Copyright. State Press. 1969, Tempe. Arizona Vol. 72 No. 18 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Friday, September 22, 1989 Student seeks policy for campus epileptics B By SO N JA LEWIS State Press An A SU student wants the University to establish a policy concerning treatment of epileptic seizures that occur on campus, but campus officials said they a re unsure of the legality of the proposal. Jim Rosendaul. a senior who has had epilepsy for 15 years, said time and money could be saved if ambulances were not immediately called each time a student experienced a seizure. Epilepsy is a disorder affecting the nervous system that is characterized by convulsions and unconsciousness. Victims s u ff e r p e rio d ic seizures that m ay be violent but are often of short duration and have little long-term effect. Under Rosendaul’s plan, a w aiver could be signed by each student with the disor­ der so that the Univer- Rosendaul sity would not be held liable if injuries were sustained during a seizure. However. Bruce Meyerson, A SU general counsel, said the w a iv e r w ould not necessarily clear the University of liability. He could not comment on the subject further without doing additional research, but said “ (even) if the w aiver w as signed voluntarily, it’s possible that it would not hold up.” Rosendaul said he suffers six to eight seizures per week and underwent brain surgery to help alleviate the problem. Last summer, Rosendaul had a seizure in Hayden Library. The librarian in charge called 911, and an ambulance arrived shortly. . R o sen d au l s a id he g a in e d p a rtia l consciousness and was not in serious danger but was transported to a hospital anyway. “ An ambulance shouldn't be called right a w a y u n less a p erso n h as in ju re d themselves or they are having a prolonged seizure," he said. Rosendaul said the ambulance trip cost more than $200. “ They (the am bulance d rivers) did absolutely nothing except take me to the hospital, where they called m e a cab,” he said. “ Students can’t afford to be spending that kind of money.” Rosendaul said the ambulance drivers Turn to Seizures, page 10. Activist plans to make m ovie about civil rights By MIKE VAN DYKE State Press A fo rm er civil rights activist said T h u r s d a y th a t b e c a u s e the m o v ie “ Mississippi Burning” does not paint an entirely accurate account of the civil rights movement in that state during 1964, he is planning a m ovie of his own. Bob Zellner, a form er m em ber of the S tu d e n t N o n v io le n t C o o r d in a t in g Committee, a group that spearheaded the civil rights movement in the South, is best rem em bered for being one of the first whites involved in the civil rights movement. He told about 75 students during an Associated Students of ASU-sponsored lecture that “ ‘Mississippi Burning’ is a wonderful cop movie but doesn’t bare much resem blance to the truth.” The lecturer, who was paid $3,100 for his appearance, said that with the help of his fiancee he plans to produce a movie that will “ reveal the truth about what happened in Neshoba County, Mississippi in 1964.” “ M ississippi B urning,” a 1989 A lan Parker-produced film, presents an account of the 1964 F B I investigation into the deaths of three civil rights advocates who were murdered by Ku Klux Klan members and Neshoba County sheriff’s officers. He said the efforts of the F B I were “ romanticized” in the movie. “ If the so-claimed ‘heroic F B I ’ had done what we asked of them, three lives would have been saved,” he said, adding that he had asked the F B I to call the sheriff’s office to find out where the students were. Turn to Zellner, page. 12. Jack W, Beasley Jr./State Press Picture This Alan Michieli, a senior in the school of social work, examines some of the prints for sale on Cady Mali Thursday. “ For four bucks apiece, you can’t beat it,” Michieli said. Student arrested in connection with sex abuse at party B y TENNY TATUSIAN State Press An A S U student was arrested Thursday in connection with the sexual abuse of a fem ale student at a fraternity party last week, University police said. ‘We’re sorry for what happened, but we haven’t gotten down to the bottom of it.’ Jam es Robert Lowry, 25, of the 600 block of East Gilbert Drive, Tempe, w as booked at the A S U Police Department on a charge of sexual abuse. He w as released on his own recognizance pending a form al complaint to be filed by the M aricopa County Attorney’s Office, said A S U police Cpl. Bennett Rowe. _________________ — Kirby Maus The incident occurred Friday night at the Ph i Delta Theta fraternity house, 701 Alpha Drive, during a party with an A S U sorority. The victim reported the incident to police on Tuesday, Row e said. K in g H o liday: The Arizona State Senate passes the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, sending the proposal to the House. Page 3 Rowe declined to provide specifics about the incident. Sexual abuse, a class five felony punishable by up to two years in jail, is defined as intentionally o r knowingly engagfhg in sexual contact with someone without their consent. The Office of Student L ife is investigating the incident, said Lenna Erickson, administrative assistant to the dean of Student Life. S u p e r B ack: ASU outside linebacker Darren Woodson leads the team in tackles, and will head up the defense against Houston P ag e 17 Low ry, a Phi Delt m em ber and a senior in the College of Public Program s, declined to comment about the incident, saying only that he had m ake a “ mistake.” Phi Delt president K irby M aus said the fraternity is looking into the m atter but has not taken any action. “ W e ’re sorry for what happened, but we haven’t gotten down to the bottom of it,” Maus said, adding that Low ry sent a typed apology letter to the sorority Monday. M aus said L ow ry had been drinking and w as “ harassing some girls” during the party. He added that the president of the visiting sorority asked him to m ake Low ry leave the party because Low ry had allegedly “ sent eight girls home crying." “ A t every party guys bother girls,” M aus said. “ A lot of guys are like that.” ASU M oneym akers: The highest-paid University employees give thé vital statistics on their personal jives. S tate P re ss M agazine Today’* waathar: Sunny and unaaaaotiaMy warm, with temperatura* expactad naar 102 dapt»**. Tha overnight low ahouid In tha uppar 60a. CljHwWad*____ ________ — r ...........-21 Com ica............................................. ........ 16 Polle* Raport...... ...;............................... ..... 0 Sporta........................... ...... .— ...............1T Stala Pt*** Magadn* Stale Press Friday. SeotemberM. 1989 World/Nation Bush, Baker, Shevardnadze open high-level talks on next summit W A S H IN G T O N (A P ) —• President Bush met with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze on Thursday, opening three days of high-level talks expected to narrow a tim e fram e for a superpower summit next y ear and spur chemical and nuclear weapons cutbacks. After nearly two hours o f discussions, Shevardnadze said the two sides had not set a date for a summit meeting between Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev but, “ W e have concluded that a summit is necessary.” Secretary of State Jam es Baker indicated a summit meeting might not occur until next year, but said it would be in the United States. The high-level meetings began with a White House session attended by Bush, Shevardnadze and Baker. H ie discussions will continue between B aker and Shevardnadze on Friday and Saturday at a wilderness lodge near Jackson Hole, Wyo. Shevardnadze spoke with reporters in the White House driveway before getting into a waiting limousine. Using the sam e language as Baker, Shevardnadze said the talks in Wyoming probably would set “ a general time fram e” for a Bush-Gorbachev summit. Vietnamese begin final pullout from Cambodia after 11-year war S IE M R E A P , Cambodia (A P ) — Cambodians showered Vietnamese soldiers with flowers Thursday as they began their final withdrawal from a w a r that started with a Christmas invasion 11 years ago and ended the bloody rule of the K hm er Roiige. “ Our friends go, but the special Cambodian-Vietnamese relationship does not,” said a red banner in front of dozens of military vehicles teat rumbled out of this northwestern province to tee blare of a pop music band in a governmentorganized ceremony. Joint Chiefs chairman calls for ban on assault weapons W A S H IN G T O N (A P ) — Adm. W illiam Crowe Jr.-, retiring chairman o f the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called Thursday for an end to sales of assault weapons and also said the nation “ might consider doing unusual things with tee m ilitary” to win tee w a r against drugs. “ I f w e want to fight it, and w e want to whip it, w e want to prevent it, I would suggest that it does require unusual m easures,” Crowe said in a interview with news service reporters. President Bush has banned imported assault weapons but has allowed sales of U.S.-m ade versions to continue. Saying tee nation has never “ seen the fiber of our society eaten aw ay by an insidious, uncontrollable threat,” Crowe suggested that in the anti-drug fight Am erica might want to use tee m ilitary in new ways. “ That doesn’t ap p a ll m e,” he said. Today Meetings •Alpha Epsilon Delta Pre-Med Fraternity Blood Drive committee assignments and meeting with representative from United Blood Services at 2 p.m. in P E B East, Room 219. •Alpha Kappa Delta Membership Drive continues in SS Room 321 -1 2 hours of Soc. credit, 3.0 G PA, membership fee..; V;-; • •ASU Ski Devils “ Trolley Keg Party” at Sunny's Pizzaand Pub, 1301 E . University Drive. Will also be signing new members and accepting deposits for Utah and San Diego trips. •Campus Crusade for Christ Spiritual Fitness with Leadership Training Class at 6:30 p.m. in the Mu Pima Room. Get in shape now. •Devil’s Juggling Club Interested in juggling? Stop by any time between 3:30 and 6:30 p.m, in front of the Language and Literature Building. •MUAB’s Farce Side Comedy Hour is performing a free comedy show at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Cinema. Headlining this week is “ The Tuna Company.” •Kayak Club Learn how to kayak at 6 p.m. in the Aquatics Center. Everyone Welcome. •MBA our first Happy Hour is from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Beverly Grill, 1320 E, Broadway Road. Free hors d ’oeuvres and spécial drink prices. •National A ssociation of Accountants Pre-Gam e Tailgater at 4 p.m. at Gammage Center. •Society of Professional Journalists will have an open house from 9 to 10 a.m. in the Stauffer Reading Room. Stop by for more, information. Membership is $25 national and $5 campus. •The Whitefield Society Open Forum - a question and answer session on the Bible and Christianity at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room 211. This Weekend •Delta Sigma Pi Sharon Cater speaking on “ Junior Achievement and the College Student” on Saturday at 6:30 "p.m. For mòre information call Ingrid Fath at 838-8914. •Esperanto ASU Classes in the “ international second language” on Saturday at noon in the MU, Room 213. •India Students Association Picnic Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Kiwanis Park volleyball courts. Contact Haresh at 966-7345 for more information. •Phi Beta Lambda a general business organization will have a general membership meeting on Sunday at 1 p.m. in the M U Pinal North Room. •Pi Sigma Epsilon General meeting on Sunday at 6 p.m. in the MU. Topics to be discussed: Regional Convention, Senate appropriations and much more. •Shotokan Karate Club practices a traditional Japanese martial art on Saturday at 2 p.m. in the S R C Gym-C. •Society fo r the Creative Anachronism Medieval fighter practice on Sunday at 4:30 p.m. in front of Student Services. Also on Sunday, Medieval accessories at 6 p.m. Call 461-3896 after 5 p.m. for location. Correction A headline in tee World/Nation section of Thursday’s S ta te P re s s falsely identified the country over which a French- DC-10 w as downed in a potential terrorist bombing, As stated in the story, the plane crashed in southern Niger: 1 A S U S C O M PU T E R S O U R C E l|Avantage 286^ m 1 I I I DONT *1195 DO YOUR HOMEWORK ATHOME Includ es 40M B Get the 286 machine that’s priced right. Includes 40Mb Hard disk. Monochrome Monitor, 640K, std. keyboard, 1.2mb drive and more. T O S H IB A T1000 $659 COMPUTE ONTHEGO WITHTHIS 71bWONDER AvantageXT 3499 ■ he Broadw ay's Executive Developm ent Program provides specialized training to introduce you to our com pany, and to prepare you for your first m anage­ ment assignm ent as an Area Sales M anager. The Area Sales M anager position provides m anage­ ment experience in a custom er driven selling environ­ ment. 