinians 
were  seriously  wounded  when  soldiers 
returned  fire  outside  the  village  of 
Tapuah,  near  the  West  Bank  town  of 
Nablus. 

Barak  has  given  Arafat  an  ultima- 
tum -  extended  Monday  night  by  what 
he  and  aides  said  would  be  a  few  days  - 
to  halt  the  violence  or  face  heavy 
reprisal.  After  his  meeting  with  Annan 
in  Jerusalem,  the  Israeli  leader  said  it 


wasn't  yet  dear  whether  Palestinian 
rioters  had  been  reined  in. 
•  "  We  are  waiting  and  we  are  examin- 
ing, not  within  a  framework  of  12 
hours  -  that's  not  enough  time  to  know 
what  is  happening,"  he  said. 

Earlier  in  the  day,  speaking  at  a 
memorial  for  those  killed  in  the  1973 
Yom  Kippur  War,  Barak  urged  perse- 
verance in  pursuit 
of  peace.  „„„„^^^,,,,„^ 

"We  must  not 
despair  or  lose 
hope,  even  in  diffi- 
cult times  in  which 
it  seems  to  us  that 
on  the  other  side 
there  is  no  partner 
for  a  true  peace," 
he  said.  "Peace 
will  contK."  

Annan,      who 
had  met  earlier  in  the  day  with  Arafat 
in  Gaza,  said  he  was  heartened  by 
signs  of  a  calming  trend. 

"Let's  get  to  work  -  stop  the  vio- 
lence, move  back  to  the  negotiating 
table,"  he  said.  "The  region  has  suf- 
fered too  much,  there  have  been  far 
too  many  killings  and  casualties  ...  We 


are  at  the  crossroads  -  let's  make  the 
right  turn." 

The  sides  were  discussing,  through 
third  parties,  a  Palestinian  demand 
that  Israel  agree  to  allow  an  interna- 
tional commission  to  investigate  the 
events.  Nearly  all  the  dead  have  been 
Palestinians,  and  the  Palestinians  say 
Israel  has  used  excessive  firepower. 

Barak 

"~'^^*""~''~"     appeared  more 

prepared   than 

previously     to 

compromise, 

telling     Israeli 

radio  he  would 

accept  an 

inquiry  "under 

the     authority 

and  responsibil- 

— — — — —      ity  of  the  United 

States." 

Initially,  he  had  said  he  would  only 

consider  submitting  Israeli  findings  to 

the  Americans  for  review. 

It  was  clear,  though,  that  Israel  and 
the  Palestinians  were  still  at  logger- 
heads over  who  was  responsible  for  the 
violence. 

"The  clashes  are  still  taking  place  in 


Israel  and  the 

Palestinians  (are)  still 

at  loggerheads  over 

who  was  responsible 

for  the  violence. 


A  Btuin's  lite  is  Ifever  Itsrgotten, 


^ratt  aiul  f-ditor  Posiritms  art-  a^  jk- 

rc:LA  l^ruinlile  Mar! 

Apj-'lKaric 

General  Intormarion  Mecriiv 
TODAY  ar  5:.M)pm  in  1  IS  Kcrckhotr 


r/-M 


a  very  difficult  situation,  and  Israel  is 
using  tanks  and  helicopters  and  mis- 
siles, and  the  (Jewish)  settkrs  are  con- 
tinuing their  crimes,"  Arafat  said  aAer 
a  meeting  with  Ivanov. 

Barak  said  Israel  would  act  with 
"determination"  to  defend  its  soldiers 
and  citizens.  "We  are  not  the  source  of 
the  violence,  and  if  the  violence  stops 
on  the  other  side,  there  will  be  quiet," 
he  said  after  his  meeting  with  Annan. 

Even  as  confrontations  between  the 
Israeli  military  and  Palestinian  rioters 
have  tapered  off,  there  has  been  a  rise 
in  vigilante-style  attacks  by  Israeli  and 
Arab  civilians  against  each  other. 

On  Tuesday,  Palestinians  threw 
stones  at  motorists  on  a  Jerusalem 
thoroughfare,  and  several  activists 
from  the  outlawed  Jewish  extremist 
Kadi  movement  brawled  with  Arabs 
at  a  Jerusalem  market,  Israel  radio 
said. 

The  national  police  commissioner. 
Yehuda  Wilk,  said  more  than  200 
Jewish  rioters  had  been  arrested. 

"We  will  lake  the  same  measures 
against  Jews  as  we  do  against  Arabs," 
he  said.  "We  don't  have  different  sys- 
tems of  justice  in  Israel." 


0\MPAKiN 

Frontpages 

Carolina,  both  men  hoped  to 
rrame  the  issues  for  the  faceK)ff  at 
campaign  events  Tuesday.  The 
two  campaigns  have  stepped  up 
their  criticism,  with  Gore  support- 
ers criticizing  Bush's  record  as 
Texas  governor  on  children's 
health  and  the  environment^Bush 
aides  say  the  vice  president  habit- 
ually stretches  the  truth. 

"We  welcome  the  talk  about 
the  Texas  record,"  Bush  dedared 
at  his  rally.  "This  is  a  state  where 
both  Republicans  and  Democrats 
have  worked  together  to  improve 
public  education,  to  reform  the 
wdfare  system,  to  increase  the  job 
base." 

Gore's  daughter  and  adviser, 
Karenna  Gore  Schiff,  said  Gore 
planned  to  use  the  debates  to  dis- 
cuss his  proposals  for  smaller 
dasses,  universal  preschool,  chil- 
dren's health  insurance  and  pre- 
scription drug  coverage  for 
Medicare. 


Miy  Brain  News 


Wednesday,  October  11, 2000       1]' 


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Anything  Is  Possible 


This  is  where  the  generation  of  new  ideas  lives  ^    -   ; 

Because  we've  built  a  global  network  of  people  who  see 
possibilities  where  others  see  confusion  and  risk  —  and  who 
know  how  to  turn  those  possibilities  into  realities.  And  by 
working  at  internet  speed  —  propelling  dozens  of  companies 
and  millions  of  investors  into  the  new  economy.  L 

We  are  propelling  careers  all  over  the  world. 

Morgan  Stanley  Dean  Witters  Investment  Banking  Division 
will  be  on  campus  at  UCLA. 

Resume  Drop  Deadline 

October  1 5 

.  ■"•;.■  v".  ' 

-».  I "  "■  ■ 

Interviews 

November  1,  2000 


\ 


Morgan  Stanley  Dean  Witter 

Investment  Banking 


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Careers  in  Investment  Banking  start  @  msdw.com/career/recruiting 

Morgon  Stanley  Deon  Wi«er  .s  on  Hqual  OppofiuoiV  tmpioyer  commtlied  to  wofklofce  divefsiV  Morgon  Stanley  Deon  Witter  is  o  service  mork  o/  Morgan  Slonley  Deon  W.tter  &  Co. 


14       Mednesday,OclDiKr11,2nO 


Daily  Boiin  News 


safetym:.>:^'^:;;- -.;.,, 

from  page  1    :  .;:  "•^:;"vj.;'-{ • 

tory  student. 

The  ORL  hires  students  to  work 
access  control  between  9  p.m.  and  5 
a.m.  each  night  to  verify  the  identity 
of  those  entering  the  dorms. 

"When  I  hved  in  Dykstra  Hall,  we 
had  to  sign  in  every  guest  who 
arrived  after  nine  and  everyone  else 
had  to  swipe  their  Bruin  Card  to 
enter  the  building,"  said  Sara 
Caballero,  a  third-year  economics 
student. 

The  ORL  also  administers  the 
Gotcha!  program,  where  CSOs 
patrolling  residence  halls  leave  stick- 
ers on  doors  of  rooms  left  unattend- 
ed, reminding  residents  they  may 
have  been  burglarized. 

Fora  CSO  escort  call  (310)  794-WALK. 


CENTER 

From  page  1 

als  to  get  a  hold  on  this  deadly  killer,"  he  continued. 

One  of  the  obstacles  the  center  will  tackle  is  fmding 
an  animal  model  that  will  adequately  mimic  the 
course  of  the  disease  in  humans. 

Amado  said  mice  will  most  likely  be  infected  with 
tumors  that  the  center  is  collecting  from  humans. 

Patients  like  McCuIlough  are  optimistic  about  the 
new  advances  the  center  may  bring  forward  in  the 
future. 

"I  think  the  facilities  at  the  new  liver  center  will  not 
only  spark  an  awareness  but  it  will  also  heal  and  treat 
cancer,"  McCuIlough  said.  "1  would  expect  there  to 
be  a  lot  more  successes  than  failures." 

Officials  said  the  center's  opening  was  timely 
because  of  the  number  of  liver  cancer  patients  coming 
to  the  university  has  been  increasing. 

"UCLA  conducts  300  liver  transplants  a  year  and 
we  have  about  five  new  patients  a  year,"  Amado  said. 
"The  opening  of  the  program  really  boosted  our  refer- 
able base." 


SPENmNG 

From  page  5 

week.  Vice  President  Al  Gore,  the  Democratic 
nominee,  tried  to  get  his  Republican  counter- 
part, Texas  Gov.  George  W.  Bush,  to  sign  on  to  a 
proposal  to  overhaul  current  campaign  finance 
laws. 

Bush  instead  invoked  a  litany  of  Clinton- 
Gore  campaign  fmance  scandals  dating  to  1996. 
'This  man  has  no  credibility  on  the  issue,"  Bush 
said. 

The  major  parties  are  raising  ever-increasing 
sums  ofhard  money  As  of  June  30,  Republicans 
had  $65  million  of  it  in  the  bank,  and  Democrats 
had  S40  million. 

The  Supreme  Court  ease  arose  out  of  a  1 986 
Senate  race  in  Colorado.  Ruling  on  another  part 
of  the  same  dispute,  the  Supreme  Court  said  in 
1996,  that  political  parties  could  spend  unlimited 
hard  money  as  long  as  they  weren't  working  in 
consultation  with  the  candidate. 

At  the  time,  the  court  bypassed  the  debate 


about  whether  spending  could  be  limited  if  par- 
ties were  consulting  with  the  candidates. 

This  time  around,  the  Federal  Election 
Commission  and  the  Justice  Department 
argued  in  court  papers  that  candidates  would 
know  where  huge  influxes  of  "coordinated 
expenditures"  came  from,  and  once  in  office 
might  fed  beholden  to  individual  party  officials. 

"There  is  no  reason  to  believe  that  such  indi- 
viduals are  immune  from  the  corrupting  tempta- 
tions and  setf-interest  of  other  persons,"  the^ov- 
emmcrrt  argued. 

Without  limits  on  coordinated  expenditures, 
parties  could  become  funnels  for  campaign  dish 
from  individuals  and  political  action  committees 
with  their  own  axes  to  grind,  the  government 
added. 

The  Colorado  Republican  Party  argued  that 
the  limits  are  an  unfair  infringement  on  the  First 
Amendment  right  to  free  speech  and  should  be 
saapped  nationwide. 

The  lOth  U.S.  Circuit  Court  of  Appeals  ruled 
in  favor  of  the  Colorado  Republicans  earlier  this 
year. 


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FUNDINa 

From  page  1 

Timmerman  said  it  is  important  for 
USAC  to  inform  all  its  constituents  of 
the  opportunities  to  apply  for  funding 
and  the  allocations  for  each  group. 

"It  seems  to  me  that,  when  you're 
using  people's  mandatorily  collected 
fees,  you  need  to  tell  them  how  you're 
spending  it,"  Timmerman  said. 

In  1995,  in  the  case  of  Rosenberger 
V.  University  of  Virginia,  the  Supreme 
Court  ruled  that  a  public  university 
must  fund  groups  regardless  of  their 
political,  religious  or  ideological  agen- 


Last  March,  in  the  caisc  of  the 

University  of  Wisconsin  v. 
Southworth,  a  judge  confirmed  this 
ruling  by  stating  that  a  public  univer- 
sity can  collect  student  fees  to  fund 
organizations  only  if  the  fundings  are 
content  neutral. 

A  week  after  Timmerman  froze  the 
budget,  the  BRC  submitted  evidence 
that  it  allocated  funding  properly  and  ^ 
USAC  members  agreed  to  examine 
the  issue  further.  As  a  result, 
Timmerman  unfroze  the  budgets  and 
said  possible  adjustments  would  be 
minor.  ;'  ; 

"Some  groups  might  get  a  little  less 


"A  reallocation  of  the 

base  budget  is  almost 

impossible  just  given 

the  time  restraint.* 


Cynthia  Rabuy 

Financial  support 
comnnissioner 


and  some  might  get  a  little  more,"  he 
said. 
Though  Timmerman  has  seen  the 


allocating  criteria  used,  he  said  he 
wishes  to  see  how  those  guidelines 
were  applied. 

Council  members  said  administra- 
tors have  already  been  provided  with 
a  lot  of  information  and  need  to  focus 
more  on  making  improvements  for 
next  year's  budget  allocation  process. 

"They  see  lots  of  problems  and  we 
don't,"  Rabuy  said. 

''A  reallocation  of  the  base  budget 
is  almost  impossible  just  given  the 
time  constraint,"  she  said. 

Marquez  agreed  the  review 
process  is  unnecessary. 

"It's  just  saying  that  the  work  that 
(the  BRC)  has  done  is  bad."  she  said. 


"Their  authority  is  being  questioned." 

The  purpose  of  the  ad  hoc  meet- 
ings is  not  only  to  review  this  year's 
budget,  but  also  to  develop  clearer 
funding  guidelines  for  future  coun- 
cils. 

"This  way,  every  BRD  and  BRC 
doesn't  make  it  up  anew  every  year," 
Pedro  said. 

In  the  future,  USAC  must  also 
decide  how  to  define  a  student  advo- 
cacy group  in  its  bylaws. 

"This  is  something  that  will  come 
up  in  awhile  and  wt  need  to  do  a  lot  of 
reading,"  Pedro  said.  "We  really  need 
to  go  through  (our  Constitution)  and 
reread  the  language." 


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AH  Campus  Organizations! 

Registration  Week  for  aO  organizations  is  4th  week  of  Fall  Quarter 


Get  started  on  another  exciting  year  of  campus  activities  and  programming 
by  registering  your  organization  at  one  of  the  23  registration  sessions  listed 
below. 


SAVE  THESE  DATES! 


Date 


Place 


Monday,  Oct  23  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Tuesday,  Oct  24  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Wednesday,  Oct  25  Ackerman  2nd  Floor  Lounge 

Thursday,  Oct  26  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Friday,  Oct  27  Viewpoint  Conference  Room 


\z 


Registration  Times 

9:30  11:00  12:30  2:00 
9:30  11:0012:30  2:00 
9:30  11:0012:30  2:00 
9:30  11:0012:30  2:00 
9:30  11:0012:30 


No  reservations  are  needed!  Simply  have  three  of  your  organization 
representatives  attend  one  of  the  registration  sessions.  Representatives 
must  be  UCLA  students,  staff,  faculty  or  a  combination  of  these  three.  All 
three  must  attend  the  same  registration  session  and  sign-in  at  the  same 
time  ten  minutes  before  the  session.    . 

We  will  start  on  time....  DONT  BE  LATE! 

It  is  highly  recommended  that  you  come  earlier  in  the  week  since  the  later 
dates  and  times  fill  up  fast.  ;  ^ 

For  further  information,  please  call  the  Center  for  Student  Programming  at 
310-825-7041  or  e-mail  at  mveluz@saonet.ucla.edu 

THE  BEGINNING  OF  THE  YEAR  IS  THE  BEST  TIME  TMEGISTER.  DOIIT  Miff  n^ITi     I 


every 

Wednesday  and 

friday  you  can 

sell  them 

all  in  the 

Daily  Brum's 


"""■'*^'^*"i*<p" 


DaHy  Bruin  News 


Wednesday.October  11,2000       17 


■.,/'  ',■  /\ 


National  Coming  Out  Day 
October  11,  2000  m^ 


We  are  your  friends,  classmates,  students,  professors,  co* 
workers,  roommates,  teammates,  alumni/ae,  and  family,  and 
we  are  just  a  few  of  the  strong  and  creative  lesbian,  gay,  bi- 
sexual, and  transgender  individuals  -  or  allies  of  LGBT  indi- 
viduals -  wt)o  are  part  of  the  diverse  UCLA  community  We  in- 
vite you  to  join  us  in  celebrating  the  12^^  Annual  National 
Coming  Out  Day  today! 


iw   01; 


Atain  0«n(t  pil.»uiiJei>i.  Urtwn  Planning.  David  underorad  ArrhK«-i  «..«._  rw  .J  Kini  .  »  »■ 

0.rylF*^rKPo«dnc.a«n,«ry»ndB.ocl«m;EH«E»cteo.Underp«).USACImernalV.ccPre5ktem  "'-'■'■'."[.      '  ■   ■  , 


(M«n  Sakn.  Aimotphrrir  ^irnccs 


li^rRo.L'rsK.t*i^v^":!:'"':'5::^^^^     ■^-.•o  ^-  ^^  ^gbt  cr^-.  j 


TJm  !!i«r,ll  I  .jJ..i,.  .  Jj  e":.  •!!     . '   .t^^  Los  Angf  Irs  Don  Spring.  Cretr  Center.  Orbra  Sriber..  SiuJ™.  P.».|-.i„-C..  ^..J!r.;^  7.     'T.!TJ"**^-  ^^  ^  ^^"  "^  '^'""~.  S'»fr  S.brin.  Smith,  Alumn,  Clan  Of  95.  U.SAC  Exier 


^' s';jr  m".?m  St.':"  .^-„'r.^: .!-"-  ■?':- -,^•^-.^0,.^  -  ^^-  *  -^n^. 


iinlVP  1091  lu  i,_,„..^,  c       ^     ™ """^i™".  "iiJ  wMniUMinclipn.  1 9lSfl  Tammy  .Slu  Ch»ifofM«h.i  Px,rhr,tr^  u.        u       V^ --—^^v^.,  ^„.„  j™,„„,  i  neaire  unoergrid.  I^retf  I  Slmps< 


'  bgy:  Ben  S«lp.  MBA  2001; 


Alh«.nVa,,r.U*».»Je«.M.fkV««,Mn)  N.kke,.S.uden.Un,on.P,eMdem  ChrW«o»»,V.fcl.nrf«r.™^r„.    ^       c 

J.b..  UCLA  L.*  .School  «u*n,.  Jk  ZMn,.  Dep.  of  Un,«..,ic.;  K.rta  Bird  Z«mt^  I99J  Alumn,  Cla,..  1993  USAC  Ex«™il  Vk,  P,„i. 


Join  us  for  a  rally  on  Westwood  Plaza  today  at  noon.  For  other  National 
Coming  Out  Month  events,  please  go  to  our  website  at 


Wl^W.LGBT.UCT.A.FnTI 


-•'-■•"_     "»';■ 


'■"'.  •.•/..>•.-■ 


Thursday 

Proposition  38  will 
take  funds  away  from 
public  education. 

Wednesday,  Octobefl  1,2000 


DaHy  Bruin 


ViewontheWe^iC 

See  all  this  and  • 

nrtofe  at  the  Daily  Bruin's  • 

monstrous  Web  site:  ; 

www.dallybruin.ucia.edu  * 


viewpoJnt#media.ucia.edu 


mmimtmim 


i     1. 1  .fi.  1.  ii.i  I.I 


■■S.-i\  ■■   .X-i^-tf'rtsai^^K 


•if.  *.-."  (—V  .,.-*-  •-. 


DiiiyBruiiiViwpoM 


Wednesday,(ktDlwr  11,2000       19 


Saying  sorry  isn't  about  blame 


AUSTRAUA:  Official  apology 
to  Aborigines  would  enhance 
improvement  program  efiforts 

She  pierced  Australia's  dark  past  like  a 
white-hot  bolt  of  lightning.  A  mere  5- 
foot-4,  Australian  runner  Cathy 
Freeman  lit  the  cauldron  to  open  the 
Olympic  Games  in  Sydney  In  a  skintight 
white  jumpsuit,  the  torch  flaming  in  her 
outstretched  fist, 
Freeman  became  the 
symbol  for 
Aboriginal  freedom 
in  Australia  that 
night,  a  living 
reminder  of  the  conti- 
nent's violent  racial 
history  and  the 
secrets  unknown  to 
most  Sydney  visitors. 

Freeman's  gold 
medal  in  the  400- 
meter  event  a  few 
days  later  secured  her 
place  as  a  hero.  Her  Aboriginal  descent 
was  reflected  in  her  winning  uniform:  she 
wore  Team  Australia's  gold  and  green,  but 
her  shoes  were  red,  yellow  and  black,  the 
colors  of  the  Aboriginal  flag. 

Spectators  at  the  Games  saw  a  talented 
young  runner  win  a  deserved  gold  medal. 
But  Australians  saw  an  involuntary  activist 
to  reconcile  the  atrocities  committed 
against  the  indigenous  peoples  of  Australia 
-  the  Aborigines  on  the  continent  and  the 
Torres  Strait  Islanders,  living  just  north  of 
the  mainland.  These  people  are  waiting  for 
an  apology  that  may  never  come. 

Before  1788.  when  the  British  first  set- 
tled Australia,  these  native  peoples 
"owned"  and  lived  off  of  the  vast  continent 
for  close  to  50,000  years.  When  the  new 


Kirk  is  a  fourth-year  political  science  student 
who  can  form  an  opinion  about  anything,  but 
always  gives  the  other  side  a  fighting  chance. 
E-mail  your  comments  and  opinions  to 
trishakirk@hotmailxom. 


settlers  expelled  them  from  their  tribal 
lands,  they  suffered  enormously.  Many 
were  forced  to  work  for  rations  radier  than 
wages.  Cliildren  were  taken  from  their 
homes  and  given  to  white  families  to  be 
assimilated  into  white  culture.  A  cruel  poli- 
cy of  discrimination  began  that  may  never 
be  completely  abolished. 

Although  two  Australian  states  have 
issued  official  apologies  for  such  crimes, 
conservative  Prime  Minister  John  Howard 
has  spoken  of  "regret,"  but  has  refused  to 
issue  an  official  parliamentary  apology  on 
the  grounds  that  doing  so  would  be  an 
admission  of  personal  guilt. 

"I  am  not  willing  to  apologize  for  things 
my  government  and  my  generation  of 
Australians  didn't  do,"  he  stated  (Los 
Angeles  Times,  Sept.  25. 2000). 

But  apologizing  for  a  nation's  crimes  in 
the  past  does  not  admit  personal  guilt  and 
does  not  condemn  current  generations  of 
Australians.  It  is  saying  that  the  Australian 
government  and  the  people  of  Australia 
are  sorry  for  what  has  been  done  to  you. 
They  recognize  the  abuse  you  have 
endured  and  they  collectively  apologize  for 
the  sins  of  their  forefathers. 

Should  Howard  issue  an  official  apolcv 
gy  for  the  sins  Australians  committed 
against  Aborigines?  Yes. 

Even  if  the  current  government  is  not 
directly  responsible  for  the  atrocities,  there 
is  evidence  that  such  crimes  continued 
until  recent  years.  The  policy  of  removing 
Aboriginal  children  from  their  families 
continued  into  the  1970s.  A  1994  survey 
conducted  by  the  Australian  Bureau  of 
Statistics  revealed  that  one  in  every  10 
Aboriginal  people  25  years  or  older  had 
been  removed  from  their  families  in  child- 
hood. Aborigines  were  not  counted  in  the 
national  census  or  allowed  to  vote  until  the 
'60s,  and  it  was  not  until  1992  that 
Aborigines  were  officially  recognized  as 
the  first  "owners"  of  Australia. 

Although  health,  education,  employ- 
ment and  boosting  Aboriginal  status 
should  be  (and  is)  a  concern  of  the  govern- 
ment, it  is  not  enough.  These  people 
deserve  an  apology  for  their  sufferings,  as 


well  as  the  same  benefits  to  whidi  all 
Australians  are  entiUed  under  their  gov- 
ernment. Without  placing  blame  on  the 
current  populace,  an  apology  would  con- 
firm reconciliation  and  put  Aborigines  and 
their  government  on  a  path  toward  heal- 
ing, peace  and  cooperation. 

The  incomprehensible  contradiction 
here  is  that  while  Howard  and  his  govern- 
ment are  more  than  willing  to  spearhead 
development  and  assistance  programs  for 
Aborigines  and  appear  to  be  offering  their 
full  support,  Howard  still  will  not  get 
behind  a  podium  and  simply  say,  "I'm 
sorry"  This  argument  over  the  words  and 
phrases  that  signify  true  apology  has  mush- 
roomed into  an  ugly  battle  between 
Howard  and  Aboriginal  activists. 

The  debate  over  official  apologies  is  not 
a  new  one.  It  has  been  questioned  whether 
the  United  States  should  formally  apolo- 
gize for  crimes  against  American  Indians, 
African  Americans,  Japanese  Americans 
and  other  ethnic  groups  that  have  been 
wronged  in  our  country's  past,  even  if 
measures  have  since  been  taken  to  help 
these  groups  enjoy  the  benefits  available  to 
all  Americans. 

The  Australian  situation  also  finds  an 
echo  in  incredibly  similar  circumstances  in 
Canada.  In  January  1998,  the  Canadian 
government  apologized  to  its  indigenous 
population  for  the  disrespect  and  violence 
they  have  suffered  in  the  past.  The 
Canadians  also  apologized  for  the  coun- 
try's old  policy  of  kidnapping  native  chil- 
dren in  an  effort  to  have  them  conform 
to  white  cuhure  -  much  like 
Australia's  so-called  "Stolen 
Children." 

Apology  pending,  however, 
there  is  no  question  that 
Australia  has  done  much  to 
assist  the  Aboriginal  popula- 
tion. Today  there  are  360,000 
Aborigines  and  Torres  Strait 
Islanders  in  the  Land  Down 
Under,  making  up  about  2  percent 
of  the  total  population.  This  year,  the  gov 


See  not  page  23 


Rush  procedures  need  to  change 


ZACHuytZ/TMyBrukl 


GREEKS:  System  should 
promote  practices  that 
are  fairer  to  participants 


ByHaroon 

As  much  as  I  hate  to  admit  it, 
Kirra  Steel  has  staggering  accuracy 
in  her  depiction  of  the  Greek  system, 
and  to  my  knowledge,  the  sorority 
system  here  at  UCLA  ("Systematic 
sisterhood  promotes  intolerance," 
Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint,  Oct.  5).  I 
know  sorority  members  that  have 
stated  that  their  houses  use  similar  if 
not  identical  methods  of  recruitment. 
Maybe  its  a  form  of  twisted  irony,  but 
I  find  it  remarkable  that  we  in  the 
Greek  system  are  at  one  of  the  most 
prestigious  higher  education  institu- 
tions in  the  world  and  it  feels  like  we 


Saleem  is  a  fifth-year  history  student 


never  left  high  school. 

The  cliques,  the  racism,  thebadc- 
stabbing,  the  superficiality  -  I'm  back 
inllthgrade. 

Being  a  part  of  the  male  Greek 
population  here  at  UCLA,  I  am  also 
aware  diat  we  in  the  fraternities  do 
not  fare  much  better  Don't  get  me 
wrong,  I  know  that  myself  and  others 
try  our  best  to  promote  the  *^ti- 
Greek"  lifestyle;  that  is,  fitting  the 
stereotype  that  has  made  us  so  popu- 
lar and  so  loathed  by  many. 

Yet  when  we  hear  about  the  dirty 
rushing  going  on  in  other  houses, 
most  of  us  look  down  and  shake  our 
heads  in  disgust,  knowing  that  the 
next  day  a  story  about  a  rushee  get- 
ting alcohol  poisoning  is  going  to  top 
the  one  about  the  fraternity  that  went 
with  its  new  members  and  cleaned  up 
a  camp  for  disadvantaged  children. 

I  have  no  problem  with  saying  that 
1  am  proud  of  being  a  brother  of  my 
fraternity.  I  know  what  the  charter  of 
my  house  says  and  what  it  means.  1 


know  what  I  stand  for  and  I  know 
I've  stayed  true.  Ill  vouch  for  any  of 
my  brothers'  actions.  But  that  aside,  I 
am  utterly  ashamed  of  calling  myself 
a  Greek. 

To  the  girls  that  read  the  article 
and  know  it's  true:  How  can  you  let 
this  happen?  Do  you  really  think 
that's  what  it's  all  about?  The  num- 
bers for  rush  this  year  were  not  exact- 
ly breakthrough.  If  the  system  does- 
n't change,  we  all  go  down.  I'm  sure 
some  of  you  could  care  less  about  all 
this  and  hey,  if  this  Nfestyie  is  your 
forte,  then  more  power  to  you.  Enjoy 
your  midlife  crisis. 

As  for  Steel,  I  applaud  your  deci- 
sion and  I  stand  by  you.  It's  great 
knowing  that  you  figured  it  out.  I 
hope  that  some  of  the  girls  in  the  sys- 
tem with  whom  I  was  willingly 
friends  will  read  your  article  and 
come  to  their  senses.  I  also  hope  that 
others  out  iii  (he  system  that  share 
your  views  wiB  make  an  effort  to  do 
something  about  it  Way  to  go,  Kirra. 


Third-party  candidates 
deserve  television  time 


DEBATES:  Commission's 
decisions  prevent  truly 
democratic  participation 


ByKlfstMlsaacMii 

Let's  talk  TV,  a.k.a.  America's 
favorite  pastime.  On  a  wild  hunch,  let 
me  presume  that  last  Ttiesday  many 
of  us  plopped  down  on  our  grungy 
sofas  and  extended  our  arms  just  far 
enough  to  aim  the  remote.  I  will  pro- 
pose two  different  resulu  of  our  exer- 
cise in  button  clicking: 

I)  Watching  millionaire  hopefuls 


Isaacson       is       an  International 

Development  Studied  student  and  a 

"^enibw     of     tht  Environmental 
Coalition. 


field  questions  from  Regis  Philbin  or 

2)  Watching  two  political  million- 
aires field  questions  from  Jim  Lehrer. 

Which  option  shall  we  guess  ranks 
up  there  with  Jerry  Springer  in  terms 
of  attracting  the  most  viewers? 

For  whatever  reason,  it  seems  as 
though  public  interest  and  involve- 
ment in  American  politics  is  frighten- 
ingly  low.  Gore  and  |^sh  boast  sepa- 
rate platforms,  yet  in  reality  seem  to 
be  the  same  package  dressed  in  differ- 
ent wrapping.  Thus,  it  is  no  surprise 
that  last  week's  presidential  debate 
had  little  impact  on  voters'  decisions, 
little  impact  on  TV  viewing  habits, 
and  bore  no  resemblance  to  the  work- 
ing of  a  democratic  system. 

But  let  us  suppose  for  an  instant 
that  watching  a  presidential  debate 


22 


How  TO  SUBMFT 
TO  VIEWPOINT 


•  Wrtte  a  thft*- M  «our- p»9«,  dpMon-tlyte 
»ub«nl$»loo  about  a  corrtw  ev«nt  on  campuf 
or  In  th«  wodd  at  large,  or  writ*  a  ttvpont*  to 

somcfMng  thil  you  have  already  rMd  In  The 
Bruin 

■  E-maN  Mbmhttom  to 

«*«wpo<M«iradlajjciMdu.  Rcnwmbcr  to 


copy  and  pMU  your  MibmMon  Into  ih«  body 
of  th«  e-mail,  or  (kop  off  a  hard  copy  of  your 
Mbmlstlon  at  the  Otily  BMNn  cflllc*  (t  IS 
Kcfdihoff  Ha«L  car*  of  Mtah  L«to. 

•  Apply  to  b*  a  ViMpoMtatllMnM  dur- 
ing WNkt  7  and  •  of  Mch  quamr. 

•  Apply  to  be  a  awteaMM  or  artlM.  Stnd  an 


•««ll  ff^ppHdng  your  mwiMt  to  tlM 
viewpom  aooresv 

A  taw  iMngi  to  rcmembec 

•  AH  Mbmhtiora  muit  msMe  your  name, 
pberte  ntiMbw  and  amMkMjwMt  UOA.  If 
you  ar*  a  MudMN.  Hwy  muN  alw  mdwde  your 
Hudml  D  mimbar,  y«ar  and  m^. 


•  VMJrfactt  wWbe  dMckMtmahe  «ire 
they  are  accurate. 

•  Vtnwpemt  is  not  an  advwtWng  ipace  f or 
any  group  or  wfMriMion;  btt  M«  to  have 
clearly  artteUated  i^Woii*.    , 

•  W»  rcMTve  Itw  right  to  a^  Mibmitslora 
for  clarity,  grammar  and  lengtK 


Extreme  actions  inflicted  on  'frustrated'  culture 


ISRAEL'  Peace  accord  not 
priority;  country  dodges 
large-scale  investigation 


ByFadlAmcr  / 

As  we  idly  sit  and  watch  this  great 
tragedy  unfold  in  the  Middle  East, 
the  prospects  for  ^ace  today  seem 
dimmer  than  sver.There  have  been 
at  least  84  Palestinian  deaths  and 
more  than  2,000  injuries.  These  fig- 
ures sharply  contrast  with  four 
Israeli  deaths  (www.alhayat.com). 

But  do  not  let  the  huge  lopsided- 
ness  surprise  you.  For  guns,  tanks 
and  helicopters  are  extremely  more 
effective  at  killing  people  than  rocks. 
It  therefore  should  be  no  surprise 
that  the  Israelis  have  agreed  to 
everything  in  Paris  except  an  inter- 
national investigation.  The  excuse  it 
gave  was  that  the  world  would  be 
biased  against  a  Jewish  State.  I 


Amer  is  a  third-year  political  science  stu- 
dent and  president  of  the  United  Arab 
Society. 


wonder  why? 

Should  all  of  the  blame  for  the 
violence  be  placed  on  Israel?  After 
all,  the  Israelis  were  very  diligent  at 
protecting  their  actions  by  blaming 
the  Palestinians,  who  began  protest- 
ing and  throwing  rocks.  Israel  claims 
they  were  merely  protecting  their  cit- 
izens from  the  barbaric  Palestinians. 
Although  this  may  seem  plausible 
on  the  surface,  it  is  puzzling  how  the 
Israelis  are  always  ready  to  vehe* 
mently  assert  this  point,  but  never 
seem  to  give  a  second  thought  as  to 
why  the  Palestinians  erupted  with 
such  great  tenacity  and  desperation. 
I  hope  that  this  column  would  give 
Israel  a  hint. 

Let  us  first  look  at  the  event  that 
sparked  the  immediate  round  of  vio- 
lence: Israeli  opposition  leader  Ariel 
Sharon's  visit  to  the  holy  sites  in 
Jerusalem.  It  seems  very  ironic  to 
me  that  a  murderer  like  Sharon 
would  actually  have  the  heart  to 
pray.  There  is  no  doubt  that  Sharon 
has  very  well  earned  the  title  of  war 
criminal.  The  atrocities  he  commit- 


S««AMHI,pa9e20 


CASf  Y  CROWEAJalty  Bfuin 


Cani^idates  give  unimpressive  public  performance 


PRESIDENCYf  Bush,  Gore 
should  leanr  everything 
from  their  running  mates 

I  heard  there  was  a  presidential 
election  this  year,  but  now  I'm 
not  so  sure.  By  definition,  elec- 
tions have  candidates,  generally  peo- 
ple, that  you  may  support.  But  after 
that  debacle  of  a  debate  last  week, 
I'm  not  sure  either  of  the  two  presi- 
dential hopefuls  qualify  as  candi- 
dates. There  was  little  personality, 
little  bravery,  little  that  made  me 
think:  Candidate  For  President. 


Fishman  is  a  fourth-year  political  sci- 
ence student.  He  can  be  reached  at 
bfishnnan@ucla.edu. 


After  all  that  TV  coverage,  ail 
those  viewers,  and  all  that  shooting 
the  breeze,  those  debates  which  are 
perhaps  the 
best  chance  for 
public  partici- 
pation in  a 
democracy  as 
large  as  ours 
have  left  many 
viewers  won- 
dering why  the 
vice  presiden- 
tial candidates 
are  not  running 
for  president. 

There  was         ^ 

Governor  Bush      ^~~~~^~~~" 
fiailing  about,  seemingly  ignorant  of 
the  key  issues  revolving  around  the 
former  Yugoslavia.  Was  he,  the 


Brian 
Fishman 


potential  commander-in-chief,  really 
blind  to  Russian  support  for  former 
tyrannical  Serbian  president 
Slobodan  Milosevic?  What  kind  of 
candidate  for  president  could  be  so 
ignorant? 

There  was  Al  Gore  verbally  swag- 
gering across  America's  airwaves, 
swinging  statistics  and  experience  to 
and  fro,  virtually  assuming  his  own 
success  in  this  election.  Seeming  to 
ignore  the  difficulty  and  importance 
of  the  election  process.  Gore  casual- 
ly plugged,  "if  you  entrust  me  with 
the  presidency"  in  front  of  bold  poli- 
cy statements.  Though  his  confi- 
dence in  this  election  is  likely  war- 
ranted. Gore  tread  a  fine  line 
between  confidence  in  his  chances 
for  election  and  a  smug  assurance 
that  he  would  become  the  most  pow- 


erful man  on  the  planet.  What  kind 
of  candidate  for  president  could  be 
so  arrogant? 

Gore  cited  all  sorts  of  statistics, 
including  the  fact  that  for  every  one 
dollar  he  plans  to  spend  on  educa- 
tion. Bush  plans  to  give  five  dollars 
in  tax  cuts  to  the  richest  one  percent 
of  the  population.  That  was  surpris- 
ing to  me,  but  Bush  didn't  seem  to 
buy  it. 

"There  he  goes  with  that  fuzzy 
math  again,"  Bush  spat  out,  shaking 
his  head  like  a  disappointed  father. 
Bush,  apparently,  does  not  do  well 
with  fractions.  What  kind  of  candi- 
date for  president  could  seem  so 
impotent  in  the  face  of  evidence? 
And,  while  Bush  acted  convinc- 
ingly disappointed  by  the  "fuzzy 
math,"  one  started  to  wonder 


whether  Gore's  math  was  fallacious 
or  Bush  was  unable  (how  to  say  this 
delicately?)  to  comprehend  just  what 
Gore  was  getting  at. 

Algebra  seems  fuzzy  to  the  aver- 
age first-grader,  but  that  does  not 
mean  it  is  biased  or  useless. 
Undaunted,  a  staunch  Republican 
friend  claimed,  "intelligence  is  not 
the  only  thing  1  look  for  in  a  presi- 
dent." While  that's  true,  what  kind 
of  candidate  is  an  unintelligent  can- 
didate? But  if  Bush's  past  lacks  a 
mathematical  education,  Gore's  is 
associated  with  Bill  Clinton,  a  man 
who  was  accused  of  having  an  affair 
at  the  White  House. 

I  counted  at  least  six  times  that 
Gore  referred  to  himself  as  his  "own 


SeenSHMAN,pa9e21 


UFE  'N  LECTURE 


By  Mike  Kaplan  Jerence  Saulbach  and  Bryan  Yumori 


l^v 


DAILY  BRUIN 

IISKMckhoffHaN 

308  Westwood  Plua 

Los  AngalM,  CA  90024 

(310)  •25-9999 

mtp!//WWwxMybru<n.ucU.edii 


UMMWlMfrf 
rfeOtr 


m^Mty  opinion  of  th*  DaHy 
•ruin  EdHofM  tovd.  AN  othw 
columm,  lanws  and  artwork 
■«prMant  Itw  opMoTM  of  tiMH 
MMnors. 

bow  «*•  author^  name, 
addroMw  tatoplwno   ftumbar. 


rogiftrMlan  nuntbw  or  aANa- 
tton  wMt  UCLA.  Namas  «»■  not 
bt  wMthaM  ncapt  In  wtnma 
caaot. 

Tha  Bruin  compliat  wrtth 
th«  Communkatlon  Boord'i 

powqf  BrohtMuno-aML 


cation  of  artktot  Om  porpatu- 
ata  darogatory  cultural  or  ath- 


nlc  altraotypM. 

Whan  multlpla  authors 
tufamtt  matarUI,  foma  nam** 
may  ba  kapt  on  fWa  rathor  than 
puMMiad  with  the  matartai. 
Tha  Iruln  ra««rv*«  tha  right  to 
lit  MfciHiid  wiaiaiial  and  lu 


tha  property  of  Tha  Bruin.  Tha 
ConvTMjnlcatlons  Board  has  a 
madia  grlavaiKa  procadura 
for  rasoMng  complaints 
against  any  of  Its  puMkatlons. 
For  a  copy  of  tha  complata 


datarmlna  Its  ptocwnant  In  tha 
papar.  All  subminlons  bacoma 


prociOuia. — vattaa — JTOr 
PubHcatlont    office    at    118 
KerckhofTHalt. 


!  ;■  _.  ■  ■  '.",.  ,  V    • 


20       WMneicby,  October  11,2000 


QjUfinmiitwrtM 


Open  House  for- 
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AMER 

From  page  19 

ted  range  from  giving  direct  orders 
in  1956  to  General  Arye  Biro  to 
chain  and  kill  Egyptian  prisoners  of 
war,  to  direct  assistance  of  the  mas- 
sacre of  hundreds  of  Palestinian 
refugees  in  the  Sabra  and  Shatila 
refugee  camps  outside  of  Beirut  in 
1982. 

The  very  fact  that  someone  like 
Sharon  still  holds  a  very  influential 
position  in  both  the  Israeli  govenv 
ment  and  Israeli  politics  is  not  only 
astounding,  but  is  greatly  resented 
throughout  the  Arab  World.  Let  me 
try  to  give  you  a  clearer  sense  of  the 
picture  here.  Although  \  really  hate 
to  use  such  comparisons,  Sharon  to 
the  Arabs  (in  terms  of  hatred  and 
abhorrence)  is  on  the  same  level  that 
Eichmann,  a  Nazi  war  criminal, 
would  be  to  the  Jews.  The  level  of 
hatred  here  is  truly  indescribable. 

Please  do  yourself  a  favor,  before 
you  get  ready  to  blast  me  for  making 
such  a  comparison.  Do  some 
research  on  Sharon  and  the  atroci- 
ties he  committed.  (I  am  more  than 
positive  that  it  will  save  you  a  great 
deal  of  embarrassment). 

But  let  us  not  get  ahead  of  our- 
selves here,  because  we  will  miss  the 
larger  picture  if  we  just  focus  on 
Sharon  to  explain  or  to  understand 
this  tragic  event.  The  truth  of  the 
matter  is  that  his  visit  was  the  spark 
that  ignited  the  great  ejiplosion  of 
Palestinian  frustration.  This  is  not 
only  tied  to  the  failures  of  the  peace 
process,  but  also  to  the  rather 
greater  Palestinian  paralysis.  This 
extends  to  every  aspect  of 
Palestinian  life,  from  education  and 
economy  to  technology  and  sover- 
eignty. 

Such  paralysis  is  not  just  limited 
to  the  Palestinians  in  the  West  Bank, 
but  to  those  also  living  in  Israel.  A 
bit  surprised?  Well,  why  don't  you 
go  and  read  about  the  Arabs  and 
their  towns  in  Israel.  If  you  know 
anything  about  the  Middle  East,  this 
should  not  be  news  to  you.  Even 
Prime  Minister  Ehud  Barak  publicly 
acknowledged  that  he  is  '^ware  of 
the  frustrations  among  the  Arab  citi- 
zens in  the  country"  ("Violence 
Spreads  Between  Arabs  and  Jews  in 
Israd,"  L.A.  Times,  Oct.  3, 2000). 
This  is  a  very  daring  thing  for  a 
prime  minister  to  say,  especially  if 
he  is  referring  to  a  country  whose 
very  establishment  was  aided  and 
based  on  ending  discrimination  and 
the  persecution  of  a  people. 

Have  I  gone  too  far?  Have  I    " 
struck  a  raw  nerve  here?  It  is  okay, 
since  this  things  that  I  am  writing 
about  do  not  necessarily  fit  to  what 
you  are  used  to  reading  in  the  news- 
papers or  what  you  see  on  TV.  As 
harsh  or  as  troubling  as  it  may  be, 
the  fact  remains  that  the 
Palestinians  have  been  under  occu- 
pation for  more  than  50  yean.  52 
years  of  oppression,  of  discrimina- 
tion, and  of  brutality. 

Still  confused?  Well,  maybe  dur- 
ing your  last  trip  to  the  Middle  East 
you  might  have  forgotten  to  visit  the 
refugee  camps,  which  still  house 
hundreds  of  thousands  of 
Palestinians.  Or  maybe  you  were  so 
enchanted  with  the  beauty  of  Tel 
Aviv  that  you  may  have  overlooked 
other  cities  like  Hebron,  Jenm  or 
Romallah.  Or  perhaps  you  were  a 
bit  scared  to  venture  into  the  unre- 
fined or  "uncultured"  eastern  sec- 
tion of  the  "United  Jerusalem." 

Maybe  you  were  just  too  busy  last 
week  to  read  accounts  of 
Mohammed  Durra,  the  12-year-old 
boy  who  was  dinging  to  his  father 
before  he  was  fatally  shot  by  the 
Israelis.  (The  Israelis  first  claimed 
that  he  was  throwing  rocks,  but 
quickly  changed  their  stocy  after 
they  found  out  it  was  captured  on 
tape.)  What  about  the  l(Kyear-old 
boy  who  apparently  was  posing  so 
much  danger  to  die  Israeli  heli- 


J« 


IX. 


FISHMAN 

Fiompagelf 

man."  But  crawling  out  from  under 
the  shadow  of  a  man  who  successful- 
ly combined  sex  and  politics  in  a 
year-long  one-of-a-kind  television 
event  will  not  breasy. 

Bush  appeared  as  saddened  by 
President  Clinton's  disreputable 
behavior  as  he  was  by  Gore's  fuzzy 
math.  So  he  bravely  assaulted  the 
current  administration  and  some- 
what effectively  tried  to  link  Gore  to 
Clinton's  character  flaws. 

Shaking  his  head  with  a  mournful 
but  determined  Texas  stare.  Bush 
declared,  "It's  time  for  a  fresh  start 
after  a  season  of  cynicism." 

It  kind  of  makes  you  want  to  ride 
off  into  the  sunset.  Unfortunately, 
neither  candidate  looked  totally  pre- 
pared to  ride  off  into  the  oval  officfe. 
Neither  Gore  nor  Bush  looked 
extraordinarily  presidential. 

Gore  looked  overiy  made-up;  his 
hair  didn't  budge  for  90  minutes. 
Bush  looked  scared;  he  stuttered 
and  smiled  nervously.  Gore  treated 
Bush  like  an  annoying  little  brother 
and  Bush  shamelessly  evaded 
Gore's  challenges  on  the  McCain- 
Feingold  campaign  finance  reform 
bill,  abortion  and  the  military. 

Evasion  was  the  name  of  the 
game  all  around.  Moderator  Jim 
Lehrer  tried  to  pry  the  two  would-be 
candidates  into  meaningful  debate 
on  education  by  asking  leading 
questions:  "So,  what's  the  difference 
between  you  two  on  education?" 

And  after  a  virtually  meaningless 
10  minutes  of  informative  would-be 
sound  bites,  a  third-grade  teacher 
exploded  at  the  two  would-be  presi- 
dents. "These  two  have  no  idea  what 
they're  talking  about.  No  clue." 

Would4)e  presidents  acting  like 
siblings,  fractions  as  indecipherable 
as  quantum  physics,  and  an  unemo- 
tional, lackluster  conversation 
unsuccessfully  tried  to  double  as  a 
meaningful  presidential  debate. 

Compared  to  these  two,  the  vice 
presidential  candidates  Senator  Joe 
Lieberman  and  former  Defense 
Secretory  Dick  Cheney  looked  like 
Abbot  and  Costello.  They  joked, 
they  laughed,  they  sparred  and 
jabbed  at  each  other.  They  were 
more  than  just  personalities  and 
recordings  espousing  policy  -  they 
were  candidates.  They  were 
informed,  intelligent  and  human. 
They  were  worth  watching. 

And  while  the  vice  presidential 
debate  was  encouraging  because  it 
demonstrated  what  a  good  debate 
can  be,  it  was  upsetting  that  the  two 
presidential  candidates  failed  to  rep- 
resent themselves  with  the  dignity 
and  class  of  their  running  mates. 

Yet,  despite  the  differences 
between  the  presidential  and  vice 
presidential  debates,  a  less  well- 
defined,  but  equally  important 
tschism  opened  between  the  democ- 
^tic  ticket  and  iu  less  mathemati- 
fcally  inclined  Republican  counter- 
lart. 

Gore  and  Lieberman,  despite 
Gore's  continued  inability  to  pre- 
sent himself  as  a  complete  candidate 
-  with  the  right  miJi  of  personality 
and  policy  -  continue  to  publicly 
descry  definitive  policies  that  they 
wish  to  carry  out  if  elected.  Bush 
especially,  but  Cheh'ey  as  well,  con- 
tinues to  tiptoe  around  abortion  and 
campaign  finance  reform. 

Consistent  democracy  depends 
on  the  notion  that  who  is  elected  is 
not  as  important  as  how  they  were 
elected  in  a  contest  between  well- 
versed,  creative,  likeable,  intelligent 
candidates.  These  are  the  candidates 
who  can  push  the  envelope,  candi- 
dates who  can  make  the  United 
States  a  better  place  by  having 
shared  their  ideas,  candidates  like 
the  would-be  vice  presidents. 

There  is  still  tim^  for  our  two 
potential  presidents  to  learn  some- 
thing, behave  like  leaders,  earn  our 
respect  and  not  just  our  votes.  Let's 


\ 


WMNodmOdober  11,2000 


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Melnitz  Movies/QSA 
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AMER 

From  page  20 

copter  pilots  that  they  felt  it  neces- 
sary to  kill  him?  I  can  go  on  with  sto- 
ries about  the  nine-year-old  kid,  the 
seventeen-year-old  or  the  seventy- 
year-old  man,  but  fortunately  for  the 
Israelis,  there  were  no  cameras  to. 
expose  the  brutality  to  public  atten- 
tion (the  deaths  are  therefore 
reduced  to  figures). 

Even  if  you  don't  understand  or 
agree  with  anything  that  I  have  said, 
you  at  least  have  a  better  under- 
standing of  why  the  Israelis  were  so 
resolute  in  preventing  an  interna- 
tional investigation  of  this  tragedy. 
This  is  not  a  call  for  the  destruction 
of  Israel,  but  a  caii  for  the  revelation 
of  truth.  :^  .'.:■/ ■t-.l^z 

But  what  docs  all  of  this  mean? 
Does  it  mean  that  we  should  aban- 
don or  give  up  the  pursuit  for  peace? 
On  the  contrary,  and  as  hard  as  it 
may  sound,  peace  should  now  be  ' 
pursued  with  more  commitment  and 
more  tenacity.  After  all,  isn't  this 
episode,  as  Former  Israeli  Prime 
Minister  Shimon  Peres  proclaimed, 
the  glorious  alternative  to  peace? 

But  the  thing  to  remember  here  is 
that  peace  needs  to  be  anchored  by 
truth,  justice  and  respect.  The  fault 
lies  in  our  view  that  a  peace  accord 
is  just  like  a  business  deal.  But  real 
peace  is  not  about  "creative  plans" 
or  skillful  negotiators;  instead,  it  is 
about  mutual  respect  for  the  other 
side  -  and,  more  importantly,  mutu- 
al respect  for  humanity. 


ISSACSON 

From  page  18 

on  television  could  be  as  exhilarating 
as  watching  WWF  Smack  Down! 
In  1992,  when  Ross  Perot  was 
allowed  to  participate  in  the  debates, 
90  million  viewers  tuned  in.  Four 
years  later  in  1996,  when  a  third- 
party  candidate  was  not  allowed,  an 
average  of  41  million  viewers 
watched  Voter  turnout  also  signifi- 
cantly declined.  So  in  an  effort  to 
increase  TV  ratings,  voter  interest, 
and  voter  turnout,  why  are  third- 
party  presidential  candidates  not  per- 
mitted to  participate  in  the  debates? 
The  Commission  on  Presidential 
Debates  is  responsible  for  organizing 
the  debates.  CNN  calls  the  commis- 
sion a  "nonpartisan  commission," 
although  CNN  seems  to  be  confusing 
nonpartisan  with  bipartisan. 

In  1987,  the  Democratic  and 
Republican  parties  took  control  of 
the  commission  from  the  truly  non- 
partisan League  of  Women  Voters. 
But  the  commission  is  now  run  by  a 
pair  of  men  representing  each  main- 
stream party.  Its  co-chairs  are  Paul 
Kirk,  former  chairman  of  the 
Democratic  Party;  and  Frank      '' 
Fahrenkopf,  the  current  Republican 
Party  chairman. 

Considering  the  elephant-donkey 
duo  controlling  the  Commission  on 
Presidential  Debates,  it  is  no  wonder 
that  third-party  candidates  are  for- 
bidden to  participate  in  the  debates. 
With  over  200  presidential  candi- 
dates, surely  one  must  use  discretion 
in  determining  debate  participants. 
But  is  the  commission's  policy 
unjust? 

In  order  to  partake  in  the  debates, 
a  candidate  must  be  considered  a 
viable  competitor  (as  stipulated  by  an 
average  of  1 5  percent  support  in  five 
national  opinion  polls).  This  percent- 
age is  triple  the  amount  the  federal 
government  uses  to  qualify  candi- 
dates for  matching  funds  In  addi- 
tion, this  policy  was  recently  adopted 
in  response  to  the  growing  viability 
of  third-party  candidates. 

In  1992,  Ross  Perot  went  into  the 
debates  with  5-6  percent  ratings  in 
the  polls;  he  won  19  percent  of  the 
votes.  Jesse  Ventura  debated  with 
only  10  percent  support  and  went  on 


SMBSMmipafc23 


ISSAGON 

From  page  22 

to  win  with  37  percent  of  the  votes. 
Following  the  beautifully  democratic 
Minnesota  upset,  the  commission 
created  the  15  percent  policy  to 
ensure  third-party  exclusion  and 
Republican  and  Democratic  domi- 
nance. 

The  very  structure  of  the 
Commission  on  Presidential  Debates 
must  be  recognized  as  a  truly  parti- 
san body  that  unfairly  rules  out  non- 
mainstream  candidates.  The  inclu- 
sion of  candidates  such  as  the  Green 
Party's  Ralph  Nader  would  not  only 
add  some  excitement  to  the  debates 
and  promote  voter  interest,  but  also 
would  inject  some  authenticity  into  a 
stale  event  where  candidates  have 
become  accustomed  to  giving  general 
gloss-overs. 

I  want  to  sit  down  to  a  true  debate, 
a  competition,  an  exchange  of  sly 
quips  and  facts  that  promote  thought 
and  challenge  the  mediocre.  How  do 
we  obtain  this? 

Open  the  debates;  promote  a  real 
democracy. 


KIRK 

From  page  18 

emment  will  spend  about  $1.5  mil- 
lion on  programs  aimed  toward 
improving  the  lives  of  these  people  in 
areas  such  as  housing,  health  care, 
literacy,  employment  and  job  train- 
ing. And  about  15  percent  of  the  cofv 
tinent  (although  mostly  remote  terri- 
tory) was  recently  restored  to  the 
Aborigines  (L.A.  Times,  Sept.  25, 
2000). 

Enlisting  Freeman  and  a  host  of 
other  Aboriginal  descendants  to 
appear  at  the  formal  Olympic  cere- 
monies was  a  grand  gesture  on  the 
part  of  the  Sydney  Organizing 
Committee  for  the  Games.  The 
_  entire  opening  ceremony  focused  on 
Aboriginal  music  and  tradition,  send- 
ing a  positive  plea  for  harmony 
between  Australia's  different  races 
and  peoples. 

Although  quelling  the  almost  cer- 
tain demonstrations  by  protest 
groups  at  the  Games  was  no  doubt 
one  of  the  committee's  objectives, 
bringing  Aboriginal  heroes  and  per- 
formances into  the  festivities  was  a 
nod  toward  their  important  contribu- 
tions to  Australian  culture  and  iden- 
tity. 

Like  Canada,  Australia  has  made 
a  broad  effort  to  right  its  wrongs  and 
help  its  indigenous  peoples  lower 
unemployment,  find  better  health 
care  and  secure  their  voting  rights. 
The  distinction  between  the  two 
countries  is  the  apology  that  Canada 
has  made  and  the  psychological 
effects  it  can  have  on  a  country's 
population. 

On  the  road  to  healing  old  wounds 
and  starting  anew,  with  natives  and 
non-natives  working  together  for 
each  other,  the  simple  gesture  of  rec- 
onciliation is  a  large  part  of  the 
process.  Howard's  stubbornness  in 
this  respect  is  foolish  and  works 
against  the  admirable  goals  of  his 
government. 

At  the  closing  ceremonies  of  the 
Sydney  Games,  the  Australian  band 
Midnight  Oil  performed  for  a 
screaming  crowd.  "How  can  we 
sleep  while  our  beds  are  burning?" 
they  shouted.  But  there  was  a  sublim- 
inal message  tied  into  their  perfor- 
mance and  the  familiar  song. 

Wearing  baggy  black  shirts  and 
pants  imprinted  with  the  word 
"sorry"  in  white  letters,  the  band 
marched  their  noessage  onto  the 
stage  without  even  mentioning  it. 
And  that  was  enough.  That  was  their 
apology  for  the  past  wrongs  of 
Australians  and  it  was  visible  and 
potent. 

If  rock  stars  can  apologize  to  the 
AhnrigiiKa,  why  nn'\  lohn  Howard? 


Daily  Brain  Viewpoint 


1IIMn«(by,OdDber11,2000       23 


UCLA  Hillel  Presents 


PIZZA  & 
PLURAUSM 

^      Lunch  &  Learn 

An  Open  Discussion  of  the  Weekly  Torah  Portion 
A  Unique  Opportunity  to  learn  with  a  Variety  of  Outstanding  Rabbis 


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Today,  Wednesday,  Oct  11* 
12:00  - 1:00  pm,  Kerckoff  417 


Rabbi  Chaim  Seidlei>Feller 


Director,  UCU^  Hillei 


Join  us  every  Wednesday  for  free  pizza  -  Call  310/208-3081  for  more  info 

This  program  was  made  possible  by  a  generous  donation  from  the  Shelley  and  Bruce  Whizin  Family  Foundation 


llomoeriiim 


EVCB   &AID 


UQA  professor  Ted  Rueter  discusses  and  signs; 

^The  267  Stupidest  Things  Republicans 
Ever  Said;  The  267  Stupidest  Things 
Democrats  Ever  Said 


// 


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X 


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r-1— *»"»  •-. 


Bare  and  naked  in  LA. 

The  Barenaked  Ladies  play  at  the  Universal 
Amphitheater  and  A&E  has  all  the  details. 
Find  out  everything  you  ever  wanted  to 
know  about  the  band  and  more. 

WWnesdayi October  11,2000  ■■'"-". ''-  J      ■ 


—  Daily  Bruin 


„,  „  .  God  Help  Productions 

bare  is  a  multi-layered  rock  opera  with  central  themes  of 
fear  and  acceptance.  Featuring  several  UCLA  students  and 
alumni,  the  play  opens  Saturday  in  Hollywood. 

Pbp  opera  focuses 
on  'bare'  emotions 


THEATER:  Youthful  cast 
examines  sexuality  in 
show  featuring  Bruins 


By  Sarah  Monson 
Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

There  comes  a  time  in  every- 
one's life  when  they  must  examine 
who  they  are. 

If  you  stand  naked  in  front  of  a 
mirror    and 

take  a  good  ^^^^^^^^^ 
long  look,  "~~'^'^~^"' 
what  do  you 
see?  Are  you 
who  you 
think  you 
are?  Are  you 
blushing? 
Are  you 
c  m  b  a  r  - 
rassed?  Are 
you  sad?  Did 
you  ever 
think      that 

you  could  be      — 

so  bare? 

"bare,"  a  new  rock  opera, 
opens  this  weekend  in  Hollywood. 
The  musical  focuses  on  four 
high  school  seniors  attending 
Catholic  boarding  school,  all  of 
whom,  in  desperate  and  dire  ways, 
come  to  find  themselves  at  a  turn- 
ing point  in  their  young  lives. 

The  two  main  characters  are. 
struggling  with  their  sexuality,  both 
in  love  with  each  other,  but  fearful 
of  what  others  may  think. 

"It's  not  a  gay  play,"  said  Jon 
Hartmere,  the  play's  lyricist  and 


co-author.  "I  think  it's  scary  to 
show  who  you  are,  and  that  is  what 
'bare'  is  about." 

"bare"  sprouted  from 

Hartmere's  mind  three  years  ago 
when  he  was  introduced  to  Damon 
Intrabartalo,  the  composer  and  co- 
author. Intrabartalo,  desiring  to 
write  a  musical,  needed  a  lyricist  to 
compliment  his  composition. 

"The  lyrics  arc  really  personal," 
Hartmere  said.  "The  two  main 
characters  are  two  sides  of  my  per- 
sonality." 

Now, 
three  years, 
dozens  of 
drafts,  and 
re-worked 
melodies 
later,  "bare" 
is  coming  to 
the  stage. 

"It's     so 

hard  to  let  go 

of  it," 

Hartmere 

confessed. 

■  "But,  in  the 

end  I  think 

there's  something  magical  that  will 

happen  (on  stage)." 

"bare"  has  been  called  a  cross 
between  a  rock  and  a  pop  opera, 
with  upbeat  dance  songs  coupled 
with  raw,  explosive  ballads. 

When  asked  about  the  genre  of 
the  show,  Hartmere  was  quick  to 
confirm  that  it  is  not  like  the  musi- 
cal "RENT'  in  its  issues  or  musi- 
cal style. 

"The  only  thing  'RENT  and 


Singing  and  dancing 

about  issues  such  as  an 

unwanted  teenage 

pregnancy  ...and 

suicide  are  an 

innovative,  albeit 

controversial,  endeavor. 


SmMRE,p«9«28 


Photos  from  Sony  Pictures  Classics 


Jason  Alexander.  The  film  opens  nationwide  on  Friday. 

Stalk 

sex 

Just  Looking'  earned  an  R-rating  for  language  despite  its  minimal 
sexual  content,  much  to  the  chagrin  of  director  Jason  Alexander 


By  Brent  Hopkins 

'\  Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Hollywood's  a  funny  town.  Indiana  Jones 
can  watch  a  flaming  human  sacrifice  and  slide 
by  with  a  PG-rating.  If  a  teenage  boy  is  caught 
using  common  profanity,  however,  the  film  is 
headed  for  an  R. 

Such  is  the  strange  atmosphere  that  the  cast 
and  crew  of  "Just  Looking"  had  to  deal  with. 
The  independent  film,  directed  by  Jason 
Alexander  and  starring  Ryan  Merriman, 
Gretchcn  Mol  and  Patti  LuPooe.  has  no  vio- 
lence, no  graphic  sex  and  ocrtainly  no  human 
sacrifices,  yet  it  receivod  one  of  the  strongest  rat- 
ings possible.  The  creative  principals  behind  the 
film  aren't  happy  about  it,  either.       ; 

"It's  got  this  ridiculous  R-rating,  but  it's  not 
provocative  in  an  R-rated  sort  of  way," 
Alexander  said,  phoning  in  an  interview  while 
preparing  for  a  TV-appearance.  "The  kids  use 
the  F-word,  and  that's  it.  There's  sexual  content, 
but  there's  no  nudity  It's  just  language." 

Granted,  the  subject  is  a  rather  strong  one.  In 
the  movie,  Merriman's  character,  the  I3-ycar- 
old  Lenny,  finds  himself  curious  about  the 
much-taboo  subject  of  sex.  To  gain  some  insight 
on  this  mysterious,  shadowy  world  that  is  only 
discussed  behind  closed  doors  in  the  less  pro- 
gressive days  of  1955,  he  unsuccessfully  tries  to 
spy  on  his  mother  and  stepfather  in  flagrante 
delicto.  While  this  is  a  tad  out  of  the  ordinary, 
it's  not  intended  to  shock  viewers,  stress  those 
involved  with  the  project. 


"I  think  that  the  rating  is  absurd,"  said  writer 
Marshall  Karp.  "I  don't  know  any  13-year-old  in 
the  worid  who  hasn't  wondered  about  this  and 
gone  through  this  situation.  I  did  at  that  age,  and 
I'm  sure  it  hasn't  changed  terribly." 

Both  Karp  and  Alexander  made  a  careful  dis- 
tinction between  what  the  movie  discusses  and 
what  it  shows.  While  Lenny  may  talk  about  sex, 
he  doesn't  engage  in  it;  something  that  different 
tiates  "Just  Looking"  from  many  teen  sex  come- 
dies. To  lump  this  movie  into  the  same  boat  is 
irresponsible,  Alexander  said. 

"I  would  have  fought  it  to  the  death,"  the 
director  said.  "There's  nothing  in  it  that 
deserves  an  R." 

Indeed,  by  slapping  this  banner  onto  the  film, 
making  it  synonymous  with  graphic  sex  or  sense- 
less violence,  the  ratings  board  has  overiooked  a 
large  part  of  what  makes  it  special,  Alexander 
said. 

"I  can  tell  you  as  someone  in  the  business  and 
as  a  parent,  for  my  money,  they  can  do  away 
with  ratings  all  together,"  he  said.  "What  I  need 
to  judge  whether  something  is  right  for  me  or  my 
children  is  information  about  what's  in  the 
movie.  Give  me  a  description  of  what's  in  there, 
and  I'll  decide  if  it's  right.  To  tell  me  'It's  an  R,' 
and  not  tell  me  why,  that  restricts  me  bringing 
people  to  the  film  that  I'd  normally  bring." 

And  if  he  were  bringing  his  own  family, 
mcluding  his  own  young  children  to  the  movies, 
would  they  go  see  "Just  Looking"? 


\ 


GRACE  HUANG/D»lly  Bfutn 


S««JUST,pag«28 


Gretchcn  Mol  <Hedy)  also  stars  In  'Just  Looking."  a  film  which  received 
an  'R"  rating  fo^strong  language. 


A&E  on  the  Web 

See  all  this  and  more  at 

the  Daily  Bruin's 
•   Website: 
;   www.clailybruin.ucla.edu 

Wednesday,  October  1 1, 2000 


Vis^llly  stunnh  production 
imparts  BuddNst  messages 


THEATER:  Director  Thiyam 
draws  from  comprehensive 
background  for  play  design 


ByANdaCheak 

Daily  Bnjin  Contributor 

For  the  past  25  years,  audiences 
abroad  have  been  treated  to  Ratan 
Thiyam 's  cinematic  depictions  of  war  and 
peace  through  the  Chorus  Repertory 
Theater  of  Manipur.  This  weekend, 
Royce  Hall  will  host  Thiyam's  1996  mas- 
terpiece, "Uttar-Priyadarshi,"  or  "The 
Final  Beatitude." 

Unless  one  closely  follows  Indian  the- 
ater and  dance,  or  keeps  up  with  the  inter- 
national theater  and  festival  scene,  neither 
the  company  nor  its  work  may  ring  a  bell. 
Tlie  company's  obscurity  may  be  due 
to  the  fact  that  fall  2000  marks  the  compa- 
ny's first  appearance  in  North  America. 
Sunil  Kothari,  a  dance  critic  and  UCLA 
professor  of  dance,  explained  why  Uttar- 
Priyadarshi  is  worth  experiencing. 

First,  there  is  the 
imagery  of  the  pro- 
duction, a  spectacle  """—""—" 
that  is  achieved  by 
incorporating  music, 
chanting,  singing, 
movement  and  mono- 
logues in  the  telling  of 
a  moral  story. 

Thiyam's  eclectic 
background  accounts 
for  his  multi-faceted 

approach  to  theater. 

A  son  of  Manipuri 
dance  masters,  Thiyam  studied  painting 
before  moving  on  to  writing  novels,  poet- 
ry and  reviews,  several  of  which  are  pub- 
lished. 

"I  started  reading  plays,  besides  writ- 
ing reviews.  I  felt  the  need  for  profession- 
al training,"  said  Thiyam,  citing  an  inter- 
est that  led  to  formal  training  at  the 
National  School  of  Drama  in  Delhi. 

Having  gained  repute  as  both  actor  and 
director,  Thiyam  returned  in  1976  to 
Manipur  and  established  the  Chorus 
Repertory  Theater. 

A  two  acre  plot  of  land  on  the  flood 
plains  just  outside  Imphal  was  purchased 
and  served  as  home  and  rehearsal  space  to 
Thiyam  and  his  troupe.  This  land  still 
houses  the  company,  which,  according  to 
Kothari,  has  stuck  together  through  hard- 


the  motto,  "Bread,  if  not  butter!" 

Perhaps  it  is  this  unity  that  enables  the 
company  to  perform  with  such  force  and 
precision.  The  troupe  demands  that  all 
actors  be  trained  in  every  aspect  of  pro- 
duction -  be  it  dancing,  acting,  music, 
martial  arts,  stage  craft  or  design.  In  fact, 
it  was  Thiyam's  cohesive  and  novel 
approach  that  first  caught  the  eye  of 
Kothari. 

"I  was  very  much  taken  aback  by  the 
wonderful  work  they  were  doing  in  the- 
ater," Kothari  said,  recalling  his  early 
encounters  with  the  director  and  his  com- 
pany. 

With  his  integrated  approach  to  the- 
ater, Thiyam,  who  dons  the  hat  of  writer, 
director,  designer,  musician,  painter  and 
actor,  was  able  to  seamlessly  yoke  differ- 
ent modes  of  storytelling  together, 

"(Thiyam  uses)  exquisite  lightning,  cos- 
tumes, and  the  highly  demanding  techni- 
caf  training  of  his  company,"  Kothari 
said,  pointing  out  that  part  of  the  reason 
he  joined  Thiyam,  was  to  extend  his  own 
understanding  of  the  nature  and  possibili- 
ties of  theater. 
That  was  20  years  ago,  and,  according    ; 

^ to  Kothari.  Thiyam    ' 

■""—"""—      continues  to  push 
the  boundaries  of 
performance 
using  theater  as  a 
mirror  of  society  as 
well  as  the  arena  for 
manipulating    and 
exploring      space, 
movement,     light, 
poetics  and  color. 
In  Thiyam's  lat- 
est  work,   "Uttar- 
Priyadarshi,"  the  fable-like  Priyadarshi  is 
adapted  from  a  lyrical  poem  by  Hindi 
playwright,  Sachitanada  Vatsyayana.  It 
tells  of  a  second  century  B.C.  emperor, 
Ashoka,  who,  faced  with  the  atrocities  of 
war,  creates  his  own  hell  to  purge  the  guilt 
and  shame  he  feels. 

Abiding  by  the  principles  of  violence 
and  war,  Ashoka  appoints  the  ferocious 
Ghor  as  the  executor  of  torture  and  pun- 
ishment,  but  Ghor  soon  takes  control  and 
overpowers  Ashoka. 

It  is  not  until  a  Bhikshu,  or  monk, 
enters  hell  in  peace  and  with  the  message 
of  hope  that  Ashoka  is  truly  redeemed. 
Through  remaining  calm,  serene  and 
steadfast,  the  monk  remains  untouched 
by  the  evil.  Ashoka  follows  the  monk's 


The  precepts  of 

Buddhism  and  the 

message  of  peace  over 

violence  are  clear 
throughout  the  play. 


ships  for  more  than  30  years,  abiding  by 


SecUn'AR,page29 


IIir.'!!SrL^r^''  ••^^^^orusRepertoryTheatreinltsNorth  iim'i^n' 
debut  of -Uttar-Prlyadarshi.-It  wvlll  run  In  Royce  Hall  frorn  Oct.  1 2-1 4  at  8  p.rn. 


";       *:— rt  --7. '~"'-""-'^'. 


-j-.j-^^'yfrf  yt-i 


26       WWnesby,  October  11, 2000 


Oaiiy  Bnim  Arts  t  EmcrtannMl 


Web  site  offier^  window  to 


INTERNET:  Artists  can  build 
virtual  cyber-community  at 
innovative  online  junction 


-    ByUUTan 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Forget  wandering  aimlessly  around 
Hollywood  scattering  your  head  shots 
and  resumes  to  every  agent  in  town. 
Your  claim  to  fame  may  lay  online  at 
MediaTrip.com. 

The  Internet  is  now  becoming  the 
hottest  spot  to  get  discovered.  Some 
sites  charge  fees,  offering  personalized 
Web  pages  and  open-call  notices  to 
aspiring  actors,  but  McdiaTrip.com 
won't  take  a  penny  for  submissions. 

MediaTrip.com  and  Joe  Roth's 
Revolution  Studios  created  a  strategic 
partnership  in  June  of  2000  to  publicize 
films  prior  to  their  release.  Because  of 
MediaTrip.com's  previous  success  in 
casting  for  the  film  "Tomcats,"  the  site  is 
currently  launching  an  open  online  cast- 
ing call  for  Revolution  Studio's  upcom- 
ing feature  film  "The  New  Guy." 

"We  had  such  a  great  response  from 
our  previous  online  project  for  the  film 
'Tomcats,'  that  we  wanted  to  continue 
creating  opportunities  for  our  users  to 
get  involved  in  the  making  of  our  major 
motion  pictures,"  said  MediaTrip.com 
CEO  Austin  Harrison.  "This  contest 
broadens  the  opportunities  for  both  men 
and  women  to  get  involved  in  the  site's 
community  and  the  casting  of  a  movie." 
MediaTrip.com  offers  an  interactive 
artist  community  which  allows  artists  to 
display  their  talents  to  Internet  users  as 
well  as  giving  them  exposure  to  enter- 
tainment industry  professionals. 

MediaTrip.com  is  currently  looking 
for  three  cheerleading  squads,  a  band, 
three  men  and  10  women  to  work  along- 


Midler  mirrors  self  in 
upcoming  CBS  sitcom 


FILM:  Multi-talented 
star  calls  show  her 
^hardest  work'  yet 


side  stars  like  DJ  Quails  ("Road  Trip"), 
Eliza  Dushku  ("Bring  It  On")  and  Eddie 
Griffin  ("Deuce  Bigalow:  Male 
Gigolo")  in  the  upcoming  film. 

"The  New  Guy"  is  about  a  student 
who  gets  himself  expelled  so  he  can 
change  his  reputation  from  "loser"  to 
"tough  guy." 

His  plan  works  like  a  charm  until  an 
old  bully  from  his  previous  school  dis- 
covers his  transformation. 

MediaTrip.com  gives  more  than  15 
people  the  chance  to  land  roles  in  "The 
NewGuy."  ..  ^.^ 


JASON  CMtN/Oa«y  Bruin  S*ntor  Stiff 


Not  only  are  aspiring  film  stars  able 
to  submit  their  portfolios,  but  they  can 
also  vote  on  the  submissions,  thus  nar- 
rowing down  the  number  of  potential 
squads,  musicians  and  actors,  so  the 
directors  can  make  their  final  decisions. 

To  vote,  Web  site  users  look  at  the 
photos  and  watch  the  video  reels 
uploaded  by  high  school  and  college 
cheerleading  squads  and  then  decide  on 
the  top  30. 

Afterward,  those  squads  will  be  asked 


By  Frazier  Meorc 

The  Associated  Press 

Ohhhhh,  sure.  A  dream 
job.  That's  what  everybody 
says  about  landing  a  sitcom. 

Bette  Midler  begs  to  differ. 
"Doing  a  sitcom  is  the  hard- 
est work  I've  ever  done  in  my 
life,"  she  reports. 

This  wisdom  is  not  only 
hard-won,  but  also  new- 
found. Midler,  who  had  tack- 
led virtually  every  other 
branch  of  show  biz  in  her 
three  decades  as  a  star,  began 
shooting  her  series  in  August. 


And  it  is.  yes,  a  sitcom  called 
"Bette"  in  which  she  plays  a 
woman,  entertainer,  wife  and 
mother  all  very  much  like 
herself. 

"Bette"  premieres 

Wednesday  at  8  p.m.  on  CBS. 
Like  the  whole  country  does- 
n't already  know. 

"I'm  telling  you!"  hoots 
Midler  at  the  huge  buildup 
for  possibly  this  fall  season's 
most-anticipated  new  series. 
She  rolls  her  eyes  theatrically. 
"Boy,  ohhhh  boy!" 

Granted  a  few  days  off 
from  filming,  she  is  in  a 
Manhattan  hotel  suite  now, 
talking  up  her  show.  Not  sur- 
prisingly, she  reveals  herself 
to  be  a  dynamo,  yet  almost 


S«etEn!E,pa9e29 


See  MEDIA,  page  30 


ThsAssocmedPreis 

Bette  Midler,  playing  a  role  nnuch  like  herself  In  the  new 
CBS  sitcom 'Bette,"  jokes  with  her  accompanist  Oscar, 
played  by  James  Dreyfus,  in  the  show's  debut  episode. 


Oct.  11,  ll-3pm 

TODAY 

Shouldn't  a  smart  person 
like  you  have  a  great  job? 


Ackerman  Grand  Ballroom 


AMD 

L3  Communications 

LSI  Logic 

Xilinx 

Raytheon 

Next  Engine 

Broadcom 

Compaq 

Plutus  Enterprises 

ViaSat 

Bilmorphic  VLSI 

Guidance 

IBM 

Microsoft 

TAOS 

Ambell 

Cambridge  Technology 

Cisco  Systems 


Andersen  Consulting        Red! 
Scient  and 

K  Deloitte  &  Touche  Consulting 

Secure  a  job  for  your  future  at  the  ACT  Tech  Fair 


Yahoo! 

Arthur  Andersen 

Edison 

Inroads 

PWC 

Xerox 

Intel 

Applied  Materials 

Draker 

Sapient 

Macromedia 

IQnest 

Honda 

TRW 

Agilent  Technologies 

Lockhead  Martin 

Novacoast 

Homestore.com 

Redspark 

and  More 


(My  Brain  Arts  ft  EntertammMt 


V(Wi»«d»y,  October  11, 2000       27 


Sound  Bites 


TOMWOPAT 
■"The  Still  of  the  Ni^^^ 

TomWopat  - 

Ihe  Still  of  the  Night" 
Angei  Records 

At  first  glance,  this  is  an  album  that 
absolutely  no  one  should  buy. 

Tom  Wopat?  Come  on,  the  guy's 
best  known  as  Luke  on  "The  Dukes  of 
Hazzard."  Sure,  he  was  a  great  stunt 
driver,  but  the  show  didn't  exactly 
showcase  his  skills  as  a  vocalist.  This 
good  or  boy  didn't  seem  like  a  likely 
candidate  to  record  any  sort  of  aJbum, 
mudi  less  one  of  Broadway  standards. 

That's  why  "The  Still  of  the  Night" 
is  such  a  pleasant  surprise.  It  turns  out 
he's  a  classically  trained  vocalist,  not 
just  a  flannd-wearing  yokel,  and  the 
album  rcnects  it.  He's  also  given  his 
regards  to  Broadway,  appearing  in 
••Guys  and  Dolls"  and  "Annie  Get 
Your  Gun."  Once  you  consider  this, 
his  warm,  jazzy  voice  isn't  such  a 
shock. 

One  of  Wopat's  biggest  strengths  is 
that  he  knows  his  limits.  His  vocals 
aren't  going  to  kick  you  in  the  head. 


but  they  complement  the  subtle,  low- 
key  arrangements  of  the  classic  tunes. 
While  many  Broadway  singers  would 
turn  "Anyone  Can  Whistle"  or  "Let's 
Fall  in  Love"  into  over-the-top  cheese- 
fests,  Wopat  handles  them  with  ease. 

He  stumbles  in  places,  most 
notably  in  "Baby  It's  Cold  OuUide." 
As  he  and  Antonia  Bennett,  daughter 
of  the  great  Tony,  duet  back  and  forth 
through  the  tune,  it's  just  a  pale  rehash 
of  Louis  Armstrong's  classic.  The 
same  is  true  for  "Where  is  Love?," 
which  sounds  overiy  whiny  and  weak. 

For  the  most  part,  however,  "The 
Still  of  the  Night"  is  solid.  Just  hear 
his  scratchy  growl  on  "Makin' 
Whoopee!,"  and  you'll  forget  his 
Duke  days  and  welcome  his  new  style. 
Brent  Hopkins 
1tating:7 

David  Alvarado 
"United  DJs  of  America, 
Volunne  1 5:  David  Alvarado" 
CMC/Razor  &  Tie  Entertainment 

As  any  avid  househead  can  tell  you, 
a  lot  of  live  DJ  sets  and  mix  CDs  are 
plagued  by  the  same  problem  -  too  lit- 
de  of  what  you  want  and  too  much  of 
what  you  don't  want.  To  his  credit, 
L.A.'8  DJ  David  Alvarado  is  consis- 
tent; throughout  his  latest  70  minute 
mix,  a  release  promoted  by  rave-sawy 
mag  Mixer,  Alvarado  keeps  his  deep 
house  down-tempo,  ethnic  and  stylish- 


ly jazzy.  However,  this  house  pioneer 
doesn't  venture  too  far  from  proven 
musical  formulas,  and  as  a  result,  isn't 
likely  to  add  to  his  global  following 
with  this  latest  collection  of  tracks. 
"Cried  Me  a  River,"  by  Jersey 
Street,  typifies  Alvarado's  bias  for    ' 
smooth,  lighter  than  air  jazz.  Free  ' 
from  all  the  standard  issue,  bas&4)eavy 
percussion,  some  blues  vocals  add  to 
the  organic  feel  of  the  track.  All  in  all, 
it  sounds  like  something  Etta  James 
might  have  cooked  up  if  she  had  a 
sampler,  but  after  6  intriguing  min- 
utes, Alvarado  puts  some  new  vinyl  on 
the  turntables. 

"The  Quest,"  a  tune  by  Dino,  Terry 
and  DJ  Deep,  introduces  some  staple 
house  elements  to  Alvarado's  jazz.  A 
steady  beat  and  some  electronic  pulses 
steer  the  mix  into  more  mechanized 
territory,  but  the  track  never 
approaches  the  high  BPM  frenzy  of 
usual  house  fare.  Likewise,  "Another 
World"  and  "Dance  the  Freestyle" 
continue  the  danceable  trend,  with  the 
latter  cut  even  mining  disco  music  for 
a  synth  sample. 

While  the  subtlety  of  Alvarado's 
deep  house  mix  is  initially  refreshing, 
after  about  a  half  hour,  it  simply  feds 
repetitive.  Alvarado  manages  to  re- 
captivate  the  listener  with  his  remix  of 
Yellow  Sox's  "Flim  Ram,"  which 
builds  a  futuristic  house  soundscape 
around  traditional  Latin  percussion. 
The  en"ect  is  amazing,  but  the  ethnic 


elements  rapidly  become  stale  conven- 
tions over  the  course  of  13  tracks. 
At  its  worst,  some  tracks  sound 
shamelessly  new  age,  so  much  so  that 
Alvarado  could  have  put  an  Enya 
;■  song  on  the  compilation  and  no  one 
would  have  noticed.  Some  faster, 
rougher  numbers  are  definitely  in 
order  here  -  after  all  this  is  house 
music  -  it  shouldn't  be  playable  on 
AM  radio. 

Anthony  Camara 
Rating:  5 

Sunny  Day  Real  Estate 
"The  Rising  Tide" 
Time  Bomb  Recordings 

On  first  listen,  "The  Rising  Tide" 
plays  like  a  scrambled  medley  of  top 
40  radio,  combining  several  pop/rock 
trends  of  the  last  few  years  into  an 
1 1 -song  volume.  Every  track  on  the 
album  shares  the  same  muted,  smooth 
production  values  that  characterize 
the  sound  of  most  modem  rock,  lend- 
ing it  a  generic  feel. 

"Killed  By  An  Angel,"  and  "One." 
the  first  two  tracks  of  the  album,  blend 
the  overbearing  earnestness  of 
Matchbox  20,  with  the  heavy  guitar 
wash  of  industrial  rock  groups  such  as 
Filter. 

However,  repeated  playing  of  the 
disc  cuts  through  the  gloss  to  reveal 
the  heart  of  the  album,  which  is  rooted 
in  the  anguished  integrity  of  the 


grunge  era.  This  comes  across  partial^ 
larly  strong  on  "Disappear,"  as  lead 
singer  Jeremy  Enigk  sings,  "T^m  me 
inside  out  this  time/looking  back,  the 
place  that  1  come  from/disappeared." 
Both  "Disappear"  and  "Snibe"  deliver 
the  overwrou^t,  disappointed  mes- 
sage of  grunge  in  a  lilting,  mid-tempo 
shell. 

Elsewhere  on  the  album,  the  band 
displays  other  stylistic  influences. 
"  Faces  in  Disguise"  sounds  like  a 
stripped^wn  version  of  an  unknown 
Depeche  Mode  classic.  However,  all 
elements  of  the  album  crystallize  in 
"Tearing  In  My  Heart."  Beginning 
with  a  woman  asking  plainly  if  we 
"Wanna  hear  some  kids,"  the  sounds 
of  children  playing  on  a  street  are 
gradually  replaced  with  a  lushly 
played  guitar  melody  supported  by 
synthesizers  and  light  percussion. 
Enigk 's  high-range  vocals  work  bril- 
liandy  with  the  instrumentation,  form- 
ing the  equivalent  of  a  modem-day  lul- 
laby. Taken  as  a  whole,  "The  Rising 
Tide"  functions  as  a  collage  of  past 
musical  ambition  set  in  the  present 


SMS0UNMITES,pa9e30 


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"It's  got  this  ridiculous 

R-rating,  but  It's  not 

provocative  in  an 

R-ratedsortofway." 

Jason  Alexander 

Director 


JUST 

From  page  24 

"My  kids  are  eight  and  four,"  he 
said.  "I'd  take  my  4-year-old.  but  I 
think  there'd  be  nothing  there  for 
him.  My  8-year-old,  I  think  I  actually 
could  take,  too.  He's  seen  'Rent,'  so 
there's  nothing  there  that  he'd  be 
offended  by.  I  think  he'd  actually 
enjoyit."     :  J>  .-■; 

Youngsters  aren't  the  only  ones 
who  can  relate  to  the  subject,  howev- 
er. Karp  recom- 
mended it  for  a 

slightly      older      -— ^— — — — 
audience,       as 
well. 

"It's  perfect 
for  a  21-year-old 
to  see,  because 
they've  grown 
up  wondering 
about  this,"  he 
said. 

Karp       can 
indeed      speak      ^_^__^_^.^__ 
with    authority 

on  this  subject;  much  of  the  script  is 
borrowed  from  his  own  life. 

"This  is  all  semi-autobiographi- 
cal," he  said.  "All  the  things  they 
talked  about  in  there  really  hap- 
pened." 

This  is  a  bold  admission,  given 
Lenny's  voyeuristic  tendencies 
toward  his  own  family  That  choice, 
however,  was  made  more  out  of 
necessity  than  interest 

"Sex,  at  that  age,  is  very  mysteri- 
ous," Karp  said.  "We're  talking  about 
someone  who  is  so  curious,  he  watch- 
es his  own  mother  in  the  act." 

This  is  one  major  jumping-ofT 
point  from  today's  information-rich 
society. 

"Nowadays,  a  13-year-old  kid 
knows  where  to  go  when  he  wants  to 
see  sex,"  Alexander  said.  "He  turns 
on  the  computer  or  he  watches  HBO 
after  1 1  p.m.  Then,  the  only  way  was 
to  find  it." 

While  Karp  brought  firsthand 
experience  to  the  table,  Alexander,  a 
self-confessed    "American    history 


nut"  had  to  ask  the  hdp  of  elder  sib> 
lings  and  parents. 

"I  wasn't  a  kid  in  1955;  I  wasnt 
bom  in  1955,  but  I  have  a  good  sense 
of  that  period,"  he  said. 

In  many  ways,  "Just  Looking* 
turned  out  to  be  a  learning  experience 
for   the  director.    While   he's   no  • 
stranger  to  working  in  front  of  thc- 
camera,  most  memorably  as  the  smug 
egomaniac   George   Costanza   on 
"Seinfeld,"  this  is  only  Alexander's 
second  time  behind  it.  His  first  movie, 
I995's  "For  Better  or  Worse,"  was 
released         on 
________^^_      TNT.  Even  with 

that         project 
under  his  belt, 
Alexander  found 
the  work   chal- 
lenging. The  S3 
million   budget, 
combined    with 
the  legal  require^ 
ments  of  work- 
ing   with    child 
actors  made  for 
'-      some  interesting 

moments       on 
scene. 

"When  you  have  less  than  an  ideal 
number  of  days  to  shoot  with,  and 
your  sUr  is  limited  to  nine  hours  each 
day,  you're  constantly  chasing,"  he 
said. 

"More  often  than  not,  at  some 
point  during  the  day  we  knew  we 
weren't  going  to  make  the  day,  but  we 
had  to  make  the  day  All  the  pre-pro- 
duction notions  and  shot  plans  would 
go  out  the  window  and  we'd  start 
improvising.  More  often  than  not, 
necessity  was  a  wonderful  mother." 

In  the  end,  whether  planned  ahead 
or  happened  upon  at  the  last  minute 
"Just  Looking"  has  made  its  makers 
proud.  Unfortunately  for  Karp,  how- 
ever, its  completion  has  left  him  with- 
out any  more  amusing  childhood 
anecdotes. 

"I  don't  have  any  wild  stories  to  tell 
really,"  he  said,  laughing.  "They're  all 
in  the  movie,  pretty  much." 


FUJI:  'Just  Looking"  opens  Friday  in 
theaters  nationwide. 


BARE 

From  page  24 

'bare'  have  in  common  is  their  mono- 
syllabic name,"  Hartmere  said. 
Indeed,  singing  and  dancing  about 

issues  such  as  unwanted  teenage  preg- 
nancy, a  closeted 

homosexual 

Catholic   priest,     ■"■■^■'^~~~" 

drug-induced 

raves  and  suicide 

are  an  innovative, 

albeit  controver- 
sial, endeavor  - 

especially       for 

someone         as 

young  as        '         

Hartmere,    who 

began      writing       ^    i  . 

"bare"  at  age  23. 

In  fact,  the  majority  of  the  cast  and 
crew  has  not  even  celebrated  their  25th 
birthday. 

The  director  of  "bare,"  Kristin 
Hanggi  is  only  23  years  old  and  has 
already  directed  over  12  plays.  She  co- 
founded    the    AfterGlow    Theater 


The  majority  of  the 

cast  and  crew  has  not 

even  celebrated  their 

25th  birthday. 


cards  with  members  of  the  cast  from 
12- 2  p.m. 

If  you  stop  by,  you  may  run  into 
your  favorite  actors,  as  many  of  the 
cast  members  are  professional  actors 
in  their  own  right. 

Jenna  Leigh  Green,  who  plays  Ivy, 
ccvstarred  in  "Sabrina,  the  Teenage 
Witch,"       and 
__^^^___     Jennie      Kwan, 
who  plays  Diane, 
starred  as  "Kim- 
in      the      first 
national  touring 
company        of 
"Miss   Saigon." 
Additionally, 
Philip 

■  Lightstone,  who 

plays  Lucas,  was 
part  of  the  tour- 
ing company  of  "Fame:  The  Musical." 
With  all  this  fame,  youth  and  intelli- 
gence, one  mi^t  think  inflated  egos 
would  abound.  But  Green  confirms 
that  "bare"  has  proven  to  be  an  incred- 
ible journey 

"The  cast  and  production  crew  are 
absolutely  amazing,"  Green  said.  "It  is 


and^  ^»  leaches_  Kreenwrning  at     I  have  e.cr  experienced  1  ba,e  Kvt, 


UCLA's  Summer  Discovery  program. 

Along  with  Hanggi,  the  cast  and 
crew  of  "bare"  are  also  closely  connect- 
ed with  UCLA.  In  fact,  one  might 
think  they  are  looking  at  a  roster  for  a 
theater  class  instead  of  a  playbill,  with 
fm  actors  and  two  q-ew  members  in 
the  musical  afTiliated  with  UCLA. 

Perhaps  that's  why  they  are  aH  com- 
ing to  Bruin  Walk  today  in  support  of 
"National  Coming  Out  Week." 
GALA,  UCLA's  Gay  and  Lesbian 
Association  AlKanoe  is  holding  a 
Coming  Out  Rally 

"It's  fortuitous  timing  that  'bare'  b 
opening  this  week,"  said  Hartmere, 


felt  like  1  was  such  a  part  of  the  creative 
process." 

The  deep-rooted  and  complex 
themes  that  'bare'  confronts,  force 
viewers  to  examine  who  they  are, 
including  their  prejudices  and  beliefs. 

But  as  Lightstone  attests  on  behalf 
of  the  show's  potentially  racy  content, 
"There  arc  only  so  many  productions 
of  'Oklahoma'  and  'The  Sound  of 
Music'  one  can  stomach." 


THEATBfe  "bare^  opens  Saturday  at  the 
Hudson  Mainstagc  Theatre  at  6539 
Santa  Monica  Blvd.  in  HoWyvwod.  For 
ticket  information  call  (31 0)  28»2999  or 


t-  ■  -■,. 


il»  .rwiiiiMUmi. 


UHAR 

From  page  25 


example  and,  in  turn,  overcomes  the 
evil  within  himself 

If  any  of  the  themes  sound  familiar 
it  is  because  it  is  Ashoka  (known  later 
as    Priyadarshi) 

who  goes  on  to  .^i^.^™.^.^ 
spread 
Buddhism 
throughout 
India.  The  pre- 
cepts of 
Buddhism  and 
the  message  of 
peace  over  vio- 
lence are  clear 
throughout  the 
play 


Thlyam...wasableto 
^■-■;,  seamlessly  yoke 
different  modes  of 
storytelling  together. 


that  it  is  an  experimentation  of  the- 
ater as  an  expression  of  language," 
Kathori  said. 

Through  body  language  and  the 
training  of  actors,  the  troupe  trans- 
lates the  Manipuri  tongue  into  a  cin- 
ematic and  visually  driven  language. 
This  transformation  immediately 
■  ■.,:.:•-  cuts  across  bar- 

—^■iWKMM  riers  universal- 
ly, consequently 
allowing  the 
play  to  speak  to 
audiences  in 
many  countries. 
Kathori  added 
that,  based  on 
his  experiences 
with  audiences 
abroad,        the 


"Thiyam's  plays  are  almost  always 
morally  motivated  because  of  the  con- 
ditions under  which  he  lives.  The  state 
of  Manipur  is  characterized  by  insur- 
,  gency  and  the  people  wanting  separa- 
tion from  the  main  Indian  Union," 
Kathori  said.  "(Thiyam)  is  describing 
the  reality  of  his  world.  But  it  is  also 
the  reality  for  many  others,  outside  of 
Manipur,  outside  India." 

According  to  Thiyam  and 
Kathori,  Ashoka  is  not  so  different 
from  modern  man  -  considerably 
wealthy  in  the  material  sense  but 
lacking  spirituality. 

The  production  is  appealing  to 
Western  sensibilities,  even  if  the 
audience  lacks  knowledge  of  the 
Manipuri  language  and  aesthetics. 

"The  staging  of  Priyadarshi  has 
advances  over  eariier  productions  in 


message  is  clear  because  the  symbols 
speak  for  themselves. 

"The  show  is  so  visual,  it  is  so 
stunning,  even  with  the  subtitles, 
they  are  helpful  merely  as  an  entry 
point,"  Kathori  said  about  what  one 
could  expect  from  the  production. 

When  asked  how  audiences  in 
America  have  thus  far  responded  to 
Priyadarshi,  Kathori  said  simply,  ''It 
leaves  a  great  impression."  . 


THEATER:  Ratan  Thiyam's  Chorus 
Repertory  Theater  presents  "Uttar- 
Priyadarshi'  (The  Rnal  Beatitude)  at 
Royce  Hall,  Oct.  12-14  at  8  p.m. 
Student  tickets  are  $9,  available  at 
the  CTO  or  www.sca.ucla.edu.  For 
more  information,  call  (310)  825- 
2101.  Kathori  will  lead  a  discussion  of 
the  play  one  hour  prior  to  the  perfor- 
mance. Free  to  ticket  holders. 


BEHE 

Frompage26  .      v..- % 

demure  turned  out  in  cardigan 
sweater  and  tweed  slacks.  "I'm  try- 
ing to  be  calm,  trying  to  stay  calm," 
she  declares  unconvincingly. 

On  "Bette,"  she  stars  as  Bctte,  a 
multithreat  entertainer  who,  like 
Midler,  has  a  teen-age  daughter 
(Marina  Malota),  a  reassuring  hus- 
band (Kevin  Dunn)  and  a  gal-pal- 
slash-manager  (Joanna  Gleason). 
James  Dreyfus  as  her  British  accom- 
panist completes  the  ensemble. 

"1  totally  feel  like  Alice  with  her 
looking  glass,"  says  Midler.  "I  went 
through  the  mir- 
ror to  a  parallel 

universe.  I'm  liv-  ~—— — ^-— 
ing  two  lives. 
There's  the  Real 
Me  and  then 
there's  the  TV 
Me.  Six  episodes 
in,  it's  starting  to 
get  a  little  odd." 

Even  odder 
than  her  corre- 
sponding identi- 
ties: the  realm  of 


wtw  Will  be  81  ilie  rafly  pasging  m  post-     visit  VW>A»»f.bafethemu$ical.cora 


series  television  that  she  has  pene- 
ktrated  for  the  first  time. 
||,  "It's  so  enormous,  so  relentless," 
Hhc  confides.  "The  machine  is  so  big! 
Ti've  never  met  a  machine  like  it.  And 
I've  done  movies,  records,  concerts 
-  all  the  machines." 

Never  fear,  she  has  a  dandy  ratio- 
nale for  having  taken  this  big  step. 

With  her  daughter  Sophie  headed 
for  high  school,  Midler  figured  a  sit- 
com would  mean  a  regular  schedule 
and  a  manageable  workload,  leaving 
plenty  of  time  at  home  with  her  kid. 

This  was  based  on  the  series  being 
filmed  in  New  York,  where  Midler 
and  her  family  live.  At  the  last 
minute,  "Bette"  was  shifted  to  Los 
Angeles. 

"So  now  I'm  in  L.A.,  working  like 
a  dog,  and  my  family  is  nowhere  to 
be  seen!"  she  roars.  "Talk  about  the 
best-laid  plans!" 

Mind  you,  she  isn't  complaining. 
This  isn't  even  good-natured  kvetch- 
ing.  Her  little  rant  seems  fueled  by  a 
rich  blend  of  amaxement,  nervous 
energy  and  pride  that  nothing 
"Bette"  can  dish  out  has  thrown  her 
JCEL 


On  "Bette,"  she  is  obliged  to  be 
brassy,  loquacious,  all  over  the  place. 
She  lampoons  everything  and  every- 
body, including  herself:  her  weight, 
her  neuroses,  her  advancing  years 
(in  fact,  she's  a  divine  54).  She  does 
lots  of  physical  comedy.  She  sings. 

Who  knew?  Being  Bette  on  a  sit- 
com is  a  huge  job,  even  for  Midler 
herself. 

"And  it  goes  so  fast,"  she  says. 
"You  literally  don't  know  what  you 
did  until  two  weeks  after  it's  done. 
You  think,  'What  did  1  do  that  for?' 
Or,  'Hey,  that  really  worked!  Why 
didn't  I  do  more  of  it?'" 

"The  third  episode  1  said,  'I  can't 
learn  any  more  dialogue!'  So  they  let 
n»e    lose    my 
^^^^^^^^^^      voice.        But 
'^"^"'""""■"""'      then  1  had  to 
express  myself 
in  pantomime, 
which        was 
even  harder.  1 
said,      'Bring 
back  the  dia- 
logue!  All   is 
forgiven!'" 

She  pauses 
to  savor  a 
laugh,      then 


"Whatever  vanity  you 

have -'But  my  hair!  My 

lighting!'- forget  it!" 


B«Cte  Midler 

Entertainer 


takes  off  again. 

"Whatever  vanity  you  have  -  'But 
my  hair!  My  lighting!'  -  forget  it!  1 
said.  'Oh,  but  I'm  a  big  sUr.  They'll 
do  glamour  lighting  for  me,  won't 
they?'  No!  'Stand  over  there  in  the 
shadows  and  shut  the  (heck)  up.'" 

The  next  moment  she  is  bragging 
about  her  writers,  her  co-stars,  even 
her  lighting  man.  She  salutes  Danny 
DeVito,  who  appears  as  himself  on 
the  first  episode  and  asks  Bette  to 
guest  star  on  his  own  prospective  TV 
scries ...  as  his  mother. 

Then  she  spins  out  ideas  for 
future  stories  that  feature  more 
celebrities  playing  themselves.  What 
about  a  Broken-Hearts  Episode? 
"Everyone  who  got  dumped  this 
year,  all  the  public  dumpees,  come 
on  my  show.  Then  we  could  have 
Dennis  Quaid  fighting  Hugh  Grant 
over  Laura  Dern.  I  could  play 
matchmaker. 

"There's  a  lot  of  silliness  and  a  lot 
of  bad  behavior  in  Hollywood,"  says 
Midler  gleefully,  "and  I  want  to  show 
it  all.  The  spirit  is  willing.  It's  just 
that  the  flesh  need*  loU  of 
ralieawl." 


DalyBninAmA 


WednesUy,  October  11,2000       29 


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SOUNDBITES 

From  page  27 
musioU  style. 


Julia  Ingalls 
Rating:  7 

Various  Artists 

'Up  Records  &  Slabco  Present 

Various  Artfots' 

Up  Records 

"I  have  accepted  a  smokey  gifl," 
singer  Mike  Johnson  croons.  aptJy 
describing  the  experience  of  listening 
to  the  CD  "Up  Records  &  Slabco 
Present  Various  Artists,"  on  which 
his  song  "Smokey  Gift"  is  featured. 
The  compilation  CD,  which  showcas- 
es 16  different  musical  groups,  is  at 
times  mysterious  and  intriguing,  and 
occasionally  repulsive. 

From  the  opening  dirge-like  accor- 
dion chords  of  The  Concrete's  "The 
Thief  (Tjyven),"  to  the  wild  stylistic 
lurches  of  "V-A-C-A-N-T*  by  Draco, 
it  is  clear  that  the  artists  on  Up 
Records  are  less  concerned  with  their 
commercial  potential  than  they  are 
with  honestly  expressing  themselves. 

Although  several  of  the  songs, 


through  use  of  pre-programmed 
beats  and  predominant  bass,  could  be 
placed  in  the  broadly  defined  catego- 
ry of  "electronica,"  the  true  unifying 
factor  of  the  songs  is  their  personali- 
ty. "Land  of  the  Loops,"  from  the 
group  France,  begins  with  a  plodding 
synthesizer  riff  reminiscent  of  the 
openinjg  music  of  a  children's  show, 
joined  immediately  by  an  eerie,  beat- 
scrambled  vocal  track.  The  song 
inspires  simultaneous  impulses  to 
absorb  a  moral  lesson  while  shaking 
it  on  the  dance  floor. 

Songs  such  as  "My  Wandering 
Eye"  from  Dark  Fantastic  and  "Edit 
the  Sad  Parts"  from  Modest  Mouse 
offer  emotionally  revealing,  guitar- 
driven  rock  'n'  roll,  while, 
"Compound  Elements"  from 
Volume  All 'Star,  comes  across  as  the 
German  techno  version  of  dub 
music. 

Altogether,  "  Up  Records  & 
Slabco  Present  Various  Artists"  chal- 
lenges and  stimulates  the  listener  with 
the  one  quality  currently  lacking  in 
almost  all  of  the  country's  top  selling 
musical  acts;  imagiiuition. 

Julia  Ingalls 
Rating:  7 


MEDIA 

From  page  26 

to  create  and  submit  a  "New  Guy" 
cheer  and  the  top  three  squads  will 
be  given  performing  roles  in  the 
film. 

Rock  bands  can  also  submit  their 
band  biographies  and  music  on 
MediaTrip.com,  and  from  there, 
Web  users  and  producers  determine 
their  fate. 

Likewise,  actors  will  submit  pho- 
tos, and  biogra- 
phies     in      an 

attempt    to    be     — — ^— — — — 
cast   as   extras. 
MediaTrip.com 

users  will  vote 

on  the  top   10 

men  and  the  film 

producers    will 

then  decide  on 

which  three  men 

will     be     cast. 

Over  the  next  10 

weeks,  Wtto  site 

users  can  vote 


wwwMediaTnpcom 


"We  wanted  to 

continue  to  create 

opportunities  for  our 

users  to  get  involved." 

Austin  Harrison 

CEO,  MediaTrip.com 


on  a  female  winner  each  week  to  be 
«n  extra  in  "The  New  Guy." 

"The  New  Guy"  isn't  the  only 
thing  that  lures  Net  surfers  to 
MediaTrip.com,  though.  Artists  can 
create  their  own  community  on  the 
site,  featuring  their  own  works  and 
communicating  with  one  another 
through  the  site's  message  boards. 

Several  contests  arc  also  hdd  on 
the  site.  Currently,  MediaTrip.com 
has  a  Flowlab  skateboard  auto- 
graphed by  the  Black  Eyed  Peas  up 
for  grabs  for  one  of  its  lucky  users. 

MediaTrip.com  also  Teitures 
other  movks  bMtdM  "Th*  N«w 
Guy."  W(*  site  osen  are  able  to 
watdi  MitMited  redi  of  "Gary  the 


In  addition  to  several  short  films, 
MediaTrip.com  offers  reviews  of 
current  movies  playing  in  theaters. 
Audio  interviews  with  blockbuster 
stars  such  as  Sylvester  Stallone 
("Get  Carter"),  Jada  Pinkett-Smith 
("Bamboozled")  and  Keanu  Reeves 
("The  Replacements")  provide  fur- 
ther entertainment  while  stay-at- 
home  movie  watchers  can  learn 
about  the  latest  video  and  DVD 
releases. 

MediaTrip.com  provides  the  lat- 
est in  the  world  of  music  by  offering 
interviews, 
_^___^^^^^^  music  videos 
and  concerts 
from  groups 
like  De  La  Soul, 
Madonna  and 
Third  Eye 

Blind,  the  Web 
site  also  fea- 
tures its  own 
community 
radio  program 
accessible  from 
the  Internet. 
For  tons  of 


laughs,  dick  on  the  "Live  Action 
Shows"  to  watch  comedy  programs. 
Currently,  McdiaTrip.com  features 
an  alternative  comedy  show  called 
"No  Drink  Minimum." 

Users  can  also  watch  the  "Daily 
Comic,"  with  Bob  Odenkirk  and 
Karen  KilgarifT. 

Not  only  is  MediaTrip.com  a  site 
where  checrlcading  squads,  bands 
and  aspiring  actors  can  audition 
online  to  win  roles  in  movies  like 
"The  New  Guy,"  it  also  ofTcn  a  vari- 
ety of  entertainment  for  everyone. 

Check  it  out  for  the  latest  in 
movies,  musMSIcomedy  and  stirs. 
Medi«Trip.cofl^M  the  interviews, 
information  anf  contests  necessary 


S^*:'??^'^-?^^'*''^     to  bring  togcS^r  a  coSZ^ 
Gr«nmicr(  Frasier").  "rtistt  via  the  hlKoei. 


(My  Brain  Arts  ft  EMMaiMMiii 


WWiKidajiOctobef  11.2000       31 


Opportunities 


mmmtm 


created  here 


■.?  '  -■•--.. ';:,«;';V^" 


■"?»..,'.' 


.,.^^l,t^^^. 


■'W 


M&A 


investigate  career  opportunities 
at  today's  leading  global 
technology  M&A  advisor  and 
private  equity  firm.    - 


.'":»■■ 


-•'?<*?•' 


# 


Technology 


Company  Presentation:     -       ; 
Thursday,  October  1 2,  2000 
Presentation  begins  at  7:00  pm  : 
At  the  W  HJotel  -  930  Hilgard  Avenue 


^ 


Resume  drop  date:  Friday  October  13,  2000 
On-Campus  interviews:  Monday,  October  30,  2000 


Bring  together  todays  hottest  industries  -  technology  and  global  financial  services 
Add  a  work  environment  that  fosters  knowledge  in  IT.  communications  and  media 
You  11  see  something  new  beginning  to  take  shape:  career  opportunities  unlike  those 
anywhere.  Join  the  firm  that  specializes  in  creating  opportunities  for  our  clients  and 
professionals.  Broadview.  With  offices  in  the  US.  Europe  and  Asia.  For  more  information 
reach  us  at  www.broadview.com  or  submit  resumes  to  analystrecruiter@broadview.com 


BROADVIEW 


u. 


r'TTiliWiffiiliili 


":<MWll»MM;iiffi';'g-»''ig,'^B»»ieT^weis»»»r«: 


JmU 


Daily  Bruin 


,- '  ■  •■.-•■  ■    c'- 


CLASSIFIED 


Wednesday,  October  It,  2000 


'r''  "^'      '  I  '    "i.  ntFii   111     '   [«i> 


K*«-;^y**4A;',V  ^i«^.-*,^J^.,T 


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33       WfcdWudj)i,OciDhw  11,2000 


CaityBniinaMdfM 


J  1- 


I  Campus  Happenings 
I  Campus  Organizations 

CamtMJS  Racruitment 

Campus  Services 

Birthdays 
I  Legal  notices 
I  Lost  &  Found 

IMisceilaneous 

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I  Tickets  Wanted 

Wanted 


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I  Bicycles  /  Skates 

Books 

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I  Accessories 
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travel 


irts  /  Hotels 
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1-900  numbers 
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TWecommunlcalkMis 
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Typing 

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mmQ 


Business  Opportunities 
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Child  Care  Offered 
I  ChiW  Cars  VUantaii 
HelpWMited 
HousesHtlng 
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Vokimeer 


mtTjjj 


ApartmenU  for  Rent 

Apartmenu  FumlslMd 

Condo  /  TbMmhouse  for  ReiH 

CofMlo  /  Timmhouse  for  Sale 

Guesthouse  for  Rent 

House  for  Rent 

House  for  sale 

Houseboats  for  Item  /  Sale 

Housing  Needed 

Room  for  Help 

Room  tor  Rant 

Roommates  ••  I>r1vate  Room 
I  RoommMes  -  Shared  Room 
,     Mou 

Vacation  Itentals 


tndlGx 


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^^^^ 


payment 


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Deutsche  Barv:  Alex.  Brown  identifies  the  US  investnnent  banlcing  and  brokerage  activities  of  DB  Alex.  Brown  LLC  and 

Deutsche  Banic  Securities  Inc.,  which  are  indirect  subsidianes  of  Deutsche  Banic  AG. 

•Tradenrark  application  pending  '-■.  ...  ';..:■ 


an  efledlife  ad 

•  Start  your  ad  with  the 
merchandise  you  are  selling. 
This  makes  it  easier  for  readers  to 
quickly  scan  the  ads  and  locate 
your  Items 

•  Always  include  the  price  of  your 
item.  Many  classified  readers 
simply  do  not  respond  to  ads 
without  prices. 

•  Avoid  abbrBvi8tions--make  your 
ad  easy  for  readers  to  understand 

•  Place  yoursetf  in  the  reader's 
position,  ask  what  you  would  Uke 
to  know  atK>ut  the  merchandise, 
and  Include  that  In  the  ad    include 
such  infomiation  as  brand  names, 
colors  and  other  specific 
descriptions. 

SM.  or  sanal  orttmtai  In  ■ 
sarvicas  lOmmKi  or  Hw 


isiMponaU*  hx Iti* lirtl Incoir 


Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown 


Turning  change  into  opportunity 


r^T4'4'4"iT^ 


W0  NMd 


HonMRMOT  MPEGS,  Qulcfc- 

■no  «NXtt9  Oi  VNMOi  m  rnOIDS 


lliMBrtalmustlMorlgMandNQI  SIlfiEQ. 
Nosscand4isnd8UI-KMUST  BE  VDURS* 


t*nmft 


■Man 


•143illii»0ewira.- 

MOUOE  yOA  NMCMOCSS  MO  Mtt  NIMBI 
pw^  jBw  wti^iy  —  www 


Fratumities  •  Sororities 
Chibs  •  Student  Groups 

Earn  $1.000-S2.000  tMs  qusfttf  «M«  Om  Msy 
CampMfuNMMr.cwn  Itirse  hour  fundnang  wwii 
No  SalM  nqumd  Ftnfeaang  (Mn  ira  IMng  (McMy: 
to  cH  kxtorl  Contact  CanpuHumtnMar.com  M  (M^ 
R3-Xnt,ar«W(  -     - 


1800 

MiscnllriiKMJiis 


NEED  TWO  TICKETS  tor  UCLA  vs. 
footMH  Gams.  Call  310-572-1958 


use 


ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-campus  a  on-Kne  flnarx^l  ssn^lcas 
source  lor  studsMs.  faculty  &  stafl.  Visit  us  at 
Acksmtan  A-iavsl,  on-line  at  www.ucu.0fg  or 
can  310-477-6628. 

PSYCHICOtRL.com  SfMdflc  answars  to 
your  quaslions  by  Justin*  as  Issiursd  m 
GHamour  and  EnlartairvMnI  WaaWy  Maga> 
zma.  $60  by  s-mail. 


2000 

Pctsoiiiils 


MAJOR 

ENTERTAINTMENT 

INDSUTRYJEXEC 

Sasks  bsaullM  snmao  to  daM^aBarid  mator 
toduatry  tmu.  Qrsaf  adwanmra.  Stn^, 
«Mia.  mala.  40,  tal,  vary  alliaiai)#suuass 
M  (raasnMaa  Mchaal  Dougtaa).  8ala.  310- 
777-0204. 


11  oo 

Campus  Happenings 


1100 

Campus  Happeni(i(js 


1100 

Campus  Happoniiuis 


announcements 

1100-2600 


11  oo 

Campus  Happenings 


THE  UCLA  SCHOOL  OF  NURSING  Is 
scheduled  for  accredltatton  sila-vistt  by  the 
Commission  on  Cotogiale  Nursing  on  Oct. 
30,  31,  and  Nov.  1,  2000.  The  public  is  irwH- 
ed  to  attend  ttie  site  visit  and  express  their 
opinion  on  the  t>accalaureate  and  master's 
degrae  programs.  For  further  into,  contact 
Eloise  Luera  310-825-5884. 


SHOW  YOUR  STUFF  ON  TV! 


Juniors  and  seniors  welcome. 


2000 

PiirsDiials 


NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT. Sale'  aftoidable'  affective-  visit  us  at 
www.figureplus.com  1-8e8-«)3-9e00.  Dis- 
tributorships ars  avalabla. 

PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-36 
year  old  lamalas  tNNh  advankMous  and  opan 
minded  apli«i  «^  want  to  axpanMMplora 
their  anaiaMy  ftmugii  nuda  modalng.  Free 
prims  tor  modalng  «ma.  Can  Robert  at  310- 
463-6996  robWOatt.nal 


2100 

Rccrr.-atfonal  Ac.tivitK-*- 


VAMPIRE  Live  Action  Role  Playing  gamal 
Cal  David  909-338-4621  or  visit  www.gaocl- 
lias.com/LAt>yNigh4.  Games  every  other  Sat 
beginning  10^/00. 


2000 

Personals 


RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  tor 
UCLA  Bram  Mapping  study.  Wear  goggles 
tor  two  wwsfcs  mal  turn  the  world  upside 
down.  Musi  ba  righHwndod,  nomwl  haarftig. 
viaion  good  or  corractabto,  $1000  payment. 
Corttct  Richard  at  quixoleOucia.edu  for 
inon  Mo. 


2300 

Spf?rm/Efjr|  IJiniofs 


If  you  are  male,  In  coHege  or  have  a  cotege 
degrae,  you  can  eam  up  to  $600/mo.  cal  for 
details  on  our  anonymous  sperm  donor  pro- 
gram. Racaiva  free  oomprehensive  haaNh 
screening  A  help  Martila  couplae.  So  If 
you're  looMng  tor  a  great  )ob  and  a  IMe  extra 
cash,  can  us  fIrsL  310-824-0941 . 


SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH.  18-45,  want- 
ad  tor  ntooina  raaaarch  study  adminiBtarad 
by  UCLA.  Bo«i  heavy  and  occasional  smolt- 
ars  naadad.  Pamcipanla  «■  ba  paid  up  to 
$30S  tor  tour  vMls.  Can  Richard  Otmslsad  at 
310-312-0565,  leave  mesaaga. 


2200 

Rr!soarcli  Subjects 


ARE  YOU  UNHAPPY  Irt  your  ratational^? 
HetaroaaioMf  woman  parMpams  neatfad  tor 
study  on  rslallonship  laBalKillan.  Cal  301- 
994-4990  or  amaN  JanaMcktaoI.eom 


EARN  $$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  tor  the  com- 
rrwn  ooW.  Mala/lamale  18-55yr8  old,  oon- 
smoltar,  no  aatfima  history.  UmHad  awaNaUI- 
Ity.  Cal  today  310-786-9121 . 
Emal:dinicalsub)acls»yahoo.com 

RESEARCH  PARTICIPAMTS  NEEDED  tor 
Panama  aspanancing  Hay  Fever/AHargic 
RMfMa.  nsqulraa  4  vialla  (6  houra  total)  over 
7-10days.  Wa  pay  up  to  $100  at  oonokMlon 
o<_aludy.  Conlaei  Or.  0iaz-8af«oh«  or 
DtUmn  tt  310«M88f  or  31042S497B 


SOLAR  ENERGY 

Ej^arlmanlafB  Needed.  Oiract  many  mir- 
rors at  various  objects.  Spaoiacular  dla- 
piays7HH)h  temperature  physica  akidtoa 
datore?  Call  Edward  Vtandegrmrad- 
diavanOpacbefl.nel 


WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60+  WIcyphosis 
(fonvard  bending  o(  spina)  needed  for  re- 
search program  InvaaiMing  wtiaffwr  yoga 
can  improve  kyphoala.  Sludy  being  conduct- 
ed by  Qan  Greendaie,  MD  in  the  UCLA  Dept 
ol  Medicine.  Please  cai  310-794-9065. 


u 

r  THE  CENTER  FOR 
EQQ  OPTIONS 

(310)  546-6786 

If  you're  a  Japanese  woman 
between  18  and  32,  you  can  eam 

money  easily,  anonymoualy." 

Donate  your  eggs  to  an  infertile 

couple.  Up  to  $5,000.  depending 

on  your  educartion  and  other 

Lqualificatiarts.  CaH  today. 
The  Center  for  Egg  Options.  LLC 


.**?■ 


j.  •  ■••-  St. 


■V,  , 


Global  reach  is 


Please  join  us  to  learn  about  career     r;- 
opportunities  in  investment  banking. 

Analyst  Panel  Discussion 

Wednesday,  October  1 1 ,  2000 

7:00  p.m. 

Bradley  Center,  Third  Floor 

Visit  our  booth  at  the 
Job  Fair 

Friday  October  13.  2000 

Investment  Banking  Night 

Thursday,  October  1 9,  2000 

7:00  p.m. 

Bradley  Center,  Third  Floor      :':"  "'"  ■:^' — ■ 

(Please  note  room  change) 

Casual  attire.         / 

Students  interested  in  U.S.  opportunities 
should  fax  resume  and  cover  letter 
with  area  of  interest  to  (212)  469-3872 
or  (212)  469-3660. 


■r'^-i:iHi~'.\f' 


To  learn  more  about 
Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown, 
visit  our  website  at  ! 

www.db.com/careers       ] 


' 

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leading  to  results. 


TMH 


Deutsche  Bank 


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•  '■:••<' 


"•■• 


My  Brain  GmsIIM 


MMncidi)iOctober11,2000       34 


35        Wednwday.  Octtber  1 1, 2000 


DMiy  Bruin  OassifM 


1300 

Campus  Recruitrnent 


1300 

Cninpiis  Recriiitnient 


Campus  R 


1300 


1300 

Campus  RecruitiULMit 


1300 

Campus  RecruiliiuMil 


":'■■".  "•,'j^.'" 


You  can 

get  lost  at 

a  huge 

investment 

bank, 


or  Join  us 
and  find. 

out  tlOVIf 


W0  will  be  off-i 
int^rvlmyiOi^for 
invGBttrmnt  Bmnicing 
Anmlymt  ptrnMans, 

Ihtereefed  pieommjtm 
Bul^mlt  your  resume 
Ijy  Ckstoher  13tir   M 
to  M&llory  Coffin^Mti 
maSkHyjO€3mn9prusBc.c€kn 


For  more  information  visit  our  website  at: 

www.pruclentialsecurities.com/ 

investment  banking/careers. htm 


Prudential 

Securities 


09/00  Prudential  Securities  Incorporated.  Member  SIPC 

Prudential  Securities  Incorporated  is  an  Equal  Opportunity  Employer  (M/F/D/V) 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


Egg  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 

wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

$5,000 


kL 


Call  Mirna  (818)  832-1494 


^ 


3^00 

Computers  /  Software 


WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

Sleigh  beds  Rustic  pine  fumilure.  armoires, 
mattress  sets,  slip  covered  &  upholstered  so- 
fas/chairs. Leattfer  soJas  &  chairs.  310-745- 
2253. 


Autos  for  S;il(^ 


1980  HONDA  ACCORD  5  speed.  4  door, 
Good  transportation  car  $750  obo.  Call  310- 
820-8247  or  page  310-840-5554. 

1987  HONDA  ACCORD.  Drives  great,  5spd, 
4dr,  recent  clutch,  tires,  belts,  andhosos 
155K,  $2000obo  310-449-3712. 


5200 

Parkiiu] 


PARKING  NEEDED.  WM  pay  monthly.  626- 
824-7209. 


2600 

Wanted 


ADOPTION 


Baby  Is  our  dream  We  can  provide  love&se- 
curity  All  expenses  paid.  Attorney  Involved 
Confidential.  Call  Gina  &  Frank.  888-676- 
1995. 


2700 

A|ip'iances 


REFRIGERATOR  FOR  SALE  Practically 
new.  med  sized  (34-tall)  Danby  Designer 
Indge,  lots  room,  manual  included,  paid 
$200+.  asking  $100.  310-208-2686. 


3400 

Computers/Software 


TOSHIBA  TECRA  8100  laptop.  P3  600  Mhz. 
14.1-  TFT.  256  Ram.  16  8  GB  HD  5  mos.  oW 
w/receipt.  3  year  on-site  no  fault  v«rranty 
$4600.  310-338-0688 


3500 

Fnriiituri; 


MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY.  STEARNS  &  FOSTER  Also  Iwtn- 
set»-$79.95.  Fulls-$9995.  Oueen»-f  138.95. 
Kinga-$199.95  Queen  PiHowlops  $199.95. 
BMoon  Open  7-days  1309  Weetwood 
BM.  310-477-1466 

SIMMONS  EXTRA  SUPER  FUU  (douWe) 
mattress,  boxapnng  and  frame.'  $100  Oeo. 
310-745-2445  or  X47501 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55.000  Visas  awarded  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared application  John  Manley,  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd  #300  LA,  CA  90025 
310-820-7553.  Deadline:  10/30/00. 


1989  CONVERTIBLE  FORD  MUSTANG  LX 
for  sale  for  $1,500  Automatic,  Cmise  Con- 
trol. Power  windows  and  kx*s.  Newer  en- 
gine and  lop  New  paint  job.  Runs  well.  Call 
Tino  at  323-653-6923. 


A  A  A  A  w^ 


1989  GEO  METRO  LSI  Bkie.  $2200  obo. 
2D/hatchback.  automatic,  excellent  condi- 
tion. 80,000  mites,  A/C.  AM/FM.  310-478- 
5663. 

1990  CHEVROLET  LUMINA.  Runs  greatf 
Blue  ext/int.  New  suspension.  3.1  Liter.  4dr, 
iSOKmiles,  very  dependable.  Must  sell 
$1800obo  Jeff  323-469-8438. 

1990  HONDA  CIVIC  LX 

Red,  4<Jr,  fully  toaded,  80K.  setvteod  last 
week,  $5000  caH  Marilyn.310-571-0084. 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4¥»d, 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  condi- 
tion. Sell  for  $4300  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836. 


5900 

Finam.ial  Aid 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  applicatkxi  fees,  high  approval  rate,  kjw 
interest  rale,  all  applteants  wekxjme.  Call 
loM-lree:  1-866-427-2677. 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Code  832123).  Wore  on 
campus  at  Ackenman  A-tevel.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.org 


6000 

Insurance 


Cvcl'^T'Tio  Ir 


"^.urinrf  SprvicPS 


5700 

Travel  Tickets 


transportation 

4600-.5500 


1994  NISSAN  SENTRA.  All  power.  First 
owner,  Low  Milage,  Automafte,  Burgandy 
BiueBook  Vahje  $6400  Asking  $5200  OBO 
310-613-8770. 


4900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1930  FORD  MODEL  A.  $10,000  obo  5-w<n- 
dow  coupe,  mmWe  seat.  origlrMrt,  good  con- 
dition. 310-342-7414 

1972  MERCEDES  280  SEL  4.5L  dassk:  lux- 
ury sedan,^great  condMon.  $3750.  310-470- 
7026.  \ 

1979  450 
MERCEDES  SLC 

Excelent  condMlon.  150K.  AIMfFM 
AC,  laSOOobo.  310-828-9111 


1996  FORD  ASPIRE  71500mi..  auto,  a/C. 
airtwg.  red  exceHeni  condMorv  $2950  obo! 
Leaving  Country.  Cal  Andras  310-825-4585 
or  after  6pm  310-208-4345. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Cars  as  tow  as  $600 

for  listings  1-600-319-3323  exl.A214. 

VW  CABRtOLET  Convertible  1990 
B^OOOmi.  good  oondWon,  power  windows 
biack,  A/C.  regMmilon  paid  for  one  ymt 
$4000.  Cal  Vtoente  310-39B-4123  or  email 
ioon>rer»uc<a  edu 

•98  CHEVY  CAVALIER.  -68.000m».  CD.  sun- 
rort.  standard.  A^.  Mual  set  $4900  obo 
310-428-2345. 


,  Motorcycle  •  Motor  Scooter  •  Moped  I 

,  MSURAfRC  IS  TMe  L**»  _ 

tr%  IMW  THAK  VOU  THINK]  " 

Can  tor  a  fra*  quota! 

■  (310)  275^734  " 

■  " ,       «Jcoun*  wtti  Inauranca  pim  nan  S 


6100 

Cmiipiiler/lnttMnet 


FREE  WEBSITE!!! 

YOUR  OWN  5-page  website  ABSOLUTELY 
FREE  Easy.  taat.  quaMy.  NO  banner  ads  to 
watchi  http7/eengen.go.coo<abte.net 

PfT  to  complete  oonstnx:tk>n  and  maimain 
webeite.  NationwWe  wholeeaie.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 


6200 

Hf,'nUh  Services 


LOSE  30  lbs.  30  days.  Money  Back 
Quarantea.  Program*  start  m  $38.  1-800- 
414-3652 

MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  retaidng  Sw«d- 
isM>*ep  Tiaaiw  Maaaaga.  $40/hr  wMudani 
ID.  Monday^rMay  10miv4|mi.  Maidne  Oirr 
310-575-6294.  Gift  CerlillcMM  <      ~ 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Display 


1300 

Campus  Kecriiilineiit 


1300 

l^aiiipijs  Kocfiiitmenl 


./• 


Jack  H.  Slivers,  MD 

Bofd  CfWIad  darmatolpalat 

'H0  hmmt  forgottwt  what  H'» 
lik*  to  If  a  Mtudent' 

•Acne»Mole  Retnoval*  Warts -Rashes 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmentation  • 

•Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  826-2051 

www.DrSUven.com 


6300 

L(;()al  AcJvKX'/Attoriieys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST.  Sexuat  harrassmeni.  DIscrimina- 
tton.  Auto-accWents.  Siips/falis.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM.  Westskle.  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW86). 
www.be8tlawyer.com  310-277-3000. 

PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIOE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pre-paki  legal  service  programs 
ppovWing  quality  legal  services  to  pJan  mem- 
bers. Robert  Moss(UCLAW'71).:31 0-260- 
7850. 


Movers/Storjige 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  Job  too  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  IWo 
24-loot  tnjcks  fully  equipped  for  large  moves 
Call  24/7.  Availatale  on  short  notice.  Liconse 
T163844.  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  w/14ft  truck  and  dollies, 
sman  jobs,  short  nottee  ok.  SF.  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  Bniinsl  10th  yr.  310- 
285-8668 

JERRrS  MOVING4DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  ratable,  aame-day  de- 
livery. Paddng.  boxaa  available.  Aiao,  pk:k- 
up  donatkyis  for  American  Cancer  Society. 
Jerry  ©31 0-391 -5657 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  vwth  dedteated  pro- 
fessional. At  your  home  or  WLA  studw.  1st- 
lesson  free.  No  drum  set  necessary 
Neil;323-654-8226. 

GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professtonal  near  UCLA.  AH  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effortlesslyl 
www.JWGS.com.  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 

VOICE  AND  PIANO  COACHING;  Broadway 
show  tune*.  $20/hr.  Studk>4iON.Roa8mor« 
Ave.  323-461-5204.  David  RIahlon.  Begln- 
.  Intemtedtete.  and  advanced. 


6600 

Personal  St;iA/iC(;s 


fenage  a  trois?  I  do  transiatk)ns  In  German. 
Engliah,  or  French.  Call  JuNa  310-626-8917. 


6700 

Piofcssioiiiil  Ser-vices 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  lor  de- 
prasalon.  anidaty,  obaaaelona.  poat-traumat- 
k:  eMaa^alc.  CouplMAndMdiiala.  Crime  vk:- 
On»s  may  be  eflgMe  lor  free  treatment.  CaM 
Uz  Qould(MFC«32388)0  31 0-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  consultation 

ATTENTION  MBA.  LAW.  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPUCANTSI  Fnistrated  devel- 
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proleeaional  help  Irom  well-known  au- 
ttNMfloon«illanL310-82e-4445.  www.wmmng- 
t.oom. 


Resort's  : 
Hospitality  Job  fsilr'X&'^ 

Featuring  roles  at  The  Disneyland  Hotel,  Disney^  Paradise  Pier  Hotel 

and  our  newest,  Disney's  Grand  Califomian  Hotel  - 

the  first  hotel  within  a  Theme  Parid 

The  Disneyland  Hotel 
Exhibit  Hall 
;:  October  17  &  18,2000 
> -- '■  Bam- 6pm 


Get  ready  to  exploit  exciting  full-time  and  part-time  roles  in: 

•  Bell  Service*  V" 

•  Bussing/Stewards 
•Cashiers 


•  Convention 
Services 


■Certified 
Lifeguards 


■  Culinary 

'  Food  &  Beverage 

'  Front  Ocsic 


•  Houselceeping 

■  Laundry 

•  Paridng/Valet 

■  Recreation 

•  Servers 


Thafsnotall! 

Disney  recruiters  will  be  interviewing  and  hiring  for  hourly  roles 

throMghout  the  entire  Disneyland  Resort.  That  means  youVe  sure 

to  find  plefity  c4  magical  opportunities,  whatever  your  interest! 

Rus,  chedc  out  the  opportunities  at  ESPNZONE  the  ultimate  sports 

dinir>g  and  entertainment  complex,  located  in  Downtown  Disney. 

Or  visit  us  at  vio^vw.espnzone.com. 

For  more  information  call  die  Disneyland  Resort  jobline  at  800-766-0888, 

or  visit  DisneyCareers.com  for  professional  opportunities.  Then  get  ready  to 

Experience  The  Magic  At  Work! 


800>766<0888 
JOBLINE 


EOE  •  Crtating  Magic  Threiifh  Dlvertity  •  CDltnty 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


Council 


Travel 


Council  navel  Invnes  you  to  our 


ijpenina  party  oven   • 


October  7th  •  1-8pni 

pnize  atvesNA/aus  • 

evenu  hour*  on  the  iToun  • 

TNB  WOKLO  FAMOUS  KROQ  VAN  WILL  BE  THElie  WITH  BiVEAWAYS 
AND  MBBT  KROQ  DJ  STYKERI 

prizes  Include : 

TICKETS  TO  UNIVERSAL  STUDIOS  •  QUEEN  MARYS  SHIPWRECK  HALLOWEEN 
HAUNT  •  SPRING  BREAK  PACKAGES  TO  CLUB  MED  SONORA  BAY  MEXrcO 
•  A  TRIP  FOR  TWO  TO  HAWIMI  •  AIRLINE  TICKETS  TO  EUROPE  ON  VIRGIN 
ATLANTIC  WITHACONTIKI  TOUR  •  EURAILPASSES  •  AND  MUCH.  MUCH  MOREIt 


Come  and  meet  Melissa  from  MTV's 
"The  Real  World"  from  3:30pm-5:30pm  ! 


Join  us  For  music  and  Fun  and 

4;rfJL^lGt:  council  travel  taMe  you    off 

-^^^  around  t;rie  \A/orld !  wrgm 

atiantic 


mbXsmb 

^>Bt"lPM5i 


m 


riH 


531  Santa  Monica  Blvd.    310-656-9991 

corner  of  Santa  Monica  and  6th 
M.  T.  W.  F  10-7     TH  11-7     SAT11-5 


Adv^b.    BiipMihiteiiia 


Classifipcls 


Acupuncture  services  are  offered  in  the  Ashe  Center.  The 
visits  last  one  hour  with  a  fee  of  $  1 8  per  visit.  Appoint- 
ments are  avaibble  on  Wednesdays  and  Fridays  from  1 :00 
to  5:00  pm,  and  on  Thursdays  from  8:00  am  to  1 2:00  pm. 

Appointments  may  be  made  directly  or  by  referral  from 
an  Ashe  Center  clinician.  To  make  an  appointment,  either 
request  one  on  our  website: 
hftp://www/MK>net.ucla.edu/health.htm 
or  call  310  825-4073,  option  1,  arid  option  1  again. 


4ffllifitliTfM3» 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PUZZLE 


ACROSS 

1  Ligtitwood 
6  Swerve 
10  Horse  color 

14  Presses 

15  Brutieck  of  jazz 

16  Qualified 

17  Apportion 

18  Stumble 

19  Optimism 

20  Flew  high 

22  Makes  happy 
24  Hike 

26  Shade  tree 

27  Crows'  cries 
30  Actor  Jamie  — 
32  Are 

37  Copy " — 

38  Ares'  mother 

39  Porch  fumiture 

40  Mailing  option 

43  First-tlorn 

44  Water,  to  Jose 

45  Gone  t>y  . 

46  Positive    \  ^ 
answers 

47  —  pillar  to  post 

48  Valley 

49  Slippery  one 
51  Wild  plum 
53  Ate  heartily 
57  Jerked    ' 

61  Related 

62  Leader 

64  Like  marsh 
plants 

65  Mona  — 

66  Neutral  color 

67  "Sesame  Street- 
name 

68  Chowder    '  ^ 
ingredient 

69  Country  singer 
Loretta  — 

70  Out  of  style 

DOWN 

1  Prejudice 

2  Singer  Guthne 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


mmmss  DQQ  noQiaaQ 

dOD    DSCiQ    IZIDDSIE 

SBDS[Z]  Dsizisegas 

□DIDS  E!SOC]  aQQaQ 
BBSS  ODBSS  dOOS 
EIBCIBS    DDSD    SQBd 

□OIZ]    QBIZIS 


T 

U 

L   1 

8 

L 

1  C 

wm 


RIL 


AFE 


MP 


QOSDQ  mSS  DDQDS 


3  Albright  of  films 

4  Por>ies'  noises 

5  Flower 

6  Computer  pt. 

7  Marshal 
Wyatt  — 

8  More  wicked 

9  Ward  off 

10  Cheers 

11  Woodwind 
instrument 

12  Swiss  heights 

13  Wedding-page 
word 

21  L^ss 

23  Aviator  Earhart 

25  Marx  or  Benz 

27  Baseballs 
Stengel 

28  Orchard  fryit 

29  Gardener's 
problems 

31  Airplane  tracker 

33  XX  minus  VI 

34  Perfect 

35  Suit  material 

36  Use  a  dressing 


room 

38  Snake's 
comments 

39  Moodily 

41  Satisfactory 
grade 

42  Selves 

47  Like  llama  wool 

48  Biological 
classifications 

50  A  Barrymore 

52  Went  rowing 

53  Food  wrapping 

54  Actress 
Lemchester 

55  Adpr  Arkin 

56  Merid 

58  Superman's 
alias 

59  Entertainer 
Brickell 

60  Changed  a 
color 

61  RNs 
specialty 

63  Hound  for  >;. 
paymeni     ,' 


w 

rr 

^ 

rr 

16 

IS 

/ 

■ 

Display 


_!uui-  :.JM.  niii>- 


■  P  f  idr  -.iWi  t  !>. 


Oaiiy  Bruin  ObsMM 


Wednesday,  Octobw  11, 2000       16 


37        Wedn«sddy,October  11,2000 


imiMkM'Mp'Ma 


DaMyBnwiaassificd 


S680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Uostinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


[MlSfinASl!]  ^ 


FREE  TRIP 


Come  into  our  branch  to  register  for  2  FREE  AA 
licliets  to  anywhere  in  the  Continental "" 

MUST  fWMMs  •••  a.^  BV«  V 1  ^-  .    . 


You  MUST  come  in  to  STA  Travol  to  register  for  the  refffle  prior  to 

Restrictions  Apply.  Booidng  must  be  made  at  least  3  day* 

^advance.  2  night  mmimum  stay.  Maximum  45  day  stay.  Must  be  used  by  October  31   2001 

CST  #101756060  •  «:«J'. 


.V4^- 


Zj'  '.'*> 


31. 


310-UCLA-aY 
920  Weslwood  Blvd. 


'1' 


TRAVEL 


www.statravel.com 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Services 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  (^ 


3S!L  Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 
_$pecializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


Braces 

Miver  BriUiant 


•  Cosmetic  Pofceloln 

Suroical  Orthodonltcs 

•  Renriovable 

•Tradmonol 

•Invtitjte 

•European 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Comprehensive  Disserlalion  Assistance 
Theses,  Papers,  and  Personal  Slalemeois 

Proposals  and  Books 

International  Students  Welcome  Since  1985 

Shwon  Bmt.  Ph.D.  (310)  A70-W62 

www  Bear-Write  com 


BOND  TUTORING 

All  subjects  6- 12th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  wlU  meet  your  Individu- 
al needs.310-471 -7628. 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Wnfing,  editing,  dissertation  formatting,  tran- 
scribing. Personalized,  professional  assis- 
tance Ace  VVords,Etc  310-820-8830. 


TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Union/Unton.  For  current  taK  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  In  Westwood.  310-206-0464. 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day.  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
pers.com 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results. 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Calculus/PhysicsAIhemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/English  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 

MATH  TUTOR 

I  tutor  SAT  math.  Pre-Algebra,  Algebra  1  and 
2,  Geometry.  Trigonometry,  and  beginning 
Calculus  UCLA  Student,  math  major.  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  math  and  one  year 
teaching  experience.  You  come  to  me. 
$25/hour.  CaN  lor  more  information.  Stepha- 
nle:310-702-6455. 


PHD  GRADUATE  tutors  French  language  for 
all  levels  beginning,  advanced  and  conver- 
sational Frencti.  Excellent  sen/ice  and  rates 
Call  Liza.310-575-3874. 

SCIENCE  AND  ANY  HIGH  SCHOOt  or  ju- 
ntor  high  subjects  tutoring-  UCLA  Molecular 
Biology  Grad.  Previous  tutoring  experience 
1-323-874-5960.  «    "»- ^ 


WRITERS  REPAIR 

Editing.  ouMning.  research,  and  production 
assistance  tor  academic  or  professional  writ- 
ing Experienced  writing  instnjclor.  Harvard 
Univeristy  MA.  JorV310-367-56e6 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


THE  MATHEMAGICIAN 

Your  on-Hne  math  tutor.  On-Nne  assistance 
with  your  math  praMam.  Pre-Algatora,  Alga- 
bra,  PoKJalculus.  CalGulus.  31(M62-06SS 
or,  go  to:www.thema<herwglclan.com 


AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE  Tutoring,  com- 
panion, driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  11y/o 
gid.  Athletic  female  prefened  BH  $8-i2/hr 
MUefhM.  2-4hr8/d8y.  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3«e3.  310-753-3535  Email 

Ioru320aolcom. 


7100 

Tiitorint)  lA/;intt,'ff 


DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/exceHenl  study  habits  to  assist  12416-yr- 
old  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $lO-$l2/hr  3io- 
472-7353. 


7500 

T  Onnoiliinitifis 


THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
term  paper  assistance,  English.  Social  Sci- 
ence. History   Foreign  Students  Welcome 
Call:310-452-2865 
www.thewriterscoach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  with  tt)e  English  language— for  stud- 
ents  of  all  ages/levels  310-440-3118. 

WRITING  TUTOR 

Kind  and  patient  Stanford  graduate.  Help 
wtth  the  English  language— 4or  students  of 
all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW MY-TUTORCOM  Math/Physics/Sta- 
tistics/EnglisrVHebrew/  chemistry/biology/as- 
trooomy/  Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
sennce  Call  anytime.  800-90-TLrrOR. 


7100 

Tiitoriiui  W.'interl 


ACADEMIC  COACH/TUTOfl  for  freshman 
Saritt  Monica  College  student  with  learning 
dteabHUy.  Help  organize,  support  and  tutor 
basic  SiOiacts.  3-5hr8/wk.  $2Ci^r.  Maureen 
310-459-1600. 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED.  Must  be 
graduate  student  or  TA.  For  high  school 
student  taking  second  year  Spanish  and 
math  310-476-0766. 


SECRETARY/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

ijght  Wing,  computer,  phones  in  Beverty 
Real  Estate  Company.  Part-tlme/Full-tlme. 
Flexibie  hours.  Starting  pay  $1l/hf  w/great 
future  job  opportunities.  Fax  resume310- 
278-6801  Attn  Anda. 


MATH.  SPANISH,  FRENCH,  LATIN,  CHEM- 
ISTRY tutors  wanted.  Must  have  own  car. 
Articulate,  no  experience  required.  SM  BH 
Ce.  $15*tir.  310-679-2133. 


MATH,  SPELLING, 

READING 
COMPREHENSION 

Tutor  wanted  foi  3rd  grader.  2-3  times/week, 
evenings.  $15/hour.  Must  come  to  house 
323-954-7433. 


STOCK  BROKER.  Licenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216,  Woodland  Hills,  CA.  Instnictor  DavkJ 
Sho  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  University) 
818-703-8889. 


BARTENDERS 


•  Earn  $l00-$200  a  day 

•  2  week  training  S  Job 
PUKement  Included 

•  It^  not  a  )ot>  -Ifs  a  PARTY!!! 

NatloMi  Bartendefs  School 


f 


MATH/SCIENCE/LANGUAGE  tutors  needed 
for  grades  6-12.  Algebra,  Geometry,  Physk», 
Chemistry,  Spanish  1/2.  $15/hr.  Experi- 
enced-f  Must  have  car.  Fax  resuine-310-474- 
7413  ASAP. 


TUTOR  NEEDED  for  2  boys  (ages  6«8)  Job 
wouW  kKiude  the  folkjwing:  Pk*  up  boys 
from  Falrbum  Elementary  School  (approx 
2ml  from  UCLA)  at  2:35pm  M-Thurs, 
T2:10pm  on  Fri.  Take  boys  to  Century  City 
condo,  do  HW.  tutor  various  subjects,  give 
them  snack,  swim  in  Olympk;  size  pool,  play 
ball.  etc.  Parents  will  arrive  home  at  approx 
6:30pm  everyday.  "•Important  to  note  this 
job  is  every  other  week  only.  $30C/wk.  Ad- 
justments up  if  more  work  or  hours  neces- 
sary Reply  to  Anthony  BrookJier  310-273- 
7166  or  Fax  info  310-277-3006. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homewort<  assist  for  two  boys.  2nd  and  3fd 
grade  in  private  home  in  Laurel  Canyon.  Al- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  can  evenlngs:310-401-0113  or  day- 
time:3 10-392- 1405. 


1   («00)  646  -  MIXX  (6439) 


SAFETY  INSPECTOR 


LooUaa  for  a  clMiH|s7  Needed  for  I 
labor  cor«si«ng  fi?m.  Colege  degrse.  bMingutf 

^'f**^ jWbJJw*  roquirod.  dSHA/twItti  and^safety 


^ 


E«*ilertt)enefits  package  ofteed        j/ 
VMt  tnmxaec-  owlias.eoai      yy 


7600 

Child  Care  Offt  r.ni 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  mn  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Ctose  to  UCLA 
310-473-0772. 


TUTOR  WANTED  for  4th  grade  boy.  aum- 
gual  (French-English)  American  preferred. 
3tlmes/wk  for  2  hours.  Must  have  own  car 
Bel-air.  310-471-0032  or  dbtwenty4sev- 
enOaol.com 


NAGiLA  P^fSCHooL 


UMwIy  W.LA.  fMNNy.  doM  to  UOA 

FT  «  PT.  AoM  2-6. 
CaM  (310)207-4543  or  vistt  in  pwBon 
at  1620  S.  Bundy. 


7700 

Child  Ciir.!  W;mt(;d 


TUTORS  NEEDED 

All  subjects,  levels,  ages.  Flexitjie  days  and 
hours.  $10-13/hour.  Tutor  in  WLA  or  SFV. 
Totally  Tutored.  310-397-0999. 


7200 

Ty()mfj 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in 
es,  dissertatkxis,  transcriptwn,  resumes,  fil- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports  Santa 
Monica,  310-828-6939  Hollywood.  323-466- 
2888. 


ABSOLUTELY 
AWESOME 

AFTERNOON  assistant  for  2  wonderful  girts 
(5.8yrs)  Driving,  playing,  HW  Near  UCLA. 
Mon-Thurs.3-6pm.some  evenings  Day.  310- 
206-0669;  night,  310-824-9609. 

AFTER  SCHOOL  CARE  NEEDED  4 
days/wk.  2  boys  ages  648  WLA,  Car  neces- 
sary. Must  be  available  2:45-5:45pm.  CaH 
Stacey  310-449-5765." 

AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED. 
Mon-Fri,  2pm-7pm.  Own  Iransportatkin  a 
must.  Brentwood.  310-979-7103. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE  Tutoring.com- 
panion.drivir)g.  Active  7y/o  boy  artd  11y/o 
girt.  Athletic  female  prefened.  BH.  $8-12/hr. 
4daysA«k  2-4hrs/day.  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663.310-753-3535.  EmaH  tonz320aol.oom. 

ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

P/T  JOB  working  with  sweet,  intelligent 
handkapped  giri  ChiW  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  in  kitchen  and  wortung  with  chikJ 
on  improving  physteal  skills.  Appficant  must 
be  sweet,  intelligent,  reliable,  speak  English 
and  drive  Meat  Elman:3 10-396-8 100. 


7^00 

Business  Opportunities 


A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  Ifs  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35,  Refundable.  No  Risk. 
httpy/zl>gib.com/phanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stephanie. 


CHILD  CARE 

for  2  girts,  ages  5411.  Brentwood.  Tues  4 
Thurs  evenings,  5-9:30pm  Duties  inckide: 
light  meal  prep,  reading,  playing,  bathing. 
Must  have  car.  Excellent  references  and  en- 
joy chikJren.  Salary  neg.  Please  call  Linda 
476-4728. 


BURNED  OUT? 

Tired  of  misleading  ads?  Im  tired  of  clueless 
people.  Want  to  make  $5000-$800a'mo? 
Beverty  Hills  off  tee  exptoding.  CafI  me  310- 
268-1515. 


COLLEGE  ACHIEVERS 

Ground  ftow  company,  Southern  Callfomla 
marttet  exploding.  Want  to  make  $5- 
8K/month?  I'll  teach  you  how.  FT/PT  CaH 
310-360-6994  9am- 1pm. 


NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

Wortc    from    home    virtth    flexible    hours. 
www.homebusinass.ta/enioney 


7500 

C'lreor  Op|K)rliimii(!s 


GET  AN  "A"  on  your  health  testlll  Detoxify 
your  system  last  or  double  your  S$  backtll 
Call  toll  tree  877-696-4541  extUCIOO. 
www.faroutpromottorw.com 

KOREATOWN  E-COMMERCE  business 
••eks  P/r  amployae  tor  computer  and  o«tee 
work.  Fluani  m  Korean  and  English 
Resumae  to  namhae.hanOgle.net. 


CHILD  CARE  NEEDED  for  7-year-old  boy 
2:30-7:30  Wednesday,  Thursday  afternoons. 
Must  drive,  have  reliable  car,  references  re- 
quired  Pay  negotiable.  Mary:310-828-2624. 

CHILD  CARE  Wanted  Tues  3-8,  Thurs  3-6 
AND/OR  Sat  12-9  in  Santa  Montoa 
Someone  to  help  fun  time  Mom  w/  kMs  ages 
4,6,10.  Must  have  experience.  Good  pay 
CaH  Doug  310-888-0163.  Fax  310-451- 
6050. 


CHILDCARE 

for  petsonaMe  8yr-old  girt.  Ptek-up  from 
sctiooMasaone.  CDL.  own  car.  insurance 
Non-smoker.  Monday/Wednasday/Frtday  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thoradsy  2-«p»n.  iKVhr. 
Call  310-440-6738 

CHILDCARE/DRIVER  for  12-yr-old  boy 
Non-smoker.  Likes  kids  and  dogs.  Help 
w/HW  M-Thurs.  4:15-5:45pm.  flOfhr  CaH 
310-828-5144. 


Display 


absolutely  FREE*  some  of  the  best  deals  In  Westwood.  Check  weekly  for  updates  so  you  don't  miss  out  on  great  savings! 


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To  place  a  I 

ad  in  the  Bruin 

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infofmation  on  the  right 

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Bruin  Classifieds. 


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B5  a  jart  at"  the  staff  tint  juts  teethe; 
^/Gur  isennrable  nniEnts  at  UCEA. 


join  rile  UCLA  Bniinlite  Yearbook  Staff  and  create  the 
memories  that  would  hi.st  a  htetime. 

I'uk  up  .m  applicirioii  rociay  .a  the  .Sriulcm  Mctlia  [toih  IXsk  in  Kcrckluitt. 
^  Positions  tor  St.iK  .md  lulitors  art-  avail. ihk-. 

Applicanons  arc  Jik-  friJay  (Xtolxr  I  ^ih. 

General    Iniorraation    iieeting: 
TODAY    at    5:30pn:    in    118    Kerci.hoii'. 


tor  niort- 


Classifieds 
825-22i^1 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


DRIVE  CHILD  from  school  In  Pico/Robert- 
son area  to  home  In  Pacific  Palisades  in  af- 
ternoons Must  have  car  and  insurance.  310- 
454-7525. 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  12&16-yr- 
old  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

FUN/CARING  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  for 
picking  up  &  caring  lor  9yr  old  girl.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver  3-5days/wk. 
aftemoons-6pm.  Gayle  310-450-4109  (even- 
ings). 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

NEEDED.  P/r  sitter  needed  lor  kids  10&7 
Responsibilities:  Driving,  readlngiplaying. 
Good  pay!!  References  a  must!  Located  In 
Brentwood.  310-394-9781. 

PACIFIC  PALISADES.  Age  9.  Good  Driver. 
M-F  2:30-6pm  $10/hr.  Live  out.  Non-smoker. 
References  Required.  Call:  213-243-4025 
Business  hours. 

PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  for  10  yr/oW 
gin  Need  help  6:45-8:30AM  MTW,  2-7:30pm 
MT.  Must  have  car,  experience  with  chlWren 
and  help  with  enands.  310-441-9766. 

PH"  DRIVER     .       • 
CHILDCARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  needs  drop-off  (6:45-8am)  &  pick- 
up-ferrands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only  Must  have 
car,  insuranceAvalid  license.  Brentwood. 
Please  call  Sarah  310-385-6768. 

PfT  NANNY 
DRIVER/HELPER 

Pacifte  Palisades  professtonal  Mom  needs 
permanent  nanny  to  drive  I1yr.  oW  daugter 
to  school/appoinments  and  supervise  home- 
work/activities. 7-9am(flexible)  and  3-7pm. 
M-F;  every-other-week.  Live-out.  Perfect 
toog-term  opportunity  for  mature  student  or 
part-time  worker  Must  have  reliable  car/exp. 
driving-record./excellent  judgment/maturi- 
ty/positive personality  310-573-1170. 
FAX310-573-0130. 


Display 
206-3060 


'% 


Daily  BnimChssifM 


f^.;     . 


MWMSd^Octob(m2000       3t 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


PART-TIME  BABYSITTER.  Responsible 
oxpenenced.  child  developnient  preferred" 
Energetic,  for  2-year-old  and  5-year-old 
Own  car.  310-273-4900. 

'       PT  CHILDCARE 

For  Very  special  Syr  old  daughter.  Interna- 
tional or  bilingual  background  preferred 
carireferences  required.  Grand  Piano.  Bev- 
ertywood.  Urifd:310-287- 1 677. 

~~      RELIABLE 
BABYSITTER  NEEDED 

For  after  school  hetp.  Monday-Thursday.  2- 
6pm.  We're  looking  lor  a  student  who  Is  great 
with  kkte.  ages  7-6,  to  help  with  driving 
homework  and  light  housekeeping  Hours 
and  salary  negotiable.  Car  and  references 
are  required.  Please  call  Joy  at  310-394- 
2342. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


STUDENTS 

You  can  earn  $20K  this  semestor.  No  gim- 
micks. Totally  on  the  level.  ABSOLUTELY 
NO  COST  TO  YOU.  We  wIN  provkle  you 
w/free  training  and  support.  Go  to 
httpyAill8.go.coolebU.net  and  watch  the  on- 
line flash  presentatkxi. 


7800 

Help  W.iiitcd 


•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK"  Bmis  aN  jobe  Start 
Immediately.  Great  pay.  Fun/Easy.  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  tof  tree  medk»i  Call-24/hre 
323-850-4417. 


7800 

Help  Waiih'd 


COMMUNICATION  COMPANY  sceia  busi- 
ness student  to  work  Pn.  Experience  in  re- 
search and  business  plan  writing.  Pay  neoo- 
tiable.  Contact  Jason.  310-551-2282. 

COMMUNICATIONS/MARKETING  STUD- 
ENT  needed  to  market  and  promote  an  up- 
scale optometrlc  prwttee.  Leave  message  at 
31O418-2020  and  fax  rsMjme  to  310-271- 
3958. 


7800 

Help  Wanttul 


FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

Needed  for  piivM*  hMNh  dub.  Permanent 
houra  wwiabn.  hmMi  Inauianca  offered. 
Please  ask  for  A«»on:310-659-5002. 


2  HASHERS  NEEDED  ASAP  for  Monday 
Nights  onlyll  Please  call  Miriam  310-206- 
9005. 


RESPONSIBLE.  RELIABLE  DRIVER  lor  15- 
yr-oW  boy  to  and  from  school- and  to  appoint- 
rnems.  UCLA  area.  323-468-2632.  ask  for 
Norma. 


RIDE  NEEDED 

To  phA  up  chfld  from  Bekerty  Hall  on  Mulhd- 
land  Drive  at  3:20  pm.  Call  310-271-4651  af- 
ter  6pm.  213-252-9437  From  9am-epm. 

THERAPEUTIC 
COMPANION 

To  work  pn  w/12-year-oW  boy  w/auHsm. 
Evenings  and/or  weekends  5-10hours/week 
Minimum  6-monfhs.  Coursework  and/or  ex- 
penence  w/autism  necessary.  $10+/hr  310- 
559-7384. 


A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

DO  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  In  the  afternoons  dur- 
ing school  (M-F)?  All  day  Saturday,  tool  Fu«- 
timo  during  Quartef  Breaks  and  Summer  Va- 
catk>nsl  Work  experience  not  necessary  Ap- 
ply today  at  Westwood  Sporttoig  Goods. 
1065  Gayley  Ave.  Westwood  VWiQe. 

A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  fieW  sales,  flexK)le  hours  +  com- 
misston  and  bonusi  AmbWous  salesperson 
Fax.818-223-3247  or  email:  8upportOk)nes- 
4all.com  Attn:FieM  Sales. 

ACCOUNTING  CLERK  Needed.  $12- 
15/DOE.  Must  have  taken  accounting  class- 
es. Excel  and  strong  communkatton  skills. 
Fax  resume  attn:Mekx1y  323-965-31 94. 


CARE  TAKING  COMPANION  for  1«-y««r  oM 
devekjpmentally  disabled  girl.  Involve  neigh- 
borhood fieM  tripa4activitle«.playlng 
boardgames.walks.etc.  Need  car  Hours 
flexible.<12/hr.  310-839-3732. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  Jobs  available  at  Cooperage.  We 
work  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals,  man- 
agement training  opportunity.  Call:31 0-206- 
0740. 


COOL  LADY  seeks  drh«r  for  occasional  er- 
rands. Own  car  required.  $7/HR  310-826- 
9150. 


FRONT  DESK.  Perfect  PfT  positkxi!  Short 
shifts,  some  nlghts««veekends  in  small  exer- 
cise studio.  Must  be  friendly,  outgoing,  com- 
puter literate  and  have  dynamte  personality. 
lO-IShrs/wk.  Kim  310-3W^53^. 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

PART-TIME  Jobs  available  at  Coopwage. 
We  work  with  your  schedule.  1/2-olf  meals 
mngmnt  training  opptnty.  Call  310-206-0740 

CHEVIOT  HILLS-STUDENT  WANTED  TO 
DRIVE  4-year-oW  boy  to  school  and  to  help 
with  general  errands.  FRIDAYS.  8:30am- 
12:30pm.  SKVhr  310-836-8980 


WANTED:  Responlsble  IndMdual  needed  to 
help  after  school  with  2  small  chiWren. 
Mondays  4-8pm  and  some  weekends  Must 
D"V8  References.  Call  310-446-1438. 


1 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK-  , 
KEEPER.  Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 1 
ware  computer  skills  required.  Flexible 
part-time  hours.  $10-l3/hr.  Tennis  a  phisl 
We  are  national  ftower  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-2304146. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASST 

p/r 

(M-TH,  9-3:30)SM.  Pediatric  therapy  offc 
medkal  lenninotogy  helpful.  Multiple  tasks 
detail  oriented,  self-modvated.  Good  verbal 
skills,  MAC:  Word.  Quickbooks  exp.  req'd. 
FAX  resuote  including  salary  history.  3io- 
582-1165. 


Design  Fashion  & 
Merchandising  Student  Alert 


Great  job  waits  for  you  in  busy  reftail 
establishnient.  Looking  for  outgoJr>g 
salespeople  with  interest  in  ck3thing 

to  work  in  young,  hip.  new  store. 

Good  salary,  great  perks,  bonuses,  & 

more.  Must  have  some  retail 

experience. 

FuH  &  part  tinne  positkxis  available 

Call  Jessica  or  Erica  O  310-230-6085 

or  fax  resume  Jo  31 0-230-4536 


ADULT  RESPONSIBLE  MALE.   Personal 
care   for  disabled   man.    Monday-Friday 
ihr/day,   alternate  weekends.  Will  train 
Strong  References.  Near  UCLA.  $300/mo 
310-475-5209. 


ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary 
Host  musfc/lalk-shows  for  our  radto  stations 
P/T.  $10-15/hr,  $200+per/show,  plus  (antas^ 
tk:  benefits.  323^468-0080.  24-hour». 

ART  NUDES  IN  NATURE.  $75mr.  UCLA 
Grad  fine  art  photographer  seeks  female 
niodete  18-28.  B4W  galtefy  exhWts.  High 
integrity  work.  Altradlve.  toned,  danoa/gym- 
"M«c/aitist»c  background  preferred.  CaJ  lor 
more  Info  and  check  my  webpage  818-623- 


cSeIS,      ^SS'STANT/CHiLDCARE 

CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT  SALARY  $7  03- 
$8.65/hr+partial  benefits.  CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR  SALARY:  $e  65 

$1 1 .9Q'hr+partial  benefits.  Under  general  su- 
P^'^'iswn.  Ptans.  Implements  recreatkinal 
•<lucationa- 
I  and  sports  activliies  lor  5-12  year  okls.  such 
as  arts  and  crafts.  Learning  groups,  outdoor 
games  and  playing  intramural  sports    RE- 
QUIREMENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  ASSIS- 
TANT: High  School  Graduation;  enroHmenl  In 
college  preferred.  Six  months  paki  recreatkxi 
work  experience  (3monfhs  of  volunteer  ex- 
penence  In  a  chikJcare  program  can  be  sub- 
stituted for  3months  of  pakl  experience) 
Proof  of  High  School  diptonu  must  be  sub- 
mitted with  a  City  appWcatkxi.  REQUIRE- 
MENTS FOR  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR 
Completion  of  one  year  of  college,  majoring 
in  Recreation.  Educatton  or  related  fieW 
Must  have  12  units  in  Earty  ChiWhood  Edu- 
cation and  3  addlttonal  units  m  Administra- 
tton  or  Staff  Relat»ns.  One-year  park  recrea- 
tton  WDrt<  experience.  Proof  of  one  year  col- 
lege and  required  units  must  be  submitted 
wrai  a  City  appBcatton.  Call  310-550-4265. 
EOc. 


Employment 
Opportunities 


•RexIble  Hours 

•Fun  Teams 

•$7^5- $9.75  Per  Hour 

•$100.00  Quarterly  Stipend 

•Convenleni  Locations 

•Advancement  Opportunities 


UCLA  Dining  Services 


Phone:  310-206-2077 
Email:  Caros@tia.uda.edu 
Website:  www.dlnine.ucla.edu 

Apply  Todiyl 


I   (   t   I 


ItHKI 


CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 
HIRING  FOR  FALL 

Do  Good  and  gM  patd.  Pay  $8.00  to 
$l0.26/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/u 
academte  years  remaining  with  valM  driver's 
^ense.  Web:  wvirwucpdudaedu/ucpd'cso 
Email:  csoOucpd.ucla.edu.  Phone  310- 
825-2148. 


GENERAL  OFFICE  WORK  and  enands 
Santa  Monka  company.  Need  car.  Non- 
amoker.  Fax  resume  to  310-845-9691. 

GIRLS  wanted  M  SMctiislve  social  chjbs  in 
WLA.  ConversMlon  only.  No  akx>hol.  Flexl- 
ble  hours.  Earn  top  $$$.  323-441-0985 

GRAPHIC/WEB  DESIQNERIII  Grant  writer 
Non-profit  muW-radal  aits  company.  Em- 
power youth  through  theater.  I»m.  dance,  po- 
etry,  music.  P/T.  310-208-8012. 

GREAT  OPPORTUNITY 

Assistant  M-F  2-3/hr8  afternoons.  Exciting 
growing  company  seeks  dMall-oriented! 
sharp  Indivklual  who  iiiias  atot  of  rwpons«>i»- 
Ity.  Cal  Mona  Andrews  310-278-3349. 

HOST/HOSTESS 

FRIENDLY.  EXPERIENCED  host  for  Jade 
West  Restaurant.  Century  City.  Call  after 
2:30.  310-556-3388. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (EngNsh-Mtfwi)  CuaioiMr 
Servtee  Representative.  Ful  time;  omwlsiii 
Italian  written  &  verbal  akMs  laquirad  Medi- 
an Benefits.  Fax  or  ennail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1768-JspattersonOlh 
ginc.con^ 

INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRlid  seeks  Front 
Desk  R««p(ionlsL  Entry  level  positkxi.  Itali- 
an a  pkis.  ta^-30hraAwk  min.  m  pre- 
fened.  Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son 323-653-1768.  ispattersonOijginc.com. 

INTERNET  ENTERTAINMENT  COMPANY 
seeks  research  assistants.  Must  be  fluent  in 
Japanese. Korean  or  Chinese.  Pay  based  on 
experience.  Fax  resumes:  323-993-0810. 


PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  female  for  Beveriy  Hills 
producer  Short,  flexible  hours.  Excellent 
pay.  310-278-6972. 

Teachers  »or  model  educatkxwl  and  enrfch- 
ment  co.  Nsed  sxpsrtsnce  wortdng  with  ani- 
mals. CertMcaledArwn-certiftoated  ok.  Earth, 
me  or  Physkal  science  background.  Interest 
in  working  with  elementary,  and  mWdte 
school  students.  Great  pay,  hours  available 
during  and  afterschool.  $25/hour  Fax  re- 
sume: 310-445-5628 


ASSISTANT  needed  $10^.  Temple  City  M 
Opportunity  to  leem  the  andenl  art  of  Chi 
Quong.  Canionese/EngBsh,  conuuisr  Msr- 
ate.  people  skWs.  detaM-odentod.  ConlMt  Us 
310-571-6032.  —  tj* 

ASSISTANT  TO  EDITOR 

"^»»««>te-«heiBette.  writing  and  cofivuter 
^  knowtedBs  0*  Page  Mrtter  6.0  he^Jlul 
Fast-growing  molkin  ptotwe  and  television 
directory.  $7.5ahour  Hours  negoOiMe.  Coo- 
tact  Susan  Moore  at  Canoco  PubMUna 
31(M71-2287.  ««-n»iB. 

ATTRACTIVE   FEMALE  MODELS  needed 

^J!]i*^'  **°*-   '8-22  ywara  oW  only. 
$25(yday.  Email  c«nt880models.oom  for 

more  Into. 


CITY  OF  BEVERLY  HUls  Parking  Attendants 
nroded.  $9.li/hr.  Morning  and  Evening 
»h«J««rthbie.  Seasonal  PosMons  starting 
November  16.  2000  to  January  5  2001  All 
shifts  available.  Apply  Nowlll  Dept.  of  Trans- 
•  portatkxi.  455  N.  Rexford  Dr..  Room  130  Ap- 
ply  In  person.  310-285-2552. 

CLERICAUCUSTOMER  SERVICE  M-F  F/T 
permanent.  Good  phone  and  EngMsh  skMs 
detail-Oriented,  reliable.  WLA.  $»-$iomr 
310-e26-37S9ext229. 

CLERK  TYPIST/RECEPTKDNIST  Manage 
•™""  "•'"eel  research  group.  Good  oom- 
™«»M«o»>^*rtlin9  awns,  word-processing. 
Wrioows  95,  up  to  20/hours,  weekday-morn- 
ings. Startmg-Se.OOhr.  Westwood.  310-826- 
0679. 


DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  is  hiring  van  driv- 
ers. Looking  for  sneigette.  unstoppable 
poaitive  crew  immedtetely.  Flexfcle  houn! 
busy  weekends.  Apply  in  person  M-Sat  W 
6pm.  Appty  at  937  Westwood.  310-208-1180. 
DOG-WALKER  NEEDED.  MWF.  mominga- 
TR  afternoons.  Ck>se  to  cannus.  Borviie' 
310-474-9989. 


forptnmisl  tnttnHew  catt  nou 

310.659.7000 


DRIVER  NEEDED.  Shoure  Tuesday  Wed- 

?!??•  J!!!**^-  O™*  Stop  Westw^  to 
Santa  Monlce.  $l5/hr  310-476-8401 . 

DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED  FuB- 
«me  or  part-time.  Westwood  driving  and  traf- 
flc  school.  C«a  for  infonntftoa  31^824- 


LAW  OFFTCE  ENVIRONMENT.  Excellent 
opportunity.  Clerk  posWons  available  Flexi- 
ble hows.  MlnMum20hiaAwk.  $7/hr.  Fax  re- 
sume and  pniposed  available  houra  to  Hu- 
man RaaouRM  Dept  310-274-2798  or  Mall 
lo|Uirte.  Zepeda,  Schmalz  a  Hogan  9107 
WlaNre  Blvd..  SuMe  80a  Beveriy  HM.  CA 
90210. 


$1Q/H0UR 


Accounting,  business,  math,  and  econ 
majors  wrtMwic  MathAEnglish  skills  needed 
TuesdiysAThursdays  for  PT-FT  positk)ns. 
Excellent  experience  for  future  CPAs  or  busi- 
ness oinmers.  Fax  re8ume<UCLA  students 
also  send  DPR):818-76»-4e94. 

$12/HR,  Hours  Flexible 

pn.  indhMjsl  needs  assistani  m  contacting 
property  omtii%,  Must  have  car.  Cal  310- 
476-9069.  : 

|15-$23;1HR  BRKSHt  ENTHUSIASTS  peo- 
pie  to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academk: 
Subjects.  Transpoftatton  required.  We  wH 
tram.  FlexMe  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, inckjding  lest  scores  (SAT,  GRE 
etc.)  to  ACE  EducMORf  I  Sen'k:es,  Atki  Bar- 
ry.  Mil  W.  Pteo  BMIft«ta.1025.  LA.  CA 
90035:  Fax:310-282-6424.  PoeWons  avW- 
able  throughout  LA  and  the  VMsy. 

$1 500  weekly  potential  maMng  our  circulars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  InfonnaHon 
packet.  Cal  202-466-1639. 

^   $8  to  $15  per  hour 

Work  m  WesMwod  tor  an  i«>ecais  ain^s 
organizaion.  Women  eitcel.  Telemartieang. 
Recniii  new  members.  Weekly  pay  Cal  afler 
3PHSun-Thur8  Keith:3 10-279-3300. 


AUDIO  VISUAL 
OPERATORS  WANTED 

fordalhwry  and  operaitons.  l»Moi«houl  cam- 
pus. Computer  and  customer  akMs  pre- 
!^/^  "Vertance  not  required.  Open 
schedule  needed.  Must  be  able  to  Mt  35 
poinds.  Two  positk)ns  available:  Operator. 
M.SOhr,  Technictan  $li.4(Vhr.  Cal  Juan 

3io-aoe-floo2. 

BABYSITTING  A  NINE  MONTH  OLD  BABY 
aome  regi4ar  and  aome  random  times.  2- 
4hourB  2-3  Ihnes  a  tveek.  MUST  be  some- 
what nextile  w«h  sctieduma.  3l<M71.aa04 

,„    BANKING 

riU*cJL52!l?***  ••  University  Credit 
^ii^'^  pay.  hours  *  envkonmem. 
Some  «er  ei^Mrience  preferred.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulv«lB  Blvd..  LA.  90025^re- 
aume  310-477-2566  or  on  web 
»w>w.ucu.oig»bsJ>lro 

BEAUTIRJL  WOMQ4  tor  up«ala"dS^ 
agajicy.  Excelentflt.  Mrt  wbTpte  (5x7to 
aclij.  contact  lnto:11064  \«niuia  BM  #365 
Studto  City  91604.  AaaMani  «m>  wanted 
310-388-2803  """  ^"^ 

B^jjJJJrHlfc  Health  and  Walnees  Co.  Needs 

''tjmnqAviHiMs.  310-273-7122 

\kin  CMckan.  VMnJL  E«el. 
•— "-^  3t<yB04-335e 


CLERK.  P/T.  P1eee«H  Century  City  Engl- 
f»«*20  Firm  seeks  perfecttonist  with  typing 

!**•'?»!««•  o***  *«as.  Mutt  abeoluie- 
5f  be  detal-oriented.  $ii^our  to  start.  Cal 
Rhonda  310-286-2437. 

CUNICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  poeMon  UnmedMaly  evalable  tor  a  K- 
cemed  laboratory  sdentist  m  a  private  dni- 
cal  laboratory  in  Santa  Morrica.  U«>piovWes 
«|]*«*!?v«««*»Oy.  aerotogy  and  Immu- 
"owW«aa«nQ.  Incumbent  required  to  «»ortt 
;i***«2J«?«ons.  Salary  oommeneurate 
wWiQuaWrittw  and  e><)ertance.   Submit 

Tertwotogy  Laboiatoitoa,  1245  1601  Btrael. 
Suje  105.  Senia  Montoa.  CA  90404  (Tel 
310-82»0102).  ^^  ' 

COACHES  NEEDED 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 

2000-2001  achod  year  QMs  Soccer.  Vknl- 
ty  and  JV  Lacreeae,  JV  Boys  Oasltetm. 
Paid  posHtons.  310-391-7127.  Cal  Nate  ext 
247  tor  boys' posHtons.  Cal  Gal  ext.  248  tor 
O'rta' poeMoiia. 

^ACHES  NEEDEDI  GIris  Vkrslty 
B*afca«>al  and  Qiris  Freshman  Baskelbal 
Team.  Starts  Nov  ist-mto  Feb.  P/T  6  days  a 
Jjajk^  Freshmen  hours:  3^:30pm  everyday 
WarWy  hours:  4:30-6:30.  Prevtous 
Ejpedence  Necessary.  Abie  to  coach  HS 
gWjvV^iiaMy:  $2000/season.  FresDman 
$12«V>sason   Contact  Maureen  323^1- 

9061 

COFFEE  BAR  Al  IfcNOANT.  tie  beet  Slud- 
•"•Joto^Vou  muat  be  reapoiieMe.  re«Ma. 
a«V«lance  a  ptoa.  Dultons  11975  San  VI- 


DUNOEAL.NET  lisww.  Pn.Pn  now  seeking 
college  studsnis  to  take  sunreys  on  the  inler- 
nelt  Gel  prtd  tor  your  opintoni  Wwk  from  any 
computer  Sign  up  today  at  wwwdun- 
deal.neL 


EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITON8  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  aaise.  Make  up  to 
$15(Mliy.  Part  or  fuMme  work.  CalrOwrto 
310-441-0394.  v^uwno 

EXPERIENCED  DRIVER  NEEDED  FOR 
PICKUP  o»  teenager  from  UNI  High  to  Holy- 
^NiJ^KW.elsC«,yon.3pm.5d.y./wk. 


LIBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  snd  other  slacks 
duBes.  12-19  hrs^vk.  $e.7amr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
iSSs-l'S^"®'^  "^  ««  A«H>one  Kutay 

LOVE  CUTE  DOGS? 

SEEKINQ  CARING.  nssponsDIe.  non^nm- 
aftodogsHeveninBa^»sekandHiMattwre 
own  car  and  experience.  PISMe  oM  310- 
459-7631.  ^^  • 


pn- orP/rjChMren-s retal stoie.  Hours: sat 
required.  $6-1(Vhr  DOE.  Ort  Santa  Montoa 
Blvdin  Westwood.  310-234-9S54       ^^ 


F/T&P/T  OFFICE  ASST 

For  dynamto  property  management  fkm. 
Must  have  car,  be  organized,  and  ratable 
Fax  resume:310^7fr675S  or  cal:310-470^ 
1970 


FEMALE  ATTENDANT 

10  HOURS/WK;$iOhr10mtos  UCLA.  Heto 
<«aatoled  woman  with  laundry,  ahoppino 
metieal  appointmenls  and  miac.  enand*.' 
Muat  have  car.  Cal:3l0.628-«6a6. 

FINE  JEWELRY  STORE  m  Westwood  Vl- 
legs  needs  Pn  sales.  Computer  Mer- 
ate.lrtendly,cheerfui.  wnung  distance  to 
campus.  310«4-5036.11anv6pm.  Fax  re- 
a«*ms  310-624-2738.  EmafcgracajawslOhot. 
maa.com. 


MEDICAL  BILUNQ  SUPERVISOR  WANT- 
ED by  dynamte.  DME  &  Reh^  dealer  Ex- 
pertiae  with  Medtoare.  MedCal «  inaunnce 
required.  E)«>ertence  wUh  Team  DME  8o<l- 
««ea  big  plus.  Part-Ume  lewtng  qukMy  to 
''*«"••  Hourly  oompensMon  oommensu- 
reto  wMi  experience.  Fax  resume  to  310- 
575-1505. 

MEDICAL 

UPSCALE  OPTOMETWC  PRACTICE  aaaks 
fttj^experienced.  Mgh-energyi  automate 
•wawato  Prom-ofltoaAMCk-oMos.  Plaaae 
toave  n»e8sage:3l0-418-2020  And  tax 
reaume:310-27139S9. 

MESSENGER 

»aned  waatwood  taw  tarn  seeks  2-part-4lme 
•"•••^^"•(MWF  or  TR,  9:30-6:30)  to  work 
kiour ofltoe aenrtaes department.  Muat l»ve 
"»«aMe  car  lnawnce*good  diMng  reoom 

toxiriB.  swtehbow^  sto.  Prefer ISutaitoS: 
ante  ii*K>  are  atao  iMponsMe&dstal-orkni- 
ed.  Ptaaee  cal  Robin  Barnes  3lO-47»«»4t. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

todrt«^wo«ks.f2  lun6gllMMdBagas5«7. 
Partact  scrisduta  tor  aluttant  Muat  h«»  car 
P/T  pa«n«nsni.  Enpalent  aatory.  Judyjio- 


p,r  Sl^WST  SEEKING 

P^  aataa.  pHona  aeatatant  ShiBta  tvo- 
Ingtailwliitalwilliii  sMto  he^lful.  Ptaxme 
houia^jn  environmenl.  Csl  Montoa  323- 
862-0648. 


MUSIC  MARKETINQ  oonpeny  seeks  Fu^ 
I!!!!^.°;**."y»S>  aaalSt  En»y4,vei 
poaMon  aesMlrtf  amne  fflMtogm  dMston 

•tfja  01  me  IniMrMl.  Cal  Rc6  M  aSMao- 
3l41tor  more  Mo  or  vtall  wwwjwkapoau. 


39       Wednesd4)tOctob«  11,2000 


DM^BruinC^ssjfM 


7800 

Help  W-.iiJled 


NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT.  Mostly 
runs  errands,  some  light  housewortc  and 
cooking,  good  pay  near  UCLA.  4-5 
hours/day.  310-788-4727. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  LuValle  Com- 
mons. We  wort(  with  your  schedule,  1/2  of 
meals,  management  training  opportunity. 
Call:310-825-1177. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  North  Campus. 
We  wort(  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
marwgement  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-0720. 

OFFrcE  ASSISTANT  for  general  filling,  bill- 
ing insurance,  invoicing,  troubleshooting 
t}ills,  and  entering  data  into  Quicken  and 
Qutekbooks.  Iday  a  week  Monday-Thurs- 
day. MUST  have  relerences  and  prefferable 
some  experience.  310-471-3604. 

OFFICE  HELP 

Eslat)lished  Brentwood  computer  co  needs 
help  with  MS  Word,  phones,  email,  clerical 
stuff.  Flexitjie  hours;  great  for  students:  learn 
the  bizt  Email  resume  to  jkenne- 
dyOant91.com 

OFFICE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CE0. 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company-West- 
wood.  10am-2pm/Full-lime,  flexible  hours. 
Need: excellent  telephone  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admirVcomp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
ferred Benefits/advancement  FaxRes2Mar- 
ina:  310-475-1533. 

OFFICE-EXCELLENT  OPPORTUNITY  2 
P/T  positKins  available  Flexft>le  hours.  Retail 
store  in  Westwood  Village.  310-208-6404 
from  12-6.  Mr  Rogers. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
woridng  at  various  on-campus  events.  We 
offer  nexit)le  hours  that  vary  Irom  week  to 
week.  Call  310-206-0735 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
working  al  various  on-campus  events.  We 

flexible  hours  that  vary  from  week  to 

.  Call:310-206-0735. 


7800 

Holp  W.iiit»j(l 


7800 

Holj)  W.iiUr:cl 


$$$  Calling  all  Students!!  $$$ 
UCLA  Concessions  is  hiring!! 

Convenient  location 

on  campus  at  aUI  UCLA  athletic  events  and  other  special  events 

Flexible  schedule 

sign  up  for  as  many  or  as  few  hours  as  you  want 

no  set  weekly  schedule 

shifts  available  during  the  week/weekend,  day/night 

whHe  school  Is  both  in/out  of  sessksn 

Make  money 

many  management  training  opportunities 

bonus  program  during  Men's  Basketk>all  season 

recruiting  bonus-  get  paid  by  getting  your  friends  to  vw>rk! 

Save  money  i 

discount  at  UCLA  Store 
fiatf  off  meals  at  all  ASUCLA  restaurants 

Great  environment 

friendly  people  =        "-      . 

fast  pace 

For  more  Info  or  an  application, 
contact  Sean  at  (310)  206-0736 


PfT  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  100  MedKal  Plaza.  Dermatok>gy  prac- 
tk:e.  Hours  can  vary  w/classes.  F/T  during 
summer.  $8/hr.  Pkis  free  paridng.  Assist 
manager,  computer  skills  necessary,  math  or 
business  majors  preferred.  Fax  resume  after 
6:30pm.  310-206-4010. 

P/T  OR  CAREER 
OPPORTUNITY! 

Private  tutors/instructors  for  K-12  and  Edu- 
cattonal  Consultants  for  college  admissions 
services.  Seekirtg  Undergraduates-PhD's. 
Experience  preferred,  strong  communk:a- 
ttons  akMs  required.  Future  Youth  IncTMind- 
Life  Consulting  Group.  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329. 


Seeking  bright  active  person 

with  college  degree  to  assist 

with  2  children  ages  6  &  8, 

part  time,  for  school  related 

tutoring,  computer 

assistance,  and  extra 

curricular  activities.  Excellent 

personal  references  required. 

Resumes  to:  Rose  Cooper 
510  fi  Robertson  Blvd. 
Lot  Angelas,  CA  90048 


pn  OR  FfT  SERVER 

AND  ANSWERING  phones  lor  diner  in  Bev- 
eriy HIMs.  Will  train.  Great  tips!  Call  Roni:310- 
772-0044  from  8am-5pm. 


RECREATION  ASSISTANT  NEEDED,  P/T 
nightwori(  Approx  $9.50/hr.  Stoner  Recrea- 
tion Center  310-479-7200  ask  for  Valerie  or 
Jason. 


P/T  DRIVER/UTIUTY 
TRAINEE 

FlexUe  hours,  $8/hour  includes  gasoline. 
Own  vahtoto.  valid  Callfomia  driver's  H- 
cenee  and  prod  ol  Insurance.  Non-smok- 
ing environment.  Qean-cut  indivklual. 
Stephanle:310-395-3291 . 


PfT  LAW  OFFICE  ASST 

Word  Prooeseor/Secratarial  for  Westwood 
law  offk:e.  PC  and  Internet  adept. 
Compensatton  depends  on  skils.  Flext)ie 
hours.  Fax  resume  310-443-4223. 

P/T  OFFICE  ASSISTANT.  Must  type  50 
wpm.  $7-10^r.  Fax  raaunw  323-655-7754. 


P/T  ASSISTANT 

Private  home  olice.  data  entiy,  Mac/Oulck- 
en.  Accuracy  Important.  Good  Englsh.  Own 
tranapoftaUon.  Pleidbia  schedule.  Weekdays 
only.  8-12hTs/Wk.  310-394-2933. 

PfT  DATA  ENTRY/ 
DISPATCH  ASSISTANT 

10:30am-3;30pm.  M-F.  some  ovenime. 
Compmar.  heavy  phones,  and  knowledge  of 
LA  area  a  must.  Messenger  background  pre- 
fened.  Fax  resume  310-27S-4439. 


P/T  RECEPTIONIST 
WANTED 

Yeflow  BaBoon  HairSaton.  Must  be  hon- 
est/child-friendly. Hours  aweekdays  1- 
5:30pm,  Saturdays  9-5pm  Days  and  times 
negotiable.  $a/hr  Contact  Natalle:3i0-475- 
1241.  Fax  resume  323-939-4339. 

pn  WRITER.  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Rrm  seeks  perfectionist  with  strong 
writing  sklls  to  produce  mikJly  technteal  re- 
ports tor  lnlerr»l  and  external  use.  $l3/hr  to 
start.  Wage  incraaaes  as  appropriate  Mini- 
mum  I5hrs/wk  Faxraaume  310-286-9126. 

PARK  RANGER 

$8  65-$l1.90/hr,  with  partial  benefits.  En- 
force park  njles  and  regulatk^ns:  disseminate 
informatkxi  and  assisi  pdbtk:  in  the  paricon- 
slte  supenMon  of  commercial  fikn  compa- 
nies and  MTOik  dspartmeni  special  events: 
assist  with  oMce  dulise.  Requiras  one  year 
of  oolege  majoring  in  RecieeHon.  Outdoor 
Educatton,  Parit  Ranger  or  related  fleW;  or 
one-yaer  paid^otunieer  ei^eHence  m  a  cus- 
tomer seivkje  orienM  posMon.  Must  have  a 
vaHd  CaHfomia  C  driver's  Hcense  and  muat 
be  able  to  obtain  CPR  and  First  AM  oertifi- 
cates.Apply  bnmediatelyOPEN  UNTIL 
FILLED.  City  of  Beveriy  Hills,  455  N.  Rexford 
Dr  »210,  Beveriy  Hils,  CA  90210.  310-285- 
1071  EOE. 

PART-TIME  CHILOCARE/TUTOR  needed 
for  1st  and  2nd  grader.  Endno  Mulholand 
and  405  adjacent.  Must  have  car.  Cal  Jacfc- 
10:310-826-2466. 

PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCnOfi^TECHNICAL  Bookstore  m 
WLA  has  one  opening  for  oieflcel  poeWons. 
$7/hr  Mornings  or  afternoons.  Call 
MfcheleJIO-474-7771 

PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  kw  (annily  (of  Inler- 
est  to  young  fNmmskers).  1S-20hrs/¥»k- 
SlO/hr.  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues.  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  en«nds.  Fmng^raseerch. 
FlexMe  schedule^iesouicefultf  Cortad:  310- 
824-1444  (John).  Good  referenoes  required. 
f^on-Sriwker  Must  have  own  carUnsursnce. 

POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  BeneMs.  No  Experience,  exam 
Info.  Cal  1-600-301-5866  Ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar 

PROFESSIONAL  COUECTOR  Saban  Pla- 
za  near  UCLA.  "Best  servtee  company*. 
SWtw.  Fleidbia  scfieduNng.  Weeken*  snd 
evenings  avaNaUe.  Perfect  for  students.  NO 
experience  needed.  Fax  reaume  310-477- 
7094. 


Responsible  Skate  & 
_Snowboarders  Wanted  ^ 


Sates,  technical  and  teaching 

positions  available  at  the 
Westside's  best  boardsfiop. 

Full  &  part  time  positions 
availalDle.  Must  be  honest  and 

experienced  Great  perks, 
discounts,  &  bonuses.  Salary 

depends  on  experience. 

Call  for  Jessica  or  Enca  (310)  230-6085 
Fax  resume  to  (310)  230-4536 


RESEARCHER 

For  Businees  Plan.  Thorough  research  skills, 
condee  writing,  organized,  and  reliable.  Fa- 
mWartty  with  PC,  corwoie.  and  arcade  games 
helpful,  spgreeneearthlnk.net 

RESTAURANT  in  WLA  now  hiring  senws. 
cashiers,  prep  personnel.  F/T  or  P/T.  apply  in 
person.  9411  W.  f»k»  Blvd.  Sun-Thure. 

SALES  Le  Beach  Club  Tarwiing  Resorts 
Happy,  friendly  people.  $l2-20/hr  Call  bet- 
ween 3-l0pm.  310-820-2710  ask  lor  Yas- 
mine. 

SALES  POSITION 

F/T.  Growing  Century  City  oompeny  seeks 
sales  person  who  are  energelk:  self-starters. 
Our  company  is  the  ieedar  k\  the  procure- 
ment of  Ik^uor  Iceneee  and  uee  pemMs  hi 
California.  Must  be  computer-MefBte.  Urban 
Pianningtagal  backgrDundMlngual  ^ipik:- 
ants  ttwt  WWII  to  pwMpaiB  In  our  e«Mng 
nk:he  businees  cal  our  afficee  today  kx  de- 
talls:310-553-63e3  ext.18  or  tax  resume 
to:310-553-399e  Attn:Cindy. 

SALES  Popular  Westwood  VHsge  jeweky 
store  seeks  2  P/T  sales  associatss.  Excel- 
lent opportunity.  310-206-8404  phone  from 
12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 

SECRETARY,  halflkne.  mornings,  to  RN  at 
VA  medteal  center,  WLA.  Proftaient  in  word 
and  excel.  $ll/hr.  Some  benefits.  Fax  re- 
sume to  Susan  Orrange  310-268-4404. 

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST  Small  WLA 
law  ofltee  seeks  p/t  or  f/l  bMngual  (Spanish) 
indivklual  Must  have  experience  with  word 
perfect  and  type  mki  40wpm.  Cal  Nel  310- 
445-1100  or  send  rsaume  310-445-7779. 

SITE  ACQUISITIONS  CONSULTANT 
FulUtJart  time.  Seff-starter,  creative.  Intelli- 
gent. Acquke  land  sites  for  oelular  Salary 
oommenaurate  w/experience.  Fax  resume 
310-737-4228. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


TEACHER'S 
ASSISTANT 

IMMEDIATE  POSITION.  Santa  Monka  pre- 
school. 20hrs/wk.  Mon-Thurs  afternoon.  Ear- 
ly childhood  units*  some  experiece  wori<ing 
w/young  chiklren  required.  310-394-0463. 

TELEMARKETING,  No  cold  calls.  $16- 
20-iVhr,  bonuses.  F/T-P/T  Must  have  desire 
to  make  big  $$$.  Flexible  schedule.  Great  for 
students.  Near  SMC/UCLA.  310-996-6701 
ext.298. 

THE  HIDDEN  GARDEN  Ftower  Shop  needs 
people  who  love  ftowers.  Help  process,  prep 
containers,  etc.  MWF  $8/hr.  7am-3pm.  No 
experience  necessary.  Near  UCLA.  310-475- 
4647. 


US  International  Co. 

Wori<  at  home  position  immediately!  P/T 
$500-2000/mo.  F/T  $2000-6000/mc.  Lan- 
guages/computer skills  a  plus,  www.rich- 
lromhome.com/intemet 


PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$600/week.  310-724-8360.  Days  only 

RECEPTIONIST  for  LA/West  Hollywood 
Design  District  sfwwroom.  Requires  great 
phone  manner  and  offk:e  skiHs.  Excellent  en- 
vironment and  pay,  tiextole  hours.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-659-4584. 

RECEPTIONIST 
WANTED 

BEVERLY  HILLS  SALON  seeks  energetic 
receptionist.  F/T  or  P/T.  To  start  ASAP  310- 
278-1191. 


VALET  PARKING 
ATTENDANTS 

Flexible  hours,  great  tips,  Santa  Monica  and 
Marina  Del  Rey  areas.  310-214-1888.  Leave 
message. 

WANTED 

75people  will  pay  you  to  tose  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  dnjgs.  Cal  now.  323-993-3391. 

WANTED:  PAID 
COACHES 

Girts  frosh/soph  JV  basketball,  girts  JV  soft- 
ball.  Palisades  Charter  High  School.  Contact 
T  Tamura  310-454-0611  ext3290  or  ext3450. 

WEB  DESIGNER/PROGRAMMERS  NEED- 
EDI  Ambittous  company  seeks  sell  motivat- 
ed people.  Knowledge  ol  FLASH  HTML,  and 
Programming  a  plus.  Call  Teri  0562-622- 
0729. 

WORK  AT  HOME 

lntematior«l  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo. 
F/T:  $2000-$600a^mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888. 

WORK  IN  WESTWOOD.  Recepttonist  need- 
ed for  PT  wort«  Thursday-Sunday  Fun  at- 
HDosphere.  Call  Louis:  310-279-3300. 

YMCA  NOW  HIRING  Alter  School  teachers 
arKi  drivers.  Must  have  3-6  units  in  educa- 
tton/related  fieM.  Fax  Resume  to  Laura  310- 
575-0271. 


8000 

internships 


ACCLAIMED  PRODUCER  seeks  motivated 
Interns  lor  fall  2000  Please  fax  resumes  to 
Comn>otion  Ptotures  attn:Mk:helle  310-432- 
2001. 

FREE  ARTS  FOR  ABUSED  CHILDREN  IS 
SEEKING  UNPAID  INTERNS.  PLEASE 
CONTACT  KARINA  AT  310-313-4ART 

INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
student  film  projects.  Call  Joel:310-828- 
2292 

INTERNSHIP  PUBLISHING  HOUSE 
PR/MktgTEd.  Relaxed,  fun  atmosphere. 
JrVSr.  dass  credit.  Fax  323-939-1655,  e-mail 
pubbooksOaol.com. 

P/R  INTERNSHIP 

SEVERAL  POSITIONS  are  now  avaUabie 
with  a  major  entertainmeni  firm  in  publk:  re- 
latkxis  No  pay  but  complete  educatton  in 
P/R.  Flexibte  hours.  Golden  opportunity  to 
learn  tt>e  ropes.  Call  us  immediately  at  323- 
692-9999  Ex.13.  Ask  for  Rebecca. 


SALES  ASSISTANT/INTERN.  Short  tewn. 
Make  acraening  oals,  assistance.  Flextoie 
momlng  hours.  WM  train.  Great  tor  business 
major  or  MBA  gnd  student  Pay  $lO-$12/hr. 
Culver  CNy.  Juta:310-99e-0417. 


81 OO 

Personal  Assistance 


PHYSICAL 
ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  dtoabled  male  In  Reiber  Hal.  A  few 
hrs^day.  Flexible  sheduie.  $10/hr.  Call  Alex 
949-369-9871  or  310-267-8189. 


housing 


840(J-9b(JU 


8^tOO 

Apartments  (or  Rent 


1  MIN  TO  UCLA 

WESTWOOD.  Furnished.  Single: 

$850/month.  Carpeted.  Gated  complex. 
Quiet.  Pool.  Laundry,  lyr  lease.  310-824- 
1330. 

BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  U2BEDR00M 
$8954UP  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM. 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS. 
310-839-6294. 

BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdnn/3bth,  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdrm/3bth,  $2950.  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat.  /Vlarm,  gated  paridng. 
Spacious,  carpet.  Prime  location!  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 

BRENTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

Luxury  buikllng.  pool,  partung,  gated  entry, 
laundry,  one  and  two  bedrooms  from 
$1500/month.  310-312-1223. 

BRENTWOOD 

North  of  Wishire,  spacious  3BD/2Bath,  w/ 
separate  patio.  New  dishwasher,  refrigerator, 
stove,  etc.  Quiet  8-unit  bidg.  w/  garden  sun- 
deck.  $2300.  11921  Goshen  Ave.  #1.  Open 
Sat/Sun  or  by  appt.  310-571-0293. 

BRENTWOOD 

BACHELOR 
APARTMENT 

FOR  RENT.  Grad  student  prefen^ed.  Upper, 
front,  walk-in  ctoset,  tub  and  shower.  Close 
to  bus.  $695/month  310-275-7139. 

FREE  RENTAL  SERVICE  Westside  .  1  and 
2bdrm  available  Call  The  Roberts  Compa- 
nies. 310-829-1700. 


Westw  ood  Plaza 


Single  w/  Shared  Bathroom 

$850-$875 

Single  w/  Private  Bathroom 
$900 

1  Bedroom 
$1295-$1350 

short  term  available  /  5  min  walk  to  UCLA 

Parking  available  for 

1  Bedrooms  only 

310-208-8505 


ONE  BLOCK  TO 
CAMPUS 

2bdrm  suite.  Hardwood,  private  patk>  one 
paridng,  walk  to  UCLA.  $1350.  10966 
RoeWing  Ave.  310-208-4253  or  310-824- 
2595. 


PALMS.  1BDRM/BATH  $895/month.  Newly- 
painted,  two  gated  partcing  spots,  intercom 
Jacuzzi.  Ctose  to  UCLA  Bus  Kay  310-842- 
9127. 


PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $575,  $600deposit 
1 -year  lease  only.  Stove,  refrig  .caipets  vert 
blinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message,  'sam- 
5pm  only. 

Santa  Monica  1bd/1bth,  living  room,  parking 
space,  storage,  kitchen  w/oven  &  refridg 
$1100/mo.  Zay  818-895-0497. 

SPECTACULAR  OCEAN  VIEW  Ibdrm.  up- 
per.  Hardwood  fkjors,  2  btocks  from  Main 
St.*  beach  2627  3rd  St  #4   Santa  Monica.  . 
$1700.  310-899-9580. 

WALK  TO  UCLA  WESTWOOD  Large  U1. 
2-I-2.  Pool,  iacuzzi,  walk-in  ckjsets,  fireplace, 
fuH-kitchen,  gated  garage,  instant  broadband 
avail,  www.keltontowers.com.  310-208- 
1976. 


WESTWOOD/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2bdmfVlbth.  Large,  laundry  enckjsed 
garage,  bakx)rry.  large  closets,  near  buses. 
Winds.  Charming,  bright,  quiet  buifcJing.  310- 
474-1172. 


Bargains 


I  good  enough  even 
for  Uncle  Scrooge." 
Mwry  Wednmedmy  «  Frtdmy 


8600 

Condo/Townhoiisi;  foi  Kent 


BRENTWOOD  1BDRM/2BTH,  security 
buikSng/garage.  eurmy  w/view.  pool/)acuz7l, 
suana/gym.  large  ctosets.  vacarrt  11/5.  lease 
$1275/mo.  310-471-1335. 


8700 

Condo  /  Townhouse  for  Sale 


Westwood  Condo  Penthouse 

t>y  owner,  k>w  rise  t)ek>w  markiM  value. 

3br  4  den.  Over  2000  sq.  ft  $450/)00 

310-502-3636  or  818-990-3273 

AskforBan 


Display 
206-306^ 


:; 


*Ci.v 


\ 


40       MMncsdoiOdDber  11,2000     "   .    : 

PETERSON 

Frofnpage46 

Bruin  runner  Pam  Thompson.  But 
when  Thompson  took  a  position  at 
Saugus  High  School  instead  that 
would  allow  her  to  teach  and  coach, 
UCLA  turned  to  Peterson. 

"It  was  the  greatest  entry-level 
job,"  Peterson  said. 

There  was  one  problem:  the  job 
paid  only  $12,000  a  year. 

Nonetheless,  Peterson,  who  was 
26  years  old  at  the  time,  didn't  think 
twice  about  accepting  the  offer. 

"I  was  willing  to  be  here  under  any 
circumstance,"  he  said. 

Short  of  money,  not  having  ever 
been  in  Los  Angeles  otjier  than  when 
he  was  there  to  run,  and  without  a 
place  to  live,  Peterson  asked 
Thompson  for  some  advice. 

"My  friend  Sally  lives  nearby," 
Thompson  told  him.  "She  might  have 
a  room  available." 

"Who's  Sally?"  he  asked,  feeling 


IWhrMnSiwii. 


use 

From  page  47 

get  back  on  track." 

Determining  what  the  Trojans 
need  to  do  to  achieve  that,  however, 
may  be  difficult.  They  essentially 
have  been  ineffective  in  all  three 
areas  of  the  game  -  offense,  defense, 
special  teams  -  in  their  last  two  out- 
ings. 

use  fell  behind  Arizona  21-0  in 
the  first  quarter  as  the  defense  was 
burned  for  a  75-yard  scoring  pass  and 
an  80-yard  touchdown  run. 

The  Trojans'  ground  game  netted 
just  10  yards,  and  Carson  Palmer 
threw  three  interceptions  -  for  the 
second  week  in  a  row  -  and  had  one 
of  the  team's  two  lost  fumbles. 

David  Newbury  missed  two  field 
goals  and  had  an  extra-point  kick 
H'fempt  blocked  -  all  in  the  first  half- 
and  lost  his  job  to  freshman  John 
Wall.  Newbury  had  missed  five  of 
nine  field  goal  attempts  this  year. 
Wall  made  his  only  field  goal  attempt 
against  Arizona,  but  also  had  an  extra 
point  try  blocked. 

Hackett  said  falling  behind  early 
the  past  two  weeks  took  its  toll. 

"We  have  had  two  games  where 
we  got  behind  in  the  game  and  didn't 
really  manage  being  behind  very 
well,"  the  coach  said.  "We  got  a  little 
bit  away  from  what  we  wanted  to  do 
and  found  ourselves  pressing,  per- 
haps." 

He  said  one  of  the  things  the 
Trojans  got  away  from  was  running 
the  ball. 

"You  have  to  stop  the  run  and  you 
have  to  be  able  to  run  the  ball  to  win, 
and  we're  not  able  to  do  either  of 
those  things  well  enough  right  now. 
Turnovers  in  the  red  zone  compound 
that,"  HackeU  said. 


uneasy  as  thoughts  of  living  with  a 
total  stranger  entered  his  head. 

"Sally,  you  know,"  she  said.  "Sally 
Struthers." 

Struthers,  the  actress,  it  turned 
out,  had  an  open  room  in  her 
Brentwood  residence.  Peterson  went 
to  live  there  and  was  charged  only 
$185  a  month  in  rent. 

"If  it  weren't  for  her,"  Peterson 
said,  "I  would  have  had  a  tough  time 
making  it." 

In  the  1993  cross  country  season, 
his  first  year  at  UCLA,  Peterson 
coached  Karen  Hecox  to  the  PaolO 
and  West  Regional  championships. 
In  the  spring  track  season  that  fol- 
lowed, Hecox  won  the  3,000-meter 
run  at  the  NCAA  finals. 

"I  remember  those  early  years 
really  well,"  Peterson  said.  "I  was 
very  energized  about  my  work  and 
the  athletes  were  enthusiastic.  It  was 
a  good  fit." 

From  the  start,  Peterson  had  to 
work  on  developing  the  women's  dis- 
tance program  without  the  benefit  of 


being  able  to  give  scholarships. 

Under  NCAA  rules,  track  and 
cross  country  must  share  scholar- 
ships, and  with  UCLA  investing  most 
of  them  in  the  sprints  and  field 
events,  Peterson  had  few  to  work 
with.  In  addition,  several  Pac-10 
schools,  such  as  Stanford,  Oregon 
and  Arizona,  were  investing  a  good 
portion  of  their  money  into  the  dis- 
tance events,  and  UCLA  had  trouble 
keeping  up. 

But  in  1998,  the  Bruins  made  their 
first  appearance  at  the  NCAAs  since 
1988.  Peterson  had  less  than  one 
scholarship  invested  in  the  team,  and 
he  didn't  even  recruit  three  of  the 
seven  runners  who  competed  at  the 
championship  meet. 

Bowen,  who  was  on  that  team,  said 
Peterson's  approach  of  developing 
his  runners  as  more  than  athletes 
helped. 

"A  lot  of  times,  he'll  start  talking  to 
you  about  running  and  soon,  the  con- 
versation gets  deeper  and  deeper," 
she  said.  "You  learn  a  lot  about  your- 


self. He  makes  you  realize  the  things 
in  your  life  that  you  have  to  change  to 
get  the  most  out  of  yourself.  He  does- 
n't push  you,  but  he  makes  you  real- 
ize what  you  have  to  do  and  a  lot  of 
times,  that's  what  you  need." 

Bowen  added  that  Peterson  makes 
himself  available  to  his  runners  at  all 
times  of  the  day  and  that  she  feels 
comfortable  discussing  anything  with 
him. 

"When  we  talk  to  runners  from 
other  teams  about  Eric,  they  get 
weirded  out,"  she  said.  "They  don't 
understand  how  he  can  be  our  friend 
and  somehow  be  professional. 

"He's  affected  me  as  much  as  any- 
one in  my  life." 

This  year,  Peterson's  duties 
expanded  as  he  also  took  over  the 
men's  cross  country  team,  which  had 
been  under  Bob  Larsen  for  the  last 
two  decades,  while  continuing  to 
coach  the  women's  squad. 

"It's  a  totally  different  system," 
said  sophomore  Justin  Patananan. 
"He's  very  active.  When  we  do 


tempo  runs,  he'll  take  100-meter 
splits.  That's  not  something  you  real- 
ly expect." 

"I  think  he's  still  young  and  trying 
to  prove  himsdf,"  added  senior  Paul 
Muite.  "He's  using  a  lot  of  energy 
and  that  gets  us  going  too." 

As  a  result,  the  men's  team,  which 
has  spent  the  last  few  years  in  the  Pac- 
lO's  gutter,  has  exceeded  expecta- 
tions. And  the  women's  teart,  despite 
the  departure  of  three  top-fiight  run- 
ners, looks  to  be  in  contention  to  grab 
its  third  consecutive  NCAA  champi- 
onship bid. 

In  the  meantime,  Peterson  contin- 
ues to  run  around  recruiting,  in  hopes 
of  landing  the  elite  athletes  that  will 
push  his  teams  into  the  top  10. 

While  he  spends  much  of  his  free 
time  with  the  friends  he  made  when 
he  lived  in  San  Diego,  Peterson  does- 
n't get  many  of  those  opportunities. 

"I  travel  a  lot  and  I  don't  have  « 
lot  of  time,"  he  said.  "But  I  love  it 
No  one  should  feel  sorry  for  me.  I 
love  what  I  do." 


Diily  Brain  Sporb 


KMIOTEK 

From  page 48  -         -" 

to  help  UCLA  beat  Alabama.  It  was 
exciting,  fun  and  displayed  how  explosive 
the  offense  can  be. 

Worst  play:  Coach  Bob  Toledo's  deci- 
sion to  punt  late  in  UCLA's  loss  to 
Oregon.  If  they  had  gone  for  it,  who 
knows.  Instead  UCLA  threw  in  the 
towel. 

The  J. P.  Losman  award  for  stupidity: 
Those  pesky  pollsters.  Although  I  think  a 
4-1  team  that's  beaten  four  bowl  teams 
should  be  higher  than  13  (and  No.  15  in 
the  coaches  poll),  I'll 

accept  UCLA's  rank-      ^_^^^^^^ 
ings.  But  Kansas  ^'~~"~'"""~ 

State  No.  2?  The 
Wildcats'  six  wins 
have  come  against 
teams  who  have  a 
total  of  seven  wins. 
And  then  there's  5-1 
Florida  at  No.  10, 
whose  only  big  win  _ 

was  a  gift  against  ;■■  y\:s  -  •         ~ 

Tennessee.  Just  a  bunch  of  BS. 

«    •    • 

Give  credit  to  UCLA's  depth  and 
recruiting,  as  they  still  field  a  competitive 
team  without  their  top  offensive  player 
(DeShaun  Foster)  and  top  defensive  play- 
er (Kenyon  Coleman).  Imagine  Virginia 
Tech  without  Michael  Vick,  Purdue  with- 
out Drew  Brees  and  TCU  without 
LaDainlian  Tomlinson. 

•   •   • 

Like  UCLA,  the  St.  Louis  Rams  had  a 
bye,  but  still  beat  the  spread.  Their 
offense  is  so  good  they  could  score  in  a 
convent.  They  get  in  the  end  zone  so 
much  they  should  move  their  sideline 
there.  Referees'  arms  are  getting  tired. 

•   •   • 

On  the  flip  side,  the  Chargers  lost 
again.  Ryan  Leaf  didn't  play,  but  I'm 
sure  he  had  something  to  do  with  the  loss. 


,  I'd  say  he  was  terrible,  but  I  wouldn't 
want  to  insult  terrible.  The  guy  is  such  a 
stiff  he  makes  Al  Gore  look  like  a  contor- 
tionist. 

•     •     9 

Cade  McNown's  Bears  also  lost  again, 
this  time  to  the  SainU,  not  scoring  a 
touchdown  on  offense. 

But  I  say  give  Cade  a  break,  as  he  did 
score  big  with  Playmate  of  the  Year 
Heather  Kozar.  As  someone  also  dating  a 
Playboy  Playmate,  I  know  it  can  be  diffi- 
cult to  concentait  on  yer  wurk.  OK,  she's 
gone.  Back  to  the  column. 

•    •   • 

The  NHL  has  started  its  new  season. 
Yeah,  I  don't  care 
either. 

•   •   • 

But  since  it 
involves  Bruins  of 
sorts,  Boston 
Bruins'  Marty 
McSoriey  was 
recently  found  guilty 
ofassaultwitha 

TT' • weapon  for  a  blow 

to  Donald 
Brashear's  head  last  year.  But  this  was  a 
case  that  should  have  stayed  on  the  rink 
and  out  of  the  court.  Might  as  well  prose- 
cute every  brawl,  beaning  and  hard  hit. 

•  •  • 

I  have  something  really  interesting  to 
say  about  the  Olympics,  but  in  the  spirit 
of  NBC,  ni  tdl  you  next  month. 

•  •   • 

Start  spreading  the  news  and  the  mus- 
tard. The  Yankees  will  win  the  Subway 
series  against  the  Mets,  and  a  certain 
sandwich  shop  will  get  a  lot  of  free  pub. 

•  •   • 

This  week's  use  joke: 
What  does  the  average  USC  player  get 
on  his  SATs? 
Drool. 


USC's  kicker  kicked  as 

though  Lucy  from 

"Peanuts"  was  holding 

the  snap. 


E-mail  Kmlotek  at  jizzeff#aoi.com.  Send 
comments,  analysis,  questions  or  'SC  jokes. 


TENNIS 

From  page  48 

State,  Virginia 

Commonwealth  and  Illinois, 
but  ended  the  tournament 
beating  Louisiana  State  23- 
17. 

Individually,  Walker  went 
40  at  singles,  and  she  and 
Zlebnick  went  2-2  at 
women's  doubles.  Rojer 
went  3-1  at  men's  singles,  he 
and  Sands  were  04  at  dou- 
bles, and  Zlebnick  and  Sands 
had  a  3-1  record. 

"It  was  something  that 
Zana  had  to  get  used  to," 
Sampras  said  of  the  mixed 
doubles  team.  "It's  definitely 
different  than  playing 
women's  doubles  because 
you're  picked  on  from  the 
other  team.  But  she  did  well, 
she  hung  in  there." 

Zlebnik  said  that  the 
mixed  doubles  matches  got 
more  intense  than  she  was 
used  to. 

"When  the  matches  got 


NATIONAL 

From  page  45 

There  was  some  talk  that 
a  trip  to  the  World  Series 
would  be  cheapened  for  the 
Mets  because  they  don't 
have  to  go  throu^  AdanU 
to  do  it.  The  players  don't 
buy  into  it. 

"We  can't  control  what 
other  teams  do,"  said  Bobby 
J.  Jones,  who  pitched  a  one- 
hitter  to  clinch  the  division 


serious,  the  guys  didn't  hold 
back,"  she  said.  "It's  a  little 
intimidating  when  the  ball 
comes  at  you  at  twice  the 
speed  that  the  girls  hit  it  at." 

Zlebnick  and  Walker  also 
made  their  first  appearance 
as  a  doubles  team,  since 
Walker's  partner  4ast  year, 
Annica  Cooper,  has  graduat- 
ed. 

At  a  2-2  record,  they  had 
mixed  results. 

"We  still  need  to  get  used 
to  each  other,"  Zlebnick 
said.  "It's  good  to  get 
acquainted  together." 

Walker,  who  last  year  was 
the  sole  All-American  from 
the  women's  team,  had  the 
Bruins'  only  perfect  record. 

She  was  pleased  at  the 
social  aspect  of  playing  with 
athletes  from  the  men's 
team. 

"It  was  fun  to  travel  with 
the  guys,"  she  said.  "It  was 
more  social,  we  were  rooting 
for  the  guys.  I  think  it'll 
make  our  teams  a  little  bit 
closer." 


series.  "We  control  the  New 
York  Mets.  We've  got  a  ball- 
game  that  we  have  to  win 
and  that  we  have  to  worry 
about.  We  go  about  it  like 
that" 

The  Cardinals  head  into 
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years  well  rested,  having 
swept  the  Braves  on 
Saturday.  The  MeU  took  an 
extra  day  to  eliminate  the 
Giants,  but  both  teams  have 
their  pitching  rotations  set 
up  perfectly. 


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Wednesdays  October  11,2000       41 


AMERICA  S  LEADERSHIP  DEVELOPMENT  ERAIERfJIIY 


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FERNANDEZ 

From  page  43         ,    \^- 

the  world,  but  it  was  probably  the 
months  leading  up  to  the  '96 
Olympics. 

While  at  UCLA,  she  accomplished 
a  remarkable  double  crown.  In  1993, 
Fernandez  became  the  only  person  to 
lead  the  NCAA  in  ERA  and  batting 
average  in  the  same  year. 

She  was  a  three-time  Honda  award 
winner,  and  as  the  best  collegiate  soft- 
ball  player,  won  two  national  titles  and 
set  the  NCAA  career  r«cord  for  win- 


ning percentage  witfi  a  93-7  record. 
She  also  was  a  four-time  first-team  All- 
American,  had  nine  no-hitters,  two 
perfect  games  and  was  the  only  soft- 
ball  player  ever  to  win  the  Broderick 
Cup  as  the  top  female  collegiate  ath- 
lete in  all  sports. 

But  the  1995  Pan-American  games 
Softball  roster  did  not  include 
Fernandez. 

Fernandez  stepped  up  her  training, 
vowing  to  make  the  Olympic  team.  By 
the  time  that  roster  was  set,  she  was  the 
best  player  in  the  world,  pitching  the 
final  innings  of  Team  USA's  victory 
over  China  in  the  Gold  Medal  game. 


With  the  recognition  gained  from 
the  Olympics,  she  went  on  national  TV 
to  help  promote  the  sport.  Teaching 
major  league  slugger  David  Justice  a 
valuable  lesson  about  Softball  was  part 
of  that  process. 

'This  isn't  baseball,"  Justice  had 
said.  He  was  right.  He  quickly  learned 
that  there  is  less  time  to  react  to  a  70 
mph  Fernandez  fastball  than  a  90  mph 
major  league  fastball. 

Fernandez  struck  him  out  in  three 
pitches. 

In  November,  Fernandez  will 
return  to  UCLA  to  begin  her  sixth  sea- 
son as  an  assistant  softball  coach. 


Coaching  is  something  Fernandez 
loves,  but  being  an  instructor  for  Team 
USA  teammate  and  UCLA  junior 
catcher  Stocey  Nuveman  should  be 
interesting. 

"We  having  a  saying,  what  goes  on 
the  road,  stays  on  the  road  -  meaning 
that  whatever  happened  away  from 
UCLA  does  not  factor  into  what  hap- 
pens at  school.  I'll  go  back  to  being  her 
coach,"  Fernandez  said. 

"The  more  I'm  around  Lisa," 
Nuveman  said,  "the  more  it's  obvious 
why  she  is  the  best  in  the  world.  When 
she  is  out  there,  no  one  is  going  to  get 
in  her  way.  She's  taught  me  how  to 


think  like  a  pitcher,  have  a  good  rap- 
port with  a  pitcher,  and  get  into  a 
pitcher's  mind." 

With  seven  Bruins  on  the  national 
team,  Fernandez  never  ventured  far 
from  Westwood,  at  least  in  spirit. 

"I  can  never  really  decide  wether 
I'm  representing  UCLA  or  USA. 
UCLA  is  where  my  heart  is,  but  when 
it's  USA,  I'm  representing  my  coun- 
try," she  said.  "Having  all  the  people 
on  the  team  from  UCLA  has  made  it  a 
lot  easier.  We  got  to  talk  about  the  big 
football  wins  oyer  Alabama  and 
Michigan  while  we  were  in  Sydney.  It 
makes  it  a  lot  more  fun." 


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How  much  do  you  know 

ABOUT  DOMESTIC 
VIOLENCE? 


1.  What  is  the  most  common  iiyury 
among  women? 

a)  Auto  accidents 

b)  Physical  abuse  by  male  social  *^ 
partners 

c)  Muggings  and  rape  combined 


2.  Which  age  group  reports  the  most 
violence  by  someone  they  are 
intimate  with? 

a)  16  to  24 

b)  25-34 

c)  35-64 

d)  65  and  over  :£ 

3.1f  every  woman  victimized  by 
domestic  violence  were  to  join 
hands  in  a  line,  the  string  of  people 
would  expand  from: 

a)  New  York  to  Chicago 

b)  New  York  to  San  Francisco 

c)  New  York  to  Los  Aneeles  and 
back  again 

4.  There  are  3  times  as  many  animal 
shelters  as  there  are  battered 
women's  shelters 

a)  False 

b)  True  j|  Next  Page  for  Answers! 


•  f 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


FERNANDEZ 

From  page  48 

Christie  Ambrosi  singled  home 
'Team  USA's  only  run  in  the  1 3th 
■winning. 

.;  The  perpetually  rowdy  crowd  quiet- 
ed, expecting  Fernandez  to  strike  out 
the  side  in  the  Aussie's  next  at  bat,  as 
she  had  done  the  inning  before,  to  end 
the  game. 

With  one  out,  Fernandez  went  up 
against  Brown  again.  The  Australian 
crowd  remembered  '96  and  let 
Fernandez  know,  raising  the  decibel 
level  a  few  notches. 


Wednesday,  October  1 1 2000       43 


Fernandez  induced  a  ground-out 
from  Brown,  but  on  the  Aussies'  next 
at-bat,  Peta  Edebone  ended  the  game 
with  a  two-out  homer  and  provided  a 
tough  dose  of  mortality  for  the  world's 
best  player. 

"I  made  two  mistakes  the  whole 
game,"  Fernandez  said  afterwards, 
almost  in  tears.  "That  one  was  a  drop 
ball  that  didn't  drop." 

Two  days  later,  in  a  game  the  U.S. 
had  to  win  to  make  the  medal  round, 
Fernandez  not  only  pitched  the  win 
but  broke  out  of  a  slump  at  the  plate, 
knocking  her  first  home  run  of  the 
tournament. 
Another  two  days  later,  with  a  berth 


in  the  Gold  Medal  game  on  the  line, 
Fernandez  was  again  sent  out. 

It  was  another  rematch  with  the 
Australians.  One  Aussie  hit  and  no 
runs  later,  Fernandez  and  the  U.S. 
came  away  with  a  1-0  victory. 

Despite  .pitching  22  innings  in  four 
days,  there  was  really  no  other  choice 
but  for  Fernandez  to  pitch  the  final 
game. 

"How  could  you  not?  You've  got  to 
pitch  the  best,"  said  UCLA  head 
coach  Sue  Enquist  as  she  watched 
Fernandez  warm  up  in  the  bullpen 
before  the  Gold  Medal  game. 

Fernandez  mowed  down  the 
Japanese  team,  allowing  only  one  run 


in  eight  innings. 

"This  gold  medal  was  sweeter," 
Fernandez  said.  "The  competition  was 
so  close,  everything  was  a  dogfight.  In 
'96,  everybody  was  in  the  zone,  and  we 
were  playing  so  well.  It  meant  more 
with  the  close  games." 

In  fact,  after  the  Games  were  over 
in  Atlanta,  Fernandez  got  an  anony- 
mous postcard  of  a  picture  of  Brown 
celebrating  with  her  teammates. 

Despite  the  gold  medal,  that  game 
actually  changed  Fernandez's  pitch- 
ing. Fernandez  felt  that  in  the  10th 
inning,  she  was  a  little  tired. 

Vowing  never  to  let  that  happen 
again,  she  embarked  on  a  rigorous 


year-long  training  regimen  which 
focuses  on  a  balanced  workout,  not 
just  an  upper  body  one.  That  led  to  one 
of  the  stranger  sights  in  the  Olympics. 

Whenever  Fernandez  was  on  the 
mound,  she  was  bouncing.  Catcher 
has  the  ball  -  bouncing.  Batter  steps 
out  of  the  box  -  bouncing.  Infield 
warming  up  -  bouncing.  The  bouncing 
is  to  help  keep  Fernandez  fit,  even  if  it 
is  during  the  game. 

That's  the  kind  of  work  it  takes  to 
be  the  best  player  in  the  world. 

It's  hard  to  pinpoint  exactly  when 
Fernandez  became  the  best  player  in 


$e«FEINUNOEZ,page42 


read  it, 

then„. 


ANSWER  TO  pqMesTtn. 
VIOLENCE  QI/ggTIQAf-Qf 

1 .  Physical  abuse  by  male  social  partners  may  be 
the  single  most  common  source  of  injury 
among  women,  more  common  that  auto 
accidents,  muggings,  and  rapes  combined. 

nnnnnn 

According  to  testimony  by  Evan  Starit,  Ph.D. 
and  Anne  Flitcrafl,  M.D.  to  the  Attomey  :    •     ■ 
General's  Task  Force  (1992)  on  Family 
Violence  in  New  York  City. 

nnnnn 

2.  The  highest  rates  of  intimate  violence  affected 
women  ages  16  to  24.  Woman  age  16  to  19 
and  age  20  to  29  had  nearly  identical  rates  of 
intimate  vrctimization-  about  one  violent 
victimization  for  every  50  women 

,  nnnn  . 

Bureau  of  Justice  Statlsttes,  National  Crime 
Vrctimization  Survey  (NCVS),  1992-1996 

New  York  to  Los  Angeles  and  back  a^fri? 
According  to  the  Senate  Judiciary  Committee 
July  31, 1990. 

u  ■■-' 

4.   True,  According  to  the  Senate  Judiciary 
Committee,  July  31, 1990 

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AWARENESS  COMMITTEE  TO 

INCREASE  THE  AWARENESS  OF 

DOMESTIC  VIOLENCE  THROUGH 

OUR  OCTOBER  EVENT. 

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Friday,  October  13,  2000 

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Representatives  from  a  wide  range  of  Blue  Chip,  High 
Tech,  Start-Up,  and  Nonprofit  companies  will  be 
available  to  discuss  their  current  full-time  career 

opportunities,  as  well  as  internships  and  summer  jobs. 

Visit  career.ucla.edu  to  see  a 

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44       Vtedi)wday,Octobff  11,2000 


MfBimSforts 


Miami  center's  health  in  question 


BASKETBALL  Reports 
claim  Mourning  may 
need  another  kidney 


ByStevenWinc 

The  Associated  Press  : 

MIAMI  -  Ailing  Miami  Heat 
center  Alonzo  Mourning,  still 
weighing  medical  options  and 
hoping  to  avoid  a  kidney  trans- 
plant, visited  practice  Tuesday  for 
the  first  time  since  his  illness  was 
discovered. 

"He's  upbeat,"  coach  Pat  Riley 
said.  "He  walked  in  and.  lit  the 
place  up." 

The  prognosis  remains  uncer- 
tain, Heat  ofTlcials  said.  A  course 
of  treatment  for  Mourning's 
apparent  kidney  disorder  will  like- 
ly be  determined  by  next  week 
after  he  has  finished  consulting 
with  doctors,  Riley  said. 

Mourning's  foster  mother, 
Fannie  Threet,  said  he  has  a  rare 
kidney  ailment  that  could  require  a 
transplant. 

"He  just  said,  'Oh.  it  is  bad, 
Mom.  It  is  bad,'"  she  told  The 
Palm  Beach  Post  for  Tuesday's 


editions.  Threet,  interviewed  by 
telephone  from  her  home  in 
Chesapeake,  Va.,  raised  Mourning 
from  the  time  he  was  12. 

Threet  said  she  spoke  twice  with 
Mourning  since  the  ailment  was 
discovered  during  a  routine  physi- 
cal. She  said  Mourning  told  her 
that  doctors  were  "hopeful  they 
could  find  a  kidney  if  it  was  neces- 
sary." 

A  caretaker  who  answered 
Threet's  phone  Tuesday  said  she 
was  unavailable  to  discuss  the  situ- 
ation further. 

Her  comments  contrasted  with 
those  of  Mourning's  close  friend, 
Seattle  center  Patrick  Ewing.  He 
said  Mourning  expects  to  play  this 
season. 

When  reporters  pressed  Heat 
players  for  information  on 
Mourning's  condition  following 
practice  Tuesday,  team  media  rela- 
tions director  Tim  Donovan  inter- 
vened. 

"Guys,  we  do  not  know  what 
the  problem  is,"  Donovan  said. 
"We're  not  lying  to  you." 

Mourning,  30.  became  a  father 
for  the  second  time  and  helped  the 
U.S.  Olympic  team  win  the  gold 
medal  in  Sydney  last  month.  He 


Over  400  I^s  of 

UOEA  Horary 

(i^nd  it's  rot  iar 

class.) 


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(NEXTTOCOFFFE  BEAN) 


was  dcpected  to  lead  a  revamped 
Miami  team  widely  considered  the 
Eastern  Conference  favorite  this 
season. 

The  All-Star  center  hasn't 
appeared  in  public  since  Oct.  3. 
when  he  attended  Heat  media  day 
Training  camp  began  without  him 
the  following  day. 

Mourning  spent  about  90  min- 
utes at  the  Heat's  closed  practice 
session  Tuesday.  Heat  and 
Olympic  teammate  Tim 
Hardaway  said  he  greeted 
Mourning  with  a  hug  and  "stupid 
stuff  that  comes  out  of  your 
mouth."- 

"You  think.  'Wow,  this  guy  has 
everything  -  money,  family,  a  nice 
house  -  and  something  like  this 
happens,'"  Hardaway  said.  "It's 
tough." 

Mourning  met  with  Riley, 
stretched  with  teammates  and 
rode  a  stationary  bike  long  enough 
to  break  a  sweat. 

"I'm  going  to  tell  you:  Don't  be 
having  a  long  face  around  him." 
Riley  said.  "He'll  kick  your  rear. 
He's  about  attacking  it  and  finding 
a  plan,  and  he  doesn't  want  to  be 
around  anybody  who  is  feeling 
sorry  for  him." 


Bri.n  G«„.  of  the  Miami  Hea.  in  a  preseason  practice  Tuesday  i^M^t ""' 
tarant  s  teammate  Alonzo  Mourning  is  in  ailing  health. 


— 

miscellaneous  fun  stuff 


coming 

5*''  and 
10*  week. 


www.mindzip.com 


UCLA  School  of  Law 


Fall  2001 


;*•. 


Application  and  Financial  Aid 
Information  Session 


Please  Join  us  for  one  of  the  following  dates: 


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This  sessions  will  be  held  in  Room  1357 
in  the  School  of  l^w  Building 


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information,  please 

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Mr  Brain  SpMts 


Mariners  aim  to  destroy  Yanicee  pride 


AMERICAN:  Seattle  rested 
after  three  days  off,  will 
rely  on  pitching  rotation 


ByJoshDubmv 

The  Associated  Press 


NEW  YORK  -  While  the  New 
York  Yankees  fought  ofT  the  pesky 
Oakland  Athletics,  the  Mariners  sat 
on  a  runway  in  Seattle  deciding  where 
to  go  next  for  the  AL  championship 
series. 

The  Mariners  enter  the  ALCS  on 
Tuesday  night,  rested  following  three 
days  off.  The  Yankees  are  drained  fol- 
lowing back-to-back  crosscountry 
flights. 

"Once  they  hear  56,o6d  screaming 
fans  at  Yankee  Stadium,  that  should 
get  their  adrenaline  going,"  said 
Mariners  manager  Lou  Piniella.  "I'm 
not  feding  sorry  for  them." 

Piniella  knows  tiiat  feding,  having 
to  endure  a  similar  travel  schedule  in 
1995  after  eliminating  the  Yankees  in 
a  tense  flve^ame  series. 

Seattle  won  the  opener  of  the 
ALCS  tfiat  year  in  Qeveland  before 
falling  to  the  Indians  in  six  games. 
"They've  had  to  make  that  trip 


twice  now."  Piniella  said.  "We  were 
caught  in  a  similar  situation  in  1995. 
But  they're  not  the  world  champions 
for  nothing.  They  showed  it.  It's  fitting 
to  play  the  defending  world  champi- 
ons to  go  to  the  World  Series.  We're 
going  to  go  in  nice  and  relaxed." 

They'll  also  go  in  with  their  pitchers 
in  rotation.  Freddy  Garcia  (9-5)  starts 
for  the  Mariners  against  Denny 
Neagle  (15-9),  who  didn't  even  pitch 
in  the  first-round  against  Oakland. 

Piniella  will  follow  up  Garcia  with 
John  Halama,  Aaron  Sele  and  Paul 
Abbott,  while  Yankees  manager  Joe 
Torre  counters  with  Orlando 
Hernandez  in  Game  2,  followed  by 
Andy  Pettitte  and  Roger  Qemens. 

There  are  few  similarities  between 
the  teams  that  will  meet  in  this  year's 
ALCS  and  the  ones  who  played  that 
thrilling  division  series  in  1995. 

Ken  Griffey,  Jr.  and  Randy 
Johnson  left  Seattle.  Alex  Rodriguez 
and  Derek  Jeter  have  become  full- 
blown megastars.  And,  Tino 
Martinez,  Jeff  Nelson  and  Luis  Sojo 
shed  their  Mariners'  uniforms  for 
Yankees  pinstripes. 

Perhaps  most  importantly  is  that 
the  Yankees  have  the  mystique  of  win- 
ning three  World  Series  titles  in  four 
years  and  the  Mariners  have  under- 


gone an  overliaui  from  a  power-hit- 
ting team  to  a  club  that  relies  on  pitch- 
ing and  situational  baseball. 

"It's  a  different  Yankees  dub  and 
certainly  a  different  Seattle  club,"  said 
Pinidia,  one  of  the  few  holdovers  on 
either  team.  "You  can't  go  back  to 
1995  and  draw  any  comparisons." 

Many  of  the  dtanges  undergone  by 
the  teams  stem  from  that  memorable 
week  in  Oct.  1995.  Tlie  series  featured 
two  extra-inning  games,  including  Jim 
Leyritz's  game-winning  homer  that 
gave  the  Yankees  a  2-0  series  lead. 

Then  Griffey,  Johnson  and  Edgar 
Martinez  took  over,  with  the  Big  Unit 
winning  two  of  the  next  three  games  - 
one  in  rdief  -  and  Griffey  scoring  the 
winning  run  on  Martinez's  double  in 
the  1 1th  inning  of  the  deciding  fifth 
game. 

"It  was  so  dramatic,"  Rodriguez 
said.  "We  were  serious  underdogs. 
Nobody  expected  us  to  do  anything." 
Buck  Showalter  lost  his  job  follow- 
ing that  series,  and  Yankees  owner 
George  Stdnbrenner,  in  one  of  his 
best  moves,  hired  manager  Joe  Torre. 
Jeter  became  the  starting  shortstop  in 
1996,  Martinez  took  over  Don 
Mattingly's  spot  at  first  base,  and 
Ndson  hdped  give  New  York  the  best 
postseason  bullpen  in  history 


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Wedmsctoy,  October  11,2000       4S 


miss 


tough  Braves  in  NLCS 


PLAYOFFS:  New  York  set 

to  take  on  St.  Louis,  not 
Atlanta,  in  next  matchup 


ByJeshDubow 

The  Associated  Press 

NEW  YORK  -  The  New  York 
Mets  are  providing  a  little  bulletin 
board  material  for  the  St.  Louis 
Cardinals. 

The  Mets  aren't  shy  about  express- 
ing their  preference  for  playing  St. 
Louis  instead  of  their  nemesis,  the 
Atlanta  Braves,  in  the  NL  champi- 
onship series. 

"I  was  a  little  relieved,"  reliever 
Turk  Wendell  said  of  the  Braves  being 
eliminated.  "That  is  a  team  that  men- 
tally puts  a  lot  of  pressure  on  other 
teams.  It  puts  pressure  on  guys  to 
think  that  they  have  to  be  perfect." 

New  York  has  been  far  from  it 
against  Atlanta.  The  Mets  are  14-29 
against  the  Braves  the  past  three  sea- 
sons, including  a  loss  in  last  year's 
NLCS. 


And  while  the  champagne  was 
spraying  throughout  the  New  York 
clubhouse  Sunday  after  eliminating 
San  Francisco  in  four  games,  the 
Mets  were  happy  not  to  have  to 
answer  questions  about  why  they  are 
spooked  by  Atlanta. 

"Nothing  derogatory  against 
them,  but  I'm  glad  to  see  them  lose," 
said  first  baseman  Todd  Zeile.  "This 
team  has  not  had  much  success 
against  them.  But  I  don't  think  any- 
body really  cares  who  we're  playing, 
as  long  as  we're  there." 

The  Mets  are  26-10  against  the 
Cardinals,  making  it  is  easy  to  under- 
stand why  the  Mets  are  relieved  they 
are  opening  the  best-of-seven  NLCS 
Wednesday  night  in  St.  Louis  instead 
of  in  Atlanta. 

Mike  Hampton  (1 5-1 1)  is  expected 
to  get  the  start  for  New  York  against 
St.  Louis' Darryl  Kile  (21-9). 

"I'm  glad  we  don't  have  to  answer 
questions  about  why  we  can't  win  in 
Atlanta,"  left-hander  Al  Leiter  said. 
"That  became  a  nuisance." 


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46       Wrfn«<fa)^  October  11.2000 


.    a 


OiilyfinnSpMls 


mile 


Peterson,  who  was  not  yet  afTlliated 
with  UCLA,  was  a  weight  coach. 

"He  really  motivated  me  there." 
Bowen  said.  "I  sort  of  looked  up  to 
him.  since  he  ran  for  Oregon  and 
stuff.  I  was  young  at  the  time  and  not 
totally  into  running,  but  he  got  me 
enthusiastic." 

That  memory  lured 
Bowen  to  UCLA,  where 
now,  as  a  fifth-year 
senior,  she  is  the  team's 
top  runner. 

"What  it  really  came 
down  to,"  Bowen  said, 
"was  that  I  really  trusted 
him  and  believed  in  him. 
I  looked   back   to  that 
workshop  and  remem- 
bered how  much  energy 
he  put  in." 
Bowen  said  that  Peterson  has  done 
nothing  since  to  betray  her  trust. 
"Eric  is  an  amazing  coach."  she 

„-,c'       r  u         .    .  ' "     *^'^  "^'^^"  ^^^  coaches  that  I've  had 

ners  workshop  m  Lake  Tahoe  where     he's  been  able  to  motivate  the  most! 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

It  was  the  spring  of  1996,  and  Tina 
Bowen  was  a  senior  at  San  Ramon 
High  School  in  Danville,  Calif. 

She  was  in  her  house,  seated  with 
her  parents,  listening  to  UCLA  cross 
country  and  track  dis-  ..' 

tance  coach  Eric 
Peterson  make  a  last- 
minute  sales  pitch. 
Peterson  hadn't  contact- 
ed her  until  late  in  the 
recruiting  process  and 
Bowen  had  already  made 
up  her  mind  to  attend 
Vanderbilt,  though  she 
had  yet  to  give  the  school 
a  commitment  of  any 
kind. 

As  she  listened  to  Peterson  speak, 
Bowen  thought  back  to  four  years 
ago,  the  summer  before  her  freshman 
year  in  high  school.  She  was  at  a  run- 


Cross 
country 
coach 
goes  the 
distance  for 
his  team 


Every  year  I've  been  here.   I've 
improved  tremendously." 

Peterson  shrugs  when  asked  why 
he  spends  so  much  energy  in  his  job. 
"Coaching  is  not  what  I  do,"  he 
said.  "It's  who  I  am. 

"I  never  wake  up  in  the  morning 
thinking  I  have  to  go  to  work.  I  love 
thinking  about  the  sport  and  prepar- 
ing workouts.  I  love  recruiting  and  I 
love  meeting  people." 

Peterson  was  an  All-American 
middle  distance  runner  at  Oregon  in 
the  late  '908  and  twice  qualified  for 
the  Olympic  Trials,  recording  a  per- 
sonal best  of  3:41.03  in  the  1500- 
meter. 

But,  he  said,  "I  always  knew  I  was 
going  to  be  a  coach." 

Upon  graduating  from  Oregon  in 
1990.  Peterson  moved  to  San  Diego 
to  continue  training. 

After  two  years,  he  returned  to 
Oregon  as  a  graduate  assistant 
strength  coach.  Peterson  figured  that 
the  quickest  way  to  get  a  job  as  a  col- 


Ooss  country  head  coach  M.  P««on'.  enthTsiaT^SeThis"" 
athletes. 


lege  head  coach  was  to  first  take  a 
lower  position  at  a  major  university. 
Then  in  1993,  Peterson  got  his 
break,  as  a  spot  opened  on  UCLA's 
staff  when  the  women's  team  was  in 


need  of  a  distance  coach. 

The  Bruins  first  offered  the  job  to 
one  of  Peterson's  friends,  former 


ScePEIBB0lipa9e40 


An 


to  moving  back  home. 


iukle 

Watch  for  it  Friday,  October  13th. 


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•orn^b»OMOTOoOp(u,$,oooOtor««:f, 

mod*  and  $  1 75  00  to  tocmS^riS^oSoir 
•xp<fotloo<3o»>ii.iaoo 


'         1%  Bruin  Spom 


Wedoesda)iOrtobeni,2000       47 


Wildcat  defense 
bests  opponents 

Only    a    week    after    holding 
Stanford    to   three   total    poinU, 
Arizona's  iron-clad  defense  limited 
then-No.  18  USC  to  a  mere  10  yards 
rushing  and  added  to  the  onslaught 
by  forcing  five  turnovers  and  record- 
ing five  quarterback  sacks.  Arizona 
easily  leads  the  Pac-lO  conference  in 
scoring  defense,  with  its  front  seven 
being  especially  impressive  in  stop- 
ping the  run.  Through  five  games, 
the  Wildcats  have  held  opponents  to 
an  average  of  62.2  rushing  yards  per 
game,  1.8  yards  per  carry  and  a 
miniscule  two  rushing  touchdowns. 
"We  are  attacking  offenses,"  said 
Arizona     defensive     end     Idris 
Haroon.  "We  just  want  to  bury 
them,  put  them  in  the  dirt." 


C-10NOTEBOO 


As  the  only  Pac-IO  team  besides 
Oregon  to  still  be  undefeated  in  con- 
ference play,  Arizona  looks  to  con- 
tinue its  defensive  dominance 
Saturday  against  Washington  State. 

The  nation's  best 
conference? 

The  Pac-IO  is  certainly  making  its 
case  this  season  to  be  regarded  as  the 
nation's  strongest  conference.  In 
recent  AP  polls,  seven  Pac-IO  teams 
ranked  among  the  nation's  30  top 
teams,  including  five  in  the  top  25 
for  the  second  consecutive  week.  Off 
to  an  impressive  start,  Oregon  leads 
the  way  with  a  No.  9  ranking,  the 
fourth  Pac-IO  team  this  season  to 


have  broken  the  top- 10  barrier. 
Washington  comes  next  with  a  No. 
1 1  ranking,  followed  by  13th-ranked 
UCLA.  Rounding  out  the  rest  of  the 
list  include  No.  22  Arizona,  No.  23 
Oregon  State,  No.  28  Arizona  State 
and  No.  29  USC. 


Football  players 
receive  honors 

Arizona  cornerback  Michael 
Jolivettc  was  named  Pac-IO 
Defensive  Player  of  the  Week  for  his 
strong  effort  against  then-No.  18 
USC  over  the  weekend.  Jolivette 
had  two  key  interceptions  in  the  sec- 
ond half  of  the  game  to  thwart 
Trojan  drives,  including  a  34-yard 
return  that  resulted  in  a  touchdown. 
He  also  recorded  six  tackles,  all  of 
them  solo. 

Also  receiving  recognition  was 
Washington  tailback  Paul  Arnold, 
who  was  named  Pao-IO  Offensive 
Player  of  the  Week  for  his  part  in  the 
33-30  Husky  win  over  Oregon  State. 


Arnold  rushed  for  102  yards  on  16 
carries,  as  well  as  receiving  for  65 
yards. 

Pac-IO  Special  Teams  Player  of 
the  Week  honors  went  to 
Washington  State  place-kicker 
Anousith  Wilkaikul. 

Semi-finalists 
named  for  award 

Cal  defensive  end  Andre  Carter 
and  Stanford  defensive  tackle  Willie 
Howard  were  the  two  Pac-IO  candi- 
dates out  of  a  field  of  12  named  as 
semifinalists  for  the  2000  Rotary 
Lombardi  Award.  The  award,  which 
honors  the  nation's  top  outstanding 
college  lineman,  is  awarded  at  the 
end  of  the  season. 


Compiled  by  Josh  Mason,  Daily  Bruin 
Contributor. 


FOOTBALL:  USC  dropped 
from  national  rankings 
after  recent  losing  streak 


By  Km  Pcccn 

Th«  Associated  Press 

The  USC  Trojans  are  out  of  sorts 
and  in  a  funk,  their  coach  says,  and 
they  need  to  snap  out  of  it  in  a  hurry. 

use  is  off" to  an  0-2  start  in  the  Pao- 


IO  Conference  for  the  first  time  in  29 
years,  having  lost  to  underdogs 
Oregon  State  and  Arizona  the  past 
two  weekends  and  dropping  from 
No.  8  to  out  of  the  national  rankings. 

Things  don't  get  any  easier  for  the 
Trojans  (3-2  overall)  this  Saturday 
when  they  face  Oregon  (3-1, 2-0),  with 
the  Ducks  favored  by  two  points 
despite  the  game  being  at  the  Los 
Angeles  Coliseum. 

"There's  a  lot  of  argument  to  say, 
'Woe  is  me,  the  season  is  destroyed,*" 


Hackett  said  Tuesday.  "Well,  there's  a 
lot  of  argument  to  say,  'Wait  a  minute. 
We  had  a  good  start  (then)  we  had 
two  stumbles."' 

The  USC  coach  said  the  team 
shouldn't  dwell  on  what's  gone 
wrong,  rather,  "Ut's  dwell  on,  we 
have  Oregon  and  we  have  the  rest  of 
the  Pac-IO  Conference  as  well  as 
Notre  Dame.  Once  you  come  out  of 
this  funk,  you  need  to  finish  strong. 

"We  know  at  the  end  of  the  season 
at   USC.  you're   playing   UCLA, 


you're  playing  Notre  Dame.  We've 
got  to  get  out  of  this  funk  as  fast  as  we 
can.  The  way  to  do  that  is  to  concen- 
trate on  Oregon,  don't  worry  about 
all  the  other  things  that  are  on  the  out- 
side." 

The  "other  things"  ostensibly 
would  include  increasing  heat  on 
Hackett.  In  the  third  year  of  a  five- 
year  contract,  he  has  a  17-13  record  at 
USC,  including  6-6  last  year. 

The  Trojans,  who  seemed  a  team  in 
disarray  at  times  during  their  31-15 


loss  to  Arizona  last  Saturday,  fre- 
quently were  booed  by  their  own  fans. 

Hackett  tried  to  put  the  two-game 
slump  in  perspective,  noting  the 
Trojans'  3-0  start. 

"You  don't  want  to  admit  it  as  a 
coach,  but  you  know  at  some  point 
you're  not  going  to  play  at  your  best," 
he  said.  "The  whole  key  to  the  season 
is  how  you  deal  with  that,  how  quickly 
you  can  come  out  of  that  setback  and 


See  use  page  40 


LASA'S 
PROJECTING  MINDS 

M0NDAY9  AND  FRIDAY9 
1 :45PM  -  5:00PM 

FOR  MORE  INFORMATION: 

Call  310.206.2631 

Email  LASA@UCLA.EDU 

COME  TO  USA  MEETING  IN  PERLOFF       ^ 
1 102  WEDNESDAYS  6-8PM 

TE  E8PERAN  LA0/LO8  CHAMACA8/08H! 


■*' 


Trojans  continue  to  struggle  for  win  in  Pac-IO 


't--:.- 


•» . 


»r* 


Focus  on  the  coach 

Eric  Peterson  has  been  the  women's 
aoss  country  coach  for  seven  years 
and  is  now  coaching  the  men  as  well. 
Read  more  about  him  on  page  46. 

Wednesday,  October  1 1, 2000 


♦  -   -.*r.--;-;vV.    ,' 


Daily  Bruin 


., .  -  •,.(■  ..  ( 


OLYMPICS:  Competition,  tough 
calls  make  second  medal  more 
meaningful  to  softball  superstar 


ByGregLewb 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff  :' 

It's  possible  the  U.S.  softball  team  would 
have  won  the  gold  without  Lisa  Fernandez.  But 
not  likely. 

At  the  Olympic  games  this  summer,  whenev- 
er there  was  a  must-win  game,  everybody  knew 
who  would  take  the  mound  for  the  American 
squad  -  the  best  softball  player  in  the  world,  the 
one  who's  already  won  two  NCAA 
Championships,  one  International  Softball 
Federation  title  and  an  Olympic  gold  medal 
from  Atlanta. 

"I  was  ready,"  Fernandez  said.  "For  whatev- 
er." 

"Whatever"  turned  out  to  be  eerily  familiar 
in  Fernandez's  first  appearance.  U.S.  head 
coach  Ralph  Raymond  drew  up  the  pitching 
match-ups  before  the  tournament,  making  sure 
that  his  star  pitcher  would  be  in  the  circle  against 
the  hometown  Aussies.  Before  the  tournament, 
they  were  the  biggest  threat  to  dethroning  the 
defending  Olympic  champions. 

But,  that  wasn't  the  only  reason  for  picking 
Fernandez  to  pitch  in  the  crucial  game.  Back  in 
Atlanta  in  '96,  the  United  States'  only  loss  was  a 
lO-inning  battle  against  the  Australians. 

In  that  game,  Fernandez  had  a  perfect  game 
through  almost  9  innings.  Then,  former  UCLA 
teammate  and  current  Aussie  Joanne  Brown, 
with  one  swing  of  the  bat,  ended  the  game  with  a 
home  run. 

"That  defeat  stung,"  Fernandez  said.  "It 
stuck  with  me." 


UCLA  assistant  softball  coach  Lisa  Fernandez  tosses  fastballs  at  Japanese  batters 
during  the  women's  softball  game  Tuesday,  Sept.  26,  at  the  Olympics  in  Sydney. 


Team  USA  went  on  to  win  the  next  three 
games  and  the  gold  medal  game  against  China, 
but  the  loss  to  Australia  was  never  forgotten. 

On  Oct.  21,  2000.  in  the  middle  of  Olympic 
play,  and  as  the  U.S.  was  riding  a  stunning  two- 
game  losing  streak,  the  situation  was  almost 
identical.  Fernandez  was  pitching  masterfully. 


but  the  ofTense  could  not  touch  Australia  pitch- 
er Tanya  Harding  (another  former  Bruin).  The 
game  again  went  into  extra  innings,  where 
Fernandez  set  an  Olympic  record  with  25  strike- 
outs. 


S«e  FERNANDEZ,  page  43 


Bruins  play  in  collegiate 
national  championships 


TENNIS:  Players  finish 
event  in  13th;  first  time 
for  mixed  doubles  team 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Four  members  of  the  UCLA 
men's  and  women's  tennis  teams 
traveled  to  Stanford  over  the 
weekend  to  play 
in    the    World 

Team  Tennis  — — — i— 
National 
Collegiate 
Tennis 
Championships, 
where  they 
placed  13th  out 
of  16  teams. 

The  team, 
which  consisted 
of    sophomore  ." 

Sara  Walker  and  ;      " 

senior  Zana  Zlebnik,  and  seniors 
Chris  Sands  and  Jean-Julien 
Rojer,  was  the  first  one  that  com- 
bined members  of  both  the  men's 
and  women's  teams.  They  partici- 


"We  could  go  out 

and  not  play  with  a 

lot  of  pressure." 

Stella  Sampras 

Women's  head  coach 


pated  in  five  events:  men's  and 
women's  singles  (Rojer  and 
Walker),  men's  and  women's 
doubles,  and  mixed  doubles 
(Zlebnik  and  Sands). 

"Obviously,  we  wanted  to  do 
well  and  we  came  across  some 
tough  teams,"  said  women's  head 
coach  Stella  Sampras.  "I  don't 
think  (our  finish)  shows  either 
how  good  or  bad  we  are,  it's  just  a 
totally  different  format  that  we 
played  and  it 
'■•"■'  '-'"  ■  was  fun." 

The  event 
finish  doesn't 
count  toward 
rankings, 
records  or  any- 
thing official. 
College  tennis 
starts  its  real 
season  in  the 
spring. 

"We    could 

go  out  and  not 

of  pressure," 


lot 


play  with  a 
Sampras  said 

The  team  lost  to  Mississippi 


40 


_.     .     _  .  0*iy8ruln«»l>ho«o 

riMit  Sand!  participated  in  the  off  season  tuuniaiiiwii  ttils  wwfcgnfl. 


Sports  on  the  Web  Q    ^ 

See  all  this  and  more  at  • 

the  Daily  Bruin's  : 

cool  Web  site:  • 

www.dailybruin.uda.edu  I 


R>otball,  NHl^ 
badcoadiing 
you'll  definitely 
find  it  all  here 


■■t- 


COLUMN:  Send  in  your 
questions  -  interactivity 
is  the  name  of  the  game 

Welcome  to  the  first  install- 
ment of  the  Fresh  Prints.  I 
won't  promise  you  any- 
thing, but  I  intend  to  fill  this  space 
with  sarcasm,  seriousness,  insight 
and  nonsense  as  I  column  like  I  see 
'em.  Also,  I  need  your  feedback, 
comments  and  questions  because 
this  will  be  very  interactive.  So  keep 
reading  to  the  end,  get  to  Powell  and 
e-mail  me  at  Jizzeff@aol.com. 
Include  your  year  and  major,  and 
your  thoughts 
may  get  print- 
ed. 

•    «    • 

Your  first 
assignment  is  to 
send  me  ques- 
tions for  receiv- 
er Freddie 
Mitchell,  and  I 
will  ask  him  and 
post  the  best 
ones  next  week. 


Jeff 
Kmiotek 


With  Big 
Brother  finally 

over  and 

Britney  Spean 
touring  in 
Europe,  the  biggest  bust  in  town 
once  again  belongs  at  USC.  The 
mighty  Trojans  struck  out  again 
Saturday,  getting  stomped  on  by  the 
Arizona  Wildcats.  Carson  Palmer, 
star  of  the  1996  film  "The  Great 
White  Hype,"  threw  three  intercep- 
tions,  was  sacked  five  times  and  lost 
a  fumble.  But  he  was  victorious  in 
not  breaking  any  bones.  USC's  kick- 
er kicked  as  though  Lucy  from 
"Peanuts"  was  holding  the  snap  and 
their  running  backs  ran  in  place  like 
Wile  E.  Coyote  trying  to  flee. 

"Coach"  Paul  Hackelt's  hot  scat 
is  boiling,  and  fans  are  calling  for  his 
head.  Well,  not  Bruin  fans,  who  Jove 
the  guy.  ,;  :  .     •'    ,  ,     ' 

•   •    • 

Meanwhile,  UCLA  moved  up 
three  spots  to  No.  13  in  the  AP  Poll 
on  their  bye,  while  falling  a  spot  last 
week  after  a  nice  comeback  win 
against  4-1  Arizona  State. 

Since  it's  the  halfway  point  of  the 
season,  here  are  my  halfway-point 
thoughts. 

Offensive  MVP:  Freddie 
Mitchell.  Mitchell  is  second  in  the 
nation  with  569  yards,  despite  play- 
,  ing  with  a  reduced  playbook  and  a 
backup  QB  in  UCLA's  first  four 
games.  While  his  mouth  has  been 
open  repeatedly  this  season,  so  has 
he.  WiUi  Cory  Paus  back,  expect  a 
200-yard  game. 

Defensive  MVP:  Ricky  Manning. 
This  one  is  close  with  Robert 
Thomas,  but  I'll  give  the  nod  to 
Manning.  He's  saved  touchdowns 
and  made  some  great  tackles,  and 
since  I  hadn't  seen  that  out  of  the 
UCLA  secondary  in  so  long,  he  gets 
my  vote. 

Best  play:  Freddie  Mitchell's 
touchdown  pass  to  Brian  Poli-Dixon 


■im 


I ,  Serving  the  UOA  community  since  1919 


Thursday,  OoottR  12,2000 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


Report  reveals  wage  disparity 


GENDER:  Women  earn  less 
overall,  study  says;  results 
-^ary  by  department,  rank 


By  Bimal  Rajkomar 

.Jiaily  Bruin  Contributor 

Female  professors  at  UCLA  are  paid 
about  2.4  percent  less  than  male  equiva- 
lent counterparts,  according  to  a  study 
released  Tuesday. 

But  male  full  professors  earn  more 
than  their  female  counterparts  across 
all  academic  units,  with  the  exception  of 
the  physical  sciences.  At  the  associate 
professor  level,  the  study  found  salaries 
to  be  relatively  balanced. 


The  study  also  found  that  women 
advance  in  their  jobs  slower,  but  that 
many  female  assistant  professors  are 
actually  paid  more  than  their  male  col- 
leagues of  equaJ  rank. 

A  possible  reason  women  are  paid 
somewhat  less  overall  is  the  concentra- 
tion of  women  is  high  in  lower-paying 
departments  such  as  education  and 
some  of  the  humanities,  the  study  said. 

"The  fact  that  the  trend  is  not  consis- 
tent is  an  important  finding.  It  goes 
against  the  perceptions  that  males  are 
being  paid  more,  while  the  data  shows 
that  is  not  the  case,"  said  Norman 
Abrams,  vice  chancellor  of  academic 
personnel. 

This  first-ever  campus  gender  equity 
report,     "Gender     Equity     Issues 


Affecting  Senate  Faculty  at  UCLA." 
was  issued  following  a  six  month  study 
conducted  by  ^  coounittee  appointed 
by  Abrams.       '.x-^y:^''  ' 

The  Schools  of  Dentistry  and 
Medicine  were  not  included  in  the 
study.  •    • 

"We  were  pleased  to  see  a  lack  of  dis- 
parity in  salaries."  Abrams  said.  But,  he 
expressed  concern  with  the  difficulty 
that  some  women  face  in  moving  up  the 
academic  ladder. 

He  noted  that  the  preliminary  study 
only  included  findings  from  one  year, 
so  it  was  too  early  to  speculate  the  caus- 
es of  these  salary  differences. 

The  report  was  a  "good  starting 


Service  commission  seeks 
more  student  volunteers 

FAIR:  Organization  runs  programs  benefiting 
immigrants,  homeless  children,  other  groups 


Sm  STUDY,  page  19 


By  Barbara  Ortutay 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  Community  Service 
Commission  wants  UCLA  stu- 
dents to  step  outside  their  com- 
fort zones  and  reach  out  to  oth- 
ers. 

Hosting  its  annual 

Community  Service  Fair  today 
in  Westwood  Plaza,  CSC  mem- 
bers hope  students  will  take  time 
out  to  volunteer  in  the  more 


than  20  student-run  projects  the 
commission  has  to  offer. 

"You're  always  going  to  be 
busy  in  life,"  said  Angie  Cho, 
internal  assistant  commissioner. 
"It  really  depends  on  what  you 
prioritize." 

CSC  is  the  largest  student-ini- 
tiated and  student-run  commu- 
nity service  organization  on  any 
college  campus,  Cho  said.  The 

Sm  COMMUNITY,  page  18 


Coming  Out  Day  raises 
awareness  of  LGBT  issues 


GALA:  Celiebration  encourages 
students  to  be  open  about  their 
sexuality,  combat  homophobia 


una  Qutnn.  a  member  of  GALA,  helped  organize  a  rally  in  Westwood  Plaza  on 
jesday  to  kick  off  National  Coming  Out  Month. 


By  Maijoric  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor  * 

Members  of  the  lesbian,  gay,  bisexual  and 
transgender  community  gathered  in  the 
Ackerman  lounge  Wednesday  to  celebrate 
their  pride. 

The  event,  sponsored  by  the  Gay  and 
Lesbian  Association,  served  as  a  kick-off  for 
National  Coming  Out  Month. 

"Coming  out  is  a  big  step  for  many  LGBT 
people,"  said  Chris  Yah,  director  of  GALA. 
"Being  truthful  not  only  to  yourself  but  to 
other  people  and  celebrating  honesty  is 
important." 

Founded  by  Robert  Eichberg  and  Jean 
O'Leary,  National  Coming  Out  Day  was  first 
celebrated  on  Oct.  1 1,  1988  to  commemorate 
the  first  anniversary  of  the  1987  March  on 
Washington  for  Lesbian  and  Gay  Rights.  The 
day  also  observed  the  elimination  of  gays  and 
lesbians  by  Nazi  factions  on  Oct.  1 1,  1936. 


Guest  speaker  Winnie  Varghese,  an  open- 
ly gay  reverend  from  the  Episcopal  Anglican 
Chaplaincy,  discussed  the  role  of  religion  and 
LGBT  issues. 

"The  church  needs  to  come  out,"  she  said. 
"One  of  the  great  things  about  being  in  the 
church  is  that  we  can't  pretend  that  we  are 
not  racists,  sexists  and  homophobic." 

While  admitting  the  church  has  been 
wrong  in  the  past,  Varghese  also  noted  its 
new  attitudes. 

"We  are  also  about  changing  society  and 
changing  the  world,"  she  said.  "One  of  the 
things  that  we  are  finally  coming  around  with 
at  the  church  is  that  sexuality  is  a  blessing." 

Colorful  balloons  and  banners  decorated 
makeshift  tables  at  Wednesday's  event, 
where  18  organizations  provided  informa- 
tion on  safe  sex,  sexually  transmitted  diseases 
and  free  AIDS  testing. 

Many  people  at  the  event,  which  was  orig- 
inally scheduled  to  take  place  in  Westwood 
Plaza  but  got  rained  out,  said  they  welcome 
all  students  to  learn  more  about  LGBT 
issues. 

"The  LGBT  Center  serves  all  students. 


See  MUY,  page  16 


Candidates  focus  on  college  funding 


EDUCATION:  Bush  seeks 
expansion  of  Pell  Grant; 
Gore  focuses  on  teachers 


By 

OaHy  Bniin  Reporter 

With  the  presidential  election  less 
than  four  weeks  away,  George  W. 
Bush  and  Al  Gore  -  statistically  even 
in  most  polls  -  have  widened  the  edu- 
cation debate  to  include  competing 
pfaUM  for  cdiege  affordability. 

Their  policy  proposals,  as  posted 
on  their  official  campaign  Web  sites, 
hnth  aim  to  maka  eolkft  edwaatieii 


more  affordable. 

But  for  the  most  part,  the  similari- 
ties end  there. 

While  both  offer  new  tax-exempt 
educational  savings  plans  and  an 
increase  in  federal  funding,  Bush 
appears  to  allow  more  flexibility  while 
Gore's  agenda  is  more  targeted  in  its 
approach. 

"The  governor's  college  education 
affordability  proposals  arc  consistent 
with  every  other  element  of  his  domes- 
tic policy."  said  Bush-Cheney 
California  campaign  spokeswoman 
Lindsey  Kozberg. 

"He's  trying  to  emphasize  the  idea 
of  choioe  for  families  in  choosing  the 
miiigi  lytium  wlilcll  bw  mil  Iheir 


particular  needs." 

But  since  the  first  presidential 
debate,  the  Gore  campaign  has  been 
touting  the  vice  president's  plan  to 
offer  an  annual  tax  deduction  of  up  to 
$10,000  or  a  28  percent  tax  credit 
applicable  to  undergraduate,  gradu- 
ate, and  other  continuing  education 
tuition  costs. 

"Unlike  Bush,  Gore's  plan  pro- 
vides families  with  a  deduction  for  all 
post-secondary  education,"  said 
Gore-Lieberman  deputy  national 
campaign  spokeswoman  Devona 
Dolliole. 

Bush  plans  to  .expand  the  Pell 


HIGHER  EDUCATION  AFFORDABILITY 

CandkJate  policy  proposals  of  interest  to  college  students. 


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Daily  Bruin  N«ws 


; 


H»ursday,October12,2000         3 


College  Briefs 


Syracuse  chancellor's 
wife  defends  salary 


SYRACUSE,  N.Y.  -  Mary  Ann  Shaw  said  she 
plays  the  traditional  role  of  a  chancellor's  wife: 
She  helps  host  and  organize  events,  schedule 
meetings  and  conduct  fund  raising,  reported  the 
Daily  Orange. 

But  Shaw  is  also  paid  $65,000  a  year  for  fuldll- 
ing  these  duties,  according  to  an  article  in  the  Sept. 
22  Issue  of  the  Chronicle  of  Higher  Education.  A 
1998  survey  of  presidential  compensation  by  the 
College  and  University  Professional  Association 
for  Human  Resources  found  that  of  894  institu- 
tions, about  4  percent  reported  that  the  presi- 
dent's spouse  earned  a  salary  for  working  as  a 
partner,  the  article  stated. 

Mary  Ann  Shaw,  whose  husband  is  Syracuse 
University  Chancellor  Kenneth  A.  Shaw,  works 
under  the  title  of  associate  of  the  chancellor. 

"There's  work  to  be  done,  whether  1  do  it  or 
someone  else  does  it,"  she  said. 


South  Florida  hoops 
players  allege  racism 

TAMPA,  Ra.  -  Two  more  former  women's 
basketball  players  filed  civil  rights  lawsuits 
against  the  University  of  South  Rorida  arid 
women's  basketball  coach  Jerry  Ann  Winters 
on  Tuesday,  the  Oracle  reported. 

LaTonya  Greer  and  Patrice  Coleman  became 
the  third  and  fourth  former  players  to  sue  the 
university,  claiming  they  were  discriminated 
against  because  they  are  African  American. 

"The  reason  is  because  of  the  stonewalling 
and  the  racism  practiced  at  an  institutional  level 
by  the  University  of  South  Rorida.  said 
Jonathon  Alpert,  council  for  the  players. 

According  to  Greer,  when  she  and  other  play- 
ers questioned  why  Winters  recruited  ail  white 
players.  Winters  accused  them  of  being  racist. 
Greer  said  she  was  demoted  to  the  second  string 
behind  Sonya  Swick,  who  is  white,  because 
Greer  questioned  Winters'  recruiting  process. 


Cal  State-Chico  pledge 
dies  of  alcohol  overdose 

CHICO,  Calif.  -  Adrian  Heideman  died 
before  he  got  to  wear  his  fraternity  letters,  the 
Orion  reported. 

Heideman,  an  18-year-old  California  State 
University-Chico  student  and  Pi  Kappa  Phi 
pledge,  was  pronounced  dead  by  Chico  police 
eariy  Saturday  morning  in  his  fraternity  house, 
a  victim  of  what  police  are  calling  an  apparent 
alcohol  overdose. 

Heideman,  a  first-year  student,  was  found 
passed  out  in  a  basement  bedroom  in  the 
house  on  Rio  Chico  Way  after  a  night  of  drink- 
ing hard  alcohol  with  his  fraternity  brothers. 
When  friends  found  him  not  breathing  at  1 :2l 
a.m.,  they  called  911,  stated  a  police  press 
release. 

He  died  by  the  time  police  arrived. 
The  Chico  Police  Department  is  launching 
a  full  investigation  into  the  cause  of  death. 


Many  students  can't 
name  the  candidates 

ANN  ARBOR,  Mich.  -  Undecided  voters 
have  the  potential  to  swing  this  year's  presiden- 
tial election,  but  while  many  students  are  grap- 
pling with  which  candidate  to  vote  for,  others 
are  left  wondering  who  is  even  on  the  ballot, 
reported  the  Michigan  Daily. 

According  to  a  study  released  Tuesday  by  the 
Close  Up  Foundation,  one-third  of  16-  to  21- 
year-olds  do  not  know  who  the  Republican  and 
Democratic  presidential  candidates  are  and  75 
percent  cannot  name  either  of  the  two  vice-pres- 
idential candidates.  And  although  many  stu- 
dents at  the  University  of  Michigan  can  name 
both  presidential  candidates,  they  could  not 
name  the  vice-presidential  candidates,  often 
referring  to  Joe  Lieberman  as  "the  Jewish  guy" 
and  completely  forgetting  Dick  Cheney's  name. 


Compiled  fiwn  University  Wire  reports. 


WHArS  BREWIW 

Today  4  p.m. 

Project  Share 

Fall  Volunteer  Orientation 

KerckhofT417 


5  p.m. 

United  Arab  Society 
First  General  Meeting 
Ackernian3517 
824-3977  .^    ; 

Koreatown  Tutorial  Project 
Orientation 
Kerckhofr408 
824-1211 


5:30  p.m. 


Alumni  Scholars  Club 
Fall  Welcome  Event 


James  West  Alumni  Center 
RSVP  825-0947 

6  p.m. 

LBSA  -  Latino  Business  Student 

Association 

Resume  and  Interview  Workshop 

Doddl70 

6:30  p.m. 

OCM  -  Oikos  Campus  Ministry 

Regular  Meeting 

CS24 

559-5381 

7  p.m. 

Graduate  Christian  Fellowship 
Worship  and  Discussion 
Ackerman  2408 


ACADEMIC 
ANNOUNCEMENTS 


Week  2 

Last  week  to  drop  impacted 
L&S  undergraduate  courses 

Last  week  to  add/drop  classes 
on  URSA  without  a  fee 

Last  week  to  check  wait  lists  for 
courses  through  URSA 

Last  week  to  declare  bachelor's 
degree  candidacy  for  current 
term 

Last  week  to  return  textbooks 
to  UCLA  Store  for  full  refund 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


aDm® 


A  QUICK  LOOK 


Pago# 
Dally  Bruin  CiassiflAHft      36-42 

Crossword  Puzzle 35 

Movie  Guidft       ^:    33 


1.  A  change  Of  variation.  The  quality  of  twng  changeabJe; 
iTxilabiity. 

2.  Often  vteiw^jdes.  One  of  ttie  sudden  or  unexpected 
cfiange*  or  ahifts  encountered  in  one's  life,  activities  or 
surrounclngt 

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vldaatudaa  of  tfia  currant  century.-* 

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'     Kanan  Styla  Reaan  Deaeert 


•  Cappuclno 

•  Ctiocotote 

•  Coconut 

•  Hazelnut 

•  RasplMrry 

Pint 


2/$5 


For  additionai  details,  see  page  51 


PPLEMENT  Sr 


Coupon  Pages  (5lh  &  lOih  Week), 

and  Dining  Guide  issues  are 
coming  to  your  newsstands  9000! 

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DAILY  BRUIN 


1 


Edtor  in  Chief:  Christina  Byrd 

lEdHor  MididPllJtschi 


News  Edtor.  B«t»fa  Ortutay 
Assistant  New  Eilm:  Oharshani 
OhamuwanKfu,  Ukhui  Falcone,  rimathy  Kuda 
Unhlat 

Viewpoint  Editor:  JonaMabs 
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Cuauhtemoc  Oritga 

AIEE*or  Angela  Salaur 
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AUWriten:  Megan OidtefMn.BfemHopkini, 
Sharon  Hori.Terrylang 

Sports  Editor:  Pauline^ 

Assistant  Sports  Editors:  Amanda  Hetctiei; 

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Umpiene 

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StodBtJl 

Copy  EdHon:  Kim  Ancheta,Marisa  Chiang,  MHb 

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Pearson 

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Shraga,Heniane1abay 


Assistant  Director  of  Bwsincss:  Guy  levy 
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Brad  Kaipt  Steve  Reuter 

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n  wMed  Display  Accowt  (mcMm:  ¥kk 

Coiingeia  Lisa  Pyte,\Wiitney  Showier 

ElectiMdc  Modh  Aosunt  EncMhr  Vwessa 

Scott 

Traffic  and  Operations  Manager  Mile  Maflei 
University  Accowt  EmcMvr  fim  Soity 
NationaiAccMMtsManagw:  Chris  MnMaacit 
CbniM  Line  Manager  Siqtanie/MituDO 
ain«iiUne>ipr»Mnliilm.  DwCuloni. 
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Wendy  Shen,  Rene  Visceral 


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Sanchez 

ModbAdviMr  Elena  Jirvis 
iMbDirtctH:ArviJWM 


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Arts  &  Entertainment:  825  2538:  Horn 
Sports:  82 


PattI  Diaz,  a  fifth-year  psychology  student,  conducts  a  tour  of  the  UCLA  campus  Wednesday. 


ANDREA  KIM 


Campus  Tour  guides  like 

Patti  Diaz  take  pride  in  their 

jobs  as  ambassadors  for  UCLA 


ByJuUeYoshioka 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Leading  campus  tours  and  Click- 
ing joices  almost  gave  fifth-year  psy- 
chology student  Patti  Diaz  a  break 
into  show  business. 

Diaz,  one  of  the  30  UCLA 
Campus  Tour  guides,  once  received  a 
phone  number  from  an  agent  when 
he  heard  her  comedic  remarks. 

But  for  Diaz,  her  talk  is  more  than 
just  an  act. 

"We're  really  encouraged  to 
reficct  our  own  personality  and 
style,"  she  described.  "It's  up  to  us  to 
best  articulate  what  UCLA  is  all 
about.  And  we  color  that  with  our 
own  experiences." 

This  personal  reflection  is  impor- 


tant for  guides  who  need  to  portray 
-  college  life  to  prospective  UCLA  stu- 
dents. 

"She's  fun  and  able  to  both  enjoy 
her  job  and  yet  be  professional  at  the 
same  time,"  said  Tracy  Davis,  advisor 
for  the  Campus  Tours  Program.  "She 
shows  that  you  can  have  fun  and  go  to 
college  at  the  same  time." 

As  just  one  of  her  duties,  Diaz  said 
she  holds  the  responsibility  of  repre- 
senting UCLA. 

"We're  the  first  line  of  public  rela- 
tions for  UCLA."  she  described.  "We 
come  in  contact  with  more  prospec- 
tive students  than  any  other  depart- 
ment." 

At  10:20  a.m.  Wednesday  morn- 
ing, Diaz  began  her  second  UCLA 
tour  of  the  week. 


R€AL  Bruins 


Every  other  Thursday,  the  Daily  Bmin  takes  a  look  at  members  of 
the  UCLA  community.  In  this  continuirig  series,  vw  highlight  the 
many  different  activities  Bruins  are  involved  in. 


She  greeted  her  group  of  15  visit- 
ing students  and  their  parents  in  front 
of  the  James  West  Alumni  Center 
with  a  smile. 

"Gather,  we're  all  friends,"  she 
said. 

After  introducing  herself  and  pass- 
ing out  bags  containing  information 
on  the  different  majors,  colleges  and 
schools  at  the  university,  and  a  view- 
book,  Diaz  set  out  for  the  two-hour 
tour. 


"I  don't  have  any  rules  on  my 
tours,"  Diaz  said.  "We're  just  gonna 
hang  out  for  a  couple  of  hours." 

Stopping  first  at  Pauley  Pavilion, 
Diaz  shared  some  of  the  history  and 
tradition  of  UCLA  basketball. 

"If  you're  a  fan  of  college  sports, 
this  is  the  Mecca  of  men's  college  bas- 
ketball," Diaz  said. 

Next     they     headed     over     to 


See  RECRUITER,  page  10 


iein-Unruh  enjoys  position  in 
Utters  &  Sciences  counseling 


APPOINTMENT:  New  director's 
experience  as  liaison,  adviser 
will  help  in  high-visibility  job 


ByPayamMalinMi 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


Two  months  after  her  appointment  as  director 
of  the  College  of  Letters  &  Sciences  Counseling, 
Penelope  Hein-Unruh  says  she  can't  see  herself 
doing  anything  else. 

Her  appointment  followed  the  recommenda- 
tion of  several  faculty  and  staff  committees,  af^er 
the  served  as  interim-director  for  more  than  a 
year. 

"Her  great  understanding  and  experience 


with  student  initiatives  are  among  the  qualities 
that  make  her  right  for  the  position,"  said  Betty 
Click,  associate  vice  provost  of  the  college. 

As  director  of  counseling,  Hein-Unruh  over- 
sees services  such  as  freshman  and  transfer  stu- 
dent workshops  and  expanded  online  virtual 
counseling. 

"Students  often  comment  that  they  would  like 
more  counselor  availability."  Hein-Unruh  said. 
"I  do  my  best  to  help  facilitate  these  needs." 

Hein-Unruh's  promotion  came  after  the 
forced  resignation  of  former  director  Jane 
Crawford. 

Crawford  was  indicted  in  June  1999  for  steal- 
ing a  painting  donated  to  the  university  and  sell- 
ing it  to  an  art  gallery  in  New  York  for  $300,000. 


$wlOIIIIWilt»»tH3 


Pwwiop*  Hdn-Unruh  i;  the  new  dirprtnr  of  counseling  of  Letters  &  Science. 


tIrtU.* 


-   .-y    '•-'-' 


Thursday,  October  12,2000 


Dailyilruin  N«ws 


»  .  f.. 


Campus  organizatiphs 
urge  students  to  vote 


DiiiyBiuinNewj 


EVENT:  Rally  focuses  on 
registration,  education, 
youth  issues  in  debate 


By  Nitin  Ohamija 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor    " 

A  coalition  of  several  student  orga- 
nizations came  together  Wednesday 
to  promote  political  mobilization  by 
encouraging  Bruins  to  vote. 

"We  have  registered  over  1,000 
voters  and  we're  trying  to  get  people 
interested  and  educated  about 
upcoming  elections,"  said  Alyssa 
Scullion,  a  second-year  political  sci- 
ence student  and  the  chair  of  UCLA's 
California  Public  Interest  Research 
Group,  one  of  the  organizations  par- 
ticipating in  the  event. 

Along  with  CALPIRG,  represen- 
tatives from  Bruin  Democrats,  the 
offices  of  the  Undergraduate  Student 
Association  President  and  Vice- 
President,  the  Bruin  Political  Action 
Committee  and  the  Gay  and  Lesbian 
Association  joined  to  form  the  non- 


partisan group  Youth  Vote  2000 
Coalition. 

TTie  coalition  is  calling  on  the  pres- 
idential candidates  to  address  issues 
in  their  last  debate  that  face 
America's  youth.  The  group  is  also 
trying  to  ensure  that  the  town-hall- 
style  forum  is  filled  with  younger 
audience  members,  organizers  said. 

At  the  rally,  students  stood  in  the 
rain  sharing  their  personal  experi- 
ences and  explaining  the  importance 
of  participation  in  national  elections. 
"Rain  or  shine,  students  come," 
said  Merriah  Fairchild,  representing 
CALPIRG  at  the  event. 

One  such  activist,  Barmark  Nara, 
a  third-year  transfer  history  student, 
initially  decided  not  to  vote.  He  said 
he  felt  disillusioned  by  the  "two 
shades  of  same  evil:  Clinton  and 
Gore." 

But.  after  consideration,  he  real- 
ized that  even  though  he  wasn't  sup- 
portive of  the  Democrats  and  the 
Republicans,  he  had  alternatives. 
"Even  though  I  know  my  vote 


CAMPAIGN:  Fund-raising 
efforts  take  forefront  w^ith 
few  public  appearances 


treks  through  Califomia  {    WORLD  &  NATION 


Thurvlay,  October  12, 2000 


By  Scott  Undlaw 

The  Associated  Press 


See  VOTE,  page  16 


SAN  JOSE  -  Democratic  vice 
presidential  candidate  Joseph 
Lieberman  skipped  across 
California  for  two  days,  raising  $4.2 
million  in  a  series  of  fund-raisers 
with  scarcely  a  public  appearance. 

The  state  has  long  been  known  as 
the  politicians'  cash  machine,  and 
Lieberman  used  it  to  full  advantage. 
During  a  campaign  swing 
through  the  Pacific  Northwest,  he 
dropped  into  California  just  long 
enough  to  collect  $3.2  million  at  a 
Silicon  Valley  fund-raiser  Tuesday 
night.  He  planned  to  fly  on  to 
Oregon  afterward,  but  ended  up 
spending  the  night  in  San  Jose  after 
he  lingered  too  late  with  donors  at 
the  private  event. 

Before  dawn  Wednesday, 
Lieberman  flew  to  Hillsboro,  Ore., 
to  talk  about  improving  schools, 
then  returned  to  California  and  went 
directly  to  another  fund-raiser,  this 


Dow  Jones  Industrials 


down:  110.61    : 
close:  10,413.79 


Nasdaq  Imiex 

down:  72.05 
close:  3 168.05 


DolUr 

Yen:  107.70 
Euro:  1.1515 


_.  .  The  Associated  Press 

Democratrc  vice  presidential  candidate  Sen.  Joseph  Lieberman 
talks  about  education  issues  during  a  campaign  appearance. 


one  bringing  in  a  projected  $500,000 
for  the  Democratic  National 
Committee. 

Then  it  was  off  to  a  presidential 
debate-watching  party  in  San  Diego, 
where  he  was  to  mingle  with  sup- 
porters and  students,  do  a  series  of 


network  TV  interviews,  and  a  third 
DNC  fund-raiser  expected  to  raise 
$500,000. 

In  contrast  to  Oregon,  where  the 
race  is  close,  campaign  appearances 
in  California  are  a  lower  priority  for 
the  Democratic  ticket. 


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»ttt     I    I  LN  Mil  I  ,1 


Milosevic's  allies  refuse  to  leave  supreme  court  may  limit 


RESISTANCE:  Another  general 
strike  may  be  in  the  works  if 
key  leaders  don't  step  down 


By  George  Jahn 

The  Associated  Press 


BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia  -  Allies  of 
ousted  president  Slobodan  Milosevic  said 
Wednesday  they  were  reassuming  control  of 
the  police  and  fighting  efforts  by 
Yugoslavia's  new  president  to  purge  the 
country's  military  leadership. 

ProKlemocracy  leader  Zoran  Djindjic 
dismissed  the  statements  as  "haggling  and 
manipulations"  by  Serbia's  government, 
which  remains  in  the  hands  of  Milosevic 
supporters  despite  the  change  of  power  at 
the  federal  level. 

The  Serbian  government  has  resisted 
pressure  to  resign  and  formally  hand  over 
control  to  a  transition  administration  of  sup- 
porters of  new  Yugoslav  President  Vojislav 
Kostunica. 

But  Djindjic  -  who  has  emerged  as  a  key 
figure  in  the  new  Yugoslav  leadership  -  gave 
the  Serbian  government  until  Friday  to  set  a 
date  for  new  elections  or  the  opposition 
would  call  its  followers  into  the  streets. 

"If  they  reject  this,  we  will  call  on  the  peo- 
ple to  demand  the  elections,"  Djindjic  said, 
threatening  a  renewal  of  the  popular  revolt 
that  ousted  Milosevic. 

More  than  90  percent  of  Yugoslavs  live  in 
Serbia,  which  together  with  much  smaller 
Montenegro      makes      up      Yugoslavia. 


scope  (^Disabilities  Act 


CASE:  Justices  divided 
over  letting  people  use 
civil  rights  law  to  sue 


SeeVUG0SUVU,pa9e19 


^^  The  Associated  Press 

Predrag  Marfcovk,  front  of  the  G-1 7  economists  group,  walks  past 
destroyed  statues  in  front  of  the  Yugoslav  Parliament  building. 


6y  Laurie  Asseo 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Supreme 
Court  justices,  hearing  a  case  that 
could  significantly  diminish  the 
reach  of  the  Americans  with 
Disabilities  Act,  seemed  divided 
Wednesday  over  letting  disabled 
people  sue  states  under  the  federal 
civil  rights  law. 

Justice  Antonin  Scalia  ques- 
tioned whether  the  failure  of  states 
to  make  "special  accommodations" 
for  the  disabled  justifies  subjecting 
them  to  financial-damage  lawsuits 
in  federal  court. 

"There  might  well  be  a  rational 
basis  for  refusing  to  hire  a  teacher  in 
a  wheelchair"  if  the  disability  could 
not  be  accommodated,  Scalia 
added. 

But  Justice  Stephen  G.  Breyer 
said  court  papers  filed  in  the  states' 
rights  case  from  Alabama  showed 
many  examples  of  unequal  treat- 
ment of  the  disabled  that  Congress 
sought  to  remedy  when  it  passed 
the  law  in  1990. 

"Why  isn't  it  a  constitutional  vio- 
lation, where  Congress  has  lots  and 


lots  of  instances  of  states  that  seem 
to  discriminate  against  handi- 
capped people?"  he  asked. 

At  the  heart  of  the  dispute  is  the 
balance  of  power  between  the  fed- 
eral and  state  governments,  and  the 
court  has  issued  a  series  of  5-4  rul- 
ings in  favor  of  the  states  in  recent 
disputes.  Last  January,  for 
instance,  the  justices  barred  state 
workers  from  suing  their  employers 
in  federal  court  under  the  federal 
Age  Discrimination  in 

Employment  Act. 

The  justices'  decision  on  the 
ADA,  expected  by  next  summer, 
could  sweep  broadly  enough  to 
affect  not  just  lawsuits  by  state 
employees,  but  all  claims  that 
accuse  states  of  bias  against  the  dis- 
abled in  services  such  as  employ- 
ment, education  and  health  care.  A 
ruling  in  favor  of  the  states  would 
thus  have  the  effect  of  limiting  the 
ADA'S  enforcement. 

Alabama  is  seeking  to  fend  off 
disability-bias  claims  by  a  state- 
employed  nurse  and  security  guard. 
The  nurse.  Patricia  Garrett,  says 
she  was  demoted  after  taking  a 
leave  to  be  treated  for  breast  can- 
cer, and  security  guard  Milton  Ash 
says  the  state  refused  to  enforce  its 
no-smoking  policy  to  accommo- 
date his  severe  asthma. 

An  appeals  court  ruled  the  two 
could  sue  the  state  under  the  ADA. 


Israel  fears  guerilla  war  dev< 


TALKS:  No  end  in  sight 
to  violent  riots  that  have 
already  killed  91  people 


ByKarbiLaub 

The  Associated  Press 

JERUSALEM  -The  U.N.  sec- 
retary-general  extended  his 
Mideast  peace  mission 

Wednesday  after  meeting  unex- 
pectedly with  the  Israeli  and 
Palestinian  leaders,  but  a  truce 
remained  elusive.  Israeli  tank  gun- 
ners fired  at  a  Palestinian  village 
to  flush  out  gunmen  targeting  an 
Israeli  funeral  convoy  and  three 
Palestinians  were  killed  in  the 
West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip. 


The  gunmen  belonged  to  a 
newly  formed  Palestinian  militia, 
fueling  Israeli  fears  that  the  vio- 
lence of  the  past  two  weeks  - 
much  of  it  large-scale  rock-throw- 
ing riots  -  was  evolving  into  a 
guerrilla  war.  91  people  have  been 
killed,  all  but  five  Palestinians. 

The  Palestinians'  anger  at 
Israel,  initially  triggered  by  a  visit 
by  an  Israeli  hard-line  politician  to 
a  contested  Jerusalem  shrine, 
showed  no  sign  of  abating.  In  a 
march  in  the  West  Bank  town  of 
Hebron,  two  men  pointed  pistols 
at  an  effigy  of  Israeli  Prime 
Minister  Ehud  Barak  before  burn- 
ing it  to  cheers  from  the  crowd. 

The  fiercest  battle  erupted  near 
the  village  of  Kufr  Kalil,  just  south 
of  the  West  Bank  town  of  Nablus, 


as  dozens  of  buses  and  cars  carry- 
ing mourners  to  the  funeral  of 
American-born  Jewish  settler 
Hillel  Lieberman  passed  by. 

As  four  helicopter  gunships 
hovered  above,  Israeli  troops  fired 
tank  machine  guns  toward  the  vil- 
lage where  the  gunmen,  members 
of  a  new  Nablus-based  militia, 
weaved  in  an  out  of  narrow  alleys. 
Settlers  crouched  behind  their 
vehicles.  Two  Israeli  soldiers  and 
two  Palestinians  were  injured. 

"We  shot  at  the  settlers  and  it 
was  a  successful  attack.  We  beat 
them  back."  one  of  the  assailants 
said  later,  balancing  an  AK-47 
assault  rifle  on  his  kees  as  he  and 
his  fellow  gunmen  regrouped  on  a 


S«elSIUEUp49el8 


■« 


I  I-  n  •  »«•     •  .  Tfie  Associated  Press 

Israeli  Prime  Minister  Ehud  Barak,  right,  shakes  hands  with  U.N.  Secretary 
General  Kofi  Annan  as  they  meet  in  the  Prime  Minister's  office  yesterday. 


World  &  nation  briefs 


\ 


Clinton  signs  bill  for 
conservation  funds 

WASHINGTON  -  President  Clinton 
signed  a  major  conservation  bill  Wednesday 
that  will  double  spending  next  year  for  feder- 
al land  acquisition  and  preservation.  He  said 
the  measure  "provides  a  lasting  legacy  for 
our  grandchildren." 

The  interior  appropriations  bill  earmarks 
$12  billion  over  six  years  for  purchasing  frag- 
ile lands,  maintaining  parks,  preserving 
wildlife  and  other  initiatives.  "This  is  a  truly 
historic  achievement,  achieved  in  a  genuine 
bipartisan  spirit."  the  president  said. 

He  signed  the  bill  in  the  Oval  Office,  sur- 
rounded by  leaders  of  environmental  organi- 
zations. Moments  later.  Clinton  went  to  the 
Rose  Garden  on  a  crisp  fall  day  and  urged 
Congress,  in  its  closing  days,  to  pass  his  ini- 
tiatives on  education,  crime-fighting,  equal 
pay  for  women  and  HMO  protections. 

The  bill  budgets  $1.6  billion  next  year  for 


land  acquisition  and  conservation, 
with  that  figure  rising  to  $2.4  bil- 
lion a  year  by  2006.  Clinton  origi- 
nally had  asked  for  a  $3-billion-a-year 
plan  but  said  the  compromise  with 
Congress  "represents  a  major  leap  forward 
in  the  quest  to  preserve  our  environment." 

Violence  in  Chechnya 
claims  three  lives 

NAZRAN.  Russia  -  Three  Russian  sol- 
diers were  killed  in  the  Chechen  capital 
Grozny  when  rebels  ambushed  an  armored 
personnel  carrier,  crippling  it  with  an  explo- 
sion and  bombarding  it  with  grenades,  offi- 
cials said  Wednesday. 

The  ambush  was  one  of  three  separate 
rebel  attacks  on  Tuesday  that  killed  four 
Russian  soldiers  and  wounded  eight  others, 
said  an  official  in  the  pro-Russian  adminis- 
tration in  Chechnya.  The  two  other  attacks 
were  in  the  southeastern  Shatoi  district.* 


where  one  serviceman  was  killed 
and  one  was  wounded,  and  the 
southern  Vedeno  Gorge,  where 
three  were  wounded. 
The  Interfax  news  agency,  citing 
Russian  police  in  Chechnya,  also  said  three 
more  Russian  soldiers  were  killed,  and  three 
injured,  when  their  armored  vehicle  ran  over 
an  explosive  in  the  Kurchaloi  region  of  the 
south. 

The  report  could  not  be  independently 
confirmed. 

Aircraft  inspections 
reveal  minor  problems 

WASHINGTON  -  Inspections  of  wiring 
on  81  airliners  found  "room  for  improve- 
ment" but  no  immediate  safety  problems, 
the  Federal  Aviation  Administration  report- 
ed Wednesday. 

While  cracked  insulation  was  found  on 
wires  in  six  recently  retired  planes,  the  cracks 


did  not  necessarily  represent  a  hazard,  said 
Elizabeth  Erickson,  director  of  aircraft  certi- 
fication for  the  Federal  Aviation 
Administration. 

"Cracked  wires  do  not,  in  and  of  them- 
selves, represent  an  immediate  safety  prob- 
lem," Erickson  said  in  a  discussion  of  the 
agency's  program  to  study  aircraft  wiring. 
She  added,  "They  are  of  concern  to  us." 

The  FAA  launched  a  program  two  years 
ago  to  study  wiring  in  aircraft,  particularly 
aging  airliners.  The  advisory  committee  for 
that  effort  is  meeting  in  Washington  this 
week  to  review  progress. 

The  National  Transportation  Safety 
Board  has  concluded  that  the  de.struction  of 
TWA  flight  800  four  years  ago,  killing  all  230 
aboard,  resulted  from  a  fuel  tank  explosion, 
probably  caused  by  a  short  circuit. 

The  FAA  program  studied  airliners  dur- 
ing their  regular  maintenance  stops,  looking 
specifically  for  wiring  problems 


Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports 


4* 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


foiyBniinNtwt 


I^  Bruin  News 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


STATE  &(  LOCAL 


County  cri 

WALKOUTS:  Court  order 
keeps  nurses  from  joining 
in  massive  work  stoppage 


By Judy  Un 

The  Associated  Press 

Some  42,000  Los  Angeles  County 
employees  went  on  strike  Wednesday 
at  clinics,  jails  and  other  sites;  crippling 
services  used  by  millions  of  residents  - 
especially  the  poor,  already  hit  hard  by 
a  nearly  month-old  transit  strike. 

Outside  one  county  hospital.  Daniel 
Lopez,  who  was  paralyzed  from  the 
waist  down  when  he  was  shot  in  the 
spine  last  week,  waited  to  go  to  a  reha- 
bilitation center. 

"I  was  supposed  to  be  transferred 
on  Monday,  and  now  I'm  stuck.  I'll 
probably  be  here  until  this  strike  finish- 
es," he  said. 

The  walkout  by  nearly  half  the  work 
force  of  the  nation's  most  populous 
county  -  with  nearly  10  million  resi- 
dents -  forced  service  cutbacks  at  six 
hospitals  and  42  clinics,  though  a  last- 
minute  court  order  barred  registered 
nurses  and  other  essential  workers 
from  striking. 

"The  emergency  rooms  remain 
open  to  walk-ins,  people  who  present 
themselves  at  the  hospitals,"  said  John 
Wallace,  a  spokesman  for  the  county 
health  department.  "Doctors  by  and 
large  are  not  participating  in  work 
actions." 

Still,  public  hospitals  with  trauma 
centers  diverted  ambulances  to  private 
clinics.  Stacks  of  mail  piled  up  outside 
the  registrar-recorder's  office  in 
Norwalk  a  day  after  the  postmark 
deadline  for  voters  to  register  by  mail 
for  the  Nov.  7  election. 

The  county's  three-year  pact  with 
the  Service  Employees  International 


I  I 


Berkeley  professor  v/m 


Nobel  for  statistics  worK 


The  AsKxiMed  Press 

Claudio  Manzo  shouts  with  fellow  county  service  workers  striking 
outside  the  L.A.  County  Registrar-Recorder's  offices  in  Norwalk,  Calif. 


Union  Local  660  ended  Sept.  30,  with 
the  two  sides  still  far  apart  on  pay.  The 
union  wants  15.5  percent  raises  over 
the  next  three  years,  while  the  county 
has  offered  a  9  percent  increase. 
The  union  has  been  staging  rolling 


one-day  walkouts  since  last  week  to 
demonstrate  the  potential  effects  of  a 
general  walkout.  Contract  talks  have 
been  sporadic. 


See  UMW,  page  14 


PRIZE:  Practical  uses  of 
research  cited  as  reason 
for  committee's  selection 


By  Midielie  Locke 
The  Associated  Press 

BERKELEY  -  The  minute  she 
heard  a  Swedish  accent  on  the 
phone,  Beverlee  Tito  Somboli 
knew  her  husband's  years  of  pio- 
neering research  on  how  people 
make  everyday  choices  had  paid  off 
with  the  biggest  award  in  acade- 
mics, the  Nobel  Prize. 

It  took  a  little  longer  for  things 
to  sink  in  for  the  prize-winner  him- 
self, UC  Berkeley  economics  pro- 
fessor Daniel  McFadden. 

"She  kind  of  got  the  grasp  of  this 
before  I  did,  so  she  was  jumping  up 
and  down  while  I  was  still  trying  to 
figure  out  what  was  going  on,"  he 
said  Wednesday.  "My  immediate 
reaction  was,  'Rats,  I  should  have 
cleaned  my  office  yesterday.'" 

McFadden  shares  the  prize, 
awarded  by  the  Royal  Swedish 
Academy  of  Sciences  on 
Wednesday,  with  James  J. 
Heckman,  56,  of  the  University  of 
Chicago. 

Both  men  were  cited  for  meth- 
ods of  analyzing  statistics  that  have 
wide-ranging  practical  applica- 
tions. Heckman  is  best  known  for 
labor  force  studies  that  focus  on 
how  various  groups,  such  as  mar- 
ried women,  decide  when  to  work 
and  how  much.  McFadden's 
research  deals  with  how  people  will 
choose  from  different  alternatives 
when  deciding  where  to  live,  how  to 


travel  and  what  items  to  buy. 

