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April 18, 1989

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Dept. of Atmospheric Sciences

Arts & Entertainment

WM

Royce Hall screens the 1927 silent film classic *Love' tonight, complete with new sfcore and live orchestra.

See story, page 17.

Spor^

UCLA's golf editor- says that the men golfers are approaching the NCAA green.

"-♦'See story, page 32\ -

^ r-

CIRCULATION: 22,000

I..

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

Graduate resolution requests fajr ^enure^ review for Naicanishi

AUB/Daily Bruin

Uoyd Monserratt second from left discusses a point at the first UCLA conference on student retention held last weekend in Oxnard.

Sch

§!•

I board member

By T. Nhan

Staff Writer

Graduate government's forum called for a fair tenure review for Professor Don Nakanishi at its meeting last week.

Nakanishi,. a professor of Asian American studies in the Graduate School of Education, has been seeking tenure since 1987. Supporters of Nakanishi have said his tenure review was biased, and have accused the wnivgrsity -ef^acial dtscrimina-

tion.

small part of a bigger issue.

"I think it is a responsibility of all graduate students to stand for diversity, not just racial diversity but academic diversi- ty," said Ed Pai, a repre- sentative of the Asian Pacific Graduate Students Ass:ociation

"Whether the work is suitable quality is >a very subjective judgment," he said, citing his own experiences as an editor having to judge scientific papers. Who the reviewer is and what liihjcct drea^Tt-^TTray Inftuencg"

talks on UCLA retentidn

L.A. School Board member Warren Furutani

ally Brum

By Holly bauer

Staff Writer '"

Editor's note: This is the second in a series.

OXNARD Los Angeles Schtx)! Board Member Warren Furutani applauded retention efforts by UCLA students whert he spoke at UCLA's first student retention conference Saturday.

'The dynamic leadership of students is ir- repressible. No matter what form it takes, it will always be there," Furutani said. "An im- portant group put this (conference) together students."

Furutani. was the keynote speaker at this weekend's conference on retention in Oxnard, where more than 50 students, administrators and faculty discussed the need for more stu- dents to graduate from UCLA.

The conference was an opportunity to bring * 'different key players," such as students, tgigether, Furutani said.

Furutani became/^ the first Asian Pacific islander ever elected to the Los Angeles schtx)! board in 1987. Before his election, he c(X)r- dinated student community projects for UCLA's Asian American Studies Center, where he worked with about 16 Asian Pacific student groups.

See FURUTANI, Page 3

And graduate government is not the only group concerned with Nakanishi 's tenure review. Last quarter, several campus organizations sponsored a rally for the professor, and students have organized letter-writing campaigns in support of Nakanishi.

The graduate forum passed a resolution 9-1-2, which also asks the university to 'take substan- tive actions to increase the number of under-represented minorities."

Graduate President Konrad Huntley said the resolution and discu^on of Nakanishi 's case showed that graduate governm- ent "would like to see a more diverse graduate and faculty population.'*

An original resolution was amended because some forum members thought statistics on Asian faculty were irrelevant to whether Nakanishi's work merited tenure or whether he was given a fair review.

"The issue is: is Professor Nakanishi's work and contiibu- tions to UCLA suitable for tenure? It has nothing to do with all these statistics ... I really take offense to this. I think so- meone in law would separate the facts from the hoopla,"' said Randy Treece, representative of the math and physical sciences council.

"If ' (Nakanishi is) Japanese and good, let's hire him. If he's Japanese and not gmxi, let's not hire him. All this other stuff isn't important," Treece said.

But External Vice President Brian Williams, who wrote the original resolution, said statistics were important because Nakanishi's case was only a

4h€ decision, Pai said

^ome forum members" thought efforts should be focused on changing the tenure review pro- cess rather than on Nakanishi's individual case. "" _ ''

"Getting tenure for Nakanishi

'If Nakanishi is Japanese and good, let's hire him. If he's ~~ Japanese and not good, let's not hire him. All this other stuff isn't important.' Randy Treece

is not going to solve the problem for other minorities," said Nan- cy Stum, representative from the •biological sciences counciL A letter from Chancellor Charles Young confirmed that the Academic Senate's Commit- tee on Privilege and Tenure had determined twice at first view that "there had been procedural irregularities" with Nakanishi's review.

Young said in the letter that these were rjot actual findings, because the committee in both cases did not pursue the case "to the point of making factual fin- dings."

He defended the university by staling that .'the number of minority faculty has increased 67 percent over the last 10 years.

The letter and the statistics "show that there is change in progress, " Treeee said.

AAtestwood man charged 4rfter inciden^tit

r

By Marlene Caslllas

Staff Writer

^ A Westwood man will be arraigned to- day for possession of an illegal weapon he allegedly used to threaten UCLA fraternity membcrsr university police said.

Shannon Stafford, 36, was arrested late Saturday i^fter police saw him throwing nunchucks a Chinese marital arts weapon near Sigma Phi Bpsilon fraternity, police said.

Hfrv allegedly shouted threats of vio-

lence and obscenities at fraternity members who were watching a hiKkey game, said Chris Rimer, the fraternity's secretary^

I : : "-

Stafford and another man, who live m the apartment noxt to the fraternity, climbed on a wall between the buildings and attempted to start a fight, he said. House members, however, were absorbed in the Edmonton Oilers-Lx>s Angeles Kings game, the final in first^round playoffs for the Stanley Cup.

"They screamed obscenities at us and wanted us to come out and fight," Rimer

said. "They shouted 'we want to see

your red bkHnJ on our fists. You rich

kids think you're so great. You're just

-^jeaknt^r 'cause we take your womcir

Fraternity members ignored the men and called the pi>lice. "We didn't want anyone to get hurt and it's easier to han- dle it legally, " Rimersaid. "We have no hard feelings."

Police arrested Stafford and charged him with a felony after seeing him thfow nunchucks in the bushes, police said.

No charges were made against, the other man; although both had been drink-

ing and were ri>wdy, police said.

The men had been harassing the frater- nity members since the two moved into T~rhe apartment on 565 Gay ley Towers ^ about a week ago. Rimer said.

"They are always drinking and throw- ing beer cans and cigarette butts on cars parked in our driveway," Rimer said.

A women and a young girl, who pre- sumably live with the men, also shouted obscenities from a fourth story window; said Jeff Kerrancvi fraternity member.

WitH reports from Eugene Ahn

•\

fC- -

2 NEWS

Dally Bruin

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

Daily Bruin

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eioom County

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by Berke Breathed

The staff of the Daily Bruin strives for accuracy and sensitivi- ty in the newspaper's content. If mistakes occti/,- it is our policy to correct them promptly on this page. Errors may be brought to our attention by calling (213) 825-9898.

Daily Bruin

Volume CXXVIII. Number 104 TUESDAY. APRIL 18. I9W

Edttbr-in-ChM: Nancy L McCuNough

Managing Editor: Brian Bossert Budget Manager: Keily Klaus Newt Editor: Maja Radevich , University Edttor:

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5 faculty members honored for contributions to science

By Jacqueline Serrao

Contributor

Five UCLA faculty members ^were recently elected fellows in the American Association for the Advancement of Science for their outstanding contributions to the sciences.

UCLA led the nine campuses of the UC system in the number of felloWs elected. Overall, 27 UC faculty were chosen for membership in the association.

Accordipg to the association's charter, felJows are selected because their efforts "on behalf of the advancement of science or its applications are scientifically or socially distinguished." Among those selected:

J. William Schopf, a pro- fessor of paleobiology whose research focuses on fossils of microscopic organisms. He is credited with discovering a fossil containing the oldest form of cyanobacteria. They were found in Western Australia and are believed to be 3.6 billion years old, making them the oldest recorded form of life. *■ He has twice received Guggenheim Fellowships for his contributions to this field, which he has con- centrated on since 1980. He has been at UCLA since 1972«„

Margaret Kivelson, a pro- fessor of Earth and Space Sciences, whose research focuses on the magnetosphere, the space

Prof. J. William Schopf Prof. Donald Guthrie

surrounding, the planets where charged particles and magnetic fields interact. She has been concentrating on this research since she came to UCLA in 1%7, and in 1984 she received the Women of Science award from the UCLA Medical Center Auxiliary.

Donald Guthrie, a professor of psychiatry and biostatistics at the UCLA Neuropsychiatric In- stitute. His research focuses on mental health and mental retarda- tion in children. He said that he was selected because of his work with other scientists on "studies ranging from autism to mental retarcbtion to schizophrenia in children." He has worked at UCLA for 15 years.

Richard Berk, a professor of

sociology who studies crime and security, with a specialization in domestic violence. He was recognized for his 15 years of research in these areas. He taught at UC Santa Barbara be- fore coming to UCLA last year. Christine L. Borgman, an associate professor in 5ie Gradu- ate School of Library and Infor- mation Science who conducts research on human-computer in- teraction with information retrieval s/stems.

Members in the science association are selected by a panel of scientists^ specializing in the prospective members' field of study. The association cur- rently has 132,000 members and publishes the monthly magazine Science.

NEWS 3

Cambodian 'killing fields' remembered

Prof Stresses that genocide must be confronted in order to be prevented

By Irena Auerbuch

Senior Staff Writer

A_lthough the communis! Khmer Rouge regime massacred nearly a quarter of Camb(xlia's population in the late 1970s, at- tempts to bring the perpetrators to justice have been unsuc- cessful, according to Gregory Stanton.

Stanton, an assistant professor of law and anthropology at Washington and Lee University in Virginia, spoke at UCLA last Friday. He emphasized not only the dimensions of the tragedy in Cambodia, but also the lack of involvement on the part of the international community both during and after the massacres.

This lack of concern still poses a grave danger to Cambodia, Stanton said, because the Khmer Rouge may return to |X)wer after Vietnamese troops, which have occupied the country since 1978, withiiraw this September. ^ Although the Vietnamese inva- Mon halted the ma&s. kiUing^js—

of the family escaped vv^ith their lives, Stanton said. j

The Cambodian culture, once* a- "culture of great art and wonderful tradition," was turned into a wasteland, Stanton said.

Education and religion were abolished; the Khmer Rouge "blew up all the schools they could" and "did everything they could to eradicate the Cambo- dian Buddhist monks," Stanton said.

Of the 80,000 monks living in Cambodia in 1975, 800 were left' in 1980.

- Most Cambodian citiqs, wCre evacuated, while others were dynamited and bulldozed over. Their occupants were resettled into forced labor camps by the

several hundred thousand Khmei Rouge troops are still attemptfhg to regain power, Stanton said.

He predicts that after the Viet- namese withdraw from Cam- bodia, a civil war will ensue and the Khmer Rouge will be iii a position to overthrow the present Cambodian government. This is an outcome that Stanton is strug- gling to prevent ^educating the public.

"I want to leave in your minds an image that you will never forget," said Stanton, who has traveled extensively in Cam

The Khmer Rouge

systematically murdered all ieachers^€k>6f^ "tors, lawyersr^

ethnic and religious minorities, soldiers, and government of- ficials in Cam- bodia.

Khmer Rouge, vwho subscribed

to the Marxist doctrine that cities

were corrupt while rural life and

bodia surveying the devastation^ labor were purifying and gwxi.

left by the Khmer Rouge. **! want to bring justice' to Cam- bodia."

The mass murders began in 1975, he said, when the Khmer Rouge invaded Phnom Penh and seized control of the governme- nt. They then proceeded tb systematically murder all teach- ers, doctors, lawyers, ethnic and religious minorities, soldiers and government officials.

"If you wore glasses or could speak a foreign language, or were educated, you were classified as an enemy; you were arrested, tortured, then killed," Stanton said. -

"From 1975 through 1978, according to our census taken in Cambodian villages, 1.7 million to 2.2 million people died o.ut of a population of eight million. Half ^ million to a million were intentionally murdered. Another million were starved or worked to death in the forced labor communes the Khmer Rouge imposed at gunpoint in every region of the country," he said.

Many children were extermi- nated with the rest of their fami- lies beciiuse the Khmer Rouge wanted to prevent the "later bit- terneiih" that would it&uli if pair

Stanton said.

Many later died of starvatioi\ and overwork at the camps; many more were tortured and killed, he said.

"The Khmer Rouge was no ordinary political regime; it was a regime based on mass murder. The Khmer Rouge is a highly- disciplined, fanatical group of

idealogically- committed radicals," Stanton said.

This regime turned much of Cambodia into one vast killing field, he said. The killing fields, portrayed in a 1984 film of the same name, became mass graves for thousands of CambcKiians. As many as 8,000 skulls were found at one of the sites.

The victims were often made to dig their own mass graves and then to kneel on the edge of it. They then received a blow to the back of the head with hoses or iron bars, meant to sever the spinal cord and kill instantly.

They used these methods because they were under orders not to waste bullets, Stanton said. Those who were not killed instantly werc^ thrown into the graves alive and left there to die.

b66UAMB0DlA, PagelO

FURUTANI: Successful retention requires 'holistic point of view'

Continued from PageT~

"It was at UCLA that I first decided to work for the L.A. school board," he said.

Furutani discussed student affirmative action, but stressed the importance of helping students "not only to survive, but succeed . . . there is affirmative action to get them in, but not affir- mative action to graduate them out."

Many individuals go through "socio- economic obstacle courses to get them to UCLA," he said, which leaves the university with the challenge of becom- ing a responsive institution "the vehicle so students can ride to suc- cess."

Furutani emphasized the need for diversity but "without integration, there is failure," he said. .

He used the U.S. Olympic team as an

example t- one he said had obvious strength and, diversity, bringing together all human resources.

There is a need for diversity in every area and profession, Furutani said, ad- ding "What better place (to start) than UCLA and the LA. Unified School District?"

Successful retention involves a "holistic point of view," he said. Stu- dents need academic support, but self-

esteem, ethnic awareness and political consciousness are equally important.

Dropping out of school is a "lonely process. Peoprc don't drop out together," Furutani said.

Furutani mentioned an ethnic studies and community awareness requirement for high school students that is currently being discussed in the Education Development Committee of the Los Angeles Unified School District.

-4-

4 NEWS

DaNy Bruin

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

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In wake of stadium tragedy, Britain hints at seating restrictions

Wright formally charged with breaking House ethics rules

By Robert Barr

Associated Press

SHEFRELD, England^— Criticism increased Monday into the police handling of the soccer stadium disaster that killed 94 fans, and the gov- ernment launched its own in- quiry and said it may ban standing-room-only sections.

Officials and fans accused the South Yorkshire police of letting thousands of late ar- rivals into Hillsborough stadium and then respon- ding too slowly when the surging crowd was crushed against a steel anti-riot fence in one of the standing-room- only terraces.

Home Secretary Dougli^ Hurd, speaking to a hushed House of Commons, said the inquiry headed by Lord Justice Taylor would begin

:t^%^ K . i: ttCSRUgtr: 2inu maKC

recommendations about the needs of crowd control and safety at sports grounds.*'

**We have to set our sights high and find a better way for British football (soccer)," Hurd said. **We owe a duty to these passionate suppbfters of football to examine) iirg<^t-

^j^j^

ly and thoroughly the causes and background and to do all in our power to prevent such a thing happening again."

Hurd told the Conunons the decision of a senior police of- ficer to open the gate because he '^considered that there was a possible danger to the lives of the spectators at the front" would be a central question for investigators. Survivors said about 4,000 fans werb pushing at turnstiles to get in- side.

Hillsborough gatekeeper Jack Stone told the Sheffield Star he refused police orders to opstt the outer gate and was forced to hand over his keys to a police inspector.

**I handed the keys to him and told him it was his re- sponsibility and not mine," Stone was quoted as saying.

Liverpool fan Stephen Mit- imv who was caaght m the crush outside tfie gate, told BBC-TV, *The steward put his hand on the gate and said, *Don't open it.' The police said, *Open the gate. There's going to be a crush.' Then two police officers opened the

Sae.SpCOER, Page 1 1

By Jim Drinklird

Associated Press

WASHINGTOI^ The House ethics commit- tee, with Democrats and Republicans united, for- mally charged Speaker Jim Wright Monday with 69 violations of the chamber's rules including what the panel's chairman called "a scheme to evade" limits on outside earnings.

After a 10-month, $1.5 million investigation, the committee, pf six Democrats and six Republicans voted unanimously to issue a report finding *' reason to believe" the Texas Democrat had run afoul of House rules requiring reporting of gifts, barring acceptance of gifts from persons with a direct? interest m legislation and limiting outside earned income.

'*! know in my heart I have not violated any of the rules of that institution," Wright said in a speech to a labor meeting shortly after the ethics

report was released.

He said he had asked -very urgently, verv earnestly for a quick meeting with the the com mittee "to confront them, to confront the alleea tions head-on, face-to-face." ^

At a news conference, committee chairman Rep. Julian Dixon, D-Calif., emphasized that Wright is presumed innocent until the charges are proven, and he underscored that proving them re- quires a much higher weight of evidence than the step taken Monday, vwhicjj is the panel's equivalent of an indictment. r

The move set in motion a series of steps in which Wright can defend himself and the panel must prove with "clear and convincing" evidence that the violations occurred. That is likely ultimately to throw the matter before t|je full

See WRIGHT, f^age 13

Oil spin will have 'mirkimaMmpacr on gasoline prtces, says Exxon VP

By Diane Dutson

Associated Press

\ , I

WASHINGTON -^-"T^iTExxorr Corp. vice president told Con- gress Monday the recent Alaskan tanker accident had minimal im- pact on gasoline prices, which in recent weeks showed the single largest jump in the history .of the American market.

But two senators and a California state official raised

questions at a Senate subcommit- Jee about whether oil companies were engaging in gasoline price ^gouging, planning to reap tax benefits from cleain>p costs stemming from the Alaskan spill, and are ill-equipped to handle future oil spills elsewhere.

J.T. McMillan, senior vice president of Exxon, said the Valdez, Alaska oil spill tem- porarily affected the price of

WEEK 1N4JSAC -

crude oil to the West fcoast, but added: **Its effect on overalL- ^. Si, petroleum jmces was minimal in relation to other fac tors," he said.

