Employee fund invested in S. Africa - CORE

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SJSU payroll deduction involved

Employee fund invested in S. Africa By Gary Morse

SJSU employees are a small part of a retirement system with $1.2 billion in corporate investments in apartheid South Africa.

The employees’ money is invested through the Public Employees’ Retirement System in stock in corporations in South Africa � a country of political, social and economic discrimination against non-whites.

Officials of PERS have studied the matter. But like the University of California and Stanford University , which were scenes of massive student protests over similar investments, PERS has decided to take no further action.

However, faculty organization leaders, who were unaware of the investments, have promised to look into the issue.

SJSU faculty and staff are linked to the South African investments through payroll deductions. So are other employees throughout the California State University and Colleges system. Additionally, the CSUC makes a monthly employer’s contribution equal to 14.98 percent of salaries.

The result is that the CSUC accounts for about 6 percent of 556,759 employees in the retirement system.

South African investments have been a matter of interest for several years but PERS just undertook and completed a study of the corporations this summer, ac-cording to Melvin Petersen, chief investment officer for PERS.

"As time went on and as more information came to be known about U.S. involvement in South Africa, I got the impression that we should do something," Petersen said.

Both to express concern and to gather information, officials of PERS sent letters to the 39 corporations they own stock in � including Xerox, General Motors, Hewlett-Packard � which have investments in South Africa.

"As far as I know, we aren’t going to take any further action," Petersen said "This is where we will rest at this time."

He said for PERS to divest itself of the corporations

Volume 69, Number 54

New way to escape worries: on skates

By Scott Brown There are easier ways of

getting from one point to another. There certainly are safer

ways. But for Jackie Jacobs, SJSU

recreational therapy sophomore, there is none more exciting than rollerskating.

On almost any day she can be seen sweeping down the crowded sidewalks of SJSU, weaving through pedestrians, traffic and man-made obstacles in long graceful strides.

It used to be difficult for her to skate in public, she admitted, but with a new pair of roller-skates and a lot of practice, she is unabashed.

The homocidal drivers, pedestrian herds, litter, congestion and other San Jose hazards don’t faze her.

"That," she said with a smile, "is what makes it fun."

In spite of San Jose’s congestion, she pointed out, good skating sites abound downtown.

The concrete plaza beneath MacQuarrie Hall is perfect, she said, while parking lots and garages, and the drive-up win-dow lanes of banks are also good.

Besides, traffic and congestion "give you a chance to practice your turns," she said.

For Jacobs, however, skating is not just an exotic pastime.

Besides a bicycle, roller-skates are her only means of transportation, and she has made several shopping expeditions to downtown San Jose on skates alone.

Her only ambition for skating is a modest one.

"I want to rollerskate across the United States."

While she definitely wants to do it, no plans have been made for the trip, she added.

Reactions to her campus skating are mixed, she said. Some people laugh or joke, while others use the skates as an ex-cuse to start conversation.

How SJSU contributes How SJSU employees con-

tribute:

Employees who belong to the Social Security system pay five percent of monthly income more than $513 into the Public Retirement Employees’ System through paycheck deductions.

Non-Social Security mem-bers pay six percent of their monthly salary over $317.

Employees who earn less than those two floor levels have nothing deducted from their

. paychecks. The California State

University and Colleges system, however, pays an amount equal to 14.98 percent of all salaries as the employer’s contribution. The only exception is police, for whom the CSUC contributes 20.07 percent of salary.

The paycheck deductions and the employer’s contributions of the 30,832 CSUC members of PERS are then, along with the retirement benefits of 556,759 other public employees, "in-vested immediately."

Of total PERS investments of about $9 billion, approximately $1.2 billion is invested in cor-porations who operate in apar-theid South Africa.

with investments in South Africa, as students have urged the trustees of both Stanford and University of California to do, would be fiscally irresponsible.

Selling the $1.2 billion of stock would drop the market price and reduce retirement investments for the public employees who have paid into the system, he said.

It would also severely limit future investment because approximately 300 of the largest 500 corporations have business operations in South Africa.

Another reason not to divest the stock holdings is because the corporations serve as a vehicle for social improvement,’ Petersen said.

"We think they ( the corporations have been a con-structive force," he said.

Although not specifically asked by the PERS letter, some of the corporations indicated they are taking steps toward racial equality, Petersen said.

"Most companies who stated anything about dif-ferences between races have special programs for the black employees," Petersen said.

Such company programs are in the areas of

education, health, housing, transportation and legal aid. Petersen didn’t have figures on how many special programs existed.

"Some also stated they were breaking down the facial barriers by integrating restrooms and eating facilities," he added.

Twenty-one of the 39 corporations have also signed the Sullivan principals, he said.

The guidelines pledge to end segregation within company eating facilities, provide equal pay for equal work, equal employment practices, initiate job training programs, increase black employment in supervisory positions, and improve the quality of life outside of the industry.

Petersen admitted, however, that "sitting here 10,030 miles away it’s impossible to tell" how well the guidelines are being followed.

"It’s not altogether clear the corporations have done much to follow the Sullivan principles," said David Liff, a research analyst for the Investment Responsibity Research Center in Washington, D.C. The center provides

Serving the San Jose State Community Since 1934

1111

Jackie Jacobs Sydney Br ink

Strangely enough, she said, some people act embarrassed about seeing her in skates and avoid looking at her.

Skating on campus has not always been easy. Aside from a certain lack of grace she said her earlier skating had, falling down is the major embarrassment.

"It is especially em-barrassing to fall while roller-skating," she said, "because

everyone’s watching you." What advice does she have

for the skating newcomer? "The main thing is not to be

embarrassed to fall," she said. "Everyone falls."

Small, barely-visible marks on her shins and knees testify that she knows what she is talking about.

"Falling is nothing," she concluded, smiling. "The wounds always heal’

1964 Civil Rights Act argued in Bakke trial BERKELEY ( AP ) � The 1964 Civil Rights Act allows

universities to adopt race-conscious admission programs such as the one challenged in the Bakke case now before the U.S. Supreme Court, the University of California argued in a brief yesterday.

And attorneys for Allan Bakke said they had for-warded a brief claiming the act could provide an even more "forceful" argument against "any discrimination."

The legal briefs were prepared after the justices

asked for additional arguments on Title VI of the Act, which says no person in any federally funded program may be discriminated against for reasons of race, color or national origin.

Justices heard oral arguments in the case last month. Federal funds sugport research and education at the UC-Davis Medical School, which rejected Bakke in favor of minority students with less impressive academic records.

)Continued on back page)

By Linda Zavoral

Nighttime library attendance is down, but attendance is up at almost all other on-campus night functions, despite a recent wave of campus area sexual assaults.

Library systems analyst Ruth Roberts said there has been a "significant drop" in night at-tendance at the library since the first part of October.

Roberts estimated that at-tendance last month was "about one-third off," which is "unusual since October is one of our heaviest months."

Library Director Hal Olsen conducted some "informal head counts" in the library during the past few weeks and found "a definite preponderance of males in the library in the evening."

The ratio of males over females,

PERS with information about foreign business operations.

Liff added that some critics of the Sullivan principles say the guidelines don’t go far enotigh. Corporations have refused to support black trade unions which could be a major step toward economic equality, he added.

Petersen said he was "a little surprised about the low U.S. corporate involvement."

He estimated that most corporations employed only 200 to 500 persons in South Africa, although General Motors has 4,385, with non-white workers most often comprising between one-third to one-half of the labor force.

CSUC officials and faculty organization leaders, meanwhile, were surprised that the retirement funds were being invested in corporations dealing in South Africa.

"I’m not aware of it," said Majorie Downing Wagner, vice chancellor. "I guess I thought they were just sitting on it up there in Sacramento."

Wagner was unsure of if and how the CSUC would deal with the matter.

Faculty organization executives David Elliot and Warren Kessler, however, said the matter would be considered before their respective groups.

"I want to pump the matter on to our standing com-mittee on affirmative action," said Elliot, statewide Academic Senate chairman.

"I think the issue serves as an example of a moral question -- a question we ought to discuss. To what degree should we govern our portfolio on moral and ethical questions?"

Kessler, president of the statewide United Professors of California, also said the issue would be studied by a committee.

"You may see us sponsoring or co-sponsoring an assembly bill sometime later," he added, in order to halt the retirement money from being invested in "oppressive countries." (Continued on back page)

Thursday, November 17, 1977

he said, has been as high as 3-to-1. Olsen said the women he did find

were "accompanied by at least one male or in groups of three or four."

Claudia Eastman of the A.S. Program Board said attendance is up for Wednesday night films.

There has been "a very slight decrease" in attendance for Friday films, she said, adding, "I don’t believe it’s due to things happening around campus."

Eastman attributed the drop to the fact that there are more things to do on Friday nights.

S.U. Associate Director Pat Wiley said there has been "no noticeable difference" in attendance at functions in the Student Union, but said he didn’t expect a drop since "most clubs have their own following."

According to John Blum, S.U.

Games Area employee, attendance is up there at night.

Gaines area employee Joe Trippi concurred.

"It’s at least the same, and perhaps a little higher," Trippi said. "But the Union is pretty much seen ass safe place."

People, he said, often ’bide their time" in the games area while waiting for friends to pick them up.

Music Department Chairman Robert Cowden said attendance at night concerts "is up this year."

More than 200 persons attended the department-sponsored Baroque concert Monday night, which Cowden termed "a very good audience."

Cowden also said 50 persons attended a Javanese dance Tuesday night, which was "more than we expected."

Cool cat coed’s companion

For the coed with everything, Roberta McIntosh, an SJSU sophomore in natural science, has come up with a novel idea � a watchcat.

Nos this is not the same as a watchdog.

The idea started out with McIntosh’s 6-month-old cat Prin-cess, who has gotten in the habit of accompanying her to school on a leash.

The joke got around. Before long, McIntosh’s professors and fellow students started kidding her about using the cat as protection.

Since the joking, the cat has become somewhat of a campus celebrity, serving as both a mascot to McIntosh and a conversation piece in boring classes.

According to McIntosh, she got the cat around the beginning of the semester because her landlord wouldn’t allow her to have a dog.

But the cat seems to have become more of a companion than any dog could be.

Princess rides from Los Altos to SJSU with McIntosh each morning, and comes when her master whistles. She attends classes dutifully, and despite the nervous nature of cats, seems very much at home attending courses. �

In addition, the cat wears a leash as willingly as any dog would.

She is billed by fellow students.,

Roberta McIntosh with

as the "lightest on her feet" in McIntosh’s social dance class, as "protection" in her mistress’ humanities class and as the "most mad bird watcher" in McIntosh’s

Glenn Mor tin her wotchcot. Princess.

Zoology 112 class. Overall. Princess might do very

well if she decided to attend SJSU full-time, but registration might pose a problem.

Page 2, November 17, 1977 10 RUM, �

Editorial Hayes’ program

San Jose Mayor Janet Gray Hayes should be commended for finally taking some concrete steps to combat the rape crisis on this campus.

In the aftermath of last week’s epidemic of seven sexual assaults, Mayor Hayes, at a press conference Monday, in-troduced a four-point plan to combat the rash of rapes around SJSU.

Her plan is an enormous improvement over her emotional television plea to the "campus area rapist" which accomplished little.

The mayor’s plan includes these four programs: - A $500 reward for information leading to the arrest and

conviction of persons committing "sexually violent crimes." - The arrangement for the installation of call boxes

connected to campus security. - Speeding the trimming of large trees in the campus

area which obstruct street lighting. - The formation of a Task Force on Neighborhood

Security. These measures should help to unite SJSU students and

the surrounding campus community to make this a safer area in which to both live and attend school.

We agree with Hayes that these programs are long overdue, and hope they will be effective in halting sexual assaults on and around the SJSU campus.

Exchange students face job problems By Steve Dulas

Last week a foreign exchange high school student in Iowa was informed he would have to quit his $9-a-month paper route or be deported. Officials told him young people from the town should have first crack at the job.

He insisted that he took the job because no one else wanted it, but still he was ordered to hang up his carrier bags and rubber bands.

A friend of mine, Mike M. Agrent, was in the same situation a few years ago. He had come to the country on an exchange program from Slobbovia, a tiny frozen country in Asia.

During his studies at Whassamata Polytechnic High School, he decided he wanted to get a job like all the American kids he knew. The only problem was the exchange student program ad-ministrators kept telling him he couldn’t take a job which other people, namely the locals, would want.

Steve Dubs is the Spartan Daily copy editor

Mike said he looked all over to try and find a job, since his money from the exchange service was running low and he had gotten hooked on Big Macs and milkshakes. He needed to support his habit.

The first place he looked for work was at a farm in the area. He figured it would be a natural, since Slobbovia is an agricultural nation - they grow lichen and ice.

The only job the farmer had was cleaning out the stables and rabbit hutches for $1 an hour. Mike knew that pay would keep him in Big Macs, so he took it.

Sure, Mike told me, it was a really dirty job, but no one else in town wanted it, so he figured it would be all right if he took it.

But the administrators from the exchange program, Mike said, found out about it and promised to revoke his visa and deport him if he didn’t quit the job.

"I told them it was the dirtiest job in town, and that I was the first one who asked about it in five years, so I figured I may as well take it. But the bureaucrats told me I couldn’t have it.

So, Mike told me, he went out to find another job which could not possibly be wanted by any of the local high school kids.

Mike said he tried like the dickens to find a job that no one else

Forum Policy The intent of the Spartan Daily

Forum Page is to present respon-sible viewpoints on issues affecting the university community.

Columns, editorials and car-toons may discuss local, state, national or international affairs. The Doak also welcomes reader’s contributions. Letters may be submitted at the newspaper office, on the second floor of the Journalism Building.

would want, but he just could not find one lucrative enough to keep him in junk food. He was nearing the end of his rope and, faced with the idea of quitting his habit cold turkey, came up with a brainstorm of an idea.

Why not, he decided, teach folk dances to the people here? After all, if they are willing to learn square dances, disco dances and the Mexican hat dance, why not teach the Slobbovian lichen harvest dance?

Immediately, he got underway, got his license to teach and opened his studio in the garage at the house where he was staying. Business was booming, he said. At $10 a lesson, he was making enough to eat at Mc-Donald’s three times a day.

Then the roof caved in. The student exchange service caught wind of his latest money making venture, and once again hit him with the order - "Quit the business, because some American kid might want it."

Finally, in total frustration, Mike gave up his business, bought a freighter ticket back to Slobbovia and left the United States, deter-mined never to come back.

Last time I heard from Mike, he was doing prqty well in hi’: ,c�Intry, exccept for one thing. He .tried to open a disco dance school, but the Slobbovian government had to close it, in case some American exchange student wanted to do it.

"WHO IAlosS THAT MASKED AAAYOR? I WANTED TO THANK HEW

While U.S. firms reap billions in profits

Iran provided unlimited arms By David Willman

This week’s visit to the United States by the Shah of Iran brings attention to a significant shift in American foreign policy toward the Middle East.

Although this country has long supported the shah, it is now selling vast amounts of arms to his regime. Some of the hardware, including seven sdphisticated radar system-carrying aircraft, is more advanced than that now possessed by any other foreign nation.

It is evident that the Carter administration feels compelled to meet Iranian requests for such arms sales. With U.S. reliance on foreign oil imports continuing to soar, the administration apparently believes it is necessary to maintain friendly relations with Iran - at any cost.

In an unprecedented action, Stansfield Turner, director of the CIA, opposed the recent sale of the airborne radar systems to Iran. Turner, in a letter to the federal General Accounting Office, said that the potential for an Iranian crew to defect to the Soviet Union with the

Psychology lab

radar systems could create security problems for the U.S.

And, although the sale drew a storm of protest last summer from Congress, the President remained firm in his commitment to the shah.