As  it  turns  out,  economics  was- 
n't McFadden's  first  career  choice. 
As  a  boy  growing  up  on  a 
Depression-era  farm  in  North 
Carolina,  he  dreamed  of  being  a 
fartn  agent  or  a  novelist. 
"Fortunately  for  literature,  that 
didn't  come  to  pass,"  he  said  jok- 
ingly. 

McFadden  studied  physics  as  an 
undergraduate  and  then  switched 
to  behavioral  sciences,  falling  into 
his  current  field  mainly  because  the 
two  professors  he  wanted  to  study 
under  were  economists. 

Soon,  he  was  drawn  into  the 
field  of  decision-making  analysis. 

McFadden's  achievement  is 
turning  his  research  of  individual 
choices  into  models  that  can  reli- 
ably predict  behavior.  Among 
other  applications,  designers  of  the 
San  Francisco  BART  commuter 
train  system  used  his  work  for  such 
decisions  as  where  to  place  sta- 
tions. 

UC  Berkeley  is  known  for  its 
real-world  approach  to  studying 
economics  with  researchers  taking 
up  issues  like  wages,  jobs  and  immi- 
gration policy.  McFadden  said  the 
Nobel  "is  a  nice  indication  we're 
doing  things  right." 

McFadden's  win  was  UC 
Berkeley's  17th  Nobel  and  the  third 
for  the  University  of  California  sys- 
tem this  week.  Two  UC  Santa 
Barbara  professors  shared  in  the 
physics  and  chemistry  prizes. 

McFadden  joined  the  Berkeley 
faculty  in  1963,  moved  to  MIT  in 
1977  and  then  returned  to  Berkeley 


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I       Hiursday,  October  U  2000 


•m^^^m'^mmmmmmmmimm 


Daily  Brain  Nmts 


Feinstein  holds  comfortable  lead 


SENATE:  Incumbent  expects  to 
keep  Congressional  seat  with 
little  spending  on  campaign 

By  John  Howard 

The  Associated  Press 

SAN  FRANCISCO  -  California's  U.S. 
Senate  race  is  all  but  invisible  just  a  month 
before  Election  Day,  with  the  candidates  and 
their  issues  generating  some  light  but  little  heat. 

Incumbent  Democrat  Dianne  Feinstein  and 
Republican  challenger  Tom  Campbell  have  yet 
to  air  television  ads,  and  their  first  debates 
won't  be  held  until  two  weeks  before  the  elec- 
tion, if  then. 

Feinstein  continues  her  yearlong  lead  in  the 
polls:  While  her  edge  has  dropped,  it  remains  in 
double-digits  and  her  voter-approval  ratings  are 
high.  Campbell's  polling  shows  the  contest  is 
closer,  but  there  is  no  horse  race. 

"I  can  only  tell  you  what  people  say  to  me, 
which  is  that  they  think  I'm  a  cinch  to  win  the 

^  SceOUJFOMIIA,pa9«10 


Ihe  Aisocuird  Pint 

Mayoral  candidate  Tom  Ammiano,  center,  and  some  of 
his  supporters  stand  on  a  corner  in  San  Francisco  in  1999. 


Califomia  court  orders  Ford 
to  recall  1.7  million  veNdes 


SUrr:  Judge  accuses  the 
automaker  of  conceahng 
a  dangerous  design  flaw 


By  David  Knraets 

The  Associated  Press 

OAKLAND  -  A  judge  took  the 
unprecedented  step  Wednesday  of 
ordering  the  recall  of  as  many  as  1.7 
million  Ford  cars  and  trucks  sold  in 
Califomia,  accusing  the  automaker  of 
concealing  a  dangerous  design  flaw 
that  can  cause  the  vehicles  to  stall  in 
trdfTic. 

The  ruling  compounds  Ford's  trou- 
bles as  the  automaker  tries  to  steer  its 
way  out  of  the  Firestone  tire  recall  cri- 
sis. 

Ford  has  insisted  all  along  that  the 
ignition  module  at  issue  is  safe,  and  k 


said  it  will  appeal  the  ruling,  arguing 
that  a  Califomia  state  judge  had  no 
authority  to  issue  such  an  order„ 

Never  before  has  a  U.S.  judge 
ordered  an  automotive  recall. 

The  device  was  put  on  29  models 
between  1983  and  1995,  including  the 
Taums,  LTD,  Ranger,  Bronco, 
Mustang  and  Escort,  according  to 
Ford.  During  that  period,  Taums  was 
one  of  the  top-selling  cars  in  America. 

Superior  Court  Judge  Michael  E. 
Ballachey  said  Ford  sold  as  many  as  23 
million  vehicles  with  the  flaw,  but  his 
jurisdiction  does  not  extend  beyond 
California.  However,  similar  class- 
action  suits  are  pending  in  Alabama, 
Maryland,  Illinois,  Tennessee  and 
Washington. 

The  automaker  has  settled  dozens 
of  wrongful-death  and  personal-injury 

SceNNIQ,page12 


NOTES 

DIARYUPEAS) 


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Ttanday,  October  12, 2000 


WAMTED: 


Visionaries 

Creators 

Evaluators 

Probl'-'-'-'-Solvc' 


Yaakov's  attention  to  detail  is  critical  when  documenting  and  analyzing 
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Goldman,  Sachs  &  Co. 

Information  Session  y  . 

Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon       ; 
Monday,  October  16,  2000  :[.  '■'%  v 

6:00  p.m.  -  8:00  p.m.     . 

Investment  Banking  Fair 

Bradley  International  Center,  International  Room  - 

Thursday,  October  19,  2000  < 

7:00  p.m.  -  10:00  p.m. 

Send  Cover  Letter/Resume/Transcript  By  October  24 

Goldman,  Sachs  &  Co.  '  /   *  >  ; 

Fox  Plaza,  Suite  2600 

2121  Avenue  of  the  Stars 

Los  Angeles,  CA  90067  ^Z' 

Fax:310-407-5555 

Attn:  Joel  Werner 

■■^_y  OR      /       ■■    ;. 

JobTrak, 
Via  the  Career  Center's  website  (.:     •  .  , 

www.career.ucla.edu 

If  you  have  any  questions,  please  feel  free  to  contact  Joel  Werner  (310-407-5704)  or  Jill  Axelrod  (212-902-7286) 


(ioldlllil 


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Ti 


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10       Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


W^ 


ili^  Bruin  Nflws 


RECRUITER  , 

FrompageS        •  .^.     j^     ::    ;  /  .= 

Westwood  Plaza,  where  Diaz  talked  about  the 
history  of  the  university  and  described  the  ser- 
vices provided  at  John  Wooden  and  the 
Arthur  Ashe  centers. 

A  two-year  veteran  of  the  program,  Diaz 
said  giving  tours  means  hours  of  work,  but 
worth  the  efi'ort. 

In  addition  to  giving  two  tours,  guides  must 
also  conduct  two  office  hours  answering 
phones  and  taking  reservations,  and  attetid  a 
weekly  meeting. 

'it's  a  lot  of  work,  but  it's  also  a  lot  of  fun," 
Diaz  described.  "It's  hard  to  say  that  about  a 
lot  of  jobs.  It's  not  your  typical  working  envi- 
ronment. It's  definitely  a  job  though." 

Because  of  the  nature  of  her  job,  Diaz  rec- 
ognized that  her  words  may  influence  a  major 
decision  in  a  person's  life. 

"You  can  really  see  how  we  din  affect  stu- 
dents and  their  choice  of  college,"  she 
described.  "One  of  their  biggest  choices  in  life 
is  picking  a  college." 

One  time,  Diaz  gave  a  visiting  student  from 
Texas  her  e-mail  address  and  the  girl  wrote 
back  asking  questions  on  how  to  get  into 
UCLA.  Diaz  wrote  back  and  the  girl  was  quite 
grateful. 

"She  really  understands  the  purpose  of  our 
program  to  provide  a  service  and  inspire  peo- 
ple to  go  to  college,"  said  fourth-year  English 
student  and  Campus  Tour  Coordinator  Kate 
Herold. 

Continuing  the  tour,  Diaz  spoke  about  the 
campus  as  the  group  entered  the  B-levcl  of 
Ackerman  Union. 

"They  sometimes  call  this  Ackermall," 
Diaz  said  jokingly.  "You  could  literally  live  in 
here  for  a  day." 

Upstairs,  the  group  entered  Ackerman 
Grand  Ballroom,  where  Diaz  talked  about 
campus  events,  movies  and  other  informa- 
tional fairs. 

"A  lot  of  companies  recruit  UCLA,"  Diaz 
explained.  "So  you  come  to  these  fairs  and 
pass  out  your  resume  to  a  few  companies  and 
you  could  walk  out  with  a  job." 

Exiting  to  Kerckhoff  Patio,  Diaz  led  the 


MlyBniinNtm 


Thursd^,  October  12, 2000       11 


group  behind  Franz  Hall  to  the  inverted  foun- 
tain. There,  she  recounted  past  pranks  UCLA 
and  use  have  played  on  each  other. 

As  rain  began  to  put  a  damper  on  the  tour, 
Diaz  decided  to  divert  the  group  to  Royce 
Hall  and  Powell  Library,  telling  of  both's  his- 
tories and  services. 

Finding  shelter  from  the  rain  in  front  of 
Royce  Hall,  she  gave  an  overview  of  the  appli- 
cation and  admissions  process. 

"Last  year,  38,000  people  applied  to 
UCLA,"  Diaz  said.  "We  received  more  appli- 
cations than  any  other  school  in  the  nation." 

The  rain  let  up  a  little  at  Janss  Steps  and 
Diaz  pointed  to  the  residence  halls,  informing 
the  students  about  on-campus  housing. 

At  Westwood  Plaza,  she  Finished  her  tour, 
encouraging  everyone  to  visit  many  different 
campuses  to  decide  what  qualities  they  liked 
in  a  college. 

"I  picked  UCLA  personally  because  of  the 
diversity,"  she  described.  "I  come  from  a 
small  town  and  I  needed  to  see  different  reli- 
gions, ethnicities,  and  people." 

In  addition  to  giving  tours  rain  or  shine, 
Diaz  said  she  sometimes  leads  the  excursions 
speaking  in  Spanish  for  groups  requesting  it. 
"It  was  a  little  nerve  wracking,"  she  said. 
"I'm  fluent,  but  my  Spanish  is  conversational 
and  there  are  defmitely  a  lot  of  academic 
terms  used  as  far  as  admissions." 

Her  willingness  to  give  such  tours,  which 
are  not  a  requirement,  showed  her  commit- 
ment to  the  program,  according  to  fourth-year 
history  student  and  Campus  Tours 
Coordinator  Nelson  Auyon. 

"She  volunteered  to  do  the  tour,"  he  said. 
"And  that's  the  thing  about  being  a  guide;  to 
be  there  and  to  give  it  some  priority  in  your 
life." 

The  road  to  becoming  a  Campus  Tour 
guide  begins  with  an  application  during  spring 
quarter  and  two  call-back  interviews 
Approximately  200  students  apply,  of  which 
only  15  usually  make  the  cut. 

Outside  of  her  life  as  a  tour  guide,  Diaz  par- 
ticipates in  stand-up  comedy  routines,  an 
activity  her  fellow  guides  thoroughly  encour- 
age. 

"All  tour  guides  go  to  her  show,"  Herold 
said.  "People  love  her." 


CALIFORNIA 

From  page  8 

race,"  Feinstein,  a  former  San  Francisco  mayor, 
said  Wednesday.  "1  really  feel  that  the  polls  and 
things  that  have  been  done  that  show  me  with  a 
substantial  lead  put  this  in  that  category." 

For  Campbell,  a  Silicon  Valley  congressman 
and  Stanford  University  law  professor,  the  cam- 
paign has  come  down  to  a  quest  to  make  his 
name  and  his  positions  on  key  issues  known  to 
voters. 

"I  emphasize  that  my  standing  in  the  polls  is 
quite  good,  given  my  name  ID,  and  1  believe  if  I 
increase  my  name  ID  I  will  win,"  Campbell  said. 
Campbell  has  maintained  an  energetic  cam- 
paign schedule,  crisscrossing  the  state  with 
dozens  of  appearances,  including  many  on  col- 
lege campuses  -  but  he  has  not  built  dramatic 
momentum. 

In  part,  that's  because  he  started  his  cam- 
paign late,  last  fall,  while  Feinstein's  campaign 
staff  began  organizing  and  raising  money  soon 
after  the  November  1998  elections. 

Feinstein,  who  recently  broke  her  leg  at  her 
Colorado  vacation  home,  has  not  been  on  the 
campaign  trail.  So  far,  she  has  largely  avoided 
the  kind  of  give-and-take  with  reporters  that 
provides  an  opponent  with  political  ammuni- 
tion. 

"She  is  having  an  easier  run  for  the  Senate 
than  any  incumbent  in  California  for  the  past  25 
years,"  said  Tony  Quinn,  a  historian  and 
Republican  political  analyst. 

Amazingly,  this  year's  U.S.  Senate  race  may 
wind  up  being  a  cheap,  no-frills  contest  -  at  least 
by  California  standards. 

The  1994  Senate  battle  between  Feinstein  and 
Republicao  Michael  Huffmgton  cost  more  than 
$40  million  -  more  than  $10  million  from 
Feinstein  and  $30  million  from  Huffmgton  - 
and  then  ranked  as  the  nation's  costliest  U.S. 
Senate  race  ever.  Other  California  Senate  cam- 
paigns typically  cost  $20  million  or  more. 

This  year,  Feinstein  has  raised  at  least  $8  mil- 
lionv  and  has  at  least  $3.5  million  in  the  bank, 
while  Campbell  collected  about  $3.5  million  and 
has  $1.2  million  in  the  bank,  according  to  their 
campaigns. 

The  price  tag  for  the  entire  race  could  be  $15 


million  or  less.  Any  full-blown  statewide  televi- 
sion ad  campaign,  which  typically  costs  $2  mil- 
lion per  week  per  candidate  in  California,  is  like- 
ly to  be  ^ort^ived. 

Contributing  to  California's  low-key  Senate 
contest  is  the  lack  of  a  close  top-of-the-ticket  race 
to  attract  voters  to  the  polls. 

The  national  whirlwind  of  the  tight  presiden- 
tial campaign  has  skipped  California,  where 
Vice  President  Al  Gore  enjoys  a  commanding 
lead  over  Republican  George  W.  Bush. 

Even  the  House  elections,  which  normally 
generate  little  statewide  interest  in  a  state  with 
52  seats,  have  drawn  national  attention  and 
overshadowed  the  U.S.  Senate  contest,  the 
longest  ever  in  California. 

About  a  half-dozen  California  seats  are 
viewed  as  crucial  in  the  fight  over  House  control. 
Those  include  the  nation's  costliest  congres- 
sional campaign,  the  $8  million  fight  in  the  Los 
Angeles  area's  27th  District  between 
Democratic  state  Sen.  Adam  Schiff  and  incum- 
bent Rep.  James  Rogan,  a  House  manager  in 
President  Clinton's  impeachment. 

The  most  interesting  issues  in  the  U.S.  Senate 
race  -  drug  availability  for  addicts'  m^ical 
treatment,  elimination  of  the  national  income 
tax,  immigration  changes,  campaign  finance 
and  an  Internet  sales  tax  -  have  all  been  raised  by 
Campbell.  But  they  have  not  sparked  wide 
excitement. 

Campbell  believes  those  ideas,  and  others, 
will  strike  a  chord  with  voters,  especially  in  the 
context  of  statewodtdchateS*. 

"They  will  be  useful  and  ver^very  important 
in  their  proximity  to  the  election,"  he  said.  "The 
voters  will  be  in  a  position  to  compare  and  con- 
trast us.  Surely,  this  will  help  me." 

Feinstein  rejects  that,  saying  Campbell's  posi- 
tion on  replacing  the  income  tax  with  a  national 
sales  tax  has  not  been  thought  out 

"It's  totally  unrealistic,  it  isn't  going  to  hap- 
pen," Feinstein  said.  "A  20  percent  national 
sales  tax  is  revenue  negative  by  $500  billion.  It  is 
extraordinarily  regressive." 

The  role  of  maverick  is  one  of  Campbell's 
campaign  themes,  and  he  says  he's  standing  by 
it. 

"It's  an  honest  position,"  Campbell  said.  **I 
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12        Thun<toy,Octobff  12,2000 

HEIN-UNRUH 

From  page  3 


Daily  BniH)  News 


The  former  director  was  charged  with  two  counts  of 
fraud  and  sentenced  to  five  months  in  prison,  followed 
by  house  arrest.  A  $14  million  lawsuit  filed  by  the 
gallery  against  Crawford  and  the  university  is  pending. 
Though  Hein-Unruh  would  not  comment  specifi- 
cally on  the  case,  she  said  the  circumstances  prior  to 
her  appointment  were  unfortunate. 
-.—   A  native  of  Kansas,  Hein-Unruh  received  her 
undergraduate  degree  from  Wichita  State  University. 
She  then  moved  to  California,  where  she  received 
an  M.D.  in  child  development  from  UC  Davis.  There 
she   served   as   advisor   for   the    Department    of 
Behavioral  Sciences  and  as  director  of  an  infant  and 
toddler  program. 

Hein-Unruh  began  working  at  UCLA  19  years  ago 
as  an  academic  advisor  in  the  psychology  department, 
where  she  later  founded  and  directed  another  infant 
program. 

For  the  past  15  years,  she  has  worked  as  academic 
counselor  and  interdepartmental  liaison  coordinator 
for  the  college. 

"Her  role  as  department  liaison  was  key  to  helping 
the  psychology  department  be  in  compliance  with  uni- 
versity policies,"  said  Rosemary  Chavoya,  executive 
officer  of  the  department. 

"She  is  the  perfect  blend  of  someone  who  knows  the 
facts  and  someone  who  is  guided  with  the  passion  to 
solve  students'  problems,"  she  continued. 

While  finding  time  to  complete  all  daily  tasks  is  a 
challenge,  Hein-Unruh  said  the  most  rewarding  aspect 
of  her  job  involves  interacting  with  students  and  col- 
leagues. 

"One  important  thing  I  have  learned  through  inter- 
action is  that  each  person  has  a  legitimate  and  valid 
point  of  view  that  should  be  understood."  Hein-Unruh 
said.  "My  job  is  to  balance  the  needs  and  requirements 
of  the  college  with  those  of  the  student." 

In  her  spare  time,  Hein-Unruh  enjoys  reading  and 
spending  time  with  her  family.  She  is  an  active  member 
of  a  book  club  that  concentrates  on  literature  by 
women. 


FORD 

From  page  8 

lawsuits  nationwide  in  which  a  Ford  vehicle 
was  suspected  of  stalling.  But  Ford  never 
admitted  any  wrongdoing. 

The  National  Highway  Traffic  Safety 
Administration  conducted  three  probes  into 
stalling  of  Ford  vehicles  between  1984  and 
1987  and  closed  the  cases  after  finding  no 
defects,  agency  spokesman  Tim  Hurd  said 
Wednesday 

Ballachey  said  that  Ford  knew  since  at  least 
1982  that  the  vehicles  were  prone  to  stalling, 
especially  when  the  engine  was  hot,  but  failed 
to  alert  consumers  and  repeatedly  deceived 
federal  regulators  by  claiming  the  modules 
were  safe. 


The  ruling  was  based  on  a 

class-action  lawsuit  filed  on 

behalf  of  3.5  million  current 

and  former  Ford  owners. 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Thursday,  Ortober  12,2000       !3 


A I  J     A-  r-  The  Associated  Pr«s 

Alameda  County  Superior  Court  Judge  Michael  Ballachey  speaks  to  Ford  Motor 
Company  attorneys  before  ordering  the  recall  of  1.7  million  Ford  cars  and  trucks. 


"This  case  was  about  concealment  of  a  dan- 
gerous condition,"  he  said. 

Government  agencies  normally  order 
recalls,  but  Ballachey  said  state  law  gives  him 
that  power. 

Ford  disagreed  aftd  argued  that  a  recall  is 
unnecessary. 

"The  record  in  this  case  does  not  demon- 
strate a  safety  problem,"  Ford  attorney 
Richard  Warmer  said.  "These  vehicles  are 
safe," 

The  judge  appointed  a  referee  to  study 
three  options  -  ordering  Ford  to  remove  the 


modules  and  remount  them  away  from  the 
engine,  replacing  the  module  with  one  from 
1999-2000  model  vehicles,  or  ordering  a  vehi- 
cle buyback.  Ballachey  set  an  Oct.  27  hearing 
to  determine  the  next  step. 

The  automaker  already  is  involved  in  the 
recall  of  6.5  million  Firestone  tires,  which 
were  standard  equipment  on  Explorers  and 
other  vehicles.  NHTSA  is  investigating  more 
than  100  deaths  in  connection  with  the  tires. 

The  judges  ruling  was  based  on  a  class- 
action  lawsuit  filed  on  behalf  of  3.5  million 
current  and  former  Ford  owners  in 
California. 

The  plaintiffs  claim  that  the  TFI  module, 
which  regulates  electric  current  to  the  spark 


plugs,  was  wrongly  mounted  on  the  distribu- 
tor near  the  engine  block,  exposing  it  to  exces- 
sive heat  and  stress.  The  plaintiffs  say  that 
caused  the  vehicles  to  stall. 

Ford  documents  show  the  automaker  was 
warned  by  an  engineer  that  high  temperatures 
would  cause  the  device  to  fail  and  stall  the 
engine.  The  documents  also  show  that  Ford 
confirmed  the  problem  in  internal  studies  and 
could  have  moved  the  module  to  a  cooler  spot 
for  $4  per  vehicle. 

The  largest  recall  by  an  automaker  was  in 
1996,  when  Ford  recalled  8.7  million  vehicles 
with  a  type  of  ignition  switch  in  the  steering 
column  that  caught  fire  in  hundreds  of  vehi- 
cles. 


lim^  U 


Where  it  matters  most. 


As  one  of  the  vofkfs  leacing  dKmified  technology  oxnpanie^  we're  breaking  new  ground  in  every- 
thing from  defense  and  commercial  electronics,  and  business  aviation  and  special 
mission  aircraft.  As  a  Raytheon  employee,  you'll  contritwte  to  the  development  of  exciting 
revolutionary  technology  designed  to  malte  life  better,  easier,  and  safer  throughout  the  world! 
Such  as  our  STARS  air  traffic  control  system.  And  our  award-winning  Nigh6ight™  tedmology. 

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about  the  future.  In  return,  we  offer  exceptional  training  and  professional  development  oppor- 
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We  have  a  lot  to  tell  you  about  Raytfieon  and  the  exciting  opportunities  we  have  available 
Plan  on  visiting  our  booth  at  your  college  career  fair  If  you  are  unable  to  attend  the  fair  please 
e-maH  your  resume  to:  re$umeOrayjob$.com  (ASCII  text  only;  no  attachments),  or  mail  to: 
Raytf»eon  Company,  Attn:  National  Staffing  Data  Center,  P.O.  Box  660246,  MS-201, 
Dallas,  TX  75266.  U.S.  Citizenship  may  be  required.  We  are  an  equal  opportunity  employer 


-f^C 


opportunities  are  available  for  exceptional  students  with  the  ftjjfowing  niajors: 


•  Computer  Science 

•  Computer  Engineering 

•  Electrical  Engineering 

•  Mechanical  Engineering 
•Math 


•  Physics 

•  Chemical  Engineering 

•  Aeronautical  Engineering 

•  Finance/Accounting 

•  Human  Resources 


•  Industrial  and  Labor 
Relations 

•  Marketing/Communications 

•  Management 


Ch^k  out  our  Website  at  WWW.rayjobs.COm/CampUS  for  further  information  including  a  calendar 
of  recrurting  events.  At  Raytheon,  we  strive  to  be  the  employer  of  choice  for  a  diverse  workforce  by  attracting  retaining  and 
recognizing  the  most  talented,  resourceful  and  aeative  people.  ^'  '^"'""^'  ^'^° 


Bringing  technology  to  the  edge 


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WHAT'S 


VISIT  THESE  GREAT  WEBSITES 


ffS     J  THIS  0)    / 

artwEEK(^^ 

■     Jiyl  ■  J    Oct.  12-18,  2000  ♦-.■V'A-  -'":'■■■' 


0«pt  of  Architacture  &  Uitoan  Oasign 


0«pl.  o(  Dwign 
www.dwlgn.ucli.«du  •  «2S.90O7 

0«pt.  of  Ethnomusicology 
www«lhn<ifmMicjxte.adu  •  2M.3033 
Fowler  Museum 

www.tmchjjcte.adu  •  B2S.4M1 
Film  &  Televisior  Archive 
wwwx*Mina.ucte.edu  •  aiM.flni 
Hammer  Museum 
wwwJM«nmer.ueto.««lu  •  443.7000 


UCLA  Performing  Arts 
www4Mf4onnin9arta.ucte.edu  •  S2S.2101 
Oept  of  Musk 

wwwjmMic.ucte.adu  •  82S.47S1 
DepI  of  VltorW  Arts  &  Cultufes 
www.wac.ucte.adu>  82S.3861 
UCLA  Central  Tickel  Office 
www.ct04icte.edu  •  829.2101 

UCLA  Performing  Arts  Student  Committee 
www.aca4jcte.adu  •  <»«  ^?ff? 


Tbursday^mm  \7  Saturday^mm  14  Sundqy^mm  15 


UCLA  Peffofming  Arts 
presents 

Ratan  Thiyaiii's  Chorus 

RtlMrtofy  Tbntra 

INtarPriyadmhi' 

(Tkt  Hnal  BMtttHito) 

CMtirtaoi*7p*lmal90 

MkMimnfNkMrallMaNc 

PfeifnHKf8p*lqaHiii 

Gmril.  135,  Student  Tickets  19 

A  panorainic  meditation  on  war  and 
peace  by  acclaimed  Indian  director  Ratan 
Ihiyam.  His  30  member  theater  is 
internationally  known  lor  creating  works 
of  shimmering  color  and  beauty,  pulsing 
with  musK  and  palpable  passion. 

UCLA  Hammer  Musetun 
presents 

A  Coiimiiation  wWi 

Ntil  M.  Dwiari  and 

Tom  Gilmoro 

7pB*llMiBirllBNB,Free 

The  discussion  will  explore  Issues  of 
urban  expansion,  using  as  an  example 
SCI-Arc's  move  from  Santa  Monica  to 
downtown  Los  Angeies. 

UCLA  Hm  &  Television  Archive 

presenb 

Hi^ateWash 

Wgh  Siorra 
Colorado  Torrftery 

7:30pa,jMKBrWgnTkiater 

K  gnenl.  )4  itudtnti  (wMi  H))  Did  iMion 

UCLA  P8r1omiir)g  Arts 
presents 

Ratan  Thiyani's  Chorus 

Roportory  Thoatro 

llttarHirlyadarBM' 

(The  HmI  BoatlliNlo) 

RnBiaft1ar1230pa 
ninfibiiBaital,1lMtir200 
CNtMtHot  •  7pa  •  Ii|nl90 

«  k  M  Mirt  iNlnnr  ■!  tM  oil 

8pa*lifciiiali 

itas^awMirciMts 

I  refer  to  10/12  listings  lor 
descfipfion  ^ly ^ 

Sdwoi  of  Tlieater.  Film  ant)  Television 
presents 

Jay  Rosonblatt 

7J0piihlaNitM|iiTlMatir 

l!»  UCLA  Documentary  Salon  presents  an 
ewning  of  Dm  short  films  by  Jay 
Roanbtaa  iriio  It  cansHfered  the  most 
accUrod  MmmikBr  of  iMs  genre 
I  in  Ihi  US  today 


UCLA  Performing  Arts 
presents 

EHoonhwrs     . 

Cii!irttipi*7pn«Jaihpr 
Tliiatir,SdMNbiniliideW|  ; 
■Ml  Gkn  Im,  Adnt 
Mnmki  •  8pM  •  Ostiii  Rdl 

Geneni  (30,  Student  rckeb  19 

Gaining  nabonal  attention  for  her  musical 
turn  in  "Rwerdance,"  fiddler  Ivers  creates 
muse  that  embodies  the  breathtaking 
depth  of  the  Irish-American  expenence  - 
tram  Irish  roots  to  world  rhythms. 


UCLA  Film  &  television  Archive 

presents 

Gotta  Smg.  Ootta  Dance: 

Musics  from  around  the  World 

TiM  UmbreHas  tf 


\ 


\ 


Thi  YiNiig  6h1s  of 
Roditfoft 

7:30pa.jBMlrM|nT1intsr 

t6  geMfil.  t4  itudenb  (with  10)  and  Kni 

5tfW%ocmHFR  IS 

UCLA  Pertofmlng  Arts 
presents 

JoftnUthgow 
'FaiMa  and  Frtonds' 

MnHMi*2p*liVCiUI 

finammSlKleniriMtSS 
Award-winning  actor  John  lithgow 
returns  to  Royce  Hall  with  a  hjll 
symphony  orchestra  performing  new  and 
old  zany  songs  for  kidt^  cubniriating  in 
'TheRenwIiatileFsldtUcBrlde- 


UCLA  Fifm  &  Television  Arcfiive 
presents 

Nitrate  Wash 

ThayOtodVIRthTboir 

RaolsOn 

SHvorRhror 

7fl)|B,JaNslrM|KTkiitir 

tS  gamni  S4  itMdena  (wtdilO)  and  iMigra 


UCLA  HAMMER  MUSEUM  mM 

ArcMtactiMV  LA.  at  Hit  Hammtr 

For  tkni  imaii  the  Hammer  Muuum  imH  praaeM  a  Cartyvd  U&  Desgo  Dniogues.  ml  f^ininiwi. 
bUliH  ii»  »e  ipto  ardttduri  iJ  ita  U  ScW  Itt  af  Fii«*  0  G«l»y.  Efit  Own  Itesj,  IhOT 

Mn  fM^Mlta.  hd  ^nnte^HM  ^^ 

W*c»f a  LA  i  Die  Haiiw  caletrMa  Ibi  Angatis  conlMon  ti  cai*mpar«T  nlMactn  WWi  llie 
axnpM  of  (kc^'s  Mm  a(  Ito  Aympai  In  it  hat  oaMy.  iliara  is  na  a«w  Amw^ 
produced  aucli  MMwalM  MdN  *«|Rid  by  leal  nMai:b 


UCLA  Perfonning  Arts    '' 
presents    ':■.■. 

James  Carvillt 

Uwksattha 

Amailcan  Politics 


•7p*|g)«liail 

Gantm,  S29,  Sludant  Tidcti  t15 

This  fast-talking,  chansmatic  and  always 
entertaining  political  strategist  and  best 
selling  author  gained  national  prominence 
m  1992  when  he  guided  Bill  Clinton  to 
the  Presidency  in  a  surpnse  victory. 


UCLA  Hammer  kiluseum 
presents 

RandaH  Stout 
Entrgy  *  Arditttctiire 

3pB*ltaMirll«Hm,Ffte 

Courtyard  Talk  about  Stouts  built  work, 
which  B  part  of  the  Expo2000  in 
Hannover.  Germany. 


KuiUs  ClaiNlening 


Buflding  EnghiMrfng 


in 


4pa  *  Naiair  Unn,  free 

Clandening  is  an  associate  at  Ove  Amp  b 
Partners  in  Los  Angeles  Better  known  for 
invohfement  with  many  of  the  high-profile 
buildings  in  the  post-war  years 

Mondaynmm  IK 

UCLA  Hammer  Museum 
presents 

Architocturo  A  Urban 
Dosign 

6J()pn*1302Pi(1iflliili(llNdi) 

Free 

The  UCIA  Department  of  Archittcturt  and 
Urban  Onign  wM  host  a  round  table 
discussion  feahinng  Dana  Cuff.  Wes 
Jones.  Greg  Lyna  Thom  Mayne,  Oagmer 
Richter.  Robert  E  Somol,  and  Anthony 
Vldler.  moderated  by  Sylvia  lavin 

UCLA  Hammer  Museum 
presents 

HImforum  at  tho 
Hammor 


7p 

ti  Ftee  to  muaeum 

The  UCLA  Hammer  Museum  will  host 
.  Filmfonim's  fall  series  of  underground  and 
ivaflt-gardi  Mm  and  video  soeenngi 

rg^w^s&yflCmHfR  Ifl 

Department  of  Music 

presents 

racoRy  Ridtal 

Maifc  Kaplan,  vIoHn 

Aikniaalon:  tlOgenenl.  it  Mutt  1  lenien 

Kaplan    wM    pvlonn    J.S.    Bach's 
unaccompanied  violfn  sonatas 


Ghoras  Repertory  Theatre 

'Uttar-Priyadarshr 
(The  Hnal  Beatitude) 

October  12  &  13*  Spin  •Royce  Hall 

General  $35,  Student  Tickets  $9 


CMterttiis  •  7pin  with  Or.  Sutiil  Kottiari,  Professor  &  Dance  Critic 


UCLA  Performing  Arts 

student  Ticliets 

www.sca.ucla.edu 


■N 


Your  Bruin  Card  Is  Your  Ticket  to  Great  SeatsI 


audeni  lK*ets  are  mmq  im  a(  die  B(ST  seats  in  the  house  to  UCIA  Performing  Am 
Events  and  they  are  baiRi  kaU  tmluMty  for  UCLA  Studemsi 

Students  can  purchase  Ocltets  ONUNE  at  ■nxudttda  or  IN  PERSON  at  CTO 

fawlnmCMdN«ktyMir  ticket  HtheenntOntkedaredkeerentyMi 
««  eimyty  awipe  |wr  and*  (M  ft  Um  apeciricifly  marked  entrance. 


fv  addtaMi  intormation  Visit  our  website  at  wwwscaudaedu  A  UCIA  Bnjm 
Cart  k  raqulrad  at  the  Hme  ol  purchase  AND  at  the  door  or  all  perfcrmaices 


MTf 


imi    ON-SAU 

mat 


Oct  12  Mtar-frlyadanM  (R) 

Oil  13  RlarfriyaianM  (R) 

0ct14  BMal«Mi(0) 

OctIS  MMLWigMr(R) 

Oct  15  iaMsC«vMelMksatAimricMPolitia(ll) 

Oct21  taEwMhfNiUitadraMcOoMMni) 

Oct  21  NliMii|BinritiMS(0) 

Oct  22  hrliaPhltannonicWiMlQiiiiitil 
NNkJNNakMiain(O) 

Oct2S  TlMMnTlMiinlhMi1IIMihgfrBi*f'(F) 

Oct25  iMlaMlMiMPra|Ml(1l) 

OATS  TNUnnMairaMai1MttigtorMit'(r) 

Oct26  NhMlakBMCtPralKtni) 

OaV  tin  bate  TlmlreMlillWHHgfwGtM'CF) 

Oct27  MMilakOaMiPraiKtni) 

0ct27  ttmk Manli hiiwiiwiirt (0) 

Oct28  ThtMnTbMlrikMalllMtiiigfBrMrt'lT) 

Oct28  IMiNiOakBaiiaPn|Kt(ll) 

Oct  28  R«Mit  Harris  PwMMNMKfO) 

0ct29  The  fiAnTkMtraaMRHMtlng  for  Godot' (f) 

0ct29  SipoRtla(O) 

Nov.  2    MWl  (R) 

Nov  2    llcc«rtM(0) 

Nin3    taEiMiaiNmi  Arte  Butbrto  and  Family  (R) 

Nov3   Mwitui Pntrior Md Itmif tkk Mib (0) 

No«4   MiirtiH Pnwiir wd fimf Bdt Bw (0) 

Nov  4    Nw|i  f ilirM  liMinborg  wWli  the  Atiad  Ouo(R) 


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14 Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


DiilyBniinNcws 


POLICY 

From  page! 

Grant  program,  a  form  of  federally- 
funded  rinancial  aid  for  low-income  stu- 
dents which  they  do  not  have  to  pay 
back. 

The  Bush  agenda  includes  a  proposal 
to  increase  the  maximum  one-year  Pell 
Grant  award  to  $5,100  from  its  current 
$3,300  for  first-year  students.  Bush  offi- 
cials said  studies  show  students  who 
don't  drop  out  after  their  first  year  have 
a  greater  likelihood  of  graduating. 

Bush  also  proposes  awarding  an 
additional  $1,000  in  Pell  Grant  money 
to  students  who  pass  math  and  science 
ad  va  need  placements  tests  or  college 
courses  while  in  high  school. 

Though  the  Republican  party 
opposed  federal  funding  of  education 
in  the  past  -  even  calling  for  the  abol- 
ishment of  the  Department  of 
Education  during  the  Reagan  adminis- 
tration -  the  Bush  campaign  has  taken  a 
different  approach. 

"(Bush)  is  proposing  expansion  of 
the  Pell  Grant  program  across  the 
board,"  Kozberg  said.  "What  distin- 
guishes him  from  the  Vice  President  is 
that  he's  not  proposing  to  create  a  new 
federal  bureaucracy,  he  simply  propos 
es  to  expand  a  program  that  works." 

But  Gore  campaign  ofilcials  dis- 
agree with  that  premise  and  said  the 
Bush  plan  is  deficient  in  providing  for 
the  lifelong  education  needs  of 
Americans  in  the  midst  of  a  changing 
economy. 

"The  Bush  tax  cut  would  leave  fewer 
dollars  available  for  investment  in  edu- 
cation," Dolliole  said. 

Perhaps  one  of  the  biggest  policy 
approach  differences  between  the  two 
is  Gore's  focus  on  continuing  educa- 
tion. He  proposes  to  offer  employers  a 
$6,000  tax  credit  if  they  pay  for  infor- 
mation and  other  new  technology  train- 
ing for  an  employee. 

Levin  G.  Sy,  a  graduate  student  in 


.  urban  planning  at  the  School  of  Public 
Policy  and  Social  Research  and  mem- 
ber of  Karenna  Gore-SchilTs  Youth 
Media  Outreach  Program,  said  that  this 
policy  proposal  difference  is  signifi- 
cant. 

"Gore's  program  is  comprehen- 
sive," he  said.  "It  provides  funds  for 
those  in  college,  and  for  those  beyond 
college  who  want  to  make  sure  they 
don't  get  left  behind  by  the  global  econ- 
omy." 

But  the  Bush  plan  to  expand  the  max- 
imum yearly  contribution  into  current 
education  savings  accounts  offers  a  way 
to  save  for  any  form  of  future  education 
and  training,  and  is  consistent  with  his 
reluctance  to  create  plans  that  target  the 
spending  of  money  in  one  specific  area. 
Education  savings  accounts,  like 
Individual  Retirement  Accounts,  allow 
families  to  contribute  a  fixed  amount  of 
money  annually  without  being  taxed  on 
the  interest  earned. 

Bush  proposes  raising  the  maximum 
yearly  contribution  from  $500  to 
$5,000  for  two  parent  families  earning 
$150,000  or  less  and  for  one  parent 
households  earning  $95,000  or  less. 

TTiough  Bush  has  spent  most  of  the 
campaign  focusing  on  his  plans  to 
improve  K-12  education,  Kozberg  said 
his  candidate's  proposals  has  always 
included  offering  people  a  choice  when 
it  comes  to  higher  education. 

"This  policy  is  a  continuation  of  his 
priority  to  make  education  available" 
and  affordable  for  every  American," 
she  said. 

Gore,  in  keeping  with  his  theme  of 
targeting  assistance  to  areas  he  feels 
need  it,  is  proposing  to  provide  a  maxi- 
mum of  $10,000  of  financial  aid  or  loan 
forgiveness  for  students  who  agree  to 
spend  four  years  teaching  in  "high 
need"  schools  or  teaching  subjects  that 
are  short  of  qualified  teachers. 

"The  vice  president  believes  that  it's 
important  not  only  to  provide  tax  cuts 
for  families,  but  to  train  the  next  gener- 
ation of  teachers  as  well,"  Sy  said. 


NOBEL 

From  page  6 

in  1991. 

Colleagues  praised  McFadden 
as  brilliant  and  modest. 

"Dan  McFadden  is  an  econo- 
mist's economist,"  said  Maurice 
Obstfeld,  chair  of  UC  Berkeley's 
economics  department.  "Dan's 
work  has  changed  the  way  we 
approach  economic  theory." 

"He  makes  you  feel  that  what 
you're  doing  is  important,"  said 
graduate  student  Sofia  Villasboas. 

Although  he'd  been  up  since 
2:30  a.m.,  McFadden  sailed 
through  a  morning  news  confer- 
ence, taking  pains  to  mention  his 
mentors  and  research  team  before 
handling  a  barrage  of  questions. 

He  said  he  hadn't  decided  what 
to  do  with  his  winnings  -  about 
$450,000  -  although  he  joked  they 
probably  would  be  gulped  down  by 
his  small  farm.  One  perk  from  the 
prize  he'll  definitely  appreciate; 
Berkeley  winners  get  a  lifetime  on- 


Th«  Associated  Puss 

Nobel  Prize-winner  Daniel  L  McFadden.  63,  gets  a  kiss  from 
his  wife,  Beverlee  McFadden,  at  their  home  in  Berkeley. 


campus  parking  spot. 

And  how  does  choice  theory 
play  out  in  the  McFadden-Simboli 
household? 

McFadden  smiled. 


"Beverlee  and  I  have  an  agree- 
ment," he  said  as  the  room  erupted 
with  laughter.  "I  do  the  high  theory 
and  she  does  the  important  deci- 
sions." 


LABOR 

From  page  6 

'There's  been  a  little  bit  of  move- 
ment on  a  couple  of  the  tables," 
union  spokesman  Mark  Tamawsky 
said  of  contracts  involving  20  bar- 
gaining units.  "Wages  are  a  common 
issue  but  there  are  many  side-issues 
unique  to  one  unit." 

Some  60  percent  of  the  county's 
unionized  employees  earn  less  than 
$32,000  a  year,  Tamawsky  said. 

Among  those  striking  were  wel- 
fare workers,  clerks  who  issue  mar- 
riage licenses  and  record  property 
U-ansactions,  coroner's  office  work- 
ers, librarians,  beach  maintenance 
employees  and  crews  for  sewer 


maintenance,  said  Bart  Diener.  assis- 
tant general  manager  of  the  striking 
union. 

Most  county-employed  doctors 
are  represented  by  non-striking 
unions. 

At  the  recorder-register's  office  in 
Norwalk,  Jae  Kim,  29,  and  fiancee 
Rebecca  Hong,  27,  waited  in  an 
unmoving  line  of  40  people  to  pick 
up  a  marriage  license. 

"If  we  don't  get  the  license  by 
Saturday  then  we  can't  get  married," 
Hong  said. 

Outside  the  Hall  of 
Administration  in  downtown  Los 
Angeles,  union  pickets  .shouted  and 
blew  whistles. 

"None  of  us  make  enough  money 
to  have  a  savings  account.  I  had  to 


call  my  landlord  to  let  him  known 
that  I'm  on  strike  and  tell  him  I'd  be 
late  with  my  payment,"  said  Edwina 
Walker,  47,  a  single  mother 
employed  by  the  county  tax  collec- 
tion division. 

Meanwhile,  the  Metropolitan 
Transportation  Authority  has  made 
iU  "final  offer"  to  the  United 
Transportation  Union,  whose  4,300 
bus  and  rail  drivers  remain  on  strike 
after  26  days. 

The  transit  strike  is  one  of  the 
longest  in  the  city's  history  and 
affects  some  450,000  daHy  riders. 
The  agency  also  gave  the  union  until 
Thursday  morning  to  accept  its  offer. 

Union  General  Chairman  James 
Williams  declined  immediate  com- 
menL 


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BROADVIEW 


16       Thunday,  October  12, 2000 


From  page  1  ''..\---^-'::-/^''':r'::^"''^'--': 

regardless  of  sexual  orientation,"  said  Ronni 
Sanlo,  director  of  the  LGBT  Campus 
Resource  Center. 

"Even  heterosexual  students  are  welcome 
to  the  center  to  learn  who  we  are  and  what 
our  issues  are.  especially  if  students  are  deal- 
ing with  gay  family  members."  she  contin- 
ued. 

Sanlo,  who  said  she  hid  her  lesbian  identi- 
ty for  20  years,  applauded  the  openness  of 
participating  students. 

"We  have  so  few  times  in  oiir  lives  when 
we  can  celebrate  who  we  are,"  Sanlo  said. 
"It's  also  important  for  the  people  who  are 
in  the  closet  to  know  that  there  are  other  peo- 
ple out  there  who  are  living  their  hves  open^ 


Participants  at  Wednesday's  gathering 
sought  to  put  the  LGBT  community  in  a  pos- 
itive light. 

"By  raising  awareness,  we  hope  to  break 
down  homophobia  and  a  lot  of  oppression 
that  people  normally  generate  out  of  hate," 
said  GALA  secretary  Brenton  Jaimes. 

But  participants  at  the  event  said  homo- 
phobic sentiments  still  exist  on  campus. 

One  incident  involved  a  student  being 
caught  ripping  a  poster  from  the  GALA 
Center  front  door  late  Tuesday  night.  No 
charges  were  Tiled  against  the  student,  who 
was  taken  into  custody  and  later  released  by 
university  police. 

"Although  we  had  the  option,  we  didn't 
file  criminal  charges  because  we  didn't  want 
to  escalate  the  problem  any  further,"  said 
GALA  member  Ron  Asher. 


.Daily  Bruin  News 


Tuesday's  vandalism  was  not  an  isolated 
case.  According  to  Jaimes,  GALA  office 
bulletin  boards  were  also  defaced  last  year. 

"There  is  definitely  an  issue  of  homopho- 
bia and  racism  on  this  campus  that  needs  to 
be  dealt  with,"  Jaimes  said. 

LGBT  will  celebrate  its  fifth  anniversary 
on  Oct.  30  with  guest  speaker  Judy 
Shepherd,  mother  of  the  late  Matthew 
Shepherd. 

Matthew  was  the  2 1 -year-old  openly  gay 
University  of  Wyoming  student  who  was 
beaten  and  left  to  die  in  1998. 

Sanlo  hopes  events  like  Coming  Out  Day 
will  overshadow  hate  crime  atrocities  and 
encourage  students  to  be  open  about  their 
sexual  orientation. 

"The  joys  have  truly  outweighed  the  risks 
of  being  out,"  Sanlo  said.  "I'm  very  grateful 
for  who  I  am  and  what  I  am  able  to  do." 


VOTE 

From  page  4 

won't  make  a  diflerence  in  the  outcome  of  the  elec- 
tion, 1  am  going  to  vote  for  Ralph  Nader,"  Nara  said. 
"To  use  my  vote  as  a  statement  that  one  more  person . 
is  outraged  and  dissatisfied  with  the  Clinton  adminis- 
tration." 

Though  the  groups  came  together  for  the  same 
cause,  the  coalition  showed  unity  in  the  face  of  differ- 
ent political  beliefs.  Unlike  Nara,  other  students  gave 
different  reasons  to  vote  based  on  other  concemj. 

Bryan  Masumoto,  representing  GALA  at  the 
event,  expressed  concern  about  Bush's  views  on  gay 
rights  and  women's  issues.  Warning  of  Bush's  poten- 
tial career  as  president,  he  advised  his  listeners  on  the 
importance  of  the  ballot. 

"There  is  no  such  thing  as  a  wasted  vote,"  said 
Ramzi  Ajami,  the  USAC  president's  Chief  of  Staff. 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Thursday,  October  12,2000       17 


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COMMUNITY 

From  page  1 

commission  is  the  umbrella  organiza- 
tion for  22  volunteer  projects  staffed 
by  2.000  to  3,000  students  each  year, 
according  to  CSC's  Web  site. 

From  tutoring  incarcerated  youth 
to  mentoring  homeless  children, 
CSC  ofTers  an  array  of  volunteer  pro- 
jects in  and  around  the  Los  Angeles 
area. 

Project  WILD,  for  example,  pro- 
vides English  tutoring  for  immigrant 
middle  school  students.  Amigos  de 
UCLA,  CSC's  longest-running  tuto- 
rial project,  targets  predominantly 
Latino  schools  and  integrates  art 
with  learning. 

Other  projects  include  mentoring 
students  in  Koreatown,  Watts  and 
low-income  housing  projects  such  as 
Casa  Heiwa  in  Little  Tokyo. 

Volunteers  in  the  Hunger  Project 
deliver  food,  assist  in  job  searches 
and  deliver  clothing  and  furniture  to 
homeless  and  low-income  people. 

Fannie  Huang,  Undergraduate 
Students  Association  Council  com- 
munity service  commissioner,  volun- 
teers in  Project  BRITE,  which  men- 
tors and  tutors  youth  offenders. 

"It's  hard  for  at-risk  youth  to  get 
help  and  get  into  college,"  she  said. 
"They  don't  have  the  13  AP  courses, 
the  extra  S  1,000  to  take  an  SAT  prep 
course." 

Huang  said  deciding  to  volunteer 
is  a  big  step  students  can  take  which 
will  benefit  them  in  the  end. 

"Many  people  grow  up  sheltered 

.  and  don't  realize  the  hardships  out 

there,"  she  said.  "Not  everyone  is 

privileged,  not  everyone  has  the 

advantages." 

Huang  said  students  should  volun-  ■ 
teer  in  projects  they  enjoy  and  not 
just    to    fulfill    requirements    or 
enhance  their  resumes. 

"Do  something  you're  good  at," 
she  said.  "Kids  aren't  stupid,  they 
want  to  know  you  are  there  for  them 
and  want  to  be  there  for  them  every 
single  day" 

The  fair,  which  also  hosts  projects 
from  the  Community  Programming 
Office  -  another  community  service 
organization  on  campus  -  will  take 
place  in  Weslwood  Plaza  from  10 
a.m.  to  2  p.m. 


ISRAEL 

From  page  5 

Nablus  street  corner.  Dressed  in 
faded  jeans  and  a  muddied  shirt,  the 
31 -year-old  man  spoke  on  condition 
of  anonymity. 

The  militia  members  are  an  off- 
shoot of  Palestinian  leader  Yasser 
Arafat's  Fatah  faction  in  Nablus. 
The  gunmen  said  they  banded 
together  to  defend  Palestinians 
against  what  they  said  were  settler 
rampages. 

Tensions  in  the  Nablus  area  have 
been  running  high  since  the  slaying 
of  Lieberman,  a  resident  of  the  near- 
by Jewish  settlement  of  Elon 
Moreh.  Since  Lieberman's  body 
was  found  Sunday,  groups  of  set- 
tlers have  hurled  stones  and 
smashed  car  windshields  in  several 
Arab  villages. 

U.N.  Secretary-General  Kofi 
Annan  has  been  trying  since 
Monday  to  mediate  an  end  to  the 
violence. 

On  Wednesday,  Annan  was  to 
head  to  Beirut  to  help  secure  the 
return  of  three  Israeli  soldiers  cap- 
tured over  the  weekend  by  Lebanese 
guerrillas.  However,  Annan  held 
unscheduled  meetings  Wednesday 
with  Barak  and  Arafat,  and  then 
extended  his  stay  for  another  24 
hours. 

"He  (Annan)  continues  to  build 
international  support  for  a  formula 
not  yet  accepted  fully  by  both  sides 
for  reducing  tensions."  said  U.N. 
deputy  spokesman  Manoel  de 
Almeida  e  Silva. 


STUDY 

From  page  1 

point,"  Abrams  said. 

"This  landmark  report  provides 
the  UCLA  academic  community 
with  a  blueprint  to  develop  a  long- 
range  strategic  study  of  gender  equity 
at  the  university,"  Chancellor  Albert 
Camesale  said  in  a  Statement. 

"Clearly  we  must  seek  out  and  hire 
greater  numbers  of  qualified  women 
while  we  improve  our  campus  envi- 
ronment for  female  faculty,"  he  said. 
Camesale  announced  he  would 
immediately  accept  the  committee's 
recommendation  to  create  three  joint 
Administration-Academic  Senate 
committees  to  examine  additional 
gender  issues  at  UCLA  that  the  com- 
mittee was  not  able  to  address  as  part 
of  the  study. 

"I  am  really  encouraged  by  the 
positive  reaction  by  the  chancellor," 
said  Margaret  Kivelson,  professor  of 
space  physics  and  co-chair  of  the 
UCLA  Gender  Equity  Committee. 

An  analysis  of  1999-2000  payroll 
data  showed  that  female  faculty  earn 
2.4  percent  less  than  male  faculty 
when  comparing  individuals  within 
the  same  rank  and  department,  and 
who  have  similar  year  of  hire  or  high- 
est degree. 

Kivelson  attributed  these  differ- 
ences to  the  fact  that  women  tend  to 
be  concentrated  in  lower-paying 
departments. 

Some  departments,  such  as  the 
School  of  Engineering,  Physical 
Sciences  and  Andersen  School  of 
Business,  had  a  particularly  low  num- 
ber of  women  she  said. 

"I  have  had  almost  no  experience 
whatsoever.  I  have  found  it  perfectly 
equitable  here,"  said  Assistant 
Professor  Sarah  Tolbert,  who  teaches 
physical  chemistry. 

She  said  the  UCLA  department 
was  very  good,  and  that  chemistry 
typically  has  more  women  than  other 
physical  sciences. 

But  some  professors  don't  think 
the  department  is  responsible  for  the 
low  numbers  of  women. 

"I  don't  think  it's  because  of  the 
department  that  there  are  few 
women."  said  Maha  Ashour-Abdalla. 
professor  of  physics  and  director  of 
the  Center  of  Digital  Innovation.  "I 
think  it's  because  girls  are  not 
encouraged  to  enter  the  field." 

She  said  not  many  women  are 
hired  simply  because  not  many 
women  apply,  and  that  in  her  experi- 
ence, she  was  treated  as  an  equal. 

On  the  other  hand,  some  depart- 
ments, such  as  psychology,  have  a 
predominantly  female  faculty,  result- 
ing in  a  different  atmosphere  for 
women. 

"It's  my  feeling  in  my  department 
that  things  are  very  fair."  said 
Assistant  Professor  Traci  Mann, 
though  she  has  been  at  UCLA  only  a 
short  time.  "I  have  never  had,  nor 
would  I  expect  to  have  any  (problems 
related  to  being  a  woman)." 

Th(^  report  is  more  of  a  "snap- 
shof'^f  the  year  1999-2000.  because 
salarf^information  from  past  years  is 
not  ill  a  computer  database  and  to 
acces^  these  records,  multiple 
sources  would  have  to  be  used, 
Kivelson  said. 

To  follow  salaries  over  decades, 
researchers  need  a  computer  data- 
base, which  is  something  the  report 
suggests  pursuing. 


YUGOSUVIA 

From  page  5 

Whoever  controls  Serbia  effectively 
controls  Yugoslavia. 

Also  Wednesday,  U.S.  diplomat 
William  Dale  Montgomery  arrived  in 
Belgrade,  the  first  official  visit  to  the 
Yugoslav  capital  by  an  American 
since  relations  were  severed  during 
NATO  bombing  last  year.  James  C. 
O'Brien,  the  senior  U.S.  official  over- 
teeing  Balkans  developments,  is 
expected  this  week. 


Oaity  Brain  News 


Thursday,  October  12,2000       H 


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Friday 

Are  men  as  concerned 
with  their  body  image 
as  women? 

Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


Daily  Bruin 


View  on  the  We^^ 

See  all  this  and  • 

more  at  the  Daily  Bruin^  • 

tcnific  Web  site:  ; 

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viewpoint@media.uda.edu 


EDITORIAL 


Plan  misguided  attempt  to  improve  diversity 


ADMISSIONS:  Atkinson's 
proposal,  while  in  legal 
bounds,  still  isn't  enough 

Since  the  implementation  of  SP-I 
in  1995,  the  number  of  under- 
represented  minorities  entering 
UCLA  has  dropped  dramatically. 
Diversity  in  the  classroom  and  on 
Bruin  Walk  today  does  not  adequate- 
ly reflect  the  diversity  of  the  state  this 
university  serves. 

The  hands  of  diversity  and  out- 
reach are  tied  behind  the  university's 
back  due  to  SP-i,  the  measure  which 
outlawed  the  use  of  race  as  a  factor 
for  admissions;  and  Proposition  209, 
the  law  approved  by  voters  which 
banned  aiffirmative  action.  But  UC 
President  Richard  Atkinson  has  pro- 
posed a  plan  he  claims  may  help 
increase  minority  enrollment  for  UC 
campuses. 

At  first  glance,  this  plan  seems  like 
a  positive  legal  step  toward  making 
the  UC  more  diverse.  But  working 
within  legal  limits  does  not  imply  efft- 
ciency. 


Spearheaded  by  President 
Atkinson,  the  proposal  looks  more 
like  a  public  relations  elTort  to 
appear  inclusive  in  light  of  the  dwin- 
dling number  of  underrepresented 
students  rather  than  a  real  solution  to 
the  lack  of  diversity. 

Under  the  proposal,  12.5  percent 
of  students  in  each  high  school  are 
guaranteed  admission  into  the  uni- 
versity as  long  as  they  complete  cer- 
tain requirements  at  a  community 
college.  University  officials  have  long 
been  aware  that  for  many  communi- 
ty college  students,  the  idea  of 
attending  a  large  university  seems 
out  of  reach.  Atkinson  argues  that 
this  plan  would  not  only  boost  the 
number  of  community  college  trans- 
fer students,  but  may  also  allow  more 
underrepresented  minorities  access 
lotheUC. 

Currently,  admission  is  guaran- 
teed to  students  ranked  in  the  top  4 
percent  of  their  high  schools.  Of  that 
pool,  12  percent  are  underrepresent- 
ed minorities.  Officials  say  that  the 
new  plan  would  increase  the  number 
of  eligible  minority  students  -  34  to 
36  percent  of  the  new  group  of  stu- 


dents slated  for  transfer  admission 
would  be  minorities. 

Despite  its  seemingly  beneficial 
effects,  several  problems  exist  with 
the  new  proposal. 

First,  there  is  no  guarantee  that 
the  number  of  minority  students  who 
choose  to  attend  the  university  will 
increase  by  much,  especially  at  the 
most  competitive  campuses  -  namely 
UCLA  and  UC  Berkeley. 

Moreover,  we  are  toncemed 
about  the  quality  of  student  perfor- 
mance. Under  Atkinson's  proposal, 
the  12.5  percent  of  eligible  students 
will  consist  of  64  to  66  percent  non- 
minority  students  -  students  who  are 
white  and  Asian. 

These  students  would  not  have 
been  eligible  for  admission  under  the 
current  4  percent  plan.  Thus,  cam- 
puses may  find  themselves  with  an 
increase  of  less-qualified  students 
whose  ethnicities  are  already  over- 
represented  at  UC,  which  could 
mean  a  decrease  in  the  quality  of 
education  in  the  classroom  and  the 
campus  at  large. 

Another  problem  with  the  plan  is 
that  the  more  diverse  pool  of  eligible 


Even  politidans  pad(  Palm  Pilots 


GORE:  Candidate  needn't  align  himself 
with  hyperactive  technologies,  trends 


By  Ted  Ructer 

Al  Gore  is  a  man  of  many  wardrobes.  For  years,  he 
donned  dark  blue  suits  with  white  shirts  and  power 
ties,  while  standing  stiffly  next  to  the  president.  Upon 
the  advice  of  Naomi  Wolf,  "Alpha  Al"  switched  to 
earth  tones.  When  he  met  with  Jesse  Ventura,  the  vice 
president  was  wearing  blue  jeans  and  cowboy  boots. 
At  most  summertime  campaign  appearances.  Gore 
sported  khaki  pants  and  short-sleave  cotton  shirts. 

Gore's  attire  has  captured  the  public's  imagination. 
In  his  acceptance  speech  at  the  Republican  conven- 
tion, George  W.  Bush  said,  "I  am  not  running  in  bor- 
rowed clothes."  Humorist  Dave  Barry  says  that  one 
day,  Gore's  "wearing  a  suit;  the  next  day  it's  cowboy 
boots  and  earth  tones;  the  next  day  it's  a  tutu  and  nip- 
ple rings  -  you  never  know,  with  Al!" 

After  the  controversy  over  Gore's  new  earth  tones. 
Tipper  Gore  remarked,  "He's  not  wearing  anything 
when  he  goes  to  bed!" 

One  constant  in  Gore's  apparel  is  a  Palm  Pilot  V, 
strapped  to  his  belt.  And  I  find  this  abhorrent. 

Palm  Pilots  are  all  the  rage.  More  than  5  million 
have  been  sold  since  they  were  introduced  in  1996. 
These  hand-held  computers  can  synchronize  phone 
lists  and  calendars  with  software  on  a  desktop  comput- 
er. Palm  Pilots  can  access  the  Internet.  Palm  software 
often  includes  currency  converters,  calculators,  dictio- 
naries and  recipes.  Now  there  are  even  designer  Palm 
Pilots.  The  Claudia  Schiffer  Edition  Palm  Vx,  available 
in  "brushed  metallic  aqua,"  includes  the  model's 
favorite  software. 

Among  politicians.  Palm  Pilots  are  the  new  sUtus 
symbol.  With  a  few  clicks  of  the  Palm's  pointer  (send- 


Rueter  teaches  political  science  at  UCLA.  His  Web  site  is 
DrPolitics.com,  and  is  the  author  of  The  267  Stupidest 
Things  Republicans  Ever  Said/  The  267  Stupidest  Things 
DenfKxrats  Ever  Said! 


Democratic  presidential  candidate  Vice  President 
Al  Gore  speaks  at  a  town-hall-style  meeting  at 
Manatee  Community  College  in  Bradenton,  Fla. 

ing  infrared  signals),  reporters  and  staffers  can 
exchange  data  bases.  The  leader  of  the  Iowa  House  of 
Representatives  announces  the  day's  schedule  by  read- 
ing from  his  Palm  Pilot. 

U.S.  Senate  Democratic  Leader  Tom  Daschle  is  a 
fervent  Palmite.  And  now  the  Democratic  National 
Committee  lets  you  be  "on  the  Go  with  AvantGo,"  a 
"personal  digital  assistant"  manufacturer:  "All  you 


ScelKVTEII,|M9c24 


students  would  consist  of  t^dnsfers. 
Though  this  proposal  may  increase 
the  number  of  minorities  among 
upper-classmen,  it  still  leaves  the 
entering  freshman  class  and  and 
many  lower-division  classrooms 
largely  homogenized. 

Still,  this  program  will  have  a  posi- 
tive impact  on  low-income  students. 
After  high  school,  many  students 
may  not  have  the  money  to  pay  for 
four  or  five  years  at  a  university.  The 
plan  gives  low-income  students  an 
opportunity  to  attend  community 
college  while  being  guaranteed 
acceptance  into  a  UC  school,  assum- 
ing they  finish  their  requirements. 

Without  a  doubt,  the  number  of 
underrepresented  students  who  are 
UC-eligible  will  increase  under 
Atkinson's  proposal.  Regardless,  the 
university  should  not  have  to  resort 
to  admitting  a  large  number  of  stu- 
dents while  hoping  that  underrepre- 
sented minorities  will  be  included. 

Who's  to  say  that  more  African 
American,  Latino,  or  Native 
American  students  will  be  admitted 
to  UCLA  under  this  plan?  Where  is 
a  plan  that  wiO  increase  diversity 


among  lower-classmen? 

Such  weaknesses  highlight  the 
fundamental  flaws  with  SP-1  and 
Proposition  209.  It  is  unfortunate 
that  the  best  plan  the  university  can 
come  up  with  while  remaining  within 
its  legal  boundaries  sounds  more  like 
a  public  relations  move  than  a  real 
solution  to  the  problem. 

Diversity  is  an  important  element 
of  a  college  education.  It  creates  a 
more  vigorous  learning  environment 
that  fosters  tolerance  and  under- 
standing. 

Atkinson  stated  his  desire  to  boost 
the  number  of  transfer  students  while 
at  the  same  time  suggesting  that  the 
plan  may  increase  the  number  of 
minority  students  on  UC  campuses. 
Unfortunately,  this  attempt  to  kill 
two  birds  with  one  stone  docs  not 
solve  the  problem  of  dwindling  diver- 
sity at  the  UC  by  any  means.  The 
university  must  do  more  if  ilwishes 
to  achieve  the  diversity  of    " 
California's  population.      ' 

Otherwise,  UCLA  wiH  b6  left  in 
the  heart  of  one  of  the  most  diverse 
states  in  the  nation,  but  wall  remain 
one  of  the  least  diverse  campuses. 


Regents  delay  decision 
for  con-ect  legal  reason 


FEES:  Funds' distribution 
must  be  content-neutral; 
counsel  made  right  call 


By  Casey  Rusher 

After  two  submissions  regarding 
the  stalled  USSA  fees  ("Voter- 
Approved  Fee  Stalled  by  Regenu," 
Daily  Bruin,  News,  Oct.  2  and 
"Logic  for  overturning  decision 
flawed,"  Viewpoint,  Oct.  6)  and  lit- 
tle sign  of  the  opposing  point  of 
view,  it  seems  evident  that  someone 
should  present  the  other  side  of  the 
issue. 

The  reasoning  for  UC  Deputy 
General  Council  Gary  Morrison's 
initial  disapproval  is  being  misun- 
derstood, distorted  and  underrepre- 
sented. The  legal  concept  of  com- 
pelled speech  has  not  been  intro- 
duced. If  any  mandatory  fees  arc 
imposed  upon  students  and  the  rev- 
enues from  such  a  forced  fee  are 
used  to  promote,  champion  or  oth- 
erwise advocate  for  a  particular 
belief,  ideology  or  political  position, 
it  is  known  as  compelled  speech. 

A  clear  distinction  must  be  made 
between  mandatory  and  optional 
fees,  especially  from  a  legal  stand- 
point. When  mandatory  fees  are 
imposed,  students  are  at  the  mercy 
of  the  discretion  of  the  organization 

Rusher  is  a  third-year  life  sciences 
student 


receiving  their  money.  For  that  orga- 
nization to  turn  around  and  use  stu- 
dents' money  to  advocate  for  a  posi- 
tion contrary  to  their  own  is 
exploitative.  Using  other  people's 
money  for  your  own  political  benefit 
is  distasteful. 

Rightfully,  it  appears  that  there  is 
legal  protection  from  student  body 
organizations  engaging  in  this  prac- 
tice. As  pointed  out  in  the  original 
article,  there  is  pending  legislation 
regarding  this  exact  issue  involving 
the  University  of  Wisconsin.  The 
Supreme  Court  has  determined  thus 
far  that  if  student  body  government 
organizations  arc  to  collect  money 
via  mandatory  fees  for  student  activ- 
ities, that  money  must  be  distributed 
on  a  content-neutral  basis. 

Morrison's  analysis  of  USSA,  a 
lobby  organization  in  Washington, 
D.C.  that  represents  students,  sug- 
gested they  engage  in  advocacy  that 
is  not  content-neutral.  Such  is  the 
inherent  nature  of  advocacy. 

As  the  deputy  general  counsel  for 
the  university,  Morrison  is  a  risk 
manager  for  the  institution.  He  must 
make  decisions,  using  his  legal  expe- 
rience, that  avoid  putting  the  univer- 
sity in  a  position  where  they  are  sus- 
ceptible to  lawsuits.  I  think  this  is 
one  example  where  it  is  best  to  trust 
Morrison's  legal  expertise  and 
attempt  to  understand  the  potential 
legal  ramifications  of  compelled 
speech. 


See  MSNBC  page  24 


iiOlAr       lO     SUBiMIX     •"'••^»*«^  •'»«»'•  f""Wt  ev«f>«  on  campuj 

or  in  the  wofU  M  Urge,  or  «vrite  a  reiponte  to 
wnwAjn?  that  you  h««*»re«dy  read  (nn»e 

TO  VIEWPOINT     n^.*«„„ 

v<>w>po<in>imdto.Md».«du.  Wtmtwbtt  to 


copy  arxl  paste  your  tubmission  into  the  body 
of  the  e-mail,  or  drop  off  •  hard  copy  of  your 
HJbmisMon  at  the  OiMy  Iniin  offke  (1  IS 
Kerckhoff  HaN),  c«re  of  Jonih  LalH. 

•  Appty  to  be  a  Viewpolnl  colwnntot  dur- 
ing Weeks  7  and  a  ofMdi  quMOT. 

•  Apply  to  be  a  canoeniM  or  antM.  Send  an 


e-malapmiing  your  interest  to  the 
Viewpoint  aAlress. 

A  few  things  to  remember: 

•  Al  submiuians  mutt  indude  your  name, 
phone  number  and  afMatlan  wfth  UOA.  K 
you  afe  a  MudMt  Ih^f  mutt  aho  Indude  your 
student  10  number,  year  and  ma|or. 


■  Vbur  facts  wW  be  checked;  make  sure 
they  are  acajratc. 

•  Viewpoint  K  not  an  advertWng  space  for 
any  group  or  organiatlon;  be  sure  to  have 
cfearty  artlataMt  opiniont. 

•Wfeiiwrwuhe  right  to  adit  mbmtesions 
for  darMK  grOTNMT  and  iMgiK 


DiiiyBniin  Viewpoint 


Thursday,  October  12,2000       21 


Prop.  38  unrealistic,  gives  brealc  to  rich  families 


mim 

■^  '  ■  ■•■     .'.'•'    '      '      ■■' ,  .  '.' 

■  f.^ 

'V:\;% -.;:,' 

V  ■■:-'-'.■ 

>    . 

'■■-''' -:^W- 

VOUCHERS:  Enrollment,  tuition 
limitations  at  private  schools  will 
cap  number  of  student  transfers 

In  almost  every  California  statewide  election 
since  1994  we  have  seen  specific  attacks  on 
the  working  class.  These  attacks  have  been 
specifically  at  immigrants,  people  of  color, 
jm^      women,  gays  and  lesbians  and  youth. 
^^■N|  These  attacks  started  with 

Av^         Proposition  187.  which 
*     %A%      sought  to  bar  undocument- 
ed immigrants  from 
receiving  education  and 
health  care  and  contin- 
ued with  Propositions 
209, 226, 227, 21  and  22. 
These  propositions  eliminated  affirma- 
tive action, 
banned  bilingual 
education,  banned 
gay  marriages,  and 
lowered  the  age 


% 


Mike 
Schwartz 


JARREH  OUON/Oiily  Bru<n 


that  children  can 
be  tried  as  adults 
in  criminal  court 
to  14.  Every  one 
of  the  proposi- 
tions had  the 
backing  of 

wealthy  donors 

and/or  large  ~~~~~~^^— 

corporations. 

Proposition  38  is  just  the  latest  ballot 

initiative  designed  to  eliminate  the 

gains  of  working  people  in  California 
:    and  across  the  nation.  r  -; 

Schwart2  is  a  fifth-year  sociology 
student  who  can  be  reached  at 
tiggertrot@hotmail.com. 


Proposition  38  is  being  funded  by  a  multimil- 
lionaire venture  capitalist  named  Tim  Draper. 
Draper  has  expressed  the  fact  that  he  seeks  to 
have  public  education  eliminated  and  fully  priva- 
tized 

(http.7/vww.NoVouchers2000.com/h/faq.html). 
If  there  is  one  thing  I  would  like  you  to  remem- 
ber when  you  think  about  Proposition  38,  it  is 
that  it  is  a  big  tax  cut  for  the  wealthy  that  will  be 
paid  for  by  working-class  families. 

Proposition  38  would  provide  vouchers  worth 
$4000  for  every  child  who  is  now  in  private 
school  or  who  gets  accepted  to  private  school. 
The  value  would  rise  over  the  years  with  infla- 
tion. These  vouchers  would  also  be  provided  to 
parents  who  "home  school"  their  children. 

The  California  Budget  Project  predicts  that 
there  woijld  be  almost  $5  billion  in  losses  to  pub- 
lic schools  if  Proposition  38  passes.  In  fact,  if 
Proposition  38  passes,  $3  billion  would  immedi- 
ately be  taken  from  the  general  tax  fund  and  go 
to  children  who  are  already  in  private  school. 
This  initiative  would  also  remove  voter- 
approved  constitutional  funding  for  community 
colleges,  childcare  programs  provided  by  public 
schools,  state  schools  for  the  deaf  and  blind,  and 
schools  for  the  neurologically  handicapped 
(Sacramento  Bee,  Sept.  18, 2000). 

The  idea  is  that  any  child  who  is  now  in  public 
school  would  just  pick  up  and  move  on  to  pri- 
vate school  where  the  "education  is  better,  class- 
es are  smaller,  and  everything  is  perfect." 

Ask  yourself  a  few  questions:  how  would 
working-class  parents  afford  the  normal  tuition 
of  $  10,000  that  it  costs  to  send  a  child  to  private 
school  if  the  voucher  is  only  worth  $4000?  What 
happens  to  the  public  schools  if  billions  of  dol- 
lars are  taken  to  subsidize  the  children  of 
wealthy  parents?  What  happens  to  those  stu- 
dents who  are  not  accepted  by  the  private 
schools?   . 

SccSaiWMrai>a9e22 


Disgraceful  Greek  piece 
nowhere  near  the  truth 


SORORrrV:  Generalizing 
unfairly  types  individuals 
within  system,  in  houses 

By  Kristcn  SUndk 

While  reading  Kirra  Steel's  arti- 
cle ("Systematic  sisterhood  pro- 
motes intolerance."  Daily  Bruin, 
Viewpoint,  Oct.  5)  on  the  intoler- 
ance and  shameful  behavior  she 
encountered  in  her  sorority  here  at 
UCLA,  I  found  myself  not  only 
shocked  and  appalled,  but  offended. 

I  would  first  like  to  say  that  I  am 
terribly  sorry  that  Steel  had  such  a 
negative  experience.  She  was  not  in 
my  sorority,  nor  do  I  know  to  which 
house  she  belonged.  I  also  do  not 
agree  with  the  rush  tactics  she 
described,  and  neither  do  my  sorori- 
ty sistars.  We  do  not  score  women 
on  na| polish.  We  do  not  select  our 
members  based  on  how  skinny  they 
are.  Wl  do  not  prefer  blondes. 

I  can  speak  for  my  sorority  as 
wdl  as  numerous  others  when  I  say 
that  we  use  the  rush  process,  as 
imperfect  and  sometimes  imperson- 
al as  it  is,  to  show  potential  mem- 
bers what  is  special  about  our 
house,  and  invite  them  to  show  us 
what  is  special  about  them. 

My  sorority  does  not  sit  around 
discussing  positives  and  negatives  of 
6ach  girt  that  came  through  the 

Stancik  is  a  fourth-year  English  student 


door,  based  on  trivial  matters.  My 
sisters  pay  attention  to  attitude  and 
character,  not  waist  size  and  name- 
brand  labels. 

I  would  also  like  to  point  out  that 
the  "open  rush  ploy"  that  Steel  criti- 
cizes is  actually  a  way  for  houses  to 
meet  women  who  did  not  pledge 
during  that  period,  in  a  more  casual 
setting  than  formal  rush.  Like  I  said, 
rush  is  not  a  perfect  process,  but 
this  "open  rush"  or  continuous  open 
bidding,  as  it  is  normally  called, 
gives  women  who  are  interested  in 
sororities  another,  less  intimidating 
introduction  to  the  house. 

More  importantly,  the  women 
who  join  my  sorority  are  kind  peo- 
ple who  care  about  each  other,  both 
on  our  best  days  and  our  worst.  I 
have  sisters  from  vastly  different 
ethnic  and  cultural  backgrounds, 
and  each  of  is  us  proud  of  where  we 
came  from.  We  bring  our  experi- 
ences to  the  house  to  help  it  grow. 
Steel  says,  "Someone  who  does 
not  look  exactly  like  them,  have  the 
same  skin  color,  financial  status  or . 
clothes  threatens  the  Greek  sys- 
tem." This  statement  made  me 
angry.  I  have  three  jobs  and  still 
worry  about  money;  I  don't  bear  a 
strong  resemblance  to  anyone  in  my 
house  and  I  am  consistently  a  sea- 
son behind  any  given  fashion  trend. 
And,  lo  and  behold,  I  am  accepted 
as  an  active  member  of  my  sorority, 
vice  president  even,  just  like  Steel. 
I  don't  know  what  forced  Steel  to 


LETTERS 


Greek  practices 
questionable 


SecfrAliaK,pa9e23 


My  friend  referred  me  to  the 
online  edition  of  the  Daily  Bruin, 
and  I  happened  to  come  across  one 
of  the  most  poignant  articles  I've 
ever  read. 

Kirra  Steel's  letter  on  the  Greek 
system  was  sickening  and  sad  at  the 
same  time.  It  disgusts  mc  to  know 
that  things  like  that  go  on  at  a  uni- 
versity founded  on  the  principles  of 
diversity  and  enlightenment. 

But  I  guess  people  in  the  Greek 
system  abide  by  a  difTerent  set  of 
rules.  It's  sad  to  see  that  as  a  soci- 
ety, we  haven't  progressed  very  far. 
There's  so  much  talk  about  how 
politically  correct  we  are.  when  in 
reality,  we're  still  as  unequal  as  ever. 
The  only  difference  now  is  people 
can  hide  their  true  feelings  a  little 
better. 

Instead  of  ridiculing  someone's 
race  or  creed  in  public,  we  save  it 
for  the  confines  of  our  homes.  I  jtist 
hope  Steel's  letter  served  as  an  eye 
opener  for  the  UCLA  student 
body.  If  not,  I  must  say  I  am  very 
disconcerted  with  the  way  of  the 
world. 

KmtMoriam 

S«(»nd-ycar,  poiticai  sdenct 

UCBcfkcicy 


RU-486  argument 
flawed 


I  am  writing  in  response  to  the 
anonymous  submission  "RU-486  is 
not  solution  to  unwanted  pregnan- 
cies" (Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint.  Oct. 
4).  I  agree,  having  an  abortion  is 
traumatic  for  most  women  (and 
their  partners),  no  matter  how  it  is 
performed.  This  is  a  good  point, 
but  the  author  follows  some  serious 
misconceptions. 

First,  the  number  of  abortions 
performed  in  France  have  not 
increased  since  the  introduction  of 
RU-486.  There  certainly  has  not 
been  a  "dramatic"  increase  as  the 
author  slates.  His  data  shows  that 
RU-486  use  increa.sed  6  percentage 
points  in  eight  years,  but  this  does 
not  demonstrate  an  increase  in  total 
abortions. 

Many  opponents  of  abortion 
have  suggested  that  the  presence  of 
RU-486  will  increase  the  rate  of 
abortion.  If  this  data  can  be  pre- 
sented, fine.  Until  then,  this  is  just 
an  opinion. 

Second,  the  author  states  that 
the  young  people  of  America  are 
not  "worthy"  of  RU-486  based  on 
their  apparent  lack  of  seriousness 
toward  sex.  But  just  because  some- 
one approaches  sex  lightly  does  not 
mean  women  across  America 
should  be  denied  an  advancement 
in  health  care.  The  main  issue  at 
hand  is  not  about  the  author,  his 
attitudes,  or  the  attitudes  of  other 
UCLA  students  toward  sex.  It  is 
about  a  less  invasive  manner  of 
abortion  for  all  women,  young  and 
old,  who  choose  to  exercise  their 


right  to  terminate  their  pregnan- 
cies. 

Should  this  right  be  denied  to  a 
struggling  mother  of  five,  who  lives 
in  one  of  the  86  percent  of  the 
counties  without  an  abortion 
provider  and  has  an  unexpected 
pregnancy,  because  the  author  feels 
his  generation  acts  irresponsibly? 

If  the  author  is  against  a 
women's  right  to  choose,  that's 
another  issue.  He  essentially  states 
that  abortion  is  okay,  but  that  all 
women  should  be  forced  to  under- 
go a  more  traumatic,  surgical  pro- 
cedure rather  than  have  access  to 
the  comforts  and  benefits  of  RU- 
486.  Is  he  suggesting  that  we  should 
make  abortion  as  bad  an  experi- 
ence as  possible  to  prevent  unwant- 
ed pregnancies? 

Advancements  in  health  care 
should  be  made  accessible  to  the 
patients  in  need,  and  not  withheld 
from  the  population  until  a  portion 
of  the  population  proves  that  they 
can  "make  rational  decisions."  We 
don't  withhold  trauma  surgeons  or 
precious  blood  transfusions  from 
gang  members  with  bullet  wounds, 
dialysis  from  patients  with  uncon- 
trolled diabetes  or  liver  transplants 
from  ex-alcoholics.  How  can  it  be 
that  you  suggest  we  withhold  RU- 
486  from  women  because  young 
people  "don't  deserve  it?" 

The  release  of  this  medication 
has  been  withheld  for  years,  and 
much  more  critically  studied  than 
most  FDA-approved  drugs,  due  lo 
abortion  politics.  Like  I  said,  it's 
not  about  the  author  or  this  tiny  col- 


See  LETTBIS,  page  2S 


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SCHWARn 

From  page  21 

Private  schools  arc  completely 
unregulated.  That  means  they  get  to 
accept  whomever  they  want.  Under 
Proposition  38  it  will  be  legal  for  these 
private  schools  to  discriminate  against 
perspective  students  on  such  princi- 
ples as  gender,  dass  status,  mental 
ability,  physical  ability,  religion  and 
language  skills.  These  schools  are  not 
required  to  give  their  reason  for  deny- 
ing entrance  to  students  (Sacramento 
Bee,  Sept.  18,2000). 

Teachers  at  these  schools  wouldn't 
be  required  to  have  a  college  degree, 
and  voucher  schools  are  allowed  to 
decide  how  money  is  spent  in  closed 
secret  meetings  with  no  public  over- 
sight. 


Proposition  38  ...will 

make  the  local  public 

school  even  worse, 

while  providing  a  nice 

refund  for  private 

school  children.    ' 


It  is  completely  undersUndable 
that  working-class  families  are  attract- 
ed to  the  idea  of  school  vouchers, 
especially  the  way  the  media  and 
Draper  portrays  them.  They  look  at 
their  local  public  school  and  see  that  it 
is  overcrowded,  with  underpaid  and 
overworked  teachers,  and  they  see 
that  their  children  go  without  basic 
supplies  year  after  year.  They  continu- 
ally tax  themselves  over  and  over 
again  in  the  hope  that  their  schools 
will  improve,  and  every  time  their 
hopes  are  destroyed. 

Administrative  bureaucrats  usually 
waste  money  that  should  be  used  to 
improve  the  schools.  Private  schools 
are  held  up  as  an  alternative  for  their 
children.  They  see  schools  that  pro- 
duce children  who  go  on  to  study  at 
elite  universities,  campuses  that  have 
swimming  pools  and  libraries  and 
classrooms  where  the  roof  is  not 
falling  apart.  Their  perception  that 
wealthier  children  are  receiving  a  bet- 
ter environment  for  learning  is  cor- 
rect. 

Proposition  38,  however,  is  not 
going  to  improve  the  lives  of  their  chil- 
dren; it  will  make  the  local  public 
school  even  worse,  while  providing  a 
nice  refund  for  private  school  chil- 
dren. 


Private  schools  are  not 

required  to  give  reasons 

for  denying  entrance. 


There  are  currently  almost  6  mil- 
lion children  attending  public  school 
in  California.  There  are  currently 
700,000  children  attending  private 
sdKX)l  in  California 

(http://www.NoVouchers2000.eom/h 
/myths/html  and 

http://www.NoVouchers2000.eom/h/ 
faq.html).  Those  in  favor  of 
Proposition  38  envision  all  these  pub- 
lic school  children  moving  over  to  the 
private  schools,  but  the  facts  contra- 
dict their  daims. 

A  survey  done  by  the  educational 
research  group  WestEd  found  that 
im  than  I  percent  of  public  school 
students  could  expect  to  find  space  in 
the  private  schools 

(http://www.NoVouchers2000.eom/h 
/faq.html).  You  now  know  that  the  I 
percent  that  does  move  would  have 
been  choaen  through  many  different 
forms  of  discrimination. 

We  have  to  remember  what  and 
who  is  to  Name  for  the  terrible  state 


SMMnMinipaft23 


SCHWARn 

From  page  22 

our  public  schools  are  in.  In  the  last  20 
years  we  have  seen  the  state  prison 
budget  grow  and  grow  while  our  edu- 
cational budget  has  been  slashed.  It 
took  California  150  years  to  build  15 
prisons  and  they  have  built  21  new 
prisons  in  the  last  20 years.  In  that 
time  we  have  watched  our  schools 
deteriorate. 

The  public  schools  that  are  hurting 
the  most  are  in  the  working-class  areas 
of  our  state.  Wealthier  areas  have 
more  than  enough  resources  to 
improve  their  schools  while  poorer 
areas  tax  and  tax  themselves,  but  can- 
not afTord  to  maintain  their  schools. 
The  answer  is  not  to  look  to  people 
like  Gov.  Gray  Davis  to  fix  the  prob- 
lem. Working  people  should  demand 
that  the  money  be  allocated  to  fix  the 
schools  in  their  neighborhoods. 

The  money  that  the  teachers'  union 
continuously  pours  into  the 
Democratic  Party  should  be  reallocat- 
ed to  mobilize  people  independently 
of  Democrats  or  Republicans.  These 
two  parties  have  both  overseen 
California's  decline  from  being  first  in 
the  nation  in  education  to  being  one 
of  the  worst  educational  states  in  the 
country. 

High  quality  public  education  is  a 
right  that  should  be  enjoyed  by  every- 
one. As  students  in  a  public  university 
we  should  stand  behind  our  younger 
brothers  and  sisters  in  sdiool  and 
demand  that  public  education  be 
placed  as  a  top  priority  in  our  state. 
Slash  the  prison  budget  and  fund  the 
schools!  Privatizing  public  education 
is  not  the  answer.  Vote  no  on 
Proposition  38. 


STANCIK 

From  page  21 

take  that  position,  but  I  take  mine 
because  1  want  to  work  to  enhance 
the  college  experience  of  the 
women  that  brightened  my  every 
day. 

Hearing  the  words  "hate," 
''racism"  and  "morally  divisive" 
used  to  describe  something  I  care 
deeply  about  broke  my  heart.  1  am  a 
better,  stronger  and  more  accepting 
person  because  of  the  women  in  my 
sorority.  They  have  never  once  torn 
me  down,  but  always  built  me  up. 

These  are  some  of  the  greatest 
people  1  know,  and  in  many  ways, 
we  are  a  family.  I  have  incredible 
respect  and  admiration  for  them, 
based  on  their  values,  their  charac- 
ter and  the  love  and  support  they 
constantly  show  me  and  each  other. 
Steel's  generalizations  are  horribly 
'  inaccurate. 

Aside  from  disapproving  of 
Steel's  house's  actions,  I  was  fur- 
ther dismayed  by  the  fact  that  she 
presented  these  actions  as  the 
accepjjpd  norm.  1  wouldn't  be  sur- 
pri$«ij|f  everyone  who  read  that 
articl«ot  the  impression  that 
sororiSes  are  elitist  clone  factories. 
Perhaps  that  was  her  intent. 

I  don't  know  anything  about 
Steel  or  her  sorority,  but  there  arc 
plenty  of  sororities  on  Hilgard  that 
value  individuality,  and  I  encourage 
women  who  are  interested  in  find- 
ing a  home  like  this  to  try  it  for 
themselves. 

Finally,  to  anyone  who  identified 
with  Steel's  experience,  speak  out  to 
the  women  in  your  house.  Talk  to 
your  sorority's  national  board  or  to 
the  Panhellenic  Council.  Change 
the  way  it  works.  Or  leave.  In  any 
case,  groups  that  thrive  on  ridicule 
serve  no  one,  and  should  not  be  per- 
petuated by  ignorance  or  fear,  espe- 
cially at  UCLA. 

I  will  graduate  in  the  spring  with 
four  years  of  memories,  mostly  of 
times  spent  with  my  sorority.  None 
of  them  involve  shame,  regret,  dis- 
grace or  humiliation.  They  all 
involve  love;/fupport  and  lots  of 
liiightf  r  at  no  one's  expcnM. 


"Mily  BfUM  ViMi|WM 


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SHABBAT  IN  THE  SUKKAH 

To  the  Sahara  &  Back: 

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w/  Rabbi  Chaim  Seidler-Feller 

Friday,  October  13,  2000 
6:30  p.m. 

at  the  home  of 

Chaim  &  Doreen  Seidler-Feller 

10750  Wellworth  Avenue  (@Selby) 

Meet  to  walk,  5:45pm,  Sproul  Turnaround 


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Daly  Brum  Viewpeint 


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Apnly  r()day  ro  become  a  parr  of"  the  Bruinlife  'iearbi)()k  Staff 
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OCMOM-W 


REUTER 

From  page  20 

need  is  AvantGo's  free  browser 
software,  and  our  special  AvantGo 
Web  site  will  be  downloaded  to  your 
PDA  every  time  you  sync  with  your 
desktop  computer." 

Al  Gore  seems  to  have  endless 
faith  in  science  and  technology.  He 
coined  the  term  "information  super- 
highway" and  was  instrumental  in 
securing  federal  funding  for  the    ' 
Internet.  He  wants  to  wire  every 
classroom  and  library  in  the  coun- 
try. In  his  speech  at  the  Democratic 
National  Convention,  Gore  noted 
that  "there  is  more  computer  power 
in  a  Palm  Pilot  than  in  the  spaceship 
that  took  Neil  Armstrong  to  the 
moon." 

Palm  Pilots  arc  yet  another  exam- 
ple of  technology  run  amok.  There 
are  now  more  than  400  million  cell 
phones  worldwide,  beeping  in    . 
churches,  funeral  homes  and  movie 
theaters.  Some  cars  now  come 
equipped  with  car  alarms, 
CD/DVD  players,  fax  machines, 
wireless  Internet  capability  and 
global  positioning  systems.  High- 
priced  health  clubs  offer  Web  access 
on  stationary  bikes.  Boeing  will 
soon  offer  airplane  passengers  live 
television,  e-mail  and  high-speed 
Internet  access. 

Many  junior  high  school  students 
show  up  with  cell  phones,  beepers, 
CD  players,  Palm  Pilots,  and  MP3 
players.  More  and  more  campers 
are  "roughing  it"  with  digital  cam- 
eras, televisions,  air  conditioners, 
generators,  washer-dryers, 
microwaves  and  satellite  dishes. 
Global  positioning  systems  are 
being  used  to  keep  track  of  cows. 
All  this  "progress"  comes  at  a 
huge  price.  James  Gleich,  author  of 
"Faster:  the  Acceleration  of  Just 
About  Everything,"  argues  that 
Western  society  suffers  from  "hurry 
sickness"  and  idolizes  competitive, 
impatient  people.  Similarly,  Yale 
political  scientist  Robert  E.  Lane 
argues  in  "The  Loss  of  Happiness  in 
Market  Democracies"  that  there  is 
no  positive  correlation  between 
material  wealth  and-personal  happi- 
ness. 

Indeed,  he  finds  extensive  evi- 
dence of  growing  clinical  depression 
in  all  advanced  industrial 
economies.  Lane  contends  that  mar- 
ket-based prosperity  leads  to  stress 
and  depression,  because  it  breaks 
the  bonds  of  family  and  friendship. 
Now,  Al  Gore  is  certainly  not  at 
fault  for  these  trends.  He  didn't 
invent  the  DVD  player,  and  he  can't 
be  blamed  for  America's  seeming 
obsession  with  materialism  and  gad- 
gets. But  wearing  a  Palm  Pilot 
seems  to  put  the  vice  president  on 
the  side  of  hyperactive  economic 
growth  and  an  even  speedier  cul- 
ture. 

Say  it  ain't  so,  Al.  Please  put 
away  your  Palm  Pilot. 


RUSHER 

From  page  20 

The  issue  is  not  about  asking 
USSA  "to  promote  both  sides  of 
every  argument"  (Marcelle 
Richards,  "Logic  for  overturning 
decision  flawed");  rather,  it  is  about 
asking  them  to  use  voluntary  contri- 
butions to  finance  their  political 
activism,  not  compelled  contribu- 
tions. 

I  undersUnd  that  USAC  and 
some  students  may  feel  slighted  by 
voting  for  a  policy  and  then  having 
it  overruled  by  a  higher  authority, 
but  one  should  not  be  surprised  this 
can  happen  at  the  university  level. 
This  scenario  is  analogous  to  the 
voten  of  California  creating  a  law 
by  supporting  a  proposition  and 
then  having  it  negated  by  a  law  of 
higher  precedence,  like  constitution- 
al law. 


LEHERS 

From  page  21 

lege  community;  rather,  it's  about 
women  across  America  having  the 
right  to  the  best  health  care  our  tedv 
nology  and  scientific  research  has  to 
offer. 


MaryCostantnw 
Medical  student 


Speech  reveals 
lack  of  sensitivity, 
understanding 


Commenting  on  the  presence  of 
homophobic  attitudes  on  campus 
last  week  ("Houston's  speech  ruf- 
fles feathers,"  Daily  Bruin,  News, 
Sept.  29),  USAC  President 
Elizabeth  Houston  suggested  homo- 
phobia is  harbored  in  "people  who 
are  from  wacko  backgrounds."  This 
callous  statement  cleariy  demon- 
strates her  inability  to  grasp  the 
heart  of  issues  of  sexuality  or  show 
any  sensitivity  on  the  subject. 

What  Elizabeth  Houston  dismiss- 
es as  pathological  is  actually  socio- 
logical in  nature.  The  expression  of 
sexuality  is  in  the  last  instance 
socially  constructed  and  manifest- 
ed. 

Houston's  incorrect  representa- 
tion of  homof>hobia  implies  that  the 
practice  of  heterosexism  is  an  indi- 
vidual aberration  rather  than  the 
institutionalized  and  continually 
reinforced  norhi  of  our  society.  She 
therefore  misdirects  critical  atten- 
tion away  from  where  it  is  needed, 
namely  the  heterosexist,  hegemonic 
culture  and  institutions  of  UCLA 
and  the  dominant  society,  and  ulti- 
mately leaves  us  with  little  to  do 
other  than  lament  over  a  few  "wack- 
os"  while  people  are  literally  being 
killed  and  denied  equal  rights  over 
their  sexual  orientation. 

Unfortunately,  her  lack  of  any 
critical  sense  of  social  justice  does 
not  stop  at  issues  of  sexuality; 
indeed  it  is  a  consistent  practice  of 
hers.  By  opposing  a  candidate's 
appointment  to  the  Associated 
Students  of  UCLA  Board  of 
Directors  because  of  his  participa- 
tion in  the  student  group, 
Samahang  Pilipino,  Houston  expos- 
es herself  to  be  hypocritical  at  best. 

To  reject  the  validity  of  gay 
rights  for  religious  reasons  as  some 
council  members  suggest,  while 
claiming  that  political  arTiliations 
will  tamper  with  some  false  notion 
of  objectivity  and  board  duties,  she 
reveals  that  her  actions  are  really  a 
cover  for  a  concerted  political  agen- 
da directed  at  reinstituting  the  dom- 
inant voice  of  racism,  privilege  and 
heterosexism  in  campus  politics. 

With^this  said,  we  must  remem- 
ber thaljHouston's  ideas  are  not 
entirelyi^er  own,  but  representative 
of  a  larncr  wave  of  predatory  neo- 
conservltive  politics  ravaging  the 
globe.  Oilifornia's  recent  proposi- 
tions 187,  209,  227,  21  and  currently 
38  are  but  a  few  instances  where 
the  conscious  deployment  of  racist 
policies  are  coupled  with  the  sly  dis- 
avowal of  racist  intent. 

Yet  while  it  is  currently  common 
to  believe  that  these  are  further 
examples  of  "covert"  racism.  I 
would  argue  that  on  the  contrary, 
racist  hegemony  is  so  complete, 
total  and  overt  that  its  "official" 
practice  often  goes  unmarked, 
unquestioned  and  most  important- 
ly, uncontested. 

We  need  leaders  who  can  recog- 
nize the  reality  that  confronts  us 
and  help  others  to  mobilize  against 
injustice  and  not  those  that  are 
complicit  in  the  practice  of  repres- 
sion. 

Revel  Sims 

Fifth  year 

Hiitofy 


iT 


L 


DaHy  Brain  Vifw^aiM 


Thursday,  October  12,2000       25 


URL  WANTS  YOU. 
TO  EAT  WITH  HIM 


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URL  is  hungry  for  some  good  eats  and  some 
fresh  new  hot  spots.  Luckily,  he's  got  the 
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J    All  Campus  Organizations! 

Registration  Week  for  all  organizations  is  4th  week  of  Fall  Quarter 

^^  Get  started  on  another  exciting  year  of  campus  activities  and  programming 
by  registering  your  organization  at  one  of  the  23  registration  sessions  listed 
below. 


SAVE  THESE  DATES! 


^r*^.  w 


f 


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Tuesday,  Oct  24 


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Wednesday,  Oct  25    Ackerman  2nd  Floor  Lounge 
Thursday,  Oct  26        Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 
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Registration  Times 

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No  reservations  are  needed!  Simply  have  three  of  your  organization 
representatives  attend  one  of  the  registration  sessions.  Representatives 
must  be  UCLA  students,  staff,  faculty  or  a  combination  of  these  three.  All 
'  three  must  attend  the  same  registration  session  and  sign-in  at  the  same 
time  ten  minutes  before  the  session. 

We  will  start  on  time....  pONT  BE  LATEI 

It  is  highly  recommended  that  you  come  earlier  in  the  week  since  the  later     .     ' 
dates  and  times  fill  up  fast. 

For  further  Information,  please  call  the  Center  for  Student  Programming  at 
310-825-7041  or  e-mail  at  mveluz@saonet.ucla.edu 

THE  BEGINNING  OF  THE  YEAR  IS  THE  BEST  TIME  TO  REGISTER.  DOMT  MISS  OUT! 


V*- 


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■1*^—^1 


WholsPeariBuck? 

She  was  the  first  female  to  ever  win  the 
Nobel  Prize  for  Literature.  You  go  giril 
Tune  in  tomonDw  to  learn  more  about 
this  amazing  woman. 

Thursday,  October  12,2000 


uaoy  Drum 


NTERTAINME 


K  ^Hm  brings  his 

popular  SNL  charartei;     % 
the  Ladies  Man,  to  the  big  screen 


By 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Dr.  Drew  and  his  radio  talk  show 
"Loveiine"  have  gone  from  the  local 
airways  of  KROQ  to  national  MTV 
glory.  Now  love  doctor  Leon  Phelps 
(Tim  Meadows)  takes  dispensing  love 
advice  from  the  small  screen  to  the  big 
screen,  in  the  new  Saturday  Night  Live 
feature  film  "The  Ladies  Man." 

In  a  recent  interview,  Meadows  said 
ihat  there's  nothing  about  meeting  and 


(Left  to  right)  Karyn  Parsons,  Tim  Meadows,  and  Will  F«rr«ll  star  in  the  SNL  Studios  p'r^"" 
ductlon  ofThe  Ladles  Man."  .■ 


seducing  women  that  his  character 
could  teach  him.  and  he  would  most 
likely  not  want  to  take  love  advice  from 
the  outrageous  playboy. 

"Really,  it  would  result  in  me  being 
in  prison  probably,"  he  said. 

In  the  movie,  Leon  is  fired  from  his 
Chicago-based  radio  talk  show  for  the 
overly  frank  nature  of  his  on-air  com- 
ments. His  cations  look  bleak  until  he 
receives  a  mysterious  proposal  that 
would  enable  him  to  buy  his  own  radio 
statioa,  in  a  letter  signed  "Sweet 


Thing."  The  mniy  problem  is  he  can't 
remember  which  of  his  many  "sweet 
things"  is  the  one  who  wants  him  back. 

With  a  black  book  larger  than  the 
Yellow  Pages,  Leon  is  inexplicably 
attractive  to  women,  despite  the  fact 
that  he  is  so  obviously  crude  and  laugh- 
ably undesirable. 

"It's  just  a  fact  you  have  to  accept  as 
a  viewer  of  the  movie, "  Meadows  said. 
"James  Bond  is  attractive  to  women 
because  his  character  is  written  that 
way." — 

Far  from  the  debonair  agent  007, 
Leon  attrarts  women  despite  his  insen- 
sitivity  and  over-the-top  '70s  fashion. 

"If  Leon  is  a  real  dude,  then  he 
wouldn't  make  sense,  he  wouldn't  .score 
like  that,  he  wouldn't  have  the  lifestyle 
that  he  has,"  Meadows  said.  "He'd  be  a 
drunk,  have  some  liver  disease.  He'd  be 
dead." 

According  to  Meadows,  his  charac- 
ter tries  so  hard  to  win  over  the  ladies 


TlmMaad 


Paramount  PicturK 

stars  as  radio  talk  show  host  Leon  In  the  new  nwvleThe  Ladies  Man." 


Pl^ido 
Domingo, 

newly  named 
Artistic  Director 
of  the  LA. 
Opera,  recently 
discussed  his 
ambitions  for 
the  opera  com- 
pany. Under  his 
and  Kent 
Nagano's  direc- 
tion, the  LA. 
Opera  will  hold 
one  world  pre- 
miere each  sea- 
son starting 
with  the  2002- 
2003  season. 
Domingo's  plans 
include  collabo- 
rations with  sev- 
eral internation- 
al opera  compa- 
nies, including 
the  Kirov  Opera 
of  Russia. 


LA.  Opera  future  proves  bright,  predicts  Domin 


I  • 


COMMNT:  Renowned  tenor 
plans  to  produce  new  works, 
take  on  ambitious  Ring  cycle 


ByJohnMangum 

{)aily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


UCL*Hii«wm>i|<>ill 


■  As  if  two  operas  and  a  series  of  con- 
certs weren't  enough,  Los  Angeles 
Opera's  season  started  with  even  greater 
fanfare  than  usual  this  year. 

Plicido  Domingo,  world-renowned 
tenor,  conductor  and,  more  recently, 
artistic  administrator,  announced  the 
company's  future  plans  at  a  recent  press 
conference. 

These  plans  include  strengthening  the 
roster  of  conductors  who  lead  the  L.A. 
Opera  Orchestra,  commissioning  new 
operas  from  major  composers,  forging  a 
relationship  between  the  opera  and 
Russia's  world-famous  Kirov  Opera  and 
-  the  icing  on  the  cake  -  a  new  production 
of  German  composer  Richard  Wagner's 
monumOTtai  fouf -wight,  IS^wur  cycle  uf 


operas.  "The  Ring  of  the  Niebelungen." 

Domingo  became  Artistic  Director  of 
L.A.  Opera  after  General  Director  Peter 
Hemmings  retired  at  the  end  of  the  1999- 
2000  season.  Hemmings  laid  a  rock-solid 
foundation  for  opera  in  Los  Angeles  (he 
guided  the  opera  since  it  was  founded  a 
decade  and  a  half  ago)  and  Domiago  has 
made  it  clear  that  he  intends  to  build 
some  pretty  astounding  things  on  that 
foundation. 

"It  is  very  important  to  me  that  we 
solidify  this  company's  reputation  for 
presenting  ambitious,  artistically  chal- 
lenging works,"  Domingo  said  at  the 
press  conference,  which  was  held  at  the 
Los  Angeles  County  Performing  Arts 
Center's  Dorothy  Chandler  Pavilion, 
where  the  opera  holds  its  performances. 

"In  formulating  my  plans  for  the  com- 
pany, one  of  my  main  concerns  was  to 
strengthen  the  conductorial  component, 
which  is  why  I  invited  Kent  Nagano  to 
join  us  as  principal  conductor."  he  con- 
tinued. 

Nagano,  a  California  native  with  an 
cwlttblkhed  imemaiional  career,  aerved 


as  Music  Director  of  the'Kational  Opera 
of  Lyon,  France,  where  h|  gained  a  repu- 
tation for  adventurous  repertoire  and 
turned  that  company  into  one  of  the  best 
in  the  world. 

Nagano  will  begin  his  appointment  at 
the  L.A.  Opera  during  the  2001-2002  sea- 
son, during  which  he  will  conduct  four 
works,  including  Wagner's  "Lohengrin" 
and  Puccini's  "Turandot."  He  will  also 
lead  the  German  Symphony  Orchestra  of 
Berlin,  of  which  he  is  currently  music 
director,  in  the  first  Los  Angeles  concert 
performances  of  Arnold  Schoenbcrg's 
opera  "Moses  and  Aron"  in  honor  of  the 
50th  anniversary  of  the  composer's 
death. 

Nagano,  according  to  Domingo,  has 
already  influenced  the  company's  direc- 
tion. The  two  have  placed  a  stronger 
emphasis  on  creating  new  works,  which 
comes  as  no  surprise  to  anyone  familiar 
with  Nagjtio's  interest  in  20th-century 
opera,      t 

"Kent  Und  I  have  decided  that  each 
season.  <y*t  with  the  2002-2003  sea- 
son, we^aihave  one  world  premiere," 


LOS  ANGELES  OPERA 

Ambitious  plans  are  in  the  working  for  the  rrext  fev»  seasons  at  the  Los  Angeles  Opera  in 

part  due  to  Hacido  Domingo's  recent  tji^  as  Artistic  Director  and  his  drive  to  perlbfm 
artistically  challenging  pieces.  ^^ 


2001-2002 
2002-2003 


friiKipal  ComhKXor  Kent  lagano  oMdkKb  foar  produdiom. 


Industrial  Light  and  Magifproduced  TJIng'  cyd«  begins  in  Miy.  World  prenyen 
opera  by  LudanoBerio. 


2003-2004       Condu$lonofTHftg*cydelnMay.WofkJpreaij««operabyOeborahOratH^^ 

iMmW:  ^«»C«ifaHKti»iihPUci»Oi)iiifcuDjii<LAi^«usrti«fai<nc»l««l>^  


Domingo  said.  "Kent  and  I  are  also  excit- 
ed about  commissioning  new  works  of 
modern  operatic  music  that  will  be  per- 
formed in  smaller  venues  in  Los 
Angeles." 

In  keeping  with  this,  L.A.  Opera  has 
commissioned  new  works  from  eminent 
Italian  composer  Luciano  Berio  (for  the 
2002-2003  season)  and  from  Deborah 
Dratell,  who  is  currently  composer-in-res- 
kJcncc  at  New  York  City  Oprra  (for  tha 
2003-2004  season). 


MAGGIE  woo 

Dratell's  opera  will  be  entitled 
"Nicholas  and  Alexandra"  and  will  pre- 
sumably take  as  its  subject  the  lives  of  the 
last  Czar  and  Czarina  of  Russia. 

Russia  figures  into  Domingo's  future 
plans  in  mote  ways  than  one.  He  plans  to 
collaborate  closely  with  the  Kirov  Opera, 
one  of  the  world's  foremost  companies, 
and  its  conductor,  Valery  Gergjev. 

Domingo  has  performed  at  the  Kirov, 


A&EontheWeb 

See  all  this  and  more  at 
:  the  Daily  Bruin's 
•   killer  Web  site: 
;  www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


uv-LA  *Vi  tvjin-wnq  Arts 


Political  strategist  James  CarvUle,  known  for  making  political 
uncierdogs  into  winners,  will  speak  at  at  7  p.m.  Oct.  1 5  at  Royce  Hall. 

Carville  to  discuss  loyalty 
to  GInton  in  appearance 

SPEAKER:    Friendship  at  'Hike  to  have  fun,"  said  Carville 

!,„„„»  ^r  J      •    •        X        -J       in  a  phone  interview,  squeezed  in 
heart  Ot  decision  to  aid       between  meeting  clients  and  retriev- 

president  amid  scandal      1"^  ^'^  daughter  from  a  friends 

house.  "My  first  desire  for  my  audi- 

ences  is  for  them  to  walk  out  and  say 

'I  had  a  good  time'  than  for  some- 
body to  say,  'Yeah,  1  picked  some- 
thing up.'" 

The  author  of-  "Slickin':  The  ' 
Case  for  Loyalty,"  Carville  has 
spent  ten  years  immersed  in  the 
stoic  Brutus  mentality  of 
Washington,  D.C.  He,  like  his  good 
friend  Bill  Qinton,  also  knows  what 
it's  like  to  get  called  a  few  unsavory 
names  by  Republicans  and 
Democrats  alike.  Serpenthead. 
Presidential 


By  Megan  Dickenon 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Call  the  Virginia  office  of 
America's  most  famous  political 
consultant,  and  you'll  hear  dogs. 
Not  just  any  dogs,  mind  you  -  the 
two  canines  that  roam  Carville's 
farmhouse-based  international  con- 
sulting firm  are  rambunctious,  pure- 
bred King  Charles  spaniels,  with 
silky  fiir  and  well-groomed  coats. 

Anyone 
familiar  with  -^— ^— ^— 
James 
Carville,  the 
down-home, 
quick-talking 
Louisianan 
who  gained 
national  atten- 
tion as  manag- 
er of  Bill 
Clinton's  1992 
presidential 
race  and 

appears        at 


"Almost  the  assertion 

that  you  have  character 

is  proof  positive  that 

you  don't." 

James  Carville 

Political  consultant 


ScctnWt^lfc34 


Royce  Hall  this  Sunday,  might  half 
expect  him  to  own  earthy  blood- 
hounds or  Southern  mixed-bloods, 
animals  with  bites  just  as  powerful 
as  their  barks.  But  Carville's  genteel 
spaniels,  though  loud  enough  to 
intercept  a  phone  call,  are  no  such 
animals.  Neither,  for  that  matter,  is 
Carville. 

When  Carville  brings  his  no- 
holds-barred,  kick-in-the-pants  style 
of  political  debate  to  Royce  Hall, 
he'll  come  armed  with  a  sharp  take 
on  American  politics  and  a  strong 
stand  on  loyalty  that  would  make 
man's  best  friend  proud. 

Which  is  not  to  say  that  Carville, 
a  self-described  "ham"  known  for 
sandwiching  Cajun  recipes  between 
scathing  criticisms  of  the  political 
ri^ht,  is  all  political  bottom  line. 


Doberman.. 
Qown. 

And  all  this 
was  before  he 
decided  to  stick 
by  Bill  Clinton 
in  the  face  of 
the  1998 

Monica 
Lewinsky  scan- 
dal. 

"My  take  on 

it  was  that  it's 
just  a  grown 
man  acting  stupid  with  a  young 
woman,"  Carville  says  of  Clinton's 
interaction  with  the  intern  Monica 
Lewinsky.  "I'm  not  going  to  fall  out 
with  anybody  over  it." 

When  the  scandal  broke  in 
January  of  1998,  Carville  was  set  to 
appear  on  Larry  King  Live  the  next 
day.  For  a  man  used  to  winning 
without  the  other  side  ever  realizing 
there  was  a  contest,  spinning  a  polit- 
ical conflict  like  this  was  no  new 
challenge.  Here,  however,  Carville 
found  himself  stuck  between  two 
worlds:  political  and  personal.  As 
Carville  got  a  little  drunk  as  the 
night  progressed,  he  considered 
how  Clinton  hired  then-unknown 
Carville  to  head  his  1992  campaign 


-•♦-' 


32 


28       Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


hl'Xff^U'V'l  ^"^'^''"u  Pf '''°T^^"^^  ^°'  ^"  hour  with  no  breaks,  vocalist  Jason  Cruz  takes  a  breather 
back  stage  before  a  mob  of  roadies  and  friends  barge  jftia^ongratulate  him. 

i®Q(D§  sffld]  mm  a®  Mm  fflooo 
BitqoQqd  §©(]]0a)i7  SM 


•«_. 


Guitarist  Jake  Kil«y  backs  up  vocalist  Jason  Cruz 
at  the  end  of  their  set  on  Saturday  at  the  Palace. 


19-year-old  Dave  Laing  gets  searched  by  security  guard  Ricardo 
Hall  before  he  is  permitted  to  enter  the  Palace  in  Hollywood. 


Guitarist 
Jake  KIley 

(left)  and 

bassist  Chris 

Aikens 

discuss 

touring 

during  an 

interview  in 

the  back  of 

their  tour 

van  before 

the  first  of 

their  two 

sold-out 

shows  at  the 

Palace  last 

weekend. 


In  front  of  a  crowd  of  2,000,  Strung  Out's  lead  singer  Jason  Cru^Si^llerpu^^ 
performance  Saturday  night  at  the  Palace,  despite  the  fatigue  of  many  months  on  the  touring  cilcui^ 


A  crowd  surfer  goes  for  a  handstand  during  Strung  Out's  energy-fiHed  set  Saturdav  night. 


After  months  of  touring  together,  you 
would  think  five  band  members  would 
grow  weary  of  each  other's  company. 
With  the  punk  band  Strung  Out,  however,  that 
isn't  the  case. 

Instead  of  being  bitter  about  its  demanding 
touring  schedule,  Strung  Out  is  stoked  for  the 
opportunities  it  has. 

An  hour  before  the  first  of  two  sold-out 
shows  at  the  Hollywood  Palace  on  Oct.  6  and 
7,  guitarist  Jake  Kiley  and  bassist  Chris  Aikens 
were  busy  playing  Nintendo  64  in  the  back  of 
their  rented  $300,000  tour  van.  Kiley  was 
quick  to  admit  that  this  is  not  the  typical  setup 
for  most  touring  punk  bands. 

"I  remember  when  we  used  to  drive  across 
the  country  in  a  small  van  and  question  why 
we  were  still  playing."  he  said  in  a  recent  inter- 
view. 

All  of  its  hard  work  in  the  past  has  payed 
off.  though,  as  Strung  Out  prepares  to  release 
its  fourth  album  this  year. 

The  band's  fan  base  has  grown  exponential- 
ly in  the  past  few  years,  selling  roughly  2.000 
tickets  in  LA.  alone  this  past  weekend. 
Tuujgeis  ftom  all  OVtr  Southern  California 


lined  up  at  6  p.m.  both  Friday  and  Saturday, 
waiting  to  be  let  in  to  the  Palace.  By  the  time 
the  three  opening  bands  had  performed,  all 
five  members  of  Strung  Out  were  prepared  to 
go  on  stage,  excited  at  the  opportunity  to  play 
for  such  a  large  crowd. 

According  to  Kiley  and  Aikens,  each  mem- 
ber seems  to  have  their  own  unique  warm-up 
before  they  go  on.  Some  simply  lounge  and 
drink  beer  while  others,  like  vocalist  Jason 
Cruz,  stretch  out  and  try  to  focus  on  the  per- 
formance despite  all  the  adrenaline  building 
up. 

When  the  lights  finally  do  come  on,  and  the 
band  starts  to  play,  the  crowd  instantly  erupts, 
with  flying  bodies  and  clothes  going  in  every 
direction.  An  hour  later  the  show  winds  down 
and  the  band  finishes  with  the  same  energy  it 
started  with,  leaving  fans  in  awe,  sweating  and 
panting  with  huge  grins  on  their  faces. 

Backstage,  after  the  show,  the  band  mem- 
bers are  exhausted,  knowing  there  is  still  a 
long  drive  ahead  later  that  night.  Strung  Out 
can  rest  easy,  though,  remembering  the  cheers 
and  enthusiasm  of  the  audienc.-  N>.,t  ct»p- 
San  Di«go. 


Da«y  Bniin  Arts  ft  EMHtiiiNMnt 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000       29 


■'•  .   •  .>...a'-..""-^\:  .:■ 

Web 


www.artistsagd. 


■■i" 


>  -om 


Artists  Against  Piracy 
www^rtistsagainstpiracy.com 

Most  consumers  love  Napster  and  the  free 
access  it  provides  to  downloadable  music,  but 
nowadays  the  question  of  its  legitimacy 
threatens  to  put  the  network  and  others  like  it 
to  an  end. 

According  to  the  music  artists,  the  activity 
in  Napster  violates  their  rights  because  it  is  a 
proven  fact  that  they  are  not  being  compen- 
sated in  any  way  for  the  songs  that  are  down- 
loaded over  the  Web. 

In  an  effort  to  get  the  same  people  who  are 
using  sites  such  as  Napster  to  understand  the 
artists'  position  on  the  issue,  a  group  of  over 
70  well-known  artists  have  formed  a  coalition, 
"Artists  Against  Piracy,"  and  have  just  recent- 
ly launched  a  corresponding  Web  site, 
artistsagainstpiracy.com. 

The  group,  which  involves  artists  from  all 
genres  of  music  such  as  Alanis  Morissette, 
Blink-182,  Christina  Aguilera,  DMX,  Garth 
Brooks,  Sarah  McLachlan  and  Sisqo,  is 
designed  to  give  artists  a  voice  in  what  hap- 
pens to  their  music  on  the  Net.  Currently  the 
group  is  launching  an  advertising  campaign 
in  most  popular  magazines. 


The  Web  site  is  comprehensive  and    ' 
includes  information  dedicated  to  presenting 
the  artists  side  of  the  debate  of  M P3s.  Of 
somewhat  initial  irony,  a  link  titled 
"Downloads"  is  provided  on  the  site  -  howev- 
er, the  downloads  provided  are  not  MP3s.  but 
wallpaper  images  promoting  the  site. 

A  news  link  is  also  provided  that  connects 
viewers  to  a  wide  range  of  articles  that  have 
been  written  on  the  issue  from  magazines 
;  such  as  "Spin"  as  well  as  letters  from  support- 
ers of  the  movement. 

The  site  isn't  just  about  presenting  pro- 
artist  propaganda  to  site-goers.  Various 
forums  are  also  available  with  such  titles  as 
"What's  Legal  Online"  and  "Artists  and  the 
Internet"  for  viewers  to  voice  their  opinions 
on  the  topic,  as  well  as  respond  to  others  who 
have  posted  a  message. 

An  instant  poll  is  also  available  for  viewers 
to  voice  their  opinions  on  the  question  of  the 
day. 

Links  are  provided  to  the  Web  sites  of  all 
artists  who  support  "Artists  Against  Piracy," 
in  addition  to  links  for  all  other  company  sup- 
porters of  the  site  such  as  the  Recording 
Industry  Association  of  America  and  My 
Play. 

An  informative  site  which  furthers  the  pub- 
lic awareness  crusade  for  which  the  group 
strongly  believes  in,  artistsagainstpiracycom 
hopes  to  use  the  same  medium  from  which 
their  songs  are  being  downloaded  to  launch  a 
campaign  against  it. 

Barbara  McGuire 
Rating:? 


Click  Radio 
www.clickradio.com 


Live,  streaming  and  interactive  are  words 
that  pop  into  one's  mind  when  they  think  of  a 
music  site,  right?  Not  so  fast. 

ClickRadio.com  is  a  site  that  delivers  to  its 
listeners  free  radio-style  music  to  download 
from  the  Net  and  listen  to  ofTline. 

Gasp!  Many  college  students  haven't  even 
seen  the  light  of  day  since  the  inception  of 
streamlined  sites  that  allow  users  to  listen  to 
radio  stations  live. 

The  objective  at  clickradio.com  is  to  create 
better  sounding  music  stations,  catering  to  lis- 
teners with  slow  connections.  The  site 
believes  the  music  will  be  played  offline  any- 
way, so  why  not  make  it  accessible  until  the 
user  is  off-line? 

The  downfall  of  this  site  seems  to  be  that 
while  one  can  personalize  what  type  of  music 
they  want  to  hear,  they  also  download  songs 
they  may  not  want.  Of  course,  that  happens 
to  be  a  drawback  with  many  radio  stations. 

Additionally.  Napster  and  Macster  are  so 
accessible  and  user-friendly  that  the  notion  of 
not  having  the  exclusive  choice  of  what  music 
you  download  is  not  very  appealing. 

Alas,  one  perk  to  ClickRadio.com  is  that 
users  can  vote  Siskel  and  Ebert-style  by  giving 
thumbs  up  or  down  to  a  song,  thus  encourag- 
ing the  site  to  play  it  more  often. 

For  what  it's  worth,  this  site  is  a  day  late 
and  a  dollar  short  when  it  comes  to  music 
accessibility. 

■    >.  •  Sarah  Monson 

Rating:  3 


The  Crosswalk 
www.thecrosswalk.com 


Here's  a  story  one  rarely  hears.  A  young, 
eager  band  with  something  deep  and  meaning- 
ful to  sing  about  gets  signed,  records  an  album 
and  with  dreams  just  starting  to  come  true,  gets 
released  from  their  contract  before  their 
beloved  album  hits  the  stores.    ,      . 

Oh  wait,  that  happens  every  day  So  why  has 
one  such  band.  The  Crosswalk,  created  a  Web 
site  where  the  public  can  listen  to  their  music 
and  vote  on  whether  or  not  they  should  release 
their  album  without  a  major  label,  or  let  it  die  a 
quiet  death? 

Was  that  knife  not  stuck  deep  enough  into 
their  back?  The  whole  hullabaloo  began  when 
Hollywood  Records  released  The  Crosswalk 
from  their  contract.  Allegedly,  the  lyrics  to  the 
songs  were  just  too  naughty  to  be  put  out  by  the 
label. 

Perhaps  they  are  just  poorly  written.  Along 
with  downloading  their  songs  to  be  voted  on, 
you  can  also  read  the  lyrics. 

Which  is  what  I  had  to  do,  because  birthing 
a  small  whale  while  reading  Nietzchean  treatis- 
es would  have  been  an  easier  endeavor  than 
downloading  the  required  listening  devices  one 


See  WEB,  page  33 


XJYCECHON/DailyBfum 


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30       Thunday,  October  1 2, 2000 


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Pop  culture  musings  brand 
Barenaked  Ladies  concert 


BWDOn  OWEN/Oaiy  Brum  Seno  Suff 

Barenaked  Ladies'  Ed  Robertson  performs  in  front  of  his  image  on  a  screen  at 
the  Universal  Amphitheatre. 


MUSIC:  Song  medleys 
run  gamut  of  group's 
performance  talents 


By  Emilia  Hwang 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

His  voice  alone  could  move 
an  amphitheater. 

And  so  it  did  on  Tuesday 
night  when  the  Barenaked 
Ladies  took  the  stage  at  the 
Universal  Amphitheatre  to 
promote  its  new  album 
"Maroon."  The  audience  was 
instantly  bewitched  by  Steven 
Page,  whose  wide  vocal  range 
easily  matched  the  large  emo- 
tional scope  of  the  stories  he 
sang. 

A  few  years  ago,  the 
Canadian  band  probably 
wouldn't  have  been  able  to  get 
American  audiences  to  throw 
Kraft  dinners  on  stage  even  if 
they  got  on  their  knees  and 
begged.  Now  they  flash  signs 
on  large  projection  screens 
requesting  that  the  crowd  not 
feed  the  band. 

Nevertheless,  fans  shower 
them  with  thunderous  applause 
and  even  gifts  of  underwear. 

How  did  these  striking,  sorta 
out  of  shape,  balding  guys 
become  such  huge  rock  stars? 

While  other  bands  and 
singing  groups  may  hide  behind 
fancy  outfits  and  synchronized 
choreography,  BNL  is  not 
afraid  to  bear  its  barenaked 


soul  to  the  world.  A  certain 
honesty  rings  true,  not  only  in 
the  songs  it  sings,  but  also  in  the 
banter  that  bounces  off  the 
band  members  on  stage. 

Framed  by  large  Macy's- 
parade-like  balloons  at  each 
end  of  the  stage,  the  band 
vowed  to  help  fans  cope  with 
the  "MTV-ization"  of  music. 
Wearing  matching  button- 
down  shirts.  BNL  called  itself  a 
"man  band"  -  its  answer  to  the 
boy  band  phenomenon. 


A  certain  honesty  in 

Barenaked  Ladies 

rings  true  in  their 

songs  and  their 

on-stage  banter. 


The  singing  Canadians  said 
that  the  Los  Angeles  crowd  was 
much  more  down  to  earth  than 
it  had  expected,  and  that  it 
wanted  to  work  toward  estab- 
lishing a  solid  relationship  with 
the  audience. 

"They  deserve  the  best  a 
Barenaked  Lady  could  give," 
said  guitarist  Ed  Robertson. 

Establishing  a  solid  line  of 
communication  with  the  audi- 
ence has  always  been  key  to  the 
band's  live  performances.  And 
despite  the  surprisingly  intro- 
spective mood  of  "Maroon," 


BNL  still  delivered  a  lively  and 
upbeat  show. 

The  band  jumped  right  into 
"Too  Little  Too  Late,"  the  first 
track  on  its  new  album.  P^ge 
started  without  his  guitar, 
allowing  him  to  focus  op  his 
vocal  skills. 

While  never  breaking  his 
concentration.  Page  enjoyed 
striking  a  pose  and  doing  kung 
fu  kicks  when  he  wasn't  at  the 
microphone. 

Using  the  entire  stage  as  his 
playground,  he  jumped  and  ran 
around,  never  stopping  to  rest. 
Page  continued  to  play  to  the 
audience  throughout  the  night, 
and  the  crowd  cheered  him  on, 
whether  he  was  shaking  his 
rump  or  doing  the  Macarena. 

The  concert,  however,  was 
far  from  being  a  one-man  show. 
Though  Robertson  may  not 
have  the  same  command  as 
Page  when  singing  lead,  he  car- 
ried the  band  with  his  strong 
guitar  playing  which  shone  on 
songs  like  "Pinch  Me." 

Notorious  for  being  hot  as 
wasabi  when  he  busts  rhymes, 
Robertson  and  his  unique  class 
of  rap  vocals  is  guaranteed  to 
make  any  place  scream  and 
shout.  To  a  funky  beat,  he 
showcased  his  impression  of  a 
rhyming  mime  who  would  also 
silently  climb  rojje  and  try  to 
find  his  way  out  of  a  box. 

Though  no  mention  was 
made  of  a  certain  BNL  band 

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Mly  Bruin  Arts  ft  Entertaimnent 


Thunday,  October  12, 2000       31 


Author  explains  widely  misunderstood  practices  of  Santeria 


BOOK:  Connections  with 
ancestors,  nature  based 
on  African  faith,  beliefs 


By  MidiacI  Roscn-MoRna 

Daily  Bruin  Seraor  Staff 

Santeria  might  not  be  familiar  to 
many  Americans.  In  fact,  the  Yoruba 
African-based  religion  might  be  better 
:.  known  by  the  old  Anglocentric  mis- 
nomer voodoo. 

Far  from  old  media-driven  stereo- 
'  types  about  voodoo  dolls  and  mid- 
night sabbaths,  however,  Santeria  is  a 
rich  spiritual  faith  devoted  to  the  divin- 
ity of  nature  and  the  balance  of  the  ele^ 
ments. 

With  wit  and 

warmth,    Marta      -^— — — — — 

..Moreno     Vega, 

rS  a  n  t  e  r  i  a 

;?P  r  i  e  s  t  e  s  s  , 

.j  President      and 

'Founder  of  the 

Caribbean 

Cultural  Center 

and  assistant  pro- 


Santeria  is  based  on 

balance,  on  activating 

the  sacred  within. 


fessor  at  the  City  University  of  New 
York's  Baruch  College,  reveals  the 
vtruth  about  the  ofl-maligned  religion  in 
her  new  book,  "The  Altar  of  My  Soul: 
The  Living  Traditions  of  Santeria." 

"Hollywood  has  demonized 
Santeria,"  said  Vega  of  popular  atti- 
tudes toward  traditional  African- 
based  belief  systems. 

"Part  of  European  colonization  of 
Africa  was  the  designation  of  every- 
thing traditionally  African  as  primi- 
tive, exotic,  cannibalistic,"  she  contin- 
ued. "Slaves  being  brought  over  for 
plantations  in  the  new  world  were 
often  baptized  on  route,  to  tivilize' 
them  and  increase  their  value.  Even 


today,  Hollywood  movies  like  'The 
Belief  and  The  Serpent  and  the 
Rainbow'  enforce  negative  percef>- 
tions  of  traditional  beliefs." 

In  reality,  Santeria  is  a  relatively 
new  religion,  created  in  America  and 
based  on  the  traditions  of  the  Yoruba 
of  West  Africa. 

Santeria  accepts  the  majesty  of 
nature,  paying  respect  to  the  ancestor 
divinities,  or  orisha,  who  traveled  to 
the  new  world  in  the  hearts  of  enslaved 
Africans. 

For  many  years,  Santeria  and  other 
Yoruba-inspired  faiths  were  forced 
into  hiding.  Considered  to  be  danger- 
ous pagan  influences  by  the  Catholic 
Church,  the  original  practitioners  car- 
ried out  the  religion  in  secret,  hiding 
their  divinities  behind  the  icons  of 

Catholic  saints. 
■""""■^■"■""^  "They  would 
be  killed  if  they 
were  ever  caught 
practicing," 
explained  Vega. 
"So,  they  had  to 
come  up  with 
inventive  ways  to 
hide." 


THE  ALTAii 


The  Living  Traditions  of  Santeria 


"We  thank  the  saints  for  protection, 
but  the  orisha  stand  alone,"  she  contin- 
ued. "In  the  U.S.,  Africans  found 
images  that  reminded  them  of  impor- 
tant qualities  in  the  divinities  or  have 
visual  relationships  with  them. 

Officially,  Santeria  is  said  to  have 
401  divinities,  but  as  Vega  explains, 
this  is  more  of  a  symbolic  number. 

"There  are  actually  400  known 
divinities,  but  the  real  number  is  infi- 
nite," she  said.  "That's  why  we  add  the 
one  -  it's  symbolic  of  how  there  could 
always  be  one  more." 

Growing  up,  Vega  did  not  realize 
that  her  family  practiced  Santeria.  Her 
parents  never  discussed  the  meanings 


behind  the  holy  images  in  Vega's  child- 
hood home  and  she  grew  up  believing 
that  her  family  was  devoutly  Catholic. 
Although  she  was  fascinated  by  the 
altar  her  grandmother  kept  to  the 
orisha,  it  was  not  until  a  trip  to  Cuba  in 
1979  to  observe  the  Cari  Fiesta  festi- 
val, that  she  became  truly  curious 


about  the  faith. 

"We  had  lots  of  traditions  growing 
up,"  said  Vega.  "A  lot  of  times  when 
parents  come  over  to  this  country,  they 
get  the  mixed  message  that  to  celebrate 
the  old  world  will  keep  their  children 
backward." 

"1  was  part  of  these  traditions,  but 


they  were  never  explained  to  me,"  she 
continued.  "When  I  went  to  Cuba  I 
started  to  see  the  same  images  that  I 
remembered  from  my  childhood  and  1 
started  to  see  what  I  was  a  part  of.  In  a 
way,  the  journey  was  circular,  starting 
in  East  Hariem,  going  around  the 
worid  and  ultimately  leading  me  right 
back  home." 

While  in  Cuba,  Vega  observed  the 
public  portion  of  a  friend's  initiation 
into  the  Santeria  priesthood.  During  a 
ceremony,  Vega  believed  she  saw  her 
mother's  spirit  manifested  through  a 
medium. 

"Her  spirit  manifested  startling, 
frightening,  comforting  things,"  said 
Vega.  "She  knew  things  that  no  one 
else  knew,  nicknames  and  such.  1  real- 
ized then  that  when  she  made  her  tran- 
sition, it  did  not  mean  that  she  was  no 
longer  there." 

Although  Santeria  rituals  some- 
times include  divination  through  meth- 
ods like  possession  or  reading  palm 
nuts,  there  is  more  to  the  religion  than 
communicating  with  the  departed. 

Vega  explained  that  Santeria  is 
based  on  balance,  on  activating  the 
sacred  within.  The  religion  allows  one 
to  empower  oneself  with  sacred  ener- 
gy, drawing  on  the  inner  sacredness 
that  each  person  carries  with  them  as 
part  of  their  nature. 
.  '"It  tells  us  to  respect  one  another,  to 
recognize  certain  sacred  powers,  and  it 
helps  us  all  to  function  as  a  family," 
Vega  said.  "We  see  nature  as  sacred, 
an  extension  of  ourselves." 

"Thus,  you  can't  pollute  nature," 
she  continued.  "You  must  maintain  it 
for  your  own  survival.  If  you  disre- 
spect the  environment,  then  you're 
really  disrespecting  yourself,  saying 
that  you  have  no  value.  When  there's  a 
society  that  values  money  over  human 
life,  then  you've  got  a  problem." 


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32       Thursday,  October  12,2000 


Daily  Bruiil  Arts  &tntertajnn»em     > 


CARVILLE 

From  page  27  ./       v 

Years  before,  Carville  literally  hung 
out  in  the  gutters  of  Washington, 
D.C.,  41  years  old,  jobless  and  won- 
dering whether  his  decision  to  leave 
an  admittedly  "mediocre"  law  prac- 
tice had  been  a  big  mistake. 

Clinton  stuck  by  Carville,  so 
Carville  stuck  by  Clinton.  Some 
things;  even  in  politics,  are  pretty 
easy. 

Carville  went  on  to  write  four 
books,  gain  fame  as  one  of  the  main 
subjects  of  D.A.  Pennebaker's  docu- 


mentary "The  War  Room,"  and 
.'marry  the  equally  savvy  Republican 
political  consultant  Mary  Matalin, 
who  ran  George  Bush's  1992  cam- 
paign. He  and  Matalin  have  capital- 
ized on  their  "opposites  attract" 
union,  appearing  in  several  American 
Express  ads  and  even  a  Heineken 
endorsement. 

On  a  more  political  front,  Carville 
now  works  with  friend  and  colleague 
Stan  Greenberg  to  run  campaigns  for 
candidates  such  as  Israeli  prime  min- 
ister Ehud  Barak  and  Ernesto  Zedillo, 
the  leader  of  the  PRI  party  in  Mexico. 

As  he  explains  in  his  book,  his 
brand  of  loyalty  in  both  national  and 


international  faces  is  certainly  not 
blind.  This  is  not  dog-like  obedience, 
which  in  the  political  world  can  bor- 
der on  sycophancy.  This  is  the  think- 
ing man's  loyalty,  led  by  the  gut  but 
tempered  by  a  strong  moral  base. 

This  take  makes  sense  for  someone 
raised  in  Louisiana,  a  state  known  as 
much  for  its  unique  Cajun  food  as  its 
widespread  political  corruption. 
Carville  grew  up  in  the  small  town  of 
Carville,  Louisiana,  the  oldest  of  eight 
children.  His  mother,  nicknamed 
Miss  Nippy,  sold  encyclopedias  to  put 
her  kids  through  college.  By  sticking 
up  for  her  family  with  a  feistiness 
Carville  says  he  can  only  imitate.  Miss 


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Friday,  October  20, 2000  Spm 


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Nippy  subtly  embedded  feelings  of 
loyalty  and  morality  in  her  son. 

"All  the  people  that  I  knew  that  had 
character  never  talked  about  it," 
Carville  said  of  his  Louisiana 
upbringing.  "Now  people  go  around 
saying  i  have  character.'  And  almost 
the  assertion  that  you  have  character 
is  proof  positive  that  you  don't." 

In  an  election  fueled  by  issues  of 
character,  Carville  is  quick  to  call  all 
four  candidates  in  the  November  race 
good  family  men  -  though  he  stresses 
that  fatherhood  is  no  qualification  to 
be  president. 

it's  okay  to  have  a  picture  with 
your  kids  and  Fido,  you  know  what  I 


mean?"  Carville  said.  "Dance  with 
your  wife,  you  know?" 

Carville  is  more  often  than  not 
prone  to  folky,  somewhat  bizarre  say- 
ings that  might  knit  their  way  out  of  a 
feisty  Louisiana  grandma.  Louisiana, 
for  instance,  is  a  "naughty  girlfriend  - 
you  just  can't  stay  away  from  her, 
though  she  disappoints  you  from  time 
to  time.**-..'  ..'i  ■■  ■:.  ■'  -.■:.;  ;.-i — ■ — - 


Yet  he  still  stands  by  the  state  that 
bred  him,  gave  him  his  melodic 
Southern  accent  and  unrelenting  wit. 
His  two  daughters,  Matty  and  Emma, 
love   visiting   the   large   brood  of 


SeeOUIVILLE,page33 


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CARVILLE 

From  page  32 

cousins  that  still  live  in  the  sultry 
Southern  state.  And  as  if  an  entire 
chapter  on  family  in  "Stickin"' 
wasn't  enough.  Carville  includes  a 
picture  of  a  recent  family  reunion 
on  the  back  dust  jacket.  You  might 
falter  in  your  support  of  your  coun- 
try, politics  or  even  friends,  he 
says,  but  you  never  turn  your  back 
on  your  family. 

"I  do  believe  that  I've  got  a  bit 
of  the  Corleone  in  me,"  Carville 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000       33 


says.  "Family  loyalty  is  a  very  high 
form  of  loyalty.  But  it's  also  a  form 
of  loyalty  that's  instinctive." 

There  are  a  lot  of  reasons  why 
Carville  stayed  loyal  to  Bill  Qinton 
as  the  tide  turned  agamst  his  good 
friend  and  former  employer.  Most 
of  the  reasons  are  pretty  convinc- 
ing, much  like  Carville  himself 
But  in  Louisiana,  friend  is  family, 
and  family,  friend.  You  stick  with 
your  allies.  Carville  says,  and  stick 
it  to  your  enemies. 

"Depending  on  where  you 
come  from,  there's  x-bagillion 
years  of  biology  involved  in  that 


A  Bxiin  s  lite  is 
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sort  of  visceral,  almost  primordial 
love."  Carville  said. 

Carville  writes  in  his  book  of 
how  one  such  enemy,  Newt 
Gingrich,  divorced  his  wife  as  she 
battled  uterine  cancer.  Carville,  by 
word  and  action,  isflot  that  kind  of 
man.  After  wife  Mary  Matalin  suf- 
fered a  miscarriage  in  1994, 
Carville  took  time  off  to  help  her 
recuperate.  Thinking  a  "lapdog" 
would  cheer  her  up,  as  the  New 
York  Times  reported,  Carville 
bought  his  wife  two  spaniels,  the 
same  spaniels  that  now  share  his 
political  and  personal  life. 


Six  years  later,  man,  wife,  kids 
and  dogs  live  on  a  working  farm, 
complete  with  rural  animals  and 
the  occasional  American  Express 
photo  shoot. 

Some  loyalties  are  easy  to 
define,  even  in  a  place  like 
Washington. 


SPEAKER:  James  Carville  will  deliver 
a  speech  on  'American  Politics"  this 
Sunday  at  7  p.m.  Tickets  are  $8  for 
students  with  ID.  Call  the  C\0  at 
(310)  825-2101  or  visit  the 
Performing    Arts    Web    site    at 

httpy/www.performingarts.ucla.edu 
for  tickets  or  information. 


From  page  29  \'-?'=;;V'.r  '.V^'-- ,  -V  ^:-.^^..■f  ■:■ 

needs  to  hear  the  band's  songs  on  the  Web 
site. 

For  a  site  vying  for  positive  votes,  the- 
crosswalk.com  leaves  a  lot  to  be  desired.  It's 
hard  to  navigate  and  a  little  messy  -  and  the 

mediocre  graphics  and  cheesy  logo  don't 
help.   :.  - ; :/,-. ''.._   ....  -'''■-,:■-  -_  ■:-'-'- 

Sure,  it  may  be  gallant  to  take  a  stand  and 
make  a  stink  about  being  jilted,  but  it  just 
wouldn't  be  Hollywood  without  the  painful 
scars  and  tormented  souls. 

Sarah  Monson 
Rating:  1 


Jobs  For  Bruins 

Friday,  October  13,  2000 

Ackerman  Union  Grand  Ballroom 

10  am  -  3  pm 

A  Job  Fair  on  all  UCLA  Students  -  all  Majors 

Representatives  from  a  wide  range  of  Blue  Chip,  High 
Tech,  Start-Up,  and  Nonprofit  companies  will  be 
available  to  discuss  their  current  full-time  career 

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L^  -  rh^!!r   ^     u     Barenaked  Ladies  belts  out  Too  Little  Too 
Late,  the  first  song  of  their  concert  Tuesday. 


BARENAKED 

From  page  30 

member's  close  brush  with  cancer, 
the  returning  keyboardist  was  grant- 
ed his  fair  share  of  on  stage  self-indul- 
gence. 

In  1988.  Kevin  Hearn  was  diag- 
nosed with  leukemia,  just  shortly 
after  the  release 
of  the  quadru- 
ple-platinum 
album  "Stunt." 

Without    the 
need  to  dwell  on 
the     past,     he 
added  a  unique 
sound     to    the 
ensemble,  play- 
ing the  glocken- 
spiel,     clarinet 
and  vocoder  in 
addition  to  the  piano.  Hearn  look 
center  stage  with  his  rendition  of  the 
popular     Star     Wars     "Imperial 
March."  Even  without  Darth  Vader, 
Hearn  rendered  his  version  more 
haunting  than  the  original  score  by 
adding  chilling  cascades  and  the 


shockmg  conclusion  that  sounded  a 
little  too  much  like  "Oops  1  Did  it 
Again." 

After  all,  what  would  a  BNL  show 
be  without  pop  culture  references 
and  musical  parodies? 

A  BNL  concert  trademark,  med- 
leys of  pop  icons  like  Eminem 
Cehne  Dion,  the  Bloodhound  Gang 
and  Madonna 
colored  the  per- 
formance and 
sent  the  crowd 
into  a  frenzy. 

Barenaked 
classics        like 
"Old 
Apartment"  and 
."Jane"  were  also 
crowd-pleasers. 
Injected      with 
new     life,     the 
favorites     were 
treated  with  care,  as  the  band  took 
care  not  to  simply  go  through  the 
motions  of  performing  the  songs. 
Doing  more  than  just  adding  new 
harmonies  here  and  there,  the  band 


BNL  pleased  everyone 

by  playing  all  of  their 

songs,  a  body  of  work 

spanning  over 

a  decade. 


S«eM»IUKEO,pa9e35 


OPERA 

From  page  2tf 


as  well,  which  is  in  the  Russian  capi- 
tal of  St.  Petersburg,  and  he  sang 
Wagner  in  three  revelatory  concerts 
last  month  with  the  Kirov  Orchestra 
and  Gergiev  at  the  Dorothy 
Chandler  Pavilion. 

"I  am  proud  to  announce  signifi- 
cant artistic  collaborations  with 
major  international  companies  that 
will  be  taking  place  over  the  next 
three  seasons,"  Domingo  said 
"Particularly  with  the  Kirov  Opera 
and  Its  renowned  conductor,  my 
good  friend  Valery  Gergiev." 

"Having  worked  closely  with 
Valery,  I  can  say  with  certainty  that 
we  have  developed  a  rich  and  fulfill- 
mg  artistic  association  that  is  both 
challenging  and  rewarding,"  he  con- 
tinued. 

Gergiev  will  conduct  next  sea- 
son's opening  production  of 
Tchaikovsky's  "Queen  of  Spades" 
and  will  return  during  the  2003-2004 
season  to  conduct  the  same  compos- 
er's "Eugene  Onegin"  and 
Prokofiev's  "Love  for  Three 
Oranges." 

Coi)roductions  (which  are  shared 
between  companies  to  keep  costs  low 
and  bring  the  productions  to  a  wider 


audience)  include  Offenbach's 
"Tales  of  Hoffmann"  and 
Mussorgsky's  "Boris  Godunov  " 
both  slated  for  2002-2003. 

Finally,  L.A.  Opera  will  tackle 
Wagner's  colossal  Riirf^le,  the 
Mt.  Everest  of  oper<between  May 
2003  and  May  2004.  The  cycle  takes 
Its  subject  fronijNorse  mythology 
and  follows  tl)«^ise  and  fall  of  the 
gods  dveLCerQr  nights.  L.A.  Opera's 
plans  to  mount  a  production  of  it 
make  a  strong,  positive  statement 
about  the  company's  permanence 
and  its  position  internationally. 

"Many  companies  have  estab- 
lished their  reputations  based  on  the 
Ring  cycle,"  Domingo  said.  "With  a 
production  designed  by  Industrial 
Light  and  Magic,  a  company  found- 
ed by  George  Lucas,  and  the  motion 
picture  industry's  leading  special 
cfTects  studio,  I  am  confident  that 
this  will  be  an  exciting  Ring  cycle  for 
the  new  millennium." 

It  also  promises  to  be  a  strikingly 
mdividual  production,  something  in 
Ime  with  the  course  Domingo  has 
charted  for  L.A.  Opera. 


OPERA:  For  information  about  the 
current  season  or  Los  Angeles  Opera's 
future  plans,  visit  their  Web  site  at 
www.laopera.ofg  or  caH  (213)  972- 


-^* 


BARENAKED 

From  page  34 


'%■ 


played  the  timeless  songs  as  if  it  was 
performing  them  for  the  very  first 
time. 

The  audience,  however,  could  not 
be  sent  home  without  a  dose  of  seri- 
ous BNL  pain  and  misery.  Capturing 
the  rawest  of  emotions  in  dramatic 
songs  like  "What  a  Good  Boy"  and 
"Call  and  Answer,"  the  band  proved 
that  it  is  more  than  just  another  com- 
mercial-hit-wonder band. 

With  a  body  of  work  that  spans 


i  decade.  BNL  knew  Ihe  only 
way  it  could  please  everyone  in  the 
audience  was  by  playing  every  song  it 
has  ever  written. 

In  a  seamless  anthology,  the  band 
played  a  medley  of  snippets  from  all 
its  songs,  including  "Hello  City," 
"Grade  9,"  "Spider  in  My  Room," 
'Shoe  Box,"  "Break  Your  Heart" 
and"HeyJude."  '~ 

HcyJude? 

Oh,  honest  mistake.  You  never 
know  what  the  band  will  do  next,  and 
keeping  the  audience  on  its  toes 
seems  to  be  what  the  Barenaked 
Ladies  thrive  on. 


Karyn  Parsons  and  Tim  Meadows  star  in  the  confiedy'The  Ladies 
Man,"  based  on  Meadows' Saturday  Night  Live  character. 


LADIES 

From  page  26 


that  his  game  inevitably  follows  the  law 
of  averages. 

"He's  going  to  score  somewhere 
down  the  line,"  Meadows  said. 

Though  Leon  may  seem  like  a  man 
who  is  only  concerned  with  increasing 
his  index  of  sexu- 
al      conquests, 

Meadows  ""— ^■^■■■""^~ 
explained  that, 
deep  down,  his 
character  is  on  a 
larger  mission. 
Leon  wants  to 
help  the  world 
with  his  expert 
advice  concern- 
ing matters  of  the 
heart. 

"We   had    in 


"I  hope  women  aren't 

offended  by  it  -  it's  not 

meant  to  be  mean." 

^    Tim  Meadows 

Star  of  "The  Ladies  Man" 


our  head  that  he  really  loves  women 
andj^t's  not  a  deprecation  thing," 
Merfows  said  about  Leon's  unseen 
sincerity  and  innocence.  "When  he 
mak^  love  to  a  woman,  it's  an  awak- 
ening for  him,  like  that's  his  joy." 

In  SNL  tradition,  Leon's  outra- 
geous nature  may  shock  and  even 
offend  certain  audiences. 

"I  would  hope  that  people  who  sec 
the  movie  see  it  as  a  comedy  and  not  a 
documentary,"  Meadows  said.  "Along 
the  way,  the  guy  learns  a  lesson  and 
yo\i  can't  teach  a  lesson  without  show- 
ing the  negative  side." 

Leon  can't  help  being  a  womanizer 
at  times,  but  its  all  in  the  name  of  com- 
edy. 

"I  hope  women  aren't  offended  by 
It  -  it's  not  meant  to  be  mean," 
Meadows  said. 

He  also  explained  that  the  projec- 
tion of  his  '70s  gigolo  character  onto 
the  big  screen  is  not  meant  to  be  a 
mean-spirited  movie. 

"It's  a  character  from  another  time 
who  lived  a  certain  way,"  Meadows 
said.  "And  he  sort  of  uses  what  he 
learns  as  his  basis  for  giving  advice." 


Experience  has  taught  Meadows 
that  the  best  love  advice  is  not  to  view 
women  as  sexual  objects,  but  as  peo- 
ple. In  addition  to  listening  to  his  wife, 
he  stresses  the  importance  of  remem- 
bering important  dates,  such  as  the 
day  they  met  and  their  anniversary. 
While  his  wife  didn't  know  basketball 
existed  before  she  met  him,  she's  now  a 
huge  Bulls  fan.  Similarly,  since  his  wife 
supports  the  fine 
_____^_^^^^  arts.  Meadows 
has  started  to 
watched  ballet 
and  opera. 

"In  my  experi- 
ence, the  women 
I've  dated  or  my 
wife  now,  you 
have  to  know 
what  they  care 
about,"  he  said. 
"Even  if  you're 
not  a  huge  fan  of 


it,  you  have  to  seem  interested  in  it, 
and  it  must  be  genuine  because  women 
do  it  for  men  all  the  time." 

Though  Meadows  was  unable  to 
obtain  any  helpful  love  advice  from  the 
Ladies  Man,  he  did  take  away  a  rain- 
bow candle  from  Leon's  radio  station 
-  as  well  as  a  valuable  lesson  about 
moviemaking. 

"I  learned  that  it  is  a  lot  of  work,"  he 
said.  "It's  hard  to  make  a  comedy  and 
be  funny  every  day  for  12  hours." 

Making  a  feature  film  is  quite  dif- 
ferent from  filming  a  live  episode  of 
sketch  comedy.  And  the  viewing  expe- 
rience is  different  for  audiences  as 
well. 

"My  experience  so  far  is  that  people 
go  into  the  movie  expecting  to  hate  it 
as  a  boring  Saturday  Night  Live  movie 
and  they  come  out  genuinely  liking  the 
character  and  the  movie,"  Meadows 
said.  "That's  better  than  going  in 
thinking  it's  a  good  movie  and  finding 
out  it's  a  good  movie.  I  like  being  an 
underdog." 


FILM:  The  Ladies  Man"  opens  today  in 
theaters  i     ' 


Daily  Bniin  Arts  &  Entertakmtent 


Thursday,  Oaob«r  12, 2000       3S 


e  Dqil^grtf|^^(%|» 


Your    Morning 
Commute 


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■T-''^W?«*W|?*******^ 


Why  start  your  day  stuck  in  traffic?  There's 
no  such  thing  as  rush  hour  at  an  EYA 
wilderness  camp.  Our  youth  counselors 
live  and  work  year-round  in  some  of  the 
most  beautiful,  natural  settings  in  the 
eastern  United  States.  Hike  the 
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Sleep  under  the  stars.  Develop  personal 
relationships.  And  help  at-risk  kids  get 
back  on  the  rigfit  path.  Doesn't  that  sound 


a  lot  better  than  breathing  exhaust  fumes 
twice  a  day? 

For  more  information  and  to  apply  on-line, 
park  Your  mouse  at  www.eckerd.org. 

Or  send  resume  to: 

Selection  Specialist/jWCF,  P.O.  Box  7450 

Clearwater,  FL  33758-7450 


E-mail  to: 
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ECKERD 


Visit  our  booth  at  the  Career  Fair  on  your  campus  October  t3th. 

EYA  offers  you  -  Fulltime,  live-in  positions    •    Excellent  salary/benefits 

•  Free  room  and  boaW    •    Clothing  allowance    •    Free  time-off  quarters 

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C.()^lHn^   Soon     lo   .A     I  hcatrc   Near   Von 


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Thursday,  October  12,2000 


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howr  to  Write 
aneffBdhfead 

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ThoAQiiriAr ■ ^ '    \    "«=*>'"PllO'lS 


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Exhibit  Hall 

October  1 7  &  18,  2000 

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dining  and  entertainment  complex,  located  in  Downtown  Disney. 

Or  visit  us  at  www.espnzone.com. 

For  more  information  call  the  Disneyland  Resort  jobline  at  800-766-0888, 

or  visit  DisneyCareers.com  for  professional  opportunities.Then  get  ready  to 

Experience  The  Magic  At  Work! 


Ex-model,  late  20's.  looking  for  an 

lintelligent.  outgoing,  interesting  womar. 

^  for  possible  relationship.  Must  be  very] 

attractive.  Caucasian  /  Asian 


(213)300<4306 


21 OO 

Recreational  Activities 


VAMPIRE  Live  Action  Role  Playing  game" 
Call  Davkl  909-338-4621  or  visit  www.geoci- 
ties.conVLAbyNight.  Games  every  other  Sat 
night,  t>eginning  10/7/00. 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


ARE  YOU  UNHAPPY  in  your  relationship? 
Heterosexual  women  participants  needed  for 
study  on  relationship  satisfaction.  Call  301- 
994-4990  or  email  JanaNick©aol.com 


EARN  $$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  the  com- 
mon coW.  Male/female  18-55yrs.  oW.  non- 
smoker,  no  asthma  history.  Limited  availabil- 
ity. Call  today  310-785-9121. 
Email:clinicalsub)ects©yahoo.com 

RESEARCH  PARTICIPANTS  NEEDED  for 
patients  experiencing  Hay  Fever/Allergic 
Rhinitis.  Requires  4  visits  (6  hours  total)  over 
7- todays.  Will  pay  up  to  $100  at  conclusion 
of  study  Contact  Dr.  Diaz-Sanchez  or 
Dr  Saxon  at  310-825-3699  or  310-825-9376 


RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for 
UCLA  Brain  Mapping  study.  Wear  goggles 
for  two  weeks  that  turn  the  world  upside 
down.  Must  be  right-handed,  nomial  hearing. 
visk>n  good  or  correctable,  $1000  payment. 
Contact  Rfchard  at  quixoteOucla.edu  for 
more  info. 


^%MFtfldrKl 

— '»«  i  S  O  I  T. 


^■i^^a  r ■  I  I  n  I  T 


800*766*0888 
JOBLINE 


£0£  •  Creocing  Magic  Through  Divtnity  -  OOnney 


^ 


2000 

Personals 


2000 

P(;rsonals 


Are  you  a 


creativejover? 


Find  out  at: 


.cv 


SEVERE  PRE- 
MENSTRUAL 
SYMPTOMS  STUDY 

UCLA  is  conducting  a  study  using  an  investi- 
gational    medication     for    women     with 
SEVERE  Pre-menstnjal  symptoms.  You  may 
qualify  for  this  study  if  you  experience  some 
of  the  following  symptoms  during  the  week 
before  your  menstmal  cyde:  'depressed 
mood,  'tenson.  •imtabllity,  'feeling  suddenly 
sad  or  tearful,  'increased  sensitivity  to  rejec- 
tion. Qualifying  partteipants  must:  'have  reg- 
ular ninthly  menstrual  cycles,  'be  between 
the  ages  of  18  and  45,  'not  be  using  medica- 
tions for  the  treatment  of  PMS  (including  an- 
tkJepressants.  herbal  treatments  or  birth  con- 
trol pills).  All  study  related  evaluatkxis  and 
medication  will  be  provided  at  no  cost  to  you 
You  will  be  paid  $175  if  you  complete  the  7- 
8  month  study  Some  women  win  receive 
only  Inactive  drug  (placetxi) 

INTERESTED?  CALL 
LINDA  GOLDMAN,  RNP. 

UCLA  DEPT  OF 
OB/GYN  310-825-2452 


ACl^^ise.    ■■■■■■■■■ 


www  RqteYourself  rnr(] 


call  825.2161 


SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH,  18-45.  want- 
ed tor  nteoflne  research  study  administered 
by  UCLA  Both  heavy  and  occasional  smok- 
ers needed.  Participants  will  be  paM  up  to 
$395  tor  lour  visits.  Can  Richard  Olmstead  at 
310-312-0565,  leave  massage. 


.y:  -■■  :.- 


■\  ■:■_ 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


EPOCH 


PARTNERS 

A  new  era  in  investment  banking. 


Information  Session: 
Thursday,  October  12,  7  -  9pm 
Career  Center 

First  Round  Interview: 
Tuesday,  October  17 

Investment  Banking  Night: 
Thursday,  October  19 

Please  bring  resume,  unofficial  transcript 
(DPR)  and  cover  letter 


Epoch  Partners  Is  a  technology^nabled  investment  bank 
focused  on  high-growth  companies  and  electronically 
connected  institutional  and  Individual  investors.  Epoch 
has  assembled  a  team  of  experienced  investment 
banking,  research,  trading  and  technology  professionals 
to  build  the  next  generation  investment  bank.  Epoch  is 
looking  for  financial  analysts  and  equity  research 
associates.  Please  view  our  BruinView  job  descriptions. 

Through  partnerships  with  Charles  Schwab,  Ameritrade 
and  TD  Waterhouse,  Epoch  has  exclusive  access  to  a  fast 
growing,  electronically  connected  investor  base  that 
consists  of  more  than  10  million  accounts.  Epoch's 
industry-leading  venture  capital  partners  include 
Benchmark  Capital,  Kleiner  Perkins  Caufield  &  Byers  and 
Trident  Capital. 


www.epoch.com 

Icehouse  Two    •    151  Union  Street    •    San  Francisco    •    California    •    94111    •    415.315.3100 


U.S.  Green  Card 


Registration  Period 

October  2nd  to 

November  1,2000 

(),0t)()  U.S.  Immigrant  Visas 
-  V         to  be  Issued 

-  Available  to  foreign  students  and  theii  families. 
For  a  free  information  package,  call  our 
Lottery  Department  at  l-SOO-VISA-LAU 

1^^      Bernard  P.  VVoIfsdorf 

^  A  I'ldiySssioiial  Law  Coipoi.iiion 

'  '^'•'''   •5:>rCRrtifp  Speiiiili^t  in  lmmi«r..ii<ii.  \  S..ii..naliiv  I  ;.\v 

17.^83  Sunset  Bhd.  Suite  120,  Pacific  Palisades.  C.\  90272 
(310)  .S73-4242  •  FAX  (310)  373-3093  •  visalau@wolfsdorf.iom 

WVVW.WOLFSnORI  .COM 


2700 

Appliances 


REFRIGERATOR  FOR  SALE  Practically 
new.  med  sized  (34"tall)  Danby  Designer 
fridge,  lots  room,  manual  included,  paid 
$200+,  asl<ing  $100.  310-208-2586. 


3500 

Furniture 


MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY.  STEARNS  &  FOSTER.  Also  twin- 
sets-$79.95.  Fulls-$99.95.  Queens-$139.95. 
Kings-$199  95  Queen  Pillowtops  $199.95 
Beacon  Open  7-days.  1309  Westwood 
Blvd.  310-477-1466. 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


2300 

Spcrrn/Egy  Donors 


WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

Sleigh  beds.  Rustic  pine  furniture,  armoires, 
manress  sets,  slip  covered  &  upholstered  so- 
fas/chairs Leather  sofas  &  chairs  310-745- 
2253 


3800 

Miscell«Tneous 


GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55.000  Visas  awarded  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared application  John  Manley.  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd  #300  LA.  CA  90025 
310-820-7553.  Deadline:  10/30/00 


A900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1994  NISSAN  SENTRA.  All  power.  First 
owner.  Low  Milage.  Automatic,  Burgandy. 
BlueBooi(  Value  $6400  Asking  $5200  OBO 
310-613-8770. 

1996  FORD  ASPIRE  71500mi..  auto,  a/c. 
airtMig.  red  excellent  condition,  $2950  otx). 
Leaving  Country.  Call  Andras  310-825-4585 
or  after  6pm  310-208-4345. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Cars  as  low  as  $500 
for  listings  1-800-319-3323  ex1.A214. 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990. 
84000mi,  good  condition,  power  windows, 
black,  A/C,  registration  paid  lor  one  year. 
$4000.  Call  Vicente  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerOucla.edu 


m 


EARN  $150.00 


f.   for  2-day  alcohol  Study. 

'  Must  be  a  Hcensed  driver 
Und  willing  to  drink  alcolMl. 

CanjoMtifyouqiMNfy.  Aik  f or  Smm. 
M-F,  a-OO  am  -  4:00  pm 
t^  Pti:  310-390-8483 


Egg  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 
wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

■    $5,000 
t    CALL  MiRNA  (818)  832-1494    h 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1930  FORD  MODEL  A  $10,000  obo  5-win- 
dow  coupe,  mmble  seat,  original,  good  con- 
ditton.  310-342-7414. 


SOLAR  ENERGY 

Experimenters  Needed  Direct  marry  mir- 
rors at  various  objects  Spectacular  dls- 
pteys?High  temperature  physics  studies 
galore?  Call  Edward  Vandegrlft  ed- 
dievanOpacbeli  net 


2600 

Wanted 


ADOPTION 

Baby  is  our  dream.  We  can  provWe  tove&se- 
curity.  All  expenses  paid  Attomey  involved 
ConfkJential.  Call  Gina  8,  Frank.  888-676- 
1995 


1972  MERCEDES  280  SEL  4.5L  classic  lux- 
ury sedan,  great  condition.  $3750.  310-470- 
7026. 


1979  450 
MERCEDES  SLC 

Excellent  condition.  150K,  AM/FM  cassette, 
AC,  $8500obo.  310-828-9111 


t     Recycle     1 


1980  HONDA  ACCORD  5  speed.  4  door. 
Good  transportatran  car  $750  obo  Call  310- 
820-8247  or  page  310-840-5554 

1986  TOYOTA  CAMARY.  Runs  Excellent  Au- 
tomatic. 4door.  White.  A/C.  AM/FM  Stereo 
80.000  miles  $2800  310-837-3349  or  wort< 
310-825-4687. 


•96  CHEVY  CAVALIER.  -68.000mi.  CD,  sun- 
roof, standard,  A/C.  Must  sell  $4900  obo 
310-428-2345 


S300 

Scooter  /  Cycle  Repair 


CycleTime  Company  iSr.ce  1977) 


Motorcycle  •  Motor  Scooter  •  Moped  " 

Sales  •  Repairs  •  Insurance  " 

■  •  EXCHANGE  AD  FOR  FREE  PICK-UP  ! 

■  •  OR  PURCHASE  DISCOUNT         \ 

m  (310)275-6734  . 

,   '632S  UCienega  Blvd.  Six  Blocks  South  o<  Pico  ■ 
■■■^        ■■■■■■>•••__-. 


Scooters  for  Sale 


Scooters  For  Less 


EdTE50$54  99 

orless/mnth. 

EUti  80  $64.99 
orless/r""' 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000        37 


5700 

Travel  Tickets 


VICTORY  TRAVEL 


LATIN  AMERICA  SPSCIALISTS 

MexkoCify        119  M«/M«  ^aul*  25S  I 

Guodoloiaro       109  Uma  169 

Cobo  Son  Lotoi    99  Buenot  Aim  299  | 

EISal»odor         209  S.D.  Chile 

219  Bogota 

208  Quito 

228  Beliie 

179  Caracas 


J  Honckinn 
Cotta  Rico 

]  Nicaragua 
Guotafflola 


NEW  YORK  Sg|. 


79<Hf\ 
219  «/T 
2J9IIA 
»2t/I 


•  Chriilmoi  li<^cls  NOW  «  tave  H 


Mexico  Escape 

|$329  Cabo  San  Lucas  ' 

I  $5 19  Cancun 

|$359  Puerto  Vallarta    _ 

'/f  DOioecffmthlfAir-Tnntwnl 


y^rwMf.vicforytravel.com 

(323)  277-4595 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  application  lees,  higti  approval  rate,  low 
interest  rate,  all  applicants  welcome.  Call 
toll-free:  1  -866-427-2677 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Code  832123)  Were  on 
campus  at  Ackerman  A-level.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.org 


61  OO 

Computer/Internet 


FREE  WEBSITE!!! 

YOUR  OWN  5-page  website  ABSOLUTELY 
FREE.  Easy,  fast,  quality.  NO  banner  ads  to 
watcfi!  http://eengen.go.coolebiz.net 

P/T  to  complete  construction  and  maintain 
website.  Nationwide  wtiolesale.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146 


6200 

Health  Services 


MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  Massage  $40/tir  w/student 
ID.  Monday-Friday  10am-8pm.  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Certificates  available. 


SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for  blood  samples 
$20  per  visit  Culver  City.  lOmin  to  UCLA. 
Reply:  paulpOcareside.com 


2300 

Sporni/Efjtj  Donors 


If  you  are  male.  In  coitege  or  have  a  codege 
degree,  you  can  earn  up  to  $600/mo.  call  for 
details  on  our  anonyrtwus  apenm  donor  pro- 
gram. Receive  free  compreher»sive  fieatth 
screening  A  help  infenHe  couples.  So  if 
you're  looMng  lor  ■  great  job  and  a  little  extra 
cash.  caN  us  flrM.  310-624-9941. 


1989  GEO  METRO  LSI  Blue.  $2200  obo 
2D/hatchback,  automatic,  excellent  condi- 
tton.  80.000  miles,  A/C.  AM/FM.  310-478- 
5663. 


977  \W  mac  ParR  Blvd. 
n^EWOOD 


WE  DELIVER! 


P^FORMANCe  FIRS^ 

(310)677-5800x107 


1990  CHEVROLET  LUMINA.  Runs  great! 
Blue  ext/int  New  suspension  3  1  Liter  4dr, 
l50Kmiles,  very  dependable.  Must  sell 
$1800obo  Jeff  323-469-8438. 


1990  HONDA  CIVIC  LX 

Red,  4dr.  fully  toaded.  80K,  serviced  last 
week.  $5000  call  Marilyn:310-571-0084 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO.  4wd. 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  condi- 
tton  Sen  for  $4300  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836  h 


To  advertise  In 
lassified  Display 


206-3060 


Be  Beautifiil 

Porcelain  Bondiru^ 

$590  Each,  Lett  10%  for  Students 

Open  evenings 

Peter  Wylan,  DOS 

Bellflower  Dental  Group 

(562)925-3765        " 

1 031 8  RoMcrana     Bellf lowrer  90706 

30  min.  from  campus 


38       Thufslay,  Octobef  12, 2000 


Mir  Brain  OasdfM 


5680 

Travel  Destioatiuns 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


IMliJii(!)\m^ 


FREE  TRIP 


Come  into  our  branch  to  register  for  2  FREE  AA 
Tickets  to  anywhere  in  the  Continental  US! 

You  MUST  come  in  to  STA  Travel  to  regieter  for  the  raffle  prior  to  OCTDBER  31 

^Restrictions  Apply.  Booking  must  be  made  at  least  3  days  :' 

m  advance.  2  night  minimum  stay.  Maximom  45  day  stay.  Must  be  used  by  Octotw  31   2001 

CST#10175eoaD  .«="Ji. 


r^^i 


^310-UCLA-FLY 
920  Westwood  Blvd. 


TRAVEL  I 


www.statravel.com 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Sen/ices 


6200 

H(;altli  Services 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  (^Brac«V^ 

ORJttQDONTJST     -^  ^,         -  _  \^ii>erBrillian,  Results  J 


JWML  Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 

Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


Braces 

Detiuer  BrillianI  I 

•  Cosnr^tlc  Pofcekain 

•  Surolcal  Orthoctonitcs 

•  Renriovable 

•Trodmonol 

•mvlslbte 

•European 


(310) 826  -  7494 

llMSWilttHrcBlvll  MM2 
L«Aii(el«>.CA  •urns 

(949) 552  -  5890 

im24Culv«rDT.  M 
Irvine.  CA  9B715 


■53  Teeth  Whitening   $8S^^ 


■  «ka  %immwmmm»,tmm 


esJ 


DENTAL  HEALTH  CARE 

■ (Offlc*  of  S.  tnlilwl,  DOS) 

We  Create  Beautiful  Smil 

•  AN  Phases  of  DmHslry 

•  24  Hour  Emergency  Service 

•  Medi-Cal  A  Alost  Insurance  Plans  Accepted 
"All  Studenh  &  Faculty  A^embers  ore  welcome' 

First  time  introductory  offer  vyith  Ihis  coupon 
Tel:  (310)  475-5598  /  Fax:  (310)  475-1970 
patient  Tera  BonilU  Online:  www.onvillage.com/©/dentalhealth 

I         CmipnnE.pm.12/JI/00  1620  Westwood  Blvd.,  Wcti  Los  KnatWs  B>n.,^n  r-^-,  «^-.  _— , 

Wilshirc  k  Santa  Monica  {Fm  Parking  m  Rtar)  oBi  UBU  I^BI 


^MII!HSII!F?» 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 

B<Mnl  C«r1lflMl  darmatoleglst 

"«•  haunt  forgotten  what  If 
Ilka  to  baa  atudanL" 

•Acne«Mole  Removal»Warts»Rashes 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmentation* 

►Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)  826-2051 
www.DrSllyers.com 

— 'office  iDc^terf  to  «»■..« ^, 


6300 

Legal  Advict.'/Attorneys 


PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICtPANT  In 
several  pre-paid  legal  service  programs 
providing  quality  legal  services  to  plan  tnem- 
bers.  Robert  Moss(UCLAW71)  310-260- 
7650. 


6300 

Lerial  Atlvice/Altoriieys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST  Sexual  harrassment.  Discrimina- 
tion. Auto-aoddants.  SIpa/taNs.  MYER  I^W 
FIRM,  Weslaide.  Scon  D.  Myer(UCLAW86). 
wwwbe8tlawyer.com  310-277-3000. 


Movers/Storafie 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  S-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-1001  trucks  luHy  equipped  for  large  moves. 
Call  24/7.  Available  on  short  notice.  License 
T163844  800-2GaBEST  (800-246-2378 ) 


HONEST. MAN  w/14tt  truck  and  doMes. 
smaH  Jobs,  short  notice  ok.  SF.  LV.  SO 
Student  discount  Qo  Bruins!  lOtft  yr.  310- 

2»5-ea88. 


6AOO 

Movers/Storage 


JERRY'S  MOVING4DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reNable.  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available.  Also,  pick- 
up donations  for  American  Cancer  Society 
Jeny«3lO-391-5657. 


6500 

Miisif;  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

AU  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedteMd  pro- 
fessionel.  At  your  home  or  WLA  studto  1st- 
lasson  free  No  dmm  set  necessary 
Neil:323-6S4-e226.  -v».«i,y. 

GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  protesrtonal  nw  UCIA  AU  tevete.  guitars 
avaHeble.  Learn  to  play  efforttesslyl 
www.JWGS.oom.     Call  Jean  at  310-476- 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


6600 

Personal  Services 


Menage  a  troit?  I  do  translalkxis  in  German. 
English,  or  French.  Call  Julia  310-826-8917. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  for  de- 
pression, anxiety,  obsessions,  post-traunnat- 
ic  stress.etc.  Couples/lndivWuals.  Crime  vte- 
tims  may  be  eligible  for  free  treatment.  Call 
Uz  GouW(MFC#32388)«310-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  consultation 


ATTENTION  MBA.  LAW,  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTSI  Frustrated  devel- 
oping your  cnjcial  personal  statements?  Get 
professk>nat  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultanl.310-826-4445.  www.winning- 
personstatement.com. 


S-honr  class  is  Jnst  S2S 

'No  stress'  classes  offered 

TuesAVed  nights, 

or  all  day  Saturday! 

Wallc  to  dass! 
Walk-ins  welcome. 

(Ifipawi  l^Ml) 

Westwood  Driving  &  Traffic  School 

IM3  BraztM  AvcaiM  #211 
(J»n  ab^vt  Uiymi  Mw  Mmtk,  mamt  tnm  Rln  AM) 
Cafl  ••  nMrrt  )«w  iiM!  3IS-1M-3333 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


THE  MATHEMAGICIAN 

Your  on-line  math  tutof.  On-line  assistance 
with  your  math  problem.  Pre-Algebra,  Alge- 
bra, Pre-Cateulus.  Cateulus.  310-452-0655 
or.  go  torwww.themathemagician.com 

THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring 
term  paper  assistance.  English,  Social  Sci^ 
ence.  History.  Foreign  Students  Wekxwie' 
CaB:310-452-2865 
www.thewritef5Coach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

Kind  and  patient  Stanford  graduele.  Help 
with  the  English  language— for  students  of 
all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIEha  Stanford  graduate. 
He|)  with  the  English  language— for  stud- 
ents  of  an  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW.MY-TUTOR  COM  Math/Physlcs/Sta- 
tistics/EnglishHebrew/  chemistry/biology/as- 
tronomy/ Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  availabte.  Tutoring 
sendee.  CaH  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissenatkxi  fomwtting.  tran- 
scribirtg.  Personalized,  professional  assis- 
tance. Ace  Words,Etc.  310-620-8830. 


7700 

Tntofiiuj  Waiit(,'(l 


AFTERNOON  CHJLDCARE.  Tutoring,  com- 
panion, driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  11y/o 
girt.  Athletic  female  preferred.  BH.  $8-12/hr 
4days^»fk.  2-4hrB/day  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663,  310-753-3535.  Email 

kxiz320aol.com. 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  124l6-yT- 
oW  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr  310- 
472-7353. 


SIGN  LANGUAGE 
CLASS 

Set  your  hands  free  by  learning  to  experi- 
ence a  language  of  beauty  through  visual  ex- 
presskxi.  Starts  October.  Louisa:3lO-275- 
3809. 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR  WANTED.  Must  be 
graduate  student  or  TA.  For  high  school 
student  taking  second  year  Spanish  and 
math.  310-476-0766. 

MATH/SCIENCE/LANGUAGE  tutors  needed 
for  grades  6-12.  Algebra.  Geometry,  Physics 
Chemistry.  Spanish  1/2.  $i5Air.  Experi- 
enced+  Must  have  car.  Fax  rBsume:3lO-474- 
74 13  ASAP 


TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Union/Unkxi.  For  current  faH  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professtonal  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day.  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
pers.com 


WRITER'S  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlining,  research,  and  productton 
assistance  lor  academk;  or  professtonal  writ- 
ing. Experienced  writing  instmctor,  Hansard 
Univedsty  M.A.  Jon^  10-367-5666 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

ComfKthmwN*  OitwuiMi  AwHtsnoe 
ThMM,  Papets,  and  PMwnal  SWwnantt 

PropoMlt  and  Books 

International  Sludant*  Wekxjme  Sioc«  1985 

Sharon  Baar,  PtuO.  (310)  470-6662 

www.B««f-Wri«a.coni 


7000 

Tiiloiiiuj  Offered 


BOND  TUTORING 

All  subjects  6- 12th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  will  meet  your  indivkkj- 
al  needs.310-471-7628. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall.  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Cateulus/Phystes/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/English.  Call 
WHI  310-701-8969. 


STUDENT  TEACHERS 
NEEDED:Assistant  to  Educational  therapist. 
Must  be  Strong  in  Math  AND  Chemistry  PM 
and  earty  evening  hours  $10/hr  ASAP  Must 
have  Education  Background.  323-653-6965. 

TUTOR  NEEDED  for  2  boys  (ages  6&8)  Job 
woukJ  include  the  foltowlng.  Ptek  up  boys 
from  Fairbum  Elementary  School  (approx 
2mi  from  UCLA)  at  2:35pm  M-Thurs. 
12:10pm  on  Frt.  Take  boys  to  Century  City 
condo,  do  HW,  tutor  various  subjects,  give 
them  snack,  swim  in  Olympic  size  pod,  play 
ball.  etc.  Parents  wiN  anive  home  at  approx 
6:30pm  everyday  •"Important  to  note  this 
job  Is  every  other  week  only.  $300/wk.  Ad- 
justments up  if  more  work  or  hours  neces- 
sary Reply  to  Anthony  Brooklier  310-273- 
7166  or  Fax  info  310-277-3006. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homeworic  assist  for  two  boys,  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  in  Uurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hoursAveek,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  call  ovenings:310-401-0113  or  day- 
0me:31O-392-14O5. 


TUTOR  WANTED  for  4th  grade  boy  Bilin- 
gual (French-English)  American  preferred 
3times/wk  lor  2  hours.  Must  have  own  car 
Bel-air.  310-471-0032  or  dbtwenty4sev- 
enOaol.com 


MATH  TUTOR 

I  tutor  SAT  math,  Pre-/Mgebfa.  Algebra  1  and 
2,  Geometry,  Trigonometry,  and  beginning 
Cateulus.  UCLA  Student,  math  major.  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  math  and  orw  year 
teaching  experience.  You  come  to  me. 
$25/hour.  Call  for  more  Infoimatton.  Stepha- 
nie 310-702-6455. 

PHD  GRADUATE  tutors  Frenct)  language  for 

all  levels  baglnning,  advancod  and  conver- 
saUonal  Francti.  Evcellnni  aaivtea  and  rates. 
Cat  Uza:310-S75-3874. 

SCIENCE  AND  ANY  HIGH  SCHOOL  or  )u- 
ntof  high  subfacta  tutoring-  UCLA  Molecular 
Btology  Grad.  Prevtous  tutoring  sxpertanca 
1-323-e74-59e0. 


TUTORS  NEEDED 

All  subjects,  levels,  ages.  Rexible  days  and 
hours  $10-13/hour.  Tutor  in  WLA  or  SFV. 
Totally  Tutored.  310-397-0999. 


7200 

Tyjjing 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertatkxw,  transcription,  resumes,  IH- 
ers,  brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports  Santa 
Monfca.  310-828-6939.  Hollywood,  323-466- 
2888. 


Biisint;ss  Opponuniijes 


A  6-RGURE  INCOME  by  20027  It's  poesi- 
ble.  Invest  $35.  Refundable.  No  Risk. 
http7/zibg«).com/|phanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stephanie. 


AUVr    I>T  ISL 


BURNED  OUT? 

Tired  of  mMaadkig  adt?  I'm  tired  of  '^n. 

people  Wknl  to  make  $5000-$8000/mo7 
Beverty  Hills  offtee  exptoding.  Can  me  310- 
268-1515. 

COLLEGE  ACHIEVERS 

Ground  fkxx  company.  Southem  CaMomia 
mart«et  exploding.  Want  to  make  $5- 
8K/month?  I'H  teach  you  how.  FT/PT  CaH 
310-360^994  9aftvlpm. 

NEED  MORE  MONEY? 

Work    from    horrw    with    ftexIMe    hour* 
www.hom6buolnaaa.to/emoney 


Display 


Daily  Brain  Classified 


7500 

C.ireer  Oppoilumlies 


B 


FIRST  CALL 
Staffing  Services 

College  Students! 
Earn  extra  money  for  school! 

Are  vou  looking  for  a  way  to  pay  off  those  student 

loans'  Call  us  for  short  or  long  term  work 
assignments  We  have  lots  of  fun  jobs  a\ailable' 

CiDjaeinSanuMEinici 
510.264   9914 

or  Carrie  in  GlenUe 

818242.9988 

vwv.flriicilUurf.con 


7700 

Cliild  Care  Wanted 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

NEEDED.  P/T  sitter  needed  for  kkls  1047. 
Responsibilities:  Driving,  reading&playing 
Good  pay!!  References  a  must!  Located  in 
Brentwood.  310-394-9781. 

NANNY/MOTHER'S 
HELPER 

lor  6yr-oM  boy  and  toddler.  Flexible  hours. 
Some  travel  w/family,  especially  weekends 
Must  be  insured/ltoensed  driver.  Live-in  pos- 
sible. References  a  must.  310-446-9970. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


$10/HOUR 

Accounting,  business,  math,  and  econ. 
majors  w/basic  Malh&  English  skills  needed 
Tuesdays&Thursdays  for  PT-FT  positions. 
Excellent  experience  lor  future  CPAs  or  busi- 
ness owners.  Fax  resume(UCLA  students, 
also  send  DPR)  :8 1 8-769-4694 . 

$12/HR,  Hours  Flexible 

P/T.  Individual  needs  assistant  in  contacting 
properly  owners.  Must  have  car.  Call  310- 
476-9089. 


GET  AN  "A"  on  your  health  test!!!  Detoxify 
your  system  fast  or  double  your  $$  back!!! 
Call  toll  free  877-696-4541  ext:UC100. 
www.faroutpromottons.com 

SECRETARY/ 
RECEPTIONIST 

Light  filing,  conoputer,  phones  in  Beverty 
Real  Estate  Company  Part-time/Full-time 
Rexible  hours.  Starting  pay  $ll/hr  w/great 
future  job  opportunities.  Fax  resume:310- 
278-6801  Attn  Anda. 


PtJ  DRIVER  CHILD- 
CARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  needs  drop-off  (6;45-8am)  &  prck- 
up+errands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only  Must  have 
car,  insurance&valid  license.  Brentwood. 
Please  call  Sarah  310-385-6766. 


SAFETY  INSPECTOR 


Leokkifl  for  a  diaiwe?  Needed  tor  «i  irHBmatkxui 

labor  consuftng  fihn  College  degree,  Wlnguai 

(Welnamese^Korean/SpanishJ  a  must  Strong  PC/ 

wntmg  skills.  Travel  required.  OSH/Vheltli  »d  safety 

MfWnMirA  mUmnitii   Cnhu  u..^  ^.^^^j^ 


^ 


experiertce  preferred.  Entry  level  positkHi' 
Excellent  benefils  pacitage  offered 


Visil  wwwx«cc-onlhie.coni 


PfT  NANNY 
DRIVER/HELPER 

Pacific  Palisades  professional  Mom  needs 
permanent  nanny  to  drive  llyr.  old  daugter 
to  school/appoinments  and  supen^ise  home- 
wort</activities.  7-9am(flexibie)  and  3-7pm, 
M-F;  every-other-week.  Live-out.  Perfect 
lof»g-term  opportunity  for  mature  student  or 
part-time  wortcer  Must  have  reliable  car/exp. 
driving-record,/excellent  judgment/maturi- 
ty/positive personality  310-573-1170 
FAX310-573-0130. 


$15-$23/HR  BRIGHT  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academic 
Subjects  Transportation  required.  We  will 
train.  Flexible  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  test  scores  (SAT,  GRE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educatwnal  Services,  Attn:Bar- 
ry,  9911  W.  Pted  Blvd,  Ste.1025,  LA,  CA 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424.  Posiltons  avail- 
able throughout  LA  and  the  vailey. 

$1500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  circulars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  information 
packet.  Call  202-466-1639. 


Prr  NANNY 


for  7  yr-dd  girt.  Pacific  Palisades.  2-6:30pm, 
M-F  Must  have  car.  Enands,  light  house- 
keeping, chiW  pick-up.  $10/hr.  310-230- 
3877. 


STOCK  BROKER.  Lteenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216.  Woodland  Hills,  CA  Instmctor:  DavW 
Shu  (Master  Degree.  Hansard  University) 
818-703-8889. 

THERAPEUTIC  AID  for  autistte  chiWren. 
P/T.F/T  (flexible).  $12-1 5mr.  BS«A  Psychol- 
ogy preferred  Experience  w/OT,  behavior 
nrKxWteation  Contact  818-788-2388,  fax  re- 
sume 818-788-3875. 


PACIFIC  PALISADES.  Age  9.  Good  Driver. 
M-F  2:30-6pm  $l0/hr.  Live  out.  Non-smoker. 
References  Required.  Call:  213-243-4025 
Business  hours. 


$8  to  $15  per  hour 

Wort<  in  Westwood  lor  an  upscale  singles 
organization.  Women  excel.  Telemartteting. 
Recruit  new  members.  Weekly  pay  Call  after 
3PM  Sun-Thurs.  Keith:310-279-3300. 

STUDENTS      ^ 

You  can  eam  $20K  this  semester  No  gim- 
micks. Totally  on  the  level.  ABSOLUTELY 
NO  COST  TO  YOU.  We  will  provkle  you 
w/free  training  and  support.  Go  to 
http://nils.go.coolebiz.net  and  watch  the  on- 
lir>e  Hash  presentation. 

•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beats  all  jobs.  Start 
immediately.  Great  pay  Fun/Easy  No  crazy 
fees  Program  for  free  medkal  Call-24/hr5 
323-850-4417. 


7600 

Child  Care  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  njn  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6years.  Two  large 
piay-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Close  to  UCLA 
310-473-0772. 


NAGiLA  PR€SCH00L 


Lowvly  W.I_A.  facility,  cioa*  to  UCLA. 

FT  A  PT.  AOM  2-6. 
Cal  (310)207-4543  or  visH  in  person 

at  1620  S.  Bundy. 


PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  for  10  yr/oW 
girt.  Need  help  6 :45-8:30AM  MTW,  2-7:30pm 
MT  Must  have  car,  experience  with  chiWren 
and  help  with  errands.  310-441-9766. 

PART-TIME  BABYSITTER.  Responsible, 
experienced,  child  development  preferred. 
Energetic,  for  2-year-old  and  5-year-old 
Own  car.  310-273-4900. 


M)  Exfferieticc  /Necessary 

Men.  Vomen.  diildicn.  sll  ag^  sins. 

races  T\'  •  Films  -  tommerdab  •  Mi)^nes 

for  personal  iiiterfieii  call  mm 

310.659.7000 


RELIABLE 
BABYSITTER  NEEDED 

For  after  school  help.  Morxlay-Thursday.  2- 
6pm.  We're  k)oking  tor  a  student  who  is  great 
with  kkls,  ages  7-6,  to  help  v>rtth  driving, 
homewori*  and  Mghl  housekeeping.  Hours 
and  salary  negotiable.  Car  and  references 
are  required  Please  call  Joy  at  310-394- 
2342. 


RESPONSIBLE,  RELIABLE  DRIVER  for  15- 
yr-oW  boy  to  and  from  school  and  to  appoint- 
ments. UCLA  area  323-468-2632,  ask  for 
Norma. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED. 
Mon-Fri,  2pm-7pm.  Own  transportation  a 
must  Brentwood  310-979-7103. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tutoring.com- 
pank)n,driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
girt  Athlette  female  preferred.  BH.  $8-12/hr. 
4days/wk.  2-4hrs/day  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663,310-753-3535.  Email  kxu320aol.com. 

ASSISTANT  TO 
HANDICAPPED  CHILD 

P/T  JOB  wort<ing  with  sweet,  intelligent 
handicapped  girt  Child  care,  feeding,  assist- 
ing mother  in  kitchen  and  working  with  child 
.  on  improving  physical  skills.  Applicant  must 
be  sweety  intelligent,  reliatrfe,  speak  English 
and  driveH^Maat  Eln[wn:310-396-810a 

CHILD  CARE  Wanted  Tues  3-8,  Thurs  3-6 
and/or!  Sat  12-9  In  Santa  Monica 
SomeonAo  help  full  time  Mom  w/  Kkls  ages 
4,6,10  Mist  have  experierKe.  Good  pay. 
Call  Doug  310-888-0163.  Fax  310-451- 
6050. 

CHILDCARE 

for  personable  Syr-oW  girt.  Ptek-up  Iron- 
sctxwi/lessons  CDL.  own  car.  insurance 
Non-smoker  MorxJay/Wednesday/Frtday  2- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thursday  2-6pm.  $10/hr. 
Cal  310-440-6738. 

CHILDCARE/DRIVER  lor  12-yr-old  boy 
Non-smoker  Likes  kkls  and  dogs.  Help 
w/HW.  M-Thurs.  4:15-5:45pm.  $10mr.  CaH 
310-828-5144. 

DRIVE  CHILD  from  school  in  Pteo/Robert- 
son  area  to  homa  in  PacWc  PaNaadea  m  af- 
temoona.  Muai  have  car  and  Inawanca.  310- 
454-7525. 

DRIVERn'UTOR 

w/axcalant  study  habits  to  assist  l2Al6-yr- 
oW  boys  w/HW  and  testa  Car  plus  insurance 
naadad.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $l0-$12/hr  310- 
472-7353. 


RIDE  NEEDED 

To  pk;k  up  child  from  Bekerty  Hall  on  Mulhol- 
land  Drive  at  3:20  pm.  Call  310-271-4651  af- 
ter  6pm  213-252-9437  From  9am-6pm. 


2  HASHERS  NEEDED  ASAP  for  Monday 
Nights  only!!  Please  call  Miriam  310-208- 
9005. 

A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

DO  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  in  the  afternoons  dur- 
ing school  (M-F)?  All  day  Saturday,  too!  Full- 
time during  Quarter  Breaks  and  Summer  Va- 
catkjns!  Wort<  expenence  not  necessary.  /Vp- 
ply  today  at  Westwood  Sporting  Goods 
1065  Gayley  Ave,  Westwood  Village. 

A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  field  sales,  flexible  hours  +  com- 
misston  and  bonus!  AmbitkMJS  salesperson. 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  supportOlones- 
4all.com  Attn:Fiek1  Sales. 


SITTER.  P/T  twtee  a  week.  Bright,  responsi- 
ble student  to  watch  infant  (Prefer  educatk)n 
major,  prevtous  experience  and  own  trans- 
portation). Teni  310-910-3405 

THERAPEUTIC 
COMPANION 

To  wort<  P/T  w/12-year-oW  boy  w/autism 
Evenings  and/or  rweekends  5-10hours/week 
Minimum  6-months.  Coursewortc  and/or  ex- 
perience w/autism  necessaty.  $10+/hr  310- 
559-7384. 


ACCOUNTING  CLERK  Needed  $12- 
15/tX3E  Must  have  taken  accounting  class- 
es. Excel  and  strong  communcatton  skills 
Fax  resume  attn:Mek}dy  323-965-3194. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hantware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours.  $10-13/hr.  Tennis  a  plus! 
We  are  nattonal  ttower  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILDCARE  For  12-year-oW  girt,  SM,  M-F 
3 :30-7ish.  Car  with  insurance  References 
required  $9+/hour.  Night:31 0-828-6206 
Day:81 8-954-3276. 

WANTED:  Responisble  indivkJual  needed  to 
help  after  school  with  2  small  children 
Mondays  4-8pm  and  some  weekends  Musi 
Drive.  References  CaH  310-446-1438 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Young,  attractive  female  for  Beverty  HHIs 
producar.  Short,  flexibis  hours.  Excallant 
pay.  310-278-6972 


$$$$ 


Taachers  for  model  aducattonal  and  enrich- 
ment 00.  Naad  axparlanoa  wortdng  with  ani- 
mals. CartMcatadl/hon<a(tMcatad  ok.  Earth, 
Ufa  Of  Ptiystoal  adanca  background.  Intoraat 
in  woridng  with  alamantary.  and  mkMa 
achool  studenta.  Great  pay,  hours  avaiiaMa 
during  and  aflerschooi.  $25/hour.  Fax  ra- 
sume:  310-445-5628 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASST 
P/T 

(M-TH.  9-3:30)SM.  Pediatric  therapy  offc. 
medical  terminology  helpful.  Multiple  tasks, 
detail  oriented,  self-motivated  Good  vert)al 
skills,  MAC:  Wonj,  Quickbooks  exp.  req'd. 
FAX  resume  including  salary  history.  310- 
582-1165. 

ADULT  RESPONSIBLE  MALE.  Personal 
care  for  disabled  man.  Monday-Friday 
Ihr/day,  alternate  weekends  Will  train. 
Strong  Referef>ces  Near  UCLA  $300/mo 
310-475-5209. 

AFTERSCHOOL  homewort*  supennsor/  ba- 
bysitter for  3rd-grade  boy  Must  be  disci- 
plined to  teach  good  HW  habits  Elementa- 
ry Ed  major  a  plus.  Need  car.  Tues-Fri  2  30- 
6:00pm.  $8.00-$10.00/hf  CaH  310-390-6962 
evenings,  323-468-5273  days,  ha- 
katzfibc  O  yafwo.oom. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necesaary. 
Host  musk:/talk-shows  for  our  radk)  stattons. 
P/r.  $io-l5/hr,  $200+per/show,  plus  fantas- 
tfc  benefite.  323-468-0080.  24-hours. 

ASSISTANT  needed  $10/hr.  Temple  City,  l/t. 
Opportunity  to  learn  the  ancient  art  of  Chi 
Quong.  Cantonaaa/Engfeh,  computer  liter 
ata.  peopla  akMs,  detall-orieniad.  Contact  Lis 
310-571-6032. 


advertise  class  display  825-2221  •  display  825-21 61 


CIrJSSlflPfIb 

825-22?1 


■•K, 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000       39 


Got  a  health  question? 
Need  an  appointment? 

E-mail  the  Ashe  Center  and  they'll 

fix  you  right  up  by  e-mailing  you 

back  with  ansv^ers  and  appointment 

time  suggestions  www.saonet. 

ucla.edu/health.htm 

U's  a  service  that  is  part  of  the  health 

care  you've  already  paid  for. 

ucia  Ashe  Center 


TODAY'S 

CROSSWORD  PI  1771  F 


ACROSS 

1  Maureen  of 

filmdom 
6  Mature 
11  Gullet 

14  Yellow  gem 

15  Western  show 

16  Physicians' orq. 

17  Chirp 

18  Birch 

1 9  Roman  dozen 

20  Overhangs 
22  Principal 

conduits 
24  Incomplete 

28  Woodchuck 

29  Like  a  tans 
vok:e 

30  Overflowed 

32  —  Minor: 
constellation 

33  Honeydew,  eg 
35  Tennis  pro 

Nastase 

39  Adolescent 

40  Armed  conflict 

41  Pnce 

42  Be  impudent 

43  "Saturday 
Night  — " 

45  Mascara  target 

46  Large  deer 
48  Means  ot 

access 
50  Wandering 

53  Bedroom 
furnishing 

54  Textbook  parts 

55  Vast 

57  Fellows 

58  Walking 
60  Noticeable 

65  Cove 

66  Rent 

67  Brings  in 
(as  salary) 

68  Everything 

69  Go  in 

70  Purse  handle 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


□OBSD  DQDQ  QBQS 

sags  BQEiQ  sEaasD 


SUB  masim 
BBtam  BHiam  Biaarir!] 


DOWN 

1  Baseball's  Mel 

2  In  what  way? 

3  Orangutan,  for 
one 

4  "Norma  — " 

5  Conquistadors' 
toes 

6  Meat  juice 

7  Actor's  need 

8  Chances 

9  Tiny 

10  Typk:al 

11  Adage 
12— acid 

13  Belt's  place 
21  Polite  cough 

23  Objects 

24  Closes 

25  1988  Olympics 
site 

26  Relieves 

27  Send 

28  Least  amt. 

30  Work  hard 

31  Tiny  opening 


34  Flock  memljers 

36  Bank 
transactions 

37  Hand  out 

38  Early 
anesthetic 

43  Haze 

44  —  avis 

47  Reduced  for 
clearance 

49  Presidential 
acts 

50  Cuban  dance 

51  "Paper  Moon" 
actress 

52  Upholstery 
material 

53  Prevent 
(actions) 

55  Farm  animal 

56  Fragrant  flower 
59  Bog 

61  Tub 

62  Foul  up 

63  Genetic  letters 

64  Cook's  amt. 


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^       Thunday,  October  12. 2000 


Daily  BfuinCbssifiMi 


silmrjLs:.. 

CLASS  OF  2001 

SATO  on  your 
copy  of  the 
bruinlife 
yearbook  r^^l^ 

set  $8  off  the  price  of  your  bruinlffe 

yearbook  when  you  purchase  it  at  the 

time  of  your  senior  portrait  sitting! 

take  advantage  of  this  speciai  offerf 

irs  only  available  to  seniors  taking  their 

pictures  at  campus  photo  studio. 


make  your  appointments  now! 

3W.206.0889 
310.2064833 

or  Stop  lf]f  campus  photo  stums  in 
ackermana-level 


appointments  now  being  taken 
for  last  names  beginning  with: 


i^   B    C    D   E    F 


/ 


bruinlife 

YEARBOOK 
Serving  UCLA  Since  1919. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


ASSISTANT  TO  EDITOR 

Responsible-energeiic.  writing  and  computer 
skills.  knowJedge  o(  Page  Maker  6.0  help(ul 
Fasl-growjng  molton  picture  and  television 
dtrectory  $7  5(Vhour  Hours  negotlaUe.  Coo- 
lact  Susan  Moore  at  Canoco  PuMahina 
31(M7 1-2287.  u««ning. 

ATTRACTIVE  FEMALE  MODELS  needed 

<Ic]^m'^1'^'^-  '^-22  >'«^^  oW  only 
$250/day  Email  cllnt880 models  com  (or 
more  info. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


AUDIOVISUAL 
,o?.'!!f  "^"""ORS  WANTED 

lor  deHyery  and  operations,  throughout  cam- 
r"^^C°7"'«'  and  customrS'JrT. 
'erred  AV  experience  not  required  Ooen 
schedule  needed.  Must  be  X  to  iKs 


7800 

Help  W;intt;d 


7800 

Help  Wiitited 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


BABYSITTING  A  NINE  MONTH  OLD  BABY 
some  regular  and  some  random  times  2- 
4houre  2-3  times  a  week.  MUST  be  some- 
what flexible  with  scheduling.  310-471  -3604 

I,    BANKING 

PfT  teller  positions   at   University  Credit 

^nm"  ,^.f «"«"'  P«y.  f'oure  *  environment 
borne  teller  experience  preferred.  Aoolv  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd..TA.  90025^x  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  wrt) 
www.ucu.orgAiobs.htm 

^i^^lT*"?  ""^"^  ^'^  ^«""«'«  Co.  Needs 
6  individuals  to  help  with  new  expanston 
Training  Available.  310-273-7122 

f^.'"^^''"'°  ^SST  Needed  for  cool" 
small  home  office.   Must  be  competent 

FlS:V!n/""   °"'°*'«"-  Wo^^l.  Excel.' 
flexible.  Call  Monique  310-204-3359 

"campus^venT 

JOBS 

.0^^  \^"*  "P  '°  '^  "  y°"  can  commit 
to  the  Mens  Basketball  Season  and  other 
Special  Events!!!  Limited  number  of  posi- 
tions available,  for  UCLA  students  only^^r 
more  Infomiation  caH  Sean,  310-  206-0736. 

CARE  TAKING  COMf  ANION  for  16-year  old 
developmenlally  disabled  girl  Involve  neigh 
borhood       field       tripsiactivities.play^g 
boardgames.walks.etc.   Need  car   Hour! 
«exible.$12/hr.  310-839-3732. 

CARING  INDIVIDUALS  NEEDED  TO  suo-" 
pon  UCLA  student  lABA,  an  internationallv 

'i^Ti^  ^^^^-   '"  "^^^"^  Community 
Support  Companwns  and  Overnight  Com- 
panions to  assist  a  college  student  with 
physK^al  challenges   Assistance  needed  in 
his  dorm.classes.and  the  community  of 
W^stwood.  lABA  provides  paid  training  and 
advancement  opportunities.   Full  and  oart 
nme  shifts  available,  including  night  hours 
FuM  time  benefits  include  medeal/denfal  cov- 
erage, 401 K  plan  and  paKi  time  off.  Competi- 
tive wages-fsupplemental  tenure  pay  Retet- 
,^„«^«^«"ce  or  BA  ,n  Psychokw  pre- 
ferred^   Email    your    resume    to    rokel- 
^ Oiaba.com  or  call  ton  »ree-877-924-2220 
For    more    informatton    visit    lABA    at 
www.iaba.com  ' 


If/}-^  tf.^ilUV 


Receptionist  needed  for  small  Salon/ 
Day  Spa  phones  and  light  office  work. 

please  call  Julia  (310)  474-2524 

, 2041  westwood  blvd. 


DRIVER  NEEDED.  3hours  Tuesday  Wed- 
nesday Thursday  One  Stop  Wesfiood  to 
Santa  Monica.  $1&/hr.  310-476-8401. 

DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED  Full- 
time  or  part-time.  Westwood  driving  and  traf- 
Jcjchool.   Call  for  intomiation.   310-824- 


CLERICAL/CUSTOMER 
SERVICE 

M-F,  F/T  pemianenl.  Good  phone  and  Eng- 
lish skills,  detail-oriented,  reliable  WLA  S9- 
SlCVhr   310-826-3759ext229. 

CLERK  TYPIST/RECEPTIONIST  Manage 
small  riwdical  research  group.  Good  com- 
mumcation/writing  skills,  word-processing 
Windows  95.  up  to  20/hours,  weekday-morn- 
ings. Starling-$8.00/hr.  Westwood  310-826- 


DIJNDEAL.NET  $15/hr,  PfT.Fn  now  seeking 
CO  lege  students  to  take  surveys  on  the  inter- 
net! Get  paid  lor  your  opinion!  Wort<  from  any 


CLERK.  P/T.  Pleasant  Century  City  Enoi- 
^iS^  '^'""  ^^^  Perfecttonist  with  typi^ 
state  for  general  office  duties.  Must  absolut^ 

OK^^"'""*®"'^  *"^o"f  '°  start.  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2437. 


CLINICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
^       SUPERVISOR 

FT  position  imriiediately  available  lor  a  li- 

caMaboratory  in  Santa  Monica.  Lab  provides 
endocrine,  androtogy,  serotogy  and  Immu- 
notogy  testing  Incumbent  required  to  wort^ 
in  weekend  rotations.  Salary  commensurate 
with  qualifications  and  experience.  Submit 
appbcauons  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 
Technology  Laboratories,  1245  16th  Street 

IS-UJiot""  ''°""''  ''''  ^"^  '^^ 

COACHES  NEEDED   " 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 


EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
fl;  "®«^«1    Catenng  sales.  Make  up  to 

310^'^3^S^'  "^  ^'"-"^  -^^  ^^"  t'^-^ 

PirKUP^t'P^''   '^"'^^"  DEEDED   FOR 
KICKUP  of  teenager  from  UNI  High  to  HoMv- 

^^rwiJ^Njckels  canyon.  3pm««ays/J!i:. 

m  or  P/T  Chlwren's  retail  store.  Hours;  sat 

'i^'lTL^:.'°'^^^  °"  Santa  Monica 
Blvd  In  Westwood.  310-234-9554. 

^^Stofrceasst' 

For  dynamic  property  management  firm 
Must  have  car.  be  or^aniied,  and  reliable 
^I^Q^^S"'^  310^70-6755  or  cal:3ia470^ 

FEMALE  ATTENDANT 

10  HOURSWK:$lQ^r;10min8  UCLA  Help 
disabled  woriwn  with  laundry,  shopping 
medical  appointments  and  misc.  errands' 
Must  have  car.  Call:3i0-828^686. 

FINE  JEWELRY  STORE  In  Westwood  Vil- 
lage needs  P/T  sales.  Computer  Fifer- 
ate,friendly.cheerful.  Walking  distance  to 
canipus,  310-824-5036,liam-6pm  Fax  re- 
suriie  310-824-2738.  Emall:gracejewel©hot- 
mail.com. 


CARING  INDIVIDUALS  URGENTLY  needed 

^^T,!^"^  *  ^^^^  ^  'ABA,  a  leader 
in  the  field  on  non-aversice  behavior  oianaa- 
ment  IS  seeking  Employment  Specialists  to 
assist  adults  devetopmentally  challenged  in 
an  employment  setting  and  in  the  communi- 
ty IAEA  provides  paid  training  and  advance- 
ment opportunities.  WOrt(  from  8:30am  to 
i^T  t  '"  ^"^*  ^"'S.  M-F37.5hrs/wk 
EligOle  (or  medical/denial.  40 IK  and  paid 
ime  off.  Competitive  wages*supplemenfal 
tenure  pay  Related  experience  or  BA  in  Psy- 
t^''  Preferred  Email  your  resume  to  ro- 
kelly«iaba.com  or  call  idl  free  877-924- 
2220.     For    more     info    visit     lABA    at 
www.iaba.com 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

wfo"l!l*^^J°*"  available  at  Cooperage 
we  wort(  with  your  schedule,  l/2-o((  meals 
mngmnt  training  opptnty,  Call  31 0-206-074o' 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Cooperage  We 
wort<  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  riieals  man- 
agement training  opportunity.  Call:310-206- 

cSj^nIe'lor    ^ss's^^'^T'Childcare 

««"Ih!^^"^  ASSISTANT  SAURY    $7  03- 

rnf.^crAl*^'     ''*"®'*"'      CHILDCARE 
i^°4!!^SELOR  SALARY:  $8  65- 

$11.90mr+pariial  benefits  Under  general  su- 
perviston,  plans,  implements  recreattonal 
®  «*  "  c  a  t  i  o  n  a  : 
it'!!*'^!!!  ^**'^"®*  '°^  5- '2  year  oMs.  such 
Z^^  «"^  crafts,  Learning  groups,  outdoor 
games  and  playing  intramural  sports  RE- 
Sli^E-llf  NTS  FOR  CHILDCA^  ASS"I- 
J^.^^^.^^'  Graduation;  enrollment  in 
^Itege  preferred.  Six  months  paki  recreatkx, 
wort(  experience  (amonltis  d  volunteer  ex- 
perience m  a  chKdcare  program  can  be  sub- 
p2^,  u  .^rr»  '^  »»«  experienc*. 

M?^c*^^o  5"y  ««PP»icatton.  REOUIRE- 
n^  '^°"  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR 
C'Ompletion  of  one  year  o(  college  riiajorino 
jn  Recreetton,  Education  or  X^*^^ 
Must  have  12  units  In  Earty  ChlWhood  Edu- 
r^n°"  1"^  3  addittonal  units  in  Administra- 
twn  or  Staff  Relattons  One-year  part<  recrea- 
tion wort«  experience  Proof  of  one  year  col- 
«2!  f  "^/^""f'*!  "nits  must  be  submitted 
^ro^a  City  applKation.  Call  310-550^265 


2000-2001  school  year  Girts  Soccer  Varsi- 
ty and  JV  Lacrosse.  JV  Boys  Basketball 
Paid  positions.  310-391-7127.  Call  Nate  ext 
247  tor  boys'  posittons.  Call  Gail  ext  248  for 
girls'  positions. 

COACHES  NEEDED!  Girls  Varsity 
Basketball  and  Girts  Freshman  Basketball 
TeaiTi.  Starts  Nov  Ist-mid  Feb.  P/T  5  days  a 
week^  Freshman  hours:  3-4:30pm  every^y 
Vansty  hours:  4:30-6:30.  Prevtous 
Expenence  Necessary.  Able  to  coach  HS 
li'L/«  '"^^  $2000/season.  Freshman 
5^2CKVseason    Contact  Maureen  323-461- 

^^'l^^^^"  ^^  IfcNDANT.  the  best  stud- 
ent  ,0b.  You  must  be  responsible,  reliable 
expenence  a  plus.  Dunons  11975  San  Vi- 
cente. 

COMMUNICATION  COMPANY  seeks  busi- 

2^1^^'"^^.'°,  '^'^  ^^  Experience  In  re- 
search and  business  plan  writing.  Pay  neqo- 
twbte.  Contact  Jason.  310-551-2292 

COMMUNICATIONS/MARKETING  STUD- 
ENT needed  to  nwrtcet  and  promote  an  up- 
scale optometric  practice.  Leave  message  at 
310-418-2020  and  lax  resuriie  to  310-271- 
3959. 


FLORIST  SEEKING 

PT  sales,  phone  assistant.  Sioiple  typ- 
ing/administratton  skills  helpful.  Flexible 
hours/fun  environment.  Call  Monk»  323- 
852-0848. 


COMPUTER  and  LAN  coordinator  (or  UCLA 
dept,  P/T.  Windows  NT  exchange  server  Of- 
fice software  experience  required  'io- 
20hrsA«k.  $l6-2ahr.  Respond  to  jobs©sum- 
mer.ucla.edu 


FRONT  DESK 
M  ^^^CEPTIONIST 

Needed  tor  private  health  ckib.  Peonanent 
^ours  available.  Health  insurance  offered 
Please  ask  tor  Allison:310-659-5002 

^^^J^^  ^"'^^'^  ^^  P°5*°"'  Short 
shifts,  some  nightsAweekends  in  small  exer- 
cise studio  Must  be  friendly  outgoing,  com- 
puter  literato  and  have  dynamic  per«^|ity 
10-15hfa^»k.  Kim  310-393-6399.  ^' 

^jP^^oF^icTwoRiri^iri;;^;;^ 

s>anta  Monica  company.   Need  car   Non- 
smoker.  Fax  resume  to  310-845-9691. 


.  ^      GEOGRAPHY 

Ftood  certifKation  company  near  LAX 
has  immediate  openings  for  riwp  re- 
searchere.  Part-time  and  Full-tiriw.  Must 
be  riiap  profkaeni,  detail-oriented  and 
possess  basic  computer  skills.  Geogra- 
phy background  is  prelerred.  Will  train 
Interested  candkJates  (ax  resume  310- 
348-9022  anen:  Productton  Department 


COOL  LADY  seeks  driver  (or  occask)nal  er- 
rands. Ovwi  car  required  $7/HR  310-826- 
9150. 


CSO  PROGRAMS  NOW 

_  HIRING  FOR  FALL 

tVn^.!"^  9®'  p*'*^  ^^y  woo  to 

510.26/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/l+ 
academic  years  renwining  with  valW  driver's 
w»nse  Web  wwwucpd.ucia  edu/ucpd/cso 
Email:  cso©ucpd.ucla.edu  Phone  310- 
825-2148. 

'^  DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  is  Wring  van  driv- 
er*. Looking  lof  energetk:,  unstoppable 
posltf/e  crew  Immediately.  FlexUe  hours' 
busy  weekends.  Apply  m  person  M-Sat  till 
6pm  Appty  at  937  Westwood.  310-206-1180 


Dt'siyr,   F.ishion  & 
Merchandising  Student  Alert 


.  ^  BEVERLY  Hills  Parking  Attendants 
needed  $9  ii/hr.  Morning  and  Evening 
shrfts  available.  Seasonal  Positions  starting 
November  16,  2000  to  January  5  2001  AM 
Shifts  available.  Apply  Now!!!  Dept  of  Trans- 
portation 455  N  Rexford  Dr ,  Room  130  Ap- 
pty m  person.  310-285-2552. 


Great  job  waits  for  you  in  busy  retail 
establishment.  Looking  for  outgoing 
salespeople  with  interest  in  clothing 

to  work  in  young,  hip,  new  store 

Good  salary,  great  perf<8,  bonuses,  & 

more.  Must  have  some  retail 

experience. 

Full  A  part  tinne  positions  available 

CafI  Jessica  or  Erica  O  310-230-6085 

or  fax  resume  to  31 0-230-4536 


G^^RLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  clubs  in 
WLA.  Conversatton  only.  No  akx)hol.  Flexi- 
t)le  hours.  Earn  top  $$$  323-441 -OflRi^ 

GREAT  OPPORTUNITY 

Assistant  M-F  2-3A,rs  afternoons.  Exdtina 
growing  company  seeks  detail-oriented' 
shaip  individual  who  likes  atot  of  responsibll- 
ity.  Can  Mona  Andrews  310-278-3349. 

Sfri^p*  1^1  PROMOTIONS  REPRE- 
SENTAT1VE.  Film  advertising  Call  retail 
Stores  tor  upcoming  releases.  Coordinate 

T^I^T  ^:if^««'"-12P^  or  12:30pm. 
4.30pm-ftex  $10i/hr-»bonu8.  310-566-2555. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
*Beks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 

i^.2[^JL***"*f*"'^'*^*  ''""  t*™.  excellenl 
Italian  written  «  vertMl  skills  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  lo  John 
Sl:.*c^"     3"-«53-l76fl-jspattersoriOli. 

INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Receplionisf  Entry  level  position.  Itali- 
an a  plus.   $9/hr-30hrsAvk  MIN    F/T  pre- 

.^n^V  °'  ®'™*'  '^^"^  •»  Jof'n  Pattor- 
son  323-653-1768.  ispattersoriOpginc  com 

INTERNET  ENTERTAINMENT  COMPANY 

Japanese.Korean  or  ChinaM.  Pay  based  on 
experfence.  Fax  resumes:  323-993-0810 

LAW  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  BeveriyHUtt  P/T 
(Tues-Thurs.  1.4pm).  File  Clert^ADfftee  Sup- 
R£2J*;-*E««.  L«gal  flung  sMte.  bcoZ- 
W«|  ortiniwton.  and  oompuiar  Maiaie. 
■^noNgw  firni  axparianca  prelarrad.  Com- 

•nd  niariqou  to  310-206.8081 . 


.  t 


\ 


DaHy  Bruin  Oassjfied 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000       41 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


LAW  OFFICE  ENVIRONMENT  Excellent 
opportunity.  Clert<  positions  available.  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Minimum  20hrs/wk,  $7/hr.  Fax  re- 
sume and  proposed  available  hours  to  Hu- 
man Resources  Dept  310-2742798  or  Mall 
to:  Lurie,  Zepeda,  Schmalz  &  Hogan  9107 
Wilshire  Blvd.,  Suite  800,  Beverty  Hills  CA 
90210. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


LIBRARY  JOBS  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties.  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Antigone  Kutay 
310-825-1084. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  North  Campus 
We  wort<  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity  Call:310- 
206-0720. 


MEN  AGES  18-24  (or  nude  modeling  (or 
magazines  and  (ine  art.  Call  310-289-8941, 
days. 


LOVE  CUTE  DOGS? 

SEEKING  CARING,  responsible,  non-snrok- 
er  to  dog  sit  evenings/weekends.  Must  have 
own  car  and  experience.  Please  call  310- 
459-7631 


MODELS  WANTED  by  professtonal  photo- 
studio  for  upcoming  assignment.  Male/Fe- 
male Pro/Non-Pro.  Fashion/Commer- 
cial/Theatrlcal.  Call  (or  appointment  818- 
986-7933. 


M.  FREDRIC 

Fashion  fonvard  confipany  tooking  for  erwr- 
getk;  people  to  fill  sales  and  management 
positions.  Call  Tory  818-597-0212  ext  114. 

MEDICAL  BILLING  SUPERVISOR  WANT- 
ED by  dynamic.  DME  &  Rehab  dealer.  Ex- 
pertise with  Medkare,  MediCal  &  Insurance 
required.  Experience  with  Team  DME  Soft- 
ware a  big  plus.  Part-time  leading  qurckly  to 
full-time.  Houriy  compensatton  comriiensu- 
rate  with  experience.  Fax  resume  to  310- 
575-1505. 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  drive&wort(  w/2  lun&gifted  kids  ages  5&7. 
Perfect  schedule  for  student.  Must  have  car 
P/T  pemianent.  Excellent  salary.  Judy  310- 
551-1145 


MUSIC  MARKETING  company  seeks  Full- 
Time  online  riiariteting  assistant.  Entry-level 
position  assisting  online  nviriteting  division 
geared  towards  ttw  entertainment  company 
Must  have  excellent  computer  skills/knowl- 
edge o(  the  Internet.  Call  Rob  M  323-930- 
3141  for  more  into  or  visit  www.noizepotlu- 
tton.com 


MEDICAL 

UPSCALE  OPTOMETRIC  PRACTICE  seeks 
t/t-p/t  experienced,  high-energy,  arteulate 
individuals.  Front -olfk»/back-o«k;e.  Please 
leave  message:31 0-4 18-2020  And  fax 
resunw:310-271  -3959. 


NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  LuValle  Com- 
nfwns.  We  wort<  with  your  schedule,  1/2  ol 
meals,  managemeni  trainir>g  opportunity 
Call:310-825-1177 


OFFK:e  ASSISTANT  for  general  nillng,  bill- 
ing insurance,  invoicing,  troubleshooting 
bills,  and  entering  data  into  Quicken  and 
Quickbooks.  iday  a  week  Monday-Thurs. 
day  MUST  have  references  and  prefferable 
some  experience.  310-471.3604 

OFFICE  HELP 

Established  Brentwood  computer  co  needs 
help  with  MS  Word,  phones,  eriwil.  clerical 
stult  Flexible  hours:  great  (or  students;  learn 
the  biz!  Email  resume  to  jkenne. 
dyOant91.com 

OFFICE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CE0. 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company.West. 
wood.  10am-2pnVFull-time,  llexible  hours. 
Need:excellent  telephone  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admin/comp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
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8000 

Internships 


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SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST  Small  WLA 
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INTERNS  WANTED 

FT/PT  positions  avail  (or  students  at  presti- 
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POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
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42       Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


r  ('r*  V  .-■••-    ■   ■>     . 


W.  VOLLEYBALL 

From  page  45 

bers  of  the  team  themselves. 
Consistency,  a  strong  start,  and 
everyone  working  together  are  the 
main  objectives  of  this  weekend's 
match.  These  are  the  objectives  in 
any  athletic  outing,  but  they  are 
ones  that  the  Bruins  have  struggled 
with  so  far  this  season. 

Paradoxically,  the  Bruins  are  just 
third  in  the  conference  but  sport 
many  of  the  league-leaders  in  statis- 
tics. 

Kristee  Porter  leads  the  confer- 
ence with  5.89  kills  per  game, 
Bachman  with  1.44  blocks  and 
Lauren  Fendrick  with  .53  aces. 
Erika  Selsor  is  second  in  assists  with 
14.19.  With  these  numbers,  the 
Bruins  have  all  the  weapons  they 
should  need. 

The  explanation  for  their  5-2  con- 
ference record  lies  in  the  tough  com- 


petition they  must  face.  With 
Arizona  climbing  the  polls  to  No.  6, 
the  Bruins  play  another  top- 10  team 
for  the  second  week  in  a  row. 

Arizona  is  on  a  14-match  winning 
streak,  only  losing  to  UC  Santa 
Barbara  in  its  season  opener.  The 
Wildcats  lead  the  league  in  kills  with 
18.43  per  game.  With  players  such 
as  Marisa  DaLee  and  Stefani 
Saragosa,  who  rank  first  (.471)  and 
fourth  (.382),  respectively,  in  league 
hitting  percentage,  on  the  other  side 
of  the  net,  the  Bruins  have  their 
work  cut  out  for  them  tonight. 

But  they've  been  successful  in 
McKale  Center  before.  With  an  all- 
time  record  of  39-7  against  Arizona, 
including  a  15-5  record  in  Tucson, 
UCLA  holds  an  advantage. 

"U  of  A  is  always  a  fun  match," 
Porter  said.  "I  look  forward  to  that 
match."  . 

But  despite  the  fun  the  Bruins  will 
have  on  the  court,  the  match  is  one 
they  must  win. 


FOSTER 

From  page  52 

belong  to  Foster.  "I've  talked  to  many 
of  the  people  involved,  and  have  no 
reason  not  to  believe  that  DeShaun  is 
not  telling  the  truth. 

"Supposedly  the  guy  has  even  paid 
DeShaun  back." 

In  the  past  two  years,  safety  Audie 
Attar  and  running  back  Jermaine 
Lewis  have  been  suspended  for  get- 
ting into  a  fight. 

Last  season,  UCLA  suspended  14 
players  two  games  each  for  their 
involvement  in  the  disabled  parking 


placard  scandal. 

According  to  Toledo,  the  general ' 
rule  is  that  if  you  get  your  name  in  a 
police  report,  you  will  be  suspended 
at  least  one  game. 

"My  piayen  know.  If  you  get  a 
felony,  you're  out  of  here.  If  you  get  in 
a  fight,  you're  suspended  for  at  least 
one  game.  If  you  steal  from  one 
another,  you're  gone,"  Toledo  said. 

"I  chose  not  to  suspend  DeShaun 
because  I  believe  that  it  was  not  his 
marijuana." 

Foster  told  Toledo  about  the  situa- 
tion in  August,  a  week  before  the  first 
game  of  the  season  on  Sept.  2  against 
Alabama. 


Rumors  of  an  arrest  surfaced  in  ah 
Orange  County  Register  report  on 
Aug.  26.  Foster  denied  the  arrest,  but 
did  not  disclose  the  information 
about  the  citation. 

Toledo  said  that  Foster  did  not 
want  to  bring  negative  attention  to 
himselfor  the  team. 

Foster's  parents  came  to 
Westwood  to  confront  DeShaun 
when  they  heard  about  the  incident. 

Foster  apologized  to  the  team  after 
Wednesday's  practice.' 

He  is  out  of  action  for  at  least  two 
more  weeks  with  a  broken  hand  sus- 
tained against  Arizona  State  on 
Sept.  30.       ,  ,    ,-..,:.  . 


BASEBALL 

From  page  49 

June  29  at  Detroit. 

Seattle's  bullpen  got  blown  apart, 
wasting  six  shutout  innings  by  starter 
John  Halama. 

David  Justice,  visibly  angered 
when  umpires  ruled  he  didn't  check 
his  swing  on  a  1-1  pitch,  started  the 
big  inning  with  a  double  to  left-center 
that  hit  less  than  a  foot  from  the  top 
of  the  wall. 

Williams  slapped  a  single  to  center 
off  Arthur  Rhodes  and  Tino 
Martinez  followed  with  a  sinking 
liner  to  left  that  bounced  off  the  glove 
of  a  diving  Al  Martin  for  a  single  that 
allowed  Williams  to  take  second. 

Jorge  Posada  then  hit  a  smash  that 
rolled  off  the  glove  of  a  diving  Mark 


McLemore  in  the  hole  between  first 
and  second,  bounding  into  left  field 
as  Williams  scored.  It  was  the  first 
;  time  in  15  games,  since  Sept.  23  at 
Detroit,  that  four  straight  Yankees 
got  hits. 

Slumping  Paul  O'Neill,  dropped 
to  seventh  in  the  batting  order,  fol- 
lowed with  a  sacrifice  fiy  to  left  that 
made  it  3-1,  and  that  was  it  for 
Rhodes,  who  was  replaced  by  Jose 
Mesa. 

Luis  Sojo  singled  to  put  runners 
on  first  and  third,  and  Posada  was 
thrown  out  at  third,  apparently  as 
Jose  Vizcaino  missed  a  bunt  single. 
Vizcaino  then  doubled  in  Sojo, 
Chuck  Knoblauch  singled  home 
Vizcaino,  and  Derek  Jeter  followed 
with  a  two-run  homer  into  the  right- 
field  seats. 

Halama  had  allowed  just  five  hits. 


DRUGS 

Fro{npage48 

Lausanne,  Switzerland. 

If  found  guilty  of  drug  offenses, 
they  face  being  disqualified  from 
the  games,  and  the  Olympic  cham- 
pion would  lose  his  gold  medal. 

One  of  the  wrestlers  is  believed 
to  have  tested  positive  for  the 
steroid  nandrolone,  and  the  other 
for  a  weight-loss  diuretic. 

Michel  Dusson,  secretary  gener- 
al of  the  international  wrestling 
federation,  declined  to  comment, 
saying  the  cases  were  being  han- 
dled by  the  IOC. 

The  positive  test  results  were 
confirmed  the  day  after  the  games 
ended. 

While  the  IOC  medical  commis- 
sion usually  judges  drug  cases  with- 
in a  few  days,  it  put  off  action 
because  the  athletes  had  already 
left  Australia  and  were  not  avail- 
able for  a  hearing. 

IOC  medical  director  Patrick 
Schamasch,  who  declined  to  dis- 
cuss the  details  of  the  cases,  said 


the  athletes'  backup  "B"  samples 
have  been  tested. 

During  the  Olympics,  the  med- 
ical commission  makes  recommen- 
dations on  drug  cases  to  the  ruling 
IOC  executive  board,  which 
announces  sanctions. 


The  1 1  positives  are 

the  most  at  the 

Olympics  since  1 2 

were  recorded  at  the 

1984  Los  Angeles 

Games. 


After  Monday's  hearing,  the 
medical  commission  will  submit  its 
recommendation  to  IOC  president 
Juan  Antonio  Samaranch, 
Schamasch  said. 

Instead  of  waiting  for  the  next 
meeting  of  the  executive  board  in 
December,      Samaranch       may 


arrange  a  conference  call  with 
board  members  to  make  an  imrae^ 
diate  decision,  Schamasch  said. 

The  two  cases  bring  to  II  the 
number  of  positive  tests  reported 
by  the  IOC  during  the  Sydney 
Games  -  nine  from  in-competition 
drug  cQntrols  and  two  from  out-of- 
competition  screening. 

The  1 1  positives  are  the  most  at 
the  Olympics  since  12  were  record- 
ed at  the  1984  Los  Angeles  Games. 
Five  athletes  were  stripped  of 
medals  in  Sydney,  including  two 
gold  medalists. 

Roamanian  gymnast  Andreea 
Raducan  lost  her  all-around  gold 
after  testing  positive  for  pscu- 
doephedrine,  apparently  from  cold 
pills,  while  Bulgarian  women's 
weightlifter  Izabela  Dragneva  had 
her  gold  taken  away  after  her  urine 
sample  showed  traces  of 
furosemide,  a  banned  diuretic. 

Two         men's  Bulgarian 

weightlifters  lost  silver  and  bronze 
medals  after  testing  positive  for 
furosemide.  and  an  Armenian 
weightlifter  was  stripped  of  a 
bronze  for  nandrolone. 


8000 

Internships 


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P/R  Flexible  hours.  Golden  opportunity  to 
leam  the  ropes.  Call  us  immediately  at  323- 
692-9999  Ex.13.  Ask  for  Rebecca. 


8^00 

Apartfiients  for  Rent 


1  MIN  TO  UCLA 

WESTWOOD.  Furnished.  Single: 

$850/montfi.  Carpeted.  Gated  complex 
Quiet.  Pod.  Laundry,  lyr  lease.  310-824- 
1830. 


8^00 

Apartments  for  Rent 


PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $576,  $600deposit 
1 -year  lease  only  Stove,  rafrig, carpets  vert 
blinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message.  8am- 
5pm  only. 


9300  ■  9500 

Room  for  Help   ■     Roommates-Private  Room 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  U2BEDROOM 
$895AUP.  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM. 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS.  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS 
310-839-6294. 


BRAND  NEW  BUILDING  3bdrm/3bth,  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdmV3bth,  $2950.  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alarm,  gated  parking 
Spacious,  carpet.  Prime  location!  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 


Santa  Monica  1bd/1bth,  living  room,  parting 
space,  storage,  kitchen  w/oven  &  refrldg 
$110(Vmo.  Zay  818-695-0497. 

SPECTACULAR  OCEAN  VIEW.  Ibdrm,  up- 
per Hardwood  fkwrs,  2  btocks  from  Main 
St.*  beach  2627  3rd  St  #4.  Santa  Monica 
$1700.310-899-9580. 


FREE  PRIVATE  ROOM+BATH  Single  father 
needs  mature  student  for  p/t  f>elp  with  4-yr- 
oW  twins.  20hrs/wk,  must  own  car+in- 
surance.  310-838-5720,  jahanOmedi- 
aorte.net. 


81 OO 

Personal  Assistance 


PHYSICAL 
ASSISTANCE  NEEDED 

For  disabled  riwle  in  Reiber  Hall.  A  few 
hrs/day  Flexible  shedufe.  $10/hr.  Call  Alex 
949-369-9871  or  310-267-8189. 


housing 

8400-9800 


Ap;mmf;iits  for  Rent 


BRENTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

Luxury  buiWing,  pod,  parking,  gated  entry, 
laundry,  one  and  two  bedrooms  from 
$1500/month.  310-312-1223. 

BRENTWOOD 

North  of  WIshire,  spacious  3BD/2Bafh,  w/ 
separate  patkj.  New  dishwasher,  refrigerator, 
stove,  etc.  Quiet  8-unit  bWg.  w/  garden  sun- 
deck.  $2300.  11921  Goshen  Ave.  #1.  Open 
Sat/Sun  or  by  appt.  310-571-0293. 

FREE  RENTAL  SERVICE.  WesisMe  .  1  and 
2bdrm  available.  CaN  The  Roberts  ComiM- 
ntes.  310-829-1700. 

LOOKING  FOR  A  PLACE  TO  LIVE? 
www.housing  1 01  net. . .  Yoof  move  dl  cam- 
pusl  Search  for  summer  subMs. 

ONE  BLOCK  TO 
CAMPUS 

2txJrm  suite  Hardwood,  prhnte  patto,  one 
parking,  walk  to  UCLA  $1350.  10966 
Roebling  Ave.  310-206-4253  or  310-824- 
2505. 


WALK  TO  UCLA.  WESTWOOD.  Large  U1, 
2-^2.  Pod,  jacuzTi,  walk-in  ctosets,  fireplace! 
fuH-kitchen,  gated  garage,  instant  broadband 
avail,  www.keltontowers.com.  310-208- 
1976. 


WESTWOOD/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2bdmV1bth  Large,  laundry  enctosed 
garage,  balcony,  large  ctosets,  near  buses. 
Winds.  Charming,  bright,  quiet  buiWing.  3io- 
474-1172. 


8600 

Coinlf)/Towntioiise  for  RfMit 


BRENTWOOD  1BDRM/2BTH,  security 
buikJing/garage,  sunny  w/v»ew,  pod/Jacuzzi, 
suana/gym.  large  ctosett.  vacant  11/5.  lease 
$1275ftno.  310^71-1335. 


8700 

(>)n(l()/T()wnli()(is(;  (or  Sale 


IMAGINE  OWNING  WILSHIRE  Con«0f/Hi- 
Rlsa  single,  10f2bdfm  $75K-$150K.  WSIk  lo- 
UCLA/Vlllage,  24hr/secur1ty.  Spectacular 
views,  pod,  Jacuzzi,  sauna,  valet  servtee 
Agent-Bob  310-478-l835ext  109 


FREE  ROOM 
AND  BOARD 

In  exchange  for  babysitting  11-year-dd  girl 
approximately  10  hours/week.  Century  City 
area.  Females  only.  310-277-8480  (even- 
ings). 


9400 

f^ooiii  for  Rent 


MV  Shared  2+1  garden  apartment.  Quiet, 
safe  4-plex,  off  the  Main  St.  DSL  access. 
$500/month,  utilities  induded.  Call  Pamela 
310-915-5052. 


MELROSE  AREA  Large  unfurnished  bdmi^ 
private  bthrm, private  entrance  in  fully  fur- 
nished house    Laundry   Male/feniale  okay. 
$700/mo  ulilities&mak)  Included.  Available- 
Decl.  310-289-2129. 

OWN  BED  AND  BATH  in  bright  and  upper 
Brentwood  apt  High  ceiling,  bateony.  non- 
smoker,  love  cats,  street  parking.  $658/mo. 
310-820-9660. 

Quiet,  responsible  roommate  tor  private 
space  In  back  d  Ixxjse.  Non-smoker,  share 
utiHzes.  Avail/Nov  1,  $55a/month+1  month 
deposit.  Calf  Warren  310-737-9120 

ROOMMATE  NEEDED  3BD/2Ba  Santa  Mo- 
ntoa  apartment.  Near  beach.  Promenade, 
Montana  Batoony,  laundry,  fireplace  Profes- 
sional/grad  student,  $860/month  Contad 
NowtekieOhotmail.com  or  646-215-3433. 


NEAR  WESTWOOD.  Beautiful,  sunny  room 
tor  rent  Nov/Dec.  $500/mo-futiltties  females 
prefened  Please  call  Katie  510-326-6809  or 
310-559-0185. 


PRIVATE  ROOM  In  large  Palisades  home. 
Minutes  from  beach.  FuMy  furnished.  Kitch- 
en/laundry/parking privileges.  $750/nf>o.  Utili- 
ties/cable included.  Non-smoker/no  pets 
310-454-5331-Renata. 


PALMS  IBDRMmATH.  $895MK>n(h.  Newly- 
painted,  two  gated  parking  spots,  mieroom. 
Jacuzzi.  Ctose  to  UCLA  Bus.  Kay  310-842- 
9127. 


8^00 

Apartments  for  Rr.Mit 


Wtttwood  Condo  Penthouse 

by  owner,  tow  rtse  batow  mwkei  value. 

3br  4  dm.  Ovw  2000  sq.  ft.  $450,000 
310-502-3936  or  818-990-3273 


AskforBtn 


ROOM  in  large  Beveity  HMs  house,  grad 
student  preferred.  Kitehen  privileges,  wash- 
er/dryer, pod.  needs  car.  CaN  Abby  310-275- 
3831  or  818-783-5151. 

WESTWOO.  Walk  to  UCLA.  Male-Only 
Large,  private  furnished  bdrm  w/bath. 
Kitchen  privileges,  laundry,  partdng. 
$700/month.  Another  room  $60(Vmonth 
310-473-5789. 


9500 

Roommalcs-Priviilt.'  R(j()m 


SANTAMONCA.  Master  bedroom  suite  in 
spacious  townhouse  w/kitchen,  laundry, 
partdng.  Near  Blue  Une.  $700/mo  indudes 
utiWIes  (2  share  $95<ymo).  310-450-5082. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt.  Fun,  outgoing 
female  tooking  for  female  roommate!  Own 
bed^th  in  2bdrm/2bth  apartment,  gated 
parking,  jacuzzi  on  roof,  security  buikflng. 
Available  1/01.  ISOCVIfno.  310-209-2665. 


9600 

Roommates- Shared  Room 


MAR  VISTA.  Roommate  wanted,  rrwile. 
Large  2bdrm  apt.  FuHy  furnished.  914  SM 
Bus  line.  $300/mo.  310-435-4524. 

WESTWOOD.  Kelton  Ave.  2*\.  Hardwood 
floors,  large  bedroom,  living,  kitohen. 
$450/mo.  Wen  furnished.  SmoWng  OK.  310- 
443-9585. 

WESTWOOD:  gorgeous  WHshira  ■partment 
10  mkHMes  from  UCLA.  Huge  bednxxn  to 
share  in  2tK.  apartment.  Available  nowl  Call 
310-234-8627. 


WALK  TO  UCLA 

mv\fMAf,keltonioy\fers,  com 


8900 

Hdiisr!  tot  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJACENT.  2bdmV2bth 
f»me.  yard,  unfurnished,  hardwood  ftoors. 
Ref.  req  Approx.  $1600/mo.  310-271-0626. 

SANTA  MONK:a  -2bd/lbth  Cooler,  2  part<- 
ihQ  spaces  +  storage  Breakfast  room 
Klk*ian  w/  oven.refridg.  $^^00flno.  Zay  818- 


A8IAN/0UIET/CLEAN/MALE.  Bus  In  front 
houaa,  Westwood/Pkx)  3-mo.  min  atiy.  Re- 
qulrad  2  good  references.  Private  badroom 
•harabaft.  KSO/mortt\,  share  be<lt)ath  In- 
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OlilyBniin  Sports 


Thunday,  October  12,2000       43 


Come  and  Join 


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one  (^  the  Qij^ilatkm  sesskms  in  A::Xse777xm  ^^ 
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Paid  for  by  USAC 


<4       Thursday.  October  12. 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


OPPONENT 

From  page  51.  „ 

the  leaders  or  the  team. 

"You  can  tell  he  directs  the  players, 
like  a  point  guard  does  in  basketball. 
He's  the  one  telling  them  where  to  go, 
what  to  do."  Krikorian  said. 

Last  week  he  earned  MPSF  Player 
of  the  Week  honors  -  the  second  in  his 
career  -  when  he  scored  the  winning 
goal  to  lead  his  team  to  a  9-8  upset  of 
then-No.  1  USC. 

This  week,  he's  focusing  on  the 
Saturday  game  against  the  now-No.  I 
Bruins. 


*I  defmitely  think  that  UCLA  right 
.now  is  the  best  team  in  the  nation,"  he 
;«aid.  "They're  ranked  No.  I,  but  it's 
not  just  about  the  rankings,  it's  about 
the  way  they  play  together.  They're  a 
very,  very  experienced  team  with  a  lot 
of  maturity." 

The  Bruins  have  the  same  respect 
for  Hazor's  abilities. 

"Coaching  against  him,  you  know 
he's  going  to  give  100  percent," 
Krikorian  said.  "He  has  a  strong, 
powerful  outside  shot  that  can  be  a 
problem  for  us.**        ./ 

That's  because  of  Hazor's  determi- 
nation, according  to  his  coach. 

"I  think  he's  a  very  determined 


young  man  who  took  the  risk  upon 
himself  to  come  all  the  way  over  here 
to  attend  a  school  and  play  in  a  pro- 
gram," Asch  said.  "He  had  confi- 
dence in  himself  as  an  individual." 

Majoring  in  business,  Hazor  has 
been  named  as  an  honorable  mention 
to  the  MPSF  All-Academic  team.  He 
also  was  accepted  to  Berkeley's  Hass 
School  of  Business. 

"He  worked  very  hard  academical- 
ly so  that  he  could  get  into  that,  but  he 
made  it  in,  which  is  not  easy,"  Asch 
said.  "He  showed  the  same  determi- 
nation in  academics  that  he  has  in  ath- 
letics." 

After  graduation,  Hazor  intends  to 


work  in  the  finance  industry,  hopeful- 
ly at  an  investment  bank.  Eventually 
he  plans  on  going  back  to  Israel. 

When  he  leaves  the  States,  though, 
he'll  take  with  him  all  the  memories  of 
Cal. 

"I  think  it's  a  great  experience,  per- 
sonally," he  said.  "First  of  all,  being 
an  athlete  in  college ...  in  terms  of  par- 
ticipating in  exciting  new  competi- 
tions, traveling,  seeing  different  parts 
of  America,  it's  a  great  opportunity. 

"I  don't  know  if  I'd  have  the 
opportunity  to  do  that  all  if  I  didn't 
play  water  polo." 

Hazor  has  also  had  some  pretty 
memorable  moments  in  the  pool. 


Like  losing  to  UCLA  12-9  in  ovce-; 
time  last  year  to  get  knocked  out  of 
contention  for  the  NCAA  Final  Four. 
In  all  his  years  at  Cal  the  Golden 
Bears  have  not  yet  made  it  to  the  Final 
Four. 

"Being  very  close,  having  the  feel- 
ing that  you  can  make  it  -  unfortu- 
nately, we  didn't,"  Hazor  said. 

"Hopefully  this  year. ..."  he  added,  -- 
and  his  voice  trailed  off. 

"That's  the  beauty  of  sports.  You 
can  never  know,  never  predict  what 
can  happen  in  any  given  day." 

No  more  than  you  can  predict  who 
will  show  up  on  your  doorstep  to  play 
water  polo. 


Or.  PatricR  Doyle,  O.D. 

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Daity  Bruin  Sports 


PERRY 

From  page  46 

cocky." 

Maybe  that's  why  Perry  had  trouble  fit- 
ting in  with  the  Southern  Cahfornia 
lifestyle. 

"Coming  down  here  has  been  very  dif- 
ferent," Perry  said.  "I  miss  the  weather  up 
north;  I  miss  being  able  to  breath." 

His  demeanor  simply  does  not  fit  into 
the  hustle-bustle,  impersonal  lifestyle  of 
Los  Angeles.  Perry  would  like  nothing 
more  than  to  be  able  to  have  a  quality  con- 
versation with  another  student  on  the  way 


Thur«by,  October  12, 2000        4S 


to  class. 

"It's  different  here,"  he  said.  "People 
don't  really  talk.  They  don't  seem  to  say  hi 
to  each  other  on  campus  as  much." 

Perhaps  someday  Perry  will  learn  to  fit 
into  the  Southern  California  lifestyle.  But 
let's  hope  not.  It  is  refreshing  to  find  so 
much  talent  hidden  behind  a  quiet, humble^ 
confident  young  man. 


This  weekend  the  young  man  returns 
home  to  family,  friends  and  high  school 
teammates.  What  will  be  the  best  part  of 
Perry's  trip  home? 

The  warm  bed?  His  mom's  lasagna?  Or 
maybe  a  couple  of  touchdowns  to  help  the 
Bruins  down  the  Bears  on  their  home  turf 


W.VOLLEYBAU. 

Ffompage52    .  /•■■    :  V     :      '^^^    - 

squad  they  will  face  in  "nicson. 

"We're  trying  to  get  ready  to  combat  Arizona's 
big  block,"  Banachowski  said. 

Having  been  out-blocked  15  to  9  and  out-dug  75 
~tD  68  in  their  match  against  the  Trojans.  UCLA  has 
been  focusing  on  defense  in  preparation  for  the 
weekend. 

"We've  been  working  on  defense  all  around  - 
looking  at  left  back,  right  back,  middle  back," 
Bachman  said.  "Alid  we  spent  a  lot  of  time  block- 
ing, making  sure  we're  closing  the  block  and  filling 
in  the  seams."      •:.■•..- 


"U  of  A  is  always^  fun  match;? 

:        Kristee  Porter 

UCLA  outside  hitter         y 


Up  against  a  defense  as  tough  as  the  Wildcats',  it 
is  vital  that  the  Bruins  execute  on  their  attack. 

"We  need  to  be  very  effective  with  our  offense 
spreading  them  out  and  making  sure  that  we're  cov- 
ering our  hitters;"  Banachowski  said. 

Beyond  the  attack  and  the  block  are  the  mem- 


See  W.  VOLLEYBALL,  page  42 


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46       Ihunday,  October  T2, 2000 


My  Bruin  Sforts 


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PERRY  ^>v:;;,;'^-;;|w^:- 

From  page  52       Vv  •      V^     1 ;. ,  •: 

were  times  when  1  wasn't  sure  I 
belonged  here." 

Thankfully  for  the  Bruins,  Perry 
was  able  to  settle  down  with  the  help  of 
veteran  Freddie  Mitchell. 

"Freddie  kind  of  took  me  under  his 
wing,"  Perry  said.  "He's  like  a  big 
brother  to  me." 

Mitchell,  who  has  seen  plenty  of 
freshmen  come  through  the  program, 
believes  Perry  is  one  of  the  few  who 
came  in  ready  to  play. 

"Most  freshman  need  a  year  to 


inatBrc."  Mitchell  said,  "iiut  he's 
ready  to  play  his  freshman  year." 

For  the  most  part  Perry  has  been 
used  as  a  return  specialist  and  a  third 
receiver.  He  provides  UCLA  with  a 
spark  on  special  teams.  In  high 
school  Perry  returned  one  punt  and 
three  kickoffs  for  touchdowns,  and 
found  time  after  football  to  compete 
in  both  soccer  and  baseball.  It  was  this 
athletic  ability  that  first  attracted 
UCLA  coaches  to  Milpitas  during  a 
game  against  Cal. 

Head  coach  Bob  Toledo  credits 
assistant  Ron  Caragher  with  discover- 
ing Perry.  After  that,  it  didn't  take 
long  to  convince  the  coaching  staff 


that  he  was  the  perfect  successor  to 
Freddie  Mitchell. 

"He's  got  the  capability  to  be  a  big 
play  guy,"  Toledo  said.  "He  has  great 
athletic  ability,  but  he's  playing  behind 
Freddie  Mitchell." 

When  Freddie  steps  down,  it'll  be 
his  turn  to  step  up. 

When  that  time  comes.  Perry  will 
be  the  reluctant  superstar. 

"I  kind  of  like  to  stay  in  the  shad- 
ows," he  said.  "In  the  Bay  Area  we're 
a  little  more  laid  back,  and  I  think  that 
suits  me  better." 

Perry  is  a  rarity  in  high  profile  col- 
lege sports.  He  is  a  blue  chip  freshman 
with  all  the  physical  tools  to  go  to  the 


next  level  In  many  programs  he 
would  be  starting,  rather  than  rotating 
with  Jon  Dubravac  and  playing  on 
special  teams.  Ask  Perry  about  play- 
ing time  and  he  shrugs. 

"I  try  to  help  out  where  I  can,"  he 
said.  "I  contribute  where  they  need 
me. 

Even  ask  him  about  the  possibility 
of  more  playing  time  in  front  of  the  50 
or  so  friends  and  family  members  who 
will  be  at  Memorial  Stadium,  and  he 
merely  smiles. 

"I  just  hope  I  get  a  chance  to  watch 
my  cousin  play  (while  I'm  home)," 
Perry  said  of  his  cousin,  Michael 
Collins  who  is  a  senior  at  Milpitas 


High  School 

His  teammates  may  rib  him  by  call- 
ing him  "Strawberry,"  but  perhaps 
there's  more  to  the  name  than  they 
might  know. 

Most  people  like  strawberries,  aod 
it's  hard  to  find  a  teammate  or  coach 
who  doesn't  like  Perry.  His  moves  on 
the  field  are  sweet,  and  he  seems  cetr 
tain  to  burst  out  at  any  time.  ~~ 

But  away  from  the  bright  lights  he  is 
just  Tab,  and  cool  kid  from  NorCal. 

"I  like  the  way  he  came  in  here,"  fel- 
low wide  out  Brian  Poli-Dixon  said. 
"He  came  ready  to  play,  but  he's  not 


See  PfMlY,  page  4S 


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First  practical 
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and  inductive 
reasoning  in 
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Lady  IMary 

Wortley 

Montagu 

Early  techniques 
for  immunization 
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Daily  Bniin  Sports 


CLUB  WATFR  PQLQ  BRIgPS 

Water  polo  wins 


Thunday,  October  12,2000       47 


season  openers 

Last  Sunday,  the  UCLA  men's 
club  water  polo  team.  No.  3  in  the 
national  collegiate  club  polls,  won  its 
first  two  games  of  the  season. 

Against  Cal  Maritime,  UCLA  got 
an  early  lead  that  it  maintained  for  the 
rest  of  the  game.  Cal  Maritime  staged 
a  small  comeback  in  the  third  quarter, 
narrowing  the  deficit  to  three,  but  the 
Bruins  were  able  to  hold  on  for  a  12-8 
victory.       .,     ,,  .; 


In  the  second  game  against  Cal 
Tech,  the  game  was  close  for  the  first 
quarter  and  a  half,  but  a  defensive 
shift  in  the  second  half  allowed  the 
Bruins  to  blow  the  game  wide  open 
and  run  to  a  16-7  win.  \- 

The  Bruins'  leading  scorer  for  the 
day  was  Nathan  Manning.  Other  scor- 
ers included  Nick  Celano,  Geoff 
Huntington,  Tim  Christian,  James 
Rock,  Noah  Bookman  and  Herb 
Kimmons.  Both  Evan  Schubert  and 
first-year  player  Cristian  Munden 
play«l  in  the  goal. 

"We  also  have  a  lot  of  guys  who  are 


going  to  be  solid  role  players,"  said 
Bookman,  club  president  and  captain. 

The  team  is  coached  by  former 
player  Mike  Stanley. 

•The  club  water  polo  team  competes 
in  the  Collegiate  Water  Polo 
Association  (www.coUegiatewaterpo- 
lo.org),  a  national  league.  UCLA  is  in 
the  Pacific  Coast  Division,  which  cov- 
ers the  entire  state  of  California.  Their 
toughest  opponents  are  Cal  Poly  San 
Luis  Obispo,  Chico  State  and  Cal 
Maritime. 

Last  year,  the  team  finished  second 
in  the  Pacific  Coast  Division  and 


fourth  in  the  national  club  poll. 

The  remaining  tournament  sched- 
ule includes  the  Pacific  Coast 
Regionals  in  San  Luis  Obispo,  Calif 
(Oct.  13-15),  the  Pacific  Coast 
Championships  in  San  Luis  Obispo, 
(Nov.  4-5),  and  the  Club  Nationals 
(Nov.  17-19). 

Field  hockey  to 
play  this  weekend 

The  UCLA  women's  field  hockey 
team  has  two  games  this  Saturday,  the 


first  at  10  a.m.  and  the  second  at  12:30 
p.m.  on  the  IM  field.  The  Bruins  take 
on  Pepperdine  first,  then  Cal  Poly  San 
Luis  Obispo.  ^ 

Those  interested  in  joining  the 
team  can  e-mail  Marissa  Sandoval  at 
playhard@ucla.edu.  Visit  www.stu- 
dentgroups.ucla.edu/fieldhockey  for 
more  information. 


^i^^ 


The  Club  Update  runs  every  Thursday. 
Club  presidents  can  e-mail  information 
to  sports@media.ucla.edu  before 
Wednesday,  2  p.m.  if  they  wish  to  have 
it  printed  in  that  week's  issue. 


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«  .    « Thursday,  Octobtf  12,2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


.  -i 


CROSS  COUNTRY  NOTEBOOK 


Pac-1 0  teams  in  the  . 
top25 

In  the  latest  national  polls,  both  the 
UCLA  men's  and  women's  teams 
remained  unranked,  but  on  both  sides, 
other  Pac-IO  squads  littered  the  rankings. 

For  the  women,  defending  national 
champion  Stanford  was  No.  1,  gathermg  1 1 
of  the  12  first-place  votes  and  298  points  in 
the  FinishLynx  poll.  Washington  (No.  4, 
253  points).  Arizona  State  (No.  14,  156), 
Arizona  (No.  15,  133)  and  Oregon  (No.  22, 
22)  were  the  other  teams  in  the  top  25. 
UCLA  received  two  points. 

Stanford's  men,  who  destroyed  the  field 
at  the  Notre  Dame  Invitational  last  week- 
end without  some  of  their  top  runners,  was 
the  top-ranked  squad,  gathering  12  of  16 
first-place  votes  in  the  rankings  compiled 
by  the  United  States  Cross  Country 
Coaches  Association.  -       v 

Arizona  (No.  9,  269  points),  Arizona 
State  (No.  l6,  178),  Oregon  (No.  18,  145) 
and  Washington  (No.  20,  98)  were  also 


ranked.  Portland  (2  points)  and  UCSB  ( I ), 
-whom  the  Bruins  will  face  at  the  West 
Regionals,  also  received  votes. 

Women  get  rest,  men 
head  to  Michigan 

After  racing  for  four  consecutive  weeks, 
the  UCLA  women's  cross  country  team  will 
rest  this  weekend. 

In  the  meantime,  the  men,  who  took  last 
weekend  off  while  the  women  were  at  the 
Penn  State  Invitational,  will  travel  to  Ann 
Arbor,  Mich,  to  race  at  the  Wolverine 
Interregional. 

Travelling  to  Michigan  for  the  Bruins  will 
be  seniors  Scott  Abbott,  Mason  Moore  and 
Paul  Muite,  juniors  Bryan  Green,  Justin 
Patananan  and  Andrew  Wulf,  sophomore 
Phil  Young  and  freshman  Jon  Rankin. 

Originally,  the  men  were  scheduled  to  go 
to  the  Cal  Poly  San  Luis  Obispo  Invitational 
but  decided  to  face  stifTer  competition  aAer 
a  surprising  third-place  finish  at  the  Stanford 
Invite  two  weeks  ago. 


Riiey  favored  to  win 
Pac-10 

Cruising  to  an  easy  win  at  the  Stanford 
Inviutional.  Jonathan  Riley  of  the  host 
Cardinal  established  himself  as  the  early 
favorite  to  win  the  Pac-10  conference  indi- 
vidual title.  Riley  led  a  1-2-3  Stanford  ^weep 
by  covering  the  Cardinal's  8,000-meter 
home  course  in  24:44. 

Other  contenders  for  the  conference 
championship  include  Stanford  teammate 
Thomas  Murley,  Garrett  Jensen  of  Arizona 
State,  Michael  Kasahun  of  Oregon  and 
Mike  Cramer  of  Arizona. 

On  the  women's  side.  Arizona's  Tara 
Chaplin,  winner  of  the  Roy  Griak 
Invitational,  will  battle  defending  champion 
Erin  Sullivan  of  Stanford  and  fellow 
Cardinal  teammates  Julia  Stamps,  Lauren 
Fleshman  and  Elena  Villarreal  for  the 
crown. 


Two  more  atNetes 
fail  drug  tests,  face 
discipline  hearings 

GAMES:  One  wrestler  could  lose 
gold  medal  if  found  guilty  by  IOC 


Notes  compiled  by  Dylan  Hernandez,  Daily 
Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


By  Stephen  WHson 

The  Associated  Press 

LONDON  -  A  freestyle  wrestler  is  in  line  to 
become  the  third  athlete  from  the  Sydney 
Olympics  to  be  stripped  of  a  gold  medal  after  fail- 
ing a  drug  test. 

Two  wrestlers  tested  positive  for  banned  sub- 
stances during  the  final  weekend  of  the  Sydney 
Games  on  Sept.  30-Oct.  1,  a  senior  Olympic  med- 
ical official  said  Wednesday. 

One  of  the  wrestlers  won  a  gold  medal,  said  the 
official,  speaking  on  condition  of  anonymity  The 
second  did  not  win  a  medal.  The  identities  of  the 
two  competitors  were  not  disclosed. 

Of  the  eight  gold  medals  awarded  in  freestyle 
wrestling,  four  were  won  by  competitors  from 
Russia  and  one  each  by  wrestlers  from 
Azerbaijan,  Iran,  Germany  and  Canada. 

The  International  Olympic  Committee  med- 
ical commission  will  hold  a  hearing  with  the  two 
wrestlers  and  their  representatives  on  Monday  in 


See  OHMS,  page  42 


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DaHy  Bruin  Sports 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000       49 


FOOTBALL  NOTEBOOK 


Keeping  tabs  oa  ^ 
the  offense 

UCLA  head  coach  Bob  Toledo 
and  ofTensive  coordinator  Al  Borges 
have  been  so  impressed  with  the  play 
of  true  freshman  Tab  Perry  that  they 
have  decided  to  work  in  more  plays 
for  him. 

Perry  will  now  be  the  first  receiver 
in  when  UCLA  goes  to  three  wide 
receiver  sets.  Perry  will  still  be  No.  2 
on  the  depth  chart  at  flanker  but  will 
join  starters  Freddie  Mitchell  and 
Brian  Poli-Dixon  when  Toledo  uti- 
lizes the  hawk,  eagle,  falcon  and  other 
bird-inspired  formations. 

Despite  the  recognition  Perry  has 
received,  Toledo  will  keep  the  run- 
ning game  going.  Both  quarterback 
Cory  Paus  and  Toledo  said  they  still 
expect  teams  to  stack  eight  men  in  the 
box  to  stop  the  run,  despite  the 
absence  of  star  running  back 
DeShaun  Foster. 

Last  game,  a  38-31  win  against 
ASU,  featured  two  running  backs 
gaining  100  yards  on  the  ground. 
Jermaine  Lewis  racked  up  104  on  17 
carries  and  Akil  Harris  added  100  on 
13  carries. 

Toledo's  UCLA  teams  are  17-4 
when  at  least  one  player  rushes  for 
100  yards. 

Freddie  Mitchell 
radio 


'"^io.    ^^  '■.-.-<:?!?; 


Last  Friday  Mitchell  made  an 
appearance  on  country  music  station 
KZLA  93.9  FM.  He  talked  about  the 
country  music  in  his  hometown  of 
Lakeland,  Fl.,  as  well  as  wearing  cow- 
boy boots  in  the  locker  room. 

At  one  point,  a  female  caller  tried  to 
convince  Mitchell  to  take  her  out  on  a 
date.  Mitchell  politely  declined,  but 
sounded  flattered. 

Mitchell,  one  of  the  most  outgoing 
college  football  players  in  recent  mem- 
ory, had  previously  appeared  on  the 
television  show  "Pacific  Blue"  and  is  a 
popular  interview  on  Fox  Sports' 
Regional  Report. 

Golden  Bears,  UCLA 
match-up  deemed 
unsuitable  for  TV 

Saturday's  matchup  against  Cal  in 
Berkeley  will  be  the  only  game  of  the 
season  that  is  not  televised  live. 

Fox's  Pac-10  game  of  the  week  will  be 


Staiiluid  vs.  Oregon  Siate  and  Oregon 
vs.  Southern  Cal  will  be  the  local  game 
at  12:30  p.m.        ^.Vjv -..^V. 

Cal.  along  with  Siouthern  Cal  and 
Arizona,  are  the  only  three  UCLA 
opponents  who  did  not  appear  in  a  bowl 
game  last  season,  including  three  teams 
(Alabama,  Michigan  and  Stanford) 
which  appeared  in  BCS  games. 

The  Bears  are  also  the  only  team  on 
the  Bruins'  schedule  that  were  not 
ranked  in  Sports  lllustrated's  Top  50. 
Add  all  these  together  and  you  get  a 
game  which  was  not  deemed  worthy  of 
television. 

Die-hards  who  cannot  make  the  trip 
to  Northern  California  can  watch  the 
tape-delayed  telecast  on  Fox  Sports  Net 
2,  Sunday  at  5  p.m. 

UCLA  playboys 

At  Toledo's  last  press  conference 
on  Monday  afternoon,  the  topic  of 
the  Playboy  Mansion  came  up.  Paus 
and  Mitchell  have  both  been  guests  at 
Hugh  Hefner's  famous  home,  but 
subtract  one  former  Bruin  from  the 
list  of  welcome  guests. 

Chicago  Bear  quarterback  Cade 
McNown  has  been  summarily  ban- 
ished from  the  palace,  allegedly  for 
hitting  on  two  bunnies  that  Hefner 
deemed  off-limits.  No  worries  for 
McNown.  however,  his  current  girl- 
friend is  playmate  of  the  year  Heather 
Kozar.  < 


FOOTBALL  BRIEF 

Faoa  hearing 
set  for  today 

UCLA  redshirt  freshman 
linebacker  Asi  Faoa  will  have 
another  preliminary  hearing 
today  at  8  a.m.  at  the  Airport 
Courthouse  of  Los  Angeles. 
The  hearing  marks  the  third 
time  Faoa  will  appear  before 
a  judge  after  receiving  con- 
tinuances on  Aug.  7  and 
Sept.  18. 

Faoa  is  charged  with  one 


count  each  of  mayhem  and 
assault  after  an  altercation 
which  occurred  in  Westwood 
on  April  30  which  left  then- 
third-year  psychology  stu- 
dent Rodrigo  DeZubiria 
brain  damaged. 

DeZubiria  says  Faoa  was 
the  aggressor,  looking  for  a 
fight.  Faoa  said  he  struck 
DeZubiria  in  self-defense. 

Notes  compiled  by  Amanda 
Fletcher,  Daily  Bruin  Senior 
Staff 


Yankees  answer  doubters, 
beat  Seattle  to  even  series 


BASEBALL  Seven-run 
eighth  inning  decides 
second  game  of  ALCS 


Notes  Compiled  by  Greg  Lewis,  Daily 
Bruin  Senior  Staff.  .     . 


By  Ronald  Blum 

The  Associated  Press 

NEW  YORK -Just  when  it 
seemed  the  Yankees'  latest 
dynasty  was  crumbling.  New 
York's  dormant  offense  awoke 
in  time  to  tie  the  AL  champi- 
onship series  at  a  game  apiece. 

Bernie  Williams  ended  a 
record-tying.  21-inning  score- 
less streak  with  an  RBI  single 
that  sparked  a  seven-run  eighth 
inning,  and  New  York  rallied 
past  the  Seattle  Mariners  7-1 
Wednesday. 

Orlando  Hernandez,  pitch- 
ing on  his  birthday,  allowed  six 


Seattle's  bullpen 

got  blown  apart, 

wasting  six  shutout 

innings  by  starter 

John  Halama. 


hits  arid  struck  out  seven  in 
eight  innings. 

It  seemed  like  the  Yankees' 
hopes  for  a  third  straight  World 
Series  title  were  fading  away. 

Then  suddenly.  New  York 
went  8-for-8  to  start  the  eighth 
inning.  The  eight  hits  were  an 
ALCS  record  and  the  most  in 
an  inning  for  the  Yankees  since 


See  BASEBALL,  page  42 


Largest  selection  of  kegs  in  town! 


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50        Thursday,  October  12, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


UCLA  places  fifth  in  tournament 


RECAP:  Team  unhappy  with 
performance  in  final  round; 
nerves  may  have  played  role 


use,  896 

Stanford,  908 

Arizona  State,  911 

Pepperdlne,913 

UCLA,  91 4 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff  — — — ,  ;•'.  ;\  ■_•: 

They  finished  fifth  out  of  17  teams,  but 
the  women  of  the  No.  16  UCLA  golf  team 
still  weren't  satisfied  with  themselves  at 
the  Edean  Ihlanfeldt  Invitational.  The 
tournament,  hosted  by  Washington,  ran 
from  Monday  through  Wednesday. 
"I  think  we  could 

do  a  lot  better,"  fresh-      ' 

man  Gina  Umeck 
said.  "I  don't  think 
anybody  would  be 
happy  with  fifth  place. 
We  all  expect  more." 

The  team  shot  a 
three-round  score  of 
914.  50-over  par  and 

was  just  one  stroke      

out   of  fourth   place 

and  three  stokes  out 

of  third.  UCLA  finished  behind  No.  3 

use  (896).  No.  5  Stanford  (908).  No.  15 

Arizona     State     (911)     and     No.     10 

Pepperdine(9l3), 

Umeck  led  the  Bruins,  finishing  tied  for 
eighth  by  shooting  225.  Senior  Laura 
Moffat  was  second  for  the  team  in  14th 
place  (228).  junior  Alicia  Um  placed  17th 
(230).  and  redshirt  freshman  Saki  Uechi 
was  19th  (231)  to  round  out  the  scoring. 
True  freshman  Johanna  Andersson  was 
the  last  Bruin,  scoring  247  and  placing 
66th. 

"I  was  generally  pleased  with  the  way 
the  team  played,"  head  coach  Carrie 
Leary  said. 

But  she  agreed  with  Umeck  that  the 
Bruins  still  weren't  living  up  to  their 


potential.      ■'"■'',;  ■'"''■  ■/'■■' 

"Everybody  this  time  seemed  to  step 
up  and  play,  but  we  didn't  play  as  good  as 
we  can,"  she  said. 

One  person  definitely  not  happy  with 
her  finish  was  Moffat. 

"I  think  the  team's  finish  was  really 
good.  I'm  really  disappointed  with  my  fin- 
ish," she  said.  "I  didn't  play  well  at  the  last 
tournament,  I  didn't  really  play  well  at 
this  one  either.  It  just  seems  to  be  continu- 
ing." 

She  can't  explain  her  slump. 
"If  I  knew  (what  was  wrong)  then  I'd 
probably  be  playing  better."  Moffat  said. 
Umeck  may  have 
^^_^_^__^_      led  the  team,  but  she 
wasn't  any  more  satis- 
.  fied  than  Moffat. 

"I  feel  all  right 
about  (my  finish),  but 
I  always  feel  like  I 
could  do  better.  No 
matter  what  I  shoot, 
that's  pretty  much  the 
story  with  me,"  she 
said. 

The  team  was  in 
fourth  place  after  round  one  (where  they 
shot  306)  and  in  third  place  after  round 
two  (300),  but  shot  308  the  final  day  to 
slip  back  to  fifth.  -"      ■. 

"We  could 've  done  really  well  overall 
had  we  shot  a  decent  round  today,"  Leary 
said.  "It's  just  that  everybody  was  strug- 
gling today,  and  I  don't  know  why.  They 
seemed  a  little  bit  more  nervous. 

"Golf  is  a  funny  game  like  that,"  she 
continued.  "It's  hard  to  say  why  we  didn't 
play  as  well  as  we  should've  or  could've." 
But  Leary  was  still  able  to  find  the  pos- 
itive in  the  experience. 

"It's  just  about  going  out  and  trying  to 
do  better  next  time,"  she  said.  "At  least  we 
got  a  sense  that  everybody  can  contribute 
and  raise  the  team  up." 


.••-■'  .•*■ 


Thursday,  October  12, 2000       SI 


r         u  ^'  ■■  ■     .       .  UCLA  5po(ts  Information 

Freshman  Gina  Umeck  led  UCLA  to  a  fifth-place  finish  in  the  Edean  Ihlanfeldt  Invitational. 


PACIFICEJBELL^ 

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Heuporfied 
hard  to 
enter  Cal, 
but  made 
making 
the  team 
look  easy 


Cal  driver  Eldad  Hazor  scores  past  the  USC  goalie  in  a  match  against  the  Trojans  last  week. 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Three  years  ago,  Eldad  Hazor 
packed  his  belongings,  boarded  a 
plane  in  his  native  Israel,  and  headed 
to  America.  He  arrived  on  the 
Berkeley  campus,  introduced  himself 
to  the  men's  water  polo  coaching 
staff,  and  then  informed  them  that  he 
came  to  play. 

Now  that's  confidence. 

"We  didn't  hear  about  him,"  Cal 
head  coach  Peter  Asch  said.  "We  didn't 
recruit  him  or  anything  of  that  nature. 
He  flew  himself  over  here  and  just 
showed  up." 

Hazor  said  he  wasn't  too  nervous 
about  making  the  trip,  even  though 
English  was  his  second  language  and  he 
had  no  guarantees. 

"You  always  have  concerns,  but  on 


TheOtber^QI    JHHL 

xjSUC  1  ^ 

I  Water  Polo  I?"™' 
I      Eldad  Hazor 


the  other  hand,  I  like  to  try  new 
things,"  the  senior  driver  said.  "I  like  to 
see  the  world,  I  like  to  meet  new  peo- 
ple. 

"I  can't  deny  that  I  didn't  have  any 
concerns,  but  on  the  other  hand,  you 
can  always  go  back  (home)  and  say,  'I 
tried,'  and  do  something  else." 

But  he  came,  he  started  and  now, 


three  years  later,  Hazor  is  the  one  of 
the  most  dominant  forces  on  a  Cal 
team  ranked  second  in  the  nation. 

"He's  one  of  the  leaders  of  their 
team,  and  a  very  smart  player," 
UCLA  head  coach  Adam  Krikorian 
said. 

The  top-ranked  Bruins  will  face 
Hazor  and  the  other  Golden  Bears 
this  Saturday.  Cal  has  only  played 
UCLA  once  this  season,  in  which  they 
lost  10-7. 

Hazor  started  playing  water  polo  12 
years  ago  at  age  12,  as  water  polo  was 
big  in  his  hometown  of  Tivon.  There,  he 
only  got  better  as  he  kept  playing;  he 
even  practiced  while  fulfilling  his  coun- 
try's two-year  military  requirement 
after  high  school  graduation  in  1994. 

After  the  requirement  -  in  which 
Hazor  said  only  that  he  "served  in  the 
logistical  unit"  -  he  went  to  Oranim 


College  in  Tivon  for  a  year,  and  then 
made  the  decision  to  come  to  the  U.S. 

"I  was  looking  to  (get)  a  higher  edu- 
cation, as  well  as  playing  water  polo  at  a 
higher  level,"  Hazor  said.  "That's  the 
reason." 

Though  he  heard  about  powerhous- 
es UCLA,  Stanford  and  USC,  Cal  was 
the  only  school  he  considered. 

That  first  year  he  scored  17  points. 
His  sophomore  year  he  was  fourth  on 
the  team  with  27  points,  and  by  his 
junior  season  he  was  second  with  30 
points. 

So  far  this  year  Hazor  has  helped  Cal 
to  a  6-4  overall,  2-1  Mountain  Pacific 
Sports  Federation  record.  He's  also 
second  on  the  team  with  19  goals. 

He's  come  a  long  way,  from  being 
the  guy  no  one  heard  of  to  being  one  of 


See  OPPONENT,  page  44 


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^ow,  about  the  other  guys 

Cal  water  polo  player  Eldad  Hazor  will 
be  a  tough  opponent  for  No.  1  UCLA. 
For  his  story  just  turn  the  page. 

Thursdayi  October  12,2000  ■r'';^^       ;     •  ■; 


Daily  Bruin 


SPORTS 


Sports  on  the  Web  0   ^ 

See  all  this  and  more  at 

the  Daily  Bruin's 

Website: 

www.dailybnjin.uda.edu 


Something  to 


write 


horn 


e 


about 


All  Tab  Perry  wants  is  to  do  is  to 
visit  his  family,  breathe  fresh  air, 
and  help  his  team  any  way  he  can 


1  *    *■■#■-#  . 


Freshman  Tab  Perry  looks  forward  to  returning  home  this 
UCLA  s  game  against  Cal's  Golden  Bears. 


t  HKi'j  BACMEY 

weekend  for 


By  Adam  Karon 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Coming  home  for  a  freshman  means  a 
warm  bed,  home  cooked  food,  seeing  old 
friends,  and  possibly  hauling  in  a  couple  of 
touchdown  passes  to  beat  your  hometown 
team.  At  least  this  is  the  experience  fresh- 
man wide  receiver  Tab  Perry  hopes  for. 

The  Milpitas  High  graduate  returns 
home  for  the  first  time  in  front  of  75,000 
Bay  Area  fans  this  weekend  when  UCLA 
takes  on  the  California  Golden  Bears. 

For  the  Bruins,  the  game  means  a 
chance  to  make  ground  on  the  first  place 
Oregon  Ducks,  while  at  the  same  time 


4- 


avenging  an  embarrassing  shutout  loss  a 
year  ago. 

But  to  Perry  revenge  is  the  last  thought 
on  his  mind. 

Like  most  freshman.  Perry  went 
through  a  spell  of  homesickness  earlier  this 
year.  But  unlike  the  rest  of  the  Bay  Area 
Bniins,  when  he  feels  homesick  he  must 
wake  up  the  next  day  and  play  football  on 
national  television.  No  surprise  visits  up 
north,  no  long  phone  calls  home  -just  prac- 
tice, practice  and  play. 

"It's  very  different"  Perry  said.  "It's  a 
lot  more  football  than  I'm  used  to.  There 


Sec  mnr,  page  46 


UCLA  on  the  defensive  vs.  Arizona 


W.VOUEYBAUj  Bruins 
need  strong  start  to  tame 
undefeated  Wildcat  squad 


By  Christina  Teller 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Not  even  a  week  has  passed  since 
they  faced  the  undefeated  Trojans, 
and  members  of  the  UCLA  women's 
volleyball  team  are  on  the  road  again. 
This  time,  the  Bruins  will  face 
Arizona,  which  is  undefeated  in  con- 
ference play. 


WOMEN'S  VOLLEYBAIL 


(IS)  14-1 


Tod# 
7p4n. 
Tucson,  AZ 
Uvfon 

www^JnAittom 


AMMMOW 


"We're  looking  forward  to  a  tough 
competition  against  them,"  senior 
Elisabeth  Bachman  said.  "It's  a  chal- 
lenge because  they're  undefeated  and 
it's  something  that  we're  willing  to 
take  and  hopefully  stop." 

With  only  three  days  of  practice 
this  week,  the  Bruins  had  to  regroup 
quickly  aft^r  the  draining  defeat 
against  USC  last  Friday. 


Foster  issues  apology 
for  possession  citation 


FINE:  Tailback  spared 
suspension  since  drugs 
weren't  his,  Toledo  says 


Senior  Elisab«th  Bachman  strikes  fear  In  USC's  blockers  ^^^°^ 
prepares  to  spike  In  a  game  Oct  1. 


"We  played  a  long,  hard,  hot 
Ttlatch  the  other  night  and  \i  was  tir- 
ing," said  Andy  Banachowski, 
UCLA's  head  coach  .  "We  know  we 
got  tired  and  it  was  something  that  we 
talked  about  postgame  and  some- 


thing that  we've  been  working  on  this 
week." 

And  they  know  what  they  have  to 
do  in  order  to  shutdown  the  tough 


SMW.«0IAnB«l.H,e4S 


ByGragUwfs 

Daily  Bniin  Senior  Staff 

UCLA  star  tailback  DeShaun 
Foster  admitted  pub- 
licly Tuesday  after- 
noon to  being  caught 
with  a  small  contain- 
er of  marijuana. 

Foster.  UCLA's 
leading  rusher  so  far 
this  season,  released 
a  statement  describ- 
ing the  incident. 

"On  the  night  of 
July  7.  \  attended  an 
event  at  a  Thouaand 
Oaks  hotel  with  sev- 
eral other  people 
Unknown  to  me  at  the  lime,  one  of 
them  had  put  a  container  that  had 
marijuana  in  it  in  my  car. 

"I  could  not  get  into  the  event 
because  I  waa  wearing  a  hat.  As  I 
left  to  put  the  hat  in  my  car,  the  per- 
son to  whom  it  belonged  asked  me 
to  get  it  from  the  car  and  bring  it 


UOASpominfe 

OaShaun  Foster 


back  to  him.  That  was  the  first  time 
I  knew  it  was  in  my  car." 

The  statement  went  on  to  say 
that  as  Foster  reached  over  to 
retrieve  the  container  from  the 
glove  compartment,  two  police- 
men approached  the  car  and 
inquired  about  the  situation. 

The  police  wrote  a  $250  citation, 
which  Foster  later  paid  by  mail. 

"I  am  sorry  for 
any  embarrassment  I 
have  caused  my  fam- 
ily, coaches  and 
teammates.  I  have 
learned  a  valuable 
lesson,"  the  state- 
ment read. 

Head  coach  Bob 
Toledo  said  he  will 
not  suspend  Foster 
because  he  believes 
this  is  an  isolated 
incident. 
"I  know  that  the  mar- 
ijuana was  not  his.  DcShaun  does 
not  smoke  marijuana.  He  was  in 
the  wrong  place  at  the  wrong 
time."  Toledo  said. 

Toledo  repeatedly  stressed  that 
he  believed  the  drugs  did  not 


42 


J 


Men  feel  pressure  to 
conform .  See  page  1 2 


li 


ARTS    &    ENTERTAINMENT 


John  Lithgow  shows  up  all  over  campus^ 
including  A&E.  See  page  1 6 


-)    C    I.   .\ 


,'.■:  ■:.■*>■  ■■■■■: 

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Mysteries  to  be  solved  in  Westwood 


SHOP:  Bookstore's  move 
to  Village  marks  return 
of  independent  retailers 


MYSTTERY  BOOKSTORE  SIGNINGS 


ei.     1^  >a     «_.J-  ANDREA  KIM 

Sheldon  McArthur  prepares  for  the  Saturday  opening  of  his  new 
Westwood  Village  shop.  Mystery  Bookstore  on  Broxton  Avenue. 


By  Christine  Byrd 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

In  the  movie  "You've  Got  Mail,"  a 
children's  bookstore  struggles  to  stay 
open  in  the  shadow  of  a  chain  book- 
store but  is  forced  to  close.  Sheldon 
McArthur  is  hoping  life  will  not  imi- 
tateart. 

McArthur  has  two  passions:  books 
and  Westwood.  Both  are  converging 
on  Saturday,  when  he  opens  Mystery 
Bookstore  at  1036  Broxton  Ave. 

When  he  was  16,  McArthur  got  his 
first  job  at  Campbell's  Bookstore,  the 
oldest  book  retailer  in  Westwood. 

"I  was  already  addicted  to  books 
and  said,  'I'm  not  ever  slinging  ham- 
burgers again,'"  McArthur  said. 

McArthur  then  worked  at  the 
UCLA  book  store,  where  he  met  his 
wife,  until  he  graduated  in  1972. 

Every  paying  job  McArthur  has 
held  since  that  burger-flipping  stint 
has  been  at  a  bookstore. 

But  over  the  years,  independent 
bookstores  in  Westwood  disap- 
peared, and  last  year,  the  final  sur- 
vivor packed  up. 

Soon  after,  McArthur  said  he  was 
approached  by  a  Westwood  resident 
who  asked  him  to  move  his  bookstore 
from  West  Hollywood,  where  it  had 


Saturday,  October  14 


1:00  p.m.    Hallie  Ephron  signs'Amnesia* 
3:00  p.m.    Anne  Perry  signs 'Slaves  of  Obsession 


Thursday,  October  19 


7:00  p.m.    Carolina  Garda-Aguilera  signs^Havana  Heat* 


Friday,  October  20 


7:00  p.m.    Peter  Robinson  reads  from  and  signs  'Cold  is  the  Grave' 


Saturday,  October  21 


2.-00p.m.    Archer  Mayor  signsThe  Marble  Mask* 


Saturday,  October  28 
2:00  p.m.    Gary  Phillips  signs  'Only  the  Widced" 


Saturday,  November  4 


All  day       Grand  Opening  party 

40-50  writers  will  be  there  signing  books 


iMung  %MB>iiicfai(» 


MAGOIE  woo 


been  open  for  12  years,  back  to  his 
hometown  of  Westwood. 

"He  wanted  to  convince  me 
Westwood  is  the  place  to  come  back 
to,  and  since  I  had  literally  grown  up 
in  Westwood,  I  know  it  intimately 
and  I  know  Westwood  has  gone 
through  a  lot  of  highs  and  lows," 
McArthur  said. 

"I've  always  been  a  fan  of 
Westwood,"  he  said. 

The  timing  was  perfect.  McArthur 
said  his  lease  was  up  and  the  rent  was 
too  high,  so  he  knew  he  needed  to 
find  a  new  location. 


His  store  is  a  "destination  book- 
store," meaning  people  come  for 
what  he  specializes  in  -  mystery 
books,  which  he  says  was  his  favorite 
genre  since  childhood. 

They  also  come  for  the  book  sign- 
ings  and  special  events  that  occur  one 
to  three  times  each  week. 

When  it  came  time  to  relocate, 
McArthur  said  he  asked  his  cus- 
tomers if  they  would  follow  him  to 
Westwood  and  the  response  was  pos- 
itive. 


Se«  BOOKSTORE,  page  10 


BearWear  sales  rising  above  last  season 


ASUCLA:  Better  football 
season  has  contributed 
to  increase  in  revenues 


By  Melody  Weng 
Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Students  are  sporting  more 
BearWear  clothing  than  last  year, 
as  the  UCLA  football  team  has 
increased  its  victories  this  season. 

Since  the  beginning  of  August, 
the  UCLA  store  has  sold  an  esti- 
mated $1.9  million  in  BearWear 
items  -  up  14.3  percent  from  last 
year's  figures  at  this  time. 

This  comes  as  a  bit  of  a  surprise 
for  the  Associated  Students  of 
UCLA,  which  had  only  planned  on 
selling  about  $1.5  million  in  mer- 
chandi<tc. 

"Last  year  wasn't  a  good  year 
for  us  so  we  were  very  conservative 
in  planning  for  this  year."  said 
ASUCLA  Financial  Director  Rich 
Delia. 

To  improve  sales  this  year,  ASU- 
CLA administrators  met  in  the 
spring  to  discuss  new  marketing 
strategies,  which  were  then  imple- 
mented in  August. 

ASUCLA  Executive  Director 
Patricia  Eastman  attributes  the 
increase  in  sales  to  the  performance 


Outbreaks  of  violence  land 
dose  to  home  for  students 


ISRAEL  Sides  hold  little 
optimism  for  resolution; 
conflict  rages  on  apace 


CHRIS  BACKLEY 

Apurva  Chandra  purchases  BearWear  items  from  ASUCLA 
employee  Tiffany  Butler  in  the  UCLA  Store. 


of  the  athletic  teams  this  season, 
more  aggressive  marketing  cam- 
paigns and  changes  to  the  store. 

"I  wish  we  could  just  pinpoint  it 
to  one  thing,  but  we've  been  doing 
all  of  these  things,"  she  said. 

For  example,  the  association 
extended  its  telephone  service  avail- 
ability from  eight  to  24  hours  a  day 
and  increased  publicity  of  its  Web 
site.  They  also  sent  out  twice  as 
many  merchandise  catalogs  as  last 
year,  resulting  in  increased  orders. 

Also,  instead  of  offering  a  free 
gift  for  every  $100  mail  order, 


ASUCLA  now  provides  free  ship- 
ping instead,  said  Fred  Klein,  direc- 
tor of  the  apparel  and  accessories 
department. 

He  said  another  factor  that  has 
helped  sales  is  the  fact  that  UCLA 
has  won  four  of  the  five  football 
games  this  season'. 

'Students  are  wanting  to  affili- 
ate with  a  winning  football  team," 
Klein  said. 

Because  the  team  has  been  scor- 
ing more  touchdowns,  students  arc 


S-mMWfBUt»aqt11 


*    V    \    1    >    V   >    V    V    >     > 


By  Todd  Belie 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

With  the  death  toll  nearing  100,  vio- 
lent clashes  in  the  Middle  East  show  ht- 
tlc  sign  of  stopping  in  the  days  ahead 

The  fighting  and  bloodshed  that 
continues  half  a  world  away  has 
sparked  a  divid- 
ed reaction  on 
campus. 

"I  saw  stu- 
dents from  both 
sides  who  are 
very  emotional 
because  every- 
one has  such 
close  attach- 
ments to  the  situ- 
ation" said  A!  Tsarovsky,  president  of 
the  Jewish  Student  Union.  "It's  such  a 
sensitive  .subject  and  it  brings  out 
anger  and  pride,  but  I  don't  think 
there's  a  belter  place  for  dialogue  than 
on  the  UCLA  campus." 

Many  Muslim  students  also  showed 


Violence  continues 


Peace  talks  degenerate  as  Israeli- 
Palestinian  conflict  goes  on. 
Seepages 


their  support  for  Palestmians  and 
Israeli  Arabs  by  wearing  green  arm- 


bands. 

"A  lot  of  people  are  concerned  here 
because  many  have  family  and  strong 
tics  to  the  area,"  said  Ghaith 
Mahmood,  president  of  the  Muslim 
Student  Association. 

Despite  increased  conflict  abroad, 
many  on  campus  remain  calm. 

"I  would  be  misinterpreting  my 
faith  if  1  harbored  any  negative  feel- 
ings toward  Muslims,  or  anybody," 
Tsarovsky  said.  "That's  not  what 
Judaism  is  about." 

'Once  you  put  a  face  to  the  title  it's 
..;•':•.  '  '~  much  harder  to 

harbor  negative 
energy,"  he  said. 
"Having  friends 
who  arc  both 
Mushm  and 
Arab,  it  makes  it 
impossible  for 
mc  to  ever  har- 
bor  negative 
intentions 
toward  the  entire  culture." 

Israeli  forces  retaliated  Thursday 
for  the  mob  killing  of  two  captured  sol- 
diers by  striking  at  several  Palestinian 
targets,  including  Yasser  Arafat's  resi- 
dential compound. 

Since  Sept.  28.  the  clash  between 


See  CONFUa,  page  10 


\  \  \  »  »  » 

.        l        .        L        .        .        . 


Friday.  October  13, 2000 


'■:•■■    >'.:■  '■;;•;■ 


Oafly  Bruin  Ne«n 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Friday,  October  13.2000 


COMMUNITY  BRIEFS 

Older  community  still 
getting  by,  study  says 

Retired  residents  in  Orange  County's 
Laguna  Woods  are  more  healthy  and  active 
than  most  retired  people,  according  to  a  study 
released  Thursday  by  a  UC  Irvine  researcher. 

With  a  median  age  of  77.5  years,  less  than  5 
percent  of  the  community's  residents  are 
impaired  by  their  age,  compared  to  14  percent 
nationally. 

The  organization  is  the  first  retirement  com- 
munity in  the  nation  to  form  its  own  city  gov- 
ernment. 

"Leisure  World  is  over  35  years  old,  and  we 
needed  to  do  some  long-term  planning  as  a 
community,"  said  Syd  Aronson,  co-chair  of  the 
Leisure  World  Historical  Society  Survey 
Committee.  "It  started  with  concern  over  our 
physical  plant,  but  we  soon  realized  that  after 
35  years,  we  really  didn't  know  who  we  were 
any  more.  We  needed  information  about  our 
population  -  their  health,  how  they  used 
Leisure  World  facilities  and  other  issues." 


The  survey  one  in  a  series  that 
will  continue  to  analyze  the  retire- 
ment community. 

Faculty  salaries  not 
enough  in  colleges 

Many  community  college  districts,  which 
rely  heavily  on  part-time  instructors,  are  not 
correctly  counting  their  spending  on  faculty 
salaries  -  and  the  state  is  not  making  sure 
errors  are  caught,  an  audit  released  Thursday 
shows.  ■  •: 

A  1961  state  law  requiriss  the  state's  71  com- 
munity college  districts  to  spend  half  of  their 
funds  on  instructor  salaries  each  year  to  help 
keep  class  sizes  small  and  instructional  quality 
high. 

But  analysts  from  the  ofTice  of  State  Auditor 
Elaine  Howie  visited  10  districts  and  found  six 
fell  below  the  required  50  percent  in  1998-99, 
by  a  total  of  $10  million.  ...         ...     .      '  - 

The  colleges  could  spend  more  to  hire  full- 
time  faculty  instead  of  part-timers,  said  David 


X 


Hawkins     of     the      Faculty 

Association      of      California 

Community  Colleges,  which  asked 

the  Legisii^ture  for  the  audit. 

Currently,  29,000  of  the  47,000  community 

college  faculty  statewide  are  part-timers  who 

who  have  no  job  security  and  are  paid  less  than 

full-time  teachers,  he  said. 

The  colleges  turned  to  part-timers  to  save 
money  during  the  recession  of  the  1990s  and 
now  "many  of  the  districts  have  now  basically 
become  comfortable  with  having  these  facul- 
ty," Hawkins  said. 

Students  compete  for 
start-up  money 

Aspiring  entrepreneurs  will  vie  for  a  mini- 
mum of  $10,000  in  start-up  money  in  a  new 
competition  organized  by  MBA  students  at  the 
University  of  California,  Davis. 

The  "Big  Bang"  competition  will  be  official- 
ly launched  Thursday  at  a  reception  at  the 
University  Club  on  campus.  It  will  culminate  in 


late  April  when  finalist  teams  present  their 
plans  for  a  new  business  before  a  panel  of  ven- 
ture capitalists  and  a  public  audience. 

Students  in  the  Graduate  School  of 
Management  have  designed  the  competition  to 
promote  entrepreneurship,  innovation  and 
hands-on  learning  and  will  offer  a  series  of 
workshops  to  help  competitors  craft  business 
plans  based  on  marketable  ideas  The  competi- 
tion is  open  to  teams  with  at  least  one  UC 
Davis  student  or  graduate. 

"We  established  this  contest  for  students, 
the  university  and  the  growing  venture  com- 
munity in  the  region  served  by  UC  Davis,"  says 
K.C.  Kanaan,  co-chair  of  the  competition  and 
a  student  in  the  MBA  program  for  Working 
Professionals.  "We  know  there  are  great  ideas 
on  campus,  and  innovators  who  can  make 
them  take  shape  with  the  right  motivation,  sup- 
port and  proper  guidance," 

A  total  of  24  firms  are  providing  financial 
sponsorship,  leading  workshops,  grooming  the 
teams  or  judging  the  competition. 

Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  staff  reports. 


WHAr  S  BREWIN' 

Today  1  p.m. 

Project  Literacy 
Orientation 
Ackerman  3508 
825-2417 

7:30  p.m. 

The  UCLA  Documentary 

Salon 

Five  short  films  by  Jay 

Rosenblatt 

James  Bridges  Theater 

www.jayrosenblattfilms.com 

Saturday  11  a.m. 

UCLA  School  of  Theater, 
Film,  and  Television 
Jay  Rosenblatt  open  workshop 
Melnitz  Hall  Design  Room- 

25345-4299 


ACADEMK 
ANNOUNCEMENTS 


Today 

Last  day  to  drop  impacted  L&S 
undergraduate  courses 

Last  day  to  add/drop  classes  on 
URSA  without  a  fee 

Last  day  to  check  wait  lists  for 
courses  through  URSA 

Last  day  to  declare  bachelor's 
degree  candidacy  for  current 
term 

Last  day  to  return  textbooks  to 
UCLA  Store  for  full  refund 


CORRECTION 

The  photo  caption  for 
"Coming  Out  Day  raises 
awareness  of  LGBT  issues" 
(News,  Oct.  12)  contained 
an  error.  The  person  in  the 
picture  should  have  been 
identified  as  Ronni  Sanlo, 
director  of  the  LGBT 
Resource  Center.  The  event 
was  held  in  Ackerman 
Union. 


recycle 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


A  QUICK  LOOK 
'^v"  BRUIN 


Page# 

Daily  Bruin  Classifieds.— ^IiiT 

Crossword  Puzzle 25 

Movie  Guide 79 


DEAL 
<^^DAY 


Friday,  October  13, 2000 


Mim 


WORD      jim  crow 

ofthefljiy  Qimkroh)  : 

1  UphoWing  or  practicing  dSscriminatioo  against  and 
supression  of  Bladt  people. 

2.  Reserved  or  set  aside  for  a  racial  or  ethnic  group  ttiat  is 
to  be  discrimirated  against. 

(From  obsoMa  Jim  Crow,  dtfogalory  name  kx  a  Black  pef»oo. 
ultimatety  from  tha  litte  o<  a  19th-can(ury  minstrel  soog  from  Crow.) 
■Havmg  once  been  a  dacipta  o(  Jim  Crow,  (Sen.  Strom)  Thurmond  I* 
now  a  ioNower  of  hia  baby-boom  offaprlng.  Jim  Crxjw  was  an  in-your- 
faca  bigot,  but  J*m  Crow,  Jr.  practices  a  more  subtle  form  of  racism  • 
V PaWayne  WIcHham.  USA  Today.  Jun  3. 1996.y 


SUPER  SPECIAL 

1  medium  one  topping,  pizza 

1$5.99 

For  additional  details,  see  page  14. 


supplements/ 


Coupon  Pages  (5lh  &  10th  Week), 

and  Dinmg'Gtiide  issues  are 
coining  to  your  newsstands  soon! 


H 


To  place  an  AO,  please  call: 

S1IJ29.21t1 
11M2SJ221 
S1UII.1060 

Visit  us  online  at;  uwu1.daiJyhn4in.uda.edu 


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Students  of  The  Anderson  School  at  UCU  unwind  and 
talk  shop  duiing  their  weekly  Veer  Bust  events 


m^'n> 


■V(«.';.'C-.f;'    ■  ,v,'-,  ...   ■ ;  ■  :.,. 


(left  to  to  right)  Judy  Chang,  William  Fang  anci  Paul  Zapatka  gather  around  The  iS^ 
at  or)e  of  the  weekly  Beer  Busts  hosted  by  The  Anderson  School  at  UCLA. 


By  Maqoric  Hemandcz 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


The  image  of  beer-guzzling  students  in  an 
all-night  party  lasting  through  the  wee  hours 
of  the  morning  is  the  usual  picture  of  the  tra- 
ditional college  kegger. 

But  when  more  than  250  graduate  stu- 
dents at  The  Anderson  School  at  UCLA 
hold  their  weekly  Beer  Busts,  the  average 
college  kegger  turns  into  business  happy 
hour. 

On  average,  about  5,000  students  all  over 
the  country  vie  for  one  of  the  329  spots  in 
The  Anderson  School's  intense  two-year 
program. 

"We  have  a  very  group-based  way  of 
working,"  said  Richard  Colback.  a  second- 
year  student  and  external  vice  president  of 
the  Anderson  Student  Association  **We 
work  incredibly  hard.  It's  really  a  high-pres- 
sure course  in  the  first  year." 

The  Beer  Busts  allow  first-  and  second- 
year  Anderson  students  to  come  together 
for  some  recreation  and  relaxation. 

Although  the  Beer  Busts  are  meant  to 
relieve  stress  accumulated  from  the  week, 
students  still  find  it  hard  to  stray  from  busi- 


ness issues  in  their  conversations. 

"If  you  were  to  walk  around  and  listen  to 
the  conversations  going  on,  we're  really  not 
that  cool,"  said  Rick  Sliter,  president  of  the 
Anderson  Student  Association.  "You  hear  a 
lot  of  statistics  going  on  in  economics." 

"But  a  lot  of  the  learning  in  the  business 
school  takes  place  outside  the  classroom," 
he  continued.  "And  this  is  one  area  that  I'd 
say  where  a  lot  of  that  happens." 

Participants  enjoy  free  beer  from  seven 
kegs  and  90  boxes  of  pizzas  at  Anderson 
Plaza,  which  is  blocked  offduring  the  event. 
Talk  of  future  capital  ventures,  investments 
and  dot-coms  mixed  with  music  last  week, 
during  the  first  Beer  Bust  of  the  year. 

"It's  my  first  Beer  Bust  and  I  already  met 
quite  a  few  people,"  said  first-year  graduate 
student  Deena  Williams. 

The  weekly  Beer  Busts  aren't  limited  to 
Anderson,  but  are  a  nationwide  business 
school  tradition,  according  to  Adam 
Trinacty,  second-year  student  arid  public 
relations  chair  for  the  Anderson  Student 
Association. 

At  many  business  schools  around  the 
country,  students  have  Fridays  off  -  which 
led  to  the  tradition.  Other  professior\jil 


schools,  such  as  UCLA's  School  of  Law, 
have  similar  activities. 

"It's  integral  to  the  Anderson  culture," 
Trinacty  said.  "It's  a  good  way  to  unwind 
after  the  end  of  the  week." 