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CARDINALl 200 n B aud $459 M I 1 L P H O E N IX 16th st a G et On-line Instead O f In-line. Ë E i C am elback 2 6 6 -7 8 7 3 2400 Baud $109 TEM PE S outhern 6 M cC lintoch 838-1236 n c m (/> o m Internal M odem ¡I If The Broadway Southern California is a Division of Carter, Hawley, Hale. “ O M ETRO 35th Atta. 6 Northern 841-0202 m 30 HH P rm Page 3 Ffklay, Scptembg; g^J969 King holiday passes Senate; further support likely » P H O E N IX CAP) — The Arizona Senate voted 17-11 Thursday to trade in the state’s paid Columbus D ay holiday for a paid holiday honoring slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. The vote ended years of disappointment for backers of a King holiday because House passage and signature by Dem ocratic Gov. Rose Mofford were considered a virtual certainty. Four Republicans joined the Senate’s 13 Democrats to pass the m easure on the floor . But the key vote cam e earlier, when nine Republicans agreed to break a deadlock and let the bill get out of caucus and to the floor. Business executives have been pushing for the holiday and w arning that Phoenix’s bid for the 1993 Super Bowl could be in jeopardy unless it is approved, but many Republican senators believe the issue should go to the ballot for a vote by all the state’s citizens rather than get decided by the Legislature. Sen. Carolyn W alker, a key b a c k »* of the King effort, said the vote w as “ a victory for the entire state of Arizona, even those of us who have voted no.” “ I hope the state of Arizona can come to a real healing and can put this issue behind us,” she added. Republican Sen. Leo Corbet, who A new his weight behind the bill and competed with Senate President Bob Usdane over who could be its chief G O P supporter, cited the Super B ow l as his reason for the vote, saying lawm akers should think of “ w hat w e ’re doing for economic growth,” W alk er also referred to the bowl gam e and convention boycotts, but predicted that “history will not record that-it w a s an economic issue” that moved Arizona to join most of the nation in honoring King. N o one spoke on the flo w in opposition to the measure. Some senators who voted to let the bill out of caucus reported receiving angry telephone calls from constituents. Usdane, R-Scottsdale, had encouraged fellow Republicans at a morning caucus not to demand a show of hands under a self-imposed rule that requires nine Republican votes to get a controversial bill out of caucus. “ Just allow it to the floor,” Usdane urged and he adjourned the meeting to give leaders more time to round up the nine votes. But some m em bers insisted on a show of hands anyway, . and, following a closed door session later in the day, nine ' m em bers raised their hands to indicate they wanted to allow the full Senate to vote. Republicans had used the nine-vote rule to block a vote on the King holiday during the regular session after the Martin Luthar King Jr. addresses a civil rights rally In Chicago’s Soldier Field June 21,1964, In this file photo. measure had passed the House. E arlie r versions of the King bill often called for a federalstyle, Kihg-for-LincoIn D ay swap, angering Republicans who see Lincoln as a G O P hero. But the switch to Columbus D a y wasn’t the only factor at work this time. Super Bowl boosters are saying that Arizona has already lost $256 million in convention and tourism business because it has no paid King holiday and that the state could lose a potential $200 million in business if the 1993 Super Bowl goes elsewhere. Arizona is getting an undeserved reputation as “ a backward and bigotted state,” Corbet told his caucus. “ I hope we can get the nine votes to put this on the floor and put Now... ìòurO Scooters from... •Great on Gas •Low insurance •Easy Maintenance •Easy Parking •Bring in Your ASU I D, for Discounts •Free Pick-up & Delivery Elite LX's! CHUO'sU Elite 150!!! H e lix 's «!! A L L S A LE P R IC E D N O W !!!!! *Dest. & Prep A d d i C om e R ide W ith Us! T O W N & CO UNTRY BMW 1701 N. Arizona Ave. (3 miles south of Superstition’on Country Club) East Valley = 8 9 9 - 9 0 8 8 Phoenix ? 275-3001 f this behind us.” /)V Democratic lawm akers, meanwhile, predicted that failure to pass a King bill could jeopardize bills to let banks charge m ore for credit cards and to offer an electronics consortium tens of millions of dollars in incentives to m ove to Arizona. A ll 13 Senate Democrats and one Republican, Phoenix’s Jacque Steiner, had consistently supported King bills in the past. Usdane, Corbet, and Tem pe’s Doug Todd joined their ranks Thursday to approve the King-for-Columbus bill. Steiner, Usdane, Corbet and Todd w ere also among those voting in caucus to bring the bill to the floor. They w ere joined in caucus by Pete Corpstein of Paradise Valley, John Mawhinney of Tucson, Bill D e Long of Tucson, Tom Patterson of Phoenix and John Hays of Yaraell. Opinion State Press Frjda^eptemjjer^MjJWN Page 4 Editorial Basketball Frieder era to cost students Once again, it looks like students are going to be rolled over by the great steam roller known as the University department of athletics. With the advent of the Bill Fried er èra of À SU basketball and the University’s dream of a winning hoops squad, the higher-ups in the athletic administration a re discussing placing premium charges, which could be as high as $200, on tickets beginning in the 1990-91 season. The main purpose o f the exorbitant ticket p r ic e s w o u ld b e to p a y F r i e d e r ’s outrageously exorbitant earnings, which have been reported at anywhere from 1400,000 to $700,000 a year. Naturally, the better the seats, toe higher the premiums, so the Basketball Ticket Review Committee has m ade toe logical deduction that it needs all toe best seats in the house to sell to toe general public. B u t alas, the committee found that section “ U ” , which is located in a prim e area of toe stadium and which would bring toe highest premium charges, is already occupied by students who pay only $1 per game. The solution? Move toe students out of toe potentially expensive — and therefore profitable seats and make them sit in the corner of the arena, far aw ay from the prime seats they once occupied. The committee m embers claim this could be a beneficial move for students because the section will be increased by about 500 seats. W e are unimpressed. The only other sports team in town that charges premiums on seats is the Phoenix Cardinals — you know, that p rofession al team. ■ In case Athletic Director Charles H arris and committee chairman Lonnie Ostrom have forgotten, the Sun Devil basketball team is a collegiate organization, not a professional one. This is a s p ort, gentlemen, and it is not listed on toe N ew York Stock exchange. If H arris thinks Frieder — a m an who left his Michigan ,squad as it w as preparing to make its victory march through the N C A A tournament — is worth a paycheck that could probably build a new stadium, then he can pay for it out of his own pocket. If the committee thinks students will tolerate being herded into the corner of toe stadium so it can generate more dollars by raping toe general public for upwards of $300 a ticket, think again. A S U basketball games have never drawn large amounts of students or mem bers of the public. Don’t expect things to get better by offering bad seats to students and back­ breaking prices to everyone else. Even if Frieder can lead the A SU basketball program to toe promised land by waving his bankbook and parting the Pac-10, he still isn’t worth his income. Students want to sit in quality seats to see their team play. If we want to occupy bad seats, w e’ll drive to Tucson to watch toe gam es there — at least Lute Olson wouldn’t abandon his team before the N C A A tourney. The committee will meet again in two weeks to make its final recommendations. The committee members should seriously consider their actions before brushing students aside — or they will find toe basketball program heavily dependent on toe general public for support. And at these prices — good luck. Letters Ree Center ripoff Editor: A s complaints against toe Recreation Center’s mandatory fee continue, much is m ade of the student vote that took place several years ago. However, no one pauses to consider that those who must now pay did not have toe opportunity to vote, and those who voted did not face toe possibility of paying (unless they intended to remain at A S U a long time). The election itself w as a “ special” election. Rather than on the m all like regu lar elections, polling booths were placed in selected obscure classrooms. Anyone who has studied efficacy theory in voting trends could predict the low and skewed turnout that resulted. Especially since the vote w as known to be irrelevant. Most who were opposed had low incentive to take extra time out from classes and/or work under those conditions. There w as also disinformation circulating before toe election. Opinion polls which claim ed to show a great student demand for such a project turned out to have been taken at a different university. This is important because if enough people actually wanted it, a mandatory fee would not be necessary. The consequences of toe proposal w ere not fully explained. The distinction w as not m a d e c le a r enou gh on b a llo t s and questionnaires between the general notion that “ I think building a recreation center is a good id ea" and ‘T think all students who come to A SU after m e should pay a mandatory tax to build a recreation center,' whether they want it or not.” There is a big difference between toe two. Jerry É . Ellison Jr. . Alumnus STA TE PRESS Quotable “ If a little kn ow ledge is dangerous, w h ere is a m an w ho has so m uch a s to b e o u t o f d a n g e r? ” — Thomas Henry Huxley EDITORIAL BO AR D Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: Darrin Hostetler ED ITO R Marty Sauerzopf M ANA G ING ED ITO R Carolyn Höfig ASST. M A N A G IN G ED ITO R Brian Tassinari O P IN IO N ED ITO R DARRIN HOSTETLER Editor MARTY SAUERZOPF Managing Editor Asst. Managing Editor............................. CAROLYN H 0FI6 City Editor............... , ...........KELLY PEARCE Asst. City Editor.:..;.....^....TYRONE MEIGHAN .;..... .BRIAN TASSINARI Magazine Editor................. .................. b e n M cC o n n e l l MATTHEW LINDENBURG Assoc. Magazine Editor........ SUZANNE ROSS .....................GARY JACKSON ............................JO EL HORN ................ MICHELLE ALLMAN ....................WENDY STRODE Photo Editor........................ .......... .......... JA C K BEASLEY Asst. Photo Editor............... ...........................SEAN MOHR FREELANCE WRITERS: Meg Halverson. Sharon Kariey, Francine Stahl, Mish Tell, Richard Vigil. CARTOONIST: Mike Ritter GRAPHIC ARTIST: Joan McKenna EDITORIAL ASST.: Lynn Vavreck PRODUCTION: Daniel Donley, Steve Kricun, Nancy Ness, Mark Nothaft, Deborah Prewitt, Lynne Senzek, Jason Silver, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Frank Culver, Jay Eck­ hardt, Dan Ellstrom, L y s a F i t z h u g h . Paul Lee, Karen Lisiewski, Terri Smith, Ray Zickel. REPORTERS: Mike Burgess. Elise Elsberry, Kimberly Harris. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during Adriane Hopkins. Kelly Jain. Richard Lamping, Joie Ann La POHa, Son|a Lewis. Laura Schmidt. Tenny Tatusian. Michael the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 1S, Arizona State University, Tempe, Van Dyke. SPORTS REPORTERS: Vicki Culver, Paul Coro, Dave Arizona 86287. Newsroom: (802) 965-2292. We do not answer questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: Hodgee, Tomi McElroy, Keith Rosenhagen. (802) 965-7672. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jamie Lytle, BrianO’Mahoney, Scott The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published Troyanoe. for and circulated On the ASU campus. The news and views CO PY EpiTORS: Kelly Ettenborough, Nicole Perron. published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. MAGAZINE STAFF: Scott Seckel. Opinion Page 5 Friday, September 22,1989 State Press Explosion Will East Germany experience popular uprising? C o d y S h e a re r North Am erican Syndicate W A S H IN G T O N — For most of this year, the E ast German leadership has been anxiously preparing to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Germ an Democratic Republic (G D R ) come Oct; 7. But now that the climax has almost arrived, fear has gripped E ast Berlin because President Mikhail Gorbachev Will attend the festivities. While the E ast Germ an government is delighted to have the Soviet leader at the culmination of events celebrating the country’s legitimacy, those responsible for security in East Berlin are climbing the infamous w all with anticipation. You see, Mikhail Gorbachev is a hero to so many young East Germ ans, who a re titillated beyond belief by political reform s in the Eastern Bloc, that no one is sure what his visit could trigger. To date, Gorbachev’s visits to E ast Berlin have not encouraged any popular or m assive demonstrations. However, having visited E ast Germ any last month, I can report that the mood today is very different than dining previous Gorbachev visits. There is every indication that he will be met with the kind of fanfare that surrounded his reception in West Germ any earlier this year. According to West Germ an intelligence sources, Moscow is as alarm ed at what might happen during Gorbachev’s upcoming visit as is the E ast Germ an leadership. But Moscow is also distraught over recent developments in East Germ any, from top to bottom. T o date, Gorbachev’s visits to East Berlin have not encouraged any popular or massive demonstrations. However, having visited East Germany last month, I can report that the mood today is very different than during previous Gorbachev visits. ’ The old men who rule E ast Germany are teetering on the brink of self-destruction. With Erich Honecker, 77, seriously ill, tens of thousands of citizens feeling exasperation, and a stagnant economy, who can be optimistic? There is little doubt that E ast G erm any’s old men — eight politburo m em bers are over 70 — lack the courage or imagination to prepare for change. 'MlU*EP,DtD WÊGRDGRfitfi ÖST 6ÉRWWS?' There is also no m asking the widespread discontent within E ast Germany. I saw shops, for example, all over E ast Berlin advertising signs for workers. Meanwhile, factories are losing employees by the week. Even medical facilities in outlying parts of the country are becoming scarcer as doctors flee. Unlike some of their Eastern Bloc comrades, East Germ ans have never had to live in a ipake-believe world; With E ast Germ an television and radio beamed into almost every home, and with regular visits by friends and relatives from across the border, a deep-rooted and potentially explosive cynicism has evolved over two generations. W hat’s clear is the Germ an Democratic Republic is an artificial creation. Only the most die-hard Communist Party members claim patriotism exists in E ast Germany. Most citizens in E ast Germ any call themselves Germans and speak optimistically about reunification. Not surprisingly, it is the young who form the nucleus of the exodus. Most of them are skilled workers and professionals between the ages of 20 and 40. But the mass departure that occured last week from East Germ any is different from what took place in 1961, W e are not seeing a traditional rejection of material shortages and economic stagnation but a deep alienation from communist ideology. Complaints most often heard in E ast Germany involve travel restrictions, the police state and the perception that the party treats average citizens like a bunch of idiots. Who hasn’t been moved by the tears of joy that have been shed by all the young E ast Germans who’ve escaped the clutches of communism? The full human cost of these departures are only now sinking in. Im agine waking up to the fact that you’ve exchanged your home, job and parents for a life of uncertainty and a concept called freedom? Lutz Brinkel, a 38-year-old electrical engineer, pointed to his 8-year-old son, Marko, and wife, Barbel, last week when asked by reporters why he had fled his homeland. “ I want them to have a free life in the W est,” he said. F or the moment, the Germ an Democratic Republic is virtually leaderless as it confronts its worst crisis since the Berlin W all w as erected in 1961. Naturally, it is too much to expect old men like Honecker to understand that he has built a country so silly and gray that its brightest citizens departed quickly when they saw the first green light. If the E ast Germ an government cannot create the kind of economic and political outlets its young citizens have seen all around, they will either vote with their feet or explode in anger. After all, the failure of communist dogma has left E ast Germ any without a reason to exist. Now it must bridge its shaky Brezhnev era with serious change. But anyone who understands the leadership in E ast Berlin well, will bet that it is incapable of creating a politically attractive alternative, free of a popular uprising. Campaigns Packaging presidency tricky; Alles got bum rap Jeff Greenfield Universal Press Syndicate N E W Y O R K — W arning: I ’m about to violate the code of ethics for political writers. I ’m coming to the defense of a highly paid political operative who plots television strategy for candidates. The man in question is none other than Roger Ailes, the Republican strategist who cam e to fam e two decades ago as the shrewd media m aster o f Richard Nixon’s comeback. A s portrayed in Joe McGinnis’ book “ The Selling of the President, 1968,” Ailes Was the s h a rp -to n g u e d o p e r a t iv e behind the w arm er, less frightening “ new Nixon.” A iles’ m ore recent notoriety cam e as a result of the 1988 Bush campaign, where his commercials w ere credited — or blamed — with painting Mike Dukakis as a wimpy, effete liberal outside the “ mainstream values” of America. What brings m e rising — or at least slouching — to his defense is the notion that seems to accompany every word written about Ailes, that he authored the infamous “ W illie Horton” commercial, the T V ad that featured a menacing mug shot of the convicted m urderer who, while out of a M assa ch u setts prison on a furlough program , terrorized a M aryland couple. Ailes, it has been charged several thousand times, thus appealed to base racial fears by raising the specter of a black hoodlum raping a white woman. Then why defend Ailes ? Simple. Ailes did not do the ad and in fact had nothing to do with it. That commercial w as produced and aired by an independent group, Americans for Bush. Under current campaign law, such “ independent organizations” have a first amendment right to produce, finance and a ir whatever political messages they want, as long as they have nothing to do with the official cam paign organization. And that, to the best of m y knowledge, is what happened here. Roger Ailes did produce a commercial about the Massachusetts furlough program that Dukakis supported (the program was in fact created by his liberal Republican predecessor as governor of Massachusetts). It w as the “ revolving door” commercial, featuring prisoners going in and out of a prison, while a voice-of-doom announcer explained, in somewhat misleading terms, how Dukakis had helped put hardened criminals back on the street. The ad was worthy of tough criticism. As with most political advertising, it was woefully simplistic, and ignored the fact that Massachusetts had one of the lower s e r io u s c r im e ra te s fo r a m a jo r industrialized state. What it did not do was show a picture of W illie Horton or even mention Willie Horton. The faces it did show w ere overwhelmingly white. In and of itself, that commercial simply did not have a racial component to it. To be sure, the Bush cam paign itself drum m ed u p interest in the W illie Horton case for months before the election. It m ay even be that, given the inextricable bond between race and crime as a visceral anxiety of many Americans, any discussion of crime has to involve race. But if Roger Ailes is to be painted as the Darth V ader of the 1988 campaign, he at least deserves to be attacked for what he did or what he can plausibly be charged with doing. ‘It may even be that, given the inextricable bond between race and crime as a visceral anxiety of many Americans, any discussion of crime has to involve race. ’ Journalists who casually list “ the W ilile Horton a d ” as one of A iles’ achievements are simply proving themselves too lazy to go beyond the handful of press clips and find out the facts. They are, in sum, doing what they accuse Ailes of perfecting: throwing out a cheap shot. ; V There: I ’ve gone and defended a rightwing media manipulator. How I ’U explain this back at the office I ’ll never know. Page 6 State Press _(FHda^Septçmber22jJ989ii GR£ ¿SAT GMAT or SAT = H O L L Y W O O D = Raise your R e a d th e W e ’r e u s e r f f r ie h d ly - Thurs....................Cactus Kidd & The Desert Squids Fri ........................ Housequake with M idnight Funk Assoc. S a t ............................... Feedbags with special guest Sun & M o n ............... Tall Heart ac c o u s tic & slide guitar T u e s ............................Joe Myers intense guitarist W e d ............. insane O pen Mic The LSAT. GRE and GMAT can be tough, but we can make them a whole lot easier. The Princeton Review has helped thousands of students dramatically raise their scores. Small classes (8 to 12 students) geared to your strengths and weaknesses and a detailed computer analysis throughout the program make us the most effective, efficient and enjoyable way to d ra m a tica lly improve your scores. You II score more when you know how. A n d n v 'll teach THE P R I N C E T O) N R E V IE W VOuhow. 952-8850 8 2 0 -7 1 1 7 on Baseline, east of Price killer fo o d 'til m idnight We Score More. H ie C o ffe e P la n ta tio n T h e D efin itio n o f G o o d Taste L a tte , (laht ta) n. 1. Italian w o rd for milk 2. popular beverage in Italy as w ell as in certain sophisticated U S. cities; a silky smooth combination o f hot frothed milk and espresso. 