Despite the horrendous economic prospects of another 1973-type Arab oil embargo, one must wonder at what point the ad-ministration will be convinced to curb the dangerous proliferation of highly sophisticated war-making materials to Iran or other regimes in the volatile Middle East.

David Willman is Forum Page Editor

We have helped beef-up the Israeli air force to the point where it can now deploy enough nuclear clout to desecrate that region. We also have greatly enhanced the defense capabilities of Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

The administration perplexingly has lost sight of the fact that another Middle East war is quite likely to be

a catastrophe. Differences over West Bank settlements and the Golan Heights are but two of a number of possible catalysts.

An ironic factor at the hert of it all is the uncompromising greed of American corporations. They ec-statically view the prospect of in-creased arms sales. A statement contained in this year’s annual report of General Dynamics Corp. particularly points this out.

"The Pomona (Ca.) division continues to grow in sales, earnings and number of new and exciting programs...Pomona also has ob-tained development contracts for a number of new weapons with strong potential for future sizeable ear-nings."

General Dynamics, one of the nation’s largest defense contractors, also gleefully revealed .in its report that its aerospace division profits increased 22 percent in 1976 over 1975.

Additionally included in the report is the information that the Imperial Iranian air force has an-nounced plans to purchase 300 F-16

fighter jets from the company. Contracts for the first 160 are now being negotiated by the United States and Iranian governments, the report confirms.

The massive sale of F-16s may very well be the next step by the administration toward further ar-ming a potential enemy to Israel and/or the United States.

But the sale will bring General Dynamics "several billion dollars" according to the report.

It seems tragic that the technical brilliance of America’s outstanding scientists and engineers is oriented to such a ludicrous cause as building more and more hideous weaponry.

Dangerous ramifications? The , corporations shrug. Jobs, earnings, those are the impotant concerns. ,

Do the American people care that their government continues to I approve this mad rush to fully arm repressive dictatorships such as that headed by the Shah of Iran?

Thus far, the only audible sounds are those of stockpiled arms and billowing profits.

Letters to the Daily

Editor: Congratulations to Marilyn

Odello for exposing the atrocities against small animals in the psychology labs ( Nov. 15 issue ).

These people are apparently of the same mentality as those who

stick firecrackers up the rear-ends of cats.

There is no reason for it because whatever the test results - they cannot be applied to human behavior with any kind of con-sistency.

Further, what is the scientific significance of castrating a ham-ster? These people deserve a taste of their own medicine.

PLO STRONGHOLD

There ignorance is unbearable. Steve Young

Radio/TV Junior

� � �

Editor: In answer to that disgusting

story and photo layout depicting in a graphic manner the "fun" things you get to do to hamsters in Psychology 130, I got to wondering about the note on one of the cages that said, "One Found Dead 10/11/T."

That poor hamster might have known something was amiss and probably committed suicide.

Can you blame him? Michael Moon

Political Science Junior

The Bible and gays Editor:

This is a response to Matthew E. Savoca’s letter of Oct. 24, "Jesus and gays."

From the statements Savoca made, I find that he has misrepresented the Scripture, however it may have been unin-tentional. But I do not want to direct my thoughts, for now, to the statements he made but would rather address this letter to the homosexual who wants to change his or her lifestyle.

My purpose is to inform you of the word of God pertaining to the homosexual as it is manifested in the Scriptures.

The word of God states, "You shall not lie with a male as one lies with a female; it is an abomination" (Leviticus 18:22). And in 1 Corin-thians 6:9,10, "Do not be deceived; neither fornicators, nor idolators, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor homosexuals...shall inherit the kingdom of God." As can be seen there is quite a list and homosexuals are part of it. No one can plea-bargain with God about this. His word must and will stand (Isaiah 55:11).

And what about the Law of Mpses binding the Christian today? For one thing, I can read Isaiah 40:8

and know that the word of God from yesterday, is the same today, and will not change tomorrow. Even Jesus said in Matthew 5:17-18, "Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I did not come to abolish, but to fulfill." There is no way it can be refuted --homosexuality is a sin.

In Isaiah 64:6 we are told that no one is pleasing in God’s sight and that we all "fal short of the glory of God" (Romans 3:231. For all of us, salvation depends on Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of sins. Jesus said in John 3:16, -For God so loved the world, that he gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have eternal life."

But once we believe this it does not stop there. There must be a commitment to Jesus Christ. Jesus said to the adulterous woman ( John 8:11), "from now on sin no more." This is what Jesus Christ gives in Christianity. First faith for the forgiveness of sins and second, strength to turn from our sins. To repent means to change and to discontinue what is sinful and displeasing to God.

To say that there is no way out for the homosexual is not speaking the truth. There is a hope - a Christian hope in Jesus Christ - for the homosexual who is willing to change. In 1 Corinthians 6:9,10 we. know that "homosexuals.. shall not inherit the kingdon of God." But hope for the homosexual comes in Jesus Christ as given in verse 11, "and such were some of you; but you were washed, but you were sanc-tified, but you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and in the Spirit of our God."

What else can I say to the homosexual? To change may be rough. You may stumble and fall back into sin. If you do, Jesus Christ will forgive you and tell you "from now on sin no more." This will be the cross that you will bear, but Jesus will not leave you alone. Pick it up daily and follow Him. Some will say that it is impossible for a homosexual to change. To them you can say, "Is anything too difficult for the Lord?" (Genesis 18:14).

Larry Alb Chemistry aduate

’Role playing’ helps officers stay alive

By Steve Waldron "I’m a firm believer in the

,wer of the spoken word," said ;I Michel De Latour of the nteley Police Department. fou can’t insure your genetic unortality if your balls are ying on the sidewalk."

The former president of the trkeley Police Association oke Monday for two hours to idents in Professor Tom Mc-trney’s Justice Administration id Law Enforcement class.

Speaking about how to deal ith street people and situations ommonly faced by police of-:ters, De Latour belied the ereotype of the humorless Joe riday cop as he drew recurrent ughter with his outspoken nnments and impressions urging from street hustlers to iakespeare.

The toughest policemen I rer knew have got their asses eked," Latour said. "I don’t te violence � I don’t like to get y clothes dirty."

Sometimes "you can talk meone into jail," added the lingual, former Washington, .C. high school tacher. He said at many confessions are ob-ined by officers who have the Ality to "role play and get into s (the crirninal’s ) mind.

"I’ve been able to take mean, isty people and reduce them to ars" through interrogation.

It’s not always easy, he Idled. "It’s hard to like

somebody who spits on ) ou, beats his wife, or dips his kid into boiling water. Sometimes you have to kind of fake it."

De Latour said that knowing how to "role play" and talk to people is important in Berkeley where the population includes many radicals as well as street criminals.

"There are several houses in Berkeley that are completely anti-police. You don’t go in not understanding their philosophical base."

Dealing with the criminals on the street also requires un-derstanding and diplomacy, he continued.

"Street people are wise beyond their years � they have to live by their guts and their brains," Latour said, adding that they often have the ability to make a penetrating analysis of an approaching stranger.

"The first thing they ask is ’can I consume him or can he consume me?’ "Latour said.

The audience was in stitches as De Latour did an impression of a hypothetical police officer entering a lower class home to mediate a family fight in a cape, speaking in a Shakespearean accent.

��This is a pitiful scene," he quipped, "for people to act like beasts."

"Hey, man, look at this goddamn Halloween fool," he mimicked the lower class man’s response, illustrating the point

Sgt. Michel De Latour Marilyn °dello

that an officer must be in tune with the culture of the people he deals with.

De Latour also recom-mended that officers learn some of the language of ethnic minorities within their beats.

He said that when he goes into a Chicano home and com-pliments the parents on their baby by saying "what a beautiful bambino," the parents "just light up" in appreciation of his taking enough of an interest in their culture to learn just that one word.

The 6-foot-3 officer added that there are times when physical violence is unavoidable and every officer should be ready to "use it like any other tool."

Once, said De Latour, he was sitting inside the station at his desk, where he had just been transferred from the street. Expecting a boring, non-violent job for a while, he was in-terrupted from his work by a "growl that sounded like a 90-pound boar."

Looking up, he was attacked by a large man who was like "Godzilla unleashed." De Latour ended up on the floor, choking the "crazy tuna fish" while one jailer who was on the scene "had one arm and another had a leg." De Latour had to choke the man until he was "purple and dripping from the mouth" to subdue him.

"You cannot talk to those kind of people," he said. "You’re going to have to knock that son of a bitch out or he’s going to kill you."

De Latour told other tales of violence, including one about a large policeman who was knocked to the ground by a small man and then killed with his own gun.

Police work is a "hard, stressful existence," he said. He added that police are susceptible to high blood pressure and other physical ailments caused by stress, irregular hours and bad food.

"Cops eat lousy," he said, since they must often eat at all-night restaurants whose food, he claims, leaves much to be desired.

Police also have a high suicide and divorce rate, he added.

Unpredictable, late hours can strain marital relationships, he explained.

"You need understanding friends and relatives and a good woman backing you up," he added.

De Latour describes himself as a "risk freak" who enjoys police work and confronting "situations where behavior gets outrageous."

"It’s a hell of a game � a wonderful game, if you like people," he said.

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November 17, 1977, Page 3

Don Schofield Thomas Balgooyen talks with some of his students

Education’an art form’

Students make prof see red By John Weiland

Picture a class in a lecture hall at SJSU. The professor is warming up to his subject and beginning to speak faster and faster.

Suddenly, he sees a sea of red before his eyes and stops.

No, he’s not having a stroke. His students are waving their red 3-by-5-inch cards to tell him to slow down.

This is one way Dr. Thomas Balgooyen receives feedback from his zoology classes.

"I’m interested in getting good feedback," he said. "I use different kinds of feedback mechanisms."

He got the red card idea from traffic signals, Balgooyen said.

His other methods include encouraging his students to write him "personal letters" and to come to his open office hours.

Balgooyen, an SJSU graduate who received a bachelors degree in 1967 and a masters degree here in 1968, said he "gets all kinds" of letters from his students.

SPARTAGUIDE Allen Strange of the

Music Department will play his synthesizer at 2:30 p.m. today in the Music Building Concert Hall, Room 176. Also, "Prelude," a computer film by Ron Hayes, will be shown as part of the program.

� � � "Asian Horizons" will

air from 5:30 to 7 tonight on KSJS-FM 91. A special interview will be conducted with students from Este Fil, a Filipino student exchange program.

� � � The National Pn�ss

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Photographers Association ( NPPA ) will meet at 7 tonight in Journalism Building, Room 101. Mike Maloney will be the guest speaker.

� � � Akbayan will meet at

3:30 p.m. today in BC 209. Guest speaker will be Douglas T. Lazo, former SJSU assistant professor.

� � � The Spartan Daily

Alumni Club will meet at 8

tonight at Nick’s Pizza, corner of E. Santa Clara and Eighth streets, for beer and pizza. Free crying towels will be distributed to the December graduating class.

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meet at 5 p.m. today in the Women’s Center.

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Some write to tell him about their family problems, some about their work, and some have complaints or compliments on the class.

It takes a lot of time to read them all, he said. But, he said, he believes in more "humanistic" education.

In addition, he gets from 10 to 20 students at each of his open office hours, who come in to ask questions and talk.

Teaching is not a science, Balgooyen believes. It’s a problem of relating information to one another.

"It’s an interpersonal communication problem," he said.

His techniques are not

important, he said. Some of them are just gimmicks, some are philosophy; but it is a mood, an attitude, or a posture one takes that a teacher communicates, he added.

"Education is a philosophy with me," he said. "It’s an art form, an artistic problem.

"The strongest teachers that we have are examples," Balgooyen said.

He credits his own family with encouraging his success and growth, particularly his father, how was also a teacher.

Today Balgooyen thinks he sets his students an example.

"I am an example of

what a zoologist is, what a human being is," he said.

"We’ve come a long way from Plato’s methods of instruction," he said.

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Page 4, November 17,1977

SPORTS Booters look to next year with biggest schedule ever

By Mark Geyer "It’s an old sports cliche, but there’s always next year for SJSU’s soccer team, which capped its tailspinning collegiate season with a tough 3-2 overtime loss to arch rival Santa Clara Sunday.

With only Saturday’s season-ending exhibition match against the San Jose Earthquakes left, the booters are looking forward to next season as 13 players return, five of them for their third year together.

Adding to the optimism is a projected 23-game college schedule, the biggest in Spartan soccer history, which includes an eastern U.S. road trip and matches against eight teams currently in the nation’s top 20.

SJSU finished with a 9-8 record, really nothing to be ashamed of. But considering that they were once 8-1 with an eight game winning streak then proceeded to lose seven of the last eight contests, one begins to wonder if they had a good year.

Since 1962 when Menendez’s troops won only two games and lost eight, SJSU’s soccer teams have played in 10 NCAA post-season playoffs and have not suffered a losing season.

Once, in 1968, the Spartans, led by All-American Mani Hernandez, made it all the way to the NCAA semi-finals against Georgia Tech only to be denied a championship game berth in an overtime defeat.

This season, SJSU was again looking to participate in the NCAA’s after retaining a good portion of last year’s eighth-ranked team which succumbed to defending champion USF in the western region finals.

Following their early streak, the Spartans had reason to thing they were good and were a little over-confident for their next game: a Spartan Stadium showdown with USF.

The booters took a 1-0 lead but eventually crubled 3-1. Making plans for ha 24th season as head coach, Julie

Menendez is in the process of mapping out the eastern swing which includes a tournament with second-ranked Hartwick, Oneonta and Akron along with matches against 16th-ranked Cornell and Albany State.

Homes games against third-ranked St. Louis, seventh-ranked Indiana and 20th ranked Simon Fraser are highly possible, according to Menendez.

"The schedule will be a real test for us next year," said Menendez. "Of course if we do well against the harder teams, the guys will build confidence, gain con-sistency and have the makings of a great season."

He added that with such a tough line-up of opponents, things could just as well turn around. "We could easily wind up with a buch of losses,’ the coach said. "They play good soccer up in New York."

He didn’t deny that competiton is getting tough right here in California, after his bootecs literally kicked away their chances of an NCAA western playoff berth in the last half of the season.

Unable to come back, they dropped a hard-fought 2-1 decision to Chico State in which they played well but seemed hopelessly snake-bit by little errors.

Suffering from what Menendez called "very basic mistakes," the Spartans had two impressive wins but

SJSU goalkeeper Paul Coffee flies

finished the season losing the last five. Santa Clara shot in Sunday’s match at Buck Shaw high to block a Stadium. The Broncos won, 3-2. The Spartans end

their season tomorrow against the Earthquakes’.

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’Longest season’ ends By Chris Georges (Editor’s note: The SJSU

water polo team travels tomorrow to the PCAA championship tournament in Long Beach. The Spartans, seeded last in the eight-team double elimination tourney, face top seed UC-Irvine at 10 a.m. Friday.

In the annals of Spartan water polo history, 1977 will surely go down as the longest season ever.

SJSU’s 3-16 regular season record, the worst in nearly a half-century of San Jose State polo, is a far cry from the national cham-pionship won in 1968 or the second-place finishes of ’71 and ’72.

The record hardly reflects the aquatic heritage of the school, which graduated such notables as Olympic swim-ming coach Georges Haines, Olympic water polo coach Art Lambert, national champion polo coach Lee Walton and nationally-ranked swimming coach Nort Thornton.

What the record does reflect is that Ed Samuels is the sixth coach the team have seen in five years. It also reflects that the water polo program came within a hairbreadth of being dropped completely from the athletic budget in 1976.

"I’m not big on excuses," said a pensive Samuels after No. 3-ranked UC-Irvine handed SJSU its only shutout this season. Having been captain of the United States national team, he knows excuses won’t build a strong program.

Sydney Brink

Andrea Gaston, one of SJSU’s top golfers

Swimmers rip Davis, take on Stanford, Cal

SJSU’s women’s swim team won the opening event and never looked back as Coach Connie Roy’s squad tEounced UC-Davis 83-40 in the Women’s Gym pool Tuesday.