Corporate  sponsorships,  where  students 
and  recruiters  talk  oneon-one  in  a  more 
informal  setting,  have  also  become  a  tradi- 
tion, according  to  Chris  Brandt.  General 
Mills  recruiter  and  1 998  Anderson  alumnus. 
General  Mills,  one  of  the  largest  food 
companies  in  the  country,  was  on  hand  to 
kick  off  the  first  Beer  Bust  this  year,  where 
students  asked  questions  about  internship 
opportunities  and  full-time  employment  at 
General  Mills. 

Other  sponsors  included  business  compa- 
nies such  as  Salomon  Smith  Barney,  J. P. 
Morgan  and  Merrill  Lynch. 

"The  Anderson  School  is  a  great  addition 
to  UCLA  and  we're  happy  to  recruit  peo- 
ple." Brandt  said.  "The  people  who  we 
recruit  that  come  from  Anderson  and  have 
gone  to  General  Mills  have  been  very  suc- 
cessful. We  hope  to  continue  that  tradition." 
General  Mills  also  provided  activities 
such  the  one-dollar  golf-putting  challenge 
for  charily.  Raffles  wore  also  held  that 


included  a  prize  for  a  Nascar  training  course 
worth  $750,  where  the  winner  will  have  a 
chance  to  drive  18  laps  at  speeds  up  to  165 
miles  per  hour. 

Proceeds  for  the  mini-putt  challenge  and 
the  raffle  totaled  about  $400,  which  will  go 
to  Challenge  for  Charity,  a  Special  Olympics 
organization. 

Since  alcohol  is  distributed  on  campus  at 
the  Beer  Busts,  members  from  the 
Anderson  Student  Association  provide  des- 
ignated drivers  during  the  events  as  well  as 
taxi  phone  numbers  for  students  who  need 
them. 

But  organizers  point  out  that  the  Beer 
Bust  events  do  not  revolve  around  alcohol. 
"It's  a  pretty  solid  network  of  people  here 
who  know  to  watch  out  for  their  buddies  to 
make  sure  that  everybody's  doing  the  right 
thing,"  said  Trinacty  "We  haven't  had  any  , 
major  problems  in  the  past." 

The  average  cost  of  each  Beer  Bust  runs  ■ 
up  to  $2,000,  which  is  provided  by  the  cor- 
porate sponsor  and  organized  by  the  ASA. 
"Call  it  your  typical  Friday  afternoon 
business  happy  hour,  but  change  it  to 
Thursdays  and  make  it  for  business  school." 
Sliter  said.  ... 


I  ■  ^"•:  ■ 


<  \ » 1  > 
» >  >  > 


Friday,  October  13, 2000- 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Exiled  CNnes^  writer  wins  Nobel  Prize 


.  -i«.....v,.^ ;  ,■.. 


LrTERATURE:  Gao's  work 
cited  for  'insights;'  prize 
comes  as  huge  surprise 


By  Marilyn  August 

The  Associated  Press 


BAGNOLET.  France  -  Gao 
Xingjian  burned  his  early  writings  to 
save  himself  from  communist 
zealots,  was  denounced  by  his  own 
wife  and  eventually  went  into  exile. 
On  Thursday,  the  60-year-old  sur- 
vivor of  China's  upheaval  and 
oppression  became  its  first  Nobel 
laureate  for  literature. 

The  Swedish  Academy  cited  the 
novelist  and  playwright  for  the  "bit- 
ter insights  and  linguistic  ingenuity" 
in  his  writings  about  the  "struggle  for 
individuality  in  mass  culture." 

Gao,  "very,  very  surprised"  at  the 
honor,  declared  writing  to  have  been 
his  salvation,  even  during  Mao  Tse- 
tung's  brutal  1966-76  Cultural 
Revolution,  when  intellectuals  were 
silenced  and  he  had  to  burn  "kilos 
and  kilos"  of  his  writings  lest  they  fall 
into  the  wrong  hands. 

"In  China,  I  could  not  trust  any- 
one, not  even  my  family.  The  atmos- 
phere was  so  poisoned,  people  were 
so  brainwashed  that  even  someone 
from  your  own  family  could  turn  you 
in,"  he  said. 

That  actually  happened,  accord- 
ing to  his  friend  and  fellow  Chinese 
exile,  poet  Bei  Ling.  "His  wife  told 
people  from  the  government  that  he 
had  been  writing  literary  things  at 
home,  and  writing  literature  then  was 
very  dangerous,"  said  Bei. 

Gao  did  not  go  into  specifics  in  the 
interview,  but  it  was  not  uncommon 
during  the  Cultural  Revolution  for 


Foreign  unrest  overshadows 
presidential  campaign  plans 


CANDIDATES:  Gore,  Bush 
speak  out  for  retahatory 
response  to  bomb  attack 


By  Ron  Foumicr 

The  Associated  Press 


pissicJent  Chinese  writer  Gao  Xingjian  who  won  the  No'bd'prlreln 
literature,  is  seen  at  his  home  of  Bagnolet,  in  Paris. 


people,  driven  to  extremes  to  save 
themselves,  to  divorce  loved  ones  tar- 
geted by  the  zealots. 

Gao  went  on  to  become  a  leading 
cultural  figure  in  China  but  fled  in 
1987  after  one  of  his  plays  was 


banned  and  he  was  put  under  police 
surveillance.  After  the  1989  blood- 
bath at  Tiananmen  Square  in  Beijing, 
he  wrote  "Fugitives,"  set  against  the 


SeeNMEUpage? 


DETROIT  -  Al  Gore  and  George 
W.  Bush  both  urged  Palestinians  to 
end  the  rising  Middle  East  violence 
and  demanded  retribution  for  the 
apparent  terrorist  bombing  of  a 
Navy  destroyer,  finding  rare  agree- 
ment on  foreign  policy  crises  that 
overshadowed  their  presidential 
campaign. 

A  day  after  their  second  debate, 
Gore  and  Bush  scaled  back  plans  to 
criticize  each  other's  credibility,  real- 
izing that  candidates  -  like  the  com- 
mander-in-chief they  hope  to  become 
-  must  adapt  to  world  events. 

"It's  time  for  our  nation  to  speak 
with  one  voice,"  said  Bush,  the  GOP 
nominee.  Gore,  the  Democratic  vice 
president,  cut  short  a  campaign  trip 
to  return  to  the  White  House,  where 
he  hadn't  been  since  June  because  of 
the  presidential  race. 

"They're  learning  what  it  means 
to  be  president  of  the  United  States 
because  their  plans  and  their  cam- 
paigns just  got  wiped  off  the  front 
pages,"  said  Democratic  political 
consulunt  Jim  Duffy.  "And  neither 
one  of  them  better  get  caught  playing 
politics  with  these  issues." 

As  the  U.S.  candidates  slept,  an 
angry  mob  of  Palestinians  killed 
three  Israeli  soldiers  in  the  West 
Bank  town  of  Ramallah.  Israel's 
response  was  swift:  helicopters  rock- 


eted Arafat's  residential  compound 
in  the  Gaza  Strip  as  well  as  targets  in 
the  West  Bank. 

Separately,  a  small  boat  apparent- 
ly carrying  explosives  tore  a  hole  in 
the  side  of  a  Navy  ship  in  port  on  the 
Arabian  Peninsula,  killing  and 
wounding  American  sailors.  > 

Gore  abruptly  dropped  plans  to 
criticize  Bush's  debate  performance 
-  "I'm  not  going  to  take  any  political 
questions,"  he  told  reporters  -  as 
aides  said  a  full-throated  attack 
would  have  been  improper  on  such  a 
day. 

He  did  criticize  Bush's  health  care 
record  as  Texas  governor,  telling  sup- 
porters it  "gives  us  an  important  win- 
dow into  what  his  priorities  are." 

In  one  way,  the  turn  of  events 
worked  against  the  vice  president 
After  their  first  debate.  Bush  high- 
lighted Gore's  misstatements  and 
undercut  his  credibility  to  gain  in 
polls.  Gore  hoped  to  turn  the  tables 
Thursday  by  trumpeting  Bush's  mis- 
cues  in  their  second  meeting,  particu- 
larly the  misrepresentation  of  a  case 
involving  three  convicted  murderers 
in  Texas. 

"Bush  ought  to  be  held  to  the 
same  exacting  standards  applied  to 
Al  Gore  last  week,"  deputy  cam- 
paign manager  Mark  Fabiani  said. 

Bush  let  his  aides  respond,  know- 
ing foreign  affairs  would  overshad- 
ow the  post-debate  criticism. 

The  Texas  governor  said  he  was 
saddened  and  angry  by  the  attack  on 
a  Navy  ship.  "Take  the  necessary 
action,"  he  said.  "There  must  be  a 
consequence."  ,- 


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Daily  Bniin  News 


WORLD  <&  NATION 


Friday,  October  13,2000 


Dow  Jones  Industrials 

down:  379.21 

clo$e:ia034.58  v  V   -  * 


Nasdaq  lnd« 

down:  93.81 
dose:  3074.68 


Dollar 

Yen:  107.69 
Euro:  1.1581 


Attacks  target  Arafat's  compound 


VIOLENCE:  Annan,  chief 
of  CIA  attempt  to  broker 
peace  between  factions 


By  Ibrahim  Hazboun 

The  Associated  Press 


GAZA  CITY.  Gaza  Strip  -  In  a 
day  of  incendiary  violence  that  left 
Mideast  peacemaking  in  ashes.  Israeli 
helicopters  rocketed  Palestinian 
leader  Yasser  Arafat's  compound 
Thursday  in  retaliation  for  the  mutila- 
tion of  three  Israeli  soldiers  by  a  mob 
of  enraged  Palestinians. 

The  day  began  with  U.N. 
Secretary-General  Kofi  Annan  and 
CIA  chief  George  Tenet  trying  to  bro- 
ker a  truce  to  end  two  weeks  of  daily 

fighting.  But  it  degenerated  swiftly.      _„ ^ 

with  both  sides  unleashing  pent-up      Barak  Thursday. 


crazy  war,"  said  Saeb  Erekat.  a  senior 
Palestinian  official. 

Israeli  Prime  Minister  Ehud  Barak 
said  Arafat  "does  not  appear  to  be  a 
partner  for  peace  at  this  time." 

Barak  said  he  held  Arafat  indirectly 
responsible  for  the  killing  of  the  sol- 
diers, and  said  Israel  would  hunt 
down  those  involved.  He  demanded 
that  the  United  States  publicly  affix 
blame  to  Arafat  for  the  collapse  of  the 
peace  talks  and  the  escalation  of  vio- 
lence. 

Barak  also  renewed  calls  to  the 
hawkish  opposition  party  Likud  to 
join  an  emergency  coalition.  Likud 
has  rebuffed  Barak  in  the  past,  saying 
it  would  join  only  if  he  abandoned  the 
peace  talks.  However,  opposition 
leader  Ariel  Sharon  -  whose  visit  to  a 
contested  Jerusalem  shrine  two  weeks 
ago  triggered  the  violence  -  met  with 


rage. 

The  Palestinians  inflicted  the  worst 
losses  yet  on  Israeli  troops,  while 
Israel's  combat  helicopters  staged 
unprecedented  attacks  on  high-profile 
Palestinian  targets  and  tanks  rumbled 
to  the  outskirts  of  Palestinian  cities. 

One  Israeli  rocket  struck  150  feet 

from   Arafat's   seaside    residential 

headquarters,  with  the  Palestinian 

leader  inside  at  the  time,  his  aides  said. 

This  is  a  declaration  of  war  -  a 


Thursday's  turmoil  appeared  to 
extinguish  hopes  that  Israel  and  the 
Palestinians  could  soon  negotiate  a 
truce  and  bring  an  end  to  15  days  of 
bloodshed  that  have  left  at  least  95 
people  dead,  the  vast  majority 
Palestinians. 

The  attack  on  Arafat's  compouitd 
and  other  key  Palestinian  targets  was 
the  first  major  Israeli  assault  on 
important  Palestinian  sites  since 
Arafat  returned  to  the  region  in  1994 
and  the  two  sides  launched  negotia- 


tions aimed  at  a  comprehensive  settle- 
ment. 

A  smiling,  defiant  Arafat  was 
cheered  by  hundreds  of  Palestinians 
as  he  toured  the  Gaza  sites  hit  by  rock- 
ets, including  a  power  station,  a  gov- 
ernment building  and  a  police  station. 
■'Our  people  don't  care,  and  don't 
hesitate  to  continue  their  march  to 
Jerusalem,  their  capital  of  the  inde- 
pendent Palestinian  state,"  he  said. 

While  f«raelis  and  Palestinians 
traded  sharp  words,  Annan  made  a 
seemingly  futile  plea  for  calm. 

"I  appeal  to  all  -  leaders  and  citi- 
zens alike  -  to  stop  and  think  about 
what  they  are  doing  today  and  what 
kind  of  tomorrow  they  want  for  their 
children."  he  said.  After  a  brief  trip  to 
Lebanon  on  Thursday,  Annan 
returned  to  Israel  to  deal  with  the  cri- 
sis. 

The  violence  had  been  waning  this 
week,  but  erupted  anew  when  Israeli 
reservist  soldiers  made  a  wrong  turn 
and  ended  up  near  the  center  of  the 
West  Bank  town  of  Ramallah,  a  flash- 
point of  fighting  between  Israeli 
troops  and  Palestinian  rioters. 

The  soldiers,  traveling  in  a  civilian 
car,  were  chased  by  Palestinians  and 
sought  shelter  in  the  Ramallah  police 
station.  Word  of  their  presence 
spread,     and     more     than     1,000 


SceBRAEUpage? 


WORLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 

Hostages  taken  at 
gunpoint  in  Colombia 

QUITO.  Ecuador  -  Colombian  rebels 
seized  a  helicopter  from  an  oil  field  in  the 
Amazon  jungle  early  Thursday,  kidnapping  six 
Americans  and  at  least  four  others  and  flying 
them  into  Colombian  territory,  military  offi- 
cials said. 

The  hostages,  who  also  included  a  Chilean, 
an  Argentine  and  the  two  Frenchmen,  were 
taken  at  gunpoint  before  dawn  in  the  El  Coca 
region.  150  miles  southeast  of  the  capital,  mili- 
tary officials  said. 

An  Ecuadorean  military  communique  said 
the  gunmen,  whose  faces  were  covered, 
claimed  to  be  members  of  the  Revolutionary 
Armed  Forces  of  Colombia,  or  FARC, 
Colombia's  largest  guerrilla  group. 

The  guerrilla  group  denied  any  part  in  the 
attack. 

The  military  statement  added  that  the  heli- 


gle  town  of  Lago  Agrio  at  6:25  a.m. 
before  passing  over  the  San  Miguel 
River  into  Colombian  territory. 

The  exact  number  of  hostages  was- 
n't immediately  clear.  Though  the 
Ecuadorean  military  said  10  people  were  cap- 
tured, Ecuadorean  Vice  President  Pedro  Pinto 
said  nine  were  seized,  including  one 
Ecuadorean. 

Dow  falls  379  points; 
world  events  blamed 

NEW  YORK  -  The  Dow  Jones  industrial 
average  plunged  379  points  Thursday,  almost 
dropping  below  10,000,  as  new  Mideast  vio- 
lence and  soaring  oil  prices  compounded  wor- 
ries about  weak  company  profits. 

The  Nasdaq  composite  index  fell  to  its  low- 
est close  this  year,  extending  a  post-Labor  Day 
slide  dominated  by  fears  that  technology  com- 
panies aren't  growing  fast  enough  to  justify 


Suldde  boiTibii^  attack 


US.  warsNp  in  Ysmen 

EXPLOSION:  At  least  six  crew  members  dead,  many 
more  injured;  Pentagon  says  terrorists  responsible 


ByRobcrtBums 

The  Associated  Press  .        '. 

WASHINGTON  -  In  a  sinister 
slip  through  Navy  security,  suicide 
bombers  in  a  small  boat  tore  a  gap- 
ing hole  in  a  U.S.  warship  Thursday 
at  a  refueling  stop  in  a  Yemeni  har- 
bor on  the  Arabian  Peninsula,  U.S. 
ofTicials  say.  The  blast  killed  at  least 
six  members  of  the  crew,  injured  35, 
and  left  1 1  missing. 


The  crippled  ship  was  tilting 
slightly  in  the  harbor  at  Aden, 
Yemen,  but  the  Navy  said  it  was  not 
in  danger  of  sinking. 

No  one  has  claimed  responsibili- 
ty, Defense  Secretary  William 
Cohen  told  a  Pentagon  news  confer- 
ence. 

A  shaken  President  Clinton  said 
the  attack  on  the  USS  Cole,  one  of 


See  NAVY,  page  11 


XU      I  I  r    ki  *-     ■  1      i  The  Associated  Pies5 

The  U.S.  Navy  Guideci  Missile  Destroyer  USS  Cole  was  the  target 
of  a  bomb  attack  Thursciay  as  It  refueled  at  a  harbor  near  Yemen. 


Yugoslavia's  new  president 
meets  with  world  leaders 

TALKS:  Rostunica  receives  word  Clinton  to  remove 
embargo,  keeps  watch  over  Milosevic  supporters 


By  Katarina  Kratovac 

The  Associated  Press 

BELGRADE,  Yugoslavia  - 
President  Vojislav  Kostunica  met 
Thursday  with  a  senior  U.S.  envoy  - 
the  first  high-level  contact  between 
the  two  governments  since  Belgrade 
broke  relations  with  the  United 
States  last  year  on  the  eve  of  the 
NATO  bombing  campaign. 
The  meeting  between  Kostunica 


and  Balkan  envoy  James  C.  O'Brien 
followed  welcome  news  from 
Washington  for  the  moribund 
Yugoslav  economy.  President 
Clinton  announced  Thursday  he  was 
lifting  an  oil  embargo  and  a  flight  ban 
on  Yugoslavia  imposed  in  1998  after 
former  President  Slobodan 
Milosevic  launched  a  crackdown  on 
Kosovo  Albanians 


SeeYUGOSlilVU,pa9elO 


copter  was  detected  fiymg  near  Ecuador's  jun-     lotty  stock  prices.  The  mdex  has  dropped  in 


of  the  last  16  sessions 

The  Dow  closed  down  379.21  at 
10,034.58.  the  lowest  it's  been  since 
March.  It  was  its  fifth-largest  point 
drop  ever,  but  the  3.6  percent  decline  did 
not  even  approach  the  top  25  percentage  loss- 
es. 

"In  an  already  nervous  market,  this  is  all  we 
didn't  need."  said  Al  Goldman,  an  analyst 
with  AG.  Edwards  &  Sons  Inc.  in  St.  Louis. 
"A  terrorist  attack,  increased  hostilities  in  the 
Middle  East  and  a  spike  in  oil  prices  -  shake  it 
all  up  and  you  get  blind  dumping  of  stocks." 

The  Nasdaq  composite  closed  down  93.81 
to  3,074.68  -  its  lowest  close  of  2000. 

Court  rules  in  favor  of 
teen  cross-dresser 

BROCKTON,  Mass  ^  A  15-year-old  boy 
who  was  barred  from  school  for  wearing  girls' 
clothing,  including  padded  bras,  wigs  and  high 
heels,  can  return  to  class,  a  judge  ruled. 


The  student,  identified  in  court  records  as 
"Pat  Doe,"  can  also  wear  any  clothing  or 
accessories  that  any  other  male  or  female  stu- 
dent may  wear.  Judge  Linda  Giles  said 
Wednesday. 

South  Junior  High  School  had  forbidden 
the  boy  to  attend  school  in  female  dress,  call- 
ing it  disruptive.  A  school  attorney  said  the  stu- 
dent upset  parents  and  students  and  led  to  con- 
frontations with  classmates. 

The  student  was  suspended  three  times  for 
using  the  girls'  restroom  after  being  warned 
not  to. 

The  school  referred  him  to  a  therapist,  who 
in  1999  diagnosed  him  with  gender  identity 
disorder.  The  therapist  said  requiring  him  to 
wear  boys'  clothing  could  harm  his  mental 
health. 

On  Wednesday,  the  judge  ruled  the  prohibi- 
tion amounts  to  "the  stifling  of  a  person's  self- 
hood merely  because  it  causes  some  members 
of  the  community  discomfort." 


^ 


Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


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FfkJdy,.Octoberl3,2000 


Daily  Brum  Newi' 


Daily  BniinNeiiii 


Friday,  October  13, 2000 


STATE  &  LOCAL 


Comments 

TRUCE:  Cardinal  Mahony 
pleads  for  striking  county 
workers  to  return  to  jobs 


By  Judy  Lin 

The  Associated  Press 

Thousands  of  striking  Los  Angeles 
County  employees  returned  to  work 
Thursday  after  union  leaders  heeded 
a  plea  from  Cardinal  Roger  Mahony 
to  end  the  interruption  of  services  to 
"the  poorest  and  most  vulnerable" 
people. 

The  surprise  decision  by  union 
officials  representing  47,000  of  the 
county's  workers  put  the  day-old 
walkout  on  hold  late  Wednesday 
night  and  put  employees  back  on  the 
job  hours  later  -  some  grumbling 
about  the  cardinal  and  their  union's 
leadership. 

"I  think  it's  political,"  said  Fausto 
Santos,  28,  heading  back  to  work  at 
the  county  assessor's  office.  "The 
cardinal  has  a  lot  of  pull." 

"I  lost  several  hundred  in  pay," 
said  Paul  Bernal,  44,  an  auditor-con- 
troller's employee.  "All  of  a  sudden  I 
have  to  come  back  to  square  one.  It's 
not  too  satisfying." 

The  truce  in  the  county  labor  dis- 
pute came  as  a  separate  transit  strike 
continued  for  a  27th  day,  with  repre- 
sentatives of  bus  drivers  and  rail 
operators  rejecting  a  "final"  offer  by 
the  Metropolitan  Transportation 
Authority.  It  included  a  9.3  percent 
pay  increase  over  three  years  and  the 
MTA  picking  up  I  percent  of  employ- 
ee pension  contributions. 

MTA  officials  said  they  would  now 
take  the  proposal  directly  to  the  dri- 
vers. 

There  was  no  immediate  comment 
from  United  Transportation  Union 


•  It 


irily  halt  walkout 


Babbitt  attends  dismantling 
of  50-year-old  Ventura  dam 


The  Associated  Pre« 


A  union  representative,  left,  and  a  Los  Angeles  County  negotiator, 
both  of  whonr^  refused  to  identify  themselves,  talk  briefly. 


officials  on  that  plan. 

In  a  new  letter  Thursday  to  MTA 
and  United  Transportation  Union 
officials,  Mahony  urged  use  of  a  fed- 
eral mediator  and  said  he  was  pray- 
ing for  a  mutual  compromise  that 
would  give  workers  "a  just  salary  and 
benefits"  and  restore  public  trans- 
portation. 

Mahony  had  denounced  the  tran- 
sit strike  when  talks  broke  off  last 
month,  but  said  he  wasn't  taking 
sides. 

"The  continuation  of  this  strike  ... 
is  unconscionable  and  is  wreaking 
havoc  on  the  poorest  of  our  families, 
employees  and  small  business  own- 
ers," he  said  Sept.  26. 

That  appeal  drew  no  action  by 
either  side  in  the  transit  strike,  how- 
ever. 


■  Mahony,  whose  presence  literally 
looms  over  the  county  in  the  form  of 
a  huge  new  cathedral  he  is  building 
across  the  street  from  the  county  Hall 
of  Administration,  was  more  moder- 
ate in  his  statement  to  the  strikers  and 
the  Board  of  Supervisors. 

"Over  the  past  week,  workers  in 
Los  Angeles  County  have  made  us  all 
more  aware  of  the  important  services 
they  provide  to  the  public  and,  in  par- 
ticular, to  the  poorest  and  most  vul- 
nerable members  of  our  community," 
Mahony  wrote. 

He  said  it  was  "regrettable  the  out- 
standing issues  in  this  dispute  have 
not  been  resolved." 

County  employees  need  to  be  com- 
pensated fairly  and  should  not  face 
intimidation  for  union  activities,  he 
said. 


ENVIRONMENT:  Interior 
Secretary's  actions  may 
resolve  beach  problems 

The  Associated  Press 

OJAI  -  Interior  Secretary  Bruce 
Babbitt  stepped  into  a  crane 
Thursday  and  tore  off  part  of  a  dam 
that  has  blocked  a  major  tributary 
to  the  Ventura  River  for  more  than 
half  a  century.  His  demolition  work 
was  the  latest  move  in  a  nationwide 
campaign  to  breach  old  dams. 

Conservationists  said  removing 
the  Matitija  Dam  along  Matilija 
Creek  will  help  restore  steelhead 
runs  and  return  mountain  sediment 
to  eroding  Ventura  County  beach- 
es. 

"It  was  a  little  hard  to  believe," 
Mark  Capelii,  a  member  of  Friends 
of  the  Ventura  River,  said  after 
Babbitt  removed  a  16,000-pound 
concrete  slab  from  the  dam's  face. 
"It's  been  sitting  up  there  for  over  a 
half  a  century,  and  I  don't  think 
there  are  too  many  people  who 
thought  it  would  be  lifted  off,  at 
least  in  our  lifetime.  It  was  an  his- 
toric moment." 

The  200-foot-tall  dam,  about  20 
miles  north  of  Ventura,  was  built  in 
1948  to  control  floods  and  store 
water.  Since  then,  it  has  blocked  an 
estimated  5  to  7  million  cubic  yards 
of  sediment,  enough  to  extend  all 
Ventura  County  beaches  by  30  feet. 
The  layer  of  sand  and  gravel  behind 
the  dam  is  estimated  at  140  feet 
deep. 

Its  concrete  face  also  prevents 
steelhead  from  returning  upriver  to 


spawning  beds.  The  number  of 
steelhead  swimming  up  the  Ventura 
■River  dropped  from  about  2,000  a 
year  before  the  dam  was  built  to 
about  100  today. 

Thursday's  event  was  the  first 
step  in  a  demonstration  project  to 
determine  whether  the  dam  can  be 
removed  in  layers.  The  sediment 
backed  up  behind  it  presents  the 
most  difficult  challenge  to  breach- 
ing the  dam. 

The  project  could  cost  as  much 
as  $180  million  for  a  relatively 
quick  removal  process  that  M'ould 
involve  hauling  sediment  to 
Ventura  County  beaches,  accord- 
ing to  a  U.S.  Bureau  of 
Reclamation  study. 

It  could  cost  as  little  as  $20  mil- 
lion if  officials  choose  to  let  nature 
move  the  sediment  downstream  by 
gradually  removing  the  dam  over 
about  20  years. 

After  determining  how  best  to 
breach  the  dam,  federal,  state  and 
Ventura  County  agencies  will  seek 
funding.  Babbitt  said  the  coopera- 
tive effort,  which  brought  about 
200  people  to  the  dam  site 
Thursday,  should  serve  as  a  model 
for  the  rest  of  California  and  the 
nation. 

The  Interior  Department  has 
been  examining  the  nation's  75,000 
dams  to  determine  which  have  envi- 
ronmental costs  that  outweigh  their 
usefulness.  Dams  are  a  barricade 
for  native  fish  species  and  collect 
tons  of  silt. 

Babbitt  has  drawn  attention  to 
the  issue  by  presiding  over  several 
"dam-bustings,"  including  the  dis- 
mantling of  Saeltzer  Dam  last  week 
in  Northern  California. 


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ISRAEL 

From  pages 

Palestinians  surged  toward  the  build- 
ing. 

Palestinian  forces  tried  to  l(eep  the 
mob  at  bay,  but  about  10  men  broke 
through  a  second-floor  window  where 
the  Israelis  were  held.  The  attackers 
soon  emerged  with  blood-covered 
hands  as  the  crowd  roared  with 
approval. 

The  body  of  one  Israeli  soldier  was 
thrown  into  the  street,  and  a  second 
was  dangled  down  by  a  rope,  where 
the  corpse  was  stomped  and  beaten 
with  iron  bars.  From  the  window, 
Palestinians  shook  their  fists  and 
flashed  gleeful  "V  for  victory"  signs. 
Both  bodies  were  soaked  in  blood. 

There  was  continued  confusion 
about  the  number  of  Israeli  soldiers 
killed.  The  army  said  two  bodies  were 
handed  over  to  Israel.  However, 
Barak  later  told  CNN  that  three  sol- 
diers were  "lynched  and  mutilated." 

Before  Thursday,  only  one  Israeli 
joldier  had  been  killed  in  the  fighting. 
"The  brutal  lynching  in  Ramallah 
is  a  very  grave  incident,"  said  Israel's 
acting  foreign  minister.  Shiomo  Ben- 
Ami.  "More  than  just  escalating  the 
explosive  situation,  the  event  shows  a 
lack  of  respect  for  human  life." 

Israel's  army  said  the  helicopter 
strikes  were  a  "limited  action 
designed  to  respond  to  the  barbaric 
act  Palestinians  conducted  this  morn- 
ing." Deputy  Defense  Minister 
Ephraim  Sneh  said  Israel  did  not 
intend  to  "conquer"  territory  in  the 
West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  under 
Palestinian  security  control. 

Still,  the  assault  showed  Israel  was 
prepared  to  use  heavy  weaponry  the 
Palestinians  do  not  possess. 

The  Israeli  forces  first  targeted  the 
police  sution  and  the  Palestinian  TV 
headquarters  in  Ramallah.  Black 
columns  of  smoke  rose  from  the  city, 
and  at  least  12  people  were  injured, 
the  Palestinians  said. 

In  Gaza  City,  Arafat's  headquar- 
ters and  buildings  near  it  were  hur- 
riedly evacuated.  Shortly  afterward,  a 
guard  house  next  to  the  residence  was 
hit,  and  smoke  rose  above  the  com- 


pound. Residents  sprinted  from  near- 
by buildings. 

Barak  said  Arafat  himself  was 
never  a  target  in  the  helicopter 
attacks. 

Palestinian  officials  said  the  attack 
came  shortly  after  Tenet,  the  CIA 
chief,  met  with  Arafat  in  Gaza  City. 
Palestinian  Justice  Minister  Freih 
Abu  Medein  said  the  Israelis  wailed 
for  Tenet  to  leave  Gaza  before  they 
unleashed  the  rockets.  However,  U.S. 
officials  in  Washington  said  Tenet  was 
en  route  to  the  meeting,  but  canceled 
when  told  it  may  be  unsafe. 

In  Ramallah,  the  Palestinian  police 
station  was  reduced  to  rubble  after 
being  hammered  by  the  rockets,  and 
flames  poured  out  of  a  second  build- 
ing. An  angry  mob  gathered  outside 
the  station,  shouting  "God  is  great," 
and  raising  a  Palestinian  flag  on  a 
damaged  wall. 

After  nightfall,  Israeli  helicopter 
gunships  rocketed  the  Palestinian 
police  academy  in  the  West  Bank 
town  of  Jericho,  apparently  in  retalia- 
tion for  the  burning  of  an  ancient  syn- 
agogue in  the  biblical  oasis.  Jericho 
was  plunged  into  darkness  by  the  mis- 
sile hit. 

Fighting  continued  into  the  night. 
Combat  helicopters  attacked  the 
majn  compound  of  the  Palestinian 
security  forces  in  Nablus.  Police  offi- 
cers fled  into  the  street  before  the 
shooting  began.  A  firefight  erupted  in 
the  West  Bank  town  of  Hebron,  and 
gunships  attacked  gunmen  in  the 
town  of  Salfit  near  Nablus. 

Israel  also  clamped  an  internal  clo- 
sure on  the  West  Bank,  meaning 
Palestinians  could  not  leave  their 
communities. 

In  another  development,  the 
Palestinian  Authority  rele;ised  hun- 
dreds of  prisoners,  including  scores  of 
Islamic  militants,  from  jails  in  the 
West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip.  The 
releases  put  Israel  on  high  alert.  "This 
is  a  grave  act  that  increases  the  proba- 
bility of  terror  attacks,"  Barak  said. 

The  Dow  Jones  industrial  average 
plunged  about  380  points  Thursday 
while  the  Nasdaq  composite  index 
recorded  its  lowest  close  this  year,  as 
jittery  investors  reacted  to  the  escalat- 
ing violence  in  the  Middle  East. 


NOBEL      ^i 

From  page  4 

background  of  the  slayings.  The 
Communist  regime  declared  him 
"persona  non  grata"  and  banned  his 
works. 

Gae's  novel  "Soul  Mountain,"  a 
complex  narrative  based  on  his  trav- 
els in  China,  was  published  in 
English  translation  last  year  and  was 
singled  out  by  the  Swedish  Academy 
as  "one  of  those  singular  literary  cre- 
ations that  seem  impossible  to  com- 
pare with  anything  but  themselves." 

Gao  has  lived  in  France  for  12 
years,  speaks  flawless  French  and 
holds  French  citizenship.  He  is  an 
authority  on  modem  French  drama 
but  leads  a  humble,  spartan  life. 
After  the  Nobel  announcement,  he 
received  visitors  at  his  two-room 
apartment  in  a  blu^collar  Paris  sub- 
urb wearing  a  sweatshirt  and  slip- 
pers. 

Gao  said  he  started  keeping  a 
diary  when  he  was  8  and  now  writes 
or  paints  up  to  16  hours  a  day  on  a 
glass  table,  the  only  furniture  in  the 
room. 


"Writing  eases  my  suffering,"  he 
said.  "When  you  use  words,  you're 
able  to  keep  your  mind  alive.  Writing 
is  my  way  of  reaffirming  my  own 
existence." 

Having  survived  the  Cultural 
Revolution,  he  saw  his  dramas  fall 
victim  in  the  1980s  to  a  government 
campaign  against  what  it  called  "spir- 
itual pollution."  "Bus  Stop"  (1983) 
and  "The  Other  Shore"  (1986)  were 
banned.  After  leaving  China  he 
wrote  "Between  Life  and  Death" 
(1991),  and  "Weekend  Quartet" 
(1995)  which  critics  say  gracefully 
combines  poetry,  comedy  and 
tragedy  to  portray  life's  grim  reali- 
ties. 

Gao  said  the  prize,  worth 
$915,000,  "really  is  something,  espe- 
cially for  a  Chinese  man  because  the 
Nobel  is  a  very  heated  issue  in 
China" 

China  has  been  suspicious  of  the 
Nobel  committee  since  it  awarded 
the  1989  Peace  Prize  to  the  Dalai 
Lama,  spiritual  leader  of  Tibet  and 
leader  of  that  region's  struggle  to 
throw  off  Chinese  rule. 

Gao  said  he  would  not  try  to  make 
political  capital  out  of  his  award.  "1 


am  not  a  politician,"  he  said.  "I'm 
not  involved  in  politics,  but  that  does 
not  prevent  me  from  criticizing  the 
policies  of  Communist  China  I  say 
what  I  want  to  say.  If  I  have  chosen  to 
live  in  exile,  it  is  to  be  able  to  express 
myself  freely  without  constraints." 

Gao  said  that  he  has  broken  all 
ties  to  China  "so  that  I  can  express 
myself  freely  without  endangering 
my  family  and  those  close  to  me."    ^ 

Poet  Bei,  who  lives  in  Boston, 
called  the  prize  "an  affirmation  of  his 
creativity  and  a  great  show  of  sup- 
port for  all  of  us  independent  writers 
and  exiled  writers." 

But  for  many  young  Chinese,  Gao 
is  an  unknown.  His  works  are  pub- 
lished in  Hong  Kong  and  Taiwan, 
not  in  China,  so  "many  writers  under 
the  age  of  35  do  not  know  him,"  said 
Bei,  40. 

At  the  highbrow,  arty  Three 
Flavors  Bookstore  in  central  Beijing, 
literature-loving  shop  attendants  had 
never  heard  of  Gao  but  rejoiced 
nonetheless. 

"As  a  Chinese,  I  am  very  proud 
that  a  Chinese  person  won  the 
prize,"  said  Wang  Shenda.  a  college 
graduate  working  in  the  store. 


CAMPAiGN 

Frompage4 

Gore  said  if  the  incident  is  an  act 
of  terrorism,  "something  like  this 
will  be  met  with  a  full  and  forceful 
and  effective  retaliatory  response 
from  the  United  States  of  America. 
We  will  not  leave  this  matter.  We 
will  defend  our  country." 

Bush  campaigned  in 

Pennsylvania  and  Michigan.  Gore 
was  in  Wisconsin,  and  planned  to 
visit  Michigan  Friday  and  Saturday. 

Their  debate  had  found  both  men 
in  agreement  on  several  foreign  pol- 
icy issues,  including  the  Middle 
East.  Both  called  Israel  a  strong  ally 
and  urged  Arafat  to  quell 
Palestinian  unrest. 

On  Thursday,  Gore  said,  "I  want 
to  call  on  Chairman  Arafat  to  issue 
instructions  to  those  who  have  been 


perpetrating  the  violence  to  cease 
and  desist." 

Bush  said  Arafat  "must  stand  up 
and  call  on  his  people  to  put  down 
their  rocks  and  arms." 

Mike  Young,  political  science 
professor  at  Penn  State  University, 
said  Thursday's  events  would  likely 
focus  voters  on  foreign  policy. 

"I  think  that  benefits  Gore.  I 
think  it  benefits  the  incumbent,  the 
guys  who  are  minding  the  store" 
unless  President  Clinton  or  Gore 
missteps  in  reacting,  Young  said. 

Bush's  running  mate,  former 
Defense  Secretary  Dick  Cheney, 
said  of  a  U.S.  response  to  the  ship 
attack,  "We'd  better  find  out  who 
did  it  and  retaliate  very  forcefully." 

Gore's  running  mate.  Sen. 
Joseph  Lieberman,  said,  "The 
United  States  must  respond  quickly, 
forcefully  and  unequivocally." 

Bush's    performance     against 


Gore  in  the  foreign  policy  portion 
of  Wednesday's  debate  will  help 
Bush  weather  the  emergence  of  the 
issue  in  the  campaign.  Republicans 
said. 

A  number  of  independent  ana- 
lysts said  both  candidates  helped 
themselves,  and  the  race  likely  will 
remain  tight.  The  final  debate  is 
next  Tuesday  in  St.  Louis. 

The  foreign  distractions  came  as 
Gore  faced  some  tough  tactical 
decisions. 

Aides  say  he  is  considering  shift- 
ing more  resources  from  battle- 
ground states  not  vital  to  his  goal  of 
270  electoral  votes  to  slates  he 
absolutely  can't  win  without  -  such 
as  Michigan  and  Pennsylvania. 
Doing  so  would  be  mean  Gore  has 
concluded  the  race  will  be  won  or 
lost  narrowly,  and  he  will  be  out- 
spent  by  the  GOP  Democrats  have 
already  pulled  ads  from  four  states.  " 


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BOOKSTORE 

From  page  1 

He  hopes  more  bookstores  will 
follow  his  lead  and  return  to 
Westwood,  but  he  admiu  they  would 
need  to  be  specialty  bookstores  like 
his  own. 

"The  world  of  book-selling  has 
changed  a  lot  since  I  was  in 
(Westwood)."  he  said. 

"To  truly  succeed  as  an  indepen- 
dent bookseller,  you  become  a  spe- 
cialty book  seller,"  he  continued. 

Independent  bookstores  across 
the  nation  have  faced  similar  situa- 
tions, where  chain  bookstores  with 
lower  prices  and  wider  selections 
devour  the  market. 

But  those  who  are  passionate 
about  independent  bookstores 
lament  this  change  in  the  market. 

"I  don't  like  chain  bookstores 
because  they  have  no  personality," 
said  Maggie  Sarkissian,  buyer  and 
manager  of  the  Gallery  Bookstore 
located  inside  the  Armand  Hammer 
Museum. 

"I'm  very  happy  that  an  indepen- 
dent mystery  bookstore  is  open  in 


Westwood,"  she  said. 

Community  members  tend  to  go 
to  the  UCLA  Store  on  campus  and 
Borders  Books  and  Music  just  south 
of  the  Village  for  their  general  book 
needs. 

Though  it  is  these  larger  book- 
stores that  some  independent  owners 
sec  as  the  enemy.  Guy  Adams,  man- 
ager of  UCLA  Bookzonc.' said  he 
doesn't  believe  independent  book- 
stores will  be  competition. 

''I  think  in  this  day  and  age,  it's 
outstanding  for  any  independent 
book  store  to  come  in  anywhere," 
Adams  said. 

"I  think  Westwood  is  long  overdue 
for  a  revitalization,"  he  added. 

Adams  said  UCLA  Bookzone 
focuses  on  the  students,  faculty  and 
staff  and  their  needs,  such  as  acade- 
mic books  and  computer  texts. 

Though  there  will  be  some 
crossover  in  the  consumers  targeted 
by  UCLA  Bookzone  and  the 
Mystery  Bookstore,  Adams  said  they 
will  be  serving  different  communi- 
ties. 

"They,  as  do  we,  tend  to  focus  on 
their  own  communities,"  Adams 
said. 


CONFUa 

From  page  1 

Palestinians  and  Israelis  has  left  at 
least  94  dead  and  hundreds  wounded. 
"This  is  a  declaration  of  war  -  a 
crazy  war,"  senior  Palestinian  official 
Saeb  Erekat  told  the  Associated  Press. 
In  addition  to  helicopter  strikes, 
Israeli  forces  destroyed  six  Palestinian 
Naval  vessels  and  a  security  headquar- 
ters building. 

With  stepped-up  peace  negotiations 
in  Paris  occurring  only  weeks  ago,  the 
conflict  comes  at  an  unfortunate  time. 
"The  tragic  dimension  is  that  the 
parties  were  on  the  brink  of  a  break- 
through agreement  and  precisely  at 
the  point  when  there  was  a  chance  for 
resolution,  a  provocation  unleashed  a 
i"uror  and  rage  that  has  hurt  the 
process,  hopefully  not  irreparably." 
said  Rabbi  Chaim  Seidler-Feller,  direc- 
tor of  Hillel  at  UCLA. 

Thursday  morning,  Israeli 
Communications  Minister  Binyamin 
Bcn-Eliezer  declared  on  Israeli  radio, 
"The  peace  process  is  dead.  Arafat's 
clear  desire  is  for  war;  that  is  what  he 
wants." 

Muslims  have  argued  that  the  esca- 
lated conffict  was  forced  upon  the 
Palestinians. 

"The  Palestinians  are  not  a  violent 
people,  but  they  are  sick  of  being  treat- 
ed as  second-class  citizens," 
Mahmood  said.  "They  are  a  small 
group  of  unequipped  people  standing 
up  against  gunships  and  tanks." 

"It  takes  a  lot  for  16-year-old  males 
to  come  out  and  confront  Israeli  sol- 
diers. That's  not  something  that  some- 
one can  do  just  by  feeling  pressure."  he 
continued. 


Gabriel  Piterbcrg,  professor  of 
Near  East  History,  said  he  does  not 
believe  peace  can  be  achieved  any  time 
soon. 

"I  don't  believe  Ointon  can  reach  a 
peace  agreement  because  he  doesn't 
want  to  affect  his  wife's  campaign  and 
the  important  Jewish  vote,  so  I  don't 
believe  he  will  intervene,"  he  said. 
"The  killing  of  Palestinians  will  contin- 
ue." 

Professor  Steven  Spiegel,  an  expert 
on  the  conflict  in  the  Middle  East,  also 
has  his  doubts  about  a  peace  settle- 
ment coming  any  time  in  the  near 
future. 

"By  thinking  the  process  was  easier 
than  it  really  is  we're  taking  a  very 
American,  very  simplistic  approach 
and  our  expectations  have  been  too 
high"  Spiegel  said. 

"I  think  the  mistake  in  the  past  two 
years  has  been  people  thinking  you 
come  to  an  agreement  one  day  and 
things  will  then  "be  great  and  people 
will  be  very  friendly.  People  need  to 
think  of  it  as  a  process  that  may  take 
decades,"  Spiegel  said. 

Piterbcrg  also  noted  a  difference  in 
how  the  conflict  is  viewed  in  America. 
Seidler-Feller  mentioned  the  possi- 
bility that  an  agreement  might  still  be 
reached  without  tensions  rising 
between  factions  on  campus. 

"This  conflict  does  not  in  any  way 
diminish  the  resolution  to  peace  on  my 
part,"  Seidler-Feller  said,  "There's  no 
reason  in  my  mind  to  develop  unnec- 
essary antagonism  outside  of  the 
Middle  East.  There  arc  confrontations 
such  as  these  that  are,  in  an  ironic  way, 
part  of  the  process." 


With  reports  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  ser- 
vices. 


YUGOSLAVIA 

From  page  5 

"The  victory  of  freedom  in  Serbia  is 
one  of  the  most  hopeful  developments 
in  Europe  since  the  fall  of  the  Berlin 
Wall,"  Clinton  said.  "It  ended  a  dicta- 
torship and  it  can  liberate  an  entire 
region  from  the  nagging  fear  that  eth- 
nic differences  can  again  be  exploited 
to  start  wars  and  shift  borders." 

Kostunica  also  met  with  Italian 
Premier  Giuliano  Amato,  the  first 
head  of  government  to  travel  to 
Belgrade  since  Kostunica  took  ofTice 
Saturday. 

"The  factors  that  distanced 
Yugoslavia  from  a  democratic  society 
arc  now  gone  This  enables  us  to 
work  as  friends  on  the  task  of  reinte- 
grating Yugoslavia  into  international 
institutions,"  Amato  said  after  the 
meeting. 

Even  as  Kostunica  reached  out  to 
the  West,  he  kept  a  dose  eye  on  politi- 
cal deyelopmenu  within  Yugodbvia, 


where  Milosevic  supporters  tried  to 
stem  the  steady  erosion  of  their  power. 
Milosevic's  Socialist  Party  said  its 
hard-line  secretary-general,  Gorica 
Gajevic.  had  been  replaced  by  the 
more  moderate  Zoran  Andjelkovic, 
head  of  the  Serlvrun  Kosovo  govern- 
ment. 

Serbian  President  Milan 
Milutinovic  was  named  the  party's  vice 
president.  Milosevic  apparently 
remained  at  the  helm  despite  losing  the 
presidency,  and  the  Socialists  also 
called  a  party  congress  for  Nov.  25. 

Later  Thursday,  Beta  news  agency 
quoted  Socialist  official  Miloje 
Mihajlovic  as  saying  Milosevic  would 
resign  and  that  further  changes  in  the 
party  were  "necessary." 

There  were  also  signs  of  a  rift 
between  the  Socialists  and  their  neo- 
communist  allies,  the  Yugoslav  Left, 
the  party  of  Milosevic's  influential  wife 
Mirjana  Markovic.  Both  parties  said 
unlike  in  last  month's  elections,  their 
arrikklea  wmild  nm  inrirpcindcntly  in 


the  next  Serbian  vote. 


NAVY 

From  page  5 

the  woHd's  most  advanced  warships, 
appeared  to  be  an  act  of  terrorism,  the 
worst  against  the  U.S.  military  since 
the  bombing  of  an  Air  Force  barracks 
in  Saudi  Ai-ajfta  in  1996  that  killed  19 
troops.  (>/ 

"We  will  find  out  who  was  respon- 
sible and  hold  them  accountable," 
Clinton  pledged. 

He  dispatched  to  Yemen  investiga- 
tive teams  from  the  FBI.  the  State 
Department  and  the  Pentagon. 

Yemeni  President  Ali  Abdullah 
Saleh  talked  with  Secretary  of  State 
Madeleine  Albright,  pledged  his  coop- 
eration in  the  investigation  and  visited 
some  of  the  injured  who  were  hospi- 
talized locally.  He  insisted  in  a  CNN 
interview  that  his  country  did  not  har- 
bor "terrorist  elements"  and  said,  "I 
don't  think  it's  a  terrorist  attack." 
'  The  Cole  is  a  SI  billion  guided  mis- 
sile     destroyer 

home-ported   at      -— -■-— — i-_ 
Norfolk,  Va.  It 
had  sailed 

through  the  Red 
Sea  aiul  was  en 
route  to  the 
Persian  Gulf 
where  it  was  to 
perform       mar- 


Friday,  October  13,2000 


The  attackers  may 
have  known  the 
ship's  schedule. 


itime  intercept  operations  in  support 
of  the  U.N.  embargo  against  Iraq.  The 
ship  has  a  crew  of  about  350  people. 

Navy  medical  teams  were  en  route 
to  the  scene  Thursday  to  treat  those 
injured  in  the  5:15  a.m.  EDT  explo- 
sion. Pentagon  officials  said.  U.S.  air- 
craft capable  of  evacuating  the  injured 
were  also  scheduled  to  fly  to  Aden. 

The  incident  was  all  the  more  stun- 
ning given  that  U.S.  forces  in  the 
Middle  East  have  been  on  a  height- 
ened state  of  alert  in  recent  days  and 
security  plans  for  a  port  visit  like  the 
Cole's  are  drawn  up  in  advance. 

The  Cole  had  just  arrived  in  the  har- 
bor and  was  scheduled  to  leave  in 
about  four  hours,  officials  said,  sug- 
gesting the  attackers  may  have  known 
the  ship's  schedule  and  the  procedures 
for  a  refueling  stop 

Adm.  Vern  Clark,  the  chief  of  naval 
operations,  said  he  could  not  fault  the 
Cole's  crew  for  not  preventing  the 
midday  attack  that  apparently  was 
carried  out  by  two  men  in  a  small  har- 
bor craft  that  was  helping  lie  up  the 
ship's  mooring  lines  at  a  fueling  facili- 
ty in  the  middle  of  the  Aden  harbor. 

As  a  participant  in  normal  harbor 
operations,  the  small  boat's  presence 
did  not  raise  suspicions,  Clark  said. 

"I  have  no  reason  to  think  this  was 
anything  but  a  senseless  act  of  terror- 
ism." Clark  said. 

After  helping  ihe  Cole  moor,  the 
small  boat  came  alongside  the  warship 
and  apparently  detonated  a  high- 


explosive  bomb.  Some  reports  said  the 
two  men  in  the  boat  stood  at  attention 
as  the  bomb  exploded,  although  Clark 
said  he  could  not  verify  such  details 
based  on  early  information  from  the 
scene. 

The  explosion  ripped  a  hole  20  feet 
high  and  40  feet  wide  in  the  midsec- 
tion of  the  ship,  flooding  the  main 
engine  compartment.  Clark  said  the 
flooding  was  brought  under  control 
and  the  ship  was  not  in  danger  of  sink- 
ing. 

Clark  displayed  a  Navy  photo- 
graph of  the  damaged  ship.  The 
jagged  edges  of  the  hole  in  the  hull  pro- 
truded inward,  suggesting  the  explo- 
sive force  came  from  outside  the  ship 
at  roughly  the  water  level. 

Identities  of  the  dead  and  injured 
were  not  released  pending  notification 
ofrelatives.  Clark  said. 

Pressed  to  explain  why  the  Navy 
would  not  have  checked  the  creden- 
tials of  harbor  crews  more  carefully, 
Cohen  said  it  would  have  been  "very 
difficult   if  not 
,  impossible      to 

protect  against 
this  kind  of  inci- 
dent" 

"Our  vigi- 
lance cannot 
eliminate  all 
risk,"  Cohen 
said. 


Clark  said  the  U.S.  Embassy  in 
Aden  made  the  arrangements  for  the 
local  harbor  support. 

At  a  State  Department  news  con- 
ference, Secretary  of  State  Madeleine 
Albright  declared:  "We  will  hold  those 
who  committed  it  accountable  and 
take  appropriate  steps." 

SKe  said  this  is  no  lime  for  the 
United  States  to  "retreat  from  our 
responsibilities"  in  the  region. 

"We  are  operating  in  a  world  that  is 
filled  with  a  variety  of  threats.  But  that 
doesn't  mean  that  we  can  crawl  into 
an  ostrichlike  mode.  We  are  eagles, " 
Albright  said. 

No  other  U.S.  ships  were^in  Aden 
at  the  time  of  the  attack. 

The  explosion  was  "so  loud  I 
thought  it  was  from  inside  the  hotel. 
The  windows  in  21  of  our  33  rooms 
were  shattered,  and  many  of  the  televi- 
sion sets  fell  and  broke,"  said  Ahmed 
Mohammed  Al-Naderi,  manager  of 
the  port-side  Rock  Hotel  "Thank 
God  none  of  the  guests  or  hotel  per- 
sonnel were  injured." 

William  Arkin,  a  military  expert 
who  specializes  in  Gulf  affairs,  said 
Yemen  became  a  more  frequent  refu- 
eling stop  for  Navy  ships  following  a 
December  1997  U.S.  government  pol- 
icy decision  to  open  up  contacts  and 
cooperation  with  the  country.  He 
questioned  the  wisdom  of  using  Aden, 
considering  that  refueling  also  is  avail- 
able in  nearby  Djibouti,  which  Arkin 
said  presents  less  of  a  terrorism  risk. 


^EARWEAR 

fl^m  page  1 


aking  advantage  of  the  new  "Score 
Big  in  Bear  Wear"  promotion,  Klein 
said. 

For  each  touchdown  the  team 
scores,  a  student  with  a  ticket  stub 
can  receive  a  5  pcrcenl  discount  off 
BearWear  items  the  Monday  after  a 
game.  But  students  may  only  receive 
a  maximum  discount  of  25  percent. 

Though  sales  revenue  has  almost 
increased  to  its  normal  level,  ASU- 
CLA  will  continue  to  make  addition- 
al marketing  improvements,  Klein 
said. 

"Students  have  the  idea  that  the 
store  isn't  always  fun  to  come  to."  he 
said  "We're  working  on  creating  a 
higher  energy  level." 

Klein  said  the  new  music  store  and 
Campus  Culs  Salon  on  A-L«vcl  h.ave 
'attracted  more  students  to  Ackerman 
Union. 

"There's  definitely  been  an 
increase  in  foot  traffic,  but  there's  no 
scjcntific  way  of  measuring  it,"  he 
said 


rearranged,  with  the  Clinique 
counter  and  Fast  Track  Adidas  mer- 
chandise now  closer  to  the  front  of 
the  store. 

Delia  said  the  old  Fast  Track  area 
will  be  rented  out  to  generate  more 
revenue. 

Though  this  move  will  decrease  the 
BearWear  area,  officials  said  this 
doesn't  mean  it  will  sell  fewer  items. 

"Just  because  you  reduce  the  area 
of  the  store,  doesn't  mean  you're 
reducing  sales,"  Delia  said. 

In  the  future,  Delia  said  ASUCLA 
wants  to  move  the  store's  distribution 
center  from  Pico  Rivera  to  one  on 
campus. 

The  move  would  mean  the  associa- 
tion can  save  on  truck  and  rental 
expenses  while  allowing  them  to  hire 
more  students.  This  would  also 
decrease  the  time  students  must  wait 
for  certain  merchandise  to  arrive  on 
campus. 

Delia  said  ASUCLA  hopes  to 
increase  sales  revenue  to  $9.4  million, 
the  level  it  was  at  during  the  1998-9 
fiscal  year. 

"We'd  love  to  hit  that  number 


uguin,"  Ddia  said.  "We  duii't  kiiuw  if 


The  layout  of  B-level  has  also  been      we  can.  but  it's  looking  good." 


cJTie  sisters  ojgTieta  ^ppa  cpRi  woufcf  fiRe  to 

proufff^  present  the  members  of  their  1999-2000 

lMpon6eam  pfecfge  cfass: 


gen  Chung 
Josephine  <J)eanQ 
Qandy^  ^u^nR 
y\ileen  9[c     - 
^^uf  ie  cj^e 
^^K^rcn  ^ao 
^TV(ena  ^u 


^esfic  ^ul 

^f-^ssa  ofashiro 
C«t*ofp  ^an 
HcHcn  oJran 
iXicfieffe  ofse 
^^ennijer  Young 


L 


Congratufatlons/  ^ave  jun  at  ^nformais( 

'   .•"  ' ..'"  '■"./";■_  3ove,' 


>.; 


GEMS  AND  JEWELRY  101 


1055  westwood  blvd.  •  westwood  village 
(310)208-3131 

Supporting  UCLA  Acodemics.  AtWeftcs  ana  Performing  Arts 


Presented  by 


'ine   jewelers^ 

Where  OucKlty  and  Ethtes  Come  First. .  Since  1946 


Popular  Westwood  Jeweler 
Begins  Education  Column. 

WELCOME  TO  GEMS  AND  JEWELRY  101 

While  this  is  not  yet  pan  of  the  official  curriculum, 
we  are  lobbying  to  have  it  included  as  a  GE 
requirement!  Hello.  I'm  Dean  Abell.  Some  of  you 
may  know  me  as  David  from  my  undergrad  days  -  I 
graduated  in  1998  as  a  proud  Bruin  with  a  degree  in 
English. 

J  Since  then  I  have  joined 
my  family's  business. 
SARAH  LEONARD  Fine 
Jewelers,  and  would  like  to 
take  a  few  minutes  to  tell 
you  about  it  and  the 
purpose  of  this  column. 


Oean  Abell.  B  A  ,  UCLA.  9t 
GnduMeGemologiii.  GI.A..  99 


Friends  of  mine  often 
visit  me  at  work  looking  to 
buy  their  boy-  or  girlfriend 
a  special  gift...  or  want  to 
look  at  diamonds  for  that  "big  event."  So  many  of 
these  visits  end  with  my  friends  commenting  on  how 
lucky  they  itc  to  have  a  jeweler  on  whom  they  can 
rely  and  trust.  That  got  me  to  thinking...  How  many 
people,  then.  DON'T   have   a  jeweler   that    is 
knowledgeable,  helpful,  and  ethical...  a  jeweler  that 
they  consider  a  friend...  not  just  someone  with  whom 
to  do  business.  Not  a  day  goes  by  in  our  store  without 
hugs  and  kisses  between  our  staff  and  clients...  I  can't 
think  of  a  better  atmosphere  in  which  to  work. 

Does  your  jewelry  need  cleaning?  The  only  charge 
for  that,  as  my  grandpa,  Lenny,  always  says  is,  "a 
smile  and  a  thank  you!"  Do  you  have  some 
questions?  Or  need  a  suggestion  to  help  find  that 
perfect  gift?  Whatever  it  is,  we're  here  for  you. 

SARAH  LEONARD  Fine  Jewelers,  the  oldest 
merchant  in  Westwood  Village-  established  in  1946-- 
has  thrived  since  Day  One  because  of  dedication,  hard 
work,  and  lots'of  love  for  each  other,  the  business, 
and  niir  rlignit  (jygt  aafc  unyotw  who  knows  u&!) 


We  have  built  an  extremely  close  relationship 
with    the    UCLA   community    over    the    years 
(including  five  family  members  that  are  UCLA 
alumni)  giving  decades  of  support   lo   UCLA 
.    academics,  athletics  and  performing  arts.  We  know 
that  the  best  way  to  give  back,  though,  is  to  provide 
superior  customer  service  backed  by  professional 
know-how.    That  is  why  three  generations  of  our 
family    have   earned    the    title    of   "Graduate 
Gemologist"  (G.G.)  from  the  Gemological  Institute 
of  America  and  why  we  are  proud  members  of  the 
American  Gem  Society  (AGS),  an  organization  of 
fine  jewelers  dedicated  to  the  highest  ethical 
standards,  gemological  knowledge  and  consumer 
protection. 

All  in  all,  nine  members  of  our  staff  (five  family) 
are  G.G.s.  That's  probably  more  than  any  other 
single  store  in  the  country!  But  all  that  gemological 
expertise  only  helps  if  we  can  get  that  information 
to  you.  As  members  of  the  AGS  it  seemed  only 
natural  to  share  what  we  know  of  gems  and  jewelry, 
through  this  column,  to  make  you  a  more  informed 
and  confident  consumer 

Each  month  I  will  be  addressing  a  new  topic,  such 
as  diamond  and  gemstone  treatments,  watch  and 
jewelry  care.  and.  of  course,  what  you  should  know 
when  buying  a  diamond.  So  look  for  my  column 
again  soon...  or  don't  wait  until  then!  Come  down  to 
SARAH  LEONARD  Fine  Jewelers  at  1055 
Westwood  Blvd.  and  introduce  yourself,  or  call  me 
at  208  -  3131  with  your  questions.  You  can  also 
reach  me  via  e-mail  at  thedea<3>iiinn  rcf^  (Please 
allow  a  few  days  for  response). 

Finally,  when  you  come  in,  be  sure  to  tell  us  that 
you're  a  Brain.  All  UCLA  students,  faculty  and 
staff  receive  a  SPECIAL  DISCOUNT  on  all 
purchases,  all  repairs,  all  the  time.  It's  our  way  of 
saying  "Thank  You"  to  a  community  that  has  been 
so  supportive  of  us  for  so  long.  And  be  sure  to  ask 
for  me...  I'd  love  to  help  you! 


•t'   Vr 


..CW 


Tuesday 

Doug  Lief  on  the 
presidential  debates. 
Need  we  say  more? 

Friday,  October  13, 2000 


Daily  Bruin 


viewpoJnt#m«dia.uda.edu 


View  on  the  Web 

See  ail  this  and 

more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's 

Website: 

www.dailybruin.ucia.edu 


!^^ 


Daily  Bruin  VicwiMiiM 


Stereotypes  of  male  physique  plague  society 


MEN:  Hyper-mUscular 
images  lead  to  eating 
disorders,  steroid  abuse 

Like  most  people,  I  tooic  a  health 
education  course  in  high  school 
that  covered  eating  disorders, 
complete  with  the  made-for-TV  movie 
starring  Tracey  Gold,  who  was  a  real 
sufferer  of  anorexia.  The  way  in  which 
my  teacher  explained  eating  disorders 
led  me  to  believe  that  women  were 
more  likely  to  have  eating  disorders 
than  men,  and 
that  media 
images  of  rail- 
thin  models 
affected  only  the 
fairer  sex. 

This  year  I 
started  to  doubt 
my  stereotypes 
when  a  guy  I 
was  dating 
wouldn't  even 
share  a  cookie 
from  Diddy 
Riesewithme  .     >-     • 

and  would,  after  his  vigorous  tw(vhour 
workout,  scurry  home  to  drink  a 
chalky  'Vanilla"  powder  protein  shake 
instead  of  coming  over  to  hang  out 
with  me.  On  his  coffee  table,  I  found  a 
book  by  Arnold  Schwartzenegger  and 
several  men's  fitness  magazines.  I 
thought  his  behavior  was  somewhat 
unnatural,  and  even  disturbingly 
obsessive.  My  experience  with  this 
semi-obsessive  guy  has  led  me  to 
believe  that  we  all  need  to  start  exam- 
ining our  culture's  treatment  of  the 
male  body  and  the  effects  it  has  on 
young  men. 

Just  as  the  effects  of  media  images 
on  young  women  can  be  considered 
one  of  many  '\vomcn's  issues,"  soci- 


Megan 
Roush 


Roush  is  a  third-year  American  literature 
and  culture  student  who's  willir>g  to  talk 
about  your  body  image.  Send  a  brief 
description  of  yourself  to 
nneegan@ucla.edu. 


ety's  approach  to  the 
male  body  can  appropri- 
ately be  called  one  of 
many  "men's  issues."  My 
male  readers  often  com- 
plain that  I've  written  too 
many  columns  about 
women's  issues.  "Why  * 
don't  you  ever  write 
about  dudes?"  they  ask.  I 
think  most  women  don't 
think  of  men  as  having 
"issues;"  we  tend  to' 
think  that  men  have 
got  all  their  problems 
solved.  After  all, 
"It's  a  man's 
world." 

I'll  admit  that 
I'd  never  even 
thought  there  was 
such  a  thing  as  men's 
issues  until  I  encountered 
an  interesting  article  in 
Time  magazine  last 
spring.  The  article  cov- 
ered the  release  of  a  book 
called  "The  Adonis 
Complex,"  by  Harrison 
Pope,  Katharine  Phillips 
and  Roberto  Olivardia, 
introducing  their  research 
on  the  development  of  men's  obses- 
sion with  their  appearances  during 
recent  decades  due  to  a  flux  of  media 
images  and  general  cultural  pressure. 
In  that  same  issue.  Time  ran  a  cover 
story  on  the  availability  of  prescription 
testosterone  in  a  new,  easy  to  use  gel 
form. 

Judging  from  this  kind  of  mass 
media  exposure  from  a  major       ..•  . 
American  magazine,  men's  issues  are 
not  something  of  which  we  should 
continue  to  be  ignorant  while  the 
testosterone  and  men's  fitness  indus- 
tries are  booming,  images  of  the  "per- 
fect" male  body  are  everywhere,  and 
illegal  steroid  use  among  young  men 
continues  to  climb. 

Perhaps  we  should  start  by  taking  a 
look  at  the  effects  of  our  culture's 
pressure  to  look  "perfect"  on  boys. 
People  have  often  criticized  the  Barbie 


doll  for  making  little  girls  want  to 
attain  a  figure  that  would  require 
quadrupedal  movement  due  to  the 
enormous  mammalian  features  on  her 
chest.  The  current  G.I.  Joe  Extreme 
doll  would  have  a  55-inch  chest  and 
27-inch  biceps  if  he  were  a  real  guy, 
which,  needless  to  say,  is  physically 
impossible  (John  Qoud,  Time,  April 
24, 2000). 

What  about  countless  male  role 
models,  such  as  WWF  stars,  profes- 
sional sports  figures,  and  even  actors? 
Among  them  you'll  find  lean,  muscu- 
lar bodies  that  are  not  all  achieved 
through  legal  means.  In  one  psycho- 
logical test  administered  by  one  of  the 
authors  of  The  Adonis  Complex, 
"more  than  half  of  boys  ages  1 1  to  17 
chose  their  physical  ideal  (to  be)  an 
image  possible  to  attain  only  by  using 
steroids,"  according  to  Qoud's  article. 
Yet  I've  never  heard  a  discussion  on 


the  damage  these  images  do  on  boys. 
Instead  we  worry  about  exposing  girls 
to  busty  Barbie  and  Britney  Spears. 

So  why  aren't  men's  issues  getting 
the  necessary  attention?  One  of  the 
book's  authors  explained  to  Time  that 
"it  may  actually  be  harder  for  men 
than  women  to  talk  about  these  prob- 
lems [associated  with  appearance) 
because  it's  not  considered  masculine 
to  worry  about  such  things." 
Ironically,  I  think  the  best  way  to 
expose  men's  issues  is  through 
women,  or  at  least  those  issues  con- 
cerning appearance;  most  women  are 
comfortable  talking  about  body  image 
and  society's  pressures  to  have  a  per- 
fect body. 

The  popular  women's  magazine. 
Cosmopolitan,  published  an  article  in 
its  recent  October  issue  which  dis- 
cussed one  woman's  experience  with 
her  boyfriend  who  suffered  from  male 


body-dysmorphic  disorder  ("My  Guy 
Was  Obsessed  With  His  Body," 
Cosmopolitan,  October  2000).  "AJcx" 
continually  worried  about  getting  fat 
and  never  felt  satisfied  with  his 
appearance  even  though  he  worked 
out  obsessively  and  severely  restricted 
his  diet. 

Although  the  article  focuses  on  the 
reaction  of  "Alex's"  girlfriend,  the 
overall  article  makes  an  interesting 
point,  stated  in  a  poignantly  Cosmo 
way:  "Role  reversal:  Men  freak  about 
their  physiques  too."  I  am  hopeful  that 
discussion  of  a  condition  like  male 
BDD  in  a  popular  magazine  like 
Cosmo  will  get  women  thinking  more 
about  men's  issues,  as  well  as  the  pres- 
sure they  put  on  guys  to  have  a  perfect 
body. 

If  you  need  further  proof  that 
men's  consciousness  of  their  bodies 
has  grown,  check  out  an  article  in  last 
Thursday's  Daily  Bruin.  Apparently, 
the  Wooden  Center  will  be  enlarging 
its  weight  room  because  the  facility  is 
simply  too  small  and  overcrowded  at 
peak  hours  ("Weight  room  looks  to 
bulk  up,"  Sports,  Oct.  5). 

The  need  for  larger  facility  certainly 
reflects  the  growth  of  enrollment  at 
UCLA.  I  feel  it  also  mirrors  an 
increase  since  the  facility  was  built  in 
the  early  '80s  for  the  self-conscious, 
appearance«entered  men  at  our 
school.  I  don't  mean  to  imply  that  only 
men  use  the  weight  room,  but  in  gen- 
eral you'll  find  more  guys  than  girls 
waiting  to  use  a  bench  on  a  crowded 
afternoon. 

Thankfully,  our  school  has  made 
one  positive  change  this  year  that  I  feel 
adequately  addresses  women  and 
men's  issues.  The  Women's  Resource 
Center,  a  campus  office  that  deals  with 
students'  gender-related  issues  and 
problems,  changed  its  name  to  The 
Center  for  Women  &  Men. 

In  her  submission  to  the  Daily 
Bruin  Registration  Issue's  Viewpoint 
section  (Sept.  25),  Tina  Oakland,  the 
Center's  director,  acknowledged,  the 

SceMMKIipageU 


Sororities,  fraternities  must  be  held  accountable 


GREEKS:   Claims  of  compassion 
during  selection  process  need  to 
be  warranted  with  explanations 


ByNcdFluct 

I  would  like  to  challenge  those  from  the 
Greek  system  who  wrote  in  rebuttal  to  Kirra 
Steel's  article  ("Systematic  Sisterhood 
Promotes  Intolerance."  Daily  Bruin, 
Viewpoint,  Oct.  5).  They  claim  to  be  compas- 
sionate to  personalities  and  blind  to  physical 
features  and  financial  status  during  their  selec- 
tion process. 

Vet,  these  writers  do  not  reveal  how  they  do 
choose  who  receives  a  bid  (entrance  into  the 
Greek  system)  and  who  does  not.  If  the  process 
does  not  include  such  criteria,  then  please 
explain  what  criteria  it  docs  include. 


Fluet  graduated  from  UCLA  in  2000. 


How  do  you  decide  on  someone's  "individu- 
ality" in  just  a  few  meetings?  I,  and  I  am  sure 
the  rest  of  the  campus,  would  like  to  hear  Kyla 
Ann  Holcomb  ("Steel's  negative  experience 
doesn't  represent  entire  Greek  family.  Daily 
Bruin,  Viewpoint.  Oct.  9),  Noah  Bishoff 
("Propaganda  rein- 
forces stereotypes  about     ■'"^"■"■"■^" 
fraternity,  sorority  life," 
Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint, 
Oct.  IO)andKristen 
Stancik  ("Disgraceful 
Greek  piece  nowhere 
near  the  truth, "  Daily 

Bruin,  Viewpoint,  Oct. 

12)  explain  exactly  how 

their  compassionate  selection  process  takes 

place. 

I  have  listened  to  accounts  very  similar,  if 
not  identical,  to  Steel's  from  friends  in  other 
houses  and  am  surprised  to  read  from  these 
writers  that  she  is  simply  spouting  "propagan- 
da." 


Perhaps,  the  Greek  system  is  more  culturally 
diverse  than  she  claims.  Yet,  Steel's  article  only 
briefly  touched  on  issues  of  race.  Contrary  to 
some  beliefs,  an  organization  can  be  divisive 
and  elitist  without  being  racist.  The  two  sorori- 
ty members  speak  for  their  own  houses,  but  one 
^___^^^^^^     must  ask  what  about  the 
numerous  other  houses 
that  arc  not  refuting  her 
article?  Perhaps 
Holcomb  and  Stancik 's 
houses  are  two  of  the 
truly  compassionate 
sororities  but  what 
~~     about  the  numerous 
other  houses  that  have 
not  responded  and  possibly  engage  in  the  same 
behavior? 

While  I  cannot  personally  speak  for  the  fra- 
ternities, I  have  read  in  the  Daily  Bruin  about 
more  than  one  incident  of  alcohol  poisoning 
and  severe  abuse  during  initiations.  I  would 
challenge  them  to  explain  exactly  what  occurs 


An  organization  can  be 

divisive  and  elitist 
without  being  racist. 


during  their  initiation  processes  and  allow  the 
students  to  decide  whether  these  are  institu- 
tions we  want  on  this  campus. 

If  Steel's  article  is  "no  where  near  the  truth" 
please  explain  to  the  campus  community  how 
she  is  wrong  rather  than  simply  stating  she  is 
wrong.  Possibly  her  comments  only  deal  with  a 
few  houses,  as  Holcomb,  Bishoff  and  Stancik 
suggest.  If  this  is  the  case  then  the  entire  Greek 
system  and  the  university  arc  still  guilty  of  these 
gross  injustices,  by  tacitly  allowing  them  to  take 
place.  If  this  inhumane  behavior  occurs  in  just 
one  house  then  that  is  reason  enough  for  people 
to  revise  or  get  rid  of  the  Greek  system. 

I  challenge  the  women  Bishoff  writes  of: 
"Just  about  every  sorority  member  you  ask  will 
tell  you  how  much  she  wishes  rush  was  conduct- 
ed differently.  They  simply  do  not  have  a  choice 
in  the  malter"(Tues.,  Oct  ID).  You  are  not  help- 
less automatons  irreparably  locked  down  to 
some  omnipotent  pan-Hellenic  rulebook.  You 
do  have  a  choice  in  the  matter  and  it  is  time  to 
change. 


rM.Vj\y      lO     SUo^drl      »•*"•»««"••>«>«  •current  event  00  c*mpu» 

Of  in  the  worid  M  htgc,  or  write  a  response  to 
_,-.,.     «-»-*-     „.^^ »«»»«♦»»"«  th«tyowh«e«lre«<»y  read  m  The 

TO  VIEWPOINT     "^.^.^^^ 

viewpo)nt#med<a.ucto.edu.  Remetnbei  to 


copy  and  peste  ]wur  tutuntssion  into  the  body 
of  the  •.inaN,  or  drap  off  a  Iwrd  copy  of  your 
MkmMon  at  the  OeNy  truln  office  (1 18 
Kerdchoff  Ha«).  care  of  >dfMh  Lalas. 

•  Apply  to  tie  a  Viewpoint  colunmitt  dur- 
lr>9  Weeks  7  artd  8  of  each  quarter. 

-  Apply  to  be  a  cartoonM  or  artist  Send  an 


e-mai  c«pr«sslng  your  interest  to  the 
viewpoifii  addftfs. 

A  fcw  iMngt  to  remeniUr: 

'  AN  ttAmlHiont  muM  indudc  your  name, 
phone  number  and  affiliation  wMt  UQA  If 
you  are  a  ttudeni.  they  must  also  inckjde  your 
student  10  number.  yMr  and  maior. 


•  1towr  (acts  wW  be  chcdied;  make  sure 
they  are  aecuraM. 

•  VlewpolM  b  not  an  ad««tWn9  space  Ibr 
•ny  group  or  Mgwlmian;  be  MC 10  hMv 
dearly  wttoiilirf  opMons. 

•  Wte  iWMrwi  the  right  to  cdk  I 
for  darlty,  granWMr  and  Imgih. 


..»— i^ 


Students'  free  speech  forum 
provides  occasion  for  change 


Friday,  Octo»)ef  13,2000        13 


USAC  Light  shed  on  feud  within 
meeting  should  not  be  criticized 

By  David  RizkaNa 

I  am  writing  in  response  to  last  week's 
Undergraduate  Students  Association  Council 
meeting  and  the  events  I  witnessed  there. 
Along  with  others,  I  have  been  following  the 
Hatfield  vs.  McCoy-type  feud  that  has  existed 
between  current  USAC  President  Elizabeth 
Houston  and  certain  council  members. 

I  have  also  been  attending  the  meetings  on 
and  off  since  Houston's  election  and  have  been 
pleased  to  see  that  the  Daily  Bruin  has  covered 
the  hate-fillcd  meetings  in  Kerckhoff  Hall. 

The  same  council  members  that  attacked 
Houston  also  questioned  the  newspaper's  role 
in  the  council.  I  was  a  bit  taken  back.  Didn't 
they  enjoy  the  publicity  that  came  from  the 
Bruin? 

Elisa  Sequeira  went  so  far  as  to  call  the 
Daily  Bruin  a  "tabloid"  based  on  the  exposure 
it  has  given  to  the  conflict  within  USAC.  I 
agree  that  the  media  should  take  responsibility 
for  its  impact  on  society. 
-  Is  that  not  what  the  school  newspaper  is  for? 
To  report  the  progress,  or  lack  thereof  in 
USAC's  case,  of  important  topics  on  campus. 
Don't  we  like  to  call  that  "free  press,"  or  has 
Praxis  been  hurt  by  the  daylight  that  has 
seeped  into  its  castle? 

Last  Tuesday  night,  Sequeira  also  said, 
"People  are  not  going  to  want  to  be  a  part  of 
government  if  this  is  what  they  are  reading  in 
The  Bniin."  I  disagree;  people  will  get  behind 
what  they  believe  is  right  in  order  to  see 
whether  change  occurs. 

I  spoke  to  a  student  just  aAer  the  Houston 
victory  who  said,  "I  am  so  glad  that  Elizabeth 
is  president.  When  I  got  to  UCLA  I  wanted  to 


be  involved  in  student  govenunent,  but  after  I 
heard  about  Praxis  and  the  way  they  treat  peo- 
ple, I  lost  interest." 

The  students  are  interested  in  change,  as 
was  evident  by  the  election  results.  It  is 
USAC's  responsibility  to  deliver  that  change. 

Allow  me  to  give  an  example.  When  Martin 
Luther  King,  Jr.  spoke  about  the  racial  injus- 
tice at  his  time,  he  used  the  newspaper  to  • 
inform  people  of  what  was  going  on.  People  ~ 
became  aware  and  got  involved  in  the  political 
machinery  that  would  bring  about  civil  rights. 
The  publicity  motivated  people  to  be  involved. 
and  ultimately  led  to  the  beginnings  of  a  histor- 
ical movement. 

To  say  that  studenu  will  become  more  apa- 
thetic is  an  excuse  to  try  to  intimidate  the  Daily 
Bruin  writers,  as  Praxis  has  done  with  anyone 
who  opposes  them. 

Further  proof  of  the  benefits  of  the  Daily 
Bruin's  role  in  the  USAC  meetings 
is  evident  in  the  articles  by  Jeff 
Hale,  Jason  Krause  ("Council 
agenda  does  not  cater  to 
majority  of  incoming  fresh- 
men" and  "Uplifting  speech 
appreciated,"  Daily  Bruin, 
Viewpoint,  Oct.  3)  and  others  that 
reflect  the  desire  for  the  truth  to  be 


Simply  Igetting  along'  hurts 
chances  of  campus  solidarity 


UNTTY:  Glossing  over  histories, 
differences  keeps  wounds  open 


ByEika 

As  I  stepped  on  to  this  campus  this  quarter, 
I  did  not  see  the  diversity  we  so  often  tout  at 
UCLA.  As  a  public  institution  that  should  be 
representative  of  the  public,  particularly  that 


Ramirez  is  a  fourth-year  American  literature  and 
culture  and  chicarK)  studies  student 


Rizkalla  will  attend  UCLA's  Graduate  School  of 
Education  and  Information  Studies. 


SecRIIK«IA,pa9e14 


of  Los  Angeles  and  the  surrounding  areas,  we 
are  quite  a  distance  from  achieving  diversity 
on  this  campus. 

We  are  quickly  reminded  of  this  as  the  num- 
ber of  underrepresented  students  continually 
drop.  For  this  reason,  along  with  the  disturb- 
ing comments  made  in  articles  and  viewpoints 
I  have  read  since  last  spring  and  in  the  last  few 
weeks,  I  feel  compelled  to  respond. 

As  a  graduating  senior,  I  refuse  to  bury  my 
head  in  shame  or  lower  my  voice  in  guih.  I  will 
not  render  myself  invisible  for  the  sake  of  "get- 
ting along"  or  focusing  on  "similari- 
ties." I  am  different,  period.  I  have  no 
qualms  with  admitting  it,  yet  it  seems 
like  Elizabeth  Houston  (along  with 
others)  has  a  problem  with  that. 
Perhaps  she  feels  threatened  by  that.  I 
wonder,  though,  if  it  is  perhaps  the 
realization  that  we  the  people  of  color, 
the  women,  the  queers  will  not  just  shy 
away  in  the  face  of  ignorance.  The 
fact  of  the  matter  is  that  if  we  wait 
until  we  find  an  issue  that  addresses 
the  majority  of  the  campus,  then  there 
will  be  no  need  to  advocate  for  diver- 
sity, because  the  homogenous  group 
remaining  will  have  forgotten  what 
that  was. 

As  for  the  need  to  address  only  a 
"minority"  of  the  campus  during 
Welcome  week,  I  am  appreciative  of 
those  that  supported  such  an  event. 
These  events  are  not  only  helpful,  but 
are  necessary.  There  is  a  reason  why 
we  are  the  minority.  Not  only  have 
many  of  us  been  systematically  dis- 
criminated against,  but  it 
has  also  been  very  dif- 
ficult for  us  to  feel  wel- 
come on  this  campus. 
UCLA  does  not  have 
to  say,  "All  the  people 


JASON  CHEN/Diily  Brum  Senw  Slaff 


See  MMIRE^  page  15 


Speaks  Out 


As  a  result  of  the  School  of  Engineering  and  Applied  Sciences  Cafe's  decision  to  stop  selling  cigarettes  thev 
the  decision?  ^        '     ' 


are  no  longer  available  on  campus.  What  Is  your  opinion  on 


DanGarda 

Third-year 
Microbiology 


"The  decision  helps  promote  a  healthy 
lifestyle  because  smoking  is  really  bad. 
I'm  hoping  that  people  who  do  smoke 
quit;  it's  not  a  good  habit.  Smokers  should 
realize  that  overall,  this  decision  will  pos- 
sibly help  them  quit." 


Nattianlhara 

Fourth-year 
English 


Marco  Duraw 

Third-year 
Political  science 


"I  guess  I  don't  care  if  they're  avail- 
able. I  don't  think  that  the  way  to  get  peo- 
ple to  stop  smoking  is  to  make  it  inconve- 
nient for  them.  I  am  really  for  high  taxes 
on  smoking,  but  it  doesn't  really  hurt  any- 
body to  have  a  dispenser  on  campus.  I 
understand  why  smokers  would  be 
upset." 


"The  people  on  this  campus  are  adults. 
They  know  the  pros  and  cons,  the  choice 
should  be  ours.  If  you  don't  agree  with 
cigarette  sales  on  campus,  then  just  don't 
purchase  them.  I  don't  really  see  the  harm 
that  could  be  caused  to  nonsmokers,  since 
you  can't  smoke  in  buildings  anyway." 


((NkoleNazeini 
jFowth-ywr 
'  Psychobiok)gy 


"I  think  that  there  should  be  cigarettes 
on  campus  for  people  who  are  smokers. 
Even  though  something  may  not  be 
healthy,  it's  the  individual's  choice  to 
smoke.  The  person  has  the  right  to  smoke 
as  long  as  he  doesn't  impose  his  decision 
on  other  people." 


Sdiryl  Castaneda 

Third-year 
Microbiok)gy 


MolikaOuffl 

Second-year 
Political  science 


"I  think  that  too  many  people  smoke  as 
it  is,  so  the  decision  is  good  for  people  like 
me  who  don't  smoke.  With  the  decision, 
people  won't  be  able  to  get  cigarettes 
readily  on  campus.  I  support  the  decision 
because  I  have  asthma  and  it's  difficult 
forme  to  breathe  when  others  smoke." 


"People  who  smoke  should  be  able  to 
smoke.  It's  a  big  school,  there  are  no 
indoor  areas  where  people  can  smoke,  so 
second  hand  shouldn't  be  a  contributing 
factor  to  not  selling  cigarettes  on  cam- 
pus." 


Speaks  Out  compiled  by  Cuauhtemoc  Ortega,  Daily  Bniin  Senior 
Staff.  Photos  by  Nicote  Miller,  Daily  Bruin  Staff. 


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ROUSH 

From  page  12 

"new  name  recognizes  the  strides  the 
Center  has  made  over  the  past  years 
toward  providing  a  friendly  and  confi- 
dential place  for  both  women  and 
men,  and  the  desire  of  men  to  be  part 
of  the  process  of  creating  a  campus 
environment  that  supports  equality 
for  all  students."  In  other  words,  the 
Center's  programmers  realized, that 
an  effective  way  to  get  men  involved 
in  the  equality  process  is  to  address 
men's  issues.  ,.;., 

Men's  concern  with  their  appear- 
ances  is  one  of  many  issues  men  face, 
although  a  particularly  conspicuous 
one,  at  that,  it's  also  an  issue  that 
most  women  can  relate  to,  which  is 
why  I  bring  it  up.  On  the  more  contro- 
versial end  of  men's  issues,  men  face 
problems  with  sexual  harassment  and 
discrimination,  as  well  as  other  gei>- 
der-related  problems.  Men  can  also  be 
victims.  They  can  be  falsely  accused 
of  harassment,  rape  and  impregna- 
tion and  have  little  legal  protection 
since  our  laws  predictably  cast  women 
as  the  "victims"  in  gender-related 
problems  and  crimes. 

The  idea  that  men  can  be  victinv 
ized  draws  criticism  from  many 
women,  but  I  feel  it's  time  we  become 
more  receptive  and  operv-minded 
when  it  comes  to  talking  about  gen- 
der-related issues  and  how  they  affect 
men  in  particular. 


RIZKALLA 

From  page  13 

exposed. 

I  believe  the  truth  is  clear.  First, 
Praxis  oppose  Elizabeth  Houston 
because  they  believe  she  is  a  product 
of  "white  privilege"  (which  no  one 
has  dared  disagree  with,  and  thus 
their  silence  gives  validity  to  the  mis- 
treatment of  President  Houston)  and 
a  Christian  background.  Second, 
they  seek  to  intimidate  and  eliminate 
anyone  who  gets  in  the  way  of  iheir 
agenda,  (which  is  to  take  over  all 
aspects  of  student  government  for 
the  purposes  of  their  own  personal 
agenda,  not  the  betterment  of  the 
entire  student  body). 

Third,  it  is  apparent  that  truth  and 
genuine  tolerance  are  not  the  ulti- 
mate desire  of  the  council,  as  dis- 
played by  the  blatant  alienation  of 
the  president. 

Now  that  the  rest  of  the  campus 
has  access  to  what  many  others  and  I 
have  seen  at  the  Tuesday  night  meet- 
ings, the  response  of  select  members 
is,  "Don't  use  the  school  newspaper, 
come  talk  to  .me  in  person!"  It  was 
not  considered  a  tabloid  when  arti- 
cles where  being  published  to  sup- 
port the  Praxis  side  of  things. 

I  respectfully  remind  USAC  of 
our  constitutional  right  to  freedom 
of  speech.  It  is  the  very  basis  of  the 
arguments  that  have  taken  place  at 
the  council  table. 

We  are  all  aware  that  40  or  50 
years  ago,  topics  now  considered  by 
USAC  wouldn't  have  been  discussed 
in  any  person's  home  let  alone  in  a 
public  forum.  Thankfully,  they  are 
being  addressed  and  we  are  moving 
toward  a  solution,  because  some- 
thing needs  to  be  done  about  the  real 
issues. 

Two  weeks  ago  when  EHas 
Enciso.  (Internal  Vice  President)  got 
upset  about  an  issue  in  the  council 
meeting,  he  got  up  and  stormed  out, 
refusing  to  hear  the  opposing  side. 

This  is  an  example  of  an  immature 
attitude  that  is  present  at  all  USAC 
council  meetings.  It  is  as  if  Praxis  has 
declared,  "If  you're  not  with  mc, 
you're  against  me."  Attitudes  like 
this  are  why  students  have  lost  inter- 
est in  being  involved  with  student 
government. 

Light  is  now  being  shed  on  the  sit- 
uation in  USAC.  Shedding  light  on 
USAC's  conflicts  gives  the  entire 
campus  the  truth  of  where  the  roots 


RAMIREZ 

From  page  13 

of  color,  working  class,  and  queers, 
stay  out,"  or  "You  don't  belong 
here."  Yet,  for  many  of  us  this  is  not 
only  the  impression  we  get  when 
"Stepping  on  this  campus,  but  it  is 
-~-«lso  something  we've  encountered 
throughout  our  lives.  This  is  our  his- 
tory. 

On  several  occasions  Houston  has 
asked  us  to  "move  beyond  the  past," 
yet  that  is  extremely  difllcult  when 
the  past,  our  history,  continues  to 
shape  our  present  realities. 

Malcolm  X  once  said,  "Of  all  our 
studies,  history  is  best  qualified  to 
reward  our  research."  This  quote 
not  only  speaks  to  academic 
research,  biit  it  also  includes  the  per- 
sonal research  we  must  do  through- 
out our  lives. 

When  I  am  asked  to  "move 
beyond  the  past"  or  stop  harping  on 
prejudices  and  racism,  I  do  not  have 
to  look  far  to  know  that  I  can't.  I  can 
not  move  beyond  the  fact  that  my 
mother,  an  immigrant  from  Mexico, 
continues  to  work  day  after  day  as  a 
housekeeper  to  make  it  easier  for  her 
children.  I  cannot  move  beyond  this 
country's  history  of  exploitation  and 
oppression.  Nor  can  I  simply  move 
beyond  the  long  legacy  of  struggle 
that  allows  me  to  write  this  article 
today. 


Unity,as  a  band-aid 

remedy  to  the  wounds, 

will  not  suffice. 


Author  and  activist  Audre  Lorde 
reminds  us  that,  "by  ignoring  the 
past,  we  are  encouraged  to  repeat  its 
mistakes."  So.  this  "wound  of 
racism"  Houston  speaks  of  cannot 
be  healed  by  a  token  salve  of  "unity." 
Unity,  as  a  band-aid  remedy  to  the 
hemorrhaging  wounds  that  have 
ruptured  deep  within  us,  will  not  suf- 
fice. 

Unity  for  unity's  sake  is  an  insult 
to  the  dedicated  communities  that 
continue  struggling  for  visibility  and 
justice.  I  need  not  cite  Webster's 
Dictionary  to  speak  of  diversity, 
because  it  will  not  tell  me  that  diver- 
sity is  about  more  than  just  being  dif- 
ferent. It  is  also  about  respect,  which 
cannot  be  achieved  by  simply  saying 
we  will  all  unite,  without  really 
understanding  our  points  of  depar- 
ture as  well  as  our  future  goals.  A 
false  sense  of  unity  can  never  replace 
a  genuine  understanding  of  diversity. 

Furthermore,  I  am  appalled  by 
Houston's  comments  regarding 
homophobia  (specifically,  the  lack 
oO  on  this  campus.  Houston  said,  "I 
don't  think  anyone  on  this  campus  is 
(lli)mophobic);  maybe  those  people 
w^o  are  from  wacko  backgrounds  or 
smiething  "  (Daily  Bruin, 
"Houston's  speech  rufiles  feathers," 
Set)t.29). 

Not  only  does  this  statement  dis- 
miss the  numerous  hate  crimes 
against  queers  on  this  campus,  but 
also  by  refusing  to  acknowledge  it, 
she  ignores  that  countless  ways  in 
which  homophobia,  consciously  and 
unconsciously,  permeates  this  cam- 
pus. By  ignoring  the  present  realities 
of  the  queers  that  have  to  deal  with 
this  on  a  daily  basis,  she  is  only  per- 
petuating another  form  of  homopho- 
bia: ignorance. 

So,  until  I  can  walk  on  this  cam- 
pus without  feeling  inundated  with 
heteronormative  assumptions,  until 
I  can  hold  hands  with  someone  of 
my  same  gender  without  receiving 
cold  stares  or  insensitive  murmurs, 
and  until  I  can  feel  free  to  express 
myself  as  an  individual  and  as  a 
member  of  my  communities,  we  can- 
not argue  that  this  campus  docs  not 
need  to  be  made  aware  of  queers, 
ctptially  qu»eri  of  oelor. 


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UCLA  TV  returns! 

UCLA  TV  is  back  with  a  fresh  fine-up  of  old 
favorites  and  new  shows.  Get  the  details  on 
Monday,  when  A&E  goes  behind  the  screen. 

Friday,  October  13, 2000 


illy  Bruin 


ENTERTAINMENT 


A&E  on  the  Web 

y~See  all  this  and  more  at 

•  the  Daily  Bruinis:: 

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;  -  ■/• ;    ; :  •  Friday; October  13, 2000 


.Actor  John  Lithgow  brings  his  irreverent  humor  -  and  a 

symphony  orchestra  -  to  UCLA  Tor  a  performance  of  his 

new  children's  book,  The  Remarkable  Farkle  McBride 


By  Howard  Ho 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

John  Lithgow  is  a  Bruin. 
Sure  he  hails  from  Harvard  and  won  a 
Fulbright  Scholarship  to  the  London  Academy 
of  Music  and  Dramatic  Art.  But  if  those  places 
served  him  as  a  cultural  center  in  the  past,  now 
UCLA  has  taken  on  that  role  in  his  life.  Of 
course,  it  also  helps  that  his  wife  is  a  history  pro- 
fessor here. 

Giving  back  to  the  UCLA  campus,  Lithgow 
will  be  performing  children's  songs  as  well  as 
his  new  children's  book,  "The  Remarkable 
Farkle  McBride,"  at  Royce  Hall  on  Oct.  15. 
"Farkle,"  essentially  a  children's  guide  to  the 
symphony  orchestra,  will  be  under  the  direction 
of  Bill  Elliot. 

"Farkle"  is  about  a  young  boy  who  becomes  ■ 
a  virtuoso  on  one  instrument  in  each  section  of 
the  orchestra,  rejecting  each  instrument  succes- 
sively until  he  realizes  his  true  love  of  conduct- 
ing. While  the  book  is  filled  with  rhymes  and 
onomatopoeia  to  stimulate  children,  it  achieves 
its  further  goal  of  making  the  modern  sympho- 
ny orchestra  more  accessible  to  a  generation  of 
children. 

In  fact,  Lithgow  infuses  his  work  with  more 
sophistication  than  one  might  expect.  His  story 


of  Farkle  is  written  in  iambic  pentameter,  the 
scourge  of  high  school  English  classes. 

"There's  not  a  meter  out  of  place,"  Lithgow 
says. 

Very  true,  as  the  book  does  actually  read 
quite  poetically  and  lyrically.  Additionally, 
Lithgow  didn't  even  originally  write  the  story  as 
a  book. 

"I  wrote  it  to  be  a  piece  for  storyteller  and 
orchestra,"  he  said.  "I  thought  it  would  be  good 
to  add  to  the  loopy  songs  that  I  do  for  kids. 
Once  I  wrote  the  text,  1  realized  it  was  perfect 
for  a  children's  book." 

Lithgow  called  up  his  friend,  C.F  Payne, 
who  illustrated  Lithgows  "Singin'  in  the 
Bathtub"  album,  to  illustrate  it.  Together  they 
approached  Simon  and  Schuster,  resulting  in 
the  publication  of  Lithgow's  first  book. 

Payne  is  an  experienced  artist  whose  illustra- 
tions have  appeared  in  "Time"  and  "The  New 
Yorker,"  Lithgow  referred  to  him  as  "the  suc- 
cessor to  Norman  Rockwell." 

Lithgow,  who  performed  his  "Bathtub" 
album  last  year  at  Royce,  is  best  known  for  his 
role  as  Dick  Solomon  on  the  NBC  series.  "3rd 
Rock  from  the  Sun."  Even  though  he  has  final- 
ly found  mainstream  success  with  the  sitcom, 


SMLfnN0W,pa9c19 


.  11..  ,».  ^^  Peffcjfming  A/ti 

Actor  John  Lithgow  returns  to  UCLA's  Royce  Mali  this  Sunday  night 
with  a  full  symphony  orchestra  In  his  west  coast  premiere  ofFarkle 
and  Friends,"  a  chHd^  guide  to  the  orchestra. 


Renowned  author  sub|ect  of  one-woman  play 


THEATER;  'All  Under  Heaven' 
tells  life  Story  of  Pearl  Buck, 
winner  of  Nobel  in  literature 


By  Barbara  McGuirc 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

After  author  Pearl  Buck  won  the  Nobel 
Prize  for  Literature  in  1938,  it  would  be 
another  55  years  before  a  woman  again  rose 
to  the  occasion. 

Yet,  who  is  Pearl  Buck? 

The  author  of  well  over  a  hundred  books 
including  "The  Good  Earth,"  as  well  as  a 
humanitarian,  social  activist  and  missionary 
wife.  Buck  was  the  first  woman  to  win  the 
Nobel  Prize  for  Literature  and  is  the  focus  of 
the  theatrical  production  "All  Under 
Heaven,"  which  is  opening  at  the  Ivar 
Theatre  in  Hollywood  today. 

"All  Under  Heaven,"  directed  by  Rob 
Ruggiero,  is  a  one-person  show  focuftd  on 
the  life  of  a  woman  audiences  may  not  know 
a  lot  about,  but  played  by  a  star  who  will  bring 
a  tingle  of  nostalgia  to  most.  Valerie  Harper, 
who  many  will  remember  as  Rhoda 
Morgenstern  from  "The  Mary  Tyler  Moore 


Show,"  stars  as  Buck  in  this  interpretation  of 
her  life. 

The  show  doesn't  just  consist  of  Buck  sit- 
ting back  and  reminiscing  about  her  life. 
According  to  Harper,  she  actually  takes  on 
various  voices,  both  male  and  female,  acting 
out  a  total  of  about  18  different  characters. 

"Instead  of  staying  an  80-year-old.  walking 
around  the  stage  saying,  ^d  then  I  wrote,'" 
said  Harper,  "because  she  wrote  106  books,  I 
decided  to  have  it  be  a  play  where  we  go  back 
in  memory,  and  memory  is  volatile,  so  maybe 
it's  not  always  in  order." 

Ruggiero  mentioned  that  he  found  the  fact 
that  it  was  a  one-woman  show  to  be  both  plus 
and  a  minus  regarding  direction,  but  to  have 
no  effect  on  the  actual  play. 

"The  one  minus  is  that  you  have  one  per- 
son to  deal  with,  and  that  can  be  limiting,  on 
the  other  hand,  that's  a  big  positive  because 
there's  a  challenge  there  in  keeping  the 
evening  flowing,"  he  said. 

"And  in  this  particular  one-woman  show, 
there  are  multiple  characters,  so  the  fun  part 
of  it  is  keeping  the  clarity  of  the  characters 
and  helping  Val  in  her  portrayal,"  he  contin- 
ued. 

Additionally,  Harper  isn't  jwt  a  random 
actor  who  auditioned  to  play  the  part  of 


Ivai  Th«a(r« 

Valeric  Harper  stars  as  novelist/activist 
Pearl  Buck  in  "All  Under  Heaven." 

Buck.  She  is  the  co-author  along  with  Dyke 
Garrison  and  had  researched  Buck  for  more 
than  three  years. 
— "Multicailturalitm,  fcminiam,  «qual  righto 


-  every  major  justice  issue  -  Pearl  Buck  was 
on  the  cutting  edge  of  it  and  put  her  reputa- 
tion on  it,"  Harper  said.  "She\  was  vastly 
wealthy.  She  used  the  wealth  arJd  popped  it 
right  back  into  issues  which  she  c4red  about." 

"She's  an  amazing  character,  a  wonderful 
figure  and  she's  inspiring,"  she  continued. 

Harper  isn't  the  only  one  involved  with  the 
performance  who  has  grown  attached  to 
Buck. 

Co-author  Garrison  confessed  to  not 
knowing  much  about  Buck  prior  to  his 
involvement,  but  felt  that  the  experience  as  a 
whole  had  been  nothing  but  rewarding. 

"I  knew  basically  what  most  people  know 
about  Pearl  Buck,  which  is  not  a  lot  -  that  she 
had  written  a  couple  of  best-sellers  and  that 
she  had  lived  in  China,"  Garrison  admitted. 
"So,  I  immediately  plunged  into  a  lot  of 
research  and  that's  kind  of  where  I  got  to 
know  who  she  was." 

"The  thing  that  I  really  found  resonated 
for  mc  was  that  she  was  a  very  gutsy  woman, 
she  did  her  own  thing  long  before  it  was  con- 
sidered appropriate,"  he  continued. 

Buck  did  more  than  just  write  books. 
According  to  Harper,  she  helped  to  bridge 


UCLA  School  of  Theatef.  Film  and  Television 

King  of  the  Jews"  Is  one  of  the  short  documentaries  by  Jay 
Rosenblatt  which  will  be  shown  at  the  James  Bridges  Theater 
tonight  at  7:30  p.m. 

Documentary  filmmaker 
showcases  unique  style 


EVENT:  Director  to  show 
his  collage-Style  movies, 
hold  Student  workshop 


By  Angela  Salaiar 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


Jay  Rosenblatt  will  search  the 
globe  to  find  the  perfect  film  footage. 
"I  will  sometimes  just  scour 
through  hundreds  of  films  looking  for 
images  that  I  think  will  work  with  the 
story  lam  trying  to  tell,"  said 
Rosenblatt,  an  experimental  docu- 
mentary filmmaker  with  a  style  all  his 
own. 

Rosenblatt  uniquely  combines 
pieces  of  old  film  footage  he  finds  to 
make  collages  that  convey  his  stories 
and  experiences. 

"The  style  came  about  for  many 
different  reasons,  one  economic, 
another  control,  another  the  love  of 
the  editing  process  and  also  I  felt  like 
the  form  fit  the  subject,"  he  said. 

Rosenblatt  will  present  his  short 
films  at  the  James  Bridges  Theater 
tonight.  Following  the  screening  he 
will  be  available  for  a  question-and- 
answer  session  with  the  audience.  In 
addition,  Rosenblatt  will  teach  a  spe- 
cial film  workshop  on  Saturday.  The 
events  are  free  and  open  to  everyone, 
sponsored  by  the  UCLA  School  of 
Theater,  Film  and  Television  in  coop- 
eration with  the  International 
Documentary  Association. 

"(The  workshop)  will  deal  with 
questions  that  the  participants  have 
about  my  work  and  my  method  of 
working,"  he  said.  "It's  very  informal 
and  will  depend  a  lot  on  what  people 
that  attend  need  and  want,  so  its 
going  to  be  more  interactive" 

Although  Rosenblatt  does  not 
often  do  workshops,  he  sees  them  as  a 
good  opportunity  to  get  feedback 
from  his  audience. 

"I  like  showing  the  work  and  then 
interacting  with  the  audience  around 
the  actual  film,"  he  said.  "I  don't 
think  we'll  get  to  all  the  questions  on 
friday  night  so  if  people  have  time  to 
think  about  the  film  they  might  come 
up  with  some  more  questions  they 
can  bring  up  on  Saturday." 

Among  the  films  being  screened 
will  be  Rosenblatt's  originals, 
"Human  Remains,"  "The  Smell  of 
Burning  Ants"  and  "King  of  the 
Jews." 


"I  made  'Human  Remains'  so  people 
would  hopefully  explore  the  nature  of 
evil  and  how  we're  all  responsible  for 
what  happens  in  the  worid." 

Rosenblatt  went  on  to  explain  that 
"The  Smell  of  Burning  Ants"  deals 
with  the  problems  of  male  socializa- 
tion and  how  men  are  taught  to  dis- 
avow their  feminine  side  while  "King 
of  the  Jews"  is  about  Christian  anti- 
semitism. 

He  doesn't  feel  that  any  of  his  work 
fits  into  a  particular  genre. 

"My  films  are  not  easily  classifi- 
able. Some  are  experimental  docu- 
mentaries, some  are  experimental 
narratives,"  he  said.  "I  make  all  dif- 
ferent typesjpf  films." 

Rosenblatt  first  started  making 
films  while  in  graduate  school  for 
counseling  almost  20  years  ago. 

"I  took  a  film  class  and  I  fell  in  love 
with  the  process  and  I've  been  mak- 
ing films  since  then,"  he  said. 

Although  he  enjoys  his  work, 
Rosenblatt  admits  that  it  is  not  always 
easy  or  fast,  with  some  films  taking  as 
long  as  three  years  to  complete. 

"It  takes  a  lot  of  research  and  a  lot 
oftime,"hesaid. 

The  images  and  ideas  for 
Rosenblatt's  films  come  from  a  vari- 
ety of  places. 

"Sometimes  an  image  can  trigger 
an  idea  and  then  I  go  searching  for 
more  images  that  wiH  back  up  that 
idea  or  other  times  it  starts  with  an 
idea  and  I  go  searching  for  images 
that  will  work  with  the  film,"  he  said. 
Although  it  is  sometimes  easy  to 
gain  access  to  the  type  of  footage  he 
wants,  the  actual  process  of  finding 
old  film  images  that  are  appropriate 
and  usable  is  difficult. 

"(Sometimes)  1  have  to  buy 
footage  from  collectors  or  go  to 
archive  houses  looking  for  images, 
looking  through  their  catalogue, 
things  like  that,"  he  said. 

When  his  work  is  done,  however, 
the  film  is  his  reward.  The  messages 
he  hopes  to  convey  with  each  piece 
are  achieved  in  a  creative  form. 

"I  want  to  make  a  film  that  audi- 
ences will  relate  to  and  find  intrigu- 
ing, moving  and  provocative,"  he 
said.  "I  want  to  be  pleased  with  it, 
that's  my  number  one  goal.  I  never 
finish  a  film  until  I  feel  like  I've  done 
all  I  can  to  make  it  a  good  film." 


.►♦ 


"  I  hey're  all  about  issues  that  I  feel 
are  important  in  the  world,"  he  said. 


DOCUMENTARY:  Rosenblatt's  films 
show  at  7:30  p.m.  tonight  at  thg  Jami^ 
Bridges  Theater,  folknwed  by  a  question- 
and-answer  session  with  the  director. 


-^_.*J..--.ii.Th  -^.-it..: 


?2:^-i::m,.AL':: 


•.i.llfJUIL.I..  I" 


18       Friday,  October  13,2000 


Daily  Brum  Arts  A  Entertainment 


New  Line  Cirkemd 

Winona  Ryder  and  John  Hurt  star  in  the 
supernatural  thriller  "Lost  Spuls." 

"Lost  Souls" 

Directed  by  Janusz  Kanf>inski 
Starring  Winona  Ryder,  John  Hurt  and 
Ben  Chaplain 

In  1974,  "The  Exorcist"  opened  nationwide 
to  scare  audiences  everywhere. 

Featuring  demons  and  otherworldly  evil 
forces,  the  movie  terrified  audiences,  forming  a 
whole  new  definition  of  the  scary  movie. 

Twenty-six  years  later,  "Lost  Souls"  opens  to 
give  audiences  a  good  scare  just  in  time  for 
Halloween. 

Placing  the  ideas  of  good  and  evil  in  a  new 
context  and  set  in  present-day  New  York,  "Lost 
Souls"  centers  around  Maya  Larkin  (Winona 
Ryder),  a  schoolteacher  who  was  saved  from 
demonic  possession  as  a  little  girl.  Her  mentor. 
Father  Lareaux  (John  Hurt),  asks  her  to  take 
part  in  the  exorcism  of  Henry  Birdson  (John 
Diehl),  a  murderer  imprisoned  for  killing  his 
entire  family 

Maya's  past  and  memories  of  her  own  exor- 
cism are  seen  in  flashbacks  throughout  the  film, 
providing  a  window  into  Maya's  past  and  into 
her  beliefs. 

The  exorcism  goes  terrifyingly  wrong,  caus- 
ing Lareaux  and  Birdson  to  become  debilitated. 


Before  being  incapacitated,  Birdson  leaves  a 
message,  written  in  numbers,  that  Maya  takes 
and  decodes,  revealing  to  her  the  name  of  the 
man  that  the  devil  incarnate  will  inhabit,  Peter 
Kelson  (Ben  Chaplin). 

Maya  then  has  to  find  and  convince  Peter, 
an  agnostic  who  doesn't  believe  in  the  faith  and 
who  leads  a  charmed  life,  that  the  devil  incar- 
nate will  take  over  his  body. 

In  a  world  full  of  teen-fiick  scary  movies 
such  as  "Scream"  and  "I  Know  what  You  Did 
Last  Summer,"  the  horror  genre  has  become 
inundated  with  movies  full  of  up-and-coming 
teen  actors  and  formulaic  scripts  aimed  at 
young  audiences. 

"Lost  Souls"  offers  a  different  take  on  the 
genre,  providing  audiences  of  all  ages  with  a 
film  that  goes  beyond  the  traditional  scary 
movie  ideal  and  into  a  darker  world  where  the 
bad  guy  isn't  just  a  simple  serial  killer  but 
instead,  the  ultimate  evil. 

Ryder  plays  her  part  to  perfection.  With  her 
expressive  and  emotive  face,  she  conveys  the 
feelings  of  her  character  with  ease.  Not  to  go 
unnoticed  is  Ben  Chaplin's  performance.  Far 
from  his  breakthrough  role  in  I996's  "The 
Truth  About  Cats  and  Dogs,"  Chaplain's  por- 
trayal of  the  conflicted  Kelson  shows  a  new 
side  of  Chaplin  as  an  actor. 

First-time  director,  Janusz  Kaminski,  best 
known  for  his  work  on  "Schindler's  List"  and 
"Saving  Private  Ryan"  (for  which  he  won 
Academy  Awards  for  his  cinematography), 
directs  the  film. 

The  movie  uses  gray-hued  cinematography 
and  dark  tones  in  various  scenes  throughout 
the  film,  such  as  outdoor  scenes,  in  order  to 
give  the  movie  a  gloomy  feel  that  darkens  the 
film's  mood. 

"Lost  Souls"  looks  into  the  ideas  of  faith  and 
heaven  and  hell.  It's  a  thoughtful  movie,  but  at 
103  minutes  long  is  still  short  enough  to  retain 
anyone's  attention. 

A  thoroughly  enjoyable  movie  that  leaves 


you  with  something  to  think  about  at  the  end, 
"Lost  Souls"  is  perfect  to  watch  as  Halloween 
draws  near  and  ghouls  and  goblins  just  aren't 
as  scary  as  they  used  to  be. 

Jacqueline  Maar 
Rating:8 

"Just  Looking" 
Directed  by  Jason  Alexander 
Starring  Patti  LuPone,  Ryan  Merriman 
and  Gretchen  Mol 

Boys  will  be  boys,  no  matter  where  or  when 
you  meet  them,  and  14-year-old  Lenny  is  no 
exception. 

Growing  up  in  the  Bronx  in  the  '50s,  Lenny 
(Ryan  Merriman)  is  curious  about  sex.  Perhaps 
"curious"  is  too  mild  of  a  word.  Let's  just  say 
that  this  summer,  he's  determined  to  see  more 
than  just  the  stufT  in  books. 

He  devotes  the  entire  vacation  to  his  dogged 
plan  to  "witness  an  act  of  love."  Not  a  total 
waste  of  time,  since  he  knows  that  having  a 
goal  is  the  only  way  to  get  ahead  in  life. 

Unfortunately,  he  is  caught  early  in  his  ven- 
ture when  trying  to  peep  into  the  bedroom  of 
his  mother  (Patti  LuPone)  and  his  stepfather,  a 
fat  butcher. 

His  punishment  is  a  holiday  in  "the  coun- 
try," Queens,  with  his  aunt  and  uncle.  While 
there,  he  meets  a  group  of  young  inquisitive 
teens  like  himself  and  though  they've  never 
done  "it,"  they  talk  about  "it."  Lenny  learns 
more  from  these  new  friends  than  he  ever  did 
in  the  Bronx. 

Another  character  who  teaches  Lenny  a  les- 
son or  two  is  Hedy  (Gretchen  Mol),  a  nurse. 
Absolutely  enamored  with  the  former  bra 
model,  Lenny  indulges  his  infatuation  before 
he  sincerely  develops  a  deep  respect  and  love 
for  her. 

Does  Lenny's  summer  vacation  goal  ever 
materialize?  The  end  is  inconsequential  to  the 


means. 

;    Before  he  returns  to  the  Bronx,  Lenny  mas- 
ters beer  jingles,  learns  about  men  and  their  rr- 
"needs "  and.  most  importantly,  he  discovers 
the  difference  between  love  and  sex. 

Packed  with  sexual  innuendo,  "Just       •      , 
Looking "  skillfully  weaves  in  more  bang  for 
your  buck,  providing  for  both  awkward  and     ; 
boisterous  laughter.  Furthermore,  the  story      ! 
focuses  on  relationships,  be  it  with  fathers, 
adulters  or  abusers.  The  plot  is  well  balanced 
between  the  drama  and  the  comedy,  resulting 
in  a  light-hearted  and  touching  film. 

Mol  is  divine,  winning  over  the  hearts  of  the 
audience  despite  her  devilish  ways.  Merriman's 
performance  abounds  with  youthful  energy, 

allowing  his  character  to  get  away  with  his 
puerile  and  juvenile  stunts. 

Though  the  film  takes  place  in  a  specific 
period  and  a  particular  place,  its  narrative  is 
nevertheless  compelling.  No  matter  where  you 
banish  them  to,  boys  will  always  be  boys. 

Emilia  Hwang 
Rating:8 


The  Ladies  Man" 

starring  Tim  Meadows  and  Karyn 
Parsons 

directed  by  Reginald  Hudlin 

So  how  does  an  obnoxious,  boorish  guy 
who's  trapped  in  tacky  disco  fashions  and  an 
oversized  afro  get  the  girls?  Hell  if  "The  Ladies 


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LITHGOW 

From  page  16 

it's  been  a  long  road.  He  has 
appeared  in  films  as  diverse  as 
,  the  family-friendly  "Harry  and 
the  Hendersons"  and  the  morbid 
"Ricochet."  In  that  film,  as  well 
-  as  "Cliflhanger,"  he  played  hor- 
rific villains. 

"It's  not  the  real  me,  but  it's 
also  not  supposed  to  be.  That's 
the  fun  of  being  a  character 
actor.  I  get  to  surprise  people," 
Lilhgow  says  of  his  bad-guy  cast- 
ing. 

Lithgow  has  also  done  exten- 
sive stage  work,  performing  a 
different  show  on  Broadway 
each  season  and  garnering  a 
Tony  Award  in  the  process.  He 
has  also  been  nominated  for  an 
Academy  Award  twice  and  won 
three  of  his  four  Emmys  for  his 
portrayal  of  an  alien  high  com- 
mander in  "3rd  Rock  From  the 
Sun." 

In  addition  to  performing  at 
Roycc,  Lithgow  plans  to  give 
back  in  a  more  substantive  way 
"Farkic"  is  being  used  to  sound  a 
call  for  music  education  in 
schools.  Lithgow  plans  to  per- 
sonally present  music  instru- 
ments to  Los  Angeles  schools 
and  his  book  will  be  donated  to 
participating  schools. 

"One  thing  has  led  to  anoth- 
er," said  Lithgow.  "The  fun  of 
entertaining  kids  has  led  to  a 
book  and  this  book  has  led  to 
Simon  and  Schuster  suggesting  a 
donation  to  the  community.  I've 


Oal^  Bhiin  Xrts  S  tntertainnwnt 


-.^■-^ 


Friday,  Octobw  13,2000        19 


N     I    I   I   1 1  (  .  <  )  W 


(I     l'\>M. 


become  a  poster  boy  for  arts  edu- 
cation." 

Lithgow,  however,  is  not  rest- 
ing on  his  laurels.  Several  more 
children's  books  involving  ani- 
mals are  in  the  works.  Since  he 
followed  last  year's  concert  with 
one  this  year,  it  seems  likely  that 
an  annual  tradition  may  also  be 
developing. 

"I'd  like  to  think  so,"  says 
Lithgow.  "I  absolutely  love  to  do 
(concerts  at  Royce).  There  isn't 
much  in  the  way  of  live  entertain- 
ment for  kids  and  it  feels  good  to 
know  that  you  fill  a  demand. 
Besides,  I  love  making  the  kids 
squeal  like  fans  at  a  Beatles  con- 
cert." 

PERFORMANCE:  Lithgow  will  be 
performing  children's  songs  and 
reading  his  new  children's  book. 
The  Remarkable  Farkle  McBride,' 
at  Royce  Hall  on  Oct  1 5  at  2  p.m. 
For  ticketing  information,  call  the 
CTO  at  (310)  825-2101. 


HEAVEN       ?     3 

From  page  16 

the  entire  East-West  relationship  and 
through  her  most  prominent  novel. 
"The  Good  Earth,""altered  the  impres- 
sion the  world  had  of  the  Chinese. 

"She  was  just  the  darling  of  the  world 
with  this  book,"  said  Harper.  "She  was 
a  little  missionary  wife  sitting  in  China, 
writing  about  the  Chinese  in  a  way  that 
was  Chinese,  and  here  she  was  blonde." 
Buck  was  a  woman  full  of  life  and 
spirit  who  many  feel  is  largely  ignored 
by  colleges  around  the  nation.  Thus 
Harper  feels  that  it  is  instrumental  for 
college  students  to  come  see  the  play 
and  learn  about  this  inspiring  woman. 

"I  think  college  students  would  leave 
(the  play)  with  a  great  deal  more  respect 
perhaps  then  they  might  have  had 
because  the  literati  and  the  academia  do 
not  hold  Pearl  Buck  as  a  great  literary 
giant,"  Harper  said.  "But,  she  is  the 
most  translated  American  author  in  the 
world;  her  books  today  are  in  60  to  70 
different  languages  around  the  world." 


THEATER:  "All  Under  Heaven' opens  today 
at  the  Ivar  Theatre,  1605  N.  Ivrfr  Ave, 
Hollywood,  and  will  be  showing  through 
Nov.  5.  Performances  are  heW  Thursday 
through  Saturday  at  8  p.m.  and  Sundays  at 
7:30  pjn.  Matinees  are  Saturday  at  2  pjn. 
and  Sunday  at  3  pm.  Ticket  prices  range 
from  $32.50  -  $40  each  and  can  be  pur- 
chased at  all  Ticketmaster  oudets  or  by 
calling  (2 1 3)  365-3500.  Student  rush  tickets 
are  available  one  hour  prior  to  each  perfor- 
mance for  $15.  All  proceeds  from  these 
performances  will  be  donated  to  the 
Califomia  Youth  Theatre,  a  non-profit  orga- 
nization that  provides  theatre  arts  experi- 
ences for  youths. 


SCREENSCENE 

FrompagelS       .,;.    ,..,.;.;,  .■,-:■ 

Man"  knows.     ■'•:■'■  ^-r^^.  ■  '  •-•"(■;■ 

The  hero  Leon  Phelps  (Tim 
Meadows)  is  such  a  sexually  crude 
womanizer  with  no  redeeming  quali- 
ties, that  his  ability  to  attract  hordes 
of  beautiful  women  is  beyond  expla- 
nation. (Is  his  butt  lotion  loaded  up 
with  some  potent  pheromones  that 
the  world  doesn't  know  about?) 

In  fact,  this  comedy  explains  noth- 
ing, but  presents  this  SNL  personali- 
ty as  a  given  playboy  with  a  "little 
black  book"  as  voluminous  as  the 
yellow  pages.  With  lines  like  "It's  not 
like  I'm  imagining  a  hot  chick  when 
I'm  boning  a  skank,"  he  gets  these 
sultry  women  to  make  googly  eyes  at 
him. 

"The  Ladies  Man"  has  a  premise 
so  awful,  there's  no  saving  this  sinker 
-  unless  the  filmmakers  embrace  the 
campiness  of  it  all  to  create  an  orgy 
of  bad  taste.  And  they  do. 

The  contrived  story  is  just  a  vehi- 
cle for  Leon  to  emit  as  many  stinkers 
of  a  pick-up  line  as  possible  like,  "It's 
like  someone  stuffed  two  fine  hams 
down  your  dress"  for  starters. 

Just  for  being  himself,  Leon  gets 
booted  off  a  radio  station  along  with 
his  producer  Julie  (Karyn  Parsons). 
When  Leon  gets  a  mysterious  love 
letter  from  a  woman  who  wants  to 
share  her  body  and  money  with  the 
ladies  man,  he  goes  in  search  of  her 
because,  duh,  he  can't  remember  her 
because  he's  had  so  many  hot  rich 
babes. 

Meanwhile,  a  mob  of  angry  hus- 
bands hunts  this  ladies  man  who's 


slept  with  all  their  wives.  Led  by 
Greco-Roman  wrestler  Lance  (Will 
Ferrell),  the  guys  are  out  to  do  some- 
thing with  giant  pliers. 
•    The  campiness  works  because  the 
filmmakers  are  fully  aware  that 
"Ladies  Man"  is  a  dumb  movie  with 
stupid  characters.  There  is  no  ounce 
of  reality  or  a  hint  of  a  relatable  rela- 
tionship like  kind  and  beautiful 
Julie's  loyalty  to  this  oversexed 
lothario,  except  that  he  subjects  her 
fiance  to  a  rather  disgusting  torture. 

With  Hashbacks,  narration  and 
mushy  love  scenes  taking  up  very  lit- 
tle time,  it's  like  the  filmmakers 
knowingly  want  to  steaniroii  through 
these  movie  conventions  as  fast  as 
they  can  to  avoid  triteness  -  and  that 
is  the  most  welcome  quality  of  this 
movie. 

Instead,  "The  Ladies  Man"  paro- 
dies the  conventions.  Everything 
obvbus  is  that  much  more  obvious  - 
good  girl  Julie  lives  in  a  pink  room 
with  her  parents.  It  makes  irony 
achingly  ironic  as  the  husbands  pro- 
claim their  masculinity,  only  to  break 
into  a  song-and-dance  number  remi- 
niscent of  a  Britney  Spears  music 
video. 

And  while  leading  men  can  be 
jerks,  but  display  some  kind  of  gentle 
side,  Leon  Phelps  is  twice  as  obnox- 
ious and  reveals  only  slivers  of  sensi- 
tivity Bizarrely  enough,  however, 
not  just  a  few  women  find  him 
charming,  an  entire  phone  book  full 
of  women  find  him  irresistible. 
Such  extremes  transcend  this 
potentially  awful  conventional  come- 
dy to  the  realm  of  campy  fun. 

Sandy  Yang 
Rating:  6 


2Sl!l?J°"r   o  THX-OolbyDiQital 

208-5576     Fn-Sit  (11:45  2:15  4:45)  7:30  10:15  1245 

Sun-Thu  (11:45  2:15  4:45)  7:30  10:15 


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PACIFIC 


lOWBrOKton 
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Oolby  Oigitil 

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P^rNFofwarttPO-IS) 

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Snaik  Preview  Sat  7  IS 


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208-7664  Fri-Thu  (1:00  3:15  5:30)  7:45  IMO 


WEtTWOODZ 

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BMutllal  (P0-13J 

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Fri-Th«  (1:10  3:50)  7:l»  9:40 


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1050  Gayley 
208-7664 


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Dolby  SA 

Fn-Th«(1:204«))  7:20  950 


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WLA/Beverly  Hills 

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FrI-Sat  (12:30)  2:50  5:10  7:30  10:00  12  15 
Sun-Thu  (12:30)  2:505  10  7:30  10D0 


Santa  Monica 


i!ii^"!!!??S.  i»i««iDiTtpw 

lOBMWellwoflh  THX-M 

475-944 1  Fn-Thu  1 1  30  2:00  4:45  7:20  10:20 


GENERAL  CINEMA 


Westwood 


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10840  WrIsKtf  BMt 

1  BIk  E  ol  Westwood 
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MMlllMP«ra*tt(PG-13) 
Ol  2  StrMM 

Presented  in  THX  Digital  Sound 

11«)12fl0  1  30  2.40  4  20  5  20 

7.008:00  9:4010:30 

Fri-S*tUe  Show  12:15 


BEVERLY  CONNECTION 


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Presented  in  Digital  Sound 

11:45  2:15  5.00  7:30  10«) 

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1322  2nd  St. 
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B«hrEHIal(RI 

Fri-Thu  (1:30)  4:15  7.«)  9:45 


Tht  Eicofcial  (R) 

Presented  m  Digital  Sound 

12:45  4:00  70)9:50 

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AVCO  CINEMA 


MONICA  2 


MONICA  3 


Dr.TM4awWiNMi(R) 

1^3:45  4  45  6:3(5 

7:309:1510:15 


Fri-Thu  (1«)2«)1 3 


Me«t  tkt  Partntx  (PC  13) 
Oil  2  icieen 

Presented  in  Digital  Sound 

11:00140420700940 

Presented  in  THX  Digital  Sound 

12.W  2:40  5  20  8.00  10:40 


BEVERLY  CONNECTION 


AlONWi  FMKNn  (R) 

Presented  in  Digital  Sound 
(1001404207109:50 
Optm  10/20:  Ltgtiid  ol  Dmkn  Ma«lw  (R) 


Tkfl  Mm  HtMt  Qak  (RJ 


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Presented  in  Digital  Sound 
11:20  4  4010:00 
Sep  Adm. 
OlriP§,M,RJ 


2(»! 


WaiW00D4 


Tlw  Tk  C«<t  (R) 

Dolby  sn 

Fri-Thu  (1:30  4:10)  7:10  9:30 


ROYAL 

11523  Santa  Monica  Blvd 
(310)477-5581 


AVCO  CINEMA 


Goya  li  •oftff  Ml  (Ri 

Fn-Thu  (12:20) 
2:45  5:10  7:3S10«) 


Santa  Monica 


5f!!?9?'  Lo*$o«*(R) 

1313  3rd  SL  THX    Stereo 

Pj2«SJ?«  frt-Sat  (1.45  4:45)  7:30  10:15  12  30 

395-1590  Sun-Thu  (1:45  4  45)  7:30  10:15 


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9036  WHshlre 
274-6869 


PM«  X  (NRI 

Fri.  Mon-Thu  7:00  9:55 

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9036  WNshire 
274-6869 


Fri.  Mon-Thu  7:15  lOod 
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THX-  Doiby  Olgliai 
Fri-Thu  (1:004«))7«)  10:15 


Rf  mmAtr  Iht  Tilam  (PC) 

Piesented  in  THX  Digital  Sound 

11:40  2  20  5  00  7  40  10  30 

Ortm  10/20:  MVP  (R) 


UCLA 


Campus  Events 


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Daily  Bhi'm  Arts  &  Entmainfn«nt 


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^fobs  For  Bruins 

IWd^  October  13,  2000 

Ackertnan  Union  Grand  Ballroom 

10  am '  3  pm 

A  Job  Fair  for  all  UCLA  Students  -  all  Majors 

Representatives  from  a  wide  range  of  Blue  Chip,  High  Tech,  Start-Up,  and  Nonprofit  companies 
will  be  available  to  discuss  their  current  full-time  career  opportunities,  as  well  as  intenuhips  and 

_■■;  •;.■^: .: '■■   \    summer  jobs.  ,j-:  ?:  .  ::  V"; /^■■■;'V:  "•^■■' ■ 

ytsit  career McCaxcCu  to  see  a  compCete 
^rnpCoyer  Cist  as  weCCasj?rofiCes  anacontact 

1   inforrnation. 


Sponsored  by 
'^W  UCLA  Career  Center 


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Miiii^^nT^iru 

1  IIK) 

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BIG  SWING  DANCE 

13th  Annual  New  Student  Welcome  Party. 
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Earn  $1,000-$2,000  ttiis  quarter  with  the  easy 
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NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT. Safe*  affordabte*  effective*  visit  us  at 
www.figureplus.com  1-888-603-9800.  Dls- 
trltxitorshtps  are  availat>le. 

PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
year  old  females  with  adventurous  and  open 
mirxled  spirits  wfio  want  to  expand/explore 
their  sexuality  through  nude  modeling.  Free 
prints  for  modeling  time.  Call  Rotjert  at  310- 
463-5996  robldOatt.net 


1800 

IVIiscellan«;niis 


www.yhwh.com 


Church  of  Yah\ 

Pastor  Ahyh 

welcomes  you! 

We  are  always  open! 

We  are  dedicated  to 

presenting  the 

clearest  explanations 

available  about  the 

mysteries  and 

essence  of  the 

/erse,  God, 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


ARE  YOU  UNHAPPY  in  your  relationship? 
Heterosexual  women  participants  needed  lor 
study  on  relationship  satisfaction.  Call  301- 
994-4990  or  emaU  JanaNickOaol.oom 

EARN$$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  the  com- 
mon coW   Male/female  18-55yrs   oid,  non- 
smoker,  no  asthma  history.  Limited  availabil- 
ity. Call  today  310-785-9121. 
EmalLctlntoalsubiectsOya  hoo.com 

NON-SMOKERS  &  LONG-TERM  TOBA- 
CCO SMOKERS  needed  for  research 
bronchoscopy  25-50yrs.  oW.  $1 75  for  2  vis- 
Its.  310-206-0396. 

RESEARCH  PARTICIPANTS  NEEDED  for 
patients  experierKlng  Hay  Fever/Allergk: 
Rhinitis.  Requires  4  visits  (6  hours  total)  over 
7-10days  Will  pay  up  lo  $100  at  concluskxi 
of  study.  Contact  Dr.  Diaz-Sanchez  or 
Dr.  Saxon  at  310-825-3699  or  310-825-9376. 

RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for 
UCLA  Braki  Mapping  study  Wear  goggles 
for  (wo  weeks  tfuit  tum  the  world  upskfe 
down.  Musi  t>e  rigtH-funded,  normal  hearing, 
vision  good  or  correctatiie,  $1000  payment. 
Contact  Rtefwrd  at  quixoteOucIa  edu  lor 
more  info. 

SMOKERS  IN  QOOD  HEALTH.  18-45,  want- 
•d  for  ntooMna  rasearch  study  administered 
t>y  LfCLA.  Both  heavy  arKj  occasional  smok- 
ofs  needed.  PaiUdpants  wM  ba  paid  up  to 
$395  for  tour  vtaNs.  Can  Rkrhard  Olmstead  at 
310-312-0565.  laava  masaage. 

SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for  blood  san^iM. 
120  par  vtaH.  Cuivar  CMy.  lOrnln  to  UCLA. 
Reply:  paulp«caraalda.oo(n 


Pay  your  tuition 
with  eggs. 


If  you're  a  woman  between  18 
and  35,  fou  can  earn  money  easi- 
ly, anonymously.  Donate  your 
egp  to  an  infertile  couple.  . 

$3,500  aitd  up,  dependii\g  on 
your  education  and  other  qualifi- 
cations. Call  today. 

The  Center  for  Egg  Options 
310/546-6786 

♦  Th«  Center  fJBT  Er  Optioew.  UC 


2700 

Appliances 


REFRIGERATOR  FOR  SALE  Practically 
new,  med  sized  {34"tall)  Danby  Designer 
fridge,  lots  room,  manual  Included,  paid 
$2001-,  asking  $100.  310-208-2586 


3500 

Furniture 


MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY  STEARNS  &  FOSTER.  Also  twin- 
sets-$79.95,  Fulls-$99.95,  Queens-$139  95: 
Kings-$1 99.95.  Queen  Pillowtops  $199.95. 
Beacon.  Open  7-days.  1309  Westwood 
Blvd.  310-477-1466. 

WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

Sleigh  beds.  Rustic  pine  fumiture.  armoires, 
mattress  sets,  slip  covered  &  upholstered  so- 
fas/chairs. Leather  sofas  &  chairs.  310-745- - 
2253. 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded.  $40  for  attomey  pre- 
pared application.  John  Manley  Esq  12304 
Santa  K4onica  Blvd.  «300  LA,  CA  90025. 
310-820-7553.  Deadline:  IWSO/OO. 


2600 

Wanted 


ADOPTION 

Baby  is  our  dream.  We  can  provide  love&se- 
curity.  All  expenses  paid.  Attomey  involved. 
Confidential.  Call  GIna  A  Frank.  888-676- 
1995 


A  A  A  A  A  ftT?3 


transportation 

4600-5500 


coming  ^ 

Oct.  30 


check  your  newsstands. 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1930  FORD  MODEL  A  $10,000  obo.  5-¥yin- 
dow  coupe,  rumble  seat,  original,  good  con- 
dition. 310-342-7414. 

1972  MERCEDES  280  SEL  4  5L  classic  lux- 
ury sedan,  great  condition.  $3750.  310-470- 
7026. 

1984  HONDA  CIVIC  2  door,  4  speed,  mns 
great,  good  gas  mileage,  AM/FM  cassette, 
new  muffler,  $1100  obo.  310-444-9814 

1986  TOYOTA  CAMARY  Runs  ExceXent  Au- 
tomatic, 4door,  White,  A/C.  AM/FM  Stereo 
80.000  miles.  $2800  310-637-3349  or  wortc 
310-825-4687. 

1990  CHEVROLET  LUMINA  Runs  great! 
Blue  ext/Int  New  suspension.  3.1  Liter.  4dr, 
150Kmiles,  very  dependable.  Must  seH. 
$1800obo  Jeff  323-469-8438. 

1991  JEEP  WRANGLER.  Black,  soft  top. 
fully  serviced,  clean,  mns  great,  must  sett. 
$5700  310-826-3563. 

1996  FORD  ASPIRE  71500mi ,  auto,  a/c, 
airbag.  red  axcelleni  corKlltk>n,  $2950  obo. 
Leaving  Country  Call  Andras  310-825-4585 
Of  after  6pm  310-208-4345. 

POUCE  IMPOUNDS.  Cars  as  tow  as  $500 
tor  Hstings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214. 


wba  ^Ja^^fa^mi^.frjil 


22_' Friday, Octobw  13, 2000 


4900 

Autos  for  Sale 


Daily  Bruin  Oiuified 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990. 
84000mi,  good  condition,  power  windovw, 
black,  A/C,  registration  paid  for  one  year 
$4000.  Call  Vicente  310-398-4123  or  emaii 
jcontrer®ucla.edu 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


■93  NISSAN  SENTRA  XE.  2door,  5spd/man- 
ual,  white  A/C,  am/fm  cassette,  cruise  con- 
trol, good  condition,  90K.  $4400  Denise  310- 
268-3838  X48480. 


Allergy  Sufferers 


■96  CHEVY  CAVALIER  -68,000mi,  CD  sun- 
roof, standard,  A/C.  Must  sell  $4900  obo 
310-428-2345. 


5200 

Parking 


GREAT  LOCATION,  Corner  H4idvale  and 
Ophir.  Lrg  parking  spot  in  subterreanian 
garage  Offers  better  safety  and  protects 
from  the  elements.  $150/mo/obo.  310-657- 
7270 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  application  fees,  high  approval  rate  low 
interest  rate,  all  applicants  welcome  Call 
loll-free:  1-866-427-2677 


Are  you  of  Japanese  Descent? 
f^o  your  aller^es  make  your  eyes  RED  and  ITfiHY? 

'^^^^^^:Z^^:^^  -^'  P°"en  or  dust  or  .ode,.  ,f  yo. ' 

Benefits  of  participation 
include: 


Free  study  related  eye 

examination 

Financial  compensation 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Code  832123).  We're  on 
campus  at  Ackerman  A-level.  310-477-6628 
www.ucu.org 


61 OO 

Coinputer/hiternet 


FREE  WEBSITE!!! 

YOUR  OWN  5-page  website  ABSOLUTELY 
FREE.  Easy,  fast,  quality  NO  banner  ads  to 
watch!  http;//eengen.go.coolebiz.net 


For  more  information  cail: 

Jonathan  Macy,  M.D. 
310-657-2777 


Ask  about  our  referral  program 


our  studies. 
Ask  for  details 


You  may  qualify  if  you: 

•  Are  in  good  health,  and, 

•  Are  of  Japanese  descent 

•Get  RED,  ITCHY  EYES  from  tree, 
grass,  cat  pollens,  mold  or  dust. 


s  one  of 


6200 

Health  Services 


MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  K^assage.  $40/hr  w/student 
ID.  Monday-Fhday  10am-8pm  Maxine  CH4T 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Certificates  available 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

f,':'-  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedicated  pro- 
essional.  At  your  home  or  WLA  studio  1st- 
^5f°"  '^««  No  drum  set  necessary 
Neil:323-654-e226.  ^-oaaary 

^     GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professional  near  UCLA.  All  levels,  guitars 

^"^  »!!.  '-*^'"  '°  P'ay  effortlessly. 
www.JWGS.com.  Call  Jean  at  310^76- 
4154. 


6700 

HrofessionaJ  Services 


TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day.  1-888-774-9994  www.abcpa- 
pers.com 


7000 

Tutorinf)  Offered 


Bor 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 

B«»rt  CvftHlMt  darmatologlst. 

"He  hasnt  forgotten  what  It's 
like  to  be  a  student." 

•Acne»Mote  flemoval«W3rts«Rashes 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmentation* 

•Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)826-2051 

www.DrSflvers.com 

'Offfee  ktrmttm  in  Brmnt,yfff^. 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Attorneys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST  Sexual  harrassment.  Discrimina- 
tion, Auto-accidents,  Slips/falls.  H4YER  LAW 
FIRM,  Westside.  Scott  D  Myer(UCLAW'86) 
wwwbestlawyer.com  310-277-3000. 


6600 

Personal  Services 


Merwge  a  Irois'  I  do  translations  in  German 
English,  or  French.  Call  Julia  310-826-8917' 


6700 

Professional  Services 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  for  de- 
pression, anxiety,  obsessions,  post-traumal- 
ic  stress,efc.  Couples/Individuals.  Crime  vic- 
tims may  be  eligible  lor  free  treatment.  Call 
Liz  Gould(MFC#32388)O310-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  corttultation 


WRITERS  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlining,  research,  and  production 
assistance  for  academic  or  professional  writ- 
ing. Experieoced  writing  instructor.  Harvard 
Univerisfy  ^.\  Jon/310-367-5666 


•rience 


sSSI.^co^^^'  '-^^'  "^^EDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Frustrated  devel- 
0P"«Tg  your  crucial  personal  statements'  Get 
professional  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultant 310-826-4445.  www  winnina- 
personsiatement  com.  •"'•ning 

Creative  expertise^ 

personal 

statements. 

RESUMES 
wri.  COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  formatting,  tran- 
scribing Personalized,  professional  assis- 
lance.  Ace  Words.Etc.  3 1 0-820-8830 


PHO  GRADUATE  tutors  French  language  for 
all  levels  beginning,  advanced  and  conver- 
sational French.  Exceilent  asfvice  and  rates 
Call  Liza  3 10-575-3874. 

SCIENCE  AND  ANY  HIGH  SCHOOL  or   iu- 
nior  high  subjects  tutoring-  UCLA  Motaci/ia, 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


THE  MATHEMAGICIAN 

V^r  on-line  math  tutor.  On-line  assistance 
wrth  ^r  math  problem.  Pre-Algebra,  Alge- 
ora,  Pre-Calculus,  Calculus.  310-452-0655 
or.  go  to.www.themathemagician.com 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


ForALImltedTlme 


n 


"? 


PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  In 
several  pre-paid  legal  sennce  programs 
providing  quality  legal  servwes  to  plan  mem- 
bers Robert  Moss(UCLAW'71)  310-260- 
7650. 


6^00 

fVIovers/Storage 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small  5-piece  special  $102  Two 
24-foot  trucks  fully  equipped  for  large  moves 
Ca«  24/7.  Available  on  short  notice.  License 
T163844  800-2GaBEST  (800-246-2378 ) 


SERRANO'S  CLEANING  SERVICES  Busi- 
ness Ucense  Years  of  experience.  Afford- 
able prices  Offices,  apartments,  condomini- 
ums houses.  Cleaning.  Laundry  etc  Maria 
310-836-7258  310-655-3664 

TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
UnionaJnion  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond  CaH  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-206-0464 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


GET  $1,500.00  BONUS 

IN  ADDITION  TO  A 
$3,500.00  DONOR  FEE 


when  you  are  chosen  by 
a  couple  within  the  first 
month  of  being 
accepted  by  our 
program 


SAFETY  INSPECTOR 


Excellent  t)enefits  paclcage  of 
_J^l*wW:Mcc-onliii«.eoiii 


^ 


tiantfsately 
DSition 
red        y 


6400 

IVIovers/Storage 


(iirini^  \  C Onlldcnti;!! 

(omiscliiiji 

DopfL-NMdM.  ,\n\n:i\. 

Kolalii-iisliips.  .AtiilKlioiis  A 

.\hii>o 


BOND  TUTORING 

AH  subjects  6-l2th  grade  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  w.ii  meet  your  mdividu- 
alneeds.310-471-7  «;e. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABi  E  TUT^JR  that  will^.'riL?,. 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall.  Seven-years 

MATH  TUTOR 

2.  Geometry,  Trigonometry,  and  beginnina 
Calculus  UCLA  Student,  ^th  ma^F^ 
years  eKperience  tutoring  math  and  one  year 

Li^^  *l^^^'  ^■''  ^'  "^^  'n'ormation 
Stephan«e:310-702-6455. 


6200 

Henltfi  Sf>rvif;ns 


THE  EGG 

DONOR 

PROGRAM 

Help  a  couple  achieve  their  dream  and 
voull  receive  the  highest  corpensatton 
%mJ^°^^  personalized  attention  from  the 
oldest  donor  program  in  LA. 

Shelley  Smtth  m.a..  M.F.e.c 
323-933-0414 


6200 

Hp.-iUh  Services 


HONEST  MAN  w/Uft  truck  and  dolltM 
smaH  jobs,  short  notice  ok.  SF,  LV.  SD 
Student  discount.  Go  BruinsI  10th  vr  3ia 
285-8688. 

JERRYS  MOVING4DELIVERY.  The  canlijl 
movers  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery Packing,  boxes  available  Also,  ptek- 
up  donatkxis  for  American  Cancer  Society 
Jenry  ©310-391 -5657 


6200 

HiMltli  Services 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  (^bII^ 


Slii-rh  Klio(liKliur.Ml 
(3I(I)47*)-S255 


1%S:  Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

Member  American  Assoriatinn  of  Orthodonti<;t. 

■SmSmii'JJ^  braces  for  adults  &  children 


Braces 

Deliver  Bri/liant ) 

•  Cosnrwlk:  PoTcetam 

•SuofcoiOffhodorttei 

*f*en<ovabte 

•Trodmonal 

•  Invlslbie 

•European 


(310)  826  -  7494 

IIMsVnW«rilK4  am 

i«*niHf«.  CA  •mna 
(949)  552  -  5890 

l»IMCut»lrDr..i* 
IniBt.  CA  «715 


Te^thWhitening   $8500 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Display 


Daly  Srum  Classified 


7000 

Tiiloring  Offered 


THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
term  paper  assistance,  English.  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  Wekxjme 
Call:310-452-2865 
www.tfiewriterscoacfi.com  i  ■  '! 

WRITING  TUTOR 

Kind  and  patient  Stanford  graduate.  Help 
witti  ttie  Englisti  language— 4or  students  of 
all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  with  the  Engtish  language— tor  stud- 
ents  of  all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW.MY-TUTOR.COM  Math/Phys«s/Sta- 
tistics/English/Hebrew/  chemistry/bwlogy/as- 
tronomy/  Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistk^l  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
senrtce.  CaH  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

TiitoriDf)  W.inted 


AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tutoring,  com- 
panton,  driving.  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
girl.  AthtetK  female  preferred.  BH  $8-l2/hf 
4day8/wk.  2-4hrs/day.  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663,  310-753-3535.  Email 

lonz320aol.com. 


7500 

Ciiieer  Oppartuiiilies 


BREAK  INTO 
HOLLYWOOD!!! 

After  a  decade  of  research-it's  here:  The 
"Industry  Secrets  VkJeo".  Anyone  can  do 
this  simple,  ten-step  plan.  Get  the  inskJe 
track  to  achieving  your  acting  dreams 
nowf  Send  $24.95  (check  or  money  or- 
der) to:  Break  Into  Hollywood  PO  Box  833 
Santa  Monrca,  CA  90406  or  caH  310- 
899KX)82. 


GET  AN  "A"  o«i  your  health  test!!!  Detoxify 
your  system  fast  or  double  your  $$  backll! 
Call  toll  free  877-696-4541  extUClOO. 
www.faroutpromotions.com 

GRADUATING? 
NEED  A  CAREER? 

SCHOLASTTC  Recmits  Inc.  can  help.  We're 
a  free  service  that  links  stuoents  with  great 
companies!  Submit  resumes  to  ucla_sr©ya- 
hoo.com  and  check  out  www.scholasticre- 
crults.com 


7700 

Cltild  Care  Wanted 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


Friday,  October  13,2000       23 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


NANNY/MOTHER'S 
HELPER 

for  6yr-oW  boy  and  toddtor.  Flexible  hours. 
Some  travel  w/family,  especially  weekends. 
Must  be  insured^Kensed  driver.  Live-in  pos- 
sible. References  a  must.  310-446-9970. 

P/T  DRIVER  CHILD- 
CARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  needs  drop-off  (6:45-8am)  &  pfck- 
up+errands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only.  Must  have 
car,  insurance&valid  license.  Brentwood. 
Please  call  Sarah  310-385-6766. 


ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary. 
Host  musk:/talk-shows  for  our  radk)  stations. 
P/T.  $10-15/hr,  $200+per/show.  plus  fantas- 
tte  benefits.  323-468-0080,  24-hours. 

ASSISTANT  TO  EDITOR 

Responsible-energetk;,  writing  and  computer 
skills,  knowledge  of  Page  Maker  6.0  helpful. 
Fast-growing  motion  picture  and  television 
directory.  $7.50/hour  Hours  negotiable.  Con- 
tact Susan  Moore  at  Canoco  Publishing 
310-471-2287. 


ATTENTIONI  A  PERFECT  MATCH.  If  you 
have  15-75  lbs.  to  lose  we  pay  you.  888-559- 
3858. 


CARING  INDIVIDUALS  URGENTLY  needed 
in  Santa  Monica  &  West  LA  lABA.  a  leader 
in  the  fieW  on  non-averstoe  behavior  manag- 
ment  is  seeking  Emptoyment  Specialists  to 
assist  adults  devetopmentally  challenged  in 
an  employment  setting  and  in  the  communi- 
ty. lABA  provides  paid  training  and  advance- 
ment opportunities.  WOrk  from  8:30am  to 
2:30pm  +  in  service  hours,  M-F,37.5hrs/wk 
Eligible  for  medical/dental.  401K  and  paid 
time  off.  Competitive  wages+supplemental 
tenure  pay  Related  experience  or  BA  in  Psy- 
chology preferred  Email  your  resume  to  ro- 
kellyOiaba  com  or  call  toll  free  877-924- 
2220.  For  more  info  visit  lABA  at 
www.iaba.com 


P/T  NANNY 

for  7  yr-oW  girl.  PacHk;  Palisades.  2-6:30pm. 
M-R  Must  have  car.  Errands,  light  house- 
keeping, chiW  pick-up.  $10/hr.  310-230- 
3877. 


ATTRACTIVE  FEMALE  MODELS  needed 
(or  internet  work.  18-22  years  old  only. 
$250/day.  Email  clint88©  models.com  for 
more  info. 


PACIFIC  PALISADES.  Age  9.  Good  Driver. 
M-F  2:30-6pm.  $lO/hr  Live  out.  Non-smoker. 
References  Required.  Call:  213-243-4025 
Business  hours. 


STOCK   BROKER.   Lk^enses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Blvd  Suite 
216.  Woodland  Hills.  CA.  Instructor  David 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  Universitv) 
818-703-8889. 


COLLEGE  STUDENT 
TUTORS  WANTED 

K-12  after  school,  in  WLA.  SM.  BH.  No  ex- 
perience necessary.  $lO-15/hour  plus  bo- 
nus. The  Tutor's  Club:3 10-444-0449. 


THERAPEUTIC  AID  for  auUstk:  chiWren 
P/T,F/T  (flexible).  $12-15/hr.  BS/BA  Psychol- 
ogy preferred  Experience  w/DT.  behavwr 
OKxJifkatkMi  Contact  818-788-2388  fax  re- 
sume 818-788-3875. 


PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  for  10  yr/okj 
giri  Need  help  6:45-8:30AM  MTW,  2-7:30pm 
MT.  Must  have  car,  experience  with  chiWren 
and  help  with  errands.  310-441-9766. 

PART-TIME  BABYSITTER.  Responsible, 
experienced,  chiW  development  preferred 
Energete.  for  2-year-old  and  5-year-old. 
Ovm  car.  310-273-4900. 


DRIVER/rUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  I2&l6-yr- 
oW  boys  w/HW  and  tests  Car  plus  insurance 
needed  Approx  20hr8/¥vk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 


MATH.  SPANISH,  FRENCH,  LATIN,  CHEM- 
ISTRY tutors  wanted  Must  have  own  car 
Artteuiate.  no  experience  required  SM  BH 
CC.  $15mr.  310-679-2133 


TUTOR  NEEDED  for  2  boys  (ages  648)  Job 
wouW  include  the  foltowing:  PkA  up  boys 
from  Fairbum  Elementary  School  (approx 
2mi  from  UCLA)  at  2:35pm  M-Thurs, 
12:10pm  on  Fri.  Take  boys  to  Century  City 
condo,  do  HW,  tutor  various  subjects,  give 
them  snack,  swim  in  Olympk:  size  pool,  play 
ban,  etc.  Parents  will  arrive  home  at  approx 
6:30pm  everyday.  •"Important  to  nole  this 
job  is  every  other  week  only  $300^^lyk  Ad- 
justments up  if  more  work  or  hours  neces- 
sary. Reply  to  Anthony  Brooklier  310-273- 
7166  or  Fax  info  310-277-3006. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homewori<  assist  for  two  boys,  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  in  Laurel  Canyon  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexit>le  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  call  evenings:  3 10-40 1-01 13  or  day- 
timo:310-392-1405. 

TUTOR  WANTED  for  4th  grade  boy.  Bilin- 
gual (French-English)  American  preferred. 
3times/wk  for  2  hours  Must  have  own  car 
Bel-air  310-471-0032  or  dbtwenty4sev- 
enOaol.com 


RAND  fias  an  immediate  opening  for  a 
Data  Reductton  Supervisor.  Oversees  the 
data  reduction  operations  of  survey  re- 
search projects,  including  sample  prepa- 
ratton,  mailing  survey  documents  and 
processing  sunwy  data.  Trains  and  su- 
pen/ises  editors,  coders,  and  clerks.  Min- 
imum of  1  year  experience  in  question- 
naire editing  and  coding,  record  abstrac- 
tton.  database  management  systems,  on- 
line computer  editing,  cleaning  or  data 
entry  Must  be  familiar  with  MA  Access 
and  have  strong  supervisor,  vertjal  & 
communication  skills  &  experience  writing 
technkal  procedures/manuals  Fax  re 
sume  to  SRG  Recruiting «310-451 -6921 
EOE 


PT  CHILDCARE 

For  Very  special  5yr  okJ  daughter  Infema- 
twnal  or  bilingual  background  preferred, 
car&references  required.  Grand  Piano.  Bev- 
erlywood.  Laird:310-287-1677. 

RESPONSIBLE,  RELIABLE  DRIVER  for  15- 
yr-oid  boy  to  and  from  school  and  to  appoint- 
ments. tXJLA  area.  323-468-2632.  ask  for 
Norma. 


Seeking  bright,  active  person 

with  college  degree  to  assist 

with  2  children  ages  6  &  8, 

part  time,  for  school  related 

tutoring,  computer 

assistance,  and  extra 

curricular  activities.  Excellent 

personal  references  required. 

Resumes  to:  Rose  Cooper 
510  N.  Robertson  Blvd. 
LjOS  Angeles,  CA  90048 


CASHIER.  We  are  a  Chinese  Seafood  res- 
taurant. Speak  English,  Mandarin  or  Can- 
tonese. Full-time  or  part-time.  Experience 
prefen-ed.  626-641-8978. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Cooperage.  We 
wortc  ¥Mth  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals,  man- 
agement training  opportunity.  Call:3l0-206- 
0740. 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

PART-TIME  jobs  available  at  Cooperage. 
We  work  with  your  schedule.  l/2-off  meals, 
mngmnt  training  opplntK  Call  310-206-0740 


$1500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  circulars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  infomiatk>n 
packet  Call  202-466-1639. 


7600 

Child  Care  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  run  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6years  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Ck>se  to  UCLA. 
310-473-0772. 


SITTER.  P/T  twtee  a  week.  Bright,  responsi- 
ble student  to  watch  infant  (Prefer  education 
major,  prevkMJS  experience  and  own  trans- 
portatran).  Terri  310-910-3405. 

THERAPEUTIC 
COMPANION 

To  wort<  P/T  w/12-year-old  boy  w/autism. 
Evenings  and/or  weekends  5-10hours/week. 
Minimum  6-months.  Coursework  and/or  ex- 
perience w/autism  necessary.  $10+/hr.  310- 
559-7384. 


7700 

Cliild  Care  Wanted 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertatkxis,  transcription,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports  Santa 
Mortca,  310-828-6939  Hollywood  323-466- 
2888. 


AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED 
Mon-Fri.  2pm-7pm  Own  transportation  a 
must.  Brentwood.  310-979-7103. 

AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE.  Tutoring.com- 
panion,dnving  Active  7y/o  boy  and  lly/o 
giri.  Athletk;  female  preferred.  BH.  $8-12/hr 
4daysMk.  2-4hrs/day  ASAP  Call  310-273- 
3663.310-753-3535.  Email  tonz320aol.com 
ATHLETIC,  Energetk:,  Intelligeni  guy  to  play 
sports  and  help  out  with  homewort(  for  kids 
6,8  As  many/little  hours  as  wanted,  after 
school  and  on  weekends  Must  know  how  to 
drive  and  swim.  Call  Maureen  310-440- 
0990. 


WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILDCARE  For  12-year-okl  giri.  SM,  M-F, 
3:30-7lsh.  Car  with  insurance.  References 
required.  $9+/hour  Night:3 10-828-6206. 
Day:818-954-3276. 

WANTED:  Responisble  individual  needed  to 
help  after  school  with  2  small  children. 
Mondays  4-8pm  and  some  weekends.  Must 
Drive  References  Call  310-446-1438. 


$8  to  $15  per  hour 

Work  in  Westwood  for  an  upscale  singles 
organizatton.  Women  excel  Teleowrtteting 
Recruit  new  members.  Weekly  pay.  Call  after 
3PM  Sun-Thurs.  Keith:31 0-279-3300. 

STUDENTS 

You  can  earn  $20K  this  semester.  No  gim- 
micks. Totally  on  the  level.  ABSOLUTELY 
NO  COST  TO  YOU.  We  Mhll  provWe  you 
w/free  training  and  support.  Go  to 
httpy/nils  go.coolebiz.net  and  watch  the  on- 
line flash  presentation 

*DANCE  HOSTESS* 

EXCELLENT  TIPS  +  SALARY  Flexible 
schedule.  P/T-F/T  l^  Downtown  nightclub. 
No  atooho(/no  nudity.  18years+.  Call  now"" 
213-620-9572. 


(^TJTTS 


BABYSITTER  NEEDED  for  weekends  in 
Brentwood  WouW  like  non-smoker,  gentle, 
playful,  responsible  sou).  Call  Vtoletta  310- 
472-8745. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


$10/HOUR 

Accounting,  business,  math,  and  econ 
majors  w/bask;  MathAEnglish  skills  needed 
TuesdaysAThursdays  for  PT-FT  posittons 
Excellent  experience  for  future  CPAs  or  busi- 
ness owners  Fax  resume(UCLA  students, 
also  send  DPR):818-769-4694. 

$12/HR,  Hours  Flexible 

P/T.  IndlvWual  needs  assistant  in  contacting 
property  owners.  Must  have  car  Call  310- 
476-9089 


*MAJOR  NETWORK 
SHOOT* 

DkJ  you  like  "Sunrivor?"  READ  ON!  Nehwort* 
Pilot  Promotton  to  be  shot  next  tuesday  and 
Wednesday  at  the  luxurious  RITZ  CARLTON 
RESORT    in    Palm    Springs.    MUST    BE 
LARGE  AND  IN  CHARGE!  Sorry,  OVER- 
WEIGHT men  and  women  only!  Auditions 
are  TODAY  ONLY.  Friday  from  12  noon  to 
6pm  at:  Aftershock  Digital  8222  Melrose  Ave 
LA,  CA.  (Two  Blocks  from  Fred  Segul's  in 
Hollywood)  PLEASE  CALL  CHAD  AT  AF- 
TERSHOCK  ASAP  323-CS8-5700 
•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK"  Beats  all  jobs.  Start 
immediately.  Great  pay  Fun/Easy.  No  crazy 
fees   Program  for  free  medical  Call-24/hrs 
323-850-4417. 


CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT/CHILDCARE 
COUNSELOR  CHILIX:ARE  ASSISTANT 
SALARY:  $7.03-$8.65/hr+partial  benefits 
CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR  SALARY: 
$8.65-$l1  90/hr+partial  benefits.  Under  gen- 
eral superviston.  plans,  impieriwnts  recrea- 
ttonal,  educattonal  and  sports  activities  for 

5-12  year  olds,  such  as  arts  and  crafts. 
Learning  groups,  outdoor  games  and  play- 
ing intramural  sports.  REQUIREMENTS 

FOR  CHILDCARE  ASSISTANT  High 
School  Graduation:  enrollment  in  college 
preferred.  Six  months  paid  recreation  wort( 
experience  (3months  of  volunteer  experi- 
ence in  a  chiWcare  program  can  be  substi- 
tuted for  3months  of  paid  experience).  Proof 
of  High  School  diploma  must  be  sut)mitted 
with  a  City  applk»tion  REQUIREMENTS 
FOR  CHILDCARE  COUNSELOR:  Comple- 
tion of  one  year  of  college,  majoring  in  Re- 
creation. Education  or  related  field  Must 
have  12  units  in  Earty  Childhood  Education 
and  3  addittonal  units  in  Administration  or 
Staff  Relations.  One-year  partt  recreation 
wort<  experience.  Proof  of  one  year  college 
and  required  units  must  be  submined  with  a 
City  applfcafton  Call  310-550-4265  EOE. 
CITY  OF  BEVERLY  Hills  Part<ing  Attendants 
needed.   $9.11/hr.   Morning  and   Evening 
shifts  available  Seasonal  Positions  starting 
November  16,  2000  to  January  5,  2001.  All 
shifts  available.  Apply  Now!!!  Depl.  of  Trans- 
portation. 455  N  Rexford  Dr.  Room  130.  fi^- 
ply  in  person.  310-285-2552. 


employment 

7400-8300 


Business  0|)|)Oftiiiiities 


A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  It's  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35.  Refundable.  No  Risk. 
hnp://2K)glb.com/phanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stophanle. 

BURNED  OUT? 

Tired  of  misteadkig  ads?  I'm  tired  of  clueless 
people.  Want  to  make  $6000-$8000/mo? 
Bcwwty  HM»  omot  expfcxang.  Call  me:  310- 
268-1515. 


BENEDICT  CANYON-10  yo.  giri  attending 
Warner  Ave  After  School  Care  From  1- 
6:30pm.  M-F.  $350Aivk.  Must  have  car  and 
good  driving  reconte.  310-858-7060. 

CHILD  CARE  Wanted  Tues  3-8,  Thurs  3-6 
AND/OR  Sat  12-9  In  Santa  Monica. 
Someone  to  help  fuH  time  Mom  w/  kkte  ages 
4,6,10  Must  have  experience.  Good  pay 
Call  Doug  310-888-0163.  Fax  310-451- 
6050 


$15-$23/HR  BRIGHT.  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academe 
Subjects.  Transportatton  required  We  will 
train.  Rexible  hours  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  test  scores  (SAT  GRE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educational  Sen/k:es,  Attn  Bar- 
ry. 9911  W.  Pico  Blvd.  Ste.1025,  LA,  CA 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424  PosiUons  avail- 
able throughout  LA  and  the  Valley. 


COLLEGE  ACHIEVERS 

Ground  ftoor  company,  Southem  California 
market  exploding.  Want  to  make  $5- 
BK/month?  m  teach  you  how.  FT/PT.  CaM 
310060-6994  9am- 1pm. 


Classifieds 


CHILDCARE 

for  perBonaWe  8yr-oW  giri.  Ptek-up  from 
schooMeMooa.  CDL,  own  car,  insurance 
Non-smoker  Monday/Wednesday/Friday  ?.- 
5:30pm  Tuesday/Thursday  2-6pm.  $l0/hr 
Cal  310-440-«738. 

CHILDCARE/DRIVER  for  12-yr-old  boy. 
Non-smoker  Likes  kkte  and  dogs.  Help 
w/HW  M-Thurs,  4:15-5:45pm.  $10^r.  Call 
310-828-5144 

DRIVE  CHILD  from  school  m  Pkx>/Rob«t- 
son  area  to  home  In  Padfk:  PaMaadM  in  af- 
ternoons Must  have  car  and  Irwurarx^  310- 
454-7525. 

FUN/CARING  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  for 
pteWng  up  A  caring  for  9yr  oW  girt  Must 
hav«  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-5day8/wk. 
aftamoona-epm.  Oayla  310-450-4109  (evan- 
moa). 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  fiek)  sales,  flexible  hours  +  com- 
misskxi  and  bonus!  Ambitious  salesperson 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  supportOfones- 
4all.com  Attn:FleW  Sales 


ACCOUNTING  CLERK  Needed.  $12- 
1 5/DOE.  Must  have  taken  accounting  class- 
es. Excel  and  strong  communication  skills 
Fax  resume  attnMelody  323-965-3194. 

ADULT  RESPONSIBLE  MALE.  Personal 
care   lor  disaWad   man.    Monday-Friday 
Ihr/day,  alternate  weekends    Will  train. 
Strong  References.  Near  (XILA.  $300/mo 
310-475-5209 


2  HASHERS  NEEDED  ASAP  for  Monday 
Nights  only!!  Please  call  Miriam  310-208- 
9005. 

CAMPUS  EVENT 
JOBS 

Eam  a  Bonus  up  to  $500  If  you  can  commit 
lo  tfie  Men's  Basketball  Season  and  other 
Special  Events!!!  Limited  number  of  posi- 
tions available,  for  UCLA  students  onfy.  For 
more  informatkjn  call  Sean,  310-  206-0736. 

CARING  INDIVIDUALS  NEEDED  TO  sup- 
port  UCLA  student  lABA.  an  intemattonally 
respected  agency,  is  seeking  Community 
Support  Companions  and  Overriight  Com- 
pank>ns  to  assist  a  college  student  with 
physk^al  challenges  Assistance  needed  in 
his  dorm, classes. and  the  community  of 
Westwood.  lABA  provkJes  paM  training  and 
advancement  opportunities.  Full  and  part 
time  shifts  available,  inducing  night  hours. 
Full  time  benefits  include  nwdfoal/dental  cov- 
erage, 401 K  plan  and  paW  finDe  off.  Competi- 
tive wages+supplenwntal  tenure  pay  Relat- 
ed experience  or  BA  In  Psychok>gy  pre- 
ferred. Email  your  resume  to  rokel- 
lyOiaba.com  or  caH  ton  free-877-924-2220 
For  mora  Infonnatton  vlait  lABA  at 
www.laba.com        


AUDIO  VISUAL 
OPERATORS  WANTED 

for  delivery  and  operattons,  throughout  cam- 
pus. Computer  and  customer  skills  pre- 
ferred. AV  experience  not  required.  Open 
schedule  needed.  Must  be  at)le  to  lift  35 
pounds.  Two  positions  available:  Operator. 
$8.90/hr,  Technrcian  $11.40/hr  Call  Juan 
310-206-8002. 

BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Unton.  Excellent  pay,  hours  &  environment. 
Some  teller  experience  prefen-ed.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd  ,  \J^.  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.ucu.org/jobs.htm 

A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

CX)  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  in  the  afternoons  dur- 
ing school  (M-F)?  All  day  Saturday,  too!  Full- 
time during  Quarter  Breaks  and  Summer  Va- 
cations! Work  experience  not  necessary.  Ap- 
ply today  at  Westwood  Sporting  Goods. 
1065  Gaytey  Ave,  Westwood  Village. 

LIBRARY  JOBS  Shelving  and  other  slacks 
duties,  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  appfy  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Antigone  Kutav 
310-825-1084.  ' 


AFTERSCHOOL  honnoworit  supervisor/  ba- 
byaHtar  for  3rd-grade  boy.  Must  be  disci- 
p«nad  to  teach  good  HW  habits  Elementa- 
ry Ed  major  a  plus  Need  car  Tues-Fri  2  30- 
6:00pm  $8  00-$1000/hr  Call  310-390-6962 
evenings,  323-468-5273  days.  ha- 
katztt)cOyahoo  com 


f*>  Experiettce  Neceaary 

Mov  Wtmien.  dilMitn.  all  ago,  siaes. 

raos  TV'  ■  HIms  Ornimatiab  -  M^axines 

fnr persimtil  liitenieti  call  mm 

310.659.7000 


LIFEGUARDS  WANTED 

NOW  HIRING  Certified  lifeguante  Culver- 
Palms  YMCA.  Call  Meredith  310-390- 
3604x7525. 


LOVE  CUTE  DOGS? 

SEEKING  CARING,  responsible,  non-smok- 
er to  dog  sit  eveningsAveekends  Must  have 
own  car  and  experience  Please  call  310- 
459-7631. 


Display 
206-3060 


24       Friday,  October  13,2000 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


M.  FREDRIC 

Fashion  forward  company  looking  for  ener- 
getic people  to  fill  sales  and  management 
positions.  Call  Tory  818-597-0212  exi  114. 

fVlEDICAL  BILLING  SUPERVISOR  WANT 
ED  by  dynamic.  DI^E  &  Refiab  dealer.  Ex 
perlise  witfi  Medicare,  MediCal  &  Insurance 
required.  Experience  witfi  Team  DME  Soft- 
ware a  big  plus.  Full-time  position.  Hourly 
compensation  commensurate  witfi  experi- 
ence. Fax  resume  to  310-575-1505. 


CITY  OF  BEVERLY  Hills  Parking  Attendants 
needed.  $9.11/hr.  Morning  and  Evening 
shifts  available.  Seasonal  Positions  starting 
November  16,  2000  to  January  5,  2001.  All 
shifts  available.  Apply  Now!!!  Dept.  of  Trans- 
portation. 455  N.  Rexford  Dr..  Room  130.  Ap- 
ply in  person.  310-285-2552. 

CLERICAL7CUST0MER 
SERVICE 

M-F,  F/T  pemianent.  Good  phone  and  Eng- 
lish skills,  detail-oriented,  reliable.  WLA.  $9- 
$10/hr   310-826-3759ext229. 


CLERK  TYPIST/RECEPTIONIST  Manage 
small  medical  research  group.  Good  com- 
munication/writing skills,  word-processing, 
Windows  95,  up  to  20/hours,  weekday-mom- 
ings  Slarting-$8.00/hr.  Weslwood.  310-826- 
0679. 


F/T  or  P/T.  Children's  retail  store.  Hours:  sat 
required.  $8-10/hr  DOE.  On  Santa  Monica 
Blvd  in  Westwood.  310-234-9554. 


.~*^"jfjit^\ 


Flu  Vaccine 


For  all  registered  students  as  of  17  October, 
by  appointment  in  the  Ashe  Center 

Also  look  for  FREE  Flu  Vaccine  fairs  m  November 

Visit  the  Asfie  web  site  for  more  information,  request 

an  appointment  or  ask  a  health  related  question- 

http.y/www.saonet. ucla.edu/health  htm  • 

or  call  825-4073 

ucia  Ashe  Center 


harojains 

student  deals  C-^ 


!tplace  of  student-to-student  deals 

absolutely  FREE*  some  of  the  best  deals  in  Westwo<xi.  Ch^k  weekly  for  updates  so  you  don't  miss  out  on  great  savings! 


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14  Citrus  fruit 

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16  Llama  country 

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18  Soon 

19  Fury 

20  Writer  Isaac  — 
22  Shuddered 

24  "Crooklyn- 
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26  Off  the  track 

27  Snow  vetiicle 

31  W  Hemisphere 
alliance 

32  Glances 

33  Dentist's  tool 
36  Wane 

39  Nothing  tjuf 

40  Horror-flick  role 

41  Mayberry  boy 

42  Halloween 
creature 

43  Primp 

44  Encounters 

45  *Gotlyr 

46  HtHarys 
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51  Mystery  writer 
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52  Predatory  fish 
54  Headdresses  for 

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63  18-wheeler 

64  Agitate 

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66  Keats' 
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8  Honolulu  40 
wek»}me  41 

9  Varied  43 

10  Binges  44 

11  Oysters  45 
treasure  47 

12  Persuaded  48 

13  Was  sorry  49 
21  Goose  50 

formation  52 

23  Bottle  53 

25  Actor  Cantor  55 

27  Amorphous  56 
mass  57 

28  A  Chaplin  58 

29  Lock  part  61 

30  Upper 

T 


RIN 


RTA 


atmosphere 

Female 

sandpiper 

Secret 

FerKing 

weapon 

Scraps 

Most  excellent 

Crispest 

Above:  poet. 

Laborer 

Juarez  native 

Free 

Okj  soldier 

Intended 

It  doesn't  pay! 

Like  pretzels 

Senor's  coin 

Omit 

Friend 

Banister 

Pulpit 

Quick  drive 

Before,  to  a 

poet 


To  place  a  FREE* 

ad  ill  the  Brum 

Bargaiii.s,  fill  out 

iiifomialion  on  llie  right 

and  .submit  to  the  Daily 

Bruin  Clas,sifie(is. 


I  •Item: 

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I  •Description: 

(20  characters  maximum,  including  spaces) 


•Item: •    ""'"."""^" 

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Classifieds 
825-2221 


Display 


Dally  Bruin  Oassified 


7800 

Help  Wnnted 


CLERK.  P/T,  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  perfectionist  with  typing 
skills  for  gerwral  offkie  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  detail-oriented.  $1l/hour  to  start  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2437 


CLINICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  positwn  immediately  available  lor  a  li- 
censed laboratory  scientist  in  a  private  clini- 
cal laboratory  in  Santa  Monica.  Lab  provides 
endocrine,  androtogy,  serology  and  immu- 
nology testing.  Incumbent  required  to  work 
in  weekend  rotatwns.  Salary  commensurate 
with  qualifications  and  experience.  Submit 
applications  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 
Technology  Laboratories,  1245  16th  Street, 
Suite  105,  Santa  Monica,  CA  90404  (Tei 
310-829-0102). 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


MEDICAL 

UPSCALE  OPTOMETRIC  PRACTICE  seeks 
f/t-p/t  experienced,  high-energy  articulate 
individuals  Front-otfice/back-otfice.  Please 
leave  message:310-4l8-2020  And  fax 
resume:310-271-3959. 

MEN  AGES  18-24  lor  nude  modeling  for 
magazines  and  fine  art.  Call  310-289-8941, 
days. 


Friday,  Octol)er  13, 2000        25 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


MUSIC  MARKETING  company  seeks  Full- 
Time  online  marketing  assistant.  Entry-level 
position  assisting  online  mart<eting  division 
geared  towards  the  entertainment  company 
Must  have  excellent  computer  skills/knowl- 
edge of  the  Internet.  Call  Rob  M  323-930- 
3141  for  more  info  or  visit  www.noizepollu- 
tion.com 


COACHES  NEEDED 
&  HIGH  SCHOOL 

2000-2001  school  year..  Girls  Soccer,  Varsi- 
ty and  JV  Lacrosse,  JV  Boys  Basketball 
PakJ  positions.  310-391-7127.  Call  Nate  ext. 
247  for  boys'  positrans.  Call  Gail  ext.  248  for 
girls'  positions. 


MESSENGER 

STRONG  BRUIN  SUPPORTER&well  estab- 
lished Westwood  law  firm  seeks  2-pan-time 
messengers(MWF  or  TR,  9:30-6:30)  to  work 
in  our  office  services  department.  Must  have 
reliable  car,  insurance&good  driving  record. 
Additional  duties  include  mail,  photocopying, 
faxing,  switchboard,  etc.  Prefer  Bruin  stud- 
ents who  are  also  responsible&detaN-orieni- 
ed.  Please  call  Robin  Bames  310-478-2541. 

FEMALE  ATTENDANT 

10  HOURS>WK:$10/hr:10mins  UCLA  Help 
disabled  woman  with  laundry,  shopping, 
medical  appointments  and  misc.  errands! 
Must  have  car.  Call:3l 0-828-4686. 


NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  Mostly 
runs  errands,  some  light  housework  and 
cooking,  good  pay.  near  UCLA  4-5 
hours/day  310-788-4727. 

NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  North  Campus 
We  work  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity  CallSIO- 
206-0720 


NORTH  CAMPUS  JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  LuValle  Com- 
mons. We  work  with  your  schedule.  1/2  of 
meals,  management  training  opportunity 
Call  310-825-1177. 


COFFEE  BAR  ATTENDANT  the  best  stud- 
ent job.  You  must  be  responsitHe,  reliable, 
experience  a  plus.  Duttons  11975  San  Vi- 
cente. 


FINE  JEWELRY  STORE  in  Westwood  Vil- 
lage needs  P/T  sales.  Computer  liter- 
ate,fnendlycheerful.  Walking  distance  to 
campus.  310-824-5036,11am-6pm  Fax  re- 
sume 310-824-2738.  Emaihgracfijewel©  hot- 
mail. com. 


COMMUNICATION  COMPANY  seeks  busi- 
ness student  to  work  P/T.  Experier>ce  in  re- 
search and  business  plan  writing.  Pay  nego- 
tiabte.  Contact  Jason.  310-551-2292. 

COMMUNICATIONSA^ARKETING  STUD- 
ENT  needed  to  market  and  promote  an  up- 
scale optometric  practk^.  Leave  message  at 
310-418-2020  and  fax  resuow  to  310-271- 
3959. 


FIVE  ATTORNEY  CENTURY  CITY  LAW 
FIRM  seeks  P/T  file  clerk.  Flex  hours  b/t  9- 
5pm,  M-F  Computer  knowledge  a  plus  Fax 
resume  to  Meg  310-277-0035. 

FLORIST  SEEKING 

P/T  sales,  phone  assistant.  Simple  typ- 
ing/administration skills  helpful.  Flexible 
hours/fun  environment.  Call  Monka  323- 
852-0848. 


OFFICE  HELP 

Established  Brentwood  computer  co  needs 
help  with  MS  Word,  phones,  email,  clerical 
stuff.  Flexible  hours;  great  for  students;  learn 
the  biz!  Email  resume  to  jkenne- 
dy®ant91.com 

OFFICE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CE0. 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company-West- 
wood.  10am-2pm/Full-time,  flexible  hours 
Need:excellent  telephone  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admin/comp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
ferred. Benefits/advancement.  FaxRes2Mar- 
ina:  310-475-1533. 


COMMUNITY  SERVICE 
OFFICERS 

Do  Good  and  gel  paid.  Pay  $8  16  to 
$l0.46/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/u 
.academte  years  remaining  with  valid  driver's 
lk:ense.  Web:  www.ucpd.ucla.edu/ucpd/cso. 
Email:  csoOucpd.ucla.edu.  Phone  310- 
825-2148. 


FRONT  DESK 
RECEPTIONIST 

Needed  for  private  health  club.  Permanent 
hours  available.  Health  insurance  offered. 
Please  ask  for  Allison:310-659-5002. 


OFFICE-EXCELLENT  OPPORTUNITY  2 
P/T  positions  available  Flexible  hours.  Retail 
store  in  Westwood  Village.  310-208-8404 
from  12-6.  Mr  Rogers. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
worthing  at  various  on-campus  events  We 
offer  flexible  hours  that  vary  from  week  to 
week.  Call  310-206-0735 


COMPUTER  and  LAN  coordinator  for  UCLA 
dept,  P/r.  Windows  NT  exchange  server.  Of- 
fice software  experience  required,  10- 
20hrs/wk,  $16-2a'hr.  Respond  to  jobssisum- 
merucla  edu 


COOL  LADY  seeks  driver  for  occaswnal  er- 
rands. Own  car  required.  $7/HR  310-826- 

aiso. 


FRONT  DESK.  Perfect  P/T  position!  Short 
shifts,  some  nighis&weekends  in  small  exer- 
cise studio.  Must  be  friendly,  outgoing,  com- 
puter literate  and  have  dynamic  personality 
10-15hrs/wk.  Kim  310-393-6399. 

GENERAL  OFFICE  WORK  and  errands 
Santa  Monica  company  Need  car  Non- 
smoker  Fax  resume  to  310-845-9691 


ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

ASUCLA  Catering  has  great  part-time  jobs 
worthing  at  various  on-campus  events.  We 
offer  flexible  hours  that  vary  from  week  to 
week.  Call:31 0-206-0735. 


P/T  ASSISTANT 

Private  home  office,  data  entry,  Mac/Quick- 
en. Accuracy  important.  Good  English  Own 
transportation.  Flexible  schedule.  Weekdays 
only  8-12hrs/wk.  310-394-2933 


CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

F/T,  M-F  9-5.  Century  City  kxatton.  Seeking 
«elt-molivated,  energetic  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate, 
WMngual,  college  degree  prel.  Fax  resume 
310-553-3996. 


CUSTOMER  SERVICE,  WEB  PROGRAM- 
MER NEEDED-  cash  weekly  plus  bonuses 
2  bkjcks  from  campus.  One  job,  internet 
knowledge  preferred.  310-282-1199. 
jobs©fashk)n4less.com. 

DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  is  hWng  van  driv- 
ers. Looking  for  energette,  unstoppable, 
positive  crew  immediately  Flextole  hours 
busy  weekends.  Apply  in  person  MSal  till 
6pm.  Appty  at  937  Westwood.  310-208-1180. 

DRIVER  NEEDED.  3hours  Tuesday,  Wed- 
nesday Thursday  One  Slop  Westwood  to 
Santa  Monica.  $15/hr.  310-476-8401. 

DRIVER  NEEDED.  Ptek-up  kids  at  West- 
wood  Secondary  School,  back  to  Hollywood 
Flexible  schedule,  T-W-Th  5-8pm.  Call  323- 
436-0774,  evenings  only. 

DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED.  Full- 
time or  part-time.  Westwood  driving  and  traf- 
fic school.  Call  for  informatkm.  310-624- 
4444. 


GEOGRAPHY 

Fk)od  certification  company  near  LAX 
has  immediate  openings  for  map  re- 
searchers. Part-time  and  Full-time.  Must 
be  rt«p  proficient,  detail-oriented,  and 
possess  bask:  computer  skills.  Geogra- 
phy background  is  preferred.  Will  train 
Interested  candklates  lax  resume:  310- 
348-9022  aften:  Producton  Department 


r  P/T  DRIVER/UTILITY 
TRAINEE 

Flexible  hours.  $8/hour  includes  gasoline 
Own  vehkJie,  valkJ  Califomia  driver's  li- 
cense and  proof  of  insurance.  Non-smok- 
ing environment.  Clean-cut  individual. 
Stephanie:3l0-395-329i . 


DUNDEAL  NET  $15/hr,  P/T,F/T  now  seeking 
college  students  to  take  surveys  on  the  inter- 
net! Get  paid  for  your  opinran!  Work  from  any 
computer  Sign  up  today  at:  wwwdun- 
deal.net. 


GIRLS  wanted  at  exdgslve  social  clubs  in 
WLA.  Conversatkjn  only.  No  atoohol.  Flexi- 
tXe  hours.  Earn  top  $$$.  323-441-0985 

GREAT  OPPORTUNITY 

Assistant  M-F  2-3/hrs  afternoons.  Exciting, 
growing  company  seeks  detail-oriented! 
sharp  indivkfual  who  likes  atot  of  responsibil- 
ity.  CaW  Mona  Andrews  310-278-3349. 

INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPRE- 
SENTATIVE. Film  advertising  Call  retail 
stores  for  upcoming  releases  Coordinate 
store  visits.  P/T-F/T-8am-l2pm  or  12:30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $10/hr-Kbonus.  310-566-2555. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Service  Representative  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  vertxal  skills  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1 768-jspatter8on  O  ij- 
ginc.com. 


EARN  WHAT  YOU'RE  WORTH!  Success 
dnven  individuals  wanted  for  expanding 
gkJbal  business.  Serious  inquiries  only!  (no 
exp  nee.)  310-246- 1 522. 

EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  sales.  Make  up  to 
$150/day  Part  or  full-time  *vork.  Call  David 
310-441-0394 


EXPERIENCED  DRIVER  NEEDED  FOR 
PICKUP  of  teenager  from  UNI  High  to  Holly- 
wood hills,  Ntekels  Canyon.  3pm.  5davs/wk 
323-876-6567. 


INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  ReceptkMiist  Entry  level  positkjn  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrs/wk  MIN  F/T  pre- 
fen^ed  Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son  323-653-1768  ispattersonOijginc.com. 

INTERNET  ENTERTAINMENT  COMPANY 
seeks  research  assistants  Must  be  fluent  in 
Japanese.Korean  or  Chinese.  Pay  based  on 
experience.  Fax  resumes:  323-993-0810 

LAW  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  Beverty  Hills  PfT 
(Tues-Thurs.  1-4pm).  FHe  Clerk/Offtoe  Sup- 
port. Need:  Excel.  Legal  filing  skills,  accura- 
cy/detail orientation,  and  computer  literate. 
Prior  law  firm  experience  preferred  Com- 
pensation based  on  experience.  Fax  resume 
and  references  to  310-205-6081. 


P/T  LAW  OFFICE  ASST 

Word  Processor/Secretarial  for  Westwood 
law  office.  PC  and  Internet  adept. 
Compensatton  depends  on  skills.  Flexible 
hours.  Fax  resume  310-443-4223. 

P/T  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  Must  type  50 
wpm.  $7-10/hr  Fax  resurite  323-655-7754. 

P/T  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  too  Medical  Plaza.  Dermatology  prac- 
tice. Hours  can  vary  w/classes.  F/T  during 
summer  $8/hr.  Plus  free  parking  Assist 
manager,  computer  skills  necessary.  Bask; 
math  skills  needed  Undergrad  only  Fax 
resume  after  6:30pm.  310-206-4010. 

P/T  OR  CAREER 
OPPORTUNITY! 

■Private  tutors/instructors  for  K- 12  and  Edu- 
cational Consultants  for  college  admissions 
services.  Seeking  Undergraduates-PhO's. 
Experience  preferred,  strong  communica- 
tions skills  required.  Future  Youth  Inc./Mind- 
Life  Consulting  Group.  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329 


P/T  OR  F/T  SERVER 

AND  ANSWERING  phones  for  diner  in  Bev- 
erty Hills.  Will  train.  Great  tips!  Call  Roni:310- 
772-0044  from  8am-5pm 

PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts  Knowledge  of  LA 
Own  car  and  insurance  Earn  up  to 
$600/week.  310-724-8360.  Days  only 


F/r&P/T  OFFICE  ASST 

For  dynairnc  property  management  firm 
Must  have  car.  be  organized,  and  reliable 
Fax  resume:3 10-470-6755  or  call310-470- 
1970 


LAW  OFFICE  ENVIRONMENT  Excellent 
opportunity  Clert(  positkjns  available.  Flexi- 
ble hours  Minimum  20hrs/wk,  $7/hr.  Fax  re- 
sume and  proposed  available  hours  to  Hu- 
man Resources  Dept  310-274-2798  or  Mail 
to:  Lurie,  Zepeda.  Schmalz  &  Hogan  9107 
Wilshire  Blvd  .  Suite  800.  Beverty  Hills  CA 
90210  ' 


RECEPTIONIST  for  LA/Wesi  Hollywood 
Design  District  showroom.  Requires  great 
phone  manner  and  offk:e  skills.  Excellent  en- 
vironment and  pay,  flexible  hours.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-659-4584 


RECEPTIONIST 

WEST  LA  FIRM  seeks  an  outgoing.pleasanl 
individualw/  xint  phone  skills.  Mbn-Fri 
2:00pm-7:00pm  Perfect  for  a  student. 
$l0.0O/hr-Prkg  paid  Email  Resume  to 
tgrossmanOGKM  com. 


nicnJQxr 

206"-3060 


■*r=^, 


i 


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26       Friday,  October  13, 2000 


•  >  .  -        ^ 


Daily  BfumaasdM 


7700 

Child  Ciire  Wimtiul 


P/T  RECEPTIONIST 
WANTED 

Yellow  Balloon  HairSalon,  Must  be  hon- 
est/chiW-triendly.  Hours:  3week(Jays  1- 
5:30pm,  Saturdays  9-5pm.  Days  and  times 
negotiable  $a/hr  Contecf  Natalie:31 0-475- 
1241,  Fax  resume  323-939-4339. 


7800 

Holp  W;uit»!d 


7800 

Htilp  Waiiu-d 


WORK  IN  WESTWOOD.  Receptionist  need- 
ed lor  PT  work  Thursday-Sunday.  Fun  m- 
moephere.  Call  Louis:  310-279-3300. 

RECEPTIONIST.  P/T.  New  Wostwood 
Village  dental  olfice.  No  experience  required. 
310-451-4401. 


PARK  RANGER 

$8.65-$11.90/tir.  witti  partial  benefits.  En- 
force parV  rules  and  regulations;  disseminate 
information  and  assist  publK  in  the  park;on- 
site  supervision  of  commercial  film  compa- 
nies and  work  department  special  events; 
assist  with  offwe  duties.  Requires  one  year 
of  college  majoring  in  Recreation,  Outdoor 
Educatkjn,  Park  Ranger  or  related  fieW;  or 
one-year  paid/volunteer  experience  in  a  cus- 
tomer service  oriented  position.  Must  have  a 
valid  California  C  driver's  license  and  must 
be  able  to  obtain  CPR  and  First  Aid  certifi- 
■cates.Apply  immediatety-OPEN  UNTIL 
FILLED.  City  of  Beverly  Hills,  455  N.  Rexford 
Dr.  #210,  Beverly  Hills,  CA  90210.  310-285- 
1071  EOE. 


RECREATION  ASSISTANT  NEEDED.  P/T 
nighlwort<.  Approx  $9.50/hr.  Sk)f>er  Recrea- 
tion Center.  310-479-7200  ask  for  Valerie  or 
Jason. 


US  International  Co. 

Work  at  home  posWon  Immedialefyf  P/T 
$500-200(ymo.  F/T  $2000-6000/mo.  Lan- 
guages/computer skills  a  plus,  www.rtch- 
lronr)home.com/lnlame( 


8000 

liittjritsliips 


ACCLAIMED  PRODUCER  SMiw  motivated 
interns  for  fan  2000.  Hmm  fnc  rvaumee  to 
Commodon  Peturas  attn:Mcheto  310-432- 
2001. 


RESTAURANT  in  WLA  now  hiring  servers, 
cashiers,  prep  personnel.  F/T  or  P/T,  apply  in 
person.  9411  W.  Pkx)  Blvd.  Sun-Thurs. 

SALES  CLERK 

$7/hf.  Ho  experience  necessary.  Cashiering, 
working  wrth  patients.  UCLA  Hospital.  2e- 
venings,  3-7:30PM  11:30-«:00PM.  310-825- 
6069 


VALET  PARKING 
ATTENDANTS 

Flexible  hours,  great  tips,  Santa  Monica  and 
Manna  Del  Rey  areas.  310-214-1888.  Leave 
message. 


INTERN  WANTED.  Do  rMeaich  tor  Rsaaon 
a  naltonai  magazine  of  poMIca  and  culture 
«7-50/hr  lOhraAn*.  Fieidbto  schedule,  wiN 
help  anange  cradH.  Fax  resume  to  310-390- 
8986.  E-mail sararOreasoncont 


8400 

Apiirtiuenls  for  R«i»u 


1  MIN  TO  UCLA 

WESTWOOD.  Furnished.  Single: 

$860/month.  Carpeted.  Gated  confiplex. 
Quiet.  Pool.  Laundry,  lyr  lease.  310-824- 
1830. 


BEVERLY  HILLS  AOJ.  U2BEDROOM 
$895&UP  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM. 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS.  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PKX)  BUS. 

310-839-6294. 


PART-TIME  CHILDCAREmiTOR  needed 
lor  1st  and  2nd  grader.  Encino  Mulholland 
and  405  adjacent.  Must  have  car.  Call  Jack- 
te:310-826-2466. 

POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
info.  Call  1-800-391-5856  ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar. 


SALES  Le  Beach  Club  Tanning  Resoitsl 
Happy,  friendly  people.  $12-20/hr.  CaH  bet- 
ween 3- 10pm.  310-820-2710  ask  for  Yas- 
mine. 


PROFESSIONAL  COLLECTOR.  Saban  Pla- 
za near  UCLA.  "Best  sendee  company". 
$9/hr  Flexible  scheduling.  Weekends  and 
evenings  available.  Perfect  for  students.  NO 
experience  needed  Fax  resume  310-477- 
7694. 


PROMOTIONAL  PRINT  AGENCY  seeks 
friendly,  energetic  receptwnisf  for  a  F/T  en- 
try-level positwn.  Good  communication  skills 
and  computer  literacy  required.  Please  email 
resume  to:  mickyyOedwardslabel.com  or 
fax  resume  to:  Micky  Yadathi  310-479-1828. 

RECEPTIONIST  WANTED 

BEVERLY  HILLS  SALON  seeks  energetic 
receptionisL  F/T  or  P/T.  To  start  ASAP  310- 
278-1191. 


SALES.  Popular  Westwood  Village  jewelry 
store  seeks  2  P/T  sales  associates.  Excel- 
lent opportunity.  310-208-8404  phone  from 
12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 

i  SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST  Small  WLA 
law  office  seeks  p/l  or  f/t  bilingual  (Spanish) 
individual.  Must  have  experience  with  word 
perfect  and  type  min  40wpm  Call  Neil  310- 
445-1100  or  send  resume  310-445-7779. 

STOCK  CLERK  in  chikJren's  bookstore  20- 
30hrs^veek,  $7/hr,  WLA  310-559-2665. 

TEACHER'S  ASSISTANT 

IMMEDIATE  POSITION.  Santa  Montea  pre- 
school 20hrs/wk.  Mon-Thurs  afternoon  Ear- 
ly chikjhood  units&  some  experiece  working 
w/young  chiWren  required.  310-394-0463. 

TELEMARKETING.  No  CoW  calls.  $16- 
20-t-/hr,  bonuses.  F/T-P/T  Must  have  desire 
to  make  big  $$$.  Flexible  schedule  Great  for 
students.  Near  SMC/UCLA.  310-996-6701 
ext.298. 


WANTED 

75people  will  pay  you  to  tose  weight  In  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommerxled.  100% 
natural/no  dntgs.  Call  now.  323-993-3391. 

WORK AT  HOME 

International  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/rno. 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888. 

YMCA  NOW  HIRING  After  School  teachers 
and  drivers.  Must  have  3-6  units  in  educa- 
tion/related fieW.  Fax  Resume  to  Laura  310- 
575-0271. 


8000 

Internsliip 


INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
student  film  projects.  Call  Joel:3 10-628- 
2292. 


BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdnn«)th.  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdmV3bth,  $2950.  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alann.  gated  parking. 
Spacious,  carpet  Prime  locationi  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 


MARKETING 

SALES/TRAINING  for  Mexico-USA  irpor- 
ting/consulting  company  $7.50^.  Spanish 
helpluL  Buslnees  ntajor  preferred.  Good  ex- 
perience. Fax  resume  310-854-6287  or  E- 
mall:  salesOthepainteddesert.com. 

P/R  INTERNSHIP 

SEVERAL  POSITK)NS  are  now  available 
with  a  major  entertainment  firm  In  public  re- 
lations. No  pay  but  complete  education  in 
P/R.  Flexible  hours.  GoWen  opportunity  to 
leam  the  ropes.  CaH  us  immediately  at  323- 
692-9999  Ex.13.  AsIc  tor  Rebecca. 


BRENTWOOD 
ADJACENT 

Luxury  building,  pod.  partdng,  gated  entry, 
laundry,  one  and  hvo  bedrooms  from 
$1500/monlh.  310-312-1223. 


INTERNS  WANTED 

FT/PT  positions  avail  for  students  at  presti- 
gious entertainment  PR  firm.  Must  be  enthu- 
siastk:,  detail-oriented.  Offers  college  credit, 
hands-on  experience  and  future  film  and  tel- 
evision career  contacts.  Contact  Rebecca 
310-550-7776. 


8300 

Voluiilecr 


VOLUNTEERS  NEEDED  for  No  kill  dog/cat 
WLA  shelter.  Loving  homes  and  foster 
homes  needed.  310-470-7667. 


BRENTWOOD 

North  of  Wiahire.  spacious  3BO/2Bath,  tri 
separate  patio.  New  dWiwasher.  refrigerator. 
Stove,  etc.  Quiet  8-unlt  Wdg.  w/  garden  sun- 
deck.  $2300.  11921  Goshen  Ave.  #1.  Open 
Sal/Sun  or  by  appt.  310-571-0293. 

ONE  BLOCK  TO  CAMPUS 

2bdrm  suite  Hardwood,  private  patto  one 
partying,  walk  to  UCLA.  $1350.  10966 
Roebling  Ave  310-208-4253  or  310-824- 
2595. 


THE  HIDDEN  GARDEN  Ftower  Shop  needs 
people  who  tove  ftowers.  Help  process,  prep 
containers,  etc.  MWF  $8/hr,  7am-3pm.  No 
experience  necessary.  Near  UCLA.  310-475- 
4647 


ENTERTAINMENT 
WEBSITE  INTERNSHIPS 

Looking  tor  motivated  individuals  with  an  in- 
terest in  the  entertainment  industry,  to  join 
one  of  Hollywood's  leading  websites.  Call 
310-305-2688,  or  e-mail  resume 
henly  O  four>tainheadmedia  com 


8^00 

Ap.-irlmunls  for  Rent 


PALMS.  1BDRM/BATH.  $895/month.  Newly- 
painted,  two  gated  parting  spots,  intercom, 
lacuzzi.  Ctoee  to  UCLA  Bus.  Kay  310-842- 
9127. 


PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $575.  $600deposit 
1 -year  lease  only.  Stove,  rofrig, carpets  vert 
blinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message  8am- 
5pm  only. 


Santa  Monica  Ibd^lWh.  living  room,  partong 
space,  storage.  kMchen  w/oven  &  refrtdg 
$1100/mo  Zay  818-895-0497. 


Westvvooil  Plaza 


Single  w/  Shared  Bathroom 

$850-$875 

Single  w/  Private  Bathroom 

$900 

1  Bedroom 
$1295-$1350 

shon  temi  availaNc  /  5  min  waJli  to  DCLA 

Parking  available  for 

1  Bedrooms  only 

310-208-8505 


Disciples  of  Chrja^ 


Gateway  Christian  Church 

11760  Gateway  BM. 
Los  Angeles.  CA  90064  ,     . 

310-473-3191 

email:  GatewyCCOaolcom 
Worship  Sunday  at  10:45am, 
Children's  Sunday  School  and 
Choir  Rehearsal  at  9:30am, 
Tuesday  and  Wednesday  Groups. 
Share  in  our  country-style  atmos- 
phere, and  experience  the  blending 
of  traditional  and  contemporary 
worship.  Find  yourself  warmly  wel- 
comed as  you  seek  both  meaning 
and  joy  Near  student  housing. 


Christian 


Church 

1343  Ocean  Park  Blvd. 

Santa  Monica,  CA  90405 

310-441-2125 

^"^rw.westsideoikoa.org 

Sunday  worship  at  1:30pm, 

Thursday  UCLA  Oikos  Campus 

Ministry  (OCM)  meetings  at 

6:30pm  in  CS  Young  24. 
Come  and  share  the  joy! 
Encounter  God's  presence 
through  powerful  worship. 
Inspiring  messages,  and  genuine 
community.   Rides  for  Sunday 
worship  provided  at  Sproul  turn- 
around at  1pm. 

Roman  Catholic 


Westwood  Hills  Christian 
Church 

lOBOe  Le  Conte  Ave 
Los  Angeles.  CA  90024 
310-208-8576  •..     ; 

wwwWHCCOmelcbc.com       '  '"' 

Bible  Study  9:00am,  Worship 
10:00am.  Tuesday  Evening  Bible 
Study  7:00pm. 

We  are  located  ^ross  from  UCLA 
Medical  Center  atte  Conte  and 
Hilgard.  Students  ar«  welcome. 
Join  us  for  lunch  1st  Sunday  each 
month  after  worship. 

Westside  Oikos  Community 


University  Catholic  Center 

633Gayl»yAve 

Los  Angeles.  CA  90(^4 

310-208-5015 

www.uccla.org 

Sunday  Masses  at  10:30am.  7pm, 
and  9pm. 

Our  Catholic  community  wel- 
comes all.  With  over  70  years  of 
service  to  UCLA  and  the 
University  Religious  Conference, 
we  offer  worship,  retreats,  sacra- 
mental preparation,  education, 
and  just  plain  fun! 


Lutheran 

St.  Paul's  Lutheran  Church 


(ELCA) 

958UncolnBM. 
Santa  Monica,  CA  90403 
310-451-1346 

Holy  Communion,  Sunday  at 
8:30am  and  10:45am.  Sunday 
School  for  all  ages,  9:40am.  Child 
care  provided. 

St.  Paul's  is  an  inclusive  and 
intergenerational  Christian  com- 
munity. Come  and  be  fed  with 
God's  Word,  the  Sacraments,  and 
the  Fellowship  with  real  people. 

University  Lutheran  Chapel 

10915  Strathmore  Dr. 

Los  AngelM.  CA  90024 

310-206-4571 

www.ulc.la.ca.us 

10:30am,  tradition  7pm,  contem- 
porary. 

Join  us  in  experiencing  in  the 
context  of  word  and  sacrament  in 
small  groups  throughout  the 


Please  join  us  for  a  talk  on  "God, 
Good,  Guards,  Guides,  and 
Govem's  Man*  in  our  church  edifibe 
at  7:30pm,  Thursday  October  26, 
2000.  All  are  wek:ome. 


Foursquare 


Christian  Spl^nc^^ 


New  Heart  Christian 
Fellowship 

1941  S  BamngfonAve 

W  Los  Angeles,  CA  90025 

310-478-3059 

email:  NewHeanctOaol.com 

Sunday  10:30am.  Wednesday 

7:30pm  (Bible  Study). 

Come  share  the  excitement  of 

God's  House  through  New  Heart's 

dynamk:  worship  and  relevant 

word.  Always  feel  weteomed  in  the 

warm  atmosphere  of  heartfelt 

friendship. 


Episcopal 


Tenth  Church  of  Christ, 
Scientist 

113S.BunayDr. 

Los  Angelta.  CA  90049 

310-826-2229 

Sunday  10am  Church  Service 
and  Sunday  School  (up  to  20 
years).  Wednesdays  7:30pm 
Testimonial  Meeting.   Reading 
Room  310-820-2014. 


Canterbury  Westwood 

SaO  HKgardAw. 

Los  Anffehs,  CA  90024 

310-20»4SaO 

WMw.iAiCMiiliMMiiiiXKf.  com 

Tuesday  4pm  Eucharist.  5pm  din- 
ner and  discussion.  Sunday  Sam, 
10am. 

We  are  an  open  and  inclusive  com- 
munity. Join  us  Tuesdays  for  wor- 
ship, dinner  and  discussion. 


Full  Gospel 

House  Upon  The  Rock 
Church 

4427  Overland  Ave.  0  Farragut 

CulVfCity 

310^39-1114 

Sunday  at  12:30pm. 

In  depth  Bible  teaching  for  the 

serious  student  of  scripture. 

Upbeat  Praise  and  Worship. 

Healing  Ministry. 

Seventh-day 
Adventist 


Santa  Monica  Seventh-Day 
Adventist  Church 

1254  19tti  SI. 
SlMa  Monica,  CA  90404 
310-829-194S 

^ff"^— nUmonicaaaa.homepaga.com 
Saturday  9:30,  Worship  Ham. 
Small  groups  throughout  the 
week.  Collegiate  group  Thurs.  at 
UCLA.  We  invite  you  to  join  us 
to  worship  and  grow,  and  experi- 
ence God's  love  in  a  SG  and 
Sabbath  nrK>ming  worship. 


27       Friday,0ctoben},2000       • 

M.  CROSS 

From  page  31 

on  fte  results  and  just  concentrate  on  improv- 
ing ead)  race. 

But  junior  Bryan  Green  established  himself 
as  UCLA's  clear-cut  No.  I  man,  placing  no 
lower  than  seventh  in  any  of  the  learn  s  meets. 
While  he  certainly  has  not  been  ninning  at  the 
levels  that  former  Bruin  All-Americans  Meb 
Keflezighi  and  Mark  Hauser  were  at,  he  has 
helped  the  Bniins  be  competitive  in  all  the  races 
they  have  been  in. 

The  squad  last  competed  two  weeks  ago  at 
the  Stanford  Invitational  and  placed  third, 
making  its  members  believe  that  getting  an  at- 
large  bid  to  the  NCAA  championships  was  a 
possibility 

Peterson,  consequently,  got  his  team  into  the 
Wolverine  Interregional  so  that  it  would  have 
the  chance  to  beat  a  few  teams  from  outside  of 
the  West  Region  and  improve  its  chance  to 
squeeze  into  the  national  finals. 


Daily  Bfuin  Sports 


Now.  the  focus  of  Peterson's  team  has 
changed. 

"We  have  to  think  about  the  results  if  we're 
going  to  be  competitive,"  senior  team  captain 
Scott  Abbott  said.  "If  we're  going  to  spend  the 
athletic  department's  money  and  go  to 
Michigan,  we're  going  to  go  out  and  try  tp.  do 
something." 

Green,  however,  says  the  team  remembers 
what  got  it  to  this  point. 

"We're  going  to  do  what  we've  always  been 
doing,  which  is  concentrating  to  get  better  in 
this  race,"  he  said.  "We  can't  look  to  the  future 
because  this  is  our  future.  If  we  don't  get  in  the 
top  two  at  this  meet,  the  season  is  over  for  us 
(after  the  West  Regional  meet)." 

Travelling  to  Michigan  along  with  Abbott 
and  Green  will  be  seniors  Mason  Moore  and 
Paul  Muite,  juniors  Justin  Patananan  and 
Andrew  Wulf,  sophomore  Phil  Young  and  true 
freshman  Jon  Rankin. 

At  the  Wolverine  Interregional,  the  Bruins 
will  face  No.  18  Washington  and  host  No.  19 
Michigan,  Tennessee  and  Texas. 


DUKE 

From  page  29 

her  complaints,  failed  to  act. 

Duke  lawyer  John  Simpson  said  no  decision 
has  been  made  on  whether  to  appeal  the  federal 
jury's  ruling. 

"We're  disappointed  by  it.  Like  they  say  in 
football,  I  left  everything  on  the  field,"  he  said. 

During  deliberations,  jurors  asked  to  see 
videotapes  of  Mercer  and  other  kickers  practic- 
ing. They  also  reviewed  the  transcript  of  a  con- 
versation between  Mercer  and  assistant  football 
coach  Fred  Chatham  that  Mercer  taped  secretly 

They  also  sought  from  Judge  James  Beaty  a 
definition  of  the  phrase  "deliberate  indiffer- 
ence," meaning  whether  Duke  officials  knew 
Mercer  was  having  problems  and  did  nothing  to 
correct  them. 

To  award  compensatory  damages,  jurors  had 
to  find  Mercer  suffered  actual  financial  losses 
because  of  Duke's  actions.  For  punitive  dam- 
ages, they  had  to  find  Duke  acted  with  malice 


and  reckless  indifference 

In  closing  arguments  Thursday,  Mercer's 
lawyers  said  she  wanted  to  be  treated  like  any 
other  member  of  the  football  team.  That's  exact- 
ly what  happened,  the  attorney  for  Duke  said. 

"(Coach)  Fred  Goldsmith  chose  not  to  sec 
Heather  Sue  Mercer  as  a  football  player,"  said 
Melinda  Lawrence,  an  attorney  for  Mercer  "He 
chose  not  to  see  her  skills.  He  chose  only  to  see 
her  as  a  woman." 

Simpson  said  the  case  was  not  about  discrimi- 
nation but  about  a  young  woman  naive  to  the 
cold  reality  of  Division  I  football,  and  penalized 
Goldsmith  for  being  a  nice  guy  and  trying  to  help 
Mercer. ^^j;;  '\/.v'  ■■^'    ,  ■ 

He  pointed  but  that  male  kickers  who  were 
not  members  of  a  scout  team  -  which  played 
against  the  first-string  team  in  practice  -  also 
were  cut,  and  reminded  jurors  that  six  other  kick- 
ers on  the  team  at  the  time  testified  Mercer 
lacked  the  necessary  skills. 

Mercer  testified  Wednesday  she  was  able  to 
kick  48-yard  field  goals,  although  she  was  more 
comfortable  from  43  yards. 


UCLA  GALA  presents 

CluB 
Fabulous 

a  dance   closing  NCOW 


Friday  13  October 

9PM-1 2AM  Midnight 

Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Free  Admission 

sponsored  by  GALA 
funded  by  USAC,    Campus  Programs  Committee,    and 

Waiver  Pool 


8^00 

Apnrtnients  for  R«Mit 


5PECTACU>R  CXJEAN  VIEW  Ibdrm.  up- 
per. HanAwood  floors.  2  blocfcs  from  Main 
St.A  beaoh.  2627  3nl  St  «4.  Santa  Monica. 
$1700.  310-899-9580. 

WALK  TO  UCLA.  WESTWOOD  Urge  1+1. 
2+2.  Pool,  iacuzzi.  walk-in  closets,  fireplace, 
Ml-Mlchan.  galad  gacaga.  instant  l}ioadt)and 
avatf.  www.keWomowera.com.  310-208- 
1976. 

WESTWOOO/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2t>dnTi/lMh.  Large,  laundry  erKk>sed 
Oarafle,  bakxKiy.  large  ckisets.  near  buses, 
blndi.  ChaiiMng.  bilghi.  quiet  bulMng.  310- 
474-117^ 


9200 

Hoiisiiuj  Needed 


GRADUATE  VISmNG  STUDENT/WRITER 
needs  housing  1A)1-6A)1.  Female,  Former 
teacher  Contact  mtoharOkyjest.net  or  312- 
666-7949 


9400 


9500 


9500 


f^oon,  for  Ren.  B_R<K„nn,ntes^Privme  Room   |   Roonmintes  -  Privnte  Room 


MV  Shared  2+1  garden  apartment.  Quiet, 
safe  4-plex.  oil  the  Main  St.  DSL  access. 
$500/month,  utilities  included.  Call  Pamela 
310-915-5052. 


Bargains 

good  enough  even 
Uncle  Scrooge." 
Wadnmadmy  A  FHdmy 


9300 


8900 

H(ms(!  for  RtMit 


BEVERLY  HILL8  AOJACENT.  2bdmV2Mh 
home,  yard,  unlumlarted.  hardwood  Hoors. 
Rel  req.  Approx.  $ieOO/>t>o  310-271-0626. 

SANTA  MONICA  -2b(V1bth.  Cooler.  2  paik- 

Ino  epMM  ♦  alofaoe.   Breakfast  room. 

raWianw/oven.reMdg.  Siaotvmo.  Zay  818- 
89tW»497 


Rr)()m 


FREE  PRIVATE  ROOM+BATH  Single  fattter 
needs  mature  studerN  lor  p/t  help  wHh  4-yr- 
oW  twins  20hra/wk,  must  own  car+in- 
surance.  310-838-5720.  JahanOmedi- 
aone.net. 


FREE  ROOM 
AND  BOARD 

In  sjichange  lor  babytiOino  ll-yaar-oM  gin 
■PProMlmalely  10  houra^raek.  Century  CMy 
area.  Pamales  only  310-277-8480  (even- 
ings) 


NEAR  WESTWOOD  Beautiful,  sunny  room 
for  rant  NoWDec.  $500/mo+utilities.  females 
prafeiTed.  Pieese  can  Katie  510-326-8809  or 
310-SS9-018S. 

PRIVATE  ROOM  in  large  Palisades  home. 
Minutes  from  beach.  Fully  furnished.  Kitch- 
en^undry/parfctng  prlvHoges.  $750/mo.  Utiii- 
ties/caWe  irKluded.  Non-smoker/no  pets. 
31 0-454-533 1-Renaia. 

ROOM  in  large  Beverly  HWs  house,  grad 
student  preferred  Kitchen  piMeges,  wash- 
er/dryer, pool,  needs  car  Call  Abby  310-275- 
3831  or  818-783-5151. 

WESTWOOD.  Walk  to  iXLA.  Male-Only. 
Large,  private  furnished  bdrm  w/bath. 
KItehen  privileged,  laundry,  parking. 
$70(Vmonth.  Another  room  $600/month 
310-473-5769. 


ASIANAXIIET/CLEAN/MALE  Bus  In  front 
house,  Westwood/Pico.  3-mo.  min  stay  Re- 
quired 2  good  references.  Private  bedroom 
sharebath  $65Q^month,  share  bed/twth  in- 
ciudes  utilities  $40/day  310-475-8787. 

FREE  RENT  FOR  PSYCM/MED/SPECIAL 
ED  gnduale  student  to  share  2bdrm/2bth 
apartnant  with  learning  disabled  adult  in 
WesHA.  Call  Stan  1-800-843-3658. 

KILLER  VIEW— share  Wilshire  Blvd. 
2BR/2BA  hi-rise  apt.  w/  prof,  male  security, 
gym,  pod,  bateony,  $825/mo.,  male  pref 
Can  Pete  31 0-478-3542 

MELROSE  AREA.  Large  unfurnished  bdrm. 
private  bthrm.private  entrance  in  fuily  fur- 
nished house  Laundry  Maie/female  okay 
$700/mo  utHities&makf  included.  AvaiiaWe- 
Decl.  310-289-2129. 


ROOMMATE  NEEDED  3BD/2Ba  Santa  Mo- 
ntea  apartment  Near  beach.  Promenade. 
Montana  Bateony,  laundry,  fireplace.  Profes- 
sional/grad  student,  $860/month.  Contact 
Nowickie©  holmaii.com  or  646-215-3433. 

SANTAMONICA   Master  bedroom  suite  in 
spacious   townhouse   w/kitchen,   laundry   - 
parking.  Near  Blue  Line    $700/mo  includes  ' 
utilities  (2  share  $950/mo).  310-450-5082 


WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt.  Fun,  outgoing 
female  looking  for  female  roommate!  Own 
bod/tMth  in  2bdmV2bth  apartment,   gated 
parking,  Jacuzzi  on  roof,  security  building 
Available  1/01,  $900/mo  310-209-2665 


9600 

Roommates-Shared  Room 


Quiet,  responsible  roommate  for  private 
space  ki  back  of  house  hton-amoker.  shara 
utHtees.  AvdI/Nov  1,  $S50M)onlh+l  month 
deposit.  Cal  Wkrran  310-737-9120 


Classifieds 
825-2??l 


-»» 


w\ 


recycle. 


MAR  VISTA.  Roommate  wanted  male 
Large  2bdrm  apt.  Fully  furnished.  #14  SM 
Bus  line  $300/mo.  310-435-4524. 

WESTWOOD.  Kolton  Ave.  2+1  Haidwooo 
ftoors.  large  bedroom,  living,  kitchen 
USO/mo.  WsM  furnished.  Smoking  OK  310- 
443-9585. 


Display 
206-3060 


-  u.**.  -,  i-. 


\- 


28        Friday,  October  13,2000 


Daily  Brum  Sports 


.*^4l 


wmmimf^ 


Runs  every  Friday  in  ttie  Daily  Bruin. 


Village 
xpressmart 


10974  Le  Conte  Ave.  at  Gayley 

FREE  PARKING 

(While  shopping  in  store) 


m 


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6pfC-12ozcans 

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12pk '  12oz  cans 


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Attention 

UCLA 
Students!! 

•  Law 

•  Medicine 

•  Computer  Systems 

•  Science  A  Engineeiin 

•  Personnel  Management 

•  Law  enforcement 

•  Military  Intelligence 

•  Finance 

•  And  More! 


2  -  Year  Program 

•  ideal  for  transfer  students,  or  any 
student  with  2  years  until  graduation 

•  Offers  $3,450/  year  for  tuition,  books, 
snd  fees  plus  $200/month 


For  mon  Informmtlon,  contact: 

Capt  Timothy  Reynolds 
UCLA  Air  Force  ROTC 
(310)825-1742 


4  -  Year  Program 

•  Ideal  for  coOege  freshmen  and  some 
sophomores 

•  Full  Scholarship  avaHablel 


http-7/wwwMon«tiicta.«du/a(rD«c/iM086eucto.Mlu 


FOOTBALL 

From  page  32 

getting  injured,  which  causes  defens- 
es to  icey  on  him  even  more.  This 
weeic  will  t>e  no  exception,  as  backup 
quarterback  Ryan  McCann  is  suffer- 
ing from  tendonitis  in  his  throwing 
shoulder  and  will  be  third-string 
behind  Scott  McEwan. 

Something  else  you  might  need  to 
know  about  UCLA: 

UCLA  got  a  pregame  speech 
from  coach  Ed  Kezirian.  Why  is  this 
important?  UCLA  is  21-2  when  it 
receives  pep  talks  before  the  Cal 
game. 

Legendary  UCLA  track  coach 
Elvin  C.  "Ducky"  Drake  started  the 
tradition  in  1972  by  reminding  the 
players  that  Cal  treated  UCLA  like 


its  "little  brother."  The  Bruins,  who 
lost  the  previous  year,  went  on  to 
trounce  their  upstate  rivals  49-13. 

Drake  continued  his  pre-game- ' 
speech  for  16  years,  and  the  Bruins 
won  all  16  times. 

UCLA  lost  four  in  a  row  after 
Drake  pas.sed  away.  In  1994  Kezirian 
decided  to  rekindle  the  tradition  and 
the  Bruins  promptly  broke  the  losing  ;^ 
streak. 

Something  else  you  might  need  to. 
know  about  Cal:  CaPs  punter  Nicic 
Harris  is  frequently  referred  to  as 
their  most  dangerous  offensive 
weajKjn.  Proof  of  the  Bear's  inepti- 
tude on  offense  lies  in  Harris' 
records. 

Last  week  he  became  the  I*ac-IO 
career  leader  in  punts  and  punting 
yardage  with  285  pupfs  for  12,407 
yards.  ■■ ."  ''■;)'■■' 


W.VOLLEYBALL 

From  page  32  ""    C 

did  a  lot  of  different  things  tonight, 
using  Cira  Wright  in  the  front  row  for 
Erika  (Selsor).  We  used  that  a  lot  more 
in  the  rally  scored  fifth  game,  having 
(Ashley)  Bowles  set.  I  thought  Erika 
got  some  deflections  in  game  four 
when  Arizona's  hitters  were  getting 
tired,  and  we  were  able  to  score  in  tran- 
sition. It  was  an  exciting  game." 

UCLA  started  sluggishly  in  game 
one,  falling  behind  8-2.  Then  freshman 
outside  hitter  Ella  Harley  came  to  serve 
seven  straight  points  for  the  Bruins 
before  the  Wildcats  could  gain  control 
with  a  sideout. 

Banachowski's  substitution  of  fresh- 
man middle  blocker  Wright  for  Selsor 
with  Arizona  leading  13-10  proved  to 
be  the  difference  for  UCLA  in  the 
opening  game.  The  Bruins  rallied  off 
five  consecutive  points  and  took  game 
one  on  Porter's  seventh  kill. 

Game  two  saw  a  seesaw  battle 
between  both  sides,  as  neither  UCLA 
nor  Arizona  could  maintain  more  then 
a  two-point  advantage.  The  Bruins 
were  able  to  keep  the  score  tight  until 
they  moved  ahead  lS-14  on  a  block  by 
Bruin  I-auren  Fendrick.  But  a  costly 
service  error  by  Harley  gave  Arizona 
the  momentum  needed  to  capture  the 
second  game  17-15. 

Game  three  was  more  of  the  same 
inconsistency  and  lack  of  intensity 
which  plagued  the  Bruins  in  game  two. 
After  falling  behind  10-5,  UCLA 
ret>ounded  to  knot  the  score  at  15. 


The  Bruins'  ensuing  offensive  posses- 
sion was  designed  for  their  go4o  player, 
Porter.  But  the  Wildcats  anticipated  the 
move  and  blocked  Porter  to  sideout  and 
eventually  took  game  three  17-15. 

Trailing  two  games  to  one,  the 
Bruins  reached  into  their  magic  bag  to 
regain  their  focus.  After  hitting  .371  to 
take  game  four  15-8,  UCLA  fought  a 
tough  battle  in  game  five. 

Again  falling  behind  8-5,  the  Bruins 
dug  themselves  out  of  yet  another 
deficit  to  tie  the  score  at  1 1.  The  Bruins 
got  behind  13-11  on  a  Lisa  Rutledge 
kill,  but  Rutledge 's  error  on  a  rally 
opened  the  door  for  a  Bowles  kill  to 
give  UCLA  service.  With  Selsor  serv- 
ing for  the  match.  Porter  hammered 
home  her  35th  kill  to  claim  the  victory. 

UCLA  now  sets  its  sights  on 
Arizona  State  on  Friday.  The  Sun 
Devils  haven't  had  much  success 
against  the  Bruins  with  a  5-43  lifetime 
record  against  the  blue  and  gold. 
Moreso,  Arizona  State  holds  a  dismal 
2-20  record  since  1989,  when  current 
coach  i*atti  Snyder-Park  look  over  the 
program.  Banachowski's  squad  has 
won  eight  straight  contests  over  the 
Sun  Devils,  dating  back  to  1995. 

One  |>layer  the  Bruins  must  pay  care- 
ful attention  to  is  outside  hitter  Amanda 
Burbridge.  She  leads  the  Sun  Devils  in 
kills  with  304  (5.24  pergame)  and  is  sec- 
ond in  the  Pac-IO  in  that  category 
behind  UCLA's  Porter.  Burbridge  also 
sits  in  the  number  two  spot  in  the  con- 
ference with  a  3.93  digs  per  game  aver- 
age. ASU's  go4o  player  has  recorded 
13  double-doubles  this  season  and  has 
at  least  20  kills  in  nine  matches. 


M.  BASKETBALL 

From  page  30 

will  bolster  our  inside  game,"  L^vin 
said. 

"We  expect  T.J.  and  Josiah  to  make 
a  big  impact  eariy,"  he  added. 

The  Bruins  open  the  regular  season 
at  the  IKON  Coaches  vs.  Cancer 
Classic  against  the  Kansas  Jayhawks 
on  Nov.  9. 

UCLA  is  slated  to  have  a  national 
audience  on  seven  occasions  this  sea- 
son. The  Bruins'  showdown  with 
North  Carolina  at  Pauley  Pavilion  on 
Dec.  23  will  be  on  CBS  at  1  p.m.  The 
Bruins'  Jan.  20  battle  with  the  Arizona 
Wildcats  in  Tucson,  Ariz,  is  scheduled 


for  10  a.m.  on  CBS. 

ABC  Sports  holds  the  rights  to  the 
most  anticipated  rematch  from  last  sea- 
son, when  head  coach  Steve  Lavin's 
troops  trek  north  to  Palo  Alto  to  take 
on  the  Stanford  Cardinal  Feb.  3.  Bruin 
fans  have  not  forgotten  JaRon  Rush's 
12-foot  baseline  jumper  with  three  sec- 
onds remaining  in  overtime  to  steal  a 
heartbreaker  over  then-No.  1  Stanford, 
94-93. 

In  a  recently  released  preseason  poll 
in  ESPN  Magazine,  the  No.  19  Bruins 
face  five  Top  25  schools  during  the 
upcoming  season.  Duke  heads  the 
rankings,  and  future  UCLA  oppo- 
nents Arizona,  North  Carolina, 
Kansas  and  Stanford  round  out  the  top 
5. 


M.socaR 

From  page  30 

a  very  athletic  and  physical  team. 
With  them  in  the  conference  now, 
everyone  is  excited  " 

But  perhaps  looming  even  larger  is 
Sunday's  game  against  the  first  place 
Huskies  (8-W),  3-<M)).  Washington  is 
on  a  five-game  winning  streak  and  has 
climbed  into  the  top  10  in  the  Soccer 
America  poll.  Last  Friday,  the 
Huskies  upset  No.  4  Stanford  2-lon 
the  road  in  overtime. 

Washington  has  a  well  balanced 
attack,  with  forward  ,Greg  Foisie, 
defender  Bryn  Ritchie,  and  midfielder 


Ben  Somoza  all  sharing  the  team  lead 
with  nine  points.  In  goal,  Chad  Olsen 
holds  an  impressive  1.00  goals-against 
average  with  three  and  a  half  shutouts. 

"Obviously  going  3-0  in  conference 
is  a  good  start,"  Husky  coach  Dean 
Wurzberger  said  in  a  statement.  "We 
are  off  to  the  start  in  conference  that 
we'd  hoped  for.  We've  grown  as  a 
team.  We'll  find  out  more,  obviously, 
playing  at  UCLA  Sunday." 

Of  course,  the  Bruins  will  also  be 
finding  out  a  lot  this  weekend.  How 
will  they  bounce  back  from  defeat? 
How  will  the  Bruins  compete  against 
a  west  coast  power  in  Washington? 

The  questions  will  be  answered  this 
weekend. 


1.1 


Daily  Bnw)  Sports 


Friday,  Octobef  13,2000       29 


Female  place-kicker  wins 
in  discrimination  lawsuit 


DUKE  Jury  finds  in  favor 
of  former  player,  awards 
$2  million  in  damages 


ByPaulNowcl 

The  Assodated  Press 


GREENSBORO,  N.C.  -  A  jury 
awarded  a  female  place-kicker  $2  mil- 
lion in  punitive  damages  Thursday, 
ruling  Duke  University  cut  her  from 
the  team  solely  because  of  her  gender. 

Jurors  deliberated  just  over  two 
hours  before  deciding  the  school  dis- 
criminated against  Heather  Mercer, 
who  graduated  in  1998.  They  met 
briefly  after  arguments  on" damages  to 
rule  Duke  must  pay  a  $  1  compensato- 
ry penalty  and  the  larger  amount  as 


punishment. 

"I  feet  great.  I  consider  it  a  com- 
plete victory.  Any  monetary  award  is 
completely  icing  on  the  cake," 
Mercer  said.  "I  wanted  to  be  told 
what  they  did  was  wrong,  and  it  was." 

Lawyer  Burton  Craig  said  Mercer, 
who  now  works  for  Charles  Schwab 
&  Co.  in  New  York,  will  use  the 
award  to  finance  a  scholarship  for 
female  place-kickers.  Her  own  foot- 
ball career  is  over,  he  said,  but  she  will 
continue  with  fencing. 

The  university  claimed  Mercer, 
now  24,  wasn't  talented  enough  to 
play  for  a  Division  i  football  team. 
The  jurors  ruled  sex  was  the  motivat- 
ing factor  in  the  way  she  was  treated 
and  that  Duke  officials,  informed  of 


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Matt  Flesher  attempts  to  score  in  a  recent  match  against  the  Trojans. 


M.  WATERPOLO 

From  page  32 

a  big  crowd,"  Baker  said. 

The  top-ranked  Bruins'  7-5  victory 
last  week  over  the  Trojans  showed 
that  defense  was  a  problem  for 
UCLA.  But  the  Bruins  have  taken 
strides  against  letting  their  defense 
become  a  problem  against  these 
teams  when  they  travel  up  north. 

"We  are  working  in  all  aspects.  We 
have  been  working  on  defense,  but  we 
have  been  working  on  offense  as 
well,"  Krikorian  said. 

They  are  trying  to  stay  affront  on 
the  two-meter  men,  so  the  rest  of  the 
players  can  concentrate  on  the  ball. 

On  Sunday  the  Bruins  move  just  a 
little  south  to  take  on  long  time  neme- 


sis Stanford.  The  sixth-ranked 
Cardinal  also  has  strong  players, 
including  one  of  the  top  goalies  in  the 
nation  last  year,  Nick  Elis. 

'We  are  going  to  have  to  be  shoot- 
ing well,  and  executing  well.  [Elisj  can 
single-handedly  keep  the  Cardinal  in 
games.  They  also  have  some  really  big 
physical  men  in  sophomore  Peter 
Hudnut  and  junior  Mark  Amott.  We 
are  going  to  have  to  contain  them," 
Krikonan  said. 

UCLA  plays  at  Stanford's  new 
pool  for  the  first  time  and  faces  the 
Cardinal's  speed  and  counter-attack, 
which  are  well  known  in  the  water 
polo  circles. 

Helping  the  Bruins  in  the  upcom- 
ing weekend  is  the  return  of  Kern. 

"Wc  lost  to  Stanford  my  freshman 
year  and  that  was  it,"  Kern  said. 


UCLA  Center  lor  Prehospital  Care 

924  Westwood  Blvd.,  Suite  720.  Los  Angeles.  CA  90095-1369 

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W.  SOCCER 

From  page  31 

Last  weekend  at  home  in  Corvallis, 
the  Beavers  tied  Arizona  1-1  but  were 
shut  out  by  Arizona  Sute  2-0.  Facing 
the  Bruins  and  the  USC  Trojans  in 
the  same  weekend  proves  to  be  a 
daunting  task  for  the  ostensibly  over- 
matched Beavers 

"Obviously,  we  are  going  to  play 
two  teams  that  are  traditionally  very 
good,"  Oregon  State  head  coach 
Steve  Fennah  said  in  a  statement. 

"There's  the  difficulty  of  playing  in 
Los  Angeles  against  them,  but  it's  an 
exciting  opportunity  for  us  to  go  out 
and  play  again." 

UCLA  looks  for  vindication  in 
Sunday's  game  against  the  Ducks  (4- 
9-0,  l-l   Pac-10)T  Last  season,  the 


Bruins'  Pac-IO  title  hopes  were 
dashed  when  Oregon  sent  them  home 
with  a  2-1  upset  loss  in  Eugene.  But 
the  conference  is  dripping  with  parity, 
and  UCLA  suffered  a  plague  of 
missed  opportunities  against  USC 
last  weekend  when  it  let  30  shots  loose 
but  netted  only  orte  goal. 

"We're  working  on  shooting  this 
week,  but  it's  not  something  we  can 
change  in  a  week,"  Shattuck  said. 
"Our  team  has  done  well  and  scored 
lots  of  goals  so  far  and  that  was  one 
bad  game  where  we  didn't  put  away 
opportunities  we  needed  to  and  it 
hurts  us." 

With  four  conference  teams 
ranked  in  the  top  13  of  the  latest 
NSCAA  poll,  the  Bruins  must  capital- 
ize on  opportunities  or  be  forced  to 
>»iltch  someone  rhr  takf  home  the 


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'-30       Friday,(ktober  13,2000 


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Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Rule  yiplation  leads  to 
suspension  for  Mines 


M.  BASKETBALL:  Forward 
to  sit  out  two  games;  new 
squad  officially  named 


ByAJCadman 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  UCLA  men's  basketball  pro- 
gram announced  Thursday  at  their 
annual  Media  Day  that  6-foot-4  wing 
forward  Rico  Mines  has  been  sus- 
pended for  the  first  two  games  of  the 
2000-2001  season  for  violation  of 
team  rules.  The  Greenville,  N.C. 
native  was  a  co-captain  last  season 
with  senior  point  guard  Earl  Watson 
and  graduated  forward  Sean 
Famham. 

"Rico  broke  a  team  rule  and  will 
accept  the  consequences  for  his 
actions,"  UCLA  head  coach  Steve 
Lavin  said  in  a  statement.  "He  has 
been  a  team  leader  for  us  over  the 
years  and  he  knows  what  it  means  to 
learn  from  your  mistakes." 

According  to  team  sources,  the 
disciplinary  action  stems  from  an 
incident  that  took  place  last 
Wednesday  during  a  preseason 
workout  in  Pauley  Pavilion.  During 
an  intrasquad  pick-up  game  closed  to 
the  general  public,  an  alleged  dis- 
agreement involving  Mines  took 
place  that  led  to  the  violation. 

Mines  will  not  be  eligible  to  partic- 
ipate in  the  Bruins'  exhibition  game 
on  Nov.  I  against  Team  Concept, 
nor  the  season  opener  at  the  Coaches 
vs.  Cancer  Tournament  against 
Kansas  at  Madison  Square  Garden 
on  Nov.  9.  The  senior  has  been 
allowed  to  participate  in  daily  prac- 
tices, which  olfrcially  start  tomorrow. 

At  lliursday's  Media  day,  the 
2000-2001  UCLA  men's  basketball 
team  was  officially  introduced.  The 
three  returning  starters  from  last  sea- 


son's Sweet  Sixteen  squad  -  senior 
point  guard  Earl  Watson,  sopho- 
more forward  Jason  Kapono  and 
junior  center  Dan  Gadzuric  -  were 
optimistic  about  the  upcoming  sea- 
son. 

"We  hope  to  build  on  what  we  did 
at  the  end  of  last  season  and  the 
Tournament,"  Watson  said.  "1  think 
we  are  a  more  mature  team  than 
maybe  we  were  last  year  at  this  time. 
We  expect  a  lot  of  good  things  to  hap- 
pen for  us." 

The  offseason  provided  a  little 
drama  within  the  Bruin  basketball 
program  with  Kapono's  thoughts  of 
pursuing  an  NBA  career  after  a 
freshman  season  that  earned  him  All- 
Pac-10  First  Team  and  Conference 
Co-Freshman  of  the  Year  honors. 

"I  am  glad  to  have  gone  through  it 
all  and  was  able  to  see  that  F  need  to 
be  positive  and  certain  about  making 
a  big  decision  like  that,"  Kapono 
said.  "I  learned  a  lot  from  the  experi- 
ence." 

For  the  UCLA  coaching  stafT,  the 
nucleus  of  the  squad  will  provide  the 
foundation  for  a  season  of  high 
expectations  -  a  constant  in  a  pro- 
gram that  has  won  a  record  II 
national  championships. 

"Earl,  Dan  and  Jason  provide  us 
with  three  solid  starters  for  the  com- 
ing season,"  Lavin  said.  "Earl  is  our 
leader  on  the  court,  Dan  is  our  pres- 
ence in  the  middle  and  Jason  pro- 
vides us  with  the  scoring  punch.  They 
are  all  unselfish  team  players." 

Also  present  were  UCLA's 
newest  additions  for  the  season. 
Freshman  forwards  T.J.  Cummings 
and  Josiah  Johnson  will  bring  to 
Westwood  the  exemplary  talents  that 
led  to  highly-touted  high  school 
careers. 

"Cummings  and  Johnson  should 
get  immediate  playing  time  and  they 


UCLA  sets  new  goals  after  first  defeat 


M.  SOCCER:  Team's  spirits 
up  as  Beavers,  Huskies 
weekend  matches  await 


See  M.  BASKETMU,  page  28 


By  Brian  Thompson  '  -■-■-*•':■- 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Until  last  Sunday,  the  UCLA 
men's  soccer  team  did  not  know  what 
it  was  like  to  taste  defeat.  They  had 
shot  out  of  the  gates  this  season,  win- 
ning their  first  eight  games  and  earn- 
ing the  consensus  No.  1  ranking  in  the 
nation. 

But  following  UCLA's  1-0  loss  to 
No.  4  Stanford  last  Sunday,  the  Bruins 
will  look  to  bounce  back  from  defeat 
for  the  first  time  this  season. 

The  Brums,  who  now  rank  any- 
where from  No.  2  to  No.  6  depending 
on  what  poll  you  look  at,  will  attempt 
to  get  back  to  their  winning  ways  this 
weekend  with  a  pair  of  Pac-IO  match- 
ups at  home.  UCLA  (8-1-0  overall,  0- 
1-0  Pac-IO)  will  battle  Oregon  State 
tonight  at  Spaulding  Field,  and  take 
on  No.  7  Washington  at  Drake 
Stadium  on  Sunday. 

"We've  been  really  positive  this 
week,"  Bruin  captain  Ryan  Lee  said. 
"We  needed  a  little  kick  in  the  butt." 

Lee  and  his  teammates  hope  that 
last  Sunday's  loss  to  the  Cardinal  was 
just  a  wakeup  call.  It  seems  everyone 
at  the  North  Athletic  Field  is  putting  a 
positive  spin  on  things  this  week  at 
practice  in  preparation  for  the  upcom- 
ing games. 

"Losing  grounds  you,"  Lee  said. 
"It's  always  good  to  have  a  goal  to 
look  up  to  rather  than  just  maintain- 
ing something." 

Head  coach  Todd  Saldana  is  also 
looking  forward  to  building  a  new 
winning  streak. 

"We  want  to  get  back  on  track  and 
get  our  confidence  back,"  he  said. 

The  Bruins  will  look  no  further 
than  Oregon  State  in  their  quest  to  get 
back  into  the  win  column.  The 
Beavers  (5-5-1,  O-l-l)  are  winless  in 
their  last  three  contests.  OSU  is  com- 


In  a  ganne  earlier  this  season,  sophomore  Scot  Thompson  pushes 
past  two  Mount  Saint  Mary's  players.  UCLA  won  the  match  3-2. 


ANNA  AV'IK 


ing  ofTof  a  l-I  tie  with  California  in 
Corvalis,  Ore.  last  Friday. 

A  familiar  face  for  many  Bruin  soc- 
cer fans  will  be  that  of  Beaver  defend- 
er Gavin  Shak.  Shak,  a  sophomore,  is 
the  younger  brother  of  former  UCLA 
standout  and  current  MLS  rookie 
Steve  Shak.  Other  OSU  notables 
include  forward  Matt  Olscn,  who  has 
tallied  four  goals  and  two  assists  this 
year,  and  goalkeeper  Peter  Billmeyer. 
who  has  a  1.04  goals-agatnst  average. 

Beaver  head  coach  Dana  Taylor 
knows  that  UCLA  will  be  aggressive 
tonight.  Me  believes,  however,  that  the 
Bruins'  aggressiveness  will  open  the 
door  for  his  squad  to  strike  back. 


"There  will  be  some  opportunities 
to  counter-attack,"  he  said  in  a  state- 
ment about  tonight's  game.  "I  like  our 
match-ups.  We  have  a  very  good  mid- 
field  and  they  have  a  very  good  mid- 
field  as  well.  Up  front,  though,  it'll  be 
interesting  to  see  how  they  play, 
because  we'll  come  at  them  with  three 
forwards.  We'll  see  how  they  match 
up." 

While  confident  in  his  team's  abili- 
ty to  come  back,  Saldaiia  is  wary  of  a 
potential  Beaver  upset. 

"Oregon  State  has  been  up  and 
down  this  year."  he  said.  "But  they  are 


See  M.  SOCCER,  page  28 


NERVOUS? 
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Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Friday,  October  13, 2000        31 


BRUIN  UPDATI 


Squad  out  to  score  in  P&c-IO 


W.  SOCCER;  Players  hope  to 
continue  streak  with  first 
game  at  Marshall  Field 


Saturday 

W.  Diving  Intersquad 
Rose  Bowl,  9:30  a.m. 
M.  Water  polo  vs.  Cal 
Berkeley,  CAe  10  a.m. 
Football  vs.  Cal 
ey,CA,  12:30  p.m. 

iunday 

jfoss  country  at 
^rine  Interregional 
rArbor,MI,8:15a.m. 

W.  Soccer  vs.  Oregon 
Drake  Stadium,  1 1  a.m. 

M.  Water  polo  vs.  Stanford 
Stanford,  Calif.,  12 

M.  Soccer  vs.  Wa^HK>n 
Drake  StadiunS^S 


Softball  tryouts 

UCLA's  Softball  team  will 
have  open  tryouts  Monday,  Oct. 
16,  at  1  p.m.  at  Easton  Softball 
Stadium.  Players  should  bring  a 
glove,  spikes.  Bruin  Card  and  a 
note  from  a  doctor  stating  they 
are  cleared  to  try  out. 

Call  assistant  coach  Kelly 
Inouye-Perez  at  (310)  206-7349 
with  questions. 


ByJeffAgas« 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

On  Sunday  at  1 1  a.m.,  the  UCLA 
women's  soccer  team  will  do  some- 
thing it  has  never  done  before.  It  will 
host  a  game  against  Oregon  at  fabled 
Drake  Stadium  on  newly  named 
Frank  W.  Marshall  Field,  the  regula- 
tion 75-yard  by  120-yard  pitch  that 
was  completed  last  spring. 

Until  this  season,  the  Bruins  had 
played  home  games  at  a  variety  of 
locales,  including  El  Camino  College, 
the  North  Athletic  Field  and 
Spaulding  Field,  where  they  currently 
play  Friday  night  games. 

There  could  be  no  better  time  to 
christen  the  Bruins'  new  home  than 
this  weekend.  UCLA  is  riding  a  10- 
game  unbeaten  streak,  that  dates 
back  to  Nov.  14,  1998,  and  assistant 
coach  Lisa  Shattuck  expects  a  sizable 
crowd  for  the  birth  of  women's  soccer 
in  Drake  Stadium. 

"I  think  since  we  haven't  had  that 
many  home  games,  I'd  hope  people 
are  anxious  to  see  us  play,"  she  said. 
"I've  heard  it's  a  great  surface.  It's 
our  first  game  on  the  new  field  so  we 
need  to  make  a  statement." 

The  No.  7  Bruins  (9-1-1,  00-1  Pac- 
IO)  have  made  more  of  an  exclama- 
tion than  a  statement  this  season. 
After  a  1-1  tie  against  Southern  Cal 
last  weekend,  UCLA  ranks  eighth 
nationally  in  scoring  offense  (3.27 
goals  per  game)  and  fifth  in  goals 
against  average  (.353  goals  per 
game)-. 


expectatlbn?; 
Michigan  hovv 
on  itinerary 

M.CROSS:  Placement 
may  help  team  secure 
at-large  national  berth 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


_  .  -  ,  EDWARD  LIN 

Forward  Stad  Duncan  battles  It  out  with  a  player  from  USC  in  a 
match  from  last  week.  The  game  ended  in  a  1-1  tie. 


The  tie  on  Sunday  at  the  Coliseum 
triggered  a  sense  of  urgency  in  the 
Bruins,  who  were  picked  in  the  pre- 
season coaches'  poll  to  win  the  Pac- 
IO. 

"We  kind  of  know  that  we  have  to 
win  them  all  because  the  Pac-IO  is  so 
tough,"  senior  forward  Tracey 
Milburn  said.  "Us  tying  that  game 


last  Sunday  has  gotten  us  up  for  this 
week,  because  we  want  to  win,  of 
course,  and  we  want  to  send  a  mes- 
sage to  the  rest  of  the  Pac-IO." 

The  weekend  begins  tonight  at  8 
p.m.  at  Spaulding  Field  against 
Oregon  State  (6-7-1.  O-l-l  Pac-IO). 


When  cross  country  coach  Eric 
Peterson  first  constructed  the  2000 
season  schedule,  he  had  his  men's 
team  penciled  in  to  compete  in  the 
low-key  Cal  Poly  Invitational  in 
San  Luis  Obispo  this  weekend. 

But  after  a  string  of  surprisingly 
strong  performances,  Peterson 
changed  plans  and  will  now  take 
his  team  to  Ann  Arbor,  Mich., 
where  the  Bruins  will  race  a  flight 
of  elite  squads  in  the  Wolverine 
Interregional. 

"The  men  have  exceeded  my 
expectations,"  Peterson  said. 
"They've  worked  so  hard. 

"It's  important  to  give  the  team 
the  best  opportunity  to  compete 
interregionally  and  put  some  wins 
on  the  board." 

Peterson,  the  women's  coach 
for  the  past  six  years,  entered  his 
first  season  with  the  men  without 
the  highest  of  expectations. 

Noting  the  absence  of  a  big-time 
frontrunner,  he  didn't  think  his 
team  would  go  very  far.  He  wanted 
his  runners  to  put  little  emphasis 


Sweet&Crispy 
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Soccer  weekend  at  UCLA 

The  women  play  at  Drake  stadium  for 
the  first  time  and  the  men  take  on 
Pac-10  leader  Washington.  For  game 
previews,  see  inside. 

Friday,Octoberl3,2000 


^^'"t 


—  Daily  Bruin 


-— — *-T1r-;-'-; 


Sports  on  the  Web  <J    ^ 

You  can  also  read  about 

cross  country  and  men's 

basketball  online  at: 

www.dailybruin.ucla.edM 


Bruins  ready  for  revenge  against  Bears 


FOOTBALL  UCLA  loolis 
to  malie  up  for  last  year's 
shutout  in  home  stadium 


.  -,     ,.        .  KEITH  ENRIQUf^/Datly  Brum  Seniof  Staff 

Brian  Poli-Dixon  catches  a  touchdown  pass  from  fellow  receiver 
Freddie  Mitchell  in  a  35-24  win  over  Alabama. 


By  Greg  Lewis 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

There's  no  real  theme  for  this 
week's  game  against  Cal.  The  Bruins 
know  they  can  win  if  they  just  sticlc  to 
their  game  plan  and  execute  on  both 
sides  of  the  ball. 

Last  year  Cal  shut  out  the  Bruins 
17-0  at  the  Rose  Bowl.  UCLA  was 
held  to  an  embarrassingly  low  12  first 
downs  and  only  168  total  yards. 

The  loss  was  particularly  painful 
for  quarterback  Cory  Paus. 

"It  left  a  terrible  taste,  not  just  for 
me  but  all  the  offense,"  Paus  said. 
"We  didn't  play  particularly  well  last 
year  as  a  whole.  But  that  game  was 
the  worst." 

The  thirteenth-ranked  Bruins  have 
won  four  out  of  five  games  this  year, 
while  the  Bears  arc  the  inverse,  los- 
ing four  of  five. 

UCLA  head  coach  Bob  Toledo  is 
not  thinking  about  Cal's  record, 
though,  but  about  how  tough  they 
play. 

"They've  got  some  great  football 
players  on  their  team,  especially  on 
defense.  (Defensive  end  Andre) 
Carter  and  (nose  tackle  Jacob) 
Waasdorp  are  excellent  football  play- 
ers. 

"They've  also  given  up  some  big 
plays,"  Toledo  said. 

What  UCLA  must  do  to  win: 

•Don't  try  to  do  everything  at 
once.  Cal's  offense  has  sputtered  the 


entire  season;  anything  over  20 
points  should  be  good  enough  for  the 
win, 

•  Do  not  turn  the  ball  over.  Against 
Arizona  State,  the  Bruins  scored 
almost  every  time  they  had  the  ball  - 
almost  every  time  they  had  the  ball 
and  did  not  turn  it  over,  that  is. 

•Stop  the  pass  rush.  Carter  is  one 
of  the  premiere  ends  in  the  country 
and  will  be  coming  hard.  With 
DeShaun  Foster  out,  the  Bruins  lose 
not  only  their  best  runner,  but  also 
their  best  blocker. 


TERESA  woo 


"We're  going  to  stay  conscious  of 
their  pass  rush.  We  might  keep  an 
extra  blocker  in  the  back  field,  and 
we'll  make  sure  the  running  backs 
give  an  extra  chip  on  the  defenders 
before  they  go  out  on  their  routes." 
Toledo  said. 

Last  week  against  ASU,  Cal's  sec- 
ondary gave  up  about  420  passing 
yards  on  only  12  completions.  If 
Paus  has  time  to  throw  the  ball,  the 
receivers  will  be  open. 

Freddie  Mitchell  is  third  in  the 
nation  in  receiving  yards  at  1 13  per 
game. 

•Cover  all  kicks.  The  UCLA  kick 
coverage  has  been  a  weak  spot  for 


the  team  this  season,  They  were 
saved  against  Fresno  State  when 
Charles  Smith  tripped  over  himself 
at  the  seven-yard  line,  and  the  Bruin 
defense  held.  But  the  team  cannot 
expect  such  luck  to  repeat  itself. 
What  Cal  must  do  to  win: 
•Hope  that  the  Bruin  team  bus 
gets  caught  in  some  strange  Friday 
the  13th  time  warp.  Barring  that,  the 
Bears  must  run  the  ball.  UCLA  will 
undoubtedly  stack  at  least  eight  men 
in  the  box  in  an  attempt  to  stop  Cal's 
pairof  Joes,  Igber  and  Echema. 

Cal  quarterback  Kyle  Boiler, 
once  dubbed  "Jesus  in  Cleats"  by 
the  Daily  Cal,  has  been  demoted  to 
"Sub-par  quarterback  in  Cleats." 
He  cannot  win  the  game  through 
the  air  for  the  Bears,  so  it  will  have 
to  be  done  on  the  ground. 

•Have  success  on  special  teams. 
In  a  conventional  game  with  few 
turnovers  and  no  big  plays  the 
Bears  will  lose.  Nothing  changes  the 
momentum  and  inspires  confidence 
like  a  blocked  punt  or  punt  return 
for  a  touchdown. 

•Get  their  paws  on  Paus.  This  is 
mainly  Carter's  job.  This  will  be  a 
tough  order,  however,  as  UCLA  has 
already  proved  it  can  run  the  ball 
effectively,  even  without  Foster. 

"Their  running  backs  have  great 
speed,  both  outside  and  inside,  and 
their  receivers  are  very  tall,"  Carter 
said  at  a  press  conference.  "They'll 
be  coming  to  our  house  all  pumped 
up  after  we  went  down  there  last  year 
and  shut  them  out.  They'll  be  ready 
for  a  fight." 

Paus  has  earned  a  reputation  for 


SeeFOareAlUpa9c28 


Squad  digs  deep  for  narrow  victory  |  Top-ranked  UCIJ\  iieads 


W.  VOLLEYBALL:  Players 

pull  together  mid-game, 
overcome  inconsistency 


By  AJ  Cadman 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

For  the  UCLA  women's  volleyball 
tcjm.  five  game  mulches  arc  not  a 
desirable  commodity. 

But  with  a  1-3  record  on  the  season 
in  matches  going  to  a  rally-scoring  fifth 
game,  the  No,  13  Bruins  (11-5  overall. 
6-2  Pac-10)  pulled  out  a  thrilling  3-2  vic- 
tory over  No  5  Arizona  ( 14-2,  7-1)  on 
Thursday  night  15-13.  15-17.  15-17,  15- 
X,  16-4  in  Tucson.  Ariz, 


UCLA  d.  Arizona 

15-13,15-17,15-17, 
15-8,16-4 


UCLA  outside  hitter  Kristee  Porter 
led  the  Bruins  with  her  second  ever  20- 
20  match,  with  35  kills  and  a  career- 
high  26  digs,  while  senior  middle 
blocker  Elisabeth  Bachman  added  21 
kills  and  eight  blocks  for  the  Bruins. 
Porter  notched  her  fifth  .30-kill  match 
on  (he  season. 

"We  played  tough  tonight,"  UCLA 
head  coach  Andy  Banachowski  said  in 
a  statement,  "and  we  played  well.  We 


north  for  conference  play 


M.WATERPOLO:  Bears  pose 
threat  with  talented  team; 
Bniins  face  fast  Cardinal 


„   .  H«itK.,tT0W*(N/t)rfyB«uin5«^K>r  Staff 

Knstee  Porter  looks  on  as  Ashlgy  Bowles  bumps  a  serve  from 


S«  W.  WLLfT»*ll,  page^B       Of^gor^  Slate,  lonight  the  Bruins  take  on  Arizona  State. 


By  Rekha  Rao 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Forget  about  football. 
The  UCLA  men's  water  polo  team 
travels  north  this  weekend  to  lake  on 
rival  Cal  just  before  the  UCLA-Cal 
football  game,  and  then  follows 
through  on  the  quest  for  a  Bay  Area 
sweep  with  a  game  against  the 
Stanford  Cardinal  on  Sunday, 

This  is  one  of  the  biggest  weekends 
of  the  year  for  the  No.  1  ranked 
Bruins.  Aiding  UCLA  on  its  pursuit 
are  the  return  of  Sydney  Olympians 
senior  two-meter  man  Sean  Kern  and 
co-head  coach  Guy  Baker,  who  led 
the  Olympic  women's  water  polo 
team  to  a  silver  medal. 

"The  hard  thing  about  this  week- 
end is  playing  two  top<aliber  teams, 
back  to  back,  away  from  home," 
Krikorian  said. 

Senior  Andy  Bailey  agreed, 
adding.  "Cal  and  Stanford  are  two  of 
the  top  ranked  teams  in  the  country. 
And  Cal  might  be  the  most  talented 
team  in  the  country  because  they  have 
lots  of  good  all-around  players  " 
Baker   is   glad    to   be   back    in 


lOth  season  of  coaching  champions. 
"I  am  proud  of  the  team  that  I 
coached  in  Sydney,  and  how  well  we 
did  as  a  team  there.  But  I  am  also 
proud  of  Adam  (Krikorian)  and  how 
well  we  did  here,"  Baker  said.  "Wc 
have  done  an  outstanding  job  since  I 
have  been  gone,  and  to  me  that  means 
the  same  as  winning  a  silver  medal" 
The  Bruins  lost  early  in  the  season 
without  Kern  and  Baker,  but  have 
come  back  and  have  a  five-game  win- 
ning streak  going  into  this  weekend. 
•    Although  the  Bruins  defeated  the 
No.  4  Golden  Bears  earlier  this  sea- 
son, they  cannot  underestimate  Cal's 
power  and  strength.  The  Bears  have 
arguably  the  top  two-meter  man  in 
the  nation,  senior  Jerry  Smith,  as  well 
as    a    6-4    record    coming    int© 
Saturday's  game.  Not  only  that,  but 
the  Golden  Bears  are  on  a  roll.  Last 
weekend,  they  defeated  then-No    I 

use. 

"They  are  a  talented  team.  We 
have  to  be  ready  defensively  for 
Smith,"  Krikorian  said. 

The  game  against  Cal  counts 
towards  conference  play,  in  which  the 
Bruins  are  4-0  and  the  Golden  Bears 
hold  a  2-1  record. 

"These  are  some  of  the  highlights 
of  the  season.  It  is  the  first  time  since 
1996  that  we  play  a  water  pdo  game 
before  the  football  g-dme.  It  should  be 


California  and  is  ready  lo  lake  on  his 


S«eM.W«TEIirOlj0t|M9e29 


.V    .;^'-m:\ 


2         Friday  October  13, 2000 


CAREER  GUIDE 


CAREER  GUIDE 


TABLE  OF  CONTENTS 


irtday,  October  13,2000       "^ 


FEATURES 


Career  Fair  Map 

Career  Tirrieline . 

Continuing  Education. 
Joining  ttie  Military . . 


•  •*•••■• 


«••■•••• 


3 
4 

C 

•  •       •       •      •      ^^ 

o 

•  •     «     •     «     ^ 


ADVERTISERS 


Raytheon 

Bain  &  Company 

Prudential 

Enterprise 

OUaio 

PriceWaterhouseCoopers 

Toshiba/RICOH 

Nortel  Networks 

Surefoot  Ski  Boot  Store 

Deutsche  Bank 

Etensity 


Where  it  matters  most. 


The  Job  Market . . . 
The  Peace  Corps . . 
Graduate  Education 


•  •  •  • 


«  •  *  » 


10 
12 
14 


...2 
...4 

m      .      ,      %J 

. . .  6 
. . .  6 
...7 
. . .  8 
. . .  8 
. . .  8 

m      •      •      C7 

...12 


Bear  Stearns 13 

Credit  Suisse/First  Boston 15 

Prudential w 

Bravo!  Marketing .... : 16 

Southern  California  University  of 

Health  Sciences 17 

Arthur  Andersen 18 

Environmental  Microbiology  Lab  .  18 

Broadview w 

Lehman  Brothers 20 


CAREER  GUIDE  STAFF 

DISPLAY  SALES  MANAQER 

Jeremy  WHdman 

TRAFFIC  AND  OPERATIONS 
MANAGER 

MikeMaftoi 

ASSlSt^lL^  diftECFbll  OF  BUSMESS 

Guy  Levy 

MEDU  DIRECTOR 

ArvtiWard 

EDfTORIAL 

Christopher  Bates 

DaveHtll 
Bridget  O'Br^ 

AO  PRODUCTION  MANAQER 

Liz  Magaliahes 

AO  PRODUCTION  STAFF 

Adrian  Balanon 
Kyle  de  Bruyn 
Rubers  Carrer: 

Cliff  Cuny 
AmyQaHaiin 

Vivian  Lui 
Jose  Murtguia 
ASaOttfcainen 

MikiShftio 

Ignado  Sandoval 

Armand  Soebagk) 

^tiif  VaWerra 

SPECIAL  THANKS 

Joyce  Haraughty 

Dario  Bravo 

Suzanne  Hausbrook 

Frank  Cote 

The  Peace  Corps 

www.gFid8chools  oom 

The  UCLA  Career  Center 


116 

31 

100 

22 

I 

26 

79 

SO 

»5 

64 

M 

23 

93 

65 

',«/■ 
■  •»■- 

27 

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86 
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85 

92 

83 

81 

82 

15 

3 

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80 

84 

78 

96 

32 

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75 

66 

76 

74 

73 


American  Honda  Motor  Co. 

American  Management  Syitems 

Amy  Zimmerman  3t  Assoc. 

Andersen  Consulting 

Anheuser-Busch,  inc. 

Arthur  Andersen 

Ashland  Distribution  Company 

Automatic  Data  Processing 

Bain  &  Company 

Bank  of  America/Bank  of  America 
..Securities  ^T'- ■. 

:   Best  Buy 
,  Bobrick  Washroom  Equipment 

Boeing 

Brandes  investment  Partners 

Bravo!  Marketing 

California  School 

Employees  Association 

California  State  Auditor 

Cap  Gemini  Ernst  A  Young 

Career  Group 

CBS 

CIA  ■      '"■':■-"■■. 

CIBC 

City  of  Los  Angeles  '_]'";, 

Clarke  American  Checks      ' 

CkHvx 

CNM  Networks 

Contact  Oflice  Solutions     - 

Contact  Singapore 

Creative  Labs 

Deloitte  Consulting 

Disneyland  Resorts 

E!  Entertainment 

Eckerd  Youth  Alternatives 

Eli  Lilly  &  Co. 

Enterprise  Rent-a-Car 

Epoch  Partners 

Event  Z*ro 


60 
70 
48 
77 
68 

69 
51 
5 
!•> 

fi 

'■W 

/'Ml' 

f» 

m\ 


45 
55 

46 
17 
102 

113 

110 

S3 

117 

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S4 

111 


-FactSet  Research  Systems 
Ferguson  Enterprises 
Fisher  Investments 
Gallo  Wine  Compai^ 
Gap,  Inc. 

GUxo  Wellcome       '      v 
Globix  Corp  ''.       '        '-;-' 

Guest? 

Household  Credit  Services 
ICG  Commerce 
Ingram  Micro         , 
Intel  Corporation    " 
International  Rectifier    .:'"       .-  t' 
JobSummit.com 
y   Jules  &  Associates 

KIRN  670  AM:  Radio  Iran 
L.E.K.  Consulting 
LA  Unified  School  District 
Los  Angeles  Police  Dept. 
Macy  s  West 
Mademoiselle  Magazine 
Media  Revolution 
V    Merrill  Lynch 

Mervyn  s  California 
"     MetLife 
'      Morgan  Stanley/  Dean  Witter 

National  Imagery  and  Mapping  Agency 
>    National  Starch  &  Chemical  Co. 

Navy  OfTicer  Programs        ^ . 
/'fMman  Marcns  " 

I    lyntrogena 
\   Npws  America  Marketing 
I  Northridge  Hospital  Medical  Center 
One  Inc. 

Option  One  Mortgage  Co.  _ 

Pacific  Bell 
Pacific  Life 
PeaceCorps 
PeopleSoft,  Inc. 
Philip  Morris  USA 
PriceWaterhouseCoopers  ABAS 
PriceWaterhouseCoopers  LLP 
Prmientiai  CapiUl  Groap 
Qnantnm 


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.  Rubio  s  Restaurants 
Scholastic  Recruits 
Score! 

Sears,  Roebuck,  &  Co. 
Select  Personnel  Services 
STAThivel 
State  Farm  Insurance 
Steelcase 

Stryker  Endoscopy 
Sunnyvale  Dept.  of  Public  Safety 
Supply  Access 
Teach  for  America' 
The  Capital  Group  Companies 
The  Hariford 

The  Patent  &  License  Exchange 
Towers  Perrin 

Toyota  Motor  Credit  Corporation 
Triage  Consulting  Group 
Twentieth  Century  Fox 
UCLA  Career  Center 
Unisys  Corporation 
Universal  Care 
US  Census  Bureau 
US  Dept.  of  Transportation, 
Inspector  General 
US  Securities  and 
Exchange  Commission      ' 
VITAC 

Walt  Disney  Consumer  Products 
Walt  Disney  Feature  Animation 
Walt  Disney  Imaginecring 
Walt  Disney  Internet  Croup 
Walt  Disney  Studios 
Warner  Bros. 

Wedbush  Morgan  Securities 
Welb  Far^ 
William  M.  Mercer  Inc. 
Working  Worid 


jJmjsj  Ji. 


As  one  rf  *»  wortifs  leadhg  A«sifad  lBdn*)w  oofrpatiie^  we're  breald^ 

thing  from  iMtme  and  conviwxial  elwtronk^  and  burinm  aviation 

minion  alraraft  As  a  Raytheon  empkiyee,  you'll  comribote  to  the  development  of  exdting, 

twofcjbonary  tedwwtogy  designed  to  mate  ifc  betl«  easiet  and  sate  thfou^wut  the  v^^ 
Such  as  our  5M«  air  traffk  control  syslBft  And  OIF  a*arrf^(wwAig /M^^^ 

But  it  al  starts  with  you.  Vour  ocitMty.  Your  knowledge  and  innovation.  And  enthusiasm 
about  the  future.  In  return,  we  0%  esoepcional  training  and  professional  dewetopmert  opp^ 
tunities.  A  suppoftiwe  doiMHo«afth  work  cmironHMntAnd  inoredMe  benefits  indudtng  flexi- 
ble sdwtMes  designed  to  respect  your  quafity  of  Kir 

SoyoucanstiUihowoffatOHKegnttqualitiKofyoursoutskkofworK  too. 

Well  be  visiting  your  campus  soon  —  contact  your  career  placement  office  to  sdtedule  an 
tnterview  If  yoo  are  unable  to  meet  with  Us,  please  send  your  resume  to:  E-mail: 
resumeOrayjob$.com  (ASCII  text  only;  no  attadiments).  Raytheon  Con^Mmy,  Attn: 
National  Staffing  Data  Centei;  P.O.  Box  660246,  MS-201,  Dallas  TX  75266.  US 
Citizenship  may  be  required.  We  are  an  equal  opportunity  empl^er. 


Opportunities  are  available  for  exceptional  students  with  the  following  majors: 

•  Computer  Sci«Kc  •  Hiyslts  .  indiistrM  and  Labor 

•  Computer  Engineering  •  Chemical  Engineering  Relatiom 

•  Etectrkal  Engineering  •  Aeronautical  EnginMring  •  Mwketin^CommunicMiom 

•  Mechanical  Engineering  •  Hnance/Accounting  •  Management 

•  •*•*  •  HuHMn  Resources 

Che*  out  our  Website  at  WWW.rayiobS.COIIl/ainipilS  for  further  infonnation  indudbHi  a  calendir 
ofrecnjitongewnti  At  Raytheoi^  we  $trl«  to  be  *•  eanjloyer  of  dwice  for  a  dlwse  woAlorce  b»  attractina  i^^ 
recognizing  the  most  talented,  resourceful  and  creative  people 


Thank  You 

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Friday  Octo6fr  13, 2000 


CAREER  GUIDE 


CAREER  TIMELINE 


Ideally,  the  career  planning  process  begins  as  early  as  freshman  year.  This  gives  you  plenty  of  time  to  get  to  know  yourself  and  your  Interests 
before  you  make  a  career  decision.  Keep  in  mind  it's  never  too  late  to  get  started,  even  if  you're  a  senior  or  a  graduate  student.  And,  you  may 
go  through  the  various  phases  of  the  cycle  at  different  times  than  your  peers. 


rreSnitiSIf  TBar^ 

•  Develop  your  Interests  and  skills 
through  student  organizations, 
sports,  general  education  classes 
and  other  sorts  of  extracurricular 
activities. 

•  Get  acquainted  with  what's  avail- 
able at  the  Career  Center  Library 
Read  about  different  occupations. 

•  Talk  about  your  career  interests 
with  parents,  friends,  professors 
and  other  individuals  already 
employed  in  professional  work  situ- 
ations. 

•  Stop  by  the  Career  Center  for  drop- 
in  counseling.  Take  self-assess- 
ments to  learn  more  about  yourself. 
Identify  the  skills  and  strengths  you 
enjoy  using. 

•  Study  hard  and  keep  your  grades 
as  high  as  possible.   ;    ,  \ 


Sophomore  Year 

•  Continue  to  expand  your  knowledge  of 
career  options.  Make  a  list  of  the  ones 
which  sound  interesting. 

•  Learn  more  about  the  Job  market  by 
browsing  through  the  Occupational 
Outlook  Handbook.  Research  other  mate- 
rials at  the  Career  Center  Library  and  on 
the  Internet. 

•  Conduct  information  interviews  with 
people  who  work  in  career  fields  of  inter- 
est to  you.  Spend  a  day  on  the  job  with  a 
professional. 

•  Pursue  internships,  part-time  and  sum- 
mer jobs  and  volunteer  activities  to  gain 
work  experience  and  to  learn  more  about 
your  work  preferences. 

•  Attend  career  fairs  and  other  career- 
related  programs  to  increase  your  knowl- 
edge of  the  full  range  of  jobs  that  people 
perform. 


Junior  Year 

•  Narrow  down  the  choices  and  discuss 
your  career  ideas  with  a  career  coun- 
selor. Are  you  satisfied  With  your  early 
decisions? 

•  Start  preparing  for  graduate  school  if 
your  career  choice  requires  an 
advanced  degree.  Check  admission 
requirements,  testing  dates  and  time- 
lines for  applications. 

•  Research  companies  and  work  envi- 
ronments. Pinpoint  organizations  with 
job  titles  that  use  your  skills  and  for 
which  you  believe  you  are  a  good 
match. 

•  Begin  to  establish  professional  con- 
tacts to  assist  with  your  job  search 
campaign. 

•  Continue  to  gain  as  much  career- 
related  work  and  leadership  experience 
as  you  can. 


Senior  Year 

•  Discover  the  ABCs  of  a  successful 
job  search  by  attending  workshops  at . 
the  Career  Center.  Consult  with  a 
career  counselor. 

•  Prepare  for  your  first  job.  Talk  with 
UCLA  alumni  about  their  first  year  on 
ttie  job  and  some  of  the  challenges 
you  can  expect. 

•  Use  the  contacts  you  have  made  to 
identify  job  opportunities  and  get 
referrals. 

•  Explore  all  opportunities.  Attend 
career  fairs  and  employer  presenta- 
tions. Check  Bruin-Traks  job  listings. 
Register  for  BruinView  campus  inter- 
views. 

•  Confirm  your  remaining  degree 
requirements  at  the  beginning  of  the 
year  so  there  are  no  surprises  when  it 
comes  time  to  graduate. 

Information  courtasy  of  ttia  UCLA  Career  Center 


.'  ^. '   ' '  '  > . 


BAiisr 

COJMPANY 


Los  Angeles  •  San  Francisco  .  Atlanta  •  Beijing  •  Boston  •  Brussels*  CNcago*  Dallas  Geneva  •  Hong  Kor>g  •  London  •  Madrid  •  MHan  •  Moscow 
Munich  •  Paris  •  Rome  •  San  Jose  •  Seoul  •  Singapore  •  Stockholm  •  Sydney  •  Tokyo  •  Toronto  •  Warsaw 

Would  like  to  invite  the  Class  of  2001  to  our 

Company  Presentation 
October  24,  2000 


6:30  pm  UCLA  Career  Center 


Bain  &  Company  is  one  of  the  world's  largest  strategic  management  consulting  firms. 

We  offer  unparalleled  opportunities  for  graduates  to  learn  and  apply  fundamental 
business  concepts  and  problem  solving  techniques  to  a  broad  range  of  industries. 

Bain  is  actively  seeking  highly  motivated  individuals  from  all  majors,  with  a  strong 
academic  record,  exceptional  communication  skills  and  demonstrated  leadership 
capabilities  for  the  following  position: 

Associate  Consultant 


Resume  Deadline:  November  17,  2000 

;    via  BruinView 

ALL  l\flAJORS  WELCOIVIE 


D 


< 

Hi-  • 

(V 


To  advertise  call: 
310.825.2161 


CAREER  GUIDE 


Friday,  Octob«r  13,2000         S 


You  have  a  lot  to  offer 
the  investment  world. 


We  have  a  lot  to 


you 


s 


The  next  time  someone  asks — what  are  you  going  to  do  when  you  graduate? — tell  them 
you're  joining  one  of  the  industry's  leading  investment  analyst  programs — at  Prudential. 
It's  a  program  that  can  help  position  you  for  enrollment  in  a  leading  business  school  or 
for  continuing  on  the  fast  track  to  the  top  of  an  exciting  investment  career. 


Here's  your 
chance  to  meet  us. 


We  will  be 
interviewing 
Wednesday 
October  18 

in  the 
Career  Center 


The  program.  Our  in-depth  program 
offers  the  opportunities  you  can 
only  find  at  an  established  global 
asset  management  company — 
plus  the  immediate  responsibilities 
and  hands-on  learning  that  a  small- 
firm  environment  offers.  Industry- 
leading  training  will  help  ensure 
you  hit  the  ground  running.  You'll 
gain  valuable  exposure  to  private 
placement,  asset  management  or 
commercial  real  estate  lending 
markets  as  you  become  part  of 

one  of  the  world's  most  powerful 
global  investment  teams. 


The  company.  Prudential  is 
a  global,  diversified  financial 
services  firm  with  more  than 
$300  billion  in  assets  under 
management.  With  offices  in 
32  countries  on  four  continents, 
we  have  direct  exposure  to  the 
world's  m^yor  money  centers. 

The  candidate.  Graduating 
students  with  a  solid  background 
in  finance  or  accounting  who 
want  to  learn  the  investment 
business  will  get  valuable 
experience  monitoring  diverse 
portfolios. 

The  rewards.  Prudential  offers 
a  highly  competitive  salary  and 
benefits  package  and  a  flexible 
work  schedule.  You'll  also  find 
opportunities  throughout  the  U.S. 
with  our  nationwide  offices. 

Visit  our  website  at 
yfww.prudenflal.com 


Prudential 


Vte  OM  an  Equd  Opporlwity/Aflirmative  Action  EmployH  ond  ore  convnH^ 


u(lo-10/13 


-     >     \     »     V    V     V 
>    \    V   V    I    V   > 
»  ■  V     ^     *      \      > 


\.f.  '■        v'»  i'v* 


*    \    \ 


6         Friday  October  13,2000 


CAREiRGUIDi 


-»^ 


CONTINUING  EDUCATION 


CAREER  GUIDE 


Frkby,  October  13, 2000 


Internships  and  study  abroad  programs  offer  a  different  type  of 

I~~~'''^'^^H||||HHH|H      What  are  the  advantages  of  doing  an 
.    _  ^^^^^^^^^H      internship? 


learning. 


Photo  courtesy  UCLA  EXPO  Center 

Tbe  UCLA  Expo  Center  helps  Students  expand  their  horizMB  Mtfc  a  wiety  ff 
ieariiig  experwnces.  Oockmse,  from  top  left,  the  staff  indndes  brt^^ 
VlUthers,  Local  IVopams  Counselor  Erk  BaMwin,  Natioflal  Pri9«^ 
Prapams  Coonselor  Jane  OdMa  and  Student  Assistant  Officer  Dense  EasleiL 


What  are  the  advantages  of  doing  an 
internship? 

As  a  student,  I  believe  it  gives  you  a 
chance  to  explore  your  career  choic- 
es. It  gives  you  a  chance  to  either 
confirm  in  a  fieW  where  you  really 
think  you  want  to  spend  the  rest  of 
your  life  in  or  to  explore  new  fields 
that  you  might  have  an  interest  in  but 
you're  not  sure  what  you  actually 
would  do  in  those  fields. 

Q&A  with      """""7", 
Dario  Bravo      ^^  -" 

UCLA  EXPO  Center 

Are  there  any  professions  where  an 
internship  is  especially  useful? 
Doing  an  internship  builds  your 
resume  for  almost  any  profession. 
Obviously,  in  professions  like  the 
media,  doing  internships  within  the 
media  is  almost  a  must.  In  the  public 
sector,  when  you're  applying  to  work 
for  either  city  government,  state  gov- 
ernment, or  federal  government,  it 


does  look  good  on  your  resume  if 
you've  actually  done  some  internships'^' 
in  city  government  in  Los  Angeles  or 
in  Washington,  D.C.,  or  in  ns 

Sacramento.  And  in  the  arts,  it's  ■ 

becoming  really  important  that  yow     T- 
get  some  hands  on  experience.  If  ' 
you've  had  experience  working  in  a     % 
museum,  that  would  be  a  plus  when      > 
you  apply  for  a  job  in  a  museum.  In     ^ 
the  computer  science  industry,  it's       £„ 
almost  a  must  that  you  intern  for 
someone  in  the  computer  industry.- 
And  working  in  an  internship  in  one 
of  those  companies  might  lead  right 
into  a  position.  We're  beginning  to 
see  that  a  lot. 

What  kinds  of  internship  opportunities 
•re  available  through  be  EXPO  cen- 
ter? 

It's  pretty  much  unlimited.  We  offer 
the  local  program  in  just  about  any 
field  you  want.  Entertainment,  edu- 
cation, the  media,  the  non-profit  sec- 
tor, the  public  sector,  legal,  sciences. 


It's  a  dot.com 

(ij/ithout  the  dot.nskl 


(withotit  the  lOU% 


And  it's  all  mine. 


Running  a  business  appealed  to  me.  But  let's 
face  it,  there's  never  a  venture  capitalist 
around  when  you  need  one.  So  I  was  open  to 
Enterprise.  Here  they  train  me  to  run  a  profit 
center,  manage  people  and  handle  myself  in 
business  settings.  It's  like  my  own  startup, 
backed  by  a  $5  billion  con\pany.  , 

Enterprise  isn't  funny  uniforms.  It's  dressing 
professionally,  conducting  sales  calls, 
planning  logistics.  Easy?  No.  But  people 
who  succeed  here  aren't  afraid  to  prove 
themselves,  or  have  fun  togetfier.  And  now 
that  I  have  the  potential  to  outearn  most 
MBAs,  I  look  forward  to  doing  both. 


"^  Enterprise! 


enterprise. com 

Enlerpriiing  appllconts,  please  $end  resume  to: 

Nicole  Giguere,  Regionol  Recruiter, 

6160  Bristol  Pkwy ,  Culver  Cily,  CA  90230 

plwne:  {310)  649  5025  exi   167 

fox:  1310)  649-5325 

e-moil:  ndgiguereOerac.com      EOE 


LOOKING  FOR 


SOME  ACTION? 


WE'VE  GOT  SOME  ADVICE. 


\ 


Information  Session 
Tuesday,  October  17 
6:30  p.m. 
Doubletree  Hotel  _ 

;   r- '   V  -  S-        10740  Wilshire  Blvd. 

Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 

CamfMit  lntervic%n 

;  October  23,  2000 

Financial  Advisory  Services 

.  _  1      .  recruiting  majors  In  Accounting,  Business,  Economics  and  Finance 

Applied  Decision  Analysis 

recruiting  majors  in  Computer  Science,  Mathematics,  Applied  Math,  Operations  Research,  Industrial  Engineering, 

Economics  or  other  Engineering  or  Science  disciplines 

Get  in  on  the  excitement.  Join  the  elite  team  at  fVicewaterhouseCoopers  Financial  Advisory  Services  (FAS).  As  one  of  the  firm's 

""^^^  c r'?  K^n-^'^"'!  LTc'  "^""''^  ""^  ""^  ^^^  "^^''^'^  '^'8*^^  ""''"^'^'  consulting  firms  with  6.000  employees  and  revenues  of 
over  $1 .3  billion.  At  FAS  we  introduce  you  to  the  world  of  financial  advising  right  from  the  start.  You'll  work  with  senior 
management  from  some  of  the  world's  larger  companies  in  a  variety  of  exciting  industries.  www pwcglabal  com 


PHICmilERHOUs^PERS  B 

Join  us.  Together  we  can  change  the  world.*** 


Friday  October  13,2000 


CAREER  GUIDE 


JOINING  THE  MIU1M 


Gettin' Mtched  can  have  positive  benefits  later  in  life. 


What  are  tfie  a<iraiitages  of  Joiniag 
the  iriUtary? 

Probably  service  to  the  country. 
We  take  it  for  granted  sometimes 
that  we're  really  fortunate  to  be 
here,  to  have  gotten  a  lot  of  the 
gifts  that  we  have  gotten,  and  it's  a 
chance  to  give  back  for  all  of  the 
opportunities  that  we  have  been 
given. 

Q&Awith  v:^/ 

Frank  Cote   ' 
UCLAROTC     -•  n 

What  are  the  short  term  prospects 
in,  say,  the  next  rive  years  for  some- 
one who  enters  the  miUtary  service? 

Well,  I  guess  it  depends  what  you 
want  to  do.  There's  a  variety  of 
careers  that  you  can  go  into.  I 
personally  have  an  engineering 
background.  If  you  want  to  fly, 
you  can  be  a  jet  pilot  for  exam- 
ple. This  is  probably  the  best 


time  we've  had  in  years. 

WiO  bodgetary  cnthadu  have  a  neg- 
ative taipact  OB  Bewcalstecs? 

There  will  probably  be  some  effect, 
but  at  the  same  time,  we  have  a  bit 
of  an  outcry  because  the  market- 
place in  general  is  doing  so  well 
that  a  lot  of  people  are  exiting  the 
military  for  other  jobs.  With  some 
experience  under  their  belt,  they're 
getting  out.  In  light  of  that,  they're 
trying  to  increase  some  of  the 
incentive  to  keep  people  staying  in. 
So  I  don't  think  (budget  cuts]  are 
going  to  have  too  much  of  an 
adverse  effect  on  people  coming  in 
now. 

What  are  tte  hmg  tern  prospects 
for  a  nilitary  career?  Is  the  profes- 
skmal  soldier  a  thing  of  the  past? 
I  think  no  is  the  short  answer  for 
that.  There's  always  going  to  be 
people  who  want  to  stay  in  for  the 
long  term.  One  of  the  nice  things 
about  the  military  is  that  after 


twenty  years  you  can  retire  and  live 
off  of  a  pension  for  the  rest  of  your 
life. 

What  are  the  oiost  hnpoitaat  choic- 
es that  sooeoae  wid  need  to  make  in 
the  coflihig  BKNiths  if  they  decide  to 
Jobi  the  military? 

Really,  it's  just  like  any  other  life 
choice  that  you're  going  to  have  to 
make.  You  have  to  think  about 
what  you  want  out  erf"  life  in  terms 
of  quality  of  life.  The  military  can 
afford  you  opportimities  that  you 
can't  get  in  other  places.  Some  of 
our  cadets  will  go  oil  F^16  rides, 
lots  will  go  to  dilferent  countries 
and  be  immersed  in  those  cultures 
for  a  while.  Those  are  opportunities 
that  you  just  can't  get  in  normal, 
everyday  jobs. 

What  kind  of  person  do  yoo  recoai>- 
mend  mffitary  service  for?  Is  there 
anyone  for  whom  you  wodd  recom- 
mend against  joining  the  military? 

We're  defmitely  looking  for  a  spe- 


cific type  of  person.  We  want  peo- 
ple with  high  moral  standards,  v^o 
are  going  to  be  industrious.  In 
terms  of  ROTC  specifically,  we 
want  people  who  are  going  to  be 
future  leaders.  We  don't  want  peo- 
ple who  are  going  to  follow  tile 
pack  and  be  yes  men.  If  you  don't 
believe  in  the  country  and  what  it 
stands  for,  and  if  you're  not  look- 
ing for  a  really  structured  environ- 
ment, then  the  military's  not  for 
you. 

What  happens  if  a  person  decides  to 
Join  the  military  and  then  finds  dwy 
don't  ike  it? 

Well,  I  guess  it  depends  flow  far 
down  the  road  you  arc.  If  you're 
just  going  to  be  a  member  of  the 
ROTC,  the  first  couple  of  years 
involve  very  little  commitment  at 
all,assuming  there's  no  scholar- 
ship at  that  point.  You  can  pretty 
much  walk  in,  try  it  out  for  a  cou- 
ple of  years  and  if  you  don't  like  it, 
then  you  can  stop  at  that  point. 


UINS! 


Come  COAUOiCr  us  at  the  "JOBS  FOR 
BRUINS",  October  13,  In  Ackerman  Student 
Union.  Contact  Office  Solutions  invites  you 
to  contact  us  at  our  booth  to  learn  about 
the  exciting  opportunities  in  sales  and 
marketing  careers  available  in  digital 
graphic  technology  at  Contact  Office 
Solutions.  We  are  a  multi-million  dollar 
authorized  dealership  for  Ricoh  and 
Toshiba  in  digital  technology  products. 

Sign  up  for  Dec  3  on  campus  interviews 

9  The  Career  Fair 

Contact  Office  Solutions  today! 

fax:  (310)  381-3989 


Cfe 


SKIERS 

SUREFOOT  -  Ski  Boot  Store 

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im 


TOSHIBA 

OLUTIONS 


What  do 


want  the 


The  New 
Internet 


you 

Internet  to  be? 

A  chance  to  shake  things  up.  VouVe  never  been  one  to  accept  the  status  quo  And  we 
wouldn't  have  it  any  other  way.  We're  Nortel  Networks.  And  we  know  «  takes  daring  Ideas  like  yours 
to  change  the  way  people  work,  learn,  and  communicate.  Today,  we're  Imilding  the  new  high-performance 
Internet  And  we're  counting  on  you  to  help  set  a  new  global  sUndard  for  speed,  reliability  and  security 
How's  that  for  radical  thinking? 


Nortel  Networks  is  a  great  place  to  build  your  own  unique  career  As  a  global  leader,  we  can  offer  you  unparalleled 
opportunities  to  work  with  cutting-edge  technotogy  that  is  changing  the  world  Whether  you're  looking  for  a 
full-time  position  upon  graduation  or  some  practical  experience  while  you  are  in  school,  this  is  the  best  place 
to  get  your  foot  in  the  door.  Positions  range  from  software  design  and  system  analysis,  to  hardware 
engineering  and  product  marketing  Imagine  how  many  doors  you  can  open  with  us  behind  you. 


Once  you  go  to  field  training,  and 
you  come  back  from  that,^en  the 
conunitment  starts  to  kick  in  at  that 
point.  Now.  if  you're  a  scholarship 
cadet,  then  your  conunitment  actu^ 
ally  starts  before  that  point,  at  the 
beginning  of  your  sophomore  year. 
Once  you  stay  on  after  that  point, 
you're  going  to  be  committed. 

So  what  happens  at  that  point  if  yoe 
decide  you  don't  want  to  do  it  any- 
more? 

Well,  it's  a  breach  of  contract,  basi- 
cally. The  scholarship  cadets  have 
signed  a  contract  that  says  that  they 
have  accepted  money  for  services 
they  will  provide.  If  you  decide  it's 
not  for  you  at  that  point,  there's 
two  things  that  can  ha{^)en:  one, 
the  military  can  demand  back  the 
money  that  they  paid  for  you,  two 
is  that  they  can  assign  you  to  enlist- 
ed service  until  you  earn  that 
money  back. 

SmMUIMKpViIS 


Js 


3 


Submit  your  personal  profile  to  www.nortelnetworkscom/careers  by  October  9th  and  come  vistt  us 
at  the  Tedt  Career  Mr  on  October  27tti  Well  be  hosting  an  htformatkm  (M«km  on  October  Mfh. 


•W»wia»)iwmwiHh«iM«m^t»Wrii-«i«ni«c»m«A«>WBH«lmu»uila  WDOewwMII^I 


Of  NOTtH  MeCWfWkft 


N&RTEL 

NETWORKS' 

wortrinatw>frtB^Hnn/nTMw 


> 

< 

:^ 

»-^  • 

ft 

To  advertise  call: 
310.836.2161 


CAREER  GUIDE 


-*»^ 


"*!-<■ 


Friday,  October  13. 2000 


Deutsche  Banc  Atex.  Brown  identifies  the  US  investnient  banking  and  brokerage  activities  of  DB  Alex.  Brown  LLC  aixi 
Deutsche  Banic  Securities  Inc.,  which  are  indirect  subsidiaries  of  Deutsche  Bank  AG. 


:^'n^v.-.  i-.- 


Deutscifici  Banc  Alexl  Brown 


Turning  change  into  opportunity 


Juniors  and  seniors  welcome 


,,-.rf^-  t,  -■  --^ 


Global  reach  is 


*f'^ 


4% 


Please  join  us  to  learn  about  career 
opportunities  in  investment  banking. 

Visit  our  booth  at  the      / 

Job  Fair 

Friday,  October  1 3.  2000 

Investment  Banking  Night 

Thursday,  October  19,  2000 

7:00  p.m. 

Bradley  Center,  Third  Floor 

Casual  attire. 

Students  interested  in  U.S. 
opportunities  should  fax  resume 
and  cover  letter  with  area  of 
interest  to  (212)  469-3872 
or  (212)  469-3660.    , 

To  learn  more  about 
Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown/   -' 
visit  our  website  at 
www.db.com/careers  ^ 


^n^!^ 


leading  to  results. 


Deutsche  Bank 


m 


e^^^^^^^^ 


10       Friday  October  13,2000 


CAREER  dUIDE 


IHE  JOB  MARKET 


v/imiiJ^U'^^' 


Friday,  Ortober  13, 2000        11 


No  matter  how  prepared  you  are,  there  are  lots  of  resources  available  to  help  you  prepare  for  life  after  graduation. 


m-^-- 


Jithe   UCLA 

ceNTeR 


What  Is  the  state  of  the  job  market  right  nowf^ 

It's  absolutely  booming.  Wc  have  over  350 
employers  who  are  coming  this  fall  to  conduct 
campus  interviews.  And  we  have  three  job 
fairs  this  fall  and  we're  at  capacity  for  all  three 

of  those. 

What  jobs  are  "hot"  right  now? 

1  would  say  that  investment  banking  is  very 
popular,  also  management  consulting.  And 
technical  positions,  especially  for  the  electrical 
engineers  and  computer  science  careers  are 
popular  right  now. 


"TT? 


Joyce  Haraughty 
UCLA  Career  Center 


Ibe  UCU  Career  Center^  new  iMalioiL 


BRIOQET  CTBniEN/Caresr  Guide  Staff 


What  professions  seem  to  offer  the  greatest 
long-term  potential? 

It's  hard  for  me  to  really  answer  that.  We  have 
seen  many  of  the  same  types  of  companies 
coming  that  have  come  to  the  campus  for*a 
number  of  years.  The  financial  companies,  ^he 
banks,  the  department  stores  and  other  retail- 
ing companies  and  also  the  manufacturing 
companies.  We're  getting  a  lot  of  Silicon 
Valley  companies  coming.  I  think  most  com- 
panies hire  thinking  that  it's  going  to  be  long- 
term. 

What  are  the  most  important  things  a  student 
will  Deed  to  do  right  nour  If  be  or  she  is  planning 
to  joia  the  ranks  of  the  employed  in  the  near 
future? 

Definitely  do  the  internships.  Companies  are 
looking  at  internships  more  than  they  ever 
have  been  before.    We're  finding  a  lot  of  stu- 
dents are  doing  multiple  internships.  They're 


«ot  waiting  to  do  that  between  their  junior  and 
senior  year;  a  good  number  are  starting  to  look 
for  internships  between  their  freshman  and 
sophomore  year.  That's  a  really  good  way  to 
get  in  there  and  get  the  experience  to  put  on 
your  resume.  Also,  we  have  quite  a  lot  of 
workshops  going  on  at  the  Career  Center.  We 
have  resume  writing,  we  have  interviewing 
tips,  and  we  have  mock  interviews  where  stu- 
dents can  get  feedback  from  the  counselors. 

What  kinds  of  things  are  recruiters  aad  employ- 
ers looking  for? 

They're  looking  for  communication  skills, 
problem  solving,  critical  thinking,  and  comput- 
er skills.  All  the  basics.  The  employers  who 
come  to  conduct  campus  interviews  are  doing 
one-on-one  evaluations.  The  companies  com- 
ing to  the  job  fairs  will  be  there  for  a  variety  of 
reasons.  Some  will  be  there  to  collect  resumes, 
some  are  there  to  pre-screen  people  for  follow- 
up  interviews.  Some  are  there  just  to  share  lit- 
erature and  share  information  about  the  com- 
pany and  the  different  positions. 

Wherrcwi  individuals  go  for  informatioa 
and  advice  in  figuring  oat  what  job  to  get 
and  bow  to  get  it? 

They  can  come  right  here  to  the  Career 
Center.   Come  to  the  second  floor,  the 
information  services  area.  That's  where 
the  drop-in  counseling  is.   We  have  two 
kinds  of  counseling  here.  One  is  the  drop- 
in  counseling,  which  is  generally  a  15 
minute  session.   And  then  they  can  come 
back  and  meet  with  a  counselor  for 
appointment  counseling. 


The  Career  Center  is  located  on  the  Second  and 
Third  floors  of  the  Strathmore  building,  at  50 J 
Westwood  Plaza 


ON-CAMPUS  RESOURCES 


UCLA  oners  plenty  of  assistance  in  heiping  you  maice  your  post-gnduation  choices. 


Car«w  and  Gounsellng 

Carwr  Counseling  -  Experienced  career  counselors  will  help  you  clariN  vour  career  Dr«f 
erencos,  e^lore  career  options,  targrt  and  organize  you°,'ob  »M?ch  aniTnSate 

ZrTeZ  '"'  """"''  "=•"""  "■'''""'"'•'•'  ^"^  •"'  "^  'rttloue  your  rSS 
The  first  step  is  a  "quick  question  and  get  acquainted"  session  available  on  a  «>« 

= :tbrhS.:iS^:a„r '"  *'  ^^^^'^  --^^^^^^- 

PcTtL'l^fnK""""^' "  ^'^"^ '"°''  ^^"^  y°"^  preferences,  skills  and  occupationallnter- 
ntes    nvt^^^^^^  T  f  '"'  Myers-Brlggs.  SklllScan  Card  Sort   "ng 

r^mSnr !    ^  ^  l''"^''*  '"''*'"«  ^"^  ^°"°^-"P  interpretation  session  with  a  career 
counselor  are  required  to  assure  that  feedback  is  provided  in  the  corrercoS. 

Workshops  and  Events 

Workshops  -  You  can  enhance  your  job  search  efforts  by  attending  workshops  desionnd 

iddZT  'Tk'"""  '"  ^''"'"^  ^^'*'"9'  interviewing' and  conduXg  a  Kar"  f. 

Information  Sessions  -  Employer  presentations  give  you  a  chance  to  learn  more  pho.,t 
companies  and  career  fields.  These  informal  forums  provide  anTve^eTofen^^^^^^^^^ 
positions,  career  paths,  training  programs  and  other  company  in?o7Sn       ^ 

Career  Information 

Career  Library  -  A  multimedia  collection  of  more  than  3,000  books  periodicals  virion, 
directories  and  other  materials  makes  the  Career  Cente  Librarone  o7  th       i^^^ 
most  comprehensive  in  the  nation.  "  ^  ^"° 

The  Career  Library  is  a  wonderful  place  to  browse  and  get  career  ideas  Whan  ur»..'rp 

721  XKoT'  '""■" "" '  -""^  °'  -"- -o^rySti^rrs 

Cyberunk  -  The  Career  Center's  own  computer  laboratory  Is  a  convenient  place  to  tap 


So~:  wor'i^Kr  ■  "•" '" """ ''''"  •"""■'"•  -<•  ""•  «^  ■"'""- 

Grailuate  School 

Graduate  School  Planning  -  Personal  assistance  and  programs  are  offered  on  tho  nrari 

s~saTS^^^^^^^^  '"^'"^'"0  pro  "rrctK^ 

sonai  essay,  faculty  recommendations,  admissions  tests  and  ffnanclal  assistance 

Fellowships  and  Scholarships  -  Information  on  eligibility  and  application  procedures  can 

at  the  Career  Library  and  EXPO  Internship  and  Study  Abroad  Services. 

Intemsliips 

Hr  ~lXl?'*'  internships  -  The  possibilities  are  amazing!  Choose  advertising  and  pub- 

s    rlur/ar^nTtl^^^^^^  ''"''''^  organizations,  public  interesUnd  o     - 

Irt.  <n^;i  1.       ^  television,  business  and  Industry,  motion  pictures  and  theater  fine 

corporations,  or  small-  to  mid-size  companies  and  organizations. 

National  Internships  -  A  tO-week  or  longer  experience  can  be  arranged  in  Washinaton 

D^blir^trcf  °  '"**  ''^''  "•^-  '^'^''-  ^^P"'^^  ^*tes  include  the  of«ces  of  legi  latlr  ' 
Lh  nt  m'^  ^'^"P"'  Oov«^nment  agencies,  private  businesses,  media  and  the  arts 
and  mtemational  organizations.  The  White  House  U.S.  Attorney's  OffSe  U  S  DeDartmeni 

R  petntl"es'fi:nal'"ct^  IT'  ''^«^'^'"°  cLTcil' U.l. '^0"; 

nepreseniatives  &  Senate  California  Legislature  ABC  Nightline  Strauss  Radio  StratPnie<? 

sS"  '°'""""'  ""'"  """"O"  *''^''"  '"""  <=«"'"  ""  Strlglc  1  InternaSi 
Sludy,  Work  and  Teach  Abroad 

.=Vwf„  c    ^°  .''"*  "'"^^  loternational  Internships,  short-term  work  abroad 
leachmg  English  abroad,  and  imernational  volunteer  programs  American  SitWe  for 

Zml   "J'o  Ilin'Tf  ^•'l''''^^^''^-'  "«*)  semester  a?  Se™  So    Scbtl 
tconomics  Council  on  International  Educational  Exchange  JET  Teach  Abroad  Jaoan 

JhZ.  rrf'":,'"  "'""'"''"' "™  ^'"'*'  '^'O'O  Beaver  College,  Center  foEduca 'on 
Abroad  Butler  University,  Institute  for  Study  Abroad  Peace  Corps  Westwo<«J  Ro  trJ 


International  Scholarship 
Employment  Opportunities 

rs^^^y^nrot^nr  *''  '""""'■ ""'  -  ^  ^'o  ''™'"^-  ^^ '»- 

In  addition,  employers  from  throughout  Greater  Los  Anfleles  and  from  acatfemic  and 

OOo'n.rt^imr"^^ ''''''''.'' '''  "^^  ""^^^  "^«  S-^'^Traks  to  llTSma  elj 
2.000  part-time  and  seasonal  employment  opportunities  each  month  These  lobs  can 
help  finance  your  college  education,  add  spendlno  money  to  youV  budge  a^ohre  your 
resume  a  boost  with  valuable  on-the-job  experience.  Oiveyour 

InJ^^Z  ^^^"f  '"t«^i8^  ■  Several  hundred  employers  conduct  Interviews-with 
.niX'^'^T  'l^  ^''^"'*'  '*"^«'^  ^°^  «"try-level  career  opportunmes  summer  fobs 
and  jernships.  Positions  are  available  in  a  variety  of  fields,  including  aSountinTbank 

2  ioSSir'ZT    ''  '''' '''''  °^""''  '"^•"^^^'  "'-"^-turing.  marklrS 

Careers  Fafrs  -  Career  Center-sponsored  career  fairs  provide  convenient  one-stoo  shon- 
Ping  for  positions  with  Fortune  500  corporations,  as  well  as  smaTarmrsii  comnS- 
mes.  nonprofits  and  school  districts.  Held  several  times  throughou  the  school  yfarwreer 
airs  provide  a  wonderful  opportunity  to  develop  contacts  with  ecruUers  eSfnew 
career  options,  and  identify  current  full-time  poslLs.  summer  jobs  and  LSjl"'"' 

Career  Services  for  Alumni 

Whether  you're  beginning  your  career  journey,  looking  for  new  opportunities  or  makino 

.rni^:;'K,irdu^r  ^ '"""  "•-  ^^«'*«-  -"'-  --  '-- 

writing  and  interviewing  skills.  Our  convenient  24-hour  web  site  provides  SSs 

The  Career  Center  can  also  assist  with  a  variety  of  career  advancement  transition  and 
re-entry  .ssues.  The  BrmnTraks  listings  for  experienced  IZnl^T^'.Te 
Internet  -  put  you  In  touch  with  hundreds  of  employment  opportunities  worldwide 


liirwmillDn  eaiirtssy  of  tlie  UCU  6ara«r  Center 


What  have  you  done  to  prepare  for  life  after 
graduation? 


