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loamaHsn DapaibMnt 2Mi amhrsnanf sdMion the Sundial CAUFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRUME SPiOIAL EDITION JOURNALISM ANNIVERSARY, FRIDAV, NOVEMBER 4. 1S03 Department celebration honors 1,000 graduates This anniversary edition of the Daily Sundial honors all of the students who made this celebration possible, the thousands of students who attended journalism classes during the past 25 years. Part <A the university's 2Sth anniversary festivities as well, this issue highlights the achievements of the Sundial,- KCSN-FM, Scene magazine and all departmental organizations and honor societies. Photographs found in an old fdde^ rqxoductions of Sundial pages kept in bound volmnes, lists Ol award winners and letters of reminisoenoe written by representatives oS different time periods obviously are (Hily part of a larger story. In addition to any names published here, every graduate can recall another dozen students who assisted with a departmental ivoduction or excelled in <jlhe classroom. Also not forgotten are all of the professors, including the many devoted part-time instructors, who gave their time to insure success of student the same can be said for the staff, whether they worked in the department office, Sundial advertising, KCSN-FM or in a production capacity. But this primarily is a testimonial to the department's graduates, all 1,000 of them, no matter where they are or what they have achieved.* Our evolution from a one-person depulment to one of the larynt and most successful in the region is traced here through the photos, okl headlines and lists of facts and figures. This profile of growth, as interesting as it is, can be taken for granted. But a little rdlection might lead to another oonchisioa: it all is nther amazing. '... \ . DaHy Sundlai past editors remember tlie years, events gone by 2 Scene S Mfsfrom ioidto color magazine 5 KCSN radio beats the pros in their own competitions 8

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loamaHsn DapaibMnt 2Mi amhrsnanf sdMion

the Sundial CAUFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRUME SPiOIAL EDITION JOURNALISM ANNIVERSARY, FRIDAV, NOVEMBER 4. 1S03

Department celebration honors 1,000 graduates This anniversary edition of the Daily

Sundial honors all of the students who made this celebration possible, the thousands of students who attended journalism classes during the past 25 years.

Part <A the university's 2Sth anniversary festivities as well, this issue highlights the achievements of the Sundial,- KCSN-FM, Scene magazine and all departmental organizations and honor societies.

Photographs found in an old f d d e ^ rqxoductions of Sundial pages kept in bound volmnes, lists Ol award winners and letters of reminisoenoe written by representatives oS different time periods obviously are (Hily part of a larger story.

In addition to any names published here, every graduate can recall another dozen students who assisted with a departmental ivoduction or excelled in <jlhe classroom.

Also not forgotten are all of the professors, including the many devoted part-time instructors, who gave their time to insure success of student

the same can be said for the staff, whether they worked in the department office, Sundial advertising, KCSN-FM or in a production capacity.

But this primarily is a testimonial to the department's graduates, all 1,000 of them, no matter where they are or what they have achieved.*

Our evolution from a one-person depulment to one of the larynt and most successful in the region is traced here through the photos, okl headlines and lists of facts and figures.

This profile of growth, as interesting as it is, can be taken for granted. But a little rdlection might lead to another oonchisioa: it all is nther amazing.

'... \ .

DaHy Sundlai past editors remember tlie years, events gone by

2

Scene

SMfsfrom ioidto color

magazine

5

KCSN radio beats the pros in their own competitions

8

2 JoMhtsMsiii Jfainlvafsin^ 4, isis

The way it was e e

Matadfir Fivo Drop^ Opener, 75-67

ByJ0EBUTTITTA,'61

I came to the San Femando Valley State College ^inpus in the fall of 19S9. At that time, the campus was a myriad of wooden planks connecting btmgalows where the student union now stands.

The only permanent buikiing was the okl library (South Library), while the Music Buikiing and the Fine Arts complex were under construction. The campus was a mess, especially in the rain.

As I recall, the student peculation at that time was something like 600 or 800.

The mood on campus was one of bewiklerment. After all, here we were at this new college in the middle of the raral San Femando Valley.

It wasn't Pierce or Valley College, but a real-life college, a four-year job, and everyone was feeling their way. It was wonderful because everyone knew everyone else . . . or so it seemed.

I got involved in the journalism department right away and talk about feeling your way! Our office moved many times in that first semester in the hopes that we wouldn't be in anybody's way.

As I recall, we inhabited part of the fourth floor of the library, nestled among pre-fabricated walls whk;h were piled in the middle of the floor.

I followed John Hamber as the second sports editor of the Sundial and I was in hog-heaven because sports was where I wanted to be, especially since I played on the "awesome" SFVSC baseball team which was coached by Phil Munroe.

I even got to cover, live and in-person, the very fu t Matador football game, a junior varsity affair against Southem Califomia College (not the University of Southem Califomia). The game was played in a down­pour at s e c and was coached by Sam Winningham, who is now the chairman of the physKal education depart­ment. We tied that first football game.

As I write this, I keep thinking of other things that happened, things that have been in the recesses of my subconscious for so many years. It feels like a catharsis of sorts.

My college days were definitely scrnie of the happiest days of my life. And I'm glad I was one of the pioneers at SFVSC.

Joe Buttitta Is currently a sports broadcaster for KTLA. channdS.

By MAYERENE BARKER, '61

Campus Kfe during the late '50s and early '60s was not as exciting as it was in the later yeare. The era of student activism was just beginning when I graduated in the early 1960s

I do remember my first assignment on the Cteily Sundial. It was an interview with tiie now famous Julian Nava. But tiie big stories were mostiy routine stuff such as student council decisions.

There was much excitement when Lyndon Johnson and Henry Cabot Lodge, vkx presidential candidates in 1960, sp(*e on separate occasions on campus. I'm not sure how much good it dki for tiicm, because the voUng age hadn't been lowered to 18 yet, tiKrefore most of us coukln't vote.

I was tiie Sundial editor during tiie summer semester of 1960. Bob Hilbum, tiie fall semester editor, couW not accept the assignment for an entire year because he wanted to run fw student body president.He was elected, by the way. . .

Dances and spring sings were well-attended activities, and the Sundial usually covered them.

I remember one exciting incklent that occurred when I was the editor. An okler male student lowered the campus flag to half-mast the day Caryl Chessman was executed. I sent a reporter and photographer to interview the man.

We ran the story in the school paper and it was picked up by tiie now-defunct Valley Times. In tum, the wire servkes ran the story.

Later, all of us who were involved were called in by the president of the university and were told that we had made the college look bad.

We were firmly asked never to do anything like that apin. The content then definitely was controlled by the administration.

The journalism department was then located in the newly completed Fine Arts Building. Much of our equipment was out of date. Photography classes were taugiht with the okl Speed Graphks and we had one broadcast news writing class.

That course was taught by a man who was then head of NBC news for the West Coast. Some of our classes were at the old NBC headquarters in Hollywood and we were thrilled to see Elmer Petersen give the news live and to meet him.

The Sundial was a weekly during my years at the university. It was put together at the old Northridger by a very patient compositor.

Few students would volunteer to help put the paper together, and it usually ended up with two or three of us trying to make things fit, reading hot type upside down, trimming stories and filling holes. Erlandson, our adviser, woukl stay with us until the paper rolled off the presses, usually about 1 or 2 a.m.

Although the faculty was small'and the department new, I feel that I received a wonderful background in journalism attending CSUN.

I was hired by the Valley Times after I graduated. The staff was comprised of mostiy young people from USC. Hilbum also started out at the Valley Times, and we coukl hokl our own with any of them.

Mayerene Barker currently writes for the Los Angeles Times.

25th Anniversary Sundial PuMlaher Cyntlila Z. RawNoh

Edttor Marlaa Markman

Staff J«nlaCaoMar Allan QroanlMrg

Staoay Shaw

Faculty Adviser Michaal Emory

Editorial Consultants Kan Davol KatMoMi Halo

Busineas Manager Wlllla StaM-Unak Advertiaing oirector Qaorga Ratnar

Carol Vanak Production Lon Splagalman

T. Bruoa Andaraon

in* AnnwwMry SundM w 1 •pccwl M Citionm SUM UnvtrMy, Nonimdta, CM. SISM. Tlw MMorut offn* • numMr a aM-asiS; •d»«tiiiii^ and numaari

M naeKtm Sts-Siss

Karon Martlnaa puMcMion of ttw dipartffltm of toumaiMin

IS l l l NordtwHSVMt Nofthrtds*. ' in SMTT* t«orth 200 and tho pnono

buwww ofcww • • in SMm Itorth 200

m i HOUSEJEXraCTED FOR STEVE ALLEN LECTllIB

^ ^ - ^ : ^ A S U N D I A L ^

Second Annual G>niniencenient June 9 Aipecla Orteievition View«sd By Steve Allen

1 Giwne Will AddreM ^ Graduation For S25

A vote on a pn^iosal to raise student fees to fmancei ^ student union was discussed all year, and there were the usual battles between student govemment and studen ^ press. \

Sundial editws (Marty Ball, Twiy Cifareffi and John Weigle) protested the ^ n g elections because of what tiiey called lack of ballot secrecy; the Associated Students board cut off funds to the Sundial and studenu protesting tiie Sundial poiides started a letters-only pubUcation called, "The C ^ n Voke."

But no one who was at the college, indeed no one dd enough to remember anything of that year, can forget what the two nuyor wire servkxs and the Sundial staff pwked as tiie year's Uxp story: Nov. 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was gunned down in Dlllas, Texas.

That occurred on a Friday and the Sundial was abeady on tiie stands when tiie news came. The next legulir edition woukln't be printed until the following Tuesday,

So, we planned an "extra" for Monday, the first day we could cover campus reaction to the mtuder.

Then President Lyndon B. Johnson declared Monday a national day d mourning, and classes were canceled. Our four-page special appeared as an insert in tht Nov. 26 paper.

Rosalie Long wrote the main story whkh was headlined: Mr. Kennedy's Death: What Can We Say?

Her third graf tokl the story: "Fw the moment, inertia

AAr. Kennedy's Death: 'What Gin We Say?

Shock Grips

Student Body] ar ROiAiJf ume

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20-Year J'mx Seeti itt Death i n S i i r - ' iH^tDv:'

tM> • • • 11 I M •>•«•

ByJ0HNWEI0LE.'64

The year 1963-64 was a school year like any other until the month trf November. The first issue of tiie Daily Sundial reported tiiat enrollment was expected to hit an All-time high of 9,600 students.

mled. Students stood immobile, mute. 'I feel cold,' said one."

Friday aftemoon classes were canceled and as Rosalie noted, no one cheered.

"Some faculty members said they could not face a class upon hearing of the assassination. Many classes engaged in a short discussk>n of the event and its immediate significance and ttusn were dimissed," sakl Bob Tarlau.

And sports editor Amie Friedman, who was in the physical education building at the time, described this scene:

" . . . A burly member of the varsity football team was leaning weakly against the wall, staring into space. Both of his eyes, had tr^c^ pf tears."

There were other big stories, of course, but none matched the Kennedy assassination. For many Sundial sUtifers, it was the biggest story they ever had covered -or ever woukl cover — and they dkl it magnificiently, like the journalists they were training to be.

Anticlimaticas they are, some of tiie otiier stones selected by the staff as tiie year's top 10 were:

— Faculty members ttueatetKd to boycott tiie summer session to protest summer salaries. Raises came through in time to save the classes.

— Fresh from his win in the Oregon presidental primary. New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller brought his campaign to the coll ie . Cdlege officials tried to downplay ttie pditical aspects of OK talk saying it was not a rally, but few doubted tiiat it was. Reporter Walter Winchell drew a crowd (rf his own as he wrote and called in his story on tiie event.

— A move began to change tiie college's name from San Femando VaUey State CoUege to something cIsc.The most popular proposals at the time were California State CoUege at Nortiuidae and Cal State at San Femando VaUey.

John fVelgle is the news editor for the Ventum County Star Free Press.

Joumallam Annhraraary, Novambar 4 ,1983 ' 3

0.. asreniembered by former Sundial editors Omm Jumpers to Relive Old West

SUNDIAL •ALUET STATK

S3 MILLION BONDS PASS

2,500 Parking SpocasOKad

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• y ROBERT TARLAU.'68

I was lucky enough dtiring Iny stay on campus from 1963 tiU 196S to score a couple of firsts.

I was the first editor of the Daily Sundial in the fall of 1964 to head the paper in Sierra FUdl. And I was the first news director of the 10-watt KEDC, the fledgling campus FM radk> outlet that has now grown into KCSN.

The statk)n had such k)w power in those days, we used to tease that our few listeners coukl only hear us when the wind was bkiwing toward them.

Bur, certainly, the most memorable broadcast I was involved in during that era came on election night in 1964.

Tom Sanger and I hosted the first broadcast from the studio in Sierra HaU, covering results of the John-son-Goldwater election and state and local issued.

We were on the air for several hours, in a very primitive setup, taking our cues off of my kitchen radk) which I had brought in for the evening, since Sierra HaU

. wasn't equipped with any control room monitCM^ at the time.

With the able assistance of some J-department volunteers, we somehow made it through the night. And to c^r great surprise, a few postcards actuaUy came in, offering congratulations.

Recalling incidents on the Daily Sundial, the coverage of campus and community reaction to the assassination of Presklent John F. Kennedy comes to mind first.

During my first semester at the campus, I happened to lie in the Sundial office (at that time in a pot factory in the Fine Arts Buikiing), standing next to our DPI printer, when the first buUetin came over announcing that the presklent and Gov. John ConnaUy of Texas had been shot as they rode in a Dallas motoroule.

I remember watching with almost total disbelief as the machine later deUvered history in the form of a 10-beU flash: Presklent Kennedy was dead.

We mobUized our sniaU staff and by working through what was normaUy an off-day for the Siuidial, and by working through most of the night, we tumed out a special editkm of the paper.

While the effort we made dkln't b ^ n to ease the hurt of that tragK November of 1963, we felt we had at least made some journalistic contributkm to the coverage of the story of the decade.

Both of these examples, with the radio station and the paper, show that my great recollections come from the exposure we were given to the coverage of non-campus, workl headUne events.

The opportunities and the experiences have come back to help me so many times. Those foundation days at the Northridge campus have always and wiU always mean a very great deal to me.

Robert Tarlau is the North American bureau marwgerfor Australia's Nine Network. By ROBERT RAWITCH.'67

There is always something special about being a part of something new, growing and changing. Those three words probably best describe the mood at what I knew as San Femando VaUey Sute CoUege while a student from 1963-67.

The five-year-okl campus had about 8,000 students when I started and had neariy doubled in size by the time 1 fraduated. The Daily Sundial grew from a smaU, twkx-a-week publKatkMi, operating out of a tiny room in the Fine Arts Buikiing, to a robust, award-winning daUy newspaper with modem equipment kicated in the then newly-buUt Sierra HaU complex.

But if the campus, the newspaper and the joumaUsm department were growing and changing, the magnitude of that activity paled to what was going on in society as a whole during those years.

Universities of course are never isolated from the forces that move the workl outskle academia, but in the wikl decade of the 1960s, everything seems, and maybe it was, magnified on the campuses.

The Vietnam War and the draft were the hottest issues around and aU that coUege men coukl taUc about was making "normal progress" toward getting a degree in four years so they woiUdn't be drafted out of school. Not untU' 1966 dkl the anti-war movement and student protests come to VaUey Sute.

The fledgUng Students for a Democrat^ Sodety (SDS) was formed on the campus about that time and was

jconsklered only slightiy left of the student chapter of the American CivU Liberties Umon.

The then non-vk)lent organization and its charismatk leader (Paul Shintrff, who then narrowly missed becoming Associated Students presklent and is now a labor writer for the San Francisco Examiner), were the focal points of student protests on campus. FoUowing SDS was one of the biggest stories on campus.

Concurrentiy, LSD was a new street drug that arrived on the coUege scene and debate raged in the columns of

%.[01 PLANS REVEALED VX iMim Nak T I M M M y Pht rE~E:'E=

BSU, SDS join in occupation of Administrotion Building

DAILY SUNIHAL

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the Sutidial over whether the drug was mind expanding or mind destroying.

While LSD was new, more common was the slowly increasing use of "pot" by middle class coUege students. Sundial reporters and the SDX chapter backed an Oregon Sute University newspaper editor who was nearly jailed for refusing to reveal the names of people who attetKled a "pot party" about wluch she wrote.

No one coukl beUeve that an actor named Ronald Reagan was reaUy mnning for govemor, tet akine beUeve that he would win. Think of the odds Las Vegas woukl have given in early 1966 about Reagan's chances of being presklent in 1980.

A series I wrote for the Sundial on Reagan's drive to impose tuition on sute universities and coUeges helped me to win an internship at the Los Angeles Times.

In February, 1967 in San Francisco, I accepted a pku)ue from Reagan whkh named the Sundial the best college daily in the sUte.

I considered pubUcly refusing the award as a protest against his attitudes toward educatk>n. But, the award was of course to the paper and not me. I accepted it silentiy and smiled for the photographers.

Some things were, of course, no different than they are now. We quarreled with A S whk;h then funded about 25 percent of the paper.

Fratemities never beUeved they got enouj^ coverage and there was never enough on-campus parking or reasonably-priced off-campus housing.

But, there was immense pride in the DaUy Sundial and the infant 10-watt KEDC (later to become KCSN) news operatk>n. About 20 of us who spent two or three years on the Sundial graduated togetiMr and most sUyed in some form of joumaUsm. ;

Robert Rawltch is the Admitan EOtor for the Los Angeies TVMS^

I remember the chaos. I remember one of the broadcasters from KEDC

coming across the hall into the DaUy Sundial city room on a Monday, fifteen years ago today, at 11 in the moming and yeUing, "The BSU (Black Student Unk>n) has got the Administration buUding."

Nah, we sakl. AU that's happening today is an 11:30 a.m. class waUtout sponsored by Students for t Democratic Society. Nobody woukl take over a buikiing without tipping us.

The week before the Administration BuiMing ukeover, a couple of Sundial editors had secretly planned to pubUsh a parody of the notoriously leftist Los Angeles Free Press and insert it inskle the usual Sundial. It woukl have come out Nov. 1.

The lead column was an angry treatise viUifying San Femando VaUey Sute CoUege because it, unUke Columbia and other more aware universities, had not enjoyed a student buUding occupation. The colummst demanded a local takeover. It was the best of timing, it was the worst of timing. (We dkln't pubUsh the parody. Somebody squealed and the J-faculty threatened to withdraw sponsorship of the Sundial. We relented. Whew.)

Were there threatening phone caUs from rightists today, or were the leftists on the phone? Was there a caU from the chairman of the Board of PubUcations an­nouncing he was going to recommend firing yours truly and Ralph Sanders?

Oh, do I remember Ralph Sanders. A bUnd man waUting so elegantiy through that joumaUstk minefiekl as editor of the Sundial during the hottest months, the faU of 1968.

I remember him calmly, always cahnly, whUe the rest of us were screaming at the sUghtest (H>portunity, fingering the notes he'd taken in BntiUe, then typing his stwy or editorial.

I remember trying to sneak up behind him, just for kkks. Never coukl. Ralph knew everybody's footsteps. HeU, I waUced into the Sundial one day in Eteoember and found him standing on his desk, hanging a Christmas ornament from the ceUing.

But if you're kxiking for a moment to remember what it was Uke, it was a couple (rf days after Kent Sute, May, 1970, and nobody cared about the ethiuc studies issues that had dominated 1968.

An effort was being made to swamp the White House with pre-printed postcards. You could fiU them out in the gymnasium lobby, and on that aftemoon, students poured out of class and swept across the grassy central campus, up the soft knoU toward the gym. „. Les Gokiman,a serious, quiet joiuiiaUsm student who had written on many social issues, was standing in their path, shouting: "Listen to me! UntU we solve the problem of racism in this country, it won't matter whether we stop the war." Nobody Ustened. Nobody stopped.

For me, that scene always captured the cUmate in whk:h we tived and in whkh we pubUshed: righteousness, arrogance, anger — the certainty tiiat one issue or per-a o n i ^ . and only one, stood between heaven and heU. Bob Baker is the VaUey editor cf the Los Angeks Tbnes.

FleaaetimttopatBTO

ATy^ Ao/io/:s to/i students

••* THETA BIOS —Tha WICI InataHtttlon on

3, 1967. Tha organiaatlon'a original nama waa Thata Sigma Phi.

WICI helps students meet challenges By LMDA BACHRACK Contributing Writer

Through annual natkMial meetings and year-round programs. Women in Commumcations, Inc. (WICI), works to help its members sucoessfuUy meet the chaUenges of the rapkUy devek)pin| and changing commuiucations fiekl.

One of the nation's oklest and laiiest p r o f e s s i o n a l c o m m u n i c a t i o n s Ofganizations, WICI was founded in 1909 at the University of Washingtcm in Seattle by seven women students, and since then, 30.000 persons have become membo^.

OriginaUy named Theu Sigma Phi, WICI unites women and men from aU fiekls of communkatKNis.

The Northridge chapter of WICI WK introduced to the campus in 1967 and h u oonsistentiy strived to carry out the ordinal purposes of the organizatkMi's founders.

Created to work for a free and responsibleuifess, WICI endeavors to

unite aU those involved in the various fields of communication. The organization also annuaUy recognizes achkvements by women joumaUsts and encourages its members to indivklually maintain high professional sundards.

"The w(Mnen who are in WICI really Uke it," sakl Dr. Susan Henry, the chapter adviser. Henry, who has been the adviser for the last seven years, sakl that the club has maintained a steady membership of 20-25 members.

