state press Voi. 70 N o . 60 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily • Copyright, State Press, 1987 Tempe, Arizona Thursday, Novem ber 19, 1987 Jailed Contra details plans to kill Tambs By VICKIE CHACHERE State Press In 1985, Jesus Garcia was a fervent anti-communist, caught up in a web of drug smuggling, assassination and illegal gun supplies to the Nicaraguan Contra rebels. For nearly eight months, Garcia, an 11-year veteran of the Dade County, Fla., police force, was a loyal soldier in the Miami-based network of Americans who support the Contras. He didn’t question orders — not even when he was asked to load arm s on planes bound for Contras or when he saw the network bring tons of cocaine into M iam i, sell the drugs and use the money to buy more guns. And when he was asked to assassinate the Russian ambassador to Nicaragua, he eagerly said yes, although he never carried out the task. Th en in M a rch 1985, THE CONTRA NETWORK Garcia said in a series of S t a t e P r e s s phone interviews, he was asked to k ill ASU history professor Lew is Tam bs, then U.S. ambassador to Costa Rica. It was a task that G arcia found unthinkable, and he refused. Now as an inmate at a federal corrections center in Tallahassee, F la., where he is servin g a th ree-year s e n te n c e fo r ille g a l possession of a machine gun and silencer, G arcia, a 40-year-old Vietnam vétéran, says his regard fo r Tambs’ life cost him his freedom. “ T ell him (Tam bs), that Jesus Garcia paid heavy fo r not taking his life ,” said Garcia, who has three months left to serve on his sentence. “ They destroyed m y life. I just didn’t have the stomach to k ill a fellow Am erican and I don’t now.” Tam bs’ assassination, according to Garcia and a 1986 lawsuit filed against 28 suspected network members, had a twofold purpose. First, Garcia and the other four men asked to carry out the assassination would have split a $1 m illion bounty placed on the diplom at’s head by Colombian drug dealers he had angered during a crackdown on drug smuggling. P a rt o f those funds also would have gone to buying m ore weapons. * Secondly, the murder of Tambs was to have been blamed on the Sandinistas, likely causing a U.S. m ilitary strike against Nicaragua. Tambs, meanwhile, said he never has seen independent confirm ation o f a Contra-backed plot against his life. The 60-year-old professor, who teaches Latin Am erican history at ASÜ, remains an unwavering supporter o f the Contras. Garcia is quick to point out that he has gone public with his involvem ent in the network out of revenge fo r the men he says used the Contras to turn a profit from drugs and gun sm uggling. G arcia is due to be released ea rly from his sentence for good behavior. In a C on gression al rep ort relea sed W ednesday, investigators probing the Reagan administration’s sale of arm s to Iran and the use of profits to fund the Contras determined that the private network profited $6.6 m illion in their operations. “ I didn’t want to be the first to break it, but I had no choice,” he said in a slight Cuban accent peppered with a New York twist. “ I had been betrayed. I f I wasn’t in this position, I would have continued to say nothing.” Garcia added that his openness about the network’s activities m ay cost him heavily once he is released from prison. s “ I ’m not worth a dim e,” he said. “ On the street, I ’m not worth one dime. “ As soon as I hit the street they’ll put someone near me. It would be to their advantage to hit m e as early and as quickly as possible. “ F or not killing, for not taking a man’s life , I signed m y own death sentence.” _ __________ _ Turn to CO NTRA, p a g * 7. inside today ASU WEATHER Sunny and warmer, with an expected high in the upper 70s. H| mmmi Dana Laonard/S tata Praaa Tuition hike? Michael Konz, ASASU state relations director, addressed the Board of Regents at an open hearing In Phoenix Wednesday, entreating them to ta k e a tong-term approach” to tuition Increases. Story, page 6. ASASU Senate passes resolution against Nelson’s off-campus rule By AARYN KEMP State Press The Associated Students Senate has passed a resolution voicing its disapproval of President J. Russell Nelson’s o ff campus conduct rule, but the thumbs down came two days late to be effective. The 20-day period for student reaction to Nelson’s controversial ruling expired Nov. 15. Senators said thèy passed the resolution Tuesday night because it could allow fo r punishment of students not convicted o f a crim e. “ It should not be up to the U niversity to judge someone for something that is already being taken care o f by the police,” said College o f Business Sen. Ted Ballard. “ The U niversity does not have the right to punish us for what w e do o ff campus'“ added College o f Business Sen. George Karam . Although the deadline for public input has passed, Kunasek said Nelson still is interested in student input. Nelson received seven complaints against the rule, ranging from m ild dislike to remarks that the U niversity should not be involved in. punishing outside conduct at all, said Tabb Forester, assistant director of policy and procedures. Kimasrit w ill add the resolution to a letter she wrote to Nelson Nov. 12 expressing her disapproval of the rule. Kunasek said she told Nelson the senate was working on a resolution. “ He said he is interested in seeing it.” The resolution states: “ Associated Students Senate expresses our concern and displeasure about the newlyproposed rule pertaining to off-campus conduct of students as it is currently worded. “ The rule has the potential to abuse individual rights of students. “ The senate is o f the opinion that students’ off-campus conduct is regulated by state law which provides safeguards against abuse through protections guaranteed by the U.S. and Arizona Constitutions. This rule may provide penalties for students who have not been convicted on any crim e. The senate feels this is a clear violation o f students’ right to due process o f the law. “ As a result, the Associated Students Senate recommends that a public hearing be held regarding this rule.” In other business, Associated Students approved its 1988-89 budget this week, increasing its spending lim it by about 5 percent fo r the next academ ic year. The $858,255 b ill was passed by the senate unanimously Tuesday night, but has to be approved by ASASU President Karrin Kunasek, U niversity administration and the Arizona Board of Regents before being implemented. Gary Kleem an, ASASU coordinator, said he hopes to have the budget approved in M a y / He said Kunasek has the power to line-item veto the budget. I f she does so, the budget w ill be sent back to the senate which w ill either uphold her veto or vote against it. The budget w ill then be review ed by the office of Student A ffairs budget analyst and the U niversity budget office. I f it passes, a council consisiting of ASU President J. Russell Nelson, all U niversity vice presidents and the director o f the University budget office w ill vote for approval. I f the council approves the budget, it w ill be brought before the regents. Kleem an said it is not policy fo r the regents to disapprove the budget, but some things involved with the budget are not known because o f budget work being done in the Arizona Legislature, including the adjustment o f salaries. Changes in the budget include a significant amount of money being transferred from the ASASU Lecture Series to the Political Union and form ation of a College Council contingency because not all councils spend allotted funds. ASASU Executive V ice President W ill D aly, college council coordinator, said the contingency w ill consist o f leftover money from a ll councils. “ The contingency w ill allow councils with good program s to receive more money than councils who do not use their funds,” he said. “ The fund w ill free up money fo r councils which can use it, rather than let it sit and not be used.” STOP ME IF YOU’VE HEARD THIS Tempe City staff recommends that-the city council refuse zoning for Tempo Improv because of inadequate parking space. Page 3. C lassified........................... .18 C om ics.........................................*¡.....1 6 O pinion............... ......4 Sports................... .....1 7 Pages State Press Thursday, November 19,1987 world/nation in brief A b o u t 2 8 d e a d , d o z e n s in ju re d in L o n d o n s u b w a y s ta tio n fire LONDON (A P ) — F ire broke out in a crowded London subway station Wednesday, and the fire brigade said about 28 people w ere killed and dozens o f others w ere injured. The fire broke at 7:36 p.m., apparently under an escalator, at the King’s Cross station in north-central London. The station, one of the biggest on the Underground system, was packed with commuters. L iz Code, a London F ire Brigade spokeswoman, said the exact number of dead and injured was not known. But said, “ We believe around 28 were killed.’ ’ She said the fire was brought under control within two hours, but the station was filled with smoke. Press Association, the British domestic news agency, said 30 people w ere feared trapped in the station, but Ms. Cook said she could not confirm that report. Television footage showed dense smoke billowing from King’s Cross, which also contains a British R ail station. N e g o tia to rs s tru g g le w ith p a c t to re d u c e fe d e ra l b u d g e t d e fic it W ASHINGTON (A P ) — White House and congressional negotiators struggled Wednesday to cement a two-year, $75 billion budget deficit-reduction agreem ent and saw their still-unfinished work coming under attack even from within their own ranks. “ It ’s pretty weak. A pretty weak package unless you like taxes,” said Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole of Kansas, who said many o f his GOP colleagues would have trouble voting for it. “ It is so m arginal as to be em barrassing,” said Sen. Bob Packwood o f Oregon, who is among the negotiators and is the ranking GOP member of the Senate Finance Committee. The package would reduce the deficit in fiscal 1988, which began Oct. 1, by about $30 billion and cut fiscal 1989 red ink by m ore than $45 billion. That would more than meet the minimum goal of the Gramm-Rudman law, which requires $23 billion in fiscal 1988 deficit reduction. The law calls fo r President Reagan to order spending cuts on Friday, half from the m ilitary and half from domestic programs, if the goal is not met. C o n tin e n ta l A irlin e s o ffic ia l d e fe n d s p ilo ts ’ s h o rt re c o rd s D EN VE R (A P ) — A Continental Airlines official on Wednesday defended the relatively short experience the crew o f the crashed Flight 1713 had with that model aircraft. He said it was not an unusual situation for expanding airlines. National Transportation Safety Board investigators continued their investigation of Sunday’s crash of the DC-9 in a snowstorm at Stapleton International Airport. Since the crash, two people have died in hospitals, pushing the death toll to 28. O f the 54 people taken to hospitals, five remained in critical condition; many have been released. Federal investigators have said they are examining the possibility that ice on the wings caused the crash. NTSB Chairman Jim Burnett said the pilot, Capt. Frank Zvonek, 43, and co-pilot Lee Bruecher had only been certified to fly DC-9s in October. “ To look at one area of their specific tim e on DC-9s would be just not an accurate portrayal o f their qualifications as pilots,” Continental spokesman Bruce Hicks said Wednesday at a news conference. H o u s in g c o n s tru c tio n p lu n g e b la m e d o n m a rk e t p ro b le m s WASHINGTON (A P ) — Housing construction plunged 8.2 percent in October, the biggest decline in m ore than three years, the government reported Wednesday in a setback analysts blamed on rising m ortgage rates and fears over the collapse of the stock market. The Comm erce Departm ent said new homes and apartments w ere started at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.51 m illion units in October, down from an annual rate of 1.65 m illion units in September. The October figure represented the slowest annual building rate since April 1983 and the decline from September was the steepest monthly drop since an 8.4 percent decrease in August 1984. Housing construction had risen 4.0 percent in September. today Meetings •N IS A m eets to d a y a t 6 p.m . in MU Room •A lpha Lambda Delta w ill nold a general 215 N orth. m eeting today a t 6:30 p.m . in M U Room 209. •Am erican Israel Cultural Education Society m eets te k ^ y a t 4 p.m . a t th e H ille l •T h e C irc le C o m p u tatio n al U nion o f Jew ish S tudents to discuss Israel A w areness W eek. \ •KASR w ill be having “ B roadcasters’ C areer N ig h t” to d a y a