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UCLA DAILY BRUIN
LOS ANQELE
CALIFORMIA
FALL 2000, PAET 1 OF
EPTEMBEE
OCTOBER 20,
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,2 Septtitibef 25-28. 2000
Daily Bnrin News
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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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tmltnt
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
1145 Westwood Blvd.
Westwood
(310) 208 2082
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one of our Personal Choice rate plans and
add up to three people for an additional
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Plus, if you act now, we'M include
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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.
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appaa*. Rooming coverage oUride CAMV not avBllebto In el areaa 3tj)ng OlManoa la kwhaled in
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September 25-28, 2000
Daily Bruin
Daily Brain
iiNiivs
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
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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
i^ '•■jtf,^ -
r :'
iiim^mmmm
IMy Brain Newt
September 25-28, 2000
^
't*<:'^
12 pk. - 12 oz. bottles
■f
2/89
Discount Shoppers
pay only 400 ea.^
fe^i 1 Utor (33.8 oz.)
w/sporttop
Get Great Prices!
BECOME A DISCOUNT SHOPPER
SAVE
SAVE
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
at 1057 Gayley Ave. 209-1111
r ^ ^
MasterCard
J^--
• <
0
•^tf*
-La-
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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^j^ t Lot 31 t Macgowan Hall
H^P^ i Ueberroth Building f Muiphy Hall
^jj^oepoo* (^ J NPI fi Factoi/Hershcy
Ackerman Union • Ackerman Union
33C» "^^FMtorBuflding H Medical Plaza
^Jj^^ f Mui|>lqi!^FiBculty etc f Ueberroth Building
(6:00pm-7pm-southbo»iid stops also include
Ueberroth Building. G^iyicy & \^eybum. and Lot 31)
For More Infornnatian Call (310) 806-2908
email: fis@ts.ucla.edu www.transportation
.ucla.edu /^^
Keep rnis map
for future reference
Ji.J^
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12 Septfmber 25-28, 2000
I. f ,
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Daily Bruin N«ws
f'Mltj
Daily Bruin News
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
Program that will earmark at least
$1.2 billion to students with a C
average or better, creating one of
the nation's lai-gest scholarship
programs.
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16 September 25-28, 2000
Sh ■
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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
smm
Textbooks- ^10 20*
www.uclastore com
Keep the booKs you'll
need, sell the rest for
cash...some booKs may
be worth half their
purchase price!
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:
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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
S«eiailSrY,pa9e22
fs-.
Daily Bntin News
"•.J,
September 25-28, 2000 21
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22 September 25-28, 2000
Daily Bruin News
When the Bruins score,
you Save!
•■'iwiwiwrt^iiiiirr-iwiiMiij
-r^^.
\
\ X. V
.tCA
;ii«.
UCLA Fans - One more reason to cheer this season! Fans receive a 5%
DISCOUNT onBearWear for every touchdown the Bruins score at
HOME games! Two touchdowns means 10% OFf; five touchdowns means
25% OFF' Discount is good on the MONDAY following the game. Show
your TICKET STUB in the BearWear Department of the UCLA Store in
Ackerman Union. It's bound to be a winning season for the Bruins!
• Maximum cJiicount ,5 25 . OFF Good only on the Monday following ffie home gome
No other discounts apply Not vol.d on doss ring orders
A/ext Home Came:
Saturday, September 30 vs, Arizona state
/vext scoreBig aiscountday:
.Monday, October 2,
BearWear
510.206.0810
www.uclastore.com
UCLfe
■- 1''*^
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.
See WMMMUIfS, pa9e 24
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24 Se|M«nber2S-28,2000
Daily Bruin News
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Advertise Campus' Events in the
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September 25-28, 2000 25
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.
You'll still be eating ramen, but
it will taste a heck of a lot better.
n
S
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
■*»■■'■■..
.^-'
jy •':,
Daily Bnm New
examines
• II
^^^ 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-
SccUMNliMgelT
Bruin OnLine
Fall 2000 Training Courses
UCLA 'Communloation
TochneiogySorvieM
■de,.f.ca.on .. ^u„^. y ^ ^,^„ ^ ,^^^^ rt,/,ajc»t^ '^Xl.l^^^cIZirf 3„d oU,, size i, li™.ed. UCLA
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A p,.sent4tion o^ services of ftc Interne., Bniin OnLine. and how ,o esublish . BOL .ccount
I Tue.. Decembers 10:30.m-ll:36.» KerckholT State Room.
Training for first time Eudoia Pro E-mail u<iMM nfr.^^!^l^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^"''^I^BBB^^B^^^^^^^HI
HisHe...„c,udesHowu.config„„Hriro°«^:r^^^=£E^^^^
W«l. October4 l:30pD.-2!j«pai Kerekhoff Sut. Ro<Mn. I w«l N k...
t.R«»,. I Th.„. December 7 3:00pm - 4:00p» Kerckhoirsute R«,m.
\(l\;intc(l liidor;! I»i
Thur.. Octobers 10:30.m - 12:00pm KerckhofT Sute Room. I Wed. N«. k^ .c
Wed. Octobers 9:p0.m - I0:30.m Ke«.cbo,rSt.te^ Z^ ^Z^l ^T''"'^'^ Ke.U.oirSe.te Room.
I Wed. December 6 3:00p« - 4:30pm Kerckhoff State Room.
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An overhead demonstration on basic techniaues iwed tohnii!^!!!r^I^^^^^^^^^^^^^''''''^iBBHBBBBB
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''^
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■■■ ■-••^.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
..V. -i .?■;'. ». ,: - ■, ■.-•.,v-i.. : , ■ J
* •- * '.-''. ^ ■ ' "•.■-'" ■» • '' ■'*•■■" ; '" *'",-■',■ ' ■. .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
When you come in for athletic shoes, don't be surprised if we ask you about
your pronation. Or your medial wedge density. Or any other personal
question that helps us fit you better. That's our
expertise and customer service at work. Fact is,
when it comes to feet and fit, we've got it down to
a science at FrontRunners.
fHOHTRUMMBRS
11620 San Vicente Blvci.
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in Brentwood
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Join the Dc% Bruin staff
Tht: Daily Uruin oners »|)|M)rlunili(« for .slu(l(!nLs intcrciil(!d in
ncnrly owry ««|)o<l of journalism — rn)m r(;|M>rlinK <« Inisimsw.
from n<w»nM)ni manaccmcnl lo Inlctrnci journali.sm. And wi; do it
iK'llor than any ( laxs iMtytusc we olTcr you lh(! chaiMi! lo do more
Ihan.sludy. VW; offirr r(«l cx^XTirmc!. A.s a rcfjorlcr or
pholopaithci for Ihc Daily Bruin, youll «»'l a fronl-row .seal lo Ih*'
cvcnl.s thai .sha|><' (uir campus and communily. There isnl a more
j'xcilinj; exira-curricularaelivily in (•olle(,T.
II doesnl mailer whal your major is or if you have any |ir<>\'ious
ex|K!riemc in news|)a|H!r.s. WW train you to re|M»rl. (Krsign. or
shool |>i(lures in four weekend *'orksho|)s lan(rhl l»y wctrkinK
journalists. You miphi end u|i end up like many wh(» vmv^ before
you — ^wilh a solid slarl loward a (ahht
■MITTOGETMVOUrED?
If yrtud liki' lo know mon;. come lo our Oriental ion and OfK-n
lloHS«' 1\iesday, (Kl. H at ir.W p.m. in Ar4<erman Union Grand
llallr<M»m. VMm'. bt^ni what wo haw to offer, visit our ofllms, and
m<K!t the DruinslafT.
F\m more inr«»rmation. call us at 825-2787.
Find out how you can
join the Daily Brain jrt pur
Orientation and Open House
Tuesday, Oct 3 at 6:30 p.m.
Aclcemian Union
Grand Ballroom.
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.
r
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Get great
food,
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and
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Every Sth &
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call 825-2161
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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
investment bank?"
EPOCH
P A R T N t R S
Ushering in a new era of technology investment banking
Resume Drop Date: Friday, October 6, 2000
Information Session Thursday October 12 @ 7:00 - 9:00pm - Career Center
First Round Interview: Tuesday. October 17, 2000
Investment Banking Night: Thursday October 19
Epoch Partners is a technology-enabled investment bank focused on high-qrowth
companies and electronically connected institutional and individual investors Epoch has
assembled a team of expenenced investment banking, research, trading and technology
professionals to build the next generation investment bank.
Through partnerships with Charles Schwab, Amentrade and TD Waterhouse Epoch has
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more than 10 million accounts. Epoch's industry-leading venture capital partners include
Benchmark Capital, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Tndent Capital
"■'.*^'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.
Ever wanted to run
your own radio station?
i
Here's your chance.
UCLARADI0.COM IS YOUR CAMPUS RADIO STATION
U(;LArH(lio.n)m i.s an (TJcdic Inlcrncl music silc Icalurinj,'
live and archived music profrramminf^and olh(>r conlcnl
includinj? discussions and (lownloads in "channels."
(Channels are j-adio sUlions within a slalion, each (JevoU-d lo
a slyle oC music. U(:LAra<JI(M-,om will conUin as many chan-
nels as sludenls are inleresled in crtialln}?. All styles wel-
come; including, hul not limited to, indie, punk, metal, ska,
Mrit(K)|», hardcor(!/emo, electronic, danc<-, ^'othic/imlustrial,
hif) hop. jazz, world, and even classical.
WANT TO PRODUCE A CNANNa OR BE A DJ?
lnlereMt(|d in pnxlucinK a channel or DJin^a show? Ifyou
are, vcmi should he knowled«t«ahle and passionate al)out the
kind oC music you propo.se lo play. Vou'll l>e asked lo recruit
IWs and other staff to drive the olh<«r content in your chan-
nel. You should Ih' passionate about Ihe IntiTnet a.s a minU-
um Ibr music and as a way to hrinjr communities of tM'ople
logi'ther
Other fwsitions art; also availabk;, atid students who just
want to ch(!ck it out as intt^rns are also wtilcome.
COME TO THE STUDENT MEDIA ORIENTATION NEXT TUESDAY
Hyotj're inleresled, come lo Ihe Studenl MinJia OrienUlion,
wh(>re w(;'ll Ik; talkinj,' about radio, next Tu(!sday Oct. .'} at
(i:.'M) p.m. in Ackerman Union dVand |{allr(M)m.
More (pjestionsf Call us at 825-2787.
U C L A R A D
Come to Ihe Shid«it Media Ortentation next Tye«liV
O M
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to hear about student opportunities in radio
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i
MIy Bruin NtM
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."
W^nt more stories?
DAin lUU IN ONLINE
^ NEWS
^ VIEWPOINT
S A»E
IT) SPORTS
For addraonaT
online coverage
check out
www.dallvbruln.ucla.edu
Get great
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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
The Office for Students with Disabilities operates a van service for
academic related purposejs to regularly enrofled students with verifiable
permanent and/or temporary disabilities in the area defined by Wilshire,
HiJgard, Sunset, and Veteran.
7:20ain to 5:40pm
\pfe ,^. Monday tfiru Friday
T(on^eekends. with advanced notice)
825-2263
Office for Students
with Disabilities
Between 6 pm and 12 midnight, Monday thru Thursday ^^55 Murphy Hall
the CSO's incorporate the OSD van into their regular route as needed ^"^''^^ 825-1501 office
Call CSO at 825-9800 for more information " ^^""^^ 825-2263 vgn
_^^ (310) 206-6083 tty
your Passport to World Service
for your passport to world service. 'ntcrcuirural Studies, you II receive the necessary cross-cultural tools
Programs
m BA or Mmor in Intercultural Stud«. ■ SIl7Wycl.ffe li„gu«r.cs program . PhD m Inrercultural Education
■ MA m In««ultural Studi« ■ DMis. Doctorate of M.ss.ology - . MA «, Appl.cd UnguistKs
■ Minor or Cenifieatc in TESOL ■ MA in TESOL
Come see u, at the Graduate School Fair on your campus on
October 4, or visit our booth at Urbana 2000.
BIOLA
univiKsiTr
KHonoF
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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V Daily Bruin News
September 25-28, 2000 39
Fall quarter starts. Another adventure begins.
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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^^-.
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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
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HONG KONG
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PHILIPPINES
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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
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yes
no
yes
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mil lit wEisin n WWW:iS0P.I6U.EPI/EAP
.-f»5r
•. i
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:'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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ad-just-ment n. The act or
process of changing;
accommodating to suit a
harmonious relationship
with the environment.
(Set; page 51)
562-902-3309
www.lacc.edu
YOU DQITT HMH TO 00 DOWN
UNMR lO 00 FOR THi OOUDk
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BniinCard Studont Advisory Commlttoo?
WWW. bruincard, ucla.edu / (310) 825-2336
so Septembtf 25-28, 2000
Ddily Bruin News
■W
•V
■■. "..■ :■ U;
RECYCLE
al-ter-na-tive adj. To make
change or become
different;^ to modify;
allowing a choice.
(See page 51)
562-902-3309
www.lacc.edu
A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE
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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!
F^^^K
— ^.. . I"
' 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
David Shaw and Tony Aulh.
()lh(;r.s, like I'oi mcr liruin (Hlilt>r.s
Jo(!l Su'^a\. "(i(MKi Morning
Am(;ri(-a' <>nl<!rlainm<;nl (Hlitor. and
Krank SiNtlnilz. iiroduccr of "The
X-Pil('..s," *vn{ on to cJinM'r.s in
olh(!r RKMlia. And for each of
Ihom, I here wi^w hundreds of
olhons who launchcMl (-JtnttTs wilh
lh(; skills lh(!y hwrmxl working a!
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
Jase Mcntury N(!W.v, and Kox
"nilevision.
Th(; Daily Hruin oilers
o|t|K>rlunili(;N for sludenLs
inler(»l(!(l in nearly (rw^ry as|NH:i of
journalism — from n;|N)rline lo
business, from n(twsnM>m
mana|,Tmenl lo lnlern(>l
journalism. And we do 11 l>ell(!r
than any class Ikh-jiusi; we oiler you
Ihe chance lo do mon; than study.
We offer nyil <'X|M'iienc<!. As a
r(!|N>rter or pholograplHT lor lh(*
Daily liruin, you'll gel a fronl-row
s(!al lo Ihe events Ihal shape our
caminis and communily. Th(!re
isn't a more exciling exlia-
curricular aclivily in collide. ; .
II do(;sn't malhtr whal your major
is or if you have any previous
ex|HMienc^! in n(tws|>a|K;(s. We'll
train you lo n>|Nirl, d(!sign, or
shool pictures in lour w(M>k(;nd
workshops laughl l>y working
journalists. You might <;nd up (!nd
up like many who camt; Intfon^
you — wilh a solid slarl toward a
(■ai(H'r
mmnoawnnuiBn
HERFSHQW...
Ifyou'd lik(! lo know more, come lo
our ()ri(!nlMlion and ()|M;n Mouse
T\ie.sday Oct. ;{ al ():.{0 p.m. in
Ackerman Union (Jrand liallnMim.
(lome hear whal we hav(! lo oiler,
visit our oni('e.s, and m(K;l Ihe
Ikuin slalT.
Kor raon; informHiiun, c^ill usal
«25-2787. ■■. -.. ::- =
H-'^.
Nawkiitkmal offm can beatJpliedto obcmtfridnR. Not valid on tmor sales. Exjnres IQ/I5/00
i^atis^tf^^^^^^M^
^.i^^^Ui^tf
.■>'
ti/
l,.f»
•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^
Join the Daik Bruin staff
The Daily Bruin oflcrN <)|>|Mtr)unili(M fiH* .sludimLs inl(rr<«l(Hl in
m^arly ovcry a.H|K>cl orjournaliKm — from r«?|»()riin(r lo ItuMnctvi,
from n(>WNnMim mHn»^>m<-nl lo lnl(>rm!l j(>urnali.Mn. And we do il
iM'lItT Ihan any cinss Im><-hu.s(! wc idTiT you th<> cham-c In do mon*
than Kiudy. W oflcj- rciU cjqMU-itina!. An a rc^iurtitr or
|>holofrrH|)h(T for Ihc; Daily Hruin, y«Hj'll ^I't a fronl-row .seal lo ihc
(!vt>nl.s Ihal Khn\H' mr campas and (-ommunily Th(U(' i.sn'l a more
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il d(H-sn'l mailer whal your nvnjor \n or if you have any pr<>viou.s
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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."
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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.
\
64 September 25-28, 2000
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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."
Daily Bniinitewi
September 25-28, 2000 6S
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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
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"^^^DINER & PRESS CLUB
WESTWOOD
10922 Kinross Ave . Westwood Village . 20^2424
Ji-^ikm
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
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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
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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
X»
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.
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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
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ver the
tummerti
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WITH CHABAD
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High Holidays
with a man
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Rabbi Boruch
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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.
YomKippur:
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
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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
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'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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;•■*
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
Y!
I
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
Molecular, Cell & Developmental Biology/
Neuroscience/ Organismic Biology, Ecology & Evolution/
Physiological Science Open House
Jf Naval Science Open House
Near Eastern Languages & Cultures Open Housel
ORL's On Campus Housing Academic Success Workshops
ORL's Acceptable Use Computer Workshop
ORL's Acceptable Use Computer Workshop
ORL's Computer Resources Workshop ^^
Physics & Astronomy Open House
Political Science Open House
Psychology/Psychobiology/Cognitive Science Open Housr
Scandinavian Open House
Scholarship Resource Center (SRC) Open House
Slavic Languages & Literatures Open House
Sociology Open House
South A Southeast Asian Languages & Cultures Open House
Transfer Adjustment Workshop
Undergraduate Research Center-Humanities/Social Sciences
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 '--
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00
2:00-4:00
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00 / ^ v
2:00-5:00 ^:^.j:}^^l
2:00-3:30 j^ ' T ;
2:00-5:00 j : .
2:00-4:00
2:00-4:00 .,
2:00-5:00 ' : - i :.
2:00-4:00 -.
2:00-4:00 "^;^
2:00-4:00 '
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00 f '^ ^
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00 ,
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00 > v^
10:00- 12:00noon
10:00-11:00 V '
l:00-8:30pm
12:00- 1:00/9:30- 10:30pm
2:00-4:00
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00
2:00-4:00
10:00-12:00noon
12:00-5:00
2:00-5:00
2:00-5:00
10-1 1:30 & 2-3:30
2:00-4:00
2:00-5:00
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
1301 Rolfe Hall V^
11377 Bunche Hall
236 Royce Hall
Palm Terrace, Bunche Hall
3rd Floor Terrace Royce Hall ; :
6282 Bunche Hall
3rd Floor North Terrace Royce Hall
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 -;
Covel Commons
Covel Commons Computer Lab
Covel SouthBay Room
Covel Commons Computer Lab
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
^
> uaUonum
^:fH)noon - 2:00p>,m.
12 September 25-28, 2000
1*
Daily Bruin Arts & Entertainment
10:00piii - 6:00««
>fwwJtqu§4butt9rfly.nei
(310) 88^.8888
DAILY
BRUINl
Advertise in
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over 58,000
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September 25-28, 2000 :M
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Visa, Mastercard, ATM accepted
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Established 1978
FOR MEN & WOMEN
WELCOME UCLA STUDENTS!
SHAMPOO & CONDITIONINQ
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FREE CONSULTATION j
We do up-dos for all occasions I
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14 September 25-28, 2000
OttjfMnkrtiUmaUiHmiM
^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
ADVERTISING?
r>
I
TOmiMYMENT
$8.00
$
Ticket availability in some sections is limited; please b^ sure to
include an alternate choice. If my requests are sold out (please check):
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
FREE ADVERTISING FOR
ANY ITEM WORTH
$100 OR LESStir
Por^ffor* Info
Call (310> 82B-2221
or eonto by
Tho Dally Bruin at
lis KarekHofff Hall
For itoms between
$101-$500, S2 extra
ITATl
H»
OAV fHONI
iv« mom
t-MAIlAODilSt
n Check enctosed,' made payable to Los Angeles Opera
Charge my Q American Express Q Visa G MasterCard
CARD NUMKR
NI6II TECN
DENTAL PtACnCE
FOR THE
21** CENTURY
WWVIUZiUIIIENR.COM
September 2S-28, 2000 IS
f
■ij.. ;i/ I n ■ I. ,%<f' II
\
r
¥:■
■ i
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!
•\
'r-iF-
IIP. OATf
CAR0MOlDir£NAMt_
■ lUINCAOOMtt
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
■t^
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
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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
SceSnBkpa9c22
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VITAMIM SAMPLB
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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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reg issue 9/25- 1(y4 - Spot PAffTONE Reflex Blue CVU
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
Ki
Dm
Incorrect;
new work,
Juliet;" Pull
Portuondo
renowned thi
the CO
UCLA Perfoi
different
family, theat
igal's modfm
dancff g
Ijrit
^ \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 &
z^wmnmg »"thor Rink M^urt; Buena Vista Social Club's stunning diva Omira
w^iillT!lifc"Mlf'^ ^'^^^^' ^""8 %^ '^yiWtafs; India's most
« MIMRlllH'^''"™* RepertorfrittttCand a performance of
" '*™"* Bi™tt«HBIlsicianj>M|n||^ ycfc kj^
spe^BlaE
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For additidnaf [nfonnatlon. please visitlhe ncW vVeb^te^nIIIm.perfom^^^
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER A
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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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tgfei and anabig evasiion. nciel inkracbon in
the digital era and new dlgNal worUs.
UCLA Performing Arts
Student Tickets
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Dapl e( ArcMMure fc Urban OasipB ExWMtons
live Oangeniusly
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Your Bruin Card Is Your Ticket to Great SeatsI
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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.
Sel^Defense
iTraining for Women
Fall Quarter Dates:
Attend One of These Saturdays...
October 14
October 21
November 11
November 18
Workshops are taught by certified instructors from the nationally recognized
Los Angeles Commission on Assaults Against Women (LACAAWQ.
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
ORSHIP?
Feeung a
r. LriTLE
Spiritual
Iaihy?
Look for the
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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:;"" °'''"''' '""'''' °''-'' "^"'^
•li ' i'
2S k'ptenibtr 25-28,2000
Daily Brum Aits K fntertciinment
.' > if •,
^ »* '.'I i>
■ ■ .''1 ''-; ■■
,• til n' W.'. ,11, ".1, )', "i . iil.i.t.
September 25-28, 2000 29
"^ "* r«tr'';^»?r!Cir
'Katbot inironuiK tumt
J yeas
• t
atNgh
• i
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
literature
CULTURE: slides, movies
muslcke
Prof: Peter Haidu
M-l:00-4:S0p
WF- 1:00-1 :50p
All texts & lectures in Enfflteh
LECTURES:
literary form
culture theory
S(X)lal structure
power, space & politics
ideology, identity, the subject
beginning the nation-state
LITERARY GASTRONOMY
FEAST, FAMJNE ANQ DECADENCE
History and culture of French cujslne from the Middle
Ages to the 20*^ century.
Texts by:
HtelSpme
QSPacIc
Events:
Roundtable discussion of
French gastronomy
sponsored by the Dept. of
French and French consulate
A Feast of contemporary
and historical dishes
FRENCH 112: MEDIEVAL FOUNDATIONS OF
MODERN CIVILIZATION
satisfies general education requirements:
hmncuiities/culture Se civilization OR
social science/history
Ronsard, Rabelais, Brillat-
Savarin, the Encyclopedists.
Dumas, Zola, Proust, Duras
examined in relation to the
genre of the cookbook and
to anthropologk^l,
structuralist theories of food.
Prof. Andrea Loselle ■.
TTh 12:30-1:45
All texte A Iftc^wraa In Enqljyh
FRENCH 168: TOPICS IN FRENCH LITERATURE
IN TRANSLATION
FuMUg the Foreign Literature In Tranalathn requirement
Come participate In the exciting activities of the Hew FRENCH CLUBl
Contact Prof. Laurence Denle (310) 794-8926 email: laurenceehumnetucla.edu
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■■■^k :
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
CASEY CBOWHA)»ily 8«uin
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MoviosUL
To advertise
in the
Bruin
Movie
coll
310.825.2161
'/*''-* •iiV*^.-'
/
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
ItlU
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UCLA STUDENTS & STAFF
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^ei/e nuuk ^oim im/am/emmti whlh ywi w&tA gwmi
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Miy Bniki Alts A EnlcftilnnMflt
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
. tkykets to the
IMeil Diamond
concert you
can't goto
because of
finals
urlabonr^|>er
specials
liave OT common?
you can sell them
ail in the
Daily Bruin's
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
NEW MEDIA ART FROM FINLAND
THE NEW WIGHT GALLERY AT UCLA
1 100 DICKSON ART CENTER, LOS ANGELES
SEPTEMBER 1 6 TO OCTOBER 6, 2000
WEDNESDAY - SUNDAY NOON - 7:00 PM
IN A
IN EDUCATION
INFORMATION
The UCLA
Graduate School of
Education &
Information Studies
EXHIBITION
To find out more about careers and graduate programs in
Education and Information Studies, please join us at one
of the information sessions listed below.
Department of Education • Master of Education/
Teaching Credential Program
On-c^mpus parking is $6 and is available In Lot 3.
Organized by the Finnish Foundation for the Visual-
Arts In collaboration with the Embassy of Finland,
Washington D.C. and the Department of Design I
Media Arts, School of the Arts and Architecture at
UCLA. For more Information, contact Heather
McGee at heather@arts.ucla.edu, (310) 825-9007,
or the Consulate General of Finland, Los Angeles at
(310)203-9903.
Generously supported by Gloria and William Jackson.
October 9, 2000
October 26, 2000
November 9, 2000
November 30, 2000
December 4, 2000
5:00-6:30 pm
5:00-6:30 pm
5:00-6:30 pm
5:00-6:30 pm
10:00-11:30 am
3340 Moore Hall
3340 Moore Hall
3340 Moore Hall
3340 Moore Hall
3340 Moore Hall
Department of Education • Advanced Degree Programs
(MA/Ph.D.)
October 2, 2000
October 25, 2000
November 1,2000
November 13, 2000
December 6, 2000
10:00- II :00 am
5:00-6:00 pm
5:00-6:00 pm
5:00-6:00 pm
6:00-7:00 pm
3340 Moore Hall
3340 Moore Hall
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3340 Moore Hall
3340 Moore Hall
Department of Information Studies
October 5, 2000
October 23, 2000
November 4, 2000
November 21, 2000
December 7, 2000
6:00 pm
5:00 pm
10:00 am
4:30 pm
6:00 pm
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Each session will offer a person overview, discuss the
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For additional information ad to RSVP, please
contact the GSE&IS
Office of Student Services
at (310) 825-8326
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
ORSHIP?
Feeung a
Spirttuali
Look for the
IReugious
ServicesI
DI RECTORY
Every Friday
IReugious
^ ServicesI
DI RECTORY
To Advertise call:
310.825.2221
■ i!'
. *\*f *-:'
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
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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,»!
■.■
A ^ S
M
M A
v«fJ \>A m^.
S @ S
s @ c
Join our team
•A*
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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
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(YOU. HOWEVER. MUST READ-MUSIC)
First
Daily Bruin
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^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.
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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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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
Evier wanted to run
own radio station?
c^
This is your chance.
UCUU1AIN0.COM IS YOUR CAMPUS RADIO SIXflON
U{jLArH(li().(X)nfi is an ocloclic Inlorncl music, silo fealurinjf live and
archived music pro^'ramminff and other conlcnl includinj,' discussions
and downloads in "channiijs." Channels arc radio slalions within a sta-
tion, each devot(!d to a style of music. UCIjAradio.cx)m will cxmtain as
many channels as tht; U(>liA studi'Qt body is interested in creatin}?. All
styles welc4)m(! including, but not limited to, indie, punk, metal, ska,
nrit[K)p, hardcore/emo, trltictronic, dancx;, jjothicyindustrial, hip hop,
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the oth(!r content in your channel. You should b<' fjassionate about the
InttTnet as a medium for music and as a way to bring cx)mmunilics of
|M^opl(^ to^ither.
Other [K)sitions are also available, and students who just want to check
it out as interns are also wcktome.
COME TO THE STUDENT MEDU ORKNmnON NEXT TUESDAY
If you'rt; interestcid, come to the Student Media Orienlalion, where we'll
Im^ talking about radio, next Tuesday Oct. '] at 6:30 p.m. in Ackerman
Union (jrand Ballroom.
More questions'? Call us at 825-2787.
U C LARADIO.COM
(>)me to the iStudent Media Orienlalion next Tue.s<lay (kt. •') at 0:30 p.m. in Ackerman Union (irand Ballnwm lo hv^r about sludenl opportunities in radio
j-*t
>'^»
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
11835WilshireBlvd.
(310)477-7550
21 &OverwJthlD
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
Free before 1 0pm
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
Sec
page*'
(Ahemotive)
The Ziggens
(PoR/Ska)
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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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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
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Urban planners arc part of the solution
to all these pmblems and more!
A recent New York Times anicle reported that urban
planning is the profession with the eighth largest in-
crease in job opportunities in the United States during
the past year. Planners earn competitive salaries while
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
placed graduates in jobs with numerous pubUc agencies
and private firms, such as the United States Environmen-
tal Proteaion Agency, the CaUfomia Coastal Commis-
sion, the San Diego Transit Authority and the Orange
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
welcome applications from students in any discipline.
For more information about gradiute education in plan-
ning at UC-Irvine, go to:
^ ^ http://tDww.serveb.Mci.edu/wrp_bome.btml
h. «f.