The win brings the swimmers’ record to 1-1-1 as they travel to Stanford today to face the No. 2 Cards and Cal at 2 p.m.

’I’m really pleased with the way they swam,’’ said beaming first-year Coach Roy. "I think they’re getting really jazzed up about the Stanford meet."

Sophomore breast-stroker Eileen Campbell was a quadruple winner,

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helping the opening 400-yard medley relay to victory, then easily win-ning the 50 breast and the 100 and 200 individual medley.

soq

Chris Georges Sophomore goalie Dennis Johanneck breaks up a Stanford storing attempt

But excuses come readily to mind: the team’s awesome schedule, which this year included 11 games wiht Top 10 teams; three with No. 1 Cal; lack of coaching continuity; lack of regulation facilites; lack of money.

Samuels isn’t about to water down the schedule. To be the best, you must play the best.

Facilities and money probably can’t be had for a while, but coaching continuity can. Samuels said he intends to stick around to remake a four-year program and see the team nationally ranked pg

"It takes time," he often

said during the season as the loss streak got longer and longer. Indeed, championship teams do not spring up overnight.

Time is needed to turn individual talent into team play. Individual talent, which abounds in the swimming-pool-infested Santa Clara Valley, can be recruited; time cannot.

"I’ve often played against teams who cheered when they finally scored their first point in a game," he said as Vince DeFrank did just that for SJSU in a 14-1 loss to Stanford, then philosphically added, "but I never thought I’d be on

one." Well, he is. At least for

this year. But, things should improve for the Spartan polo squad. Only two seniors will be lost to graduation, and virtually the entire starting lineup will return in 1978. This year’s freshmen are the best the school has seen in three years, and have proved their mettle in almost every varsity game this season.

"Wait till next year" is usually dismissed as the hollow threat from a perennial runner-up, or worse.

� But if Ed Samuels stays that long, well...

Wait till next year.

villiGale force behind women’s golf team

By Brian Hoey Mark Gale is out to put

SJSU "on the map." The first-year head

coach of the women’s golf team guided his charges to a third in the Tucker In-vitational at Albuquerque, N.M. in October before destroying the field in the prestigious Stanford In-vitational two weeks ago.

"Golf is the kind of sport that a university should be fully supportive of because it’s such a well-known sport nationwide. You can take a goup like these five or six women and put this school on the map nationally," he said.

Gale, also the professor of aerospace studies and a full colonel in charge of the SJSU Air

� Force ROTC detachment, was the assistant coach of the men’s gold team for two years under Jerry V room before assuming command of the women’s squad this season.

He states that his team, comprised mostly of sophomores, can realistically "be national champions by the time they’re seniors." But to du this requires training unheard of in most sports.

"You’ve got to be dedicated. Our first practice is a a month before school starts, and the last match is one month after classes are out. These girls are lasting the whole scholastic year. I

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don’t know of any other sport like that."

He also said that a successful college career is a necessary prerequisite to playing professionally.

"Certainly golf competition on the collegiate level with a high caliber is a must before going on the tour. And you can do this with a minimum funding."

His budget this year looks microscopic when compared to some oti:er sports. Allotted less than than $7,500 for traveling expenses, equipment and scholarships, the team received support from Wilson Sporting Goods Co. this year in the form of new club bags.

"Things like that make a difference. And the advertisers really don’t get a lot in return. Most of them probably do it for the simple fact that a lot of executives play the game, and they’d just like to help the teams out."

In his effort to mold the women into a team of national prominence, Gale is now trying to re-locate his practices from the Villages Golf Course to the Almaden Country Club.

"To compete as a championship team we’ve got to play on cham-pionship courses. I’m not knocking the Villages, but we have to look to the future."

The experience of the team reflects his con-fidence. Most have competed in non-collegiate tournaments before.

The Tucker and Stanford Invitationals were the only fall meets the clubbers went to. The women practiced three days a week for five hours per day to get ready for those two matches, but Gale is increasing that schedule to five days a week in preparation for the Lady Aztec Invitational in San Diego Jan 18-20.

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November 17, 1977, Page 5

Hard-working Haynes ready for big year

By Pete Cavagban Tracy Haynes is not a

typical basketball player. In an era where hard

work is overshadowed by overinflated egos and publicity in sports, Tracy Haynes is a rarity-he’s self-motivated.

Haynes, a 6-foot-5 and a half forward-guard, is the captain of the Spartan basketball team, and its only senior.

Haynes, who nearly left SJSU in 1975 because both he and coach Ivan Guevara felt he might not be able to cut it for the Spartans, is now in his third year with the varsity team, and the second as a starter.

Where the defensive specialist starts this year is not known. But when the Australian National Team invades Independence Park Fieldhouse Saturday at 8 p.m., Haynes will be in the lineup.

A forward the last two years after performing as an All-League center at Washington High in San Francisco, Haynes is making his second position change, to what Guevara calls "big guard."

Haynes, both on his own admission and Guevara’s , made the team as a Spartan sophomore because of his defensive abilites, and his playing time was mainly in situations where he was needed to shut down an opposing player.

Haynes is still a strong defensive threat, but last year, to the surprise of many, was second on the Spartans in scoring with a 10.6 norm.

"A lot of people look at somebody’s scoring average," Hayes said. "Anyone on our team could go out there and score 25 points and be the superstar and we’d get killed. Defense doesn’t show up on paper.

Second honor for Williamson

Cully Williamson, SJSU free safety, was named defensive player-of-the-week by the NorCal sportswriters for his play against Stanford last Saturday.

Williamson, also named PCAA defensive player-of-the-week, had an interception, fumble recovery and 13 tackles in the game the Spartans lost 31-26.

"Nobody ever would have thought I’d be second in scoring last year," the 190-pound Spartan con-tinued.

"I’ve always had a high shooting percentage--61 percent in high school," Haynes pointed out, at-tributing his high mark to his shot selection, not his one-on-one ability.

His one-on-one ability

TRACY HAYNES has changed somewhat, though, because of junior varsity coach Earl White.

"He said to start using my legs, since that is my best talent," evidenced by his team-leading 28 blocked shots last season.

"Now I can shoot over anybody just using my legs. But," Haynes was quick to note, "that doesn’t mean it’ll go in."

"Guevara has so many shooters coming through here," said Haynes, a sociology-turned-recreation major.

Haynes spent last summer working on im-proving his ball-handing, adjusting to the guard position, but still has work left to do.

So does the entire Spartan team, which lost five key members from last year’s team.

Haynes, being the lone senior, is cast in the elder’s role.

"I always did work hard because of my (lack of) size. To put an im-pression on Guevara I had

to work extra hard." This serves as an

excellent example for the younger players.

"I try to keep talking to them on and off the court; get on them when they’re jivin’ too much. It’s almost like everything depends on me, being the only senior.

"If they see me doing something wrong, they’ll think they can do it, too. So far, there’s been no problem with respect. It’s a pretty good group," Haynes evaluated.

"As far as talent, we could beat any team we wanted to. Experience will come. It (winning) just depends on how fast everybody wants to get together."

In the line of team goals, Haynes wants what the Spartans barely missed last year-a trip to the NCAA playoffs.

"That would be one of my biggest goals," he related. "I’d also like a shot at the pros; at least a chance. I feel like I can play at that level.

"Our team’s got to win--that’ll help a lot with publicity. You can’t just be an average player on an average team."

Whether this is an average team or an NCAA-bound team probably rests more on the 21 -year-old Haynes’ shoulders than any other player’s.

"He’s a leader by his deeds," complimented Guevara. "He works all the time and has made great strides with his ballhandling. But that’s usually the last thing to come, especially for taller guys."

"He has a good manner about him. He’s been around long enough to know what it takes. He’s the only senior and that means a lot to him."

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Page 6, November 17, 1977

WEEKEND Cycling a natural trip

By Brian Hoey As I jumped on the kickstarter of my motorcycle

last Saturday morning, it occurred to me that this would be my first trip of any appreciable distance since returning from a cross-country trek in August. I had rolled up more than 7,000 miles on that little jaunt, so cruising down to Monterey for a day seemed like a ride around the block.

The faithful steed spluttering to life beneath me was a Honda CB360T, veteran of many back roads, city streets and superhighways. The fact that the 360, marketed as an economy commuter motorcycle, had carried me from Cupertino to Washington, D.C. and back has dropped more than one biker’s jaw, but the

-

confidence born of long hours of tune-ups and oil changes assured me that my machine could easily handle this trip.

When the bike had warmed up, I rode over and picked up Greg Kolbo, a friend who owns a BMW 750/5. After getting gas and air for the tires, we wheeled down 10th Street and hit the freeway.

Cruising down 101, I set my automatic throttle control at 60 mph and watched other motorists trying to blink away last night’s cocktail party on their way to church. And as I rode on, the aggravations, frustrations and worries that college life brings began to fade with the miles. It is here that the beauty of motorcycle touring is found.

Bikers rely not on gas-guzzling monsters surrounded by tons of steel. Instead, the pleasure of touring is found in its simplicity. The appeal is more elemental - two wheels, a humming engine and a pair of handlebar grips provide the feel of the motorcycle, a sensation automobile drivers can never get from power steering and bucket seats.

Motorcyclists are also able to experience the immediate environment to its fullest. Rushing wind, the smell of trees and the openness of a ’cycle can make the rider almost euphoric. People in cars see the passing countryside as if it were just another television program. Framed by windows from the inside, the scenery is only slightly more realistic than images on a TV screen.

Leaving the brown hills of Santa Clara County, we climbed over Hecker Pass on Route 152 and stopped in the parking lot of the Mt. Madonna Inn. From there the shoreline is visible for miles in each direction, and Watsonville directly below with its golf courses dotted Tith would-be Jack Nicklaus’. A bank of fog sat about

10 miles off the coast under a cloudless sky. With speed comes excitement ( or terror, depen-

ding on your nature), and the ride down into placid Watsonville was the best kick of the day. Weaving and banking, we followed the twisting curves into the downtown area, which was quiet to say the least.

Turning south on Highway 1, we proceeded to our destination and wound up at Fisherman’s Wharf.

Heading into the tourist traps, I noticed the tur-tleneck and leisure suit crowd was out in full force, which made me look like a janitor in my jeans and down jacket.

Thankfully, the area hasn’t fallen entirely into the hands of free enterprise. The state park service has taken over the job of preserving much of Monterey’s history and most of the buildings have been nicely preserved. The only problem is that restrooms are about as easy to find as Spanish galleons.

Cannery Row is another main attraction, and the tide of commercialism has also swept in there in the form of a glut of small gift and jewelry shops. The area still retains much of its old-time flavor, though, and scenes from John Steinbeck’s works seem to materialize as you walk through the streets.

But the ever-present majesty of Monterey is the coastline. Cold blue swells crest into icy-green waves that break their backs on the jagged rocks, while flat-topped cypress trees line the cliffs. The clarity of the water is a scuba diver’s paradise, and they bobbed around while spectators watched from above.

c California also operates the state’s only toll road in Monterey on the 17-Mile Scenic Drive to the tune of $4 per vehicle.

An urge that hits me every time I go touring around Monterey or Big Sur is to keep going to Los Angeles. I rationalize that it will take me only six more hours to get there.

On the way back we took Highway Ito Highway 17. By this time the sun was beginning to set, sending a streak of orange across the ocean. It was also getting colder, and I began to appreciate my down jacket and leather gloves.

Riding over 17 is always a drag, and this trip was no exception. Arriving just in time to catch the rush-hour traffic, we chugged along at 25 mph most of the way. The ride was uneventful until a car lost control about 20 feet behind us, making a horrible grating sound of metal on metal as it slid along the rusty divider in the middle of the road.

In my rear view mirror, all I could see were flying sparks and tires smoking. The sight sent about a gallon of adrenalin pouring into my system because motor-cycles have a bad habit of tipping over from a nudge that most automobiles wouldn’t even feel. A twist of the wrist cranked the speedometer up to 70 in about two seconds and sent me whizzing out of danger.

When my heart had slowed somewhat, we were passing the Los Gatos exit and could see the lights of the valley ahead. The odometer had run up just over 200 miles for the day, and I’d only spent about $2.50 for gas. Although I was a little sore from four hours in the saddle, I still kept thinking how good a ride down to L.A. would have been.

But then, there’s always next Saturday.

WHAT’S HAPPENING Frank Zappa will

present a two-hour concert at 9 p.m. Saturday at Maples Pavilion on the Stanford campus as part of Big Game activities. The show will concentrate on Zappa’s new album "Leather."

� � � Bay Area favorite

Sammy Hager will headline a show at 8 p.m. Saturday at Winterland Arena, Post and Steiner streets in San Francisco, and Monday at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium on Center Street.

Firefall and Jessie Winchester will be in concert at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Berkeley Community Theater, Allston and Grove streets. Both acts play laid-back folk rock music.

� � �

Country rocker John Stewart will headline eight shows tonight through Sunday at the Boarding House, 960 Bush St., in San Francisco. Showtimes are

9 and 11:30 nightly. Becky Hobbs will open the show.

� � �

Tony Orlando will make his first public ap-pearance coming back from retirement Tuesday through next Sunday at the Circle Star Theater, 1717 Industrial Road in San Carlos. This will be a solo tour without Dawn. Showtimes vary throughout the week.

� � �

The fast-moving comedy "The Girl in the Freudian Slip" will have a champagne opening at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the King Dodo Playhouse, 12378 Sunnyvale-Saratoga Road. It will run in repertory with "Absence of a Cello" through Dec. 16.

� � �

Henry IV and Henry V are running in repertory at the Old Town Theater in Los Gatos through Nov. 27. Evening performances vary on Tuesday through Sunday with matinees on Saturday and Sunday.

� � �

"Julius Ceasar," "The Master Builder" and "The Circle" are running in tandem at the American Conservatory Theater, 450 Geary St. in San Francisco. Evening performances start at 8:30 with matinees on Wednesday and Saturday at 2:30 p.m. "A Christmas Carol" joins the program on Dec. 3.

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Dick Shawn appears in a hilarious one-man show

"The Second Greatet Entertainer in the Whole Wide World" at 8:30 p.m., Tuesday through Sunday,

at the Alcazar Theater, 650 Geary St., San Francisco The show runs through December 3.

� � �

"Wonderland Won," a fantasy for adults as well as children, will be per-formed at 10:30 a.m. today in the Studio Theater. The play is an adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s "Alice in Wonderland." The

’Galivanting Inspiration Group (GIG), a 13-member children’s theater com-pany, is producing the show.

Nov.17-Dec.4

Special Values SALE!

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Playwriting: SJSU student status changed to pro

By Brad Ryder Oladipo "Dipo" 1Calajaiye plans to graduate from

SJSU with an MA in playwriting. He’s off to a good start. His play, "Polygamy," which he also directed, was

one of the three one-act plays performed last month in the Showcase Theater.

Another of his one-acts, "The Father of Secrets," is being published by an independent firm, the Zikuwuma Communications Company in Palo Alto.

"He’s not charging me anything yet, not that I know of," Dipo said about the publisher. "I’ll sign a contract next week; then I’ll find out."

Dipo has a good background for writing plays: for one thing, he learned English in school.

Not unusual, except Dipo was born in Akure, Nigeria, and left there only six years ago to travel and get an education in the United States.

"The only university at that time that had a drama department was in Ibadan. But I didn’t want to go there because they only had the diploma level. You couldn’t get a degree in drama."

While working for the military government in Nigeria, Dipo got interested in the performing arts. He joined a band as a vocalist. They played rock and traditional African music, as well as what Dipo called "high-life," a very popular form of music in Nigeria.

But he wanted to learn theater, so with money he’d saved, along with money from his father, he came to the United States.

First he attended Greensboro College in North Carolina, but soon came to California where he received his BA in drama from UC-Berkeley.

