u.s. advisors said to violate guidelines in el salvador, associated press, 25 june 1982

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"Washington — Some U.S. advisers in El Salvador are violating U.S. noncombat guidelines by 'fighting side by side' with government troops battling guerrillas, CBS News said Wednesday night. The network quoted unidentified Salvadoran soldiers as saying that on Tuesday advisers 'were firing 81mm mortars against a rebel base' near a government camp along the Lempa River, about 45 miles southeast of San Salvador. CBS added that it was told by the Salvadoran troops that "there are 10 Americans based at the camp, and they are taking part in combat operations" and carrying M-16 rifles. Guidelines for U.S. advisers forbid advisers from carrying weapons larger than pistols and restrict M-16s to quarters for self-protection and to automobiles outside San Salvador. The guidelines prohibit the stationing of advisers in areas of heavy rebel concentration or anyplace where combat is likely. The guidelines state that if a firefight develops between rival Salvadoran forces, advisers are to avoid taking part. An embassy spokesman who requested anonymity told The Associated Press Wednesday night that Ambassador Deane R. Hinton had ordered an investigation. Gary Shephard of CBS and Ray Bonner of the New York Times said they had seen the two advisers near the Golden Bridge, an area of almost constant fighting in eastern El Salvador."

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

The Stanford DailyFriday, June-25, 1982 Stanford, California Volume 181A, Number 2

Funding act OK'd despite University lobbyby Neil MacFarquhar

The Small Business Innovation

Development Act, vigorously

opposed by Stanford, passed in

Congress, 353-57, Wednesday.Under the new law, one and

one-quarter percent of the total

Federal research budget of $44

million must be set aside for re-

search projects conducted bysmall business. Stanford foughthard against the measure, argu-

ing that it would undercut fund-

ing for"the most innovativepor-

tions of existing research ef-

forts."

According to University Direc-

tor of Government Relations

Larry Horton, the University's

opposition centers around the

fear that the required one-and-

one-quarter percent set-asides

will come mainly from long-term research projects. The Uni-

versity frequently works in con-

junction with small businesses in

research and development, and

thus could indirectly benefit

from the bill. However, it is con-

cerned that the set-aside alloca-

tion system will move resources

away from long-term technolog-ical breakthroughs to the de-

velopment of short-term com-

mercial products — from new

understanding in high energy

physics, for example, to better

computersoftware.

Due to the new law, any feder-

al agency with a research budgetgreater than $100 million must

set as:de one and one-quarter

percentof theirallotment for re-

search done by businesses em-

ploying less than 500 people. Al-

though they can take the money

from a variety of areas, the bill

exempts in-house, or federal, re-

search fromany cuts, it exempts

the intelligence agencies from

setting aside funds, and it limits

the amount which can be taken

from innovative research.

For example, the Defense De-

partment alone receives about

$20 billion dollars for Research

and Development (R & D), ac-

cording to Horton. Of those

funds, 80 percent is allocated to

the continued development of

weapons systems already in the

planning stages. Once in the

planning stages this develop-ment is likely to be continued

and this amount of moneywould effectively be exempt

from cuts, Horton said.

Of the remaining $4 billion,

about $3.3 billion is allocated to

applied research and only about

$700 million goes towards basic,innovative research.

In an attempt to protect a cer-

tain level of innovative research,

one of the few amendments

tacked to the bill limits the

amount of funding which can be

set aside from basic research to

1.25 percent. Thus, for example,the defense department could

not cut more than $8.75 million

from its $700 million allocation

for basic research.

The loophole in this limita-

tion, opponents pointout, isthat

the distinction between basic

and applied research is not clear-

ly defined. Thus by reclassifyingprojects agencies could cut

more than the prescribed limit

from basic research.

In addition toopposition from

universities, the bill was op-

posed by the medical lobby, ag-

ricultural interests, defense and

intelligence groups. In the

House, it was opposed by most

of the committees who control

allocations for research and de-

velopment, including the Com-

mittees on Science and Technol-

ogy, on Armed Services, on

Energy and Commerce, on For-

eign Affairs, on Intelligence, and

on Veteran's Affairs.

All of these committees ex-

cept Foreign Affairs attempted

to add amendments to the bill

which would exempt the R&D

funds under their jurisdictionfrom making set-asides. These

amendments were defeated on

the floor of the House, due

mainly to the lobbying efforts of

the House Small Business Com-

mitee, according to Horton.

McCloskey was one of the

leaders of the fight against the

bill in the House. Don Dußane,

a spokesman for McClosky's of-

fice, said that the measure

proved difficult to defeat be-

cause, "it is politically important,

especially in an election year, to

appear to support small busi-

nesses."

There would never have been

a fight in Congress at all, accord-

ing to Dußane, had it not been

for the leadership of Horton and

University President Donald

Kennedy. Kennedy lead the op-position to the bill, testifyingagainst it before the House

Committee on Science and

Technology January 27.

Many Stanford faculty mem-

bers wrote letters to Congress

opposing the bill. Henry Riggs,chairman of industrial engineer-

ing and engineering man-

agement, opposed the legisla-tion "because the community of

effective, entrepreneurial, tech-

nical companies doesn't need

it."

Nobel laureateand Economics

Prof. Kenneth Arrow said cur-

rent tax laws were sufficient in

"encouraging innovative and

growing small business and rem-

edying their comparative disad-

vantage in access to the captialmarket." Ultimately, he said, the

legislation could damage the in-

novative advantages now held

by small firms. They will respondless to the market and more

towards the "forced demands of

the government."Others opposedto the bill said

it will be a subsidy to those com-

panies who cannot compete in

the open marketplace due to the

questionable value of their re-

search projects.

A similar bill, setting aside one

percent of the Federal research

budget for small businesses,

passed in the Senate 90-0 in De-

cember.

The current administration,

though initially vigorously op-

posed to the bill as a perfect ex-

ample of needless government

intervention, abruptly switched

to supporting the bill before it

went to the Senate floor. This ef-

fectively muzzled opposition to

the bill from many government

agencies. Although it is not clear

why the administration

switched, speculation centers on

the idea that President Ronald

Reagan agreed to back the bill in

the Senate in return for the sup-

port of the bill's sponsor, Sen.

Warren Rudman (R-N.H.), for

the sale of AWACs to Saudi Ara-

bia.

Row Office impounds bicyclesby Bill Ainsworth

As part of a campus-wide ef-

fort to remove bikes presumed

abandoned, last week Housing

Office employees removed bi-

cycles around the Row Houses

that were not locked to a rack

or a tree, according to Heloisa

Edwards, manager of row facil-

ities and services.

Edwards said bikes that were

chained to a tree or a rack were

tagged with a notice warning

owners that the bikes would be

impounded within 10 days if

not moved. Another check will

be made later in the summer to

remove any remaining tagged

bikes, she added.

According to Edwards, be-

tween 200 and 300 bikes have

been impounded from the

Row and are being stored in an

undisclosed location on cam-

pus.

Students residing in the Row

Houses were warned at the end

of spring quarter, through in-

formation given out at house

meetings and through posted

signs, that any unclaimedbikes'

would be impounded after 10

days, Edwards said.

Because of a lack of man-

power, last year the Housing

Office did not actively im-

pound bikes, Edwards said, al-

though some bikes were im-

pounded by the University Po-

lice Department. As a result of

the failureto remove bikes last

year "we lost tons of them,"

said Edwards. "This year I said

I'd better get my hands on

them and store them before

they disappear."

According to Capt. Raoul

Niemeyer of the University Po-

lice, -the University has been

following a policy of impound-

ing abandoned bikes since

before 1977. In the past the

bikes had been held until the

end of summer when theywere turned over to the Santa

Clara County Sheriff's Depart-

ment.

Ifat any time during the sum-

mer a bike owner claims his

bike by giving a description of

it and offering some proof of

ownership, the bike is given

back to the student, Niemeyer

said.

Before they turn the bikes

over to the Sheriff's Depart-

ment, Niemeyer said that his

office makes an effort to locate

the bike's owner. He called

this "a very time-consuming

process."

Niemeyer advised students

who have had their bike re-

moved from a location near

their residence to contact their

residence office and find out

where they can claim their

bike.

Since the program began,

Niemeyer said that no student

has left a bike out over the

summer that he has later tried

to claim in the fall from the po-

lice. "Most of the bikes we end

up turning over are In real bad

shape," he said.

In addition to actively im-

pounding bikes, Edwards has

some new ideasabout dispos-

ing .of hikei taken .from -the

Row. But she said she is unsure

which, if any, of these ideas will

be approved by the.University.

One of her ideas is to hold

the bikes until the fall, at which

time she proposes holding a

bike fair at which students

could claim theirbikes and un-

claimed bikes could be auc-

tioned off.

She also hopes to be able to

charge students $10 for han-

dling and storage costs for

bikes taken from the Row and

to use the funds collected from

this charge to refurbish Row

Houses.

*

Row Facilities has been impounding bikes

on the row that are not locked to stationary

Nancy Raff/Daily

objects. Thebikes are first tagged with warn-

ing notices.

Kennedy seeks new director

for Office of DevelopmentA committee is currently ac-

tively searching for a new di-

rector of the Office of De-

velopment to replace Univer-

sity vice-president Joel Smith,

who resigned from the posi-

tion in early June.

The committee, chaired byPresident Donald Kennedy,will try to appoint a permanent

director before the end of

1982. In the interim the Office

of Development, which is re-

sponsible for the University's

extensive fund-raising opera-

tions, will be run by Bruce

Hinchliffe.

Hinchliffe, who was formerly

the director of corporate rela-

tions, has been with the Office

of Development since 1963.

Previously he served for four

years as director of the Stan-

ford Annual Fund, and was as-

sociate director and chairman

of the executive committeeof

the successful $300 million

Campaign for Stanford.

Kennedy said, "I am de-

lighted that Bruce Hinchliffe

has agreed to serve as acting

vice-president. He has proven

his effectiveness in virtually all

areas of fundraising and he is

also an effective administrator

and a good leader/' Joel Smith

Page 2: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

WORLD

Vodka a problem in Poland

by The Los Angeles Times

Warsaw— For the last year,vodka has been rationedin Po-

land. touching off a wave of or-

ganized crime involving

bootlegging, moonshining and

other activities that are beinglikened to Prohibition-era be-

havior in the United States.

Concern over the problemhas prompted second thoughtsabout the desirability of ration-

ing as growing numbers of

Poles turn to illegal sources of

liquor to supplement their ra-

tions.

Anyone 18 or older can buyhalf a liter of vokda a month,which is about half of what av-

erage per-capita consumptionis thought to have been before

rationing took effect.

Rationing was introduced

last year in an effort to reduce

alcoholism — Poland reputed-

ly has the highest per-capita

consumption of hard liquor in

the world — and to limit the

use of scarce grain and

potatoes in the manufactureof

vodka.

The newspaper S/owo Pow-

szechne recently reported that

the police are concerned over

what it said is likely to be the

most dangerous result of vodka

rationing."There is the likelihood that

once the prohibition is lifted,the criminal activities may con-

tinue in other spheres," the

newpaper said.

The newspaper noted that

there was illegal traffic in vodka

long before rationing but that

this was generally for personalconsumption. Rationing, the

newspaper added, has led to

the emergenceof "acomplete-

ly new form of crime — mass

selling of alcohol outside the

rationing system, by organizedgangs."

In assessing what it called the

"negative phenomena" of

vodka rationing S/owo Pow-

Szechne said that healthauthor-

ities have noted a rise in

poisonings resulting from the

drinking of cleaning fluid, au-

tomobile antifreeze and cer-

tain cosmetics as substitutes for

vodka.

, It said that the limited avail-

ability of vodka under ration-

ing has led some people to try

narcotics. According to health

authorities, the use of heroin

produced from home-grownpoppies is indeed on the rise.

The papersaid that rationinghas also meant a "further im-

poverishment" of the families

of alcoholics because the priceof black-market vodka has

been driven up.A governmentbill proposed

in Parliamentwould restrict the

number of outlets sellingvodka and other alcoholic

beverages, impose prisonterms of up to two years on

managers who permit drinkingon the job, ban alcohol sales at

sports and certainother publicevents and increase the legalprice of vodka.

US advisors said to

violate guidelinesby The Associated Press

Washington — Some U.S.

advisers in El Salvador are vio-

lating U.S. noncombat

guidelines by "fighting side byside" with government troops

battling guerrillas, CBS News

said Wednesday night.The networkquoted uniden-

tified Salvadoran soldiers as

saying that on Tuesday advisers

"were firing 81mm mortars

against a rebel base" near a

government camp along the

Lempa River, about 45 miles

southeastof San Salvador.

CBS added that it was toldbythe Salvadoran troops that

"there are 10 Americans based

at the camp, and they are tak-

ing part in combat operations"and carrying M-16rifles.

Guidelines for U.S. advisers

forbid advisers from carrying

weapons larger than pistols

and restrict M-16s to quarters

for self-protection and to auto-

mobilesoutside San Salvador.

The guidelines prohibit the

stationing of advisers in areas

of heavy rebel concentration

or anyplace where combat is

likely. The guidelines state that

if a firefight develops between

rival Salvadoran forces, ad-

visers are to avoid taking part.

An embassy spokesman who

requested anonymity told The

Associated Press Wednesday

night that Ambassador Deane

R. Hinton had ordered an in-

vestigation.

Gary Shephard of CBS and

Ray Bonner of the New York

Times said they had seen the

two advisers near the Golden

Bridge, an area of almost cons-

tant fighting in eastern El

Salvador.