^
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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.
fetakbrwlire,
(diiiswiivovmiK
dadjrmit
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September 27th|[
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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
Just a few of our famous sandwiriches.
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wwwJrsdelLcom
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.
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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. . .
It's Your Credit Union.
UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION
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ucumail @ ucu.org
•.>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
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which athletics are supported
by Bruin alumni.
McBain: More than is
known by most students and
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groups, too numerous to
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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.
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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
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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
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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."
inilOllMK
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Ddily BnjJn Sports
■«?■
W'
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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
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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
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■:.«ji>iu»finji«- , i,\ '
f •>
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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16 September 2S-28,2qpO
Oily Brain Spwts
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."
^^^^■1
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09/23 ^^^^^H
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09/29 ^^^^^B
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COACHES
From page 12
,T='',
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10/12 ^^^^^H
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10/13 ^^H^^l
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ion9 ^^^^^H
7300 PM
10/20 ^^^^^H
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10/27 ^^^^^H
7:00 PM
10/28 ^^^^^H
7:00 PM
11/03 ^^^^^H
7.-00PM
11/07 ^^^^^^H
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11/10 ^^^^^H
7MPM
11/11 ^K S
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11/17 ^HlMp!
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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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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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20 September 25-28, 2000
Daily Bruin Sports
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Daily Bruin Sports
September 25-28, 2000 21
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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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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
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r('Ij,\lv News, a new .sluilcnl projcci iHiimhinfr Ihi.s (|iiarlcr.
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(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
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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
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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,"
SeeW.fiOtf,pa9e26
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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
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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
Discover a New World without Glasses and Contacts
m
Join the
The Daily liriiin (ilTcis (i|i|i(itiiinilic.s lor .sludrnl.s iHlcicslcil
ill iicKilv cvci V a.s|i('(l ol jdiiiimlisni — rniiii rc|Miiliii); In
liu.siii('.s.s. Inini iicw.sitHiin iiianaKi'iiifiil to liilciiicl
jduniatism. And we ilo il Ix-ilcr lliaii any class iMTaii.sc we
oiler you llic cltaiicc lo ilo more than si tidy We oiler real
exjMrieiice. ;Vs a repoilcr or |)lioloj;ra|ilicr lor I he Daily
Hruin. youll pi a rioiil-row seal lo llic cveiils llial shape
our cainjuis ami (•oiimuinily Thcic isn'l a more c.xrilin^
c.xlra-curricular a( livily ill colicf;!'.
' ■ ■■■■■■ . »'' " .■-
Il (locsri'l mallei whal your major is or ifyoii have any
jirevioiis e.xiteiicnce in iiews|ia|M'is. We'll I rain you lo
K'lMiil, (Icsiffii. or .shool iMcluics ill four weekend workshojis
ruin
lau};lil by working,' jouriialisls. Vou nii(,Hil end up end up
like many who <ame helore you — \vilh a .solid .slarl lowanl a
laiier.
WMIT TO GET INVOLVED?
HERE'S HOW...
11 you d like lo know more. n»me lo our Orieiilalioii and
Open House Tuesday. Oil. I al (i:-t() p.m"; in Arkerman
Inioii (I'land Hallrooni. Come liear whal we have lo olTei,
visil our oH'iics. and meei llie liiuiii slall.
Kor more inl'ormalion. call ushI h2:')-:27H7. v ,r
Find out how you can:
join the Daily Bruin at our
Orientation and Open House
Tuesday, Oct. 3 at 6:30 p.nu
Acicemian Union
Grand BaiirooiQ. ^
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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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have In common?
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Daily Bruin's
BRUIN
BARGAINS
•ad»tertwme¥wr$aooar»$a
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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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.
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runs every Friday in
the Daily Bruin.
September 25-28, 2000 JS
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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
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More que.slionsf Call us al H2r)--27«7.
ONLINE
''A--i: \:
-r
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»
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1,9-7
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W,10-7
12:00 PM
4:00 PM
12:00 PM
12.-00PM
TBA
12H)0PM
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AM Day
12K)0PM
12:00 PM
12.D0PM
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
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Long Beach Stat*"^"^*^
Pacific
UCSB
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UCSD
AirR>rce
Queens
Massachusetts- Amherst
Loyola Marymount
St Francis
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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.
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A Place for Men 5'8"
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In short and extra short sizes just need to go to -
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GLENDALE - You walk into
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That still didn't solve Jimmy's
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When asked how times have
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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. '
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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
^ r
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,
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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
SceMC-10,pag«45
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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.
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UCLA Sports Infotmdtion
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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Daily Bruin Sports
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-
ries is breached and even though five
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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-
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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
September 25-28,2000 49
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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."
LET YOU
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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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you may qualify for an important research
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->■■":.■*
54 Sefitmber 25-28, 2000
Daity Bruin Sports
K I \
Office for Students
v/tth Disabilities
Sa\^(S the Dates
OSD is pleased to invite you to tfie following welcoming events:
Breakfast Receptiori
Wednesday, September 27; 9-1 1 a.m.
Murphy t St nopr patio
■ Peer mentor orientation
Wednesday, September 27: 1-3 p.m.
Murphy A-245 ■■' -.vi^ v..V;;V :■,::■/■/■■-■
m
■ Nuts n' Bolts of OSD (choose one date)
i Tuesday, October 3: 3-4 p.m. ^ -^^--r
Wednesday, October 4: 12-1:30 p.m.
Friday, October 6: 1 0-1 1:30 a.m.
All meetings in Murphy A-245
• Disabilities and Computing Open House
Thursday. October 12: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Math ScierKes Building 4909
Mark your calendars
Call (3l6) 825-1501 with any questions,
or stop by our office at Murphy A-255
Ever wanted
to run
)purown
station?
Here's your
U('JiAra(li().(,<)m is an (m-IccUc Inlorm;! music, silo fcalurinjf
live and archivcuJ music, pn)t,'ramminj? and ()lh(!r conlonl
including discussions amJ (Jownloads in "channels."
(ihann(!ls arc radio slalions wilhin a slalion, vAvh dcvoUuJ lo
a style of music. LfC LAradio.com will contain as many chan-
nels as the UCliA student iMMly is inlerestcMl in creating. All
styles w(«lcome includinjf, hut not limited to, indie, punk, .
m(!UI, ska, hril(M)p, hardcore/emo, eh'ctronict, danci!,
«olhic/induslrial, hip hop, jazz, world, and even classical.
WANT TO PRODUCE A GtUNNa OR BE A DJ?
Interested in pnxJucin^,' a channel or DJin^? a show"? Ifyou
ar(!, you should Im' knowhrdRt^alih; and (jassionale al)oiit th(;
kind of music you ()ro|M)S(! to play. You'll Im- askid to recruit
DJs and other stalT to driw the other c4)nU!nt in your chan-
mil. Vou should Ix' fiassionate al)out th(! lnt(!rnot as a medi-
um for music and as a way to brinj? cximmunitic^s of fKwple
l(^i!thor.
Other |K)8itions nrv. also available, and students who just
want lo check il out as interns are also welcome;.
COIK TO THE STUDENT INEDU ORIEIirariON NEXT TUESDAY
K you're inlcuTstc^l, come lo lh(! Student McMiia OricmUtion,
when- we'll Im; lAlking alM)ul radio, nexl Tu<'sday Oct. H al
«:-U) p.m. in Ac,k(!rman Union (Jrand »allr(K)m.
More ()uesti<msf (]all us at «2r)-27H7. ;
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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56 Sfptember 25-28, 2000
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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
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.>•—.»•
worshiping God in Spirit and Tmth
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mentoring relatiortship^
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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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<-
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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
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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
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0.60
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2.00
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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
r
>.-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
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PROGRAM
Help a couple achieve their dream and
you'll receive the highest compensation
and most personalized attention from the
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\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 ^
MnkoGly 119 Ki«/Ste PmI* aSS |
Guadabiara 109 Lima
169
CoboSanLuoB 99 luanoi Airvt
209
ElScrivodor 209 S.DaOiik
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
'■:■-• *.
•^^3--
i
\»
i.
I
•^v«»
^1
#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
-:«-/
,^"'*»'
"^fl^l-'t.' ' ,*l" '"■ ^ ■
10 September 25-28,2000
Daity Bruin Classified
.'^-»-ji.
i-y
!,„,,;..■;,>** —
(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
206-30H0
Daily Brum Ciassifwd
Septeffll)fr 25-28, 2000 U
nt-tio-student deals
utns
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)
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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
^^.^
^^^y
'bi-
r
■ •J rJ
.'i: 'iT
>w. "
:?ff0 eiv V(i)V v>iv 19Z
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.
", *- ' \ ^
'.;'■<?'
.>r
^0 0 0 GREEK GUIDE A D V E R f I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T • P A G E 3
GRAND OPENING!
yiiZXBfitjM
^.ii«
Starters
Forget About It!
99
Appetizers
Fried Mozzarella $4.95
Garlic Bread $2.00
Cheese Garlic Bread $2.50
Loaf of Bread w/sd of Garlic Butter $1.25
Side of Meatballs (2) $2.00
SideofSausage(2)$2.00
Grilled of Chicken Breast $2.00
Salad
Caesar Salad
half $2.25 full $4.25
House Salad
half $2.25 full $4.25
Chicken Caesar Salad $6.25
Grilled Chicken House Salad $6.25
Antipasto Salad $5-95
(Prosdutto, Moftadelia, Genoa Salami and Provalone)
Hero Sandwiches
- Pepperoni
Sausage
Meatball
Canadian Bacon
Ham
Anchovies
Prosciutto
Roma Tomato
Genoa Salami
•Chicken
Slice $1.75 8" Cheese $4.25 14" Cheese $8.50 18" Cheese $10.50
'■'■^'y:-^'<:'C: Toppings
Fresh Garlic Onions
Fresh Basil Jalapeno
Mushrooms Spinach
Green Peppers Black Olives
Pineapple *Artichoke Hearts
A AJJ-*- •Premium Toppings $.5o
Any AdAtional Toppings
Slice $.40 8" Cheese $.75 14" Cheese $1.25 18" Cheese $1.50
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 ■ '
Calzones
;. s .^ (made With Ricotta and Mozzarella)
Cl)eese$4.95 *additional toppings $.40 /
' Enzo^s Favorites Co
Spinach $5.35 Pepperoni $5.35 Mushroom $5.35 '
Your Choice $4.95
Italian Grinder Chicken Parmesan
(Prosciutto, Mortadella, Genoa Salami and Provalone) Eggplant ParmesaU
Meatball Parmesan Grilled Chicken Sandwich
Sausage Parmesan
Enzo^s Specialties
" '\'''..^"''... (Served with a House Salad and Bread) ■'■'■' ■'
J ::_..■: ii. 2; Homemade Lasagna $4.95 . :: i ^_
add Meatballs or Sausage $6.95 -:
:' Baked Zitti $4.95
(Italian style macaroni & cheese)
add Meatballs or Sausage $6.95
\ : ^ Stromboh $4.95 ; v : ■ . v
(pepperoni, ham, mozzarella and Anierican cheese baked in pizza dough)
;^'v..-.T;' V ■- ^-"' ■■■ "' Pasta 'v^''.-^ .
(Served with a Salad, Skte of Pasta and Bread) •; •
SPAGHETTI with tomato sauce $4.25 add Meatballs or Sausage $6.25
PENNE PASTA with tomato sauce $4.25 add Meatballs or Sausage $6.25
Dinners -:•.■; ^v:-;:'' "V"
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Desserts
Tiramisu $2.95
N.Y. Style Cheese Cake $2.95
Italian Ice $1.25
(cherry or lemon)
Beverages
Soft Drink (Ml you can drink) $1.00
Bottled Water $1.25
San Pelligrino $1.95 : : r
/ Coffee or 'Ifea$ 1.00
* Please allow 10 min. on special orders
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AS
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i
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-
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<;r-
PAGE 6 • 2000 GREEK GUIDE ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
^m
u
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
—
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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.^;
'■ -- •,■•'■.■■■- --■ "-:. '■-
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A. Alpha Delta Pi
B. Alpha Epsilon Phi
AAn
AEO
808 Hilgard
632 Hilgard
208-9108/9066
208-9152/9129
" \-; :'; ■''- :. ., . -.\ '■
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C. Alpha Phi
A<D
714 Hilgard
208-9118/9157 '•
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D. Chi Omega
xa
708 Hilgard
208-9176/9266 v
• . ' \ ' <
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E. Delta Delta Delta
AAA
862 Hilgard
208-9005/9202
- ' ' ' ■ ' ."'■'- -
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F. Delta Gamma
Ar
652 Hilgard
208-9119/92341 /
• - . -. ' ^' ■ '
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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' -■.■■"■■,'*
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K. Pi Beta Phi
necD
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700 Hilgard
208-9145/9056 :{
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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.
%mm
o
>
\
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
'e
e
k
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
I -i
■-ft' ■ t*
\v
J
1- •■ r
■i. \-'- ^
»■« ."<. A
ucla
'■'-1'}- h':
■IV /■l.-i.V
^1- i -^
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
•'y C
f ■'■•*
^-•r ■:/■•;-
f\:rrf:\ i P' Kappa Phi nK<D
— -' J- . «- ■. . ■,»■ ^. ' . s^
4j/< . ^_ ■ ■■•^
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
(") -^yW"} ®^ Theta Chi
.-_\
*■ 1 Jt. A '■
% ^i^...v,■■• ':-«t -' ■,;.2 .:•■■■*■ 4-..;l ■ -i;.^
> -w . /
^t
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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^1
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i_. .1
-*»':■
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PAGE 12 t 2000 GREEK GUIDE ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
f.-
] 'i'Z,
.^.
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
\^
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.
Back
Waaassupp!!!
Si Rush Delta Sig.
Week 1
true...
1 PM BBQ
AND SUNDAY
rDDTBALL
DNDURBIG
SCREEN TV.
3:3DPM
FDnTBALL
PRACTICE.
7:DDPM
STEAK AND
SHRIMP
DINNER.
MEETDUR
ALUMNI:
SHIRT AND
TIE
REQUESTED
5:3nPM
SLIDE
SHOW
AND
DINNER
CATERED
BYBAJA
FRESH.
4:3D-6:3DPM
OPEN HOUSE.
COME VISIT DUR
NEWLY
RENDVATED
PROPERTY
6:3DPM
FIGHT NIGHT
DINNER
CATERED BY
TOGO'S
7AM SURF
SESSIDN. MEET
AT THE HOUSE.
6:3nPM
2-nN-2
5DCCER
TOURNAMENT
DINNER
CATERED BY
LAMDNICA'S
MIDNIGHT 5:3DPM
MADNESS, ITALIAN
BRDDMBALL BUFFET BY
MEET AT UURHDUBE
1 1 PM AT
THEHDUSE
CHEF
Monday Tuesday ^^^^^^y^^ Thursday
i^
Formal Dkmtr w/ tptcM
alunnri Sptakan
Dinner ■ min Ganttn
Monday MlgM Pootball
wAhoBroa
BKOOmML OK KXIIII
Unnar • Roaeoa'a Chiekad
aaawatnaa
Dassart - Kriapy Krama
Oomita
3 an 3 BaakatMl
Tounmr-SlOOpriza
Lunch - Shakar'a
DInnar • Fatturgar
Week 2
Monday
.
Formal Dinnar ty ranownad
Hop U'a Chinaae Cuialna
Monday Night Football
wAhaBroa
Tuesday Wednesday
Shakes
DInnar by Shakafa.
BUIIards and Blackjack
Tounumant to foUom.
DInnar bytha ■:,
infamous Chaff'. '
Rush ends O a:00pm
6:3nPM LAST
PDDL CHANCE TD
TOURNAMENT. CDME BY,
DINNER CDME RELAX
CATERED WITH THE
BYIN'N'DUT BROTHERS
DURING DUR
CLOSING Bag.
ALL RUSH EVENTS ARE DRY
FDR MDRE
INFnRMATIDN
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
Thursday, September 28th Monday, October 2nd
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 .
Tuesday, October 3rd
Surf Trip to Point Dumc 9 7am
Breakfast «» House 9-llam
Dinner provided by Saks
Japanese Teriyaki 9 House @ .Spm
Followed by pig wrestling
Wednesday, October 4th
SurfTrip (o Manhattan Beach @ 7am
Breakfast 6» House 9- 1 1 am
Dinner provided by La Pizzeria e» 6pm
Rush Ends 9 8pm
to advertise call
825-2161
Kappa Alpha Pm, founded in 1923, was the first African- American fraternity at UCLA.
lil'-l »H iiui
■i\H\Mffi
'J" ■ ■ ) F
w-
'\— -H'-:
■■*^.^.— ,. ^,
PAGE 2 2 . 20 0 0 G R E E K 611 f b I /^ D V E R T I S I
NG SUPPLEMENT
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WELCdME BACK
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WESTWQOn
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
208-8671 820^6636
^^^vietv
>
Exp. 10/6/00
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,ied^^
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LARGE
PIZZA w/
Free Liter
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TWO TOPPINGS
TAX INCLUDED
Exp. 10/6/00
208-8671
BRENTWOOD
820-6636
Offer good only with this coupon,
one coupon per pizza.*
"^"^~" Must present coupon.
Limit 3 pizzas per address.
N01/2 41/2S
Open until 1 am
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820-6636
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LARGE
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* Not valid on Sicilians or with any other offer. Must mention ad. ,'
TWO TOPPINGS
TAX INCLUDED
85% of Fortune 500 Executives are Greek.
Offer good only with this coupon.
one coupon per pizza.*
Must present coupon.
Limit 3 pizzas per address.
N01/2&1/2S
Open until 1 am
208-8671
BRENTW00l>
820-6636
Offer good only with this coupon,
one coupon per pizza.*
Must present coupon.
Limit 3 pizzas per address.
N01/2A1/2S
Open until 1 am
^ ^ ^ . .
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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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JENNY YURiHANSKY/Diily Bfuin
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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36
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PresMeitlalElecdMis
^ • 1' •
-r
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-
■1; .'
, a~ ^^: ■■ -,
■ ■y"-'
September 25-28, 2000
bilf Brain Vlwptkt
.'■^'r!
Differant PeRpeciiins
"f^^
■<\.'\
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
SB?
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!
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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
a result. It is so important that we
make the right decisions in every
area of our lives.
^ So what then is the "right" deci-
sion?
A wise proverb says that if you
look very hard for the truth, you will
find it. For those who are just arriv-
ing at this Bruin world and those of
us who will soon be alumni, this is a
very practical piece of advice.
Whether you are a freshman or a
super senior, I welcome you to
UCLA and look forward to serving
you during the year.
GOBRUINS!
September 25-28, 2000 11
1
IS
the first day of your
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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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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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'«-*':
'V
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*^._
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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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•^i-
Daily Brain Viewpoint
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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D>iy Bruin \newpoJnt
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.
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www.requiemforadream.com
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.
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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.
. l«.ming Disabilities urogram • Reader Service • Deof ond Hard of Heoring Sludenb Prog
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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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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| ;|
Hi ]i:;}0 p.m. in Ackerman Inion (hand
iwllr(M)m. Come hear what w«' have to olTer.
VLsil our oniee.s. and m«M'l lhe Mruin .stan.
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.
Deadline
for
ihsml
is September
at 12 noon,
call the
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.mU.'.
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.
eduEditcom.
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Admissions Essays • Term papers • Theses • Resumes • Translatior)
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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
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■ f Book signing to foUou) presentation. ' • •; ^ ,.
Thursday, September 2S, 2000
4:00
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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
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
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
11:30am - 3:00pm
Dihner Hours:
" Monday through Saturday 5:30pm - 11:30pm
Sunday 5:30pm - 10:00 prt\
1043 Wcstwood Boulevard .r^
Wcstwood Village
Los Angeles. CA 90024 : V
Tel 3 10 208 0444 -V
Fax 3 10 208 2344 •
' ■ . ■' '. ' .
'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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40 S«p(nttber 25-28, 2000
Diily Bruin Viewpoint
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. : ;' V
Informational Meetings: ';:;//'
Tuesday, October 16, 4-5pni, 5301 Life Science BIdg.
Thursday, October 19, 4-5pm, 2 Dodd Hall
T\iesday, October 24, 4-5pni, 5301 Life Science Bldg.
Applications are available at: t ' - i
The Center for Women & Men, 2 Dodd Hall
Undergraduate Research Center for Life &. Physical Sciences, 2121 Life Sciences
For hiore information, please call 310-825-3945. ^
Sponsored by The Center for Women & Men and the Undergraduate Research Center for Life & Physical Sciences
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Frompdge,3#
.-'i
••v'^.^t;-^.-.
' 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
(310)825-2333
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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ADJUST &/0R VERIFY THE FOLLOWING:
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THE FOUOWMG CRITICAL SAFETY
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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
Today Tomorrow
Partly cloudy Partly doudy
High 74* High 79*
Low63' Low66'
u c: L A
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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
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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
S U P m E H E,*T S
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Daily until 10PM
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Visit us online at
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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,
Dylan Hernandez, Christina Teller
Sports WrHcn: A J. Cadman, Greg Lewis, Chris
Umpiene
Art/Design Dirertor Connie m
Assistant Design Director Jennier^Wn
BmsIrcss Manager Guy levy
Display Sales Manager JeremyWHdman
Assistant Sales Managcn: Josh Austin, Laura
Display Senior Account EaetNtiws: Lesiey
Gwtei, Julie Taylor
AccoMtExaidves: LoriBimMoshEpsJem,
Brad Karpi Sieve Reuter
Account Representatives: Reia Davidson, Ted
HehvkkAin HoanftErin Lindholm,Eric Matthew,
Manlague
HwrtMBIiplay Senior Account EMcutiw:
Bryan Hoing
Interim Assistant Design Direcertor VU Wang
Assistant Art Director Jason Chen
llustrators: Adam Brown, Casey Crowe, Amy
Haber, Danny Hong,Hing-yi Kong, Jacob Liaa
Roderick Roxas, Erica Pinto, ^«ch^e^ Shaw, Jenny
Yurshanskji
Designcn: Elaine Chan, Johnson Hua, Eunice Ling,
Tim Nga Harsha Raa Cindy Wake, Sean Waters
Pfwto Editor Dave Hill
Assis. Photo Editors: Keith Enriquez, Bridget
O'Brien, Mindy Ross
Photo Staff: Nicole Millet Biad Morikawa
Copy Chief: Brian O'Camb
Copy Deputies: Stacy Dodd, Joan Ong, Mason
Stodutill
Copy Edfters: Marisa Chiang, Melia Hong,
Normalyn Nicoias, Mari Nicholson, Jenny Pearson
BcctronicMedU Director Mbenlht
Assistant EM Dincton: Monica Kmng, Anshal
Shra9a,Hemanelabay
OassNM Display Account EaecuHves: Nkk
Colangetei Lisa Pyles, Whitney Showier
Electronic Media Account Executive: ^nessa
Scon
Traffic and Operations Manager Mike Maffei
University Account Executive: Tim Sovay
National Acxountt Manager Chris VbnMaack
OassMed line Manager Stephanie Abruzzo
OassMHllneRepretcntadvcs: DanCuNom,
Stephanie Herztog tonessa Floin Angela Lee,
Wendy Shea Rente Wscoil
Advertising Production Manager Uz
Magailanes
ManagcMcnt Assistant- Tristan Hublat
ClassMcd Supervisor Grace Tomilloso
Ad Pradudion Staff: Adrian BalanoaX^de
Bru)n, Ruben Carrena Off Cuiry Amy GlM^
Vhton Lui, Jose Munguta, Alia OHainen, MIki
Shina Ignacio Sandoval, Arnund SoetMgia Paul
mm
Gtn.OpciMlans Managor MkM CConnar
MB Staff: Oirisjopher Bates, Arthur Chang, Geoff
Allen,MarioCorazon
Sales Entry Mamger rHDothy Dang
Sdos Entry Staff: Rayo Antonlob Oinii de la Rosa
Chris KkWer, Sam let Sherry Ohafa,Chrl$lina
Sanchez
MedhAMMRftniirvis
:Ar««MM
aaonttmnm ''•»*cww«Haa.A«ln«m$ th« M«prlm«d In th«D«ai»«n*i«Min«J«»L
Arts & Entertainment: 825 2538, ijtvvi. 825-2795;
Sports: 825-9851; Viewpoint: 825-2216;
Classified Line: 825-2221; (lassifiecj Display: 206 3060;
Sales: 825-2161
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
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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.
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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
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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.
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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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' Side of Meatballs (2) $2.00
.."- Side of Sausage (2) $2.00
Grilled of Chicken Breast $2.00
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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)
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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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16 Friday, September 29, 2000
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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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Find out how
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Orientation and
Open House
Tuesday, Oct. 3
at 6:30 p.m.
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IdLAIv News, a im^w slii(l(^l media
pitijccl laiiiichinjr lliis (iiiailn. is l»M)k-
iiiil loi .sliidcnls itili-icslrd in woikiiif,'
AS |it(Mlu(('i.s, f('|«)iici.s, (Hnwra o|»cra-
lors, (rraj)liic aiiisls, and amliois lor a
ni^rliliy Iclcvision news Ijioadcaxl lea- .
luiinf,' camniis news and .s|i(»ii.s.
I (ILAlv is clianncl i\) in Ihc dorms
and oilier camiuisimildin^.
YOU DONT NEED EXPERIENCE
IF YOU HAVE THE DRIVE ■ '. .:
(landidales should iw molivale<l,()r>r<i-
iii/.ed, arliculale, and knowledjjealile
aboul news or s|Kirls. (iandidales
should In- (.afjahh; of working in a
learn conlexl in a dynamic, deadline-
driven environmenl. While mmv. Itack-
jpound in high s<h()(»l or collej^c jour-
nalism is prelei hmI, ex|)eri(;n(-ejs-iwr'
necessary. We |)r()vid(ii«tinrnf,' in
workshops lauffhrHyhw^l television
news |)r(Mluc.(^rs and r(!|)orl(!r». _.
Ifc suro lo visil us in Ack(Tman Union
iirand IJallroom Tuesday Oct. .i al U:aO
p.m. lo find oul how you (tan join up.
?T 9?^ <>d to see rf rt reveah an »«am-w,nner me«ige To pi*, wShout a Decocterd^, «rt att.coaVcol(«e/takethemooey ixiTfo7»i^S o^hcTto^^ ^
alongw*a3 x5 a<^w* your name, addresv phone nuri*er and Entry Code W«u ^^^
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'(''»7)f<l'~^ I"' separate stamped «ns«tope.taAT4T'Tai* the Mon« and «tod("SwBepstJ«>b^
^ worth 1 0 «y;fr«, feach addrtK^I ma.led«ntr> s v«rth one entry.) S««pst^
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grxx«J try«portatKy. to and from thejiotel/anm in a (ER^^
' * « eVJ^ >nd laWity'pubteity relewe viBthin 1 4 da)^ of notrficatior attempt or the pn
ssion to use wwmers' names and iheneaes for promotional purposes (odud™ posting
ring thB prorn«kn )«u lyw to be bound by the Offcil Rulei EUGIHLrrY: Open to r
*es of AT4T, its rfliitei subjtfiriei contractorv advertising aienoes, «xJ Don jModa A
MS and rcfiAians and to the Offciii Rules available at attcom/colege/tikelhemoney; Si
Sweepstakes erxts 1 0/3 1 /OO. Void where prohibited
. >Mcpitjkes Grand Pntt
lonanempiortnepraim^D ' ' ■
KCs (nckidiru posting rmtm a
UGIHUTY: Open to residents
,,„, , _^ , ,, . j^ ;r_ ■.-.-■oes.andDonJajodaAssocutEi
N, 07,20 lnstantV.,,dar.J^S.:^'^^5S.^
'!ZCZ !^-?1!^'° "!S"" "^r^"^ »«Mavrt ore«git»lry and labdity/publKitr neleMe wrthrl 4 days of notrficator attempt or the prwm* be faSw«) a^
w»iner selerted Acceptance of prra constitutes pemwsion to use wwiners' names and llhene.« for pro^^
or restncted tjy law. Sublet to al iederal state, local laws and mitfians and to the CMnM R..l» >..i>H. „ -* -TV^T' 'T'.'^ <'«°" /;^ssocans, inc. vow wnere pfwyitea
dl.S^^SL^Sl^^Si^'L'^t^rr.i'irK^^tL!!^^ toniptonce custonr^r ^ selecting the AT4T One Rate Off-Ptak II Plan 1 00 )iw m»xrtes of AT&T domestKi.
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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."
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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.
he
by
or
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Go to www.latiii)es.coii]/colleoe.
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OjMlyBniinNnM
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every S^8t
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for advertising
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watch for It on newstands
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Welcome Party!
Wednesday,
October 4, 2000
!633 Gayley Avenue i
Los Angeles , California 90024
•'. - 1 '
Telephone: (310) 208-5015,
E-mail: ucathctr@ucla.edu
.Visit our website:
www.uccla.org
Sunday Masses: 10:30am, 7pm, & 9pm
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• Have fun with your peers and Buddies at theme parks, museums,
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To find (Hit more about PEST lOPplES at UCLA, idease attend
one of the Orientatkin sessions in.4cKEr77ian ^^
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Paid for try USAC
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.
u^««
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fMuf, SipHiiibiT 29, 2000 23
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FRIDAYS
with DAVID MARINE
L.A.'s II HoNse M«sic Clab
PUB - Dl CJL SPHS NOT RU QMWVES ■ THE V.I.P ROOM
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24 Friday, September 29, 2000
DlilyBiuANMM
Welcome Back Bruins
DINER & PRESS CLUB
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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:
^
^
c
Jewisk Student Center
fiiiiiiit
Spirited Shabbat Service followecf by dinner and
a lecture with Rabbi Chaim Seidler-Fellcr
Friday, October 6, 6:30 p.m.