McMillan said the price of gasoline has been increasing for several months because the cost of crude oil has been rising.

He said die onset of the sum- mer driving season also tradi-

See EXXON, Page 12

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TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

Dally Bruin

NEWS 5

'^

^.

By Gary Langer

Associated Press

NEW YORK ~ Ttiough a sizable minority of adults oppose abortions, Americans overwhelmingly believe ttiat banning them would do little to curtail them, a Media General-Associated Press survey has found.

With the U.S. Supreme Court poised to reconsider the issue next week, the na- tional poll found support for legal abor^" tion ranging from 50 percent to 65 per- cent of the 1,108 adults polled, depen- ding on the question posed.

Fifty-three percent, for example, were in favor of the court's 1^73 ruling legalizing abortion in the first three mon- ths of pregnancy. And if the court reversed itself and let each state make its own abortion law, 57 percent would want abortion legal in their state.

Moreover, large majorities said outlaw- l^j^J^l^rtioft ^puld fail to prevent it from kn argument used by those ,-,'c many women would have un- safe illegal abortions if the operation were banned.

The poll asked: **If abortion were il- legal in your state, do you think that .would stop most-wonaen there who want abortions from having them, or would most of them go to another state where it

abortion, finds

53% of the people polled were in favor of the Supreme Court's 1973 ruling legalizing abortion in the first three months ~ of pregnancy.

was legal?" Eighty-seven percent said the women would go to another state.

The survey next asked if making abor- tions illegal nationwide would stop most women from having them, or if those women would have illegal abortions or go to a country where abortion is legal. Seventy-diree percent said most women would find a way to have abortions.

The survey nonetheless found its closest split on the question of a constitu- tional amendment.to make abortions il- legal except in cases of rape, incest or to save the life of the mother: Fifty percent were opposed and 44 percent in favor, a division within die poll's margijo of error.

No amendment with those provisions is before Congress, but they are the terms President Bush has said he would sup-^^ port.

Because the wording of questions on

such a sensitive issue can affect the results, the poll posed thc^matter in a variety of ways. The findings on basic at- titudes toward abortion were similar in other recent surveys.**'' ^~^

One question asked: **Should abortion be legal as it is now; legal only in such cases as rape, incest, or to save the life of the mother; or should it not be permit- ted at all?" Fifty percent said legal as now, 39 percent said legal in some case^, 7 percent wanted it banned and the rest were unsure.

CBS News and The New York Times have asked the same poll question since 1985, tracking a slight increase in sup- » port for current law. Depending on the questions, though, other polls have found slight declines in support for legal abor- , tion, and others still have found no change.

In another question, outside the legal context, the poll asked: *'If a woman wants to have an abortion and her doctor agrees to it, should she be allowed to have an abortion, or not?" Sixty-five percent said yes, 25 percent said no and the remaining 10 percent had no opinion. The CBS-Times poll has found a similar response to that same question. _ —Opposition to abortion was greatest among older, less wealthy and less educated respondents, and Republicans

§!•

and conservatives. There was no signifi- cant division in opinion between men and women.

The federal Centers for Disease Con- trol say 1.3 million abortions are per- formed annually in the United States, making it one of the nation's most com- mon surgical procedures. Next week, the Supreme Court is to hear a cffse that could enable it to review its 1973 ruling legalizing abortion, with a decision ex- pected later in the year.

On related issuesyjhe Media General- AP survey found: ^S.

Widespread oppositido to protests by Operation Rescue, the anti-abortion group whose members have been blocking en- trances to abortion clinics around the country. Sixty-seven percent qpposed those demonstrations, 22 percent sup- - ported them and 1 1 percent were unsure.

Narrow opposition to the use of feder- al ftjrids to help poor women with their niedical bills if they want an abortion, f^orty^nine pel-cent opposed such spen- ding, 41 percent were in favor. The rest did not answer. '

Fifty-one pereent support for legaliza- tion in the United States of RU486, a drug developed ^ranc«. thai stops very early pregnancy by preventing the fertil- ized egg from being implanted in the uterine wall.

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6 NEWS

Daily Bruin

TUESDAY, APRIL 18

1989

In Mexico, 2 more bodies found iinlced to ritual killings

By Joel Williams

Associated Press .

MATAMOROS, Mexico - The discovery of two bodies near" a ranch where 13 mutilated corpses were found last week delayed the filing of Mexican charges Monday against members of a human-sacrificing cult, officials said.

The cult also is suspected of killing the newly discovered victims.

Two bodies of suspected drug traf- fickers missing since May were unearthed Sunday on a collective farm two miles south of the Rancho Santa Elena, where 13 corpses were found last week.

The two victims, Moises Castillo, 52, of Houston and Hector de la Fuente, 39, who lived on a small communal farm west of Matamoros, did not appear tor- tured or mutilated like the others, of- ficials ^id. * J

Castillo's father, Hidalgo Castillo, ^6, of Brownsville, said he found $70, a pair of eyeglasses and a passport in his son's pocket when he helped police ^ig up the bodies.

* Formal Mexican federal charges were

to have been filed Monday against four men in custody here, but the new deaths complicated the case, said JoiC^Piedad Silva Arrbyo, Mexico's chief federal nar- cotics investigator for northeastern Tamaulipas state.

Silva said authorities were considering adding the latest victims' deaths to the murder, kidnapping*, drug and weapons charges already pending against the four suspects.

'*It's a big case, not simple, and there are a lot of details to attend to, before we take them before the court," Silva said.

Although relatives disputed the descripr tion, officials said the two newly found victims were drug traffickers somehow involved with the cult allegedly led by Adolfo de Jesus Constanzo, 26, and Sara Maria Aldrete, 24.

Constanzo, a Cuban-American who lived for a time in Miami, and Aldrete, a Texas college student who authorities s^d lived a double life as the ''\yitch" of the ritualistic cult, were at large Monday.-

The elder Castillo said he first suspected his son might be buried at the communal farm after children told him

they saw somethioiE; suspicious there.

They said. Look over there. There s a hand sticking out of the ground,

Castillo said. . .

But Castillo said he avoided digging it up until after the 13 bodies were discovered last week, at Rancho Santa Elena, about a mile south of the border and 20 miles west of Matamoros. Castillo said he feared he might be- arrested if he told anyone about the body.

Castillo said he (lid not know what his son was doing at the farm where his body was found with the hands bound with wire. In Houston, he said, Moises worked as a mechanic and at other various jobs. He disputed authdrities' description of his son as a drug traf- ficker.— : : =^.^ jg '• '^^ n

Monica de Leon, de la Fuente's \i>ife, ^ said she learned ofJier husband's death on television Sunday night. He was a farm worker, and not involved with drugs, she said.

Martin Elias Salai^ar, a federal judicial police group chief who supervised Sun- day's exhumations, said the two men had been suspected of drug trafficking.

Across the Rio Grande in Brownsville Cameron County Sheriff Alex Pere described the two newly discovered deaths as drug-related, **revenee-tvnp killings/* ^ ^^

The suspects in custody have told in- vestigators that cult members wece in- volved in occult practices inspired by palo mayombe, a form of spiritism that draws on African and Caribbean in- fluences.

The suspects also said that they were encouraged by Aldrete to watch the movie '*The Believers," which deals with people practicing palo mayombe.

Sheriffs Lt. George Gavito said of- ficials throughout the U.S. and Mexico continued focusing Monday on finding ^Constanzo and Ms. Aldrete. The paW, charged with "aggravated kidnapping by Cameron County authorities, are believed to have directed the human sacrifices,' mutilations and boiling of brains and other organs in rituals to bring occult protection for their drug-smuggling ring.

Numerous people have called to report sightings of the pair, Gavito said.

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Daily Bruin

NEWS 7

FBLjbins locals In seafch for suspect in Sonoma slaylngs

By Jack Schreibmarr-

Associated Press

GLEN ELLEN, Calif. - The search for a winery worker suspected of seven murders was joined by the FBI Monday as law enforcement officials vowed to track down the enigmatic man who has eluded them despite an intense, four-day manhunt. 1-

"We will finally locate him and get him, but it's hard work to do that," said FBI spokesman Chuck Latting about Ramon Salcido.

The 28-year-old native of the Mexican state of Sinaloa described alternately as friendly and well-mannered, or as a paranoid cocaine user propiC to violent outbursts is wanted in connection with a series of Sonoma County murders.

The slayings began Friday" with the deaths of his wife, Angela, his mother-in-law, two of her other daughters and one of his co-workers. Two Salcido children, Teresa, 1, and Sofia, A^W^& found dead^a^^ <4w>y site Saturday. "- .

A third, 3-year-old Carmina, was reported in stable condition

Monday at Petaluma Valley Hospital, where her grandfather. Bob Richards, visited her. Both Carmina and her grandfather were protected by armed depu- ties.

Latting acknowledged that Salcido, who came to the United States as an illegal immigrant, is believed to have extensive con- tacts within the Hispanic com- munity and could try to slip home to Mexico.

**It makes it tough," said Lat- ting. **I mean it's hard, dirty work."

Although photos and descrip- tioifc of the 5-foot-9, 180-pound Salcido have been circulated to attendants at California airports and border guards, Sonoma County Sheriff Richard Michaelsen theorized that the former Grand Cm winery bottl- ing department worker hasn't strayed far from the murder scenes close to the winery in Glel*i Ellen, nearby Boyes Hot Springs, Cotati and the dump just outside of Petaluma.

ly best guess i^ that 1ie*s

Jaying low. We're assuming he's in our county or in Marin Coun ty," the sheriff said.

1000s of Californians dash to mail centers to send in tax returns

By Judy Farah

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES - Pro- testing peace marchers and parties for procrastinators marked Monday's last-minute scramble by thousands of Californians who dashed to get their tax returns in the mail by the midnight deadline.

The scene was hectic at Los Angeles' downtown Terminal Annex, the city's main mail processing center, which l^ad 3-foot canvas hampers posted at curb side for the 400,000 taxpayers expected to file their returns at the last minute, said postal spokesman I Larry Dozier.

April 17 was the deadline because April 15 fell on the weekend.

About 35 mail centers in San Francisco and 20 in Los Angeles and Orange counties were to remain open until midnight for late returns. The Internal Revenue Service's center in Fresno reported it expected to receive the ma- jority of its 11.4 million -returns from the Central and Southern California and Hawaii regions by Wednes- day. As of last week, it had Tcccivcd 5.9 million retunwr

In Los Angeles, rock radio station KLSX-FM held a. **Tax Day Procrastination Party" in an effort to make tax time more ^n. Station employees offered moral sup- port for delayers by serving coffee and doughnuts to them as they dropped off their returns.

">ye want to add some merriment and not make the people feel bad that they're procrastinators," explained disc jockey Peter Tilden.

Meanwhile, dozens of peace activists from Hollywood Sane-Freeze and Jobs for Peace opted for a candlelight vigil at Terminal Annex to call attention to military spending which they claim consumes 52 per- cent of all tax dollars in the United States.

Similar protests were staged in San Diego and San Fran- cisco.

"It's time to stop making death and destruction our fed- eral priorities and to start dealing with issues like liuhger, homelessness and en- vironmental destruction," Carol Jahnkow, a spokeswoman for the Coor- dinating Council for Peaide and Justice, said in San Diego.

In San Francisco, members of the Berkeley-based Nor- thern California War Tax Resistance distributed $6,000 from people who refused to

pay all or part of their taxes.:

The people contributed the money because they contend 60 percent of federal income taxes are ttscd ^w ^^war imd war preparations." The money was distributed to such organizations as» Women's Convoy to Centrai America, Peace and Justipe Youth Outreach Project, Western States Legal Foundation, Veterans Vietnam Restoration Project and People for a Nu- clear Free Future.

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8 NEWS

Dally Bruin

lawmaj$rs approve assault weapons bill

By Doug Willis

Associate Press

SACRAMENTO - The California Legislature took a major step Monday toward restricting sales and possession of more than 50 models of assault weapons^ including AK-47s like the gun used in the Stockton schoolyard massacre.

The assault weapons bill, SB292 by Senate President Pro Tem David Roberti, D-Los Angeles, was approved on a 41-34 majority, the absolute minimum vote re- quired for passage in the 80-member lower house.

An unidentified spectator in the gallery shouted "Sieg Hell!" as the vole was an- nounced, a reference to the contention of some gun owners that any limit on gun ownership is a step toward dictatorship. But there was no other disturbance follow- ing the controversial vote.

Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, D-San Francisco, a backer of the assault weapons bill, held the Assembly roll call open at a 39-34 count for six^urs to allow time for two Southern California lawmakers who were absent iluring the morning debate on the bill to fly back to the Capi- tol andwote> ' *^ ^-

Both legislators. Assemblywoman Max- ine Waters, D-Los Angeles, and Assemblyman Steve Clute, D-Riverside, voted yes to sencj the bill back to the Senate, which could vote as early as Thursday. * .

Jlie Assembly . floor vote was regaroed

as the bill's toughest test, since sentiment for gun restricti9ns is considerably stronger in the Senate, and since the Senate has already approved a broader and more controversial version of the Roberti bill by a wide margin.

However, the controversial measure must clear anywhere from one to four more votes, depending on pending parliamentary maneuvers, before it can go to Gov. George Deukmejian's desk. ^~^

The Republican governor has not specifically endorsed either the Roberti bill or a nearly identical measure by Assemblyman Mike Roos, D-Los Angeles, but has said he is prepared to sign legisla- tion with restrictions similar to provisions in those bills, v

Like an early Assembly vote on Roos'

AB347, the roll call on Roberti's SB292

divided the Assembly sharply on party

lines, with Democrats in support and

4tcputrticans opposed. Only

Republicans crossed lines to vote with 39 Democrats favoring the bill, and only six Democrats from conservative districts joined 28 GOP opponents. ^

An hour-long floor debate on Roberti s bill raised no new issues on either side and rarely approached the emotional rhetoric of earlier debates, as all partici- pants appeared certain of the outcome.

Roos, who acted as principal Assembly sponsor of Roberti's bill, noted that the vote was being taken on "a most ig- nominious anniversary," exactly thrive months after the Jan. 17 tragedy in which Patrick Purdy sprayed a Stockton schoolyard with more than 100 rounds from an AK-47, killing five children and wounding 2^ others and a teacher before taking his own life.

"This is not only a courageous, but an historic step to end the culture of vio- lence," Roos said.

*'This is a superficial bill that ignores the crux of the problem.... The problem is this Legislature's unwillingness (to enact tougher laws) to put these people (like Purdy) behind bars/' replied Assemblyman Tom McClintock, R-Thou- sahd Oaks "'"^"T.

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Funded by Campus Programs Committee of the Program Activities Board

TUESDAY. APRIL 18, 1989

States debate how to provide health care for working poor

By Larry Ryckman

Associated Press ^^- ^

At least a dozen states are considering laws that would force companies to insure their employees as a way to stem billions of dollars in liospital losses and protect some of the 37 million Americans vyithout health insurance.

Hawaii in 1974 became the first state in the nation to adopt a mandatory insurance law, and it was followed last year by Massachusetts.

This year, California, Florida Illinois, Ohio and other states are debating bills that would order companies to cover workers, impose tax penalties on those that don't and provide in- -eemives for those tha*t do.

New York, Washington and a few other states have adopted pilot projects to provide health care to the working poor.

And last week in Washington, D.C., Sen. Edward M. Ken- nedy, D-Mass., and Rep. Henry " axman , D-Cattfc=introduced

federal legislation that would re quire employers to buy health insurance for all (ull-time workers.

More than 37 million Americans lack health insurance; about two-thirds 24 million ' are workers or their families. Their numbers have grown about 1 million a year sinc^ 1980, their ranks swelled by ^workers who once held well-paying fac- tory jobs and now work in the service industry.

Hospitals have been prime supporters of the effort on the state and federal levels to insure the poor. Small businesses op- pose mandatory insurance, say- ing they cannot afford to provide health care benefits.

In 1980, hospitals lost $2.8 billion in health care costs for which they received no reim- bursement, or about 3.6 percent of their total costs, said Irene Fraser, a health project manager with the American Hospital Association in Chicago.

Seven years later, losses for treating the poor rose to $7.2 billion, or 4.7 percent of total hospital costs, she said.

Many workers are unable to pay their bills because their employers provide no insurance and they earn just enough to be ineligible for assistance through Medicaid, which has wage ceil- ings that vary from state to state. Fifteen years after Hawaii "•passed its mandatory insurance law, opinions differ on the pro- gram's success, and its ap- plicability to mainland states.

**I would say to anyone look- ing, don^ use Hawaii as an ex- ample because it's a poor exam- ple," said Sam Slom, president (of Small Business Hawaii.

Employees are offered health insurance if they work at least 20 hours a week for four con- secutive weeks. The law ex- cludes government employees, family businesses and people who work on commission, such as real estate agents.

Employees pay 1.5 percent of their monthly wage, or one-hali the cost of the insurance premium, whichever is less, and the employer pays the balance.

Hawaii's law wouldn't work elsewhere, said tofi Weidman, Washington, D.C.. manager ot state media relations for the Na- tional Federation of Independent Businesses. (

TUESDAY, APRILTS:i989

Deukmejian pays $21,314 in income tax

The Associated Press

DaHy Bruin

NEWS 9

il

SACRAMENTO - Gov. George Deukmejian and his wife, Gloria, reported income of $85,141 and paid a total of $21,314 in federal, state and local taxes in 1988, copies of his tax returns reveal.

The Republican governor released copies of federal and state returns Monday^

Deukmejian's income was $8,470 lower than in 1987, and his total tax bill was $5,196 below that of 1987. The only significant change in Deukme- jian's income was in speaking fees. He reported $7,500 in honoraria in 1987, but none in 1988.