Once AroundThe Quad

Today

Communion Service: 7:15 a.m., Mem.

Chu., enter through Round Room, to-

day and every Friday, allwelcome.

Computer For Writing: Context is Stan-

ford's computer for writers, demon-

stration at noon in Turing Aud., Polya

Hall, all welcome.

Swedish Folkdaricing: Friday nights,

newcomers welcome; advanced:

7:30-8 p.m.; all levels: 8-11 p.m., I-Cen-

ter.,

Future

Catholic High Mass: Mass sung inEnglish

& Latin, including Gregorina chant and

Renaissance polyphony. Sun. 11:30

a.m., St. Ann Chapel, MelvilleatTasso,

Palo Alto.

Communion Service: Short service of

prayer. Scripture, and the Lord's Sup-

per, all welcome, Sun. 9 a.m., Mem.

Chu

Folk Dance Class: International folk-

dancing. all dances taught, everyone

welcome. Mon. 7:30 p.m., I-Center.

Gay And Lesbian Alliance: Will have a

march contingent in the S.F. Les-

bian/Gay Freedom Day Parade on

Sunday, call 497-1488 for info.

Time Management Workshop: Four one-

hour sessions. Tue. 10 a.m., begins

June 29, sign up at Learning As-

sistanceCenter. 123 Meyer Library.

Publications Board Meeting: Informal

meeting to discuss Pub Board capital

improvements, the ASSU Printing

Project, and work-study for member

publications via the Board, Tue. 1 p.m.,

Pub Board room, Storke bldg.

Self-Hypnosis Workshop: Introduction to

self-hypnosis techniques, parcipants

will learn to hypnotize themselves and

help others to enter the trance state,

emphasis on fun & participation, Sun.

June 27, 2-5 p.m., The Bridge.

Sunday Suppers: A delicious interna-

tional meal every week, join us in the I-

Center tradition, call 497-1831 for info.

General

Do You Write As Well As You Like? Basic

Writing. 3 units, for grad & ur»dergrad

students who wish to Improve their

writing skills, LAC 123 Meyer Library.

Foreign Graduate Students: Do you need

help with writing? Sign up for LAC 230

in Meyer 123.

2 THE STANFORD DAILY Friday, June25,1982

You and the News

Do you feel alienated from the news

and powerless in the flow of events?

Then get involved In current affairs!

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Page 3: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

The war in Lebanon: can there be winners?by The WashingtonPost

Beirut— With Israel poised to

attack West Beirut, the United

States seems close to achievingmajor Middle East policy goalsbut is on the verge of com-

promising its long-term national

interests and those of its mod-

erate Arab friends.

News Analysis

The seeming paradox stems

from an open American unwill-

ingness to rein in the Israelis in

time to prevent their invasion

from dissipating their clear suc-

cesses and sowing the seeds of

future regional turmoil.

So far the Israelis have served

American interests in humil-

iating the Soviets, who not onlyprovided the Syrians with in-

ferior weaponry but also failed

to play a superpower role in the

defense of either their Syrian or

Palestinian friends.

Equally, the invasion has cut

down to size the recently seem-

ingly triumphant march of mili-

tant Islam, symbolized by the

battlefield victories of Iran's Is-

lamic revolution against Iraq.Some enthusiasts even argue

that an overall Middle East peace

process could move ahead fol-

lowing events of the past several

weeks and that Lebanon could

be put back together. That re-

portedly was the message givenby President Ronald Reagan and

Secretary of State Alexander

Haig to Israeli Prime Minister

Menachem Begin in Washing-ton this week, when they ap-

parently said that Washingtonhad no disagreement with what

Israel was doing in Lebanon but

wanted some movement now in

"the peace process."But Western diplomats and

Arab analysts suggest that the

United States and its moderate

allies will end up paying the

heaviest part of the bill in the af-

termath unless a way is found to

deal with Yasser Arafat and his

Palestine Liberation Organiza-tion, which seems increasinglyunlikely — and unless a way is

found to save West Beirut from

Israeli ground attack.

If Arafat feels obliged to die

fighting to keep the the Palesti-

nian cause alive for the future,the Arab world seems sure to

seize upon his martyrdom as a

perfidy specifically committed

by the Americans in arming and

encouraging the Israelis. Arafat

himself already has expressedthis idea.

Palestinian terrorism, whose

destruction the Israelis have in-

voked as a goal to justify the in-

vasion, is then likely to blossom

as never before, uncontrolled

and uncontrollable against

American as well as Israeli

targets. Palestinian moderates

say an indiscriminateassault on

West Beirut will result in ev-

erybody but the terrorists beingkilled.

Those who suggest that the Is-

raelis would be satisfied with

capturing the Palestinian camps— especially Sabra, which is the

nearest thing that the landless

Palestinians have to a capital —

assume that the Palestinian guer-rillas and their Lebaneseallies in-

side the city proper would sur-

render. The probability, how-

ever, is that the guerrillas would

keep on shooting, and the Israel-

is would use planes, artillery and

tanks to dislodge them block byblock, street by street.

Responsible Lebanese politi-cians think that reconstructingthis tormented country, a majoraim proclaimed by Israel and the

United States in this war, would

be impossible for years to come

in the wake of bitterness left bymore Moslem dead and the

Christian Phalangist militia's de

facto alliance with Israel. And

the United States would be

tagged with responsibility for

that nation-rebuilding aspect of

the invasion.

Embarked on a muscular show

of strength toward its Arab

neighbors, Israel seems to be ac-

cording little priority to such

considerations. American of-

ficials in the regionand in Wash-

ington have at times suggestedthat, on the contrary, Israel has

systematically sought to frustrate

U.S. relationships with moderate

Arab regimes such as Jordanand

Saudi Arabia and prefers to be

confronted in the region bymore radical regimes that can-

not look to Washington for any

support.

Thus, radicalization of the re-

gion does not appear at this

stage to be a major deterrentfor

Israel. But potentially high casu-

alties inherent in street fightinghave served as a brake in delay-ing the ground assault againstWest Beirut.

Israeli statements have made it

clear that Jerusalem would pre-

fer to use its overwhelming mili-

tary presence to force the

Palestinians and their Lebanese

allies into unconditional sur-

render without having to resort

to such a potentially costly at-

tack.

But the complexities of Leba-

nese politics appear so far to

have been more intractablethan

military problems forthe Israelis.

It is now 10 days since Israeli

Defense Minister Ariel Sharon

led his troops into Baabda, the

seat of the last remnant of Leba-

nese sovereignty.The Israelis have sought to in-

corporate their Maronite Chris-

tian militia ally, the Phalangists,into the battle, and prod the

Christians into finishing off the

Palestinians for them. The

Phalangists have resisted that

temptation.

Paradoxically, many Lebanese

recognize that without the Is-

raeli military pressure, there is

little chance of forcing change in

the Lebanese political scene,

with its hatredsand pettiness en-

crusted after more than seven

years of violence.

Iran to move troopsby Agence France Presse

Tehran — Iran will send a largeportion of its forces to Lebanon

when the Iran-Iraq war is over,

to "resolve the question of the

war against Israel," PresidentAli

Khamenei said Wednesday.

Khamenei, quoted by Iranian

radio, was speaking aftera meet-

ing of the Higher Defense Coun-

cil, called to consider Iraq'sstatement that it had begunwithdrawing its troopsfrom Iran.

Whenthe question of the war

with Iraq was resolved, he said,Iran would transfer "a large

part" of its forces to Lebanon.

"Our revolution will not see

complete victory withoutunder-

taking actions in occupied

Palestine," he added. Khamenei

is head of the Higher Defense

Council.

On the Iraqi statement,

Khamenei said Iraqi President

Saddam Hussein was "not sin-

cere."

"Hypothetically, if theywithdraw, it would be to avoid

the losses that Iranian forces

would inflict upon them and to

prepare themselves for a new of-

fensive," he said.

"Saddam wants at once to ac-

quire a certain political prestigeand the time needed to preparehimself for a new offensive."

Khameneiadded: "We can re-

main neither in a state of peace

nor war while our cities are

within enemy firing range."

A P Laserphoto/PeninsulaTimes Tribune

OPEN FOR BUSINESS - Two Israeli troopers from the Invading forces seen on guard

duty in frontof a sandbagged pharmacy in East Beirut.

Friday, June 25,1982 THE STANFORD DAILY 3

PnmliMHallJazzIftlilii The L,ve|V Arts at

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Page 4: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

OPINIONS

Viewpoint/Rachelle Marshall

Israelis prevent peaceAnyone who has followed the

war in Lebanon only by readingfront page news reports mightwell believe that Israel's massive

invasion was simply an effort to

achieve peace through sani-

tation.Israel called the assault by20,000 troops and armadas of

bombing planes and warships"Operation Peace in Galilee,"

whose object was to "clean out"

Palestinian terrorists. Israeli of-

.dls referred to the war as a

"purification campaign." Ac-

cording to the press, after "ter-

rorist strongholds" were

bombed into rubble, Israeli

troops went in to "mop up."When terrorists and guerrillas

are the only named targets, it is

difficult to believe that human

blood is being spilled. Perhapsfor this reason columnist JosephKraft could note with satisfaction

that Israel's invasion had opened"corridors of opportunity" for

enhanced U.S. — Israeli in-

fluence in the MiddleEast.

While West Beirut burned un-

der day-long Israeli bombing at-

tacks, President Reagan held a

friendly meeting with Prime

Minister Begin and reaffirmed

U.S. support for Israel. Mean-

while anonymous Pentagon of-

ficials were reported as pleasedat how well American-made

weapons had performed in Is-

rael's lightning attack.

Despite the lack of horror on

the part of U.S. officials, the fact

remains that so far 26,000 peoplehave been killed or wounded in

Lebanon, and 600,000 driven

once more into desperate flightfrom their homes.

Even these statistics don't re-

veal the agoniesof pain and de-

spair inflicted, not on nameless

"terrorists," but on human

beings caught in the waves of in-

discriminateshelling, torn by ex-

ploding cluster bombs as they

lay in hospital beds, or left

without food, water, or medi-

cine in the wastelands that were

once towns and cities.

One of the tragedies of this

war is that its victims have been

made to appear as somehow less

than human; their elimination

(Begin has used the word "ex-

termination")is put forth as sim-

ply a necessary measure to in-

sure Israel's survival.

But in fact, the current havoc

in Lebanon is a result of Israel's

long standing determination to

avoid a possible peace settle-

ment that would provide a per-manent home for the Palestinian

people.

Begin claimed that the June 7

invasion was a means of protect-

ing Israelis in the Galilee from

Palestinian shelling. Butfor near-

ly a year the PLO had scrupulous-

ly observed a cease-fire despiteIsraeli bombing raids and other

provocations. It was only after

massive Israeli bombing raids in

early June (following an as-

sassination attempt against the

Israeli ambassador by ant/'-PLO

elements) that the PLO re-

sponded, and the long-preparedinvasion was given its excuse.

Any excuse would have done;

the invasion was a crucial ele-

ment in the Begin government's

approach to the Arab-Israeli

conflict, an approach that re-

gards anything but a show of

force as a sign of weakness.

Ever since the Camp David

agreements, and especially in

the past year, Israel has been

tightening its hold on the oc-

cupied territories — annexingthe Golan Heights, oustingelected municipal officials on

the West Bank, creating new

lewish settlements, and, most re-

cently, putting down protest

demonstrations with gunfirethat left 18 Palestiniansdead.

After the return of the Sinai to

Egypt on April 26, Israel was ex-

pected underthe terms of CampDavid to take part in serious ne-

gotiations leading to Palestinian

autonomy. But the Begin gov-

ernment has repeatediy made

clear that it had no intention of

reaching an agreement that

would in any way loosen its con-

trol of the occupied territories.

Its alternative was to crush the

PLO, the only organization that

could effectively bargain for the

Palestinians.

The invasion of Lebanon, with

its widespread and prolonged

bombing, was designed to de-

stroy Palestinian leadership and

with it the ability of the Palesti-

nians to achieve self-de-

termination through peaceful

negotiations. Tragically, Israel's

success in weakening current

PLO leadership will leave the

way open for radical Palestinians

to resume terrorism as the onlyalternative to submission.

Last April an Israeli editor and

former Knesset member, Uri Av-

neri, published an open letter

appealing for dialogue between

Israel and the PLO. Avneri has

been in touch with the PLO lead-

ership for several years and was

the recipient of a widely-publi-cized letter from Yassir Arafat's

chief political adviser supporting

the concept of an independentPalestinian state that would live

in peace with Israel.

In criticizing Israel in-

transigence over the occupiedterritories, Avneri wrote: "We

are reaching the point of no re-

turn, the point where there will

be neither a choicenor the pos-

sibility of compromise, and no

chance for peace. The Govern-

ment of Israel, with the approvalof the Labor Alignment, is de-

termined to block forever the

possibility of an Israeli

withdrawl. From there on fhe

road will lead to inevitable wars

and mutual calamity."

Two months later Avneri's

prophecy seemed on the way to

fulfillment. On June 21, News-

week's correspondent in Leba-

non observed: "Israel's advance

had ravaged cities, killing civil-

ians along with armed guerillas,creating new droves of refugeesand new hatreds that would not

burn out soon. Operation Peace

in Galilee may have ended one

period of bloodshed, but it may

also have set the stage for anoth-

er one."

(Rachelle Marshall is a resident

of Stanford.)

Commentary/Brown, Craig and Drye

Elusive, hard to find:

the job search sagaSpending the summer in a

classroom may not be ideal.