900 HUgard Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90024
RSVP (310) 208-3081 V ,
E-mail: hillel(Sucla.cdu
Visit our website: www.uelaliilleLorg
University -
Lutheran Chapel
"Living in Grace,
Sharing the Light"
Traditional Worship: Sundays, 10:30 a.m.
Contemporary Worship: Sundays, 7:00 p.m.
10915 Strathmore Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Telephone: (310) 208-4579
E-mail: ulc@ucla.edu
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
Rev. Kusala
For more information, please contact
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Friday, October 6, 6 p.m.
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580 HUgard Ave. (At Westholme)
Tel: (310) 208-6869. E-mail: methodi8@ucia.edu
Web Addraea: www.bol.ucla.edu/~methodi8
A Reconciling UnNed Methodist Ministry
A Registarad LGBT Safe Zone at UCLA
UNIVERSITY
CATHOLIC CENTER
Welcome Party!
Wednesday, October 4, 2000
633 Gayley Avenue
Los Angeles, California 90024
Telephone: (310) 208-5015, E-mail: ucathctr^ncla.edu
Visit our Website: www.uccla.org
Sunday Masses: 10:30 AM, 7 PM, & 9 PM
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900 Hilgard Avenue, Room 315
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Telephone: (310) 208-3439
Directors: Carsesa Carlstsdt and CHa Cohen
ACADEMY FOR JUDAIC,
CHRISTIAN, AND ISLAMIC
STUDIES
RECOMMENDS
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"The Abrahamic Religions in the 21 st
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President: George Grose, D. IMIn.
900 Hilgard Avenue, Ste. 323, Los Angeles, CA 90024
Telephone: (310) 208-0863, E-mail: academy@ucia.edu
BL
CanterBury M^estivooiC
The Episcopal Chaplaincy serving UCLA
Chaplain: The Rev. Winnie S. Varghese
Midweek Eucharist - Thursdays, 12:05 p.m.
Discussion of (venerai Assembly
Tuesday. October 3, 7-9 p.in.
SL Alban's Episcopal Church
580 Hilgard Avenue, Los Angelas, CA 90024
(On the eest sMe of campus at the comer of Weettiolnie Ave.)
Telephone: (310) 2084130, E-mail: Wsvarghaseeeolxom
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Pastor J.D. Langford
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Tuesday evenings, 7:30 p.m.
University Religious Conference
Third Floor Lounge
900 Hilgard Avenue, Rm. 314
Telephone; (310) 208-2929
weoeNe: Mlp:/rlnMlNiilnleMee.ofg
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Avenue^ l^^geles, CA d002|^009, Campus Mail Code: 14^207
: (310)2(t8^55, Fax: (3^10) 2(^^686, E-mail: relii9ion@u6ia.edu
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26 Friday, Sept«fnber 29, 2000
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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
-v^i^^ifm'^ ■ ■-■>»»-,^-.
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Friday, Septnnlief 29, 2000 27
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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
Friday, Septembef 29, 2000 29
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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
How TO SUBMIT
TO VIEWPOINT
• Write a three- to four- ptqe, opirtion-styte
submission about a currerti event on campus
or in the world at large. Of write • response to
somethir>g that you have already read in The
Bniin.
• E-fnaU Mibmissions to
viewpotnf iriedia.uda.edu. Remeniber to
copy ai>d paste your subntission Into the Ixidy
of the e-fna<l,or drop off a hard copy of your
submission at the Daily Bruin office (118
Kerckhoff HaU), care of Michael Weinet.
• Apply to be a Viewpoint columrtisl dur-
ing Weeks 7 and 8 of each quaner .
• Apply to be a canoonitt or artist. Send an
e-mail expressing your Interest to th#
Viewpoint address.
A few thingf to remember:
■ AN submhsions must include your nartw,
phone number and affiliation with UCLA. If
you are a student, they must also include your
studeftt ID number, year and ma^.
• Your facts will be checked; make sure
they are accurate.
• Viewpoint is not an adwMng space for
any group or organization; bt iwc 10 have
dearty artkulated opiniora.
' We reserve the right to edit submissions
for clarity, grammar and length.
ntaccusis
Daily Bruin Viewpoint
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
Are you
opinionated?
Can you draw?
T
If SO, pick up an application to
be a Viewpoint political
cartoonist in 1 1 8 Kerckhoff Hall.
Applications are due Oct. 6 at
5 p.m. in Jonah Lalas'
mailbox.
DAILY BRUIN
118 Kerckhoff Hall
308 Westwood Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90024
(310)825-9898
http7/www.dailybruln.ucla.edu
Editorial Board
B«b«raOrtHt«)P
^ppw5 Wfor
OwiitiMlH
AaqrMori
ytm\»oui
Jiaffa^iimnffu
MUmIUimM
TlMMhyMt
MiMptVfiiMr
iwriiptiwwiw
ImiliUlii
MMOtiMk
finprniau
Unsigned editorials represent a
majority opinion of the Daily
Bruin Editorial Board. All other
columns, letters and artwork
represent the opinions of their
authors.
All sufomHteM material mutt
bear the author's name,
address, telephone number.
registration number or affilia-
tion with UCLA. Names will not
be withheld except in extreme
cases.
The Bruin complies with
the Communication Board's
policy prohibiting the publi-
cation of articles that perpetu-
ate derogatory cultural or eth-
nic stereotypes.
When multiple authors
submit material, some names
may be kept on file rather than
published with the material.
The Bruin reserves the right to
edit submitted material and to
determine its placement in the
paper. All submissions beconr>e
the property of The Bruin. The
Communications Board has a
media grievance procedure
for resolving complaints
against any of its publications.
For a copy of the complete
procedure, contact the
Publications office at 118
Kerckhoff Hall.
K :
PC ••.■.•■■1.-
32 Friday, September 29, 2000
Daily Bruin Viewpoint
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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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BULICK
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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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 ■>!
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7
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>ii 1 uilirii 1 ■ I.I .
\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 ' ■
Sm
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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Daily Bruin Am It £nterUinm«nt
• I*
ns' offers gl
BOOKS: Comic strip breathes life,
humor into non sequitur dreams
By Michael Rosen-Molina
Bally Bruin SeniQi Staff
^^t
•r ^
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
S«eSIIMr,pa9e43
into nocturnal vibrld
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A presentation will be held:
TuoMlay, Octobor 3. 2000, 6:00 p.ni.
Covol Commono, Orand Hoilion Room
330 Do Nov* Drtvo
Discussion and reception to follow
Casual attire ■, "•..'■■
Food and drink will be served ^
' 'V '- For more information, please contact: kara_hohlfWd«mclilnMy.com
^Z^^H ° ^^1! ^^^^^0^ 'o' MBA students at Anderson on October 5.
For more information, please contact: suzanne_mlller*mckinsey.com.
;V l^"*»^«^»<^a<es should contact: iennlfer_moelloi«mcklnsey.com.
.r A
2000.
•■V-^''-*"-* ' ■*»- V*--
■ ll^l.. Ml *■*
■ »i.,i.
OaMy BnM Alts A EnttrtalMMnt
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
/
.^ v.-'irrv
■ Wi ilMl Ml
t ?
-^^
.«'>tA:r.
<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
r /«.V T' ^^ T" ■
Tuomo TaoimenpaS's exhibit, 'Need' features a fictitious product which questions the realities of what is needed in life. ^
unLunr^" ^'°'" """''""* "^'^ "^"l'^ r' fl^°*'j8«" ^'■•"^J'fi- ^*°"=' °f human nature, F2F makes for display In the New Wight Gallery in
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^^^^
erworldly quality. While this might not gy. With the artists' astute observa- ART: F2F, New Media in Finnish Art is on www.f2fmedia.net ' '
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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
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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 . • ■
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<V.y
(6 Friday, September 29, 2000
Daily Bruin Arts & Entertainment
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Daily Bruin
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'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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,». .''■iM-'i-', •.' ^i "■ '•'.. .. .. — !•, !:■■',■
48 Friday, Sefitember 29, 2000
Mty Brum Am ft EfltoftaiMMnl
■/
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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
'B^m^
■1 11
I^^^^^Bl %^^^^^^^^l
1 11
"^ : .<'"i
11
''-n^l
Hn«:i)reanitoor H
BthortJe^"
P.P-. ■ iS
■bfeher:
m
^'
""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
k
Law
Medicine
Com^Her
Science & Englneerin
Personnel Management
Law enforcement
Mif ilary JnteJHg
Finance
And More!
• Live and work abroad
• Full health and dental care
• Serve your country while building
the leadershi|^|M|tfpgement skills
demanded in^a c^^lMniTe job market
^rting salary and allowances $35,457
2 - Year l^rogram
• Ideal for transfer students, or any
student with 2 years until graduation
• Offers $3,450/ year for tuition,
books, snd fees plus $200/mo.nth
For more information, contact:
Capt Timothy Reynolds ^ ;
UCLA Air Force ROTC
(310)825-1742
4- Year Program
• Ideal for college freshmen and
some sophomores
• Full Scholarship available! ^
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/afrotc/det055@ucla.edu
■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^
lb honor hei; Honda h« nwde a donatm ID yourschooh wnnwnk adiletks piof^^
ewerytine wl haw sornettw^ n loneinber her b)( wkhout havii^ K) wsat m faic
i
•aKm^m,mmt*m^,^^m»VM.1m.
kanhjawn/mumik
Daily Bntin
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9j; 'mf
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{Sublets
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Friday, September 29, 2000
index
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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
U
Clar,sifiefls
825-2221
Display
206-3060
TT*'^i=,#*«*^'-
; */ir«
.'• '•'-I. 'i.''''
y«in«f»tv N>a((»tuj\;
-N*^
/V)«M^
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
'b^
:;i
,." • ■ '
I. iiiHi I niliili
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-
tions.com/rent.htm, tiffany kang©exc-
lte.com.
9500
Roommates-Private Room
.<ri
$330,000
CONDO FOR SALE
Great Westwood 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath town-
house-AC, security system, extra storage,
skJe by side partdng and rear yard.
BarbaraGardner. Broker 310-285-7505
IMAGINE OWNING WILSHIRE Corridor/Hi-
Rise single. 1or2bdmi $75K-$150K. Walk to-
UCLA/Village. 24hr/security Spectacular
views, pool, Jacuzzi, sauna, valet service.
Agent-Bob 310-478-1835ext.109.
8800
Guesthouse for Rent
CULVER CITY
GUESTHOUSE
Single guesthouse in great neighborhood.
Easy parking, near Overland and Jefferson
$600/month. Utilities included. 10-672-1239.
BEVERLY HILLS
VERY SMALL
Fumished roon^s in large house. Grad stud-
ents preferred. Kitchen privileges, pool,
washer/dryer, utilities/included. Need car.
$400(very small, $500). Abby: 310-275-
3831/818-783-5151.
BRENTWOOD, room in quiet home. Kitchen
and laundry privileges. Private bath and en-
trance. Fully fumished/TV. Female, non-
smoker only $60Q/month. 310-472-2568.
COMFORTABLE HOME
FEMALE Wanted, room and bath, fine West-
wood home. English-speaking, driver and
references. 310-270-4290.
WESTWOOD
ADJACENT ^
bedroom furniture optk>nal. 1 roommate, fe-
male/non-smoker. Off-street partying. $650,
includes utilities. 310-231-8200 ext. 333.
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
SHERMAN OAKS Quiet, considerate male
roommate to sfiare apartment (own room).
Own parking space, pool, sauna,
$325/month. Available now. Mario:2l3-501-
4048.
WLA female roommate(s) wanted to share
one large room (okay lor two)/private bath in
a 2bdrm/2bth apt. Gated parking,
$697.50/mo+1/2utilJtiOS. 310-508-2783
Cathy Lin.
9600
Rootiimates-Shared Room
WESTWOOD- phat pad, 548 Kelton. 3bdrm,
need one male lo share room. $417/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 Dec. $600+half utilities. 310-610-2925
SUBLET & ROOMMATE
SERVICE
FIND or LIST A SUBLET!!
www.thesublet.com
I Sublets in all cities!! (201-894-1189)
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
StiKpHatiit Ahruzxifi -i '
.:3
— • ^ '' ^. 1-
SS Mdiy,S«ptemb«f29,2(»0
OMy Bruin Mcwf
::•
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F'-..'
UTQjatns
nt deals C_^ —
nt-tjostudent deals
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•AdmustbeM]l)miUedinpasonorl)ytnail. Nophwieori^Jil^'Diiii^^^^^
n»en^ the nght 10 .^ Of ..iea any «h«to«nt n« .neeting die sundank
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Students needed for a nightty news broadcast
Find out how you can
join UCLAtv News at our
Orientation and Open House
Tuesday, Oct. 3 at 6:30 p.m.
Aclcennan Union
Grand Ballroom.
lICUlv Nows. n nc*- sludcnl media projcfl Uumhinj,' this
(Hmrlcr. is JtH.kinjf for sludcnls inlrn«l.><l in workinjf its
prtKiuccix. n'|MHl<T», camera o|K!ral<.ra. (naphir arli.sl.s. and
anchors for a nlKlilly Iclcvision mrws l)nwdrasl fcalurinR
.am|)tis news and s|M)rls. I iCLAlv Is channel 21) in the
dorms and olher camfHis l)uildin{,'s.
YOU DONT NEED EXPOHENCE
IF YOU IMVE TNT DRIVE
Candidates should Im- m(.livaled. orKaniri-d. arlicuUle and
koowledp<*|.|<. alMKil news m »|H)rts. (iindidHl('s should U-
eajMible of working in a learn conlejtl in a dynamic, dead-
lim'-driwn (wironmenl. While some ImckKround in hi|fh
M\m\ or collcKe journalism is r)refern'd. experience' is no!
necessary. W- provide Iraininu in workshojw Uu>,'ht l>y
l<H-4il lelevisi(m m^ws pnnluc (ms and re|mrl(!rs.
He sun; l<» visit us in Ackerman Union {.Vand liallroom
Tuesday ()cl. :| al (i:.M) p.m. I» Hml out how you CAn join up.
ucUlv@m4Mlia.ucla.(<rlu
■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.
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60 Friday, Sept«nb«f 29, 2000
Daily Bruin Sport}
./: -^^
Ever waiiM to ixm station?
ucuwAwacoM is Yow :^ ?
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mcludinf,'. Iiul no! limiled l(.. indie, pnnk, mela'l. ska. iSi il|M)|). hard-
core/emo, eleclronic, dan<r. «»»lliic/indiislrial. hip hop. jazz, worid,
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FREE Nutrition Classes f
Presented by Sheri Albert, MPH,RD- Ashe Center DietiHan , '::•
Nutrition Basics: Separating fact from fiction! ^ ^ '
Ar« low carb/high protmn diets best? Which fots are heaMiyT . : :i - St
Choose from one of these sessions for Fall Quarter -■'■-r\'\'-''''^:^-y-y''-.'-:-.'/--':-''^
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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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62 Friday, September 29, 2000
Daily Bruin Sports
Interested in television
\. .15-'
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Find out how
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UCLAtv News at our
Orientation and
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Tuesday, Oct 3
at 6:30 p.m.
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While sorite Itackpniiind m lii^li sihiwd or CoII<'>»«'
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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
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Bring in this ad for a 2 for 1 pass , valid for up to 4 paopto
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
reporters, camera
operators, producers
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dynamic. d(vidlin<Mlrivi!n rnviron-
mcnl. While .some baek^miund in
lii^h .s4'h(M)l or eoll(;)re journali.sm
i.s prc'fernil, (>x|M>i'ien(-e i.s no!
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.sion new-.s pnHlueeis and
i(;|M)rlor«.
H<' .sun; lo visil uh In Artkerman
Union (iraiid liallnNim Tuesday
0(1. •'< Hi n::tO p.m. lo find oul liow
yoiK-anjoin up. ■. .
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Get Informed.
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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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tained an error. The head-
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returns to face undefeated
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ance," Sean Leys' name
was misspelled.
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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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We CKcmpt Ombit
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
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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
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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
Under other circumstances,
Mh
.'■- . *;■.
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<^' tC o' ^t
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■-.■■■■.• ■■ * ■.*■
006 AngeUe ^mes
www.latimes.com/college
\x.^^Hk
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."
Daily Bruin News
Monday, October 2. 2000 13
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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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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.
Student television
news show needs
reporters, camera
operators, producers
and anchors.
hiterested?
lUILAlv News, h new .sludcnl
media |ir(ij<-(-l iHunHiin^r thi.s
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W. .sun! lo vi.sil u.s in A(-k(*rmHn
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how you *:an join up.
Inrormalion and <)ue.slionT
\VriI(r as al
u('lalv@me(lia.U(la.(;du
Hnd out how you can join
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Orientation and Open House
Tuesday, Oct 3 at 6:30 p.m.
Acliennan Union Grand BatlrDoni.
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IJW^ Unm • rnvSjudnH Mi^jeinifi • IdiAlv N'(«k
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18 Monday,October 2,2000
Daiy Brain Nmn
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Daily Bfuin N««n
Monday, bctobw 2, 2000 19
'y :--^
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UCLter
i)
ti
■e££^i.-
FREPmomoir
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
I
22 MoiKby, October 2, 2000
Miy Brum News
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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
Want to be
the next
Paul
Conrad?
If so, pidc up an
appication to be a
Viewpoint poitical
cartoonist in 118
Kefdchoff Hall.
Applications are due
Oct6at5pjain
Jonah Lalas'
mailbox.
How TO SUBMIT
TO VIEWPOINT
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vlewpoint#nwdU.uda«du. Bttnewhw to
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■ App4y to be a Viewpoint columnist dur-
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■ We reserve the right to cdK submissions
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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."
DAILY BRUIN
118 KerckhofT Hall
308 WestMwod Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90024
(310)825-9898
httpy/www.da ilybruln.ucla.edu
Editorial Board
tmntOM
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bbMOrtMajr
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For a copy of the complete
procedure. contact the
Publications office at 118
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• •III I VV t"
28 Monday, October 2, 2000
OaHyBniiftVicwppiMt
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■■■■■' ' ^ ■'■'■■ [^: ' ' ■*'
• ^ ;: ■ , Open House Tplr^ii:::::}:^^^^^^
Re-Entiy (§r NontPgclition^I Stuclents!
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/nontraditlonal students.
Where: 2 Dodd Hall
When: October 11, 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.
M
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Sponsored by the UCLA Center for Women & Men
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Leadership Orientatiori
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Attend a Leadership Orientation session
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Find out how you can become a campus leader through SAA involvement! Help organize
great events such as Beat 'SC Week, Dinners for 12 Strangers, Entertainment Night, weekly
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that have become campus traditions.
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Sessions will be held at the James West Alumni Center.
All students are welcome!
For information, call (310) UCLA-SAA or visit www.UCLAJumni.nct/saa.
rat LUUJUIUi]
4 ,
t. ■
V
\*-
\
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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it >>(A \w»r>O^WM(r
JO Monday, October 2, 2000
>4t3M)«i)AiV>«b.td<*in ^'
Daily Brum VicwpeiM
■■-w.:i,.^ .1
■'.V'. "">»■,■ ■■-*-•■
On Novem
18,2000
The Bruins and Trojans will give their sweat and
tears to determine who is #1 in Los Angeles.
You too can help to beat SC! ; ^;;^ ^ • S^
rjb iVJ
INOW
You can give your blood or platelets towards the cause!
• The Bruins will get 1 point for each blood donation,
r D points for a platelet donation.
_ Big Game T-shirt or Administrative Leave for Donors
Donate on Campus or at the Donor Center
Call tlie UCLA Blood & Platelet Center at 310-825-0888x2
Class Of
The VBarbooR
/portrait season
has stat'teH!
I October 2 - 6 is an open week • Anyone graduating in
I 2001 can make an appointment & have their senior j_
I portrait taken this week.
' ^ave up to $35
^-^lA set of proofs to keep ($8 value)^ |
f An extra set of proofs sent to parents ($8 value)
, ,•, 10% off any portrait package (up to $10 value, depending
■7:;,; onpackage]h"';^'''"^"H'-^-'^ ^^>*"'"-*^' <
• 10% off on our popular graduation frame ($4.95 value)
• 33% off off U^ sitting fee ($5 vaiue)
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PLUS you'll also get $8 off the price of your Bruinlife Yearl)ook if
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TO make an appointment*
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•Every Monday, Campus Photo Studio starts taking appointments for the following week.
Campus Photo* 310.205 0889 or 310. 2O6. 4853
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UCLftM
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?
What
do
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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 <■!
I .ll .Ills \
N< II III » N
Ad^fe^!^^e.
call the daily bruin @ 825.2161
1 1 ,1 1 II
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U \ |»l U^l
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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
and graduate students interested in producing
and promoting the performing arts at UCLfl.
♦ Produce free and ticketed performing
arts events for the UCIR coniinunity.
«Work with performers, managers,
agents, production crew and the media.
♦ Gain first-hand experience in the field
of performing arts management.
APPLY NOW
Applications ore now
available in Royce B96,
or on our website:
WWW. sea . ucia . edu
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,
$eenuirciicn,pa9e40
^'■' ..
Positions include: '
Website Coordinator
■ -. " .
Graphic Designer
Marketing Director
-\
Producers
Computer Services Director
Ticket Manager
^ :'
AND MORf!
-KiJi;
No experience? ffo problem!
Questions? ^
CALL 310.82S.32S3
i-MAZL sco®ucla.edu
UCL
>*?'.,<•.•
I
s
• f
••mmmmmmi^^trt
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
...continues to
set the standards
that others want
to follow!
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38 Monday, Octobef 2, 2000
Daily Bfuin Am & Entertainment
Mneed
I, programmers,
want to learn
STUDENT MEDIA WEB nmiECIS NEED YOU
Sludcnl Media VVAA is home lo two of the rnosl vis-
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More (|U(!slions? dall us at H25-2787.
€^x .'^!l^'^3^<»nWn<^ Web projects at the
Student Media Onentation and Open House
Tuesday, Oct 3 at 6:30 p.m. Aekerman Union Grand Baflroom
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1 %■..■"'.■.•'..'■■•'•■*'" •'■'-■T'^"'
■:,.—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
■\-:--*^
.':.^,;-.S;'-_
Monday, October 2, 2000 39
**•••••••••••••••••••••»•••••••••«••••
, for advertising Information, pleeise
call 825-2161
V watch for it on newstands
every 5**'«t 10*^week
***••••••«•«•••••«••••••••••••••
'••••••••••••mmmmm9fM9w^9t<»99*9»m»»9»49»m
UCIA
Graduate & Professional Schooli^
iWoRMATioN 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 125 schools will be
discussing their
programs and your
interests! Don't miss out
on this exciting event!
^•-••••?V*«?M-t
Visit career.ucia.edu to see a complete list of
particpating institutions!
Double your
Discount
Save up to
pffJiLL Com Rings
plus
Save up to
off in Bearwear
up to
\9avin^o
September 25 - October 13
*UCU Slore (Adnnnai, B^tvtO
•ConpuS Pfwto/GrodtKltion Etc. (Ad«nnan, A4evel)
Octobers- 5 & 10- 12
* North Comptfi Student Center
^Ctrtifiaito may b« rediemtd lor BeorWeor merchandise only.
/IRTGIRVED'
310.206.3858
www.uciastore.com
UCWfer
-irmyrr-riir I i ii n " n n^— i^imi
40 Mondiy, October 2, 2000
Daily Bruin Am ft EnlerUkimMt
BuajgjBJBjgjBJBjgjELJBjgjgjEig!
gigifzifi!iRMf3irgifJriilrJralnzlrJfJrJ|
BJBjgjgjBjgjBjajgjajBJBjgjgjgjBjBjgjBjBjg^
New Fall 2poOGpiirse:
Cultural History o^
!-iT>-
•*
v' ■ ■;:■': V:\'''-VS 180C
;;"-'V,'i:: ::Tues^ & Thursday >;\' ->'^'^::^'^:S^
Pr- Jacqueline Pak
Did you watch the Olympics? Did you see North and South Korea walking
into the stadium hand in hand? Competing as two countries yet walking as
one nation for the opening ceremonies. Examine the evolution of Korean
culture and society within context of political and institutional history.
Consideration of both higher and popular culture; 1876 to the present.
m^rdrwwwWMis;wwwwm^tii tji i3rafw^»n3rwwwwaw73r^rwgrgrgrg^ |
Methodist
^•fc.
You can reach more people by advertising in the
runs every Friday in the Daily Bruin.
to place an ad
call 826-2221
Hannah Carter
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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.
$ 2.00 off
TUESDAYS
Excludes Sicillians
Westwood
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Coupon must be given to driver.
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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Open until 1 am
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4-
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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
sacha@uclahillel.org Starts Tuesday, Oct. 3, 5:45 pm roblnQuclahin.. n^
www.uclahillel.orq
(310)208-3081
Party Pack
4]
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2 Medium
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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
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Italian Ice $1.25
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Coffee or Tea $1.00
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10940 Weyburn Avenue (310)2O8-ENZO (3696)"
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iT
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Daily Bruin
Monday, October 2, 2000
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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
^J^^"'^'^-^^-^^^ www Winning.
parsonstatemam.com. ^
Uispj.iy
POb-JObO
•^i''*^■'.■•t■
-.: ■^■
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
atlantic
«^
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
•European
(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-
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Sign-up your classmates for cool Internet
sites, and receive a minimum of $1 per per-
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Log onto TEAMMAGMA.COM or call 1-877-
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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-
dry, part«ing. $700/monlh. Another room
$600/month. 310-473-5769.
WESTWOOD. 1/2 mUe from UCLA, own
room(s). Sliare clean house. Professional or
student. $l200/month. wwwlasolu-
tionSfcom/rent.htm, tiffany.kangOexc-
ite.com.
9500
Roommates-Private Room
APARTMENT to Share. Sherman Oaks.
Private bedroom w/hardwood floors,
kitchen&teundry Non-smoking female, no
pets. $550/mo includes utilities Available
Ocll. 818-632-0584.
BEVERLY HILLS private room and bath in
2t)drm/2bth bright, upper apt. Redwood
fkjors. antk)ue and contemporary furniture,
ntoe kitchen, neighbors. Female student or
professtonal. $950 310-990-1781.
WESTWOOD VILLAGE apt.' Fun. outgoing
female looking lor ferruile roommate! Own
bi9d/l)ath in 2bdrm/2bth apartment, gated
periling, jacuzzi on roof, security buiWing.
Available 1/01, $900/mo. 310-209-2665.
WLA female roommate(s) wanted to share
one large room (okay for lwo)/private bath in
a 2bdrm/2bth apt. Gated partdng,
$697.50/mo+1/2utilitles. 310-508-2783
Cathy Lin.
9600
Roornmates-Shared Room
WESTWOOD- phai pad, 548 Kelton. 3bdrm.
need one male to share room. $4l7/rTX)nth.
No psychos. 310-209-1882.
9700
Sublets
AVAILABLE NOW!!! Sepulveda&Nattonal.
Share 2bdrm/2bth Furnished roombunk
bed, dresser, closet, desk Until erul of quar-
ter Dec. $600+half utilities. 310-610-2925.
SUBLETS ROOMMATE
SERVICE
FIND or LIST A SUBLET!!
www.thesublet.com
I Subtf In all cittos!! (201-894-1189)
Display
206-3060
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womSpen
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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Daily Bruin Sports
%: 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."
Student television
news show needs
reporters, camera
operators, producers
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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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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
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Daily Bruip
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 !
Come to the Student
Media orientation
TutSDAY, Oct. 3
6:30-8:30 p.m.
AcKERMAN Grand Ballroom
at your Bruin
Daily Bruin Classifieds 24-29
Crossword Puzzle..^... r.ii:.:?S. ...27 " "
Movie Guide .'....;. , 21
Tuesday, October 3j 2000
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Copy Chief: Brian O'Camb
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Copy Editors: Mansa Chiang, Melia Hong,
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Daify Bruin News
Tuesday, October}, 2000 > 3
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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
I perceptiMi, optical HwiMi, and ways in wWdi I
'owteraalty.
mi-m4,Hitfa,$odetyaiidCiHf.pMignodtogivo
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.
^■^^ Chaster I
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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
college students preferred free stuff.
(The rest didn't understand the question.) '^:'--S:%^:^:w
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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
d()ie:y,568.90
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
Ur iOlirrirll JSin Find out Iww you can join the Oally Bruin, UCLAtv News, uciaradio.com,
lAx j\jiA± liuiioiii pj,.|y g^.^ ^,.^ and Hie rest of tlie student media at tlie
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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)
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or spiritual group, -
whether
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running every
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to place an ad, call
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use STUDENT
FOOTBALL
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. '
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•^ ".'-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.
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Student
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Emrytlifaia yM don^ Hn
lICLAlv Nkw8, a nrw student
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Oiil)r Brain Nun
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..iied Press
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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everyday home delivery on College
Connection. And save 40%.
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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
•Vour facts win be checkad; nMtw sure
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
Want to be the next
Paul Conrad?
If so, pick up an
application to be a
Viewpoint political cartoonist
inllSKerckhoffHall.
Applications are due
Oct. 6 at 5 p.m. in
. Jonah Lal^s'mailbox.