The drop in his tax bill was a result of the lower income and inflation adjustments in tax rates. As in previous years, the great

:. majority of Deukmejian's in- come came from his guber- natorial salary of $82,970. His return also lists $1,778 in divi- dend income, $127 in interest on savings, and $58 in oil royalty income. The remaining $208 in- come came from a refund on

^ 1987 stale taxes^

UCLA CAMPUS TOURS

»«.,»..

The Deukmejians' deductions included nothing out of the ordi- nary: $2,020 in charitable deduc- tions, $881 in real estate taxes and $342 in mortgage interest on their Long Beach home, and $305 in State Bar dues.

Conservationists decry dangerous niining of cyanide

By Richard De Atley

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES^ A conser- vation group on Monday attack- ed what it called inadequate restrictions on mines using « cyanide to extract gold, saying the process endangers wildlife.

Tlw Wilderness Society called cyanide leach mining *'land eating, water polluting, bird .Idling" technology, citing min- ing industry reports of bird and mammal deaths in Nevada.

The California office of the Bureau of Land Management last week announced it was requiring the nine mines using cyanide heap-leach techniques on BLM-managed land to make monthly reports of bird and animal deaths at their sites.

**I welcome the fact that they are now going to require them to report them . . . but that doesn't do anything to prevent the deaths," Patricia Schifferle, California-Nevada regional director of The Wilderness Society, said Sunday before the news conference.

**We feel we are moving rapidly to make sure that the mines already in operation are safe," said BLM spokeswoman Jan Bedrosian in SacrajtientQ on Monday. * 'We think die mining companies are doing a good job in California."

Schifferle said Monday the ::;BLM came out with the new "procedures because It was **about to approve" the Casde Mountain Mine in the East Mo- javc National Scenic Area, with one proposed pit 600 feet deep and covering 110 acres and another 200 feet deep and 40

See MINING, Page 10

PROGRAM

NOW HIRING

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THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF DESIGNATED CYCLE PARKING AREAS ON CAMPUS PROVIDED BY

THE UCLA CYCLE PARKING ENFORCEMENT PROGRAM

DESIGNATED BICYCLE PARKING AREAS

NORTH CAMPUS

URL(S) Architecture (N) Royce Hall (N) Royce Hall (E) Dodd Hall (E) ( Law School (W) Schoenberg (SE) Schoenberg (N\V) Powell Library (E) Dance Building MelnitaL(W) Didcson Art Center University Nursery School

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\ ^'^^^ '^ ."' '^ ** ""P°™<^ ««' '"«««"y P**"! -nocorcyde,. moped. »d .cooc«. wfll be dttd «Xr^w^^t owner', exneme

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PARKING AREAS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WTTHOUT NOTICE •" ^ "^ mfotmatioo about cycle paiking conua the Cycte^iftaf feorc^mcnt OfTicc at (213) 825-2029.

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•4

10 NEWS

Daily BrUin

TUESDAY. APRIL 18, 1989

-^^

UCLA

School of Social Welfare _-

Black Caucus ,

-presents-

"South Central Los Angeles: Community in Continuing Crisis"

This half-day conference will examine selected social/political/ economic forces presently converging on the community which serves to keep it in a state of "crisis." Despite the struggles confronted by the community, positive development is Possible through agenaes, organizations, and residents coming together to Identify problems, develop strategies and organize

^^frnm

DELIVERS

DELIVERS FREE

Registration 9:00 - 9:30 am Time: 9:30 am - 1:00 pm Date: Saturday, April 22, 1989 Location: UCLA Dodd Hall, Second Floor

Keynote address: Evelyn Knighl, ACSW

Executive Director, Peoples Coordinated Services, Inc.

Community m Continued Crisis: The Challenge to Service

Providers and the Profession of Social Work" Presenters: ,

Cynthia Hamilton, Ph.D ' ~ " ~ ^~

^Jpartheid in an American Qty: The Undermining of South Central L.A " Omawole Fowles, Ed.M. and M.P.H. . .

Black Community in Continued Crisis: A Political Perspective of Ph)^ical, Psychological, and Sodal/Cultural Health" *^ Makun^u Akinyela, M.F.C.C. Touth m Crisis: Institutional Socialization of African American

1;^ Nunn, D.S.W.

Tlte Gang Problem: A Service Prospective"

For more information call (213) 825-7737 Funded by Graduate Student Association

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',■ r

uetA

Earthquake

Preparedness

Week

April 17-21, 1989

SHAKE

>?ATTvE

- Your Way tcTEarthquake FactFand Safety

Don't Forget the Expo Friday

UCLA EARTHQUAKE EXPO

r ^ '^

COME TO

THE UCLA EAITTHQUAKE

EXPO

Ack«rman UnkMi

Frkjay. AprU 21 1 1 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Uam how »o protect yours«tf from £arthquak« hazards.

RIDE THE BIG ONE ON QJAKEY SHAKEYI!

Two Free Tickets to Universal Studios Tour's

_, EARTHQUAKE

^ and live through an 8.2 Activities this week fnclude- ^ -Surveys and Information civailable or> Bruin Walk

UCLA Oepartment of Communifv Safety

..- . _ .... - For mora vtfomannr^ ccK 206-66 1 )

and the Residence Halls -EARTHQUAKE EXPO in

Ackerman on Friday, April 21 llann-2pm '^' ^'

-Hopefully NO Earthquakesi

Paid for by USAC -\our student gov'ernment "

Cambodia

Continued from Page 3

Stanton showed slides Fie k i taken in Cambodia of n 1^ stacked piles of human "S and bones many of which 1 now piled up to the ceilinp" 'f the former prisons where victim were kept. ""^

n^^U''''^''^ government of Cambodia camiot persecute those responsible for the massacres because it would spark "anr.fho'

bloodbath— Stanton said^'^T ac^ed that although the case falk

under thcUN Genocide Coriv'en tion passed ^n 1948, nothing was done by the United Nations ?o bring the Khmer Rouge to justice.

Stanton has made repeated at- tempts to bring the case to the World Court, which arbitrates disputes concerning the Genocide Convention.

;*It only takes one nation to bnng a case to the World Court for hearing and trying the case even if the guilty nation refuses to participate/' Stanton said.

However, **it is unimaginably difficult to engage the political will of even one country," he added.

The People's Republic of China, which has supplied the Khmer Rouge with weapons, has also exerted its influence to keep the case from appearing before the Worid Court, he said

He said he was continuing his efforts to establish an intema- tional panel of judges who will render a verdict on his case, as well as draw more publicity to the case by making a documen- tary film about Khmer Rouge atrocities.

Mining

Continued from Page 9

I. acres long.

The San Francisco-based Wilderness Society said a 1984- 1988 study of bird and mammal deaths at Nevada mines using cyanide leaching showed 6,444 reported deaths from 47 mines. The voluntary reports were col- lected by the Nevada Department of Wildlife. -^ -

Of the 47 mines reporting, nearly half the bird and animal deaths took place at two loca- tions. The BLM's California of- fice, meanwhile, said there were 99 bird deaths reported at six California mines over the past three years.

Of the 93 mines in operation or seeking permits in California and Nevada, most were in Nevada, according to Wilderness Society figures, whiqh showed 13 active and five proposed mines in California.

Cyanide leach mining is an approximately 20-year-old method *that gained popularity during the 1970s, when gold prices went up and computer analysis of ore showed gold de- posits previously overlooked by other detection methods.

In the process, low grade otc is sprayed with a solution of water and cyanide, usually a cup of cyanide to a ton of water.

'*The practice is seT^poIic- ing,** ^iH Rill Tilden of the

Desert Conservation Institute,^ mining industry lobby group.

The process has left the western United States dotted with mines that contain large ponds of Cyanide solution that critics say have attracted animals and birds seeking water holes .in usually arid regions.

Tilden and other mining spokesman said operators had a ^heightened awareness about ecological concerns in California during the 1970s, v^ien the cyanide leaching method came into use, ^

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

Dally Bruin

NEWS 11

ijM^

Soccer

Continued from Page 4

gate."

The crush was so great Mitton said, that fans fell on the fioor and people climbed over them. "All the police! were doing was standing up. saying *Get back, get back.'j There was already people dead then. I climbed on them tO"gct over the fencer"

The Sheffield Sfar said a police superintendent made the decision to open the 16- foot-wide gate because he feared a wall was seconds away from collapsing on hun- dreds of fans.

* 'Startled officers some of them hemmed in thought the wall was beginn- ing to buckle under the enor- mous pressure of screaming fans. The crowd was packed so tightly around a police horse that it was lifted six in- ches off the ground,'' the

paper said. 7'

South Yorkshire police, who have handed over a sepa- rate investigation of the polic- ing of the match to the neighboring West Midlands police force, refused to com- ment on thc^ Sheffield Star report.

_ Police Federation repre- sentative Paul Middup attack- ed growing public criticism of police actic^ns as ''grossly un- fair," saying they faced a situation '*for which no amount of training could prepare them."

Police on Monday released the names of the 94 victims. All were British, 34 were teen-agQrs, 33 were in their 20s, and seven were women.

Press Association, Britain's domestic news agency, said as many as 40 who perished are thought to have died in the rush through a tunnel to the center terrace at the Liverpool goal. The rest were crushed against the 10- foot fence in front of the terrace or were trampled underfoot, it said.

They ranged in age from 10 to 67. Of the 170 injured, 47 remained hospitalized Mon- day, including 17 in intensive care.

Prince Charles, heir to the British throne, and his wife, Diana, visited some of the hospitalized fans, as did Liverpool soccer team members, who came with team scarves and souvenirs.

In Liverpool, where most victims lived, the city council Monday called an official week of mourning and discussed ways of helping the bereaved and injured.

In the House of Commons, Hurd said the government believes the future of soccer lies "in providing all-seated accommo<iation at major foot- ball clubs."

Tlie

Daily Bruin

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Prepare to

Oo you remember the LA. earthquake of 1987...the one that hit U8 on the first of October, and reminded us how unprepared we really are for "The Big One?" As CaWornians we shouldnl need the intensity of the real thing to scare us into educating ourselves to what can be done to minimize anxiety and injury. So. let's take advantage of the earth's calmness now to leam about Earthquake Preparedness. The only way you can minimize injury is ty remain- ing relatively calm during the actual earthquake, and the way to decrease that anxiety is by Jsufising you are prepared for the worst scenario.

Earthquakes are extremely dangerous because the after-effects of a shaker can be any combination of fire, chemical and water dam- age. Contaminated food and water could also result from an earth- quake, not to mention a shortage of food. Power outages would most likely accompany a major quake. We need to expect that the worst combination of these might occur, so that we are not caught off guard.

Naturally people will be surprised and a bit afraid at the time of the quake, but it is important to the safety of everyone that panic does not develop. Clear thinking and cooperation with the authorities including your Resident Assistants will^help important information pass along and will keep up morale. More regimented instructions during such a disaster will be necessary for safety, and they will only be temporary until communications and transportation facilities are restored. '

Some helpful tips to get you through the rock & roll experience:

Quring the Quake ^ '•

1. Stay eilm-do not panic. Statistics prove that less injuries result from earthquakes in the night than from those occurring in the day because people are sleeping and have no time to react.

2. If you are in a building-stay inside. If you are outside-stay outside. Pretty simple, eh?

3i If you are indoors-move to the inside walls, get away from windows, and try to get under a door frame. If you are in an auditorium or large classroom crouch over and protect your head, face, and neck with your arms. You don1 want a face-full-of glass.

4. If you are in a car-stay in K, try to pull over and stop. Stay away from overpasses-they will be coming down: The car will bounce violently but it, is safe. If a powerline falls on the car-stay rn the car. DO NOT GET OUT. If possible, drive out from under- neath it after the quake, otherwise wait for a rescue.

r

L

DO YOU FLPiSHUi

When the Shaking Stops

1. Take a moment to gather yourself together before calmly and carefully leaving a building. Be aware of the exits when entering a library, theater, or other crowded place. At home have a preplanned regrouping location in case of emergency.

2. Check for iniun^: administer first aid if necflssarv If you doni know first aid you owe it to yourself, to your friends, and to your neighbors to learn. You would wish they kr>ew how to save you too. A first aid kit in the car and home is good only if you know how to use it.

3. Do not light a match! There may be a gas leak in the building. Use fjashliohts-know where they are-and keep them in working order.

4. If you smell gas, open the windows immediately, use flash- lights, shut off the main gas vah^e. and break all electrical circuits at the box.

5. If you navem already saved water you can still save some before ruptured pipelines contaminate it. Close off the main water valve, collect all remaining water from the sink faucets in bowls, and believe it or not-the water in the toilet tank is perfectly good drinking water.

6. if you are at the beach, or near a dam-get away frofn the water. Know that the ocean currents are manipulated by the ground movement and unusually large waves will result. Snow areas will also sustain more avalanche damage.

7. Listen for news on a battery operated radio. Have spare bat- teries for your radio and flashlights stored somewhere easily acces- sible. Be prepared to be self-suffkient for a period of at least 72 hours after the quake. Police and fire officials will be forced to deal with the larger emergencies first suqh as hospitals, airports, and prisons.

A Survival Kit Includes:

-Shoes to get around in the debris -Sleeping Bag for the unsheltered outdoors -Rain Poncho -Flashlight (working)

-Matches for cooking food ^

-Bottled Water to dnnk (4 gallons/person)

-Canned food (label w/date)

-Can opener ^

-First Aid Kit & knowledge of CPR

-Shovel (put out fires, dig latrines, use as hammer, etc.)

-Rope

Carry all this and a set of jumper cables in the trunk of your car The sleeping bag may come in handy for 'other" things too.

4-

I

)o not eat or drink from containers that were open during the"" quake-there could be shattered glass in them.

* Cloudy, or muddy water can be made drinkable by adding iodine tablets or 8-drops of chlorine bleach )o gallon containers, shaking the container and letting the contents dissolve for 30 minutes be- fore drinking.

*Be prepared for aftershocks.

As it stands with all our present technology we are still not able to receive preliminary warnings of this natural disaster. We cannot prevent earthquakes like we can prevent fires, but we can be prepared for the imminent danger. We can minimize* injury by minimizing panic and encouraging self-sufficiency NOW. Today, it's only a threat we're dealing with-so let's deal with it!

^

4MVWI.V *f"

12' NEWS

DaHy Bruin

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

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Exxon

Continued from Page 4

tionally causes price hikes in creased regulations, higher cost imports and added excise taxes were other contributors to hichtr prices, he said.

Sen. Alan Cranston of California, the state hit hardest by soaring gasoline prices, said Congress was right to initiate a probe "to make sure no one is taking advantage of the Alaska oil spill disaster and using it as a ' cover for price-gouging."

'^According to the U S Department of Energy, the crude oil shortage on the West Coast as a result of the Valdez incident was negligible, amounting to no more than 12 and half million barrels of crude or the equivalent of 17 hours of U.S consumption," Cranston said.

That loss '*cannot realistically account for the recent price escalation," he said.

McMillan and Cranston testified before the Senate Energy subcommittee on energy regulation and conservation.

'You have an r amazing burden of proof to con- vince the JUnierican peoplo: that the oil com- panies didn't ex- ploit the Valdez accident.'

Sen. Hdward Metzenbaum

^ ^

Amigos tutors Chicano/Latino children at Hoover Elementary School. Tutorials take place Wed. and Thurs, from 1:00 p.m.- 4:30 p.m. Transportation will be provided

m m

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will be an orientation Tuesday the 18th at 5 o'clock

at 411 Kerckhoff.

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For more information contact Amigos Del Barrio at 41 1 Kerckhoff or call 825-2217.

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Funded by CAC of PAB.

IfUlJlMf^

T-

which is trying to find out if there has be«n price gouging by the oil companies following Ex- xon's 10 million gallon oil spill into Prince William Sound on March 24.

**You have an amazing burden of proof to convince the American people that the oil companies didn't exploit the Valdez accident," Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, chairman of the subcommittee, told

McMillanr:

Gray Davis, California state controller, testified that gasoline prices in California escalated two to three times as much as other parts of the nation since the oil spill three weeks ago, in- cluding rises of as much as 49 cents per gallon in Los Angeles.

**This dramatic price increase cannot be explained by market forces," Davis said, "The oil industry is trying to profit from its own incompetence. " , /

Davis also said the oil industry is totally unprepared to handle an oil spill disaster occurring off the coast of California. He said his deputy and a delegation from the California State Lands Commission went to Alaska, and learned that only a fraction of the equipment and supplies pro- mised by the Alyeska oil consor- tium to clean op an oil spill ac-=^ tually were available.

"The lesson of Valdez is clear," Davis said. "We cannot trust oil companies to keep the i*:^— word. I call upon President Bush to personally inspect the oil disaster at Valdez.

Metzenbaum also criticized Exxon's plan to deduct the costs of cleaning up the spill from the taxes they pay the federal gov- ernment.

McMillan said the deduction was a legitimate business loss allowed by the gove^qaient. He also said Exxon was paying^peo- ple to help with the cleanup and the taxes they pay on those Exx-_i. on wages should make up most of the difference.

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

Dally Bruin

NEWS 13

Wright

Continued from Page 4

House, where Wright's position as the nation's highest elected Democrat, or even his House 5eat, could be on the line.

Wright immediately began his defense in earnest, operating what one supporter. Rep Charles Wilson, D-Texas, called **a war room" out of his office. "At some point we've got to start figuring out who's on our side and who's on the other side," Wilson said.

Wilson predicted Wright would win on the floor, "losing a few^ cowardly Democrats and picking up some brave Republicans."

The most serious allegation against Wright, that he accepted some $145,000 i^ gifWJover a 10-year period from George Mallick, a Fort/Worth developer, also had the nar- iTOwest margin of suppoi; on the ethics committee.

itigm»»TT

According to records «bf inter- nal committee votes released along with the report of the panel's special outside counsel, Chicago attorney Richard J. Phelan, Democrats Chester Atkins of Massachusetts and Bernard Dwyer of New Jersey __joined the six committed: Republicans for an 8 to 4 margin on that issue.