Working 40 hours a week maynot epitomize that relaxingsummer you've been waitingfor. But consider yourselves

lucky. Read on, and learn of

the worst scenario here.. . that

of the unemployed.The day begins early in our

trailer, as the three of us lie in

our beds thinking that lyingthere for five extra minutes

may cause us to miss the op-

portunity for that elusive

"job." So we get up.We areat the Student Emplo-

ment Office before the doors

open at 9 a.m. to peer throughthe windows to see if there are

any new listings. If there are

any at all, we wait, in semi-op-timistic anticipation.

Not that these listings will

necessarily do us any good.Twelve students call in on ev-

ery job before it is taken offthe

board. With any luck, we be-

come one of the eight or so

who get an interview.

And those interviews! Theyare often an incredibly de-

meaning experience. But we,

who want jobs very badly, will

go to great lengths to impressour prospective employers.Dress is very important. We

must look business-like, yet

not too formal; responsible,yet personable. Timing is im-

perative. We arrive at the ap-

pointed building about ten

minutes early, allowing time to

get lost inside and still be able

to enter the office atexactly the

correct hour.

During the interview, we re-

member to laugh politely at

dumb jokes, smile, and keepbringing up all the experiencewe've had at similar jobs. We

must be effervescent, but not

too bubbly. And then we hear

the übiquitous "We'll let youknow by the end of the week."

Don't they understand that a

week is eternity when you'relooking for a job?

We have been to more than

20 job interviews among us in

the past two weeks. And all

we've come up with is one 15

hours per week position,

paying $3.85 an hour at a retail

bakery.What is the matter here?

We're not unskilled. We're not

stupid. We're not inex-

perienced either. Maybe he

didn't hear me when I said, "I

worked on a machine just like

this last summer." Maybe she

didn't believe me when I said,"I'm willing to work this fall."

Still we continue our search.

Leaving the SEO behind, we

lower our aims a step. We nev-

er thought we'd find ourselves

cruising the streets of

donwtown Palo Alto, but we'd

heard thatpavementpoundingworks. So we tried it.

We tried City Hall. But the

city enacted a hiring freeze two

days before.

We tried our favorite eating

establishments, bookstores,

and the like. Over and over, we

heard "We're not hiring now,

but if you'd like to fill out an

application ..." The least

negative thing we heardall daywas "I just hired three people

yesterday. If only you'd come a

few days earlier..."Our hopes were so smashed,

we even considered applyingat the Stanford Shopping Cen-

ter. But then we'd have to work

with high school people! Highschool! No,we just couldn't do

that.

We're not impatient. We

know finding a job takes time.

But as certain deadlines draw

nearer, the pressure builds.

One of us had the un-

fortunateexperience of callinghome to ask for rent money.

The conversation went some-

thing like this:

"Dad, I need a $200 advance

to pay my rent."

"Do you have a job?""Well, I had two interviews

today, and they both look

promising.""But do you have a job?""Well, not yet, but I will,

soon. I'm looking really hard."

"I just can't justify loaning

you $200 when you don't have

a job, especially when we have

a nice, empty room waiting for

you here at home."

Our roommate hung up the

phone shortly thereafter. She

turned to us and said, "Theydon't understand...I'm physi-

cally unable to live in that en-

vironment. I would just die!"

As the tension builds, the

three of us are slowly losing our

sanity. We sit around looking at

the telephone. Every time it

rings, we jump at it and yell in

unison "Somebody wants to

offer me a job!"The one who was lucky

enough to land the 15 hour jobsat down and figured out that

at her present salary, she could

pay rent ana have $59 left over.

That translates into $1.05 per

day for food, entertainment,

essentials ... everything. The

situation does not look good.

Our fourth trailermatehas a

full-time job. And she sits

around complaining about her

boss, how boring her job is,

and how she never has any

time to exercise. Somehow,

our sympathy is just not with

her.

(Carolyn Brown, Erin Craig and

Elizabeth Drye are un-

employed students taking the

summer off).

The Stanford Daily

Editorial 497-4632 Business 497-2554

Mike Hale Dan SpiegelmanEditor Business Manager

Managing Editor Karen E. Halbo

Advertising/Production Manager Paul Barber

News Department Editor* — Bill Ainsworth andKaren SpringenWire editor

— Heather Millar

Opinions Department Editor -Erin Craig

Entertainment Department .. .Editor— Tony Kelly

Cinemascope Editor — Jim MattsonRestaurantsEditors — Sam Howe and Lisa Verhovek

Nation/World Department ...Editor — jane West

Photography Department ....Editor

- james Higa

The StanfordDaily (USPS 518-420) is an independent student newspaper ownedand

published by The Stanford DailyPublishing Corporation. The Stanford Daily is publishedMonday through Friday during the academic yearwith the exceptions ofdead week, whenone issue is published, and finals week, when no issues are published. The Daily is

published Tuesdays and Fridays during the eight-week summer quarter. Main office:Storke StudentPublications Building, Stanford, CA 94305. Telephone Editorial (415) 497-

4632; Business (41S) 497-2554.

Nothing on theopinions page necessarily represents a positionof the entire Daily staff,or theleland Stanford Junior University, letters, columnsand cartoonsrepresent only theviews of their authors The Daily regrets that it cannot guarantee the return of any article

submitted. All submittedarticles are subject to editing.Subscription rates: in the United States, Canada and Mexico, $35 per year or $15 per

quarter. Secondclass postage paid at PaloAlto, CA. Send check or moneyorder in advanceto: TheStanford Daily, Storke Publications Building, Stanford, CA 94305.Postmaster: Send

address changes to The Stanford Daily, Storke Publications Building, CA 94305Productionat the ASSU Typesetting Shop, Storke Student Publications Building, Stan-

ford. CA 94305 Printed by Independent Publications, 865 The Alameda, San lose, CACopyright 1982 by TheStanford Daily Publishing Corporation.

This issue's staff:

Night Editor: Erin Craig

4 THE STANFORD DAILY Friday, June 25, 1982

Page 5: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

Art panel commissions controversial sculptureby Karen Halbo

Kenneth Snelson's Mozart 1,the University's newest outdoor

sculpture, has been variouslylabeled "a graceful structure of

heavy stainless steel pipe and

cable/' "(a) haphazard bundle

of metal," and "Mem jungle

Gym."The sculpture, installed this

spring between the bookstoreand Meyer library, stirred up a

campus controversy over the

selection and placement of out-

door sculpture aesthetic here.

Several letters published in the

Daily criticized the sculptureand the committee process bywhich it was selected. But ac-

cording to Law Prof. John Mer-

ryman, chairman of the Univer-

sity Panel on Outdoor Art,"feedback (on the sculpture)from the beginning has been

quite heavily positive."

The decision to commission

the Snelson sculpture, and the

decision on where it would be

located, were made by the Uni-

versity Panel on Outdoor Art. In

addition to Merryman, panelmembers include ChemistryProf. Carl Djerassi, Art Profs. Al-

bert Elsen, Kurt Forster and Paul

Turner, formerVice-Presidentof

Development Joel Smith, and

Director of Planning Phil Wil-

liams. Assisting the panel were

Director Henry Hopkins and As-

sistant Director George Neubert

of the San Francisco Museum of

Modern Art.

The panel is an ongoing com-

mittee which meets "when any-

body gets a gleam in their eye,"said Williams. Members of the

panel try to be aware of the avail-

ability of new sculpture and in-

terested donors.

Williams said, "Whoever

comes up with an opportunityrounds up information, and

John (Merryman) gets the com-

mittee together."Williams praised Elsen for his

contributionsto the panel. "(He)

is usually the radar (for the

panel), because he knows

donors." Williams called Elsen

"the le2ding guy in getting it (the

Snelson sculpture) launched."

The panel had "the idea from

the beginning" to purchase the

sculpture, and was aided by the

Office of Sponsored Projects in

obtaining the funding.The panel was responsible for

getting a supporting grant of

$35,000 from the National En-

dowment for the Arts (NEA).

And while the exact amount

donated for the purchase by

University alumni joAnne and

Julian Ganz was "notavailable,"Daily sources indicate that the

total cost of the sculpture was

"within therange of" $110,000.

In Mozart 1, Snelson uses his

priciples of "tensegrity," de-

scribed by Elsen in Campus Re-

port as "a floating equilibriumbetween compression and ten-

sion using the analogy of the

human body, the tubes repre-

sent the bones (compression)and the cables the muscles (ten-

sion)."

Because of this use of tensegri-ty, the sculpture should prove

highly earthquake-resistant. Ac-

cording to Merryman, another

positive quality of the sculptureis that"it's a see-through piece."The stainless steel sculpture is

also weather resistant, and will

require minimal upkeep.Merryman said he enjoys peo-

ple's reactions to the sculpture."I go over there and stand

around and just listen to their

comments."Merryman cited in-

itial responses: "There was an in-

teresting comment... people

were baffled, they were justcurious, and wanted to know ifit

was permanent."Snelson, assisted by a groupof

engineering students and facul-

ty, supervised the installation of

the sculpture during May 9-12.

He watched as the sculpture was

being put up, and he described

the festive mood as "like a par-

ty." Those who helped, and

talkedwith Snelson, "went away

feeling positive" about Mozart

7, Merryman said.

On May 14, Soto residents

added their own touch to the

newly-dedicated sculpture by

hanging laundry on the lower

cables of the piece. Williams

called the Soto prank "a sort of

whimsical thing" but noted that

the students "could have waited

a while," as Snelson had been on

campus for the dedication onlytwo days earlier.

Snelson, a native Oregonian,is an internationally-known ar-

tist who has works in American,

European and Australian public

collections, and will soon be

honored with a retrospective ex-

hibition at the GuggenheimMuseum in New York.

Both the Ganz's graduatedfrom the University in 1951, and

their collection of 19th-centuryAmerican art was exhibited last

year at the National Gallery in

Washington, D.C.

Artie Streiber/Daily

GRACE OR CHAOS? — Aclose-up viewofMozart 1, Stan-

ford's newest outdoorsculpture, which was installed May12.

Bell Labs 'engineers' graduate scholarship programby Karen Springen

One-quarter of the students

receiving masters degrees in

electrical engineering hereeach

year are sponsored by Bell Labo-

ratories, which pays the Univer-

sity full tuition for each student

and gives an additional sum

roughly equal to the cost of tui-

tion to the student's depart-ment. This makes the total

payment per student around

twice the normalcost.

According to Madelyn Hunt,

assistant dean at the School of

Engineering, Bell gives a "gift" to

each student's department "to

aid their educational program."

Hunt added that the gift is not

required by the University and

that the money is placed in un-

restricted department funds.

The Bell policy of giving the

University extra money for stu-

dents it sponsors has no effect on

the admissions process, accord-

ing to Hunt. However, Hunt said

that a student's employmentwith Bell would be listed on a

normalapplication.

Many students, upon accep-

tance into the graduate pro-

gram, apply to Bell and other

corporations for sponsorship,she said, adding that this pro-

cedure was independent of the

University.In addition to paying full tui-

tion for each of the 100 students

they sponsor hereeach year, Bell

pays the students reduced

salaries. Because they do not

have to serve as teaching assis-

tants or hold down a job, thestu-

dents are able to receive their

degree in one year. Thus, theyreceive the nickname "OYOCs"

(one year on campus). Normally,

graduate students work or serve

as teaching assistants to finance

theirstudy.The program's fringe benefits

also help increase its attractive-

ness to students. For example,Bell pays for its students' reloca-

tion to California. (Bell Labs is

East coast-based, and Bell stu-

dents are also generally from the

East.)

According to Jose Enciso, a

Bell-sponsored graduate stu-

dent in electrical engineering,Bell also foots the bill for two

trips home during the year.

Enciso added that upon com-

pletion of their studies, students

are under no legal obligation to

work for Bell. But he said that

about 96 of 100 Bell students

here last year went to work for

Bell after receiving their

degrees.To obtain Bell sponsorship,

student's must hold under-

graduate degrees in technical

fields. Fifty of the 100 students

here are electrical engineers.Other popular fields includeop-erations research, statistics, and

mechanicalengineering.According to Enciso, Bell's re-

cruitmentprocedures are similar

to those of other companies.

"They just show up on campus

with the rest of the companies,"he said. Students have a brief in-

terview on campus. But Enciso

said, "The real interview is the

plant trip."After the plant trip, Bell re-

cruits give the company anorder

of department preference.Selected students thenwork for

Bell the summer before gradu-ate school.

Bell does not "police" its stu-

dents while they are at Stanford

but the company's "Educationin

Training" program does oversee

student performance. Like other

graduate students, the Bell stu-

dents must maintain a "B" aver-

age to graduate. But in contrast

to other students, they are not

permitted to take non-technical

courses.

Enciso said Bell allows its re-

cruits to choose from about a

dozen schools. He notedthe ap-

peal of the West coast to Bell's

Eastern recruits. Most Bell labo-

ratories are in New Jersey (the

farthest west being in Denver).

Enciso added that Bell's fa-

vored schools include Stevens,

Princeton, MIT, Purdue,

Carnegie and Cornell.

Enciso claimed that most pro-

fessors are not particularly fond

of Bell students. "Professors like

to have people stay for drawn-

out research." This eliminates

Bell students, who are required

to finish within one year.

Friday, June 25,1982 THE STANFORD DAILY 5

Mydoctor

pronouncedme coredofcancer.

Myboss

didnt.My boss didn't under-

stand that I was healthyagain.

So i was let go.,

A lot of people are like

my boss. They think that

everyone dies of cancer I

thought so. too Until the

American Cancer Society,

through one of its service

and rehabilitationprograms,

helped me return to a

normal life

The ACS also has local

Units that help Americans

who've never had cancer

understand it better.