DAILY BRUIN
IISKerckhoffHall
308 Westwood Plaza
Los Angel«s, CA 90024
(310)825-9898
httpy/www.dailybruin.ucia.edu
Editorial Bo«ni
iNkmOrtM^'
MtmUlui
QtMmtiii
flnm till!
mHkOtHf
iumikpmtnMll
HRI(H|fHMI
Umifl^lttii
Aifil^RMlrt^
SMNipnnM**
Unsigned editorials represent »
majority opinion of the Daily
Bnjki Editorial Board All other
columns, letters and artiwork
represent the opMons of their
authors.
All submittjfd material must
bear the author's name,
address, telephorte number.
registration number or affilia-
tion with UCLA. Names will not
be withheld except In extreme
cases.
The Bruin complies with
the Communication Board's
policy prohibiting the publi-
cation of articles that perpetu-
ate derogatory cultural or eth-
nic stereotypes.
When multiple authors
submit nnaterial, some names
may be kept on file rather than
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The Bruin reserves the right to
edit submitted material and to
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paper. All submissions become
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Communications Board has a
media grievance procedure
for resoKrIng complaints
against any of Its publications.
For a copy of the complete
procedure, contact the
Publications office at 118
Kerckhoff Hall.
.,-»
n
'. ■..V
16 Tuesday, October 3, 2000
My Bniin Viewpoint
"ii 'I II : I ill
Your Passport to World Service
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UNIVCRSITV
StHOdOF
IwrCTOATUlUl
STUDIES
Come see us at the Graduate School Fair on /c
October 4, or visit our booth at Urbana
bur campus on
(..ill mill tot nifaniuition Hoo-(t-,i- \U^2 jh i-iii.nl vli.iri . iiKi
Vi-w \ SOS Mil w 1 ii \i tiicu'.hioLi.cdti
Leadership Orientation I
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great events such as Beat 'SC Week, Dinners for 12 Strangers, Entertainment Night, weekly
career workshops, Spring Sing and other career-oriented, social and school-unifying events
that have become campus traditions.
Sen ioi^s
Only
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gmA ^^ Students are welcome!
W \ ^°' information, call (310) UCLA-SAA or visit www.UCLAlumni nct/saa
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A
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.
IWly Bruin Viewpoint
Toesdaj!;OdoberS.200r 17
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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
, See all this and more at
I the Daily Bruin^
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
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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
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I f ( I I I I
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"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
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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
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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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Enjoy the
Movies!!!
To advertise
in the
Bruin
Movie
Guide,
call
310.825.216T
/
%.» ..i^- -;--yi' '
=F
22 Tuesday, October 3, 2000
Daily Bruin Arts t Enteruinment
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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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I \ '
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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) {
l|l>4'.WM
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
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For more info call (310) 825-2221
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Display
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,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,
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Come to an Orientation Session! ! !
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Sad or Blue?
Trouble sleeping?
Withdrawn? Low motivation?
Feeling tired or loss of energy?
Difficulty concentrating?
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
imbalance and may be treated with
medication. If your quality of life is being
disrupted, please call toll free to see if
you may qualify for an important research
medication program. Quiaified partici-
pants may be compensated up to
$200.00
NERVOUS
AROUND
PEOPLE?
• Do you feel shy in social situations?
• Are you fearful of performing or
speaking 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
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overall enjoyment of life. Southwestern
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Call toll-free for more Information. -
Southwestern Research, Inc.
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www.435.com
Are you considering theological education?
Meet with an admissions representative from
Harvard Divinity School
Graduate and Professional
School Information Fair
Wednesday, October 4
10:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M.
JANSS Plaza
Learn about our graduate pn^ams, including the Master of
Divifii^ and the Mburter ornic<dogtcfll Studies, and about
tdated resources whlun Harvard University's other graduate
Acuities and the nine^school Boston Theological Institute.
All Students. All Majors and All Years Welcome
' For rnoce infeftnatioiHcomact At OCke of AdmMnoot and Fkundtl Aid
tt (617) 495-5796 or coMuh the HuTud Dhrinii^ Sdiod webMM tt
h^^/um>vt.bds.bamard.tJu
-l*3?Y^'T'J3:'5!
Live and Learn
V Japanese!
The Waseda Oregon Transnational Program, Winter & Spring
2001, in Tokyo, Japan, is a comparative US-Japanese Societies
study program that mixes US-based and intemationaJ students
with Japanese undergraduates at the prestigious Waseda
University. Three levels of Japanese language instruction arc
offered in addition to US-Japanese Societies courses in the
humanities and social sciences. Scholarships of up to $1000 are
available! Deadline for applications is October 27, 2000. For
more information, contact:
Waseda Oregon Office
Pbrtland Sute University
(800) 823-7938 www.wasedaoregon.org
THE GRADUATE SCHOOL
UNIVERSITY OF
ONotre
:'-'('.'.*-■' ■''■l'»''
Daily Bruin Sports
Tuesday, October 3,2000 31
O LET YOUR
SHIN EC*
«. - » «
Dally Bfuln Advertising* display 8i5-2l6t • Classified 82S-2221
©IMKET
'^it.
Many opportunities for full funding with
stipends ranging from $10,000 to $21,000.
If you are from an American racial/ethnic
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For more information, call (219) 631-7706. or write to the
University of Notre Dame,
Graduate Admissions, 502 Main Building,
Notre Dame, Indiana 46556-5602
E-mail: gradad.l@nd.edu
http://www.nd.edu/~gradsch/
LATINAS SOBRESALIENTES DEL ANO
s;
li
Miercoles, 11 de octubre del 2000 2pmn8pm
Glolie Tlieatie. Uiiiveisnl Studios. Hollywood
ConftraMij it ondoras: Sarita Brown, Directora Ejecutiva, Iniciativa de la Casa Blanca para la excelencia en la educacidn para los
hispanoamericarKK. "El Color del Poder" con Donna Fujii. experta en color y autora de Color with Style. "La Sabidurfa de los Frijoles"
con Yolanda Nava, periodista ganadora del premio Emmy y autora de It's All in the Frijoles y aims invitados.
Ademfc: Un espectSculo con la sensaci6n de la musica pop, Jaci Velasquez.
Alumnados: s20 Admisldn General: $25 Estudiantes: $15
Se requiere inscripcidn previa. Para informacidn adicional, favor de llamar a: The Rol>bins Group. 818.776.1244, ext.l3.
OUTSTANDING LATINAS OF THE YEAR
Carwrl
Wednesday; October 11, 2000 2proto8|Mi
tiato tlwalra, URTvvreal StMlo$, HoNywood
» SfmrttMS: Sw-ite Brown, Executive Director White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanic Americans.
"Ttm Color of Power" witti Donna Fujii. color expert and author of Color with Style. "The Wisdom of the Frijoles"
witti Yoianda Nava, Emmy-award winnir^ journalist and author of It's All in the Frijoles and many other speariters.
Pius: CeletjHty Entertainnrtent with pop sensation Jaci Velisquez.
_ Alumni: $20 Ganaral Adnmssion: $25 Student: $15
Advanced raglsfcrBtion required. Fbr additional information, please call The RoN>ins &oup, 61&776.1244, twt.l3.
32 Tuesday, October 3, 2000
Daily 8niin
. i>V'^<«-i)ii>i- ,*•.
«.■■
i
UCLA Pai1dngSenn(xs is kx)king for Mendfy, courteous pe^
to assist our customers with their partdng and information needs.*
(Previous customer service and cash harxHir^g experierice preferred)
f^ morm Inhtnnatkin and It appUcatkm, Mtop by ttm Partdng Smvk— otHe*
ki 0M Stnthmen BuUdIng (a^acmnt to Partcing Structun B)
or call (310) 825-1386.
*M«i b« • owrMiOy r«gMw«d UCLA Mudwit
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BRUIN OLYMPIANS
With >8 overall medals and eight gold medals. UCLA wa« rh# mott tf
on the medal stand at the Sydney Games.
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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
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Wednesday, October 4*^, 2000
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7:00 PM
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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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Movie Guide 27
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':•• i'^'V '^:- .'■' L'i .
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.
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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^^'' '
•;i
:-*v^.:^-.r ■■*»•'■
«•;■;,,*; / _ ^
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
SMSndB^pagtlO
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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 ,
want to get this resolved," said Tommy
Elisaldez, financial recording secretary
forATU Local 1277.
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^^5^ UCLA PERFORMING
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Student Committee
^ f»iK'
We are looking for approximately 24 undergraduate
and graduate students interested in producing
and promoting the performing arts at UCLf).
♦ Produce free and ticketed performing
arts events for the UCLA community.
♦ Work with performers, managers,
agents, production crew and the media,
♦ Gain first-hand experience in the field
of performing arts management.
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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."
TO DAY!
Wednesday, October 4th
BRUIN PLAZA •10am-2pm
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No purchase necesMry, ifid no on line tmry necessary. Ymj mutt b« 18 yaifs of to* Of okter It l^• tkne of entiy to artar C^
on October 31 . 2000 This contest is open to amateur photographers only. Ptwtos that hava been pravtouaiy puMMiad, accapted tor publication or are under consldantion by other puMlcatlons are
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•Any city In the wrld serviced by a major US. based air carrier, not to exceed $3000 per ticket.
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Sluf-T yoo Kie«<J. Sir\^ W.
14 Wednesday, OOobef 4, 2000
'Daily Bniin News
NOt TO MKSf
^+«>..-.. ••■-:.,
m
:Sffmt»m
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'AILYBRUIN
SPECIAL ISSUfg
Career Guide
Halloween Coupon Pages
Dining Guide
Football (vs. use) Issue
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October 13th
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Call your favorite account executive
today to reserve space! -
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Leading Rabbis from all streams of
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• No experience necessary
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Meet Rabbi Lee Bycel
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Killel's House of Schmooze hos arrived!
Hear local music talent
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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
^^:
Presentation and Reception
4^ '2.0 JA .tijHiMn
On
i>'
av, October 4?, 20
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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
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Positions available in New York, Chicago, San Francisco
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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
How TO SUBMIT
TO VIEWPOINT
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vltwpoint*medla.uda«du. Remember to
copy and patte your submission Into the body
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A few ttMngs to remember:
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Diily Bom Viewpoint
Wednesdiy. Ocwbw 4, 2000 1» y:- jr
"/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."
DAILY BRUIN
IISKcrckhoirHall
308 M^Mtvyood PUza
|jOsAn9elM,CA 90024
010)t25-9t9e
hnp://¥vww4laiybruin.ucU.«du
E«torial Board
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SMTl
tMtlQ'Md MIIUIUnS IVflNVMfll a
Nufovlly opMon of th# OttMy
Brum EdMorM Board AH o«hw
column^ Mtart and •rtworfc
rvpfVMni th# oplnlon$ oi tnalf
MlVWfl*
AM Mibfnittvd maCfffil muu
m tha author^ itanM.
aodiaitt tawpnona nuRibaf,
raglttnMion numbar of affHa-
Uon wMt IXIA. Names wfli not
Da viMwiaid axcapt In axtrefna
case*.
Tha Bruin compllat iwlih
tha Comntunkatlon Board'*
policy prohibiting tha pubtt-
calton of artklM that parpatw-
ata darogaiory cultural or ath-
nk staraolypas.
Whan muhlpic authan
lubmtt matarlal soma namas
may ba kapt on flk rathar than
pubBshad with tha matarlal.
Tha Bruin rasarwi tha right to
adN submMtad matarlal and to
datarmliM Hs placamant In tha
papar. AB submissions baconw
tha proparty of Tha Bruin. Tha
Commuitlcatlons Board has a
madia griavanca procedura
for rasolving complaints
against arty of Hs publications.
For a copy of tha complata
procadura, contact tha
PubHcatlons offka at 11B
KarckhofTHaM.
.::-l^<se^-:<
20 WrdneyJay, October 4, 2000
Daily Bmin
•^^^^^pi
V.' ■■•■■■;:■< '■-■
brown Bgg Lunch Piscussions ^^ v^^^^
for Re-^Entiy/Nontr-gdition^l Stu4ents^
BHngyout lunch ^ndmeet infotm^lly with other nontr$4ftion2it siucientsfl^
Helct every first Wectnescl^y of the Month
Cwhen classes in session)
' Please [oln us: -;
October 4th, November 1st, December 6th
12 noon, in Room 2, Do4cl H^ll ,
%
Sponsoi-ect by The Center foi- Women & Men
www.tbecentei-.ucU. ec|u
'■"-■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■'■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
Come to the Transportaaon Fair
At Bruin Plaza Noar tiio Bruin Boar
On Ybur Mark,
Gef Sef... -
^^.00M«-|
W V Ir ■■- 2001 ex Pdomar Bike
with Bell Vista Helmet
AltcrmliTclY tadM vdiiclcs wi AsplaT
- $50 Bruin Card Credit
Il«l*i6 Cycl«s
Hs Bicycle Heaven
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-
~. SccUVlpa^
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For Undergraduate Student Groups
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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
^ ,,,..^ , ,. http://students.asucla.ucla.edu/Forms/CSMini-Fund/ ^^ >::.■■':
> 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
paidforbyUSAC
.'.>•'■
22 Wednesday, October 4, 2000
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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
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Instructor: Prof MK Norseng
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;; *• ;-
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
* -y
^*-v
RACHEL REILOVOiily Bniin
-M^ aeigrr-.^aift -
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
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28 Wedn«day, October 4, 2000
Daiy Bnrin Arts ft EirtcftaiiimcM
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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
UNIVERSITY CATHOLIC CENTER
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
# friendship!
I Opening Ceremony 6:00-6:30 j-
Th« GamM Begin 6V30 - 8:00
|l>innw8KX>-9:00
i^vvflttedowK group watdgpa^ I
<t^flt5:45i
The UCC is a member of the University Religious Conference
Ready for
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Tuesday, October 1 0th at 7 pm
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To register today, call 1-800-KAP-TEST
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Phone (808) 544 0279 . Fo. (808)544 0280
;',■ V
Another valuable lesson
learned from Hollywood:
6 " '*)
are no match
for 1 manm
tntroduclng NIbbloboK.tom. Toinoiiow's entrntaimnaiit today.
Log on for Oftginol optoodlc alMiwt, kitmetlvo ontwUlnm^it .od tho !>•« ol ooNogo nOo ctMtMl by
•ollogo «liidwt« wHh help li«i. P«»pto ■»- Amy llochiHfcii (Ouolo-), OoMg Uman (Swingoo). and
f*rton Row* (Bi«n9 H On), io-ort M*o ITS lyn molting cynlert eommwitt olwiK oirt^^
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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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Come and meet representatives from one of the fastest growing investment banks in
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■'♦■ ■.
■;»'..; ^r , ->-;:^'^ ■
Daily Bruin
:• ?■■
Wednesday, October 4, 2000
T©
Campus Happenings
Campus Organizations
Campus Recruitment
Campus Services
Birthdays
Legal notices
I Lost A Found
Miscellaneous
Personal Message*
Personals
Pregnancy
Recreational Activities
Research Subjects
Sperm / Egg Donors
Tickets Offered
Tickets Wanted
Wanted
Appliances
I Art / Paintings
Bicycle&Z Skates
Books
j Calling Cards
Cameras / Camcorders
Collectibles
Computers / Software
FumHure
Garage / Ybrd Sales
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Musical Instruments
Office Equipment
Pets
Remais
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Stereos / TVs / Radios
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TUmnn
Auto Accessories
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Autos for Sale
Boats for Sale
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Parking
Scooter / Cycle Repair
Scooters for Sale
Vehicles for Rent
Resorts / Hotels
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Taxi / Shuttle Service
Travel Destinations
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1-900 numbers
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Movers / Storage
Music Lessons
Personal Services
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Resumes
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Tutoring Offered
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Typing
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LLL
Tmn
Business OpportunKi<s
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Child Care Offered
ChiM Care Wanted
Help Wanted
Housesitting
Internship
Personal Assistance
Temporary Employment
Volunteer
Apartments for Rent
Apartments Fumished
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 Rent
Roommates - Private Room
Roommates - Shared Room
I Sublets
I Vacation Rentals
index
•>• .:,"■•■
■•■ 1
;4
-4».--
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1100
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announcements
1100-2600
1800
Miscellaneous
Beautiful Asian girls. 250+ Daily FREE sexy
Images of Asian women. Includes UCLA co-
eds. Team Asian, http://www.teamasian.com
ON CAMPUS BANKING
Your on-campus 4 on-line financial services
source lor students, faculty & staff Visit ;is at
Ackerman A-level. on-line at www.ucu.org or
call 310-477-6628.
2000
Personals
NATURAL HERBAL BREAST ENLARGE-
MENT Safe* affor(Jat)le" effectivo* visit us at
www.figureplus com 1-888-603-9800. Dis-
tributorships are availat)le.
PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER 18-35
year oM females with adventurous and open
minded spirits who want to expand/explore
their sexuality through nude modeling. Free
prints lor modeling time. Call RotMit at 310-
463-5996 roOWOatt.net
21 OO
Recreational Activities
VAMPIRE Live Action Role Playing gamel
CaN DavW 909-338-4621 or visit wvw/.geoci-
ties.com/LAbyNighl. Games every other Sat
night, beginnlng1(V7AX).
2200
Research Subjects
EARN $$$$$
CLINICAL RESEARCH STUDY for the com-
mon cold Male/lemale 18-55yr». oW, non-
smoker, no asthma history. Limited availabil-
ity. CaH today 310-785-9121.
Email clinicalsubtects O yahoo.com
PLAY GAMES&EARN money, loo! Social
psyctwiogical experiment. 1-hour. Average
$10 Undergraduate only Call:310-825-
3017. sign-up 2524 Hershey, or
email:pbonacichOyahoo.com, leaving your
name, phone number, and available times.
RESEARCH PARTICIPANTS NEEDED lor
patients experiencing Hay Fever/Allergic
Rhinitis. Requires 4 visits (6 hours total) over
7- todays. Will pay up to $100 at concluston
ol study Contact Dr. Diaz-Sanchez or
DrSaxoo at 310-825-3699 or 310-825-9376.
SMOKERS EX-$MOKERS AND NON-
SMOKERS 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. Call Dr Rich Olmstead at 310-478-
-3711 ext.44319, leave meeuge
SMOKERS IN GOOD HEALTH, 18-45, want-
ed lor nlcoUne research study administered
by UCLA. Both heavy and occastonal smok-
ers needed. Participants virill be paid up to
$395 for four vfeits. Call Richard Olmstead at
310-312-0565. leave meeaag*.
All Nmr: All Your*: All Ftm
;- »- •
University of California Los Angeles
frffff T-shirt
t/ m vvlii.h
M .KlAdz.com ^Mi
Z
Limit or>« t-shifl p«r stiKf«m.
2200
Research Subjects
Female UCLA
Undergrads With
Lupus Needed
for interviews regarding
the college experience
Contact: Kiisten McKinney
825-3180
mckinneyOucla.edu
2300
Sperm/Egg Donors
$50,000 FOR EGG
DONATION
PLEASE HELP us give our precious baby
boy a sit}ting. We seek a compassionate, in-
telligent, attracttva. honest, ertergetic, arxl
fun-loving Caucasian woman, urxter 32, at
least 5'5*, to t>e our egg donor. Please con-
tact us at egghuntingOaol.com or PO Box
140-328, Howard Beach, NY 11414.
BROKEN HEARTED COUPLE SEEKING
Caucasian egg donor. Up to $15,000. Previ-
ous donors welcome. 858-554-0688 or E-
mail: susanplacelOhotmail.com.
2300
Sperm / Egg Donors
Will you stay at the forefront of change?
Create value in today's marketplace?
. rt.V-
EGG DONORS NEEDED
Healthy females ages 1 9-31
wishing to help infertile couples.
S5.000
k Call MIRNA (818) 832-1494 u
EGG DONOR NEEDED
call 310-397-0490.
Oriental. Please
2600
W;mt(!(l
M/F MODELS WANTED by est. photogra-
pher for commercial portfoNo. Must be in
shape ar>d good looking call Steven 818-
733-0657.
SMOKERS WANTED
UCLA research study. Earn $7.50/hour plus
$30 bonus for not smoking ovemighi and $5
per bkx)d 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 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
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All rights reserved. EOE.
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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
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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
ZO ..l)IS(()l \1
(310) 826 7494
ll54%W>MiirrHI><t 11102
I in Aniirin (A 900?^
(949) 552 5890
I*l24(:ulwi Di (A
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
I )L'piv^sK)n. \n\Ki\.
RcLilioiiships. ,\».liliLli(M)s iS>:
}■:
I ' ■; ■' .; _\iuii Nwll >-Nk\'m
' I *.uih lnN's/ii.iiini.i
/w ( '<<n\iillti!it>ii I III
Slurl> KluuliuiiKl. MI- I
iis^i) w.xiiiiK- H\\i.\- «:i)i
(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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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
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Daily Bruin Sports
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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
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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
Graduate & PROFESSIONAL ScHoor
Information Fair
Are you considering ^n advanced
degree program? Now is your chance
to get firsthand information on a wide
range of graduate and professional
programs!
Kepresentatives from over 1 25
schools will be discussing their
programs and your interests! Don't
miss out on this exciting event! ^
I
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'ednesdQv, Od
Vlsif CQreeer.uclQ.edu to see q complefe list of
pQrricipQfjng instlturjons!
'j*'f'i
':Uu.^"-^-'-^
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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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
www.dailybaiin.uda.edu
Aquk^
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Daily Bruin Classifieds 34-42
Crossword Puzzle 37
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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.
Property owners, environ
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WORLD & NATION
^—^•^— --^ — ^ — ■ — - \
Dow Jones Industrials
up:64.74 '•,■-.: ■
clo«:ia784.48
Dollar
Yffi: 109.37
Euro: 1.1431
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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
9
UORL
mi
1
i
m
i
.Hi
}
^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.
\-
m
I
■*. •.' ."
6 Jhvniaf.(Mbtt 5,2000
Daily Brain Ntws
mrmifi*
' DMQTBninllnK
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-
SeeiMnQ||MS,|Mge19
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On-Campus interviews: Monday, October 30, 2000
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8 Thursday, October 5, 2000
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,
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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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fldmtafthaAiMAArcMlwture HanrnvMuMum — ^
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D«pt o( EVmomuticotogy
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0«)t of World Arts «CuKuw :
www.w»c,ucli.«du
UCIA Cwitnl Tictat Offic*
www.clojiote.9du
tX^LA Portonning Arts Shidonl ComnMM*
UCL^fBg
THURSDAY. OCTOBER 5
Film & lelwision Archive
prasants
atttaSmg. Gotta Oantx: j^.
Uuskais Imn anwnd *• WM^ \
JilllMNisa Rock '^^
Vhra Las Vegas
7:3Qpa,JaMiltM|n1lMlv
UCIA Hammer Museum
presents
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
tectum aRd itauiaR Ibruns. as well
3iai2S«S3S
•iptol
! tOitaMT
3VL443.7nO
iCURhi«T(
SVUOBJIm
3VU2&43B1
■ivLitaalt
31Qlt2S4m
NUNrtnimMi
3ttJ19.2V1
snuutu
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
AKaimMMraiv
OnafSaiiWp-jHhppv
liMacSGiMtailWcM^
iMMUMiMw.OincfereflMal .
1lMhrtlMarat(vASCAP
hrtnuKi*|p
Mil fal, Scfeniaai Hnfe Ml
GtWil.t4S.StidMlUMa
Baipn hat umt tm Academy
wmrt^ iDur Eimy wmk and two
Grammys br die aesrai a< audi dataic
HmsaslheWayWbWve-and-YM.'
Stall ait Emmy i— dutartm actrass
MMn IniM^s BraiA^r tntb Indudi
1 Had a Bar. -JoyM Noia.- Tm
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
Tm
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/
I
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!
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Your Brum Card will be your ticket to the event On the day of the event you will I
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UCLA Fikn & liilevision Archive
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Jli.t4f;
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LM2fetelsp«aidn(M
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WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 11
Department of Music
presents
NoMyltodtal
Maifc Kaplaa, viaHn
Bi«pa. ^_
MMoien: tlO gmnl. 17 ilgdenii a leniort
Kaplan wi perform JS
unaccompanied violin sonatas
Bach's
Oct 1
Bel 1
(ki12
Oct 13
OctM
Oct 15
0ill5
Oct 21
Oct 21
Oct 22
Oct2S
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Oct 26
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Oct 27
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Oct 28
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12 Thursday, October 5, 2000
Oaiiy Bruin News
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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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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
Sec
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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
approval of an abortion pill.
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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.
Daily Bniin News
Thursday, October 5, 2000 19
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Should some books be
banned?
Thursday, October 5, 2000
Daily Bruin
^
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View on the Web
See all this and •
more at the Daily Bruin's •
Web site: ;
^ www.dailybruin.ucla.edu I
viewpoint@media .ucia.edu
^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
IISKeKkhoffHa*
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Los An^elM^CA 90024
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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.
■W>W<P
Thursday, October $,2000 23
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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
9:30 11:0012:30 2:00 3:30
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
l(
RIGHARD 6[R[ DfllVfRS A GARY RRANf-CAllRIR PERFORMANCI,
Dpr»riiis...lllliii's list {riwi-plMsiii
NISII
* ^
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
^<
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ROeERIAlIMAN
S^^^
MRitiantc
ITtl"1~r >i**a«katMBkM
• 1 • iTTT eumm
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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.
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]
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■ I ■ ^
30 Thursday, October 5, 2000
Oiiy Bnm Arts • EirtHtafcimMl'
■* >^
An alternative to moving back home.
UCLA
Daily Bruin
FALL 2000 GUIDE
i Publication Date; October 13, 2000
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lISAWAMLAMDfcH
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
Bruin Bargains
JTU 1 . A great way to buy or sell your r -
: items in a publication that over ^^
• ; 58,000 people read.
V. 1. Runs every Wed. & Fri. Jn the Daily Bruin
Seethe Classified Section every Wed. & Fri. for more info
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TO 6ET THE
VOTE
EXEBCISE YOUR BIGHT! H
Did you know: * .v;^
The 1 9th Amendment (granting women the right to vote) V
was not signed until August 26, 1 920.
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were motjbed, lobbied Congress, made pteas to the President of the U3.
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The deadline to register to vote in order to vote In the
Novemt)er election is October 10, 20001 . ," ".
The presidential election is on Tuesday Novemt)er 7, 2000. • . -^-^ '
The Center for Women & Men has ftee voter registration :' ?^
applications especially for UCLA women and men, i
ExEiasB Toim KMsn. RMism to vote at:
Must turn in application by October 9. 2000. For more Information,
please call 825-3945 or vfsit us at 2 Dodd Hafl.
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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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»- •
— Daily Bruin
Thursday, Oaober 5, 2000
^t^mim
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Auto Accessories
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Boats for Sale
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Parking
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1100
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Campus Happeninrjs
THE liCLA School of Nursing Is scheduled
for a creditation site visit by tfie Commission
on Collegiate Nursing on Oct 30, 31, and
Nov 1 , 2000 The public Is invited (o attend
the site visit and express their opinion on the
baccalaureate and master's degree pro-
grams. For further info, contact Eloise-Luera
310-825-5884.
<'TiTir.
feP
1-900 numben
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Insurance
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Cliild Cars OffisfBd
CMMCsfsVMMitad
Help VWanted
HousesMting
Intemsliip
Personal Assistance
'fempofary Employment
Vokinteer
Faber Consulting is
seeicing the brightest
minds
...to help transform our clients' data assets
into valuable Business Intelligence.
Business Intelligence will separate th«
winners from the losers in the coming
decade. That's why Faber is looking for self-
motivated, intelligent people with a :
computer studies backgrourtd to contribute
to our explosive growth and become our
next generation of consultants.
W* offer a challenging work environment
with exceptional opportunities for training
and career advarKement. And every
•Faberite" receives an equity stake in our
business. • ''' .
Deadline to sign up for an irrterview is
October 9th I Use Jobtrak.com to sign up
immediately - the schedule fills quickly. We
are interviewing in the Career Center on
Tuesday, October 17th. Also, attend an open
•Information Session* on Monday, October
16th from 7-8.00 pjn. in the Career Center
Conference Room. Refreshments will be
available.
We are »n Equal Opportunity Employer
Intelligent
Minds
Business
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Miscnllaneous
BeautHul Asian girls. 25af Daily FREE sexy
images of Asian women. Includes UCLA co-
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NEED TWO TICKETS for UCLA vs. USC
football Game. Call 310-572-1958
ON CAMPUS BANKING
Voor on-campus & oo-lme firwnctal services
source for students, faculty & staff. Visit us at
Ackerman A-level, on-lir>e at www.ucu.org or
call 310-477-6628.
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Research Subjects
SEVERE PRE-MEN-
STRUAL SYMPTOMS
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.
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OB/GYN 310-825-2452
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CLINICAL RESEARCH STUDY for the com-
mon cold. Mala/lemaie 18-55yrs. oW, norv
smol(er, no asthma history. Limited availabU-
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Email clinlcalsutitectsOyahoo.com
RESEARCH PARTICIPANTS NEEDED for
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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.
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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-
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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'^
26 5T58^ |||p5~5fr ■F^ iFIFIP
■■% Hi^
38 39 Hr^
"" bp -mri
PIP" ' .i;f iiUp
^64 Iggg
Display
\ I
v
■ *.J^ „i^^
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§
J
(TT
TTa
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.
I papa- rv.cyr.y.-: ttiis pai)oi ixH-.ycie this
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
APARTMENT to Share. Shennan Oaks.