The panel agreed with its counsel, Phelan, that Mallicjc's major interests in real estate and oil and gas ventures and in redevelopment of Fort Worth's historic stockyards district gave him ^ direct interest in legisla- tion on taxation and on certain appropriations bills. His financ- ing arrangements ^ith savings and loan institutions also gave I him an interest iij^ legislation in- volving thB S&L industry, the committee found.

But Wright's lawyer, William C. Oldaker, called that "doublespeak" and said "it's one of the most outrageous readings of legislative history" he has seen. Overall, the report contains "a lot of noise, a lot of clamoring, but very little substance," he said.

Other matters before the committee were more clear cut. The panel voted unanimously that there was reason to believe Wright failed to report as gifts the use of a car and Fort Worth condominium he and bis wife received from Mallick. Commit- tee members voted 10-2 that Mrs. Wright's $18,000-a-year salary from a Mallick-Wright company should also be charac- terized as a gift, saying she did little or nothing to earn the money.

The panel also voted 10-2 that certain bulk sales of Wright's book, "Reflections of a Public Man," appeared to have been used to evade House ceilings on outside earned income.

"In the committee's view, seven bulk sales of Rep. Wright's book . . . demon- strated an overall scheme to evade the House outside earned

income limit because (speaking) honorarium payments were re- characterized as royalties," Dix- on said.

The committee voted unanimously to issue its state- ment of alleged violation formal- ly charging the speaker with breaking the rules.

Forty-seven possible violations raised by Phelan were disipissed. Those involved allegations of improper lobbying of executive l^nch officials, misuse of con- gressional staff and misuse of campaign ftinds.

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14 VIEWPOINT

Daily Bruin

TUESDAY. APRIL 18, 1959

i.

Defense

fit

I icy or atrocity?

8y David HofF

Does the magnitude of our military expen- diture bear any relation to our national defense capacity? Does the acquisition of enemy-silo- seeking ICBMs, radar invisible Stealth aircraft, and satellite destroying satellites make us any safer?

Apparently the government thinks so because defense expenditures amount to approximately one third of the annual budget, as has been the ?ase for the past decade. Yet turkeys such as the grounded Bl and the military's infamous $600 hammer surely don't strengthen our na- ^tion's defenses. Are all these machines really necessary, or are they just widget produced to legitimize corporate welfare otherwise known as the defense budget? I'm inclined to believe the latter.

Who is our enemy? If it is the Russians, there's no need to continue with such a massive weapons build-up because the Mutual- ly Assured Destruction (MAD) threshold has long since been reached. In addition, the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), which is supposed to render MAD strategy obsolete, is only destabilizing in that it will protect us no better from enemy missiles than a perforated umbrella keeps us dry. Most experts agree that it's virtually impossible to create an imperme- able defense shield such such as SDI promises. In this light massive new weapons systems make little sense yet cost billions of dollars.

If Third World nations such as those that ap- pear to endorse extremist terrorist organizations (i.e. Libya and Iran) are our enemies, why is it that we find it so difficult to prevent such ter- rorist actions with all our expensive "space age" weapons systems? Bombs concealed -in cassette radios have recently caused more dam- age than has any MX missile!

It seems letter bombs and chemical and bio- logical weapons in the hands of terrorists can be just as deadly, if not more so, than our

sophisticated arsenal. Thus, traditional defense policies aimed at the Russians are self- defeating in the Third World aren^. After all, David did defeat Goliath.

If our enemy is Japan economically speak- ing — the military plays absolutely no part in an effective defense. In fact, it weakens our stance by siphoning away the much needed research and development dollars and organiza- tion that the Japanese government is so willing to devote to their manufacturing industries. We, in turn, spend billions on their cars, TV's, radios, and VCR's, whi4e producing a few bombers and missiles the average Joe couldn't afford or even want. And who now seems to own half the United States? The Japanese!

Over the last 20 years it seems we have in- dulged in weaponry overkill only to satisfy our own gluttonous egos under the justification that the many defense dollars exist (e.g. education), and defense industries can shift irto consumer related fields preserving their employees' jobs. Just think of the corporate jets Northrop could produce or a "Walkman" made by TRW!

It would therefore appear that much of our military budget is currently misdirected. While there is a bona fide need for modern, efficient armed forces, over the years we have created a money-consuming monster whose mere ex- istence is justification for its voracious appetite. When both the Russian and American economies are plagued by excessive debt, for- midable military budgets don't ease the pain. Perhaps we need to re-examine the means by which we pursue peace.

Channeling funds toward economic and humanitarian foreign aid (even to the Russians) may be a more effective game plan, and it's surely more consistent than the current philosophy of ensuring peace by the threat of death.

The Midnight Economist

International debt: rescues and reforms

The international debt crisis of Mexico, Brazil, Argen- tina, and many lesser economies became abruptly ap- parent in mid- 1982. Their massive foreign debts did not materialize overnight, of course, but few were prepared for an- nouncements that such potential- ly wealthy countries could not continue interest payments. It was widely supposed in credi or countries that this was only a transitory difficulty. After all, world oil prices had softened after 1979, and interest rates had risen along with inflation. So the preferred prescription for the debt problem was somehow to reduce interest rates, to increase '

demand for exports of debtor countries by world economic recovery, and meanwhile to continue lending to the debtors by banks and in- ternational agencies. :8ut Anna i Schwartz, distinguished financial analyst, finds that

William Allen

the debt problem was not temporary concern stemming from simply a recession in industrialized economies and a rise in short-term inter- est rates. It was a genuine crisis of solvency, not a passing tightening of liquidity. The cause of the crisis was not so much breakdown in the worid economy as miserable management of the debtors' economies, abetted by peculiar policies of the world's lenders.

Borrowing can be sensible. But this requires sensible use of the borrowed ftinds. The resources acquired through borrowing must be productively employed, creating incomfe out of which the debt can be

-f Jfi'i-.S-.S ,

Borrowing can be sensible. But this re- quires sensible us^of the borrowed funds. The resources acquired through borrowing must be productively employed.

Raff is a graduate student of electrical engineering.

Daily Brum

serviced and ultimately repaid. In the current, ongoing episode, a huge proportion of the borrowed ftinds Avas not used well; much went into consumption rather than investment, much was sunk into \ unprofitable state enterprises, and much left the borrowing countries \ m capital flight." Foolishness, inefficiency, and corruption wasted a great deal of what was borrowed as the debts continued to grow.

An internally collapsing situation can be sustained only be external propping Unwise borrowing has been feasible through imprudent, if not utteriy unconscious, lending, largely by private banks. And after 1V82, creditors found themselves holding a tiger by the tail, hardly danng to let go. So new money has been loaned in order to enable debtors to pay interest on old money, hoping - typically in vain - to buy time in which half-finished investment projects might be completed. ^

Bankers belatedly began to realize that nonperforming loans are made by poorly performing lenders. But they were cajoled and cwrcea by their government and international agencies to paper over S^oH^T"^ problems of the debtor economies and to support *'the prS)lem " ^^*^" borrowers were faced only with the liquidity

r^rl^^/'^^f T^"" V^ ^^ ^''^y ^980s has not been adequate: interest iPHH^mf r^i^u "' ^^^ ^°''*^ economy has generally flourished, and hTv J nl» J 'l''^* continued - but so has the problem. Reforms !!g!l!!gL^g!Li!;gge^ gap rescues cannot work.

^a^uuZ ^^n^ professor of economics, is vice president of the ^^t^tute for Contemporary Studies. h j

Editorial Board

^ Editor-in-Chief

Naruy Mi( u4*ough

M^naginK Editor

Bfidn BossjTf

Ne«v» Editor

Md)H KddcvK h

Viewpoint Editor

Glenn Ad?. ns

EntcftJtnment Editor

Anthony Iran

Sportt Editor

Brian Murphy

Photography Editor

Dan MacMedan

An CNredor.

Tom Yun

Ufisigned editorials represent a majority opinion of- the Daily Bruin Editorial Board. All other columns, letters an^ artwork/ represent the opinions oi their authors. The Bruin complies with the Communica- tion Board's policy^ prohibiting the publication ^of ar- ticles that perpetiiate derogatory cultural or ethnic stereotypes.

Written material suk>niitted must be typed or written legibly and mus* be double-spaced. All material must bear the author's name, address, telephone number, registration card number and . affiliation with UCLA. Names will not be withheld, but phone numbers will not be published. When multiple authors submit mate- rial, some names may be kept on file rather than published with the material.

The Bruin reserves the right to edit submitted ma- terial and to determine its placemient in the paper. All submissions become the property of The Bruin. The Communications Board has a media grievance procedure for resolving complaints against any of its publications. For a copy of the complete procedure, contact the Publications office at 112 Kerckhoff Hall.

Letters

Let's set up a few ground rules

Editor:

As we discuss issues as wide- ranging as abortion and nuclear arms, it might be worth our while to*ponder certain aspects of debating.

First, the individual^ is quite different frqm his viewpoint. It is the viewpoint which ought to be under the microscope and not the individual. A person's views on other issues are generally not relevant.

Many people jake_a- stand- on

-^elmgs alone. A rational ba.sis

'or d feeling makes us more

secure. "lure

meUt ' „7"'";*^""^ra" environ- ment misunderstandings are bound to «:cur Sarcasm f nd Z may be mistaken for rudeness Ambition is mistaken for Ilf 'shness. We'd be better ofT if everyone tried harder to look from the other person's point of- As a friend of mine likes to

T .h « " "'^'°' '"'"'er dur- .'"g short periods of intense

communication.

We sometimes like to perceive people as good and bad. Once we see a characteristic (which unfortunately may be a view- point or a collection of view- points) which is disagreeable to us, there is a tendency at times to shut ourselves from perceiv- ing the good in the other. ^ _j. Generalizations, in general, ought to be avoided.

Ramachandra Divakaruni Qraduat* Studant

Electrical Engineering

-f— «-

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

^i^iy

iruin

VIEWPOINT 15

So she can't be more than eighteen, nineteen at most. She sits across the table from this guy who I guess is her boyfriend. He looks like Holden Caulfield minus the anxiety at- tacks. Fresh-faced and clean-cut. Same age.

He's looking at her like maybe she's the greatest thing since Twinkies. Or God. Or both. He'll just look at her and smile kmd of in disbelief (like "I can't believe I'm sitting here with her!"). Every so often he'll drop his head down into his arms for a second and look back up and get that goofy smile all over his face again ("I can't believe it. . ."). ■'^ She takes it pretty well. Being ^worshipped, I mean. Although ihe isn't exactly dressed for Goddess-status. She's wearing a black mini-skirt, a frilly black lace halter, and black nylons with garter belts. She takes a drag off her cigarette. She's a striking contrast to the guy's basic Wally Cleavemess.

It's Saturday, after midnight on the Sunset Strip. Matthijs and I sit in **CafeL. A. "sipping beers, looking out on the Scene. The young couple sit at a table across from us.

, We had drifted down from the :*'Cal and Fiddle" in Hollywood. Where everybody either had Bon Jovi hair and killer tans and no brains, or brains and no tans and no personality. Lxx)king at everybody else to see if, hey, they were Somebody. You know: Snifflng for Celebrities. But nobody wlas Anybody. Life in L.A. can be hard sometimes. The **Cat and Fiddle" had

the Id: love and lust on the Sunset Strip

n r^"^ r^am: ... f

rV.

Steven Sherwood

been a pretty middle-class thing. We moved to West Hollywood to scope out the Youth Culture.

'*Well, whaddya think?" I ask Matthijs. It's his first encounter with the Strip^Scene.

"What do I think? It's primitive. Primal ..." Matthijs responds. In his Dutchly-ac- cented English. Matthijs is from Holland. That's why his name is spelled fiinny.

At the *'Cat and Fiddle" the milling patrons had the dull-wil- ted look of cows caught in somebody's headlights. There was also a distinct lack of ethnic diversity. Terminal Honkiness. It's amazing. Get enough whtfc=

people together and you reach this critical mass of Mediocrity, a la Orange County or the Republican Party.

Here the air is ftill of raw, steamy energy. Now, Matthijs thinks like a social scientist. He's got a serious Mind. Me, I think like a shoe salesman from Iowa. I'm easily amused.

**Yup, primal. Isn't it '

great?!" I say, beaming.

**Great? It's a zoo!" Matthijs looks at me like I've got something hanging out of my nose.

Bright ne^n glows everywhere. ^Cars are backed way up Sunset boulevard, row's ' of headlights winding out of «ight behind Tower Records. Wild young guys with long, fly- ing hair shout and laugh deeply and cluster outside the clubs that form the heart of the Strip: ** Whiskey- A-Go-Go," the "Roxy," the ** Rainbow Bar and ^ Grill" and "Ghazzari's."

They're glancing over their shoulders or ahead of them or sideways: watching the women who trapse up and down the sidewalk. Some enter the clubs. Most others are content to mere- ly walk the Boulevard: back and forth, up and down. To Be Seen. Lipsticked Babes clad in what seem to be Standard Issue black mini-skirts and high heels. Legs seem to be everywhere: some strutting confidently, clicking down the sidewalk. Others wob- ble unsteadily, like newborn foals, coping with the complex- ities of high heels and pavement. Still others kick languidly as their owners sit on a waist high brick wall that runs betwQpn

buildings: '

Though the airbrushed pictures of moi>-headed, metal bands adorn the fronts of the clubs it's obvious who the real Stars are.

^''So what's wrong with a zoo? It's better than all tho^ lame, tanning-salon clones ^t the other place." I'm slightly offended at Matthijs's characterization. "Steve, this is all so bar- baric." Matthijs shakes his head.

Looking pensive. "I don't know It just makes me want to have a house in the country, with a nice, quiet garden . . ."

Someone has said that being loved is a kind of fame. That it's a type QjCpublic acclaim. Doing the Sunset Strip after midnight is also a kind of fame. There's an electricity in the air. Everybody

Someone has said that being loved is a kind of fame. That it's a type of public ac- claim. Doing tiie Sunset Strip after midnight is al^d a, kind of fame. There's an elec- tricity in the air.

feels like they're part of some kind of Bacchanalian festival. Even those of us in the balcony seats.

"Look, it's a ritual thing." I

say^ "A tribal rite. These kids

=jusl go out ami follow their im- pulses. Takd the old Id outfot a * walk. That's why there's all this crazy energy."

"Ah! So that's it!" Matthijs suddenly smiles. Obviously onto,^ something. "You're an energy vampire. You feed off of these people's lust."

Is that a social-scientific thing to say to somebody or what?

"Yeah, so?" I shrug, guilty as charged.

"Don't you see? That makes you like all those clones at the *Cat and Fiddle.' " Matthijs ex- plains. "They feed off of celebrities' energy; you feed off the energy of these kids. Either way, it's a kind of theft."

I stare back at him grumpily. It never fails to annoy me when somebody other than me is right.

Meanwhile, Wally Cleaver and Mata Hari are about to leave. I turn to watch as she ^ kills her cigarette in the ash-tray. She says some street- wise thing as she gathers her purse and the -^guy^tares at her. Adoringly.

Whoa, Wally, I think to myself, ol' Ward would tell you to watch out for a woman like that.

As she gets up, she catches my stare. An^gives me a long, icy glare right back. Like: Young Love says Screw You, Dracula. She takes Wally 's lov- ing arm and they stroll cuddly- cute out into the night.

I shake my head. Here I'm thinking everybody gets the same charge out of the Strip: -raw lu.st. In,vtead, it seems thafc

some people can take that energy and get houses in the country, while others get visions of Love! Energy, I guess, is all what you make of it

,t

^ Funny, the things you discover when you take your Id out for a walk . . .

..*► ,^

Sherwood is a graduate stu- dent of sociology.

i^.

-r

RIMA

S P E C T I V E

...Qerima [is] among the most interesting and original narrative filmmakers on the current scene." .jhe Village Voiq^

YOU'VE SEEN "OUT OF AFRICA," YOU'VE SEEN "WHITE MISCHIEF."

NOW The Third World Cultural Association invites you to _ -

see Africa AND America from the POV of African filmmaker

(and UCLA Film School Graduate)

Haile Gerima.

See the films. Meet the man. Make the break.

-V

Wednesday, April 19

ffiEE/ Melnltz Theater— "

8:00

Ashes and Embers (1982) Directed by Haile Gerima. A compelling human portrayal of a Vietman veteran who grows to understand the realities of African-American

geople. 16mm. 120 min. ^ hlld of Resistance (1972) Directed by Halle Gerima. The personal transformation of a woman who, upon becoming aware of existing social inequalities, joins the organized fight for social justice. 16mm, 57 min. After Winter^ Sterling Brown (1985) Directed by Haile Gerima. A document of the monumental literaty contri- butions of Washington DC poet laureate Sterling Brown. 16mm. 60 min. r-^

Thursday, April 20

TREE/IVIelni&Theafer 5:00 PM

Bush Mama (1976) Directed by Haile Gerima. Urban Black America seen through a portrait of Dorothy, a woman living on welfare in Watts, California, trying to raise her daughter while her man is in jail for a crime he did not commit 16mm, 98 min.

*Frrday, Aarij 21

TREE/Melnltz Theater 7:30

Harvest: 3,000 Years (1976)Directed by Haile Gerima Set in contemporary Ethiopia, this film tells the real-life story of a peasant family's struggle for survial under subsistence conditions on a wealthy landowner's farm 16mm, 150 min.

*HAILE GERIMA WILL SPEAK Mm A RECEPTION WILL FOLLOW .

FUNDED BY THE CAMPUS PROGRAMS COMMITTEE OF THE PROGRAM ACTIVITIES BOARD

•>~rai

V

16 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

■^Ny Brum

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 17

Bunny Wailer professes roots, rhythms of reggae

By Cameron Shavi, Staff Writer

ILSSm-f"Ii.®.lfrK^ Waller with special guests Judy Mowatt. the SKatalttes, Ras Michael, and Andrew Tosh. Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre, ounday, Apnl 16.