Today, more and more,

cancer is a curable disease

Ignorance about cancer is

curaoie. too.

Cancer Soctty

mnwrtcarmwrt i*nf r.n:jHt» u»Fi'Hic*»vrT

• HOLLYWOOD ON POLITICS •

>>»»>>>••>•>

Stanford Memorial Church will present a film series

on the four Wednesdays of July at 7 pm in Room

320 (Geology Corner) at a cost of $2 per person.

There will be refreshments and discussion

following.

July 7 Mr. Smith Goes to Washington with James

Stewart and Jean Arthur (1939)

July 14 All the King's Men with Broderick

Crawford, Joanne Dru and Mercedes

McCambridge (1949)

July 21 The Last Hurrah with Spencer Tracy,

Jeffrey Hunter and Pat O'Brien (1958)

July 28 The Candidate with Robert Redford and

Melvyn Douglas (1972)

An Unusual Summer ExperienceFew Share and None Forget

There is a certain magic to the The Club fleet includes 10

sky that has fascinatedpeople modem airplanesfor centuries. One flight is all it (Cessna-150/152's, Aerobatic

will take to convince you there C-152, C-172's, C-172RG

is nothing quite like it.andTurbo-210aircraft).

With the Stanford Flying Club StanfordFlying Club members

Solo-Course you can become can flyplanes for less than 22

part of this adventure at a very cents per mile!That's less than

affordableprice. the real cost ofa car, includingMost pilots obtain a Solo fuel, maintenance and

License in about 14 hours of insurance.

flight time. Many members Could you afford not to learn

have completed a Solo to drive?Come fly with us. To

License for less than $432 in scheduled lesson, or just toget

just a few weeks. free information, call todayMoreadvanced training is also 941-8818 (1:00-5:30 pm).

available. Stanford Flying ClubI 941-8818

Page 6: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

6 THE STANFORD DAILY Friday, June25,1982

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Page 7: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

Summer conferences bring campus varietyby Lisa Tseng

"Summer at Stanford is green

grass, beige buildings, red-tile

roofs, and blue sunny skies. Days

are warm, nights are cool, and

the humidity is comfortablylow." Sound appealing? Over

125 conference groups thought

so. And they responded to this

conference management ad-

vertisement by scheduling their

conferences here so that

thousands of could

use University facilities to ac-

complish their varied goals.During the upcoming summer

months beginning in mid-June

and ending in mid-September,

approximately 125 conferences

and 12,500 conferees will visit

the University for anywherefrom two days to 13 weeks.

A variety of groups will utilize

campus facilities to fulfill the

needs of their specially fash-

ioned curriculums. Participantsare of all ages, and many come

from as far away as China or Bra-

zil while others are as local as

nearby Palo Alto.

Sports conferences such as

pole vaulting camps, tennis or-

ganizations, karate associations,and cheerleading groups em-

ploy the University's extensive

athletic facilities throughout the

summer. Business trainees and

technical executives, on the oth-

er hand, will hold daily lectures

The resort-like atmosphere is furthured with

linen services, maids, messengers, and porters.

Lounges and outdoor patio furniture are

removed from winter storage to liven up

courtyards and decks. Any conference desiring a

special banquet, barbeque, or cocktail party can

select from a completerangeofcatering services

and entertaining facilities.

and workshops in auditoriums

and meetinghallsaboutcampus.

Food service is provided pre-

dominantly in Wilbur for those

residing on the East side of cam-

pus. Groups can elect to dine

privately as in Storey House or

decide not to includemeal plans

at all, especially groups working

at a distance from their resi-

dences such as law and medical

seminars.

The resort-like atmosphere is

furthured with linen services,

maids, messengers, and porters.

Lounges and outdoor patiofurnitureare removed from win-

ter storage to liven up courtyardsand decks. Any conference de-

siring a special banquet,

barbeque, or cocktail party can

select from a complete rangeof

catering services and entertain-

ing facilities.

The size and scope of summer

conferences has grown dramati-

cally from the 317 peoplewhoat-tended conferences in 1947 to

the 5800 who attendedin 1967 to

this year's total of 12,500. The

program has grown because of a

strong marketing effort and the

high quality of the services of-

fered, according to Conference

Manager Lois Fariello, who has

witnessed much of that growthin her 22 year tenure.

All profits, received from the

threemonths of conferences are

put back into the University'sgeneral operating budget, she

said.

Nearly 50 students are also

provided with summer em-

ployment by helping out the

constant flow and change of

conferences. Some work as part-

time porters and bartenders,

others act as resident assistants

and night watchmen.

The variety of conferences in-

clude some organized around

political topics. This year the

Summer Alumni College bringsalumni back from July 30 to Au-

gust 8 for a conferencecenteringon a New Conservatism theme.

Such a seminar is held annually,and each year a different theme

is selected. China and Marxism

are two themes seen in past

years.

A group of about 20 peoplewill attend a summer sleep camp

sponsored by the Psychiatry De-

Nearly 50 students are also provided with

summer employment by helping out the

constantflow and change ofconferences. Some

work as part-time porters and bartenders, others

act as resident assistants and night watchmen.

partment. In this conference in-

dividuals of all ages will studysleep disorders and the particu-lars of the sleep state.

Upward Bound and MigrantEducation conferences are de-

signed to let childrenexplore ac-

ademic and social opportunitiesavailable to them. Special in-

struction in math, reading, or

computertechnology allows the

youngsters to broaden ex-

periences and heighten academ-

ic interest.

One of the most popular cate-

gories of conferences centers

around athletics. Four spirit as-

sociations will train cheerleaders

in three 5-day camps while judodelegations from Japan and Jor-

danian tennis teams will both be

at Stanford some time in July.National events like the

Runner's World corporate CupTrack Meet and U.S. Water Polo

Championships will be spon-

sored by the Athletic Depart-ment in july and August respec-

tively.

One of the larger and more

exclusive conferences, the Stan-

ford Executive Program, broughthere by the Graduate School of

Business, will reside in Lagunita

for an eight-week stay from June

20 to August 12. This program

draws business executives from

firms and corporations across

the country to learn about up-dated developments and dis-

coveries in the business world.

Typical of the many sciences

conferences is the Beijing Elec-

tron-Positron Collider Design

Group. This group will send 28

engineers from the People's Re-

public of China.

In the medical profesion,therewill be six independent in-

terns from other universitiesstu-

dying in the opthamology de-

partment. Often science ton-

ferences working under a grant

come here to share results and

discuss new findings with the

University.

Fariello predicted that the

week of July 18 will be the heav-

iest week for summer con-

ferences with 2044 conferees on

campus.

We need you! Tired of classes and summer

jobs? How about writing for the summer

Daily? Anyone interested in productionaspects is welcome as well. Stop by the Dailyoffices in the Storke Publications Building

any time. If we're nothere, leave your name

and phone number. You are guaranteed to

find us in on Monday and Thursday nightssince the

paper is published each Tuesdayand Friday. So stop by, find a story

assignment, have some popcorn....

Friday, June 25,1982 THE STANFORD DAILY 7

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The Glass Fiber Division of Evans Products Company is seeking

mechanical/chemical engineers with fluid mechanics and heat

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Page 8: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

CINEMA SCOPEExcellent ����

Good ���

Fair ��

Better than TV �

Guano

The General ����

New Varsity, Palo Alto

Buster Keaton's silent films are

masterpieces of comic timing.The General is a clockwork par-

able of the civil war: Keaton, a

railroad engineer, saves his hon-

or through a stunningly or-

chestrated series of calamities.Keaton's world balances be-

tween the happy accident and to-

tal disaster —and it's not unusual

for the two to turn out to be the

same thing.Keaton's gift is for making the

fantastic seem ordinary. By com-

parison, the ordinary seems

hilariously out of place.Plays Monday with another

Keaton film, Steamboat Bill Jun-ior.

— Jim Mattson

Star Trek II

Palo Alto SquareAn enjoyably dopey movie,

which strolls fearlessly down the

dark corridor that lies between

pretentiousness and utter

absurdity. Most of the cast of the

'60s television series is back. The

characters have been given pro-

motions (except, rather upset-

tingly, Uhura, who's still in her

old position of hyper-space sec-

retary), but the dialogue they

speak is still as weirdly stilted as

ever. Nicholas Meyer, who

directed the often charming sci-

ence fantasy Time After Time, is

at the helm, and does a goodjobof keeping things moving fast

enough so the movie never reallygrates on you.

— J.M.

The Sound of Music �

Fox, Redwood CityJulieAndrews plays nursemaid

to seven singing lentils and their

crusty old father. She loses her

nunliness in the process, but ev-

erything's okay in the end be-

cause she gets to be a singing

mommy instead.

Plays Sunday with Fiddler on

the Roof.

— J.M.

Shoot the Moon ����

Fox, Redwood City

Perhaps the most intense ex-

pression of domestic pain ever

conceived for American movies.

Diane Keaton and Albert Finney,as a couple whose marriage is

breaking up, and Dana Hill, as

their sensitive eldest daughter,give superlative performances;this is the kind of acting that is

authentic in every detail because

it seems to have been dug from

the bowels. Bo Goldman's

screenplay can lay claim to beingamong the best film writing ever

done by an American. The direc-

tion by Alan Parker is surprisinglygraceful, genuine and deeplymoving; it suggests a more-

agonized domestic Renoir.

Plays Saturday only with Two

for the Road, a comedy which

stars Audrey Hepburn and Albert

Finney.— Steve Vineberg

RedsNew Varsity, Palo Alto

An intelligent, unconven-

tional, craftsmanlike movie, re-

markably coherent and sus-

tained. The first part, most of

which is given over to the

burgeoning relationship be-

tween reporter-revolutionaryjack Reed (Warren Beatty) and

would-be writer Louise Bryant

(Diane Keaton), could stand

restructuring, but in part two, af-

ter the experience of the Russian

Revolution, the two characters

are jerked into adulthood, and

they turn out to be fascinatingpeople whose interaction trulyholds the screen. Beatty and

Keaton's acting may never have

been better than it is in the last 90

minutes, and they are superblysupported by Jack Nicholson as

Eugene O'Neill and Maureen

Stapleton as Emma Goldman.

Plays Saturday and Sundaywith the comedy short, The

Dove.

— S.V.

Atlantic City ����

New Varsity, Palo Alto

One character in Atlantic Citytells another, "I never wear seat

belts — I don't believe in grav-

ity." It's evident that director

Louis Malle and screenwriter

john Cuare don't believe in grav-

ity, either — their movie, which

deals with love, chance, and co-

caine-peddling, levitates effort-

lessly between black comedy and

pathos without ever quitesettlingin either condition. Susan Saran-

don plays Sally, a waitress study-ing to be a blackjack dealer, and

BurtLancaster plays Lou, a former

second-rate gangster nowturned

second-rate numbers runner.

Both are better than they've ever

been.

Tonightonly, with Pretty Baby.— J.M.

Foul Play **

Sunday, MemorialAuditorium

Colin Higgins' prefab comedytries very hard to updateHitchcock's comedy thrillers; it!ends up turning the droll

Hitchcock wit into the stuff of TV

sitcoms. The Goldie Hawn-ChevyChase pairing has its moments

(and Goldie is worth watching in

almost anything), but Chase's

two-bit Cary Grant send-upwears thin before the end is

reached. Set in San Francisco; the

obligatory car chase may make

your head hurt.

—Ron Lillejord

MissingNew Varsity, Palo Alto

Costa-Gavras' politicalmelodrama take place in Chile

during the 1973 coup, but it

seems to be set in hell. The film,

made with an open leftist bias, is a

stunning demonstration of what

it is like to be in a country in a

state of seige, and as the wife of

the missing American, Sissy

Spacek does her best work in

years. However, there is a second

plot — the politicization of her

father-in-law, dreadfully playedby Jack Lemmon — that nearlywrecks the movie.

Plays Tuesday and Wednesdaywith The Amateur.

— S.V.

8 THE STANFORD DAILY Friday, June 25, 1982

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Page 9: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

ENTERTAINMENT

Spielberg weaves magicby Steve Vineberg

The setting for the openingscene of Steven Spielberg's E.T.

the Extra-Terrestrial is a fairy-tale sky full of stars that closelyresembles the one in Close En-

counters of the ThirdKind: it's

the kind of sky that spaceships

glide through on their way to

earth. E.T. begins where Close

Encounters peaked — with the

descent of an alien craft — and

gets better and better from

there. It's an absolutely entran-

cing movie — a miracle; when

you walk out of the theater af-

ter it's over, your visual sense of

whatever surrounds you is mys-

teriously heightened for a

while, and you may feel as if

you've just been granted some

special grace.

The plot of the film is simple,but Melissa Mathison's

screenplay invests the narrative

with clarity and a consistent vi-

sion. Mathison worked on the

script for Carroll Ballard's The

Black Stallion, a wonderful

movie that shared with E.T. an

understanding of how children

regard the world, and a vivid

sense of the magical. In both

movies, the children blessed

with a special relationship to

the title characters have lost

fathers; both films offer emo-

tional compensation to their

young protagonists. In E.T., El-

liott (Henry Thomas), who is

about ten, his kid sister Gertie

(Drew Barrymore, of the Bar-

rymores), and his brother

•Michael (Robert M a c -

Naughton), who seems to have

just rounded the corner into

teenhood, live with their

mother Mary (Dee Wallace),

because their father has run off

to Mexico with another wom-

an. Mary has a loose, friendly

rapport with her kids and with

Michael's bicycle demon pals(K.C. Martel, Sean Frye, Tom

Howell); they're very fond of

her but they know she'll let

them get away with murder.