t 7:30 p.m . in th e MU W est C ochise Room . •P h i Alpha Delta Pre-Law Organization w ill have a p u b lic defe n d e r address th e gro u p to d a y a t 3 p.m . in MU Room 213. •AED Pre-med honor society w ill have an o n co lo g ist as speaker today a t 7 p.m . in S ocial S cience Room 226. fo r R esearch L in g u is tic s w ill in* be discu ssin g “ Language L e a rn a b ility” today at 1 p.m . in ERC 293. •U n iv e rs ity Toastm asters, a p u b lic speaking clu b , m eets to d a y at 5:15 p.m . in BA 341. G uests w elcom e. a t 6 p.m . in th e MU M ohave Room. •T h e Upward Bound Club w ill be d iscussing upcom ing events and a ctivitie s today a t 6:30 p.m . in the MU Coconino Room. •The ASU chapter of the Association for Computing Machinery m eets today at 3 p.m . in E ngineering Research C enter Room 493. Anyone interested is invited. •Asian American Christian Fellowship •T h e American Society of Women Accountants w ill have a general m eeting m eets today at 3 p.m . in th e MU C oconino Room. and a g uest speaker today a t 4 p.m . in th e MU V avapai Room . •T h e Black Student Union w ill be d iscu ssin g m ale/fem ale re la tio n sh ip s to d a y •Th e Lesbian and Gay Academic Union w ill be show ing the m ovie “ The Life and Tim es o f H arvey M ilk” today at 7:30 p.m . in th e MU Y um a Room. Announcements • D r. S o lo m o n W a n g b o je o f the University of Benin in Benin, N ig e ria w ill discuss a rt in N ig e ria to d a y a t 1 p.m . in the MU A rt G a lle ry. • “ Forgotten Pleasures: Rediscovering Lost Traditions of Jewish Sexuality” is th e su b je ct o f to d a y’s W om en’s Studies Brown Bag L e ctu re a t 12:30 p.m . in Social S cience Room 103. •Th e Muslim Students’ Association is sponsoring a le ctu re on “ R eligion and Hum an R ig h ts” by D r. S teve Johnson today at 7 p.m . in th e M U Pim a Room. O pen to th e p u b lic. " D on'tworry, dear. B illy knows th is is the la s t week to get h is picture taken fo r the yearbook. " ~TkiHmQvil ■ ir k That’s right, folks. It's your last chance to get your photo in the yearbook. We want every student en­ rolled in ASU to get their photo taken this week in the M.U. 9-5 Tues., Weds., Friday and 12-8 Thurs. -n ,& n tu axbook3a^j Bring your smile and do it today. (It’s FREE) f State Pins» Page 3 Thursday, November 19,1987 Judge allows Corbin to continue loan investigation By J. MICHAEL HOEHN State Press A Maricopa County Superior Court Judge ruled Wednesday that Attorney General Bob C orb in can contin u e a gra n d ju ry investigation into an unreported campaign loan made to Gov. Evan Mecham. M u rray M iller, M echam ’s personal attorney, had argued Corbin’s involvem ent in the investigation constituted a conflict of interest, since Corbin allegedly supplied Mecham with confidential advice about financial reporting. But Judge Michael Ryan said Wednesday afternoon that M iller had failed to present enough evidence to prove a conflict of interest existed. R ecall cou nte r quits, p. 9. “ Based on the statements made by Mr. M iller, the state finds there is no conflict,” Ryan said in the ruling. The Arizona Supreme Court had ruled in late October that Corbin could not be rem oved from the investigation unless he had provid ed M echam ' w ith sp ecific inform ation relating to the contested loan. On Monday, M iller filed a motion to dismiss Corbin from the case on the grounds he had provided such information to the governor. The attorney general’s office has said no such information was given. The hearing convened at 10:30 a.m. Meanwhile, the grand ju ry continued its investigation Wednesday. The ju ry is trying to determ ine whether Mecham comm itted any wrongdoing in failing to report a $350,000 campaign loan to the secretary of state’s office as required by law. Mecham has said the failure to report the loan was a mistake. Form er Mecham aide Donna Carlson also was seen entering the M aricopa County Superior Court House on Wednesday to testify before the grand jury. An a lleged death th reat m ade on Carlson’s life appears to be the latest focus of the grand ju ry probe. Evan Mecham Bob Corbin Wednesday when M iller called Robert L ’E cu yere, an attorn ey who advises candidates on financial matters, to testify. He was on the stand for only a short tim e when the state objected to the relevancy of L ’Ecuyere’s testimony. Ryan declared a recess and when the hearing reconvened at 4 p.m., he announed that Corbin could remain on die case. Corbin said he was not surprised by the decision. “ W e’re very pleased,” he said. “ We never thought we had a conflict of interest. That is what w e’ve maintained a ll along. W e’re very, very pleased.” “ The judge determined again there is no disqualifying evidence, and w e intend to continue our investigation,” said Steve Tw ist, assistant attorney general. Tw ist presented the attorney general’s case during die hearing. M iller said he w ill continue to try to rem ove Corbin from the investigation and m ay later present m ore evidence. Ken Smith, Mecham’s press aide, said he could not comment on the ruling because he had not yet heard the verdict. He said he had not discussed the ruling with the governor. State prison construction D irector Lee Watkins allegedly told P eggy G riffith, head o f the O ffice of Women’s Services, that if Carlson didn’t stop talking she would end up “ in the bottom o f a riv er.” Watkins has denied making such, a statement. Mecham had said during a live television inteview on Monday, he knew “ little or nothing” about the threat. But The Arizona R epublic reported Wednesday that Mecham was told by at least six people about the threat on Friday. Smith confirm ed on Wednesday that Lt. Bo Johnson, a form er member o f Mecham’s Departm ent of Public Safety Security detail, told the governor about the alleged threat “ late Friday.” P an e ls’ report lays blam e on Reagan for Iran-Contra affair W ASHINGTON (A P ) — President Reagan contributed to a m assive deception of Congress and the public in the IranContra a ffa ir and bears responsibility fo r thwarting the law by allowing zealots to seize policy control, congressional investigators concluded Wednesday. “ These committees found no direct evidence suggesting that the president was a knowing participant in the effort to deceive Congress and the Am erican public,” the Senate and House investigating panels wrote. “ But the president’s actions and statements contributed to the deception.” “ The ultim ate responsibility for the events in the IranContra a ffa ir must rest with the president,” the panels’ 690-page final report concluded. “ If the president did not know what his national security advisers w ere doing, he should have.” The report comes three months after the conclusion of summer-long hearings into the secret sales of U.S. weapons to Iran and the diversion of some profits to the Nicaraguan rebels known as Contras. A t the W hite House, Reagan spokesman Marlin Fitzw ater said, “ This new report reflects the subjective opinions and not even the unanimous judgment of the com m ittee.” “ We are m oving on,” he said. The report, in one new disclosure, indicates the administration was deceived when, after concluding that middleman Manucher Ghorbanifar was untrustworthy, it switched to what it saw as a m ore reliable “ second channel” for dealing with Iranian “ m oderates.” The report said Am erican operatives were dismayed to discover that “ the second channel represented the same Iranian leaders as did the first channel, that some U.S. weapons destined for so-called moderates in fact went to Iran’s radical Revolutionary Guards, and that one of the “ moderates” m ay have masterminded the kidnappings of at least two o f the Am ericans then being held hostage in Lebanon — educator Frank Reed and W illiam Buckley, the Beirut C IA station chief who was killed while in captivity. L iq u o r B a rn This week’s super special... Lowenbrau Michelob Rolling Rock — epa<* presents — Oregon! I <5Wi, !I®J KAHLUA KORBEL B ru t, X -D ry or $?99 M a rtin i & R o ssi A s ti S p u m a n te “ Great Price” 750 ml. M ille r o r G e n u in e D ra ft B u d a nd B u d L ite One show only . . . 7:30 Nov. 19 • $9.00 ticket $499 12 pk. S o n y, no L it* $459 12 pk. cans Follow ed by an evening o f blues with Over 1,000 square feet o f Expires ICE COLD walk-in beer cooler! 11-25-87. John Hammond — in Tempe — 9-1 • $5.00/cover C u t th is ad & re ce ive $ 1 .0 0 o ff. For more info, call 968-5568. 930 E. Broadway 894-1067 A < _s Located in Hayden Square 3rd & Mill SAFEWAY I . e LIQUOR BARK I BROADWAYROAD SOUTHERN Gladly accepted. $12»® □ N C h u y ’s YOUR CHOICE BAILEY’S FRANGELIC0 AMARETTO DISARRONO \ OPEN; Mon.-Thurs. 9-9 Fri. 9-10 Sat. 8-10 Sun. 12-8 \ o p in io n Dead Wrong Pro-choice is no choice for millions of murdered unborn 1971: The year the United States o f Am erica legalized abortion. The year this nation officia lly sanctioned murder. It doesn’t get much clearer than that, does it? It has been 16 years since the Supreme Court struck down state abortion laws in the landmark case R oe v. Wade, opening a flo o d g a te that today resu lts in the destruction of 1.5 m illion fetuses every year. One and a h alf m illion — every year — that is but a part o f a worldwide bloodbath of 50 m illion abortions annually. Over the course of a decade and a half, th is le g a liz e d b ru ta lity has becom e ingrained in our culture, accepted as a normal — if traumatic — (not fo r the fetus o f course, but fo r the m other) part of Am erican society . Legalized abortion has been hailed by many as a great stride in the advancement o f “ women’s rights” and as a legitim ate and sim ple method of “ fam ily planning.” Y e t there are those who are appalled by the act o f abortion, and who are beginning to once again raise the issue to the forefront of national attention — with an eye tow a rd . ending what they view as nothing less than murder on a scale unmatched by H itler, S talin or any o f h istory’ s genocidal m entalities. Today at ASU an opportunity to further debate the issue presents itself, as Sarah Weddington — the legal wonderkid who at age 26 successfully argued the R oe v. Wade case before the Supreme Court — w ill be speaking in the MU on the topics o f abortion and women’s rights. The question o f the day: What gives a woman, or a man for that m atter, the rig h t to authorize and perpetrate an abortion of an infant in the womb? • • • The cornerstone of the abortion debate lies in the determination o f the beginning of human life. In this most vital o f questions is contained the very heart of the issue, for pro-abortion and anti-abortion forces w ill all rationally concur that to destroy a human life is murder — and thus wrong. The task w e must lay at the door o f the abortionist camp is to produce a point in tim e a fter which to abort a fetus is m urder. It can be effectively argued that life begins from the moment of conception, the point at which the m ale sperm joins with the fem ale egg. It is at this point that all inform ation for the development of a unique, autonomous human being is com piled and set into action — the person’s sex, color, and a ll other characteristics are determined in this single moment. Y e t abortionist thought replies that the fetus at conception is but an amorphous mass o f protoplasm, an organic “ growth” within an unwilling biological host — the mother — that cannot live ouside the womb and is in no w ay a human being as w e know it. It m atters not that a ll the components for a human are present, the abortionist w ill say. The erector set, as it w ere, is disassembled. We are left with m erely the instructions. A fter conception, the fetus grows rapidly, form ing an easily discernible brain, head and lim bs in the first 10 or 11 weeks. It can feel pain and respond to stimuli. Is this when life begins? Evidently not, fo r most abortions take place during this stage of development. A t around 20 weeks, the mother often feels the first movements o f the fetus within her as developm ent of intellectual and nervous system capacity increases. Does this growth and movement indicate life? No. Abortions are often perform ed legally through the 24th week. Then when? The central flaw and inconsistency in the abortionist argum ent is that they cannot provide a solid conclusion to this problem. Many claim that life begins when the child can survive through the aid of modern m edicine outside the womb. B u t m e d ic a l s c ie n c e is a lw a y s “ It is her body, and she has a right to make the decision.” •• • • Unable to provide a definite point of origin fo r human life, the abortionist, in effect, abandons his argument and claims that the life of the fetus is subject to the authority of the proprietor of its home for nine months the