I  have  decided  to  play  for  a  few  different 
groups.  I  also  do  music  production  type  of 
stuff  like  recording  and  writing  songs.  I've 
just  been  trying  to  do  that  aamuch  as  I 
can  so  that  maybe  when  I  get  out  of  here  I 
can  get  some  kind  of  record  deal  or  some- 
thing. 

Marko 

4th  year  Musicology 


I  have  worked  extensively  outside  of 
UCLA  doing  other  outside  shows,  I  work 
as  a  costume  designer  right  now  .  I'm 
cun^ntiy  working  on  the  costume  crew 
for  a  show  in  Santa  Monica  called  Baer. 
I  studied  abroad  for  a  year.  I  studied  the- 
ater in  England  and  I  think  that  was  more 
helpful  than  anything. 

Teri  Gamble 
4th  year  Theater 


I've  done  a  lot  of  volunteer  projects  for 
different  organizations.  I  haven't  done 
too  much  research  or  internships. 
Project  MAC,  which  works  with  children 
who  haven't  been  placed  in  a  foster 
home  yet.  I  want  to  do  something  with 
devetopmental  psychology  and  children. 

Sonia  Mehta 

5th  year  Psychology 


I  Interned  at  a  software  company  this 
past  summer.  It  was  a  really  good  expe- 
rience and  if  s  kind  of  what  I  want  to  do 
after  college. 

Oalblr  Singh 
4th  year  Math 


I've  changed  my  major  to  pursue  some- 
thing that  I  know  I  will  be  interested  in 
for  years  to  come.  I've  done  many 
internships  and  made  connections  with 
people.  Every  time  I  see  something  that 
looks  interesting  for  when  I  graduate,  I 
write  it  down,  get  a  number,  and  keep  it 
In  my  file  to  pursue  later. 

Lindsey  Strick 

3rd  year  Psychology 


I'm  a  natural  physics  major,  so  I  have  a 
job  working  in  a  physics  lab  in  Knudsen. 
That's  my  part-time  job  and  I'm  getting  a 
tot  of  experience  there. 

Jun  Uehara 

3rd  year  Natural  Physics 


Compiled  by  MIDGET  O'MlEN/Career  Guide  Stiff 


|i 


12       Frkby  October  13,2000 


CAREER  GUIDE 


THE  PEACE  CORPS 


Is  ihe  toughest  job  you'l  ever  love'  for  you? 


Can  1  choose  the  country  wiwre  I'U  serve  as  a 
Vohntccr?  How  long  is  a  PMce  Corps 
assignment? 

The  Peace  Corps  malces  every  effort  to 
accommodate  your  interests  and  preferences 
for  serving  as  a  Volunteer,  but  we  cannot 
guarantee  placement  in  any  specific  country 
or  region.  Our  main  priority  is  to  place  you 
in  a  country  where  your  skills  are  most  need- 
ed, so  we 


Q&A  i 
courtesy  of 
The  Peace  Corps 


A  Peace  Corps  vokinteer  wofis  with  kids  in  Bu^aria 


PtxMo  courtesy  of  ihe  Peace  Corps 


encourage  you  to  be  flexible  when  you  are 
offered  an  assignment.  Peace  Corps  assign- 
ments are  for  two  years  plus  three  months  of 
training  in  your  country  of  service. 

I  have  student  loans.  Can  they  be  deferred  or 
canceled  while  I  serve  in  the  Peace  Corps? 

In  general,  while  you  are  a  Volunteer,  you 
may  defer  repayment  of  your  Stafford 
Loans  (formerly  known  as  Guaranteed 


Student  Loans),  Perkins  Loans,  Federal 
Consolidation  Loans,  or  Direct  Loans.  In 
addition.  Volunteers  with  Perkins  Loans 
receive  a  15%  cancellation  of  their  outstand- 
ing balance  for  each  year  of  their  two  years 
of  service.  The  Peace  Corps  does  not  grant 
deferments,  cancellations,  or  grace  periods 
for  government  or  private  loans.  You  must 
obtain  these  directly  from  your  lending  insti- 
tution. The  regulations  that  authorize  loan 
deferment  and  cancellation  are  sometimes 
complicated,  but  your  Peace  Corps  recruiter 
can  help  explain  the  different  rules  that 
apply  to  each  type  of  loan. 

What  kind  of  job  placement  assistance  does 
Peace  Corps  provide  when  I  complete  my 
Volunteer  service? 

The  Peace  Corps'  Office  of  Returned 
Volunteer  Services  (RVS)  provides  career, 
educational,  and  other  advice  and  assistance 
through  its  Career  Center  in  Washington, 
D.C.,  and  through  the  Peace  Corps  regional 
recruiting  offices.  RVS  publishes  a  bimonth- 
ly job  bulletin  and  career  manuals,  provides 

See  CORPS,  page  13 


OK,  SO  WE  WDRK  HARD 

HTIKHiiO 

HJIVUID 


HALLOWEEN 
COUPON 


MONDAY 
OerOBEft  30 


«^*peopte  prefer  our  foosb.1,  tournamem     X.ri«.«n  N.gh,-  wor.s  ,cx,    You  u>e.  we  uncV.««„d  ,ha,  thererLvTV 
fumihr>9  creer  thar,  a  paycheck  We  call  rf«  commionm  ,o  our  »„ptoy.«  Co«ecU.,  Soul.  Con«  «. «.  tf,e  .^ty  o<  Me  tf»,  ne«*,. 

Email  your  resume  to  collegerecruitmgCBetefwItycom 
Come  vnit  us  at  www  etensity.com 

••  Com,  «.  «  «  ,h.  UCLA  Engin^^rin,  «HlT^hn»c-  Job  F-r  on  Frid^  October  27. l.om  10  em  u„«  3pn,  « 
Ackerman  Studwit  Union.  ^^ 


r 


*©£tens/ty 


f 


CAREER  GUIDE 


Fridin  October  13,2000       Q,! 


CORPS, 


12 


sdf-«ssessment  toob  to  help 
returned  Volunteers  explore  career 
options,  and  facilitates  career  plan- 
ning activities  throughout  the  United 
States.  In  addition,  returned 
Vohinteers  have  noivcompetitive  eli- 
gibility status  for  appointments  to 
U.S.  govemment  executive  branch 
agencies  for  a  period  of  one  year 
after  the  completion  of  their  service. 
Under  some  limited  circumstances, 
this  status  can  be  extended  up  to  a 
maximum  of  three  years  after  com- 
pletion of  Peace  Corps  service. 

^^^luU  sort  of  edocatioaal  background 
do  I  need  to  be  a  Vohmteer? 

Most  Volunteer  assignments  require 
a  four-year  college  degree. 
Applicants  without  a  college  degree 
may  qualify  by  having  three  to  five 
years  of  work  experience  in  an  area 
such  as  managing  a  business  or 
working  in  a  skilled  trade.  For  more 
information  about  the  educational 
background  needed  for  different 
assignments,  please  see  the  descrip- 
tions for  education,  business,  envi- 
ronment, health,  agriculture,  and 
community  development. 


coming 

5*^  and 
10*^  week. 


\ 


For  advertising 

information,  please 

cafl  825-2161 


I  hear  it%  my  hari  to  tet  i^  the 
Pieaoe  Cbiya.  b  that  trae?  How  ce» 
pedlive  is  it? 

To  beooRK  a  Peace  Coips 
Vohmteer.  applicants  must  meet  cer- 
tain education  and  woric  experience 
requirements.  When  evaluating  an 
appUcant  the  Peace  Corps  considers 
the  'whole  person,'  inchjding  your 
life  experiences,  community  involve- 
ment, vohmteer  work,  motivations, 
and  even  your  hobbies.  Your  Peace 
Corps  recruiter  can  work  with  you 
to  help  you  gain  the  skiUs  and  experi- 
etKxs  needed  to  qualify  for  a 
Volunteer  assignment. 

Do  I  weed  to  speak  aaotber  language 
to  get  into  the  Peace  Coips? 

The  Peace  Corps  teaches  more  than 
180  languages  and  dialects.  During 
your  pre-«ervioe  training,  you  will 
receive  intensive  language  instruc- 
tion to  prepare  you  for  living  and 
woricing  in  your  overseas  communi- 
ty. While  some  countries  where 
Volunteers  serve  prefer  people  who 
have  studied  French  or  Spanish,  it  is 
not  always  a  requirement. 


^^  I  be  theM^  FeaceCorpi 
Vokortecr  ia  ny  couMMity?  Wll 

be  in  aa  iMiBted  spec?  Caa  I  have  a 
nHMBmalc? 

Every  Vohmteer's  experience  b 
unique.  Some  Volunteers  are  placed 
in  rural  conununities,  hours  or  even 
days  away  from  the  nearest  Peace 
Corps  Volunteer.  Others  bve  in 
bustling  towns  or  large  cities,  where 
the  nearest  Volunteer  lives  down  the 
street  or  even  in  the  same  ^lartment 
building.  Serving  in  the  Peace  Corps 
requires  flexibility  and  indepen- 
dence. So  be  prepared  to  live  atone, 
with  another  Volunteer,  or  even  with 
a  host  family. 

How  much  wiB  I  get  paid  hi  the  Peace 
Corps?  What  do  I  have  to  pay  for  as  a 
VohMteer? 

As  a  Peace  Corps  Vohmteer,  you  are 
not  paid  a  salary.  Instead,  you  will 
receive  a  stipend  to  cover  your  basic 
necessities  -  food,  housing  expenses, 
and  tocal  transportation.  While  the 
amount  of  the  stipend  varies  from 
country  to  country,  you  will  receive 
an  amount  that  altows  you  to  live  at 


the  same  level  as  the  people  you 
serve  in  your  oonununity.  Your  per- 
sonal expenses  -  souvenirs  and  vaca- 
tion travel  -  will  be  your  responsibfli- 
ty.  The  Peace  Corps  pays  for  your 
tnuisportation  to  and  from  your 
country  of  service  and  provides  you 
with  complete  medical  and  dental 
care.  At  the  conclusion  of  your  ser- 
vice as  a  Volunteer,  you  wiD  receive  a 
'readjustment  allowance'  of  $225 
(rate  as  of  January  1999)  for  each 
month  of  service.  If  you  complete 
your  full  term  of  service,  you  will 
receive  $6,075. 

Do  I  get  vacation  time  while  I'm  over- 
seas? Can  I  come  hone  for  a  visit? 
Can  my  family  or  friends  visit  me? 

The  Peace  Corps  provides  two  vaca- 
tion days  for  every  month  of  service. 
You  may  wish  to  travel  home  for  a 
visit,  or  your  family  and  friends  can 
make  the  trip  to  see  you  in  your 
overseas  community.  Traveling  with 
a  Peace  Corps  Volunteer  is  one  of 
the  most  exciting  ways  to  see  and . 
learn  about  another  country's  peo- 
ple, cultures,  and  traditions.  The  cost 
of  your  vacation  travel,  home  or 


elsewhere,  b  your  responsibility. 

Cau  married  couples  Join  the 
Peace  Corps?  Can  I  serve  with  my 
boyfriend  or  girirriead? 
Peace  Corps  service  can  be  a 
rewarding,  enriching  experience 
for  married  couples.  Today,  about 
10%  of  Peace  Corps  Volunteers 
are  married.  In  all  cases,  both     '-'-. 
spouses  must  serve  as  Volunteers 
and  live  and  work  in  the  same 
community.  The  Peace  Corps  is 
unable  to  place  couples  with 
dependent  children  and  cannot 
guarantee  placement  in  the  same 
country  of  couples  or  friends  who 
are  not  legally  married. 
Applicants  can  begin  the  Peace 
Corps  application  process  while 
engaged,  but  must  be  married 
before  departing  for  their  over-    , 
seas  assignment. 

Does  the  Peace  Corps  accept 
senior  citizens? 

You're  never  too  old  to  serve  in 
the  Peace  Corps.  Volunteers  must 

SeeCORPS,MeU 


STBVRNS 


You 


a  company 
,  built  on  an 
innovative  idea. 

Or  one  built  on 

75  years 

worth  of  them. 


■  Vi ;.; 


For  information  about  Investment  Banking  at 
Bear  Stearns,  please  contact: 

Megan  Kelaghan,  Recruiting  Manager 
Bear,  Stearns  &  Co.  Inc.,  17th  Floor 
245  Park  Avenue,  New  York,  NY  10167 


■V-    .  ■.  .  :ri    ■■<-■■. 


»-t 


14       Friday  October  13, 2000 


\f  ;■-.■<.. 


M'-..  iii|.'..i.lMi 


CAREER  GUIDE 


GRADUATE  EDUCAnON 


CAREER  GUIDE 


•1; 


■> 


Should  you  stay  in  school  a  little  (or  a  lot)  longer? 


What  is  Graduate  School? 

Graduate  school  is  training  in  research.  It  is  for 
people  who  love  research,  scholarship,  and 
teaching  for  their  own  sake  and  for  the  differ- 
ence they  can  sometimes  make  in  the  world.  It  is 
not  for  people  who  simply  want  more  under- 
graduate courses.  It  is  not  for  people  who  are  in 
a  hurry  to  get  a  real  job.  And  it  is  definitely  not 
for  people  who  want  to  get  rich.  (The  really 
famous  professors,  however,  make  tons  of 
money.  They  just  don't  want  you  to  know  about 
it.)  The  eventual  goal  of  many  doctoral  students 
is  to  get  a  job  as  a  college  professor,  or  perhaps 
in  industrial  or  government  research.  But  many 
just  do  it  because  they  like  it. 

More  specifically,  graduate  school  is  typically 
a  five  to  eight  year  program  (in  the  US  anyway; 
fewer  years  in  most  other  countries)  of  study  and 
research  organized  by  a  single  department  of 
some  university,  culminating  in  a  doctoral 
degree  (usually  a  PhD).  In  the  United  States,  as 
a  general  rule,  the  term  "university"  refers  to  a 
college  that  grants  doctoral  degrees.  Some  indi- 
vidual departments  in  a  university  may  not  have 
graduate  programs.  But  a  research-oriented  uni- 
versity will  normally  grant  doctorates  in  dozens 
of  different  fields. 


Q&A 

courtesy  of 

www.graclschools.com 


Do  I  Want  to  go  to  Graduate  School? 

Your  basic  undergraduate  education  will  not 
enable  you  to  decide  whether  to  go  to  graduate 
school.  You  will  need  to  ask  for  advice.  You 
should  figure  that  the  decision  will  take  about  a 
year  to  make,  so  ask  for  a  lot  of  advice  over  a 
long  period.  Start  toward  the  middle  of  your 
junior  year,  if  not  before.  You  should  get  advice 
from  everyone  you  consider  either  knowledge- 
able or  wise,  but  particularly  from  professors. 

Many  people  have  difficulty  asking  for  advice 
about  such  things,  especially  from  professors, 
because  they  are  embarrassed  at  not  already 
knowing  all  the  answers.  But  you  should  under- 
stand that  a  large  part  of  what  professors  do  all 
day  is  to  give  people  advice.  And  professore 
know  a  great  deal  about  graduate  school.  In  par- 
ticular, a  professor  who  does  research  in  a  given 
area  will  probably  know  a  large  proportion  of 
the  other  people  who  do  research  in  that  area. 
Indeed,  he  or  she  will  probably  have  visited  most 
of  the  departments  that  have  good  graduate  pro- 
grams in  the  area.  On  the  other  hand,  professors 
(like  everyone  else)  see  things  from  their  own 
personal  angle,  so  you  should  expect  to  get  dif- 
ferent advice  from  different  people.  That's  life. 

WiHl  hare  to  do  Research? 

Without  question.  When  a  graduate  school  looks 
at  your  application,  their  principal  question  is, 
•Is  this  person  going  to  be  good  at  research?" 
Indeed,  that  should  be  one  of  your  own  principal 
questions  as  well.  How  can  you  tell  if  you're 
going  to  be  good  at  research?  Getting  good 
grades  in  your  undergraduate  classes  is  impor- 
tant, but  it's  not  really  the  main  thing.  The  main 
thing  is  this:  if  you  want  to  go  to  graduate  school, 
you  should  start  getting  involved  in  research  as 
an  undergraduate.  This  fact  is  usually  kept 
secret,  but  it's  true.  And  in  retrospect  it's  obvious 
why.  Graduate  school  is  a  big  commitment,  both 
for  you  and  for  the  department  that  accepts  you 
into  its  graduate  program.  You  should  try  your 
hand  at  research  first  no  that  everyone  can  make 
a  well-informed  decision. 

How  can  an  undergraduate  get  involved  in 
research? 

This  question  has  two  answers,  the  official 
answer  and  the  real  answer.  The  official  answer 
will  take  the  form  of  administrative  mechanisms 
(independent  study  courses,  faculty  mentor  pro- 
grams, and  so  forth)  that  provide  formal  struc- 
tures around  a  project  that  you  might  be 
involved  in.  Go  talk  to  your  department's  under- 
graduate  coordinator  and  find  nut  whar  th^^ 


mechanisms  arc.  Then  forget  about  them  for  a 
while,  because  the  real  answer  to  the  question 
lies  in  your  professional  relationship  to  the  facul- 
ty member  who  will  supervise  your  research.  But 
who  will  this  person  be?  That's  the  hard  part. 

As  with  all  professional  relationships,  you're 
looking  for  a  match  between  your  interests  and 
abilities  and  those  of  a  faculty  member.  Finding 
this  match  will  take  a  little  time,  but  like  all  hard 
projects  it  starts  with  asking  advice.  One  way  to 
start  is  by  finding  out  which  faculty  members 
have  supervised  undergraduate  research  in  the 
past.  Teaching  assistants  are  often  a  good  source 
for  this  sort  of  information  (and  much  other 
information  as  well,  though  you  should  realize 
that  TA's,  like  everyone  else,  see  the  world  from 
a  particular  angle  and  often  have  difTering  opin- 
ions). You  can  also  start  with  someone  whose 
course  you  liked  and  did  well  in.  This  approach 
has  the  advantage  that  the  professor  in  question 
already  knows  you.  Show  up  in  that  person's 
office  hours  and  say,  "I'd  like  to  ask  your  advice. 
1  really  liked  your  course  on  such-and-such  and 
I'm  thinking  I  might  want  to  go  to  graduate 
school  in  that  area.  In  particular  I'd  like  to  see  if 
I  can  get  involved  in  a  research  project  in  the 
area  starting  maybe  next  term.  But  I  haven't  got 
a  precise  idea  of  how  to  go  about  it,  or  about 
how  to  define  a  good  project.  What  do  you  think 
I  should  do?"  Maybe  they'll  just  send  you  to 
someone  else,  but  then  maybe  they  won't. 

Undergraduate  research  projects  can  take  a 
wide  variety  of  forms.  Sometimes  a  professor 
will  have  a  large  research  project  that  involves 
dozens  of  people.  Such  projects  frequently  have 
niches  for  undergraduates.  This  can  be  the  best 
kind  of  undergraduate  research  experience 
because  it  will  give  you  the  opportunity  to  work 
with  a  group,  observe  the  whole  process  of 
research,  and  feel  like  you're  contributing  to 
something.  But  maybe  nobody  has  project  of 
this  type  in  your  area. 

How  do  I  apply  to  Graduate  Sdieel? 

If  you  have  been  getting  advice  and  doing 
research  then  you  will  have  figured  out  where 
the  good  graduate  programs  for  your  interests 
are.  You  might  even  have  an  idea  of  which  pro- 
fessors you  want  to  study  with.  (If  you  really 
liked  someone's  book,  maybe  you  should 
become  that  person's  student.  It's  worth  a  try. 
Ask  for  good  books  to  read  with  this  in  mind.) 
Apply  to  as  many  good  graduate  programs  in 
your  area  as  you  can.  When  in  doubt,  apply.  You 
can  always  turn  down  offers  you  don't  want  later 
on. 

Applications  for  graduate  school,  at  least  in 
the  United  States,  are  typically  due  in  December 
or  January.  You  should  start  writing  away  for  the 
application  forms  in  September  -  that  is, 
September  of  your  senior  year,  unless  you  are 
planning  to  take  a  year  ofr(oAen  a  good  idea).  I 
want  to  make  a  special  point  of  this  because  it  is 
common  to  forget  about  next  year  until  the 
spring,  when  it  is  too  late.  Getting  the  applica- 
tion forms  is  easy.  Write  a  letter  to  "Graduate 
Program  /  Department  of  Whatever  /  University 
of  Whatever  /  City,  State,  ZIP"  (you  can  get  the 
addresses  from  reference  books;  ask  at  the 
library  reference  desk)  and  say  "I  am  interested 
in  applying  to  graduate  school  in  your  depart- 
ment. Please  send  me  some  detailed  information 
on  the  department,  the  necessary  application 
forms,  and  information  about  financial  aid. 
lliank  you  very  much." 

You  should  expect  to  apply  lo  five  or  six 
schools  and  maybe  more,  depending  on  the  level 
of  competition  in  your  area.  Filling  out  the  appli- 
cation forms  is  tedious,  but  it  will  get  easier  once 
you've  done  a  couple.  The  most  important  part 
of  the  application  form  will  be  a  blank  page 
headed  something  like  "Statement  of  Purpose". 
On  this  page  you  will  be  asked  to  explain  why 
you  want  to  go  to  graduate  school,  including 
some  idea  about  what  sort  of  research  you  would 
like  to  conduct.  You  need  to  take  this  seriously 
Write  about  a  page  and  a  half  on  the  subject,  sin- 
gle-spaced, and  take  it  to  the  professors  you've 
been  getting  advice  from.  They  will  almost  cer- 


Why  did  you  choose  to  go  to  graduate 
school? 


i.M. 


I  want  to  stay  in  school  as  long  as  possi- 
ble. I've  had  many  crappy  jobs  in  the  past, 
working  graveyard  shift  at  7-11.1  just  want 
to  avoid  that  experience.  Academla  is 
nice,  t  lilte  to  be  intellectually  stimulated 
and  you  can't  get  that  in  many  jobs. 

Luke  Jackson 
Law  School 


.  /v 


Friday,  Oaob«f  13,2000       15 


'■'      i»     li.'l     .iii  I   ' 


CREDIT 


I  guess  I  tried  a  lot  of  other  things,  and  I 
didn't  know  what  else  to  do.  I  always 
knew  that  I  wanted  to  pursue  an 
advanced  degree  in  English,  but  I  need- 
ed a  long  break  in  between  undergrad 
and  graduate  school.  I  wanted  to  travel, 
and  that's  something  I  achieved  in  my 
five  years  out  of  school. 

Kate  Karagueuzian 
English 


FIRST 
BOSTON 


Donaldsoii,  LnfUn  &  Jenrette* 


•*->■•  i.-^'-    ■.., 


■  ">.'/    '■; 


,.:-.M. 


I  want  to  oarri  nwre,  and  get  a  Master's 
degree.  I  wouW  like  to  get  a  position  that 
requires  a  master's  degree. 

Noriko  Kafclwani 
Education 


IF  CHANGE  IS  THE  NEW  CONSTANT, 
WHAT  IS  THE  NEW  CHANGE? 


I  want  to  work  with  eating  disorders.  And 
In  order  to  get  a  position,  you  need  to 
get  an  advanced  degree.  And  so  I  deckl- 
ed to  go  for  a  Masters  In  social  work. 
It's  really  versatile. 

Krtatel  Renenger 
Social  Sciences 


I  think  if  s  probably  true  of  most  graduate 
students  that  orte  wants  to  do  something 
that  one  was  really  Interested  in  as  an 
undergraduate  but  ddm  feel  that  they  had 
enough  e)(po6Ufe  to  it  or  enough  opportuni- 
ty. The  graduate  school  offers  an  opportu- 
nity to  concentrate  on  one  spedffc  aspect  of 
whatever  fieW  you  studied  as  an  undecgiad. 

Emma  Scioll 
Classics 


I  need  a  better  paying  job. 

Nicole  Wam-McGraw 
Social  Sciences 


In  a  world  that  changes  by  the  hour,  the  challenge  is  to  lead  change  yourself.  Come 
learn  about  Credit  Suisse  First  Boston  and  Donaldson.  Lufkin  &  Jenrette  and  what  this 
high-impact  combination  means  for  you.  ,    '' 


■.9--   y:i:\ 


■4'"'  ■••  ,  '  ■ 


UNIVERSITY  OF  CALIFORNIA  -  LOS  ANGELES 

PRESENTATION  ABOUT 

CAREER  OPPORTUNITIES  FOR  UNDERGRADUATES 

TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  17TH,  6PM 

BRADLEY  CENTER 


EMPOWERING  CHANGEr 

02000  Cr«tt  SuNM  F»»t  BoMon  Corp  Al  n^it,  rmanwl 


16       Friday  Ortobw  13, 2000 


CAREER  GUIDE 


\ 


/ 


Will  your  desk  be  the  next 
home  of  Bondage  Cow?  jr^ 

Meet  Bondage  Cow,  a  small  stuffed  bovine  who 
sits  at  the  desk  of  the  newest  person  on  the 
Bravo!  Marketing  team.  Few  employees  remember 
how  this  tradition  started,  and  they  aren't 
talking.  Bondage  Cow  may  know  something,  but 
her  mouth  is  taped  shut.  And  she's  been  mooving 
a  lot  lately,  because  Bravo!  Marketing  is  growing. 
Check  out  our  exciting  career  opportunities  at 
www.bravomarketing.com. 


You  have  a  lot  to  offer 
the  investment  world 

We  have  a  lot  to  offer  you. 


The  next  time  someone  asks-what  are  you  going  to  do  when  you  graduate'-tell  them 

It  s  a  program  that  can  help  position  you  for  enrollment  in  a  leading  business  school  or 
for  continuing  on  the  fast  track  to  the  top  of  an  exciting  investment  career. 


Here's  your 
chonce  to  meet  us. 


Friday 
October  13 

Ackermon 
Student  Union 

10ajn.to3pjn. 


Tlie  program.  Our  in-depth  program 
offers  the  opportunities  you  can 
only  find  at  an  established  global 
asset  management  company — 
plus  the  immediate  responsibilities 
and  hands-on  learning  that  a  small- 
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you  hit  the  ground  running.  You'll 
gain  valuable  exposure  to  private 
placement,  asset  management  or 
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markets  as  you  become  part  of 
one  of  the  world's  most  powerful 
global  investment  teams. 


The  company.  Prudential  is 
a  global,  diversified  financial 
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management.  With  offices  in 
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we  have  direct  exposure  to  the 
world's  mjyor  money  centers. 

The  candidate.  Graduating 
students  with  a  solid  background 
in  finance  or  accounting  who 
want  to  learn  the  investment 
business  will  get  valuable 
experience  monitoring  diverse 
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Visit  our  website  at  ' 

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udi-IO/i      I 


COfmNUINCfram  paces 


computers,  technology.  And  if 
you  want  to  expand  that,  we  can 
send  you  to  an  internship  in 
Washington,  D.C.,  or  to 
Sacramento,  and  even  more  so  if 
you  want  to  do  an  internship 
abroad.  There  are  some  really 
great  internships  abroad. 

■'• 

lypically,  bow  long  do  internships 
last? 

Ten  weeks.  The  normal  time  to 
do  an  internship  is  ten  weeks.  So 
you  could  do  an  internship  every 
quarter.  Or  do  one  during  the 
summer  and  then  maybe  one 
sometime  during  the  academic 
year.  And  during  the  summer, 
those  would  be  full  time  intern- 
ships. Ifyou  do  one  during  the 
academic  year,  it  would  probably 
be  about  ten,  twelve  hours  a 
week. 


What  are  the  advantages  of  study- 
ing/working abroad? 

Because  this  world  is  shrinking 
and  because  there's  so  much 
competition  internationally,  the 
American  students  are  at  a  disad- 
vantage. Number  one,  not  all  of 
thtm  speak  a  second  language. 
By  going  abroad  and  maybe  pick- 
ing up  a  second  language,  that 
enhances  your  skills  ifyou  want 
to  apply  for  an  international  posi- 
tion. The  other  thing  is  that  by 
going  abroad,  you  get  exposed  to 
a  new  world,  a  different  culture, 
a  different  language,  different 
people.  Itjust  expands  your 
resume  as  a  person  because  you 
show  that  you're  the  kind  of  per- 
son that's  willing  to  go  out  of  the 
ordinary.  When  an  employer 
looks  at  a  resume,  some  of  the 
things  that  stand  out  are  intern-  - 
ships  and  if  you've  done  some- 
thing abroad.  "~~* 


What  kind  of  students  do  you 
think  would  benefit  most  from  a 
study/work  abroad  program? 
I  myself  think  it's  something  that 
every  student  should  be  required 
to  do.  I  think  it's  even  more 
important  for  the  students  that 
have  not  really  had  a  chance  to 
even  go  outside  of  California.  I 
think  any  student  can  benefit 
from  an  experience  abroad.  I 
don't  think  we  should  put  a  limit 
on  who  should  go.  It's  really 
important  for  as  many  students 
who  can  to  go  abroad.  You  see  a 
huge  difference  in  students  when 
they  come  back;  they  come  back 
and  they  are  so  motivated. 

How  long  do  these  programs  typi- 
cally last? 

Through  our  office,  you  can  go 
for  a  quarter,  you  can  go  for  a 
semester,  for  the  summer,  or  you 
can  go  for  a  whole  year.  So  we 
can  pretty  much  cover  whatever 
your  needs  are,  and  what  time 
you  can  take  off  from  UCLA. 
You  can  go  for  fall  quarter  and 
get  semester  units  because  it's  a 
semester,  but  only  be  gone  from 
UCLA  for  one  quarter. 


How  many  countries  do  you  have 
study/work  abroad  programs 
with,  and  what  are  the  most  popu- 
lar ones? 

Hundreds.  We  just  had  a  study 
abroad  fair,  and  there  were  73 
programs  from  all  over  the 
world.  And  those  represent 
probably  between  a  hundred  and 
two  hundred  countries.  And 


SMCOimNUiNG,p«i]| 


Southern  California  University  of  Health  Sciences,  (SCU),  intefnationally  recognized  as  the  leader 
in  scientifically.based  health  care  education  with  its  Los  Angeles  College  of  Chiropractic  now 
plans  to  bring  the  same  innovative  curriculum  style  and  dedication  to  excellence  with  its  new 
College  of  Acupuncture  and  Oriental  Medicine  starting  January,  2001. 


Los  Angeles  College  of  Chiropractic 


♦  The  leader  in  scienttfically-based  and 
evidence-based  approach  to  patient  care 

^  Has  the  imiy  chiropractic  college 
accredited  by  the  Western  Association 
of  Schools  and  Colleges  (WASC) 

♦  A  leader  in  sports  medicine 
programs  with  emphasis  in  sports  injuries, 
nutrition*  radiology,  pediatrics  and  pain 
management 

*  Sate-of-the-art  aydioMsuai 

and  computer-assisted  learning  resources 

•  Is  proud  to  announce  the  opening  of  the 

College  of  Acupuncture  and  Oriental 
Medicine  starting  January,  2001 


College  of  Acupuncture  and 
Oriental  Medicine 


Curriculum  abilities  include: 

•  Effective  Communication 

•  Reason-Based  Use  of  Science 
and  Evidence 

•  Patient-Centered  Disease  Management 

•  Illness  Prevention  and  Wellness  Focus 

•  Diagnostic  Skills 

Programs  Offered: 

•  Acupuncture 

•  Traditional  Oriental  Medicine 

•  Western  Sciences  and  Orthopedics 

•  Herbal  Studies 

•  Ethics  and  Practice  Management 

•  Clinical  Training 


%. 


Soudieni  CalifbrnkUnivet«ty 
d  Health  Sciences 


We're  coming 
to  see  you  Oct  24! 

Dr.  Rosette  Martinez  will 
meet  witfi  UCLA  students  on 
Tues.,  Oct24,  froni 
10  am  to  1  pm  in  front  of 
the  Life  Sciences  Bldg. 


Applications 
being  accepted 

ONLINE  TODAY! 


LQsAneefeiCblk«eofChifO|xacilc 
Collc^  of  Acupi*icturc  &  C>knial  Modicmc 

562-902-3309 
www^uhs.edu 

Ment'based  scholarships  and  financial  aid  available 


18       Friday  October  13,2000 


CAREER  GUIDE 


:rm 


t^Wgi 


every  S^8t 
10*^  week 


for  advertising 


information,  plea^  call 


watch  for  it  on  newstands 


International  opportunities 


www.arthurander8on.com 


For  the  21st  Century. 

Our  vision  is  to  be  the  partner  for  success  in  the  new  economy. 
We  know  it  will  take  a  number  of  ttiings  to  achieve  this  vision. 
Ckinnectivity.  Teamwork.  Wortd-class  credentials.  A  world- 
class  reputation.  New  ways  of  looking  at  traditional  challenges. 
But  most  importantly,  it  will  take  great  people.  Talented  people. 
Resourceful  people.  Inventive  people.  Confklert  people. 
Fulfilled  and  inspired  p>eople. 

To  achieve  our  vision  we  need  the  besf  people. 

Many  opportunities  are  available  to  upcoming  December,  May. 
and  August  intematkjnal  graduates  at  Arthur  Anderson.  A 
minimum  requirement  for  positwns  and  in  any  of  our  nine  servfce 
lines  is  a  Bachetors  or  Masters  degree  in  a  business, 
engineering,  or  computer  science  related  field  with  an  above 
average  record  of  performance.  A  limited  number  of  US  training 
expMiencM  are  available  in  Assurance.  Existing  legal  wrtr^ 
authorgation  in  one  of  the  countries  li^t«ri  tjelow  i.^  mandatftfy 
fPr  home  country  employmfiflt  Please  use  refererxre  number      . 
Y01 -IRG01  when  applying  for  these  positions. 

To  be  considered  for  an  interview,  please  e-mail  your  resume  to: 
intflmational.recruitinQQus.arthuranttefwvi  rnm 


Arthur  Anoerscn 


Hong  Kong.  Taiwan.  Indonesia.  Malaysia.  Korea.  Singapof,.  Japan.  ThalUwKl.Untt«JWnad^ 
Qern«ny  .  Belgium  .  Saudi  Arabia  .  Egypt  .  Kuwait  .  Joctlan  .  Unlt««  Arab  Emir.,.,  .  Syria  .  Bahra.^^^ 

Assurance  •  Bus««s  Cor«oH»,g  .  Corporaf  Finance  •  eBos-r^s  •  Hunw,  Caprtal  •  L.g„  5er^^  .  OuWcrig  •  R,k  Cor»u««g  .  T«  Service" 


ArtiutAndBnmwtBSiotieuS  kmolAitiu/MenenUPandanTiiimim 
alineAiituAndenengUiilclmiienianeMrati  CitOO/MwAnlmn 


NolK  The  MnriOM  flflmtf  bl  |. _^  "r^'^^nmm^mitwwmmmmm. 


4»ll  OM*i*l« 


Environmental  Microbiology  Lab  is  a  private,  rapidly  growing,  corporate 
laboratory  that  needs  highly  motivated  and  experienced  individuals  who  seek 

a  long-term  support  career  in  the  field  of  Bioaerosol  analysis.  We  pay 
competitive  wages,  have  multiple  health  plan  options,  and  reward  employees 

with  merit  and  profit-sharing  bonuses  as  well  as  an  active  401(k)  plan. 

We  believe  in  a  group  environment  with  each  individual  being  essential  to  the 

success  of  the  company!  We  are  continuously  looking  for  self-motivated 

individuals  who  wish  to  join  our  modem  environmental  laboratory. 


We  currently  have  openings  in  the  following  area.s: 

•  Administrative  Support  &  Data  Entry  -  Generation  of  client  reports  and 
customer  service  for  our  client  base. 

•  Human  Resources  -  Assisting  in  the  hiring  and  recruitment  of  employees. 

•  Laboratory  Technicians  -  Preparation  of  samples  for  fungal  and  bacterial 
analysis  and  culture  of  samples  using  sterile  technique. 

•  Microbiologists  &  Mycologists  -  Analysis  of  culturable  and  nonculturable 
surface  and  air  samples  for  present  fungi  and  bacteria. 


All  positions  require  work  experience,  education,  or  equivalent,  in  their 

respective  areas  of  expertise.  Please  contact  us  for  further  details  on 
gflc/i  of  the  requirements  for  the  above  listed  openings. 


Benefits;  -^       ' 

-  Accrued  paid  time  off 

-  Company  &.  individual  bonuses 

-  Multiple  health  plan  choices  &  401  (k) 


-  Located  close  to  SFSU! 

-  Near  Colma  BART  station 

-  Pre-tax  transportation  vouchers 


Please  send  resume  &  references  to:  Daniel  B.  Kocher 

Fax:  650-997-7825  or  E-mail:  dkocher@enilab.com 

(Please  reference  which  job  you  are  interested  in  on  your  cover  letter) 


CONTINUING,  from  p9ge  16 


that's  just  a  part  of  what  we  have 
here.  The  most  popular  country 
for  UCLA  students  is  Spain.  A 
lot  of  students  speak  Spanish, 
and  Spain  is  an  incredible  coun- 
try. The  people  are  great  and 
the  climate  is  very  similar  to 
California.  Other  countries 
would  be  maybe  England 
because  you  don't  have  to  learn 
a  language  there.  South 
America  is  also  popular. 

Is  financial  assistance  available? 

Money  doesn't  have  to  be  a  rea- 
son to  not  go.  There  are  differ- 
ent ways  that  you  can  do  it.  You 
can  use  UCLA  financial  aid  for 
some  independent  programs,  in 
addition  to  EAP  (UC  Education 

MILITUiy;fr<mrpa^8 


Abroad  Program).  There  are  ■ 
also  some  scholarships  available 
fpr  some  of  the  programs. 

Where  can  individuals  go  for 
advice  or  further  information?  "T 
If  you're  interested  in  the 
national  programs,  that  would 
be  myself.  For  our  local  intern- 
ships, it's  Eric  Baldwin.  And  for 
our  international  programs,  our 
counselor  is  Ava  Walthers.  And 
then  we  have  a  Sacramento 
counselor  and  her  name  is  Jane 
Ochoa. 


The  EXPO  Center  is  located  on 
the  Second  floor  of  the 
Strathmore  building,  at  501 
We  St  wood  Plaza 


Will  military  service  be  of  use  in  the 
future,  even  for  people  who  do  not 
pursue  a  military  career? 

I  definitely  believe  that  it  will  be. 
The  officers'  corps  gives  you  a 
tremendous  amount  of  resf>onsibil- 
ity  as  soon  as  you  walk  in  the  door. 
I  came  in  fresh  out  of  college,  I  had 
just  gotten  my  commission  in  the 
air  force,  and  they  gave  me  a  30 
million  dollar  project  to  take  care 


CORPS,  from  page  13 


of  The  military  gives  you  a  lot  of 
practical  management  skills  -  you 
supervise  a  lot  of  people  at  a 
young  age,  even  people  twice 
your  age.  You  learn  to  finish  pro- 
jects and  handle  a  lot  of  jobs  at 
the  same  time. 


UCLA 's  A  ir  Force.  A  rmy  andNa  vy 
ROTC  centers  are  located  in  men  s 
gym. 


be  at  least  18  years  old,  but  there 
is  no  upper  age  limit.  The  oldest 
Peace  Corps  Volunteer  ever  was 
86  when  he  completed  his  service. 
The  Peace  Corps  and  the  coun- 
tries where  Volunteers  serve  often 
welcome  and  value  the  wealth  of 
experience  that  older  Americans 
bring  to  their  overseas  assign- 
ments. 


6RAD,  from  page  14 


I'm  not  a  U.S.  citizen.  Can  I  join 
Peace  Corps? 

We  appreciate  the  interest  of  our 
friends  around  the  world,  but  the 
answer  is  no  -  only  U.S.  citizens 
may  join  Peace  Corps.  / 


For  more  information,  see  the  offi- 
cial Peace  Corps  website  at 
www.peacecorps.gov 


tainly  tell  you  to  rewrite  it,  and  you 
should  definitely  do  so.  Don't  be 
surprised  if  it  takes  three  or  four 
tries  to  get  it  right. 

What  about  letters  of  recommenda- 
tion? 

Your  application  to  graduate  school 
will  also  involve  some  letters  of  rec- 
ommendation, usually  three  or  four. 
Most  of  these  letters  will  probably 
(but  not  necessarily)  be  from  profes- 
sors in  the  department  where  you 
got  your  undergraduate  degree.  It 
helps,  other  things  being  equal,  if 
you  get  letters  from  famous  profes- 
sors as  opposed  to  junior  ones.  But 
the  important  thing  is  to  get  letters 
from  people  who  know  you  and 
who  can  say  things  about  you  that 
make  you  sound  like  you  belong. 

But  there's  a  problem.  Most  let- 
ters that  professors  write  for  under- 
graduates arc  not  very  impressive 
because  most  professors  do  not 
know  the  undergraduates  in  their 
department  very  well.  If  you  want 
good  letters  then  you  need  to  do 
something  about  this.  The  best  thing 
is  to  get  involved  in  research,  as  I've 
described  above.  The  person  who 
supervises  your  research  will  then 
be  able  to  write  you  a  helpful  letter 
that  doesn't  sound  like  a  computer 
wrote  it. 

The  other  way  to  get  good  letters 
of  recommendation  is  to  get  to 
know  the  professors  who  teach  the 
classes  that  you  particularly  like. 
This  is  a  remarkably  difficult  mat- 


class  definitely  helps,  but  this  in 
itself  needn't  entail  any  actual 
acquaintance  with  the  professor 
who  taught  it.  So  how  do  you  do 
this? 

The  wrong  way  to  go  about  it  is 
to  show  up  in  the  professor's  office 
to  chat  randomly,  hoping  Ihat  you'll 
make  a  good  impression  along  the 
way.  This  strategy  almost  always 
makes  a  dreadful  impression,  for 
the  simple  reason  that  professors 
are  busy  people  who  hate  it  when 
you  waste  their  time. 

Think  about  it  like  this.  Your 
relationship  with  a  professor  will  be 
defined  by  a  set  of  ideas  -  the  ideas 
that  the  professor  is  trying  to  teach 
in  the  classes  you're  taking.  Either 
you  find  those  ideas  compelling  and 
interesting  or  you  don't.  If  you 
don't  get  a  genuine  thrill  out  of  the 
ideas  then  you're  better  off  invest- 
ing your  energies  elsewhere  in  the 
first  place.  But  if  you  actually  do 
find  the  ideas  interesting  then  you 
are  going  to  have  questions  about 
them  -  questions  that  go  beyond 
the  course.  Maybe  your  term 
papers  will  address  those  questions. 
Or  whatever.  In  any  event,  dont 
keep  your  questions  a  secret.  Go 
ask  them.  And,  again,  ask  them 
because  you  want  to  know  the 
answers.  Only  a  real  jerk  considers 
it  a  waste  of  time  to  answer  genuine 
questions.  Letters  of  recommenda- 
tion will  take  care  of  themselves. 


ler.  uoing  really  gotxl  work  in  the         schools.com 


For  more  information,  see  www.grad- 


CAREER  GUIDE 


Ffiday,  October  13,2000       19 


Opportunities 


created  here 


II 


M&A 


Investigate  career  opportunities 
at  today's  leading  global 
technology  M&A  advisor  and 
private  equity  firm. 


Technology 


Company  Presentation: 

On  Campus  at  the  UBS         ■ 
Investment  Banking  Career  Fair 
October  1 9,  2000 


Resume  drop  date:  Friday  October  13,  2000 
On-Campus  interviews:  Monday,  October  30,  2000 


Broadview 


Bring  together  today  5  hottest  industries  -  technology  and  global  financial  services. 
Add  a  work  environment  that  fosters  knowledge  in  IT.  communications  and  media. 
You  11  see  something  new  beginning  to  take  shape:  career  opportunities  unlike  those 
anywhere.  Join  the  firm  that  specializes  in  creating  opportunities  for  our  clients  and 
professionals.  Broadview.  With  offices  in  the  US,  Europe  and  Asia.  For  more  information 
reach  us  at  www.broadview.com  or  submit  resumes  to  analystrecruiter@broadview.com. 


BROADVIEW 


>  JU  i'-.l  ^  ■! 


■r   ■.;     . 


20      .F^dayiOctober  13,2000 


CAREER  GUIDE 


'"rigyti '": 


I^HMAN  Brothers 


.»\\ 


Lehman  Brothers 
cordially  invites  undergraduates 
to  attend  a  presentation  on- 
career  opportunities  in  ^^^  #   il 


»*■ 


;•■',;•  ..■  -k. 


y^f 


Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 
6:00  p.m.  *^ 

W  Hotel  -  Studio  3  Room 


. "  ■} 


■» 


f«*-ifc 


Lehman  Brothers  is  an  equal  opportunity  employer. 


m 


Serving  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


Student  group  raises  money 
to  aid  Vietnam  flood  victims 


VSU:  Members  stress  importance 
of  international  aid  for  residents 


By  Laura  Rico 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Members  of  the  Vietnamese  Student  Union  are 
committed  to  helping  flood  victims  in  southern 
Vietnam.  ■  v 

From  collecting  spare  change  to  hosting  a  fuiid- 
raising  dinner  and  dance,  the  students  are  stressing 
the  importance  of  international  aid. 

"Since  Vietnam  is  a  developing  country,  it  lacks 
the  infrastructure  to  deal  with  damages  caused  by 
floods,"  said  Giang  Nguyen,  co-president  of  VSU. 


"Foreign  aid  is  heavily  relied  upon." 

The  floods  are  being  called  the  worst  in  more 
than  three  decades,  with  death  tolls  exceeding  the 
300  mark  since  the  middle  of  September.  About  75 
percent  of  fatalities  are  children  under  3  years  of 
age. 

So  far,  45,000  people  have  been  displaced  and 
four  million  homes  destroyed  by  the  floods, 
according  to  VSU  members.  Damages  to  the  area 
are  estimated  at  SI 90  million. 

Vinh  Phan,  VSU  co-chair,  said  donations  are 
needed  to  control  damages  caused  by  floods  and  to 
assist  victims  suffering  from  the  long-term  effects 
of  the  storms. 


Secn000,page16 


KEITH  ENRIQUEZ/Djily  Brum  S«n.or  Slaff 

Kim  Le  Pham  sits  at  a  table  on  Bruin  Walk  for  the  Vietnamese  StucJent  Union, 
collecting  donations  to  assist  the  victims  of  recent  floods  in  Vietnam.    .     -      . 


Mourning  glory 


KEITH  iHrnMU/CMy  Blum  Senkx  Staff 

Flags  were  at  half-mast  this  weekend  at  the  Federal  Building  in 
honor  of  the  1 7  sailors  killed  aboard  the  USS  Cole.  S««  page  5 


Lab 

mi 


By  Mary  Hoang 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  CityLab  program  at  UCLA 
had  its  first  annual  installment  of  sci- 
ence laboratory  outreach  Saturday  in 
Young  Hall. 

UCLA  students  with  science  and 
lab  backgrounds  took  the  opportunity 
to  expose  disadvantaged  high  school 
students  in  Los  Angeles  County  to  lab 
research,  something  they  may  not 
have  access  to  in  their  high  schools. 

Seventeen  students,  enrolled  in  sci- 
ence classes  at  Monroe  High  School, 
in  the  San  Fernando  Valley,  took  part 
in  the  program,  which  is  co-sponsored 
by  the  molecular,  cell  and  develop- 
mental biology  department  and  the 
Undergraduate  Research  Center. 

With  1 5  undergraduate  science  stu- 
dents assisting  during  the  four-hour 
session,  the  high  schoolers  learned 
about  proper  lab  etiquette,  the  scien- 


% 


/ 


tific  method,  and  how  to  diagnose 
someone  who  may  be  afflicted  by 
sickle-cell  anemia. 

The  students  had  different  view- 
points about  their  ijiterest  in  science 
and  why  they  went. 

"I  came  because  I  thought  that  it 
would  be  fun  to  come  and  do  some- 
thing new  and  I  also  learned  a  lot  of 
things  that  no  one  had  ever  explained 
to  me,"  said  Elsa,  an  1 1  th  grader  who 
is  taking  a  biology  class. 

But  10th  grader  Miguel  came  to 
the  CityLab  session  for  difTerent  rea- 
sons; he  said  he  would  have  been 
bored  at  his  house. 

All  the  students  said  they  learned 
something  new  and  that  they  were 
glad  they  had  come  to  UCLA  for  the 
CityLab  program. 

"In  high  school,  I  didn't  have  labo- 
ratories in  any  of  my  science  classes. 
Work  in  the  lab  is  a  huge  component 
of  learning  because  of  the  hands  on 


CityLab  promotes 

science  literacy  by 

letting  high  school 

students  visit  UCLA 

laboratory  facilities 


experience,"  said  CityLab  Director 
Howard  Fan,  a  fourth-year  psychobi- 
ology  student  who  has  been  with  the 
program  for  half  a  year. 

"There  is  a  huge  need  for  improved 
science  literacy  in  California,"  said, 
Diana  Truong,  president  of  CityLab 
and  a  third-year  psychobiology  stu- 
dent. 

"If  you  consider  the  groundbreak- 
ing work  being  done  in  cloning,  and 
gene  therapy,  we  need  a  literate  gen- 
eration of  students  to  make  informed 
decisions  regarding  the  ethical  ques- 
tions of  these  developments,"  she 
added. 

In  addition,  Truong  said,  the  cur- 
riculum in  high  school  science  courses 
is  not  up-to-date.  She  said  CityLab 
seeks  to  promote  science  literacy  by 
teaching  molecular  biology  concepts 
and  making  students  apply  their  new- 
Sec  Ut,  page  10 


Sides  argue  costs,  benefits  of  Prop.  38 


BAUX3T:  Parental  concern 
over  public  schools  leads 
to  proposal,  professor  says 


By  David  Drudicr 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Legislation  calling  for  a  $4,000 
voucher  for  parents  to  send  their  chil- 
dren to  private  schools  may  decrease 
public  school  funding,  while  giving 
parents  more  say  in  their  child's  edu- 
cation. 

Proposition  38.  the  controversial 


November,  calls  for  taxpayer  funds  - 
based  on  the  annual  cost  per  pupil  -  to 
be  refunded  to  parents  in  the  form  of 
vouchers  redeemable  for  K- 
12  education  at  the  school 
of  their  choice. 

Proponents  argue  it  will 
enable  poor  and  middle- 
class  families  to  afTord  the 
same  high  quality  private 
education  as  the  wealthy, 
while  strengthening  public 
education's  financial  pic- 
ture and  holding  schools 
accountable  for  their  performance. 

We  want  thr  govprnmcnt  to  atop 


our  children,"  said  Sherry  Davis,  a 

spokeswoman   for   38   Yes'   South 

Central  Los  Angeles  office. 

Opponents,  such  as  the 
California  Teachers 

Association,  contend  that 
$4,000  is  insufficient  to 
cover  the  cost  of  private 
school  tuition.  They  also  say 
the  measure's  passage  will 
trap  poor  and  minority  chil- 
dren in  public  schools 
pushed  further  into  decline 
by  the  l%:k  of  funds  resulting 

from  the  wealthy's  use  of  vouchers. 
— "Prop,  .18  will  cost  tawpMyers  at 

least  $3  billion  per  year  and  not  one 


PROPOSITION  38 


^ 


II    I 


SOWg  (jmmHitatUiftl'Mii 


In  addMofl  to  funding  a  public  school 
system,  the  state  would  malce 
available  to  all  school-age  children 
(kindergarten  -  12th  grade) 
scholarships  (vouchers)  of  at  least 
$4,000  each  year  to  pay  tuition  and 
fees  at  private  schools. 


dime  of  that  will  go  to  improve  public 
schools."  said  No  on  38  spokesman 
Jeremy  Prillwiiz.  "We  need  to  contin- 
ue investing  in  them,  rather  than  aban- 
doning them." 

Professor  Jeffrey  T,  Grogger, 
whose  area  of  expertise  at  the  School 
ef  PuHit  Policy  and  Suaal  Research 
includes  the  economics  of  education, 


VCrORCHfN 

understands  the  desire  for  change. 

"There's  clearly  a  degree  of  dissatis- 
faction among  parents  because  incre- 
mental reforms  have  not  delivered  the 
results  they've  promised,"  he  said. 

But  Grogger  cautioned  against 
making     any     wholesale     changes 


'.rS     - 


V     -'--V  m  * 


ballot   mitiative   up   for   vote   this      interfering  with  what  we  feel  is  best  for 


•;l 


SeeniOrO$mON,pa9«17 


I    ».«   (t   IV   <    t   I  rV  l^k.  t   > 


I  .»  k  t  t .«  It  V  ♦  *  >  »  '  V  \  A  (  \-  \  ^  .1   \  \   \'  \ 


i  \  1  >  1   •, 


>   \   > 


2        >ton(toy,  October  K,  2000^ 


Daity  Bruin  News 


COMMUNITY  BRIEFS 

In  battles  for  life  and 
death,  squirrels  win     f ; 

The  two  face  off  in  a  battle  to  the  death.  The 
little  ground  squirrel  looks  nervously  around 
and  sees  its  enemy  the  rattlesnake.  The  snake 
strikes  its  prey  -  a  death  blow?  No,  the  squirrel 
lives  to  fi^t  another  day. 

Research  done  by  scientists  at  UC  Davis 
may  pave  the  way  for  treatment  of  snake  bites 
on  humans  by  looking  at  ground  squirrels  with  a 
natural  resistance  to  the  venom. 

Last  April,  there  were  more  than  40  recorded 
cases  of  rattlesnake  bites,  according  to  the 
California  Poison  Control  System. 

Blood  from  the  squirrel  neutralizes  the  snake 
venom,  according  to  the  research  published  in 
the  journal  Toxicon. 

"They  can  essentially  beat  up  on  a  rattlesnake 
and  not  feel  any  ill  effects,"  said  James  Biardi, 
who  studied  the  resistance  as  a  graduate  student 
in  ecology. 

In  some  tests,  researchers  placed  squirrel  and 
tethered  rattlesnakes  in  pens  together.  The 


squirrel  would  then  tease  the  snakes 
in  a  way  to  size  up  their  opponent. 

In  some  cases  the  taunting  went  to 
such  a  level  that  the  researchers  "had  to  go 
save  the  snake,'\Biardi  said. 

Looting  erupts  at  Cal, 
some  arrested    : 

Police  had  their  hands  full  after  a  mob  of 
about  500  people  broke  store  windows  and  loot- 
ed several  businesses  on  a  busy  street  near  UC 
Berkeley  after  the  Cal-UCLA  game  earlier  that 
day. 

The  break-ins  occurred  Saturday  night  after 
several  people  were  refused  admission  to  a  party 
near  the  university. 

The  dejected  particrs  made  their  way  down 
Telegraph  Avenue  breaking  windows  and  steal- 
ing from  at  least  eight  stores  including  an  athlet- 
ic goods  shop,  a  record  store  and  a  Gap  clothing 
store.  ;;•;  ;,-  .',;;;/-■ -:^t.;.''' 

"I  didn't  think  too  much  of  it  at  the  time  but 
we  saw  people  walking  away  from  Telegraph 


with  boxes  of  Nike  shoes,"  said 
Karen  Lease,  a  third-year  English 
student   who,    like   many   other 
UCLA  students,  went  to  Berkeley  for  the 
game. 

Lease  was  on  her  way  to  Top  Dog  restaurant 
when  she  first  found  out  about  the  disturbance. 
"The  owner  of  Top  Dog  says,  'Sorry  guys, 
we're  going  to  lock  you  in  here  and  see  what 
happens,'"  she  said.  "Once  the  guy  pulled  out 
the  knife  and  was  guarding  the  door  I  got  a  little 
scared." 

After  it  was  over,  "they  just  started  serving 
hot  dogs  again,"  Lease  said. 

Police  arrested  four  juveniles  for  looting, 
while  hundreds  of  others  ran  off  into  the  night. 

Study  finds  widespread 
cheating  among  teens 

The  nation's  high  school  students  lie  a  lot, 
cheat  a  lot,  and  many  show  up  for  class  drunk, 
according  to  preliminary  results  of  a  nation- 
wide teen  character  study  released  today. 


Seven  in  10  students  surveyed  admitted 
cheating  on  a  test  at  least  once  in  the  past  year, 
and  nearly  half  said  they  had  done  so  more 
than  once,  according  to  the  nonprofit  Joseph 
&  Edna  Josephson  Institute  of  Ethics. 

"This  data  reveals  a  hole  in  the  moral 
ozone,"  said  Michael  Josephson,  founder  and 
president  of  the  Marina  Del  Rey-based  orga- 
nization. 

On  the  other  hand,  the  results  were  rjot  sig- 
nificantly worse  than  on  the  last  test  in  1998  - 
the  first  time  that  has  happened  since  the 
group  began  testing  in  1992. 

"The  good  news  appears  that  it's  peaked," 
Josephson  said.  "The  bad  news  is  that  it's  hor- 
ribly high." 

The  "Report  Card  on  the  Ethics  of 
American  Youth"  found  that  92  percent  of  the 
8,600  students  surveyed  lied  to  their  parents 
in  the  past  year.  Seventy-eight  percent  said 
they  had  lied  to  a  teacher,  and  more  than  one 
in  four  said  they  would  lie  to  get  a  job. 

Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  Staff  and  wire 
reports. 


WHAT'S  BREWIN' 


Today  4  p.m. 

Center  for  the  Study  of  Women 
World  Arts  and  Culture 
Dance/Lecture  "Improvising  the 
•  Choreography  :  Gender  and  Race 
in  I960 

355  Kinsey  Hall 
206-8101 

6:15  p.m. 

BDC/IFDC  Performing  Dance 

Group 

Learn  fun  dances 

Ackerman  2nd  Poor 

284-3636 

7  p.m. 

Ballroom  Dance  Club 

Swing  lessons 

Ackerman  2nd  Floor  Lounge 

284-3636 

ballroom@ucla.edu 


8  p.m. 

GALA 

Men's  discussion  group 

Kerckhoffl31 

825-8053 

GALA 

Women's  discussion  group 

Kerckhoffl33 

825-8053 

Transfer  Student  Association 
1 3th  Annual  New  Student 
Welcome  -  Swing  Lessons 
Ackerman  Grand  Ballroom 
206-7865 
transfer@ucla.edu 

9  p.m. 

BDC/IFDC  &TSA 

Annual  swing  (salsa)  party 
Ackerman  Grand  Ballroom 


ACADEMIC 
ANNOUNCEMENTS 


Week  3 

Last  day  to  add  courses  for  a  $3 
fee  through  URSA 

Textbooks  may  be  returned  to 
UCLA  Store  within  24  hours  of 
purchase  or  with  proof  of 
dropped  class 


J 


RECYCLE 


Monday,  October  16, 2000 


www.clailybruin.uda.edu 


A  QUICK  LOOK  ^     ^ 

Page  # 
Dally  Bruin  Classifleds_32:^ 

Crossword  Puzzle 2S 

Movie  Guide 27 


ffiEKv  P'®^  pip®*" 

___jUAJl. (pied  PIE-puhr) 


1  A  person  who  offers  others  strong  yet  delusive  enticements 

2.  One,  such  as  a  leader,  wtio  makes  in^sponsibte  promises. 

(After  The  Pied  Piper  o»  HameHn,  title  and  hero  of  ■  poem  by  Robert 
Browningl 

"»*3  team  had  promised  to  come  here,  but  suddenly  (Jerry)  Cfciton 

was  being  hounded  to  get  out.  At  such  ■  time,  the  Pied  Ptpv  tootled 

up  Plan  B.  Clinton  did  take  action,  pursuing  la«ns  to  move  here.  But 

wtth  no  vocal  supporter*,  he  kapt  piping  up  m  hs  ovm  defense.- 

A  Pip*  Oraam  SW  In  Reach,  He  Won't  Cava  m, 

- St.  LouH  Post-[)lspach.  Aug  30. 1984^ 


DEAL 


MONDAY  MADNESS 

Medium  l-Kem  Pizza 

$5.99 

For  additional  details,  tee  page  22. 


^. 


^FALL 

nwwUAiM 

SUPPLEMENT  Sr 

41^ 


Coupon  Pages  (5lh  &  lOtfi  Week), 

and  Dinlag  Guide  issues  are 
coming  to  yournewsstands  soon! 


To  place  an  AD,  please  call:         \ 

l1IJ29.21t1 
S1M2U2» 
nUNJMI 

Visit  us  online  at  www.daifybniin.uda.fdu 


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Oaiy  Bruin  News 


Monday, Octoberia. 2000  ■'  J 


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oioiai 


Some  Students 

find  pets  to  be 

a  welcome 

retreat  from 

tiie  demands  of 

college 


,•  i 


By^Dhanhani  OhannawardcM 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

For  Nidhi  Gupta,  a  third-year  physiological 
science  student,  the  trauma  of  giving  away  her 
roommate's  rabbit  rivaled  the  scene  in  "Fatal 
Attraction"  where  Glenn  Close's  character 
boils  the  little  girl's  bunny. 

After  discovering  that  Gupta  and  her  room- 
mates were  harboring  a  pel  in  their  apartment, 
their  manager  made  them  get  rid  of  it. 

A  few  days  later  he  came  by  as  Gupta  and  her 
friends  were  cooking  lunch. 

"He  walked  by  and  asked  if  I  was  making 
rabbit  stew  for  lunch,"  said  Gupta. 

Similar  to  most  policies  for  Westwood  apart- 
ment complexes,  Gupta's  did  not  allow  pets,  but 
the  rabbit  was  a  comforting  distraction  from 
studying. 

"The  rabbit  made  us  happy,"  she  said.  "It 
gave  us  something  to  do,  like  playing  with  it  and 
feeding  it." 

For  apartment  managers,  however,  residents 
keeping  pets  in  their  homes  often  create  unsafe 
conditions. 

Ashok  Desai,  who  manages  a  complex  on 
Kelton  Avenue,  said  because  Westwood  is  a 
'•woodsy  area."  pets  can  bring  ticks  and  fleas 
into  buildings.  He  also  said  many  residents  are 
allergic  to  animals. 

If  Desai  discovers  a  tenant  housing  a  pet,  he 
usually  gives  them  a  few  days  to  find  a  new 
home  for  it. 
"They'll  be  emotional,"  he  said.  "But  we 


can't  let  one  person's  whims  dictate  the  policy 
for  others." 

Gupta,  on  the  other  hand,  said  some  animals 
could  stay  in  apartmente  without  creating  prob- 
lems. 

"I  think  some  pets  should  be  allowed, 
depending  on  the  size  and  where  it  would  be," 
she  said.  "Our  rabbit  stayed  on  the  balcony  in  a 
cage  so  he  couldn't  have  done  any  damage." 

Since  January,  students  living  in  the  resi- 
dence halls  have  been 
allowed  to  keep  fish  in  a 
10-gallon  tank. 

"I  think  if  they're  in 
water,  mayb^  you'd 
consider  them  in  the 
same  category  as  fish," 
said  Jack  Gibbons, 
associate  director  of  the 
Office  of  Residential 
Life. 

But  if  these  animals 
don't  live  in  water,  sttF 
dents  can  forget  about 
keeping  them  in  the 
halls, 

"Ifwe  have  snakes  or 
poisonous  animals,  and 
they  were  to  get  out, 
they  would  become  a 
nuisance  in  our  environ- 
ment," said  Gibbons. 

Despite  the  pet  poli- 
cies enforced  by  apart- 


ment  managers  and  on-campus  housing  offi- 
cials, many  UCLA  students  choose  to  raise  pets 
in  their  college  homes  anyway. 

Although  most  students  have  more  tradition- 
al pets  ranging  from  fish  to  dogs,  others  opt  for 
more  exotic  ones,  such  as  frogs  and  snakes. 

Fourth-year  anthropology  student  Charles 
Boyd,  who  raised  cats  in  his  home  for  as  long  as 


MICHAEL  SHAW/Daily  Bruin 


Sm  ANIMALS,  page  14 


J«l»,a  ball  python,  curls  around  the  hand  of  third-year  physiological  science  studenTsahw 
MMoudi.  Many  students  find  pets  to  be  a  pleasant  distraction  from  college  life. 


'>»»♦>> 


Monday,  October  16, 2000 


Daffy  Bruin  N«wt' 


Privacy  act  causes  probleitis  for  recruiters 


BUSH:  State  won't  release 
names  of  top  10  percentile 
of  classes  to  universities 


By  Connie  Mabin 

The  Associated  Press 

AUSTIN,  Texas  —  Educators  say 
a  plan  backed  by  Gov.  George  W. 
Bush  as  a  way  to  diversify  Texas  col- 
lege campuses  without  affirmative 
action  is  being  hindered  by  the  state's 
strict  interpretation  of  federal  priva- 
cy law. 

A  state  law  passed  in  1997  and 
signed  by  Bush  guarantees  students 
who  rank  in  the  top  10  percent  of 
their  high  school  graduating  class  a 
spot  at  the  state's  public  colleges  and 
universities. 

Bush,  who  opposes  affirmative 
action,  has  listed  the  so-called  top  10 
percent  rule  among  his  successes 
with  helping  minorities.  But  universi- 
ty officials  say  they're  having  trouble 
recruiting  those  top-ranked  high 
school  seniors  because  a  state  agency 
won't  give  them  the  students'  names. 

The  Federal  Educational  Rights 
and  Privacy  Act  requires  the  permiSs. 
sion  of  parents  or  students  over  18 


before  the  release  of  student  records 
that  include  "personally  identifiable 
information,"  such  as  names  and 
home  addresses.  Lawyers  for  the 
Texas  Education  Agency  say  this 
doesn't  allow  them  to  release  the 
names  of  the  top-ranked  students. 

California  and  Florida  have  simi- 
lar laws  guaranteeing  admission  to 
top-ranked  students.  Rorida  public 
schools  allow  student  information  to 
be  released  to  university  officials  for 
educational  purposes;  California 
officials  obtain  parental  permission 
and  pass  on  the  names  to  universities. 
'  But  the  Texas  Education  Agency, 
which  supervises  public  schools,  says 
getting  permission  from  the  parents 
of  an  estimated  19,000  eligible  high 
school  seniors  is  not  practical. 

As  a  result,  university  admissions 
officials  must  find  the  students  on 
their  own,  out  of  the  state's  more 
than  200,000  high  school  seniors. 

That  hurts  students  who  haven't 
heard  about  the  guaranteed  admis- 
sion system  and  don't  know  to  apply 
on  their  own,  said  Bruce  Walker, 
director  of  admissions  at  the 
University  of  Texas  at  Austin. 

"It's  easily  possible  that  we'll  miss 
some  of  those  students,"  said  Joe 
Estrada,  interim  assistant  provost  at 


Texas  A&M  University  at  College 
Station. 

Texas  and  Texas  A&M,  the  state's 
two  largest  universities,  buy  lists  of 
self-reported  top-ranked  students 
from  the  College  Board,  the  compa- 
ny that  administers  the  Scholastic 
Aptitude  Test.  But  they  say  there 
really  is  no  way  to  tell  how  many 
qualified  students  have  been  missed 
since  not  all  take  the  SAT. 

The  College  Board  charges  23 
cents  per  name  plus  fees  per  campus. 
UT-Austin  paid  about  $2,000  for  a 
list  of  students  not  already  on  its 
mailing  list.  ^■       .     v'    "H  V 

David  Anderson,  genera!  counsel 
for  the  Texas  Education  Agency,  said 
he's  confident  the  state's  outreach 
efforts,  including  working  with 
school  counselors  and  a  letter  from 
Bush  sent  last  fall  to  eligible  high 
school  seniors,  were  effective. 

"Maybe  we've  missed  a  few 
who've  moved,  but  it's  not  like  they 
don't  know,"  Anderson  said. 

The  governor's  office  will  send 
another  letter  this  month  to  the  class 
of  2001.  And  at  the  TEA's  request, 
the  U.S.  Department  of  Education  is 
drafting  advice  on  interpreting  the 
federal  privacy  law,  department 
spokesman  Jim  Bradshaw  said. 


Mexico's  ruling  party  could 
set  up  important  comeback 

POUnCS:    Polls  put  PR  I        ^°°^^  ^"^  'i^^'  opposed  many  recent 
J.J         4      1      J  .         reforms  designed  to  make  the  party 

canaidate  Andrade  up  m    more  democratic 

gubernatorial  elections  ^"  ^"'^  i  the  party's  presidential 

°  candidate,  Francisco  Labastida,  lost 

to  Vicente  Fox,  a  former  Coca-Cola 
executive  and  member  of  Mexico's 
socially  conservative  National 
Action  Party. 

The  defeat  left  the  PRI,  which  had 
held  power  by  incorporating  every- 
one from  peasant  groups  to  wealthy 
businessmen,  struggling  to  keep  from 
tearing  apart.  The  country's  presi- 
dent had  traditionally  led  the  party, 
and  the  loss  in  July  left  the  PRI  lead- 
erless  and  searching  for  a  new  identi- 
ty. 

The  division  worsened  Aug.  20 
when  the  PRI  lost  the  governor's  race 
in  southern  Chiapas  state,  long  a 
party  stronghold. 

But  the  party  may  soon  have  its 
first  major  victory  since  the  July  elec- 
tion. 

A  poll  in  early  October  gave 
Andrade  support  from  40  percent  of 
those  surveyed  and  a  comfortable  15- 
point  lead  over  his  nearest  challenger, 
Raul  Ojeda  of  the  Democratic 
Revolution  Party. 


By  Trad  Carl 

The  Associated  Press 

VILLAHERMOSA,  Mexico  - 
Mexico's  ruling  party  fought  Sunday 
to  make  a  comeback  in  state  elections 
after  months  of  turmoil  and  a  string 
of  stunning  defeats,  including  its  first- 
ever  loss  in  a  presidential  race. 

Most  polls  show  the  party's  candi- 
date, Miguel  Andrade,  leading  10 
other  opposition  members  -  includ- 
ing eight  former  members  of  his 
party  -  in  the  race  for  governor  of  this 
oikich.  Gulf  of  Mexico  state. 

A  victory  by  Andrade  would  help 
current  Tabasco  Gov.  Roberto 
Madrazo  in  his  fight  to  become 
national  president  of  the  Institutional 
Revolutionary  Party,  or  PRI,  which 
has  ruled  Mexico  since  its  creation  in 
1929. 

Madrazo,  with  the  backing  of  sev- 
eral of  the  nation's  governors,  advo- 
cates returning  to  the  party's  populist 


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Qinton,  others  head  to  Egypt  for  peace  talks 


Th*  As$oc>ated  Pt«i 

President  Clinton  leaves  Foundry  United  Methodist  Church 
Sunday  in  Washington  before  travelling  to  Egypt  for  a  summit. 


SUMIMIT:  Leaders  hope  to 
persuade  Arafat  to  quell 
emotions  of  Palestinians 


By  Sonya  Ross 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  U.S.  leaders 
headed  to  Egypt  on  Sunday  to  try  to 
cool  Middle  East  tensions  but  with  lit- 
tle hope  of  resuming  an  Israeli- 
Palestinian  peace  process  that 
Secretary  of  State  Madeleine  Albright 
said  "is  the  only  road"  away  from  vio- 
lence. 

President  Clinton  took  a  break  from 
almost  constant  telephone  diplomacy 
to  attend  services  at  Foundry 
Methodist  Church,  where  the  congre- 
gation prayed  that  he  would  succeed  in 
bringing  peace  between  Israelis  and 
Palestinians. 

Qinton  was  to  get  a  briefing  from 
his  national  security  adviser  Sandy 
Bcrger  before  taking  off  for  Sharm  el- 
Sheikh,  Egypt,  for  emergency  talks  on 
Monday  with  Palestinian  leader  Yasser 
Arafat,  Israeli  Prime  Minister  Ehud 
Barak,  Egyptian  President  Hosni 
Mubarak  and  King  Abdullah  of 
Jordan. 

Berger  told  NBC's  "Meet  the 
Press"  that  the  president  was  going 
into  the  summit  focused  on  stopping 
the  violence,  in  which  more  than  100 


people,  mostly  Palestinians,  have  been 
killed. 

"I  have  no  illusions.  This  is  a  very 
difficult  situation.  Emotions  and  frus- 
trations are  very  high  on  both  sides," 
Berger  said.  "It  will  be  difficult  to 
resume  negotiations  for  a  peace  agree- 
ment, I  think,  quickly.  The  most  impor- 
tant thing  here  is  to  break  this  cycle  of 
violence." 

Albright  told  ABC's  "This  Week" 
that  the  prospects  for  renewed  peace 
negotiations  are  dim,  but  the  United 
States  hoped  at  least  to  persuade 
Arafat  to  assume  more  responsibility 
for  calming  inflamed  tensions. 

"He  has  made,  in  the  past  seven 
years,  some  important  decisions  for 
peace,  but  we  now  believe  that  he  has 
to  do  more  to  control  the  violence," 
Albright  said,  "The  peace  process  is 
the  only  road." 

The  senior  Palestinian  negotiator, 
Saeb  Erekat,  warned  not  to  expect 
solutions  at  Sharm  el-Sheikh,  saying 
too  much  is  being  expected  of  Arafat. 

"I  really  don't  want  to  raise  any- 
one's expectations,"  Erekat  said.  "I 
think  Mr.  Barak  went  a  long  way  in  his 
exit  strategy  from  the  peace  process. 
We  will  go  to  Sharm  el-Sheikh  hoping 
he  is  going  to  stop  the  war  against  us." 
Erekat.  a  longtime  Arafat  aide, 
accused  Barak  of  trying  to  teach  the 
Palestinians  a  lesson  with  the  idea  that 
violence  "is  a  language  you  under- 
stand" and  said  he  fears  that  the  vio- 


lence may  escalate  even  further. 

By  ordering  inordinately  violent 
retaliation,  Barak  really  "is  strengthen- 
ing Palestinian  extremists.  He  is 
strengthening  Israeli  extremists," 
Erekat  said,  while  shunting  aside  "peo- 
ple like  me,  who  have  done  nothing  in 
last  25  years  of  my  life  except  do  what  I 
can  to  let  Israelis  and  Palestinians  live 
together." 

For  his  part.  Israeli  Prime  Minister 
Ehud  Barak  laid  out  a  list  of  objectives 
he  wants  from  the  conference  in  Sharm 
el-Sheikh,  a  Red  Sea  resort,  including 
reincarceration  of  hundreds  of  Lslamic 
terrorist  suspects  freed  last  week  by 
Arafat's  Palestinian  Authority  govern- 
ment. The  prisoners  were  freed 
Thursday  during  Israeli  helicopter 
rocket  attacks  in  retaliation  for  the 
lynching  of  two  Israeli  army  reservists. 
"I  believe  that  an  end  to  violence 
could  be  accomplished,  and  in  a  way 
should  be  accomplished,"  Barak  said 
on  CNN's  "Late  Edition."  He  urged 
formulation  of  a  "mechanism"  by  the 
Palestinians.  Israel  and  the  United 
States  to  ensure  that  previously  estab- 
lished security  "understandings"  are 
carried  out. 

In  an  opinion  article  published 
Sunday  in  The  Washington  Post, 
Albright  said  the  United  States  has 
offered  to  develop  a  fact-finding  com- 
mission to  look  into  the  violence  and 
find  ways  to  prevent  it  from  happening 
again. 


J 


r    • 

Ebola  virus  resurfaces, 
claims  31  in  Uganda 

EPIDEMIC:  Centers  for  Disease  Control 
investigators  set  to  confirm  diagnosis 


By  Henry  Wasswa 

The  Associated  Press  ^ 

KAMPALA,  Uganda  After  lying  dormant  for  three 
years,  the  Ebola  virus  has  resurfaced  -  this  time  in  Uganda, 
where  31  people  have  died  from  the  deadly  disease. 

The  hemorrhagic  virus,  which  kills  with  devastating 
speed,  turned  up  two  weeks  ago  in  Gulu,  225  miles  north  of 
Kampala,  health  officials  said. 

Thirty-one  people,  including  three  student  nurses  who 
treated  the  first  Ebola  patients,  had  died  by  Sunday,  the 
Ugandan  Ministry  of  Health  said. 

Another  20  patients  were  being  treated  at  the  Lacor 


Explosion  survivors  arrive  to  hero's  welcome 


See  EBOU,  page  10 


COLE:  Wounded  hospTtalized^ 
memorial  service  held  for 
victim  of  alleged  terrorist  act 


By  Maria  SanminiatdIi 

The  Associated  Press  • 

NORFOLK,  Va.  -  Thirty-three  sailors 
injured  in  the  deadly  explosion  that  ripped 
through  the  hull  of  the  USS  Cole,  killing  17 
crew  members,  arrived  back  on  U.S.  soil 
Sunday  to  the  cheers  of  hundreds  of  family 
members  and  sailors  lining  the  tarmac  at 
Norfolk  Naval  Station. 

Banners  hanging  from  the  base's  control 
tower  read:  "Our  heroes"  and  "We  join 
hands  and  hearts  to  welcome  you  home." 

With  the  Atlantic  Reet  band  playing,  the 
first  of  the  injured  sailors  walked  down  the 
ramp  of  the  military  transport  plane,  fol- 


lowed by  others  limping  slowly  with  the 
help  of  canes,  crutches  and  the  arms  of  their 
colleagues.  At  least  seven  had  to  be  carried 
off  on  stretchers. 

Crying  family  members  and  children 
waving  small  U.S.  fiags  surrounded  the 
sailors  in  group  hugs,  reluctant  to  let  go  as 
they  were  moved  toward  buses  and  ambu- 
lances for  the  wounded  to  be  taken  to 
Portsmouth  Naval  Hospital.  All  31  men 
and  two  women  were  expected  to  be  hospi- 
talized at  least  overnight. 

Since  Thursday,  when  a  suspected  terror- 
ist bomb  blew  a  40-by-40  foot  hole  in  the 
side  of  the  destroyer  during  a  refueling  stop 
on  the  Arabian  Peninsula,  the  families  had 
been  gathering  at  the  home  of  the  Atlantic 
Reet  for  regular  briefings  and  the  support 
of  chaplains  and  counselors,  said  Cmdr. 
Denny  Moynihan,  a  Navy  spokesman. 

"It's  an  entire  Cole  family,"  Moynihan 
said. 


About  1,500  sailors  in  dress  white  uni- 
forms were  on  the  tarmac  with  200  relatives 
of  the  injured  Sunday. 

Chandra  Benoit  of  Norfolk,  whose  hus- 
band Kevin  was  still  aboard  the  Cole, 
joined  the  crowd  with  her  infant  daughter. 
Kyra,  to  welcome  his  injured  crewmates 
home.  She  said  she  had  spoken  with  her 
husband  briefiy  by  phone. 

"We  didn't  talk  about  what  happened," 
she  said.  "He  just  asked  me  about  the  baby. 

I'm  just  waiting  for  him  to  come  home." 

Lt.  Cmdr.  Jim  Mensching,  an  emergency 
medicine  physician  at  Portsmouth  Naval 
Hospital,  said  the  Cole  sailors'  injuries 
ranged  from  fractured  ribs  and  collapsed 
lungs  to  multiple  fractures,  facial  burns  and 
contusions. 

Relatives  of  six  other  injured  crew  mem- 
bers   who    remained    hospitalized 


m 


See  SHIP,  page  IS 


WORLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 

IPassengers  not  initially 
informed  of  hijacking 

BAGHDAD,  Iraq  -They  had  been  in  the  air 
only  two  hours  when  first  class  passengers 
noticed  a  flight  attendant  emerge  from  the  cock-^ 
pit  with  tears  in  her  eyes.  Passengers  became 
more  concerned  when  the  "fasten  seat  belts" 
waming  light  failed  to  go  off"  and  the  monitor 
tracking  their  flight  went  blank. 

Lon<ion4x>und  Saudi  Arabian  Airlines  Right 
1 15  had  been  hijacked. 

But  passengers  weren't  told  this  while  they 
were  in  the  air,  and  the  crew  remained  so  calm 
that  some  passengers  learned  of  it  only  aAer  the 
plane  landed  in  Baghdad  late  Saturday  affer  a 
seven  and  a  half-hour  odyssey  that  began  in 
Jiddah,  Saudi  Arabia. 

"I  first  thought  we  landed  at  Heathrow  in 
London.  But  when  I  looked  through  the  window 
I  said  to  myjdf.  This  is  not  London,'"  said  fqbal 
Diwood  from  Pakistan,  one  of  the  103  passen- 
gen  and  crew  on  the  flij^t. 


Half  an  hour  after  landing,  the 
captain  announced  to  passengers  that 
the  plane  had  been  hijacked  and  that 
negotiations  were  under  way. 

The  two  hijacking  suspects  surrendered 
without  incident  in  Baghdad. 

\)blunteers  killed  in 
small  plane  crash 

ENSEN  ADA,  Mexico  -  Six  Americans  trav- 
eling in  Mexico  as  part  of  a  volunteer  doctors 
group  were  killed  when  their  private  airplane 
crashed  in  a  residential  area,  narrowly  missing 
several  houses. 

The  twin-engine  Cessna  320E,  flown  by  the 
U.S.  group  Flying  Doctors,  was  trying  to  land 
Saturday  at  a  military  air  base  outside 
Ensenada.  a  coastal  city  about  50  miles  south  of 
the  California  border,  police  said.  No  one  on  the 
ground  was  hurt. 

Mexican  authorities  said  they  did  not  know 
the  cause  of  the  crash,  but  a  c&owner  of  the  air-  • 


plane,  manufactured  in  1967,  said  it 
was  apparently  having  trouble  with 
its  landing  gear. 

"My  understanding  is  that  the  land- 
ing gear  did  not  lock  down  and  they  were 
flying  past  the  control  tower  so  (the  tower)  could 
check  to  see  if  the  gear  was  down.  The  pilot 
somehow  lost  control,"  said  John  A.  Linford  of 
Piedmont,  Calif. 

Monkey  study  suggests 
addictiveness  of  THC 

NEW  YORK  -  Monkeys  repeatedly  dosed 
themselves  with  the  main  active  ingredient  of 
marijuana  in  a  new  federal  study.  The 
researchers  say  that  result  emphasizes  the  idea 
that  people  can  get  hooked  on  pot  and  provides 
a  new  way  to  test  therapies. 

Lab  animals  will  actively  dose  themselves 
with  most  drugs  abused  by  people,  but  mari- 
juana has  been  an  exception,  said  researcher 
Steven  Goldberg  of  the  National  Institute  on 


Drug  Abuse,  called  N I  DA. 

Some  people  might  interpret  that  as  suggest- 
ing it  has  little  potential  for  addiction,  he  said. 
But  the  new  work  found  that  squirrel  monkeys 
repeatedly  pushed  a  lever  to  get  injections  of 
the  marijuana  ingredient  THC,  Goldberg  and 
colleagues  report  in  the  November  issue  of  the 
journal  Nature  Neuroscience. 

The  animals  pushed  the  lever  about  as  much 
as  other  monkeys  did  to  get  cocaine,  but 
Goldberg  said  that  does  not  necessarily  mean 
marijuana  is  as  addictive  as  cocaine  is  in  peo- 
ple. 

NIDA  says  marijuana  causes  compulsive 
and  often  uncontrollable  craving  and  use, 
despite  health  and  social  consequences,  and  so 
is  addictive. 

But  a  former  Harvard  Medical  School  psy- 
chiatry professor.  Dr.  Lester  Grinspoon  dis- 
agrees. 

"This  drug  is  not  addicting.  Clinical  experi- 
ence says  that,"  he  said. 


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<&  LOCAL 


FBI  study  marks  1 999 
Withlow  murder  rate 


Parties  end  strike  negotiations  optimistically 


CRIME:  Report  shows  littie 
deviance  in  L.A.  killings; 
violence  doAvn  nationwide 


By  Michael  J.  Snrffen 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  The  nation's 
overall  murder  rate  hit  a  33-year  low 
in  1999  but  Los  Angeles's  rate  held 
steady  and  the  city  ranked  second 
behind  New  York  in  sheer  number  of 
killings,  the  FBI  reported  Sunday. 

Los  Angeles  reported  425  homi- 
cides in  1 999  and  426  in  1998. 

The  number  of  murders  rose  in  sev- 
eral other  large  California  and 
Nevada  cities. 

Nationwide,  serious  crimes  report- 
ed to  police  dipped  for  a  record  eighth 
straight  year,  falling  7  percent  from 
1998.  The  overall  violent  crime  rate 
sank  to  a  2 1 -year  low  -  525  murders, 
rapes,  robberies  and  assaults  for  every 
100,000  residents.  The  last  time  the 
figure  was  lower  -  498  in  1978  - 
came  well  before  an  epidemic  of  crack 
cocaine  sent  violent  crime  soaring  in 
the  mid-1980s. 

The  murder  rate  was  the  lowest 
since  1966;  5.7  per  100,000  in  1999, 
compared  with  5.6  in  1966. 

But  the  FBI  report  contained  a  hint 
that  big  gains  against  crime  may  be 
about  to  slow  down. 


Big  cities  with  more  than  1  million 
residents  showed  the  smallest  decline 
in  murder  rate  of  any  size  community, 
down  just  4  percent  from  13.5  to  13 
per  100,000.  The  largest.  New  York, 
even  saw  murders  rise,  from  633  in 
1998 to 671  in  1999.       ;  .    .-    ; 

In  California  and  Nevada,  the 
largest  murder  increases  were  in 
Sacramento,  which  rose  from  31  to 
54,  and  San  Diego,  up  from  42  to  57. 
San  Francisco  also  had  an  increase 
fi-om58to64.      ;  r  ■■    ;^ 

In  Oakland,  murders  Tell  from  72  in 
1998  to  60  last  year.  San  Jose  also  had 
a  decline  from  29  to  25. 

Las  Vegas  showed  a  drop  in  mur- 
ders from  1 16  to  109  last  year,  while 
Reno  had  an  increase  from  10  in  1998 
to  14  in  1999. 

"The  big  cities  are  readying  their 
limit"  in  crime  reduction,  said  James 
Alan  Fox,  a  professor  at  Northeastern 
University  in  Boston.  The  murder 
totals  are  considered  the  most  reliable 
figures  in  the  FBI  report  and  a  leading 
general  indicator  of  crime. 

"The  big  cities  were  the  first  to  go 
up  in  the  1980s,  the  first  to  come  down 
in  the  1990s,"  said  professor  Alfred 
Blumstein  of  Carnegie  Mellon 
University  in  Pittsburgh.  "Now,  hav- 
ing the  lowest  murder  rate  dedine  sug- 
gests they'll  be  the  first  to  stabilize. 
Murders  and  crime  can't  go  down  for- 


TALKS:  Both  sides  cite 
progress;  Jesse  Jackson 
enters  fray  as  mediator 

The  Associated  Press 

After  a  long  day  of  talks  with  the 
Rev.  Jesse  Jackson  as  mediator,  both 
sides  in  the  Los  Angeles  County 
transit  strike  reported  progress. 

The  strike,  which  entered  its  30th 
day  Sunday,  had  appeared  far  from 
resolution  in  recent  days,  with  bus 
drivers  angrily  rejecting  what  man- 
agement termed  its  best  and  final 
offer. 

But  almost  10  hours  of  talks  in 
suburban  Pasadena  ended  at  11:30 


p.m.  Saturday  with  optimistic  com- 
ments from  Jackson,  union  and 
management  officials,  and  Los 
Angeles  Mayor  Richard  Riordan, 
who  sat  in  on  the  meetings. 

■"There's  movement  on  both 
sides.  We're  not  there  yet  but  we're 
going  to  get  there,"  Jackson  said 
shortly  before  talks  ended  for  the 
night.  "We  intend  to  work  together 
to  have  the  buses  rolling  Monday 
morning." 

MTA  spokesman  Marc  Littman 
said  the  gap  between  union  and 
management  narrowed  during  the 
day,  and  United  Transportation 
Union  spokesman  Goldy  Norton 
called  the  talks  "very  constructive." 
The  parties  planned  to  be  back  at 
the  table  at  1  p.m.  Sunday.  Littman 


S«eCIUME,pa9e12 


The  Aisociaied  Press 

Rev.  Jesse  Jackson,  several  striking  MTA  ennployees  anci  sup- 
porters listen  as  LA.  City  Council  nnembers  debate  on  Friday. 


said  the  union  gave  the  MTA  a  coun- 
terproposal Saturday  that  gave  some 
ground  on  work  rules,  and  the  MTA 
planned  to  draft  a  "comprthensive 
proposal"  in  response. 

Riordan  planned  to  review  the 
proposal  before  the  MTA  presented 
it  to  union  representatives  Sunday, 
Littman  said. 

About  4,300  bus  and  rail  opera- 
tors struck  at  one  minute  past  mid- 
night on  Sept.  16,  stranding  some 
450,000  commuters,  most  of  them 
low-income.  The  drivers  oppose  the 
MTA's  proposal  to  change  work 
rules  to  reduce  overtime  costs  and 
increase  the  use  of  part-time  drivers 
in  order  to  save  a  projected  $23  mil- 
lion. 

Each  side  has  accused  the  other  of 
bad-faith  bargaining  to  prolong  the 
strike. 

Jackson  offered  his  services  as 
peacemaker  on  Friday,  at  the 
request  of  Miguel  Contreras,  who 
heads  the  Los  Angeles  County 
Federation  of  Labor,  AFL<:iO. 

Drivers'  salaries  average  $50,000 
a  year,  and  a  handful  make  up  to 
$85,000  a  year  with  overtime, 
according  to  the  MTA. 

Transit  officials  have  offered  dri- 
vers a  retroactive,  three-year  con- 
tract good  until  June  30,  2003,  that 
includes  a  9.3  percent  pay  hike  and 
additional  pension  contributions. 

But  it  also  would  allow  the  MTA 
to  expand  its  use  of  part-time  drivers 
and  the  number  of  bus  runs  in  which 
drivers  are  not  paid  overtime  for  10- 
hour  shifts. 


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Board 

Publishers  of 
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media  at 
UCLA 

announce  their 
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Monday,  Oct  3 
6  p.m.  in 
Kerckhoff  Hall  131 

can  825-2787  for 
agenda  details 


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Monday,  October  16, 2000 


A  new  one  every  day. 


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Monday,  October  16,2000 


Oaiiy  Bruin  Ntws 


■   r 

Women  criticize  lending 
organizations  at  protest 


Opijf  InlHI  RtWI 


Monday,  October  16,2000        'f 


ACTIVISM:  March  was  part 
of  global  movement,  focus 
on  mistreatment,  poverty 


as  they  passed  the  side-by-side  buildings 
of  the  IMF  and  the  World  Bank,  the 
main  lending  institutions  for  poor 
countries.  Activists  in  a  major  new 
movement  against  globally  based  eco- 
nomics contend  the  institutions'  lend- 
ing policies  unfairly  discriminate 
against  the  poor. 

In  front  of  the  World  Bank,  some 
WASHINGTON  -  Thousands  of     women  got  into  a  shouting  match  with 
chanting  women  marched  on  Sunday  .  four  men  protesting  the  event  with  anti- 


By  David  Ho 

The  Associated  Press 


through  downtown  past  the  World 
Bank  and  the  International  Monetary 
Fund  in  a  protest  against  world  poverty 
and  the  mistreatment  of  women. 

Marchers,  whose  circular  route 
began  on  the  grassy  Ellipse  across  from 
the  White  House,  chanted  in  a  cacoph- 
ony of  languages  their  support  for 
equal  rights  for  women  and  their  oppo- 
sition to  domestic  violence. 

Demonstrators  shouted  "Shame!" 


gay  and  anti-lesbian  placards.  "Submit 
to  your  husbands,  you  rebels,"  Ruben 
Israel,  36,  of  Los  Angeles,  yelled  at  the 
marchers  through  a  bullhorn. 

The  Washington  rally,  which 
brought  women  from  around  the 
world,  was  a  culminating  event  of  the 
World  March  of  Women  2000,  which 
began  in  March  in  Geneva. 

See  WOMEN, page  IS 


■^^*"' 


WANTEO: 


Problem -Sol  vt?r? 


--      _  ,  The  Associated  ftess 

On  Sunday,  thousands  of  women  march  through  downtown  Washington  past  the  World  Bank  and 
the  International  Monetary  Fund  to  protest  world  poverty  and  the  mistreatment  of  women. 


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Monday,  October  16, 2000 '      11 


'  •     KAfHERINEOat 

Two  stucients  from  James  Monroe  High  School  conciuct  a  lab      ^ 
experiment  as  part  of  Saturday's  CityLab  program  at  UCLA.-      ,  ■ 


LAB    :';■■■.- :-K^ :■:::} 

From  page  1  -. 

found  knowledge  through  science 
laboratory  experiences  that  are  usual- 
ly unavailable  to  most  students  in 
]  LAUSD. 

/       "This  is  truly  an  innovative  and 
exciting    program.    The    CityLab 
undergraduates  are  extraordinarily 
committed      to 
^  introducing  high  -• '    -^      •     - 

school  students  ^— — ^— 
to  the  excite- 
ment of  scieoce 
research,"  said 
Dr.  Audrey 
Cramer,  direc- 
tor of  the 
Undergraduate 
Research  Center 
for  th<f  life  and 
p  -h  y  s  i  c  a  I 

sciences.  

'   CityLab       • 

UCLA  is  not  the 

first  of  such  programs.  Steve  Yoo,  a 

graduate  of  Massachusetts  Institute 

of  Technology,  modeled   CityLab 

after  a  similar  program  at  Boston 

University. 

After  graduating,  he  wanted  to 
give  back  to  his  community  by  creat- 
ing CityLab  at  UCLA,  where  he  was 
working  at  a  Center  for  Health 
Sciences  laboratory.  ■ 

Yoo  along  with   Bryant   Ng,  a 


UCLA  alumnus  ('00),  established  the 
infrastructure  of  the  current  pro- 
gram. Along  with  the  high  school  out- 
reach component,  the  founders  want- 
ed to  give  teaching  experience  to 
undergraduates. 

"This  is  another  way  to  help 
UCLA  by  linking  the  school  to  the 
community"  Yoo  said. 

In   late    1998,   Yoo   established 

CityLab  UCLA  with  an  initial  pilot 

grant  of  $2,000 

from  the 

Graduate  School 
of  Education 
and  Information 
Studies. 

CityLab 
received  lab 
space,  equip- 
ment and  facility 
support  from  the 
molecular  cell 
and        develop- 

— — mental    biology 

department.  The 

program 

received  this  support  from  Dr.  Lutz 

Birnbaumer  who  is  currently  chair  of 

the  department. 

"We  plan  on  figuring  out  a  way  to 
do  the  same  thing  with  high  school 
biology  curriculum,"  Yoo  said. 

Nine  more  sessions  are  scheduled 
for  the  rest  of  the  year,  with  two  sets 
of  high  school  groups,  of  about  60  stu- 
dents each,  planning  on  attending 
each  session. 


"Work  in  the  lab  is  a 

huge  component  of 

learning  because  of  the 

hands  on  experience." 

Howard  Fan 

CityLab  director       , 


EBOLA 

From  page  5 

Hospital  in  Gulu,  with  seven  new 
patients  admitted  Saturday  alone. 
Ninety  percent  of  Ebola  victims  die, 
according  to  the  World  Health 
Organization. 

While  not  as  deadly  as  HIV.  Ebola 
is  terrifying  because  of  its  speed  and 
how  it  kills.  Within  four  days  of  com- 
ing in  contact  with  the  bodily  fluids  of 
someone  carry- 
ing the  virus,  Hu-      ^ 

like    symptoms      "'~^"^"~"^^"" 

set  in,  followed 

by  vomiting  and 

diarrhea.  Ten  to 

1 5  days  later,  the 

victim     "bleeds 

out"  through  the 

eyes,  nose,  ears 

and  other  bodily 

orifices. 

Ebola      out- 

breaks    usually 

only  last  a  few  weeks  since  the  vic- 
tims die  faster  than  they  are  able  to 
spread  the  virus.  The  Ebola  virus 
then  disappears,  only  to  re-emerge 
later. 

Four  investigators  from  the 
Atlanta-based  Centers  for  Disease 
Control  will  leave Jor  Gulu  either 
Monday  or  Tuesday'fo  confirm  the 
Ugandan  diagnosis,  CDC  spokes- 
woman Barbara  Reynolds  said. 

The  team  was  invited  by  the 
World  Health  Organization  to  help 
determine  the  origin  of  the  outbreak 
and  how  to  contain  it,  she  said. 


According  to  the  World 

Health  Organization, 

the  hemorrhagic 

disease  claims  90 

percent  of  its  victims. 


There  is  no  known  cure  for  Ebola 
and  it  is  not  understood  why  some 
patients  survive.  Scientists  also  do 
not  know  where  the  virus  lives  when 
it  is  not  infecting  humans,  though 
contact  with  monkeys  has  led  to 
many  cases  in  humans. 

WHO  dispatched  two  experts 
Saturday  to  investigate  and  advise 
local  health  authorities  on  how  to 
contain  the  outbreak,  a  WHO 
spokesman  in  Kampala  said. 

Uganda  has  never  before  record- 
ed an  outbreak 
___^^__^      of    Ebola,    but 
there  have  been 
cases     of     the 
closely    related 
Marburg  virus. 
Ebola  was 
named  after  a 
river  in  Congo, 
where     it    was 
first  detected  in 
a  number  of  vil- 
lages in  1976. 
.             .Ebola      first 
worldwide    attention    in 


gained 

Richard  Preston's  1994  best  seller 
"The  Hot  Zone,"  which  recounted 
how  the  virus  turned  up  in  research 
monkeys  in  Reston,  Va.  It  was  also 
the  subject  of  the  1995  fictional  film 
"Outbreak,"  starring  Dustin 
Hoffman. 

The  last  major  Ebola  outbreak 
struck  Kikwit,  Congo,  in  1995,  and 
killed  245  people.  The  last  recorded 
outbreak  was  in  Gabon  in  February 
1997,  when  10  people  died.  Sudan 
and  the  Ivory  Coast  have  also  had 
outbreaks. 


1 


INSQNS  ♦  MAY 


THIS  IS  WHhRE  IT  GETS  GOOD 


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' »■     IB )^>> i<    Mim       » 


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CRIME 

From  page  6 

ever." 

Nationwide,  the  rate  and  the  num- 
ber of  all  seven  major  violent  and 
property  crimes  declined,  despite  an 
increase  in  the  U.S.  population,  the 
FBI  reported. 

The  national  total  for  the  seven 
serious  crimes  reported  to  17,000 
police  agencies  around  the  natiop  was 
11,635,149  in  1999,  down  20  percent 
since  1990.  The  number  of  reported 
crimes  was  down  10  percent  in  the 
West,  7  percent  in  the  Northeast  and 
Midwest  and  5  percent  in  the  South. 
The  totals  were  down  7  percent  in 
cites  and  rural  areas  and  8  percent  in 
suburbs. 


Nationwide,  reported 

serious  crimes 
dropped  by  7  percent. 


Among  violent  crimes,  the  popula- 
tion-adjusted rate  for  murder  fell  8.5 
percent;  for  robbery,  8.4  percent;  for 
aggravated  assault,  6.2  percent;  and 
for  rape,  4.3  percent. 

Among  property  crimes,  the  rate 
for  burglary  fell  10  percent;  for  auto 
theft,  7.7  percent,  and  for  larceny- 
theft,  5.7  percent. 

The  overall  decline  extended  a 
trend  begun  in  1992  that  is  now 
almost  three  times  longer  than  the  sec- 
ond-longest decline,  the  three  years 
from  1982  through  1984.  FBI  records 
go  back  through  I960. 

Attorney  General  Janet  Reno  said, 
"American  families  are  safer  today 
than  they  have  been  in  a  generation. ... 
But  we  cannot  rest."  She  advocated 
more  work  to  ensure  that  the  500,000 
Americans  to  be  released  from  prison 
this  year  end  up  in  jobs  rather  than 
back  behind  bars. 

President  Clinton  attributed  crime 
declines  to  administration  legislation 
giving  local  communities  "better  tools 
...  including  100,000  more  police  for 
our  streets,  stronger  gun  laws  and 
smart  prevention." 

Republicans  in  Congress  credited 
local  efforts  and  a  GOP-sponsored 
law  they  said  induced  27  states  to 
impose  longer  prison  terms  in 
exchange  for  federal  money  to  build 
prisons. 

Academic  experts  credited  both 
parties'  favorite  anti<rime  remedies 
but  also  factors  beyond  control  of 
politicians,  like  the  aging  of  baby 
boomers  past  crime-prone  years. 
They  also  cited  the  decline  of  crack 
cocaine  and  the  violent  gangs  that 
sold  it,  an  increase  in  community- 
based  prevention  programs,  police 
targeting  of  illegal  weapons  and  a  bet- 
ter economy. 

Fox  and  Blumstein  found  math 
problems  and  mistakes  in  the  FBI 
report. 

The  FBI  said  the  lifetime  risk  of 
being  murdered  has  plunged  since 
1978:  One  out  of  every  240 
Americans  alive  in  1997  would  be 
murdered,  down  from  one  out  of 
every  157  alive  in  1978. 

But  the  FBI  also  said  the  risk  for 
older  black  Americans  declined  by 
130  percent.  "A  decrease  of  100  per- 
cent brings  you  down  to  zero  mur- 
ders," Blumstein  noted.  "Over  100 
percent  means  negative  murders,  and 
there's  not  a  lot  of  resurrection 
around." 

The  FBI's  James  Noonan 
acknowledged:  "It  should  say  the  risk 
was  130  percent  higher  in  1978;  the 
decline  since  is  around  50  percent." 

Fox  pointed  out  "a  horribly  mis- 
leading example  of  rounding"  in  the 
FBI's  statement  that  firearms  rose 
from  accounting  for  6  of  10  murders 
to  7  of  10  -  which  seems  like  a  16.6 
percent  increase.  The  unrounded  rise 
was  from  6.48  to  6.52  -  "a  statistical- 
ly insignificant  0  4  percent  increase," 
Fox  said. 


DalyBnilillnM 


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ANIMALS 

From  page  3 

he  could  remember,  decided  to  con- 
tinue the  tradition  in  college. 

Boyd  said  his  cats  Luna  and 
Britney,  named  for  teenage  singing 
sensation  Britney  Spears,  have  per- 
sonalities of  their  own. 

"Britney  is  a  very  do-what-you- 
want  type  of  cat,  meaning  nothing 
will  disturb  her,"  said  Boyd.  "Luna 
will  run  out  of  the  way  if  you  gel  near 
her." 

Having  pets  in  his  apartment 
means  taking  responsibility  for  their 
health  and  happiness,  he  said.  ,.7  -  ' 
At  home  "my  parents  took  care  of 
them,"  he  said.  "Now,  I  have  to 
change  their  litter  and  make  sure  not 
to  leave  them  alone  too  long." 

Boyd  also  said  he  takes  his  cats  for 
yearly  check-ups,  which  usually  cost 
$40,  and  makes  sure  they  receive 
good  food,  which  can  cost  $15  a  bag. 
Unlike  having  a  dog,  cats  require 
less  maintenance  and  attention,  he 
said. 

"I  used  to  play  with  Britney  a  little 
more,"  Boyd  said.  "Now  that  there 
are  two  of  them,  they  just  play  among 
themselves.  I  don't  really  worry 
about  them." 

In  addition  to  the  cats,  Boyd  also 
houses  fish  and  a  rat,  which  was  given 
to  him  by  a  friend. 

"The  rat  was  supposed  to  be  used 
for  food,"  he  said.  "Lucky  for  him, 
the  snake  died." 

Originally,  Boyd  worried  that  a  rat 
living  with  two  cats  meant  finding  a 
headless  body  in  the  apartment  one 
day. 

"Britney  used  to  sit  on  top  of  the 
cage,  but  after  a  while,  she  realized 
that  lid  was  not  coming  off,"  he  said. 
"Cats  get  rather  bored  of  the  same 
thing." 

Some  people's  pets,  however,  are 
food  for  other  students'  pets. 

Sahar  Masoudi,  a  third-year  physi- 
ological science  student,  feeds  her 
two-month  old  ball  python,  Jake  the 
snake,  a  mouse  once  a  week. 

"I  feed  it  to  him  live,"  she  said. 
"The  snake  will  see  it  and  he's  so  fast 
that  I  don't  think  the  mouse  even  real- 
izes what's  happening." 

Although  she's  only  had  him  for  a 
short  time,  Masoudi  said  she  feels 
comfortable  around  her  snake. 

"My  mom's  had  a  few  of  them,  so 
I've  had  to  deal  with  them,"  she  said. 
"I  wanted  a  snake  that  I  could  hang 
with  and  Jake's  real  chill  with  peo- 
ple." 

Like  Boyd,  Masoudi  said  her  pet 
requires  little  maintenance. 
Currently,  Jake,  who  cost  $60,  lives  in 
a  30-gallon  tank  but  will  need  a  larger 
living  space  because  he  may  grow  to 
be  5  feet  long. 

Oftentimes,  certain  performers 
like  to  use  snakes  similar  to  Jake,  who 
curi  around  people's  arms  and  neck, 
in  their  acts. 

"I  think  ball  pythons  arc  popular 
with  dancers  and  strippers," 
Masoudi  said.  "The  woman  at  the 
(pet)  store  said  they  get  pretty  inter- 
esting customers  looking  for  snakes." 
Jake,  according  to  Masoudi,  has 
already  tasted  a  bit  of  show  business. 
At  a  recent  party,  Jake  was  the  center 
of  attention. 

For  Masoudi's  roommates,  living 
with  a  snake  was  a  learning  experi- 
ence. 

Her  roommate,  Reha  Modi,  a 
third-year  sociology  student,  said  her 
fear  of  snakes  became  less  prevalent 
after  living  with  Jake. 

"It's  all  psychological.  People 
think  they're  slimy,  but  they're  really 
not,"  Modi  said.  "I  just  came  to  real- 
ize that  it's  not  going  to  hurt  me." 

For  most  students,  keeping  pets 
relieves  stress  and  gives  them  a  differ- 
ent kind  of  companion. 

Boyd  said  his  cats  help  relieve 
stress. 

"It's  soothing  to  hear  them  purr." 
he  said.  "Seriously,  you'd  want  to  be  a 
cat.  They  spend  up  to  60  percent  of 
their  liVcs  sleeping.  It's  such  a  lazy 
life." 


The  Associated  Piess 

Msgr.  Michael  Diaz,  rear  center, 
gives  a  mass  at  a  Navel  Chapel. 


SHIP 

From  page  5 

Germany  on  Sunday  have  flown  to 
the  U.S.  military's  Landstuhl 
Regional  Medical  Center  to  see 
them.  The  most  seriously  injured,  a 
man  in  his  20s,  was  suffering  from 
multiple  fractures  in  his  legs,  ankles, 
feet  and  wrists,  as  well  as  abdominal 
injuries,  doctors  said. 

"Wc  hope  he  will  recover  from  his 
wounds,  but  he  has  been  extremely 
injured  and  anything  can  happen 
with  this  type  of  extensive  injuries," 
said  Thomas  Burkhard,  a  senior 
Navy  doctor  at  Landstuhl. 

Sunday  morning,  one  of  the  17 
killed  in  the  Cole  explosion,  Seaman 
Recruit  Cherone  Gunn,  was  remem- 
bered during  a  memorial  service  at 
the  Basilica  of  Saint  Mary  of  the 
Immaculate  Conception  in  Norfolk, 
the  same  church  where  he  was  chris- 
tened 22  years  earlier. 

Gunn's  parents,  fiancee  and  three 
brothers  were  joined  by  members  of 
the  congregation,  who  provided  hugs 
and  offers  of  assistance. 

"When  you're  in  pain  like  that  you 
think  you  need  a  shot  of  cognac,  but 
what  I  really  needed  was  a  shot  of  the 
church,"  said  Gunn's  father,  Louge 
Gunn. 

Since  Gunn's  mother,  Mona, 
heard  the  news  of  her  son's  death  on 
Thursday,  friends  from  the  church, 
colleagues  and  relatives  had  flooded 
the  family's  home  with  messages  of 
support. 

"There's  been  a  steady  flow  of  peo- 
ple in  our  house  from  8  or  9  a.m.  until 
the  evening,"  Mona  Gunn  said.  "I 
went  up  (to  bed)  at  about  9  p.m.  yes- 
terday and  there  must  have  been  30 
or  40  people  downstairs." 

Louge  Gunn,  a  retired  chief  with 
the  Navy,  stressed  the  pride  he  felt  for 
his  son,  who  enlisted  in  the  Navy  in 
January. 

"He  was  a  hero,"  Louge  Gunn 
saidi  "He  gave  his  life  for  his  country, 
for -something  that  he  loved  -  the 
k  was  a  sailor,  a  true  sailor. 
:  was  fulfilled." 


lor  -iome 
Nafv.  H( 
Hislfe  w 


WOMEN 

From  page  8 

The  movement's  international  del- 
egation planned  to  meet  Monday 
with  IMF  and  Worid  Bank  officials 
to  seek  greater  debt  relief  and 
improved  lending  for  poor  countries. 
The  same  group  will  meet  with  U.N. 
Secretary  General  Kofi  Annan  on 
Tuesday  to  present  him  with  petitions 
signed  by  2  million  people  seeking 
and  end  to  violence  against  women. 

"This  march  is  against  the  champi- 
ons of  patriarchy  that  deny  the 
human,  democratic  and  social  wel- 
fare of  women,"  said  Ramcsh 
Sepehrrad,  spokeswoman  for  the 
National  Committee  of  Women  for  a 
Democratic  Iran. 


SwlWMai,iMg<l6 


Daily  Bniin  News 


Monday,  October  16, 2000        15' 


Paid  advertisement 


;,  Dear  University  Student. 

Wi(h  many  of  you  back  in  school  after 
summer  break.  I  would  like  to  take  a  moment 
10  share  with  you  soine  of  my  thoughts  oii 
college  life  and  cduca'tion.  As  both  a  college 
professor  and  a  Christian  minister.  1  have  a 
special  place  in  my  hean  for  college  students 
and  recognize  the  strategic  moment  this 
period  of  time  in  your  life  represents.  Permit 
me,  if  you  will,  to  share  some  advice  about 
education  and  learning  that  1  have  come  10 
aft'inn. 

First,  emhrace  lite  eJiKaiitmal pnnrss  for 
all  it's  wiinh.  The  best  thing  your  college 
years  can  give  you  is  a  lifelong  love  of 
learning.  Approach  learning  the  way  you 
would  approach  a  great  movie  or  delicious 
meal.  Salivateover  your  prospects!  Indulge 
your  quest  for  knowledge!  Read  good  books 
not  because  youre  going  to  be  tested  on  them 
(a  mindset  particularly  afflicting 
undergraduates)  but  because  of  the  hidden 
riches  they  contain.  There  is  a  T-shirt  that 
reads  "So  many  books,  so  little  time."  Once 
you  learn  to  embrace  that  attitude,  you  will 
begin  the  prixess  of  education. 

Second,  leant  lo  think  of  eJiicaliim  as 
queslioiiiiiit  rather  than  as  irainin^.  There 
are  two  very  different  models  of  education  at 
work  today  One  model  emphasizes  "know- 
how."  the  other  emphasizes  "how-we-know. ' 
One  emphasizes  knowledge  as  a  thing  to  be 
marketed  and  "used,"  the  other  emphasizes 
knowledge  as  a  means  to  personal  growth  and 
liberation.  You  will  aiguably  change  careers 
several  times  in  your  lifetime.  Leaniing  to 


ACTORS  /  MODELS 

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M<  tmlHmtfa  (tf  Adok  Sysnm  Incopnatcd 


think  clearly  and  critically  (which  dws  not 
■  mean  negatively)  transcends  every  sphere  of 
life  and  prepares  you  to  succeed  in  whatever 
career  path  you  choose   At  best, education 
should  make  you  a  better  person,  not  just  a 
better  clinician. 

Closely  related  to  the  above  is  a  third  piece 
of  advice:  ChiMixe  a  major  that  \oii  love 
rather  than  a  major  that  will  hriiift  >"/«  the 
most  money.  Here.  I  realize,  1  am  swimming 
upstream.  Most  college  students.  I  dare  say. 
are  in  school  for  the  purpose  of  securing  a 
well-paying  job.  "What  are  you  going  to  do 
with  that?"  is  a  question  often  posed  to  the 
prospective  History  or  Music  major  by  well 
meaning  friends  and  parents  concerned  with 
job  prospects    But  the  question  is  misguided 
as  it  is  practical.  Personally.  I  would  rather 
spend  my  life  doing  something  I  truly  enjoy 
and  make  a  little  less  money  than  doing 
something  I  tolerate  at  best  and  make 
substantially  more.  Please  don't 
misunderstand  me  here.  Money  is  importatit. 
but  is  it  important  enough  to  dictate  your  life 
choices? 

Fourth,  respect  your  professors,  hut 
rememl>er  that  they  are  human,  too.  When 
you're  an  undergraduate,  you  have  a 
tendency  to  put  your  professors  on  a  pedestal, 
to  think  that  they  pretty  much  know 
everything  abt)ut  anything.  But.  I  assure  you. 
we  do  not!  Even  today  1  am  amazed  at  how 
uninformed  and  uncritical  professors  can  be 
outside  their  field  of  expertise.  (One  may  be 
an  expert  in  Biology  or  Chemistry  but  have  a 
very  naive  view  of  religion,  for  example).    - 


Respect  your  professors,  but  don't  idolize 
ihcin. 

Lastly, //W  u  />/ate  of  worship  tlutt  will 
encouraftt,  not  Jiscourage.  sincere  and 
honest  questioninx.  Too  many  churches,  for 
example,  set  up  lal.se  alternatives  and  then 
force  you  to  chm)se  between  them  ("creation  " 
verses  'evolution."  for  example).  If  you  are 
of  the  Chnstian  faith,  find  a  church  that  will 
expand  your  fuiih.  not  constrict  it;  that  will 
enlarge  your  horizon,  not  obstruct  it;  that  will 
appreciate  your  education,  not  bi'liitle  it.  It  is 
a  wonderfully  challenging  quest  you're  on, 
and  our  congregation  would  love  to  help  you 
get  there 

Westwrntd  Hills  Christian  Church 

lOHOH  Le  C<mle  Avenue 

(comer  of  Le  Conte  and  HilKaril) 

Worship:  Sundays,  10  A.M. 

Adult  Bible  Study:  Sundays  9  A.M. 

Tuesdays?  P.M. 


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WOMEN 

From  page  IS 

Other  speakers  from  the  United 
States  had  a  political  focus. 

"In  three  weeks  and  a  few  days  we 
will  carry  this  energy,  this  enthusiasm 
and  these  issues  to  the  voting  booths 
Of  this  country  to  elect  a  government 
that  will  support  our  equality."  said 
Patricia  Ireland,  president  of  the 
National  Organization  for  Women, 
the  lead  organizer  of  the  march. 

Ireland  also  condemned  the  treat- 
ment of  women  in  the  war-ravaged 
regions  of  the  world. 

"Our  prayers  and  our  spirit  goes 
out  to  those  in  the  Middle  East,  espe- 
cially the  women  and  the  children," 
she  said. 

The  cheering  crowd  held  signs  sup- 
porting a  range  of  issues  such  as 
defense  of  abortion  rights  and 
protests  of  female  circumcision,  or 
female  genital  mutilation. 

Molly  Mattessich,  21,  said  she 
came  from  Boston  because  she 
empathized  with  the  condition  of 
women  around  the  world.  "It  was 
important  for  me  to  come,  because 
there  are  so  many  women  around  the 
world  who  can't  speak  for  them- 
selves," she  said. 

Some  men  joined  in.  Dan  Nooter, 
23,  of  Washington,  DC,  spent  his 
day  volunteering  at  the  march. 
"Violence  is  something  that  men 
have  a  responsibility  for  ending,"  he 
said.  "But  I'm  not  coming  out  here  as 
a  man.  I'm  coming  out  here  as  some- 
one who  is  concerned  about  ending 
violence  and  poverty." 

Mardiers  gathered  at  the  southern 
tip  of  the  Ellipse,  part  of  the  National 
Mall,  to  prepare  for  the  march,  then 
returned  for  speeches. 


FLOOD 

From  page  1  ' 

"It's  important  to  provide  help  in 
a  timely  manner,"  said  Pham. 
"Starvation  and  disease  will  face  the 
victims  long  after  the  floods-recede." 
The  money  VSU  raises  will  go  to 
the  Union  of  Vietnamese  Student 
Associations  of  Southern  California, 
which  distributes  funds  to  flood  vic- 
tims mainly  through  religious  organi- 
zations, according  to  Nguyen. 

Aside  from  tabling  on  Bruin  Walk, 
VSU  members  hope  to  reach  out  to 
students  through  class  presentations. 
"We  have  sent  some  representa- 
tives to  speak  at  South  East  Asian 
studies  classes,  as  well  as  Vietnamese 
language  classes,"  said  Nguyen. 

Nguyen  also  announced  a  joint 
fund-raising  effort  between  UCLA 
and  use. 

"This  week,  we  are  co-program- 
ming a  fund-raising  dinner  with 
use's  Vietnamese  Student 
Association  and  coordinating  a  VSA 
alliance  dance  to  send  proceeds  to 
Hood  victims,"  said  Nguyen. 

Last  November,  VSU  members 
from  UCLA  and  Cal  State  Fullerton 
held  a  dance  which  raised  $2,500  for 
flood  relief  In  addition,  the  group 
from  UCLA  raised  $700  through 
other  relief  efforts  similar  to  those 
this  year. 

This  week,  all  30  VSU  members  at 
UCLA  are  carrying  boxes  to  collect 
spare  change  from  donors. 
Donations  are  also  being  accepted  at 
the  South  East  Asian  Campus 
Learning  Education  and  Retention 
ofTicc,  located  in  the  Men's  Gym. 

Hop  Tran,  director  of  the  SEA 
CLEAR  office,  urged  the  communi- 
ty to  assist  VSU  with  the  relief 
eff^orts. 

"We  are  relying  on  the  generosity 
of  the  UCLA  community  to  make  a 
diff"ercnce  in  people's  lives,"  Tran 
said.  "Every  little  bit  helps." 


With  reports  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  ser- 
vices. For  more  information,  e-mail 
VSU  at  vsu9ucla.edu  or  go  to 
Mmmriiciawsu.! 


Mtq- 


\ 


PROPOSITION 

From  page  1 

'  overnight.  r,iU ''; 

"While  I'd  support  an  experimen- 
tal voucher  program  in  selected  urban 
:  areas,  we  don't  yet  have  enough  infor- 
^mation  to  know  if  it  will  work  on  a 
large  scale,"  he  said. 

But  the  two  sides  are  determined. 
.  According  to  Calvoter.org,  a  non-par- 
;  tisan  political  information  Web  site, 
they  have  spent  more  than  $35  million 
attempting  to  sway  California  voters. 
The  California  Teachers  Association 
is  the  opposition's  biggest  donor  at 
close  to  $18  million,  according  to 
Calvoter.org. 

In  support  of  the  proposition, 
Davis  argued  against  the  belief  that 
the  money  won't  prove  to  be  enough 
for  poorer  families  to  send  their  chil- 
dren to  private  schools. 


"Prop.  38  will  cost  $3 
billion  per  year." 

Jeremy  Prillwitz 

Spokesman  for  No  on  38 


"And  we  don't  need  teachers  telling 
us  what  we  can  and  cannot  afford," 
she  said. 

But  Prillwitz  .said  the  facts  purport- 
ed by  Yes  on  38  simply  don't  pan  out. 
"$4,000  per  student  is  not  an  incen- 
tive for  private  schools,"  he  said.  "It's 
bad  policy  and  a  false  promise  to 
daim  you  are  providing  a  choice  when 
in  reality  you're  not." 

Proponents  of  Proposition  38 
counter  that  while  public  schools  may 
lose  funds,  there  will  be  a  correspond- 
ing decline  in  student  enrollment. 

Limited  voucher  experiments  in 
cities  like  Milwaukee  and  Washington 
D.C  proved  popular  with  inner-city 
parents,  and  were  instituted  because 
they  were  unhappy  with  the  quality  of 
education  their  children  received  as 
compared  with  those  in  private 
school. 

Frank  Baxter,  an  L.A.  business- 
man, donated  $25,000  to  38  Yes 
because  he  wants  to  see  poor  children 
have  the  same  choice  he  had  when 
they  were  growing  up. 

"1  have  a  passionate  desire  to  make 
sure  our  underprivileged  youth  get  a 
chance  to  participate  in  the  American 
dream,"  Baxter  said. 

But  Prillwitz  said  the  proposition 
doesn't  necessarily  ensure  the  equality 
and  opportunity  proponents  argue 
will  be  the  result. 

"Prop  38  will  allow  private  voucher 
schools  to  discriminate  for  any  rea- 
son," he  said.  "Whether  it's  by  their 
ability  to  pay,  religion,  gender  or  acad- 
emic ability,  it's  the  school  that  will 
have  the  choice,  not  parents." 

3Tiough  the  California  Department 
ofjtducation  cannot  take  an  official 
pciition  on  a  proposition,  CDE 
spokesman  Doug  Stone  painted  an 
ever  worse  picture. 

"Someone  could  open  up  a  school 
for  skinheads,  and  there  would  be  no 
accountability  to  stop  that  from  tak- 
ing place,"  he  said. 

But  Davis  said  opponents  of  38  Yes 
are  misinterpreting  the  facts.  She 
added  that  parents  are  aware  of  pri- 
vate schools'  practice  of  being  selec- 
tive, and  that  they  don't  want  them  to 
change  as  long  as  they  have  access 
through  the  vouchers. 

"When  people  talk  about  private 
schools,  they  think  of  Ivy  League  type 
institutions,"  she  said.  "But  we  have  a 
lot  of  Catholic  schools  here  in  the 
inner  city  that  run  the  gamut  in  terms 
of  tuition  and  academic  standards." 

Grogger  said  it's  puzzling  that 
voucher  experiments  implemented 
thus  far  have  netted  a  high  degree  of 
parental  satisfaction,  but  only  small 
gains  in  test  scores. 

"Anyone  who  says  either  side  is 
fundamentally  wrong  is  incorrect,"  he 

I       ■  11^—  ■  I  ■       ■!  I 


said.  "That's  just  blind  advocacy.' 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Monday,  October  16,2000       17 


44tti  Annual  School  of  Medicine  Lecture 

ig  H.  Robert  HorWtz,  Pli.P.-__ 

Professor  of  Biology,  li/IIT    ? 
Howard  Hughes  IMedicai  Institute  Investigator 

^Genetic  Control  ofApoptosis  Iritaenorhabditis  Elegans" 

>  October  24, 2000 

NPI  Auditorium  (C8-1 83) 

;  4:00  -  5:30  p.m.  -  Lecture 

October  25, 2000 
%  1 3-1 05  CHS,  1 0:00  - 1 1 :00  a.m. 

Open  Forum  for  Graduate  Students, 
Medical  Students  and  Postdoctoral  Fellows 

For  Open  Forum,  please  RSVP  via  e-mail  to  REncamacion@mednet.ucla.edu  by  October  20,  2000 
^____^_ Continental  breakfast  will  be  provided  with  RSVP.  : ' :. 


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Tuesday      > 

Bruin  Republicans 
take  on  the  Bruin 
Democrats 

Monday,  October  16, 2000 


vtewpoJnt@medid.ucla.edu 


View  on  the  We^^ 

See  aU  this  and  • 

more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's  • 

Website:  • 

www.dailybruin.uda.edu  I 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Monday,  October  16,2000       19 


Gore  demonstrates  abilities  as  master  debater 


DEBATES:  Emphasis  on 
use  of 'fuzzy  math'  helps 
Bush  avoid  real  issues 

Hello  and  welcome  to  another 
exciting  Monday  morning 
here  in  beautiful  downtown 
Westwood  as  we  gear  up  to  analyze 
another  confrontation  between  two 
battle-hardened  opponents,  Al  Gore 
and  George  W. 
Bush  today  on 
"Debate  2000: 
RAW  is  WAR." 

I'm  your 
host,  commenta- 
tor Doug  Lief, 
and  we'll  be  tak- 
ing a  look  at  the 
winners  and 
losers  in  this 
week's  debate. 
With  me  in  the 
studio  as  always 
is  my  conserva- 
tive colleague  Douglas  Lief  (no  rela- 
tion to  me  of  course)  and  as  always. 
Trivial  Pursuit  champion  Dennis 
Miller. 

Let's  take  a  look  at  the  opening  20 
minutes  of  the  Boston  debate,' shall 
we?  Now  Douglas,  Gore  spent  an 
awful  amount  of  time  talking 
specifics  on  the  numbers  of  both  his 
tax  cut,  and  Bush's  tax  cut.  Do  you 
think  Bush  did  an  adequate  job  of  dis- 
pelling Gore's  claim  that  most  of  the 


See  UEF,  page  20 


Lief  is  a  third-year  psychology  and 
English  student  who  has  fewer  multiple 
personalities  than  this  column  suggests. 
Contact  them  at  dlief@ucla.edu. 


Concern  for  nature  needs  bipartisan  participation  I  Coining 


ENVIRONMENT:  CiUgroup 
project  threatens  culture, 
farmland  in  Yangtze  area 


By  Roger  Aramayo 

Environmental  problems  are 
issues  that  concern  everyone.  Wc  all 
breathe  the  earth's  air  and  drink  its 
water.  Why  can't  wc  all  be  con- 
cerned enough  to  secure  clean  air 
and  clean  water,  if  not  for  our- 
selves, then  for  our  children?  As 
students,  we  must  ask  ourselves, 
"What  kind  of  world  will  we  inher- 
it?" Indeed,  students  have  always 
been  at  the  forefront  of  reform  and 
activism. 

It's  all  too  easy  to  think  of  envi- 
ronmental issues  as  the  exclusive 
province  of  liberals.  Truth  is,  there 
is  no  rule  that  says  you  must  draw 
up  your  opinions  based  on  party 
lines.  Once  you  do  so,  you  don't 
allow  your  mind  to  properly  consid- 
er real  world  problems  because  the 


Aramayo  is  a  fourth-year  political  sci- 
ence student 


solution  might  fall  under  a  "liberal 
agenda"  or  be  a  "republican  idea." 

Why  is  it  that  we  all  enjoy  the 
planet,  yet  people  seem  to  think 
that  the  environment  is  some  issue 
that  exists  only  in  the  minds  of  liber- 
als, Al  Gore  or  so  called  "trec-hug- 
gers"? 

It  is  imperative  that  we  get  out  of 
our  self-fortifications  and  meet  tp 
discuss  those  issues  that  concern  us 
all.  What  issue  bears  more  rele- 
vance to  both  sides  of  the  political 
coin  than  human  well-being? 

The  crusade  for  environmental 
issues  is  a  quest  for  the  well-being  of 
everyone  on  the  planet. 

That  is  why  all  those  who  are 
truly  concerned  about  the  air  and 
the  water  around  us  should  protest 
Citigroup  and  its  corporate  entities 
so  that  we  may  put  an  end  to  their 
manipulation  of  both  nature  and 
the  truth 

Corporations  are  an  internation- 
al endangerment.  Citigroup,  for 
example,  threatens  the  environment 
in  the  United  Slates  and  abroad. 
People  may  be  familiar  with 
Citigroup  through  Citibank  or  its 
investment  leg,  Solomon  Smith 


Barney. 

Since  1994,  Citicorp  and  the 
Chinese  Development  Bank  have 
funded  the  Three  Gorge  Dam  pro- 
ject in  China.  This  mega-project, 
when  completed,  will  end  up  cost- 
ing $72  billion. 

In  order  to  fund  the  project, 
Citigroup  has  to  ignore  some  pretty 
important  concerns  as  expressed  by 
the  US  Export  Bank:  "Protection  of 
ecological  resources  and  preserva- 
tion of  endangered  species  poten- 
tially affected  by  the  project;  the 
environmental  and  socioeconomic 
impacts  associated  with  the  pro- 
posed resettlement  of  up  to  1.3  mil- 
lion people  to  be  displaced  by  the 
reservoir;  and  the  protection  of  cul- 
tural resources  affected  by  the  pro- 
ject." 

The  Three  Gorge  Dam  will  flood 
and  scour  the  Yangtze  river,  sub- 
merging 13  cities,  140  towns,  1,352 
villages,  657  factories  and  most 
importantly  75,000  acres  of  farm- 
land. The  obvious  result  is  that  half 
of  those  displaced  will  be  rural 
farmers. 

Anyone  who  has  read  "The 
Grapes  of  Wrath"  can  guess  what 


happens  next.  Those  subsistence 
farmers  displaced  by  the  Dam  will 
have  to  largely  fend  for  themselves 
as  there  are  no  ready  jobs  waiting  to 
accommodate  them. 

An  underclass  of  beggars  and 
sweatshop  workers  will  be  created 
out  of  those  who  survive.  Proud 
farmers  who  were  once  indepen- 
dent and  happy  will  now  be  forced 
to  carve  out  a  meager  existence  in 
the  cities  where  they  will  most  likely 
face  hatred  and  anger  from  those 
workers  already  ensconced  there. 

As  if  that  wasn't  bad  enough,  the 
Dam  threatens  the  White  Dolphin 
(or  Baiji  River  Dolphin)  with 
extinction.  Once  6,000  in  number 
around  1950,  today  their  numbers 
have  decreased  to  less  than  100.  The 
river,  as  a  result  of  the  flooding,  will 
most  likely  divert  the  river  away 
from  a  semi-natural  reserve  meant 
to  protect  the  already  endangered 
animal. 

How  could  any  conservative 
abide  the  destruction  of  an  environ- 
ment, the  displacement  of  millions 
of  people  and  the  killing  of  an 


QaAwith 
GhanoBlor 
Camesale 

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U.S.  turns  blind  eye  on  Palestine    Jews  need  mutual  respect,  peace 


CONFLICT:  Israeli  tactics  toward 
Palestinians  need  to  be  punished 
despite  being  Holocaust  victims 


By  Michel  Chaghourt 

ft  has  become  a  rather  tired  and  overused 
cliche  that  Jewish  people  all  over  are  helpless 
victims  in  a  hostile  world.  One  need  look  only 
at  the  long  list  of  Jewish  notaries  to  realize 
i  that  in  the  United  States,  and  in  the  rest  of  the 
.  V  world,  Jewish  people  contribute  greatly  to  the 
■    global  community. 

We  must,  however,  always  remember  that 
no  matter  how  integrated  or  accepted  any 
group  of  people  may  seem  to  be,  we  must 
always  guard  against  racial  hatred  and  vio- 
lence. Having  said  all  that,  it  is  high  time  to 
chastise  Israel  for  its  disproportionate  use  of 
force  against  Palestinian  rioters  in  the  occu- 
pied territories  and  Israeli  Arabs  who  no 
longer  wish  to  be  treated  as  second-class  citi- 
zens.   "  si,: 

By  now,  everyone  has  seen  images  of 
Muhammed  al-Durah,  the  12-year-old  boy 
who  was  killed  in  a  crossfire  and  has  come  to 
represent  the  gross  asymmetry  in  firepower 
between  Palestinians  and  Israelis. 

Such  accidental  deaths  are  tragedies  that 
should  never  occur.  But  when  bullets  are  fly- 
ing in  both  directions,  accidents  like  this  are 
bound  to  happen  (for,  surely,  no  person  - 
Israeli  or  Palestinian  -  would  deliberately  kill 
a  12-year-old  boy  cowering  in  fear).  Indeed,  I 
fully  underftand  (not  agree,  mind  you)  that 
Israelis  "need"  to  use  live  ammunition  and 
"rubber"  bullets  (steel  bullets  that  are  wrapped 
in  a  thin  layer  of  rubber)  to  disperse  large 
crowds  of  people  who  are  throwing  rocks. 

I  do  protest,  and  you  should  too,  at  the  use 
of  tanks,  helicopters,  gunships  and  snipers 
by  Israeli  "defense"  forces  to  disperse  riot- 
ers and.destroy  Palestinian  authority 
buildings. 

The  statistics  are  telling:  nearly  100  ,  ; 
people  are  dead,  the  vast  majority  of 
them  Palestinian.  Don't  think  that  ' 

this  is  the  only  time  that  Israel  has 
reacted  with  inappropriate  force. 
The  most  galling  example  in  recent 
times  happened  about  three  years 
ago  at  a  U.N.  compound  based  in 
Qana,  Lebanon.  Some  800  people 
sought  shelter  there  from  the  fight- 
ing between  Hezbollah  and  Israeli 
forces.  As  many  of  you  may  remem- 
ber, 102  of  them  died,  and  hundreds 
more  of  them  were  injured  by  Israeli 
anti-personnel  mortar  fire. 

Although  to  this  day,  the  Israelis 


have  claimed  it  was  an  error,  the  U.N.  found 
this  to  be  highly  unlikely.  Amnesty 
International  went  a  step  further,  concluding 
after  a  separate  investigation  that  the  Israelis 
deliberately  attacked  the  U.N.  compound  at 
Qana.  Why  the  Israelis  would  do  such  a  horrif- 
ic thing  is  beyond  even  my  comprehension. 

Most  Israelis  that  I  have  met  and  befriend- 
ed are,  for  the  most  part,  kind  and  caring  peo- 
ple, just  like  any  other  group  of  people.         "^ 

The  blood-letting  must  stop,  the  blaming 
must  stop.  For  the  first  time  in  my  life,  I  was 
nearly  brought  to  tears  by  the  news  wires.  Too 
many  people  are  dying,  because  they  desire  a 
life  slightly  better  than  the  one  they  have  now. 
They  live  in  refugee  camps  where  their  main 
source  of  income,  embarrassingly  enough,  is 
building  gleaming  new  homes  for  Israeli  "set- 
tlers," and  where  the  desire  for  a  homeland  is 
in  stark  contrast  with  the  economic  realities  of 
unemployment. 

ft  is  a  pity  to  see  that  Palestinians  have  been 
completely  forsaken  by  the  United  States  in 


PALESTINE:  Differences,  history 
must  be  overcome  by  opposing 
sides  to  break  cycle  of  violence 


..  c>' 


SeeaU6H0UU,pjig«22 


ByJustinLcv 

After  likening  fsfstei'y  leaders  to  Nazis  and 
its  policies  to  lies,  it's  interesting  that  Fadi 
Amer's  article  ("Extreme  actions  inflicted  on 
'frustrated'  culture,"  Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint, 
Oct.  1 1 )  still  calls  for  peace  and  mutual 
respect.  But  mutual  respect  entails  two  sides  of 
a  story  with  all  the  facts  on  the  table.  This  is 
the  other  side  of  the  story. 

I  find  the  comparison  of  Israeli  leaders  to 
Nazis  particulaHy  despicable.  Such  preposter- 
ous claims  serv'e  only  to  reduce  the  credibility 
of  and  sympathy  for  many  legitimate 
Palestinian  claims.  What  Amer  fails  to  men- 
tion in  his  article,  though,  is  that  the 
Palestinian  population  continues  to  teach  and 


Lev  is  a  fourth-year  business  economics  student. 


Chaghouri   is  a   third-year  political 
science  student. 


PRESS  POUND 


perpetuate  a  systematic  hatred  of  Jews.       ' 

To  quote  a  children's  textbook  currently 
used  in  areas  controlled  by  the  Palestinian 
authority:  "One  must  beware  of  the  Jews,  for 
they  are  treacherous  and  disloyal."  (Islamic  ^ 
Education  for  Ninth  Grade  p.  79).  I  join  Amer 
in  urging  you  to  do  research.  Check  out 

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/english/ne 
wspaper/ondisplay/ondisp.html  for  just  a 
small  sample  of  such  quotes. 

It's  true  that  Israeli  guns  have  killed  87 
Palestinians  to  date,  but  the  bullets  do  not  hail 
exclusively  from  our  side.  As  the  leader  of  the 
Palestinian  Liberation  Organization,  Arafat 
himself  is  no  stranger  to  murder  This  same 
organization  was  responsible  for  countless  ter- 
rorist atUcks,  bus  bombings  and  the  like. 

To  this  day,  the  PLO  covenant  still  does  not 
recognize  the  existence  of  a  Jewish  State, 
although  its  acceptance  was  one  of  the  agree- 
ments  made  between  the  Israeli  and 
Palestinian  governments.  How  can  Israel  work 
toward  peace  with  an  organization  that  does 
not  even  recognize  its  right  to  exist? 
What  of  the  279  Israelis  killed  by 
Palestinians  since  the  Oslo  accords,  a  tally 
taken  over  two  years  ago  (http://www.nando- 
times.com/newsroom/ntn/world/09l  198/worl 
dl8-12590-Sl-body.html)?  Palestinian  rioters 
have  fired  guns  and  tossed  Molotov  cocktails 
and  grenades  at  Israeli  soldiers  even  in  the         ' 
recent  riots. 

Recently,  Arabs  in  Ramallah  seized  two 
Israeli  soldiers,  brutally  tortured  them,  mur- 
•  dered  them  and  paraded  their  remains 
throughout  the  city  to  be  beaten  to  a  pulp  by 
locals.  What  are  Israeli  soldiers  expected  to 
do,  just  stand  by  and  be  killed?  Once  again,  I 
urge  you  to  view  a  listing  of  Palestinian  viola- 
tions of  the  Oslo  accords  since  inception. 

Israel  is  praiseworthy  in  continuing  with  the 
peace  process  despite  the  fact  that  Palestinians 
continue  to  release  Hamas  terrorists  even  at 
the  height  of  the  most  recent  terrorist  attacks. 
A  few  days  ago,  Palestinian  rioters  attacked  a 
funeral  procession  of  a  Jewish  settler  named 
Hillel  Lieberman,  who  they  killed.  Would 
you  continue  a  peace  process  when  the 
Palestinian  authority  policemen  stand 
idle  as  rioters  destroy  and  bum  a  yeshi- 
va  and  its  holy  books?  Wait,  I  think 
that  Nazis  did  that  too. 

Too  many  lives  have  been  lost  on 
both  sides.  I  beg  the  Palestinian  lead- 
A    ership:  don't  threaten  the  lives  of  sol- 
\   diers  and  Israelis,  and  there  won't  be 
j   89  Palestinian  deaths.  Don't  hold 
your  children  in  front  of  you  while 
you  throw  stones  at  Israeli  soldiers, 
.^^0^...  *"^  children  won't  get  hurt.  Don't 

V^i^^^U^^;;;^ shout  "Kill  the  Jews"  as  you  stone  an 
y^^K^^*""^  Israeli  police  station  in  the  Old  City, 
-^-^t '  *frw         and  maybe  the  cycle  of  violence  will     • 


JAHRETT  QU0M/D»«y  Bruin 


See  LEV,  page  23 


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UEF 

From  page  18 

Bush  cut  goes  to  the  upper  1  percent? 

Absolutely,  Doug,  and  let  me  tell 
you  why.  Bush's  strategy  of  name- 
calling  Gore's  calculations 
"Washington  fuzzy  math"  was  a  bril- 
liant move  to  separate  himself  from 
the  geek  vote.  If  there's  one  thing  the 
American  public  has  shown  time  and 
time  again,  it's  that  they  suck  at 
math,  and  they  want  a  leader  who 
can  represent  those  values.  I  myself 
only  went  as  far  as  geometry  in  high 
school,  and  never  took  fuzzy  math, 
especially  not  the  highly  advanced 
Washington  variety.  Besides,  Bush'i 
father  called  Reagan's  plan  "voodoo 
economics"  and  he  eventually 
became  president.  I  learned  that      v, 
from  "Ferris  Buellcr's  Day  Off."     ■'!' 


Bush  showed  not  only 
is  he  willing  to  accuse 
Gore  of  avoiding  the  , 
issue,  but  he  is  willing 
to  lead  by  example  by 
avoiding  issues  himself. 


Point  well  taken,  Douglas.  What 
do  you  think,  Dennis  Miller? 

Well  jeez,  Jonesy,  it's  like  I'm  in 
Plato's  allegory  of  the  cave  with 
Humbert-Humbert  over  here,  I 
mean,  Jesus! 

Dennis  Miller,  you  are  a  useless 
human  being. 

1  second  that,  Doug. 
Anyways  gentleman,  let's  move  on 
to  another  important  part  of  the 
debate:  presentation.  Personally,  I 
thought  both  candidates  stayed  on 
message,  and  left  it  up  to  the 
American  people  to  decide  whom 
they  liked  based  on  the  issues. 
Douglas? 

Well  one  problem  for  me  wasffiie  ' 
whooshing  sound  that  kept  occurring 
while  Bush  was  talking.  Sourcesat 
the  debate  headquarters  informed  me 
that  it  was  either  caused  by  Al  Gore 
confidently  huffing  over* his  oppo- 
nent's answers,  or  the  sound  of 
excess  air  escaping  from  George 
Bush's  head.  Either  way,  the  candi- 
dates should  have  been  prepared  for 
this  eventuality.  Don't  you  agree, 
Doug? 

Yes.  It's  a  simple  matter  of  debate 
etiquette  to  keep  from  venting  idiot 
gas  during  the  procedure,  so  as  not  to 
affect  the  audience.  Dennis? 

Well  babe,  it's  like  Morris  Travers 
and  Sir  William  Ramsay  out  there. 

What  the  hell  arc  you  talking 
about? 

Doug,  I  think  Dennis  is  making  an 
obscure  reference  to  the  two  British 
co-discoverers  of  the  noble  gas 
xenon. 

Yeah  babe,  1898  was  a  rockin' 
year  in  chemistry.  Rockin'  like  Neils 
Bohr  on  laudanum. 

Oy.  Douglas,  let  me  address  one  of 
the  most  important  issucsof  the  pres- 
idential election  -  the  upcoming 
Supreme  Court  nominees  that  the 
next  president  will  almost  pertainly 
make.  Moderator  Jim  Lehrer  asked 
Bush  point-blank  about  whether  or 
not  he  would  appoint  justices  who 
would  overturn  Roe  v.  Wade  and  out- 
law abortion. 

Yes,  now  here's  where  I  thought 
Bush  really  came  on  strong.  He  often 
accuses  Gore  of  avoiding  the  issue* 
and  not  actually  answering  the  ques- 
tions posed  to  him  directly.  Here, 
Bush  showed  not  only  is  he  willing  to 
accuse  Gore  of  avoicing  the  issue, 
but  he  is  willing  to  lead  by  example 
by  avoiding  issues  himself.  Doug,  it  is 
a  classic  example  of  a  leader  who  is 
willing  to  illustrate  his  opponent's 
shortcomings  by  adopting  them  as 


S«eUg,pa9t21 


Mi 


nrtiv»  -•^^"-•^  '^'•**'T*iVT'"»ifrni 


UEF 

From  page  20 

his  own. 

But  Douglas,  shouldn't  Bush  hide 
.his  shortcomings? 

See,  there  you  go  again  with  your 
fuzzy  words.  I  swear  if  I  had  a  nickel 
for  every  time  I  didn't  know  one  of 
them  big  words  of  yours  I'd  have  57 
cents  by  now. 

But  57  isn't  divisible  by  five. 
Doug,  now  you've  got  that  fuzzy 
math  thing  going  again.  I  swear  you 
must  have  invented  the  calculator. 

Jeez  babe,  it's  like  a  pentium/eniac 
imbroglio  out  here,  babe. 
Shut  up,  Dennis! 

Listen  Doug,  this  is  your  problem: 
you  can't  see  that  Bush  is  an  inviter, 
not  a  divisionater.  As  a  governor  for 
almost  seven  years.  Bush  has  worked 
with  both  Republicans  and 
Democrats  to  get  things  done.  You 
remember  when  Lehrer  asked  Bush 
about  emergencies. 

Douglas,  Bush  couldn't  even 
remember  when  Lehrer  asked  him 
about  emergencies.  He  said,  "What 
was  the  question  again?" 
:,  Exactly.  That  shows  he  has  his 
mind  on  other  things,  bigger  and  bet- 
ter things  than  this  debate.  Anyway, 
he  told  a  very  compelling  story  about 
how  he  bridged  the  partisan  gap  to 
put  out  a  fire  in  Texas. 

What's  partisan  about  a  fire?  A 
fire  starts  in  a  state,  the  governor 
says.  "Go  put  it  out."  Somebody  puts 
it  out.  Governor  shakes  hands  and 
kisses  babies,  end  of  story. 

No,  that's  not  the  end  of  the  story. 
You  think  a  liberal  bleeding  heart  like 
Gray  Davis  would  have  the  diplomat- 
ic know-how  to  put  out  a  fire?  It  takes 
good  old-fashioned  Republican  com- 
mon sense.  A  liberal  would  just  give 
that  fire  9  hand-out  of  water.  We  put 
that  fire  out  in  Texas  by  initiating  a 
tax  cut  for  the  upper  1  percent. 
How  does  that  work? 
Simple,  you  give  the  rich  more 
money,  they  go  out  and  invest  in 
pools  and  sprinkler  systems. 
Furthermore,  they  develop  strip 
malls  over  potentially  flammable 
wildlife  reserves.  This  brings  in  rev- 
enue and  reduces  the  number  of 
trees,  which  Ronald  Reagan  pointed 
out  are  responsible  for  more  pollu- 
tion than  anything  else. 

Douglas,  that  brings  me  to  anoth- 
er issue:  the  Alaskan  land  Bush  wants 
to  drill  for  oil.  Shouldn't  we  leave 
some  of  our  precious  natural  land 
unspoiled? 

Oh  sure,  today  you  liberals  tell  us 
we  can't  drill  for  oil  in  Alaska. 
Tomorrow  we  can't  turn  the  Grand 
Tetons  into  a  tobacco  plantation.  Are 
you  going  to  cry  when  we  blow  up 
your  precious  '*moon"  for  strategic 
military  position? 

You  know,  guys,  babes,  if  I  may 
interject  a  word  here.  You're  missing 
out  on  the  big  picture.  The  important 
poiat  of  these  debates  isn  't  to 
explund  on  the  issues  of  the  day  like 
Cicftro.  It's  about  concealing  the  true 
evilintents  behind  both  parties.  We 
all  k^ow  the  Republicans  are  anti- 
choice,  environment-ruining  oli- 
garchists  with  no  sympathy  for  the 
sick  and  poor  who  don't  want  the 
government  in  our  lives,  except  of 
course  in  our  bedrooms.  We  all  know 
the  Democrats  are  like  Kane  crying 
for  his  Rosebud  in  Xanadu,  giving 
everybody  everything  they  can, 
except  what  they  actually  want.  But 
in  the  debates,  they  put  all  that  ugli- 
ness aside  where  you  can't  sec  it,  so 
they  can  dicker  over  five  dollars  of  a 
social  security  check  like  twin 
Shylocks  cutting  coupons  out  of  the 
Sharper  Image  catalogue.  And  that's 
the  big  picture,  folks. 

Well  Dennis,  on  that  note  I  think 
we  can  conclude  this  edition  of 
"Debate  2000:  RAW  is  WAR." 
From  the  left,  I'm  Doug  Lief,  thanks 
to  my  partner  on  the  right  Douglas 
Lief,  and  encyclopedic  comedian 
Dennis  Miller  As  we  say  here,  keep 
bickering  better  for  bigger  and  bct- 
-4ep! 


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CHAGHOURI     ^^  A 

Frompage19  .     -^ .'::;'  ^ 

their  fight  for  a  homeland.  Had  any 
other  country  other  than  Israel  used 
such  repressive  and  overly  aggres- 
sive police  tactics  against  people,  the 
United  States  would  have  been 
quick  to  react  with  horror  and,  per- 
haps, to  call  for  economic  sanctions. 
Indeed,  recently  the  United  States 
was  the  only  U.N.  Security  Council 
member  that  did  not  vote  in  favor  of 
a  resolution  condemning  Israeli 
actions.  Thankfully,  they  abstained 
from  voting,  and  the  resolution 
passed. 

I  would  hate  to  think  that  the 
United  States  has  let  Israelis  get 
away  with  their  violent  and  repres- 
sive acts  because  of  a  Holocaust  that 
happened  over  50  years  ago.  As 
hard  as  that  was  for  me  to  say,  none 
of  us  are  responsible  for  what  hap- 
pened. We  shouldn't  feel  guilty  for 
that  atrocity,  nor,  on  the  same  token, 
should  we  turn  a  blind  eye  to  naked 
aggression,  whoever  the  perpetra- 
tors may  be. 

Reporters  in  this  country,  as  well 
as  many  prominent  Jewish  organiza- 
tions (the  Anti-Defamation  League 
and  FLAME  leap  to  mind),  have 
created  the  perception,  albeit  with 
the  help  of  Palestinian  terrorists 
fighting  for  a  homeland,  that  Israel 
can  do  no  wrong.  Israel,  a  state 
formed  in  the  aftermath  of  the 
Holocaust,  could  neveract  inhu- 
manely against  any  other  people. 

How  could  Israel  inflict  any  sort 
of  wound  upon  another  nation  of 
people  after  experiencing  a  vicious 
genocide?  Forget  that  the 
Palestinians  are  being  marginalized 
like  the  Native  Americans  were  in 
this  country,  and  forget  that  whenev- 
er they  protest  at  being  occupied  by 
a  foreign  invader  they  get  slaugh- 
tered. 

Israel  can  do  no  wrong.  Believe 
what  you  wish  about  who  owns  the 
land.  Remind  me  constantly  that  the 
Jewish  people  were  the  victims  of  a 
horrible  Holocaust  and  need  a 
nation  to  protect  themselves  from 
that  sort  of  massacre  ever  happen- 
ing again. 

Explain  away  their  constant 
human  rights  violations  as  reactions 
to  the  acts  of  the  evil  Arab  hordes. 
Tell  me  the  Middle  East  needs  civi- 
lized  nations  like  Israel  to  stabilize 
the  region. 

In  the  end.  the  ugly  truth  still 
remains:  Israelis  are  no  better  than 
their  opposition.  Tliey  are  just  as 
brutal,  just  as  brutish  and  just  as  vio- 
lent, only  they  have  better  weapons. 
What  a  pity  too.  I  have  always 
hoped  that  Israel,  the  invaders  they 
might  be,  would  lead  the  way  in 
showing  Arabs  living  in  neighboring 
autocratic  regimes  that  there  is  a 
better  standard  of  living  if  they  just 
set  their  minds  to  it  and  push  for 
democracy. 

After  all,  as  many  Jews  proudly 
proclaim,  Palestine  was  but  a  desert 
wasteland  long  before  they  came 
along. 


ARAMAYO 

From  page  18 


r., 
el 


ancient  and  noble  creature? 

Have  I  mentioned  the  looting  of 
hundreds  of  culturally/historically 
important  sites  that  lie  in  the  area? 

If.  as  students,  you  are  con- 
cerned about  this  degradation  of 
humanity,  or  the  killing  off  of  an 
innocent  animal,  or  the  rape  of  a 
countryside  and  its  culture  in  the 
name  of  "economic  progress,"  then 
please  join  the  Citigroup  protest 
Tuesday  in  downtown  Los  Angeles 
to  protest  Citigroup's  tyranny. 
Whip  the  Bank! 

It  will  be  on  Oct.  17  at  10:30  am 
at  787  West  5th  St.  (5th  and 
Flower).  For  more  information  see 
the  Palpirg  office  at  330  Kcrckhoff. 


*"«f'*^^;-"'^^«:7«»»-' ■J.tii'W: if^^i^^mr^  «^-5)*^  »..■^•  ■  i^s  :».;  .■ 


^^  LEV  -BV^jW^ 

From  page  19  :-" :  v;;     ,  "'v  '^  ■; 

cease.       v'"-  :■"■■.■;'•.         ■  ';  ^v,; 
I  don"t  wish  to  imply  that  I  think 
■   Israel  is  infallible  or  blameless.  I  too 

find  .Ariel  Sharon's  \  isit  pro\  ocati\  e, 
;_j)erhaps  e\en  a  little  spiteful.  In  no 

way.  ho\ve\er.  was  it  a  cause  for  \io- 
.  lence.  Amers  article  quite  rightiv 

points  out  some  reasons  for 

Palestinian  anger:  economics,  educa- 
,  lion  and  soxereigntx.  But  are  these 
really  Israel's  problems' 

Just  recently.  I  \  isjted  Israel  and 
hiked  through  the  Galilee.  .At  one 
point.  I  crossed  right  through  an 
.Arab  \illage.  Two-slor>  houses 
flanked  me  on  e\  ery  side,  people 
dro\e  Mercedes-Benzes  or  rode  the 
occasional  donkey,  and  the  streets 
were  clean.  These  people  weren't 
angr\  at  us.  How  is  it  that  these 
•Arabs  li\  e  in  peace  w  ith  an  open 
Israeli  town  just  across  the  street 
while  Jewish  settlements  in  Gaza 
ha\e  to  be  surrounded  with  thick 
barbed  w  ire? 


Itistheleacdersofthe 

Palestinians 

themselves  who  incite 

violence. 


Granted,  the  situation  is  not  quite 
so  clear  cut  Man\  Israeli  Arabs  have 
also  associated  \\  ith  the  Palestinian 
cause,  but  only  recently. 
Economically  speaking,  atleast. 
Israeli  .Arabs  don't  seem  to  be  tairing 
too  poorl>  Economic  problems 
among  Palestinians  abound  much 
more  in  Gaza.  Where  are  the  millions 
of  dollars  that  .Americans  pa\  to  the 
Palestinian  authorit\  for  the  purpose 
ot  establishing  an  economically 
\iable  country? 

NNhen  Israel  brought  out  thou- 
sands of  refugees  from  Russia,  thev 
were  put  in  refugee  camps  in  tent 
housing.  Soon  thereafter,  the 
Russians  had  jobs  and  housing  as 
well  as  full  integration  in  Israeli  soci- 
ety Israel  took  pains  for  their  inte- 
gration. Many  of  the  Palestinian 
authority  refugee  camps  are  under 
the  control  of  the  Palestinian  authori- 
t>  which  chooses  not  to  do  anything 
with  them. 

Again,  where  are  the  millions  of 
dollars  that  .Americans  pay  to  the 
Palestinian  authority'  What  are  the\ 
used  for  if  their  go\  ernment  turns  a 
blind  eye  to  its  own  refugees''  .And 
what  of  the  degradation  of  Hebron 
and  Ramallah'  Who's  stopping 
Arabs  tYom  building  cities  as  beauti- 
ful as  Tel  A\  i\ '  The  Jewish  section  is 
a  tiny  fragment  of  Hebron,  the  \  ast 
majority  of  which  is  controlled  by 
Arabs  who  maintain  the  cit\  as  it  is 
by  ^oice.  not  mandate 

My  point  is  that  the  anger  is  an 
intefenal  problem.  It  is  the  leaders  of 
the  Palestinians  themselves  who 
incite  violence  and  continue  to  indoc- 
trinate their  youth  in  the  culture  of 
hate.  I  understand  that  they  are  an 
oppressed  people,  and  that  this 
oppression  has  sadly  and  regrettabl\ 
come  from  Israel  at  times,  just  as  the 
Jews  were  oppressed  b\  the  Arabs 
before  the  inception  of  the  State. 

Maybe  if  all  that  anger  were  chan- 
neled into  rectif\  ing  the  problems  of 
a  fledgling  countrv.  the  economics, 
education  and  sovereignt\  issues,  the 
Palestinians  would  ha\e  less  to  riot 
about  and  we  would  all  ha\ e  more  to 
celebrate. 

From  a  standpoint  of  camaraderie 
the  .Arabs  are  our  brothers  and  I  too 
w ish  for  peace  between  two  brother 
nations,  but  not  at  the  expenses  of 
security  and  the  desecration  of  m\ 
forefathers'  tombs.  Amer  is  right  -  If 
the  Palestinian  authority  really  wants 
peace,  mutual  respect  is  essential.  It's 
time  people  started  hearing  the  other 


side  01  the  storv. 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Monday,  October  16, 2000       23      ;, 


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l>yORFUl  SAUCES 


FEATURINC  TASTY  SAUCES 

S  •  TERIYAKI  *  KUNC  PAO 

lAMAICANJIIRK 


id  get  a  ^.Stee  iwige 
di^i^^^*tAed  6ieifeHaqe! 


Mmtgk  11120 


Commons  8as  ll?7 


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BfSIMWIHB 


■iwiipwjfciiii      iim  ji. 


*'*■*"■"  Vwy*'  ""W^'  *-i^-ii^^ww»w<>t^iw^ 


.*■  -.;■••  ■'<i>- 


Director  takes  helm  of  opera 

Film  director  John  Schlesinger  directs  the 
Los  Angeles  opera's  new  production  of  . 
"Peter  Grimes." 


Monday,  October  16,2000 


DaJlyBruin 


./■'•I  \\y.  '  ''■\-,--'«'vv .  ■\''-":j7;;  V  '1^ 


ENTERTAINME 


(Above)  Jason  Cim.  stars  in  Tony  Barbieri's "One,- written  by  Barbieri  and  Cairns.  "»"''-'»-»'<-' 

(Below)  K.n«  Picoy  (left)  and  J..on  CIrn.  90  for  a  ride  in  'One' which  explores  human  communication. 


Tony  Barbieri  adds  depth  to  a  story  of 

co-dependency  and  second  chances 

with  his  innovative  camera-woric 


By  EmBia  Hwang 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


According  to  songwriter  Harry  Nilsson. 
"One  is  the  loneliest  number,"  and  Tony 
Barbieri,  director  and  co-writer  of  the 
movie  "One,"  tends  to  agree. 

The  story  about  two  best  friends  rn  San 
Francisco  focuses  on  the  loneliness  and 
despair  that  results  when  people  aren't  able 
to  communicate  Thus,  the  movie's  title  was 
taken  from  the  song  lyric. 

"It  just  seemed  like  the  right  title." 
Barbieri  said  in  a  recent  interview,  it  was 
minimal  and  lonely  and  bleak." 

In  the  film,  the  life  long  friendship 
between  Charlie  O'Connell  (Jason  Cahns) 
and  Nick  Razca  (Kane  Picoy)  is  put  to  the 
greatest  challenge  as  their  lives  diverge 
after  many  years  together. 

Barbicri's  arrives  at  a  particular  visual 
style  that  uses  camera-work  to  reveal  what 
isn't  spoken. 

"I  look  at  the  script  from  a  visual  stand- 


poinU  <is  I'm  looking  at  pictures  not  reading 
dialogue,"  Barbieri  said. 

He  explained  that  using  minimal  shots 
helped  to  create  a  voyeuristic  style,  with  a 
flow  of  pictures  and  a  distant  look  that 
emanated  from  the  characters. 

"I  feel  the  camera  is  motivated  by  char- 
acter." Barbieri  said.  "So  being  that  these 
people  were  distant,  didn't  really  talk  a  lot 
about  themselves,  I  felt  it  would  be  false  to 
go  in  for  coverage  on  these  people  tradi- 
tionally It  didn't  make  sense  to  me." 

The  film  highlights  the  emotional  dis- 
tance that  results  when  people  don't  know 
how  to  be  honest  and  vulnerable. 
According  to  Picoy,  the  story  focuses  not 
only  on  co-dependency  and  loneliness,  but 
also  on  second  chances  in  life. 

"The  two  lead  chara9ters  ...  both  get  a 
second  chance  in  their  lives,"  Picoy  said. 
"One  revels  in  it  and  works  hard,  the  other 
basically  shoots  himself  in  the  foot  again." 

Following  his  release  from  prison, 
Charlie  disa)vcrs  an  inherent  self  worth  as 


he  commits  to  a  job,  college  and  eventually 
love.  On  the  other  hand,  Nick,  once  a 
promising  baseball  player,  only  finds 
absence  of  purpose  and  desolation. 

"What  attracted  me  was  the  character's 
self-sabotaging,"  Picoy  said.  "It  seemed  to 
be  a  reoccurring  theme  in  my  life  at  the  time 

and  I  just  found  it  a  very  realistic  script." 

While  Nick  goes  down  a  self-destructive 
road,  Chariie  finds  a  world  full  of  new  pos- 
sibilities. Sara  (Autumn  Macintosh),  recog- 
nizes Charlie's  potential  and  falls  in  love 
with  him. 

"My  character  represents  possibility  and 
the  life  that  Chariie  could  have  and  strives 
to  build  for  himself,"  Macintosh  said. 

She  explained  how  she  had  to  play  down 
her  role,  since  the  story  is  not  about  her 
character. 

"I  just  wanted  to  be  there  and  support 
the  transition  of  what  these  two  characters, 
Nick  and  Charlie,  are  going  through," 


THEATER;  Fred  Savage  stars 
in  non-linear  portrait  piece 
from  author  of 'Love  Letters' 


cTivorcewith 


By  Andic  Dingman 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Changing  family  dynamics  are  a  uni- 
versal, yet  personal  aspect  of  life.     • 

This  theme  is  explored  in  the  West 
Coast  premiere  of  the  play  "Ancestral 
Voices,"'  which  opened  last  weekend  at 
the  Falcon  Theatre  in  Burbank. 

Dealing  with  one  family's  issues  with 
divorce  in  the  1930s  and  1940s,  "Voices" 
strikes  a  chord  with  young  adults  who 
can  relate  to  the  story's  narrator,  Eddie, 
played  by  Fred  Savage  ("The  Wonder 
Years"). 

Falcon  Theatre  producer  Meryl 
Freedman  spoke  about  the  play's  story 


line  in  a  recent  interview. 

"It's  the  story  of  a  wealthy  and  eccen- 
tric family  that  lives  in  Buffalo,  right 
before  Worid  War  II,"  she  said. 

"It's  what  happens  when  the  matri- 
arch of  the  family,  the  grandmother, 
decides  to  leave  the  grandfather  for 
another  man  and  it's  how  it  kind  of 
leaves  the  family  in  turmoil,"  she  contin- 
ued. 

The  story  line  of  "Voices"  is  told 
though  Savage's  character,  Eddie,  the 
grandson  who  over  the  course  of  the 
play,  ages  from  third  grade  to  adulthood. 

"Voices"  is  the  25th  full-length  play 
written  by  A.R.  Gurney,  well  know  for 
his  classic  "Love  Letters."  Both  Savage 
and  Freedman  were  drawn  to  "Voices" 
in  large  part  due  to  the  quality  of  the 
script. 

"We  thought  it  was  very  beautifully 
written  and  we  thought  it  was  a  well-told 
storvofafamilvHnH;ir;imi 


said  Freedman.  "Stylistically,  it's  a  very 
interesting  play  in  how  it's  structured." 

Similar  to  "Love  Letters,"  "Voices"  is 
not  your  typical  play. 

"Because  the  play's  kind  of  scaled 
down,  it's  a  staged  reading,"  Savage 
explained,  cutting  into  the  question.  "It's 
the  same  guy  who  wrote  this  play  'Love 
Letters,'  which  was  really  popular,  where 
the  characters  kind  of  just  sit  and  it's  not 
a  whole  staged,  acted  out  play;  they're 
written  just  to  be  read  to  the  audience. 

"It's  less  of  a  linear  kind  of  traditional 
story  plot,  you  know,  like  a  confiict-reso- 
lution  play,  and  it's  more  of  a  portrait  of 
this  family  and  the  relationships  between 
them  as  the  years  kind  of  progress," 
Savage  continued,  "So  it's  much  more 
cleverly  done.  Its  much  more  overt  and 
it's  really  subtle  and  it's  kind  of  just  a 
really  nice  lapeitry  of  this  family." 
Besides  dealing  with  the  effect  of 


es  on  feminism  and  the  influence  of 
one's  ancestors. 

**!  think  it's  an  interesUng  take  on  an 
American  family,"  Freedman  said.  "I 
think  that,  set  in  the  '30s  and  '40s,  you 
don't  often  see  a  story  which  is  about  a 
woman  doing  what  she  wanu  to  do,  cer- 
tainly not  in  that  time  period. 

"And  then  it's  about  how  this  particu- 
lar family  deals  with  a  strong-willed 
woman  when  that  was  not  the  role  of 
women  at  that  time,"  she  continued.  "In 
particular,  it's  how  a  young  man  deals 
with  his  grandmother  and  grandfather  as 
role  models  and  the  importance  of 
grandparents  in  the  lives  of  young  peo- 
ple." 

"Voices"  is  directed  by  acclaimed  tele- 
vision and  theater  director  Gordon  Hunt 
and  also  features  actors  Robert 
Foxworth.  Rene  Auberjonois,  Mariette 
Hartley,  and  Katherine  Helmond 


performance 

"Voices"  is  complex  in  terms  of  the  rela- 
tionships between  the  characters  and  its 
main  issues. 

"It's  a  really  warm,  kind  of  open,  real- 
ly kind  of  friendly  pl»y  that  deals  with 
kind  of  just  this  family  and  their  relation- 
ships," Savage  said.  "Yo«  know,  it's  not 
really,  it's  not  fiashy,  it's  not  sexy  and  it's 
not  kinda  sensational  in  any  way,  but  it's 
a  really  nice,  sweet  story  about  this  fami- 
ly." 


ly  dynamic."     d.voro,  on  a  lamil,  » Voices"  also  met,  I  h;:!^'"  ii^^Mo^ric!:;"  s.mple. 


THEATER:"'Ancestral  Voices' is  showing  at 
the  Falcon  Theatre,  4252  Riverside  Drive 
through  Nov.  26.  Performances  are 
Thursday  through  Sunday  at  8  p.m.  and 
Sunday  at 

3:30  p.m. Tickets  are  $25*f  Thursday,  $30 
for  Friday  and  Sunday  and  $35  for 
Saturday  night.  Studer  t  and  senior  rush 
tickets  are  available  3  i  minutes  before 
curtain.  For  more  infaJbiation  call  (818) 
93»B101. 


■'rf- 


.1  '.^'  •  i 


'■.'.-'    '  il  •'        '  '    I   >  1    <  J>    I   K    •    I ,;  )    <;    -   1  ■   ■ 


rrvf'.ri'f 


(Left  (o  right)  R«ii«  Aubwjonoli,  l-i^d  Savag.  and  K«th«r{n«  HelmondTtar  ui' 

Ancestrd  Voices, "  a  rww  play  at  the  Falcon  Theater. 


A&EontheWeb 

r~See  all  this  and  more  at 
I  the  Daily  Bruin's 

•   Website: 

• 

;  www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

Monday,  October  16,2000 


Qfde  of  re-birth  continues 
with  latest  from  Radiohead 


MUSIC:  Minimalist  sound, 
raw  emotions  sets  group 
apart  from  other  rock  acts 


Cyrus 
McNally 


As  an  adamant  fan  of 
Radiohead,  I  thought  I'd  let 
you  know  right  off  the  bat 
that  writing  a  column  on  the  new 
album  was  not 
as  easy  as  I 
thought. 

Sometimes  a 
record  comes 
along  that  is  so 
consummate,  so 
impeccably  cun- 
ning and  pre- 
cisely crafted 
that  any 

attempt  to 

describe  it  ends 
up  doing  it  a  big 
disservice. 

Hence,     the 
ensuing  qualitative  analysis  is  not  a 
"review"  by  any  means,  as  there  are 
already  too  many  of  those. 

If  you  are  one  of  those  who  hasn't 
heard  this  album  yet,  I  suggest  you  do 
not  read  this  column.  I'm  not  trying 
to  scare  my  own  audience  or  any- 
thing, I  just  don't  want  to  be  the  one 
who  taints  your  initial  impressions  of 
one  of  the  greatest  albums  of  all  time 
with  my  own  rudimentary  proclama- 
tions. 

Whatever  you've  heard  about 
"Kid  A."  the  band's  two  week-old 
release,  forget  it.  Never  mind  the  fact 
that  it  debuted  at  No.  I  on  the 
Billboard  Top  200  and  has  already 
sold  well  over  200.000  copies,  "Kid 
A"  is  best  listened  to  without  expecta- 
tions. The  quintet's  efforts  to  keep 
the  album  shrouded  in  secrecy  before 
its  relea.se  (which  were  undermined 
by  Napsterians  who  had  the  entire 
album  up  weeks  eariier)  left  many 
fans  guessing  about  the  album's  con- 
tent with  almost  no  clues  to  go  on. 

It  is  Radiohead's  unpredictability 
that  allows  it  to  take  songwriting  to 
the  next  level,  one  notch  about  the 
competition.  This  talent  shines  in  the 
new  album. 

Having  already  listened  to  the 
album  several  times  since  I  picked  it 
up  last  Saturday,  I  am  still  obsessing 
over  it,  finding  little  nuances  of 
sound  previously  undiscovered:  a 
background  scream  here,  a  sublimi- 
nal synth  line  there,  etc.  "Kid  A"  is 
such  a  nugget  of  tonal  abundance 
that  it  makes  "OK  Computer,"  the 
band's  previous  release,  seem  like 
seedless  rye  in  comparison. 

Similar  trend-setting  "avant-rock" 
bands  such  as  the  Beatles,  Pink  Floyd 
and  REM  have  all  successfully  dealt 
with  the  problem  of  how  to  follow  up 
one  sonically  intrepid  album  with 
another  while  remaining  commer- 
cially viable  at  the  same  time,  proving 
it  can  indeed  be  done. 

Radiohead  stands  alone  in  its  qual- 
ity and  type  of  music  and  it  needn't 
budge  for  critics  nor  record  compa- 
nies or  fans  alike.  Its  creative  output 
is  thus  served  up  unprocessed  and 
put  on  the  dinner  table  cold  and  raw. 
The  band's  quest  for  total  control 
over  their  own  sound  goes  back  to  the 
days  of  mid- 1 996,  when  Thom  Yorke 
handed  over  to  Capitol  Records  a 
demo  of  the  most  "normal"  song 


("CltMioneering")  for  Iheir  upcom- 
ing  album,  m  an  attempt  to  dissuade 


creativity-castrating  executives  from 
barging  into  the  studio  to  make  sure 
it  wasn't  recording  a  modern-day 
"Rites  of  Spring,"  with  electric  gui- 
tars instead  of  oboes  (a  feat  they 
saved  for  "Kid  A"). 

When  the  resulting  album,  "OK 
Computer,"  put  Radiohead  on  the 
map  forever  and  was  proclaimed  one 
of  the  "top  100  albums  of  all  time"  by 
several  magazines  within  two  years 
of  its  release,  Capitol  wisely  decided 
it  best  to  keep  the  heavy  hand  of  their 
administrative  girths  at  a  distance 
from  the  band's  mixers. 

Not  only  did  Radiohead  reinvent 
alternative  rock  yet  again  with  "OK 
Computer,"  they  saved  a  nation  disil- 
lusioned with  the  voice  of  indistin- 
guishably  disgruntled  youths,  and  the 
filthy  entourage  of  Nirvana/Pearl 
Jam  wannabes  which  dominated  the 
stale  airwaves. 

The  harsh  minimalist  concoctions 
to  be  found  on  the  album,  such  as 
"Everything  In  Its  Right  Place"  or 
"Idioteque"  are  a  far  cry  from  the 
guitar-driven  grunge  days  of  the  . 
band's  first  album,  "Pablo  Honey." 
But  by  abandoning  the  antiquated 
verse/chorus  structure  of  most  pop 
music  of  today,  Radiohead  is  helping 
to  reinvent  the  concept  of 
rock  'n'  roll. 

Such  rule-breaking  songs  found  on 
"Kid    A,"     like     The     National 

Anthem"  contain  enough  orchestra- 

tion  to  make  Wagner  proud. 
However,  this  particular  national 
anthem  is  not  a  jingoish  tribute  to 
mass  conformity  set  to  the  sounds  of 
triumphant  fanfare. 

Instead,     Colin     Greenwood's 
repetitive   bass   line   lunges   along 
incessantly  while  Yorke  chimes  about 
the  alienation   one   might   feel   if 
attending  a  ball  game  opening  with 
Toccata  and  Fugue  instead  of  the 
"Star-Spangled     Banner"    (or    in 
Yorke's  case,  "God  Save  the  Queen" 
at  a  football  match).  "Everyone  is  so 
near,   so   alone."    Yorke   laments, 
before  a  cacophonous  band  of  intri- 
cately arranged  jazz  horns  breaks  the 
SoundScape. 

From  this  point  on,  the  band 
begins  a  steady  descent  into  madness 
-  a  la  Coltrane  -  as  Yorke  yelps  impo- 
tently  to  discipline  its  seemingly 
directionless  blaring.  Yet  there  is  no 
relief  as  the  harmony  explodes  into  a 
dissonant  bouquet  of  befuddled 
trumpet,  horn  and  saxophone  solos. 

Harkening  back  to  the  crunch  of 

older  rock-outs  "My  Iron  Lung"  and 

"Electioneering,"  "Optimistic"  is  the 

song  most  likely  to  be  an  outlake 

from  the  "OK  Computer"  sessions. 

The  song  glides  along  on  a  muted 
tribal  rhythm  as  Yorke  sings  about 
flies,  vultures  and  dinosaurs,  ending 
with  a  jazzy  chord  progression. 
Thom's  soothing  vocal  line  and 
Greenwood's  frenetic  bass  chops  at 
this  point  are  some  of  the  only 
reminders  of  the  old  Radiohead  on 
the  whole  album. 

Pieces  like  "Everything  In  Its 
Right  Place,"  "Morning  Bell"  and 
"In  Limbo"  all  experiment  with  time 
signatures  usually  exogenous  to  pop 
music,  giving  them  a  sense  that  every- 
thing is  a  bit  off-kilter -even  if  also  in  .  . 
its  right  place. 

While  the  lyrical  content  of  "Kid 
A"  might  be  a  bit  more  sublime  with 
its  treatises  than  "OK  Compmer" 


.^'i.... 


SeeMaMU.Y,pag«30 


:v  r 


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•-  I  'I'  r">i. 


26       Monday,  October  16,2000 


Dally  Bruin  Arts  &  Entcrtaimneiit     ' 


f 


"■v^MnpWt&^itaaMtMlrii 


Newest  pop-band  effort 
brings  in  Asiaris  -  at  last 


UCU\tv  lineup  tests  boundaries  of  humdr 


Daily  Bruin  Am  &  Entcftakunem 


Monday,  October  16,2000 


MUSIC:  Group  looks  to 
represent  minority  in 
industry,  display  talent 


By  Dria  Fearn 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Everybody's  seen  the  voyeuris- 
tic bo\  band  television  show. 
"Making  the  Band."  Imagine 
something  similar,  only  with 
Asians. 

A  new  pop  group.  At  Last.' is 
the  result  of  a  massive  open  call 
audition  with  one  twist:  it  called 
for  Asians. 

The  auditions  were  held  by 
actor  Ming-Na  ("ER."  'Mulan." 
■Joy  Luck  Club")  and  actor  pro- 
ducer Eric  Zee  ("E.xit  the 
Dragon."  "Dr.  Quinn  Medicine 
Woman"),  the  heads  of  the  new 
music  company  Innovazian. 
founded  to  promote  Asian 
.American  talent  in  the  main- 
stream market. 

The  audition  process  consisted 
of  three  parts  and  resulted  in  the 
production  of  the  talent  that  now 
makes  up  this  up-and-coming 
group:  Justin  Fong.  JP  Leynes. 
Cliff  Wang  and  Ken  Ycmai. 

A  word  of  caution:  do  not  refer 
to  them  as  a  "boy  band."  Getting 
their  start  at  an  open  call  audition 
IS  where  the  similarities  between 
the  Lou  Pearlman  creations  and 
At  Last  end.  This  group  writes, 
composes,  arranges  and  produces 
all  their  own  music,  which  is  not 
the  norm  among  their  pop  music 
peers 


Ycmat.  25.  is  a  UCLA  graduate 
student  in  physiological  sciences 
who  spent  two  years  as  a  student 
health  advocate  in  Dykstra  Hall. 
Out  of  the  rest  of  the  members. 
Ycmat  is  the  newest  to  music;  he 
did  not  start  singing  until  he  took 
a  course  at  UCL.^  E.xiension. 

Other  members  have  equally 
impressive  resumes.  Leynes.  24. 
graduated  with  a  degree  in  film 
and  a  minor  in  music  industry 
from  use. 

Wang.  22.  recently  graduated 
pre-med  from  USC.  but  is  forgo- 
ing medical  school  to  pursue 
music.  He  also  majored  in  violin 
performance  and  plays  the  violin 
on  their  song.  "Free  At  Last. " 

Finally.  Fong.  20.  is  a  junior  at 
USC.  but  is  taking  a  year  off  to 
pursue  music  with  the  band. 
Coincidentallv.  Fong  and  Wang 
knew  each  other  through  USCs 
Chinese  Cultural  Club  before 
joining  At  Last. 

Just  this  past  June,  similar  to 
the  "Making  the  Band"  e.xperi- 
ence.  the  group  mo\  ed  into  a  West 
Los  Angeles  condominium  to 
spend  more  time  working  togeth- 
er and  creating  music 

The  living  room  has  been  con- 
verted into  a  dance  and  recording 
studio,  complete  with  a  mixing 
board,  electric  guitars  and  key- 
boards. The  band  comments  that 
living  together  has  allowed  them 
to  become  more  like  family. 
Interestingly  enough,  none  of  the 
members  have  any  brothers  of 
their  own 

See  LAST,  page  30 


TELEVfSlbN:  Third  season 
of  comedy  shows  reflect 
polish  as  spin-off  debuts 


By  Andie  Dingman 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor     ...  ^ 

E\er\bod\  loves  Raymond.  He's  lik- 
able, comfortable,  and.  well,  boring. 
Every  sitcom  and  comed>  \ ariety  show, 
from  "Raymond"  to  "Saturday  Night 
Live"  to  "Tom  Green."  might  be  mildly 
entertaining,  but  do  any  of  them  make 
you  think'^  UCLAtvs  Comedy  Lineup 
on  Mondav  nights  on  Channel  29  in  the 
dorms  not  only  makes  you  chuckle:  it 
also  makes  you  take  a  look  at  yourself 
and  tells  it  like  it  is. 


"The  Mike  and  Ben  Show"  and 
"Getting  it  On  With  .Matt  and  John" 
.will  return  with  new-and-improved 
episodes  for  your  \iewing  enjoyment, 
and  UCL.Atv  s  first  spin-off.  "Th.e 
Show."  will  debut  tonight.  '  ■  \,      ;  , 


In  a  recent  inter\iew.  members  of 
each  cast  demonstrated  their  abilitv  to 
gel  togetlier  and  come  up  w  ith  sponta- 
neous, cutting-edge  soundbites. 

"The  Show."  the  spm-off  of  "The 
Mike  and  Ben  Show."  is  entirel)  sketch- 
based.  Produced  and  co-hosted  by 
".Mike  and  Ben"  actor  Lawrence 
Givens.  "Show"  hopes  to  break  new 
ground  in  the  world  of  sketch  comed> 
with  its  di\erse  staff. 

By  having  a  multicultural  cast. 
Givens  believes  dorm  residents  can  see 
themselves    represented    onscreen. 


Man\  of  the  sketches'  originated  from 
real  life,  such  as  when  middleweight 
champion  Shane  Mosely  stole  a  strip- 
per at  a  club. 

"We're  trying  to  actually  implement 

Jnore  stereotypes  and  concrete  more 

that  are  actually  out  there."  Givens 

explained  "We  take  those  and  just  kind 

ofpoketunatihem." 

Like  "Saturdav  Night  Live." 
"Show"  takes  a  relati\el\  small  cast 
(se\en  actors  at  present)  and  puts  them 
in  multiple  roles. 

"Getting  it  On  With  Matt  and  John" 
w  ill  resume  its  tele\  ised  live  radio  show 
on  ULC.Aradio  com  on  Monday  and 
Tuesday  nights  from  10:30-1 1 :36p.m.. 
and     then     repeat     the     episodes 

SeeTV,pag«31 


CaLeNdaR 


Oct 


:>.  fA 


fmtvt 


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'Gilmore  Giiis'  fresh  fare 
for  youth-oriented  WB 


TELEVISION:  Advertisers' 
support  behind  premiere 
of  family-friendly  show 


ByLynnElber 

The  Assodated  Press 


Here  are  key  facts  about  the  new  TV 
series  "Gilmore  Girls": 

1)  The  hour-long  comedy-drama 
about  a  single  mom  and  her  teen-age 
daughter  is  airing  as  part  of  an  effort  by 
major  advertisers  to  create  more  fami- 
ly-friendly shows.  .    ..^       !'■• 

2)  It's  on  the  youth-obsessed  WB 
network,  where  people  born  after  1966 
are  as  rare  as  denture  adhesive  ads. 

3)  The  show's  creator  is  a  veteran  of 
sitcom  writing,  both  for  better 
("Roseanne")  and  worse  ("Veronica's 
Closet"). 

Now  here's  the  truth:  "Gilmore 
Girls"  is  more  than  the  sum  of  its  parts. 
It's  a  fresh  and  disarming  show  that  is: 
(1)  wholesome  but  not  sanitized  to  the 
point  of  blandness;  (2)  a  combination 
of  youthful  energy  and  mature  smarts, 
and;  (3)  funny  without  sitcom  hokum. 
"Gilmore  Girls"  is,  quite  simply, 
this  season's  buried  treasure.  While 
star-driven  shows  on  the  bigger  net- 
works grab  the  spoUight,  this  little  gem 
(airing  8  p.m.  EDT  Thursday)  is  worth 
a  close  look. 

Still  wary?  Consider  that  Amy 
ShermaivPalladino,  who  dreamed  up 
the  series,  named  her  company 
Dorothy  Parker  Drank  Here 
Productions.  Parker,  the  wickedly 
sophisticated  writer,  might  well  have 
gotten  a  kick  out  of  the  sweet  but  sassy 
"Gilmore  Girls." 

Lauren  Graham  stars  as  Lorelai 
Gilmore,  a  32-year-old  managing  a 
country  inn  and  raising  16-year-old 


Rory  (Alexis  Bledcl)  in  a  pictur^per- 
fect  Connecticut  town. 

Lorelai  is  self-sufficient  as  well  as 
unwed,  both  of  which  distress  her 
upper-crust  parents  (Edward 
Herrmann  and  Kelly  Bishop).  Her 
youth  makes  her  both  a  pal  and  a  par- 
ent to  Rory,  but  that  doesn't  mean  the 
teenager  has  free  rein. 

When  Rory  balks  at  transferring  to 
a  prestigious  high  school,  mom  turns 
inquisitor  and  finds  out  a  boy  is  behind 
the  change  of  heart.  Lorelai,  her  own 
ambitions  derailed  by  her  teenage 
pregnancy,  doesn't  want  to  see  family 
history  repeat  itself! 

"Who  is  he?  Dark  hair,  romantic 
eyes,  looks  a  little  dangerous?  Tattoos 
are  good  too,"  Lorelai  says,  angrily 
confronting  Rory.  "Does  he  have  a 
motorcycle?  If  you're  gonna  throw 
your  life  away,  he  better  have  a  motor- 
cycle!" 

The  series  had  a  strong  start  last 
week,  drawing  5  million  viewers. 

In  this  week's  episode,  Rory  enters 
swanky  Chilton  Prep  but  gets  off  on 
the  wrong  foot  by  antagonizing  the 
school's  star  pupil.  Lorelai,  mean- 
while, is  trying  to  keep  her  parents' 
meddling  to  a  minimum  after  accept- 
ing financial  support  from  them. 

Graham  and  Bledel,  dark-haired 
beauties  who  couW  easily  pass  as  kin, 
play  off  each  other  smoothly.  The 
town's  collection  of  quirky  residents 
(the  best  since  "Northern  Exposure" 
and  more  original  than  the  offbeat 
crew  on  another  new  series,  "Ed")  are 
brought  to  life  by  an  adept  supporting 
cast.  ,  .• 

The  pilot  for  "Gilmore  Girls"  was  v 
developed  with  a  pool  of  funds  con- 
tributed by  major  advertisers  including 
Procter  &  Gamble,  General  Motors 


See6llllS,page30 


Joe  Cocker  rocks  on  with 
latest  release,  U.S.  tour 


MUSIC:  Artist  discusses 
soul  of  his  music,  past 
several  years  of  his  life 


By  Mary  Campbell 

The  Associated  Press 


When  Joe  Cocker  was  a  teenager 
in  his  native  Sheffield,  England,  he 
became  so  obsessed  with  Ray 
Charles,  he  patterned  his  singing  after 
the  great  rhythm  and  blues  artist. 

But  Cocker  had  developed  his  own 
style  by  the  time  he  recorded  the 
Beatles'  "With  a  Little  Help  From 
My  Friends,"  a  No.  1  hit  in  Europe 
and  the  title  of  his  first  album  in  1969. 
The  '708  began  with  the  high-ener- 
gy "Mad  Dogs  and  Englishmen" 
tour,  which  left  Cocker  exhausted;  he 
spent  the  rest  of  the  decade  battling 
drugs  and  other  problems.  In  1982,  he 
scored  his  first  No.  I  U.S.  hit  with 
"Up     Where     We     Belong."    his 
Grammy  Award-winning  duet  with 
Jennifer  Wames  from  the  soundtrack 
of  "An  Officer  and  a  Gentleman." 

Cocker,  56,  has  continued  to 
record  and  tour.  "No  Ordinary 
World"  was  released  by  Eagle 
Records  in  August.  His  current  U.S. 
tour,  which  includes  33  dates  with 
Tina  Turner,  ends  Dec.  6. 

"I'm  going  to  rock  on  for  a  little  bit 
longer."  he  says. 

Q.  Is  the  new  album  your  usual 
rhythm  n'hlues? 

A:  It's  more  melodic  in  the  choice 
of  songs.  But  everything  I  do,  I  try  to 
do  it  with  a  little  bit  of  soul. 
Q.  Where  do  you  live  now? 
A:  My  wife  Pam  and  I  have  been  in 


Colorado  eight  or  nine  years.  I  did  a 
gig  in  Telluride  12  years  ago.  I 
thought  it  would  be  nice  to  get  a  coun- 
try retreat.  I  ended  up  buying  a  200- 
acre  ranch.  It's  tucked  into  the  West 
Elk  Rocky  Mountains.  ...  We  built  a 
big  house.  ...  A  guy  sent  me  a  sign, 
'The  Mad  Dog  Ranch.'  We  took  the 
name.  We  have  the  Mad  Dog  Ranch 
Cafe  in  Crawford,  five  minutes  away, 
now.  It's  not  something  I  want  to  put 
back  together  again. 

Q.  Mad  Dog  Ranch? 

A:  It's  named  for  the  Mad  Dogs 
and  Englishmen  tour,  which  was  sup- 
posed to  be  love  and  peace.  It  started 
with  eating  meals  together  and  Leon 
Russell  saying  little  prayers  before  we 
went  onsuge.  a  family  kind  of  thing.  I 
don't  know  why  it  disintegrated 
toward  the  end.  It  wasn't  over  money. 
There  were  lots  of  conflicts  between 
artists. 

Q.  Were  drugx  part  of  the  problem? 
A:  Oh,  sure.  I  weigh  195  now.  At 
the  end  of  that  tour  I  weighed  145. 
The  years  1975  to  '78  or  '79,  just 
before  I  met  Pam,  I  know  the  venues 
we  played,  but  I  was  pretty  aimless. 
I'm  off  drugs  now.  I  still  drink.  I  quit 
cigarettes  seven  years  ago.  It  helped 
my  singing  to  maintain  the  high  end  I 
was  getting  worried  about.  I'm  still 
managing  to  sing  in  the  keys  I  record- 
ed songs  in.  But  'Woman  to  Woman' 
I  sang  really  high.  That's  one  song  I 
can't  sing.  It  has  great  rhythm.  I  wish 
I  could  do  it. 

Q.  Do  you  still  make  jerky  move- 
ments onstage? 

A:  Yeah.  I  still  do  playing  an  imag- 
inary piano  and  air  guitor.  That  was 
the  frustration  of  not  being  aWe  to 
play,  really.  That's  how  it  evolved. 


r_'*!'^'^^^-^^ 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


In  wake  of  grunge  exNbit, 
many  wonder  what's  next 


Monday,  October  16,2000       29 


MUSIC  Seattle  scene  far 
from  dead  as  bands  mix 
genres  for  new  sounds 


ByUibCabrara 

The  Associated  Press 


It's  a  pretty  good  clue  that  your 
music  is  "over"  when  it  becomes  a 
museum  exhibit. 

And  if  it  weren't  enough  that  the 
beer-soaked  relics  of  Seattle's  grunge- 
rock  heyday  are  captured  under  glass 
at  the  new  Experience  Music  Project, 
consider  this  recent  advertisement 
from  an  auto-repair  chain: 

"The  only  grunge  left  around  here 
is  under  your  hood." 

While  the  anguished,  slow-grind- 
ing sound  of  Nirvana,  Soundgarden 
and  Alice  in  Chains  may  be  a  thing  of 
the  recent  past,  the  Seattle  music 
scene  is  far  from  dead.  In  fact,  the  dis- 
appearance of  the  flannel-shirt-and- 
cutoffs  crowd  has  cleared  the  way  for 
a  vibrant,  eclectic  mix  of  new  sounds. 
"Even  though  it  doesn't  seem  to 
attract  the  sort  of  attention  it  did  eight 
or  nine  years  ago  when  Nirvana 
broke,  there's  still  a  lot  going  on 
here,"  said  Joe  Ehrbar,  editor  for 
"The  Rocket,"  a  weekly  that  has  been 
covering  Seattle's  music  since  most 
grunge  superstars  were  in  diapers. 

"In  some  ways  it's  great,  because 
without  that  national  spotlight  beam- 
ing on  Seattle,  people  don't  have  to  be 
so  self-conscious."  he  said.  "They  can 
do  their  own  thing  and  not  have  to 
worry  about  the  industry  watching 
their  every  fnove.  That  was  one  of  the 
downsides  of  grunge." 


Scott  McCaughey,  45,  whose  pop 
group  the  Young  Fresh  Fellows  devel- 
oped a  national  following  but  never 
approached  the  popularity  of  the 
grungies.  thinks  the  current  Seattle 
scene  is  defined  by  its  lack  of  a  defin- 
ing sound. 

"There's  lots  of  roots,  country, 
rockabilly,  pop  and  noise  bands. 
There's  no  one  kind  of  scene,"  he 
said. 

Weeds  now  grow  in  the  lot  of  the 
long-shuttered  grunge  institution  the 
RCKNDY,  and  its  equally  renowned 
neighbor,  the  Off  Ramp,  has  gone 
through  some  changes,  emerging 
most  recently  as  Graceland. 

The  Crocodile  Cafe,  which  always 
drew  the  more  pop  side  of  the  scene, 
has  survived  intact. 

"We're  by  far  the  last  from  the  hey- 
day," said  Stephanie  Dorgan,  who 
founded  the  club  in  1991.  She  can 
recall  when  it  seemed  as  if  every  local 
band  was  trying  to  catch  the  grunge 
wave. 

"The  diversity's  still  there,  but  now 
everyone's  being  what  they  are,"  she 
said. 

A  recent  Friday  night  show  at  the 
Crocodile  featured  an  eclectic  lineup. 
Tyson  Meade  opened  with  a  solo  gui- 
tar-and-voice  performance,  followed 
by  Essex  Porder  -  named  for  a  local 
TV  newsman  -  who  romped  their  way 
through  a  harder,  pop-punk  set,  and 
an  acoustic  set  by  Ken  Stringfellow 
and  Jon  Auer  of  the  Posies,  another 
local  pop  group  that  reached  only  the 
verge  of  stardom  in  the  '90s. 

"There's  a  lot  going  on  here,"  said 
Cory  Gutch,  25,  who  caught  the 


SeeGIIUN6E,page31 


_  »•_•...  Shooting  Gillefy 

Tony  Babieri  directs  "One.-The  film's  different  visual  style  captures  the 
loneliness  and  lack  of  communication  between  the  main  characters. 


From  pipe  25 

Macint*sh  said.  "It's  much  harder  to 
play  normal  and  move  silently  than  it 
is  if  you  have  the  opportunity  to  play  a 
drug  addict  or  a  crazy  person. 

"If  you're  just  being  calm  and  in 
the  moment  it's  a  challenge  because 
you  don't  have  anything  to  hide 
behind,  as  far  as  addiction  or  tur- 
moil." she  continued. 

For  Macintosh.  "One"  speaks  of 
how  terrifying  it  is  to  be  intimate.  The 
movie's  main  characters  all  desperate- 
ly want  to  have  the  courage  to  be  vul- 
nerable and  express  themselves. 

"In  human  nature  we  all  so  very 
much  want  to  connect  with  each  other 
and  there's  just  a  lot  of  fear  -  a  fear  of 
revealing  who  we  are,  a  fear  of  being 
hurt,  being  vulnerable,"  Macintosh 
said.  "So  I  found  that  very  appealing 
about  this  movie,  how  everyone  is  so 
isolated  and  yearning  for  connection, 
but  not  knowing,  not  having  the  skills 
to  go  about  finding  that  for  your  life." 
Lack  of  communication  is  the  final 
straw  that  tears  the  Nick  anH  rh«rii>. 


apart.  When  the  two  friends  reach  a 
crossroads  in  their  lives,  Charlie  refus- 
es to  take  his  own  separate  path. 

"There's  a  point  in  everyone's  life 
where  it's  hard  to  let  go  of  the  old 
days,  whether  it's  high  school,  col- 
lege," Picoy  said.  "And  my  character 
Nick  just  did  not  want  to  let  go  of 
those  days." 

In  the  end,  Nick  ends  up  alone  con- 
firming that  one,  indeed,  is  the  loneli- 
est number.  Though  the  film's  tragic 
ending  may  seem  fatalistic, 
Macintosh  sees  the  movie's  overall 
message  as  an  optimistic  outlook  on 
life. 

"It's  a  film  about ...  human  frailty 
and  human  strength  and  how  life  is 
beautiful,  but  it's  not  a  happy  ending, 
she  said.  "I  don't  mean  that  in  a  mor- 
bid way  but  there's  beauty  in  the 
difficulties  of  being  human." 

"It's  about  connecting  with  other 
people  and  expressing  these  universal 
feelings  that  we  all  have,"  she  said. 

"It's  a  mirror  of  who  we  are  a 
humanity." 


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30       Monday,  Oftober  16, 2000 


DaMy  Brain  Am  t  Entertainment 


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At  Lasi 


(Left  to  right)  Pop/R&B  group  At  Last  members  Ken  Ycmat,  Justul 
Fong,  JP  Leynes  and  Giff  Wang. 


From  page  26  ;  ,  •' 

"In  the  beginning,  there  were  con- 
flicts and  we  had  ups  and  downs," 
said  Leynes,  "but  you  work  through 

it."    v;:-:'.;^ 

Ycmat  added  that  he  doesn't  find  it 
coincidental  that  they  are  all  even- 
tempered  and  easy-going. 

"It's  not  a  mistake  that  we're  all 
nice  guys,"  he  said.  "  I  think  they  (Zee 
and  Na)  chose  us  because  of  that 
group  dynamic." 

Natural  performers.  At'  Cast 
opened  "Concert  in  the  Woods"  at 
De  Neve  Plaza  during  Welcome 
Week.  They  performed  a  seven-song 
set  complete  with  costumes  and 
choreographed  dance  moves. 

The  group  has  also  performed  at 
use's  Bovart  Hall  (which  is  compa- 
rable to  Royce  Hall)  and  is  currently 
busy  on  the  club  circuit  Their  biggest 
thrill,  however,  was  singing  the 
national  anthem  at  Dodger  Stadium 
last  July. 

The  group  counts  Boyz  II  Men 
and  the  Temptations  among  their  top 
musical  influences,  while  producers 
Ming-Na  and  Zee  mentioned  a  long 
list  of  idols  that  included  Martin 
Luther  King  and  Michael  Jordan. 
"It  comes  down  to  having  a  good 


work  ethic,  and  Ming  has  a  great 
one,"  said  Wang.  "She's  able  to  go  in 
and  read  for  a  part  that's  not  written 
for  an  Asian  and  get  it.  That's  talent 
and  determination." 

At  Last  is  concerned  with  the  lack 
of  Asian  Americans,  especially 
males,  in  entertainment.  Currently, 
there  has  yet  to  be  an  Asian 
pop/R&B  group  that  has  had  any 
staying  power. 

"It's  all  about  the  music  and  the 
performance,  but  if,  at  the  same  time, 
we  can  be  positive  role  models  and  fill 
that  void  (of  Asian-Americans)  in 
pop  music,  (then)  that's  two  birds 
with  one  stone,"  said  Wang. 

Other  members  also  felt  that  it  was 
important  for  other  Asian  Americans 
to  see  At  Last  out  there  performing. 
"Being  Asian  is  almost  an  asset 
because  it's  not  as  saturated  a  mar- 
ket," said  Fong.  "Hopefully  we  can 
be  role  models  for  children  in  the 
Asian  community,  so  they  realize  that 
being  in  entertainment  is  a  reason- 
able goal.  They  can  do  anything  they 
put  their  minds  to." 


MUSK:  At  Last  will  have  an  album 
release  party  on  Oct.  26  at  Club  Soho 
in  Downtown  Los  Angeles,  where  they 
will  be  performing.  For  more  informa- 
tion, log  onto  their  Web  site,  at 
www.lnnovazian.com." 


MCNALLY 

From  page  25 

themes  of  alienation,  confusion  and 
helplessness  abound,  set  to  minimal- 
istic  masterpieces  manage  to  retain 
the  tried-and-true  spirit  of  rock  'n' 
roll  in  a  big  way. 

Less  guitars  and  more  sourceless 
noises  might  scare  fans  into  thinking 
that  Radiohead  has  lost  it  completely, 
when  in  fact  they  must  have  it  quite 


together  to  still  be  functional  after 
recording  this  album. 

With  "Kid  A,"  Yorke,  age  32. 
proves  he  has  not  gone  soft  through 
the  years,  and  still  has  many  more 
demons  to  exorcise  from  his  shadow, 
and  thus  hopefully  many  more  stellar 
releases  as  well. 


McNally  is  currently  extracting  the 
text  of  the  Bible  from  the  human 
genome.  He  can  be  reached  at 
nougat@ucla.edu.a 


GIRLS 

Frompage28  : /"' '       - 

and  Sears,  who  pronounced  them- 
selves tired  of  hawking  products  on 
sexy  and  violent  network  shows. 

The  advertisers  approached  all  the 
broadcast  networks  with  their  con- 
cerns, striking  a  deal  with  WB  after  it 
offered  the  most  specific  plan.  WB 
supervises  script  development  and 
decides  which,  if  any,  go  into  produc- 
tion; the  advertisers  agreed  to  bankroll 
at  least  eight  scripts,  which  generally 
cost  between  $60,000  and  $90,000. 

In  other  words,  the  sponsors  pay 
but  don't  have  a  say  in  a  shows  con- 
tent. 

"One  thing  we  told  them  early  on  is 
this  has  to  remain  totally  network-con- 
trolled creatively,"  said  Jamie  Kellner, 
WB  chief  executive  officer. 

"Gilmorc  Girls"  fits  the  advertisers' 
intent  because  it's  about  "families  that 
work,  about  a  love-filled  household 
with  a  successful  woman  and  a  success- 
ful child,"  Kellner  said. 


The  show  also  has  potential  to  reach 
the  young  adults  and  teenagers  favored 
by  advertisers.  Those  contrary  viewers 
tend  to  prefer  such  sexually-charged 
dramas  as  WB's  "Dawson's  Creek," 
while  clean-scrubbed  shows  like  CBS's 
"Touched  by  an  Angel"  draw  older 
viewers. 

Proof  that  young  audiences  can 
connect  with  milder  fare,  however,  is 
found  right  on  the  WB;  one  of  its  high- ; 
est-rated  shows  is  "7th  Heaven,"  about 
a  minister  and  his  family 

Sherman-Palladino  and  her  co^xeo- 
utive  producer,  Gavin  Polone,  see  "7th 
Heaven"  as  a  distant  relative. 

"Gilmore  Girls'  is  not  saccharine  in 
the  least,  it's  very  dissimilar  from  '7th 
Heaven,'"  said  Palone  "I  think  it  will 
end  up  satisfying  the  people  who  want 
more  family-friendly  shows  inadver- 
tently, rather  than  intentionally" 

He  and  Sherman-Palladino  say  they 
weren't  even  aware  the  pilot  was  being 
bankrolled  through  the  ponderously 
narned  Family  Friendly  Forum's 
Script  Development  Fund  until  they 
read  it  in  the  newspaper. 


sj*r-- 


>.       V 


From  page  26 


Wednesday  and  Thursday  at  the  same 
time.  Cohosts  Malt  Hirt  and  John 
Laun  chat,  take  calls  from  the  dorms, 
and  even  perform  the  occasional 
•NSYNC  or  Britney  Spears  dance 
number. 

"We  come  on  the  air,  and  Matt  and 
I  are  roommates  and  friends  and  we 
always  have  stuff  to  talk  about,"  Laun 
said.  "So  once  the  mics  are  on,  it's 
really  pretty  easy;  either  we'll  be  make 
fun  of  each  other  or  talk  about  some- 
thing we  did  that  day,  or  talk  about  our 
friends." 

Improvements  for  this  season 
include  a  larger  team,  and  going  to  the 
dorms  armed  with  Laun's  cell  phone 
to  recruit  calls. 

"The  Mike  and  Ben  Show"  was  the 
first  ever  student-produced  television 
show,  and  the  most  well-known  of  the 
three  programs.  "Mike  and  Ben," 
hosted  by  the  interview-shy  and  elu- 
sive Mike  Pesses  and  Ben  Larson,  is  a 
comedy  variety  show,  with  sketches 
(or  "skitches"  as  the  "Mike  and  Ben" 
crew  likes  to  call  them),  improv  and 
silly,  push-the-envelope  pranks.  The 
cast  hopes  the  third  season  will  reflect 
their  ever-progressing  chemistry  and 
improvements  in  editing  since  past 
season. 

To  give  prospective  viewers  a  small 
taste  of  what  to  expect  from  an 
episode  of  Mike  and  Ben,  the  follow- 
ing is  the  response  of  several  of  the 
producers/directors/writers/editors 
of  the  show  when  asked  what  the  show 
is  about: 

"The  Mike  and  Ben  show  is  like 
'Where  the  Red  Fern  Grows,'  only 
sadder,"  said  Price  Peterson,  a  sec- 
ond-year undeclared  student. 

Mylcs  Nye,  a  second-year  theater 
student  said,  "It's  a  show  about  noth- 
ing." 

Peterson.  "We're  a  strenuous  exer- 
cise in  bad  taste." 

"We're  dull-edged."  said  Greg 
Snyder,  a  fifth-year  communications 
student. 

Nye:  "We're  breaking  new  ground 
in  mediocrity,  that  was  Myles  Nye, 
blood  type  O-negative." 

Peterson:  "Hey!  I'm  O-negative!" 

Nye:  "Universal  donor!" 

Nye     and     Peterson     together: 


"Oobohh!" 

(Nye  and  Peterson  high  five). 
Nye:  "Sorry,  uh,  gotta  go  give 
platelets!" 

All  joking  aside,  "Mike  and  Ben"  is 
concerned  with  bringing  injustices  to 
light  by  putting  them  blatantly  out  in 
the  open,  such  as  Givens'  comment, 
"We  (the  African  American  actors) 
carry  their  bags. 

"An  important  goal  for  us  is  to 
either  emphasize  stereotypes  by  ridi- 
culing them,  or  celebrating  them, 
which  is  in  a  way  satirizing  them  and 
expressing  our  disapproval  of  these 
horrible  things  that  are  going  on  in 
society  today,"  Peterson  said. 

Examples  of  candid-camera-style 
pranks  the  show  has  pulled  include  a 
stand-up  Jesus  doing  insult  comedy, 
four  secret  service  agents  randomly 
escorting  people,  and  students  ran- 
domly dying  on  campus  (sudden  stu- 
dent death  syndrome). 

According  to  producer  Sean 
Heckman,  who  is  also  the  coordinator 
of  UCLAtv  comedy,  mock  public  ser- 
vice announcements  are  also  given. 
One  examines  the  horrible  practice  of 
"art  molestation"  in  the  Sculpture 
Garden,  where  people  abuse  naked 
sculptures;  another  deals  with  rufies, 
the  "weapon  of  desperate  women." 

While  UCLAtv  is  currently  avail- 
able in  the  dorms  only,  the  cast 
encourages  those  living  off  campus  to 
make  the  trek  over  to  Sproul  Hall  at 
9:30  p.m.  on  Mondays,  where  dorm 
residents  will  check  them  in  to  watch 
the  shows. 

.  While  one  might  try  to  stifle  a  laugh 
after  Nye  makes  a  comment  such  as, 
"The  great  thing  about  the  dining  halls 
on  campus  is  that  they're  all  Mexican 
food."  pushing  one's  buttons  is  exact- 
ly what  both  "Mike  and  Ben"  and 
"The  Show"  are  out  to  do. 

"You  are  laughing,  but  you  don't 
think  you  should,"  Heckman  said 
matter-of-factly  "That's  what  the 
show's  all  about." 

"We're  kind  of  like  a  good  enema," 
Nye  continued.  "'The  Mike  and  Ben 
Show;'  it's  an  enema  for  your  mind." 


TELEVISION:  The  Show  premieres  at 
9:30  p.m.,  Monday,  Oct.  16. 'The  Mike 
and  Ben  Show'  and  'Gettin'  It  On  With 
Matt  and  John'  premiere  at.  1 0  p.m.  and 
10:30  p.m,  respectively  All  three  shows 
play  on  Channel  29  in  the  dorms. 


GRUNGE 

From  page  29 

Posies  show  and  plays  guitar  for  The 
Tum-Ons,  a  group  trying  to  break 
into  the  club  circuit.  "There's  a  feel- 
ing that  there's  something  bubbling 
up." 

Essex  Porder  members  moved  to 
Seattle  from  Fort  Smith,  Ark.,  in 
1995,  a  year  after  the  shotgun  suicide 
of  Nirvana  front  man  Kurt  Cobain  - 
cited  by  many  as 
the  beinning  of 
the  (find  for 
grunge||That  was 
also  theVme  when 
Pearl  j  Jam. 
Soundgarden  and 
other  mega- 

groups  were  keep- 
ing Seattle  at  cen- 
ter stage. 

Bass  player 
Sean  Becker,  25, 
whose  bobbing 
bald  head  and  on- 
hi»-back  flourish-  —————___ 
es  made  a  visual 

impact  for  Essex  Porder  on  stage, 
said  it's  still  possible  for  a  band  to  get 
noticed  in  Seattle.  He  cited  Modest 
Mouse,  whose  major-label  debut  was 
just  released  on  Epic. 

"They've  been  working  hard  for 
years,"  he  said. 

Other  Up-and-€omers  cited  by 
scene  observers  include  Death  Cab 
for  Cutie.  Pedro  the  Lion  and  764 
Hero. 

Seattle  will  continue  to  produce 
high-profile  bands.  Ehrbar  predin^'H 


"Even  though  it 

doesn't  seem  to  attract 

the  sort  of  attention  it 

did  ...when  Nirvana 

broke,there'sstillalot 

going  on  here." 

Joe  Ehrbar 

Editor,  The  Rocket 


but  it's  unlikely  to  become  the  center 
of  the  rock  universe  again. 

"Remember,  the  kind  of  music 
that  came  out  of  here  was  something 
that  no  one  had  ever  heard."  he  said. 
"Now,  with  the  Internet  especially, 
everyone  knows  what's  going  on.  I 
think  it's  going  to  happen  somewhere 
else,  if  it  ever  happens  again,  and  it's 
going  to  be  a  totally  different  kind  of 
music." 

Those  seeking  a  window  into  the 
lost  world  of  grunge  can  pay  the  $20 
_^^^^^^^^   admission  price  at 
Experience  Music 
Project,  a  pet  pro- 
ject of  local  aofl- 
ware     billionaire 
Paul    Allen    that 
began  as  a  tribute 
to  Jimi    Hendrix 
and  ballooned  into 
a  full-scale  music 
museum  and  inter- 
active playhouse. 

The        grunge 

exhibit  takes  up  a 

few  display  cases 

_»«_«_______   in  the  Northwest 

Passage  section, 
which  also  features  the  Kingsmen  of 
"Louie  Louie"  fame.  Heart,  and 
other  Northwest  rockers  who've 
come  and  gone. 

Crumpled,  hand-scrawled  lyric 
sheets  are  displayed  alongside  bat- 
tered, sweatstained  guitars,  and  fliers 
for  small-club  shows. 

The  section's  final  exhibit  is  a  video 
screen  that  shows  clips  of  some  cur- 
rent Seattle  bands  and  asks  which  will 
be  the  next  defining  Seattle  sound. 
The  display,  like  most  observers, 


♦    » 


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Person.ils 


MAJOR  ENTERTAINTMENT 

INDUSTRY  EXEC 

Seelu  beautiful  won«en  to  dale/attafxl  ma)or 
mduMry  evema.  Qreat  KNanbre.  Single, 
white,  male,  40,  tal,  very  aRracdve/sucoeu- 
(ul  (resemblee  Mk:hae(  Douglaa).  Safe.  310- 
777-0204. 


EARN$$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDYtor  the  com- 
">on  cold.  Mirfe/lamale  i8-55yre  old.  non- 
smoker,  no  aatfiRM  Walory.  Limited  avattM- 
Ky.  Cat  today  310-785-9121 
EmailrcllnicalaubJectaOyahoo.com 


(  ./111.. I     :     M:ilc 


•uITrVI  v,„ 


•111  .\  \ 


NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT Sale*  allontable'  allactiva*  visit  ua  at 
*>"««»  ngurepluexoin  1-888-603-9800.  Dis- 
tributorships are  avMable. 


NON-SMOKERS  «  LONG-TERM  TOBA- 
CCO SMOKERS  needed  for  research 
bronchoscopy.  25-50yr8.  okJ.  $175  lor  2  vis- 
Its  310-206-0396 


17383  Suivsot  Blvd.  Suitr  12(1.  P.i(ifir  Fali.sades.  C.A  «»"^r^ 
(310)  -7^.4242  .  FAX  (310)  5-3-;;093  •  vlsnlau(«wolfsdon.co.,. 
UVVW  WOI  FSDOKt  COM 


PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
yaorotd  females  wHh  adventurous  and  open 
fnlndad  apMts  «4io  went  to  expemMivlDre 
their  sexuality  through  nude  modeling.  Free 
prints  for  modeling  time.  CaH  Robert  at  310- 
463-5996  robldOatt.net 


RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  tor 
UCLA  Brain  Mapping  study.  Wear  gogglea 
tor  two  weeks  that  turn  the  wodd  unlde 
itown.  Must  t>e  rioht-handed,  normal  haarfng, 
vWon  good  or  correotatHe.  $1000  payment 
correct  Richard  at  quimle«ucla  edu  tor 
more  Into. 


SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH.  18-45  want- 
ed tor  ntcoUne  raaaert*)  study  adminHtaied 
by  UCLA.  Both  he«7  and  occaalonrt  amok- 
ers  needed  Paitlcipanis  wW  be  paid  up  to 

$395  tor  tour  viaHa.  C*l  nichart  Omateed  at 
310-312-0565.  leave  meaaage 


SU8J»rr8  NEEDED  for  Mood  samples 
1^  per  vlaii  Quiver  CHy,  lOmm  to  UCLA 
Reply:  pauip«caraslde  oom 


Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown  identifies  the  US  investnrient  banlcing  and  brolcerage  activities  of  DB  Atex  Brown  LLC  w 
Deutsche  Banic  Secunt«s  Inc..  which  are  indirect  subsdiahes  of  Deutsche  Ba^AG  -      %?''■  f '^  ^^  ^ 

Tradennark  application  pending  .'•      ^         '  .    :    ■ 


.r^-l-.Tl^^W- 


Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown 


I— --r-rv- 


lUmlng  diango  into  opportunity 


a;- 


Juniors  and  seniors  welcome 


Global  reach  is 


Please  join  us  to  learn  about  career  ""'; " 
opportunities  in  investment  banking. : 

Analyst  Panel  Discussion 

Wednesday,  October  11.  2000 

7:00  p.m.  -r  •  ^ 

Bradley  Center;  Third  Floor 

Visit  our  booth  at  the  -^ 

Job  Fair 

Friday,  October  13,  2000 

Investment  Banking  Night 

Thursday,  October  19,  2000 
7:00  p.m. 

Bradley  Center,  Third  Floor 
(Please  note  room  change) 

Casual  attire. 

Students  interested  in  U.S.  opportunities 
should  fax  resume  and  cover  letter 
with  area  of  interest  to  (212)  469-3872 
or  (212)  469-3660. 

To  learn  more  about  J 

Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown, 
visit  our  website  at 
www.db.com/careers 


toading  to  rMults."" 


Deutsche  Bank 


m 


34       Monday,  October  16,2000 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


2000 

Personals 


2000 

Personals 


2200 

Research  Suhjecls 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


Are  you  right  for  each  other? 

v^^— ; —  ■  .^  ■*^.■^—    ,t;,\     ■■■■■•■■,  11* -'i. — 1^^^ — . — »  ^^^  9~Mf^ *~ 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60+  w/kyphosis 
(forward  bending  of  spine)  needed  for  re- 
search program  investigating  wt>elher  Yoga 
can  improve  l^yphosis.  Study  being  conduct- 
ed by  Gail  Greendale,  MO  in  the  UCLA  Dept. 
of  Medicine.  Please  caU  310-794-9055. 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


BF 


FREE 
DIABETES  SCREENING 

Genetic  study  of  Diabetes  recruits 

healthy  volunteers  (1 8-40  years  oM)  for 

free  diabetes  screening  with  standard 

oral  glucose  tolerance  test  (2.5  hours). 

Qualified  subjects  (wtio  pass  the  oral 

glucose  tolerance  test  and  have  normal 

blood  pressure)  will  t>e  invited  to 

participate  in  a  genetic  study  of 

diabetes.  Subjects  will  t>e  paid  $1 50 

for  participation. 
'  Maiti,  ca«  Dr.Cliia  (310>-206HM64. 


THE  CENTER  FOR 
EGG  OPTIONS 

(310)546-6786 

If  you're  a  Japartese  woman 
between  18  and  32.  you  can  earn 

money  easily,  anonymously." 

Donate  your  eggs  to  an  Infertile 

couple.  Up  to  $5,000,  depending 

on  your  education  and  other 

qualifications.  Call  today. 

The  Center  for  Egg  Options,  LLC 


% 


i 


2300 

Sperm/Egg  Donors 


EGG  DONOR  NEEDED.  Asian.  Please  call 
310-397-0490. 

If  you  are  male,  in  college  or  have  a  college 
degree,  you  can  earn  up  to  $600/mo,  call  for 
details  on  our  anonymous  sperm  donor  pro- 
gram. Receive  free  comprehensive  health 
screening  &  help  infertile  couples.  So  if 
you're  looking  for  a  great  job  and  a  little  extra 
cash,  call  us  first.  310-824-9941. 


Pay  your  tuition 
with  eggs. 


If  you're  a  woman  between  18 
and  35,  you  can  earn  money  easi- 
ly, anonymously.  Donate  your 
eggs  to  an  infeitile  couple. 

$3,500  and  up,  depending  on 
your  education  and  other  qualifi* 
cations.  CaU  today. 

THr  CSNTER  FOR  ECG  OPTIONS 
310/546-6786 

•  The  Center  for  En  Options,  LLC 


EGG  DONORS  NEEDED 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 
wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

$5,000 
^    CALL  MIRNA  (818)  832-1494    ^ 


Are  you  or  someone  ypu  know 

a  healtify  individuaj^om  in 
tCorea  ^d 

III  A  in\  ::Wm  ^\\\ 


2600 

Wanted 


ADOPTION 

Baby  Is  our  dream.  We  can  provide  love&se- 
curity.  All  expenses  paid.  Attorney  involved. 
Confidential.  Call  Gina  &  Frank.  B88-676- 
1995. 


1100 

Cnnipiis  Happenings 


2700 

Appliances 


REFRIGERATOR  FOR  SALE  Practically 
new,  med  sized  (34"tall)  Danby  Designer 
fridge,  lots  room,  manual  included,  paid 
$200>,  asking  $100.  310-208-2586 


3500 

Furniture 


MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY,  STEARNS  &  FOSTER.  Also  hivin- 
sels-$79.95.  Fulls-599.95,  Queens-$1 39.95. 
Kings-Si 99.95.  Queen  Piltowtops  $199.95. 
Beacon.  Open  7-days.  1309  Westwood 
Blvd  310-477-1466. 

WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

Sleigh  beds.  Rustic  pine  furniture,  armoires, 
mattress  sets,  slip  covered  &  upholstered  so- 
fas/chairs. Leather  sofas  &  chairs  310-745- 
2253. 


11  oo 

Campus  Happenings 


Califohuji^finical  Trial^  leading  research  facility, 
conduj^jil^n  important  Mafick  research  study  involvii|f  this 

population  and  is  seeking  volurtteers  to  participate.  If  you 

would  like  to  participateyplease  calPDr.  Stan  Jhee  of  California 

Clinical  Trials  at  310-358-1612  or  oiie  of  our  Phone  Research 

Associates  at  1-888-CC-TRIALS.  All  qualified  volunteers  must 

be  able  to  communicate  in  English  and  may  be  compensated 

up  to  $80.00.  Enrollment  is  limited  and  begins  immediately, 

so  call  us  now  at 

1-888-CC-TRIALS 

or  visit  our  web  site  www.cctrials.com. 
California  Clinical  Trials 


!• 


Finding  Answers  Together 

www.CCTRIALS.com 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded.  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared application.  John  Manley,  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd  #300  LA,  CA  90025. 
310-820-7553.  Deadline:  10/30/00. 


Stereos/TVs/Raclios 


BIG  SCREEN  45"  cotor  TV  $575  obo.  Cotor 
TV  27"  new  new  $175.  Cotor  TV  20"  new 
new  $100.  310-313-6449 


11  OO 

Campus  Happeninqs 


JiOOO 

Autos  for  Sale 


1972  MERCEDES  280  SEL  4  5L  classic  lux- 
ury sedan,  great  condition.  $3750.  310-470- 
7026. 

1984  HONDA  CIVIC  2  door,  4  speed,  runs 
great,  good  gas  mileage.  AM/FM  cassette, 
new  muffler,  $1100  obo.  310-444-9814. 

1986  TOYOTA  CAMARY.  Runs  Excellent  Au- 
tomatic, 4door,  White,  A/C,  AM/FM  Stereo 
80,000  miles.  $2800  310-837-3349  or  W0f1( 
310-825-4687. 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  19d0. 
84000mi,  good  cortdition,  povrar  windows, 
black,  A/C.  registratkxi  pak)  (or  one  year 
$4000.  CaU  Vicente  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerOuda.edu 


1100 

Campus  Happeninqs 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1 988  TOYOTA  CELICA  GTS.  Power  sunroof. 
AC,  cruise,  autok>ck  alarm.  5speed  stick 
sourxJ-system  new  battery.  Exceltenl  engine. 
$2400obo.  Can  Jay:310-839-7654. 


1994  GEO  PRISM  Original  o*wier  Auto,  air, 
airbags  Well  maintained.  70,000  miles.  Blue 
book  $6510,  asking  $5000  obo.  310-478- 
8400  L-Cutler© yahoo.com 


1996  FORD  ASPIRE  71500mi,  auto,  a/c. 
airtMg,  red  excellent  condition,  $2950  obo! 
Leaving  Country  Call  Andras  310-825-4585 
or  after  6pm  310-208-4345. 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Cars  as  tow  as  $500 
(or  Mstinga  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214. 


€et  great  food, 

products, 

and  services  at 

even  better 

prices. 

Every  5th  and 
1 0th  week 


•  •  • 


For  advertising 

information,  please 

call  825-2161 


Oaihr  Bruin  OasstfM 


Monday,  Octobff  16, 2000       35 


'fi. ' .  .■ 


Lehman  Brothers 


'*-^^j'-mM-^-*i~»tr^  J^^t^t 


•."••srhr? 


Lehman  Brothers  ;^ 

cordially  invites  undergraduates 
to  attend  a  presentation  on 
career  opportunities  in     ^^ 


Investment  Banking 


:.t>. 


Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 

6:00  p.m. 

W  Hotel  -  Studio  3  Room 


I 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Display 


Lehman  Brothers  is  an  equal  opportunity  employer. 


WlwJ(|[fOOM10ilj(M)(IDO 


•i^* 


,')V.S, 


»{*i*i>4^**«*>    * 


36       Mondiir,  October  16^2000 


l»      4lfe. 


Flu  Vaccine 


For  all  registered  students  as  of  1  7  October, 
by  appointment  in  the  Ashe  Center 

Also  look  for  FREE  FL  Vaccine  fairs  in  November 

Visit  the  Ashe  web  site  for  more  information,  request 

on  appointment  or  ask  a  health  related  question- 

http.//www. saonet.ucla.edu/health.htm  - 

or  call  825-4073 


ucia  Ashe  Center 


^^    TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PU77I F 


ACROSS 

1  Tomato  jelly 
6  Theme 
1 1  Type  of  league 

14  City  on  the  Nile 

15  Swiftly 

16  Antique  auto 

17  Goodie  for  Fido 

18  Clerk's  concem 

20  Knight's  title 

21  Like  basketball 
players 

23  Washer  cycle 

24  Orchard 
26  Fortunate 
28  Lead  ore 

30  Emulated  John 
Grisham 

31  Egg  shapes 

32  Entices 

33  Guernsey,  e.g. 

36  Optimistic 

37  Long  stories 

38  Gymnast  Korbut 

39  Navy  offrcer: 
abbr. 

40  Buffalo 

41  Get  some 
knowledge 

42  Wheat  or  rye 

43  Woke  up 

44  Uses  coupons 

47  Hairdos 

48  Greek  market 

49  Bird  treat 

50  Irked 

53  Raised  a  false 

alarm 
56  Clean  off 

58  Long  fish 

59  Burglar 

60  Fees 

61  Pig's  abode 

62  Contains 

63  Talk 

DOWN 

1  Parts  of  a  ptay 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


DsizjBC]  Sana  Qsam 

„  HSS    □QOSDIE 

msmsnsii]     sius 
ossos  BQniiii  [iiDm 

BCIOQ    BDSISQ    SQOS 

BDBaiaiaegs  ddqqqs 
SSQSD   saoQ   aoDmD 

BBBB    DiaHH    dDBBim 


2  Hindu  woman's 
attire 

3  Full-length 
mirror 

4  Gershwin 
brother 

5  Popular  fabrics 

6  —leaf 

7  Iridescent  gem 

8  Spigot 

9  Kind  of  cube 

10  Some  house 
pets 

11  Golf  dubs 

12  Stanza 

13  Hitched 
19  Smart 
22  Actress 

Gardner 

25  Tmst 

26  Skater  Boitano 

27  House  sites 

28  At  or  Tipper 

29  Cosmetics 
connpany 


30  Cart 

32  Foundation 

33  School  friend 

34  Giant  in  fairy 
tales 

35  Magk:ian's  stick 

37  Thailand, 
formerly 

38  Egg,  in  France 

40  WtSh 

41  Dawdles 

42  Actor 
Rkrfwrd  — 

43  Caviar,  actually 

44  PotttKal 
campaigns 

45  Heron 

46  Lace  mat 

47  Shirt  parts 
49  Snow  coaster 

51  On  the  briny 

52  Student's  seat 

54  Owl's  questk>n 

55  Grease 
57  Knock 


pOfinmCiatsmti 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


1300 


C;iiit[)!i«-  R(MT 


1300 


Cnifipiis  Rcnniitnii.'iit 


3^00 

CnmpiitfMS  /  SuttWiiri! 


Deloitte 
Consulting 


Memory 
Upgrades 

PC,  MAC,  Notebook 

Wholesale 
to  the  public 


travel 

5600-5720 


5700 

Tmv(;I  licktMs 


,AutQ  ln«urance,fe:„„^ 


Mercury  Broker  in  Westwood.  No  Brokers  Fees.  Also  other 
markets.  Low  Rates.  Foreign  Students  and  New  Drivers  OK. 
i31W208-3548  1081  Westwood  B^d.  Suite  221 


VICTORY  TRAVEL 


UVM  iMtmCh  SPSOALISTS 

\Cty        119   M«/M«  »Ml«  >••  I 

109   Um  149 

CekeSMlMoi    99   NtwiAiiM  299 

lasdvodv        209   S.D»CH»  209 

3tV  toiala  220 

ICMoHca  20a    QMfto  2S9 

179   Caracat  1991 

^•■AMiB  u«M4_i  hsMMu  mm 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


'93  NISSAN  SENTRA  XE.  2door,  5spd/man- 
ual,  wtiHe  A/C,  am/tm  cassette,  cruise  con- 
trol, good  condition,  90K.  $4400  Denise  310- 
266-3838  x48480. 

'96  CHEVY  CAVALIER.  -68,000fni,  CD,  sun- 
roof, standard,  A/C.  Must  sell  $4900  otxs 
310-428-2345. 


5100 

Motorcycles  foi  S.ilc 


1981  HONDA  900  SPORT-$  1000.00  «  1998 
SUZUKI  800  INTRUDER,  showroom  condi- 
tion. Uto  new  under  4200  nf»lle8-$5600.00. 
C«l  >f»r  flpm  323-293-4009.  


5200 

P.irkiiuj 


GREAT  LOCATION.  Comer  Midvale  and 
Ophlf.  Lrg  parking  spot  in  subterreanian 
garage.  Offers  better  safety  and  protects 
from  the  elements.   $150/rTKVol».  310-657- 


NEWYORK  aSL 

"259  .«^     &SL 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  applMlton  lM«,  Mgh  approval  rate,  low 
interwt  nte,  at  appteams  iveloome.  Call 
too-free:  1-868-427-2677. 


,  Mexico  EscMM^ 

l$329  Cabo  Son  Lucas  ^^ 

$519  Cancwn 
|$359  PiMrtoVoRorta 

'/rinoccJIi^ilmMr^mi*^ 


v/ww.vittorytravcl.€om 

(323)  277-4595 


6100 


FREE  WEBSITEIIl 

__,  ,^ YOUR  OWN  6i>«Q#web*te  ABSOLUTELY 

STUDENT  LOAN^     free  Ea«y.«M»,qu*l».NOb«n.f«l.to 

Get  yoor  Stafford  Loan  from  Un*verBltyCred-     ' 
It  Unton  (Lander  Coda  832123).  We're  on 
carrpoa  at  Ackerman  A-tevet.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.oig 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


Monday,  October  16, 2000       37 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


2200 

Kt.'M^areh  Subjects 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


6200 

Health  Setvices 


Allergy  Sufferers 


^m 


,-.:--   Are  you  Of  Japanese  Descent? 

'■■-[^■:'':'-^^  your  allergies  make  your  eyes  RED  and  tTCMYr  ■ 

We  are  seeking  people  who  are  allergic  to  tree,  grass,  ragweed,  cat,  pollen  or  dust  or  models.  If  you 
suffer  from  allergic  symptoms  to  one  or  more  or  these  allergens,  you  may  be  eligible  to  participate 
-- =       :-:■■-:     i"  upcoming  allergy  research  studies  for  anti-allei^ic  eye-drops. 


Benefits  of  participation 
Include: 

•  Free  study  related  eye 
examination 

•  Financial  compensation 


V^i 


For  more  Information  call: 

Jonathan  Macy,  M.D. 
310'6S7'2777 


You  may  qualify  if  you: 

•  Are  in  good  health,  and, 

•  Are  of  Japanese  descent 

•Get  RED,  ITCHY  EYES  from  tree, 
grass,  cat  pollens,  mold  or  dust. 


Ask  about  our  referral  program 

Compensation  is  available  for  every  person  you  refer  who  completes  one  of 

our  studies. 
Ask  for  details 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinatiofis 


-J 


Be  Beautiftil 

Porcelain  Bonding 

$590  Each,  Less  10%  for  Students 

Open  evenings 

Peter  Wylan,  DOS 
Bellflower  Dental  Group 

"*  (562)925-3765 

1 031 8  Roaecrana    BetIf  lower  90706 
30  min.  from  campus 


6200 

Health  Services 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


56570' 


ppEfflig^^aii^a 


6200 

Health  Services 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  (^BracesV 


(310)  826  -  7494 

llM5WilihinM<id.MQ 
L«An(el<i.CA  SOa?S 

(949)  552  -  5890 

IHIMCulwrDr.  tA 
Inin.. «  SB715 


.^SSL  Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontif;t«; 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


Deliver  Brilliant  Results 

•  Cosmetic  Porceloin 
Surgical  Ofttiocionitcs 

•  Renriovable 

•  TradltiotKil 
•  Invteibte 

•European 


Teeth  Whitening   $8^:00 

upper  Of  lower  "^       ^^  \J  %J 


Pg^JTAL  HEALTH  CARE  " 

■  (Ofnee  of  S.  Tttilmawl.  DOS) 

We  Create  Beautiful  Smiles! 

•  All  Phases  ol  Dentistry 

•  24  Hour  Emergency  Service 

•  MedKol  &  Most  Insurance  Wans  Accepted 
•All  Students  &  Faculty  Members  are  welcome" 

First  time  introductory  offer  with  this  coupon 
Tel:  (310)  475-5598  /  Fax:  (310)  475-1970 
Online:  www.onvillage.com/e/dentalhealth 

aocn 


1620  Westwood  Wvd  ,  West  Lo*  Ai\geles.  Between 
Wilslure  It  S*nti  Monioi  (Fur  Pmrktng  m  Rmr) 


(Reg  $1701 

|»  f  ull  or»l  tumtrution  •  Or»l  Cmcei  Scr«ning 
•  Nneiv»r>)C-R*y»  •  Ptnodontil  EMminltion 

[;;^ClMimgji_Poli;hmj    «  X  Rjy>  ut  nnnlrtniltrrMt 


6200 

Health  Services 


6300 

Lerjal  Advice/Attorneys 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST.  Sexual  harrassment,  Discrimina- 
tion, Auto-accidents,  SJIps/lalls.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  Westside.  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW'86). 
www.bestlawyer.com  310-277-3000. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


AinMiWeOoni 

Parrlck  Farins  Agency 
Student  Loan  Program 
25.000  per  year.  5  Min.  Approval 
(310)  206-7183  •90024 


6000 

Insurance 


Farmers.com 

Potrlcl<  Parlns  Agency 

Student  Loon  Program 

2  5,  (XX)  per  year. 

5  Min  Ajpproval 

(310)  20e-7  1  83  •  90024 


Believe. 


Displnv 
206-30(m 


"»\--       1^.  ■..■'*•;•• 


6200 

Health  Services 


LOSE  30  lbs,  30  days.  Money  Back 
Quarantee.  Programs  start  at  $38  1-800- 
414-36S2 

MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
s^'peepTlaaue  Massage.  Uonw w^Mudent 
ID  Monday-Frtday  lOam-Spm.  Maxina  CMT 
310-575^294,  Qnt  CettWcem  ewMWe 


6300 

Lefjal  Advice/Attorneys 


PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  In 
several  pre-paid  legal  sen^lce  programs 
providing  quaMy  legal  aen/lcee  to  plan  mem- 
bers.  Robert  Mo88(UCLAW71)  310-260- 


6^00 

Movers/Storafje 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-foot  trucks  fully  equipped  for  large  moves. 
Can  24/7.  Available  on  stwrt  notice.  License 
T1 63644.  B00-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  w/14tt  truck  and  doHies, 
small  Jobs,  short  nottee  ok.  SF,  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  (So  Bruins!  10th  yr  310- 
285-8688. 

JERRTS  MOVINQ«DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available  Also,  pick- 
up donatk»ns  fOf  Amertean  Cancer  Society. 
Jerry  031 0-391 -5657. 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedteated  pro- 
fessional At  your  home  or  WLA  studk).  1st- 
lesson  free.  No  drum  set  necessary 
Neil:323-654-8226 


8-liour  class  is  Just  $25 

'Ne  stress'  classes  ofTered 

TacsAVed  nights, 

or  all  day  Saturday! 

Walk  to  dass! 
Walk-Ins  welcome. 

Westwood  Driving  A  Trafllc  School 

ie>3  InitM  A*CMM  ffllS 
(Jim  alMv*  %rr*»4  Ike  B«m1i,  ktm  trm  RMe  AM) 

C«S  !•  riMnre  jwar  Mat!  JIS-2SS-3U3 


PSYCHOTHERAPY 

(  iirin^i  \  (  tnin(k'n!l;il 
C  omisclino 

DopivsMon.  \n\ii.-i\. 

I'Jcl.ili'oiivliipN.  ,\(IJkIioiis  \ 

,\hii>>c 


6600 

Personal  Services 


Menage  a  trois?  I  do  translations  in  German. 
English,  or  French  Call  Julia  310-826-8917. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  lor  de- 
pression, anxiety,  obsessions,  post-traumat- 
ic stress.etc.  Couples/Individuals.  Crime  vte- 
tims  may  be  eligitHe  for  free  treatment.  Call 
LIZ  Gould(MFC#32388)©310-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  consultatton 

ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW.  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Frustrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
professional  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultant.310-826-4445  www.wlnning- 
personstatemont.com. 


GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professkjnal  near  UCLA  All  levels,  guitars 
avaHable.  Leam  to  play  etfoittessly! 
www.JWGS.oom.  CaH  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 


/'■  ■    <     I  'I.  M'.iUuh  'li    I    I,   ( 

SIm  rl\  KhodiKhid.  Mf  | 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  lormatting,  tran- 
scribing Personalized,  professional  assls- 
tance.  Ace  Words,Etc.  310-820-8830. 

SERRANO'S  CLEANING  SERVICES.  Busi- 
"•»•  JJcenae.  Years  of  experience  Afford- 
able prtoec.  Otfioes.  apartments,  cofuJomlni- 
umt  hniMet  Cleaning,  Uundfy  ete.  Marta 
310-B36-7258  310-655-3664 


!/;/■ 


^Mik 


»    >    *    I    >    V, 


38       Monday,  October  16,2000 


DaityBniin  Classified 


Mty  Brain  Oassified 


Monday,  (ktober  16,2000       39 


6700 

Professional  Services 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Comprehensive  Oi»se<tatton  AsMlanc* 
Theses.  Papers,  arxj  Personal  Siatementa 

Proposals  arvj  Books 

Inlemalional  Students  Wetcome.  Since  1965 

Sharon  Bmt,  Ph.D.  (310)  4704662 

www.Bcar-Wfile.com 


7100 

Tiitoriiuj  Wnrited 


DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  12416-yr- 
old  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurarree 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $l0-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 


TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Uniorv/Union.  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day.  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
pers.com  , 

WRITER'S  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlining,  researcti.  and  production 
assistance  for  academic  or  professional  writ- 
ing. Experienced  writing  instructor,  Harvard 
Univeristy  M.A.  Jon/310-367-5666 


GERMAN  NATIVE 

To  tutor  young  boy  in  German  once/wk.  (pre- 
ferably male).  Venice.  310-392-4974. 


Coieer  OppotiuiiHiLs 


SAFETY  INSPECTOR 


tator  consuWno  iffm.  CotJege  dsgree.  Mingual 

(VS*i«nMefl<ori86n/Swniahya  must  SlroioPC 

ffWng  stdli.  Travd  requirad.  OSHA/MIti  andsafi 

.       experience  preftfred.EritryleMljXMition.      ^ 

V        Exc8flentlMnefitspaci(a9eoflterBCl.       / 

Vn>.       Vi3ittiniirw.c6cc-oiilliie.ccm       y/y' 


PfT  OR  CAREER 
OPPORTUNITY! 

Private  tutors/instructors  for  K-12  and  Edu- 
cational Consultants  for  coflege  admissions 
services.  Seeking  Undergraduales-PhD's. 
Experience  preferred,  strong  commonfca- 
twns  skills  required.  Future  Youth  lnc./Mind- 
Life  Consulting  Group.  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329. 


STOCK  BROKER.   Licenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216,  Woodland  Hills,  CA.  Instructor  Davkl 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  University) 
818-703-8889. 


THERAPEUTIC  AID  for  auUstte  chiWren. 
P/T,F/T  (flexiWe).  $12-l5Air.  BS/BA  Psychol- 
ogy preferred.  Experience  w/DT,  behavior 
modificalion.  Contact  818-788-2388,  fax  re- 
sume 818-788-3875. 


7700 

Child  Ciue  W.iiUed 


P/T  NANNY 

for  7  yr-oW  gin.  Pacific  Palisades.  2-6:30pm, 
M-F  Must  have  car.  Errands,  light  house- 
keeping, chiW  pick-up.  $10/hr.  310-230- 
3877. 

PACIRC  PALISADES  Age  9.  Good  Driver. 
M-F  2:30-6pm.  $10/hr.  Live  out.  Non-smoker. 
References  Required.  Call:  213-243-4025 
Business  hours. 

PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  for  10  yr/oW 
gin.  Need  help  6:45-8:30AM  MTW,  2-7:30pm 
MT.  Must  have  car,  experience  with  cNldren 
and  help  with  en-ands.  310-441-9766. 

PART-TIME  BABYSITTER.  Responsible, 
experienced,  chiW  development  preferred. 
Energette,  for  2-year-oh]  and  5-year-old. 
Own  car.  310-273-4900. 


7800 

Help  W.'inted 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  fleW  sales,  flexltte  hours  +  com- 
missk)n  and  bonus!  Ambitwus  salesperson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  supportOfones- 
4all.com  Attn:Fiek3  Sales. 


ACCOUNTING  CLERK  Needed.  $12- 
15/DOE.  Must  have  taken  accounting  class- 
es. Excel  and  strong  communrcation  skills. 
Fax  resume  attn:Melody  323-965-31 94. 


CONTACTS 

N(J  HIDDEN  CHAHCIFS' 


EXTENDED  c.w«LY2^$59 «39h 

D|SP(gJBIiS ^Mo/4Bo«««69 

CjjSfeE  BROWN  EYES extTSptI 

Haze),  GfMn,  BhM 

CHANGE  LIGHT  EYES  bsi «49rt 

Bhie,  Green,  Aqua 

I  BIFOCALyiNONOVISION add  1*50 

ASnGMATISMEXT «a9ril 


EYE   EXAM  $1 


TUTOR  NEEDED  for  2  boys  (ages  648).  Job 
wouW  include  the  foltowing:  Ptek  up  boys 
from  Fairbum  Elementary  School  (approx 
2mi  from  UCLA)  at  2;35pm  M-Thurs, 
12:10pm  on  Fri.  Take  boys  to  Century  City 
condo,  do  HW,  tutor  various  subjects,  give 
them  snack,  swim  in  Olympk:  size  pool,  play 
ball,  etc.  Parents  will  arrive  home  at  approx 
6:30pm  everyday.  •"Important  to  note  this 
job  is  every  other  week  only.  $300/wk.  Ad- 
justments up  if  more  wort<  or  hours  neces- 
sary. Reply  to  Anthony  BrookJier  310-273- 
7166  or  Fax  info  310-277-3006. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homewort?  assist  for  two  boys,  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  in  Laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule.  Some  driving. 
Please  caH  evenings:310-401-0113  or  day- 
time:3 10-392- 1405. 


B 


FIRST  CALL 
Staffing  Services 

College  Students! 
Earn  extra  money  for  school! 

Are  vou  looking  for  a  way  to  pay  off  those  student 

loans?  Call  us  for  short  or  long  lerni  work 

assignmenis  We  have  lots  of  fun  jobs  available! 

CdjaeiflSMMiMDoica 

310.264.9914 

oOnkbiGltnUe 

818242.9988  f 

•  »«.flrttc»II»j»fr.ceiB  ) 


PTCHILDCARE 

For  Very  special  5yr  okl  daughter.  Intenv- 
ttonal  or  bilingual  background  preferred, 
car&reterences  required.  Grand  Piano.  Bev- 
ertywood.  Laird:310-287-l677. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hardware  aixl  soft- 
ware computer  skiUs  required.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours.  $l0-l3/hr.  Tennis  a  plus! 
We  are  natnnal  ftower  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


SITTER  P/T  twtee  a  week.  Bright,  responsi- 
ble student  to  watch  infant.  (Prefer  education 
major,  previous  experience  and  own  trans- 
portatkKi).  Torn  3 10-9 10-3405. 

STUDENT  NEEDED 

3-4  days,  4-7pm.  Must  have  own  car.  Walk- 
ing distance  to  UCLA.  $8/hr.  Drive  chiWren, 
help  w/homework.  Non-smoker.  310-470- 
0021. 


AH  tR SCHOOL  homewort*  supervisor/  ba- 
bysitter tor  3rd-grade  boy.  Must  be  dlscl- 
pUned  to  teach  good  HW  habits.  Elementa- 
ry Ed  major  a  plus.  Need  car.  Tues-Frl  2  30- 
6:00pm.  $8.00-$10.00/hr.  CaM  310-390-6962 
evenings.  323-468-5273  days,  ha- 
katzhbcOyahoo.com. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary. 
Host  muski/talk-shows  for  our  radk>  stations. 
P/T.  $10-15/hr,  $200+per/show,  plus  fantas- 
tte  benefits.  323-468-0080,  24-hours 


ATTENTION!  A  PERFECT  MATCH.  If  you 
have  1 5-75  lbs.  to  tose  we  pay  you.  888-559- 
3858. 


UBMKBB/ 

BwwIyHtaAdl. 
Oiai3BM613 


1038$.ltab((taiBtML,r 

*ed3-5Fr)ll-l 

1K2W.linGitatoi.,fG 

Vlted11-1.Fii3-5 

4130AlaRlcAnL,riB 

Tliurs3-5,S«2-4pm 


11227 , . 

ThufslMpm, 


I,  SiM  1:30-1  pm 


'  '<^f    r:.»i<-   Kit   w/Cnrc:li;ijii 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


"ENGLISH  EXPERT 

DOES  WRITING  IN  ENGLISH  make  you 
crazy?  Assistance  in  basic  skills  to  major  re- 
search paper  completton.  ESL  experienced 
310-839-9933/Adam. 


BOND  TUTORING 

All  subjects  6-1 2th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  will  meet  your  indivkJu- 
al  needs.310-471-7628. 


TUTOR  WANTED  for  4th  grade  boy.  Bilin- 
gual (Frer>ch-English)  American  preferred. 
3times/wk  for  2  hours.  Must  have  own  car 
Bel-air.  310-471-0032  or  dbtwenty4sev- 
enOaol.com 


7200 

Typing 


TYPING/SECRETARIAL  services.  Typing 
$2.  50/page.  Photocopying,  answering  serv- 
ice, $50/month.  Personal  mailbox, 
$50/month.  Car  garage.  Personal  answering 
service  also  provkled.  310-475-8787. 

WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertatwns,  Iranscriptran,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Monica,  310-828-6939.  Hollywood,  323-466- 
2888. 


7600 

Child  Care  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  run  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Ctose  to  UCLA 
310^73-0772. 


NAGMA  Pr£SCHOOL 


UmtfWXA.  todWy.  dOM  to  UCIA 

FT  4  PT.  Ages  2-6. 
CM  (310)207-4543  or  v«sN  In  (Mreon 
^  1620  S.  Bundy. 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results. 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Catoulus/Physics/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/English.  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 


FRENCH  TUTOR 

PHD  GRADUATE  tutors  Frer>ch  language  for 
ail  levels  beginning,  advanced  and  conver- 
sattonal  French.  Excellent  senate  and  rates 
Call  Liza:310-575-3e74. 

MATH  TUTOR 

I  tutor  SAT  math.  Pre- Algebra,  Algebra  1  and 
2,  Geometry.  Trigonometry,  and  beginning 
Cateulus.  UCLA  Student,  math  major.  Four 
years  experience  tutoring  math  and  one  year 
teaching  experience.  You  come  to  me 
(UCLA)  $25/hour.  Call  for  more  infonnatton 
Stephanie:3 10-702-6455. 

THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
lenn  paper  assistance.  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  Wetoome 
Can:310-452-2865 
www.thewriterscoach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

Kind  and  patient  Stanford  graduate.  Help 
vwth  the  English  language— for  students  of 
all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate 
Help  with  the  English  language— for  stud- 
ents  of  all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW.MYTUTOR  COM  Math/Physics/Sta- 
tistk;s/Engllsh/Hebrew/chemislry/b»ology/as- 
tronomy/  Computer  programming  Compu- 
terized statistteal  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
senrtee.  Call  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


3»STTs 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


AFTERNOON  BABYSITTER  WANTED. 
MofvFri,  2pm-7pm.  Own  transportafkm  a 
must.  Brentwood.  310-979-7103. 

ATHLETIC,  Energetk:,  Intelligent  guy  to  play 
sports  and  help  out  with  homework  for  kkls 
6.8.  As  nr«ny/imie  hours  as  wanted,  after 
sctxx)l  and  on  weekends.  Must  know  how  lo 
drive  and  swim.  Call  Maureen  310-440- 
0990. 


WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILDCARE  For  12-year-oW  girt,  SM,  M-F 
3:30-7ish.  Car  with  insurance.  References 
required.  $9+/hour.  Night:31 0-828-6206 
Oay:81 8-954-3276. 

WANTED:  Responisble  indivWual  needed  to 
help  after  school  with  2  small  chiWren. 
Mondays  4-8pm  and  some  weekends.  Must 
Drive.  References.  CaN  310-446-1438. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


$$GREAT  PAY$$ 

SlOiMOUR?  Students  with  good  Math*Eng- 
lish  skills  needed  for  PT-FT  office  poslttons. 
Flexible  schedule  but  must  be  available  all 
day  Tuesday  and  Thursday  until  December. 
Fax  resume:818-769-4694  or  call:818-769- 
4600  ask  tor  Lisa. 


ATTRACTIVE  FEMALE  MODELS  needed 
for  internet  wort«,  18-22  years  old  only. 
$250/day  Email  clint880nrKidels.com  for 
nrwre  info. 


$1,000'S  WEEKLY!! 

STUFF  ENVELOPES  at  home  tor  $2.00 
each  plus  bonuses.  F/T,  PfT.  Make  $800+ 
weekly  guaranteed!  Free  supplies.  For  de- 
tails send  one  stamp  to:  N-33,  PMB  552 
12021  Wilshire  Blvd..  Los  Angeles.  CA 
90025. 


employment 

7400-8300 


74  OO 

Business  Opporlunities 


A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  Its  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35,  Refundable.  No  Risk. 
http://zibglb.com/phanya.  213-739-0994  ksk 
for  Stephanie. 


BABYSITTER  NEEDED  tor  weekends  In 
Brentwood.  WouW  like  non-smoker,  gentle, 
piayful,  responsible  soul.  Call  Violetta  3ia 
472-8745. 


BENEDCT  CANYON-10  y.o.  girt  attending 
Warner  Ave  After  School  Care.  From  1- 
6:30pm.  M-F  $350/wk.  Must  have  car  and 
good  driving  records.  310-858-7060. 

CHILCARE/DRIVER.  Mon/Tues,  3-7:30pm, 
5  year-oW-boy  ptek-up  from  school  to  activi- 
ties and  home,  supervise  HW  and  play  Care 
for  2  year-oW  brother  for  1  hr.  Good  driver. 
References.  Good  pay.  Westvwod.  310-475- 
1953. 


BURNED  OUT? 

Tired  of  misleading  ads?  I'm  tired  of  clueless 
people.  Want  to  make  $5000-$8000/mo7 
Beveriy  Hills  offtee  exptoding.  Call  me:  310- 
268-1515. 


CHILD  CARE  Wanted  Tues  3-8,  Ttiurs  3-6 
AND/OR  Sat  12-9  in  Santa  Montea. 
Someone  to  help  fun  time  Mom  w/  kWs  ages 
4,6,10.  Must  have  experience.  Good  pay 
Call  Doug  310-888-0163.  Fax  310-451- 
6050. 


COLLEGE   ACHIEVERS 

Ground  floor  cornpany,  Southem  Califomia 
market  exploding.  Want  to  make  $5- 
8K/month?  I'll  teach  you  how.  FT/PT  Can 
310-360-6994  9am-ipm. 


7500 

earner  0()pnrttmitins 


CHILDCARE/DRIVER  for  12-yr-old  boy 
Non-smoker.  Likes  kWs  and  dogs.  Help 
w/HW.  M-Thurs.  4:15-5:45pm.  $10mr.  Call 
310-828-5144. 


$15-$23/HR  BRK3HT,  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academk: 
Sut)jects.  Transportatwn  required  We  will 
train  RexiWe  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  test  scores  (SAT  GRE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educattonal  Sen/tees.  Attn  Bar- 
ry. 9911  W.  Pteo  Blvd.  Ste.1025.  LA  CA 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424.  Postttone  avall- 
able  throughout  LA  and  the  Valley. 

$1500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  circulars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  Infonnatton 
packet.  CaU  202-466-1639. 

$8  to  $15  per  hour 

Wbfit  in  Westwood  for  an  upscale  singles 
orjaniatlon.  Women  excel.  Telemart<eting 
Recmft  new  members.  Weekly  pay.  Call  after 
3PM  Sun-Thurs.  Keilh:31 0-279-3300. 

•DANCE  HOSTESS* 

EXCELLENT  TIPS  +  SALARY.  Flexible 
schedule.  P/T-F/T.  LA  Downtown  nightclub 
No  ateohol/no  nudity.  18years+.  Call  now<|i 
213-620-9572. 


AUDIO  VISUAL 
OPERATORS  WANTED 

for  delivery  and  operattons,  throughout  cam- 
pus. Computer  and  customer  skills  pre- 
fen-ed.  AV  experience  not  required.  Open 
schedule  needed.  Must  be  able  to  Nft  35 
pounds.  Two  posittons  available:  Operator. 
$8.90/hr,  Technk:ian  $1l.40/hr  Call  Juan 
310-206-8002. 

BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Unen.  Excellent  pay,  hours  &  environment. 
Some  teller  experience  preferred  /Vpply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd  ,  LA,  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.ucu.org/jobs.htm 

CAMPUS  EVENT 
JOBS 

Earn  a  Bonus  up  to  $500  If  you  can  commit 
to  the  Mens  Basketball  Season  and  other 
Special  Events!!!  UmHed  number  ol  posi- 
ttons available,  for  UCLA  sfudents  only.  For 
more  informatton  caR  Sean.  310-  206-0736. 


Afe  you  a  model. 

or  wnnt   to  ti.t   stort«  r1^ 


Looking  for  all  types 
male/femaie  modeii/acum 

•PhMtiw    •Chiidrcn 

For  prtni  *  non-nnkM  canmcrciaU 

No  expehOKX  itqalied    No  fees. 


CARING  INDIVIDUALS  NEEDED  TO  sup- 
port UCLA  student  lABA.  an  intemattonally 
respected  agency,   is  seeking  Community 
Support  Compantons  and  Overnight  Com- 
pantons  to  assist  a  college  student  with 
physteal  chaHangaa.  Assistance  needed  in 
his  domi,ciMtM,and  the  community  of 
Westwood  (ABA  provides  paW  tivlning  and 
advancement  opportunities.  FuN  and  part 
time  shifts  available,  mduding  night  hou«. 
Full  time  beneflto  Include  madtoal/dental  cov- 
erage, 401 K  plan  and  p*d  Ihna  o«.  Compen- 
«•  wigiaiaupplemantl  tanure  pay.  Relat- 
ed ntpadance  or  BA  m  Payrtwtogy  pre- 
ferred.    Email    your    resume    to    rokel- 
lyOiaba.com  or  can  ton  froe-877-924-2220. 
For    more    infonnatton    visit    lABA    at 
www.laba.com 


DRIVE  CHILD  from  school  In  PkxVRobert- 
son  area  to  hon>e  in  Pacific  Palisades  in  af- 
ternoons. Must  have  car  and  Insurance.  310- 
454-7525. 


COLLEGE  STUDENT 
TUTORS  WANTED 

K-12  after  school.  In  WLA,  SM.  BH.  No  ex-' 
pertence  necessary.  $l0-15/hour  plus  bo- 
nus. The  Tutor's  Club  310-444-0449 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


BREAK  INTO 
HOLLYWOOD!!! 

After  a  decade  of  research-it's  here:  The 
"Industry  Secrets  VWeo".  Anyone  can  do 
this  simple,  ten-step  plan.  Get  the  inskJe 
track  to  achieving  your  acting  dreams 
now!  Send  $24  95  (check  or  money  or- 
der) to:  Break  Into  Hollywood  PO  Box  833 
Santa  Monfca,  CA  90406  or  can:  310- 
899-0082. 


FUN/CARING  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  tor 
picking  up  &  caring  tor  9yr  oW  girt.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-5days/wk. 
aftemoons-6pm.  Gayte  310-450-4109  (even- 
ings). 


^ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Buey  VMey.  Holywood,  or  Santa  Montoa 
office  neads  energetk:  people,  Bonuses! 
310-395-7368 


NANNY/MOTHER'S 
HELPER 

for  6yr-oW  boy  and  toddler  Flexibia  hours. 
Some  travel  w/famlly,  oapedaNy  weakands 
Must  be  lnsurad«cana«)  driver.  Live-In  pos- 
slble.  Refererices  a  must.  310-446-9970. 


*^^OVIE  EXTRA  WORK-  Beats  aN  Jobs.  Start 
ImmadhWy.  Great  pay.  Fun/Easy.  No  crazy 
•aaa.  Program  tor  free  medtoal  Cal-24/hr» 
323-85(M417. 


2  HASHERS  NEEDED  ASAP  for  Monday 
NIghta  only  II  Please  ca«  Miriam  310-206- 
9005. 


CARING  INDIVIDUALS  URGENTLY  needed 
in  Santa  Montoa  &  West  LA.  lABA.  a  leader 
In  the  fletd  on  non-averslce  behavtor  manag- 
ment  is  taeMng  Employment  Specialists  to 
asslsl  adulla  davatopmanlally  challenged  m 
an  ampioymam  aaMng  and  in  the  communi- 
ty lABA  provides  paid  training  and  advanca- 
ment  opportunMas.  WOrt<  from  8:30am  to 
2:30pfn  ♦  in  sarvica  hours.  M-F,37.5hnA»l(. 
EHgtole  for  madlcaManM.  401K  and  pakt 
time  off.  CompatWva  wagas^supplemental 
tenure  pay.  Related  experience  or  BA  In  Psy- 
chotogy  preferred.  Email  your  resume  to  ro- 
l«ellyOlaba.oom  or  can  ton  free  877-924- 
2220.  For  more  Into  visit  lABA  at 
www.iabacom 


GET  AN  "A"  on  your  haaRh  tesOIL  Detoxify 
•  your  system  fast  or  doUM  your  $$  back!!! 
Call   toll   tree   877-696-4541    ext:UC100. 
www.laroutpromottons.com 


P/T  DRIVER  CHILD- 
CARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  needs  drop-off  (6:45-eam)  A  ptek- 
up+errands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only.  Must  have 
car,  insurance&valld  Itoense.  Brentwood 
Please  can  Sarah  310-385-6766. 


A  PERFECT 
STUDENT  JOB 

DO  YOU  NEED  A  JOB  In  the  afternoons  dur- 
ing school  (M-F)?  All  day  Saturday,  tool  FuH- 
tmoe  Ailing  Quarter  Breaks  and  Summer  Vb- 
cattonel  Wort<  experterne  not  necsaaary  Ap- 
ply today  at  Westwood  SporVng  Goods 
1066  Qayley  Ave.  Westwood  VWaga 


CASHIER.  We  are  a  Chinese  Seafood  res- 
taurant. Speak  English.  Mandarin  or  Can- 
tonaaa.  Fuimma  or  part-time  Expedanoa 
prelanrad  626-641-8978. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Campus  Comer 
We  work  Mritti  your  schadula.  1/2  off  meals 
managameoi  training  opportunity.  Can  310- 
206^133. 


Display 
206-3060 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


CLERICAUCUSTOMER 
SERVICE 

M-F,  F/T  pennanent.  Good  phone  and  Eng- 
lish skills,  detail-oriented,  reliable  WLA  $9- 
$10/hr.   310-826-3759ext229. 

CLERK.  P/T,  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  pertecttonist  with  typing 
skills  tor  general  office  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  detail-oriented.  $1l/hour  to  start  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2437. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


FIVE  ATTORNEY  CENTURY  CITY  LAW 
FIRM  seeks  PfX  file  clertt.  Flex  hours  b/t  9- 
5pm,  M-F.  Computer  knowledge  a  plus  Fax 
resume  to  Meg  310-277-0035. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


CLINICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  position  immediately  available  for  a  li- 
censed laboratory  scientist  in  a  private  clini- 
cal laboratory  in  Santa  Monica.  Ub  provides 
endocrine,  andrology,  serology  and  immu- 
nology testing.  Incumbent  required  to  wort< 
in  weekend  rotaltons.  Salary  commensurate 
with  qualifications  and  experience.  Submit 
applications  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 
Technology  Laboratories,  1245  16th  Street 
Suite  105,  Santa  Monica,  CA  90404  nrai 
310-829-0102).  * 


FLORIST  SEEKING 

P/T  sales,  phone  assistant.  Simple  typ- 
ing/administration skills  helpful.  Flexible 
hours/fun  environment.  Call  Monica  323- 
852-0848. 

FRATERNITIES.  SORORITIES,  CLUBS 
STUDENT  GROUPS.  Earn  $1000-2000  this 
quarter  with  the  easy  Campusfundraiser.com 
three  hour  fundraising  event.  No  sales  re- 
quired. Fundraising  dates  are  filling  quickly, 
so  call  today!  Con'.act  Campusfundrais- 
er.com  at  (888)923-3238  or  visit  www.cam- 
pusfundrasler.com 


Seeking  bright,  active  person 

with  college  degree  to  assist 

with  2  children  ages  6  &  8, 

part  time,  for  school  related 

tutoring,  computer 

assistance,  and  extra 

curricular  activities.  Excellent 

personal  references  required. 

Resumes  to:  Rose  Cooper 
510  N.  Robertson  Blvtj. 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90048 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


OFFICE-EXCELLENT  OPPORTUNITY  2 
P/T  positions  available.  Flexible  hours.  Retail 
store  in  Westwood  Village.  310-208-8404 
from  12-6.  Mr.  Rogers. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


COFl-fcE  BAR  ATTENDANT  the  best  stud- 
ent  job.  You  must  be  responsible,  reliable 
experience  a  ptos.  Duttons  11975  San  Vi- 
cente.- 


COMMUNICATIONS/MARKETING  STUD- 
ENT needed  to  maricet  and  promote  an  up- 
scale optometrk:  practice.  Leave  message  at 
310-418-2020  and  fax  resume  to  310-271- 
3959. 


Responsible  Skate  & 

m^  Snowboarders  Wanted 


Sales,  technical  and  teaching 

positions  available  at  the 
Westside's  best  boardshop. 

Full  &  part  time  positions 
availat)le.  fvlust  be  honest  and 

experienced.  Great  perks, 
discounts,  &  bonuses.  Salary 

depends  on  experience. 

Call  for  Jessica  or  Enca  (310)  230-6085 
Fax  resume  to  (310)  230-4536 


COMMUNITY  SERVICE 
OFFICERS 

Do  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8  16  to 
$l0.46/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/u 
academk:  years  remaining  with  valid  driver's 
Icense.  Web:  www.ucpd.ucla.edu/ucpd/cso 
Email:  cso©ucpd.ucla.edu.  Phone  3io- 
825-2148. 


FRONT  DESK.  Perfect  P/T  positwn!  Short 
shifts,  some  nightsiweekends  in  small  exer- 
cise studio.  Must  be  friendly,  outgoing,  com- 
puter literate  and  have  dynamk;  personality. 
10-15hrs/wk.  Kim  310-393-6399. 


LIFEGUARDS  WANTED 

NOW  HIRING  Certified  lifeguards.  Culver- 
Palms  YMCA.  Call  Meredith  310-390- 
3604x7525. 

M.  FREDRIC 

Fashion  fonivard  company  tooking  for  ener- 
getic people  to  fill  sales  and  management 
positions.  Call  Tory  818-597-0212  ext  114 

MATCHMAKER 

For  dating  senrice  Must  have  great  people 
skills,  organized,  computer  literate,  secretari- 
al experience.  P/T  evenings.  310-914-3444, 
leave  message. 

MEDICAL  BILLING  SUPERVISOR  WANT- 
ED by  dynamic,  DME  &  Rehab  dealer  Ex- 
pertise with  Medicare,  MediCal  &  Insurance 
required.  Experience  with  Team  DME  Soft- 
ware a  big  plus.  Full-time  positwn.  Houriy 
compensation  commensurate  with  experi- 
ence. Fax  resume  to  310-575-1505. 


GENERAL  OFFICE  WORK  and  errands. 
Santa  Monfca  company.  Need  car  Non- 
smoker  Fax  resume  to  310-845-9691 


COMPUTER  and  LAN  coordinator  for  UCLA 
dept,  P/T.  Windows  NT.  exchange  sen/er,  Of- 
ftee software  experience  required,  10- 
20hrs/¥»k,  $16-20/hr  Respond  to  jobs«sum- 
mer.uda.edu 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE      I 


GEOGRAPHY 

Flood  certificatk)n  company  near  LAX 
has  immediate  openings  for  map  re- 
searchers. Part-time  and  Full-time.  Must 
be  map  profteient,  detail-oriented,  and 
possess  baste  computer  skills.  Geogra- 
phy background  is  prelen'ed.  Will  train. 
Interested  candkJates  fax  resume:  310- 
348-9022  atten:  Productton  Department. 


MEDICAL  SPECIALTY  COMPANY  is  looking 
tor  a  self-motivated  mdivklual  to  assume  a 
part  time  position  as  a  courier.  This  oppor- 
tunity provkles  training  and  access  to  the 
medical  sales  industry,  directly  in  the  hospi- 
tal O/R.  Must  have  good  communication  and 
customer  skills.  Resume:  bpltacoma©spnnt- 
mail.com.  Fax:  253-572-7490. 


F/T,  M-F  9-5.  Century  City  tocatten.  Seeking 
self-motivated,  energette  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate, 
bilingual,  college  degree  pref.  Fax  resume 
310-553-3996. 


CUSTOMER  SERVICE.  WEB  PROGRAM- 
MER NEEDED-  cash  weekly  plus  bonuses, 
2  bkxjks  from  campus.  One  job,  intemet 
knowledge  preferred.  310-282-1199. 
iobsOfash«>n4less.com. 

DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  is  hiring  van  driv- 
ers, tookirig  for  energette,  unstoppable. 
positive  crew  immediately.  Flexible  hours, 
busy  weekends.  Apply  in  person  M-Sat  till 
6pm.  Apply  at  937  Westwood.  3 1 0-208- 11 80 

DRIVER  NEEDED.  3hours  Tuesday,  Wed- 
nesday, Thursday  One  Stop  Westwood  to 
Santa  Montea.  $15/hr,  310-476-8401. 

DRIVER  NEEDED  Ptek-up  kkls  at  West- 
wood  Secondary  School,  back  lo  Hollywood. 
Flexible  schedule,  T-W-Th  5-8pm.  Call  323- 
436-0774,  evenings  only. 

ASSISTANT  P/T  for  West  coast  offtee  of  na- 
tional company.  Excellent  opportunity  Flexi- 
ble PfT  hours.  Please  call  Mona  Andrews 
310-278-3349. 

DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED  Full- 
«  time  or  part-lime  Westwood  driving  and  traf- 
jjfto  school.  CaU  for  infonnatten.  310-824- 


GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  clubs  in 
WLA.  Conversation  only.  No  ateohol.  Flexi- 
ble  hours.  Earn  top  $$$.  323-441-0985 

INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPRE- 
SENTATIVE. Film  advertising.  Call  retail 
stores  for  upcoming  releases.  Coordinate 
store  visits.  P/T-Fnr-8am-12pm  or  12:30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $10/hr-t-bonus.  310-566-2555. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Servfee  Representative.  Full  time:  excellent 
Italian  written  &  vert>al  skills  required  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1 768-jspatterson  O  ij- 
ginc.com. 


MEDICAL 

UPSCALE  OPTOMETRIC  PRACTICE  seeks 
fA-p/t  experienced,  high-energy,  articulate 
indivkluals.  Front-otftee/back-office.  Please 
leave  message:3l0-4l8-2020  And  fax 
resume:310-271-3959. 

MEN  AGES  18-24  for  nude  modeling  for 
riiagazines  and  fine  art.  Call  310-289-8941. 
days. 


NEW  FACES  WANTED 

Aa  AGES  AU.  TYPES 

FOR  UPCOMING  TV  FLM.  COMMERCIAL 

MUSCVCEOS 

Al«  PRtt^,  NO  FEES.  NO  EXP  REQ'D 

PLEASE  CALL  FOR  AUOmON  TIME 

AUOmONMGNOW 

(818)  379-7070 


t  DUNDEAL.NET  $15/hr.  P/T,F/T  now  seeking 

1  college  students  to  take  surveys  on  the  inter- 
net! Get  paid  for  your  opinten!  Wort<  from  any 
computer.  Sign  up  today  at:  www.dun- 
deal.net. 


INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Recepttenist.  Entry  level  position  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrs/wk  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
ferred. Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son 323-653-1768.  JspattersonOijginc.com. 

INTERNET  CO  seeks 
PIT  Receptionist 

for  Santa  Monica  offtee.  $8/hr,  great  oppor- 
tunity and  location!  Send  resume  to  isa- 
belle©webeasycom  or  fax  310-576-2011 
Attn:  Isabelle. 


MESSENGER 

STRONG  BRUIN  SUPPORTER&well  estab- 
lished Westwood  law  firm  seeks  2-part-time 
messengers(MWF  or  TR.  9:30-6:30)  to  work 
in  our  offtee  services  department.  Must  have 
reliable  car,  insurance&good  driving  record 
Addittonal  duties  include  mail,  photocopying, 
faxing,  switchboard,  etc.  Prefer  Baiin  stud- 
ents who  are  also  responsibleidetail-orienl- 
ed.  Please  call  Robin  Barnes  310-478-2541. 

MODELS  Catalog  Studio  seeks  models  and 
new  faces  lor  pholo  test  and  catalog  assign- 
ments $300- $500  per  day.  Agency  leads  No 
Fee  323-464-3172 


EARN  TRAVEL  MONEY 

NEED  TO  EARN  SOME  QUICK  CASH?  flier- 
ing  needed  immediately  on  campus  call 
jason  at  858-630-7976. 


EARN  WHAT  YOU'RE  WORTH!  Success 
driven  indivkjuals  wanted  for  expanding 
gtobal  business.  Serious  inquiries  only!  (no 
exp.  nee)  310-246-1522. 

EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed  Catering  sales.  Make  up  to 
$150/day.  Part  or  full-time  wort(.  CallDavW 
310-441-0394. 


EXPERIENCED  DRIVER  NEEDED  FOR 
PICKUP  of  toanager  from  UNI  High  to  Holly- 
»w>od  hills,  Ntokals  Canyon  3pm,  5days/wk 
323-876-6567 

F/T  or  P/T.  Children's  rotaH  store.  Hours:  sat 
rsqulrad.  $8-ia'hr  DOE  On  Santa  Montea 
Blvd  In  Westwood  310-234-9654 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


LAW  FIRM  NEEDS  PH  employee  from 
2003-2004  for  a  clerical  position.  Mail/fax  re- 
sume to  Rtek  Edwards.  Inc  Attn:  Margie 
1925  Century  Park  East  Los  Angeles,  CA 
90067.  Fax  310-286-9501. 

LAW  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  Beverty  Hills  P/T 
(Tues-Thurs,  1-4pm).  File  Cleric/Office  Sup- 
port. Need:  Excel,  Legal  filing  skills,  accura- 
cy/detail orientation,  and  computer  literate. 
Prtor  law  fimi  experience  preferred.  Com- 
pensation based  on  experience.  Fax  resume 
and  references  to  310-205-6081. 

LAW  OFFICE  ENVIRONMENT  ExceMenl 
opportunity.  Clertt  posittons  available.  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Minimum  20hrs/vA,  $7/hr.  Fax  re- 
sume and  proposed  available  hours  to  Hu- 
riian  Resources  Dept  310-274-2798  or  Mail 
to:  Lurie,  Zepeda.  Schmalz  &  Hogan  9107 
Wilshire  Blvd..  Suite  800.  Beveriy  Hills  CA 
90210. 


MODELS  WANTED  by  prolessional  photo- 
studio  for  upcoming  assignment  Male/Fe- 
male Pro/Non-Pro.  Fashion/Commer- 
cial/Theatrical. Call  for  appointment  818- 
986-7933 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  dnve&wort<  w/2  lun&gitted  kidsages  5«7. 
Perfect  schedule  for  student.  Must  have  car 
P/T  permanent.  Excellent  salary  Judy:310- 
551-1145 


MUSIC  MARKETING  company  seeks  Full- 
Time  online  mart<eiing  assistant.  Entry-level 
position  assisting  online  ma  riveting  division 
geared  towards  the  entertainment  company 
Must  have  excellent  computer  sklllsrUcnowl- 
edge  of  the  Internet  Call  Rob  M  323-930- 
3141  for  more  info  or  visit  wwwnoizepollu- 
tton.com 


LIBRARY  JOBS  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties,  12-19  hrs/wk  $6  70/hr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Andgone  Kutay 
310-825-1084 


NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  Mostly 
njns  enands.  some  light  housewortc  and 
cooking,  good  pay.  near  UCLA.  4-5 
hours/day.  310-788-4727. 

OFFICE  HELP 

Established  Brentwood  computer  co  needs 
help  with  MS  Word,  phones,  email,  clerical 
stuff  Flexible  hours;  great  for  students;  learn 
the  biz!  Email  resume  to  jkenne- 
dyOant91  com 


ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Concessions  has  great  part-lime  jobs 
woriting  at  Athlette  events.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive bonus  program  for  those  who  can  com- 
mit to  virork  the  Mens  Basketball  Season. 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  set  every  week 
Call:310-206-0736 


t6.fi9  Eeawjv 


Receptionist  needed  for  small  Salon/ 
Day  Spa  phones  and  light  office  work 

please  call  Julia  (310)  474-2524 

^  2041  Westwood  blvrt 


P/T  ASSISTANT 

Private  home  office,  data  entry,  Mac/Quick- 
en, Accuracy  important.  Good  English.  Own 
transportation.  Flexible  schedule.  Weekdays 
only.  8-12hrs/wk.  310-394-2933. 


P/T  DRIVERAJTILITY 
TRAINEE 

Flexible  hours.  $8/hour  Includes  gasoline. 
Own  vehicle,  valid  Califomia  drivers  li- 
cense and  proof  of  insurance.  Non-smok- 
ing environment.  Clean-cut  individual. 
Stephanie:310-395-3291 


PIT  LAW  OFFICE  ASST 

Word  Processor/Secretarial  for  Westwood 
law  office.  PC  and  Internet  adept. 
Compensation  depends  on  skills.  Flexible 
hours.  Fax  resume  310-443-4223. 


P/r  to  complete  construction  and  maintain 
website.  Nationwide  wholesale  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 

P/T  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  Must  type  50 
wpm.  $7-1Q^r.  Fax  resume  323-655-7754. 

PIT  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  100  Medical  Plaza.  Dermatology  prac- 
tice. Hours  can  vary  w/classes.  F/T  during 
summer  $8/hr.  Plus  Iree  parting.  Assist 
manager,  computer  skills  necessary.  Basic 
math  skills  needed.  Undergrad  only.  Fax 
resume  after  6:30pm.  310-206-4010. 

PIT  OR  F/T  SERVER 

AND  ANSWERING  phones  lor  diner  in  Bev- 
eriy Hills.  Will  train.  Great  tips!  Call  Roni  310- 
772-0044  from  8am-5pm. 

PIT  RECEPTIONIST 
WANTED 

Yellow  Balloon  HairSalon.  Must  be  hon- 
est/child-friendly. Hours:3weekdays  1- 
5:30pm,  Saturdays  9-5pm.  Days  and  times 
negotiable.  $8/hr.  Contact  Natalle:3 10-475- 
1241   Fax  resume  323-939-4339. 


Entry  Levels 
Will  Train! 


o:i 


to  start 


'Nothine:  to  sell. 
Faid  Meals. 

Must-work  some 
weekends. 


X- 


'"'■"."(./  •• 


Good  math  skills  a  plus. 


^a\  Resume:  (323)  263-0556 


Display 
2ub-dUb(J 


v'';i  V 


^       Monday,  October  16, 2000 


7800 

Help  Wnntud 


Da%Bnjinaa$sJfi(d 


' :  ■     ^%-;V' 


'.  jiiwoif' 


.Vo  Expenettce  Necessary 

Men.  Wamen,  diildrcn.  all  3ff&.  siie. 

races  T\'  ■  Rims  •  Commacials  •  Magazinei 

for persiiual  inlenieti  call  mm 

310.659.7000 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


TEACHER'S 
ASSISTANT 

IMMEDIATE  POSITION.  Santa  Monica  pre- 
school. 20hrs/wk,  Mon-Thurs  afternoon.  Ear- 
ly childhood  development  classes  &  some 
experience  working  w/young  children  re- 
quired. 310-394-0463. 


8/»00 

Apartments  ia,  Ht-nt 


8^00 

Ap.iflnienls  fiu  H,iit 


WALK  TO  UCLA 

iviviv./re/f  o/itoivers.  com 


PART-TIME  CHILDCARE/TUTOR  needed 
for  1st  and  2nd  grader.  Encino  Mulholland 
and  405  adjacent.  Must  have  car.  Call  Jack- 
ie:310-826-2466. 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTIONA-ECHNICAL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  has  one  opening  for  clerical  positions. 
$7/hr.  Mornings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Michelle:310-474-7771 

PIANO  TEACHER  WANTED.  Westwood, 
close  to  tXLA.  To  teach  llyr-oW  boy  ori 
weekends.  Please  call  310-441-9388. 


US  International  Co. 

Work  at  home  position  immediately!  P/T 
$500-2000/mo.  F/T  $2000-6000/mo.  Lan- 
guages/computer skills  a  plus,  www  rich- 
fromhome.com/intemet 


VALET  PARKING 
ATTENDANTS 

Flexible  hours,  great  tips,  Santa  Monica  and 
Marina  Del  Rey  areas.  310-214-1888.  Leave 
message. 


I^niih  Bargains 

"Deals  good  enough  even 

for  Uncle  Scrooge." 
Mvry  Wmdtfadmf  A  Fridmy 


WANTED 


POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
into  Call  1-800-391-5856  ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm  Local  not  guar. 

PROFESSIONAL  COLLECTOR.  Saban  Pla- 
za  near  UCLA.  "Best  service  company". 
$9/hr.  Flexible  scheduling.  Weekends  and 
evenings  available.  Perfect  for  students.  NO 
experience  needed.  Fax  resume  310-477- 
7694. 


75people  will  pay  you  to  tose  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  drugs.  Call  now.  323-993-3391. 


WHO  WANTS  TO  BE 
A  MILLIONAIRE? 

TV  and  Internet  ad  sales.  Commission 
and  equity  in  company.  Fax  818-846- 
7961.  RISK+  HUGE  REWARDS 


PROMOTIONAL  PRINT  AGENCY  seeks 
friendly,  energetic  receptionist  for  a  FH"  en- 
try-level position.  Good  communicatton  skills 
and  computer  literacy  required.  Please  email 
resume  to:  mickyyOedwardslabel.com  or 
fax  resume  to:  Micky  Yadathi  310-479-1828. 

PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$600/¥i>eek.  310-724-8360.  Days  only. 

RECEPTIONIST  for  LAWest  Hollywood 
Design  District  showroom.  Requires  great 
phone  manner  and  office  skills.  Excellent  en- 
vironment and  pay,  flexible  hours.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-659-4584. 


WORK  AT  HOME 

International  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo. 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888. 


Design  Fashion  & 
Merchandising  Student  Alerl 


Great  job  waits  for  you  in  busy  retail 
estat)li9hment.  Loolung  for  outgoing 
salespeople  with  interest  in  clothing 

to  work  in  y»ung,  hip,  new  store. 

Good  salary,  great  perks,  bonuses,  & 

more.  Must  have  some  retail 

experienS&e; 

Full  &  part  time  positions  available. 

Call  Jessk:a  or  Erica  9  31 0-230-6085 

or  fax  resume  to  31 0-230-4536 


WORK  IN  WESTWOOD.  Receptkxilst  need- 
ed for  PT  work  Thursday-Sunday.  Fun  at- 
mosphere. Call  Louis:  310-279-3300. 


8000 

Internships 


ACCLAIMED  PRODUCER  seeks  motivated 
interns  for  fall  2000.  Please  fax  resumes  to 
Commotton  Pknures  attii:IMch«lle  310-432- 
2001. 

ENTERTAINMENT 

WEBSITE 

INTERNSHIPS 

Looking  for  motivated  indivWuals  with  an  In- 
terest in  tf>e  entertainment  industry,  to  join 
one  of  Hollywood's  leading  websites.  Call 
310-305-2688,  or  e-mail  resume 
henlyOfoontainheadmedia.com 

INTERN  WANTED.  Do  research  for  Reason, 
a  national  magazine  of  politks  and  culture. 
$7.50mr;  I0firs/wk.  Flexible  schedule,  will 
help  arrange  credit.  Fax  resume  to  310-390- 
8986.  E-mail  sararOreason.com 


8100 

Personal  Assistance 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  for  family  (of  inter- 
est to  young  filmmakers).  l5-20hrs/wk- 
$10/hr.  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues,  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  Filing/research. 
Flexible  schedule/resourceful!!  Contact:  310- 
459-0815.  Good  refererKes  required.  Non- 
Snwker.  Must  have  own  car&insurarK». 


8200 

Temporary  Employment 


P/T  CLERICAL 
ASSISTANCE 

Entertainment  company  kxated  In  West- 
wood  seeks  clerical  assistance  approx  3 
days/wk.  3hrs/day  Duties  will  include  filing, 
copying,  document  distributkxi.  Please  call 
310-234-5041. 


8300 

Volunteer 


VOLUNTEERS  NEEDED  for  No  kill  dog/cat 
WLA  shelter  Loving  homes  and  foster 
homes  needed.  310-470-7667. 


SANTA  MONICA  BUNGALOW,  r&s,  hard- 
wood ftoon,  yard.  $900.  310-395-RENT 
www.westsiderentals.com 

SANTA  MONICA  CONDO.  r&s,  bak»ny,  w/a. 
fireplace.  $625.  310-395-RENT  »yww.west- 
sklerentals.com 

SANTA  MONKJA  HOUSE.  Private  room,  fire- 
place, yard.  $654.  310-395-RENT 
www.westsklerentals.com 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


DISCOUNTED  ROOM  AND  BATH  in  ex- 
change for  dnving  approximately  20hrs/wk, 
afternoons  Must  own  car.  8  minutes  to  cam-  ■ 
pus.  References  necessary.  310-477-6977. 

FREE  PRIVATE  ROOM+BATH.  Single  father 
needs  mature  student  for  p/t  help  with  4-yr- 
old   twins.    20hrs/wk,    must   own   car+in- 
surance.     310-838-5720,     jahanOmedl-" 
aor>e.net. 


SANTA  MONICA  STUDIO.  Bateony.  laundry, 
large  ctosets,  kxjatton.  $750.  310-395-RENT. 
www.westsiderentals.com 


SANTA  MONICA  TOWNHOUSE  TO 
SHARE,  private  bed  ar>d  bath,  hard¥K)od 
fkxjrs,  r&s,  laundry.  $650.  310-395-RENT 
www.westsklerentals.com 

SANTA  MONICA.  U1,  catok,  laundry,  park- 
ing included.  $975.  310-395-7368. 
www.westskierentals.com. 

SANTA  MONICA.  2-fl ,  catok.  r&s,  hardwood 
fkwrs,  great  tocatton!  Parking  included.  310- 
395-7368.  www.westsiderentals.com. 

SHERMAN  OAKS.  Adorable  studk>  guest 
house.  Pet  okayl  Full  bath.  $645.  818-623- 
4444.  www.altofLA.com 


FREE  ROOM 
AND  BOARD 

In  exchange  for  babysitting  ll-year-okj  girl 
approximately  10  hours/week.  Century  City 
area.  Females  only.  310-277-8480  (even- 
ings). 


94kOO 

Room  for  Rent 


BEL  AIR  PRIVATE  FURNISHED  ROOM 
AND  BATH.  Kitchen  and  laurxlry  privleges, 
utilities  included.  Car  necessary.  Relerenc- 
es.  $600/month.  310-477-6977. 

MV  Shared  2-^1  garden  apartment.  Quiet, 
sate  4-plex,  off  the  Main  St.  DSL  access. 
$500/rTX>nth,  utilities  included.  Call  Pamela 
310-915-5052. 


SOUTH  RB  APARTMENT.  2+1.  panoramk: 
ocean  view.  $1300.  fee,  310-372-RENT 

STUDIO  CITY  HUGE  APARTMENT! 
Sundeck,  high  ceilings  $700.  818-623-4444 
wvrtv.allofLA.com 


NEAR  WESTWOOD.  Beautiful,  sunny  room 
for  rent  Nov/Dec.  $500/mo+utilities.  fenrtales 
preferred  Please  call  Katie  510-326-6809  or 
310-559-0185. 

PRIVATE  ROOM  in  large  Palisades  home. 
Minutes  from  beach.  Fully  furnished.  Kitch- 
en/laundry/parking privileges  $750^mo.  Ut«l- 
ties/caWe  included.  Non-smoker/no  pets. 
310-454-5331-Renata. 


STUDIO  CITY  UNK3UE  APARTMENT  Best 
location,  a/c.  pool.  $800.  818-623-4444. 
www.allofLA.com 


TORR  CONDO.  2+1,  pet  okay,  large  end 
unit,  Jacuzzi.  $1175.  fee.  310-372-RENT 

VENICE  GUEST  HOUSE  yard.  $650.  310- 
395-RENT  www.westsklerentals.com 
WALK  TO  UCLA.  WESTWOOD  Large  1+1. 
2+2.  Pool,  Jacuzzi,  walk-in  ctosets,  fireplace, 
full-kitchen,  gated  garage,  instant  broadband 
avail,  www.keltontowers.com.  310-208- 
1976. 


ROOM  in  large  Beverly  HHIs  house,  grad 
student  preferred  Kitchen  privileges,  wash- 
er/dryer, pool,  needs  car.  CallAljby  310-275- 
3831  or  818-783-5151. 

SHERMAN  OAKS.  Master  Bedroom/bath. 
Resort  style  apartment  complex  7  mOes 
from  UCLA.  Off  Ventura.  818-728-1528 
$755. 


housing 


WESTCHESTER  GREAT  HOUSE  catok  ref 
$500.  310-395-RENT  www.westskleren- 
tals.com 


8400-9800 


^     RECEPTIONIST       < 

WfcST  LA  FIRM  seeks  an  outgoing.pieasant 
inflividualw/  xint  phone  skills.  Mon-Fri 
2;00pm-7:00pm.  Perfect  lor  a  student 
$tO  00/h^-Prkg  paid.  Email  Resume  to 
tgrossmartOGKM.com. 

RECEPTIONIST  P/T.  New  Westwood 
VHIage  dental  oftkie.  No  experience  required 
310-451-4401. 

RECEPTIONIST/SECRETARY  P/T  .  F/T 
Beveriy  Hills  dermatotogy  medical  offteo.  Fax 
resume  310-550-1920. 


INTERNS  NEEDED  to  assist  Content  Team 
in  producing  athlete  web  sites.  Interns  will  re- 
search and  compile  background  info  on  ath- 
letes. Intems  will  also  screen  chats:  assist  in 
posting  content  to  sites;  transcrit)e  Interviews 
and  Input  fan  club  member  data  This  poei- 
fk)n  requires  thorough  sports  knowledge. 
HTML  skills  are  helpful.  The  kleal  candktete 
<  will  thrive  in  a  fast-paced  and  challenging  en- 
vironment. 310-315-8517. 


8^00 

Apartments  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  1+2BEDROOM 
$895&UP  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM. 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS.  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS 
310-839-6294. 


RESTAURANT  in  WLA  now  hiring  seryers, 
cashiers,  prep  personnel.  F/T  or  P/T,  apply  in 
person  9411  W.  Pkx)  Blvd.  Sun-Thurs. 

RETAIL  SPORTS/RUNNING  Store  will  train 
person  who  likes  running  and  talking  to  peo- 
ple. Near  beach,  in  MDR  $8-9/hour  PT  310- 
827-3035. 


INTERNS  WANTED 

FT/PT  posttwns  avail  for  students  at  presti- 
gtous  entertainment  PR  firm.  Must  be  enthu- 
siastic, detail-oriented.  Offer*  college  credrt, 
hands-on  experience  and  future  film  and  tel- 
evision career  contacts  Contact  Rebecca 
310-550-7776. 

—     INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

POST-PRODUCTION    INTERNSHIP   and 
student  film  projects.  Call  Joel:310-828- 


BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdrm«)th,  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdmV3bth,  $2950.  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alarm,  gated  partdng. 
Spactous,  carpet.  Prime  tocatloni  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 


Westvvood  Plaza 


Single  w/  Shared  Bathroom 

$850.$875 

Single  w/  Private  Bathroom 
$900 

1  Bedroom 
$1295.$1350 

short  term  avaUaMe  /  5  min  walk  to  UCLA 

Parking  available  for 

1  Bedrooms  only 

310-208-8505 


WEST  LA.  Private  bdmVshared  bth  in  3bdrm 
apt.  $475/mo+security  deposit.  Near  cam- 
pus. Fully  furnished.  310-444-0105,  leave 
message  for  Buzz. 

WESTWOOD,  private  bdrm/bth/ctoset. 
Share  dean  house  In  nfce  neighbortKwd. 
$l000/mo,  www.lasolutions.com/rent.htm. 
tiffanykangOexcite.com 

WESTWOOD  Walk  to  UCLA.  Male-Only 
Large,  private  fumlshed  bdrm  w/bath. 
Kitchen  privileges,  laundry,  parking. 
$700/month.  Another  room  $600/n>onth 
310-473-5769. 


9500 

Roommates-Private  Room 


FREE  RENT  FOR  PSYCHA4ED/SPECIAL 
ED  graduate  student  to  share  2bdnTv'2bth 
apartment  with  learning  disatiled  adult  in 
WestLA.  Call  Stan  1-800-843-3658 


2292. 


BRENTWOOD 

North  ot  Wishire,  spactous  3BO/2Bath,  w/ 
separate  patto.  New  dishwasher,  refrigerator, 
stove,  etc  Quiet  8-unlt  bidg.  w/  garden  sun- 
deck  $2300.  11921  Goshen  Ave.  #1.  Open 
Sat/Sun  or  by  appt.  310-571-0293. 

EL  SEQUNDO.  1+1.  r«8.  carpels,  bUnds 
including  partdng.  $800.  fees.  310-372- 
RENT 


WESTWOOD  SPACIOUS  APARTMENT 
1+1.  r&s,  oonlroUed  access,  a/c,  laundry. 
$920.  310-395-RENT  www.westskleren- 
tals.com 


WESTWOOD/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2bdrm/1bth.  Large,  laundry  enctosad 
garage,  batoony.  large  ctosets,  near  buaes, 
blinds.  Chamiing,  bright,  quiet  bulWing.  310- 
474-1172. 


SALES  CLERK 

$7/hr.  No  experience  necessary.  Cashiering, 
worthing  with  patients.  UCLA  Hospital.  2e- 
venings,  3-7:30PM  11:30-6:00PM.  310-825- 
6069 


SALES  Le  Beach  Club  Tanning  Resorts 
Happy,  friendly  people.  $l2-20/hr.  Call  bet- 
ween 3-l0pm  310-820-2710  ask  for  Yas- 
mlne. 


MARKETING 

SALES/TRAINING  tor  Mexico-USA  impor- 
tlngfeonsi^ng  company  $7  50/hr  Spanish 
helpful  Business  major  preferred.  Good  ex- 
perience F^x  r^ume  310-854-6287  or  E- 
mail:  salesOihepainteddesert.com. 

P/R  INTERNSHIP 

SEVERAL  POSmONS  ar«  now  available 
with  a  major  entertainment  firm  in  public  re- 
lattons.  tio  pay  but  complete  educatton  In 
P/R.  Flexible  hours  Goklen  opportunity  to 
learn  the  ropes  Call  us  ioHnediately  at  323- 
692-9999  Ex  13.  Ask  for  Rebecca 


GLENDALE  DUPLEX.  Great  locatton.  yard 
$695.  818-623-4444.  www.allofLA.com 

GRANADA  HILLS  SPACIOUS  GUEST- 
HOUSE. 1+1.  Large  yard.  Private  entry. 
$685  818-623-4444.  www.altofLA.com 


HANCOCK  PARK  ADJ.  GUESTHOUSE 
Large  closets,  quiet  neighbortxx)d.  $650 
323-634-RENT  wvAvaltofLA.com 


8700 

Conclo/ToM/nhoiise  for  Sale 


IMAGINE  OWNING  WILSHIRE  Corridor/Hi 
Rise  single.  1or2bdmi  $75K$150K  Walk  to- 
UCLA/Village,  24hr/security  Spectacular 
views,  pool,  Jacuzzi,  sauna,  valet  servtoe. 
Agent-Bob  310-478-1835ext.109. 


SALES.  Popular  Westwood  Village  jevwiry 
store  seeks  2  PfT  sales  associates  Excel- 
lent opportunity.  3l0-20r-8404  phone  from 
12-6  Mr  Rogers. 

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST  Small  WLA 
law  offtoe  seeks  pA  or  f/t  bilingual  (Spanish) 
indivklual  Must  have  experience  with  word 
perfect  and  type  mIn  40wpm.  Call  Neil  310- 
445-1100  or  send  resume  310-445-7779 

SITE  ACQUISITIONS  CONSULTANT 
Ful^Mrt  lime.  SeH-starter,  creative.  Intelli- 
gent. Acquire  land  sites  for  ceUular  Salary 
commensurate  w/expertence.  Fax  resume 
310-737-4228 


iove  Wu^ic?'? 


HERMOSA  BEACH  APARTMENT  2+1,  rfts, 
bright,  Minds.  $885,  fee.  310-372-REI^. 

LOOKING  FOR  A  PLACE  TO  LIVE? 
wwwhousingl01.net...  Yournxwe  off  cam- 
pusl  Search  for  sunwner  sublets. 

MAR  VISTA  HOUSE.  2+1.  w/c  pet,  hard- 
wood  ftoors,  w/d  hook  upe,  yard.  $1295.  310- 
395-RENT  wwwwe8tsMerentals.com 


Westwood  Condo  Penthouse 

by  owner,  tow  rtae  betow  market  vakje. 
atir  ♦  dwt  Over  2000  sq.  ft.  $450,000 
310-502-3636  or  818-090-3273 

AsHr/brSen 


llnl|M    o|   l,|Ul^  (  mm  Ms   III  MilLMh. 