While there, he performed in Tennessee Williams’ "Orpheus Descending," Wilder’s "The Skin of Our Teeth," and other plays. He did some directing but found he liked writing better.

In 1975, he won the Ina Coolbrith Poetry Writing contest, a university competition, and the poems were reproduced in the Berkeley Poetry Review.

"Every now and then I would get into poetry," Dipo said, but, he added, "I don’t really write poetry, as I’m more interested in writing plays."

Dipo thinks it may be easier to find jobs in Nigeria, mainly because they are just developing their resources there.

"With my qualifications, a BA, I would be eligible to teach in high school. I wouldn’t need a credential."

He said the teaching field is more open in Nigeria for those in the liberal arts majors, but said it probably wouldn’t last long.

"The resources are there. It’s not a poor country at all. But things will probably change in 10 or 15 years.

"In America, everything depends upon the individual, but there the situation’s not like that yet."

Oloclipo "Dipo" Kolaioiye

Dipo’s father died since he left, but his mother, four brothers and one sister are still living in Nigeria.

One of his brothers wanted to come over, but Dipo discouraged him.

"I thought he was a rascal," he said. " ’They’re not looking for rascals here,’ I told him. He wouldn’t be serious."

Speaking on the subject of his play, Dipo said polygamy is a big thing in Nigeria.

"Polygamy is an institution that developed, I think, because of economics. The man is probably a farmer who needs two wives to help him on the farm."

But he said the tradition is mainly for the old and uneducated.

"It’s fast dying out with the so-called ’educated.’ They look down on it. They don’t see the need for it."

One thing the Nigerians do see the need for is a common language. Since there are more than 250 languages and dialects in the country, English is becoming very widely used.

"One of my best friends, now living in San Jose, is from the eastern part of the country," Dipo said. "So when we get together we speak English. I don’t speak his language and he doesn’t speak mine.

"You can’t get through school without learning English, there’s just no way."

So Dipo didn’t have the language barrier when he came to the United States and now, with his background in Nigeria, and his education here, he hopes to pursue a teaching career, maybe in Nigeria.

But he mainly wants to continue writing and directing his own plays.

Hat Removed PeAstaiteittfij

Foe Combas* / Slate Dewed osid riLvtallat / aiid Religeta

Dcettese 141 Wan 292-8444 247 K. 3td, S.9.

PUT SOME EXCITIVIENT IN YOUR COLLEGE LIFE WITH

SPARTAN BASKETBALL ’78

The ratings are out.. .and in

case you haven’t heard,. .Spartan

Basketball is rated PG (the most

Popular Game). The fans have

received a G rating (you will be

Guaranteed) The Spartan offense

will be rated X (that’s Xciting). An

evening with Spartan basketball is rated R (that’s reasonably priced).

Ivan Guevara’s basketballes will host you and a friend at 12 home

games this winter for just $18 (save $6 per pair). This inexpensive, yet

entertaining, way to enjoy off -moments from studying is available to

all San Jose State students.

Headlining the home opponents will be Cal’ ornia, Pacific, Iowa

State and Long Beach State. All games will be played in the luminous

and spacious Independence Park Fieldhouse, located (East of campus)

on Jackson Ave. north of the McKee intersection.

Fill out the coupon below and return to the Athletic Ticket Office by FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18 for your student season tickets.

Name Phone

I wish to purchase pair (s) of student basketball season tickets for the discounted price of $18 (a sayings of $6)

MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO: SJSU BASKETBALL

ETURN PAYMENT I COUPON TO: Athletic Ticket Office

(Men’s Gym) by FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1131h.

By Carol Sarasoho Portrait of the Most Forgetful Student on Campus: He walked to school one day, briefcase in hand, bare feet padding along the cement. It wasn’t a particularly hot day; even if it had been he wouldn’t have worn shoes. You see his new shoes were hurting his feet, so he locked his apartment, dashed down to his car to retrieve his com-fortable tennies, then discovered he didn’t have his car key; it was inside his locked apartment.

He’s an avid sports buff and follows the football team wherever it’s playing�but the cost for his hobby far ex-ceeds the price of airplane tickets to various cities.

On recent trips he has: left his coat and camera on the plane, left his extra coat at the game, locked himself out of his motel room�staying up all night waiting for his roommate to return and when his roomie did come back he was too polite to wake him up and then on the return flight discovered he left his money in the motel and still had the motel key with him.

Don’t bother asking Rich Freedman, the Spartan Daily sports editor, if there’s a football game this weekend. He’ll tell you he can’t remember.

� � � Speaking of Sports: Has anyone been around here

long enough to remember that in the late 1950s the coach of the Spartan football team was a Mr. Marty Feldman?

Lynn Stiles, our present coach, may not be as funny as Feldman, but he’s not bad, reports the press who cover his post game conferences. One comment after the beating by Cal-Berkeley by a resounding 52-3: "Well, we have to look at the bright side. At least no cheerleaders were hurt."

The team has been plagued by an unprecedented number of injuries. In fact, everything was going so badly for Stiles that at one point he said," This is typical of the way things have been going lately. My father-in-law came to visit us and he broke his toe climbing the stairs."

A Personal message to Sour Grapes: You’re one of the sweetest people I know.

� � � One Irate reader wrote in to say: The sign in the

Office of Admission says ’There is nothing more im-portant than the waiting student.’�I can personally testify that is not true.."

Dear Irate: Few people know this but the sign is actually supposed to read: There is nothing more im-portant than student waiting.

� � �

In response to a growing number of inquiries I will now provide a clue as to what Tom O’Neill, P.E. prof, was doing in a Rome swimming pool in 1944. He was diving.

� � � Students In Larry Gerstoo’s Intro to Public Policy

class have dubbed it Intro to Contact Lens Wearing 196. Last week his lens was bothering him and since five of his

CI students wear lenses, naturally they began to discuss whether it is possible to insert a lens without the use of a nirror.

Larry boasted he could and he did, but since Gerston is being considered for retention this month I cenainly hope Dr. Roy Young, Poli. Sci. department chairman, loesn’t find out that Gerston is goofing around in class.

Shakespeare in Dec. Shakespeare’s "Mea-

sure for Measure" will come to SJSU at 8 p.m., December 3, in the University Theater.

"Measure for Measure" is a play about law coming into conflict with moral concepts. In fact moral law has not been enforced for some time and when the letter of law is newly enforced, the people feel unfairly treated.

In "Measure for Measure," Shakespeare shows us both sides of the issue: an unstructured society without moral structures and what occurs with the imposition of

unbending rules. The play continues to

play Dec. 3, 7, 8, 9 and 10. For tickets call the Box Office at 277-2777.

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NO1 ember 17, 1977. Page’ 7

CLASSIFIEDS ANNOUNCEMENTS

GRAND OPENING Christenson s Imports, 2 Anatolia fops for Me price of one, A specially import shop for men and women Casual and exotic clothing. iewetry and unusual artifacts from 7 different countries Price with the student’s budget in mind Come in and browse Open S days a week. Monday thru Friday. 10 to 6. 1186 Lincoln Avenue, San Jose 297 0424 Open weekends

STUDENT DENTAL PLAN Enroll now! Information available at the A S. off ,,, or phone 371 6811

FLY FOR FUN Low Club Prices Airplanes Rental Training 751 2614 CALL for Price List

JAPANESE TEAHOUSE is now open daily in the Kelley Park Friendship Gardens at 1300 Senter Rood, near Keyes. Conte and spend a relaxed morning or afternoon emoying a Japanese lunch. A quiet study area IS available. There are more than 100 oriental leas and 20 gourmet coffees from which to choose The TOEAHOUSE Facilities which include a seating capacity for more than 700 are available for group meetings at no charge. The Kelley Park Gardens and Teahouse will make a gorgeous setting for a wedding and reception Catering and Wed ding Photography are available at low student rates. Bride keeps the Wedding Negatives and all color prints For complete details, please call 295-2708 or 998.9699.

FOR FREE Real Estate Consultation, contact Farzacl Emami and Robert Taylor. ST F Enterprises 1150South Bascom, Suite IS. Phone 288 5515 or629 7671.

WRITE A RESUME NOW, A workbook designed for students, housewives and changers. 56415 postpaid. CB Functional Resumes. 1414 Moravalle Ave., Los Altos 94022.

ASPEN! Those people who are scheduled on the charter flight to Aspen with the SJSU SKI CLUB should attend tonights meeting at 7.30 pm in Engineering 132 Room signups. luggage and departure details Will be given The Flea Market will be held Sun Nov 20, so bring your junk to the SKI CLUB table this week. Signups are still being taken for the Northstar Sugarbowl trip Dec. 71. More info call Joe or Bob at 260 2529. Wade at 293 1521 or Steve at 76,-0126. GO FOR IT!

MEChA Say Jose State University MEChA would like to thank you for attending our first meeting this academic year 1977 lB. We also want to take this op. portunity to extend a warm welcome and abrazo to all LA RAZA GENIE. MEChA has prepared sorne activities and programs for this year which will be announced in the Spartaguide. in which we hope that you will participate in. If you are interested in any of the activities or have new ideas. accept this as a personal in vitation to attend the next MEChA meeting. MEChA meets every Monday at 4 p.m. in the Guadalupe Room of the Student Union. Into, call 1408)251 3894.

Hey 08 you lovely "Plant Mamas" and "Plant Papas" consider yourselves very fortunate to be reading these words. Because I am going to introduce you to a "health food" which Is going to bring happiness, happiness 10 611 your "little green children." They will thank you forever by throwing out their arms till you Will have to trim them back to keep them from taking over your "Pad " This "health food" is called Marsh’s VF II. It’s the plant food everyone Is talking about and no wonder!! Some Hydroponic experts perfected this "Magic juice" for all those poor plants trying to survive under human condition. in houses and apartments. Poor things they need all the help they can gel. If you have a Creeping Charley your’e going to be calling him your "Galloping Chuck" after a few drinks of the magic "VF II" potent And you’d better boll down your door If you want to hang onto your Wandering Jew!! Your "little green children" are going to get very "high" on this stuff . They will be so healthy in so short a time you’ll find a whole new ex c dement in "Plant Party Shoed." "VF 11" has been known to have reincarnation powers, so try it quickly on some Of those plants you think are deceased you’ll be shouting HALLELUJAH! as you watch them come back to Ole. Our motto Is. DON’T LET YOUR PLANTS GO TO H. .HEAVEN!! USE "MARSH’S VF WI!! You can purchase this great plant food at: Alpha Beta, Ralph’s, Frys, Genic°, Luckys, Payless. Longs, Brentwood, Sane On, Orchard Supply. For locations closest to y041, call 356.4166.

Let ACRE help you with your research design. instrument development, data analysis and data interpretation. Expert assistance on and hourly basis MC and Bola accepted 41$ 328 7175

SKYDIVE Complete 1st Jump Course. Expert Instructions $35 Phone 731 3$1111

PSI., Graduate School of Professional Psychology Ap plications are currently being accepted for our PhD program in Clinical Counseling Psychology Exiblential home nistic emphasis Slate approved for professional license. Write for free brochure, current catalogue II 00 Dr George Muench, director Or Peter

Koestenbaurn. dean PSI. 580 College Avenue. Palo Alto. CA 94306

AUTOMOBILE REFERRAL SERVICE Let us help you sell or find an auto, van, wagon or light truck Sellers, send us a complete description of your vehicle Include up to ten at tributes or accesoroes plus your name, address, and phone number Our rates will beat any other form of advertising Buyers. you describe the vehicle you seek, we lond many that match a or send you a complete list of an vehicles for sale Write tous for details. AUTO MASON, P0 BOX 11724, Palo Alto. CA 94306 or phone 14151 377 0320

THE SKI CLUB is having its annual Ice Adventure on Wed Nov 16 at 7 00 pm at the Eastridge Ice Arena. (Don’t worry, no one else knows how either) Just come prepared to have a good time The SKI CLUB is selling items a the SJ Flea Market on Sun Nov 70, you can bring donated tunk to the table the week of the 14th 18th. Signups for the Dec 1 4 trip to Nor Mostar and Sugar bowl are being taken now also. Look forward to snow. Aspen and good tomes More into, call 15.00 or Joe at 768 7529, Wade at 793 1521. Steve at 2600176. GO FOR IT,

AUTOMOTIVE

VW PORSCHE SERVICE All work guaranteed Tune ups from $21 inducing parts. Also instruction in tuning and appraisal service for prospective buyers Free house calls in central S J Phone Dan 356 474 eves.

WHEELS FOR SALE? Incredible offer to SJSU students Photo add for only 57.93 runs until you sell (max I wks) Call AUTO VIEW "The Vehicle Shopping Guide." For details call 247 7469

1967 PONTIAC Interior and VS engine are in good condition. Most sell soon. $375 or best offer. 244 3353 eves.

’69 TOYOTA CORONA Or ig owner Only 60.000 mi good condition S903 or offer 374 3753 eves and wknds.

VW Baja Bug 1966. excellent running condition Sunroof. $1 100. Call Andrea 796 0064

FOR SALE

SHREDDED FOAM rubber 50 cents per lb. No limit to a Customer 293 7954.

COUNTRY QUILTS, hone made, various colors, room accents. To KING SIZE, non allergic, cotton With polyester filling 2950761 or 195 2355

WATERBEDS any size, complete with mattress, heater, loner, frame and pedestal. only 5119 to SJSU students with this ad Located 5 minutes from cam pus Npah’s Ark Waterbeds. 06 Keyes St. San Jose 289 8451

STUDENTS AND SENIOR CITIZENS. 10 percent discount on recycled clothes, dishes. household items, bOoks, baskets. collectibles Good Stuff! Angle’s Attic. 555 S Second St. San Jose Hrs 9 30 to 4 30, Mon Sat

72 " � 10 SPEED SILVEREAGLE Excellent rond $90 146 1696

BOOKS AND LEVI’S SALE. Hard cover .69 Levi’s 1.95. hand made frame 4.98 ENERGY PYRAMID KIT cont. 21k Met . gold pendant, and pyramid compass and booklet all for 995 only. We take items on con signment II am to 5 pm or aPpt 279 2735. THRIFT, CRAFT AND RECYCLE 194 W Santa Clara St . San Jose

DEAR STUDENTS Your insurance man on the campus can take care of all your insurance needs AUTO. HOME, FIRE RENTERS., LIFE AND HEALTH If you are not already With State Farm, call for an appointment at my office or home and we’ll set up a time convenient tor you on campus, your home or my office Let’s get together and give you better coverage for less money. CALL MORY STAR. 253 31/7 or 446 1649

HELP WANTED

NEED 14 PEOPLE to demonstrate Shaklee Products "They Sell Themselves ’ Earn 0465 wk working one hour a day. Call Mac 01266 1453 btwn 6 7 p m

OVERSEAS JOBS. summer year round Europe. S America, Australoa, Asia,etc All fields. MOO S1.700 monthly Expenses paid sight seeing Freeinlo write International Job Center. Dept 511, Box 4490. Berkeley, CA 94704

TELSPHONE ADVERTISING SURVEY Work hours 59 p m Pleasant voice. ableto coon mumc ate cheerfully T condor I meat advertising telephone survey Starting salary. 53 50 hr Phone 798 4900 Ad vertising Mgr

EARN EXTRA INCOME IN YOUR SPARE TIME TRAINING PROVIDED Phone 266 MI

COLLEGE STUDENTS needing over $300 per week for part time wogk Flxible hours Must be neat, have car and phone Cal Fuller Brush Co 243 1121 for inter yiew appointment

DRIVER, part time. 53 25,hr Neat appearance. husky, to work in warehouse office, able to lift 50 lb boxes Work 3105 days. *k

after school. 3 4 hrs ern personnel

ACCOUNT ING oAuchtori Full time

Position open for an individual

maiormg in accounting The

position begins hourly but will

be management within one

year Hours II pm 7 am

Contact Personel ilOSI 988 1500

Marriott Hotel, 7700 64,sslon

College awl . Santa Clara. CA 95054 an Equal Opportunity Employer M F

CANvAsSOPs salary Plus cornorussion or straight corn

mission Will train Home

xpanders. Office Hrs 9016917

or if no answer 3693156

NEED on call assistance for

Attorney’s office near campus

Guarantee 15 plus hours per

week Type 50 wpm $300 per

hour Call Belinda at 294 9323

WAITRESS WANTED Lunch hours, and or Fri and Sat evenings Apply at DeMarco’s Pizza or call 794 1737 Wages tips and bonus

MATURE STUDENT TO assist on leaching rented to I reading approx 1520 hrs per week Must be available Mon thru Fri between 2pm and 7pm ZAJsi be excellent reader Will train 5250 he Call Mrs Spencer 257 1809.