Wallace makes Mary both ex-

tremely appealing and child-

ish-spacey enough so that we

can see why a grown man

might leave her. She's the kind

of mother who, nestled up

against the pillows of her

daughter's bed to read Peter

Pan to her, is as transported bythe story as Gertie'is — the kind

of mother who loves the idea

of Halloween so much that she

dresses up for it, too, even

though she's stuck at home

while the children go trick-or-

treating.Elliott is the first of the trio to

become acquainted with the

extra-terrestrial ("E.T." is their

name for him) who, terrified bythe enormous humans who

track through the tall grass af-

ter him when his spaceship ac-

cidentally abandons him, has

been camping out in the fami-

ly's toolshed.(This chase, much

of which is shot from E.T.'s

point of view, is ingeniously ed-

ited by Carol Littleton and

almost unbearably exciting; it's

such a riveting grabber that

fear that the rest of the movie

will be a disappointment. Such

fears are groundless.)

Spielberg handles the initial

encounter between these two

with delicate wit; somehow he

lets us feel both Elliott's fear

and E.T.'s. He achieves the

same effect again when Gertie

sees E.T. for the first time,

though the results are much

more explosive and much fun-

nier.

To Gertie, who dresses him

up like one of her dolls, E.T. is

another marvel in a world still

new enough to be full of them,

but Elliott and Michael are old

enough to have acquired a cer-

tain amount of suburban blase

and therefore to be trulyenchanted by their visitor. E.T.

brings out the best in the boys— their sweetness and sensi-

tivity and loyalty. In this most

benevolent of fantasies,

Spielberg and Mathison have

provided a kind world to

sheltertheiralienin, a world —

a child's world, of course —

that is ready to receive him.

There isn't a moment of crueltyin the film (though there is a

great deal of suspense), and

Spielberg's vision is so over-

whelming that he makes it dif-

ficult for us to conceive of

cruelty while we are watchingthe picture. E.T. taps into El-

liott's feelings, establishing so

strong a bond that when E.T.

feels pain or fear, Elliott has an

immediate sympathetic re-

sponse. E.T. enriches Elliott's

life beyond measure by accept-

ing his love and, in return, ex-

panding his capacity for love.

Spielberg uses his filmmaker's

magic to tap into our feelings,and the result is a movie of ex-

traordinary emotional power

culminating in one of the most

strangely moving denoue-

ments a director has ever

brought off.

Indeed, Spielberg's giftshave neverbeen so richly in ev-

idence before. I found Raiders

of the Lost Ark dismaying be-

cause, for all the boys' adven-

ture serial spirit it was

purported to possess, I

couldn't see any spirit in it at

all; coldly efficient and re-

markably unimaginative, it

gave off bad vibes — as if

Spielberg hadn't really enjoyed

Friday, June25, 1982 THE STANFORD DAILY 9

Please see page 15

IT'S NO

MYSTERY...

why Stanford's Discovery Film

Series is the best bargain in town.

Travel the world in the comfort of your seat at

Stanford. See nine spectacular films

personally narrated by their producers.Visit Egypt, England, Morocco, Austria,

Alaska, Peru, Mew Zealand, Belgium, and

Holland.

•Mine matinees: series price $25 (non-

reserved seating)—saves $2!

•Mine evenings: series price $29.50 (reserved

seating)—saves $6.50!

Call 497-2551 for a free brochure.

University Events and Services

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Page 10: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

Chic 'Diva' is self-consciously entertainingby Steve Vineberg

The high-tech chic of Diva,directed by Jean-Jacques Beinix

and shot by Philippe Rousselot,

is dazzling; all the surfaces glit-ter. I haven't seen such a Ver-

sailles of a movie since Barocco,

by Beinix's fellow countryman

AndreTechine— and Diva, lack-

ing Barocco's opacity and ex-

istential angst about identity, is

much more fun. Beinix's chief

virtue, aside from his deftness, is

his determination not to take

himselfseriously; the witty, free-

wheeling way in which he has

put the picture together, makinghis camera doubleback on itself

with tantalizing self-conscious-

ness, seems to be based on the

careless assumption that this lit-

tle thriller is inconsequential.You can't complain that Diva

doesn't mean anything, because

Beinix's style and the weightless,hollow shimmer of Hilton Mc-

Connico's interior designs de-

clare it in every frame. Of

course, in Diva style is content.

Like Techine, 'Beinix works

through a memory bank ofolder

movies, and bits and pieces of

Children ofParadise, The Seven

Year Itch, Citizen Kane, The

Trial, The French Connection,

etc. show up in amusingly al-

tered form in Diva. It's an

energized junkyard ofa movie in

which all thepop scraps set each

other in motion in startling ways,

as in a Rube Goldberg contrap-

tion — and the scraps represent

other worlds beside the movies.

An incidental character named

Lindbergh owns a cat named

Ayatollah; a pair of hoods, one

with hair slicked back like a

parody of a Hollywoodbad guy,

and the other sporting a punk

haircutand patent leatherboots,

stalk the streets of Paris armed

with ice picks. The hero, Jules

(Frederic Andrei), a young

mailman on a moped, has a soft,feminine face and a slender,

flaccid body; naive and im-

pressionable, he recalls the Jean-

Pierre Leaud of the middle and

late '60s, and when he plays a

scene with Alba(Thuy An Luu), a

gorgeous Vietnamese adoles-

cent who slips stolen records

into her portfolio with the un-

flappable cool of a Godard

gamine, you think of La

Chinoise. Though it's far from

experimental, Diva contains se-

quences that suggest Godard at

his most playful, like a scene in

which Jules and Alba"share" the

experience of a piece of music

by listening to it on separate sets

of headphones. (The alienation

joke might beGodard's.)

Jules is enamored of a black

opera singer, Cynthia Hawkins

(Wilhelminia WigginsFernandez); unbeknownst to

her, he owns a pirated tape of

one of her concerts — a singular

prize since she has never re-

leased a record, believing that

music should be "an exceptional

moment for the singer and the

auditor —

a unique ex-

perience." But one night Jules'

home, a loft full of wrecked cars

and murals of cars, is ransacked

and the tape stolen. (The scene

he returns to — tape strung

about the room and a program

from a Cynthia Hawkins concert

spinning on his turntable — has

the extraordinary richness of a

Bertolucci image.) Beinix and

Jean Van Hamme, who togetheradapted the script from a novel

by Delacorta, provide a second

tape, too: an expose by the mis-

tress of a vice chief, which she

slips into the basket ot Jules'

moped before she is ice-pickedto death outside a cafe. The

doubling of tapes is not only in-

genious in narrative terms; it

also sets up the film's funniest

moment. (Perhaps Beinix was

thinking of the hilarious mix-upsin Bringing Up Baby, with its twin

leopards, when he structured

some of Diva.) In fact, doublingseems to be the motif in this

movie: there is a black whore to

mirror Cynthia Hawkins, a pairof Taiwanese underworld typesto mirror not only the punks but

also the coyly named Alba

("white" in a number of lan-

guages), and two marvelous car

chases that, in a curious way,

mirror each other. (In the first,

Jules, on his moped, can be far

more flexible than his pursuers

and eludes them; in the second,he is on foot and therefore at a

distinct disadvantage.) And the

tapes can be seen as a form of

mirror, as well.At the endof the

film, Jules presents Cynthia with

the illegal tape he made of her,

allowing her to listen to her own

voice for the first timein her life;

he brings her the gift ofself-con-

sciousness.

At first, Jules' loft reminded

me of the body shop where

Frederic Forrest worked in One

from the Heart, and in a sense

Diva and One from the Heart are

souvenirs from the same fan-

tasyland. The difference is that

Diva doesn't come off lookinglike self-indulgence; Beinix,who has a cunning editorial

sense, works with his audience

in mind, as Coppola doesn't

seem to do these days. Beinix

doesn't stay locked up in the pop

playground from which he

draws inspiration; he brings out

the parts that he thinks will de-

light us the most. There'sa quali-ty of show and tell to this movie,

even though it moves fast (to a

terrific jazzy score by Vladimir

Cosma), and Beinix's eye for col-

lage isn't quite like any other di-

THE DIVA HERSELF — WilhelmeniaWiggins Fernandez stars as famous opera singer in the

French thriller Diva.

CROSSWORD PUZZLEEdited by EUGENE T. MALESKA

ACROSS

1 It'sbetter than

no loaf

5 A's slugger10 Fools

14 Winglike15 Tether

1 d'Orsay,Paris

17 "Mens

18 Witch

19 Single20 Rome "must"

23 Founder of

Stoicism

24 Spanish queen25 Kitchen aid

28 Slangynegative

31 Fail tohit it off

35 What "video"

means

38 Kind of brick

or cement

38 Bee follower

39 Rome "must"

42 Seamstress's

concern

43 Roman deputy44 Old English

coins

45 Follow

47 Byelorussia is

one: Abbr.

48 Mosey49 Catch a thief

51 Othello's

"consigliere"53 Rome "must"

01 Where tovisit

the Taj Mahal

02 Kind ofpool03 Caboose's

locale

04 An Arnaz

05 S.A. timber

tree

00 Salmagundi

07 Do an energy-

saving job08 Build

09 Keenan or Ed

DOWN

1 Fastener

2 Jai

3 Actress Turner

4 Unnerves

5 Poe's middle

name

0 Arguments7 Doll's word

8 B Baker

9 Dieter's worry

10 Rat on the mob

11 Dad's sister,

e.g.

12 Carson's

predecessor

13 Barn's

neighbor21 Last letter

22 "Peopleof the

sun"

25 Supple

20 White-faced

27 MusicologistTaylor

29 A.k.a.

30 Like a ham's

performance32 Sour

33 Plant part34 Writer

Hermann

30 So, in Scotland

37 Guevara

40 Kilt feature

41 Song from

"Annie"

46 Use a claw

hammer

48Ten-pct.

person

50 Recipeinstruction

52 On the move

53 Pet rock and

hula hoop54 S-shaped

molding5 Major56 Via Appia's kin

57 Hawaiian

goose

58 Slippery59 Conceited

60 Something to

pump

10 THE STANFORD DAILY Friday, June 25,1982

Please see page 11

• Permanent Centers open • Opportunity to make updays, evenings and missed lessons.

• bmhourly cost. Dedicated* .**»#«>

full-time staffmaterials constantly

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approx.10 hr/wk. and own transportation.

FOR MORE INFORMATION COME BY THE

■ Office of Student Activities, 2nd Floor Tresidder, mM

OR CALL 497-3542.

Applications due Wednesday, June 30.

Page 11: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

rector's. In one shot, Alba roller skates through a pen-

thouse while an oil bubble forms blue-tinted waves in a

kinetic glass sculpture; in another, her cellophane dress

rustles as she sips Coke through a siphon and

hopscotches on a nude painted on the floorof Jules' loft.

A scene in which Jules shelters Cynthia with an umbrella

as they stroll, in silhouette, behindan arch is like a slight-

ly preposterous echo of the romanticism found in Bo

Widerberg's and Jacques Demy's movies. And there's

one wonderfully telling image: in a whore's boudoir, a

revolving white light filtered through an empty reel of

film functions as a home-madestrobe. It locates Diva's

particular brand of self-consciousness, just as Richard

Rush did in the opening sequence in The Stunt Man,

with the camera clicking away up in the sky, and it an-

nounces Beinix's aim in making the picture: to givepleasure. He's a pretty high-class whore at that.

Carl Reiner's Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid has a seduc-

tive gimmick: the private-eye hero, Rigby Reardon

(Steve Martin), trying to track downthe killer of his beau-

tiful client's father, shares the screen with the stars of a

dozenand a half film noirs (Bogart, Bette Davis, Burt Lan-

caster, Joan Crawford, Cagney, etc.) The editor, Bud

Molin, employs several techniques to effect this comic

strategy, so that the film doesn't always just cut from a

close-up of Martin to a clip from an old movie and back

again, and there is much to be said for his technical

wizardry (though it doesn't quite match up to Richard

Marks' in the Astaire-Rogers number in Martin's last

film, Pennies from Heaven). The trouble is, the clev-

erness of Reiner's and Molin's gag sabotages the picture.Most of the clips have considerably more style than Re-

iner shows in the transitional sequences; when he has to

fall back on his own wit to parody the thrillers of the

19405, he can't seem to come up with anything. (There is

one exception: the credits are lovely — Miklos Rozsa

must have had a grand time writing the theme music —

and they segue into a fine opening shot that sends upThe Maltese Falcon.) Reiner's staging is clumsy and un-

exciting; even the climax of the 1949 The Bribe with Ava

Gardner and Vincent Price, directed by M-G-M hack

Robert Z. Leonard, shows him up.

Dead Men has its pleasures — Steve Martin, chiefly, a

nice bit by Reni Santonias a banana republic cop, some

tip-top one-liners that Martin probably wrote for himself

— but outside of its one gimmick, it isn't terribly im-

aginative. I suspect that even Steve Martin fans who are

not familiar with Hollywood film noir will grow impa-tient with it; Reiner has made the most blatantly ex-

clusive film buff movie since High Anxiety. He has even

built in a trivia quiz: Reardon sometimesmakes jokey al-

lusions to the other "characters" beforewe actually see

the clips.Reiner may not have much style — nor does Rachel

Ward, who plays Reardon's client, Julia Forest, thoughshe does have class — but Steve Martin is a wonder. He

somehow strikes the idealbalancebetween finely honed

parody (he looks great in the suits designed for him byEdith Head, whose final assignment was this film) and his

own neo-dadaisttype ofcomedy; his timing and deliveryare just about perfect. He was so astonishing in Pennies

from Heaven, and Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid is reallysuch a doodle, that one might have expected him to

mark time on this round, but he seems to come

equipped with his own energy kit. He must be the most

unusually gifted comic actor in recent American movies.