Beskles monthly meetings and in­formative guest lectures, a membership in WICI provkles many bonuses.

The national newsletter. The Signal, is maUed to members. It provkles in-formatKHi concerning upcoming events and Usts job onxMtunities, internship inograms and workshops.

AnnuaUy, the organizatkMi gives the Outsunding Woman JoumaUsm Student Award to a student who has been nominated as outstanding in the fiekl of communkation.

By KENNETH S.DEVOL Contributing Writer

The CSUN campus chapter of Kappa Tau Alpha, the national journalism honor society, has initiated 181 jour-naUsm students in its 13 years at Nor­thridge.

The campus chapter was estoblished in 1970 witii the induction of four un­dergraduate joumaUsm honor students.

The top 10 percent of each yearns graduating class, including master's degree candidates, are eUgiblc for initiation. This normaUy requires a grade-point-average of 3.5 or better for undergraduates and often a 4.0 for graduate students. ~^

'•i The sockty has been described as the journalism and mass communication najors' equivalent of Phi BeU Kappa, tiie Kberal arts honor sockty. ~^

Active chapters exist today on most campuses housing major schools of journalism. Nearly 25,000 students from across the land have been initiated since its founding. The department adviser. Ken Devol, has served in that rok since the 1970 founding of tiie CSUN chapter.

In addition to honoring outsunding academk work of its students, the sockty honors individuals who have made special contributions to the various schools of journalism. Such individuals have been recognized on this campus since 1975.

The Ust of honorees include: 1975 — Haig Keropian, editorial edit(M-

of the Daily News, veteran newsman, frequent chair of the University's Board of Student Publications, and long a supporter of the department and its students.

1976 - Dr. Paul Walker, former newsman with the WaU Street Journal and the Bakersfiekl CaUfomian, the first campus director of pubUc relations and later executive vice presklent, now

retired. He was the first dean of fj^l School of Communication and* Professional Studies, to whom the' department reports. He also holds the rank of professor of journalism.

1977 — MUce Wkner, journalisni teacher at Canoga Park High School, for his dedkation in attacking censorship of high school pubUcations and for \^ leadership in achkving through state legisbition a freer and more responsive scholastk press.

1978 —• Jess Martow, news anchor KNBC, Utter moving to KNXT, for hii constant intoest and dedication to our program-

1979 — Dr. Earl WaUis, retired dean of the School (rf Communication and Professional Studies, for his leadei^ and constant support of our program

1980 — Ftofessor Maynard Hkks, proi issor emeritus at Washington State University, for his loyalty over the recent years as a part-time professor at CSUN.

1981 — Scott Schmidt, publisher of the DaUy News, for his efforts in developing the VaUeydaUy into national prominence and for his interest in our program and in hiring and accepting interns and alumni from CSUN.

1982 — Bob Rawitch, editor of subiulian sections of the Los Angeles Times, CSUN journalism graduate and former editor of the Sundial, for his continuing dedkation to the department through a decade of part-time teaching and support and his state-wide leadership in the area of freedom of information.

1983 — Agness Underwood, one Q( the first woman editors of a nutjor metropoUun newspaper in the nation (the Herakl-Express) for her lifetime of devotkin to newpaper journalism, and for her intoest in the department through the donatkm of her personal papers for use in the research by faculty and students and in esUbUshing a journalism scholarship in her name.

&

CSUN Office of Continuing Education

CONGRATULATES

The Journalism Department

on its 25th Anniversary

For class Information call 885-2644 Modlo Inqulrlot: 885-3979

h-

"Every iuue of the paper presents an opportunity and a duty to say something courageous and true . . . "

— JOSVH PUUTZm

JottmaUam Annhraraary, Novambar 4,1S83 5

SCENE YEARS '68-'83 SCENE

B O O C » « « A O |

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By MARISA MARKIMAN Anniversary Editor

In January 1969, a new pubUcatkHi hit the San Fenuoido VaUey Sute CoUq^ campus.

The kid was named Scene magazine. During its 14 years of pubUcation, Scene has

grown from a small tabloid to a professkmal-kxiking 40-page cokv magazine.

Because of the efforts (rf Dr. Mkhael Emery, the campus magazine saw the Ught of day.

"In the faU of 1%8,1 was assigned the task of pbmning the new department magazine," sakl Emery, the periodkal's first adviser.

The first issue appeared in tabknd format and focused on an incklent that occurred on Nov. 4, when members of tiie Black Student Union oc­cupied the Administratkn Buikiing to protest a raciaUy-based conflkt.

On that date, BSU m e m ^ hekl several hostages in oppositkn to an aUeged racist attitude exhibited toward a black footiiaU player by freshman footbaU coach Don Markham.

The magazine's staff, working on tiic story, was made up of two students — Editor Vkki Brumagin and her assistant, Janis Russo.

"Our main effort in titiis first issue has been to examine tiM turmoU of faU 1968 with a kiok toward the future," Brumagin wrote.

The foltowing semester Scene began to grow and nutture — Dr. Tom ReUly adopted the new (tepartment e(Uti(m and, vrith the staff, tumed it into a slkk magazine that came out twke a semester.

"Scene Magazine sUrted as a newsmagazine," ReiUy sakl. "It then changed to a general-interest magazine and has remained so."

From the beginning, the magazine has primarily been student-mn. The faculty who have been involved with the magazine, including Dr. Larry Meyer, Nancy Baker Jacobs and Dr. WUUam Thomas, have oonsistentiy perceived their rok to be that of adviser, aUowing the individual editiws to make decisions on whkh stories to mn and on what theme, if any, the issue woukl be based.

Although the control maiiUy rested with the different editors, ReUly sakl that there were a few difficuh departmental deciskms conoeming the printing of some controversial stories and photographs.

In the spring 1970 issue, the theme chosen by editor John Moir and his stajff was, "The Changing MoraUty."

Pktured in the first cokir photograph to be used on the cover of Scene was a contemporary coupk with a chUd posed in the 1930 "American Gothk" represenUtran.

"The cover photograph is a symboUc rebuff to the last vestiges of 'OM America,' represented by its archak traditkns and values, rigkl conformity, racism, doubk sundards and hypocrisy, which in general have not kept within the framework of a changing social situation," wrote staffer MUce Snitowsky.

"The 'New America,' depkted by the con­temporary coupk on the cover, rejects the okl ethks and is seeking to replace them with a new moraUty," he wrote.

On page two, opposite Snitowsky's essay was a red-tinted, screened photograph of a nude coupk holding a pitchfork. According to ReiUy, the coupk were frknds of a member of the sUff. They were Uken to a house on Lindky Avenue that looked like a barn, took their ckthes off and were photographed on the driveway.

There were a number of probkms with running the photo,"RcUly sakl.There was some unhappiness in the journalism department so it was decided that the photo woukl be screened and overlaid with red, thus removiiig the detaUing."

ReiUy was not the only adviser who had to face some pretty sticky situations. Dr. Larry Meyer, professor of joumaUsm at CaUfornia Sute University, Long Beach, served as Scene adviser from 1974-78.

Two (rf the issues he was involved >vith were

termed, "special issues" because they dealt specificaUy witili the respective themes of women and the televiskn industry in Southem CaUfornia.

"I remember in our feminist issue (summer 1974) the charge was made tiiat tiie Sute Department was steriUzing Third-workl women," Meyer sakl.

This charge was promptiy chaUenged by a member of the Sute Department and Scsene was helpless in their defense siiKe they coukl not adequately prove the accusation.

The s(Ming issue of 1977 was the most memorabk for Meyer. Still being pubUshed twke a semester, the department funds for the first pubUcation were late, thus causing the staff to doubk up both planned issues.

The result was the largest Scene ever to be pubUshed, with a total of 64 pages. "Sergk) Aragones from MAD Magazine dkl the Ulustratkm tot the cover of the nugazine," Meyer said. -^- ^

That issue w(m the CaUfornia Intercollegiate Press Association award for the Best Magazine.

Scene won tiiat award in 1976 and 1977. In recent years, the spring 1983 issue was chosen by the Sockty (rf Professbnal JoumaUsts to be the best magazine on the West Coast, and at the upcoming November SPJ/SDX national con­vention in San Francisco, the issue wUl be in the ranning for the best stu(knt magazine in the country.

Current adviser Prof. WUUam Thomas remembered the tribulations he had whUe serving as adviser for the award-winning issue.

"In that faU semester, we only had nine staffers, many of whom hadn't compkted the prerequisites for the course," Thomas said, " ^ t somehow, with' that staff, we managed to put out a good issue under very trying circumstances."

At the oeginning of the plaiuiing stages, Thomas and editor Dan Schmklt deckled to try to have cokir in the pubUcatkin. "We expkired every possibk avenue to get catot in the spring," he sakl. They succeeded and the issue dkl luive some cokir pages.

Campus and community members were im pressed by the kiok (rf cokv in the magazine. So much so that the Associated Students Senate and

^the Instructionally Related Activities Committee aUocated extra money to be uaed for a fuU-cok>r magazine for the summer 1983 issue.

These extra funds enabled the issue to have a fuU-cokr cover, along with fuU-c(4(v art throughout the magazine.

That special 25th anniversary issue had come a king way from the first UbkMd. In tribute^^^_ anniversary, artkles were written on the future of CSUN, aking with profiles of the Foundation and the campus jazz baiid.

The current editor is Chris Martin, who sakl that he is striving for a "management approach" with his issue. At the beginning of the semester, Martin aUocated jobs. He created different departments — mini suffs of photographers, artists, copy editors-

Another change this semester is that Scene became a departmental practkiun. IXiring the first half of the semester, the staff members are required to write for and vvork on the magazine.

For the second half of the course, the students are required to design their own pubUcations.

They are to write an artkk that coukl be used in the pubUcation, select their readership urget groups and inclwk photographs that are ap­pUcable to their publication, along with a cover and a logo design. The purpose of this in-(kpth (lesign is for the stu(knts to be able to seU their prototype pubUcation to a potential advertiser, Thomas said.

"Scene has come a king way since its inception," wrote Gail Dkker, ecUtor of the anniversary issue. "What was once a Mack and white 20-page nugazine is now a sUck, 40-page, award-winning cokir magazine, fuU of informative and interesting artkles and art."

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6 4, ISBS

KCSN-FM, barely out of 'teens, shows maturity ByJANNESCAOCLBR Contributing Writer

Though radk) sUtion KEDC-FM. whkh woukl biter beonne KCSN, first began broadcasting in 1963, it was not untU November of 1964 that the first news broadcast was mack from the smaU, new Skrra North facilities.

That historic election night began 20 years of broadcast joiunaUsm at the then San Fematido VaUey Sute CoUege.

The two joumaUsm students. Bob Tarbiu and Tom Sanger, who were responsibk for that first broadcast probably had Uttie klea what woukl become of the humbk Uttk sution.

KEDC, at the time, was broadcasting only four hours a day with a tiny 10-watt signal that barely breached the boundaries of the campus. "The transmitter was about the size of a coffee can," Tarlau sakl.

So although the broadcast woukl be heard by few, the two men went about gathering the information they woukl need to properly cover the returns.

"For a good week-and-a-half to two weeks leading up to the election day, we botii dug thrtxigh magazines and' newspapers and gathered as much background in­formation as we could," Sanger sakl.

They rewrote thfe material vrith a local angk whenever possibk, he sakl, "and then the plan was to use this as the returns started coming in. We used the wire machine in the other room to keep us informed and up to date as to what was going on. ^i: i : z z i _ _ _

"We wound up uains ewary hM ten^ of material we had prepared, and I think I ended up readiiig from the c(4umns of the Los Angeles Times at one point," Sanger sakl.

Since the setup was rather sparse, Tarlau br(Night in his kitchen radk), he said, so that some acxt (rf Unk other than the telephone ooukl be maintained with the main studk in the Speech and Drama Buikiing.

Tarlau sakl they were using the airwaves, (rff and on.

for about six hours tiiat night untU the ekction results were compkted. Sanger said the whok thing "went much more smoothly than either of us had anticipated," except for one breakdown in communkation between the two of them and the main studio.

They were on the air for about 10 minutes each hour, Sanger said, and at the end of one of tiieir updates they were unabk to give the air back to the main studio.

Deadsieace After finishing tiie update, "Bob tumed up the radk to

listen and there was nothing. Nothing happened. So we waited for what seemed to me Uke an etemity, but I'm sure it was no more than 10 seconds. Bob cooly turned down tiie radio and sakl. This is KEDC, Northridge CaUfornia.'" StiU there was sUence, he said, and they ended up having to improvise.

"The guy on the other end had obviously faUen asleep or gone out to diitner," Tarkiu said, "and we realized that we were stuck with a Uve mkrophone that we had no control over, so we just kept on going."

The radio sUtion began as part of the speech depan-ment in 1963, but from the beginning it was ckar that the journalism faculty" was determined that the broadcast joumaUsm students woukl work under the supervision of professional news peopk in Sierra North, said Dr. Kenneth Devol.

Through the years, sq;>aratk)n: of the main studio and news sttldio has caused un(kniabk probkms, he said, but stiU the joumaUsm faculty remains convinced that the soUd news educati(Hi these students receive is weU worth the inconvenknce (rf the division. "The advantages outweigh tiie disadvantages," Devol said.

"Idedly they shoukl be together in one pUice, but don't hold your breath waiting for it to happen," Devol sakl. It would involve mUUons (rf doUars to buUd a new structure where aU the broadcast, joumaUsm and various areas of communications coukl work together, and Sierra Hall's thick, soUd concrete waUs make it generaUy unsuitable for conversion, he said.

During a c(dlege-wkk re(Mganization in 1965, broadcast was removed from the speech department and wedded with jotmuUsm to form the department of joumaUsm and broadcasting. Dr. Bertram Barer joined tiie faculty of this new department as a broadcast speciaUst and the first faculty advisor to the sUtion.

Though Barer, who is on sabbatical this year, was unavaUabk for comment, Tarbiu offered his impressions

Please tum to page 7

TelevBion studio to get equipment

Television iab

Technokigkal devekpments affecting the com­munkation fiekl have posed a consunt dilemma to CSUN's journalism department. Tight budgets wUl not permit annual updating of expensive equipment.

But the department received additional funding of about $26,(X)0 this semester from the Sch(X)l of Com­munkation and Professional Studies to compkte the tekvision news studio.

A switcher, whkh allows pktures from any of the connected cameras to be fed into the the video recorder, is among the items pbmned for the control room.

Students using the new equipment wiU find many uses for a character generator which creates type to use in credits, identification and weather sUtistics.

Camera operators and performers in the studio will be abk to hear directions from the control room with a new communkation system.

Rounding out the stu(Uo wiU be three new color tekvision cameras, monitors and special lighting. The high quaUty cameras wUl be for exclusive use in the studio.

When the studio is oxnpkted, broadcast students will have a curriculum whkh joins their fiekl reporting work with studio work. Print joumaUsm students also will be abk to use the equipment to practice interviewing skills.

Previously, students studying tekvision news produced broadcasts using the borrowed faciUties at the Media Center in the Oviatt Library and at Valley Cable Tekvision.

Professor Jerry Jacobs, who worked in tekvision and radio news for more than 20 years, including 13 years with the NBC Tekvision Network and four years with tekvision sutions in Los Angeks, is in charge of the broadcast joumaUsm program.

You have 25 years to be proud of

N

Congratulations^ CSUNI

CEDTIFIEO PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

420 NORTH BRAND BOULEVARD. Suite 600 / Mail: P.O. Box 1917

QI.EN0ALE. CAUFORNIA 91209 / (213) 240-1437 / 245-9251

Oth«r Locationa: Son Dittgo EIC«ntro Wataonvillo

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Joumallam Annivraary, NovamlMr 4,1SS3 7

Station becomes award-winner through the years Continuedfrom page 6

of Barer as advisor and professor at the time.

Barer raises briNulcasters Tarlau sakl Barer was a professtonal broadcaster who

had been around at several suttons, and was really the only professor who was deeply involved in broadcast.

"What a funny guy,' he sakl of Barer. "I don't know if he's like he used to be, but gosh, he was a funny man.

"The cbisses used to begin with about 20 minutes of a sund-up routine," Tarlau sakl. **It was Uke the banning

CSUN/KCSN alumnua Bob Tariau ('66) works in tha naw Slarra North nawa facilWaa. Tarlau and fallow atudant Tom Sanger ('66) conductad tha firat KCSN nawa broailcaat out of tha atatlon in Nov. 1964.

according to Ray Tippo, a joumaUsm professtM- who joined the faculty that same year.

"What happened was that in tiie early 70s the Cor-poratton for PubUc Broadcasting was formed, and they give out grants to publk radto sutions," Tippo sakl. "One of the requirements for those grants is that you be a sutton that broadcasts out to a general area, and when they were only 10 watts they reaUy only broadcast to the campus area.

"So, in order to get that grant, whkh was a con-skkrabk amount of money, tiiey had to change their power," he sakl.

KEDC becomes KCSN It was also in 1972 that

San Femando VaUey Sute College was renamed C a l i f o r n i a S t a t e University, Northridge, so in 1973 KEDC became KCSN, streiigthening its Unk to the university.

To improve the quaUty of servke, the sUtion went stereo in 1975, Tippo said.

The improvement in the quaUty of the product was graduaUy becoming ap­parent, in 1976 the sUtion scored its first "Gokkn Mike," a coveted and flashy award from the Radio and Tekvision News Association of Southem California. And there would be more to come, though not for several years.

of the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. HEEEEEERE'S BERT... He'd come out and do his number and have us in stitches.. .and then he woukl go on with the lesson."

Tarbiu said Barer was such a popular and good teacher that many students became interested in broadcast because of him.

From the Uite 1960s and into the mkl 70s, the sution, atong with the rest of the department, grew and changed in many ways.

In 1969, fibn was added to the fiekl and Barer was asked to form the new radto-TV-fihti department, the final and compkte separatton of general broadcast and broadcast journalism. The journalism department then began to offer broadcast as a practkum.

In 1970, KEDC became an affiUate of National Education Radto, a foremnner of National PubUc Radio.

Then, in 1972, the sUtton increased its power to 3,000 watu., a significant jump that put it in kague with other publk sutions so that it coukl seek grants from the newly-formed Corporation for Public Broadcasting,

Although tiie period of the mkl-70s marked the banning of a trend toward exceUencc at KCSN, Tippo sakl he thinks the big difference occurred when tiie sUtion and the department made the deciston to make the positton of news direct(M' a fuU-time staff positton in 1980.

Before that year, the news director's shoes were fiUed by graduate students who earned Uttk more than brownk points for their work.

News Director goes to ftaB-tinM "Obviously a grad student was just a part-time person,

maybe 12 hours a week. It was clear that if we wanted to have a fuU-scak news operatton we needed to have a fuU-time staff person," Tippo sakl. "I ^ n k it improved the quaUty of the news.— content and format.

In 1981, Rich Guabuio, a CSUN/KCSN alumnus, became the first fuU-time news (Urector.

Guabuio remained as the fuU-time news director for one year, and Jayne Bower succeeded him in 1981.

Professor Jerry Jacobs, the sution's current adviserii

sakl tiiat the sution won about 2S awards in the spring 1982 semester atone, and "abnost aU were won in competition against professional sutions."

In its history, KCSN has won a total of five Gokkn Mikes, and a multitude of honors and awards from such (M-ganizations as the Greater Los Angeks Press Club, Sockty of Professtonal JoiumaUsts, Sigma DelU Chi, and the CaUfornia Associated Press.

Though the sUtton has continued on its path of ex-ceUence, budget probkms have rekntiessly dogged the smaU SUtion throughout its history, and never num critkaUy and visibly than in the past several years.

"What was happening unfortunately, is that we were living very dangerously," sakl Dr. Charks Lynch, present chair of the radio-TV-fiUn department. "We stiU have no money set aside for future anergencies."

Though Lynch joined the RTVF department at CSUN only four years ago, he said tiie sUtion has "been on the toose edge aU the way. It's because there just isn't enoiii^ money."

Tippo agreed that things "were always bad." But he remembers a peri(xl of improvement just before the beginning of the federal cuts that came fr(ffia tiie Reagan Administration. , ^

Finances take a tailspin "I woukl say from 1975 or 1978 onward we had a

steady improvement in our financial situation. But the unfortunate thing that happened in the early SOs was the fact that the Reagan Administration came atong and was not supp(M-tive of pubUc broadcasting, so our grant money went down," Tippo sakl.

As the economy took a Uilspin, so did the amount of money the sution was abk to solicit from subscribers and the sute, he sakl. "Now we also have a govem«^ who doesn't think much of pubUc broadcasting, either."

Lynch sakl he disagrees that Reagan and Gov. <3ecHge Deukmejian are anti-pubUc radio. "What I think both Reagan and Deukmejun feel is not anything against" National PubUc Radto. It's abnost a phitosophk thing, they're in favor of deregubition," he sakl. "I don't see it as being opposed to pubUc broadcasting, as such, but it sure as heU has cut us to the bone."

To c(Mnpound the sUtton's woes, NPR feU upon hard times and its members, including KCSN, wUl Ukely have to pay to help keep NPR solvent. KCSN receives grants from tiie corporation, and "payment back'^to NPR wUl be Ul the form of a birge cut in the grant, according to Lynch.

He added that the amount of the cut wiU not be smaU — somewhere around $6,000.

The SUtton is working on several solutions to ameiidr the situation.

Askk from pumping up the tradittonal efforts such as underwrituig of programs, shows or special events, and soUciutton of subscriber contributions, the sUtion began a new venture tiiis season with the Los Angeks Kings hockey club.