mother. Many women say: “ It is my body, I can do what I want with it.” But is that an accurate assessment of the situation? Legally, perhaps. Logically and m orally, no. The fetus is dependent upon the mother fo r future growth and development — as it w ill be after birth, when it w ill rely on her fo r care and feeding — but the child is not, strictly speaking, the mother’s body. The fetus has its own heart, lungs and brain. It is m erely a tenant in the mother’s womb, not a part of the permanent organism. I f the mother had the right to terminate the child’s life at any point during its early development because it is an actual part of ‘The question o f the sanctity o f the mother’s body becomes further clouded when one states the obvious: that, in m ost cases, the fetus is not an uninvited squatter in the womb. ’ progressing. Surely just because science can keep a fetus a live without its mother — at an ea rlier period than it could 20 years ago — does not mean that the absolute point where life begins has shifted with scientific advances. I f abortionist thought is follow ed through its logical retreat, one must ask if life then does not begin until the moment o f birth. And if that is true, would it then be allow able to abort a fetus the day before birth but an act of murder the day a fter“! Obviously not. Who decides when life begins? Who has the omniscience to make this crucial judgment? “ The mother, o f course,” answers the abortionist, who is forced into this refuge of “ personal rights” fo r want o f a logical answer to the question at hand. LETTER POLICY The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Requests for anonymity w ill be granted with an appropriate reason. All letters are subject to editing at the discretion of the opinion page editor. Bring letters to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center. Photo l,D. is required. Letters may also be addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-1502. her, then it must be argued that she has the right to continue to exercise such discretion over that child throughout his life. Shall w e legalize the “ abortion” o f a child during his teens, when the mother may be having difficulty with the young adult? • • • The question of the sanctity of the mother’s body becomes further clouded when one states the obvious: that, in most cases, the fetus is not an uninvited squatter in the womb. In fa r too many cases, abortions are perform ed oh women who are using the technique as a form of birth control — because they or their partners were too irresponsible to use contraception — not because of a potential birth defect or due to a rape. Unconcerned with the fact that abortion of even a newly conceived fetus is murder, many women overlook their responsibility toward the unborn in fa vor o f the easy escape to their legal “ right.” Unable to establish a tim e when life begins, having failed to ju stify the sole domination of the m other’s w ill over the unborn fetus, abortions rem ain a legal reality sim ply because they are expedient. In this w ay they are but a symptom of an age where the m orality o f an act — even one so clearly defined as murder — must be subjugated to convenience. • • • The most prevalent rem aining supports advanced by the abortionist make a deceptive appeal to the emotion that comes closest to toppling resistance to the act — compassion. So often the abortionist w ill ask of those who oppose it: “ But what about victim s of rape that result in unwanted pregnancy, those children whom m edical science has determined w ill be bom deform ed or disabled and locked into a life of pain and uselessness, or the teen-ager whose life will be destroyed by one tragic m istake?” The answer is at once sim ple and difficult. Yes, the woman who is raped is often faced with not only a most difficult psychological trauma, but with the terrible burden o f bearing within her the child of her attacker. And it is true that doctors can often determine that the unborn w ill be mentally or physically handicapped, sometimes doomed to die at a young age. The anguish and heartache a parent must feel in cases such as these is beyond description. And the teen-ager who becomes pregnant because she and her partner failed to take precautions faces difficulties with parents and peers and a tem porary setback in life. But the bottom line on a ll o f these tragic cases is the sam e: The unborn child in the w om b is n o t a c c o u n ta b le fo r the circumstances surrounding its conception, and as a livin g human being it is m urder to term inate its life through an abortion. Who can d eterm in e w ith absolute certainty that the child m ay not have a productive life despite doctor’s prognosis, or that the embarrassment and financial and emotional difficu lty teen parents may endure fo r the nine months before the child m ay be put up fo r adoption outweigh the child’s right to life? D e s p it e th e m o s t d i f f i c u l t o f circumstances and the apparent callousness of the reply, the sacred value of life itself m ay not be taken from the unborn. • • • What precedes is m ore a term paper than a State Press opinion page column. But this question is a tim eless, lingering one that lies at the base of the m oral status o f a nation and the human race. It is of utmost importance that w e discuss the issue — frankly, honestly and w ith open minds. I have clim bed up on a mountain of soapboxes (w ith the assurance that I w ill be knocked o ff) to present one view of the issue, with hopes that on a day when we have a woman on campus who led the way to the legalization o f abortion, w e w ill a ll ask Sarah Weddington the question: “ What righ t do w e have to ca rry out the termination o f unborn human life ? ” I ’m asking because I really want to know. And I ’m asking fo r the 1.5 m illion young Americans killed last year who would ask the question themselves. If they could. quotable “ No woman can call herself free who does not own and control her body. No woman can call herself free until she can choose consciously whether she will or will not be a mother. ” — Margaret Sanger “ Whenever I hear people discussing birth control, I always remember that I was the fifth. ” — Clarence Darrow L State Press Thursday, November 19,1987 Pase 5 Plans for Tempe Improv club opposed by City staff By TRACY SCOTT State Press Tem pe City’s staff w ill recommend against housing the country’s eighth “ Im provisation” comedy club at the Tempe Cornerstone Shopping Center because of lim ited parking at the center, a city official said Wednesday. “ The decision was purely based on inadequate parking during peak hours in the evenings and on the weekends,” said T erry Mullins, assistant community development director. But the proposed Im prov location was approved by the city’s Planning and Zoning Commission last week .and endorsed by the Cornerstone M all Merchant Association. Mullins said, “ The commission wanted the Im prov so badly that they approved it.” A t its m eeting tonight, the city council w ill schedule a public hearing fo r Dec. 10 for the Tem pe community to voice opinions on whether to allow the nation’s most famous com edy club to come to Tempe. Planning Commissioner Gary Bird said the commission approved a use perm it for the Im prov despite the lack of parking at the U niversity D rive and Rural Road center because it would bring notoriety to Tempe. But Bird added: “ From the (c ity ’s) standpoint thendecision makes sense. Parking can become a serious m atter to other merchants if people going to the Im prov use all the parking spaces leaving no spaces for other businesses.” Cornerstone’s parking facility includes 769 spaces, and the lot reaches capacity on weekend nights. Parking for the Im prov alone would require 172 spaces. But Mark Anderson, chief executive officer of MWA Arizona Inc., which runs the comedy clubs, said he is w illing to work with Cornerstone owners to im prove the parking. “ W e are w illing to pay additional money to im prove the parking situation,” he said, declining to name any specific proposals. Birtcher Properties, which.owns the Cornerstone, also has not provided a proposal to handle parking problems but continues to favor a Tem pe Im prov. Anderson, who has spent more than two years looking for a suitable Im prov location, offered several suggestions for im proving parking availability, including use of the lots behind Mann’s Sun D evil Six Theater or construction of a parking structure. Mullins said, “ We are trying to get the owners (o f Cornerstone) to realize the need for a parking structure.” The U niversity allows overflow Cornerstone parking in the ASU lot north of the center by the band field during peak hours. But ASU can call o ff the agreem ent at any tim e, and University events often occur during the center’s busiest hours. If approved, the Tem pe Im prov would become one of only ten to be built in the nation, joining Los Angeles; San D iego; Irvine, C a lif.; Las Vegas and Dallas. The first Im prov was founded 21 years ago by Budd Friedm an and was a hangout for the late-night theater crowd in New York. The club provides an opportunity fo r would-be comedians to break into the business or established comedians to test new m aterial. Tempe City Council to decide fate of apartment complex plans By MARISSA HALLARE State Press The Tem pe City Council w ill decide tonight whether to grant a Tem pe developer approval to build an apartment complex that is opposed by a group of neighbors. The decision was postponed last week due to Councilman B ill Ream ’s absence. Since Tem pe developer John Bebbling’s proposed 75-unit apartment complex at 2424 S. M ill Ave. is opposed by local residents who gathered enough petition signatures to force a m ajority vote. Bebbling must have the backing o f six out of seven council members fo r the complex to be approved. The proposed complex would be built on the south side o f an unused lot owned by the Church of Christ. “ I hope the council goes,with the staff, p la n n in g and d esign r e v ie w board recommendations,” Bebbling said. Bebbling’s architect, Lee Peters o f Peters 7707 East McDowell Road, Scottsdale For more information or reservations, call 949-7900. No cover charge before 10p.m. Fridays & Saturdays. Open for Lunch & Dinner Monday through Friday. Dinner at 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Caribbean j Creole presents WALT RICHARDSON and THE MORNING STAR BAND This Friday & Saturday, N ovem ber 2 0 & 21 Also appearing: Francine Reed & The Motown Madness every Sunday r “ «■» — '— ■— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — | I Fri. & Sat. *-75c Well Drinks • 75c Draft Beer • 75c Jamaican Rum Shots | I • $1.50 Jamaican Red Stripe Beer. DRINK SPECIALS every Friday j | through Sunday with an ASU l.D . Expires 11-29-87. and Associates, said he is certain the council w ill approve the apartment complex. “ W e’ve done our homework,” Peters said. “ W e’re optim istic that the council w ill approve the staff’s recommendations and vote in our favor.” Neighbors prefer tenant-owned units rather than an apartment complex because they fear the noise and “ partying” of college students would ruin the tranquility of the fam ily-dom inated neighborhood. They also fear an apartment complex would set a precedent to usher in m ore students. Robert Cialdini, a professor o f psychology at ASU and a nearby neighbor to the project, said problems with traffic, unfam iliar p e o p le in th e n e ig h b o r h o o d and vulnerability of handicapped neighbors to crim e w ill rise if the proposed project is approved. Turn to CO M PLEX, page 15 2 fo r i A n y s a n d w ic h e s Buy any sandwich and g et the next o f equal o r lesser value free (with this coupon). D E V IL H U T D E L I 216 E. University E xp ires 11-25-87. Ask m e Foster T r a v e l s e r v ic e S IS M A FH S in c e 1 8 8 8 W e G iv e T h e W o r ld T o Y o u . . . CORDIALLY INVITES ALU ASU MEN TO A PRE RUSH INFORMAL B R EQ U E THURSDAY NOVEMBER I7 * 500-730W HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE. DELTA A S K U S A B O U T O U R F R E Ë P A R K IN G UNIVERSITY W2. _ L A COLLEGE CAREER OE V ALU E, AND A LIFE TIME OE FRIENDSHIP 707 S. Forest • Tem pe, A Z 85281 • 967-9403 M - F 8:30 - 5:30 SA T 10:00 - 4:00 Evenings and Saturdays by Appointm ent \ Regents’ tuition hike proposal meets opposition By DANA LEONARD State Press PH O E N IX — The Arizona Board of R eg en ts’ proposed tu ition hike m et opposition from 17 students and one faculty m em ber Wednesday afternoon, but a final vote on the $82 in-state increase w ill not be made for two m ore weeks. If the regents approve the increase, resident tuition w ill rise from $1,196 to $1,278 next year, while out-of-state tuition is hiked $238, from $4,628 to $4,866 at ASU and UofA. Those who traveled to central Phoenix for the hearing at the regents’ offices expressed concern that a tuition increase, without m ore financial aid, could affect university access and make higher education an “ elite” good. “ A tuition increase could, produce an elitist educational system ,” Associated Students Business Sen. T ed Ballard told the regents. “ I don’t want to see this happen, and I don't believe you do.” A U ofA m inority representative agreed, adding that the state’s universities are in danger of becoming “ not only educationally elitist but culturally elitist as w ell,” making Vote on in-state increase in 2 weeks B a lla rd a greed , s a y in g ,‘ ‘ So m any students that are the brunt of the increase are the ones without cars, or who are busy working and couldn’t come down here today.” Arizona Students Association Executive Director Mick Dalrym ple said earlier this week he had requested the hearing from Regent President Donald Shropshire a week and a half ago and wanted to hold it at ASU to allow for student input. But the regents’ central office did not know if ASA had decided definitely on the hearing until Monday, said M olly Broad, the regents’ executive director. “ The request was made Friday, and we indicated w e would explore the possibility, and that w e would change the tim e of our (p r e v io u s ly sch ed u led c o m m itte e ) meetings,” she said. “ We didn’t hear from the students until Monday.” Broad said because o f conflicts in committee members’ schedules, several of them would not have had time to travel to education inaccessible to lower-income minorities. M ichael Konz, ASASU state relations director, urged the board to take a “ longrange approach” to tuition increases. “ Education should be viewed as an investment in capital,” he said. “ The board should definitely look at this increase very earefu lly and tie an increase to a financial aid program for those students who are on the m argin.” Others expressed their displeasure at holding the hearing in Phoenix instead o f at ASU. “ I think the regents lose touch with the students who are most affected by a tuition increase,” ASASU A ctivities V ice President John Fees said. “ The regents must not lose sight o f the human factor. “ Most of the student leaders here today won’t be priced out of the university if the tuition increase goes through . . . the students who faced being priced out could not m ake it (to Phoenix) today.” ASU, and there would not have been enough members for a quorum. “ I ’d like to have gotten a broader spectrum of students,” said Konz, who dubbed student turnout “ lukewarm” . But Ballard said he thought the response was good, and encouraged students who could not attend the hearing to w rite to the regents to express their opinions. ASASU President-Karrin Kunasek said student government is conducting a survey with the O ffice of Student A ffairs to obtain student response from 900 to 1,000 students regarding financial aid and tuition issues. “ It’s hoped that Regent (E sth er) Capin w ill call us to the table at the Dec. 4 meeting so we can present the results before they vo te," she said. A fter an open hearing, the regents usually do not allow audience members to comment further on the hearing issue because o f time constraints, Broad said, but she expects student leaders w ill be allowed to speak at the December meeting. “ T h e re g e n ts u s u a lly bend over backwards to allow students the opportunity to speak,” she said. RESUM ES SCRATCHING BRUSHLESS A U T O M A T IC P a ra d is e P i z z a INCLUDES U N D E R C A R R IA G E W A S H 9 6 f (recommended by «ill owners manuals) CHECK I US O U T 0 TERRACE & APACHE (O n e block east o f R u ra l) 401 S. MILL AVE. «-is-»?. U p to $ 140 amonth! University Plasm a Center That’s how much you can earn donating plasma in safe, easy visits to University Plasm a Center. Call to­ day to find out just how easy it is, and to set up an appoinjjnent. WEEK 1 2 3 4 $10 $10 $10$10 $20 $20 $20$20 1st visit in a calendar week 2nd visit in a • calendar week Donor Referral $5 $5 $5 $5 Weekly Totals $36 $35 $35 $36 Example can earn in each calendar amountyou month $140 TEL: 9 6 6 -0 4 5 1 HOOPrD-DO SPIRIT TICKET INFORMATION Purchase your ASU student season basketball tickets before Nov. 26 and receive a “ Hoop-D-Do” spirit card. Present your “ Hoop-D-Do” spirit card at each game and it will be stamped. Attend 14 of 15 games and receive a chance to win a Mazatlan vacation (4 trips given away, courtesy of Cerkvenik-Anderson Travel). Attend 12 of 15 games and receive a chance to win six trips to San Diego. Attend 10 of 15 games and receive a hamburger, fries and coke from Flakey Jake’s (50 given away). Attend 8 of 15 games and receive a free hamburger from Flakey Jake's. Students purchasing discounted season tickets must carry seven or more hours at ASU. You have two options: The 15-game option is $14.00 and includes all 15 home games. The 13-game option is $12.00 and includes all home games except January 7 and January 9 during Christmas break. 1. All student seats are general admission, and saving seats will not be permitted. Only Zonie members will be allowed in Zonie section (see diagram). 2. Orders must include completed form (below), valid student I.D. and appropriate payment. 3. Guest tickets are available on space available basis. 4. Valid student I.D. must be presented when purchasing tickets, picking up tickets and entering game with ticket. 5. Ticket office hours, M-F, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Phone 965-2381. BASKETBALL ZONIES R E FE R A F R IE N D G E T A N E X T R A « BO NUS! N.E. CORNER U NIVERSITY & 48th ST. SUITE 108. BUILDING 455 1987-88 ASU STUDENT BASKETBALL SEASON TICKETS When purchasing your ASU student basketball season tickets, sign up for the basketball spirit group, the Zonies. For just $5.00, Zonie members receive priority seating in student sections, free t-shirt, “ go gold” towel, free soft drink at each game, names printed in game program, halftime statistics, face painting and cither Zonie-only prizes, gifts and contests. The Zonie basketball spirit group is limited to the first 92 students who purchase membership. I do it because I know that it saves lives. That’s why I donate plasma. Millions of people all over Am erica rely on plasm a products to stay healthy— or to Stay alive! That’s a good enough reason for me. But I sure can use the extra cash, too. ROLLS WELLS BUSINESS COMPLEX SKETBALL WeTry Like The Devil That's N o t Md=■' GOOD THROUGH 'CORPORATE RESUME" BRING ASU 1.0. FOR *5* DRAFTS WHILE YOU WAIT! éé\ IDoftT -2233 •SAME DAY SERVICE L . 7 ~ •WRITING & CONSULTING " £ I •CLOSEST TO ASU | " •LAYOUT & DESIGN . 1 [ " •LASER PRINTING univer,i.Y_ l _ UNIVERSITY ACTIVITY CENTER 1987-88 HOME SCHEDULE Nov. 20 vs. Bulgaria, Nov. 27 vs. Texas Tech, Dec. 4-5 vs. Kactus Klassic (ASU, San Diego St., Tulsa, Richmond), Dec. 18 vs. S. Utah, Jan. 7 vs. Stanford, Jan. 9 vs. California, Jan. 21 vs. UCLA, Jan. 23 vs. USC, Jan. 30 vs. Utah, Feb. 11 vs. Oregon St., Feb. 13 vs. Oregon, Feb. 27 vs. Arizona, Mar. 3 vs. Washington, Mär. 6 vs. Washington St. Student Sections: U, V, W, T1, U1, V1, V2, W1 Mi Zonie Spirit Section Return with payment to Sun Devil Stadium Ticket Office, M-F, 8:30 a.m . to 4:30 p.m . Name_______________ Associated Bioscience of Tempe, Inc. 1015 South Rural Rd. Tem pe, AZ 85281 Phone 968-6139 ■ Type of Ticket Price Student — 15 games $14.00 Student — 13 games $12.00 Quantity Total A rirlrn a s City, Zip__________________________________________ Check ..... Visa P a y m e n t- MG Amer. Exd. (m ake check payable to ASU) Card No..________________ • Expiration Date_______ _________ ,____ ______________ (cannot process without) Card Issued Tn __________________ Student I.D. No._______________________ ,_____________ A ssociated Bioscience, Inc. Phone 965-2381. Zonie Spouse Card TOTAL $5.00 $15.00 ' * State Press Thursday. November 19.1987 TH E C O N T R A N ETW O RK Garcia: Drugs, gun sales built secret aid network C ontinued from page 1. Childhood, Vietnam War spur communist hate The overthrow of the Sandinistas — the Marxist-backed regim e that gained control o f Nicaragua after the 1979 assassination of dictator Anastazio Somoza — became G arcia’s obsession nearly nine years ago, he said, because he saw the Sandinistas as an extension of Fidel Castro’s Cuba. Garcia, the first-born son of Cuban imm igrants livin g in Staten Island, N .Y., said he visited his grandparents in Cuba before^ the Castro revolution and then again in the' 1960s after a revolt against the dictator was crushed. His father had been a financial-backer of the anti-Castro forces, and Garcia him self joined the Cuban underground in 1969. He was an active m em ber until his arrest in 1985. But Garcia said the Vietnam W ar was the one event that made him anti-communist. As a combat soldier, he spent 13 months in fighting, including the battles of Khesahn, where 500 Americans and 10,000 Vietnamese communists died. “ I must have spent days picking up bodies,” he said. “ I ’m pretty revengeful. I ’m pretty Latin, emotional wise. I said ‘somebody has to pay fo r this.’ When I came back to the states, it just fe ll into place.” By 1985, Garcia had become a member of the lower eschelon in the private network that form ed in Florida to support the Nicaraguan rebels. He said he took orders from men he believes received their instructions from Robert Owen, the liaison between the Contras and form er National Security Council Aide Lt. Col. O liver North. Garcia said he dobs not know why the network leaders asked him to kill Tambs, but he said he suspects his 13 months as a combat soldier in Vietnam made him a Jesus Garcia prim e candidate. He would not say if the Tambs assassination would have been his first hit, adding that to admit that would be “ an indictment.” Both the Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s subcommittee on narcotics, terrorism and international operations and the House Judiciary subcommittee on crim e are investigating the private assistance network. The committees are expected to release reports on their investigations early next year. Tambs, who has been an ASU faculty member since 1969, denied any knowledge of the plot against his life, saying he has never seen direct evidence that any faction o f the Contras wanted him dead. T a m b s , a sta u n ch c o n s e r v a tiv e Republican who once served in the National Security Council and now is considering r unning fo r D em ocratic Arizona Sen. Dennis D eC on cin i’ s seat next year, maintains that it was the Sandinistatf who w ere involved with drug traffickers and who wanted him dead. Leonard Greenbaum, Owen’s attorney, denied that Owen was involved in the plot to k ill Tambs, calling it a “ w ild allegation.” During testimony at last summer’s IranContra hearings on the sale of arms to Ira n . and subsequent diversion of funds to the Nicaraguan rebels, Owen testified that he had no connection to alleged incidents of Contra drug smuggling. And in a A pril 1,1985, memo from Owen to North, submitted as evidence during the hearings, Owen expressed concern that some members o f the rebel forces “ are in the w ar not only to fightf but to make money.” Owen identified in the memo four Contras suspected of drug smuggling or of selling “ goods” and pocketing the commissions. Garcia said he joined the network in February 1985, when, as a booking officer at the Dade County ja il, he m et Tom Posey, the founder o f the Civilian M aterial Assistance, an Alabama-based param ilitary group that used private funds to send guns and m ercenaries to aid the Contras. Posey was identified by Massachusetts Sen. John K erry, a Dem ocrat and chairman of the Senate subcommittee investigating the private network, as a leader in the Contra network in an October 1986 report. Posey, a native of Flint, A la., organized the CMA in 1983 to send m ercenaries and m ilitary supplies to E l Salvador. The day he m et Garcia, Posey had been arrested at M iam i International Airport when an X-ray machine detected a .380 automatic pistol in his luggage. Garcia used as liaison between CMA, Cuban exiles Garcia, with his close ties to Brigade 2506 — a group of Cuban exiles who had participated in the 1961 Bay o f P igs invasimi — told Posey he would be interested in joining the Contra network. “ I was a booking o fficer,” Garcia said. “ W e processed 100,000 people a year. I m et a lot o f people, I knew a lot of people. I could get along easier in M iam i than he (P osey) could. They realized I could go into the brigade very readily and talk to them. He couldn’t do that. “ I was a little cautious b ecau se, in th e Cuban community, m ore of the people in the brigade are cautious about Americans because