FLEXIBLE HOURS GOOD PAY Need Nurses’ aides ord 141.50,hr. LVN’s. S.5.67/hr., and RN’s. 57 ’hr Some experience required Call for appt. New Horizons Nurses’ Registry, 2775 Park Ave S.C. 287 1749.

SALES AMBITIOUS, WEEKENDS/EVENINGS, $100 BASE 75 hrs per week Green Thumb Lawn Service, 245 4920

NEED 16 people to demonstrate Shaklee products Each S165 wk working the day Cali Val 629 8195 6 1 p m

PROCESS SERVERS 121 San Jose area, and nearby cities. Hours SMOd for students, but fringe benefits non existant i will use ANYONE willing to work 321 1839, afternoon.

MODELS Men, women, children, all ages, all sozes. No exp. nec for fashion and commercials. No nudes. Not a school. 293.8303.

Earn some extra money nowt Exc. X mos season to make appts for portrait studio No exp. necessary Outgoing per sonality. Must be self motivated Flex Ms Call Natural Color Portraits 279 7/35. Clearance Sale Thrift Zratt and Recycle 191W Santa Clara St

Part time only work near campus $3 50.’hr Will fit your schedule Call 733 6262 between II and

GHOSTWRITER NEEDED for marketing Good Bucks Call 0010251

INTERESTED IN an exciting career in TRAVEL? Part time work study position open to SJSU student Flexible hours Call SJSU work study dept 177 2116

EULIPIA CAFE needs waitresses Prefer experience. Call 2936610 374 S 1st. next door to Camera One Theater.

COCKTAIL WAITRESSES needed at Chief -Petty Officer’s Club. Moll et Field E xperience required. Good takes for hard worker 2 3 nights per week. Call Nancy 966 5181

LOST & FOUND LOST White Samoy Husky 8 mos

SJS area REWARD Call 793 7051.293 40140 354 6749.

There’s a REWARD if you found a tan Day Al A Glance aP pointment book on Morris Dailey last week Please call Steve at 267 1708 or 264 5504

HOUSING ROOM FOR RENT, $100, walking

distance to SJSU, houSe and garden to share with small family Vegetarians preferred 2098070

FULL SECURITY BUILDING. Extremely large two bedroom and two bath. w.’w carpeting, AEK BBC). courtyard. recroorn, p001, parking, two blocks from campus. $210 and up. Utilities paid Chuck 998 4149 leave message Now and next semester

Porn studio apart 5145iono 1 Wks from campus Call 733 6261 between

115pm

Female to share 2 bdrM house near Captol Cop and Snell Ave 0140 incl utilities Non smoker! Phone 277 34300r 226 /353

MALE STUDENT, single room w kitchen privileges S90/mo 115 S 14th St

2 813RM turn apt for rent new, clean. S710 mo i 1st and last plus $130 dep in advance) So Ilth SI.. Students only. No children or pets. Avail 1711 Call manager, 769 0972

Quiet male senior or grad student Pvt em Kot prov 570,month 643 South Sixth St

STUDIO APT Newly decorated Good lighting No pets First and last months rent Utilities paid Parking. Adults only Near campus Call 2942471 after 6 Pm

PERSONALS DO YOUR OWN legal forms

Professional typong and litong Call al ter 7 p on 353 3740.

Special Class in FOOT REFLEXOLOGY

The theraputic foot massage Friday evening Non II. 19. Saturday morning Nov 12.0 till abOut I. You will learn, practice and receive a complete Ref le�Ology treatment for relieving tension and improving circulatiOn You will also learn Walt to improve your thinking for better health, more hap pines. and more love Special price $10. place 1540 Los Padres Blvd. In Santa Clara (upstairs), Instructor Holly Lynn

THE SJSU GAY STUDENVUNION Meets every Thurs ate p.m. in the Almaden Room of the Student Union. G S U is an informal club striving to meet the needs of the gay community oncampus and off You will find that our meetings are always friendly and informative Meetings are half siructured, half informal, and are attended by about 50 people Be MO

whole self attend! II 10 sing along in Guadalupe Rm. 11,17 Disco Dance. 17,1 Political Rap Group. 12 ’8 Pot Luck off campus, 17 15 Political Speaker, 17 27 Dance. Call 398 GAYS for info

VOLUNTEERS needed to work with disturbed children. Peninsula Children’s Center 494 1100.

VOLUNTEERS needed: Work one one to one basis with an emotionally disturbed child aged 20 Learn Behavior Modification techniques, gain valuable experience Mornings 9 I.or afternoons 12 30 4.30. Call Zonta Children’s Center. 295 35131

DISCOVER A fresh new you. With Shaklee products.. Call "Bob" for your complimentary beauty demonstration No obligation 266 1453 between 6 7 pm

DEBONAIR DATING SERVICE Fast, personal and selective Men and women 01 all ages are welcome. Women for the first 30 days will be allowed in free with this ad. Unlimited in in troductions 259 /254.

TRANSFERRING to Cal State Northridge? If you know anyone who Is planning to transfer to Cal State at Northridge, or moving to the general vicinity, please give me a call. 406 378 1574. Interested in getting acquainted and possibly sharing an apartment.

1079 LBS. in One month drinking milkshakes; no drugs. excercises. Totally natural Money Back Guarantee $75 plus tax. month supply. Call 267 3528 2-6 prn.

ALOE .2/ERA Natural Skin Care Products approz. 35 Items to aid your natural beauty. For Information call 743 6060.

Free pregnancy testing. Low cost confidential birth control see vices Abortion and supportive counseling. Call Pregnancy Coons...nation Center 253 2773

CHICKEN. Thanks for being you the I Samaritan ever! Also, this little sis’ sends a bit of heart to the gentlemen of Sigma Nu!

Happy Birthday Judy R. Your a beautiful Lady. G.

Hey to all you Allen Hall virgins. Thank for a hole lotto nuthin! Keep it up ace! Allen controls dormland!

567 888069 1 know I was there!! I was throwing eggs AT YOU!! (with short arms you have to get close) 0302

YOU R FICKLE Here’s your personal. Valley People aren’t so bad, are they? In !roe/I.:tom, 3.

SERVICES

TYPING I CASSETTE TRANSCRIPTION Student rates, 75 cents page and up Term papers resumes theses senior projects reports letters etc All work guaranteed IBM Correcting Selectrics. Business accounts soloc tied NORTH VALLEY SECRETARIAL SERVICE. 103 CHARCOT AVE

� SUITE 102, ORCHARD BUSINESS PARK, SAN JOSE 263 4525 KITTY CARTER

INTELLIGENT TYPING grammar, form 9 a 9 p Phone Margie Reeves, 9ins 1765

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Page 8, November 17, 1977

Toddler discovers way to avoid parking ban

Al Dongerbeld

Little Ua Tai hasn’t worried about the parking ban one bit since it went into effect Monday. Here, he porks his skateboard at the corner of 7th and San Carlos streets where a traffic ticket seems unlikely.

Band to be revived after 3-year absence

By Isabella Micboa A marching band is in store for

SJSU beginning next fall, according to A.S. President Steve Wright.

Wright was on the committee that voted to allot approximately $11,000 in Instructionally Related Activities funding toward the creation of a marching band.

The upkeep of a marching hand is a huge operation, costing anywhere from $25,000 to $100,000, said Dr. Robert Cowden, Music Department chairman.

Marching band expenditures are used for personnel, operation costs, uniforms, instruments, music and travel needs, Cowden said.

Thus far the band has been alloted funds only for six months’ wages for a part-time director and assistant director, but since old instruments and uniforms are still available, the band will be able to perform.

The band’s continued existence will depend on the financial support it receives from the student body and alumni, Cowden said.

SJSU, which has not had a band for the last three years, and had only a partial band in 1973 and 1974, was once one of the top dozen bands in

the country, Cowden said. The 120-piece all-brass and

percussion marching band lost its A.S. funding in 1969, Cowden recalled. The following year it disbanded.

The mood changed in the late ’60s. "Traditions such as fraternities and sororities and collegiate athletics fell by the wayside," Cowden explained.

Ruth Smith, the first female student in the old band, believes funds were cut because students looked down upon anything that reminded them of the military and war. Students tended to be opposed to disciplined marching uniformed band members, added Smith, who plans to rejoin the new band.

Ruth’s husband, Eugene Smith, a music graduate student and head of the music council, agreed. The former band’s tuba player said student demand was aimed at funding more relevant programs to society.

But now SJSU has a chance to recapture a top title in the country, and recapture students’ fading school spirit, because the mood is changing back, Cowden said. The students now want a band.

Apart from it being a school pride booster, it is for all the students and the community, Cowden said.

Cowden estimates that 80 percent of band members usually are non-music majors who just love being in a band, and enjoy the comradeship it offers.

A band is the university’s image, Cowden said. It contributes winning support to the athletes and makes them look good.

It saves them from em-barrassment, Cowden added. If the other school has a super marching band, and we have no band, it makes us "feel like two cents," he chuckled.

A marching band could increase enrollment, Cowden said, because many high school students have expressed their desire to attend SJSU if one exists.

Though organizing a marching band is very expensive and requires hard work, skill, dedication and intelligence from students and directors, Cowden and former band members Eugene and Ruth Smith believe it’s worth it.

"It’s for school spirit and we can’t have too much of that," Cowden said with a smile.

Employees’ fund invests in South Africa (Continued from Page 1)

"I think the over-whelming reaction of our members would be to disengage ourselves from multinational corporations in South Africa or any other

corrupt country. "The problem is that

given the web of in-ternational corporations, how do you find a company that isn’t invested in South Africa or some other such

country?" A proposal being

considered by the state legislature could provide an answer, according to the consultant to the Select Committee on Investment

Priorities and Objectives. Pre-print Senate Bill 9

would create a task force to oversee the investments of public money in companies that are socially discriminatory or en,

vironmentally harmfil, Tom Leatherwood said.

If passed into the law, the task force would obtain information about cor-porate stockholder voting issues and recommend a

Administrator menaced with knife A San Francisco State University vice

president escaped without harm Tuesday morning from a knife-wielding assailant who attacked her in a women’s restroom.

Dr. Konnilyn Feig, 38, was leaving the restroom near her fifth-floor office in the Administration Building about 7:20 a.m. when a man with a pocket knife in his left hand leapt from a stall and tried to grab her.

Feig got away and ran down the hall, closely pursued by the man, who shouted, "I’m gonna get you, I’m gonna get you..."

She ducked back into her office, locked the door and called campus police. She said the man screamed and kicked at the door, but left before police arrived about three minutes later.

The attacker was described as

Caucasian, about 5-foot-9, near 30 years of age, with thinning dark hair, long sideburns and a pockmarked face, according to University Police Inspector Bill Noonan.

Ironically, Feig was working on a report on ways to improve campus safety just before the incident. SFSU has experienced an in-crease in crime in recent months, including the rape-murder of coed Jenny Low Chang in the campus library in September.

Civil rights debated in Bakke case (Continued from Page 1)

Bakke, a white engineer twice denied admission at Davis, took legal action and the California Supreme Court ruled he was a victim of discrimination and invalidated minority admissions programs. That decision was based on the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which says no state should deny a person equal protection under the law.

The UC brief argues the equal protection

clause leaves state schools "free to adopt race-conscious admissions policies affording minorities more nearly equal ac-cess...bringing an increased measure of racial justice to a society still marred by the consequence of racial injustice.

"To read Title VI as taking away this freedom...and thus to deprive minorities...would not only stand the Civil Rights Act on its head, it would turn a charter

San Jose Community News loses $4,000

of liberty into an instrument of exclusion from opportunities central to American life."

Bakke’s attorney, Reynold Colvin, in his brief, said both the 14th Amendment and Title VI support the argument that Bakke was the victim of discrimination because he had qualified for admission at Davis.

Bakke’s lawsuit says he was denied admission solely because he is white.

Council freezes newspaper funds A.S. funds for the San

Jose Community News were frozen last week by a 10-1 vote of the A.S. Council.

The newspaper, which was budgeted $4,000 for this school year, folded this summer and hasn’t put out

a newspaper since. Four months of rent, totaling ;128, has been paid for the office at 255 E. William St., however.

"I don’t think anybody’s using the space," said A.S. Executive Assistant Kim

Baskett, a former em-ployee of the newspaper. "Probably someone comes in once in a while and keeps up with the mail."

Another group is now publishing under the San Jose Community News name, she said, but they

are not using the William Street facilities.

According to A.S. Business Administrator Jean Lenart, a student named Cruz Mendoza requisitioned the funds for payment of rent and publishing.

Male inmates protest searches by females SANTA CRUZ (AP) � Equal treatment for women is

going too far when females take part in "skin searches" of male prisoners, according to inmates of the Santa Cruz County Jail.

Twenty-three prisoners and two sheriff’s deputies signed a letter of protest presented Tuesday to the county Board of Supervisors, which is looking into the complaint.

"I was shocked to experience this," said the letter written by Tim McKenna, 19, jailed on charges of possessing stolen property.

He said on two occasions women jailers were present when he was forced to strip nude for a thorough search of body openings.

"It is lowering moral decency, sir, just like the law says when it raids or closes down nude bars and dirty magazines and movie houses," McKenna complained.

"I was even more shocked to find that a male jailer cannot even be in the near vicinity when a female inmate is being searched. I feel this to be discrimination.

SROPC

"Thursday Live"

DUCKS ON A POND

Student Union Amphitheatre

Goli Bac San Nigl Art Galt

Now what should simply be, sir: Women handle women and the men handle men in all institutions. Decency over discrimination."

Sheriff Al Noren said he has no choice in the matter because affirmative action rulings bar discrimination in hiring guards and assigning them to duties.

Lenart is attempting to contact Mendoza to inform him of the Council action.

Lenart said the A.S has been funding thc newspaper, formerlj called Sedition, for "at least three or four years."

specific proxy vote by the state, said Leatherwood, a former SJSU political science instructor.

In such issues as South African investment, the state and other corporate stockholders could use their vote to oppose in-vestments.

The task force could also recommend a gradual or an immediate selling of stock in the company, Leatherwood said.

Petersen said PER. has previously used proxj votes to oppose motions for further studies about South African investments and to squelch calls for the cor-poration to either divest holdings or limit futun expansion.

"Now we will take a harder look" at any proxj vote requests for the corporations to conduct studies on South African investments, Petersen said.

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Page 2, November 17, 1977

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4.:

Gold Rush is alive By Linda Zavoral

The year 1848 is only a two-and-one-half hour drive from San Jose.

In the foothills east of Stockton lies the southern end of the Mother Lode, the 120-mile-long string of quartz veins commonly known as gold country.

To get there, take Highway 680 to 580 the Stockton turnoff) to 205 to 120, past Tracy and through Manteca, Escalon and Oakdale..

Jamestown is the southernmost mining town, nicknamed the "Gateway of the Mother Lode."

The main street is small and lined with antique shops. Most are very commercial, but browsing through the Emporium Antique Store is alone worth a stop in Jamestown.