SMOKING IN THE BOYS' ROOM — Richard Bohr-

inger relaxes under the gamine gaze of Thuy An

Luu in Jean-Jacques Beineix's Diva.

Friday, June 25, 1982 THE STANFORD DAILY 11

'Dead Men'for film buffs only

Continued from page 10

creating pastries and breads for ilie

discriminating palate

Specializing in CIIIP '

"ALL BUTTER" 112 Itl&ODBis |CAKES fprollflC l ylonoarDANISH r/x

A\J IV# ffipfffsiCROISSANT? & flVfiflCONTINENTAL PASTRIES

Serving Coffee. 8. Teasbakery icoffe. hoose

Day, & Evening*# 415-326-8485

Sales Both Retail &ai!> 6i* *WJ;>

Wholesale 550 waverley, palo alto

-

The Lively Arts at Stanford

midsummer

MOZART

FESFiVfIL

directed by George Cleve

comes to Stanford this summer!

Hiree Friday evenings at 8 pm,

in Memorial Auditorium

with

� Menahem Pressler, piano �

July 16

�Daniel Kobialka, violin �

July 23

*Lydia Artymhv, piano �

luly 30

Series tickets (all three concerts): $25, $22, $17;

students $19, $16, $11

Single tickets: $10, $8, $6; students $8, $6, $4

Call Tresidder Ticket Office. 497-4317. BASS.

Ticket ron. andother Bay Area agencies.

Mozart Festival |6fSJ|Scott's Seafood

Plan a complete evening out - fine music and fine food.

Mozart Festival / Scott's Seafixxl a concert and dinner

special. For the price of your ticket (sintfle or series)

plus $20 per person you will receive a complete fresh

seaf<xxl dinnerand complimentary wine at Scoff 's

Senfood drill Bar in Palo Alto.Order this special

package l*»fore |une 30 and receive preferred seating.

Dinners may be used anytime before August 31. 1982.

For more informationabout the concert —

dinner package call (415)468-5939.

Midsummer is

READING TIME...

Select from the

Bay Area's most

complete paperback hook store:

KEPLER'S

Books & MagazinesVictoria Lane

800 Block El Camino Real

Menlo Park

Free Parking Open Seven Days & Evei-

Tfrrnl I rrnl

A PLACE FOR YOU• # +

11 AM University Public Worship

Sunday, June 27

Conviction

and CharityErnlfe W.D. Young

Acting Dean of the Chapel

Adult Classes 9:30-10:30 AM Round Room

"Catalytic Literature:

Books that Change Lives"

9 AM Communion Sen/ice

Infant Care and Sunday School at 11:00 AM

Wheelchair Access

11 /OASISI;

! [ atmosphere j!

(| 326-8896 !;! { 241 El Camino 11]» Menlo Park j I

visit I 1

THE BOARD WALK < \

| 4940 EL CAMINO ! (J l LOS ALTOS ; |

Country French Cuisine

Intimate

V Dining V

■ Atmosphere ■

— Cocktails —

Luncheon Entrees

Dinner Entrees

CrepesSalad Bar

Desserts

Espresso

'All our entrees

and crepes

urc prepared

fresh dailv

<oMsDt<v»

I Lunch 11:30-2:00

Dinner from 5:30

Sunday■ Champagne Brunch ■

1010-2:00 ■

(closed Mondayl

941-2782

355 Slate Street

Downtown Los Altos IM

i *

Page 12: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

RESTAURANTS

Fine French cuisine a la Monique and sons

by Ron Garwood

Monique247 Hamilton Avenue

Palo Alto

326-6336

When my friendand I entered Monique,we had three

surprises: the hostess, Michelle, was a classmateofmine;

the sight of the dessert cart had me drooling before we

were seated; and the restaurant is not at all what one

would expect. Judging by the location, it appears to be

part of the curious Cardinal Hotel, which, fortunately, it

is not. Instead we walked out of the bustle of Hamilton

Avenue into the unpretentious calm of Monique.

We waited a few minutes before being led to our table

— a bit small, but in tone with the cozy atmosphere. The

hostess brought the menu and stayed to supplement it,

because it gives only a general idea of what isavailable.

She named and explained the main dish specials, the

types of soups, crepes, omelettes and quiches. At first, it

was a bit disconcerting to dealwith such a sketchy menu,

but I eventually realized that the best way to assure fresh-

ness and quality — without having to print new menus

daily — is Monique'sway.

I'm a great fan of baguettes and of butter sculpture,and enjoyed both while Jeff perused the wine list. The

selection ofwines is uncommonly well done,with partic-

ular attention given to the small California wineries that

Denis, Monique's son, visits regularly.We decided on an excellent chardonnay ($l3), recom-

mended by the waitress. She even suggested that we

keep it cold in a bucket, brought promptly with the wine

(a first in the restaurants that I have visited in this area).

Jeff, my lunch partner,ordered the pate Monique,wa-

iercress soup, poached salmon, a raspberry genoise and

capuccino. I had salmon mousse, soup, chicken in wine

and the same raspberry cake with a cup of coffee.

Jeff thought the pate had an odd texture (too much

like meat loaf) but he seemed to enjoy it. And althoughthe waitress brought him smoked salmon instead of the

poached salmon he ordered, he liked it and we both

raved over the raspberry masterpiece. It so happenedthat Denis had recently returned from a farm where he

had selected the raspberries. Incidentally, Denis pre-

pared everything on the impressive dessert cart. My

mousse was sensational. A lady at the table next to us in-

quired about the mousse and I replied by offering her a

taste. She liked it, too. My chicken dish was very good:tender, attractively garnished, with well seasoned (but a

bit overcooked) white beans, carrots and zucchini.

12 THE STANFORD DAILY Friday, June 25,1982

Please see page 13

10% OFF

Dinner with Couponwin* not inducted

Best Chinese Food in Town

Food to Go

This special offer is goodfor each member of your party

No limit to the number — bring the family*

Mandarin and Hunan Cuisine of China

493-9989 Master Award Winning

3345 El Camino Real,rom £h' na

Palo Alto, near Page Mill Rdotter good thru 12/20/81

IKING CHUAN RESTAURANf7I Pure Peking and Szechuan Cuisine I

/ % "t #M

' If YOU lIKI MOJ I SftCT 112% r

I m H»V( SZ[CHU»N /1/W *If YOU lIK[ ttGHMMMt OISWS P»*m, .

/ w

t <* MANY MMTIfSS OCUGHIS Iftj* » '00 IIK( « MUMR lASU 7r

% *t »iso Offt* miicious Ptuwc styi r a

I * If YOU IM( k GRCRI IUNCHfON 112112 SrtCIAl M H»Vf IHJkt 100 J

Sncnuen • m

X CHINESE WINE SAKE /NIA WINE

BEE^^^HOURS: LUNCHEON 2.30

DINNER Friday-Sunday 5-10

Monday-Thursday 5-9:30

FOOD TO GO

323-655075 TOWN & COUNTRY VILLAGE

PALO ALTO

I

sari's |Family Restaurant

• Nightly Dinner Specials

• Pure Ground Chuck

• Breakfast served day and night —

/

• Choice N.Y. Steaks/

• Homemade Soups \ /

• Banquet Facilities \J V1? • /for up to forty people V: > j

jj|.'ask 'for 10% dterount)

wU II O 1105 EL CAMINO REAL, MENLO PARK (comer Santa Cruz)Family Restaurant Phone: 323-2011 6 a.m.-12:30 a.m.

I 1LARGE OR $1 OFF ANY

OFF MED UM PIZZA OFF ■Only one coupon per puu. please. Pick any of our 17varieties.

S HmmbtohU |s SPizza Restaurants

GOOD ONLY AT

263 University Ave.

H Palo Alto

322-2893

fM*Tr|"Someday ,

people wll /

come from allv #n

over to eat my I'

barbecue ribs,homemade NV

empanadas, jCuban burritos Jose s

and Argentin- Homemade

ean pizza." Specialties From

SouthAmerica

and Cuba.

A Cuban AffairPalo Alto a 2275 El Camlno Real o near California Street

Reservations 326-6522

Lunch & Dinner Daily ° Closed Mondays

Imported Wine & Beer o MasterCard/Visa

Home ofthe Worst Pizza In Town —Soon theBaddesiBarbecue r

LUNCH

Licensee

o0

We try harder.

Avis features GM

cars and trucks with

• Daily• Weekly

• Monthly rates

The new AVIS 2-to-11

month mini-lease

Try Us 493-8888Across from Rickey's Hyatt

4218 El Camino Real

Palo Alto

I save !

i \0 tO% \! HAWAII S

FISH MARKET Ji >

• Mahi Mahi or Cod Ja t Char Broiled or

Deep Fried

i ■

I

I Show Your Stanford ID

for 10% saving

Weekdays 2 to 5 pm

and Bring This Ad in for I

■ one Extra Piece of Fish

{| EL CAMINO REAL, PALOALTO I

| (1 BLK. NO. of CAUFORNIA AVE.) I

L ...J

1

mai*** mmr -1 ■ lu-nnfliw

Lm AHm *****

All the Pleasures

for a Great Evening!

Garden Bar

Relax with us in shady comfort

and help yourself to our tasty

nacho bar, weekdays 4:30 to 6:30.

Enjoy Giant Margarita?; by the

glass or the pitcher.

UpstairsCasual California dining. Prime Rib,

Steaks, Fresh Seafood and a bountiful

salad bar are house specialties.

DownstairsLive entertainment in an intimate

cellar cabaret featuring nationallyknown and local entertainers.

Come Enjoy A Winning

Combination Tonight!

Page 13: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

Monique/the proprietress, circulated among the

guests, inquiring as to their comfort and satisfaction. Iheard no complaints. When she stopped at our table, Iasked about the salmon mousse (unbelievabletexture)

and the raspberry cake. She responded in a most charm-

ing fashion. Nice lady.

Jeff and I spent two and a half hours there, and could

have stayed longer. The service falls off the closer one

gets to closing time, but I suppose that's normal.

Monique, the restaurant, holds 50-60 people. It was full

when we entered and we were the last to leave.

Lunch is served Monday through Friday, with dinner

every Friday night ($12.95, reservations recommended).On her second visit to our table, Monique explained that

the restaurant is open six evenings a week for private

parties. "Custom Banquets" she calls them, for from

eight to 60 people.

I have a very good impression of Monique (the restau-

rant), as did Jeff and the people around us. It is tastefullydecorated (except for those "sensible" plastictablecloths!); the decor (off-white, blues and unpainted

wood, tasteful decorative pieces hereand there) is a suc-

cess in that it reflects the quality of the service and the

cuisine. The service is attentive; the food is consistentlyabove par (in some cases exceptionally fine) and attrac-

tively presented.

Lunch for two could cost $15 or $50, both well worth

the price.

Student lunches in France are like the ones here; theykeep you from starving, with little attention paid to ser-

vice, quality, and selection. I often would look for a res-

taurant where I could eat well in a cozy atmosphere,where I wouldn'thave to dress up, and where it wouldn't

cost a fortune. There are some in France, and at least one

in Palo Alto.

Friday, June 25, 1982 THE STANFORD DAILY 13

—-rf" Vu

TJfo^lQuality key to Monlque's success

Continued from page 12

'SLEEP

FRUSTRATING?

Stanford University

Physicians will pay

men and women

AGES 55 to 70

to take part in sleepmedication studies.

Call SUE

collect

325-4697

English

InglesAnglais

• Intensive

• Conversational —

Convenient

• 22 Other Languages

SUMMER

SPECIAL RATES

Audio School

637 Maloney Lane

Menlo Park

328-4556

112RENTALS

REPAIRS

SALES

uitars

in|o*

andoMfW

jlcim*rt

•corder*

nplifttritwni

:cet«orie«

wd

itrumcnit

rtl Muiic

ittical

litar

trilm

Trm« R«p«rmin

On Pr«rrvM«

1035 EL CABWO REAL

MENLO PARK

322 9214Nwi (010 iJO Mm hi

oiflu'§ CuisineAll You Can Eat

Lunch: $3.50 Dinner: $4.75

12 Items 14 Items

To Go: $2.50 any 3 Items

W§SMSSIM

r ydWoff iWITH THIS COUPON

I —One Coupon Per Meal —

2614 Broadway, Redwood City

(415) 364-8036

\ &_Jsl<J*

Woodsicle^^3^^^^'

268 Castro St. Mountain View

©968-2604

MEKONGVietnamese

Restaurant

OPEN: Monday-Saturday for dinner

from 5:30 p.m.

Monday-Friday for lunch

11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Open Monday-SaturdayRecommended by: Sunset Magazine,Stan/ord Guide to Good

Eating.Camero Hidden Restaurant Guide,Forkful of San Jose,

, Wallach's Guide to Restaurants of Northern California, and

multiple reviews of various local newspapers.

B^^^makeT^uho^UMMEStock up now at reduced prices E&U

■grcl eg Corcellet reg $2 98 now $1.98 EES

Kjftjfl Fortnum & Mason reg $5 75 now $4.25 BSH

flmjfl La Charcutiere reg $1 39 now $ .99 *93

ESI Amora to Zatarains. al reduced.