Private bedroom w/hardwood fkjors.
kitcherAtaundry. Non-smoking female, no
pete. $550^10 includes utilities. AvaUabto
Octl. 818-632-0584.
ASIAN/QUIET/CLEAN/MALE. Bus to front
house. Westwood/Ptop. 3-rTx>. min stay. Re-
quired 2 good references Private bedroom
sharabath. $550/month. share be<M]ath in-
cludes utilities $40/day 310-475-8787.
BEVERLY HILLS private room and bath in
2txlrm/2bth bright, upper apt Redwood
ftoors. anttoue and contemporary furniture,
ntae kitohen. neighbors. Female student or
prolesstonal $950. 3 1 0-990- 1 78 1 .
KILLER VIEW— ehare Witehire BNd.
2BR/2BA hf-riee apt w/ prof, mate security,
gym. pool, belcony, $82S/mo.. mate prel.
Cal Pete 310-478-3542.
PARK LA BREA Large Ibdrm^lbth. Very
dean, one neat person. $600/ri)o. 213-391-
BRENTWOOD
GUESTHOUSE
FOR HELP
Private entrance: gated property iMth pod.
For after-schod heto with children (14412
years). Inciuding drivtog. 310-476-4297.
FREE PRIVATE ROOM+BATH. Singte father
needs mature student for p/i hdp wHh 4-yr-
old twins. 20hrs/wk. must own car+in-
surance. 310-836-5720. jahanOmedi-
aofM.net
MOTHERS HELPER to exchange tor room
Shop, cook lor family. 6-lOhra/wk, l.2days.
No experience. Time anartged. Vil 310-471 -
1671. evenings best
WESTWOOD VILLAGE apt Fun. outgoing
lemate tooUng for femate roomnwM Own
bed/t>ath to 2bdrnV2bth i^Mftmenl. gaM
partdng. jacuzzi on roof, aecurlty buUr^.
Avaiable 1/01. $900/mo. 310-209-2665.
WESTWOOD VILLAGE; Fumtehed Room to
great 2bd. 1/3rd ml campus. Historic
Btock.Rreplaca. Books. Musto. Mature per-
son to mind apartmenL cate when other
occupant travete. Maid, UtiMtes induded
$670. 310-20»6606.
WLA ROOMMATE needed to shere
2bdrm/2.5blh condo. Prtvate bath, under-
ground pertdng. hMohenUaundry, 2 balconies
(upstairs and downstairs). $750. 31(M46-
6106.
9600
Roomm.ites-Sli.Kcd Room
WESTWOOD- phat pad. 546 Kelton 3bdmi,
need one mate to sfwre room. $4l7/month
No pwychos. 310-209-1862.
9700
Suhlels
AVAILABLE NOWIII SepulvedaANattonal
Share 2bdmV2blh. Fumtehed room:bunk
bed. dresser ctoset. desk. UrtH end d quar-
ter Dec. $600»helf uMMea. 310-610-2925.
SUBLETS ROOMMATE
SERVICE
FINDorUSTA SUBLET!!
www.thesublet.corn
Sublete in aH ciO—n (a01-8a4-1ie0)
Display
206-3060
■ J ■■■■^■y»* *■*■»
■'■■■:-:a.
■:.. ,■ "> ..• -
:--^y.^.:
1hndmOclofarS,20M 41
>'fe-
T-^rr-
BB\R
STBVRNS
::"'* .•
'-.'IK- ■
■•'V*i
'*■.■■<■ " •"*- -■'
Ydu can join i
a company
built on an
novative idea.
i
Or one built on
years worth
of them.
•*'7^-
"^^.■:
,r ■ '. A •
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.
■^■jwv
r--* '/»" .. -■ "^f
fir^'rZL^ ^"^T ^•'""/^""' '»",' *»"• -^^^ " " vrg,s,frrdtnuUr»<,rk of Ihr li«,rS,Mm, Clompama Im
•^4^
*^ Thunday, Odofaer 5, 2000
' wl^ BBBlSpirtf '
■.MKHMt
BRUIN EYE GUY
tmmamnamtm mrnn
MUrtMMinM
Pari \^axiii^ Salon
Body Waxing for Men & Women
with 100% Natural Pari wax.
Women Full leg and Bikini $25
Underarm 53
Lower Half leg siO
Bikini Wax $10
Lip or Chin S6
Eyebrow Wax $10
Eyelash Tint $10
Facial S50
Arm Wax S20
Threading $-15
We Do Nails
www.pariwax.com
1435 Westwood Blvd., Westwood 473-0066 or 479-9325
Open Sundays Walk-ins Welcome
Of the Art
Laser Hair Removal
Call now for your
free consultation.
Bring this ad for
50% off in the
month of
October.
on campus
James Heaps, MD
Russell Rapoza, MD
Pracxtice in Gynecology
100 UCLA Medical
Plaza #383
THIS MAfl' IS VERY DAHaEROUS !
Jeff PsttersoB ■ordered ay slater mod other
people tbAt he lured into the Black Hills on a "tour"
to search for the tzuth about the BUlr Witch.
BE 01 THB LOOEOUTI
IP TOU SSS HIM, PLEASE COITlOT THE POLIOS.
www.blairwltch* com
Glendale Learning Program
Interested in Community Service?
Join a team of volunteers tutoring students from the Glendale Unified School District
information Sessions
Date
Time
Location
Men, 10/9
2-4pm
KenMioff Hail 408
Tues, 10/10
2-4pm
KerckhoffHall408
Wed. 10/11
12-2pm
Kerckhoff Hall 408
VHhen ; Saturdays 10:00am - 1:00pm
Where : Glendale High School
(Transportation provided to and from UCLA)
Orientation
Date
Time
Location
Sat. 10/14 10-12pm Glendale High School
Please attend an Info Session to find out more and to fill out an application
: -, • or contact us at '
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.
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JARED LETO JENNIFER CONNELLY
MARLON WAYANS
A FILM BY DARREN ARONOFSKY
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Pick up an application from
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46 Thunday, October 5, 2000
Daly Bruin Spom
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825-2161
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
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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
SeeMraOOCN,pa9e46
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I
i
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
DIARYtlPEAS)
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■ '<■• • I
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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X
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
Deal of
the Day!
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t
\
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
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read
the
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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
largos, car repair shops, restauranu
and parking lots with 25 or ntore
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Friday, Oaober 6, 2000
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."
«/\b>oU't. 7 OU.
Steelcase, Inc. is a successful company that promotes a healthy bal-
ance between career and personal life. As the preeminent designer
and manufacturer of over 540 different lines of products used to cre-
ate fiigfi-performonce working environments, it is by no coincidence
that we know what it takes Id accommodate our own employees. We
are now making it more convenient tfian ever to learn more about us
by coming to visit you! Take the first step toward a rewarding new
career by stopping by to see us at the
Jobs for Bruins
Career Fair
Friday, October 13
We are cunrently considering new graduates for ifie
folkAving positions:
• Marketing/Sales
• Information Systems
• Engineering
• Finance
At Steelcase, we won't try to mold you into something you're not.
Insteod we'll nurture and develop the talents you already have. We
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Steelcase strongly supports a diverse workplace
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Q^tv^tettiB iki^M
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Friday, October 6. 2000 11
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Bill Glenn was a first-year analyst in Salomon Smith Barney's Sales &
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week went by and the replacement had yet to be named. Bill was doing
routine work, helping the sales effort in New York. Near the end of the
week, the Head of the Desk came to Bill and asked him what he thought
about taking an opportunity in Hc^g /ong. Suffice to say, he was
surprised by the offer. Though
for seven months, it seemed
confidence to let him tr^
Kong. He went home t
he had only been at the firm
his managers had enough
on the finapieertfesk in Hong
sat quietly, thinking
V
hard on this unique opportunity. It would mean leaving New York and
moving to Hong Kong, something he wasn't sure he was prepared to do.
Finally, he made his decision. He crossed the room, picked up the phone,
dialed one of the only numbers he knew by heart, and ordered some
"General Tso's Chicken." As a first-year analyst. Bill Glenn had the chance
to expand his world, experience a foreign culture, and work with an
international team. The global opportunity afforded to Bill is not an
anomaly— it is simply the way things work at Salomon Smith Barney.
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When you mef I us face-to-face, you'll understand what sets us apart from the field. We Invite you to attend our recruit-
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Amernberof atiqrou^
Imagine No Limits'^
58 .■:
iVV^V-V V V WW 'r-
S
, 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-
ating table."
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YUGOSLAVIA
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
Belgrade, and tens of thousand*
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
the crowd roared below.
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Dr. Herdt is Director of Human Sexual Studies, Director of
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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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Daily Bruin
Next week's forum
Does Bush's education
plan present a viable
method of improving
schools?
Friday, October 6, 2000
f^V
View on the Web
See all this and •
more at the Daily Bruin's •
mind-blowing Web site: *
www.dailybruin.uda.edu I
viewpoint#media.ucla.edu
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
t"^
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
MbmiHion at iha OaMy Bruin offka 018
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
»^nail aKprtning your bitarMt to Itia
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.
F
■'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.
DAILY BRUIN
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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
Friday, October 6,2000 17
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brings homemade robots together for one
unique battle. Find out what the show is -
really about on Monday. c ;:
Friday, October 6, 2000
Daily Bruin
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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
I f • I I
I f r
I •'■ <-'.•'■•, ■» '>f
\.,: ■^■■-K ■':,'■> ':,\: ■' ''■■:f^..
« '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 •• ■;'
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^[PJMrtiwiewsirtattdoniKaleoftjJ^^B
Mptime ptoyiinw II^^H
JOYCE CHdhlSPRK
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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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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.
961 Braxton
20t-SS7e
Frt-TlMl (1&4S 3:4S) liK 10:15
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10:15 10:45
<»)
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206-7664
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si9r
To advertise
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Enjoy the
Movies!!!
r
t t ^ t r f
N \ \
•• «.», V
22 Friday, OctotMT 6, 2000
.v.-: •< V
OalyBrufoAiislEi
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.
y
■.f
f^f'^^iT^i i*'^:?^?^''^':-^.'j!^-; '-iXliiJ-
'-'^,^
r
.-.V .■^>'
s
..J -■■*" -■
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
M
t
*^T^t — -■ ^.SKf*
Daily Bruin
Friday, Octobff 6, 2000
Campus Happenings
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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
Earn $1,000-$2,000 ttiis quarter with tiM easy
Campuftundraiser.cafli ttree hour furKtraaing event,
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
Spnrni/Etjrj Donors
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.
Bargains
' 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
ext467 or email rvapolejOmarlbor-
ough.la.ca.us
WANTED: PAID
COACHES
Girls frosh/soph JV basketball, girls JV soft-
tall. Palisades Charter High School. Contact
TTamura 310-454-0611 ext3290 or ext3450.
WEB DESIGNER/PROGRAMMERS NEED-
ED! AmbitkHJS company seeks self motivat-
ed people. Knowledge ol FLASH HTML, and
Programming a plus. Call Teri O 562-622-
0729.
WORK AT HOME
Intematwnal business PfT: $500-$2000/*no.
F/T: $2000-$6000/mo. WUI train. 310-558-
5888.
8000
internships
Dr MARTEN'S AIRWAIR
INTERNSHIP. Leading footwear manufac-
ture seeks ambiikxM, creative interns for
street marketing team. For more info caU Ja-
net 310-450-5396.
FREE ARTS FOR ABUSED CHILDREN IS
SEEKING UNPAID INTERNS. PLEASE
CONTACT KARINAAT 310-313-4ART
INTERNSHIP POSITION
POST-PRODUCTION INTERNSHIP and
student fHm proiects. CaH Joel:310-828-
2292.
INTERNSHIP. PUBLISHING HOUSE.
PR/MMgTEd. Relaxed, fun atmosphere.
Jr./Sr. dass credK. Fax 323-939-1855. e-mail
pubbooksOaol.com.
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
INTERN. Smart bk>chemlslry undergrad
needed for UCLA research project In compu-
tatkjnal molecular btology/bloinlormatics.
Must know baste biochemistry. Computer
skills needed, (preferable UNIX) Dr Pet-
tit,310-206-4748.
7800
Helf) Wanti'il
7800
Help Wanted
SITE ACQUISITIONS CONSULTANT
Full/part time. Self-starter, creative Intelli-
gent. Acquire land sites tor cellular Salary
commensurate w/experience. Fax resume,
310-737-4228.
SMALL SANTA MONICA LAW FIRM seeks
secretary/administrative assistant. Must be
computer literate. Fax or email resume 310-
395-9880 or tecotfteemngrOearthlink 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 asste-
lants needed at k>cal elementary school. Ap-
prox $8.83/hr Call Steve 310-473-2172.
TELEMARKETING. No coW calls. $16-
20+/hr. bonuses. F/T-P/T Must have desire
to make big $$$. Flexible schedule. Great for
students. Near UCtJV. 310-996-6701
ext.298.
TUTOR for active senior, post-stroke. Needs
help with Photoshop. Pagemaker, Quicken.
Must be patient and friendly Pay rate $40-
50/hr BOE. Call Laura at 323-933-5880
X1012.
Write your own Qk
Since 1874, our reputation for quality,
integrity, stability and service has allowed
Clarke American to be recognized as a
"First In Service." The quality of life and
fXKitive attitudes our associates enjoy
reflect our commitment to superior
service and quality performance.
Immediate opportunities for
highly motivated individuals
are available in the
following locations:
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES
Comeseeusatthe
UCU Career Fair
October 13**
We an looking forward to
meeting you
Morthem Region-
Ohio
Illinois
South Dakota
-Hortheastem Region
New York
Pennsylvania
a/RI/Massachusetts
Southern Region-
Texas
Louisiana
-Western Region
California
Utah
Oregon/
South Washington
Hawaii
Clarke American
ThesuccessMondidatBwimaintmoor-
ponte r«btio«KliJpsin jRlwyfunctionalar-
e*$ (maiteting, diti procHsing, opmtiom,
and purdtasiR)) mMm the finaocHiiffititti-
tion for bMkiHIbigMdfHdkidL This posi-
tion will act as ) consukant to ttte fkuncal
institutions for devHopmcnt of new and inno-
vative prodtKts and programs and provide
ongoing infinMilM to fiMmdal iMdMion
penonnel legHdhg oideiing and hing pio-
oedunThniiHiicdcindktewiposses^M
initialivr and a positive outfodt, PCkQowt-
M^, as wel as excellent organiutuiaConm-
tnunkativf and interpersonal skik. The pre-
ferred candidate wi also possess a bachefors
tfqree. Must be willing to relocate.
I t/kn its team memben
workkfas$benefe,indudn9MedalDeniai/
Viaon/Ue, Profit Sharing(401K)andCo(poia»
Bonus program. Professionals interested in ow
opportunities shouM forward a resume,
including salary requirements, to Human
Resources, 10931 laureate Drive,
San Antonio, Texas 78249; •-mail:
P«M««i<rtiomMMlHMMfkaiiAm.
To learn more about Clarke American,
please visit:
;larl<
rh
Web Marketing & Web Development Positions
ProfMsloiMl CmrlronmMit. SmhI RMumM IMay Ito:
Fax: (310) 793-9894; T«l: (310) 793-7704
■tiwHl! MOmiiWACFBfg|IDS.COIW
8000
liUcriisiiips
8000
Daily Bruin Classified
Friday, October 6, 2000 29
81 OO
Petsonnl Assistnnco
PHYSICAL
ASSISTANCE NEEDED
For disabled male in Reiber Hall. A tew
hrs/day. Flexible shedule. $l0/hr. CaH Alex
949-369-9871 or 310-267-8189.
coming
5^^ week
»««
check your newsstands.
housing
8400-9800
8^tOO
ApiiHinents f(jr Rent
1 MIN TO UCLA
WESTWOOO. Fumished. Single:
$850/month. Carpeted. Gated complex.
Quiet. Pool. Laurtdry. lyr lease. 310-824-
1830.
BEVERLY HILLS ADJ
Charming Spanish duplex. 2bed/1bath. Ex-
cellent Location. One block from Beverly
HHls. Hardwood floors. Living/dining room
$1650/n(K>nth. 310-858-8817.
BEVERLY HILLS ADJ. U2BE0ROOM
$895»UP LARGE. UNUSUAL CHARM
SOME SPANISH STYLE W/HAROWOOD
FLOORS. ONLY 1/2 BLOCK TO PICO BUS
310-839^294.
1?©®(S©
8^00
Ap;ittiiu.'nts for Rc-iit
BRAND NEW BUILDING. 3bdmV3bth, start-
ing $2500. 4bdmV3bth, $2950. W/D In unit.
Central air and heat. Alarm, gated parking
Spacious, carpet. Prinw locaUonI Near
UCLA. 310-474-1111.
BRENTWOOD
ADJACENT
Luxury building, pool, parking, gated entry,
laurKlry, one and two t>edrooms from
$1500/month. 310-312-1223.
BRENTWOOD BACHE-
LOR
APARTMENT
FOR RENT Grad student preferred. Upper,
front, walk-in ck»et. tub and stwwer Ck}se
to bus. $695/riK)nth. 310-275-7139.
FREE RENTAL SERVICE. Westside . 1 and
2t>drm available. CaH The Roberts Compa-
nies. 310-829-1700.
PALMS. Single apt from $575, $600deposlt
1-year lease only Stove, refrig, carpets, vert,
blinds. 310-837-1502 leave message. 8am-
5pm only
Santa Montea 1bd/1Wh, living room, parking
space, storage, kitchen w/oven & refridg.
$10O0/mo. Zay 310-541-2887.
VENICE
1BDRM $1390-)^ 2BDRM $1680>Special pri-
vate garden apartments. 1txlrm-$1650
2bdrm-$2200. Uncoil Place Garden Apts.
Cal 310-450-8119.
«400| FREF
Apiirtmunts for RtMil
WALK TO UCLA. WESTWOOD Large 1+1.
2+2. Pool, Jacuzzi, walk-in closets, fireplace,
full-kitchen, gated garage, Instant broadband
avail, www.keltontowers.com. 310-208-
1976.
WESTWOOD
I'fl apartment. 2 miles to campus.
Prime kxatton. Private entry. $850. Female
preferred. 310-475-9145.
WESTWOOD/NEAR CENTURY CITY
$1290. 2t)drm/1bth. Large, laurxlry enck>sed
garage, balcony, large ck>sets. near buses,
blinds. Charmirtg, bright, quiet buikJing. 310-
474-1172.
WLA ONE BEDROOM one bath. Ohto and
Butler L.arge living room. Carpet and drapes.
Refridge and stove, Laundry. Secured build-
ing. 2mtles from UCLA. Near shopping and
bus. $770/mo. 310-470-2122.
Westwootf ^iaza
Single w/ Shared Bathroom
$930 - $965
Single w/ Private Bathroom
$965 -$1095
1 Bedroom
$1210 -$1500
Parlcing availabia for
1 Bedrooms only
310-208-8505
I ADVERTISING?!
YES!!I
BRUIN BARGAINS
OFFERS FREE
ADVERTISING FOR
ANY ITEM WORTH
$100 OR LESS!* , J
For nrwre info call (310) 825-2221
or come by the Daily Bruin
at118KerckhoffHall
•For items between $101 -$500. $2 extra
8600
Coiulo/TowMhoiise for Rent
BRENTWOOD 1BDRM/2BTH. security
building/garage, sunny w/view, pool/jacuzzi, •
suana/gym, large closets, vacant 11/5. lease
$1275/mo. 310-471-1335.
8800
Guesthouse for Rent
BRENTWOOD ESTATE 9 minutes from
campus. Single occupancy, prefer medical
resktent or grad student. $aioo. Call:3l0-472-"
9226.
CULVER CITY
GUESTHOUSE
Single guesthouse in great neighborhood.
Easy parking, near Overland and Jefferson,
$600/month. Utilities included. 310-572-
1239.
:t>-
bqrmins
student deals \J
absolutely FREE* some of the best deals in Westwood. Check weekly for updates so you don't miss out on great savings!
Item
Description
Price
Phone
19- TV. STEREO
ALARM CLOCK
oniy-3>r.QldiiiAiem9^y
BACKPACKS
am/Mbuaar
JSQ-
SSL
jLflUBEL
Sil.
31<>€gK9417
310-312-2466
Hem
MICflOeBOOK
MICROWAVE
De^ .ription
custom edw/od-fom
BED FRAME METAL
bQlL>ime.vi9fV comfy f^
310-312-2645
MICROWAVE
med. size, mtetinff
Price
J15_
BIKE RIDING
BOOKSHELF
anHRMJnaMfm^
JgS2QflHLA&_
J8-
310-20^5588
310^3ft4192
85
BRAND NEW LUGGAGE SocNm^bkiaJS^A^ ^
CAKEHOLOERCARRIER ftomti«fln. $4
310-838^192
310-26B-2461
MINI FRIDGE
MINI-FRIDGE
white, very ntee
JSL
Phone
310-267-9262
fridoe/freazer
JSL
QE.wh»».a— tonnd
JGQ_
310«04>417
MOTORCYCLE HELMUT fuflface w/ visor
N'SYNC TICKETS >f«n Hky^ ,v,n.^
S100
310-312-3801
818-528-2599
310-20^6386
_s§_
CD PLAYER. 5CD
d<non.inoffcihQxgvyff
CHEM MLCR MODEL pl^istic. oofralala a^
COMPUTER SOFTWARE suo-sotefte 7 i^^y
CRUTCHESALUMINIUM adltJStabteS'lQ'-ffy
DggK LAMPS dartctamp
DESlSSr dMfcl*M!ttfia6i]fiL_
Jifi.
90
310-63&4192
310-820-9417
310-393-2997
NADS NEVER USED hajr removal systepi
N/A
NOKIA 6160 NEW
with lots of extras
JSL
310-208-5683
310-312-2465
619-316-8633
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310-312-2465
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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
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BEVERLYWOOD. $500/MO. Bedroom lor
rent in private home. Own enterance and
bathroom. Kitchen Privelages and Utilites
included. 310-839-9602
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exchange for tutoring (lOhrs), some driving.
Kkte-14412. Female UCLA students only.
310-971-7S7S
FREE PRIVATE ROOM-i-BATH. Single father
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LOOKING FOR PVT ROOM for rent Max
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WANTED: Quiet male gradute student.
Lovely bedroom w/microwave and fridge,
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WESTWOOD
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dry, partying. $700/nx)nth. Another room
$600/month. 310-473-5769.
9500
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quired 2 good references. Private bedroom
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.
2BR/2BA hi-rise apt. w/ prof, male security,
gym, pod, bakx>riy, $82S/mo., male pref.
CaH Pete 310-478-3542.
OWN BED AND BATH in bright and upper
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-
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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-
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9600
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WESTWOOD: gorgeous Wilshire apartment
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share in 2br. apartment. Available now! CaH
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9700
Suhlt.'ts
WESTWOOD VILLAGE: Furnished Room In
great 2bd, 1/3rd mi carrjpus. Historic
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occupant travels. Makl, Utilities InchJded
$670. 310-20e-«606.
Private room & Bath in large TowrVxwse
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310-837-2575
nAHYBRULX
I) '-J
^/p^xr^^—.
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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
Mb)(OclalMr 8,2000 31
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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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Frid«Ocloberib2000 33
M50CaR
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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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."
Sm
p^prlO
', V » V -* -
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'.'■■' i. 'i .'■.'- , ■
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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
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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
Stephanie Aguiiar (left) and other CALPIRG members
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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
^'
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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
S«cNXpa9e16
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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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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
^iiiiiiliti '^iV.trhdok St.itf
lu! t IT, in- i!k- mk tnoru's
that wdiiM List a
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UCtffer
■..■"■ - '.- -■-,-.. i ■ '. ■ ■> ■
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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':-'-: ■■'* ;.'.>■ .. ■■)..
: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?
Let's
Make
History!
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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
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SaumjnSmith
«)
sa
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m
m
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sa
A membepef dtigraulSr
Imagine No Limits'"
'jt
omo
isgassamsgaBSMBBMBoS^^
M Monday, October 9, 2000
•Also CMjiloble at lt» Hill Ibp SJwp, Lu Vok Commonj, Norlli Campus Skxe,
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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 ^ - —
.growth potential in cor Managen>en, Co^^^'^icT^J^^:'^':^:^^^^ "* ^"^ P*^' '^^^ '-Hno^^^^
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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
Planninoj foi^ -
Financial £iccesi
Mn SAA and MBNA on Monday, Oct 23, at 6 p.m. at the James WM
Alumni Center for an infonnative woriuhop on credit management
and wliat it means to your foture. Rememl>er Good Credit = Great
Future. For infonnation, call (310) 794-5201.
>.•
Senior Day
%
The first Senior Day of tlie year is scheduled for Wfednesday, Oct 25,
from 11 ajn. to 2 p.m. in Bruin Plaza. This quarterly event allows
seniore to find out about all the benefits and services available to
them as Alumni Association members while networMns «vtth other
seniors. You will also have the opportunity to purchase your Alumni
Association membership at this event The first 1000 seniors wiH
recehre lunch on us. But remember, this event is for Seniore Only! Be
sure to bring your BruinCard. For biformatfcM, caN (310) UCLA-SAA.
Scholarship Money
is Available
Distinguished Bridn Awards offer an opportunNy for continnhig UCU
students to johi the fandly of Alumni Scholars. These awards place a
heavy emphasis on research and academics and prtwMe a total of
$50,000 to studento who have completed at least one academic year
atUCtA. ApplcatioNS are now avalaUe and must be completed and
returned to the Ahmuii AssodaUon by noon on Oct 27, 2000. For
hiformation or an appHcaHon, visit us at www.llCLAIumni.net
<«*-<**'
p. Dates to .
Remember
(Oct 23)
Plarniing for Financial Success
(Oct 25)
Senior Day
(Oct 25)
Resume Writing Woricsliop
(Oct 27)
Mstinsuislied Bruin Application Due
COct3l3
APSIA Intemationaf Affaire
CN?f. 1 J
Intenfiew witii a Brain
■.'.'- »i
SAA
U C L «
UCLA Stiiu> / * M jnitii Aiiociation
Jomcs West Alumni CenfLT
^i Angelev CA 90095- 1397
or McftibtTship Infornofion
UCUVJumni
For Event & Volunteer
Information.
(310) UCLA-SAA
Fax: (310)825-8678
E moil sao UCLAIumm net
www UCLAIumni net/sao
.^4 4
«-N--U *i.
22 Monday, October 9, 2000
Daily BniiaNMi
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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
Momtay,0ctober9,2000 23
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Center's services!
Network with Career Professionals! ;
Applications due Monday, October 16! Pick one up at the Career
Center!
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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DAILY BRUIN
118 Kerckhoff Hall
308 Westwood Plaza
I.OS Angeles, CA 90024
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The Bruin compll«s vtrith
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When multiple authors
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for resolving complaints
against any of Its publications.
For a copy of the complete
procedure, contact the
Publications office at im
■■gM I JlftllJIJfyN
26 Monday, October 9, 2000
Daily Brain Viewpoint
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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
1^
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'***»^^''W**M<M\fc*>wf-at-:^
^^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
Do you find it hard to express your opinions and wishes to others?
. Want to learn how to assert yourself and state your ideas with confidence?
Join us and leam how to develop your assertive potential through a discussion
facilitated by Lisa Frankel, Ph.D., M.F.C.C.
4~-
ffy
Choose one of tibese Dates:
October 25th or November 8th
12:00-1:30 p.m.
SDoddHaU
For more information or to sign up, please call 310-825-3945.
Sponsored by the UCLA Center for Women & Men
www.thecenter.ucla.edu ,., ^ ... ;. 4.' ^
forwomengmen
Andersen Consulting
...invites UCLA students to learn about
our exciting career opportunities:
Information Session
Monday, October 1 6th
Bradley Center, 6:30 pm
We hope to see you there!
We will also be on campus:
ACT Job Fair
Job For Bruins Job Fair
Engineering and Sciences Job Fair
October 1 1
October 13
October 27
Graduating seniors who would liite to interview with
us should request an interview through the Career
Center by October 19th..;
t I
To request an interview, you must submit a resume
electronically through the BruinView system and
retum a completed Personal Data^Pack to the
UCLA Career CetntQc. ,., v ^^
For complete career and calendar information, log on to:
http://campusconnection,ac,com
stay tuned for
news on our
WWW Challenge
event coming
Winter Quarter!
Andersei
Consij^/j;>^
r.-"
•:T
28 Monday, October 9, 2000
Daily Bruin Vieivpeint
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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"?
*' ■» »^ w^- J. iiQiiiypy la? »,-<i».»yjw^y jiMi rf
n.f*.-»,^wj^-rjfc«rtaJ-*' 3^ -•»v** v**^».-.,**|j 11.1^^7 -ijV-
9»9^M-
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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-
www.ibidlive.tv
Now that you have registered for classes, register with www.ibidlive.tv where
every weekday at 1 2 noon and 4 p.m. we auction off gift certificates from
Gap, Old Navy, Olive Garden, The Gardens, Acapuico, Tower Records,
Brewing Company, Maui Beach Cafe, Otomix- World 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 vmviMMdllyeJy every weekday at noon.
2 Large Pizzas
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tHum i».iwi»-iMryT^wi»n»i«yri iiitii-'«iti.t lyjiriaMK^H^^nHoM'^aii* c;Ai
>.■' ■■!■»•
•^.
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
Bruin Special
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$9.95 - Mivary Only; $16.75 value; limit 1 p«r order
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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'
fv'.-j'^ j«*i-js*t>«r*-».,-
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.