The Emporium is a large, musty, cluttered store filled with furniture rather than the trinkets which other shops in the area stock.

The selection features ornate heaters, stoves and basins as well as a loft filled with chairs and buggies.

Two of the town’s oldest buildings have been restored: Butterfield Building, now a hardware store, which was built in 1850, and the Marengo Building, built in 1854.

From Jamestown follow Highway 49 through Sonora to Columbia, the "Gem of the Southern Mines."

Although it is one of the more commercial towns, Columbia, a state

(Continued on page 15)

SATURDAY TIMES STAFF

Editor I inda Zavoral Advertising Manager Chris Gray Assistant Editor Rick Cotta Layout Editor Mark Geyer Art Director Marc J. Shur Retail Ad Manager Debbie Brown National Ad Manager Pete Brown Business Manager Alan Cat-main Promotion Toni Coshow Cartoonists Larry Baumgardner,

Joan Cotta Editorial Staff. . .Jan Greben, Kirk Heinrichs, Cinde Chorness, Corky Dick, Brad Ryder, Isabella Michon, John Weiland, Barbara Cockerham, H. Kim Lew, Jim Hooker. Advertising Staff. . .Art Adjemian, Peggy Bailey, Don Cresswell, Dan Dannenfelser, Bob Fong, Cheryl Lee Kimbo, Joannie Napala, Frank Rosenhoover, Henry Sakaida, Ron Starnes, Anne Teng. Photography Staff. . .Richard Johns, Ed Souza, Scott Allen, Sydney Brink, Al Dangerfield, Beth Geordinier, Glenn Martin, Marilyn Odello, Dan Schofield.

’November 17, 1977, Page .3

Photos By

Ed Souza

At Historical Park

San Jose recreates ’roots’ By Rick Cotta

As Alex Haley has pointed out, each of us has individual roots. But few people ever take time out to think about the roots of the city in which they live.

San Jose has its own roots, as you will discover if you visit historic San Jose, located at the south end of Kelley Park, near the intersection of Senter and Keyes roads.

Situated on 16 acres are some of the homes, businesses and landmarks that made up the San Jose of yesterday. Some of the structures have been "imported" from outlying parts of the Santa Clara Valley, but all the buildings are typical of architectural styles that characterized the period known as Victorian.

O’Brien’s Candy Store shares a building with the re-created Pacific Hotel at the park. The original O’Brien’s was founded by Maurice O’Brien in 1868 in the doorway of the Pacific Hotel. The shop that now sits next to the Pacific Hotel was originally situated at 30S. First St.

The candy store still sells candy and ice cream at the historic park. Ice cream comes in vanilla, chocolate and strawberry, and is 35 cents for one scoop, 50 cents for a double scoop and 70 cents for a triple scoop. Sundaes and soda water, as well as other refresh-ments, are also available at the new O’Brien’s.

The Pacific Hotel was a grand old building that originally stood on South Market Street, near the intersection of Santa Clara Street.

The first floor of the rebuilt structure now houses a museum of artifacts from San Jose and the period at the turn of the century. Among the many items on display in the museum are a vintage Harley-Davidson motorcycle, Costanoan Indian artifacts and belongings of early valley residents.

The Pacific Hotel also houses an art gallery. Currently being shown is a work titled "Land for Sale" by Richard Conrat. Conrat examines the value placed on land in many poignant photographs.

Up the walk from the Pacific Hotel

is the re-created San Jose branch of the Bank of Italy.

San Jose native Amadeo P. Giannini founded the Bank of Italy in San Francisco in 1904 to serve that city’s Italian community. In 1909 he opened his first branch office at Santa Clara and Lightson streets in San Jose.

From there, the Bank of Italy grew into the first successful branch banking business in the United States, and by 1930 was known nationally as the Bank of America.

San Jose’s roots are bared in other places throughout historic San Jose. Outside the Bank of Italy stands a replica of the electric tower which once jutted over 230 feet into the sky at the intersection of Santa Clara and Market Streets. The original tower was sup-posed to turn night into day.

When the switch was thrown on the original tower, built in the 1800s, it lit up a large portion of old downtown San Jose, casting an eerie glow through the city. The tower was eventually damaged in a wind storm and collapsed in December 1908.

Across the square is a replica of Dashaway Stables, originally sited at 130 S. Second St. The stable was a satellite of the Lick Livery and Hack Company, and rented out buggies, surreys and other vehicles for tours to Mt. Hamilton and back.

Other buildings include the old Umbarger House, Chiechi House and the offices of Dr. H.H. Warburton.

The Umbarger House was built in the 1980s by David Umbarger, and is typical of the well-made, ornate Vic-torian houses occupied by well-to-do San Joseans of the time. The house was moved from its original site at 2662 S. First St. to the park.

The Chiechi House was moved from its original plot at 820 Northrup Ave. ( a few blocks east of Valley Medical Center) to the museum in 1973. It is typical of the ranch-style houses that dotted valley orchards when agriculture was king.

Warburton’s office was moved from its original location at Benton and Main streets in Santa Clara. H.H.

(Continued on page 10(

III

DASHAWAY II STABLE

Dashoway Stables, once one of the i,usiest livery stables in Son Jose, stand quietly today in a corner of Historic Son Jose A now -rusted engine (below left) has also found easier days at the park. Near the Facific Hotel is re-created the electric tower (below right) that once stood at the intersection of Santa Clara and Market Streets.

Page 4, November 17, 1977

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Backpacking: leave urban life behind

By Jan Greben Are those weekends when you

desire to escape San Jose’s urban sprawl becoming more frequent?

Backpacking, or "a return to nature" as many of its aficionados call it, could be the answer, at least when the weather warms a bit.

This hardy hobby involves hikes traversing mountainous areas for several days with their complete trip gear resting in the pack they carry on their backs. Hence the name.

Experienced backpackers say there’s nothing like a few carefree days in the mountains to relieve the city blahs.

"I need to get away three or four times a year," said former SJSU student Guy Matthews, who now works at a backpacking store. "There’s an unbelievable feeling of being back at your primitive roots when you’re, say, up in the Sierras with just a creek and a few chipmunks to keep you company."

"There’s no ’IV or other garbage to bother you," agreed John Kodin, religious studies major. "You’re able to totally concentrate on more important aspects of life for long amounts of time."

Most backpackers travel in groups of two to four people, though many experienced hikers go it alone. While some venerable hikers relish staying in the mountains for periods of a month or more, most trips range from four to seven days.

A typical day in Yosemite, for example would start with breakfast at dawn. It’s difficult to sleep once light appears.

On the trail that day, one can ex-pect some level hiking, but should also be ready to endure tortuous � ’swit-chbacks," which occur when a trail winds up the side of a peak. Swit-chbacks sometimes ascend for over 1,000 feet.

Once the hiker reaches the summit of the peak, however, marks "the true joy of backpacking � a real catharsis," according to Matthews.

"You kill yourself climbing up some mountains with a pack that can weigh 60 pounds," he said. "Then, abruptly, you reach the summit and can see in all directions the area below you. There is no smog and no people; just a beautiful valley to observe."

After a lunch of quickly digestible energy food like gorp, a mixture of raisins, nuts and M x M candies, the hiker will normally cover three or four more miles before stoping to set up camp.

Making a campsite usually takes an hour; included is the setting up of the tent, the clearing away of brush so a fire can be built, and assorted other chores.

Until dinner, one can occupy himself with whidever seems in-tereesting at that particular site.

After a dinner of freeze-dried food (it’s lightweight), conversation around the campfire is a pleasant way to end a long day.

Once 8 p.m. or so arrives, as most backpackes will attest, not much in-centiye is needed to crawl into the down sleeping bag and let the highly visible stars lull them to sleep.

"No doubt you sleep better up there," Kodin said. "It’s such a return to basics. You set up camp, cook din-ner, talk a whle and then, with no city problems staring you in the face, just fall right off with the smell of woods very evident."

The next morning, unless you decide to make it a layover day, the routine begins all over.

Before, however, you drop your books and high-tail it to the mountains, be reminded that backpacking season won’t start until April when the weather mellows.

Additionally, there is much equipment needed, and, as Matthews warned, "Don’t ever go up by yourself until you are completely confident and knowledgeable about backpacking. Otherwise, it’s too dangerous."

Clothing for backpacing requires, minimally, a strong pair of jeans, some warm shirts, a down jacket and woolen hiking socks.

Boots may be the most important piece of equipment. An ill-fitting pair can ruin a trip by causing painful blisters.

Be sure to walk long distances several days before the trip not only to wear in the boots but also to build your own endurance up.

Numerous other pieces of equip-ment, ranging from the sleeping bag and backpack to the miniature stove,

(Continued on page 10)

Observatory path: a daredevil’s delight

By Cinde Chorness For $8.95 you can be strapped into

the Tidal Wave roller coaster at Marriott’s Great America and have the thrill of making it to the top without falling out of your seat, or for about the same price you can strap yourself into your car and have the thrill of reaching the top of Mt. Hamilton without sliding off the road.

You may have survived the Tidal Wave, but have you braved Mt. Hamilton?

All you need to attempt the climb is the spirit a adventure and a full tank of gas.

Mt. Hamilton Road, which leads you up the Lick Observatory, is only 18 miles long, but it takes about 45 minutes to an hour to reach the top of the mountain.

The road is not for the queasy-stomach set. There are hairpin turns and a sheer drop to the right of the road. One word of advice: if you want to sightsee, let someone else do the driving. The winding road demands full attention from the driver.

But the fall colors of the trees lining the road and the spectacular view of the Santa Clara Valley make the trip worthwhile. So pack your lunch and Dramamine and make a day of it.’

To get to Mt. Hamilton Road, take the Alum Rock exit from Highway 280 and proceed on Alum Rock Avenue toward the foothills for about four miles until you come to Mt. Hamilton Road.

Turn right on Mt. Hamilton Road. A sign will direct you to the Lick Ob-servatory.

About a third of the way up the mountain the winding road will lead you into Hall’s Valley, a good place to stop for a picnic lunch.

From Hall’s Valley the road gets worse. But don’t get discouraged�just proceed with caution.

When you reach the top of Mt. Hamilton, signs will point you to the Observing Station. You can visit the main building, where the 36 and 12-inch

L

55

refracting telescopes are located, and the visitor’s gallery of the 120-inch telescope.

The main building, open from Ito 5 p.m. daily, also has a photographic exhibit and meteorite exhibit. An at-tendant shows visitors the 36-inch telescope and gives a short talk on the history of the observatory 15 minutes before and after the hour from 1:15 to 4:45 p.m.

The 36-inch telescope is housed in a round, redwood-paneled room. The floor of the room is moved up and down by four hydraulic lifts to position the 5-ton telescope.

Beneath the floor at the base of the telescope is the crypt of James Lick, who in the 1870s set up a trust fund to finance the observatory.

Lick, a San Francisco millionaire, never visited Mt. Hamilton when he was alive, and he died 12 years before its completion in 1888.

The observatory’s facilities are exactly as they were in 1888 except for the addition of electricity and the 120+inch reflector, built in 1959.

Materials for the observatory were brought up the mountain by horse-drawn wagons and mule teams�a two-day trip from San Jose.

The main building includes a gift shop where booklets, photographs and posters are available.

The visitors’ gallery of the 120-inch Shane telescope is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.

The telescope can be observed through a glass-enclosed wall while a recording in both English and Spanish explains the history of the telescope.

The telescope was the second largest in the United States at the time it was built. It was named after C. Donald Shane, a former director of the observatory.

The observatory’s telescopes are open to the public Friday evenings during the summer, the best time for observing.

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Night life action hot

Rock clubs pack them in By Corky Dick

The Santa Clara Valley offers a wide selection of nightclubs to whet almost anyone’s taste. One can find any type of music to listen or dance to on a Saturday night.

The Odyssey Room at 799 E. El Camino Real in Sunnyvale is the oldest rock’n’roll club in Santa Clara County. It has been open for eight and one-half years and presents live entertainment seven nights per week, 365 days per year.

"We’re predominantly a singles club," owner Gary Schmidt said. "This is a boy-meets-girl dance club with a good mixture on most nights. People come to meet other people more than to listen to the music."

The Odyssey Room books primarily top 40 commercial rock’n’roll bands. Every Sunday the month’s featured band performs. On Tuesday through Saturday, a variety of bands play. Monday night is name band night with a fairly top name group per-forming, such as Earthquake, Daddy-0, Papa Du Run Run and blues guitarist John Lee Hooker.

There is no cover charge Tuesday through Sunday. Monday’s cover charge ranges from $2 to $5 depending on the name act. The average age of customers is 21 to 30.

"There is perpetual competition in this area," Schmidt said. "It is con-stantly shifting with new clubs opening up and some making it and some failing. To be successful depends on how well you present your service."

The Bodega, 30 S. Central Ave., Campbell, has been operating seven years.

"We’re still here and doing fine," owner Ken Rominger said. "We’re starting to bring in a little country rock and blues to have a more varied lineup of music."

The Bodega is open Tuesday through Saturday. Normally there is no cover on Tuesdays or Wednesdays. On Fridays and Saturdays $1 is the average cover charge. Thursday is name band night with admission ranging from $2 to $5.50.

Singles are more predominant than couples on most nights. The average age of patrons is 25 years. Bands such as Streamliner, Skycreek, Snail and Pokerface play at the Bodega on a regular basis.

TThe Wooden Nickel on 2505 The Alameda in Santa Clara is open Mon-day through Saturday and books mostly local bands with a good following.

"When we first opened up we tried to bring in the bigger names but it didn’t work out financially," manager Pam Madison said. "It’s easier to get local acts that draw well."

The average customer is between 21 and 32 at the Wooden Nickel. It is mostly a singles club with a shortage of men on certain nights. The cover charge every night is $1.

Alias, Glide, Flash and Shagbark Hickory play at the club on a regular basis. Bands are usually booked for a month and play the same night every week.

The Laundry Works at 87 N. San Pedro St. in downtown San Jose books disco-style live bands. Most groups are

local with some Los Angeles bands coming in. There is live entertainment seven nights a week.

SJSU students make up about GO percent of the clientele which ranges in age from 21 to 30. It is a singles club which normally has a good mixture of men and women. The cover runs from $1 to $2.

"There have been some nights when there were so many single ladies in here that I felt like calling the fraternities and telling them to get over here," manager Jerry Martin said.

Tuesday through Saturday bands are booked for four to six weeks at a time with Sundays and Mondays being fill-in nights.

"There is always room for com-petition," Martin said. "So many people are doings poor job that you can develop your own market if you know what you’re doing."

Joshua’s, 4440 Stevens Creek Blvd. in Santa Clara, has live entertainment in an upstairs lounge and also in a downstairs club. There is live music four nights a week downstairs and six nights a week upstairs.

Joshua’s, 4440 Stevens Creek Blvd. in Santa Clara, has live entertainment in an upstairs lounge and also in a downstairs club. There is live music four nights a week downstairs and six nights a week upstairs.

Downstairs entertainment is mostly rock and funk while upstairs is more mellow. The cover charge downstairs is $1. There is no cover charge upstairs.

Joshua’s is a singles club with the average age of customers being bet-ween 25 and 27 years. Local bands are booked from a couple of nights to a week or a month , depending on the response to the band.

"Live clubs are at a pretty equal level," assistant manager Alan Hughes said. "The club scene is pretty saturated five or six clubs having really good bands appearing some nights. You always have to look for that new in-novation."

One of the newest clubs in the area, Fargo’s in the Old Mill Shopping Center on Central Expressway and San An-tonio roads in Mountain View, is becoming very popular. Live en-tertainment runs six nights a week with nothing happening on Wednesdays. There is no cover charge on weeknights. The cover charge on weekends is $1.

Bay Area rock and bluegrass bands are booked and there is a songwriters’ night on Mondays where local singers perform original compositions. The winner each week gets $100.