they w ere betrayed, they w ere left on the beach.” Posey and thè CMA were linked to the C IA in K erry’s report. The report said the C IA had hired m ercenaries to oversee the CMA and o th er o rg a n iz a tio n s supporting the Contras. In a Jan. 31,1985, letter to North, Owen w rote that much of the financial aid to th e C o n tra s w o u ld go through “ under the guise of the CM A.” K erry’s report further stated that Posey had told a Memphis, Tenn., newspaper in a January 1985 that the CMA had been to Miam i to enlist the support of Cuban Am ericans, including members o f Brigade 2506. Doug Jones, Posey’s Birmingham, Ala., attorney, confirm ed that Posey was under investigation fo r his work with the network, but denied a ll allegations that his client plotted to k ill Tambs or participated in drug trafficking to fund the network’s operations. “ That’s absurd. That’s an absolutely false sta tem en t,” Jones said o f G a rcia ’ s allegation against Posey. ‘ ‘ T h e r e w i ll n e v e r be any p ro o f whatsoever that Tom Posey was involved in any assassination plot against M r. Tambs or anyone else.” Jones a lso d isc ou n te d K e r r y ’ s investigation, saying K erry’s researchers only talked to a few people and the report was not the result of a fid i investigation. “ I don’t think there was any evidence of a plot to k ill Tam bs,” Jones said. “ These people (the network) w ere concentrating on S tate Press photo Lewis Tambs, former U.S. ambassador to Costa Rica, was to be killed by network members to prompt a U.S. military strike against Nicaragua, according to former network member Jesus Gar­ cia and U.S. District Court records. supplies, and they w ere concentrating on arm ing the Contras. “ Even though I am not the greatest fan of O liver North, I don’t believe he was in the bu sin ess o f k i l l i n g A m e r i c a n s o r ambassadors.” Tambs assassination plotted before diplomat took office Garcia said Posey first mentioned the plot to k ill Tambs in February 1985, nearly fiv e months before the Reagan administration announced Tambs’ appointment to the post. The conspiracy was in its early stages during that tim e, and the network was beginning to collect inform ation about guard movements at the embassy, said Rick Em irch, a spokesman for the Washingtonbased Christie Institute. The Christie Institute is a public policy institute that investigated the allegations of drug smuggling and the Tambs conspiracy and then filed suit against 28 suspected network members. Garcia said he had never heard o f Tambs before Posey mentioned the diplom at’s name. “ It was the the first tim e, in fact, that I had heard o f Lewis Tam bs,” he said. “ The only thing that really stuck in m y mind was the idea of killing an Am erican ambassador, and it didn’t sound right.” Garcia said when Posey mentioned killing Tambs, Posey said he had received the orders from Owen. “ Rob Owen only worked for one man,” Garcia said. “ The only man he worked fo r was O liver North. When he (Posey), told m e about it (the plot to k ill Tam bs) he distinctly said ‘White House.’ There were a lot of big people involved in this gam e. “ W e knew the W hite House was involved. I didn’t know National Security was playing around. It had White House links. In order to hit a man that high, it has to come from the White House.” Tambs resigned his Costa Rican post in December after it was revealed that he oversaw construction of a rem ote Costa Rican airstrip near the Nicaraguan border to be used fo r a series of weapons drops. He told the Iran-Contra com m ittee in M ay that he had been asked by North to build the airstrip as part of the Contras’ “ southern front.” As ambassador to Colombia from 1983 to 1985, Tam bs w orked to arran ge an extradition treaty between Colombia and the United States to bring some of the m ajor drug kingpins to trial. Tw o of the men he targeted w ere Pablo Escobar and Jorge Ochoa, the two most powerful Colombian traffickers. Tam bs’ attempts to extradite Escobar and Ochoa to the United States resulted in the two men offering the $1 m illion bounty for Tam bs’ assassination. Threats on his life forced Tambs to leave Colombia fo r a safer post in Costa Rica. “ Posey cam e up to me, introduced the plan, but introduced it as a question,” Garcia said. “ ‘Now what do you think about this?’ I kept quiet. I did not answer him when he asked that question at all, until the determination came whether I was going or not. “ The plan was to place a C-4 (a plastic explosive) and a light box outside the embassy and w ait for an explosion,” Garcia explained. “ When Tambs would run out, we would get him.” Garcia said he was first approached with the assassination contract during a m eeting at a M iam i Howard Johnson’s hotel lounge with Posey; Bruce Jones, a Florida resident who had owned a ranch in northern Costa R ica ; Sam H all, the Am erican pilot who was shot down by the Sandinistas in Nicaragua last year and charged with espionage; Steve C a rr, G a rc ia ’ s clo se frien d and an Am erican m ercenary; and two other men whose names G arcia says he cannot remem ber. E fforts to reach Jones for comment were unsuccessful. Carr gave a detailed statement to the F B I about the arms shipments in the summer of 1986 and spoke openly to journalists and congressional investigators later in the year about the network’s activities. He was scheduled to appear before U.S. House and Senate comm ittees investigating the Reagan administration’s covert Contra supply operation in Decem ber 1986. But before he could testify, Carr was found dead in a Van Nuys, Calif., parking lot from an apparent drug overdose. A year before his death, Carr wrote G arcia, telling him, “ I am an Am erican all the w ay, but I stop at killing other Am ericans for the sake of C IA war gam es.” During the M iam i meeting, Garcia said the network members decided fiv e men would be enlisted to carry out the hit, including one Nicaraguan who would be killed im m ediately afterw ard and have papers planted on him that would lead back to Managua and Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega. “ They gave m e the impression that I was the one who would hit Tam bs,” Garcia said. “ I f it was a Russian, it would have been no problem. But not Tambs, not an Am erican. I got up, finished my drink and said, ‘I don’t want to hear this.’ ” Hector Cornillot, a defendant in the Christie Institute lawsuit, told the State Press that he was at the Howard Johnson m otel during the m eeting between Garcia, Posey and the other network members. The men did discuss assassinating Tambs, Cornillot said, but they w ere drunk and none of the talk was to be taken seriously. “ When men drink and talk about war, there is all kinds of shit you are going to hear,” he said. Cornillot occupied an office at the hotel and said the network members used to congregate there because he could get inexpensive room prices for them. Rebel confession stops plot, Garcia asked to kill Russian According to the 1986 Christie Institute lawsuit, filed in a south Florida U.S. D istrict Court, the plot to kill Tambs fe ll apart by m id-April 1985, when one of the fiv e men, a Nicaraguan identified as “ David,” decided to bail out. David was to be the one left dead at the scene with the papers im plicating the Sandinistas, Garcia said. Turn to CO NTRA, page 8 . State Pres» TH E C O N T R A NETW O RK Continued from page 7. The plot becam e public when D avid told the plan to a Costa Rican carpenter identified as Carlos, who later inform ed U.S. journalists Tony Avirgan and Martha Honey, the p lain tiffs in the Christie Institute’s lawsuit. D a v id d isapp eared sh ortly a ft e r inform ing Avirgan and Honey. Costa Rican officials later inform ed the plaintiffs that D avid had been tortured and killed by the Contras. Garcia said the last tim e he heard talk about the Tambs assassination plot was in March 1965. Three months later, he was asked to k ill the Russian ambassador to Nicaragua. “ It was no money,” Garcia said. “ The Am erican embassy and killing Tambs was a m illion dollars. But when they cam e to me about the Russian embassy, we w ere going to take the money out o f our own pockets and pay fo r that hit. “ To be truthful, I thought I owed it to them because I didn’t want to take the first mission.” Garcia never carried out the assignment. In late July, he traveled to the Dominican Republic to w ait further word on when to hit the Russian ambassador, but was called home by Posey because of difficulties, in getting him into Nicaragua. On Aug. 31, 1985, G arcia was arrested in M iam i fo r an unregistered machine gun and silencer found in his home. He said the weapon was to be used to assassinate the Russian. He said members of the network told police o f the weapon, which was stored in his h om e, b ecau se he had re fu s e d t o assassinate Tambs and because members o f the network believed he was the one who had m ade die plot public. The plot, in fact, had been made public by Honey and Avirgan. Lawsuit charges racketeering among network members The Christie Institute lawsuit against the alleged network leaders, charges both Posey and Owen with racketeering and c o n s p ir in g to m u r d e r T a m b s . Th e defendants also are accused of plotting to k ill Eden Pastora, a dissident Contra leader, by planting a bomb at a M ay 30,1984, news conference in a sm all jungle retreat in Costa Rica. P a sto ra su rvived the assassination attem pt, but eight people w ere killed and 28, including Avirgan, w ere injured in the blast. The lawsuit details (he Tambs plot and links G arcia with Posey, Bruce Jones and Costa Rican rancher John Hull in planning the Tambs assassination. R e tire d U .S . A r m y G en era l John Singlaub, a defendant in the lawsuit and chairman o f the Phoenix-based U.S. Council fo r W orld Freedom , an anti-communist organization, called the plot to k ill Tambs, “ one o f the w ild accusations . . . by two R e m e m b e r T h e O n e s Y o u A re T h a n k fu l F o r W ith C a r d s F r o m Hours C e le b ra te ! Mon.-Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 11-4 I communist journalists in Costa R ica.’ Singlaub, who is a close friend of Tambs and a political supporter of Arizona Gov. Evan Mecham, said the plot is a “ total fabrication.” “ I think the suit was developed for the sim ple harassment o f conservatives,” Singlaub said. In January, a federal judge in Miami denied motions to dismiss the Chnstic lawsuit and the charges of racketeering, saying that one or more of the defendants have a history of drug smuggling, terrorist a c tiv itie s and p o litica l assassination operations. Cocaine smuggling funded Contra activities, Garcia says Garcia said the M iam i network dealt in m ore than guns and ammunition when it cam e to supplying the rebels. Cocaine trafficking became the m ajor source of revenue for weapons purchases, he said, with an estimated one ton a week of the drug being brought into Miami. Although Garcia said he had been hearing o f the network’s trafficking activities for m ore than a year, he did not actually see any of the drugs until he participated in a March 6,1985, shipment o f 10 tons of arm s to the rebels. He said that when the network members w ere loading arm s onto transport planes at th e F o r t L a u d e r d a l e - H o l l y w o o d International Airport, a shipment of cocaine was brought in and unloaded 10 feet from where thè network members w ere working. Garcia said he learned of the drug smuggling m ore than a year before he joined the network from the traffickers and smugglers who w ere booked at the Dade County Jail. “ Most drug people today talk about it. The drug business leaves a heavy dollar; it leaves a lot m ore money than guns. “ The actual people who m ade no bones about it w ere a lot o f the traffickers. It was bad fo r business because it brought down their profits. They w ere being brought into ja il and they w ere saying, ‘Man, most of the cocaine is bein g brought in by the government, and it’s cutting us to pieces.’ ” He said so much cocaine was being brought to M iam i that prices on the drug began to drop. In 1983, cocaine was selling for about $52,000 a kilo, he said. As the network began bringing m ore of the drug in, the price began to fa ll and was at $30,000 a kilo in 1984, Garcia said. “ The CIA was bringing in so much it went down to $13,000 a kilo (in 1985),” he said. “ There was so much cocaine in Miami, it wasn’t even a com petitive item anymore.” Most of the chugs w ere brought in from Colombia through a Costa Rican shellfish processing plant under the name of “ Operation T ic T a c,” he said. In all, about $388 m illion worth o f cocaine was brought in by the network. T u rn to CO NTRA, page 13. IN J U R E D IN A N A C C ID E N T ? TO FIND OUT WHAT YOUR CASE MAY BE WORTH CALL: BAKER A N D M ARCUS CORPORATE FOUNTAINS 4625 S. WENDLER DR., SUITE 111 TEMPE, ARIZONA 85282 219 E. Baseline Tem pe 4 3 8 -1 2 1 2 (betw een M ill & R u ra l) IPRACTICE LIM ITED TO PERSONAL INJURY LAW) Sieve Martin John Candy P l a n e s ,T r a in s a n d A u t o m o b il e s W hat he really wanted w as to spend Thanksgiving with his family. What he got w as three days with the turkey. ""A ;'A A A " 'Highest rating. The most importo« Mmol this year, this decade, even « this generation. Richard Attenborough* compelling film grips ihe audience with classic tension and suspense.