'}■:<,
«a; ^t;-.,c :■■-:
'<
^i'
M/yicrg To Get Application Forms
USA Finance Committee/Budgetlleview Office 300BKerckhoffHall
Community Programs Office (CPO) ' io2 lien's Gym
Center for Student Programming (CSP) 105 Kercichoff Hali
http;//students.asucla.ucla.edu/Funding/board„programming.fund.html
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
Kerckhofr413or
http://8tudentB.asucla.ucla.edu/Bwe/
For more information:
Cali SWC at (310) 325-7586
or Email: usaswcGasucia.ucia.edu
Paid For By Undergraduate
Studanta AaaoclaUon Council
^liafafhrUSAC
I
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• I
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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-
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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
Chemistry 130B
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
tangible resources to
undergraduate students in
financial need. The program
alms to create an educational
environment that Is accessible
and affordable.
BROUGinm YOU BY WE FtNAMOML SUPPORTS COMMISSIOM
ANDWEUMDERGRAOUATESWDBirASSOCmnOM
Applications available at 300A Kerckhoff Hall
_ (right above ttie Kerckhoff Coffee House).
Books will be awarded on a FUtST COME HRST SERVE
BASIS, upon review of completed applications.
For futher information, call 825-7608
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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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
Daily Bnan Arts t Entertainineflt
trmr^-^m-^-^ • - ii^j 'fc*'*Wi'^^.^p» .H>.**''. -
Mon<by, October 9, 2000 39
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summer...
GVREER
FALL 2000 GUIDE
UCIA
Daily Bruin
Watch for it...
October 13, 2000
TO ADVERTISE: — — ~
Call: 310.206.3060
Fax: 310.206.0528
E-mail: dbcareer@media.ucla.edu
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> find oiit more about K8T WIWKS at UCLA, please attEi„
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Thur, Oct 5 - Tues, Oct 10 - Wed, Oct 11 - Thur, Oct 12
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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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./-•
index
""iMonday, October 9, 2000
'H
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SrS^T^.^SJSJiU'^^j:!;^*'??" ^*TSS^ y.^Jl?'*?™^ m «* issue vto^M me Board's policy on nondisalminaiion stated herein should cornniunic«S^n?Wnte in v^fngTSf aSSflSaW
w-2JE_ ~h^iI!?,r^f?f,5S??L?!!^ " n«5>//Www.dallybniin.ucla.edu. Placement on-line Is oAared as a compimemaiy service to customers and is not guvanteed The Oaiv Bruin is resoonstte for the Ari innJt
JwgttononlyJjInoMjgog^^ j^'SfOliMtaSon^ lor the Wrst mcorr
r^^i?^^^
1300
Campus Recniitmont
1300
C.inipiis Recruitment
1300
Campus Recruitment
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
SHOW YOUR STUFF ON TV!
Wa NaadOrtginal Homematia HDPEGS, Qulck-
Tbna Movtot aad JPEGS or Videos & Pliotos
Sand Us Vbur Most Embarming Momante,
SpontMMous Goofs and Furaiy Plwlaa
MatorialmtatbeotlgMandMQI SUfiEQ.
No secondhand stuff -I MUST BE YOURS.*
. -lOBWetiaOowarSt-
■■ » - Hat^rwMd, CA. gooaa
MOJUK VOUR NWCMnCSS /WO ROC NUMKH
•>"«•
Slfc'3f218tWL*S2!3*"
18 GO
Miscellaneous
NEED TWO TICKETS for UCLA vs.
football Game. Call 310-572-1956
use
ON CAMPUS BANKING
Your on-campus A «v«ne flnandal services
source tor studenta. faouKy & staff. VMt us at
Actterman A-level, on-ilne at yvww.ucu.org or
call 3l0-477-fl828.
20GG
NATURAL HERSAt. BREAST ENLARGE-
MENT Safe' affordable* effective* vieff ue at
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minded aplrtts wtw want to expend/explore
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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. —
•I
I
h ■ • ■■:■
•■■ <• « .'■ . ■»,
s
'J
42 Meodaji October 9, 2000
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innovative idea
Or one built on
International opportunities
For the 21st Century.
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of them
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
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www.arthuraitdaraon.com
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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-
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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
^^>?-
>« I
■('
• . \
7
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^
00
•wkaAiMM «■ >•
» m— t iiaao«»
•M|IMMIWMa<
i«»«
•WMMMlW MWM 1
a*«
MnMiaMDKJtp
and
«Kt%\i%mm^m«
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
Apartment. Newly Decorated.Flreplace.
Hardwood Floors.Batoonles, Totally Fur-
nishedl Available All of November. $600.
310-837-2575
SUBLETS ROOMMATE
SERVICE
FINDorUSTA SUBLET!!
www.thesublet.com
I SuMrta in all cftiaaK (201 -894-1 189> I
FREE
[ADVERTISING?
BRENTWOOD ESTATE 9 minutes from
campus. Single occupancy, prefer medtoal
reskJent or grad student. $800. CaR:310-472-
9226.
KILLER VIEW— share Wilshire Blvd
2BR/2BA hi-riso apt. w/ prof, male securtty,
gym. pod, bateony, $825/mo., male pref
Cal Pete 310-478-3542.
YES!!!
BRUIN BARGAINS
OFFERS FREE
ADVERTISING FOR
ANY ITEM WORTH
$100 OR LESSr
For more info call (310) 825-2221
or come by the Daily Brum
.It 118 Kerckhoff Hall
Allergy Sufferers
Uv ;> \ Arm you of Japanoso DomeoniT
- Do your allorglom mmko your oyos RED mnd WlMYt^^^'
^ufTJ^^l'IPJ'^'"^ "^T 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
r "??9/"'"9 allergy reseanh stJdieafor anti-allergic eye-drops.
S«r,e^o/partlc/pallon _^Jlg^^ Vi*- may qualify if you:
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• Are of Japanese descent
•Get RED, ITCHY EYES from tree,
grass, cat pollens, mold or dust.
• Free study related eye
examination
• Financial compensation
For itlor^nf^rmiMontan:
Jonathan Kfacy, M,Da
310-657-2777
Ask about our referral program
•s dv
' every person you r^re;
r.iir -tiirli*^':;
Ask for details
^^^H
50 Monday, Ortobff 9, 2000
w->*vi!
Daily Bruin Sports
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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
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Catch all NFL
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11:30-4pm ^ ^
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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
\NeeV.
LJHS
SMP
During the year 2000. any gift purchase
will be discounted
10% with this coupon.
■Bring your student I.D. and
get 15% towsffd the purchase price.
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Call Jamie at
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UCLA
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(Monday-Friday)
Thh, iWKHr a ccmriuciwl by Dn. Poinid Tahldn t Ijic Klm-up
A young Chinese wamM wdct, ai variovt dmei. tenily tecuriiy. iexaal fieedom and
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LOVEACKOSS WE PACIHC OSBN 0.3»^OM62.7) ii poMMed by Writer; SJumcase
prcaMted by Wri$ers Digest. Ii U available through web aiiet. wdi ai Amazon com. or
boolwoiw R<«w Wen to preft«or eiwrltt. of d»il et^pneering. Miehig« Swe IMiven^^
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■'<t:.--
52 Monday, October 9, 2000
Daily Bfuin Sports
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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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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
' '-^j.
/-■■■
I
t ■ •■
I
/' > '
/■ '\.
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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MomJay, October 9, 2000 57
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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
L&S undergraduate courses
Last week to add/drop classes
through 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
Tuesday, October 10, 2000
www.dailybruin.ucla.edu
atyour Bruin
MM
Rmgm*
Daily Brvin Classifieds 37-35
Crossword Puzzle 33
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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.
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Jewish observances coincide with latest violent attacks
Arts & Entertainment: 825-2538; Ntv^.v o25-279i)
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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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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.
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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
Fall Events
. ^^ . from the
University Catholic Center
633 Gayley Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90024
coming Events: ^^^
Fall Weekend Retreat
at the beach
Searching for an Intimate Lifestyle
Friday Eveflliig, October 27 -
Sunday, October 29
Pizza and Theology ^
Election 2000: A Wide Range of Catholic
Teaching and Issues
Wednesday, October 18 6-9pni
Confirmation Classes start October 16
from6'9pm
Inquiry Classes (RCIA) start October 24
from 7-8:30pm
Bible Study
Tuesdays, 7-8: 30pm
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 !
Schedule of Services:
Sunday Masses:
Mon., Wed., Mass:
Thurs. Communion Service:
I0:30am, 7:00pm and 9:00pm
12:10p^ Ackerman 2410 (on campus)
12:10pm Ackerman 2410 (on campus)
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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UCLfhioir
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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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.
. •
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pubNoMom an
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and
Secure a job for your
AMD Yah(
L3 Communications Arth
LSI Logic Edis
Xilinx Inro
^ Raytheon PWC
Next Engine Xerc
Broadcom Inte
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Plutus Enterprises Dra^
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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
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■ \ " ■•
» ., ■ ! » "
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:
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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
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Thursday, October 1 2, aOO p.m.
Aclcerman Grand Ballroom
Get your free passes at the
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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
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^' ^ ^' 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)
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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
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(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
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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
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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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MhrMiVhwpaiM
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^\**
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•luin EdHorlal Board All other
coHimni, latteri and artwork
npnMt* the opMom of thtlr
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An MbmRisd mMMW muM
ttir-
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•ddrtu.
numbw,
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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
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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
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10AM - 2PM
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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.
Know your rights.
For more information, please contact The Center at 3 10-825-3945.
JjieCenter
tor women jiTien
Sponsored by The Center for Women & Men and UCLA Police Department in collaboration with the L.A. District Attorney's Office and
the Los Angeles Commission on Assaults Against Women. LACAAW Stalking Hotline 1(877) 633-0044
www.lovemenot.org ■ www.thecenter.ucla.edu
ast. noi, FresVi
Double ^~~~~~
Cheeseburger,
fries & a large
Coke Qj
at the North Campus
Student Center.
VWW /ou kW»A «>i»\i« Art
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|
\
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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.
I
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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
Christoph von Dohnanyi, right, conducts the Clevdand Orchestra
as Maurizio Pollini plays Brahms's "Piano Concerto No. 2* during
the season-opening njin.wti ji New rorkt Carnegie Hall on Oct. 3.
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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-
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*>#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 »
'i ' '
Just the greatest career opportunity
of our lifetime.
SCI
®
The eiiisiness Systems Innovators
Scient builds breakthrough
eBusinesses for legendary clients.
www.scient.com
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
Summer Internship Opportunities, send your resume to
Summerlegends@scientcom
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
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i:)(Hi
IxdO
Campus S«(vloM
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Birthdays
It. (1(1
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1700
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UiOO
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I'.IOf)
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20(10
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2().'.0
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21110
Recreational Activities
2200
Research Subjects
Sperm / Egg Donors
TIcfceu Offered
2J00
2'tOO
2r)0()
Tidtets Wanted
2(.00
VWairted
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Sublels
1 Vacation Rentals
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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
□□QQS □SDO mmsEi
[icis somssD miiiQa
QlSaC] OSOQCIQ SOS
SQSDD QSD BSQSD
lAICIA C I Al
^^„ BBHIEIB
ISISmS @BSm SBQIQS
DaBn BKIBB DBDSIZ]
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
\,
I. .,1» .
Daily Bruin Cbssifictf-
Tuesday, October 10,2000 34
35 l»«djy,Octolierl6,20»
^^i
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
tiM ohKm MMsic dabat* ffrvM «
<Nff«nmt |Mifait-«f-«(awL
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*
e»H MAKt THI ticdtT DirriaiNCl
liiesday,
October 17
(. ;^f^^.r;v«;^«;;•r^;■.:■.;,^^'^.:^.x:;.iv•. ^r- '--
'**A'W'^*W>"
Nescafe
6:00pm 9 Freud Playhouse - Macgowan Hall
Free passes available at the
Campus Events Office, 319 Kervkhoff Hall.
PassM raqulrvd . SMting Is Hmited
and not guaranteed. Plaasa arriva early.
J
Otseount
Save up to
offMLGoM Rings
plus
Save up to
off In BcofWeaf
up to
September 25 - October 13
*UCU Store (Ad(«nai,B-leval)
•Conpus Photo/Grafciatlon Ek. (Adwmon, A-tevel)
October 3- 5 i 10- 12
•North Campus Student Center
•CertfcoH moy be radaamed b BtorWeor merchandise only.
^RTQIRVED
510.206.5858
www.ucia^^tore.com
<^-^tff yUj iimmi. c>i>^ m.
UCLfferr
r ' .
(•'
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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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.
•'""' ^''^' ^ ' '-' ^^'■'^' U-arhook >tatl aiui create the memories rliat would last a lifetime
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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,
(The rest didn't understand the question.)
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OMlyBniin Sports
■■«• 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/
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"""Pity
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1st time clients
15% off
; student rate
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DAILY BRUIN
Editor in ChW: Oinstine Byrd
Managing Etftor Michael Litsdii
Hem Editor Barbara Ortutay
AssbtantNewsEdfton: Dharshani
Ohartnawafdma, Mkhae) Falcone, Timothy Kuda
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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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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
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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
UCLA Credits
got sports?
:^:"
CAPPP Quarter in
Washington Program
Open to ALL majors
■ --■" ^■' ?:
Info Meetings:
EverylUes and Wed in October
5:00pm - 4355D Pub Pol Bldg
Applications due Nov 3rd
'■.. ■ .V 'rt •:
■* x-
III
II
Sports in the
Daily Bruin,
without a 25 (
cover chargel
III ■■■ III
Center for American Politics and Public Policy
www.cappp.ucla.edu
to advertise cnl
825-2161
.' '-•■' ■
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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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.
IM^f MM MTOS
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BriJyBnmNMi
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-
Re-Entr/ (§r Nonti^dition^l Students!
If youVe 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
Where: 2 Dodd Hall
"i When: October 11, 2000
Time^ ,J1:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
Take this opportunity to meet other students and learn about upcoming eventsi
For more information, please call The Center at 310-825-3945.
fofWOnienJIIien Sponsored by the UCLA center for women & Men
« www.thecenter.ucla.edu
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNSHIPS ^
Summer 2001 , Fall 2001 , Spring 2002
The Department of State offers internships in Washington D.C. and at the
United States Mission to the United Nations in New York City throughout
the year. Internships are also available in American Embassies and
Consulates overseas.
Eligibility requirements: ^ Vi k ^
Be a continuing coUege junior, senior, or graduate student; ^
Be a US. citizen. . ^ v
Be in good academic standing. . ; ''^ ^^
INFORMATION MEETINGS:
Wednesday, October 1 1 . 5:00pm-6:00pm
Thursday, October 1 2 , 1 0:OOam- 1 1 :00am
Meetings are held at EXPO, Room 200 Strattimore Building.
For more information contact Dario at 206-9880 or dbravo@saonet.ucIa.edu
Applications and information about Department of State internships will
be given out at the meetings.
http://career.ucla.edu/expo/
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
21
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Melnitz Movies/QSA
Present a Free Screening of
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ITie ^rat /n a series of films on
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Wednesday, October 11, 2000
James Bridges Theatre in
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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
-^^
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
//
'i am not worried oboMt ihe deficit. It is big enough to take care of itsdfr
- Ronald Reagan
UCLA Bookzone
'I dorl't necessarily consider McOonaldi junk food!"
- 8*7/ Clinton
310.206.4041
www.uclastore.com
X
UCtfter
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
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TODAY ar 5:^()pm in IIS KerckhoFF
~ — i
l^i'uinlile
■' f " K >: II r, (,
■■Mfifn
mmmmfOfifm
"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^
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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
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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
,'••-;
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
Personal Messages
Personals
Pregnancy
I Recreational Activities
Research Subjects
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Tickets Offered
I Tickets Wanted
Wanted
Appliances
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I Bicycles / Skates
Books
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Cameras / Camcorders
Collectibles
Computers / Software
Furniture
Garage / Ybrd Sales
I Heahn Products
Miscellaneous
Musical Instruments
Office Equipment
Pets
Rentals
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Stereos / TVs / Radios
"bble Sports
I Accessories
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irts / Hotels
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mmQ
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Housing Needed
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, Mou
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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-
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2000
Personals
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SMOKERS IN GOOD HEALTH. 18-45, want-
ad tor ntooina raaaarch study adminiBtarad
by UCLA. Bo«i heavy and occasional smolt-
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Bradley Center, Third Floor
Visit our booth at the
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Friday October 13. 2000
Investment Banking Night
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7:00 p.m.
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Casual attire. /
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MMncidi)iOctober11,2000 34
35 Wednwday. Octtber 1 1, 2000
DMiy Bruin OassifM
1300
Campus Recruitrnent
1300
Cninpiis Recriiitnient
Campus R
1300
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Campus RecruitiULMit
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or Join us
and find.
out tlOVIf
W0 will be off-i
int^rvlmyiOi^for
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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-
oping your cnjcW personal statements? Get
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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reserve the nglH to reviae or reiect any jdneitiKniHU not meeting the .standanfe of tiie Daily Bniin
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
their first NLCS in four
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.
The Daily Bruin
News Source
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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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1 8
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
PLEASE JOIN THE ASSAULT
AWARENESS COMMITTEE TO
INCREASE THE AWARENESS OF
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE THROUGH
OUR OCTOBER EVENT.
REMEMBER MY NAME!
EMAIL: CRONOEYmuCLA.EDU
UCLA Parking Sen^kes is tookkiglbrfnendfy, courteous peop^
to assist our custorrierswflhlheirparMrfg arid Irifdirnattoririee^
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Friday, October 13, 2000
Ackerman Union Grand Ballroom
10 am -3 pm
A Job Fair on aU UCLA Students - aU Majors
Representatives from a wide range of Blue Chip, High
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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
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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
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For advertising
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coN 825-2161
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
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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.
SMMUa^ftU
Al Gore
Democrat
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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
Mm vIciMttudo. from vIclMm. in turn prata^ity from vicM ol of
•vh, Chang*.)
'In Jiangs (PMCh. h« notad. "Paopla of my aga hava al aioariancad
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For additionai details, see page 51
PPLEMENT Sr
Coupon Pages (5lh & lOih Week),
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To place an AD, please call:
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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
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AUWriten: Megan OidtefMn.BfemHopkini,
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Sports Editor: Pauline^
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n wMed Display Accowt (mcMm: ¥kk
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ain«iiUne>ipr»Mnliilm. DwCuloni.
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Magalanes
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Classilied Supervisor Grace TomWoso
Ad Praduclion Staff: Adrian Baianon, 1^ de
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MIS Staff: Christopher Bates, Arthur Chang, Geoff
Allen, ManoCora«xi
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Sales Entry Staff: Rayo Antonia Olivia de la Rosa
Chris Kidder, Sam Lee, Sherry Ohara.Christkia
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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
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_. . 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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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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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
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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
MINDS. WIDE OPEN!
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Ti
■^ ■ ■•■"*.
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
don't ever take positions just to be iconoclastic.
It's simply what I believe."
BEST AND BRIGHTEST.
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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
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So you can still show off all ttiose great qualities of yours outside of wort. (do.
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
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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)
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OctIS MMLWigMr(R)
Oct 15 iaMsC«vMelMksatAimricMPolitia(ll)
Oct21 taEwMhfNiUitadraMcOoMMni)
Oct 21 NliMii|BinritiMS(0)
Oct 22 hrliaPhltannonicWiMlQiiiiitil
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Oct 28 R«Mit Harris PwMMNMKfO)
0ct29 The fiAnTkMtraaMRHMtlng for Godot' (f)
0ct29 SipoRtla(O)
Nov. 2 MWl (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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DaHy Brain News
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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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Are men as concerned
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as women?
Thursday, October 12, 2000
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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
DAILY BRUIN
118 Kerckhoff Hall
308 Westwood Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90024
(310) 82S-9898
http-y/www.dailybruin.ucla.edu
Editorial Board
fWBCJKf
imttiiii
kfbMOitaUiir
TiMMferiiitf*
MmOXm*
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majority opinion of the Daily
Bruin Editorial Board. All other
columns, letters and artwork
rtprescrtt the opirtions of their
authors.
All sutimltted^Tutedal must
bear the author's rwnt,
■laphfw nuinbaf,
registration rHimber or afTIUa-
tion with UCLA Names will not
be withheld except In extreme
cases.
The Bruin complies with
the Communication Board's
policy prohibiting the publi-
cation of articles that perpetu-
ata dtngataty <mHm»I m elh
nic stereotypes.
When multiple authors
submit material, some names
may be kept on file rather than
published with the material.
The Bruin reserves the right to .
edit submitted nrvaterial and to
determine its placement In the
yeper. All lubmiirtwn beteme
the property of The Bruin. The
Communications Board has a
media grievance procedure
for resolving complaints
against any of Its publications.
For a copy of the complete
procedure, contact the
Publications office at 118
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''f.'.'^-
.**■•
yii
^ U Ihwwfay, October 12, 2000
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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
Thursday, October U 2000 23
(!t^
S'VtV^'^
^K^^^^"
$2.ooofr
TUESDAYS
ExdudM SicWant
' r
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I"
I
I
■ " •- p*-^ CUP AND SAVE - - - -» -i-; i* • - - _ . .
Exp. 10/19/00
9.75
LARGE
PIZZA w/
Free Liter
TWO TOPPINGS
TAX INCLUDED
Exp. 10/19/00
^. LARGE
■ I 0 '^'^^^^^
Free Liter
TWO TOPPINGS
r- - -
TAX INCLUDED
- • pt^ CUP AND SAVE'
.^^^^P€^^:'^ \
•Not valid on Sicilians or with any other offer. Must mention ad.
SENIORS
Exp. 10/19/00
mj^ LARGE
Free Liter
TWO TOPPINGS
TAX INCLUDED
WMtwood 208-8671
Brentwood 820-6636
Offer good only with this
coupon, one coupon per pizza.
NO 1/2 & 1/2's
Limit 3 pizzas per address.
Open until 1 a.m.
Coupons must be given to driver.
Coupon voM at Wtstwod end
BrenhMod lonliom only.
" p^ CLIP AND SAVE - -
WMtwood 208-8671
Brantwood 820-6636
Offer good only with this
coupon, one coupon per pizza. '
NO 1/2 & 1/2's
Limit 3 pizzas per address.
Open until 1 a.ni.
Coupons must be given to driver.
Coupon vaU 01 Westwood snd
Brentwood locotiore only.
WMtwood 208-8671
Brwitwood 820-6636
Offer good only with this
coupon, one coupon per pizza. *
NO 1/2 & 1/2's
Limit 3 pizzas per address.
Open until 1 a.m.
Coupons must be given to driver.
Coupon valid ot Wesiwood ond
• M ^8'2|*Jod loMfiojH only.
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■ ■
CLASS OF 2001
SAVE on your copy of
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SHABBAT IN THE SUKKAH
To the Sahara & Back:
Travels Through Jewish Morocco
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
RSVP to Hillel: (310) 208-3081
ShanahTova! 1,7^/^ y)j^
"rii.
I ■' ■■ y-
U Thundjy, October 12. 2000
Daly Brum Viewpeint
Over 400 ftges a£^ UOEA Hilary
(ind it's ixjt far class.)
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.
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fresh new hot spots. Luckily, he's got the
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style. Visit URL at LAtribe.com and learn more
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URL, (PRONOUNCED EARL)
L.A.'S NEW MAN ABOUT TOWN
=^
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
Date
Place
Monday, Oct 23
Tuesday, Oct 24
Kerckhoff Grand Salon
Korckhoff 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 11:00 12:30 2:00 3:30
9:30 11:00 12:30 2:00 3:30
9:30 11:00 12:30 2:00 3:30
9:30 11:0012:30 2:00 3:30
9:30 11:0012:30
J
L
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*-
rt
■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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> ■»
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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
SeelMKNMSD,page34
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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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X
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
e
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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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Visit career.ucla.edu to see a
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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
,*'*f«.*x«*5S^f*^i,((j|Bi».|WiiW»pfi
■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:
recruiting@eckerd.org
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
• Paid training (all majors encouraged to apply)
EOE
GARY OLDMAN
JOAN ALL^N JEFF BRIDGES
CHRISTIAN SLATER
TENDER
r3 100! I >!<( \m\\«h<k-
fl« II HIS
C.()^lHn^ Soon lo .A I hcatrc Near Von
Daily Bruin
Thursday, October 12,2000
Campus Happenings
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zaszz?
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ivnn
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ThoAQiiriAr ■ ^ ' \ "«=*>'"PllO'lS
(^^^T^r>T^
1300
Cainpus Recruitment
1300
Campus Recruitment
2000
Personals
1100
Campus Happenings
Fraturnities • Sororities
Clubs • Student Groups
Earn $1,000-$2.000 this quarter with the easy
Campusfundraiser.coin three hour tundrasing event.
No Sales required Fundrasing dates are filling quicldy,
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SHOW YOUR STUFF ON TV!
We Need Original Homemade MPEGS, Quick-
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Send Us Ybur Most Embarraslng Moments,
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Miscellaneous
ON CAMPUS BANKING
Your on-campus & on-line financial services
source for students, faculty & staff Visit us at
Ackemian A-)evel. on-line at www.ucu org or
call 310-477-6628.
PSYCHICGIRL.com Specific answers to
your questions by Justine as featured in
Glanxiur and Entertainment Weekly Maga-
zine. $50 by e-mail.
2000
Porsofials
MAJOR ENTERTAINT-
MENT INDSUTRY EXEC
Seeks beautiful woman to date/attend major
industry events. Great adventure. Single,
wfiife. male. 40. tall, very attractive/success-
ful (resembles Mk^el Douglas). Safe. 310-
777-0204.
NATURAL HERBAL BREAST ENLARGE-
MENT Safe* affordable' effective* visit us at
wwwfigureplus.com 1-888-603-9800. Dis-
tributorships are available.
PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER 18-35
year old females with adventurous and open
minded spirits wt)o want to expand/exptore
their sexuality through nude modeling. Free
prints for modeling lime Call Robert at 310-
463-5996 robldOatt.net
Disneyland Resort's
Hospitality Job Fair
Featuring roles at The Disneyland Hotel. Disney's Paradise Pier Hotel
and our newest, Disney's Grand Califomian Hotel -
the first hotel within a Theme Parid
The Disneyland Hotel
Exhibit Hall
October 1 7 & 18, 2000
Bam - 6pni
Get ready to explore exciting full-time and part-time roles in:
• Bell Services -Convention -Housekeeping
• Bussing/Stewards *••"*'«*» . Laundry
• Cashiers ' C"""**-/ • Parkingn^alet
•Certified • Food & Beverage -Recreation
Lifeguards • Front Desk -Servers
That's not all!
Disney recruiters will be interviewing and hiring for hourly roles
throughout the entire Disneyland ResortThat means you're sure
to find plenty of magical 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.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.
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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: -■■ :.-
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Daily Bruin Classified
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Campus Recruitment
1300
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Campus Recruitment
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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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^
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Display
206-3060
■4'- ■•
^ 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-
ferred. Benelits/advancement. FaxRes2Mar-
ina: 310-475-1533.
OFFICE-EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY 2
P/T positions available. Flextole hours. Retail
store in Westwood Village. 310-208-8404
from 12-6. Mr. Rogers.
ON CAMPUS JOBS
ASUCLA Catering has great part-lime jobs
wort<ing at various on-campus events. We
offer flexible hours that vaty trom week to
week. Call:3l 0-206-0735.
7800
Help Wanted
PARK RANGER
$8.65-$11.90/hr. with partial benetits. En-
force part< rules and regulations; disseminate
inlonnatton and assist public in the part<;on-
site supervision of commercial film compa-
nies and wort( department special events;
assist with offue duties. Requires one year
of college majoring in Recreation, Outdoor
Education, Park Ranger or related field; or
one-year paid/volunteer experience in a cus-
toriier service onenled position. Must have a
vaW CalKomia C drivers license and must
be able to obtain CPR and First Aid certili-
cates. Apply Immediately-OPEN UNTIL
FILLED. City of Beverty Hills, 455 N Rexford
Dr #210. Beverty Hills. CA 90210 310-285-
1071 EOE.
PART-TIME CHILDCARE^-UTOR 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
CONSTRUCTION/TECHNICAL Bookstore in
WLA has one opening (or clerical positions.
$7/hr. Mornings or alternoons. Call
Michelle:310-474-7771
7800
Help Wanted
Responsible Skate & "*
Snov^/boarders Wanteds
Sales, technical and teaching
positions available at the
Westside's best boardshop.
Full & part time positions
available. Must be honest and
experienced. Great perl<s,
discounts, & bonuses. Salary
depends on experience.
Call for Jessica or Erica (310) 230-6085
Fax resume to (310) 230-4536
SITE ACQUISITIONS CONSULTANT.
Full/part time. Self-starter, creative, intelli.
gent. Acquire land sites (or cellular. Salary
commensurate w/experience. Fax resume
31 0-737 WJ228.
nicnlnv/
Ciassifinfls
825-2221
ON CAMPUS JOBS
ASUCLA Catering has great parttime jobs
woriting at various on-campus events. We
offer flexible hours that vary Irom week to
week. CaH 310-206-0735.
Pn 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 DATA ENTRY/
DISPATCH ASSISTANT
I0;30am-3:30pm, M-F some overtime
Computer, heavy phones, and knowledge ol
LA area a must. Messenger twckground pre-
lerred. Fax resume 310-275-4439
PERSONAL ASSISTANT tor family (o( inter-
est to young filmmakers), 15-20hrs/wk-
$10/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.