I-  (Mil  I.I  iIk'  LiryiAi  ,1,1111  n  iiniiiiH 
III. II  i..iii|i,iiii,x  in  ih.    I  s    I. ...km 
I'T  inn  Ills  .!-.;  ,|,i\s  .1  vu.k  ill  x.iii" 
"IIS  (l(  (i.iiinu  Ills  ti.r  ,  I. II,  .^,. , , ,  ,|i, 


MB  APARTMENT  1+1.  2  totocks  to  beach 
R*S,  garage.  $1195,  fee,  310-372-RENT 

PALMS.  1BDRNVBATH.  $895/rTX5nth.  Newfy- 
painted,  two  gated  parking  spots,  intercom 
Jacuzzi.  Ctose  to  UCU  Bus.  Kay  310-842- 
9127. 


sl  li,  .ihlc  III  work  III 


."  I  II     ,  ll\  iri.|||ll,'|||.     jli.sM  ^^ 
III    HHIIIIIIIIIII.III..M    skills.    Il, 

till   III  N...ri|  ,111(1  i\,,|  .,,,,1 

"■  IM'lll  .llliliiil.    mil  >l.  ..i., 


PALMS  Single  apt  from  $575,  $600depo8« 
1-year  lease  only.  Stove,  refrig, carpets  vert 
Winds.  310-837-1502  leave  message.  8arD- 
5pm  only. 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


SANTA  MONtCA  -2bd/1bth.  Cooler  2  part(- 
iry  spacM  +  storage  Breakfast  room. 
KNdien  w/  oven.refridg.  %^^00/mo.  Zay  818- 


STOCK  CLERK  in  chMdran's  bookstore  20- 
30hr«/week.  $7/tir,  WLA  310-559-2665 


Ckissifiecls 
825-2221 


t'O'-'ih.iu'i 


'^r0  246C200 


Santa  Montoa  lbd/1Wh,  living  room,  partdng 
space,  storage,  kitchen  w/oven  &  refrMg 
$1100Ano.Zay  818-895-0497 


9200 

HoiisJnn  Needed 


GRADUATE  VISITING  STUDENT/WRrfER 
oe^  Housing  1/0l-6A)1.  Female.  Former 
j*J^ConlK:t  mtoharOk|uest.nel  or  312- 


KILLER  VIEW— share  Wllshire  Blvd. 
2BR/2BA  N-rise  apt.  w/  prof,  male  security, 
gym,  pool,  batoony,  SBZS/mo.,  male  pre( 
Can  Pete  310-478-3542. 

MELROSE  AREA.  Large  unfurnished  bdrm. 
private  bthrm.private  entrance  in  fully  fur- 
nished house.  Laundry  Male/female  okay. 
$70a/nw  uUMies&mato  included.  Availabte- 
Decl.  310-289-2129. 

Quiet,  resporwible  roommate  for  private 
space  in  back  of  house.  Non-smoker,  share 
utilizes.  Avail/Nov  1,  $550/month+l  month 
deposit.  Call  Warren  310-737-9120 

ROOMMATE  NEEDED.  38D/2Ba  Santa  Mo- 
ntoa apartment.  Near  beach,  Promenad* 
Montana.  Bateony,  laundry,  fireplace.  Pro^es- 
sional/grad  student,  $860/month.  Contact 
NowfckleOhotmall.com  or  646-215-3433. 

SANTAMONICA.  Master  bedroom  suite  In 
spacious  townhouse  w/kitchen,  laundry 
parking  Near  Btoe  Une.  $70Wmo  included 
utHtties  (2  share  $9S0/mo).  310^50-5062. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt.  Fun,  outgoina 
female  tooking  for  female  roommaiel  Own 
bed/bath  to  2bdrm/2t)th  apartment,  gated 
partJing,  Jacuzzi  on  roof,  security  buikSna 
Ava«aWe1/D1.$900/mo.  310-209-2665. 


9600 

Roomni;ili:s-Shared  Room 


MAR  VISTA.  Roommate  wanted,  male. 
Large  2bdmi  apt.  Fully  furnished.  #14  SM 
Bus  Una.  $300/mo.  310-436-4S24. 


9700 

_  Siihlefs 


SUBLETS  ROOMMATE 
SERVICE 


FIND  or  LIST  A  SUBLETl! 


wvvw.thesublGt.com 


Display 
200-306(1 


■  ■<^l^i^^^>t^i|p^ 


FreshrDan  midfielder  Whitney  Jones  heads  the  bail  in  UCLA's  win 
over  Oregon  on  Sunday  at  Drake  Stadium. 


ANNA  AVIK 


W.SOCCER 

From  page  47 


in  Victoria  Bloom's  cross  in  the  75th 

minute         and 

Breana     Boling     -i.«___^.^_ 

scored  Trom   16 

yards      off      a 

Milbum  assist  to 

cap  the  scoring. 

^Goalies  Cicf 
Peterson  and 
Jadyn  Harwood 
combined  for 
four  saves  on  the 
night,  a  testament 
to  the  outstand- 
ing play  of  the 
Bruin  defenders. 

The      Ducks      " 

managed  just  five 

shots  in  the  first  half  and  only  two  cor- 
ner kicks  the  entire  game. 

UCLA  had  six  in  the  first  half  and 
finished  with  10. 


The  Ducks  managed 
Just  five  shots  in  the 


first  half  and  only 

two  corner  kicks  the 

entire  game.  UCLA  had 

six  in  the  first  ha  If  and 

finished  with  10. 


The  Oregon  keepers,  Sarah  Peters 
and  Jcanine  Norstad,  had  their  hands 
full  all  day,  combining  for  22  saves. 

"Against  the  Beavers,  we  played 
slow."  Bogart  said  of  Friday's  match. 
The  junior 

_^„^_^,,^,^  defender  scored 
the  initial  goal 
against  Oregon 
off  a  comer  kick 
in  the  I9th^ 
minute. 

All  but  five  of 
the  players  on 
UCLA's  roster 
logged  minutes 
and  the  Bruins' 
bench  out-shot 
Oregon's  bench 
1 1-0,  posting  two 
goals. 

UCLA  trav- 
els to  Washington  State  to  face  the 
Cougars  on  Friday  and  will  seek  an 
upset  when  they  face  No.  4 
Washington  on  Sunday 


SIDEBAR 

From  page  42 


.  dent  Jon  Sher  said.  "I'm  glad  I  came,  I 
Jj  just  wished  we  could  have  played  better 
T),  and  had  a  bigger  impact  on  the  game." 
r  The  fans  did  in  fact  have  an  effect  on 
j  the  game.  Once  overtime  rolled 
•around,       each 

coach    tried    to     __^___^^_^ 

direct  his  team      """""""^^"^ 

into  an  endzone 

surrounded     by 

their  fans. 
The      Bruins 

fans  in  the  south 

zone  were  so  loud 

that  Bears  coach 

Todd      Holmoe 

changed     direc- 
tions prior  to  the 

start  of  the  first 

overtime. 
"I    love    our 

fans,"  wide 

receiver      Brian 

Poli-Dixon  said.  "We  definitely  take 

into  account  where  our  fans  are." 

Those  fans  that  were  able  to  endure 
countless  repetitions  of  the  schools' 
similar  fight  songs  stayed  to  the  end  of 
a  great  college  football  game.  While 


there  were  no  chants  of  "take  off  that 
red  shirt,"  there  was  plenty  of  rivalry  to 
go  around. 

Bruin  fans  were  restricted  to  each 
end  zone,  with  the  south  side  housing 
students.  With  each  round  of  the 
Bericeley  fight  song,  UCLA  students 
broke  into  an  8-clap,  hoping  to  drown 
out  the  Cal  section.  Like  the  Bears  foot- 
ball team,  the 
-^.._^__^  UCLA  section 
faced  insur- 
mountable odds, 
but  hung  in  the 
whole  game. 

It  wasn't  until 
a  Cory  Paus  pass 
was  intercepted 
in  the  last  over- 
time that  Bruins 
fans  accepted 
their  fate. 

"Well,       it's 

back      to     the 

books,"       Sher 

"  —      said  as  he  left  the 

stadium.  "I  guess 

we'll  have  to  come  up  again  when  I  m  a 

senior." 

TWo  years  is  a  long  time  to  wait  for 
revenge,  but  Bruins  fans  will 
undoubtedly  turn  up  the  next  time  the 
team  heads  north.  > 


"It's  tough  to  drive  all 
the  way  up  here  In  a 

crowded  car  with 
annoying  people  to 
watch  your  team  get 

beat  by  Berkeley.* 

Jon  Sher 

Second-year  UCLA  student 


Daily  Bniih  Sports 


Monday,  October  16,2000        'ill 


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42       Monday,  October  16,2000 


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ttem  as  Alumni  Association  members  «irhile  mrtworWng  with  other 
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%x*>. 


Freshman  forward  Matt  Taylor  battles  for  the  ball  against  an 
Oregon  State  defender  in  Friday  night's  match. 


CATHY  JUN 


'>>A^: 


Q  Dates  to  ,        \  \^ 

Remember^    ' 


COct.23) 
(Oct.  25^ 
(Oct.  25  ^ 
(Oct  27^ 
(Oct  31^ 
CNov.  1    ^ 


Planning  for  Financial  Success 
Senior  Day 

Resume  Writing  Workshop 
Distinguished  Bruin  Application  Due 
APSIA  International  Affairs 
Interview  with  a  Brain 


■»*r'4 


M.  SOCCER 

From  page  48 

who  also  had  two  assists  in  the  game. 
"They  went  up  two-nil  and  we 
thought  we  were  still  in  it." 

"They  totally  took  us  out  of  our 
game  in  the  first  half.  Guys  weren't 
playing  the  way  they  normally  play." 
he  added.  "We 

got  our  act  —^^^^^mm^ 
together  in  the 
second  half  and 
took  it  to  them." 
Washington 
scored  goals  in 
the  53rd  and 
57th  minutes  to 
tie  the  score. 

It  was  almost 
as  if  UCLA  was 
going  through 
the  motions  in  ' 

the  second  half. 

"I  didn't  feel  that  we  treated  it  like 
it  was  do  or  die,"  Saldai^a  said.  "I 
think  we  went  out  and  played,  but  not 
like  it  was  the  end  of  the  world  if  we 
lost.  ;  /     ;    - 

"I  don't  think  you  can  ever 
approach  a  half  of  a  game  the  way  we 
did,"  he  added. 

Somoza  felt  UCLA  got  tired  in  the 
second  half,  allowing  for  Washington 


"I  don't  think  you  can 

ever  approach  a 

halfofa  game  the 

way  we  did/' 

ToddSaldana 

Head  coach 


to  come  back. 

Saldaiia  didn't  cite  fatigue  for  the 
second  half  meltdown,  instead  saying 
the  team's  youth  and  lack  of  prepara- 
tion played  roles  in  the  defeat. 

"We  still  have  a  very  young  team 
and  now  we  are  finally  being  tested," 
he  said.  "Our  matches  previously 
with  San  Diego  State,  USF,  Santa 
Barbara  and  St.  Mary's  weren't  chal- 

lenging  enough. 

■"""■^"■■"^  "1  think  those  - 

games  didn't 
prepare  us  at  all 
for  the  Stanford 
game  and  the 
match  today." 


In  UCLA's 
other  game  over 
the  weekend,  the 
Bruins        beat 

'  Oregon  State  4- 

I  on  Friday  at 
Spaulding  Field. 
Tsakiris  and  Tennyson  scored  two 
goals  apiece. 

Tsakiris  and  Tennyson  each 
scored  the  first  of  their  goals  in  the 
first  half,  and  a  few  minutes  later 
Beaver  Ryan  Smith  scored  his  first 
goal  of  the  season  to  cut  the  Bruin 
lead  to  2-1.  In  the  49th  and  52nd  min- 
utes, however,  Tennyson  and  Tsakiris 
scored  again  to  put  the  game  away. 


SAA 


UCLA  Student  Alumni  Association 
James  West  Alumni  Center 
Los  Angeles,  CA   90095)397 
For  Membership  Information; 
PlOUCLAlumn. 
(800)  UCLAIumni 


For  Event  &  Volunteer 

Information: 

(310)  UCLA- SAA 

Fax;  (310)  825-8678 

E-mail:  saal-UCLAlumni.net 

www.UCLAlumni.net/sao 


SIDEBAR 

From  page  46 

"  I  came  up  because  all  of  my  friends 
came  up,"  said  second-year  electrical 
engineering  student  Andy  Isaacson.  "I 
like  football,  but 

it  was  more  of  _^^^^^^^^ 
chance  for  a  ~^^~"~"~~~' 
road  trip  with 
my  buddies." 

Asked  how 
he  felt  about  the 
result  of  the 
game,  Isaacson 
merely  shrugged 

and   said.   "Oh      — ^ 

well,  at  least  they 
have  good  raves  here." 

Others  took  the  result  more  to  heart. 
"I  am  disappointed  we  lost,"  third- 
year  student  Evan  Bcn-Artzi  said.  "But 
I  was  mostly  disappointed  that  we  had 


to  watch  another  team  storm  the  field. 
We  beat  both  Alabama  and  Michigan 
and  it's  tough  to  know  that  we  will 
never  (storm  the  field)." 

"I  saw  a  lot  of  Bruin  fans  out  there 

today,"  said  freshman  receiver  Tab 

Perry,  a  native  of  nearby  Milpitaa.  "It 

felt    good;    it 

—i— — .i_i..      made  us  feel  at 

home." 

Some  fans 
were  unhappy 
to  sec  the  Bruins 
squander  a 
game  to  another 
UC  school. 

, "It's  tough  to 

drive  all  the  way 

up    here   in    a 

crowded  car  with  annoying  people  to 

watch  your  team  get  beat  by  Berkeley." 

second-year  business-economics  stu- 


"1  saw  a  lot  of  Bruin  fans; 
it  made  us  feel  at  home." 

Tab  Perry 

UCLA  receiver 


S««SIDEtiU|,pa9«41 


Daily  Bniin  Sports 


W.VOLLEYBALL 

From  page  44 

UCLA  retaliated  behind  the  steady  serving 
of  Erika  Selsor.  The  Bruins  closed  out  the 
game  15-12.  which  brought  the  match  to  a 
rally  scoring  fifth  game. 

For  the  Bruins,  a  loss  would  push  them 
-  out  of  second  place  in  conference  standings, 
and  for  the  Sun  Devils,  a  loss  would  sepa- 
rate them  further  from  the  top  of  the  Pac. 

ASU  took  an  early  4-3  lead  in  the  game, 
but  the  Bruins  then  assumed  that  role,  push- 
ing the  score  to  5-4  off  of  a  kill  from  Ella 
Hariey  and  one  from  Porter. 

It  appeared  that  the  Bruins  had  taken 


control  of  the  game  with  a  40-7  lead,  but  the 
Sun  Devils  came  back  to  tie  it  up.  With  the 
score  tied  up  at  1 1,  it  was  Selsor's  steady 
serving  and  two  kills  apiece  from  Porter  and 
Bowles  that  put  the  match  away  15-1 1. 

Posting  her  second  20-20  match  in  a  row, 
Porter  helped  her  team  remain  consistent 
and  strong  throughout  the  match. 

"She  played  well  this  weekend,"  Selsor 
said.  "We  rely  on  our  hitters,  Kristee  and 
Ashley  and  Wiz,  and  last  night  it  turned  out 
to  be  Kristee,  and  she  came  up  big  for  us." 

The  weekend  in  Arizona  may  have  been  a 
challenging  one,  but  the  Bruins  played  like 
they  knew  they  could. 

They  have  gained  control  over  the  incon- 
sistency that  plagued  them  in  previous 


Monday,  October  16, 2000     •  43 


matches  this  season.  With  their  play  this 
weekend,  the  Bruins  followed  through  on 
the  threat  that  their  well-rounded  roster 
poses. 

With  four  players  posting  double  figure 
kills  and  five  contributing  double-digit  digs, 
the  Bruins  look  on  track  for  upcoming 
matches. 

Arizona's  loss  to  UCLA  and  their  win 
over  use  shuffled  the  Pac- 10  standings 
from  where  they  were  at  the  beginning  of 
the  weekend.  Arizona  and  USC  are  now 
tied  for  first  with  the  Bruins  in  a  close  sec- 
ond. 

It  just  goes  to  show  that  anything  can 
happen  with  the  caliber  of  competition  in 
the  Pao-10  conference. 


Frompage45  ■■  '  :^:-':-'  ■  .":,!^' 

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Gonzalez  had  three  catches  for  46  yards,  including  a  14^ 
yarder  to  put  the  Chiefs  on  top  10-7.  — 

Late  in  the  half,  Grbac  hit  Derrick  Alexander  on  con- 
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for  the  pass  that  gave  the  Chiefs  a  17-7  halftime  lead. 

Gannon  led  a  14-play,  80-yard  march  on  Oakland's 
first  possession,  capped  by  his  4-yard  TD  pass  to 
Napoleon  Kauffman. 


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■I 


44       Monday,  October  16, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


W.VOLLEYBALL 

Frompage48  ; '*" 

Fendricic  notched  1 1  kills  and  23  digs 
Bowles  added  16  kills  of  her  own, 
while  Erika  Selsor  dished  out  52 
assists. 

ASU  didn't  make  it  easy  for  the 
Bruins,  posting  a  .203  hitting  percent- 
age to  the  Bruins'  .186,  with  23  kills 
from  senior  Amanda  Burbridee  and 
20  kills  from 

junior      Jami      ^____^__^_ 
Coughlin. 

"Like  (head 
coach  Andy 
Banachowski) 
said,  'We 
dodged  a  lot  of 
bullets 
tonight,"" 
Bowles  said. 

The       Sun 
Devils   pulled 

away    with    a 

quick  10-3  lead 

in  game  one,  but  the  Bruins  battled 
back  with  seven  service  points  from 
Selsor.  ASU  eventually  closed  the 
game  at  15-H. 

"After  losing  the  first  game  I  just 
thought,  'We  have  another  game  and 
we  have  to  go  out  and  play  hard  and 
to  win  it,'"  Porter  said. 

And  they  did,  but  it  didn't  come 
without  a  fight.  ASU  started  out  with 


a  5-1  lead  and  pulled  further  ahead  to 
9-4.  The  Bruins  eventually  tied  it  up  at 
nine  and  finished  the  game  at  15-10. 

Once  ASU  commanded  a  12-3  lead 
off  of  1 1  straight  service  points.  The 
Bruins  only  scored  three  more  points 
before  the  Sun  Devils  closed  it  out  at 
15-6. 

It  was  the  final  two  games  that 
showed  the  Bruins'  grit. 

"In  games  four  and  five  we  were 
steady  out  there  and  came  out  togeth- 
er,"     Selsor 
..^__     said.   "If  we 
could      have 
done     better 
maybe       we 
would       not 
have  had  to 
do  that  (play  a 
fourth      and 
fifth    game), 
but        when 
things       got 
^^^^^  tight,  we  came 

-  up  with  what 
we  needed." 
Entering  game  four,  down  1-2,  it 
was  a  must-win  for  the  Bruins  and 
they  pulled  together  against  the  Sun 
Devils'  growing  momentum.  The 
teams  battled  through  the  first  seven 
points  with  UCLA's  biggest  lead  at  5- 
2.  After  a  television  timeout,  the  Sun 
Devils  pulled  away  to  a  12-7  lead,  but 


"(Kristee)  did  really  well 

this  weekend,  and  last 

night  It  turned  out  that 

she  came  out  big  for  us." 

Erika  Selsor 

Teammate 


SeeW.V0UEYBAU.pa9e43 


Erika  Selsor  jump  serves  in  a  match  last  month  Her 
serving  helped  the  Bruins  defeat  ASU  on  Friday. 


KMIOTEK 

From  page  46 

ing  the  importance  of  putting  together  four  solid 
quarters  of  football. 

Toledo  recenUy  joked  that  his  team  should 
scrimmage  for  30  minutes  prior  to  the  start  of 
each  game,  so  they  can  get  their  slow  starts  out  of 
the  way.  „ 

That  doesn't  seem  too  far-fetched  anymore. 

Because  if  the  Bruins  don't  change  soon,  their 
bad  starts  will  result  in  a  bad  ending  qome 
November. 

The  other  monkey  on  UCLA's  back  isa  mrfl^ 
la,  and  it's  only  getting  bigger. 

The  last  lime  UCLA  won  a  game  outside  the 
Rose  Bowl.  Cade  McNown  was  their  quarter- 
back. 

They've  gone  down  in  eight  consecutive  road 
games,  allowing  thousands  of  fans  to  mn  around 
on  opposing  fields  throughout  the  West. 

And  if  UCLA  can't  take  care  of  struggling  Cal 

^UUI.  UCLA's  remaining  away  games  are  at  5-1 
Anzona  and  5-1  Washington. 

"Any  time  you  have  a  team  of  this  caliber,  ' 
you've  got  to  win  on  the  road,"  said  safety   ' " 
Marques  Anderson.  "We're  kind  of  in  between  a 
rock  and  a  hard  place." 

The  road  to  success  goes  through  the  road,  and 
If  the  Bruins  want  to  be  legitimate  contenders 
they  must  right  the  ship  quick. 

They  must  have  success  cariy  and  away  and 
give  Freddie  something  to  talk  about.         ■   v 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Monday,  October  16,2000       45 


Win  against  CNefe  Widens  Raiders' AFC  lead  I  softbaiitryouts 


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Stoller  Foundation 

Proudly  presents  the 
Annual  Robert  J.  Stoller 
Memorial  Lecture     s 

Dr.  Gil  Herdt 

Dr.  Herdt  is  Director  of  Human  Sexual  Studies  Director  of 
the  Institute  on^xuality,  Social  Inequality  and  Health  as 
well  as  Professor  of  Human  Sexuality  and  Professor  of 
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of  Sexual  ExcHement  A  Lecture  in  Honor  of  the 

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FOOTBALL:  Janikowski 
overcomes  slump  to  help 
bring  victory  to  Oakland 


\ 


By  Doug  Tudtcr 

The  Associated  Press 


KANSAS  CITY,  Mo.  -  Sebastian 
Janikowsici  no  longer  feels  like  a  wast- 
ed first-round  draft  pick. 

The  rookie  kicker,  just  6-for-l  I  on 
field  goals  coming  into  the  game  and 
feeling  the  heat,  nailed  a  43-yarder 
with  25  seconds  left  Sunday,  lifting  the 
Raiders  past  Kansas  City  20-17 

Before  hitting  a  47-yardcr  to  slice 
Kansas  City's  lead  to  17-10  five  min- 
utes into  the  third  quarter,  Janikowski 
was  O-for-2  for  the  game  and  O-for-6 
from  beyond  the  40. 

The  week  before,  the  kicker  on  last 
season's  national  championship  team 
at  Florida  State  missed  a  potential 
game-winner  from  35  yards  out  at  San 
Francisco. 

Now  everything's  right  again,  he 
declared. 

"The  media  was  putting  a  lot  of 
pressure  on  me.  I  needed  to  get  oft"  by 
myself  and  figure  out  what  I  was 
doing  wrong,"  he  said.  "I  figured  it 


^  tkdkets  to  the 
Nen  Diamond 
ooncertyou 
can't  goto 

because  Of 

finals 

and 


unSXonn§3&r 
speciaTs 


have  1  common? 


you  can  sell  them 

all  in  the 

Daily  Bruin's 


BRUIN 
BARGAINS 


out.  I  was  kicking  on  the  snap.  That's 
why  I  was  missing." 

The  victory  lifted  the  Raiders  to  5- 
l.  giving  them  a  commanding  lead  in 
the  AFC  West  over  Kansas  City  (3-3), 
which  had  won  three  in  a  row  and 
blew  a  10-pointiead. 

Oakland  coach  Jon  Gruden  said  an 
"R-rated"   con- 
versation    with 

his  troubled  — """■""■"— " 
young  kicker  last 
week  may  also 
have  had  some- 
thing to  do  with 
his  improve- 
ment. 

"We  basically 
cleared  the  air 
and  I  let  him 
know  that  we're 
going  to  keep 
sending  him  out 
there,"  Gruden 
said.    "I    think 


That's  what  Rich  does. 

He's  able  to  go  out 

there  and  make 

something  out  of 

0  •  nothing.' 

Donnie  Edwards 

Chiefs  linebacker 


he's  going  to  be  a  great  kicker  for  a 
longtime." 

Former  Chiefs  QB  Rich  Gannon 
drove  the  Raiders  64  yards  in  eight 
plays  to  set  up  Janikowski,  who  also 
missed  a  59-yarder  as  time  ran  out  in 
the  first  half. 

"Rich  Gannon  made  some  plays 


out  there,"  Chiefs  center  Tim 
Grunhard  said.  "He's  running  side- 
ways and  throwing  the  ball  50  yards. 
He  really  amazes  me  sometimes." 

The  Raiders  tied  it  I7-«II  with  a 
long  drive  aided  by  a  gambling  fourth- 
down  pass  by  Gannon. 
On    fourth-and-one    from    the 
Kansas  City  35 
"'  '    ••  and  the  Chiefs  all 

expecting  a  run, 
Gannon  scram- 
bled and  hit  Tim 
Brown  for  32 
yards  to  the 
three.  After  a 
false-start  penal- 
ty, Tyrone 
Wheatley  caught 
Gannon's  seven- 
yard  pass  in  the 
end  zone  with 
9:25  left,  capping 
an  80-yard  drive 
that  took  more 


than  eight  minutes. 

"1  thought  we  had  him  sacked,  and 
then  he  throws  up  a  duck  that  Tim 
Brown  makes  a  great  play  on,"  Chiefs 
linebacker  Donnie  Edwards  said. 

"That's  what  Rich  does.  He's  able 
to  go  out  there  and  make  something 
out  of  nothing." 


Earlier  in  the  fourth  quarter,  the 
Chiefs  appeared  to  be  driving  for  the 
go-ahead  score  when  rookie  wide 
receiver  Sylvester  Morris  took  a  pass 
from  Elvis  Grbac  and  lost  the  bail  at 
almost  the  same  instant  his  knee  hit 
the  ground.  The  ball  was  recovered  by 
Charles  Woodson  on  the  Oakland  12 
with  7:09  left. 

The  Chiefs'  challenge  of  a  fumble 
was  not  upheld,  triggering  thunderous 
booing  from  the  sellout  crowd  who 
watched  the  replay  of  the  extremely 
close  play  on  the  video  board. 

"I  was  totally  surprised  when  they 
said  it  was  a  fumble,"  Morris  said.  "I 
felt  my  knee  touch  (the  ground). 
Nothing  I  can  do  about  it." 

Tight  end  Tony  Gonzalez  helped 
the  Chiefs  take  the  early  lead  with  sev- 
eral leaping  catches  and  totaled  seven 
receptions  for  100  yards. 

Gonzalez  made  his  first  leaping 
catch  of  the  pme  on  an  1 1-yard  gain- 
er to  get  the  Chiefs  started  on  their  1 7- 
point  third  quarter. 

Todd  Peterson,  signed  at  mid-week 
to  replace  Pete  Stoyanovich,  missed  a 
44-yard  attempt  in  the  first  quarter 
but  connected  from  27  yards  with 
6:38  left  in  the  half,  making  it  7-3. 


S«eR)OTBAU,page43 


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innistiyouts 

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46        Monday,  October  16,2000 


DiifinMiiiforti 


.  ■  -.  ■■  •■ 


*rt 


IftQuarter The  two  teams  trade  toudv- 
downs.  and  UCLA  seems  to  control  the 
Iffiipo  Of  the  game.  Penalties  and  dropped 
pa»es  hound  the  Bruins,  but  the  quarter 
ends  with  UCLA  in  control  of  the  ball  at  the 

and  QMrter  Great  punting  by  Nick  Harris 
and  an  Interception  by  Nnamdi  Asamugha 
help  Califomia  jump  out  to  a  21-7  lead. 
Fortunately  for  the  Bruins,  Cal  quarterljack 
Kyle  Boiler  fumbles  on  his  own  five,  leatfing 
to  a  Bruin  score  right  before  half. 

3rd  Quarter  Cal  controls  the  dock  and  the 
ball  and  holds  the  Bruins  scoreless. 

■  Mh  Quarter  The  Bruins  use  an  iotercep- 
tjon  and  a  fumble  recovery  to  set  up  a  pair 
of  KOfes.Cory  Paus  throws  two  touchdown 
passes  as  the  Bruins  tie  up  the  game  and 
send  it  into  overtime. 

1$t  Overtime:  Cal's  Derek  Swafford  haub  in 
a  touchdown  pass  on  the  second  play  to 
ghfe  the  Bears  the  lead.  UCLA  pulls  pad 
with  a  quarterback  sneak  from  the  one  to 
tie  the  game.    •■ 

2ndOvertime:The  Bruins  score  flrjt tak- 
ing their  only  lead  of  the  game  when  Nick 
Ham's  kidcs  a  36-yard  field  goal.  Cal  wswerj 
with  a  37  yard  Mark-Christian  Jensen  iac^BJ 

3rd  Overtime:  This  period  spells  doom  for 
the  Bruins.  The  Bean  score  on  three  plays, 
and  convert  the  mandatory  two-point  o 
version  to  go  up  eight  and  force  the 
to  answer.  UCLA  is  unable  to  respond  tt 
Paus  is  pided  off  in  the  end  zone  to  give 
the  Bean  the  victory. 


Away  game  leaves 
fans,  players  at  loss 


m^mmmm^m^*m 


Northern  hospitality 


COLUMN:  Changes  in 
momentum  leaves  team 
drained  from  slow  start 

Freddie  Mitchell's  response 
after  the  game  told  the 
story.  Actually,  it  was  his 
lack  of  a  response. 

"I  don't  know  what  to  say,"  he 
said.  "It's 
probably  the 
first  time  I 
don't  know 
what  to  say." 

And  if 
Mitchell 
can't  put  the 
game  into 
words,  it 
can't  be  an 
easy  task. 
Basically,  as 
many  of  the 
locals  here 

would  say,  it  was  '•hella  crazy.** 
There  were  1 62  plays  for  71 3 
yards  in  228  wild  minutes,  and 
every  play  was  the  biggest  play  - 
until  the  next  one. 

But  the  question  that  was  so  dif- 
ficult to  answer  in  the  locker  room 
remains:  What  went  wrong  for  the 
Bruins  in  a  game  they  were  sup- 
posed to  easily  win? 

For  starters,  the  team  continued 
two  trends  which  have  plagued 
them  for  so  long. 

"We  tried  to  get  two  monkeys 


Jeff 
Kmiotek 


off  our  back.  One  was  to  start  fast 
and  score  ri^t  ofTthe  bat  and  the 
second  thing  was  to  win  on  the 
road,"  coach  Bob  Toledo  said. 

"Those  were  two  of  our  goals, 
and  we  didn't  reach  our  goals." 
Just  as  in  UCLA's  first  five 
games,  the  Bruins  fell  behind  early 
and  were  forced  to  play  catch  up. 
They've  given  up  the  first  touch- 
down in  every  game  this  year  and 
have  spotted  teams  a  combined  58 
points  before  getting  on  the  score- 
board.    -  ;  ,:   '    ■ 

And  Saturday's  game  was  no 
different.  Down  7-0  and  later  21-7, 
UCLA's  backs  were  against  the 
wall  throughout. 

"As  1  told  the  team,  you  can 
only  go  to  the  well  so  many  times," 
Toledo  said,  "or  eventually  it's  • 
going  to  catch  up  with  you." 

UCLA  did  catch  up  initially 
with  a  stunning  fourtlvquarter 
comeback  to  tie  the  game.  And  at 
that  point,  the  Bruins  looked  des- 
tined to  win. 

"I  thought  we  were  going  to 
win.  I  thought  the  game  was  ours," 
Mitchell  said. 

But  the  well  was  already 
drained.  Cory  Paus  tried  to  explain 
UCLA's  slow  starts,  but  couldn't. 
And  Mitchell  was  on  that  same 
path. 

"I  don't  know.  I  don't  know. 
But  (we've)  got  to  change  it  up." 
Jermaine  Lewis  agreed,  stress- 


See  lONIOIlltpage  44 


UCLA  crowd  gives  home 
feel  yet  remains  defeated 


X    -lU       ■.•.•..         .  DAVE  HILL/Oaily  Bruin  Senkw  Staff 

Tailback  Akil  Harris  is  tackleci  by  a  Cal  ciefensive  tackle.  The 
Bruin  loss  to  the  Bears  marks  their  eighth  straight  road  loss  and 
all  but  ensures  that  UCLA  won't  be  playing  at  the  Rose  Bowl 


SIDEBAR:  Bruins  find 
second  consecutive  loss 
to  Cal  hard  to  swallow 


By  Adam  Karon 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

BERKELEY -Interstate  5  was  a 
river  of  blue  and  gold  Friday  evening 
as     cars     and 

trucks  from  ■— ^— ^— 
both  schools 
headed  north 
for  what  used  to 
be  called  "all- 
Cal  weekend." 

Nearly  all  of 
the  56,000  fans 

on     hand     to      

watch    UCLA      ~"  " 

lose  to 

Califomia  46-38  wore  their  school 
colors,  which  proved  to  be  eerily  sim- 
ilar So  much  so  that  even  to  the 
UCLA  players  it  seemed  like  home. 

"Our  fans  are  great,"  said  safety 


-  vV ; 


Amidst  the  blue  and 

gold  in  Cal's  stadium 

was  an  overwhelming 

amount  of  red. 


Marques  Anderson.  "Any  time  they 
come  to  games  it  gets  us  hyped. 
Today  it  almost  felt  like  home." 

But  the  Bruins  didn't  play  that 
way.  Amidst  thie  blue  and  gold  in 
Cal's  Memorial  Stadium,  Saturday 
was  an  overwhelming  amount  of  red 
-  on  the  faces  of  Bruins  fans,  flu.shed 
from  the  sun  and  disappointed  at  the 
fate  of  their  team. 

Perhaps  the  thousands  of  UCLA 
fans  on  hand 
were  simply  try- 
ing to  give 
UCLA  better 
odds  of  win- 
ning. After  all, 
the  Bruins  hold 
a  4^  record  in 
Pasadena  while 

they  have  yet  to 

claim  a  victory 
on  the  road. 
Whatever   reasons   they   might 
have,  there  were  plenty  of  Bruins  in 
Berkeley  on  Saturday. 


GAME  SUMMARY  BOX 


defeated 
46-38 


JOfKUl 

Iflkw  cMfht  dM  iMn' «nt  tw« 

tMKMMVM,  tkM  OMMrf  Um  fMM 

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wwtiMtopMliiitmiiarfwiMd. 
li  tkt  fMrth  qaartw,  Vi  KmIi 
KMRMte  irap^  a  KB  and  UCU 
laMy  Ww^aii  Umiuum  MmufM 
Ifc*  bal.  TkttviiMflrM  to  14 
Manwmri  Irain  paints,  wMdi  s«it 
tiM  gaat  iRta  avtftiaa. 

«.  CaTi  paiat  tatal  SatM^mi  tht 
awft  dM  laan  kaw  Kan4  to  a  faaM 
itoca  Na*.  2, 19M,  whm  tfcay  b«N 
MnnaSt-ii. 

If  s  Mntrattof .  If  I  as  frastnttof  « 
yaaonpasiMirfMl.' 
UCU^MTtaitacfcCaryraas 


t  HowTi 


1 
C«l  7 

UCLA  7 


1ST  Cai 
IKU 

2N0  Cal 
Cal 
UCU 

3R0  Cal 

4TN  IKU 
UCU 

OT    Cal 
KU 
UCU 
Cal 
Cal 


Fletdwr,  TD  (IS  yd  pass  frwa  Paw) 

ifbcr,  TD  (3«  74  M»  frm  lalcr) 

Asemugha,  TD  (31  yd  IntcraptiM  ratwn) 

Fletdtcr,  TD  (4  yd  |mss  ftwii  Fav) 

EdMiM,TD(1ydnin) 

Harris,  TD  (20  yd  pass  frM  Pa«s) 

WtdMH,  TD  (3S  yd  pan  frMn  Paw) 

Swafford,  TD  (22  yd  pats  frMi  B«ll«r) 

Paw,TD(1ydrwi) 

6rmMi,K(3«yds) 

i«ns«i,Ri(37yd$) 

Ifbcr,  TO  (3  yd  ran),  2-petnt  onvcniM 


Ca^pM  wkk  last  yaafs  17-0  ihatMit 
af  tiba  Iratos  to  Pasadana,  this  vktary 
anriBttMNntttoM  Cai  has  Maatad 
|(U  to  bad-taHkadt  yaan  siiKa  tlM 

la  iM-faaM  wtoMinf  itraak 
"  ^   frM199»^ 


NMYatdsRwhing 
Net  Yards  Passing 
Total  Net  Yards 
Sadu:  Number-Yards 
First  Oewm 


Cal 

197 
2S2 
3S4 
3-22 
II 


SeeSI0EBAII,pa9e42 


LF  W'V* 


.-,^        ^       .  ,        .  DAVfH»L/D»ity  Bruin  S«»or5»»ff 

Many  students  made  the  road  trip  to  Cal  to  cheer  on  the  Bruins 
and  give  them  as  much  of  a  home  field  advantage  as  possible. 


FOOTBALL 

Fronf)pag€48 

the  second  play,  as  Boiler  hit  Derek 
Swafford  on  the  slant  to  beat  Jason 
Bell  and  put  the  Bears  ahead,  35-28. 
"We  needed  this  game,"  said  Bell. 
"We  should  have  had  it.  It's  hard  to 
keep  putting  yourself  in  a  hole  like 
that." 

UCLA  answered  in  the  second 
half  of  the  first  overtime,  twice  con- 
verting on  fourth  down  and  finally 
scoring  on  a  quarterback  sneak  on 
third  and  goal. 

Cal  stuffed  Harris  for  a  six-yard 
loss  on  the  first  play  of  the  second 
overtime,  in  which  UCLA  was 
unable  to  convert  a  first  down.  The 
Bears  held  the  Bruins  to  a  36-yard 
field  goal  by  Chris  Griffith,  giving 
the  Bruins  their  first  and  only  lead  of 
the  ariernoon. 


Once  again,  Cal  answered,  this 

time  with  a  field  goal  of  its  own  from 
37  yards  out. 

Things  looked  good  for  the 
Bruins,  who  were  able  to  start  the 
third  overtime  period  on  defense. 
With  the  help  of  a  fifteen-yard  inter- 
ference call  against  cornerback 
Ricky  Manning,  however,  the  Bears 
drove  the  ball  to  the  UCLA  two- 
yard  line. 

Running  back  Joe  Igbcr.  who  had 
179  total  yards,  scored  on  the  next 
play  to  put  Cal  on  top  for  good. 

"They  came  out  motivated," 
UCLA  linebacker  Robert  Thomas 
said.  "We  started  off  slow,  but  I  tip 
my  hat  to  them.  We  played  well,  but 
a  couple  of  blown  coverages  were 
big  mistakes." 

Thomas  led  all  defensive  players 
with  11  tackles.  Cal'i  Matt  Nixon 
was  second  with  eight,  including 
three  for  a  lou. 


'i>AUllt4MJ/0<tVlruin' 


Freddie  Mitchell  highlighted  the 
Bruin  offense  with  167  yards  on 
eight  receptions. 

The  Bruins  did  not  seem  to  show 
any  real  effects  from  the  bye  week. 
According  to  Toledo,  the  week  off 
allowed  some  players  to  heal  from 
nagging  injuries  incurred  earlier  in 
the  season. 

But  the  Bruins'  force  was 
nonetheless  depleted  on  Saturday. 
They  were  down  to  some  third-string 
defensive  linemen  when  Sean 
Phillips  and  Rusty  Williams  left  the 
game  with  injuries. 

Phillips  was  hurt  on  the  second 
play  of  the  game,  while  Williams  was 
in  and  out  throughout  the  contest. 

With  the  loss.  UCLA  falls  to  1-2 
in  conference  play  and  4-2  overall. 
While  New  Year's  dates  are  not  out 
of  the  question,  it  is  unlikely  that  the 
Bruins  will  smell  roses  when  the  big 
dance  rolls  around. 


«      «      «'    t      •      t      4       .      4      .       . 


Daily  Brain  Sports 


Monday,  Ortober  16, 2000       47 


Bruins  continue  undefeated  streaJc  against  Beavers,  Diidcs 


W.SOCCER:  Record  set  for 
most  shots  and  goats  off 
Division  One  opponent 


ByMayarZokaei 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Proximity  is  a  good  thing.  Just  ask 
the  UCLA  women's  soccer  team. 

The  Bruins  scored  six  goals  from 
jess  than  10  yards  from  the  goal  and 
extended  their  unbeaten  streak  to  12  in 
an  M  victory  over  the  Oregon  Ducks 
Sunday  at  Drake  Stadium. 

Before  that,  UCLA  (ll-l-l  overall, 
2-0-1  in  conference  and  ranked  seventh 
in  the  nation  by 

the  NSCAA)  — ^— — 
scored  three  sec- 
ond-half goals 
Friday  night  en 
route  to  a  3-0  vic- 
tory over  Oregon 

State  (6-8-2, 0-2-2      '. — 

Pac-IO)  at  ^  ^' 

Spaulding  Field. 

"It  was  a  great  weekend,"  said 
senior  forward  Tracey  Milbum.  "We 
expected  to  come  in  today  and  win  with 


UCLA  d.  Oregon  State, 

3-0 
UCLA  d.  Oregon,  8-0 


the  game  less  than  30  seconds  later 
after  beating  three  defenders.  UCLA 
scored  again  less  than  a  minute  later  on 
Stephanie  Rigamat's  strike  from  six 
yards  after  receiving  a  left  cross  from 
Venus  James. 

Milbum  had  three  goals  and  two 
assists  on  the  weekend  for  the  Bruins. 
"The  first  half  against  Oregon  State, 
we  didn't  score  and  we  all  wanted  to 
come  and  play  better  against  Oregon," 
she  said. 

The  Bruins  out-shot  Oregon  19  to 
five  in  the  first  half,  and  finished  with 
35,  a  school-record  for  most  shots 
against  an  NCAA  Division  I  oppo- 
nent. The  previous  high  was  34  shots 
against  Oregon  State  in  1997 

The  Bruins 
also  set  a  new 
school  mark  for 
posting  the  most 
goals  against  a 
Division  I  oppo- 
nent with  eight, 
eclipsing  the  pre- 
vious   total    of 


seven  set  against  UNC-Chariotte  last 
year. 

"I  wasn't  aware  of  the  records,  but  I 

-^ ^  „..„  „..,  „,„,      know  our  team  played  great,  and  it  was 

a  good  effort,  and  we  expected  to  ddJi^;/' a  great  eft^ort  for  our  first  game  (at 
'"^'^L.'  Drake  Stadium),"  said  assistant  coach 

UCLA  jumped  out  to  a  3-0  halftime      Lisa  Shattuck.  Shattuck  took  the  helm 
lead  against  Oregon  (4-1 1,  0-3  PaolO)      Sunday  in  the  absence  of  head  coach 


on  the  strength  of  one  goal  apiece  by 
Bethany  Bogart,  Milbum  and  Staci 
Duncan,  the  latter  coming  in  the  31st 
minute,  less  than  two  minutes  after 
Duncan  had  substituted  in. 

Milbum  sped  past  two  defenders 
and  zipped  a  pass  five  yards  across  the 
top  of  the  box  to  freshman  Duncan, 
who  converted  the  assist  for  a  4^  lead 
in  the'52nd  minute  Sunday. 

Milbum  scored  her  second  goal  of 


Jillian  Ellis,  who  missed  the  game  due 
to  and  undisclosed  illness. 

"We  started  oft"  with  a  lot  of  oppor- 
tunities to  score  but  we  didn't  capital- 
ize," Shattuck  said.  "We  settled  down 
in  the  second  half,  and  we  had  to  play 
as  a  team." 

After  misfiring  on  her  first  five 
shots,  freshman  Lindsay  Greco  headed 


See  WJOCCa,  page  41      Stephanie  Rigamat  tries  to  get  away  from  an  Oregon  defender  in  an  8-0  victory. 


ANNA  AVIK 


I     I    I    I    4    f  4 


i  *.'  1 1  f  f'i  i'iYtYi''L'r>U*i'y 


■|hKi£«M4Hi#«^^ 


.'V 


Women's  soccer  sets  record 

The  women's  team  set  single  game 
school  records  for  goals  scored  and 
shots-on-goal  in  Sunday's  game 
against  Oregon.  See  inside  for  story 

Monday,  October  16,2000        " 


Daily  Bruin 


S^.^': 


Sports  on  the  Web  Q    p 

See  all  this  at  the  Daily  • 

Bruin's  incredible,  stellar  : 

Website:  • 

www.dailybruin.ucla.edu  I 


FOOTBAU:  Cal  damages  UCLA's 
Rose  Bowl  hopes;  leaves  team  1-2 
in  Pac-10  conference,  4-2  overall 


triple-overtime  loss 


By  Adam  Karon 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

BERKELEY  -  Trampled  roses  are  not  pretty. 

UCLA  learned  this  the  hard  way  after  being 
stomped  on  by  the  California  Golden  Bears  46- 
38  in  a  triple-overtime  loss  that  severely  damp- 
ened the  Bruins'  Rose  Bowl  hopes. 

The  loss,  coupled  by  another  Oregon  win,  put 
the  Bruins  two  games  behind  the  Ducks  in  the 
race  for  the  Pac-10  crown. 

Perhaps  even  more  disappointing  was  the  fact 
that  the  Bruins  lost  to  a  Bears  team  that  was  pre- 
viously 1-4  overall  and  had  beaten  UCLA  a  year 
ago  in  Pasadena. 


UCLA  38 
Cal  46 


"It's  frustrating,"  quarterback  Cory  Paus 
said.  "It's  as  frustrating  as  you  can  possibly  feel." 

Paus.  who  was  hounded  all  day  by  Cal  defen- 
sive linemen  Andre  Carter  and  Jacob  Waasdorp, 
completed  20  of  40  passes  for  309  yards! 
However,  the  redshirt  sophomore  was  victim- 
ized by  three  interceptions,  including  one  on  the 
final  possession  in  overtime. 

'We  played  well  enough  to  win,"  Paus  said. 
"We  didn't  make  some  plays,  but  we  were  still  in 
a  position  to  win." 

The  game  was  a  pendulum  of  momentum, 
with  the  Bruins  once  agam  falling  behind  early. 
The  team  has  yet  to  score  first  this  year. 

"You  can  only  go  to  the  well  so  many  times," 
head  coach  Bob  Toledo  said  of  his  team's  open- 
ing drive  woes.  "We  can't  keep  falling  behind 
early." 

Two  weeks  ago,  UCLA  was  down  by  14 
against  Arizona  State  at  halftime.  The  Bruins 
seemed  destined  for  a  repeat  performance  until 
Ryan  Nece  knocked  the  ball  loose  from  Cal 
quarterback  Kyle  Boiler,  and  UCLA  recovered 
on  the  Bears  five-yard  line. 

Twenty-two  seconds  later.  Paus  found  tight 
end  Brian  Fletcher  for  the  second  time  to  pull  the 
Bruins  to  within  seven  at  the  half. 

Cal  dominated  most  of  the  third  quarter, 
which  has  previously  been  friendly  to  the  Bruins! 


Squad  rallies 
to  beat  ASU; 
victory  places 
team  second 

W.VOLLEYBALL:  Grueling 
match  shows  squad  can 
work  together  to  win 


ByChristtnaTeller 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


Coming  off  a  five-game  win  over 
previously  undefeated  Arizona,  the 
UCLA  women's  volleyball  team  (12- 
5  overall,  7-2  Pac-10)  headed  into  the 
match  against  Arizona  State  (12-7,  4- 
5)  with  one  objective  in  mind:  to  keep 
on  winning. 

What  they  hadn't  expected  was 
that  it  was  going  to  be  another  gruel- 
ing five-game  match  and  that  they 
would  again  work  through  it  and  win 
11-15. 15-10,6-15, 15-12  and  15-11. 


UCLA  d.  Arizona  State 

11-15,15-10,6-15,15- 

12,15-11 


I  in  A .4.      u       I    #-  M  D*V€  HlliyOaily  Brum  Sentot  Slaff 

UCLA  quarterback  Cory  Paus  is  tackled  by  the  Cal  defense.  In  Saturday's  garDe  Paus  threw 
four  touchdown  passes,  but  also  threw  three  interceptions. 


The  Bears  held  UCLA  to  a  scoreless  quarter, 
while  chewing  up  more  than  10  minutes  of  the 
clock  and  scoring  a  touchdown. 

But  as  they  have  done  all  year,  the  Bruins 
stormed  back.  In  the  fourth  quarter  UCLA  got  a 
pair  of  touchdowns  off  of  turnovers.  Cal's  Keala 
Keanaaina  dropped  a  Boiler  pass  over  the  mid- 
dle, and  safety  Marques  Anderson  intercepted 
the  tipped  ball.  Five  plays  later  Paus  found  fresh- 
man Akil  Harris  on  a  screen  for  a  twenly-yard 


Bruin  touchdown. 

Later  in  the  quarter,  Tony  White  recovered  a 
fumbled  handoffand  returned  it  to  the  Bears  41. 
Once  again,  the  Bruins  took  advantage  as  Paus 
found  Mitchell  over  the  middle  for  a  catch-and- 
run  for  35  yards. 

Unfortunately  for  the  Bruins,  the  highlights 
ended  there.  The  first  overtime  saw  Cal  score  on 


SecF00fBAtl,pa9e46 


"Ft's  a  great  confidence  booster," 
junior  outside  hitter  Ashley  Bowles 
said.  "We  had  a  couple  losses  at  the 
beginning  of  the  season.  But  it's  how 
you  end  the  season,  and  pulling  out 
these  two  wins  will  carry  us  through 
the  end  of  the  season." 

Walking  away  from  an  intense  2 
hour  and  40  minute  match  as  the  win- 
ner means  more  than  notching  anoth- 
er victory. 

It  proves  to  the  members  that  they 
can  work  together  as  a  team.  Battling 
from  behind  in  four  out  of  five  games, 
the  Bruins  all  chipped  in  to  counter- 
attack the  relentless  Sun  Devil  attack. 
Kristec  Porter  led  the  team  with  36 
kills   and   21    digs   while    Lauren 


S«cW.V0lifYBMl,|M9e44 


UCLA  splits  in  back-to-back  games 


RECAP:  Young  squad  faUs 
to  Huskies,  defeats  Beavers 
in  weekend  home  matches 


CATHfHINfJUN 

Hermann  Trophy  candidate  McKinley  Tennyson  Jr.  goes  after  a 
balllnFrlHay'c  A-1  v/irtr>ryr.warr>,«g^.^  5^3^,>  


By  Chris  Umplerre 

Daily  Bruin  Staff  -'•.'.'; 

For  the  first  time  this  season,  the 
UCLA  men's  soccer  team  showed  its 
youth. 

The  No.  2  Bruins  (9-2. 1-2  Pac-10), 
who  typically  start  six  freshman, 
became  complacent  after  taking  a  2-0 
second  half  lead  over  Washington  (9- 
3,  3-0  Pac-10)  at  Drake  Stadium  on 
Sunday  With  UCLA's  guard  down, 
the  Huskies  roared  back  and  eventu- 
ally won  the  game  3-2. 

The  game  winner  was  scored  with 
just  30  seconds  left  in  the  game  by 
Washington  midfielder  Benjamin 
Somoza. 

With  40  seconds  left.  Husky  Mark 
Hogenhout  fired  a  shot  just  outside 


Bruin  defender.  The  ball  fell  to  the 
wide  open  Somoza,  who  beat  UCLA 
keeper  DJ  Countess  to  the  back  post. 

Bruin  senior  Ryan  Lee  felt  his 
younger  teammates  lost  their  focus 
mentally  in  the  second  half. 

"I  think  we  are  a  young  team  and  it 
takes  90  minutes  of  mentally  being 
able  to  stay  in  the  game,  not  so  much 
physically,"  he  said. 


UCLA  d.  Oregon  State, 

4-1 
Washington  d.  UCLA, 

3-2 


th«  goal  bow  that  was  deflcfted  by  a 


"It's  tough  to  play  90  minutes  and 
these  (young)  guys  have  a  lot  of  grow- 
ingup  to  do." 

UCLA  jumped  out  to  the  early 
lead  on  goals  by  seniors  McKinley 
Teniiysuii.  Jr.  In  V\t  Eighth  mmute 


and   Shaun   Tsakiris   in   the   51st 
minute. 

After  Tsakiris  scored  on  a  penalty 
kick,  UCLA  head  coach  Todd 
Saldarta  felt  his  Bruins  thought  the 
game  was  over. 

"We  played  a  really  good  first  half 
and  we  were  very  much  in  control," 
he  said.  "In  regards  to  the  physical 
and  soccer  aspect  of  the  game,  I  think 
we  out-classed  them. 

"But  in  the  second  half  I  think  we 
thought  that  the  game  had  been 
won,"  he  added. 

The  game  was  not  over;  there  were 
some  40  minutes  left  to  be  played 
after  Tsakiris's  goal  and  the  Huskies 
used  each  minute  on  the  attack. 

With  the  ball  constantly  in 
UCLA's  end  of  the  field,  Washington 
fired  15  shots  on  goal  in  the  second 
half.  They  had  just  three  in  the  first 
half 

"It's  about  not  letting  down  and 
having  a  lot  of  heart."  said  Somoza, 


Servirjg  the  UCLA  community  since  T919 


Tuesday,  October  17,2000 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


1 


,^.- 


Dlscussion  praises 
understanding  of 
various  genocides 

lECnjRE:  Denial  of  historical 
fact  also  rejection  of  science; 
speaker  focuses  on  Armenia 


African  groups  hold  welcome  week 


By  Hasmft  Badalian 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


More  than  100  people  gathered  in  Dickson 
Plaza  Auditorium  for  a  lecture  on  the  denial 
of  the  Armenian  Genocide  Sunday. 

The  lecture,  titled  "The  Many  Faces  of 
Genocide  Denial.  The  Holocaust  and  the 
Armenian  Genocide,"  was  presented  by 
Israel  Charny,  professor  of  psychology  and 
family  therapy  at  Hebrew  University  in 
Israel. 

"Genocide  is  not  a  subject  of  the  past 
alone,"  Charny  said. 

"It  is  a  subject  of  the  present  as  well  It  is  a 
subject  cif  the  future,"  he  said. 

Though  his  field  of  study  is  the  Holocaust, 
Charny  focused  his  lecture  more  on  the 
Armenian  genocide. 

Throughout  his  lecture,  he  drew  parallels 


Sc«CEII0aK,pa9e12 


ASU:  Pre-professional 
organizations,  support 
systems  work  together 


ByMdodyWang 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Imagine  walking  to  q)ass  to  the 
beat  of  hands  clapping  and  feet 
stomping. 

This  will  come  true  Wednesday 
afternoon,  as  part  of  the  African 
Student  Union's  annual  Welcome 
Week. 

ASU,  one  of  the  oldest  cultural 
student  groups  on  campus,  has 
planned  events  to  introduce  stu- 
dents to  the  university's  many 
African  student  organizations. 

But  ASU  Program  Coordinator 
Robbie  Qark  said  Welcome  Week 
is  meant  to  target  more  than  just 
the  African  American  community. 

"We  would  like  for  African 
American  students  to  be  involved 
with  our  organizations,  but  we  also 
want  the  entire  student  body  to 
know  what  we're  doing,"  Clark 
said. 

She  said  many  upperclassmen 
still  do  not  know  what  the  organiza- 


tions are  about. 

Onyx,  for  instance,  is  a  group  of 
Afriqui  American  men  who  pro- 
vide academic  and  personal  sup- 
port for  each  other.  The  African 
Women's  Collective  provides  simi- 
lar services,  but  members  seek  to 
empower  themselves  by  reading 
African  literature. 

Clark  said  Welcome  Week  tliis 
year  will  be  special  because  differ- 
ent organizations  will  come  togeth- 
er to  introduce  themselves. 

For  example,  all  of  the  African 
American  sororities  and  fraterni- 
ties will  perform  a  show  together 
while  pre-professional  groups  give 
presentations  that  same  day. 

"We're  all  doing  it  together  this 
year  in  a  unified  way,"  Clark  said. 

ASU  kicked  off  the  week 
Monday  with  pre-professional 
organizations,  such  as  Black 
Prelaw  and  the  National  Society  of 
Black  Engineers,  handing  out 
information  and  attracting  new 
members. 

On  Wednesday,  the  National 
PanHellenic  Council  will  hold  a 
•^ard  show,"  with  African  fraterni- 
ties and  sororities  performing  a 
step  show  that  consists  of  hand 
clapping  and  stomping. 


CALENDAR  OF  EVENTS 

African  Studerrt  Union  w8l  host  these  events  to  make  students  aw«e  of  the  (fiffcrent 

African  American  organizations  on  campus. 

/y^    Monday  ^''^Os. 

j^^    Tuesday  ^""^''^V 

y^'  Pre-Profe$sionalDay^  y 

^^Community  Service  Day  ^TX 

M                5^p.m.                Vdi 

(n  pjn.  Barbecue  in  Wcstwood  PlauX  \ 

■L             OriMtatHMi  in             //ij 

6-7  p.in.  Cultural  AfrainCemmisiion  |  j 

^^,^^     »««h«fH*ll$422      jy     \ 

I         Concert  S-IOpjB.OHYX         // 

'^  OritntatiMiinKerddMff     AJ 

^^Grand  Salwix^^ 

^'""^ednwd*/"""^^. 

^^^^^^     "--^""^'^ 

^r    National  Pan-Hellenic   ^V\. 

M                Council  Day                  \  \ 

^'^''''^    Thursday    ^^^^ 

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^  //     African  Peoples' Day  ^. 
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Friday       ^s\ 

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[  African  Brothers  \  \ 

1    and  Sisters  Sleepover     )    ]                         | 

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t«raaro«ind       >^                .   :>    ■ 

SOUKLMHuaSMnlUMi 

"**      "^^^  .  :-, 

NPHC  President  Jamila  Small 
said  the  show  is  about  everyone 
showcasing  their  talents,  unlike  a 
usual  step  show,  which  is  often  a 
competition  between  groups. 


ABAM  BRa\WjyB«ly  Bruin 

"ITierc's  a  whole  art  and  history 
of  stepping,  but  it's  also  our  way  of 
having  fun,"  Small  said. 


SecWa£0Mi,pa9e12 


Spin  control 


SMaLS0CCBtpa9«42 


\  t  '   -'  -'  4  fA  i  ♦ 


•  •«  'SKV'-.  ti-t^^  •» 


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'   '  <   )    I   I   I  1 


Fees  up  at  colleges  aaoss  nation, 
but  UC  bucks  trend,  report  finds 


COST:  State  funds  make 
up  for  needed  increases 
at  nine-campus  system 


Wwf  MKjjCttly  Bruki  Sertw  Staff 

Tim  Davis,  a  fifth-year  American  literature  anci  culture  stucient, 
swings  a  pair  of  New  Zealand  Poi  baHs  on  top  of  Janss  steps 


Monday  afternoon,  ihe  balls  are  used  in  exercise  and  meditation. 


By  Hemcsh  Patd 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

In  order  to  meet  rising  costs  due 
to  inftation,  universities  around 
the  country  are  increasing  their 
fees  -  but  some  schools,  including 
UCLA,  are  not  raising  those  fees. 

The  College  Board  reported 
Monday  that  the  schools  in  the 
University  of  California  system 
went  against  this  nationwide  trend 
for  the  sixth  consecutive  year.  The 
board  also  reported  that  a  record 
$68  billion  was  available  for  finan- 
cial aid  nationwide. 

The  College  Board  surveyed 
public,  private,  four-year  and  two- 
year  institutions  in  their  study 

"I  think  the  university  will  bend 
every  effort  to  keep  costs  down 
and  keep  a  university  education  as 
inexpensive  as  possible,"  said  UC 
spokesman  Chuck  McFadden. 

He  added  that  the  UC  can 
afford  not  to  increase  fees  because 
of  aid  from  Gov.  Gray  Davis  and 
the  state  budget. 

"The  College  Board  figures 
point  to  the  fact  that  the  UC  con- 
tinues to  pfovide  a  superior  educa- 


a  sUtement.  "This  is  because  of  the 
generosity  of  the  government,  the 
legislature  and  the  people  of 
California." 

Each  year,  the  UC  Oftlce  of  the 
President  puts  together  a  budget 
propoial  for  the  governor,  which 
includes  a  request  for  a  fee 
increase  of  about  4  to  4.5  percent, 
said  Debbie  Davis,  chair  of  the  UC 
Student  Association. 

"But  every  year,  the  legislature 
buys  out  the  fee  increase  -  the  gov- 
ernor gives  enough  money  to  equal 
the  amount  requested  by  the  office 
of  the  president,"  she  said. 

According  to  the  survey,  the 
cost  of  college  fees  and  tuition 
went  up  by  as  much  as  5.2  percent 
at  four-year  schools  nationwide 
this  year. 


The  College  Board  is  looking  at 
this  increase  in  fees  with  an  opti- 
mistic attitude. 

"This  means  that  a  college  edu- 
cation is  still  well  within  the  grasp 
of  all  Americans,"  said  Gaston 
Caperton,  president  of  the  College 
Board,  in  a  statement. 

Aside  from  the  board's  report, 
the  National  Association  of  State 
Universities  and  Land-Grant 
Colleges  found  that  eight  other 
schools  also  went  against  the  trend 
and  did  not  raise  their  fees  or 
tuition. 

California  State  University, 
State  University  of  New  York  and 
the  University  of  Oregon  were 
among  those  who  bucked  the  trend 


S«e  FEES,  page  10 


AVEIUGE  FIX£|l<HARGESfOR  UNDERGRADUATES 


\^ 


pQOO-2001    1999-2000   %Change 


S 


2  year  public      r $  1 ,705       $  1 ,649       +3.4 
^y!?^Piiy.^*L_JM58       $6,968 


4  year  public       $3.510       $3,362       +< 
4  year  private    ^S  16,332     $15,518 
UCLA  1$3,^98  7^  $3,698 


•-.  Vi  »-  *    •■  *.  1 


tion  at  ottremely  low  fees."  said 
UC  President  Richard  Atkinson  in 


V  V. »,  V  V  I.  V  V ». »  k.  i  >  (  \  X  V  A  \  ».  V  I 


VICTOflCMtN 


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.      .      .      .  T     T  ,      ^     ;  \  \S      \      \      \      y      i      .      \      \      \  ^      \     \      \      \      \      \      ■,      \  ;      \ 


2         Tuwday,  October  17, 2«W 


Daily  Bniin  News 


l^e  Wat 


Petty  thdit 

Three  parking  permits,  three  cdiular 
phones  and  several  bags  were  stolen  last 
week,  incurring  a  total  loss  of  $660. 

Police  received  two  reports  last  week  of 
people  breaking  into  cars  parked  in  the 
garages  on  Kelton  and  Veteran  Avenues^ 
The  culprits  took  off  with  a  stereo  or 
player.  The  total  loss  was  $600 

Someone  entered  an  apa 
removing  the  screen  from 
dow  Friday  and  stole  a 
phone  and  CD  player 
$300. 

Police  received  a 
someone  had  charg 
to  another  person's 
their  authorization 

A  man  shortcha 

Source:  Unive  fsHy  Nice  Dtpt  L6g 


card  and  a  bag.  The  total  loss  was  $  1,000. 

Miscelfauieoas 

Police  received  five  reports  of  misde- 
meanor hit-and-runs  last  week. 

Police  received  a  secondhand  report  of 
a  man  exposing  himself  at  Hitch  Suites  at 
1  16  a.m.  on  Sunday 

and  advised  a  man 
in  public  Friday  aftcr- 
versity  Extension  on 

irtedly  exited  their  car 

er  to  kick  and  try  to  open 

passing  vehicle  near  Gaylcy 

[m  Avenues  early  Thursday 

.  Wednesday,  a  man  report- 

iman  as  she  entered  the  lunch 

the    fourth    floor    of    the 

*oimd  Medical  Research  Lab  to 

^bme  on  in  and  not  scream.  The  woman 

ran  down  the  hall  ancl  called  the  police. 

Compiled  from  UCPD  media  reports 
betvween  Oa  10  and  16  by  Unh  Tat  Daily 
Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


WHAT'S  BREVinN' 


Today  3  p.m. 


Center  for  African  American 

Studies 

Readings  and  authors  book 

signing 

2312  Murphy  Hall 

206-8267 

5  p.m. 

Student  Business  Union 
Towers  Perrin  on  interviewing 
tips  and  techniques 
Ackerman24l2 


5:45  p.m. 

UCLA  Pre-Dental  Society 
UCLA  Clinic  tour 


meet  outside  main  entrance  of 
dental  school  -  1st  floor 

6:30  p.m. 

Spark 

Forum  on  Palestinian  uprising: 

Bankruptcy  of  the  Peace  Process 

Kerckhoff  Hall  152 

443-1470 

.7  p.m. 

Transfer  Student  Association 
Your  first  90  days  on  the  job 
Career  Center  2nd  floor 
206-7865 

Muslim  Student  Union 
Juma  Prayer 
Viewpoint  Lounge 


CORRECTION 

On  Oct.  16,  the  Daily  Bruin 
ran  a  Viewpoint  submission 
titled  "Jews  need  mutual 
respect,  peace"  that  contained 
an  error.  The  author  of  the  sub- 
mission was  Kevin  Lev. 


DAILY  BRUIN 


ACADEMIC 
ANNOUNCEMENTS 


Week3 

Friday:  Last  day  to  add  courses 
with  a  $3  fee  through  URSA 

Textbooks  may  be  returned  to 
UCLA  Store  within  24  hours  of 
purchase  or  with  proof  of 
dropped  class 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


4  QUICK  LOOK 


Page  # 
Daily  Bruin  CiassififtH»      23-30 

Crossword  Puzzie. 27 

Movie  Guide 21 


Tuesday,  Oaober  17, 2000 


uoJIlJliCi 


MJffifJ^  misopedia 

OfUieQ^y  (mis-oh-PEE-dee-up.  mi-soh-) 

Hatred  of  chiMren,  especiaHy  one's  own. 
IGrMk  miso-.  hate  ■>■  pad-,  cMd  *  ».] 

Than  again.  Iha  tubiact  of  Ifw  maating  -  to  tniun  that  Amaricali 

IS  mMan  young  paa0a  tiava  accaaa  to  raaouroa*  mat  h«4p  iham 

laad  haaHhyi  MMng  and  productlva  Nvaa'  --  might  not  vf»^  to 

FMda,  «rtio  was  infamous  for  his  partxiilad  misopedia  (••  in, 

"ChNdtan  ttiould  naWiar  ba  saan  nor  heard  from  -  tver  again.*).* 

VoiunlMrlng:  Do  K  for  your  oiwn  salte.  too.  IMInneapo«s  Star  Tritxna. 

16Apr  19B7. 


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News  Editor;  Barbara  Ortutay 
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Unhlat  -,  ;,   ^,  .  .:  «  : 

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for  additional  details,  see  page  32. 


^ 


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l_ 


Tha  Dally  Bruin  (ISSN  lOM-SOM)  Is  pwULhwi  end  copyrlgMad  by  tha  ASUCIA 
Comrnonk:.tloni  Board.  All  right.  „,  rasarvwi.  naprktting  oT  ,ny  matarM  In  this  publication 
without  the  wrKtar>  pcfmlstlon  of  tha  Communlcaltom  Board  b  itiktly  prohlbNad.  Tha  ASUCIA 
Comrrwnlcatlons  Board  rulty  supports  tha  Unlvwslty  of  Callfatnl^ 

.il'^  T"*  "'**•  '^  "^  •"  '•*^'  •"  """^  "fvartMng  wl»ia  contam  dhcflmlnMas 
t!lX^t,T^"^-  '°^'  "'""'^  °'^-  '"^*  '•""^  *'*^  .9*  .ax  or  .axual  orlanta- 
^H]^  "^  ComcTHir^ttoo.  Board  has  a  madia  grtavanca  procedure  for  raMMng  com^ 

ptoWs  a»i*n«  ariy  of  Its  poWlcattom.  For  a  .:opy  of  tha  cornpt«a  procedure,  corwact  th/puWI- 

cMtom  offlca  at  1 1 8  KarcfcfKiff  Ha«.  Al  InMrts  that  ara  prtntad  In  tha  Dally  Bruin  are  mdaperv 

dan«y  paid  publications  and  do  not  rattect  the  vtewt  of  tha  Editorial  Board  or  tha  staff   ^^ 

OaMy*n*i,naKarddM(rNallloaWaalwa«IHau,LMAn«alas.CA  90024, (Itoiaas- 

M0a.ta^pi//WaHj|aUybiiiinMta.a*i.fw(S10)a0C-ON« 


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i 


Daily  Bruin  Ncirt 


Ttiesday,  October  17, 2000        1 


Various  centers  on 

campus  help  students 

who  must  deal  with 

stress-related  depression. 


ByStdlaChu 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

Of  all  UCLA  undergraduate  and  gradu- 
ate students  visiting  Student  Psychological 
Services,  23  percent  are  seeking  treatment 
for  depression,  according  to  William 
Prcscotl,  a  psychologist  and  associate  direc- 
tor of  SPS. 

•  "Depression  certainly  is  a  widespread 
problem  among  young  adults,"  said  Jo  Ann 
Dawson,  staff  physician  and  Director  of 
Primary  Care  at  the  Arthur  Ashe  Student 
Health  and  Wellness  Center.  "Graduate  stu- 
dents and  undergraduate  students  alike  suf- 
fer because  of  their  demanding  schedules 
and  pressure." 

With  the  onslaught  of  finals,  midterms 
and  term  papers,  students  find  themselves  in 
a  stress  continuum  that  progresses  from  stu- 
dents feeling  busy  to  feeling  overwhelmed, 
according  to  Dawson. 

"I  think  students  have  made  it  that  way," 
she  said.  "UCLA  students  have  outstand- 
ing credentials.  I  think  they  wear  them- 
selves out." 

Some  students,  like  second-year  unde- 
clared student  Susan  Eckerman,  who  has 
mild  clinical  depression,  said  pre-college 
pressures  may  effect  students'  mental  health 
today. 

"I  think  the  intense  stress  of  high  school 
in  a  way  carries  over  to  the  stress  that  stu- 
dents in  college  experience,"  she  said. 

"Sometimes  that  stress  they  experienced 
then  makes  students  more  prone  to  depres- 
sion now,"  Eckerman  continued.  "In  my 


experience,  depression  occurs  when 
there's  pressure." 

Depression  is  clinically  described  as 
an  emotional  condition,  characterized 
by  feelings  ranging  from  hopelessness 
and  inadequacy  to  sadness. 

The  Ashe  Center  and  SPS  serve  as  two 
main  resources  on  campus  students  can  go 
to  for  help  with  depression.  Students  can  go 
to  either  to  get  advice  and  counseling  infor- 
mation. 

During  the  academic  year,  regularly 
enrolled  students  (which  excludes  extension 
students)  can  receive  SPS  services  free  of 
charge. 

"We  work  closely  with  SPS  to  co-manage 
the  depression  cases  that  we  encounter," 
Dawson  said.  "Depending  on  the  severity 
of  the  case,  if  we  do  refer  them  elsewhere, 
virtually  all  the  time  we  refer  them  to  SPS. 
It's  right  on  campus,  it's  free,  and  they  have 
a  highly  experienced  staff." 

Students  referred  to  SPS  for  depression 
usually  show  a  combination  of  symptoms 
such  as  insomnia,  loss  of  appetite  and  low 
concentration. 

SPS  serves  students  almost  exclusively, 
but  there  are  a  few  exceptions,  Prescott  said. 

"There  will  sometimes  be  emergency 
cases,"  he  said.  "Or  if  family  problems  is  the 
cause  of  their  depression,  we'll  bring  in  the 
family  member  and  talk  to  them  together. 
They  have  to  be  connected  with  the  stu- 
dent." 

Not  only  are  the  patients  who  come  in  for 
depression  suffering  from  stress  or  situa- 
tional depression,  but  biological  depression 


is  common  among  them 
as  well. 

"The  students'  way  of 
reacting  to  anxiety  could 
be  a  reason  for  depression,' 
Prescott  said.  "Although  there  may  be  bio- 
logical propensities  where  students  are  natu- 
rally prone  to  it,  it  isn't  as  much  situational." 
From  her  experience,  Eckerman  said 
genetic  chemical  imbalances  in  the  brain 
can  cause  biological  depression. 

Eckerman  said  her  family  background  of 
depression  proved  that  it  was  hereditary. 

"If  I  look  at  my  family  history,  all  the 
women  were  prone  to  depression, "  she  said. 
"My  great  grandmother,  my  grandmother, 
even  my  mother  had  depression  tenden- 
cies." 

As  much  as  biology  accounts  for  depres- 
sion, however,  so  can  one's  environment, 
she  added. 

Students  who  come  in  showing  depres- 
sion-related symptoms,  such  as  high  anxiety, 
sleep  deprivation,  loss  of  appetite,  are 
almost  always  given  the  same  advice, 
according  to  Dawson, 

"We  tell  students  to  get  involved,  but  to 
not  get  involved  in  everything,"  she  said. 
"We  always  make  it  a  point  to  stress  time 
management  and  to  encourage  the  right 
amount  of  sleep.  It's  unbelievable  how 
sleep  can  help." 


Many  students  who  come  into  the 
Ashe  Center  with  depression-like  symp- 
toms are  not  always  ready  to  admit  they 
have  depression,  Dawson  said. 

"I  think  there's  a  stigma,  and  many  stu- 
dents don't  want  to  be  defined  as  ill,"  she 
said. 

Prescott  agreed  with  this  notion  of  stu- 
dents being  afraid  of  admitting  that  they  are 
depressed. 

"Some  students  don't  like  the  idea  of 
medication,"  he  said.  "To  them,  it  shows  a 
loss  of  control,  like  they  have  to  use  some- 
thing outside  of  themselves." 

Eckerman,  who  uses  Prozac,  said  people 
are  afraid  of  being  given  the  label  of  depres- 
sion. 

"Before,  I  didn't  want  to  go  on  Prozac 
because  I  thought  it  would  make  me  seem 
crazy,"  she  said.  "I  mean,  you  can't  tell  if 
somebody's  on  Prozac.  I'm  normal.  It's  not 
that  it  makes  me  not  me." 

But  Dawson  said  students  should  not  feel 
alone  in  their  struggle  with  clinical  depres- 
sion. 

"Some  students  feel  embarrassed  about 
expressing  that  they  have  depression,"  she 
said.  "It's  our  job  to  identify  this  so  they  can 
resume  full-function." 


*.  V 


For  more  information,  call  SPS  at  825-0768  or 
825-7985. 


Six  candidates  vie  for  Riordan's  position  in  close  race 


»A 


MAYOR:  Contest  heats  up 
early  for  termed-out  office; 
new  charter  to  take  effect 


By  Mason  SteckstiU 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Though  the  election  for  mayor  of 
Los  Angeles  is  seven  months  away, 
six  candidates  have  already  emerged 
in  what  may  become  a  hotly  contest- 
ed race. 

The  candidates  arc  Congressman 
Xttvicr  Becerra,  D-Los  Angeic*; 
State.  Controller  Kathleen  Connell; 
City  Attorney  James  Hahn;  LA. 
Businessman  Steve  Soboroff; 
Assemblyman  Antonio  Villaraigosa, 
D-Lo$  Angeles;  and  City 
Councilman  Joel  Wachs. 
— Though  the  field  seems  crowded,  it 


is  nowhere  near  the  24  candidates 
who  vied  for  the  office  in  1993,  when 
popular  Mayor  Tom  Bradley  finally 
hung  up  his  hat  after  20  years  in 
office.  In  1997, 

only  State     «...»...._ 

Senator  Tom 
Hayden  chal- 
lenged incum- 
bent Richard 
Riordan,  who 
won  re-election 
handily. 

But  Riordan 
is  ineligible  for 
re-election 
because  of  term 
limits        which 


ring. 

"If  you  take  a  good  look  at  Los 

Angeles,  it's  tough  to  see  anything 

but  blurriness.  There  is  just  a  lack  of 

focus,"        said 


(Xavier)  Becerra  is  one 

of  two  candidates 

who  never  attended 

or  taught  at  UCLA.  The 

other  is  (James)  Hahn. 


were  enacted  the  same  year  he  was 
elected.  And,  as  in  1993.  many  Los 
Angeles  politicians  arc  taking  advan- 
tage of  the  lack  of  a  popular  incum- 


bern  and  tossing  ihtit  ftals  mlo  (he — RaHn 


Congressman 
Becerra  in  an 
interview  with 
LatinoLA.com. 
"The  next  mayor 
has  to  show  that 
the  city  can 
work." 

-     Becerra    has 
been  a  member 

__________      of        Congress 

since  1992. 

Before  that,  he 

served  one  term  in  the.state  assembly. 
Becerra  is  one  of  two  candidates 

who  never  attended  or  taught  at 

UCLA.  The  other  ts  City  Attorney 


THE  RACE  IS  ON 

Thotigh  the  election  i$  not  uniii  Apm,  yx  cangjgaies  lor  mayor  ot  ua  Angeles  tiave  already 
begun  their  campaigns. 


JACOe  LIAO/Dally  Bruin 

Early  polls  show  Hahn  with  a     only  candidate  who  currently  holds  a 
slight  lead  over  the  other  candidates     citywide  elected  office, 
fnr  the  ofllcf .  though  hit  Uad  could —  — 


be  attributed  to  the  fact  that  he  is  the 


Sec  MO, pages 


\     ^     V     V     V     \     i     . 


'.  >.  M  V  V  \  *  -^  >  '  *  '  *  <  "  >  >  \  V  »  A 


Tuesday,  October  1 7, 2()00 


Daily  Brum  News 


Daily  Bfuin  News 


Tuesday,  October  17,2000 


|>      I  r  r  I 


More  Americans  using 
Internet  in  their  homes 


ACCESS:  Increased  usage 
seen;  'digital  divide'  still 
afflicts  ethnic  minorities 


Technology  instructor  Karen  King,  standing,  shows  Audrey  Marshall,  left,  anci  I>o^' A^toms 

how  to  use  e-mail  during  a  computer  class  at  the  Denver  Indian  Center  Oct.  1 1,  in  Denver. 

Native  Americans  face  'digital  divide' 

INTERNET:  Companies 
bring  technology  into 
reservations'  schools 


By  Kh  Minidier 

The  Associated  Press 


PALO  ALTO  -  More  than  100 
people  joined  in  a  traditional 
American  Indian  purification  cer- 
emony last  weekend  in  a  sun- 
baked Silicon  Valley  courtyard 
before  launching  into  a  very  untra- 
ditional  subject:  the  "digital 
divide"  on  America's  reserva- 
tions. 

Dennis     Bercier    of    Turtle 
Mountain  Community  College  of 


Belcourt,  N.D..  lighted  the  first  of 

four  clusters  of  sweet  grass,  cedar, 

tobacco  and  sage. 

"Open  your  hearts,  minds,  ears 

and  souls  and  speak  freely,"  he 

urged  the  participants. 

Afterward,  technocrats  from 

Microsoft,     IBM,     the     W.K. 

Kellogg  Foundation  and  Lucent 

Technologies  did  just  that  as  they 
joined  federal  officials,  educators, 
American  Indian  leaders  and 
other  stakeholders  in  finding  ways 
to  help  tribal  colleges  acquire 
stateofthe-art  technology. 

The  conference,  called  "Circle 
of  Prosperity,"  was  invitation- 
only,  and  organizers  said  it  was  the 
first  of  its  kind. 
The  U.S.  Census  Bureau  esti- 


mates there  are  2.4  million 
American  Indians,  with  almost 
half  of  them  under  the  age  of  24. 
With  unemployment  rates  above 
75  percent  ,.and  telephones 
unavailable  to  half  the  people  on 
often-remote  reservations,  infor- 
mation technology  is  virtually 
unknown  in  most  areas. 

The  Information  Technology 
Association  of  America  estimates 
the  industry  will  employ  1.6  mil- 
lion Americans  this  year,  although 
only  0.2  percent  will  be  American 
Indians.  More  importantly,  reser- 
vation Indians  will  be  denied  edu- 
cational opportunities  for  science, 
math  and  other  fields  if  they  don't 
have  access  to  the  information 
highway,  several  speakers  noted.. 


By  Martin  Cnitsinger 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  Americans' 
access  to  computers  and  the  Intemet 
has  grown  dramatically  over  the  past 
20  months  with  computers  now  in 
more  than  half  of  all  households,  a 
new  government  report  said 
Monday. 

The  share  of  households  with 
computers  rose  from  42.1  percent  in 
December  1998  to  51  percent  in 
August  of  this  year  -  a  total  of  53.7 
million  households,  the  Commerce 
Department  found  in  its  latest  sur- 
vey of  computer  usage. 

The  number  of  households  with 
Internet  access  also  soared,  hitting 
41.5  percent  in  August,  up  from  just 
26.2  percent  in  the  previous  1999 
survey. 

But  as  in  past  surveys,  the  govern- 
ment found  a  gap,  with  whites  and 
people  living  in  cities  much  more 
likely  to  have  computers  and 
Internet  access  than  minorities  and 
those  living  in  rural  areas. 

The  report  found  that  23.5  per- 
cent of  black  households  had 
Internet  access  in  August.  While  this 
was  up  from  1 1.2  percent  in  the  1999 
survey,  it  still  lagged  behind  the  rate 
for  white  households  of  46.1  percent. 
The  percentage  of  Hispanic 
households  with  Internet  access 
stood  at  23.6  percent  in  August  while 
Asian  Americans  and  Pacific 
Islanders  continued  to  have  the 
largest  Internet  penetration,  with 


56.8  percent. 

The  report,  "Falling  through, the 
Net:  Toward  Digital  Inclusion."  was 
released  by  Commerce  Secretary 
Norman  Y.  Mineta  as  he  began  a 
West  Coast  "digital  divide"  tour 
aimed  at  highlighting  efforts  to  close 
the  gap  in  computer  and  Intemet 
use. 

"Each  year  being  connected 
becomes  more  critical  to  economic 
and  educational  advancement  and  to 
community  participation,"  Mineta 
said.  "That's  why  it  is  so  important 
that  we  move  as  quickly  as  we  can 
toward  digital  inclusion." 

The  Commerce  Department 
report  showed  that  computer  owner- 
ship has  been  rising  steadily,  going 
from  8.2  percent  of  households  in 
1984  to  the  current  51  percent. 
Intemet  access  in  homes  has  risen 
from  18.6  percent  in  1998  to  26.2 
percent  in  1999,  and  41.5  percent  in 
the  August  survey.  • 

Among  the  report's  other  find- 
ings: 

•  The  disparity  between  men  and 
women  in  their  use  of  the  Internet 
has  largely  disappeared  with  44.6 
percent  of  men  and  44.2  percent  of 
women  now  using  the  Internet. 

•  Sending  messages  remains  the 
most  popular  use  for  the  Internet 
with  79.9  percent  of  Internet  users 
reporting  that  they  use  e-mail. 
Online  shopping  and  paying  bills 
showed  the  fastest  growth. 

•  By  state,  Utah  ranked  No.  I  in 
computer  ownership  with  66.1  per- 
cent of  households  owning  a  com- 
puter followed  by  Alaska  at  64.8  per- 
cent of  households.  States  with  the 
lowest  percentage  of  computer 
homes  were  Mississippi  at  37.2  per- 
cent and  Arkansas  at  37.3  percent. 


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INFORMATION  SESSION 

Wednesday.  October  18,  2000   •   6:00  p.m. 

UCLA,  The  Career  Center,  2nd  Floor 


TEACH  AMERICA 


Dow  Jones  Industrials 

up:46.62  V,:;    v 

close:  ia238.8b 


Nasdaq  index 

down:  26.49 
dose:  3,290.28 


Dollar 

Vfn:  108.06 
Euro:  1.1765 


WORLD  <&  NATION 

Weary  Qlnton  urges  leaders  ifp  'move  beyond  Wame' 


SUMMIT:  Tense  meeting 
between  Arafat,  Barak; 
strife  continues  in  area 


By  Terence  Hunt 

The  Associated  Press 


_    ,  ,  Tb»  Aisocated  Press 

Palestinian  leader  Yasser  Arafat  leaves  the  Mideast  summit  in  the 
Egyptian  resort  town  of  Sharm  El-Sheik  in  the  early  hours  last  night. 


SHARM  EL-SHEIK,  Egypt  ^  In 
an  atmosphere  of  high  tension  and 
mistrust,  Israeli  Prime  Minister 
Ehud  Barak  and  Palestinian  leader 
Yasser  Arafat  met  warily  at  an  emer- 
gency summit  Monday  aimed  at 
halting  bloody  clashes  in  the 
Mideast. 

"We  cannot  afford  to  fail," 
President  Clinton  said. 

After  14  hours  of  talks,  there  was 
no  cease-fire  agreement  or  claims  of 
progress.  The  leaders  met  over  a  late 
dinner,  followed  by  post-midnight 
talks  among  Clinton,  Arafat  and 
Egyptian  President  Hosni 
Mubarak.  Afterward,  Clinton  was 
to  see  Barak.  The  president  extend- 
ed his  stay  to  today,  rather  than 
departing  late  Monday  "Things 
have  been  intense,"  Clinton's 
spokesman  said. 

The  main  hangup  was  Arafat's 
insistence  for  an  international  fact- 
finding commission  to  assess  the 
causes  of  the  violence,  an  Israeli 
official  said.  Israel  says  it  will  only 
accept  a  panel  led  by  the  United 
States,  its  closest  ally. 

Barak,  meanwhile,  insisted  on  a 
halt  to  Palestinian  attacks  on  Israeli 


soldiers  and  civilians  and  the  re- 
arrest of  extremists  from  the  Hamas 
.and  Islamic  Jihad  movements  who 
were  released  this  past  week.  He  has 
called  for  the  Palestinian  media  to 
stop  its  calls  for  further  attacks 
against  Israel. 

Clinton  implored  both  sides  "to 
move  beyond  blame"  after  more 
than  two  weeks  of  armed  clashes  on 
the  West  Bank  and  Gaza  that  have 
left  about  100  people  dead,  most  of 
them  Palestinians.  It  has  been  the 
worst  Israeli-Palestinian  violence 
since  1993,  when  the  Oslo  peace 
accords  launched  the  now-shattered 
peace  process. 

Fighting  flared  anew  less  than  an 
hour  after  the  summit  opened. 
Israeli  soldiers  opened  fire  at 
Palestinian  gunmen  and  rock-throw- 
ers. A  Palestinian  police  officer  was 
killed  and  dozens  of  civilians  were 
wounded  by  Israeli  fire. 

Surrounded  by  tight  security,  the 
leaders  met  at  a  two-story  golf  club- 
house at  this  Red  Sea  resort,  famous 
for  its  coral  reefs  and  scuba  diving. 
They  gathered  around  a  horseshoe- 
shaped  table,  Arafat  and  Barak  sit- 
ting away  from  other  leaders  and  far 
apart  from  each  other. 

"It's  tough  going  -  painstaking 
work,"  a  senior  administration  offi- 
cial said. 

There  were  no  smiles  or  hand- 
shakes for  the  cameras,  but  officials 
said  the  two  men  did  shake  hands. 
Their  attitude  toward  each  other 
was  described  as  chilly.  There  were 


flashes  of  anger  in  a  foreign  minis- 
ters' meeting  on  another  floor.  " . 
Gadi  Baltiansky,  Barak's 
spokesman,  said  there  were  "sub- 
stantial difficulties"  in  the  foreign 
ministers'  negotiations  and  that  any 
agreement  would  have  to  be  decided 
by  the  leaders. 

"The  differences  are,  on  the  one 
hand,  the  insistence  by  Palestinians 
that  the  Israelis  take  steps  on  the 
ground  before  a  full  stop  to  the  vio- 
lence, something  Israel  objects  to; 
And,  on  the  other  hand,  the  charac- 
ter of  a  body  that  would  investigate 
the  events  has  not  been  agreed 
upon,"  Baltiansky  said. 

The  summit  was  hosted  by 
Egyptian  President  Hosni 
Mubarak,  who  unmistakably 
blamed  Israel  for  the  violence. 

"The  aggressions  to  which  the" 
Palestinian  people  were  subjected  ' 
during  the  last  two  weeks  persuaded 
me    to    convene    this    meeting," 
Mubarak  said. 

Also  participating  were  King 
Abdullah  of  Jordan,  U.N. 
Secretary-General  Kofi  Annan  and 
Javier  Solana,  the  European 
Union's  foreign  affairs  chief.  Asked 
how  the  talks  were  proceeding, 
Annan  cautiously  responded: 
"Reasonably  well." 

White  House  press  secretary 
Jake  Siewert  said,  "All  the  parties 
have  shown  some  willingness  to  try 
to  resolve  their  differences  and 
restore  calm.  That's  why  they  came 
here." 


Bush  and  Gore  rehearse  for  debate  |  Missouri  leader  feared 

dead  after  plane  crash 


CANDIDATES:  Final  face-ofT 
tonight;  both  have  practiced 
different  format  extensively 


By  Laurie  KeUnun  . 

The  Assodated  Press 

AUSTIN,  Texas  -  George  W.  Bush  said 
he  would  be  comfortable  fieWing  undecided 
voters'  questions  in  Tuesday's  debate 
because  "I  know  what  I  believe."  Al  Gore 
practiced  with  a  mock  town-hall  meeting 
Monday,  saying  the  format  was  familiar 
from  16  years  in  Congress. 

Both  candidates  practiced  taking  ques- 
tions and  perching  on  the  stools  that  will 
replace  lecterns  when  the  candidates  meet 
Tuesday  in  St.  Louis  for  the  last  face-to-face 


GOVERNOR:  Accident  in 
foggy  area;  unidentified 
remains  found  near  site 


X 


$eeCMIPANN,pa9«l2 


The  Associate  Piess 

Governor  George  W.  Bush  kisses  the  hand  of  a  supporter  as  he 
greets  the  crowd  during  a  rally  In  Little  Rock,  Ark.,  Monday. 


By  Jim  Salter 

The  Associated  Press 

GOLDMAN,  Mo.  -  A  plane 
believed  to  be  carrying  Missouri 
Gov.  Mel  Carnahan  crashed  in  a 
hilly  wooded  area  south  of  St.  Louis 
on  Monday  night,  the  Jefferson 
County  Sheriffs  Department  said. 

"We  believe  that  it  may  be  the 
governor's  plane,"  said  Sgt.  Ed 
Kemp,  of  the  department.  "We're 
still  searching." 


Missouri  Highway  Patrol  Sgt. 
Tim  McDonald  said  debris  from 
the  crash  was  scattered,  making 
identification  of  the  plane  difficult. 

He  said  the  governor's  security 
staff  was  at  the  crash  site  because 
they  had  not  heard  from  Carnahan 
and  "tensions  were  high."  The  gov- 
ernor had  been  expected  at  a  cam- 
paign rally  at  8  p.m.  in  New 
Madrid,  about  150  miles  south  of 
St.  Louis. 

Carnahan,  66,  a  popular 
Democratic  governor  finishing  his 
second  term,  is  running  for  the  U.S. 
Senate  seat  held  by  Republican 
John  Ashcroft.  Their  race  has  been 


VyORLP  &  NATION  BRIEFS 

Ethnic  conflict  in 
Nigeria  claims  40  lives 

LAGOS.  Nigeria  -  Fighting  raged  Monday 
between  Nigeria's  two  largest  tribes,  leaving 
about  40  people  dead  and  bodies  strewn  in  the 
streets  of  this  commercial  capital. 

The  clashes  broke  out  late  Sunday  between 
Hausas  from  the  predominantly  Muslim 
north,  and  Yorubas,  who  are  mostly  Christians 
from  southern  Nigeria. 

Fighting  persisted  Monday,  police  and  gov- 
ernment officials  said.  Anti-riot  police  were 
sent  to  the  clash  sites  Monday  afternoon,  and 
the  violence  subsided. 

Thousands  have  been  killed  in  ethnic  and 
religious  violence  since  President  Olusegun 
Obasanjo  took  office  last  year,  ending  15  years 
of  military  rule. 

The  clashes  began  when  a  Hausa  night 
guard  was  killed  Sunday  in  Lagos.  The  victim's 
relatives  blamed  members  of  a  militant  Yoruba 
group,  the  Odudua  People's  Congress,  and 


Hausas  set  houses  on  fire,  officials 
said. 

Washington  march 
focuses  on  families 

WASHINGTON  -  In  an  atmosphere  of 
joyous  fellowship,  thousands  of  marchers  gath- 
ered amid  the  nation's  monuments  Monday  to 
celebrate  racial  and  religious  unity  and  the  cen- 
tral role  of  the  family  in  American  life. 

Called  by  Nation  of  Islam  leader  Louis 
Farrakhan  on  the  fifth  anniversary  of  his 
Million  Man  March,  people  of  all  races  and 
religions  spread  out  on  blankets  and  lawn 
chairs  in  the  National  Mall  and  laughed, 
clapped  and  shouted  as  speakers  urged  them  to 
improve  their  family  lives. 

"The  family  is  the  basic  unit  of  civilization 

so  everything  must  be  done  to  take  care  of  the 

family  unit."  Farrakhan  said  during  his  speech 

of  more  than  two  hours. 

The  assemblage  appeared  to  be  consider- 


SeePtJUiE,page12 


ably  smaller  than  the  Million  Man 
March,  but  it  was  expected  to  be  the 
largest  gathering  of  black  people 
since  that  1995  event.  The  National 
Park  Service  said  the  Million  Man  March 
brought  an  estimated  400,000  people  to 
Washington,  but  Farrakhan  insisted  it  drew 
more  than  I  million. 

Chernomyrdin  seeks 
apology  from  Bush 

MOSCOW  -  Former  Prime  Minister 
Viktor  Chernomyrdin  on  Monday  demanded 
an  apology  from  George  W.  Bush,  accusing 
him  of  lying  when  the  GOP  presidential  nomi- 
nee said  Russian  officials  had  misused  foreign 
aid  funds. 

During  a  televised  debate  last  week  with  his 
Democratic  rival  Al  Gore,  Bush  alleged  that 
Chernomyrdin  had  diverted  loans  from  the 
jnternational  Monetary  Fund  to  his  own  use 

Bush  made  the  charge  to  back  up  his  con- 


tention that  foreign  aid  should  be  clearly  tied  to 
reform  and  that  the  IMF  itself  should  be 
reformed,  and  to  criticize  the  Democrats'  poli- 
cy toward  Russia. 

IMF  spokesman  Thomas  Dawson  said  the 
organization  had  no  evidence  Chernomyrdin 
had  misappropriated  any  IMF  loans. 
Chernomyrdin  has  denied  any  wrongdoing 
and  said  he  would  sue  the  younger  Bush  over 
the  allegation. 

Chernomyrdin  said  Monday  that  he  had 
written  a  letter  to  Bush,  demanding  a  public 
apology  He  said  Bush  had  "insulted  Russia's 
state  and  public  figures,  including  myself." 

Chernomyrdin  also  criticized  Bush  for 
describing  as  "a  troubling  piece  of  informa- 
tion" an  agreement  Chernomyrdin  and  Gore 
signed  in  June  1995,  allowing  the  limited  sale 
of  Russian  arms  to  Iran.  The  agreement  let 
Russia  fulfill  existing  contracts,  but  not  con- 
clude new  deals,  according  to  a  U.S. 
Congressional  Web  site. 


Conrtpiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports 


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Tuesday,  October  17,  ^{00 


D«l)r6hiiflNews 


STATE  &(  LOCAL 


Vlfeb  site  sculling  presidential  votes  |  MIA,  union  inch  towarxj 

resolving  strike  Monday 


FRAUD:  Foreign  owners 
swear  to  protect  clients' 
identities,  avoid  penalty 


By  Audrey  Cooper 

The  Associated  Press 

SACRAMENTO  -  A  Web  site 
offering  to  sell  15,000  votes  for  presi- 
dent to  the  highest  bidder,  is  being 
investigated  for  possible  voter  fraud, 
Secretary  of  State  Bill  Jones  said 
Monday. 

His  announcement  prompted  the 
Austrian  owners  of  the  site,  voteauc- 
lion.com,  to  promise  they  would 
never  reveal  the  identity  of  either 
their  bidders  or  voters. 

More  than  1,800  of  the  votes  up  for 
sale  are  from  Californians,  the  most 
of  any  state.  The  going  price  Monday 
afternoon  was  $19.61  per  vote  on  the 
site,  which  boasts  it  is  "bringing  capi- 
talism and  democracy  closer  togeth- 
er." 

"This  is  a  felony  punishable  by 
upward  of  three  years  in  prison  (for 
the  voter).  This  is  no  different  from 
standing  outside  a  polling  place  and 
selling  your  vote  for  $1,"  said  Jones. 

Controlling  the  activities  of  inter- 
national investors  could  be  difficult 
for  the  state,  but  it  could  try  to  prose- 
cute its  own  voters.  Jones  wouldn't 
say  Monday  how  the  state  planned  to 
identify  participants. 

Even  people  who  sign  up  as  a  joke 
are  essentially  agreeing  to  commit 
fraud,  Jones  added. 

The  site  was  designed  by  James 
Baumgartner,  an  Overland  Park, 
Kan.,  native  who  is  a  graduate  stu- 
dent at  Rensselaer  Polytechnic 
Institute  in  New  York.  He  sold  the  site 
in  August  to  a  group  of  Austrian 
investors  for  an  undisclosed  sum. 


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Hans  Bemhard,  a  project  investor, 
said  he  will  take  the  site  off  the 
Internet  before  revealing  the  identity 
of  voters. 

"We  have  to  protect  our  voters. 
They  are  really  critical,"  he  said  in  a 
telephone  interview  from  Vienna, 
Austria,  adding  that  the  only  letter  he 
has  received  that  threatened  legal 
action  was  from  Jones. 

"I  know  American  institutions, 
especially  legal  and  government  insti- 
tutions, threaten  massively  and  that's 
how  they  solve  things,  they  make  peo- 
ple afraid.  We  aren't  afraid  because 
there  is  no  clear  indication  that  some- 
thing serious  can  come  out  of  this," 
Bemhard  said. 

Project  investors  are  using  the 
November  election  as  a  pilot  program 
to  determine  how  the  scheme  can 
become  profitable  and  ensure  the  vot- 
ers get  paid  for  participation,  he  said. 

They  plan  to  expand  the  site  to  all 
countries'  elections,  he  said.  .     •' 

The  Web  site  allows  voters  to  sign 
up  by  filling  out  their  name,  address. 


www  wteauclKxi  com 

age,  nationality,  and  household 
income.  Corporations  and  individu- 
als can  bid  for  an  entire  block  of  votes 
from  one  state  by  providing  similar 
information. 

The  minimum  bid  is  $100  and  goes 
up  in  $S0  increments.  Bids  above 
$10,000  must  go  up  by  $500. 

The  site  was  registered  by  Domain 
Bank  Inc.  under  a  contract  that  man- 
dates all  applicable  laws  must  be  fol- 
lowed, including  U.S.  election  laws. 

Domain  Bank  attorney  Scott 
Hemphill  said  Monday  that  his  com- 
pany notified  the  Austrian  owners 
that  it  has  received  Jones'  complaint 
and  asked  the  owners  to  either  stop 
auctioning  votes  or  refute  the  allega- 
tions of  vote  fraud.  The  deadline  is 
Nov.  14. 

If  Bemhard  and  other  owners  of 
the  site  do  not  respond  to  the  letter. 
Domain  Bank  could  stop  its  Intemet 
access,  Hemphill  said. 

Domain  Bank's  Nov.  14  deadline  is 
after  Election  Day,  after  the  damage 
could  be  done,  Jones  said. 


NEGOTIATIONS:  Dispute 
close  to  ending  as  sides 
resume  bargaining  talks 


By  Cadonna  Peyton 

The  Associated  Press 

Talks  aimed  at  resolving  the 
month-old  bus  and  commuter  rail 
strike  in  Los  Angeles  resumed 
Monday  but  were  briefly  interrupt- 
ed when  union  negotiators  left  to 
investigate  a  report  that  a  picketing 
bus  driver  was  hit  by  a  car  at  transit 
headquarters. 

The  incident  occurred  outside 
the  Metropolitan  Transportation 
Authority's  Gateway  Transit  Plaza 
while  negotiations  were  under  way 
at  a  suburban  Pasadena  hotel. 

The  bus  driver  was  hospitalized 
for  minor  injuries,  MTA  spokesman 
Jose  Ubaldo  said  at  the  negotiation 
site.  A  motorist  was  taken  into  cus- 
tody after  being  pursued  by  MTA 
security  officials,  Ubaldo  said. 

The  motorist  was  not  an  MTA 
employee  but  had  apparently 
dropped  off  a  job  application  at  the 
building,  MTA  spokesman  Marc 
Littman  said. 

United  Transporution  Union 
general  chairman  James  Williams 
left  the  talks  for  about  30  minutes 
and  then  returned,  accompanied  by 
the  Rev.  Jesse  Jackson,  who  joined 
the  negotiations  on  Friday. 
Williams  said  he  believed  the  driver 
was  OK. 

Jackson's  intervention  created 
an  optimism  that  was  muted  -  but 
not  eliminated  -  by  Monday. 
"I  think  this  meeting  is  going  to 


tell  the  story,"  Los  Angeles  Mayor 
Richard  Riordan,  an  MTA  board 
member,  said  as  he  arrived  for  nego- 
tiations. "We're  either  going  to  get 
there  or  we  won't  get  there." 

Representatives  of  the  MTA  and 
UTU  said  they'd  made  progress  but 
remained  divided  on  work  rules 
dealing  with  overtime  and  part-time 
workers. 

About  4,300  bus  and  rail  opera- 
tors went  on  strike  Sept.  16,  strand- 
ing an  estimated  450,000  com- 
muters, most  of  them  working  poor. 
The  drivers  oppose  MTA's  offer 
to  change  work  rules  to  reduce  over- 
time and  increase  the  use  of  part- 
time  drivers  in  order  to  prevent  a 
projected  $23  million  deficit. 

On  another  labor  front,  talks 
resumed  Monday  between  Los 
Angeles  County  and  a  union  repre- 
senting 47,000  of  its  employees. 

"We  are  bargaining  and  we  are 
making  progress,"  said  Mark 
Tamawsky,  spokesman  for  Service 
Employees  International  Union 
Local  660. 

After  days  of  rolling  walkouts 
against  selected  county  facilities,  the 
SEIU  called  a  general  strike  last 
Wednesday  but  suspended  it  late  the 
same  day  at  the  request  of  Cardinal 
Roger  Mahony,  who  said  it  was 
hurting  the  poor. 

The  one-day  strike  occurred  dur- 
ing a  stalemate  as  the  union  sought  a 
15.5  percent  pay  increase  over  three 
years  and  the  county  offered  9  per- 
cent. The  SEIU  said  Monday  that 
the  county  has  since  agreed  to  wage 
increases  of  "more  than  9  percent" 
for  more  than  half  its  members, 
improved  retirement  benefits  and 
increased  training. 


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RACE 

frompageS  ":  ^  ''     ■ 

That  office,  dty  attorney,  is  one 
that  Hahn  has  held  since  1985.  The 
son  of  legendary  former  L.A.  County 
Supervisor  Kenneth  Hahn,  Hahn  will 
be  termed  out  at  the  end  of  his  fourth 
term  on  July  1,  2001, 
"  The  city  attorney's  office  handles 
the  city's  legal  affairs,  including  the 
prosecution  of  infractions  and  misde- 
meanors that  occur  within  the  city 
limits.  This  time  last  year,  allegations 
arose  that  the  UCLA  disabled  park- 
ing placard  scandal  was  moved  from 


the  city  attorney's  West  Los  Angeles 
bureau  to  the  downtown  bureau  for 
what  a  source  close  to  the  investiga- 
tion then  called  "political  reasons"  - 
which  included  Hahn's  mayoral  bid. 

Though  he  doesn't  hold  citywide 
ofTice,  City  Councilman  Wachs  also 
has  high  name  recognition  and  sup- 
port throughout  Los  Angeles.  A  Los 
Angeles  Times  poll  of  registered  vot- 
ers taken  in  April  showed  Wachs  at 
14  percent,  just  behind  Hahn's  16 
percent. 

Wachs,  a  29-year  city  council  vet- 
eran, first  ran  for  mayor  in  1993, 
coming  in  third  behind  then- 
Councilman  Mike  Woo  and  Riordan. 


The  number  of 
candidates  makes  an 
outright  win  unlikely. 


A  graduate  of  UCLA,  Wachs 
served  as  president  of  the  university's 
student  government  in  1960-61. 
Among  his  actions  were  successfully 
changing  UCLA's  official  alma 
mater  to  "Hail  to  the  Hills  of 
Westwood,"  which  remains  the 
school's  song. 


Connell,  anothor  UCLA  alum,  is 
the  only  woman  among  the  candi- 
dates. Though  the  election  is  still  far 
off,  Connell  is  significantly  behind 
the  other  candidates  in  fund  raising 
and  public  visibility  because  she  only 
declared  her  candidacy  in 
September. 

"Our  city  and  its  people  need  an 
experienced,  independent  leader,  a 
tough  fiscal  watdidog  with  a  record 
of  cutting  waste,"  Connell  said  when 
announcing  her  candidacy. 

Connell  is  the  only  candidate  to 
hold  statewide  office,  which  could 
both  help  her  and  hurt  her  in  the  race. 
Though  many  voters  in  Los  Angeles 


'MiJ'ill' 


jpie^da»Oa<4>tfiyop9v    j 


have  voted  for  her  in  the  past,  the  fact 
that  she  has  little  experience  in  city 
politics  may  be  a  drawback. 

Assemblyman  Villaraigosa.  who 
also  graduated  from  UCLA,  brings 
one  of  the  more  distinguished  politi- 
cal resumes  to  the  race.  Until  recent- 
ly, Villaraigosa  served  as  speaker  of 
the  state  assembly.  He  was  first  elect- 
ed to  the  assembly  in  1994. 

The  city's  large  Latino  vote  has 
been  largely  split  between 
Villaraigosa  and  Becerra,  according 
to  the  Times  poll,  which  could  leave 
neither  of  them  with  enough  support 

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VVE'Vt  GOT  SOME  ADVICE. 


Fall  Quarter  Deadline 

October  19tli 


Hearing  Dates 

October  23rd  -  25th 


Eliftibilitv  Reauir^mpjfitK 

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registered  with  the  Center  for  Student  Programming. 

*  Must  provide  on-campus  culturai  or  educational  programs. 

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Where  To  Get  APDlication  Form^ 

USA  Finance  Committee/Budget  Review  Office  300B  Kerckhoff  Hall 

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Center  for  Student  Programming  (CSP)  1 05  Kerckhoff  Hall 

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For  More  Information 

Call  Janet  Quindara,  USA  Programming  Chair, 
825-501 7  or  email  usaficom@asucla.ucla.edu 


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10^      Tuesday,  Octobw  17, 2000 


Daily  Awn  Nmn 


■-'.-l-^ 


RACE 

From  page*  '         ' 

"  to  win  the  race. 

Local  developer  Steve  SoborofT, 
though  scoring  only  1  percent  in  the 
Times  poll,  is  the  one  candidate  who 
most  resembles  current  Mayor 
Riordan.  In  fact.  Soboroff  has 
served  as  a  senior  adviser  to  the 
mayor  since  1996,  and  already  has 
Riordan 's  endorsement. 

Soboroff  has  been  an  instrumen- 
tal behind-the-scenes  player  in  Los 
Angeles'  downtown  scene  for  years. 


He  is  widely  credited  with  spear- 
heading the  effort  to  build  Staples 
Center  downtown  and  sits  on  the 
boards  of  several  charitable  organi- 
zations, including  Big  Brothers  of 
Greater  Los  Angeles,  Father 
Flanagan's  Boys  Town,  Westside 
Women's  Clinic  and  Weingart 
Center  for  the  Homeless. 

Additionally,  SoborofT  founded 
and  taught  the  "Shopping  Center 
Game"  business  seminar,  which  has 
run  at  UCLA  since  1975. 

"  I  have  a  vision  of  Los  Angeles  as 
a  city  that  works  for  all  of  us.  Los 
Angeles  will  be  a  city  that  feels  like  a 


neighborhood,  a  city  where  we  want 
to  live,  want  to  raise  our  children 
and  have  our  friends  visit,"  he  said. 

With  so  many  candidates,  it  is 
unlikely  any  one  of  them  will 
receive  the  necessary  50  percent  of 
the  vote  to  win  the  election  outright, 
and  a  runoff  will  be  held. 

Whoever  does  become  the  next 
mayor  will  be  the  first  to  work 
under  the  new  city  charter, 
approved  by  voters  in  June  1999. 
The  new  charter,  which  was  strong- 
ly supported  by  Mayor  Riordan, 
gives  expanded  powers  to  the 
mayor. 


FEES 

From  page  1 

along  with  the  UC  system. 

The  report  also  totalled  the 
amount  of  money  universities 
reserved  for  financial  aid. 

The  College  Board  found  that  a 
record  $68  billion  was  available  last 
year  -  an  increase  of  4  percent  over 
last  year. 

"Over  the  decades,  the  increased 
support  for  student  financial  aid 
reflects  some  of  the  wisest  invest- 
ments our  national  leaders  have 


made,"  Caperton  said  in  the  sutc- 
ment. 

McFadden  said  he  doesn't  see  a 
connection  between  the  increase  in 
fees  and  an  increase  in  the  amount 
of  money  universities  allocate 
towards  financial  aid. 

"But,  it  would  be  interesting  if 
someone  did  a  study  on  it,"  he 
added. 

Other  officials  expect  to  see  an 
increase  in  financial  aid  with  an 
increase  in  fees. 

"When  fees  are  increased,  its  not 
surprising  that  financial  aid 
increases,"  Davis  said. 


iiri'ii," 


Daily  Bnjin  News 


■i*HM-nHa 


1uesday,Octot>er17,2000        11 


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Registration  Week  for  all  organizations  is  4th  week  of  Fall  Quarter 

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12        Tuesday,  October  17, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  News 


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OaUy  Bruin  News 


From  page  5 

one  of  the  closest  and  most  bitterly 
contested  races  in  the  nation  this 
year. 

Jerry  Nachtigal,  the  governor's 
spokesman  in  Jefferson  City,  told  the 
St.  Louis  Post-Dispatch  that 
Carnahan,  one  of  his  sons  and  a  staff 
member  were  scheduled  to  be  on 
board  the  plane.  He  did  not  confirm 
the  governor's  plane  was  the  one  that 

crashed,  v  :'''';  ■  i  ;  ' :';^- 
At  11  p.m;,  the  governor's  office 
called  Lt.  Gov.  Roger  Wilson  and  the 
state  treasurer  to  return  to  the 
Statehouse  in  Jefferson  City  immedi- 
ately for  an  emergency,  the  newspa- 
per reported.  '  ; 
Both  Carnahan  and  his  son  Randy 


Tuesday,  October  17,2000       13 


are  licensed  pilots.  Randy  damahan 

normally  flies  the  campaign  plane  on 
political  events.  -  ■    , 

Police  said  Lambert  Airport  in  St. 
Louis  was  tracking  the  plane,  which 
took  off  at  about  7  p.m.  from  a  small 
airport  across  the  Mississippi  River 
in  Illinois.  The  plane  disappeared 
from  the  radar  screen  at  7:33  p.m. 

Officials  said  the  plane  went  down 
about  25  miles  from  St.  Louis.  The 
area  is  thick  with  trees,  scattered 
farm  houses  and  fields  and  ther^e  was 
a  light  rain  and  heavy  fog. 

"We  found  wreckage  in  very  small 
pieces  spread  over  a  large  area.  We 
have  found  some  remains  we  cannot 
identify  at  this  point,"  said  Capt.  Ed 
Kemp  of  the  Jefferson  County 
Sheriffs  Department.  He  said  it  was 
unclear  if  the  remain?  were  those  of 
one  or  more  people. 


GENOCIDE 

From  page  1     '  ■'  ■ 

to  the  Holocaust  and  reminded  the 
audience  that  though  more  people 
perished  in  the  Holocaust,  the 
Armenian  genocide  was  just  as  inhu- 
mane. 

On  April  24,  1915,  the  Turkish 
government  of  the  Ottoman  Empire 
began  systematically  exterminating 
Armenians,  and  eventually  claimed 
the  lives  of  an  estimated  1.5  million 
people,  according  to  L'.S. 
Ambassador  Henry  Morgenthau. 
The  Turkish  government  continues 
to  deny  the  genocide  ever  occurred. 

Sunday's  lecture,  sponsored  by 
the  Armenian  Students  Association, 
celebrated  the  community's 
progress  in  achieving  recognition  of 
the  genocide. 

"We  celebrate  today  the  resolu- 
tion of  126  scholars  that  was  posted 
in  the  New  York  Times  in  April  ... 
affirming  the  Armenian  genocide," 
Charny  said.  "We  are  making  defi- 
nite progress." 


Charny  discussed  the  politics 
:  behind  denying  genocide. 

"We  have  had  many  experiences 
with  efforts  of  the  Turkish  govern- 
ment to  deny  the  genocide.  But  we 
arc  convinced  of  the  authenticity  of 
the  Armenian  genocide,"  he  said. 

Anahid  Keshishian,  an  Armenian 
professor,  compared  genocide 
denial  to  denying  proven  scientific 
findings. 

"The  results  of  these  findings 
affect  our  lives,  and  you  cannot 
deny  them,  for  they  are  facts,"  she 
said. 

Ben  Charchian,  president  of 
ASA,  said  denying  the  truth  of  what 
happened  breeds  ignorance  and 
halls  progress. 

"I  think  that  the  main  importance 
in  learning  about  the  genocide  and 
the  methods  of  denial  is  to  help  pre- 
vent future  injustices  against 
humanity,"  he  said. 

"You  cannot  improve  as  a  society 
if  you  do  not  know  what  went  wrong 
in  the  past  and  aren't  willing  to  act 
differently  in  the  future,"  Charchian 


WELCOME 

From  page  1 

That  same  day,  ASU  will  have  a  bar- 
becue to  raise  money  for  its  annual 
African  cultural  graduation. 

in  addition,  ASU  members  will  talk 
about  the  organization's  history  and 
impact  on  students  at  an  orientation 
meeting  Thursday. 

"The  meeting  will  focus  on  the  lega- 
cy we're  inheriting,  reflecting  on  our 
history  and  what  we're  going  to  con- 
tinue this  year,"  Clark  said. 

ASU,  which  was  formed  in  1989, 
has  existed  for  more  than  30  years 
under  different  names,  but  its  goals 
have  remained  similar. 

At  first,  ASU  was  known  as 
Harambee  Club,  then  Black  Student 
Union    and    later    Black    Student 


Alliance.    •  /  ■ ''"    "   '  ?:<' .  "->"  "■  '" 

"ASU  is  supposed  to  be  the  voice  of 
the  African  community  in  political, 
social,  academic,  cultural  and  spiritual 
aspects,  on  or  off  campus,"  said 
Kennisha  Austin,  ASU  community 
empowerment  coordinator. 

She  added  that  ASU  achieves  these 
goals  through  organizations  such  as 
the  African  Supports  Program,  a 
retention  program,  and  Students' 
Heightening  Academic  Performance 
through  Education,  which  is  ASU's 
outreach  program. 

Fiazah  Carr,  the  Harambee 
Council  Coordinator,  said  ASU  will 
have  a  sleepover  Friday  to  discuss 
issues  facing  African  American  stu- 
dents. 

"It's  going  to  be  about  giving 
answers  to  the  younger  people  from  an 
older  perspective,"  Carr  said. 


CAMPAIGN 

From  page  5 

showdown  before  the  sprint  to 
Election  Day. 

"I've  answered  a  lot  of  questions 
from  audiences  and  I'm  looking  for- 
ward to  it,"  Bush  said  Monday  as  he 
left  Austin  for  a  Little  Rock,  Ark. 
rally. 

Earlier,  the  Texas  governor 
rehearsed  at  the  Governors  Mansion, 
taking  sample  questions  from  aides 
and  getting  used  to  the  dynamics  of 
"sitting  on  the  stool,  getting  off  the 
stool,"  said  spokeswoman  Karen 
Hughes.  Though  Bush  is  less  practiced 
at  the  informal  format,  Hughes  said  it 
suited  him  because  "He's  very  much  a 
people  person." 

Gore  pu.shed  aside  the  stool  provid- 
ed for  him  at  a  rehearsal  outside  St. 
Louis  Monday  to  debut  the  easygoing 
style  he  hoped  to  project  on  stage 

"I'm  going  to  do  what  I've  done  a 


lot  of  times  in  Tennessee,  and  that  is, 
just  have  an  open  meeting,"  Gore  said. 
Reporters  were  allowed  to  watch  only 
the  start  of  the  rehearsal  with  "citizen 
debate  coaches"  gathered  by  his  staff. 

Asked  whether  he  would  be  dis- 
tracted from  debate  preparation  by 
the  Middle  East  summit.  Gore  said, 
"Our  prayers  are  with  the  participants 
in  the  summit"  and  added  that  he'd 
been  getting  regular  updates  from  his 
national  security  adviser,  Leon 
Feurth. 

Meanwhile,  three  Texas  legislators 
criticized     as     misleading     Bush's  • 
remarks  in  the  last  debate  about  the 
state's  efforts  to  care  for  people  with- 
out health  insurance. 

Democratic  state  Reps.  Garnett 
Coleman,  Glen  Maxey  and  Elliott 
Naishtat  wrote  a  letter  chastising  Bush 
for  saying  Texas  spends  $4.7  billion  a 
year  on  health  care  for  the  uninsured. 
Three-fourths  of  that  money  is  either 
charity  care  or  financed  by  local  gov- 
ernments, not  the  state,  they  said. 


Who^  in  your  court? 


On  election  day, 
you'il  be  tlie  judge. 


Internet  Privacy.  Gun  Control.  Reproductive  Rights.  The  Environment. 


u-  I  nitcd  States  SupiviiK-  Court  l.iIIs  iIk-  sliois  on  tlu'  issues  iluu  ,itt(.xt  the  ivst  ofvour  life.  And 


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iiLike 


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(he  N()\eniher  V 


.il  t'.lection. 


(.lurmi;  the  next  President  s  icrni. 


Anil  thai 


ine.uis  Ik  «' 


niakini 


iuhts,  shouljnt  \(»u  ha\e 


\ears,  I')!!!  tor  lile.  \\  iih  justkes  niakinj;  decisions  on  e\er\lhinu  Ironi  hiiernei  [niwiee  to  leprotlueiive 
ri<;lus,  shouldnt  \ou  ha\e  ,i  sa\  .ihoui  the  |vo[ile  siiiini;  on  the  Ix-ikIi? 

(.heck  oui  oin  \\ehsite      \\\\w.at].ori;/fsp/sijpreniecoiirt — for  nioie  on  how  the  next  Piesideni 
<\in  chaiiue  the  .Supreme  (.ioiirt — and  win  \ou  shouki  eare. 


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Daily  Bruin 


Wednesday 

Was  the  creation  of 
Israel  beneficial  for 
ail? 


Tuesday,  October  17, 2000 


View  on  the  Wel^^ 

See  all  this  and  • 

more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's  • 

Website:  • 

www.dailybruin.uda.edu  ; 


viewpoint@inedia.ucla.edu 


s#i5i^> 


%BSX^ 


Carnesdie  shows  support  by 
meeting  with  union  leaders 

Thumbs  up  to  Chancellor  Albert  Camesale  for  meet- 
ing with  university  employee  union  organizers  after  a 
recent  protest  conducted  on  campus.  Though 
Camesale  was  criticized  for  refusing  to  meet  with  the  union 
organizers  in  the  past,  the  chancellor  voiced  concern  for 
some  of  the  unions'  issues  and  said  he  supported  a  fair  reso- 
lution. 

While  we  applaud  the  chancellor  for  speaking  out  in  sup- 
port of  union  concerns,  we  urge  him  to  do  whatever  is  in  his 
power  to  improve  the  condition  of  workers  at  UCLA  with- 
out side-stepping  collective  bargaining  agreements  between 
the  University  of  California  and  the  unions. 

The  chancellor  should  remember  that  actions  speak  loud- 
erthan  words.  ;■'•!;;,;,  '•     ■■ 

Med  Center  remains  at  head 
of  field  by  providing  RU-486 

Thumbs  up  to  the  UCLA  Medical  Center  for  mak- 
ing RU-486  available  to  women  on  campus  and  the 
local  community.  The  RU-486  pill,  recently 
approved  by  the  Food  and  Drug  Administration,  allows 
women  to  terminate  their  pregnancy  in  the  privacy  of  their 
own  homes  without  undergoing  surgery. 

The  Medical  Center  should  be  commended  for  its  efforts 
to  slay  at  the  forefront  of  health  care  by  offering  the  most 
up-to<iate  treatments  and  procedures,  and  ensuring  that  all 
patients  have  a  variety  of  medical  options.  In  doing  so,  the 
Medical  Center  displays  a  commitment  to  the  future  of  med- 
ical care. 

There  is  no  rea.son  why  the  Medical  Center  should  not 
make  new  treatments  available  to  women.  Giving  women 
access  to  this  new  treatment  supports  a  woman's  control 
over  personal  health  decisions. 


Thumbs  Up/Thumbs  Down  represents  the  majority  opiniorf  of 
the  Daily  Bruin  editorial  board.  Send  feedback  to 
viewpoint@media@ucla.eda 


Coming  soon: 
Q&Awith 

Chancellor  Camesale 

E-mail  your  questions  to 

«iaiNiiaini@nmluBlaedD 


Pleast  hiclude  your  year,  maiar  and 
studemiD  nnmiier 


•     • 


l^i 


i'  rebel  with  a  cause:  Eminem 


iCONTROVERSY:  Lyricist's 
incendiary  message  draws 
attention,  be  it  good  or  bad 

'•■V  iT, 

His  jeans  may  be  a  little  baggier 
than  James  Dean's  and  the 
white  shirt  may  ironically  be  a 
wife  beater,  but  Eminem  is  certainly 
rebelling  against  social  norms.  And 
there  is  nothing  Americans  like  better 
than  a  rebel  with 
the  good  old  fash- 
ioned intention  of 
just  getting  us 
worked  up. 

I  bought  the 
"Marshal  Mathers 
LP"  because  it 
makes  me  feel 
political,  and  I  like 
music  that  makes         „ 
me  think  and  ask         MBC^^II 
questions.  I  also  CdrbCfrV 

have  to  agree  with 

Slim  Shady  himself 
and  say  that  the  only  thing  that  Britney 
Spears  is  making  me  ask  is,  "When  did 
little  girls  become  so  sexual?" 

Let's  think  of  the  main  qualms  peo- 
ple have  with  Eminem:  he  demeans 
women,  hates  gays,  incessantly  swears, 
talks  about  murder,  and  has  made  no 
secret  of  his  distaste  for  fellow  teen  pop- 
ular idols.  Sounds  like  a  great  guy. 

I  would  be  lying  if  I  tried  to  argue 
that  I  do  not  find  him  disturbing 
in  many  ways,  particularly 
when  it  comes  to  his  feelings 
about  homosexuality  and 
his  disrespect  for  women. 
Except  I  think  he  is  fasci- 
nating. Also,  the  fact  that 


Cart>erry  is  a  third-year  polit- 
ical science  student.  E-mail 
her  at  maegs@ucla.edu. 


a  lot  of  us  are  willingly  subjecting  our- 
selves to  his  lyrics  is  doubly  perplexing 
and  worthy  of  contemplation. 

As  Eminem  says  in  "The  Real  Slim 
Shady":  "I'm  like  a  head-trip  to  listen 
to,  'cause  I'm  only  giving  you  things 
you  joke  about  with  your  friends  inside 
your  living  rooms."  My  friends  and  I 
don't  generally  joke  about  the  rape  and 
murder  of  homosexuals  or  wives  and 
our  mothers  -  but  it's  the  idea  of  what 
happens  behind  the  closed  doors  of 
your  home  and  society  that  many  artists 
use  to  make  us  evaluate  what  face  we're 
all  showing  to  the  world. 

Usually  it's  the  unspeakable  thing 
that  causes  the  most  commotion  and 
evaluation.  No  one  wanted  to  see 
Harold  and  Maude's  first  kiss  or  hear 
the  Material  Girl  narrate  the  deflower- 
ing of  a  virgin  on  the  airwaves.  And 
that's  exactly  what  Eminem  is  doing. 

The  heinous  crimes,  violence  and  vul- 
garity are  things  we  are  all  aware  of,  but 
often  times  choose  to  ignore  and  put 
out  of  our  minds. 
And  here  he  is 

reminding  us  of  it         — i»^— ^— ^ 
on  the  radio. 
What's  interesting 
is  that  we  could 
probably  find  a  lot 
ofit  (minus  the  foul 
language)  on  the 
5  o'clock  news. 

In  "Criminal,"  he 
intimates  that  a  lot  of  people  think  that 
because  he  says  ludicrous  things  in  his 
songs  he  must  therefore 
believe  or  practice  them. 
Eminem  also  addresses 
this  concern  in  the  song 
"Stan,"  about  a  crazed 
fan  who  represents 
today's  tendency  to  ele- 
vate celebrities  to  incredi- 
bly high  and  influential  sta- 
tus. In  this  song.  Slim 
responds  to  the  out  of  control 
fan  in  a  sincere  voice  telling  him 
that  he  needs  counseling  and 
the  lyrics  are  in  jest  -  and 
not  meant  to  be  carried 
out. 

Celebrity  status  is 
further  explored  in 
"The  Way  I  Am,"  in 
which  Eminem 
expresses  the  frus- 
tration of  not 
being  able  to  par- 
ticipate in  regu- 
lar every  day 
life  activi- 
ties 


There  is  indeed  a 

Slim  Shady"  lurking 

inside  all  of  us. 


without  being  bombarded  with  requests 
for  autographs.  1  find  this  song  interest- 
ing because  celebrities  have  to  find  this 
aspect  of  the  job  aggravating,  yet  you 
never  actually  hear  any  of  them  let  loose 
to  the  public.  (Eminem  covers  it  for 
everyone  in  this  tune.) 

Another  pressing  issue  addressed  by 
Mathers  on  his  new  CD  is  the  cycle  of 
drug  addiction.  In  "Drug  Ballad."  he 
describes  in  detail  the  daily  life  of  some- 
one trapped  by  this  behavior.  Mathers' 
tone  implies  that  he  finds  this  lifestyle 
horrific  and  undesirable.  I  think  this 
song  actually  discourages  drug  use 
rather  than  promoting  it. 

Perhaps  Eminem's  favorite  topic  of 
discussion  is  dysfunctional  parenting. 
Some  great  lyrics  on  this  subject  are; 
"What  about  the  makeup  you  allow 
your  12-year-old  daughter  to  wear?"  or 
"You  should  have  been  watching  him, 
apparently  you  ain't  parents."  I  find  it 
very  ironic  that  someone  who  engages 
in  behavior  that  is  far  from  what  par- 
ents might  expect 

from  their  children 

(like  swearing, 
intolerance  and  vio- 
lence) thinks  of 
himself  as  a  voice  of 
a  good  parent. 
That's  the  kind  of 

irony  Eminem  plays 

~      on. 

I  remember  buy- 
ing the  tape,  pressing  play  and  hearing 
his  "Public  Service  Announcement 
2000":  Slim  Shady  would  like  to  thank 
you,  because  "upon  purchase  of  this 
album,  you  have  just  kissed  his  ass."  It's 
true.  I  don't  support  him  dcmeanmg 
women  and  gays,  but  I  bought  his  tape. 
I  gave  him  my  mohey  and  by  doing  that 
I  showed  support  for  all  the  things  he's 
saying. 

I  think  he  gets  a  real  kick  out  of 
knowing  how  many  people  object  to 
him,  yet  continue  to  objectify  him  with 
articles,  sales  and  awards.  "He's  talking 
about  raping  his  own  mother  -  and  we 
gave  him  the  Rolling  Stone  cover?"  he 
asks  in  "Kill  You." 

He  confronts  the  notion  of  saying 
one  thing  while  knowing  in  your  heart  it 
is  just  a  front.  There  is  indeed  a  "Slim 
Shady"  lurking  inside  all  of  us.  It  is 
quite  a  bold  statement  that  holds  a  lot  of 
merit. 

For  example,  think  of  all  the  people 
who  find  themselves  to  be  moral  and 
oppose  him  for  the  things  he  says  about 
gays.  I'd  like  to  ask  half  of  them  how 
they  voted  on  Proposition  22. 1  can  see 
all  the  middle-aged  Republican  wive* 
shaking  their  heads  and  pearl  necklaces 
over  a  lunch  date  discussing  how  "terri- 
ble" it  is  that  he  hates  homosexuals 
when  they  themselves  don't  have 
enough  respect  for  gay 
Americans  to  recognize 


SeeCAIIKIIItV,pa9e16 


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student  10  fHNTtber,  year  and  major 


•  Your  facts  wilt  be  ch«i(ed;  maice  sure 
they  are  accurate 

•  Viewpoint  Is  not  an  advertising  space  for 
»ny  group  or  orgwitwJoa  be  sure  to  have 
clearly  articulated  opinions 

•  We  reserve  the  right  to  edit  submissions 
for  darlty,  gramma/  and  length. 


Oiily  Brutn  Viewpoint 


Tuesday,  Octobff  17, 2000        15 


Bush's  tax  plan  doesn't  add  up, 
reflects  Hs  view  of  education 


DEMOCRAT:  Goveraor's  partisan 
iSgures  fail  to  damage  Al  Gore's 
top  priority  of  improving  schools 


ByMdaniaHo 

Bush  seems  to  be  having  trouble  with  math 
lately.  During  the  first  presidential  debate  in 
Boston,  Gov.  George  W.  Bush  accused  Vice 
President  Al  Gore  of  using  "fuzzy  math"  when 
Gore  pointed  out  that  Bush's  plan  would  spend 
more  of  the  surplus  on 
tax  cuts  for  the  wealthi- 
est 1  percent  of  taxpay- 
ers than  on  education, 
health,  prescription 
drugs  and  the  national 
defense  combined. 
The  next  day  on 
"Good  Morning 
America,"  Bush  admit- 
ted that  Gore's  math 
wasn't  fuzzy  after  all. 
Later  that  day  on  CNN, 
he  changed  his  story 
again. 

Bush's  attack  on  the  vice  president's  mathe- 
matical calculations  has  a  diiaHrony.  First, 
Bush  was  using  fuzzy  math  himself  The  Bush 
campaign  admitted  the  governor's  statistics  to 
attack  Gore's  policies  came  from  a  partisan 
source:  a  report  by  the  Republican  staff  of  the 
Senate  Budget  Committee.  The  Washington 
Post  asked  the  report's  director  if  the  same 
methods  by  which  they  picked  apart  Gore's 
plan  were  used  to  analyze  Bush's  proposals. 
The  answer  they  received  was:  "I  know  this  is 
going  to  sound  partisan,  but  no." 

While  Bush  accused  his  opponent  of  using 
"fuzzy  math,"  the  Republican  candidate's  own 
statistics  were  partisan-created  rhetoric  rather 
than  substantiated  facts. 

The  second  irony  to  Bush's  charge  against 


Ho  is  a  fourth-year  political  science  student  and 
president  of  the  Bruin  Democrats, .       ;. 


the  vice  president's  math  is  that  Gore  was  cor- 
rect in  his  statement  about  Bush's  budget  fig- 
ures. In  Bush's  plan,  the  tax  cut  for  the  top 
1  percent  of  Americans  ($620  billion)  is  greater 
than  total  domestic  spending  on  education 
($47.6  billion),  health  ($131.9  billion),  prescrip- 
tion drugs  ($158  billion),  and  national  defense 
($45  billion)  combined. 

Bush's  questionable  calculations  were  made 
apparent  again  during  the  second  presidential 
debate  last  Wednesday.  Again,  Bush  defended 
his  tax  plan,  saying  that  the  top  I  percent  would 
receive  only  $223  billion. 

Likewise,  the  Bush  campaign  cites  that  only 
21  percent  of  the  tax  cut  goes  to  the  wealthiest  1 
percent  of  Americans.  But  this  2 1  percent  and 
associated  $223  billion  numbers  do  not  include 
the  repeal  of  the  estate  tax.  Furthermore,  Bush 
assumes  that  his  proposal  cuts  taxes  evenly  for 
taxpayers  making  over  $200,0(X).  But,  for  a 
couple  making  $2  million,  the  Bush  tax  cut  is  19 
times  that  of  the  tax  cut  for  a  couple  making 
$200,000,  even  though  their  income  is  only  10 
times  as  large. 

Ignoring  these  facts.  Bush  argued  that  his  tax 
cut  for  the  wealthy  was  far  less  than  his  actual 
policies  and  plans  demonstrate. 

Overall,  the  tax  cut  which  Bush  defended  in 
both  debates  leaves  few  resources  left  for  the 
important  issues  like  education.  His  budget 
numbers  display  that  rather  than  investing  in 
rebuilding  schools  or  hiring  more  teachers. 
Bush  would  spend  the  surplus  on  providing  a 
tax  cut  for  the  wealthiest  Americans. 

During  the  first  debate,  Bush  defined  "at-risk 
children"  as  meaning  that  "basically  they  can't 
learn."  But,  the  only  reason  that  children 
wouldn't  be  able  to  learn  is  that  under  the  Bush 
plan,  many  students  would  remain  in  failing 
schools.  These  already-troubled  schools  would 
have  their  funding  taken  away  from  them, 
impeding  their  ability  to  function  properly 
while  students  remained  enrolled. 

On  the  other  hand.  Gore  would  require 
states  and  school  districts  to  improve  low  per- 
forming schools,  provide  expanded  after-school 


Rush  procedures  not  explicitly 
superficial;  diversity  main  goal 


GREEK:  Don*t  pass  judgment 
based  on  stereotypes;  system 
is  comprised  of  individuals 


Sec  HO,  page  17 


By  Lauren  Beret  Kdy 

Since  the  publication  of  Kirra  Steel's  article 
on  the  Greek  System  ("Systematic  sisterhood 
promotes  intolerance,"  Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint, 
Oct.  5),  I  have  sat  back  and  read  a  recent  bar- 
rage of  responding  Viewpoint  submissions. 
Many  people  have  approached  me  with  disgust 
and  concern  for  the  initial  publishing  and  as 
president  of  the  Panhellenic  Council,  I  would 
like  to  make  my  thoughts  known,  specifically  on 
the  issues  of  recruitment  ("rush")  and  diversity. 
You  are  probably  expecting  me  to  spout  out 
some  political  jargon.  But  the  truth  is  that  our 
system  is  imperfect  and  I 

openly  challenge  any  

Bruin  to  become  a  mem- 
ber and  lead  change  as 
opposed  to  sitting  back 
and  bad-mouthing  it. 

In  terms  of  recruitment, 
we  use  the  same  system 
implemented  by  our 
national  organizations  and 
advisors  and  it  is  utilized 
by  thousands  of  chapters  internationally.  It  is 
important  to  understand  that  our  1 1  National 
Panhellenic  Council  sororities  are  accountable 
to  a  nationwide  network  that  governs  how  we 
recruit.  Women  are  discussed  for  membership, 
but  it  is  done  tactfully  in  the  presence  of  alumni 
advisors. 

To  think  that  there  is  the  time  or  desire  in  the 
few  minutes  between  recruitment  parties  to 
write  extensive  descriptions  about  nails  and 
weight  is  absurd.  As  with  any  first  impression 
(i.e.  a  job  interview),  a  well-groomed  appear- 
ance is  not  going  to  hurt  you  during  recruit- 
ment, but  we  ask  that  women  merely  be  them- 


Kelly  is  a  fifth-year  English  student  and  president 
of  the  Panhellehic  Council. 


selves.  __!_ 

I  will  admit  that  rush  parties  are  much  too 
short  of  a  time  to  truly  assess  someone's  charac- 
ter, but  please  believe  that  our  sorority  women 
are  merely  looking  for  exceptional  personality 
traits  and  talent.  Sense  of  humor,  intelligence, 
athletic  ability  or  a  creative  nature  are  so  much 
more  valuable  to  these  women  who  are  in  pur- 
suit of  potential  friendship  -  and  not  someone  to 
flatter  their  appearance. 

It  is  ridiculous  to  think  that  1,200  UCLA 
women  with  an  average  GPA  higher  than  that  of 
the  campus  are  shallow  enough  only  to  want 
friends  who  get  manicures  and  drive  teM  Ws. 
Those  stereotypes  are  an  irrelevant  focus  com- 
pared to  the  talent  and  accomplishment  that  is 
present  among  our  women. 

The  next  issue  is  diversity.  I  'm  assuming  that 
when  the  Greek  system  is  attacked  for  not  being  - 
diverse,  the  main  focus  is  on  IFCand 

Panhellenic.  For  the 
■i^i^.^.^.^      record,  our  African 
American  groups 
(National  Pan-Hellenic), 
the  Asian  Greek  Council, 
the  religious,  the  engineer- 
ing and  even  the  older 
groups  are  recognized 

__      under  the  term  "Greek 

system." 

As  for  Panhellenic 
specifically,  my  definition  of  "diverse"  is  that  of 
encompassing  many  difterent  backgrounds  and 
cultures.  While  groups  on  campus  that  focus  (in 
their  membership)  upon  race  or  religion  are  a 
very  important  cultural  asset  to  our  campus,  I 
do  not  consider  the  group  itself  to  be  diverse. 

Our  women  are  diverse  in  their  spectrum  of 
cultural  representation,  but  not  as  proudly  or 
successfully  as  the  campus  itself  This  is  not  a 
result  of  racism  or  discrimination. 
Unfortunately,  we  cannot  offer  as  rich  of  a  cul- 
tural experience  as  many  student  groups. 

But  we  can  offer  unsurpassed  leadership 
opportunities,  networking  and  personal  growth 
-  qualities  that  appeal  to  everyone.  In  an 


The  truth  is  that  we  are 

all  individuals  who  make 

individual  decisions. 


SeeiaUY,page16 


I  NEED  A  GRLfRIEND 

By  Chris  Davis 


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lilMO'CaMk 


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16        Tuesday,  October  17, 2000 


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CARBERRY 

From  page  14 

their  marriages  by  the  law. 

In  any  case,  while  I  enjoy  the  way 
Eminem  provokes  my  thoughts,  I 
wish  he  would  take  responsibility 
for  himself.  He  had  a  rough  life,  a 
broken  down  family  and  his  mother 
lied  to  him.  Yes,  he  is  definitely  one 
of  the  many  children  who  has  been 
wronged  by  their  parents  and  com- 
munity. But  you  can  still  decide  to 
be  a  step  above  that  environment. 

Eminem  is  walking,  talking  irony 
because  he  preaches  to  parents  to 
have  a  greater  influence  in  their 
children's  lives,  yet  he  seems  to 
think  he  is  not  responsible  for  the 
delinquency  of  anyone  via  his 
music.  "I  just  said  it  -  I  didn't  know 
if  you'd  do  it  or  not,"hc  says  in  . 
"The  Way  I  Am." 

Overall,  however,  I  think.  -;'"■ 
Eminem's  message  is  startlingly 
poignant  in  today's  society.  There 
are  a  lot  of  kids  who  feel  like  they 
are  forgotten  and  getting  screwed 
by  the  system.  People  are  listening 
to  him  because  they  think  he's  talk- 
ing about  something  important. 
He's  challenging  us  to  confront 
issues  and  get  them  out  in  the  open 
instead  of  keeping  our  opinions  to 
ourselves  in  private  where  no  one 
can  see  or  do  anything  about  them. 

In  a  society  where  professional 
wrestling  is  on  TV,  where lialf- 
naked  teenage  girls  are  singing   ' 
about  "being  rubbed  the  right  way," 
and  murder  and  intolerance  are  in 
the  daily  news,  Eminem's  strategy  is 
to  think  of  the  most  vile  thing  to  say 
and  see  if  even  it  bothers  us  any- 
more. 

I'm  glad  he's  found  a  way  to 
bother  us,  and  that  he's  thought  of 
such  a  witty  way  to  do  it.  This 
means  we're  actually  thinking  about 
what  we  want  for  our  society. 

Madonna  burned  crosses,  John 
Lennon  sang  about  a  walrus,  and 
now  this  little  white  kid  has  started 
running  around  the  stage  with  his 
middle  finger  straight  up  in  the  air. 
But  as  long  as  they  keep  us  guess- 
ing, we'll  have  to  keep  thinking. 


KELIY 

From  page  15 

attempt  to  broaden  our  horizons,  we 
ofTered  a  speaker  on  homophobia  last 
year  to  our  members  ar)d  the  entire 
campus.  I  invite  alt  of  you  to  attend 
our  speaker  series  this  year  which  will 
focus  on  the  topic  of  diversity. 

In  regards  to  the  Kirra  Steel  artide 
that  started  it  all,  I'm  glad  that  after 
three  and  a  half  painful  years  she  was 
able  to  escape.  I  would  hate  to  think 
that  any  Greeks  would  view  their  vol- 
untary membership  as  such  a  prison 
sentence.  But  the  fact  is,  she  has  grad- 
uated, is  living  in  Chicago,  and  her 
college  experience  is  over  now.  She 
had  her  diance  to  be  a  force  of 
enlightenment  as  vice  president  and 
new  member  educator  for  her  chap- 
ter. It  is  unfortunate  that  she  did  not 
feel  the  urge  to  be  a  true  leader  of 
morals  and  set  a  precedent  for  her 
chapter  face-to-face. 

That  being  said,  ifwe  coukl  truly 
"brainwash"  our  members,  I  wish  we 
could  make  them  into  perfect  citizens. 
The  truth  is  that  we  are  all  individuals 
who  make  individual  decisions.  In  the 
same  fashion  that  several  illegal  handi- 
cap placards  tarnished  the  reputation 
of  our  entire  football  team  in  the 
media,  the  same  is  true  if  a  few  of  our 
3,000  members  commit  tragic  acts. 

Hazing,  akx>hol-poisoning  and 
even  embellished  articles  are  unfortu- 
nate decisions  by  individuals,  yet  the 
public  feeds  on  the  sensationalism. 
We  and  our  national  organizations 
make  an  attempt  to  hold  our  ntembers 
accountable  for  their  actions.  For 
every  negative  incident,  there  are  so 

WmiT.|Mgf17 


KELLY 

From  page  16 

several  responsible,  unsung  heroes 
in  our  system. 

In  conclusion  I  ask  two  things  of 
you,  the  UCLA  public.  First  I  ask 
that  if  you  are  still  under  the 
impression  that  we  stereotype  and 
discriminate,  please  do  not  in  turn 
pass  judgment  upon  us.  We  are  an 
organization  of  unique  individuals 
and  to  not  recognize  that  is  to 
lower  yourself  to  the  very  critical 
nature  of  which  we  have  been 
accused. 

Secondly,  I  ask  for  a  little  taCt  in 
opinions  of  the  Greek  system  out  of 
Mspect  to  your  fellow  Bruins  who 
enjoy  it  as  well  as  those  who  are 
seeking  to  form  unbiased  opinions 
of  their  own. 


HO  ^^v^; -■.;■:;■/;; 

From  page  15     w 

opportunities  such  as  tutoring,  and 
ofTcr  further  financial  incentives  to 
principals  and  outstanding  teachers. 
Such  policy  differences  illustrate 
that  Bush's  priority  is  not  education. 
In  fact,  in  his  budget  plan.  Bush  will 
spend  $12  for  the  wealthiest  I  percent 
of  Americans  for  every  SI  he  spends 
on  education.  This  should  be  of  no 
surprise  to  anyone  who  has  looked  at 
Bush's  gubernatorial  record  in  Texas. 


Unfortunately,  Bush's 

poor  education  record 

in  Texas  is  not  confined 

to  just  college  age 

students. 


In  fact,  during  his  1998  gubernato- 
rial re-election  campaign.  Bush  said, 
"Higher  education  is  not  my  priori- 
ty"(San  Antonio  Express-News, 
March  22.  1998).  Not  surprisingly, 
when  it  comes  to  financial  aid  rank- 
ings. Texas  is  a  low  38th  in  the  nation 
in  estimated  grant  dollars  awarded 
per  student,  according  to  a  study  by 
the  National  Association  of  State 
Student  Grant  and  Aid  Programs. 

Unfortunately,  Bush's  poor  educa- 
tion record  in  Texas  is  not  confined  to 
just  college  age  students.  For  exam- 
ple. Bush  opposed  President 
Clinton's  plan  to  on"cr  funds  to  hire 
100,000  new  teachers  to  reduce  class 
size  (Dallas  Morning  News,  Nov.  1 1, 
1999). 

On  the  other  hand.  Gore  demon- 
strated in  both  debates  that  education 
is  his  priority.  In  the  first  debate, 
while  Bush  resorted  to  character 
assaults  on  the  vice  president,  attack- 
ing his  credibility  and  character.  Gore 
j|^yed  focused  on  the  issues,  voicing 
his  desire  to  "making  the  country 
»en  better  than  it  is,  not  making  you 
(Bush)  out  to  be  a  bad  person." 

In  the  sc9pnd  debate.  Gore  again 
showed  his  understanding  of  what 
needs  to  be  prioritized  by  telling 
Bush.  "If  you  squander  the  surplus  on 
a  huge  tax  ^yt  that  goes  mostly  to 
those  at  the  top,  then  you  can't  make 
education  the  top  priority.  If  the  tax 
cut  is  your  No.  1, 2,  3  and  4  (priori- 
ties), you  can't  do  education." 

During  the  presidential  debates 
and  throughout  the  campaign.  Gore 
has  continually  emphasized  this  focus 
on  education,  from  pre-kindergarten 
to  the  university  level.  Meanwhile, 
Bush  has  been  uni^jle  to  justify  his 
plan  that  would  benefit  only  a  few.  As 
a  result,,he  and  his  campaign  have 
resorted  to  credibility  attacks  and 
faulty  claims  of  "fuzzy  math "  in  order 
to  plead  his  case. 

Bush  has  claimed  that  he  priori- 
tizes education  and  health  care  when 
the  numbers  show  just  the  opposite. 
Sniinds  a  bit  like  sonv  fiway  logic, 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Tuesday,  Octotwf  17, 2000        17 


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Surf  this! 

Find  out  about  "Requiem  For  A  Dream  ' 
which  has  not  only  become  one  of  the  most 
highly  acclaimed  films  of  the  year,  but  also 
has  one  of  the  most  trafficked  movie  sites. 


Daily  Bruin 


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Tuesday,  October  17, 2000 


ENTERTAINME 


:.:-'^->' 


AMYHASCfl/DMyl 


lAOpeM 


-Academy  A«va»d-winning  director  John  Schksinger  will  direct  Los  Angeles 
Opera's  new  production  of  Benjamin  Britten's  opera  "Peter  Grimes." 

-  Academy  Award-winner 

John  Schlesinger  brings  his  directing 

talents  and  love  of  opera  to  L.A. 

for  a  seven-performance  run  of 

Benjamin  Britten's  "Peter  Grimes" 


ByJohnManfun* 

Daily  Bruin  Contribator 

If  John  Schlcsmger's  [Irst  love  is  film, 
then  opera  is  his  mistresaj' 

Schlesinger,  the  Acadany  Award-win- 
ning director  of  films  iicluding  "The 
Falcon  and  the  Snowman,"  "Midnight 
Cowboy,"  "Sanday,  Bloody  Sunday" 
and.  most  rccortly,  "The  Next  Best 
Thing,"  first  tried  his  hand  at  opera  near- 
ly two  decades  ago  when  he  directed 
Offenbach's  "Tales  of  Hoffmann"  at 
London's  Royal  Opera  House,  Covent 
Garden. 

"I  love  music  nd  opera  in  particular," 
Schlesinger  said.  "I  go  to  see  it  a  great 
deal  and  wh«n  the  chance  came  to  work 
in  it,  I  said  I  'd  try  to  see  if  I  enjoyed  doing 
it,  and  I  did  " 

Since  his  first  attempt,  Schlesinger  has 
directed  productiont  of  Richard  Strauss' 
"Der  Rosenkavalier"  and  Verdi's  "Un 
ballo  in  mascherar  at  Covent  Garden  and 
the  Salzburf  Fertval,  respectively  His 
most  recent  eadeavor,  a  production  of 
English  compoper  Beryamin  Britten's 


"Peter  Grimes,"  premiered  at  Milan's 
prestigious  Teatro  alia  Scala.  The  Los 
Angeles  Opera  will  present  the  produc- 
tion in  seven  performances  beginning 
Oct.  18  at  the  Performing  Arts  Center  of 
Los  Angeles  County's  Dorothy  Chandler 
Pavilion.  * 

Of  course,  directing  an  opera  is  quite 
different  from  directing  a  film. 
Schlesinger  sees  a  number  of  differences 
between  the  genres  and  the  creative 
prooesKs  involved  in  bringing  each  to 
fruition. 

"You  have  to  know  what  you're 
doing,"  Schlesinger  said.  "Movies  have 
more  flexibility  because  of  a  pair  of  scis- 
sors." 

"With  opera,  you  have  to  know  what 
you're  aiming  for  everyday,"  Schlesinger 
said.  "You  have  to  have  a  picture  of  the 
whole  thing  in  your  mind  when  you're  dis- 
cussing it  with  the  designer,  which  is 
months  before  you're  going  to  meet  the 
singers." 

Opera    also    presents    a    challenge 

SMaUMCS,|M9e21 


i  ',.'.  ■  ■; 


A&EontheWeb 

l~See  all  this  and  more  at 
I  the  Daily  Bruin's 
•  entertaining  Web  site: 
;  www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

Tuesday,  October  17, 2000 


Festival  to  celebrate  larantella^  past 


EVENT:  RilualisUc  dance 
designed  to  cleanse  bite 
victims  of  spider  venom 


ByMidHMlRoseiHMaBna 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  Tarantella  is  famous  as  the  fre- 
netic dance  that  victims  of  the  dreaded 
tarantula  used  to  perform  to  clean  their 
systems  of  the  deadly  poison. 

As  strange  an  idea  as  that  might 
sound  today,  even  stranger  is  that  the 
dance  actually  seemed  to  work. 
Although  the  effectiveness  of  the  prac- 
tice might  puzzle  modem  medicine,  the 
explanation  is  really  quite  simple:  there 
never  really  was  any  spider. 

Throughout  the  month  of  October, 
the  Italian  Oral  History  Institute  is 
organizing  a  series  of  conferences,  lec- 
tures, seminars  and  workshops  on 
Tarantismo  and  related  ecstatic  phe- 
nomena. "Performing  Ecstasies: 
Music,  Dance  and  Ritual  in  the 
Mediterranean,"  explores  the  domi- 
nance of  such  rapturous  states  of  the 
tarantella. 

"It  would  often  happen  around  the 
Mediterranean  in  the  summer  that 
young  women  working  out  in  the  fields 
would  suddenly  think  that  they  were 
bitten  by  a  spider,"  said  Luisa  Del 
Giudice,  an  organizer  of  the  event. 

"They  would  display  depression  and 
anxiety;  their  parents  would  notice 
something  wrong  and  call  in  musicians 
to  see  if  the  change  was  the  result  of  a 
spider  bite,"  Del  Giudice  said.  "They 


would  play  rhythms  to  awaken  the  spi- 
der and  make  the  girl  dance  in  an  ecsta- 
tic trance.  The  dancer  would  imitate 
the  movements  of  the  spider,  crawling, 
running  and  finally  collapsing." 

Even  after  the  woman  recovered 
from  the  bite  through  such  ritual,  the 
ordeal  was  far  from  over.  Every  year, 
around  the  end  of  June,  the  girl  had  to 
travel  to  the  shrine  of  St.  Paul,  the 
patron  saint  of  the  the  Tarantella,  at 
Galantina  to  pay  homage  to  the  saint 
and  recreate  the  same  excited  dance. 


"The  victim  is  allowed 
to  scream,  shout  insults 

and  generally  behave 

in  a  way  that  she 
would  not  normally  be 

allowed  to  behave." 

Roberto  Catalano 

Musician 


"There  weren't  any  psychiatrists 
back  then  to  help  them,"  joked  Del 
Giudice.  "The  dance  allowed  women 
to  work  some  frustration  out  of  their 
system." 

Some  featured  events  include  a  lec- 
ture/demonstration of  Sufi  U^dition, 
the  faith  of  the  famed  whirling  dervish- 
es, by  UCLA  professor  Ali  Jihad  Racy, 
as  well  as  an  exhibition  of  "The  Lomax 
Collection:     Photographic    Essay," 


whidi  will  be  available  at  theCraft  and 
Folk  Art  Museum. 

"Ellen  Lomax  made  one  of  the  first 
field  expeditions  to  record  European 
songs  »nd  musical  traditions,"  said  Del 
Giudice.  "These  photos  were  taken 
during  that  campaign." 

The  Lomax  exhibit  concerns  itself 
with  the  Italian  region  of  Salento, 
where  the  Tarantismo  tradition  lasted 
longer  than  in  oUier  areas.  Pictures  of 
Tarantismo  pilgrimage  sites  taken 
between  1970  and  1992  will  also  be  on 
display. 

Musicantica,  a  musical  group  dedi- 
cated to  exposing  the  sounds  of  tradi- 
tional Mediterranean  music  to  a  wider 
audience,  will  also  recreate  the  tradi- 
tional Tarantismo  process  in  a  show  at 
the  Freud  Theater,  Oct.  2  at  2  p.m.  In 
the  prologue  to  the  performance,  a  nar- 
rator explains  how  he  has  been  inspired 
by  the  stories  of  Tarantismo  to  write  a 
poem  on  the  subject. 

"In  the  first  stage,  the  victim  lies  on 
the  floor  on  a  white  sheet,  surrounded 
by  icons  of  St.  Paul,"  said  Roberto 
Catalano  member  of  Musicantica. 
"Colored  tissues  are  used  to  represent 
the  color  of  the  spider." 

"The  victim  is  allowed  to  scream, 
shout  insults  and  generally  behave  in  a 
way  that  she  would  not  normally  be 
allowed  to  behave,"  he  continued. 

Superstition  underlying  this  perfor- 
mance claims  that  the  venom  of  the  spi- 
der's bite  must  be  sweated  out  of  the 
system  and  the  best  way  to  do  that  is  for 
the  victim  to  dance. 


S«eSnDBIS,pa9e22 


Celebrrties  represent  democratic  ideals 


FILM:  From  Ben  Affleck 
to  Darva  Conger,  society 
savors  national  spotlight 

Stop  Uie  presses.  Ben  Affleck 
touched  me.  Forget  the  presi- 
dential race,  this  is  news! 
Call  me  unprofessional.  I'm  sure 
you  would  be,  too,  if  the  most  inspira- 
tional young  filmmaker  in  the  indus- 
try touched  you. 
Lucky       for 
you,  he  didn't. 
So    you    don't 
have  to  worry 
about  upsetting 
journalistic  pro- 
tocol. 

Inquiring 
minds,  however, 
want  to  know. 
Therefore,  it  is 
my  duty  as  a 
reporter,  to  pub- 
licly disseminate 

information  regarding  my  soon-l&4>e- 
infamous  brush  with  celebrity 

In  other  words,  I  have  free  license 
'to  gush.  (He  touched  me  and  I  will 
never  wash  that  cardigan  again.) 

Though  working  as  an  entertain- 
ment writer  gives  me  the  opportunity 
to  meet  countless  famous  (and  even 
more  countless  not-so-famous) 
actors,  writers  and  directdrs,  the  most 
memorable  moment  of  my  career  so 
far  has  definitely  been  interviewing 
Ben. 

Nervous  does  not  describe  the  anx- 
iety f  fell  entering  the  hospitality  suite 
at  the  Four  Seasons  Hotel  in  Beverly 
Hills.  We  were  supposed  to  discuss  his 


Emilia 
Hwang 


It  was  an  intimate  rendezvous  - 
just  me  and  Ben  ...  and  his  publicist,  a 
camera  crew  and  a  couple  other 
reporters.  (Oh,  and  Matt  Damon  was 
there,  too.) 

Here  is  where  I  redeem  whatever 
shred  of  professional  integrity  I  have 
left.  Though  I  wanted  to  propel 
myself  onto  the  blue-eyed  actor  as 
soon  as  he  entered  the  room,  some- 
thing told  me  that  it  would  not  be 
kosher  to  jump  on  his  back  like  a  sala- 
mander before  the  interview  even 
started. 

OK,  believe  it  or  not,  I'rn  usually 
not  such  a  fanatic.  Perhaps  I  can 
blame  my  celebrity  fixation  on  grow- 
ing up  in  Los  Angeles.  Temporary 
insanity  is  not  uncommon  among  chil- 
dren weaned  on  Hollywood  culture. 

The  special  status  of  celebrity,  how- 
ever, is  not  a  phenomenon  contained 
to  the  palm-tree-lined  boulevards  of 
Southern  California.  The  art  of  turn- 
ing the  human  being  into  entertain- 
ment has  been  a  nationwide  obsession 
in  the  media  for  decades. 

It  started  in  the  1920s  with  gossip 
columnist  Walter  Winchell,  whose 
rapid-fire  style  of  newscasting  cap- 
tured the  interest  of  millions  of 
Americans.  BoUi  admirers  and  critics 
followed  his  news  reports.  Never  shy 
about  holding  back  his  opinions, 
Winchell  built  up  one  of  the  highest- 
rated  programs  in  radio  history 

In  the  twenty-first  century,  howev- 
er, television  newsmagazines  have 
turned  audience  fixation  onto  fame 
and  infamy  from  the  fictional  world 
of  the  movies  to  real  life  -  the  show 
that  never  ends.  With  scandal  flavor- 
ing everything  from  gossip  reports  to 
news  articles,  celebrity  has  become 


latrtt  projtct,  but  who  knew  where — uu»  luiional  religion 


pecks  into  an  intriguing  world  of  sex, 
power,  money,  and  even  millionaire 
matrimonials. 

Who  can  forget  the  circus  that 
ensued  after  Fox's  "Who  WanU  to 
Marry  a  Multi-Millionaire?" 

As  preposterous  as  the  show's 
premise  may  sound,  it  still  captured 
the  attention  of  23  million  viewers. 
With  no  consequences,  contempo- 
rary viewers  enjoy  invasion  and  televi- 
sion voyeurism.  The  events  that  fol- 
lowed a  rich  guy  picking  a  wife  before 
a  national  television  audience  became 
more  of  a  spectacle  than  the  television 
show  itself 

With  the  country's  attention  con- 
veniently focused  on  Rick  Rockwell 
and  Darva  Conger,  the  couple  was 
instantly  propelled  into  celebrity  sta- 
tus. For  Rockwell,  his  resume  of 
deception  included  questionable  mil- 
lionaire status  as  well  as  past  restrain- 
ing orders.  And  the  self-professed 
(but  not  really)  Gulf  War  veteran 
Conger  soon  stole  the  nation's  gaze 
by  posing  for  Playboy 

When  you  think  about  it,  the  con- 
cept of  celebrity  is  one  of  the  most 
democratic  ideas  of  our  time  -  it  puts 
the  spotlight  on  people  who've 
accomplished  absolutely  nothing. 

Me?  My  greatest  claim  to  fame  is  a  ', 
professional  pat  on  the  back  from  Ben  . 
Affleck. 

Let's  put  this  in  contrast  with  one 
of  Winchell's  accomplishments.  In 
1940,  he  broke  the  news  of  President 
Franklin  D.  Roosevelt's  decision  to 
seek  an  unprecedented  third  term.  In 
a  less  positive  example  of  his  journal- 
istic discretion,  he  also  pubiically  sup- 
ported the  notorious  Sen.  Joseph 
McCarthy  ■ 


'\ 


things  would  go  from  there? 


Today  headlines  offer  tantalizing 


Se*IMriUli,pa9c22 


20 Tuesday;  October  17, 2000 


'  ;  >  •  .1 


Daily  Bruin  Am  &Entertainiii«flt  '; 


A&E  BRIEFS 


Audra  McDonald 
performs  at  Royc^ 

Renowned  mezzo-soprano  Audra 
McDonald  will  perform  at  Royce 
Hall  on  Oct.  21. 

Her  new  CD,  "How  Glory  Goes," 
has  won  substantial  critical  acclaim 
and  the  New  York  Times  praises  her 
as  "restoring  hope  in  a  musical 
future." 

McDonald  is  the  winner  of  three 
Tony  awards  and  is  expected  to  win  a 
fourth  for  her  starring  role  in  the 
Broadway  show,  "Marie  Christine." 
For  ticketing  information,  call  the 
Central  Ticket  Office  at  (310)  825- 
2101. 

Lee  and  Johnston 
talk  at  Perloff 

Mark  Lee  and  Sharon  Johnston, 
of  Johnston  Marklee  &  Associates 
architectural  company,  Los  Angeles, 
will  speak  at  1302  Perloff  Hall,  Oct' 
23,  6:30  p.m. 

They  will  discuss  their  firm's  new 
mterdisciplinary  method  of  looking 
at  new  design  strategies  and  solu- 
tions for  architecture  and  urbanism. 
Prior  to  this  lecture,  Lee  and 
Johnston  have  worked  on  a  series  of 
commercial,  residential,  and  and 
institutional  commissions  in  diverse 
locations  including  California. 
Michigan,  New  Mexico,  and  Texas 
since  creating  the  architectural  firm 


in  1998. 

Both  speakers  lead  design  studios 
at  UCLA,  and  Lee  has  also  taught  at 
the  Southern  California  Institute  of 
Architecture. 

For  more  information,  contact 
the  School  of  Arts  and  Architecture 
at  (310)  825-7858. 

Open  call  for  new 
musical  ;    ,■ 

School  of  Theater,  Film  and 
Television  graduate  student  Weiko 
Lin  will  hold  an  open  house  cast 
information  session  for  his  new 
musical  drama,  "Parachute  Kid"  set 
to  debut  on  May  17,  2001  at  Royce 
Hall. 

The  session  is  scheduled  for 
Tuesday,  Oct.  24,  7:30  p.m.  to  9  p.m. 
m  the  Sproul  Hall  Entertainment 
Center. 

The  Production/Creative  Staff 
Information  Session  is  designed  to 
bring  new  students  into  the  produc- 
tion, offering  interested  attendees 
the  chance  to  join  the  play's  staff. 
Openings  are  available  in  both  the 
creative  and  technical  sides  of 
"Parachute  Kid's"  production 
ensemble. 

Positions  include  graphic  design- 
ers, media/press  relations  director, 
set  construction,  assistant  directors, 
choreographers,  press  assistants  and 
others.  :.-\  .  > 

Described  as  a  cross  between 
"Rent"  and  "West  Side  Story,"  the 


play  takes  a  look  at  life  in  poverty 
with  a  40-member  cast  and  a  slate  of 
13  original  songs  by  Joy 
Montgomery.  3ook  and  lyrics  are  by 
Weiko  Lin.      :  .: 

For  information  on  Staff 
Information  Session,  contact 
Associate  Producer  Lisa  Turner  at 
lytumer@ucla.edu.  For  info  on  pro- 
duction contact  Melissa  Chu, 
Director  of  Public  Relations,  at 
chewymel@ucla.edu. 

Film  screenings 
at  Hammer 

The  UCLA  Armand  Hammer 
Museum  is  hosting  Filmforum's  fall 
series  of  independent  underground 
and  avant-garde  movies  every 
Tuesday  from  Oct.  10  through  Dec. 
19  (except  Oct.  31  and  Nov.  28)  at  7 
p.m. 

Selections  include  Jack 
Chambers'  "The  Hart  of  London," 
Fu-Ding  Cheng's  series  "Zen  Tales 
for  the  Urban  Explorer,"  Amie 
Siegel's  "The  Sleepers,"  Zack 
Stiglicz  and  Shellie  Fleming's  "Life/ 
Expectancy,"  "Nothing  Nobody 
Nowhere."  "Coiled"  and  "Pompeii," 
and  Erika  Suderberg's  retrospective 
"SOMATOGRAPHY." 

Admission  is  $5;  free  for  Museum 
members.   For  more  information 
call  (310)  443-7000. 


Notes  compiled  by  Michael  Rosen- 
Molina,  Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


"»»»■■  mmi,'m»m,  ■ 


Three-time  Tony  Award-winner  and  operatic  mezzo-soprano 
Audra  McDonald  makes  her  UCLA  debut  at  Royce  Hall  on 
Saturday,  Oct.  21  at  8  p.m.  For  information,  call  (310)  825-2101 


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Daily  Bniin  Arts  &  Entertainment 


GRIMES 

From  page  18 

because,  in  addition  to  the  libretto  - 
which,  to  continue  the  comparison 
with  film,  is  an  opera's  screenplay  - 
the  director  has  to  factor  the  music 
^  into    his    or    her    approach.    For 
^  Schlcsinger,  the  music  makes  direct- 
ing an  opera  into  a  special  challenge, 
one  that  requires  a  director  with  a 
.    unique  sensitivity  to  music. 

"An  opera  is  a  world  of  its  own," 
the  director  said.  "You  have  to  know 
something  about  the  music  to  enter 
into  it,  which  is  a  nice  thought. 
Nobody  needs  to  know  anything.  Bill 
Goldman  once  wrote,  for  the  movies, 
but  you  do  have  to  know  something  to 
do  an  opera." 

Opera  also  differs  from  many  films 
in  that  singers  may  have  performed  a 
role  dozens,  if  not  hundreds,  of  times. 
Of  course,  the  same  may  be  true  of 
casts  in  filmed  versions  of  plays,  but 
the  opera  director  has  to  reckon  with 
singers  who  may  have  set  ideas  on  a 
role.  Schlesinger  has  had  good  luck 
with  singers  so  far. 

"I've  never  worked  with  singers 
who  tell  me,  'This  is  where  I  stand  and 
I  need  a  handkerchief  so  that  I  can  do 
it  and  this  is  how  I  do  it,'"  Schlesinger 
said.  "No,  I've  never  come  across 
that.  Placido  (Domingo)  was  the  first 
opera  star  I  worked  with  and  he's 
wonderfully  fiexiblc,  listens  and  dis- 
cusses  things.  He's  quite  wonderful." 

Schlesinger  has  had  the  same  expe- 
rience with  Philip  Langridgc,  who 
sings  the  title  role  in  L.A.  Opera's 
"Peter  Grimes."  Langridge  has  per- 
formed  the  role  in  many  of  the  world's 


;   great  opera  houses,  and  he  sang  it  in 
..    the  first  staging  of  this  production  at 
U  Scala. 

"Philip  has  come  with  an  experi- 
ence singing  it  and  I  suggest  some- 
thing totally  different  and  he  says, 
'Well,  let's  try  it,'"  Schlesinger  said. 
"If  it  works,  fine,  and  quite  often  it 
doesn't  work,  so  we  have  to  think  of 
something  else." 

In  moments  like  this,  Schlesinger 
can  draw  on  his  long  career  as  a  direc- 
tor. His  first  feature  film,  "A  Kind  of 
Loving,"  was  released  in  1962.  Since 
then,  Schlesinger  has  directed  for 
stage,  film,  and  television,  winning 
the  Best  Director  Academy  Award 
for  "Midnight  Cowboy"  in  1969. 

Several  of  his  films  have  dealt  with 
subjects  similar  to  that  of  "Peter 
Grimes."  In  the  opera,  the  title  char- 
acter, a  fisherman,  becomes  a  pariah 
when  his  apprentices  die  in  suspicious 
circumstances.  His  fellow  villagers, 
thinking  Grimes  a  child  murderer, 
ostracize  the  fisherman  and  place 
tremendous  pressure  on  him  until  he 
commits  suicide,  scuttling  his  ship  at 
sea  and  drowning. 

The  outsider,  a  character  that  no 
one  quite  understands,  figures  in 
many  of  Schlesinger's  most  powerful 
films.  Dustin  Hoffman's  role  in 
"Midnight  Cowboy"  is  an  especially 
memorable  example. 

"That's  one  of  the  reasons  I  like 
this  particular  work,"  Schlesinger 
said.  "It  deals  with  the  reality  and  the 
fantasy  of  what  someone  feels  cast  in 
this  role  of  not  only  being  an  outsider 
but  also  of  being  held  responsible  for 
the  deaths  of  apprentices,  two  of 
them,  which  is  why  the  villagers 
hound  him.  It's  a  totally  modern  - 


Los  Angeles  Opera's  newest  production  is  Benjamin  Britten's  "Peter  Grimes."  directed  by  Oscar-winner 
John  Schlesinger.  Schlesinger  has  also  directed  this  production  of  the  opera  in  Milan,  Italy. 


I  .A  Opera 


well  I  won't  say  it's  a  modem  idea.  It's 
been  an  idea,  unfortunately,  forever." 
Some  of  the  opera's  most  powerful 
moments  come  when  Grimes'  out- 
sider status  is  thrown  into  sharp  relief 
In  Act  One,  for  example,  Grimes 
stumbles  into  the  town's  pub  to  seek 
refuge  from  a  torrential  storm.  He 
sings  a  haunting  solo  that  upsets  the 
other  villagers,  so  one  of  them  sug- 
gests starting  a  song  to  calm  their 
nerves.  Grimes  contributes  a  verse 
that  almost  derails  the  whole  thing  - 


he  just  can't  fit  in,  and  the  villagers 
think  he's  insane 

"Grimes  looks  like  a  drowned  rat 
because  he's  chosen  to  sit  out  in  the 
storm  and  he's  had  this  row  with 
Balstrode  (one  of  the  villagers  who 
initially  tries  to  help  Grimes  exoner- 
ate himselO,"  Schlesinger  said.  "And 
then  Grimes  comes  in  and  everybody 
recoils,  and  he  goes  in  to  a  poetic 
mood.  I'm  not  doing  anything  extra- 
ordinary, because  the  music  and  the 
text  are  extraordinary  enough." 


It's  an  approach  that  has  served 
Schlesinger  well  in  his  previous  oper- 
atic ventures,  and  it  bodes  well  for  this 
latest  production. 


OPERA:  Benjamin  Britten's  'Peter 
Grimes,"  directed  by  John  Schlesinger  at 
the  Los  Angeles  Ofjera  for  seven  perfor- 
mances beginning  Oct  18.  Tickets:  $28- 
$148;  $20  student  and  senior  rush  tick- 
ets one  hour  before  curtain,  subject  to 
availability.  For  more  information,  call 
213-972-8001  orvisitvvww.laopera.org. 


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12       Tu«d«y,October17,2000 


Daily  Bfuin  Arts  &  EnteQainmMt 


HWANG 

From  page  19 

While  I  won't  be  reporting  political  history, 
blacklisting  any  Communists  or  digging  for 
gold  on  national  television,  I  still  enjoy  my 
celebrity-by-association  status. 

After  all,  Ben  AfTleck  did  touch  me,  whtch 
makes  me  almost  famous.  And  what's  left  for 
a  fan  to  do  after  she  has  finally  had  her  fanati- 
cal encounter? 

Nothing,  really,  except  to  write  about  it. 

If  you  would  like  to  encourage  Hwang's  celebri- 
ty status,  send  her  plenty  of  fan  mail  at 
emilia@ucla.edu. 


SPIDERS         = 

From  page  19 

"The  phenomenon  has  even 
been  reported  in  modem  times,  as 
recently  as  the  19608,"  said 
Catalano.  "Poverty,  underdevelop- 
ment and  the  high  demands  of  work 
were  all  contributing  factors  to  the 
start  of  the  Tarantismo." 

"Women  were  oppressed;  they 
had  no  income  and  everything  they 
earned  became  the  property  of  their 
husbands,"  she  continued.  "Even 
with  all  the  help  that  the  Italian  fam- 
ily provided,  it  was  a  great  load  on  a 


woman's  bade." 

Different  spiders,  however,  often 
had  widely  difterent  tastes  in  music 
and  it  was  the  job  of  the  musicians  to 
find  out  which  genre  the  victim's 
tormentor  preferred. 

"A  spider  frequently  became 
known  by  a  pet  name,  like 
Katharine,  for  example,"  said  Del 
Giudice.  "Depending  on  the  per- 
sonality and  name  of  the  spider,  it 
could  prefer  anything  from  erotic  to 
melancholy  music." 

Musicantica  is  a  Los  Angeles- 
based  group  that  performs  a  variety 
of  Southern  Italian  music  from  the 
17th  century  to  present.  The  group 


performs  both  oral  and  popular 
songs,  as  well  as  instrumental  con- 
structions by  composers  of  the  18th 
and  19th  centuries. 

Catalano  performs  on  frame 
drum,  guitar  and  mandolin,  while 
othef  members  include  Enzo  Fina 
on  guitar,  frame  drum  and  percus- 
sion; Lorenzo  Buhne  on  guitar  and 
drums;  and  Kebron  Parker  on 
accordion,  guitar  and  friction  drum. 

"Performing  Ecstasies:  Music, 
Dance,  and  Ritual  in  the 
Mediterranean"  takes  a  look  at  all 
varieties,  of  music  associated  with 
the  Tarantismo,  in  addition  to  other 
ecstatic  traditions. 


"The  ecstatic  trance  is  a  very  old 
tradition;  some  believe  it  even  goes 
back  as  far  as  the  Dionysian  orgies  in 
ancient  Greece,"  Del  Giudice  said. 

"We  had  the  idea  to  place  the  cus- 
tom in  the  context  of  the 
Mediterranean,  to  show  that  certain 
traditions  are  widely  shared  around 
the  worid,"  she  said. 


ART: 'Performing  Ecstasies:  Music, 
Dance,  and  Ritual  in  the 
Mediterranean'  continues  through- 
out February.  For  nrwre  information, 
contact  Luisa  Del  Giudice  at  the 
Italian  Oral  History  Institute  at  (310) 
474-1698. 


Project  S.E  J. 

(South  CMtral 
EvMiag  Tutorial) 


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The  Julian  "Cannonball"  Adderley  Memorial  Scholarship  Fund  honors  the 
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you're  looking  tor  a  great  job  and  a  little  extra 
cash,  call  us  first.  310-824-9941. 


Egg  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 

wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

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2600 

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Research  Subjects 


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CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  (or  the  com- 
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RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  (or 
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Appliances 


REFRIGERATOR  FOR  SALe'  Practically 
new,  med  sized  (34"tall)  Danby  Designer 
(ridge,  lots  room,  manual  Included,  paid 
$200+,  asking  $100.  310-208-2586. 


3500 

Furniture 


MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY  STEARNS  &  FOSTER  Also  twin- 
sets-$79  95,  Fulls-$99.95,  Queens-$139  95. 
Kings-$  199.95.  Queen  Pillowtops  $19995. 
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Blvd  310-477-1466 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH,  18-45,  want- 
ed for  nicotine  research  study  administered 
by  UCLA  Both  heavy  and  occasional  smok- 
ers needed  Participants  will  be  paid  up  to 
$395  (or  (our  visits.  Call  Richard  CMmsiead  at 
310-312-0565,  leave  message 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60+  w/kyphosis 
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o(  Medicine  Please  call  310-794-9055 


SUBJECTS  NEEDED  (or  blood  samples 
$20  per  visit  Culver  City,  lOmtn  to  UCLA 
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3800 

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Pets 


2  CATS  FREE  to  good  home.  Beautiful,  (un, 
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Stereos/TVs/Radios 


JVC  STEREO  SYSTEM  w/cabinet  and  2 
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ttansportation 

4600-5500 


4900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1972  MERCEDES  280  SEL  4.5L  classic  lux- 
ury sedan,  great  condition.  $3750.  310-470- 
7026. 


1984  HONDA  CIVIC.  2  door,  4  speed,  runs 
great,  good  gas  mileage,  AM/FM  cassette, 
newmutfler,  $1100  obo.  310-444-9814. 

1986  TOYOTA  CAMARY  Runs  Excellent  Au- 
tomatic, 4door.  White,  A/C,  AM/FM  Stereo 
80,000  miles  $2800  310-837-3349  or  wor1< 
310-825-4687. 

1988  TOYOTA  CELICA  GTS.  Power  sunroof. 
AC,  cruise,  autolock  alarm,  Sspeed  stick 
sound-system  new  battery.  Excellent  engine 
$2400obo  Call  Jay:310-839-7654. 

1991  NISSAN  SENTRA  XE,  4  doors,  5- 
speed  16  valves,  A/C,  stereo,  cruise  corttrol, 
$3300.  310-473-1214. 

1994  GEO  PRISM.  Original  owner.  Auto,  air, 
airbags.  Well  maintained  70,000  miles  Blue 
book  $6510,  asking  $5000  obo.  310-478- 
8400  )_  cutler  9  yahoo  com 

MOVING-  MUST  SELL 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO.  4wd, 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  condi- 
tion. Sell  for  $4200.  310^73-1214  or  310- 
993-7836 

POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Cars  as  low  as  $500 
lor  listings  1-800-319-3323  ex1.A214. 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990. 
84000mi,  good  conditksn,  power  windows, 
black,  A/C,  registration  pak)  for  one  year 
$4000.  Call  Vkienle  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerOucla.edu 

•93  NISSAN  SENTRA  XE  2door  5spd/man- 
ual,  white  A/C.  arrVIm  cassette,  crtJise  con- 
trol, good  condition,  90K.  $4400  Denise  310- 
268-3838  x48480. 


5100 

Motorcycles  for  Sale 


1981  HONDA  900  SPORT-$  1000.00  &  1998 
SUZUKI  800  INTRUDER,  showroom  condi- 
tton.  Like  new  under  4200  miles-$5500.00. 
Call  after  6pm  323-293-4009 

1999  DUCATI  Monster  900  Dark.  Low  miles, 
oins  and  kx)ks  new.  $7500.  310-701-1811. 


S200 

Parking 


GREAT  LOCATtON.  Comer  MIdvale  and 
Ophir  Lrg  parting  spot  In  subferreanian 
garage.  Offers  better  safety  and  protects 
from  the  elements.  $150/mo/obo.  310-657- 
7270 


coming  6^ 

Oct.  30 

check  your  newsstands. 


V.     ■ '., 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


Tuesday,  October  17.2000       25 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Oestinations 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


6200 

Health  Services 


MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  Massage.  $40/hr  w/studeni 
ID  Monday-Friday  10am-8pm.  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Certificates  available. 


Jack  H.  Silvers,  MD 

Board  C«nifl«d  d«nnatotogi«L 

"He  hasn't  forgotten  what  It's 
like  to  be  a  student." 

»Acne«Mole  Removal«Warts»Rashes 

•Laser  Hair  and  Tattoo  Removal* 

•Lip  Augmentation* 

•Laser  Ablation  of  Red  and  Brown  Spots* 

(310)826-2051 
www.DrSShfers.  com 

'Officm  loratad  in  Br»nfi>»nri> 


6700 

Professional  Services 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Comprehensive  Dissertation  Assistance 
Theses,  Papers,  and  Personal  Statements 

Proposals  and  Books 
International  Students  Welcome  Since  1985 
Sharon  Baar,  Ph.D.  (310)  470-6662 
www.Bear-Wfite  com 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  for  de- 
pression, anxiety,  obsessions,  post-traumat- 
ic stress, etc  Couples/Individuals.  Crime  vic- 
tims may  be  eligible  for  free  treatment.  Call 
Liz  Gould(MFC#32388)@310-578-5957  to 
scfiedule  free  consultation 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Attorneys 


LEGAL  PROTECTION 

EARN$$$.  Pre-paid  legal  plan  to  protect 
yourself.  $25/month  membersfiip  tfiroughout 
the  US  and  Canada.  SURQ33@riot- 
mailcom,  213-841-5704.  www.pplsi.com  1- 
800-654-7757. 

NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST.  Sexual  harrassment.  Discrimina- 
tion, Auto-accidents,  Slips/falls  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  Westside,  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW'86). 
www  bestlawyercom  310-277-3000. 


ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW,  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Frustrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
professional  tielp  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultant.310-826-4445.  www.winning- 
personstatement  com. 


Travel 


Council 


America's  Student  Travel  Leader  for  over  50  year 


Bad  to  school  blues? 

Then  study  this... 

Miami 229.00 

New  York ..263.00 

Mexico  City... .288.00 

Honolulu 315.00 

London 463.00 

WHAT  WE  DO  BEST 

WORLDWIDE  LOWEST  AIRFARES 

INTERNATIONAL  TRAVEL  EXPERTS 

EUROPEAN  RAIL  ISSUED  ON  THE  SPOT 

INTERNATIONAL  STUDENT  YOUTN  AND  TEACHER  I.D.  CARDS 

HOSTEL  CARDS 

BUDGET  HOTELS 

WORLDWIDE  ADVENTURE  TOURS 

WORK  ABROAD  PERMITS 

STUDY  ABROAD  PROGRAMS 

VOLUNTEER  PROGRAMS  ABROAD 

TRAVEL  GEAR  AND  GUIDEBOOKS 

TRAVEL  INSURANCE 

EXPERT  TRAVEL  AOVKB 


I -209 -UCLA 
931  Westwood  Blvd.  \r\  Westwood  Village 


PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pre-paid  legal  service  programs 
providing  quality  legal  sen/ices  to  plan  mem- 
bers. Robert  Moss(UCLAW71).:310-260- 
7650. 


64fOO 

Movers/Storage 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  |0b  too  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-toot  trucks  fully  equipped  for  large  moves. 
Call  24/7.  Available  on  sfwrt  notice.  License 
T 163844  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378  ) 

HONEST  MAN  w/14tt  truck  and  dollies, 
small  jobs,  short  notice  ok.  SF,  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  Bruins!  lOtfi  yr  310- 
285-8688 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  formatting,  tran- 
scribing. Personalized,  professional  assis- 
tance. Ace  Words,Etc.  310-820-8830. 

SERRANO'S  CLEANING  SERVICES  easi- 
ness License  Years  of  experience  Afford- 
able prices.  Offices,  apartments,  condomini- 
ums, houses.  Cleaning,  Laundry  etc  Maria 
310-836-7258  310-655-3664 


TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Union/Union.  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day  1-888-774-9994.  wwwabcpa- 
pers.com 


JERRY'S  MOVING&DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available.  Also,  pick- 
up donations  for  American  Cancer  Society 
JerryO310-391-5657 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedicated  pro- 
fessional. At  your  home  or  WLA  studio.  1st- 
lesson  tree  No  drum  set  necessary 
Neil;323-654-8226.' 


WRITER'S  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlining,  research,  and  production 
assistance  for  academic  or  professional  writ- 
ing. Experienced  writing  instructor,  Harvard 
Univeristy  MA.  Jon/310-367-5666 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


"ENGLISH  EXPERT 

DOES  WRITING  IN  ENGLISH  make  you 
crazy?  Assistance  in  basic  skills  to  major  re- 
search paper  completion.  ESL  experienced 
310-839-9933/Adam. 


BOND  TUTORING 

All  subjects  6- 12th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  will  meet  your  individu- 
al needs  310-471-7628 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  apphcatkjn  fees,  high  approval  rate,  tow 
interest  rate,  all  applicants  welcome.  Call 
toll-free:  1-866-427-2677 


6150 

Foreign  Lanqiiage 


GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professional  near  UCLA.  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effortlessly! 
www,JWGS.com.  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 


6600 

Personal  Services 


Menage  a  trois?  I  do  translations  in  German. 
English,  or  French.  Call  Julia  310-826-8917 


6700 

Professional  Services 


EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results. 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Calculus/Physics/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/English  Call 
Will  31 0-701 -8969 


FRENCH  TUTOR 

PHD  GRADUATE  tutors  Frencti  language  for 
all  levels  beginning,  advanced  and  conver- 
sational French.  Excellent  service  and  rates 
Call  Liza  310-575-3874. 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Gel  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Code  832123).  We're  on 
campus  at  Ackerman  A-level.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.org 


61  OO 

Conifjijter/lnternel 


FREE  WEBSITE!!! 

YOUR  OWN  5-pago  website  ABSOLUTELY 
FREE.  Easy,  fast,  quality  NO  banner  ads  to 
watch!  http://eengen  go.cooleblz.net 

WANTED!  Internet  savvy  programmer  Abili- 
ty to  host  web  sites  and  search  engine  place- 
ment skills.  818-873-4767  pager. 


MMKSi  cmrasArm  OAssX 

Santa  Monica  College    Business  and 
travel.  Six  Saturdays.  9am  12pm    $80 

Participation  encouraged. 
. www.smc.edu 


Class  begins  Oct  28 ' 
310-434-3400 


A  Guide  to  the  Perplexed 


universitysecrets.com 


? 


Iillp//universiiysecrels   cm 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  Services 


THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tulonng, 
term  paper  assistance,  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  We.come 
Call:310-452-2865 
www.thewriterscoach  com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  with  the  English  language— for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels  310-440-3118. 


6200 

Health  Services 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  ( ^BacesV 


..  "'^imW'  Dr.  Nader  Davani 

llCLAFAa^T^■  MEMBER  *^*«    A^  AIS V A    m#€ft^<tlll 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children 


Deliver  BriHiimt  Results 

•  Cosmetic  Porceloin 

•  Surgical  OrtrxxJonltcs 

•  Rerriovabk3 

•  Traditioi>al 

•  Invisible 

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l€xAr«tln.CA  Wn;?. 

(949) 552  -  5890 

\m*  Culwr  Dr..  M 
lr\in«  C*  9?71S 


Teeth  Whitening   $R^^^ 

upper  or  Irmrr  ,      ^^  KJ  <-/ 


ll««0  m   •«c^  nwtfh  . 


Classifieds 


***"*"—' ■  III    Wiiai 

fti«)-a»ton  of3««  iaji<B 


Displa 
206-JUbO 


/  ■'■ 


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V 


26       Tuesday,  October  17, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


WWW.MY-TUT0R.COM  Math/PhysJcs/Sta- 
tislics/English/Hebrew/ chemistry /biology/as- 
tronomy/ Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
service.  Call  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


ASSISTANT  to  Educational  therapist  Must 
be  strong  in  Math.  Minimum  15hrs/wk 
$10/hr.  ASAP.  Must  have  Education  Back- 
ground. 323-653-6965. 

DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  12&16-yr- 
oW  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  Insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/wk.  $10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

GERMAN  NATIVE 

To  tutor  young  tx)y  in  German  once/wk  (pre- 
lerably  male).  Venice.  310-392-4974. 

MATH.  SPANISH.  FRENCH,  l_ATIN,  CHEM- 
ISTRY  tutors  wanted.  Must  have  own  car. 
Articulate,  no  experience  required.  SM,  BH. 
CC.  $15/hr.  310-679-2133. 

Need  Music  Theory  tutor.  2hrs/wk.  On 
Campus.  $10/hr.  310-575-0053 


P/T  OR  CAREER 
OPPORTUNITY! 

Private  tutors/instnjctors  tor  K-12  and  Edu- 
cational Consultants  tor  college  admissk>ns 
services.  Seekir)g  Urxlergraduates-PhD's. 
Experience  preferred,  strong  communk:a- 
tions  skills  required.  Future  Youth  lnc./Mind- 
Life  Consulting  Group.  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homework  assist  lor  two  boys,  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  in  laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hours/week,  flexible  schedule  Some  driving. 
Please  call  evenings:310-401-0113  or  day- 
time:310-392-1405. 

TUTOR  WANTED  tor  4th  grade  boy  Bilin- 
gual (French-English)  American  preferred. 
3times/wk  for  2  hours.  Must  have  own  car. 
Bel-air.  310-471-0032  or  dbtwenty4sev- 
en9aol.com 

TUTOR/DRIVER  for  11  6year  girt.  Wed  & 
Thurs,  3:30-5:30pm  $10/hr.  Near  6year.  Call 
Ian  310-477-7541 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertatkxis.  transcription,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Monica,  310-828-6939  Hollywood.  323-466- 
2888 


(TST 


— employment 

7400-8300 


7^00 

Business  Opportimitios 


A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  Its  possi- 
ble Invest  $35.  Refundable.  No  Risk. 
http7/zibgib.cofiVphanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stephanie. 

BURNED  OUT? 

Tired  of  misleading  ads?  I'm  tired  of  clueless 
people.  Want  to  make  $5000-$8000/nx)? 
Beverly  Hills  office  exptoding.  Call  me:  310- 
268-1515. 

COLLEGE  ACHIEVERS 

Ground  tkxw  company.  Soutt>em  California 
market  exploding.  Want  to  make  $5- 
8K/month7  ru  leach  you  how.  FT/PT.  CaO 
310-360-6994  9am-1pm. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


BREAK  INTO 
HOLLYWOOD!!! 

After  a  decade  of  reaearch-ifs  here:  The 
Industry  Secrets  VMeo'  Anyor>e  can  do 
this  simple,  ten-step  plan.  Get  the  inside 
track  to  achieving  your  acting  dreams 
nowl  Send  $24  95  (check  or  morwy  or- 
der) to:  Break  Into  Hollywood  PO  Box  833 
Sania  Monica.  CA  90406  of  caH:  310- 
89»O0e2 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


Classifieds 

825-2221 


BePartofXicor's 
Transformation 

Join  the  enthusiastic  team  that  is 

transforming  Xicor  into  a  fabless, 

analog/mixed  signal  supplier 

of  semiconductors! 

r's  managetnent  team  has  set  a  strategic  course  of  direaiott  focusing  on 
new  proprietary  products  for  high  growth  marltets  in  the  analog  and  mixed- 
signal  arenas.  This  transfomnation  includes  completing  the  transition  to  out- 
sourced nunufacturing.  We  are  looking  for  bright,  enthusiastic  team  players 
to  join  us. 

Xicor  pioneered  advanced,  electrically  programmable  mixed  signal  products 
that  power  today's  advanced  electronic  sytems.  The  cell  phone  you  use,  the 
computer  on  your  desktop,  your  car  all  contain  products  likely  made  by  Xicor. 

With  analog  and  mixed  signal  technologies  taking  center  stage  in  Xicor's 
rategy  for  the  new  millennium,  we  need  talented  professionals  as  we 
and  our  horizons  and  cultivate  new  market  potential.  G)me  join  our  team 
help  us  make  this  transformation. 

Please  join  us  for  an  Information  Session, 

10/25, 6-8  pm  at  the  Career  Center. 

We  will  be  interviewing  on  campus, 

1 1/1 3  at  the  Career  Center. 


XICOR 


Xicor,  Inc. 
1511  Buckeye  Drive 
Milpitas,CA  95035 


Xicor  offers  competitive 
benefits  packages.  Visit  o 
www.xicor.com  for  info 
job  opportunities. 

Xicor  is  proud  to  be  an  r' 
and  aftirnftative  action  e. 


Harbor-UCLA  medical  Center.  Department  of  Ortttopaedic  Surgery 
Research  Coordinator  Job  Description 


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BARTENDERS 


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GET  AN  'A*  on  your  heatm  tettttl  Detoxity 
your  system  fast  or  double  your  $$  backlll 
Call  toll  free  877-696-4541  extUClOO 
www.faroutprDtnotloru.cofn 

STOCK  BROKER.  Licenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventu/a  Blvd.  Suite 
216.  Woodtand  HNto.  CA  Instnictor  David 
Shu  (Ittaslar  Dagrae,  Harvard  Univeriity)^. 
818-703-6669 


THERAPEUTIC  AID  lor  autMic  chHdran. 
P/T.F/T  (Hexibie).  $12-1  Vhr.  BS/BA  Ptyctnl- 
ogy  prelerred.  ExperlerKe  w/DT,  bahavtor 
modification  Contact  818-788-2388,  fax  re- 
SUiTie  818-788-3875. 

WANTED!  Internet  Sawy  Programfnar.  AbH- 
ity  to  host  wet)  sites  arnl  search  engine 
placement  sidHs.  818-673-4767  pagac 


SAFETY  INSPECTOR 


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7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


ATHLETIC.  Energetic,  Inlelligenl  guy  to  play 
sports  and  help  out  with  homework  for  l(ids 
6.8.  As  many/little  hours  as  wanted,  after 
school  and  on  weekends.  Must  know  how  to 
drive  and  swim.  Call  Maureen  310-440- 
0990. 

BENEDICT  CANYON-10  y.o.  girl  attending 
Warner  Ave  After  School  Care.  From  1- 
6:30pm.  M-F  $350/wk.  Must  have  car  and 
good  driving  records.  310-858-7060. 

CHILCARE/DRIVER.  Monn^ues.  3-7:30pm. 
5  year-oW-boy  pick-up  from  school  to  activi- 
ties and  home,  supervise  HW  and  piay.  Care 
for  2  year-oW  brottier  for  1  hr.  Good  driver. 
References.  Good  pay.  Westwood.  310-475- 
1953. 

CHILD  CARE  Wanted  Toes  3-8.  Thurs  3-6 
AND/OR  Sat  12-9  in  Santa  Monk:a. 
Someone  to  help  fuH  time  Mom  w/  kkte  ages 
4,6,10.  Must  have  experier>ce.  (kKxl  pay. 
Call  Doug  310-888-0163.  Fax  310-451- 
6050. 

DRIVE  CHILD  from  school  in  Pkx)/Robert- 
son  area  to  home  in  Padfk;  Palisades  in  af- 
ternoons. Must  have  car  arxj  insurance.  310- 
454-7525'. 

FUN/CARING  BABYSHTER  NEEDED  for 
pkMng  up  &  caring  lor  9yr  okl  giri.  Must 
f>ave  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-5days/wk. 
aftemoons-6pm.  Gayte  310-450-4109  (even- 
ings). 

NANNY/MOTHER'S 
HELPER 

for  6yr-okl  boy  and  toddler.  Flexible  hours. 
Some  travel  w/family,  especially  weeker>ds. 
Must  be  irvsured/IJcensed  driver.  Live-in  pos- 
sible. References  a  must.  310-446-9970. 

P/T  DRIVER  CHILD- 
CARE  NEEDED 

Daughter  needs  drop-off  {6;45-8am)  &  pick- 
up+errands  (3-7pm)  M-W  only.  Must  have 
car.  insurance&valkj  license.  Brentwood. 
Please  call  Sarah  310-385-6766. 

P/T  NANNY 

for  7  yr-oW  girl.  Pacifk:  Palisades  2-6:30pm, 
M-F.  Must  have  car.  Errands,  light  house- 
keeping, chiW  pk;k-up.  $10/hr.  310-230- 
3877. 

PACIFIC  PALISADES  Age  9  Good  Driver. 
M-F  2:30-6pm.  $10/hr.  Live  out.  Non-smoker. 
References  Required.  CaH:  213-243-4025 
Busir>ess  hours. 

PART  TIME  NANNY  NEEDED  lor  10  yr/okJ 
giri.  Need  help  6:45-6:30AM  MTW,  2-7:30pm 
MT.  Must  have  car,  experlerK»  with  ctHMren 
and  help  with  errands.  310-441-9766. 

PART-TIME  BABYSITTER  Responsible, 
experienced,  chikj  devek>pment  preferred. 
Energetk:,  for  2-year-okj  and  5-year-old. 
Ovwi  car.  310-273-4900. 

PT  BABYSITTER  Desperately  wanted  lor 
evenings^¥eefcends.  Must  be  responsible, 
have  common  senaa,  references  and  a  car. 
Cal  310-838-8065  or  buzheeguriOaol.com 

SITTER.  Pn  twtoe  a  week  Bright,  responsi- 
ble student  to  watch  infant.  (Prefer  education 
ma)or.  prevkxjs  experience  and  own  trans- 
portation). Terri  310-910-3405. 

STUDENT  NEEDED 

3-4  days,  4-7pm.  Must  have  own  car.  Walk- 
ing dMance  to  UCLA.  $8/hr.  Drive  chikJren. 
help  w/homewoilL  Nor>-«moker  310-470- 
0021. 

WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHHJX:ARE  For  12-year-oW  giri,  SM.  M-F. 
3:30-7W>.  Car  wNh  insurance.  References 
required.  $9-»Vhour.  Night:31 0-828-6206. 
Dayrei  8-954-3276. 

WANTED:  ReaponMHe  individual  naaded  to 
help  altar  school  with  2  small  chHdran. 
Moridiys  4-8pm  and  some  wvakonds.  Must 
Dftv*.  Ralwancea.  CaM  310-446-1436. 


7800 

Help  Wiintcd 


$$GREAT  PAY$$ 

$1Q/HOUR?  Students  with  good  Math&Eng- 
HshaMaanaMM  lor  PT-FT o«fice poMona. 
n«Ma  achadule  but  must  ba  avaauM  all 
day  Tuaaday  and  Thursday  unm  Oaconibar. 
Fax  raaume:8l6-76e-46»4  or  cat:818-708- 
4600  ask  lor  Uaa. 

$1,000'S  WEEKLY!! 

STUFF  ENVELOPES  at  home  tor  $200 
each  plua  bonuaaa.  frx,  P/T.  Make  $800^^ 
waeMy  giMraniMdl  Free  euppWai.  For  da- 
tala  aand  ona  stwnp  to:  N-33,  pmb  S62. 
12M1  WNaNra  Blvd..  Loa  Angalea.  CA 
900CS. 


7600 

Cfiild  Care  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCH(X)L  run  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards  Open  7:30-5:30.Close  to  UCLA. 
310-473-0772. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


$15-$2a«R  BRIGHT.  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academk: 
Subjects.  Transportation  required.  We  will 
train.  Flexible  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  lest  scores  (SAT,  GRE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educatk>nal  Sen/tees,  Attn:Bar- 
ry,  9911  W.  Ptoo  Blvd,  Sta1025,  LA,  CA" 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424  Posittons  avail- 
able throughout  LA  and  the  Valley. 

$1500  weekly  potential  mailir>g  our  circplars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  informatk)n 
packet.  Call  202-466-1639. 

$8  to  $15  per  hour 

Work  in  Westwood  for  an  upscale  singles 
organization.  Women  excel.  Telemariteting. 
Recruit  new  members  Weekly  pay  Call  after 
3PM  Sun-Thurs.  Keith;31 0-279-3300. 

•DANCE  HOSTESS* 

EXCELLENT  TIPS  +  SALARY  Flexible 
schedule  P/T-F/T.  LA  Downtown  nightclub. 
No  ak:ohol/no  nudity.  18years+.  Call  nowIM 
213-620-9572. 


•ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  Valley,  Holywood.  or  Santa  Monk» 
office  needs  energetk:  people.  Bortusesl 
310-395-7368 


Seeking  bright,  active  person 

with  college  degree  to  assist 

with  2  children  ages  6  &  8, 

part  time,  for  school  related 

tutoring,  computer 

assistance,  and  extra 

curricular  activities.  Excellent 

personal  references  required. 

Resumes  to:  Rose  Cooper 
510  N.  Robertson  Blvd. 
Los  Ang«)e3,CA  90048 


*F/T  GENERAL  OFFICE* 

WESTWOOD  ENTERTAINMENT  LAW 
FIRM  SEEKS  F/T  OFFICE  CLERK  TO  DO 
COPYING,  FAXING,  AND  MAIL  PROCESS- 
ING. MUST  HAVE  CLERICAL  OFFICE  EX- 
PERIENCE. SALARY  DOE-fBENEFITS. 
FAX  RESUME  TO  E.  KRAFT:  310-441-8010. 

•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beats  all  jobs.  Start 
immediately  Great  pay  Fun/Easy  fto  crazy 
fees  Program  for  free  medcal  Call-24/hrs 
323-850-4417. 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  fieM  sales,  flexible  hours  *  com- 
mission and  tx)nus!  AmbitkMJS  saleaparson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  support  Olones- 
4all.com  Attn:Bek1  Sales. 


ACCOUNTING  CLERK  Needed.  $12- 
1S/DOE.  Must  have  taken  accounting  daas- 
es.  Excel  and  strong  communk»tk)n  sMto. 
Fax  rasuma  attn:Melody  323-965-3194. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours.  $10-13/hr.  Tennis  a  plusi 
We  are  nattonal  ftower  shippers.  310- 
230-0611  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANTWl  train.  In 
med«al  ollfce  3O-40hrs/M-F/9:00-6:O0pm. 
Computer  knowledge  mandatory.  Great  job 
for  Business/Pra-M0d/Pub«c-Heatth  majors. 
15-fnin  to  UCLA.  310-476-4205. 

AFTERSCHOOL  homework  supen/laor/  be- 
bysmer  for  3rd-grB<)«  boy.  Must  be  dteci- 
plined  to  teach  good  HW  habits.  Elementa- 
ry Ed  major  a  plus  Need  car.  Tues-Fri  2:30- 
6:00pm.  $8.00-$10.00mr.  CaH  310-390O62 
evenings,  323-468-5273  days,  ha- 
kat2hbcOyahoo.com. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necMaary. 
Host  musK/lalk-shows  for  our  radio  slatkxis. 
PfT.  $l0-15/hf.  $200■^per/show.  plus  lantas- 
Uc  benefits.  323-468-0080.  24-hours. 


ASSISTANT  P/T  lor  West  coast  olftee  of  na- 
ttonal  company.  Excellent  opportunity.  Flexi- 
ble P/T  hours.  Please  call  Mona  Andrews, 
310-278-3349. 


AUDIO  VISUAL 
OPERATORS  WANTED 

for  dsHveiy  and  oparstions.  IhrDugmut  cam- 
pus. Compuisr  and  customer  skMs  pre- 
fsrrsd.  AV  ai^perlsnoa  not  required.  Open 
schsduls  nssJsd,  Must  be  able  k>  mt  35 
pounds.  TWO  posMons  «v««aMs:  Operator. 
$890[/hf.  Technician  $11.40^.  CaH  Juan 
310-206-8002 


/\U\^'l   RTISE 


»^e- 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


7800 

Help  WnuttMl 


BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Unon.  Excellent  pay,  hours  &  environment 
Some  teller  expenence  preferred.  Apolv  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd..  LA,  90025  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
wwwucuorg/}ohs.htm 


CAMPUS  EVENT 
JOBS 

Eam  a  Bonus  up  to  $500  if  you  can  commit 
to  the  Men's  Basketball  Season  and  other 
Special  Eventslll  Limited  number  of  posi- 
tions available  for  UCLA  students  only  For 
more  information  call  Sean,  310-  206-0736. 

CARING  INDIVIDUALS  NEEDED  TO  sup- 
port  UCLA  student  lABA,  an  internationally 
respected  agency,  is  seeking  Community 
Support  Companions  and  Overnight  Com- 
panions to  assist  a  college  student  with 
physwal  challenges.  Assistance  needed  in 
his  dorm,classes,and  the  community  of 
Westwood.  lABA  provkJes  paid  training  and 
advancement  opportunities.  Full  and  part 
Bme  shifts  available,  including  night  hours. 
Full  time  benefits  include  medical/dental  cov- 
erage, 401 K  plan  and  paid  time  off.  Competi- 
tive wages+supplemental  tenure  pay.  Relat- 
ed experience  or  BA  in  Psychology  pre- 
lerred. Email  your  resume  to  rokel- 
ly©iaba.com  or  call  toll  free-877-924-2220. 
For  more  information  visit  lABA  at 
www.iaba.com 


7800 

Help  Wiintod 


COMPUTER  and  LAN  coordinator  tor  UCLA 
dept.  P/T.  Windows  NT  exchange  sen/er.  Of- 
fice software  experience  required,  10- 
20hrs/wk,  $16-20/hr.  Respond  to  jobs©sum- 
mer.ucla.edu 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

F/T.  M-F  9-5.  Century  City  kwation.  Seeking 
self-motivated,  energetic  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate, 
bilingual,  college  degree  pref.  Fax  resume 
310-553-3996. 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE,  WEB  PROGRAM- 
MER NEEDED-  cash  weekly  plus  bonuses, 
2  blocks  from  campus.  One  job,  internet 
knowledge  preferred.  310-282-1199. 
jobs  O  fa8hK>n4  less .  com 

DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BAUOON  CELEBRATION  is  hiring  van  driv- 
ers. Looking  for  energetic,  unstoppable, 
positive  crew  immediately.  Flexible  hours, 
busy  weekends.  Apply  in  person  M-Sal  till 
6pm.  Apply  at  937  Westwood.  310-208-1180. 

DRIVER  NEEDED.  3hours  Tuesday,  Wed- 
nesday, Thursday.  One  Stop  Westwood  to 
Santa  Monka.  $15/hr.  310-476-8401. 


7800 

Help  Wiintecl 


INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Service  Representative.  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  verbal  skills  required  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1 768-Jspatterson  O  ij- 
girK.com. 


INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Recepttonist.  Entry  level  position.  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrs/wk  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
fen^ed.  Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son  323-653-1768.  jspatterson  Oijginc.com. 

INTERNET  CO  seeks 
P/T  Receptionist 

lor  Santa  Monica  office.  $8/hr,  great  oppor- 
tunity and  kx»tk)n!  Send  resume  to  isa- 
belle©webeasy.com  or  fax  310-576-2011 
Attn:  Isabelle 


LAW  FIRM  NEEDS  P/T  employee  from 
2003-2004  for  a  clerical  position.  Mail/fax  re- 
sume to  Rtek  Edwards,  Inc.  Attn:  Margie 
1925  Century  Park  East  Los  Angeles,  CA 
90067.  Fax  310-286-9501 


CARING  INDIVIDUALS  URGENTLY  needed 
in  Santa  Monica  &  West  LA.  lABA,  a  leader 
in  the  field  on  non-aversice  behavior  manag- 
ment  is  seeking  Emptoyment  Specialists  to 
assist  adults  devetopmentally  challenged  in 
an  employment  setting  and  in  the  communi- 
ty. lABA  provkles  paid  training  and  advance- 
ment opportunities.  WOri<  from  8:30am  to 
2:30pm  +  in  sennce  hours.  M-F,37.5hrs/wk. 
Eligible  lor  medkal/dental,  401 K  and  pakl 
time  off.  Competitive  wages+supplemental 
terwre  pay.  Related  experience  or  BA  In  Psy- 
chotogy  preferred.  Email  your  resume  to  ro- 
kellyOiaba.com  or  call  toll  free  877-924- 
2220.  For  more  info  visit  lABA  at 
wwwiaba.com 


DRIVER  NEEDED  Pk:k-up  kids  at  West- 
wood  Secondary  School,  back  to  Hollywood. 
Flexible  schedule,  T-W-Th  5-8pm.  Call  323- 
436-0774,  evenings  only. 

DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED  Full- 
time  or  part-time.  Westwood  driving  and  traf- 
fk:  school.  Call  for  information.  310-824- 
4444. 


LAW  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  Beveriy  Hills.  P/T 
(Tues-Thurs,  1-4pm).  File  Cleri(/Office  Sup- 
port. Need:  legal  filing  skills,  accuracy/detail 
orientatton,  and  computer  literate.  Prior  law 
firm  experience  preferred.  Compensation 
based  on  experience  Fax  resume  and  refer- 
ences to  310-205-6081 


DUNDEAL.NET  $15/hr.  P/T,F/T  now  seeking 
college  students  to  take  sun/eys  on  the  inter- 
net! Get  paid  for  your  opink>nl  Wort«  from  any 
computer.  Sign  up  today  at:  www.dun- 
deal.net. 

EARN  TRAVEL  MONEY 

NEED  TO  EARN  SOME  QUICK  CASH?  tfier- 
ing  needed  immediately  on  campus  call 
jason  at  858-630-7976. 


LAW  OFFICE  ENVIRONMENT  Excellent 
opportunity.  Clert(  positions  available  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Minimum  20hrs/wk,  $7/hr.  Fax  re- 
sume and  proposed  available  hours  to  Hu- 
man Resources  Dept  310-274-2798  or  Mail 
to:  Lurie,  Zepeda,  Schmalz  &  Hogan  9107 
Wilshire  Blvd.,  Suite  800,  Beveriy  Hills  CA 
90210. 


LIBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties,  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  can  Antigone  Kutay 
310-825-1084. 


EARN  WHAT  YOURE  WORTH!  Success 
driven  indivWuals  wanted  for  expanding 
gtobal  business.  Serious  inquiries  onlyl  (no 
exp.  nee.)  310-246-1522. 


CASHIER,  We  are  a  Chinese  Sealood  res- 
taurant. Speak  English,  Mandarin  or  Can- 
tonese. Full-time  or  part-time.  Experience 
prafenred.  626-641-8978. 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Campus  Comer. 
We  wort<  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
managenwnt  training  opportunity.  Call:310- 
206-8133. 


EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  sales.  Make  up  to 
$150/day.  Part  or  full-time  woric.  CalLDavkl 
310-441-0394. 


LIFEGUARDS  WANTED 

NOW  HIRING  Certified  lifeguards.  Culver- 
Palms  YMCA.  Call  Meredith  310-390- 
3604x7525. 


EXPERIENCED  DRIVER  NEEDED  FOR 
PICKUP  of  teenager  from  UNI  High  to  Holly- 
wood hills,  Nk:kels  Canyon.  3pm,  5days/wk 
323-876-6567. 


No  Experience  Necessary 
•>««k  «nnen.  dddrni,  dl  «a«  liK. 

fitrperuinal  huenieiv  call  mm 

310.659.7000 


F/T  or  P/T.  ChiWren's  retail  store  Hours:  sat 
required.  $8-10/hr  DOE.  On  Santa  Monka 
Blvd  in  Westwood.  310-234-9554. 


CLERICAUCUSTOMER 
SERVICE 

M-F,  F/T  pemianent  Good  phone  and  Eng- 
lish skills,  detail-oriented,  reliable.  WLA.  $9- 
$1Q^r.  310-826-3759ext229. 

CLERK.  P/T,  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  pertectwnist  with  typing 
skills  for  general  offk»  duties  Must  absolute- 
ly be  detail -oriented  $ll/hour  to  start  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2437. 

CLINICAL  ~ 

LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
I  SUPERVISOR 

h  FT  positnn  imntedlately  available  for  a  li- 

f  osnsed  lat>oratory  scientist  in  a  private  dini- 

*i  cal  laboratory  in  Santa  Monica.  Lab  provkJes 

I  endocrine,  androtogy,  serology  and  immu- 

notogy  testing.    Incumbent  required  to  wort< 

in  wssksnd  rotatkNis.  Salary  commensurate 

with  quaNHcatkyis  and  enpattenco    Submit 

„    appHcaUons  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 

,     Teohnotogy  Laboratories,  1245  I6m  Street, 

Suite   105.  Santa  Monka.  CA  90404  (Tel 

310-829-0102). 

COFFEE  BAR  ATTENDANT,  the  best  stud- 
ent  job.  You  must  be  responsible,  reliable, 
experience  a  plus.  Duttons  11975  San  Vi- 
cente. 


FIVE  ATTORNEY  CENTURY  CITY  LAW 
FIRM  seeks  P/T  IHe  deri*.  Flex  hours  b/t  9- 
5pm.  M-F.  Computer  knowledge  a  plus.  Fax 
resume  to  Meg  310-277-0035. 

FLORIST  SEEKING 

P/T  sales,  phone  assistant.  Simple  typ- 
ing/administratk)n  skills  helpful.  Flexible 
hours/fun  environment.  Call  Monca  323- 
852-0848. 


FRATERNITIES,  SORORITIES,  CLUBS 
STUDENT  GROUPS.  Eam  $1000-2000  thi^ 
quarter  with  the  easy  Campusfundraiser.com 
three  hour  lundraising  event.  No  sales  re- 
quired. Fundraising  dates  are  IHIing  qutekly. 
so  call  today!  Contact  Campusfundrais- 
er.com  at  (888)923-3238  Of  visit  w*wv.cam- 
pusfundrasier.com 


M.  FREDRIC 

Fashton  fonward  company  kxjking  for  ener- 
getic people  to  fill  sales  and  management 
positions.  Call  Tory  818-597-0212  ext  114. 

MATCHMAKER 

For  dating  sen^ice.  Must  have  great  people 
skills,  organized,  computer  literate,  secretari- 
al experience.  P/T  evenings.  310-914-3444, 
leave  message. 

MEDICAL  BILLING  SUPERVISOR  WANT- 
ED by  dynamk:,  DME  &  Rehab  dealer.  Ex- 
pertise with  Medteare,  MediCal  &  Insurance 
required.  Experience  with  Team  DME  Soft- 
ware a  big  plus.  Full-time  positton.  Houriy 
compensation  commensurate  with  experi- 
ence. Fax  resume  to  310-575-1505. 


MEDICAL  FRONT  OFRCE  positron  for  busy 
Beveriy  Hills  dermatotogy  practk:e.  \^riety  of 
duties.  P/T  morning  hours  only.  References 
required.  Call  Diane:  310-273-0467. 

MEDICAL  SPECIALTY  COMPANY  is  tooking 
for  a  self-motivated  indivWual  to  assun>e  a 
part  time  position  as  a  courier.  This  oppor- 
tunity provkJes  training  and  access  to  the 
medical  sales  industry,  directly  in  the  hospi- 
tal O/R  Must  have  good  communicatwn  and 
customer  skills.  Resume:  tipitacomaOsprint- 
mail.com.  Fax:  253-572-7490. 


FRONT  DESK  Perfect  P/T  positton!  Short 
shifts,  some  nights&weekends  in  small  exer- 
cise studto  Must  be  friendly,  outgoing,  com- 
puter literate  and  have  dynamk:  personality 
10-15hr8/wk.  Kim  310-393-6399. 

GENERAL  OFFICE  WORK  and  errands 
Santa  Monica  company.  Need  car.  Non- 
smoker.  Fax  resume  to  310-845-9691. 


GEOGRAPHY 

Flood  certifteation  company  near  LAX 
has  immediate  openings  for  map  re- 
searchers. Part-time  and  Full-time.  Must 
be  map  proficient,  detail-oriented,  and 
possess  bask:  computer  skills.  Geogra- 
phy background  is  preferred  Will  train. 
Iniarssted  candkJates  fax  resume:  310- 
348-9022  anen:  Productton  Department. 


MEDICAL 

UPSCALE  OPTOMETRIC  PRACTICE  seeks 
f/t-pt  experienced,  high-energy,  arttoulafe 
individuals.  Front-otffce/back-ofNce.  Please 
leave  message:310-4l8-2020  And  fax 
rosumo:310-271 -3959. 

MEN  AGES  18-24  for  nude  modeling  for 
magazines  and  fine  art.  Call  310-289-8941 
days. 


COMMUNICATIONS/MARKETING  STUD- 
ENT needed  to  mart<et  and  promote  an  up- 
scale opiometric  practtee.  Leave  message  at 
310-418-2020  and  lax  resume  to  310-271- 
3959. 


COMMUNITY  SERVICE 
OFFICERS 

Do  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8  16  to 
$l0.46/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/u 
acadsmte  years  rsmainlno  with  vaMd  driver's 
Mcense.  Web:  www.ucpd udaedu/ucpd/cso. 
EmaH:  csoOucpd  ucia  edu  Phone  310- 
825-2148 


tiz.J   ^^^ 


GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  clube  In 
WLA.  Conversatton  only  No  afcohol  Flexl- 
bie  hours.  Eam  top  $$$.  323-441-0985 

GUITARIST  WANTED 

ROCK^^EGGAE  GUITARIST  NEEDED  lor 
consiructton  of  new  hip-hop  band.  Must  have 
the  skills.  Call  Eric  310-274-4663. 


HOMEWORK  SUPERVISORH-UTOR  lor 
10th  grader  taking  Spanish  and  Algebra  2- 
hours  per  evening  M-F.  $9/hf  310-476-4205 


MESSENGER 

STRONG  BRUIN  SUPPORTERiwell  estab- 
lished Westwood  law  firm  seeks  2-part-time 
messengers(MWF  or  TR,  9:30-630)  to  wori< 
in  our  offk;e  servtees  department.  Must  have 
reliable  car.  insuranceigood  driving  record. 
Addltkjnal  duties  ir>clude  mail,  photocopying, 
faxing,  switchboard,  etc  Prefer  Bruin  stud- 
ents who  are  also  responsible&detail-orient- 
ed  Please  call  Robin  Barnes  310-478-2541. 

MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  driveAwork  w/2  funAglfted  kkJs  ages  5A7. 
Perfect  schedule  for  student.  Must  have  car. 
P/T  permanent.  Excellent  salary.  Judy:310- 
551-1145 

NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  Mostly 
mns  errands,  some  light  housework  and 
cooking  good  pay.  near  UCLA.  4-5 
hours/day.  310-788-4727. 

OFFICE  MANAQER/ASSISTANT2CE0. 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company-West- 
wood.  10am-2pm/Full-time,  flexible  hours. 
Need: excellent  telephone  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admin/donip  sfcMs.  science  interest  pre- 
lerred Benefits/advancement  FaxRes2Mar- 
ina:  310-475-1533 


Tuesday,  October  17,2000       27 


Quality 
Health  Care 
youVe  already 
paid  for  .  .  . 

Yes,  OS  a  registered  UCLA  student  you  have 
paid  for  the  use  of  the  Arthur  Ashe   Student 
Health  and  Wellness  Center,  where  most  ser- 
vices are  FREE.  So,  visit  our  Web  site  for  more 
information,  request  on  appointment  or  ask  a 
health  related  question  - 

http://wwv/.saonet. ucla.edu/health. htm  - 
or  call  825-4073 

ucIa  Ashe  Center 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PUZZI F 


ACROSS 

1  Explorers'  needs 
5  Adam's  son 
9  Reputatk>n 
13  Old  cattle  town 

15  Clothier  Strauss 

16  Singer  Billy — 

1 7  Star  in  Orion 

18  Tree  part 

19  Exam  type 

20  Society-column 
word 

21  Religious  image 
23  Kind  of  soup 

25  Cat's  sound 

26  Weekend 
follower 

27  Martha's 
Vineyard  and 
Nantucket 

30  Shipboard 
direction 

31  Bankrupts 

32  Some  glasses 

37  As  well 

38  Gratings 

40  "I  smell  — " 

41  Mined 

43  Vowel  mark 

44  Stop 

45  Jetsam's  partner 
47  Cake  toppings 

50  Rowboat  needs 

51  Took  big  steps 

52  Walked 

53  Collection 

56  Tight 

57  Paper  amount 
59  Summon  up 

61  "M*A*S*H"  actor 

62  Ancient  musical 
instrument 

63  Goes  by  bus 

64  Some  breads 

65  2000,  tor  one 

66  Ungentlemanly 
Onw 

DOWN 

1  Poet's  new  day 

2  Jacques' 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


□SBDS    CnSDOB    DQia 


IGiAIL  E  N  Al 


^_„  I  SmSD  CQHH 
SBDSSSiSBB  SQQSIi 
SSa  DODBB  QDDSS 
BOB    EltaaBS    SQBDQ 


girlfriend 

Beep 

-—  sells 

seastiells" 

Permits 

"How've  ya  — ?" 

One  of  ttie 

Gabors 

Canaveral 


occasions 
9  Norwegian  bay 

10  Important  artery 

11  Dry  and 
crumbly 

12  Fashion 
magazine 

14  Sigourney 

Weaver  movie 
22  —  liver  oil 

24  "Do  —  others' 

25  Estate 

26  Servant 

27  Kuwait 
neightxjr 

28  Captain  Kirk's 
navigator 

29  Kudrow  or 
Hart  man 


32  Participate  in 
an  auction 

33  Shoppers' 
needs 

34  War  deity 

35  Volcanic  flow 

36  Flower  stalk 

38  Cautiously 

39  Cerise  and 
scarlet 

42  Split 

43  Frontier 

45  Previous 

46  —  -tzu 

47  Rome's  place 

48  Like  some  oil 

49  Small 
quantities 

51  Leading 
lady 

52  GWTW  home 

53  Kind  of  cracker 

54  —  out: 
stretched 

55  Hardy  lass 
58  Potato  bud 
60  Singer 

Damone 


Display 


28       Jnejday,  October  17,2000 


J- 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


inffn 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Concessions  has  great  pan-lime  )obs 
working  at  Athletic  events.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive bonus  program  (or  those  who  can  com- 
mit to  work  the  Men's  Basketball  Season. 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  set  every  week 
CalUIO-206-0736 


7800 

Help  Wiuilod 


RETAIL  SPORTS/RUNNING  Store  will  train 
person  who  likes  running  and  talking  to  peo- 
ple Near  beach,  in  MDR.  $8-9/hour,  PT.  310- 
827-3035. 


P/T  ASSISTANT 

Private  home  office,  data  entry,  Mac/Quick- 
en, Accuracy  important.  Good  English.  Own 
transportation.  Flexible  schedule  Weekdays 
only.  8-12hrs/wk.  310-394-2933. 

P/T  CLERK 

Santa  Monica  law  firm  seeks  a  P/T  General 
Office  aerk.  Flexible  hours,  but  mornings 
preferred.  $7-l0/hr  DOE.  Please  call  Ida 
310-393-1486. 

P/T  LAW  OFFICE  ASS'T 

Word  Processor/Secretarial  for  Westwood 
law  office.  PC  and  Internet  adept. 
Compensation  depends  on  skills.  Flexible 
hours.  Fax  resume  310-443-4223. 

P/T  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  Must  type  50 
wpm  $7-10/hr  Fax  resume  323-655-7754. 

P/T  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  100  Medical  Plaza  Dermatology  prac- 
tice. Hours  can  vary  w/classes.  F/T  during 
summer.  $8/hr  Plus  free  pari<ing.  Assist 
manager,  computer  skills  necessary.  Basic 
math  skills  needed.  Undergrad  only  Fax 
resume  after  6:30pm.  310-206-4010. 

P/T  OR  F/T  SERVER 

AND  ANSWERING  phones  for  diner  in  Bev- 
eriy  Hills  Will  train.  Great  tips!  Call  Roni:3l0- 
772-0044  from  8am-5pm. 

P/r  RECEPTIONIST 
WANTED 

Yellow  Balloon  HairSalon.  Must  be  hon- 
est/child-friendly Hours:  aweekdays  1- 
5  30pm.  Saturdays  9-5pm.  Days  and  times 
negotiable.  $8/hr  Contact  Natalie:310-475- 
1241.  Fax  resume  323-939-4339. 


SALES  CLERK 

$7/hr  No  expenence  necessary.  Cashiering, 
worthing  with  patients.  UCLA  Hospital.  2e- 
venings,  3-7:30PM  11;3O-6:00PM.  310-825- 
6069 


SALES  Le  Beach  Club  Tanning  Resorts. 
Happy,  friendly  people.  $12-2Whr.  Call  bet- 
ween 3- 10pm.  310-820-2710  ask  (or  Yas- 
mine. 


SITE  ACQUISITIONS  CONSULTANT 
Full/part  time.  Self-starter,  creative,  intelli- 
gent. Acquire  land  sites  for  cellular  Salary 
commensurate  w/expertence.  Fax  resume 
310-737-4228. 


STOCK  CLERK  in  chiWren's  bookstore  20- 
30hrs/week,  $7/hr,  WLA  310-559-2665. 


TEACHER'S  ASSIS- 
TANT 

IMMEDIATE  POSITION.  Santa  Monka  pre- 
school. 20hrs/wk,  Mon-Thurs  afternoon.  Ear- 
ly childhood  development  classes  &  some 
experience  wort<ing  w/young  children  re- 
quired. 310-394-0463. 


8000 

Internships 


P/R  INTERNSHIP 

SEVERAL  POSITIONS  are  now  available 
with  a  major  entertainment  firm  in  public  re- 
latkjns.  No  pay  but  complete  education  in 
P/R.  Flexible  hours.  GoWen  opportunity  to 
learn  the  ropes.  C8ll  us  immediately  at  323- 
692-9999  Ex.13.  Ask  for  Rebecca. 


81 OO 

Personal  Assistance 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  for  family  (of  inter- 
est to  young  filmmakers).  15-20hrs/wk- 
$10/hr  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues.  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  Filing/research. 
Flexible  schedule/resourcetulM  Contact:  310- 
459-0815.  Good  references  required.  Non- 
Smoker  Must  have  own  car&insurance. 


8200 

Temporary  Employment 


P/T  CLERICAL 
ASSISTANCE 

Entertainment  company  located  in  West- 
wood  seeks  clerical  assistance  approx  3 
days/wk,  3hrs/day  Duties  will  include  filing, 
copying,  document  distribution.  Please  call 
310-234-5041. 


8^00 

Apartments  for  R«!iit 


SANTA  MONICA.  2+1.  catok,  ris,  hardwood 
ttoors,  great  locatton!  Parking  included.  310- 
395-7368.  wvirwwestsiderentals.com. 

SHERMAN  OAKS  Adorable  studio  guest 
house.  Pel  okay!  Full  bath  $645.  818-623- 
4444.  www.aMofLA  com 


9AOO 

Room  for  Rent 


WEST  LA.  Private  bdrm/shared  Wh  in  3bdrm 
apt.  $475/mo+sacurlty  deposit.  Near  cam- 
pus. Fully  furnished.  310-444-0105,  leave 
message  for  Buzz. 


SOUTH  RB  APARTMENT  2+1,  panoramic 
ocean  view.  $1300,  fee,  310-372-RENT 

STUDIO  CITY  HUGE  APARTMENT! 
Sundeck,  high  ceilings.  $700  818-623-4444 
www.allofLA.com 


STUDIO  CITY  UNIQUE  APARTMENT  Best 
location,  a/c.  pool.  $800.  818-623-4444. 
www.allofLA.com 


TORR  CONDO.  2+1,  pet  okay,  large  end 
unit.  Jacuzzi.  $1175.  fee.  310-372-RENT 

VENICE  GUEST  HOUSE,  yard.  $650.  310- 
395-RENT  www.westsiderentals.com 
WALK  TO  UCLA  WESTWOOD.  Urge  1+1. 
2+2.  Pool,  Jacuzzi,  walk-in  closets,  fireplace, 
fuH-kitchen,  gated  garage,  instant  broadband 
avail,  www.kellontowers.com.  310-208- 
1976. 


WESTWOOD.  private  bdrm/bth/closet. 
Share  clean  house  in  nice  neighborhood. 
$l000/mo.  www.lasoluUons.conVrent.htm 
tiffany.kangOexcite.com 

WLA.  Unfurnished  room  w/private  bath.  Se- 
cured building.  All  utilities  included  <exclud- 
ing  telephone).  Female,  non-smoker  Avail- 
able 11/1.  $625/mo.  310-446-1545 


9500 

Roommates-Private  Room 


FREE  RENT  FOR  PSYCH/MED/SPECIAL 
ED  graduate  student  to  share  2bdrm/2bth 
apartment  with  learning  disabled  adult  in 
WestLA.  Call  Stan  1-800-843-3658. 

KILLER  VIEW — share  Wilshire  Blvd. 
2BR/2BA  hi-rise  apt.  w/  prof,  male  security, 
gym,  pool,  bateony.  $825/mo..  male  pref 
CaM  Pete  310-478-3542. 


WESTCHESTER  GREAT  HOUSE,  catok  ref 
$500.  310-395-RENT  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 


US  International  Co. 

Work  at  home  position  immediately!  P/T 
$500-2000/mo.  F/T  $2000-6000/mo.  Lan- 
guages/computer skills  a  plus,  www.rich- 
fromhome.com/intemet 


8300 

Volunteer 


VOLUNTEERS  NEEDED  (or  No  kill  dog/cat 
WLA  shelter.  Loving  homes  and  (oster 
homes  needed.  310-470-7667. 


WESTWOOD  SPACIOUS  APARTMENT 
1+1,  r&s,  controlled  access,  a/c,  laundry 
$920.  310-395-RENT  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 


WANTED 

75people  will  pay  you  to  tose  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  dnjgs.  Call  now.  323-993-3391. 


P/T  to  complete  construction  and  maintain 
website.  Nationwide  wholesale.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  3 10-230-4 146 


WHO  WANTS  TO  BE 
A  MILLIONAIRE? 

TV  and  Internet  ad  sales.  Commission 
and  equity  in  compeny  Fax  818-846- 
7961.  RISK+  HUGE  REWARDS 


PART-TIME  CHILDCARE/TUTOR  needed 
(or  1st  and  2nd  grader  Encino  Mulholland 
and  405  adjacent  Must  have  car  Call  Jack- 
ie 310-826-2466. 


WORK  AT  HOME 

International  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888 


WESTWOOD/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2bdrm/1bth.  Large,  laundry  enclosed 
garage,  balcony,  large  ctosets,  near  buses, 
blinds.  Charming,  bright,  quiet  buiWing.  310- 
474-1172. 


8600 

Condo/Townhouse  for  Rent 


540  KELTON.  2bdmV2.5bth,  1200sqft  right 
comer  unit.  Completley  remodeled.  Swim- 
ming pool/spa.  Available  Nov  1.  $1995  323- 
874-0339. 


8700 

Condo/Townhouse  for  Sale 


MELROSE  AREA  Largo  unfurnished  bdmi, 
private  bthrm.private  entrance  in  fully  fur- 
nished house  Laundry.  Male/fenrtale  okay. 
$700/mo  utilities&maid  included.  Available- 
Decl.  310-289-2129. 

ROOMMATE  NEEDED.  3BD/2Ba  Santa  Mo- 
nica  apartment.  Near  beach,  Promenade. 
Montana.  Balcony,  laundry,  fireplace.  Profes- 
sional/grad  student  $860/month.  Contact 
NowickieOhofmail.com  or  646-215-3433. 

SANTAMONICA.  Master  bedroom  suite  in 
spacious  townhouse  w/kitchen,  laundry 
pari<ing.  Near  Blue  Line.  $700/mo  includes 
utiHties  (2  share  $950/mo).  310-450-5082. 

WEST  LA  Roommate  needed  in 
2bdrm/2.5bth  condo.  Gated  buiWing,  under- 
ground parking,  washer/dryer  in  unit,  partial- 
ly furnished  Jewish  female  preferred. 
$800/month  including  utilities  310-478- 
5677. 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTION-TECHNICAL  Bookstore  in 
'.  ;lA  has  one  opening  for  clencal  positions. 
S7/hr  Mornings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Micnelle:31 0-474-7771 

PIANO  TEACHER  WANTED.  Westwood. 
close  to  UCLA  To  teach  llyr-old  boy  on 
weekends  Please  call  310-441-9388 


WORK  IN  WESTWOOD.  Receptionist  need- 
ed for  PT  work  Thursday-Sunday  Fun  at- 
mosphere. Call  Louis:  310-279-3300 


8000 

Internships 


ACCLAIMED  PRODUCER  seeks  motivated 
interns  for  fall  2000.  Please  fax  resumes  to 
Commotion  Pictures  attn:Michelle  310-432- 
2001. 


8^00 

Apartments  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  1+2BEDROOM 
$895&UP  LARGE  UNUSUAL  CHARM 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS 
310-839-6294. 


Westwood  Condo  Penthouse 

by  owner,  low  rise  tsetow  market  value. 

3t)r  +  den.  Over  2000  sq.  ft  $450,000 
31 0*502-3636  or  818-990-3273 

Ask  tor  Ben 


WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt   Fun.  outgoing 
female  looking  for  female  roommate!  Own 
bed/bath  in  2bdrm/2bth  apartment,  gated 
partying,  Jacuzzi  on  roof,  security  buikJtng 
AvailahiP  1/01,  $900/mo.  310-209-^665 


POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benelits  No  Expenence,  exam 
info  Call  1-800-391-5856  ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar 

PROMOTIONAL  PRINT  AGENCY  seeks 
friendly  energetic  receptionist  for  a  F/T  en- 
try-level position.  Good  communication  skills 
and  computer  literacy  required  Please  email 
resume  to:  mickyyeedwardslabel.com  or 
fax  resume  to:  Micky  Yadathi  310-479-1828 

PT  EXECUTIVE  ASST/BOOKKEEPER  for 
Beveriy  Hills  office  Must  be  proficient  in 
Quick  Books  Pro  and  Microsoft  Offk:e.  15-20 
hours/week  Great  Location!  Great  Boss! 
Call  Dominique  310-273-4000. 

PT  FLORAL  DELIVERY  Person  needed 
Courteous,  neat,  efficient  person  sought  by 
the  friendliest  ftower  shop  in  Beveriy  Hills. 
Must  have  a  clean  DMV  report  Call  310- 
271-5030  for  details. 


ENTERTAINMENT  WEB- 
SITE INTERNSHIPS 

Looking  (or  motivated  individuals  with  an  in- 
terest in  the  entertainment  industry,  to  join 
one  of  Hollywood's  leading  websites  Call 
310-305-2688,  or  e-mail  resume 
henlyefountainheadmedia.com 

FINANCIAL  CONSULTANT  INTERNS.  Gain 
valuable  finance  and  Wall  Street  experience. 
Great  resume  builder  Westwood  location 
Fred  Ayazi  310-234-2132.  Allen  310-234- 
2138. 


BRAND  NEW  BUILDING  3bdrm/3blh,  start- 
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WRESTLING 

Frompage33 

could  have  tested  positive  for  nan- 
drolone,  an  anabolic  steroid  that 

.  has  produced  a  spate  of  drug  scan- 
dals around  the  world  in  recent 
years. 

"It's  not  the  kind  of  drug  you 

.  take  for  wrestling,"  he  said.  "I  don't 
wrestle  with  power  but  with  tactic 
and  technique." 

As  Leipold  struggled  with  the 
news.  Slay,  meanwhile,  got  a  hero's 
welcome  in  Gruver,  a  town  of  1,300 
near  the  Texas-Oklahoma  line.  He 
went  to  visit  his  former  elementary 
school  teacher  from  Amarillo  and 
her  students  who  chose  him  as  their 
Olympic  contender  and  wrote  him 
letters  of  support  during  his 
Olympic  bid.  *     ' 

Red,  white  and  blue  streamers 


hung  from  building  to  building  and 
shop  windows  offered  congratulato- 
ry messages  like  "U.S.A.  No.  I" 
and  "Slay  all  the  way."  The  sign  at 
the  First  Baptist  Church  read,  "God 
bless  you,  Brandon." 

Slay  spent  the  rest  of  the  day  in 
the  home  of  his  former  elementary 
school  teacher,  Angie  Klawson,  e- 
mailing  friends  and  family. 

School  officials  said  they  had 
planned  to  give  Slay  a  fake  gold 
medal  upon  hearing  the  news,  but 
Slay  opted  to  wait  until  the  IOC 
made  its  final  decision. 

Prince  Alexandre  de  Merode, 
chairman  of  the  IOC  medical  com- 
mission, said  Leipold's  sample 
showed  20  nanograms  of  nan- 
drolone  per  milliliter  of  urine.  The 
limit  is  2  nanograms  per  milliliter 

"When  you  find  10  times  more 
than  the  fixed  Hmit,  we  believe  the 
case  is  clear,"  de  Merode  said.  "The 


presence  of  the  drug  is  clear." 

De  Merode  said  the  recommen- 
dations would  be  made  to  IOC  pres- 
ident Juan  Antonio  Samaranch, 
who  was  traveling  Monday  to 
Sydney  for  the  Paralympics. 

He  said  Samaranch  will  arrange  a 
conference  call  with  the  IOC's  four 
vice  presidents,  or  the  entire  15- 
member  executive  board,  to  act  on 
the  two  cases,  probably  within  a  few 
days. 

Jim  Scherr,  executive  director  of 
U.S.A.  Wrestling,  said  the  decision 
was  'a  very  bad  thing  for  Leipold" 
but  was  proper  given  the  test  results. 

"He  took  some  shortcuts  and 
cheated,"  Scherr  said.  "We  thought 
Brandon  was  very  deserving." 

Mike  Moran,  spokesman  for  the 
U.S.  Olympic  Committee,  said  the 
ruling  underscored  that  Slay  "was 
the  best  freestyle  wrestler  in  the 
world  at  that  weight."  "C-;  . 


CHARGERS 

From  page  33 

with  6:34  left  in  overtime. 
Harbaugh's  thrown  seven  intercep- 
tions and  five  TD  passes. 

Now  Leaf,  out  since  spraining  his 
right  wrist  in  a  loss  to  Seattle  on  Sept. 
24,  reenters  the  picture.  He's  expect- 
ed back  for  the  Chargers'  next  game, 
at  home  against  the  Oakland  Raiders 
on  Oct.  29.  Leaf  was  benched  after 
two  starts,  replaced  the  injured 
Moreno  in  the  third  game  and  then 
got  hurt  the  next  weekend. 

If  Leaf  remains  healthy,  Riley  was 
asked,  why  not  play  him  the  rest  of 
the  season  and  see  if  he  indeed  is  the 
franchise's  quarterback  of  the  future? 
Riley  apparently  needs  time  to  think 
it  over. 

"It's  a  valid  point  and  it's  one  I'm 
not  ready  to  say  what  I'm  going  to  do 


yet,"  Riley  said.  "That's  part  of  our 
thought  process,  for  sure.  That  would 
make  sense  to  a  lot  of  people.  I'm  just 
not  ready  to  commit  to  that  picture 
right  now  because  I've  got  a  whole 
team  to  think  about  and  quarterbacks 
that  I  want  to  know  the  health  of  and 
how  ready  they  are  to  play. 

"Time  is  a  little  bit  of  an  ally  for 
me.  I  don't  have  to  make  a  decisioBT 
today,  and  I  don't  want  to." 

Leaf,  who's  thrown  seven  inter- 
ceptions and  one  touchdown  pass, 
said  Harbaugh  should  remain  the 
starter. 

"He's  played  well.  He's  got  a  good 
rhythm  going.  It's  the  coach's  deci- 
sion, but  I'll  be  ready  to  play  if  they 
ask  me  to." 

Leaf  sidestepped  a  question  about 
whether  he  should  get  a  look  the  rest 
of  the  season 

'We  need  a  win  right  now  more 
than  anything,"  he  said. 


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V   E    A   N   ■   0   0   K 


KARON 

From  page  36 

fraternity  guys,  many  of  whom  were 
alHeague  football  players  in  high 
school,  running  around  the  field  like 
chickens  with  their  wings  clipped. 
Talk  about  a  humbling  experience 
for  a  group  that  is  notoriously  proud 
of  athletic  accomplishments. 

Second,  the  no-contact  rule  limits 
the  size  of  quality  players.  I  have  a 
friend  who  is  about  6-foot-4. 225 
pounds  and  played  right  tackle  for 
his  high  school  team.  He  is  ineffec- 
.    ti ve  on  the  I M  field  because  some  5- 
foot-7  sportswriler  can  run  around 
him  and  his  armless  body  like  a  grey- 
hound around  a  track.  In  fact,  a  team 
of  smaller,  quicker  players  will 
almost  always  win  an  IM  football 
game.  .-  .v .;  ■  v 

Third,  because  lineman  cannot 
really  block,  the  quarterback  has  no 
time  to  pass.  Most  offenses  look  like 
the  l^s  Angeles  Rams  of  the  early 
'90s,  and  while  I  still  believe  Jim 
Everett  is  the  greatest  quarterback  of 
all  time,  even  he  couldn't  get  a  pass 
off  in  an  IM  game.  Countless  times  I 
have  seen  a  defender  pull  a  flag  just 
as  a  QB  received  the  snap. 

"The  plays  I  draw  up  are  limited 

,  because  I  must  adjust  for  the  no<on- 

tact  rule,"  coach  "Alice"  Schwartz 

said  following  his  teams'  first  game. 

"That  means  no  draws,  no  traps 

and  definitely  no  halfback  passes." 

Fourth,  the  logic  by  which  the  rule 
was  created  may  be  flawed.  Contact 
was  eliminated  to  prevent  injury,  but 
just  how  much  injury  is  prevented? 
The  argument  is  that  players  do 
not  wear  pads,  and  therefore  should 
not  engage  in  contact.  Rugby  players 
don't  wear  pads,  and  the  game  sees 
far  fewer  serious  injuries  than  its 
padded  cousin  football.  This  is 
because  without  the  protection  of 
high-tech  equipment,  players  are  less 
likely  to  throw  their  bodies  around 
like  projectiles. 

Very  few  participants  support  the 


no-contact  rule.  *-  "^ •'»• 

"I'm  here  to  play  football,"  line- 
man Steve  "Bullwinkle"  Hausse  said 
after  a  recent  debacle  of  a  game. 
"This  is  a  f— ing  joke.  I'd  love  to 
stand  a  few  I M  officials  up  with  their 
hands  behind  their  back  and  see  how 
they  like  it  when  a  bull  charge  hits 

them  flush  in  the  stomach!" 

There  will  always  be  contact  in 
football,  no  matter  what  rules  are 
instituted.  Perhaps  that  is  what  has 
me  so  peeved  over  the  whole  issue. 
The  contact  has  merely  shifted  to 
other  facets  of  the  game. 

The  last  time  I  played  I  went 
through  two  pairs  of  shorts.  It  seems 
the  other  team  forgot  that  flags  were 
not  attached  to  my  brand  new 
UCLA  mesh  athletic  shorts.  The 
elastic  waistbands  were  completely 
severed,  and  no  penalty  was  called. 
•     I  guess  it  was  penalty  enough  that 
everyone  on  the  field  had  to  look  at 
my  scrawny  white  legs  while  I 
changed  on  the  sideline. 

I  don't  think  the  no-contact  rule 
eliminates  injury.  I  don't  think  it 
eliminates  conflict.  But  I  do  think  it 
eliminates  the  quality  of  the  game. 
Autumn  plus  pigskin  plus  testos- 
terone equals  competition.  It  also 
equals  fun,  camaraderie  and  stories 
that  we  can  tell  for  years  to  come. 

I  can  just  imagine  telling  my  kids 
about  winning  the  big  IM  game 
under  the  current  rules. 

"...and  then  I  breezed  past  two 
guys  who  weren't  allowed  to  move 
their  arms  to  block  me,  so  unhin- 
dered I  sacked  the  quarterback  for 
the  14th  time." 

Not  something  most  of  us  would 
be  proud  to  say.  The  rules  must 
change,  and  they  must  change  soon, 
for  I  am  a  junior  and  will  have  only 
one  year  left  to  enjoy  the  battlefields 
of  IM  football. 


Daily  Bnjin  Sports 


Tuesday,  October  17.2000       11 


<mmmmiimm 


Karon  is  organizing  a  petition  and 
hopes  to  occupy  the  IM  office  in 
protest  of  the  no<ontact  rule.  Those 
who  wish  to  join  the  fight  should 
e-mail  him  at  akaron@media.ucla.edu. 


M.WATERf>OLO 

From  page  36 

up." 

Late  in  the  first  period.  Brown 
finally  broke  through  with  a  goal  for 
UCLA.  Stanford  added  another  goal 
in  the  second  period  for  the 
Cardinal's  second  three-goal  advan- 
tage of  the  match.  But  UCLA 
responded  with  two  goals  before  half- 
time  to  cut  the  deficit  to  4-3. 

"Every  time  they  jumped  on  us, 
we  came  back,"  Krikorian  said. 

Down  7-5  going  into  the  fourth 
quarter,  Wright  took  the  team  on  his 
shoulders.  His  two  goals  in  the  final 
period  and  his  team  leading  24th  and 
25th  of  the  season,  sent  the  game  into 
two  overtime  periods. 

"Adam's  our  leader.  He  just  comes 
through  in  the  clutch,"  Krikorian 
said.  "We  had  to  turn  it  on  in  the  sec- 
ond half  and  Adam  was  the  key  to 
that.  He  played  the  entire  game  and 
showed  what  he  was  made  of  in  the 


fourth  quarter." 

The  Bruins  shut  out  Stanford  in 
overtime  and  Kern  scored  the  final 
goal  of  the  contest  with  1 :35  remain- 
ing in  the  first  overtime  period,  giv- 
ing the  Bruins  their  first  lead. 

"We  wanted  to  score  the  first  over- 
time goal.  We  are  very  confident  in 
our  defense,"  Krikorian  said. 

This  weekend  was  important  in 
other  ways  besides  just  adding  more 
numbers  to  the  win  column  of 
UCLA's  record. 

"We've  been  coming  out  the  past 
month  or  so  and  just  dominating 
teams  in  the  first  quarter,"  Brooks 
said.  "(Against  Stanford)  we  gained 
experience,  knowing  we  can  be 
behind  in  the  game  and  still  pull 
ahead." 

The  Bruins  now  head  to  the 
Northern  California  Tournament  in 
Stockton  beginning  Saturday. 
Oct.  21. 


With  contributions  by  Pauline  Vu, 
Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


M.CROSS 

From  page  36 

Abbott  dropped  out  of  the  race  at  this 
point  because  of  a  throbbing  back. 
UCLA  marched  on  with  senior  Paul 
Muite  at  its  head,  keeping  its  top  five 
intact  though  the  first  three  miles. 

Just  before  the  5-kilometer  mark, 
junior  Bryan  Green,  the  Bruins'  No.  I 
runner  in  each  one  of  their  races  this 
season,  made  his  move. 

Green  tore  down  the  last  two  miles, 
crossing  the  finish  line  at  25:24  to 
come  in  ninth. 

Moore,    freshman    Jon    Rankin 

( 18th,  25:44),  Muite  (33rd.  26:16)  and 

senior  Andrew  Wulf  (42nd,  26:28) 

rounded  out  the  Bruin  five. 

Junior  Jmtiw   Putimuwun  (59th. 


26:46)  and  sophomore  Phil  Young 
<71st,  27:19)  were  the  other  UCLA 
runners  to  finish  the  race. 

"We  weren't  paying  much  attention 
to  Texas  and  St.  Frands."  said  Muite. 
"When  we  heard  Michigan's  score,  we 
thought  we  had  finished  as  high  as  sec- 
ond." 

With  the  race  in  Michigan  behind 
them,  the  Bruins  look  forward  to  the 
Pac-IO  and  Western  Regional 
Championships  which  will  take  place 
on  Oct.  28  and  Nov.  1 1,  respectively. 

Peterson  expects  that  to  get  a  spot 
at  nationals,  his  team  will  have  to  finish 
fourth  behind  national  powerhouses 
Stanford,  Oregon  and  Arizona  in  each 
of  those  meets. 

"I'm  encouraged,"  he  said. 
"Hopefully,  we  can  reproduce  our 


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M.TENNIS 

From  page  35 

"I  personally  felt  like  he  respected 
(Chidzikwe)  a  little  too  much," 
Martin  said  of  Rojer.  "He  was  more 
worried  about  what  that  young  man 
would  do  instead  of  worrying  about 
what  he  wanted  to  do. 

"In  our  sport,  you  can't  be  worried 
about  the  other  guy.  You  just  go  out, 
hit  your  shot." 

Actually,  Rojer  said  that  wasn't  the 
problem  at  all. 

"I  was  actually  looking  forward  to 
the  match,"  he  said.  "When  I  lose,  it 
motivates  me. 

"I  made  too  many  errors,"  he  con- 
tinued. "His  game  was  just  to  get  a  lot 
of  balls  back;  he's  very  consistent,  1 
just  made  too  many  mistakes." 

The  64-player  field  at  the  AIl- 
American  included  only  the  country's 
best,  based  on  preseason  rankings. 
Rojer  is  ranked  30th  in  the  nation. 

The  unseeded  sophomore  beat 
Phillip  Stolt  of  Illinois  in  the  first 
round,  and  then  upset  eighth-seeded 
Alex  Hartman  of  Mississippi  in  the 
second  round.  ,  ^    , 

"I  started  moving  better,  anticipat- 
ing better,"  Rojer  said  of  the  nuUch 
against  Hartman.  .■/.^, 

"Julien's  a  real  all-court  player," 
Martin  said.  "He  doesn't  just  serve 
and  volley,  doesn't  just  stay  in  the 
backcourt.  He  was  able  to  mix  up  his 


game,  keep  the  kid  on  his  toes  and  not 
let  (Hartman)  play  his  game  as  much 
as  he  would've  liked." 

Senior  Jean-Noel  Grinda,  ranked 
12th  in  the  nation,  was  the  other 
Bruin  who  qualified  for  the  main 
draw  of  the  tournament.  Because  of  a 
nagging  back  problem  and  the  fact  he 
had  only  been  practicing  for  two 
weeks,  he  chose  not  to  go. 

"It's  a  grueling  tournament," 
Martin  said.  "If  you  go  into  it  a  little 
injured  you'll  come  out  more  injured. 
I  don't  think  he's  going,  to  have  a 
problem  qualifying  for  NCAA  sin- 
gles, just  because  he's  by  far  one  of 
the  top  kids  in  the  country." 

Grinda,  who  was  preseason  No.  3 
last  year  before  injuries  took  him  out 
for  the  season,  agreed. 

"I  don't  need  to  prove  anything 
new,  rankings-wise,"  he  said. 

Other  Bruins  also  went  to  the  tour- 
nament, but  none  of  them  made  it 
past  the  qualifying  round. 

The  last  of  the  three  Grand  Slam 
singles  events  is  the  ITA  National 
Championships,  which  will  take  place 
in  Dallas,  Texas  in  January.  Unlike 
the  previous  two  events,  this  one  is 
not  based  on  rankings  but  on  how  the 
players  will  do  at  the  regional  champi- 
onships, which  will  take  place  in 
November. 

Next  for  the  Bruins  is  the  Southern 
California  Intercollegiate 

Championships  at  the  Los  Angeles 
Tennis  Club,  starting  Oct.  25. 


W.TENNIS 

From  page  34 


friends,  we  know  each  other  really 
well,  and  I  definitely  think  that  we  can 
do  well  this  week." 

In  last  year's  tournament.  Walker's 
first  collegiate  tournament,  she  imme- 
diately made  her  presence  felt  across 
the  country.  Throughout  the  tourna- 
ment she  played  15  matches. 

"I  was  so  nervous  last  year,  I  had  to 
pre-qualify  and  win  five  matches  just 
to  gel  to  the  main  draw,"  Walker  said. 

"I  lost  in  the  first  round  but  then  got 
to  the  finals  of  the  back-draw.  I  was  so 
dead  tired  in  the  finals  I  could  barely 
move.  I  got  killed  and  then  I  remem- 
ber coming  home  crying  to  my  mom 
and  dad  and  thinking  that  college  ten- 
nis was  so  hard." 


Head  coach  Stella  Sampras  added, 
"Every  match  last  year  for  Walker  was 
a  tough  match.  She  played  really  hard 
and  it  showed.  This  year  she  has  a 
good  chance  to  win." 

This  year,  if  Walker  continues 
where  she  left  offlast  year,  it  will  be  her 
opponents  who  will  be  left  crying. 
With  singles  play  starting  Thursday 
for  her.  Walker  will  be  the  player  to 
beat.  And  with  her  No.  3  national 
ranking,  she  cannot  help  but  realize 
that  she  is  no  longer  the  underdog. 

But  in  the  face  of  pressure  Walker 
only  smiles  and  says,  "I  just  go  out 
there  and  play.  I  do  best  under  pres- 
sure." 


Tournament  play  is  free  to  watch.  The 
Riviera  Country  Club  is  located  at  1250 
Capri  Dr.  Pacific  Palisades,  CA  90272.  Call 
(310)  459-5252  for  more  information. 


MOURNING 

From  page  34 

he  has  not  practiced  because  of  his  con- 
dition, which  was  di.scovered  during  a 
routine  physical  two  weeks  ago. 

Dr.  Gerald  Appel,  of  Columbia 
Presbyterian  Hospital  in  New  York, 
said  the  disease  causes  the  kidneys  to 
leak  protein  into  a  person's  urine. 
Without  treatment,  filters  in  the  kid- 
neys eventually  become  scarred,  cease 
to  function  and  a  transplant  is  needed. 
He  said  the  disease  is  widespread 
among  African  Americans. 

"I  am  very  confident  this  is  not  relat- 
ed to  HIV  disease,  it's  not  related  to 
drug  abuse,  it's  not  related  to  steroids 
or  anything  Alonzo  did,"  Appd  said, 
adding  that  the  origin  of  Mourning's 
condition  is  "idiopathic,"  or  unknown. 
Mourning  will  be  placed  on  a  six- 
month  treatment  trial.  He  will  take 
medications  to  hopefully  reduce  the 
swelling  in  his  lower  body,  stop  the  kid- 
neys from  leaking  proteins  and  control 
his  Wood  pressure  and  cholesterol  lev- 
els. He  also  will  follow  a  strict  k>w-«odi- 
um  diet. 

Even  with  treatment,  about  50  per- 
cent of  cases  develop  chronic  renal  fail- 
ure, Appd  said.  The  kidney  disease 
used  to  be  the  fourth  largest  cause  of 
death  in  the  United  States. 

"Right  now,  his  kidney  function  is 
good,"  Appel  said.  "He  is  not  in  a  situ- 
ation where  we're  talking  about  dialysis 
or  a  transplant.  Many  of  the  patients, 
when  we  turn  off  the  protein  entirely 
with  these  medications,  they  come  off 
the  medications  and  lead  an  absolutely 


normal  life  and  they  can  do  whatever 
they  want. 

"If  they're  a  school  teacher,  they  go 
back  to  that.  If  they're  a  lawyer  or  a 
doctor,  they  go  back  to  that.  And  if 
they're  a  basketball  player,  they  go 
back  to  that." 

When  asked  if  Mourning  will  need 
dialysis  or  a  transplant,  Appel  said:  "If 
the  levels  of  certain  substances  in  his 
blood  rose  up  to  a  certain  point  where 
we  thought  that  would  be  beneficial, 
then  that  would  be  the  case." 

Dr.  Victor  Richards,  also  treating 
the  five-time  All  Star,  said  Mourning 
has  not  been  placed  on  a  waiting  list  for 
a  kidney  transplant  because  doctors 
diagnosed  his  condition  in  its  early 
stage,  and  they  hope  to  keep  it  from 
growing  worse. 

"I'm  a  blessed  individual  -  I  have  a 
lot  to  be  thankful  for,"  Mourning  said. 
"There  are  a  whole  tot  of  people  that 
are  worse  off  than  me." 

Doctors  initially  suspected 
Mourning  had  a  viral  infection,  thyroid 
condition  or  merely  fatigue  from  a  busy 
ofTseason. 

Beginning  Aug.  23,  Mourning  was 
on  the  road  with  the  Olympic  team  for 
nearly  six  weeks,  logging  more  than 
40,000  air  miles.  He  went  to  New  York, 
Hawaii,  Japan  and  finally  Australia, 
and  crossed  the  Pacific  Ocean  four 
times,  returning  briefly  to  Miami  for 
the  birth  of  his  second  child  and  flying 
back  to  Sydney  to  help  the  U.S. 
Olympic  team  win  a  gold  medal. 

He  was  expected  to  lead  a  revamped 
Miami  team  widely  considered  to  be 
the  favorite  to  win  the  Eastern 
Conference. 


\ 


DaHy  Bniin  Sports 


American  may  bring  home  gold  yet 


WRESTLING:  Slay  could 

get  medal  after  Leipold 

„tests  positive  for  steroids 


ByPamEaston 

The  Associated  Press 


GRUVER.  Texas  -  The  U.S. 

freestyle  wrestling  team  left  Sydney 

without  a  gold  medal,  the  first  time 

that's  happened  at  the  Olympics 

>«ince  1968. 

On  Monday,  two  weeks  after  the 
Summer  Games  closed,  the 
Americans  learned  they  will  almost 
certainly  get  a  gold  medal  after  all. 

The  IOC  medical  commission 
recommended  that  Germany's 
Alexander  Leipold  be  stripped  of 
his  gold  medal  after  testing  positive 
for  the  steroid  nandrolone. 

If  approved  as  expected  by  the 
IOC's  ruling  executive  board,  the 
gold  will  go  to  Brandon  Slay  of 
Amarillo,  Texas. 

In  an  interview  with  The 
Associated  Press  on  Monday,  Slay 
said  he  had  mixed  feelings  about  the 
chances  of  being  an  Olympic  cham- 
pion without  winning  the  final 
match. 

"I  really  haven't  let  it  affect  me 


You  can  reach  more 

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emotionally  at  all  yet  because  you 
never  know  what  is  going  to  hap- 
pen. I  am  not  going  to  set  myself  up 
for  a  potential  let  down.  Either 
medal,  gold  or  silver,  I  am  happy 
with  it,"  said  Slay,  who  spent  the  day 
touring  the  Texas  Panhandle  talking 
with  elementary  students  and  show- 
ing them  his  silver  medal.  .  /  . 
"To  lose  a  gold  medal  in  the 
Olympics  teaches  you  all  the  lessons 
of  losing,  then  to  come  back  and 
find  out  you've  won  the  gold  is  the 
ultimate  goal  for  any  athlete,"  Slay 
said. 

Others,  however,  said  they  were 
elated  at  the  news. 

"It's  wonderful,"  said  Johnny 
Cobb,  his  coach.  "I  tell  you  what,  we 
have  a  gold  medalist  over  here  at 
our  school.  It  looks  pretty  certain. 
It's  such  a  feeling  of  elation  for  our 
school,  our  city,  our  state  and  the 
whole  nation." 

Leipold,  a  two-time  world  cham- 
pion and  four-time  European 
champ,  failed  a  mandatory  drug  test 
after  defeating  Slay  4-0  in  the  167 
1/2-pound  gold  medal  match  on  the 
final  day  of  the  games,  Oct.  I. 

Leipold  appeared  at  a  hearing  of 
the  International  Olympic 
Committee  medical  commission, 
which  was  investigating  two  posi- 


tive drug  cases  in  wrestling  from  the 
final  weekend  of  the  games. 

The  other  wrestler  accused  of 
doping  was  Mongolia's  Oyungbileg  , 
Purevbaatar,  who  tested  positive  for 
the  diuretic  furosemide  after  finish- 
ing fifth  in  the  127  3/4-pound  class. 
The  IOC  panel  recommended 
that  he  be  disqualified  and  his 
results  wiped  off  the  books. 

Leipold  would  become  the  third 
Olympian  from  Sydney  to  lose  a 
gold  medal  for  a  drug  ofTense,  after 
a  Bulgarian  weightlifter  and  a 
Romanian  gymnast  tested  positive 
during  the  games. 

South  Korea's  Moon  Eui  Jae 
would  move  up  from  the  bronze 
medal  to  silver,  while  Turkey's 
Adem  Bereket  would  go  from 
fourth  to  third. 

Slay  would  be  the  second  U.S. 
athlete  to  win  a  gold  because  of  a 
drug  disqualification  in  Sydney. 
Tara  Nott  became  the  first 
American  to  win  a  gold  in 
weightlifting  in  40  years  when 
Bulgaria's  Izabela  Dragneva  was 
disqualified  after  winning  the  105- 
pound  class. 

With  his  wife  crying  by  his  side, 
Leipold  said  he  had  no  idea  how  he 

SceinKSTUIK,pa9e30 


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Tuesday,  October  1 7, 2000       33 


NFL  Leaf  returns  frora-^ 
injury;  remaining  games 
could  help  salvage  season 


Riley  still  try ihg  to  sort  put 
injuries  quarterback  spot 

-been,"  Riley  said.  "I  don't  know  what 
I'm  going  to  do  yet.  I  don't  have  to  be 
committal  right  now." 

Riley  admitted  after  Sunday's  27- 
24  overtime  loss  at  Buffalo  that  it  was 
a  mistake  to  rotate  Harbaugh  and 
Moreno  in  the  first  half.  He  planned 
going  in  to  let  Harbaugh  play  the  first 
quarter  and  Moreno  the  second,  leav- 
ing the  second  half  up  in  the  air. 

Harbaugh  led  the  Chargers  on  a 
62-yard  drive  capped  by  John 
Carney's  36-yard  field  goal  for  a  3-0 
lead  at  the  end  of  the  first  quarter.  On 
came  Moreno,  who  fumbled  his  first 
and  third  snaps,  leading  to  two 
Buffalo  touchdowns. 

Harbaugh  played  the  rest  of  the 
way  and  almost  pulled  out  a  win.  The 
Chargers  scored  three  straight  touch- 
downs -  two  on  long  passes  by 
Harbaugh  -  to  take  a  10-point  lead 
after  three  quarters.  But  a  99-yard 
touchdown  drive  and  a  field  goal  by 
Steve  Christie  forced  overtime. 

Harbaugh  then  served  up  his  sec- 
ond interception  of  the  game  and  San 
Diego's  14th  this  season,  setting  up 

Christie's  winning  46-yard  field  goal 


By  Bemit  Wilson 

The  Associated  Press 

SAN  DIEGO  -  If  nothing  else, 
San  Diego  Chargers  coach  Mike 
Riley  still  has  his  sense  of  humor 
amid  the  wreckage  of  a  lost  season. 

With  the  Chargers  0-7  and  the 
quarterback  position  a  mess  going 
into  their  bye  weekend,  Riley  was 
asked  why  he  doesn't  just  pick  one 
guy  and  go  with  him  the  rest  of  the 
season. 

"It  hasn't  been  our  style  this  year," 
Riley  joked  on  Monday. 

Heck,  Riley  can't  even  make  up 
his  mind  for  one  game,  let  alone  the 
remaining  nine.  With  this  weekend 
off,  Riley  does  have  some  time  to  fig- 
ure out  what  to  do  with  the  turnover- 
prone  trio  of  Jim  Harbaugh,  Moses 
Moreno  and  Ryan  Leaf 

"That's  been  probably  the  biggest 
factor  for  our  team  is  lack  of  consis- 
tency of  who  the  quarterback  has 


SeeaUMEIIS,page30 


HAIRCUTTING 


WESTWOOD 


Tues-Sat  9-7 

•  Free  Consultation    •  Perms/Bodywaves 

•  Colorist  on  staff 

1st  time  clients  15%  off  student  rate 

824-2711  -1001  Gayley 

(NEXT  TO  COFFEE  BEAN) 


October  20, 2000 


TheRobertJ. 
Stolier  Foundation 

Proudly  presents  the 
Annual  Robert  J.  Stolier 
Memorial  Lecture  - 

Dr.  Gil  Herdt 

Dr.  Herdt  is  Director  of  Human  Sexual  Studies,  Director  of 
the  Institute  on  Sexuality,  Social  Inequality  and  Health,  as 
well  as  Professor  of  Human  Sexuality  anj  Professor  of 
Anthropology  at  San  Francisco  State  University.  Dr  Herdt, 
a  Guggenheim  Fellow,  and  William  S.  Vaughn  Fellow 
(1997-1998)  has  written  over  70  articles  and  25  books 
on  sexuality,  bisexuality,  homosexuality  and  culture.  The 
Stolier  Foundation  is  certain  you  will  find  Dr  Herdt's 
lecture  fascinating.  It  is  titled: 

"The  Magical  Age  of  10  and  the  Development 

of  Sexual  Excitement:  A  Lecture  In  Honor  of  the 

work  of  Robert  J.  Stolier" 


The  Robert  J  Stolier  Foundation  is  a  non  profit 
organ«ation  dedicated  to  promoting  psychoanalytically 
informed  research  in  the  social  sciences,  btot)ehavioral 
sciences  and  o0Mr  ralatBd  fiehts.  VWt  our  web  page  for 
immnilngeMsnti,  tntitJiwmi>fMnw  fouwdatiew.Bfg — 


Informatkxi  contact:  mehnandelOmsn  com 


•  Admission  is  free 

•  Public  is  welcome 

•  Friday,  October  20, 2000 
1 8:00  p.m 


•UCU-NPl  Auditorium 


JP  wiiw^^ 


34       Tuesday,  (ktober  17,2000 


Daly  Brum  Spiofts 


^.«  :    .■>•«';• 


I   • 


Championship  hopes  lie  with  Walker 


WTENNIS:  No.2seed 

to  team  up  with  Zlebnik 
for  doubles  competition 


By  Jason  Saltoun  Ebin 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

For  the  UCLA  women's  tennis 
team,  their  chances  this  year  at  the 
All-American  Tennis 

Championships  will  come  down  to 
the  performance  of  one  player:  Sara 
Walker. 

Walker,  a  sophomore  from  El 
Paso,  Texas,  earned  a  preseason 
No.  3  ranking  and  a  No.  2  seed  at 
this  year's  All-American.  But  more 
importantly,  she  is  the  only  Bruin 
guaranteed  a  spot  in  the  main  draw 
of  the  tournament. 

Over  the  weekend,  freshman 
Lauren  Fisher  won  two  tough  three- 
set  pre-qualifying  matches  before 
falling  6-2, 6-1  in  her  final  pre-quali- 
fying match  to  sophomore  Marine 
Piriou  from  Northwestern. 

Bruin  senior  Zana  Zlebnik,  com- 
peting in  her  first  tournament  since 
injuring  her  achilles  last  January, 
also  bowed  out  early  in  singles, 
falling  6-4,  6-4  in  her  first  pre-quali- 
fying match  to  junior  Rebecca  Ho 
from  Penn  State.  Junior  Petya 
Marinova  won  her  first  pre-qualify- 
ing match  but  then  fell  to  sopho- 
more Charlotte  Vernaz  of 
Pepperdine  6-2,6-1. 
Junior  Catherine  Holly  has  so  far 


Star  center's  kidney  illness 
complicates  dreams  of  title 


NBA;  Doctors  try  to  lower 
Mourning's  protein  levels; 
Miami  reevaluates  strategy 


Daily  Biuin  file  Phoio 

Sophomore  Sara  Walker,  shown  here  in  a  match  last  season,  will 
be  the  No.  2  seed  in  this  year's  All-American  tennis  tournament 
put  in  the  best  Bruin  effort,  advanc- 


By  Mark  Long 

The  Associated  Press 


ing  to  the  qualifying  rounds  after 
winning  her  three  pre-qualifying 
matches,  two  aAer  losing  the  first 

set.   .  .,;,;•■ 

She  realizes  that  not  everyone  on 
the  team  was  so  lucky. 

"I  was  hoping  that  the  rest  of  the 
team  would  end  up  winning  their 
singles  matches,  but  we  still  have  a 
chance  to  redeem  ourselves  and  do 
really  well  in  doubles,"  Holly  said. 
She  plays  the  tournament's  No.  4 
seed,  sophomore  Kavitha 
Krishnamurthy,  today  at  9  a.m.  at 
the  Riviera  Country  Club. 

In  doubles  competition,  the 
teams  of  Holly  and  senior  Jennifer 


Donahue  as  well  as  sophomore 
Michelle  Stiefel  and  freshman 
Chelsea  Godbey  fell  in  their  first 
match. 

The  remaining  doubles  teams  of 
Marinova  and  Fisher,  and  Walker 
and  Zlebnik  will  compete  today  at  3 
p.m.  to  earn  a  spot  in  the  main  draw. 

For  Walker,  the  tournament  is 
just  beginning.  Though  she  and 
Zlebnik  have  never  played  an  offi- 
cial tournament  together,  they 
eamed  a  pre-scason  No.  45  ranking. 

"I  am  really  looking  forward  to 
playing  with  Sara,"  Zlebnik  said. 
"We  live  together  and  are  good 


MIAMI  -^  A  common  but  serious  kid- 
ney ailment  will  keep  Alonzo  Mourning 
sidelined  for  the  entire  season,  depriving 
the  Miami  Heat  of  their  biggest  star  and 
the  key  to  their  quest  for  an  NBA  tide. 

Doctors  said  Monday  that  the  illness, 
first  spotted  just  after  Mouming  helped 
the  U.S.  team  to  the  basketball  gold 
medal  earlier  this  month,  was  focal 
glomerulosclerosis,  which  leads  to  kidney 
failure  in  about  half  the  cases. 

They  said  there  were  no  immediate 
plans  for  a  kidney  transplant  or  dialysis. 

"I  feel  great  right  now.  We've  pretty 
much  got  a  hold  on  it,  the  whole  situation 
right  now,"  Mouming  said  at  a  news  con- 


ference where  he  discussed  his  ailment 
publicly  for  the  first  time.  "The  maim 
objective  is  to  get  me  healthy  so  I  can  live 
my  life  normally,  so  I  can  see  my  babies 
grow  up  and  so  I  can  enjoy  my  family. 

"And,  at  the  same  time,  possibly  do  the 
things  that  1  know  and  love  -  and  that's 
the  game  of  basketball.  But  the  key  right 
now  is  to  get  me  healthy." 

Pat  Riley,  the  Heat  coach  who  spent 
the  offseason  signing  free  agents  and 
redesigning  the  team  to  complement 
Mouming's  talents,  said  his  star  center 
was  following  the  proper  course^. .':  "; 

"Alonzo  Mouming  will  not  be  playing 
professional  basketball  this  season,  and 
we're  totally  convinced  that  the  only 
thing  that  should  be  on  his  mind  is  getting 
healthy,"  Riley  said. 

Mourning,  30,  made  his  first  public 
appearance  since  Oct.  3,  when  he  attend- 
ed the  team's  media  day.  Training  camp 
began  without  him  the  following  day,  and 


Se«MOUIlNIIICpa9e32 


S««W.TENNIS,pa9e32 


TENNIS  BRIEFS 

Walk-on  tourney 
meeting  scheduled 

For  all  those  interested  in  playing 
in  the  Walk-On  Tournament  for  the 
UCLA  men's  tennis  team,  there  will 


be  an  information  meeting  and  sigiv 
ups  today  at  4  p.m.  The  meeting  will 
take  place  at  the  LATC  in  the  blue 
seats  by  court  I  on  the  west  side  of  the 
stadium. 

For  more  information  call  coach 
Billy  Martin  at  (310)  206-6375. 


ACTORS  /  MODELS 

NEEDED  FOR  CASTING 
DIRECTORS  &  AGENTS  WEBSITE 

NEW  AGE  ENTERTAINMENT,  INC. 

is  currently  in  search  of  new  talent  for 

ActorsModeIsDirect.coni. 

„For  more  information  call  818-848-7318  or 

log  onto  ActorsModelsDirect.com 


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Daily  Bruin  Spoils 


Tuesday,  October  17,2000       35 


FOOTBALL  NOTEBOOK 


Stats  say  Mitchell 
is  best  receiver 

Wide  receiver  Freddie  Mitchell  is 
now  the  best  receiver  in  the  nation.  At 
least  according  to  statistics,  he  is. 

Mitchell  leads  the  NCAA  with  123 
yards  per  game,  averaging  6.3  catches 
per  game.  His  19.4  yards  per  recep- 
tion average  is  also  the  best  in  the 
nation  of  those  in  the  top  30  in  recep- 
tions per  game. 

The  junior  flanker  has  38  recep- 
tions for  736  yards  to  go  along  with  six 
touchdowns.  His  season  long  was  an 
80-yarder  against  Arizona  State. 

.  Mitchell,  who  has  also  thrown  a 
touchdown  this  season,  had  a  career 
high  10  receptions  for  137  yards 
against  Michigan,  nine  of  which 
resulted  in  first  downs. 

Against  Cal,  he  caught  eight  balls 
for  a  career  high  167  yards,  good  for 
seventh  on  UCLA's  single  game  list. 
Mitchell  is  on  pace  to  hit  1,349  yards 
this  year,  surpassing  Danny  Farmer's 
school  record  of  1,274  in  1998.  The 
736  yards  is  already  the  eighth  best 
total  in  a  season  by  a  Bruin. 

Longer  is  not 
necessarily  better 

The  46-38  triple  overtime  loss  to 
Cal  last  weekend  was  the  longest 
game  in  UCLA  football  history. 

Under  the  alternating  possession 
overtime  rules,  UCLA,  now  ranked 
No.  23,  IS  3-1. 

In  the  game,  the  Bruins  rallied 
from  14  points  down  in  the  fourth 
quarter  before  having  a  pass  inter- 
cepted in  the  third  overtime  to  end  the 
game. 

The  previous  longest  Bruin  game 
was  against  Southern  Cal  in  1996.  In 
that  game  Cade  McNown  and  Skip 


L 


Hicks  rallied  the  Bruins  from  a  41-24 
deficit.  Toledo  called  that  game  his 
personal  favorite  as  a  head  coach. 
Toledo  called  the  recent  loss  to  Cal 
one  of  the  most  disappointing. 

Ground  game  at  a 
low 

Despite  the  three  extra  posses- 
sions, no  Bruin  rushed  for  more  than 
100  yards.  Under  Toledo,  the  Bruins 
are  17-4  when  a  back  goes  over  100 
yards,  and  16-15  when  they  do  not. 

The  Bruins  miss  their  star  running 
back  DeShaun  Foster. 

"He  would  have  helped.  (His 
absence)  wasn't  the  reason  we  lost, 
but  it  would  have  helped,"  Toledo 
said. 

Jermaine  Lewis  ran  for  15  yards  on 
16  carries  on  a  tender  sprained  ankle, 
and  Akil  Harris  had  20  carries  for  59 
yards. 

Team  shouldering 
fewer  plays 

Cal's  strong  front  seven  had  a  lot  to 
do  with  the  poor  rushing  statistics,  but 
there  might  have  been  another  factor. 

Toledo  admitted  that  the  playbook 
has  been  somewhat  limited  in  order  to 
protect    quarterback    Cory    Paus' 


shoulder. 

"I  feel  I'm  ready  for  anything," 
said  Paus  on  Monday  afternoon. 

On  the  Bruins'  first  play  from 
scrimmage  of  the  season,  Paus  sepa- 
rated his  shoulder  on  a  late  hit,  forcing 
him  to  miss  the  three  following  games. 
The  Bruins  cannot  afford  to  lose  Paus 
again  because  backup  Ryan  McCann 
did  not  practice  all  last  week  due  to 
tendonitis  in  his  throwing  shoulder. 

Toledo  said  that  the  playbook 
would  be  opened  up  a  little  more  this 
week,  but  there  would  still  be  some 
plays  in  the  lock  box. 

Who's  next? 

The  playbook  has  been  open  for 
other  players  to  pass  the  ball  this 
season. 

So  fkr,  besides  quarterbacks 
Paus,  McCann,  Scott  McEwan  and 
Drew  Bennett,  wide  receivers 
Mitchell  and  Brian  Poli-Dixon,  and 
punter  Nate  Fikse  have  all  thrown 
passes  this  season.  Two  years  ago, 
Lewis  threw  a  23  yard  touchdown 
pass  to  John  Dubravac,  so  there  are 
still  some  other  plays  yet  to  be  seen 
this  season. 

Paus,  McCann,  Bennett  and 
Mitchell  have  all  thrown  touch- 
downs this  season. 

No  place  like 
home 

UCLA's  road  woes  have  been  well- 
documented,  but  what  has  not  been  is 
their  success  at  home.  UCLA  has  not 
won  away  from  the  Rose  Bowl  since 
1998,  but  they  have  also  won  18  of  the 
last  20  home  games.  They  are  five  of 
their  last  five. 

Istotes  compiled  by  Greg  Lewis,  Daily 
Bruin  Senior  Staff. 


Rojer  gj^s  Im^^ 
showing  at  tournament 


M.TENNIS:  Sophomore   - 
advances  to  round  of  16, 
loses  to  eventual  winner 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

At  last  weekend's  All-American 
Tournament,  UCLA  men's  tennis 
player  Jean-Julien  Rojer  made  it  to 
the  round  of  16  before  falling  6-4, 4- 
6,  6-4  to  eventual  tournament  win- 
ner Genius  Chidzikwe  of  SMU. 


-^-^"I  felt  he  had  a  good  tourna- 
ment," UCLA  head  coach  Billy 
Martin  said.  "This  should  solidify 
him  in  the  rankings." 

The  All-American  Tournament  is 
the  second  Grand  Slam  event  out  of 
three  that  determines  who  makes  it 
to  NCAA  Championships  for  sin- 
gles play.  In  the  first  event,  the 
National  Clay  Court 

Championships  in  late  September, 
Rojer  lost  in  the  first  round  -  also  to  '■ 
Chidzikwe. 


SeeM.TENNIS,page32 


Daily  Brum  file  Photo 


Sophomore  Jcan-Julien  Rojer,  shown  here  at  a  match  last  year, 
qualified  for  the  round  of  16  at  the  All-American  Tournament. 


WORKOUT 


Most  of  us  feel  the  need  to  work  out,  but  don't  have  time  to  hit  the  gym  every  day.  Fortunately, 
exercise  comes  in  many  forms,  so  yOU  can  worlcout  anytime,  anywhere.  Just  looli  at  how  much 

exercise  you  can  get  in  a  typical  day  by  doing  simple  tasks  and  having  fU  n ! 


Wherever,  vvfiatever...a  pad  feels  like  a  diaper. 


-■V  .ii-.;i-«nj~,^.--. » , 


^•Wi 


WithPltytex-GendeGiidtf 
all  you  fied  is  oomfbrt&ble. 

&•«  Ih*  iNnnMt  p*4  en 
"O^  you  W  H»  youW  WMno 

>y  PIs/tM  GmW  GUt  Iwvnnt. 

T>iay  hm  •  uniqu*  dtngn 

«h*«4HMttoeaii<(MfiL 

So  (h^f'i*  Mcti  new  ti«n  bwMbb  ■ 


So  ootnfof  table  you 


M?>,^A 


Quick  Ways  to  Get  Exercise 
Every  Day: 

•  Stretch  when  you  wake  up.  before  you 
hit  the  shower  Sit  on  the  floor  and  slowly 
reach  for  the  sky.  then  toward  your  toes. 
Take  some  deep  breaths,  clear  your  mind, 
and  think  about  what  you  want  to 
accomplish  that  day  This  activity  not  only 
bums  calories,  but  also  lets  you  become 
focused  on  the  day  ahead  (15  minutes 
bums  50  calories). 

•  Leave  for  class  a  few  minutes  early  and 
take  the  long  route  (15  minutes  leisurely 
walking.  35  calories).  Take  the  stairs 
instead  of  an  elevator  whenever  possible, 
and  bike  to  dass  or  work  instead  of 
driving  (20  minutes  of  peddling  will  bum 
more  than  140  calories).         .  . 

•  Do  some  quick  cleaning.  Vacuum,  dust, 
or  haul  that  big  pile  of  laundry  dov^  to 
the  laundry  room  (30  min..  89  cal.). 

•  Take  a  physical  fitness  class  through 
school.  Besides  being  a  great  way  to  meet 
people,  these  classes  can  be  fun.  get  your 
heart  going,  teach  you  something  new  and 
may  even  be  included  with  your  tuition. 

►  Co  out  with  friends  to  work  up  a  sweat. 

and  maybe  an  audience,  on  the  dance 
'  floor  (30  min..  150  cal).  If  dancing  isn't 

your  thing  vou  can  play  pool  ^hnnt  cnm/. 


hoops,  or  go  disco  bowling  (70. 120  and 
80  calories  respectively  for  30  min.)  Or. 
If  you  prefer  some  quiet  time,  take  a  brisk 
walk,  go  for  a  jog  or  try  rollerblading 
(190  cal  each  for  30  min). 

Things  to  Remember 

•  Burning  calories  isnl  the  only  thing  that 
counts.  Eating  balanced  meals  is  equally 
important  to  looking  and  feeling  healthy 
The  more  you  exercise,  the  more  your 
body  needs  nutritious  foods  to  keep 
you  going. 

•  Although  you  may  be  tempted  to  skip 
your  workout  when  you  have  your  period, 
regular  exercise  is  one  of  the  best  ways 
to  fight  PMS  and  keep  you  feeling  good 
all  month  long.  To  make  your  worlcout 
more  comfortable  and  avoid  bulky  pads 
that  can  shift  while  exercising,  try  Playtex 
tampons  -  they're  so  comfortable  you 
can't  even  feel  them. 

'  Finally,  remember  that  overexerclsing  can 
be  just  as  dangerous  for  your  body  as  not 
exercising  at  all.  so  listen  to  your  body  for 
signs  of  fatigue  and  know  when  it's  time 
to  take  it  easy 


'PlaytexL 


So 


yxjuifiT 


"^^'r 


•  -i"'<"i*: 


Tennis  at  the  All-Amerkan 

Jean-Julian  Rojer  qualified  for  the 
round  of  16  at  the  All-American 
Tournament  while  Sara  Walker  begins 
play  today.  Turn  the  page  ,,  . ,    ;  .- 

Tuesday, October  17,2000  ';  •.      -^ 


Dail/ Bruin 


SPORTS 


Sports  on  the  Web  Q    j) 

See  all  this  and  more  at  • 

the  Daily  Bruin's  : 

Website:  • 

www.dailybruin.ucla.edu  : 


Bruins  prove  mettle  in  sweep  of  Bay  Area  sch 


M.WATERPOLO:  Stanford 
falls  in  overtime;  Brooks 
notches  12  saves  vs.  Cal 


By  Steven  Romero 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


The  top-ranked  UCLA  men's 
water  polo  team  completed  the  sweep 
of  the  Bay  Area  schools  this  weekend, 
handily  defeating  the  California 
Golden  Bears  11-5  on  Saturday  and 
registering  a  come-from-behind  8-7 
overtime  win  against  the  Stanford 
Cardinal  on  Sunday. 

"We  jumped  out  to  an  early  lead 
(against  No.  4  Cal),"  senior  2-meter 
man  Sean  Kern  said.  "It  was  one  of 
those  hitting  on  all  cylinders-type 
things." 

But  the  same  could  not  be  said  of 
the  game  against  the  sixth-ranked 
Cardinal. 

"We  lacked  the  emotion  that 
Stanford  had,"  Kern  said.  "We  never 
did  get  it.  it  was  kind  of  one  of  those 
'blah' games." 

On  Saturday,  the  Bruins  (10-2 
overall,  5-0  Mountain  Pacific  Sports 
Federation)  traveled  to  Cal  to  face 
the  Golden  Bears  (6-5,  2-2)  in  an 
MPSF  showdown.  The  Bruins  gained 
the  early  advantage  with  goals  by 
Brian  Brown,  Dave  Parker  and 
Andrew  Bailey  in  the  first  quarter 
and  never  relinquished  their  lead 
throughout  the  match. 

"Dave  Parker  played  his  best 
game  of  the  year.  He  got  us  going  by 
scoring  the  first  goal  and  also  had  a 
lot  of  great  passes,"  said  Adam 
Krikorian,  UCLA's  head  coach. 

Although  the  Bears  cut  the  deficit 
to  3-2  early  in  the  second  quarter,  it 
was  the  closest  they  would  come  to 
the  Bruins.  UCLA  scored  four  more 
goals  and  allowed  Cal  only  one  in  the 
remainder  of  the  quarter  for  a  7-3 
halftime  advantage. 

The  second  half  also  belonged  to 
the  Bruins.  UCLA  outscored  Cal  4-2 
in  the  third  and  fourth  quarters  to  put 
the  game  out  of  reach  for  the  Golden 


tl# 


No.  9  Kyle  Baumgarner  attempts  to  Intercept  a  pass  to  a  Princeton  player  during  a  win  over  the  Tigers 


Bears 

UCLA  was  led  defensively  by 
sophomore  goalie  Brandon  Brooks. 
Brooks  had  12  saves,  including  two 
blocks  on  four-meter  penalty  shots  by 
Cal. 

"Brandon  played  great," 
Krikorian  said.  "He's  proven  to  be  a 
gamer.  The  blocks  on  the  penalty 
shots  really  let  the  air  out  of  the 


Bears' 

Meanwhile,  the  offense  was  paced 
by  a  balanced  attack.  Brown  scored 
three  goals  while  Matt  Flesher,  Adam 
Wright,  and  Parker  also  contributed 
two  goals  apiece. 

On  Sunday,  the  Bruins  showed 
their  grit  as  they  rallied  twice  from 
three-goal  deficits  versus  Stanford  (6- 
6).  The  Cardinal  opened  the  game 


with  a  3-0  run  against  the  Bruins  in 
the  first  quarter. 

"We  were  down  from  the  get-go," 
Krikorian  said.  "The  great  thing 
about  this  game  was  that,  for  Uie  past 
three  to  four  weeks,  we've  been  jump- 
ing on  teams.  So,  for  us  to  start  shaky, 
be  down  3-0  and  come  back  showed  a 
lot  of  character  and  a  lot  of  heart." 

The  team  came  out  flat,  according 


mm  Af)M€MAN/0*My  Bnrin  Senior  SuH 

in  September* 

to  the  players. 

"Our  struggles  caused  the  game  to 
be  so  close,"  Kern  said. 

The  team  was  disappointed,  he 
added,  but  not  discouraged  by  the 
deficit  they  had  to  overcome. 

"Everybody  was  yelling,  'Come 
on,'"  Kern  said,  "trying  to  fire  us 


UCLA  places  fourth  over 
Michigan  at  interregional 


See  M.WilTB»OlOt  page  31 


M.CROSS:  At-largebid 
questionable  after  defeat 
by  two  unranked  teams 


By  Dylan  Hernandez 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  UCLA  men's  cross  country 
team  flew  out  of  Michigan  Sunday 
afternoon  having  accomplished  one  of 
its  goals. 

That  morning  at  the  Wolverine 
Interregional,  the  Bruins  took  down 
host  No.  19  Michigan.  Going  into  the 
contest,  UCLA  figured  doing  so 
would  put  it  on  the  bubble  to  earn  an 
at-large  bid  for  the  NCAA 
Championship  meet. 

Many  of  the  Bruins  were  pleased 
<hat  they  defeated  Michigan,  but  at  the 
same  time,  they  knew  it  may  have  not 
been  enough. 

The  Bruins  allowed  a  pair  of 
unranked  teams  to  slip  by  them  and 
ended  up  fourth  in  the  race,  dimming 
their  chances  of  running  at  the  nation- 


al finals. 

"It's  kind  of  bittersweet,"  said 
senior  Mason  Moore,  who  finished 
13th  at  25:36.  "We  beat  Michigan  but 
we  were  still  fourth." 

Winning  the  meet  was  Texas,  which 
placed  all  five  of  its  scorers  in  the  top 
25  to  tally  77  points. 

St.  Francis  (91  points)  and  No.  20 

Washington    (94)    followed,    with 

UCLA  (1 15)  and  Michigan  (121)  com- 
ing in  next. 

Mark  Pilja.  a  junior  from  Michigan, 
won  the  individual  title,  covering  the  8- 
kilometer  course  in  24:42. 

"Both  Texas  and  St.  Francis  were 
very  impressive  teams,"  UCLA  head 
coach  Eric  Peterson  said.  "I  admit, 
they  did  (surprise  us)  It  was  kind  of  a 
shock." 

The  race  went  out  at  a  moderate 

pace,  as  the  leaders  hit  the  mile  mark  at 

about  4:50.  The  Bruins'  pack  of  eight 

-runners  was  close  behind,  hitting  the 

mark  at  4:55. 

Though    senior    captain    Scott 


lx)ok,  no  hands ...  too  bad  rt'$  no  longer  cool 


SeeM.aiOSS,pa9c31 


COLUMN:  Rules  limiting 
contact  change  strategy, 
fun  of  intramural  football 

When  was  the  last  time  you 
had  a  good  laugh?  I  fit's 
been  a  while,  or  if  you  are 
a  fan  of  physical  comedy,  go  down 
to  the  Intramural  field  between  3 
and  8  p.m.  during  the  week  and  try 
to  watch  the  fiag  football  games 
without  laugh- 
ing. 

The  games 
are  something 
out  of a 
Saturday 
Night  Live 
skit,  and  I 
mean  the  good 
ones  before 
Adam  Sandler 
and  Chris 
Farley  left. 

The  follow-  

ing  activities 

are  prohibited  according  to  intra- 
mural flag  football  blocking  guide- 
lines: any  contact;  three-  or  four- 
point  stances;  spearing;  arms  leav- 


ing the  sides  of  the  body. 

Now  with  that  in  mind,  put  on 
your  skirts,  lace  up  your  ice  skates, 
it's  time  for  flag  football! 

These  contests  are  far  from  the 
blood  and  guts  schoolyard  games  of 
our  youth. 

Remember  during  elementary 
school  when  we  all  snuck  to  the 
back  of  the  playground  during 
lunch  to  play  Uckle  football? 
Sooner  or  later  a  supervisor  would 
come  and  change  the  game  to  two- 
hand  touch,  completely  reshaping 
the  sport  we  loved.  No  more  Bo 
Jackson,  Brian  Bosworth  or  Joe 
Montana.  Two-hand  touch  seemed 
like  something  out  of  a  Michael 
Jackson  news  fiash  rather  than  a 
form  of  football. 

That  meant  the  only  source  of 
amusement  left  was  to  launch 
bombs  toward  groups  of  girls  and 
watch  them  scatter,  only  to  be  thor- 
oughly embarrassed  when  one  of 
them  caught  the  pass  better  than 
you  could. 

She  immediately  became  the 
major  crush  of  every  guy  at  school. 
But  I  digress.  Walk  to  the  intra- 
mural fields  and  you  will  see  one  of 
the  greatest  travesties  ever  commit- 


ted against  the  sports  world.  Worse 
than  the  1919  Black  Sox  scandal, 
worse  than  the  aboli  tion  of  college 
boxing,  even  worse  than  the  inch*» 
sion  of  ballroom  dancing  in  the 
Olympics. 

I'm  talking  about  the  fact  that 
contact  blocking  is  illegal  in  UCLA 
intramural  football.  In  fact,  it  is 
called  "screen  blocking"  in  the  IM 
rulebook.  At  first  glance  that  does- 
n't seem  like  a  problem.  But  there 
are  all  sorts  of  contradictions  in  this 
rule. 

First,  how  can  one  block  without.. 
contact?  Very  easily,  according  to 
the  IM  department.  Simply  clasp 
one's  hands  behind  thy  back,  assum- 
ing Mike  Tyson's  favorite  prison 
pose,  and  try  to  move  thy  feet. 

It's  all  fun  and  games  until  some- 
one trips  and  forgets  to  unclasp 
their  hands. 

If  the  defender  runs  into  the  line- 
ma  i,  it  is  a  "contact"  foul.  That's  all 
good,  but  how  many  people  want  to 
put  their  hands  behind  their  back 
and  take  one  for  the  team  every 
play? 
So  instead  you  have  a  bunch  of 


Sennng  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


Wedn£soay,  October  18,2000 


www.dailybnjin.ucla.edu 


Colleges  accused  of  underreporting  crime 


CAMPUS:  Complaint  says 
many  California  schools 
are  withholding  numbers 


ByLinhTat 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

The  U.S.  Department  of 
Education  is  reviewing  allegations 
that  some  California  universities 
underreport  crimes  on  their  campus- 
es. 

The  announcement  came  after  a 
national  campus  security  group  filed 
complaints  that  schools  in  the 
University  of  California  and 
California  State  University  systems 
are  withholding  numbers  in  their 
annual  crime  reports. 

S.  Daniel  Carter,  vice  president  of 
Security  on  Campus,  Inc.,  the  organi- 
zation that  filed  the  complaint,  said 
though  the  department  is  reviewing 
UCs  and  CSUs,  they  are  not  the  only 
ones  underreporting  crimes. 

"This  is  certainly  nothing  unique  to 
the  UC  system.  It's  probably  the  rule 
rather  than  the  exception  by  and 


large,"  he  said. 

UC  officials  say  they  reported  the 
sUtistics  accurately  to  the  best  of  their 
knowledge,  and  that  they  intend  to 
cooperate  with  the  Department  of 
Education  in  the  review. 

"We  want  to  make  absolutely  sure 
that  we  are  in  full  compliance  with  the 
law,"  said  UC  spokesman  Brad 
Hayward.         .,    >' 

The  complaint  was  prompted  by 
articles  in  the  Sacramento  Bee  last 
month  alleging  that  two-thirds  of  UC 
campuses  did  not  include  in  crime  sta- 
tistics sexual  assaults  reported  to  uni- 
versity officials  other  than  police. 

The  articles  found  that  three  times 
as  many  sex  offenses  occurred  than 
were  reported  by  the  UC. 

In  addition,  crimes  were  allegedly 
miscategorized  in  some  cases.  For 
example,  UC  Riverside  police  don't 
recognize  male  rape  victims,  and  UC 
San  Diego  accounts  for  sexual 
assaults  under  the  heading  "physical 
abuse,"  according  to  the  article. 