- In the reggae world, there are stars, and then there are superstars people who have molded the music from its beginning. Bunny Waller, performmg to thousands of reggae fans at the Irvine Mead- ows Amphitheatre Sunday, asserted his position as one reecae's foundmg fathers. _^

A childhood companion of reggae icon Bob Marley, Bunny Wailer has not only watched Jamaica's music scene change; he also .

assumed a vital role in its developriient from a small movement in Kingston, Jamaica to an international voice. ' ~"

Supported by singers, Kingston dancers, and a four piece brass section, Wailer treated the audience to a selec- tion of excerpts spanning his en- tire career: from early Rastafarian religious songs to contemporary ''dancehall grooves."

_ Clad in striped robes and a headband. Bunny Wailer opened the show from a chair in center- stage; beating a drum which he held on his lap.

Early in the concert, Wailer invited the audience to join him in reggae's **m"agic" world of fantasy and imagination. *This music is it, this is the magic," he said, giving thanks to Jah, the . Rastafarian name for God, for letting him share his *'gift with the people; ' '

Between songs, Wailer reminded the audienCe not to forget food, ''the most important thing. Some people forget about food, but we can not. Before love, before music, before hap- piness, there is food!" he . shouted.

Once the crowd started mov- ing, Wailer jumped up from his chair and marched around the stage, clutching hands outr^eached from the audience as he preached

_his ** Liberation" message. _^_^___

Liberation, his newest album, combines all the reggae styles .Waller has pioneered during his career. Both danceable and didactic the album urges people around the world to stand up for their richts' ''to stand up for freedom." ^ . - ^ *

reggae's newer dimensions, "dancehall."

No longer in r^bes, Wailer pranced about the stage in Nike basketball shoes and white pants, whirling his waist-long dreadlongs in the air, dancing to tljp rich reggae beat.

The acclaimed "King of Dancehall Reggae" and his band rocked the crowd with heavy,' bass rythms which were not only heard but felt by the audience.

"I can feel the bass in my feetf," said UCLA junior Brian Schiller. .'

"Dancehall" reggae originated in Kingston Jamaica, where fans regularly pack "halls" to dance to reggae cuts "mixed up" by D.J's. Characterized by hypnotic rythms, and a powerful bass,

"dancehall style" almost forces the listener to dance.

"It calls to you . . . and it's good for you to dance, so move out there," Wailer said.

Bunny's tiies to Bob Marley

Blackheart Man album, which career.

Bunny Wailer and" Bob Marley grew up together in a mountain town in Jamaica, then moved to Trenchtown, a Kingston district, when they were in their early teens.

Joined by Peter Tosh in the early I960's, Marley and Wailer formed the Wailers, one of the first reggae bands to put out an extended playing record. Catch a Fire: . ^

An instant sucess, the record included such early Wailer hits . . ^^ as "400 Years," "Concrete I 1/^1 A Jungle," and "Stir it Up." ">*— W wLA\

In 1972, the band put out the album Bumin, which had "I Shot the Sheriff," and the Wailers went on their first con- cert tour.

When the Wailers were together, both Tosh and Bunny Waller contributed significantly to the songwriting and vocals, yet they began to take a back seat to the band's leader. Bob Marley. ^

Unsatisfied, they broke with Marley to produce solo albums

In 1976, Wailer put out the heavily religious and political catapulted Bunny Waller's solo-

Arnold Brostoff, composer of the /^ew score for 'Love/ ^

Greta Gartx) in 'Love' (1927)

screens silent illmclassic 'Love'

By J.D.Wolverton

Senior Staff Writer

INTERVIEW/PREVIEW. Arnold Brostoff, composef of original score for the MGM silent feature film Love (1927). Directed by Edmund Goulding. With Greta Garbo and John Gilbert. Screening Tuesday, April 18, 1989 at 8:00 p.m. Royce Hall. Presented by UCLA Campus Events, in cooperation with the UCLA Cepter for the Performing Arts. 35mm print from Turner Entertainment Co. Tickets on sale now at CTO. $3 for students with ID. $10 for general public.

lary series Hollywood, which thronicled the history of the American silent film era.

,In the early Eighties, Carmine Coppola wrote and arranged a magnificent score to accompany Abel Cancels Napoleon (1927), which he conducted at screen- ings of the film around the coun- try

Dancehall style

After a quick break, Wailer re-emerged from backstage, "to keep It moving . . . there's so much, it can go tilJ daylight.*' During the second half of the show, Wailer demonstrated one of

jJ^^t^'i^'^V.^^V^^' '^ ^^ ^^^ s"^ivor of the original Wailers Bob^Mariey died of cancer in 1982 and Peter ToshTsn!!^S

-rS' n'/i^rhT ""^ '^^ ^^^^'^ ^^ '"^^^^ '""^i^^" Jailer is the root of both the music and the Rastafarian relgion, said Schiller.

"I had to see him," he said.

The bands Ras Mike, the Skatalites, and Judy Mowat opened the

See WAILER, Page 19

Two 1920s Clara Bow film classics to screen

«

Two silent film classics from the Tweniles, feafurTng TTamTcT Lloyd and Clara Bow, will be screened at Cultural Hall in

Over the past several years, Thames Television in England has been unearthing silent film classics, like The Crowd. (\92^) and The Thief of Bagdad (1924), and commissioning or- chestral scores for them from Carl Davis.

Davis is probably best known for the splendid music he pro- vided for Thames' TV documen

The most recent such project has been completed by Arnold Brostof^ a violinist with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for neariy 25 years. He has composed an original score to accompany the 1927 silent film Love, which he will conduct at a special screening of the film at Royce Hall tonight. The picRire features two of the most popular stars of the era: Greta Garbo and John Gilbert.

Before coming to Los Angeles, he led an orchestra in his score at a well-received screening of the film at the

Castro Theater in San Francisco.

Asked what drew him to write a symphonic piece for this par- ticular film, Brostoff said, **I had seen^ TJie Flesh and the Det?t7 (another silent classic star- ring Greta Garbo> in New York while the Chicago Symphony was on their Eastern tour. It was with a large orchestra, at Radio City Music Hall. It lost a lot of money.

"I thought that if somebody would do this with an original kind of orchestra, the way they had intended during the silent era a very small kind of pit orchestra that this kind of idea might work. There seemed to be an audience for it, but the problem was that the price costs were so prohibitive, what with a large orchestra and hall, that they had to charge a tremendous amount of money to break even.'*

**So I called Michael Schles-

Independents carve out Native American imagery

inger, who was working at MGM at the time, and asked him about a Garbo film that I remembered seeing.*' Schles- inger told Brostoff that it was entitled Love, and that it was part of the MGM feature film library which Turner Entertain- nient Company had purchased in 1986. He said that he would talk to Dick May (who headed up the film library at MGM for many years, and no'A' performs the same service, as Manager of Technical and Archival Film Services for Turner Entertain- ment). They set up a special screening for Brostoff.

**They literally took this movie out of a safe. It hadn't been shown since the late Twen- ties," he says. The three of them saw the film together in the fall of 1987, and, the composer relates, '*were knocked out by

See BROSTOFF, Page 18

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LANDMARK THEATRES

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-L^

North Hollywood at 8 p.m. Tomorrow night (located at 11830 Saticoy Street, a few blocks west of Lankershim Blvd.). Two Lloyd shorts are scheduled: His Royal Slyness and Haunted Spookes, both made in 1920. After the intermission. It (1927), one of the decade's most popular films, will be shown. Based on a best-selling novel by Elinor Glyn (who aj)pears in the film in a smafll role), the picture made a big star of Clara Bow, playing a role which was close to her own r(X)ts. She plays a shopgirl who sets her cap for the boss (Antonio Moreno), a goal which is initially hindered by class differences between them. Directed by Clarence Badger, It is also notable for an early film appearance by a very young Gary Cooper. A dona- tion of $3.50 is requested. Ample parking is available at the rear of the hall. Call (818) 894-3203 for more information.

r- J.D. Wolverton

By June PInheIro, ContributQ

vances made in thrmediuni of film^ '"'""^' ""** "'''''^ «"-

Moving camera techniqes, rincma vrritr o„i„ a

-paced editing most 6T us^ have come to ukel^r ^^^ f h*" '*^ ^»*'-^

were develop.^ by small scale «n.o„.- ? &^nieA in movies

dents who have su^iv^ _ fhoul^^f "^ and audacious indepen-

- amid- the turbul n^ and unfem n ^0^ ni^ ""'^t P^"^"^"* distribution. uncenainty of film marketing and

soTiStuSisSUtt^irlrThlZ'?"^"' P°''«^^^ --' - novation of dedicated indeZde„swh^' """■ ■"'"""y ^"^ 'he in- disdainfully leaving firSrness"oriL7:^'"rf'"S "'"^ """" «"" big studios'making'and market ^g'bg buK.i^ "^^ "^^ *°''^ °^

The fact that their Hlms would oftin 00 uUoHrt^ shadows of the billboards and hvr^ of .h»T!, ""j"" 8*' '°s' '" «he behemoths may have dampen^ S soirk h, h**!.""- ^^^"^ '^"^^^

The Nattve American fdm TestWal "llh *^'?" ' ""P 'h^*"- fared wonderful examples of Tim Jnit'tj ."1^"" '" '^«'"*'^. of- convictions and the drive to bring the vi^on ,n .h''°""«'^ "^ ^^'^ the "big" odds against them. " ''"e screen despite

But there is a sihall film currentiv at Cencr,, /- . .

^•s also noteworthy for its "nique VL ^^w^J^at^^^^^^ '.J

have taken the issue-oriented film m a different and potentially wonderful direction.

The movie is called Powwow Highway and it has no billboards, no stars and eventless advertising hype, but it is terrific.

The acting, by newcom6r Gary Farmer who Sheila Benson of the L.A. Times called "/.the most captivating screen presence since E.T" is wonderfully comic and captivating.

The film also boasts lyrical, almost poetic directing by South African director Jonathan Wacks. The story is a simple, swe^t and fimny modem fable about a Native American's acquisition oi spiritual wisdom.

The lead character is Philbert, a fat, lumbering Cheyenne Indian who is used to being ridiculed because of his size. Philbert, who has smoked too much grass and gowned too many beers for people to take him seriously, decides to make a spiritual voyage similar to those made by die great Cheyenne warriors.

Philbert trades a stash of marijuana to acquire his war pony (a rust bucket '60s Chevy only the gcxis could make work) that he names **The Protector." He begins his voyage almost immediately when he's asked to help rescue the sister ol his friend Buddy Redbow from a false arrest by corrupt policemen '"j^anu Fe, New Mexico.

Buddy is one of the ones who used to torment Philbert when they were children, but all Philbert cares about is that they are Cheyenne and one of their number is in danger.

Basically, Philbert makes it up as he goes along and follows what he believes are "signs" from the old ones" with Buddy/ '■^"'

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throughout his voyage

. >\ Martinez portrays the aggressive Indian activist See 'POWWOW/ Page 19 Buddy Red Bow in 'Powwow Highway.'

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18 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

DaHy Bruin

Brostoff

Continued from Page 17

the acting and the preservation of the film."

"It took about six months for us to get some kind of a deal go- ing, but I really had made up my mind that I was going to do the score regardless of what the out- c(Jme was."

The film made such an impact on Brostoff that he said that all he had to do was '^basically write down the feelings and the sounds that I had in my mind. That's why it only took 2 1 days for me to write the whole score. I sat down and wrote it on paper last summer, the whole or- chestration and ever^hing. It went very quickly b^ause~T"

believe in it.

'*It's like, you know you read about these stories where a 70- year-old man sees a little boy under a car and he gets the most incredible strength to lift up the car so that he can pull the boy out from under it. I mean, you get incredible strength, you can do wonderful feats if you really believe^in something, if you real- ly care about something. I pro- bably can't do this wjth every kind of thingt^but for this kind of movie, I was able to conjure up -the ideas. They just came fast and furious."

Brostoff, who just turned 53, said^at he wasn't old enough to have^'any personal memories of the silent film era. But he said that he attended a great many movies while growing up in the Forties. **My father owned a

grocery store, and I used to go to a movie every day."

Brostoff acknowledged a debt to the great composers of film music who worked for the film studios during Hollywood's Golden Age men like Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Max Steiner, and Alfred Newman. As a young boy watching the films they scored, he observed how their music emotionally heightened what was Happening on the screen.

"We just played a piece of Korngold's with (he Chicago Symphony . . . that guy was a master take Kings Row, for instance. I remember seeing that as a little boy, and it just knock- ed me for a loop. It's truly oper- atic. You'll hear people in Hollywood who $till remember Korngold talking about him with

great reverence because, a man like him, really almost on, an equal basis helped make a mQvie like that. Many people aren't aware ... the lay people ... they're listening to it, they're af- fected by it, but they don't really realize just what •kind of subliminal effect the music is having on them." .

In the silent picture era, Brostoff believes, the audience was aware of the contribution of music to the impact made by the film. Silent films, though they lacked dialogue, were never completely silent. Whether there was an orchestra, or simply an organ or piano accompaniment, the composer said that "most people were aware of how the music was affecting them.

"I just came back from San Francisco, and the people were

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

very aware of how much music plays an important in what is happening on^the screen. People really appreciated it ... I mean, I wasn't a silent movie fan, it was just before my time, but it's not a boring thing if it's put together in such a way that the audience is part of it. AJl ages can be thrilled by something like this, but the only way you^can go about doing a project like this is, if it affects you , you hope it will affect somebody else." ^

In discussing the performances of Greta Garbo and John Gilbert in the film's leading roles, Brostoff referred to the relation- ship between the stars, who were involved in an off-screen affair as intense as that depicted in the

See BROSTOFF. Page 19

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Sponsored by - ASCE and The Structural Engineers Association of Southern California

Spfialsei - Dr. Eberhardt~Rechtin - "Of Course Machines Oan

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TUESDAY, APRIL 18; 1989

Brostoff

Continued from Page 18

drama. "The first thi«|- 1 noted to Dick May and Mike Schles- inger after the screening was that this lady wasn't simply acting . . . though J know she was a great actress, there's no doubt about that . . . but when two people look at each other the way these two do here, you don't have to be a genius to fig- ure out that something is going on.'^- ,1—

The film's scenario is based upon Leo Tolstoy's novel Anna Karenina. Brostoff notes that there were two endings filmed for the production. "The correct Anna Karenina ending, where she throws herself in front of a train, they actually showed at one of the early premieres, but the fans were so angry regardless of what the storyline was that their heroine would die at the end, that the studio ac- tually went back and made a happy ending. This was basically the reason they changed the title to Love/'

Brostoff relates that he was supposed tip meet Garty) on one occasion, through a friend, David Diamond, a composer he met in New York who is a close friend of hers. But, to his great regret, the visV fell through. **One of the major^ reasons Garbo left Hollywood is because of the way that MGM head Louis B. Mayer had treated her, he says. **If I meet her, he

told me, we can never talk about her movies. It's an unwritten law among her close friends."

Brostoff believes that Garbo wasn't able to regain confidence in herself as an actress because of the browbeating she got frofn Mayer. "As a lady of 85, she can't bring herself up to talking about it." ^

Garbo has been Hving a reclusive life in New York for more than four decades. "Most people who've been put under a microscope, as Garbo was for so many years, like to be away from it all," Brostoff com- mented. "Very few can unders- tand that . . . they want atten- tion ... but after you get it, and are hurt a lot by attention] you .want to stay away from it.^*

A friend of the actress recently told Brostoff that she had heard about the resurrection of Love, and (breaking her usual silence on her movie career) expressed the view that she preferred Tolstoy's tragic ending to the af- fair between Anna and Count Vronsky.

Brostoff hopes that public response to the screenings of Love will show Turner Enter- tainment that there is an au- dience for this sort of film. Among the major Hollywood studios, die MGM silent film library is unequalled. It is to be hoped that Turner could do with Jhese films what Thames TV did -m England: commission scores for the best examples which lack soundtracks, release them to the- aters and then broadcast them on their TNT cable channel.

'POWWOW: Indians

Continued from Page 17

He ends up taking the scenic route to Sante Fe to visit all the ma- jor historical sites from South Dakota to Colorado that were impor- tant in the history of Native Americans. He also gathers a lot of "good medicine" that consists of candy, cheeseburgers and histori- cal tokens that he believes were left behind by the old ones.

Initially Buddy, an embittered Indian activist and Vietnam veteran, is merely cynical and annoyed at the delays but he ends up sharing Philbert's spiritual rebirth and gaining new strength from and respect for his heritage and culture.

The details of the plot are best left to the film, but suffice it to say that Buddy and Philbert become the best of friends, rescue Buddy's sister from some corrupt government officials and leave us with the promise of a better future. . ' . ' '

Gary Farmer portrays Philbert with such wide-eyed innocence and pure optimism that he renders even the overly simplistic elements of the script believable.

A. Martinez portrays Buddy with a smouldering and sexy intensity that will make a lasting impression unless the viewer is asleep or numbed by too many mindless characterizations.

The breakthrough ofPowwow Highway, however, is it's respect for Native American culture.

There aren't any noble savages or long-suffering victims here. For once, the down-trodden minortiy is allowed to take its fate in hand and save itself from an injustice. For once, other cultures are given credit for empowering and strengthening worthy individuals. For once, other voices have been given a platform to discuss the issues that affect us all.

All of that, amazingly enough, and Powwow Highway is still as engaging, fiinny and entertaining as any of the other film business "product."

There are no well-meaning or heroic whites in this movie who ride in to save the day. The one sympathetic white is a wonderftilly ftin- ny, brassy and honest female characterization by Amanda Wyss as Rabbit.

The white officials do mainly what white officials have done to Native Americans since their first meeting; they lie and they take what they can. This time, however, they have Philbert to deal with -- and there is no contest.

Powwow Highway is for all those Indians who have ever been educated to expect only second class citizenship, for those whites who have been educated to accept only the best from life, and for everybody who's ever imagined the worid as optimistically as it could be and said "why not?"

WAILER: Reggae

v

Continued from Page 16

show. Backed up by a D.J. and a "bass crew," Ras Mike pulled o u t

all the stops to rock the crowd with his **straight-up" reggae beat.