POSTAL JOBS
$9-14.27/HR
Plus Federal Benefits. No Experience, exam
info, Call 1-800-391-5856 Ext. 0614 Sam-
9pm. Local not guar
PROFESSIONAL COLLECTOR. Sabar Pla^
za near UCLA "Best servwe company".
$9/hr. Flexible scheduling. Weekends and
evenings available. Perfect lor students. NO
experience needed. Fax resume 310-477-
7694
TEACHER'S
ASSISTANT
IMMEDIATE POSITION. Santa Monica pre-
school. 20hrs/wk, MonThurs afternoon. Ear.
ly chiWhood units* some experiece wori<ing
w/young chiWren required. 310.394.0463.
TELEMARKETING, No cold calls $16-
20+/hr, bonuses. F/T-P/T Must have desire
to make big $$$. Flexible schedule. Great (or
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.
Wort< at home position immediately! P/T
$500.2000/mo. F/T $2000.6000/riio. Lan-
guages/computer skills a plus, www .rich-
fromhome.com/intemet
NEW FACES WANTED
ALL AGES /UX TYPES
FOR UPCOMING TV FILM. COMMERCIAL,
MUSIC. VIDEOS
AND PRINT, NO FEES. NO EXP REOD
PLEASE CALL FOR AUDfTION TIME
AUOmONirvlG NOW
(818) 379-7070
P/r DRIVER/UTILITY
TRAINEE
Flexible hours, $8/hour Includes gasoline
Own vehrcle, valM California driver's li-
cense and proof ol insurance. Non-snx)k-
ing environment. Clean-cut individual
Stephanie:310-395-3291 .
VALET PARKING
ATTENDANTS
Flexible hours, great tips, Santa Monica and
Manna Del Rey areas. 310-214-1888. Leave
message.
P/T LAW OFFICE ASST
Word Processor/Secretarial (or 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-^55.7754.
P/T OR CAREER
OPPORTUNITY!
Pnvate tutors/lnsthx;tors (or K-12 and Edu-
cational Consultants (or college admissions
services Seeking Undergraduates-PhD's
Experience prelerred. strong communica-
tions skills required. Future Youth Inc/Mind-
Li(e Consulting Group. 310-234.3330 or Fax
resumes to 3 10-234 3329.
P/T OR F/T SERVER
AND ANSWERING phones tor diner in Bev-
erty Hills Will train. Great tips! Call Roni:310-
772-0044 from 8am-5pm.
P/T RECEPTIONIST
WANTED
YeHow Balloon HairSaton Must be hon-
est/child-friendly Hours:3weekdays 1-
5:30pm, Saturdays 9-5pm. Days and times
negotiable. $8/hr Contact Natalle:310-475-
1241. Fax resume 323-939-4339.
P/T WRITER Pleasant Century City Engi-
neering Firm seeks perfectionist with stnjng
writing skills to produce miWIy technical re-
ports for Internal and extemal use. $13/hr to
start. Wage increases as appropriate. Mini-
mum 15hrs/wk. Fax resume 310-286-9126.
PROMOTIONAL PRINT AGENCY seeks
friendly, energetic receptionist (or a F/T en-
try-level position Good communication skills
and computer literacy required. Please email
resume to: mickyy©edwardslabelcom 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/week. 310-724-8360. Days only
RECEPTIONIST (or LA/West Hollywood
Design District showroom. Requires great
phone manner and ottice skills. Excellent en-
vironment and pay, flexible hours. Fax re-
SUriie 310-659-4584.
WANTED
75people will pay you to tose weight in the
next 30days. Doctor recommended 100%
natural/no dnjgs. Call now. 323-993-3391.
WANTED: PAID
COACHES
Girts frosh/soph JV basketball, giris JV soft-
ball. Palisades Charter High School Contact
T Tamura 310-454-0611 ext3290 or ext3450
WEB DESIGNER/PROGRAMMERS NEED-
ED! Ambitious company seeks self motivat-
ed people Knowledge o( FLASH HTML, and
Programming a plus. Call Ten ©562-622-
0729.
RECEPTIONIST
WANTED
BEVERLY HILLS SALON seeks energetk:
receptkjnist. F/T or P/T. To start ASAP 310-
278-1191.
WORK AT HOME
International business. P/T: $500-$2000/mo
F/T: $2000-$6000/mo. Will train. 310-558-
5888.
RECEPTIONIST P/T. New Westwood
Village dental oflice. No experience required
310-451-4401.
RECREATION ASSISTANT NEEDED. P/T
nlghtwort<. Approx $9 50/hr Stoner Recrea-
tton Center 310-479-7200 ask lor VSIerie or
Jason.
RESTAURANT in WLA now hiring sen/ers,
cashiers, prep personnel. F/T or P/f, apply in
person 9411 W. Pico Blvd. Sun-Thurs.
SALES Le Beach Club Tanning Resorts.
Happy, (riendty people. $12-20/hr Call bet-
ween 3.10pm. 310-820-2710 ask tor Yas-
mlne.
WORK IN WESTWOOD Receptionist need-
ed (or PT worit Thursday-Sunday Fun at-
mosphere. Call Louis: 310-279-3300.
YMCA NOW HIRING After School teachers
and drivers. Must have 3-6 units in educa-
tion/related field. Fax Resume to Laura 310-
575-0271.
8000
Internships
ACCLAIMED PRODUCER seeks motivated
interns tor fall 2000, Please (ax resumes to
Commotton Pctures attn:MJchelle 310-432-
2001.
SALES POSITION
F/T Growing Century City company seeks
sales person who are energetic seK-starters.
Our company Is the leader in the pnxure-
ment of Ik^uor Hcenses and use permits In
California. Must be computer.llterate. Urtjan
planning/legal background/bilingual applic-
ants that want lo parttolpate in our exciting
niche business call our offices today for de-
tail8:3 10.553-6363 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. 310-206-8404 phone (rom
12-6. Mr Rogers.
SECRETARY, halltime. mornings, lo RN al
VA medical center, WLA. Proficieni in word
and excel. $1l/hr. Sonw benefits Fax re-
sume to Susan Orrange 310-268-4404
SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST Small WLA
law offkie seeks p/t or (/t bilingual (Spanish)
indlvkJual. Must have experience with word
perfect and type min 40wpm Call Nell 310-
445-1100 Of send resume 310-445-7779.
INTERNS WANTED
FT/PT positions avail (or students at presti-
gious entertainment PR (irm Must be enthu-
siastk:, detail-oriented Offers college credit,
hands-on expenence and future dim and tel-
evision career contacts. Contact Rebecca
310-550-7776.
INTERNSHIP POSITION
POST-PRODUCTION INTERNSHIP and
student film projects Call Joel:3l0-828-
2292.
bve IWuSic^i?
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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
INTERNSHIP PUBLISHING HOUSE.
PR/Mktg./Ed. Relaxed, fun atmosphere.
Jr./Sr. class credit. Fax 323-939-1855, e-mail
pubbooksdaol.com.
MARKETING
SALES/TRAINING tor Mexico-USA Impor-
ting/consulting company. $7.5CVrir. Spanish
helpful. Business major prefened. Good ex-
perience. Fax resume 310-854-6287 or E-
mail: salesOthepainteddesert.com.
P/R INTERNSHIP
SEVERAL POSITIONS are now available
with a majof entertainment firm in put)lic re-
lations. Ho pay tKJt complete education in
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
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OlilyBniin Sports
Thunday, October 12,2000 43
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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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My Bruin Sforts
'.% >.
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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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.
m$.'0^§i
In
5th & lOth week.
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YEARBOOK
Sf»viNc UCLA SiNa 1919.
''"—^yyT-y^'^^"*.'' ■■•' '^^j^Mi^ti^ ^fc■»■^<«*^A^4-L*■«A.-:Ju^.^li-»J^»J*u.■WLS.JJ l' LlJUinii
: ♦»'
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M
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<• ■
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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
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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.
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'MmutesTor Just
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. .\
,'.■: ■:.■*>■ ■■■■■:
.■,■''.'■1 ■■'' ■ ^ r-V
WEATHER
.J"
Today Tomorrow
Sunny Partly Cloudy
High 68' V High 73'
Low58* \ low56'
Serving the UCLA community since 1919
Friday, October 13, 2000
www.ddilybruin.ucld.edu
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
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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
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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.
-i'tf:rj-
' » < v,>
t ■
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."
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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
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copy and peste ]wur tutuntssion into the body
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' AN ttAmlHiont muM indudc your name,
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..»— 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.
h:
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Dai^ Bruin inev^point
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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.
Oiiiy Brain Viewpoint
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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..:
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•.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
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■•:,• ;-'VK
20 Friday, October 13, 2000.
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
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1 inforrnation.
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I'llKI
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l(,l)|]
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17(11)
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1)1111)
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l!)i)l)
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2U1)0
Personals
^O^^iO
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^100
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2,?l)l)
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Sperm / ^q Donors
Tldiets Offered
2A()(1
2r)()()
Tlckeu Mfcmted
2(.()n
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travBl
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Apartments fbr Rent
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I Condo / Ttownhouse for Sale
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I Houeina NMded
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ftoomforRem
Roommates - f*rlwate Room
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{Sublets
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tndGx
1 1 8 Kerckhoff Hall ,
308 Westwood Ptaza
Los Angeles. CA 90024
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f'-r'T"T>T>Th'1
1800
Miscellaneous
announcements
1100-2600
1100
Campus Happeninrjs
BIG SWING DANCE
13th Annual New Student Welcome Party.
Monday October I6th, Spm-Swing Lessons
9pm. Amazing Social EventHMI'H FREEEve-
ryone Welcome Limited to 1st 1,000 partic-
ipants. UCLA Ackerman Grand Ballroom.
Ouestioru Contact ballroom 9 ucia edu 310-
284-3636. Or UCLA Transfer Student Asso-
ciation transferOuda.edu 310-206-7865.
LOANS, LOANS,
LOANS
FOR GOOD AND BAD CREDIT. We do all
types of loans with no appiicatton fees. High
approval rate. All applicants wekx)med. Call
toll tree 1-888-696-1301
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.
PSYCHICGIRL com Specifk: answers to
your questkins by Justine as featured in
Glamour and Entertainment Weekly Maga-
zine. $50 t>y e-mail.
2300
Sperni/Egg Donors
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 dorwr pro-
gram. Receive free comprehensive health
screening & help infertile couples. So if
you're kxjking for a great job and a little extra
cash, call us first. 310-824-9941.
Egg Donors Needed
Healthy females ages 1 9-31
wishing to help infertile couples.
$5,000
t Call MIRNA (818) 832-1494 m
Fratumities • Sororities
Clubs • Student Groups
Earn $1,000-$2,000 ttiis quarter with the easy
CampwhnlniMrcon) ttvee hour fundrasing event.
fto SalH iwiuind. RaMtming (Mm are fHng quicMy.
so at todqd Contact dmpwfcmlrMsr.cam at
9n-3ZN, or vWt
SHOW YOUR STUFF ON TV!
We Need OftglMl HonMimtfe MPEGS, Quick-
Tkm MoviM and JPEGS or Vktoos & Pliotos
stWMius nwi iHOH cmMrrasng MoinMns,
Spontaneous Goals nd Fimy Plwlos
MatarlaimiBtbearii^andNai SLfifitD.
No seconHund stuff -K MUST BE YOtJRS.*
E-IM Ik fcawiOiiMmdywortdJWltXBBi
Mm Ioc CoMMy wOlid - 143B Nonh Gowmt Sl -
Ban 30 - Hglirwood, CA. aooa
MXUOE YOUR tMCADORESS NO PWM NUMBl
2000
Personals
MAJOR ENTERTAINT-
MENT INDSUTRY EXEC
Seeks beautiful woman to data/attend major
Industry events Great adventure. Single,
while, male, 40, tall, very attcactrve/success-
ful (resembles Micfiael Douglas). Safe 310-
777-0204.
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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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
I.. .-♦.
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.
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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
Phone (310)794-8797 • Fax (310)794-8796
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
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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
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* "■■ ■ P ■ M I mil m uapi |i 111 .p ■■ » ,p,
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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"*i .:
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
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MEDU DIRECTOR
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EDfTORIAL
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AO PRODUCTION MANAQER
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AO PRODUCTION STAFF
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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
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27
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86
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85
92
83
81
82
15
3
4
80
84
78
96
32
6
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
71
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
108
118
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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:
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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
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• •*•* • 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
Delta Sigma Pi
for your help
with today's event
stage
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Bringing technology to the edge
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.■"■'..i^
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
1999 inc. Itegaadne
•43 FastMt Qrowing Compani«a
Need people for the future.
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(310)393-3331 • 8antamonica@8urefoot.com
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:
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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-
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 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
portfolios. ■■■,:. , ,
Tlie 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 officeSr
Visit our website at '
www.prudmntiaUom
Prudential
W^««EHOppof^
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.
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To achieve our vision we need the besf people.
Many opportunities are available to upcoming December, May.
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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^
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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
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We believe in a group environment with each individual being essential to the
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We currently have openings in the following area.s:
• Administrative Support & Data Entry - Generation of client reports and
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• Laboratory Technicians - Preparation of samples for fungal and bacterial
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All positions require work experience, education, or equivalent, in their
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Benefits; -^ '
- Accrued paid time off
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Please send resume & references to: Daniel B. Kocher
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(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
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Resume drop date: Friday October 13, 2000
On-Campus interviews: Monday, October 30, 2000
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CAREER GUIDE
'"rigyti '":
I^HMAN Brothers
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cordially invites undergraduates
to attend a presentation on-
career opportunities in ^^^ # il
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;•■',;• ..■ -k.
y^f
Wednesday, October 18, 2000
6:00 p.m. *^
W Hotel - Studio 3 Room
. " ■}
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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 \ \ \' \
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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.
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41^
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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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MMHiay,bdob«n6,2000 S
WORLD & NATION
Dow Jones Industrials
up: 157.60
close: 10,192.18
Nasdaq Indci
up: 242.09
dose: 3,316.77
Dollar
Yen: 107.86
Euro: 1,1695
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.
Compiled from Dally Bruin wire reports.
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Daily Brum Newi
'*■'■'*>. ' >' '." <*■'■'''■
<& 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
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media at
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announce their
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Monday, Oct 3
6 p.m. in
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can 825-2787 for
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u"|-|; '!t\r
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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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10 Monday, October 16,2000
Daily Bruin News
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Daily Bruin News
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
■;■ -f
' »■ IB )^>> i< Mim »
12 Monday, 0«*)b« 16, 2000
Daily Bruin Nmvs
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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
IMondaji October 16^ 2000 13
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Daily Bruin News
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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-
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One emphasizes knowledge as a thing to be
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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
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and make a little less money than doing
something I tolerate at best and make
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but is it important enough to dictate your life
choices?
Fourth, respect your professors, hut
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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
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On November 18, 2000- i 1^^^^^
■ * '.* ,'-'. ""f* '' - ;'■
The Bruifis and TrojiHis Will give their sweat and teare to determine ::ilO:2 ::
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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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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
E-mail your
questions to
S««MtMUVapa9«22
SOMlMIII
Of In tfM world «t torgc or write a rMpons* to
TP VIEWPOINT
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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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20. Monday, October 16, 2000
Daily Bruin Viewpoint
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presents the Twentieth Annual
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100 Normal and Ridiculous
Costume ideas for Halloween
for $1.00
Are you one of those losers who goes to a Halloween Party with a hat on
and says "I'm Hat Man!" because you were too lazy to come up with a
good costume? Or maybe you just need a little help finding something fun
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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!
■•«,.♦■;
[My Bruin VicwpoiM
Monday, October 16, 2(X» 21
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22 Monday, October 16, 2000 *
Daily Bruin Viewpoint
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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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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
! i
•- 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
20
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our various exciting career opportunities.
'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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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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Daily Bruin
Monday, Octobw 16, 2000
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ewnl No sila requiraL Pui
ye filUm quiddy, so cdl lodav! «„Bit.
Ciinpustiiiidnisetcooi at (888) 9233238, or
vMt www.campuaundniieraiQi
1800
Miscellaneous
LOANS, LOANS,
LOANS
FOR GOOD AND BAD CREDIT We do all
types of toans with no application fees. High
approval rale. All applicants welcomed. Call
toll free 1-888-696-1301.
Campus R
1300
ON CAMPUS BANKING
Your on-campus A on-line financial services
source for students, faculty & staff. Visit us at
Ackerman A-(evel, on-line at www.ucu.org or
caM 310-477-6628.
1300
Campus Recruitment
On Wednesday, October 18 at
1 2 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
U.S. Green Card
Lottery
Kt\!4isiicilion IVriod
October 2ful lo
November 1, 2(100
^0,000 U.S. Immignint Visas
to be Issued
Aviiilahle lo foreign ^Indctits and fhcii l.iniilics
FV)ra tree inforiiKdion packiige, ciill om
Lottery Department at l-8{)()-\'ISA-L.\\\
^ Bernard P. Wolfsdorf
1800
PSYCHICGIRL.com Specific answers to
your questions by Justine as featured In
Glamour and Entertainment Weekly Maga-
zine. $50 by e-mail.
2200
Research Suf)jects
ARE YOU UNHAPPY In your relatkxtthip?
Heterosexual women partldpents needed for
study on rslationsNp sattsfacOon. CaN 301-
994^990 or email JanaNtkOaolcom
2000
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.,
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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
V 1^*^ .. '
A
^
1
''ts ^
q.
■^K— ..
Starting at
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For Information about
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R»«riclioni ami PtyiMnt Policiei: Apple Hardware is available only
to UCLA HiitaM. Mitclad UCLA Extension siudenij. UCLA laculfy,
UCLA staff and UCLA departmenis Extension students should inquire
« the Computer Store regarding eligibility UCLA Computer Store
poci requires payment by currency, cashiers check, or Unnreriity
Credit Union Withdrawal Check made payable to The UCLA Store
VISA. MaaterCard. Anrencan Express and Discover are also
accepted. Personal checks are accepted up to SI.000 Money orders
are n« accepted Seles tax wiH be added to listed pnctt
Computer store
510.825.6952
www.uclastore.com
Siuff yoo KWe<i. Sine* Hit
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' ' ;,>M :-
• I ...
42 Monday, October 16,2000
■&
to.n SAA and MBNA on Monday. Oct 23, at 6 p.m. at tf» James West
Ti ^l ^ "*" Infonnative m>r1ishop on ciedH management
and what It means to your future. Remember Good Credrt = Great
Future. For infonnation, call (310) 794-5201.
Senior Day
The first Senior Day of the year is scheduled for Wednesday, Oct 25
seniors to find out about all the benefits ami services available to
ttem as Alumni Association members «irhile mrtworWng with other
I!^«« ""^^^y^" ** opportunity to purchase your Alumni
Association membership at this event The first 1000 seniore «»HI
receive lunch on us. But remember, this event is for Seniore Only! Be
sure to bring your BruinCard. For infonnation, call (310) UCUUSAA.
Scholarship Money
is Available J'
Wstii^uished Bruin A«rards offer an opportunity for continuing OCU
shidents to join the family of Alumni Scholars. These awards Nace a
$50^ to stodents who have completed at least one acad«„ic year
atUCIA Applications are now available and must be completed ami
returned to the Alumni Association by noon on Oct 27, 2000. For
Informabon or an application, visit us at •wm.UCLAIumni.net
%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 ■■ ' :^:-':-' ■ .":,!^'
John Browning and Dan Williams combined to sack
Gannon a few minutes later, and the Chiefs took over at
midfield. In the ensuing five-play, 50-yard drive,
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-
secutive plays for 17- and 16-yard gains. On third-and-IO
from the 15, Gonzalez suckered the defense to follow
him over the middle, leaving Tony Richardson all alone
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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,t.._.i.
■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
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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
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lecture fascinating. It is titled:
"The Magical Age of 10 and the Development
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work of Robert J. Stoller"
IN campus!
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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
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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
UCLA's Softball team vidli
( open tryouts today at I
at Easton Softball
Hum. Anyone interested
_ Ing out must bring a
glove, spikes, Bruin Card and
J note from a medical doctor
Sng that you are cleared
ytryout.
^you have any question:^
I can contact UCLA a$us-
ifioach Kelly Inouye-Perez
ho) 206-7349.
innistiyouts
>r those interested in
jrlng in the Walk-On .
rnament for the UCLA
1 tennis team, there will
fwn information meeting
I $lgn-ups on Tuesday, Oct.
: 4 p.m. The meeting will
take place at the LATC in the
;^ blue seats by Court 1 on the
west side of the stadium.
For more information
please call Coach Billy Martin
.at (310) 206-6375.
Of the Art
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free consultation.
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46 Monday, October 16,2000
DiifinMiiiforti
. ■ -. ■■ •■
*rt
IftQuarter The two teams trade toudv-
downs. and UCLA seems to control the
Iffiipo Of the game. Penalties and dropped
pa»es hound the Bruins, but the quarter
ends with UCLA in control of the ball at the
and QMrter Great punting by Nick Harris
and an Interception by Nnamdi Asamugha
help Califomia jump out to a 21-7 lead.
Fortunately for the Bruins, Cal quarterljack
Kyle Boiler fumbles on his own five, leatfing
to a Bruin score right before half.
3rd Quarter Cal controls the dock and the
ball and holds the Bruins scoreless.
■ Mh Quarter The Bruins use an iotercep-
tjon and a fumble recovery to set up a pair
of KOfes.Cory Paus throws two touchdown
passes as the Bruins tie up the game and
send it into overtime.
1$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
«M a Ami tMKMtmi to tht tiM
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.
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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 ♦
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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
\ K
. . . . 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.
Eflitor in Oiief : Christine Byrd
Managing Editor: Michdel Utschi . .
News Editor; Barbara Ortutay
Assistant News Editors: Dharshani
Oharmawardena, Michael Falcone, Timothy Kuda
Unhlat -, ;, ^, . .: « :
Viewpoint Editor: Jonah Lalas
Assistant Viewpoint Editon: AmyGdod,
Cuauhtemoc Ortega
A&E Editor Angela Salazar
Assistant A&E Edftors: Emilia Hwang, Barbara
McGuire, Michael Rosen-Molina ''i , ..■:
A&£ WHtws: Megan Oidtefson, Brent Hopltins,
Sharon Hon.Terrylang
Sports Editor Pauline Vu
Assistant Sports Editois: Anunda Retdie^
Dylan Hernandez, Chnstina Teller
Sports WHten: AJCadman, Greg Lewis, Chris
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Assistant Art Director: Jason Chen
Ulustraton: Adam Brown, Casey Crowe, Amy
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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 ^^
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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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Daily Bruin News
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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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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Attention!
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
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12 Tuesday, October 17, 2000
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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
lood re.
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(.lurmi; the next President s icrni.
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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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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
DAILY BRUIN """'"■«-
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308 Westwood Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90024
(310)825-9898
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Unslgncd editorials repf««nt a
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columrtt, l«ttars and artwork
reprMcnt the opinions of their
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for resolving complaints
against any of its publications.
For a copy of the complete
procedure, contact the
putiiieitioni arrnt a\ ng '
1- - ^-e»»>.n.^.^»..^v-.^
■ Wirt im» * !»■■.*" JTV^m
16 Tuesday, October 17, 2000
0»if Bniin Viewpoint
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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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Find out about "Requiem For A Dream '
which has not only become one of the most
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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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Center for African American Studies
The Julian "" Cannonbair Adderley
Memorial Scholarship
2000-2001
The Julian "Cannonball" Adderley Memorial Scholarship Fund honors the
memory of a talented and innovative African American musician and composer.
The purpose of the fiind is to foster a greater appreciation of music as a core
component of African American culture.
Applications are invited from undergraduate students in African American Studies,
the arts, and other disciplines. Awards will be made on a competitive basis with
consideration given to achievement, scholastic promise, financial need, and how
closely student goals relate to those of the Adderley Scholarship Fund, described
above. Applicants may be entering or continuing students, and may be awarded
the Adderley Scholarship a maximum of two times. Award is $500.
The deadline for submitting completed applications is November 28^ 2000.
Applicatioas are avalljible from the
1-877-722-7587
UCLA Ceater for Africaa
America a Studies
2308 Murphy Hall
Box 951545 *•
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1545
310-825-3776
or
CAAS Library
2330 Murphy Hall, B324
Box 951545
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1545
310-825-6060
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Earth One Netrwork, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
hiihf^^.irjm^
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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
((onward bending of spine) needed (or re-
search program investigating whether Yoga
can improve kyphosis Study being conduct-
ed by Gail Greendale. MD in the UCLA Dept
o( Medicine Please call 310-794-9055
SUBJECTS NEEDED (or blood samples
$20 per visit Culver City, lOmtn to UCLA
Rufity paulpOcaretMeieww
WHOLESALE .
FURNITURE
Sleigh beds. Rustic pine (urniiure, armoires,
mattress sets, slip covered & upholstered so-
las/chairs. Leather solas & chairs. 310-745-
2253
3800
Miscellaneous
GREEN CARD
LOTTERY
55,000 Visas awarded. $40 (or attomey pre-
pared application. John Manley, Esq 12304
Sania Monica Blvd. K3QQ LA r.A onn?^
310-820-7553. Deadline: 10/30/00
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Pets
2 CATS FREE to good home. Beautiful, (un,
playful. Moving, must 90 together. 310-209-
3377.
Stereos/TVs/Radios
JVC STEREO SYSTEM w/cabinet and 2
speakers. 36in tall. AM/'FM. CD, dual cas-
sette, turn table. Great condition. $450 310-
477-0809.
'AA4«>AAA^
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
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826 - 7494
IIMSWilthirtBM Mm
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
/ ■'■
i.'t."
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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your system fast or double your $$ backlll
Call toll free 877-696-4541 extUClOO
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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.
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ity to host wet) sites arnl search engine
placement sidHs. 818-673-4767 pagac
SAFETY INSPECTOR
r a ckaawT Nssdid tor w InMnMianil
Hbw comiMng ftm. CoasM digrai, MbigMl
(Matinna«unai^f<altt^i must SlwnD PC/
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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
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Daily Bruin Sports
4:
.1
! -
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.
SENIORS.
ClASS Of 2001 *
SAVE on your copy of the
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bminlife
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
cffuiiiiiiegtonuli
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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
people by
advertising in the
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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
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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
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TheRobertJ.
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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
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informed research in the social sciences, btot)ehavioral
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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.
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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^
government
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Rooocfy
Aggravated assMrft
10
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32
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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
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For additional dotaHs, too page 20.
^.
SUPPLEMENT s/
Coupon Pages (5di & lOdi Week),
and Dining Guide issues are
coming to yournewsstands soon!
To place an AO, please call:
nuiuiti
mJ2U22l
tmnum§
Visit us online at www.dailybmin.ucla.edu
DAILY BRUIN
Mhof in Chief: ChnsJinf Bytd
Managm) Editor: MkhaH Litscht
M«wj Editor Bartwra Ortutay
Assistant News Editors: Dharshani
Oharmawafdfna.MJchart Fakone, Timothy Kuda
Ut*I«
Viewpoint Editor: lonah lalas
Assistant Viewpoint Editors: Amy Golod,
Cuauhlf mo( Ortfqa
AtfUitor Angela Salazar
Assistant A&E Editors: Emiba Hwang, Barbara
McGuittMichaH Rosm-MoHna
Hi. MMtcrs: Megan Dtdw rson. Brent Hopkins,
Sharon Hon, lerrylang
Sports Editor: PaulmeVij
Assistant Sports EdMors: Amanda Retchet
Dylan Hernandei, Chrislina TeHer ^^T"
Sports Wiilirs: AJ Cadman, Greg Lewis, Owis
Umpietre
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Assistant Design Nrectar Jennierlfben
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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.
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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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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
Get the information you need to be effective!
20QO-2001 Guide to Student Government Accounting
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, ^Tf«>'-^ — ^^v-
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
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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.
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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.
ScclfV|,|M9e15
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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
Sf^^Rl, }^»? WE So^TM
CAMr^5E<CJ CfiiN \JSE 0</(^
We c/\NTeu you
WW/IT To DO Wf7H
TffEM.
7^
DAILY BRUIN "'^"^
IISKerckhoffHall
308 Wcstwood Plaza
Los Angeles. CA 90024
(310)825-9898
http;//¥ift»nM.d»llybryln.wcU.eHu
MMtMlUlMM
IwHiltlii
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14 Wfdnwday, October 18, 2000
OM^rBnun Vwwpoint
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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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torwomenj^en
Sponsored by The Center for Women & Men and UCLA Police Department in collaboration with the L. A. District Attorney's Office and
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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vuww requiFmfo(ddre«n.com
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^
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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.
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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
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COMPLETE COMPUTER SYSTEM-
433MHz,lnlel Celron,64MB,6.4GB.CD-
ROM,56k bps,2USB ports.Wln98,Wf>Sul-
teS 0.PS/2keyt>oardamouse, speakers
BJC1000 cotor printer. Hitachi SuperScari
Monitor ir+Xtras. OBO $799.00. 323-294.
1864.
-: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
Ch^l!0-^'etc'yori.Saf,Fni,uisco-PbikMpbia.Frmift,rt»Lofui^ . Amsterdam
3500
Ftirnifurf;
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
•peakooj 36in tall. AM/FM. CO, dual cas-
sette, turn table. Great condition. $4S0 310-
477-0809.
WHOLESALE
FURNITURE
SWgh beds. Rustic pine fumMure. armoiree,
mattress sals, SHIP oovered ft uphoislersd so-
las/ctwlfs. Leather sofas ft chairs. 310-74S-
2253.