Nancy  Greenstein,  director  of 
police  community  services  at  UCLA, 
said  compiling  crime  reports  for  the 
school  is  more  difficult  because  of  its 
urban  location. 


CRIME  STATISTICS  FOR  UCLA 

The  Oery  Act  requifw  that  universities  make  Aeir  anniMi  uioie  leporo  avauasie  w  uw 

pubk  This  year,  for  the  first  time, unhwsjties  must  $tib«A  their  refKjmto^fWw^ 
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151 


Music  building 
will  remain 
renamect  say 
UCLA  officials 

BUILDING:  Family  of 
Schoenberg  plans  to  go 
to  UC  Board  of  Regents 


MAGGKWOO 


Sometimes,  campus  crimes  are 
reported  to  the  Los  Angeles  Police 
Department  or  agencies  other  than 
the      UC      Police      Department, 


Greenstein  said.  Though  her  depart- 
ment attempts  to  include  these  inci- 


SccSnmSTKSrpageO 


By  Monique  Simpson 

Dally  Bruin  Contributor 

Ostin  Hall  will  keep  its  new 
name,  despite  documentation 
showing  that  the  auditorium  in  the 
music  building  was  officially 
named  after  composer  Arnold 
Schoenberg  in  1955,  university 
officials  said. 

In  an  effort  to  try  to  have  the 
hall  changed  back  to  Schoenberg, 
the  Schoenberg  family  met  on 
Oct.  10  with  Michael  Eicher,  vice 
chancellor  of  external  affairs,  and 


SeeREIMMJNCpageS 


Advisory  panel  may  rid  UC 
portfolio  of  tobacco  stocks 


COMMITTEE:  Regents  still 
looking  for  new  treasurer 
after  Small's  resignation 


By  Benjamin  Parke 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


S«.  J«„o„  ,«„,er),  3  linguistics  student  and  G«H„  H»9  Wght),  a  fourth-year  theTer'^n^SjoT 
dinner  at  the  Westwood  Brew  Co.  while  watching  the  third  and  final  presidential  debate  last  night. 

Candidates  square  off  in  third  debate 

ELECTIONS:  Uncommitted  voters  pose  questions  as 
Gore,  Bush  highlight  differences  in  policies,  ideas 

showdown  of  the  2000  presidential 
campaign  was  conducted  town-hall 


The  question  of  tobacco  stocks  and 
the  search  for  a  new  treasurer  were 
the  topics  of  discussion  in  Tuesday's 
meeting  of  the  UC  Board  of  Regents' 
Investment  Advisory  Committee. 

In  the  James  West  Alumni  Center, 
the  members  of  the  committee  dis- 
cussed the  possible  exclusion  of 
tobacco  stocks  from  planned  invest- 


ments in  a  Russell  3000  index  fund. 

The  regents  created  the  advisory 
committee  a  year  ago  to  provide  addi- 
tional oversight  of  the  University  of 
California's  $53  billion  investment 
fund,  which  is  comprised  of  the  uni- 
versity's retirement  and  endowment 
pools. 

A  portion  of  the  UC  investment 
portfolio  will  be  placed  into  the  index 
fund,  which  consists  of  3,000  differ- 
ent stocks. 

If  six  tobacco  stocks  were  to  be 
excluded  from  that  investment  - 
Philip  Morris  being  the  largest  -  the 
money  would  have  to  be  redistributed 
to    the   other    2,994    stocks,    said 


SeelNVESTMENTS^pageS 


By  David  Dntdtcr 

Dally  Bruin  Reporter 


SeelUIION,pa9e31 


I 


Republican  George  W. 
Bush  and  Democrat  Al 
Gore  met  in  St.  Louis  last 
night  and  engaged  in  a 
brisk  debate  of  campaign 
issues  and  governing 
philosophies. 

The    third    and    firml 


meeting  style  on  the  cam- 
pus of  Washington 
University,  with  modera- 
tor Jim  Lehrer  selecting 
questions  that  were  then 
posed  directly  to  the  can- 
didates by  the  people  who 
submitted  them. 
— According — »o — John 


Scardino,  media  director  for  the 
Commission  on  Presidential 
Debates  -  the  event's  sponsor  -  the 
CPD  contracted  The  Gallup 
Organization  to  produce  a  panel  of 
100  uncommitted  voters. 

The  questions  they  asked  touched 
on  education,  health  care  and  the 
current  Middle  East  crisis,  among 
other  subjects  Gore  answered  these 
questions  in  the  aggressive, 
specifics-heavy  manner  he  is  known 


pVERSWJfT  FOR  THE  yCJOFRaOF  T^^^^^ 

With  changes  made  earlier  this  year,  the  UC  Treasurer  beame  an  officer  of  the  President  in 
addition  to  the  Regents,  while  extra  oversight  accompanied  the  creation  of  the  Investmem 
Advisory  Committee  almost  a  year  ago. 


« 


(^BoardofReywts 
[Committte  of  In^wtmentTk  — -g^- 


Trcasurer 


jflU    (^Board  of  Regents 


tMPJMHytgtlO 


(^   Office  of  the  President    ^ 


Committee  on 
Investments 


CmutMUt) 


Investment 

Advisory 

Committee 


Treasurer  and  Vke  President 

"'"'**•  I  for  Investments 


MMW  UC 


,^^^^0_^P^»jW  WlHW^  WlWBlfl 


HMGCIEWOO 


2        Wednesday,  October  18,2000 


Daily  Bniin  News 


Daily  Bruin  Nmh 


COMMUNITY  BmEFS 


Tribal  chief  speaks  of 
struggle  to  survive    | 

Surrounded  by  500,000  hectares  of  logged 
wood,  the  Higaonon  tribe  lives  in  the  last 
untouched  rainforest  in  the  Philippines. 

Tribal  Chief  Datu  Efren  Mandipensa  visit- 
ed UCLA  yesterday  to  speak  about  his 
tribe's  struggle  to  preserve  the  remainder  of 
the  Mindanao  forest  and  protect  their  indige- 
nous culture. 

"I'm  scared  that  we'll  be  a  tribe  without  a 
culture,"  said  Mandipensa,  who  wore  a  tradi- 
tional costume  for  the  event.  "The  forest  is 
the  church,  the  hospital,  the  market  for  many 
people." 

He  added  that  sometimes  members  of  the 
tribe  have  had  to  be  "a  little  bit  brutal"  and 
conilsci'te  chain  saws,  for  example,  when 
dealing  with  loggers  in  the  area. 

Elders  and  other  members  of  the  350,000- 
member  Higaonon  tribe  have  formed  the 
Tribal  Agro-Forestry  Technology  to  try  to 
preserve  the  remainder  of  the  forest  through 


re-introducing  indigenous  plants 
to  the  area. 

The  lecture,  held  at  noon   in 
Bunche  Hall,  was  sponsored  by  the 
UCLA  Center  for  Southeast  Asian  Studies. 

Richardson  accepts 
safety  suggestions 

Energy  Secretary  Bill  Richardson  accept- 
ed the  recommendations  of  John  Gordon, 
National  Nuclear  Security  Administrator, 
for  improving  security  and  other  facility 
operations  at  the  Energy  Department's  Los 
Alamos  National  Laboratory  and  the 
Lawrence  Livermore  National  Laboratory, 
both  operated  by  the  University  of 
California. 

"The  decision  to  proceed  is  a  vole  of  con- 
fidence in  a  relationship  that  has  brought 
great  benefits  to  our  nation  for  more  than 
half  a  century,"  said  UC  President  Richard 
Atkinson  in  a  statement. 

On  June  30,  Richardson  asked  Gordon  to 


prepare  recommendations  for 
restructuring  the  UC  contracts 
with  the  Energy  Department's 
weapons  laboratories. 
Richardson  has  authorized  the  NNSA 
administrator  to  immediately  restructure  the 
department's  current  contracts  with  the  uni- 
versity to  address  security  and  management 
issues. 

The  department  will  also  commence  nego- 
tiations with  UC  that,  if  successful,  would 
lead  to  additional  performance  requirements 
and  a  three  year  extension  of  the  contract. 
The  current  UC  contract  for  the  operation  of 
the  laboratories  runs  through  September  30, 
2002. 

Brockovich  to  speak 
about  teen  health 

Leadership,  reproductive  rights,  herbal 
medicine  and  healthy  dating  relationships 
are  some  of  the  issues  to  be  explored  at 
"Healthy  Hearts.  Healthy  Liyes..,Young 


Women  on  the  Rise,"  a  health  conference  for 
young  women  in  San  Francisco. 

Erin  Brockovich,  an  environmental  inves- 
tigator and  subject  of  a  recent  movie  starring 
Julia  Roberts,  is  one  of  the  keynote  speakers 
at  the  event. 

Brockovich  spearheaded  a  lawsuit  against 
Pacific  Gas  and  Electric  Company  after  dis- 
covering the  health  of  many  people  who  lived 
in  and  around  Hinkley,  California  during  the 
1960s,  '70s  and  '80s  had  been  devastated  by 
exposure  to  toxic  Chromium  6. 

The  chemical  had  leaked  into  the  ground- 
water from  a  nearby  PG&E  compressor  sta- 
tion. As  a  result  of  Brockovich's  investiga- 
tion, PG&E  was  ordered  to  pay  out  $333  mil- 
lion in  damages  to  more  than  600  Hinkley 
residents  in  1996,  making  it  the  largest  legal 
settlement  in  U.S.  history. 

About  1,000  high  school  girls  from  San 
Francisco  are  expected  to  attend  the  confer- 
ence, sponsored  by  the  UCSF  National 
Center  for  Excellence  in  Women's  Health. 

Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  services. 


WHAr  S  BREWING 

Today  12  p.m. 

NPHC/ASU 
NPHCyardshow 
Bruin  Plaza 

The  Center  for  the  Study  of  Religion 
Lecture  by  Dr.  Eric  Gans,  UCLA 
dept.  of  French 
10383  Bunche  Hall 
religion@humnet.ucla.edu 


Bradley  218 
ccdc@ucla.edu 


3:30  pjn. 

Hillel 

Teach-in  on  the  current  crisis  in  the 

Middle  East 

190  Royce  Hall 

208-3081 

4  p.m. 

UCLA  Chinese  Cultural  Dance 

Club 

Dance  class 


4:30  p.m. 

Undergraduate  History  Association 
Orientation  meeting 
Bunche 6265 


5  p.m. 

RAZA  Anistas  del  Pueblo 
Orientation  , 
Janss  Steps 
mc3@ucla.edu 


6  p.m. 

Youth  for  Socialist  Action 
The  Palestinian  struggle 
156  Royce  Hall 
Circle  K  International 


Service/Volunteer  Qub       ' 
General  meeting 
Kerckhofri35  ,_> 

Latinas  Guiding  Latinas 

Orientation 

Ackerman  Viewpoint  Lounge 

Coptic  Orthodox  Christian  Qub 
Weekly  meeting 
Royce  150 

African  Americans  in 
Communications,  Media,  and 
Entertainment 
General  meeting 
Ackerman  Union  2412 
%66870 

7:30  p.m. 

LG  BT  Resource  Center 
Bisexual  rap/support  group 
355Kinsey 


r 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


A  QUICK  LOOK 


Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 


Page# 
Dally  Bruin  Classlfled8_2I:;28 
Crossword  Puzzle_^_____25 
Movie  Guide ifl 


JJpD    mumpsimus 


1 .  Adhawtoa  to  or  panMino*  in  an  erroneous  UM  o(  Iwiguage, 
(nwnoriiaMon.  practtoe,  baHaf.  ate.  out  of  habM  or  obstinacy. 

2.  A  parson  who  persists  in  a  mMakan  aKprsaaian  or  pracUca. 

(Fnxn  a  s«o>y,  w««:h  pwtiaps  wttfruMd  «ah  ErsOTUi.  of  ■!  MwM*  piiMt 
wtto  SM  mumpsftna  raltwr  t«m  wmprtiM  (1H  pkrit  pwfKt  mOcallM  of 
LMin  sunan  10  pick  up)  whM  ivcMng  «w  Hugy.  ««)  rMuMd  to  chnit  tha 
WOK)  wtian  conaclad.) 

TMs  (Tumpsims  aicanOs  tlia  )«(N«  tiMMn  of  mvanaon,  IM  doai  not 

twtd  UP  undar  Via  applcabia  caaa  law  or  t^a  IMS.' 

Am  McOiAa.  Tha  quaHy  erf  maicy  la  not  slralnad.  iMOitgvi  Law  Ravtsw. 

V FabltM. 


DEAL 

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^5.99 

Small  MM-tafMlRf 
phia  ami  tmM, 

For  additional  dotaHs,  too  page  20. 


^. 


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Wednesday,  October  18, 2000         3 


Trac*y  Tuy«n  tells  stories  to  a  group  of  children  in  a  village  near  Bodh-Gaya.  India  last  spring. 


Last  year,  four  UCLA 

students  worked  to  provide 

families  in  northern 

India  with  medical  and 

educational  services 


\ 


(Left  to  right)  Recent  UCLA  graduates  Lisa  Hwang,  Bahar  Kumar  and  Tracei^TuyetJ  displaT"' 
one  of  their  meals  during  their  travel  to  northern  India  to  help  impoverished  communities. 


By  Dharshani  Dharmawardtna 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

For  some  people  who  have  never  visited 
India,  the  Taj  Mahal,  Mendhi.  also  known 
as  Henna,  and  "The  .Simpsons"  character 
Apu  selling  hot  dogs  at  Kwik-E  Mart  com- 
plete their  view  of  the  former  Crown  Jewel 
ofthe  British  Empire. 

"It's  not  that,  it's  not  about  the  silk  or  the 
Mendhi,"  said  Bahar  Kumar,  a  UCLA 
alumna  ('99).  "This  is  what  the  West  gets 
bombarded  with." 

The  real  beauty  of  India  shines  through 
when  people  learn  to  sec  the  world  through 
locals'  eyes,  she  said. 

"There's  somethmg  about  people  living 
off  the  land,"  Kumar  said.  "We  realized  we 
had  to  strike  internal  balance  and  acknowl- 
edge reality." 

As  one  of  four  women  chosen  by  the 
International  Development  Studies 
Program,  Kumar  traveled  to  northern  India 
for  four  months  last  year  with  a  donor-fund- 
ed non-governmental  organization  called 
Buddha  Educutiowul  Charitable  Suuiety, 


which  fosters  educational  and  medicinal  ser- 
vices in  the  region. 

Kumar,  Lisa  Hwang,  Tracey  Tuyen,  and 
Sarah  Borchelt,  all  UCLA  alumnae  ('99), 
participated  in  community  development 
work  that  ranged  from  community  health  to 
rural  education  and  NGO  administrative 
development,  Hwang  said. 

Living  in  this  area  meant  living  in  the 
very  heart  and  soul  of  India,  Kumar  said. 
But,  it  also  meant  seeing  the  fragility  of  life, 
especially  in  a  part  of  the  world  where 
poverty  runs  rampant. 

"I  heard  this  moaning  outside  near  the 
(outpatient  clinic)  -  two  women  were  cry- 
ing," she  said.  "I  saw  a  baby  wrapped  up  on 
a  bench  and  heard  the  doctor  say  he  could^ 
n't  do  anything." 

Left  alone  near  water,  the  baby  had 
drowned  before  anybody  could  come  to  his 
rescue. 

"That  was  the  first  lime  I'd  seen  a  little 
infant  pass  away  in  a  few  minutes,"  she  said. 

Robert  and  Jennifer  Chartoffspearheab- 
ed  the  program  in  an  effort  to  educate 
"uniuuchable"   CHildrcri   m   Bodh-Caya, 


Bihar,  which  is  considered  holy  land. 

As  Buddhists,  the  couple  went  on  to  per- 
form "dharma,"  or  religious  duty:  helping 
people  improve  their  lives. 

Ten  years  later,  they  spoke  to  Joshua 
Muldavin,  chair  of  the  International 
DepartmenUl  Studies  Program  at  UCLA, 
and  came  up  with  the  idea  to  have  IDS  stu- 
dents go  participate  in  the  program  as  field 
experience. 

The  Chartoffs  initially  started  the 
Jennifer  School,  which  teaches  children 
from  age  6  to  15,  but  now  have  extended 
educational  services  to  six  village  schools 
for  students  of  kindergarten  age,  and  have 
also  added  health  care  services. 

In  addition  to  education,  the  program 
now  addresses  broader  developmental 
issues,  including  health  education,  agricul- 
ture and  water  sources,  Muldavin  said. 

Taking  part  in  the  program  gave  the 
women  Tield  service  experience,  letting 
them  see  firsthand  whal  they  learned  in  lec- 
ture halls  about  economy  and  society  at 

work  in  real  life,  Hwang  said 

It  taught  them  limits  and  de^p  respect  for 


the  culture  as  well,  Kumar  said,  adding  that 
learning  to  deal  with  how  women  were  treat- 
ed proved  to  be  a  challenge. 

"We  had  to  learn  that  even  if  we  were  all 
feminists  we  couldn't  just  go  over  there  and 
proclaim  to  them  to  break  their  chains,"  she 
said.  "We  had  to  learn  to  not  be  frustrated, 
to  understand,  and  to  value  the  power  they 
have  and  how  they  deal  with  their  situa- 
tions." 

Women  in  many  of  the  villages  have  to 
deal  with  drunken  husbands,  bury  children, 
tend  to  fields  and  keep  the  community 
together. 

"You  have  to  step  back  and  look  at  the 
bigger  picture,  at  how  contained  they  are," 
Kumar  said.  "It  tells  you  the  strength  of  the 
human  spirit." 

Teaching  at  the  schools  involved  more 
than  just  instructing  the  children,  she  con- 
tinued. It  meant  Ulking  to  the  teachers  as 
well. 

OHen,  Hwang,  Kumar  and  the  other  two 
participants  would  talk  with  the  teachers 


Se«MDM,pa9e11 


■  tf:'    •^^   :  i  . 


<      ■'Wfdnt«Ja)tOctoli«.18,2000 


Daily  Bniin  News 


STATE  &  LOCAL 


D«ly  Brain  Newt 


WFdoesday,  October  18,2000 


WORLD  <&  NATION 


Dow  Jones  Industrials 

down:  149.09  .; 

clo$e:1,089.71  j  '       ,         ; 


Nasdaq  Index 

down:  76.32 
dose:3,2W.% 


Dollar 

Yen:  107.97 
Euro:  1.1706 


may  reach  resolution 


SETTLEMENT:  Deal  awaits 
union  members'  approval; 
buses  likely  to  run  today 


By  Cadonna  M.  Peyton 

The  Associated  Press 


Negotiators  reached  a  settlement 
Tuesday  in  the  monthlong  transit 
strike  that  has  stranded  nearly  a  half- 
million  bus  and  subway  riders  and 
hit  particularly  hard  at  Los  Angeles' 
working  poor. 

The  deal,  which  was  to  be  present- 
ed to  the  union  rank-and-file  for  rat- 
ification Tuesday  evening,  could 
possibly  have  buses  rolling  today 
and  subways  back  in  service 
Thursday. 

"I'm  fed  up  with  the  strike.  1  need 
the  bus  to  come  back.  I  cannot  do 
anything,"  said  Magdalena  Iglesias, 
31,  who  uses  public  transportation  to 
attend  English  classes  at  an  adult 
school.  She  also  said  she  paid  people 
as  much  as  $12  per  trip  to  take  her 
son  to  school. 

"They've  made  us  suffer  for  a 
month.  A  lot  of  people  I  know  have 
lost  their  jobs,"  she  said  in  Spanish. 
The  4,300  bus  drivers  and  rail 
operators  represented  by  the  United 
Transportation  Union  walked  out 
Sept.  16  against  the  Metropolitan 
Transportation  Authority. 

The  breakthrough  came  after  a 
marathon,  all-night  bargaining  ses- 
sion assisted  by  the  Rev.  Jesse 
Jackson. 

"We  had  just  about  given  up  after, 
all  night  long,  then  we  were  awak- 
ened this  morning  by  some  angel 
that  blessed  us  out  of  somewhere 
with  a  fresh  start,  a  fresh  idea  and  we 
shared  it  with  the  MTA  leadership," 
Jackson  said. 


Officials  make  arrests 
in  alien 


Barak,  Arafat  come  to  agreement 


NATIONS:  Multinational 
cooperation  brings  in  38 
immigration  criminals 


.  n  J  x-L  TheAssoa««JPr«s 

MTA  Board  Chairperson  Yvonne  BrathwaKe  Burke  (left)  and  Los    . 
Angeles  Mayor  Richard  Riordan,  arrive  for  continued  negotiations 
with  nnembers  of  the  striking  United  Transportation  Union  Monday. 


The  terms  of  the  tentative  con- 
tract were  not  immediately  avail- 
able. 

The  walkout  sent  450,000  daily 
riders  scrambling  to  get  to  work, 
school,  doctors'  appointments  and 
grocery  stores.  People  drove,  bicy- 
cled, got  rides  from  friends  or  took 
advantage  of  illegal  rides  offered  by 
entrepreneurs. 

The  MTA  offered  some  bus  ser- 
vice on  "lifeline"  routes,  but  most  of 
its  2,275  buses  and  all  59  miles  of 
light  rail  and  subway  were  idled. 

The  strike  worsened  the  traffic  on 
the  area's  clogged  freeways,  but  oth- 


erwise there  were  few  signs  that 
there  was  even  a  strike  going  on, 
reflecting  the  fact  that  Los  Angeles' 
movers  and  shakers  drive  instead  of 
using  public  transit. 

Most  affected  were  the  poor  and 
minorities. 

While  only  about  7  percent  of 
commuters  in  Los  Angeles  County 
use  public  transit,  those  who  do 
often  have  few  alternatives.  Sixty- 
eight  percent  have  household 
incomes  under  $  1 5,000  per  year,  and 
three-quarters  of  bus  riders  are 
black  or  Hispanic,  according  to  the 
MTA. 


ByMidiaelJ.Sniffcn 

The  Associated  Press  ,    , 

WASHINGTON  -  U.S.  irnmi- 
gration  officers  working  with  coun- 
terparts in  Mexico  and  five  Central 
American  nations  have  arrested  38 
alien  smugglers  -  including  an 
alleged  kingpin  taken  into  custody 
in  Los  Angeles  -  and  detained 
3,500  of  their  clients  before  they 
got  to  the  United  States. 

The  results  of  Operation 
Forerunner,  the  first  simultaneous, 
coordinated  multinational  anti- 
smuggling  action,  were  announced 
by  Immigration  Commissioner 
Doris  Meissner  at  a  news  confer- 
ence here  Tuesday.  The  three-week 
operation  began  Sept.  21. 

Meissner  described  the  joint 
operation  as  an  "extremely  cost- 
effective"  way  to  attack  the  grow- 
ing, "nasty  and  vicious"  billion-dol- 
lar alien  smuggling  business. 
Apprehending  smugglers  and  their 
clients  in  Latin  America  saves  the 
U.S.  government  the  cost  of  find- 
ing and  detaining  illegal  aliens  here 
and  "is  much  less  dangerous  for  the 
migrants,"  whose  lives  often  are 
risked  on  their  journey,  Meissner 
said.    . 

"We  want  to  stop  this  smuggling 
as  close  to  the  source  as  possible," 
she  said. 

The  most  significant  arrest  was 
arranged    with    help    from    the 


Guatemalan  government.  Two 
individuals  employed  by  the  U.S. 
Immigration  and  Naturalization 
Service  located  alleged  smuggling 
kingpin  Jose  Leon  Castillo  in 
Guatemala.  Guatemala  expelled 
him  to  his  native  country, 
Honduras,  but  did  so  by  putting 
him  on  a  plane  that  went  first  to  the 
United  States,  said  Richard 
Cravener,  head  of  the  INS  Houston 
office.  Upon  arrival  in  Los  Angeles 
on  Oct.  5,  Castillo  was  arrested  and 
will  be  transferred  later  this  month 
to  Houston  where  he  faces  federal 
alien  smuggling  charges. 

The  INS  considers  Castillo  one 
of  the  hemisphere's  most  notorious 
smugglers.  Meissner  said  he  has 
smuggled  thousands  of  illegal 
immigrants  into  the  United  States 
during  his  more  than  five  years  run- 
ning a  major  operation. 

The  other  Central  American 
countries  participating  in  the  oper- 
ation were  Belize,  El  Salvador, 
Honduras  and  Panama.  Thirty- 
four  of  the  38  smugglers  were 
arrested  outside  the  United  States 
and  face  charges  where  they  were 
taken  into  custody. 

The  3,500  migrants  detained 
abroad  were  destined  for  this  courn 
try;  most  had  paid  up  to  $3,800 
apiece  to  the  smugglers,  Meissner 
said.  They  came  from  25  different 
countries,  but  primarily  from 
Guatemala,  Honduras,  Ecuador 
and  EI  Salvador.  They  were 
detained  for  immigration  viola- 
tions in  the  cooperating  countries 
and  most  were  returned  to  their 
country  of  origin.  U.S.  officials 
said. 


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SUMMrT:  Leaders  hope 
public  statements  will 
prevent  further  violence 


By  Laura  King 

The  Assodated  Press  '  ' 

SHARM  EL-SHEIK.  Egypt  - 
Ending  an  emergency  summit 
fraught  with  anger  and  mistrust, 
Israeli  and  Palestinian  leaders 
agreed  Tuesday  to  publicly  urge  an 
end  to  a  burst  of  bloody  conflicts  and 
to  consult  within  two  weeks  on 
restarting  the  ravaged  Mideast  peace 
process. 

In  the  West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip, 
new  violence  flared  even  as 
marathon  negotiations  in  this  Red 
Sea  resort  reached  a  finale.  That 
casts  doubt  on  whether  a  concerted 
effort  by  Israeli  Prime  Minister 
Ehud  Barak  and  Palestinian  leader 
Yasser  Arafat  could  halt  chaotic 
street  clashes  between  Israeli  troops 
and  Palestinian  stone-throwers  and 
gunmen  that  raged  for  a  20th  day. 

Israeli  security  forces  "will  be 
meticulous  in  their  eff^oru  to  end  the 
violence  and  prevent  further  loss  of 
life,"  Barak  said  in  Jerusalem, 
responding  to  a  provision  in  the 
agreement  requiring  each  of  the 
leaders  to  make  a  public  statement 
denouncing  the  violence. 

In  a  statement  issued  late  Tuesday, 
the  Palestinian  leadership  said,  "Our 


Environmental  clean-up  bill 


Stalled  by  Congress  conflict 


LEGISLATIO^k  Agreement 
between  lawmakers  may 
be  behind  long  hold-up 


-  The  Associated  Press 

(Left  to  nght)  Palestinian  leader  Yuscr  Arafat  Prasictent  Bill  Clinton 
and  Egyptian  president  Hosni  Mubarak  meet  at  a  summit  on  Tuesday. 


people  will  not  initiate  violence,  but 
our  people  were  the  victims  of  this 
violence." 

Earlier  Tuesday,  as  he  returned  to 
Gaza,  Arafat  told  reporters,  "We 
expect  that  the  implementation  will 
be  exactly  as  we  agreed  upon." 

Barak  said  the  agreement  con- 
tained "clear  understandings"  on 
ways  to  calm  tensions.  "If  the 
Palestinian  side  sticks  to  it  and  we  do 
our  part,  and  there  really  is  a  calming 
down,  then  this  is  a  significant 
change." 

Soon     after     the     deal     was 


announced,  the  militant  Islamic 
group  Hamas  said  it  was  not  bound 
by  it.  And  in  the  latest  wave  of  vio- 
lence, two  Palestinians  were  killed 
Tuesday  in  fierce  gun-battles,  push- 
ing the  death  toll  above  100,  nearly 
all  of  them  Palestinians.  An  Israeli 
policeman  was  critically  wounded  in 
a  Jerusalem  firefight. 

Reading  a  carefully  worded  state- 
ment at  the  conclusion  of  28  hours  of 
talks  interrupted  only  by  a  four-hour 
rest  period.  President  Clinton  said, 


See«6KEMEIIT,pa9e10 


ByH.JoscfHcbert 

The  Assodated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  GOP  presi- 
dential hopeful  George  W.  Bush  has 
made  cleaning  up  moderately  conta- 
minated urtun  land  a  top  environ- 
mental issue,  but  a  bill  to  help  do  has 
been  blocked  for  months  in  Congress 
because  of  opposition  from  the 
Senate's  top  Republican. 

At  campaign  stops  and  during 
debates.  Bush  has  praised  govern- 
ment efforts  to  clean  up  "brown- 
fields"  and  said  that  as  president  he 
would  press  Congress  to  speed  up  the 
restoration  of  these  sites  Demoaatic 
rival  Al  Gore  has  vowed  the  same. 

Ironically,  a  behind-the-scenes 
"horse-trade"  between  two  GOP  serv 
ators  -  one  seeking  to  assure  passage 
of  one  of  his  favorite  bills,  and  anoth- 
er out  to  protect  powerful  con- 
stituents back  home  -  appears  to 
have  undermined  just  that  kind  of  leg- 
islation in  the  current  Congress. 

There  are  tens  of  thousands  of 
brownfield  sites  around  the  country, 
and  a  Senate  bill  would  provide 
increased  spending  -  as  much  as 


$150  million  a  year  -  for  restoration 
programs.  More  importantly,  its  sup- 
porters say,  the  bill  would  ensure  that 
developers  willing  to  build  on  the  sites 
would  have  modest  cleanup  costs  and 
would  be  insulated  from  future  law- 
suits under  the  federal  Superfund 
toxic  waste  law. 

But  the  bill  has  been  in  legislative 
limbo  for  months  even  though  it  has 
the  support  of  the  Clinton  administra- 
tion and  is  sponsored  by  67  senators, 
including  28  Republicans. 

The  bill's  sponsors  complain  that 
Majority  Leader  Trent  Lott,  R-Miss., 
won't  allow  the  bill  to  come  up  for 
vote  because  of  a  secret  promise  he 
made  to  Republican  Idaho  Sen. 
Michael  Crapo,  last  November. 

At  the  time  Lott  received  Crapo's 
assurance  that  he  would  not  block  a 
bill  exempting  scrap  metal  recyclers 
from  Superfund  requirements.  An 
old  college  chum  in  the  metal  scrap 
business  lobbied  Lott  on  the  issue. 

The  scrap  metal  bill  passed  with 
broad  bipartisan  support  four  days 
after  Lott  wrote  a  letter  to  Crapo  out- 
lining the  agreement.  In  return  for 
Crapo  not  interfering  in  the  scrap 
metal  bill,  Lott  promised  to  "use  the 
privilege  of  my  position  as  majority 
leader  to  ensure  ...  no  brownfields 
proposal ...  win  be  allowed  to  be  con- 
sidered or  acted  upon  by  the  Senate 
during  this  Congress." 


Investigators  discover  evidence 
near  site  of  attacic  on  USS  Cole 


BOMBING:  Recovery 
of  bodies  from  ship's 
wreckage  continues 


By  BriM  Murphy 
The  Associated  Press 

ADEN,  Yemen  -  Investigators 
found  bomb-making  equipment  in 
an  apartment  near  the  port  of 
Aden  and  believe  two  former 
occupants  may  have  carried  out 
the  suicide  bombing  that  killed  17 
sailors  aboard  the  USS  Cole,  secu- 
rity officials  said  Tuesday. 

U.S.  authorities  would  not  com- 
ment directly  on  the  disclosure 
But   the   ambassador,    Barbara 


Bodine,  described  the  investiga- 
tion as  advancing  "a  quantum 
leap." 

"We  are  very  hopeful  we  are 
going  to  get  to  the  bottom  of  this," 
she  said. 

Yemeni  ofilcials,  who  spoke  on 
condition  of  anonymity,  identified 
the  missing  men  only  as  non- 
Yemeni  Arabs.  Other  Yemeni  offi- 
cials said  they  were  from  neighbor- 
ing Saudi  Arabia. 

Moments  before  the  huge  blast 
Thursday,  two  men  were  seen 
standing  on  the  deck  of  a  small  ves- 
sel alongside  the  destroyer,  U.S. 
authorities  said.  A  404>y-4(Mbot 
hole  was  blown  into  the  Cole's  hull 
and  the  attack  ship  disintegrated 
into  'tonfetti  size"  pieces. 


On  Tuesday,  divers  and  other 
crew  members  using  metal-slicing 
torches  and  aowbars  pulled  six 
more  bodies  from  the  tangled 
bowels  of  the  Cole.  Officials  initial- 
ly said  seven  bodies  were  recov- 
ered Tuesday,  but  later  corrected 
the  figure.  Six  victims  remain 
trapped  near  the  blast  site. 

In  Virginia,  four  of  the  more 
seriously  wounded  Cole  sailors 
arrived  at  Norfolk  Naval  Station 
after  a  flight  from  Germany  Most 
of  the  39  injured  sailors  had 
arrived  in  Virginia  over  the  week- 
end, while  two  critically  injured 
shipmates  remain  at  the  military's 
Landstuhl     Regional     Medical 


SecEVIDEIiapagcll 


\ 


_  .  _  The  Associated  Press 

carrying  a  U.S.  flag,  an  unidentified  sailor  injured  in  the  apparent  attack  on 
the  USS  Cole,  heads  toward  a  waiting  ambulance  after  being  greeted  by 
family  members  on  the  tarmac  at  Norfolk  Naval  Station  in  Virginia. 


WORLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 


Mourning  continues 
for  Missouri  governor 

GOLDMAN,  Mo.  -  Gov.  Mel  Carnahan's 
death  in  the  crash  of  a  small  plane  piloted  by 
his  son  sent  Missouri  into  mourning  for  the 
beloved  politician  Tuesday  and  cut  short  one 
of  the  hardest-fought  Senate  races  in  the 
nation. 

The  twin-engine  plane  went  down  Monday 
night  in  rain  and  fog  south  of  St.  Louis  en 
route  to  a  campaign  rally,  killing  the  66-year- 
old  Carnahan,  his  44-year-old  son  Roger 
Carnahan  and  an  aide,  Chris  SifTord.  37  No 
one  else  was  aboard. 

The  cause  of  the  crash  was  not  immediately 
known,  but  Federal  Aviation  Administration 
spokeswoman  Elizabeth  Isham  Cory  said  the 
pilot  reported  a  "gyro  problem"  shortly 
before  the  plane  vanished  from  radar.  A  gyro- 
scope is  a  dashboard  instrument  that  helps  the 
pilot  with  basic  orientation  and  sense  of  hori- 
zon -  distinguishing  level  fiight  from  bank- 


ing,  turning  from   straight  and 
climbing  from  descent. 

The  remains  of  the  victims  were 
not  immediately  recovered.  Members 
of  the  National  Transportation  Safety 
Board  said  a  report  would  take  months  to 
complete.  ^ 

Floods  take  toll  in 
Switzerland,  Italy 

PIACENZA,  Italy  -  luly  hurried  more 
than  15,000  people  from  the  path  of  two  rag- 
ing rivers  Tuesday  as  Hood  waters  that 
wreaked  death  in  Alpine  towns  bore  down  on 
the  medieval  villages  and  cities  of  the  north- 
em  Italian  plains. 

The  death  toll  in  luly  and  Switzeriand  rose 
to  25,  with  the  mud-caked  bodies  of  a  I -year- 
old  lulian  boy  and  a  woman  believed  to  be  his 
mother  among  the  latest  uncovered.  A  total  of 
21  people  in  the  two  countries  were  missine 
and  feared  dead. 


On  Tuesday,  emergency  crews 

evacuated  whole  villages  in  the 

paths  of  the  Po,  Italy's  longest  river, 

and  the  Ticino  that  feeds  into  it  from 

the  Alps. 

Water  was  climbing  within  inches  of  the 

sandbags  newly  lining  the  Po,  a  few  steps  from 

Rossi's  church.  Hh  too  was  leaving  soon. 

The  Po  already  had  burst  its  banks  at  some 
points.  By  Tuesday  night,  the  Hood  crest  was 
passing  the  old  trade  town  of  Piacenza,  home 
to  columned  Romanesque  churches  and  a 
Botticelli  painting.  ;    ' 

Lagos  at  the  center  of 
violent  outbreaks 

LAGOS,  Nigeria  -  Schools  were  closed, 
markets  were  deserted  and  anti-riot  police 
patrolled  streets  in  parts  of  Nigeria's  com- 
mercial capital  Tuesday  amid  days  of  tribal 
fighting  that  has  killed  up  to  65  people. 

More  than  20  people  were  arrested  in  con- 


nection with  the  fighting,  and  leaders  of  the 
tribes  -  the  northern  predominantly  Muslim 
Hausas  and  the  southern-based  Christian 
Yorubas  -  agreed  to  meet  in  a  bid  to  restore 
calm. 

Police  Commissioner  Mike  Okiro  con- 
firmed 24  deaths  in  the  fighting.  Other  police 
officials  have  said  about  65  people  were 
killed. 

Police  opened  fire  Tuesday  to  disperse  a 
crowd  of  Yoruba  youths  belonging  to  the 
Odudua  People's  Congress,  a  group  that 
advocates  a  separate  state  for  Hausas  in 
southwestern  Nigeria.  Another  band  of 
Yoruba  youths  also  belonging  to  the  Odudua 
People's  Congress  attacked  guests  at  a  hotel 
with  guns,  axes  and  knives,  killing  about  15 
people  early  Tuesday,  the  building's  owner 
said  on  condition  of  anonymity. 

By  afternoon,  security  forces  had  regained 
control  of  sites  where  fighting  broke  out  and 
an  "uneasy  calm"  prevailed,  Okiro  said. 


Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports 


*   *'.  ■  ■  >   -^ 


•••'■    .\  .  -.  , 


Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 


DaHy  Bruin  News 


Daily  Bruin  {iem 


Wednesday.  October  18,2000       -  f 


unravels  mystery 


BEETHOVEN:  Analysis 
of  specimen  suggests 
lead  poisoning  death„ 


By  Martha  Irvine 

The  Associated  Press 

ARGONNE,  III. -An  analy- 
sis of  a  lock  of  Ludwig  van 
Beethoven's  hair  suggests  lead 
poisoning  could  explain  the 
erratic  genius'  lifelong  ailments, 
his  strange  behavior,  his  death, 
maybe  even  his  deafness.  , 

The  four-year  analysis  of  the 
hair  -  apparently  snipped  after 
the  composer's  death  at  age  56 
in  1827-  has  turned  up  a  con- 
centration of  lead  lOO-times  the 
levels  commonly  found  in  peo- 
ple today,  according  to 
researchers  at  the  Health 
Research  Institute  in  suburban 
Chicago,  where  the  hair  was 
tested. 

That  means  it  is  all  but  cer- 
tain that  the  composer  suffered 
from  lead  poisoning,  also 
known  as  plumbism,  the 
researchers  said. 

"It  was  a  surprise,  but  it 
stood  out  like  a  sore  thumb  in 
the  analysis,"  said  William 
Walsh,  director  of  the  institute's 
Beethoven  research  project. 

Scientists  initially  were 
searching  for  mercury,  a  com- 
mon treatment  for  syphilis  in 
Beethoven's  day.  The  absence  of 
mercury  supports  the  recent 
consensus  of  scholars  who 
believe  Beethoven  did  not  have 
syphilis. 

In  rare  cases,  lead  poisoning 
causes  deafness,  but  scientists 
remain  unsure  if  that  was  what 
caused  Beethoven's  hearing 
loss. 

"So  that's  really  the  million- 


dollar  question,"  said  William 
Meredith,  director  of  the  Center 
for  Beethoven  Studies  at  San 
Jose  State  University.    ■„ 

He  said  he  hopes  further  test- 
ing will  be  done  on  other  locks 
of  hair  from  the  Beethoven 
house  in  Bonn,  Germany,  which 
has  several  strands  that  were 
taken  five  or  more  years  before 
he  died. 

Lead  poisoning  may  also 
explain  what  some  described  as 
dramatic  mood  swings  on 
Beethoven's  part. 


"Ifyou  asked  friends, 

they'd  say  he  ...was 

unpredictable." 

William  Meredith 

Beethoven  Center  director 


"Ff  you  asked  friends,  they'd 
.  say  he  could  be  gruff  but  he  had 
a  great  sense  of  humor," 
Meredith  said.  "Others  say  he 
was  unpredictable  -  very  errat- 
ic behavior  -  that  you'd  never 
know  what  to  expect  when 
you'd  visit  him." 

Beethoven  was  given  to  tow- 
ering rages,  and  sometimes  had 
the  look  of  a  wild  animal,  with 
his  long  hair  unkempt  and  his 
appearance  filthy.  He  was 
known  to  bicker  with  waiters 
and  stroll  the  streets  of  Vienna 
in  an  oversize  top  hat  and  a  coat 
that  extended  almost  to  his 
ankles,  humming  off-key  and 
scribbling  in  a  notebook. 

The  Health  Research 
Institute  scientists  said  that 
Beethoven's  lead  exposure 
came  as  an  adult  but  that  the 


source  of  the  lead  is  unclear, 
though  one  possibility  is  the 
mineral  water  he  swam  in  and 
'  drank  during  his  stays  at  spas. 
The  conclusions  were  based 
on  chemical  analysis  by  the 
McCrone  Research  Institute  in 
Chicago  and  images  taken  at 
Argonne  National  Laboratory 
using  an  electron  accelerator 
that  creates  the  most  detailed  X- 
rays  available  today 

Many  mourners  took  hair 
from  Beethoven  while  the  body 
was  on  view  in  the  Vienna  apart- 
•  ment  where  he  died  of  pneumo- 
nia and  complications  of 
abdominal  problems,  which  are 
a  c6mmon  symptoms  of  lead 
poisoning. 

"He  was  shorn.  He  was  prac- 
tically bald  when  he  was 
buried,"  said  Ira  Brilliant, 
founder  of  the  Center  of 
Beethoven  Studies. 

Brilliant  and  Alfredo 
Guevara,  a  surgeon  from 
Nogales,  Ariz.,  bought  the  hair 
in  1994  for  $7,300  at  Sotheby's 
auction  house  in  London.  In  all, 
there  were  582  strands  -  3  inch- 
es to  6  inches  long  -  that  were 
gray  and  two  shades  of  brown. 

The  analysis  did  not  find  drug 
metabolites,  which  indicate 
Beethoven  avoided  painkillers 
during  his  long  and  painful 
death. 

"This  implies  that  he  decided 
to  keep  his  mind  clear  for  his 
music,"  Walsh  said. 

Even  Beethoven  himself 
wanted  to  know  what  had  made 
him  so  ill  since  his  early  20s.  He 
wrote  a  letter  to  his  brothers  in 
1802  asking  them  to  have  doc- 
tors find  the  cause  of  his  abdom- 
inal pain  after  his  death. 

"We  feel  that  we're  fulfilling 
part  of  his  wishes,  albeit  199 
years  later,"  Walsh  said. 


Estrada  presidency  in  danger 
as  economic  troubles  persist 


BRIBERY:  'Leadership  crisis' 
has  undermined  confidence 
of  investors,  opposition  says 


By  Oliver  Tcvcs 

The  Associated  Press 


J 


MANILA,  Philippines  -  President 
Joseph  Estrada  faced  the  most  serious 
threat  to  his  presidency  Tuesday  as  one- 
time allies  -  business,  political  and  reli- 
gious -  delivered  a  unified  message:  step 
aside. 

Estrada  again  maintained  he  was 
innocent  of  corruption,  denying  he 
received  "even  a  centavo"  of  the  $11.4 
million  in  illegal  gambling  money  and 
tobacco  taxes  he  is  accused  of  pocket- 
ing. 

"I  have  been  convicted  without  a 
trial,"  the  president  complained. 

But  the  accusations  already  have  had 
a  devastating  effect  on  the  Philippines' 
faltering  economy.  And  impeachment 
proceedings  could  jeopardize  democra- 
cy in  the  Philippines,  former  President 
Corazon  Aquino  said. 

The  peso  plunged  to  a  record  low  and 
the  stock  market  dropped  to  its  lowest 
point  in  two  years  Monday.  The  central 
bank  has  had  to  sharply  raise  interest 
rates,  threatening  growth  in  an  economy 
that  is  already  one  of  the  slowest  in 
Southeast  Asia,  four  leading  business 
groups  said. 

The  "crisis  of  leadership"  has  serious- 
ly undermined  investor  confidence,  the 
business  groups  said  Tuesday,  urging 
Estrada  to  step  down  to  avert  economic 
disaster. 

The  corruption  allegations  surfaced 
when  provincial  Gov.  Luis  Singson, 
once  a  close  friend  of  Estrada's,  testified 
last  week  that  he  arranged  payoffs  of 
$8.6  million  from  illegal  gambling  and 
another  $2.8  million  from  tobacco  taxes. 
Singson  said  he  decided  step  forward 
about  the  payoffs  after  Estrada  awarded 


the  franchise  for  a  legalized  form  of  the 
numbers  game  jueteng  to  Singson's 
political  rival. 

For  the  sake  of  democracy,  Estrada 
should  step  aside  until  the  allegations 
are  resolved,  political  and  religious  lead- 
ers said. 

Aquino  wore  yellow  -  symbol  of  the 
"people  power"  revolt  she  led  against 
ousted  dictator  Ferdinand  Marcos  in 
1986  -  to  call  on  Estrada  to  resign  or 
take  a  leave  of  absence. 

"No  government  can  continue  with 
such  charges  hanging  over  its  head,"  she 
said. 

Archbishop  Jaime  Cardinal  Sin 
joined  her  at  a  shrine  commemorating 
the  1986  revolt  to  repeat  his  advice  to 
Estrada  to  step  aside. 

"May  God  show  him  the  heroic  value 
of  relinquishing  his  post  for  the  sake  of 
our  people,"  he  said  Tuesday. 

Opposition  lawmakers  and  citizen's 
groups  said  they  planned  to  file  a  formal 
impeachment  proceedings  against  the 
president  Wednesday  in  the  House  of 
Representatives. 

Estrada  -  whose  party  holds  large 
majorities  in  both  houses  of  Congress  - 
welcomed  the  action,  saying  impeach- 
ment proceedings  would  vindicate  him. 
But  Aquino  warned  Tuesday  that 
impeachment  proceedings,  sure  to  be 
complicated  and  lengthy,  would  only 
threaten  the  country's  democracy,  scare 
away  investment  and  damage  its  econo- 
my "  beyond  any  chance  of  swift  repair." 
"No  less  than  the  life  of  our  country  is 
at  stake,"  she  said. 

And  in  another  major  political  Wow 
to  Estrada,  Vice  President  Gloria 
Macapagal  Arroyo  announced  that  she 
had  enlisted  the  support  of  several  key 
opposition  leaders  for  a  united  move- 
ment against  Estrada. 

"The  first  order  of  the  day  is  unity," 
said  Arroyo,  who  resigned  last  week  as 
Estrada's  secretary  of  social  welfare 
after  refusing  for  two  years  to  criticize 
his  presidency. 


NKW  LINi:  CINKMA 


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8         WHlnfS(by,  October  18, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Newt 


»>! 


STATISTIC 

From  page  1 

dents  in  the  university's  report,  not 
all  may  be  accounted  for. 

"For  schools  like  us,  it's  pretty 
complicated  because  we  deal  with  so 
many  entities,"  she  said. 

In  1990,  President  George  Bush 
signed  the  Crime  Awareness  and 
Campus  Security  Bill,  requiring  all 
institutions  of  higher  education 
receiving  federal  student  aid  to 
report  crime  statistics.  In  1998, 
Congress  amended  the  requirements 
and  renamed  it  the  Jeanne  Clery 
Disclosure  of  Campus  Security 
Policy  and  Campus  Crime  Statistics 
Act. 

The  Clery  Act  requires  that  uni- 
versities include  reports  made  to  the 


dean  of  students,  athletic  directors 
or  other  university  officials.  This 
year,  for  the  first  time,  colleges  must 
submit  their  reports  to  the 
Department  of  Education. 

Hayward  acknowledged  that  uni- 
versities face  difficulty  in  reporting 
their  statistics. 

"It's  a  confusing  law  and  the 
implementation  of  this  law  has  been 
a  challenge  for  universities  across 
the  country  for  years,"  he  said. 

The  current  review  by  the 
Department  of  Education  of  the  UC 
and  CSU  is  the  largest  the  depart- 
ment has  ever  conducted  regarding 
campus  crimes. 

"It  is  the  first  time  that  we  have 
received  complaints  about  several 
campuses  within  a  system,"  Said 
Jane  Glickman,  spokeswoman  for 
the  Department  of  Education.  "All 


our  other  complaints  in  the  past 
have  been  about  specific  campuses." 

The  department  is  working 
through  its  San  Francisco  regional 
office  to  review  the  reports.  So  far,  it 
has  contacted  the  UC  by  phone  and 
letters,  Glickman  said. 

Neither  ofTicials  from  the 
Department  of  Education  or  the  UC 
system  would  comment  on  possible 
outcomes  of  the  review,  saying  it  is 
premature  to  guess.  But  the  depart- 
ment may  issue  a  $25,000  fine  to 
universities  not  complying  with  the 
law. 

Glickman  said  the  department 
will  likely  not  issue  fines,  noting  that 
only  one  school  has  ever  had  to  pay 
the  fee. 

"Our  main  goal  is  to  get  the 
schools  to  comply  with  the  law.  Our 
goal  is  not  to  punish  or  fine,"  she 


said.  *"  '■ 

Hayward  said  the  university 
hopes  to  identify  strengths  and 
weaknesses  of  its  current  reporting 
practices  through  the  Department  of 
Education's  review. , 

"We  are  hoping  this  process  helps 
clarify  the  rules  for  the  higher  educa- 
tional institutions  across  the  coun- 
try," he  said. 

In  addition  to  filing  the  complaint 
against  California  universities. 
Security  on  Campus,  Inc.  is  calling 
for  the  government  to  create  a  uni- 
form complaint  procedure  and  to 
better  monitor  all  schools. 

"We  propose  that  schools  be  ran- 
domly audited,  several  a  year;  so  that 
irrespective  of  whether  a  complaint 
has  been  filed,  every  school  stands 
the  chance  of  having  their  reports 
jeyicwed,"  Carter  said. 


RENAMING 

From  page  1 

Daniel  Neuman,  dean  of  the  School 
of  Arts  and  Architecture. 

UCLA  officials  contend  that  the 
university's  naming  policy  was  cor- 
rectly followed  in  the  Schoenberg 
case. 

"It's  the  appropriate  recognition 
of  a  substantial  endowment," 
Neuman  said. 

Nonetheless,  the  Schoenberg 
family  plans  to  further  pursue  the 
issue  by  taking  their  case  to  the  next 
meeting  of  the  University  of 
California  Board  of  Regents. 
Lawrence  Schoenberg,  the  son  of 
the  late  composer,  recently  sent  a  let- 
ter to  top  UC  and  UCLA  officials 
expressing  his  dismay  at  the  renam- 
ing. 

Lawrence  wrote  in  the  letter  that 
"if  the  naming  of  the  auditorium  in 
1955  was  an  honor  to  my  father,  then 
certainly  the  renaming  in  2000  is  a 
dishonor." 

He  has  also  said  the  university 
should  have  notified  the  Schoenberg 
family  before  publicly  announcing 
the  naming. 

The  hall,  Neuman  said,  was  a  suit- 
able place  to  honor  the  Ostins, 
because  their  donation  supports  the 
"university's  central  mission  of  edu- 
cating students." 


Neuman  also  said  he  considered 
the  whole  music  building  being 
named  after  Schoenberg  "a  more  sig- 
nificant honor  than  just  the  auditori- 
um." 

Neuman  said  the  renaming  would 
have  been  proposed  regardless  of 
the  controversy  over  whether  the 
hall  was  officially  named  in  the  past 
-  because  both  the  building  and  the 
music  hall  were 


named       after 
Schoenberg. 

Mo  Ostin,  a 
UCLA  alum- 
nus and  music 
industry  execu- 
tive for 
Dreamworks 
SKG  who  gave 
the  donation  on 

behalf   of   his      

wife  and  him- 
self, was 

unavailable  for  comment  since  the 
renaming. 

Some  students  were  displeased 
with  the  renaming. 

"It's  the  glorification  of  money" 
said  Curt  Stokes,  a  fourth-year  phys- 
iological science  student.  "Honor  he 
who  has  money." 

Other  students  worried  that  if 
UCLA  frequently  renames  build- 
ings after  donors,  the  honor  is  dimin- 
ished. 

"If  UCLA  keeps  changing  names 


based  on  who  funds  it,  it  undermines 
the  historical  significance  behind 
these  buildings,"  said  Rahwa 
Asmerom,  a  fifth-year  international 
development  studies  student. 

When  deciding  to  name  a  loca- 
tion after  a  donor,  the  size  of  the 
donation  along  with  the  individual's 
prominence  and  relationship  to  the 
university  are  considered. 

According 
"■^"^"^"■""^  to  the  universi- 
ty's policy  for 
naming  univer- 
sity facilities, 
the  gift  should 
"fund  the  total 
cost  of  the  pro- 
ject to  be 
named  or  pro- 
vide the  total 

cost        which 

would  not  have 
'  >         ■  been  available 

from  any  other  source." 

The  chancellor's  executive  com- 
mittee is  responsible  for  reviewing 
and  approving  all  name  requests. 

After  looking  at  documents 
regarding  the  music  building, 
Neuman  interpreted  the  naming  of 
the  entire  building  after  Schoenberg 
as  creating  a  naming  opportunity  for 
the  auditorium. 

Consequently  when  the  Ostins 
donated  $5  million  to  the  arts  pro- 
gram, the  name  of  the  hall  was 


UCLA  officials  contend 

that  the  university's 

naming  policy  was 

correctly  followed  In 

the  Schoenberg  case. 


changed. 

Neuman  said  he  apologized  to  the 
Schoenbergs  for  an  error  made 
when  a  spokesperson  for  the  School 
of  Arts  and  Architecture,  stated  the 
hall  "was  never  named."  He  attrib- 
uted the  error  to  miscommunica- 
tion. 

Before  the  building  was  named 
after  Arnold  Schoenberg,  the  perfor- 
mance hall  inside  the  building  held 
his  name.  While  university  officials 
contend  that  the  hall  was  unnamed, 
the  Schoenberg  family  disagrees. 

"In  1962,  the  building  was  named 
after  Schoenberg,  and  it  looked  as  if 
the  hall  was  unnamed,"  said 
Neuman. 

As  the  debate  over  najning  build- 
ings after  donors  continues,  univer- 
sity officials,  as  well  as  some  stu- 
dents, said  it  is  important  to  remem- 
ber that  the  money  donated  benefits 
the  campus. 

"The  university  can't  continue 
without  (funding  from)  the  state, 
federal  government,  corporations, 
foundations  and  private  individu- 
als," Neuman  said. 

The  donation  will  be  used  for 
scholarships,  programming,  and 
other  features  which  will  support 
programs  in  the  school. 

Neuman  also  said  there  is  a  "tech- 
nical possibility"  that  other  halls, 
like  the  auditorium  in  Royce  Hall, 
could  be  renamed  in  the  future. 


INVESTMENTS 

From  page!  ;';.:} 

Stephen  Nesbitt,  senior  managing 
director  of  Wilshire  Associates,  the 
regents'  investment  consultant. 

That  would  create  a  slightly  higher 
margin  of  error  in  monitoring  the 
-  index,  Nesbitt  said. 
.He  added  that  the  committee 
members  need  to  be  cautious  of  cre- 
ating a  "slippery  slope"  if  othef  kinds 
of  stocks  that  are  part  of  the  index  are 
excluded." If  you  start  excluding 
more  and  more  stocks,  you  start  to 
accelerate  the  difficulty  of  tracking 
that  index,"  Nesbitt  said.    .^1    i,^ 

Saying  that  the  tobacco  industry 
"has  had  a  lot  of  attention  in  recent 
years,"  Nesbitt  estimated  that  two 
dozen  public  and  private  colleges 
have  already  taken  similar  measures 
with  regard  to  these  stocks. 

Since  the  advisory  committee  can- 
not act  on  its  own,  any  action  on  the 
tobacco  stocks  will  not  occur  until 
the  regents'  next  meeting  in 
November. 

UC  investments  are  currently 
undergoing  a  restructuring,  as  rec- 
ommended in  a  study  conducted  by 
Wilshire  Associates.  The  study 
formed  the  basis  for  a  new  invest- 
ment plan  which  was  adopted  by  the 
regents  in  March. 

Part  of  that  plan  calls  for  funds 
previously  managed  by  the  treasurer 
to  be  allocated  to  index  funds.  For 
instance,  the  Russel  3000  index  will 
be  used  for  30  percent  of  the  UC's 
domestic  stocks.  That  represents  15.9 
percent  of  the  UC's  entire  invest- 
ment portfolio. 

In  August,  Patricia  Small,  who 
had  been  treasurer  since  1996, 
resigned  because  she  was  reportedly 
unhappy  with  a  reduction  of  her  inde- 
pendence in  managing  the  fund. 

Regent  Judith  Hopkinson  said,  at 
Tuesday's  meeting,  that  she  was  a 
member  of  a  committee  looking  for  a 
replacement  for  Small.  The  search 
committee  had  already  held  its  first 
meeting,  and  another  was  scheduled 
for  December. 

Selection  criteria  is  under  consif^ 
eration,  and  a  firm  helping  with  the 
search  has  already  come  up  with  a  list 


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Daily  Bnjin  News 


Wednesday,  October  18,2000 


INVESTMENTS 

From  page  S 

of  60  candidates. 

"There  are  letters  going  out  to 
foundations  and  members  of  this 
committee  -  and  to  faculty,  staff  - 
soliciting  candidates  and  any  conv 
ments  on  qualifications  or  selection 
criteria,"  Hopkinson  said. 

She  added  that  interviews  of  candi- 
dates would  be  starting  in  January, 
with  recommendations  to  be  made  to 
the  Board  of  Regents  no  later  than 
February. 

The  August  resignation  of  Small 
had  been  anticipated  a  month  earlier 
in  reports  by  the  San  Francisco 
Examiner,  which  suggested  a  rift 
between  her  and  Regent  Gerald 
Parsky,  then-chair  of  the  Committee 
on  Investments,  over  changes  he 
wanted  to  make  in  the  UC's  invest- 
ment policies  and  governance  of  the 
treasurer.       .       ..,..;;:. 

The  steps  toward  additional  over- 
sight grew  out  of  concern  that  the 
quarterly  reports  the  treasurer  made 
to  the  Investment  Committee  were 
insufficient  in  updating  the  regents  on 
the  investment  portfolio.    . .  ,.  ,< 

In  a  November  18, 1999  meeting  of 
the  Committee  on  Investments,  the 
regents  approved  the  creation  of  a 
permanent  Investment  Advisory 
Committee,  to  continue  with  over- 


D  ^iJB-l_i.^i.  uwt  HlLiyoaily  Bruin  Seniof  Si 

Kegent  GcraM  Panky,  chair  of  the  lnvestn)ent  Advisory  Committee  speaks  at  a  committee  meeting  in  the 
James  West  Center.  He  has  pushed  for  changes  in  the  management  of  the  UC's  $53  billion  investment  fund. 


sight  of  the  treasurer,  for  investments 
as  well  as  personnel. 

It  replaced  a  previous  committee, 
also  chaired  by  Parsky,  setup  to 
review  the  UC's  investment  policies 


and  governance  of  the  treasurer's 
office. 

Like  its  predecessor,  the  majority 
of  the  Investment  Advisory 
Committee's    members    are    not 


regents  -  something  which  concerned 
Regent  David  Lee,  according  to  min- 
utes from  the  meeting. 

In    addition    to    UC    President 
Richard  Atkinson,  two  other  regents 


currently  serve  on  the  board  -  its 
chair,  Parsky,  and  Hopkinson. 
Atkinson  was  represented  Tuesday  by 
Senior  Vice  President  Joseph 
Mullinix. 

The  committee  also  includes  five 
members  from  outside  the  UC  sys- 
tem, one  of  whom  has  advisory  status. 
"Regent  Lee  suggested  that  the 
advisory  committee  was  being  given 
too  much  power,"  the  minutes  read. 

"He  agreed  that  it  would  be  helpful 
to  have  outside  experts  to  provide 
advice  to  the  regents,  but  he  did  not 
want  them  to  be  in  control." 

But.  Regent  S.  Sue  Johnson  said  at 
the  meeting  that  the  committee  would 
provide  an  additional  layer  of  exper- 
tise to  help  the  regents  carry  out  their 
fiduciary  duty. 

Lee  was  the  only  member  at  the 
meeting  to  vote  against  creating  the 
Investment  Advisory  Committee. 
The  minutes  show  that  Parsky  intend- 
ed to  meet  with  Lee  to  alleviate  his 
concerns. 

But,  as  of  last  month,  the  two  had 
not  met. 

"He's  a  busy  person,"  Lee  said  at 
the  September  regents'  meeting. 

Regent  William  Bagley  said  out- 
side members  on  the  advisory  com- 
mittee shouldn't  be  a  concern. 

"It's  simply  advice,"  said  Bagley, 
adding  that  the  regents  had  never 
really  exercised  oversight  in  the  past 
with  regard  to  investments. 


DAVE  HILL/Daily  Bruin  Seniw  Staff 


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10        Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 


MIy  Bruin  News 


DEBATE 

From  page  1  :       i. 

■    for.  ■: ^  ■  ■■  •■'■  ■•:•'/:■ 

Though  Bush  looked  flustered  and  off- 
balance  at  times,  he  displayed  his  trade- 
mark congeniality  and  performed  up  to 
expectations  when  the  discussion  veered 
towards  the  philosophical. 

"I  thought  Gore  was  more  aggressive 
than  he  was  in  the  second  debate,"  said 
political  science  professor  Ted  Rueter, 
who  follows  politics  and  the  media. 

"He  came  across  more  knowledgeable 
and  gave  more  competent  answers," 
Rueter  added.  "But  he  wasn't  obnoxious 
like  he  was  in  the  first  debate." 

But  Speech  and  Debate  Team  coach 
and  lecturer  Thomas  Miller  said  Bush 
was  the  better  communicator  Tuesday 
night,  following  a  trend  of  improvement 
since  the  first  debate  in  Boston. 

"Bush  only  got  better  as  the  debates 
progressed,"  he  said.  "He  stayed  on  mfes- 
sage,  and  that  resonates." 

With  election  day  less  than  three  weeks 
away  and  most  national  polls  showing  the 
nominees  statistically  even,  members  of 
both  parties  saw  this  debate  as  a  prime 
opportunity  to  reach  the  undecided  voter 
that  pundits  say  may  decide  the  election. 
That  could  explain  why  this  debate  was 
the  most  combative  of  the  three,  with 
each  candidate  attempting  to  draw  a 
sharp  contrast  in  order  to  make  a  case  for 
their  election. 

"I  think  that  after  three  debates,  the 
good  people  of  this  country  understand 
there  is  a  difference,"  Bush  said  in  the 
debate.  "The  difference  between  a  big 
federal  government  and  someone  who  is 
coming  from  outside  Washington  who 
will  trust  individuals." 

Gore  rebutted  the  big  government 
label,  and  characterized  the  voters' 
choice  in  terms  of  progress  versus  a 
return  to  the  past. 

"If  you  want  somebody  who  believes 
that  we  were  better  off  eight  years  ago 
than  we  are  now  and  that  we  ought  to  go 


back  to  the  kinds  of  polides  we  had  back 
then,  emphasizing  tax  cuts  mainly  for  the 
wealthy,  here  is  your  man,"  Gore  said.  "If 
you  want  somebody  who  will  fight  for  you 
and  will  fight  for  middle-class  tax  cuts, 
then  I  am  your  man." 

An  exchange  regarding  health  care 
policy  also  produced  one  of  the  sharper 
disagreements  seen  in  any  of  the  three 
debates. 

When  one  audience  member  asked 
Gore  if  he  would  like  to  see  the  country 
move  towards  federally  funded  health 
care,  he  answered  yes:  "We  should  move 
step  by  step  toward  universal  health  cov- 
erage, but  I  do  not  think  the  government 
should  do  all  of  it,"  he  said. 
Bush  emphatically  disagreed. 
"I  am  absolutely  opposed  to  a  national 
care  plan,"  he  said.  "I  don't  want  the  fed- 
eral government  making  decisions  for 
consumers  or  providers." 

Based  on  Tuesday  night's  duel,  sup- 
porters of  both  Gore  and  Bush  said  their 
candidate  offered  voters  the  better 
choice. 

"1  think  the  major  difference  is  that 
you  have  Bush,  who's  major  policy  is  a 
tax  cut  for  the  wealthy,"  said  Bruin 
Democrats  President  Melanie  Ho.  "And 
you  have  Gore,  who  will  spread  the  pros- 
perity so  that  it  reaches  everybody." 

Bruin  Republican  Chair  Vartan 
Djihanian  countered,  saying  that  Bush 
simply  has  a  different  philosophy.  "I 
think  Bush  trusts  the  American  people 
more  than  Gore  does.  Gore  wants  more 
government  intervention,"  he  said.  "I 
think  Americans  are  afraid  of  this." 

Miller  said  the  political  discourse 
resulting  from  the  debates  is  healthy  for 
American  democracy  and  helps  voters 
make  a  more  informed  choice. 

"I  think  we  can  tell  something  about 
these  men  and  their  character  from  the 
debates,"  he  said.  "We  got  different  infor- 
mation and  saw  different  sides  of  the  can- 
didates by  using  three  different  formats." 

With  reports  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  ser- 
vices. 


AGREEMENT 

From  page  5 

"We  have  made  important  com- 
mitments here  today  against  a 
backdrop  of  tragedy  and  crisis. 
Repairing  the  damage  will  take 
time  and  great  effort  by  all  of 
us." 

The  talks  were  complex  ones, 
involving  seven  parties  -  Israel 
and  the  Palestinians,  the  United 
States,  the  United  Nations, 
Egypt,  Jordan  and  the  European 
Union.  Clinton  held  more  than 
20  meetings,  the  White  House 
said. 

Underscoring  the  depths  of 
the  bitterness  lingering  between 
the  parties,  the  agreements  that 
emerged  from  the  summit  were 
described  as  "understandings," 
with  no  formal  signing  taking 
place. 

The  "understandings"  includ- 
ed taking  some  practical  steps  to 
cool  tensions,  such  as  lifting 
Israel's  blockade  of  the  West 
Bank  and  Gaza,  reopening  the 
Gaza  airport,  and  instituting 
measures  to  separate  the  two 
sides  at  points  of  friction.  No 
specific  deadlines  were  dis- 
closed, however. 

Additionally,  within  two 
weeks  the  two  sides  were  to  meet 
with  American  mediators  to 
explore  the  possibility  of  resum- 
ing talks.  Secretary  of  State 
Madeleine  Albright  said. 

The  summit's  host,  Egyptian 
President  Hosni  Mubarak,  said 
the  summit's  outcome  is  "not 
equal  to  what  our  peoples  aspire 
to,  but  they  could  be  the  basis  for 
continuing  our  efforts  to  achieve 
peace." 

The  Palestinian  delegation 
pointedly  refused  to  give  an 
enthusiastic  endorsement.  They 


went  direclly  from  the  confer- 
ence center  to  the  airport  with- 
out making  any  statements. 
Before  the  deal  was  announced, 
Arafat  aide  Nabil  Shaath  said 
that  the  Palestinians  "are  not 
happy,  but  we  want  to  protect  the 
lives  of  our  people." 

Barak  said  Israel  achieved  its 
main  objectives  at  the  summit. 

"Let  me  emphasize  that  the 
real  test  of  all  the  understandings 
and  agreements  is  implementa- 
tion," he  said.  "We  will  ask  to 
stop  the  violence  in  the  spirit  of 
understandings  and  concessions 
determined  here  and  at  Camp 
David." 


The  Palestinian 

delegation  refused  to 

give  an  enthusiastic 

endorsement. 


Back  in  the  West  Bank,  Jibril 
Rajoub,  the  Palestinian  security 
chief  there,  said  the  onus  for 
restoring  calm  is  on  the  Israelis. 

"It's  they  who  created  this  cri- 
sis, they  are  the  ones  who  used 
acts  of  killing  and  terrorism 
against  our  people,"  Rajoub 
said.  "What  is  needed  now  is  for 
them  to  take  all  the  necessary 
measures  to  stop  this  violence." 

Saying  he  feared  tensions  may 
reignite,  U.N.  Secreury  General 
Kofi  Annan  called  on  both  sides 
to  "weigh  their  words  carefully" 
while  steps  are  taken  to  restore 
calm.  "Ending  the  violence  is  a 
real  achievement.  But  language 
can  be  violent  too,"  Annan  said. 

Clinton's  appeal  for  the  two 
sides  to  "move  beyond  blame" 


and  to  resume  peace  negotia- 
tions may  prove  difficult  to 
achieve.  Both  Israel  and  the 
Palestinian  have  balked  at 
promising  outright  to  abide  by  a 
cease-fire  because  each  believes 
that  in  doing  so,  they  accept  too 
large  a  share  of  responsibility  for 
the  carnage. 

Israel  says  it  has  taken  only 
the  measures  necessary  to  pro- 
tect its  soldiers  and  citizens,  with 
the  use  of  heavy  weaponi;y  like 
tanks  and  helicopter  gunships 
falling  into  that  category. 
Palestinians  furiously  dismissed 
that,  saying  the  Israelis  had  blast- 
ed away  with  firepower  dispro- 
portionate to  the  threat  posed  by 
stone-throwing  crowds  .  and 
paramilitary  gunmen. 

It  was  also  apparent  before 
the  summit  that  the  two  sides 
would  have  tremendous  difficul- 
ty agreeing  on  how  to  investigate 
the  causes  of  the  violence. 

Israel,  believing  it  had  already 
been  convicted  in  the  court  of 
world  opinion,  said  it  would 
accept  only  a  fact-finding  effort 
led  by  its  chief  ally,  the  United 
States.  Palestinians,  certain  that 
the  United  States  would  protect 
Israel  from  censure,  insisted  on  a 
broader-based  international 
inquiry. 

A  compromise  emerged: 
Annan  would  work  with  the 
United  States  in  setting  up  a  fact- 
finding mechanism,  with  the 
final  report  published  under  U.S. 
auspices,  Clinton  said. 

Even  before  the  summit 
ended,  some  on  both  sides 
expressed  pessimism  that  any 
truce  would  hold.  Israeli  Cabinet 
minister  Binyamin  Ben-Eliezer 
told  Israel's  army  radio  that  a 
cease-fire  agreement  would  hard- 
ly affect  "what's  going  to  happen 
in  the  field." 


> .. 


Pizza  &  Pluralism 

Lunch  &  Learn 

Wednesdays,  12-1  pm,  Kerckhoff  417 
Today's  special  guest,  Rabbi  Daniel  Bouskila,  of  the  Sephardic  Temple 

This  program  was  made  possible  by  a  generous  donation  from  the  Shelley  &  Bruce  Whizin  Family  Foundation. 


Dliy  Bruin  News 


INDIA 

From  page  3 

and  older  students  trying  to  decipher 
the  roots  of  problems  in  their  lives, 
like  tracing  poverty  back  to  the  caste 
system  and  lack  of  education. 

"We  wanted  them  to  put  a  mental 
picture  into  why  things  were  the  way 
they  were,"  Hwang  said.  "It  was  fas- 
cinating to  see  why  poverty  exists." 

The  women  also  tried  to  integrate 
Western  modes  of  teaching,  like  play- 
ing games  and  using  toys,  into  the  vil- 
lage schools  where  students  usually 
learn  by  lecture-type  instruction, 
Kumar  said. 

'■■■■'  "Ultimately,  they  did  not  think 
very  highly  of  that  sort  of  teaching," 
she  said.  "Real  learning  was  very  dis- 
ciplined, where  the  teacher  speaks 
and  the  students  listen." 

"They  were  totally  defending  their 
way  of  teaching,  saying  that  just 
because  it  works  in  the  States  doesn't 
mean  it'll  work  in  India,"  Hwang 
said. 

She  added  that  although  American 


modes  of  teaching  may  not  have  con- 
vinced teachers,  the  time  spent  on  dis- 
cussion will  prove  worth  while. 

"We  taught  them  to  think  about 
learning  in  a  different  way,"  Hwang 
said.  "It  opened  things  up  for  discus- 
sion." 

At  the  end  of  their  stay,  the  women 
received  the  ultimate  gift  from  the  vil- 
lagers, who  initially  felt  a  little  cau- 
tious of  their  presence  in  the  commu- 
nity. 

"When  we  left,  they  gave  us  what 
they  give  to  their  sisters  or  their 
daughters  on  their  wedding  day," 
Kumar  said. 

The  villagers  presented  the  women 
with  Buddhist  statues,  suits  of  Indian 
dress,  and  other  gifts,  integrating 
them  into  their  community.   '     ' 

"India  has  some  of  the  poorest 
people  in  the  world,  but  they  came 
together,  they  pooled  together  to  do 
this  for  us,"  she  continued.  "There 
was  nothing  we  could  say." 

There  will  be  a  nneeting  about  the  pro- 
gram Oct.  23  at  5  p.m.  in  Bunche  Palm 

Court  ;-> 


Wednesday,  October  18,2000        11 


EVIDENCE 

From  page  5 

Center  in  western  Germany. 

Speaking  about  the  two  suspects, 
the  Yemeni  officials  said  the  apartment 
was  searched  Monday,  when.  Yemen 
reversed  an  earlier  position  and  called 
the  blast  "a  premeditated  criminal 
act."  A  senior  Saudi  intelligence  offi- 
cial visited  Aden  on  Monday,  but  no 
details  of  the  meeting  were  made  pub- 
lic. 

The  Yemeni  officials  would  give  no 
further  information  on  the  material 
found,  but  said  the  missing  men 
arrived  in  Yemen  four  days  before 
Thursday's  attack. 

Bodine  declined  to  comment  on 
details  of  the  case  or  speculate  on  pos- 
sible links  to  larger  terrorist  groups, 
including  that  of 

Afghan-based      ^____^_^___ 
Saudi    dissident 
Osama  bin 

Laden.  She 

stressed  that  the 
investigation 
would  continue. 

"We  want  this      

investigation  to 
go  further  ...  to 

see  how  far  back  we  can  walk  this.  And 
those  kinds  of  investigations  can  some- 
times take  some  time,"  she  said. 

The  Yemeni  find  could  be  a  key 
break  on  the  first  day  of  work  for  a 
joint  FBI-Yemeni  task  force.  The  hunt, 
however,  is  already  well  under  way. 

So  far,  Yemeni  security  forces  have 
interrogated  hundreds  of  port  workers 
and  others,  including  the  head  of  the 
company  that  services  U.S.  warships. 
Some  fragments  from  the  blast  were 
shipped  to  the  United  States  for  analy- 
st by  the  first  FBI  agents  to  arrive  after 
tft  attack.  That  initial  evidence  arrived 
0^  U.S.  shores  Monday  night. 
NThere  has  been  no  credible  claim  of 
responsibility  for  the  deadliest  terrorist 
attack  on  the  U.S.  mihtary  since  the 
1996  bombing  of  an  Air  Force  bar- 
racks in  Saudi  Arabia  that  killed  19. 

Immediate  suspicion  fell  on  bin 
Laden,  accused  in  the  1998  bombings 
of  U.S.  embassies  in  Kenya  and 
Tanzania  that  killed  224  people.  In 
retaliation,  the  United  States  fired 
dozens  of  Tomahawk  cruise  missiles  at 
his  suspected  stronghold  in  eastern 
Afghanistan. 

In  his  first  statement  since 
December  1998,  bin  Laden  said 
Tuesday  that  another  such  attack 
would  not  kill  him  or  deter  his  battle 
against  the  "enemies  of  Islam  "  He 
made  no  direct  reference  to  the  Aden 
attack.  Afghanistan's  Taliban  rulers  on 
Monday  denied  bin  Laden  was 
involved,  but  also  said  Tuesday  that  he 
could  not  have  issued  a  statement 
because  all  means  of  communications 
have  been  denied  him. 

FBI  Director  Louis  Freeh  trans- 


A  service  for  the 

victims  will  be  held 

Wednesday  In  Virginia. 


ferred  the  investigation  from 
Washington  to  the  command  of  John 
O'Neill  in  the  New  York  field  office, 
which  handled  the  East  African 
embassy  bombing  cases.  But  U.S.  offi- 
cials denied  this  meant  they  co\ild  link 
the  blast  to  bin  Laden  at  this  point. 

The  full  FBI  team  is  expected  to 
swell  to  100  agents.  Seventy  are 
already  in  Aden,  and  30  others  are 
waiting  in  Germany  for  accommoda- 
tions to  be  arranged. 

Many  Yemenis  have  said  they  do 
not  believe  the  attack  was  the  result  of 
a  homegrown  plot,  and  Tuesday's  dis- 
closures put  the  spotlight  on  Saudi 
Arabia.  Bin  Laden  is  a  Saudi  national 
of  Yemeni  heritage. 

Border  disputes  have  marred  rela- 
tions  between   Yemen   and  Saudi 
Arabia,  but  an  agreement  was  signed 
in  June  to  seek  a  solution.  Yemen  has 
long    contested 
„,_,^_^_^,^_      the  Saudi  claim 
to  three  Red  Sea 
islands  and  parts 
of    the    Empty 
Quarter,  a  vast 
desert      region 
with  potentially 
lucrative        oil 
deposits. 

Aboard     the 


stricken  Cole,  wreckage  specialists 
fought  their  way  through  collapsed 
bulkheads  and  a  maze  of  twisted  metal 
to  reach  bodies.  Above  the  oily  harbor 
water,  blowtorches  cut  slowly  through 
the  reinforced  steel.  Beneath  them,  in 
the  cavern  created  by  the  blast,  divers 
poked  slowly  through  murky  passages 
and  fissures. 

The  divers  -  some  of  whom  plucked 
victims  from  the  doomed  TWA  800 
night  near  Long  Island  in  1996  -  car- 
ried tools  to  try  to  pry  apart  the  metal 
trapping  the  bodies. 

The  bodies  recovered  Tuesday  were 
found  above  and  below  the  water  line, 
said  Rear  Adm.  Mark  Fitzgerald,  who 
is  leading  naval  operations  in  the  area. 
The  cause  of  death:  "trauma  from  the 
blast,"  he  said. 

Five  bodies  were  recovered  last 
week  and  were  flown  back  to  the 
United  States. 

A  memorial  service  for  victims  of 
the  bombing  is  scheduled  Wednesday 
at  Norfolk  Naval  Station,  the  Cole's 
home  port  in  Virginia.  President 
Clinton  and  Defense  Secretary 
William  Cohen  plan  to  attend. 
Security  worries  in  Aden  have 
.  mounted  as  more  American  investiga- 
tors arrive  in  a  nation  the  State 
Department  described  as  a  "haven" 
for  terrorists  Efforts  are  made  to  keep 
most  personnel  either  on  other  U.S. 
warships  just  offshore  or  in  a  hotel 
guarded  by  Yemeni  soldiers  and  US 
Marines. 

U.S.  Navy  officials  say  it  could  be 
weeks  before  the  Cde  can  be  raised, 
onto  a  heavy  lift  ship  and  transported 
back  to  the  United  States  for  repairs. 


^K^^^^mmimmmi^ 


Thank  yoli. 

Soon,  you'll  begin  seeing  people  wattdng  around  with  ATO  leners  on    ~ 
sweatshirts,  shorts  and  t>aseball  caps.  As  UCLA's  newest  fraternity,  we  at  Alpha 
Tau  Omega  National  Fraternity  are  proud  to  have  our  letters  prominently 
displayed.  We're  even  prouder  of  the  people  wearing  them.  Many  of  you  should 

:  be  too.  The  last  week  of  membership 

.:  recruitment  would  not  have  been  nearly  as 
successful  without  your  help,  including  our 
interfratemal  brothers  and  sisters,  UCLA's 
faculty  and  staff  and  everyone  else  who 
made  our  arrival  a  pleasant  experience.  For 
more  infomiation  calll -800-798-9286  Ext. 


»ytliiC«S|[«01ilSHIPB[Vfl5P»fMtli»Ifll\lir 


READY 
FOR  THE 

RIDE 
OF  YOUR 

LIFE? 


U(.llNl;iru< 


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^^m,     ^WT 


•MBWMbF*9olMk>Mn*iKnx:  EfOfrMMVv 


.■^ffm^*^"^^:- 


Thursday 

Will  getting  rid  of 
stria  drug  laws  ben- 
efit society? 


Dally  Bruin 


Wednesday,  October  18,2000 


View  on  the  Wel^^ 

See  alt  this  and  • 

more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's  • 

Website:  • 

www.dailybniin.iKla.edu  I 


viewpoim@media.ucla.edu 


Daily  Bruin  Viewpoint 


Wednesday,  October  18, 2000       13 


tfy 


ISRAEL  Denial  of  similarities, 
unwillingness  to  talk  prevents 
peace;  may  affect  U.S.  economy 

In  1948,  the  state  of  Israel  was  created 
with  the  heavy  backing  of  the  United 
States  and  Great  Britain.  Ever  since  its 
implementation,  the  state  has  been  in  con- 
stant conflict  and  war. 

At  the  time  this  article  was  written,  two 
Israeli  soldiers  had  just 
been  lynched  and  tor- 
tured and  their  bodies 
thrown  from  a  two- 
story  building.  That 
same  day  Israeli  Prime 
Minister  Ehud  Barak 
ordered  the  bombing 
of  Palestinian  authority 
leader  Yassar  Arafat's 
headquarters.  As  I 
processed  this,  I  saw 
that  the  Dow  Jones 
dropped  nearly  400 
points  due  to  this  tur- 
moil and  the  higher  oil 
prices  it  might  cause  (LA  Times,  Oct.  13. 
2000). 

Ever  since  the  failed  peace  talks  hosted  by 
the  United  States,  tensions  between  Israelis 
and  Palestinians  have  risen  to  higher  levels 


Brendan 
Nemeth- 
Brown 


Nemeth-Brown  is  an  interhational  econom- 
ics and  political  science  student  who  urges 
you  to  question  the  hegemony.  He  can  be 
reached  at  bnb@ucla.edu. 


than  I  have  ever  witnessed  in  my  lifetime. 
This  became  more  apparent  to  me  after 
watching  "Nightlinc  in  Jerusalem"  last 
week.  Ted  Koppel  was  hoping  to  facilitate  a 
discussion  between  three  Palestinians  and 
three  Israeli  leaders.  But,  the  only  thing  he 
accomplished  doing  was  shouting  over  who- 
ever was  talking  to  signal  a  commercial 
break. 

The  discussion  made  one  thing  abundant- 
ly dear  to  me:  Palestinian  and  Israeli  leaders 
arc  intolerant  of  one  another,  and  a  peace 
agreement  will  never  be  reached  as  long  as 
they  attempt  to  divide  Jerusalem. 

Many  in  the  press  praised  the  concessions 
that  Barak  made  to  Arafat,  including  granti- 
ng some  autonomous  control  to  heavily  pop- 
ulated Palestinian  areas.  But  when  talks 
broke  down  because  neither  side  could  agree 
on  Jerusalem,  people  acted  surprised  that 
talks  fell  through.  That  would  be  like  break- 
ing up  the  Chicago  Bulls  and  being  surprised 
when  a  resolution  cannot  be  reached  when  - 
both  sides  want  Michael  Jordan. 

How  can  one  come  to  an  agreement  if 
neither  side  will  budge  from  the  most  presf' 
ing  issue? 

The  single  biggest  issue  that  has  driven       ' 
these  two  sides  apart  is  religion.  Israel  was 
created  to  be  a  homeland  for  Jews,  not  for 
Muslims.  There  are  ways  to  become  a  citizen 
of  Israel  if  you're  not  Jewish,  but  why  is  it 
that  Israel  must  exist  as  a  religiously-driven 
state?  (http://www.mfa.gov.il/mfa/home.asp) 
Maybe  it's  just  me,  but  hasn't  the  unification 
of  church  and  state  been  a  practice  rejected 


ZACHL0Pf2/D*l(yBnjin 


Altruism  Knders  society  from  progress 


SeellEMEmM0WN,|»ge14 


POLITICS:  Self-sacrifice 
for  'greater  good'  hides 
true  abilities,  ambitions 

With  the  presidential  elec- 
tion in  full  swing,  it 
seems  the  overarching 
debate  is,  as  usual,  over  the  size 
and  scope  of  the  government.  I 
find  it  very  troublesome,  however, 
that  no  can- 
didate, not 
even  the 
extremes, 
Ralph  Nader 
and  Harry 
Browne, 
choose  to  dis- 
cuss the 
more  funda- 
mental, 
philosophical 
issues  that 

are  pertinent      — — 

to  this  issue. 

More  specifically,  I  am  refer- 
ring to  the  continuous  and  under- 
lying struggle  between  individual- 
ism and  altruism.  If  your  next 
thought  is  that  I  must  be  a  wor- 
shipper of  the  great  Ayn  Rand, 
you  are  absolutely  correct. 

In  an  individualistic  society,  the 


Levi,  philosopher-king  arxi  second- 
year  political  science  student,  can  be 
reached  for  comments  at 
$wingkid181@hotmail.com. 


fundamental  goal  is  to  allow  every 
member  the  freedom  to  benefit 
himself  (or  herselQ,  rather  than 
demand  a  detrimental  self-sacrifice 
to  the  service  of  the  "greater 
good."  Only  then,  argue  individu- 
alists, can  we  ensure  that  every 
member  of  society  benefits  in 
some  way  or  another. 

But  why  can't  we  do  that  in  an 
altruistic  society?  After  all,  would- 
n't a  nobler  goal  be  to  require  that 
every  citizen  pool  his  or  her 
resources  and  have  one  great  uni- 
fying force,  such  as  a  government, 
take  as  its  responsibility  the  gener- 
al welfare  of  all? 

Just  ask  any  random  commu- 
nist out  on  Bruin  Walk,  and  he'll 
hand  you  a  cort  of  the  Spartacist, 
a  severely  misguided  publication 
that  will  give  a  resounding  "yes"  to 
that  question.  And  on  a  college 
campus,  of  all  places,  the  majority 
of  the  population  might,  and  in 
fact  is,  largely  sympathetic  to  such 
an  idea. 

Let  us  take  a  communist  scKiety 
as  an  example  of  the  extreme,  as 
far  as  altruism  goes.  (All  you 
Naderites.  get  ready)  In  such  a 
society,  the  individual  is  barred 
from  pursuing  the  lifelong  career 
he  so  desires,  must  accept  the  will 
of  all  others  as  his  creed,  and  is 
rewarded  with  the  same  exact 
compensation  as  all  others,  regard- 
less of  the  actual  value  of  work  and 
time  put  in.  A  society  of  drones? 
You  bet.  Someone  please  tell  me 


how  anybody  is  supposed  to  bene- 
fit from  this  destruction  of  individ- 
uality. 

An  altruistic  attitude,  while  ben- 
eficial on  an  individual  level, 
becomes  destructive  if  applied  to 
society  as  a  whole.  In  a  society 
whose  values  preach  self-sacrifice 
in  order  to  serve  the  greater  cause, 
no  room  is  left  for  individual 
thought,  personal  growth  or  moti- 
vation to  succeed  and  help  society 
progress. 

I  know  it  may  be  diflkult  for 
blindly  compassionate  college  stu- 
dents to  admit,  but  there  is  no  such 
thing  as  the  "greater  good."  It  is  a 
myth  passed  down  through  the 
generations  in  order  to  benefit 
those  that  are  able  to  exploit  it. 
The  greedy,  overiy  exploitative  elit- 
ists Ralph  Nader  keeps  railing 
against  (if  indeed  they  really  are 
overly  exploitative)  take  advantage 
not  of  a  lack  of  altruistic,  dare  I 
say,  socialistic  emotions  in  society, 
but  of  a  lack  of  individual,  inde- 
pendent thought  and  action. 

Staunch  collectivists  wouW 
argue  it  is  an  individualistic  society 
that  would  lead  lo  this  selfish,  rob- 
ber-baron type  ruling  class. 
However,  it  is  nnportant  to 
remember  that  these  robber 
barons  are,  in  fact,  reactionaries  to 
a  society  that  teaches  them  to  sup- 
press their  own  thoughts  and  feel- 
ings and  seeks  to  quash  their  indi- 
viduahsm.  Solution?  No  emphasis 
on  altruism,  no  reactionaries. 


As  a  student  of  politics,  I  often 
find  myself  very  frustrated  when 
certain  opponents  in  a  debate 
refuse  to  think  rationally  for  them- 
selves. How  can  humans  be 
expected  to  express  an  indepen- 
dent thought  process  when,  from 
an  early  age.  they  are  told  that 
their  own  opinions,  thoughts  and 
feelings  are  irrelevant  next  to  the 
thought  process  of  the  collective? 
My  answer:  they  can't.  When  the 
collective  good  says  something  is 
good,  it  is  good,  and  when  it's  bad, 
well,  don't  remind  me. 

If  you  don't  think  that  such  an 
attitude  is  extraordinarily  danger- 
ous, look  back  in  time  about  70 
years.  That's  when  a  litde  known 
demon  by  the  name  of  Adolf 
Hitler  took  advantage  of  the  altru- 
istic, everything-for-the-greatcr- 
cause  attitude  of  the  German  peo- 
ple. The  subsequent  and  over- 
whelming devotion  to  "racial  puri- 
ty," rather  than  rational,  indepen- 
dent thought  led  to  one  of  the 
greatest  massacres  in  history. 

By  now  you're  probably  gasp- 
ing. "Did  he  just  compare  commu- 
nism to  fascism?!"  Indeed  I  did.  I 
guess  I  have  the  distinct  honor,  at 
least  on  this  campus,  of  exposing 
communism  (and  altruism),  for 
what  they  really  are:  dictatorship. 
Sure,  maybe  not  anti-civil  libertari- 
an dictatorship.  After  all,  if  com- 
munism could  ever  work  (It  can't. 


LETTERS 

Political 

fair  play  disregarded 

I  normally  refrain  from  commenting  on 
Viewpoint  pieces  written  by  students,  but  I 
can't  forbear  a  brief  comment  on  the  misuse  of 
my  article  ("An  Unfinished  Revolution,"  Daily 
Bruin.  Viewpoint,  Sept.  25)  by  Andrew  Jones 
("Racially-based  politics  hinder  progress," 
Daily  Bruin.  Viewpoint,  Oct.  9). 

My  article,  as  readers  might  remember,  was 

an  attempt  to  derive  lessons  from  the  struggle 
of  oppressed  against  oppressor  in  this  country 
during  the  twentieth  century,  with  special 
emphasis  given  to  the  African  American  liber- 
ation movement.  Jones  took  one  line  from  my 
analysis,  dropped  out  its  context,  and  tried  to 
make  it  appear  that  I  was  on  his  (conservative) 
side  -  that  I  was  for  the  side  I  was  expliciUy 
arguing  against. 

This  was  precisely  the  strategy  adopted  by 
the  opponents  of  alTirmative  action  in 
California,  who  misused  the,  words  of  Dr. 
Martin  Luther  King,  Jr.  to  make  it  appear  he 
would  have  supported  policies  he  gave  his  life 
to  overthrow.  Dr.  King  isn't  here  to  object  to 
the  misuse  of  his  views,  but  I  am  here  to  object 
to  the  misuse  of  mine. 

Perhaps  Mr.  Jones  misunderstood  my  arti- 
cle, but  it  seems  more  likely  that  he  knew  just 
what  he  was  doing.  If  so.  then  he  has  demon- 
strated a  cynical  disregard  for  the  rules  of 
political  fair  play,  which  dictate  an  accurate 
depiction  of  one's  opponent's  position. 


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Affirmative  action  minimizes 


RACE:  Circumstances  of 
life  often  create  gaps  that 
can  rarely  be  closed 


By  Bcthclvvcl  Wilson 


1  am  responding  to  Andrew 
Jones  and  his  article,  "Racially- 
based  politics  hinder  progress" 
(Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint,  Oct.  9). 
First,  I  would  like  to  clarify  that  the 
citing  of  Professor  Victor 
Wolfenstein's  quote  was  taken  com- 
pletely out  of  context  and  distorted 
to  support  the  status  quo:  "Those 
who  benefit  from  an  existing  social 
order  don't  voluntarily  surrender 
their  advantages.  They  use  all 
means  possible  to  retain  them, 
including  masking  of  their  inter- 
ests" ("An  Unfinished  Revolution," 
Daily  Bruin,  Viewpoint,  Sept.  25). 

Wolfenstein,  a  radical  and  a 
product  of  the  Civil  Rights 
Movement,  is  not  delineating  a 
power  differential  where  minorities 
dominate,  while  whites  are  clamor- 
ing for  political  equality;  rather,  he 
is  contending  the  pwlar  opposite 
stands  as  the  true  condition. 
Wolfenstein  unequivocally  states 
that  the  gains  won  by  the  Civil 
Rights  Movement  (affirmative 
action,  free  choice)  are  slowly  being 
usurped. 

Regressive  social  policies,  legis- 
lated by  institutions  of  power  that 
have  no  interests  in  buttressing  the 
upward  mobility  of  minorities  in 
America's  educational,  political 
and  economic  arenas,  have  negated 
the  hard-won  gains  people  like 
Martirt  Luther  King,  Jr.  and 
Malcom  X  died  for,  To  say  that 
King  would  be  disenchanted  by  the 
implementation  of  affirmative 
action  is  to  repudiate  and  confound 
everything  that  he  stood  for:  equal 
opportunity,  racial  progress  and  the 
eradication  of  poverty. 

It  must  be  conceded  that  we  do 
not  live  in  a  color-blind  society,  and 
the  onus  is  on  society  to  mitigate 
the  historical  atrocities  that  have 
cemented  certain  groups  in  irrevo- 
cably impoverished  social  and  eco- 
nomic conditions. 

One  way  to  provide  restitution  to 
these  groups  is  through  the  imple- 
mentation of  affirmative  action,  a 


Wilson  is  a  third-year  political  science 
student. 


reparation  that  not  only  levels  the 
playing  field,  but  gives  minorities, 
coming  from  an  environment  that 
proscribes  educational  advance- 
ment, a  chance  to  attend  competi- 
tive universities  like  UCLA. 

Jones'  preposterous  mention  of 
"free  rides"  is  incongruous  with  the 
minority  experience,  a  cumbersome 
uphill  battle  most  privileged  groups 
do  not  have  to  climb.  If  these  obsta- 
cles are  conquered,  some  costs  were 
indubitably  incurred  and  a  mighty 
price  was  paid  on  the  part  of  that 
minority  student  who  got  into 
UCLA  or  any  other  academic  insti- 
tution. 

Should  those  who  have  been 
marginalized  be  denied  by  academ- 
ic institutions  because  their  scholas- 
tic achievements  are  not  meritori- 
ous enough?  Can  merit  even  com- 
pare to  a  lifetime  of  economic 
deprivation,  social  upheaval,  and 
the  struggle  to  survive? 

Where  we  grow  up  is  determined 
by  biological  fiat  and  we  cannot 
control  the  environment  in  which 
we  are  raised.  In  consequence, 
some  start  off  handicapped  by 
social  maladies  and  others  start 
with  their  futures  already  sealed 
due  to  more  congenial  circum- 
stances. 

Give  a  student  who  wakes  up  4 
o'clock  every  morning  to  attend  a 
good  high  school  30  miles  away, 
lives  a  precarious  existence  in  a  sin- 
gle-mother household,  and  survives 
violent  episodes,  admission  into 
UCLA  via  affirmative  action  and  it 
still  would  not  be  enough  to  recom- 
pense that  student's  suffering. 
Society  is  long  delinquent  in  the 
reparations  it  owes  minorities.  Now 
these  racial  groups  are  demanding 
full  payment,  and  ineluctably  they 
are  being  called  avaricious,  no  dif- 
ferent from  what  racist  '60s 
America  said  about  blacks. 

People  like  Jones  who  minimize 
the  burdens  of  people  of  color  facil- 
itate and  reinforce  the  misconcep- 
tions that  already  prevail  in  the 
minds  of  privileged  groups  towards 
disadvantaged  minorities.  To  ignore 
the  grievances  of  minority  groups  is 
to  disparage  their  experience  as  stu- 
dents of  color  on  a  campus  that  is 
increasingly  conveying  a  message  to 
them  that  they  are  not  wanted. 

If  racism  on  college  campuses 
did  not  abound,  then  the  need  for 
racial  politics  would  be  obviated, 
racial  solidarity  would  not  be  so 
unattainable,  and  there  would  be  no 


%  differences 


need  for  universities  to  employ 
race-sensitive  admission  policies. 

Racial  groups  exist  on  this  cam- 
pus because  the  racial  polarization 
in  this  university  reflects  that  of 
general  society,  and  students  identi- 
fy with  those  whom  they  share  simi- 
lar life  experiences  and  congruent 
realities. 

Undeniably,  minority  groups  do 
trigger  conflict,  but  I  think  this  per- 
turbation is  more  amplified  when 
directed  at  a  large  congregation 
that  does  not  want  its  complacency 
and  picturesque  view  of  the  world 
disturbed. 

Protracted  deliberation  is  almost 
futile  due  to  the  racial  and  experien- 
tial chasm  that  dichotomizes  the 
groups  into  haves  and  have-nots,  an 
equation  that  complicates  the 
process  of  conciliation  between  the 
two.  I  firmly  believe  one's  fervor  to 
effecting  social  change  is  gauged  by 
F>ersonal  experience. 

If  one  never  experiences  oppres- 


sion, how  can  one  fully  empathize 
with  the  burdens  of  the  oppressed 
except  through  enlightenment  and 
interaction  with  the  affiicted?  When 
minority  students  remonstrate 
against  what  seemingly  appears  to 
be  fabricated  persecution  to  out- 
siders, well-off  collectives,  never 
having  direct  communion  with 
oppression,  view  minority  protest 
as  embellished  complaining  or  as 
Jones  eloquently  puts  it,  "denial." 

It  comes  as  no  surprise  that  these 
minority  groups  criticize  the  UC 
Regents'  reinstitution  of  segrega- 
tion and  are  viewed  as  radical  while 
privileged  groups  support  the  dis- 
mantling of  Proposition  209. 
Clearly,  if  one  is  treated  well  by 
society  one  will  reciprocate  in  kind. 
But  these  minority  student  groups, 
entities  comprised  of  students  from 
disadvantaged  backgrounds,  will 
not  reciprocate  acquiescence  to  an 
institution  that  is  trying  to  eliminate 
them.  To  do  so  would  be  outright 


ERICA  PINTO/Oaily  Brum 


complicity. 

In  light  of  the  anti-affirmative 
action  sentiment  in  California,  the 
fact  that  many  minority  groups  are 
becoming  more  cohesive  can  be 
empowering  and  self-affirming  in 
an  alienating  setting  like  UCLA 
where  a  plethora  of  students  come 
from  more  affluent,  suburban  back- 
grounds. 

How  can  Jones  say  that  affirma- 
tive action,  a  privilege  Martin 
Luther  King  and  other  civil  rights 
activists  so  dearly  bequeathed  to 
minorities  with  their  lives,  would  be 
seen  as  reprehensible  in  King's 
vision  of  the  world? 

King's  world  envisages  a  place 
where  blacks  are  not  profiled  for     ; 
the  color  of  their  skin,  economic 
disparity  would  be  nil,  and  racial 
equality  would  preempt  affirmative 
action.  We  have  invariably  failed  in 
reaching  this  goal.  As  Wolfenstein 
stated,  "the  revolution  is  unfin- 
ished." 


LECTURE 


By  Miles  Kaplan  and  Terence  Saalbach 


YO^    NiORTH    CAMPv/5 
PfoPLf  THW^  Ypu'^e  SO 

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CO  sporisored  by  fhe  Cisor  Chovex  Cmnter  for  Chkana  &  Chicano  Studies 

Ana  Castillo 


October  1 8,  4pm 

Charles  E.  Young  Grand  Salon 

(off  the  Kerckhoff  Patio) 


Ana  Castillo  reads  from  and  signs: 

"Peel  My  Love  Like 
an  Onion" 

'By  o  combination  of  l«TMnin.  brt,,«Jo  and  yen«^ 

'  The  N0w)forkrinm  Book  Kmntw 


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www.uclastorrcom 


NEMETH-BROWN 


From  page  12 


by  the  Western  world  for  some  time 
now? 

I  don't  want  to  delve  into  who  was 
right  and  who  was  wrong  because 
that  would  take  hours  of  time  to  sort 
through.  Truth  be  told,  I  believe  any 
such  attempt  is  an  operation  in  futili- 
ty. Both  sides  blame  each  other;  both 
sides  have  plenty  of  biased  propagan- 
da, so  to  sort  through  and  determine 
the  morally  "right"  side  would  be  a 
subjective  mess  on  the  part  of  the 
judge.  I  believe  a  practical  resolution 
can  be  achieved,  if  both  sides  sit 
down  and  think  reasonably,  not  reli- 
giously. 

Since  both  the  Jews  and  the 
Palestinians  live  there  concurrently, 
the  idea  to  just  get  rid  of  one  group  is 
ridiculous.  Both  have  claims  to  the 
land,  and  whether  or  not  you  may 
believe  one's  claim  is  more  legitimate 
than  the  other's,  that  should  have  no 
bearing  on  the  outcome;  for  who  is  to 
judge? 

In  my  experience  growing  up,  reli- 
gion has  always  been  more  divisive 
than  it  has  been  unifying.  I  knew 
people  who  honestly  believed  I  was 
going  to  Hell  for  not  attending 
Sunday  services.  1  have  always 
believed  one  can  be  spiritual  without 
subscribing  to  a  certain  organized 
religion. 

And  this  point  is  at  the  core  of  my 
article.  Whether  you  pray  to  Yahwch 
or  Allah,  I  don't  sec  the  difference.  If 
you  believe  in  a  higher  being,  why  is 
it  that  some  people  criticize  you  for 
not  believing  in  their  higher  being?  Is 
it  really  the  case  that  theirs  is  better 
than  yours?  The  irony  is  that  all  reli- 
gions claim  to  welcome  people  of  dif- 
ferent backgrounds,  only  to  con- 
demn them  if  they  don't  accept  their 
doctrine. 

The  creation  of  Israel  as  a  reli- 
gious state  was  a  mistake.  While  the 
Jews  do  have  a  pressing  claim  for  the 
land  and  their  migration  there  was 
seemingly  fair  to  the  Western  judges 
to  be.  the  creation  of  a  holy  state 
reeks  of  intolerance. 

How  can  a  country  only  aHow  one 
set  of  religious  people  to  run  the 
country?  Instead  of  fighting  over 
every  piece  of  land  or  attempting  to 
connect  the  Gaza  Strip  and  the  West 
Bank,  the  Israelis  should  just  offer 
unlimited  equal  rights  to  the 
Palestinians. 

This  may  sound  like  a  radical  idea, 
but  stepping  back  and  treating  this 
situation  objectively  makes  the  most 
sense.  Forcing  the  Palestinians  and 
Israelis  to  assimilate  would  be  the 
best  thing  for  both  sides.  What  they 
have  now  is  a  form  of  religious  segre- 
gation, similar  to  the  racial  segrega- 
tion we  had  in  America  with  African 
Americans.  Maybe  we  were  even 
more  tolerant  in  America,  for  an 
African  American  counted  for  at 
least  three-fifths  of  a  citizen. 

If  we  erase  boundaries  instead  of 
create  them,  Palestinians  and  Israelis 
would  have  to  start  living  together. 
Although  there  would  still  be  some 
residual  violence  and  animosity 
between  both  sides,  it  would  subdue 
with  time.  Once  people  start  to  real- 
ize that  the  dilTerences  between  them 
are  not  as  great  as  they've  been 
taught  to  believe,  Israelis  and 
Palestinians  will  begin  to  accept  one 
another  more. 

Much  like  my  earlier  example  with 
African  Americans,  prejudice  can  be 
subdued  through  years  of  desegrega- 
tion. While  I  will  not  claim  that  all 
racism  is  gone  from  this  country,  I 
believe  I  am  standing  on  Tinn  ground 
when  I  say  America  has  become 
more  acoeptint  in  these  last  SO  years. 

Maybe  the  only  way  to  affect  the 
minds  of  these  two  peoples  is  to 
somehow  show  them  they  have  nwre 
in  common  than  they  think.  Do  they 
both  want  a  healthy  economy?  Yes. 
Do  they  both  want  peace?  Yes.  Do 
they  both  believe  in  God  and  read 


NEMETH-BROWN 

From  page  14 

from  books  that  espouse  generally 
good  morals?  Yes.  As  I  see  it,  these 
people  have  every  reason  in  the 
world  to  get  along  but  are  stopped 
from  doing  so  by  party  hardliners  on 
both  sides. 

Maybe  both  sides  will  have  to  wait 
until  these  people  pass  on  and  more 
accepting  individuals  come  to 
power.  With  the  recent  chain  of 
events,  however,  there  may  be  more 
incentive  than  ever  to  be  extreme  - 
and  that  is  the  most  dangerous  possi- 
bility for  peace  in  the  Middle  East 
and  the  U.S.  economy. 

The  last  time  there  was  war  in  the 
Middle  East,  gas  prices  soared.  Now 
that  prices  are  rising  and  the  Dow 
Jones  is  falling,  a  war  in  that  region 
could  send  our  economy  spiraling. 
And  even  if  you  don't  care  about  a 
word  I've  written,  you  should  care 
about  that. 


LEVI 

From  page  12 

so  get  over  it!),  you'd  probably  still  be 
free  to  say  how  bad  it  is.  No,  this 
despotism  is,  in  many  ways,  far 
worse.  It  is  the  autocracy  of  thought, 
and  the  imprisonment  of  the  mind. 

On  the  flipside,  we  have  objec- 
tivists,  individualists  and  philosophi- 
cal libertarians  who  recognize  that 
the  fundamental  driving  force  of 
human  progress  is  ego  -  the  pride  one 
feels  in  one's  own  creation.  Very  sim- 
ply, given  the  q)portunity,  the  human 
mind,  lefl  to  its  own  devices  and  not 
coerced  by  external  notions  of  altru- 
ism, will  produce  wonders  that  no 
social  collective  could  conceive. 

If  I  still  haven't  provided  enough 
fodder  for  controversy,  get  a  load  of 
this  one:  an  individualistic  society  will 
lead  to  greater  interpersonal  relation- 
ships between  human  beings.  But  this 
is  totally  illogical,  right?  Not  quite. 
"Tecause  an  altruistic  society 
inevitably  ends  up  becoming  a  detri- 
ment to  more  people  than  it  helps,  a 
society  based  on  the  precept  that  each 
individual  will  determine  his  or  her 
own  fate  is  more  beneficial. 

If  you  still  don't  believe  me,  you 
needn't  look  any  further  than  a  histo- 
ry book.  Nearly  every  great  human 
tragedy  in  mankind's  history  can  be 
traced,  in  some  way,  to  the  idea  that  a 
certain  cause,  be  it  a  religion,  a  gov- 
ernment, a  leader  or  a  master  race,  is 
more  important  than  the  individuals 
who  make  up  that  unit.  In  the  20th 
century  alone,  we  have  experienced 
the  Armenian  Genocide,  the 
Holocaust,  two  world  wars,  commu- 
nism, the  Khmer  Rouge,  etc.  Every 
single  victim  of  those  horrific  events 
died  because  the  perpetraton  were 
iiKapable  of  independent,  rational 
tifeught,  as  they  believed  they  were 
rving  a  great  cause,  one  that  most 
ofthem  could  not  even  understand, 
en  there  is  America,  the  greatest 
litical,  social  and  philosophical 
experiment  in  man's  history.  Sure, 
we've  stumbled  along  the  way.  but 
ultimately,  we  have  experienced 
unprecedented  growth  in  a  remark- 
ably short  amount  of  time,  especially 
relative  to  any  other  society  in  histo- 
ry. The  only  major  difference 
between  this  country  and  the  rest  of 
the  world  is  that  we  allow  ourselves  a 
large  degree  of  independence  and 
individualism.  In  America,  you  are 
free  to  guide  your  own  life  without 
interference  from  those  who  do  not 
understand  your  feelings  and  opin- 
ions. 

I  may  be  a  biased  patriot,  but  his- 
tory speaks  for  itself.  Only  when  we 
realize  that  the  whole  is  never  greater 
than  the  suhi  of  its  parts  will  we  be  ' 
able  to  break  free  from  the  chains  of  a 
rigorous  altruism  that  has  so  plagued 
our  society,  and  experience  and  era  of 
both  tangible  and  intellectual 
progress  heretofore  unknown  in 


mankmd's  history. 


"Sf^ 


Daily  Bniin  Viewpoint 


«(Wnesday,  October  18, 2000       15 


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-%^  Love  Me  Not:  Stalk  Me  Not 
;  Z  ^      Wednesday,  Octoi)€sr  18 1 
4:30-5:30  pm,  2  Dodd  Hall 

,  Have  you  or  a  friend  ever  received  unv^ranted  telephone  calls  or  emails? 
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^::;-'^\l--^'y-:-y  ^r  more  information,  please  contact  The  Center  at  310-825-3945. 

rmeCenter 

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the  Los  Angeles  Commission  on  Assaults  Against  Women.  LACAA W  Stalking  Hotline  1  (877)  633-0044 
www.Iovemenot.orgJiwww.thecenter.ucla.edu 


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More  than  monologues 

"Vagina  Monologues"  has  made  its  way  to 
L.A.and  is  still  receiving  rave  reviews.  Check 
out  what  A&E  has  to  say  about  this  unique 
performance  in  tomorrow's  Daily  Bruin. 

Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 


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Web  sites  create  hype 
for  independent  films 


INTERNET:  Technology 
helps  Aronofsky  movie 
draw  potential  viewers 


By  Howard  Ho 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

After  a  summer  of  mutant  super- 
heros and  impossible  missions,  the 
Hollywood  studio  system  can't  be 
reckoned  with  in  terms  of  box  office 
receipts,  but  times  are  changing  and 
entertainment  is  quickly  moving 
toward  the  Web. 

Last  year's  "The  Blair  Witch 
Project"  showed  Hollywood  that  a 
small,  low-budget  indie  flick  could  be 
profitable  -  with  a  little  help  from  its 
Web  site. 

The  reason  for  the  "Blair  Witch " 
success  was  not  necessarily  its  novel- 
ty ("This  is  Spinal  Tap"  set  the  bar  for 
future  mockumentaries),  nor  its  qual- 
ity (the  dialogue  was  often  static),  but 
its  hype,  its  ability  to  create  such  a 
suspension  of  disbelief,  and  the  way 
in  which  the  horrors  depicted  in  it 
can  scare  even  today's  cynical  audi- 
ence. 

The  so-called  "buzz"  prior  to  the 
film,  however,  didn't  come  from  the 
traditional  media,  but  from  a  corre- 
sponding Web  site,  blairwitch.com, 
that  convinced  many  that  the  film 
was  indeed  lost  footage  from  a 
doomed  expedition. 

Joining  the  "Web  hype"  revolu- 
tion is  Darren  Aronofsky's  new  film, 
"Requiem  for  a  Dream,"  opening 
Friday  in  Los  Angeles.  The  Web  site, 
requiemforadream.com,  adds  a  new 
dimension  to  the  science  of  film  mar- 
keting, and  shows  what  the  Web  is 
capable  of  doing  for  independent 
films. 

On  the  site,  which  generated  over 
one  million  hits  in  a  single  month, 
you  won't  find  press  releases,  inter- 
views with  the  cast,  release  dates,  or 
even  the  names  of  aiiyone  who 
worked  on  the  project.  In  fact,  the 
title  of  the  film  and  its  distribution  by 
Artisan  Entertainment,  which  also 
released  'Blair  Witch,"  are  the  only 
words  that  keep  you  oriented  once 
inside.  After  this  fades,  the  world  of 
"Requiem"  takes  over. 

An  advertising  banner  appears, 
proclaiming  "Do  you  want  to  revolu- 
tionize your  life?  Click  here  now!"  _ 
Images  of  cash  and  embracing  lovers 
flash  alternately.  Clicking  on  the  ban- 
ner reveals  "The  Tappy  Tibbons 
Show,"  an  infomercial-iike  game 
show's  Web  site,  which  eventually 


deteriorates  in  static.  Meanwhile, 
Clint  Mansell's  music  adds  ambience 
via  the  synthesis  of  the  Kronos 
Quartet  and  Mansell's  electronica 
riffs. 

On  the  white  screen  that  follows, 
moving  the  mouse  reveals  a  dizzying 
picture  of  two  people  lying  down  on 
the  floor  of  a  disheveled  room. 
Clicking  on  either  person  transports 
this  relatively  calm  moment  into  an 
ensuing  storm  which  parallels  the 
movie  through  the  drug  addictions  of 
characters,  Harry  (Jared  Leto)  and 
his  obese  mother  Sara  (Ellen 
Burstyn). 

From  a  summer  of  idealism  to  a 
winter  of  depression  and  withdrawal, 
the  Web  site  dramatizes  the  pitfalls  of 
being  a  drug  addict,  similar  to  what 
happ>ens  in  the  movie. 

"The  Web  site,  while  not  necessar- 
ily following  a  linear  story  pattern, 
does  chronicle  difTerent  stages  and 
seasons  for  each  of  the  characters 
that  directly  relates  to  experiences 
that  happen  in  the  film,"  said 
LeAnne  Gayner,  Senior  Vice 
President  of  Theatrical  Marketing 
for  Artisan  Entertainment. 

Indeed,  unlike  many  trailers  that 
spoil  the  film's  plot,  the  "Requiem" 
Web  site  incites  further  curiosity, 
evading  clarity  of  plot  and  characters 
for  a  surreal  experience  that  parallels 
the  film. 

"This  Web  site  came  out  of  an 
approach  that  Artisan  has  taken  for  a 
while,  which  is  to  create  film  Web 
sites  that  are  an  extension  of  the  film 
property,"  said  Gayner,  who  is  also  a 
UCLA  alumnus.  "The  idea  of  the 
Web  site  was  to  create  a  full  experi- 
ence rather  than  just  an  information- 
al tool.  As  far  as  Web  sites  go,  it's 
fairly  revolutionary." 

The  site  was  developed  by  Hi-Res, 
a  London-based  company  which  has 
released  its  own  experimental  site, 
soulbath.com.  Aronofsky  actually 
found  Hi-Res  by  accident,  when  he 
sal  next  to  the  company's  owner  on 
an  air  plane.  Later,  he  introduced  the 
company  to  Artisan,  resulting  in  the 
creation  of  a  new  art  form. 

According  to  Aronofsky,  Hi-Res 
interpreted  the  movie  for  the  Web 
site,  making  it  more  than  just  an 
online  advertisement  for  the  film. 
The  goal  was  to  capture  the  emotion 
ofthe  film  on  the  site. 
.  This  aesthetic  of  the  site  under- 
mines the  traditional  user-friendly 
approach  to  Web  design.  At  times, 
the  site  seems  alive,  with  the  HTML 

Sn  DREAM,  pag«  19 


Byron  Richard,  guitarist/vocalist  of  the  band  Melt  belts  out  lyrics  to  a  packed  crowd  at  the 
House  of  Blues  on  Monday  night. 


Kristyan  Ransonnct  sings  at  the  House  of  Blues.  His  group  Melt's  latest 
endeavor  is  a  contribution  to  the  soundtrack  to  MTV's  "Undressed." 


A&E  on  the  Web 

See  all  this  and  more  at 
the  Daily  Bruin's 
Website: 
www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 

Wednesday,  October  18,2000 


Phoim  by  CLAIRE  ZUGMEVER 


Melt  IS  comprised  of  Kristyan  Ransonnat  (bass/vocals),  Scott  Cameghi  (drums),  Byron 
Richard  (guitar/vocals),  and  Eric  Bradley  (guitar/vocals). 


Me(t  -  a  ^an4  rv)a</e  up  of  a  ^roup  of 
ta(ente^  frlefxis  -  Is  on  fhe  way  up 


ByAagHaSaiazar 

OailyBruin  Senior  Staff 


Melt's  got  it  -  the  ambition,  the  talent  and  the 
presence  all  melted  together  to  form  a  dynamic 
band. 

The  only  question  is:  how  far  will  it  take  ihem? 
"I  want  to  be  in  the  rock  n'  roll  hall  of  fame  - 
there's  no  hiding  that,"  Melt's 
singer/guitarist/songwriter,  Byron  Richard,  said 
in  a  pre-show  interview  at  the  House  of  Blues 
Monday  niaht  when  members  of  Melt  talked 
about  the  dj^amics  of  the  band,  its  successes  and 
future  plans? 

For  a  relatively  young  band  (only  two  years  old) 
without  a  labf  1  or  a  full-length  album  out  yet.  Melt 
has  made  tremendous  strides  on  the  music  scene  in 
LA.  and  beyond. 

The  band,  comprised  of  Richard,  Scott 
Cameghi  (drums),  Kristyan  Ransonnet 
(bass/vocals)  and  Eric  Bradley 

(guitar/vocals/songwriting),  has  an  advantage 
over  other  bands  with  two  lead  singer/songwriters. 
After  coming  together  out  of  failed  bands  in 
1999',  Melt  had  a  song  featured  in  the  independent 
film  -Jimmy  Zip"  and  played  many  LA.  clubs  as 
well  as  the  2000  Mardi  Gras  festival  in  Louisiana. 
In  addition.  Melt  had  several  songs  featured  on 
MTV's  popular  drama.  "Undressed,"  including 
the  song  "Slow"  which  is  on  the  the  show's  sound- 
track album. 

"We'd  all  been  friends  throughout  the  years  so 
we  thought  we'd  give  it  a  shot  and  see  if  anything 
clicked  and  we  melted."  Richard  said. 

Carneghi  and  Richard,  who  had  been  friends 
for  leveral  years,  were  housemates  when  they 


made  the  decision  to  develop  a  new  band. 

"We  used  to  live  together,  we  had  a  house 
together;  it  turned  into  basically  a  party  pad," 
Carneghi  said. 

"It  was  crazy,  and  we  needed  somebody  else  to 
play  with,"  Richard  said. 

The  band  finally  came  together  when 
Ransonnet  and  Bradley  joined,  giving  it  the  boost 
it  needed  to  get  started. 

"Before  we  knew  it,  we  had  like  25  songs  and 
were  opening  up  at  the  Roxy  and  here  we  are  -  two 
years  later  -  and  we  just  keep  going,"  Richard 
said. 

Now  the  band  is  able  to  come  together  and  pro- 
duce the  kind  of  music  they  want. 

"We're  not  really  part  of  any  particular  sound, 
its  not  a  rap/rock  thing,  its  not  a  punk  thing,  its  just 
Melt,"  Bradley  said. 

"I  think  there's  something  in  it  for  everybody,  a 
little  bit  of  everything."  he  continued.  "You  can 
call  it  alternative,  you  can  call  it  metal,  you  can  call 
it  rock,  you  can  call  it  pop." 

Not  wanting  to  fall  into  one  specific  genre,  the 
band  describes  itself  as  its  own  kind  of  "Melt 
rock." 

"We're  all  about  melodies  and  beautiful  chords 
and  energy,"  Richard  said. 

The  sound  and  talent  ofthe  band  is  not  the  only 
thing  that  helped  it  achieve  success  so  rapidly.  The 
drive  and  determination  ofthe  members,  and  a  lit- 
tle luck,  also  played  a  role. 

By  chance,  members  of  the  band  met  music 
supervisor.  Jennifer  Pyken  of  MTV's 
"Undressed"  at  a  Pavilions  grocery  store. 


S«eMElT,pa9e19 


HINGYI  KHONGA)aily  Biuin 


New  'Blair  Witcif  offering 
nothing  to  scream 


BOOK:  Rehashing  familiar 
occult  material,  novel  fails 
to  answer  many  questions 


By  Aphrodite  Manousos 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  latest  installment  in  the  Blair 
Witch  chronicles,  "The  Secret 
Confessions  of  Rustin  Parr,"  reveals  that 
even  the  occult  can  be  made  banal.  Of 
course,  for  those  die-hard  fans  who 
believe  that  "Blair  Witch"  is  a. master- 
piece, this  novel  will  be  a  great  piece  of 
eye  candy. 

Set  in  the  sleepy  community  of 
Burkittsville.  Maryland,  this  tale  follows 
a  former  priest  named  Dominick  Cazale. 
Fifty  years  ago,  Cazale  had  an  unforget- 
table encounter  with  Rustin  Parr,  a  her- 
mit living  in  the  Black  Woods,  a  dense, 
claustrophobic  forest  said  to  be  crawling 
with  evil  magic. 

Parr  was  believed  to  be  the  murderer 
of  several  local  children  from 
Burkittsville  who  were  found  dead  in  the 
woods.  Upon  his  capture.  Parr  claimed 
that  he  was  not  responsible  for  the  mur- 
ders, that  strange  voices  in  his  head  com- 
manded him  to  carry  out  the  brutal 
crimes.  Some  locals  believed  the  real  cul- 
prit was  the  infamous  Blair  Witch,  a  17th 
century  sorceress  expelled  from  the  town 
for  drawing  blood  from  innocent  chil- 
dren to  use  in  her  spells.  The  ghost  of  the 
Blair  Witch  is  now  said  to  haunt  the 
Burkittsville  region,  still  reaping  her  sin- 
ister revenge  on  the  community  that 
ostracized  her  so  long  ago. 

The  only  person  who  might  know  the 
truth  about  Parr's  guilt  is  the  priest  who 


BOOK  REVIEW 


Title:  Blair  Witch:  The  Secet 
Confessions  of  Rustin  Parr 

Author  D.  A.  Stem 
Publisher  Pocket  Books 
Price:  $11.95  Pages:  160 
Rating:  4 


JACOB  LIAO/PaiTTIBTw! 


heardtlieiiMiJeiiineJi 


I  man's  final  conres- 
sion,  but  that  phssl,  Cazale,  has  kept  the 


sanctity  of  the  confessional  for  the  past 
fifty  years. 

When  the  novel  opens,  Cazale  is  in  the 
hospital,  comatose  and  with  third-degree 
burns  on  over  30  percent  of  his  body  His 
wife  has  been  killed  in  the  same  fire  that 
destroyed  his  house  and  left  him  incapac- 
itated. 

Meanwhile,  Detective  Nicholas 
Vamana  (who  is  fashioned  a  bit  after 
Columbo,  with  his  haphazard  manner 
and  pseudo-ignorant  act)  is  a  hard-nosed 
cop  investigating  the  fire.  Meeting  up 
with  the  narrator,  while  both  are  visiting 
Cazale  at  the  hospital,  the  two  men  try  to 
extract  information  from  each  other  to 
solve  the  mystery  of  the  fire  that  gutted 
Cazale's  home  and  killed  his  wife. 
Somehow,  the  fire  is  related  to  the  con- 
fessions of  Parr,  recorded  over  50  years 
before  the  events  in  the  story  now  unfold. 


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18       Wednesday,  October  18,2000 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  EnterUinmeiil 


Sound  Bites 


INDIGENOUS 
"Circle" 


Indigenous 
"Circle" 
Pachyderm  Records 

Finally,  the  lost  Stevie  Ray 
Vaughan/Hootie  and  the  Blowfish 
jamming  album  has  emerged! 

Well,  not  really.  In  truth,  "Circle" 
is  the  product  of  a  hard-rocking, 
Native  American  blues  quartet  out  of 
South  Dakota,  but  man,  if  it  isn't  an 
amazingly  similar  product  to  what 
the  aforementioned  artists  might 
have  made  in  a  really  weird  record- 
ing session.  It's  got  the  Texas  grit 
that's  been  sorely  missed  since  Stevie 
Ray  made  an  early  exit  nearly  a 
decade  ago,  but,  unfortunately,  it's 
also  got  the  goofy  soul-rock  that  real- 
ly hasn't  been  missed  at  all  since  the 
Blowfish  first  showed  up  on  the  pop 
charts  with  "Hold  My  Hand." 

It's  no  real  shock  that  "Circle" 
.sounds  a  lot  like  Stevie  Ray.  seeing  as 
how  it  was  produced  by  his  frequent 
collaborator  Doyle  Bramhall.  You 
can  almost  hear  him  saying,  "All 


right,  folks,  now  turn  the  amps  to  '9,' 
just  like  Stevie  used  to,"  as  the  band 
rips  through  scorchers  like  "Little 
Time"  and  the  standout  "You  Left 
Me  this  Morning."  Lead  singer  Mato 
Nanji  has  both  the  alley-cat  yowl  and 
the  amazing  guitar  skills  a  hopeful 
bluesman  needs,  so  tracks  like  this 
are  a  refreshing  return  to  the  greats 
of  the  past. 

Inexplicably,  the  band  strays  from 
this  can't-miss  formula  numerous 
times,  heading  into  Hootieville  with 
reckless  abandon.  "Can't  Keep  Me 
From  You"  and  "You  Were  The    • 
One"  could  be  dropped  onto  any 
Blowfish  album  and  no  one  would 
even  notice.  They're  not  terrible    .. 
songs  by  any  means,  but  they  defi- 
nitely remind  you  why  Hootie  used 
to  be  popular,  but  no  longer  is. 

It's  really  too  bad  that  Indigenous 
saddles  itself  with  sub-par  tracks  such 
as  these,  because  it's  capable  of  much 
better.  If  the.  foursome  stuck  with 
straight  blues  instead  of  getting  all 
touchy-feely,  it  deserves  to  go  far. 

Brent  Hopkins 
Rating:  5 

Underworld 

"Underworld  Live:  Everything, 

Everything* 

V2  Records         - 

From  the  sounds  of  the  smooth-as- 
silk,  trancey  fiow  of  Underworld's 


new  record,  it  would  have  been 
impossible  to  guess  that  this  electron- 
ica-virtuostic  trio  started  out  as  WT" 


New  Wave  group  in  the  late  '80s. 

Three  huge  genre-redefining 
albums  and  several  anthemic  club 
smashes  later,  the  UK  trance  band  is 
finally  ready  to  release  a  testament  to 
its  live  act.  "Underworld  Live" 
includes  beat-heavy  versions  of  songs 
off  Underworld's  previous  three 
1990s  releases,  plus  a  great  perfor- 
mance off  the  "Trainspotting" 
soundtrack,  "Born  Slippy,"  that  pos- 
sibly started  the  whole  trance  craze. 

Although  most  of  the  songs  bleed 
into  each  other  a  la  DJ  mix  compila- 
tions, there  are  occasional  pauses  for 
lead  singer  Karl  Hyde  to  address  the 
audience  and  mutter  his  stream-of- 
consciousness-style  poetry,  which 
abounds  in  his  lyrics  and  CD  booklet 
inserts. 

Also  included  on  the  album  are 
stellar  versions  of  "Juanita"  and 
"Kiteless,"  from  1996's  "Second 
Toughest  in  the  Infants,"  which 
segues  beautifully  into  the  hard- 
house  temblor  "Cups,"  from  last 
year's  "Beaucoup  Fish."  Another 
track  from  "Beaucoup  Fish,"  "King 
of  Snake,"  sounds  straight  out  of  an 
after-hours  French  discotheque,  with 
Giorgio  Moroder/Donna  Summer 
taking  over  the  synth  flashes  and 
leaving  the  beat  up  to  DJ  Darren 
Emerson. 


With  undeniably  danccy  tracks 
like  these.  Underworld  almost 

'  sounds  like  Eurodisco  all  over  again 
-  this  time  in  a  classy  sense  of  course, 
as  Underworld  redefines  the  word  as 
applied  to  clublife  with  each  new 
album. 

Emerson,  who  has  since  lefl  the 
group  to  pursue  a  career  as  a  solo 
DJ,  mixes  up  some  great  beats  for  his 
effervescent  version  of  "Born 
Slippy,"  which  goes  on  just  long 
enough  to  trance  down  to  before 
retiring  into  yourself  the  chill  out 
roonri.  Hyde's  vocals  are  usually        ' 
processed  as  unintelligible,  serving  to 
add  as  another  instrument  to  the  mix 
rather  than  being  a  separate  entity  of 
its  own.  The  closers  "Rez"  and 
"Cowgirl,"  both  from  1994's  dance 
masterpiece 

"  Dubnobasswithmyheadman,"  leave 
the  crowd  and  the  listener  with  a 
warm  glow,  the  kind  you  might  get 
after  witnessing  an  immense  thunder- 
storm in  the  middle  of  the  summer. 
All  in  all.  Underworld  does  a  near- 
perfect  job  of  selecting  such  a  wide 
variety  of  tracks  from  its  10-year 
career  as  a  dance  act,  and  reacating 
the  rave  experience  as  well  (if  turned 
up  loud  enough),  without  making  it 
necessary  to  consume  overpriced, 
impure  psychoactive  substances  in  a 

stuffy,  sweaty  atmosphere. 

Cyrus  McNally 
Rating:  8 


Green  Day 
"Warning:* 
Reprise 


Once  upon  a  time,  owning  "the 
new  Green  Day  album"  was  just  ' 
about  as  cool  as  it  could  get.  You 
were  immediately  punk  rock,  hip 
and,  of  course,  tres  cool.  Having  the  ' 
fresh-off-the-presses  copy  of 
"Dookie"  was  just  about  as  good  as  it 
got. 

Then,  unfortunately  for  the  Bay 
Area  trio.  Green  Day  started  making 
stupid  records.  "Insomniac"  was 
pretty  good,  but  a  lot  of  it  was  just  re- 
hashed earlier  sounds.  Then  came 
"Nimrod,"  which  should  have  been 
really  exciting,  but  really  wasn't. 
While  the  threesome  had  once  been 
shocking  and  quasi-alternative,  front- 
man  Billie  Joe  Armstrong  started 
penning  god-awful  radio-friendly  sap 
like  "Good  Riddance."  The  result: 
the  much-dreaded  overexposure, 
which  turned  Green  Day  into  a  syn- 
onym for  boring  mass-production. 

With  this  in  mind,  "Warning:" 

S«eSOUinMIB,|Mge20 


JjjJjJiJ  J^ 


Where  it  matters  most. 


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RaytlHHiii 


Daily  Bnjin  Am  t  Entertainment 


Wednesday,  October  18, 2000        19 


Bums' jazz  documentary  to  air  on  PBS 


HISTORY:  Newest  offering 
from  respected  filmmaker 
profiles  musical  legends 


ByMikcRedit 
The  Associated  Press 

V  Frail,  walking  on  spindly  legs, 
knowing  he  was  dying,  Louis 
Armstrong  hobbled  onto  the  stage  at 
the  Newport  Ja/z  Festival  in  1971 
for  a  final  goodbye.  Although  con- 
sidered too  weak  to  perform,  he 
wanted  to  sing  one  last  song. 

Watching  film  of  the  event, 
acclaimed  documentary  filmmaker 
Ken  Bums  and  a  roomful  of  his  staff 
working  on  his  latest  epic  "Jazz"  saw 


an  incredible  transformation.  -  '■■' 
As  Armstrong  sang  in  his  raspy, 
unforgettable  style  with  no  musical 
accompaniment,  "he  kept  getting 
bigger  and  bigger  and  bigger,"  Burns 
said  softly.  "It  was  unbelievably 
powerful.  One  of  the  assistants 
grabbed  a  box  of  tissues  and  was 
passing  them  around." 

Burns  viewed  the  film  hundreds 
of  times  during  the  editing  of  his 
PBS  documentary,  which  begins 
Jan.  8  and  runs  18  hours  in  10 
episodes  through  Jan.  31.  "And  I  still 
feel  that  lump  or  my  eyes  fill  with 
tears. 

"You  get  close  to  these  people. 
They  become  like  family  members, 
and  when  they  pass  from  the  scene,  it 
can  be  terrifically  hard,"  he  said  in  a 


recent  interview. 

From  his  acclaimed  Civil  War 
scries  to  his  epic  on  baseball,  and 
now  "Jazz,"  Burns  has  shown  uncan- 
ny skill  in  helping  Americans  con- 
nect with  their  heritage.  He'll  begin 
work  next  year  on  a  program  on 
national  parks,  which  is  expected  to 
take  five  years  to  complete. 

He  hopes  "Jazz"  will  help  revive  a 
musical  form  that  has  fallen  far  from 
the  zenith  of  its  popularity  in  the  first 
half  of  the  century. 

"I  hope  people  will  trust  me,"  said 
Burns,  47,  who  lives  in  New 
Hampshire.  "At  first  blush,  people 
were  not  into  military  history." 

"Jazz"  takes  viewers  through  two 

See  MZZ,  page  20 


MELT  '-:!:'i:;:;-,;V, 

From  page  16 

"Kristyan  and  I  were  in  this 
phase  where  we  would  just  walk  up 
to  anybody  and  say  *Hey,  come  and 
see  our  band,'  and  give  them  a 
Oyer,"  Richard  said. 

"I  met  (Jennifer)  at  Pavilions 
and  gave  her  the  CD  and  she 
passed  the  information  on  to 
Melinda  Gedman  (soundtrack 
coordinator  of  'Undressed')  and 
we  hooked  up  and  kept  talking  and 
it  developed  from  there," 
Ransonnet  said. 

According  to  Gedman,  Melt  was 
one  of  16  bands  chosen  from  over 
500  indie  bands  by  the  music 
department  of  "Undressed"  to  be 
featured  on  the  show's  soundtrack. 

"It  was  just  so  random  how  it 
happened  ...  by  the  time  we  had 


gotten  back  from  lunch,  the  person 

had  already  left  a  message  ...  it  was 

just  like  snap,  snap,  snap,"  Richard 

\.fpid.-  ;,-■■.■■■.:-  ^\.-v-  ■••,.!/;■'•■•■..■;■■ 

Since  then.  Melt  has  continued 
to  work  with  Gedman  and  pursue 
other  performing  opportunities. 

"It  seems  we  open  a  door  and 
boom,  there's  five  more  doors," 
Bradley  said.  "We  just  keep  inching 
up." 

Although  the  band  has  experi- 
enced some  difficulty  booking 
shows  at  certain  clubs  because  of 
its  newness,  overall,  it  has  been  able 
to  showcase  its  talents  in  promi- 
nent L.A.  spots  that  have  been  will- 
ing to  give  the  band  a  shot. 

With  support  from  such  clubs,  as 
well  as  from  friends  and  family. 
Melt  continues  to  work  on  perfect- 
ing its  music  and  expanding  its 

See  Mar,  page  20 


DREAM 

From  page  16 

text  rebelling  against  its  tasks.  Barely 
perceptible  words  pop  up  sporadically, 
only  to  give  an  impression  of  their  mes- 
sage, and  pictures  that  are  supposed  to 
download,  don't.  Even  Mansell's  slick 
music  slows  like  a  bad  record  until  it 
becomes  part  of  the  mess.  Despite  these 
quirks,  however,  the  site's  goal  is  still 
valid  and  it  proves  to  be  a  complimenta- 
ry addition  to  the  film. 

Based  on  the  novel  by  Hubert  Selby. 
Jr.,  "Requiem"  is  Aronofsky's  second 
film.  "Requiem"  shows  a  more  mature 


www  requiemfor,>dream  com 


Aronofsky,  daring  to  take  on  subject 
matter  so  disturbing  that  the  Motion 
Picture  Association  of  America 
(MPAA)  threatened  to  give  it  an  NC-17 
rating.  Incidentally,  Artisan  avoided  the 
threat  by  releasing  the  film  as  "not 
rated."  Even  so,  some  of  the  "Requiem" 
Web  site's  contents  were  removed  due  to 
the  disapproval  of  the  MPAA. 

This  rating  dilemma  seems  to  be  quite 
extensive  for  a  film  that's  potential  audi- 
ence will  be  mainly  limited  to  the  art- 
house.  While  most  Hollywood  films 
make  a  killing  off  wide  release  to  several 
thousand  theatres,  "Requiem"  opened 
in  New  York  last  week  at  only  two  the- 
aters, earning  an  impressive  $.32,000  per 
screen.  With  that  in  mind,  Artisan  hopes 


to  further  the  success  of  independent 
filmmakers  through  the  Web. 

In  addition,  a  live,  64-hour  Web-fcsl 
will  be  held  from  Wednesday  to  Friday, 
providing  online  chats  with  directors, 
actors,  writers,  producers  and  others 
from  Artisan. 

Just  as  in  other  areas  of  commerce, 
the  Internet  decentralizes  power,  giving 
filmmakers  a  chance  to  overcome  the 
studio  system.  Requiemforadream.com 
is  a  trailblazer,  ushering  in  a  new  use  for 
the  Internet  as  well  as  a  new  way  to  find 
an  audience  for  smaller  budget  films. 

Aronofsky  hopes  that  other  sites  will 
follow  Artisan's  lead  and  make  the  Web 
less  of  a  supermarket  and  more  of  an 
experimental  art  gallery. 


MANN 


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■■  ''^.'f*»''.'>    -*t  -'-^-"^ 


20       Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 


ji, 


Dady  Bruin  Arts  &  EntefUinmeflt 


MEtr 

From  page  19 

experiences  while  remaining 
focused  on  its  ultimate  goals. 

"We  have  aspirations  just  like 
every  other  rock  band  -  to  get 
the  deal  and  sell  enough  records 
to  be  happy  and  have  this  be  our 
soul  thing,"  Richard  said. 

With  a  strong  dynamic  on  and 


ofr  stage,  Melt  has  been  able  to 
move  forward,  already  accom- 
plishing a  lot  of  ground  work  on 
their  own,  without  the  help  of  a 
record  label. 

"The  most  exciting  thing 
about  this  band  is  that  we've 
never  really  hit  a  plateau,  things 
just  keep  on  rolling  and  snow- 
balling," Richard  said.  "We're 
getting  there,  just  fighting  our 
way  into  the  scene,  doing  it  up." 


Right  now.  Melt  is  all  about 
having  fun  and  enjoying  the 
perks  of  having  a  tightly  knit 
band  working  toward  success. 
The  band  has  a  video  that  can  be 
viewed  on  their  Web  site  and  is 
currently  working  on  putting 
together  a  record  and  touring 
regionally. 

The  band  hopes  to  hit  several 
venues  in  California,  including 
college  campuses.   They   also 


want  their  music  to  be  heard  via 
college  radio. 

"A  lot  of  positive  things  keep 
happening  -  everyone  is  really 
excited  about  the  project  and 
just  keeps  putting  the  energy  in 
and  every  week  something  new 
happens,"  Richard  said. 

MUSK:  For  more  information  on 
Melt  and  its  music,  check  out  the 
Web  site  www.melterskelter.com. 


SOUNDBITES 

From  page  18 

seems  like  it  would  be  a  cynical  music 
critic's  dream  -  a  fat  target  ripe  for  the 
insulting.  But,  unfortunately,  it'-s  not. 

Though  the  latest  disc  is  a  far  cry 
from  the  good-ol'  "Kerplunk"  days,  it's 
actually  not  too  bad.  While  the  band  has 
pretty  much  completely  shed  its  punk 
label  and  crossed  over  into  the  main- 
stream, it  sure  sounds  good  doing  it. 
Call  'em  pop  or  whatever  else  you  want. 
Green  Day's  evolved  from  a  bratty 
bunch  of  teenagers  to,  well,  a  minorly 
less-bratty  bunch  of  middle-aged  men, 
but  ones  who  can  write  a  nice  tune, 
nonetheless. 

Tracks  like  "Blood,  Sex  and  Booze" 
and  "Fashion  Victim"  chug  along  with 
the  old  familiar  sound,  but  Armstrong 
has  definitely  broadened  himself. 


Usually,  in  the  case  of  the  Gyspy-esque 
"Misery"  or  the  folky  "Macy's  Day 
Parade,"  this  newfound  breadth  is  a 
good  thing.  In  the  case  of  the  lamely 
rocking  "Hold  On,"  which  showcases 
Armstrong's  unsung  talents  on  the  har- 
monica, listeners  will  find  themselves 
cringing  and  wishing  he'd  go  back  to 
being  punk. 

While  "Warning:"  isn't  the  band's 
best  effort,  it  comes  across  far  better 
than  expected.  If  there's  one  thing  for 
certain,  however,  it's  that  when 
Armstrong  sings,  "I  want  to  be  the 
minority,"  on  the  lead  single,  he's  lying. 

You  don't  make  catchy  records  like 
this  if  you  really  want  to  be  part  of  the 
underground.  Whatever  his  true  alle- 
giances lie,  at  least  he's  making  some 
snappy  tunes. 

Brent  Hopkins 
_,       ,       ;  ^.  ,    .-  Rating:? 


■JAZZ   ,;:v::^;:;:?r;::v:u:-;;^^:;^l; 

From  page  19 

world  wars,  the  Roaring  '20s,  the  Great 
Depression,  the  sexual  revolution,  the  drug  culture 
and  the  civil  rights  movement.  He  guides  them 
through  the  blues,  swing,  rhythm  and  blues,  bebop 
and  hip-hop. 

Featured  jazz  greats  include  Duke  Ellington, 
Count  Basie,  Billie  Holiday,  Dizzy  Gillespie,  Miles 
Davis,  Dave  Brubeck,  Ella  Fitzgerald,  Charlie 
Parker,  John  Coltrane,  and  Wynton  Marsalis. 

And  Satchmo,  of  course. 

"He  is  to  music  in  the  20th  century  what 
Einstein  is  to  physics,"  Burns  said.  "Out  of  75 
interviews,  maybe  50  talked  about  Armstrong." 

The  people  he  talked  with  called  Armstrong  a 
genius,  a  "gift  from  God,"  Burns  said.  "He  spread 
the  gospel  of  jazz  around  the  world." 

Burns  said  Armstrong  turned  jazz  into  a 
soloist's  art  and  sang  like  no  one  else  ever  had;  he 
changed  everything. 


BLAIR- ^■:^,;^v;,,.;-:;n.v-^,.;::^>-' 

Frompagel?     '        "      :^'     ■•;'-. 

The  novel  is  a  simple  read.  The  only  questions 
one  will  have  are  over  the  mystery  of  what  actually 
took  place  in  the  woods  and  what  happened  to 
Cazale.  Every  historical  tidbit,  every  religious  allu- 
sion, every  tale  of  witchcraft  and  superstition  is 
explained  in  layman's  terms.  No  need  to  worry 
about  complicated  words  or  storylines  here. 

The  motivation  to  continue  reading  might  come 
from  the  desire  to  figure  out  the  meaning  behind 
all  the  mysterious  "witch's  markings,"  arcane 
Celtic  symbols  that  Parr  carves  into  the  arms  of  his 
young  victims  and  that  later  also  appear  on  Cazale. 
Or  one  might  continue  reading  to  find  out  if  the 
murders  were  all  due  to  supernatural  causes. 
Unfortunately  not  much  will  be  revealed  about 
either  mystery. 

Reading  the  synopsis  on  the  back  cover  will  suf- 
fice if  one  is  unable  to  dredge  through  the  150 
pages  of  the  book  as  the  author  does  not  cover 
much  more  inside.  In  the  end,  the  reader  is  left 
guessing  what  really  happened.  Did  Cazale  himself 
go  mad  and  bum  his  wife  and  home?  Did  the  ghost 
of  the  Blair  Witch  really  kill  those  children?  Was  it 
1 1 -year-old  Kyle  Brody,  the  one  survivor  out  of  all 
the  children  kidnapped  by  Parr,  who  committed 
those  heinous  crimes?  Was  Rustin  Parr  an  inno- 
cent man,  a  lunatic,  or  a  liar? 

"The  Secret  Confessions  of  Rustin  Parr"  serves 
its  purpose  as  a  semi-entertaining  book,  following 
on  the  heels  of  a  much  talked-about  film.  If  you 
find  yourself  with  nothing  better  to  do  than  to  con- 
template your  navel,  you  could  do  worse  than  pick- 
ing up  a  copy  of  this  book.  •  ; 


Daily  Bruin 


Wednesday,  Octobef  18, 2000 


Ta 


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an  eflectiiie  ad 

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merchandise  you  are  selling 
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and  include  that  in  the  ad.  Include 
such  information  as  brand  names, 
colors  and  other  specific 

.   descnptions. 


iS!SSSL^tZJSSH^^Jl  ^K!2JS,SS2Z2t.?2?2f5L2^°'.^'if  ■"  """^iSJ^i^Jl.?!*.^  "?L^  ^^^^  CommumcWons  Board  has  iovesligaled  any  o(  the  series  a<»vertiMd  o.  the 
c2raJSrT?BS5SS?iil^^2i^'?2S  ?!?iS^  ?1^2;?r"^  ■?  r^  '*?il"5?*^"2.!;?5*  ?<>*»  on  nondtscrimMOoo  stated  herein  should  comrnunlcatTcSmplalnts  ,n  wrtting  to  the  Business  Manager. 
^K}Tc^!!^Sl^^,^^1^^J^,ift^^S!^2^^S^  '^J^iSgr"  1^  ""gg.*'"'''*"*?"  P™'*™^.  can  me  UCIA  Housing  OHice  at  (310)  825-4271  or  can  the  Wests.de  Fa^  Housing  0(f«:e  at  (310 
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JgggonongrWnoMjgogragWg^enoraa^  «n>  day  ol  publication  by  rwxi. 


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Coinpiis  Hnppeninys 


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Campus  Happenings 


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Campus  Happt^nings 


FREE  Franchise) 


Hwer-flTOWrih  Dot  Com  Company 

Needs  members  to 
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^Fof  adttional  info  caB:  323-971 -0e02v^ 


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LOANS,  LOANS, 
LOANS 

FOn  GOOD  AND  BAD  CREDIT.  We  do  aM 
types  of  loans  with  no  appKcation  fees  High 
approval  rate.  All  appHcanla  welcomed.  Call 
ton  free  1-688-696-1301. 

ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-campus  4  on-line  financial  services 
source  for  students,  faculty  &  staff  Visit  us  at 
Ackerman  A-level,  on-line  at  www.ucu.org  or 
caH  310-477-6628. 

KINKY  FRIEDMAN  AND 
THE  TEXAS  JEWBOYS 

To  headline  at  the  QoFe-Uebetman  Inagural 
Ball.  Read  all  about  it  In  www.fraedonia- 
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2200 

Research  Subjects 


RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  (or 
UCl>  Biain  Mapping  study.  Wear  goggles 
for  two  weeks  that  turn  the  world  upskJo 
down.  Must  be  right-handed,  normal  hearing, 
vision  good  or  correctat)le.  $1000  payment. 
Contact  Richard  at  quixoteOucia.edu  tor 
more  Info. 


2300 

Sperm  /  Egg  Donors 


2600 

Wanted 


2000 

Peisonals 


NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT. Safe'  affordatite*  effective'  visit  us  a( 
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PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
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ttwir  aexuaMy  through  nude  modeling.  Free 
prints  for  tnocMing  time  Call  Robail  at  310- 
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CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  the  com- 
mon ooM.  Malsi/tamale  IS-SSyts.  oW.  rton- 
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B  wlliellnHalSM»)aB<i  Oyshee.eew 


SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH,  18-45.  want 
od  tor  nkx)tine  research  study  administered 
by  UCLA  Both  heavy  and  occasional  smok- 
ers needed.  Partk;ipants  will  be  paU  up  to 
$395  for  tour  visits.  Call  Richard  Olmstead  at 
310-312-0565.  leave  message. 

SOLAR  ENERGY 
INVESTIGATORS 

Help  direct  many  flat  mirTors  at  vartous  ob- 
jects. Spectacular  displays?  High  tempera- 
ture phystes  experiments  gak>re7  Transfonn 
deserts  into  gardens?  Solar  tunneling?  Pre- 
heat steel  for  welding?  Contact  Edward  Van- 
degrift  at  eddievanOpact>ell.nel 

SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for  btood  samples. 
$20  per  visit  Culver  City,  lOmin  to  UCLA. 
Reply:  paulpOcareside.cofn 

WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60+  w/kyphosis 
(fonward  bending  of  spine)  needed  for  re- 
search progrsm  Invesllgallng  ««h«her  Yoga 
can  improve  kyphosis.  Study  being  conduct- 
ed by  Gall  Greendale,  MD  in  the  UCLA  Dept. 
of  Medteine.  Please  call  310-794-9055. 


2300 

Sperm/E(i(|  Donors 


H  you  are  male.  In  ooMege  or  have  a  codege 
degrae,  you  can  earn  up  to  $eO0/mo.  call  lor 
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r>ah,  man  ua  Hrat.  310  aa«  B8«1 . 


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EGG  DONORS  NEEDED 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 
wishing  to  lielp  infertile  couples. 
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COMPLETE  COMPUTER  SYSTEM- 
433MHz,lnlel  Celron,64MB,6.4GB.CD- 
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BJC1000  cotor  printer.  Hitachi  SuperScari 
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-:f 


22       Wedo«dj)t  October  18, 2000 


DaMy  Bruin  Classified 


1300 

Campus  Rocruitinent 


1300 

Campus  Recrmtineiit 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


J300 

Campus  Recruitment 


'■:■■'  !J«  ^"-"fy^ 


Botta  Capital 
Management  LLC; 

'/■'.'■■.,:.  ■■:.  has  openings  for       .,   ■■..";: 

TRADING  ASSISTANTS 


V— -.--v;^.— 


'4::;- 


Botta  Capital  Management  L.L.C.  is  a  major  market 
maker  of  index  and  stock  options  with  floor  trading 
operations  at  the  Chicago  Board  Options  Exchange,  the  Pacific 
Stock  Exchange  in  San  Francisco,  the  American  Stock  Exchange 
(AMEX)  in  New  York,  Philadelphia  Stock  Exchange  (PHLX), 
London  International  Financial  Futures  Exchange  (UFFE)  and 
the  Amsterdam  Stock  Exchange.  Botta  also  conducts  electronic 
screen-based  trading  on  German  and  Swiss  equities  traded  on 
the  EUREX  from  our  Frankfurt  office.  With  over  80  market 
makers,  Botta  provides  significant  market  liquidity  in  exchange- 
traded  options  on  approximately  1,000  stocks  and  indexes 

Botta  docs  not  require  its  candidates  to  have  a  prior 
background  in  economic  or  financial  matters.  Instead  we 
carefully  seek  individuals  who  have  demonstrated  strong 
leadership  abiUties  and  who  display  a  keen  ability  to  work  with 
confidence  and  discipline  in  a  highly  competitive,  fast-paced 
environment.  Botta  has  an  extensive  internship  program  and 
welcomes  inquiries  from  underclassmen. 


Botta  will  be  interviewing  on  campus 

November  7*.  To  be  considered  for  an 

interview,  please  submit  your  resume: 

Visit  Botta's  web  site  at  www.bottatrading.com 
Mail:  440  S.  LaSalJe  St.  Suite  3400,  Chicago  60605 
FAX:(312)  260-5491      ' 

■m 

— Botta  Capital  Management 

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MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY,  STEARNS  A  FOSTER.  Also  twtn- 
sets-$79  95,  Fulls-$99  95,  Qoeens-$l39  95 
Kings-$  199.95.  Queen  PUIowtops  $199  95 
Beacon.  Open  7-days.  1309  WMtwood 
Btvd.  310-477-1466 


Stereos/TVs/Rndios 


JVC  STEREO  SYSTEM  w/caMnet  and  2 
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477-0809. 


WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

SWgh  beds.  Rustic  pine  fumMure.  armoiree, 
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GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded  $40  (or  attorney  pre- 
pared application.  John  K4anley,  Esq.  12304 
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310-820-7553.  OaadhW:10l^30»W 


P(Ms 


Autos  f(jf  s.ili." 


1984  HONDA  CIVIC  2  door,  4  speed,  runs 
great,  good  gas  mileage,  AM/FM  cassette 
new  muffler,  $1100  obo  310-444-9814. 

1986  TOYOTA  CAMARY  Runs  ExceMentAu- 
tomatic,  4door,  White,  A/C,  AM/FM  Stereo 
80.000  miles.  $2800  310-837-3349  or  wortc 
310-825-4887. 


On  Wednesday,  October  1 8  at 
12  noon  in  Charles  Young  Grand 

Salon  (next  to  Kerckhoff  Art 

Gallery)  the  Deans  of  Admission 

from  Cornell,  Harvard,  New 

York  University,  Stanford  and 

Yale  will  present  a  panel 

discussion  on  the  law  school 

admissions  process. 

For  further  information  call 
Sharif  Sawires  at  310-206-9969 


services 

5800-7300 


5900 

Financiiil  Aid 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  application  fees,  high  approval  rate  low 
•merest  rate,  ail  applicants  welcome.  Call 
loll-free:  1  -866-427-2677 


^900 

Autos  for  S.-ilc 


5700 

Travol  Tickets 


MOVING-  MUST  SELL 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4wd 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  condi- 
twn.  Sen  for  $4200.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836. 


POLICE  IMPOUNDS.  Care  as  low  as  $500 
for  listings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214. 

TWO  VERY  NICE  CARS.  Under  txwk 
Under  72K  miles.  1994  Mercury  Capri 
Convertable.  $4500.  1994  Cadillac  El 
Dorado  $14,000.  323-293-4009. 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990 
84000m(,  good  condition,  power  windows 
Wack,  A/C,  registration  paid  lor  one  year 
$4000  Can  Vicente  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerOucla.edu 

■93  NISSAN  SENTRA  XE.  2door.  Sspd/man- 
ual,  white  A/C,  am/fm  cassette,  cruise  con- 
trol, good  condition,  90K.  $4400  Denise  310- 
268-3838  x48480. 


51 OO 

Motorcycles  for  Salt.' 


1981  HONDA  900  SPORT-$1000  00  «  1996 
SUZUKI  800  INTRUDER,  snowroom  condi- 
tion. Ui(e  new  under  4200  mlle8-$5500  00 
Call  after  6pm  323-293-4009. 

1999  DUCATI  Monster  900  Dart(.  Low  miles 
runs  and  ioote  new.  $7500.  310-701-1811.  ' 


VICTORY  TRAVEL 


Urw  AMEBICA  Sf>caAaJ$TS 


tl» 
109 
CabeSanlucoi   99 

BSaiMdar        309 
I  Hi«dMiu»  319 

Ilka  30S 
VQM  33t 
Mdo         179 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Union  (Lender  Code  832123).  We're  on 
campus  at  Adwnnan  A-level.  310^77.6628- 
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6000 

Insuriiiico 


(.yclerunp  Insutmcc  Srrvicpc; 


■  Motorcycle -Motor  Scooter  •Moped 

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DAILY  BRUIN 

Cl.mided  825-2221  •  Display  206-3060 


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1 988  TOYOTA  CELICA  GTS.  Power  sunroof 
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1991  NISSAN  SENTRA  XE.  4  doWB  5- 
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825-2221 


Then  study  this... 

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_PCPlinrTRAVBLADVICB 


Disnl.iy 


IMr  Brain  OassMol 


Wrdnesday,  October  18, 2000       23 


1300 

Campus  Rccruititu-nt 


1300 

Campus  RecniitiinMU 


1300 

Campus  Recrtjitmeiit 


\ 


1300 

Campus  Ret.ruitnuMit 


1300 

Campus  Recruitment 


Lehman  Brothers 


.■■%:■■     . 


i<1*>-' 


Lehman  Brothers     ^    | 
cordially  invites  undergraduates 
to  attend  a  presentation  bn 

.■.,..-■■  ""^ 

career  opportunities  in 


Investment  Banking 


.'ifvi''  -.,    ^■.^^, '■:•*;.-• 


Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 

6:00  p.m. 

W  Hotel  -  Studio  3  Room 


-"<: . 


Lehman  Brothers  is  an  equal  opportunity  employer. 


WVWoOdDDOiMlKUgOlffl 


^^^^^^^^^W^^ff^^^^^ 


nicnliw 

206-30fo 


_, -ij-..,;*  \,-\'  ;,■;  ^,-     ] ,    ,.;..  Umf» ' 


'  24       Wednesday,  (ktober  18, 2000 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


Daily  Bniin  Classified' 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


[imii]finME!] /i\ 


FREE  TRIP 


Come  into  our  branch  to  register  for  2  FREE  AA 
licicets  to  anywhere  in  the  Continental  US! 

You  MUST  come  in  to  STA  Travel  to  register  for  the  raffle  prior  to  OCTOBER  31. 

Restrictions  Apply.  Booking  must  tw  made  at  least  3  days 
m  advance.  2  night  mimnrHjm  stay.  Maximum  45  day  stay.  Must  be  used  by  October  31    POOl 

CST #101756060  .  c^j"--.. 


6200 

Health  Sen/ices 


LOSE  up  to  30  lbs,  30  day  $8ack  Guarantee. 
Programs  start  at  $38.  1-800-414-3652 


MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  Massage.  $40/hr  w/student 
ID.  Monday-Friday  10am-8pm  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Certifk:ates  available 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Attorneys 


LEGAL  PROTECTION 

EARN$$$.  Pre-pakl  legal  plan  to  protect 
yourself.  $25/month  membership  throughout 
the  US  and  Canada.  SURQ33ehot- 
mail.com,  213-841-5704.  www.pplsi.com  1- 
800-654-7757. 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedicated  pro- 
fessional. At  your  home  or  WLA  studk).  1st- 
lesson  tree.  No  drum  set  necessary 
Neil:323-654-8226. 


.-■■.■-:■•'.-;': 


Daily  Bruin  Ciassifwd 


6200 

Health  Services 


6200 

Health  S»;ivices 


6200 

H(?;illli  Services 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST  Sexual  harrassment,  Discrimina- 
tk)n.  Auto-accidents,  Slips/falls.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  Westside,  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW86). 
www.bestlawyer.com  310-277-3000. 


GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professtonal  near  UCLA.  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  play  effortlassly! 
www.JWGS.com.     CaH  Jean  at  310-476- 

4154. 


6600 

Personal  Services 


Joelle  Jacobson,  MARRIAGE/FAMILY 
THERAPIST  intern  (IMF37582).  Call  310- 
797-2243.  Specializes  in  teenagers  and 
young  adults.  Supervized  by  Serena  Brooks, 
licensed  Marriage/Family  Therapist 
(MFC30534). 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION 

^--r^    3IJSL  Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontisti; 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  children  ■ 


Braces 

Deliver  Brilliant 


V) 

Resultsy 


•  Cosmetic  Porcekaln 
•  Surgk:al  Orinodonltcs 

•  RemovablQ 

•  Tradittexxii 
•  fnvlsltJte 

•European 


Menage  a  trols?  I  do  translations  In  German. 
English,  or  Frearh.  Call  Julia  310-826-8917. 


(310)  826  -  7494 

llMSWililvrcBlvd  «M2 
LotAngclti.  CA  90O2S 

(949)  552  -  5890 

mU  Culver  Dr..  tA 


■::i):^. 


ir'#. 


^310-UClA-aY 
920  Weslwood  Blvd. 


TRAVEL 


PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pre-paid  legal  senrtce  programs 
providing  quality  legal  sendees  to  plan  mem- 
bers. Robert  Moss(LK;LAW'71).:310-260- 
7650. 


6400 

Movers/Storatje 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-foot  trucks  fully  equipped  for  large  moves. 
Call  24/7.  Available  on  short  notice  Ucense 
T163844.  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  w/i4fi  tmck  and  dollies, 
small  jobs,  short  notice  ok  SF,  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  Bruins!  10th  vr  310- 
285-8688. 


The  UCU 

Dining 
Guide 


www.statravel.com 


JERRYS  MOVING&DEUVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reHable.  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available  Also,  ptek- 
up  donatwns  for  American  Cancer  Society 
JerrYa310-391-5657. 


harsmins 


-  Marketplace  ofstudent-tD-stucient  deaJs  C3  - 

a^tely  FREE*  some  of  the  best  deals  in  Westwood.  Check  weekly  for  updates  so  you  don't  miss  out  on  great  savings! 


19-rV  AMPR.<tnM 
4_SLIITCASF.';  A.S.ST  . 
ACX-.tr,  .■^nPTuyftfiF 
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— jIIHbP'jBo? 


To  place  a  I 

ad  in  the  Bruin 

Bargains,  fill  out 

information  on  the  right 

and  submit  to  the  Daily 

Bruin  Classifieds. 


tn 


aHM7*fi«18 


3iMaMim 


— ^rjjiM  tod  Iran  (»«» 

•  Item: "'""'"-""'" 

(15  characters  inaximuni,  indudlng  spaces) 
•Description. 

(20  characters  maxifnum,  including  spaces) 
•Price. 

(example  $25,  $74ea,  FREE.  Please  round  to  the  neaist  dollar— NO  OBO) 
•Phone:  (.^      ) 


Teeth  Whitening  $Sc:oo   Bf"!    |fl^£^" 

upper  or  tower  ^'    \J  \J  ^BL___^JB        I'STS!! m'^JT. TI" " *~~ 


TCkASTCR  nwcti 
TWIN  MATTPCCC 


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•Description: 

(20  characters  maximum,  including  spaces) 
•Price 

(example  $25,  |74ca,  FREE.  Please  round  to  the  nearest  dollar— NO  OBO) 
•Phone:  ( ) _^. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


•Wm^ti^subniittdinperKxtorbymailrtophoneonienrii;;^",;;;;:;;^^^^  

— : ^^^^^-^^^'^^''^'•'-^  •-i.<rf4f««l,p.rc«om.per«ek 


■'vl,/'. 


To  advertise  call: 
310.825.2161 


recycle. 


Display 

7nK.'?n^^n 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


7500 

Cnreer  Opportunities 


7500 

Caronr  Opportunities 


Harbor-UCLA  medical  Center,  Department  of  Orthopaedic  Surgery 
Research  Coordinator  Job  Description 


ftir»M«_TI>»p«r|wt»oftlitepo«Wwi»t«i«ctttotttlwwwafc>>ni^cteefth^ 
SwvwyOaiMrtmMt  A  swomlary  purpoM  is  to  maintain  the  oompirtar  systems,  ditabasM 
and  oHmt  tMAnologicai  oqnipnNnt  of  On  departmont. 

SpsdfloANW  A  candidate  tor  this  posMon  must  ba  self  motivatad,  a  cfvative  problem  solver 

fwnlUar  wMi  computers  (Macintosli  and  PC),  intarostwl  in  a  rotated  tMd,  and  willing  to 

commit  at  least  a  year  to  ttie  position. 

Duttes:  The  Duties  of  tliit  positiott  include,  but  are  not  limitad  to,  dally  uplceep  of  several  data 

kHM^rldng  on  various  research  protects  including  the  reviewing  of  charts  and  X-ray  files, 

tnotoping  new  programs  to  help  the  department  further  Its  research  interests,  talcing  an 
acthfo  rolo  in  miscellaneous  departmental  proiecis  and  providing  gmeral/technical  support  lor 

office  and  clinical  staff . 

ainOJZ2J71§ 


6700 

Professional  Services 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Ccmpthtnaivm  Oisseitalion  Assistance 
ThMes.  Paper*,  and  Paraonal  Suiements 

Proposals  artd  Books 

International  StudanU  Woieocno  Sine*  1965 

Slwroa  Bear,  Ph.0.  (310)  470-6662 

»»ww.B«ar-Write.eom 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


FRENCH  TUTOR 

PHD  GRADUATE  tutors  French  language  for 
all  levels  tjeginning,  advanced  and  conver- 
sational French.  Excellent  service  and  rates 
Call  Liza:3 10-575-3874. 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  for  de- 
pression, anxiety,  obsessions,  post-traumat- 
ic stress.etc.  Couples/Individuals.  Crime  vic- 
tims may  t)e  eligible  for  free  treatment.  Call 
Liz  Gould(MFC#32388)«310-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  consultation 

ATTENTION  MBA.  LAW,  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Frustrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
professional  help  from  well-ltnown  au- 
thor/consultant.310-826-4445  wwv^.winning- 
personslatement.com. 


THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
temi  paper  assistance,  English,  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  Welcome 
Call:31 0-452-2865 
www.thewriterscoach.com 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 
PERSONAL 
:  STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 
COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertation  lomiatting,  tran- 
scribing. Personalized,  professional  assis- 
lance.  Ace  Words,Etc.  3 1 0-820-8830. 

SERRANO'S  CLEANING  SERVICES.  Busi- 
ness License.  Years  of  experience.  Afford- 
able prices.  Offices,  apartments,  condomini- 
ums, houses.  Cleaning,  Uundry  etc.  Maria 
310-836-7258  310-655-3664 


WWW.MY-TUTOR.COM  Mafh/Physics/Sta- 
tistics/English/Hebfew/  chemistry/biology/as- 
tronomy/ Computer  programming.  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
service.  Call  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/excellent  study  habits  to  assist  128.16-yr- 
oid  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  Insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hrs/v^.  $l0-$l2/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 


GERMAN  NATIVE 

To  tutor  young  boy  in  German  once/wk  (pre- 
ferably male).  Venice.  310-392-4974. 


NEED  COLLEGE  LEVEL  ALGEBRA  2  TU- 
TOR asap  Must  have  own  car  Mid-Wilshire 
area  or  SMCC.  $20/hr.  323-857-0540  or  213- 
703-6141. 


TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Union/Union.  For  cun-ent  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day  1-888-774-9994.  »mw.abcpa- 
pers.com 


WRITER'S  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlining,  research,  and  production 
assistance  for  academic  or  professional  writ- 
ing. Experienced  writing  instructor.  Harvard 
Univeristy  MA.  JofV3 10-367-5666 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


"ENGLISH  EXPERT 

DOES  WRITING  IN  ENGLISH  make  you 
crazy?  Assistance  In  basic  skills  to  major  re- 
search paper  completion  ESL  experienced 
310-839-9933/Adam. 

BOND  TUTORING 

AHso^ects  6-1 2th  grade  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees.  We  will  meet  your  Indlvidu- 
al  needs  310-471  -7628. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  thai  will  get  results 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall  Seven-years 
experience  SAT/Cateulus/Physics/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geometry/French/Enollsh  Call 
WW  31 0-701 -8969 


P/T  OR  CAREER 
OPPORTUNITY! 

Private  tutors/instructors  for  K-12  and  Edu- 
cational Consultants  for  college  admissions 
services.  Seeking  UndergraduatesPhD's. 
Experience  preferred,  strong  communica- 
tksns  skills  required  Future  Youth  Inc./Mind- 
Life  Consulting  Group.  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329. 

TUTOR  NEEDED 

Homework  assist  for  tvw)  boys,  2nd  and  3rd 
grade  in  private  home  in  Laurel  Canyon.  Af- 
ter School  hours  approximately  10 
hoursAweek,  flexible  schedule  Some  driving. 
Please  call  ovenings:310-401-0113  or  day- 
time:310-392-1405. 


TUTOR  WANfED  for  4th  grade  boy  Bilin- 
gual (French-English)  American  preferred 
3times/wk  for  2  hours.  Must  have  own  car 
Bel-air.  310-471-0032  or  dbtwenty4sev- 
enOaol.com 


TUTOR-  14  yo  boy  Keep  kids  organized 
and  up-to-date  on  schodwortc  2-3hrs/day  2- 
4  days/week  Must  have  car  Bel  Air  $8- 
10/hr.  310-471-1363/310-420-4420 

TUTOR/DRIVER  for  11  6yeaf  girt  Wed  & 
Thurs,  3  30-5  30pm.  $10/hr  Near6year  Call 
(an  310-477-7541. 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  apwiallzing  In  thes- 
es, dissertations,  transcription,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports  Santa 
Monica,  310-828-6939  Hollywood  323-466- 
2888 


Wedtiesday,  Octotw  18, 2000       25 


Just  between  us 

Check  out  the  Ashe  Center 
Wbmen'!^  Clinic. 


9 


I 


Most  rooHne  services  are  free.  It's  absolofely  confidential 
It's  not  just  for  illness  -  whether  you're  ready  for  intimacy 
(or  not),  or  just  need  to  know  you're  ok,   the  Women's  Clinic 
has  something  for  you. 

Whatever  is  on  your  mind  about  the  miracle 
of  being  female  .  .  .  feel  free  to  coll  us, 
make  an  appointment,  folk  it  oyer. 

For  informotion  or  on 
appointment  coll   310  825-4073, 
or  vist  the  Ashe  vy«b  site  to 
request  on  appointment  or 
ask  a  health  related  ques- 
tion hHp://wMfw.saonat. 
uela.0du/health.htm 


ucm  Ashe  Center 


"i  I  ■•'■■  i 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PI  1771 F 


ACROSS 

1  Understandable 
6  Recipe  qty. 
10  "Dear"  one 

14  Jazzy  Lena 

15  Jai  — 

16  Mouse  cousin 

1 7  Getting  older 

18  Floor  coverings 

19  Histoncal 
periods 

20  Strappers' 
papers 

22  Harangue 

24  Poet  Ogden 

25  Gemst>oks 

26  Eucalyptus 
eaters 

30  Famous  volcano 

32  Andes  native 

33  Greeic  goddess 
35  Peculianty 

40  Timeless 
42  Toss  it! 

44  Screwdriver 
need 

45  Place 

47  Emulate  Celine 
Dion 

48  Hull  txjttom 
50  Pops 

52  Wet 
56  Boor 

58  Mountain 
nymphs 

59  Kernels 

64  Tidings 

65  Bad  day  for 
Caesar 

67  Hit  movie  of  the 
past 

68  Muslim  prince 

69  Puff  of  wind 

70  Grin 

71  Tardy 

72  Eliot  of  "Tt>e 
Untouctiables" 

73  Lugged 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


mumm     QmiiD  qqihb 


mss  nasiua  araQDoi 


RiL 

DES 

■CAIDISI 

DOWN 

1  Scorch 

2  Theater  section 

3  Guitarist 
Clapton 

4  Actress  Meara 

5  Canadian  city 

6  Bakery  items 

7  Rouge 

8  Droop 

9  Engine  part 

10  Painter 
Milton  — 

11  Water  softener 

12  Grass  unit 

13  Affirmatives 
21  Turkish  official 
23  Baghdad  native 

26  Ukraine  s 
capital 

27  "I'm  —  your 
tricks!" 

28  Made  an  "A" 

29  Escapade 
31  27th  President 


34  End  of  a  threat 

36  Old  map  inits. 

37  Wading  bird 

38  Monthly 
obligation 

39  Barrels 
41  Unclothed 
43  Disprove 
46  Malady 
49  Naval 

officer 

51  Greatest 

52  Wooden  rod 

53  Good  smell 

54  Deserve 

55  Pedro's  father 
57  Expels  from 

power 

60  Pollster  Roper 

61  Mine  entrance 

62  Roofing  piece 

63  Planter's 
need 

66  Expected 
to  arrive 


ni<:nlau 
06-3060 


iLii&j 


26       Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 


Oaiy  Brum  Classified 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


7800 

Help  Want(!d 


SERIOUS  ABOUT  HAVING 

AT 


ORK? 


At  Noah's  we  take  having  fun  at  work  pretty 

seriously.  Great  people,  great  service  and  great  food 

are  what  make  us  a  seriously  fun  place  to  work. 

HIRING  NOW! 

PART  TIME  SHIFTS  AVAILABLE 

Weekdays   7am  -  noon  Flexible.  Well  work 

10am -2pm  around  your  schedule. 
2pm-6pm  10910  Undbrook  Dr. 

Sat/Sun      7am  -  6pm  (310)  209-8177 

Apply  with  the  manger  today! 


— employment 

7400-8300 


Business  Opportunities 


A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  Its  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35,  Refundable.  No  Risk. 
httpV/zibgib.conVphanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stephanie. 

BURNED  OUT? 

Tired  of  misleading  ads?  I'm  tired  of  clueless 
people.  Want  to  make  $5000-$8000/mo? 
Beverfy  Hills  office  expkxJing.  Call  me:  310- 
268-1515. 

COLLEGE  ACHIEVERS 

Ground  floor  company.  Soutfiem  California 
market  exploding.  Want  to  make  $5- 
8K/month?  Ill  teach  you  how.  FT/PT.  Can 
310-360-6994  9am-1pm. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


STOCK  BROKER  Licenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars.  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216.  Woodland  Hills,  CA.  Instructor:  David 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  University). 
818-703-8889. 

THERAPEUTIC  AID  for  auUstic  chiWren. 
P/T.F/T  (flexible).  $12-15/hr.  BS/BA  Psychol- 
ogy preferred.  Experience  w/DT,  behavior 
modification  Contact  818-788-2388,  fax  re- 
sume 818-788-3875. 


WANTED!  Internet  Sawy  Programmer.  Abil- 
ity to  host  web  sites  and  search  engine 
placement  skills.  818-873-4767  pager. 


BARTENDERS 


•2 


t1O»-i2O0  ■  day 

IraMnaftjob 
Mnt  kidudMl 
•  iri  not  a  lob -«n  a  nWTYlH 


WaUonaiBaiUnderi  School 


1    (BOO)  04G  -  MIXX  (G40U) 

\.v\.vvv   I  ).(1i<  >i  t.  irt  ).  It  If -f  i<  t<    r'.  (    «iMt 


7600 

Child  Care  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  run  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2  5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Ctose  to  UCLA. 
310-473-0772. 


BREAK  INTO 
HOLLYWOOD!!! 

After  a  decade  of  research-it's  here:  The 
"Industry  Secrets  VkJeo"  Anyone  can  do 
this  simple,  ten-step  plan  Get  the  irtskle 
track  to  achievtrtg  your  acting  dreams 
now!  Send  $24.95  (check  or  money  or- 
der) to:  Break  Into  Hollywood  PO  Box  833 
Santa  Monica,  CA  90406  or  call:  310- 
899-0082. 


GET  AN  "A"  on  your  health  test!!!  Detoxify 
your  system  fast  or  double  your  $$  back!!! 
Call  toll  free  877-696-4541  extUCIOO. 
www.faroutpromotk)ns.com 


coming 

October  30 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


ATHLETIC.  Energetk:.  Intelligent  guy  to  play 
sports  and  help  out  with  homework  for  kkte 
6,8  As  many/little  hours  as  wanted,  after 
school  and  on  weekerxls.  Must  krK>w  ftow  to 
drive  and  swim.  Call  Maureen  310-440- 
0990. 

BENEDICT  CANYON- 10  yo.  girl  attending 
Warner  Ave  After  School  Care.  From  1- 
6:30pm.  M-F  $350/wk.  Must  have  car  and 
good  driving  records.  310-858-7060. 

CHILCARE/DRIVER.  Mon^uw,  3-7;30pm, 
5  year-oW-boy  pick-up  from  school  to  activi- 
ties and  home,  supervise  HW  arxl  ptey.  Care 
for  2  year-oW  brother  fof  1  hr  Good  driver. 
References  Good  pay.  Wesiwood.  310-475- 
1953. 

CHILD  CARE  Wanted  Tues  3-8,  TTuirs  3-6 
AND/OR  Sat  12-9  in  Santa  Monk» 
Someone  to  he(p  full  time  Mom  w/  kkla  ages 
4,6,10.  Must  have  experience.  Good  pay. 
Call  Doug  310-868-01^.  Fax  310^51- 
6050. 


P/T  NANNY 

for  7  yr-oW  girl.  PacNk:  PaHsades.  2-€:30pm, 
M-F  Must  have  car.  Errands,  light  house- 
keeping, child  pick-up.  $10/hr.  310-230- 
3877. 

PT  BABYSITTER  Desperately  wanted  for 
evenings/weekends.  Must  be  responsible, 
l>ave  common  sense,  refererKes  and  a  car. 
Can  310-838-8085  or  buzheegunOaol.com. 

SITTER  P/T  twice  a  week  Bright,  responsi- 
ble student  to  watch  infant.  (Prefer  educatton 
major,  previous  experience  and  own  trarw- 
portatlon).  Terri  310-910-3405. 

SPANISH  SPEAKING  CAREGIVER  needed 
to  ptek-up  chiWren  from  school  and  tutor 
Spanish.  School  and  reskJence  within  bkx;ks 
of  UCLA.  1-2hrs/day,  4days/wk.  $12/»w.  310- 
208-6865  Of  310-825-2556. 

STUDENT  NEEDED 

3-4  days,  4-7pm.  Must  have  own  car.  Walk- 
ing distance  to  UCLA.  $8/hr.  Drive  cNdren, 
help  w/homework.  Non-smoker.  310-470- 
0021. 


WANT  THE  BEST  JOB 
ON  THE  WEST  SIDE? 

CHILDCARE  For  12-year-oW  gW.  SM,  M-F 
3:30-7l8h.  Car  with  Insurance  References 
required.  $9Whour.  Nlght:3lO-828-6206, 
Day:818-954-3276 

WATCH  MOVIES  AND  STUDY.  BabytiHer 
needed.  Flexibte  hours.  Weeknighto  tnHtot 
weekende.  BH  family.  CDL.  Fax  reewne  323- 
957-9782 


♦ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  VaNey.  Holywood.  or  Santa  Monk:a 
office  nMda  •nargedc  p«opl«.  Bonuaaal 
310-395-7368 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


7800 

Help  WiintL-d 


$$GREAT  PAY$$ 

$1CVH0UR?  Students  with  good  MathAEng- 
Hsh  skills  needed  for  PT-FT  office  positions. 
Flexible  schedule  but  must  be  available  all 
day  Tuesday  and  Thursday  until  December. 
Fax  resume:818-769-4694  or  cal:818-769- 
4600  ask  for  Usa. 


$1,000'S  WEEKLY!! 

STUFF  ENVELOPES  at  home  for  $2.00 
each  plus  bonuses.  F/T,  P/T.  K4ake  $800+ 
weekly  guaranteed!  Free  supplies.  For  de- 
tails send  one  stamp  to:  N-33,  PMB  552, 
12021  Wilshire  Blvd.,  Los  Angeles.  CA 
90025. 

$15-$23/HR  BRIGHT  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academk: 
Subjects.  Transportatnn  required.  We  will 
train.  Flexible  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  lel- 
terAesume,  including  test  scores  (SAT,  GRE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educational  Services,  Aiin:Bar- 
ry,  9911  W.  Pico  Blvd.  Ste.1025.  LA.  CA 
m.  90035;  Fax:310-282-6424.  Positions  avail- 
able throughout  LA  and  the  Valley. 

$1500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  circulars. 
No  experierwe  required.  Free  infonmation 
packet.  Call  202-466-1639. 

$8  to  $15  per  hour 

Work  in  Westwood  for  an  upscale  singles 
organization.  Women  excel.  Telemarketing. 
Recruit  new  members.  Weekly  pay  Call  after 
3PM  Sun-Thurs.  Keith:31 0-279-3300. 

♦DANCE  HOSTESS* 

EXCELLENT  TIPS  ♦  SALARY  Flexible 
schedule.  P/T-F/T.  LA  Downtown  nightclub. 
No  akx>hol/no  nudity.  l8yiBars-f.  CaM  nowlll 
213-620-9572. 


7800 

Help  Wiinled 


BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Uraon.  Excellent  pay,  hours  &  environment. 
Some  teller  experience  preferred.  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd..  LA.  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.ucu.oig/iobs.htm 

CAMPUS  EVENT 


JOBS 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


FUNA;ARING  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  tor 
picking  up  &  caring  for  9yr  old  girt.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-5days/wk. 
aftemoons-6pm.  Gayle  310-450-4109  (even- 
ings)  

NANNY/MOTHER'S 
HELPER 

for  6yr-oW  boy  and  toddler.  Flexible  hours. 
Some  travel  w/family,  especially  weekends. 
Must  be  insured/licensed  driver.  Live-in  pos- 
sible   References  a  must.  310-446-9970. 

P/T  FULL  HOUSE  CLEANING.  CDL,  chiW- 
care.  Must  be  atAe  to  stay  overnight  on  occa- 
sions. Light  cooking.  MWF  l-6pm.  Must  be 
flexible.  323-370-2413. 


Earn  a  Bonus  up  to  $500  if  you  can  commit 
to  the  Men's  Baskettiall  Season  and  other 
Special  Events!!!  Limited  number  of  posi- 
tions available,  for  UCLA  students  only.  For 
more  Informatton  call  Sean.  310-  206-0736. 

CARING  INDIVIDUALS  NEEDED  TO  sup- 
port UCLA  student  lABA.  an  intaxnationalty 
respected  ager>cy,  is  seeking  Community 
Support  Companions  and  Overnight  Com- 
panions to  assist  a  college  student  with 
physical  challenges.  Assistance  needed  ii 
his  dorm. classes. and  the  community  of 
Wesiwood.  lABA  provides  pakj  training  and 
advancement  opportunities.  Full  and  part 
time  shifts  availat>le,  irKluding  night  hours. 
Full  time  benefits  include  medical/dental  cov- 
erage, 401 K  plan  and  pakf  time  off  Competi- 
tive wages+supplemental  tenure  pay.  Relat- 
ed experience  or  BA  in  Psychotogy  pre- 
ferred. Email  your  resume  to  rokel- 
ly©iaba.com  or  call  toll  lree-877-924-2220. 
For  more  information  visit  lABA  at 
www.iaba.com 


*F/T  GENERAL  GFRCE* 

WESTWOOD  ENTERTAINMENT  LAW 
FIRM  SEEKS  F/T  OFFICE  CLERK  TO  DO 
COPYING,  FAXING,  AND  MAIL  PROCESS- 
ING. MUST  HAVE  CLERKJAL  OFFICE  EX- 
PERIENCE. SALARY  DOE+BENEFITS 
FAX  RESUME  TO  E.  KRAFT:  310-441-8010 

•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beats  all  jobs.  Start 
immediately.  Great  pay.  Fun/Easy.  Ho  crazy 
fees.  Program  for  free  mednal  Call-24/hrs 
323-850-4417. 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  fieW  sales,  flexible  fwurs  +  com- 
mission and  txxiusl  Ambitious  salesperson. 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  support  ©tones - 
4all.com AttnFieM  Sales. 

ACCOUNTING  CLERK  Needed.  $12- 
15/DOE.  Must  have  taken  accounting  class- 
es. Excel  and  strong  communicatkKi  skills 
Fax  resume  attnMelody  323-965-3194. 


CUNiCAL 

_j:  laboratory 
technician- 
supervisor 

FT  position  immediately  available  for  a  li- 
censed latX)falory  scientist  in  a  private  clini- 
cal laboratory  in  Santa  Monica.  LabprovkJes 
endocrine,  androtogy,  serotogy  and  immu- 
nology testing.  Incumbent  required  to  work 
in  weekend  rotatk)ns.  Salary  commerisurate 
with  qualifkations  and  experience.  Submit 
applkatkxis  to  Bronte  Stone.  Reproductive 
Technotogy  Laboratories,  1245  I6th  Street. 
Suite  105,  Santa  Monk»,  CA  90404  (Tal 
310-829-0102). 

COFFEE  BAR  ATTENDANT  the  best  stud- 
ent  job.  You  must  be  responsible,  reliable, 
experience  a  plus.  Dutlons  11975  San  Vi- 
cente. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  Flexible, 
part-time  tiours  $10-1 3/hr.  Tennis  a  plus! 
We  are  nattorul  ftower  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANTWill  train.  In 
medteal  offce  30-40hrs/M-F/9;00-6:OOpm. 
Computer  knowledge  nwndatory.  Great  job 
for  Buair>e88/Pre-Me<VPublk:-Heafth  majors. 
15-rrtn  to  UCLA.  310-476-4205. 

AFTERNOONS  DURING 
SCHOOL 

AH  day  Saturday,  too!  FuNtime  during  Quarter 
Breaks  and  Summer  V&catkxis!  Work  experi- 
ence not  necessary.  Apply  today  at  West- 
wood  Sporting  Goods.  1065  Gaylay  Ave, 
Westwood  VMlage  310-208-6215. 

AFTERSCHOOL  homework  supen^isor/  ba- 
bysitter for  3rd-grade  boy  Must  be  diaci- 
plined  to  teach  good  HW  habrts.  Elementa- 
ry Ed  major  a  plus  Need  car.  Tues-Fri  2:30- 
6:00pm.  $8  00-$10.00/hr.  Call  310-390-6962 
evenings,  323-468-5273  days,  ha- 
katzhbcOyahoo.com. 

AIRLINE  TICKET  AGEI^S.  We  are  hiring 
PT  at  LAX  for  Oantas,  Lufthansa,  All  Nippon. 
Mexicana  and  Varag  Airilnes  Students  in 
German.  Spanish.  Portuguese,  and  Japanes 
can  apply  as  woN.  These  airilnes  do  offer 
travel  passes  to  their  deetlnattont.  SourvJ 
like  fun?  Apply  In  parson  or  fax  or  e-mail  at: 
Hatmaric  Aviation.  6033  W.  Century  Blvd 
#808  (next  to  LAX)  310-21 5O701  x45  voice, 
310-410-5350  tax.  E-mail  acottmcguf- 
finOhailmatk-aviatk3n.com. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  exparlenca  nacaaaary. 
Host  mualc/talk-showt  tor  our  radto  slatione. 
P/T.  $10-1 5/hr.  $200fper/8how,  plua'famas- 
tk:  benefits  323-468-0060,  24-hour8. 

AUDIO  VISUAL 
OPERATORS  WANTED 

for  delivery  and  operatkxw,  throughout  cam- 
pus. Cotriputer  and  customer  tMNs  pre- 
ferred. AV  experience  not  raqulrad.  Open 
sct>adule  needed  Must  be  aUa  to  Wt  35 
pounds.  Two  posilkxis  avaHabie:  Opemlor. 
$e.9Q/hr.  Technician  $11.40/hr.  Can  Juan 
310-206-8002. 


COMMUNITY  SERVICE 
OFFICERS 

Do  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8.16  to 
$10.46/hf.  Must  be  a  LXJLA  student  w/1+ 
acadertMc  years  remaining  with  vaW  driver's 
iKense.  Web:  www.ucpd.ucia.sdu/ucpd/cso. 
Email:  csoOucpd.ucla.edu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 

COMPANIONS/CAREGIVERS,  Psych.  Ex- 
perience Desirable  Live-irVlive-out.  4-12hr 
shifts  available.  Sign  on  bonus  for  live-in 
drivers  w/car.  Excellent  benefifs/training/top 
pay/401  K  plan.  Need  some  experience  with 
Alzheimer,  Dementia,  or  Gero-Psych.  Call 
Melissa  323-933-5880. 

COMPUTER  and  LAN  coordinator  for  UCLA 
dept,  P/T  Windows  NT,  exchange  sender.  Of- 
fk:e  software  experience  required.  10- 
20hrs/wk.  $i6-20/hr.  Respond  to  jobsOsum- 
mer.uda.edu 

COMPUTER/ADMIN 
ASSISTANT 

Established  Brerttwood  computer  co  needs 
help  with  MS  Word,  phones,  email,  clerical 
stuff.  Flexible  hours;  great  for  students;  learn 
the  biz!  Email  resume  to  jkenne- 
dyOant9l.com 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

F/T.  M-F  9-5.  Century  City  kjcatton.  Seeking 
self-motivated,  energetic  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate. 
bilingual,  college  degree  pref.  Fax  resume 
310-553-3996. 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

NejghbortK)od  bakery/take-out  shop  now  hir- 
ing counter  persons  Competitive  pay  and 
benefits.  Call  310-552-1060  or  apply  in  per- 
son.  10/19.  3-5  pm.  1751  EnsleyAve. 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE.  WEB  PROGRAM- 
MER NEEDED-  cash  weekly  plus  bonuses, 
2  btocks  from  campus.  One  job.  Internet 
knowledge  preferred.  310-282-1199. 
)ob80fashion4less.com. 

DEUVERY  DRIVERS 

BAUOON  CELEBRATION  Is  hiring  van  drtv- 
ers.  Looking  lor  energetk:.  unstoppable, 
positive  crew  Immedtately.  Flexfcle  hours, 
busy  weekends.  Apply  m  person  M-Sal  tiU 
6pm  Apply  at  937  Westwood.  310-206- 1 1 80. 

DRIVER  NEEDED.  Ptek-up  kids  at  West- 
wood  Seoondary  School,  back  to  Hollywood 
FlexWe  achaduie.  T-W-Th  5-8pm.  Call  323- 
436-0774,  evenings  oniy. 

DRIVERS  WANTED 

F/T  or  P/T.  Own  car/Insurance.  Must  be  able 
to  read  map.  No  weekends.  Great  hoMay 
income.  818-224-3445.  Caroline. 


Display 
206-3060 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


EARN  TRAVEL  MONEY 

NEED  TO  EARN  SOME  QUICK  CASH?  flier- 
ing  needed  immediately  on  campus,  call 
jason  at  858-630-7976. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


EARN  WHAT  YOU'RE  WORTH!  Success 
driven  indivkluals  wanted  for  expanding 
global  business.  Serious  inquiries  only!  (no 
exp.  nee.)  310-246-1522. 

EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  sales.  Make  up  to 
$150/day.  Part  or  full-time  wori<.  Call:David 
310-441-0394. 


F/T  or  P/r.  ChiWren's  retaH  store.  Hours:  sat 
required  $8-10/hr  DOE.  On  Santa  Monica 
Blvd  in  Westwood.  310-234-9554. 


FIVE  ATTORNEY  CENTURY  CITY  LAW 
FIRM  seeks  P/T  file  cleric.  Flex  hours  b/t  9- 
5pm,  M-F.  Computer  knowledge  a  plus.  Fax 
resume  to  Meg  310-277-0035. 

FLORIST  SEEKING 

P/T  sales,  phone  assistant.  Simple  typ- 
ing/administration skills  helpful.  Flexible 
hours/fun  environment.  Call  Monica  323- 
852-0848. 


FRATERNITIES,  SORORITIES,  CLUBS 
STUDENT  GROUPS  Eam  $1000-2000  this 
quarter  with  the  easy  Campusfundraiser.com 
three  hour  fundraising  event.  No  sales  re- 
quired. Fundraising  dates  are  filling  quickly, 
so  call  today!  Contact  Campusfundrais- 
er.com  at  (888)923-3238  or  visit  www.cam- 
pusfundrasier.com 


GEOGRAPHY 

Ftood  certifteatton  company  near  LAX 
has  immediate  openings  for  map  re- 
searchers. Part-time  and  Full-time.  Must 
be  map  profkaent.  detail-oriented,  and 
possess  t)ask:  computer  skills  Geogra- 
phy background  is  prefen^ed.  Will  train. 
Interested  candidates  lax  resume:  310- 
348-9022  atten:  Productwn  Department. 


MEDrcAL  BILLING  SUPERVISOR  WANT- 
ED by  dynamk;.  DME  &  Rehab  dealer  Ex- 
pertise with  Medcare.  MediCal  &  Insurance 
required.  Experience  with  Team  DME  Soft- 
ware a  big  plus  Full-time  position  Hourty 
compensatton  commeruurate  with  experi- 
ence. Fax  resume  to  310-575-1505. 

MEDICAL  FRONT  OFFICE  positkjn  for  busy 
Beverty  Hills  dermatok>gy  practice.  Variety  of 
duties.  P/T  moming  hours  only  References 
required.  Call  Diane:  310-273-0467 

MEDICAL  SPECIALTY  COMPANY  is  looking 
for  a  self-motivated  individual  to  assume  a 
part  time  position  as  a  courier.  This  oppor- 
tunity provWes  training  and  access  to  tfie 
medical  sales  industry,  directly  in  the  hospi- 
tal 0/R.  Must  have  good  communk»tion  and 
customer  skills.  Resume:  bpitacomaOsprint- 
mail.com.  Fax:  253-572-7490. 

MEN  AGES  18-24  for  nude  modeling  for 
magazines  and  fine  art.  Call  310-289-8941, 
days. 

MESSENGER 

STRONG  BRUIN  SUPPORTER&well  estab- 
lished Westwood  law  firm  seeks  2-part-lime 
messengers(MWF  or  TR.  9:30-6:30)  to  wori< 
in  our  office  services  department  Must  have 
reliable  car,  insurance&good  driving  record. 
Additional  duties  include  mail,  photocopying, 
faxing,  switchboard,  etc.  Prefer  Bruin  stud- 
ents who  are  also  responsible&detail-orient- 
ed.  Please  call  Robin  Barnes  310-478-2541. 

MODELS  WANTED  by  professronal  photo- 
studio  for  upcoming  assignment.  Mala/Fe- 
male Pro/Non-Pro.  Fashion/Commer- 
cial/Theatrical. Call  for  appointment  818- 
986-7933. 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  drive&wori(  w/2  fun&gifted  kkls  ages  547. 
Perfect  schedule  for  student.  Must  have  car. 
P/T  permanent.  Excellent  salary.  Judy:3l0- 
561-1145 


GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  ckibs  in 
WLA.  Conversatton  only  No  ateohol.  Rexi- 
bie  hours  Eam  top  $$$  323-441-0985 

GUITARIST  WANTED 

ROCK/REGGAE  GUfFARIST  NEEDED  for 
constoictton  of  new  hip-hop  band.  Must  have 
the  skills  Call  Eric  310-274-4663. 

HOMEWORK  SUPERVISOR/TUTOR  lor 
10th  grader  taking  Spanish  and  Algebra.  2- 
hours  per  evening  M-F,  $9/hr  310-476-4205. 

INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPREr 
SENTATIVE.  Film  advertising.  Call  retail 
stores  for  upcoming  releases  Coordir«te 
store  visits.  P/T-F/r-8am-l2pm  or  1 2:30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $10/hr-»toonus.  310-566-2555. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Sen/tee  Representative  FuH  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  vertial  skills  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1 768jspatterson  O  ij- 
ginc.com. 

INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Receptionist.  Entry  level  positwn.  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrs/wk  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
fened.  Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son 323-653-1768.  japattersonOijginc.com. 

CARING  INDIVIDUALS  URGENTLY  needed 
in  Santa  Monica  &  West  LA  lABA,  a  leader 
in  tfie  field  on  non-aversice  t>ef\avior  manag- 
ment  is  seeking  Employment  Specialists  to 
assist  adults  developmentally  challenged  in 
an  employment  setting  and  in  the  communi- 
ty. lABA  provides  paid  training  and  advance- 
ment opportunities   WOrtt  from  8:30am  to 
*  2:30pm  +  in  service  hours,  M-F,37.5hrs/wk. 
Jf  Eligible  for  medical/dental,  401K  and  paid 
.,  time  off.  Competitive  wages-^supplemental 
i  tenure  pay  Related  experience  or  BA  in  Psy- 
•icfiology  preferred.  Email  your  resume  to  ro- 
jkellyOiabacom  or  call  toll  Iree  877-924- 
•2220.     For     more     info     visit     lABA    at 
www.iatM.com 

CASHIER,  We  are  a  Chinese  Sealood  res- 
taurant. Speak  English,  Mandarin  or  Can- 
tonese. Full-time  or  part-time.  Experience 
prefen^ed.  626-641-8978. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Campus  Comer. 
We  wort<  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportur)ity.  Call:310- 
206-8133. 

CLERICAUCUSTOMER 
SERVICE 

M-F.  F/T  permanent.  Good  phone  and  Eng- 
lish skills,  detail-oriented,  reliable.  WLA,  $9- 
$1Q^r.  310-826-375»ext229. 

CLERK.  P/T,  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neaUng  Firm  seeks  perfecttonlst  with  typing 
•HNi  for  general  ofttoe  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  detaM-orlented.  $11/hour  to  start.  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2437 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  Mostly 
rijns  errands,  some  light  housewort(  and 
cooking,  good  pay.  near  UCLA.  4-5 
hours/day  310-788-4727. 

OFFICE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CE0, 
Growing  Btotechnology  Company-West- 
wood  10am-2pm/Full-time,  flexible  hours. 
Need: excellent  telephone  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admirv/comp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
ferred Benefits/advancement  FaxRes2Mar- 
ina:  310-475-1533. 


ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Coricesstons  has  great  part-time  jobs 
wortcing  at  Athletk;  events  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive bonus  program  for  those  wtw  can  com- 
mit to  wori<  the  Men's  Basketball  Season. 
Hours  are  per  evertt.  not  set  every  week 
Cal:310-206-0736 


ONCE  IN  A  LIFETIME 
OPPORTUNITY!!! 

Pop  star  needs  student  to  wort<  p/t  helping 
out  with  his  fan  mail  Job  includes  managing 
fan  datat>ase,  respondirig  to  fans,  etc  Fun 
and  interesting  wort<  for  the  right  person.  To 
apply,  please  send  a  brief  resume  and  photo 
to:  Fan  Mail  Helper  PO  Box  18383  BH  CA 
90209. 


PR  CLERK 

Santa  Montea  law  fimi  seeks  a  P/T  General 
Office  Clerit.  Flexible  hours,  but  mornings 
prefened.  $7-ia^r  DOE.  Please  call  Ida 
310-393-1486. 


Daily  Bruin  CtjKsified 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


Wfdnesday,  October  18, 2000       27 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


W^^         Back 

ExpamI  your  UCIA  Sxperieiue 

$«.18/HR.  -    ' 

PIUS  BONUS 


y 


''Convenient  Scheduling 

(Mon.-Fri.  evenings  &  Sat.,Sun.) 

*Build  Your  Resume 

*Speak  Directly  to  Alumni 

**  We  ore  on  equal  opportunity  employer 


** 


Call  Sandin  for  Appointment 

3 1 0-794-0277 

1083GayleyAve.4th 
email  callcenter@support.ucla.edu 


^  MOVIES 

PRODUCERS! 

NEEDED! 

CO-PRODUCE 
LIONS  GATE  FILMS' 

NEXT  MOVIE! 

No  Exparitnct  NflCMMry 


RECEPTIONIST 

WEST  LA  FIRM  seeks  an  outgoing.pieasant 
individualw/  xint  phone  skills.  Mon-Fri 
2:00pm-7:00pm  Perfect  for  a  student 
$10.00/hr-Prkg  paid.  Email  Resume  to 
Igrossman  9  GKM.com. 

RECEPTIONIST.  P/T.  New  Westwood 
VHIage  dental  otftee.  No  experience  required 
310-451-4401. 


RECEPTIONIST/SECRETARY  P/T  .  F/T 
Beverty  Hills  dennatotogy  medwal  olftee.  Fax 
resume  310-550-1920. 


APPLY  TODAY  @ 

virtualproductr.com/ucla 


INTERNET  CO  seeks 
P/T  Receptionist 

for  Santa  Monica  office  $8/hr,  great  oppor- 
tunity and  location!  Send  resume  to  isa- 
belle©webeasycom  or  fax  310-576-2011 
Attn:  Isabelle. 

LAW  FIRM  NEEDS  P/T  employee  from 
2003-2004  for  a  clerical  posJtton  Mail/fax  re- 
sume to  Rtek  Edwards,  Inc.  Attn:  Margie 
1925  Century  Part<  East  Los  Angeles,  CA 
90067.  Fax  310-286-9501. 


LAW  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  Beverty  Hills  P/T 
(Tues-Thurs,  1-4pm)  File  Clert</Office  Sup- 
port. Need:  legal  filing  skills,  accuracy/detail 
orientation,  and  computer  literate  Prior  law 
firm  experience  preferred.  Compensation 
based  on  experience.  Fax  resume  and  refer- 
ences to  310-205-6081. 


UBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties.  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start. 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Rasaareh 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Antlgona  Kutay 
310-825-6982. 


LIFEGUARDS  WANTED 

NOW  HIRING  Certified  lifeguards.  Culver- 
Palms  YMCA.  Call  Meredith  310-390- 
3604x7525. 


LOOKING  for  experienced  staffing  coordina- 
tor. 2  years  minimum  experience  in  home 
care  environment.  Computer  Itteracy  a  must 
Qfaat  benefits.  Wonderful  wort«  environment 
Cal  Laura  MaOhaa  323-933  5880  ext1012. 

M.  FREDRJC 

Fashton  forward  company  tooking  for  ener- 
getk: people  to  fill  sales  and  management 
posWons^ll  Tory  818-597-0212  ext  114 


P/T  LAW  OFRCE  ASST 

Word  Processor/Secretarial  for  Westwood 
law  office.  PC  and  Internet  adept. 
Compensation  depends  on  skills.  Flexible 
hours.  Fax  resume  310-443-4223. 

prr  ON-CAMPus  job 

UCLA  100  Medtoal  Plaza.  Demiatology  prac- 
tice. Hours  can  vary  w/classes.  F/T  during 
summer  $8/hr.  Plus  free  parting.  Assist 
manager,  computer  skills  necessary.  Bask; 
math  skills  needed  Undergrad  only  Fax 
resume  after  6:30pm.  310-206-4010. 

PfT  OR  F/T  SERVER 

AND  ANSWERING  phones  for  diner  In  Bev- 
erty Hills.  Will  train.  Great  tips!  CaH  Ronl:3l0- 
772-0044  from  8am-5pm. 

PfT  RECEPTIONIST 
WANTED 

Yellow  Balkxjn  HairSaton.  Must  be  hon- 
est/chlld-frisndly  Hours:3weekdays  1- 
5:30pm,  Saturdays  9-5pm  Days  and  tinws 
negotiable  $8/hr  Contact  Natalle:31 0-475- 
1241.  Fax  resume  323-939-4339. 

prr  to  complele  oonslnjctfcKi  and  maintain 
website.  r4atk>nwk)e  wholesale.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 

PART  TIME  TELEf^RKETER  NEEDED. 
$1Q^R.  No  Experience  Necessary.  Call  for 
Informatkjn.  310-680-7604. 

PART-TIME  CHILDCAREn-UTOR  needed 
for  Isl  and  2nd  grader  Encino  MulhoNand 
and  405  adjacent  Must  have  car  Call  Jack- 
ie:310-82e-246e 


RESTAURANT  in  WLA  now  hiring  servers, 
cashiers,  prep  personnel  F/T  or  P/T,  apply  in 
person.  9411  W.  Pteo  Blvd.  Sun-Thurs. 

RETAIL  SPORTS/RUNNING  Store  will  train 
person  who  likes  running  and  talking  to  peo- 
ple. Near  beach,  in  MDR.  $8-9/hour,  PT  310- 
827-3035. 

SALES  CLERK 

$7/»w.  Uo  experience  necessary.  Cashiering, 
wortdng  with  patients.  UCLA  Hospital.  2e- 
venings.  3-7:30PM  11:3O-6:0OPM.  310-825- 
6069 


SALES  Le  Beach  Club  Tanning  Resorts. 
Happy,  friendly  people.  $12-20mr.  Call  bet- 
ween 3- 10pm.  310-820-2710  ask  for  Yas- 
mine. 


SITE  ACQUISITIONS  CONSULTANT 
Full/part  time.  Self-starter,  creative,  intelli- 
gent Acquire  land  sites  for  cellular.  Salary 
commensurate  w/experience.  Fax  resume 
310-737-4228. 


STOCK  CLERK  In  chlWrens  bookstore  20- 
30hrs/week.  $7/hr,  WLA  310-559-2665 

TEACHER'S  ASSISTANT 

IMMEDIATE  POSITION.  Santa  Montea  pre- 
school. 20hr8/wk.  Mon-Thurs  afternoon.  Ear- 
ly cNWhood  devetoppient  classes  A  some 
experience  working  w/young  chHdren  re- 
quired. 310-394-0463. 


TRAINERn^EACHER  ASSISTANT  San  Fer- 
nando Valley.  $10-l8/houf,  15-25  hours/»»k. 
Casual  environment,  flexible  hours,  bllln- 
fluaVSpanlsh.  excellent  people  skWs.  Com- 
pmar  akMs  a  must.  1-877-776-7274. 


Are*  you  n  mocfel... 

Looking  for  all  types 

male/female  models/actors 

•P1us»i«    •Childmi 

For  rrtlN  *  M»-OTtal  MMMICilb 

NoexperiMmi«qi*D<.  Notes. 

^       MATCHMAKER 

For  dating  sen/lce  Must  have  great  people 
skills,  organized,  computer  Hterate,  secretari- 
al experience.  PfT  evenings  310-914-3444 
laave  message. 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTKJN/TECHNrcAL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  fias  one  opening  for  clerical  positions. 
$7/hr.  Momings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Mtehelle:310-474-7771 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

Westskle  business  man  wants  attractive, 
young  fenule  for  computer  help  arxl  otfier 
needs.  Excellent  compensatksn.  Flexible 
hours,  Possble  Travel.  310-553-0922 

PERSONAL  TRAINERS  NEEDED  Certiftea- 
tion  and  clients  provkJed  Flexible  fwurs. 
Must  have  fitness  knowledge.  National  Train- 
ers Associatten  1-888-NTA-2338 

PIANO  TEACHER  WANTED.  Westwood. 
close  to  UCLA.  To  teach  llyr-old  boy  on 
weekends.  Please  call  310-441-9388. 

POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR 

Plus  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
info  Call  1-800-391-5856  ext  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar. 

PROFESSIONAL  COLLECTOR  Saban  Pla- 
za  near  UCLA.  "Best  servtee  company". 
$9/hr  Flexible  scheduling  Weekends  and 
evenings  available.  Perfect  for  students.  NO 
experience  needed  Fax  resume  310-477- 
7694. 

PROMOTIONAL  PRINT  AGENCY  seeks 
frierxlly.  energetic  receptionist  for  a  F/T  en- 
try-level position  Good  communteation  skills 
and  computer  literacy  required.  Please  email 
resume  to:  mickyyOedwardslabel.com  or 
fax  resume  to:  Micky  Yadathi  310-479-1828. 

PT  EXECUTIVE  ASST/BOOKKEEPER  for 
Beverty  Hills  office.  Must  be  proficient  in 
Quick  Books  Pro  and  Mterosoft  Office.  15-20 
hours/week.  Great  Locatton!  Great  Boss! 
Call  Dominique  310-273-4000. 

PT  FLORAL  DELIVERY  Person  needed 
Courteous,  neat,  effteient  person  sought  by 
the  friendliest  flower  shop  in  Beverty  Hills. 
Must  have  a  clean  DMV  report.  CaN  310- 
271-5030  for  details. 

PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance  Eam  up  to 
$600/¥wek  310-724-8360  Days  only 

RECEPTIONIST  WANTED  PT/FT  for  hair 
sakxi  Ask  for  Liana.  310-208-0101. 


Believe. 


Display 

one    onrn 


28       WediMsday,  October  18, 2000 


Daily  Bniin  Sports 


KMIOTEK 

From  page  32 

have  as  many  votes  in  the  poll  as 
Santa  Monica  City  College. 

In  fact,  the  only  way  Paul  Hackett 
is  going  to  be  associated  with  the 
poll  is  when  someone  mispro- 
nounces his  first  name. 

Hackett's  Trojans  could  have    "T" 
beaten  Oregon  on  Saturday,  but  in 
the  fourth  quarter,  he  had  USC  kick 
an  extra  point  to  cut  its  deficit  to  21- 
17,  instead  of  going  for  two  to  get 
within  a  field  goal.  About  six  min- 
utes later,  Hackett  had  the  Trojans 
punt  on  fourth  and  two  at  midfield, 
and  the  Ducks  ate  up  almost  all  the 
rest  of  the  clock  to  secure  the  win. 

This  from  a  coach  who  the  USC 
media  guide  calls  "innovative"  and 


*1one  of  the  game's  most  progressive 
ofiensive  coaches."  I  do  agree  he's 
innovative,  finding  new  ways  to  lose 
each  week. 

.     Back  to  Freddie  Mitchell  -  last 
week  I  asked  you  to  send  me  ques- 
tions for  the  leading  receiver  in  the 
nation.  Here  are  some  of  your 
queries  and  his  responses. 

: :    Are  there  any  receivers  belter  than 
you? 

"No,  with  or  without  stats.  Stats 
don't  mean  anything.  I'm  the  best 
receiver  on  the  field." 

fVhat  do  you  put  in  your  hair? 
"Soul-Glo." 

Do  you  have  any  superstitions  on 
gameitay? 

"If  I  don't  read  the  Bible  before 


each  game,  I  feel  bad." 

Why  aren  V  you  returning  punts  or 
kicks  this  year? 

"I  wanted  to  focus  on  receiving 
and  be  a  great  receiver.  Spending 
time  with  punts  and  kickoffs  hin- 
dered my  ability  to  be  the  best." 

Did  you  score  with  Elizabeth 
Hurley? 

"We  are  just  friends!" 

Please  send  me  any  and  all  ques- 
tions for  sophomore  corner  Ricky 
Manning,  and  I  will  print  them  next 
week.  Send  them,  along  with  any 
other  comments,  to 
Jizzeft®aol.com. 

To  the  NFL,  where  UCLA  and 
USC  quarterbacks  didn't  fare  very 
well  this  week. 


Cade  McNown's  Bears  lost  again 
to  fall  to  1-6,  Troy  Aikman  threw 
five  interceptions  as  the  Cowboys 
went  down,  Rob  Johnson  separated 
his  shoulder  in  the  Bills'  near-loss  to 
the  Chargers,  and  Todd 
Marinovich's  dealer  was  out  of 
town. 

I  wonder  what  would  happen  if 
the  Chargers  played  the  Bengals? 

A  court  recently  awarded 
Heather  Sue  Mercer  two  million 
dollars  in  a  sex  discrimination  suit 
because  Duke  University  did  not 
allow  her  to  kick  for  their  football 
team.  I  guess  no  one  cared  that  she 
wasn't  good  at  kicking  footballs. 

Sh?  didn't  have  the  ability  to  play 
college  football,  but  she  did  manage 
to  play  the  system  and  our  overly- 
PC  world  to  become  a  millionaire. 

In  Orange  County,  a  IS-year-old 


boy  named  Quan  Vu  wants  to  play 
field  hockey  for  a  girls'  team,  but 
rules  say  he  can't.  Vu  is  just  5-foot-5 
and  12S  pounds,  and  field  hockey 
has  minima]  contact  anyway.  So  why 
can  girls  play  on  boys'  teams,  but 
boys  can't  play  on  girls'  teams? 
Where's  Vu's  money? 

After  hours  of  research,  I  have  a '" 
grand  idea  to  solve  everything.  Let  ■ ' 
women  play  with  women,  and  men 
play  with  men.  I  know  it's  compli- 
cated, but  it  might  actually  work. 

I 

'SC  Joke  of  the  Week: 
What  do  UCLA  students  and 
USC  students  have  in  common? 
They  both  got  into  USC. 


Send  comments,  'SC  Jokes  and  ques- 
tions for  Ricky  Manning  for  the  next 
installment  of  the  'Fresh  Prints'  to 
Ji2zen®aol.com.  ^ 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


8000 

Internship 


US  International  Co. 

Work  at  home  position  immediately!  P/T 
$500-200(Vmo.  F^r  $2000-600(Vmo.  Lan- 
cuages/compoter  skills  a  plus.  «¥ww.fich- 
fromhome.coflVintemet 


WANTED 


75people  will  pay  you  to  k)se  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended  100% 
natural/no  drugs.  CaN  now.  323-993-3391. 


Airi  Experience  Necessary 

Men.  'Women,  children,  ill  tfjcs.  sin, 

raos  T\'  -  Films  Oimmsciils  ■  Mai^ne 

Jitr ftersinial  iitlennifr  call  iumi- 

310.659.7000 


ASSISTANT  P/T  for  West  coast  offwe  of  na- 
tional company  Excellent  opportunity.  Flexi- 
tAe  P/T  hours.  Please  call  Mona  Andrews 
310-278-3349. 


WHO  WANTS  TO  BE 
A  MILLIONAIRE? 

TV  and  Internet  ad  sales.  Commission 
and  equity  in  company  Fax  818-646- 
7961.  RISK+  HUGE  REWARDS 


MARKETING 

SALE&TRAINING  for  Mexk»-USA  impor- 
ting/cor»ulting  company  $7.50/hr.  Spanish 
helpful.  Business  major  preferred.  Good  ex- 
perience. Fax  resume  310-854-6287  or  E- 
maN:  salesOthepainteddeseft.com. 

P/R  INTERNSHIP 

SEVERAL  POSrriONS  are  now  available 
with  a  major  entertainment  firm  in  put)lic  re- 
lations. Ho  pay  but  complete  educatKxi  in 
P/R.  Flexible  hours.  GoWen  opportunity  to 
team  tt»e  ropes.  Call  us  immediately  at  323- 
692-9999  Ex.13.  Ask  lor  Rebecca. 

START-UP  COMPANY  in  Westwood  needs 
intems  for  admin,  marketing,  and  tech  posi- 
ttorw.  Flex  hours.  No  salary,  but  stock  op- 
ttons  given.  WHI  hire  good  irrtems.  Fax/email 
resume.:  310-268-0665  or  hr«remo- 
temed.com 


81 OO 

Personal  Assist;iiice 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  tor  family  (of  Inter- 
est to  young  filmmakers).  15-20hrs/wk- 
SKVhr.  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues,  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  Filing/research 
Flexible  schedule/resourceful!!  Contact:  310- 
459-0815.  Good  references  required.  Non- 
Smoker.  Must  have  own  car&insurance. 


SltOO 

Apartments  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HJLLS  ADJ.  1>2BE0ROOM 
$8954UP  LARGE.  UNUSUAL  CHARM 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS.  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS 
310-839-6294. 


Apimments  for  Rent 


9AOO 

Room  for  Rent 


TORR  CONDO.  2+1,  pet  okay  large  er>d 
unit.  Jacuzzi.  $1175,  fee,  310-372-RENT 


VENICE  GUEST  HOUSE,  yard.  $650.  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westsiderentals.com 


BEL  AIR  PRIVATE  FURNISHED  ROOM 
AND  BATH.  Kitchen  and  laundry  privleges. 
utilities  included.  Car  necessary.  Referenc- 
es. $600/monh.  310-477-6977. 


BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdfTn/3bth,  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdmV3bth,  $2950.  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat  /Uarm,  gated  parking. 
Spacious,  carpet.  Prime  tocalioni  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 


WALK  TO  UCLA.  WESTWOOD.  Large  U1 
2+2.  Pool,  Jacuzzi,  walk-in  ctosets,  fireplace 
fuH-kitchen,  gated  garage,  instant  broadbanc 
avail,  www.keltontowers.com.  310-208- 
1976. 


BEVERLY  HILLS:  Room  lor  rent  in  private 
home  Private  bdrrrVbth  Preferred  Medksal 
or  grad  student  Some  kitchen  prMlegM, 
laundry,  parking,  secure  house,  must  tk» 
dogs.  Male  students, norvsmoldng.  $7S0/mo 
310-275-5034. 


BRENTWOOD 

North  of  Wlshire,  spadous  3BO/2Bath.  w/ 
separate  patk>.  New  dishwasher,  refrigerator, 
stove,  etc.  Oulet  8-unit  bWg  w/  garden  sun- 
deck.  $2300.  11921  Goshen  Ave.  #1.  Open 
Sat/Sun  or  by  appt.  310-571-0293. 

EL  SEQUNDO  1+1,  r&s.  carpets,  blinds, 
including  parking.  $800.  fees,  310-372- 
RENT 


WESTCHESTER  GREAT  HOUSE,  catok  ref 
$500.  310-395-RENT  www.westsMeren- 
tals.oom 


GLENDALE  DUPLEX.  Groat  kx^ation.  yard 
$695.  818-623-4444  www.altofLA.com 

GRANADA  HIUS  SPACIOUS  GUEST- 
HOUSE. 1+1.  Large  yard.  Private  entry 
$685.  818-623-4444.  www.altofLA.com 

HANCOCK  PARK  ADJ.  GUESTHOUSE. 
Large  ctosets,  quiet  neighbortxxxJ.  $650 
323-634-RENT  www.altofLA.com 


WORK  AT  HOME 

Intemattonal  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888. 


WORK  IN  WESTWOOD.  Recepttonist  need- 
ed for  PT  work  Thursday-Sunday  Fun  at- 
mosphere.  Call  Louis:  310-279-3300. 

WWW.DUNDEAL.NET.  $15-125  per  survey 
Earn  cash  on  the  Internet  tjy  givir>g  your 
opinton  on  surveys. 


8000 

Internships 


ACCLAIMED  PRODUCER  seeks  motivated 
intems  for  fall  2000.  Please  lax  resumes  to 
Commotton  Pictures  attn:Mk:helle  310-432- 
2001. 


8200 

Temporary  Employment 


P/T  CLERICAL 
ASSISTANCE 

Entertainment  company  tocated  in  West- 
wood  seeks  clerical  assistance  approx  3 
days/wk,  3hrs/day  Duties  will  include  filing, 
copyir)g,  document  distributKXi.  Please  call 
310-234-5041. 


8300 

V()lunt(;er 


VOLUNTEERS  NEEDED  for  No  kHI  dog^cat 
WLA  shelter.  Lovir>g  homes  and  foster 
homes  needed.  310-470-7667. 


HERMOSA  BEACH  APARTMENT  2+1,  rfts. 
bright,  blinds.  $885.  lee,  310-372-RENT 


MAR  VISTA  HOUSE.  2+1.  w/c  pet,  hard- 
wood ftoors,  w/d  hook  ups.  yard.  $1295. 31  a 
395-RENT  www.westsiderenlals  com 

MB  APARTMENT.  1+1,2  blocks  10  beach 
R*S,  garage.  $1195,  fee,  310-372-RENT 


WESTWOOD  SPACIOUS  APARTMENT 
1+1,  r&s,  controNed  access,  a/c,  laundry 
$920.  310-395-RENT  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 

WESTWOOD/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2bdmV1blh.  Large,  laundry  enctoeed 
garage,  batoony,  large  ctoeets,  near  buses, 
blinds.  Charmirig,  bright,  quiet  buUding.  310- 
474-1172. 


8600 

Cqndo/Townhoiise  for  Rent 


540  KELTON.  2bdmV2.5Wh,  1200sqft  right 
comer  unit.  Completley  remodeled.  Swim- 
ming pool/spa.  Available  Nov  1.  $1995  323- 
874-0339. 


8700 

Conrio/Townhoiise  foi  Sale 


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Display 
206-3060 


i 


TOM 

From  page  32 

the  team's  only  collegian  was  one 
filled  with  anticipation. 

"I  compare  Logan  to  a  female 
Karch  Kiraly  (former  UCLA  volley- 
ball standout),  who's  probably  the 
best  U.S.  player  ever."  said  Bob 
Gambardella.  director  of  the  U.S. 
National  Team.  "Logan  has  all  the 
tools  to  reach  that  level,  and  she's 
only  going  to  get  better.  We  already 
think  she's  one  of  the  best  outside 
hitters  in  the  United  States  and  that 
includes  our  national  team." 

Tom's  notability  hit  epic  propor- 
tions when  she  was  featured  on  the 
cover  of  Sports  Illustrated  for 
Women  a  year  ago.  Leading  the 
national  team  in  hitting  against  the 
world's  best  volleyball  players  has 
only  boosted  her  popularity.  Yet  she 
still  finds  a  way  to  take  her  surpass- 
ing talent  and  media  attention  in 
stride. 

"I  don't  wish  they  would  go 
away,"  Tom  said  of  the  publicity.  "I 
know  they  are  going  to  be  there 
because  of  what  we  did  at  the 
Olympics.  I  try  to  make  people 
happy  and  at  the  same  time  make 
myself  happy.  I  try  to  find  a  good 
balance  between  the  two." 
Last     year's 


P   a   c   -    I    0 
Freshman      of 
the  Year,  Logan 
didn't       think 
twice  about  tak- 
ing    time     off 
from    her    trip 
down      under, 
choosing  to  con- 
tinue her  acade- 
mic and  athletic 
endeavors. 
-     It's  quite  sur- 
prising that  the 
1999       AVCA 
National 

Freshman      of     __^ 

the    Year    has 
time  for  anything  else. 

'it  has  been  really  cool  to  get  back 
on  campus,"  Tom  said.  "I  basically 
just  hang  out  with  my  friends.  I  don't 
have  time  for  much  more.  School 
and  volleyball  are  it  for  me.  but 
hopefully  there  will  be  more  time 
when  things  settle  down." 

Fpr  Stanford  head  coach  Denise 
Corlett,  Tom's  return  has  had  an 
immediate  impact. 

"She  gives  us  a  confidence  boost 
because  early  on  we  lacked  a  go-to 
hitter,"  Corlett  said.  "With  her,  we 
have  a  little  more  security.  We  have 
been  trying  to  help  her  get  back  with 
classes  and  housing.  It  has  been  a 
tough  transition." 

Tom  holds  the  Utah  high  school 
state  record  for  career  kills  (935). 
digs  (351)  and  services  aces  (130), 
and  her  love  for  sports  extends  to  the 
basketball  court  and  the  track.  But  in 
the  end,  she  has  always  known  that 
her  place  was  six-on-six. 

And  with  that  comes  an  attitude 
of  living  for  the  moment  and  enjoy- 
ing the  hype. 

"I  am  taking  things  little  by  little," 
Tom  said.  "I  am  going  day-by-day  in 
the  immediate  future.  I  am  still  in  the 


undecided  mode  as  far  as  what  I 
want  to  do  after  college." 

Now  Tom  is  excited  about  getting 
back  into  the  thick  of  a  conference 
race  that  has  Stanford  in  the  middle 
of  the  standings  during  her  absence. 
"We  will  take  it  one  game  at  a 
time,"  Tom  said.  "There's  a  lot  of 
good  teams  in  the  conference  this 
year,  so  we  will  just  work  with  it  as  il 
comes."  '  '  "/-tv^    ">; 

The  Cardinal's  first  real  test  with 
Tom  comes  Thursday  night  when 
Stanford  enters  Pauley  Pavilion  to 
battle  UCLA  and  the  Bruins'  hitting 
phenom.  Junior  Kristee  Porter.  But 
for  Tom,  competition  is  never  per- 
sonal, as  she  has  made  many  friends 
on  the  court  in  her  travels. 

"Kristee  is  an  awesome  player," 
Tom  said  of  her  counterpart,  whom 
she  finished  behind  in  the  kills  per 
game  list  last  year.  "She  definitely 
can  get  on  rolls.  Hopefully,  we  can 
stop  her  a  little  bit.  But  she  is  going 
to  get  her  kills.  I  look  forward  to  see- 
ing her  and  saying  hi." 

"I  think  athletically  ICristee  is  in 
that  class  and  caliber,"  Corlett  said 
of  the  level  Porter  and  Tom  have 
reached.  "(Porter)  is  one  of  the  top 
ones  in  the  country.  She  wants  the 
ball  when  the  game  is  on  the  line. ' 

Foi'  Porter,  the  sentiment  is  one  of 
mutual  respect  and  admiration. 

"She's  a  more 


"(Tom's)  a  more 
powerful  hitter  than 

most  players.  Her 

presence  on  the  court 

will  always  make  them 

better  and  more 

competitive." 

Kristee  Porter 

UCLA  women's  volleyball 


powerful  hitter 
than  most  play- 
ers." Porter  said. 
"Her  presence 
on  the  court  will 
always  make 
them  better  and 
more  competi- 
tive." 

Since  coming 
back  from  the 
Olympics,  Tom 
has  picked  up  a 
new  regimen 
prior  to  the  start 
of  match. 
'  "I  never 

thought  I  was 
(superstitious)  until  I  was  at  the 
Olympics,"  Tom  said,  "so  I  guess  I 
am.  I  had  to  listen  to  the  same  CDs, 
ones  with  a  beat,  before  every  match 
and  go  through  the  same  routine. 
Little  things  when  you  start  winning 
that  you  don't  want  to  change.  But 
nothing  permanent  that  I  have  had 
forever." 

Her  return  to  the  Cardinal  is  wel- 
comed both  by  teammates  as  well  as 
the  coaching  staff. 

"It's  great  to  have  Logan  back."    I 
Corlett  said.  "She  is  a  physically  gift- 
ed athlete  who  adds  another  dimen- 
sion to  our  team." 

Stanford  now  has  the  entire  1999 
national  runner-up  team  back,  and 
the  team's  newfound  focus  can  lead 
to  a  second-half  surge  which  will 
carry  the  Cardinal  into  the  NCAA 
Tournament  with  full  steam. 

One  thing  is  for  sure:  Logan  Tom 
will  be  a  force  on  the  court  and  will 
have  other  teams  in  the  conference 
changing  their  gamcplans  from  the 
first  time  they  faced  Stanford  earlier 
this  season.  Knowing  that  opposing 
defenses  will  be  aiming  to  stop  her, 
Tom  has  only  one  answer:  "I  will  do 
what  needs  to  be  done." 


QUON 

From  page  31 

other  team  before  she  jumps  into 
action. 

As  a  senior,  Quon  is  a  leader.  And  in 
her  fourth  year  as  a  Bruin,  she  has 
already  been  through  the  adjustment 
and  the  first  game  jitters  and  therefore 
docs  her  best  to  make  sure  everyone's 
feeling  comfortable  out  on  the  court. 

"Her  play  is  so  steady  and  constant. 
It's  like  everyone  just  looks  to  her  and 
says,  *Oh  she's  the  Rock  of  Gibraltar 
out  there,'"  Banachowski  said.  "You 
know  she's  going  to  get  the  job  done." 

As  she's  asked  to  move  the  ball 
around  whik  tha  photographar  awopg 


away,  that  smile  peeks  through  again. 

"What  are  you  like  on  the  court ... 
are  you  two  different  people  on  and 
off?"  the  photographer  asks. 

In  an  instant,  the  smile  fades  behind 
Quon's  game  face  and  the  question  is 
answered. 

After  an  hour-long  escapade  of  a 
photo  shoot,  which  included  the  inter- 
ruptions of  a  Tae-Bo  class,  the  explo- 
ration of  the  second  floor  of  the 
Wooden  Center  and  a  move  to  a  final 
destination  of  the  grass  behind  Men's 
Gym.  Quon  says.  "I  am  sorry  it  was 
such  a  hassle  for  you  guys." 

Not  as  sorry  as  the  hitters  on  the 
other  side  of  the  net  are  when  Quon 
steals  yet  another  kill  and  takes  it 
under  liet  iianie  ay  dig. 


Oaify  Bruin  Sperts 


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30       Wednesday.  October  18, 2000 


Oregon  continues 
to  dominate 

Though  the  Pac-JO  is  always  an 
unpredictable  conference,  where 
any  team  seems  able  to  win  on  any 
given  Saturday,  No.  7  Oregon  (5-1, 
3-0)  seems  to  have  cleared  a  path 
for  itself  toward  a  New  Year  in 
Pasadena.   In  three  consecutive 
games,  the  Ducks  have  trampled 
lop      Pac-10     powers      UCLA, 
Washington   and   USC.   Though 
they  still  have  three  road  games  to 
go,  their  toughest  challenges  will 
more  than  likely  come  in  their  last 
game  at  Oregon  State  (5-1, 2-1 )  and 
this  weekend  against  Arizona  (5-1, 
3-0).  They'll  have  a  hefty  home- 
field  advantage  in  the  Arizona 
matchup  not  having  lost  in  Autsen 
Stadium  in  18  consecutive  games. 

Simonton's 
Heisman  Bid 

Though  limited  in  playing  time. 
Oregon     State     tailback     Ken 


PAC-10  NOTEBOO 


Simonton    con- 
tinued to 
impress         the 
national    media 
with       another 
solid        perfor- 
mance   against 
Stanford.     The 
junior      rushed 
for  81  yards  and 
a  touchdown  on 
only   14  carries 
in  limited  action 
against  the  Cardinal,  keeping  him- 
self in  a  Heisman  race  that  still  has- 
n't established  a  clear  front-runner 
at  this  point  in  the  season. 

Simonton  ranks  fourth  in  the 
nation  in  rushing  yards  per  game, 
averaging  149  in  one  of  the 
nation's  toughest  conferences. 
With  894  total  rushing  yards  and 
II  touchdowns  to  his  credit,  the 
Beaver  runner  leads  the  Pac-10  in 
rushing,  all-purpose  yards  and 
scoring. 

In  the  Pac-10,  Simonton  ranks 


'3th       all-time 
with  3,408 

career  rushing 
yards.  He  needs 
1 1 1  yards  of 
rushing  against 
a  banged-up 
UCLA  defense 
this  weekend  to 
enter  the  top  ten 
and  only  16 
yards  to  surpass 
former       USC 

standout  O.J.  Simpson's  career 

mark. 

Simonton 's  Heisman  run  may 
be  demolished  in  his  final  two  tests 
of  the  season,  however,  as  he  will 
face  the  Pac-IO's  top  two  defenses 
in  Arizona  and  Oregon. 

Collaborative 
success 

In  such  a  wild  Pac-10  season  as 
this  one.  offensive  regularity  has 


not  necessarily  prated  to  be  the 
most  effective.  Takfe  Washington's 
running     gameVfor     example. 
Withoutadeaiy^tarter  at  running 
back, 'ThnWies  (5-1.  2-1)  have 
been  force^td  implement  a  run- 
ner-by-committfce  scheme  through- 
out the  season.  Though  unortho- 
dox, the  strategy  has  been  strange- 
ly successful,  as  Washington  leads 
the  Pac-10  with  191.7  rushing  yards 
per  game,  despite  lacking  an  indi- 
vidual rusher  in  the  conferences 
top-10. .;        w- 

Even  more  intriguing  is  the  suc- 
cess of  the  Arizona  State  passing 
game.  The  Sun  Devils  (4-2,  1-2) 
currently  lead  the  Pac-10  in  passing 
offense  at  266.3  yards  per  game, 
including  340.3  yards  per  game 
over    their    last    four    contests. 
What's  unusual  about  this  success 
is  not  the  fact  that  ASU  leads  in 
this  category,  but  that  they  lead 
after  starting  three  different  quar- 
terbacks over  the  course  of  the  sea- 
son. 


Notes  compiled  by  Josh  Mason, 
Daily  Bruin  Contributor. 


Iqria  Steinem 

Thursday,  October  19th 

12:00pm 
Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

(across  from  Kerkhoff  Coffeehouse) 


COMPLIMENTARY 
CONSULTATION 


The  next  president  will  appoint  at  least  2 

SUPREME  COURT  Justices.  These  votes  can 

mean  the  difference  between 

PRO-CHOICE  and  no  choice. 

Show#ir  support  for  CIVIL  RIGHTS  and 

REPRODUCTIVE  FREEDOM. 

For  information,  email  Sarah  Angel  at  sangel@ucla.edu. 


Braces^^     ) 
J^Uver  Brilliant  Results/ 


ORTHODONTIST 
SINCE  1980 

UCU  FACULTY  MEMBER 


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October  20, 2000 


www.mindzip.com 


TheRobertJ. 
Stoller  Foundation 

Proudly  presents  the 
Annual  Robert  J.  Stoller 
Memorial  Lecture 

Dr.  Gil  Herdt 

Dr.  Herdt  is  Director  of  Huriian  Sexual  Studies,  Director  of 
the  nstitute  on  Sexuality,  Social  Inequality  and  Health  as 
well  as  Professor  of  Human  Sexuality  and  Professor  of 
Anthropology  at  San  Francisco  State  University.  Dr  Herdt 
a  Guggenheim  Fellow,  and  William  S.  Vaughn  Fellow 
(1 997- 1 998)  has  written  over  70  artlctes  and  25  books 
on  sexuality,  bisexuality.  homosexuality  and  cufture  TTie 
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"The  Magical  Age  of  10  and  the  Development 

of  Sexual  Excitement  A  Lecture  in  Honor  of  the 

work  of  RobertJ.  Stoller" 


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•  Admission  Is  free 

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•  Friday.  October  20, 2000 

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Daily  Bruin  Sports 


Wednnday,  October  18,2000       }i 


W.TENNIS  BRIEFS 


Results  from 
Tuesday  wonfien's 
tennis  matches 

In  yesterday's  qualifying  matches 
at  the  Women's  AU-American  at  the 


Riviera  Country  Club,  Bruin  junior 
Cathrine  Holly  fell  to  the  No.  4  seed 
Kavitha  Krishnamurthy,  6-3,  6-3. 
Afterwards  Holly  won  her  consola- 
tion match  6-3,6-3.       i,  , . 

Notes  compiled  by  Jason  Ebin,  Daily 
Bruin  Contributor. 


SOCCER  NOTEBOOK 


QUON  ■M'M'M 

From  page  32      ;     /:' 

out  Erika  having  to  move." 

Now  a  senior  at  UCLA,  Quon  is 
focused  on  what's  in  front  of  her.  With 
six  weeks  to  go  in  the  regular  season, 
she  has  one  ultimate  goal. 

"A  national  championship,"  Quon 
said  matter-of-factly. 

Her  team  started  the  year  ranked 
No.  1  and  now  sits  at  No.  8,  but 
UCLA's  defeats  have  come  at  the 
hands  of  some  of  .^,  ^ 

the  nation's  top     ..i,^...,^^^^ 
teams.    ' 

When  asked 
how  she's  feeling 
about  this  season, 
Quon  thinks  hard 
and  wrinkles  her 
nose. 

"It's  like  you 
see    it   all    right 

there,"  she  said  as      ——.—____ 
she  looks  to  her 

outstretched  arm.  "It's  ail  right  there 
and  you  just  see  it,  and  we're  just  not 
playing  how  we  could  be." 

Her  team  now  is  much  different 
from  the  one  she  joined  as  a  freshman. 
At  that  time,  the  Bruins  were  just  trying 
to  get  into  the  tournament. 

This  year,  they  have  all  the  right  peo- 
ple. 

"Now  we're  an  experienced  team 


that  should  be  doing  something." 

"It's  coming  together  slowly.  It's 
good  and  bad.  It's  frustrating  because 
it's  slow,  but  it's  good  that  it's  coming 
along."  Quon  said. 

Quon  isn't  the  one  hammering  the 
ball  towards  the  parquet  floor  nor  is  she 
the  one  who  sets  up  the  offensive  attack, 
but  without  the  steady  platform  of  her 
arms,  nothing  else  would  play  out. 

"Quono,"  as  Selsor  affectionately 
calls  her.  "is  irreplaceable." 

"She  is  so  important  in  the  back  row 
and  takes  charge  in  the  majority  of  our 
•V,;      passing  schemes. 
'•"-"■^^■■■-■»      You   know   that 
when  she  sets  you 
up  for  a  pass,  it's 
going  to  be  there 
at  the  place  and 
time,"  Selsor  con- 
tinued. 

Quon  breaks 
down  the  game 
step-by-step  -  tak- 

— ing  each  part  as  it 

comes. 
First  there's  the  serve.  Then  it's  mov- 
ing into  position  to  pass,  watching 
Selsor  set  the  ball,  and  finally  it's 
preparing  to  cover  the  hitter  as  she 
attacks. 

And  doing  all  of  this  takes  patience  - 
the  kind  of  patience  that  is  needed  from 
a  defensive  player  who  must  wait  on  the 


"Everyone  just  looks  to 
her  and  says/Oh  she's 
the  Rock  of  Gibraltar/" 

Andy  BanachowskI 

Head  coach 


See  OMNI,  page  29 


UCLA  prepares 
for  road  trip 

The  Bruins  hit  the  road  this 
weekend  for  two  games  against 
lower  ranked  foes  California 
and  Oregon  State.  These  small- 
er games  become  increasingly 
important  as  the  Pac-10  season 
winds  down.  They  also  take  on 
new  meaning  with  UCLA  los- 
ing two  of  three  conference 
games. 

Friday's  bade  with  Cal  (2-9- 
I,  0-2-1  in  Pac-10)  shouldn't  pre- 
sent too  serious  a  challenge  to 
UCLA,  as  the  Bears  have  fallen 
out  of  the  rankings.  The  Bruins  will 
still  have  to  bring  their  A-game  to 
Edwards  Stadium  and  shut  down 
forward  Kendal!  Simmons  to 
avoid  the  losing  streak,  however. 

UCLA  hopes  the  showdown 
with  the  Beavers  (6-6-1,  0-2-1  Pac- 
10)  on  Sunday  will  be  the  same 
story  as  the  Oct.  13  matchup, 
which  the  Bruins  won  4-1  at  home. 
The  Bruins  will  look  to  shut  down 
forward  Matt  Olsen,  who  leads  the 
team  with  10  points. 

UCLA  slips  in  the 
polls  again 

The  Bruins'  loss  on  Sunday  to 
Washington  resulted  in  another 
week  of  falling  in  the  rankings.  A 
week  after  dropping  from  the  No. 


1  spot  in  the  nation,  the  Bruins  fell 
from  sixth  to  17th  in  the  NSCAA 
poll  and  from  fifth  to  seventh  in  the 
Soccer  America  rankings. 

The  Bruins  are  also  ranked 
fourth  in  the  media  poll  and  ninth 
in  the  SoccerTimes.com  poll. 

Tennyson  has 
shot  at  another 
award 

Senior  forward  McKinley 
Tennyson  Jr.  is  already  a  nominee 
for  the  Hermann  Trophy  award 
and  now  has  a  shot  at  more  hard- 
ware. Tennyson  was  announced  as 
one  of  the  15  candidates  for  the 
Missouri  Athletic  Club  Collegiate 
Player  of  the  Year  award. 

Tennyson,  known  as  "Key"  by 
his  teammates,  has  scored  12  goals 
and  25  poinu  in  10  games  this  year. 


Bruins  help 
capture  MLS 
title 

The  Major  League  Soccer 
Championship  on  Sunday  had 
a  decidedly  UCLA  flavor  as 
alums  Chris  Henderson  and 
Tahl  Jakins  helped  the  Kansas 
City  Wizards  defeat  the 
Chicago  Fire  1-0. 

Henderson  was  an  All- 
American  midfielder  for  the 
Bruins  from  1989-1990.  This  sea- 
son he  has  become  one  of  the 
Wizards'  best  players  and  played 
all  90  minutes  of  the  championship 
game. 

Jakins  was  a  UCLA  defender 
during  the  1993-96  seasons.  He 
was  also  a  valuable  player  for  the 
Wizards,  though  he  did  not  play  in 
the  championship. 

Both  players  also  played  for 
Colorado  in  1997  when  they  were 
runners-up. 

The  Chicago  Fire  has  even  more 
Bruins  in  their  lineup  with  four  for- 
mer UCLA  players  suiting  up. 
Defender  Carios  Bocanegra  ( 1997- 
99),  midfielder  Sam  George  ( 1988- 
91),  forward  Ante  Razov  (1992- 
95),  and  goalkeeper  Chris  Snitko 
(1992-95)  all  played  key  roles  for 
the  Fire. 


Notes  compiled  by  Jim  Guthrie, 
Daily  Bruin  Contributor. 


rOlH.  Z06'. 


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In  the  thick  of  it 

In  the  course  of  the  season  the  men's 
soccer  team  has  faced  challenges  from 
conference  teams.  Get  an  update  on 
the  season  on  page  31 

Wednesday,  October  18, 2000 


—  Dally  Bruin 


Michelle  Quen  is  the  steady 

force  in  the  Bruin's  bacii  rew 

who  has  heen  stifling  the  attacic 

of  hig  hitters  on  the  other  side 

for  the  last  three  years 


By  Christina  Teller 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


The  sun  is  setting  as  Michelle  Quon  tries  not  to 
laugh  at  the  photographer's  request. 

"Look  at  the  ball  intensely  ...  look  at  it  like  it's 
your  opponent." 

This  smile  is  in  stark  contrast  to  the  focus  she 
wears  all  over  her  face  during  a  match. 

But  even  if  her  game  face  doesn't  strike  fear  into 
the  heart  of  the  hitter  on  the  other  side  of  the  net, 
her  digging  ability  surely  does. 

'It's  the  fact  that  you  can  frustrate  big  ol'  6'4" 
and  6'5"  people  just  in  one  play,"  explained  the  5- 
foot-5-inch  Quon.  "They  hit  the  ball  as  hard  as  they 
can  and  you  dig  it.  It  frustrates  them  so  much." 

"It's  so  fun,"  she  added  with  a  laugh. 

Quon  likes  what  she  does.  Plain  and  simple. 

She  wants  the  ball  to  come  to  her.  It's  not  just 
about  the  game  -  it's  about  getting  her  job  done. 

"In  junior  high,  my  club  coach  always  told  us  to 
take  it  personally  if  you  don't  get  a  ball  up,"  Quon 
said.  "So  on  defense,  I  want  the  ball  to  come  my 
area,  but  even  more  so,  I  want  to  get  the  ball  up. 

"Because  if  not,  I  take  it  personally." 


'^^ 


itfucnuiu 


Ptioio  llluslration  by  MINDY  ROSVDaily  8<uin  Senioi  Staff 


_        .  ►'•'Oio  llluslration  by  MINDY  ROSS/Daily  8<uin  Senioi 

Senior  defensive  specialist  Michelle  Quon  wears  a  different  face  on  and  off  the  court. 
Quon's  defensive  skills  have  been  invaluable  to  the  Bruins  for  the  past  four  years. 


A  defensive  specialist  since  her  freshman  year  in 
high  school,  Quon  has  had  plenty  of  time  to  famil- 
iarize herself  with  the  territory  behind  the  10-foot 
line. 

Second  on  her  team  in  total  digs,  even  though 
she's  on  the  court  for  only  half  the  time  team  leader 
Kristee  Porter  is,  Quon  is  the  Bruins'  defensive 
threat  for  half  of  their  rotations. 

"I  would  not  hesitate  to  put  her  up  against  any- 


one. She  can  dig,  she's  quick,  she  pursues  the  ball 
well.  She's  capable  of  making  a  great  play,"  Bruin 
head  coach  Andy  Banachowski  said. 

"She  does  it  so  often  that  it  makes  it  routine. 
She's  always  able  to  get  the  ball  to  the  setter  (Erika 
Selsor),  not  just  get  a  dig  up.  She's  not  satisfied 
unless  that  ball  is  right  there  in  Erika's  hands  with- 


See  QUON,  page  31 


i4^ii-To^Jeaj9 

Stanford  outside  hitter  Logan  Tom's  return    i^^HH^^HI^BB^^^^^^^ 


Stanford  outside  hitter  Logan  Tom's  return 
to  the  Cardinal  has  her  teammates  and 
opposing  defenses  holding  their  hreath 

became  the  fourth  freshman  All- 
American  ever  and  took  the 
Cardinal  to  the  championship 
match  against  Penn  State. 

And  after  that  came  the  news 
that  elevated  her  to  the  pinnacle 
of  volleyball:  she  had  made  the 
U.S.  Olympic  team. 

"For  me.  I  loved  absolutely 
everything  about  it, "  said  Tom. 
who  returned  to  the  Cardinal 
last  week  following  her  trip  to 
Sydney.  "The  volleyball,  the 
a  t  m  o  s  - 


By  AJ  Cadman 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

For  Stanford  outside  hitter 
Logan  Tom.  being  an  average 
volleyball  player  has  never  quite 
been  enough. 

Electing  to  study  in  Palo  Alto 
last    year.    Tom    was    widely 
regarded  as  one  of  the  most  her- 
alded female  volleyball  recruits 
ever  at  the  age  of  17.  But  for  the 
Salt  Lake  City  native,  her  athlet- 
ic    career 
has    never 
been  ordi- 
nary. 

Named 
to  the 
junior 
national 
team  at  16. 
Tom  led 
the  squad 
in  kills  and 
blocks. 
Two  Utah 
state    high 


TheOttMr^l 


[I  Volleyball 


;i 


school  volleyball 
championships,  two  Gatorade 
State  Volleyball  Player  of  the 
Year  Awards,  and  one  National 
High  School  Player  of  the  Year 
Award  later.  Tom  has  traveled 
far  in  such  a  short  time. 

Then  came  her  arrival  on  the 
Farm.   In  her   first  year  she 


phere.  the 
entirety  of 
the  whole 
Olympic 
idea  was 
great. 

"The 
entire  two 
weeks  we 
were  there 
were  awe- 
some. 
Opening 
ceremonies  were  great,  but  from 
every  match  we  played,  we  were 
on  a  high  for  the  whole  two 
weeks." 

Named  to  the  women's 
National  Volleyball  Team  six 
month's  ago,  Tom's  selection  as 


Sianfoid  Spcxis  Info 

Tom 


Logan 


See  TOM,  page  29 


_        ,  Staoftxd  Sp»n  IntemMiion 

bophomore  Logan  Tom,  re-joins  Cardinal  teammates  after  the  Olympics. 


Sports  on  the  Web  (J    q 

See  all  this  and  more  at 
the  Daily  Bruin's 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


Website:  • 


Running  scared 
wont  get  you 
Krispy  Kremes 
or  out  of  traffic 

COLUMN:  Even  with  fall 
in  standings,  at  least 
Bruins  still  ahead  of  'SC 


I've  decided  to  lead  with  the 
UCLA  football  team  because 
they  haven't  had  an  early  lead 
all  season. 

Each  Bruin  opponent  has  scored 
a  touchdown  when  UCLA  still  has  a 
donut  on  the  scoreboard.  And  when 
UCLA  has  that  donut,  fans  don't.  -• 
Krispy  Kreme 
has  a  promo- 
tion to  give  a 
free  doughnut 
to  students  if 
the  Bruins 
score  first  at 
the  Rose  Bowl, 
which  hasn't 
happened  all 
season,  let 
alone  at  home. 

Freddie 
Mitchell  was 
unaware  of  the 
promotion  until 
two  days  ago, 
but  now  has 
that  extra  incentive. 

'I'll  do  my  best  to  get  Krispy 
Kreme  doughnuts  for  everybody. 
I'm  a  big  Krispy  Kreme  fan,"  he 
said. 

So  if  Freddie  scores  first  on 
Saturday,  be  nice  and  give  him  a 
bite  of  your  sticky,  glazed  goodness. 


Jeff 
Kmiotek 


Speaking  of  doughnuts,  why  is 
UCLA  always  getting  into  such  a 
big  hole?  Why  did  a  team  that  beat 
Alabama  and  Michigan  struggle  so 
much  against  lowly  Cal? 

True,  they  have  two  AII- 
American  candidates  sidelined,  but 
UCLA  should  still  beat  Cal  every 
time  they  play.  And  they  should 
beat  them  the  next  time  and  the 
time  after  that. 

One  of  the  main  reasons  UCLA 
lost  was  its  conservative  play  call- 
ing. Jermaine  Lewis  is  a  solid  tail- 
back and  Akil  Harris  is  an  emerging 
star,  but  if  the  run  is  not  working, 
the  run  is  not  working.  The  Bruins 
ran  for  just  45  yards  on  45  carries. 
Even  Cal's  fans  rushed  on  the  field 
more  efficiently. 

UCLA's  offensive  line  was  con- 
tinually getting  beat  by  Cal's  front 
seven,  but  the  Bruins  stubbornly 
kept  trying  to  run. 

When  I'm  stuck  in  traffic  on  the 
405, 1  take  a  different  route  and  use 
the  Sepulveda  Pass.  UCLA  was 
stuck  in  traffic  up  the  middle,  so 
they  should  have  used  the  Cory 
Paus  Pass.  Throw  on  first  down, 
and  if  that  doesn't  work,  throw  on 
second  down.  If  that  doesn't  work, 
throw  on  third  down.  UCLA  has 
the  receivers  to  make  big  plays,  but 
the  playbook  isn't  opened  wide 
enough.  Coach  Bob  Toledo  said  he 
was  trying  to  protect  Paus,  but 
when  you  play  scared,  you  lose. 

UCLA  dropped  to  No.  23  in  the 
AP  Poll.  Meanwhile,  the  Trojans 
lost  their  third  straight  game  and 


M. 


Senring  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


Thursday,  OaoBER  19,2000 


www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


Art  mirrors  life 


Police  urge  victims  to 
report  obscene  calls 


HOUSING:  Residents  told  to 
get  trap  from  phone  servers; 
individual  l^gets  women 


Chrlftln.  Salamanca,  Dasha  Slezco  anci  Colombtna  Zamponi  participate  In  "Art  for  Sociar'*'* ''" 
Action,  in  Kerckhoff  Hall  Tuesciay.The  group  of  micidle-schoolers  performeci  in  Cuba  this  summer. 


By  Amanda  Fletdier 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

A  scries  of  sexually  explicit  crank  calls 
to  the  residence  halls  has  led  housing  ofTl- 
cials  to  involve  university  police  and 
GTE/Verizon  and  Pacific  Bell  in  an  inves- 
tigation. 

Housing  officials  are  advising  students 
who  receive  crank  calls  to  file  a  police 
report  and  request  a  phone  trap.  '; 

According  to  a  resident  assistant  who 
requested  anonymity  for  fear  of  losing  her 
job,  the  calls  are  made  by  a  man  and  have 
"mostly  been  heavy  breathing  or  sexual  in 
nature.  The  person  only  calls  females  and 
hangs  up  if  he  hears  a  male  voice." 

Due  to  the  unusually  large  number  of 
obscene    and   harassing    phone   calls 


received  in  the  dorms,  housing  officials 
are  now  directing  students  straight  to 
police. 

"We  were  taking  incident  reports  for  a 
while  but  now  wc  have  them  call  the 
police  directly  because  there's  not  much 
we  can  do,"  said  Suzanne  Scplow,  south 
area  director  for  the  Onicc  of  Residential 
Life. 

Though  the  pattern  appears  to  be  ran- 
dom, the  total  number  of  calls  students 
have  received  is  significantly  more  than 
usual. 

- ,  "My  understanding  is  that  at  this  point 
there  is  no  pattern,"  Seplow  said. 
"Somewhere  on  the  hill  we'll  probably  get 
at  least  one  a  night." 

After  filing  a  police  report  students  are 
advised  to  contact  their  phone  company 
to  have  a  trap  put  on  their  telephone. 

"The  police  can't  put  a  trap  on  a  line, 
the  student  has  to  do  it,"  Seplow  said. 

A  trace,  or  trap,  allows  the  phone 


Many  don't  alter  pattern 

ion,  report  finds 

ENVIRONMENT:  Researchers  say  L.A.  residents  don't 
understand  affects  of  everyday  actions  on  local  bay 


S«eaUS,|>age19 


Professor  discusses  Mideast  conflict 


BylimodiyKudo 

Daily  Bruin  SenkNT  Staff 

Though  Los  Angeles  residents  are 
aware  of  the  environmental  damage 
their  actions  cause,  they  don't  change 
their  behavior,  according  to  a  recent 
report  by  the  Institute  of  the 
Environment. 

Ovcrwatering  and  chemical  spillage 
damage   the   Santa    Monica    Bay's 


ecosystem  as  wdl  as  those  swimming 
and  fishing  in  it,  according  to  the 
"Southern  California  Environmental 
Report  Card  2000." 

"The  soap  you  wash  your  car  in 
today,  you'll  be  swimming  in  tomor- 
row," said  Professor  Richard  Berk,  co- 
editor  of  the  report. 

Storm    drains    throughout    Los 


UNREST:  Intricacies 
of  politics,  religions 
explained  by  adviser 


ByBd^faminPariK 
Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


SccttP0IIT,page16 


?yiRYPAY  ACTIONS  HARM  THE  ENVIRONMFMT 
any  people's  day-to-day  activities  can  be  hacmWto  the  Mviromnent." 


Of  plants 


Downplaying  the  chances  for 
war  in  the  Middle  East,  a  UCLA 
political  science  professor  who 
has  advised  President  Clinton 
and  other  leaders  on  policy  for 
the  region  addressed  more  than 
100  people  at  a  teach-in 
Wednesday. 

Stating  that  "the  Mideast  is 
not  quite  normal,"  Professor 
Steven  Spiegel  cautioned  that 
matters  are  never  as  good  as 
they  look  in  good  times  -  nor  as 
bad  as  they  look  in  bad  times. 

"Things  are  not  as  dose  to 
war  today  as  they  may  appear," 
Spiegel  said  at  the  event  in 
Royce  Hall,  which  was  spon- 
sored by  the  Hillel  Council  and 


Jewish     Student     Union     at 
UCLA. 

Spiegel,  who  has  many  politi- 
cal contacts  with  people 
involved  in  the  situation,  told  the 
audience  that  he  had  been  on  the 
phone  with  an  Israeli  ofTicial 
shortly  before  the  teach-in 
began.  He  explained  his  outlook 
on  recent  events,  giving  his 
analysis  of  the  complex  politics 
within  -  and  between  -  the 
Israelis,  Palestinians, 

Americans    and    "key    Arab 
states." 

The  current  crisis  began  afier 
right-wing  Likud  Party  leader 
Ariel  Sharon  visited  a  site, 
known  as  the  Temple  Mount  by 
Jews  and  Haram  al-Sharif  by 
Muslims,  containing  the  Al- 
Aqsa  Mosque. 

The  site  is  holy  to  both  reli- 
gions. 

Sharon  was  accompanied  by 
a  1,000  person  security  detail  - 


SecTIAOI-INrpagcIS 


ANNAAVIK 

Steven  Spiegel,  political  science  professor 
at  UCLA,  spoke  Wednesday  in  Royce  Hall. 


Dow  Jones  drops  beidw  1  dOOO  marie 


Theoccan 

jsyoumi  GO  10  prevent  tuft^^^  ■  - '  ■'    ■ 

Tatr^  VTiitf  (M  tn  A  rytt  u/;>(h  uitt/> 


d  fertilizers 


houn: 


STOCKS:  Poor  earnings  by  IBM,  Middle  East  unrest 
lead  to  fall  professor  says;  Nasdaq  also  dips  for  day 


IBStSKTSSr 


'  AiAkiiiJblbdt 


By  Barbara  Ortutay 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

For  the  first  time  in  seven  months, 
the  Dow  Jones  Industrial  Average 
dropped  below  10,000  Wednesday, 
largely  due  to  a  poor  earnings  report 
by  IBM. 

The  Dnw  clmfd  at  9,97fi  02  afier 


point  loss  during  the  day 

"There  are  30  stocks  in  the  Dow 
Jones,  so  if  IBM  drops  16  percent, 
that  accounts  for  some  of  it,"  said 
Michael  Brcnnan,  professor  of 
finance  at  The  Anderson  School  at 
UCLA. 

In  addition  to  the  fall  in  IBM 
ttockt  Brewnan  said  the  cuiuiiiuiiig 


tributed  to  recent  drops  in  the  stock 
market. 

"The  economy  is  slowing  down," 
he  said,  adding  that  the  effects  prob- 
ably will  not  be  noticeable  until  after 
elections. 

Bill  Barker,  an  investment  strate- 
gy consultant  with  Dain  Rauscher, 
told  the  Associated  Press  the  worst 
may  not  be  over. 

"Oil  is  still  high,  the  euro  is  down 
and  the  Middle  East  is  still  in  a 


recovering  from  more  than  a  400-     crisis  in  the  Middle  East  also  con- 


See  OOW,  page  12 


Thursday,  October  19,2000 


04«y  Bruin  News 


Mi^Pi 


Vtmf^Wmi  MMfS 


Corporations  stand  by 
.U.Michigan  in  lawsuit 

ANN  ARBOR,  Mich.  Although  they  are 
rivals  in  the  corporate  world,  companies  such  as 
Microsoft,  Intel,  Kellogg  Co.  and  General  Mills 
are  unified  in  the  fight  to  preserve  afilrmative 
action  in  higher  education,  the  Michigan  Daily 
reported. 

These  are  four  of  20  high  profile  companies 
throwing  their  weight  behind  the  University  of 
Michigan  in  a  brief  supporting  the  use  of  race  in 
the  admissions  process. 

The  amicus  brief  filed  Monday  in  U  .S.  District 
Court  is  the  latest  of  the  "friend  of  the  court" 
briefs  filed  on  both  sides  of  the  two  lawsuits 
brought  by  the  Center  for  Individual  Rights 
against  the  University  -  one  against  the  universi- 
ty's Law  School  and  one  against  the  College  of 
Literature,  Sciences  and  the  Arts  claiming  its  use 
of  race  in  admissions  is  unconstitutional. 


Student  charged  with 
three  rapes  in  Maryland 

COLLEGE  PARK,  Md.  -  Prince  George's 
County  police  arrested  a  University  of  Maryland 
student  Monday  and  charged  him  with  second- 
degree  rape,  a  week  after  University  police  arrest- 
ed and  charged  the  student  with  two  counts  of 
rape  in  connection  with  two  separate  incidents, 
the  Diamondback  reported. 

Patrick  J.  Sanders,  33,  was  charged  by  P.G. 
County  police  Monday  in  connection  with  a  Sept. 
30  acquaintance  rape.  Sanders  was  charged  with 
second-degree  rape,  first-degree  assault,  second- 
degree  assault  and  second-degree  sexual  offense, 
said  police  spokesman  Cpl.  Joe  Merkel. 

A  32-year-old  woman  reported  the  incident  to 
police  Oct.  7.  She  said  she  had  been  out  with  a  man 
on  Sept.  29,  and  he  took  her  to  his  residence  in 
later  that  night  and  sexually  assaulted  her. 
Sanders'  trial  is  scheduled  for  Nov.  8. 


lU  may  face  legal  action 
over  firing  of  Knight 

BLOOMINGTON,  Ind.  -  A  lawsuit  filed  by 
Indiana  citizens  and  lU  alumni  against  Indiana 
University  for  avoiding  state  laws  is  beginning  to 
take  shape,  the  Indiana  Daily  Student  reported. 

The  plaintiffs  now  know  who  will  defend  the 
University,  what  judge  is  likely  to  hear  the  case 
and  what  is  likely  to  happen  next. 

The  lawsuit  claims  that  lU  President  Myles 
Brand  and  the  board  of  trustees  deliberately  skirt- 
ed Open  Door  Laws  Sept.  9  by  meeting  in  two 
separate  groups  of  four  trustees  before  making  his 
decision  to  fire  controversial  former  basketball 
coach  Bob  Knight. 

Roy  Graham  filed  the  suit  in  Monroe  County 
Circuit  Court  Oct.  2. 

"We  are  confident  that  this  action  is  right  as 
rain  and  will  pursue  this  matter  even  if  it  requires 
an  appeal,"  Graham  said. 


Wisconsin  may  not  be 
complying  with  Title  IX: 


MADISON,  Wis.  -  The  Federal  Office  of 
Civil  Rights  is  requesting  that  the  University  of 
Wisconsin  take  further  action  to  comply  with  Tide 
IX,  the  Daily  Cardinal  reported. 

University  officials  said  they  believe  the  athlet- 
ics program  offers  equal  opportunities  to  men  and 
women. 

Title  IX  requires  equal  athletic  opportunities 
for  men  and  women  at  institutions  receiving  fed- 
eral funds.  For  the  past  two  years,  the  university 
has  tried  to  comply  through  "substantial  propor- 
tionality," which  means  the  proportion  of  male  to 
female  student  athletes  should  be  relatively  equal 
to  the  proportion  of  men  and  women  who  attend 
the  university.  But  an  anonymous  complaint  was 
filed  against  the  university  earlier  this  year 


Compiled  from  University  Wire  reports. 


WHAT'S  BREWIN' 


Today  11:30  a.m. 

Japanese  Student  Association 
Seminar.  "Career  in  Japan"  by 
Recruit  ICI  Co. 
Ackerman3517 

12  p.m. 

Bruin  Democrats 
Speaker  Gloria  Steinem 
Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

4p.m. 

Center  for  the  Study  of  Women 

Joanna  Regulska  "European 

Integration:  Unmasking  Gender 

Blindness" 

355  Kinsey 

206-8101 

5  p.m. 

UCLA  Pre-Dental  Society 
How  to  Have  a  Successful 
Interview 
CHS  3.3-105 


ACADEMIC 
ANNOUNCEMENTS 

Week  3 

Last  chance  to  add  courses 
with  a  $3  fee  through  URSA 

Textbooks  may  be  returned  to 
UCLA  Store  within  24  hours 
of  purchase  or  with  proof  of 
dropped  class 


CORRECTIONS 

The  headline  for  the  story 
"Music  building  will  remain 
renamed,  say  UCLA  ofTicials" 
(News,  Oct.  18)  contained  an 
error.  It  should  have  read 
"Music  hall  will  remain 
renamed,  say  UCLA  officials." 

The  headline  for  the  story 
"Advisory  panel  may  rid  UC 
portfolio  of  tobacco  stocks" 
(News,  Oct.  18)  contained  an 
error.  The  advisory  panel  does 
not  have  the  power  to  change 
the  UC's  portfolio. 


REQCLE 


Thursday,  October  19, 2000 


mnm 


A  QUICK  LOOK 
'^v*"  BRUIN 


Page# 
Dally  Bruin  ClassifiedR      35-42 

Crossword  Puzzle— ^ 

Movie  Guide _2S 


UnD    prince  charming 

of  thefl^  Y     ^"^""^  CHAR-ming) 


1  A  man  who  fufilb  a»  the  romantic  expectations  of  a  woman. 

2  A  man  who  ardentty  seeks  the  company  and  affection  of  women 

[Attef  Prince  Ctunning,  h»ro  of  lh»  (airy  IM  Cmderata.) 

•A  mutuH  tmm  had  sat  us  up.  and  I'd  instanlty  dKld«j  tw  wasn.1  lor  ma 
Tobegm  wWi .  his  Mt  was  a>  wrong-short.  tMMng.  stocky  not  axacttv 
Prtnce  Charming. " 

Edalstain.  Andy:  Sharman.  BMh.  From  hala-al-Krst-slght  to  Wands. 

CosmopoMan,  Jan  i ,  1995 


DEAL 
<^^DAY 


Cellular  Mdl 

CD  EC  DIGITAL 
rnCE  PHONE 

For  addWonal  details,  see  page  22. 


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•I    ,jt.      !  .  J-"    >    .1 


in  the  early 
1990s,  many 
UCLA  stucients 
protested  the 
ROTCfornot 
allowing  openly 
gay  students  to 
serve  in  the  pro- 
gram and  thus 
receive  scholar- 
ships. The  mili- 
tary's current 
"Don't  ask,  don't 
tell  policy,"  still 
doesn't  allow 
openly  gay  peo- 
ple to  serve. 


Over 


Thursday,  Oaober  19,2000         3 


Over  the  years,  UCLA  has 
increased  efforts  to      - 
promote  understanding  and 
awareness  of  LGBT  issues 


By  Julie  YosMoka 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


^      UCLA  students  participate  in  a  demonstration  calling  for  gay  rights  during  the  1980s. 


TenPercent 


Today  lesbian,  gay,  bisexual  and 
transgender  groups  can  stand  on 
Bruin  Walk  and  promote  their  orga- 
nizations. 

UCLA,  however,  has  not  always 
accepted  them. 

In  the  beginning,  even  faculty 
members  faced  prejudice  if  they 
were  members  of  the  LGBT  com- 
munity -  whether  they  were  in  the 
closet  or  openly  gay. 

"The  Gay  and  Lesbian  Faculty 
Suff  Network  was  started  because 
the  faculty  and  staff  were  con- 
cerned about  the  discrimination 
that  was  taking  place."  said  Al 
Aubin,  associate  director  of  the 
Career  Center,  who  is  also  known 
as  UCLA's  unofficial  historian  on 
LGBT  issues. 

"The  fact  was  that.we  did  not  feel 
that  the  climate  was  comfortable  for 
LGB  faculty,  staff,  students,  and  we 
were  concerned  about  the  resources 
and  services  that  were  being  provid- 
ed to  all  members  of  the  campus 
community,"  he  continued. 

The  network  held  their  first  meet- 
ing at  someone's  home  because 
some  people  were  hesitant  to  meet 
on  campus. 

Slowly,  awareness  about  LGBT 


issys  spread  to  campus  iii  the  form 
ofipducation. 

English  professor  Peter  Thorslev 
who  was  the  first  faculty  member 
to  come  out  according  to  Aubin  - 
began  teaching  UCLA's  first  gay 
and  lesbian  literature  class  in  1976. 
Many  community  members, 
however,  did  not  support  Thorslev's 
example  of  being  open  about  his 
sexuality. 

"People  didn't  really  take  it  that 
well,"  Aubin  said.  "I  think  they 
wanted  everyone  to  stay  in  the  clos- 
et." V 

After  years  of  planning,  the 
LGBT  Studies  minor  was  approved 
in  1997. 

The  formation  of  the  Gay  and 
Lesbian  Association,  now  known  as 
the  Multicultural  Gay  Lesbian 
bisexual  and  Transgender 
Association,  and  Ten  Percent  maga- 
zine during  the  1970s  was  a  step- 
ping stone  toward  public  awareness 
and  education,  but  UCLA  stilt  had 
a  long  way  to  go. 

"You  could  be  thrown  out  of  the 
university  if  you  were  found  out  to 
be  gay,"  said  LGBT  Campus 
Resource  Center  assistant  Steven 
Leider. 

"ft  happened  all  the  time.  It  was 


SeeHISF0ltY,pag«17 


Proposition  35  would  privatize  dvil  service  projects 


BAUOT:  Some  fear  delays, 
costs;  supporters  contend 
it  would  speed  up  works 


ByMdiadFakoM 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Crowded  freeways,  decaying 
schools  and  buildings  overdue  for 
earthquake  retrofits  are  among  the 
problems  supporters  of  Proposition 
35  say  the  measure  will  help  alleviate. 

But  opponents  -  including  numer- 
ous labor  unions  and  school  districts  - 
foresee  construction  delays  and  hid- 
den costs  for  the  taxpayer. 

Through  a  Califomia  constitution- 
al amendment.  Proposition  35  would 
«How  the  state  more  flexibility  to  out- 


vate  companies. 

Current  law 
requires  that  only 
state  civil  service 
employees  per- 
form work  for 
state  agencies. 

A      host      of 
California  taxpay- 
er associations,  cities,  counties  and 
state  and  local  chamber  of  commerce 
branches  endorsed  the  proposition 
according  to  "Yes  on  35"  Web  site. 

Supporters  of  the  proposition  say, 
the  measure,  if  passed,  would  signifi- 
cantly speed  up  the  completion  of 
public  works  projects  around  the 
state  such  as  the  building  of  highways, 
schools  and  prisons. 

The  official  ballot  argument  in 
faYOr  of  Proposition  35  cites  a  "hwy 


PROPOSmON3S 


Mwg  UfcKiiwmjyKaa, 


Proppsitton  35  would  amend  the 

Caltfomia  Constitution  to  allow  the 

sute  to  contract  privat*  firms  for 

eitgineering  and  architectural  projects 

such  as  the  building  of  freeways, 

prisons,  schools,  sewer  systems  and 

higher  education  facilities. 


AOAM  BflOWN/Dalty  Brum 


iourcepuHic  works  projecU  to  pri-     backlog"  in  California  Department  of 


Transportation  construction  projects 
evidenced  by  traffic  congestion  on  the 
state's  freeways. 

The  argument  also  projects  a  huge 
savings  for  Californians  if  the  propo- 
sition passes. 

The  Calif9rnia  Taxpayers' 
Association    and    other    taxpayer 


groups  say  Proposition  35  would  save 
$2.5   billion  annually  and  create 


40,000  jobs  over  the  next  10  years. 

But  opponents  say  jobs,  money 
and  time  will  be  lost  -  not  saved  -  if 
the  measure  is  passed  Nov.  7 

Bruce  Blanning.  a  spokesman  for 
the  "No  on  35"  campaign  said  the 
estimated  $2.5  billion  savings  is  "non- 
sense" since  the  number  is  based  on  a 


siudy  paid  for  by  backers  of  the 
proposition. 


Though  the  proposition  counts 
about  35  school  districts  among  its 
supporters,  another  20  school  dis- 
tricts and  the  California  Federation 
of  Teachers  say  the  proposition  will 
stall  current  school  building  projects, 

"This  requires  the  state  to  develop 
new  regulations  and  impose  them  on 
all  local  agencies  -  that  process  takes 
at  least  18  months,"  Blanning  said. 
"It  would  bring  contracting  to  a 
crawl,  if  not  a  complete  halt." 

But  proponents  say  the  speed  of 
construction  in  the  state  is  already  too 
slow. 

Analysis  of  Proposition  35  provid- 
ed  by  the  non-partisan  state 
Legislative  Analysts  Office  says  that 
although  costs  to  the  state  may  be 
higher  when  contracted  nnt,  ir  may 


-■u3 


Sec  nMPQSmON,  page  14 


Thunday,  October  19, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Ntwt 


!■-  ■•.-    ■;»'-'-i-' 


-?-»"•  r''»M>'«  '■    •}■': 


OiiiyBiuinNcws 


Qjbans  mardi  against  US.  legislation 


PROTESTS;  Bill  won't  ease 
sanctions,  forces  nation  to 
borrow,  Castro  contends 


By  Anita  Snow 

The  Associated  Press  ■    :  - 

HAVANA  -  Waving  huge  plac- 
ards with  portraits  of  Abraham 
Lincoln,  hundreds  of  thousands  of 
Cubans  marched  Wednesday  in 
hopes  of  convincing  Americans  that 
U.S.  legislation  will  make  it  harder 
for  them  to  visit  the  island. 

The  march  was  being  held  in  large 
part  to  show  the  world,  ''and  espe- 
cially American  public  opinion,  what 
our  people  think  of  the  gross  lie  that 
the  genocidal  blockade  has  been 
softened,"  the  Communist  Party 
daily  Granma  said  Wednesday. 

Wearing  his  traditional  olive 
green  uniform  with  his  now-familiar 
white  athletic  shoes  for  marching, 
Fidel  Castro  led  a  crowd  the  govern- 
ment estimated  at  800.000  -  nearly 
half  the  capital's  population  of  2  mil- 
lion -  down  Havana's  Malecon 
coastal  highway. 

See  CUBA,  page  15 


Nader  says  he'll  return  to 
people  power  if  elected^ 


CRITiaSM:  Candidate 
endorses  environmental 
stance  of  party  to  crowd 


By  Betsy  Blaney 

The  Associated  Press 


)   .tall 


The  Aivxiated  Press 


Cuban  President  Fidel  Castro  arrives  at  a  march  Wednesday  in 
front  of  the  U.S.  Interests  Section's  building  in  Havana,  Cuba. 


DALLAS  -  Ralph  Nader  says 
Democrats  and  Republicans  have 
"morphed  into  one  corporate  party" 
and  promised  Wednesday  to  shift 
power  from  corporations  to  the  peo- 
ple if  elected.    " 

"They're  basically  tools  of  corpo- 
rate power,"  Nader,  the  Green  Party 
presidential  nominee,  said  of  his 
rivals.  Republican  George  W.  Bush 
and  Democrat  AJ  Gore.  " 

"This  is  not  a  government  of,  by 
and  for  big  business,"  he  told  an  audi- 
ence of  mostly  young  people  at 
Richland  Junior  College,  as  he 
opened  a  campaign  swing  in  Bush's 
home  state. 

Nader  said  the  Green  Party  focus- 
es pn  the  environment  and  offers  vot- 
ers an  option. 

Gore,  Nader  said,  "is  always 


breaking  his  promises"  on  environ- 
mental issues.  Bush's  record  on  the 
issue  also  is  abysmal,  Nader  said. 

"Look  at  Houston,  if  you  can  look 
at  it,"  Nader  said,  referrirjg  to  the 
Environmental  Protection  Agency's 
report  that  Houston  has  the  worst 
problem  with  grouncHevel  ozone,  a 
main  ingredient  in  smog.  "George 
Bush  is  a  corporation  running  for 
president  disguised  as  a  person." 

A  spokesman  for  Gore's  cam- 
paign could  not  immediately  reached 
for  comment.  The  Bush  campaign 
said  Nader's  information  was  wrong. 
"Under  Governor  Bush,  Texas 
has  stronger  clean  air  laws,  industrial 
pollution  is  down,"  said  spokesman 
Ray  Sullivan.  "We  recently  sent  plans 
to  EPA  to  reduce  industrial  emissions 
by  90  percent  in  Dallas  and 
Houston." 

Sullivan  also  said  Gore  and  Bush 
are  very  different  candidates. 

"As  anyone  who  has  observed  this 
campaign  and  these  debates  recog- 
nizes that  there  are  vast  differences  in 
philosophy  and  in  leadership  styles 
between  Governor  Bush  and  Vice 
President  Gore,"  he  said. 


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WORLD  &  NATIQNJJ- 

First  day  of  cease-fire 
shows  dip  in  violence 


Thursday,  October  19, 2000 


Dow  Jones  Industrials 

down:  114.69  '    .    ; 

dose:  9,975.02  .     >;  ^ 


Nasdaq  Index 

down:42.4 
dose:  3,171.56 


Yen:  108.18 
Euro:  1.1752 


TENSION:  Both  sides  move 
to  make  good  on  truce  as 
scattered  clashes  continue 


ByGragMyrc 

The  Associated  Press 


JERUSALEM  -  The  first  full  day 
of  a  cease-fire  produced  a  muddled 
verdict  Wednesday:  scattered  clashes 
kept  tensions  high  on  rock-strewn 
Palestinian  streets,  but  overall  vio- 
lence dipped  as  Israeli  and  Palestinian 
security  teams  moved  to  halt  three 
weeks  of  upheaval. 

Faced  with  Palestinian  militants 
bent  on  confrontation,  the  Palestinian 
leadership  issued  "strict  orders"  to 
observe  the  truce  reached  Tuesday  at 


a  summit  in  Egypt.  The  Israeli  army 
withdrew  tanks  from  the  ouukirts  of 
the  West  Bank  town  of  Nablus  and 
planned  to  remove  more  heavy 
weaponry  from  other  flashpoints  if 
the  violence  ebbed. 

Palestinian  leaders  said  Israc^ 
needed  to  remove  soldiers  from  the 
fringes  of  restive  Palestinian  cities  to 
end  the  fighting. 

Yitzhak  Herzog,  Israel's  Cabinet 
secretary,  said  the  cease-fire  would 
test  Palestinian  leader  Yasser  Arafat's 
ability  to  "exercise  governance  over 
the  various  gangs  swarming  around 
and  saying  vociferously  that  they 
don't  intend  to  honor  the  agree- 
ment." 
A  senior  defense  ofTlcial,  speaking 


See  BMB,  page  14 


An  injureci  Palestinian  Is  carried  to  an  ambulance  after  being  shot  by  Israeli  soWiers  protecTinTtTe"" 
Jewish  settlement  of  Kfar  Darom  In  the  Gaza  Strip  Wednesday 


Memorial  ceremony  honors  sailors 


COLE:  CUnton  addresses 
famihes,  friends  of  fallen, 
pledges  justice  for  attack 


BySonyaRoss 

The  Associated  Press 

NORFOLK.  Va.  -  Alternating 
between  words  of  grief  and  retribu- 
tion. President  Clinton  sought 
Wednesday  to  comfort  the  sailors  and 
families  of  the  USS  Cole.  He  praised 
the  fallen  as  patriots  and  sternly 
warned  the  "hate-micd  terrorists" 
whose  attack  killed  17  aboard  the 
Navy  destroyer:  "We  will  find  you 
and  justice  will  prevail." 

Under  a  gray  sheet  of  sky.  Clinton 
addressed  a  memorial  ceremony  at  a 
Norfolk  Naval  Station  pier  aowded 
with  destroyers  and  aircraft  carriers. 
Sailors  in  white  dress  uniforms  lined 
every  deck  of  every  ship,  listening  to 
Clinton  praise  the  colleagues  lost  in 
Thursday's  explosion  at  a  Yemeni 
harbor  as  "our  finest  young  people, 
fallen  soldiers  who  rose  to  freedom's 
challenge." 

"They  all  had  their  own  stories  and 
their  own  dreams, "  Clinton  said.  "In 
the  names  and  faces  of  those  we  lost 
and  mourn,  the  world  sees  our 
nation's  greatest  strength:  People  in 
uniform,  rooted  in  every  race,  creed 
and  region  on  the  face  of  the  Earth." 


Countdown  begins  for 
presidential  hopefuls 


CANDIDATES:  Spending 
increases  as  race  heads 
into  final  20-day  stretch 


_         ,  ,  ,  The  Associated  Press 

President  Clinton  bows  his  head  at  a  memorial  service  at  Norfolk 
Naval  Station  in  Virginia  for  victims  of  the  USS  Cole  bombing. 


Clinton  described  the  attackers  - 
still  unknovm  -  as  "hate-filled  terror- 
ists" who  "envy  our  strength"  while 
holding  warped  religious,  political, 
racial,  or  ethnic  views  of  the  world. 

"For  them,  it  is  their  way  or  no 
way,"  he  said.  Addressing  those 
attackers  directly,  the  president 
warned:  "You  will  not  find  a  safe  har- 
bor. We  will  find  you  and  justice  will 
prevail." 

One  by  one,  Oinlon  called  out  full 
names  and  ranks  of  the  17  dead. 


including  those  whose  bodies  have  yet 
lo  be  recovered. 

In  the  end,  a  lone  Navy  trumpeter 
played  "Taps"  from  the  deck  of  the 
destroyer  USS  McFaul,  one  of  two 
Cole  sister  ships  docked  nearby.  A 
wounded  sailor  saluted  from  his 
front-row  stretcher,  his  wife  at  his 
side. 

The  military's  top  civilian  and  uni- 
formed leaders  also  took  part. 


JL 


S««MEMMUUpage1S 


ByRonFoumicr 

The  Associated  Press 

ST.  LOUIS  -  The  debaUng  done, 
Al  Gore  hitched  his  election  hopes 
to  the  volatile  economy  Wednesday 
and  rival  George  W.  Bush  plunged 
into  Democratic  terrain  for  the  final 
20  days  of  their  nip-and-tuck  presi- 
dential campaign. 

Jittery  about  ground  lost  lo  Bush 
since  early  October,  Democrats  wel- 
comed the  vice  president's  new 
focus  but  wondered  why  he  took  so 
long  to  seek  political  advantage 
from  the  economic  recovery  under 
the  Clinton-Gore  administration. 

"I'm  not  sure  why  he  avoided 
that.  It's  been  nuts  to  wait,"  said 
Democratic  operative.  Ken  Brock 
of  Michigan.  People  in  both  parties 
said  the  dynamics  of  the  race 
changed  little  after  the  third  and 
final  debate  on  Tuesday. 

Heading  into  the  homestretch, 
Gore  is  promising  to  fight  big  busi- 
ness on  behalf  of  working  families  - 
a  populist  theme  he  struck  repeated- 


ly during  the  face-off. 

Bush  is  sticking  with  his  message 
of  civility,  smaller  government, 
lower  taxes  and  a  break  from  what 
he  refers  to  as  the  cynicism  and 
scandal  of  Washington.  He  men- 
tioned bipartisanship  at  least  10 
times  Tuesday  night. 

Both  campaigns  lined  up  millions 
of  dollars  in  TV  ads  to  spread  their 
messages  in  the  final  three  weeks. 

Republican  strategists  are  consid- 
ering increasing  their  efforts  in 
California,  Minnesota  and  maybe 
even  Vermont,  traditionally 
Democratic  states  Gore  can't  afford 
to  defend.  On  Thursday,  the 
Republican  National  Committee 
was  announcing  Spanish-language 
ads  in  Califomia  and  other  states 
with  large  Latino  populations. 

In  Ohio,  a  key  battleground  state. 
Gore  advisers  decided  to  pump  up 
spending  in  two  major  cities  - 
Cleveland  and  Columbus  -  after  cut- 
ting their  recent  buys.  Modest  ad 
spending  will  continue  in  other  Ohio 
cities. 

Nervous  Democrats  in  California 
want  Gore  to  siphon  money  from 
battleground  states  to  slow  Bush's 
inroads  there,  knowing  Gore  can't 


^ 


See  CAMPAIGN,  page  12 


ORLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 


olombian  conference 
makes  little  progress 

SAN  JOSE,  CosU  Rica  -  A  conference 
aimed  at  finding  ways  to  ease  Colombia's  36- 
year  conflict  ended  Wednesday  with  only  a 
vague  call  for  "humanitarian  accords"  to  curb 
its  brutality. 

With  no  major  peace  initiatives  struck,  the 
meeting  in  this  Central  American  capital 
became  a  forum  on  Plan  Colombia,  a  U.S.- 
backed  anti-drug  offensive  many  feel  will 
inflame  the  36-year  conflict. 

In  closed-door  sessions,  European  partici- 
ptnu  criticized  the  plan  and  its  large  U.S.  mil- 
itary aid  component  -  indicating  that 
Washington  is  becoming  isolated  in  its  policy 
toward  the  South  American  nation. 

"It's  clear  that  they're  not  going  to  give  any 

more  money  for  Plan  Colombia,"  said  Susan 

Lee,  a  delegate  from  the  London-based 

human-rights  group  Amnesty  international. 

Guerrillas  attending  the  three^ay  confer- 


ence called  Washington's  $L3  bil- 
lion aid  plan  an  assist  to  arms  man- 
ufacturers disguised  as  a  drug-fight- 
ing initiative. 

Conference  organizers  had  hoped  for 
breakthroughs  in  humanizing  the  conflict, 
which  claims  some  3,000  lives  annually  and 
has  forced  nearly  2  million  Colombians  lo  flee 
their  homes  during  the  past  15  years. 

Agreement  forces 
MP3.com  to  pay  up 

SAN  DIEGO  -  MP3.com  Inc.  reached  a 
preliminary  settlement  with  the  National 
Music  Publishers'  Association  Inc.  that  will 
make  more  than  one  million  songs  available 
on  its  online  music  service. 

The  agreement  calls  for  MP3.com  to  pay  up 
lo  $30  million  to  ihe  association's  licensing  unit, 
MP3.com  said  Wednesday.  It  also  grants 
MP3.com  a  three-year  license  that  requires  the 
company  to  pay  publishers  one  quarter  cent 


each  time  a  song  is  streamed  on 
demand  to  a  listener. 
The  publishing  association  sued 
in  March  over  the  site's  use  of  its 
members'  songs.  My.MP3.com  allows 
users  lo  listen  to  music  from  CDs  they 
already  own  or  which  they  purchase  from 
MP3.com's  retail  partners.  Unlike  music- 
sharing  Web  site  Napster,  it  does  not  allow 
users  to  download  computer  files  or  make 
copies. 

If  the  settlement  is  approved  by  individual 
music  publisher-principals,  the  publishing 
association  will  drop  the  lawsuit. 

"This  agreement  ...  is  a  giant  step  for  all 
consumers  who  want  to  simply  be  able  to  lis- 
ten to  music  they  already  own."  said 
MP3.com  President  Robin  Richards. 

Extremists  still  have 
hostages  in  Philippines 

ZAMBOANGA.  Philippines  -  Three 


Malaysians  and  an  American  still  held  by 
Muslim  extremist  rebels  have  been  spotted  in 
jungles  on  a  southern  Philippine  island,  an 
army  officer  involved  in  a  rescue  operation 
said  Wednesday. 

A  fifth  hostage,  a  Pilipino  held  since  April, 
has  not  been  seen,  said  Lt.  Abdurasad 
Serajan,  who  is  leading  a  group  of  former 
Muslim  rebels  who  have  joined  the  military 
in  pursuing  members  of  the  Abu  Sayyaf  rebel 
group. 

Serajan  said  the  Malaysians  were  seen  In 
the  jungles  outside  Talipao  town  on  Jolo 
island,  and  the  American,  Jeffrey  Schilling, 
in  Panamao,  also  on  Jolo. 

"The  foreign  hostages  are  still  there  and 
being  held  captive  separately  by  the  Abu 
Sayyaf,"  he  said. 

The  military  launched  a  massive  operation 
on  Sept.  16  to  rescue  19  hostages.  Fourteen 
of  the  hostages  escaped  during  the  opera- 
tion, but  five  hostages  are  still  captive. 


Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


Thursday,  October  19,2000 


A^fci  Rm^a  k^^^^ 

VM^  IhW»  PWW9 


STATE  &  LOCAL 


Oaity  BruM)  News 


Thursday,  October  19,2000        t 


a 


MTA  services  resume  following  negotiations 


LABOR:  Drivers  return  to  work; 
contract  delivers  9.3  percent  raise 
over  three  years,  adds  part-timers 


ByJohnAntoak 

The  Associated  Press 

Transit  buses  and  light-rail  commuter  trains 
began  rolling  countywide  Wednesday  for  the  first 
time  in  4  1/2  weeks,  as  Metropolitan 
Transportation  Authority  drivers  came  back  to 
work  from  a  strike  that  cut  service  vital  to  450,000 
riders. 

The  MTA  fielded  about  two-thirds  of  its  usual 
fleet  of  buses  during  the  morning  and  expected  to 
achieve  100  percent  by  Thursday,  spokesman 
Marc  Littman  said. 

A  contract  hammered  out  during  sometimes 
bitter  negotiations  between  the  4,300-member 
drivers  union  and  MTA  officials  was  ratified  by 
rank-and-file  late  Tuesday. 

"Los  Angeles  survived  this,"  said  Mayor 
Richard  Riordan,  who  welcomed  riders  on  a  brief 
bus  trip  up  Figueroa  Street  to  his  downtown 
restaurant. "  We  should  be  proud  of  ourselves,  but 
we  should  also  feel  pain  for  the  people  who  had  to 
put  up  with  a  hardship." 

Enough  drivers  showed  in  the  morning  to 
cover  all  routes  but  there  were  service  gaps 
because  a  third  of  buses  didn't  get  out.  Some  dri- 
vers may  have  been  absent  because  they  didn't 
know  the  strike  was  settled  or  were  working  at 
temporary  jobs,  Littman  said. 


The  A»ocia(«d  Press 

With  a  bus  full  of  passengers  on  Broadway  in  downtown  Los  Angetes*  MTA  Bus  Operator 
Cathy  Jones  proclaimed  'You  don't  know  how  happy  I  am  to  be  back  to  work!" 

The  Red  Line  subway  and  Blue  and  Green  sur-     was  reached  early  Tuesday. 


face  rail  lines  resumed  operation  in  the  afternoon 
at  25  percent  of  regular  service  levels.  Sweeper 
cars  cleared  rust  off  the  rails  earlier  in  the  day  to 
make  sure  that  train  location  sensors  were  work- 
ing, Littman  said 

Often  stormy  negotiations  picked  up  steam 
during  the  weekend  when  the  Rev.  Jesse  Jackson 
joined  the  talks  as  an  intermediary.  Agreement 


The  new  contract  provides  raises  of  9.3  per- 
cent over  three  years,  among  other  terms. 

It  also  allows  the  MTA  to  hire  an  additional 
330  part-time  drivers  over  the  next  three  years 
and  to  add  55  drivers  to  the  number  who  can 
work  104K>ur  shifts  without  overtime. 

The  MTA  will  also  inaease  its  contribution  to 
the  drivers'  pension  plan  by  I  percent 


State  Supreme 
Court  upholds 
ordinance  for 
seizure  of  cars 

LAW:    Government  may 
confiscate  vehicles  involved 
in  drugs  deals,  prostitution 


By  David  Kravets  ,  .-  , 

The  Associated  Press  "    " 

SAN  FRANCISCO  -  In  a  move  that  may 
lead  to  an  expansion  of  vehicle  seizure  laws 
around  the  state,  the  California  Supreme 
Court  declined  Wednesday  to  review  a  ruling 
that  local  governments  can  seize  the  vehicles  of 
people  suspected  of  dealing  drugs  or  soliciting 
prostitutes  from  a  car. 

The  high  court  upheld  a  1997  Oakland  ordi- 
nance allowing  sudi  seizures  even  if  the  sus- 
pect is  not  convicted  or  is  acquitted.  Tlie  law 
applies  even  if  the  owner  wasn't  in  the  car  and 
did  not  know  of  or  support  the  crime. 

Following  Wednesday's  closely  watched 
ruling,  comparable  seizure  laws  are  expected 
to  be  adopted  by  cities  and  counties  across  the 


S««SElZUIES,|»g«14 


Where  it  matters  most 


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ri4(  any  Sari*  Uooiu  lit  Iht  liu- 


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^t-       1bun<by,  October  79,2000 


■■■-•^i.^ 


Daity  Bruin  N«ws- 


High-sp<Bed  train  unveiled  in  WasNngton 


LOCOMOnVL'  Amtrak  hopes 
Acela  Express  will  revive  rail 
travel  as  option  to  cars,  planes 


By  Laurence  Arnold 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  -  America's  first  high- 
speed train  crept  through  fake  fog  to  a  dramati- 
cally choreographed  arrival  Wednesday,  carry- 
ing no  passengers  but  many  hopes  for  reviving 
rail  travel  throughout  the  country. 

Amlrak  officials  announced  the  train,  Acela 
Express,  will  begin  regularly  scheduled  trips 
between  Boston  and  Washington  on  Dec.  1 1. 

Silver  and  teal  on  the  outside,  dappled  in  pur- 
ple and  blue  inside  and  featuring  creature  com- 
forts like  audio  and  video  entertainment  at  each 
seat  and  bar  stools  in  the  cafe  car,  the  new  train 
is  the  first  of  20  that  will  reach  speeds  up  to  1 50 
mph. 

"America  is  ready  for  an  alternative  to  traffic 
congestion,  airport  delays  and  bad  service. 
Today  that  alternative  has  arrived,"  Amtrak 
President  George  Warrington  told  dozens  of 
guests  at  a  ceremony  alongside  Track  19  at 
Union  Station. 

Passengers  walking  to  conventional  Amtrak 
trains  craned  their  necks  for  their  first  look  at 
the  Acela  train's  distinctive  rounded  snout. 

"We  are  now  poised  to  offer  American  trav- 
elers what  people  have  enjoyed  in  Europe  and 
Asia  for  years, "  said  Sen.  Frank  Lautenberg,  D- 
N.J.  and  a  longtime  Amtrak  supporter. 

Emphasizing  the  point.  Rep.  James 
Oberstar,  D-Minn.,  opened  his  remarks  in 
French. 

"Excuse  me,  I  thought  I  was  in  Paris,"  he 
said. 

Acela  is  a  selling  point  for  Amtrak  advocates 
on  Capitol  Hill  who  are  trying  to  win  funding 
for  other  high-speed  train  routes.  A  bill  still  alive 
in  the  closing  days  of  the  106th  Congress  would 
help  Amtrak  raise  $10  billion  over  10  years  for 
track  and  train  improvements  in  up  to  1 1  other 
rail  corridors  throughout  the  country. 

Introduction  of  Acela  Express  is  about  a  year 
behind  schedule.  Problems  with  the  tilting  tech- 
nology that  helps  the  train  negotiate  curves  at 
higher  speeds  than  conventional  trains  caused  a 
series  of  delays. 

Under  its  contract  with  the  consortium  build- 


The  Associated  Press 

Anntrak's  new  high-speed 'Acela' train  is  shown  parked  outside  the  Barre,Vt.,  factory 
where  it  was  made.  Amtrak  officials  hope  the  new  service  will  soon  be  available. 


ing  the  trains,  Canada's  Bombardier 
Transportation  and  France's  Alston  Ltd., 
Amtrak  can  seek  up  to  $13,500  a  day  in  penal- 
ties .for  delayed  delivery  of  each  of  the  20  eight- 
car  train  sets. 

Warrington  thanked  representatives  of  both 
companies  at  Wednesday's  ceremony  and  later 
declined  to  discuss  penalties. 

Jolene  Molitoris,  administrator  of  the 
Federal  Railroad  Administration,  said  Amtrak 
officials  never  pressured  her  office  to  speed  up 
its  testing  of  the  new  train. 

"Not  only  is  this  the  fastest  train  in 
America,"  she  said,  "it's  the  safest  high-speed 
train  in  the  world." 

Amtrak  is  under  a  congressional  order  to 
become  financially  self-sufficient  by  2003  and 
Acela  Express  is  integral  to  its  survival  plan. 
High-speed  service  in  the  Northeast  Corridor  is 
projected  to  earn  $  1 80  million  a  year. 

Pending  further  improvements  to  tracks  in 
the  Northeast  Corridor,  the  Acela  Express 
trains  will  reach  their  top  speed  of  1 50  mph  only 
through  about  50  miles  in  Rhode  Island  and 
Massachusetts,  Warrington  said. 

The  train's  tilting  technology  will  be  most 
useful  on  the  winding  route  between  New  York 
and  Boston.  Amtrak  expects  that  trip,  which 


now  takes  just  over  four  hours,  will  improve  to 
three  hours,  23  minutes  by  mid-December  and 
just  over  three  hours  in  two  to  three  years  as 
more  track  improvements  are  made. 