"This is a couples place, not a body shop," owner John Reilly said. "There is individual seating but we like to provide an atmosphere that is intimate where you feel like bringing a date."

There are two levels to Fargo’s with roughly 50 booths. The dance floor is in a pit so that nobody is obstructed from the stage. The floor is 1,000 square feet large.

Fargo’s allows persons 18 and above. It is one of the few clubs in the area to do this. The average age of patrons is 24 to 25 years with a big college following.

I Mission dates back to 1809 I By Brad Ryder The organ was constructed of a

Mission San Juan Bautista is just barrel with nails and staples which up the street from downtown San Juan, would depress the keys and cause air to or if historical importance is to be rush through the pipes. This made considered, downtown San Juan is just sounds that passed for music. The pipes down the street from the mission, on the front of the organ are just

San Juan is about 10 miles south of decorative. The functional pipes are in Gilroy which is 29 miles south of San the back. Jose on Highway 101. Wandering on, you’ll pass several

The sign at the mission that greets interesting items: an Italian trunk, you says the mission is currently un- circa 1920, Mexican stirrups, crucibles, dergoing restoration. Soon it will look hoes, shovels, music stands, furniture, exactly as it did in 1809. an Ansonian clock from 1878, paintings,

It was named San Juan Bautista statues, gold and silver candlesticks, because the blessing took place in 1797 the padres’ library, and chasubles, the on June 24, the traditional feast day of garments once worn by the padres. St. John the Baptist. The town was then Made of Chinese silk, gold thread, named Alta, but over the years it has red velvet and French brocade, the adopted the name of the mission. chasubles are proof that the padres

On June 13, 1803, the cornerstone spared no expense in personal em-was laid for the permanent church. It bellishment. was completed on June 23, 1812, and The kitchen is the most fascinating with three aisles, is one of the widest of stop in the museum tour, and not only all the California mission churches, from a culinary aspect.

The Mutsun Indians were the main tribe to inhabit the mission, but in its history, Mission San Juan Bautista has welcomed more than 20 different tribes, including the Nopthrinthre, Eyulahuas, Quihueths, Cothsmejait, Thrayapthre, and Siuesianthre. Say that five times fast.

The mission is known as the Outside is the cemetery. "Mission of Music," which is obvious A sign says that about 4,300 Indians when you walk into the music room of are buried there in unmarked graves. the museum. Relics from the mission’s The cemetery is only about 100 feet by choir era are displayed in glass cases: 50 feet, and a few token mounds have a bass fiddle, a Spanish-made violin, been placed in neat rows. ( If 4,300 In-and most impressive of all, the pipe dians are buried there, they are stacked organ. 12 layers deep.

The size of the oven alone is staggering. It takes up a whole wall, 15 feet of it, aid it’s five-feet high. When you consider that three meals a day had to be prepared for more than 1,200 Indians, it’s apparent that an oven this size was quite necessary.

Nothing to do? Do nothing! By Rick Cotta

This article could save your life. Cut it out and pin it where you will see it often. When looking at it, always remember that its main message is what to do when you don’t have enough time to do anything.

Don’t do anything. That’s right, do nothing.

Kick back, read a book, drink some wine and listen to a little music. Close the door, shut out the world, and devote some time to "Number One."

Nobody has to remind you of the dangers of the 20th century living � heart attacks, nervous breakdown, ulcers, anxiety and neurosis that are the results of PRESSURE. So why not just disengage every now and then to give yourself a break?

American society has overlooked the virtues of doing nothing. We have turned from a nation of slow-paced

farmers into a veritable anthill of in-dustrious humans. Even relaxation is 50 percent pressure today � going nuts for the home team just before they lose, taking your tranquilizers along to the in-laws at Thanksgiving, or playing that stupid game of golf.

So relax. Don’t go out. Disconnect the phone. Unplug the television. If you’ve got kids, send them to the movies. If you’re married or otherwise attached, don’t do it together. But whatever else you do, don’t do anything.

Wasting a little time on yourself could just be the best thing you ever do. It can add years to your life, depth to your character and peace to your mind. Make it the one thing you do that is justified to yourself, and doesn’t have to be justified to anybody else.

Don’t pretend you haven’t got the time, either.

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by animals at zoo By Isabella Michon

"Something tells me it’s all hap-pening at the zoo."

Little do Simon and Garfunkel know how right they were, because it happens from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., 364 days per year for kids of all ages.

A two-month-old baby and a 100-year-old woman are among the 250,000 persons who visited the San Jose Baby Zoo last year, Lutz Ruhe, president of Baby Zoo Incorporated, said.

The zoo, within walking distance for athletes, is about a mile away from campus, at 1300 Senter Road. To get there, take 10th Street, make a left of Keyes Street and a right on Senter Road.

The pleasure of seeing the cuddly baby animals is complemented by the inexpensiveness of the simple outing.

There is free parking. Admission for adults is 75 cents. Children 2 to 14 and senior citizens 65-80 get in for 50 cents and persons over 80 are free.

The San Jose City Zoo, which opened in 1964, was changed to a baby animal zoo in 1973 with mostly baby and miniature animals, Ruhe said.

A petting zoo was then opened. To keep a constant baby animal

population, full-grown animals may be exchanged for the baby animals of another zoo, Mary Deroo, San Jose Baby Zoo public relations director, said.

It is not a zoo only for babies and toddlers, Ruhe stressed.

Nevertheless, baby strollers can be rented for 50 cents, and exhibits on photosynthesis, the heart and an elephants’s cooling system, etc, are geared to attract children.

Everyone can enjoy all 150 animals with personalities of their own, from the sleepy baby rhinoceros to the ogling owl to the scurrying monkey squirrel.

The petting zoo, a touching ex-travaganza with furry animals who’ll be your friend in exchange for a couple of rabbit pellets, is a constant attention grabber.

If the visitors find they would like to be befriended by the animals, there are

always ice cream cones of rabbit pellets for 10 cents.

Of course if one plans to spend the whole day, it may be less expensive to buy a 5-pound bag of pellets for $1.15 at the local supermarket. It’ll last longer and so will your animal friends.

Most of the animals in the petting zoo are not caged and are free to roam around and ask visitors for food.

A luscious, dark-eyed camel, an array of tiny -to-pony-sized goats and stately white and black llamas can be delicately approached and petted.

One visitor chuckled that the camels eating out of the people’s hands are gentle but ticklish.

Though the zoo’s four-and-one-half acres are only equal to about one-fifth of the San Francisco Zoo, Deroo said, the San Jose Zoo does have a special treat.

The baby zoo has two snorting pigs with pudgy noses and a welcome sign that says "careful�we have teeth."

The pigs nose their way through the crowd for a friendly hand and grunt for attention.

For the adventurer, the zoo has a boa constrictor, a raindow boa and a slimy iguana who may have other things in mind besides entertaining you.

The zoo has a little bit of something for everyone. For the romantic at heart, snuggling hippopotamuses and smooching tortoises lover 100 years old) tempt observers to do the same.

Meanwhile, visitors are ogled from a tree by two lemurs with brilliant orange eyes and exotic black-and-white tails resembling giant, fluffy cater-pillars.

Colorful macaw birds of fiery red, powder blue and radiant green graciously model for their impressed visitors.

The zoo attractions do not end there. Located next to the zoo is Happy Hollow Park, a playground that offers 25-cent rides and a puppet show.

Combined zoo and playground admission rates are $1 per adult and 60 cents for children.

November17,1977,Page9

Parks, gyms offer ’free’ time pleasure

By Mark Geyer It’s Saturday morning. A hard

week of school is behind you with yet another one to follow.

You’re itching to do something to get away from the "grind" but most pastimes these days seem to all have a price on them and the old budget is already spread rather thin.

Try riding a bike, shooting some basketball, throwing a frisbee or get-ting together a touch football match or a pick-up softball game.

Such recreational pastimes are free and many outdoor and indoor facilities in San Jose are open during the weekend for smart folks wanting to take advantage.

Bicycling is great by itself but it’s even more fun if you can take a frisbee, some lunch and a few fellow riders along.

From the SJSU area, a number of bike routes can be looked into. A perfect short escapade is to William Street Park, at the corner of 17th and William streets.

With a huge, well-kept grass field lined with a variety of healthy trees and bushes, this park is ideal for frisbee, football or softball. You can eat your picnic lunch on either tables and benches provided or under willow trees along a creek that trickles through the park.

If you’re into being by yourself, Mum Rock Park is a vast natural landscape which is ideal for thinking about more important things than the everyday "grind."

About five mies east on Alum Rock Avenue I the same as Santa Clara Street this side of Highway 101 ), the park is a good destination for a long, partly uphill ride.

Bakesto Park, corner of 13th and Washington streets north of campus, is another fine outdoor facility for just about anything.

Besides a lot of open space, Bakesto has a softball field, basketball and tennis courts, a playground and a picnic area. This park, like William Street, is within bike riding distance and is easily accessible down the peaceful, tree-lined streets characteristic of that neigh-borhood.

Six miles south of SJSU is Coyote Creek Park, just west of 101 between Capital Expressway and Hellyer Avenue. This is one of the nicest and most secluded parks in the city. Its highlight is a bike path that heads east toward the foothills, a must for anyone who likes a country-style bike ride within the city limits.

This park is also good for frisbee, pick-up football and the like. A sheltered picnic area is provided complete with a couple of cook-out pits.

For basketball enthusiasts, at least nine high school and two junior high school gymnasiums are open every Saturday in the San Jose area.

Always free, pick-up basketball is excellent exercise, especially on the hardwoods of an open gym. The great thing about basketball is that you play by yourself or with any number of fellow cagers up to an all-out, full -court affair which involves 10 pla yes.

. . .

GYMS OPEN ON SATURDAYS: Piedmont High, 9 a.m. to I p.m. Overfelt High, II a.m. to 5 p.m. Gunderson High, 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. for basketball, 10:30 a.m, to noon for badminton. Branham High, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Camden High, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Leigh High, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Blackford High, noon to 4 p.m. Del Mar High, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Westmont High, 9 a.m. to 1p.m. Markham Junior High, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. John Muir Junior High, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Nearby diving locations offer unique challenge

By John Weilans For the stout-hearted and able-

bodied, the ultimate water spot is skin and scuba diving.

Skin diving is the free diving form of the two and scuba self-contained underwater breathing apparatus) is done with air tanks and regulators a la Lloyd Bridges.

After picking up a 1977 California Sport Fishing Regulations handbook and a basic fishing license, a diver is prepared to hunt fish or invertebrate game, including abalone.

In the Monterey Flay/Carmel Bay regions the diver and photographer have an almost unlimited variety of animal life, plant life and scenery to explore.

Hundreds of shipwrecks, sub-marine canyons, kelp forests and sandy plains make up the underwater scenario.

Many of the area’s dive locations are accessible from shore and are ideal for the sightseer and photographer. Othes require a boat or small craft of

some kind. In general, fish and game laws are

enforced, so be sure to know the ones that pertain to a certain area by checking with the local dive shops.

One of the best places to start is the Cannery Row of Monterey. The Coast Guard Breakwater gives easy access to skin and scuba divers. It consists of a man-made pile of rocks and boulders that provide a substrate support for a large number of fish and invertebrates.

It is aLso relatively shallow, angling down to about 60 feet.

After a couple of dives here a diver can feel confident on a night dive, thanks to the predictable topography.

Near the breakwater is another site with the remains of old piers and pipelines. There is a lot of kelp here and it makes the area a good one for spearfishing.

Lovers’ Point in Pacific Grove provides easy access, good visibility and interesting flora and fauna close to shore. The large granite boulders

Continued on page 141

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Parks, garden exist for kids of all ages

By Barbara Cockerham No one has to relive those old

western memories by watching John Wayne running across the television screen catching all the bad guys.

Just hop on your stagecoach and head to Frontier Village Amusement Park, 4885 Monterey Road.

While walking through the past you’ll notice that the park’s theme title clearly defines its purpose, the family-oriented park is equipped with over 30 rides and attractions.

While winding through town on the train you’ll see taverns and bars dating back over 30 years.

One $4.94 admission buys an unlimited number of rides, and is all you need to explore this structured replica of yesteryear.

Children under 3 are admitted free.

Marriott’s Great America

If you’..e looking for more than fun, excitement and exhaustion, Marriott’s Great America can quench your thirst.

The newly established amusement park attracts enthusiastic visitors with 29 thrill rides, ( including the tallest rollercoaster in California, 12 live shows, restaurants, arcades and shops.

Next, try the Dolphin Show in the Wilderness Theater. Boy, you thought Flipper was great!

Throughout the entire park there are 12 rides for children under five years of age.

Admission price for entertainment and rides is $8.95 for adults and $7.95 for children 4 to 11. Children under 3 are free.

Japanese friendship gardens The main attraction, the Japanese

teahouse and gift shop, are open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Mondays.

The Japanese Garden, dedicated to friendship between the sister cities of

Backpack (Continued from page 4

are necessities, too. Many area backpack stores not only rent equip-ment and sell food for trips but will give you a checklist of items to bring.

Sites in range of San Jose include the Santa Cruz Mountains ( nearby, but not much privacy), the northern Sierras ( Yosemite is a four-hour drie and the hills surrounding Lake Tahoe.

For the serious appreciator of beauty, the southern Sierras, including majestic Mt. Whitney, are about eight hours away but well worth the drive.

Before beginning the hike, check how badly the drought has affected the area, as water may be scarce.

But, once you’re on your way, such worries quickly evaporate.

Matthews explained: "When you get past the first day

and finally realize you’re in the wilderness and not in the city, it’s a complete rush. The good vibes continue to build and build through the next few (lays of the trip. When you’re faced with the survival existence that back-packing presents and you do survive, the pressures of city living seem pretty small and nondescript."

San Jose and Okayama, Japan, was established in 1957.

Special attention was paid to the traditional and symbolic meaning attached to the placement of rocky bridges and other features in the park. There are 31 such symbols to look for in the gardens.

The small island in the lower pond is "Turtle Island." Those aren’t goldfish in the water, but a special kind of Carp called koi. The first 3,000 of the fish were flown to San Jose from Japan in 1966. They generally live for 35 to 40 years.

The garden has wooden zig-zag bridges, called "devil" or "spirit" bridges.

Honest and wise people can get rid of devils, worries and problems by walking acorss the bridge. The bad spirits fall into the water because the zig-zagging of the bridge makes them dizzy.

There is much more to see in this legendary park, such as the bridge to Paradise Island, the tall lanterns and the moonlight bridge. Legend says that it is good fortune to see the reflection of yourself and the bridge in the water by moonlight.

But you may never be able to prove this legend, because the park closes at dusk.

Historic S.J. (Continued from page 3

Warburton was one of the first physicians to come to the San Jose area, arriving during the Gold Rush.

Whether rebuilt or moved and refurbished, all of the buildings have been placed as nearly as possible in their original relation to other buildings on the lot.

In addition to the buildings already mentioned, there is also the old Coyote post office, a print shop and band stand.

Out back of the Pacific Hotel you will find an iron engine, built by the Port Huron Engine and Thresher Company in 1880. Old and rusted today, the rolling boiler once towed threshing machines through vast valley wheat fields.

In Warburton’s office you will also find a cast-iron dental chair and foot-powered drill that look like leftovers from the inquisition. Sitting above the chaig and drill on a shelf is a large apothecary jar filled with candy�rewards, no doubt, for well-behaved children.

A park spokeswoman said the museum will eventually consist of 65 buildings and should be finished in 20 years. An artist’s conception of the finished park is on display in the Pacific Hotel.

You can see all there is at Historic San Jose in about three hours, making it a perfect place to go with a cameras on a fall afternoon.

The park is open from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from noon to 4:30 p.m. weekends and holidays. It is partially funded by the San Jose Park and Recreation Department and is a project of the San Jose Historical Museum.