Judy Mowat treated the au- dience to beautiftil harmonies and dance tunes. Toward the end of her show, she saluted Bob Marley by offering a rendition of

his famous song "No Woman No Cry." Mowat closed her set with an upbeat, fast-paced reg- gae style rap^

At the end of his show. Bunny Wailer told the crowd that reg- gae music is not dead and stagnate, **but alive and mov- ing."

The dancing crowd, which never sat down, illustrated his point.

DaiHy Bruftn

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 19

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TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

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SCHOLARSHIPy grants for college are avail- able. Millions go unclainf>ed yeaHv Call 1-800.USA-1221! ext. 0627. ^^

WOMEN needed as overnight volunteers for Daybreak, a %VDmen'$ shelter in Santa Monica. Dariene (213)450-0650.

r TRI DELTA - Thank you for Tiaking my visit so enjoyable. Keep up the great work!!! -, -Cldne

Lie

my big bro Larry OKH'

Happy 25th You're the greatest! LYLS. Sheri

^ongr^tulatio] to the newly

initiated members of

James Hilbert , Steve Jacobs id Purcell

Dally Bruin

10 Peraonal

CLASSIFIED 21

10 Personal

Alpha Chi Omega

PPEN HOUSE & DINNER

X A 6:00 - 7:30 PM TONIGHT

638 Hilgard

for info call Debbie Brown (213) 208-3686

pre^Lcgs^gJOig^sundresses or coordinates'

Che Sisters of IIBO

Arra

7:00

anf^ounce our

X

Recept

ton

^m Coat & Tie

We look formrd to meeting prospective arrowmen . tonight! '- '

the

Batters up for Kappa Delta's

Bio Brother Nlnhf nf

Dodger Stadium Buses leave at 5:30

Be a UCU STUDENT RECRUfTER

Share your enthusiam as a Bruin with prospective students on campus and at high school and community college fairs! Find out more ai an orientation meeting-

April 17 11-12

April 18 9-10

April 18 5:15-6:15

April 19 6-7

Afxil 20 9-10-

Afxil 20 5:30^:30

Ackerman 3530

Ackerman 2412

North Campus 20

1147 Murphy Hall

Ackerman 2408

1147 Murphy Hall

For more infonnation cal (213) 206^11

{poooooooooooooooooooooc^

oOA0 proudly presents §

o its 8

8 Spring 1989 Phikeia: 8

John Funk o Darryl Holzbergg Ravi Jain g

Bob Strachan o yj ivcviii i^uuKiici-ty Larry Stem g oooooooooooooooooopoooO

Q Ronnie Bae ojim Bak o Brian Brittain § Bob Cho

12 Research Studies

BEDWETTINC (enuretic) Boys 7-11 years without bchaviof/leaming problems needed for UO^ research project. Subjects will be paid 825-0392.

EARN free dental care ar>d extra payll kxper- ince dentist seeks interested patients for June exam. (213)278-0980.$$$

HEADACHE and healthy control (non- headache) subjects between 18 and 45 are needed. Subjects will be asked to complete a questionnaire, keep a headache diary for six days and wear a small tape recorder to record jaw muscle activity. $80.00 paid upon completion of study. Contact Lynne at 825-9792, the Clinical Research Center.

INATTENTIVE, Restless Boys 7-11 years needed for UCLA research project. Receh^ $20 and a free developmental evalution. 825-0392.

NORMAL Healthy BOys 3-1 1 yrs needed for UCLA research project. Receive $20 and have a scientific "learning experience. 825-0392.

NORMAL subjects wanted. Auditory system research. Normal hearing. Fee paid. Call 206-8754, Qeg. *

I " I

PERSIST, painful jaw~joint clicking, loddng or arthritis. Subject rmist have had this problem for 6 months or more arxi have received prior treatment that was unsuccessful. If accepted, the subject will receive a jaw joint injection which may reduce pain and noise arKJ receive $100.00 upon completion. TMJ X-Ray is. required. ConUct Lynne at the Clinical Research Center, 825-9792.

19 Sperm Donors

NEED EASY MONCYTT

_SQSlin dtiiocs nswisd for wiedteBl

HI D0V6ny riH8

s|xoellent psy. Cal (213)273-2463

^«v IQr.lnRiniNRIOn MIWl.

NEED CAS]

Earn SlOS.OeJ'wk

Students/Faculty

Private Sperm Bank

in Westwood Village

( ALIIORMA ( RVO HANK

824-9941

^Jd Health Services

WANTED, wanted, wantedl 80 people to lose 10-29 IbsAno. Doctor recommended, 100% natural. (213)470-3473, ask for Greg.

4

10 Personal

HBO KKr

Happy Hour

tonight at

Tacos Tacos

6:30 See you ftierei

22 Health Services

22 Health Services

]

First Session Free

Sensual

HOT OIL PASSAGE

Spoil Yourself To Pure

Physical Satisfaction

Leave Message 24 Hours

(213) 515-2044

CHANGE your brown eyes to blue or green, for only

■oon 1.^^!. .^ ^-

Dr. Vogel in vyestwood 208-3011

Anonymous HIV Antibody Testing

UCLA Family Planning ainic Call 825-6657 or 825-5906 Protect Yourself and Others

26 Opportunities

EARN up to $100 per month BY HELPING OTHERS

DONATE 6L0CC P.ATElETS SAFELY '-

HemoCore

YOUR OM/n business. Sell unique t-shirts. Must apply nosv for Fall 1989. Call toll free 1 •800-842-2336. .

30 Help Wanted

8 JOB OPENINGS. Invrwdiate enf>ployment. Full and part4ime. house cleaning, top wges. Felible. Men and women; students, musicians, artists, etc. (213)453-1817.

ACCOUNT Executive. Northridge publishing firm is looking for intelligent people with excellent communication skills to call business owners. No experience necessary. Profes- sional envirorvnent. $7 per hour plus incen- tives. Part-time or full-time hours available. Call (818)998-6514, ext. 2803.

ADMINISTRATIVE ASST. to financial planner/ insurarK:e and securities agent. 20hr^vk, $8/hr. must be computer krxMvleddgeble (WordPerfect). Wilshire and Bundy. Call tom Courtney. (213)475-5854.

ADVERTISING solicitors needed for legal jour- nal. Flexible hours. Child Abuse Law Reporter (818)905-0377.

ASSISTANT Manager. 31 Flavors Yogurt and Ice Cream. Part-time days/weekends/ weeknights, westside location. (213)208-8048, Scott.

BEAUTIFUL women to rrxxiel for photography student. Fren> duplicates. Call Robert (213)275-0482.

BRENTWOOD PR agency needs FT exper- ienced secretary. Call Joan Stewart for an appt. at Simon/McCarry PR. (213)820-2606.

CASHIER/GROCERY clerk. FT/PT. Westside marketers, days or evenings available, apply 9-noon. 11031 Santa Monica Blvd. (213)477-3216.

CASHIER. Westworld electronic game center has a position open, weekend^eveningi at our Marina Del Rey location. Starting at $5.5(Vhour. Call (213)823-1195.

PEACE ACTIVISTS

Help slash the military

budget and restore our

ability to meet hiunan

needs. SANE/FREEZE

seeks women & men to

train as paid political

organizers. Be part of the

solution, not the problem.

Call 213-938-3470.

:

30 Help Wanted

J

COMPUTER operator entry-levei nr juuCT computer. Perform back-up, run arxi distribute reports, edit time cards, some data-entry, prefer prior DP experience. Shift 3:30-12 midnight M-F. Send resume to: Personnel Dept. ODS, 2038 Armacost Avenue, WLA/CA 90025. Reference SjW-20.

CREATIVE WRITERS - TO FINISH TREAT- MENTS AND SCREENPLAYS. FLARE, CLEV- ERNESS, DESIRE IMPORTANT, JOURNAL IS- TIC EXPERTISE. (21 3)274-1 101 . ,

CUSTOMER sen/ice retail chain. Full/part, flexible hours, will train. $10.75/start. Accept- ing applications for summer work. Call 10-3. (818)241-7423.

DATA entry for medical billing office. Flexible hrs, PT/FT, Beverry Hills area. (21 3)653-071 8.^

DESIGN manufacturing firm needs bright, energetic, well-organized person. Must type beautiful surroundings, good salary. (213)936-7111, 12-4.

DOCTOR'S west LA office receptionist posi- tion. Salary D.O.E., flexible hours. (213K79-6683, ask (or Jarod.

DO you like the beach? Wanted full and part-time employees for growing gourmet food company, Jody-Maroni's Sausage Kingdom has openings for cashiers, grill cooks, and in-store demonstrators. Food service and sales experience helpful. S7.00Av-v(21 3)306-1 995 for appointment.

EARN free dental care arxi extra payt! Exper- ince dentist seeks interested patients for Jur>e exam. (213)278-0980.$$$

EXPERIENCED w/public to work all shifts. Perfect for students. Good pay. Chevron, 670 N.Sepulveda,BelAir.EOE.

FLOOR manager. Westworld electronic ganr>e center has a position open, weekends/ evenings at our Marina Del Rey location. Starting at Sfl^our. Call (213)823-1195.

FLOWER shop in Beverly Hills seeks part-time staff. Morning hours. Clean driving record essential. (213)271-5030.

FT receptionist, filing, light typing; prefer some legal experience; pay subject to experierx:e. Call MWF (213)277-1009, ask for Michelle.

FULL and part-time positions available, salary commisions, great working invironn>ent. (213)207-1444. .

FULL or part-tinw general office work. Phor>es, filing, and typing skills, knowledge of compu- ters a plus. (213)479-7995.

FULL-TIME Sumnr>er, approximately 15 flexi- ble hours rx>w to train. Distributor of educa- tional materials. Culver City, 839-2436. Elaine.

GREAT SUMMER |OB WITH CHILDREN. 8 WEEK BEACH ORIENTED DAY PROGRAM, 2 WEEK HIGH SIERRA CAMPOUT. MINIMUM AGE 21 BY JUNE, EXPERIENCE WITH CHILD- REN, BOATING, CAMPING. $275/WK. (213)826-7000.

HARDWARE store PT flexible to your sche- dule. Brentwood location permar^ent through the summer. Pleasant working condion. Call Jan 476-2864.

HOST/ hostess/ counterperson full or part- time, $6^r plus tips. Apply in person, M,T,Th, F 3:30-5. Cheesecake factory. 364 N. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hitfs.

IF you like to dance or work out at the gym, come join THE LORD OF LEOTARD at KNOW BODIES EXERCISE AND DANCEWEAR, as we are seeing employees who are nrx>tivated, hard-working and preferably have son>e retail experience. Flexible hours available at WLA (213)474-8214, Sherman Oaks (818)784-0374, Northridge (818)349-9104, Canoga Park (81 8)704-9685. Ask for manaxer.

I'M searching for Ulented %vriter$ who wish to earn a living writing creatively. Vernon. (213)452-1469 ext. 11.

KOREAN/ENGLISH speaker needed for cashier and operator. PT-FT starting pay $6. (818)763-7511. (213)271-5464.

LAW firm needs part-time (MWF) responsible receptionist. Good phone/clerical skills. Typ- ing 55 wpm. (213)82a8400.

LAW Office needs assistants for word proccw- ing, clerical duties, typing 5a60 wpm. FlueiH. Spanish a plus $6.50/hr 10-20 hrs/wk. (213)475-0481 Sidney Diamond.

.1

4-

i I

X-

<?

22 CLASSIFIED

Daily Bruin

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

30 Hdp Wanted

30 Help Wanted

30 Help Wanted

f---

**^^

t^MPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Bel Age

PBX Operator

Bartender

Barback/Busperson

Cocktail Server Cashier/ Ordertaker - Sales /Secretary

L*Ermitage

Front Office Clerk PRY OpsT

Mondraih

Hostess/Host (PT)

Houseperson

Front Office Clerk

Room Service Server

Room Service Manager

Tumdoum Attendant

Floor Supervisor ^

Food Server (PV

Cooks

Maitre'D/Food Server

Room Service Supervisors

General Maintenance

Accounting Clerk

Pool Server

Le Pare

Sahes Secretary

Le D\{fy

Reservation Supervisor PBX Operator ziSecurity Agent— =:

Valadon

Busperson

Reservations Agent

Food Server

Le Reve

Cook Food Server

Corporate

Secretary

/

L'ERMITAGE HOTELS

A CoUection of Originals Beveriy Hi/is West HtUiywoo^

SCIENCE RESEARCHER

KCET has an outstanding funded opportunity for a liSearcher wjth^a^ng science

background to seek out, research, develop and write proposals for tfu^ Science &

Society unit productions. These productions trill range in length from short segments to

one-hour documentaries.

The person selected will also be responsible for data-gathering/liason with scientific

and other research institutions: assist in the development, administrations and logistical

elements of production; and will research and write other assigned abstracts/

background papers.

Research candidates must also have demonstrate ability to communicate scientific

information to a lay audience; must be exceptionally accurate, fast, well organized and

flirive under pressure; previous research and television experience preferred.

"-Qualified applicants, please submit your resume to: Science Researcher Oppty.i Human Resources Department, KCET, 4401 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90027

ICET

Channel 28

An Affirmative Action Employer

LOOKING FOR A SUMMER JOB?

We have openings a t $ 5 . 3 2/hr . in, all

Residence Hall Food Service&>^ There are also other jobs available. Call 825-0838 for info, or pick up an apphcation at Rieber Food Service or at the Display Table on Bruin Walk. M-W-F between 10:00 - 12:00.

30 Help Wanted

[so Hdp Wanted

LAW office support staff. Photocopying, PT file clerk 9am- 2pm. M-F. Century City law phoncs.errands. Full-time 9rS. (213)202-1958 office. Please call Elizabeth Laighton B. Shen(vyn. (213^277-5000.

LITIGATION law firm seeks file clerk/ messenger (must have own car), part-linr>c, $a/hour. Engel and Engel 9200 Sunset Blvd. (213)550-7997.

MALE models; Earn SlOtVhr w more. Hand- some, slim/ athletic, 18-30. Playgirl-type magazine^ nudity. Beginners welcome. Brad (213)392-4248 anytime. "

MODEL needed for fashion/advertising work. Work for prints. Call (213)653-3456.

NORTHERN Cal Jewish summer resident camp needs staff. 6-15 to 7-13: unit heads, head cook, office manager. A & C sports, nature, drama, dance specialists, and counse- lors. (415)832-8448.

OLIVE Garden. Now accepting applications for the following positions: Servers, hosts, bussers, bartenders with daytinrte availability. Cashiers with night-tin>e availability. Apply daily between 2 and 4.

PAINTERS/FOREMAN wanted for student op- erated exterior house painting company. In San Fernando Valley. $5-$9/hour. nytsic "*-" . I J II . . , , „■■

PT receptionist for Beverly Hills law firm. Monday, Wednesday 9-5, Friday 1 -5. Please call Mr. Ho¥vard at 273-2458.

P/r secretary - clerk allergy clinic research dept. In Brentwood. (213)820-6574.

PT secretarial position available in nr>edica|/ legal cliniciSdMst have outgoing personality & competitive typing skills. Approx. 1 5 hnAveek (possible increase during sumnr>er). Call James P. at (213)854-4404.

REAL Estate office clerk. Typing, filing, 20fhr/ wk. $6/hr start. 820-5891 .

RECEPTIONIST needed part/Vulltime for small but growing compUer firm. (213)644-6100. Ask for Thomas.

RECEPTIONIST needed for snull growing business in Culver City. Answer busy phor>es, file, photo copy, light typing. M-F 8-4:30. $1 20(Vn>o. Some office experier>ced required. Call Jackie (213)202-5300.

SALES M\d Assistant Manager. Snftall, quality company seeks outgoing, responsible, mature, goal-oriented, irKlividual, fu" mri r*'* ^ime in

PART-TIME typist-word processor for attorriey. SM. Hours fiexible, approx. 25 hours per week. Salary dependent upon ability and experierKe. Ask for Debbie (213)451-5285.

PART-TIME temporary secretary/ receptionist position available in r>ew insurarKe brokerage office. Responsibilities irKlude: typing, Word Perfect knowledge a plus, answering arxJ screening phone calls, aixl filing. Hours ex- tremely flexible. Please call (213)473-1722.

PART-TIME. Publishing company near Marirui Del Rey see^ collection clerk, flexible hours. Call Nancy (213)306-2907.

PART-TIME assistant; Santa Monica chiroprac- tic office. 8-10 hounAveek, Tuesday, Thurs- day, and Saturday. $7-l(VtKXir. Aruwering 4>horYes, typing, making appointments. Outgo- "ing, creative, friendly individual. Call 452-1908.

PART-TIME BOOKKEEPER, HOURS FLEXIBLE POSTING TO LEDGER, PAYROLL, PAYING INVOICES, WESTWOOD LADIES SHOES- TORE. (213)208-6774.

PART-TIME assistant for magazine publisher. 1 -year data entry, customer service ar>d phor« experence. Detail-minded, type SO WPM, non-smoker. 20 hrs^veek, days. Call Monique (213)385-2209.

P/\RT-TIME general offitt work for Westwood Property Management Company. $5A>our, days. Contact Judith Curte at (21 3)37 2-909o'.

PART-TIME typist/ receptionist wanted. Flexi- ble hours, Maaps Inc. Beverly Hills (213)276-3190.

PARTY helpers, barterxiers needed by Party Planning Company. Experience needed. Sl2/hr. average. Part-time. (213)478-7799.

PERMANENT part lime 3+ hours a day. Phone, client service, and DP functions. Westwood area. Modern clinical lab. Interpersonal skills a must. CaU at 479-4911 immediately.

Sought t»y major HtJkfmood $

Beverly Mils AgenoM for

prinl»»ork. fM, video. caiMdws.

••=• Top oofnm<Mion« paid

W>MA MODELS "

(213) 874-4466

B®glnnef» woteome (Prtvote sewtons ti li p.m.)

LE^^RN AND EARN!