Making your own9 Check our bulk dried

mustards and restaurant-sized Dijon

———j| %?" Caleta Mexican Cuisine

(

Buy one complete Mexican Dinner

I and receive one complete dinner

I FREE

1 1143 Crane Street

| Menlo Park— 327-1143 INot Valid: Poco Apetito. A-la-carte orders, and all Holidays

VALID SUNDAY thru THURSDAY, 4:30 PM to 9:00 PM

I sty happiness iBeer & Wine

(lS!fifEn FOOD T0 G0

ffl wnHIS/ (Phone orders invited)

y;tfacilities for up to 200

DAY-FRIDAY 11:30-9 PM 1ENDS 11:30 AM-9:30 PM

University Ave., Palo Alto 5

tween Ramona & Emerson

Phone:326-6565 » 11-—

B

p ESTRELLITA (1 RESTAURANT /

1 "ESTRELLITA features a classic Mexican menu which |C includes everything from exquisite tacos to exotic dishes \

1 like chalupas. .. . This white-walied interior, candlelit #

I tables and handmade Mexican decor creates the \

1 unpretentious ambience found south of the border. We /

I highly recommend ESTRELLII A." V

\ -The Stanford Daily 1

112 This is a very pleasant family run restaurant that serves a\

1 wide range of dishes, including a wide range of burritos /

■ that couldn't possibly be served without plates. V

J ESTRELLITA's burritos are not only excellent, but with #

112 the help of a take home container they could last for %

112 -The Peninsula Times Tribune 1

j GREAT MEXICAN FOOD (i At Reasonable Prices \

) S7l N. SAN ANTONIO ROAD 1

l (1/2 Block from El Camino) 948-9865 \

SUMMER STANFORD

STUDENTS 8c FACULTY:

Enjoy GREAT CHINESE FOOD at

a sensible price

Chefs's Special Dinner

$5.95 per personFor One — 8.8.Q. Pork Won Ton Soup

Sweet 8c Sour Pork

Beef with Snow Peas

Chicken Fried Rice

Cookies — Tea

For Two Add — Mongolian Lamb

For Three Add— Shrimp/Double Mushrooms

For Four Add — Chefs Beef SpecialENOUGH PORTION FOR MORF.

Dim Sum Served at 11:00 am-2:00 pmSat. & Sun. Only

—^

M house op yeeChinese restaurant

160 Castro Street, Mtn. View 961-9694

OPF.N 7 DAYS 11:30 AM-9:20 PM SAT 8c SUN 11 PM-9 PM

Page 14: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

14 THE STANFORD DAILY Friday, June 25,1982

Storke Publications BuildingStanford, California 94305

CASH FOR BOOKS and RECORDS

Open til 9 PM Daily

5:30 Sat & Sun

RECYCLE BOOK STORE

230 Hamilton, Palo Alto, CA

Fine Selection Rare Books, Sc>-Fiction

SHARE OWNERSHIP

o» a Moose ol your choice with an investor

which we provide Combinewith the investor

tor down payment andloan qualification We

specialize in equity sharing otresidentialprop-

erty in the immediate Palo Alto area Investor

inquiries welcome

Santa Oar a Properties

Palo Alto

494-7764

MICROSCOPE WANTED3Objectives Gary 591-6190

Which newspaper published the series on

Justice in America which won the Amencn

Bar AssociationCertificate of Merit' — THE

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Isn tit time

to read

THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR?

3 months — student discount $14.50

Box 997 Los Altos 94022

Meet the most eligible men In San Fran-

cisco and Northern California in THE

BACHELOR BOOK. Candid, intimate, enter

taining Tells who they are and how to meet

them, whatthey like in a woman, etc Where-

ever paperoaCxs are sold $4 95 Putasneaoy

Harper & Row.

Mike and Sy (and Scott) Sell Burgers Mon-

Sat 11:30-1:00outside of the Tresidder Un-

ion.

NEED FUNDS? Locate bona fide non gov-ernmental grants 4 loans Free infor Write

Student College Aid. Dept B. 3641 Deal St.,Houston TX 77025

72WY411 STNWGN at. mech great! NuBatt

69N/WSQBK 30-plus MPS $1,200 497-3625

DAYS

74 MUSTANG II Auto Trans FM vinyl roof,$1 I00(VBO 497-7605

73 OLDS DELTA 88 Convert All Power$1,200 Call Patrick 328-6345

���������������

65 MUSTANG 6cyl Automatic Needs work

$950 or Best Offer 857-0329

���������������80 RABBIT auto trans air. deck, warranty

$5995 eve 49a2550

76DELTA 88autotrans PS air FMSI9S(VBOeve 490-2550

VOLVOBefore You Buy or Lease

Here or Abroad CaU

CHUCK BOBRINK 348-5432 DLR

PEPPER STREET

IMPORT REPAIR SERVICESpecializing in repair and service

of the imported cars

440PEPPER STREET. PALO ALTO

327-127210% discountfor faculty A student*

Diesel Repairs— Saturday >>v

MENLO PARK

SMALL CAR SERVICEExpert repairs and service on VW, Porsche.Datsun. Toyota. Volvo. BMW.Rat and Honda

WE ALSO BUY AND SELL USED CARS

VW BUG SERVICE PRICES:

Complete tune up Irtd parts 39.50

Lube and oil change 9.50Valve job Ind. parts 175.00

Clutch replacement 80 00

Brake overJiaul ind parts 80 00

1044 El Camino, Monk) Park

325-3223

Jack's CyclerySchwinn, Raleigh. Motorbecano

Peugot. Centurion. Univega

320 EL CAMINO 968-2974

Garner's Pro

SALES BIKE SHOP SEVICE

Fugi — UnivegaGarner-Guercaotti — Ron Cooper

1 year optional service with all new takes

small parts — clothing— frame building supp

2755 ElCamino, Redwood City366-7453

Two Men's ten speed bikes $60 each 365-

3026afternoons

LANGUAGES UNLIMITED

— All Foreign Languages —

— English for Foreign Students —

671 Oak Grove. M P - 328-2085

Summer visitors interestedin the Stanford In-

stitute for Teachers of English as a second/

loreign language (SITE) should contact:

JudithChun. Director. SITE.School of Education, 497-2109

Professional Piano Teacher, Stanford MusicB.A 1973, Seeks Pupils Lessons at yourhome Refs M Rubinstein 858-0468

I California ■

Publishing Insriltite__^

Caifornia PublshinglnstituteOffers Publshing Degree

An innovativeM S degreeprogam in Publish-

ing will be started by California Publishing Insti-

tute, Palo Alto,m Fall 1982Specialties offeredare GeneralEditing. Graphic Design andPro-

duction. and Technical Writing and Edit-

ing The full program,in seminar format,will be

scheduled evenings and weekends The fa-

culty includes Michael Crisp (vice president of

SRA , tormer editor-in-chief ofMcGraw-Hill).Joel Shurkin (Pulitzer prize-winning science

writer). Dr CartMaves (book editor forPenin-sulu Times Tribunal. Robyn Shotwell (col-umnist for Publishers Weekly/, and Martyn

Perry (technical editor at S.R.i., Menlo Park)For information, write California Publishing In-

stitue, 580 College Avenue. Palo Alto, CA

94306

TRANSLATORSexp. sd/tech translators into EnglishGerman, French, other languages if

any/all sd/tech fields, interested in free

lance assignments from internet*I in

dustr. translation service, write or call:

AD-EX3220 Alpine Rd.

Portola Valley, CA 94025

(behind campus)

854-6732

Also - Terh Tyvsts

Research assistants wantedtorprotect inves- '

tigatingthe role ofsocial support in copingwith

divorce CaU 321-7080 affr 5

SUMMER VOLUNTEERS NEEDEDWork w/emotionally disturbedkids credit

CaU PCC. 484-1200 for into.

HELP WANTED

Word Processor pt afternoons, expon Xerox

860 a must Pd vac. benefits

Call M. Harrisonor L. Coleman.

487-7431 or send resume to

NCCP. 1801 Page MM Rd PA 94304

Commodore PET Owner

Earn money in spare time copying diskettes

Mike Eaton 746-1816

SECRETEVIL ScientificOrganization benton

world domination seeks open minded bikini

dad cronies Call 497-1193. Free gtft for the

first 100 applicants

STUDIO 1 & 2 BR Apts

_

c«!LtofjfifiL

Junwr 1 & 2 BR Deluxe AptsUMs. ind exc location, elevator pool into

941-2200

r< > T < > ■■ fc. Ik. ■+ ■

889-7488/ 889-7489

OPEN 7 DAYS

Rooms For Rent in main houseof a Ranch in

Portota Valley Prices reasonableand negofr-able. Please call 654-8534 Eric

1 BR/Studio Vacant Patio very dean.

$415& $350. pete OK. 324-1268

Avail 7/1: MSTR Bdrm/Pvt bath in spacious

turn 3 bdrm house Rdwd City. Nonsmkr

$300 mo , $50 misc/300 dep Call Elaine

368-5271

Help!Seeking home/mate 1 room & 1/2house

1/2util $275 rent. $150 dep. Avail 7/10. 325-

4328 or 328-6561 x202.

Responsible female roommate wanted to

share 2/br apt Menlo Park Pool Trees 260/mCall Linda326-8422(h). 497-3563(w). Over 25

preferred

Exchange rm & bd atOak Creek apts forhelpby dedicatedaltruistic student in medically di-

rected rehabilitation of physically active, re-

covering, brain damaged, gifted, male college

student. Prefer abilitytoserve beyond summer

quarter. Call 327-1184 afler June 24.

FRENCH FAMILY NDS 2BR (turn) upto$800

Aug 1-Feb 1 or xchg 3V2hsrtrF>arisor rentout.

493-4352

Apartment to share. 2 BR 2 Bath 3 miles fromcampus Pool, sauna,very nice. Prefer maturemale nonsmoker $32Strw._4943gij

mammm

SHOESTRING SAJLBOARDSI

World famous for stange hours & low prices

Sales, rentals, lessons. 365-6374

ALEXANDRA"Fine Vintage Clothing

Victorian thru 40 s

M-Sat. 10:30-5:00

536 RamonaSt., P.A.*

In the Iris Boutique 322-4198

Review Copies Wanted

One full-size Frldgidair gas dryer exc cond

366-3026 afternoons

SHtoOOVER MOOVERS - Licensed

insured. lurnrture iiwHbg — 327-5483

'daily classifieds". SELL IT, TELL IT, FIND IT

I Standard Ad 2in* mm.inum all acta — Ada run lor 4 days

$2.5CV32-apace line Classified pages is published Tues ft Fri

■ Personals Late Ads: Run 1 day in tie last column $1.25/32-space line

ADS: RN 4 ISSUES (2 wks.)

hne)DEADLINE: FRI noonto start Tues . WED noon to start Fri

I The Stanford Daily . . .

Name I

. Storke Publications ftdg. Lomrta Mall Artrlrocc Ibetween Santa Teresa andPanama Streetr

ess |Business OMtae <87 2564

Phone No

IQopy

Classification'

ifi Till 11 11TI 1 1 I I—llll— I L LJ——l——l—!•'

Mail to The Stanford Dailyn«w»hte to

,Storke Putmcattons BMg

payable to

Stanford.CA 94306 Attn Classifieds« M |

Classifieds

WESTERN AUDIO

Specializing »n FINE AUDIO LINES

Mcintosh ADS Revox B & O

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Page 15: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

making it. E.T. has even more

warmth than Close Encounters

did, and it's even more lovinglycrafted. The direction and edit-

ing and Allen Daviau's glorious

photography are so much of a

piece that you begin to wonder

if these three artists had the

same dreams. (The composer,

John Williams, whose high-pitched, string-heavy score is

imitation Bernard Herrmann,

clearly had differentones.) The

domestic scenes are easily the

best in any Spielberg movie;the two boys are so wonderful

together that you can forgivethe cuteness of some of Drew

Barrymore's moments. There

are sequences— like the en-

trance of the NASA team that

invades Mary's home in search

of E.T. — that are so cleverly as-

sembled that it takes a while to

catch on to everything that's

happening, and Spielberg ap-

pears to be discovering alongwith us. Spielberg even re-

deems his own worst ideas.

Wandering around the kitch-

en, E.T. discovers beer and

takes some predictable low-

comedy tumbles; the kicker is

that Elliott, in biology lab, gets a

sympathtic high and proceedsto liberate every frog in the

room in the general spirit of

good will toward stranded

creatures.

E.T. himself is a beautyCreated by Carlo Rambaldi, hehas a kind of flattened frogface, with huge, deep-eyes, andwhen he becomes excited, hestretches a long scaly neck andemits a sound that is midwaybetween a gurgle and a purr.He is diminutive but antique-looking, like Yoda in The Em-pire Strikes Back, and he hasthe damnedestvoice: he learnshow to speak English, and ev-

ery time he repeats a word itsounds more human without

losing its eerie alien quality.Spielberg capitalizes on E.T.'s

resemblance to \oda in the

film's funniest scene. The boystake him with themon Hallow-

een — asa ploy to spirit him out

of the house under Mary'swatchful eyes (she is as yet un-

aware of his existence) — and,seeing a child in a Yoda cos-

tume on the street, he tries to

follow him, crying, "Home!

Home!" What makes this mo-

ment so delightful is

Spielberg's recognition that

E.T. is a fantastic filmmaker's

creation, like Yoda. In the same

vein, E.T. abounds with al-

lusions to Star Wars and Star

Trek and The Twilight Zone, as

well as to The Wizard of Oz and

Peter Pan, which resonate

throughout the movie.