3. b e ­ com ing extremely popular at the Coffee Plantation in Tempe. 4. re­ placing the w o rd ‘lunch’ in the phrase, “Let’s d o Latte.” OLD CHICAGO T h ere are o v e r 41,000 s tu d e n ts o n th e A S U campus. There are 8,581 faculty and staff members. STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS REACH THEM ALL! W e publish Monday through Friday, w ith 21,000 copies circulating each day. W e ’re located on campus in the basem ent (south e n d ) o f Matthews Center. O r call 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 5 3 0 W . B r o a d w a y , T e m p e 921 -9 4 3 1 GRAND OPENING FEATURING: DEEP DISH PIZZA, . FRESH PASTA & SAUCE BAR. A SELECTION O F 115 BEERS, SPORTS TAVERN WITH 8 TVS. SALADS, SANDWICHES, PASTA SPECIALTIES. 25% OFF DINNER C o ffe e R oasters T ro p ic a l C o ffe e h o u se TH IS O F F E R IS G O O D F O R Y O U R ENTI RE D I N N E R BILL I N C L U D I N G D R I N K . A N Y N I G H T A F T E R 5 P M N O T G O O D W IT H A N Y . OTHER S P E C IA L OFFER O R D IS C O U N T. E XPIRES O C T . 23. 1989 O p e n fr o m 7 a.m . L u n c h D a ily H appy H o u r 4-7 p.m. M-F Live Entertainment » C O F F E E # H alf Price b rin k s PLANTATION C o rn e r 6th & M ill FREE 5-P O IN T IN S P E C TIO N Call for A p p o in tm en t HOMEPHONENO. YEAR M AKE FRIrNITE BUS. PHONENO. T Y P E O R M O D E L M IL E A G E MARC0NIAS PLAYS GUITAR Belt* and Ho m s Inspacaon: F reni Brak« Pad*lnspecbon: NO COVER Il Fluids Checked: Charging System and Benery Check: Exhaust System InspecSorVOR: H ou rs 8 a . m . - 5 p . m . , Monday-Friday. We’re here f o r you, ASU! Chalk Portraits b y Herm an on the patio Friday and Saturday nights Expires 10-31-89 Not valid with any other coupon THE HONDA DOCTOR SAT. NITELIVE! : • VO LLEYB A LL JAM w / M A R C O N IA S • from I HA LF-TIM E O N . . . Crawling distance from the stadium A riz o n a 's 1st and O n ly Brew Pub: 717 S. Hacienda Suite 104, Tempe 987-7282 Hours: Mon-Fri 7:30am-5:30 pm Tues&Thurstil8pm(byappointment) 5th St. & Forest 966-4438 BREWPUB Est. 1988 State Press Page 7 Friday, September 22,1989 ASU animal-rights group wants to educate students By KIMBERLY HARRIS State Press A Phoenix-based animal-rights group that has started a chapter at A SU is eager to educate students and Arizonans about institutional abuses to animals. Stephanie N ich ols-Y oun g, president of Concerned Arizonans for Anim al Rights and Ethics, said University student interest spurred the group to expand to ASU. “ People are learning more (about animal mistreatment), and a lot of people have questions about what is and isn’t right,” she said. Nichols-Young said the expansion movement is not an effort to keep a closer eye on animal experimenters on campus but rather a w a y for students to form their own group. “ l i i e biggest problem at A SU that concerns us right now is M axw ell, who is licensed with W ildlife Rehabilitation, said she is adamantly opposed to the mistreatment of animals. “ I can't believe the minds that put Voyager 2 (a space probe) within 20 miles of their projected target can’t cóme up with a viable, economically feasible method o f performing these studies,” she said. Although M axw ell said she owns leather cowhide shoes, she tries to avoid using products containing animal by­ products. “ Yes, I do drive a car which uses anti-freeze m ade from animal by-products,” M axw ell said. “ But in our society it is extremely difficult to buy products that are ‘cruelty-free.’ ” M axw ell Said she has a solution to avoiding the use of anim al by-products. “ M y plan is to start grass-root movements and set up booths to educate people on humane issues,” she said. the students who are not given an alternative to participating in animal studies,” she said. Last spring, a student withdrew from the University because she said she w as horrified by the experimental animal studies conducted in her zoology classroom. B arba ra M axwell, a clinical psychology graduate student, said today she is encouraging students to join the animalrights group on campus. “ There is an overall feeling of animal issues nationwide,” she said. “ At ASU, the concern is that the University m ay not be enforcing its policies of allowing alternatives to experimentation. This is one area of interest for our group.” M axw ell said the purpose of the A S U group is to provide a forum for students who feel pressured into participating in issues against their morals. ‘Offensive’ words absent from revised English Bible L O N D O N ( A P ) — Jesus rides into Jerusalem on a donkey instead of an ass in a new English-language Bible that is careful hot to upset U.S. readers, the editor said Thursday, •’‘The old usage is a classic example of offense being caused in the United States for obvious reasons,” said Roger Coleman, coordinating editor of “ The Revised English B ible.” In Britain, the word ass doesn’t have as many meanings as it does in American use. “ References to ass have been adjusted to the inoffensive and unambiguous donkey,” he said. The change is one of thousands in the 1,294-page revision of “ The New, English B ib le," which appeared in 1970 and which in Britain has largely replaced the Authorized Version or King James Bible of 1611 and its late 19th- century Revised Version. C olem an said A m erican viewpoints reached the translators through the New York offices of the Oxford and Cambridge university presses, which a re jointly printing the new Bible, “ They cam e largely from people who want to use the Bible literally, with only the meanings they attribute to the words, although a large number of Americans are used to the Authorized Version Where ‘ass’ is used liberally,” Coleman said. The publishers describe the new Bible as a linguistically updated version, whose style relates less to the vocabulary of a 19thcentury clergym an and more to the needs of a 20th-century congregation. It substitutes “ you” - for “ thee” and “ thou,".“ did” for “ didst” and abandons the “ O ” in references.to God such as “ O Lord.” God is still referred to as “ h e " (but without a capital H ) in faithfulness to the original writings, Coleman said, but in other references to gender the version grapples with sexism for the first time in a Britishproduced Bible. “ English is not too well equipped to express gender,” Coleman told a news conference, “ W e carefully looked at all cases where male-oriented language w as used — ‘men’ or ‘brethren’ applied to people of both sexes — and we used an inclusive gender term or adjusted the translation to sidestep the problem ," he said. “ Brethren” becomes “ friends” in some places and “ a m an” sometimes is changed to “ a person.” Elsewhere, “c o rn ” has been changed to “ grain” in many cases because it means wheat in some countries, maize in others and oats in Scotland. W illiam D uff M cHardy, formerly Regius Professor of H ebrew at Oxford University, the revision’s director, w as asked why the: phrase, ‘‘Vanity of vanities . . . all is v a n ity ” fr o m th e fi r s t c h a p te r o f Ecclesiastes was changed to “ Futility, utter futility.” “ W e discussed it for a long time,” he said. “ Vanity did not represent all that the original Hebrew ought to represent; but futility was the best we could do. W e still have slight m isgivings.” M o rn a H o o k e r, p ro fe s s o r o f N e w Testament studies at C am bridge University and the only woman among the revisers, said: “ If God w as referred to as ‘she,’ it wouldn’t be the Bible, which one must remember is 19 centuries- old. You must always stand at a slight distance from it.” ' Scholars of all Britain’s mainstream churches cooperated for the first time in the revision, which took 15 years: Anglicans, R o m a n C a th o lic s , P r e s b y t e r ia n s , M e th o d is ts , B a p t is t s , Q u a k e r s , the Salvation Arm y and the Bible societies. Literary advisers included the poet Philip Larkin (M o re his death in 1985 and novelist M ary Stewart. L ord Coggart, form er archbishop of Canterbury and a scholar of ancient Hebrew Nho presided over meetings of the project committee, said they aimed to produce the “ f i r s t f u ll y e c u m e n ic a l B i b l e ” in “ straightforward language for reading in c h u r c h th a t c a n b e i m m e d i a t e l y understood.” “ The Bible is one of the main tools of the Christian church but tools get blunt and the edges need resh arpening. K now ledge increases as the years go by, language changes and style alters,” he said. The new Bible, officially published Sept.: 28 but already on sale, will be used immediately in Protestant churches but still needs the imprimatur — license to publish — of Catholic authorities before their congregations can use it, Coleman said. The revisers met in the Jerusalem C ham ber of 900-year-old W estm inster Abbey where the compilers of the first Revised Version met from 1871 to 1881. The work is being printed in a first run of 300,000 copies for the English-speaking world, including 200,000 for the United States, said Geoffrey Cass, chief executive of Cambridge University Press. for those 21 A d d e r /V ^P1?1 P v1 Drinks ~doubles for singles fes: V Bi Friday Afternoon Club m' 1/2 price pitchers of Long Island ice le a s or Margaritas 2.0° off all pitchers of Beer = 9pm~tlpm = Lynchburg Lem onade ¥ : K J ? AFTERHOURS 12:30 am ~3am $1.95 PARTY ON THE PATIO L et our cocktail waitresses WvmjuajL*. serve you as you relax next to our 18 ft. fountain on our 20,000 sq. ft. p a tio ! & be here for Saturday C O U N TD O W N 5 for I drink prices 7pm -8 pm & counting down every hour Free Admission before 8 pm S iili D evil H ouse 430 N. Scottsdale Rd. • Tempe Page 8 S it e Pie»» Rfctay^SeptembçrS^Çrt ASU Police Report A S U police reported the following incidents that occurred between 7 a.m. Wednesday and 7 a.m. Thursday: •A thief stole a mens 26-inch black Zerbakeuko bicycle, valued at $350, from die back y ard of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house, 418 Adelphi Drive, where it was left unlocked between 6:30 p.m. Monday and 8:30 a.m. Tuesday. The bicycle was later found at the west side of the Technology Building at 11:20 a.m. •A thief stole a bicycle seat from a bicycle while it w as parked on the northwest side of Fletcher Library at A SU West. •A thief stole a white Takara l-speed cruiser, valued at $60, from the bicycle racks at Palo Verde West Residence Hall where it w as locked with a U-lock between 3 p.m. Tuesday and 7 a.m. Wednesday. •A thief stole a womens red F ree Spirit 10-speed bicycle, valued at $40, from the bicycle racks at Cholla Apartments where it w as locked with a chain and padlock. C om p ile d by S ta te P re s s r e p o rte r Tenny Tatusian. Tempe Police Report The Tempe Police Department reported the following incidents that occurred between 7 a.m , Wednesday and 7 a.m. Thursday: •Three people, including one A S U student, w ere arrested in connection with an alleged theft after they were seen leaving an apartment complex at 155 W. Third St. with a bicycle. Tenants became suspicious after they allegedly saw the trio peering into apartment patios. •A n A S U student w a s a r re s te d fo r disorderly conduct after he allegedly yelled profanities at officers while they were issuing a citation to another student. •A man was arrested after he allegedly tried choking his son for shooting unripe oranges with a sling shot. One orange hit the roof and upset the man, police said. •A man was arrested for drunken driving after he allegedly ran a red light and hit a car at B roadway Road and the Interstate 10. He failed a sobriety test. •A man was arrested for aggravated assault after he allegedly pointed a .25-caliber semi­ automatic gun a t a person and threatened to kill him. C om p iled by State. P re s s r e p o r te r Tenny Tatusian. SAHUARO . M o a . S e p . .1 8 A l - 2 :3 0 Á 2 -3 -.