Pleasd turn to pc^ 8

KC^4 Radio News

CONGiUTUUTiS THE JOURNALISM DEPAITTMENT

OP G U N ON ITS ^=—aSlfrANNIYIRSART

AND MANY THANKS TO THE DEPARTMENT FOR MAKING US

WHAT WE ARE TODAY

GOLDEN MIKE: lEST RADIO NIWS,

' I I , '12 BEST WRITING:

1910 REST DOCUNIEIITARY:

197* REST SOUND IN NEWS:

1fl2

L A . PRESS CLUB: REST WRITING:

1913 CIPA.

REST NEWSCAST: 1913

CAPTRA. REST RROADCAST t REST MMI SERIES:

1933

8 Joumallfni Annhraraary, Novambar 4, 19S3

Financial troubles slow, not stop, campus station Continuedfrom page 7

KCSN signs to broadcast Kings' games KCSN agreed to broadcast the Kings' games for at least

half of the season for an amount wkkly rumored to be S500 per game, though none (rf the (rfficials for the SUtton or the Kinp woukl agree to confirm the figures. Lynch would only say that the contract was a limited one, renewabk at the Kings' option on January 1,1984.

According to mmor, the original contract was to cover the Kings' entire season of 82 gaines for $500 per game, for a total of more than $40,000. After further negotktion the contract was changed to cover only the games through December 31, 1983, <x about half the regular season.

Lynch seemed fairly optimistk that the contract would be renewed for the setxmd half of the season. If the Ustener response and the response of the underwriters is what they want "then we have every expecution that they wUl continue, but we don't know that," Lynch sakl.

'Atong the same Unes as the deal, Mkhael Turner, KCSN program director, announced Oct. 17 plans to sign a contract with a smaU sports network to broadcast at least two Matador f(x>tbaU games with pbiy-by-pky coverage.

The network is run by two CSUN students who are not affiUated with the sution, the joumaUsm department nor the RTVF department. Turner sakl. Tte group, caUed the Community Sports Network, has broatkast the games of Pierce, Ventura and Moorpark coU^es, he sakl.

The ptan initiaUy drew fire from news-staff members who said they had actively been negotiating witii Turner fm an (qiportunity to provkk simUar coverage, and felt cheated of the experience of Uve coverage (m their own turf.

Jacobs sakl reoentiy that the sUtton "concentrates on San Femando VaUey news rather than campus coverage." He sakl the sUtion does not nomuUy cover campus events unless they are significant to the sution's C(Mnmunity audknce.

The deciston to broadcast the Matador games seemed to in(Ucate that the sUtion may be moving in the direction of kkntifying itself with the university more, and therefore spending more time covering it.

But whatever course KCSN takes, it seems abundantiy ckar that it wiU be more than just a survivor — it wUl be a winner. OOLOEN MIKE AWARDS

Golden Mikes: H a £ ^ to excellence in radio By JAMIE S.CACKLER Contributing Writer

In 1976 the sUtion scored its first "Golden Mike'i^ distinguished award from the Radio and Television Newi ] Association of Southem Califomia. It was the fust ot many great awards with which the station would be] honored. 1

The RTNA has various (»tegories but makes no' distinction between (XMnmercial and non-commenad sutions, according to Prtrfessor Ray Tippo, the station'i former general manager. The only distinction made • between buge and smaU sutions, he said.

"It always feels good to have your work appreciated," sakl Gary Carlson, the sution's sports director. Carbon and Dawn Kamber co-produced a news show that wwi i Golden Mike for the sUtion in 1982. Carlson said Ae award honors the whok news team that worked on thit particubu- show, not just the producers.

"Peopk hare a tendency to associate awards with the producers, but the producers cannot put out a good newscast without a good anchor, writers and reponers, aU of which we were very fortunate to have at the time," Carlson said.

The Golden MUces:

1976 ^ BEST DOCUMENTARY, Division B. to Mars." 1980 — BEST NEWS WRITING, Division A. "Rescue Attempt," a special on the hostage crisis in Iran. 1981 - BEST RADIO NEWS BROADCAST OVER 15 MINUTES, Division A. "AU Things Considered." The award was for an entire news broadcast, so the whole team that put it together shared the award. 1982 - BEST RADIO BROADCAST OVER 15 MINUTES, Division A. "Local Edition — All Things Considered," also won with an entire news broadcast and shared by the whole team. 1982 - BEST RADIO USE OF SOUND IN RADIO NEWS, Division A. "Red River Dave," a feature about an okl cowboy who makes up songs about the news.

Over the years, KCSN has won numerous awards from the Greater Los Angeks and VaUey Press Clubs, Women in Commumcations, Inc., CaUfornia Associated Press TV and Radto, Sotaety of Professional JbumaUsts, Sigma Delu Chi and other organizations.

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Annlvoraary, Novwwbat 4,1SS3 9

PRSSA celebrates growth BylVAQRANT Contrtbuting Writer

In 1980, Patricia G. Johnson, tiw past-manager of corp(}rate pubUc rekttons at Magk Mountain, came to the Norttiridge chapter of tiie PubUc Rebitions Student Sockty of America (PRSSA) asking for help.

She wanted to up tiie organization's student ingenuity by hoUuig a brain-nortiiing session. The campus wganizatton was pakl $200 for thdr advice and in a past newsktta, Johnaon wrote," We woukl have been extrraiely happy with just one or two good, woriubk kkas and we got much more than Uiat."

This occaskm marked the first time that tiie PRSSA chapter's creative resources had been utUized by the inroa.

An offshoot QS the nattonal AbUc Relations Sockty of America (PRSA), PRSSA has grovini to over 18,000 members oa 63 c(41ege and university campuses. It was estabUshed to akl those students interested in the pubUc rebittons fkkl by helping them to esubUsh amtacts

with professionals in the fieki and obtain informatton, advke and intm^ps.

Since its inception on the CSUN campus in April 1969, under the diiectkm of I>r. Sam FeUman, many speakers have advised PRSSA members how to best prepare for a career in pubUc rebititms.

One speaker who spoke to the organization recently was KNBC manager of press aiiid pubtidty, BUI Whittaker.

In March of 1980, tiie CSUN chapter held a conference that was attended by 17S students and profeasionals. with over 16 universitks represented akmg with representathresfhMn Uoomparies.

Tritia Toyota waa tiw special guest speaker at the oooferenoe whidi was led by past PRSSA presklent Wendy Clark. I lk conference focused on teaching students the needed skUls for a successful career in pubUc relations.

Not only was the conference a suoocas in the chapter^ eyes, but abo in the PRSA-Los Angeks chapter's eyes. The cainpus coordinators of the "To(^ oS the Trade" conference received tiie first ptace 1980 PRSSA Achkvement Award.

STOP THE PRESS it's t lm* for a Silver annlvorsary toaat to California

Stat* Univorsity, Northridg*

and

•sp«ciolly to all th* staffs through ail th* y*ors of

Chicano media group founded ^ROSItLEAL

ContributingVWter : : i :

The Chkano Media Assocaatton (CMA) was founded by Chicano/Latino joumaUsm students in tiie fan of 1982. ,,

CMA is designed primarily to encourage Latino students to enter the media professton by provkUng them with information about job op­portunities. Various activities abo serve to foster feUowship among Latino students at the university.

In additton, students can participate in CMA-organized seminars and workshops where they receive in-structicm on mterviewing technkiues and rebited subjects such as how to prepare a resume.

The organization works ckisely with two medta outkts at tiie university whkh are designed to give Latino students practical experienoe in joumaUsm.

They are La Voz Latins, whkh is broadcast weekly over KCSN and El Popo, the Chkano student newspaper at CSUN.

We're proud to call you fellow journalists. '^

V I or the past 25 years, we've supported the J L outistanding work of the CSUN Journalism Department. We've watched - with growing professional respect - the emergence of the Daily Simdial.

And, all the while, we've been proud to chronicle your success in the pages of your hometown newspaper.

The men and women of the Daily News congratulate you on a quarter-century of excellence.

And, in the years ahead, we look forward to CSUN journalism graduates playing vital roles in" the dynamic, constantly-changing world of modem journalism.

DaiiyNews

10 4, 1SS3

TO BE^ROUD THAT'S HOW MANY GRADUATES

WE HAVE PRODUCED DURING THrPAST^25 YEARS

1958 to 1983 "%.

THECSUl^ • • - . ' ' • . • - - ' • »

JOIJRIVALISM FACULTY Al^D SALUTE OUR ALUMNI

Mt,

ON THEIR ACHIEVElHEJVrS •r. \-

FACULTY Joined Facalty

J o i n e d F a c u l t y

J o i n e d F a c u l t y

KENTBRECHEEN-KIRKTON 19S3 JERKY JACOBS.. . . . .1978 ROBfXtT RAWITCH ... . . . . .1970 ipart tlMcl ••••••••'-

NANCY BAKER JACOBS 1977 ( iMirttiMe)

tOMREILLY 1969 DeWAYNE JOHNSON 19«i

LAWRENCE SCHNEIDER... 1971 HAROLD JONES 197«

(part tlMel WILLIAM THOMAS 1976

KENNETH DEVOL 1061

MICHAEL EMERY.... . . . . lOM

ERLIN6 ERLANDSON I95S

SAM FELDMAN 1070

SUSAN HENRY | 9 7 «

r

CYNTHIA RAWITCH 19t2 ROGER WETHERINGTON..1979

STAFF

Joined Staff

Joined Staff

JOANN DeSANTIS. .I90S VICKI MORTON 1973

Joined Staff

WILLIE STAHL-LINSK 1965

I m» m»h .MWpiiiar^SO*

JouraaSam Annlvaraary, Novambar 4, ISSS 1 1

Bob and Ron In 1S67, Bob Rawltch, editor of tha 1966 Dally Sundial, raoahrod a plaqua from thon Oov. Ronald Raagan In San Frandaco, which namod tho papor tho baat coHaga daily In Califomia. Tha award waa ghran to tha SundM by tha Califomia Nawapapar PuMlahora Aaaociation. Aftar graduatloii Rawltoh want on to bacoma tha Suburban Editor of tha Loa Angalaa Tlmaa. Ronald Roagan want on to bacoma Praaldant of tha Unltad Stataa.

Inside

CMPS Collaga Madio Plocamant Sarvica A Division of Alan Watton Communicotlons, Inc. 1680 North Vina Straat, Suit* 900, HoUyvnxKl, CA 90028

i

MMMMH

THE 1950s: THE FOUNDING YEARS

1956 — The campus is opened as the San Femando Valley branch of Los Angeks State O ^ l ^ of the Ap­plied Arts.

1957 — The first campus newspaper — with a questkMi m v k in i^aoe of the nameplate — is published on a weekly basis.

1958 — San Femando Valky State College is established with the separation from Los Angeks State CoOege.

— Erl Erlandson comes from USC to become the first journalism faculty member and is asked to devekip

mkmm cohmmiCATioNs, mc

TANDING WOMAN UKNALISM STUDENT A WARD

t977 - SARAH BAm^Y t97$^FAYBFUMtE 1979 - BAKBAMA PALERMO 1980 - ANNSmfSSmSEN 1981 - DIANE FOGIESONG mi^ PAM tZAKOmrz im-^ ANNE BELL

Major milestones in Journalism

curriculum, to recruit students and faculty and to plan facilitks.

— The campus newspaper, now the Daily Sundial, becomes a lab of thie new Department of Journalism.

.Vf

-" THE 1960s: THE YEARS OF DEVELOPMENT

1961 — The first graduating class to receive Bachelor of Arts degrees in journalism numbers seven.

— De Wayne Johnson joins the full-time faculty in January to become its second member and serves as acting chair the following year during Eriandson's study at Northwestern. ^ ^ ^

— Ken Devol becomes the iRS'u full-time faculty member with the beginning of the fall term.

1963 — Radk) station KEDC-FM (later to become KCSN) receives its Ikense from the FCC and begins broadcasting four hours per day with 10 watts of power.

— The campus chapter of Sigma Delta Chi is founded.

1964 — The department moves into new Skrra Hall facilities, anKNig the finest in the West.

— The November pieskkntial ekction is covered in the first news broadcast out of the new Skrra Hall facilities.

— The Sundial becomes the first c d k g e newspaper in tbe West to be produced, in jnt^UOpUl, offset facilities.

— JoElkn Winnikoff signs oh as dcqpairtnieht

TANDING GRADUATING NWRAWAttD ^•__^

1965 ^ ROBERT TARLAU 1966 " TOM SmiifER 1967 - ROBERTtAWITCH 1968 ^ RUSS BARNARD 1969 ^ RALPH SANDERS 1970 - . FRANK Dm. OLMO 1971 - PWL MiSSB^ME 1972 - GREG LEWIS 1973 ~ HEIDI WENZEL 1974 ^ PAT PAmONS 1975^ KIM XmfT 1976 ^ GREG WASKVL 1977 - SANDRA MLDBN 1978 - SARAH BAimJSY 1979 ^ FAYE FHm 19^ ^ LORI $AKER 1981 - EVA PALLAD 1982 ^ MARIA LtGANGA ms - joNAtmi^mmjMN

secretary, a post she will hokl for three years. 1965 — In a oolkge-wkk reorganizatkm, broad­

casting is moved from the Speech area to Journalism to form the Department of Journalism and Broadcasting.

— Johnson serves again as acting department chair during Eriandson's Fulbright year in Chik.

— Bert Barer joins the newly organized department as its broadcast specialist. He remains until 1969, when he is asked to fcHin a separate department, calkd Radk>-TV-Film.

— Pete Wilson is added to khe faculty and remaiiB until 1971.

— Willk Stahl-Linsk is appointed first full-time business and advertising manager of the Sundial.

1966 — The Sundial moves to four times per week. (i|ian»Mpn?i4

- The Daily Sundial wins first place for "general excelknce" among tiie state's large colkges and unhreisities in tiie annual Califomia Newspaper Publishm Association competition.

1967 — The department gains its first national professkmal accrediution from tiie Amcrkan Council on Educatkxi for Journalism.

— The campus chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, later renamed Women In Commumcations, Inc. (WICI) is established. .

— Judy Belt serves as department secretary until 1968.

1968 ^ The full-time faculty grows to five with the addition (rf Mkhael Emery, who comes from Wisconsin.

. — SCENE Magazine, witii a tabkkl format, first appeara as a department laboratory publkation.

1969 — Ken Devol is named tiie department's second chair — a post he will hokl until 1981.

— The campus chapter of the Publk Rektkns Student Sockty of America is esUdilished.

— The general broadcasting area adds film to its curriculum and leaves Journalism to become a separate department.

— , , _„•- SCENE converts to a slkk magazine format. — Tom Reilly joins the full-time faculty frtrm Oregon to become the first alumnus to play such a rok.

— Leslk Leutwikr joins the department as secretary, remaining for about a year and a half before

THE 1970s: THE GROWTH YEARS

1970 — Undergraduate majors pass the 200 mark.

\UTSTANDING GRADUATE fEARCH

L

1975 - PAUL KROLL 1976 ^ BRUCEMARmALL 1977 - LAURIE ALEXANDRE 1978 ^ PAT PARSONS 1979-^ ANN BETHEL 199$ ^S&SAN CASTLEDINE 1981 --ANITA KLAZ 1982 - VIRGINIA ELWOOD ms *-MARV SmNA

— The department receives approval from the ChanceUor to offer tiie Master's degree in Mass Com­munkation.

— The campus chapter of Kappa Tau Alpha, the natkmal journalism honor sockty, is established.

— SCENE publishes its first full-color page. — KEDC affiliates with National Education^

Radk), forerunner to National Publk Radio. — Sam Feklman joins the faculty from graduate

work and teaching at UCLA. — Sheryl Wells is department secretary until

1971. 1971 - r Larry Schneklo- joins the deparunent from

the faculty at the University of Washington. — Jack Hart joins the faculty from graduate

work at the University of Wisconsin and stays until 1974. — Kathy Orkff, a freelance writer and publkist,

joins the full-time faculty and remains until 1974. — Marilyn Servedio assumes the rok of

department secretary until 1973. 1972 — The university is renamed California State

University, Northridge by action of the State Legislature, the Governor and the Trustees.

— The first nuuter's degrees are awarded to a ckssoffour.

— KEDC increases power to 3,000 watts. — Zena Beth Guenin comes from Montana to

obtain her master's degree and joins the full-time faculty, remaining until 1974, when she heads for Iowa to get her PhD.

— Ray Tippo joins the full-time faculty from Oregon to buikl the broadcast news area.

1973 — The faculty grows to 10 full-time members. — The number of journalism nuyors passes the

400 mark. — Natkmal professknal journalism accreditation

is renewed by the ACEJ for another full six-year term. — A department 15th Anniversary reuiuon

banquet is held with smne 100 in attendance, several coming from out-of-state.

— KEDC changes caU ktters to KCSN, reflecting the new name of the university.

— Joe Webb joim tiie full-time faculty from Illinois and sUys until 1976, only to return a coupk of years kter for another brief stay.

— Vkki Mortem is appointed department secretary. She will remain with the department throu]^ the present with the exception of a coupk of years whkh she devoted to raising her new son.

1974 — A decade of disagreement over oontroi of tiw budget leads to tiie deparunent's dropping the Daily

di Erlandson reflects m By DR. ERL ERLANDSON Contributing Writer

HONOLULU - " . . . C h a r k s Kaplan, then chairman of the Langtiage and Literature Diviaon, kud the groundwork for a journalism program. He contiu;ted me at USC, in 1957,1 belkve. When I wu hired, I resigned from USC in time to start work on my doctorate at Northwestern the spring quarter of 19Sg •^ When I was in theMklwest, I sought advkx fnxn various journalism school adminisu^ators, including Ted Peterson at iHincns, Bud Nelson at Wisconsin and Bill Cok at N(Mlhwestem. I also maintained contact witii Ed Barrett at O^iunbia.

The journalism curriculum I submitted in 1958 wu based oa the advke I had received and from my training at Or^on, Cohnnbia and Northwestern. What I wanted was a small major without the sequences that I thought had confused most other programs.

I also wanted to taik)r it to top students from high schools who coukl be pushed atong faster than average students..That is why the second-semester reporting and first-semester editing courses were at the sophomore kvel.

We later had to make the 300 courses because of probkms we had with junior colkge transfers, who usually concentrated on putting out the student newspaper. Our experience was designed to progress from the student newspaper to actual situations, such as covering the city of San Femando and downtown beats, to internships on professional publications.

1 I became sokl on offset and photo composition in 1952 when I was at Columbia, and De Wayne (Johnson) shared my enthusiasm when he was hired in 1961.

One of my biggest thrills was when we switched from letterpress to offset in one week when Bob Hilbum was editor. Then we began experimenting with dif fcrent production methods, including hot-type repro-proofs, Filmotype, Headliner and Justowriter.

Probably my three other biggest thrills were when

The Founin^

Dr. Erl Ertandaon Dr. OeWs] w Jc

The future is exp&t By DR. T O M REILLY Journalism Department Chair

Most of the anniversary issue of the Daily Sundial recounts tiie history of the department, as it shoukl. We have had an eventful 25 years, and there are many events and peopk worth remembering and honoring on our anniversary.

But my real concem today is not with the depart­ment's past, but witii its future. Our next 25 years are going to be quite different from the first 25. Changes are coming rapklly to our fiekl — the term "Com munications Revolution" is a stapk of everyday language for good reason. It may be difficult in future years for our department to absorb these changes and still fulfill our bask misskn <rf adequately preparing peopk for a future in the medk. Many of the predicted chuiges appear to be major and they may be costly.

This somewhat uncertain situatkn creates a concem that I woukl like to share with you. .

T o put it simply, we heed help — and wc will need it for many years to come. There are many practical ways our present and former students caii help make the department stronger and more productive.

In coming years the journalism department needs to: — Find new sources of funds for scholarshi|»,

curriculum projects, equipment and faculty devetopment tiiat are beyond our regular state budgets. (The state budgets are smaU to begin with anfl are declining in value.) .

— Become increasingly more visibk in tiic Southern Califomia media market and beyond, as a source a highly promising graduates and as a kader m the ticKi of journalism educaticm. (Seminars, worksho|», "i; temships, alumni job banks and a strong alurani

ass

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dftpartment history 1Q^^ - ]Q} ^ o the early years we won several top awards at the C I P A competit ion in San Francisco, and also w h e n B o b HiRnrni was editor, a near-miss at tiie top award for all state co lkge newspapers in State Fair competi t ion in 1960; and Ijearing "San F e m a n d o V a l k y State" being c a l k d for the first time at the roll of accredited journalism programs in N e w York.

DeWayne and K e n ( D e v d ) dkl m u c h t o make tiie accreditation possibk. In fact, I w a s o n o n e of my many leaves w h e n m u c h of the material for ac­creditation was compiled.

I believe the SuncUal had the best o n e - t w o art punch on student newspapers w h e n B o b Poo l w a s the star photographer and Jim Talmadge w a s the star car­toonist.

In the first four years or s o , the journalism program, faculty office(s) and t h e SuiKlUal changed quarters virtually every semester. W h e n Jim Bond and E d Murdock were photographers, they sometimes had t o develop negatives in a b r o o m closet wi th the chemicals almost boiling.

As you know, the Sundial had been started before I arrived on campus in the fall o f 1958. Bob H i l b u m had already been editor as a freshman. A n d Dick Handt of the Daily N e w s preceded him.