* -GANNETTNEW SPAPERS "EXTRAO RDINARY!” "Cry Freedom1 is extraordinary. An exciting Aim.. Powerful and engrossing.' "DON’T M ISS n r '★ ★ ★ ★ (highest rating). A Mm atgroat offishy and passion with all the elements o(a Hist-doss suspense thriller. Don't miss ItT -RexReed.ATTHEMOVIES "A BLOCKBUSTER THRILLER!" 'Nerve-tingling and heartbreaking, 'Cry Freedom' is a blockbuster thriller in the very best sense, as powerful In its political truths as it is com­ passionate in its consideration ol friendship.' -JudKiCiM "WONDERFUL!” 'Thrilling. One ol the year* most Inspiring, wonderful films. Oorrt miss IT - JeffreyLyons.SNEAKPREVIEWS^INN "SUPERB!” 'On the honors list or movies that really mailer, reserve a top spot lor'Cry Freedom: Denzel Washington Is superb and Kevin Kline delivers his best screen performance ever.* PARAMOUNT PICTURES, PRESENTS -BruceW dbom son.PLAYBOY J ohn Huches FILM PLANES. TRAINS AND AUTOMOBLES Mux Sent by IRA NEWBORN bccuMPraducos MICHAEL CHINICH and NEIL MACHUSjjj Written,Produced aod Directed by JOHN HUGHES A PARAMOUNT PICTURE TMi Copyright «987 by * * SoundtrackAlbumAvailableon Paramount PicturesCorporation, Hughes Music/MCA Records. "V AI Rights Reserved “ cSSST' Cassettes andCompact Discs. IT ■ s m u ia t n u ARRIVING NOVEMBER 25TH AT THEATRES EVERYWHERE. HUH ■ HIMI I ■ M .M H, AITENBO RO UG H ’S TWiUMT ® saa sJ S S & m r a * 5 » | P 9 S iU swianMMiaNDiRcoacMsnBwaii w w m O PENS FRIDAY NOVEMBER 20TH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU- Slate Press Page 9 Thursday, November 19,1987 Tempe man hangs self in prison; second hanging in past 2 days By MIKE BURGESS State Press An 18-year-old Tem pe man hanged him self Tuesday inside a shower at a Phoenix ja il, a sheriff’s spokesman said. Leonard Dale Lacrue was found hanging about 2:50 p.m. at the Central Jail, 120 S. F irst Street, by an officer making a routine check, said Cpl. Joe Rossano. He was pronounced dead at 3:30 p.m. The incident marks the second ja il hanging in the past two days, Rossano said. Herbert Yazzie, 31, was found dead at the Madison Street Jail on Tuesday. Lacrue, who was m entally retarded, was booked into the ja il Nov. 11 on charges of m o l e s t a t i o n a nd t h r e a t e n i n g and intim idating and was scheduled to appear in Tem pe Justice Court Wednesday. Rossano said Lacrue was a special housing inmate who had access to showers. He said a shower curtain tied to a shower rod was used in the hanging. Firefighters got the call at 9:16 p.m. and arrived at the Triumph Corporation, 1210 W. Alam eda D rive, three minutes later, said assistant fire chief Jim Gaintner. “ There was a pretty good column of smoke when w e got there,’ ’ Gaintner said. “ W e suited up a hazardous m aterials team and got some active readings o f potassium cyanide.” Gaintner said the structure, which is used for “ electroplating” circuit boards, was closed at the tim e of the fire. A sm all acid leak also was detected inside the building. No one was injured in the blaze. Gainter said the cyanide readings did not pose a threat. The nearest neighbor to the building is three-quarters of a m ile away. “ A t this point we have no idea what caused it and w e don’t know the dollar dam age,” he said, adding that arson is not suspected. •A 70-year-old Ohio man was shoved to the ground and robbed of $350 Tuesday, Tem pe police said. W inkler Goodman was robbed of his w allet about 7:45 p.m. as he was getting into his car, which was parked at the Regal Eight Inn, 1720 S. Priest D rive, said Sgt. M ark N eville. Police describe the suspect as a black m ale, 35 to 40 years old, 5 feet 9 inches, and 215 pounds. He was last seen wearing a white sweatshirt and dark pants. police report In other incidents: •Tem pe firefighters battled sm all amounts of highly toxic chemicals at the scene of a sm oldering fire that lasted almost six hours Tuesday night at an electronics plant, a fire officia l said. We want you to take a zany picture of yourself! GET CRAZY! HAVE FUN! BE SILLY! BE SUAVE! It’s fun and it's absolutely FREE. And you have a chance to appear In the yearbook! You can do it any day this week between 10:40 and 2:40 on Cady M all near the fountain. Just bring a few props and your smiling fa c e . . . and SHO OT YOURSELF!) TheJ2vtdv>l Q r v a s 'l . e U I A I I *\ ■ Ljearixiok After your photo, cool off rrtUi a FM E tea cold Papal and ngfcter » « • » to win a n te e Honda Space *■ Scooter! Elections director resigns By J. MICHAEL HOEHN State Press T h e M aricop a County Elections D irector resigned in a cloud of confusion Wednesday as his office prepared to verify thousands of signatures on Mecham recall petitions today. “ James R iggs resigned because of health concerns, and he decided to resign i m m e d i a t e l y , ” N o rm Hulcher, the chief deputy recorder said. H o w e v e r, R i g g s , who declined to give a specific reason for the resignation, told reporters his health did not affect his decision to resign. But he told Poletis he was unable to stay on “ due to health reasons which w ere a m ajor consideration in my 20% decision to leave.” In R i g g s ’ l e t t e r o f resign ation , released by Hulcher, R iggs apologized for what he said was his ‘ ‘inability to ensure a smooth transition” in the $51,000-ayear job. Secretary of State Rose M offord began delivering Mecham recall petitions on W e d n e s d a y to cou nty recorders who w ill begin v e r i f y i n g about 400,000 signatures. The recorders must return their petitions to M offord by J a n . 18. I f M o f f o r d determines there are 216,746 v a l i d s i g n a t u r e s , th e governor has until Feb. 1 to resign or fa ce a reca ll election. If he declines to resign, an election could be held as early as M ay 12. R iggs refused to answer questions about whether the resignation had anything to do w ith the verifica tion process. Hulcher said as fa r as he knows R iggs did not resign because of problems with the verification. “ He did not have a m ajor role in the recall verification,” he said. R iggs acknowledged he was not playing a leading role in the verification effort. “ The election staff w ill be doing it,” he said. “ There are some very excellent people who w ill be checking the signatures.” T h e A s s o c ia te d P r e s s contributed ta this report. ALL DRINKS ONLY O FF ARTW O RK & FRAM ES »Rosters, Prints •M eta l Frames, Custom Moulding • U N I Frame at $ 0 . 9 5 Plus Glass • R eady-m ade Fram es for Canvas Paintings •Stretched Canvas M mao Picture fkamM 1827 N . Scottsdale R d., Tem pe • Abco Shopping C enter • 9 4 1 -1 2 3 2 m m a HAT & CAP COMPANY a— r * r r I J ■— I" “ 1 l LITER it e r • RUBBER DUCK TUES. W ED. THUR S. FRI Outlaw N ight Ladies Night It s only a Quarter Happy Hour 6-9 100 Coors 1 penny drinks for ladies T A V 'Live Music 95c Domestic S1 25 Im ports Every dfHnk in the house 100 Wme Draft Free buffet No co ve r.til 9 W eekend Party 75C drinks for ladies til 11 A fter Hours til 3 Only S2.00 1 M U G With This Ad While Supplies Last R E G . $ 3 ,0 0 V A L U E VALLEY'S LARGEST SELECTION OF n f l -n b a -n c a a - m a j o r l e a g u e auto & BEER LOGO CAPS ; O R IG IN A L SWEATS a n d TEES LOWEST PRllfeS AROUND 831 S. RURAL, TEMPE (NEXT TO BOJO S) 966-6356 9 6 8 -2 4 4 6 1216 E. APACHE, TEMPE £ 2 2 5 ^ 2 ™ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ — — ««^ ¡¡¡¡5 2 ffi^ i2 i2 S S £ L 2 i2 2 2 M —«i«— i « ¿ ¡¡¡£ £ ¡2 * Senate passes bill to fund new disabled-student cart By AARYN KEMP ByAARYNKEMP State Press c r i s i s has h a s been h een given trivpn a Disabled Student Resources’ cart crisis Band-Aid o f $4,700 from Associated Students. A fter an hour o f debate Tuesday night, the senate passed a bill to purchase a new four-passenger transportation cart, a vehicle that fills “ an im m ediate need that otherwise would not have been funded.” The senate passed the bill by a vote o f 15-6. Senators w ere split over whether ASASU should be responsible for funding a U niversity department with student funds. College o f Engineering Sen. Kevin Anderson, chairman of the finance comm ittee, said the funding “ could have adverse effects on funding o f ASASU departments later in the year.” “ It should not be our policy to fund U niversity departments.” But Tedde Scharf, associate director of Disabled Student Resources, argued that “ the U niversity does not have to legally provide the cart service at all. There is no other service like this in thé country. “ It allows students to stay in school who otherwise wouldn’t wouldn’tbe beable ableto.” to.' She said problems arose with the service when the Student H pntih rCenter, » n tp r W a tp H next n a v i in s R aasked s k e d if DSR could Health located to n DSR, transport tem porarily disabled students. A 41.5 percent increase in cart usage during the first seven weeks of fa ll sem ester 1987 has demonstrated the growing need for m ore carts, Scharf said. “ We have reached a point in the budget that in order to continue the service for tem porarily disabled students, we have to find other funding,*’ she said. DSR was forced to ask Associated Students for funds after depleting all other resources for money, including federal funding, U niversity departments, alumni, corporations and students, she said. “ We cam e to ASASU because we thought it would be the quickest w ay (to receive funds),” said Jim Morin, program director of DSR m obility services. DSR federal funds w ere cut last year because the transportation service was made available to tem porarily disabled students on campus, Scharf said. Federal funding rules do not include servicing students who are are not not permanently permanently disabled, disabled, she she said. said. GrammGrammwho Rudman cuts in the federal buget also affected the loss of funds. University A ffairs now is responsible for funding the entire DSR program and adiditional funds fo r new carts are not available. Betty Asher, V ice President of Student A ffairs, wrote a letter to College of Social Work Sen. Bridget Branigan, who was responsible for initiating the b ill with College of Social Work Sen. Monica Ram irez, concerning DSR’s plight for funding. The letter, in part, said: ‘ ‘Let m e emphasize that each year Student A ffairs allocates substantial financial resources to the operation and maintenance of the existing cart fleet. “ We do not have sufficient resources to add new carts to the program. However, please be assured that we w ill not perm it the current service to decline. ” Sen. David Enzminger, College of Law , said, “ It seems the representatives here (from D SR) have checked into all possibilities (fo r funding). The need does not go away.” LOW AIR FARES ■ T R A V E L “ 1 8 ” 7 1 5 5 E. T h o m a s , S u ite 106 S c o ttsd a le , A Z 8 5 2 5 1 9 4 9 -8 8 8 8 O p en D a ily 9 a .m .-6 p .m . O p en S a tu rd a y 9 a. m .-1 p . m . •C re d it cards accepted «Free ticke t delivery •N o service charge fo r ticketing Remember to purchase yo u r holiday tickets early to get the lowest fares! R o und T rip A irfa re s : Chicago.......................... $152 $152 Denver....... ........ $148 Kansas City.:................... $130 Los Angeles.................. $38 Minneapolis/St. Paul.... .... $198 New York........... ........ ....$198 Miami......................... .... $212 San Francisco............. ....$110 START THINKING NOW ABOUT SPRING BREAK! CALL US FOR INFORM ATION. Pre Holiday Fiesta R e g is t e r H e r e Drawing Held November 21 (Noon-3 p.m.) At The Cornerstone ‘ GRAND PRIZE A Car From The KKFR Fleet Of Cars 1st P rize............................. $1,000.00 2nd Prize.......... $500.00 3rd Prize................. ....... ...... $500.00 4th Prize...... $500.00 5th Prize......... $500.00 6th Prize...... ....... 25” Color TV 7th Prize...... Trip to San Francisco (via United Airlines) plus 2 N ig h ts Lodging 8th Prize....... ......... . Trip to Mazatlan plus 3 N ig hts Lodging i f e » fovve Ternpe Z ero s' 6:00 Ç X o / Îe 1 0 9th Prize»... ......... . . ... Bicycle 10th Prize........ Several Gift Certificates and Prizes from Cornerstone Merchants Enter at any participating Cornerstone merchant No purchase necessary. Need not be present to win. * Register at the participating Frys grocery stores to win a KKFR Fleet Car or obtain official entry form from any participating Pepsi Cola retailer. State P ro s Thursday, November 19,1987 mmmmmmmmrn H ii\ Af\ lifB R #K I N Sound s sh tw ilig ht show S2 so iiir 4 Channel owumi s at iwhn 4 ws 6.to EXCEPT NUTS D A T E W IT H AN ANGEL Page 11 CROSS MY HEART L it I T ( BARBRA STREISAND ■ IN U I ^RICHARD DREYFCISS D Roedshow No Dlsce'onts/Passe ITO) 00m IS ’, .................................... .SHEUIVLOJtG B k f a t o k i FLO W ER S » S Í L I f X t S l c É sT ~ E ll ATTRACTIONS COM ING SOON TAMPOPO TANNING WOLFF SYSTEM -I N * WhereiPalo Verde Beach A MONTH WITH ASU tf) Buy the official w, < UNIV. I 3 g 1415 E. U NIV. Arizona Easter T EM PE MARRIOTT [THE NUMBER 1 HIT MUSIC STATION FOOD SERVICE SIGMA CHI ALPHA CHI OMEGA W in m e free. At IB M Exam Days, you can put the new IB M Personal System/2 M odel 25 to the test. You can also test your luck at w inning one. Because every qualified A S U student w ho attends Exam Days is eligible for the drawing. Even if you don’t w in , getting this m achine at ou r special student discount w ill m ake you feel like a winner. T h e M odel 25 Collegiate comes packed with perform ance. A big 640K B mem ory, advanced graphics capabilities, and lots o f software. So stop by, check out the PS/2 M odel 25 and ask about the great discounts available through the IB M Education Product Coordinator, C O M PA SS (Com puting Assistance Center, Trailer # 2 on Palm W alk). IBM Exam Days T u es., N ov. 17 th ru F ri., N ov. 20 (9 am -4 p m ) O n the A S U C am p u s Drawing eligibility limited to qualified ASU students. Personal System/2 is a trademark of IBM Corp. ______________________ ____________________ S ttt< PtCH Thursday, November 19,1987 Soviet scientists may join ASU in M ars research geology department spokeswoman said. Both countries to send probes M aureen G erin ger said discussions among R.O. Kuzmin and G.A. Burba, from the V I Vernadsky Institute in Moscow, and ASU professors Ronald G reeley, P hilip Christensen and M ichael Malin w ill focus on each nation’s upcoming investigations of the red planet. By STEVE NOLEN State Press Tw o Soviet scientists w ill arrive at ASU today to explore possible collaborative Mars research with U niversity geologists, a The Soviet Union plans to launch a Mars probe next year, and an unmanned National Aeronautics and Space Adm inistration exploration of Earth’s nearest neighbor is scheduled tp blast o ff in the early 1990s. called “ Together to M ars,” which aired on K A E T Channel 8 in October. G reeley leads a team o f University researchers that is mapping the geology of M ars and studying its volcanos, craters and wind. Christensen heads a group that is building instruments and equipment fo r the NASA probe, which is to include a camera designed and built by M alin’s group. Malin took part in a videotaped teleconference between Soviet and Am erican scientists In addition to m eeting with ASU faculty, the Soviet scientists w ill tour campus research facilities. Friday evening G reeley is tentatively scheduled to accompany them to the Grand Canyon, G eringer said. Kuzmin and Burba attended a Mars workshop at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston before coming to ASU. It is easy to find out if you are pregnant. . . •FREE pregnancy testing •N o appointment, immediate results •D etects pregnancy 5 days before your period is due j; «Evening and Sat. hours •Abortion, birth control, gyn. services SOUP & SALAD WELLS MARGS WINE LONGNECKS t a u p r n » *2« at Rural & Apache D v PITCHERS 1 1 :3 0 -8 :0 0 BAR & GRILL V CORNER OF BROADWAY & ROOSEVELT 894-6423 524 WEST BROADW AY/TEMPE, A: «M m il ■ ■M M Tempe 968-7471 424 W. Broadway Rd. Shepherd Every Thursday BURGER MADNESS price 9100 N . 2nd St. 1O-O' Go To The Countdown With NO COVER e sp e r a d o s ^ Family Planning Institute Phx. 997-7493 ALL burgers All Day and Night 5 FO R 1 starts at 7:00 L IV E E N T E R T A IN M E N T Well, Wine, Draft, Strawberry Margs, Reg. Margsandlce Teas H a w th o r n - H ill B a n d Rural & Apache . . Never, never, ever a cover. Selling in the classifieds. State Press ________ 965-6731 # Computers for Rent Now at The Arches 122 E. University Com e a n d v is it us 921-0980 BUY«SELL«TRADE Vour book* at C hanging Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) w s pay 30% o f o ur re-aala price in cash or SOS in trad ein cred it which m ay b * used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (S orry, no trade-ins on Sat. o r S un.) Browse through our three floors of: •N ew & Used Books •A rt Prints & Posters •C alendars & C an ts •Handbound Journals M -F 10-9 SAT 1 0-6 SU N 12-5 1 e M t Drinks Don’t Forgat Friday’s all night for Ém m bm ÍI ipP|Pj| w B lH ri the ladies! 5 1 .0 0 Drinks fo r the g u y s 8-11 p.m. ....................... $ 4 ........................ y /y 1 8 price Drinks W 6. Û Q 2 J »♦ D rin k s 9-11 ... Alter Hows flB 3a.m , ~ Dance, Dance, Dance C h a n g in g H a n d s 414 MW Avenue SSS 0292 Otd Town Tamp« B ■ mm i _b : btb S ta te Pres» Page 13 Thursday, November 19,1987 THE CONTRA NETWORK Continued fro m page 8 . START TANNING FOR THE HOLIDAYS! Garcia said he never doubted the drug shipments w ere both illegal and unmoral, but said he saw it as the only way to help stem communist movements in Central Am erica. “ I thought it was wrong, to be truthful. I thought it was wrong, but this is the way they wanted to maintain the w ar,” he said. “ I saw a Congress against the w ar and the Contras. And I said to m yself, communism has to be stopped. I hate communism. And this is the w ay they w ere doing it, through drugs. •50% OFF any single visit •10 sessions for *2495 •Monthly Unlimited for *3195 “ A lot o f people knew, that’s the interesting thing, a lot of people in the Latin community knew about this. But one, a lot of them are pro-Reagan, and two, the press in Am erica, if they w rite things about that, they are considered communist.” O ffe r expires 11-25-87. Garcia said the people who supported the Contra effort because they hated communism have been betrayed by the Americans and profit-seekers who controlled the private assistance line. “ I shouldn’t have trusted,” he said. “ I shouldn’t have gotten involved with Americans. Especially with some of those characters. They played politics, and I was pure for the cause. “ That hurts worse than any bullet.” But Garcia stopped short of pledging m ore help for the Contras, saying any efforts would be in vain because the movement is dead. “ This is just business,” he said. “ The Contras are secondary. Everybody was making a dollar. “ The Contra, the one that actually pays with his life, is a little man. That man that dreams of a free Nicaragua, he barely has boots, he barely has bullets, he barely has beans, but he’s paying with his life. And that’s wrong.” I f you 're going home fo r the holidays, d on 't worry, w e'll freeze your membership. (N o t valid w ith any other o ffer.) SUN DEVIL TANNING SALON Located In T h e Arches M all • C o m e r o f Forest & University (N e x t to the W areh o u se D e li) •B u ilt-in high speed fa ce tanners •P io n ee r AM/FM stereo • A ir con d ition ed c o m fo rt ^ mm «•£ , CALL N O W 968-4611 H o u r s : M o n . -Fri.“ 10 a .m .-9 p .m ., Sat. 10-4, Sun . 12-6 Estab 9 6 6 -7 7 8 8 1 ^ ^ WAREHOUSE D E L I & P U B 130 E . U niversity D r. (at Forest) O V a ? <0- & 4 P ¿4P & o r ■ • W TW too m A W V CHRIS-TOWN 0 Y i r b a r g a in p r ic e SUN DEUIL BELL TOWER w man) 1230, 3Ä ), 5:15, 8:00, 10:15 W K « K U H (N U ) 230, 7:15 f i l l i REAITT (I) 1215, 4:45, 9:30 GROS MT HURT (R) 1230, 3:00, 5: 15, 7:45, 10:00 H M K I 8T ( N U ) 1215, 245, 5207:15, 9:30 PRKESS RRME (N U ) 1200, 230, 520, 7:30, 9:45 SURRENDER (FR) 1245 420 820 IRE FATHER U K SM (FRIS) 230, 015, 9:45 FATAI ATTRACTION (!) 1:30, 420, 72a 10:15 BAHT ROOM (N) 1220 230 500 7:451015 H U M OUT (N U ) ORT (N U ) 120a215,4:45,7:15,920 120, 320,520 7: 159:45 PROMNKHTI(R) 123a245, 5:15,7:45,1020 FATAI K 1HTT (1) 1215, 52a RUSSXKS (N U ) 245, 7:30 TKSRRMH(R) 11:45 200 4:15,720 9:45 »45 MADEN HEATER (N ) 1230, 230, 4:30, 7: 15, 9:45 DOTI MSH II (!) 3:30,7:45 DUTH R M (R) 12a 5:45,1020 TRI-CITY DOLLAR THEATRES S1.00 AU SEATS-AU SHOWS ARI 1070 MAIN ST & DOBSON RD L 4 D I-1U /U IN MESA j CATCH THE K H (I) 120, 2X , 5:30, 7:30, 9:45 M W ! M T (I) 1:00, 5: 15, 9:30 MUCOS (PC) 3:15,720 1K UHM M 1UMTS (N ) 1230, 5: 15,1020 SOMEOK OK Tl WITCH OVER ME (R) 320, 7:45 lOTOTMES N IA1T9TTRK (N U ) 120, 5:15,920 U MMM (N U ) 320. 7:15 Q ,843-4583 248-2843 S7D7WQHTHAVÉ J ß F ID I ATTRACMI m 1:45. 4:30, 7:30. 10:15 ■ SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM. M ON.-FRI. (EXCEPT HOLIDAYS) SATUROAY.SUNOAY S HOtlOAYS FIRST SHOW ON LY . SUPERSTITION 0 1 8 3 4 -5 7 6 7 ^ ^ ^ N IM M REM O (N U ) 1200215 4:3a72a SRSFECT (R) 11:45215, 4:45 7:3010:15 NUIT DARCHK ( N 13) 1:15 230 520. 7:30 9:45 FATAI ATTMCTMH (I) 1220 230520 8201020 9:15 HEUR ASM (N ) 1245,320 515 720 9:45 FATAL ATTMC1MR (R) 11:452154:457: 159:45 NUTS WARNER BROS , , BARWOOD FILMS/MARTIN BARBRA STREISAND RICHARD DREYFUSS "NUTS’ MADREEN STAPLETON ELI WALLACH ROBERT WEBBER J A IS WHITMORE, KARL MALDEN ’ BARBRA S T R E M I THE IM00EH (R) 1203205207:15920 URSS MT KART (R) (N U ) 230 720 STIKRHI (A) 1-20520 920 1215,230 4:45 7:15920 M IT ORON (N ) MATH WSM M (R) 120,520 920 FARRI K OMUESS (8)250720 M A D A S IN A N G R Y GRILLST PLA IN ... 1245 200 5:15 720 9:45 F R N N G R IIP Q 1:15 215 5:15,720 9:45 STAFFS FFRDAYNOVEMBER20th State Press Thursday, November 19,1987 fashion bargains IS Famous name designer clothing for guys and gals at unbeatable savings! J u s t a rriv e d ! Fabulous new fashions for gals. Unbeatable savings. 7041 E. Indian School (next to Buffalo Exchange) (opposite Impeccable Pig) 921-3535 947-3551 $588 W E D D IN G CO NSU LTING SERV IC E W HAT TO DO BEFO RE YOU SAY “ I DO” 225 W. University 1 P C + PLU S T U R B O X T | FREE •IBM PG/XT COMPATIBLE •4.77/8 MHz •640K RAM •TWO 360K FLOPPY DRIVES •HI-RES. TTL MONITOR •GRAPHICS CARD W/PRINTER PORT •AT KEYBOARD •A LIST OF FLEXIBLE, RELIABLE A N D REASONABLE BUSINESSES IN TH E V ALLE Y •W E D D IN G CHECKLIST, PROFILE A N D TIPS PROVIDED Computer Systems S Solutions *Make this your firs t step. Call 5 8 0 0 E . T h o m as S c o tts d a le 220-4898 9 90 -9 4 78 20 Meg Hard Drive...... Add $239 Panasonic Printer............. . $189 TURBO AT COMPATIBLE $988 niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir ti Your One S to m a te Shop COPIES Complete Line of Atari Hardware HALF OFF c o p ie s o f o n e o r i g i n a l First 100 «".ioo<•*<*.-~*. ph.. M a s apply ttw M lo, loft« tin pop«. For Vt off prices on othsr papen, call ns. _ S5*00 “ Next 100 A a moo kinko'i D an ci E x e rc i Great copies. Great people. W e A ls o C a rry *Conm our D ii O versize C opies • P assport Photos B inding • C assette Duplicatinig MESA Fiesta Mall I DMT 8««n 9 69 -1 66 7 TEMPE 1840 W . Southern 715 S . Forest 969-3326 894-9588 SHOW US YOUR STUDENT I.D. YO U ’LL GET A DINNER makes our already terrific prices «yen better1Our dinners include a full course m eal w ith a ll the trimm lngs-from salad to dessert So. dollar for dollar, when you're hungry and you need a break, you c a n 't beat The Spaghetti Com pany! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! W ith 2 dinners for the price of 11But you MUST have Any day of the week, tor lunch or your student I D card dinner. The Spaghetti Com pany is known w ith you to take advan­ for a great m eal a t an affordable tage of this otter. price. But the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL This year we’re doing it again! Every Sunday (b u t ONLY on Sunday), Mike Putos of the Spaghetti Com pany will give you one FREE dinner" for each dinner you order! It’s our 2 for 1 SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL. And it s good for the whole school year a t both our Tempe and Phoenix locations bpen at 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sundays S p a g li c i ti C ,M |panj/' mm « A i X 'I ' a V T T 1 A m T 'r » RESFArnAXT ¡n Old Town TEM PE P H O E N IX South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 257-0380 A W id e S e le c tio n o f V id e o G a m es Fiesta M all, M esa Now ; m Plus software for Apple, IBM, C64, Amiga & Atari ST C opies • R eductions • E n largem ents Lowtr U I Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Di Jon, Stuffed F ile t of S ole, Tenderloin, Chicken Plcatta, Veal Marsala ARE NOT INCLUDED in the 2-for-1 special. 