For those who are looking for afuU time position, we wiU

P^f^de free PC classes and placement services,

CURRENT OPENINGS:

Management Tndncc

(Financial Institute) ' Sccnctary/acrk ^ Sales Assistant

Accountant/Bookkeeper

Assistant Editor

Jpnz/Eng Bilingual positions

Call for more information (215) 624^266 rinanciar ForecMting Group

T"

Bcii tfuiicin. iMMwear and appearal. Apply in person only. Frontrunner^ 1 1 640 San Vicente, BrentvMxxi.

SALES, inside. California Tan, America #1 distributor oi indoor tanning prodOcts is cur- rently looking for enthusiastic sales people. Generous earnings, high tech support, fun Westwood Village office, mornings and after- noons available. For info call Terry at 1-800-4264)106 ext 241.

SALESPERSON for SanU Monica gourmet food shop. Afternoons preferred. Ask (or Mary or Oaire. 451-1753.

SALES Position Ivailable. M^e good morwy with little effort. Call Greg, (213)838-8197.

SEE the sun, park their cars. Valet oompvvy seeking part time attendants. •Flexible hours Tips •Over 18 •Clear* OKW •Clean Cut. CaH (213)287-1811 Ask for Jod.

SM gallery needs PT picture frvner. Expo-i- ence or carpentry skills a must. (213)828-6866.

SM gallery needs energetic PT employee for sales and frame designing, hourly & commis- sion. Tue, Thur 9-1; Sat 10-5. (21 3)82^6866.

SUMMER job. Camp courvefors needed for 1 0 w«ek WLA day camp. Interviews on April 24, 25, 29. Call for appointment (21 3)398-S>82.

TANNING SALON. Reliable, friendly, meti- culous, sales oriented. Earn up to $7.50 per hour. Stacey (213)82a2710.

TaEMARKETING agent for computer training center. Salary plus comm\moi>. Great oppor- tunity for motivated, money-minded Indivi- dual. Full/ part4inr»e. (213)479-7995.

LIVKN

EMLRTAINMINT

VWMU RILVIIOVS

Inli'rn ji ^nr\ P I,' hrr

\"pi\ I'M! . ,jnii\

.iv iil.ihl-

r \ri

NEED EXTRA $$$?

Immediate openings forj

clerks receptionists,

typists, secretaries,

W.P.S., and aW office skills.

Work by tt)e day* w^k,|

or month. Call for an

appointment at

208-5666.

STIVERS TEMPORARY

PERSONNEL

COME JOIN US

WESTMINSTER LACE

is coming to

Century Qty

Shopping Center in

May!

We offer lace clothing,

lingerie, dining and

bedding linens, and

antique laoe touched

treasures, all in an elegant

Victorian setting

We are searching for energetic; experience store personnel, who hsve an eye for the fuhne.

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

DaMy Bruin

CLASSIFIED 23

H

30 Help Wanted

TELETECH Telecommunications, a Marketing Communications Company, is seeking Full TinfW Salespersons to Ulk to businesses about a •least cost Telephone System" from their Corporate offices in Sherman Oaks. Along with guaranteed base plus commissions, selected candidates will enjoy a benefits package that features employer paid medical/ dental, insurance and vacation. Excellent training and growth opportunities available. To discuss this excellent opportunity, call Ms. Lippert at (318)501-5595, extension 87.

TOM Sawyer Camps is kx)king for energetic, dynamic people for suntmer camp counselors in the Pasadena area. Develop leadership, communication, and organisation skills. Have fun, make new friends. Impact children's lives forever. Call (818)794-1156.

VENTURE capltaiAlght hand. Aggressive, assertive, finarKlal/dlrect sales, administrative background, computer literate. Venture firm needs experienced, mature person. PTAT. La»vrence Caiber, (213)688-1477.

WANTED: Sales Managers. $40,000- $100,000 first year. International Company introduces new product. (213)931-8992. Call for rnore info.

WAgFHOI iSE.

32 Job Opportunities

SJVp^^J^'^'^^ ^^ '^^f UP TO $6600 OR t^M.I^c^ SUMMER, TRAVEL, AND CAIN V^UABLE WORK EXPERIENCE? SOUTH VVESTERN'S MARKETING AND MANAGE- MENT TRAINING PROGRAM STILL HAS POSITIONS OPEN FOR INTERESTED STU-

v?c^.I?- ^'- ^^^^ ELIGIBLE. INTER- VIEWS HELD ON CAMPUS MONDAY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. CALL (213)209-2434 FOR APPOINTMENT. LEAVF NAME, PHONE, MAJOR, CP\ YEAR IN SCHOOL ON MACHINE.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY FOr' ALL STU- ^DENTS. Branch management positions avail- able in your home town during the summer. Eam $6,000-15,000 and gain valuable busi- ness experience. No investment required. Act nowl Call Student Painters for more informa- tion at 1-800-426-6441.

33 Jobs Wanted

CROWING local advertising and desl^ firm seeks outgowing and energetic person with the desire to Team various aspects of the advertis- ing ir>dustry. experierKe w/mac computer system; part-time internship, flexible hours, pay is negotiable, ask for Joel or Bart. (213)826-4151.

34* Internships

J. It,

needed part/fulltinfw. Clean driving record a must. (213)644-6101. Ask for Robert.

WEEKEND Receptfonist, real estate office. Saturday 9-6, Sunday 9-4. Harry (2T3)653-9970.

WEST LA Real Estate Development/ Constnjc- tkMi needs a part-time person with accounting skills and IBM PC experience. 2 days a week. Call Brooke (213)826-5575.

WEST LA Real Estate Devebpment/ Construc- tion needs graduate for accounting dept. Strong accounting skills and IBM PC experi- ence necessary. Full-time positfon. Call Tom Parks, Controller (21 3)826-5575.

WONDERFUL weekend job for llyr oM daughter. Sleep over Saturday night. $12(Vwknd. Call Chris at (213)273-2330.

WORD PROCESSOR. Part-time, flexible hours. Need 2 years experience WP. Know- ledge )(erox Writer III a pjjm. Call Janice (213)483-1154.

IN WESTWOOD

59 yr. old Wall St. Firm

investment sales/management

PT/FT. CoAiplete training.

Mr. Rinaldi (213)475-1058

GET a jobi Cruise lines U3. and overseas. (509)785-6767 ext. CI 16.

EAB Tech. Rheumatology Diagnostics Laborat- ory Inc.. located in Santa Monica and specia- "^'?8 jn Immunology, has a FT position available for a Laboratory Technologist with experience in ELISA. Must be California lis- ttnyd or fllnihln r,,^*;^..

A&M Records is looking for an intern to work in marketing and promotions. Need someone energetic, enthusiastic, arxJ irUerested in learrv ing about the music business. Call (213)856-2748 to set up an interview.

GROWING local advertising and design fimn seeks outgoing and energetic person with the desire to learn various aspects of the advertis- ing industry. Experience w/mac computer system; part4lme internship, fiexible hours, pay is negotiable.' Ask for Joel or Bart. (213)826-4151.

WRITERS for internship. Write for interna- tional filnVTV magazine. No pay, great expo- sure. (213)460-4494. ^

--^ -— w ^i«i]r. new,

modem facility with paricing provided. Conge- nial atmosphere. Good benefits including health Insurance coverage. Casual positions also available. Send resume or call: RDL Inc Personnel Dept., 1 538 20th St., SanU Monica! CA 90404. (213)453-4560.

OUTDOOR surmner jobs in your hometown. Foremen and painters needed. No experience necessary. Eam %S-Sli^r. 1(800)426-6441.

PROGRAMMER minimum MS Computer Sci- ence. Must know C, IBM-PC, and Macintosh architecture. Experience in word-processing, desk top publishing, and graphics develop- ment preferable. Excellent opportunity with growth potential. Top salaryAienefits. Please call Mr. James. (213)215-9645.

.1 1^1

I 35 Child Care

BABYSITTER/Drlver, with car & insurances. Mondays & Tuesdays from 2:45pm. Refer- ences. Call Sue (213)397-1790.

TWO daysAveek, 2 year old chi Id, in my home, Tarzana. Lillane (818)705-1317.

49 Apto. for Rent

$1 050. VERY spacious 2-bed^ 2-bath, less than 1 0 minutes from campus. Ckise to busstop arxi shopping Open for viewing from 9am lo 8pm, no appointment necessary. 1635 S. Beveriy Qen, WIA, (21 3)453-4»?^or (21 3)451 -0693.

REAL estate site locator trainee for Beverly Hills developer. Full-time. Call Bruce, 275-9831.

One of ttie largest modeling firms is having an audition for models to

tK working In ttiree different markets. LA., France, and Japan For Commercial, print, & runway.

Call for aopL (213)463-1181 ^

1, 2, & 3-B^DROOM large, newly renrxxiied apartmer>ts in Beverly wood area. From $550 and up. Open houses. Saturday and Sunday at 1933 or 1963 Bedford. (213)657-8756.

1-BEDROOM, l-bath. Palms area S60(ymonth. (213)451-4771.

1 -BEDROOM, $60(ymo. First month, 1/2 off. Carpets, drapes, stove, refrig. 10-min. to campus. 3545 Jasmine. Palrm. 836-81 38.

1 MILE to campus. Brentwood adjacent, large furnished single. $620. Parking pool. 1235 Federal Ave. (213)477-7237.

■^

w

DAILY BRUIN CLASSIFIED YOUR ACE - THE HOLE 825-2222, 825-2221

Monday-Friday 9am-4pm

49 Apto. for Rent

2- AND 3-bedroom new luxury apts. Security, (3/W, A/C, microwave. Reasonable rent. CoTKiessions for 1-yr. lease. Sherman Oaks opposite Galleria. 4724 Sepulveda Blvd. (213)473-6001.

NEWER LUXURY APARTMENTS

CLOSE TO CAMPUS/WLA

Spadoiis Apartments 1-mo. free with lease.

2251 Bentley

2+2- Prom $1195

473-8299

10144 Tabor

1+1+Loft- Prom $925 838-0175

2475 Corinth

2+2- Prom $1000

477-4071

All Units -Have Many

Amenities RIM MANAGEMENT

820-2575

4^ Apto. for Rent

2-BEO/2-BATH townhouse. Bright unit, ap- pliances irx:l., 2-car parking. Available now. $1200/mo. Please call C.S. White (213)821-2219. 1805 S. Barrington.

2-BEDROOM, 2-bath, close to Westwood. $975Anonth. (213)451-4771.

$650 SHERMAN Oaks adjacent. Quiet, homey, 2-bedroom, garden- type apartment, two entries, new carpeting beveled mirrors, newly decorated, appliarKes, air, prime area, near all. (»1 8)889-0483.

BEVERLY Hills 1 -bedroom, 1 -bath, 600 square ft. in a small 4-unit building. Laundry. $695. 652-0314.

MAR VISTA/ PALMS

2-bed/2-bath townhouse $895-$995

''"' *«alconics *hirq)laces

^Laundry facilities ♦Security alarms *2 Car parking ♦Staircase to private bedrooms. ♦Some with Jacuzzi & rec room

Low security deposit

to move in.

Playa Vista Properties

306-6789

L

TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE

ACROSS

1 Maidservant 5 Draw or stud 10 Thick piece

14 lndor>esian isJand

15 Extant

16 Soft drink

17 Prenned subj.

18 Quoted

19 Acidity

20 Knight

21 Busy place

22 Trifles 24 Soup base

26 Linen item

27 Chair part

28 Erect 31 Instances

34 Bridges

35 Petroleum

36 Kind of car

37 Large tMrd ^

38 In tf>e past

39 After zeta

40 Rklknjie

41 Krupp works site

42 S-sounding

44 Accomplk:e

45 "— Together"

46 Lab vessels 50 Manned

52 Damsel

53 Cereal

54 Ferrara name

55 Command

57 Bumpkin

58 "... and

PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED

59 Celet>ration

60 At the peak

61 Collide

62 Scandinavian

63 Pronoun

DOWN

1 Discomfit

2 Lunacy

3 Affright

4 Line drive

5 Stepping off

6 Fruit

7 Hawk

8 Dusk

9 OkJ World 'sandpiper

10 Frightened ^'11 Places

12 Beneath

13 Keeps out 21 Garden tools 23 SawtHiCks

25 Lost sap

26 Origin

28 PItctter part

29 Agreeat>le

30 Dingle

31 Pool sticks

32 Wine city

33 Trafalgar. e.g.

34 Pelt

37 Vilifies

38 European capital

40 Ice mass

41 Etches 43 Sickest

•44 Mortar and

46 Went quk:kly

47 Highway

48 Drum

49 Processes

50 Athletk: group

51 AtoN

52 Reside

56 Moisture

57 Stadium yell

N

24 CLASSIFIED

DaHy Bruin

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

49 Aptfl. for Rent

49 Apto. for Rent

BREh47WOOD, 1 -bedroom $760, N of Wil- shire, security bidg., new decor, six month. lease. 820-9766.

DELUXE 1 -bedroom, S-mirujtes from UCLA, A/C, water paid, parking, quiet security build- ing. $825 and up. Call (213)206-8881.

FIRST month freel Large one-bedrooms. $795. All new, garden-style, appliances, patios and parking. 1 mile from camjius, 1650 Federal. 478-0624.

PRIME Westwood location. Singles and 1 -bedrooms available. Call Mike at (213)824.9925.

MID-WILSHIRE area. 2-bedroom, 1 200 sq. ft., parking space, nice view, $850/month. (213)450-8182.

PALMS 2-bedroorV2-bath. $950, one month free rent and low deposit. Large bedrooms, living room with fireplace. Big closets. (21 3)558-3728.

PALMS $725. 2-bedn-bath, gas/ water incL, new paint and carpet, no pets. (21 3)478-3441 .

FREE RENTAL SERVICE

Looking for an apartment?

Why pound the streets?

ijKf ii ilie^fast wayT

THE ROBERTS

COMPANIES

I CALL (213)312-9090 TODAY.

For an indepth guide to

furnished/ unfurnished

apartment vacancies

contact Jan.

Call 9-6 no cost or obligadoi

SHARE and save. 3-bedroom apartment. Large balconies, living room, gourmet kitchen, park- ing, no car, no problem. Next to Sunset Blvd. Bus stop. S2O0/mo. 1533 Martel Ave. Holly- .wood (213)874-6863.

SHARE Santa Monica 9th and Wikhire appart- ment, 2bdmrv2bath. Balcony, fireplace, sec- urity. Female preferred. $500/month. (213)393-2442.

FURNISHED/ UNFURNISHED

-JL

*

APARTMENTS

Walk to UCLA

•Security -Pool

$850 and up

3 people OK

660 Veteran

208-2251

-j-

/ A/o use coming to help me now

I've learned my lesson,

anyhow! Believe me, once I get unposted From all this paper I have wasted, I 'II try no other crazy caper,

I'll read the Want Ads in the paper, And, if I fail to find help there. That's still no reason to despair Mom says youye never really tried Until you've run a Classified!

825-2221

49 ApU. for Rent

PALMS. Spacious two bedroom, two bath apartment. Includes dishwasher, balcony and fireplace. Laundry facilities and two car parking provided. Security buildins. (213)204-6795. *

SINGLE. Full kitchen plus parking. $550/month. West Hollywood (213)451-4771,

STUDIO in luxury apartment building, $S0Q^fK>. Swimming pool, jacuxzi, gym. Walking distance to UCLA. (213)475-0317.

WALK to lXn.A. Bachelors and singles starting at $550. Utilities included. (213)824-9704, (818)894-7194.

WESTWOOD. $790 1 -bedroom, refrigerator, dishwasher. $675 single. Discount for 1-year lease. (213)479-1202 after 5:30 pm.

WLA 2-bedroom unfurnished, 3 miles from UCLA. High beam ceiling. $835/mo. Kim 826-1880 ext. 217.

52 Apte. Unfurnished

PALMS single+loft, $750. 2+2, $925, UDen, $825. One month free rent, luxury apartments. (213)397-0405.

WESTWOOD/ Sepulveda & Olympic. $935. Upper 2-bedl/ 2-bath. Sunny and spacious, parking, new carpet and miniblinds. (213)277-0604.

Westwood $925 1— bedroom.

New contemporafy furnishings at

no charge. Across from UCLA

501 & 505 Gayley

I v»/«.WO-i

W.W. Village

Five month sublet Two bedroom/!wo ba!h....$1,300 Huge apartment. Living room with] Fireplace, Dining room, BuiH-ins, Balcony. Pool,

Security, Paridng. 691 Levering 208-3647

60 Housing NecTded

SABBATIC HOUSE WANTED. 3-bedroom or larger. WLA, SM, or Venice area. August 119 . jur>e '90, by faculty family. Professor Richard Rar>d, dept. Theoretical and Applied Mecharv •cs. Cornell Univ. Ithaca, New York, 148S3. Home phone (607)273-5780, call collect E-mail: RHRYOCRNLVAXS.BITNET

SEEKING apartmer^t in Brentwood or West- wood, mid-June through mid- August. Please call Carolyn (617)247-0676.

SUMMER housing needed for out-of-town summer associates. May 28- Aug 18. Please contact Daniela Dedona at Buchalter, NerT>er Fields, and Younger. (213)626-6700.

WANTED; summer sublet. Studio or 1 -bed- room in Westwood from June-Aug. Call ,(415)325-8629, collect, eves., or leave messeage.

/

53 Vacation Rentals

BRAND NEW

BUILDING

1320 Venice Blvd

2-bedroom

2-bath

$985-$1050

4th floor has view

of Marina Del Rey

Low security

deposit move-in

Features include

stove, dishwasher,

microwave, 2 car

parking, laundry

facility.

Close to beach,

Playa Vista

Property

306-6789

BEAUTIFUL spacious Yosemite house sur- rounded by pir>es. Fully equipped, close to everything. Reasonable rates. (818)785-9865.

62 Room/Board for Helj^^

1 0 MINUTES to UCLA. Looking for approx. 3

hmun/t^fiv. S dav«A»<^ in tntefi^nmm fnr fyit^at^

room. Lucy, 475-4346.