Three Bobs were key p e o p k in the eariy years: Hilbum, the first journalism major (also a sociology double major) and twice Sundial editor; Rawitch, w h o did double duty in advertising and news; and Tarlau, whose enthusiasm for broadcast as well as print journalism gave the program a big push.

Among the promotions w e had, were the Miss Flashbulb contest (Mayerene Barker and Marty Ball William were a m o n g the winners) and the Old Newspaper Man's Q u b , w h k h at o n e time included ibout 10 percent of the faculty and administration because of our liberal definition of an old newspaperman.

1 can't emphasize t o o m u c h the contribution Charles Kaplan made to the journalism program's develop­ment because of his unflagging support. Of course, Paul Walker also was a booster . . . "

nlng Fathers

Dr. Konnath Davol

ndial ould. nany oring

;part-rsare anges Com-ryday uture !sand )aring dieted ly. incem

need ictical make

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state thand

uthern irce of le field ps, in; ilumni

ted to be bright association will help in this area.)

— Continue t o strengthen our faculty and support it with the resources needed t o make our classroom program more effective. T h e quality, reputation and productivity of a faculty are keys t o the quality of a journalism program.

— Strengthen offerings in our curriculum which •tflect the changing nature of news and mass com­munication in our country and around the world. Important changes are under way , piore are coming, and the department needs t o constantiy evaluate and be responsivp t o change where it is needed.

— Expand and strengthen our ties with all areas of the profession, to al low us t o stay o n top of directions and needs in the media nuuket. _ _ _ _

— Seek out more aggressively the best high school and community colkge students in our area, and make tiiem aware of the quality and t^portunities in the CSUN journalism program.

One last point: It is quite true we need help raising money and equipment, but mare importantiy, we need help in sUengthening our human resources. The atrongcr our students, the stronger tiie program. The Wronger our faculty, the stronger the program. The stronger our alunmi, the stronger the program. Peopk arc the true key to an even better journalism program at CSUN.

In future years, I hope you will help us make a good Pfopam even better. In this special issue of the Sundial, we honor many of the achkvements and peopk from our first 25 years,

We are proud of this record, but we are far from »tisficd witii it. We need to make tiie deparunent's future even better. And we need the suwiort, concem *nd interest cf many, many peopk to reach that god

iiaMiiiiiiMaiaaai

independent status. — F e U x G u t i e n e z comes t o tiie dq iar tment f torn

doctoral work at Stanford University and stays until

— Larry Collins arrives from Indiana t o become the department's first full-time (noductkm manager.

1975 — Sam Feklman sits as acting department chair whik Devol serves as Acting Associate Dean of tiie School of Communkatton and Professkmal Studies.

— Don Krimel kaves tiie presklent's (rfficeto join the department as a full-time faculty member untQ 1977.

— Freelance writer Barbara Lee joins tiie full-t ime faculty for the year.

— Maggk Tutiiill, fresh from UCLA U w School, joins tiie department full-time for tiie year, tiien moves to Montecito to practke law.

1976 — President Cleary asks tiie department to resiune its rok as supervisor (rf the I^iily Sundial operation. The Sundial returns "home" when ttK ad­ministration agrees to add financial support. All ties "^th the AS then are cut.

— KCSN wins its first Gokkn Mike award.

- SCENE is named the best colkge nutgazine in the state by the Califomia Intercolkgiate Press Assocktion.

— Susan Henry joins the faculty from Syracuse University, w t e r e she compkted her doctorate.

— Larry Snipes joins the faculty as the first Dai ly Sundial publisher, o m i i n g from San Jose State, where he had a similar position. H e remains until 1979.

— Mike Sonuner is added to the ful l - t ime faculty from the University of M a r y k n d and stays until 1981 .

— Bill Thomas comes t o the department full-t ime from various S o u t h e m Califomia editing posts.

— Judk Stein fills a new part-t ime pofifibn u T the department's secretarial staff.

1977 — S C E N E is named the best magazine in the state by the C I P A for the second consecutive y«ar.

— Sue Jackson begins a two-year stay a s department secretary.

1978 — The department's backshop goes al l -computer, becoming among the first in the West to have VDTs on-line for direct input.

— Daily Sundial advertising s a k s surpass the $100 ,000 mark for tiie first time.

— Jerry Jacobs joins the ful l - t ime faculty after part-t ime teaching here and wra-king in broadcast n e w s for more than t w o decades.

1^79 — National professional journalism ac­crediut ion is renewed by tiie ACEJ for anotiier full s ix year term. . .^

— Roger Wetherington joins the faculty to be the Daily Sundial publisher after a simUar p c v t i o n at Califomia S U t e Long Blach .

— T h e faculty reaches an al l - t ime high (rf 3 3 , including 13 fuU-timc and 2 0 part-t ime m e d k professionals.

— Judy St. George fills tiie part-t ime 8e(aetanal post, remaining until 1982.

— George Lupanow serves as productkm manager for tiie year.

THE 1980s: TOWARD THE FUTURE

19g0 — The Daily Sundial budget passes tiie quar-ter-of-a-miUion dollar mark.

— Cheryl Addington comes from a graphks iMckfroond m Jtticfaigan to head t te Imtahoii for te

next three years. — Rkh Gualano becomes the first full-time

KCSN news director, coming from statkms in Voitura and Santa Barbara. He stays until 1981.

1981 — Tom Rdliy becomes tiie dqiartment's thinl chair.

— T h e Dai ly Sundial publishes 56 pages for its

t:rfj — trmiKE SNUOWSXY 1976--BETTY LeROY 1977 - l»IOr SPANGLER 1980-^ Tmt SULLIVAN 1981 — BEOKY LaVALLY 1982 - STEVE BRBNER 1983 - JOE BUmTTA

V .

JOURNALISTS SIGMA DELTA.CHI ALUMNUS

WARD im'r^^jmMnMKN 1964-^^MMmW^ 1965^ ED MURDOCK 1966-^ PHIL KRAPF 1967^ JOHN WmStM 1968-PAT ONmATO 1969-BOB TARLAU 1970 - MAmBEm BARKER 1971 - mmmKUSEL 1972 -> RmmtT RA WITCH 1973 - Rmmwr POOL 1974 ~ FR^mKDBL OLMO 1975 - MmrHAmLLMAN 1976 - BOB BAKER 1977 - TOM REILLY 1978 - ROBERT CHAMBERLIN 1979 - OVID GOOMJR. me - DIANNE GKOSmOf 1981 -1982 — 1983-

registratton issue, the largest papa* ever produced here. — Cynthk Rawitch joins the fuU-time facu l^

aStet several ytan as a part-time instructor. — Jayne Bovrer c o m e s from a M k h i g a n radto

background t o jo in the department as ful l - t ime n e w s director o f K C S N .

1982 — The student chapter of the Chkano News Medk Association is established at CSUN.

— KCSN wins two Gokkn Mikes, making a total of five over the past six years.

— Joann DeSantis jo ins the department's secretarial staff. .

1983 — The department, atong with the university, cekbrates its 25th Anniversary with a major alumni reuni(m at the Stadium Club of Dodger Stadium and a special commemorative edition of the Daily Sundial.

— T h e number (rf umkrgraduate journalism majors reaches an al l - t ime high of 539 , including 14 . second B.A. candklates.

— T h e number of graduate students seeking the master's degrees in mass communicat ion, with an em­phasis in journalism, reaches a record 4 1 .

— The tekvision news studio in Skrra North is compkted with state-of-the-art equipment.

— K C S N sweeps broadcasting awards and scholarships, wins Press Club Grand Award.

— T h e Daily Sundial budget reaches $275 ,000 . — Kent Brecheen-Kirkton.joins the department

from the P h . D . program at Iowa to head the photojournalism area.

— T h e first photojournalism club is established. ^ Lon Spiegelman is named productton manager

for the department's print m e d k k b s . — George Ratner is named t o the new position

(rf advertising sales manager for the Daily Sundial and other department pubUcations, bringing the department support staff t o six.

— T h e total number of students receiving degrees in journalism from C S U N surpasses 1,000.

\J

KmK^KmKE 'Mm'

— The CSUN Journalism Alumni Assocktkm is fouiKkd with a steering committee of Pat Messigian, claas of "73, preskknt; Jim Yeager, '74, vke preskknt; Bob Rawitch, '67, secretary; Ross Goldberg, 75 , treasurer, Ixxi Baker, "80, job network; Kathy Hak, '71, mem­bership; Judy Elias, '79, publkity; Tom Sanger, '66; reunton banquet; and Bob Tarku, '65, member-at-large. Ken Devol acted as department Ikison.

This history of the Caltfomia State University, Nor-tiuidge joumaUsm department was compiled by Dr.

^f(fiUI€^JOevoi„ - . • ; . . . . . .'i i'r.-T-'!,.-;-tWfr.v'/

%4 Joumallam Annlvaraary, Novombor 4, ISSS

-•»«—••—»•••

We Join In Congratulating

on 25

./ ' .;'

A^axmWiSlt oRo^

Frank St. Denis

Robert R. Rygg

Edward L. Reel ^ ^ ^

Ross K. Goldberg

^»fency McGann

Steve Garcia

Carol Gallagher Kramer

Kevin Moore

Jared Rule

Alicia Doval-Crum

Class of 1958

Class of 1970

Class of 1971

Class of 1975

Class of 1976

Class of 1978

Class of 1979

Class of 1979

Class of 1979

Class of 1980

Tarone D. Claybrook Class of 1981

John F. Graves Class of 1981

Victoria Morgan Class of 1981

Margaret Ellen Bowers Class of 1982

Marc L. Hecksel Class of 1982

Elizabeth Maul ^ <:iass of 1982

James Franklin Mohlman Class of 1982

Debra Rippe Class of 1982

Lynn Weinreich Class of 1982

JoLynn Klein Class of 1984

. . . a health services network of nonprofit hospitals including three outstanding San Fernando Valley facilities:

Northridge Hospital Medical Center • Valley Hospital Medical Center (Van Nuys)

• Coldwater Canyon Hospital (No. Hollywood)

HealthWest — proud co-sponsors of the second annual lOK

"Run To Beat Cancer"

October 22nd at CSUN

j^k~

JoumaHam Annlva*ary, Novambar 4,1SS3 f 8

Many have been winners in the J-department

Much haa boon aeoompHahad In 2S yaara. At laft, Mlaa and Mra. naahbulb oontoata wara hold during tha aarly yaara of tha dapartmant. Pletwod In uppor r l ^ photo la Ralph Sandara who waa an adKor of tha Sundial, although Mind. At bottom la currant KCSN nowa diractor Jayna Bowar hugging tha Qtoldan Mika awarda.

DISCOVER WHAT GOOlJlSr

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16 JoumaHam Annlvaraary, jlavambar 4, ISSS

V 4

• )

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SPJ inaugurated 20 years ago

JoumaHam Annlvaraary, Novambar 4 ,1983 1 7

By DEWAYNE JOHNSON Contributing Writer

I Top names from the "Who's Who of Southem

California Journalism" helped uiaugurate the San Fer­nando Valley State College chapter of tht Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi, on Feb. 5, 1963, at the Chase Hyatt House, Sepulveda.

The event 20 years ago was preceded by many months of preparation: the formation of a men's journalism club, the granting of recognition as such by the San Femando Valley State CoUege Associated Students, fundraising to demonstrate fiscal responsibility, an elaborate petition submitted to the national SDX convention in the fall of 1962 which was accepted unanimously,.and much discussion about the evening menu.

The steak was rare and the event was well-done. Master of ceremonies for the banquet was Haig

Keropian, president of the Valley Press Club and associate editor of the Van Nuys News.

Gladwin Hill, West Coast bureau chief of the New York Times and a director of the Greater Los Angeles Press Club, gave an inspirational talk on "Freedom of Information."

Joining the tocal joumalistk; notables were others from throughout the nation — Chicago, Nevada, Redwood City, San Diego. National executive officer Russell E. Hurst; Region II Director Guy Ryan of the San Diego Evening Tribune; A.L. Higginbotham, national vice president in charge of undergraduate affairs and chair man of the department of journalism at the University of Nevada; national SDX Treasurer (later President), Raymond L. Spangler, publisher of the Redwood City Tribune; and past national President Walter Burroughs of Costa Mesa attended.

Other notables in attendance were Ferdinand Men­denhall of The News, charter member of the Valley State College advisory board and director of the S^them Califomia ch^ter, Sigma Delta Chi; Los Angeles professional chapter President Robert Krauch, Vice President John Moon, Second Vice President M.E. (Rocky) Spicer, Secretary Don Moyer and John Lowry.

- Please turn to page 19

F0R43 YEARS OUR GROWTH HAS BEEN 10«BtfU)111E nmiRE

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OFFICERS VICKIE AND VICK WANEK,LAPD AND CSUN

You guessed it, they're father and daughter. Officer Vickie Wanek is a P. E. maior who graduated from CSUtJ in 1981 and became an LAPD Police Officer in 1982. Vick recently retired from LAPD and for two years has been an investigator for the CSUN Campus Police. . ^

Vickie, who maintains an expert marksmanship bonus, says she loves her job as patrol officer because she works in the field, meets a wide variety of people, and every day is different. Both Vickie and her father began their LAPD careers at Northeast Division. After Vickie, who has already promoted to Police Officer II, gains more patrol experience she hopes to transfer to a vice or narcotics assignment. She's also planning to obtain a helicopter license so she can fly an LAPD helicopter.

Officer Wanek says there's nothing she doesn't like about the job except for the unoccupied time she spends outside the courtroom waiting to testify.

In addition to raising pet angora rabbits and parakeets, exercising her green thumb, and redecorating her new home, Vickie runs eight to ten miles a day and works out with weights every other day. She says the physical exercise helps her to relax and to be prepared to meet the rigors of patrol work.

Officer Wanek says that in her third year at CSUN when she decided not to go into teaching, her father suggested LAPD. Although she had been exposed to police philosophy all her Ufe she had never really considered the job for herself, but the salary, benefits, variety and working conditions were just right for her, so she applied to LAPD, passed the tests and was hired.

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SPJ's two-decade history Continuedfrom page 17

SFVSC president Ralph Prator dispatched Delmar T. Oviatt, college \vx president, to extend greetings to the society and its members and officers.

Welcoming the new undergraduate chapter on behalf of the Los Angeles professional chapter was Cliff Dektar, chapter director, an official of the American Broadcasting Corp.

Charter officers and members of the SFVSC chapter were: President Daniel Fapp Jr., Vkx President William Milton, Secretary Jerry Custis, Trea»irer William Homer and members Edward Murdock, Cratg Altschul, James Hanchett, Philip Krapf, John Marrs and Lawrence Travis.

In its earlier days as a college professional fratemity, the membership was all-male. The enlightened members of the society — many of whom are iScntified here — fought for too many years to open the membership to women, as it is today.

The initial contingent of faculty ad­visers included Journalism Depardnent Chairman Erling H. Erlandson and faculty members Kenneth S. Devd and DeWayne B. Johnson.

Dr. Mwhael Emery assumed the ad-visership in 1969, later sharing responsibilities with Johnson (rff and on and in recent years with Professor Maynard Hkks, a SPl/SDX member for more than 50 years.

Johnson was preskknt of the Los Angeles Professional Chapter and served a number of terms as an elected board member. Emery has represented the campus chapter at the professional board meetings ance 1969.

A number of CSUN journalism students have won Mark of Excellence awards over the years for the best student work in Region 11, which includes Califomia, Nevada, Arizona and Hawaii. The highest student honor, the Barney Kilgore award, went to Greg Waskul.

Con^atulations CSUN's ,

Joumalisin Department

on its I 25th-_:^

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2 0 JottmaNam Annlvaraary, Novambar 4, 1983

Daily Sundial editors take a look back Continuedfrom page 3 • y KATHLEEN HALE,'71

Today it all sounds unreal: RKhard Nixon was president. Ronakl Reagan was govemor. The war in Vietnam was tscalating, and more troops were being sent to Cambodia. Four students were shot to death by Natk>nal Guardsmen while protesting on a college campus in the United States of America.

Not that we wanted to believe it then. VaUey State College in the spring of 1970 was a campus caught between turbulence and tradition in a community where young people had been brought up to behave themselves.

Student protests were thoughtful, sometimes threatening and serious. Yet when the four students were killed at Kent State, Valley State — and colleges across the nation — reeled in obvious horror.

Of course it could happen here. It could happen anywhere. The protests, escalated. Presklent Nixon sent more troops to the campuses. Gov. Reagan condemned Califomia, students for not realizing that the U.S.A. was the "ckxest thing to Camekit" and shut down the state's

universities and colleges for a four-day weekend. IronKally, the Board of PubHcatkins had selected me as

the first woman editor of the Sundial's daily editions, assuming that perhaps student denKXistrations woukl wind down that spring of 1970 and that a "girl" couki therefore handle the tough job of running a campus newqiaper.

Running the newspaper that semester meant aban­doning many of the okl rules for campus coverage. It meant getting involved with large intemational mues. It meant being called a communist and a fascist by two groups for the same editorial. It meant mnning that editorial on the front page. It meant not asking the Sundial advertising department's permission to publish a special edition during the four-day shutdown. It meant writing, editing, composing, pasting up and delivering to nearby apartment houses, churches and campus buiklings an edition oK the newspaper that we hoped woukl accomplish what we had been taught in our journalism classes: Inform in the nudst of chaos. The front page banner headline on that Friday edition cap-

= ^ £ ; S

i X

Litton Division

Congratulates -:^CSUN J:

on its 25th Anniversary

m Utton

20745 Nordhoff Street Chatsworth, CA 91311-5979

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you EPRNED

it! Display an exact replica of your hard-earned degree or apecial award in brushed aatin or mirrored metal finish, mounted on hand-rubbed walnut or oak. PHOTOPLAQUE " is a permanent process, impervious to mois­ture or light. Plus — your original is always retumed! PHOTOPLAQUE'" is also a much apprecia­ted form of recognition. Duplicate certifi­cates, photos or artwork of many kinds. Available in many sizes and colors.

SUNDIAL Strikers plart fo continue, buf disagree on facfics

Coivocotioi Ml loaid'MofM' Nunez, Pinsky will vie

for presidency in run-off

r^mtmmmmt, pn«««w '

.tiured our confusion: "Campus Closed but Open." Despite the cokl water that Gov. Reagan had tossed on

the protests, students gathered tentatively on and around the campus, whispering their chants, distributing leaflets and making their plans. Workirig with our adviser. Dr. Mkhael Emery, we also distributed a two-page mimeographed Sundial that weekend, telling of strike plans. Roger Scott covered the story.

The Monday following the shutdown (after being both chastised and congratulated for publishing a money-losing extra edition) we published an "Extra" edition of the Daily Sundial. I The real and the unreal had merged in the Valley. It was the best of times and it was the worst of times.

Kathleen Hale, an editor in the flnancial section at the Los Angeles Times, teaches part-time in the CSUN Journalism department.

ByBECKYLaVAUY,'71 -

The mood on the campus of course was very hostile, with the strike against the bombing of Cambodia, the poUoe with drawn batons moving across the campus against demonstrators who all wore faded blue jeans and blue work shirts or army fatigues, and kits of hostility against os Daily Sundial rep(Mlers because we were part of the nonparticipating establitilment.

Mostly I remember that King Durkee of Copley Newspapers conducted job interviews on campus and refused to interview graduating women.

Please tum to page 21

Scene. Judged the best college magazine in the West last year. Now better than ever.

• wovsilipsr 4, twee Za'

A myriad of experiences are readied by alumni Continued from pagfi 20

The year was 1971 and Durkee tokl me he dkin't hire women because they can get married and pregnant, therefore beccmiing unrdiabk empkiyees.

The department did not protest Durkee's refusal to interview female students. In tact, it was accepted in those days. The only protester was me.

I got my interview but was not hired because Durkee jakl Uiat I was a woman.

Am I still bitter? You bet.

ggckyLaVdlyworksfor UPI in Sacramento.

ByPATMESSIQIAN .'72 Some things never change. Back in September of 1971, the Sundial was embroiled

SUNDIAL i . V G R K S S . Jrn.*. .;,•».

lie unantm(>nT5*fcfttrtttioii « * - - -*»^Mc* Pf^'WfT'f *

in a struggle with the Associated Students government, a conimon predicament in those days. The Sundial had uncovfcred an electron scandal involving the presklent who, interestingly enough, had been a former Sundial editor.

The govemment tried to freeze the newspaper's operating funds, over whkh it had control, on the grounds that the Sundial's coverage was biased and inaccurate.

The reporter covering the student govenunent beat, and the subject of controversy, was John BaLcar. Today, he works in Sacramento for the Los Angeles Tmies, covering state govemment.

Some things never change. Fall 1971 featured an incredible cast of characters on

the Sundial staff. I was managing editor, working for Harold Klopper. Harold had tremendous energy and talent, writing ISO-inch stwies at a moment's notke or producing some of the most oeative front pages the newspaper has ever had.

Then there was our sports editor. Sports was his life. I've never met anyone as knowledgeabk about the subject.

His name is Steve Brener, aiul today he's in charge of publicity for the Los Angeles Dodgers. ~: ^—„ -^

Some things never chanse. We had a very qiuet city editor. He hardly sakl a word.

But he was a man of action. He was the one who blew the whistle on the rigged Associated Students electkm. He and I later became co-editors of the Sundial. The thmg he liked best about our reign was that he got to write a kit of hi(^y pohtical editorials.

In looking back at them, I'd say some of his best writing for the Sundial appeared on the opinion page.

John Rogers today is the managing editor of the Simi Enterprise, and is responsible for that paper's editorial pages.