Ó 0 . A 3 - 3 : 30 B 1 -4 :0 0 B 2 -4 :3 0 B 3 - 5 : 00 T u e s . S e p 19 C l - 2 :3 0 C 2 - 3 :0 0 C 3 - 3 :3 0 ' D1 -4 :0 0 D 2 - 4 :3 0 • D 3 - 5 :0 0 M A R IP O S A Moni. S e p . 2 5 '1 1 4 2 - 5 :0 0 Man arrested on sex charge, allegedly tries ‘score’ on cop By TENNY TATUSIAN State Press A 49-year-old Sun City m an w as arrested Wednesday on a sex charge after police said he allegedly grabbed an undercover officer in the mens restroom at the Farm er Education Building. Michael Gregory Freer, of the 10000 block of Caron Drive, w as arrested on a charge of sexual abuse and released on his own recognizance pending a formal complaint to be filed by the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office, A SU police said. Police said Freer, a substitute high school teacher in Glendale, has a prior record of sex crimes in M aricopa County. Police said F reer was standing in the halls in the Farm er building attempting to “ make contact” with other men. In the past, police said he has gone to the building to “ score” homosexual dates. T h e St a t e P r e s s M a g a z in e \ \V t ! k i 1 c O. I. I. F (: E T O w N J O I H N A I. C H O LLA Sep. . 2Q . 1 4 2 -2 :3 0 3 4 4 -:3 : 0 0 5 4 6 -3 :3 0 7 4 8 -4 :0 0 1 4 2 -4 :3 0 3 4 4 -5 :0 0 T h ü rs. Sep. CD CD FG FG FG 5 4 6 -2 :3 0 7 4 8 -3 :0 0 1 -3 :3 0 2 - 4 : 00 3 -4 :3 0 M on :. S e p . \ 21 O C O T ÏL LO ...F r i« S e p . 22 . AB 1 A3 DE I DE3 4 4 4 4 A2v - 2 : 3 0 B C 3 - 3 :0 0 D E 2 - 3 : 30 B C 2 - 4 : 00 B B ST Moa... S è p . 25 A 3 4 B Ì - 3 :0 0 B 2 4 3 .- 3 : 30 ' . 0 2 4 3 - 4 : ÒO ... C4 -4 :3 0 Ç5 -5 :0 0 18 3 -3 :0 0 M o n . S e p . „ 25 . • I r is h B 4 C - 2 : 30 P V WEST M A N Z A N ITA . T u e s : S e p . 26 ■ . F r i - : S e p .. 29 1 -2 :0 0 . 2 -:2 :3 0 ; 2 -2 :3 0 •••- 3 - 3 : 0 0 3 -3 :0 0 4 -3 :3 0 4 -3 :3 0 . 5 - 4 :0 0 5 -4 :0 0 6 -4 :3 0 6 -4 :3 0 7 -r5 :00 . i 7 -5 :0 0 W e d . S e p • 2.7 8 -2 :3 0 9 -3 :0 0 1 0 -3 :3 0 1 1 -4 :0 0 1 2 -4 :3 0 1 3 -5 :0 0 T h ù r s , S e p . -.28 1 4 -2 :3 0 . 1 5 -3 :0 0 . . F r i . i S e p . 29 1 4 2 -2 :3 0 3 4 4 -3 :0 0 5 4 6 -3 :3 0 7 -4 :0 0 Mc C l i n t o c k T u e s . Sep-. 19 A 4 B - 2 :$ 0 The floor with the moot optiti orino Opizzo porty oponoored by Domino'* Pizzo Undercover officers were sent into the building to investigate the matter after they received complaints from students and faculty about incidents involving other men, police said. Police said the F arm er building has had a history of problems involving homosexual activity in the mens bathrooms. The University shut the restrooms down in 1985 because of complaints of homosexual activity but later reopened them. F a c u lt y , s t a f f an d stu den ts h a v e complained that the activity in the mens room is em barassing and prevents others from using the facilities, police said. Holes have been cut into the restroom dividers to enable the sex acts to occur, police said. Sexual abuse is considered a class five felony and is punishable with up to two years in jail. Our guarantee: No Woodstock Coverage . W ed. AB AB AB AB. CD CD For more information about group photos or the Sun Devil Spark yearbook, call the yearbook office at 965-6881. 6 TV SCREENS , lce Teas 4 AC WINGS $2 mms s ■ DURING GAM E CORONAS MARGARITAS SHOTS OF GOLD Blue Hawaiians 8-Close MICH DRY 8-10 PM DOM. BOTTLED BEERS KAMIKAZEES WATERMELONS STIFF JOHNSONS 8-10 PM 8-10 PM Starting fo r 1 COUNTDOWN 7 PM well, Wine ^ | Q C Margs & Schnapps RURAL & A PA CH E 968-0243 S ta t« PrtSS Pag« 9 Friday, September gg.1989__________ Disabled tackle library’s ‘obstacle course’ By JOIE ANN LaPOLLA State Press A SU doctoral student Mike Waldon said it takes all his strength just to go from the new section o f the renovated Hayden Library to the old elevators. Waldon, who moves his wheelchair manually, is just one of many disabled students at A SU who has a difficult time trekking up the new ram p in the library. He said the ram p is just too long. “ It takes every bit of strength I have to make it,” the English m ajor said. “ It’s a poor plan for a building.’’ But University officials said they will attempt to fix any items to m ake the library more accessible for disabled students. “ I don’t see anything that we can’t fix,” said the library’s Assistant Dean Jane Conrow, after taking a tour Thursday with Waldon, who pointed out the library’s shortcomings. The library will request the construction of a wheelchair lift to connect the new section and the old elevators, Conrow said. The lift should be in place this year, she added. Jim Morin, a program coordinator for Disabled Student Resources, said there have been several complaints by students about the new library section. In addition to the long ramp, disabled students have charged that the Hayden Library expansion makes it difficult to study, find books or use research facilities, Waldon said. Waldon also said some book stacks are too close together and many study and computer tables are too low for wheelchairs to fit under them. Conrow said higher desks will be made available and a new computer room with comfortable tables will be added. There is also a Disabled Student Resources Room, located in the basement of the new addition, which is staffed by two assistants who help students use the library’s facilities. “ W e try to correct problems or offer help (fo r disabled students),” said Debbie Kast, the room’s supervisor. “ W e help overcome barriers despite what the library has done.” In 1986, when the library w as in the planning stages, Conrow, representatives from A S U ’s planning and construction department and Jim Hemauer, program director for the orthopedically disabled, met to discuss disabled students’ needs for the new section of the library. Hemauer, who also uses a wheelchair, said he examined the blueprints and models of the new section and w as satisfied with it. “ I ’ve been working with Jane since before they started digging the hole for this place,” Hemauer said. “ To say that disabled persons have been overlooked is not true.” But Waldon said the library w as much easier to use before the renovations and the new entrance has turned it into an “ obstacle course.” “ It’s like they took access aw ay from m e that w as already there,” Waldon said. “ They ca l! this art and art won out over practicality. “ But art should always think of the people.” Jack W. Beasley Jr./State Press University officials will attempt to make adjustments in the Hayden Library to make It more accessible to disabled students such as Mike Waldon, pictured here. Health value of fast food based on cooking method By MICHELLE ALLMAN State Press Those eating chicken and fish instead of red meat for health reasons m ay not be doing themselves any favors, a recently released report stated. In fact, a fast-food chicken or fish sandwich is sometimes worse than a ham burger and fries, the Massachusetts Medical Society said in its report. In addition, the Simmons Market Research Bureau found that 99 percent of the University population at A SU eat out at least once a week, and 75 percent eat out at least four times a week. Karen Moses, a nutritionist with the A S U Student Health Center, said people are confused about the advantages of chicken and fish over red meat. “ People are on this 'no red m eat’ kick,” she said. “ They aren’t realizing that when they take a low-fat meat like chicken or fish, they are making it highfat by breading and frying it. The difference is in the cooking method.” Many people are surprised to discover that a fish sandwich coated in batter and fried may contain up to 25 gram s of fat, while a single ham burger contains 13 g ra m s . A fast-food chicken patty sandwich contains as much fat as 14 pints of ice cream, the report said. Connie Roberts, a B righ am and Women’s Hospital dietician who wrote the report, said fast-food chains should give consumers more information about what they are eating. H er report, published in the N ew England Journal of Medicine, recommends that the chains: •Reveal the type and quantity of fat in food, as well as the amount of protein, vitamins and minerals. •Provide printed menus for people who want to restrict their intake of salt, calories or fat. •Identify the nutrient content of items on salad bars, especially such selections as potato salad and dressings. •O ffer such alternatives as low-fat or skim milk, m argarine, low-fat salad dressings and whole-grain buns. However, Moses said many students will still choose high-fat foods. “ The guidelines would make things easier for the consumer,” Moses said. “ But if people like the taste (o f high-fat food), they will still eat it.” Red meat does not deserve the bad w rap it has gotten over the last few years, she said. “ Beef is a great source of iron, zinc and other m in erals,” M oses said. The A m e r i c a n H e a r t A s s o ci a t i o n recommends adults eat five to seven ounces of beef daily. 1 “ W e should be eating beef sometimes — especially women,” she said. . Moses said the important thing for students to rem em ber is to make logical choices. “ If you go to a fast-food place just realize you probably aren’t going to eat healthy,” she said. “ If eating healthy is important, go somewhere that you know will offer you a choice.” Moses said the importance of choice is w h y sh e s u p p o r t s the M M S recommendations. “ If you are standing in line trying to decided what to get, with angry people behind you, you won’t m ake a thoughtout choice,” she said. “ But if you can take a menu home you can compare and choose and know what you want.” Patty Parker, a spokeswoman for C arl’s Jr. restaurants, said the fast-food chain tries to give customers an option. “ W e have grilled chicken and low-fat salads,” she said. “ W e have been offering take-home menus for a long time. W e think it is important to offer a wide variety of choices.” Despite the options offered at some fast-food places, m any others are “ behind the times, health-wise,” Moses said. “ M cDonald’s is one that has very few choices,” she said. M cDonald’s declined comment on the study. Moses said until consumers demand a change, most fast-food places will offer a limited menu including very few healthy items. “ It takes the public a long time to catch on,” she said. “ The problems with cholesterol have been known for years, but it is just now ‘hip’ to watch cholesterol. People need to be aw are — to be informed.” WorldGymandAerobics of Scottsdalefor Men& Women Arnold Invites You to Join Us j S t . k 65AEROBICSCLASSESWEEKLY! 5MINUTESFROMASU! ARIZONA'SLARGESTFACILITY • • • • • • • • • • 15,000 square feet A ir Conditioned W orld Gym Pro Shop The W orld Cafe Juice Bar W olff Tanning Beds Open Every Day! Heartmate • Lifecycle Stairm aster • Eagle Flex • Icarian • Camstar And M uch M ore1 Only $30 A Month No Contracts Bring your World Gym $30 Coupon G w ith th is ad your initiation fee is waived. New members only Scottsdale location Expires Oct 1.1989 STATE PC C la s s if ie d s . . . t h e d c o r to n e w e x c it in s a v e n u e s . 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 o r 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 t 1465 N. HAYDENROAD SE CORNER OF HAYDEN & McDOW ELl SCOTTSDALE, ARBONA 945-6060 I; I& P S Ë K ! 