The  trip  between  Washington  and  New 
York,  now  three  hours,  will  be  cut  to  two  hours, 
44  minutes.  A  daily  express  train  will  shave  an 
additional  15  minutes.  Amtrak 's  longer-term 
goal  for  the  Washington-New  York  route  is  two 
hours,  15  minutes. 

A  one-way  coach  ticket  between  Washington 
and  New  York  will  be  $143,  up  from  $122  now. 
Between  New  Yoric  and  Boston  it  will  cost  $  1 20, 
up  from  $72.  Those  fares  arc  below  the  week- 
day walk-up  fare  of  $202  for  the  Delta  and  US 
Airways  shuttles,  but  higher  than  some  air  fares 
on  weekends  or  with  advance  purchase. 

Warrington  said  value,  not  price,  will  be  the 
appeal  of  Acela  Express. 

"Tlie  dilTerence  is  the  train  will  get  you  there 
on  time,  youll  be  a  lot  more  relaxed,  and  you'll 
have  a  much  more  comfortable  experience,"  he 
said. 

Amtrak  officials  plan  a  VIP-only  debut  run 
of  Acela  Express  on  Nov.  16.  The  railway  will 
begin  accepting  reservations  from  the  public  on 
Nov.  29  for  regular  daily  roundtrips  beginning 
Dec.  1 1. 


Russia  will  alkyw 
new  doctor  for 

■>■■ 

US.  business  man 
in  espionage  case 

PRISONER:  Moscow  to  review  if 
cancer  patient  is  to  remain  in 
jail;  translation  problems  arise 


By  Anna  Dolgov 

The  Associated  Press  .     v  ;    .^V 

MOSCOW  -  Opening  the  espionage  trial 
against  U.S.  businessman  Edmond  Pope,  a 
Moscow  judge  agreed  Wednesday  to  an  inde- 
pendent medical  examination  to  determine 
whether  the  American  is  healthy  enough  to 
remain  in  prison. 

Pope,  a  retired  U.S.  Navy  officer  from  State 
College,  Pa.,  was  arrested  in  April  by  Russia's 
Federal  Security  Service  on  charges  that  he 
tried  to  buy  plans  for  a  high-speed  Russian  tor- 
pedo. He  faces  up  to  20  years  in  prison  if  con- 
victed. 

The  54-year-old  Pope  -  who  has  been  treated 
for  a  rare  form  of  bone  cancer  -  says  he's  inno- 
cent. The  United  States  has  called  repeatedly 
for  his  release  from  Moscow's  Lefortovo 
prison,  where  he  has  been  held  for  six  months. 
U.S.  ofllcials  have  warned  that  the  case  could 
discourage  American  investment  in  Russia. 
Russian  officials  have  responded  by  saying 
American  criticism  amounts  to  meddling  in 
Russia's  legal  system. 

Pope's  lawyer,  Pavel  Astakhov,  told 
reporters  at  the  Moscow  city  court  that  he  did 
not  see  the  26-page  indictment  until 
Wednesday,  and  that  Pope  had  not  been  per- 
mitted to  study  it  closely  because  it  was  based 
on  classified  documents. 

The  judge,  Nina  Barkina,  is  to  read  the 
indictment  at  the  next  session,  on  Friday. 

Barkina  ordered  the  defense  to  submit  by 
Friday  the  names  of  doctors  they  want  to  exam- 
ine Pope.  Astakhov  said  he  would  insist  on  an 
American  doctor  -  a  request  that  has  been 


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tw«»» •  nn 


k PASADENA 

Laemmle's  Playhouse  7 
(626)844-6500 


.IMy  Brain  Ntws 


Tlwnday,  October  19, 2000        9 


WHAT'S 


IT'S     xTHIS         0) 

aTTWEEK(r 

f    Mj  I  l.    Oct.  19-35,  12000        ,  ©s 


Dvl.  of  ArchRMure  t  Urtan  DMigri 

•w«i.«id<ietMdu  •  US.Csas 

OtptofOMign 

wmm  rtMl|n.utte.»>lu  »  »a».«OOT 

Oapt.  of  Bhnomuiicatogy 


••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••I 


VISrr  THESE  GREAT  WEBisiTES 


«wwAMlu<ela.adu  •  sas>«M1 
Fkn  a  Tatmiaon  ArctW* 
wwwxlmnia.uola.adu  •  a06Jbn 
HammtrMuMun 

iMmnar  jicla.«lu  •  443.7000 


UCLA  Pwlorming  Arts 
www.p»rlnnwln»«U  mla  whi » «fc»tOI 

0^il.«(Muiic 

wwwjwlc  uc<a.»du  «  MMTtI 

Dapl.  o(  WwM  Aitt  ft  CuKurw 

WWW.MWB  MCli  tllU  ♦  SIBJOOI 

UCLA  C«*nl  T)cfc«  Office 
www.dojidaadu  •  82S.2101 

UCLA  Ptrforming  Arts  S<ud«nt  ConmMlaa 
www.MajNla«du  •  aiSJast     ,. 


UCL^^^ 


\ 


Tbursdaymm^  19 

UCLA  Fowler  Museum 
presents 

Rghting  With  Art: 

Apptiquid  Rags  of  the 

hmtt  Asaf  0 

fj|38pii*FMlir  Museum 

fMiipiliH  MM  to  2Di 


On  gf  te  most  dyimic  and  potent  art 
hnin  of  the  Fante  Asato.  ttca  brightly 
caiored  flags  pair  visual  images  with  verbal 
proverbs. 

UCIA  Film  i,  lelevisian  Ardm 

presents 

Botti  Sing.  Gotta  Dtnee: 

Uiacals  hmnund  tie  Worid 

East  Side  Story 
Hot  Summor 

73Qpii,lMtslrM|ttTbiatir 

0  OBMnl  t4  sMM  (Nth  NO  Mri 


UCLA  Hammer  Museum 

presents 

Design  Diatogue 

A  Gmivarsation  with 

Paul  F.  Cummins  and 

Thorn  Mayne 

7p*llMRir  Museum,  Frit 

SMtiag  ii « t  fireHxw.  firat-iarvid  kaiti 
Modirttd  by  Frances  Anderton.  the  three 
pnlMl  wH  discuss  issues  in  cneating 
successful  environments  for  learning, 
using  Mayne's  architacture  as  a  point  of 
depvhie 

Dept  of  Ethnomustcology 
presents 


Aramlra:  Tarantisino 
and  Traditional 

Saiantina  Music"  and 
Alassandra  Balloni: 
Tarantata:  Oanca  of 
tho  Andant  Spidor" 

lin|a*OstiiMI.SdMiilif| 

tlO  gNwai  ta  to  UCU  itidenb.  lanily 
airi  Mff  go  KM!  It  AoMi  al  in  door) 

Pridaymmfi?i\ 

UCU  Perfonning  Arts 
presents 

MOTI  ON  MUSI  MUVIiy  VMH 

iUidni  McOonaid 

Meet  the  Artist 
S:30-7pa-MNiibeii|1343 

Ihis  three-time  tony  vvinnef's  "overs«ed 
talmt'    passion    and    charisna    have 
aNmheknid  t»  theater  world  Ihe  New 
M  Tims  says  her  operatic  meuo 
aoprano  makes  you  beliew  in  a 
musical  hihire. 


Saluniay  nmmji 

UCLA  Flm&leieflsion  Archive 
presents 

Hilmhi  Wash 

Puisuod 
TiMEnfortor 

7J0pR,JaieslrM|isT)wlv 

tt  gaiwit  t4  «i*M  (M«  10)  Md 


SaturdayQmm  21 

UCLA  Petfcrming  Arts 
presents 

Whirling  Dervishes 

WoWwJ^Bw  WW  ■•■^1      IpHI 

damelu  Reea,  SdNenfterg  Music 

CliliilUp«7»m«JapP>fptr 
Tkntei;Scfeeeiihefg  Music  1^ 

MitaferiiaiTlnMdMW-  :. 
MNMRi*8pa«0stiildl 

Gaatfit,  t4S.  19  siydmb  (kdhd  aaMMy) 

Believing  that  art  has  the  power  ta  uplift 
the  spirit  to  realms  above,  liittiey's 
mystical  Sufis  perfonn  their  trance-Hie 
nrhiriing  in  rewrence  to  a  higher  power  -  a 
pmfound  and  iprfbindkHi  drama  of  taith. 


•p. 


UCLA  Peffornwg  Arts 
presents 

An  Evening  with 
Audra  IMcOonald 

Cntirttve  •  7pm  •  RoycelSO 


Jp«lifnliiH 

6mni  $50,  SMnt  TUMI  ta 


Pest^enuKeOiscBdii 

mtmta 

Please  lalai  to  10/20  Jsttigs  tor  descrlpllon 

UCLA  Fowler  Museum 

presents 

•A  World  of  Arf  Family  Workshop 


Painting  Mfords 


fVHto 


CtoriM- 


viauake  the  words  of 
and  translate  them  into 
mages 

UCLA  Performing  Arts 
presents 

Berlin  Philharmonic 

Wind  Quintet 
with  Jon  Naicamatsu 

GiiMlap*6pm«JaiPlppr 
Tlnkr,  Sdieenberg  Music  BIdg. 


.Msl 

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:~J 


Dady  Bruin  News 


OaiiyBnimNnn 


Thursday,  October  19, 2000       11 


to  firing  of  office  aides 


lehrer  captures  nation  with  moderation 


TESTIMONY:  Investigator 
says  no  intent  to  deceive 
means  no  prosecution 


ByPWeYost 

The  Associated  Press 

WASHINGTON  Independent 
Counsel  Robert  Ray  concluded 
Hillary  Rodham  Clinton  gave  "factu- 
ally false"  testimony  when  she  denied 
having  a  role  in  the  White  House 
travel  office  firings  His  final  report 
Wednesday  gave  ammunition  to  her 
Senate  rival  three  weeks  before 
Election  Day. 

Ray  said  he  decided  not  to  prose- 
cute Mrs.  Clinton  because  he  could 
not  prove  she  intended  to  deceive  or 
even  knew  that  her  contacts  with 
White  House  aides  had  instigated  the 
May  1993  firings. 

But  he  wrote  that  the  evidence 
established  beyond  a  reasonable 
doubt  that  Mrs.  Clinton,  during  eight 
separate  conversations  with  senior 
presidential  aides  and  advisers, 
helped  prompt  the  firings  of  seven 
White  House  travel  office  workers. 

The  dismissals  spurred  one  of  the 
earliest  controversies  of  her'  hus- 
band's presidency. 

"Mrs.  Clinton  ...  played  a  role  in 
the  decision  to  fire  the  employees  and 
thus,  her  statement  to  the  contrary 
under  oath  to  this  olTice  is  factually 
false,"  Ray  concluded  in  a  report  that 
divulged  testimony  she  gave  to  prose- 
cutors. 

Ray  wrote  that  she  made  "factual- 
ly inaccurate"  statements  to  criminal 
investigators  and  Congress  about  the 
matter. 

Locked  in  a  tight  race  for  a  Senate 
seat  from  New  York,  Mrs.  Clinton 
dismissed  the  findings  during  a  cam- 
paign stop  in  Syracuse,  N.Y.  "Most 
New  Yorkers  and  Americans  have 


made  up  their  minds  about  this,"  she 
said. 

Asked  if  she  was  concerned  about 
the  report's  release  so  close  to  the 
election,  she  added;  "That's  some- 
thing I  have  no  control  over." 

Her  attorney,  David  Kendall, 
immediately  assailed  the  prosecutor's 
conclusions  as  "highly  unfair  and 
misleading." 

"The  suggestion  that  Mrs. 
Clinton's  testimony  was  'factually 
inaccurate'  as  to  her  role  in  this  mat- 
ter is  contradicted  by  the  final  report 
itself,  which  recognizes  she  may  not 
have  even  been  aware  of  any  influ- 
ence she  may  have  had  on  the  firing 
decision,"  Kendall  wrote  in  reply  to 
the  report. 

Rep.  Rick  Lazio,  Mrs.  Clinton's 
Republican  opponent  in  the  Senate 
race,  seized  on  the  report  to  raise  new 
questions  about  credibility. 

"We  believe  that  character  counts 
in  public  service  and  ...  we  believe 
that  integrity  needs  to  be  restored  in 
our  public  servants,"  Lazio  said. 

The  report  cited  several  former 
White  House  officials  for  being  unco- 
operative, among  them  former  White 
House  chief  of  staff  Mack  McLarty; 
former  deputy  chief  of  staff  Harold 
Ickes;  Lisa  Caputo,  Mrs.  Qinton's 
former  press  secretary;  Patsy 
Thomasson,  a  former  deputy  in  the 
White  House  Office  of 
Administration;  and  Jeff  Eller,  a  for- 
mer deputy  press  secretary. 

Ickes  told  prosecutors  he  recalled 
nothing  about  a  two4iour  meeting 
eight  days  before  the  travel  office  fir- 
ings with  Hollywood  producer  Harry 
Thomason,  a  key  figure  in  the  contro- 
versy. At  the  time,  Ickes  was  a  private 
attorney.  Prosecutors  said  Eller 
claimed  a  lack  of  memory  more  than 
200  times  in  less  than  two  hours  of 
grand  jury  testimony.  In  a  written 

SceaiNT0l|,pa9ei9 


ATTENTION:  Some  wonder 
if  host  could  have  elicited 
better  candidate  responses 


By  David  Baudcr 

The  Associated  Press 

NEW  YORK  -  Jim  Lehrer  was 
clear  about  his  mission  moderating 
the  three  presidential  debates:  The 
candidates  should  get  the  attention, 
not  him. 

He  wasn't  entirely  successful. 
While  his  sober,  respectful 
approach  to  the  job  drew  praise,  some 
critics  grumbled  that  Lehrer's  ques- 
tions weren't  pointed  enough  to  throw 
George  W.  Bush  and  Al  Gore  off  their 
preprogrammed  responses  and  that 
he  should  have  kept  them  on  a  tighter 
leash. 

The  host  of  the  "News  Hour"  on 
PBS  also  had  to  open  Tuesday's  third 
debate  with  an  apology  for  a  misstate- 
ment in  the  second. 

Lehrer  was  responsible  for  all  of  the 
questions  in  the  first  two  debates.  He 
chose  audience  members  to  ask  ques- 
tions on  Tuesday,  although  he  jumped 
in  for  clarifications.  One  of  those 
tiines  provoked  a  testy  exchange 
between  Bush  and  Gore  that  was 
played  frequently  on  Wednesday 
morning  news  shows. 

"I  think  Jim  is  a  graceful  man," 
ABC's  Peter  Jennings  said.  "He  does 
not  make  anybody  sweat.  The  envi- 
ronment he  tries  to  create  for  the 
debate  is,  'This  is  a  serious  moment. 
The  best  thing  I  can  do  is  to  get  people 
to  talk  about  themselves  and  their 
issues.'" 

Several  of  his  questions  were  direct, 
with  little  preamble.  "Do  you  believe, 
in  general,  that  gays  and  lesbians 
should  have  the  same  rights  as  other 
Americans?" 

Or,  "Would  you  support  a  federal 
law  banning  racial  profiling  by  police 
and  other  authorities''" 

Lehrer  also  asked  opert-ended  or 
broadly    philosophical     questions. 


®@w 


T  ME 


The  AsKxiaicd  Press 

Moderator  Jim  Lehrer  talks  to  the  audience  before  the  third  presi- 
dential debate  at  Washington  University  Tuesday,  Oct.  1 7  in  St.  Louis. 


designed  primarily  to  get  each  candi- 
date to  talk.  He  opened  the  second 
debate  by  asking  Gore  and  Bush 
about  their  guiding  principles  in  exert- 
ing U.S.  power  all  over  the  world.  .; 
Bill  O'Reilly,  the  combative  Fox 
News  Channel  talk  show  host,  said 
those  queries  frequently  provoked 
campaign  speeches  instead  of 
thoughtful  responses  from  Bush  and 
Gore. 


"I  think  it's  important  that  you 
come  up  with  more  creative  questions 
and  more  pointed  questions," 
O'Reilly  said. 

Lehrer  said  he  anticipated  criti- 
cism, considering  how  close  the  race 
is.  He  said  he  had  to  make  judgment 
calls  on  the  ffy,  and  although  it  could 
be  argued  some  were  right  and  some- 
wrong,  the  debates  were  "a  good  exer- 
cise for  democracy". 


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12       Thursday,0ctoberl9,2000 


Daily  Bruin  News 


DOW 

From  page  1    •    ■  ■  v    V 

potentially  explosive  situation,"  he 
said 

Although  1 0.000  has  come  to  be  seen 
as  a  benchmark  for  the  health  of  the 
economy  in  recent  months,  Brennan 
cautioned  against  viewing  it  as  such. 

Wednesday's  drop,  while  dragging 
the  Dow  into  the  quadruple  digits,  still 
only  amounted  to  a  loss  of  1.14  percent. 

"This  is  a  small  amount  for  a  given 
day,"  Brennan  said.  "The  market  was 
clearly  too  high,  and  now  we  are  getting 
a  dose  of  reality." 

The  reason  behind  IBM's  disap- 
pointing performance  was  that  it  did 
not  meet  the  high  earnings  the  compa- 
ny forecasted  earlier,  according  to 
Brennan. 

Malt  Woelbern,  a  nrst-year'studenl 
at  The  Anderson  School,  said  he  was 


not  surprised  by  the  drop. 

"1  saw  it  coming.  I  didn't  know  it 
closed  at  that  amount,  but  I  wasn't  sur- 
prised," he  said. 

As  for  stockholders  themselves,  first- 
year  Anderson  School  student  Zack 
Sterngold  said  he  is  not  worried  about 
his  portfolio. 

"I  have  faith  in  my  companies,"  he 
said. 

Sterngold  said  he  has  a  biotechnolo- 
gy and  technology  portfolio  and  that 
they  are  "hanging  in  there." 

The  Nasdaq  composite  index,  which 
is  composed  mostly  of  technology 
stocks,  also  dropped  by  42.40  points, 
which  amounted  to  a  1.32  percent  loss. 

"The  expectations  were  that  there 
was  a  lot  of  money  to  be  made  on  the 
Internet,"  Brennan  said.  "This  was 
completely  out  of  line." 

With  reports  from  Daily  Bruin  wire 
services. 


CAMPAIGN      . 

From  page 5  :;  .    '  '■■'.; r^ 

win  the  presidency  without  the 
Golden  State. 

The  decisions  are  critical  in  a 
race  that  could  be  the  closest  since 
John  F.  Kennedy  defeated  Richard 
Nixon  in  I960.  In  national  polls  and 
the  race  for  state  electoral  votes,  the 
contest  is  either  tied  or  Bush  holds  a 
slight  edge. 

The  end  game  comes  amid  rising 
uncertainty  about  America's  peace 
and  prosperity.  Even  as  Gore  made 
the  economy  the  cornerstone  of  his 
closing  message,  the  stock  market 
took  a  roller  coaster  ride  on 
Wednesday.  Turmoil  in  the  Middle 
East  and  the  terrorist  bombing  of  a 
U.S.  Navy  ship  cast  a  shadow  over 
an  otherwise  dominated-by-domes- 
tic-poiicy  campaign.         -;:.;.. 


Both  campaigns  claimed  victory 
in  the  final  debate,  though  less  parti- 
san analysts  said  it  produced  no 
winner  -  only  a  clear  contrast  for 
undecided  voters. 

•..':**Both  candidates  were  on  their 
game,"  said  Pat  Anderson,  a  GOP 
operative  in  Michigan.  "Undecided 
voters  clearly  walked  away  with  the 
impression  that  Al  Gore  was  going 
to  spend  more  money  on  social  pro- 
grams and  George  Bush  was  for 
smaller  government  and  bigger  tax 
cuts." 

Democrats  said  with  a  hint  of 
frustration  that  the  race  had 
become  a  contest  between  style  and 
substance.  While  Bush  looked 
relaxed  and  sure  of  himself,  Gore's 
own  allies  said  he  had  trouble  con- 
necting with  voters,  even  those  who 
backed  the  vice  president  on  the 
issues. 

"It's  going  to  come  down  to  an 


issues  versus  personalities  race.  I 
think  that's  good  for  us,"  Ohio 
Democrat  Jim  Ruvolo  said,  though 
he  added  that  Gore  won't  find  it 
easy  closing  the  sale.  "We  have  to 
challenge  the  American  voters  to 
say,  'Hey,  do  you  want  to  take  a  risk 
on  this  guy  Bush?  Do  you  want  to  go 
back  to  how  things  were  8  years 
ago?"' 

Gore  acknowledged  that  he 
struggled  to  find  his  voice  in  the 
debates.  "It  was  kind  of  like  the 
story  of  Goldilocks:  the  first  one 
was  too  hot,  the  second  one  was  too 
cold  and  the  third  one  was  just 
right,"  he  said. 

Quoting  from  the  third  debate. 
Gore  said  in  Iowa,  "When 
Governor  Bush  says  'of  course'  his 
plan  benefits  the  wealthiest  1  per- 
cent, I  agree  with  him.  It  was  a 
moment  of  candor.  Of  course,  my 
plan  benefits  middle  class  families." 


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PROPOSITION 


From  page  3 


still  be  in  the  state's  interest  to  do  so  in 
times  of  "peak-workload." 

Now  is  one  of  those  times,  said 
Scott  Macdonald,  the  spokesman  for 
the  Southern  California  bureau  of 
"Yes  on  35."  He  said  the  state  needs 
to  mobilize  public  and  private  engi- 
neers to  eliminate  what  he  called 
infrastructure  "gridlock"  in 
California. 

"There  is  so  much  work  to  be 
done,"  Macdonald  said.  "It'll  take 
years  to  get  through  the  pile." 

Macdonald  said  Cahfomia  u.sed  to 
do  more  contracting  to  private  com- 


panies until  a  number  of  successful 
lawsuits  brought  by  Caltrans  workers 
limited  the  hiring  of  private  architects 
and  engineers.  At  the  time,  those  law- 
suits caused  the  termination  of  IS 
earthquake  retrofit  contracts, 
Macdonald  said. 

But  Blanning  syid  California 
already  uses  a  combination  of  civil 
service  employees  and  private  sector 
workers,  and  if  the  proposition  was  to 
be  approved  by  voters  in  November  it 
would  allow  special  interests  to  soak 
into  the  fabric  of  current  constitution- 
al hiring  provisions. 

"Anytime  you  eliminate  bidding 
for  a  procedure  that  selects  the  most 
qualified  firm,  it's  an  open  door  to 
corruption,"  Blanning  said. 


Djily  Bfuin  fwws 


Thu5day,0(tober19,2000        15 


ISRAEL 

From  page  5 


on  condition  of  anonymity,  said  the 
army  believed  Arafat  could  rein  in  the 
gunmen,  but  was  skeptical  about 
whether  he  would.  He  said  the  feeling 
in  the  army  was  that  Arafat  wanted  to 
exploit  the  violence  at  least  until  a 
summit  of  Arab  states  this  weekend, 
where  a  hard  line  could  earn  him  sup- 
port. 

Meanwhile.  Israeli  security  forces 
arrested  six  Palestinians  suspected  of 
taking  part  in  the  mob  killing  of  two 
Israeli  reserve  soldiers  last  week  in  the 
West  Bank  town  of  Ramallah,  accord- 
ing to  Israeli  security  sources.  Israeli 
and  Palestinian  leaders  both  refused 
to  comment. 

Israel  radio  said  one  of  those 
tracked  down  by  Israeli  agents  was 
the  Palestinian  man  who  emerged 
from  the  killings  with  blood-coated 
hands  triumphantly  raised  in  the  air. 
The  photograph  appeared  on  news- 
paper front  pages  worldwide. 

In  Wednesday's  unrest,  Palestinian 
gunmen  fired  at  Israeli  troops  and 
rock-throwing  clashes  erupted  at  sev- 
eral friction  points  in  the  West  Bank 
and  Gaza  Strip,  injuring  more  than 
two  dozen  Palestinians. 

Also,  an  Israeli  army  officer  suf- 
fered facial  wounds  from  a  firebomb 
in  Gaza.  An  explosive  device  went  off 
as  an  Israeli  civilian  bus  passed  near 
the  Jewish  settlement  of  Gush  Katif 
in  Gaza,  the  army  said.  No  one  was 
hurt. 

A  25-year-old  from  a  village  near 
Hebron  who  suffered  a  head  wound  " 
in  Oct.  12  clashes  died  in  a  Jordanian 
hospital  on  Wednesday  No  deaths 
were  reported  from  Wednesday's 
clashes,  however  -  a  rarit>  in  the  21 
days  of  violence  that  have  left  103 
people  dead,  the  vast  majority 
Palestinian. 

High-level  Israeli  and  Palestinian 
security  otTicials  held  meetings 
Wednesday  to  implement  promises 
made  to  President  Clinton,  who  medi- 
ated at  the  summit  in  Egypt 

Israel  said  it  was  encouraged  by 
Wednesday's  developments,  and 
eased  tight  restrictions  on  the  move 
ments  of  Palestinians. 

Authorities  lifted  the  internal  clo- 
sure on  Palestinian  areas,  which  pre- 
vented residents  from  traveling 
between  towns  inside  the  West  Bank 
and  Gaza.  The  Israelis  al.so  allowed 
the  Palestinians  to  reopen  their  air- 


port in  Gaza,  and  opened  border 
crossings  to  Egypt  and  Jordan 

However,  a  general  closure  barring 
Palestinian  travel  from  the  West  Bank 
and  Gaza  Strip  to  Israel  remained  in 
effect,  keeping  many  Palestinians 
away  from  their  jobs. 

Israel's  deputy  defense  minister, 
Ephraim  Sneh,  said  Israel  would  not 
abandon  the  truce  over  low-level 
unrest. 

"We  are  experienced  enough  to 
difierentiate  between  sporadic  events 
and  a  wave  of  violence  directed  by  the 
Palestinian  leadership."  he  said. 

Arafat's  Palestinian  Authority 
declared  its  commitment  to  the  cease- 
fire with  repeated  broadcasts  on  offi- 
cial TV  and  radio  announcing  "strict 
orders  to  all  Palestinians  involved  to 
follow  through  on  the  implementa- 
tion" of  summit  agreements. 

The  announcement  was  made  on 
behalf  of  the  Palestinian  Authority, 
and  did  not  specifically  mention 
Arafat.  The  reason  was  not  clear, 
though  many  Palestinians  opposed 
Arafat's  participation  at  the  summit, 
and  a  collective  statement  suggested  a 
united  front  among  Palestinian 
authorities. 

The  broadcasts  appeared  aimed 
especially  at  militants,  including 
members  of  Arafat's  Fatah  faction, 
whose  gunmen  have  Ukcn  a  lead  in 
shooting  attacks. 

In  Nablus,  a  Fatah  leader,  Ali 


Farraj,  told  4,(500  cheering  support- 
ers that  his  faction  would  press  on 
with  the  uprising. 

"The  uprising  must  continue  The 
clashes  must  continue,"  he  said  at  the 
funeral  of  a  Fatah  activist.  After  the 
burial,  dozens  of  Palestinians 
marched  to  an  Israeli  checkpoint  and 
threw  stones.  They  were  joined  by 
several  gunmen  who  shot  ^t  Israeli 
soldiers,  drawing  return  fire. 

In  another  development,  Israel's 
right-wing  opposition  leader,  Ariel 
Sharon  -  whose  visit  to  a  disputed 
Jerusalem  shrine  touched  off  the  lat- 
est round  of  violence  -  said  he  had  no 
intention  of  joining  Barak's  minority 
government. 

Sharon,  who  has  sharply  criticized 
Barak  for  offering  concessions  to  the 
Palestinians,  said  he  would  not  con- 
sider joining  the  government  unless 
Barak  walked  away  from  talks  with 
the  Palestinians. 

Israel's  parliament  returns  from 
recess  next  week,  and  Barak  lacks  a 
majority,  making  him  vulnerable  if 
the  opposition  pushes  for  elections. 


SEIZURES 

Frompage6 

state.  Sacramento,  for  one,  already  has 
a  similar  law.  San  Francisco  lawmakers 
shelved  the  idea  last  month  afler  con- 
cluding it  was  unconstitutional. 

Without  comment,  a  majority  of  the 
high  court's  justices  declined  to  review 
the  American  Civil  Liberties  Union's 
challenge  of  the  Oakland  law.  The 
ACLU  claimed  among  other  things 
that  similar  laws  would  proliferate  with 
cities  viewing  them  as  money  making 
ventures. 

Only  justices  Stanley  Mosk  and 
Joyce  L.  Kennard  voted  to  review  the 
case. 


The  city  has  seized  about  300  cars 
under  the  law  and  keeps  the  profits 
from  their  sale. 

After  a  state  appeals  court  ruling  in 
July  upheld  the  so<alled  "nuisance 
abatement"  law,  neariy  a  dozen 
California  cities  contacted  Oakland  to 
learn  how  they  could  enact  their  own 
similar  seizure  law,  said .  Oakland 
Deputy  City  Attorney  Pelayo  Llamas. 

"The  impetus  for  the  City  Council 
was  really  complaints  from  certain 
communities  which  were  essentially 
drive-thru  sex-and-drug  bazaars," 
Llamas  said.  "People  were  sick  of  hav- 
ing lines  of  cars  in  their  streets  with  this 
activity  going  on." 

Oakland's  ordinance  is  harsher  than 
state  and  federal  fnrfpjturp  lau« 


CUBA 

From  page  4 

Cuba  insists  the  legislation  - 
already  approved  by  the  House  and 
passed  by  the  Senate  Wednesday 
evening  -  will  toughen  rather  than 
ease  the  nearly  four-decade  embargo 
against  the  island.  It  has  been 
described  in  Washington  as  the  first 
opportunity  for  American  farmers  in 
38  years  to  sell  food  to  Cuba,  as  well 
as  the  first  step  in  the  easing  of  trade 
sanctions. 

But  because  the  measure,  which 
President  Clinton  has  already  said  he 
will  sign,  bars  the  U.S.  government 
and  banks  from  financing  the  food 
sales,  Cuba  will  have  to  pay  cash  or 
get  credit  from  a  third  country. 

"In  practice,  it  will  be  totally 
impossible  to  buy  food  and  medicine 
from  the  United  States.'  read  an  edi- 
torial published  Monday  in  state 
newspapers.  In  protest,  "our  country 
will  not  buy  a  single  cent  of  food  or 
medicine  from  the  United  States,"  it 
said. 

Havana  has  complained  that 
growing  support  among  the 
American  people  to  lift  the  embargo 
has  been  eroded  in  recent  months  by 
U.S.  election-year  politics.  It  worries 
that  many  Americans  will  believe  the 
current  measure  will  do  much  more 
to  ease  sanctions  than  it  actually  will. 
Cuba  insists  on  a  total  lifting  of 
the  sanctions  imposed  in  1962  in  an 
attempt  to  squeeze  Castro's  govern- 
ment, y/^:  • 
"Down  with  the  blockader  a 
series  of  young  speakers  chanted 


Wednesday  over  a  public  address 
system  set  up  outside  the  U.S. 
Interests  Section,  the  American  mis- 
sion here.  "Long  live  the  revolu- 
tion!" 

Castro,  along  with  many  other 
marchers,  waved  small  red,  white 
and  blue  Cuban  flags  as  the  mass  of 
people  snaked  slowly  past  towering 
historic  coastal  buildings. 

Bobbing  above  the  crowd  were 
placards  bearing  portraits  of  Cuban 
independence  hero  Jose  Marti  and 
Lincoln  -  the  latter  a  revered  figure 
among  members  of  Cuba's  heavily 
black  population  for  his  liberation  pf 
American  slaves. 

The  Lincoln  portraits  were  a 
reminder  of  Cuba's  respect  for  cer- 
tain American  figures  and  its  insis- 
tence that  the  legislation  will  violate 
the  rights  of  U.S.  farmers  who  want 
to  sell  food  to  Cuba,  as  well  as  those 
of  all  Americans  who  want  to  travel 
here. 

Granma  on  Wednesday  called  the 
mobilization  a  response  "to  the 
extreme  U.S.  right  and  the  terrorist 
C'uban-American  mafia"  for  the  "sin- 
ister modifications"  in  the  proposed 
law  The  current  legislation  is  a  com- 
promise bill  backed  by  Cuban- 
American  lawmakers  and  other 
Castro  foes  in  Congress. 

Among  Havana's  biggest  com- 
plaint'- about  the  legislation  are 
tighter  restrictions  on  U.S.  travel  to 
the  island.  Most  U.S.  citizens  already 
arc  effectively  barred  from  visiting 
Cuba  because  of  spending  restric- 
tions imposed  by  the  embargo  and 
the  congressional  proposal  would 
codify  those  regulations. 


MEMORIAL 

From  page  5 

"Death  snatched  them  away  in  one 
violent,  unsuspecting  moment  while 
they  were  making  sure  America  and 
its  friends  slept  easily  in  a  dangerous 
world."  said  Defense  Secretary 
William  Cohen.  He  warned  those 
responsible  for  the  bombing,  "Our 
search  for  you  will  be  relentless." 

Army  Gen.  Hugh  Shelton,  chair- 
man of  the  Joint  Chiefs  of  Staff,  was 
more  blunt:  "Those  who  perpetrated 
this  act  of  terror  should  also  never  for- 
get that  America's  memory  is  long, 
and  our  reach,  longer." 

Besides  Cohen  and  Shelton, 
Clinton  was  accompanied  by  daugh- 
ter Chelsea,  Attorney  General  Janet 
Reno.  Cohen's  wife,  Janet  Langhart 
Cohen,  and  national  security  adviser 
Sandy  Berger.  First  lady  Hillary 
Rodham  Clinton  arrived  later  in  a 
separate  car. 

Ointon  went  directly  to  the  93- 
year-old  Pennsylvania  House,  a  small- 
scale  replica  of  Philadelphia's 
Independence  Hall,  and  sat  with  the 
grief-stricken.  Wounded  sailors,  36  in 
all,  came  to  him  on  gurneys,  on 
crut^es,  in  wheelchairs,  with  legs  in 
castiior  faces  pocked  with  injury. 

Tfcfo  sailors  injured  in  the  attack 
remain  in  Germany  undergoing  treat- 
ment* and  another  was  recovering 
from  surgery  performed  Tuesday 
night.  The  remains  of  eight  sailors  will 
arrive  Thursday  at  Dover  Air  Force 
Base  in  Delaware. 

The  president  spent  more  than  an 
hour  visiting  with  the  wounded  and 


making  his  way  slowly  around  adjoin- 
ing rooms,  talking  with  new  widows, 
childless  parents  and  parentless  chil- 
dren, many  of  whom  wore  blue-and- 
gold  lapel  ribbons  and  clutched  pho- 
tographs of  their  loved  ones. 

"There  were,  obviously,  some  tears 
and  sobbing,"  said  White  House 
spokesman  Elliot  Diringer. 

The  president  then  went  to  the  cer- 
emony at  Pier  12,  which  was  sur- 
rounded by  the  McFaul,  the  destroyer 
USS  Ross  and  aircraft  carriers  USS 
Enterprise  and  Eisenhower.  In  the 
stories  told  by  the  families,  Clinton 
said,  he  could  hear  the  pride  of  the 
first  time  they  saw  their  loved  one  in 
uniform,  or  "the  last  time  you  said 
goodbye." 

Clinton  pointed  out  that  the  dead 
included  Electronics  Technician  1st 
Class  Richard  Costelow  of 
Morrisville,  Pa.,  who  had  worked 
with  the  White  House 
Communications  Agency,  helping  to 
update  its  communications  systems. 

"All  these  very  different 
Americans,  all  with  their  different  sto- 
ries, their  lifelines  and  love  ties, 
answered  the  same  call  of  service  and 
found  themselves  on  the  USS  Cole," 
Clinton  said.  "Their  tragic  loss 
reminds  us  that  even  when  America  is 
not  at  war,  the  men  and  women  of  the 
military  still  risk  their  lives  for  peace." 
Clinton  a.sked  Americans  to 
"thank  God  today  for  the  lives,  the 
character,  and  courage  of  the  crew  of 
the  USS  Cole." 

The  House  and  Senate  passed  reso- 
lutions Wednesday  honoring  the  USS 
Cole's  crew  and  condemning  the 
attackers. 


RUSSIA 

From  page  8 

denied. 

"Otherwise,  it  will  be  another 
farce,  another  fiction."  Astakhov  said. 
He  suggested  that  prison  doctors  who 
have  said  Pope  is  healthy  have  ignored 
the  cancer  concern. 

Astakhov  also  demanded  a  new 
translator,  saying  the  one  at  the  hear- 
ing might  be  biased  because  he  is  from 
the  Federal  Security  Service,  the 
agency  that  has  lodged  the  charges 
against  Pope.  He  said  Pope  might 
refuse  to  testify  because  of  the  transla- 


tor. 

The  lawyer  said  Pope  doubted  the 
accuracy  of  the  translation  of  the 
indictment,  which  he  was  permitted  to 
see  three  times  -  once  when  he  signed 
it  and  on  two  other  occasions  when  he 
was  allowed  to  read  it  for  an  hour. 

The  court  hearing  was  closed,  and 
U.S.  Embassy  officials  were  not  per- 
mitted inside.  Only  Astakhov 
addressed  reporters  gathered  outside. 

"At  this  stage  our  concern  is  about 
the  trial  process,  about  the  lack  of 
information,"  U.S.  Undersecretary  of 
State  Thomas  Pickering,  who  was  in 

Moscow  for  hilaliral  \a\V^  nr)  t^Tf^T- 

ism.  said  at  a  press  conference. 


When  the  Bruins  score, 

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REPORT 

From  page  1 

Angeles  transfer  everything  found  on 
the  streets  to  the  bay  without  any  filter- 
ing mechanism. 

As  a  result,  overwatering  lawns 
where  pesticides,  herbicides  or  fertiliz- 
ers have  been  used,  cleaning  with 
hoses,  and  washing  cars  on  the  street, 
all  contribute  to  pollution  in  Santa 
Monica  Bay,  the  report  found. 

UCLA  calculates  how  much  water 
should  be  used  each  day,  taking  into 
account  the  humidity  and  temperature, 
to  mitigate  runoff.  In  addition,  toxic 
runoff  at  some  of  the  campus  factories 
goes  into  a  clarifier  that  traps  certain 
chemicals,  said  Rich  Ohara,  senior 
superintendent  of  grounds. 

Clean-up  crews  are  called  in  for 
large  or  toxic  spills,  he  said 

"Everything  else  just  goes  througji,'' 
Ohara  said. 

Though  UCLA  uses  street  sweepers 
(which  retain  trash)  to  clean  parts  of 
campus,  water  is  used  to  clean  areas 
like  Bruin  Walt  where  students  leave 
gum  on  the  sidewalk  and  spill  soda. 

"We  get  a  lot  of  spillage  on  campus," 
Oharasaid.    ^      ;"     »::  ; 

He  added  that  UCLA  uses  high 
pressure  hoses  which  cut  down  on 
runoff  by  spending  only  about  two  gal- 
lons a  minute  as  opposed  to  12  with  a 
regular  hose. 

Researchers  say  problems  arise 
because  people  don't  imnriediately  see 
the  impact  their  actions  have  on  the 
environment,  since  most  effects  are 
long-term. 


The  Study  also 

examined  local  area 

drinking  water,  air 

toxins  and  coastal 

water  quality. 


Also,  many  people  view  environ- 
mental damage  as  something  done  by^ 
large  companies,  but  researchers  note 
that  problems  are  created  at  every  level. 
"Global  warming  is  connected  to 
the  individual  behavior  because  the 
individual  makes  the  decision  as  to 
what  car  to  buy  or  how  energy  emcient 
their  home  will  be,"  said  Richard 
Turco,  director  of  the  lOE. 

"On  the  other  hand,  it's  an  issue  of 
business  because  big  business  generates 
the  products  that  cause  these  prob- 
lems," he  continued. 

Likewise,  he  said  the  problem 
becomes  global  because  all  countries 
damage  the  environment  one  way  or 
another. 

"If  you  look  around,  things  look 
pretty  good,  campus  is  beautiful,  the  air 
is  good,  but  on  a  global  scale,  things  are 
slipping,"  Turco  said. 

The  study  also  examined  local  area 
drinking  water,  air  toxins  and  coastal 
water  quality. 

Every  five  years,  lOE  members 
hope  to  reexamine  each  issue  in  the 
report  to  see  whether  things  have 
improved  or  degraded  in  quality. 

Additionally,  members  of  the  FOE 
hope  to  expand  the  program  someday 
mto  a  fulMledged  school  to  further 
study  these  programs.  Currently,  the 
institute  is  more  of  a  cross-disciplinary 
group  of  professors  working  on  these 
issues. 

Turco  noted  that  when  it  comes  to 
environmental  studies,  people  involved 
in  nearly  evei^  aspect  of  campus  from 
business  to  physical  and  biological  sci- 
ences to  law  can  be  included. 

The  report's  editors  have  a  list  of 
issues  they  hope  to  address  in  upcom- 
ing years,  including  transportation, 
green  house  gas  emissions  and  water 
reuse. 

'These  arc  big  Gordian  knot  prob- 
lems that  have  many  facets,"  said  co- 
editor  Arthur  Winer  referring  to  the 
legendary  knot  Alexander  the  Great 
cut  with  his  sword  to  become  king  of 
Asia. 


HISTORY^ 

Frompagei     )     vv    .'■  j-   '  ' 

called  'moral  turpitude,*"  he  contin- 
ued. "You  had  to  be  of  sound  moral 
character  to  be  a  UC  student." 

During  the  first  GALA  meetings 
-there  was  even  concern  of  whether 


■      or  not  members  should  write  their 
real  names  on  their  name  tags. 
"In  the  beginning,  we  were  the 
'  only  crganization  that  was  overtly 
tailored  to  the  LGBT  community," 
said  GALA  secretary  and  sixth-year 
linguistics  student  Brenton  Jaimes. 
The  LGBT  Campus  Resource 
Center,  established  in  1995,  created 
another    resource    for    students, 
whether  they  are  gay  or  straight. 

"There  are  plenty  of  heterosexual 
students  who  are  looking  for  infor- 
mation to  better  understand  their 
(LGBT)  roommates,  parents,  sib- 
lings and  friends,"  Leider  said. 

To  celebrate  National  Coming 
Out  Month  in  October,  the  center  is 
sponsoring  both  workshops  and 
speakers.  Judy  Shepard,  the  mother 
of  the  Wyoming  college  student  who 
was  murdered  a  year  ago  because  he 
was  gay,  will  be  speaking  Oct.  30. 

In  June,  the  center  holds 
"Lavender  Graduation"  to  recog- 
nize the  accomplishments  of  LGBT 
students  who  are  graduating. 

During  the  1990s,  thematic 
LGBT  groups  on  campus  such  as  La 
Familia  for  Latino  students  and 
Mahu  for  Asian,  South  Asian  and 
Pacific  Islander  students  also 
emerged  to  cater  to  a  more  ethnical- 
ly diverse  campus. 

"We  all  have  a  history  with  each 
other,"  said  La  Familia  member 
XochitI  Marquez.  "All  of  the  organi- 
zations support  each  other  and  we 
try  not  to  confiict  with  each  other's 
meetings." 

Currently,  there  are  10  LGBT 
groups  on  campus,  including  orga- 
nizations in  the  UCLA  School  of 
Law  and  The  Anderson  School  at 
UCLA. 

"They  serve  as  good  support 
mechanisms  for  students,"  Aubin 
said.  "Many  have  weekly  rap  groups 
to  discuss  issues  that  are  impor- 
tant:" 

Although  there  have  been  strong 
attempts  at  promoting  understand- 
ing and  awareness  of  LGBT  issues 
on  campus,  not  everyone  has  been 
supportive. 

Earlier  last  week,  officials  caught 
someone  tearing  up  a  poster  at  the 
GALA  office,  said  Steven  P. 
Waldon,  second-year  political  sci- 
ence student  and  GALA  finances 
officer.  There  have  also  been  inci- 
dents of  vandalism  in  the  past  to  the 
doors  of  the  GALA  and  TenPercent 
offices. 

But  not  all  incidents  of  homopho- 
bia are  overt. 

"When  you  have  such  a  diverse 
campus,  and  you  have  people  who 
njipy  have  not  been  aware  of  gay  or 
l^fbian  classmates  ...  they  come  to 
cMmpus  and  sometimes  don't  realize 
sane  of  the  insensitivity,  something 
thwt  might  not  be  malicious  but 
could  be  hurtful,"  Aubin  said 

With  the  upcoming  elections,  the 
LGBT  community  faces  added  con- 
cern, he  continued. 

"It  always  gets  a  little  more  diffi- 
cult during  an  election  year  when 
political  candidates  discuss  families 
and  the  family  issue,"  Aubin  said. 
"Gay  and  lesbian  families  do  exist, 
and  not  all  political  beings  speak  to 
that  issue." 

Jaimes  said  he  hoped  that  some 
day,  sexual  orientation  will  be  a  non- 
issue.  He  said  he  advocates  having 
stronger  role  models  out  in  the  pub- 
lic. 

"We're  infiucnced  so  much  by 
the  media,  and  up  until  recently, 
everyone  you  saw  on  TV  that  was 
gay  or  lesbian  was  portrayed  in  a 
stereotypical  way,"  Jaimes  said. 
"Hopefully  we  can  help  all  students, 
gay  and  straight  alike,  to  see  that 
there  is  more  to  a  gay  irirntity  than 


what  you  see  on  T.V." 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Thunday,  October  1 9, 2000       1 7 


"M: 


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$2.00  Off 

TUESDAYS 


Exdudas  S«cMiant 


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We  're  coming 
to  see  you  Oct  24! 

Or  Rosette  Martinez  will  meet  with 
UCLA  siurients  Tuesday,  Oct  24,  in  front 
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18       Thursdiy,  October  19,2000 


■Daily  Bruin  N«ws 


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Start  Your  Academic  Career! 


^  ^       Join  the  UCLA  Catalyst  Mentorship  Program  where  you  will  be  matched 
with  a  professor  or  graduate  student  in  the  life  or  physical  sciences  to 
^    explore  a  world  of  options. 


Informational  Meetings: 

Thursday,  October  19, 4-5pm,  2  Dodd  Hall 

Tuesday,  October  24, 4-5pHi,  5301  Life  Science  Bldg. 


Applications  are  available  at:  •  ;         :   .    ; 

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October  28, 1 2:30-4:30  p.m. 
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Workshops  are  taught  by  certified  Instructors  from  the  nationally  recognized 
Los  Angeles  Commission  on  Assaults  Against  Women  (l^CAAW) 
For  more  Information  about  advanced  self-defense  training  or  classes  for  men.  ' 
please  call  The  Center  for  Women  &  Men  at  310-825-3945 

FREE  to  all  UCLA  Students,  Staff  and  Faculty!! 

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•  -  •     in  collaboration  with  the  Student  Welfare  Commission 

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PoidfofbyUSAC 


TEACH-IN 

From  page  f;    ; 


many  dressed  in  riot  gear  -  but  Spiegd 
said  the  leader's  visit  had  been  cleared 
by  both  Israeli  and  Palestinian  security. 
Although  Israeli  Prime  Minister 
Ehud  Barak  should  have  had  the 
courage  to  say  no  to  the  visit,  Spiegel 
said,  Palestinians  made  a  "terrible  mis- 
take" by  not  not  reacting  to  it  calmly 

Doing  so  would  have  pushed  the 
peace  process  forward,  he  said, 
because  Israeli  opponents  to  the 
process  would  have  been  undercut. 
The  Palestinians  would  have  effective- 
ly demonstrated  that  "any  Jew  could 
go  up  there,"  easing  public  fears  about 
the  viability  of  coexistence. 

Spiegel  added  that  Palestinian 
leader  Yasir  Arafat  could  have  pre- 
vented the  violence  on  the  part  of 
Palestinians,  saying  that  the  leader  was 
"ready  to  roll"  by  closing  school?  and 
using  clerics  for  his  purposes. 

"Sharon  helped  him  out,"  Spiegel 
said. 

The  professor  added  that  he 
believed  Arafat  had  been  ready  for 
confrontation  ever  since  this  summer's 
Camp  David  summit,  in  which 
President  Qinton,  Arafat  and  Barak 
met  this  summer  -  producing  no 
agreement. 

Arafat,  said  Spiegel,  passed  up  a 
"generous  offer"  by  Ehud  Barak  at  the 
summit.  As  an  example,  the  professor 
mentioned  an  Israeli  offer  of  a  portion 
of  natural  gas  deposits  in  the 
Mediterranean  Sea,  as  well  as  billions 
of  dollars  in  aid  offered  by  the  United 
States  and  other  countries. . 

But  Spiegel  said  Israel  has  taken 
missteps  loo,  never  understanding  the 
impact  of  Jewish  settlers  in  the  West 
Bank,  whom  he  referred  to  as  "unguid- 
ed  missiles."  Also,  the  rubber-coated 
bullets  Israelis  used,  he  said,  were  not 
appropriate  for  use  on  children. 

"I  think  there's  no  question  that 
both  sides  made  misukes,"  said 
Spiegel. 

He  said  the  recent  violence  should 
not  prevent  the  Israelis  and  the 
Palestinians  from  returning  to  the 
peace  process  despite  anger  that  has 
been  stirred  on  both  sides. 

"You  don't  make  peace  with  people 
you  trust,"  Spiegel  said.  "If  you  trusted 
them  you  wouldn't  have  to  make  peace 
with  them." 

Ghaith  Mahmood,  president  of  the 
Muslim  Students  Association  at 
UCLA,  was  one  of  the  people  in  the 
audience  from  whom  Spiegel  fielded 
questions. 

After  the  teach-in,  Mahmood  said 
he  believed  that  talk  at  the  negotiating 
table  is  meaningless  if  it  is  accompa- 
nied by  continuing  injustice. 

He  said  Palestinians  are  forced  to 
live  with  second-class  schools,  second- 
class  homes  and  second-class  land. 

"That  aspect  is  not  being  talked 
about,"  said  Mahmood  who  ques- 
tioned Spiegel  at  the  teach-in.  "You 
can  only  get  peace  when  two  people  on 
equal  terms  come  and  meet." 

The  MSA  was  planning  a  teach-in 
of  its  own  next  week,  he  said,  to  coin- 
cide with  ones  by  Muslim  student 
groups  at  other  campuses. 

Rabbi  Chaim  Seidler-Feller,  direc- 
tor of  the  Yitzhak  Rabin  Hillel  Center 
for  Jewish  Life  near  campus,  said  both 
sides  need  to  understand  that  it  is  in 
their  interest  to  keep  religion  at  bay 

"Justice  as  a  legal  and  religious  cate- 
gory always  has  to  be  balanced  by 
mercy  -  always  has  to  yield  to  the  inter- 
est of  life  -  and  that  is  why  religion  is 
not  an  effective  tool  for  reaching  com- 
promise," said  Seidler-Feller 

Eli  Gordon,  a  third-year  business 
and  economics  student  who  is  an 
Orthodox  Jew,  said  there  is  radicalism 
on  both  sides  of  the  political  spectrum. 
Although  he  said  radicalism  is 
"severely  disconcerting"  when  let 
loose  for  an  extended  period  of  time, 
there  will  always  be  radicals. 

He  said  the  important  thing  is  the 
peace  process. 

"There's  too  much  radicalism  out 
there  and  not  enough  undersUnding," 
Gordon  said 


Frompageli  ^    "    ;■     :; 

company  to  trace  a  call  arid  retrieve 
the  number  and  owner  of  the  line 
making  the  call. 

"Basically  it  tells  you  where  the 
call  is  coming  from,"  said  Nancy 
Greenstein,  director  of  police  com- 
munity services. 

Students  are  advised  to  get  two 
traps,  one  with  GTE/Verizon  -  the 
server  used  in  the  dorms  -  and  one 
with  Pacific  Bell. 

These  traps  can  be  obtained 
through  either  company  for  18  days 
at  no  cost.  Resetting  the  traps  after 
that  time  period  is  over  is  also  free. 

"With  two  traps  there's  a  chance 
for  greater  success  if  the  caller  calls 
back  again,"  Seplow  said. 

When  requesting  a  trap,  students 
must  provide  the  police  report  num- 
ber and  name  of  the  law  enforcement 
agency  with  whom  they  file  the 
report.  When  the  unwanted  caller's 
information  is  received,  the  phone 
company  will  send  it  directly  to  the 
police,  according  to  representatives 
of  Verizon's  security  services  depart- 
ment. 

Because  the  word  of  phone  traps 
is  just  now  beginning  to  reach  stu- 
dents, police  are  still  waiting  for 
repeat  calls  to  trace  the  source. 

According  to  Greenstein,  crank 
calls  aren't  unusual  but  most  are 
made  during  summer  months  when 
the  dorms  house  several  conference 
groups. 

"When  the  groups  leave,  the  calls 
usually  stop,"  Greenstein  said. 


Daily  Bruin  News 


Thursday,  Octol)er  19, 2000       19 


Students  wishing  to  put  a  trap  on 
their  phone  should  call  the  Verizon 
Nuisance  Call  Bureau  at  1-800-257- 
2969,  Monday  through  Friday,  8  ajn. 
toSp^fn. 


OINTON 

From  page  10 

_  rebuttal  accompanying  Ray's  report, 
McLarty  insisted  he  had  been  "com- 
pletely forthcoming  and  truthful  at  all 
times"  with  investigators,  who  asserted 
that  McLarty  had  given  varying 
accounts  of  a  conversation  with  Mrs. 
Qinton. 

Ray's  predecessor,  Kenneth  Starr, 
,  zeroed  in  on  the  travel  office  in 
January  19%  when  a  memo  by  former 
'■'■  White  House  administration  chief 
David  Watkins  surfaced  stating  that 
Mrs.  Qinton  had  been  behind  the  fir- 
ings. 

"We  ...  knew  that  there  would  be 
hell  to  pay  if ...  we  failed  to  take  swift 
and  decisive  action  in  conformity  with 
the  first  lady's  wishes,"  Watkins  wrote 
in  the  memo. 

Five  months  earlier,  Mrs.  Qinton 
testified  to  Starr's  investigators  during 
a  deposition  at  the  White  House  that 
she  had  had  no  part  in  the  purge. 
ff  Portions  of  Mrs.  Clinton's  testimo- 
mr  were  released  Wednesday  for  the 
fkst  time. 

j"  Who  ultimately  made  the  decision, 
to  the  extent  that  you  know,  to  fire  the 
employees  from  the  travel  office?" 
Starr's  investigators  asked  on  July  22, 
1995. 

"Well,  the  best  I  know  is  David 
Watkins  and  (then-White  House  chief 
of  staff)  Mack  McLarty,  I  assume, 
based  on  what  I  have  learned  since  and 
read  in  the  newspapers,"  Mrs.  Qinton 
answered. 

"Did  you  have  any  role  in  it?" 
Starr's  investigators  asked  Mrs. 
Qinton. 

"No,  I  did  not,"  she  replied 
"Did  you  have  any  input  with  either 
Mr.  McLarty  or  Mr.  Watkins  as  to  that 
decision?" 

"I  don't  believe  I  did,  no,"  the  first 
lady  said. 

Ray  submitted  his  final  report  in 
June  to  the  threejudge  panel  that  over- 
sees his  investigation.  The  panel 
released  the  report  after  giving  parties 
named  in  it  time  to  review  it  and 
respond. 


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EDrrORIAL 


UG  anti-sweatshop  policy  must  be  enforced 


LABOR:  Students  given 
little  information  about 
apparel  manufacturers 

A  woman  in  Thailand  arrives  at 
work,  dusts  aside  the  rat  feces 
on  her  chair  arid  turns  on  the 
sewing  machine  she  will  use  for  the 
next  16  hours.  Feeling  the  rain  drip- 
ping on  her  head  through  the  cracks 
in  the  roof,  she  wonders  how  she  and 
her  12-year-old  son  working  down- 
stairs will  eat  tonight.  But  the  boss 
doesn't  care.  After  all,  a  Bruin  needs  a 
sweatshirt  on  the  other  side  of  the 
world. 

It  could  be  happening. 
In  recent  years,  students  across 
the  University  of  California  and 
other  college  campuses  protested 
because  the  merchandise  embla- 
zoned with  their  college  logo  may 
have  been  manufactured  in  sweat- 
shops. They  demanded  policy 
changes  to  improve  working  condi- 


tions at  the  factories,  resulting  in  a 

new  UC  Code  of  Conduct  last 

January.  (The  code  is  available  online 

at 

http://www.usasnet.0rg/resources/C 

odes/university%20oP/o20califomia.h 

tml); 

But  rules  on  paper  mean  nothing 
if  they  are  not  enforced. 

Knowing  this,  the  UC  and  other 
universities,  including  Harvard 
University,  Ohio  State  University,  the 
University  of  Notre  Dame  and  the 
University  of  Michigan  commis- 
sioned a  report  researching  work- 
place conditions  at  major  college 
apparel  manufacturers. 

The  UC  paid  $40,000  to  partici- 
pate in  the  research. 

The  report  revealed  that  a  number 
of  apparel  manufacturers  for  the  uni- 
versities in  the  study  overlook  child 
labor  laws,  maintain  substandard 
working  conditions,  discriminate 
against  women  and  pay  less  than  liv- 
able wages.  Though  these  conditions 
are  more  prevalent  in  foreign  coun- 


tries, they  also  exist  in  the  United 
States  in  sweatshops  that  exploit  ille- 
gal immigrants. 

Now  we  know  some  UCLA  logo 
apparel  is  manufactured  under  inhu- 
mane conditions,  despite  the  UC 
Code  of  Conduct  banning  it. 

While  the  report  represents  a  posi- 
tive step  toward  enforcing  UC  labor 
policies,  it  also  limits  students'  ability 
to  take  action. 

The  report  released  to  the  public 
(http://www.ucop.edu/ucophome/co 
ordrev/policy/initiative-report.pdf) 
does  not  name  the  manufacturers 
that  violate  the  UC's  Code  of 
Conduct  and  does  not  specify  which 
university's  apparel  is  made  by  which 
manufacturer.  The  factories  are  only 
referred  to  as  "Factory  1 "  and 
"Factory  2." 

By  excluding  the  companies' 
names,  factory  managers  and  loca- 
tions, the  report  prevents  students 
from  protesting,  petitioning  or  boy- 
cotting violators. 

Due  to  the  lack  of  information. 


students  do  not  know  how  much  of 
their  apparel  is  produced  by  sweat- 
shop labor  or  the  extent  of  the  viola- 
tions. 

It  is  possible  that  one  of  the  uni- 
versities has  relatively  little  merchan- 
dise manufactured  in  substandard 
conditions  or  that  the  violations  are 
not  as  grotesque  in  comparison  with 
the  other  schools.  But  the  report  does 
not  specify.  How  then,  are  con- 
sumers supposed  to  make  informed 
decisions  about  which  producer's 
clothing  they  wish  to  purchase? 

The  \JC  is  a  large  enough  institu- 
tion to  require  change  and  lead  the 
way  for  other  universities  and  should 
not  enter  into  contracts  with  manu- 
facturers that  refuse  to  run  safe, 
humane  work  places.  Though  the 
UC's  code  supports  that  policy,  their 
actions  do  not. 

The  report  recommends  educating 
workers  about  their  right  to  livable 
wages,  a  safe  and  healthy  working 
environment  and  freedom  from  dis- 
crimination. Manufacturers  who 


demonstrate  willingness  to  change 
and  are  not  in  excessive  violation  of 
the  policy  should  be  encouraged  to 
continue  change  and  education. 

Workers  who  know  their  rights 
are  more  likely  to  fight  for  them. 

The  university  listened  when  stu- 
dents protested  sweatshop  labor  and 
created  the  new  policy.  Now,  stu- 
dents must  urge  the  university  to 
enforce  it. 


STUPYI>AiiTrai»AltT5 

These  manufiKtiam  M  Mwng  ttie  top 
college  apparel  Ikensees  and  <9R«d  to 
participate  n  the  study. 

•adidas-SakMnon 

•Apparel  Sales 

•Champk>n 

•Gear  for  Sports 

•Jansport 

•Nike 

•VF  Knitwear 

•  Zephyr  Graf-X 

•  4004  Inc  (Steve  and  Barry^) 


flP 


COMK  mviMIr  (n*)  SMitor  So* 


UCU\  graduates  not  prepared  for  life  after  college 


EMPLOYMENT:  Lack  of  hands-on 
experience  in  school  will  leave 
students  unable  to  secure  jobs 

Bruin  life  is  a  world  full  of  change.  For 
many  of  us,  freshman  year  is  a  painful, 
lonely  time  -  we  get  lost  on  Westwood's 
curving  streets,  lost  among  residence  hall 
strangers,  lost  on  the  way  to  class,  even  lost  in 
class.  But  we  bear  through  everything  with  high 
hopes  that  as  the  years  go  on,  school  life  will 
work  out  and  we  will  leave  the  university  with 
plans  and  thorough  training  for  our  future 
careers. 

For  many  undergradu- 
ates, the  only  thing  worse 
than  coming  to  UCLA  as 
a  freshman  is  leaving 
UCLA  as  a  senior  with 
those  hopes  crushed. 

Take  Joe  Bruin,  for 
example.  Joe  didn't  know 
what  he  wanted  to  major 
in  straight  out  of  high 
school.  He  enrolled  at 
UCLA  undeclared,  think- 
ing about  pre-medical 

studies.  Then  he  discovers     

dancing.  Joe  winds  up  a 

world  arts  and  cultures  student  doubling  in 

biology  just  to  learn  something  "practical." 

But  Joe's  bio  grades  are  mediocre,  and  he 
doesn't  get  into  medical  school. 

Joe  graduates  from  UCLA  waving  a  tutu  in 
defiance.  "Screw  medical  school,"  he  figures. 
After  all,  he  is  cultured. 

What  Joe  Bruin  doesn't  know  is  that  culture 
doesn't  pay  rent  in  the  United  States.  The  real 
career  world  with  its  gleaming  jaws  is  lurking 
just  around  the  corner,  waiting  to  ensnare  Joe 


in  a  mesh  of  financial  debt.  Then  it  plans  to  eat 
him  alive. 

Many  UCLA  seniors  like  myself  are  caught 
ofT-guard  by  the  same  predicament.  While 
classes  have  Uught  us  how  to  think,  they  do  not 
necessarily  provide  us  with  appropriate  work 
skills.  This  makes  us  perfect  candidates  for 


low-paying  internships  and  entry-level  posi- 
tions. And  because  we  want  to  work  our  way 
-^  -•  up  in  the  career  world, 

employers  know  we'll 
break  our  backs  for 
them  to  make  a 
good  impres- 
sion. 

The  purgatory 
period  between 
an  alumnus's 
undergraduate 
studies  and  his 
first  real  job 
can  be  nerve- 
wracking. 
Like  him, 
some  of  us 
still  haven't 


chosen  a  long-term  career  field. 

Our  lives  go  something  like  this:  we  move 
out  of  Westwood  to  the  cheapest  studio-sized 
box  we  can  find  and  drift  from  interview  to 
interview,  admitting  our  minimal  work  experi-  ". 
cnce,  and  wondering  how  we  will  ever  pay  back- 
our  student  loans.  Eventually,  we  must  sacrifice 
salary,  hours,  location,  and  sometimes  even 
personal  sanity  just  to  find  a  job. 

As  we  settle  into  work,  we  make  our  last  and 
often  most  disheartening  discovery  -  we  have 
no  idea  what  we're  doing. 


(UCLA)  teaches  students  life 
skills,  not  work  skills. 


Elonai  is  finishing  her  last  quarter  as  an  English  stu- 
dent at  UCLA  Like  a  good  columnist  she'll  stick  her 
nose  in  anybody's  business.  Fed  free  to  return  the 
favor  at  emaisha#hotniail.cont    ,. 


Education  begins  all  over  agiin. 
Some  students  are  lucky.  Some  students 
have  been  happily  running  their  campus  news- 
papen  or  programming  Web  sites  since  junior 
high.  They  know  what  they  want  to  do  with 
their  lives  and  will  never  have  to  fumble 
throu^  career  training. 

But  for  those  of  us  who  haven't  had  hands- 
on  experience  -  medical  and  law  students  who 
have  never  practiced  with  real  peo- 
ple, budding  artists  whose 
names  are  yet  unrecog- 
nized, psych  students  who 
don't  want  to  counsel.  Letters 
and  Science  students  who  haven't 
specifically  decided  on  a  career  -  we 

S«eB«l«,pa9«ls 


^^iQaac' 


J«ncn  Quon/DM/ Biutn 


How  TO  SUBMIT 
TO  VIEWPOINT 


•  Writ*  •  thrw- to  four- PJ191.  op«nlon-«yt* 
MJbMttiion  about  a  currant  twwM  on  CMo^M* 
or  In  itw  wof<d  at  brg«,  or  wrti*  a  rttpooM  to 
MnwtMng  thM  you  hwi  alMady  fMd  In  Th* 
tntn. 

•  E-ma>  tutmitHlant  to 
i^W|iiili«»iiii>i  iKto<dM.llwntiribw  to 


copy  and  pastt  your  MlNnlsiien  Into  iho  body 
of  Iht  o-maa,  or  drop  otr  a  hard  copy  of  your 
MbmiMlon  at  the  tMty  Bn*t  oinca  0  It 
MrcMMfT  HdO,  car*  o<  Jonab  LaiH. 

•  Ap^  to  bt  a  VWwpoim  colurtmM  dur- 
ing WMa  7  and  a  of  aacb  4uar«ar. 

•  Apply  to  bt  a  cartaonM  or  artkt  SMd  an 


•^nail  aiprouing  your  imarMl  to  Itto 
Vwwpoint  Aoofvu. 

A  raw  tninQft  to  ranwinbcf: 

'  M  MifamttfkMH  muft  indud*  yournama, 
phono  nimbar  and  affllatlon  wM«  UCLA.  V 
you  a»t  a  (tudani,  thoy  muM  alw  indudt  your 
nudant  O  numbor.  year  and  m^. 


•  Ytour  facts  wW  bo  cbachad;  make  tura 
rtwy  art  accural*. 

•  Vltwpotnt  l«  not  an  advartiftng  (paca  (or 
any  group  or  organtatlotK  bt  two  to  haw 
ciMrfy  arttculMd  opMotH. 

•  Wi  (OMTva  Iho  ttghl  to  adk 
far  dMliy,«nnwMr  nd  ling*. 


Daily  Brain  Vicwpehit 


ThurscUy,  October  19,2000       21 


TO  HEAD 

Today  ^  uiomissions  aeoaie  a  measure  that  woald  change  the  way  state  law  punishes  drag  offenses 


Treatment,  not  prison,  best 
solution  for  drug  offenders 


REFORM:  Proposition  36  will 
help  substance  abusers  break 
cycle  of  addiction,  criminality 

ByCrMMEvsratt 

As  a  college  student  you  can  relate  to  the 
following  analogy  regarding  why  you 
should  vote  "yes"  on  Proposition  36  on 
November  7th.  Consider  this:  a  professor 
pops  a  quiz  on  you  and  you  haven't  been 
keeping  up.  You  fail  miserably. 
Miraculously,  the  professor  decides  to  give 
the  same  test  again,  but  does  nothing  to  fur- 
ther prepare  you,  and  you  don't  devote  any 
time  to  learning  the  material.  You  fail  again. 
Without  the  tools  to  be  successful,  a  com- 
petent professor,  and  the  will  to  compre- 
hend the  material,  you  probably  will  not  be 
successful. 

Now,  consider  this:  a  person  is  arrested 
for  simple  drug  possession.  Although  no 
other  crime  has  been  committed,  this  per- 
son is  sentenced  to  a  Jail  term.  Perhaps 
this  person  has  an  addiction  problem.  In 
prison,  this  person  has  little  chance  of 
being  given  the  treatment  -  the  tools 
-to  heat  the  addiction  and  return  to 
society  as  a  contributing  member. 
They  are  released  still  addicted, 
with  a  criminal  record,  and  unable 
to  reintegrate  into  society.  They 
are  set  up  to  fail. 

Proposition  36  is  about  treat- 
ment as  opposed  to  incarceration 

Everett  graduated  from  UCLA  in  1990 
with  a  BA  in  English/American  stud- 
ies. She  is  currently  working  on  the 
Proposition  36  campaign. 


for  the  type  of  drug  offender  who  is  most 
likely  to  benefit  from  treatment. 
Proposition  36  does  not  apply  to  anyone 
who  has  committed  a  concurrent  criminal 
act  or  has  a  violent  history.  Proposition  36 
aims  to  catch  drug  addicts  before 
they  get  into  the  cycle  of  resorting 
to  harmful  and  dangerous  activity 
to  support  their  habit.  This  is  why  it 
is  called  the  Substance  Abuse  and 
Crime  Prevention  Act. 

Who  supports  Proposition  36? 
The  list  of  endorsers  is  long  and 
diverse.  A  sampling:  California 
Association  of  Alcoholism  and 
Drug  Abuse  Counselors,  California 

S«cEVBErT,|NM|e22 


Qose  reading  reveals  major 
problenis  behind  Prop.  36 


REHAnUTATION:   Proposal 
would  hurt  successful  drug 
programs  state  has  in  place 


ByJtffToncy 

Proposition  36  is  a  disturbing  les- 
son in  political  science.  I  did  my 
homework  and  discovered  that  this 
misleading  initiative  is  not  what  it 
appears  to  be,  and  I  encourage  you 
to  do  the  same.  The  lesson  I  learned 


Toney  is  a  third  year  politicai  science 
student  at  UCIA  He  worked  on  the 
campaign  against  Propositkxi  36. 


is  that  the  voters  of  California  are  being 
manipulated  by  out-of-state  millionaires  who 
have  placed  a  "Trojan  horse"  on  the  ballot. 

At  first  glance.  Proposition  36  made 
sense,  providing  treatment  instead  of  incar- 
ceration for  drug  addicts.  But  upon  closer 
examination,  I  learned  that  the  real  issue 
isn't  treatn)ent  versus  incarceration;  rather, 
it  is  effective  treatment  versus  ineffective 
treatment. 

First,  I  looked  at  who  was  funding  the  ini- 
tiative and  found  that  it  wasn't  treatment 
providers,  but  instead  three  millionaires 
known  for  their  roles  in  the  movement  to 
legalize  drugs.  I  also  learned  that 
Proposition  36  was  drafted  by  a  defense 
attorney,  again,  with  no  input  from  treat- 
ment providers. 

I  also  looked  at  those  against  Proposition 
36.  Many  respected  treatment  providers  and 
advocates,  including  the  Betty  Ford  Center, 
actor  Martin  Sheen,  the  California  District 
Attorneys  Association,  the  California 
Association  of  Drug  Court  Professionals 
and  neariy  200  judges  throughout  the  state, 
oppose  Proposition  36.  In  addition, 
many  prominent  Democrats  and 
Republicans  have  voiced  concern  about 
Proposition  36,  including  U.S.  Senator 
Diane  Feinstein,  Attorney  General  Bill 
Lockyer  and  California  Secretary  of 
State  Bill  Jones. 

Moreover,  both  the  State 
Democratic  Party  and  State 
Republican  Party  have  refused 
to  support  this  dangerous  ballot 
initiative.  Why?  Because 
Proposition  36  is  not  about  treat- 
ment. California  already  has  a 
drug  court  system  that  allows 


AMY  HAKfVOdily  Brum 


See  TONEY,  page  23 


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EVERETT 

From  page  21 

Psychiatric  Association,  CaKfomia 
Women's  Commission,  Progressive 
Jewish  Alliance,  Republican  Lit)erty 
Caucus,  Rainbow  Caucus  of  the 
California  Democratic  Party, 
Dolores  Huerta  of  United  Farm 
Woricen/AFL<:iO,  Willie  L.  Brown 
-  Mayor  of  San  Francisco,  and  the 
California  Public  Defenders 
Association. 

These  individuals  and  groups 
know  that  drug  addicts  must  be  treat- 
ed for  the  benefit  of  themselves  and 
society  rather  than  warehoused  in 
prison  at  a  cost  to  taxpayers  of 
upwards  of  $25,000  per  year.    , '    .^ 

That  brings  us  to  the  simple  eco-  ' 
nomic  issue.  In  approximate  num- 
bers, reputable  treatment  would  cost 
the  state  $5,000  a  year  per  case.  As 
stated  earlier,  incarceration  runs  the 
state  about  $25,000  a  year  per  case. 
In  the  state  of  California,  there  are 
approximately  19,700  people  in 
prison  for  simple  drug  possession 
offenses. 

Fewer  prisoners  means  no  need  ' 
for  new  prisons.  More  prison  space 
win  be  reserved  for  the  truly  violent 
criminals  who  pose  a  threat  to  soci- 
ety. Fewer  prisons  and  prisoners  is 
why  the  non-partisan  state  legislative 
Analyst  believes  that  Proposition  36 
will  save  California  taxpayers  $1.5  bil- 
lion. 

Who  opposes  Proposition  36?  The 
very  groups  that  would  benefit  from 
more  prisoners.  A  few  examples  arc 
the  California  Probation,  Parole  and 
Correctional  Association,  California 
Bail  Agents  and  the  California 
Correctional  Peace  CMTicers 
Association.  The  CCPOA  is  one  of 
the  largest  lobby  groups  in  California. 
They  have  an  obvious  vested  interest 
in  the  growth  of  the  prison  popula- 
tion and  the  development  of  new 
prison  facilities. 


mi-: 


You  don't  put  a  fire  out 

by  yelling  at  It  of"    ^ 

ignoring  it;  rather,  you 

take  quick  action  to 

douse  the  flames. 


What  do  our  opponents  say? 
Those  in  opposition  to  Proposition 
36  daim  that  the  proposition  seeks  to 
deci  iminali/e  drugs.  Not  true.  To  be 
diverted  under  Proposition  36  means 
offenders  are  convicted  of  a  felony 
and  placed  on  probation,  like  many 
other  criminals.  Proposition  36  sim- 
ply changes  sentencing;  instead  of 
incarcerating  addicts,  their  criminal      - 
sentence  is  treatment,  plus  any  other  ^  ' 
sanctions  deemed  necessary  by  the       ' 
court,  instead  of  biding  time  until  the  ' 
next  fix  while  in  jail,  an  offender  can 
work  toward  changing  a  dangerous      r 
lifestyle.  {• 

Simply  put:  you  don't  put  a  fire  ' 
out  by  yelling  at  or  ignoring  it;  rather,  ; 
you  take  quick  action  to  douse  the 
flames. 

Opponents  also  argue  that  we 
already  have  a  sufficient  system  in 
place  with  the  drug  courts.  Yet  while 
drug  courts  do  offer  alternatives  to 
prison,  currently  they  only  serve  -i 

about  2  percent  of  the  population 
that  could  qualify  for  the  program. 
Proposition  36  would  extend  the 
reach  of  the  drug  courts  and  give  a 
much  larger  population  access  to 
effective  treatment. 

Furthermore,  they  say  that 
Proposition  36  will  render  the  drug 
court  judges  powerless.  Again,  not 
true.  A  judge  will  have  the  power  to 
determine  what  treatment  program 
would  be  most  appropriate  and 
would  supervise  the  offender  until  the 
offender  was  sufficiently  recovered. 


$MimKIXN9*23 


EVERETT 

From  page  22 

Offenders  can  be,  at  the  discretion  of 
a  judge,  sentenced  to  one  to  three 
years  in  state  prison  if  they  do  not 
prove  themselves  amenable  to  treat- 
ment. 

Finally,  opponents  daim  that 
Proposition  36  opens  the  door  for  fly- 
by-night  treatment  providers  indud- 
ing  such  things  as  "online"  treatment 
programs.  This  is  simply  not  true. 
Every  treatment  provider  must  be 
accredited  by  the  state,  and  a  judge 
has  the  final  word  on  which  treatment 
provider  is  the  most  effective  for  each 
individual  offender. 
.    Who  am  I  that  you  should  take  my 
opinion  to  your  local  polling  place?  I 
am  someone  quite  like  yourself  1  am 
a  UCLA  graduate  (1990),  a  former 
public  school  educator,  someone  who 
read  the  admittedly  technical  lan- 
guage of  Proposition  36  and  came 
out  for  the  side  of  effectiveness,  fair- 
ness, and  what  would  be  the  most 
safe  and  healthy  choice  for  our  coni- 
muntty.  ■-', 

Why  should  you  care?  Because 
you  have  committed  yourself  to  high- 
er education  at  a  public  university 
and  will  make  choices  that  continue 
to  benefit  future  generations  of 
Califomians.  Because  you  are,  or  will 
soon  be,  a  taxpayer  who  cares  how 
your  hard  earned  money  is  managed. 
Because  if  you  have  ever  done  pooriy 
on  a  test  or  made  a  mistake,  you 
would  be  grateful  for  the  tools  and 
the  time  to  go  back  and  get  a  better 
grade  or  fix  the  mistake. 

A  "yes"  vote  on  Proposition  36 
will  give  medical  professionals  the 
necessary  tools  to  help  people  suffer- 
ing from  drug  addiction.  Such  treat- 
ment vnll  help  addicts  return  to  sod- 
ety  as  healthier,  more  stable  and  more 
productive  individuals. 


TONEY 

From  page  21 


drug  ofTendcrs  to  receive  treatnwnt 
instead  of  jail,  and  it's  working. 

What  Proposition  36  will  do  is 
effectively  decriminalize  the  hard 
drugs  behind  most  crime:  PCP, 
crack,  cocaine,  methamphetamine, 
heroin  and  even  "date  rape"  drugs. 
In  the  process,  it  will  cripple  our  suc- 
cessful drug  courts. 

Drug  courts  have  an  amazing  suc- 
cess rate  of  65  to  85  percent  because 
they  offer  precisdy  what  Proposition 
36  fails  to  deliver:  court-supervised 
treatment  with  regular  drug  testing 
and  consequences  that  hold  partici- 
pants accountable  with  short-term, 
jail  time  if  they  fail  to  take  treatment 
seriously. 

Proposition  36  will  spend  $120 
million  a  year  in  tax  money,  but  pro- 
hil>its  any  of  the  funds  from  t>eing 
used  for  drug  testing,  a  critical  ele- 
mem  in  effective  treatment  pro- 
gra|ks.  Despite  this,  proponents  still 
insist  on  making  the  unrealistic  claim 
thatprug  defendants  can  pay  for 
their  own  drug  testing. 

Proposition  36  also  fails  to  include 
any  licensing  or  accountability  guide- 
lines, inviting  unregulated  and  inef- 
fective treatment  by  unqualified 
operators.  It  also  limits  drug  treat- 
ment to  only  12  months,  when  it 
often  takes  much  longer  to  treat  drug 
addiction. 

But  that's  not  all.  Proposition  36 
also  prohibits  the  consequence  of 
short  term  jail  for  addicts  who  fail 
drug  tests,  stripping  drug  court 
judges  of  the  discretion  they  need  to 
keep  addicts  in  treatment. 

When  drug  court  graduates  were 
asked  what  kept  them  in  treatment, 
91  percent  said  jail  sanctions,  87  per- 
cent said  frequent  drug  testing  and 
89  percent  said  discussing  their 
progress  and  problems  with  the 
judge,  according  to  a  study  conductr 

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TONEY 

From  page  23 

cd  by  American  University. 
Proposition  36  would  eliminate  this 
"carrot  and  stick"  approach  that  is 
working. 

Actor  Martin  Sheen  said, 
"Clearly,  we  need  to  do  everything 
possible  to  help  drug  abusers  get 
treatment  so  they  can  recover  from 
their  addictions  and  get  on  with  their 
lives.  But  Proposition  36  isrt't  the 
answer.  We're  not  going  to  help  drug 
abusers  by  decriminalizing  danger- 
ous and  addictive  drugs  like  heroin, 
crack  cocaine.  PCP  and  metham- 
phelamine."  :~  - 

Moreover,  he  argues  that  getting 
rid  of  accountability  and  conse- 
quences, the  two  most  basic  incen- 
tives Tor  effective  treatment,  will  do 
nothing  to  help  drug  abusers  over- 
come their  addiction.  Yet  this  is  what 
Proposition  36  proposes  to  do. 

The  Caliromia  Association  of 
Sexual  Assault  Investigators  opposes 
this  initiative  because  even  date  rape 
drugs  are  legalized.  Under 
Proposition  36,  sexual  predators 
would  escape  a  jail  term  by  being 
diverted  into  drug  treatment  if  they 
were  found  possessing  these  danger- 
ous drugs,  even  if  they  have  a  history 
of  using  GH  B  or  other  date  rape 
drugs  on  their  victims.  This  is  a 
frightening  thought  when  you  con- 
sider the  increase  in  date  rape  across 
college  campuses. 


Proposition  36  will 
perpetuate  drug  abuse 
by  undermining  ...our 
successful  drug  courts. 


The  president  of  the  Betty  Ford 
Center,  John  T.  Schwarzlose,  said 
that  Proposition  36  is  dangerous  and 
destructive  and  could  ruin  many  lives 
by  failing  to  deliver  on  its  promise  of 
effective  treatment. 

Furthermore,  under  Proposition 
36,  "some  drug  addicts  would  be 
treated  much  like  chronic  alcoholics, 
the  skid  row  wtnos  who  are  cycled 
back  and  forth  endlessly  from  jails  to 
homeless  shelters  to  the  streets," 
(Sacramento  Bee,  Oct.  14, 2000). 
Yet  drug  abusers,  unlike  alco- 
holics, are  addicted  to  deadly  and 
unlawful  substances  that  rely  on  an 
illegitimate  market  to  meet  their 
needs.  Such  a  market  is  then  brought 
back  to  the  vulnerable  and  impover- 
ished communities  where  they  com- 
monly reside.  Without  a  doubt,  this 
will  most  likely  help  breed  more 
prostitution,  domestic  violence,  child 
abuse  and  gang  warfare.  In  addition, 
"if  the  addict  decides  to  use  metham- 
phetamine,  a  chemical  brewed  in  a 
makeshift,  dangerous  lab,  the  addic- 
tion creates  costly  environmental 
hazards  as  well,"  (Sacramento  Bee, 
Oct.  14). 

Finally,  it  becomes  evident  that'''  : 
Proposition  36  "offers  a  false 
promise  of  a  kinder,  gentler 
approach  to  drug  abuse  in  a  state 
with  the  highest  use  of  illegal  drugs. 
What  California  needs  is  more  drug 
courts,  specifically  designed  to  deal 
with  drug  offenders  on  an  individual 
basis,"  (San  Francisco  Chronicle, 
October  4). 

Such  courts  would  gather  both 
experienced  law  enforcement  offi- 
cials and  therapists  to  recommend 
and  place  certain  drugoffenden.in 
programs  that  provide  effective 
treatment  that  includes  close  moni- 
toring and  serious  consequences  for 
those  who  fail  (San  Francisco 
Chronicle,  Oct.  4). 

Proposition  36  fails  to  provide  any 
reasonable  incentive  for  drug  addicts 
to  break  the  deadly  cycle  of  being 
arrested  and  treated  over  and  over 

$«enilEll^pi(c25 


Daliy  Brain  Viewpoint 


TONEY 

From  page  24 

again.  While  addiction  and  drugs  are 
serious  problems  in  society  that 
require  a  humane  approach,  there  is 
no  room  for  nonsense  if  we  want  to 
achieve  success. 

California  needs  more  resources 
for  drug  treatment,  but  Proposition 
36  clearly  isn't  the  answer. 
Proposition  36  will  perpetuate  drug 
abuse  by  undermining  drug  testing 
and  effective  treatment  programs, 
including  our  successful  drug  court 
system. 

Don't  be  misled  by  the  wealthy 
out-of-state  backers  pushing  this  ini- 
tiative. Do  your  homework  on   -v 
Proposition  36  and  see  why  it's  tJOt 
the  right  approach  to  the  serious 
problem  of  drug  addiction. 


ELONAI 

From  page  20  :;;'*:  ^ 

are  desperate  to  find  a  lucrative 
career  for  which  we  have  some  train- 
ing. 

In  some  ways,  UCLA  curriculum 
fails  to  prepare  us  for  this  hurdle. 
While  our  classes  do  train  us  to  ana- 
lyze and  write,  few  offer  hands-on 
experience.  Most  courses  focus  on 
theory,  discussion  of  history,  and 
memorization  of  terms.  They  might 
relate  the  secrets  of  poetry  -  chias- 
mus appeals  to  a  reader's  sense  of 
aesthetics  by  reversing  a  verse's  sym- 
metry in  a  series  of  phrases  -  but 
they  don't  necessarily  teach  students 
to  write  a  good  column  on  deadline. 
In  fact,  UCLA  is  missing  several 
basic  programs  that  could  help  stu- 
dents find  a  good  career.  There  is  no 
business  major,  only  a  business  and 
economics  program  with  scant  man- 
agement courses.  A  pre-law  curricu- 
lum for  undergraduates  is  not 
offered  either.  Instead,  there  are 
only  a  few  classes  scattered  across 
departments.  The  only  journalism 
"mjyor"  offered  is  a  job  at  the  Daily 
Bruin  and  in  ASUCLA  Student 
Media. 

UCLA  coursework  simply  does  a 
poor  job  of  training  students  for  cer- 
tain fields.  The  university  teaches 
students  life  skills,  not  work  skills.  It 
could  easily  offer  students  a  more 
balanced  education  by  offering  more 
vocationally-oriented  classes,  but 
until  such  classes  are  instituted,  stu- 
dents are  on  their  own. 

Fortunately,  university  life  does 
offer  us  some  advantages.  UCLA 
offers  a  few  courses,  such  as 
Communication  Studies  185,  which 
give  students  units  for  practicing 
fieldwork.  Various  associations  offer 
job  fairs  and  career  counseling  on 
campus.  And  work  study  can  pro- 
vide students  with  the  necessary 
experience  to  successfully  apply  for 
^job  in  the  future. 
I  Students  should  start  looking 
^rly  for  a  job.  Many  employers 
require  two  to  three  years  of  experi- 
oice  in  a  similar  field  before  they 
will  consider  hiring  an  applicant. 
Landing  an  internship  for  a  stipend 
or  college  credit  can  help  students 
minimize  the  time  they  are  unem- 
ployed or  working  for  low  wages 
after  graduation. 

Taking  any  job  in  college  is  better 
than  entering  the  career  world  with- 
out an  employment  history. 
Suffering  through  entry-level  work 
while  still  receiving  parental  support 
and/or  student  loans  is  a  much  bet- 
ter alternative  than  struggling  to  pay 
bills  without  help.  Working  also  can 
help  undecided  students  figure  out 
which  career  to  pursue. 

Limbo  is  not  an  exciting  place  to 
live.  Take  it  from  someone  graduat- 
ing: prepare  for  the  career  world 
while  you  can.  Otherwise,  a  bache- 
lor's degree  is  nothing  more  than  a 
label  announcing  a  student's  medial 
social  status,  and  it  is  still  possible  to 
get  stuck  worK^ng  at  Starbucks. 


'^/iw 


Thursday,  Octobff  19, 2(X)0       25       V 


Paid  advertisement:  An  Open  Letter  to  University  Students 


Dear  Universiiy  Siudem. 

With  inany  of  you  back  in  school  afier 
summer  break.  I  would  like  (o  lake  a  moment 
to  shore  with  you  some  of  my  thoughts  oo  .  *-. 
college  life  and  education.  As  both  a  college 
professor  and  a  Ch'risiian  minister,  I  have  a 
special  place  in  my  heart  for  college  students 
and  recognize  the  strategic  moinent  this 
period  of  tune  in  your  life  represents.  Permit 
me,  if  you  will,  to  share  some  advice  about 
education  and  learning  that  I  have  come  to     . 
afTirni. 

First,  emhnutf  iht  eilucalioiml prtKess for 
all  it'x  worth.  The  best  thing  your  college 
years  can  give  you  is  a  lifelong  love  of 
learning.  Approach  learning  the  way  you 
would  approach  a  great  movie  or  delicious 
meal.  Salivate  over  your  prospects!  Indulge 
your  quest  for  knowledge!  Read  good  books 
not  because  you're  going  to  be  tested  on  them 
(a  mindset  particularly  afflicting 
undergraduates)  but  because  of  the  hidden 
riches  they  contain.  There  is  a  T-shirt  that 
reads  "So  many  books,  so  little  tiine."  Once 
you  learn  to  embmce  that  altitude,  you  will 
begin  the  process  of  education. 

Second,  learti  to  think  of  tducaliun  a\ 
t/iitstiiming  rather  than  a.v  traininn.  There 
are  two  very  difTereni  models  of  education  at 
work  today.  One  model  emphasizes  "know- 
how."  the  other  emphasizes  "how-we-know." 
One  emphasizes  knowledge  as  a  thing  to  be 
marketed  and  "used,"  the  other  emphasizes 
knowledge  as  a  means  to  personal  growth  and 
liberation.  You  will  arguably  change  careers 
several  times  in  your  lifetime,  teaming  to 
think  clearly  and  critically  (which  does  not 


iiv»in  negatively)  tnutscends  every  sphere  of 
life  and  prepares  you  lu  succeed  in  whatever 
career  path  you  choose.  At  its  best,  education 
should  make  you  a  better  person,  not  just  a 
t>etter  clinician. 

Closely  related  to  the  above  is  a  third  piece 
of  advice:  Choose  a  major  thai  you  love 
rather  than  a  major  that  will  bring  you  llu; 
most  money.  Here,  I  realize,  I  am  swimming 
upstream.  Most  college  students,  I  dare  say. 
;  are  in  school  for  the  purpose  of  securing  a 
well-paying  job.  "What  are  you  going  to  do 
with  that?"  is  a  question  often  posed  to  the 
prospective  History  w  Music  major  by  well 
meaning  friends  and  parents  concerned  with 
jobtf)rospects.  But  the  question  is  as 
misguided  as  it  is  practical.  Personally,  I 
would  rather  spend  my  life  doing  something  I 
truly  enjoy  and  make  a  little  less  money  than 
doing  something  I  tolerate  at  best  and  make 
substantially  more.  Please  don't 
misunderstand  me  here.  Money  is  important, 
but  is  it  important  enough  to  dictate  your  life 
choices? 

Fourth,  re.specl  ytnir professors,  hut 
remember  that  they  are  human,  twt.  When 
you're  an  undergraduate,  you  have  a 
tendency  to  put  your  professors  on  a  pedestal, 
to  think  that  they  pretty  much  know 
everything  about  anything.  But,  I  assure  you, 
we  do  not!  Even  today  I  am  amazed  at  how 
uninfonned  and  uncritical  professors  can  be 
outside  their  field  of  expertise.  (One  may  be 
an  expert  in  Biology  or  Chemistry  but  have  a 
very  naive  view  of  religion,  for  example.) 
Respect  your  professors,  but  don't  idolize 
them. 


'    Lasl\\/,fitui  a  place  of  worship  that  will 
encouraye,  not  discourane,  sincere  and 
honest  ifuesiioning.  Too  many  churches  set 
up  false  alternatives  and  then  force  you  to 
chmise  between  them  ("creation"  versus 
"evolution,"  for  example).  If  you  are  of  the 
Christian  faith,  find  a  church  that  will  expand 
your  faith,  nut  constrict  it;  that  will  enlarge 
your  horizon,  not  obstruct  it;  that  will 
appreciate  your  education,  not  belittle  it.  It  is 
a  wonderfully  challenging  quest  you're  on, 
and  our  congregation  would  love  to  help  you 
get  there. 

David  L  Matson,  Ph.D.,  Mimi.\ter 

,         We.ttwiHHJ Hilh  Christian  Church 

lOXOHLeConte  Avenue 

(conterofLe  Conte  andHilgard) 

'■  Worship:  Sundays.  10  A.M. 

Adult  Bible  Study:  Sundays  9  A.M. 

TuesdawK?  P.M. 


AH  Campus  Organizations! 

Registration  Week  for  all  organizations  is  4th  week  of  Fall  Quarter 

—  Get  started  on  another  exciting  year  of  campus  activities  and  progrannming 
by  registering  your  organization  at  one  of  the  23  registration  sessions  \\sXe6 
below. 


SAVE  THESE  DATES! 


Date 


Place 


Monday,  Oct  23  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Tuesday,  Oct  24  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Wednesday,  Oct  25  Ackerman  2nd  Floor  Lounge 

Thursday,  Oct  26  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

Friday,  Oct  27  Viewpoint  Conference  Room 


Registration  Times       i? 

9:30  11:0012:30  2:00  3:30 
9:30  11:0012:30  2:00  3:30 
9:30  11:0012:30  2:00  3:30 
9:30  11:0012:30  2:00  3:30 
9:30  11:0012:30 


jf 


No  reservations  are  needed!  Sinnply  have  three  of  your  organization 
representatives  attend  one  of  the  registration  sessions.  Representatives 
must  be  UCLA  students,  staff,  faculty  or  a  combination  of  these  three.  All 
three  must  attend  the  same  registration  session  and  sign-In  at  the  same 
time  ten  minutes  before  the  session. 

We  will  start  on  time....  DONT  BE  LATE!  .    - 

It  Is  highly  recommended  that  you  come  earlier  in  the  week  since  the  fater 
dates  and  times  fill  up  fast.  ^>     -    -     ' 

For  further  information,  please  call  the  Center  for  Student  Programming  at 
310-825-7041  or  e-mail  at  mveluz@saonet.ucla.edu 

THE  BEGINNING  OF  THE  YEAR  IS  THE  BEST  TIME  TO  REGISTER.  DON'T  MISS  OUT! 


L 


•  ;■■-•,  O'. 


Loose  your  luggage? 

Find  out  why  Isabella  Rossellini  and    ■ 
Maximillian  Schell  are  digging  for  buried 
baggage  in  1970  Belgium  in  Jeroen  Krabb^'s 
new  film  "Lost  Luggage  *; 


"^^immmh 


-Dally  Bruin 


Thursday,  October  19,2000 


ENTERTAINMENT 


—  27 


a 


word 


'The  Vagina  Manologtws'  offers  a  woman's^ 
view  of  their  genitalia  and  educational  facts 


ByBaifearaMcfiuira 
Daily  Bruin  Seniof  Staff 

All  women  have  one,  worry  about  it,  wonder  about  it, 
sometimes  secretly  despise  it,  and  often  refuse  to  acknowl- 
edge its  existence.  Nonetheless  have  the  courage  to  say  its 
name  -  vagina. 

Eve  Ensler's  world-renowned  theatrical  play,  "The 
Vagina  Monologues,"  explores  this  private  topic  by  ana- 
lyzing and  breaking  it  down  to  the  point  that  the  actual 
word  "vagina"  loses  its  uncomfortoble  connotation,  and 
instead  makes  all  of  the  above  disturbingly  appaicnt. 

Currently  showing  at  the  Canon  Theatre  i«  Beverly 
Hills,  the  cast  changes  every  three  weeks  to  kee|l  the  storjr 
fresh.  Current  cast  members  include  Rosie  Peret  (**  WhitI 
Men  Can't  Jump"),  Julie  Kavner,  (the  voice  of  Marrfl 
Simpson  on  "The  Simpsons"),  and  Julianna  Marguli^ 
("E.R.").  The  second  cast  promises  to  be  just  as  award 
winning:  it  stars  Carol  Kane,  Phylicia  Rashad  and 
Kimberly  Williams. 

'('The  Vagina  Monologues')  is  a  piece  based  on  inter- 
views Ensler  did  with  over  200  women  which  she  then 
turned  into  individual  monologues,"  director  Joe 
Mantello  explained  in  a  recent  interview.  "Some  are  near- 
ly verbatim,  some  are  changed  a  little,  but  they  are  on  a 
wide  variety  of  subjects,  regarding  vagin;ts.  some  are  com- 
ical, serious,  moving  -  everything." 

The  show,  however,  doesn't  follow  the  standard  format 
of  a  play.  The  actors  step  out  of  character  in  between  most 
monologues  to  laugh  at  each  other's  performances,  and 
provide  the  audience  w,^th  various  "vagina  facts,"  Such 
facts  range  from  the  upbeat;  women  have  tvuice  as  many 


A&EontheWeb 

See  all  this  and  more  at 
the  Daily  Bruin^  ;:  ,     ■ 
Website: 
www.dailybruin.uda.edu 

Thursday,  Ortober  19,2000 


The  members  of  Munkafust  (from  left  to  right).  Tony  Gr.y.  Jeos  Funke,  Evan  Brau,  and  M.tt  RimiT"" 
perform  today  at  noon  in  Westwood  Plaza.  The  band  is  currently  touring  to  promotes  its  fifth  album. 

Ljocal  Munkafust  brings  regbnal 
alternative  to  Westwood  Plaza 

MUSIC  Exploding  vans, 
expanding  fan  base  all 
part  of  the  fun  for  group 


Concert  today 


ByAnflclaSalazar 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Pop  boy  bands  aren't  the  only 
ones  that  can  draw  teenie-bopper 
girls. 

"When  we  played  this  all  ages 
show  ...  we  were  signing  CDs  after- 
ward and  stuff  and  these  girls  had  to 
leave  early  because  they  had  to  take 
the  SAT  -  it  was  pretty  cool, "  said 
Evan  Brau.  Munkafust  lead 
singcr/songwriter/guitarist,  in  a 
recent  interview. 

Born  and  raised  in  L.A.  the  boys 
of  Munkafu.st  are  making  their  way 
into  the  California  music  scene  with 
a  new  rock/alternative  album  and 
high  hopes. 

The  band  is  set  to  play  a  concert 
today  at  noon  at  Westwood  Plaza. 

The  band  is  comprised  of  Brau, 
Jens    Funke    (bass/vocals),    Tony 


Check  oift  Munkafust  In  concert 
today  at  noon  at 
Westwood  Plaza. 


Right  now,  the  band  Is 
focused  on  getting  Its 
name  and  music  out. 


Gray  (guitar)  and  Matt  Rimer 
(drums).  It's  fifth  album,  the  recent- 
ly released  "Down  for  Days"  is  in 
stores  now. 

"Its  definitely  out  there  compet- 
ing with  bigger  labels'  products  and 
that  can  be  a  problem  sometimes; 
they  dominate  the  marketplace  so  to 
say  but  1  like  to  concentrate  on 
the  music  and  having  a  good  time," 
Brau  said. 

The  band  came  together  in  1992 


and  all  its  current  members  have 
been  acquainted  since  high  school. 

"Once  you're  having  fun  all  the 
time  and  you're  not  having  any 
internal  problems  with  the  band  - 
which  I've  been  through  before  - 
once  all  that's  gone,  like  it  is  now, 
you  can  start  worrying  about  what 
direction  you're  going  to  lake  in  pro- 
moting yourself,"  Brau  said. 
"There's  no  point  in  making  the 
music  if  nobody's  going  to  hear  it." 
Munkafust  is  now  being  heard 
across  the  country. 

Regional  tours  at  college  campus- 
es and  clubs  has  earned  Munkafust  a 
solid  fan  base  in  its  native  Southern 
California  and  Northern  California 
as  well.    ,    .    .  ,,- 

"We  play  up  north  as  much  as  we 
play  down  south,  if  not  more,  just 
because  we've  developed  quite  a 
good  following  up  there,"  Brau  said. 
On  one  of  its  many  trips  to  San 
Francisco  for  a  show,  Munkafust 
experienced  a  touring  hazard  when 
its  van,  nicknamed  "Eddie,"  caught 


SeeMimUFUST,pa9e33 


stars  discuss  cigarettes  in  entertainment 


TOBACCO:  Participants  look  at  influence 
of  smoking  in  mass  media  on  children 


See 


»»»9«33 


Ev«  Ensler's  'The  Vagina  Monologues"  is  now 
playring  at  the  Canon  Theatre  in  Beverly  Hills. 


lhfcl°non  ThAf  •"":  ^  ?"'^*'^""*  ''•""•''  *"^  "*»*'•  '^^'^^  -'"  ^PP**^ '"  ^^  ^n.ie,  s  The  Vagina  Mon"^;:eT-aT 
the  Canon  Theatre  in  Beverly  Hills  Oct.  13-19.  The  second  cast  will  begin  Oct.  3 1 .  o'ogues  at 


By  Terry  Tang 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

For  the  last  month,  Hollywood  studios  have  taken  a 
browbeating  in  hearings  on  Capitol  Hill  for  marketing 
movies  with  adult  content  to  youngsters.  While  Sen.  John 
McCain's  charges  focus. on  films  with  sex  and  violence, 
cigarettes  and  tobacco  are  most  likely  not  too  far  down  the 
list. 

The  portrayal  of  cigarette  consumption  in  television 
and  moviea  seen  by  youths  has  been  a  subject  of  continu- 
ous debate  between  the  entertainment  industry,  govern- 
ment officials  and  parents. 

Although  there  is  n*  clear-cut  compromise,  it  doesn't 
hurt  to  get  the  lines  of  communication  open.  Discussing 


Uic  Issue  fh>m  all  sides  is  exacUy  what  a  panel  discussion 
on  campus  hoped  to  accomplish. 


The  discussion,  titled  "STARS,  for  the  21st  Century: 
Seeking  Tobacco  Alternatives  with  Realistic  Solutions," 
attracted  many  aspiring  film  students  to  a  Melnitz  Hall  re- 
recording  studio  Monday  afternoon. 

The  nine-person  panel,  made  up  of  show  biz  actors, 
writers,  publicists  as  well  as  a  cardiac  surgeon,  addressed 
the  complex  arguments  for  First  Amendment  freedom 
and  social  responsibility,  amid  concerns  about  the  glamor- 
ization  of  smoking.  Lawrence  Lebowsky,  a  former  chair- 
man of  the  American  Lung  Association,  moderated  the 
45-minute  discussion. 

Lebowsky  started  off  the  discussion  by  asking  if  movie 
scenes  with  smokers  should  be  a  criterion  for  the  film's 
rating.  Some  panelists  were  skeptical  that  an  R-rating 
would  really  prevent  kids  and  teenagers  from  watching 
their  favorite  movie  star  take  a  puff. 

"By  putting  smoking  in  the  same  category  as  sex  and 
violence  that  just  sends  up  a  red  fiag,"  said  Joe  Marich, 
president  of  Marich  Commnnirationt,  "Young  people 


SeeSTUS^pageJI 


28        Thursday,  October  19,2000 


Diily  Bruin  Art}  A  EitterUmmeirt 


^^■*^i^"'WiP"'""'"^~7»"^""9"PPi|"'"*«IF*!"''l*W*"»"<W" 


Daily  Brum  Am  ft  Entertainment 


IhuTMiay,  October  19, 2000       29 


www.dipuc.com 

Dipuc,  Cupid's  sister 
www.dfpuc.com 

This  site  contains  material, that  may  not  be 
suitable  for  site-goers  under  the  age  of  18. 

At  least  that's  what  the  somewhat  surprising 
opening  page  says  because  without  any  porno- 
graphic content,  it  seems  as  like  an  efTort,  to 
cover  the  site  creators'  butts  in  case  anyone 
seems  to  find  Dipuc,  Cupid's  long  lost  twin  sis- 
ter, offensive. 

Apparently  Dipuc  is  out  to  destroy  Cupid's 
cover  as  the  ultimate  supporter  of  love. 
Claiming  her  brother  is  really  an  evil,  fat,  little 
sadist  and  that  she  is  the  heroine  of  love,  Dipuc 
offers  viewers  the  chance  to  win  $2000  if  they 
help  prove  her  case. 

All  someone  needs  to  do  is  submit  their  most 
tragic  (read:  worst),  yet  true,  dating  adventure. 
Under  the  link  "Brain  Vomit,"  a  viewer  can 
read  the  seemingly  tall  tales  and  urban  date  leg- 
ends of  others  to  both  size-up  the  competition, 
as  well  as  to  have  a  good  laugh. 

One  tale  recounts  a  first  experience  with 
champagne  on  New  Year's  Eve  and  a  subse- 
quent run-in  with  the  cops.  Another  describes  a 
date  in  which  one  member  turned  out  to  be  a 
transvestite,  resulting  in  the  other  person's 
decision  that  he  just  didn't  care. 

Having  the  worst  dating  story,  however, 
won't  just  get  one  the  $2,000.  Four  finalists  will 
be  selected  from  the  entries  and  have  actual  on- 
line comics  of  their  experiences  drawn  and 
placed  on  the  site. 


After  that,  it  is  up  to  the  tall-tale  tellers  to  get 
as  many  Web  visitors  "back  stage"  into  their 
comics. 

If  it  sounds  complicated,  it  is.  Each  finalist 
will  be  given  their  own  secret  code  to  their 
comic,  which  they  must  deliver  to  as  many  peo- 
ple as  possible  to  get  them  "back  stage."  What 
exactly  "back  stage"  means  and  how  they  get 
there,  however,  is  sontewhat  fuzzy.  In  the  end, 
the  finalist  with  the  most  people  "back  stage" 
wins  the  $2000.  [''■''■:' 

Dipuc.com  is  more  than  just  a  dating  story 
exchange  site,  which  would  be  sufficient 
enough  to  make  the  site  an  interesting  hit. 
There  is  Dipuc  merchandise  and  free  e-mail 
cards  in  addition  to  other  humorous  comics 
starring  Cupid  and  Dipuc. 

The  so-called  "party  goddess"  and  "savior  of 
love,"  Dipuc,  also  seems  to  be  the  appropriate 
"savior  from  boredom"  and  "vehicle  of 
humor." 

"Barbara  McGuire 
Rating:8 

Study  Abroad 
www.studyabroad.com 

Everybody  likes  traveliiig  to  different 
countries  to  sightsee  as  well  as  learning  about 
different  cultures.  Studying  abroad  allows  stu- 
dents to  do  just  that  and  while  getting  school 
credit. 

Studyabroad.com  offers  a  place  where  stu- 
dents can  get  lots  of  information  about  how 
to  study  abroad,  no  matter  what  countries  or 
programs  they  are  interested  in. 

What  could  be  better  than  studying  abroad 
in  another  country?  Well,  how  about  studying 
in  another  country  for  free?  Until  Nov.  30, 
studyabroad.com  is  offering  sweepstakes  to 
win  a  five-and-a-half-week  summer  study  pro- 
gram in  Cadiz,  Spain. 

Even  if  you  don't  win  the  sweepstakes, 
studyabroad.com  provides  links  to  Web  sites 


that  give  finandal  aid  to  students,  so  you  can 
enjoy  a  summer  in  Spain  or  anywhere  else 

you  choose.       - — '•■■■••_  .    ■  >',;■■■    .■■'■'^-  •;■  -v..' — ;— — 

Want  to  see  what  programs  are  available 
for  the  quarter  or  the  semester? 
Studyabroad.com  offers  programs  for  the 
academic  year,  semester,  summer,  high  school 
student  and  ESL  student,  among  others. 
Offering  a  list  of  programs  available,  the  Web 
site  is  organized  in  a  searchable  format,  allow- 
ing students  to  look  for  links  for  study  abroad 
programs  by  location  and  subject. 

For  the  student  thinking  about  studying 
abroad  or  not  sure  where  they  want  to  go, 
studyabroad.com  provides  a  travel  guide  con- 
taining information  about  the  various  coun- 
tries where  programs  are  offered.  The  guide 
allows  students  to  read  about  a  country's  his- 
tory and  government,  as  well  as  its  culture 
and  weather. 

Included  on  the  Web  site  is  a 
studyabroad.com  handbook,  which  offers 
information,  ranging  from  tips  on  how  to 
label  your  luggage  to  getting  over  culture 
shock. 

Links  to  sites  where  a  student  can  apply  for 
a  visa  or  a  passport  are  also  included  in  addi- 
tion to  links  to  other  Web  sites  that  would  be 
useful  to  students  studying  abroad.  The  infor- 
mation provided  is  very  thorough  and  in- 
depth.  It  is  great  for  anyone  who  is  about  to 
leave  for  another  country. 

Studyabroad.com  also  offers  a  free  e-mail 
newsletter  titled  "Studyabroad.com 
'EXPRESS'."  It  sends  students  information 
about  special  offers  and  programs  weekly. 

If  one  is  even  thinking  about  studying  out 
of  the  country,  studyabroad.com  is  the  place    . 
to  go.  This  Web  site  is  a  great  resource  for 
getting  all  the  information  you  want  from 
choosing  a  program  to  stepping  off  the  plane. 

Jacqueline  Maar 
Rating:  8 


Grab 
www.grab.com 


Nowadays  it's  atl  about  the  Benjamins. 

Everybody  wants  them,  it's  just  a  matter  of 
getting  them  quickly,  easily  and  without  a  lot  of 
work. 

From  numerous  television  shows  that  offer 
free  money,  such  as  "Who  Wants  To  Be  a 
Millionaire"  to  "Survivor,"  it  seems  as  if  every- 
one has  become  infected  with  the  million  dollar 
bug.;.:  ■...-. 

A  million  dollars,  however,  just  doesn't  Seem 
to  be  cutting  it  anymore.  With  so  many  ways  to 
strike  it  rich,  a  million  dollars  doesn't  hold  the 
value  it  used  to,  but  how  could  it,  considering 
on  average  a  male  actor  makes  approximately 
$20  million  a  film? 

This  seems  to  be  the  idea  behind  a  new  site, 
grab.com,  which  offers  viewers  a  Las  Vegas 
style  chance  to  win  $1  billion.  That's  right, 
$1  billion.  Site  goers  logging  onto  the  main 
page  will  notice  its  somewhat  simplistic,  yet  col- 
orful, appearance,  but  with  a  legitimate  chance 
to  win  that  much  money,  looks  aren't  what's 
important. 

The  idea  is  simple  and  works  much  like  the  '. 
lottery,  only  with  higher  stakes.  After  clicking 
on  a  hand  which  is  "grabbing"  a  wad  of  bills,  -V 
viewers  are  taken  to  another  page  in  which 
numbers  ranging  from  one  to  77  are  listed. 

One  has  the  option  to  either  do  a  "quick 
pick"  where  the  computer  randomly  selects 
numbers,  or  to  simply  select  the  seven  numbers 
using  personal  methods.  After  doing  such. 

See  WB,  page  34 


I 


BRUINS! 


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DINER  &  PRESS  CLUB 
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10922  Kinross  Ave,  Westwood 
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breakfasts . . . 


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Wind  quintet  to  breeze 
through  UCIJV  Saturday 


MUSIC  U.S.  pianist  looks 
to  add  to  already  diverse 
styles  of  renowned  group 

ByUUTan 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

UCLA's  very  own  Ostin  Hall  will 
soon  be  filled  with  the  harmonious 
.  sounds  of  the  blissful  bassoon,  calm- 
ing clarinet,  outstanding  oboe,  fantas- 
tic Hute,  harmonious  horn  and  pro- 
found piano,  performing  together  for 
a  concert  not  to  be  missed.       ; 

This  Sunday,  UCLA  Performing 
Arts  presents  the  Berlin 
Philharmonic  Wind  Quintet,  one  of 
the  world's  most  renowned  wind 
ensembles.  The  Quintet  features 
Michael  Hassel,  flute;  Andreas 
Wittman,  oboe;  Walter  Scyfarth.  clar- 
inet; Henning  Trog,  bassoon;  and 
Fergus  McWilliam,  horn.  The  five 
chamber  musicians  added  a  sixth 
member  for  their  United  States  tour, 
the  prominent  pianist  Jon 
Nakamatsu. 

The  quintet  formed  in  1988,  when 
they  met  in  a  coffee  house  in  Berlin  to 
do  a  small  after-hours  concert.  All 
five  were  members  of  the  same  wind 
section  in  the  Berlin  Philharmonic 
Orchestra.  After  playing  together  in  a 
small  group,  the  men  decided  they 
should  perform  together  again. 


"It  was  almost  like  a  love  affair," 
McWilliam  said  in  a  recent  interview. 
"We  had  a  certain  chemistry  that 
made  us  decide  that  the  five  of  us  had 
to  do  this  again  and  again  and  again. 
It  carried  on  for  almost  13  years  now 
and  we're  still  going." 

Although  every  member  of  the 
group  is  plays  differently  from  each 
other,  they  cooperate  effectively. 
Other  ensembles,  depending  on  the 
personalities  in  the  group,  rarely  com- 
pliment each  other  as  well  as  the  quin- 
tet 

"You're  all  breathing  as  one  even 
though.everything  each  of  us  brings  is 
something  different,"  said 
Nakamatsu.  "These  men  have  played 
together  for  years  and  their  refiexes 
are  group  oriented.  They  really  play 
together  as  a  unit." 

Hassel  originally  studied  the  piano 
and  organ,  but  the  Hute  later  became 
his  passion.  He  was  a  member  of  the 
Frankfurt  Radio  Symphony 
Orchestra  and  its  Wind  Quintet  from 
1982  to  1984.  He  predominantly 
plays  throughout  Europe  and  Japan 
as  a  chamber  musician  and  a  soloist. 

Wittman  entered  the  Berlin 
Philharmonic  Orchestra  Academy 
immediately  after  graduation  in  I98S. 
A  year  later,  he  gained  membership  in 
the  orchestra  itself  Along  with  the 
Berlin  Philharmonic  Quintet, 
Wittman  is  also  a  member  of  the 
"Winds  of  the  Berlin  Philharmonic" 


The  Berlin  Philharmonic  Wind  Quintet  will  perform  at  UCLA's  Ostin 
group  has  added  U.S.  pianist  Jon  Nakamatsu  for  the  duration  of  its 


and  is  an  international  soloist  and 
chamber  musician. 

Seyfarth  hails  from  Dusseldorf 
and,  like  Wittman,  studied  at  the 
Berlin  Philharmonic  Orchestra 
Academy.  Later,  he  was  a  member  of 
the    Saarland    Radio    Symphony 


Orchestra,  and  then  was  appointed  to 
the  Berlin  Philhiirmonic  Orchestra. 
Besides  touring  with  the  quintet, 
Seyfarth  is  a  part  of  the  teaching  fac- 
ulty at  the  Schleswig-Holstein  Music 
Festival. 
Trog    initially    studied    church 


UCLA  Perfcuming  Ans 

Hall  this  Sunday  at  7  p.m.  The 
U.S.tour. 

music,  which  later  led  him  to  the  bas- 
soon. While  still  in  school,  he  partici- 
pated in  concert  tours  and  made 
many  recordings  with  other  ensem- 
bles. Like  Wittman,  Trog  was  a  mem- 

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Enjoy  the 
Movies!!! 


To  advertise 

in  the 

Bruin 

Movie 
Guide, 

coll 

310.825.2161 


\ 


i'..- 


30 ThuwUy,  October  19, 2000 


Party  Bfuin  Am  A  Entertaiimwiit 


Upcoming  afbiim  hew  t^^^^     tferlc 


MUSIC:  Country  artist 
hopes  release  remains 
fearless  in  face  of  critics 


By  Jim  Patterson 

The  Associated  Press 


Singer  Terri  Clark  sums  up  her 
new  album  in  terms  that  must 
chill  a  record  executive's  heart: 
"More  cerebral  and  less  commer- 
cial." 

Then  she  laughs,  a  bit  nervous- 
ly. 

She's  taking  a  sharp  left  turn 
on  her  new  "Fearless"  CD,  and 
she's  hoping  the  audience  she 
gained  on  such  straightforward 
country  hits  as  "Better  Things  to 
Do"  will  come  along  for  the  ride. 
Although  her  previous  albums 
made  her  a  star,  Clark,  32.  was 
itching  for  more  recognition  as  a 
songwriter  and  wanted  to  per- 
form material  with  more  depth. 
(She  has  written  much  of  her  own 
material  in  the  past.)  She  asked 
Mary  Chapin  Carpenter.  Kim 
Richey.  Gary  Burr,  Angelo  and 
Beth  Nielson  Chapman  to  help 
her  with  the  songs  on  her  new 
CD 

First  single  "A  Little  Gasoline" 
is  a  Top  30  hit  and  still  climbing, 
but  it  doesn't  reflect  the  rest  of  the 
album.  For  one  thing.  Clark  had 
no  hand  in  writing  the  song, 
which  is  by  Dean  Miller  and 
Tammy  Rogers. 

The  real  story  will  be  told  on 
the  second  and  third  singles  off 
"Fearless." 

That's  when  radio  program- 
mers will  decide  whether  to 
accept  Clark  as  a  country  singer- 
songwriter  in  the  same  vein  as 


Women  of  rock  take  stage 
for  breast  cancer  awareness 


BENEFm  Proceeds  from 
concert  to  aid  groups;  show 
will  be  aired  on  Lifetime 


>.  .  Th*  Associated  Press 

Country  singer  Tern  Clark  presents  an  award  at  the  Country 
Music  Association  Awards  show  in  Nashville,  Tenn.,  Oct.  4. 


Carpenter  and  Richey.  Carpenter 
co-wrote  "No  Fear"  and  "To  Tell 
You  Everything"  with  Clark. 
"Last  Thing  I  Wanted"  was  writ- 
ten by  Richey  and  Carpenter. 

Clark  handily  outsells  Richey 
and  probably  Carpenter  in  recent 
years.  But  she  doesn't  sec  it  as  a 
contradiction  to  look  to  them  for 
inspiration.  And  after  three  shc- 
cessful  albums  doing  essentially 
the  same  thing,  she  felt  the  need 


for  a  change. 

"I  think,  honestly,  that  there  is 
a  way  to  maintain  artistic  integri- 
ty and  musical  conviction  with 
commercial  and  mainstream  suc- 
cess," she  said.  "It's  hard  as  hell. 
It's  really  hard  to  do  that. 

"And  I  still  don't  know  how  it's 
going  to  work." 

In  1995,  Clark  found  a  gim- 


SeeaJUU(,pag«34 


By  Chelsea  J.  Carter 

The  Associated  Press 

What  happened  when  a  handful  of  the 
music  industry's  best-known  women  - 
from  rocker  Melissa  Etheridge  to  country 
music's  Wynonna  Judd  -  got  together  to 
raise  awareness  about  breast  cancer? 

They  rocked.  They  rolled.  They 
brought  the  house  down  at  the  Wiltem 
Theatre. 

Now  their  performance  comes  to  tele- 
vision in  "Women  Rock!  Girls  & 
Guitars,"  airing  Sunday  at  8  p.m.  EDT  on 
Lifetime  Television. 

Forget  critics  who  say  the  concert 
experience  is  lost  on  television.  "Women 
Rock!"  offers  a  front-row  seat  to  a  once- 
in-a-lifetime  jam  session  of  unforgettable 
musical  collaborations. 

Etheridge  and  Judd  are  joined  by 
Sheryl  Crow,  Heart's  Ann  and  Nancy 
Wilson,  Amy  Grant,  Cyndi  Lauper  and 
newcomers  Destiny's  Child  for  the  two- 
hour  musical  event,  billed  as  a  benefit  for 
the  National  Alliance  of  Breast  Cancer 
Organizations  and  the  National  Breast 
Cancer  Coalition. 

"It's  about  time  for  women  to  band 
together  and  use  their  power,  their 
influence  to  raise  awareness,"  Lauper 
said  in  an  interview. 

The  concert,  airing  during  National 
Breast  Cancer  Awareness  Month,  is  part 
of  the  cable  television  network's  six-year 
campaign  "Our  Lifetime  Commitment: 
Stop  Breast  Cancer  for  Life." 

It  will  serve  as  a  catalyst  for  NBCC's 


"Make  Breast  Cancer  History"  donation 
and  pledge  campaign,  which  includes  a 
petition  drive  asking  voters  to  consider  a 
political  candidate's  stance  on  breast  can- 
cer issues  before  voting. 

For  many  of  those  taking  the  stage,  the 
campaign  is  personal,  ,^ 

When  she  was  growing  up,  Grant*s 
father,  a  doctor,  handled  breast  cancer 
cases.  Now.  as  an  adult,  she  has  three 
friends  who  have  undergone  surgery  to 
remove  tumors. 

"When  my  dad  first  started  out.  he  said 
if  breast  cancer  was  detected  there  was  a 
(low)  survival  rate.  By  the  time  he  retired, 
it  was  a  95  percent  survival  rate  if  it  was 
detected  early,"  she  said.  "It  can  only  get 
better." 

Lauper  was  drawn  to  the  concert 
because  of  her  aunt,  who  died  of  the  dis- 
ease in  1995. 

The  show  includes  a  musical  tribute  by 
the  women  to  Paul  McCartney  and  his 
wife,  Linda,  who  died  of  breast  cancer  in 
1998.  . 

But  it  is  the  women  performing  who 
are  the  stars  of  this  show. 

Viewers  will  get  the  opportunity  to  see 
Judd  and  Heart's  Ann  Wilson  trade 
vocals  in  a  hard-rocking,  bluesy  rendition 
of  "Barracuda."  with  Etheridge  and 
Crow  singing  backup. 

"It's  really  like  old  friends  getting 
together  with  a  few  new  friends,"  said 
Ann  Wilson. 

Many  of  the  women  met  for  the  first 
time  during  three  days  of  rehearsal  where 
they  worked  up  the  unique  collabora- 
tions. 

"None  of  it  is  finely  tuned."  said 
Grant.  "But  we  don't  want  it  to  be  per-     1 
feet.  After  three  days  of  rehearsals  we 
were  like,  'Let's  just  get  out  there  and 
have  fun.'" 


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Daily  Bruin  Arts  ft  Entertainment 


Thursday,  October  19,2000       31 


^     Joe  Marich  Jr. 

explains  his  views 

on  tobacco  in  the 

film  industry  in 

MelnitzHall 

Monday.  He,  along 

with  eight  other 

actors,  writers  and 

%   publicists,  were 

part  of  a  panel 

addressing  the 

glamorization  of 

smoking. 


STARS 

From  page  27; 

only  want  to  watch  what  they're  not  allowed  to 
see." 

Others  on  the  panel  also  argued  that  the  use 
of  cigarettes  on-screen  should  really  be  deter- 
mined by  whether  it  was  an  integral  part  of  the 
character. 

"As  an  actor,  I  get  asked  to  do  a  lot  of 
things.  It's  really  a  combination  of  personal 
tastes,"  said  Dawnn  Lewis,  whose  credits 
include  "A  Different  Worid"  and  "Hanging 
With  Mr.  Cooper."  "It's  also  about  what  really 
makes  sense  for  the  character.  You  should  be 
true  to  what  it  is  you  present  as  a  filmmaker." 


'  Lebowsky  also  brought  up  the  isssue  of 
whether  using  cigarettes  to  create  mood  or 
character  appeal  is  just  "lazy  filmmaking." 
Debra  Hill,  a  writer-producer-director 
("Halloween,"  "The  Fisher  King"),  said  film- 
makers can  sometimes  find  alternative  ways  of 
making  a  character  look  sexy  or  chic. 

On  the  set  of  her  most  recent  film,  "Crazy  in 
Alabama,"  Hill  urged  star  Melanie  Griffith,  a 
smoker  in  real  life,  that  her  character  didn't 
need  to  use  cigarettes. 

"I  think  you  can  make  a  sexy  character  in 
other  ways,"  Hill  said.  "Once  I  got  Melanie  lo 
see  her  character  doesn't  smoke,  she  found 
other  things  to  do."  -     ..  •,• 


See  STARS,  page  32 


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Dcbra  Hill,  a  writer-producer-director,  urges  filmmakers  to  use  ahema- 
tives  to  cigarettes  in  their  films  when  making  characters  k)ok  sexy. 


STARS 

From  page  31 

Marich,  a  veteran  in  PR  for  enter- 
tainment products,  said  that  advertis- 
ing and  mass  media  could  not  solely 
shoulder  responsibility.  He  used  his 
own  life  as  an  example. 

"Both  my  parents  smoked.  I  was 
around  it  all  the  time,"  said  Marich, 
who  is  currently  trying  to  quit.  "I 
don't  think  (the  media)  helped  me 
start." 

He  also  added  that  not  being 
exposed  to  images  of  smokers  in  the 
mass  media  doesn't  help  kids  who  are 
already  addicted  to  cigarettes. 

In  general,  the  entire  panel  agreed 
that  parents  need  to  take  an  active 
role  in  teaching  their  children  about 
the  effects  of  cigarettes. 

"You  can't  hide  smoking  from 
kids.  You  have  got  to  educate  them," 
said  Brian  Fox,  president  and  CEO 
of  an  advertising  agency  "Kids  will 
always  do  the  opposite  of  what  you 
tell  them." 

The  panel  also  ruminated  on  the 
best  approach  to  get  kids,  as  well  as 
adulu,  to  either  not  start  smoking  or 
to  quit.  Dr.  Ismale  Nufio,  Chief  of 
Cardiac  Surgery  Service  at  the 
LAC+USC  Medical  Center,  com- 
mented that  citing  statistics  from  dif- 
ferent studies  was  not  enough. 

To  prove  his  point,  Nufto  asked  for 
a  show  of  hands  of  how  many  in  the 
audience  smoked.  After  several 
hands  went  up,  he  asked  how  many 
knew  smoking  was  hazardous  and 
could  lead  to  cancer.  The  same  peo- 
ple timidly  raised  their  hands. 

Marich  agreed  that  all  the  dau 


available  was  not  enough  to  stop  cig- 
arette addiction. 

"All  those  figures  sound  like  white 
noise  to  me.  This  (panel)  will  have 
more  of  an  impact  than  10,000  fiiers 
full  of  facts  and  figures,"  Marich 
said. 

The  panel  was  just  one  part  of  the 
S.T.A.R.S.  Project,  a  program  coor- 
dinated by  the  American  Lung 
Association  of  Los  Angeles  County. 
Funded  by  a  grant  from  state 
Proposition  99,  an  anti-tobacco  ordi- 
nance which  raised  taxes  on  cigarette 
and  tobacco  products,  S.T.A.R.S.  is 
an  advocacy  program  that  strives  to 
de-glamorize  smoking  on  screen. 
One  way  they  are  using  the  grant  is  by 
fostering  more  dialogue  between  the 
motion  picture  industry  and  the  pub- 
lic about  the  use  of  cigarettes  in  mass 
media. 

Aside  from  the  panel,  S.T.A.R.S. 
has  other  activities  in  the  works.  They 
are  in  the  process  of  shooting  a  docu- 
mentary called,  "Where  There's 
Smoke  There's  Ire,"  which  features 
celebrities  like  Rob  Reiner,  Ted 
Danson  and  Sean  Penn. 

Coordinators  have  also  recruited 
teenagers  for  a  Young  Ambassadors 
program.  Teens  will  perform  skits 
about  the  effects  of  media  images  of 

smoking  for  film  executives.  u 

They  additionally  hope  to  have 
more  speakers'  bureaus  like  this  one. 
All  the  panelists  were  satisfied  by  the 
discussion  and  would  gladly  partici- 
pate in  more  of  them. 

"I  think  it  was  excellent.  We 
should  have  more  of  these,"  Nui^o 
said  afterward.  "It's  good  that  the 
acting  and  medical  industries  come 
together  and  raise  awareness." 


BERLIN 

From  page  29 


ber  of  the  "Winds  of  the  Berlin 
Philharmonic"  and  continues  exten- 
sive chamber  music  and  solo  perfor- 
mances throughout  the  world. 

McWilliam,  bom  in  the  Scottish 
Highlands,  studied  primarily  in 
Canada,  Holland  and  Sweden. 
Before  joining  the  Berlin 
Philharmonic  Orchestra  in  1985,  he 
was  a  member  of  the  Detroit 
Symphony  and  the  Bavarian  Radio 
Symphony  Orchestras. 

With  their  vast  experience  and 
backgrounds,  it's  no  wonder  the  quin- 
tet is  world  renowned. 

"They're  phenomenal.  You'd  be 
amazed  at  the  versatility  of  the  wind 
instruments  and  the  sounds  they  can 
produce.  The  quintet  starts  playing  at 
such  a  high  level  and  it  just  keeps  get- 
ting better." 

The  quintet  is  proud  to  add 
Nakamatsu  lo  their  group  to  form  a 
sextet  for  their  U.S.  tour.  Nakamatsu 
has  won  many  prestigious  awards, 
including  "Named  Debut  Artist  of 
the  Year"  (1998). 

"Nakamatsu  is  a  tremendous 
musician,  both  as  a  soloist  and  a 
chamber  musician.  He's  really  one  of 
the  big  finds  among  American 
pianisu,"  said  McWilliam. 


Though  the  five  wind  instruments 
blend  together  so  well,  the  piano  adds 
a  new  element  to  the  group's  music. 

"The  piano  provides  a  whole  new 
depth  of  color  and  possibilities,  and  a 
whole  new  range  of  sounds," 
McWilliam  said. 

The  piano  is  featured  in  two  out  of 
the  five  pieces  which  the  quintet  and 
Nakamatsu  will  perform  Sunday 
evening.  Nakamatsu  will  contribute 
to  the  group's  performance  of 
Ludwig  van  Beethoven's  "Quintet  for 
Piano  and  Winds  in  E  fiat-Major 
Op.  16"  and  Francis  Poulenc's 
"Sextet  for  Piano  and  Wind  Quintet." 
McWilliam  said  the  Poulenc  piece 
was  his  favorite  of  the  concert. 

"Poulenc  is  from  the  more  modem 
French  .school,  almost  sort  of  humor- 
ous and  witty,  but  a  gorgeous  piece 
with  a  very  powerful  bittersweet  mes- 
sage in  it  and  tremendous  virtuosity," 
he  said.  "It  always  brings  down  the 
house." 

The  other  three  pieces  performed 
by  the  quintet  include  Wolfgang 
Amadeus  Mozart's  "Piece  for  a 
Musical  Clock  in  F-minor,"  Anton 
Reicha's  "Andante  for  English 
Horn,"  and  Andre  Jolivet's 
"Serenade  for  Wind  Quintet." 

"All  the  pieces  are  really  easy  to  sit 
down  and  listen  to  and  really  enjoy 


See  MUl,  page  34 


Daily  Bniin  Arts  &  EmertMimeM 


Tlmndiy,OdDb(r19,2000       33 


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or 


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MUNKAFUSr 

Frompage27 

fire  and  blew  up.  Luckily,  the  band 
members  had  time  to  rescue  equip- 
ment and  personal  belongings  from 
the  vehicle  before  it  exploded. 

The  band's  loss  of  Eddie,  howev- 
er, has  not  stopped  it  touring.  In 
fact,  the  experience  inspired  the 
artistic  concept  for  Munkafust's  lat- 
est album.      •'  :  ■ - 

"We're  going  to  continue  going 
out  on  the  road  regionally  right  now 
and  we're  going  to  keep  trying  to  sell 


albums,"  Brau  said. 

Right  now,  the  band  is  focused  on 
getting  its  name  and  music  out  so 
people  can  hear  it. 

"Our  music  isn't  exactly  the  type 
of  music  that  labels  are  jumping  oh 
to  find  right  now  ...  but  it  may  be 
next  month,"  Brau  said. 

"There's  no  telling,  you  sort  of 
just  have  to  make  your  own  time  and 
place  so  that's  what  we're  trying  to 
do." 


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VAGINA 

From  page  26 

nerve  gatherings  in  their  sexual  organ 
as  opposed  to  men;  to  the  shocking 
statistics  on  the  number  of  women 
who  have  their  vaginas  mutilated  each 
year  in  Africa. 

Audience  members  also  learn, 
through  such  informal  commentary, 
of  the  questions  that  Enslcr  asked  each 
woman  and  the  answers  she  got.  One 
question  is,  "If  you  could  dress  your 
vagina  up,  what  would  it  wear?" 
Answers  range  from  *^n  electric  shock 
devise  to  keep  the  unwanted  away,"  to 
"k  slicker,"  to  ^  beret,"  but  all  demon- 
strate just  how 
different  women 
can  be.  — i— -■■i.«i« 

Though  most 
monologues  are, 
for  the  most  part, 
comical,  Ensler 
didn't  write  "The 
Vagina 
Monologues" 
ft"om   just   one 
perspective. 
Honest,     heart 
breaking      and 
deprettinf 
monologues  are 
also  included  in 


the    ^  evening,     ~"^~~~~"~~~ 
whidraflow  for  a 
weB^^nded  performance. 

Onl  touching  monologue,  titled 
"The  (Jooche  Snorcher  That  Could," 
focuses  on  a  homeless  woman  who 
had  been  sexually  abused  as  a  child  by 
her  father's  friend.  Fortunately,  the 
story  ends  on  a  happy  note,  as  the 
woman  finds  true  love  with  another 
woman  at  the  shelter  where  she  was 
staying. 

One  interesting  aspect  of  the  show 
is  the  way  in  which  the  performers  act 
out  emotionally  trying  pieces  only  to 
suddenly  switch  gean  with  an  amus- 
ing   monologue.    Throughout    the 
evening,  the  audience  responds  with 
both  tears  of  joy  and  tears  of  sadness. 
Rosie  Perez's  first  piece  is  especial- 
ly funny  Prior  to  getting  into  charac- 
ter, the  mentioned  a  topic  all  women 
who  were  interviewed  touched  on. 
The  topic  Waa  hair,  and  not  the  hair  on 
their  head. 

The  woman  in  this  monologue  has 
issues  with  the  fact  that  her  hutbutd 


wants  her  to  shave  all  of  her  pubic  hair. 
She  wants  to  please  him,  but  feds  it  is 
not  worth  the  resulting  rash  (that  can- 
not be  cured  even  with  calamine 
lotion)  nor  the  childish  way  it  makes 
her  feel. 

Nine  monologues  are  performed 
between  the  three  performers,  all  con- 
cerning women  of  various  ages  and 
ethnicities.  One,  titled  "The  Rood," 
tells  the  story  of  a  72-year-old  woman 
who  has  never  had  an  orgasm  and 
refers  to  her  vagina  as  a  cellar  because 
it  hasn't  gotten  any  action  since  1953. 
Another  focuses  on  a  former  lawyer- 
tumed-lesbian  dominatrix  who  discov- 
ered her  sole  purpose  in  life  is  to  make 
other  women  moan. 

"I  just  think 
_.,.,.,_____  it's  something 
that  hasn't  been 
Ulked  about  in 
such  an  open 
way,"  said 

Mantello.       "I 
think  people,  not 
only  women,  but 
most  people  that 
I  know  that  have 
seen  it,  find  it 
very  liberating." 
"It's      really 
entertaining,"  he 
added.  "But,  it'i 
'  really  smart  and 

I  think  it  has  the 

power  to  diange 
people." 

"The  Vagina  Monologues"  pro- 
vides an  honest  and  uncensored  look 
at  women  and  their  feelings  toward 
their  vaginas.  Hidden  under  the  guise 
of  more  comical  moments,  the  true 
message  is  to  show  the  world  how 
women  can  be  insecure  about  what 
lies  between  their  legs.  Capable  of  pro- 
viding a  learning  experience  for  both 
men  and  women,  the  monologues  are 
truly  revolutionary  as  they  attempt  to 
change  the  way  vaginas  are  perceived. 


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Another  (monologue) 

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TMEWBt  The  Vagina  Monologues'  is 
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"'•'  -,*.•  ".'■  j  ' 


34       Thursday,  October  19,2000 


DaHy  Bruin  Arts  &  Eiitertainirtent 


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hnndaxtHnikM'wds 


*    « 


CLARK 

From  page  30 

mick  to  help  her  make  it  to  the  top. 

She  wasn't  comfqrtable  with  a 
glamorous  look,  so  she  dressed  in  a 
cowboy  hat  and  tight  jeans.  She 
became  a  female  "hat  act,"  the  term 
applied  to  Garth  Brooks  and  Clint 
Black  when  they  made  it  in  the  late 
1980s. 

Although  she's  wearing  leather 
instead  of  denim  now  -  to  symbolize 
that  something  is  different  -  she  still 
sports  the  hat.  It's  all  part  of  pushing 
things,  but  not  doing  it  too  fast. 

"You've  got  to  maintain  some  sort 
of  consistency."  Clark  said.  "If  I 
maintain  consistency  in  my  image,  I 
think  I'll  be  allowed  a  little  more  lee- 
way musically." 

Clark  was  bom  in  Montreal  and 
raised  in  Calgary,  Alberta.  After  high 
school,  she  moved  to  Nashville  and 
sang  at  honky-tonks,  hoping  to  get 
noticed.  Eventually  she  was  signed  to 
Mercury  Records,  where  her  first 
album  was  an  immediate  hit. 

Although  her  albums  have  been 
successful,  she  has  taken  longer  and 
longer  to  produce  them.  Her  reputa- 
tion as  a  performer  has  kept  her 
working. 


BERLIN 

From  page  32 

for  what  they  are,"  Nakamatsu  said. 

The  musicians  insist  that  the  not- 
so-musically-inclined  can  listen  and 
understand  classical  music.  If  you 
can  relax,  you  can  enjoy  classical 
music,  they  said. 

"The  best  thing  about  people  who 
don't  normally  go  to  classical  music 
concerts  is  that  (this  show)  is  some- 
thing toully  different,"  Nakamatsu 
said.  "You  can  just  come  and  sit  there 
and  enjoy  something  really  soothing 
and  really  beautiful. 

"You're  at  (the  concert)  to  relax 
and  have  a  good  time  and  let  the 
music  take  you  where  it  wants  to," 
Nakamatsu  continued.  "You  don't 
have  to  have  anything  other  than  an 
open  ear  to  enjoy  it." 

MUSIC  The  Berlin  Philhannonic  Wind 
Quintet  performs  Sunday,  Oct  22  at 
7  pjTV,  at  Ostin  Hall.  For  more  informa- 
tion, contact  the  Central  Ticket  Office 
at  (310)  82S-2101.  Student  tickets  can 
also  be  purchased  through  the  UCLA 
Performing  Arts  Student  Committee 
Web  site  at  vwvw.sca.uda.edu. 


WEB 

From  page  28 

entering  an  e-mail  address  and 
clicking  on  a  "play"  graphic,  view- 
ers are  required  to  enter  standard 
personal  information  such  as  an 
address  to  which  the  $1  billion  will 
be  sent. 

The  only  downfall  is  that  a  view- 
er is  required  to  select  at  least  one 
free  mailer  from  a  list  of  15.  Junk 
mail  is  annoying  enough  as  it  is,  but 
a  chance  at  $1  billion  seems  well 
worth  receiving  an  easily  deleted, 
unwanted  e-mail. 

The  grab.com  entries  will  be 
accepted  until  Dec.  26,  and  the  win- 
ning numbers  will  be  randomly 
selected  on  Dec.  28.  The  newly  rich 
winner  will  unfortunately  be  paid  in 
annual  installments  over  the  next 
40  years,  but  also  has  the  option  of 
accepting  a  one  time  payment  of 
SI  70  million. 

In  addition  to  their  billion  dollar 
contest,  grab.com  is  the  host  of 
numerous  other  daily  contests 
which  have  prize  sums  ranging 
from  SSOOO  to  SI  million.  Looks 
like  winning  a  million  dollars  is  eas- 
ier than  answering  bizarre  trivia 
questions  and  eating  bugs  on  a 
deserted  island. 

Barbara  McGuire 
Rating:  6 


I 
I 


i 


Daily  Bruin 


Thursday,  October  19,2000 


tZ 


hiWititHiniTTn?! 

Campus  Happenings 
Campus  Organizations 
Campus  Racruitinent 
Campus  Servicet 
Birthdays 
Legal  noticea 
I  Lost  &  Found 
MisoeUaneous 
Psfsonai  Massages 
Personals 
n«gnancy 

Recreational  Activities 
Rasaarch  Subtocts 
Sperm  /  Egg  Donota 
TicfceU  Offered 
Tldteu  Mtantad 
Wanted 


forJsale 


Appliances 

Art  /  Paintings 

Bicycles  /  Skates 

Books 

Ceiling  Canls 
I  Cstneras  /  Camcorders 

CoMectibles 

Computers  /  Software 

Furniture 

Garage  /  Vard  Salea 

Heaitn  Products 

Miscellaneous 

Musical  Instruments 

Office  E(|uipment 

PeU 

Rentals 

Sports  Equipment 

Stereos  /  TVs  /  Radios 
rbbla  Sports 


transportation 


Auto  Accessories 
I  Auto  Insurance 
Auto  Repair 
Autos  for  Sale 
Boats  for  Sale 
Motorcycles  for  Sale 
ParWng 

Scooter  /  Cycle  Repair 
Scooters  for  Sale 
Vehicles  for  Rent 


1 1 8  Kerckhoff  Hall 
308  Westwood  Plaza 
Los  Angeles.  CA  90024 


E-Mail:  dasslfieds@media.uda.edu 
Web  http://vwvw.aailybruin.ucla.edu 


Classified  Une:  C310)  825-2221 

Fax:  (310)  206-0528 
Classified  Display:  [310]  206-3060 

Fax:  C310)  206-0528 


Mon-TTiu:  9:00am-3:00pm 
Ri:  9am-2 :30pm 


r  rales 

^ 

One  issue,  up  to  20  words 

$8.50 

...each  additional  word 

065 

\Ateekly.  up  to  20  words 

29.00 

...each  additional  word 

2.15 

Monthly,  up  to  20  words 

96.00 

...each  additional  word 

5.75 

1 2  pt  headline 

$1.60 

16  pt  headline 

$225 

\Border 

$5.00  y 

Classified  Une  Ads: 

1  working  day  before  printing, 
at  12  noon. 

Classified  Display  Ads: 

2  working  days  before  printing, 
at  12  noon. 

There  are  no  cancellations  after 
noon  of  the  day  laefore  printing, 


For  Classified  Display  ads. 

please  see  our  rate  card 

for  variable  rate  information. 


fflB^  ^^^ 


pflymeni 


Rease  make  checks  payable  to 
"The  UCLA  Daily  Brum."  \Ne 
accept  Visa.  MasterCard,  and 
Discover  credit  cards.  Allow  5 
working  days  for  mail  fjayments. 


hoMfioiMrile 

an  efiBcJiwe  bA 

•  Start  your  ad  with  the 
merchandise  you  are  selling. 
This  makes  it  easier  for  readers  to 
quickly  scan  the  ads  and  locate 
your  items. 

•  Always  include  the  price  of  your 
Item.  Many  classified  readers 
simply  do  not  respond  to  ads 
without  prices 

•  Avoid  abbreviations— make  your 
ad  easy  for  readers  to  understand 

•  Race  yourself  in  the  reader's 
position,  ask  what  you  would  like 
to  know  about  the  merchandise, 
and  include  that  in  the  ad    Include 
such  information  as  brand  names, 
colors  and  other  specific 
descriptions 


2l!!JlfI£^t^Tl!;!)i?tS?,S2rii^^  ""Ha.""  "°'I^5S:*^!S?2.  **°  'S?*^  *^  «==«*  Kh^ttownems  «***  prasem  panons  o(  any  origin,  race.  sex.  or  sexual  onentalJon  in  a 

demeaning  w»Y  <*  impty  tty.Mwy  «"  *n«»<J  to  POSMons.  capabMtes.  nUes.  or  status  m  sodely.  Neither  the  Daily  Bruin  nor  l«w  ASUCIA  Communications  Board  has  investigated  any  of  the  services  advertised  or  the 
J2!r?*'TT.'5?!!I!S?15^^S?L^'i'S*°"  '?"'»*B  •»««  «f  advertisement  In  IMs  issue  vMalad  the  Board's  policy  on  nondbcrimination  stated  herein  should  communicate  complaints  m  vmting  to  the  Business  Manager 
^^^■ML'i^!9^^.1^.^'1^J^.^  ^?g^'  £*  """l-  ^SLIS!****  »J».'w«2inB  <*scrimination  protiems.  can  the  UCLA  Houdng  Office  at  (310)  825-4271  or  call  the  WestsKje  Fair  Housing  Office  at  (310) 
i-^lS£I  ~?^S!?^^^!5152T*  on-»ne  *  ti2£«n»w.da«yt)niin  uclaeAi^  Plac«i«ent  on-line  a  olfvwl  as  a  complimentary  swvice  for  customer?  and  is  not  guaranteed.  The  Daily  Bruin  is  lesponsible  lor  the  frsi  incorr 
insertion  on^  Minor  typographical  etiors  are  »>yd^|lb^elofl^^ut^d».  For  any  tetund.  the  Daiy  Bruin  ClasslSad^^  the  first  otay  of  publication  by  noon       "^""'^   w  ™  irs,  mcorr 


travel 


Resorts  /  Hotels 
Rides  Offered 
Rides  Wanted 
Xni  I  Shuttle  Service 
Ihraei  Destinations 
Tiavei  Tickets 
Vacation  Padu^ies 


services 


1-900  fiumbere 

Financial  Aid 

Insurance 
I  Computer  /  Internet 

Foreign  Languages 

Heaitn  /  Beauty  Services 

Legal  Advice  /  Attorneys 

Movere  /  Storage 

Music  Lessons 

PersoiMl  Services 
I  i¥ofessional  Services 

Resumes 
I  Telecommunications 

1Utor1f>g  Offered 

Tutoring  IManted 

Typing 

WHtingHeip         .    . 


11  GO 

Cnnipiis  HMi)peniiU|s 


Akoholics  Anonymous 


1NM.ka.A3-Q29 
DiscuMi»,Al  law  12:10-  100p« 


1300 

Campus  RecriiitiMfjiit 


Skiers 

SurePoot 
Ski  Boot  Store 


Need  people  for  the  future. 

Full/PtAvoiiflbleNow 

Hourly -I- Comiss. 

IStli  &  Moniono  -  Sonto  Monko 
310.393.3331 

sairtomonkoOsurefoot.coni 


2000 

Personals 


2000 

Personals 


Are  you  right  for  each  other? 


1300 

Ciinipiis  Rocriiitmciit 


18  GO 

Miscellaneous 


LOANS,  LOANS, 
LOANS 

FOR  G(X)D  AND  BAD  CREDIT.  We  do  all 
types  of  loans  with  no  application  fees.  High 
approval  rate  All  applicants  welcomed.  Call 
toll  free  1-888-698-1301. 


NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT. Safe'  affordable*  effective*  visit  us  at 
www  ligureplus  com  1-888-603-9800.  Dis- 
tributorships are  available. 

PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
year  old  females  with  adventurous  and  open 
minded  spirits  who  want  to  expand/explore 
their  sexuality  through  nude  modeling.  Free 
prints  for  modeling  time.  Call  Robert  at  310- 
463-5996  robldOatLn^ 


SKIERS 

SUREFOOT - 
Ski  Boot  Store 

1 999  IrK.  IMagazine 

#43  Faatest  Growii>g 

Companies 

Need  people  for  the  future. 

FuU/PT  Available  Now 

Hrly.+Commis. 

15"  &  Montana,  Santa  Monica 

(310)  393-3331 

•antamonK«Osur«footco«n 


nrmn 


Business  Opportunities 
Career  Oppoiftunlties 
ChUd  Care  Offerad 
Child  Care  Wanted 
Help  Wanted 
Housesitting 
IrNamship 

Personal  Assistance 
Temporary  Employment 
Volunteer 


2BffiE7 


Apartments  for  Rent 

Apartments  Fumisiied 

Condo  /  Townhouse  for  Rent 
I  Condo  /  lownhouse  for  Sale 

Guesthouse  for  Rent 

House  for  Rent 

House  for  sale 
I  Houseboats  for  Rant  /  Sale 

Housifig  Needed 

Ftoom  for  Help 

Room  for  ftont 

Roommates  -  l*rtvatc  ftoom 

Itoommates  -Shared  ftoom 
iSuMeU 

Vacation  ftemala 


index 


11GG 

Campus  Happenings 


^    ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-campus  A  on-line  financial  services 
source  for  students,  faculty  &  staff  Visit  us  at 
Ackerman  A-level,  on-line  at  w»»w.ucu.org  or 
caH  310-477-6628. 


20GG 

Personals 


MARRIAGE  OF 
CONVENIENCE 

MALE  STUDENT  ISO  lemate  student  seek- 
ing irxlependent  status.  No  relationship. 
Purely  contractual  and  plutonk;  No  one  tack- 
ing lor  citizenship.  nickalaosOholmaU.coni. 


11  GO 

Campus  Happeniii()s 


22GO 

Research  Subjects 


EARN$$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  the  com- 
mon cold.  Male/female  18-55yrs.  okJ,  non- 
smoker,  no  asttwna  history.  Umited  availabil- 
ity. CaH  today  310-785-9121 . 
Emailidinicalsubiects  O  yahoo.com 

RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for 
UCLA  Brain  Mapping  study.  Wear  goggles 
tor  two  weeks  tf^at  tum'ttw  worM  upskle 
down.  Must  be  rlght-harxjed,  normal  hearing, 
vision  good  or  con'ectable,  $1000  payment. 
Corrtact  Rk:hard  at  quixoteOucla.edu  for 
more  info. 


Bf£aecyd@| 


11  GO 

Campus  Happenings 


2200 

Researcli  Subjects 


SEVERE  PRE- 
MENSTRUAL 
SYMPTOMS  STUDY 

UCLA  is  conducting  a  study  using  an  investi- 
gational medication  for  women  with 
SEVERE  Pre-menstrual  symptoms.  You  may 
qualify  for  this  study  if  you  experience  some 
of  the  following  symptoms  during  tfie  week 
before  your  menstrual  cycle:  *depressed 
mood,  *tensk>n,  *irritability,  *feeling  suddenly 
sad  or  tearful,  'increased  ser^itivlty  to  rejec- 
tion. Qualifying  participants  must:  *have  reg- 
ular monthly  menstrual  cycles,  *be  between 
the  ages  of  18  and  45,  *not  t>e  using  medica- 
tkw^  for  the  treatment  of  PMS  (including  an- 
tidepressants, heitoal  treatments  or  birth  con- 
trol pills).  All  study  related  evaluations  and 
mediation  will  t>e  provided  at  no  cost  to  you. 
You  will  t)e  paid  $175  if  you  complete  the  7- 
8  month  study.  Some  women  will  receive 
only  inactive  drug  (placebo). 

INTERESTED?  CALL 
LINDA  GOLDMAN,  RNR 

UCLA  DEPT  OF 
OB/GYN  310-825-2452 


SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH,  18-45.  want- 
ed for  nkx)tine  research  study  administered 
by  IX^LA  Both  heavy  and  occasional  smok- 
ers needed  Participants  will  be  paid  up  to 
$395  for  four  visits.  Call  Richard  Olmstead  at 
310-312-0565,  leave  message. 

SOLAR  ENERGY 
INVESTIGATORS 

Help  direct  many  flat  mirrors  at  various  ob- 
jects Spectacular  displays?  High  tempera- 
ture phystes  experiments  gatore?  Transform 
deserts  into  gardens?  Solar  tunneling?  Pre- 
heat steel  for  welding?  Contact  Edward  Van- 
degrfft  at  eddievanOpacbell.net 

SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for  btaod  samples. 
$20  per  visit  Culver  City,  lOmin  to  UCLA. 
Reply:  paulpOcaresWecom 

WOMEN  AGES  18-40  WITH  and  WITHOUT 
PREMENSTRUAL  SYNDROME  wanted  for 
a  4-mon1h  study  of  hormone  in  response  to 
progesterone  or  prozac  challenge.  The  study 
entails  mood  diaries,  blood  test  and  2  spinal 
tap>s,  and  taking  progesteror>e  or  prozac. 
May  t>e  pakl  up  to  $200-400  for  your  time. 
Contact  Linda  GoMman,  RNP  UCLA  08- 
GYN  310-825-2452. 

WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60+  w/kyphosis 
(fonward  t>endir>g  of  spine)  needed  for  r«- 
search  program  investigating  whether  Yoga 
can  improve  kyphosis.  Study  being  conduct- 
ed by  GsM  Grssndais.  MD  In  the  (XLA  Dept. 
of  Mfldk*w.  Please  call  310-794-9055 


'  ■'.'    :\  -■»  •' 


36       Thursday,  October  19,2000 


Daily  Brutn  Ctassified 


•^"fm 


1300 

Campus  RecrnilnKMit 


1300 

Cnrnpus  RecriiitinoiU 


1300 

Campus  Recruitmeiit 


1300 

CiMlipuS  RoCf  llilllUMlt 


1300 

Campus  RecruitiULMit 


*     D«nSh!  ^Z  ^^'-  V  °T  '''^"'''^  '^^  ^^  investment  banking  and  brokerage  activities  of  DB  Alex.  Brown  LLC  and 
Deutsche  Bank  Secunties  Inc..  which  are  indirect  subsidiaries  of  Deutsche  Bank  AG. 


Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown 


.ii»,^^^V   '—^  i;  -rj^"  :*;"»»i«'- ■t'ir-'"^^  ■; 


turning  change  into  opportunity 


Juniors  and  seniors  welcome 


Global  reach  is 


Please  join  us  to  learn  about  career  '•; 
opportunities  in  investment  banking. 

Investment  Banking  Night 

Thursday,  October  1 9,  2000       ^  -  v^  - 
7:00  p.m.  :  ;  v 

Bradley  Center 
Third  Floor 

Casual  attire. 

Students  interested  in  U.S.  opportunities 
should  fax  resume  and  cover  letter 
with  area  of  interest  to  (212)  469-3872 
or  (212)  469-3660. 

To  learn  more  about  *      ,    : 

Deutsche  Banc  Alex.  Brown, 
visit  our  website  at 
www.db.com/careers  •    , 


leading  to  results. 


Deutsche  Bank 


m 


DaAy  Bruin  Oaisificd 


1300 

Campus  RcctuitiiM.'iit 


1300 

Campus  Rfcrmtiiutiit 


Botta  Capital 
Management  LLC 

has  openings  for        _* 


TRADING  ASSISTANTS 


Botta  Capital  Management  LLC.  is  a  major  market 
maker  of  index  and  stock  options  with  floor  trading 
operaUons  at  the  Chicago  Board  OpUons  Exchange,  the  Pacific 
Stock  Exchange  in  San  Francisco,  the  American  Stock  Exchange 
(AMEX)  in  New  York,  Philadelphia  Stock  Exchange  (PHLX), 
London  IntemaUonal  Financial  Futures  Exchange  (LIFFE),  and 
the  Amsterdam  Stock  Exchange.  Botta  also  conducts  electronic 
screen-based  trading  on  German  and  Swiss  equities  traded  on 
the  EUREX  from  our  Frankfurt  office.  With  over  80  market 
makers,  Botta  provides  significant  market  liquidity  in  exchange- 
traded  options  on  approximately  1,000  stocks  and  indexes 

Botta  does  not  require  its  candidates  to  have  a  prior 
background  in  economic  or  financial  matters.  Instead,  we 
carefully  seek  individuals  who  have  demonstrated  strong 
leadership  abilities  and  who  display  a  keen  ability  to  work  with 
confidence  and  discipline  in  a  highly  compeUtive,  fast-paced 
environment.  Botta  has  an  extensive  internship  program  and 
welcomes  inquiries  from  underclassmen. 

Botta  will  be  interviewing  on  campus 

yVor^lfffrlfr  7*.  To  be  considered  for  an 
interview,  please  submit  your  resume: 

Visit  Botta's  web  site  at  www.bottatrading.com 

Mail:  440  S.  LaSaUe  St.  Suite  3400,  Chicago  60605 

FAX:  (3 12)  260-5491 


Botta  Capital  Management  L.L.C. 


Chicago  »  New  York*  San  Frandsco  »  Philadelpbia  «  Frmkfurt  •  Lofidon  •  Amsterdam 


2300 

Sperm/Ecjy  Donors 


If  you  aiB  nwla,  in  ootegc  or  have  a  college 
degrae,  you  can  earn  up  to  iKOImo.  call  tor 
details  on  our  anonymous  apefm  donor  pro- 
-gram  Receive  free  comprehensive  health 
II  screening  &  help  infertile  couples  So  if 
^  youre  looking  for  a  great  job  and  a  IWIe  extra 
f  cash,  cal  us  first.  310^4-9»41. 


Egg  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 

wishing  to  help  infertile  couples 

$5,000 

it    CauMirna  (818)  8321494    ^, 


Pay  your  tuition 
with  eggs. 


If  fou're  a  wooun  between  18 
and  35,  you  can  earn  money  easi* 
If  anonymoudf  Donate  your 
eggi  (o  an  biiieiiile  couple. 

$3^  and  up,  depending  on 
TOUT  education  and  other  qualifi- 
cations.  Call  todaf 

Tw  CiNTu  ran  Egg  Options 
310/54€-€78€ 

•  •n>eC«wcefferEBOpci<m«.LLC 


2600 

Wanted 


ADOPTION 


Baby  is  our  dream  We  can  provide  loveise- 
curity.  AH  expenses  paid.  Attorney  involved 
Confidential  CaH  GIna  &  Frank,  888-676- 
1995 


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tor  sale 

2700-4500 


1300 

Cninpiis  Recruitment 


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Thomas  Jefferson 
School  of  L^w 


teoMAs  Jefferson  School  of  Law  offers: 

♦  Three  academic  centers  address  the  legal  impact  of 
technological  changes  and  globalization 

♦  Distinguished  and  accessible  faculty,  put  students  first 

♦  Individualized  attention;  average  class  size  is  30  students 

♦  January  and  August  entering  classes,  full-time  and 
part-time  programs 

♦  Full  and  partial  scholarships  for  entering  students  with 
average  LSATs  of  1 50+ 

♦  Lowest  tuition  of  private  ABA-approved  law  schools  in  CA. 

♦  Stq>-l^-stcp  career  counseling  and  guidance,  job  preparation 
wortcshops,  judicial  internships  and  clinical  education  programs 

♦  Prestigious  student  placements,  including  summer  associates 
sbA  post-graduate  positions 

♦  Alumni  include  partners  and  associates  in  leading  law  firms 
numerous  judges  and  a  member  of  the  US  Congress 

♦  Ranked  fifth  in  the  nation  for  quality  of  on-campus  life  in  the 
Princeton  Review's  The  Best  Law  Schools  2000 

♦  Named  best  Smdent  Bar  Association  in  the  nation  at  the  1999 
American  Bar  Association  annual  meeting 

♦  Located  in  scenic  and  eco^npmically  thriving  San  Diego 


■  '"'^^     CONTACT  OUR  AD.VHSSIONE  COUNSELORS  TO  LEARN  MORE 

<  1 21 21  San  Diego  Ave.,  San  Diego,  CA  92110 
■-■y\A  ^^^^^  297-9700  ♦  (800)  936-7529 

WWW.TJSL.EDU*    email:  INFO@TJSL.EDU 


3000 

Books 


A  NEW  GOVERNMENT 

fang-lupus.com 


3/»00 

Cotnputcrs/Softwiin; 


COMPLETE  COMPUTER  SYSTEM: 
433MHi,lntel  Celron,64MB,6  4GB,CD- 
R0M,56k  bps,2USB  ports. Wln98.WPSui- 
te8  0,PS/2keyt)oard&mouse.  speakers, 
BJC1000  color  printer,  Hitactii  SuperScari 
Monitor  ir+Xtras.  OBO  $799.00  323-294- 
1864. 


3500 

Fiitnlturo 


FOR  SALE  Desk  w/attached  bookcase 
($75),  Nightstand  ($25).  4  llres  ($50),  Mazda 
Car  radto  ($25)  or  best  oHerl  Debbie  323- 
661-6450. 

MATTRESSESIII 

SEALY,  STEARNS  &  FOSTER  Also  twin- 
sets-$79  95,  Full8-$99.95.  Queens-$139  95. 
Kings-$  199.95.  Queen  Plllowtops  $199.95. 
Beacon  Open  7-days  1309  Westwood 
BMJ.  310-477-1466. 


3500 

Furniture 


WHOLESALE 
FURNrrURE 

Sleigh  beds.  Rustic  pine  furniture.  amx>ires 
iTWttraea  mis,  Mp  covered  &  uptiolstered  so- 
tas/chaira.  Laalher  sofas  &  ctiairs  310-745- 
2253. 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


.     GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55.000  Visas  awarded  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared application  John  Manley,  Esq  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd  #300  LA,  CA  90025 
3 1 0-820-7553.  DeadHne:  1 0/30/00 


Pets 


2  CATS  FREE  to  good  home.  Beautiful,  fun, 
playful.  Moving,  muM  go  together.  310-209- 
3377. 


Stereos/TVs/R.ulios 


BIG  SCREEN  45"  cotor  TV  $575  obo.  Cotor 
TV  2r  new  new  $175  Cotof  TV  20"  new 
new  $100  310-313-6449 


* Thursday,  Octobw  19, 2000     "  37 


Stereos/TVs/Radios 


JVC  STEREO  SYSTEM  w/cabinet  and  2 
speakers.  36in  taH.  AM/FM,  CD,  dual  cas-'- 
sette,  turn  table.  Great  condition.  $450.  310- 
477-0809.  "I 


WWW4iKi4wE! 


transportation 

4600-5500 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1984  HONDA  CMC  2  door.  4  speed,  runs 
great,  good  gas  mileage,  AM/FM  cassette, 
new  muffler.  $1100  obo.  310-444-9814 

1988  MARK  VII.  Designer  edition,  brown, 
mnning  conditkKi.  Asking  $1800.  310-209- 
0267. 


1 988  TOYOTA  CELICA  GTS.  Power  sunroof 
AC.  cruise,  autokxik  alarm.  5speed  stick 
sound-system  new  battery.  Excellent  engine 
$2400obo.  Call  Jay:  3 10-839-7654. 

1991  NISSAN  SENTRA  SER  "Pocket  Rock- 
et". New  shocks,  tires,  batte^,  windshield, 
brakes.  Excellent  condition.  $3600.  Roger 
310-206-2837(0),  310-275-3107(E) 

1991  NISSAN  SENTRA  XE,  4  doors,  5- 
speed  16  valves,  A/C,  stereo,  cnjise  control, 
$3300.  310-473-1214. 

1993  GEO  STORM,  black  exterior,  gray  inte- 
rior, 66K  miles,  one  owner,  oins  great!  $4000 
obo.  310-836-8163. 

1994  GEO  PRISM.  Original  owner  Auto,  air, 
airtMigs.  Well  maintained.  70,000  miles.  Blue 
book  $6510,  asking  $5000  obo.  310-478- 
8400.  LcutterOyahoo.com 

1996  FORD  ASPIRE  71500mi.,  auto.  a/c. 
alrtoag.  red,  excellent  conditwn,  $2450  obo 
Leaving  Country.  Call  Andras  310-825-4585 
or  after  6pm  310-208-4345. 

MOVING-  MUST  SELL 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4wd. 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player,  red-grey,  great  condi- 
tton.  Sell  for  $4200.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836. 

POLICE  tMPOUNDS  Cars  as  tow  as  $500 
tor  listings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214 

TWO  VERY  NICE  CARS.  Under  book. 
Under  72K  miles.  1994  Mercury  Capri 
Convertable  $4500.  1994  Cadillac  El 
Dorado  $14,000.  323-293-4009. 

VW  CABRIOLET  Convertible  1990 
84000mi,  good  conditton,  power  windows, 
black,  A/C,  registration  pakJ  for  one  year. 
$4000.  Call  Vicente  310-398-4123  or  email 
)contrer9uc  la.edu 

•93  NISSAN  SENTRA  XE.  2door,  5spd/man- 
ual,  white  A/C,  am/fm  cassette,  cmise  con- 
trol, good  condition,  90K.  $4400  Denise  310- 
268-3838  x48480 


51 OO 

Motorcycles  for  Sale 


1981  HONDA  900  SPORT-$1000.00  &  1998 
SUZUKI  800  INTRUDER,  showroom  condi- 
tion. Like  new  under  4200  miles-$5500  00 
CaH  after  6pm  323-293-4009. 


1999  DUCATI  Monster  900  Dark.  Low  miles, 
runs  and  tooks  new.  $7500.  310-701-1811 


5200 

Parking 


GREAT  LOCATION  Comer  Midvale  and 
Ophir  Lrg  parking  spot  in  sublerreanian 
garage  Offers  better  safety  and  protects 
from  the  elements  $150/mo/obo.  310-657- 
7270 


5300 

Scooter  /  Cycle  Repair 


CyclpTimc  Comp,inv 


Motwcyde  •  Motor  Scooter  •  Moped 
Salei  •  Repairs  •  Insurance 


ooio.  -  nepairx  •  insurance 

■  •  EXCHANQE  AO  FOR  FREE  PICKUP  ! 

■  •  OR  PURCHASE  DISCOUNT  \ 

■  (310)275-6734  ■ 

g   1632|  UCiwiega  Blvd  Six  BtodtsSoultiol  Pico  ■ 


ISar. 


Display 
206-3060 


38 Tliursdiy,  October  19, 2000 


Daily  BoiinCbssified 


i 


beloitte 
&Touche 


Deloitte  i 
Consulting 


-»»i.«— T-   ■■^i* 


''■^i\': 


r   t  ,1.  /.i^iv  .  -v. 


.(■».  ..' 


.  <>;-**Vi;  ■ 


ours  depends  on 

earn  this  big 


Come  totn^  all  Deloitte  Career  Night 

and  learn  aj^ut  our  Consulting  Group, 
'Enterprise  gj^k  Services,  and 

t  Solutions  career 
offj^ortunitiks. 

October  24, "2000 
Bradley  Cerfier 

6  p.m.  to  8p.m. 


www.dc.com/careers 

moo 


i-.-A  -S.      J     /M       ,  I 


www.dttus.com/us/career/dtt_opp.htm 


OiilyBruinChssifM 


1300 

Campus  Recruitmonl 


1300 

Ciiinpiis  Rt;cruitnu.'nt 


1300 

Campus  Recruitiiuiit 


1300 

Campus  RecruitiiKMit 


^hllni»%  October  19, 2000       39 


EPOCH 

.  P  A  R .  I    N   £   R   S 

A  new  era  in  investment  banking. 


6000 

Insurance 

'_'-:■'■<  i '" 

Farmers.com 

Patrick  Parins  Agency 

Business*  Fire»E-Quake 

;  ■;  ■'  -  ■.. 

Llte»Healfti 

Financial  &  Insurance  Services 

C3  1  O)  208  7  1  83 

Investment  Banking  Night: 
Thursday,  October  19 


Epoch  Partners  is  a  technology-enabled  investment  bank 
focused  on  high-growth  companies  and  electronically 
connected  institutional  and  individual  investors.  Epoch 
has  assembled  a  team  of  experienced  investment 
banking,  research,  trading  and  technology  professionals 
to  build  the  next  generation  investment  bank.  Epoch  is 
looking  for  financial  analysts  and  equity  research 
associates    Please  view  our  BruinView  job  descriptions. 

Through  partnerships  with  Charles  Schwab,  Ameritrade 
and  TD  Waterhouse,  Epoch  has  exclusive  access  to  a  fast 
growing,  electronically  connected  investor  base  that 
consists  of  more  than  10  million  accounts.  Epoch's 
industry-leading  venture  capital  partners  include 
Benchmark  Capital,  Kleiner  Perkins  Caufield  &  Byers  and 
Trident  Capital. 


6100 

Computer/Internet 


FREE  WEBSITE!!! 

YOUR  OWN  5-page  website  ABSOLUTELY 
FREE.  Easy,  fast,  quality.  NO  banner  ads  to' 
*atchl  httpy/eengen.go  coolobiz  net 

iVANTED!  Internet  savvy  programmer.  Abili- 
ty to  host  web  sites  and  search  engine  place- 
ment skills.  818-873-4767  pagei 


www.epoch.com 

Icehouse  Two    •    1 51   Union  Street    •    San  rrancisco    •    California    •    94m    •    415  315  3100 


2300 

Sperni/Efjrj  Donors 


2300 

Sperm/Egrj  Donors 


We  Need  Your  Sperm! 


We  are  studying  the  effect  of  an 
experimental  drug  on  sperm  function. 

Qualified  participants  will  receive  an 

evaluation  by  a  board-certified 

physician  including  physical 

examination,  blood  testing,  and  EKG,  all 

free  of  charge. 

Also,  earn  up  to 


5900 

Fitjancijil  Aid 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  application  fees,  high  approval  rate,  low 
interest  rate,  all  applicants  welcome.  Call 
toll-free:  1-866-427-2677. 


5900 

Finunciiil  Aid 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
«  Union  (Lender  Code  832123)  We're  on 
campus  at  Aclterman  A-level.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.org 


Fmrmmr9,eom 

Patrick  Parins  Agency 

Student  Loan  Program 

25,000  per  year.  5  Min.  Approval. 

(310)206-7183-90024 


*acc 


Bargains 


( good  enough  even 
for  Uncle  Scrooge." 
Swmry  Wmdnmmdmy  A  Fridmy 


5680 

Trovel  Dcstitintions 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


6200 

Health  Son/ices 


MASSAGE  by  friendly  guy.  Tal<e  a  break  and 
enjoy  complete  relaxation.  $25/tir,  will  travel 
women  only  please.  310-996-1153.  or  page 
310-775-6588. 

MASSAGE        ~ 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
isfi/Deep  Tissue  Massage.  $40/hr  w/studen; 
ID.  Monday-Fnday  10am-8pm.  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Cerliflcates  available 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Attorneys 


LEGAL  PROTECTION 

EARN$$$  Pre-paid  legal  plan  to  protect 
yourself.  $25/montti  membership  ffirougfioui 
the  US  and  Canada.  SURQ33©hot- 
maM.com,  213-841-5704.  wwwpplsicom  - 
800-654-7757. 

NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST  Sexual  harrassment.  Discrimina- 
tion. Auto-accidents,  Slips/falls  MYER  LAW 
FIRM.  Westside.  Scott  D.  Myer(UCLAW'86) 
wwwbestlawyer.com  310-277-3000 

PREPAID  LEGAL 
SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  m 
several  pre-paid  legal  service  programs 
providing  quality  legal  sendees  to  plan  mem- 
bers. Robert  Moss(UCLAW71).:310-260- 
7650. 


5680 

Travel  Destinations 


$2000 


in  compensation! 


For  more  information  call: 

West  Coast  Clinical  Research 
(818)  901-8546  ext.  113 


Scooters  for  Sale 


EftrES(^$4:99 

or  less/mfiHi. 


CaUr 

977W.  HvclcI'dirBlvd. 
nJ^LEWOOD 


WE  DELIVER! 


(310)677-5800x107 


S700 

Travel  Tickets 


lATM  AMsnCA  SPKClALlSrS 

»°^      "»  M*/M«  pmi«  sea 

I  ■ajaro       109  lima  159 

Cabo  Son  luoit    99  lunm  Aim  209 

HSofcoder        J09  $.D«Chil.  209 

Hondurm  219  logota  220 

CMtaRica  20«  Oujia  259 

Nicvaoua  22<  Mn  309 

iGvcMmalo         179  Corocoi 


•nixa^l^aiAp 


199 


•  "i^*d  mrmmm 


NEW  YORK 

•259  R/T 


i***n 


imK  ftanoKo  I]  «/T 


liclirli  NOW  « 


STUDENT  TRAVEL 


[IMilfinMB!]  ^ 


FREE  TRIP 


Come  into  our  branch  to  register  for  2  FREE  AA 
Tickets  to  anywhere  in  the  Continental  US! 

You  MUST  come  In  to  8TA  Travel  to  register  for  the  raffle  prior  to  OCTOBER  31. 

i„  -^  o       ^"fistrictions  Apply.  Booking  must  be  made  at  least  3  days 

.•  '"«*«^t»2"«f*nriinimumstay.MaxirT>um  45  day  stay  Must  be  used  by  October  31    2001 

CST#10175eO€0  '.cvjui. 


Mf^ 


NMexico  Escape? 

|$369  Gibo  Son  Lucas  .,m*-^ 

l$479  Concon  v«.^o5»*'' 

I$352  PowtoVaHona    >** 

»/r<wiott  /3  ri^hh  ■  Air  -  Tronshn) 


www.victorytravel.com 

(323)  277-4595 


:ds^-. 


SIO-UCLA-FLY 
920  Westwood  Blvd. 


TRAVEL 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


www.statravel.com 


^^^^^^^B 

^^H 

^^^^H 

Display 
2G6-3ubU 

^^^^H 

^^^^■^H 

HHI 

!■ 

Thursday,  October  19,2000 


.-  » 


Mercury  Broker  in  Westwood.  No  Brokers  Fees.  Also  other 
markets.  Low  Rates.  Foreign  Students  and  New  Drivers  OK. 
(310)208-3548     ._  v      1081  Westwood  Blvd. Suite 221 


Oaiiy  Bruin  Oassificd 


Daily  Bruin  Classified     ' 


Thursday,  October  1 9, 2000       41 


6000 

Insiirnnce 


Be  Beautifid 


Porcelain  Bonding 

$590  Each,  Less  10%  for  StudenU 

Open  evenings 

Peter  Wyian,  DOS 

Bellflower  Dental  Group 

(562)  925-3765 

10318  Ro««cran8     Bellflower  90706 

30  min.  from  campus 


ADVERTISE  IN 
OUR  NEXT 
BIG  ISSUE 

DAILY  BRUIN 

Classified  825-2221  •  Display  206-3060 


6600 

Personal  Services 


Joelle  Jacobson.  MARRIAGE/FAMILY 
THERAPIST  intern  (IMF37582).  Call  310- 
797-2243.  Specializes  in  teenagers  arxJ 
young  adults.  Supervized  by  Serena  Brooks, 
licensed  Marriage/Family  Therapist 
(MFC30534). 


6700 

Professional  Services 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  for  de- 
pression, anxiety,  obsessions,  post-traumat- 
tc  stress,etc.  Couples/Individuals.  Crime  vic- 
tims may  be  eHgible  for  free  treatment.  Call 
Liz  Gould(MFC#32388)«310-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  consultation 

ATTENTION  MBA,  LAW.  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Frustrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
prolessionai  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultant.  3 1 0-826 -4  44  5 .  www.  winning  • 
personstalement.com 


A  Guide  to  the  Perplexed 

0 

umversit\'secrets.com  X 

htip   //unlversitysecreis   com 


6200 

Health  Services 


-^■'' 


Movers/Storage 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  loo  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-foot  trucks  fully  equipped  for  large  moves. 
Call  24/7.  Available  on  short  notice.  License 
T163844.  800-2GO-BEST  (800-246-2378.) 

HONEST  MAN  w/14ft  tojck  and  dollies, 
small  jobs,  short  notice  ok.  SF,  LV,  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  Bruins!  10th  yr.  310- 
285-8688. 


JERRY'S  MOVING&DELIVERY  The  careful 
movers.  Experienced,  reliable,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available  Also,  pfck- 
up  donations  for  American  CarKer  Society. 
Jerry©310-391-5657 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

ALL  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedicated  pro- 
fessional At  your  home  or  WLA  studio  Isl- 
lesson  free.  No  drum  set  necessary.' 
Neil:323-654-8226. 

GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professiortal  near  UCLA  All  levels,  guitars 
available.  Learn  to  pl^y  effortlessly! 
www.JWGS.com.  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 


6700 

Professional  Services 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Writing,  editing,  dissertatton  formatting,  tran- 
scribing. Personalized,  prolessionai  assis- 
tance. Ace  Words,Etc.  310-820-8830 


PSYCHOTHERAPY 

C  arinji  •!<.  COiitldiiilial 
Coimstiiii^ 

DopiVsMlHI.  .\ll\H.'t\.      . 

RfLilicnNliips.  A(.ldi».ti(iiis  iV 
AInisc 

Im|iruu'  >i)ur  NL'i!-c>iL'i.'iit 

Ct'pc  Willi  lnss/iraiiiii  i 

Hc;il  iniKT  \\(UitKl>> 


Isr  i'cnsiilhilioii  hne 


Slurly  Kliodndad,  Ml  I 

I    l>i>0     WivlhllX'    Bl\d     r?2(l| 
I    >'^  AtlL'L-lcv.  ("  \  *)0()2-> 

(310)479-8255 


SERRAf^'S  CLEANING  SERVICES.  Busi- 
ness License.  Years  of  experience.  Afford- 
able prices  Offices,  apartrT>ents,  condomini- 
ums, houses.  Cleaning,  Laundry  etc.  Maria 
310-836-7258  310-655-3664 

TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
Union/Unkxi.  For  cunwit  fall  season  artd 
beyond.  Call  Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-206-0464. 


TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
pers.com 

WRITER'S  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlinir)g,  research,  and  production 
assistarK;e  lor  academic  or  professkxial  writ- 
ing. Experienced  writing  instmctor,  Hansard 
Univeristy  MA.  Jon/310-367-5666 


iRiF'Fipnnnii 

IQilyLljiMPIl 

8-hour  class  is  Just  S25 

'No  stress'  classes  ofTered 

Tucs/Wcd  nlf  hts, 

or  all  day  Saturday! 

Walk  to  class! 
Walk-Ins  welcome. 

(ir  lyici  BvaflaMtt 

Westwood  Driving  &  Traflk  School 

I  #93  Broifon  Av«a«e#2IS 
(Jiut  abavf  Bryoad  tht  Bcuh,  acrMi  rrvm  RM*  AM) 
C«U  ro  rcwrvr  ywr  ml!  3l«-2W-3333 


6200 

Health  Services 


DETSTTAL  HEALTH  CARE 

(Orfico  of  S.  tolalwiawl,  DOS) 

>^  e  Create  BcAutiful  Smiles! 

•  All  Phases  of  Dentistry 

•  24  Hour  EmergeiKy  Service 

•  Medi-Col  &  Most  htsuronce  Plans  Accepted 
'All  Students  &  Faculty  Members  ore  wekome' 

First  time  inh-oductory  offer  witfi  this  coupon 

Tel:  (310)  475-5598  /  Fax:  (310)  475-1970 
Online:  www.onvillage.com/e/dentalhealth 

noDm 


palicnl  Ten  Bnnili* 

C.>upi>n  E«pirT5  d/.ll/OI) 


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Wilshirp  tt  SanM  Mrmicjt  (TriT  Poriitif  in  Hnir) 


•  Full  oral  tufflinKion  •  Oral  CiiKct  Scmning 

•  Nfrcsuty  K  lUyt  •  PtrxHlonUI  Euminjiion 

•  CItMiing  <«  PolghiiH   'X  KlyijftnontrMufcrrrfilt  I 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  (^^bII^ 

V    Miver  BrUlkmt  Results     J 
ORTHODONTIST    ■*._^,_-_«^  .  ^^r^ -— 


'JiW^£i'"  Dr.  Nader  Davanl 

liCLAFACirLTY  MEMBER    •^^e     *^#»l»^JiL      m0€^y  €LWkm 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 
Specializing  in  braces  for  adults  &  chil<dren 


Braces 

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•  Cosmetic  Porcelain 

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Teeth  Whitening   $8S^^    PTI    feMfi 

upper  Of  kMTCr  ^J  %^  ^^|L*_^^^^B  *mtt  vmmmm^mmmZmmm^ 

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6700 

Professional  Servicr.'s 


CONTACTS 

fJO  HIDDhN  CHAUCifcS! 


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IM.ROI 

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FREE   Ciiro   Kit   v\//l'«in:l»ii;ii. 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Comprehensive  Dissertalioo  Assistance 
Theses.  Papers,  and  Personal  Stalements 

Proposals  and  Books 
Interrwtional  Students  Wetcorne.  Since  1965 
Sharon  Bear,  Pti.O.  (310)  47046*2 
www.Bear-Wnle.coiT) 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


-ENGLISH  EXPERT 

DOES  WRITING  IN  ENGLISH  make  you 
crazy?  Assistance  in  t>asic  skills  to  major  re- 
search paper  completion.  ESL  experienced. 
310-839-9933/Adam. 

BOND  TUTORING 

All  subjects  6-i2tti  grade.  All  our  tutors  tuive 
college  degrees.  We  will  meet  your  indtvWu- 
alneeds.310-471-7628. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  ttwt  will  get  results. 
CatcTi  up  or  get  ahead  this  lall,  Severvyears 
experience.  SAT/Cafculus/Physics/Chemis- 
try/Alget>ra/Geometry/French/English.  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 

FRENCH  TUTOR 

PHD  GRADUATE  tutors  French  language  for 
all  levels  t)eginning,  advanced  and  conver- 
satkKfal  French.  Excellent  service  and  rates. 
Call  Ll2a:310-575-3874. 

INTERVIEW  TUTOR 

Worried  atxjut  Med  School  interviews? 
Former  admissk)ns  interviewer  will  improve 
your  skills  and  improve  your  chances.  Dan 
310-209-9124. 

PSYCH  TUTORING  AVAILABLE.  Masters  in 
psychology  $lO/hr.  will  travel  310-996- 
1153,  or  page  310-775-6588. 

THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  prolessor  otters  tutoring, 
term  paper  assistance.  English.  Social  Sci- 
erKe.  History.  Foreign  Students  Welcome. 
Call:310-4  52-2865 
www.thewriterscoach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  with  the  English  language— for  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels  310-440-3116. 

WWWMY-TUT0R.COM   Math/Physics/Sta- 
listics/English/Hebrew/chemistry/l)iology/as- 
tronomy/  Computer  programming    Compu-  • 
terized  statistical  analysis  available.  Tutoring 
sendee.  Call  anytime.  800-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

Tiitoriiu)  Wiiiited 


7100 

Ttitorinq  W.mted 


DRIVER/TUTOR 

w/exceHent  study  habits  to  assist  12416-yr- 
old  boys  w/HW  and  tests.  Car  plus  insurance 
needed.  Approx  20hr8/wi(.  t10-$12/hr.  310- 
472-7353. 

GERMAN  NATIVE 

To  tutor  young  boy  In  Gennan  once/wk.  (pre- 
ferably male).  Venice.  310-392-4974. 


MATH  TUTOR  NEEDED  for  11th  grade  high 
school  student.  Weekdays  and  weekends 
Please  call  310-600-4109. 

MATH.  CHEMISTRY  FRENCH,  AND  SAT 
PREP  tutors  wanted.  Must  have  own  car. 
Arlteulate.no  experience  required  SM,  BH 
CC.  $15/hr  310-679-2133. 


NEED  COLLEGE  LEVEL  ALGEBRA  2  TU- 
TOR asap  Must  have  own  car.  Mid-Wilshire 
area  or  SMCC  $20/hr.  323-857-0540  or  213- 
703-6141. 


PAT  OR  CAREER 
OPPORTUNITY! 

Pnvaie  tulors/irtstructors  for  K-12  ami  Edu- 
cational Consultants  for  college  admissions 
services  Seeking  Undergraduates-PhD's. 
ExperierKie  preferred,  strong  communlcB-- 
tions  skills  required.  Future  Youth  Inc./Mind-: 
Life  Consulting  Group  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329. 

TUTOR         " 

TUTOR  FOR  Tlh  and  10th  graders.  Pacific 
Palisades  $l5/hr  Approx  15-20hrs/wk.  Es- , 
pecially  science,  math,  English.  818-560- 
3211  or  310-454-1418. 

TUTOR  WANTED  for  4th  grade  boy  Bilin- 
gual (Frerwh-English)  American  preferred. 
3times/wk  for  2  hours.  Must  have  own  car. 
Bel-air.  310-471-0032  or  dbtwenty4sev- 
enOaol.com 


TUTOR-  14  y.o.  boy.  Keep  kWs  orgar>ized 
and  up-to-date  on  schoolwori<  2-3hrs/day  2- 
4  days/week.  Must  have  car.  Bel  Air.  $8- 
10/hr  310-471-1363/310-420-4420. 

TUTOFVDRIVER  lor  11  6year  girt.  Wed  & 
Thurs,  3:30-5:30pm.  $10/hr  Near6year.  CaU 
Ian  310-477-7541. 

TUTORS  WANTED:  All  Subjects.  preK-12tt> 
grade,  computers,  languages,  instruments, 
PT  (WLA/SFV/MALIBU),  salary:  $10-15, 
must  have  car,  310-477-2669,  tax:  310-477- 
1359. 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PRtXESSING  specializing  In  thes- 
es, dissertatkH^,  transcription,  resumes,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Mortca,  310-828-6939  Hollywood,  323-466- 
2888. 


i^^mWP^  tL_     


DUCLA 
INING 

GUIDE 

FOR  PBOPlf  WHO  LCyVE  POOD 

Eat, 

Drink, 

&  Advertise 


W 


To  advertise  call: 
310.825  J2161 


7400 

Business  Opportunities 


A  6-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  It's  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35,  Refundable  No  Risk 
httpV/zibglb.com/phanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
for  Stepharfie. 

BURNED  OUT? 

Tired  of  misleading  ads?  I'm  tired  of  clueless 
people  Want  to  make  $5000-$800a/mo7 
Beverly  HiHs  oince  expk>ding.  CaH  me:  310- 
268-1515. 

COLLEGE  ACHIEVERS 

Ground  fk)or  company,  Southern  California 
market  exploding.  Want  to  make  $5- 
8K/month?  I'll  leach  you  how.  FT/PT  Call 
310-360-6994  9am-1pm 


7500 

Ciircei  Oppottiimiitjs 


BREAK  INTO 
HOLLYWOODII! 

After  a  decade  of  research-d's  here:  The 
"Industry  Secrets  VkJeo'.  Anyorte  can  do 
this  simple,  ten-step  plan  Get  the  inskle 
track  to  acNeving  your  actirtg  dreams 
now!  Send  $24  95  (check  or  money  or- 
der) to:  Break  Into  Hollywood  PO  Box  833 
Santa  Monica,  CA  90406  or  caN:  310- 
899-0082. 


GET  AN  "A*  on  your  health  test!!!  Detoxify 
your  system  last  or  double  your  $$  backIM 
Call  toll  free  877-696-4541  •Kt:UC100. 
www.tafDutpnmo(ion«.com 


Display 
2U6-3060 


Evaluation  and  treotnW^f  olfiMOes 
related  to  sexual  andreproc 


Clinic 


lance  of 
ofSTDj 


Counseling  and  support  fo 
relating  to  sexual  function, 
or  orientation 

Anonymous  tW  lasting* 


For  informotien  or  on  appointment  call 
310  825-4073,  or  visit  thnr  Ash«  web 
sit*  to  request  on  oppointnwnt  or  ask  a 
health  related  question: 
http://www.saonet.ucla.edu/health.htm 
•/D  /*  checked  tqdptermine  eligibility  to  use  Ashe 


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9  Extinct  birds 

1 3  Tunnmy  exercise 

14  Fabled  racer 

1 5  Arm  txjne 

16  Diner 

1 7  Baker's  need 

18  Basin 

19  Patchwork  art 

21  Misplace 

22  Quiet  time 
23— Baba 
25  Delivered  a 

message 
29  Scurry 

33  Having 
krxiwledgeof 

34  Logger's 
commodity 

35  Actor  Wallacti 

36  Tiers 

37  Sticky  ntud 

39  Ringo's 
instrument 

40  Fire 

41  Mineral  deposit 

42  Assistant 

43  Like  some 
poems 

45  Confuses 

48  Morsel 

49  Boxer's 
boundary 

50  Tart 

53  FurKlamentals 

59  Big  Foot's 
cousin 

60  Eternities 

61  Amptiittieater 

62  Garden  spot 

63  Racing  sled 

64  Small 
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65  Wittiered 

66  Pullovers 

67  Memo 


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5  "—  I  Do  It?": 
song 

6  Qulbt>le 

7  Pitctier 
Herstiiser 

8  Octopus 
appeindage 

9  Islamic 

10  Miscellany 

11  Beattieand 
Reinking 

1 2  Rice  wine 

13  Pan  of  a  min. 
20  Montreal's  prov. 

24  Baby's  seat 

25  Kind  of  delivery 

26  Glue  ingredient 

27  Quieter 

28  Reply:  abbr. 


29  Total 

30  Danger 

31  Evade  adroitly 

32  Frosts 
34  Fasten 

37  Safety  devk:e 

38  "—  Abner 

39  Mom's  mate 
41  TV  add-on 

44  Antiseptk: 

45  Model  Kate 
and  kin 

46  —  and  downs 

47  Confine 
temporarily 

49  Gamut 

50  Votes  in  favor 

51  Yietd 

52  Roman  road 

54  Debauctiee 

55  "New  Yorker 
cartoonist 

56  Gael 

57  Type  of  jerk 

58  Perctied 


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Classifieds 
825-2221 


7500 

Cjtrnor  Op|)(jrtimiti(;s 


7500 

Cnroer  Opportunities 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


Harbor-UCLA  medical  Center,  Department  of  Orthopaedic  Surgery 
Researcli  Coordinator  Job  Description 


Tke  pwym  of  tMi  periUMiis  ts  facMtat*  Ike  rMsaraii  »niM:t>  sf  tke  OmMpaoilc 
Sergonr  OipirtmMt  A  swMdary  pwpose  Is  to  ntaintaiii  the  cwnpntar  systems,  tetabasas 
asd  ottMT  todmological  oeiilpmMit  of  the  dopartmoet 

Spodtlcatiens:  AcaMidattformispoattioaiiwsttoiaMiiietivatad.acroatlwiMvMomsolMr, 

famliar  «M  coiiUNitsrs  (MaoMsik  and  PC),  Mwostod  Is  a  ratated  field,  and  willing  to 

conrniH  at  least  a  yMv  to  ths  poaWon. 

OotiaK  11m  Dattos  of  Uils  position  Inctado,  but  an  not  limitad  to,  daHy  upkosp  of  sovonM  data 
basM,  amtdag  ON  vartoM  rosoMvb  pralacts  tactatfiis  Ifeo  rsviowtng  of  ciiaits  and  X-ray  tKos, 

dovaloptag  awM  pregnim  to  balp  tko  dapartmont  funfcor  its  rasoarcft  Inlorests,  taking  an 
actlw  rsis  in  miscollanooas  dopartmantal  protects  ""d  provtdliig  gonsral/lodinical  mpport  for 

dMcal  staff. 

arifA2ZU7f0 


^ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  Valley,  Hollywood,  or  Santa  Monica 
office  needs  energetic  people.  Bonuses! 
310-395-7368 


B 


FIRST  CALL 
Staffing  Services 

College  Students! 
Earn  extra  money  for  school! 

Are  vou  looking  for  a  way  to  pay  off  those  student 

loans'  Call  us  for  short  or  long  term  wrk 
assignments  We  haw  lots  of  fun  jobs  available' 

CitlJaeinSanuMoirict 
3 10   264.9914 

orC$n\tin&aMc 

818242.9988 

www.firjicillilirr.coni 


LEGAL  ASSISTANT 

Great  opportunity  for  winter  grads!  Beverly 
Hills  Law  office  seeks  enttiusiastic  graduate 
for  entry  level  legal  position.  Great  opportun- 
ity witti  grovtrth  potential.  Office  experience 
t>elpful.  Computer  skills  (Windows  9aA/Vord) 
required.  M-F  8:30-5:30.  Great  benefits, 
competitive  salary.  Fax  resume  310-550- 
8771,  Attn:  Lily 

STOCK  BROKER.   Licenses  and   Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Blvd  Suite 
216,  Woodland  Hills,  CA.  Instnjcton  David 
Stiu  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  University) 
818-703-8889. 


THERAPEUTIC  AID  for  autistic  ctiildren 
P/T,F/T  (flexible).  $12-15/tir.  BS/BA  Psychol- 
ogy preferred  Experience  w/DT  behavior 
modification.  Contact  818-788-2388,  fax  re- 
sume 818-788-3875 


WANTED!  Internet  Savvy  Programmer  Abil- 
ity to  host  web  sites  and  search  engine 
placement  skills.  818-873-4767  pager 


7600 

Child  Care  Offered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  njn  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2.5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Ctose  to  UCLA 
310-473-0772. 


NAGiLA  PRf  SCWooL 


LxweDr  W.LA  tecHHy.  doee  to  UCLA. 

FT  *  PT,  Age*  2-e. 
<M  (310)207-4543  or  vistt  In  person 
"t  1620  S.  Bundy. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE  wanted  for  11- 
yr-oW  girl  and  6-yr-ok)  boy  Driving  home 
from  school  or  to  after  school  activities  Help 
with  homework  and  light  housekeeping. 
Must  have  reliable  car  with  insurance.  M-F  2- 
6pm.  $lO/hr  approx.  Call  310-273-9160, 
email  vucetk:  Oucla.edu 


ATHLETIC,  EnergetK.  Intelligent  guy  to  play 
sports  and  help  out  with  homework  for  kkls 
6,8.  As  many/little  hours  as  wanted,  after 
school  and  on  weekends.  Must  know  how  to 
drive  and  swim.  Call  Maureen  310-440- 
0990. 


BABYSITTER  Occastonal  need  for  5  yr-old 
gin  (and  labrador)  in  the  hills  off  Beverly 
Glen.  Car  and  references  required.  818-981- 
1834 

BABYSITTER/TUTOR 

for  girts,  1349  y/o.  Help  w/HW  in  BH  home 
Car  provkled  for  min  driving.  Must  be  UCLA 
student  w/good  driving  record,  references 
$11/hr.  310-820-6700x4. 

BENEDICT  CANYON-10  yo.  girl  anending 
Warner  Ave  After  School  Care.  From  1- 
6:30pm  M-F.  $350A(vk.  Must  have  car  and 
good  driving  records  310-858-7060. 

CHILCARE/DRIVER.  Mon/Tues.  3-7:30pm. 
5  year-oM-toy  ptek-up  from  school  to  activi- 
ties and  home,  supen/ise  HW  and  play  Care 
lor  2  year-oW  brother  for  1  hr  Good  driver 
References.  Good  pay  Westwood.  310-475- 
1953. 


CHILD  CARE  Wanted  Tues  3-8,  Thurs  3-6 
AND/OR  Sat  12-9  In  Santa  Montea 
Someone  to  help  full  lime  Mom  w/  kWs  ages 
4,6,10.  Must  iMve  experience  Good  pay 
Call  Doug  310-888-0163.  Fax  310-451- 
6050. 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


FUN/CARING  BABYSITTER  NEEDED  for 
picking  up  &  caring  for  9yr  old  gin.  Must 
have  car  and  be  a  good  driver.  3-5days/wk 
aftemoons-6pm  Gayle  310-450-4109  (even- 
ings). 

Pn  FULL  HOUSE  CLEANING.  CDL,  child- 
care.  Must  tie  able  to  slay  overnight  on  occa- 
sions. Light  cooking.  MWF  1-6pm.  Must  be 
flexible.  323-370-2413. 

PT  BABYSITTER  Desperately  wanted  for 
evenings/weekends.  Must  be  responsible, 
have  common  sense,  references  and  a  car 
Call  310-838-8085  or  bu2heeguri©aol  com 

PT  CHILDCARE 

For  Very  special  Syr  old  daughter  Interna- 
tional or  bilingual  background  preferred, 
car&references  required.  Grand  Piano.  Bev- 
ertywood.  Laird:3 10-287- 1677. 

SPANISH  SPEAKING  CAREGIVER  needed 
to  pick-up  children  from  school  and  tutor 
Spanish.  School  and  residence  within  blocks 
of  UCLA.  1-2hrs/day  4days/wk.  $l2/hr  310- 
208-6865  or  310-825-2556. 

STUDENT  NEEDED 

3-4  days,  4-7pm.  Must  have  own  car  Walk- 
ing distance  to  UCLA.  $8/hr  Drive  children, 
help  w/homewori<.  Non-smoker  310-470- 
0021. 

WATCH  MOVIES  AND  STUDY  Babysitter 
needed.  Flexible  hours  Weeknights  and/or 
weekends.  BH  family  CDL.  Fax  resume  323- 
957-9762. 


•F/T  GENERAL  OFFICE* 

WESTWOOD  ENTERTAINMENT  LAW 
FIRM  SEEKS  F/T  OFFICE  CLERK  TO  DO 
COPYING,  FAXING.  AND  MAIL  PROCESS- 
ING. MUST  HAVE  CLERICAL  OFFICE  EX- 
PERIENCE. SALARY  DOE+BENEFITS. 
FAX  RESUME  TO  E.  KRAFT:  310-441-8010. 

•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beats  all  jobs.  Start 
immediately  Great  pay  Fun/Easy  No  crazy 
fees  Program  for  free  medical  Call-24/hrs 
323-850-4417. 


A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Part-Time  field  sales,  flexible  hours  ■>■  com- 
mission and  bonus!  Ambitious  salesperson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  support©fones- 
4all.com  AttnField  Sales. 


ACCOUNTING  CLERK  Needed.  $12- 
15/DOE.  Must  have  taken  accounting  class- 
es. Excel  and  strong  communication  skills. 
Fax  resume  attn:Melody  323-965-3194. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


$$GREAT  PAY$$ 

$10/HOUR?  Students  with  good  Math&Eng- 
lish  skills  needed  for  PT-FT  offtoe  positions. 
Flexible  sctiedule  but  must  be  available  all 
day  Tuesday  and  Thursday  until  December. 
Fax  resunr>e:81 8-769-4694  or  call:818-769- 
4600  ask  for  Lisa. 


$1,000'S  WEEKLY!! 

STUFF  ENVELOPES  at  home  for  $2.00 
each  plus  bonuses.  F/T,  P/T.  Make  $800■^ 
weekly  guaranteed!  Free  supplies.  For  de- 
tails seryj  one  stamp  to:  N-33,  PMB  552, 
12021  Wilshire  Blvd.,  Los  Anoeles.  CA 
90025. 


NEW  FACES  WANTED 

AU.  AGES  ALL  TYPES 

FOR  UPCOMNG  TV.  FIM,  COMMEFICIAL, 

MUSIC,  VIDEOS 

AND  PRINT,  NO  FffiS.  NO  EXP  REQD 

PLEASE  CALL  F'OR  AUDfTlON  T1H4E 

AU0fT10(«NGNOW 

379-7070 


(818) 


No  Experience  Necessary 

Moi  WMKn,  dtUeoMl  «o,  siio, 

raos.  TV  ■  Hns .  Cgmmodali  -  Migaams 

fnrpersotutl  Ituervieiv  call  noiv 

310.659.7000 


$15-$23'HR  BRIGHT  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academic 
Subjects.  Transportatkxi  required.  We  will 
train.  Rexible  hours  Send  or  lax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  test  scores  (SAT,  GRE. 
etc )  to  ACE  Educatk>nal  Servwes,  Attn:Bar' 
ry,  9911  W.  Pteo  Blvd,  Ste.1025,  LA  CA 
90035;  Fax:310-282-6424  Posittons  avail- 
ablethrooghoolLA  and  the  Valley 

$1500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  circulars 
No  experience  required.  Free  inlonnation 
packet.  CaN  202-466-1639. 


$8  to  $15  per  hour 

Work  In  Westwood  for  an  upscale  singles 
organizatton.  Women  excel.  Telemarketing 
Recnjit  new  menibers.  Weekly  pay  Call  after 
3PM  Sun-Thurs  Keith:310-279-3300 

*DANCE  HOSTESS* 

EXCELLENT  TIPS  ♦  SALARY  Flexible 
schedule.  PU-ffX.  LA  Do*vntown  nigtitclub. 
No  akx)hol/no  nudity.  18year8+  Call  now"! 
213-620-9572. 


Seeking  bright,  active  person 

with  college  degree  to  assist 

with  2  children  ages  6  &  8, 

part  time,  for  school  related 

tutoring,  computer 

assistance,  and  extra 

curricular  activities.  Excellent 

personal  references  required. 

Resumes  to:  Rose  Cooper 
510  N.  Robertson  Blvd. 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90048 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK 
KEEPER.  Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours.  $10-13/hr.  Tennis  a  plus' 
We  are  natwnal  flower  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANTWill  train.  In 
medical  offkie  30-40hrs/M-F/9:00-6:OOpm. 
Computer  knowledge  mandatory.  Great  job 
for  Business/Pre-Med/Public-Health  majors. 
15-min  to  UCLA.  310-476-4205. 


AFTERNOONS  DURING 
SCHOOL 

All  day  Saturday  too!  Fulltime  during  Quarter 
Breaks  and  Summer  V&cations!  Wortc  experi- 
ence not  necessary.  /Kppiy  today  at  West- 
wood  Sporting  Goods.  1065  Gayley  Ave, 
Westwood  Village.  310-208-6215. 

ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary. 
Host  music/talk-shows  for  our  radio  statkjns. 
P/T.  $10-1 5/hr,  $200+per/show,  plus  fantas- 
tk:  benefits.  323-466-0080.  24-hour5. 

ASSISTANT 

Fanustk:  job.  M-F  2-3/hrs  afternoons.  Excit- 
ing, growing  company  seeks  detail-oriented, 
sharp  indivklual  who  wants  to  learn  great 
skills.  Call  Mona  Andrews  310-278-3349. 


ASSISTANT  P/T  for  West  coast  oftfce  of  na- 
ttonal  company.  Excellent  opportunity.  Flexi- 
ble P/T  hours.  Please  call  Mona  Andrews 
310-278-3349. 


AUDIO  VISUAL 
OPERATORS  WANTED 

for  delivery  and  operattons,  throughout  cam- 
pus. Computer  and  customer  skills  pre- 
fen-ed.  AV  experience  not  required.  Open 
schedule  needed  Must  be  able  to  lift  35 
pounds.  Two  positions  available:  Operator. 
$a.90/hr,  Technk:ian  $11  40/hr.  Call  Juan 
310-206-8002 

BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Unkjn.  Excellent  pay.  hours  A  environment. 
Some  teller  experience  prefen-ed  Apply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd..  LA,  90025  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.ucu.org/jobs.htm 


Desicjn  Fashion.  & 
Mfrchjndisinq  Student  Alert 


Great  job  waits  for  you  in  busy  retail 
establishment.  Looking  for  outgoing 
salespeople  with  interest  in  ckjttiing 

to  work  in  young,  tiip,  new  store. 

Good  salary,  great  perks,  bonuses.  & 

more.  Must  have  some  retail 

experience. 

Full  &  part  time  positwns  available 

Call  Jessk:a  or  Erica  0  310-230-6085 

or  fax  resume  to  310-230-4536 


Display 
206-3060 


<2       Thursday,  October  19, 2000 


OdMyBnunOxuified 


7800 

Help  Wniited 


CAMPUS  EVENT 
JOBS 

Earn  a  Bonus  up  to  $500  if  you  can  commit 
to  the  Mens  Basketball  Season  and  other 
Special  Events!!!  Limited  number  of  posi- 
tions availabte.  (or  UCLA  students  only.  For 
more  Intormation  call  Sean,  310-  206-0736. 

CARING  INDIVIDUALS  NEEDED  TO  sup- 
port UCLA  student  lABA,  an  Internationally 
respected  agency,  is  seeking  Community 
Support  Companions  and  Ovemight  Com- 
panions to  assist  a  college  student  with 
physical  challenges.  Assistance  needed  in 
his  dorm,classes.and  the  community  of 
Westwood.  lABA  provides  paid  training  and 
advancement  opportunities.   Full  and  part 
time  shifts  available,  including  night  hours. 
Full  time  benefits  include  medical/dental  cov- 
erage, 40 IK  plan  and  paid  time  off.  Competi- 
tive wages-KSupplemental  tenure  pay.  Relat- 
ed experience  or  BA  in  Psychotogy  pre- 
ferred.    Email    your    resume    to    rokel- 
lyOiaba.com  or  call  tolf  free-877-924-2220. 
For    more    information    visit    lABA    at 
www.iaba.com 


CARING  INDtVIDUALS  URGENTLY  needed 
in  Santa  Monica  &  West  LA.  lABA,  a  leader 
in  the  fieW  on  non-aversice  behavior  manag- 
ment  is  seeking  Employment  Specialists  to 
assist  adults  devetopmentally  challenged  in 
an  employment  setting  and  in  the  communi- 
ty. lABA  provkJes  paid  training  and  advance- 
ment opportunities.  WOrk  from  8:30am  to 
2:30pm  +  in  servfce  hours,  M-F,37.5hrs/wk 
Eligible  for  medical/dental,  401 K  and  paid 
time  off.  Competitive  wages+supplemental 
tenure  pay  Related  experience  or  BA  in  Psy- 
chology preferred  Email  your  resume  to  ro- 
kelly©Jaba.com  or  call  toll  free  877-924- 
2220.     For    more    info    visit    lABA    at 
wwwiata.com 


7800 

H(;l()  W.iiited 


COMPUTER/ADMIN 
ASSISTANT 

Established  Brentwood  computer  co  needs 
help  wfth  MS  Word,  phones,  email,  clerical 
stuff.  Flexible  hours;  great  for  s|udents;  learn 
the  biz!  Email  resume  to  jkenne- 
dyOanl91.com 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

FH",  M-F  9-5.  Century  City  kxation.  Seeking 
self-motivated.  energetic  self-starter 
w/strong  phone  skills,  computer  literate, 
bilingual,  college  degree  pref.  Fax  resume 
310-553-3996. 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE 

Neighborhood  bakery/take-out  shop  now  hir- 
ing counter  persons.  Competitive  pay  and 
benefits.  Call  310-552-1080  or  appiy  in  per- 
son.  10/19.  3-5  pm.  1751  EnsleyAve. 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE.  WEB  PROGRAM- 
MER NEEDED-  cash  weekly  plus  bonuses 
2  Wocks  from  campus.  One  job,  internet 
knowledge       preferred.       310-475-6612 
Jo6sOfash«on4  less.com. 

DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  is  hiring  van  driv- 
ers. Looking  for  energetic,  unstoppable 
positive  crew  immediately  Flextole  hours' 
busy  weekends.  Apply  in  person  M-Sat  till 
6pm.  Apply  at  937  Westwood.  310-208-1180. 

DESIGNER  ASSISTANT 

Interior  design,  fuH-time,  M-F.  people-orient- 
ed, multi-task,  computer  skills.  Westlake  Vil- 
lage. Call:805-446-3393  or  fax:805-446- 
3396. 


7800 

Hol|)  WaiKtul 


Are  you  a  model... 

or  wnnt   to  .j.-t    •.trirtirl^ 


Looking  for  all  types 
male/female  models/actors 

•Plus  size    •Children 

For  prim  it  non-union  commercials 

Noopencnceicqaiitd    No  fees. 


7800 

Help  W.-iiit(!(J 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


utii((ue  job  opfjortunity 


CASHIER,  We  are  a  Chinese  Seafood  res- 
taurant. Speak  English.  Mandarin  or  Can- 
tonese. Full-time  or  part-time.  Experience 
preferred.  626-641-8978. 

CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Campus  Comer 
We  work  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call310- 
206-8133. 


DRIVER  NEEDED.  Pfck-up  kkte  at  West- 
wood  Secondary  School,  back  to  Hollywood 
Flexible  schedule,  T-W-Th  5-8pm.  Call  323- 
436-0774,  evenings  only. 

DRIVERS  WANTED 

F/T  or  P/T.  Own  car/insurance.  Must  be  able 
to  read  map.  No  weekends.  Great  holWay 
income.  818-224-3445,  Caroline. 

DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED.  Full- 
time or  part-time.  Westwood  driving  and  traf- 
fk;  school.  Call  for  infomiation.  310-824- 


CLERICAL/CUSTOMER 
SERVICE 

M-F.  F/T  permanent.  Good  phone  and  Eng- 
lish skills,  detail-oriented,  reliable  WLA  $9- 
$10^r.   310-826-3759ext229. 

CLERK  P/T.  Pleasant  Century  City  Engi- 
neering Firm  seeks  perfectionist  with  typing 
skills  for  general  office  duties.  Must  absolute- 
ly be  delail-oriented.  $ll/hour  to  start  Call 
Rhonda  310-286-2437. 


Responsible  Skate  &    ^ 
Snowboarders  Wanteds 


Sales,  technical  and  teaching 

positions  available  at  the 
Westside's  best  boardshop. 

Full  &  part  time  positions 
available.  Must  be  honest  and 

experienced.  Great  perks, 
discounts,  &  bonuses.  Salary 

depends  on  experierKe. 

Call  for  Jesswa  or  Erica  (310)  230-6085 
Fax  resume  to  (31 0)  230-4536 


EARN  TRAVEL  MONEY 

NEED  TO  EARN  SOME  QUICK  CASH?  Ilier- 
ing  needed  immediately  on  campus  call 
jason  at  858-630-7976. 

EARN  WHAT  YOURE  WORTH!  Success 
driven  individuals  wanted  lor  expanding 
global  business.  Serious  inquiries  only'  (no 
exp  nee)  310-246-1522. 

EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

ALL  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  sales.  Make  up  to 
$l50/day  Part  or  full-time  work.  Call  David 
310-441-0394. 


GUITARIST  WANTED 

ROCK/REGGAE  GUITARIST  NEEDED  for 
constructton  of  new  hip-hop  band.  Must  have 
the  skills.  Call  Eric  310-274-4663. 

HOMEWORK  SUPERVISORmJTOR  for 
10th  grader  taking  Spanish  and  Algebra.  2- 
hours  per  evening  M-F,  $9/hr  310-476-4205. 

HOST/HOSTESS 

FRIENDLY,  EXPERIENCED  host  lor  Jade 
West.  Century  City.  PT,  daytime.  Can  after 
2:30.  310-556-3388. 

INSIDE  SALES  PROMOTIONS  REPRE- 
SENTATIVE.  Film  advertising.  Call  retail 
stores  tor  upcoming  releases.  Coordinate 
store  visits.  P/T-F/T-eam-12pm  or  12:30pm- 
4:30pm-flex  $10/hr-^borHiS.  310-566-2555. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-ltahan)  Customer 
Service  Representative.  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  A  verbal  skills  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-maH  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1 768-jspatter8on  •  ij- 
ginc.com. 

INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Receptkxiist.  Entry  level  positton.  haH- 
an  a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrsA**  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
ferred. Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son  323-653-1768.  jspattersonOliginc.com. 

INTERNET  CO  seeks 
P/T  Receptionist 

for  Santa  Montea  ofltee,  $8/hr,  great  oppor- 
tunity and  k)catton!  Send  resume  to  Isa- 
bella Owebeasy  com  or  fax  310-576-2011 
Attn:  lsat)elle. 

LAW  FIRM  NEEDS  P/T  employee  from 
2003-2004  for  a  clerical  positwn.  Mail/Tax  re- 
sume to  Rtek  Edwards.  Inc.  Ann:  Margie 
1925  Century  Part<  East  Los  Angeles  CA 
90067.  Fax  31 0-286-950 1 

L^W  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  Beveriy  Hills.  P/T 
(Tues-Thurs,  1-4pm).  FHe  Clertt/Office  Sup- 
port. Need:  legal  filing  skills,  accuracy/detail 
orientation,  and  computer  literate.  Prior  law 
firm  experience  preferred.  Compensatkjn 
based  on  experience  Fax  resume  and  refer- 
ences to  310-205-6081. 


ftexihte  hours 
minimaf'time 
commitement 


a.^fJV»  up  to 
$000  per  month 


If  you're  male,  in  good  health,  In 
college  or  have  a  college  degree,  and 
would  like  a  flexible  job  where  you  can 
earn  up  to  $600  per  month  AND  set 
your  own  hours,  call  310-824-9941 
for  information  on  our  anonymous 
sperm  donor  program.  Receive  free 
health  screening  and  help  infertile 
couples  realize  their  dream  of 
becoming  parents. 


P/T  RECEPTIONIST 
;     WANTED 

Yellow  BaHoon  HairSaton.  Must  be  hon- 
esl/chiW-friendly  Hours:3weekdays  1- 
5:30pm,  Saturdays  9-5pm.  Days  and  times 
negotiable.  $8ilir.  Contact  Natalie:310-475- 
1241.  Fax  resume  323-939-4339. 

P/T  to  complete  constructwn  and  maintain 
website.  Nationwkle  wholesale  310-230- 
0611.  Fax  310-230-4146 


CLINICAL 
LABORATORY 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  positk)n  immediately  available  for  a  li- 
censed laboratory  scientist  in  a  private  clini- 
cal laboratory  in  Santa  Monica  Lab  provkJes 
endocrine,  androtogy  serology  and  immu- 
notogy  testing  Incumbent  required  to  wort< 
in  weekend  rotatksns.  Salary  commensurate 
with  qualificatwns  and  experience.  Submit 
applk^atkxis  to  Bronte  Stone,  Reproductive 
Technokjgy  Laboratories,  1245  16th  Street 
Suite  105.  Santa  Montea.  CA  90404  (Tei 
310-829-0102) 

COFFEE  BAR  ATTENDANT,  the  best  stud- 
ent  job.  You  must  be  responsible,  reliable, 
experience  a  plus  Duttons  11975  San  Vi- 
cente. 


F/T  or  P/r.  Children's  retail  store.  Hours  sat 
required.  $8-10Air  DOE.  On  Santa  Montea 
Btvd  in  Westwood.  310-234-9554. 

FIVE  ATTORNEY  CENTURY  CITY  LAW 
FIRM  seeks  P/J  file  dertt.  Flex  hours  bt  9- 
5pm,  M-F  Computer  knowledge  a  plus  Fax 
resume  to  Meg  31 0-277-0035. 

FRATERNITIES.  SORORITIES  CLUBS 
STUDENT  GROUPS  Earn  $1000-2000  this 
quarter  with  the  easy  Campusfundraiser.com 
three  hour  fundraising  event.  No  sales  re- 
quired. Fundraising  dates  are  filHng  qutokly. 
so  call  today!  Contact  Campusfundrais- 
ercom  at  (888)923-3238  or  visit  www.cam- 
pusfundrasier.com 

GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  chjbs  in 
WLA.  Conversation  only.  No  ateohol  Flexl- 
ble  hours.  Earn  top  $$$.  323-441-0985 


LAW  OFFICE  ENVIRONMENT.  Excellent 
opportunity  Clert<  positions  available.  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Minimum  20hrs/wk.  $7/hr  Fax  re- 
sume and  proposed  available  hours  to  Hu- 
man Resources  Dept  310-274-2798  or  Mail 
to:  Lurie,  Zepeda,  Schmalz  &  Hogan  9107 
Wilshire  Blvd.,  Suite  800,  Beveriy  Hills  CA 
90210. 

LEGAL  SECRETARY 

LAW  OFFCE  of  criminal,  corporate,  and 
immigratten  laws.  P/T  or  F/T.  Call  Joana  626- 
288-9922 


MEN  AGES  18-24  lor  nude  modeling  for 
magazines  and  fine  art.  Call  310-289-8941 
days. 


PART  TIME  TELEMARKETER  NEEDED. 
$1Q/HR.  No  Experience  Necessary  Call  lor 
informatton  310-680-7604. 

PART-TIME  CHILDCAREmjTOR  needed 
for  1st  and  2nd  grader.  Encino  Mulholland 
and  405  adjacent.  Must  have  car.  Call  Jack- 
ie:310-626-2466. 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  dnve&wort<  w/2  funfigifted  kids  ages  547. 
Perfect  schedule  for  student  Must  have  car. 
P/T  permanent.  Excellent  salary.  Judv  310- 
551-1145 


LIBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties,  12-19  hrsAvk.  $6.70/hr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Antigone  Kutay 
310-825-6982. 


LIFEGUARDS  WANTED 

NOW  HIRING  Certified  lifeguards  Culver- 
Palms  YMCA.  Call  Meredith  310-390- 
3604x7525. 


NEEDED:  PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  Mostly 
runs  errands,  some  light  housewort(  and 
cooking,  good  pay  near  UCLA  4-5 
hours/day  310-788-4727. 

OFFKJE  MANA6ER/ASSISTANT2CEO 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company-West- 
»«X)d  10am-2prTvT^ull-time.  flexible  hours 
Need: excellent  telephone  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admin/comp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
ferred Benefits/advancement  FaxRes2Mar- 
ina:  310-475-1533. 


COMMUNITY  SERVICE 
OFFICERS 

Do  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8  16  to 
$10  46/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/U 
academte  years  remaining  with  valid  drivers 
license  Web  www  ucpd  ucia  edu/ucpd/cso 
Email:  cso«ucpd  ucia  edu  Phone  310- 
825-2148 


COMPANIONSA:areGIVERS.  Psych  Ex- 
perience Desirable  LIve-ln/live-out.  4-l2hr 
shifts  available  Sign  on  borws  for  live  in 
drivers  w/car  Excellent  benefits/trainlngAop 
pay/401  K  plan  Need  some  experience  with 
Alzheimer,  Dementia,  or  Goro-Psych  Call 
Melissa  323-933-5880. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Data  Reduction 
Supervisor 


RAND    has     an     immediate 
opening  for  a  Data  Reduction 
Supervisor.  Oversees  the  data 
reduction  operations  of  survey 
research   projects,    including 
sample   preparation,   mailing 
survey  documents  &  processing 
survey  data.  Trains  &  supervises 
editors,     coders    &     clerks. 
Minimum  of  1  year  experience 
in    questionnaire    editing    & 
coding,    record    abstraction, 
database  management  systems, 
on-line     computer     editing, 
cleaning  or  data  entry.  Must  be 
familiar  with  MS  Access  and 
have  strong  supervisory,  verbal 
St  written  communication  skills 
&  experience  writing  technical 
procedures/manuals. 

Fax  rMunM  to  8RQ  R«cru(ting  • 
(310)451-6921 


LOOKING  for  experienced  staffing  coordina- 
tor. 2  years  minimum  experience  in  home 
care  environment  Computer  literacy  a  must. 
Great  benefits  Wonderful  wortc  environrT>ent 
Ca«  Laura  MaGhee  323-933-5880  extl0l2. 

M.  FREDRIC 

Fashton  fonwird  company  k)oking  for  oner- 
gette  people  to  fiM  sales  and  management 
po«itk)ns.  Call  Tory  818-597-0212  axt  114. 

MATCHMAKER 

For  dating  senrtce.  Must  have  great  people 
skills,  organized,  computer  literate,  secretari- 
al experience.  P/T  evenings.  310-914-3444 
leave  meesaga. 

MEDICAL  BILLING  SUPERVISOR  WANT- 
ED by  dynamfc,  DME  &  Rehab  dealer  Ex- 
pertise with  Medteare.  MediCal  &  Insurance 
required.  Experience  with  Team  DME  Soft- 
ware a  big  plus.  Full-time  positkjn.  Hourty 
compensatk>n  eommensurate  with  experi- 
ence.  Fax  resume  to  310-575-1505. 

MEDICAL  FRONT  OFRCE  positton  for  busy 
Beveriy  Htlls  demiaiology  practfce  Variety  of 
duties.  Pn  morning  hours  only  References 
required  Call  Diane:  310-273-0467 

MEDICAL  SPECIALTY  COMPANY  Is  kxiWno 
tor  a  aeH-fnoihiMwt  mdMdual  to  aMume  a 
P^rt  time  potMon  as  a  courier.  This  oppor- 
tunity provides  training  and  access  to  the 
medical  salM  induatry.  dlfMly  m  the  hoepl- 
tal  OR  Mo«  have  good  coenmuntartlon  and 
cuatomer  sMHs.  ReMme:  bpAKomaOsprtnt- 
maH.com.  Fax:  253-572-7490 


ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Concesstons  has  great  part-lime  jobs 
worthing  at  Athlete  events.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive bonus  program  for  those  who  can  com- 
mit to  work  the  Men's  BasketbaH  Season. 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  set  every  «veek 
Ca»:310-206-073e 


ONCE  IN  A  LIFETIME 
OPPORTUNrTYII! 

Pop  star  needs  student  to  work  pA  helping 
out  WW)  his  Ian  man.  Job  includes  managing 
fan  database,  responding  to  fans,  etc.  Fun 
and  imeiesiing  wort<  for  the  right  person  To 
apply,  pieaee  send  a  brief  resume  and  photo 
to:  Fan  MM  He^Mr  PO.  Box  18383  BH  CA 
90209. 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTIONA-ECHNrcAL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  has  one  opening  for  clerical  positions. 
$7/hr.  Mornings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Mtehelle:3 1 0-474-777 1 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

WestsWe  business  man  wants  attractive, 
young  female  for  computer  help  and  other 
needs.  Excellent  compensation.  Flexible 
hours,  Poestole  Travel.  310-553r0922 

PERSONAL  ASST 
DETAIL-ORIENTED 

person  to  manage  orders  for  small  upscale 
retail  shop.  Make  sure  orders  are  correct 
when  placed4loltow-up  w/suppNers  to  insure 
correction-time  delivery  Handle  hght  inAout 
sf^tpownts.  F/T,  mdudbig  SMufday*.  Mu« 
have  excellent  knowtedga  of  English  Call 
8111:310-278-5620. 


PERSONAL  TRAINERS  NEEDED.  Certlftea- 
tton  and  dienis  provWed  Flexible  hours 
Must  have  Blness  knowledge.  Nattonal  Train- 
ers Associatton  1-688-NTA-2338 


P/r  CHURCH  SECRETARY.  20  hrsMk,  flexi- 
Wa.  varied  duIlM,  Mterooort  Word  is  a  must 
Cal  Father  Zald>n«ofappt.  310-275-6634 


P/T  CLERK 


Santa  Montea  law  firm  seelcs  a  P/T  General 
Office  Clertt.  Flexible  hours,  but  mornings 
preferred.  $7-l0/hr  DOE.  Please  oM  £ 
310-393-1486. 


P/T  LAW  OFFICE  ASST 

Word  Procewor/Secretartal  for  Westwood 
law  offtee.  PC  and  mtemct  adept 
Compensation  depends  on  skWs.  Flwdble 
hours.  Fax  resume  310-443-4223. 

PfT  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  100  Medteal  Plaza.  Oennaioioay  prac- 
tice. Hours  can  vary  w/daaaes.  F/T  durtng 
surrvner.  $8Aw.  Phis  free  pwMng.  Aaaial 
manager,  computer  atdta  naoMawy.  Basic 
math  sidHa  needed.  Undergrad  only.  Fax 
»aaume  after  e:3Cpm.  310-206-4010. 


PHONE  SALES 

BUSY  WESTSIDE  FLORIST  Must  be  organ- 
ized, bright,  self-moUvated,  and  great  per- 
sonallty.  Call  Vlkki  310-826-0711. 

PIANO  TEACHER  WANTED.  Westwood 
dose  to  UCLA.  To  teach  liyr-oid  boy  or^ 
weekends  Please caH 31&-44l93ee 

POSTAL  JOBS 
^^  ^     $9-14.27/HR 

Ph«  Faderal  Benefits.  No  Experience,  exam 
Wo.  Call  1-800-391-5856  ext  0614  8am- 
9pm  Local  not  guar. 

PROFESSIONAL  COLLECTOR.  Saban  Pla- 
za  near  UCLA.  "Best  sen^e  company- 
<9^.  Fkudble  scheduling.  \(l^eekends  and 
•vertnge  avaNabla.  Perfect  for  studertts  NO 


PROMOTIONAL  PRINT  AGENCY  «,eks 
Wend^  eneigMic  recepttonlat  lor  a  F/T  en- 

and  computer  Nteficy  taqulrwi.  Please  email 
resume  to:  mlcl(yy«ed<««rdilabel.com  or 
fax  resume  to:  MkAy  Yadathl  310-479-1828 


Display 


Otily  Brain  OatsifM 


Thursday,  October  19, 2000        43 


7800 

Help  Wiintud 


*  MOVIE  • 

PRODUCERS] 

NEEDED! 

CO-PRODUCE 
LIONS  GATE  FILMS' 

NEXT  MOVIE! 

No  Eiparieiica  Ntcettary 

APPLY  TODAY  @ 

virtualproducer.com/ucla 


7800 

Help  WjuUed 


WANTED 

75people  wHI  pay  you  to  tose  weight  in  the 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended.  100% 
natural/no  drugs.  Call  now.  323-993-3391 

WEB  DESIGN 

Design  website  for  new  travel  classifteation 
company  Experience  necessary.  Must  be 
competent  and  creative.  Call  310-274-7931 
or  yahay830yahoo.com 


WHO  WANTS  TO  BE 
A  MILLIONAIRE? 

TV  and  Internet  ad  sales.  Commission 
and  equity  in  company.  Fax  818-846- 
7961.  RISK+  HUGE  REWARDS 


WORK  AT  HOME 

International  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo. 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  WiH  train.  310-558- 
5888 


PT  EXECUTIVE  ASST/BOOKKEEPER  for 
Beveriy  Hills  offtee.  Must  be  proficient  in 
Qutek  Books  Pro  and  Mterosoft  Office  15-20 
hours/week.  Great  Location!  Great  Boss! 
CaH  Dominkjue  310-273-4000 

PT  FLORAL  DELIVERY  Person  needed 
Courteous,  neat,  etfteient  person  sought  by 
the  friendliest  ftower  shop  in  Beveriy  Hills. 
Must  have  a  clean  DMV  repori  Call  310- 
271-5030  for  details. 


WORK  IN  WESTWOOD  Receptionist  need- 
ed for  PT  wori<  Thursday-Sunday  Fun  at- 
mosphere.  Call  Louis:  310-279-3300. 

www.AcaDemon.com 

is  kwking  for  student  liaisons  to  sen^e  as  go- 
betweens  for  company  and  home  university 
Flex,  hours,  good  pay  To  apply  email 
jobs  O  acaderiKKi .  com 


PT  HOUSEMAN 

Arxl  Handyman  For  faculty  member,  gar- 
dening, repairs,  en^ands.  possibe  live-in,  car 
needed.  Send  references,  salary  expecta- 
ttons.  handyposittonOhotmail.com 

PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  insurance.  Earn  up  to 
»600/week.  310-724-8360.  Days  only 

RECEPTIONIST  WANTED  PT/FT  for  hair 
saton.  Ask  tor  Liana.  310-206-0101. 

RECEPTIONIST 

WEST  LA  FIRM  seeks  an  outgoing,pleasant 
IndivWualw/  xint  phone  skills  Mon-Fri 
2:00pm-7:00pm.  Perlect  lor  a  student 
$10  0O/hr-Prkg  paid.  Email  Resume  to 
IgrossmanOGKM  com. 

RECEPTIONIST/SECRETARY  P/T  .  F/T 
Beveriy  Hills  dennatotogy  medteal  offtee.  Fax 
resume  310-550-1920. 

RESTAURANT  in  WLA  now  hiring  seowrs, 
caahlen,  prep  personnel  F/T  or  P/T,  apply  in 
penon.  9411  w  Pteo  Blvd.  Sun-Thurs. 

RETAIL  SALES,  PT/FT.  Westwood  Blvd.  De- 
signer wedding/evening  gowns  Experience 
preferred,  motivated  and  fnendly  Great  op- 
portunity. Salary/commisskxis/lxxiuses  Ex- 
cellent $$.  310-474-7808  Pauline. 


WWW.DUNDEAL  NET  $15-125  per  survey 
Earn  cash  on  the  Internet  by  giving  your 
opinton  on  surveys. 


8000 

Inieriiships 


ACCLAIMED  PRODUCER  seeks  motivated 
interns  for  faH  2000.  Please  fax  resumes  to 
Commotion  Ptetures  attn:Mtehelle  310-432- 
2001. 


81 00 

Personal  Assistnnce 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  for  family  (of  inter- 
est to  young  filmmakers).  15-20hrs/wk- 
$1Q/hr.  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues,  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands  Filing/research. 
Flexible  schedule/resourceful!!  Contact:  310- 
459-0815  Good  references  required.  Non- 
Smoker.  Must  have  own  car&insurance. 


8200 

Tf.'inpornry  Einploymeiit 


P/T  CLERICAL 
ASSISTANCE 

Entertainment  company  k>caled  in  West- 
wood  seeks  clerical  assistance  approx  3 
days/wk,  3hrs/day  Duties  wiH  include  filing, 
copying,  document  distributton.  Please  call 
310-234-5041.  ^-    . 


8300 

Volunteer 


VOLUNTEERS  NEEDED  for  No  kill  dog/cat 
WLA  shelter.  Loving  homes  and  foster 
homes  needed.  310-470-7667. 


8^fOO 

Apartnienls  for  Rent 


BEVERLY   HILLS  ADJ.       U2BEDROOM 
$8954UP    LARGE.    UNUSUAL   CHARM 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE    W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS 
310-839-6294. 


8^kOO 

Apartments  for  Rent 


PALMS  Single  apt  from  $575,  $600deposit 
1  -year  lease  only  Stove,  refrig, carpets,  vert 
blinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message  8am- 
5pm  only. 


SANTA  MONICA  BUNGALOW,  r&s,  hard- 
wood floors,  yard.  $900.  310-395-RENT. 
www.westsiderentals.com 


SANTA  MONICA  CONOO.  ris,  batoony  w/d 
fireplace  $625  310-395-RENT  www.west- 
siderentais  com 


9200 

Housing  Needed 


GRADUATE  VISITING  STUDENT/WRITER 
needs  housing  1/01-6/01.  Female,  Fomier 
teacher  Contact  mteharOk^uest.net  or  312- 
666-7949 

SEEKING  ROOMMATE  Situation  near 
UCLA  or  bus  route.  Male  staff  member,  50, 
easy  going,  seeks  own  room  and  bath. 
Needed  11/01,  Call  Clive  at  Murphy  Hall, 
310-794-9236  or  page  310-636-5417. 


SANTA  MONICA  HOUSE.  Private  room,  fire- 
place, yard.  $654.  310-395-RENT 
www.westSHlerentals.com 

SANTA  MONICA  STUDIO.  Balcony,  laundry, 
large  closets,  location  $750.  310-395-RENT 
www.vyestsiderentals.com 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


FREE  OCEAN-FRONT  ROOM  for  Japanese 
Female  (30s+/-).  Near  Santa  Monica  beach. 
Exchange  for  baby-sitting/etc.  15  hrs/wk,  Ms. 
Yamada  310-454-1050,  310-913-1220 


SANTA  MONICA  TOWNHOUSE  TO 
SHARE,  private  bed  and  bath,  hardwood 
floors,  r&s.  laundry  $650.  310-395-RENT 
www.westsWerentals  com 


SANTA  MONICA.  1+1,  catok,  laundry,  part<- 
ing  included.  $975.  310-395-7368. 
www.westsiderentals.com. 


FREE  ROOM 
AND  BOARD 

In  exchange  lor  babysitting  1 1  -year-old  girt 
approximately  10  hours/week.  Century  City 
area.  Females  only  310-277-8480  (even- 
ings). 


SANTA  MONICA.  2+1,  cafok,  ris,  hardwood 
floors,  great  locatkjn!  Pari<ing  included.  310- 
395-7368.  www.westsiderentals.com. 


SHERMAN  OAKS  Adorat>le  studio  guest 
house.  Pet  okay!  Full  bath.  $645.  818-623- 
4444.  www.altofLA.com 


BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdrm/3bth,  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdrTTi/3bth,  $2950.  W/D  in  unrt. 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alarm,  gated  part<ing 
Spacious,  carpel.  Prime  location!  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 


SOUTH  RB  APARTMENT  2+1,  panoramte 
ocean  view.  $1300,  fee,  310-372-RENT 

STUDIO  CITY  HUGE  APARTMENT! 
Sundeck,  high  ceilings.  $700.  818-623-4444 
www.allolLA.com 

STUDIO  CITY  UNIQUE  APARTMENT  Best 
location,  a/c.  pool.  $800  818-623-4444 
wwwallofLA.com 


ENTERTAINMENT 

WEBSITE 

INTERNSHIPS 

Looking  for  motivated  indivkluals  with  an  in- 
terest in  ttie  entertainment  industry,  to  join 
one  of  Hollywood's  leading  websites  Call 
310-305-2688,  or  e-mail  resume 
henly  O  founCainheadmedia  com 

INTERN  WANTED  Do  research  lor  Reason, 
a  national  nugazine  of  politfcs  and  cutture. 
$7.50/hr;  lOhrs/wk.  Flexible  schedule,  wHI 
help  arrange  credit.  Fax  resume  to  310-390- 
8996.  E-mail  sararOreason.com 


BRENTWOOD 

North  of  Wishire,  spacious  3BD/2Bath,  w/ 
separate  patio.  New  dishwasher,  refrigerator, 
stove,  etc.  Quiet  8-unit  bkJg.  w/  garden  sun- 
deck.  $2300.  11921  Goshen  Ave.  #1.  Open 
Sat/Sun  or  by  appt.  310-571  -0293. 

EL  SEGUNDO.  1+1,  r4s,  carpets,  blinds 
including  partcing.  $800.  fees,  310-372- 
RENT 


TORR  CONDO.  2+1,  pet  okay,  large  end 
unit,  lacuzzi.  $1175,  fee,  310-372-RENT 

VENICE  GUEST  HOUSE,  yard.  $650  310- 
395-RENT.  www.westsiderentals  com 

WALK  TO  UCLA  WESTWOOD  Large  1+1, 
2+2.  Pool,  Jacuzzi,  walk-in  ctosets,  fireplace! 
tull-ltltchen,  gated  garage,  Instant  broadband 
avail,  www.keltontowers.com.  310-208- 
1976. 


FURNISHED  ROOM  AND  BATH  in  ex- 
Change  for  driving  approximately  20hrs/wk, 
afternoons.  Must  own  car.  8  minutes  to  cam- 
pus.  References  necessary.  310-477-6977 


9^00 

Room  for  Rent 


BEL  AIR  PRIVATE  FURNISHED  ROOM 
AND  BATH.  Kitchen  and  laundry  pnvleges, 
utilities  included  Car  necessary.  Referenc- 
es $600/month  310-477-6977. 

BEVERLY  HILLS:  Room  for  rent  in  private 
home.  Private  bdrm/bth.  Preferred  Medical 
or  grad  student.  Some  kitchen  privileges, 
laundry,  partying,  secure  house,  must  like 
dogs.  Male  students,non-smoking.  $750/mo 
310-275-5034 


LARGE,  FUNRISHED  ROOM  with  own  bath 
and  walk-in  closet  for  a  professional  woman. 
Bundy  and  Wilshire,  Santa  Monica  310-442- 
6021. 


MV  Shared  2+1  garden  apartment  Male  pre- 
fened.  Quiet,  safe  4-plex,  off  Main  St.  DSL 
access.  $500/month,  utilities  included  Pa- 
mela 310-915-5052. 


FREE  RENTAL  SERVICE.  Westside  .  1  and 
2bdnT»  avariable.  CaH  The  Roberts  Compa- 
nies. 310-829-1700. 


RETAIL  SPORTS/RUNNING  Store  wIN  train 
person  who  likes  running  and  talking  to  peo- 
ple. Near  beach,  in  MDR.  $8-9/hour,  PT  310- 
827-3035 


SALES  CLERK 

$7/hr.  No  experience  necessary  Cashiering, 
wort(ing  with  patients  UCLA  Hospital  2e- 
venings,  3-7:30PM  11  30-6:OOPM.  310-825- 
6069 

SALES  Le  Beach  Club  Tanning  Resorts 
Happy,  friendly  people.  $12-20/hr  Call  bet- 
3-10pm.  310-«20-2710  ask  for  Yas- 


INTERNS  NEEDED  to  assist  Content  Team 
in  producing  athlete  web  sites  Interns  wiH  re- 
search and  compile  background  info  on  ath- 
letes Interns  wNl  also  screen  chats;  assist  in 
posting  content  to  sites;  transcrit»e  interviews 
and  input  fan  ckib  member  data  This  posi- 
tk>n  requires  thorough  sports  knowledge. 
HTML  skills  are  helpful.  The  toeal  candklate 
WiH  thrive  in  a  last-paced  and  challenging  en- 
vironment. 310-315-8517. 

INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
Student  film  projects  Call  Joel:3l0-828- 
2292. 


GLENDALE  DUPLEX.  Great  tocalton.  yard 
$695  818-623-4444.  www.aliofLA.com 

GRANADA  HILLS  SPACIOUS  GUEST- 
HOUSE. 1+1.  Large  yard.  Private  entry. 
$685.  818-623-4444.  www.altofLA.com 

HANCOCK  PARK  ADJ  GUESTHOUSE. 
Large  closets,  quiet  neighborhood.  $650 
323-634-RENT  www.altofLA  com 


WEST  LA,  $625/month,  bachelor  apartment. 
Full  bath,  kitchenette,  small  quiet  bWg.  l-yr 
lease.  No  pets.  310-410-1 575. 

WESTCHESTER  GREAT  HOUSE,  catok  ref 
$500.  310-395-RENT  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 


WESTWOOD  SPACIOUS  APARTMENT 
1+1.  r4s,  controlled  access,  a/c,  laundry 
$920.  310-395-RENT  www.westsideren- 
tals.com 


HERMOSA  BEACH  APARTMENT.  2+1   r&s 
bright,  blinds.  $885,  lee,  310-372-RENT. 

MAR  VISTA  HOUSE  2+1,  w/c  pet,  haid- 
wood  ftoors,  w/d  hook  ups,  yard.  $1295.  310- 
395-RENT  wwwwestsk1erentals.com 

MB  APARTMENT  1+1,2  btocks  to  beach. 
R&S,  garage.  $1195,  lee.  310-372-RENT 


WESTWOOD/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2bdrTn/1bth  Large,  laundry  enctosed 
garage,  bateony  large  ctosets,  near  buses, 
blinds.  Charming,  bright,  quiet  buikJino.  310- 
474-1172. 


WEST  LA.  Private  bdrm/shared  bth  in  3bdrm 
apt.  $475/mo+security  deposit.  Near  cam- 
pus. Fully  furnished.  310-444-0105.  leave 
message  for  Buzz. 

WESTWOOD,  private  bdrnVbth/closet. 
Share  dean  house  in  nfce  neighbortwod. 
$1000/mo,  www.lasoluttons.com/rent.htm. 
tWany.kangOexcitecom 

WLA  Unfumistied  room  w/^Kivafe  bath.  Se- 
cured buiWing.  All  utilities  included  (exclud- 
ing telephone).  Female,  non-smoker  Avail- 
able 11/1.  $625/mo.  310-446-1545 


9500 

Roommates-Private  Room 


SITE  ACQUISITIONS  CONSULTANT 
Fun/part  time.  Self-starter,  creative,  intelli- 
gent. Acquire  land  sites  lor  cellular  Salary 
commeipsurate  w/experience.  Fax  resume 
310-73M228.    « 


STOdfCt 
30hf»^^yefc, 


CLERK  in  children's  txx>kstoie  20- 
$7/hr,  WLA  310-559-2665. 


P/R  INTERNSHIP 

SEVERAL  POSITKJNS  are  now  available 
with  a  major  entertainment  firm  in  publte  re- 
lattons.  No  pay  but  complete  educatkxi  in 
P/R.  Flexible  hours.  Goklen  opportunity  to 
learn  the  ropes.  Call  us  immediately  at  323- 
692-9999  Ex.13.  Ask  for  Rebecca 

START-UP  COMPANY  in  Westwood  needs 
interns  for  admin,  mari^eting,  and  tech  posi- 
ttons.  Flex  hours.  No  salary,  but  slock  op- 
ttone  given  Will  hire  good  interns.  Fax/email 
resume.  310-268-0665  or  hrOremo- 
terrtod.oom 


ONE  BLOCK  TO 
CAMPUS 

2bdrm  suite.  Hardwood,  private  patto,  one 
partcing,  walk  to  UCLA.  $1350.  10966 
RoeWing  Ave.  310-208-4253  or  310-824- 
2595. 

PALMS.  $975/month,  2bdrm/1  5bth.  3455 
Jasmine.  Upper,  pool,  covered  paridng,  laun- 
dry, no  pets.  310-639-5510. 


8600 

Condo/Townhoiise  for  Rent 


540  KELTON.  2bdmi/2  5bth,  1200sqft  right 
comer  unit  Completley  remodeled.  Swim- 
ming pool/spa.  Available  Nov  1.  $1995  323- 
874-0339. 


WEST  LA.  Female  Roommate  needed  in 
2bdrrTV2.5bth  condo  Gated  buiWing,  under- 
ground parking,  washer/dryer  in  unit,  partial- 
ly furnished.  Jewish  female  preferred 
$800/month  including  utilities  310-478- 
5677. 


TEACHER'S 


ASSISTANT 

IMMEDIATE  POSmON  Santa  Monica  pre- 
school. 20hnM^.  Mon-Thurs  aftermon.  Ear- 
ly chHdhood  development  dawea  &  some 
axpahance  worttng  ¥v/young  chitoren  re- 
quirad.  310-394-0463. 

TELEMARKETER  NEEDED  tor  a  woman's 
ctothing  company.  310-473-7454. 

TRAINERH^ACHER  ASSISTANT  San  Fer- 
nando Valley  $10-18/hour.  15-25  hours/wk. 
Caaual  anvfronmanl.  RmdMa  houra.  biMn- 
gual/SpMiiah,  axcaNant  pMpto  tUH.  Com- 
pular  tMIs  a  must.  1-877-776-7274 


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US  International  Co. 

Work  at  home  positkjn  immediately!  P/T 
$500-20O0rtno  F/T  $2000-6000/nf»  Lan- 
BuaoasAxMTiputwsUllaaplus.  wwwrtch- 
Iromhome.comAfMmel 


81^00 

A|);irtiT»eiits  for  Rent 


2B0.  2BA  TOWNHOME.  FP. 

CENTRAL  ANVHEAT,  GATED 

GARAGE,  SEC.  ALARM,  CAT  OK 

3614  PARIS  DR. 

$139S/MO 

Onstto  Managor 

(310)S37-O906 

(310)391-1076 


*   MAR  VISTA   • 


2  BO,  2  BA  TOWNHOME,  FP. 

Cei^TRAL  AW/HEAT,  GATED 

GARAGE,  SEC.  ALARM,  CAT  OK 

1 1931  AVON  WAY  $1296/MO 
12736  CASWELL  AVE  $1205/MO 

(310)391-1076 

8«    Open  House  Mon^at  10  ■4  PM 


8700 

Condo/Townhouse  for  Sale 


IMAGINE  OWNING  WILSHIRE  Corridor/Hi- 
Rise  single,  lor2bdrm  $75K-$150K  Walk  to- 
UCLA/Village,  24hr/security  Spectacular 
views,  pool,  jacuui,  sauna,  valet  servrce 
Agent-Bob  310-478-1835ext.109. 


WESTWOOD  CONDO 

ONE  BEDROOM  ONE  BATH  Must  See 
Located  at  the  Cotony  on  Veteran  Cus- 
tom Wood  Ftoors  and  matching  beam, 
Smooth  Textured  raised  ceilings,  New 
Carpet,  New  kitchen  and  bathroom  tile. 
New  Mterowave.  HOA  includes  Utilities 
and  many  ammenittos.  $179,500  310- 
575-1983. 


ASIAN/QUIET/CLEAN/MALE.  Near  bus 
Stop.  Westwood/Pico.  3-mo.  min  stay  Re- 
quired 2  references.  Private  bedroom  share- 
bath.  $650/month,  w/utilHes,  kitchen  priv 
$40/day  310-475-8787. 

FREE  RENT  FOR  PSYCH/MED/SPECIAL 
ED  graduate  student  to  share  2bdrnV2bth 
apartment  with  learning  disabled  adult  in 
WestLA  Call  Stan  1  -800-843-3658 

ROOMMATE  NEEDED  3BD/2Ba  Santa  Mo- 
nica  apartment.  Near  beach.  Promenade, 
Montana.  Bateony  laundry,  fireplace  Profes- 
sional/grad  student,  $860/month.  Contact 
NowickieOhotmail.com  or  917-327-7622. 

SANTA  MONICA  CITY 

Big  bedroom  w/private  bath  in  2bdrm  condo. 
Gated-praking, laundry,  kitchen,  utilities  in- 
cluded. Available  November  $700/month 
Great  location.  310-453-9474. 

WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apt.  Fun,  outgoing 
female  tooking  for  female  roommate!  Own 
bed/bath  in  2bdrtn/2bth  apartment,  gated 
partying,  jacuzzi  on  roof,  security  buikfing 
Available  1/01,  $900/mo.  310-209-2665 


9600 

Roommates-Shared  Room 


FEMALE  ROOMMATE  WAI^TED  To  share 
spacious  Ul  apartment  in  Palms 
$337.50/month  +utilitles  Call  310-837-1793 
for  nwre  info. 


Believe.  9 


WALK  TO  UCLA 

y\fww.keltontoy\fers,com 

310-208-1976 


9700 

Sublets 


YEAR  LONG 
SUBLETTER  NEEDED 

One  spot  available  in  2  bdmV2bth  apt. 
$445/mo  Westwood  Dizaker  310-435-5409 
or  Rtehard  562-400-0421. 


"ifipri^ 


8800 

Guesthouse  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS 
GUESTHOUSE 

Single.  hmiMwd.  uMHiM  Included  One  car 
garage.  Washer/dryer.  Total  privacy 
$950/month.  310-277-5564 


8900 

House  for  Rtjut 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJACENT   2bdrrrV2b,h      I       FIND  Or  LIST  A  SUBl  FTM 
fwme.  yard,  unfurnished,  hardwood  ftoors      _^_^,^m,^^^^^,,^^_^^ 
Ref.  req  Approx.  $1700/nrw  310-271-0626.       |  Subtots  In  aM  cM—tt  (201  -694-1 189) 


SUBLET  &  ROOMMATE 
SERVICE 


44 TI«irsd»y,0rtol)«'19,2000 


•  -  ■■*• 


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<  • 


HERNANDEZ 

a  mistake  or  tire  before  firing  away. 
Furthermore,  the  maximum  num- 
ber of  rounds  has  been  reduced  from 
15  to  12,  eliminating  knockouts  that 
are  a  result  of  fatigue. 

Consequently,  no  one  really  gets 
clobbered.  Title  fights  rarely  end  with 
someone  sprawled  out  on  the  canvas, 
even  when  two  powerpunchers  are 
facing  each  other. 

And  that's  why  boxing  has  trans- 
formed into  a  cult  sport  watched  only 
by  die-hards. 
Tomorrow's  Tyson-Golota  fight. 


DiiyBniinSwm 


though,  is  expected  to  get  an  audience 
of  a  million  or  so  on  pay-per-view.  It's 
not  because  it'll  be  a  good  boxing 
match  -  it  won't  be. 

As  the  saying  goes,  styles  make 
fights,  and  more  often  than  not,  when 
a  tail  fighter  (like  6-foot-4  Golota)  is 
pinned  against  a  short  one  (Tyson  is 
5-foot- 10),  the  bout  will  resemble  a 
hugfest  between  two  water  bufTaloes. 
It  doesn't  help,  either,  that  these  fight- 
en'  skills  eroded  long  ago. 

What  most  people  are  counting  on 
is  that  one  of  these  guys  will  lose  his 
head  in  the  ring,  explode  in  a  fit  of 
rage,  forget  about  the  rules  and  do 
serious  damage  to  his  opponent 
Judging  by  their  pasts,  it's  very  likdy 


Tyson,  of  course,  bit  a  chunk  off  of 
Evander  Holyfield's  ear  in  1997. 
Since  then,  he  has  nearly  broken 
Frans  Botha's  arm,  knocked  out 
Orlin  Norris  with  a  late  punch  and 
took  several  shots  at  Lou  Savarese 
after  their  fight  was  stopped  (when 
the  referee  tried  to  prevent  Tyson 

from  hitting  Savarese,  Tyson  hit  him 
out  of  the  way  and  continued  throw- 
ing punches). 

Golota,  on  the  other  hand,  is  best 
known  for  nearly  making  Riddick 
Bowe  impotent.  Twice,  GoloU  was 
on  his  way  to  victory  over  Bowe,  but 
both  times,  he  was  disqualified  for 
repeatedly  delivering  blows  south  of 
the  border  into  "tierras  del  fuego.' 


Tyson,  to  his  credit,  has  done  a 
magnificent  job  of  selling  this  fight. 
His  hand  speed  is  gone  and  his  punch 
is  now  wider  than  Jennifer  Lopez's 
rear  end,  but  Tyson  has  used  his 
mouth  to  convince  the  judgement- 
impaired  boxing  media  that  he's  still 
dangerous. 

He's  given  the  press  a  batch  of 
ridiculous  quotes  suggesting  he  is 
insane  and  desperate  fans  have  con- 
vinced themselves  that  he  is  serious. 

In  the  bout's  first  press  conference 
(which  can  be  seen  in  its  entirety  at 
www.houseoflwxing.com),  Tyson 
delivered  several  gems. 

"Bring  on  Golota."  he  said.  "Bring 
on  (heavyweight  champion  Lennox) 


Lewis.  They  can  keep  their  titles.  I  >  ; . 
don't  warn  to  strip  them  of  their  titles, 
I  want  to  strip  them  of  their  f-ing  .' 
health. 

"I'm  in  pain,  so  I  want  them  to  be 
in  pain.  I  want  their  kids  to  see  pain. 
Lennox  Lewis,  I  want  his  kids  to  say, 
'Daddy,  are  you  okay.  Daddy?"'      '. 

When  asked  about  Golota 's  dirty" 
tactics,  Tyson  replied,  "I  wish  a  moth- 
erf-er  would  hit  me  low.  If  he  doei^ 
ohhh,  it's  on  like  a  mothcrf-er." 

Fans  are  only  wishing  it  happens. 


Oiily  Brain  Sports 


Thonday,  October  19,  JWe       4S 


Dylan  Hernandez  is  picking  Golota  to 
knock  out  Tyson  (legitimately)  In  the 
seventh.  Hernandez  can  be  reached  at 
dhemandezgmedia.uda.edu. 


JEOPARDyi 

AT  UCLA 


From  page  50 

crowd  resulting  in  the  cancellation  of 
the  show. 

Today,  throwing  cards  at  the  Rose 
Bowl  results  in  immediate  dismissal 
from  the  game  and  may  even  result  in 
expulsion,  according  to  McGrath. 

"It  hasn't  happened  this  year. 
Everybody's  been  pretty  good  lately," 
he  said. 

But  pretty  good  isn't  enough  con- 
sidering the  fame,  glory  and  tradition 
that  the  card  show  once  received. 

According  to  the  Rally  Committee 


Web  page,  the  first  documented  evi- 
dence of  card  stunts  are  pictures 
taken  in  1925  at  the  UCLA- 
Occidental  College  football  game. 
There  is  also  some  evidence  that 
UCLA  may  have  participated  in  card 
stunu  done  during  the  Cal-USC  foot- 
ball game  as  early  as  1922. 

Since  then  UCLA's  card  show  has 
seen  its  share  of  of  fame  and  change.;.. 

In  1940,  stunts  during  night  games 
were  performed  using  metallic  cards 
and  a  huge  searchlight  was  reflected 
off  the  cards. 

A  year  later.  Life  magazine  ran  an 
article  while  the  New  York  Sunday 
News  ran  a  multi-page  color  layout  of 


A  point  of  pride  and 
school  spirit,  the  card 
show  was  once  a  key 

factor  in  the  rivalry 
^    with  use      -^ 


UCLA  card  stunts. 

Fast  becoming  an  icon  of  UCLA 
spirit,  in  1951  the  UCLA-USC  game 
marked  the  first  time  the  card  show 
received  national  television  coverage. 


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MAINTSNANOS 


•  A  point  of  pride  and  school  spirit, 
the  card  show  was  once  a  key  factor  in 
the  rivalry  with  USC. 

In  1957,  USC  students  managed  to 
change  a  small  section  of  cards  so  that 
a  red  "U.S.C."  appeared  during  the 
entire  performance. 

In  1963,  after  USC  students  broke 
into  the  store  room  and  stole  some 
stunt  cards,  UCLA  displayed  the  infa- 
mous stunt  which  read:  "WE  CANT 
BUY  OUR  DIPLOMAS" 

To  those  who  participate,  the 
UCLA  card  show  is  an  emblem  of 
school  spirit  and  tradition. 

This  weekend,  in  order  to  give  the 
students  a  chance  to  see  the  show  and 


perhaps  spark  their  interest  in  partici^ 
pating,  stunts  will  be  performed  in  the 
alumni  section. 

"We've  been  trying  to  flood  the  stu- 
dent section  with  flyers  trying  to  stress 
the  point  that  it's  been  going  on  for  75 
years,  but  there's  only  so  much  we  can 
do  because  football  season  is  already 
half  over,"  McGrath  said. 

"The  popularity  has  gone  down, 
but  there's  always  the  possibility  of  it 
getting  better." 


For  information  on  how  you  can  partic- 
ipate in  the  card  show  this  weekend, 
visit  the  rally  committee's  Web  site  at 
www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/rallycom 


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MANNING    . 

FrompageSa  -        ;-^.  -    ■ 

In  a  defensive  backfield  that  has 
been  suspect  for  the  past  two  years, 
Manning  is  easily  the  most  consistent 
defender,  the  one  least  likely  to  watch 
a  defender  fly  by,  and  the  one  most 
likely  to  make  a  tackle  behind  the  line 
of  scrimmage. 

"He's  tenacious,  he  keeps  our 
energy  high  because  he  never  lets 
up,"  safety  Marques  Anderson  said. 
Manning  played  safety  in  high 
school,  but  was  quickly  moved  over 
to  corner  when  Toledo  and  defensive 
coordinator  Bob  Field  realized  he 
was  too  good  for  the  position. 

"Usually,  we  recruit  players  for  the 
backfield,  and  then  if  their  coverage 
skills  are  good  enough,  we  put  them 
at  comer.  If  not,  we  move  them  to 
safety,"  Field  said. 


"We  knew  right  away  Ricky  was  a 
corner.  Within  the  first  seven  days  of 
practice,  we  knew  he  had  the  ability 
to  play  right  away.  ShorUy  after  that, 
we  made  him  the  starting  corner- 
back"  ;r"'.^'';' 

At  the  end  of  the  1999  season,  he 
was  named  to  the  Freshman  All- 
American  squad  by  the  Sporting 
News. 

The  same  quality  that  makes 
Manning  an  effective  football  player 
also  makes  him  one  of  the  most  pop- 
ular guys  on  the  team.  He  knows 
what  to  take  seriously.     : 

"When  he's  on  the  field,  he 
remembers  what  needs  to  be  remem- 
bered and  forgets  what  needs  to  be 
forgotten.  He  never  makes  the  same 
mistake  twice;  and  when  he  does  get 
beat,  he  doesn't  dwell  on  it.  He's 
ready  for  the  next  play,"  Field  said. 

His  teammates  like  his  attitude 
when  he's  not  playing,  as  well. 


"Off  the  field  in  the  locker  room, 
he's  such  a  cool  guy  to  hang  around. 
He's  never  too  serious,"  Anderson 
said. 

"Since  we  never  get  to  dance  on 
the  field,  he's  always  dancing  in  the 
locker  room.  He's  just  such  a  good 
guy  to  have  around.  I'm  glad  he's  on 
my  team." 

The  one  time  of  the  year  when 
Manning  gets  a  little  more  serious  is 
when  the  game  means  a  little  more. 
For  example,  when  Manning's  home- 
town school,  Fresno  State,  travels  to 
the  Rose  Bowl. 

"It's  good  to  beat  them."  Manning 
said  earlier  this  season  after  UCLA 
defeated  the  Bulldogs  for  the  second 
time  in  Manning's  two  years. 

Before  the  first  meeting  of  the  two 

schools,  before  Manning's  first  start 

of  his  career,  he  felt  that  Fresno  State 

coach  Pat  Hill  was  slighting  his  skills. 

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remarks,  but  Manning  says  he  heard 
them  multiple  times  through  the 
grapevine. 

Coming  from  Fresno,  an  agricul- 
tural city  with  no  skyscrapers, 
Manning  was  not  fazed  in  the  least  by 
the  move  to  Los  Angeles. 

"He's  like  a  40.year-old  I9-ycar- 
old,"safetyAudie  Attar  said.  "He  got 
here,  and  he  was  so  mature.  It's  like 
he'd  already  been  playing  for  years. 
He  acts  like  he's  already  been  there 
before.  He's  so  humble." 

Although  Manning  will  be  a  tough 
sell  to  professional  scouts  -  the  NFL 
does  not  like  short  corners  -  he  thinks 
he  has  a  chance. 

Former  Bruin  corner  Daryl 
Henley  had  a  successful  pro  career, 
despite  being  all  of  5-foot-9,  and  Field 
thinks  Manning  can  do  the  same. 

If  the  NFL  doesn't  come  knock- 
ing. Manning  still  keeps  his  baseball 
bat  in  his  locker. 


W.BASKETBAU    , 

From  page  47 

In  addition  to  Kaczmarski,  the 
Bruins  will  also  be  without  senior 
guard  LaCresha  Flannigan,  who  is 
academically  ineligible  for  the  fall 
quarter. 


Flannigan,  who  averaged  6.7  points 
last  season  and  was  expected  to  sec 
considerable  playing  time  this  year,  is 
not  currenUy  enrolled  at  UCLA,  but 
plans  to  reapply  to  the  school  for  the 
winter  quarter.  t  \  ;     .,    / 

Olivier  feels  Flannigan  will  meet  the 
academic  requirements  to  rejoin  the 
team.  -r-  - 

"I  think  (her  chances  of  coming 
back)  are  good,"  she  said.  "She  has  to 
take  care  ofsome  business.  She  knows 
what  she  has  to  do.  I  think  that 
LaCresha  really  wants  to  be  here  and 
she  misses  the  team." 


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W.  BASKETBALL 

From  page  51 

Olivier  said.  "They  sec  an  opportunity 
and  they  are  working  hard  to  take 
advantage  of  that." 

Among  the  players  UCLA  added 
over  the  offseason  was  6-foot-l  for- 
ward Jamila  Veasley  from  Valley 
Christian  High  School  in  Cerritos.  The 
Bruins  also  got  junior  college  transfers 
6-2  center  Shalada  Allen,  64bot  for- 
ward Stacy  Robertson,  and  6-2  center 
Malika  Leatham. 


Thundain  October  19,2000       47 


Se«W.MSKEn«U,pa9e46 


W.  VOLLEYBALL 

From  page  52 

crucial  Pac-10  matchup  will  not  come 
down  to  a  oneorH>ne  duel  between 
two  of  the  nation's  best  hitters. 

"We  want  to  distribute  the  ball 
evenly  because  that's  where  we 
believe  we  can  be  successful,"  Coriett 
said.  "We  don't  want  to  get  too 
caught  up  in  creating  passes  and 
opportunities  for  Logan.  We  have  a 
lot  of  good  players  and  we  struggled 
early  in  the  season.  But  we  have  start- 
ed to  turn  a  comer  and  we  must  gear 
up  for  (Elisabeth)  Bachman  and 


Kristee.  But  we  really  are  going  to 
just  focus  on  our  side  of  the  court." 

The  Cardinal  features  a  balanced 
attack  at  the  net  with  ouuide  hitters 
Tom  and  Ashley  Ivy,  to  go  alongside 
middle  blockers  Sara  McGee,  Tara 
Conrad  arid  Jennifer  Detmer. 

Last  Saturday  against  Long  Beach 
State,  Tom  and  Ivy  notched  a  match- 
high  1 3  kills  apiece.  Detmer  is  second 
in  the  conference  in  blocks  (1.61  per 
game)  and  atop  the  charts  in  hitting 
percentage  (.411). 

With  senior  leadership  in  setter 
Lindsay  Kagawa,  Stanford  has  six 
players  on  the  court  who  could  pose  a 
problem  for  the  Bruins 


Call  now  for  your 

free  consultation. 

Bring  this  ad  for 

50%  off  in  the 

month  of 

October. 


"They  are  good  all  around," 
Porter  said.  "They  play  good  team 
defense  but  are  young  and  are  still 
working  with  their  ball  control." 

Stanford  is  riding  a  four-match 
winning  streak,  its  longest  of  the 
2000  campaign,  following  a  four- 
match  losing  skid  that  included  three- 
game  sweeps  by  the  Los  Angeles 
schools. 

The  Bruins'  15-1.  15-2,  15-11  tri- 
umph on  Sept.  23  at  Maples  Pavilion 
was  UCLA's  first  since  1993. 
Detmer  was  the  only  Cardinal  to  post 
double-digit  kills  with  12.  while 
Porter  had  26  kills,  Bowles  had  16 
and  Bachman  had  10. 


With  back-to-back  five-game 
matches  under  their  belt  from  over 
the  weekend,  the  Bruins  are  are  not 
planning  on  devising  a  new  game 
plan  for  when  they  face  a  much 
improved  Stanford  squad. 

**!  really  think  that  five-game 
matches  come  down  to  momentum," 
Selsor  said.  "It  can  be  anyone's 
match.  It  comes  down  to  who  wants 
it  more." 

One  thing  is  for  sure,  Porter  and 
the  Bruins  will  be  ready  for  Tom  and 
the  Cardinal. 

"We  are  still  getting  better  and  bet- 
ter as  "a  team,"  Porter  said.  "Come 
Thursday,  (my  game)  will  be  on."      -- 


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Thursday,  October  19th 

12:00pm 
Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon 

(across  from  Kerlchoff  Coffeehouse) 

The  next  president  will  appoint  at  least  2 

SUPREME  COURT  Justices.  These  votes  can 

mean  the  difference  between 


■•^^■ 


48       Thursday,  October  19, 2000 


OaiyBniinS^om 


'  \ 


CLUB  NOTEBOOK 


Field  hockey 
splits  first  two 
games 

The  women's  field  hockey  team 
played  in  two  matches  this  past 
Saturday  at  UCLA.  Facing 
Pepperdine  first,  the  Bruins  won  3- 
0.  The  first  goal  was  off  a  short  cor- 
ner pass  from  Merly  Ueno  to 
Marissa  Sandoval,  who  tipped  a 
shot  on  goal.  Melissa  Lorang  gave 
a  perfect  defiection  to  put  away  the 
goal.  The  second  goal  was  similar 
to  the  first,  this  time  with  Yvette 
Landeros  taking  the  final  slap  shot 


in.  Sam  Scholfield  scored  the  final 
goal  against  Pepperdine. 
•  In  a  2-1  loss  to  Cal  Poly  in  the 
second  game,  the  Bruin  offense 
dominated.  Lorang  was  the  team's 
sole  scorer.  UCLA  will  face  Cal 
Poly  again  later  in  the  season. 

Up  next  this  weekend  for  the 
field  hockey  team  are  games  at  San 
Diego's  Olympic  Training  Center 
versus  UCSD.San  Diego  State  and 
UCSB. -,;■■;/■;-:■ 

Anybody  interested  in  UCLA 
field  hockey  can  contact  Marissa 
Sandoval  at  (310)  836-4596  or  play- 
hard@ucla.edu,  or  visit  the  Web 
site:  www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/ 
fieldhockey. 


Ice  hockey  beats 
Western 
Washington       > 

The  UCLA  ice  hockey  team 
opened  its  75th  anniversary  season 
hosting  the  Western  Washington 
University  Vikings. 

After  a  successful  1999-2000  sea- 
son the  Vikings  began  their  season  by 
traveling  to  Los  Angeles  to  face  USC 
and  UCLA.  They  lost  to  USC  but 
entered  the  third  period  of  that  game 
down  by  just  one  goal.  -^  ~  "^ 

With  such  a  close  contest  across 
town,  UCLA  could  not  afford  to 


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underestimate  its  guests. 

Just  25  seconds  into  the  game,  Ben 
Theule,  assistant  captain  of  the 
UCLA  squad  and  former  Pac-8 
MVP,  scored  the  Bruins'  first  goal  of 
the  new  season. 

Playing  witji  early-game  excite- 
ment, the  Bruins  encountered  two 
penalties  at  the  gel-go.  These  initial 
mistakes  didn't  hurt  the  Bruins,  and 
Justin  Williams  even  gave  UCLA  a 
two  goal  lead  by  scoring  on  the  man- 
down  (unassisted). 

At  that  point  the  Bruins  came 
together  and  netted  four  unanswered 
goals.  With  two  more  from  Theule 
and  another  man-down  goal  by  John 
Hodder  (assist  by  Theule),  the  Bruins 


left  for  the  second  period  leading  6-0. 
When  the  margin  opened,  so  did 
the  game,  and  UCLA  coach  Patrick 
Masson  started  the  second  period 
running  all  four  forward  lines. 
Freshman  Robert  Morel  scored  his 
first  goal  as  a  Bruin.  Theule  added  his 
fourth  of  the  night,  and  Hodder 
(Theule)  has  his  second  while  a  man 
down.  After  of  two  periods  it  was  9^. 
The  Vikings  out-shot  the  Bruins  41- 
35,  but  the  final  score  read  12-3  in 
favor  of  UCLA. 


The  Club  Update  runs  every  Thursday. 
Club  presidents  can  send  information 
by  2  p.m.  Wednesday  to 
sports@media.uda.eda 


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Daily  BniinSperts 


Thursday,  October  19, 2000       49 


TBALL  NOTEfi 


More  Bruin 
injuries 

Defensive  back  Jason  Bell  is  expe- 
riencing some  soreness.  He  was 
banged  up  in  the  Cal  game  and  also 
has  problems  with  his  hamstring. 

Not  to  worry,  though. 
Sophomore  comerback  Joe  Hunter 
seems  ready  to  step  up.  Coach 
Toledo  recently  said,  "I  like  the  way 
Joe  has  been  progressing.  He's  been 
doing  some  good  things  lately." 

More  defensive 


Bruins  Iddc  off  pne$eason  |f)lay  in  Canada 


M,VOLLEYBAa:  Players 
to  compete  for  positions 
at  Calgary  Tournainent 


woes... 

Robert  Thomas,  Jason  Stephens 
and  Asi  Faoa  missed  practice 
Tuesday. 

Thomas  was  a  little  under  the 
weather  Tuesday,  Stephens  has  a 
strained  abdominal,  and  Faoa  is  still 
hurting  from  an  ankle  injury  suf- 
fered earlier  this  year. 


Big'D' 


UCLA's  defensive  line  is  also 
banged  up.  Starters  Kenyon 
Coleman  and  Sean  Phillips  are  out, 
and  Rusty  Williams  and  Ken 
Kocher  have  a  stress  fracture  and 
sore  ankle,  respectively.  This  will 
force  UCLA  to  go  with  the  rather 
inexperienced  Ball  brothers.  Mat 
and  Daye,  on  Saturday  against 
OSU. 


But  don't  expect  the  line  to  feel 
too  depleted.  While  the  freshmen 
tandem  may  give  up  some  pounds  to 
Coleman  and  Phillips,  height  is  not 
an  issue.  The  twin  towers  stretch  6- 
foot-6  in  the  air  and  should  make  an 
amusing  spectacle  tackling  5-7  run- 
ning back  Ken  Simonton. 

Running  back 
back? 

Speaking  of  running  backs, 
DeShaun  Foster  has  been  taking  an 
awful  lot  of  snaps  recently  in  prac- 
tice. Protected  by  a  cast  on  his  right 
arm,  Foster  looked  good  carrying 
the  ball  and  was  even  able  to  catch  a 
few  out  of  the  backfield. 

Butdon'tgettooexcited.  Itseems 
he  will  most  likely  not  be  ready  for 
Saturday's  game.  He  has  not  been 
cleared  to  play,  and  coach  Bob 
Toledo  would  not  answer  questions 
regarding  his  return. 


By  Pauline  Vu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff  -r;,.  ~: 

The  UCLA  men's  volleyball  team 
heads  north  to  Canada  this  weekend 
to  play  in  their  first  preseason  match- 
es at  the  Calgary  Tournament. 

The  lineup  will  be  just  a  little  differ- 
ent from  last  year's  national  champi- 
onship-winning team. 

Okay,  a  lot. 


MEN'S  VOLLE 


CalsaryTouma^int 
Thsnda^SatHfday 
y,C»ada 


Notes  compiled  by  Adam  Karon,  Daily 
Bruin  Reporter. 


MCOeLMO/DiilySrxin 


"I'm  not  running  the  same  offense 
I  did  last  year,"  said  head  coach  Al 
Scates.  "This  offense,  no  one  else  in 
the  world  has  run." 

The  only  guys  back  from  last  year 
who  are  guaranteed  starters  for  the 
Calgary  Tournament  are  sophomore 
middle  blocker  Scott  Morrow  and 
sophomore  setter  Rich  Nelson. 

Everything  else  has  changed.  At 
the  other  middle  blocker  position  is 
senior  Adam  Naeve,  a  three-time  All- 
American,  who  took  off  last  year  to 
train  with  the  national  team.  At  libero 
is  true  freshman  Paul  Jocas. 

At  the  two  outside  hitting  and  one 
opposite  position  are  six  guyslooking 
to  prove  their  stuff  to  the  coaching 
staff,  including  two  true  freshmen  and 


one  redshirt  freshman. 
Cameron  Mount  and 

sophomore  Ian 

Burnham  share  time  at 

one  outside  spot,  junior 

Matt  Komer,  a  starter 

last  year,  and  highly-tout- 
ed recruit  Parker  Smith 

share  time  at  the  other. 

while  Jesse  Debban  and 

Jonathon  Acosta  com- 
pete for  opposite. 
"We'll  be  looking  at 

three  of  these  guys  for 

the    first   time,"  Scates 

said. 

With  Volleyball 

Magazine's      No.       1 

recruiting  class  in  the 

nation,  the  team  pulled 

in  12  recruits  this  year, 
"it's    good,"    Smith 

said   of  his   freshman 

class.  "I'd  say  it's  one  of 

the  best,  if  not  the  best 

class." 

Smith  is  eager  to  start 

playing  at  the  Calgary. 
"It's  a  chance  to  prove 
yourself  before  the  regular  season 
starts,"  he  said. 

When  asked  if  he  was  worried 
about  losing  his  starting  position, 
Komer  merely  smiled  and  said,  "No." 
"It  doesn't  really  matter  to  me. 
Whatever's  best  for  the  team,"  he 
added. 

Komer  said  that  the  addition  of 
such  a  talented  freshman  class  affects 
the  atmosphere  of  practices.  "It's 
competitive  and  intense,"  Komer 
said.  "(The  freshmen)  make  for  a  bet- 
ter team." 

For  the  fall,  senior  Mark  Williams, 
who  spent  the  summer  in  Sydney  play- 
ing for  the  Australians,  is  out  because 
of  a  pulled  stomach  muscle  he  got  dur- 


Daily  Brum  file  Ptx>to 

Junior  Matt  Komer  will  share  the  starting 
outside  hitter  position  with  true  freshman 
Parker  Smith.  v 

ing  the  Olympics.       ' 

"He'll  be  healed  by  January  and 
ready  to  compete  again,"  Scates  said. 
"I'm  not  taking  any  chances." 

The  Canadians  start  their  college 
season  in  one  week,  while  the  Bruins 
have  only  been  practicing  for  a  little 
more  than  two  weeks. 

"This  is  why  we  go  up  there,  actual- 
ly," Scates  said.  "We're  all  getting 
started  down  here  and  they're  getting 
ready  logo  up  there." 

And  also,  the  team  goes  to  test  an 
olTense  much  changed  from  last  year. 
Now  one  middle  blocker  hits  out  of 
the  backcourt  and  the  setter  will 
attack  the  ball  as  much  as  anyone. 

"This  is  a  different  offense,"  Scales 
said.  "Nobody's  seen  it  yet." 


atulations  Pledge  Class  2000! 


,^\manda  ofaggart 

^Y^lsten  Cour-^ 

;^rison  Crahtree 

\       ^cgFian  ^}{fC^rthy 

^         %icofe  q)e  c^eon 

Q^fir^o  ^^^iiy 

^)anessa  ^J(amos 

^dsay  g^c^Hoim 

^uren  Qiapperton 

Qharlene  ^\tt\nqer 

^a^fe^  tHcCowen 

^uren  O'Gorman 


Sody  ^rrogg 
^uren  <J(eneau 

q)\ane  Cfiiofo 

(grigiif  Conncff^ 

^rin  ^arsR 

cpfltt-^  Gomez 

^rin  l^agerty 
Qtacey  cpfiefps 

q)\anaG'd 
^ex\s  ^onansing 
^  C^rf^  TSung  J 
i>Qsu(fa  Cohen 


We  hue  our  new  members! 


so       Thursday,  October  19,2000 


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Lacfc  of  student 

Interest  may 

end  UCLA's 

75-year-old 

card  stunt 

__tradttion 


UCLA  fans  have  b««n  participating  in  card  stunts  like  this  one  at  the  Rose  Bowl  for  the  past  75  years. 


UCLA  IMy  Commtttee 


By  Amanda  FIctdMr 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Some  say  it's  tradition,  some  say  it's  a  waste  of 
time.  Either  way,  the  UCLA  Rally  Committee 
says  that  due  to  lack  of  interest,  their  card  stunts 
are  in  danger  of  cancellation. 
;  "It's  mainly  due  in  part  to  student  apathy  over 
the  years  and  (the  football  team's)  performance," 
Rally  Committee  chairman  Jerry  Lopez  said. 

A  tradition  that  has  lasted  75  years,  the  card 
show  was  once  a  UCLA  trademark. 

"  Believe  it  or  not,"  Lopez  said,  "it's  what  we're 
known  for." 

So  much  so  that  the  UCLA  Rally  Committee 
was  approached  by  filmmakers  in  1993  to  do  the 
card  stunt  seen  in  the  movie  "Forest  Gump." 

UCLA  is  also  one  of  the  last  schools  to  do  card 
stunts  at  every  home  football  game.  The  only 
other  school  to  do  shows  is  Ohio  Sute. 

The  recent  decline  in  card  show  participation 


is  due  to  a  combination  of  technical  problems  and 
lack  of  support. 

"One  problem  is  that  the  PA  system  isn't  loud 
enough  or  they  start  playing  music  so  it  drowns 
out  our  instructions,"  said  Tim  McGrath,  the 
Rally  Committee  art  director. 

Another  reason  is  that  when  students  are  hold- 
ing the  cards,  they  can't  see  the  show  themselves. 
"In  the  past  when  they've  come  on  the  screen, 
the  stunts  are  a  lot  better,"  Lopez  said. 
"Otherwise  they're  just  sitting  there  holding 
cards." 

The  stunts  aren't  always  televised  these  days 
because  there  is  so  much  more  going  on  in  the  sta- 
dium than  there  was  in  the  1950s  when  the  card 
show  was  at  its  most  popular. 

"The  game  is  a  big  production,"  Rally 
Committee  Advisor  Melissa  Abraham  explained. 
"There  are  a  lot  of  different  things  going  on,  and 
if  the  card  show  doesn't  look  good  they  choose 
not  to  put  it  on." 


The  students  themselves  also  create  problems. 

At  the  Rose  Bowl,  the  card  show  is  done 
between  tunnel  six  and  seven,  usually  in  rows  31 
to  60.  During  a  larger  show  the  stunt  extends  to 
row  70. 

"That's  where  participation  is  the  worst," 
McGrath  said.  "The  top  half  are  those  students 
who  are  late  because  they've  been  tailgating  and 
drinking  and  sometimes  aren't  even  paying  atten- 
tion to  the  game." 

Students  also  resort  to  throwing  their  cards,  an 
act  that  has  led  to  the  cancellation  of  card  shows 
at  other  universities. 

"The  vice  chancellor's  wife  got  hit  in  the  eye, 
so  they  banned  card  shows  at  USC,"  McGrath 
said. 

In  1993  during  the  UCLA-BYU  game,  the 
Bruins  scored  a  touchdown  right  before  half^ime 
and  everyone  threw  the  stunt  cards  into  the 


SeeCM8S,pa9e45 


Daily  Bnitfl  Sports 


Thur«lay,0ctol)«r19,2000       SI 


Shearer  wins  spot  on  traveling  team 


llfcGOLF:  UCLA  hopes  to 
continue  making  strides 
at  Stanford  tournament 


I'l'Viii' 


ByPauKneVu 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 
■■'-;  ■  '■.*■■%  '-i:.  r 

The  No.  16  women's  golf  team 
heads  to  this  weekend's  Stanford 
Invitational  with  their  third  different 
No.  5  player  in  three  tournaments. 

Consistently,  true  freshman  Gina 
Umeck,  redshirt  freshman  Saki 
Uecki,  junior  Alicia  Um  and  senior 
Laura  Moffat  have  made  the  travel- 
ing team  in  all  of  UCLA's  events  so 
far. 

But  the  No.  5  player  switched  off 
every  single  time. 


WOMEN'S  GOLF 


Stanford  Pepsi  Invitati 
Friday-Saturday 
Stanford,  Calif.    .» 
Ail  day 


lACOB  LIAO/Oally  Bniln 


"We're  still  trying  to  look  for  a  fifth 
player  who's  going  to  step  up  and  do 
something/'  UCLA  head  coach 
Carrie  Leary  said. 

This  time,  it's  true  freshman 
Krystal  Shearer  rounding  out  the  five. 

According  to  Leary,  Shearer  has 
been  on  the  bubble  each  time  in  the 
team's  intrasquad  tournaments,  held 
before  each  official  event  to  deter- 
mine who  travels. 

"She's  been  really  close  every  time, 
she's  beeji  the  sixth  person,"  Leary 
said.  "She  played  really  well  last  week 
in  the  final  round  (of  the  team  event) 


to  qualify.  She's  had  a  lot  of 
good  numbers  out  in  prac- 
tice." v-;v';  •.■;<;:, /v 

The  loaded  field  has  17 
teams,  10  of  them  ranked, 
including  No.  1  Arizona,  No. 
3  USC,  No.  5  Stanford.  No. 
10  Pepperdine,  No.  1 1  Tulsa 
and  No.  J 2  New  Mexico 
State. 

"It's  a  really  good  field 
and  we're  just  looking  for- 
ward to  going  up  there  and 
playing  well,  and  really  prov- 
ing ourselves  against  the 
strength  of  the  field,"  Leary 
said.  "It'll  be  a  good  test  for 
us.  We  made  some  progress 
last  week  at  Washington,  so 
hopefully  we'll  continue  that 
into  this  week  at  Stanford." 

Last  week,  the  women 
placed  fifth  at  the  Edean 
Ihlanfeldt  Invitational  in 
Washington,  which  included 
several  of  the  teams  that  will 
be  at  the  Stanford  Invitational. 

Um  believes  that  last  week's  finish 
should  spur  this  week's  finish. 

"We  have  more  confidence 
because  we  played  well  at  the  last 
tournament,"  she  said. 

Umeck,  the  team's  top  finisher  in 
Washington,  says  the  team  will  also 
look  to  poorer  finishes  in  earlier  tour- 
naments to  inspire  them. 

"I  think  we're  all  motivated  by  our 
lower  finishes,"  she  said.  "I  don't 
think  any  of  us  were  satisfied  because 
we  know  we  can  be  No.  I." 

The  Bruins  go  into  the  Stanford 
Invitational  determined  to  be  proud 
of  themselves  when  they  leave  it.  But 
there's  never  a  normal  day  in  the 
game  of  golf 

"It's  golf,  it's  hard  to  predict," 
Leary  said.  "They're  prepared  and 


Bruins  will  start  season 
witliout  yajua     players 


UCLA  Sports  Info 

Krystal  Shearer  will  connpete  this  week- 
erid  at  the  Stanford  Pepsi  Invitational. 

that's  all  you  can  do.  When  you  get 
out  there,  you  never  know  what's 
going  to  happen.  Just  hope  for  the 
best." 

And  at  least  one  of  the  players, 
Um,  is  doing  that. 

"I  think  we'll  do  well,"  she  said. 
"Everything's  just  coming  together." 

Five  members  of  the  UCLA  golfs 
blue  team  will  head  to  San  Diego  this 
weekend  to  play  in  the  Aztec 
Invitational:  Johanna  Andersson 
Bridget  Dwyer,  Leilani  Bagby,  Vivan 
Phosomran  and  Melissa  Martin. 

"We're  looking  forward  to  having 
a  great  time  out  there,"  said  assisUnt 
coach  Ken  Lewis,  who  will  travel  with 
the  blue  squad.  "We've  prepared  the 
giris  properly,  so  it's  their  time  to 
shine." 


W.  BASKETBALL:  Stiuad 
loses  six  seniors,  plus 
Raczmarski,  Flannigan 


By  Chris  Umpierrc 

Dally  Bruin  Staff 

UCLA  women's  basketball 
sophomore  guard  Nicole 
Kaczmarski  will  miss  the  first  seven 
games  of  the  season  due  to  persona! 
reasons,  the  school  announced  late 
Tuesday. 

Kaczmarski,  who  started  all  29 
games  and  averaged  1 1.7  points  last 
season,  was  given  permission  to 
take  the  fall  quarter  off.  She  is  cur- 
rently in  her  Long  Island.  N.Y. 
home  receiving  treatment  for  a  foot 
injury  she  suffered  during  the  sum- 
mer. 

She  is  expected  to  rejoin  the 
team  by  Dec.  16. 

"Kaz  went  home  and  she  saw 
her  doctors,"  UCLA  women's  bas- 
ketball head  coach  Kathy  Olivier 
said.  "She  wants  to  be  100  percent 
when  she  comes  back.  She's  taking 
care  of  some  personal  issues." 

Kaczmarski  was  rated  by  several 
publications  as  the  No.  1  high 
school  recruit  when  she  signed  with 
UCLA  in  1998. 

She  turned  down  several  East 
Coast  women's  basketball  power- 
houses, including  Tennessee,  to 
come  to  Westwood.  Her  father 
Peter  Kaczmarski,  who  has  a  close 
relationship  with  his  daughter,  was 


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against  the  decision. 

Kaczmarski  slated  last  season 
that  her  first  few  weeks  at  UCLA  - 
.some  3,000  miles  from  home  -  were 
difficult.  Toward  the  end  of  last 
year,  Kaczmarski  said  she  had  got- 
ten over  her  homesickness. 

Olivier  said  she  didn't  feel  home- 
sickness had  anything  to  do  with 
Kaczmarski,  who  attended  summer 
school  at  UCLA  this  summer,  tak- 
ing the  fall  quarter  off. 

The  Bruins  will  face  some  com- 
petitive teams  without  their  star 
guard.  Some  notable  games  she  will 
miss  are  against  Duke  in  the 
Women's  Sports  Foundation 
Classic,  and  against  both  BYU  and 
Colorado  on  the  road. 

"I  think  we  will  definitely  be 
challenged  the  first  few  games,  but  1 
think  this  group  is  a  close  group  to 
overcome  that,"  Olivier  said.  "I 
think  the  team  chemistry  is  very 
good  and  they  work  hard  together." 
The  news  comes  at  a  time  when 
the  team  is  tr>'ing  to  rebound  from 
the  losses  of  six  seniors  last  season, 
including  UCLA  women's  basket- 
ball second  leading  alkime  scorer, 
Maylana  Martin. 

Kaczmarski,  who  earned  Pac-10 
all-freshman  honors,  was  expected 
to  pick  up  the  reins  from  the  depart- 
ing seniors. 

"I  would  love  to  see  her  have  a 
breakout  year  this  season,  but  I 
think  right  now  we  have  some  other 
people   that  are   stepping   up," 

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■  ^: 


Catch  thisf" 

Check  out  Friday's  paper  for  a  feature 
on  foottwll  receivers  coach  Ron 
Caragher,  former  backup  quarterback 
behind  Troy  Aikman  at  UCLA 


Daily  Bruin 


Thursday,  October  19, 2000 


Sports  on  the  Web  Q    Q 
See  all  this  and  more  at  * 
the  Daily  Bruin's  : 

Website:  • 

• 

www.daiiybnjin.uda.edu  I 


mi  jii.iHiUl^i  m'r  ^  mm^mmm^^  I    ■    ■>!   i 


manning  two 

sports 


Though  he  plays  professional 

baseball,  Ricky  manning  Jr.'s 

first  loue  is  football 


-.J.       --  .  MINOVROSSA)*tyBru«iS*rtOf  Staff 

RKky  Manning  Jr^  UCLA's  starting  cornerback,  spent  six  weeks  of  his 
summer  playing  professional  baseball  for  the  Minnesota  Twins. 


ByGregLcwb 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Some  rootball  players  have 
more  interesting  summer  jobs 
than  others. 

Cornerback  Ricky  Manning 
Jr.  spent  his  summer  playing 
professional  baseball  for  the 
Minnesota  Twins  organization. 

Manning  is  the  only  profes- 
sional athlete  on  the  UCLA 
football  team.  He  made  $45,000 
for  six  weeks  of  rookie  league 
baseball  in  Fort  Meyers.  Fla. 
And  he's  still  got  $235,000  and 
four  years  lefl  on  his  contract. 

"It's  nice  having  money," 
Manning  said.  "When  my 
investments  do  well,  I  can  take 
my  teammates  out  and  pick  up 
thebilL" 

Driving  a  brand  new 
Expedition  doesn't  hurt  the  col- 
lege experience,  either. 

Baseball,  despite  the  money  it 
provides,  is  a  distant  second  to 
football.  Chasing  down  wide 
receivers  is  just  more  fun  than 
chasing  down  fly  balls. 


"This  summer  1  broke  a 
catcher's  collarbone  and  sepa- 
rated his  shoulder,"  Manning 
said. 

"I  just  like  football  better." 
Sound  a  little  aggressive? 
Well,  Manning  has  to  be. 
There  are  not  too  many  success- 
ful 5-foot-8  comerbacks  in  col- 
lege football. 

"Sometimes  he's  a  litUe  over- 
aggressive,"  UCLA  head  coach 
Bob  Toledo  said.  "But  that's  a  lot 
better  than  not  being  aggressive 
enough.  I'd  uke  a  whole  team  of 
Ricky  Mannings  if  I  could." 

"F  think  he's  referring  more  to 
last  year,"  Manning  said.  "This 
year  I've  cut  down  on  being 
overaggrcssive.  I  think  I'm 
doing  all  right." 

In  a  defense  that  has  been 
notoriously  unstable  for  the  past 
two  years.  Manning  has  been 
one  of  only  two  players  to  start 
every  game  since  he  took  over 
the  starting  spot  in  the  third 
game  of  the  season  last  year. 


Sec  MMMINS,  page 


Bruins  host  improved  Stanford  team  today 


W. VOLLEYBALL-  UCLA  hopes  to 
fight  its  way  to  Championships 


ByAJCadman 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 


For  the  UCLA  women's  volleyball  team,  the 
second  season  begins  tonight. 

Posting  a  7-2  record  in  the  first  half  of  the  con- 
ference season,  the  No.  8  Bruins  begin  their 
stretch  run  towards  the  postseason  against  No. 
17    Stanford    in    Pauley 
Pavilion. 

"The  bottom  line  is  that 
this  is  an  important 
match,"  said  UCLA  junior 
setter  Erika  Selsor.  "I  think 
we  match  up  fairly  well.  We 
beat  them  at  home  and  now 
they  will  be  looking  to  do 
the  same  thing." 

Both  squads  are  looking 
to  their  superstars  to  point 
the  way  towards  a  trip  to  the  NCAA 
Championships  at  Richmond,  Va.^  .in 
December.  UCLA  junior  outside  hitter  Kristee 
Porter,  the  Pac-IO  Conference  Player  of  the 
Week,  notched  back-to-back  30-kill,  20-dig 
matches  against  the  Arizona  schools  last  week. 


WOMEN^SVOLLEYBA 

T(KUyat7f.m. 
P«»yPayiiiM 
live  broadcast 
www.iiclabraiRMom 


But  if  ever  there  was  a  player  in  the  nation 
today  that  could  match  her  kill-for-kill,  it  would 
be  Cardinal  sophomore  Logan  Tom.  The  2000 
Olympian  returned  from  her  stint  with  the 
National  Team  last  week  to  lead  Stanford  with 
30  total  kills  against  Bay  Area  rival  California 
and  No.  18  Long  Beach  Sute. 

"We  are  always  excited  to  play  Stanford," 
Porter  said.  "We  know  Logan  will  come  to  play, 
so  the  most  important  thing  above  anything  else 
is  tojust  beat  them." 

"They're  dilTerent  now 
that  they  have  Logan  Tom 
back  in  the  lineup,"  said 
UCLA  head  coach  Andy 
Banachowski.  "She  brings 
some  stability  into  their 
lineup.  She  helps  them  with 
their  ball-handling  and 
opens  up  their  attack  a  lot 
more  because  of  her  fire- 
power. When  they  get  in 
trouble,  she's  able  to  bail 
them  out. 
"They're  a  much  more  dangerous  and  ofTerv 
sive-minded  tearojiow." 

But  for  former  UCLA  volleyball  alum  and 
current  Stanford  head  coach  Denise  Corlett,  the 


AOAManOWN/DaiVBnitn 


S«eW.V0liIVMltpa9e47 


Elisabeth  Bachman  and  Erika  Salsor  will  lead 
the  Bruins  against  Stanford  at  Pauley  Pavilion. 


Dylan 
Hernandez 


Tyson  vs.  Golota 
will  be 

beating  instead 
of  boxing  niatch 

COLUMN:  Only  appeal  of 
sport  is  violence,  so  dirty 
fighters  are  prospering 

Boxing  is  dying.  You  don't  need 
to  see  the  latest  television  rat- 
ings to  realize  that. 
One  of  boxing's  most  exciting 
matchups  in  years  -  Felix  Trinidad  v. 
Fernando  Vargas  on  Dec.  2  -  is  just 
around  the  comer,  but  no  one  seems 
to  care.  No  one  even  seems  to  know 
that  the  fight  was  signed  a  couple  of 
weeks  ago. 

The  little  attention  the  sport  is  get- 
ting, instead,  is 
being  diverted 
to  tomorrow 
night's  joke  of  a 
fight  between 
Mike  Tyson  and 
Andrew  Golota. 
Considering  it's 
a  ten-round, 
non-title  bout 
between  two 
washed-up  fight- 
ers, it's  not  a 
good  sign  for 
boxing. 

People  are  looking  forward  to  a 
brutal  beating,  which  in  most  cases, 
would  be  fine.  The  sport  has  roles 
and  officials  who  are  supposed  to 
keep  combatants  from  getting  seri- 
ously injured.     - 

Problem  is,  most  fans  are  expect- 
ing someone  to  get  hurt  when  Tyson 
or  Golota  -  who  are  considered  the 
dirtiest  fighters  in  the  world  -  snap 
and  disregard  these  regulations.  So  in 
that  sense,  people  aren't  shelling  out 
$50  to  see  boxing. 

To  the  masses,  boxing's  greatest 
appeal  lies  in  its  sheer  barbarism. 
Most  people  don't  pay  to  watch  a 
boxing  match;  they  pay  to  watch  a 
fight.  They  want  to  see  someone 
come  close  to  being  hammered  out  of 
existence  without  actually  dying;  that 
hasn't  happened  much  lately. 

And  due  to  the  sport's  failure  to 
deliver  anything  violent  enough,  it 
has  been  reduced  to  a  state  in  which 
it  has  to  rely  on  farces  like  Tyson- 
Golota  to  ensure  its  survival. 

For  much  of  the  last  century,  box- 
ing was  among  the  most  popular 
sports  in  America.  It  adequately  sat- 
isfied people's  thirst  for  savagery. 
Boxing  continued  to  get  its  fair 
share  of  press  in  the  early  1980s,  as 
Sugar  Ray  Leonard,  Marvin  Fiagier, 
Roberto  Duran  and  Tommy  Heams 
took  turns  bombing  each  other's 
brains  out.  The  sport  got  a  big  boost 
later  that  decade  when  Tyson  came 
on  the  scene  and  battered  his  oppo- 
nents senseless. 

In  the  years  during  Tyson's  first 
jail  stint,  however,  boxing  began  to 
change.  Seeing  former  champions 
like  Muhammad  Ali  and  Royd 
Patterson  barely  able  to  speak  may 
have  made  fighters  more  cautious. 

Most  of  today's  top  fighten  -  i.e. 
Roy  Jones,  Floyd  Mayweather, 
Oscar  De  La  Hoya  -  are  safety-first 
countcrpunchers.  They  don't  bull 
their  way  in  and  open  up.  Rather, 
they  wait  until  their  opponents  make 


S«c 


44 


Serving  the  UCLA  community  since  1919 


Friday,  OciDKR  20, 2000 


www.ddilybruin.ucia.edu 


Ostln  Hall  will  become 
Schoenberg  once  again 


NICOt-EMILLtR/DailyBtuin 

Gloria  Steincm  speaks  in  the  Charles  E.Young  Grand  Salon  at  noon  on 
Thursday  about  the  importance  of  youth  vote  in  the  upcon^lng  elections. 