Some things never change. And how about that king-haired, bkmd photographer

who introduced me to the word "anorexia." He was so thin, so fragile-looking, I was sure he'd blow away on a

r S^ff^SSri- trarit T Z l « - lEr iaar •• Jltt^llSlkm windy day — which is every day in Northridge. - ' ^ s S S s S S S S S S a g M ^ : ^ X i - . I StiU marvel at the quality of his Sundial pktures.

— . . - ^ — ^ - i — . — "•""""^SST'ig^ 0;*i.u, Covering one anti-war protest, whkh resulted in the »^j^' ^S:±i^lBJ*r police invading the campus, he had his head bashed, but

he still came back with pktures on deadline. Not long ago, I saw his byline on photos he had taken

STRIKE ENDS IN VIOIENCE atJMa^M

•TJT.rr.nsr

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Police apprehend press

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Freedom at stake •m. !*•• TKf* T l » « » > * l "

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ill BBwHiwi to bl etoiMlM t» mUtiMl Md ' .' . , mm. - / — ' - * -TW mmOUi b«lt*Ma iht prrvnmtUL am ^.t-*'^" MMuaartiMa«a^Mhawa,huiuaM ^i/^~.-,

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r - . ^ r s c MAUVROus jo» OF GOADWG

^ ^ ^ Polict offictr dots it hb wiy

ga^r.^-s » :

U^MCTM M V M W «Hk w* IMMMI* g y m j , ^ MMM«# «tu kMia. a • • .

Elections continue Uxiay ^ i ^ ~ ~ S "^SSr"^'

in Q Salvador for the Los Angeles Times. Bob Cham^ bfflin is his name.

I made the mistake of comparing a pkture I had taken of myself reoentiy, with one taken at my wedding. Gasp! What has 12 years done to me? Whoe dkl that young woman ^ ?

Some things almost never change. ,

Pat Messlglm is a principal public information representative for the Metropolitan Wata- District of Southem Caltfomla.

Please tum to page 22

'J

Congratulations CSUN!

Sadman 8 Seidman C E R T I F I E D PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

9100 Wilshire Boulevard Beverly Hills, California 90212 (213) 273-2782

"22 JeomaNam Annlvsraary, November 4, 1M3

Editors dig memories from shadows of past

Lotofpof to be decided TTJT^SyT ^•JU^:'*^"** •gS«^SJty'«iR AiSSifaZSSr ST-' TS^Jl-'S

jf-sfH # € i ^ ^ ^ S L # @ iK-li l

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Continuedfrom page 21

By JOHN R00ER8, '73

"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times." Thank you, Charles Dkkens, for summing up my

college career, even if you dkl write those words for "A Tale of Two Cities," and not for a tale of one college campus with two names: California State University, Northridge aka San Femando Valley State College.

We fought for the new name, CSUN, back on the Daily Sundial in the early '70s. We fought for it because we thought it might mean more prestige and better jobs, and we were wrong.

But we were wrong about a kit of things. Still, we were, I think, a generation that tried, a generation that cared, and, perhaps best of all, a generation that never misplaced its sense of humor, whkh is something that seems to have happened to many of us, including the zeakits and the

journalists among us, as we've moved into these dog days we call the'80s.

We talk about depth and breadth and scope now, those of us in joumalian, too often using these 10 cent words as pseudonyms f(»- dullness, but we had fun back then.

The early 1970s was a great time to be a c o l ^ newpaper editor. If that sounds like nostalgia talking, to a certain extent it is, but a qukk scan of those okl bound volumes of Sundials from the early 70s confums the accuracy of the statement.

Like the writer of this pkce, the bound vohimes have survived the years pretty much intact, not too much the worse for the wear and tear.

They show that I became co-editor of the Sundial for the second time, this time with Pat Messigian, in the fall of 1973. We cetebrated our first editkin with a full-page front-and-back photograph of a nude model, a man clutching a copy of the Sundial over the orucial areas.

At the end (rf the year, we tried for a similiar photo with myself as the model, but the campus oops busted us and shut down our pkture-taking sesskin.

—^Iliere were a kit of pt^tks back then, too. It seems like I was firing off one wikl-eyed, left-wing editorial in su{qx>rt of this OT that every day.

We had RcMiakl Reagan as goveraw and Rkhard Nixon as presklent, and Vktnam as a war, and it seemed like the Los Angeles polke were paying a visit to campus at least once each semester to keep their nightstkks in tune.

In retroqiect, I realize they must have thought bashing students served some higher purpose. I hope they have since realized that it dkln't.

We also had stories about the little immorality plays that took place weekly in student govemment. They were written by Rip Rense, now of the Herakl-Examiner.

We also had photos of the young Anthony Russo of Pentagon Papers fame that were taken by our ace shooter Bob Chamberiin, now of the Los Angeles Times. We had a page-one pkture of one of our managing editors smoking dope to illustrate our story on the big move back then to decriminalize marijuana.

And we had one of the best entertainment writers of all time, Steve Wyrad, revkwing Jackson Browne at the Troubadour, back when peopk were saying "Jackson who?" and Mkk Jagger was still under 30.

John Rogers is managing editor of the Simi Valley En­terprise.

ByJIMYEAaER,'7S v

Oh my. The incredible dreams we had in the journalism department in the year ot 1974-75. Indeed, from my vantage point as editra- ot the Daily Sundial, they were beautiful to behokl.

We were crazy kkls with a vision of a better life. There were those who wanted to sell life insurance. Others wanted to visit Ckveland. Some dreamed of delkatessens in far off exotk huids.

And then of course, there were the would-be jounalists. What will they think of next . . .

Fall of 7 4 was the year Nixon was pardoned and the year the Daily Sundial was orphaned. For reasons more complkated than Ykklish hkroglyphks, that year the paper was no k>nger part of the jcHinialism deparunent or student govemment.

Please tum to page 23

« • .

•4K

We wish to congratulate

'•nia StateUniversity,

Northridge

on 25 outstanding years of quality-education

Fox & Company Certified Public Accounteints 102*1 W. Pice Mvd. Los AngaUt, ColHomia MOM (213) 277-0*14 > (213) 5S3-«370

AnnN^rsary. WoweiWhsr 4 , I t B l 2 3 ^ ^

Past editors look at the days gone by Continuedfrom page 22

Cast out into the wind. Atone. „, . ^ Wc did our best job at reporting. We tned to cover all

the relevant issues of the day. A took through the papers «nolv shows that the various prominent figures on ampus reaUy dkl have aU the answers to the worW's

'riiere were soluttons for parking woes, registratton Moblems and tuming our team's sagging football fortunes Jound It was even rqxMied in the Daily Sundial that the Student Union facility was nearly dead.

Well nearly 10 years later, people can still watch themselves grow okl in their rear vkw mirror white waiting for a pariung space at CSUN, registratton is about IS simple as an etephant giving birth, and the Matador ftotball team and the Student Union faciUty is about as dead as a RWwood forest.

Now based on the accuracy and foresightednessof this -oorting is it any wonder that my delkatessen in Bora S M has been such a runaway success?

HOW the mustanl, please.

Jim Yeager is currently the moming city editor of the Henid Examiner.

without the benefit of vkleo display terminals, though I remember teaming how to use a VDT by studying a photocopy of the keyboard.

The only time we saw them was during fiekltrips to local papers.We baskally had to get VDT training on the job. Believe it or not, computers were in their fetal stage as late as 1979-80.

The biggest event that the Sundial covered, in my opinion, was the trial of Lori Anderson, the lesbian tennis' player who was convkted in the shooting death of her tover, a CSUN tennis coach. That had quite an impact as it was covered by the press in Los Angeles and the West

I also remember my personal crusade to get the Farrah Fawcett-Majors posters off the wall of the crffwc of the Associated Students presklent.

I had such a great time with my colleagues. Working on the Sundial really brought us together and I still keep in touch with quite a few fellow staffers.

I do remember the shock I felt when Gary Lawrence died — he was such a vital, energetk human being.

Lori Baker is the managing eOUorfortfie Nationtd Notary Association Magazine.

DAILYSUNDIAL 'I

^^ ji sxim. Prefasaor do«t#i MWaotf paoe.

ByR0SSQ0LDBERQ,'76

We entered Northridge, then San Fernando VaUey State Coltege, weU into the "era of apathy." Frats were "out," smdent govemment was "corny" and caring seemed to be a quality ahnost tost amidst the sounds ot silence. ^ ,

But out of this vacuimi, many of us found pleasures in actively partkipating in the DaUy Sundial, Scene magazine, KCSN-FM, PRSSA and/or SPJ/SDX.

T h ^ endeavors provided much more than valuable experiences; they engendered opportumties for in­volvement and a place where friends could be made. Kept and cherished. . ,

In all, they were glorious times - from worry about deadlines in the backshop to worry about the bacK-court of the SDX basketball team; from having the Sundial go "dark" in protest of cutbacks, to darkroom antics as we teamed photography, and from wn ing about campus rallks to hokling some of our own as we cned out

a Student Union whkh eventually got built long after we had g^uated. „ , j »ii «*

Remembrances? I remember Sam Feldman and all of the interest he showed, and aU of the other professors I had, although, at the time. I never quite thought I would be thanking them later. ,„«ji-a#.

I remember aU the friends who made going to college worthwhite. , ._

Now I see the department and the campus from an entirely new vantage point, so not even the memoriK can remain constant. Instead, new ones are being made o comptement the oW. and together they form a chapter in my Ufe that will not easily be forgotten. RossGoldbergisapart-timeinstructoratCSUNandthe Corporate Director of Public Relations at Health West. By LORI BAKER,'80

When I attended CSUN, from 1 9 7 6 ^ ^ h e mood on campus was very "me" oriented. Students wcren t concemed so much with politks or social issues as they were with finding a good job and making a living.

The Watenatt em was a thing of the P«£. « ^ '"; vesUgaUve journalism was not as popular as it hadjieen in

Val ley manor congratulates

California State University, Northridge

on 25 years of excellence.

May we continue to share the belief that,

"people make the difference f9

Valley Manor ii.iirKtlianAllcii<;..incrics

S760 Tampa Ave. Northridga. CalifomiaJl324 (213)888-6060

300 N.Eirand Blvd. Qlwidal*. CaUfornia 81203 (213)600-1778

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We are looking (or enginearing graduates to support sentor engineering personnel perform­ing assignments in development and design.

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gJJjjU OtvWon

2 4 Joiirnaliani Awwivaraery, Novambar 4,19B3

Program 25th Anniyersary Dinner/Dance

Department of Journalism Califomia State Uniyersity, Northridge

Friday, Noy. 4,1983 • Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles Reception 7-8:30 p.in.

Welcome • • - . I , - ' ^ J l * - •

Pat Messigian, Oass of 73 President, CSUN Journalism Alumni Association

Tom Reilly, Class of '65 ' Chair, Department of Journalism

Lennin Glass

Amie Friedman, Class of '64

Bob Pool, Class of '68^—^^

Dean, School of Communication and Professional Studies Califomia State University, Northridge

Diiiiier 8 30 — 9 30 p.m. ^

'Reminiscences of CSU^' - — : " ' / ' [:'.::[ ;. ..' /,:,,. .'-, '. - Staff Writer, Daily News

iitaff Wriler^Los Angeles Times

Dianne Grosskopf, Class of 75 ,

Jeff Segall, Class of 7^ -

Gail Dicker, Cla^ of '83

rr Dr. Erl Erlandson, Professor of Journalism

Vice President/Executive Editor, Playgirl Magazine

Supervisor of Video Production Southem Califomia Gas Company

Publications Editor, Jonathan Club, Los Angeles The Ey^>artment of Journalism's 1,000th graduate

Founding Department Chair, 1958-69 Joined faculty Fall, 1958

Dr. DeWayne 'Doc' Johnson, Professor of Journalism

Dr. Kenneth I>evol, Professor of Journalism

Dancing 'til Midnight

Acting Department Chair, 1961-62 and 1965-66

Joined faculty Spring, 1961

Department Chair, 1969-81 Joined faculty Fall, 1961

PAST AND PRC8BNT — Altliough tho nawa doak haan't ohMigad, tha Sundial In tha FIno Arta BulMIni, tho teoHltloa movod to tha Sterra HaH oomptex hi ataffara hava prograaaad to walng modam aqolpmant In raoant yaara. Onca tho aarly 'BOa. Thacurrantatnff haa olght VDT a avaHabte far noawwtWing.

£5in

CAUFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDQE

the DaUy Siiiiaial VOLUME 28, NUMBER 40 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983

CSUN student loan default highest inCSU system By THAIR PETERSON Senior Staff Writer

CSUN has the highest default rate on National Direct Student Loans of all the California State Universities, according to figures released by CSU officials.

As of June 30, former CSUN students had defaulted on 12.9 percent of the loans given them under the National Direct Student Loan program. The average for the 19-campus jystem is 7.92 percent.

In last year's survey, CSUN placed 17th in the system with a 13.46 percent default. "Fm just as disappointed as you," said fiscal officer Linda Trou^nan of this year's performance.

This year's figure is a marked im­provement over 1977, when CSUN

placed last in the CSU survey with a rate of nearly 37 percent. It is also better than the national average this year, which is in the area of 16 percent.

She said most of the CSUN defaults are from loans made eight, nine or 10 years ago to "students who never should have gotten loans in the first place." Instead, she said they should have received grants or scholarships that did not have to be paid back.

Troutman said most of these defaulters probably dropped out of CSUN after one or two years and "don't feel any obligation because the school didn't do anything for them." ^

"Now we're trying to educate students. I think borrowers are more sophisticated," Troutman said.

CSUN lent out $935,000 under the

National Direct Student Loan program last year, compared to the usual figure of $1 million to $1.2 million. The dif ference is being taken up by other forms of financial aid, Troutman said.

By making fewer loans, the school is actually helping to keep its default rate up, she said.

She added that the default percentage is calculated by taking the dollar amount overdue and dividing it by the dollar amount of the matured loans. The higher the latter figure is, the lower the default rate.

Since the matured loan figure is the amount of money given away minus the jnoney that has not been paid yet, one way to lower the default rate is to raise the amount of new money being loaned out, Troutman said.

Another reason the school's default rate is higher than other campuses is because some institutions will accept a student's promise to pay in lieu of declaring them in default. At CSUN "a promise is not sufficient," she said.

Other schools lower their default rates by assigning their delinquent loans to the fedfral Office of Education. By having that agency take over respon­sibility for collecting the loan, the schools relinquish all rights to li ir proceeds.

Troutman said she avoids assigning loans to the Office of Education because she said she has an obligation to th& state to recover the funds.

As of the end of September, the school's rate dropped to 11.5 percent.

*Mad, panic rush 'for grpups in days before Homeaming

DRESS THAT BABY — Zata Beta Tau fratamlty mambara (laft to right) Robbie Markowltz, Stava Ticknor, Dan Lucaro and Dan Roaenburg work on their float for CSUN'a annual Homacoming parada Saturday.

By STEVEN« APPLEFORD Staff Writer

The week before CSUN's ^ Homecoming traditionally is Ihe time when members of fraternities, sororities and other campus organizations go into high gear preparing for the event.

Dan Rosenberg, homecoming chair of the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, describes this vKek ^ ^ n absolute mad panic rush." /

The main cau^ of this apparent panic is theyebnstruction of floats for the Honw^iming Parade, to be held Satur(kiy beginning at 2:30 p.m. on Northridge streets. The parade travels along Nordhoff from Lindley to Reseda and then down Reseda to Lassen.

Construction of the floats, some of which are 30 feet long and 12 feet high, is no easy task. Despite the amount of work involved most participants do not seem to worry

about beginniifg until the week or even the ni^t before the parade.

3ut this time a typical fratellnity house has the appearance of

unkept workshop. In the driveway of one fraternity house, members can be foutid hammering and sawing while a stack of unwashed dishes is in a forgotten sink.

When asked how long it takes to build a float, computer science junior Robbie Markowitz said, "It either takes a week or 48 hours."

That is not to imply, he said, that the result would be the same.

"What makes a difference is if it is going to fall apart when it goes down the street or not," said Markowitz, a member of ZBT.

Homecoming committee members said that before floats are allowed to enter |he parade they must be inspected by the CSUN Department of Health and Safety.

Please turn to page 2

Pail-African studies celebrates 15 years at CSUN When the Rev. Jesse Jackson comes

to CSUN Monday, the Democratic presidential candidate's speech will culminate a four-day awareness program sponsored by the Pan-African studies department.

The event, which celebrates the 15 anniversary of Pan-African studies, began Wednesday with a program coordinated by the Black Student Union.

BSU adviser Leroy Geter said the ceremonies succeeded in showing "momentum and a sense of solidarity" among black faculty, students and staff.

"We started Wednesday with a unity walk, gathering brothers and sisters as we walked from the Administration Building to the USU," said Antoinette Smoots, an executive memt)er of the Black Student Union.

The ceremony in Northridge Center

began as a standing room only crowd of about 250 people sang the "Negro National Anthem," Geter said.

Speeches were given by Dr. Bill Burwell, who was the first president of the BSU at CSUN, and Dr. Art Jones, a former Pan-African studies instructor who spoke for continued strength for the black movement.

Afterwards, the Pan-African studies "Re-birth Gospel Choir" sang for about an hour under the direction of BSU adviser Geter, said Jackie Brown, public relations director for the BSU.

Following the performance, a pot luck luncheon was served in front of the Oviatt Library, Smoots said.

The day's ceremonies also included speeches by Geter, BSU vice president Kim Toland, and the chair of the Pan-African studies department, Dr. James Dennis.

Jackson to speak here Monday By STEVEN APPLEFORD StaffWrlter

Civil rights activist and presidential candidate the Rev. Jesse Jackson is scheduled to speak at CSUN Monday

vat id a ^ i n the University Student DTllOniT^thridge Hall,

Jackson, who officially announced his candidacy Thursday in Washington D.C, will speak on the responsibility of youth in the political arena, said Dr. Eleazu Obinna, associate professor of Pan-African studies.

The CSUN Friends of Africa Club, with some financial support from the Associated Students, is sponsoring

Jackson's appearance. "We invited him because of his

knowledge and his broad political background," said Obinna, faculty adviser to the Friends of Africa Club. "The students and faculty of the Pan-African studies department agreed that Jesse Jackson was a good speaker to bring to the campus."

Obinna added that Jackson was invited because of his ability to in­teract with young people. Arrangements were made to bring Jackson before announcing his candidacy.

"We felt he would be able to talk to all people," Obinna said.

Jackson will stay until 1 p.m.

Photographar Ruth Lew captured tha bahind— tha-acanaa work of putting together tha thaatra production of "Looaa Enda" on camera. E4

sports The 1984 CSUN home track aaaaon haa baan cancelled bacauaa of tha track'a poor condition. 5

2 OaHy Sundlai, Friday, Novambar 4, 1983

[•i\t

lOK run scheduled for Saturday The Second Annual I OK Run for Cjiarity will be held

Saturday, Nov. 5 at 8 a.m. Runner registration will begin at 6:30 a.m.

The Student Marketing Association, the organization holding the event, will donate all of the proceeds to the Olympic Training Center.

Sandy Novell, race director and SMA officer, said he anticipates more than 600 runners to compete and said he hopes to raise over $3,000.

"This is our second year effort to raise money for the community," Novell said. "The purpose of the lOK is that it allows students to work directly with major sponsors, while at the same time contribute something wbrthwhile to the community."

The race, which is sponsored by the Miller Brewing Company, is open to the public. The starting point will be the physical education field located near Zelzah Avenue and Plummer Street.

Other sponsors of the race include Crescenta-Canada Rotary Club and Health West.

"We hope to continue this event every year as it is beneficial for both the students and the community and fun for the participants of the race," Novell said.

United Way campaign lauched - One of every three people in Los Angeles County or

two and a half million people will require the services provided by United Way agencies this year. Because of this, the United Way has launched a campaign at CSUN to collect contributions.

Contributions to the United Way are tax deductible and will go toward aiding hospitals, clinics, child care centers, youth agencies and other health relat«l services.

CSUN President James W. Cleary is serving as chair of the campaign at CSUN.

The CSUN United Way workers will be requesting donations from faculty, staff and students in various areas on campus throughout the month of November.

Shabbat at Hlllal - Shabbat at Hillel tonight features, "Jews in American Politics: the Right and the Left." Services at 6, dinner at 7. program at 8. Jewish Student Student Center. 17729 Plummer St.

KCSN-FM - KCSN-FM 88.5 looks at the weekend's Matador sports slate at 5:30 p.m. today on "All Things Considered: Local Edition."

Fact and Fantaay — Dungeons and Dragons along with other conflict simulation games at the Fact and Fantasy club meetings Fridays at 6 p.m., Sierra South 234.

American Indian Student Association — Meeting today, 2 p.m.. Sierra North 218. Everyone welcome.

Flllplno-Amerlcan Student Asaodation — Mandatory meeting today, 5 p.m., Reseda Room, USU. All dance committee members must attend.

Jewish Outreach — Sandra Lerner will speak

tonight at 8 on Jewish lobbyists in Washington DC on her recent trip. Bayit is located at 18316 Seoto St., Northridge. Refreshments.

ice Hockay — CSUN Ice Hockey Club is opening its 1983-84 season Sunday, Nov. 6. First game is against UC Irvine, 12:45 p.m., Pickwick Ice Arena Burbank. Free admission. < Folkdance Unlimltad, Northridga — The folk band NAMA will play Saturday, Nov. 5, 8 p.m. to midnight at the Fieldhouse, LA Valley College. Tickets are $4

General Elections — Deadline for filing for Associated Students general elections has been extended to today 4:45 p.m. Applicants for Senate seats can file for candidacy in the AS office, USU A112. Mandatory meeting for all new candidates, 5 p.m., San Andreas Room, A112, USU. For more in­formation call 885-2477.