50 Apt8. Furnished

$16S(VMONTH. 6 month beautifully furn- ished, luxury condo, 2+2'A , 1550 sq. ft., avail^le immediately. No pets. Walk to campus. Contact Michael (213)82a6651/days.

FLIRNiSHED single apartment, $495. Furn- ished one-bedroom apartment $598. Nice area, international students welcome. (213MSa265S.

WESTWOOD Village. Large furnished bed- room apt accomodate 3 students. $900. Pool, short walk to campus. 11070 Strathmore (213)206-3328.

WESTWOOD Village. Furnished bachelor $50Q^fnonth utilities included. 944 Tiverton 2-bkxia from campus. 824-0181.

$560, SPACIOUS, charming, one-bedroom, quiet, small building, privacy, front and back entry. Adjacent to Sherman Oaks. (213)475-9561.

$660 TWO-BEDROOM, Sherman Oaks adja- cent, privacy, quiet, garden-type building. (213M75-9561.

$935/hAO, WLA, newly decorated, spic and span, private, 2-btti/^ -baih in colonial 4-unit; no pete. Available now 277-0604.

LARGE l-btd/} 1/2 bath, carpets, drapes, refrlg., dishwasher, laundry facilitiei, security' large patio, pool, 2 car parking no pets! $99SAm>. 1S00 Purdue Ave. (213)477-5256 (213)931-1160. '

LARGE 2-bed^ 1/2 bath, carpeU, drapes, refrig., dishwasher, laundry facilities, security' large patio, pool, 2 car parking, no peu! S99SAno. 1 500 Purdue Avt. (213)477-5256 (213)931-1160.

LARGE okier two^wdroom, fireplace, wood floors, walk to campus, no lease, short-term, reasonable. (213)473-7442, (805)682-6868.

54 Apt8. to Share

AIR conditonedl Westwood. Male roomate needed. Full kitchen. Share bedroom/ bath, $317/mo. Ted, 473-5918, 479-4353.

MELROSE area, own room, huge]^ clean. Cathedral ceilings. Non-smoking femal^. Dt- bbie (213)939-1022. ' ^ >

WLA apt. UCLA close. 2- bled/ 1 -bath. A/C, cable TV, pool, security, own parking. Great view. $45(Vmo. Call David (21 3)559-7643.

63 Room for Help

$825/MONTH. 1 -bedroom bwer. Front unit, w/ fireplace, charming. North of Montana at 148 Sepulveda #1, open. Call Cathy (213)476-6072 or Brian (213)207-8789.

LIVE-IN part-time person needed for dog and bird care. 3*A -4 hrs. daily in exchar^ for separate room and bath. Private entrance from garden and pool use In Beverly Hills home plus salary. References, drivers license »id car required. Call Donna, MTTh 9am.5pm. (213)273-2433.

64 Room for Rent

ALCADa house, 624 Hilgard, LXIA student girls, board and rooms available, c^ll h/ks. Cilmdfe (213)206-7185.

DORhA space available untill the end of year, including meal plan. Call Mark (209-2671) by 4-14-89.

56 House for Rent

CHARMING and spacous 2-bedroom, 1 -bath. 2-car garage + large, livable studio. $1 300. 1 5 minutes to UCLA. 474^2314 or 581-7478.

WESTWOOD 3-bedroom, 2-bath + den, 3-car garage, central air and heat, ASS., laundry, new applieances, yard & landscaping. Reno- vated completely 2 yrs ago. $270(Vmo. Day (213)333-5161, Eves (213)474-2073.

FEMALE, large room, private bath, kitchen privileges, weekly cleaning. Lovely north SanU Monica home. $440. (213)394- 71 48.'

PALMS. Own bedroom and bath. Share kitchen and living room. $350/month. (213)204-4792.

57 House for Share

FEMALE to share quiet, spotless home on safe cul^-sac in Mar Vista. Private room, bath, entrance. Laundry, piano, huge sunny yard Jacuzzi. $475. Toni (213)284-8888. (213)390-3313.

Santa Monica room, own bath in spacious quiet apartment, kitchen privileges. Non- smoker. $330 utilities included. 452-8606 after 7 pm.

COMPLETE privacy in room. Full bath, great view, full kitchen privile9es,laundry facility. Stacy (213)442-2204.

1BEDRCX>V 1-bath, de»i place close to UQA. $293.33Ano. $450 deposit. 824-2806, 653-3540.

^^ House Exchange

DESIRE exchange of Boston apartment for Brentv*^ or Westwood apartment. June- August. Please call Carolyn (617)247-0876

2-BEDROOMV2-bath. Available 5/1. Large apartment Oose LXTLA. $40Cyb>onth each + $276 deposit. (21 3)444-9966, (21 3)479-601 6.

410 Landfair 2-bedroom, 1 roommate wanted hardwood floors close to campus $312.50. 824-4637.

60 Housing Needed

ACADEMIC couple from Yale Univ. with 2

tor 89-90 sabbatical yr. Would also be interested in house exchange. (203)865.777n

CATHOLIC Priest on Sabbatical needs livine ^mited to non-exirtent -anyone need a ho.^ offer ^asonable rent? If you can help, pis. Sh iisw'sl^'.'''''' (213)948-47,4 or

limited to non-existent -^yone nL^a h,^ w

rasT^ii^r^r^'^'^^^^^

ChTs''s\r; /^^,^-,^'f P»«- -II Fr. (291)949-8240. ^^^^^^^^'^994 or

ABC $10 roommate service. (213)512-7903. Call 24 hrs.

BRENTWOOD, share 3-bedroom apartment from May 1. $437Ano. + deposit Call Navreet, <>aen>e at (213)820-3317.

FEMALE roommate wanted immediately- share beautiful West%vood luxury 1/1. Fum- ished, security, parking, Jacuzzi, gym. (213)312-5363. *'

LA Lawfiim ,s looking for summer sublets to ^ summer law clerks. Willing toj^,r^ with present roomaies Neeri«w< i^

LAW liMi, lookmg for summer housin. PleJI call Amy at (213)6l4-aina "^'"K- »^'«««

OUR downtown LA law firm u i i . PROMINENT downioM, I...,"*! i

FEMALE roommate wanted r^ to share 1 -bdrm 5 min from campus. S320/tvki. Kin^rly, 826-5620.

FEMALE to share huge master bedroom In 3-bedroom/ 2-bath Westwood condo. $325/mo. (213)444-9563.

FOURTH female to share furnished 2bd/ba. Hop & Skip to campus, pool, Jacuzzi. (213)824-4228.

MALE to share Ig. furnished 2bd/2ba security apt; parking, pool, close to campus. (213)473-4390.

^4->

Mla^j^-%i» ■■ >iT

\

MALE to share room In a 2-bedroom Brent- wood townhouse. 1-mile to IX:LA, secuflly building, $350/mo. plus deposit: (213)8204119. .

PALMS. $190/month. Shar« 2-bedroom/ 2-bath apartment. Quiet, secure area. (213)204-4792.

ROOMMATE non-smoker/ drinker. Preferably female. $446.S(VbK). SanU Monica/ Bundy drive. (21 3)820.357^ or (213)820-9165.

ROOMMATE wanted, mat WLA apartment,

rf,*[.?***^' P^^*« bed and bath, $35aATW. _E!i!5^S791, (213)82aa942. _.^

TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1989

65 Roommates

ROOMMATE: own room, 3 ■♦■ 2, Santa Monica, close to UCLA. Patio, balcony, laundry S40(ymonth. Tim (213)479-811 6.

ROOMMATE wanted. $400/month. 2.bedroonV2-bath, Palms area, 1st and sec- urity. Pet o.k. Call Lisa (21 3)473-0777.

SEEKING female roommate to share furnished apartment across campus on Hilgard. $29(ymonth. Call (213)208-5746.

URCENTI Roommate for spacious Westwood apartment, 5 minutes-UCLA, Pool, air condi- tioning. $350. Call 824-7455.

WANTED: Female. $285/monlh, 1 -bedroom, no deposit, 10-minute$ walking to IXTLA. Call Danielle or lean (213)824-4203.

WANTED female roommate. 2-bedroorTl. Du- plex. SM/ Barrington area. $37S/mo. + 'A utilities. Glynis (21 3)826-1 1 34.

66 Sublet

LAW student seeks summer sublet, tnt^ May - mid August, in MDR, SM, Brentwood, Bel Zr,

^°[^M T^ *^"8^^^"' 2-bdrm. Westwood apt. Sub et furnished. May 1 - Sept. 21 . Single

l2n)4ll'27r'" ''°°'"°- ^^**'^'*

66 Sublet

1 7 Ro#4rrwYi ftirnicfTfi^J aoartments nee€ii^.ti for

SUMMER housing needed for out of state summer law clerks from approximately May 22 through end of August. Please contact Teresa |ane2eci</Diana Rand. (21 3)6884)200.

SUMMER sublet: 6/1 -8^5, 2-bedroom house, large yard, 5 minutes to campus. $1 SOtVmonth -t- deposit. (213)474-9526.

SUMMER sublet. Furnished l-bedroom % block to UCLA. Available mid-june to mid- September. Kelly, (213)208-3675.

WESTWOOD summer sublet. Mid-|une - end September. University studio for 2. Furnished appliances, $5S2/month. Call Nicholas (213)824-0927.

2-3 months in Westside. Approximately May 1 5 to the middle/ervJ of August. Please contact Elaine L. Effler at (213)458-1090 ext. 202.

2-BED, fully furnished apartment, walking distance to UCLA, $1 1 50/mo. Available 2-3 months, additional months negotiable. (213)474-6941.

AVAILABLE mid-June to erxl August, two bedroom, two bathroom, across from UCLA parking A/C^ 824-4745.

FOR sunrMner laMr clerk. Approximately May 21 -August 11. Please call Kim Simpkinsk (213)629-7263.

FUN summer sublet to share spacious 2br/2ba. on Levering. Parking. Male or Female. $3Saftno. (213)824-1485. ^=

Sublets Needed

Downtown lawfirm needs

sublets for law students

this summer. WLA area

preferred. May-Aug.,

June-Aug.,

Please contact:

Recruiting Office at

Graham & James at

(213)689-5169

FURNISHED one-bedroom. 729 Gayley. Available mid-June - mid-September. SSOO/negotiable. (213)824-9955.

LAW firm seeks sumnr>er housing for summer associates from May-August. Contact Shelby Ness (213)620-7700. ^~~

LAW firm seeks sublets for summer clerks from May through August. Call Jessica Brito, (213)628-7777.

SUMMER HOUSING NEEDED for our Downtown Lawv Rrm. Looking for furnished apartments and westskie

sublets to house our summer derks May thru August. Please call

Debor^ or Elaine at (213)488-7103.

Downtown law firm seeking housing for summer associates.

Space needed anytime Between 5/15/89 - 9/1/89. Apartments, sublets, house sitting, house sharing, etc. Please contact Cindy Daly at Pettit & Martin- at (213) 626-1717

WANTED: Westside Sublets &

Apts. to share. Law stixlents need

summer housing, various dates.

Contact Felicia Goggans at

MITCHELL, SILBERBERG &

KNUPP, (213)312-3203.

WANTED FOR

VISmNG LAW

CLERKS

Furnished 1 , 2, & 3

bedroom apartments

|& houses to rent from|

May - August

(213) 277-1010 xt 7866

Robyn

Prestigious law firm needs

furnished studio and 1 - bednx)m apartments for

summer law clerks.

June through Mid-Au£[MSt.

Please call Camille Manning

at Pircher. Nichols & Meeks.

(213) 201-8983.

SIDLEY & AUSTIN

LAW FIRM

NEEDS SUMMER

SUBLETS ^

If you are interested in subletting

your furnished apartment or

house from Mav-Aug^'it to

summer associates from out of

town, please contact

Brenda Thomas

'213)556-6976

CONSIDER IT RENTED

Firm seeks short-term

furnished sublets and/or

roommate situations for legal

interns who need housing for

all or part of the sununer.

(May - Sq)l)

Call PRM now.

(818) 241-2900

67 Condos for Sale

WESTWOOD, near UCLA. 1 -bedroom and 2-bedroom condo* for sale from $138,000-$! 90,000. Kismet Alfonso (213)465-3445. ,__

WLAr Bright, quiet, newer, front unit. 2"f2, security, washer/dryer in unit. $21 5,000^ Ja- nice, agent (213)828-0404.

HEY, BUDDY,

CAN YOU SPARE

A ROOM}

The annual hunt for

housing is on. If you have

a place to sublet this

summer, call Jody at

Loeb 6^. Loeb

(213)688-3659

An Equal Opportunity

Renter

69 Condoa for Rent

BRENTWOOD $1245. Large 2+2 security condo, fireplace, bath, pool, balcony, view. New carpet. Sauna. (213)820-6412. (213)478-7033

76 Flying/Parachuting

LEARN to skydlve at Skydiving Adventures. Freefall 35 seconds on your very first jump. College discounts. For further info. l.aP9.^5^6;96e2. . ^^^__

DaHy Bruin

CLASSIFIED 25

90 Child Care

RESPONSIBLE UCLA student/parent providing evening care for children of "night shift" parents. Affordable. Call Laurie (213)398-9959.

96 Service* Offered

1

100 Typing

WRITING coach: Working journalist and ex- perienced English teacher can help with pap- ers, theses. Call (213)822-9139.

9 1 Insurance

AUTO insurance, low rates. Nearby West- wood AgerKy. Personal service. Call now and save money. (213)820-4839.

INSURANCE Wari We'll beat anyone's prices or don't want your business. Sports cars, multiple tickets, student discounts. Request "Bruin Plan". (213)873-3303 or (818)992-6966.

HATE AUTO INSURANC€I

■.:.-CC by T-'V S: . . FREE LOWER QUOTE . (213)852-7175 (6161 342-1510

98 Tutoring OfTered^

MATH tutor. UCLA. Math graduate. Math 2, statistics, calculus, high school, etc. Gerry Kamln. (213)274-4846.

PATIENT TUTOR! Math, Chem, Physics. For free info call Jim Madia (21 3)383-6463.

RUSSIAN is fun. Learn to speak, read and write. Private instructor teaches all levels. (213)395-4952.

WOROPROCESSING specializing in theses/ dissertations, trar^scription, manuscripts, sta- tistical, resumes. Santa Monica (213)828-6939, Hollywood (213)466-2888.

WORD Processing: Term papers Mnd disserta- , ^ tions. Word Perfect 5.0. Fast, accurate, compe- titive rates. (213)392-6252. - - „---„-_

WORD Processing in my home. Letter quality, accurate, weeker>ds and evenings okay. Fast service, good rates. Dee (213)398-1217.

TUTORING

AN subjects plus LSAT.GMAT,

and GR^. Free 1 hour lesson with this

ad.lVY league grods. Stamford Prep

(213)271-5181.

ONE DAY TYPING

ProfesskXKSl writer with BA in English. Will type arxj edit term

papers, tr>eses. scripts, etc.

Or editing only Over 25 years

experience. In Br«itwood.

Bill Detanpy 2(>7-5021

102 Music Lessons

^iTstaie^

S TlllslalB^ 1

]f Wastwttd/VlUira OffflM )f 312-92I2 1317 WtsImM Mwd. ^

AUTO INSURANCE

Minimum liability required

by law.

Example: female 21 and

over $575/yr.; female under

21, male under 25, $737/yr.

Good rates for comp. and

collision.

Easy payment plan.

Call now (213)477-7051

or 475-8355

94 Movers

HONEST Man. Have big pickup, will travel. Small jobs, short notice oic. (213)285-8688. Call anytime. Discount.

JERRY'S Moving and Delivery. The careful movers. Free estimates, experierxxd, and reli- able. Jerry (213)391-5657.

MOVING. Call (21 3)263-BEST. Ask about our Spring special. Many moves under $125. No mIninrHjm, 26 ft. truck.,

96 Services Offered

ACADEMIC Achievement. All subjects, writ- ing and editing service, dissertations, theses, term papers, proposals, resunr>es, research. PH.D. in english (818)798-5296.

FRUSTRATED developing/editing grad school statements, theses, resumes, etc? Professional help from cor^sultant/author with MA/ jour- nalism. Dick (213)208-4353.

JAPANESE Business Conversation class, Los Angeles City College Community Services, From April 30 to June 11. Sundays 1;0O-2:3Opm. (213)666-1018.

SINCE 1970. Professional writing, editing, research, statistics, computer production: Urxiergraduate, Masters, Phxi. Any styl«^ requirement. (213)871-1333.

STUDENTS: don't have a phone numberf Singles: don't want to give your number out? Try voice mail, your own private local phone number, keep it «li summer. Call (818)594-1057. ' ^

BEAirS RESEARCH,

WRITING AND EDITING SERVICE

AO «ib)«cts. ThMM/DlMOTtattom.

Proposak and Books. Foratgn

Students Wdcoms.

ShMon Bmt. PhO. (213)470^662

iCRATCHED, DIRTY CONTACT LENSES

W* poHsh A ci«on your hard, tmnihwon,

and soft contoct lens— whl» you watt.

Il»tum your conlacts to "Iw ntvt"

concMon. F«cl otkI b*tt«r

Or. Vogei, 1132 WMtwood M. 206-30n

20%w/INsad.

99 Tutoring Needed

ENCINO teenager needs tutoring several days a %¥cek. Please call (818) 784-6806.

ENGLISH Tutor needed. Must be native Engl- ish Speaker. Hours flexible. Experierx:e not necessary. 824-0835 night.

GUITAR lessons by a professional teacher. Near UCLA. All levels. Guitars available. Call Jean (213)476-4154.

VOICE, 38 years teaching all levels and styles, NY City Opera, musicals, top clubs, near UCLA. (213) 277-7012, Michael Bondon.

100 Typing

104 Resumes

ACTUALLY type 1 20 wpm. Graduate degree, IBM computer, word processing, desktop pub- lishing, mass mailings.