1 State Pres* Friday. Seotember 22.1989 Continued from pagt 1. knew he did not need medical attention. “ I kept arguing with the ambulance crew that they knew better, and I had my (medic alert) bracelet on,” he said. “ They just wanted to m ake some money.” Southwest Ambulance, who responded to the Rosendaul incident, would not comment on the matter but said Rosendaul’s fee has been dropped. The EpUeptic Society of Arizona agreed with Rosendaul. “ The only time w e recommend an ambulance is called is if a person is in ju r y , the seizure lasts longer that four minutes or the person does not regain consciousness after the seizure has stopped,” said Luz Rubio, adminstrative assistant with the society. In Rosendaul’s plan to change the A SU policy, he said he hopes to get the support of the Associated Students of A S U and Disabled Student Resources. “ I ’m committed to straigtening people out about epilepsy,” he said. “ I ’ve been making a pest out of myself so people will listen to ■m n ft- ' :: me. Tedde Scharf, director of D isabled Student Resources, said she is interested in addressing Rosendaul’s individual needs along with those of other epileptic students but said it m ay be unreasonable to ask University employees to judge whether an ambulance is necessary. Scharf said she is not sure that a w aiver would be practical because seizures can happen anywhere and often m ay look like the symptoms of a heart attack. ‘’You can’t expect students and faculty to decide what a seizure is or not," she said. “ Y ou can’t m ake a policy that 911 would never be called. I don’t know if I would be competent to m ake that kind of decision. ” ASA SU President P au l Larson agreed. " H e (Rosendaul) is trying to accomplish something that might put other people in unreasonable danger,” he said. Because of the seriousness of his seizures, Rosendaul said he makes sure that his professors are fam iliar with his disorder and how to treat it. V i c a r i o u s t h r i l l s c a n b e f o u n d in t h e S t a t e P r e s s P e r s o n a ls . W IN DO W TIN TIN G © a u © u t¿ i f & J p fo a STUDENT SPECIAL $79.95 U'oulb lik e M O S T 2 D O O R CARS to e*teufrí¡»ut tongrratulatien« to the follctoing m em ber« of cur 0 ,1989 faU * t * * e « l a « « INCLUDES: • SCRATCH RESISTANT UPGRADE •LIFETIME GUARANTEE T h om Brennan D on D vo ra k WINDOWTINTSPECIALISTS TEMPE 3414 S. Mill Ave. 966-0731 CENT. PHX 4545 N. 7th St. 274-2665 MESA/CHANDLER 3050 S. C ountry C lu b 497-0101 N. PHX 15846 N. Cave Creek Rd, 493-5000 #| B ^ 1 H i$ jtot \ j P a v ia K ec Ite*. ¥ ^ J u s tin M ea d e Jay Sd||teidery '''" ‘ R ob Schneider R ob S ii^ M if*^ A d a m Stoftl i^ u is T e p a s y P^Ltl|Z>ickey M ich ael H asbany jßnäkew N eptu n e /Ekm S hreves J C o llin S tew art M arc W righ t W ASTIN G AW AY AGAIN IN.. WORLD FAMOUS 4 $ % Indian Restaurant In Tempe cXfffcRB /yyA , < r $550 % On d in n e r with Super Buffet Lunch • Ç i. fÆ k ^ 4 $ U th is a d. E x p . 10-1-89 7 Days A Week All You Can Eat (many, many items) 11:30-2:30 at both locations W L O C K O U T NIGHT 25° DRINKS Delhi Palace Enjoy vegetarian and nonvegetarian original Indian Style fo o d ’ Dine in, take out and catering available CUISINE OF INDIA 921-2200 Lunch 11:30-2:30 • Open 7 Days a Week • Dinner 5:00-10:00 933 E. UNIVERSITY *103/*104 TEMPE 5050 EAST MCDOWELL ROAD (University & Rural-SE Com er, PHOENIX next to M nko’s) 244-8181 9ST-8900 Starting at 7 p.m . — A ll Night Long or Until Som eone Goes to the Bathroom TER R A C E & APA C H E GRAND OPENING BASH1U 2 L A R G E C H E E S E PIZZAS & 2 LAR G E SO DAS ■ 20% Discount $6.95 T O P P IN G S $1.50, C O V E R S B O T H PIZZAS — — - NO COVER “ FRIDAY” D.J. Dancing All Night F A S T FREE 30 MIN. DELIVERY (Lim ited D elivery A rea. S5.00 fylin. Delivery) $2.00 PITCHERS 99« MARGARITAS 2 FOR 1 WELL DRINKS “ SATURDAY” F R E S H D O U G H M A D E D A IL Y • W E U S E 100% R E A L M O Z Z A R E L L A — OPEN 7 D AYS A W EEK ¡2 1 C H E C K S A C C E P T E D W I T H I D. S u b ject to c h a n g e w ithout n otice [— 1 PRE GAME & POST GAME HAPPY HOURS D.J. DANCING - LIMBO CONTEST HOOLA-HOOP CONTEST DRINK SPECIALS ALL NIGHT 625 E. Apache, Tempe, 967-2922 ■■■■Kl Page 11 Friday, September 82,1989 New A S U planning chairm an former lo n g -h a ire d radical’ By K ELLY JAIN State Press In the late 1960s and early 1970s, an ASU department chairman w as one of many radical college student activists advocating civil rights and denouncing the Vietnam W ar. But he went one step further — Frederick R . S t e in e r c h a n g e d the t r a d it io n a l yearbook. “ W e (the yearbook staff) were radical, long-haired guys,” said the chairman of the A S U planning department housed in the College of Architecture and Environmental Design. “ W e wanted to put together something that w as m ore reflective of what w e w ere experiencing in the 1970s. It w as a rather radical experiment at the time.” 7 S t e i n e r ’s y e a r b o o k , titled T h e C incinnatian, contained spreads on the . important issues of the time: the Vietnam W ar, Civil rights, prison reform, pollution and campus life at the University of Cincinnati in Ohio. The form er yearbook editor said he used expressive journalism and photographs to present these issues. Although he w as radical, Steiner said he still went to sporting events and enjoyed the usual college activities. Likewise, the yearbook contained the fraternity and sports team photos, he added. Steiner does not have long hair anymore, but he said he is still concerned about what is going on around him now that he is in the Valley. As a new planning authority in the area, Steiner said there are two local problems that need to be solved: reversing the “ urban heat-island” effect and creating safer bicycle pathways, especially a i ASU. The “ urban heat-island” effect is a highly publicized theory devised b y R obert Balling, an A S U assistant professor of geography, which states that Phoenix has w arm ed 7 degrees Celsius in the last 30 years. Balling said the effect can be described as artificial warm ing caused by an abundance of concrete and asphalt that reflects and intensifies heat. F rom an urban planning point of view, Steiner said numerous steps can be taken to improve the climate such as planting trees and vegetation along Valley streets. Another issue Steiner said he is ready to improve is A S U ’s bike paths, adding that he bikes to school everyday. ^ In some places the paths end abruptly or they run into telephone poles, Steiner said. Although Tem pe is “ bike-friendly,” there is still room for improvement including designing m ore efficient paths along canals. S t e in e r b e c a m e c h a ir m a n o f the University planning department Aug. 1, succeeding actin g ch a irm a n R ich ard E . Lai. The activist cam e to A S U from the University of Colorado at Denver, w here he w as a professor of urban and regional planning from 1987 to 1989. He holds a bachelor’s degree in design and m aster’s degrees in community, regional, and city and regional planning. H e received his d octorate in plan n in g fro m the University of Pennsylvania in 1986. E a rlie r this year, Steiner won the Researcher of the Y e a r aw ard from the University of Colorado. Hi t B in e MALIBU CHICKEN With Fries $ 4 9 5 ta tim t & ea trry q uadrang les VILLAGE. $100LIVES ENTERTAINM HOOTERS ENT APARTMENTS 1255 University D rive Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-8118 RURAL & APACHE PERFORMERS WANTED 7th Anniversary Party • Tues., Sept. 26th fo r A N A M E R IC A N A N T H O L O G Y This performance will be a col­ lection of poems, essays, and s to rie s th a t re fle ct the many cultures co-existing in America. We are especially interested in marg inalized or neglected texts. Production: November 2 & 3,1989 Auditions: Septem ber 2 5 ,1 9 8 9 Septem ber 2 6 ,1 9 8 9 2:00-3:00 4:00-5:30 S ta u ffe r 318 B ring a prepared audition or read from the te x ts provided. Send more visitors... the last 7 years they've been delicious! 7 0 « D O M E S T IC D R A F T S A L L DAY AND A L L NIGHT Sponsored by: For more Information: The Crazy Salad Interpreters Theatre D epartm ent of Communication College of P u b lic P rogram s Kate T, Motoyama 965-4111 Frederick Corey 965-5061 77« SHOTS OF PRANKSTERS PUNCH —FREE TRIPTO LAS VEGAS FOR TWO S p e c ia l Anniversary T-Shirt Giveaways FREE LUNCH! Stet« Press Page 12 Z e lln e r_ ____ Continued from page 1. Deputy sheriff Cecil P rice w as later one of those convicted of murdering the student activists. At the time, Zellner said he believed the three students were most likely in jail. “ If the F B I had called the sheriff’s office, they probably would have denied having them in custody, but it might have deterred the officers from killing them,” Zellner said. A SU is the first of 10 stops on Zellner’s college lecture tour this fall, in which he plans to tell his side of the story. Z ellner has know ledge of the F B I investigation because he w as involved in the search for the three missing student civil rights workers. The civil rights activist said he and the wife of one of the missing students, Mickey Schwerner, traveled to Philadelphia, Miss., the day after the three were thought to be missing. Zellner was a 25-year-old college student at the time. The speaker said he had been working with missing students Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman in an effort to register blacks to vote in the South. Later in the speech, the civil rights activist described how he becam e involved in the movement despite being reared by his father, grandfather and uncles — members of the KKK. He said he first realized that “ the situation in the South wasn’t quite right” after meeting with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Zellner interviewed King for a sociology term paper on the racial tension in the South at Huntington College in Montgomery, Ala., and had to deal with resulting K KK harassment. * Jack W. Beasley Jr./State Press Bob Zellner, a civil rights activist, spoke to about 75 students and faculty in the MU Thursday evening concerning the inaccuracies in the movie “ Mississippi Burning.” Rock Poster S A L E C a tch the B ig O n e a Today thru Friday, Sept-. 22 STING t 'j/vfisIvYif l)/ (Ìli liu ti By t h e F o u n ta in o n C ady Mall Sponsored by Entertainment Sponsored by * I I k1III • ' Com edy Committee 250 D RIN KS FR ID AY LA D IES N IG H T SA TU RDA Y 250 DRINKS 8:00-10:30 P M. AFTER HOURS 1:00-3:00 A M. OPEN 8:00 P.M. 250 DRINKS 9:00-10:00 P.M. $1 DRINKS FOR LADIES 10:00 P.M.-1 A M. NO COVER FOR LADIES OPEN 9:00 P.M. 415 S . M ILL A V E . • T E M P E • A C R O S S FROM S P A G H ETTI C O . •M UST B E 2t Y E A R S O LD 966-8888 ^ H it e F i t « Friday, September M. 1989 Page 13 Tempe trolleys stay in action B y LAURA SCHMIDT State Press The trolley ears “ Tessie,” “ Tillie” and “ T eresa” will continue roaming Tempe streets because the city has agreed to extend a monthly subsidy to a firm that obtained rights to the trolley concession in June. “ I don’t see us discontinuing a very needed s e rv ic e ,” T e m p e City Councilwoman B arbara Sherman said. The council’s finance committee decided Aug. 31 to continue providing a monthly subsidy of $5,416 to Metro Trolley Inc., the third owner of the trolley system in five years. Metro Trolley took over Tem pe’s three trolleys bn June 5 from the Tempe Transit Authority, which declared bankruptcy July 11, said Reg Davis, owner of Metro Trolley. P a t Flinn, Tempe management services director, said the city has sponsored the trolley service since its inauguration in 1984, when Tempe donated $46,000 to boost it “ off the ground.” Flinn said the city has given the trolley system $5,416 every month during the past 2% years. . But Tempe Transit Authority suffered financial and ridership problems. In August 1987, the Tempe Transit Authority pulled the trolleys off the streets while the company tried to solve its difficulties. Sherman Said city officials feel the trolleys add an informal and intimate atm osphere to the downtown Tem pe environment. “ I have had people that w ere concerned there wasn’t enough ridership and it costs too m uch,’’ Sherm an said. “ But the company is making money rather than losing money.” Metro Trolley accumulated a gross profit Turn to Trolley, pas6 Jam ie Lytle/State Press Tessie the Trolley will continue to cover its route thanks to the Tempe City Council finance committee which will provide a monthly subsidy of $5,416 to Metro Trolley Inc. ¡¡¡1 8 1 Sushi Dr C A L I F O R N I A R O L L - . w , , ....................j j j l É * T O R I, T O P S , T O R I O U R O W N S U S H I.......