*Mad, panic rush' before Homecoming Continuedfrom page I

Most floats are constructed of wood, chicken wire and tissue paper. Despite these basically inexpensive materials, the costs can still be high.

The Sigma Nu fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, spent $700 on tissue paper alone for the float they are constructing. Members said money for their float was raised partly by appearances on the CBS game show "Tattletales."

"Some people think it's useless or a waste of money, but I don't think it is," said geology major Pat Milman, another member of ZBT. "We're going to have 50 or 60 people btiilding our float. It's a great chance to work with other people."

Not all floats in the parade have such a large price tag, however.

" The CSUN Alliance for Survival plans a "float" that will consist of a jeep, an MX missile carrying the face

of President Reagan as a passenger, surrounded by walking club members in "peace" T-shirts.

The Alliance entry was the Source of some con­troversy, and the homecoming committee originally banned the float.

The Associated Students Senate overturned that decision at its Tuesday meeting.

"I feel they're perfectly welcome as long as they stick to the theme of the parade," Rosenberg said. "It shouldn't be overtly political."

Unlike past Homecoming celebrations, the greek letter organizations will not make up the majority of parade participants. Campus organizations, like the Alliance for Survival, and marching units, including the CSUN Marching Band and various high school bands, will outnumber the greeks.

"It's the first time," said Kaplan, a member of Sigma Nu. "I think it's fantastic thatjalMhesejeople are getting involvedr"" "

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letters Dally SundM, Friday, NovMnlMr 4, 1983 3

Accurate Allen Greenbeii and Thair Peterson's

articles about the recent demonstration have been very objective and fair. That is why probably the demonstrators and counterdemonstrators are both upset.

Regarding the demonstration, it seems to me that some of the Reagan supporters were racist in their remarks. There is no excuse for that. But it also seems to me that when anyone publicly disagrees with the peq;>le who sponsored the demonstratiofi, charges of "red­baiting" are voiced by a few disgruntled Chicano studies faculty.

I question the wisdom of hokiing a student demonstration so close to Sierra Tower. At CSUN, student activities and rallies are fine as long as they do not disrupt the educational process. Whether intended to or not, this demonstration clearly disrupted the educational process. ' And instead of trying to heighten this ugly incident, demonstrators and counterdemonstrators shoukl try to remember that they are himfuui beings and get off the macho act.

David Tulanian — senior, political science

Help for allies I was at the Grenada rally on Friday.

I heard the chcirs of "Down with U.S. imperialism, U.S. out of Grenada, and down with Reagan;" I also heard these protesters taunted and called "shitheads," "un-American," and "stupid." I was tempted to join the barrage, but held back, thinking that perhaps a better adjective to describe these ralliers was "ignorant." I do not question their right to protest, only their competence. Their arguments focus on buzz phrases such as "U.S. imperialist," "gunboat diplomacy," and "ho more Vietnams." Also, they mockingly point out that Grenada is smaller than East Los Angeles.

Clearly, U.S. military presence around the world is an issue of great concern, but if these protesters had been paying attention to events, rather than parading around in circles, they would have known that the Grenada invasion came at the "urgent" request of the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States and that the forces occupying Grenada are not only American, but rather a 3,000-man, seven-nation "intemational" force. Further, they would also know, that as they marched, two battalions of Rangers were scheduled to pull out of Grenada, and the U.S. Senate voted overwhelmingly, 64-20, to declare that the Vietnam-era War Powers act applies to the Grenada

Black Unity Walk I am writing to express my concem

that there was no coverage of the Black Unity Walk and celebration coraroemOTating the IS-year an­niversary of the Pan African studies department that was heki this past Wednesday. '

I am SippaSkd that the Sundial in its selective reporting chose to ignore a substantial part of the (^UN student body.

It is these types of actions, or inactions, that make such an event necessary.

To further demonstrate that there is still an attempt by this racist in­stitution to ignore the importance of blacks, we were informed by someone in thii University Student Union scheduling office (whose name I will withhold) that in the event of rain, the Homecoming pep rally would be moved indoors to the room that had been reserved for the commemoration. (So that President Cleary woukl not get wet, I suppose). I am sure that particular individual and others prayed for a sunny day, as I woukl hate to think of the retaliations that woukl have occurred in the event of even a drizzle.

I am also saddened and angered by the fact that the Sundial chose to select for the front page a photo of a student "break-dancing" at the pep rally, and donated almost an entire page to that event, without once mentioning the fact that over 200

students and faculty marched aaoss campus to the student union, where the commemoration program was hekl.

It is interesting that a local paper, the Daily News, found this event important enough to cover and carry on page 2 of their paper the following morning, and that the campus on which the event was hekl did not find it newsworthy enough to cover.

Although I am aware that the Su^ial cannot cover all events on campus, I feel they have a social obligation to cover important events in which a significant number of the student body participates; especially since on that partKular day, the Presklent of the United States sigrted into taw a hblklay commemorating the birthday of one of the nation's greatest leaders; Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

—Unfortunately, it is evident that even today, 16 years after the death of King, we have not overcome much, and after 15 years of the existence of the PAS department, the struggle continues.

Carta J. Bradley senior, sociology;

Editor's note: The Sundial had a photographer cover the event but the film was underexposed. We apologize for not reporting this important event in a timely manner

invasion, giving President Reagan sixty days to withdraw troops or get congressional approval to keep them there.

As for the comparison between East Los Angeles and Grenada, it is a weak and simplistic one. East L.A. is not building a naval base, a superior air base, storage bases and facilities for munitions, barracks, military training grounds, and does not have a 10,600-foot runway constructed by Cuban and Soviet engineers, which could easily accommodate the very largest of Soviet bombers. All of t^ese are true of little Grenada.

These protesters must realize that the international world of foreign policy is a cold, realistic place. Reality dictates a game of hardball. The old Grenadan Marxist government of Mauri9e Bishop had been unfavorable to U.S. interests and undoubtedly, the United States wanted to do something about this. The recent bloody coup and govemmental shift even further to the left provided a convenient opportunity; however, cleariy, there was a real danger of Grenada allying with the Soviet Union. Now, the U.S. has sent the message to

the Soviets and their clients in Cuba and Nicaragua that help to our allies will not be withhekl.

1

tha Dally Sundial Publisher CyntMa Z. Rawltoh

Editor "~^--

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TIM DMy SundM tt puDMhw) TuMday throufh Friday by tha dapartmant of ioumaNsm at CaWomla Slala Univaratty. Northrwie. 18111 Nordhoff StrMt. Northridte. CaHf 91330. Tha aditorial offlca I* locatad In Slarra North 206 and tha phorw numbar i» 88S-2915: advartlsinf and bualnaM officaa ara m Slanra Ktorth 209 and may ba raachad at aSS-SlSS. Unalgnad aditorialt rapraaant ttia vMw* of a minority of tha nawicwpar't adttorial board and ara not naoaaaamy thoaa of Wa

Kn dapartmant. Othar viawa on tha Opmion pata ara thoaa of tha Individual wrttara only. Lattara or commantariaa D t>y raadars mutt ba typad and Htnad ar<d ara aubtaet to adttlnf. If a (tudant. tha writar muat ba Idanttflad by daaa and 10 numbar and If a non-atudant by job titta. Phona numbart thould be Included tor adttort'uta: thay wM not ba

pubHhad. Tha Daily Sundial it a mambar of tha CaMomla Nawipapar Publithing AtaociaUon. tha Attodatad CoHaglata Pratt, tha Califomia lntarcolla(iala Prau Aaaociation and Ma|acampua and It a ibacnbar to Unltad Pratt Intamatlonal.

Robert G. Warshaw senior, English '

Pike's piqued Although I am an alumnus, I try to

remain in close contact through membership in the Alumn Association, Athletic Association, Associated Students Life Membership, and membership in my fratemity alumni association.

I talH.ed with people in AS, student activities and the Daily Sundial who were at the protest in an attempt to gather facts about the incident. I did this before talking to anyone in my owri fraternity. Pi Kappa Alpha.

From what I was told in each one of the organizations, the events of the day were reported accurately in the Sundial with one major difference. Pi Kappa Alpha's only presence at the rally was three pledges that jumped in and hekl up a yellow sign pushing a hot dog sale. Ruiz has taken a fact that three people were wearing fraternity letters while selling hot dogs and transferred the guilt of others on to them. He has implied that ttw fratemity had a major part in the counterdemonstration.

Ruiz has just practiced an act of discrimination. Also, he has acted prejucUcally in outlook, action, and treatment. Ruiz says he has "wit­nesses. . . who coukl klentify members of the fraternity as being responsible for the objectionable actkins." I would like to, sec them positively identify a pledge OT brother of Pi Kappa Alpha.

I think Ruiz owes a publk; apology for his unfounded remarks to the pledges, brotlKrs, and little sisters, as weU as the alumni of Pi Kappa Alpha. I also think the Faculty Senate shoukl kx)k into the problems of a person in a position as powerful as Ruiz's using that power and portion in discriminatory and stan-derousacts.

Mr. Ruiz, there is an okl saying. "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone." Perhaps you shoukl have kioked inward before you tossed yours.

Davkl B.Saffer alumnus, management

Inaccurate I would like to enlighten your readers

regarding I. the demonstration protesting the invasion of Grenada by the U.S. govemment; and 2. to respond to the authors' demonstration coverage.

The demonstration against the in­vasion of Grenada was motivated by concems that the action was unjust and dangerous to workl peace. The demonstration was an exercise of the First Amendment right: "the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the govemment for redress of grievances." Artkle I, U.S. Constitution.

When we chose to exercise our First Amendment right we dkl not in any way viotate that protectk)n: we dkl not use obscene tangtiage or behavior, incite a riot nor dkl it have that potential.

In contrast, the people who were of a different perspective did use fighting w(Kds, i.e., "greasers," "whores," "Go back to Cuba," "talk American," etc. They also used obscene conduct by using the "middle finger." Their language and behavior coukl have easily incited a riot but for our restraint. Their language and conduct together most likely violates the protections afforded by the First Amendment.

If these people felt strongly about their views, they too should have hekl a demonstration. Instead they chose to heckle, red-bait, spit, shove, utter derogatory remarks and create an at­mosphere of chaos and confusion. Campus security officers couW have-arrested these people. Instead they chose to merely hold back these agitators. One wonders if this police power would have been enforced had the marchers been the agitators.

As to the article by Allen Greenberg and Thair Peterson of Nov. 1: how do they know that "spectators could easily distinguish factions?"

Firstly, the use of the word "faction" is used inconectly.

Secondly, the only "distinguishable" feature about me, as a participant is that I'm female. My nationality, national origin, ethnicity and' race are not "easily" distinguishable. Certainly, my "factk)n" would be less distinguishable as I did not carry or wear any sub-party or sub-group identification. In addition, the observation made by the authors (journalists is too precious a word to use here) that Df. Acuna was "not visibly hurt" is fallacious reasoning. The facts are that he was pushed, not a few feet but perhaps yards, and then landed on his bottom breaking his fall with his arms and hands. His glasses flew off as a result of this assault and battery. If the authors cajnnot deduce that he was physically hurt because they coukl not see the hurt, does it follow that the forest does not exist because one does not perceive it?

Needless to say this is not objective coverage. At best it is ignorant and quite biased reporting. "T"

Yvonne M. Flores, J.D. Chicano studies

Happy If the CSUN student protesters of the

invask>n of Grenada woukl have been on that istand under the uncertainties of that govemment there, they would have been damned happy to see those American troops tand on that istand.

I compliment Presklent Reagan on the strength of his dedskm. It is about time someone showed that the United States is not a pawn for other foreign governments, including Cuba and the Soviet Umon, to be pushed around as they please.

AlIthewayU.S.A.

Georges Geller junior, politkal sckmoe

FMDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983 Oie weekly Simdial entertainment section Juluka breaks racial barriers in South Africa with music

DYNAMIC DUO — Johnny Clegg and SIpho Mchunu, the founding membBrt of the South African band Juluka, are receiving airplay on American radio and breaking down racial barriers In their homeland. Juluka will be at the Palace In Hollywood tonight.

Behind the scenes

By CRAIG ROSEN Entertainment Editor

American mainstream audiences aren't easily sold on music from foreign countries. After all, it even took the

^An^o-Anwrican trio the Police a few years to break its homogenized brand of white reggae in America.

Juluka, a six-piece biracial South African band, whwh makes its Los Angeles debut tonight at the Patace, may help to change this trend.

Not only is this band's debut American release "Scatterlings" receiving airplay on progressive and college radio stations in America, but in its homeland the band is breaking the harsh racial barriers set by the South African government.

During a phone interview from Dallas, the third stop on the band's 13-city tour of tlfe U.S., vocalistyguitarist Johnny Clegg said things have become a bit more relaxed for the band in its homeland.

"Because we have such a big following in our own country it's really difficult for the government to step down and ban us," he said.

However, Clegg, a former college teacher, said the band has to take precautions and investigate venues before it agrees to ptay them.

"If you're ptaying your music and it's iir-an all-white dub, it's a political statement. You're pteying in a racist club. You can't get away from it (politks)," he said. ^

Clegg, who co-founded the band with Sipho Mchunu, said he has enjoyed Juluka's visit to the U.S. because it is a sharp contrast to life in his homeland.

"There's a lot of things that I and Sipho experienced as young kids that we took for granted as the way of the world and obviously people can live in a different way."

Clegg said he has been arrested several times in South Africa for illegally going into segregated areas and associating with blacks. * '

"I used to go into the migrant worker hospitals and camps, and I used to go back into Zululand," he said."A$ a young boy, I always would end up being arrested by the police . . . I was told I was in an illegal area and I would have

Please tum to page Ej

Slides and music: Finishing touches that pull 'Ends' together By ANDREW SHEPARD Senior Staff Writer

This is the sixth part ofa seven-part series on the makings ofa CSUN theatre production.

After two months of rehearsals, the saga of Paul and Susan will finally come to life tonight as the CSUN theatre department presents Mk;hael Weller's "Loose Ends."

This last week was described as hectk; by many of the cast and crew involved in the production as they tied up all of the show's "kx)se ends."

For most people the beginning of the week is Monday, but in "Ends" case it began at 10 a.m. Saturday when the show's designers and their crews got together to nu^ through the technkal

MOVIE REVIEW

side of the show, including lighting, set changes, slides and sound.

Sunday the cast joined the crews as they went over their entrance and

dialogue cues. The rest of the week was spent on dress rehearsals. • —^-

What makes this show different from others during the 1983-84. season, is its use of music and slides. Both will be used simultaneously at the beginning and end of the show and between scenes.

"The music gives a feeling for the time passages between scenes and what the characters are going through," said sound designer Eric Berlioz.

While the musk: makes the audience feel what is going on between scenes, the slkles will show what the characters do between scenes and in what direction they are going.

"It is an added dimension to what is seen on stage," said Andy Siegei, the ptey's technical director, slkle coor­dinator and photographer.

"They give a sense of movement to the ptay while showing the different periods in the characters lives," he said.

The music will be filtered into the theater through four speakers, while the slides are shown on screens above each of the three entrances. The projectors rest on ptatforms above center stage.

Berlioz's search for music for "Ends" began two months ago when he sat down with two of his friends, Ray Garcta and Kevin Seymour, who have extensive musk collections.

"Ray had pop musk from the 1970s, while Kevin had obscure and rock'n'roUmusic from 1950 to 1983," Berlioz sakl.

"I described the play to them and they ptayed for me everything and anything

Please turn to page E4

^Streamers' flows with emotion ByWILUAMQROAK StaffWrlter

When a ptay moves from the stage to the screen, it is usually expanded in many ways to accommodate the movie-going audience. The intimacy and simplistic settings surrounding the ptay are often represented in films in a more elaborate and complex fashion. This sometimes inadvertantly steals the ptay's power, especially from the dialogue standpoint.

However, in "Streamers," director Robert Altman keeps it simple and straight, and succeeds brilltantly in bringing to the dnema David Rabe's powerful play about the emotional conflkts of a group of soldiers waiting to be shipped to Vietnam.

Altman, who has directed some of the finest rM*A*S*H" and "McCabe and Mrs. Miller") and some of the worst ("Quintet" and "Health") films ever,

handles Rabe's intense drama with a true feeling for both the stage and screen. Altman has had some experienoe recently as a stage director. He has directed three plays, including "Come &ck to the S & Dime Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean," which he also brought to the screen.

In "Streamers," whkh opens today at the Beverly Cineplex theater, Altman cuts some scenes for economy and impact, yet still stays faithful to all aspects of the play. The three soldiers, Billy (Mathew Modine), Ritchie (Mitchell Lichtenstein) and Roger (Davkl Atan Grier) are workis apart, but tossed together by war and expected to live as one. Their barracks might as well be in the ammunition room, for they are literally sitting on a powder keg of emotions waiting to explndf. And thf. fuse is lit.

nease tum to page E2

PRESSURE — Rtehle (Mltdieli Uchtenstein) Is harassed by Cariyle (Mk:hael Wright) In "Streamers," Robml Altman's brilliant screen adaptation of a play that deala with Intenae emotional and radal conflicts.

I* 12 DaHy Sundlai, Friday, November 4,1983

MOVIE REVIEW

Disney brings back good feeling in 'Running Brave' fflm By DAVID QREEN StaffWrlter

"Running Brave," the story of Olympic runner Billy Mills, brings D^ney Studios to the forefront once again as a company that releases films that make you feel good.

Robby Benson ptays the American Indian runner who liked to come from

ehind when he raced, but was forced to • compete from behind in life because of prejudice.

Although the film does not delve too deeply into the psychology of prejudice, Benson's sensitive, distinguished per­

formance lets us feel the pain he suffers at being "different" from his peers.

Pat Hingle, as Mills' coach Bill Easton, often steals the show from Benson. Hingle ptayed a coach for 14 months in the Broadway production of "That Championship Season," and he has the role down pat. Hingle plays, the ar­chetypical tough coach with a heart of gold, a man whose burning desire to win finally overcomes his bigotry.

Claudia Cron, who recently appeared in "Diner." plays Mills' girlfriend Pat. It is a strong role, and the only major woman's role in the film. Pat is portrayed every bit as tough as Billy, a nice change

T OFTHF

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of pace from the traditionally passive role Hollywood usually gives woinen.

The cinematography is not remarkable, but carries an understated elegance. It shows us the beautiful Kansas tandscape (actually filmed in Canada), the intimacy of reservation life, the tension of Mills' races and the strangeness of Mills' first experiences at coUege.The camera is as unobtrusive an observer as it can be, aiul it is helped by some superb editing.

"Running Brave" offers an unusual perspective for an athletic film, since it begins with the athlete seemingly at the the pinnacle of his capabilities. Unlike underd(^ Rocky, Mills is shown winning race after race from the beginning. There seems to be no stopping him until he is forced to confront his own ethnic in­security.

The emotional roller coaster Mills suffers threatens to destroy his chances at the 1964 Olympics. Considering that the outcome is history, Benson keeps thei tension at brim^-high level. —'•---•-

Although not as exhilarating as "Rocky," "Running Brave" succeeds on a

more personal level. It is a subtle yet powerful film that entertains, makes a statement, inspires and ends. The simple sincerity of that structure makes this a most appealing film.

"Running Brave" opens today at selected theaters.

Altman's Streamers' flows from Stage to screen nicely

• s .

. CHEVY CHASE SIGOURNEY WEAVER GREGORY HINES

A WILLIAM FRIEDKIN FILM A STEVE TISCH X)N AVNET PRODUCTION IN ASSOCIATION WITH B I D YORKIN PRODDCTIONS "DEAL OF THE CENTURY-

WALLACE SHAWN RICHARD LIBERTINI and VINCE EDWARDS Mu»ic by ARTHtfR R RUBINSTEIN

Executive Producers J()N AVNKT. STKVE 1 nSCHTTMTL BRICKMAN

Produced by BUD YORKIN Written by PAUL BRICKMAN

Directed by WILLIAM FRIEDKIN

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Continuedfrom page El

When Cariyle (Michael Wright), a troubled and intense soldier enters the scene, the tensions build to nuclear proportions. The soldier's razor-thin facade, which was already cracking from the deep strains of war, race and heavy homosexual conflicts, finally come to a head.

Rabe paints a bleak and almost frightening vision of military life through the eyes of the four young and nervous soldiers and the two drunken

sergeants (Guy Boyd and George Dzundza) who wander about playing pranks and sprewing fables of past glories.

Director of photography Pierre Mignot gives the film a dark, muddled look, which helps set the gloomy tone. Altman gets strong performances out of all the actors, with Wright standing out as the crazed Cariyle. Altman also adds some nice camera angles and closeups, which make "Streamers" a very powerful experience and helps the transition from stage to screen flow smoothly. : , . •

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g». ^M, @ How to Pig Out ^ ' Where to Pig Out o) Pig-Out Calorie Guide so', Holiday

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DaHy Sundial, Friday, Wovmbf 4, 1983 E3

POP REVIEW

Devoto's'Cold Imagination'breaks the ice of his frigid past ByCRAIQROSEN ' Entertainment Editor

Howard Devoto, like John Lydon, is OIK of the most important flgures in the outer fringe (^ the pop world.