3800
Miscnlhiiujons
GREEN CARD
LOTTERY
55,000 Visas awarded $40 (or attorney pre-
pared application. John K4anley, Esq. 12304
Santa Monica Blvd. #300 l>. CA 90025
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-
www.ucu.oig
6000
Insuriiiico
(.yclerunp Insutmcc Srrvicpc;
■ Motorcycle -Motor Scooter •Moped
^ irS L£n TM»H VOO THMd
Can lor a fTM quoM
J (310)275-6734
61 OO
Compiittjr/liitnriiet
FREE WEBSITE!!!
YOUR OWN 5-page website ABSOLUTELY
FREE, Easy, fast. quaMy. HO banner ads to
watch! http://eengen.go.coolebiz.net
WANTEDI Internet savvy programmer. Abili-
ty to twst web aHae and search engine ptace-
ment sitiHs. 818-873-4767 pager
CORXUS
NEW YORK
^59ii/r
Ilt«/T
j Mexico EscapM^
l$369 Cobo San Lucas ^^
|$479 Concun ^,<i^»fi^
|$352 Pu«1oVdkirta ^^^
'/f tmoa (3 niahH - Mr- Tmnt/m^l
www. vittorytravoLeom
(323) 277-4595
5680
TkivoI Dt.'stiii.jtioiis
UlNING
GuroE
FOR Pe3Pl£ WHO LOVE RXX)
Eat, - ^ I
Drink, //
& Advertise
To advertise call:
310.825.2161
56 80
Trnvtil Destiiiitlions
5200
P;trkmcj
GREAT LOCATION. Comer Midvaie and
Optur. Lrg parWng spot in subterreanlan
garage. Offers better safety and protects
from Itie elements. $150/mQ(«bbo. 310-857-
7270
Council
Travel
ADVERTISE IN
OUR NEXT
BIG ISSUE
DAILY BRUIN
Cl.mided 825-2221 • Display 206-3060
1988 MARK VII Designer adWon. brown
nj^mg condition Asking $1800. 310-20»^
0267.
1 988 TOYOTA CELICA GTS. Power sunroof
AC, cnjise, autolock alarm, Sspeed Mck
•oond^em new battery Exceflent engine.
$2400obO. Call Jay:310-839-7654.
1991 NISSAN SENTRA XE. 4 doWB 5-
«peed 16 valves, AJC. stereo, cruise control
$3300. 310w»73-1214. ^»'<Ji.
2 CATS FREE to good home. Beautlftil. fun. •Ubi^^W.S"aSl?r;2l'1n';:n^'°' *"'■
^m Moving, most go togetber. 310-209- ^^S ^sS^'TsoS'^'^'o,^-
8400. Lcuiereyaboo.oom
Classifieds
825-2221
Then study this...
Miami 229.00
New York 263.00
iVIexico City.... 288. OO
i-ionoluiu 315.00
London 463.0Q
travel
5600-5720
WHAT WE DO BEST
li«RIUTIOIUU«TU0«rr^f!y4S£?^ CARD.
HOSTIL CARDS
BUOOrrNOTILS
WORLOWIOI AOVEMTURK TOUR*
WORK ABROAD PBRlim
•TUDY ABROAD PROORAMB
)Si!J27Sir*o«*^^«^^^AD
TRAVIL MAR AND OINDBBOOKS
TRAVn. INBURANCC
_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 $102. Two
24-foot trucks fully equipped for large moves.
Call 24/7. Available on short notice Ucense
T163844. 800-2GO-BEST (800-246-2378.)
HONEST MAN w/i4fi tmck and dollies,
small jobs, short notice ok SF, LV, SD.
Student discount. Go Bruins! 10th vr 310-
285-8688.
The UCU
Dining
Guide
www.statravel.com
JERRYS MOVING&DEUVERY The careful
movers. Experienced, reHable. same-day de-
livery. Packing, boxes available Also, ptek-
up donatwns for American Cancer Society
JerrYa310-391-5657.
harsmins
- Marketplace ofstudent-tD-stucient deaJs C3 -
a^tely FREE* some of the best deals in Westwood. Check weekly for updates so you don't miss out on great savings!
19-rV AMPR.<tnM
4_SLIITCASF.'; A.S.ST .
ACX-.tr, .■^nPTuyftfiF
Ai ARM n orit
BED TWIN IKF<
RFnRPRFjfHTiiFp^
Description
tmrtirwu,
Phone
«<««AJv..lH^t^^.^
-$U_
QUCt:iPtlRtar
mfnrtn
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HAinrtPN I Aup
HAi nnPM I *uo
Description
avL.
-sm.
BIKF RATK
Blf^KF^^.«^Tr>r^K r^i nfj.S
BLANK MINI Dl.Sf:.';
»»r-ollarn mnrtlmn
-S5-
nwr mnm, «.t^) (
31(We>AJCT>1
aiO-Ta^.'WW
HQQVFR tfAntlllli
HOUSFHtTl n ITCtls
KAPPA CHARM
vtvi rrni" "'■"yrtnrt
31(V?1ftAt71
aiMgjU.ViB
'■*»«««>«^3*'
BU14Kfi£DJlCrQ(i.
cafhafHaafhy
rHFMKSTRV
g A.<iir-«; an
ni iMHiNT. CHOFIS
CRlJTr.HF«tAii|y|
3ia2QftaZB3
310.3B7-0117
"FSKRITT
DF.Stf QTIir^NT
DtNINft TABI C
IrtiilnB^il
■dorHv?,
3HV7Q«..T»U
:uf>£aft4iae
■3io.3n^BinR
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3ia3nit.a^t>
nflFAIiTft'" »*4F
DBESSEB
ETHFRNFTnAPr>
.JbOHiklMUiMiXLOtlC-
.ikktMomn vtascaL.
_3ia2a^2£B.
3i(Maft.i77i
FTHFRMFT r*nn
EIUEBI£I£aCABD_
mac pR-nrmcia,
EQAU-EAOSLCAyeiML.
FQQTBAU. TlTKFT
-MidfliiL.
Mn.:>nt^tt!o
FRFNTH VITIf n
m A.«« Tnp TAP! F
L:BateJNaaoC_
aitt»a.iii-
— 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
I
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•
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•Item:
(15 characters maximum, including qMca)
•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
MV Shared 2+1 garden apartment Mate pre-
ferred. Qutet, sate 4-ptex, off Main St. DSL
access. $500/nx>nth, utHlttes incUjded. Pa-
mela 310-915-5052.
WEST LA. Private bdmrVshared Wh In 3t)drm
apt. $475/mo+securtty deposit. Near cam-
pus. FuHy furnished. 310-444-0105, teave
message for Buzz
WESTWOOD, private bdrm/bth/closet.
Share dean house in nice neighbortwod.
$1000/mo, www.lasolution8.com/rent.htm,
tHlany.kangOexctte.com
WESTWOOD. Walk to UCLA. Male-Only.
Large, private furnished bdnn. Kitchen privi-
leges, laundry, paricing. $600/month. 310-
473-5769.
WLA. Unfurnished room w/t)rivate bath. Se-
cured buiWing. All utilities included (exclud-
ing telephone). Female, non-snx>ker AvaM-
abte 11/1. $625/mo. 310-446-1545.
9500
Roommates-Private Room
ONE BLOCK TO CAMPUS
2bdrm suite. Hardwood, private patto. or>e
parking, walk to UCLA. $1350. 10966
RoeWIng Ave. 310-208-4253 or 310-824-
2595.
PALMS. Singte apt from $575, $600deposit
1-year lease only. Stove, relrig .carpets vert
Winds 310-837-1502 leave message. 8am-
5pm only.
SANTA MONKJA BUNGALOW, r&s, hard-
wood ftoors, yard. $900 310-395-RENT
www.westsiderentals.com
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 kHchen and bathroom tite,
New Microwave HOA includes Utilittes
and many ammenlttes. $179,500 310-
575-1963.
ASIAN/QUIET/CLEAN/MAt€. Near bus
stop. Westwood/Pkx>. 3-mo. min stay Re-
quired 2 references Private bedroom share-
bath. $650/month, w/utllites, kitchen priv
$40/day 310-475-8787.
FREE RENT FOR PSYCH/MED/SPECIAL
ED graduate student to share 2bdnTV2Wh
apartment with teaming disabled adult In
WestLA Call Stan 1-800-843-3658
ENTERTAINMENT WEBSITE
INTERNSHIPS
Looking for motivated indMduals with an in-
terest in the entertainment industry, to join
one of Hollywood's leading websites. Call
310-305-2688. or e-mail resume
henlyafountainheadmedia.com
INTERN WANTED. Do research for Reason,
a national magazine of polittes and culture
$7.50/hr; lOhrs/wk. Flexible schedute, will
help arrange credit. Fax resume to 310-390-
8986. E-mail sararO reason com
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; transcribe interviews
and input Ian dub member data This posi-
tion requires thorough sports knowledge.
HTML skills are helpful. The Ideal candklate
will thrive in a fast-paced and challenging en-
vironment. 310-315-8517.
SANTA MONICA CONCK). r&s. batoony w/d
fireplace $625. 310-395-RENT. www.west-
siderentals.com
SANTA MONICA HOUSE. Private room, fire-
place, yard $654. 310-395-RENT
www.westsklerentals.com
SANTA M0NK;A STUDK). Batoony, teundry
large ctosets, tocafton. $750. 310-395-RENT
www.westsklerentals.com
8800
Gtieslhotise for Rent
BEVERLY HILLS
GUESTHOUSE
Singte, furnished, utilittes included. One car
garage. Washer/dryer. Total privacy
$950/month. 310-277-5554.
MELROSE AREA. Large unfurnished bdrm,
private bthrm.privato entrance in fuHy fur-
nished house. Laundry. Male/female okay.
$700/rTX) utilities&maW induded. Availabte-
Dec1. 310-289-2129
SANTA MONICA TOWNHOUSE TO
SHARE, prtvate bed and bath, hardwood
''oo™._f*». teundry. $650. 310-395-RENT
" " 's.com
9200
Hotjsiiu) Needed
GRADUATE VISITING STUDENT/WRITER
needs housing 1/01-6/01. Female, Former
teacher Contact mtcfiarOk^uest.net or 312-
666-7949
ROOMMATE NEEDED. 3BD/2Ba Santa Mo-
ntoa apartment. Near beach. Promenade,
Montana Batoony, laundry, fireptece Profes-
sional/grad student. $860/month. Contad
NowtokieOhotrrwil com or 917-327-7622.
SANTA MONICA CITY
Big bedroom w/private bath in 2bdrm condo.
Gatedpraking, laundry, kitchen, utilities in-
cluded. Avaiteble Itovember. $700/month
Great kxatton. 310-453-9474.
SANTA MONICA. 1+1, catok, laundry pari<-
ing induded, $975. 310-395-7368.
www.westsidsrentals.com.
INTERNS WANTED
FT/PT posittons avaH fcr students at presti-
gtous entertainment PR firm Must be enthu-
•iMiic, detail-oriented Offers college credit,
hiiKJs-on experience and future film and fel-
•vlaion career conlads. Contad Rebecca
310-5S0-7776.
INTERNSHIP POSITION
POST-PRODUCTION INTERNSHIP and
student fHm projects. Call Joel:310-e28-
2292.
Classifieds
825-2221
8^00
Apartments for Rent
\Vest\> ooj Plaza
Single w/ Shared Bathroom
$850-$875
Single w/ Private Bathroom
$900
1 Bedroom
$1295-$ 1350
ihflct temi available / 5 min waili lo UCLA
Parking available for
1 Bedrooms only
310-208-8505
SANTA MONICA. 2+1, catok. rfts. hardwood
ftoors. great locattoni PaiWng Inciudad. 310-
395-7368 wwwwestsideranmte.com.
SHERMAN OAKS. AdoraMe studto guest
house. Pet okayl Full bath $645. 818-623-
4444 www.aMofLA com
SOUTH RB APARTMENT 2+1. panoramto
ocean view. $1300, fee. 310-372RENT.
STUDIO CITY HUGE APARTMENT!
Sundeck, high cMlngs. $700. 818-623-4444
www.aNofLA.com
STUDIO Crrv unique apartment Best
location, a/c. pool. $800. 818-623-4444
www.aHoftA.com
\m
ACC
m
SEEKING ROOMMATE Situation near
UCLA or bus route. Male staff member, 50,
easy going, seeks own room and bath.
Needed 11/01. Call Cllve at Murphy HaR
310-794-9236 or page 310-636-5417.
9300
Mf)()m for Help
FREE OCEAN-FRONT ROOM for Japanese
Femate (30s+/-). Near Santa Montea beach.
Exchange for baby-slttlng/etc. 15 hrsAivk, Ms
Yamada 310-454-1050, 310-913-1220.
FREE ROOM
AND BOARD
In exchange lor babysitting il-year-oW girt
•PProxImtWy 10 hours/week Century City
area. Fsmatee only. 310-277-8480 (even-
loga).
FURNISHED ROOM AND BATH In ex-
change lor driving approximately 20hfs/wk,
afternoons. Must own car. 8 minutes to cam-
pua. Retorancea necessary. 310-477-6877
WEST LA. Roommate needed in
2bdrm/2.5bth condo. Gated buiWing, under-
ground partdng. washer/dryer in unit, partial-
ly furnished. Jewish female preferred.
$800/rTK)nth including utilities. 310-478-
5677.
WESTWOOD VILLAGE apt. Fun, outgoing
female looking for femate roommate! Own
bed/t>alh in 2t)drm/2bth apartment, gated
partting, jacuzzi on roof, security buiWing
AvaMabte 1/01. $«XVnx). 310-209-2665.
9600
R()(imm.ites-Sh.ir(!d Koom
FEMALE RCiOMMATE WANTED To share
spacious 1+1 apartment in Palms.
$337 50/nx)nth +utiMtes. CaM 310-837-1793
for more info.
9700
Sublets
YEAR LONG
SUBLETTER NEEDED
One spot avaitetHe in 2 bdmiV2bth apt.
$445/mo Weshiyood Dizaker 310-435-5409
or FUchard 562-400-0421
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.
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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)
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Show#ir support for CIVIL RIGHTS and
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For information, email Sarah Angel at sangel@ucla.edu.
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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.
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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
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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
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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 ridel Now your Bruin Card can help you travel
anywhere the Big Blue Bus goes. Travel any route, anytime! There are 5
dirert routes to campus and 9 other routes that connect to them.
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», %i>*,vX':-.s.4;».. ■■■*^#L f;
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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
^Mnm
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
PMiniMce*BpB*Ost)iiiidli
SdMikinMKJcBidg.
6enenl.|«,lkdBMTM«tte
Post-firfenuKiBscniiNi
WkttMArftts
Calted 'full blooded, marvelous,
impassioned." this renowned wind quintet
IS joined by pianist Jon Nakamatsu m
program of Mo?an Beethoven. Jolivet and
nMtnc.
>•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Sunday mm^ 72
UC|^ Film & Television Archive
presents
Ultras Wash
Sailor's Ludc
The Horn Bhiws at
Midnight
2:00pffl, Jaies Bridges Tbeeter
Gotta Smg.Ootta Dance
Uusicals horn around the World
Lemonade Joe
The Hop Pickers
7 JlOpB, Jaies Bridges Theater
l6gine(il.S«itBdwtt(wittlD)indwww
UCLA Hammer Museum
presents
. "" Courtyard Talk
tnwrgenct of tha
Modarn MoMimnT
Pierre Koenig
3pn • Hammer Museum
Koentg will discuss his work in reiabon to
the political and social concerns His case
study house #21 will be on the Hammer
House lour this November
Tuesdaymnm ?4
UCLA Film (i lelevision Archive
presents
Academy/Contemporary DKumentaries
The Last Guy To Lot You
Down
Mr. Death: The Rise
and Fall of Fred A.
Louchtsr, Jr.
7:30pa, Janes Bridges Tiuatef -
UCLA Performing Arts
SATE Theatre DuMin
HValthig for Godot'
CeiterSlaie*7pa
nuwrH^ewB
.Fiaiir.lif*
Spa, FlNd PlaiflMise
GMinl.t4aStiidMrctMt9
Pest-ferfaraan isdssieo
Regarded as one of Europe's most
aihanlunus and tarsighM ptayfiouias.
the company returns to tf« U.S. wMi their
definitive and 'wondrous' IWaibng lor
Godot'
UCLA Performing Arts
presents
White Oak Dance
Project
'PASTfoneanf
OaMnSme • 7pm • Royce Hall
SIS
PMlnum*lpa*ReirceHail
Mkhid Bityjhnliiov and the White Oak
Danct Project rehim to Royce H^l with
two dMHWl praitim, oMnUng 9»
cntfUw firw •( l« rmhiUonry Judssn
Omcal
in the spotlight
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iO Thufsday, October 19, 2000
:~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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Daily Brvin News
Thunday, Oaober 19, 2000 13
^^
. •. ; ' •> ■.»■.' I
:>-■'■'.,
U TIiundi)r,0ctobff19,2000
Daily Bruin News
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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.
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Oiiiy Brum News
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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
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Southern California University of i earth SciencesJli). internationally recognized as the leacJer
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■Daily Bruin N«ws
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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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Choose one of these Dales:
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For more information or to sign up, please call 310-825-3945.
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Israel Shabbat in the Dorms
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Daily Bruin
Friday
Stereotypes of
San Francisco and
Los Angeles don't apply
to all of California.
Thursday, October 19,2000
View on the Web
See all this and
more at the Daily Bruin's
Website:
www.dailytmjin.uda.edu
fl^^
viewpoint@*media.ucla.edti
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
DAILY BRUIN
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cation of articles that perpetu-
ate rterogaiery lyliyral w eth
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edit sut>mltted material and lo
determine its placement In the
pepet. AH sutjiiiinluiis twnwtw
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Communications Board has a
media grievance procedure
for resolving complaints
against any of its publications.
For a cDp| of the complete
procedure! - contact the
Publications office at 118
nwtunanHiii.
22 Thursday, October 19,2000
fislv ftfiibi Vtott^^kii
44th Annual School of Medicine Lecture
H. Robert Honritz, Ph. P.
tii
Professor Of Biology, MIT
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator
Control ofApoptosis in Caenorhabditis Elegans"
; ^ :^ October 24, 2000
: ': ^.:; NPI Auditorium {f»''l9Si^-''^^yr''-r:J-^(:y:V
/■.:'■..:■■;; 3:30 p.m. - Refreshments ■■■^■>:/^'<:>^^
' -- 4:00 - 5:30 p.m. - Lecture, .. "
''■if .■.!» f:
October 25, 2000
13-105 CHS, 10:00 - 11:00 a.m.
Open Forum for Graduate Students,
IMedical Students and Postdoctoral Fellows
For Open Forum, please RSVP via e-mail to REncamaclon@mednet.ucla.edu by October 20, 2000
Continental breakfast will be provided with RSVP.
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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
SMT0N{Y,pa9*24
(My Bruin VtewpsiM
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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
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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-
SeetEltUN,pagn2
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To advertise
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\
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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32 Thunday, October 19, 2000
Daily Bruin Arts & Entertaiixncnt
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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
Can I make more money in Paris, Texas
or
France?
(A)
YOU WORK
HERE
./«r»Rrm
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."
Whe.h., you wa„, fo start your career locally o. ocro.s th« ...... ,„. resources av.,labi. to vou ol
CampusCareerCenter.com will h.-lr. pi'ide yc-.j te y.iur .-Irf on job
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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)
focuses on a former
lawyer-turned-lesbian
dominatrix who
discovered her
sole purpose in life
is to make Other
women moan.
TMEWBt The Vagina Monologues' is
currently showing at the Canon
Theatre 205 North Canon Or. in Beverly
Hills through Nov. 19. Ftcket prices
range from $25 to $49.50, and can be
purchased by calling (310) 859-2830 or
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as well as at all Tk*etnf»$ter oudets.
PerfornrMnces are Tuesday through
Friday at 8 |xm, Saturdays at 5 pim. and
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"'•' -,*.• ".'■ j '
34 Thursday, October 19,2000
DaHy Bruin Arts & Eiitertainirtent
\' ,^~
J*m^'¥i3:5!
Live and Learn
Japanese!
The Waseda Oregon Transnational Program, Winter & Spring
2001, in Tokyo, Japan, is a comparative US- Japanese Societies
study prt^ram that mixes US-based and international students
with Japanese undergraduates at the prestigious Waseda
University. Three levels of Japanese language instruction are
offered in addition to US-Japanese Societies courses in the
humanities and social sciences. Scholarships of up to S 1 000 are
available! Deadline for applications is October 27. 2000. For
more information, contact:
Waseda Oregon Office
Portland Sute University iX
(800) 823-7938 www.wasedaoregon.org
Soon everyone will be asking
Sarah Cain to sign on the dotted line.
Make sure you beat the rush.
Congratulations to Sarah Cain, Gymnastics
University of Michi^n, 1999-2000 Ffonda Award Nominee
Wait nx) lon^ atxi ytm may have tn starxl in liiK to ^ her aiitii^aph. Becaa<«e with her athletic
talent, academic intcHif^ncc, and communiry involvement. shc>i bound tn make a name (iir herrsclf.
Its rM> coinddeiKC those same attributes are the re;Hons she was nominated fiv a I Vxida Award
E) honor her, Honda has nude a donation to your schcxiTs wtNTicns athletics pni^am. 'Iliat way
everyone will have something tn remember her by withcHit having to wait in line.
• >IIMl AMt-mn KiiMla \lniuc ( -n. Iw.
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
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LOANS, LOANS,
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MALE STUDENT ISO lemate student seek-
ing irxlependent status. No relationship.
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EARN$$$$$
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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@|
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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
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* 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
^SmiSmJS^
tor sale
2700-4500
1300
Cninpiis Recruitment
1300
C;iinpijs Recruitment
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)
1620 WcstW(xxl Blvd , West Ix» Angclrs. Between
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
MivtT Bri'liant I
• Cosmetic Porcelain
• Surglcol OrftKXIonitcs
• R©rT(Ovat3le
• Trodltlonal
• Invlsitsle
•European
(310) 826 - 7494
IIMsWilihIn «M «W2
L«Antcln.CA *Kms
(949) 552 - 5890
1X124 C<ilw Dr.. «A
Irvirv.CA «7I5
Teeth Whitening $8S^^ PTI feMfi
upper Of kMTCr ^J %^ ^^|L*_^^^^B *mtt vmmmm^mmmZmmm^
^^VfiMH| «<iiit»»i II I 1 1
6700
Professional Servicr.'s
CONTACTS
fJO HIDDhN CHAUCifcS!
EXTENDED or [MiLY2(r $59 *39k|
«M0/4 Botes *G9
-iXT*79Pr|
CHAIKEBIKniWEYES
Nazal, QnMn. Blua
CHANGE LIGHT EYES B» MSrt
Bhia, Qraan. Aqua
BIR)CAL/MONOVISION addl'50
ASTIGiyiATISMEXT
EYE EXAM SI!.
USAMBB/ tm&NttartMlMUtt
Bmw1yMII»Ad( Wed3^F(111-1
MMBI 1M2W.lincalMAw,f6
010060-9513 W«111-1.Fri3-5
UMKWH 41»iMMlcAn,ft05
Ttiura3-5,Sit2-4pfti
BMnk 11227«M«I
Thinll-lpm.
Wo «jn<i>il»inl HtrmmnHati HlHi-ln
VAUGHN E. DOBALIAM. MJ
IM.ROI
i.SiMI:30-1po)
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
e Center
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Not as mucti
5 Glasgow native
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
ttarbor
65 Wittiered
66 Pullovers
67 Memo
PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED
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□@OCI@ Q[g@S SQQS
QSSSOQDS DnQQQIl
SQUQCSail BQDSmSS
nana mass dbdss
DOWN
1 Teller of tales
2 — Kett of ttie
comics
3 Egyptian canal
4 Nimbly
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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■1
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-
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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.
WOULD YOU LIKE TO WIN MONEY & CARS ?
BE ON NATIONAL TV. " ?
SHOW OFF TO YOUR FRIENDS..."..........."......."?
JCDPABDy! WILL BE INTERVIEWING AT UCLA
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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.
Hill denies making disparaging
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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
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"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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oivanbation dedkalad to promoting psyctMMnatytically
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upcoming events. Httpi/Zwww.stoller-foundation.org
Wormaliai contact meimandelOmsn.coni
• Admisslofi Is free
• Public is welcome
• Friday, October 20, 2000
• 8:00 p.m.
•UCLA--NPI Auditorium
>
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IT'S YOUR WORLD. EXPLORE IT
studentuniverse.com
800.272.9676
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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QJfhe ^ctlves
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
I
I
1
■4 -f.
Ody Bruin SpMts
* A
•t: V
show
must
9(1
"•t^-^ r ;:.
♦ *.'* v-i
r* *
\ ;. 5
r%:'>:^
on
V''^
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
Gala Apples
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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^
» I » I
• • • # « ^ ,
I i < ' > ,
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K«. ,■
".*•-».'>•*« >* >.>.
■ t ;' ■ , f » •. ^, ♦..'l I
" i ■ . V
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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A QUICK LOOK
Daily Bruin Classifieds
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A.WORD.
DEAL
o'^DAY
Ponzi scheme
(PON-zee skeem)
An investmenl swindle in wtiich high profits are promised from
ficticious sources and early investors are paid off with funds
raised from later ones.
|AHer Charles Ponzi (1882'>-1949). (tadan-bom speculator who "'
organized such a scheme (t9l9-t9?0) )
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DAILY BRUIN
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Recognizing
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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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WORLD <& NATION
Friday, October 20, 2000
Dow Jones Industrials I Nasdaq lnd« l Oollar
up: 167.96 .. , up:247.04 Yen: 108.38
Close: iai42.98 - ;: dose:3418.60 Euro:1.1859
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
;.■.■
■•■•.<. t
. • , • \
',\ 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
<
:^ ■
»-— •
(/>
To advertise call:
310.825.2161
ChN/cERS WAJ^rrep
S IMC HAT TORAH
OCTOBeR 2I-2.A
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.
^ r?»ri* **"" '^"'^t'*" ^^ <^""'" ^of LChaim's, Chassidic Dance and Celebration
FriH^ ?tf '^r!? Ir'/ f ^"^^ «^^^"tion and services at 741 Gayley Ave. in Westwcxxi.
Fnciay, Oct. 20-7:PM / Saturday, Oct. 21- 7:PM / Sunday, October 22-1 1:30AM
There are 100 Chabad centers in California. For Simchat Torah celebrations
m i/our area, cimlact your Uai Ch>b0tl op a>U 310 20e'75n. Chug SameacH! ChAlV\C>
* .* r t «•
S , Friday, October 20, 2000
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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Diily Bniin News
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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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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Next week
Do suburbs offer a
more comforting
lifestyle than cities?
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
EXCLUSIVE
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chance to ask
the Chancellor
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viewpoint@niedia.ucla.edu.
Please include your year, major
and student ID number.
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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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14
Fii(by,Oaober20,2000
V ■■;;.: ;'/
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Daily Brum ViewpeiR(
miscellaneous fun stufTI
don't ^#
forget
zip!
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OctolMr 20, 2000
The Robert J.
Stoller Foundation
Proudly presents the 1;:
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Memorial Lecture ^i ^^ ■
Dr. Gil Herdt
Dr. Herdt is Director of Human Sexual Studies. Director of
the Institute on Sexuality. Social Inequality and Heattti. as
well as Professor of Human Sexuality and Professor of
Anthropology at San Francisco State University. Dr. Herdt
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(1997-1998) has written over 70 articles and 25 books
on sexuality, bisexuaHty. homosexuality and culture. The
Stoller Foundation is certain you will find Dr. Herdt's
lecture fascinating. It is titled:
^'The Magical Age of 10 and tlie Developiiient
of Sexual Excitement: A Lecture in Honor of ttie
worlc of Roliert J. Stoller"
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organization dedicated to promoting psychoanalytically
informed research in the social sciences, biobehavioral
sciences and other related fields. Visrt our web page for
upcoming events. Http://www.stoller-foundation.org
Infcnnation contact melmandel@msn.com
• Admission is free
• Public Is welcome
• Friday. October 20, 2000
• 8:00 p.m.
•UCLA-NPI Auditorium
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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..
(My Brain Viewpoint
Friday, Octolwr 20, 2000 15
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Volleyball, soccer and water polo
Check out the back page to read about
Thursday night's women's volleyball game,
women's soccer's trip to Washington
men's water polo's trip to North
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
Westwood
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To adverfise
in the
Bruin
Movie
Guide,
call
310.825.2161
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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-=^— Daily Bruin
Friday, October 20, 2000
Daily Bruin Classified
-Friday, October 20, 2000 23
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Campus Happenings
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Ml Amofe Corey - I love you ifcTY LIT
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SMOKERS IN GOOD HEALTH, 18-45, want-
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SOLAR ENERGY
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Help direct many flat mirrors at various ob-
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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
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4
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6
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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
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f I I J I 'li 1 1 ii
tOfCh-dimmar ffwiiyt^
saangsL
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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
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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
^Vc^liTilu
iil4loT'al(c
'■'■^lGl4;4r^cluiC-
eK.k'-v^ia:)K
^
Where it matters most
JJj'JjJil ]i
Opportunities ate available for exceptional students with the following majors-
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"•"""• ncsowces
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OMtyBniinSpom
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.
h
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
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Discount Shoppers
pay only 450 ea.
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Reg. $3.49 each
iBixtln^ev
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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
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BUSES: Students forced to
miss class; workers lose
jobs, unable to pay bills
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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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