Steinem  urges  students  to  vote 

ELECTION:  Speaker  discusses 
pros  of  Democratic  platform 


By  Bariiara  Ortutay 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Gloria  Steinem  has  seen  her  share  of  elec- 
tions, and  she  called  this  one  the  most  impor- 
tant one  of  her  lifetime. 


Conference  to 
feature  patriarch 
of  Armenian  faith 
tijis  weekend 

SPIAKER:   Spiritual  leader 
seen  as  symbol  of  hope  for 
local  community  members 


ByHMMshPatel 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

The  present  leader  of  a  1,700-year-old 
faith  will  come  to  UCLA  on  Friday. 

Catholicos  Aram  I,  one  of  the  two  spir- 
itual leaders  of  the  Armenian  Church, 
will  address  scholars  from  Europe  and 
North  America  at  a  two-day  conference 
focusing  on  the  historic  region  of  Cilicia 
in  Armenia. 

"This  is  his  first  patriarchal  visit  to 
California  since  his  enthronement  as 
patriarch  several  years  ago,"  said 
Richard  Hovannisian,  professor  of  histo- 
ry, who  is  organizing  the  event. 

The  patriarch  is  akin  to  the  pope  for 
Roman  Catholics  and  the  Dalai  Lama  for 


Speaking  to  a  crowd  that  packed  and  later 
spilled  outside  ChaHes  Young  Grand  Salon, 
the  66-year-old  feminist  icon  asked  students 
to  follow  their  conscience  on  Nov.  7. 

"The  art  of  behaving  ethically  is  behaving 
as  if  everything  we  do  matters,"  she  said.  "If 
we  want  Al  Gore  in  the  White  House  instead 
of  George  Bush,  we  have  to  vote  for  Gore 


SeeSIEMEMfPagelO 


■sSV; 


NAME:  University  regrets  error, 
Carnesale  says;  family  glad  to 
see  auditorium  re-redesignated 

By  Timothy  Kudo 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

Oslin  Hall  will  be  renamed  back  to  Schoenberg 
Hall,  Chancellor  Albert  Carnesale  announced 
Thursday. 

"It's  just  the  greatest  thing,"  said  Randol 
Schoenberg,  grandson  of  Arnold  Schoenberg,  the 
late  composer  and  UCLA  professor  who  is  the 
building's  and  auditorium's  namesake. 

Controversy  arose  when  UCLA  officials  decid- 
ed to  rename  the  auditorium  inside  the 
Schoenberg  music  building  after  receiving  a  $5 
million  donation  from  record  producer  Mo  Ostin 
and  his  wife.  The  Ostins  could  not  immediately  be 
reached  for  comment. 

UCLA  ofllcials  recently  renamed  the  auditori- 
um with  the  belief  that  since  the  building  itself  was 
named  after  Arnold  Schoenberg,  the  auditorium 
was  still  available  for  naming.  But  both  the  hall  and 
the  building  were,  in  fact,  ofTicially  named  after  the 
late  composer,  according  to  university  documents. 
"Regrettably,  the  decision  to  rename  the  audi- 
torium was  made  based  on  incorrect  and  inconv 
plete  information,"  Carnesale  said  in  a  public 
statement. 

The  original  decision  to  rename  the  auditorium 
was  made  after  reviewing  related  documents, 
none  of  which  indicated  it  was  named  after  Arnold 
Schoenberg,  said  Daniel  Neuman,  dean  of  the 
School  of  Arts  and  Architecture,  in  a  past  inter- 
view. 

Yet,  after  learning  that  the  auditorium  had  in 
fact  been  officially  named  after  Schoenberg, 


Neuman  said  the  renaming  would  have  been  rec- 
ommended anyway,  because  the  entire  building 
was  named  after  Schoenberg. 

A  simHar  situation  exists  with  Royce  Hall,  in 
which  the  auditorium  and  building  carry  the  same 
name.  Neuman  said  in  the  past  that  the  Royce 
auditorium  could  technically  be  renamed  as  well. 

Michael  Eicher,  vice  chancellor  of  external 
affairs,  had  defended  the  university's  decision  to 
rename  the  building  by  saying  that  the  naming 
"was  thoroughly  reviewed." 

In  a  statement  to  the  Schoenberg  family, 
Carnesale  said,  "1  deeply  regret  the  errors  that 
occurred  internally  at  UCLA  that  resulted  in  the 
decision  to  remove  (Schoenberg's)  name  from  the 
auditorium  of  the  Schoenberg  Music  Building." 

UCLA  oftlcials  have  yet  to  determine  what  to 
do  with  the  Ostins'  donation. 

"UCLA  is  working  to  find  a  suitable  way  to  rec- 
ognize the  exceptional  generosity  of  the  Ostins, ' 
Robak  said. 

When  the  university  originally  decided  to 
rename  the  hall,  they  did  so  without  notifying 
Schoenberg's  family  In  response,  relatives  met 
with  Neuman  and  Eicher  to  express  their  con- 
cerns. They  were  also  planning  on  taking  their  case  ^ 
to  the  next  meeting  of  the  UC  Board  of  Regents. 

"The  names  are  the  things  that  go  from  the  past 
to  the  present  to  the  future,"  said  Lawrence 
Schoenberg,  the  composer's  son.  "The  faculty 
change,  the  students  change,  but  UCLA  needs  to 
retain  the  names;  these  are  the  things  that  last." 

Members  of  the  family  said  they  are  grateful  to 
whomever  made  the  decision  and  do  not  feel  there 
are  bad  feelings  between  them  and  the  university 
"If  you  really  fight  for  what's  right  and  for  what 
you  believe  in,  sometimes  you  can  win,"  Randol 
Schoenberg  said.  "I  guess  I  learned  that  from  my 
grandfather." 


UCLA  SOUTHWESTCAMPUS  HOUSING  AND  PARKING  PROJECT  SITE 

To  decrease  traffic  to  campus,  UCLA  plans  to  constnict  new  housing  and  parking  for 
graduate  and  upper  diviswn  undergraduate  students  on  Veteran  Avetwe. 


-itt 


H- 


Residents,  offidals  consider 
plans  for  housing  project 


MWttKU&H<Ny» 


MAGTJE  WOO/DMy  Bni<n 


CONSTRUCTION:  Added 
facilities  to  be  used 
for  graduate  students 


By  Melody  Wang 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Most  students  believe  parking 
and  housing  are  limited  and 
over-priced  near  UCLA,  but 
administrators  and  Westwood 
residents  can't  agree  on  how  to 
tackle  the  issue. 

To  reduce  campus  traffic  from 
commuting  students,  UCLA 
wants  to  increase  university 
housing  for  single  graduate,  pro- 
fessional and  upper  division 
undergraduate  students. 

The  university  wants  to  con- 
struct new  residential  buildings 
on  Veteran  Avenue  that  will 
accommodate  approximately 
2,000  residents.  The  construc- 
tion is  scheduled  to  begin  in  2001 
and  completed  by  2008. 

Westwood    resident     David 

Achavi      JtlliH      hp      ■mH<.r«f..nHc 


UCLA's  need  to  expand,  but 
feels  this  project  will  make  exist- 
ing traffic  worse. 

"I  graduated  from  UCLA,  I 
love  UCLA,  I'm  very  loyal  to 
UCLA,"  he  said.  "But  maybe 
there's  some  other  solution  that 
is  not  as  severe  to  the  neighbor- 
hood." 

Capital  Programs,  which 
oversees  the  university's  con- 
struction projects,  held  a  public 
hearing  Wednesday  to  discuss 
the  project's  'Draft 

Environmental  Impact  Report,", 
which  was  released  Sept.  ISr 

The  report  is  available  at  the 
Charles  E.  Young  Research  and 
Biomedical  Libraries.  Palms- 
Rancho  Park,  Brentwood  and 
West  Los  Angeles  Public 
Libraries  also  have  copies  of  the 
report.  Administrators  will 
review  all  concerns  submitted 
before  Nov.  I. 

Liz  Chcadle,  assistant  dean  of 
UCLA  School  of  Law,  said  many 
graduate  students  are  frustrated 


fa9»4^ 


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Friday,  October  20, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  News 


COMMUNITY  BRIEFS 


Daily  Bruin  News 


CALPIRG  campaigns  to 
save  Alaskan  wildlife 

The  California  Public  Interest  Research 
Group  is  spearheading  a  postcard  campaign  at 
UCLA  and  other  campuses  encouraging 
President  Clinton  to  protect  Alaska's  Arctic 
National  Wildlife  Refuge  from  oil  exploration. 

The  American  Association  of  Petroleum 
Geologists  estimated  that  the  frozen  tundra 
holds  anywhere  from  1 1.5  to  31.5  billion  barrels 
of  oil.  According  to  a  recent  Christian  Science 
Monitor  Poll,  54  percent  of  Americans  support 
exploitation  it's  energy  resources. 

But  Lindsay  Taub,  fourth-year  Italian  and 
special  studies  student  said  CALPIRG  opposes 
drilling  in  the  area  because  it  will  damage  the 
environment  and  will  only  generate  six  months 
to  a  year's  supply  of  oil. 

"We  want  the  President  to  declare  this  area  a 
national  monument  before  he  leaves  office,"  she 
said.  "Because  its  one  of  our  last  pristine  wilder- 
ness areas  in  America." 

Taub,  a  member  of  CALPIRG,  added  that 


while  drilling  in  the  ANWR  may 
lower  oil  prices  and  assuage  energy 
concerns  that  have  surfaced  as  an  issue 
in  the  presidential  election,  its  long  term 
effects  would  be  inconsequential.  '     •  •  .  ■*- , 

Nerve  stimulator  may 
help  treat  depression 

A  pacemaker-like  device  currently  used  to 
treat  epilepsy  is  being  evaluated  as  a  possible 
new  treatment  for  depression  by  UC  San  Diego 
psychiatrists. 

Known  as  the  Vagus  Nerve  Stimulator,  the 
device  will  be  implanted  in  10  to  15  severely 
depressed  San  Diegans  who  have  not  responded 
to  medication  or  psychotherapy. 

Dr.  Mark  Rapaport,  associate  professor  of 
psychiatry  and  principal  investigator  of  the  San 
Diego  site,  said  the  Vagus  Nerve  Stimulator 
seems  to  help  about  40  percent  of  the  patients 
who  participated  in  the  University  of  Texas 
open-treatment  pilot  study  published  in  the 
December  1999  journal  Biological  Psychiatry. 


According  to  national  mental 
health  organizations,  17-19  mil- 
lion Americans  suffer  from  depres- 
sion and  an  estimated  1  to  3  million  are 
.  deemed  treatment-resistant 

Cancer  screenings  for 
Asian  women  low 

Cancer  ranks  as  the  major  cause  of  death 
among  Asian  and  Pacific  Islander  women,  yet  a 
range  of  health  care  access  barriers  have  left 
them  with  the  lowest  screening  and  early  detec- 
tion rates  for  breast  and  cervical  cancer  of  all 
ethnic  groups,  a  UCLA  study  shows. 

The  study,  the  first  to  break  down  national 
data  for  breast  and  cervical  carcinoma  screening 
among  API  subgroups,  also  shows  that  the  prac- 
tice of  merging  API  health  data  into  a  single  cat- 
egory hides  significant  rate  variations. 

In  fact,  the  groups  at  highest  risk  for  late  can- 
cer detection  and  treatment  become  invisible. 

For  example,  federal  guidelines  recommend 
that  95  percent  of  women  age  1 8  or  older  should 


receive  a  Pap  test  to  detect  cervical  cancer.  The 
study  showed  that  21  percent  of  API  women 
have  never  had  a  Pap  test,  compared  with  5  per- 
cent of  white  women. 

Demographic  characteristics  that  affect 
healtlvcare  access  -  education,  income,  age  -  all 
had  a  significantly  greater  negative  impact  on 
cancer  screening  rates  among  APIs  than  on 
white  women,  the  study  showed.  Language  and 
cultural  differences  also  played  a  role. 

"APIs  themselves,  as  well  as  policy  makers, 
labor  under  the  myth  that  APIs  are  a  healthy 
population  and  at  low  risk  for  breast  and  cervi- 
cal cancer,"  said  Marjorie  Kagawa-Singer,  lead 
author  and  assistant  professor  in  the  School  of 
Public  Health. 

"In  addition,  the  practice  of  aggregating 
more  than  60  nationalities  into  one  API  catego- 
ry masks  marked  demographic  differences  asso- 
ciated with  low  rates  of  cancer  screening,"  she 
said.  "Targeted  efforts  to  increase  screening 
among  API  women  could  increase  their  cancer 
survival  rates  dramatically." 

Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reports. 


Friday,  October  20, 2000         3 


Every  other  Friday,  The  Bruin  win  highEght  sodal,  politi- 
cal and  scientific  advancements  that  originated  at  UCLA 
and  set  standards  for  both  the  univefsity  and  the  n^ion. 


WHArS  BREWIN' 

Today  3  p.m. 

Jacob  Marschak  Colloquium 
Kathleen  Carley  presents 
"Organizational  Change: 
Acknowledge  Interaction 
Perspective" 
Anderson  C-301 

7:30  p.m. 

Melnitz  Movies 

The  French  Connection 

James  Bridges  Theatre  Melnitz 

Hall 

(310)206-8170 

9:30  p.m. 

UCLA  Ice  Hockey 

UCLA  vs.  Oregon 

Healthsouth  Area  -  555  Nash  St. 

El Segundo 

535-4510 

S6.00 


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Ponzi  scheme 

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organized  such  a  scheme  (t9l9-t9?0) ) 

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the  need  for 
water,  UCLA 
researchers 
take  on  the 


idea  of  reverse 


osmosis 


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By  MMJeric  HMiiandcK 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

In  the  midst  of  the  Cold  War.  President 
John  F.  Kennedy  spoke  of  "New 
Frontiers,"  in  the  field  of  space  exploration. 
At  the  same  time,  researchers  at  UCLA's 
School  of  Engineering  and  Applied 
Sciences  looked  to  the  ocean  as  their  new 
frontier. 

Following  the  slogan  "go  to  the  moon 
and  make  the  desert  bloom,"  the 
researchers  made  significant  progress  in 
water  treatment,  according  to  the  engineer- 
ing school's  Web  site. 

Recognizing  a  need  for  more  water  both 
in  California  and  around  the  world,  these 
scientists  searched  for  a  way  to  convert  salt 
water  into  a  drinkable  source.  Although 
earlier  methods  for  desalinization,  the 
process  of  removing  salt  from  ocean  water, 
were  developed  in  the  late  1940s,  they 
proved  to  be  inefficient  and  costly. 

But,  Joseph  McCutchan,  an  engineering 
professor  at  UCLA  who  worked  on  the 
desalinization  process,  said  money  should 
be  no  object  when  it  comes  to  water  purifi- 
cation. 

"It's  not  ■  question  of  cost  when  you 
need  it,"  he  said  in  an  interview  with  the 
Los  Angeles  Heraid-Examiner  in  1977. 


From  their  observation  of  osmosis,  the 
diffusion  of  water  from  higher  to  lower  con- 
centrations, UCLA  researchers  found  they 
could  apply  the  concept  to  desalinization. 

They  found  that  when  salt  water  and 
fresh  water  are  placed  on  opposite  sides  of 
a  thin  film  membrane,  fresh  water  will  natu- 
rally flow  to  the  salt  water. 

But  with  reverse  osmosis,  applied  pres- 
sure pushes  water  molecules  back  through 
tiny  membrane  holes,  leaving  salt  deposits 
behind. 

In  I960,  UCLA  engineering  Professor 
Samuel  T.  Yasser  and  graduate  students 
Sidney  Loeb  and  Srinivasa  Sourirajan,  suc- 
cessfully developed  the  first  demonstration 
of  reverse  osmosis  with  a  synthetic  mem- 
brane, or  filter. 

The  membrane,  based  on  earlier  work  by 
UCLA  engineering  Professor  Gerald  L. 
Hassler's  research,  contained  tiny  holes 
which  allowed  water  molecules  to  pass 
though. 

"It  was  a  start  towards  a  very  valuable 
tool,"  said  associate  professor  of  civil  and 
environmental  engineering  Thomas 
Harmon.  "It's  helped  drinking  water  treat- 
ment immensely." 

In  l%5,  the  discovery  of  the  UCLA 
researchers  led  to  the  development  of  the 
first  reverse  osmosis  plant  in  Coalinga,  a 


small  town  sixty  miles  southwest  of  Fresno. 
At  that  time,  the  Coalinga  desalinization 
plant  produced  up  to  6,000  gallons  of 
ground  water  per  day. 

Before  that,  Coalinga's  drinking  water 
was  imported  from  other  wells  and  shipped 
in  tank  cars  for  distribution. 

Another  plant  in  La  Jolla  focused  on 
converting  salt  water,  which  is  15  times 
saltier  than  ground  water,  into  fresh  water. 
Developments  in  membrane  technology 
continue  today,  due  in  a  large  part  to  the 
contribution  of  UCLA  pioneers.  • 

Since  the  sixties,  filters  with  different 
configurations  and  materials  have  been 
developed  out  of  the  original  Hassler  mem- 
brane. 

"The  reverse  osmosis  membrane  started 
a  whole  new  avenue  of  tailored  fabrication 
of  filters  that  do  different  things  for  water 
treatment,"  Harmon  said. 

"All  those  things  started  to  grow  once 
reverse  osmosis  was  demonstrated,"  he 
continued. 

Technology  from  the  reverse  osmosis 
discovery  has  spread  worldwide,  giving 
birth  to  desalinization  plants  throughout 
the  Middle  East  and  North  Africa  where 
need  is  high. 

'     Although  filters  are  not  as  expensive  as 
they  were  in  the  past,  maintenance  costs 


have  prevented  local  cities  from  abandon- 
ing the  more  commonly  used  method  of 
importing  water. 

Even  with  Southern  California's  relative- 
ly dry  climate  and  desert  areas,  water  dis- 
tributors have  opted  to  use  other  methods 
to  transport  its  water. 

Currently,  Los  Angeles  receives  about 
half  of  its  water  supply  from  the  Owens 
River  Aqueduct  which  transports  melted 
^now  from  the  eastern  slopes  of  the  Sierra 
Nevada,  according  to  the  L'A  Department 
of  Water  and  Power. 

Local  groundwater  only  accounts  for  15 
percent  of  the  city's  total  water  supply. 

The  remaining  supply  is  bought  from  the 
MetropoliUn  Water  District  of  Southern 
California,  the  regionaJ  water  "wholesaler" 
whose  sources  include  the  Colorado  River 
Aqueduct. 

But  according  to  Harmon,  reverse  osmo- 
sis is  now  mostly  used  in  the  "polishing"  or 
final  steps  in  the  purification  of  waste 
water. 

Waste  water  from  agricultural  irrigation 
sites,  washers  and  toilets  are  purified  and 
placed  back  into  the  hydrological  cycle. 

"As  our  population  gets  more  and  more 
crowded,  we  have  to  be  better  about  recy- 
cling our  water,"  Harmon  said.  "We  can't 

iuSt  use  it  and  throw  it  nnt  anymr.r»  " 


.  «..  ■,*.■,...—,.. 


"I  ,.i.-_»  .1  t-'r. 


■  •"»■     '  1    9   i    ' 


Friday,  October  20, 2000 


Daily  Bruin  Newt 


.:>.■:  .'if' 


Evidence  brings  olfic^ 
dosi'  to  finding  culprits 


INVESTIGATION:  Search 
for  bombers  continues; 
clues  surface  in  Yemen 


By  Salah  Nasrawi 

The  Associated  Press 

ADEN,  Yemen  -  A  12-year- 
old  Yemeni  boy  who  says  a  man 
paid  him  to  watch  his  car,  then 
tooic  to  sea  in  a  small  boat  and 
never   returned   has    provided 
investigators  with  a  key  early  lead 
in  their  search  for  clues  about 
what  happened  to  the  USS  Cole. 
Authorities  have  been  focusing 
on  two  men  who  rented  an  Aden 
apartment  where  bomb-making 
material  was  later  found.  The  two 
have  not  been  seen  since  the  U.S. 
warship  was  bombed  Oct.  12  as  it 
arrived  in  Aden  to  refuel,  killing 
17  sailors  and  injuring  39. 

The  Navy  announced 
Thursday  that  it  recovered  the 
last  four  bodies  of  sailors  killed  in 
the  blast.  Thirteen  bodies  already 
had  been  flown  to  the  United 
States,  and  the  final  four  will  be 
returned  home  soon. 

FBI  director  Louis  Freeh,  in 
Yemen  for  talks  with  President 
Ali  Abdullah  Saleh,  said  deter- 
mining exactly  who  carried  out 
the  attack  would  be  a  challenge. 
The  crime  scene  he  toured 
Thursday  was  a  "tangled  mess  of 
metal  and  wire,"  he  said. 


OfTicials  believe  two  suicide 
bombers  maneuvered  a  small 
boat  packed  with  explosives  next 
to  the  Cole  and  then  detonated  it. 
The    witnesses    being   ques- 
tioned include  the  owner  of  a 
welding  shop  who  did  work  for 
the  suspects,  Yemeni  security 
officials  said,  speaking  on  condi- 
tion of  anonymity.  The  landlord 
of  the  apartment  and  a  real  estate 
agent  who  found  it  for  the  men 
also  have  been  questioned. 

The  12-year-old  boy  told 
authorities  a  bearded  man  wear- 
ing glasses  gave  him  small  change 
and  told  him  to  watch  his  car  near 
the  port  on  the  day  of  the  bomb- 
ing, Saleh  said  Wednesday  on  the 
Arab  satellite  news  station  Al- 
Jazeera. 

According  to  the  boy,  the  man 
then  went  to  sea  in  a  small  boat  he 
carried  atop  the  car  and  did  not 
return,  Saleh  said.  Yemeni  police 
apparently  were  able  to  trace  the 
man  to  the  Aden  apartment. 

Yemeni  security  officials  said 
Thursday  the  apartment  yielded 
documents  they  believe  originat- 
ed in  Hadhramaut,  a  region  along 
the  eastern  border  with  Oman 
that  is  home  to  lawless  tribes  that 
have  kidnapped  foreigners  for 
ransom. 

A  vehicle  believed  to  have  been 
used  by  the  attackers  also  con- 
tained   documents    traced    to 


Parties  can't 
agree  on 
spending  for 
education  i~ 


BUDGET:  Democrats^  V 
Clinton  seek  to  hire  more 
teachers,  build  schools 


SeeCOlCpase? 


RetirecJ  Marine  Corps  (Sen.  Anthony  Zinni  testifieci  at  a  Senatero'^'itt^" 
hearing  Thursciay  that  he  knew  terrorists  used  Yemen  as  a  transit  route. 


By  Aivetta  McQueen 

The  Associated  Press  .    -  -^ 

WASHINGTON  -  The  partisan 
battle  over  how  to  spend  a  record  $40 
billion  education  budget  heated  up 
Thursday  with  President  Clinton  visit- 
ing Capitol  Hill  to  boost  the 
Democratic  plan  and  House 
Republicans  portraying  the  adminis- 
tration as  throwing  money  at 
unproven  programs. 

Clinton  sought  to  raise  the  stakes  of 
the  education  budget  fight,  promising 
a  Democratic  caucus  gathering  that  he 
would  no  longer  sign  stopgap  legisla- 
tion to  keep  the  government  going  for 
several  days.  He  said  he  would  sign 
only  one-day  extensions  if  budget 
negotiations  are  not  finished  by 
Wednesday. 

"Can  you  imagine  a  Democrat 
going  home  running  for  re-election 
saying.  'Vote  for  me  so  1  can  go  back 
and  finish  last  year's  business?'  We 
wouldn't  do  that,"  Qinton  said.  "And 
we  shouldn't  let  anyone  do  that.  We 


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iJTruce  ignored  as  Israel,  Palestiniaris  exchange  fire 


VIOLENCE:  Two  dead,  18 
wounded;  both  sides  say 
the  other  was  aggressor 


ByGragMyrc 

Th«  Associated  Press 

JERUSALEM  -  Israeli  combat 
helicopters,  attempting  to  rescue 
Jewish  settlers  trapped  on  a  rocky 
West  Bank  hillside,  traded  heavy  fire 
with  Palestinian  gunmen  in  a  five- 
hour  shootout  Thursday.  Two  people 
died  and  at  least  18  were  wounded. 

Israeli  Prime  Minister  Ehud  Barak 
declared  it  a  "gross  violation"  of  a 
truce  announced  two  days  earlier. 
Both  the  Palestinians  and  the  Israelis 
said  the  other  side  fired  first. 

The  settlers  said  Palestinian  gun- 
men started  the  battle,  but  the 
Palestinians  claimed  the  settlers  fired 
first  on  unarmed  olive  pickers. 

The  firefight  amid  the  barren  rocks 
of  Mount  Ebal,  overlooking  the  West 
Bank  town  of  Nablus,  came  on  the 
eve  of  a  Friday  deadline  imposed  by 
both  sides  for  ending  three  weeks  of 
violence  that  has  left  more  than  100 
dead,  the  vast  majority  Palestinians. 
The  dead  were  a  Palestinian  and  an 


Israeli  settler.  Rabbi  Binyamin 
Eriing.  64,  head  of  a  rabbinical  col- 
lege in  the  settlement  of  Eilon  Moreh. 
He  bled  to  death  awaiting  rescue. 

The  wounded  included  15 
Palestinians  and  at  least  three  Israelis, 
according  to  Palestinian  doctors  mi 
Israeli  security  ofllcials. 

"This  is  a  very  grave  inddent  and  a 
gross  violation  by  the  Palestinian 
Authority,"  Barak  said  in  a  statement 
issued  after  the  battle  ended  and  the 
settlers  were  evacuated. 

The  shootout  appeared  to  be  a  seri- 
ous threat  to  the  deal  announced 
Tuesday  at  a  Mideast  summit  in 
Egypt,  where  President  Qinton  read 
a  statement  saying  that  both  sides 
would  work  to  stop  the  violence. 

Trouble  broke  out  when  about  40 
Jewish  settlers  tried  to  travel  to  the 
hillside  to  observe  Joseph's  Tomb,  a 
holy  site  in  Nablus  recently  ransacked 
by  a  Palestinian  mob. 

Despite  a  military  ban  on  tours, 
the  settlers  received  army  permission 
for  their  excursion,  said  Maj.  Gen. 
Yitzhak  Eitan,  the  regional  comman- 
der. He  called  it  a  "grave  error"  by 
the  army  and  said  it  would  be  investi- 
gated. 


S««BMB.pagc9 


"ziT.TJ^zZ''^;:!^^'''''^^^^^^ 


•  If 


OUTBREAK:  Rebels  may 
have  brought  virus  into 
nation  across  borders 


Strain  found  to  have  killed  41  in  Uganda 


By  Chris  TMiilimon 
The  Associated  Press 

GULU,  Uganda  -  The  highly 
contagious  virus  that  has  killed  41 
people  in  Uganda  has  been  identi- 
fied as  a  strain  of  Ebola  last  seen 
in  southern  Sudan  in  1979,  U.S. 
experts  said  Thursday,  raising 
speculation  it  may  have  been 
brought  by  Ugandan  rebels  based 
in  Sudan. 

Pierre  Rollin,  the  leader  of  a 
U.S.  Centers  for  Disease  Control 
team,  said  the  virus  was  Ebola 
Sudan,  one  of  three  strains  of  the 
deadly  hemorrhagic  fever  that 
can  infect  humans. 

The  finding  raised  the  possibil- 
ity that  rebels  of  the  Lord's 
Resistance  Army  may  have  intro- 
duced the  disease  during  their 


/I    c>\  n   .^       •«•■-     I  .  Th«  Aswcaied  Press 

(left)  P«tiM  Kiboko,  public  health  nurse  helps  WorW  Health 
Organization  doctor,  Simon  Mardel,  tie  his  surgical  mask. 


1 


regular  attacks  around  Gulu,  225 
miles  north  of  Kampala. 

The  rebels  have  been  fighting  a 
13-year  war  against  President 
Yowcri  Museveni's  government 
and  have  kidnapped  thousands  of 


children,  according  to  the  United 
Nations  and  human  rights  organi- 
zations. Some  have  been  turned 
into  child  soldiers  or  porters  and 
others  into  sex  slaves. 

At  least  41  people  have  died  of 


Ebola  and  doctors  fear  70  more 
may  be  infected,  said  Okat 
Lokach.  the  Gulu  district  health 
director. 

Despite  the  toll,  Worid  Health 
Organization    experts    praised 
local  health  workers  for  their 
efforts  in  controlling  the  disease, 
saying  the  outbreak  was  likely  to 
be  contained  soon  largely  due  to 
their  efforts  and  the  quick  arrival 
of  U.N.  and  U.S.  health  expcrU. 
Once  the  virus  was  identified 
as   Ebola,  doctors  and  nurses 
immediately  took  steps  to  mini- 
mize infections  and  a  radio  cam- 
paign targeted  the  largely  rural 
and  illiterate  population,  inform- 
ing them  what  precautions  to 
take. 

"If  I  compare  this  to  my  previ- 
ous experiences,  the  facilities 
here  are  outstanding  compared  to 
the  classic  Ebola  situation,"  said 
Dr.  Guenael  Rodier,  the  WHO 
team  leader,  who  has  worked  on 


\buth  apathetic 
unplugged  about 
election  issues 
MTV  survey  says 

BAIiX)T:  Younger  generation 
feels  candidates  aren't  dealing 
with  issues  relevant  to  them 


SeeB0U,|>a9e8 


WQRLI 

Suici 


RLD  &  NATION  BRIEFS 


By  David  Baudcr 

The  Associated  Press 

NEW  YORK  -  Young  people  are  tuning 
out  the  presidential  campaign  in  such  num- 
bers that  they  may  be  the  most  disconnected 
group  of  potential  voters  in  the  nation's  his- 
tory, MTV's  top  researcher  said  Thursday. 

Surveyed  a  month  before  the  election, 
one  quarter  of  people  ages  18  to  24  couldn't 
name  both  presidential  candidates  without 


SccVOniK,pa9e10 


licide  bomber  targets 
Sri  Lankan  officials 

COLOMBO,  Sri  Unka  -  Shortly  before  Sri 
Lanka's  president  installed  her  new  Cabinet,  a 
suicide  bomber  blew  himself  up  Thursday, 
killing  two  other  people  and  wounding  21  - 
including  three  American  women. 

The  military  said  the  bomber  was  a  Tamil 
Tiger  rebel  who  hoped  to  attack  members  of 
President  Chandrika  Kumaratunga's  Cabinet. 
The  president  campaigned  for  the  Oct.  10  par- 
liamentary elections  on  a  promise  to  crush  the 
Tamil  rebellion. 

"From  now  on  you  may  see  more  and  more 
rebel  attacks  in  Colombo,"  Harry 
Goonetilleke,  a  former  air  force  chief,  said  after 
the  bombing. 

The  bomber  triggered  explosives  wrapped  to 
his  body  after  a  police  patrol  challenged  him 
He  died  immediately,  while  a  policeman  and  a 
civilian     died     later,     said     Dr.     Hector 
Weerasinghe,  director  of  the  National  Hospital. 


"The  target  of  the  bomber  was 
Cabinet  members,  but  our  alert  secu- 
rity oftlcials  foiled  his  plan."  said  mil- 
itary    spokesman     Brig.     Sanath 
Karunaratne. 


Legality  of  U.S.  -  Russia 
arms  deal  questioned 

WASHINGTON  -  The  Qinton  administra- 
tion is  refusing  to  cooperate  with  a  Senate  inves- 
tigation into  a  1995  arms  deal  with  Russia  nego- 
tiated by  Vice  President  Al  Gore,  a  member  of 
the  Foreign  Relations  Committee  said 
Thursday.  A  Gore  spokesman  accused  the 
Republican  senator  of  'despicable"  political 
behavior. 

Sen.  Gordon  Smith.  R-Ore.,  said  the  com- 
mittee will  hold  a  hearing  Wednesday  to  deter- 
mine whether  the  understanding  between  Vice 
President  Al  Gore  and  then-Prime  Minister 
Viktor  Chernomyrdin  of  Russia  is  legal. 

White  House  press  secretary  Jake  Siewert 


denied  the  administration  was 
involved  in  a  "secret  agreement" 
with  the  Russians  and  said  the  Senate 
hearings  arc  meant  to  embarrass  Gore, 
the  Democrats'  presidential  candidate. 
The  New  York  Times  reported  last  week  that 
Gore  promised  the  United  States  would  not 
interfere  with  Moscow's  fulfillment  of  existing 
sales  contracts  for  conventional  arms  to  Iran  on 
condition  such  sales  would  end  by  the  end  of 
1999. 

The  report  said  Washington  agreed  not  to 
penalize  Moscow  under  a  1992  law  banning 
arms  sales  to  countries  the  United  States  views 
as  exporters  of  terrorism. 

Vatican  denies  rumor 
of  Pope's  resignation 

VATICAN  CITY  -  An  infiuential 
European  cardinal  has  added  his  voice  to  spec- 
ulation swirling  for  months  -  that  Pope  John 
Paul  II.  burdened  by  age  and  illness,  may 


resign. 

Cardinal  Godfried  Danneels  of  Belgium  sug- 
gested John  Paul  might  step  aside  next  year, 
now  that  he  has  achieved  his  dream  of  leading 
the  church  into  the  new  millennium. 

Mere  mention  of  the  issue  has  angered  the 
Vatican,  which  sees  such  talk  as  seeking  to 
weaken  the  papacy.  Reaction  to  Danneels'  sug- 
gestion was  swift. 

"This  is  the  personal  opinion  of  Cardinal 
Danneels,  which  we  do  not  confirm,"  said  a 
one-line  statement  issued  Thursday  by  the 
pope's  spokesman,  Joaquin  Navarro-Valls. 

Danneels,  who  has  been  mentioned  as  a  pos- 
sible successor  to  John  Paul,  is  the  highest-rank- 
ing churchman  to  go  public  with  the  thought, 
which  has  been  on  the  minds  of  many  given  the 
pope's  frail  condition. 

A  top  German  bishop,  Kari  Lchmann, 
broke  the  ice  in  February  when  he  .said  he 
thought  the  pope  would  step  down  if  he  thought 
he  could  no  longer  lead  the  church. 


Compiled  from  Daily  Bruin  wire  reooru 


;.■.■ 


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.  •   ,  •  \ 


',\  I 


i   ■  :*  •' . 


6        FmUy,  October  20, 2000 


Daily  Bniin  New 


STATE  <&  LOCAL 


■■■"  -  -w 


*>,  ■ 


■^■•; 


■^•f—* 


Computer  failures  keep  planes  down 


GROUNDING:  Rejection  of 
software  upgrade  forces 
severe  backup  at  airports 


ByJcffWikon 

The  Associated  Press 

Air  trafllc  controllers  grounded 
hundreds  of  airliners  headed  to  and 
from  the  Southwest  Thursday  because 
of  repeated  failures  of  coijiputers  at 
the  Federal  Aviation  Administration's 
Los  Angeles  Center  facility. 

By  the  lime  the  FAA  lifted  the  order 
more  than  four  hours  later,  airports 
nationwide  were  gridlocked  with  air- 
craft on  the  ground,  flights  were  can- 
celed and  thousands  of  passengers 
were  stranded  or  delayed. 

"I've  got  a  grandma  dying  in  New 
Mexico  and  I  can't  get  there,"  said  a 
frustrated  Davis  Hill  of  Boise,  Idaho, 
as  he  waited  for  a  flight  at  Los  Angeles 
International  Airport. 

The  failures  of  computers  used  to 
guide  flights  through  the  region  occ- 
cured  at  the  FAA's  LA.  Center  facility 
in  the  Mojave  Desert,  where  con- 
trollers guide  flights  through  a 
100,000-square-mile  area. 

A  backup  system  took  over  immedi- 
ately and  there  were  no  safety  prob- 
lems for  the  approximately  1 00  aircraft 
in  flight  at  the  time,  said  FAA 
spokesman  Jerry  Snyder. 

Frustrated  travelers  demanded 
information  from  ticket  agents  in  Las 
Vegas.  Lines  of  passengers  snaked  120 
feet  from  ticket  counters  at  San 
Diego's  Lindbergh  Field. 

"There's  a  lot  of  ticked  ofT  people 
and  all,  but  I  guess  it  could  be  worse," 
said  Patty  Cratty  of  Carlsbad,  Calif. 

Ninety  minutes  into  a  wait  for  a 
return  flight  out  of  San  Francisco, 
Bridge  Carney  said  that  he  earlier 


Jurors  question  officer^ 
credibility  in  courtroom 


POLICE:  Prosecutors 
finding  testimony  to  be 
slanted  toward  defense 


The  Associated  Press 

Airplanes  are  stacked  up  on  a  taxiway  at  LAX,  waiting  as  air  traffic 
controllers  delayed  an  unknown  number  of  take-offs. 


spent  3  1/2  hours  aboard  a  plane  wait- 
ing to  take  off  from  Los  Angeles. 

"We  got  pushed  to  the  number  one 
position  and  the  computer  shut  down 
again,"  Carney  said.  "You've  just  got 
to  grin  and  bear  it." 

The  computer  failure  followed  a 
software  upgrade  Wednesday  night. 

"When  the  systems  were  being 
brought  back  up  on  line,  it  failed.  It's 
not  accepting  the  software,"  Snyder 
said.  "It's  worked  for  17  other  systems 
but  it's  not  working  in  this  one." 

There  were  tense  moments  for  FAA 
controllers.  At  one  point,  there  was  no 
more  room  on  the  ground  at  Los 
Angeles  International  Airport  and 
flights  from  Australia,  for  instance, 
were  sent  to  Las  Vegas. 

"It's  been  pretty  crazy,"  said  Garth 
Koleszar,  local  vice  president  of  the 
National  Air  Traffic  Controllers 
Association.  "Every  flight  in  and  out 
of  our  sector  was  afTected." 

Asked  if  there  were  any  safety  con- 


cerns, he  said:  "Any  time  you  use  a  sys- 
tem that  isn't  the  best  that  we  have,  I 
feel  there  is  a  degradation." 

The  backup  system  doesn't  have  the 
automatic  feature  that  passes  ofT 
planes  from  one  regional  controller  to 
another,  and  requires  a  controller  to 
manually  type  the  flight  information 
and  pass  along  information  by  tele- 
phone. 

The  first  main  computer  outage 
lasted  100  minutes,  from  6:50  a.m.  to 
8:30  a.m.,  and  led  to  what  was  called  a 
Tier  I  ground  stop,  meaning  Southern 
California-bound  aircraft  west  of  the 
Mississippi  couldn't  take  ofT. 

The  computer  went  down  again  at  9 
a.m.  and  a  Tier  2  ground  stop  was 
ordered,  halting  planes  on  the  ground 
nationwide. 

The  computer  was  restored  again  at 
11:15  a.m.  using  the  old  software  pro- 
gram, and  the  FAA  ordered  the  Tier  2 

SeeMOAHpagelO 


By  Linda  Oeutsdi 

The  Associated  Press  . 

Jurors  in  the  corruption  trial  of 
four  Los  Angeles  Police 
Department  policemen  sent  the 
judge  notes  questioning  a  police 
witness'  credibility  Thursday  after 
the  officer 
claimed        a 

fuzzy  memory     ^~"""— "■""" 
during  prose- 
cution    ques- 
tioning     but 
was        more 
forthcoming 
to  the  defense. 
"How     do 
wejudge  a  wit- 
ness        who 
refuses         to 
answer    ques- 
tions,    i.e.     I 
don't      recall 
and    I    don't 
remember,"        .. 
said  one  note   ' 

received  during  the  testimony  of 
OfTicer  Michael  Richardson. 

Superior  Court  Judge 
Jacqueline  Connor,  who  allows 
jurors  to  pc«e  questions  in  writing 
while  the  trial  is  under  way,  gave 
them  legal  instructions  but  said 
they  must  decide  individually 
whether  a  witness  is  being  "willfully 
false"  or  innocently  doesn't  remem- 
ber. 

"Use  your  common  sense,"  she 


said.  "But  don't  decide  now.  You 
will  have  the  opportunity  to  deliber- 
ate later." 

Richardson  was  the  third  Los 
Angeles  Police  Department  officer 
to  claim  they  saw  little  and  could 
remember  less  as  the  Hrst  trial  to 
result  from  the  Rampart  police  cor- 
ruption probe  evolved  into  a  con- 
test between  prosecutors  and  their 
own  witnesses. 

The  defendants,  members  of  a 
Rampart  station  anti-gang  unit,  are 
accused  of  planting  evidence,  per- 
jury and  fram- 
■'■•■-..-•■  ''■    ing  gang  mem- 
"""~"^~^~~     bers. 

Richardson 
said  he  was  pre- 
sent at  all  three 
incidents 
which  are  at 
the  heart  of  the 
charges  against 
Sgts.  Edward 
Ortiz  and 
Brian  Liddy 
and  Officers 
Michael 
Buchanan  and 

Paul     Harper. 

But  he  said  he 
wasn't      close 
enough  to  see  what  the  defendants 
did. 

In  one  incident  where  a  gun  sup- 
posedly was  planted,  he  said  he 
never  saw  a  gun  and  didn't  recall 
seeing  a  police  helicopter  which 
flew  overhead  illuminating  the 
scene. 

"I  don't  have  any  recollection  of 
a  helicopter  on  the  scene,"  he  said. 


"Do  you  find  your 

memory  is  better  when 

you  testify  against 

gang  members  than 

against  your  fellow 

officers?"     :  v 

Laura  Laescckc 

Deputy  District  Attorney 


See  aNUIUPnOII,pa9e8 


»■■.» 


\ 


■--^^^^. 


(My  Bruin  News 


aiNTON  ! 

From  page  4 

should  stay  here  to  resolve  this." 
,.  At  a  rally  featuring  schooldiiki- 
rcn  from  North  Carolina, 
Republican  leaders  said  the  White 
House  declined  offers  of  $3  billion 
to  $6  billion  more  for  education  in 
exchange  for  giving  schools  more 
leeway  on  spending. 

Clinton  and  the  Democrats 
have  insisted  that  money  be  set 
aside  to  hire  teachers  and  build 
schools.  They  met  inaeased  resis- 
tance Thursday. 

"I  don't  know  that  we  can 
resoNe  this  issue  in  this  Congress," 
said  Rep.  John  Porter,  R-III.,  chair- 
man of  the  House  Appropriations 
subcommittee  that  oversees  educa- 
tion spending.  "This  might  have  to 
be  sorted  out  by  the  American  peo- 
ple." 

With  vetoes  and  his  party's  pop- 
ularity on  the  issue,  Clinton  has 
succeeded  in  recent  years  in  forc- 
ing Republicans  to  compromise  on 
new  teachers  and  school  construc- 
tion. On  Thursday,  less  than  three 
weeks  before  national  elections,  he 
prepared  to  rally  around 
Democrats  who  are  faced  with  cut- 
ting a  deal  with  Republicans  who 
have  won  increasing  public 
approval  on  the  issue.    • 


Friday,  October  20, 2000 


"It's  a  fight  with  no  fighters," 

'  Senate   Minority   Leader  Tom 

Daschle.  D^.D.,  said  Wednesday, 

complaining  that  Republicans  are 

unwilling  to  discuss  compromise. 

John  Czwartacki,  spokesman 
for  Senate  Majority  Leader  Trent 
Lott,  R-Miss.,  said  Clinton  and 
Democrats  have  been  unwilling  to 
deal:  "We  could  have  been  out  of 
here  Oct.  1." 

In  the  meantime,  black 
Democrats  are  accusing  their  own 
party  leaders  of  not  putting  enough 
attention  on  improving  education 
for  the  poor. 

The  education  budget  is  part  of 
three  spending  bills  being  negotiat- 
ed by  lawmakers  and  the  White 
House  for  the  budget  year  that 
began  Oct.  I.  Leaders  planned  a 
fourth  temporary  spending  bill 
Thursday  to  keep  agencies  going. 

Democrats  are  battling  for  spe- 
cific money  to  hire  new  teachers 
and  repair  crumbling  schools. 
Republicans  still  want  to  give 
states  the  option  of  spending  the 
money  on  other  programs  such  as 
special  education  and  reading 
lessons. 

Clinton  and  the  Democrats 
could  use  a  showdown  to  brand  the 
GOP  as  the  foe  of  popular  priori- 
ties such  as  new  teachers  and  after- 
school  programs.  Republicans 
couW  use  a  low-key  compromise 


^ 
P 


over  a  big  public  fight  that  reminds 
voters  the  GOP  once  advocated 
abolishing  the  Education 
Department 

"The  Republican  leadership  is 
running  out  the  clock,"  said  Joel 
Packer,  a  lobbyist  for  the  National 
Education  Association  teachers 
union. 

Bickering  over  education  is 
hardly  new. 

Last  year's  education  budget 
passed  only  after  a  deal  that 
allowed  new  money  earmarked  for 
teachers  but  gave  states  leeway  to 
spend  some  money  on  other  pro- 
grams. A  key  federal  education 
law,  parts  of  which  expired  last 
year,  has  not  been  renewed. 

The  last  major  education  bill 
Clinton  signed,  in  1999,  expanded 
an  experimental  program  that 
exempts  states  from  some  federal 
rules  if  the  states  show  improved 
learning  by  children. 

Congress  will  have  to  answer 
for  the  lack  of  progress,  said  Rep. 
Major  Owens,  D-N.Y,  a  member 
of  the  Congressional  Black 
Caucus,  which  wants  the  debate 
focused  on  the  poorest  schools. 

"We  are  trying  to  do  a  get-out- 
the-vote  campaign,  and  we  are 
empty^anded  on  education,"  he 
said.  "In  the  endgame,  very  unusu- 
al things  happen.  It's  time  for  them 
to  happen  in  our  favor." 


From  page4[ :      '  - 

Hadhramaut,  the  Yemeni  officials  said. 
They  said  investigators  were  sent  to  the 
region  Thursday. 

Yemeni  officials  said  another  team  of 
investigators  was  going  to  neighboring 
Saudi  Arabia  on  Thursday.  Many 
Yemenis  from  Hadhramaut  have  settled 
there. 

There  has  been  no  claim  of  responsibil- 
ity for  the  Cole  bombing  that  is  considered 
credible. 

Saleh,  in  an  interview  with  CNN 
Thursday,  said  "it  could  be"  when  asked  if 
Saudi  dissident  Osama  bin  Laden  -  whom 
the  United  States  accuses  of  mastermind- 
ing the  1998  bombings  of  its  embassies  in 
Kenya  and  Tanzania  that  killed  224  peo- 
ple -  was  behind  the  attack  on  the  USS 
Cole. 

Freeh  said  it  was  far  too  eariy  to  specu- 
late. 

A  Taliban  official  in  Afghanistan  said 
Arab  militants  who  met  with  bin  Laden  in 
late  September  left  the  country  just  four 
days  before  the  attack  on  the  Cole.  The 
official,  who  is  close  to  the  security  appa- 
ratus of  the  Taliban  religious  militia  that 
controls  nearly  all  of  Afghanistan,  asked 
not  to  be  identified  for  his  own  safety. 

He  said  bin  Laden  -  who  lives  in  exile  in 
Afghanistan  -  met  with  members  of  the 
Palestinian  Hamas  movement  and  the 
Egyptian  Jihad.  He  gave  military  code 


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names  for  the  participants,  but  it  wasn't 
possible  to  determine  their  identities. 

A  second  meeting  involving  10  Arabs 
who  arrived  via  Moscow,  held  just  after 
the  bombing,  discussed  the  possibility  of 
organizing  attacks  on  U.S.  embassies 
around  the  world,  particularly  in  the 
Middle  East,  the  official  said.  :  - 

It  was  impossible  to  independently  con- 
firm the  meetings  took  place  or  who  might 
have  participated.  . 

On  Thursday,  the  London-based  news- 
paper Al  Hayat  published  a  statement  by 
Egyptian  militant  leader  Rifai  Ahmed 
Taha  citing  the  Cole  explosion  and  calling 
for  more  attacks  on  U.S.  interests. 

Taha's  al-Gamaa  al-Islamiya,  or  Islamic 
Group,  is  blamed  for  a  1997  massacre  of 
Western  tourisu  in  Luxor,  Egypt.  Taha 
now  is  believed  to  be  in  hiding  in 
Afghanistan  with  bin  Laden. 

Bin  Laden  recruited  Yemenis  and  other 
Arabs  to  fight  Soviet  troops  in 
Afghanistan  in  the  1980s.  After  the  1989 
Soviet  withdrawal,  many  battle-hardened 
Yemenis  returned  home.  Yemeni  officials 
say  they  are  questioning  Afghan  veterans. 
Retired  U.S.  Gen.  Anthony  Zinni,  the 
military  commander  in  the  region  when 
the  Pentagon  contracted  for  refueling  ser- 
vices at  Aden  in  1998,  told  a  Senate  com- 
mittee hearing  Thursday  that  he  knew  ter- 
rorists used  Yemen  as  a  transit  route  into 
Saudi  Arabia  but  that  there  were  no  better 
alternatives.  Navy  ships  had  to  refuel  in 
the  area  while  moving  to  and  from  the 
Persian  Gulf,  he  said. 


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Daily  Bruin  Ncwr 


CORRUPTION 

Frompage6 

Deputy  District  Attorney  Laura  Laesecke 
finally  asked:  "Do  you  find  your  memory  is  bet- 
ter when  you  testify  against  gang  members  than 
against  your  fellow  officers?" 

A  defense  objection  prevented  an  answer 
But  when  defense  attorney  Barry  Levin  took 
over.  Richardson  became  talkative  in  testimony 
intended  to  demolish  the  credibility  of  a  gang 
member  who  accused  the  officers  of  misconduct 
on  Wednesday. 

He  suggested  that  Raul  Mufioz,  who  served 
time  for  a  violent  felony  and  was  deported  to  El 
Salvador,  was  not  the  well-spoken,  upstanding 
fellow  he  appeared  to  be  on  the  stand. 

"Some  gang  members  are  quite  intelligent?" 
asked  Levin. 

"Yes,"  said  Richardson. 
"And  some  are  articulate  and  well-dressed?" 
"Yes  they  are,"  agreed  Richardson. 
■   Asked  his  opinion  of  those  gang  members,  he 
said,  "In  my  opinion  they're  more  dangerous 
than  the  ones  that  are  obviously  gang  members. 
They  would  be  the  leaders." 

Levin's  hypothetical  examples  were  clearly 
describing  Munoz,  27,  who  testified  that  his  life 
has  turned  around,  that  he  is  now  a  husband  and 
father  with  a  good  job  in  El  Salvador.  But  his 
descriptions  of  gang  life  were  sanitized,  depict- 
ing the  groups  as  social  clubs  who  staged  their 
own  athletic  competitions  and  dances. 

Only  at  the  end  of  his  testimony  was  it 
revealed  that  Munoz  served  six  years  in  prison 
for  shooting  a   teenager  outside  a  school. 


Richardson  said  such  a  conviction  would  be  "<i 
badge  of  honor"  in  the  gang, 

Muftoz  was  on  parole  when  arrested  in  1996 
for  allegedly  hitting  two  officers  with  his  truck 
during  a  gang  raid.  He  said  he  was  framed  and 
pleaded  guilty  because  his  lawyer  said  no  one 
would  believe  him.  He  was  deported  after  a  year 
in  prison. 

His  conviction  later  was  dismissed  when  dis- 
graced officer  Rafael  Perez  said  the  reports  in 
the  case  were  fabricated.  ~— - 

Thursday's  testimony  highlighted  the  prosecu- 
tion's problems  in  trying  to  prosecute  the  police 
officers  without  depending  on  Perez,  whose  testi- 
mony is  uncertain. 

Perez's  credibility  was  clouded  because  he 
cooperated  with  investigators  in  exchange  for 
leniency  on  a  cocaine-theft  conviction,  then 
came  into  further  question  when  an  ex-lover 
accused  him  of  involvement  in  drug-dealing  mur- 
ders. 

Prosecutors  said  at  the  outset  of  the  trial  they 
didn't  know  if  Perez  would  testify. 

Perez  was  at  the  courthouse  Thursday  for 
another  case,  but  that  judge  ruled  it  would  be 
irrelevant  to  question  him. 

His  attorney,  Winston  McKesson,  said  out- 
side court  that  Perez  was  preparing  to  testify  in 
the  police  trial. 

"I'm  operating  under  the  assumption  he  is 
going  to  testify  and  he  is  operating  under  the 
assumption  he  is  going  to  testify,"  McKesson 
said. 

McKesson  said,  however,  he  was  determined 
to  avoid  having  Perez  questioned  about  the  mur- 
der allegations  and  would  advise  him  to  invoke 
the  Fifth  Amendment  if  the  subject  arose. 


EBOLA  -■"^:.r;rl;:.^:.e:jv:" 

From  page 5  '      ■■:^^:' 

every  Ebola  outbreak  since  1986.  y 

He  said  death  and  transmission  rates 
have  been  kept  down  by  "barrier  nursing" 
techniques  in  which  health  care  workers 
wear  surgical  gear,  masks,  gloves  and 
knee-high  boots  and  take  steps  to  avoid 
contamination  from  infected  people. 

"What  was  started  a  week  ago  is  going 
to  pay  off  soon,"  Rodier  said,  adding  that 
government  support  had  also  been  key  to 
getting  medical  supplies  to  Gulu. 

The  first  Ebola  case  was  admitted  to 
Lacor  Hospital  in  late  September  but  doc- 
tors did  not  immediately  make  an  accurate 
diagnosis.  A  doctor  and  two  nurses  died 
within  days.  A  blood  sample  was  then  sent 
to  South  Africa  for  testing  and  the  out- 
break was  officially  confirmed  last 
Saturday. 

Since  then,  experts  from  WHO,  aid 
workers  from  Doctors  without  Borders 
and  investigators  from  the  Atlanta-based 
CDC  have  advised  the  Ugandans. 

Four  epidemiologists  and  two  microbi- 
ologists from  CDC  arrived  Thursday, 
bringing  laboratory  equipment  to  separate 
those  infected  from  people  with  similar 
symptoms,  and  to  try  to  determine  the 
source  of  the  outbreak. 

Ebola  is  passed  through  contact  with 
bodily  fluids,  such  as  mucus,  saliva  and 
blood,  but  is  not  airborne.  The  virus  incu- 
bates for  four  to  10  days  in  the  victim's 


body  before  flu-like  symptoms  set  in. 
Eventually,  the  virus  causes  severe  internal 
bleeding,  vomiting  and  diarrhea. 

The  outbreak  in  Gulu  is  the  first  time 
-  the  disease  has  been  found  in  Uganda.  The 
virus  is  named  after  the  Ebola  River  in 
Congo,  where  the  first  cases  were  recorded 
in  1976.  It  has  also  been  recorded  in 
Sudan,  Ivory  Coast  and  Gabon. 

There  is  no  cure  for  Ebola,  but  patients 
treated  with  aggressive  rehydration  thera- 
py have  a  chance  of  survival,  Rodier  said. 
Typically,  between  80  percent  and  90  per- 
cent of  Ebola  victims  die,  but  Rodier  said 
as  many  as  50  percent  of  the  patients  in 
Gulu  may  recover  because  of  good,  early 
medical  attention. 

Ugandan  doctors  attributed  the 
response  to  a  culture  that  places  emphasis 
on  health  and  education.  Uganda  was 
home  to  the  first  medical  school  in  East 
Africa  and  is  the  only  African  country  that 
has  slowed  HIV  infection  rates.  The 
emphasis  on  reducing  HIV  -  another 
virus  carried  in  bodily  fiuids  -  prepared 
the  Ugandans  for  Ebola. 

Dr.  Felix  Kaducu,  the  medical  superin- 
tendent at  Gulu  Hospital,  said  that  once 
they  knew  what  they  were  dealing  with, 
they  knew  what  to  do.  He  said  the  staff 
were  very  frightened,  but  that  none  had 
fied,  a  common  problem  in  past  outbreaks. 

"It's  a  new  experience,  they've  never 
been  confronted  with  this,"  Kaducu  said. 
"So  in  a  week  they  learned  about  the  dis- 
ease, learned  the  proper  way  to  treat  it  and 
then  started  responding.  I  am  very  proud." 


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from  page  5  '  ■■■  ]■. 

The  settlers  came  under  fire  from  a 
Palestinian  refugee  camp,  and  Israeli 
helicopter  gunships  soon  joined  the 
fray  in  an  attempt  to  protect  some  40 
settlers,  including  women  and  chil- 
dren, and  evacuate  the  wounded, 
according  to  Israelis. 

Two  helicopters  hovered,  unleash- 
ing machine-gun  fire  on  Palestinians 
darting  for  cover  behind  the  huge 
stones  on  a  mountain  nicknamed  the 
"accursed  mountain"  for  its  stark 
landscape.  Palestinians  returned  anti- 


aircraft fire,  a  first  in  the  four-week 
conflict. 

The  settlers  scattered  across  the 
hillside,  making  it  difficult  for  the 
Israeli  forces  to  reach  all  of  those 
trapped.  Several  of  the  wounded 
Israelis  could  not  be  evacuated  imme- 
diately due  to  the  heavy  Palestinian 
fire^    >:  A   ■-  :S^i'"'' 

Both  Israeli  television  stations 
broadcast  nonstop  coverage  of  the 
gunfight,  running  footage  caught  at 
its  outbreak  repeatedly  and  maintain- 
ing phone  contact  with  the  settlers. 
One  settler,  pinned  down  by  the  gun- 
fire, was  interviewed  on  his  cellular 
telephone  by  Israel's  Channel  2  TV. 


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Friday,  October  20, 2000 


"Under  fire  for  five  hours 
straight,"  said  Elazar  Mizrahi,  the 
staccato  of  automatic  fire  audible  in 
the  background.  "There  are  still  gun- 
shots. Hiding.  Others  30  meters  from 
me.  We  came  to  tour  the  area.  I'm 
hiding  behind  a  rock.  I  can't  leave 
here." 

The  battle  died  out  after  dark, 
while  Israel  moved  tanks  and 
armored  personnel  carriers  to  the  out- 
skirts of  Nablus.  t&nks  had  been 
moved  away  just  a  day  earlier  in  an 
efTort  to  reduce  tensions. 

Nablus  has  remained  extremely 
tense  despite  the  military's  withdraw- 
al from  the  holy  site.  The  settlers  have 


vowed  to  return  to  the  tomb,  though  it 
is  in  the  middle  of  the  restive 
Palestinian  city. 

After  the  truce  was  announced  in 
Egypt,  the  "two  sides  agreed 
Wednesday  to  wait  48  hours,  until 
around  midday  Friday,  to  determine 
whether  it  was  working. 

"The  drop  in  the  level  of  activity  of 
the  Palestinians  is  not  enough  and 
does  not  satisfy  us,"  Deputy  Defense 
Minister  Ephraim  Sneh  said  on  Army 
radio.  "We  are  halfway  through  the 
period  and  when  it  is  over  (Friday)  we 
will  decide  what  to  do  next." 

Ideally,  if  the  truce  holds,  the 
Israelis  are  to  pull  back  troops  from 


the  outskirts  of  Palestinian  cities, 
security  teams  from  the  two  sides  are 
expected  to  hold  additional  talks,  and 
the  Palestinians  are  to  continue  work- 
ing to  rein  in  militants. 

But  if  unrest  persists,  the  agree- 
ment mediated  by  Clinton  could 
quickly  disintegrate. 

In  Cairo,  Egypt,  a  top  aide  to 
Palestinian  leader  Yasser  Arafat  saidf 
Israel  had  so  far  only  made  minimal 
efforts  to  implement  the  cease-fire. 

"Israel  wants  to  kill  the  Palestinian 
people  and  to  keep  them  under  siege, 
and  to  put  them  under  pressure  that 
they  could  not  bear,"  said  the  aide, 
Nabil  Shaath.  . 


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Daiiy  Bruin  News 


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VOTING 

From  page  5 

prompting,  and  70  percent  couldn't 
identify  the  vice  presidential  candi- 
dates. 

"There  seems  to  be  a  finite  window 
of  opportunity  to  engage  young  peo- 
ple and  that  window  seems  to  be  clos- 
ing," said  Betsy  Frank,  executive  vice 
president  of  research  for  MTV 
Networks. 

Only  one-third  of  young  people 
polled  in  July  said  they  were  certain  to 
vote  in  November,  MTV  said.  That 
compares  with  57  percent  in  July 


1992,  when  young  people  were  ener- 
gized by  the  campaigns  of  Bill  Clinton 
and  Ross  Perot. 

Subsequent  polling  as  the  cam- 
paign has  heated  up  this  year  found 
more  young  people  interested  -  but 
still  not  up  to  levels  of  previous  cam* ' 
paigns,  Frank  said. 

These  people  aren't  necessarily 
apathetic;  they  just  don't  see  the  rel©». 
vance  of  politics  to  their  lives,  she'^ 
said. 

Seventy  percent  of  those  polled 
identified  issues  they  were  concerned 
with,  but  only  30  percent  said  they 
were  interested  in  politics  and  govern- 
ment, she  said. 


RADAR 

Frompagefi 

ground  stop  lifted  incrementally 
throu^out  the  day  to  meter  the  flow 
of  aircraft. 

.  "We're  kicking  out  the  departures 
now,"  Koleszar  said  before  noon. 

Snyder  added:  "It'll  be  a  long  time 
before  we  get  back  to  normal  and  fully 
lift  the  ground  stop." 

The  radar  system  at  the  FAA's  Los 
Angeles  Center,  60  miles  north  of 
downtown  in  the  Mojave  Desert  com- 
munity of  Palmdale,  covers  a  huge  sec- 
tion of  the  Southwest,  including  most 
of  California,  parts  of  Nevada  and 
Utah,  and  out  to  sea  250  miles. 

'This  was  a  standard  upgrade.  It 
was  new  software.  Something  is  cor- 
rupting the  system,"  Snyder  said, 
adding,  "There  was  nothing  wrong 


with  the  old  software."  "  *    • 

Despite  the  full  house  at  Los 
Angeles  International  Airport,  Gail 
Gadei,  a  Department  of  Airports 
spokeswoman,  could  not  say  how 
many  flights  were  grounded. 

Southwest  Airlines  canceled  70 
nights,  airline  spokesman  Melanie 
Jones  said  from  Dallas.  Other  flights 
experienced  delays  up  to  four  hours. 

"Right  now,  it  doesn't  look  like  I'll 
get  home  until  tomorrow,"  said  Alan 
Verpy.  who  was  waiting  for  a  flight  to 
Minneapolis.  He  was  stranded  along 
with  hundreds  of  other  Los  Angeles 
travelers  appearing  resigned  to  their 
plight. 

San  Francisco  International 
Airport  spokesman  Ron  Wilson  said 
about  20  flights  were  grounded  there 
during  the  first  outage. 

United  Airlines  canceled  at  least  32 
flights  into  and  out  of  San  Francisco. 


STEINEM 

From  page  1 

instead  of  Bush." 

She  also  asked  them  to  remember 
the  past. 

"I  hope  that  we  will  think  about  the 
legacy  of  the  civil  rights  movement, 
the  suffragist  movement  and  the  abo- 
litionist movement,"  she  said. 

Speaking  to  the  crowd  of  mostly 
female,  mostly  liberal  college  stu- 
dents, Steinem  also  asked  her  listen- 
ers not  to  vote  for  Bush  or  Ralph 
Nader  -  because  even  the  latter 
choice  might  mean  getting  the 
Republican  candidate  into  the  White 
House. 

"I  don't  know  about  you  here,  but 
it's  not  like  I  am  tempted  to  vote  for 
Bush,"  she  said  as  the  crowd  laughed. 
"There  is  a  reason  why  Nader's  sup- 
port is  overwhelmingly  white  and 
middle  class  and  more  male  than 
female.  It's  because  these  are  the  peo- 
ple who  do  not  suffer  as  much  if  Bush 
were  in  the  White  House." 

"If  I  were  to  run  for  president  in 
the  same  symbolic  way  that  Nader  is 
doing,  I  hope  that  those  of  you  in  this 
room  would  have  the  good  sense  to 
vote  against  me  too,"  she  said.  ;  ' 
While  calling  him  a  "good  person" 
in  an  interview  before  her  speech, 
Steinem  said  in  her  speech  that  Nader 
disparages  the  women's  movement 
and  the  gay  and  lesbian  movement. 

"Nader's  'I  don't  care  if  I  put  Bush 
in  the  White  House'  campaign  is  not 
something  those  of  us  who  knew  and 
loved  him  in  the  past  noticed  him 
doing  before  he  became  such  an 
embittered  and  angry  man,"  she  said. 
Sponsored  by  the  Bruin 
Democrats,  Steinem  stopped  at 
UCLA  as  part  of  a  Voters  For  Choice 
bus  tour,  visiting  college  campuses 
across  the  nation  in  a  campaign  to  dis- 
cuss the  importance  of  this  year's 
presidential  elections  and  to  urge  stu- 
dents to  vote  Democrat. 

The  bus,  parked  at  Ackerman  turn- 
around, drove  on  to  Scripps  College 
later  that  afternoon,  but  this  time  with 
a  handful  of  UCLA  students  riding 
along. 

After  her  speech,  Steinem  invited 
students  to  get  on  the  bua  with  her. 
Third-year  anthropology  student 
Sarah  Farmer,  along  with  several  oth- 


ers, didn't  hesitate. 

"Mostly  I  think  I  wasn't  aware  of 
how  much  this  year's  elections  will 
impact  the  Supreme  Court,"  Farmer 
said.  "And  really  I  just  want  to  hang 
out  with  Gloria." 

Steinem  has  been  an  icon  of  the 
feminist  movement  since  the  1960s. 
She  founded  the  National  Women's 
Political  Caucus  and  Ms.  Magazine. 
Her  published  books  include 
Revolution  from  Within. 

Steinem  also  helped  found  Voters 
for  Choice  in  the  late  1970s,  along 
with  board  members  from  the  Ms. 
Foundation  for  Women  and  Planned 
Parenthood. 

"We  felt  there  needed  to  be  a  polit- 
ical action  committee  whose  priority 
was  reproductive  freedom,  which  is 
as  important  as  freedom  of  speech," 
she  said. 

Because  the  next  president  will 
appoint  at  least  two  new  justices  to 
the  Supreme  Court,  Steinem  said 
Bush's  victory  could  be  detrimental 
to  reproductive  freedom,  as  well  as 
issues  like  gay  rights  and  affirmative 
action. 

"The  Republican  party  platform  is 
that  abortion  should  be  criminalized 
even  in  cases  of  rape,  incest  or  when 
the  health  of  the  mother  is  in  danger," 
she  said. 

"To  take  George  Bush  at  his  word, 
he  would  use  his  power  of  executive 
order,  veto  power  and  appointment 
of  Supreme  Court  justices  to  crimi- 
nalize abortion,  to  dismantle  the 
remaining  affirmative  action  and 
other  remedies  for  racial  discrimina- 
tion," she  continued. 

The  Republican  platform,  in  fact, 
supports  a  "human  life  amendment 
to  the  Constitution,"  and  endorses 
"legislation  to  make  clear  that  the 
Fourteenth  Amendments  protections 
apply  to  unborn  children." 

After  her  speech,  Steinem 
answered  questions  from  the  audi- 
ence. But,  in  less  than  an  hour,  she 
was  back  on  the  bus  as  quickly  as  she 
came,  but  not  before  reminding  stu- 
dents to  continue  the  legacy  of  the 
movement  she  has  been  a  part  of. 

"There  is  absolutely  no  excuse 
now."  she  said.  "Unless  it's  apathy, 
unless  it's  failing  for  these  arguments 
that  the  candidates  arc  just  alike,  or 
that  politics  is  dirty  and  we  don't  want 
to  participate  -  there  is  no  excuse." 


r 


'■:r." 


ARMENIA 

From  page  1 

Tibetan  Buddhists. 

Friday,  the  conference  will  discuss 
such  issues  as  the  historical  geography 
of  Cilicia  and  the  fall  of  the  Armenian 
kingdom. '.  ^;    ,  <  ■,     .?-    .. 

Saturday,  topics  at  the  event  will 
include  the  art  of  Cilician  Armenia 
-  and  a  presentation  on  Armenian 
architecture. 

The  patriarch  will  preside  and 
speak  during  both  days  of  the  confer- 
ence. 

The  patriarch  is  originally  from 
Cilicia,  where  the  last  Armenian  king- 
dom existed  between  the  1 1  th  and  1 4th 
centuries. 

Hovannisian  said  large  numbers  of 
Armenians  were  killed  or  driven  out 
of  Cilicia  by  the  Turkish  government 
between  1915  and  1922,  during  what  is 
known  as  the  Armenian  Genocide. 

There  are  virtually  no  Armenians 
remaining  in  Cilicia  or  in  any  part  of 
the  historic  Armenian  territories  that 
are  presently  included  in  the  eastern 
half  of  Turkey,  he  said. 

"Los  Angeles  County  now  has  the 
largest  Armenian  population  outside 
of  Armenia  itself,  and  for  them  the 
church  plays  an  important  role  far 
beyond  the  spiritual,"  Hovannisian 
said. 

Because  the  Armenian  Church  has 
been  in  existence  for  so  long,  many  see 
it  as  a  symbol  of  hope  during  hard 
times,  especially  in  light  of  the  geno- 
cide. 

"Religion  has  served  as  a  continu- 
ity and  has  managed  to  get  us  through 
the  hard  times,"  said  Ani  Shabazian,  a 
second-year  graduate  student  in  psy- 
chology. 

The  Armenian  community  in  Los 
Angeles  and  at  UCLA  is  anxiously 
awaiting  the  arrival  of  their  spiritual 
leader. 

"He  symbolizes,  to  us,  centuries  of 
religion  and  culture  that  the 
Armenians  have  in  common."  said 
first-year  biology  student  Marine 
Chefteyan. 

Chefteyan  said  she  has  never  met 
the  patriarch  and  looks  forward  to  see- 
ing him  up  close. 

For  many,  the  patriarch  is  a  spiritu- 


al guide  and  represents  a  symbol  for 
unification  among  the  Armenian  com- 
munity in  Los  Angeles. 

"I  like  to  think  I'm  a  spiritual  per- 
son," Shabazian  said.  "I  think  his  holi- 
ness keeps  my  mind  in  focus." 

The  church,  which  is  similar  to  the 
Episcopalian  faith,  currently  has  two 
patriarchs,  because  of  historic  rea- 
sons.      .. .     ;    .    ;.  ■"■"'-".■:._ 

While  die  original  patriarch  was 
from  Cilicia,  a  second  patriarch  was 
elected  in  Etchmiadzin,  the  birthplace 
of  Christianity  in  Armenia. 

"It  was  quite  difficult  to  travel  in 
those  days  from  city  to  city  -  it  would 
have  taken  more  than  a  few  months  to 
travel  between  Cilica  and 
Etchmiadzin,"  said  Varoujan  Der 
Simonian,  member  of  the  central  exec- 
utive council  of  western  prelacy  of  the 
Armenian  Apostolic  Church. 

He  said  the  Cilician  patriarch 
moved  to  Lebanon  during  the  geno- 
cide. ;  ;   :. 

"These  two  heads  are  both  equally 
important,"  Shabazian  said. 

The  Armenian  Church  developed 
as  a  separate  branch  of  Christianity  at 
the  beginning  of  the  fourth  century. 

Hovannisian  said  Armenia  was  the 
first  country  to  adopt  Christianity  as 
the  official  religion  of  a  state  and  the 
people's  history  dates  back  to  early 
antiquity. 

In  order  to  address  the  lack  of 
teaching  Armenian  issues  in  the  past. 
Hovannisian  started  the  international 
conference  series  three  years  ago  on 
historic  Armenian  cities  and 
provinces.  This  year  marks  the  40th 
anniversary  of  Armenian  Studies  at 
UCLA. 

"When  I  was  in  the  UC  system  at 
Berkeley,  and  then  at  UCLA,  there 
was  not  a  single  course  anywhere  in 
the  country  on  Armenian  history," 
Hovannisian  said. 

"In  my  case,  I  have  taught 
Armenian  history  and  studies  for  four 
decades  without  ever  having  had  the 
opportunity  to  take  a  formal  course  in 
the  field,"  he  continued.  .. 

The  conference  will  begin  Friday  nr>om- 
ing  in  Schoenberg  Hall,  and  will  con- 
clude Saturday  evening  in  Dickson 
auditorium.  The  conference  will  last 
from  9:30  a.m.  to  6  p.m.  both  days. 


HEARING 

From  page  1 


with  having  to  commute  to  campus 
and  with  finding  parking. 

"When  I  discussed  this  project 
with  them,  they  were  really  enthusi- 
astic and  just  sorry  that  they  would- 
n't be  here  to  take  advantage  of  it," 
Cheadle  said. 

But  many  Westwood  residents 
voiced  concerns  that  the  project  will 
increase  traffic  rather  than  decrease 
it,  since  approximately  2,068  park- 
ing spaces  will  be  added  as  part  of 
the  plan. 

«"lf  you're  serious  about  reducing 
cst^s,  then  don't  have  parking 
s|ftces,"  said  Sharon  Milder,  a 
\Mirstwood  resident  who  attended 
thi  hearing.  "Just  give  them  a  room 
to  live  in." 

Milder  said  having  the  two 
entrances  to  the  new  building  locat- 
ed on  Veteran  Avenue  will  also 
increase  traffic. 

"My  feeling  is  that  nobody  but 

UCLA  wants  this  project,"  she  said. 

But,  UCLA  administrators  said 

they  feel  the  benefits  of  the  project 

will  outweigh  its  disadvantages. 

"As  a  world  class  institution,  we 
strive  to  recruit  and  retain  the  best 
graduate  students,"  said  Claudia 
Mitchell-Kernan,  vice  chancellor  of 
graduate  students. 

She  said  increased  housing  will 
attract  more  of  UCLA's  prospective 
graduate  studenU  from  out  of  town. 
"With  graduate  housing,  UCLA 
can  grant  initial  housing  for  one  or 
two  years  and  allow  new  graduate 
students  to  adjust  to  the  LA  metro- 
politan area."  Mitchell-Keman  said. 
Meanwhile,  other  Westwood  resi- 


dents are  concerned  that  landscapes 
on  the  proposed  construction  site 
will  be  demolished. 

Tova  Leiah,  assistant  director  of 
Campus  and  Environmental 
Planning,  said  for  every  tree  uproot- 
ed, the  university  will  replant  anoth- 
er one. 

This  policy  did  not  satisfy  resi- 
dents who  said  the  current  trees  are 
older  and  provide  a  "grove-like" 
image. 

"Old  trees  are  very  expensive," 
said  Shelley  Taylor,  head  of  the 
North  Village  Improvement 
Committee.  "I  can't  imagine  that 
the  trees  you  are  using  as  replace- 
ments are  as  old  as  the  ones  we  have 


now. 

Taylor  said  she's  worried  about  a 
higher  noise  level  brought  in  by  new 
residents.  '  *    : 

"Everyone  can  agree  that  the 
morals  of  students  have  declined 
over  the  years,"  she  said.  "They 
don't  have  respect  for  the  communi- 
ty." 

Westwood  residents  questioned 
the  necessity  of  the  project  and  wor- 
ried about  decreasing  property  val- 
ues. Some  suggested  the  project  site 
be  moved  to  Lot  32. 

But  Martin  Griffin,  president  of 
the  Graduate  Student  Association, 
said  there  is  no  other  solution  to  the 
problem,  citing  most  graduate  stu- 
dents live  about  ID  miles  from  cam- 
pus. 

Cheadle  said  the  housing  project 
would  keep  students  from  having  to 
leave  campus  eariy  to  beat  rush  hour 
traffic,  thus  allowing  them  to  partic- 
ipate in  after  school  events. 

"Having  our  students  live  on 
campus  would  create  a  greater  sense 
of  community."  Cheadle  said. 


1^ 


......U 


Dtiiy  Brain  News 


"Friday,  Ottober  20, 2000 


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•  Offers  $3,450/  year  for  tuition,  books, 
snd  fees  plus  $200/month 


For  mon  InformaVon,  contact: 

Capt  Timothy  Reynolds 
UCLA  Air  Force  ROTC 
(310)825-1742 


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g|it>*ti' 


on 


UCLA  PEKFORMiNG  ARTS 

Artists  in  Residence 


Audra  McDonald 

Meet  the  Artist 

Fri,  Oct  2o,  from  5:30  to  7  pm 
Schoenberg  1343 


/ 


StO.tOt.IU4 


'■M: 


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^  >  fQkUC  PCRPORNA  NCE  /  Aft  t^ti^t  »ltli  AiidN  NcOonM 

f<'*mm$mmrrH*tttttftrtWtHtai^ud.nprmu 
rosy-rurvuHma  oiicmmoh 


AttMKJd&M^ 


■  UOA  Camrel  ndM  (Mc* 


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kVWita 


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Next  week 

Do  suburbs  offer  a 
more  comforting 
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Friday,  October  20, 2000 


Daily  Bruin 


View  on  the  Web 

See  all  this  and 

nrare  at  the  Daily  Bruin's 

massive  Web  site: 

www.dailybruin.uda.edu 


?^5<^ 


vJewpoint@media.ucla.edu 


UCLA5 


I  stereotypes  must  be  shattered 


CAUFORNIA:  Myths  still 
abound  in  southern  half 
of  state,  despite  realities 

I  have  been  to  Minnesota,  and  the 
rumors  are  true.  There  really  are 
people  in  the  world  who  resemble 
the  cast  from  the  movie  "Fargo." 
Every  few  years 
my  parents 
would  load  us 
kids  onto  an  air- 
plane or  into  a 
minivan  and  we 
would  be  on  our 
way  to  visit  my 
mother's  rela- 
tives. Once  we 
had  arrived,  my 
siblings  and  I 
were  always 
bombarded  by 
questions  from 
people  who 

wanted  to  know  what  life  was  like  in 
California.  A  typical  exchange 
between  myself  and  some  distant  rela- 
tive would  go  as  follows: 

"So,  you're  from  out  west.  How 
close  to  L.A.  do  you  live?" 

"WelM'm  from  Northern 
California,  so  L.A.'s  pretty  far." 

"Oh,  so  you  live  next  to  San 
Francisco,  don'tcha?" 

"Umm...  not  exactly." 

"What  do  you  mean?  You're  either 
by  one  or  the  other ...  aren't  you? 

At  this  point  I  would  usually  go 
into  some  explanation  about  how  my 
hometown  of  Yuba  City  is  actually 

Rigsby  is  a  second-year  political  science 
student  who  is  proud  to  call  himself  a 
Californian.  You  can  reach  him  at 
drigsby@ucla.edu. 


David 
Rigsby 


farther  north  than  Sacramento.  I've 
gotten  pretty  good  at  growing  up  and 
laughing  off  the  out-of-state  mindset 
that  says  you're  either  a  stone's  throw 
away  from  SF  or  L.A.  I  mean,  it's  no 
shcKk  that  they  should  associate 
California  with  its  two  most  popular 
cities. 

It  has  not  been  so  easy  to  laugh  off 
certain  mindsets  that  I  have  encoun- 
tered here  at  UCLA  regarding 
NorCal.  I  assumed  that  the 
Califomians  I  met  here  would  actual- 
ly have  a  sense  of  what  the  state  looks 
like  geographically  The  idea  that 
NorCal  and  the  Bay  Area  are  synony- 
mous is  simply  not  true. 

Whenever  the  phrase  "NorCal"  is 
used,  entire  regions  of  the  northern 
half  of  the  state  are  overlooked. 
There  is  some  symmetry,  however, . 
between  the  way  in  which  SF  over- 
shadows the  rest  of  NorCal  and  L.A. 
overshadows  the  rest  of  SoCal.  I 
think  that  people  from  San  Diego  will 
agree  with  me. 

My  main  concern  is  not  that  my 
region  of  California  is  lost  in  the  shuf- 
fle, but  rather  that  myths  are  prolifer- 
ated by  not  only  out-of-staters,  but  by 
other  Califomians  as  well.  Many  of 
the  friends  that  I  have  made  here 
have  told  me  that  had  it  not  been  for 
meeting  me,  they  never  would  have 
given  much  thought  to  the  northern- 
most parts  of  California.  So  I've 
taken  it  upon  myself  to  clear  up  some 
common  mistakes  that  people  make 
when,  on  the  rare  occasion,  they  give 
a  thought  to  what  lies  north  of  the 
Bay  Area. 

The  first  general  misconception 
which  comes  to  mind  is  that  when 
people  think  of  life  north  of  SF,  and 
to  some  extent,  north  of  Sacramento, 
they  think  of  this  giant  wilderness. 
Now,  while  Northern  California 


prides  itself  on  its  vast  natural 
resources,  there  is  s^ill  civilization  up 
there.  The  days  of  the  pioneers  cross- 
ing over  the  Sierra  Nevada  Mountain 
Range  have  long  passed.  But,  like 


CASEY  CfiOWLOiily  Brum 

many  myths,  I  suppose  that  this  one 
is  based  on  some  truth. 

A  lot  of  the  Gold  Rush  towns  hold 
on  tightly  to  their  past.  For  example,  I 
know  the  names  of  the  founders  of 


my  hometown,  and  I  have  some  con- 
cept of  the  ways  in  which  the  early 
settlers  lived.  This  is  because  commu- 
nity history  is  a  fundamental  pari  of 
our  social  studies  core  in  the  lower 
grades.  Well,  that  and  the  fact  that  it 
is  beaten  into  our  heads  with  parades 
and  Founder's  Day  celebrations.  In 
addition,  street,  park,  and  landmark 
names  all  generally  relate  to  the 
founders  in  some  way  or  another. 
I  once  asked  a  UCLA  friend  of 
mine  who  happened  to  be  from 
SoCal  if  she  knew  how  her  city  was 
founded.  She  shrugged  her  shoulders 
and  said,  "I  guess  it's  because  that's 
where  the  405  and  the  1 10  cross."  I 
don't  know  how  everyone  else  feels, 
but  I  take  pride  in  the  fact  that  my 
hometown  was  founded  for  some 
other  reason  than  that  it  was  a  conve- 
nient location  to  put  a  gas  station  and 
a  no-tell  motel. 

Another  major  misconception  is 
that  everyone  in  NorCal  is  a  political 
activist.  Yes,  it  is  true  that  we  have  the 
state  capitol  nearby,  but  that  doesn't 
mean  we  all  go  out  on  weekends  and 
hold  signs  while  chanting,  "Hell  no, 
we  won't  go!"  I  do,  however,  agree 
with  the  foundation  of  this  myth. 

Northern  Califomians  tend  to  be 
more  politically  aware  of  what's  hap- 
pening on  a  state  level.  A  large  por- 
tion of  Sacramento's  local  news  cov- 
erage is  devoted  to  state  issues 
because  the  city  is  a  beehive  of  politi- 
cal activity.  So  while  the  fourth  or 
fifth  story  on  a  Sacramento  affiliate 
sution  might  be  devoted  to  a  bill  that 
Gray  Davis  signed,  the  same  slot  on  a 
Los  Angeles  affiliate  would  be  devot- 
ed to  a  story  titled  "Nipping  and 
Tucking:  How  to  Get  the  Most  Out 
of  Your  Buck." 

Scetl6SIV,pag^ 


Turkish  tour  evokes  history  of  oppression 


GENOCIDE:  Summer  in 
region  reveals  victims' 
path  of  exile,  massacre 

By  Harout  Scmcrdfian 

While  many  UCLA  students 
would  have  chosen  an  exotic 
island  in  the  Caribbean  or  a  popu- 
lar European  destination  to  spend 
their  summer  break.  I  decided  to 
take  a  rather  unusual  trip  to  a 
region  that  more  than  700  UCLA 
students  call  "home." 

My  trip  to  Eastern  Turkey, 
known  to  most  of  us  as  historic 
Armenia,  contained  great  adven- 
ture. In  the  meantime,  however,  it 
was  also  a  trip  of  unspeakable 
'Mi^otions  considering  the  genoci- 
d.i!  c\cni<^  that  took  place  on  those 
very  lands  against  my  people 
some  86  years  ago. 


Courtwy  o<  Hnout  Semerdjun 

The  Church  of  the  Redeenner  at  the  medieval  Armenian  capital  of 
Ani  serves  as  a  reminder  of  Eastern  Turkey's  Armenian  past. 


Semerdjian  is  a  fifth-year  history  and 
near  eastern  studies  student.  He  can 
be  reached  at  h$efnerdj@ucla.edu. 


Beginning  in  1915,  virtually  ihc 
entire  Armenian  population  of 
Western  Armenia,  which  later 
became  Eastern  Turkey,  was 
cither  exterminated  or  exiled  from 
their  historical  homeland  through 
the  order  of  the  ruling  Young 


Turk  party  of  the  Ottoman 
Turkish  Empire.  After  inhabiting 
these  lands  for  3,000  years,  the 
physical  presence  of  the 
Armenians  was  almost  fully  wiped 
out  by  the  time  the  Turkish 
Republic  was  established  in  1923. 


Today,  all  that  remains  of  the 
region's  Armenian  past  are  a  few 
decaying  churches  and  fortresses 
that  once  prospered  as  a  part  of 
the  Armenian  homeland. 

Having  studied  the  Armenian 
tragedy  through  several  courses  at 
UCLA,  and  from  extensive  per- 
sonal research.  I  found  myself       r^ 
retracing  the  steps  of  those  who 
fell  victim  to  this  tragic  chapter  in 
history  decades  before.  I  could 
not  stop  asking  myself  and  my  lib- 
eral Turkish  friend  rhetorical 
questions  as  I  traveled  through  the 
region,  the  answers  for  which  will 
perhaps  never  surface. 

I  did.  however,  receive  some 
interesting  facts  and  input  from 
several  local  Kurdish  and  Turkish 
inhabitants.  Some  of  them  having 
Armenian  blood,  at  least  in  part, 
they  were  well  aware  of  the  horrif- 
ic events  that  took  place  there  in 
the  early  part  of  the  20th  Century. 
With  no  reluctance,  those  who  I 
spoke  to  openly  admitted  to  the 
unfortunate  fate  of  the  Armenian 


Sec 


P«9«14 


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Pa*y  Bruin  Vitwpoiirt 


Both  sides  suffering;  peace  requires  mutual  respect 


ISRAEL  Damage  not  just 
to  Palestinians;  Jewish 
also  have  claims  to  land 


By  Jasmine  Oberman 


Like  many  others  of  both  Jewish 
and  Muslim  faith,  I  have  been  very 
upset  and  saddened  by  what  has  been 
going  in  Israel  and  the  Palestinian 
territories  these  past  couple  of  weeks. 
But,  it  was  when  I  read  the  article  by 
Fadi  Amer  ("Extreme  actions  inflict- 
ed on  'frustrated'  culture,"  Daily 
Bruin,  Viewpoint,  Oct.  1 1 )  that  I 
became  angry. 

Although  it  was  well-written  and 
brought  up  some  valid  arguments  it 
was  filled  with  the  same  hateful, 
closed-minded  view  that  is  at  the  root 
of  the  violence  in  the  Middle  East  as 
we  speak.  Amer's  article  gave  a 
descriptive  and  pointed  argument  in 
favor  of  the  Palestinians,  but  he  com- 
pletely ignored  the  Israeli  point  of 
view.  Although  I  cannot  speak  for 
the  entire  population  of  Israel,  I 
would  like  to  shed  some  light  on  the 
subject  and  give  the  other  side  of  the 
story. 

First  of  all,  here  is  a  quick 
reminder  for  those  with  a  short-term 
memory;  This  summer  at  Camp 
David  it  was  the  Israelis,  led  by 
Prime  Minister  Ehud  Barak,  who 
Clinton  said  showed  "particular 
courage,  vision  and  understanding  of 
the  historical  importance  of  this 
moment"  and  who  "moved  forward 
more  from  his  initial  position  than 
Chairman  Arafat" 

(www.aipac.org/documents/aipacme 
mol00S00.html). 

Barak  and  his  advisers  have  even 
considered  dividing  Jerusalem,  the 
holiest  site  to  the  Jewish  people,  in 
order  to  come  to  an  agreement.  The 
Israeli  government  is  offering 
unprecedented,  historic  compromis- 
es on  some  of  the  most  sensitive 


Oberman  is  a  third-year  political  science 
student 


issues.  They  have 
been  willing  to  give  the 
Palestinians  90  percent  of  the  West 
Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  as. well  as  some 
Arab  areas  in  Jerusalem 

(www.aipac.org/documents/aipacme 
mol00500.html). 

Peace  is  so  important  to  the 
Israelis  that  they  are  willing  to  make 
groundbreaking  concessions.  The 
Palestinian  Authority,  led  by  Yasser 
Arafat,  has  on  the  other  hand  refused 
to  make  any  compromises.  The  truth 
is  that  if  the  Palestinians  valued 
peace  over  pride  as  much  as  the 
Israelis  do,  we  would  have  a  peace 
agreement  right  now. 

Even  after  Barak  and  Arafat  failed 
to  sign  an  agreement  this  summer, 
the  Israeli  government  tried  to  main- 
tain peace.  Former  Israeli  Defense 
Minister  Ariel  Sharon's  visit  to  the 
holy  site  on  the  Jewish  holiday  was 
peaceful.  It  was  not  until  a  full  day 
later  that  riots  ordiestrated  by  the 
Palestinians  took  place.  They  contin- 
ued after  Arafat  met  with  Palestinian 
paramilitary  leaders  to  keep  the  vio- 
lence alive  for  political  purposes. 
According  to  Israeli  intelligence. 


the  Palestinians 
closed  their 
schools  and  bused 
Palestinian  students 
to  the  Temple  Mount  to 
participate  in  the  riots  during 
this  past  couple  of  weeks 
(www.aipac.org). 

Obviously,  Arafat  is  not  willing  to 
work  toward  peace.  Deputy  Defense 
Minister  Ephraim  Sneh  announced 
that  Israel  had  no  intention  to  con- 


quer or  take  the  West 
Bank  or  Gaza  and  it 
has  been  stated  that  as 
soon  as  the  Palestinians 
stop  their  rioting,  Israeli 
defense  actions  in 
response  to  the  violence  will 
stop. 

Amer  speaks  about  the  50 
years  of  brutality.  The  brutality  is  on 
both  sides.  I  have  heard  the  stories  of 
the  Palestinians  who  have  been 
killed.  I  have  also  heard  the  stories  of 
the  two  young  soldiers  who  were 
"stomped  and  beaten  with  iron  bars" 


for  making  a  wrong 
turn  into  a  Palestinian  town  last 
week;  of  the  innocent  men,  women 
and  children  bombed  at  the  market 
place  in  Jerusalem  in  1997;  and  of  an 
Israeli  Olympic  Team  killed  for  rep- 
resenting their  country  in  1972  at  an 
event  intended  to  promote  world 
peace. 

I  am  not  bringing  up  all  of  this  to 
further  anger  anyone.  We  are  angry 
enough.  My  point  is  that  Palestinians 
are  not  the  only  ones  who  have  suf- 
fered. Both  groups  have  been  hurt 
over  the  past  50  years.  The  Israelis 
cannot  be  blamed  for  everything 
without  recognizing  that  the 
Palestinians  and  the  Arab  World 
have  acted  very  violently,  harshly  and 
without  humanity  on  several  occa- 
sions. 

To  add  insult  to  injury  is  the  '  •  "    ' 
Palestinians'  complete  denial  that  the 
Jews  have  any  claim  to  the  Temple 
Mount.  While  Israel  recognizes  the 
spiritual  attachment  of  the  Muslim 
people  to  the  Al  Aqsa  Mosque  and 
the  Dome  of  the  Rock,  the 
Palestinians  won't  even  admit  that 
the  Ancient  Hebrew  Temple  exists. 

Yes,  I  have  been  to  the  Arab  areas 
of  Jerusalem.  I  have  also  been  to  the 


See0tEMUN,pa9e15 


Speaks  Out 


What  would  be  your  ideal  first  date  in  L.A.? 


EsttMrONm 
Second-year 
Undedared 


"I'd  go  paintballing  because  it's  fun 
and  active.  I  can  hit  the  person  and  if  he 
still  likes  me  aHerward,  then  it's  all  good." 


DeidraBfick 

Third-year 

American  literature  and  culture 


"I  would  want  to  get  away  from 
school.  A  trip  to  the  Getty  would  be  nice 
with  dinner  afterward  and  a  walk  on  the 
beach.  I'm  a  romantic." 


Rahul  Varshney  ~~  

Third-year 

Computer  science  and  engineering 

"I'd  take  her  to  a  nice,  romantic  dinner 
at  Gaylord's  and  then  we'd  stroll  along 
Third  Street  where  we'd  watch  the  side 
shows  and  have  a  good  time." 


rRilcy 

Graduate  student 
(Sicmistry 


"Going  to  some  sort  of  event  at  a  place 
like  the  Ahmanson.  A  show  coupled  with 
dinner  would  allow  us  to  take  advantage 
of  LA.  and  interact  with  each  other." 


Albert  Pascual 

Fourth-year 
Psychobiok>gy 


"Having  an  easygoing  conversation 
where  you  don't  have  to  be  somebody 
you're  not.  It  would  be  at  a  nice  casual 
setting  where  we'd  get  hmch  or  coffee  at 
Starbuck's." 


SanamSaabar 

First-year 
Biok>gy 


Speaks  Out  compiled  by  Amy  Golod,  Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff.  Photos 
by  Daniel  Wong,  Daily  Bruin  Contributor. 


"I  would  definitely  not  go  with  a 
creepy  guy!  A.  perfect  date  would  be 
going  for  dinner  and  dancing." 


T 


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hi- . 

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-   ■  •     -  '■•..-  ■■'  r  -T     ..  ■.  ■■. 

■X. 

• 

■■"It.  ■,.■.;  " 

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'■ 

■■•     ■    ,        .'     ■         '   -  - 

'■   '■■'■■     ■    •■-  .  •■  -'•    . 

14 

Fii(by,Oaober20,2000 

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OctolMr  20, 2000 


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well  as  Professor  of  Human  Sexuality  and  Professor  of 
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RIGSBY 

From  page  12 

A  modern-day  myth  is  that  tt)e 
weather  is  always  foggy  and  gray 
across  all  orNorCal.  This  is  rooted  in 
people's  minds  when  they  take  vaca- 
tions to  SK  and  notice  how  fog  rolls 
in  and  out  of  the  city  on  a  daily  basis. 
However,  fog  is  not  nearly  as  com- 
mon in  other  parts  of  NorCal,  espe- 
cially the  landlocked  areas. 

During  the  summers,  tempera- 
tures are  generally  hotter  in  the 
Sacramento  area  than  they  are  here 
in  SoCal.  1  remember  a  few  years  ago 
when  a  record  was  broken  in  NorCal 
for  the  greatest  number  of  consecu- 
tive days  in  which  the  temperature 
was  over  one  hundred  degrees.  And 
has  anyone  out  here  ever  been  to 
Redding  in  the  summer?  Think 
Death  Valley,  with  a  little  more 
foliage.  ' 

When  people  find  out  that  my 
hometown  is  about  45  miles  north  of 
UC  Davis,  they  usually  make  refer- 
ence to  all  of  the  cows  up  North. 
While  I  will  agree  that  NorCal  is 
more  dependent  on  farming  and 
agriculture  than  SoCal,  I  do  not 
agree  with  the  stereotype  that  all 
Northern  Californians  go  "cow  tip- 
ping." I  have  never,  ever,  ever,  even 
toyed  with  the  notion  of  sneaking 
into  some  cow  pasture  late  at  night 
and  pushing  over  a  sleeping  cow.- 
Nor  do  I  know  of  anyone  who  has 
actually  done  it. 

But  I  will  admit  to  running 
through  an  orchard  or  two  late  on  a 
summer  night  when  some  friends 
and  I  were  pretty  bored.  But  pushing 
over  a  docile,  defenseless,  sleeping 
animal?  No  thanks. 

If  there  is  any  one  piece  of  advice 
that  I  can  give  to  someone  who  has 
just  met  another  person  from  the 
northernmost  reaches  of  the  stale,  it 
is  to  be  open-minded.  Just  because 
life  might  be  a  little  slower-paced  and 
subdued  up  north  doesn't  mean  that 
it  isn't  an  interesting  place  to  live. 
So  if  you're  ever  making  a  road 
trip  up  to  Sacramento,  Chico,  or 
even  Seattle,  don't  doze  ofT  in  the 
back  seat,  or  you'll  miss  out  on  a 
wonderful,  often  forgotten  side  of 
California. 


SEMERDJIAN 

From  page  12 

people.  I  learned  about  where  the 
Armenians  lived,  where  they 
prayed,  what  kind  of  people  they 
were,  and  eventually  what  hap- 
pened to  them  on  a  first-hand 
basis.  The  feeling  was  as  if  the  past 
I  had  studied  so  intensely  slowly 
unfolded  before  my  eyes. 

The  generosity  of  these  local 
inhabitants  makes  a  person  wonder 
how  such  unspeakable  acts  could 
have  been  committed  by  members 
of  their  culture  against  another 
group  of  people,  their  neighbon;  - 
and  to  such  an  extensive  degree 
where  almost  every  single  soul  - 
two  million  of  them  -  was  either 
slaughtered  or  expelled. 

The  Ottoman  government  had 
employed  key  tactics,  especially 
religious  ones,  to  engage  the  local 
"backward"  population  in  the  mas- 
sacres. As  one  Syrian  priest  resid- 
ing in  the  city  of  Diyarbakir  recent- 
ly told  a  Middle  Eastern  news 
agency,  "In  that  period  the  Kurds 
were  preaching.  'Whoever  kills 
seven  Christians  will  go  to  heav- 
en.'" Another  method  entployed 
was  the  release  of  tens  of  thou- 
sands of  convicts  and  "bloodthirsty 
criminals"  from  prisons  to  conduct 
the  cold-blooded  murders. 

When  one  examines  the  facts, 
and  in  the  meantime  encounters 
the  great  hospitality  and  kindness 
of  the  local  people,  he  will  be  con- 
vinced that  it  is  the  government 


Sm 


l»9*15 


SEMERDJIAN 

From  page  14 

and  not  the  people  that  has  to  find 
acute  answers  and  make  amends 
for  this  unpunished  crime  against 
humanity. 

Today's  government,  Turkey,  is 
the  successor  state  to  the  Ottoman 
empire.  This  is  the  same  govern- 
ment that  has  engaged  in  a  continu- 
ous denial  of  the  Armenian 
Holocaust  for  some  80  years.  It  is 
high  time  that  the  Turkish  govern- 
ment came  up  with  a  solution  to 
officially  acknowledge  this  great 
crime,  just  as  Germany  did  for  the 
Jewish  Holocaust,  and  set  the  cor- 
nerstone for  a  bright  future 
between  the  Turkish  and  Armenian 
peoples.    •.       ^  ;;'vv-         .  :'; 


OBERMAN 

From  page  13 

Western  Wall  and  seen  the  archeo- 
logical  evidence  of  the  Temple  lying 
beneath  the  mosques.  The  Temple  is 
there.  It  is  an  archeological  fact. 

So  in  response  to  Amer's  plea  for 
mutual  respect,  I  agree! 
I     Now  is  the  time  for  us  to  pursue 
'  peace  with  more  commitment  than 
ever.  But  true  peace  cannot  be 
reached  unless  the  Palestinians 
understand  that  the  Jewish  people 
have  as  valid  a  claim  to  the  land  as 
they  do  and  that  their  heartaches  at 
the  hands  of  Arabs  have  been  just  as 
vicious,  painful  and  angering. 


As  for  peace  at  UCLA,  it 

would  be  nice  if  Israeli 

Independence  Day 

was  not  surrounded 

by  propaganda 
attacking  Zionism. 


At  the  most  recent  Yom  Kippur 
services.  Rabbi  Chaim  Seidler-Feller 
of  UCLA  Hillel  stated  that  in  order 
.  for  there  to  be  true  peace,  the  Israelis 
and  the  Palestinians  have  to 
acknowledge  the  wrongs  they  have 
done  to  each  other  and  accept  each 
others'  right  to  live  in  peace.  I  think 
this  a  beautiful  statement  and  very 
true  despite  how  difficult  it  might 
seem. 

So,  how  can  we  as  students  make 
peace  in  a  country  halfway  around 
the  world?  I  encourage  all  readers  to 
write  your  congressmen,  senators 
and  even  President  Clinton,  telling 
them  how  much  you  value  peace  in 
tbe  Middle  East  and  that  you  strong- 
ll  support  legislation  that  will  keep 
tne  peace  process  alive.  It  does  not 
tjUce  much  time  and  it  really  will 
riike  a  difference. 

•As  for  peace  at  UCLA,  it  would 
be  nice  if  Israeli  Independence  Day 
was  not  surrounded  by  propaganda 
including  speakers  and  graffiti 
attacking  Zionism  and  equating 
those  in  favor  of  a  Jewish  state  to 
neo-nazis.  This  is  not  a  step  toward 
peace,  but  only  antagonizes  fellow 
classmates. 

Instead,  I  encourage  students  to 
research  both  sides  of  the  story.  Stay 
open-minded.  If  one  group  was  all 
good  and  the  other  was  all  bad,  a 
solution  would  have  been  made 
years  ago.  Reaching  an  agreement 
that  is  fair  to  everyone  would  have 
been  easy.  Unfortunately,  it's  not 
that  black  and  white. 

Once  we  begin  to  understand 
each  other,  it  will  make  it  much  easi- 
er to  work  toward  |>eace.  Once  a 
peace  agreement  is  made  both 
Mestinians  and  Israelis  will  begin  to 
heal  from  the  years  of  pain  they  both 
havi  iuffered. 


:-:.;.-.,  i.. 


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Friday,  October  20, 2000 


Daily  Bruin 


THE  MATCHUP 


Position:       Comments: 


Quanerbads: 


Runnfa>9bads: 


1 


UOA's  Cory  Paus  n  suiting  his  second  game  after  coming  bacli  from  a 
shoulder  injury  and  is  the  conference's  second-highest  rated  passer.  He 
was  good  for  309  yards  last  week,  and  wil  be  the  main  orget  of  an 
undersized  but  aggressive  OSU  defense. 
Jonathan  Smith  b  coming  off  one  of  the  best  games  of  his  life,  passing 
for  324  yards,  including  a  school-record  97-yard  play.  Smith,  hovmw, 
is  notoriously  inconsistent.  He  has  *a$tkally  cut  down  on  the 
interceptions  thb  season 


Akil  Harris  and  Jermaine  Lewis  are  listed  as  co-starters  for  the  Bniins, 
but  Harris  will  probably  get  most  of  the  legwort.  He  was  more 
impressive  than  Lewis  last  week,  who  b  bothered  by  a  sore  ankle.  Both 
are  serviceable,  but  not  at  the  level  of  the  injured  DeShaun  Foster. 
Ken  Simonton  is  probably  the  best  Beaver  running  back  ever,  and  has 
even  popped  on  some  Heisman  lists.  He's  got  great  vision  and  «  more 
slippery  than  buttered  fish. 


Widerecehrers:     Freddie  Mitchell  has  been  teMing  everybody  who  will  listen  that  he's  the 
.    I  best,  hardest-working  recewer  in  the  NCAA.  Mow  with  his  NCAA-leading 
- '  t  123  yards  per  game,  he  can  prove  it  Mitchell  is  open  virtually  every 
play,  and  has  a  200-yard  recehfing  game  just  waiting  to  come  out. 
Brian  Poli-Oixon  has  been  effective  in  adding  the  short  routes  to  his 

repertoire  in  the  past  weeks.  If  Paus  has  time  to  throw,  one  of  ttiese 
two  will  be  open. 

',  Oregon  State's  base  offense  features  three  receivers,  and  all  are 

!  acceptable,  but  none  are  quite  as  dtfigerom  as  either  Bom  sttittr, 

Offenshre  Bne:       UCLA  and  OSU  both  have  huge  offensive  lines.  Guard  Brian  Polak 

weighs  in  at  318  pounds  for  UCLA  and  Robert  Sykes  tips  the  scales  at 
i   338  pounds  for  Oregon  State  Both  are  plenty  experienced,  returning 
almost  all  of  their  starters  from  last  year. 
The  Bruin  line  has  been  exceptionally  physical  at  the  Rose  Bowl,  and  is 
highly  motivated  after  facing  the  conference's  best  defensive  line  last 
weekatCal. 

The  Beavers  are  quick  and  the  offensive  line  has  been  the  main  factor  in 
the  effeaiveness  of  Coach  Dennis  Erickson's  one-back  offense. 

UCLA  has  tost  at  least  two  of  its  top  three  defensive  ends  for  this  game, 
and  that  puts  the  pass  rush  at  a  huge  disadvantage.  Kenyon  Coleman 
and  Sean  PhiHips  are  definitely  out,  and  Rusty  Williams  missed  practice 
all  week  with  a  spramed  aiAle.  The  interior  is  still  strong  with  Ken 
Kocher  and  Rodney  Leisle  stuffing  the  middle,  and  Anthony  Fletcher  is 
having  his  best  season  yet. 

The  Beaver  line  is  built  on  quickness  and  hitting  the  botes  fast  UCIA 
Head  Coach  Bob  Toledo  recently  said  that  the  Beaver  defense  was  the 
fastest  in  the  Pac- 10. 

Robert  Thomas  has  just  been  named  as  a  semi-finalist  for  the  Butkus 
award,  and  is  probably  the  best  tackier  in  the  conference.  Although  not 
the  fastest  guy  out  there,  he  is  very  adept  at  sniffing  out  where  the  play 
IS  developing,  as  well  as  causing  tumovere.  Ryan  Nece  and  Tony  White 
provide  experience  and  leadership  on  the  outside. 
The  success  of  the  Beaver  linebackers  is  also  based  on  their  quickness 
and  aggressiveness.  They  have  been  vulnerable  to  traps  and 
misdirections  this  season. 

Injuries  will  again  affect  the  Bniin  squad  here.  Starting  comerback 

Jason  Bell  is  still  bothered  by  a  hanKtrhtg,  and  backup  safety  Jason 

Stephens  has  a  strained  abdominal  muscle.  Both  may  play,  but  will  not 

play  much.  This  is  does  not  bode  well  as  the  Bnjins  go  up  against  a 

team  most  comfortable  running  three  mUt-nctim  sets. 

Safeties  Marques  Anderson  and  Jason  Zdeoek  must  come  up  big  in  the 

secondary, 

Oregon  State  returns  all  four  of  Its  starters  from  last  jeason  and  is 

second  in  the  Pac  - 1 0  against  the  pass. 

Brum  kicker  Chris  Gnffith  has  not  missed  a  field  goal  since  his  first 
attempt  of  the  season,  going  five  for  five  since  then  Punter  Nate  Fikse 
is  leading  the  conference  in  yardage,  ahead  of  Ail-American  candidates 
Nick  Harris  and  Kurt  Doerr  ,.     v.... 

The  Bruins  have  avoided  disaster,  despite  spotty  kick  coverage,  bat 
usually  perform  better  on  special  teams  than  their  opponents 
Oregon  State  prides  itself  on  kick  returns,  and  will  likely  kwk  to  set  up 
some  big  ones  at  the  Rose  Bovifl.  The  Beavers,  however,  have  as  much 
trouble  as  UCLA  defending  returns. 


Advantage: 

DRAW 


Oefenshrelme: 


PREVIEW:  Battered  UCLA 
defense  needs  to  step  up; 
win  crucial  for  Pac- 10  title 


By  AdMn  Karon 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

HoitKcoining     may     be     alainst 

Sianfijfd  this  year,  but  the  Bruins  are 

sure  glad  to  bc  cominj  hotTie  tomcsTOW 

.Pasadena  will  be  a  welcome  s^t&lKo. 

?3UCLA  heads  lo  the  RoscBowf  to  fac< 

The  Bruins'  roaa  woes  are  wei| 
raented  (no  road  wins  in  tbyeJiftT  two 
years):  buiowoy  «e«a«3Bi^tjust  how 
good  UCLA  IS  at  home. 

Fans  are  calling  for  the  real  Bruins, 
the  team  that  beat  then-No.  3  Michigan 
and  Alabama.  The  team  that  came  back 
against  Arizona  State.  The  team  that 
must  get  a  win  Saturday  to  stay  in  the 
hunt  for  the  Pac- 10  crown. 

However,  what  they  may  get  is  the 
makeshift  Bruins. 

As  a  team,  UCLA  is  hurting.  The 
entire  defensive  starting  line  is  banged 
up.  Defensive  back  Jason  Bell  is  sore. 
Obviously  DeShaun  Foster  is  out,  and 
his  replacement.  Jermaine  Lewis,  is 
slowed  by  a  twisted  ankle. 


Untbadcers: 


FOOTBALL 


Defensive  bads; 


On  the  Oregon  State  side  of  the  ball 
things  are  looking  pr^  good.  T>^ 
Beavers  are  cominajit^ff  an  im  ^ 

win  against  Stated  wher^j|if  fea- 
tured a  high-po^ed  passidp^ck. 

Running  ycks  KejJRontoii  and 
Patrick     M,^all,    )ggf  nattvei     of 
California,  jave  bdflffie  hitm  for  the 
Beaver  atOck  dWjKfon    But  quarter- 
an  SJ|Hr<;  performance  in 
last  w^k   proves  that  the 
'e  a  ^li^operational  offense 
't  fd^  too  much  on  the 
Vfit^Ues  Anderson  said 
a  pretty  goodpassing  game 


SpMUtearm 


back  Jo 
Corvalli 
Beavers 

"We 
run,"  s 
■'They  h. 
loo." 

Perhap 
across  tow 
how  good 
game  earii 
racked  up  375 
with  234  of 


tf 


them 


^^R^TOJBTBSIIyWSn 


Bruits  should  five  a  call 

.he  yru-jans  to  find  out 

(srs  really  are.  In  a 

'c:\T  Oregon  State 

of  total  offense, 

courtesy  of 

Simonton 'sljjgs. 

"This  is  a  aicnted  team  wTth  a  lot 
speed  and  a  lot  orf  athleticism,"  coach 
Bob  Toledo  said  earlier 
have  an  excellent  quarter 
have  two  really  good  runners  and  exccl- 


^J^  Sports  on  the  Web 

:  See  all  this  and  more  at 

/J  the  Daily  Bruin^    ^ 

•  outrageous  Web  site: 

;  www.dailybruin.uda.edu 

-:- — ,..■•■  .:^''.'    :^'.."';,,,  ■.•■Jrida^ October 20, 2000 


OSU  running  back  fonriidable 
le  (or  UCLA  defense 


SIMONTON:  California  native 
continues  assault  on  Pac-lO's 
records  for  rushing  yards 


By  Adam  Karon 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 

Ever  try  catching  a  gnat  with  your  bare 
hands?  It's  pretty  difficult.  Now  give  that 
gnat  outstanding  power,  extra  speed,  and 
great  vision,  and  it's 
virtually  impossible. 
Such  is  the  case 
with  Oregon  State's 
Ken  Simonton. 

The  5-foot-7 
Pittsburgh,  Ca. 
native  has  been  tear- 
ing up  the  turf  in 
Corvallis  for  the 
past  three  years. 
This  year  the  nation 
finally  look  notice. 

Simonton  needs 
just   16  yards  this 

Saturday  against  UCLA  to  pass  O.J. 
Simpson  for  12th  on  the  all  time  Pac- 10 
career  rushing  list.  He  also  needs  just  106 
yards  to  reach  1,000  for  the  third  straight 
season. 

Not  bad  for  a  guy  who  was  deemed  "too 
small"  by  most  programs. 

"He's  a  great  back,"  said  UCLA  safety 


I  Fitilall 


Marques  Anderson.  'We  have  to  contain 
him.  When  he  gets  wide  he  gets  loose." 

Containing  Simonton  will  be  no  easy 
task.  With  starting  linemen  Kenyon 
Coleman  and  Sean  Phillips  out,  the  Bruins 
will  be  at  a  decided  disadvantage  to  stop  a 
man  who  averages  5.5  yards  per  carry. 

"We're  a  bit  banged  up. "  UCLA  defen- 
sive coordinator  Bob  Field  said.  "Other 
guys  are  just  going  to  have  to  step  up." 

Coach  Field  said  that  the  Ball  brothers, 

Dave  and  Mat,  will  have  to  fill  the  gaps 

vacated  by 

Coleman        and 

Phillips. 

"Mat  saw  con- 
siderable time 
against  Cal." 
Field  said. 

"They'll  both 
have  to  step  up 
Saturday." 

Perhaps  they'll 
have      to     step 
down,  or  at  least 
get  lower  to  try  to 
.  "       ;     slop     the     194- 
pound  Simonton.  who  uses  his  size  lo  hide 
behind  blockers  and  is  currently  fourth  in 
the  nation  in  rushing. 

"I  think  it's  very  admirable  what  he's 
done  with  his  size,"  Field  said.  "Obviously 
he's  very  productive,  very  explosive." 


'  ';  Sponi  Wc 

Ken  Simonton 


See  SIMONTON,  page  30 


Former  backup  quarterback 
brings  new  angles  to  game 


CARAGHER:  Background  as 
player  proves  advantageous 
for  mentor  to  young  receivers 


By  Joshua  Mason 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


It  wasn't  loo  long  ago  that  Ron 
Caragher  was  pacing  the  sidelines  of  the 
Rose  Bowl  as  a  player. 

These  days,  the  former  UCLA  quarter- 
back has  the  same  disposition,  only  now  in 
the  role  of  coach. 

One  of  the  youngest  assistants  on  the 
Bruin  football  staff,  Caragher 
is  certainly  living  out  his 
dreams  in  his  fifth  year  as  the 
wide  receiver  and  punting 
cbach  for  one  of  the  nation's 
nwst  talented  offenses 

^'I  would  have  lo  say  I  enjoy 
this  game  and  all  that  it's 
about,"  Caragher  said.  "I'm 
such  a  hands-on  coach  that  I 
can't  help  being  enthusiastic 
in  practice  and  game  situa- 
tions." 

The  Morgan  Hill,  Calif  native  certainly 
gets  pumped  about  his  work,  but  his 
receivers  claim  that  he's  also  the  type  of 
coach  who  keeps  his  cool  when  the  going 
gets  lough. 

"He's  not  one  of  those  coaches  that'll 
get  in  your  face  and  put  you  down  if  you 
make  a  mistake,"  said  freshman  receiver 
Tab  Perry  "He's  just  so  nice  of  a  guy  thai 
you  have  to  respect  him." 

Not  only  a  great  guy.  Caragher  also 
draws  raves  about  his  coaching  abilities 
In  his  short  five  seasons,  the  coach  has 


SceFOOTBALUpagcJO 


(!«.  .0  hgh„  R»,„  N«.,  Bob  T.l«l,, ««,«.  a™J««^  and  Bri»  P..H>b..„  |<«,k  ,„  ,he  Oregon  S,«e  g,™  «  ,  chance  ,o  return  ,o  th^e'Sy  ;«»;"£",;"'" 


Irtfldy  wuikcU  with  some  orihe  greatest 
receivers  in  UCLA  football  history, 
among    them    Jim    McElroy,    Danny 


Farmer,    and    current    stars    Freddie 
Mitchell  and  Brian  Poli-Dixon. 

"The  system  we  have  is  a  good  one  for  a 
receiver  lo  showcase  his  talents."  said 
Caragher.  "They  come  in  here  as  good 
players,  and  we  just  try  to  gel  them  to  per- 
form lo  their  potential." 

Like  his  modesty,  Caraghcr's  abilities 
as  a  hands-on  coach  most  likely  stem  from 
the  four  seasons  (1985-89)  he  served  on 
the  sideline  as  UCLA's  backup  quarter- 
back, two  of  which  came  under  the  colle- 
giate campaign  of  current  NFL  star  Troy 
Aikman. 

"I  remember  the  first  day  Troy  came 
out  to  play  catch"  Caragher  recalled,  "and 
just  warming  up,  my  hands 
were  all  red  and  hurling  from 
the  football.  I  knew  right  then 
that  he  had  a  strong  arm,  and 
he  certainly  carried  that  out 
during  his  career  here." 

"I  think  being  able  to  watch 
a  great  quarterback  like  that 
from  the  sideline  was  a 
tremendous  help  to  me,  in  that 
I  could  see  firsthand  what  the 
standard  for  an  excellent  play 
is.  It's  that  standard  that  I  like 
to  tie  into  the  mindset  of  my  players." 

Caragher  brings  several  olher  advan- 
tages to  the  table  as  a  former  quarterback 
providing  tutelage  lo  a  group  of  receivers. 
"The  thing  I  like  to  pass  on  to  my 
receivers  is  what  a  quarterback  looks  for," 
Caragher  said.  "How  a  quarterback  likes 
separation  from  defensive  backs,  how  pal- 
terns  work,  and  things  of  that  nature" 

In  doing  so.  Caragher  is  able  lo  reveal 
to  his  receivers  important  facets  of  the 
offensive  scheme  that  a  former  receiver 
may    not    have    the    capacity    to    do. 


Caragher's  background  has  enabled  him 
S«cGUUCNEII,pa9e30 


i>m*  aiiaii.irii  tw.^ 


— Ih^.       -V  4. 


■I. '*■■*•  J 


I  ^ 


Dancing  on  campus 

The  White  Oak  Dancers  are 
performing  their  ballet  on 
campus  and  A&E  has  all  the 
info.  Check  them  out  on    ; 
Monday 


Daily  Bruin 


._11_  Friday,  October  20, 2000 


A&EontheWeb 

y~See  all  this  and  more  at  the  Daily  Bruin's 
I   Web  site:  www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


NTEraAlNMENT 


'Left  Luggage' 

follows  one 

girl's  journey  of 

self-discovery 

as  she  struggles 

to  find  her  roots 

and  appreciate 

her  culture 


By  Jonathan  Jones 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

When  you  first  encounter  20-year-old 
Chaja  Silbcrschmidt,  you  delight  in  her 
bravado  as  she  quits  her  job  in  a  restaurant 
even  as  you  might  rue  her  youthful  impetu- 
ousness.  But  "Left  Luggage"  quickly  dis- 
penses with  that  edginess  in  favor  of  a 
much  schmalzier  tone. 

Actor-turned-director  Jeroen  Krabbe's 
solemn  film  about  Jewish  identity  in  1970s 
Belgium  achieves  a  great  deal  of  integrity 
with  its  actors'  fine  performances  but  ulti- 
mately undoes  it  with  an  overdose  of  senti- 
mentality. 

The  film  begins  confidently  enough, 
introducing  Chaja  (Laura  Fraser),  who 
barely  pauses  in  her  hedonistic  lifestyle  to 
visit  her  Jewish  parents,  who  are  still 
wrestling  with,  though  in  different  ways, 
their  psychic  scars  from  the  Holocaust. 

Rebuking  religion  herself,  even  skittishly 
remarking  that  she  hates  Jews,  Chaja's  life 
involves  quitting  a  thankless  job  as  a  wait- 
ress, attending  the  occasional  university 
class,  tossing  out  her  malingering  Marxist 


boyfriend,  and  almost  being  evicted  from 
her  grungy  apartment. 

What  becomes  the  catalyst  for  her  spiri- 
tual awakening,  though,  is  the  job  as  a 
nanny  she  takes  for  the  Kalmans,  a  Hasidic 
family  that  strictly  adheres  to  Jewish  law. 
At  first  the  culture  shock  seems  too  much: 
she  is  chastised  for  wearing  trousers,  which 
is  forbidden  to  Hasidic  women;  for  offering 
her  hand  in  a  gesture  of  greeting  to  the  fam- 
ily's austere  patriarch  (Krabbe  himselQ; 
and  for  unwittingly  entering  his  private 
sanctum.    ■ 

Moreover,  Chaja's  nanny  duties  are 
daunting.  But  as  she  communes  with  the 
devoted  but  overworked  Mrs  Kalman 
(Isabella  Rossellini),  Chaja  begins  to  appre- 
hend the  inferior  status  of  women  in 
Hasidic  society. 

Chaja  perseveres,  however,  mostly 
because  of  the  adorableness  of  the  family's 
young  son,  Simcha  (Adam  Monty),  who 
doesn't  speak  at  all  and  occasionally  wets 
his  pants,  ostensibly  out  of  fear  of  his  strict 
and  forbidding  father.  That  her  spunk  is  alt 
it  takes  to  eventually  coax  him  to  speak  is 
one  of  the  most  predictable  things  about 


the  film. 

Unfortunately  the  film  propounds  this 
cliche  by  inundating  the  audience  with 
scenes  of  cloying  sweetness  between 
Simcha  and  Chaja  as  they  take  regular  out- 
ings to  the  neighborhood  pond  to  view  the 
ducks. 

Chaja  develops  an  attachment  to  the 
Kalmans  and  begins  to  appreciate  some  of 
their  ways,  though,  she  must  confront  her 
parents'  soul  searching,  too.  Her  father 
(Maximillian  Schell)  obsesses  over  some 
suitcases  conuining  family  memorabilia, 
which  he  buried  somewhere  in  the  city  after 
arriving  from  a  concentration  camp. 

On  certain  days  he  embarks  with  a  map 
and  a  shovel  on  a  search  for  the  right  place 
to  dig.  confounded  by  the  changed  urban 
landmarks.  Chaja's  mother  (Marianne 
Sagebrecht),  on  the  other  hand,  fills  the 
void  left  by  denial  by  baking  cakes,  weaving 
quilts,  and  doting  on  Chaja  when  she  visits. 
Ultimately  it's  an  unexpected  tragedy 
that  threatens  and  then  reinforces  the  bond 
Chaja  has  developed  with  the  Kalmans  and 


S««UIMMi,pag«20 


*MCH(l  REtHCH/DMy  Bruin 


Musical  bares  theme  of  growing  pains 


THEATER:    Spectacular  cast, 
set,  orchestra  composes  new 
standard  for  American  stage 


By  Sarah  Monson 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


JohnTorrts  stars  in  the  God  Help!  Productions 'bare.'a 
contemporary  pop  musical,  which  is  running  until  Nov. 
1 9  at  the  Hudson  Main  Stage  Theatre. 


A  new  musical  theatre  experience  has 
begun. 

Traditional  musical  theater  standards, 
gospel,  rock  and  techno,  may  seem  like 
strange  bedfellows  indeed,  but  strange 
bedfellows  is,  in  essence,  what  "bare,"  a 
new  pop  opera,  is  all  about. 

Opened  Saturday  to  a  sold  out  audi- 
ence at  the  Hudson  Main  Stage  Theatre 
in  Hollywood,  "bare"  set  a  new  standard 
for  what  defines  a  great  piece  of 
American  musical  theater. 

Comprised  of  a  magnificently  gifted 
cast,  a  phenomenal  orchestra  and  a  spec- 
tacular set,  "bare"  tested  the  boundaries 
of  traditional  musical  theater  and  passed 
with  a  rainbow  of  flying  colors. 

A  tragic  story,  "bare"  is  about  five  high 
school  seniors,  who.  in  their  own  way,  div 
cover  themselves  and  bare  their  souls  to 
each  other  through  a  series  of  life  chang- 
ing events. 


The  show  opens  during  mass  in  a 
Catholic  boarding  school  where  the  audi- 
ence finds  the  lead  character,  Peter, 
caught  in  a  dream  where  angry  saints  and 
a  naming  gay  angel  come  alive  and 
expose  Peter's  secret  homosexuality.  This 
opening  scene  is  uproariously  funny,  yet 
slightly  misleading,  as  the  show  quickly 
becomes  very  somber,  touching  and 
heartbreakingiy  sad. 


Enchanting,  seductive 

and  truly  original, "bare"  is 

a  show  not  to  be  missed 

by  anyone  who  hasn't  got 

the  mysteries  of  life  all 

figured  out. 


Impressively  convincing,  John  GrilTcn 
plays  Jason  as  a  multi-faceted  character 
struggling  between  the  roles  of  a  popular 
and  athletic  straight  guy,  and  the  love 
struck  boy  of  Peter's  affections. 
— Ivy,  thr  rfsidcnt  Uaw  turwd  unwed 


mother-to-be,  is  beautifully  played  by 
Jenna  Leigh  Green,  whose  harrowing  bal- 
lads "All  Grown  Up"  and  "Touch  my 
Soul,"  are  emotionally  moving. 

Jason's  twin  sister,  Nadia,  an  awkward 
outcast  played  deliciously  by  Keili 
Leflcovitz,  often  adds  a  comic  touch  to 
the  show's  heavy  subject  with  a  little  ditty 
about  the  coming  spring  and  how  it  can 
"lick  her." 

Matt,  in  a  superb  performance  by 
Wallace  Smith,  is  Jason's  nemesis,  who 
ultimately  exposes  the  sordid  secrets  each 
character  comes  to  covet. 

Altogether  breathtaking,  John  Torres, 
who  plays  Peter,  delivers  a  notably  out- 
standing performance.  His  passion  and 
conviction  pulses  through  his  body,  just 
as  the  vibrato  and  resounding  depth  of  his 
voice  fills  the  theater.  This  combination 
makes  the  audience  fall  in  love  with  his 
character,  as  well  as  weep  right  along  with 
him  in  his  futile  search  for  answers. 

The  tremendous  orchestral  perfor- 
mances in  "bare"  parallel  the  great  act- 
ing The  talented  musicians  move  from 
upbeat  dance  tunes  to  songs  of  heart- 
breaking confessions  of  despair  with 
ease. 


^sffwmmnr 


■ «  I. •,.;.■■*.  .  y 


;^v:a  .,,-.V 


(My  Bniin  Am  &  Efltertiimneiit 


Ffklay,  October  20, 2000       « 


Director  ScHesinger  brings  new 
fisherman's  tale  to  stage  in  LA. 


OPERA:  Creative  sets,  powerful 
Tnusic,  come  together  for  classic 
performance  of  Teter  Grimes' 


ByJohnMangum  -_-   V       ; 

;  Daily  Bruin  Contributor    ■       '      W!-  :    V 

Los  Angeles  Opera's  new  production  of 
Benjamin  Britten's  "Peter  Grimes"  is  a  little 
like  a  wedding  ring.  No  matter  how  glittering 
the  setting,  it's  all  about  the  diamond. 

And  tenor  Philip  Langridge,  the  diamond  at 
the  center  of  this  setting,  was  not  without  his 
fiaws  when  the  production 
opened  on  Wednesday  for  m 

a  seven-performance  run 
at  the  Dorothy  Chandler 
Pavilion  downtown. 

It's  not  that  Langridge, 
who  sings  the  title  role,  is  a 
disappointment  -  because 
he  isn't  -  it's  just  that  there 
are  moments  when  one 
wishes  he  could  do  even 

more  than  he  is  already      __^ 

doing.  And  these  moments 

wouldn't  be  so  apparent  if  everything  else 

about  the  production  wasn't  so  near-perfect. 

"Peter  Crimes"  tells  the  story  of  a  fisher- 
man whose  boy  apprentice  has  died  under 
mysterious  circumstances.  The  ensuing  gossip 
and  innuendo  that  tear  through  the  small  fish- 
ing village  where  Grimes  lives  are  only  height- 
ened when  he  gets  another  apprentice. 

That  apprentice  also  dies  accidentally,  but, 
because  of  the  cloud  of  suspicion  under  which 


The  choral  and 

orchestral  forces 

(in 'Peter  Grimes') 

turned  in  a  stunning 

performance. 


he  already  toils.  Grimes  pretty  much  loses  his 
mind.  His  friends  encourage  him  to  sail  his 
boat  out  to  sea  and  sink  it,  effectively  commit- 
ting suicide. 

The  story  offers  prominent  roles  for  the 
many  characters  who  live  in  the  fishing  village, 
and,  most  of  all,  for  the  chorus,  who  portray 
the  populace  at  large.  Under  the  guidance  of 
Academy-Award  winning  director  John 
Schlesinger,  the  singers  who  appear  in  these 
roles  make  the  most  of  them,  offering  individ- 
ual, memorable  performances. 

In  fact,  one  of  the  most  striking  perfor- 
mances comes  from  baritone  Richard  Sitwell 
as  Captain  Balstrode,  one  of  the  villagers  who 
comes  to  Grimes'  defense. 
Sitwell  brings  out  all  of  the 
humor  and  humanity 
inherent  in  his  role  with 
masterful  singing. 
-  Other  distinguished 
performances  come  from 
LA.  Opera  regular 
Suzanna  Guzman  as  the 
gossiping,  eavesdropping 
Mrs.       Sedley;       Greg 

Fedderly,  whose  ringing 

voice  brings  out  the  hyste- 
ria of  the  Methodist  preacher  Bob  Boles;  John 
Atkins,  who  leavens  the  mood  with  his  amus- 
ing Ned  Keene;  and  Michael  Li-Paz  in  his  L.A. 
Opera  debut  as  the  gruff  carter  Hobson. 

Nancy  Gustafson  also  makes  her  first  L.A. 
Opera  appearance  as  Ellen  Orford,  the  woman 
who  tries  to  save  Grimes.  Gustafson 's  singing 
is  especially  impressive  in  Ellen's  third  act 


Sm  CMMES,  page  20      Tenor  Philip  Langridge  makes  his  debut  in  the  opera  Teter  Grimes, 


Los  Ang*tes  Opera 


20th  Centfufy  fox 

Elizabeth  Huriey  and  Brendan  Fraser 

star  in  the  movie  "Bedazzled/ 

"Bedazzled" 

Directed  by  Harold  Ramis 

Starring  Brendan  Fraser  and  Elizabeth 

Huriey 

While  a  trident,  a  pair  of  red  horns  and  a 
black  cloak  have  always  been  a  popular  staple 

Sf  the  Halloween  costume  scene,  most  guys 
ould,  without  a  doubt,  rather  see  the  Devil  in 
trad  dress  if  the  Devil  looks  anything  like 
Elizabeth  Hurley. 

j  While  the  British  beauty  appears  even  more 
shagadelic  than  in  "Austin  Powers,"  Hurley 
strays  as  far  as  possible  from  being  prim  and 
proper.  And  thank  goodness,  because  she  is  a 
helluva  lot  more  fun  to  watch.  Since  it  is  a 
comedy.  Hurley's  interpretation  of  Hell's 
number  one  angel  is  not  the  grotesque  and 
deep  baritone  spirit  you'd  expect  out  of  "The 
Exorcist." 

Instead,  she  plays  the  seductive  Satan  as  a 
mischievous  trickster  whose  antics  amuse  her- 
self and  the  audience. 

As  the  Princess  of  Darkness  scans  her  radar 
screen  for  the  next  soul  to  swindle,  she  comes 
across  Elliot  Richardson  (Brendan  Fraser).  A 
San  Francisco  computer  tech  counselor,  Elliot 
is  the  quintessential  office  geek.  His  co-work- 
ers can  barely  stand  to  be  in  the  same  room 
with  Elliot  and  all  his  lame  jokes  and  chit-chat. 

Although  Elliot  looks  like  the  definition  of 
dorkdom,  he  is  a  good  guy  at  heart.  And  this 
boy  scout  quality  is  exactly  why  the  Devil  sin- 
gles him  out. 

When  a  despondent  Elliot  gets  the  brush-off 
from  the  woman  of  his  dreams,  a  beautiful  co- 
worker  nam»d  Allison  (France*  O'Connor),  a 


sexy  Satan  appears  out  of  thin  air  to  offer  aid. 
In  exchange  for  his  soul,  Elliot  gets  seven 
wishes.  Much  like  Marlowe's  Dr.  Faustus, 
Elliot  goes  on  a  binge  of  indulging  his  vanity 
and  insecurities.  What  he  doesn't  bargain  on 
is  that  the  Devil  can  twist  every  wish  into  a 
bizarre  nightmare. 

The  movie  is  not  so  much  a  romantic  come- 
dy as  an  amusing  morality  tale. 

Unlike  Dr.  Faustus,  Elliot  realizes  in  time 
that  he  still  has  control  over  his  soul.  Thus,  the 
humor  in  this  primarily  feel-good  Hick  isn't 
particularly  sharp  or  biting  except  when 
Huriey  steps  in  to  stir  things  up. 

Fortunately,  the  movie  also  benefits  from 
the  charms  of  cutie  patootie  Fraser.  Normally, 
a  character  with  Elliot's  the-glass-is-half-full 
outlook  might  make  some  people  put  a  finger 
to  their  throat.  But  in  spite  of  a  farfetched 
premise  and  cheesy  ending,  Fraser  is  winning 
in  his  geniality. 

While  he  can  make  women  go  ga-ga,  Fraser 
also  seems  like  the  kind  of  guy  other  men 
would  just  want  to  pal  around  with.  It's  quite  a 
spectacle  to  see  how  he  transforms  physically 
and  mentally  as  he  goes  from  wishing  to  be  a 
basketball  of  totem-pole  height  to  a  sophisti- 
cated and  overachieving  party  boy. 

Despite  a  campy  fireball  scene  where  the 
film  looks  more  like  an  episode  of  "Xena," 
"Bedazzled"  makes  for  a  cute  and  playful 
diversion.  But  in  the  realm  of  comedy,  it  just 
doesn't  quite  earn  its  wings. 

Terry  Tang 
Rating:  6 

t 

•The  Yards" 

Directed  by  James  Gray  '  - 

Starring  Marie  Wahlberg,  Joaquin       : 
Phoenix  and  James  Caan 

While  "The  Yards"  makes  going  straight 
look  like  a  walk  in  the  park,  excellent  direction 
and  an  artistic  look  doesn't  make  up  for  the 
improbable  action  of  a  weak  script. 

James  Gray's  new  film  stars  Mark 
Wahlberg  as  Leo,  a  recently  released  convict 
who  is  placed  on  restrictive  parole.  He  wants 
nothing  more  than  to  be  a  productive  citizen 
and  help  out  his  long-suffering  and  ailing 
mother  ( Ellen  Burstyn). 

Nevertheless  Leo  still  refuses  to  accept  his 
corrupt,  but  weli-intentioned,  uncle's  (James 


Caan)  offer  to  help  with  trade  school. 

Instead,  Leo  is  carried  into  a  shady  worid 
of  payoffs  and  vandalism  by  his  best  friend, 
Willie  (Joaquin  Phoenix). 

In  the  vandalism  scene,  Leo's  choices  take 
a  rough  turn  when  the  yard  master  calls  for 
the  police  and  Leo  panics  and  beats  up  a  cop. 
He  could  have  run! 

Wahlberg  plays  his  part  with  a  boyish  Hair 
that  is  supposed  to  endear  him  to  the  audience 
but  comes  off  less  than  convincing.  Phoenix 
puts  in  a  great  performance  as  the  sleazy,  but 
confused  friend,  Willie. 

Chariize  Theron,  as  Willie's  girifriend. 
Erica,  gets  an  opportunity  to  do  some  good 
acting  since  her  character  also  turns  out  to  be 
Leo's  first  cousin  and  one  true  love  (a  twisted 
and  undeveloped  side  plot). 

Faye  Dunaway  plays  Erica's  mother  and 
Leo's  aunt  and  doesn't  have  enough  lines  to 
warrant  having  cast  such  a  talented  actor. 

"The  Yards"  provides  a  less  than  suspense- 
ful  journey  that  ends  with  a  completely  pre- 
dictable twist  that  should  have  been  concluded 
in  one  scene  but  nevertheless  drags  on  three 
scenes  after  the  audience  is  ready  to  go  home. 
The  art  direction,  which  used  meticulously 
planned  camera  shots,  also  superbly  highlights 
colors  of  green,  gold  and  brown  reminiscent 
ofwatercolors. 

So  if  you  feel  like  an  unchallenging  plot  that 
feels  like  an  art  film,  "The  Yards"  would  be  a 
good  choice. 

.•  ,-        Carolyn  Brown 

Rating:  6 

"One" 

Directed  by  Tony  Barbieri  '  "^ 

Starring  Jason  Cairns  and  Kane  Picoy 

Prison  can  really  transform  a  man.  Just 
released  from  jail,  Chariie  O'Connell  finds  a 
new  lease  on  life.  His  long  time  best  friend 
Nick  Razca,  however,  is  still  living  in  the  past 
and  wasting  away  his  days. 

The  story  of  "One"  highlights  the  friend- 
ship between  two  young  men  with  equally 
troubled  pasts.  As  they  choose  divergent  paths 
in  life,  the  film  asks  the  question,  can  people 
change?  More  significantly,  the  movie 
explores  what  happens  to  the  people  who 

refuse  tP  change  and  arr  ultima  tply  left 

behind. 


Nick  (Kane  Picoy)  is  a  talented  baseball 
player  who  destroyed  his  chance  to  play  in  the 
big  leagues  by  striking  his  manager.  His  stub- 
bornness heightens  his  profound  disappoint- 
ment and  frustration,  and  he  becomes  compla- 
cent wasting  away  his  athletic  gift  while  work- 
ing in  city  disposal. 

Nick  gets  Chariie  (Jason  Cairns)  a  job 
working  with  him  in  the  mornings  as  a 
garbage  man.  Charlie,  however,  discovers  a 
new  sense  of  self-worth,  and  he  decides  to  take 
some  classes  at  a  community  college  after 
work.  The  new  value  he  places  on  learning  is 
revolutionary  for  Chariie,  who,  as  a  child, 
slept  more  in  class  than  in  his  own  bed. 

Additionally,  he  has  to  fulfill  100  hours  of 
community  service  as  part  of  his  parole.  He 
finds  a  job  delivering  medical  supplies  to  resi- 
dential facilities  that  care  for  the  mentally  dis- 
abled Even  after  his  hours  have  been  filled,  he 
decides  to  stay  as  a  volunteer. 

The  self-motivated  and  responsible  Charlie 
soon  catches  the  attention  of  his  boss,  the 
compassionate  Sarah  Jenkins  (Autumn 
Macintosh).  Their  romance  further  divides  the 
two  friends,  and  Nick  ultimately  finds  himself 
alone. 

Without  gratuitous  sex  or  violence,  the  only 
thing  that  is  left  to  mesmerize  audiences  is 
director  Tony  Barbieri's  artful  camera  work. 
Long  shots  capture  the  characters'  physical 
and  emotional  distance  from  one  another. 

Always  observing  from  a  far,  the  audience 
can  almost  feel  the  tension  between  the  two 
friends  who  can't  communicate  anymore. 
Barbieri  brings  the  audience  into  a  voyeuristic 
relationship  with  the  characters,  making  it 
uncomfortable  at  times  to  watch  their  awk- 
ward interactions. 

This  character-driven  movie  may  seem  a  lit- 
tie  slow  at  times  for  mainstream  movie  goers 
accustomed  to  fast-pasted  blockbusters. 
However,  "One's"  life-affirming  story  might 
be  good  for  a  change. 

Emilia  Hwang 
Rating:  7 


•V. 


'-••--      -i  >»-.■' 


-\y . 


'  tf  ?nm»  mi  m  ii«i  ■i^wUfc— ■■j^ 


'  *B^  iftM>  ■»— '  ^'.^ 


*pjli«»»i^»Biar'iiirtfc, 


20       Friday,  October  20, 2000 


LUGGAGE 

From  page  18 


Odily  Brum  Arts  &  Entertainment 


-...i 


even  helps  her  relate  to  her  parents. 

The  filin's  performances  are  its  most 
resounding  feature.  Rosselhni  gives 
some  of  her  best  work  as  the  dutiful 
Hasidic  wife,  teetering  between  fear  and 
devotion  to  the  values  she  holds  so  dear. 
Fraser's  work  is  practically  as  brilliant, 
her  brown  eyes  deep,  expressive  pools  of 
vulnerability.  In  fact,  it's  she  who  lends 
the  film  perhaps  its  greatest  credibility  in 
the  subtle  way  her  character  sheds  her 
insolence  during  the  film. 

It's  the  supporting  roles  that  are  dis- 
appointing. The  actors  do  what  they 
can,  but  the  roles  are  so  cardboard,  so 
one-dimensional  that  their  presence  elic- 
its mainly  boredom.  Chaja's  parents 
bicker,  but  the  cliches  they  spew  just 
make  you  shake  your  heads  as  if  to  say, 
"I've  heard  all  this  before." 

Moreover,  the  resentful  concierge  in 
the  Kalmans'  building,  who  intimidates 
and  harasses  them,  comes  off  as  such  a 
cartoonish  figure  that  he  practically 
undermines  the  whole  earnest  tone  of 
the  film. 

"Left  Luggage"  is  a  film  that  yearns 
to  be  solemn  and  profound,  and  to  its 
credit,  achieves  that  in  its  austere  pro- 
duction design  and  cinematography.  Its 
script  is  simply  misguided  dramatically 
to  merit  it. 

Finally,  although  you  can  appreciate 
what  Chaja  has  learned  from  her 
encounter  with  the  Kalmans,  you  some- 
how still  yearn  for  some  expression  of 
that  spunk  she  had  in  the  beginning. 


PMty  Onagan  Enieilainmem 


The  world  premiere  of  the  contemporary  musical  "bare,"  will  be  showing  at 
the  Hudson  Main  StageTheatre  until  Nov.  19th.  • 


FILM:  'Left  Luggage*  opens  today  at 
select  theaters. 


BARE 

From  page  18 

From  Peter  and  Matt  singing  the 
explosively  heartfelt  and  richly  layered 
ballad  "Are  You  There"  straight  into  a 
drug  induced  vision  of  the  Virgin  Mary 
singing  "Mother  Love"  a  la  Diana  Ross 
and  the  Supremcs,  "bare"  is  as  quick  with 
its  genre  changes  as  it  is  with  its  scene 
changes. 

At  just  over  two  and  a  half  hours,  the 
show  runs  longer  than  one's  bum  might 
be  used  to,  but  these  trifles  are  quickly 
forgiven  once  an  actor  opens  his  or  her 
mouth  and  lets  the  magic  coupling  of 


writer  Jon  Hartmere  Jr.'s  whip  smart 
lyrics  and  composer  Damon 
Intrabartolo's  music  pour  out. 

Enchanting,  seductive  and  truly  origi- 
nal, "bare"  is  a  show  not  to  be  missed  by 
anyone  who  hasn't  got  the  mysteries  of 
life  all  figured  out  -  which  pretty  much 
means  all  of  us. 

Just  make  sure  you  come  prepared 
with  a  box  of  tissues  and  an  open  mind. 


THEATER:  'bare'  will  be  performed 
through  Nov.  19  at  the  Hudson  Main  Stage 
Theatre,  6539  Santa  Monica  Blvd.  in 
Hollywood.  For  ticket  information  call 
(310)  289-2999  or  visit 

www.barethemusical.com. 


GRIMES        V       V 

From  page  19 

scene,  when  she  realizes  the  second  apprentice  is 
dead.  Britten  calls  for  powerful  vocalism  to  underiine 
the  character's  pain.  :' -    , ;         V      ,-    : 

That  leaves  Philip  Langridge,  also  making  his  L.A. 
Opera  debut.  He  is  known  all  over  the  world  as  one  of 
the  leading  exponents  of  the  role  of  Peter  Grimes,  and 
he  mostly  lives  up  to  his  reputation.  The  character's 
two  "mad"  scenes  -  the  first  when  Grimes  accuses  his 
apprentice  of  complaining  to  Ellen,  the  second  after 
the  apprentice's  death  -  are  conveyed  with  extraordi- 
nary power  and  harrowing  emotional  intensity. 

It  is  during  the  great  lyrical  music  of  Act  One  that 
Langridge's  performance  is  less  satisfying.  He  fails  to 
convey  the  poetic  intensity  of  Grimes'  madness  as  the 
character  sings  about  his  turmoil  in  verse  that  is 
refined  and  visionary.  His  performance,  at  times, 
seems  to  be  an  agglomeration  of  generalized  gestures 
and  expressions  from  past  performances  of  the  role  - 
a  great  painting  in  need  of  some  careful  restoration. 

The  freshest  aspect  of  the  performance  is  the  stun- 
ning performance  turned  in  by  the  choral  and  orches- 
tral forces.  The  LA.  Opera  Orchestra,  under  the  lead- 
ership of  conductor  Richard  Armstrong,  offers 
resplendent  playing,  especially  during  the  subsuntial 
musical  interludes  between  scenes. 

The  L.A.  Opera  Chorus,  prepared  by  chorus  mas- 
ter William  Vendice,  provides  substantial  volume  and 
tremendous  precision  as  the  villagers  who  hound 
Grimes.  The  members  of  the  chorus  are  perhaps  the 
most  important  characters  of  all  in  the  opera,  and 
Schlesinger's  treatment  makes  each  one  into  an  indi- 
vidual. The  women  gut  fish  and  mend  nets  during  the 
opening  of  Act  One,  and  members  of  the  chorus  fight 
and  dance  outside  during  the  evening  scene  in  Act 
Three.  These  details,  along  with  imaginative  costumes 
by  Luciana  Arrighi,  really  bring  the  chorus  to  life. 

The  sets,  also  by  Arrighi,  are  executed  with  great 
imagination.  They  have  a  strange  expressionist  feel. 


Sce6MMES,page21 


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Guide, 

call 
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nx « ' 


•>» 


GRIMES 

From  page  20 


Daily  Bruin  Arts  &  Emcrtaimnent 


like  something  out  of  "The  Cabinet  of  Dr. 
Caligari,"  with  realistic  buildings  (a  church,  a 
pub,  a  dance  hall)  skewed  and  distorted  at  weird 
angles.  There  are  also  some  nice  touches  with 
the  sets,  like  the  boats  rocking  in  the  harbor  dur- 
ing the  storm  scene  in  Act  One. 

Schlesinger's  approach  as  a  director  is  quite 
literal,  entirely  to  the  benefit  of  the  opera.  There 
are  two  "effects,"  both  inspired  by  the  dead 
apprentices.  The  first,  a  projection  of  a  boy's 
picture  onto  a  wall  during  the  inquest  into  the 
first  apprentice's  death,  lacks  subtlety.  The  sec- 
ond, which  involves  having  the  dead  boy's  ghost 
return  at  pivotal  moments,  is  more  successful. 


as  it  was  in  legendary  Russian  film  director 
Andrei  Tarkovsky's  Covent  Garden/Kirov 
Opera  production  of  Mussorgsky's  "Boris 
Godunov." 

On  the  whole,  the  production  offers  a  chance 
to  see  an  extremely  accomplished  staging  of  one 
of  the  greatest  of  ail  English-language  operas. 
Langridge  offers  a  reading  of  the  title  role  that 
offers  moments  of  great  power  alongside  more 
uneven  moments  -  a  rough-cut  diarfiond  in  a 
Tiffany  setting. 


OPERA:  L.A.  Opera  presents  Benjamin  Britten's 
•Peter  Grimes'  at  the  Dorothy  Chandler  Pavilion 
through  Nov.  4.  Tickets:  $28-$  148,  $20  student 
and  senior  rush  tickets  one  hour  before  curtain, 
subject  to  availability.  For  more  information,  call 
(213)  972-8001  or  visit  www.laopera.org 


Friday,  October  20, 2000       21 


The  opera     '   • 
"Peter  Grimes," 
is  directed  by 
John 

Schlesinger  and 
runs  from 
Oct.!  8  to  Nov.  4. 


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ORTHODONTIST 

SINCE  1980         -k        ^.       - 

UCLA  FACULTY  MEMBER  Dr.  NaocF  Osiysuki 

Member  American  Assori^tion  of  Orthn^nnti|^fc  n 
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-=^—  Daily  Bruin 


Friday,  October  20, 2000 


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VISA 


payment 


Please  make  checks  payable  to 
"The  UCLA  Daily  Brum."  Wte 
accept  Visa,  MasterCard,  and 
Discover  credit  cards.  AllcAfv  5 
working  days  for  mail  payments. 


hoMf  to  write 
an  efiucllife  ad 

•  Start  your  ad  with  the  ,    .   . 
merchandise  you  are  selling 

This  makes  it  easier  for  readers  to 
quickly  scan  the  ads  and  locate 
your  Items. 

•  Always  include  the  price  of  your 
Item  Many  classified  readers 
simply  do  not  respond  to  ads 
without  pnces. 

•  Avoid  abbreviations— make  your 
ad  easy  for  readers  to  understand 

•  Race  yourself  in  the  reader  s 
position,  ask  what  you  would  like 
to  know  about  the  merchandise, 
and  include  that  in  the  ad    Include 
such  information  as  brand  names, 
colors  and  other  specific 
descnptions 


1100 

Campus  Happenings 


Alcoholics  Anonymous 


Mon.  ftjcw««,  Fri.  Sup  Smrfy,  3501  Adurawn 

llMirt.  look  Starfy,  3MI  AdMMai 

M/T/Wko.0MtalA»<>29 

Wod.ba.A3-(»9 

DiKUMioB,  Al  fcim  1110  - 1.00  pw 

»Wifc»>iiian«r>ii»<i    I  t0mlmmt*lKtt<tpntlmm. 


2000 

Personals 


MARRIAGE  OF 
CONVENIENCE 

MALE  STUDENT  ISO  female  student  seek- 
ing independent  status.  No  relationship 
Purely  contractual  and  plutonic.  No  one  look- 
ing  for  citizenship.  nickalaosC hotmail  com. 

NATURAL  HERBAL  BREAST  ENLARGE- 
MENT  Safe*  affordable'  effective'  visit  us  at 
www.figureplus.com  1-888-603-9800.  Dis- 
tributorships are  available. 

PROFESSIONAL  PHOTOGRAPHER  18-35 
year  oW  females  with  adventurous  and  open 
minded  spirits  who  want  to  expand/expk)re 
their  sexuality  through  nude  modeling  Free 
prims  for  modeling  time.  Call  Robert  at  310- 
463-5996  robW©att.net 


2300 

Sperm  /  Erjcj  Donors 


2300 

Sperm  /  Etjg  Donors 


18  00 

Miscellaneous 


LOANS,  LOANS, 
LOANS 

FOR  GOOD  AND  BAD  CREDIT  We  do  all 
types  of  toans  with  no  appticatk)fHees  High 
approval  rate  All  applteanfs  weteomed.  Call 
tOlHree  1-888-698-1301 

ON  CAMPUS  BANKING 

Your  on-campus  «  on-line  financial  son/ices 
source  for  students,  faculty  &  staff.  Visit  us  at 
Ackemian  A-leve),  on-line  at  www.ucu  ora  or 
call  310-477-6626. 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


EARN  $$$$$ 

CLINICAL  RESEARCH  STUDY  for  the  com- 
mon cold   Male/female  l8-55yrs.  oW,  non- 
smoker,  no  asthma  history.  Limited  availabil- 
ity Call  today  310-785-9121. 
ErnailxlinfcalsubjoctsOyahoo.com 

RESEARCH  SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for 
UCLA  Brain  Mapping  study  Wear  goggies 
for  two  weeks  that  tum  the  world  upside 
down.  Must  be  right-handed,  normal  heanng 
vision  good  or  correctable,  $1000  payment. 
Contact  Richard  at  quixole©ucla  edu  for 
more  info. 


We  Need  Your  Sperm! 


We  are  studying  the  effect  of  an 
experimental  drug  on  sperm  function. 

Qualified  participants  will  receive  an 

evaluation  by  a  board-certified 

physician  including  physical 

examination,  blood  testing,  and  EKG,  all 

-     free  of  charge.  . 

Also,  earn  up  to 


$2000 


in  compensation! 


www.yhwh.com 


"The  Church  of  Yahw< 

Pastor  Ahyh 

welcomes  you! 

We  are  always  open! 

We  are  dedicated  to 

presenting  the 

clearest  explanations 

available  about  the 

mysteries  and 

essence  of  the 

liverse,  God,  ai 

ourselves. 


19  00 

Personal  M('ss;if|(;s 


Ml  Amofe  Corey  -  I  love  you  ifcTY  LIT 
-Happy  Anniversary.  Joys  XOXO 


SMOKERS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH,  18-45,  want- 
ed for  nicotine  research  study  administered 
by  UCLA.  Both  heavy  and  occasional  srrwk- 
ers  needed.  Partfcipants  will  be  paid  up  to 
$395  for  four  visits.  Call  Rfchard  Olmstead  at 
310-312-0565,  leave  message 

SOLAR  ENERGY 
INVESTIGATORS 

Help  direct  many  flat  mirrors  at  various  ob- 
jects. Spectacular  displays?  High  tempera- 
ture physics  experiments  galore?  Transform 
deserts  into  gardens?  Soter  tunneling?  Pre- 
heat steel  lor  weWing?  Contact  Edward  Van- 
degrift  at  eddievanOpacbell.nel 

SUBJECTS  NEEDED  for  blood  samples 
$20  per  visit.  Culver  City,  lOmIn  to  UCLA, 
Reply:  paulpOcareside  com 

WOMEN  VOLUNTEERS  60+  w/kyphosis 
(forward  bending  of  spine)  needed  for  re- 
search program  investigating  whether  Yoga 
can  improve  kyphosis.  Study  being  conduct- 
ed by  Gail  Greendale.  MD  in  the  UCLA  Dept 
of  Medicine.  Please  call  310-794-9055 


230p 

f  Dot  lots:" 


If  you  are  male,  in  coHege  or  have  a  colfege 
degree,  you  can  eam  up  to  $600/mo,  can  (or 
details  on  our  anonynwus  sperm  donor  pro- 
gram Receive  free  comprehensive  health 
screening  &  help  infertile  couples.  So  If 
youre  kxjking  for  a  great  job  and  a  Httle  extra 
cash,  can  us  first.  310-624-9941. 


For  more  Information  call: 

West  Coast  Clinical  Research 

(818)  901-8546  ext.  113 


2600 

Wnntcrl 


ADOPTION 

Baby  is  our  dream.  We  can  provide  toveAse- 
cunty  All  expenses  paid  Attorney  involved 
evidential.  Cafl  GIna  &  Frank.  888-676- 
1995. 


3^00 

Coniputors/Softw.-ire 


COMPLETE  COMPUTER  SYSTEM- 
433MHz.lntel  Celron,64MB,6  4GB  CD- 
ROM,56k  bps,2USB  ports,W)n98  Wp'sui- 
te8.0,PS/2keyboard4mouse,  speakers 
BJC1000  cotor  printer,  Hitachi  SuperScari 
Monitor  17"+Xlra8.  OBO  $799.00.  323-294- 


3500 

Fiirnitijti; 


«^.  f^^  °*'^  w/attached  bookcase 
($75),  NIghtstand  ($25),  4  tires  ($50).  Mazda 
Car  radto  ($25)  or  best  offer!  Debbie  323- 
661-6450. 


/brSa/e 

2700-4500 


<  7 


indGx 


I  '^F^aec  qg)| 


Egg  Donors  Needed 

Healthy  females  ages  19-31 

wishing  to  help  infertile  couples. 

$5,000 

CAUMirna(818)832-  1494 


3000 


A  NEW  GOVERNMENT 

fang-lupus.com 


MATTRESSES!!! 

SEALY,  STEARNS  «  FOSTER  Also  fwin- 
8ets-$79  95,  Fulls-$99  95,  Queens-$139  95 
Kings-$199  95.  Queen  Plltowlops  $199  95 
Beacon  Open  7-day8.  1309  Westwood 
Blvd.  310-477-1466. 

PIER  1.  DOUBLE-SIZED  PAPASAN,  Rattan 
Loveeeat.  W  thick  state  blue  pMtow,  $200. 
Console  cherrywood  piano-Vose  Excellent 
condBkxi.  $2800.  310473-8911  momlnoa. 

WHOLESALE 
FURNITURE 

Sietgh  bwte.  RuMtc  pkw  fumNure.  vmokm 
ta;«t*».  UMher  M(M  A  chmm.  310-745- 


©ttench 


You  can  help  Quench  Hungerr^  in  North  America  today,  simply  by  ordering  EVIANmatural  Sprinfmter  . 
FERRARELLE®  Sparkling  Natural  Mineral  Water  with  your  /ne^/l******^  '^  ^ 

Forevery  1  Uter  glass  bottle  of  EVIAN  or  FERRARELLE  you  purchase  at  the  partner  rvs^nts  listed  below  during  October 
^nd  November  2000,  EVIAN&  FERRARELLE  will  contribute  a  portion  of  their  profits*  to  aid  hunger  relief  in  your  community. 
All  contributions  go  to  Share  Our  Strength,  one  of  the  nation's  leading  organizations  supporting  anti-hunger  and  anti- 
poverty  efforts.  So  please,  enjoy  EVIAN  &  FERRARELLE  at  these  participating  restaurants: 


W  Hotel 

930  Hilgard  Avenue 

Los  Angeles 

310-208-8765 

Rix 

1413  Fifth  Street 

Santa  Monica 

310-656-9688 

World  Cafe 

2820  Mam  Street 

Santa  Monica 

310-392-9140 


Chaya  Venice 
1 1 0  Navy  Street 

Venice 
310-396-1179 

Angels  American  Bistro 
636  Venice  Blvd. 

Venice 
310-827-5878 

Red  Rock  Bar  &  Eatery 

8782  West  Sunset  Blvd. 

West  Hollywood 

310-854-0710 


Fonz's  Restaurant 

1017  Manhattan  Ave. 

Manhattan  Beach 

310-376-1536 

Chaya  Brasserie 
8741  Alden  Drive 

Los  Angeles 
310-859-8833 

San  Gennaro  Cafe 

9543  Culver  Blvd. 

Culver  City 

310-836-0400 


James'  Beach 

60  North  Venice  Blvd. 

Venice 

310-823-5396 

Four  Seasons  Hotel 

300  S.  Doheny  Drive 

Los  Angeles 

310-273-2222 

Bicycle  Cafe 

12217  Wilshire  Blvd. 

West  Los  Angeles 

310-826-7831 


Tanino 

1043  Westwood  Blvd. 

Westwood 

310-208-0444 

Thai  House 

8657  W.  Pico  Blvd. 

Los  Angeles 

310-274-5492 

1 7th  Street  Cafe 

1610  Montana  Avenue 

Santa  Monica 

310-453-2771 


Le  Colonial 

8783  Beverly  Blvd. 

W.  Hollywood 

310-289-0660 

Cafe  Pierre 

317  Manhattan 

Beach  Blvd. 

Manhattan  Beach 

310-545-5262 


evian.com 


orage  profits  ppi  1  Liter  glass  bottle  sold  a!  p<irti(-(paf"ici  restaurant'' 


4   ,' 
•    \ 


^4       fridaj,  October  20, 2000 


Dlily  Bruin  Cbssified  . 


3^00 

Computers  /  Software 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


Memory 
Upgrades 

PC,  MAC,  Notebook 

Wholesale 
to  the 


2200 

Research  Subjects 


»;'■ 


Allergy  Sufferers 


.  .■yyrt'■<■^^<^^y£ikM^f^. 


Oran 


^'«  y^u  of  Japanese  Descent? 

^«  your  allergies  make  your  eyes  RED  and  ITCMY? 

We  are  seeking  people  who  are  allergic  to  tree,  grass,  ragweed,  cat.  pollen  or  dust  or  models  If  you 
suffer  from  allergic  symptoms  to  one  or  more  or  these  allergens,  you  may  be  eligible  to  par^cipate 
*  -    -  '"  upcoming  allergy  research  studies  for  anti-allergic  eye-drops. 

Be^nre^  orpartlc*.a«bn^  .-.^jl^ff^^-^-You  a,ay  „ua,lty  U you: 


r:i 


Tel:(31 0)649-4141 
www.bigorangetech.com 


•  Free  study  related  eye 
examination 

•  Financial  compensation 


For  mote  Information  call: 

Jonathan  Macy,  M.D, 
310'6S7'2777 


•  Are  in  good  health,  and, 

•  Are  of  Japanese  descent 

•Get  RED,  ITCHY  EYES  from  tree, 
grass,  cat  pollens,  mold  or  dust. 


3800 

Miscellaneous 


GREEN  CARD 
LOTTERY 

55,000  Visas  awarded.  $40  for  attorney  pre- 
pared application.  Jorin  Manley,  Esq.  12304 
Santa  Monica  Blvd.  #300  LA,  CA  90025 
310-820-7553.  Deadline:  10/30/00. 


Pets 


2  CATS  FREE  to  good  home.  Beautiful,  fun, 
playful.  Moving,  must  go  together.  310-209- 
3377. 


AsIc  about  our  referral  program 

Compensation  is  available  for  every  person  you  refer  who  completes  one  of 

our  studies. 
-4sAf  for  details 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1996  FORD  ASPIRE  71500fni ,  auto,  a/c, 
airtjag,  red,  excellent  condition,  $2450  otx)! 
Leaving  Country.  Call  Andras  310-825-4585 
or  after  6pm  310-208-4345. 


^300 

Sports  Equipment 


UNUSED,  1  STATIONARY  BIKE,  white.  $50: 
1  black  CardioFit  w/  digital  display  Dual  re- 
sistance, full  body  workout,  $200.  310-473- 
8911  mornings. 


GOVT  AUCTIONS 

AQUIRE  THE  SKILLS  to  buy  autos,  boats, 
furniture,  etc  for  pennies  on  the  dollar  at 
auctions.  310-493-9675 

MOVING-  MUST  SELL 

1990  JEEP  CHEROKEE  LAREDO,  4wd, 
auto,  A/C,  CD  player,  rod-grey,  great  condi- 
tion Sell  for  $4200.  310-473-1214  or  310- 
993-7836 


6300 

Legal  Advice/Attorneys 


LEGAL  PROTECTION 

EARN$$$.  Pre-pakJ  legal  plan  to  protect 
yourself.  $25/month  membership  throughout 
the  US  and  Canada.  SUR033©hot- 
mail.com,  213-841-5704.  www.ppisi  com  1- 
800-654-7757. 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


GUITAR  LESSONS 

by  professional  near  UCLA.  All  levels,  guitars 
available  Learn  to  play  effortlessly! 
www.JWGS.com  Call  Jean  at  310-476- 
4154. 


Stereos/TVs/Radios 


45/  33  1/3  PANASONIC  STEREO.  Turnt- 
able, AM/FM,  Cassette  player,  2  speakers. 
Rarely  used,  excellent  condition,  $250.  310- 
473-8911  mornings. 


POLICE  IMPOUNDS  Cars  as  low  as  $500 
for  listings  1-800-319-3323  ext.A214. 

TWO  VERY  NICE  CARS.  Under  book. 
Under  72K  miles.  1994  Mercury  Capri 
Convertable.  $4500  1994  Cadillac  El 
Dorado  $14,000.  323-293-4009 


5900 

Financial  Aid 


LOANS  AVAILABLE 

Low  application  fees,  high  approval  rate,  tow 
interest  rate,  all  applicants  wakxtme  Call 
toll-free:  1  -866-427-2677. 


NO  RECOVERY  NO  FEE 

NO  COST  Sexual  harrassment,  Discrimina- 
tton.  Auto-accidents.  Slips/falls.  MYER  LAW 
FIRM,  Westside,  Scott  D.  Myer(lx:LAW86) 
wwwbestlawyer.com  310-277-3000. 


JVC  STEREO  SYSTEM  w/cabinel  and  2 
speakers.  36in  tall.  AM/FM,  CD,  dual  cas- 
sette, tum  table  Great  condition  $450  310- 
477-0809 


A AA AAw^ 


VW  CABRIOLET  Convenible  1990 
84000mi,  good  condition,  power  windows, 
Wack,  A/C,  registration  paid  for  one  year 
$4000.  Call  Vicente  310-398-4123  or  email 
jcontrerOucla.edu 


51 OO 

Motorcycies  for  Sale 


1981  HONDA  900  SPORT-$  1000.00  &  1998 
SUZUKI  800  INTRUDER,  showroom  condi- 
tion. Like  new  under  4200  miles-$5500  00 
Call  after  6pm  323-293-4009. 

1999  DUCATI  Monster  900  Dark.  Low  m^ 
runs  and  looks  new.  $7500.  310-701-1811 


transportation 

4600-5500 


^900 

Autos  for  Sale 


1988  MARK  VII  Designer  edition,  brown, 
running  condition.  Asking  $1800  310-209- 
0267. 


1988  TOYOTA  CELICA  GTS  Power  sunroof 
AC,  cruise,  autolock  alarm,  5speed  sttok 
sound-system  new  battery  Excellent  engine 
$2400obo  Call  Jay:310-839-7654. 

1991  NISSAN  SENTRA  SER  "Pocket  Rock- 
et" New  shocks,  tires,  battery,  windshield, 
brakes.  Excellent  condition.  $3600  Roger 
310-206-2837(0),  310-275-3107(E) 

1991  NISSAN  SENTRA  XE,  4  doors,  5- 
speed  16  valyes.  A/C.  stereo,  cnjise  control 
$3300.  310-473-1214 


5200 

Parking 


PARKING  NEEDED 

On/near  campus.  Will  pay  monthly/quarterly 
Please  call:310-666-7783.  Email:  circo2- 
lauOhotmail.com 


5300 

Scooter/Cycle  Repair 


SCOOTER  4-SALE 

•86  HONDA  ELITE  150  mns  great  restored 
engine  $850  obo  Please  call  310-387- 
8266. 


STUDENT  LOANS 

Get  your  Stafford  Loan  from  University  Cred- 
it Unk)n  (Lender  Code  832123).  Were  on 
campus  at  Ackennan  A-level.  310-477-6628; 
www.ucu.org 


61  OO 

Computer/Internet 


FREE  WEBSITE!!! 

YOUR  OWN  5-page  website  ABSOLUTELY 
FREE.  Easy,  fast,  quality  NO  banner  ads  to 
watch!  http://eengen.go.coolebiz.net 

M4M-LA.COM  LA's  gay  date  site.  Photo  ads 
of  Local  Men/Chat.  STUDENT  SPECIAL:  3 
MONTHS  $3.  Enter  Registration  code  6729 

WANTED!  Internet  savvy  programmer  /Vbili- 
ty  to  host  web  sites  and  search  engine  place- 
ment skills.  818-873-4767  pager 


6200 

Health  Services 


MASSAGE  by  friendly  guy  Take  a  break  and 
enjoy  complete  relaxation  $25/hr,  will  travel, 
women  only  please.  310-996-1153,  or  page 
310-775-6588. 


PREPAID  LEGAL 

SERVICES 

WESTSIDE  ATTORNEY  PARTICIPANT  in 
several  pre-paid  legal  servrce  programs 
provkJing  quality  legal  servtees  to  plan  mem- 
bers. Roben  Moss(UCLAW71).;310-260- 
.7650. 


6UOO 

Movers/Storacje 


BEST  MOVERS 

No  job  too  small.  5-piece  special  $102.  Two 
24-loot  trucks  fully  equipped  for  large  nnoves 
Call  24/7.  Available  on  short  notrce.  License 
T163844.  800-2GO-BEST  (800-2462378. ) 

HONEST  MAN  w/l4ft  truck  and  dollies, 
small  jobs,  short  notfce  ok.  SF,  LV.  SD. 
Student  discount.  Go  Bruins!  10th  yr  310- 
285-8688. 

JERRYS  MOVING4DELIVERY  T^e  careful 
movers.  Expflrienced,  reHabto,  same-day  de- 
livery. Packing,  boxes  available  Also,  pick- 
up donattons  for  American  Cancer  Society 
JerryO310-391-5657. 


6600 

Personal  Services 


Joelle  Jacobson,  MARRIAGE/FAMILY 
THERAPIST  intern  (IMF37582)  Call  310- 
797-2243  Specializes  in  teenagers  and 
young  adults.  Supen/ized  by  Serena  Brooks, 
licensed  Marriage/Family  Therapist 
(MFC30534). 


6700 

Professional  Services 


A  FREE  SESSION 

PSYCHOTHERAPY/COUNSELING  lor  de- 
presswn,  anxiety,  obsesstons,  post-fraumat- 
fc  stress,etc.  Couples/Individuals  Crime  vfc- 
tims  may  be  eligible  tor  free  treatment  Call 
Liz  Gouk)(MFC#32388)«310-578-5957  to 
schedule  free  consultation 

ATTENTION  MBA.  LAW,  MEDICAL 
SCHOOL  APPLICANTS!  Fnjstrated  devel- 
oping your  crucial  personal  statements?  Get 
professional  help  from  well-known  au- 
thor/consultant 310-826-4445.  www.  winning- 
personstatemenl.com. 


1993  GEO  STORM,  black  exterior,  gray  inte- 
rior, 66K  miles,  one  owner,  runs  great!  $4000 
obo  310-836-8163 


O  O  O  Q  O  O 


MASSAGE 

TREAT  YOURSELF  to  a  relaxing  Swed- 
ish/Deep Tissue  Massage  $40/hr  w/student 
ID.  Monday-Friday  I0am-8pm.  Maxine  CMT 
310-575-6294.  Gift  Certltteates  available 


6500 

Music  Lessons 


DRUM  LESSONS 

AU  LEVELS/STYLES  with  dedteated  pro- 
fessional. At  your  home  or  WLA  studio  1st- 
lesson  free  No  drum  set  necessary 
Neil:323-654-8226. 


6200 

He.ilih  Services 


1994  GEO  PRISM  Original  owner.  Auto.  air. 
airbags  Well  maintained  70,000  miles  Blue 
book  $6510,  asking  $5000  obo  310-478- 
8400  l_cutlerO  yahoo  com 

1995  FORD  PROBE  SE  Auto,  air  at«nn 
PS,  PV,  PW  $5900  Great  conditksn  310- 
244-3283  or  818-877-6990. 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


travel 

5600-5720 


CREATIVE  EXPERTISE 

PERSONAL 

STATEMENTS, 

RESUMES 

COVER  LETTERS 

Wnting,  editing,  dissertation  formatting,  tran- 
scriljing  Personalized,  professional  assis- 
lance.  Ace  Words.Etc  310-820-8830. 

SERRANO'S  CLEANING  SERVICES.  Busi- 
ness Lteense  Years  of  experience.  Afford- 
able prte«8.  Offices,  apartments,  coodomini- 
um»,  houses  Cleaning,  Laundry  etc.  Maha 
310-836-7258  310-655-3664 


6200 

Health  Services 


COMPLIMENTARY  CONSULTATION  (f^BracV^ 

®'*JU9P9!^I!ST     «^  %.»       _■  \^ln>*rRmii<ml  Results  y 


3SL  Dr.  Nader  Dayani 

Member  American  Association  of  Orthodontists 

Specializing  In  braces  for  adults  &  children 


^LQecy^ 


•(■'  >  STI  ■ 


•  Cosmetk:  Porcetain 
•  Surgteal  Ortryxlonltcs 

•  f?erriovabks 

•  Trodmonol 
•InvWble 

•European 


(310)  826  -  7494 

IIMSWilihinllM  mm 
Ui  Anitkt.  CA  snn25 

(949)  552  -  5890 

miM  Cuhftr  Dr..  U 
lr\in«.  C*  «7IS 


Teeth  Whitening  $81^00 

upper  or  lower  ^^        ^^  \J  kJ 


Kka  nam  *m  MW  •w«i  • 


Displny 
206-3060 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


7100 

Tutoring  Wanted 


7200 

Typing 


WORD  PROCESSING  specializing  in  thes- 
es, dissertations,  transcription,  resunies,  fli- 
ers, brochures,  mailing  lists,  reports.  Santa 
Monica,  310-828-6939.  Hollywood,  323-466- 
2888. 


7300 

Wilting  Help 


THE  WRITE  WORDS 

SIMPLY  AND  CLEALRY  express  your  ideas 
Papers,  ttiesis.  personal  statements.  Bryan 
310-451-9207. 


rsT 


- 


— employment 

7400-8300 


7400 

Business  Opportunities 


A  e-FIGURE  INCOME  by  2002?  Its  possi- 
ble. Invest  $35.  Refundable.  No  Risk 
htlp://2ibgib.conVphanya.  213-739-0994  Ask 
lor  Stephar>ie. 

BURNED  OUT? 

Tired  of  misleading  ads?  I'm  tired  of  clueless 
people  Want  to  make  $5000-$8000/mo? 
Beverly  IHiHs  offk:e  expk>ding  Call  m^:  310- 
268-1515. 

COLLEGE  ACHIEVERS 

Ground  fkx>r  company.  Southern  California 
market  exploding.  Want  to  make  $5- 
BK/month?  I'll  teach  you  how  FT/PT.  Call 
310-360-6994  9am- 1pm. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


GET  AN  'A'  on  your  health  testlll  Detoxify 
your  system  fast  or  double  your  $$  backltl 
Ckll  toll  free  877-696-4541  extUCIOO. 
wwwfaroulpromotions.com 

I  LEGAL  ASSISTANT 

GrMt  opportunity  for  winter  grads*  Beverly 
l-lil^  Law  office  seeks  enthusiastk:  graduate 
for  entry  level  legal  position  Great  opportun- 
ity with  growth  potential.  Office  experience 
helpful.  Computer  skills  (Windows  98/Word) 
required.  M-F  830-530  Great  benefits, 
competitive  salary.  Fax  resume  310-550- 
8771,  Attn:  Lily 


7500 

Career  Opportiitiities 


P/T  OR  CAREER 
OPPORTUNITY! 

Private  tutors/instructors  for  K-12  and  Edu- 
cational Consultants  lor  college  admissions 
services.  Seeking  Undergraduales-PhO's. 
Experience  preferred,  strong  communica- 
tions skills  required.  Future  Youth  Inc./Mind- 
Life  Consulting  Group  310-234-3330  or  Fax 
resumes  to  310-234-3329. 

TUTOR 

TUTOR  FOR  7th  and  10th  graders.  Pacific 
Palisades.  $l5/hr  Approx  15-20hrs/wk.  Es- 
pecially science,  math,  English.  818-560- 
3211  or  310-454-1418. 

TUTOR  WANTED  lor  4th  grade  boy.  Bilin- 
gual (French-English)  American  preferred. 
3times/wk  for  2  hours.  Must  have  own  car 
Bel-air.  310-471-0032  or  dbtwenty4sev- 
enOaol.com 

TUTOR-  14  yo.  boy  Keep  kids  organized 
and  up-to-date  on  schoolworlt.  2-3hrs/day  2- 
4  days/week.  Must  have  car.  Bel  Air.  $8- 
10/hr.  310-471-1363/310-420-4420. 

TUTOR/DRIVER  lor  11  6year  girl.  Wed  & 
Thurs,  3:30-5:30pm.  $10/hr.  Near6year  Call 
Ian  310-477-7541. 


STOCK  BROKER  Lteenses  and  Internet 
Trading  seminars,  21777  Ventura  Blvd.  Suite 
216,  Woodland  Hills,  CA  Instructor:  David 
Shu  (Master  Degree,  Harvard  University) 
818-703-8889. 

THERAPEUTIC  AID  for  auUstic  chiWren. 
P/T,F/T  (flexible).  $12-15/hr.  BS/BA  Psychol- 
ogy preferred.  Experience  w/DT,  behavior 
modification  Contact  818-788-2388,  fax  re- 
sume 818-788-3875. 

WANTED!  Internet  Savvy  Programmer.  Abil- 
ity to  host  web  sites  and  search  engine 
placement  skills.  818-873-4767  pager. 


PRO  CHOICE 

MODERATE 

REPUBLICAN 

Job,        Internship,        and        Campaign 
Opportunities.  Call  310-422-7507  rym.org 


7600 

Child  Care  Olfered 


$$$  LOW  PRICES  $$$ 

WONDER  YEARS  PRESCHOOL  run  by 
UCLA  grads.  Ages2  5/6years.  Two  large 
play-yards.  Open  7:30-5:30.Close  to  UCLA 
310-473-0772 


6700 

Professional  Services 


TALENTED  ACTORS  WANTED  Non- 
UniorVUnion.  For  current  fall  season  and 
beyond.  Call  "Sarah  or  Marguax  at  PMG 
Management  in  Westwood.  310-208-0464. 

TERM  PAPER  BLUES? 

Experienced  writing  and  research  assistant. 
Professional  help  available  to  you  24 
hours/day  1-888-774-9994.  www.abcpa- 
pers.com 

WRITERS  REPAIR 

Editing,  outlining,  research,  and  production 
assistance  for  academk:  or  professional  writ- 
ing. Experienced  writing  instructor.  Harvard 
Unlveristy  MA.  Jon/310-367-5666 


BEAR'S  RESEARCH, 
WRITING  &  EDITING 

Comprehensive  Dissertation  Assistance 
Theses.  Papers,  and  Personal  Statemenis 

Proposals  and  Books 

International  Students  Welcome.  Since  1985 

Sharon  Bear,  Ph.D.  (310)  470-6662 

www.Bear-Write.com 


7700 

Child  Care  Wanted 


AFTERNOON  CHILDCARE  wanted  lor  11- 
yr-okJ  girl  and  6-yr-oW  boy  Driving  home 
from  scfKK)!  or  to  after  school  activities  Help 
with  homework  and  light  housekeeping 
Must  have  reliable  car  with  insurance.  M-F  2- 
6pm.  $10/hr  approx.  Call  310-273-9160, 
email  vucetic9ucla.edu 

BABYSITTER.  Occaskxial  rteed  lor  5  yr-oW 
gtrl  (and  labrador)  in  the  hills  od  Beverly 
Glen.  Car  and  references  required.  818-981- 
1834. 

BABYSITTERH-UTOR 

for  girls,  13&9  y/o.  Help  w/HW  in  BH  home 
Car  provided  lor  min  driving.  Must  be  UCLA 
student  w/good  driving  record,  relerences 
$11/hr  310-820-6700x4. 

CHILCAREAJRIVER.  Mon/Tues,  3-7:30pm, 
5  year-oW-t)oy  pick-up  from  school  to  activi- 
ties and  home,  supervise  HW  and  play  Care 
for  2  year-oW  brother  for  1  hr.  Good  driver 
References  Good  pay  Westwood  310-475- 
1953. 

CHILD  CARE  Wanted  Tues  3-8,  Thurs  3-6 
AND/OR  Sat  12-9  in  Santa  Monica. 
Someone  to  help  full  time  Mom  w/  kids  ages 
4,6,10.  Must  have  experience.  (k)od  pay 
Call  Doug  310-888-0163.  Fax  310-451- 
6050. 

FULL  CHARGE 
MOTHER'S  HELPER 

PART-TIME.  Tuesdays  and  Thursdays  4- 
8:30,  some  Saturdays,  8-1,  or  5-10.  Experi- 
enced to  help  busy  mom  with  kkls  and 
household  duties  Homewort<  help,  play  with 
kids,  prepare  snacks  and  dinner  Tidying  up, 
some  driving,  and  all-around  nwther's  helper 
and  right  hand  Needs  car.  $10/hour.  310- 
285-0099 


7000 

Tutoring  Offered 


ACADEMIC  TUTOR.  Chemistry,  math,  and 
science.  Flexit)le  hours.  Competitive  rates 
high  school  to  graduate  school,  MCAT 
Please  call  310-573-2284. 

BOND  TUTORING 

All  subjects  6-1 2th  grade.  All  our  tutors  have 
college  degrees  We  will  meet  your  individu- 
al needs.3 10-47 1-7628. 

EXPERIENCED  TUTOR 

PERSONABLE  TUTOR  that  will  get  results 
Catch  up  or  get  ahead  this  fall.  Seven-years 
experience.  SAT/Calculus/Physics/Chemis- 
try/Algebra/Geon>etry/French/English.  Call 
Will  310-701-8969. 

FRENCH  TUTOR 

PHD  GRADUATE  tutors  French  language  for 
all  levels  beginning,  advanced  and  conver- 
sational French.  Excellent  service  arxl  rates. 
CaK  Li2a:310-575-3874. 

INTERVIEW  TUTOR 

Worried  about  Med  School  interviews? 
Former  admissions  interviewer  will  improve 
your  skills  and  improve  your  chances.  Dan 
310-209-9124. 


I   *   ■   «   «   ■  * 


.coming 
week 

check  your  newsstands. 


PSYCH  TUTORING  AVAILABLE.  Masters  in 
psychology  $10/hr.  will  travel  310-996- 
1 1 53.  or  page  3 1 0-775-6588 . 

THE  WRITER'S  COACH 

FORMER  UCLA  professor  offers  tutoring, 
term  paper  assistance.  English.  Social  Sci- 
ence, History.  Foreign  Students  Wekx)me. 
Call:310-452-2865 
www  thewriterscoach.com 

WRITING  TUTOR 

KIND  AND  PATIENT  Stanford  graduate. 
Help  with  the  English  language— lor  stud- 
ents of  all  ages/levels.  310-440-3118. 

WWW.MY-TUTOR  COM  Math/Physk:s/Sta- 
tistics/English/Hebrew/chemistry/biotogy/as- 
tronomy/  Computer  programming  Compu- 
terized statistical  analysis  available  Tutoring 
service.  Call  anytime  80O-90-TUTOR. 


7100 

Tiilofing  Wanted 


BEHAVIOR  THERAPIST 
NEEDED 

for  smart,  fun  little  boy  with  autism  who  likes 
numbers,  animals,  drawing  trwvies  and  the 
par1<.  Wort<  on  speech,  play  and  beginning 
academes.  Prerequisites=  Phsyc  170A  &  B, 
Reliability,  energy  and  patience.  Freeway 
ctose,  only  ten  miles  from  UCLA.  Pay  $15/hr 
and  up  DOE.  Must  be  available  Wl-4  and  3 
hours  most  Sundays  Call  Barbara  818-760- 
7040. 


ENGLISH  TUTOR  FOR  A  7th  grade  student. 
In  Bel-Air  area.  $15-20/hr.  310-472-7852. 


7500 

Career  Opportunities 


GERMAN  NATIVE 

To  tutor  young  boy  in  German  once/wk  (pre- 
ferably male).  Ventee  310-392-4974 


Harbor-UCLA  medical  Center,  Department  of  Orthopaedic  Surgery 
Researcti  Coordinator  Job  Description 


MATH  TUTOR  NEEDED  for  11th  grade  high 
school  student.  Weekdays  and  weekends 
Please  call  310-600-4109 


NrpM:  Tta  pwvMi  •(  IM  poaMM  It  ti  fMWtM  MM  rnMrak  praiMl*  •(  tta  Or1lMM«tf  ic 

fa«NNar  »M  OMWirtws  (MacMMk  M«  PC),  hilvwM  III  ■  ralatad  fMd,  and  wiMil  to 
ommnN  M  tant  a  |Mr  M  MM  PmNImi. 

DMIm:  Tke  DoMts  o(  IMS  poMioa  iMlNda,  kirt  an  Mt  HmlM  ta,  teHy  iipliMp  e(  nwnri  data 
batat,  worWiia  oa  variMn  rMoarek  praleott  iNdiidtag  Ikt  rwiawtag  of  Gliartt  and  X-ray  INat, 

odtooaiidciMcalMall. 

CaKfHmemtrllmm»MS1tMZtn§ 

MATH,  CHEMISTRY  FRENCH,  AND  SAT 
PREP  tutors  wanted.  Must  have  own  car 
Aritoulate,no  experience  required  SM,  BH 
CC.  $15/hr.  310-679-21 33. 

NEED  COLLEGE  LEVEL  ALGEBRA  2  TU- 
TOR asap  Must  have  own  car  Mid-Wilshire 
area  or  SMCC.  $20/hr  323-857-0540  or  213- 
703-6141. 


Believe.  Q 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Friday,  October  20, 2000       25 


Got  a  health  question? 
Need  an  appointment? 

E-mail  the  Ashe  Center  and  they'll 

fix  you  right  up  by  e-mailing  you 

back  with  answers  and  appointment 

time  suggestions  www.saonet. 

ucla.edu/health.hfm 

It's  a  service  that  is  part  of  the  health 

care  you've  already  paid  for. 

ucia  Ashe  Center 


TODAY'S 
CROSSWORD  PU77I F 


ACROSS 

1   Iron  or  copper 
6  Genuine 
10  Coffee,  slanglly 

14  "Good  night"  girl 

15  Tfie  Mammoth 
Hunters"  heroine 

16  Flying  saucers: 
abbr. 

17  Tropical  vine 

18  Eye  part 

19  Guys'  partners 

20  Kind  of  stand 

22  Wading  bird 

23  Longings 

24  Satiate 

26  Cactus  habitat 
29  Squabbled 

33  Untamed 

34  Shopping  — 

36  Ramble  around 

37  Nabokov  girl 

38  Long  lime 

39  Plead 

40  Races  the 
engine  of 

42  Hotel  employees 

44  Greek  goddess 

45  Sky  diver's 
maneuver 

47  Breakfast 
breads 

49  Casual  shirts 

50  Actor  James  — 
Jones 

51  Kind  of  force 
54  Red  bird 

58  Roundup 
gear 

59  Sulk 

61  Black 

62  Lotion 
ingredient 

63  Rabbit's 
cousin 

64  Coin  of  India 

65  Sawbucks 

66  Roman  road 

67  One-pot 
dinners 


PREVIOUS  PUZZLE  SOLVED 


ISICIOIPIEISI 


ITISIUINIAIMI  I 


SSBlOQIiBBlSIl    aQBISia 
SDQ    SBOS       (SDOliS 

□mas  Quasci  gjanra 


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Id 

720  98 


DOWN 

1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
6 
7 


Factory 
Buffalo  s  lake 
Cubs  or  Reds 
Ticked  off 
Thinner 
Forays 
"Jane  — " 

8  Muhammad  — 

9  —  Vegas 

10  Medieval 
entertainer 

1 1  From  a 
distance 

12  Mouse  cousin 

13  Helper  abbr 

21  Picnic  pests 

22  Animal  with 
antlers 

24  Demon 

25  Type  of  cube 

26  Grumpy  or  Doc 

27  Duck  pnzed  for 
its  down 

28  Work  very  hard 

29  Gnll 

30  Loose 


garments 

31  Tennis  champ 
Chris  — 

32  Painter  of 
ballennas 

35  Chimes 

41  Sofas 

42  Daisy  — 

43  Leading  player 

44  Flatfish 
46  Lawyer's 

charge 
48  Selects  from 
the  menu 

50  Cafe  customer 

51  Naughty  kid 

52  Movie  part 

53  On  top  of 

54  Heal 

55  "Nothin"  doinT 

56  Afresh 

57  Soap-making 
ingredients 

59  Upsilon's 
follower 

60  Cereal 
grain 


Display 


j:^ 


26       Friday,  October  20, 2000 


:.»■-♦-. 


Daily  Bruin  Cbssificd 


ip*"""*""**" 


rtofXicor's 
Transformation 

Join  the  enthusiastic  team  that  is  f-r 

transforming  Xicor  into  a  fabless,  X 
analog/mixed  signal  supplier 

of  semiconductors!       vi:  - 

n,v«.  s  management  team  has  seta  strategic  course  of  direction  focusing  on 
new  proprietary  products  for  high  growth  marlcets  in  the  analog  and  mixed- 
signal  arenas.  This  transformation  includes  completing  the  transition  to  out- 
sourced manufecturing.  We  are  looking  for  bright,  enthusiastic  team  players 
to  join  us. 

Xicor  pioneered  advanced,  elearically  programnwble  mhred  signal  proAjcts 
that  power  today's  advanced  electronic  sytems.  The  cell  phone  you  use,  the 
computer  on  your  desktop,  your  car  all  contain  products  likely  made  by  Xicor. 

With  analog  and  mixed  signal  technologies  taking  center  stage  in  Xicor's 
:egy  for  the  new  millennium,  we  need  talented  professionals  as  we 
ind  our  horizons  and  cultivate  new  market  potential.  Come  join  our  team 
help  us  make  this  transformation. 

Please  join  us  for  an  infonnation  Session, 

1 0/25, 6-8  pm  at  the  Career  Center. 

We  will  be  interviewing  on  campus, 

11/13  at  the  Career  Center. 


-Ma3ffipace  of  salclen^to-stu^t  deals  <J 

^T!llTtl«'  ^'""^^  "^  P'"''  '*™*"  '^^'^^  P™^  I*™'"  ''^^'  =>  P'^'**'^^  «"*"«='  i^  able  to  advertise 
absolutely  FREE*  sorne  of  the  best  deals  in  yiteftvocxl  Check  weekly  for  updates  so  )«u  ^^^^ 


Hem 


Description 


Price 


Phone 


13!TV 

2  DRESSES 


bmndneNn 


4ASST.surrc/teF.<; 
4SmTCASE^Ayrr 
ACCTG  SQETWARF 
ALARM  CLOCK 


8Z9/10-frml/«tfrml 

Shouktef  bag  alt  fnr 

sites^houkjer  bao-all 


-S5. 


310-204-343g 


new  2001  peachtnaft 


artVfrn/buzzflf.dia.  dlap  jio 


V^^  818^<0&-893B 

-$15 310-829-1568 

-fiS 310-83»4192 

ISO 310-927-3499 


nvrwom.size8vwT¥iy  ■        as 


center  unit  avocado  g^< 
entrtmnt  ctr/avocacto 


BIRKENSTOCK  CLQG5? 
BOOK  CASE/ENT. 
BCXJKCASE  DECOR- 
CAKE  HOLDER 

CASSETTE  PLAYER 

CLASICS2Q 

CLUTCHES  ADJUST 

COFFEETABtF 

COMPUTER  SOFTWARE  sun-solarls  .syv  »7 

COURSE  READER  hist  i  'yih  ^1199 

CRUTCHES  AH  l^ill 

DESK 


310^12-246S 


J46_ 


310-21^5471 


can-jer.dear  top 
aiarm  ctqck.  radin 
cxxirse  reader 


Jfe. 


310-83&419& 


310^829-1568 


-ilfi. 


310-313-3538 


aluminum  very  nirifl SIS 

glass,  dk  brown  wopd CO 


310-267-9117 


31040^419? 
3t0^4SflSa9 


DESK  

DESK      

ETHERNET  CARD 
ETHERNET  Pp  pAPn 
FILE  CABINET 


adJustabte.S'lO'-ge' 
laroe  comer 


small  wood 


-$5Q 310^12-2486 

-HZ 310-63^4192 

310470-1503 


JESL 


wood.w/ keyboard  tray 

10^100  Lan  cam 

mac  DCDcmda 


310-206^108 


XICOR 

Xicof,lnc 
1511  Buckeye  Drive 
Milpitas,CA  95035 


FOAM  CAMPING  PAD 
FOAM  PADS  CAMPING 
FRENCH  VIDEO 

FUTON 

GLASS  TOPTABtf 
GRAPHINQ  CALC 
GUCCI  PURf^F 


soMoak 


310^92-8382 
310-9g7-34g^ 


one  eca  crate  sine  blh 


-&L 


eoQCiateairTcteboth 
Scorsese  'Pyrote  Noon' 
blk  tri-ooM.  S4-W 


_$1(L 


310-901-7559 
310-204-343? 


.Ufi. 


310629-1568 


310^29-1568 


cream  rod  iron  base 

tie7 


JSS. 


-EL 


310474-5419 
310479-1980 


HALOGEN  LAMP 


ahoukiefbag 


J4L 


310-83^8183 


"  ( 


Xicor  offers  competitive  __^,^,„^, . 
benefits  packages.  Visit  <H|W^^"at 
www.xicor.com  for  inforrref"" "" 
job  opportunities. 

Xicor  is  proud  to  be  an 
and  affirmative  action  empi 


HOOVER  VACUUM 
HUMAN  ANATQMV 
LAMP  HALOGEN  P91F 

LQVESEAI 

METAL  CABINETS 
MGMTIA/BTEXT 

MICROSCOPE 

MICROWAVF 


black,  almost  rw^ 
UDftaht  work?  fln^ 


-SL 


310624-1038 


-S_ 


310474-5419 


'/...'i 


bvMarieb2nded 


J^ 


dimmer  switch  Good 


S70 


31^459-1271 
310^29-1.568 


redininQ!75 


JSL 


bteck38hxl6d»ii 
new 


-IS. 


31^824-227? 
310-829-15^ 


_fm. 


wanted  wofkjnq 


JSL 


mfefowave 


N/A 


310444^948 
310-208^058 
310^66-14^ 


oe.  whrte.  domi  yi^y 


MINI-FRIDGE 

MOTORCYCLE  HELMFT   ^?^|.fulHaai 
NEUROSCIEMCE  hyP^,n^ 

OFFICE  CHAIR great  swivel  chair 

OREGON  STATE  TiY 
PEARL  JAM  TIX 


_IK_ 


310^15-1568 


Jm. 


310-474-5419 


310644OS71 


310-312-246$ 


8<"dantaacliQn 


ML 


310-824-227^ 
3105S96122 


POLE  LAMP  HA'.W™ 

QUEBIMAITRESS. 

SHOES 


^ SKXa^OTDI 

wndteOOlQCZS^hvahj  gea  .?iO-ggi.^^^ 

"  "'^'^  3100^419? 

310429^924 


■  .     1.'  •    nj 

f   I    I J  I  'li  1 1  ii 


tOfCh-dimmar  ffwiiyt^ 

saangsL 


-fiO. 


SLEEPlNQBAfi 
SPRINT  PHpNt^ 
TEXTBOOKS 


310468-1271 


jkoLxDode. 


momtlalbrw^^y^f. 


310474-541? 
310-624-1038 


i ,-  •. 


TYPEWRITER  FIFO »nlh  «.»,,  nnnH 

VACUUM  UPRIGHT  hryygr^ 


310-312-246?^ 


31063841fli? 


310629-1SW 


7700 

Cliild  C.-ire  Warjleri 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

P/T  MOTHERS  HELPER  NEEDED.  M-F, 
3pm-7:30pm.  Drivers  license,  but  car  not  a 
necessity.  HarxxxA  Park.  323-934-3572. 

P/T  FULL  HOUSE  CLEANING.  CDL,  chiW- 
care.  Must  be  able  to  stay  overnight  on  occa- 
sions. Ligrit  cooking.  MWF  l-epm.  Must  be 
flexible  323-370-2413. 

PT  BABYSITTER  Desperatety  wanted  for 
evenings^»eekends  Must  be  responsible, 
have  common  sense,  references  and  a  car 
Call  310-838-8065  or  buzheeguf10aof.com. 

SPANISH  SPEAKING  CAREGIVER  needed 
to  pick-up  chiWren  from  school  and  tutor 
Spanish.  School  and  residence  within  bkxks 
of  UCLA.  1-2hrs/day,  4days^vk.  $l2/hr.  310- 
208-6865  or  310-825-2556 


STUDENT  NEEDED 

3-4  days,  4-7pm.  Must  have  own  car  Walk- 
ing distance  to  UCLA.  $8/hr  Drive  chikJren, 
help  w/homework.  Non-smoker.  310-470- 
0021 


To  place  a  I 

ad  in  the  Bruin 

Bargains,  fill  out 

information  on  the  right 

and  submit  to  the  Daily 

Bruin  Classifieds. 


•  Ilein: 

(15  duraden  maximum,  including  spaces) 
•Description: 

(20  diaracten  maximum,  including  ^noes) 
•Price: ;.;.-'^A., 

(example  $25,  t74ea,  FREE.  Please  round  to  the  nearest  dollar— NO  OBO) 
•Phone:  ( ) . 


I 
I 

.J 


WATCH  MOVIES  AND  STUDY  Babysitter 
needed  Flexible  hours  Weeknights  and'or 
weekends  BH  family.  CDL.  Fax  resume  323- 
957-9762. 


Get  it. 


Monday,  October  30th 

to  advertise  call  3IO.825.2l6l 


Classifieds 
825-2221 


Dining 

FOR  PEOPLE  WHO  LOVE  FOOD /^T  TTT^r; 


UCLA 

DAILY 

BRUIN 


Eat, 
Drink, 
& 
A(Jvertise. 


To  advertise  call:  310.825.2l6l 

Deadline:  May  8,  2000  at  12  noon 
Publication:  May  19,  2000 


Display 
206-3060 


Da»y  Bruin  Cbssjfied 


7800 

H»;lp  W.iiit(!il 


$l5-$23/HR  BRIGHT,  ENTHUSIASTIC  peo- 
ple to  teach  SAT  prep  and  ALL  Academe 
Suts^ects.  Transportatk)n  required.  We  will 
train.  Flexible  hours.  Send  or  fax  cover  let- 
ter/resume, including  test  scores  (SAT,  GRE, 
etc.)  to  ACE  Educational  Sennces,  AttnrBar- 
ly,  9911  W.  Pk:o  Blvd.  Ste.1025.  LA.  CA 
90035:  Fax:310-282-6424.  Posittons  avail- 
able  throughout  LA  and  the  Valley. 

$1500  weekly  potential  mailing  our  circulars. 
No  experience  required.  Free  informalran 
packet.  Call  202-466-1639. 

$8  to  $15  per  hour 

V/oiy  in  Westwood  for  an  upscale  singles 
organizatton.  Women  excel.  Telemarketing. 
Recruit  new  members.  Weekly  pay.  Call  after 
3PM  Sun-Thurs  Kelth:310-279-3300. 

*DANCE  HOSTESS* 

EXCELLENT  TIPS  +  SALARY.  Flexible 
schedule.  PfT-FfT.  LA  Downtown  nightclub. 
No  akx)hol/no  nudity.  I8years+.  Call  now"' 
213-620-9572. 


7800 

Holp  Wiiiiti.'d 


MOTHER'S  ASSISTANT  Ptek  up  from 
schooJ/spoits  and  supervise  for  2  hours. 
Santa  Monka  $1Qmr.  Need  Car.  Karen  at 
310-550-4183. 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

NEEDED.  PfT  sitter  needed  for  kids  1047. 
Responsibilities:  Driving,  reading&playing. 
Good  payll  References  a  musti  Located  In 
Brentwood.  310-394-9781. 


^ENERGETIC  PEOPLE 
NEEDED!!!* 

Busy  Valley,  Hollywood,  or  Santa  Monica 
office  needs  energetk:  people.  Bonuses! 
310-395-7368 


ANNOUNCERS,  no  experience  necessary. 
Host  music/talk-shows  for  our  radto  stations 
P/T.  $iO-i5/hr.  $200+per/show,  plus  fantas- 
tk;  benefits.  323-468-0080,  24-hour5. 

ASSISTANT  P/T  for  West  coast  office  of  na- 
tional company.  Excellent  opportunity.  Flexi- 
ble P/T  hours.  Please  call  Mona  Andrews 
310-278-3349. 

A  PERFECT  JOB! 

Pan-Time  field  sales,  flexible  hours  +  com- 
mjsskjn  and  bonusf  Ambitious  salesperson, 
Fax:818-223-3247  or  email:  support  Of  ones - 
4all.com  Attn  FieW  Sales. 


ACCOUNTING  CLERK  Needed.  $12- 
15/DOE.  Must  have  taken  accounting  class- 
es. Excel  and  strong  communication  skills 
Fax  resume  attnMekxly  323-965-3194. 


•F/T  GENERAL  OFFICE* 

WESTWOOD  ENTERTAINMENT  LAW 
FIRM  SEEKS  F/T  OFFICE  CLERK  TO  DO 
COPYING,  FAXING,  AND  MAIL  PROCESS- 
ING. MUST  HAVE  CLERICAL  OFFICE  EX- 
PERIENCE. SALARY  OOE+BENEFITS. 
FAX  RESUME  TO  E.  KRAFT:  310-441-8010. 

•MOVIE  EXTRA  WORK*  Beats  all  jobs  Start 
immediately  Great  pay  FurVEasy  No  crazy 
fees.  Program  for  free  medteal  Cal-24/hrs 
323-850-4417 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANT/BOOK- 
KEEPER. Excellent  hardware  and  soft- 
ware computer  skills  required.  Flexible, 
part-time  hours.  $l0-l3/hr  Tennis  a  plus! 
We  are  national  ftower  shippers.  310- 
230-0811  or  Fax  resume:  310-230-4146. 


7800 

Help  Wiiiut-'d 


AIRLINE  TKJKET  AGENTS  We  are  hiring 
PT  at  LAX  for  Qantas.  Lufthansa,  All  Nippon, 
Mexicana  and  Varag  Airlines.  Students  in 
German,  Spar^ish,  Portuguese,  and  Ja- 
panese can  apply  as  well.  These  airlines  da 
offer  travel  passes  to  their  destinations. 
Sound  like  fun?  Apply  in  person  or  fax  or  e- 
mail  at:  Hallmark  Aviation.  6033  W.  Century 
Blvd  #808  (next  to  LAX)  310-215-0701  x45 
votee,  310-410-5350  fax.  E-mail  scottmcguf- 
fin  Ohallmark-avlatton.com. 


AUDIO  VISUAL 
OPERATORS  WANTED 

for  delivery  and  operations,  throughout  cam- 
pus. Computer  artd  customer  skills  pre- 
ferred. AV  experience  not  required.  Open 
schedule  needed.  Must  be  able  to  Nft  35 
pounds.  Two  positions  avallat>le:  Operator 
$8.90/hr.  Technician  $11.40/hr  Call  Juan 
310-206-8002. 

BANKING 

P/T  teller  positions  at  University  Credit 
Unwn.  Excellent  pay.  hours  &  environment. 
Some  teller  experience  preferred.  /\pply  at 
1500  S.  Sepulveda  Blvd.,  LA,  90025.  Fax  re- 
sume 310-477-2566  or  on  web 
www.ucu.org/jobs.htm 

CAMPUS  EVENT 


7800 

Holp  Wiinted 


CARING  INDIVIDUALS  URGENTLY  needed 
in  Santa  Monica  &-West  LA.  lABA,  a  leader 
in  the  fiekJ  on  non-aversice  behavior  manag- 
ment  Is  seeking  Employment  Specialists  to 
assist  adults  developmentally  challenged  in 
an  employment  setting  and  in  the  communi- 
ty lABA  provides  paid  training  and  advance- 
ment opportunities.  WOrk  from  8:30am  to 
2:30pm  +  In  service  hours,  M-F,37.5hr8/wk. 
Eligible  for  medkal/dentaJ,  401 K  and  pakl 
time  off.  Competitive  wages+supplemental 
tenure  pay.  Related  experience  or  BA  in  Psy- 
chology preferred.  Email  your  resume  to  ro- 
kellyOiaba  com  or  call  toll  free  877-924- 
2220.  For  more  info  visit  lABA  at 
www.iaba.com 


Friday,  October  20, 2000       27 


7800 

Hf.'lp  Wanted 


CENTRAL  CAMPUS 
JOBS 

Part-time  jobs  available  at  Campus  Comer 
We  work  with  your  schedule,  1/2  off  meals, 
management  training  opportunity.  Call  310- 
206-8133. 


JOBS 


ADMINISTRATIVE  ASSISTANTWfiMrain.  In 
medteal  offrce  3O-4Ohrs/M-F/9:00-6:00pm. 
Computer  knowtedge  iTwndatory.  Great  job 
for  Business/Pre-Me<yPub(ic-Health  majors. 
15-min  to  UCLA.  310-476-4205 


to  advertise 
;all  825,2161 


daily 
brui^ 


ADULT  RESPONSIBLE  MALE.  Personal 
care  lor  disabled  man.  Monday-Friday 
Ihr/day.  alternate  weekends.  Will  train. 
Strong  References.  Near  UCLA.  $30Q/mo 
310-475-5209. 

AFTERNOONS  DURING 
SCHOOL 

AH  day  Saturday,  too!  FutlUme  during  Quarter 
Breaks  and  Sumnwr  Vacalkxisl  Work  experi- 
ence not  necessary.  Apply  today  at  West- 
wood  Sporting  Goods.  1065  Gayley  Ave, 
Westwood  Village.  310-208-6215. 


Earn  a  Bonus  up  to  $500  if  you  can  commit 
to  the  Men's  Basketball  Season  and  other 
Special  Events!!!  Limited  number  of  posi- 
ttons available,  for  UCLA  students  only  For 
more  infonnation  caN  Sean,  310-  206-0736. 

CARING  INDIVIDUALS  NEEDED  TO  sup- 
port UCLA  student  lABA.  an  intemattonally 
respected  agency,  is  seeking  Community 
Support  Compantons  and  Overnight  Com- 
pantons  to  assist  a  college  student  wHh 
physteal  challenges.  Assistance  needed  in 
his  dorm,classes,and  the  community  of 
Westwood.  lABA  provWes  pakl  training  and 
advancement  opportunities.  Full  and  part 
time  sNtts  available,  including  night  hours. 
Full  time  benefits  include  medical/dental  cov- 
erage. 401 K  plan  and  pakl  time  off.  Competi- 
tive wages+supplemental  tenure  pay  Relat- 
ed experience  or  BA  in  Psychotogy  pre- 
ferred. Email  your  resunw  to  rokel- 
lyOiaba.com  or  call  toll  free-e77-924-2220. 
For  more  information  visit  lABA  at 
www.iaba.com 


CLINICAL 
LABORATORY  . 
TECHNICIAN- 
SUPERVISOR 

FT  positton  Immediately  available  for  a  li- 
censed laboratory  scientist  in  a  private  clini- 
cal laboratory  In  Santa  Monica.  Lab  provides 
endocrine,  androtogy.  serotogy  and  immu- 
nology testing.  Incumbent  required  to  wort< 
in  weekend  rotattons.  Salary  commensurate 
with  qualifteations  and  experience.  Submit 
applkattons  to  Bronte  Stone.  Reproductive 
Technotogy  Laboratories.  1245  I6th  Street. 
Suite  105.  Santa  Montoa.  CA  90404  (Tei 
310-829-0102). 

COFFEE  BAR  ATTENDANT  the  best  Stud- 
ent  job.  You  must  be  responsible,  reliable, 
experience  a  plus.  Duttons  11975  San  Vi- 
cente. 


COMPANIONS/CAREGIVERS.  Psych.  Ex- 
penence  Desirable.  Live -in/live-out  4-12hr 
shifts  available.  Sign  on  bonus  for  live-in 
dnvers  w/car  Excellent  benefitsArainingAop 
pay/40lK  plan  Need  some  experience  »»ifh 
Alzheimer,  Dementia,  or  Gero-Psych  Call 
323-933-5880. 


DRIVING  INSTRUCTOR  WANTED.  Full- 
time or  part-time.  Westwood  driving  and  traf- 
fk;  school.   Call  for  information.   310-824- 


COMMUNITY  SERVICE 
OFFICERS 

Dc  Good  and  get  paid.  Pay  $8.16  to 
$10.4e/hr.  Must  be  a  UCLA  student  w/U 
academk:  years  remwiining  with  valkJ  driver's 
Itoense.  Web:  www.ucpd.ucla.edu/ucpd/cso. 
Email:  csoOucpd.ucla.edu.  Phone:  310- 
825-2148. 

COMPUTER/ADMIN 
ASSISTANT 

Established  Brentwood  computer  co  needs 
help  with  MS  Word,  phones,  eTiail,  clerical 
stuff.  Flexible  hours:  great  for  students;  learn 
the  bizi  Email  resume  to  jkenne- 
dy  Oant91  com 

CUSTOMER  SERVICE,  WEB  PROGRAM- 
MER NEEDED-  cash  weekly  plus  tionuses, 
2  l)locks  from  campus.  One  job,  internet 
knowledge  preferred.  310-475-6612. 
iobsOfashlon4less.com. 

DELIVERY  DRIVERS 

BALLOON  CELEBRATION  is  hiring  van  driv- 
ers. Looking  for  energetic,  unstoppable, 
positive  crew  immediately  Flexible  hours, 
busy  weekends.  Apply  in  person  M-Sat  till 
6pm.  Apply  at  937  Westwood.  310-208-1180. 

DENTAL  ASSISTANT  PfT  and  F/T.  New 
Westwood  Village  and  new  Brentwood  den- 
tal office.  310-451-2728. 

DESIGNER  ASSISTANT 

Interior  design,  full-time.  M-F.  people-orient- 
ed, multi-task,  computer  skills,  Westlake  Vil- 
lage. Call:805-446-3393  or  lax:805-446- 
3396. 

DOCTOR'S  OFFICE 

Santa  Montea,  P/T  help  needed. 
15hours/week.  Answer  phones,  typing,  ap- 
pointrT)ents.  Filing,  etc.  Fax  resume  310-586- 
1177. 

DRIVERS  WANTED 

F/T  or  P/T.  Own  car/insurance.  Must  be  able 
to  read  map.  No  weekends.  Great  holiday 
income.  818-224-3445,  Caroline. 

EXCITING  NEW 
BAGEL  SHOP 

Aa  POSITONS  AND  ASSISTANT  MANAG- 
ER needed.  Catering  sales.  Make  up  to 
$150/day  Part  or  full-time  wortt.  Call:David 
310-441-0394. 


Disciples  of  Christ 


Gateway  Christian  Church 

11760  Gateway  Blvd 
Los  Angeles.  CA  90064 
310-473-3191 

email:  GatewyCCOaolcom 
Worship  Sunday  at  10:45am, 
Children's  Sunday  School  and 
Choir  Rehearsal  at  9:30am, 
Tupsday  and  Wednesday  Groups. 
SKjire  in  our  country-style  atmos- 
phere, and  experience  the  blending 
of  ftaditional  and  contemporary 
wofehip.  Find  yourself  warmly  wel- 
comed IS  you  seek  both  meaning 
and  joy.  Near  student  housing. 


Christian 


Westwood  Hills  Christian 
Church 

lOeoe  Le  Conte  AyfB 

Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 

310-208-8576 

www  WHCCOmetcbccom 

Bible  Study  9:00am,  Worship 
10:00am.  Tuesday  Evening  Bible 
Study  7:00pm. 

We  are  located  across  from  UCLA 
Medk:al  Center  at  Le  Conte  and 
Hilgard.  Students  are  welcome. 
Join  us  for  lunch  1  st  SurKJay  each 
month  after  worship. 

Westside  Oikos  Community 


Church 

1343  Ocean  Park  Blvd. 

Santa  Monica.  CA  90405 

310-441-2125 

tf'ww  westsiaeoikos.org 

Sunday  worship  at  1:30pm, 
Thursday  UCLA  Oikos  Campus 
Ministry  (OCM)  meetings  at 
6:30pm  in  CS  Young  24. 
Come  and  share  the  joy! 
Encounter  God's  preserve 
through  powerful  worship,  inspir- 
ing messages,  and  genuine  com- 
munity. Rides  for  Sunday  worship 
p/ovided  at  Sproul  turnaround  at 
1pm. 

..        ,'        r.     ,  '•.  -  r  -"■-         -    ■_ 

.      •     '  .  •  '  -*.  -4         ' 

Roman  Cathoil^ 


University  Catholic  Center 

633  Gayley  Ave 

Loe  AngaleB.  CA  90024 

310-208-5015 

wwwucdaorg 

Sunday  Masses  at  10:30am,  7pm, 
and  9pm. 

Our  Catholic  community  wel- 
comes all.  With  over  70  years  of 
sen/ice  to  UCLA  and  the 
University  ffleligious  Conference, 
we  offer  worship,  retreats,  sacra- 
mental preparation,  education, 
and  just  plain  funt 

Lutheran 

St.  Paul's  Lutheran  Church 


(ELCA) 

958  Lincoin  Blvd  .  _       ' 

Santa  Montea,  CA  90403 
310-451-1346 

Holy  Communion,  Sunday  at 
8:30am  and  10:45am.  Sunday 
School  for  all  ages,  9:40am.  Child 
care  provided. 

St.  Paul's  is  an  inclusive  and 
intergenerational  Christian  com- 
munity. Come  and  be  fed  with 
God's  Word,  the  Sacraments,  and 
the  Fellowship  with  real  people. 

University  Lutheran  Chapel 

10915  Strathmore  Or 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90024 
310-208-4571 
www.ute.la.ca.us 

10:30am,  tradition  7pm,  contem- 
porary. 

Join  us  in  experiencing  in  the 
context  of  word  and  sacrament  in 
small  groups  throughout  the 
week. 

Christian  Science 


Tenth  Church  of  Christ, 
Scientist 

1133  S.  Bandy  Or 
Los  Angtha.  CA  90049 
310-826-2229  ■'-'■- 

Sunday  10am  Church  Service 
and  Sunday  School  (up  to  20 
years),  Wednesdays  7:30pm 
Testimonial  Meetiftg.  Reading 
Room  310-820-2014. 


Please  join  us  for  a  talk  on  "God. 
Good,  Guards,  Guides,  and 
Govem's  Man"  in  our  church  edifice 
at  7:30pm,  Thursday  October  26, 
2000.  fi^\  are  welcome. 

Foursquare 

New  Heart  Christian 
Fellowship 

1941  S.  Barringlon  Ave. 

W.  Los  Angeles.  CA  90025 

310-478-3059 

email:  NewHeanctOaol.com 

Sunday  10:30am.  Wednesday 
7:30pm  (Bible  Study). 
Come  share  the  excitement  of 
God's  House  through  New  Heart's 
dynamic  worship  and  relevant 
word.  Always  feel  weteomed  in  the 
warm  atmosphere  of  heartfelt 
friendship. 

Eoiscopal 

Canterbury  Westwood 

580  Hilgard  Ave 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90024   -     - 
310-208-4830 

www.stabanswestwood.com 
Tuesday  4pm  Eucharist,  5pm  din- 
ner and  discussion.  Sunday  Sam, 
10am. 

We  are  an  open  and  inclusive  com 
munity.  Join  us  Tuesdays  for  wor- 
ship, dinner  and  discussion. 


Full  Gospel 


House  Upon  The  Rock 
Church 

4427  Overtand  Ave.  O  Farragut 

Culver  City 

310-839-1114 

Sunday  at  12:30pm. 
In  depth  Bible  teaching  for  the 
serious  student  of  scripture. 
Upt^eat  Praise  and  Worship. 
Healing  Ministry. 

Seventh-day 
Adventist 


Santa  Monica  Seventh-Day 
Adventist  Church 

1254  19th  St. 

Santa  Monkm,  CA  90404 

310-829-1945 

wwwsantamonlcasdat}omepage.Com 

Saturday  9:30,  Worship  11am. 
Small  groups  throughout  the 
week.  Collegiate  group  Thurs.  at 
UCLA.  We  invite  you  to  join  us 
to  worship  and  grow,  and  experi- 
ence God's  love  in  a  SG  and 
Sat>bath  morning  worship. 


The  Religioui  Services 

Directory  is  prinud  every 

Friday.  Call 

Stephanie  Abruzzo  at 

310-825-2221  for  more 

inforttiaiian 


-  -.s*i^i 


I  t 


28 Friday,  October  20, 200a 


Daily  Bruin  Classified 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


EARN  SERIOUS  INCOME  WHILE  YOU 
PARTY.  P/T  at  your  own  hours,  from  any  lo- 
cation. 562-428-4910,  or  recorded  message 
1-800-313-3526x207. 

—  < 

EARN  TRAVEL  MONEY 

NEED  TO  EARN  SOME  QUICK  CASH'  llier- 
ing  rteeded  immedialely  on  campus  call 
jason  at  858-630-7976. 

EARN  WHAT  YOU'RE  WORTH!  Success 
driven  individuals  wanted  (or  expanding 
global  business.  Serious  inquiries  onlyl  (no 
exp.  nee.)  310-246-1522. 


Seeking  bright,  active  person 

with  college  degree  to  assist 

with  2  children  ages  6  &  8, 

part  time,  for  school  related 

tutoring,  computer 

assistance,  and  extra 

curricular  activities.  Excellent 

personal  references  required. 

Resumes  to:  Rose  Cooper 
510  N.  Robertson  Blvd. 
Los  Angeles,  CA  90048 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


LAW  OFFICE  ASSISTANT  Beverly  Hills.  P/T 
(Tues-Thurs.  1-4pm).  FUe  Clerk/Office  Sup- 
port. Need:  legal  filing  skills,  accuracy/detail 
drientatkjn,  and  computer  literate.  Prior  law 
firm  experience  preferred.  Compensation 
based  on  experience.  Fax  resume  and  refer- 
erjces  to  310-205-6081. 

LAW  OFRCE  ENVIRONMENT.  Excellent 
opportunity.  Clerk  positions  available  Flexi- 
ble hours.  Minimum  20hrs/wk,  $7/hr.  Fax  re- 
sume and  proposed  available  hours  to  Hu- 
man Resources  Depi  310-274-2798  or  Mail 
to:  Lurie,  Zepeda,  Schmalz  &  Hogan  9107 
Wilshire  Blvd..  Suite  800,  Beverly  Hills  CA 
90210. 

LEGAL  SECRETARY 

LAW  OFFICE  of  criminal,  corporate,  and 
immigratton  laws.  P/T  or  F/T.  Call  Joana  626- 
288-9922. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


LIBRARY  JOBS.  Shelving  and  other  stacks 
duties.  12-19  hrs/wk.  $6.70/hr  to  start 
STUDENTS  ONLY  apply  at  Young  Research 
Library  Rm.  11617  or  call  Aritigone  Kutay 
310-825-6982. 


.F/T  or  P/T.  Children's  retail  store.  Hours  sat 
required.  $8-10/hr  DOE.  On  Santa  Monka 
Blvdin  Westwood.  310-234-9554. 

FILE  CLERK  wanted  for  Sherman  Oaks  law 
firm.  Flexible  hours.  Duties  include  fil- 
ing,copying,  and  miscellaneous  other  office 
duties.  Starting  date-immediate.  $9/hr 
Please  fax  resume  to  Sue  Roug  at  818-907- 
9896 


FRATERNITIES,  SORORITIES.  CLUBS 
STUDENT  GROUPS.  Earn  $1000-2000  this 
quarter  with  the  easy  Campusfundraiser.com 
three  hour  fundraising  event.  No  sales  re- 
quired. Fundraising  dates  are  filling  quk;kly, 
so  call  today!  Contact  Campusfundrais- 
er.com  at  (888)923-3238  or  visit  www.cam- 
pusfundrasiercom 

GIRLS  wanted  at  exclusive  social  clubs  in 
WLA.  Conversatkxi  only.  No  ateohol.  Flexi- 
ble  hours.  Earn  top  $$$.  323-441-0985 

GUITARIST  WANTED 

ROCK/REGGAE  GUITARIST  NEEDED  (or 
constnKtkyi  of  new  hip-hop  band.  Must  have 
the  skills.  Call  Eric  310-274-4663. 

HOMEWORK  SUPERVISOR^-UTOR  for 
10th  grader  taking  Spanish  and  Algebra.  2- 
hours  per  evening  M-F,  $9/hr  310-476-4205. 

HOST/HOSTESS 

FRIENDLY.  EXPERIENCED  host  for  Jade 
West.  Century  City.  PT.  daytime.  Call  after 
2:30.  310-556-3388. 

INTERNATIONAL  MARKETING/PR  FIRM 
seeks  bilingual  (English-Italian)  Customer 
Service  Representative  Full  time;  excellent 
Italian  written  &  verbal  skills  required.  Medi- 
cal Benefits.  Fax  or  e-mail  resume  to  John 
Patterson  323-653- 1 768-jspatterson  O  ii- 
ginc.com. 


LOOKING  for  experienced  staffing  coordina- 
tor. 2  years  minimum  experience  in  home 
care  environment.  Computer  literacy  a  must. 
Great  benefits.  Wonderlul  work  environment 
Call  Laura  MaGhee  323-933-5880  ext1012. 

LOSE  2-8  LBS  EVERY  WEEK.  Earn  $$ 
888-858-2579.  www.HealthyBody4you.eom 

M.  FREDRIC 

Fashion  fon»ard  company  looking  for  ener- 
gette  people  to  fill  sales  and  management 
positions.  Call  Tory  818-597-0212  ext  114. 

MATCHMAKER 

For  dating  service.  Must  have  great  people 
skills,  organized,  computer  literate,  secretari- 
al experience  P/T  evenings.  310-914-3444, 
leave  message. 

MEDICAL  FRONT  OFFICE  positwn  for  busy 
Beverly  Hills  demiatotogy  practkM.  Variety  of 
duties.  P/T  morning  hours  only.  References 
required.  Call  Diane:  310-273-0467. 

MEDICAL  SPECIALTY  COMPANY  is  tooking 
for  a  self-motivated  indivkJual  to  assume  a 
part  time  posifk)n  as  a  courier.  This  oppor- 
tunity provides  training  and  access  to  the 
medical  sales  industry,  directly  in  the  hospi- 
tal O/R.  Must  have  good  commuracatkxi  and 
customer  skills.  Resume:  bpitacomaOsprint- 
mail.com.  Fax:  253-572-7490. 

MEN  AGES  18-24  for  nude  modeling  (or 
magazines  and  fine  art  Call  310-289-8941 
days 


P/r  CHURCH  SECRETARY  20  hrsAyk,  flexi- 
bie.  varied  duties,  Mrcrosoft  Word  is  a  must 
Call  Father  Zakten  for  appt.  310-275-6634. 

P/T  ON-CAMPUS  JOB 

UCLA  too  Medteal  Plaza.  Dermatotogy  prac- 
tice. Hours  can  vary  w/classes.  F/r  during 
summer.  $8/hr.  Plus  free  partdng  Assist 
manager,  computer  skills  necessary.  Basic 
math  skills  needed.  Undergrad  only.  Fax 
resume  after  6:30pm  310-206-4010. 

P/T  RECEPTIONIST 
WANTED 

Yellow  Balloon  HairSaton.  Must  be  hon- 
est/child-friendly Hours:3weekdays  1- 
5:30pm,  Saturdays  9-5pm.  Days  and  times 
negotiable.  $8/hr.  Contact  Natalie:310-475- 
1241.  Fax  resume  323-939-4339. 

P/T  to  complete  constructton  and  maintain 
website.  Nationwide  wholesale.  310-230- 
0811.  Fax  310-230-4146. 

PART  TIME  TELEMARKETER  NEEDED. 
$10/HR.  No  Experience  Necessary.  Call  for 
information.  310-680-7604. 

PART-TIME  CHILDCAREmjTOR  needed 
(or  1st  and  2nd  grader.  Encino  Mulholland 
and  405  adjacent.  Must  have  car.  Call  Jack- 
ie:310-826-2466. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


PIANO  TEACHER  WANTED,  Westwood 
close  to  UCLA.  To  teach  1lyr-oW  boy  on 
weekends.  Please  call  310-441  -9388, 

POSTAL  JOBS 
$9-14.27/HR     -.— 

Plus  Federal  Benefits.  No  Experience  exam ' 
info.  Call  1-800-391-5856  ext.  0614  8am- 
9pm.  Local  not  guar. 

PROFESSIONAL  COLLECTOR,  Saban  Pla- 
za  near  UCLA.  "Best  senrice  company 
$9/hr.  Flexible  scheduling.  Weekends  and 
evenings  available.  Perfect  for  students.  NO 
expenence  needed.  Fax  resume  310-477- 
7694. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


RECEPTIONIST  WANTED  PT/FT  for  haif 
saton.  Ask  (or  Liana.  310-208-0101. 


RETAIL  SPORTS/RUNNING  Store  will  train 
person  who  likes  running  and  talking  to  peo- 
ple. Near  beach,  in  MDR,  $8-9/hour  PT  3io- 
827-3035. 

^^^  ^  SALES  CLERK 

$7/nr.  No  experience  necessary.  Cashiering 
worthing  with  patients.  UCLA  Hospital  2e- 
venings,  3-7:30PM  11:30-6:00PM,  310-825- 
6069 


MODELS  Catatog  Studio  seeks  nxxlels  and 
new  laces  for  photo  test  and  catatog  assign- 
ments $300-$500  per  day  Agency  leads  No 
Fee.  323-464-3172 


MODELS  WANTED  by  professional  photo- 
studio  for  upcoming  assignment,  Male/Fe- 
male Pro/Non-Pro,  Fashion/Commer- 
ciaimieatrical.  Call  for  appointment  818- 
986-7933. 


PART-TIME  POSTIONS 
FLEXIBLE  HOURS 

CONSTRUCTIONATECHNICAL  Bookstore  in 
WLA  has  one  opening  for  clerical  positkxis. 
$7/hr.  Mornings  or  afternoons.  Call 
Mtehe»e:31 0-474-7771 

PERSONAL 
ASSISTANT 

WestsWe  business  man  wants  attractive 
young  female  (or  computer  help  and  other 
needs.  Excellent  compensation.  Flexible 
hours,  Posstote  Travel.  310-553^)922 

PERSONAL  ASST 
DETAIL-ORIENTED 

person  to  manage  orders  for  small  upscale 
retail  shop.  Make  sure  orders  are  correct 
when  placed4foltow-up  w/suppliers  to  insure 
correctaon-time  deHvery.  Handle  light  inAout 
shipments  F/T.  including  Saturdays.  Must 
have  excellent  knowledge  of  English.  Call 
8111:310-278-5620. 

PERSONAL  TRAINERS  NEEDED.  CerHftea- 
tion  and  clients  provided.  Flexible  hours 
Must  have  fitness  knowledge.  Natkxial  Traln- 
ersAssociatton.  1-e68-NTA-2338. 

PHONE  SALES       . 

BUSY  WESTSIDE  FLORIST  Must  be  organ- 
ized, bright,  self-motivated,  and  great  oer- 
sonamy.  Call  Vikki  310-626^)711. 


PROMOTIONAL  PRINT  AGENCY  seeks 
fnendly,  energetic  receptwnist  for  a  F/T  en- 
try-level position.  Good  communication  skills 
and  computer  literacy  required.  Please  email 
resume  to:  mickyy©edwardslabel,com  or 
fax  resume  to:  Mcky  Yadathi  310-479-1828. 

PT  EXECUTIVE  ASST/BOOKKEEPER  for 
Beverty  Hills  offfce.  Must  be  profk:ient  In 
Qutok  Books  Pro  and  Microsoft  Offkie  1 5-20 
hoursAveek,  Great  Location!  Great  Boss' 
Call  Dominique  310-273-4000. 

PT  aORAL  DELIVERY  Person  needed 
Courteous,  neat,  eftteient  person  sought  by 
the  friendliest  ftower  shop  in  Beverty  Hills 
Must  have  a  clean  DMV  report.  Call  310- 
271-5030  for  details, 

~      PT  HOUSEMAN 

And  Handyman.  For  faculty  member  gar- 
dening, repairs,  en'ands.  posslbe  live-in.  car 
needed  Send  references,  salary  expecta- 
fons.  handypositk>nOhotrT>ail.com 

PT/FT  MESSENGERS 
WANTED 

Make  your  own  shifts.  Knowledge  of  LA. 
Own  car  and  Insurance.  Earn  up  to 
$600AweeK.  310-724-e360.  Days  only. 


SALES  Le  Beach  Club  Tanning  Resorts 
Happy,  friendly  people  $l2-20mr.  Call  bet- 
ween 3-l0pm.  310-820-2710  ask  for  Yas- 

mine. 


SITE  ACQUISITIONS  CONSULTANT 
Full/part  lime.  Self-starter,  creative  intelli- 
gent. Acquire  land  sites  for  cellular  Salary 
commensurate  w/experience.  Fax  resume 
310-737-4228. 


No  Experietice Necexsart' 

Men,  WHiien.  diildicn,  all  ifp.  siiei 

noo.  TV  -  Film  -  Conxntdals  -  M»f;>Ana 

Mpentniul  ittienleu  call  himv 

310.659.7000 


STOCK  CLERK  in  children's  bookstore  20- 
30hrsAveek,  $7/hr,  WLA  310-559-2665. 

STUDENT  WORKERS  NEEDED.  P/T^I^ 
Flexible  h-jufs.  Earn  up  to  $4500/month.  Call 
human  resources  offtoe.  520-281-2702. 

TELEMARKETER  NEEDED  for  a  woman's 
ctothing  company.  310-473-7454. 

THE  HIDDEN  GARDEN  FLOWER  SHOP  is 
looking  for  a  delivery  person  MWF  10am- 
4pm.  Siomr.  Must  have  own  vehKle  w/in- 
surance.  310-475-4647. 

TRAINERH-EACHER  ASSISTANT  San  Fer- 
rando  Valley.  $l0-l8/hour.  15-25  hours^vk 
Casual  environment,  flexible  hours  Wlin- 
gual/Spanlsh,  excellent  people  skills.  Com- 
puter skills  a  must.  1-877-776-7274 


US  International  Co. 

Work  at  home  positton  immediatelyl  P/T 
$500-2000/mo  F/r$200G-6000/mo  Lan- 
guages/computer skills  a  plus,  www.rich- 
fromhomecom/lnJemet 


WANTED 

75people  wMI  pay  you  to  kjse  weight  in  ttie 
next  30days.  Doctor  recommended  100% 
natural/no  dmgs.  Cal  now.  323-993-3391 


RECEPTIONIST/SECRETARY.   P/T       F/T 

Beverty  Hills  demnatotogymedfealofftee  Fax 
resume  310-550-1920. 

RESTAURANT  In  WLA  now  hiring  senders 
cashiers,  prep  personnel.  F/T  or  P/f,  apply  iri 
person.  9411  W.  Ptoo  Btvd,  Sun-Thurs 

RETAIL  SALES,  PT/FT.  Westwood  Blvd  De- 
signer wedding/evenmg  gowns.  Experience 
preferred,  motivated  and  friendly.  Great  op- 
portunity. Salary/commlsstons/bonuses  Ex- 
^«er«$$.  310-474-7808  Pauline 


■  •■lU 


WEB  DESIGN 

Design  website  for  new  travel  ciassifk»tk>n 
company.  Experience  necessary.  Must  be 
competent  and  creative.  CaN  310-274-7931 
or  yahay830yahoo.com 


WHO  WANTS  TO  BE 
^   A  MILLIONAIRE? 

TV  and  Internet  ad  sales.  Commisskjn 
and  equity  in  company.  Fax  818-846- 
7961.  RISK^'HtJGE  REWARDS 


MOTHER'S  HELPER 

to  driveiwort*  w/2  fun4gifted  kkte  ages  547. 
Perfect  schedule  for  student  Must  have  car. 
PrX  pennanent.  Excellent  salary.  Judv310- 
551-1145 


INTERNATIONAL  PR  FIRM  seeks  Front 
Desk  Receptkmist.  Entry  level  positton  Itali- 
an a  plus.  $9/hr-30hrsAvk  MIN.  F/T  pre- 
ferred. Fax  or  email  resume  to  John  Patter- 
son 323-653-1768.  jspattersonOijginc.com. 

INTERNET  CO  seeks 
P/T  Repeptlonist 

for  Santa  Monk:a  office,  $8Air,  great  oppor- 
tunity and  tocation!  Send  resume  to  isa- 
belleOwebeasycom  or  fax  310-576-2011 
Attn:  Isabelle. 


JUAN  JUAN  BEVERLY  HILLS  SALON  took- 
ing for  an  aggresive  customer  servtoe  orient- 
ed  receptionist  Please  call  310-278-5826 


LAW  FIRM  NEEDS  P/T  employee  from 
2003-2004  for  a  clerical  positton  Mail/tax  re- 
sume to  Rtok  Edwards.  Inc.  Attn  Margie 
1925  Century  Part<  East  Los  Angeles,  CA 
90067  Fax  310-286-9501, 


•  MOVIE* 

PRODUCERS 

NEEDED! 

CO-PRODUCE 
LIONS  GATE  FILMS' 

NEXT  MOVIE! 

No  Experience  Neceiury 

APPLY  TODAY  @ 

virtualproducer.com/ucla 


NEED  EXTRA  MONEY? 

HOUSEPLANT  PERSON  NEEDED  2 
times/week.  Beverty  Hills  area.  Must  have 
green  thumb.  $10/hour.  310-285-0099. 

OFFICE  MANAGER/ASSISTANT2CE0 
Growing  Biotechnology  Company-Wesi- 
wood.  10am-2pm/Full-time,  flexible  hours 
Need:  excellent  telephone  skills,  detail-orient- 
ed, admin/comp  skills,  science  interest  pre- 
fen-ed.  Benefits/advancement.  FaxRes2Mar- 
ina:  310-475-1533. 

ON  CAMPUS  JOBS 

UCLA  Concesstons  has  great  part-time  jobs 
wortting  at  Alhlette  events.  We  have  a  lucra- 
tive bonus  program  lor  those  who  can  com- 
mit to  wort«  the  Men's  Basketball  Season. 
Hours  are  per  event,  not  set  every  week 
Call:310-206-0736 

ONCE  IN  A  LIFETIME 
OPPORTUNITY!!! 

Pop  star  needs  student  to  wort<  pA  helping 
out  with  his  fan  mail.  Job  includes  managing 
fan  database,  responding  to  fans,  etc  Fun 
and  interesting  wort<  for  the  right  person  To 
apply,  please  send  a  brief  resume  and  photo 
to:  Fan  Mail  Helper  PO.  Box  18383  BH  CA 
90209. 


Welcome  Back 

Expand  your  UCLA  Expeneiue 

$8.18/HR.  ^    ' 

PLUS  BONUS 


PfT  CLERK 

Santa  Monica  law  fim)  seeks  a  P/T  General 
Office  Clert(.  RexiWe  hours,  but  mornings 

ItZu'm''^'  ^°"    ^'"^^  ""  "^^ 

P/T  GRAPHICS  DESIGNER,   Proftolent  In 
Photoshop,    Dreamweaver,   Flash    Java- 
Script, Shockwave,  or  other  web  lechnoto- 
gies  a  plus  Ctose  to  campus,  flexible  hours 
310-828-9900 


"Convenient  Scheduling 

(Mon.-Fri.  evenings  &  Sat^Sun.) 

"Build  Your  Resume 

*Speak  Directly  to  Alumni 

**  We  are  an  equal  opportunity  employer 


P/T  LAW  OFFICE  ASST 

Word  Processor/Secretarial  for  Westwood 
tew  office.  PC  and  Internet  adept 
Compensalton  depends  on  skills  Flexible 
fwurs.  Fax  resume  310-443-4223 


Call  Sandin  for  Appointment 

3 1 0-794-0277 

1083  Gayley  Ave.  4th 
email  callcenter@support.ucla.edij 


^t.«  "*- 


Oisplay 


Daily  Bruin  Sports 


CARAGHER 

Ffom  page  30  ;'  ^     '   " :  r- 

the  foolbalj." 

The  respect  frorn  Mitchell  seems  to  be 
mutual,  r  :        :      , 

"Coach  Caragher knows  his  stuff-  he's 
a  great  receivers  coach  and  without  him,  I 
wouldn't  be  having  the  yards  that  I'm  hav- 
ing," Mitchell  said.  "He's  coached  a  lot  of 
great  receivers,  and  they're  not  where  they 
are  just  on  accident.  You  sense  some  rea- 
son behind  that." 

Apart  from  his  coaching  duties, 
Caragher  also  plays  a  strong  role  in  the 
recruiting  of  potential  Bruins. 

Perry  and  redshirt  freshman  Craig 
Bragg  were  two  receivers  Caragher  helped 
lure  to  UCLA  because  of  his  northern 
California  roots. 

"Coach  (Caragher)  seemed  really  sin- 
cere about  the  things  he  said  when  he  was 
recruiting  me  and  he  was  able  to  gain  m^- 


V  trust,"  Perry  said.     ■•  .c      s . 

Off  the  field,  Caragher  takes  care  of  his 
other  family,  spending  most  of  his  free 
time  with  his  wife,  Wendy,  a  former  Bruin 
women's  tennis  player  whom  he  met  in 
school,  and  his  three  younger  boys.  Josh, 
Ron  and  Ryan. 

"When  I  was  waiting  in  line  all  those 
years  as  a  backup  quarterback  behind  a 
guy  everyone  knew  was  going  to  the  NFL, 
there  was  a  time  when  I  thought  about 
leaving  and  going  somewhere  else  to 
play,"  Caragher  said. 

But  he  stayed,  met  his  wife  and  enjoyed 
the  rest  of  his  days  at  UCLA. 

"It  worked  out  very  well  for  me," 
Caragher  said.  ; 

"As  for  the  rest  of  my  career,  it's  always 
fun  to  think  about  what  could  happen,  but 
I  enjoy  where  I'm  at  now." 

Caragher  doesn't  seem  too  worried 
about  the  future  because  heV  having  fun 
coaching  at  the  school  where  he's  spent 
more  than  1 1  years  of  his  life. 


■V 


Frjday,  October  20, 2000       29 


ANNA  AVIK 

Former  UCLA  quarterback,  Ron 
Caragher,  is  one  of  the  youngest 
assistant  coaches  on  the  football  staff. 

As  long  as  his  twd  families  are  happy, 
Caragher  seems  to  be  content  with  where 
he's  at. 


7800 

Help  Wanted 


TEACHER'S 
ASSISTANT 

IMMEDIATE  POSITION.  Santa  Monrca  pre- 
sctiool.  20hrs/wk,  Mon-Thurs  afternoon.  Ear- 
ly chikJhood  devetopment  classes  &  some 
experience  working  w/young  ctilldren  re- 
quired. 310-394-0463. 


WORK  AT  HOME 

International  business.  P/T:  $500-$2000/mo 
F/T:  $2000-$6000/mo.  Will  train.  310-558- 
5888. 


WWWOUNDEAL.NET.  $15-125  per  survey. 
Earn  cash  on  the  Internet  by  giving  your 
opinkm  on  surveys. 


8000 

Internships 


ACCLAIMED  PRODUCER  seeks  motivated 
interns  (or  lall  2000.  Please  fax  resumes  to 
Commotk>n  Pk:tures  attn:  Michelle  310-432- 
2001. 

BUSINESS  MAJORS  WANTED  to  write 
business  plan  for  internet  startup  with  An- 
derson Alumni.  Unkjue,  generous  concept 
with  huge  potential,  nothing  similar  on  the 
net  yet  E-mail,  neyphilfthotmail.com. 

INTERNS  NEEDED  to  assist  Content  Team 
in  producing  atNete  web  sites.  Interns  will  re- 
search and  compile  t)ackground  info  on  ath- 
letes. Interns  will  also  screen  chats;  assist  in 
posting  content  to  sites;  transcrit>e  interviews 
and  input  (an  dub  member  data  This  posi- 
tion requires  thorough  sports  knowledge 
HTML  skills  are  helpful  The  ideal  candidate 
will  thrive  in  a  fast -paced  and  challenging  en- 
vironment. 310-315-8517 

INTERNSHIP  POSITION 

POST-PRODUCTION  INTERNSHIP  and 
student  film  projects  Call  Joel:3l0-e28- 
2292 

P/R  INTERNSHIP 

SEVERAL  POSITIONS  are  now  available 

with  a  major  entertainment  firm  in  public  re- 

♦  lations    No  pay  but  complete  education  in 

n  P/R.  Flexible  hours    Golden  opportunity  to 

,  learn  the  ropes.  Call  us  immediately  at  323- 

692-9999  Ex  1 3  Ask  (or  Rebecca. 


) 


START-UP  COMPANY  in  Westwood  needs 
interns  (or  admin,  marketing,  and  tech  posi- 
tions. Flex  hours.  No  salary,  but  stock  op- 
tions given.  Will  hire  good  interns.  Fax/email 
resume:  310-268-0665  or  hrOremo- 
temed.oom 


81 OO 

Personal  Assistance 


PERSONAL  ASSISTANT  (or  (amily  (o(  Inter- 
est to  young  (ilmmakers)  15-20hrs/wk- 
$10i*ir  3pm-8pm  Mon.,  Tues,  Thurs.  Drive 
teenagers/run  errands.  Filing/research 
Flexible  schedule/resourceful!!  Contact:  310- 
459-0815  Good  re(erer>ces  required.  Non- 
Smoker.  Must  have  own  carftinsurance. 


8200 

Temporary  Employment 


PfT  CLERICAL 
ASSISTANCE 

Entertainment  company  located  in  West- 
wood  seeks  clerical  assistance  approx  3 
days/wk,  3hrs/day  Duties  will  include  tiling, 
copying,  document  distribution  Please  call 
310-234-5041 


Classifieds 


8200 

Temporary  Employment 


ADMIN  ASSISTANT-  Beverty  Hills.  $7/hr.  10- 
I5hrs/wk.  Corp/Entertainment/Sports  (Ten- 
nis) Law.  Qualifwations:  prior  oHice,  client 
contact  skiMs.  email:  VPortano©PacBoll.net 
or  (ax  310-285-0895  Attn:  llona. 


WORK  IN  WESTWOOD.  Receptionist  need- 
ed (or  PT  work  Thursday-Sunday  Fun  at- 
mosphere.  Call  Louis:  310-279-3300. 

www.AcaDemon.com 

is  k»king  lor  student  liaisons  to  serve  as  go- 
betweens  (or  company  and  home  university. 
Flex,  hours,  good  pay  To  apply  email 
jobsOacademon.com 


8^00 

Apartments  for  Rent 


ONE  BLOCK  TO 
CAMPUS 

2bdmi  suite.  Hardwood,  private  patk>,  one 
paridng,  walk  to  UCLA.  $1350.  10966 
Roebling  Ave.  310-208-4253  or  310-824- 
2595. 


housing 

8400-9800 


8^00 

Apartments  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJ.  U2BEDROOM 
$895AUP  LARGE  UNUSUAL  CHARM. 
SOME  SPANISH  STYLE  W/HARDWOOD 
FLOORS.  ONLY  1/2  BLOCK  TO  PICO  BUS 
310-839-6294 


PALMS.  $975/month.  2bdnn/1.5Wh.  3455 
Jasmine  Upper,  pool,  covered  parting,  laun- 
dry,  no  pets.  310-839-5510. 

PALMS.  Single  apt  from  $575,  $600deposil 
1 -year  lease  only  Stove,  refrig, carpets  vert 
blinds.  310-837-1502  leave  message.  8am- 
5pm  only 

SANTA  MONICA  BUNGALOW,  ris,  hard- 
wood doors,  yard.  $900.  310-395-RENT 
www.westsiderentals.com 

SANTA  MONICA  CONDO.  r&s.  bateony  w/d 
fireplace.  $625.  310-395-RENT  www.west- 
siderentals.com 


BRAND  NEW  BUILDING.  3bdmfi/3bth.  start- 
ing $2500.  4bdfTn/3bth,  $2950  W/D  in  unit. 
Central  air  and  heat.  Alarm,  gated  partdng. 
Spacious,  carpet.  Prime  location!  Near 
UCLA.  310-474-1111. 

BRENTWOOD 

North  o(  Wishire,  spacious  3BD/2Bath.  w/ 
separate  patio  New  dishwasher,  retrigerator, 
stove,  etc.  Quiet  8-unit  bWg  w/  garden  sun- 
deck.  $2300.  11921  Goshen  Ave.  #1.  Open 
Sat/Sun  or  by  appt.  310-571  -0293. 

EL  SEGUNDO.  1+1,  ris,  carpets,  blinds, 
including  parking.  $800.  (ees.  310-372- 
RENT 


SANTA  MONICA  HOUSE.  Private  room,  fire- 
place, yard.  $654.  310-395-RENT 
wwfw.westsklerentals.com 


Westwood  Plaza 


Single  w/  Shared  Bathroom 

$850-$875 

Single  w/  Private  Bathroom 
$900 

1  Bedroom 
$1295-$  1350 

short  temi  availaNc  /  5  mm  walk  to  UCLA 

Parking  available  for 

I  Bedrooms  only 

310-208-8505 


8AOO 

Apartments  for  Rent 


WESTWOOD  SPACIOUS  APARTMENT 
1+1.  r&s,  controlled  access,  a/c.  laundry. 
$920.  310-395-RENT  w»«v.westsideren- 
tals.com 

WESTWOOO/NEAR  CENTURY  CITY 
$1290.  2bdmV1bth  Large,  laundry  enck>sad 
garage,  bakx)ny  large  ck)sets,  near  buses, 
blinds.  Chamiing,  bright,  quiet  buikJing.  310- 
474-1172. 


8600 

Condo/Townhouse  for  Rent 


540  KELTON.  2bdnn/2.5bth,  1200sqtt  right 
comer  unit.  Completley  remodeled.  Swim- 
ming pool/spa  Available  Nov  1.  $1995.  323- 
874-0339 

PENTHOUSE  CONDO  IN  WESTWOOD 
Two  Bedroom  Suites,  2.5  baths,  1900 
square  leet.  Magnificent  open  door  plan  and 
light.  New  kitchen,  hardwood  floors,  views  of 
getty  $2500/mo.  Available  12/1  310-666- 
9730 


W.  SOCCER  t 

Frompage31 

to  playing. 

,  "I  think  we're  all  focused,"  junior  Stephanie  Rigamat 
said.  "We  kind  of  see  ourselves  as  the  underdog  in  taking 
the  game  over,  and  I  think  we're  in  a  better  position." 
,— „.On  Friday,  UCLA  takes  on  Washington  State,  which  is  a 
surprising  104-0  overall  and  2-2-0  in  the  Pac-10.  Last  week- 
end, they  upset  then-No.  18  Arizona  State  2-0. 

"The  theme  continues  to  be,  'Can  we  play  better,  can  we 
play  at  a  higher  level?"'  head  coach  Dan  Tobias  said  in  a 
statement.  "And  the  answer's  typically  been  yes." 
The  Bruins  aren't  looking  past  the  Cougars. 
"I  think  our  biggest  test  is  when  we  play  a  team  that  is 
ranked  lower  than  us  -  playing  at  our  level  of  soccer  and  not 
playing  down  to  them,"  Karissa  Hampton  said. 

Shattuck  hopes  her  team  can  continue  to  capitalize  on 
opportunities,  something  it  was  unable  to  do  in  the  tie  with 
use.  The  Bruins  must  leave  the  Great  Northwest  with  two 
wins  this  weekend  to  contend  for  the  Pac-10  title. 

"Washington  has  been  doing  really  well."  she  said.  "Cf 
course  we're  serious  about  that  game.  We  just  have  to  look 
at  it  as  a  Pac-10  game  and  a  must-win  game." 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


FREE  OCEAN-FRONT  ROOM  for  Japanese 
Female  (30s+/-).  Near  Santa  Monica  beach. 
Exchange  for  baby-sitting/etc.  1 5  hrs/wk.  Ms. 
Yamada  310-454-1050,  310-913-1220 


WEST  LA.  Female  Roommate  needed  in 
2bdmV2  5bth  condo.  Gated  buiWing,  under- 
ground parking,  washer/dryer  in  unit,  partial- 
ly furnished.  Jewish  female  preferred. 
$800/month  including  utilities.  310-478- 
5677. 


8700 

Condo/Townfiouse  for  Sale 


FURNISHED  ROOM  AND  BATH  in  ex- 
change (or  driving  approximately  20hrs/wk, 
a(terrK)ons.  Must  own  car  8  minutes  to  cam- 
pus. References  necessary.  310-477-6977 


9/kOO 

Room  for  Rent 


BEL  AIR  PRIVATE  FURNISHED  ROOM 
AND  BATH.  Kitchen  and  laundry  privleges, 
utilities  included.  Car  necessary.  Referenc- 
es. $600/month.  310-477-6977. 

BEVERLY  HILLS:  Room  for  rent  in  pnvate 
home.  Private  bdmVbth  Preferred  Medk^l 
or  grad  student  Some  kitchen  privileges, 
laundry,  partting,  secure  house,  must  like 
dogs  Male  students,non-smoking.  $750/mo 
310-275-5034. 

LARGE.  FUNRISHED  ROOM  with  own  bath 
and  walk-in  ctoset  for  a  professional  woman 
Bundy  and  Wilshire,  Santa  Monka  310-442- 
6021. 


MV  Shared  2+1  garden  apartment.  Male  pre- 
fened  Quiet,  sale  4-plex,  off  Main  St.  DSL 
access.  $500/month,  utilities  ir)cluded  Pa- 
mela 310-915-5052. 


SANTA  MONICA  STUDIO.  Bakx)ny.  laundry, 
large  ctosets,  locatron.  $750. 310-395-RENT 
wwwwestsiderentals.com 


WESTWOOD  CONDO 

ONE  BEDROOM  ONE  BATH.  Must  See. 
Located  at  the  Colony  on  Veteran  Cus- 
tom Wood  Floors  and  matching  beam, 
Srifwoth  Textured  raised  ceilings.  New 
Carpet,  Now  kitchen  and  bathroom  tile. 
New  Microwave.  HOA  includes  Utilities 
and  many  ammenities.  $179,500.  310- 
575-1963. 


WEST  LA.  Private  bdrm/shared  bth  in  3bdrm 
apt  $475/mo+secunty  deposit.  Near  cam- 
pus. Fully  furnished  310-444-0105,  leave 
message  for  Buzz. 


FREE  RENTAL  SERVICE.  Westside  .  1  and 
2bdrm  available.  Call  The  Roberts  Compa- 
nies. 310-829-1700. 


GLENDALE  DUPLEX.  Great  location,  yard 
$695.  816-623-4444.  wwwallolLA  com 

GRANADA  HILLS  SPACIOUS  GUEST- 
HOUSE 1  +  1.  Large  yard  Pnvate  entry 
$685  818-623-4444  www.allofLA.com 

HANCOCK  PARK  ADJ  GUESTHOUSE 
Large  closets,  quiet  neighborhood.  $650 
323-634-RENT  www.allofLA  com 

HERMOSA  BEACH  APARTMENT  2+1,  r&s, 
bright,  blinds  $885,  fee,  310-372-RENT 


SANTA  MONICA  TOWNHOUSE  TO 
SHARE  private  bed  and  bath,  hardwood 
floors,  ris,  laundry.  $650  310-395-RENT 
www.westsiderentals.com 


SANTA  MONICA.  1  +  1,  catok,  laundry,  part<- 
ing  included.  $975.  310-395-7368. 
www.  westskjerentals .  com . 


MAR  VISTA  HOUSE  2+1,  w/c  pet,  hard- 
wood floors,  w/d  hook  ups.  yard.  $1295.  310- 
395-RENT  www.westsklerentals.com 

MB  APARTMENT  1+1,2  btocks  to  beach 
R*S.  garage.  $1195,  fee,  310-372-RENT 


SANTA  MONICA.  2+1,  catok.  rAs,  hardwood 
doors,  great  location!  Partying  included.  310- 
395-7368  wwwwestsiderentals.com. 

SHERMAN  OAKS.  Adorable  studk)  guest 
house.  Pet  okay!  Full  bath  $645  818-623- 
4444.  www.alloflJV.com 


8800 

Guesthouse  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS 
GUESTHOUSE 

Single,  (umished.  utilities  included.  One  car 
garage.  Washer/dryer  Total  privacy 
$950/month.   310-277-5554. 


8900 

House  for  Rent 


BEVERLY  HILLS  ADJACENT  2bdrm/2bth 
home,  yard,  unturnished,  hardwood  floors 
Ref.  req.  Approx.  $l700/mo.  310-271-0826 


WESTWOOD.  private  bdrm/blh/closet 
Share  dean  house  in  nice  neighborhood 
$1000/mo,  www  lasolutions  com/rent  htm, 
tiffany  kang©excite.com 

WLA.  Unturnished  room  w/prlvate  bath  Se- 
cured buiWing.  All  utilities  included  (exclud- 
ing telephone)  Female,  non-snx)ker  Avail- 
able 11/1    $625/mo.  310-446-1545. 


9500 

Roommates-Private  Room 


ASIAN/OUIET/CLEAN/MALE  Near  bus 
stop.  Westwood/Pico  3-mo.  mm  slay  Re- 
quired 2  relerences  Pnvate  bedroom  share- 
bath.  $650/month,  w/ulilites,  kitchen  prtv 
$40/day  310-475-8787. 


FREE  RENT  FOR  PSYCH/MED/SPECIAL 
ED  graduate  student  to  share  2bdrm/2bth 
apartment  with  teaming  disabled  adult  in 
WestLA  Call  Stan  1-800-843-3658. 


SOUTH  RB  APARTMENT  2+1.  panoramic 
ocean  view  $1300,  fee,  310-372-RENT 


ROOMMATE  NEEDED  3BD/2Ba  Santa  Mo- 
nica apartment  Near  beach.  Promenade, 
Montana  Balcony  laundry,  fireplace.  Profes- 
sional/grad  student,  $860/month.  Contact 
Nowk;kie©hotmail  com  or  917-327-7622. 


SPECTACULAR  OCEAN  VIEW.  Ibdrm,  up- 
per Hardvwxjd  floors.  2  bk)cks  from  Main 
St.&  beach  2627  3rd  St  #4  Santa  Monica 
$1700.  310-899-9580 


2B0,  2BA  TOWNHOME,  FP. 

CENTRAL  AIR/HEAT,  GATED 

GARAGE,  SEC.  ALARM.  CAT  OK 

3614  PARIS  DR. 
-  $1395/MO 
Onslte  Manager 
(310)  837-0906 

(310)391-1076 


*  IVIAR  VISTA   • 


2  BD,  2  BA  TOWNHOME,  FP, 

CENTRAL  AlfVHEAT  GATED 

GARAGE.  SEC.  ALARM,  CAT  OK 

11931  AVON  WAY  $1295/MO 
12736  CASWELL  AVE$1295/MO 

(310)391-1076 

S»     open  House  Mon-Sat  10  •  4  PM     .S 


STUDIO  CITY  HUGE  APARTMENT! 
Sundeck,  high  ceilings  $700.  818-623-4444 
www.allofLA.com 

STUDIO  CITY  UNIQUE  APARTMENT  Best 
location  a/c.  pool  $800  818-623-4444. 
www.allofLA.com 

TORR  CONDO.  2+1,  pet  okay  large  end 
unit,  Jacuzzi.  $1175,  fee,  310-372-RENT 

VENICE  GUEST  HOUSE,  yard.  $650.  310- 
395-RENT  www.weslsWerentals  com 

WALK  TO  UCLA  WESTWOOD  Large  1  +  1, 
2+2  Pool,  Jacuzzi,  walk-in  ctosets,  (Ireplace, 
lull-kitchen,  gated  garage,  instant  broadband 
avail,  www.koltontowors.com  310-208- 
1976. 

WEST  LA,  $625/month,  bachelor  apartment 
Full  bath,  kitchenette,  small  quiet  Wdg.  1-yr 
lease  No  pets.  310-410-1575. 

WESTCHESTER  GREAT  HOUSE  catok  rot 
$500.  310-395RENT  www westslderen- 
tals.com 


9200 

Housing  Needed 


GRADUATE  VISITING  STUDENT/WRITER 
needs  housing  1/01-6/01.  Female,  Former 
teacher  Contact  mk;har©k3uest  net  or  312- 
666-7949 


SANTA  MONICA  CITY 

Big  bedroom  w/pnvale  bath  In  2bdrm  condo 
Galed-praking.laundry,  kitchen,  utilities  in- 
cluded Available  November  $700/monlh. 
Great  location  310-453-9474 


MEDICAL  STUDENT 

FROM  NEW  YORK  needs  to  sublet  a  bed- 
room from  Nov  1-Dec.  1  in  the  Westwood 
area  Please  call  Jamie  607-763-6702 


SEEKING  ROOMMATE  Situation  near 
UCLA  or  bus  route  Male  staft  member,  50. 
easy  going,  seeks  own  room  and  bath 
Needed  11/01  Call  Clive  at  Murphy  Hall 
310-794-9236  or  page  310-636-5417 


9300 

Room  for  Help 


WESTWOOD  VILLAGE  apl    Fun,  outgoing 
lemale  looking  for  female  roommate'  Own 
bed/bath  in  2bdrTTv'2bth  apartment,   gated 
partdng,  lacuzzi  on  root,  security  building 
Available  1/01,  $900/mo.  310-209-2665. 


9600 

Roommates-Shared  Room 


FEMALE  ROOMMATE  WANTED  To  share 
spacious  1  +  1  apartment  in  Palms 
$337.50/month  +utililies  Call  310-837-1793 
for  more  info. 


FREE  ROOM 
AND  BOARD 

In  exchange  lor  babysitting  11-year-oW  girt 
approximately  10  hours/week  Century  City 
area.  Fertiales  only  310-277-8480  (even- 
ings) 


9700 

Sublets 


YEAR  LONG 
SUBLETTER  NEEDED 

One  spot  available  in  2  bdrm/2bth  apt 
$445/mo  Westwood  Dizaker  310-435-5409 
or  Richard  562-400-0421. 


DJSDiav 
206-3060 


'iw*'/ 


T,\,> 


30       Friday,  (ktotier  20, 2000 


FOOTBALL 

From  page  16 


PaHyBrowSpom 


lent  wide  receivers.  Like  any  good  football 
team  they  are  well  balanced." 

K.  ?M^fT"  ^^""^  ^"  "'^^^'^  '"cent've  to 
beat  UCLA.  More  than  half  of  the  team 

hails  from  California. 

"It's  a  big  game  for  me  to  play  in."  said 

Oregon  State  cornerback  Keith  Heyward- 

Johnson.  "All  of  my  friends  and  family  will 

_  be  there  and  I  want  to  give  everyone  down 

there  a  good  showing." 

"We're  doing  all  right  so  far  this  season 
We  re  feelmg  all  right  where  we  are.  but 
we  re  not  satisfied.  Our  ultimate  goal  is  to 
make  ,t  to  the  Rose  Bowl,"  Heyward- 
Johnson  continued. 

The  picture  should  not  seem  all  too  bleak 
lor  UCLA  fans.  The  Bruins  have  done 
some  good  things  in  recent  games,  and 
Saturday  could  be  the  culmination  of  weeks 
ot  patchwork  practicing. 

Cory  Paus  is  coming  ofTone  of  his  better 
games  of  the  year.  Paus  did  an  outstanding 
job  last  week  considering  the  Bruins  were 
unable  to  run  effectively.  Despite  a  few 
mental  mistakes,  the  redshirt  sophomore 
appears  to  be  coming  into  his  own.  But  the 
Bruins  must  establish  the  running  game  if 
they  hope  to  be  successful  against  Oregon 
otate. 

"We're  going  to  try  and  run  the  ball  bet- 
ter, Paus  said.  "That  should  open  up  the 
passmg  game  even  more." 

Oregon  State  head  coach  Dennis 
Erickson  seems  to  be  most  worried  about 
the  Brums  air  attack. 

"Cory  Paus  is  back  now  at  quarterback 
and  playmg  healthy,"  Erickson  said  in  a 
press  conference  on  Tuesday.  "And  they 
probably  have  the  best  pair  of  wide 
receivers  in  the  league.  The  guy  who  is  the 


real  playmaker  is  Freddie  Mitchen." 

And  Mitchell  will  be  looking  for  a  little 
revenge  against  the  other  Oregon  team  He 
has  bitter  memories  from  the  Bruins'  trip  to 
Eugene  earlier  this  year.  In  addition  to  that 
the  team  is  seeking  revenge  for  the  55-7 
drubbing  r     'ved  there  last  year. 

But  Saturday  should  be  a  much  difTerent 
game  this  year.  Again,  the  Bruins  are  much 
better  in  Pasadena,  and  Oregon  State 
knows  it. 

"Obviously,  they  play  much  better  in  the 
Rose  Bowl  than  they  do  on  the  road  " 
Erickson  said.  "We've  got  our  hands  full 
We  re  looking  forward  to  going  down  and 
looking  forward  to  the  challenge.  It  will  be 
interesting  to  see  what  happens." 

It  will  take  an  outstanding  defensive 
efTort  by  a  few  new  players  to  keep  the 
Beavers  at  bay.  Oregon  State  screams  scor- 
mg  power,  and  their  defense  should  not  give 
UCLA  too  many  problems.  But  the  deplet- 
ed Brum  defense  will  need  to  see  some  key 
contnbutions  from  some  new  plajers 

Sophomore  Joe  Hunter  could  see  more 
time  in  a  defense  that  must  be  prepared  for 
Oregon  State's  spread  attack.  Mat  and 
Dave  Ball  may  be  the  biggest  key  to  the 
Brums  game  The  twin  redshirt  freshmen 
will  need  to  have  outstanding  games  if  the 
Bruins  defense  is  to  be  successful 

Warrior  of  the  week  goes  to  Rusty 
Williams  who  will  be  playing  on  a  stresi 
fractured  foot. 

"If  he's  cleared,  he'll  play."  Toledo  said 
of  his  defensive  end.  "Rusty's  a  tough  kid  " 
There  will  have  to  be  a  lot  of  tough 
Bruins  if  the  team  hopes  to  turn  around 
their  season.  A  loss  to  Cal  is  not  the  end  of 
the  world,  but  it  could  be  the  beginning  of 
the  slide.  Coming  home  provides  UCLA 
with  the  chance  to  beat  a  quality  Pac-IO 
team  and  stay  in  the  hunt  for  the  Pac-10 
title. 


SIMOMTON 

From  page  16  -  ••. 

^ctr.t''??"  '^°"'  ''*'PP'"«  S'"'°"'o"  is  the 
act  that  the  defense  is  unable  to  focus  all  its  atten- 
tion on  the  back.  Oregon  Sute  runs  out  of  a  three 
wide  receiver  set  much  of  the  time  and  therefore 
forces  teams  to  spread  out.  This  is  when  Simonton 

^Z  Z  '"*^  ^''y  ^'  ^'''  '''''^^  eleven  touch- 
downs this  year.  ...      : 

,«fl^  A*"*!!"  U*^*" ''"  °"  attention  bii  film."  said 
Wfe  y  Audie  Attar.  "If  we  focus  too  much,  they'll 
just  throw  on  us.  ~,    ■ 

UCLA  plans  for  stopping  the  Beavtrs' revolve 
around  a  balanced  defensive  set  -  trying  not  to  get 
too  wrapped  up  in  stopping  Simonton. 

They  spread  it  out  a  lot  and  we  have  to  adjust  " 
Anderson  said.  "We're  going  to  put  a  lot  of  prei. 
happen '"'  ''"'""■^^'''  ^"^  ''y  '<>  '^''^^  something 
Simonton  is  coming  off  his  worst  rushing  game 
of  the  year.  He  picked  up  81  yards  against  Stanford 
on  14  carries.  This  number  is  deceptive  because  the 
Beavers  seenried  to  focus  more  on  the  pass  with 
quarterback  Jonathan  Smith  going  for  324  yards 

Rnh??7''-li'  *'"•"  *^'^  ^CLA  head  coach 
Bob  Toledo.  "They  don't  do  a  lot  of  runs,  but  they 


do  them  wdl." 

US?"^'°t'  ^'^"'  ^'^'  ^^''  y*^^  «*"»«  '*8«inst 
h«.H.f      ^^0J^"s  «'ere  pre-season  favorites  for 

S.1f  "'!.'"u  ^'  '^'■'^'  ''"•  S'-^^"'**"  showed  he 
hadn  t  heard  the  news. 

He  ran  for  234  yards  on  37  carries  en  route  to 
as  isting  Oregon  State  upset  the  Trojans,  to  the 

dso^ilnL'      i°K  """""^  '"  ^°'-^''"'='  Simonton 
tnda^^ll"^  t"  ^""^  "y  "^""8  three,  times. 

I  ■  i«  len  m  the  fourth  quarter. 

<j.«r!"*'"  ^^^^  *'"  "^^""^  a  ^"■''^  this  weekend 
Simonton  sat  out  the  end  of  the  Stanford  game  with 

coTch  Denni.  p"'  T'^'^L"^  '°  ^^^«°"  ^tate  head 
coach  Dennis  Enckson.  this  shouldn't  prevent  him 
from  playing  in  Pasadena  this  weekend  . 

nn  t"''  '""'^"Erickson  said  in  a  press  conference 
on  Tuesday  "He's  a  little  sore.  We've  got  a  lot  of 
guys  a  imie  sore,  but  I  think  everyone  does  this  tini  , 

'ii^''.  °'."°i  "^^  ^'y  '■°'  ^CLA  i»to  contain 
Simonton.  In  Oregon  State's  only  loss  this  year,  th" 
Washin^on  Huskies  held  him  to  104  yards  on  23 
carries.  Perhaps  more  important  is  the  fact  that  the 
Huskies  were  able  to  keep  him  out  of  the  end  zone 
.J.  c™'"'  "''''  ^  ^^aunting  task  this  weekend 
aJI  with  several  starters  missing  or  banged  up. 


CARAGHER 

From  page  16 

to  stress  the  importance  of  working  angles  and 
gettmg  good  separation,  as  well  as  convey  to  his 
receivers  the  offense  in  a  broader  sense 

Receivers  often  only  think  of  a  play  in  terms 
of  their  own  individual  routes."  said  Caragher  "I 
like  to  teach  that  five  offensive  routes  consist  of 
one  single  pattern  so  they  can  see  the  whole  pio 

prS:ess."  "'°''  ""'"''  P'^^"*  '"  '^' 

At  this  point  in  the  season.Taragher's  receiv- 


Onnol'"  ^^'^^'-tainly  received  attention. 
SEp^  r'Jf  ''^'''^  '^'  combination  of 

one  of  the  best  1-2  punches  in  the  nation 
Mitchell  himself  leads  the  nation  in  receiving 
yards  per  game  at  a  122.8  clip.  For  Caragher 
however,  it's  not  always  the  sta£  that  matter      ' 
I  think  Freddie  is  having  a  good  vear" 

catchSld '?  "m  "  "''^'^*"«  ^°  -«=  ^"^  his 
catches  and  touchdowns  is  his  improvement  in 

other  areas  -  blocking  down  field,  pattern  ru^ 

ning.  and  other  things  that  aren't  just  catch.n^ 


Swau«ia,pa9e29 


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M^OCCER  BRIEF 


Friday,  October  20, 2000       31 


■■'i-: 


Bruins  ready  to 
roll  up  north 

The  UCLA  men's  soccer  team  is 
looking  to  reverse  their  recent  losing 
trend  (falling  to  both  SUnford  and 
Washington)  as  they  travel  north 
The  Bruins  (9-2  overall.  1-2  PaolO). 
looking  to  advance  to  their  second 
straight  Final  Four,  cannot  afford  t0 
slide  anymore  in  the  polls  and  will  try 
to  leap  to  the  top  of  the  Pac-IO  with 
wins  against  California  on  Friday 
and  Oregon  State  on  Sunday 

With  little  of  the  PaolO  season 
remaining,  the  Bruins  cannot  slip 
against  the  non-elite  teams.  UCLA 
has  played  fairiy  well  on  the  road  this 
year  with  a  4-1  record,  including  vio 


tories  over  Indiana  and  Santa  Qara. 
The  Bruins'  first  loss,  however,  came 
the  last  time  they  traveled  to  the  Bay 
Area,  when  the  Cardinal  defeated 
them  on  Oct.  8. 

If  the  Bruins  want  their  chance  for 
revenge  against  the  Cardinal  in  an 
upcoming  game  to  have  signifi- 
cance, they  must  not  overlook  the 
Bejirs. 

tal  (2-9-1,  0-2-1)  has  struggled  so 
far  in  Pac-IO  play  and  has  scored 
only  two  goals  in  its  last  seven  games. 
They  look  to  Kendall  Simmons  to 
jumpstart  an  offense  that  has  not 
proven  it  is  as  good  as  it  was  last  year 
when  Cal  went  1 1-4-2  and  ended  the 
season  ranked.  Adding  to  the  Bears' 
problems  have  been  the  adjustment 
time  for  new  coach  Kevin  Grimes 


and  new  goaltenders  junior  Marco 
Palmieri  and  freshnian  Brian 
Walker.  ;>:;;;/-: 

The  Bruins  will  look  to  take 
advantage  of  the  Bears  with  their 
potent  offense  anchored  by  senior 
forward  McKinley  Tennyson  Jr.. 
who  is  third  in  the  nation  in  goals  per 
game  with  1.2.  Senior  midfielder 
Shaun  Tsakiris  also  has  an  interest  in 
statistics  this  weekend  because  he  is 
one  assist  short  of  passing  Ante 
Razov  for  eighth  on  the  all-time 
UCLA  list. 

On  Sunday  the  Bruins  do  battle 
with  the  Oregon  State  Beavers. 
While  the  Beavers  (6-«-l,  0-2-1)  have 
fared  better  than  Cal  this  season, 
they  are  still  looking  to  break  into  the 
upper  echelon  of  the  PaolO  teams 


They  have  had  success  this  year  with 
freshman  goalie  Peter  Billmeyer 
sporting  a  0.92  goals  per  game  aver- 
age. Matt  Olsen  anfl  James  Albert 
lead  the  attack  on  offense. 

UCLA  will  look  to  shut  the 
Beavers  down  on  the  offensive  side 
of  the  ball  with  freshman  goalie  DJ 
Countess  stopping  the  OSU  attack. 
Last  week  the  Bruins  demolished  the 
Beavers  4-1  on  home  turf,  setting  up 
this   weekend's   rematch.    If  the 
Bruins  can  create  the  scoring  oppor- 
tunities like  they  did  at   Drake 
Stadium  and  are  able  to  stymie  the 
Beavers  on  the  defense  side,  they  will 
likely  return  home  unscathed. 


Notes  compiled  by  Jim  Guthrie,  Daily 
Bruin  Contributor. 


M.WATERPOLO 

From  page  32 

the  second  round  on  Saturday. 

The    Bruins    have    had    an 
unlucky  past  with  this  tourna- 
ment the  past  two  years.  In  1998 
they  fell  to  UC  Irvine  in  the 
championship  game,  and  last 
year  lost  the  final  game  to  USC. 
"We  always  expect  to  do  well, 
but  we  have  lost  both  times  in  the 
championship  game  the  last  two 
years,"  Baker  said. 

The   Bruins   are   hoping   to 
change  the  statistics  this  year. 

"We  are  using  (the  losses)  for 
motivation.  It  has  just  been  frus- 
trating," co-head  coach  Adam 
Krikorian  said.  "We  felt  we 
played  well  but  were  just  unfortu- 
nate. This  year  we  hope  to  have 
the  opportunity  to  win." 

UCLA  brings  their  winning 


streak  to  the  tournament  and 
hopes  to  keep  the  game-winning 
attitude  this  weekend. 

"I  like  coming  into  it  with  a 
winning  streak.  1  like  our  confi- 
dence right  now."  Baker  said. 

Krikorian    added    that    he 
thinks  their  streak  will  give  them 
the  confidence  they  need  to  win. 
"It  all  depends  on  how  we  look 
at  it,"  Krikorian  said.  "We  are 
going  into  it  thinking  positively 
and  looking  at  it  as  challenging." 
The  winning  streak  does  not 
seem  to  put  much  pressure  on  the 
players. 

"We've  been  playing  pretty 
well.  It  is  not  an  amazing  streak. 
It  isn't  out  of  the  ordinary  and 
winning  has  become  day-to^lay 
for  us  now,"  Parker  said. 

The  Bruins'  confidence  might 
just  be  what  gets  them  the  victory 
they've  been  missing  the  last  two 
years. 


W.VOLLEYBALL 

Ffompage32 

UCLA  didn't  need  much  offense 
tonight  to  take  the  win. 

Up  against  Cal  (W.  4-«)  tonight,  a 
team  known  for  its  solid  defense  and 


W.SOCCER 

From  page  32 


rEittSA  woo 


strong  attack,  UCLA  cannot  over- 
look their  unrankcd  opponent. 

But,  "If  we  play  the  way  we  played 
tonight,  we'll  be  in  good  shape," 
Fendrick  said. 


that  puts  a  bull's-eye  on  our  backs." 
head  coach  Lesle  Gallimore  said  in  a 
statement.  "Our  only  goal  this  season 
was  to  finish  in  the  top  three  in  the  Pao 
10  and  that  would  guarantee  a  spot  in 
the  NCAA  Tournament. 

"Our  goals  have  shifted.  Now  we're 
looking  to  vie  for  the  top  spot." 

At  No.  3.  Washington  is  the  highest- 
ranked  opponent  UCLA  will  have 
faced,  but  Bruin  assistant  coach  Lisa 
Shattuck  said  the  parity  of  the  PaolO 
means  every  team  is  dangerous.  "I 
don^t  know  if  it  will  be  our  biggest 
test,"  she  said.  "Every  game  we  have 
to  approach  equally.  Every  game  in  the 
PaolO  is  going  to  bea  challenge  to  us." 
As  the  underdogs,  the  Bruins  seem 
to  relish  a  role  they  are  unaccustomed 


Team  tuning  up 
at  invitational 

As  a  tune-up  for  next  week's 
Pac-IO  championships,  the 
women's  cross  country  team 
will  compete  in  today's  low-key 
Titan  Invitational  in  Fullerton. 
With  the  exception  of  fresh- 
man Valerie  Hores,  who  is  rest- 
ing her  legs.  UCLA's  top  run- 
ners will  be  in  the  race. 

Seniors  Tina  Bowen.  Katie 
Nuanes   and  Gina   Donnelly, 
junior  Bridie  Hatch,  and  sopho^ 
mores  Kelly  Grimes,  Melissa 
McBain  and  Julia  Barbour  will 
compete.    Also    running   are 
junior  Alynda  Franco,  sopho- 
more Ysanne  Williams,  and 
freshmen    Michelle    Barrack, 
Jessica    Marr    and    Tiffany 
Burgess. 

In  the  meantime,  the  men's 
team  will  rest  most  of  its  top  ath- 
letes, including  junior  Bryan 
Green  and  senior  Mason 
Moore,  who  led  the  Bruins  to  a 
fourth-place  finish  at  last  week's 
Wolverine  Interregional  in  Ann 
Arbor.  Mich. 

Running  today  for  the  men 
will  be  senior  team  captain 
Scott  Abbott,  senior  Jonathan 
Lee,  juniors  Andrew  Wulf, 
Justin  Patananan  and  Martin 
Brix,  and  sophomore  Phil 
Young. 

The  women's  5000m  race 

starts  at  4:30  p.m.  and  the  men's 

8000m  competition  begins  at  5 

p.m.  at  the  Cal  State  Fullerton 

I    campus. 


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Sc«  W.SOCCER,  page  29 


Laip  Gala  Apples 

?^4se 

^"^  Reg.  $1.39/lb. 

I  uiscount  Shoppers  I 
I  pay  only  440 /lb.    | 


BCKfiPJERinrS 


L  Notes  compiled  by  Dylan 
Hernandez,  Daily  Bruin  Senior 
Staff. 


SparWetts* 

{_  •  CUrSTAL  FRESH  ORINKINO  WATER 

A  •  MOUNTAtN  SnUNG  WATER 


Discount  Shoppers 
pay  only  450  ea. 


1.5  Uter  (50.7  oz.) 
w/sport  top 


Coke,  Diet  Coke 


Discount  Shoppe.o 
pay  only  $2.25  ea. 

Reg.  $3.49  each 


iBixtln^ev 


>ritd  7-Up, 


Uscount  Shoppers! 


I  pay  only  890 


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<&«-  Wheatles  I    Minute  Maid. 


Discount  Shoppers  I 
pay  only  890 

Umlte" 


2  Uter 


HBHC?* 


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[pay  only  $2.69 
18  oz.  Reg.  $4.39 


Orange  Juice 


Uil.UlilJiiiiiini.i.,,.„ 

/     ^       14  varieties 


Discount  Shoppers 
J  64  oyjpay  only  $2.25  ea, 


99 


Open  'til 


Midnight 


Discount  Shoppers 
pay  only  89» 


While  supplies  last 

•^^  P'^        12  02.  cans  Reg.  $11.99 

FOSTER  FARMS, 

Turkey  Franks 

99" 

Discount  Shoppers! 
pay  only  890 

Reg.  $1.79 1 


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Where's  football,  you  ask? 

Take  a  look  at  the  center  of  the  paper 
for  complete  coverage  of  Saturday's 
game  against  the  Oregon  State 
Beavers.  See  pages  16  and!  7 

Friday,  October  20, 2000    ,  ' 


Dally  Bruin 


.7-  . 


Sports  on  the  Web 

You  can  also  read  about 

cross  country  and  men's 

soccer  inside  and  online: 

www.dailybruin.ucla.edu 


Bruins  sweep  Stanford  attaclcwith  stifling  speed 


W.VOLLEYBALL  Focus,  play  of 
Fendrick,  Bowles  drive  team; 
UCLA  ready  for  Cal  contest 


By  Christina  TeMer 

Daily  Bruin  Senior  Staff 

If  you  had  blinked,  you  may  have  missed  the 
match.  But  ifyou  did,  you  would  have  missed 
the  UCLA  women's  volleyball  team's  (lJ-5 
overall,  8-2  Pac-IO)  best  showing  at  home  thus 
far  as  they  defeated  Stanford  (11-7,  5-5)  15-2 
15-9,  15-6. 

With  the  hype  of  the  return  of  Olympic 
team  member  and  Stanford  sophomore  Logan 
Tom,  the  match  was  expected  to  be  more,  well, 
anything  than  it  was. 

But    the    Bruins      

played  their  game, 
shut  down  the  hype 
and  proved  that  they 
can  sweep  Stanford 
with  or  without 
Logan. 


UCLA  d.  Stanford 
15-2,15-9,15-6 


Kristec  Porter  attacks  the  ball  as  Stacy  Le«  and  Elisabeth  Bachman  move  in  to  coveTar 

the  Bruins  shut  down  Stanford  in  three  straight  games  at  Pauley  Pavilion  Thursday  night. 


'All  the  hype  surrounding  the  match  got  us 
fired  up  and  motivated  us  tonight,"  junior 
Ashley  Bowles  said. 

To  start  out  the  match,  the  Bruins  rattled  off 
five  unanswered  points  behind  the  serving  of 
freshman  Stacy  Lee,  whereupon  Jennifer 
Detmer  posted  the  Cardinal's  first  kill  of  the 
match. 

The  Bruins  would  hold  Stanford  to  only  two 
points  and  a  -.091  hitting  percentage  in  the 
game,  as  sophomore  Lauren  Fendrick  tallied 
three  kills,  six  service  points  and  two  digs. 

Stanford  put  up  more  of  a  fight  in  the  sec- 
ond game,  by  keeping  it  within  one  until  the 
score  read  9-9.  Once  the  Bruins  took  the  lead  at 
10-9  off  of  a  Cardinal  mis-hit,  the  Bruins  never 
looked  back. 

Bowles  carried  UCLA  to  13  points  with  her 
consistent  serves,  and  the  game  closed  at  15-9 
with  a  Kristee  Porter  kill. 

Game  three  started  out  as  a  battle,  and  it 


looked  as  though  the  Bruins  had  finally  pulled 
away  once  they  stretched  their  lead  to  6-4,  but 
Stanford  capitalized  on  a  series  of  Bruin  errors 
to  tie  up  the  score  at  6-6. 
•  But  again,  it  was  Fendrick  from  the  back 
line  that  helped  pull  the  Bruins  ahead  with  six 
straight  service  points,  including  two  straight 
aces,  bringing  the  score  to  12-6. 

Erika  Selsor  closed  out  the  game  and  match 
at  15-6  with  her  two  service  points  to  bring  the 
Bruins  to  their  second-straight  sweep  of 
Stanford. 

"We  were  all  on  the  same  page  and  we  were 
all  really  focused,"  Fendrick  said.  "The  team 
played  really  well  in  all  aspects." 

A  Bruin  team  that  has  struggled  this  season 
at  playing  together  throughout  the  duration  of 
their  matches  proved  tonight  that  they  can. 

"We  got  fired  up 
—  for  this  match  and 

were  able  to  play  a 
full  match  with  con- 
sistency and  intensi- 
ty." Bowles  said,  i: 
The  strong  play 
by  the  Bruins  paired 


with  the  lack  of  attack  from  Stanford  allowed 
the  match  to  culminate  in  one  hour  and  fifteen 
minutes. 

"I  expected  a  long  match  like  we  had  the 
weekend  before.  We  did  a  great  job  at  serving 
and  putting  them  in  trouble,"  UCLA  head 
coach  Andy  Banachowski  said. 

Ironically,  the  Bruins  posted  just  one  block 
fewer  against  Stanford  than  they  had  in  the  5- 
game  loss  to  USC. 

But  those  eight  blocks  last  night  proved  to 
be  all  that  they  needed,  limiting  Stanford  to  a 
.115  hitting  percentage. 

But  the  Bruins  didn't  post  huge  figures 
themselves. 

With  Elisabeth  Bachman  and  Fendrick 
each  posting  a  team-high  nine  kills,  and  Porter 
only  adding  seven  of  her  own,  it  seemed  that 


S««W.V011fYUU«p«9c31 


Bruins  hope  to  keep 
streak  alive  up  north 


Underdog  team  faces  aucial  matches 


M.WATERP0L0:  Squad 
seeking  victory  against 
top  teams  at  tournament 


By  Rekha  Rao 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

The  top-ranked  UCLA  men's 
water  polo  team  heads  up  north  for 
the  second  consecutive  weekend  in 
hopes  of  continuing  their  seven- 
game  winning  streak  in  the 
Northern 
California 
Tournament, 
hosted  by 

University  of 
the  Pacific. 
With  several 
top  teams  in 
the  Mountain 
Pacific  Sports 

Federation  conference  competing, 
including  Pepperdine,  UC  Santa 
Cruz  and  USC,  the  Bruins  will  be 
challenged  in  this  weekend's  compe- 
titions. 

"This  is  a  key  weekend  because  if 
we  win  we  will  be  in  the  driver's  seat 
for  the  NCAAs,"  said  two-meter 
offensive  player  senior  Dave  Parker. 

This  is  the  second  of  three  key 


tournaments  for  the  men's  water 
polo  team.  In  September  at  the 
Southern  California  Tournament, 
UCLA  took  third  place  with  a  5-4 
loss  to  USC. 

The  MPSF  Championship  is  the 
final  tournament  of  the  season. 
From  this  tournament,  the  two  top- 
finishing  teams,  and  the  team  with 
the  next  best  record  in  the  league  will 
continue  on  to  the  NCAA 
Championship  tournament. 

Although  NorCal  doesn't  help 
the  Bruins  maintain  their  No.  1 
ranking,  it 
gives  them  the 
needed  prac- 
tice for  the 
weeks  ahead. 

"This  tour- 
nament goes  a 
long  way 

towards  our  at- 
large  bid  for 
the  NCAA  tournament,"  said 
UCLA  co-head  coach  Guy  Baker. 
"But  it  doesn't  help  with  our  rank- 
ings." 

At  NorCal,  UCLA  faces  a  tough 
two  days,  playing  No.  16  UCSC  in 
their  first  round  and  then  the  winner 
of  the  Pacific-Pepperdine  match  in 


TERESA  WCX} 


S««M.W/(TEV01ll,pa9c31 


Vt^SOCCER;  Washington^^ 
proves  to  be  uphill  fight, 
essential  to  Pac-10  hunt 


Braana  Boling  brings  the  ball  upfleld  In  a  game  agairwt  Oregon  this 
year.  UCLA  faces  Washington  State  today  and  Washington  on  Sunday. 


ByJcffAgasc 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

As  the  UCLA  women's  soccer 
team  prepares  for  a  road  trip  to  face 
Washington  State  and  No.  3 
Washington,  a  cursory  glance  over  the 
Pac-10  team  statistics  appears  to  point 
out  a  dear  conference  leader. 

The  No.  7  Bruins  (11-1-1, 2-0-1  Pao- 
10)  rank  first  in  the  conference  in  shots 
(21.85  per  game),  points  (9.62  per 
game),  goals  (3.62  per  game),  and 
goals  allowed  (0.21  per  game)  The 
team  is  unbeaten  in  its  last  12  games. 

Defensively,  the  team  as  a  whole 
also  ranks  first,  and  the  Bruins  lead  the 
Pac-10  in  nearly  every  offensive  statis- 
tical category,  even  comer  kicks  (8.38 
per  game,  to  be  exact),  but  are  still  dis- 
placed from  the  top  spot  in  the  confer- 
ence by  Wa.shington,  which  ranks  sec- 
ond behind  UCLA  in  nearly  all  of 
those  categories. 

It  has  been  a  landmark  season  for 
the  Huskies  (I3-I-0,  4-0-0  Pac-10). 
They  are  riding  a  school  record  seven- 
game  winning  streak  and  their  13  wim 
already  tie  the  school  record  for  victo- 
ries in  a  season. 
"We're  in  first  place  by  ourselves. 


Mapping  1,700  years  of  Nstory 


Study  links  reasons 
inequality  in  LA, 


CITY:  Conference  releases 
'Prismatic  Metropolis'  that 
contradicts  boom  beliefs 


By  Lily  Jamali 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 


u:,  ■|„l:_.„,   « ,  ,-    »u     I-  t    L       ^  »T)LA«MtrMN/0*ly  Brum  Seniof  Staff 

His  Hohness  Aram  I.  Catholicos  of  the  Great  House  of  Cicilia  introduces  the  crowd  in  Schoenberq  Hall 
to  the  history  of  Armenian  Cicilia.  The  patriarch  is  similar  to  what  the  pope  is  to  Roman  Catholics. 


A  new  study  dispels  beliefs  that 
everyone  is  better  off  as  a  result  of 
America's  current  economic  boom. 

Members  of  different  racial  and 
ethnic  groups  in  urban  areas  are  suf- 
fering because  of  differences  in 
opportunities,  resources  and  obsta- 
cles, according  to  "Prismatic 
Metropolis;  Inequality  in  Los 
Angeles." 

The  book  is  based  on  a  study  con- 
ducted over  a  10-year  period  by  the 
UCLA  Center  for  the  Study  of  Urban 
Poverty. 

Experts  in  the  fields  of  urban  plan- 
ning and  social  research  gathered  for 
a  twoKiay  conference  Thursday  and 
Friday  to  celebrate  the  book's 
release. 
The  team  of  UCLA  faculty  and 


Chancellor  Camesale  welcomes 
conference  attendants  to  Royce 
Hall  for  the  "Prismatic  Metropolis." 

students  who  wrote  the  book  con- 
ducted the  survey  of  Los  Angeles  res- 
idents as  part  of  a  multi-city  project 
that  took  similar  surveys  in  Detroii, 
Boston  and  Atlanta  Many  of  the 
writers,  having  received  their  doctor- 
ates through  their  work  on  the  book. 


Sec 


P^" 


Inconveniences  end  after 
month-long  MTA  strike 


vv 


BUSES:  Students  forced  to 
miss  class;  workers  lose 
jobs,  unable  to  pay  bills 


.  '  /  <  I 


*  •  . 

.It 


t  JAjl.'.MW^teji^'i-^^' 


By  Monique  Simpson 

Daily  Bruin  Contributor 

:  For  four  and  a  half  wt  eks,  UCL A 
wnployee  Misael  Pineda  commuted 
lirec  hours  a  day  from  hi ;  home  in 
"Vest  Los  Angeles  to  campu.s  by  bicy- 

J  It  was  a  risky  ride,  pedaling  next  to 
cars  on  Wilshire  Boulevard,  and  the 
commute  was  worse  when  the  weath- 
er was  cold  and  raining,  but  it  was  the 
only  way  Pineda  could  get  to  work. 

In  addition  to  working  at 
Kerckhoff  Coffee  House,  Pineda 
worked  mornings  at  a  warehouse  in 
East  L.A.  Once  the  strike  began,  he 
was  unable  to  make  it  to  work  by  6 
a.m. 

"I  couldn't  find  a  ride,"  Pineda 
said. 

He  had  even  walked  twice  for  two 
hours  to  the  job,  but  eventually  was 
let  go. 

"The  first  week  of  the  strike,  I  got 
fired,"  Pineda  said. 

Pineda  was  one  of  the  450,000 
Metropolitan  Transportation 

Authority  bus  riders  who  were  forced 
to  find  alternate  methods  of  trans- 
portation due  the  strike. 

The  strike  began  on  Sept.  16  when 
bus  driven'  union  representatives 
and  MTA  ofTicialii  faiUd  to  ggwe  on — 


terms  for  a  new  contract. 

"I  thought  it  would  be  a  quick 
strike,  lasting  about  two  days," 
Pineda  said. 

Instead  the  strike  lasted  32  days, 
ending  Tuesday  after  the  sides 
reached  an  agreement.  MTA  buses 
returned  to  the  streets  Wednesday 
morning,  providing  riders  on  campus 
with  needed  transportation. 

"A  family  member  would  drop  me 
ofT  at  the  commuter  bus  stop,  which 
was  inconvenient  for  him,  "  said 
Janet  Brown,  an  administrative  assis- 
tant for  the  Community  Programs 
Office,  who  commutes  from  Reseda. 
Brown  used  Commuter  Express 
buses  -  a  service  of  the  Los  Angeles 
Department  of  Transportation  - 
which  operated  during  the  strike. 

If  no  one  was  available  to  pick  her 
up  from  the  bus  stop  in  the  evening. 
Brown  would  walk  three  miles  to  her 
house. 

But  Brown  said  she  was  "one  of  the 
lucky  ones,"  because  everyone  did 
not  have  access  to  the  commuter 
buses. 

Juliana  Arraes,  an  exchange  stu- 
dent from  Brazil,  also  rode  the  com- 
muter bus  each  day  from  North 
Hollywood. 

"I  would  pay  $6  every  day  to  take  a 
small  bus  to  the  commuter  bus  and 
ride  the  commuter  bus,"  Arraes  said. 
The  MTA  bus  fare  is  $1.35  per  ride. 

When  Arraes  arrived  in  Los 
Angeles  for  the  first  time  two  weeks 


Pilipino  student  event  celebrates  heritage 


EVENT:  Chief  shares  life 
experiences;  warns  that 
culture,  home  in  danger 


By  Hcmesh  Patel 

Daily  Bruin  Reporter 


TT 


Datu  Efrew  Mandipensa  once 
stayed  awake  for  eight  days  and 
nights.  On  another  occasion  he  slept 
in  the  forest  amongst  monkeys  and 
snakes. 

About  40  stu- 
dents, profes- 
sors, a  tribal 
chief  clad  in  tra- 
ditional costume, 
and  spirits  gath- 
ered in  the 
Kerckhoff  Art 
Gallery 
Thursday    night 

to  hear  stories  from  Mandipensa, 
chief  of  an  indigenous  tribe  in  the 
.  Philippines. 

The  event  was  part  of  a  scries  of 
programs  sponsored  by  the  student 
group  Samahang  Pilipino  to  cele- 
brate Pilipino  American  History 
Month. 

"These  indigenous  people  have 
never  been  conquered  or  colonized 
and  have  still  retained  their  tribal 
dialect,"  said  Debbie  Nagata  while 
introducing  the  chief  She  spent  one 
and  a  half  years  living  with  the  tribe. 
Mandipensa  opened  the  presen- 
tation with  a  ritual  song,  summorv 
ing  the  spirits  pf  his  ancestors  to  join 
him  in  the  art  gallery. 
— "It's  part  of  our  culture  to  start 


_      .        -,  ..  ..  f  ATMfHW  JON 

Datu  Efrcw  Mandipensa,  chief  of  the  Higaonao  tribe  in  the 
Philippines,  plays  guitar  in  Kerckhoff  Grand  Salon  Thursday. 


everything  with  a  sacred  gathering. 
What  we  have  here  today  is  a  sacred 
gathering,"  he  said 

Mandipensa  is  the  youngest  tribal 
chief  ever  installed  in  the  Higaonon 
tribe,  which  resides  on  the  Mindanao 
island  off  the  coast  of  the  southern 
Philippines.  While  other  datus,  or 
chiefs,  act  as  priests  or  administra- 
tors, Mandipensa  said  he  is  respon- 
sible for  telling  others"  about  the 
tribe.  He  told  his  listeners  not  only 
about  the  Higaonon  tribe's  culture, 
but  also  that  it  is  in  danger  of  disap- 
pearing due  to  logging  in  the  area 

"We  need  to  protect  our  forest  - 
that  is  why  I  am  here."  he  said 
— StuUeiiti  iiald  thgy  citmc  lo  the 


the 
the 


event   to   better   undersund 
indigenous       people       of 
Philippines 

"I  just  heard  about  this  event  in 
my  Pilipino  history  class  and  it 
sounded  really  interesting."  said 
Bryan  Cardenas,  a  third-year  Asian 
American  Studies  student 

"I  want  to  understand  more 
because  these  arc  one  of  the  la« 
indigenous  people  in  the  countrv," 
he  continued 

Mandipensa  shared  thi-  »ior>  of 
his  journey  in  becoming  a  d«tu  five 
years  ago.  describing  tasks  that  test- 
ed    his     mental     and     physical 


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