While Lydon was fronting the Sex Pistols as Johnny Rotten, Devoto co-founded the Buzzcocks, aiTKMig the most talented and urKkrrated of the original EngKsh punk bands. After the Pistols broke-up. Lydon tumed his back on the past and formed Public Image Ltd. Likewise.

-Devoto left his punk roots to front Magazine, a highly influential post-punk outfit.

Taking a two-year sabbatical after dissolving Magazine. Devoto reoentiy re-emer^ as a sok) artist with the release of his "Jerky Versions of The Dream" LP.

At Devoto's Los Angeles solo debut last Friday night at the Palace, it was interesting to see if this pop genius could live up to his rqinitation without relying on his past works.

Devoto's solo album shows more emotional depth and musical diversity than his work with Magazine. But his

joM material, like the intense and moody Magazine tunes ^"Song From Under the Ftoorboards" and "Permafrost" came off iso strong Friday night, they hinted that Devoto's better days were behind him.Dcvoto and his four-member backing band performed these Magazine classics with such captivating vigor, it seemed his okl HOWARD DEVOTO

ON THE TUBE

Pop'N'RockeP: A different TV show ByCRAIQROSEN Entertainment Editor

With the recent success of the rock video, music • -orieiitcd tetevtskxi diows have popped up aO over the place.

While most of the shows feature an onslaught of rock videos, one show has tried something slightly (xiginaL

POP'N'ROCKER — Pop-atar/taan-haartthrob Scott Bak) (right) and laad vocaNat Vine* Naal of ttie Loa Angalaa-baaad haavy-matal haadbangara Motlay Cnia, botti Hp-ayndi ttiair Mta, Saturday morning on tha "Pop'N'Rodtar Qama."

The "Pop'N'Rocker Game," which airs Saturday at 10:30 a.m. on KTLA Channel 5, combines a typical game show fomut with American Bandstand-bke lip-synched performaiKcs by various surprise rock and pop stars.

The music trivia questions, largely drawn from acts in Billboard's Hot 100. are a breeze for any true music buff. but seem to provide a challenge for the show's con­testants.

Host Jon Bauman, also known as the silly greaser Bqwscr. who fronts Sha Na Na. has traded in his leather jacket and jeans for a sportscoat and dress slacks to be a silly gaiiK show host.

Sure Bauman is silly, but so is the '*Pc 'N'Rocker Game." The introduction of the surprise musical guest is tied into the questions used. Then Bauman reveals the big surprise; the studio audience jumps out of their seats and rushes toward the stage in hysteria. Yes, those lip-syrKhed performaiKes are pretty dam exciting.

The "Pop'N'Rocker Game" is silly, but harmless fun. In fact, weekend morning TV hasn't been this comy since the Bay City Rollers played "Wonderama."

Dandy Boy George and the Culture Club were on last week. Teen-heartthrob Scott Bak) and heavy-metal hcadbangers M6llc7 Crue will appear this week. Other talents such as the Bangles. Translator and Sparks are scheduled to appear on future shows. ,

In all, the "Pop'N'Rocker Game" is worth tuning into if you can wake-up after watching one of those late night video programs. Besides, where else can you see such talents as Motley Cruc and Scott Baio lip-synch their latest hits on the same TV show?

Enthusiastic response surprises Juluka Continuedfrom page El

^4Dpaya'Riic7' ^ While in his teens, Clegg became fascinated with the

Zulu music and culture, after he saw some Zuhi musicians performing on a street corner. ',,

- "It was an amazing sourtd," he said. "The guitar is tuned differently and played differently. I was amazed at the possibilities af it."

Mchunu joined forces with Clegg after he found his address through a migrant worker "grapcvirie." Thus the odd coupling of a college professor. Clegg. and a gardner. . Mchunu, was complete.

For six or seven yearsClegg and Mchunu played in the streets. In 1976 the duo released four singles of traditiona] 2ulu music. A few years later, the duo met manager Hilton Rosenthal and its musical ideas took a tum, Clegg said.

"In 1979 we changed from playing strictly Zul»inusic to hybridizing in Westem influenoes — chords, English lyrics — and we ended up with a music that was our own."

"The point of Juluka represents a new musical force in its own country, which is a crossover or a hybrid," Cl^g said. "We've used the rule of governing musical com position in Zulu music. iHit we write all our own material."

When the band decided to change its musical direction, Clegg aiKl Sipho tagged their IKW combo "Juluka." a Zulu word meaning "sweat." In 1981 the duo put together a backing band so Juluka coukl tour.

Clegg explained that Juluka is also settijng out to reach

material was next to impossible to top. But half way through his hour-long set, Devoto's

"CoW Imagination," one of the strongest cuts on his latest LP, burst out with a new-found enthusiasm. Devoto danced jerkily and leaped about the stage with punk-like intensity. • -

Devoto's backing band, including Magazine alumnus Dave Formula on keyboards, was tight and potent. The Martin Heath (bass)/ Pat Ahem (dmms) rhythm section provided a catchy funk-influenced backdrop for For mula's melodic keyboards and Alan St. Clair's blistering guitar breaks.

Devoto's vocals ranged from sarcastic and bitter to sincere and charming. A female back-up singer, ap pearing on several tunes, provided a nice contrast to Devoto's distinct vocals.

Other new tunes, the pleasant "I Admire You," Devoto's current hit "Rainy Season," and the revengeful "Some Will Pay," also came off strong, proving Devoto is on yet another significant musical venture.

SELF HYPNOSIS M E A N S

BETTER GRADES LESS STUDYING Speed Reading, Photographic Memory,

Improved Creat iv i ty & Better Test Takmq Skills

a few specific goals. "We want to make an alternative music that is non

-racial, which goes against the (South African) govem-

We wont to mtXe an alternative music that is non'radai, which goes against the (South African) govemmental policy of separating racial and ethnic groups.'

— Qegg

mental policy of separating racial and ethnic groups."He also feels that if Juluka can legitimize African music in America and Europe, it will help "support our struggle back home."

Thus far, Clegg seems pleased with the outcome of Juluka's first few American concerts. "The response is phenomenal." he said.

"We were told by peopk in England that in the Sutes y/e were going to have a big problem because the peopk: there are not into this kind of music and they like having everything wrapped up in nice packages." C l ^ said.

"We had all these kinds oi negative images given to us by the people in Europe and we've been incredibly happy to find it's the exact opposite (in America)."

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E4 Daily Sundlai, Friday, Novambar 4, 1983

Publicity wraps up 'LooseEnds'' preparations Continuedfrom page El

that they thought was remotely related to it," he said. "I needed songs that reflected the previous scene and foreshadowed the next."

After listening to over 75 albums, Berlioz recorded 30-second blips of over 60 songs and gave them to "Ends" director Barbara Hancock.

From that tape Berlioz and Hancock decided on 17 rock'n'roll songs from the -play's time period (1970-79).

"We decided on rock'n'roll because it sounds different from pop," Hancock said. "It's more rugged and says more

•about the confusion surrounding the play's story."

Among the songs chosen were "Time In A Bottle" by Jim Croce, "School's Out" by Alice Cooper, "Take A Chance" by ABBA, "Blinded By The Light" by Bruce Springsteen,

^Telephotse tine''t>y The Electric Light Orchestra and "Kodachrome" by Paul Simon.

"For the most part the audience will recognize the songs," Berlioz said. "We hope that the songs will make them think about how each relates to them as far as what they were doling and who they were with when they heard it."

"LooseEnds" is a real people play and since music has had such an impact on our lives it should bring the audience closer to the characters," he said.

Slides play an important role in this production because they take the audience's eyes away from the stage during scenery changes, and supply them with added information about the characters in the play.

The 108 color slides to be used for the show were taken by Siegei over a four-week period in which he dragged the cast all over the Los Angeles area.

Siegei, who has been a photographer for five years, took the cast to down­town Los Angeles, the beach, a con­struction site, a park, a farm and other locations. *

"I took a lot of extras because I thought we could use different ones on each screen, but it turned out to be too complicated," he said.

After developing the slides, Siegei and Hancock decided in what order they would occur.

"The slides should really give the audience a feel for the characters," he said.

nounoements to the local newspapers, the University Information Bulletin and Insight, the campus quarterly.

The most visual aspect of the publicity is "Ends'" poster, which is plaster^l across the campus and around the department.

Designed by Robin Otte, a senior art major, the poster features a black and white photograph of Paul and Susan on the beach. Other photographs appear t)ehind the main one. On top is open scissors with a red string attached that curves down at the bottom of the poster to make up the title of the play.

"As I read the script I tried to think of any visual elements in the story that would go good together in an effective design," said Otte.

Otte used the black and white photographs because Susan (the female lead) is a photographer, while Paul (the male lead) is a film editor.

-^'^Ibt photograph has Susan pouring a

Publicity began for "Loose Ends" when the show was selected in April.

"It started when we anounced it to the students," said Theater Manager Jeffery Levy, who is charge of all the publicity for the theater season.

Among the outlets Levy used to publicize the play was the CSUN Office of Public Affairs, which released an-

bottle of beer on Paul, which shows that they are fooling around, but at the same time shows that there is a feeling of tension in the relationship," Otte said.

"The scissors is placed so it looks like it is about to cut the photographs which is symbolic of the tenuous nature of their relationship over the years," she said. "I used red for the title of the play because it is such a charged emotional

color." • •::::_::z_i:...

The design was also used for post­cards that were distributed to past theater patrons, churches, colleges and alumni.

Levy said the intangible publicity for "Ends" includes the excitement of the cast about the play, word of mouth from audience to audience and the reputation of the department.

According to Levy, another in­tangible is the play's title, which has no community recognition.

"If we did 'Oklahoma' there woukl be no problem bringing people in because it is so recognizable," Levy said. ~"

"The Studio Theatre is a good match for the play because it is a small theater," he said.

!!Ends" which has strong language and adult situations, will play through the weekend in the Studio Theatre and then resume Nov. 9-13 and Nov. 16-20 with curtain times at 8 p.m. and at S p.m. on Sundays. - [

Tickets for the show, which are $2 for students and seniors and $4 for general admission, can be purchased at the ticket office in the Speech-Drama Building.

Daily Sundlai, Friday, Novambar 4, 1983 ES

f - S

THEATER REVIEW

'Little Shop' is fantastic on every level By ESTHER MEDINA Contributing Writer

'' These days it's rather chic to admit to watching old B horror movies. Not because one falls for all that scary stuff, but because it's fun to sit there and laugh at the comy dialogue and stare at the kooky clothes peoplb used to wear.

GIRLS YALK — Loulaa Robinson, Faith Princa, Marion Ramaay and BJ. Jofforaon In a scano from tho musical satira "Uttla Shop of Horrors," which Is currently running at tha Waatwood Playhousa.

MOVIE REVIEW

For years I have attributed this indulgence to my strange sense of humor. But proof that it is the "in" thing to do is displayed in the success of the "Little Shop of Horrors," a musical satire based on an early '60s movie of the same title.

The plot is familiar enough. Seymour, an orphan who was taken in off the streets and raised by a skid row florist shop owner, finds a rare and strange plant that he names Audrey II after his beloved co-worker.

One day, by accident, he discovers the sniall. unusual plant feeds off of human blood. By now Audrey II has attracted quite a bit of business and Seymour finds himself tortured as he tries to decide between destroying the plant and soaking in all the attention the plant brings him. Meanwhile Audrey II is getting bigger and bigger and so are her victims. "

If you are a horror film buff, 1 need not tell vou that by the time Seymour decides to destroy Audrey II the entire cast has been consumed, as well as Seymour, who ob­viously does not succeed in destroying the plant.

Although the plQt is simple, this is where the beauty lies. One can relax and enjoy the fun and silliness of it all. The play is provided with a truly wonderful cast who appear as B movie caricatures. Faith Prince and Lee Wilkofs performances as Audrey and Seymour are superb.

Three Supremes-like girls named Crystal, Ronette, and Chiffon, who serve as a chorus with miniskirts with bouffant hairdos, also give fine performances.

But the star of the show is Audrey II, the blood-thirsty plant. It eats the entire cast, and is eaten up by the audience.

"Little Shop of Horrors" is fantastic on every level. It's hilariously funny with excellent performances by all. The set is imaginative and colorful and the music lively and entertaining.

"Littte Shop of Horrors" is being performed at the Westwood Playhouse at 10886 Le Conte Ave. in Westwood Village.

Student rush prit^ are available a half hour before show time. Students must have a full-time fall '83 identification card. ^

'Hanna K.': full of unanswered questions LAURA J. TESTA Staff Writer

What does the K stand for in the film "Hanna K," the new Universal film which opened recently?

Don't,expect to find the answer by watching the film by Costrai-uavras. Uiilike his other films "Missing" and "Z," this one doesn't stand for anything.

His other films, had strong political statements built into the structure of the film. "Z" won the Greek film­maker an Oscar for the best foreign film.

"Hanna K.," however, is more like a soap opera. Its political statement has been pushed into the shadows of the story.

The film opens in the middle the confusing life of a lawyer, Hanna K., (Jill Clayburgh) who has been given the opportunity to defend a suspected terrorist (Muhamad Bakri), who she claims is just a refugee.

Before the end of the story, this suspected terrorist has become the baby sitter for the child Hanna had by the district attorney.

Understandably, the district attorney is not too pleased by this, nor is Hanna's ex-husband, who pops down from

JAZZ CSUN Studio Jaxz EnaMnMa — Strictly Jazz Series — Thursday (USU PUB, 885-3616,8 p.m.)

THEATER "Loose Enda" — (Studio Theatre. 885-3093, Friday, Saturday, Wednesday, Thursday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 5 p.m.) "Squirrela" — (Little Theatre, 885-3090, Friday,

Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m.)

POP Modom Sound of Quiet — Noontime Concert — Wednesday (The Court of Community, USU, 885-2966.)

MUSIC students of QeraMlne Rotella Hute Recital — Sunday (Recital Hall, 885-2129, 5 p.m.) Wind Symphony, David Whitwell, conductor; Christopher White, guest conductor — Tuesday (University Student Union, 885-2129,8 p.m.)

France several times during the film. Nothing is ever resolved. Perhaps Costa-Gavras didnT

think it important to to tie up any of the loose ends he stitches into his story. The end of the film is just as confusing as the opening.

Equally confusing is why this movie was rated "R," because there was no excessive violence, or bad language. The only frontal nudity was of a Hanna's baby during his circumcision.

Perhaps the confusion of the film is a reflection of the confusion of Hanna's life. She doesn't know where she is going and neither does the film.

Clayburgh struggles throughout the muddled story to define her character, but her performance is downgraded by the faulty direction and the script she has to work with. The audience little cares what sort of person Hanna is or what drives her, despite Clayburgh's attempts to portray what could have been an interesting woman.

If Costa-Gavras hopes to make his money back on the film, he will have to make a few changes. Perhaps the best one wouM be to cut out all the dialqsue, run it as a travel movie of Israel and sell it to the tourist board. Most of the movie was shot on location in Israel and contains some beautiful scenery.

"Hanna K." is playing at the Westland Twin and Town and Country in Encino.

Faculty Artist Series

Gimpel to perform ByLESHAMMER Contributing Writer >

Music of the Romantic era highlights Sunday's piano recital by Jakob Gimpel, part of the 1983-84 Faculty Artists Series.

An all-Chopin program will include four Etudes, the 24 Preludes, Scherzo in B minor and Vartiations Brillantes.

A distinguished artist in residence since 1971, Gimpel made his American concert debut in 1939. He has ap­peared as a soloist with the workl's major orchestras, including the Los Angeles Philharmonic. In addition to numerous concerts and recordings, he has performed the soundtrack for several films, including the 1971 thriller, "The Mephisto Waltz," which starred Alan AWa.

Gimpel performs Sunday at 8 p.m. in the Campus Theatre. Tickets [ut $4 general admission and $2 for students.

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E6 Pally Sundial^ Friday, Novambar 4, 1983

wtfkiiid FILM "Tha Bahig" — tonight (Citywide) "The Oatarman Waakand" •— tonight (Citywide) "Running Brave" - - tonight (Citywide) Heart Uke a Wheel" — tonight (Music Hall, 9036

Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, 274-6869, call for times.) "Streamera" — tonight (Beveriy Center Cineplex, Beverly Blvd. at La Cienega Blvd., Los Angeles. 652-7760, call for times.) "Suaana" — tonight (Fox Venice, 620 Lincoln Blvd., Los Angeles, 396-4215, call for times.) "Tendrea Coualnea" — tonight (Beverly Center Cineplex, call for times.) "Testament" — tonight (Regent, 1045 Broxton, Westvi/ood, 208-3259, call for times.)

STAGE ^ "Alligator Talla" and "More Recent Ap-pendagea" — tonight (Factory Place Theatre, 1308 Factory Place, Los Angeles, 623-3109, 8:30 p.m.) "Big Qroundiing ia Watching" — tonight (Groundling Theatre, 7307 Melrose Ave., Hollywood, 934-9700, 8:30 p.m.)

POP DIacharge, Social DIatortion, IM.D.C, Dteks, Code of Honor — tonight (Olympic Auditorium, 1801 North Grand Ave., Los Angeles, 749-5171, 7 p.m.)

, / iu luka — tonight (The Palace. 1735 North Vine, Hollywood, 462-8135, call for times.) Hunters and Collectors, Shadow MInatrela — tonight (Club Lingerie, 6507 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, 466-8557, call for times.) ' Unclaimed, Leaving Trains, Eddy and the Sub­titles, Neats — tonight (Cathay De Grande, 1600 North Argyle Ave., Hollywood. 461-4076, call for times.) Long Ryders, Ronnie Mack, POA — tonight (Plant, 12446 Ventura Blvd.. Studio City, 769-8696, call for times.) Jack Mack and the Heart Attack — tonight (Palomino. 6907 Lankershim Blvd., North Hollywood. 746-4010. call for times.) Cheap Trick, Zebra — Saturday (Universal Am­phitheatre, 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City. 980-9241,8:15 p.m.)

JAZZ Qeorge Winston — tonight (Universal Am­phitheatre, 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal

City, 980-9241,8:15 p.m.) Teddy Buckner and His Dixieland AH-Stars — tonight (Donte's 4269 Lankershim Blvd., North Hollywood, 769-1566, call for times.) Jonathon Hammond Band — tonight (Gingerhouse, 18669 Ventura Blvd., Tarzana, 881-0660, call for times.)

MUSIC/DANCf Schoenberg Ensemble — tonight (Disney Music Hall, CalArts, 8 p.m.) Loa AngekM Philharmonic, Cario Maria QlulinI, conductor; Murray Perahia, piano — tonight (Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Music Center, 130 Grand'Ave., Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.) Kurt Stefl Quintet, Suaan Bogdanovic, guitar — tonight (Wadsworth Theatre, Westwood, 8:30 p.m.) Members of Loa Angeiea Baliet — tonight (Huntington Hartford Theatre, 1617 North Vine St., Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.) Members of LJOS Angeiea Ballet — Saturday (Huntington Hartford Theatre. 2:30 and 8:30 p.m.) Uandl Dance Company — Saturday (Academy West Dance Theatre, 1711 Stewart St., Santa Monica. 8:30 p.m.) Shony Alex Braun, gypay violin — Saturday (Wilshire Ebell Theatre, 8 p.nrt)

daily sundial clasgified ads ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR SALE

PASS EXAMINATIONS, national exams improve grades 6ver-come test anxiety, phobias improve relations increase self confidence thru Professional Hypnosis Health Resource Center. Call today 275-5154 (11-10)

INSURANCE WAR! Will beat anyone's prices or don't want your business. Sports cars, multi-tickets, good driver discounts. Easy payments. Request "Northridge Plan " (213)880-4407(12-9)

ATHEISTS — HELP establish CSUN Chapter of Atheists United. Write P.O. Box 33062, Granada Hills, CA 91344. (11-8)

^m€S^^ ; ^^W»^ A O P I s . Homeconning 1983. Let's do it!!