* 2 .0 0 M e Orders your own combination ♦P O T A T O CRO Q U ET ★ M ISO S O U P ........ ....... ★ H O U SE S A L A D ........ Be a Winner Just Like the Sun Devils! Arizona State University Clothing & Souvenirs T-Shirts • Heavy W eight Sweat Shirts • Boxer Shorts Stadium Seats • Caps • Mugs * Selected ASU & Phoenix Cardinal Merchandise f6 * 20%— 50% OFF Com ing O ctober 6th, S p ecial Savings on Cham pion S w ea t S h irts * fP U fP F at JE&WwJ(>JEw 112 E. University 968-0708 $5 Off Any $25 Purchase W/coupon at time of purchase Void on sale items & w/other offers. Expires 9-29-89, » . p.m.; Sunday 12-8 p.m. Located in the Cornerstone at Rural & University • Tempe for the game • with coupon No purchase necessary. 829-1743 Expires 9-39-89. O p e n : s u ™ £n Paaé 14 Stale Press ^ F r id a ^ S ^ t e m b w ^ g g ^ lÇ e ? Trolley. Contlniw d from peg« 13. of 12,137 in its first month of operation, according to an August statement from the company. The trolleys carried 6,798 riders in August. , Flinn said the city is “ getting a super d eal” with the new trolley ownership and the trolleys’ consistently low rates. “ It’s encouraging any time you run a profit in the transportation system,” Davis said. Craig Clifford, m anager of Tem pe’s accounting department, said the city’s subsidy only covers about 30 percent of the t r o lle y s ’ e s tim a te d $18,000 m onth ly operating expense, M etro Trolley Inc. pays for the rest of the monthly costs. and reaching Southern Avenue and Dobson R o a d , T h e ro u te e x te n d s to M e s a Community College, dropping passengers off near the campus library. The trolley, which costs 75 cents to ride, runs two routes from 7 a.m . to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. Davis said during September, about 420 people ride the trolleys every day. The University Drive/McClintock Road route covers 7 miles, starting on College Avenue and reaching McClintock Drive and Baseline Road. The M ill Avenue/Southern Avenue route is a 6-mile round trip, starting downtown om e out o f L jo u T During the evenings and weekend hours, all three trolleys are used for chartered services. ç n e When all three trolleys are used for chartered services, they provide rides for football gam es, weddings and private parties. Davis said the Tem pe trolleys also offer rides to visitors during the biannual Mill Avenue Merchants Association art fair. He said the trolleys m ay offer rides during the Fiesta Bowl block party on N ew Y e a r ’s Eve. He added that it w ill help police curb the am o u n t o f d ru n k e n d r iv e r s in the community. v e a a th e S t a t e P vess. 7 iie ¿UetiMf MUMi-At&utft people W A N T E N a tio n a l a g e n c y Is see k in g fem a les fo r severa l a d v e rtis in g ca m p a ign s an d prom otio n s. A d placem ent in Vogue, Glamour, Mademoiselle & S e lf m agazin es an d v a rio u s tra vel and in d u s try m agazin es. S creen in gs h eld Sep­ tem ber 24 & 25 a t th e P h x A irp o rt H ilton. C a ll S tryk eR ow e @ (602) 921-8313 fo r in fo an d to sch ed u le 10-m inu te app oin tm en t. 5’x5’.....$12 5’x10’.....$20 10’x10’.....$32 10’x20\....$44 #' Arizona Storage Inns Special Discounted Prices Limited time offer. 2235 W, First Street Tem pe — , CR A B PU FFS ut 'C 't t J j t 1 BIH O AD W AY sT *6* (602)986-5006 818 W. Broadway • Tempe, AZ 85282 $1400 H aircuts ^ Reg. $17.00 SAVE $5.00 Includes Shampoo Conditioner & Cut (With Coupon) *45*° P e rm s $ 5 .0 0 O f f R e gu la r $ 1 0 .0 0 O f f S p ira l Wraps Includes Shampoo. Conditioner & Cut With Coupon for First Time Customers Only One Coupon Cellophane.................................$22.00 Highlights................... .. ... $40.00 W ith Coupon fo r First Time Customers Only One Coupon $1 50 each visit TAKE CARE OF THE STUDENT BODY. B lu e C ross and B lue S h ield n ow o ffe rs P referred C are, an a ffo rd a b le su pplem en tary h ealth insurance plan available to a ll en ro lled students w h o are e lig ib le fo r c a fe at the Student H ealth Center. G iv in g you the best leve l o f b en efit w h en used w ith Student H ealth S ervices. Tb fin d out m ore, stop b y the Student H ealth C en ter o r c a ll 965-2411. L a s t d a y to e n r o ll is S e p te m b e r 25. Student Health Services Benefits: (automatically aroilaHe to all emoUed students) M edical care visits 966-6111 M on,-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 11:30-4:00 Call For Appointment 933 E. University SECorner Rural &University Referrals to specialists in gynecology, der­ matology, surgery, neurology, orthopedics, and ear, nose and throat * Health education and preventive Services iko's th e c o p y c e n te r A llerg y injections (student must provide extract)* O rthopedic devices (crutches, canes, casts, e tc .)* Laboratory tests* Pharm acy* H ALF O FF $ 6 0 0 Prices apply to white, let­ ter size paper. For Vi off prices on other papers, $100 $200 ‘ Fees may apply Pays up to a total maximum o f $50,000 for each illness or accident Coverage for dependents o f insured students also available N ext 100 $300 ‘ Preferred Providers include physicians, hospitals, laboratories with a special arrangement with Blue Cross & Blue Shield can us. T E M P E 1* 715 S Forest 894-9588 F A X : 894-6457 T E M P E II* 933 E. University 894-1797 F A X : 894-1986 T E M P E III 960 W. University 921-0168 FA X : 894-2038 M ESA ★ 1840 W. Southern 969-3326 F A X : 461-8442 ★ M edical Care with Preferred Providers*— including hospitals. Pays 80% o f eligible expenses after $100 deductible up to $4,000 deductible w aived i f referred by Student H ealth (fo llo w in g treatm ent) provid in g you w ith the best level o f ben efit M edical Care w ith Non-Preferred Providers pays 70% o f eligible expenses deductible after copies of one original first 100 copiss — rag. price First 100 Biodyne Centers M ental health services— N o deductible or co-pay M edical Care with Preferred Providers pays 100% o f eligible expenses after $4,000paid fo r Preferred Providers X -rays* COPIES Preferred Care Benefits: (additional health insurance from Blue Cross & Blue Shield) Pays lab and X -ray charges incurred at Student Health Center (n o deductible o rco -p a y) M ental health visits O PEN 24 HOURS! m u lo \ E xp ire s 9-30-89 W ITH TH IS A D f f "-,.. IS j§" 9 6 7 -0 2 1 0 W HEN YO U BU Y AN E N TR EE Blue Cross Blue Shield. of Arizona : \bu just cant do any better. State Pneu P ag e15 Friday, September 22,1989 Tame lion loses home in dispute D O U G L A S (A P ) — State G am e and Fish officials held the door open for J, C., and the mountain lion stepped right into a van that w as to take him to his new home in Texas, said the owners of the zoo that housed him since October. J. C., a neutered and declawed lion who has lived in captivity since his birth in 1981, was turned over to the Douglas Wildlife P a rk after Christine Aspesi lost a four-year battle with state wildlife authorities over keeping the animal in her E lfrid a home. Aspesi and her fam ily had purchased J. C. in Michigan and only ran into problems kèeping him when they moved to Arizona. However, when the Aspesis sought to return with J. C. to Ann Arbor, they found state officials there now prohibited the importation of mountain lions into that state. Aspesi said she contacted the owners of the non-profit Texas Exotic Feline Foundation in Boyd in an effort to find J. C. a home where he’ll have more space and human companionship than at the Douglas park. “ I ’m sorry to be separated from him, but at least in Texas he would be back in an environment with people who handl AMERICAN LEAGUE THURSDAY’S RESULTS San Diego 11, Cincinnati 7 . Chicago 9, Philadelphia 1 Atlanta 3, Houston 0 Montreal 6, Pittsburgh 5 New Yock 6, St, Louis 1 O Los Angeles at San Francisco, (n) . '- . FRIDAY S SCHEDULE Seattle at Kansas City. 2,3:05 p.m. New York at Baltimore, 4:35 p.m. California at Cleveland, 4:35 p.m. Boston at Detroit, 4:35 pm Oakland at Minnesota, 5:05 pm. Toronto at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m. Chicago at Texas, 5:35 p m. SA TU RD A Y'S SCHEDULE Oakland at Minnesota, 9 am Boston at Detroit, 10:15 am; California at Cleveland, 10:35 am. Toronto at Milwaukee, 11:30 a.m. New York at Baltimore, 4:35 pm. Seattle at Kansas City, 5:06 p.m. Chicago at Texas, 5:36 p m. r£ 4 . old but still fleet-footed Cardinal wide receivers — Roy Green and J. T. Smith. Green, 32, has caught 47 passes for 771 yards and seven touchdowns in 14 career gam es against the Giants. ‘‘H e’s been a pain in the butt for me for nine years,” Parcells said in a telephone conference call. “ I ’m just going to take him across the M exican border and try to let him get back over on his own.” Green has 200 yards and four touchdowns on just 10 catches in the season’s first two gam es while Smith, 33, has a team-leading 225 yards on 17 catches with one TD. “ J. T. is very crafty. He can take young defensive backs and make them look bad,” P a rc e lls said. “ It doesn’t m ake any difference how old J. T. and Roy are. They don’t ask for your birth certificate when you get in thè huddle.” v ----- -— W SBRVICES We’re at your service! Page 19 Friday, September gg, 1989 Stale P re ti Runners tune up in San Diego By LARRY NEW ELL State Press The ASU cross country team will try to duplicate its feats at the U T E P Invitational, when it competes Saturday in the Aztec Invitational in San Diego. “ I feel that the U T E P meet w as m ore of a tune-up for the tougher m eets,” A SU cross country Coach Ken Lehman said. “ I expect that the better competition will bring out better performancès from our athletes. “ With powerhouses U C L A and Arizona competing, this meet will be a good test for us. This meet will show us how good we really a r e ." U ofA cross country Coach D ave M urray said he is confident of the W ildcats’ chances. “ W e expect to win on Saturday, as we have the talent to win and if we perform up to our capabilities w e will win,” M urray said. ' Leading the Wildcat attack will be M ark Davis, who holds m any individual accolades. “ M ark holds the fastest time ever for an American teenager in the 5000 meters, as well as being thé District 8, Pac-10 and the N C A A 5000 meter champion,” M urray said. “ He will definitely be the athlete to beat on Saturday.” Fifth-year senior G ary Cobb and freshman Brian Grosso w ill also showcase their talents in San Diego. “ G ary Cobb w as a m em ber of a nationally ranked Virgina NEWWINDSHIELD ho cost to vour Tech team two years ago and Brian Grosso w as the top high school long distance runner in 1988,” M urray said. ‘ If your comprehensive Is between $0-$100, we will waive your deductible and collect the rest from your Insurance carrier. _ y O U pAY NOTHING! — U C L A , who in the past has been both a Pac-10 and national power, will try to be competitive early in the season. I “ W e are a little behind right now because, for us, school has not started and because of this our athletes are not in top shape,” U C L A cross country Coach Bob Larson said. “ However, w e did manage a second place finish at the Fullerton Invitational two weeks ago, and I believe that we will be competitive on Saturday.” i -, V Tt ^ ‘ 7 4 8 W . U n iv e r s ity , M e s a (Extension & University) I S fth P ï A S U ’s best threat to derail its Pac-10 foes will center around junior Todd Lewis, who last week recorded a second place finish at the U T E P ’nvitational. “ M y strategy at the Aztec Invitational will be to go out with the leaders, stay conservative and go with the flow of the race,” Lewis said. “ I feel that I can finish in the top five and stay in contention to win the race.” Seniors Mike Frick and Paul Boudreaux, who also will compete for top honors, finished sixth and eighth respectively last week. Freshm an D ave Harkins, who tallied an 11th place finish and w as the fourth best Sun Devil finisher, will be looked upon to contribute to overall team scoring. Other top Sun Devil performers will be senior Rob Dorf, sophomore Troy M cK ay and freshman Chris Guinnip. 