4thStreetand Mill 966-3848 T E M P E II TEMPE III 933 E University Hardy & University 894-1797 921-0168 (near Sears, lower level) 969-2553 State Press C o m p le x ___ C o n tin u e d Page 15 Thursday, November 19,1987 frompage 5. “ The density and transfer of people are characteristic o f apartment complexes, so unfam iliar faces can cause you to take note and be m ore vigilan t,” Cialdini said. “ I don’t think w e could be good neighbors — like w e should — as a consequence.” Todd N a r ra m o re , a neighborhood resident and an ASU sophomore finance m ajor, said he does not mind that college students may be living nearby but added he is concerned about increased traffic. The controversial project originally was to be built on the north end of the lot until neighbors complained and the Planning and Zoning Commission rejected Bebbling’s proposal. Bubbling moved his plan to the South side o f the lot but again complaints have follow ed Bebbling. D avid M ickey, a Church o f Christ minister, said the church plans to sell the land, if not to Bebbling, then to soiheone else. “ W e’re aware we can’t please everybody although w e’d certainly like to,” M ickey said. “ But at the same time we have the right to sell our land. W e’ll let the City Council decide what’s right for this land.” Council member Pat Hattdn said she w ill listen to both sides before making a decision. “ I ’m not sure it’s the City Council’ s resp on sib ility to so lve the church’s financial problems. “ I have reservations whether there should be an apartment project there because this w ill set precedence for other such projects to be built near the area,” Hatton said. RUNDLE’S LIQUORS 4 MKT. D ID Y O U K N O W ? . 730 S. MILL Comer MMA University Ave. CORDOBA BEER 8pk.. ....... $1.88 WHITE MT. WINE COOLER 4 pk... $1.17 NATURAL LIGHT BEER 12 pk.... $4.46 SAUZAEX.TE0UILA375ve, Jill. On-Campus 1908 personals N E IL ”W .” Bradley: Hey, USC Backstrokers, ya’II watch out! Neil eats grits and red eye gravy before his races. (That’s their secret down in Arkansas.) Good luck, sw eetie... I’ll be cheering you on! Go, Sun Devil Swimmers!!! Your fan, Deborah Lee. PAISAN: TH IS weekend was great, but next weekend will be even better. Count­ ing the m inutes, XO XO Paddington. T e le p h o n e d a tin g th a t’s q u ic k , easy a n d fu n . Listen to exciting personal ads, then leave your own. Only 80 cents per minute. O n ly ta sta fu l ads a cca p ta d . services COM PUTER CONFUSED?? Consulting and tutoring in IBM /M aclntosh- operating systems and software. C all M E Consul­ tants, 966-8779. HAVE UNW ANTED facial or body hair removed perm anently by electrolysis. Free consultation, located in Tem pe. Call Sharon at Desert Electrolysis Center, 829-7829. .JAPAN! ENHANCE your preparation for ah international career. W inter and summer training programs. 206-623-5539. International Internship Programs, 406 Colman Building, 811 1st Avenue, Seattle, WA 98104. PSE M EM BERS, elections are upon us, so let’s have a huge turnout. Thank you all for making the Payson trip such a blast! Falling down the stairs, Rich R. P-TRICK: IN case I haven’t told you lately... TM P was the best, I really love your zest. XOXO J-Bear. SIGM A ALPHA Mu Barry Doyle: I can’t wait until form al. W e w ill have T ri Sigma fun. Sigm a love, Judy. SIGM A C H I’S: Let’s hold the title for TriDelt Softball Tourney! G et psyched to win! Your coaches. SIGM A N U 'S: G et ready to rage at Tridelt softball tourney! Your coaches are ready (o win! SIGM A PI Big Bro Lance: Thanks for everything! I luv ya! Your III sis Amy. SIGM A PI: Tri Delt w ill leave it’s mark tomorrow in the chapter room. Check it out. D elta love, your coaches. SKYDIVER SCOTT H .- Someone wants to get to know you better. Interested? Just call me "G race” !!? SPIDER MONKEYS! Hola Ken, Quo tal estas? G racias para el desayuno ayer-- me lo pase en grande contigo. (From the elusive Spider Monkey!) STIFFY: THANKS for a wonderful birth­ day. G lad I got to spend it with you! Your granola bar, Goober. NATIONALE INTERNATIONALE Studen­ tenvereinigung Kulturelle Erfahrung in San Francisco 12.- 15. Janva. Vorberei­ tungtreffen 19. Novem ber, 18 Uhr M .U . 215N , 894-2194.______________________ NATIONAL INTERNATIONAL Students Association Cultural Experience in San Francisco , Jan uary 12-15. M eeting Novem ber 1 9 .6 :0 0 M .U ., 215N . 839-3136. N .I.S .A VOYAGE Culturel A San Francis­ co du 12 au 15 Janvier. Rendev-vous le 19 Novembre dans le M .U . 215N 6:00, 829-7350. ONE W AY ticket anywhere Continental flies, $100. M ary, 896-3794. Must use by 12-17-87. Transferable. RO UND-TRIP TICKET, Phoenix-Sarasota, Florida. Leave 12-21-87, return 1-12-88. Reduced rate negotiable. C all Paul, 784-8899. THANKSGIVING W EEKEND: Roundtrip to Chicago. Leave November 25, return Novem ber 30, $150. C all John at 840-9034. Must sell! UTAH! TR IP over Thanksgiving break for sale! C all Gwynne at 279-3641 or 241-1280. Let’s go skiing! CLASSIFIEDSWORK. ty p in g / w ord processing $1.20 PER page. Spelling, gram m ar co rrected . 4 color p rin t, graphics. Baseline/Hardy, 345-8379. $1.25 DOUBLE spaced page. A-1 letter quality word processing. 32 years exper­ ience. M arian, 839-4269. $1.50 PAGE for prompt, quality work. Term papers. C all anytim e! Sesam e Street W ord Processing, 839-3626. $1.50 PER page. Any Type Word Process­ ing. Spelling and gram m ar corrected. Some graphics available. Call Debbie, 961-1495. A A A T Y P IN G /w o rd p ro c e s s in g . $1.50/page. 10 years experience. Fast turnaround. Call Linda, 962-8075. AAA W ORD Processing Service. Quick, professional services. Graphics available. Ron, 833-5532, or message. A-ONE Proficient typing. IBM Selectric. Loraine, 833-8365, at University and Dobson in Mesa. A PAPERS possible with professional word processing. Spelling checked, no extra cost. C all Julie, 820-4663' CALL M E for fast, accurate, quality service at com petitive prices. Close to ASU. 966-2186. DEGREED PHD information specialist. Faculty, advanced student projects profes­ sionally guided to com pletion. Word processing, 256-2830. FLYING FING ERS W ord Processing and Resum e Service. McDowell/Scottsdale Road area. 945-1500. M ARIJUANA AND Cocaine smuggling can m ake your rich... legally. Exotic cars (foreign, dom estic), boats, planes, and other luxurious item s are siezed by the government. Send $9.95 to add your name to the m ailing list. W AF Enterprises, Suite 257, 1716 E. Broadway, Tem pe, 85282. STEP INTO the future with the Focus 21 design team hair models. For information, 990-9186. PH I-SIG ANDRE: Ok, I adm it it-1 wasn’t very nice. I'm sorry, Kathy. PHI SIG S- G et ready for the Tri Delt Softball Tournam ent! W e’re going to win!! Love, your coaches. travel PHO TO PROCESSING B la c k & W h ite Develop & Contact Print $5 per roll C o lo rb u rs t P h o to 933 E. U n iv e rs ity , No. 108 transportation ATTENTIO N: FREE cars to all major cities. 21 or older. C all AAA Driveaway, 277-9979. CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older. All States Drive-away, 992-5200. travel A IR LIN E AW ARDS buying coupons, m iles, bump tickets. Top prices. Also s e llin g , savings w orldw ide. A rthur, 968-7283. A IR LIN E CO UPO N S w anted: United Bonus tickets; W estern Extra; others. Up to $350 each. 800-255-4060. EXPERIENCIA CULTURAL en SanFrancisco de Estudiantes Nacionales e Interna­ cionales. Enero iz a 15. Noviembre 19 (reunion) 6:00 M .U . 215N , 829-7350. FLYING TO Knoxville around the 19th? O r back after the 1st? Call me, gotta deal. 838-5892. NATIONAL INTERNATIONAL Kyokai San Francisco no Tai Ken, Ich Gastu 1 2 -1 5 kai Go November 19 6:00 M .U . 214N, 438-8684. FORMER ASU staffers- W ord Perfect and Xerox memory writers. Experienced with APA, MLA, graduate school, etc.- gradu­ ate students and faculty work welcome. 945-6302, Donna and Joan. PROFESSIO NAL TYPIN G - $1.25 page. Call after 6 p.m ., 994-3302. per RESUM ES, TERM papers, reports, legal and business documents, editing, general secretary, and notary service. 990-9341. ‘ RESUMES ‘ TYPIN G ‘ Word processing ‘ Copier. Student discount. 820-6249. SA VE T IM E , c a ll n f j’ firs t. W ord p ro c e s s in g - th e s e s , d is s e rta tio n s , resumes. Professional typist. M esa Secre­ tarial. 844-1876. SHORT O F TIM E? I can help. Rea­ son able. P ro fessio n al. G u aran teed . Experienced in academ ic. Call Jessie 945-5744. THE PAPERW ORKS- Thesis, report and resume typing. IBM com patible word processing. Near ASU. 921-9575. T Y P IN G /W O R D P ro c e s s in g . Term papers, reports, etc. Reasonable and dependable. 955-4308. W ORD PROCESSING, resumes, typing. Call Uni-Print, 967-1651. and W ORD PROCESSING- Reports, theses, resumes, etc. Business, legal, engineer­ ing experience. Rush jobs okay. 945-0058, evenings. wanted BASEBALL CARDS, yearbooks, world series programs, autographed baseballs, and any other sports item s wanted. 784-8846. I NEED help! Looking for a qualified tutor for REL100 and/or JUS100. Call 966-0413, ask for Tiffany. Fee negotiable. W ANTED: TUTORING for 8th grader in social studies, language and reading. 3 days per week. 839-1191 after 6 p.m . Page 20 State Press Thursday, November 19.1987 Football practice closed to media as Devils prepare to face Wildcats By CAROL BOOS State Press It won’t be business as usual fo r the Sun D evils as they prepare fo r the U niversity o f Arizona. ran it in the gam e Illinois sacked the quarterback. “ W e’ve been accused o f not making the gam e as big as they do,” Cooper said. “ I don’t know what else we can do that w e haven’t already done. Maybe this w ill let our players know ‘Hey, this is a big ballgam e.’ ” ASU coach John Cooper has closed practice (including m edia) until after the Nov. 28 B ig Game. Meanwhile, Cooper said a ll positions are open, including the quarterback position. But only two candidates are vying for signal-caller duties because freshman Paul Justin w ill not be able to play this week due to an ankle injury he suffered against California. Cooper said he closed it to prevent the U A from finding out what the Sun D evils m ight have up their sleeves. “ W e have a lot o f work to be done,” Cooper said. “ Any inform ation they (U A ) can’t get might help us.” Although he said that what is printed or broadcasted is not going to be the difference between a win or a loss, it could mean the difference between a good play and a bad play. Cooper said juniors Daniel Ford and John W alker are taking snaps at practice. He pointed out a television prom o a local station broadcast p rio r to the season open er again st Illin o is . Th e advertisem ent highlighted a play which included a reverse. The Sun D evils w ill practice throughout the week, including Saturday and possibly Sunday. “ The play had worked before,” Cooper said. But when they “ This is a big ballgam e and I think you should do all you can do,” Cooper said. State Pt m i photo ASU football coach John Cooper has closed practice to the media until the UA game. Swimming_____ _ Continued from page 17. ^ “ Audience support (students); divers and the swimmers w ill a ll have to be at their best to com e out o f this with a win. But that is a real possibility.” Both USC and ASU have future 1988 Olym pic team members swim m ing in the n$get, which should make fo r an interesting spectator event, i Last week, ASU beat then-No. 1 Texas in a close meet. than ninth.” In addition to today’s competition, the women w ill meet ninth-ranked UCLA and 15th-ranked Ohio State Friday at 3 p.m. at the Aquatic Center. The Buckeyes w ill be bringing only eight swimmers, inclu ding, J a n e lle B o ssey, th e d e fe n d in g N C A A 400-individual m edley champion. “ U CLA has no weaknesses, and has good depth in all events,” H ill said. “ They probably should be ranked better Admission to the swim meets is free with a validated ASU ID. A nominal admission fee w ill be charged to non-students. Justice Studies Students Bè on the cutting edge o f an exciting future. Attend Alpha Sigm a Upsilon (Justice Studies Students Association) Next meeting Nov. 25, 6-7 p.m. MU Santa Cruz "1 U F’C Health Foods Restaurant Buy any size yogurt and get a homemade chocolate chip cookie F R E E . Fresh Juice Bar & Store Expires 12-13-87. Sandwiches, Customize Health Foods Cooking & Catering To Parties " A Heaven For Vegetarians & Fresh Juke Lovers. The Variety Is Unlim ited. " ANNIE’S YOGURTACOOKIES Sm oothies. Shakes. Banana Splits, s Hawaiian Snow. N o n -fa t F rozen Y ogurt as low as 17 calories p e r ounce. SW Comer University & Price Rd. 894-5515 Free Soft Drink With Any Cutlets Ordered (Introductory Offer) . S.E. corner Broadway & McClintock I C c fV fX t& é ' 966-1531 N e x t to E l P o lio Asado Open Mon.-Sat. 10:30-10:00. Sun. ¡2:00-9:00 ASSOCIATED STUDENTS LECTURE SERIES presents Sarah Weddington Decision winning lawyer in Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court Abortion Case Selected one of Time’s outstanding women in Am erica TODAY, THURSDAY, NOV. 19 12:30 p.m. MU Arizona Room Free with student/ASU I.D. I I I I I I I I I I I