APT. FOR RENT

WALK CSUN — 1 bdrm apt. refrig. $365 mo. 8803 Etivyanda 886-4809 (11-11)

AUTOMOBILE

DATSUN 240Z '73 auto new engine runs great needs body work $2,200 395-0718 ask for Carl (11-4)

'T l OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme power, air, good tires, engine, great $1000 obo (11-8) «. _

1977 FORD Granada Ghia 302 V8 auto luxury Int. fully loaded - immaculate $2350. Call 997-0432(11-11)

1978 CHEY MONTE Carlo blue velour Int. Car looks and runs like new - loaded. Call 997-0432(11-11)

NEED A Car! Get your wtieels at auto auction prices. Call for details 997-0432. Ask for Doug (11-11)

FOR RENT

ONE BEDROOM condominium. $620 month. Lease-option with $3,000. Canoga Park broker 996-6300/342-5712 Larry G. (11-4)

THREE BEDROOM, two bath, 2 level condominium, furnished or unfurnished, built-ins, pool, tennis, spa, $750. 7651 Reseda Blvd. (unit on Park side) by appointment, 821-6076 (11-5)

RENT-A-GUY Rent a Lambda Chi brother or associate member to be your beast of burden. It's Just for fun but oh. what fun it can be! Nov 7 Tapestry Room 3-5 p.m. (11-4)

MATTRESS — MARKETING grad can save you op to 50% on brands, any size. Don't pay retail. See Richard Pratt 18717 Parthenia Warehouse near CSUN 349-8118(5-11)

CANON FTB 35 mm camera with 50 • mm lens excellent condition. Call after 5 p.m. 886-4784(11-4)

BOOK SALE (9,000 used) Sat Nov. 5 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Granada Hills Library 10640 Petit (11-4)

SILVER REED typewriter. Portable, with case. Like new. used very lightly. $200 709-1712(11-11)

1972 VW SUPERBEETLE, Super mechanical & body condition, consistent 25 mpg, new tires, generator, seat covers, $2150.00. Call Reese, 9 9 8 - 8 8 6 1 weekdays , 706-1026 weekends (11-9)

5-PIECE ROGERS drum set with Zildjian cymbals, cases. Excellent condition! $2000 or best offer. Call Cathy evenings at 656-4945 (11-9)

HELPWANTED

WANT A free facial or to earn $ 1 0 0 - $ 5 0 0 a week working for #1 skin care and cosmetic firm, call Laurie 993-2215 message (11-23)

PRODUCTION DEPARTMENT of the Sundial looking for production asst. for spring. Sign up now SN229 after 2 p.m. (12-9)

HOUSE KEEPER wanted 1 day per week must be dependable — Granada Hills location 3 br house 368-9599 evenings (11-4)

TEACHER POSITIONS available working with individuals with the problem of autism involved in communi ty t ra in ing programs in the greater L.A. area on Saturday's and/or d u r i n g s c h o o l b reaks (Christmas, Easter, etc.). Bachelor's degree in ap­propriate field and experience with developmentaily disabled, autism preferred. Send resume to Jay Nolan Center, 24303 San Fernando Rd., Newhall, Ca. 91321. Attn: Becky Un-densmith before Nov. 11. (11-4)

PART TIME — Bilingual preferred to work in office typing helpful. Call Ed Span 994-9984 4.75 hour (11-4)

AFTERSCHOOL COUNSELOR wanted — Van Nuys, must have creativity, initiative and recreation/P.E. background with children 894 -3360 (11-15)

HELP WANTED

ACCOUNTING CLERK trainee. Work 15 hours/week, flexible on hours between 8 and 5. Must know 10-key by touch. Canoga Park $3.50 - $3.75/hour. Call 882-9947.(11-4) .,

HOUSES FOR SALE

2 BLOCKS to CSUN and only $115,000!!! 3 bedroom, den. spa. Knotty pine, cathedral ceiling, fireplace, fruit trees. Move-in condition. Bonnie Steele RE. 213/340-4486 (11-7)

PERSONALS TUTORINQ

LEARNING

SELF HYPNOSIS: Get As while cutting study time In half. Photographic memory, speed reading, creativity enhan­c e m e n t . S t u d e n t discount/private sessions call Success Center, Terry Hop-wood, Certified Hypnotherapist 989-2923(11-23)

SIGMA NUS: There is something of great importance to you (and especially your pledges) that was found. To claim this item you must have Mike "Hunk Of" Mietz provide one (1) champagne break— fast-in-bed to a certain Alpha Xi Delta, Make sure it is good!! (11-4)

MPENZI WAIRIMU — Wewe Mrembo Sana — Mimi Nakupenda Sana — Craig (11-4)

LINDA, YOU don't know how glad I am that we met! Have a great 20th birthday! Lots of love. Marcj (11-4)

LAOI Dl, I looked for your name on the Homecoming ballot, but 1 could not fifMl it. You will always be my Queen! Love, your prince. (11-4)

DIANA FREEDMAN. I'm not a salesman, biker or mugger, my past-time is being a hugger! SIGBB(l l -4)

TYPINQ

PERSONALS

DANI WEISS, Some M&Ms are brown, some orange, and some yellow, but everyone knows the green ones are best. To the sweetest M&M of all, my big sis. You're the best! Love. Kim (11-4)

LET THERE be peace and let it begin with us! Alliance for Survival keep up the good work. Love, E.S. (11-4)

CSUN SENIOR, 21, residing in Chatsworth, looking tor female companion who shares similar interests: traveling, driving, walking, dining out, theater, movies, television, shopping, music, spor ts , w r i t i ng , astronomy, outdoor activities. If interested, please call Scott Frechman, at (213) 341-1392 atter 6:00 p.m. (11-4)

LOREN N.. Our relationship is the best thing that ever hap­pened to us. 10 amore tu. Love your little Italian girl, Carol A. (11-4)

WE WANT to thank our Lambda Chi Alpha coaches, Mark, Kevin, Tom, Frank, and Kevin for all of your help and in­spiration with the "Pumpkin Bust" — We could not have done it without you guys! Love, the Sister of Alpha Xi Delta (11-4)

KARLEE G; In case you Tnissed it yesterday, Happy 19th Birthday. Love always, The Kid (11-4)

ROOMMATES

FEMALE NON-SMOKER student yvanted to share huge dout>le Dedroom in fully fur­nished townhouse 5 minutes from CSUN. Fireplace, jacuzzi, pool, $230.00 month. Lots of privacy! Karer» 987-2454 (11-11)

AVAILABLE NOW! Female non-smoker, $190.(X) a month apartment. Own room, 4 miles from CSUN, pool, great roommates! Ask for Johanna 882-4588.(11-4)

ROOM FOR rent, private twth, pool, jacuzzi. security bIdg., utilities paid. $250 month 882-7996(11-4)

TRAVEL

SKI MAMMOTH: Two bedroom condominium. Three and four night specijfl rates from $80Mlght. 735-8106. (11-10)

RELEASE YOUR Freedom Monster! Charming book tells how to travel inexpensively by RV. Send $4.95 to Viewpoint Press, P.O. Box P, Tehachapi, CA 93561. (11-4)

TUTORINQ

THESIS 4 DISSERTATION counseling. Research problems — all levels. Foreign students w e l c o m e . Dr. A r n o l d . 473-3729.(12-9)

NEED HELP with English, Social Sciences term papers? For exper ienced i tu^or cal l 780-1477 evenings.112-9)

MATH AND Comp Scl tutoring by CSUN honors student. Call Harry Goodnight — 984-1161 '^^-^) . ' TUTORING IN all subjects — Call Tutor Registry at 669-0818 24 hour appts. (12-8)

TYPINQ

IN THE jungle out there you r>eed an edge! Xerox 860 Word Processing: Resumes, theses, papers, letters. Call The Edge. 368-5877. Near campus. Weekends OK. (11-15)

NOW! WOW! Six IBM Correcting Selectrics available for hourly renta l In the Matador Bookstore. Low prices. (11-19)

NOW YOU'VE Got It! Word Processing at the Matador Bookstore. We'll do It or do It yourself on our DECmatell. (11-9)

WORD PROCESSING/typing — term papers, theses, reports including technical and engineering. 8 minutes from c a m p u s . T h o m p s o n ' s Secretarial Service. 349-9274 (12-9)

TYPING!! TYPING!! 780-7555!! 10% discount - save this ad! Reports, theses, dissertations, scripts, resumes. Editing. 7 8 0 - 7 5 5 5 1 7 8 0 - 7 5 5 S L . (11-18)

TYPING 4 WORD processing — 6 years experience — dissertations, theses, resumes, proofreading. Near campus. Ann -885 -8010 . (11-11)

IBM TYPING — $1.35/page. "You write It. I'll type it!" Lisa 704-6164 evenings (11-4)

PROFESSIONAL TYPING gMaranteed. Term papers, theses, reports, scripts. Free editing. $1.75 per page. 3 blocks from CSUN. Pam 993-7329(11-4)

EXPERT IBM typing (Simi Valley) reports, thesis, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Nancy Turnage 526-5489 (12-9) •*

"JUST YOUR Type" All word processing needs. My home. Fast. Accurate. Reasonable. Editing. Chris: 368-7985 (11-4)

IBM TYPING: Term papers, resumes, reports, theses. ^>eclat student rates! Delta Bus i ness S e r v i c e s 526-5210/498-6666 (12-9)

TYPING. IBM, Selectric, $1.25 double spaced legible. Ex­perienced. Final copy masters and doctoral slightly higher 886-2119(11-15)

TYPING FOR you! 345-5417. Fast expert service for your academic/personal/business needs. 345-5417(11-25)

TYPING; WORD Processing: We draft edit, store pring your thesis, paper, lab report Inexpensive 4 fast. Call Karen 705-1206 7 days a week! (11-4)

EXPERT TYPING: Reports — term papers — theses. Free editing/spelling correction. Student discounts. Mrs. Finn; 786-8742.(11-15)

PROFESSIONAL TYPING: Business 305 specialist. Reservations accepted with deposit. IBM Correcting Selectric. Notary. Maureen 709-0460,(12-1)

QUALITY IBM Typing, ex­perienced secretary. Light editing. Campus collection. Mar ie 3 6 0 - 8 1 6 6 evenings/weekends. (11-29)

TERM PAPERS and other typing. Pick up and delivery. Unda 881-3817 (11-10)

WANTED

WANTED — USED hardbound and paperback mystery, detection, spy novels. Call 366-6937 for infornwtkw. 11 a.m.-Sp.m. (11-9)

DaNy SundM OlaaaHlad Ada MUST ba subffllttMl bafora 2 p.m. two working daya prior to publication. Thora Is no minimum to tiia numbar of InaartkNis doalrod. Minimum Inaortlona la 18 words for $3.00; aach addltloMil word Is 15C. A run of 9 conaacuthra days you wlH gat tha 4th day fraa. Notify tha Dally Sundlai of any typographical arrora Immadiataly. Tha Dally Sundlai la itot raaponalMa for mora than tha second In-eorract Inaartlon of .any daaaiflad. Tha Dally Sundlai raaarvaa tha right to approva, ralaet or adit any claaaHlad. Ada MUST ba prapaid. Bring to Dally Sundial, Room 20a, SAN. Houra: 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. If aftar hotira, allp ad with chack or monay ordar through mall slot.

4 Daily Sundial, Fridiy, November 4, 1983

CSUN official runs for community college board By STEVEN APPLEFORD ^ ^ Staff Writer

Jeanette Mann, CSUN director of affirmative action programs, is running for a seat on the Pasadena Area Com­munity College Board of Trustees in an effort to make the board "leave education to faculty."

As director of affirmative action, Mann is responsible for monitoring CSUN's progress in fair employment for women and minorities. She has been at CSUN since 1976.

Mann said she decided to run when the community college board started making educational decisions and made enor­mous cuts in faculty when faced with a S3.8 million budget shortfall.

The shortfall in PCC's $36 million budget was a result of the stati; budget crisis, which itself was a result of the loss of property taxes after the passage of Proposition 13 in June 1978.

"The decision was made to make the cut in personnel," Mann said. "But the decision was made to cut faculty and no administrators."

In fact, Mann explained, 97 layoff notices were sent out. And some departments, like the nursing program,

were threatened with crippling cuts. "The nursing program at PCC is

ranked as one of the very best in the state," Mann said, "yet 16 out of 32 teachers were cut."

A seven-year resident of Pasadena, Mann is running for the No. 1 trustee seat against incumbent Gary Adams.

Mann said that when she saw how Adams and the board reacted to the budget crisis she decided "the board needed another perspective."

Adams, just finishing his first four--year term of office, is a typical example of the seven conservative white males on the board, she said. Mann, who said that she has had much more experience in academic activities than politics, pointed out that in the 40-year history of the college a woman has never had a seat on the board.

Of the approximately 20,000 students at the Pasadena coUege, Mann explained, 54 percent are women and 30 percent minorities, with some overlap. Mann has' been endorsed for the Nov. 8 election by the Pasadena Area Women's Caucus and the North-East Los Angeles chapter of the National Organization for Women. She has also been endorsed by the PCC teachers' union.

CALIFORNIASTATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE

HOMECOIVIING NOV.5,1983 2 5 T H A N N I V E R S A R Y C E L E B R A T I O N

25 years young & the SMM!s still rising.

Parade Nordhoff - RESEDA - Lassen

2:30 RM. Guest Appearance by L^. Dodger

Pitching Coach Ron PerranoskI

Pregame Show and F i r e w o r k s S p e c t a c u l a r

^^^ Football Game ^^^.u^^ Matadors vs. University of Santa Clara

7:00 RM. ^Gam^alMeHvere^jMjara^^

Homecoming Dance and other special attractions

Sweepstakes Winners Announced

USU San Fernando Hall (after the game)

For more Information, call 885-2477 Sponsored by ASSOCIATED STUDENTS, INC. and tha C.S.U.N. ALUMNI

ASSOCIATION In cooperation with tha NORTHRIDQE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

Subcommittee backs faculty salary supplement proposal By BETU POWIS Senior staff Writer ~

A subcommittee of the Faculty Senate cast a straw vote supporting salary supplements to retain faculty in the School of Business Administration and Economics and the School of Engineering and Computer Science.

The Personnel Planning and Review Committee Wednesday approved a draft proposal on salary supplements as acceptable even though some members of the committee were uneasy with the concept of salaries being tMised on such supplements.

The draft, submitteid by Executive Vice President and Provost David Benson, requests two levels of sup­plements, to be established at CSUN for spring 1984 and the entire 1984-85 school year.

Requested supplements will be $4,500 for some faculty in accounting, electrical engineering, computer science, and computer engineering and S2,500 for positions in finance, management, marketing, management science, chemical engineering and civil/industrial engineering.

Only eight faculty positions will be eligible for supplements in the spring of 1984, Benson said. The funds for the supplements will be provided by the Califomia State University Chan­cellor's office and will not mean less funds available ftff other faculty salaricis, he said.

Benson said the state legislature will be asked to fund the program.in the future, but that there is no guarantee that it will do so.'

Bensoji also said that faculty should not count on receiving as much money as has been requested for 1984-85 because the collective bargaining agreement limits the amount of funds that can be given in supplements.

Benson said the request for S4,50O supplements for 1984-85 was a strategy to make the Legislature realize how much is needed to retain faculty, because in future years there will be no limit on the amount of supplements that can be given by the university.

If the Legislature refuses to fund the supplements within two years they will be discontinued in accordance with the new collective bargaining agreement, which established the program.

OnOctoiDerl4,i964, BWy MIRs Stunned the world by running the most sensational race in Olympic history.

Butitw^t how he finished, It was where he started that made him a champion.

ROBBYBENSON

ENGIANUR PRODUCTIONS In Association With THE ERMINESXIN BAND Presents ROBBY BENSON "RUNNING BRAVE PAT HINGLE CLAUDIA CRON lEFF McCRACKEN Music by MIKE POST Written by HENRY BEAN and SHIRl HENDRYX Produced by IRA ENGLANDER Associate Producer MAURICE WOLFE Directed by D.S.EVERETT fX^^^^' Color by (Million rilmlibofitoiies.lofonlo lenstsindl'Miifloi* Caimfibyl'anivisiM* RelnsedbyBUriMVISMDISIDIBUIIOI)CO.MC c 1913imkm*PDOOUCIIOIISMC

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gports Dally Sundlai, Friday, Novambar 4 ,1983 5 «»

Track condition bad; home season canceUed ByPAULSCHNEiOER StaffWrlter

The 1984 CSUN home track season has been of­ficially cancelled because of the poor condition of the inside lane of the track and the lack of money needed to make repairs. In addition, the track has been closed to public use, while only the outside lanes will be available for physical education classes.

Dr. Sam Winningham, chair of the PE department, instructed that all meets scheduled at CSUN be cancelled until the track can be brought up to safe standards. He also said that signs will be posted prohibiting the public from using the track, and has advised all coaches that their classes can only use the outside lanes.

"The track is in such bad shape that a sprinter can seriously injure himself if he comes out of that far tum too quickly," said men's track coach Bill Webb. "The least we can do to get it back so we can use it in competition is to replace the whole lane."

The question of whether or not to close the track was first brought to the attention of the track coaches by Dr. Winningham in early October. In a memo dated Oct. 17, Winningham stated to coaches Webb and Don Strametz that based on the analysis of the track, he was instructing them that all meets at the track would either have to be cancelled, or relocated.

As stated on the memo, the Laykold Corporation gave Winningham an estimate of $63,775 to remove and replace lane one, and $28,000 to retexture the inside three lanes.

^ __ The track is a specialized synthetic Chevron track which, according to Webb, is a long lasting track that

Please tum to page 6

Homecomine closes out conference

Mats to do battle with Santa Qara ByDAVIDPERRY Sports £d;tor

Faultering in last week's Westem Football Conference game to Portland State, 31 -13, the CSUN gridders retum home Saturday to take on WFC rival UC Santa Clara at North Campus Stadium. ^ . _

The game will serve a dual purpose for the Matadors, who are now 5-3 overall and 1 -1 in conference.

First, aside from being just another football game, it is CSUN's homecoming. And winning the homecoming, to many, is more important than capturing the league crown, which leads to the second point. The match is also the final WFC confrontation of the season for the Matadors, who need the win to stay in contention for at least a first-place tie.

"We're slill m the hunt for the conference pionship," said head coach Tom Keele. "Our two remaining goals of winning the conference championship and having a winning season are still viable.

"Santa Clara is a very good team," he continued. "They are good on defense and the offense continues to improve. We will have to play very well to win."

As of late, Santa Clara falls into both the categories of playing well and winning. After a slow start, the Broncos have won two straight, one of those being a 20-6 victory over mutual WFC rival Portland State, who the Matadors fell to last week. They are now 4-3 overall and 1-0 in the WFC.

Statistically, the game looks to be an exciting matchup between the two teams that lead the league in almost all offensive and defensive team averages.

Above all, the key to the outcome will be if the stingy Santa Clara rush defense, which allows only 98.4 yards a game, can contain the explosive rushing offense that the Matadors possess in the duo of tailback Mike Kane, 602 yards on 134 carries, and fullback George Williams, 317

yards on 74 carries and eight touchdowns. The Broncos have a big edge in the area of pass offense,

having averaged 218.1 yards over their first seven games. CSUN on the other hand, trails the league with a passing average of only 167.9 per outing.

Defensively, both teams have performed with in--eredible intensity against the pass. Leading the league is Santa Clara, having allotted only 161.9 yards per game which, considering CSUN's passing average, isn't too devastating. On the other hand, though, the Matadors, allowing a meager 171.1 yards per contest could cut as much as 40 to 50 yards off the Broncos' average.

Responsible for Santa Clara's tremendous passing attack is the fact that not one, but three Bronco receivers have more than 20 catches on the year. Having snagged 26 aerials thus far, Todd Dal Porto is followed close

'We're still in the hunt for the conference championship. *

—Keele.

behind by teammates Kevin Collins with 23 grabs, and Brent Jones, who has 2t receptions.

On the other end of the Broncos' pass threat is quar­terback Isaac Vaughn, whose 61 completions in 124 attempts, is good for 1,053 yards and six touchdowns. He is countered by CSUN's t^ve Johnson, who has passed-for 1,132 yards and six TDs, while completing BO of 162

The Matadors are on a three-game winning streak at home, and post a 14-5-1 record Over the past four seasons at North Campus Stadium.

Based on the respective team's capabilities and seasonal performances thus far, the game is just too close to calL Kickoff for the confrontation is set for 7 p.m.

f)

PLANT M NAV 4

THE LONG RYDERS RONNIE MACK

PDA $Mll«*i D-DAY

ANOTHER VIEW llivr Ntf 10

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Higliwqf Patrol

M N w I I RAIN PARADE THE QUESTION

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7 6 9 - 8 9 0 1 1^446 V E N T U R A BL

Success is cheap when you consider the high cost of failure

YOUR SUCCESS FOR MID-TERM EXAMS

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6 Daily Sundial, Friday, November 4, 1983

Worn out track forces cancellation of home season Continuedfrom page 5 ^

has just started to deteriorate over time. Webb analogized the track to a carpet which is walked on by a large number of people every day for ten years until it finally wears out.

Winningham said that the money needed is not available. He said that he has been budgeting money to have the track repaired for several years, but it has always been decided that Other itiaintenance was inprder first.

Blaming the state govemment for the lack of funds, Wiifningham said that the state is too short-sighted to recognize it takes millions of dollars to operate any state university.

CSUN President James W. Cleary agreed with Winningham. "It's a real problem and the system is simply unfair," Cleary said. He added that every year the government allocates money to the 19 campuses in the CSU system for "minor operational repairs," but that they distribute the money purely on a value judgment basis. Once the money is received by the school, he said,^ilJtup^ to the chancellor's office to make the final decision as to what gets repaired first.

Cleary went on to explain that if the government would allocate the funds based on full-time attendance rather than the judgmental method now employed, CSUN woujd have about $850,000 to use, rather than the $24,000 they received this year.

Right now there are two alternatives which CSUN can approach to try to obtain the money for the track, Cleary said. The school can either dip into the chancellor's emergency fund, or they can respond to Lt. Gov. Leo McCarthy's request that each school submit a budget for campus maintenance.

The cancellation of th^ track home schedule has caused a wave of frustration and concern in the track depart­ment. Webb has said that the current situation is "ari embarrassment" to the school. "We couW lose our credibility with other schools," he said.

An Equal Oppoitunify to Become An Assistant Director

in Motion Pictures

WORN OUT — Lack of money to repair the CSUN tracit haa resulted In the can­cellation of the home season. Such a repair Job couid cost aa much as $63,000.

Photos by Laura J. Testa

Dina Bacheloit: administrator of the

motion picture industry's Assistant Directors Training Program

will be on campus

Wedn<»sday, November 9 to discuss openings for

the 1984 program. Candidates must have a bachelor's degree by June 1984. '

Contact your ptacement oflice for ftirther InfomiatloB.

A.S. GENERAL ELECTION NOTICE—

The filing period for 4.S. General Elections has been extended to 4:45 pm, Friday, Nov. 4, File for Senate positions in the A.S. USU A208.

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