November 17, 1977, Page 11

The challenge of a ’puker’ By H. Kim Lew

Experiencced fishermen refer to "party boats" as "pukers."

They’re called pukers because a significant number of the clients puke; that is, they throw up their breakfast on the way out to sea.

Party boats are "boats for hire" to anyone who is willing to pay the fee. They’re 40- to 50-foot lumbering tugboats that haul occasional fishermen from Monterey, Pacifica and San Francisco harbors.

These half-day excursions can cost as little as $15 or as much as $30.

The quarry can vary from albacore and rockfish to salmon, depending on the time of year and the temperament of the skipper.

The easiest pickings for non-fishermen are rockfish. "Fishing" for these bot-tomdwellers is as simple as dropping down a line, waiting until a fish bites and pulling it aboard. The hardest part is pulling the poor devils on the boat.

The skipper of a boat usually is equipped with a depth finder and generally determines when the boat is situated over a school of unsuspecting fish.

The fish are dumb and hungry. They don’t care that the 40 or so lines hanging over the side of a boat all have the same little "jigs," and that they all have the same 10-ounce weight. What they see are images that appear to be shrimp.

The fish don’t even care that literally dozens of their brethren are being dragged to the surface. Apparently this simply means that fewer fellow fish will be around to join in the shrirnpfest � a fatal mistake.

The type of fish that rock fishing skippers seek are blue cod, yellowtail, red rock cod, widow cod and ling cod.

If a boat gets well situated over a typical school, every single angler will be dragging two or three fish up at a time. The

competition is not a matter of technique � it’s a race to see who can get those buggers off the hook fastest.

By the way, party boat concessions generally sell and rent all necessary materials right at their on-shore office. They even suggest their own jigs � the lures used for catching rockfish.

These jigs are a joke. They consist of a 5-foot "leader" and three hooks evenly spaced along the monofilament, a loop at the bottom for a weight and a loop at the top.

They’re not guaranteed to last an entire day, which is a credit to the monetary smarts of party boat entrepreneurs. If you figure the line is bound to break every 10 fish or so, at $2.10 a pop they’re bound to make a tidy bundle on the suckers, or rather, fishermen.

( To the owners’ credit, there is a trace of fluorescent thread tied to the hooks to make them look attractive to the somewhat ignorant fish, and they do work.)

K-Mart and other fishing equipment outlets sell the same or better lures for 10 to 20 percent less.

Anyway, back to what party boat fishing entails. On a good day, just about everyone on the boat can be guaranteed to get more than enough fish, but there is a question whether or not much fishing satisfaction can be gleaned. /After all, that’s what it’s all about. The answer is mixed. If a slow ride on a two-diesel tug boat with a bunch of beer-drinking old and young men and women sounds fun�party boat fishing is a gas.

But don’t expect the thrill of catching the big lings’ or larger rockfish. The skipper will discourage fishing at the very bottom, especially when everyone is fishing at say 100 feet and the bottom is at 200 feet.

This is somewhat justified. The reasoning is that someone fishing at a variant depth will tangle up the lines, and instead of catching fish, will catch hell from the collective fishermen. True. However, way down at the bottom live the much larger and much more exciting ling cod. These fish actually fight all the way to the sur-face�a significant difference.

(Continued on page 14)

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Page 12, November 17, 1977

Santa Cruz

Art attracts crowds By Jim Hooker

Art in Santa Cruz has, until recently, been ignored by tourists in favor of more active pastimes. In the past few years, however, art galleries have become one of the town’s most visible and most popular attractions.

Most of the town’s artistic activity occurs near the Pacific Garden Mall, itself a bit of an attraction offering dining spots, shops for browsing and of course, artists and their creations.

Down the mall, a small kiosk dispenses tourist information from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily.

Nearby, at 1515 Pacific Ave., Gary Dwyer’s Hypercube, an orange boxlike structure, marks the entrance to In-tegrand Design, a remodeled bank which offers a variety of meals and modern designs in household and novelty items.

Further down the mall in the direction of the beach stands the Cooper House, a remodeled Victorian mansion which now houses a variety of artists’ galleries, restaurants and novelty shops.

In front of the Cooper House, a sidewalk jazz ensemble plays daily.

The Courtroom Gallery, located on the second floor, of fes exhibits ranging from sculpture to surfboards. Art shows change monthly.

The Alley Studio, just outside the Cooper House, displays work -in -progress under a glass roof. Hours of the exhibits usually range from 10 a.m.

to 5 p.m. On Cooper Street, next to the

Cooper House, the Octagon Museum, an eight-sided wooden structure, exhibits art of the present and past. Hours are noon to 5 p.m. daily except Sunday.

Darkroom Graphics, 1362 Pacific Ave., contains photographic galleries, and is open Monday through Thursday

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On Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. you can watch artists at work in their shop behind the gallery.

At 1308 Pacific Ave. is the Artists’ Cooperative, owned by about 25 craft-smen. Hours for the gallery are 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily and Saturday, and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday.

The Criterion, located at 1110 Pacific Ave., is run by two artists who often work on the premises. Hours for this gallery are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.

The Guild Gallery, located at 1013 Pacific Ave. I behind Crazy Horse Leathers ) is another one of the many local galleries, and is open to the public from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily, and noon tot p.m. Sundays.

Outdoors between Elm and Maple streets is the Open Market, where local crafts are sold on Fridays and Satur-days from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

One block away is the Cedar Street Gallery at 411 Cedar St., which is located in an old Victorian house.

Shows displayed at this gallery include work by artists such as Patrick Aherne and other California and national artists.

Hours of the gallery are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily except Mondays.

If you walk back up the mall, you (Continued on page 141

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November 17, 1977, Page 13

4.

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lillir III 111 111 ihII

boats and tackles for rent and hoists for launching.

Between the wharf and the downtown area stands a cluster of stucco buildings built in the 1920s as California’s first beachfront con-dominiums.

These units begin at $25 a night for two persons.

On Depot Hill, just above the town, a path called Grand Avenue leads along the ocean cliffs. Some of the grandest old houses and most beautiful views can be found along this path as it stretches across town and out over the ocean, A flight of 87 concrete steps will lead you back to town.

Capitola Avenue, which stretches for about a mile through the center of

town, is where most of the boutiques and restaurnats are located.

These shops deal in arts and crafts mainly leather goods I, antiques,

clothing, books and kitchenware.

Just north of the train trestle at the edge of town stands a red school house, now the Capitola Museum. It contains photographs and momentos of the early days.

One of the biggest events of the year in Capitola is the annual Begonia Festival, celebrated in the first week of September.

The event consists of flowered floats, bike races, a sandcastle building contest and the Northern California Volleyball Tournament.

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This compact community, located about five miles south of Santa Cruz on Highway 1, combines the old with the new, as many attractive shops, galleries and restaurants are housed in late 19th century buildings.

Plan to walk or ride a bike as you spend a day or weekend exploring the town, as most of the attractions are close together and traffic gets congested.

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The surf about 100 yards to the east of the beach sometimes comes alive, mostly during the winter months, as surfers take advantage of the waves and artists take advantage of the surfers.

Backtracking along the *ueach, you’ll come to where the 150-room Capitola Hotel built in 1895, burned down in 1929) stood, Now restaurants takes its place, identified by wooden signs carved by local craftsmen. This small stretch also includes a board-walk-type game hall.

Continuing west, you’ll come upon a wharf, ideal for fishing. There are

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Party boat fishing (Continued from page 111

The yellow tail, blues and red cod have an air bladder behind their gills that keeps them at a stable position as they wade through the ocean current. This air bladder poses a problem when someone is yanking the fish up at 120 feet per minute. It expands and ef-fectively chokes the fish to death before it gets halfway to the top. This is great for subduing a fish, but terrible for a fishing challenge.

Ling cod, to the contrary, live without the bladders, rising and descending at will�against the strain of a fishing line. The ling cod can also grow to over 50 pounds, while the typical blue and yellow tail average two to four pounds.

The equipment, forgetting the laughable lures, is fit to kill sharks, instead of half-baked rock fish. The rod "tips" look more like the muzzle end of a 30-30 rifle than a sensitive measuring device to "feel" the fish strike.

Feel is not a term befitting the party boat experience.

"Wait until your line stops going down, then stop the reel from letting out line," instructs a crew member to his collective audience of neophyte anglers. "Then reel in the line slow, so more than one will catch on."

No sense wasting time. Make every "cast" count.

Another thing that a first-time party boater should be wary of is the 35-cent sacks the shop will sell to the unsuspecting angler to "hold" his catch.

The best thing to do is bring one. They’ll sell onion bags that hold perhaps 20 small fish and then break. The crew does not bring extra bags, so if your catch is strewn about, they’ll just pick up the strays in the name of keeping the deck clear. Very bright fellows, those crewmembers.

Speaking of the crew, besides acting as mother hens�overseeing all the tangled lines and gaffing the larger fish�they get in a little fishing on the

Skindiving (Continued from page 9)

support a divesity of Life forms. Local regulations apply to diving

here. Monterey or San Jose Beach,

located about seven miles past Carmel, is under a hillside which holds a Car-melite monastery, hence the name.

The easiest entry to the beach is at the south end next to the cliff. Visibility is usualy good during spring and fall. A few hundred yards off shore is a sub-marine canyon with a dazzling variety of life. Best check your depth guages as it gets mighty deep.

Perhaps the most beautiful diving site on the area is Point Lobos state reserve. Only sightseeing and photography are permitted. No fishing or hunting is allowed.

There is an entrance fee and the area is strictly regulated.

The reserve has spectacular kelp forests, canyons, pinnacles and un-derwater caves. The visitility is usualy very good.

For more information on dive locations, there are newslettes at the many dive shops which are lised in the phone book. In addition, specialized

side too. But they don’t use jigs. Their lures

are true ling cod killers, simple weights, from 10 to 12 ounces with a treble hook at the base. These lures have bigger hooks, and sink through the pint-sized school fish to the bottom where larger prey stalk.

At any rate, once the fish are caught, the crew informs the fishermen that they can only bring 20 fish back to shore, unless of course they have the fish fileted before hitting port.

Who is going to count filets? Not the fish and game warden. So the crew will filet the fish right there as the boat steams home. Very convenient. At a convenient price of 7 cents per pound of fish cleaned.

At a rate of 30 to 50 pounds per person, the boat can make a tidy little sum here too. But paying someone else $3 or $4 to filet fish is nothing when it would take hours back at the dock.

� � �

In the vicinity of San Jose, the best place to catch a party boat excursion is Monterey.

The fishing has been fair of late, with 75 to 80 percent of the people on party boats coming back with their limit.

For weekend or holiday fishing, prospective fishermen should call a few days in advance to reserve a spot on a boat, which usually leaves port between 6:30 and 7:30 a.m.

Typical costs are: � $15 for the trip, � $2 for rod and reel, � $2.10 for tackle with hooks, � 35 cents for a sack, � $4 for a season saltwater fishing

license, � 7 cents for each pound of fish

cleaned, � 81.80 for a six-pack of beer, � $1.50 for Dramamine, Party boats sailing out of Monterey

will travel anywhere between Point Sur, 30 miles south of Monterey, to just a few miles out of harbor.

in S.J. area maps with areas of interest and locations of wrecks can be purchased.

Additionaly, don’t overlook the personnel at the local dive shop. Their first-hand experience may be the best bet on where to go on a given day.

Santa Cruz art (Continued from page 12)

can visit the Santa Cruz Art Center, one of the most popular centers of artistic activity in Santa Cruz.

Formerly a warehouse, the Center, at 1001 Center St., was purchased by a local businessman with an interest in art. Local artists remodeled the building to provide themselves with open, roomy studios and galleries.

The Center Street Clayworks is another cooperative, run by six local artists who model and sell their own clay creations. Other shops in the center feature local painters, jewelers and quilt makers. Hours for the gallery are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday.

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Gold Rush country (Continued from page 2)

historical park, serves as an excellent introduction to the Gold Rush era. Buildings which perished in the fires of the late 1800s have been either reproduced or restored.

The offices of the Columbia Gazette house a small printing press museum.

Nerby is the Fallon Cottage, ad-vertised during the Gold Rush as "headquarters for mining men with excellent accommodation for tourists, invalids and others."

The furnishings inside the Wells Fargo Express office are authentic, including the safe, gold scales and hundreds of pieces of luggage. Stagecoach rides are available for $1 to $1.50.

Down the street is the blacksmith shop, with its eight-foot bellows, which is still in business.

Other exhibits include a Chinese herb shop one-sixth of Columbia’s population during the Gold Rush was Chinese, the fire engine company and the refurbished miner’s cabin, com-plete with spittoon, wash basin and outhouse.

Mining artifacts, photographs, maps, clothing and musical in-struments of the day ( including a Stradivarius) can be found in the nearby museum.

Murphys, a 10-minute drive from Columbia, is a delight because it has retained its small-town atmosphere.

Names after John and Daniel

Thur. Nov. 17:

Fri. Nov. 18:

Sat. Nov. 19:

Mon. Nov. 21:

Tue. Nov. 22:

Wed. Nov. 23:

Murphy, who discovered gold there in 1848 (and employed the Miwok Indians to mine it for them, Murphys is also called the "Queen of the Sierra."

The oldest stone building in town, the P.I.. Traver Building (built in 1856, is now the Old Timers Museum. It features a large collection of photographs of Murphys and its prominent citizens during the Gold Rush.

A special section is devoted to Joaquin Murrieta, the bandit and murderer who started his infamous career in Murphys. A knife with 11 knotches carved into the handle, allegedly used by Murrieta, is in the collection, as are some of the only pictures ever taken of him.

The Compere Building was a general merchandise store in the late 1850s and is now a residence.

Murphys Hotel, first built in 1856, is the highlight of the town.

The white stucco building with its iron-framed windows has been vir-tually untouched since 1859 when it was rebuilt after a fire.

Mark Twain, Horatio Alger, Black Bart and General Ulysses Grant all stayed there.

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The rooms are furnished with antiques, including high-backed beds and pictures. Bathrooms are just as they were during the Gold Rush�down the hall.

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Hayes told more than 70 s Wednesday night that the city community attack" against pot

The mayor brought more tl by downtown businessmen, whi coeds. Almost every woman in I the offer.

Hayes said the univesity i security guard positions that were city approved.

Speaking in the Formal I mitory, Hayes said she is also hiring male students to study a each floor in every building on c

She said this plan has been assure that "students know se door" and help is as close as the

In saying the city has "br, assaults, Hayes pointed out th/ apprehended in rape-related in undercover police decoys.

Reiterating her recent four "We want to explore the feasibil this problem."

The four-point rape prevent 2,1 A reward of aproximab

leading to the arrest and convicl sexually violent crimes.

Arranging for the installal around the campus, hooked security.

Speeding the trimming of la area which hinder street lightim

The formation of a Task Security.

Although Hayes allotted I answer period, few students tool

One student asked the may the city to implement these rape

The question was direct Executive Vice President Gail responded, "There has been a I we really didn’t want to tell ever units and decoys on the streets"

Other students complained the dorms and also questioned were being used to light surroun,

Referring to charges that m

Riot anniver

The By Steve Dula

Sunday will mark the 10th an the worst demonstrations an tainly the largest, between still SJSU.

. No one will make ai dedications to the actions of be The moment will pass just other Sunday afternoon.

The fall 1967 semester s powder keg with a long fuse at sociology professor Harry Edv first week of school when he I racial discrimination against all areas.

The fuse kept burning stir as there were two small violi between anti-war protestors porters.

The tension mounted as shorter. There were no m violence after the Marine cla was going to happen.

The catalyst was thrown when Dow Chemical Comps representatives would be on prospective employees.

During the Vietnam War hotly protested things was ti bombs, a jellied gasoline everything it came in contai people. It was known that Doe napalm, so the stage was a boi radical movements.

One man who received a f ew k

the police after

been arrested.

The radical erouns had hi