(Spielberg also refers to some

of his own pictures — Close En-

counters, of course, and Jaws

and his first theatrical release,The Sugarland Express.)UE.T. is

dedicated to one of Spielberg'sfellow fantasists more than any

other, it must be James Barrie:

this film is a rhapsody on the

themes of believing in fairies

and never growing up. The lat-

ter is interpreted in the best

sense — the sense of retainingthe openness to experience,the emotional intensity.and the

purity of heartof which, in the

view of directors like Steven

Spielberg and Carroll Ballard,children are capable. There is a

great image late in the movieof

Michael asleep in a huge closet

full of toys and stuffedanimals.

It perfectly expresses

Spielberg's unique brandof ro-

manticism, and it explains the

sweetness of his best movies.

Poltergeist, on the otherhand, is not one of Spielberg'sbest movies. Tobe Hooper is

credited with directing this

suburban haunted house pic-ture, but Spielberg — who co-

produced, wrote the originalstory, and worked on the scriptwith Michael Grais and Mark

Victor — apparently worked

out more of the storyboardsthan Hooper did, closely su-

pervised the production, and

may even have reshot some ofthe scenes when he wasn't sat-

isfied with Hooper's output. It

would be nice to be able to laythe blame for the results on

Hooper, who directed The

Texas Chainsaw Massacre, and

perhaps the only offensive se-

quence, involving a steak and

turkey leg infested with mag-

gots, really does reflect

Hooper's style. But onecertain-

ly sees Spielberg's mark all over

the rest of the movie: In the set-

ting, the domestic comedy(which is wildly erratic: some

of it is quite inventive, some of

it worse than the worst parts of

Close Encounters and Jaws),

the focus on children, the un-

failing optimism, the cracker-

jack editing of the special ef-

fects sequences (by Michael

Kahn, whose credits include

The Warriors and The EmpireStrikes Back). Some of the vis-

ual gimmickry is pretty, and

there is one sequenceSpielberg can be pfoud of: the

first supernatural attack,wherin a little boy is abducted

by a tree that crashes throughhis bedroom window, has the

magical scariness of a first-rate

children's story. But on the

whole, Poltergeist leaves a

viewer feeling more zappedthan enchanted.

Perhaps something un-

fortunatehappens to Spielbergwhen he makes a movie with

holograms; Poltergeist, like

Raiders, is not a warm ex-

perience. The movie is terriblyefficient— it gets to you

— but

I didn't have much fun at it. I

felt barraged by all the close-

ups and the Dolby Sound from

the beginning, long before the

ghosts took over. This film is so

loudand so relentless through-out that it doesn't have any-where to go but straight to its

rather ludicrous bigfinish, with

skeletons popping up all over

the neighborhood and houses

flaming and folding.Michael Kahn must have

dozed off during the non-fan-

tasy portions of the picture, be-

cause they are edited in

awkwardly, so that the movie

seems slightly off rhythm. The

dialogue doesn't help, and

neither does the uninspiredstory. Like Close Encounters

and EJ„ Poltergeist revolvesaround the relationship be-

tween a child — in this case, a

beautiful blonde girl named

Carole Ann (Heather

O'Rourke) — and ultra-human

powers: she is kidnaped byghosts who also terrify her pa-

rents, Diane and Steve (JobethWilliams and Craig T. Nelson)and herbrother Robbie (Oliver

Robins). Diane and Steve's ef-

forts to reclaim their daughterinvolve them with a para-

psychologist (Beatrice

Straight), a tiny, squeaky-voiced spiritualist with a south-

ern acent (Zelda Rubinstein),

and a great deal of technical-

mystical mumbo-jumbo that is

far more complicated than the

narrative intended to supportit. When we aren't being over-

powered by the effects, we are

being asked to carry a weightyburden of credulity, once the

movie abandons the playfultone of its early scenes and be-

comes solemn. That may be

partly the effect of castingBeatrice Straight, a long-timegraduate of the Geraldine PageTwisted Mouth School of Act-

ing, who carries a cloud over

her wherever she goes. But to

be perfectly fair, the ex-

planatory cant the writers have

given the parapsychologistseem tailor-made for an actress

of Straight's peculiarities.

The acting in Poltergeist is

not, however, without its

bright spots. Jobeth Williams,who opened in New York in a

new play by John Guare a few

weeks before the film's pre-

miere, is touchingly earnest as

the persistent loving mother,and Zelda Rubinstein bringssuch an unusual quicksilvercharmto her role thatshe near-

ly redeems the most self-seri-

ous scenes. She convinces us

that this strange littlewoman is

truly possessed of supernaturalknowledge and healing gifts;for a few moments, she lifts a

mundane movie into the realm

of real magic.

Friday, June 25,1982 THE STANFORD DAILY15

'Poltergeist' a step in the wrong directionContinued from page9

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Page 16: U.S. advisors said to violate guidelines in El Salvador, Associated Press, 25 June 1982

NEWS. From thewires of th* AMOcUtcd Pmt uv6 «h«Lot Angelc*Hm«/W«*li.glon P<»l

Navy stages American evacuation

Washington — As Israeli military leaders anguished

over whether to storm West Beirutas all attempts to hon-

or cease-fires in Lebanon appear to collapse, the U.S.

Navy began evacuating Americans from Lebanon yester-

day in an operation described by a Defense Department

spokesman as "going smoothly."This was the first U.S. naval evacuation of Americans

from Lebanon since the 1976 civil war there.

Henry Catto, the Pentagon spokesman, told reporters

the evacuation began about 7:30 a.m. EDT and was ex-

pected to be completed before the end of the day."Thelast I heard, things were peaceful and going smoothly,"he said.

Two Navy amphibious ships, the Nashville and the

Hermitage, were assigned to send landing craft ashore at

the port of Jounieh, north of Beirut, to pick up evacuees

and transport them to Cyprus, Catto said.

Asked how many Americans will be taken out from

Lebanon, Catto said the Pentagon did not know, al-

though he said they might number as many as 4000.

Citizens of other nations carrying what Catto de-

scribed as "proper documents" certified by their em-

bassies also will be evacuated by the U.S. Navy.

Reagan vetoes housing subsidy bill

Washington — President Ronald Reagan yesterdayvetoed an emergency money bill containing housingsubsidies for low- and middle-income home buyers,charging that Congress is not serious about controllingfederal spending.

Less than two hours later, Reagan's veto was sustained

by the House. The vote was 253-171 in favor of overrid-

ing, but fell 17 short of the two-thirds margin required.It takes a two-thirds majority of both the House and

the Senate to override a presidential veto.

The House then began considering a new bill that con-

tained every element of the vetoed version except for

the housing subsidies. Like the failed measure, the new

one would repeal a $75-per-day tax deductionthat Con-

gress voted itself last year.

Although Reagan criticized several featuresof the $8.9billion bill in casting the fifth veto of his administration,he concentrated on the housing provision.

Reagan said he was concernedthat the measure would

"add to the federal deficit and generate upward pres-

sures on interest rates — aggravating the very situation it

seeks to help."

Anticipating the veto, Democratic leaders accused

Reagan at a news conference of turning his back on the

depressed housing industry.

Handgun intiative makes ballot

Sacramento — An initiativethat would ban new hand-

gun sales in May 1983 has qualified for the November

ballot, placing the gun control issue before California

voters for the first time, Secretary of State March Fong Eu

said vesterday.She said the legally required randomsample count of

petition signatures projected a totalof 427,474 valid sig-natures of registered voters, more than 40,000 above the

total needed to avoid a full signature count.

The proponents of the initiative, John Phillips of Los

Angeles and Victor Palmieri of San Francisco, submitted568,867 signatures last month.

The measure is sponsored by gun-control groups andbacked by Gov. EdmundBrown. Anti-gun-control forces

led by Sen. H.L. Richardson (R-Arcadia), have alreadybegun raising money to defeat it.

The initiative would limit the total number of con-

cealable guns in California to those already in circulation

next April 30, so that handguns could not be brought

into the state after that.

It also would require registration of all handguns with

the state attorney general by Nov. 2,1983. Another pro-

vision would prevent the legislature from passing any

laws to take handguns away from law-abiding citizens.

Eu said the only previous gun-control initiative

proposed in California failed to qualify for the ballot in

1976.

Frenchman orbits with cosmonauts

Moscow — French astronaut Jean-Loup Chretien be-

came the first Western European to fly in space yesterdaywhen he rode into orbit with a Soviet crew aboard a

Soyuz T-6 spacecraft.Chretien and cosmonauts Vladimir Dzhanebikov and

Alexander Ivanchenkov plan to rendezvous today with

the Salyut-7 orbiting space station, where two other So-

viet cosmonauts have been living since May 13.

The international launch was the 10th in the "In-

tercosmos" series, in which the Soviets have been joined

by foreign pilots on space voyages. All of the previous

missions have involved pilots from other communist na-

tions.

The launch was the second that Sovietauthoritieshave

televised live in the 20 years of manned space explora-

tion from the Soviet Union. The first was the Apollo-

Soyuz mission in 1975, in which American and Soviet

space capsules docked in orbit.

The launch telecast, which occurred in prime-time

evening hours in both France and the Soviet Union, in-

cluded a measure of political rhetoric in addition to the

sight of the fiery rocket blasting off into a dark evening

sky from the cosmodrome at Baikonur.

The telecast showed Chretien arriving at the launch

site, blowing a kiss at the assembled Soviet and French

technicians.

Just before the launch, viewers saw mission com-

mander Dzhanibekov, inside the spacecraft, deliver a

brief speech in which he said he was certain the flight"will serve the future development of the science and

technology of our two countries and strengthen the

friendship between the Soviet and the French peoples."French and Soviet scientists have been cooperatingon

space research since 1966. At a Kremlin meeting in 1979,Soviet PresidentLeonid Brezhnev invited formerFrench

President Valery Giscard d'Estaing to arrange a jointmanned flight.

Franco-Soviet relations have cooled since Giscard lost

the French presidency, and the Socialist governmentof

Francois Mitterrandappears apprehensive over the pos-

sible political fallout.

Budget approved, awaits passage

Sacramento — The Legislature's budget-writing com-

mitteeapproved a nearly $26 billionstate budget yester-

day with no new money for schools, an omission that a

Republican leader said would block passage.But Senate leaders said later that $100 million might be

found for schools in a companion bill, half of which

would depend on the economy improving.The 5-1 vote by the budget conference committee

sent to the Assembly and Senate floors a compromisespending proposal for the fiscal year that begins july 1.

The two houses were expected to vote today.But Assemblyman Charles Imbrecht (R-Ventura), the

lone dissenter, said he thought there would be no As-

sembly Republican votes for the proposal.He called the school funding freeze "a very ir-

responsible action in failing to provide for the futureofthe state's children."

The budget, like any bill that spends money, needs a

two-thirds vote in both houses. Democrats havei

jorities inboth houses, but not the 54 votes neededin

80-memberAssembly nor the 27 votes in the 40-men

Senate.

The committee action came after days of meet

among Senate and Assembly Republicans and De

crats, along with Democratic Gov. Edmund Brown,(cipally on the issue of school funding.

Assembly Republicans insisted on some extra mc

for the state's 1100school districts, which will getai

of $8 billion in state money next year.

But Imbrecht blaimed Senate Democrats, aidec

Senate Republicans, for just as stubbornly insistingoi

funding increases for any programs.

Connors enters third round

Wimbledon, England — Gutsy Jimmy Connors.l

tling on every point, captured a fourth-set tiebreake

yesterday to fight back an upsetbid by JohnAlexandi

Australia 6-3, 4-6, 6-1, 7-6 and advance into the!

round at All-England tennis championshipsWimbledon.

Alexander jumped out to a 3-1 edge in the tiebrei

only to have Connors rip off the next four points Bu!

Australian, who came into the tournament off ait

pressive win at Bristol, twice battled back to take lea

6-s*tind 7-6.

Connors then rushed to the net at every chance,fc

ting the tiebreakerat 7-7 with a lunging forehandvd

He reached match point when Alexander's lobsa

wide, then wrapped up the victory when the Austti

netted a forehandvolley.In other men's singles matches yesterday, the firs

of the tournament to be contested without rain, fai

seeded Sandy Mayer gained the third round withi

6-2, 6-3 victory over Colin Dowdeswell of Britain;*!

Brian Teacher came from behind to overtake Shi

Glickstein of Israel 3-6,7-6,6-4,4-6,6-2, and Hank PI

defeated fellow American Mel Purcell 6-2,6-3,6-4.

Tomas Smidof Czechoslovakia ousted England'slard Lewis 6-3, 7-6, 6-0 in matches carried over I

Wednesday.On the women's side, seventh-seeded Pam Sh

crushed fellow American Kim Jones6-1, 6-1 yesterdmove into the third round at Wimbledonas the sui

peared for the first time this week at the All-EngLawn Tennisand Croquet Club.

Shriver, who teamed with Martina Navratilovato

ture the women's doubles here last year, will faci

year-old Kathy Rinaldi as she attempts to reach

Wimbledonsemifinalsfor the second straight time

Stock market advance falters

New York — The stock market tried to push its

vance to three straight sessions yesterday but falti

and closed mixed as traders took advantage of re

gains.

Among the losers were auto, oil and technolojsues.

In an extension of their late surge Wednesday,p"climbed moderately higher through the morninghbut then found resistance in the early afternoon.

Blue-chips stocks were particularly affected, and

Dow Jones average of 30 industrials —

up 5.04 at

p.m.— turned lower and finished with a 2.76-point

cline at 810.41.

Briefly

The photo department, under the direction of feai

leader James Higa, will hold a meeting for all inters

photographers Monday at 5 p.m. Bring spam.

Friday, June 25,16 THE STANFORD DAILY

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