8 2 7 -1 2 6 2 YO G U RT BUY ONE GET 2nd FREE B u y a n y s m a ll, m e d iu m o r la r s e s iz e y o g u r t $ a n d g e t a n o t h e r s a m e s iz e FREE. T o p p in g s V e x tra . Baseline & Hardy E x p . 1 0 - 8 - 8 9 (Next to ABCO) 1 x Baseline Turn to Runnérs, page 21. Y o u ’v e G o t W h at It T a k e s ! BLO O D P LA SM A TH E^ IpJTTElg* Your blood plasma goes to accident and burn victims and is used for hemophiliacs .who would otherwise suffer from uncontrolled bleeding. You are a life-saving source . . . it’s healthful; safe and easy. Plus your ban earn $115 plus a month. 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The B iggest Alternative C oncert •O reat on Gas •Low insurance •Easy Maintenance •Easy Parking •B ring in Your ASU I.D. fo r Discounts EV E R ! “Bring us your b e s t deal & we'll beat It” SAME DAY FINANCE Monday-Friday ... 8-9 S a tu rd a y.......8-6 Sunday.......... . .10-6 ‘ Freight & set-up Additional The Red Hot Chili Peppers Cam per Van Beethoven Sidew inders Mary's Danish “ASU's Closest Dealer"...Get Quick & Easy Service at w e s te rn h o n d a o f S c o ttsd a le 994-8400 (New Donors Only) (May Not Be Used With Other Bonuses) OPEN 7 DAYS M-F till 2 p.m., Sat-Sun till 3 p.m. U n iv e r s it y & M c C lin t o c k , T e m p e TAKE ARIDE ON THE WILD SIDE WITH A Z ’S #1 VOLUME SCOOTER DEALER 6717 E. McDowell Rd. THIS AD • o f f e r g o o d a n y t im e » p r e s e n t c o u p o n w h e n o r d e r in g O PEN 7 NIGHTS at 10 p.m. s AND PICK UP YOUR $5 BONUS BY MENTIONING or lesser value for only $2.00. DON'T SETTLE FOR WALKIN'! Come ride with us! TODAY m eal df equal September 28th Tickets: Advance $5.00 at Dillard’s At Gate: $7.00 McDowell W BIG SU RF 0£ 1500 N. Hayden Road Benefits (S> "ONLY 5 MIN. AW AY!" 3 xo «O ASU State Press Friday. September 22,1989 Page 20 Trojans learn Love’s tractics for Devil match 1988 w as 1.42, and setter Christine Brigman, who set an average of 13.44 last season. Although Brigm an sat out a few games earlier this season due to an injury, Snyder said she will be back on the court tonight. “ W e are going to have to hop on USC early and be aggressive,” Snyder said. “ W e can’t allow them to get any offensive flow.” Snyder said that USC is superior to A SU in strength, jumping ability and quickness, but said the Sun Devils’ offense is comparable to U SC ’s in effectiveness. “ W e are going to have to run a quicker attack against them and use a lot of middle plays,” she said. “ If it cam e down to it, I think our middle could outplay theirs. “ Just because you are more physical doesn’t mean you win gam es.” The Sun Devils will remain in California after tonight’s match and compete against U C L A on Saturday. B y VICKI CULVER State Press It should be an interesting volleyball match tonight when the Sun Devils compete in an aw ay gam e against USC, a team in the sam e boat as ASU. Like ASU, which this season hired new Head Coach Patti Snyder, USC is starting the year fresh with a new Pac-10 coach. The Trojans’ coach is newcomer Lisa Love, who this year took over the reins of 12-year Coach Chuck Erbe. Love coached for seven years at Texas Arlington, where in 1988 her team finished 30-4. “ Lisa Love is an extremely intelligent coach,” Snyder said. “ I have a lot of respect for her technique. If anything, her team will get better and better and she w ill complement them.” The Trojans are led by middle-blocker Jenny Hatchett, whose blocking average in Snyder said that the Bruins are definitely as talented as their No. 2 ranking proves them to be. “ They receive the top recruits each year — the best players in the country,” she said. “ If you continue to do that, over time you will have a great team.” Snyder said that the number of top recruits also contributes to the Bruins’ success, in that each day of practice is like a highly competitive game. “ They probably have two starting line-ups that could win the national title,” she said. U C L A is coached by Andy Banachowski who is the winningest coach in Division-1 history, with a 19-year record of 582-136. Last year, he coached the Bruins to a 34-1 overall record, and an unprecedented, undefeated 18-0 conference record. “ There is no doubt that Andy knows his stuff,” Snyder said. “ He is very consistent.” The Bruins are led by first-team AllAm erica and 1988 P lay er of the Y ear, D aiva Tomkus. Tomkus finished last season with a 3.96 kill average, a .58 serve average and a 1.44 blocking average. Snyder said that Tomkus’ diversified talents on the court Will pose a threat to the Sun Devils. “ D aiva is an outstanding player,” Snyder said. “ She is quick, strong and enthusiastic. She re ally d eserves her A ll-A m erica status.” In addition to Tomkus, Snyder said that middle-blocker Elaine Youngs should be a tough competitor. Youngs followed closely behind Tomkus in offense and defense statistics. “ Elaine is one of the most physical players in the country,” Snyder said. “ But she is a real hothead and loses her temper quickly. She can really dominate a match.” After several m oves, Berg finally returns hom e At last Tina B erg can concentrate on the more important aspects of volleyball — like blocking. F o r two years, the 1987 Moon Valley High School graduate w as played in the right and left positions, as well as the middle. With the incoming of Head Coach Patti Snyder, B erg has had the opportunity to play in the middle only. “ When I got here, my middle was not that strong,” Berg said. “ I didn’t have a whole lot of experience. They made me more of a utility player.” Snyder said that B e rg ’s experience in the three spots was essential to her finding the perfect position. “ She was a high swinger on the left side,” Snyder said. “ They were trying to find her best position, and her biggest strength w as blocking.” Although B erg likes the middle position much better, she said that the other positions she played are the sam e in a lot of ways. “ The positions are similar, but the middle is much quicker,” she said. “ M y timing w as off quite a bit.” Berg, a junior, said she is glad to finally be back in the spot she has been playing since high school. B erg said she has built up confidence in her playing since she has come to ASU, but contends that there are many “ I like to concentrate on one position at a time,” she said. “ The techniques are different.” things she needs to work on. “ I really want to improve m y blocking, and. become more consistent,” she said. “ If I can, I would like to close the block B erg contends, however, that she has picked up one positive aspect from the switching around of positions. Now, in the case of a team injury, she will be able to fill in without a problem.. State P r e ? ? « I li m ■quicker.” t Snyder, on the other hand, has been pleased with B e rg ’s performance so fa r this season. “ She has gained more confidence,” Snyder said. “ She has a lot of determina­ tion, and has become more focused.” B erg (6-foot-3), who is the tallest m em ber of the Sun Devil squad, said her height h e 1p s h e r g a m e tremendously.. “ I have an advantage to _ get bigger blocks,” she said, ts e ig “ And I can cover a lot m ore ground without jumping so high.” . ...v H er goals for the season a re to piake it to at least the first round of the N C A A Championships and to play consistently. H er personal goals include working on her confidence. “ I just want to feel like I belong out there,” she said. — VICKI CULVER M oitthew? (Ser,teT’ 0 0ôtçement 0 Pa?» L A M B D A CH I A L P H A W ATERM ELO N ijq iiT iri f Fresh Continuous Music 'j r~ m s, ^ 3 t o ▼ p sole r o s iì. ’ ’s (0 k energy/plus, ani pm LIQ UO RS 707 S. M y rtle A v* l Tempe. Anim a 85281 ». {Schloizsky’s pUege treet Deli IMPECVOSATTOCDW v * • D A S H IN N tii-à ir» SIGMA KAPPA-Keily J.-Next time ask information for my number. Can’t wait for Sat!! Bob A. SIGMA KAPPA Kelly Young: Thanks for being there for me this week! Tommorow is the day we’ve anticipated! It’ll be incredible! Love, Ame. SIGMA KAPPA- Get ready for Pledge Presents. It’s gonna be a blast. Claudette. SIGMA KAPPA’s Denise, Jacki, and Debbie. Get ready tomorrow night at Pledge Presents. Love Claudette. SIGMA PI Shea, get psyched for the best forma! ever! I love you. No, I mean I really love ydu! Ange. T R I-S IG M A K A T H L E E N , your an awesome "dot” ! Get psyched for Luau! Sigma Love Missy T. TRI-SIGMA DENISE Martinez, Come by and say “ Hi", we miss you!! Love your sigma sisters. TRI-SIGMA JEN N Y and Audra- Get excited for an awesome time at Luau! We’re gonna rage! Sigma love, Kat. VIOLETTA, BON Anniversaire! Now enjoy and don’t worry about correcting this! LAMBDA CHI Kelly,' Happy 1st year Anniversary! What can I say, this year has been fantastic. I love you ningababillion. P.S. Sedona will live in my memory forever. Love always, Janelle. A-PHI AMY D., your mom loves you beary much! 7 can’t wait until Sunday! Phi-love, morn. A-PHI CAMIELLE, Happy Birthday Baby! I’m glad you’re my suitmate! I love you tons! Allison. A-PHI ERIN Craig finding out your mom will be a bigger surprise than you thought. Can’t wait to get to know you! Luv, mom. A-PHI KATE Deely 4 have the best dot there is! I can’t wait till Sunday for your delivery. Love- Mom. A-PHI TRICIA Millar, only two more days until you get your mom! Love, mom. ATO CHRIS B. What a weekend. So many formais, so little Urne. Love, Claudette. MIKE OBERT~“We’re not here to eat, we’re here to-drink.“ Tonight will be raging, if not quotable. Kari. MIKE P.: Happy B’day and anniversary! “ You’re my hero". Let’s make tomorrow special. Lové Láveme. NANCY, PAUL-Alright, Tuesday night was pretty cool. Cholla. Thanks guys-David. NO.95, No. 16, and No.9: Good luck at the game! We’ll be watching! C-3 times. PAPPY: I can’t believe that -your 21st Birthday celebration has to wait until next week. Oh wed, we will celébrate California style! Happy Birthday. Love, the big green -women. PHI DELT Eric: Prepare yourself to Rage tonight at Kappa Pledge Presents! We’re going to have a Blast! Love ya! Wendi. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. F AND D Publications, word processing unlimited. $1.25 per page, resumes $20, $5 revisions, free pick up and delivery. Call 784-0451. FLYING FINGERS offers typeset quality with a Mac II and laser printer. Call Susan, 945-1500. KINKO’S PAPERS make to grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers, Selfservice Macintosh also. 933 East Universi­ ty, Tempe. Call 966-2035 for details. WORD PROCESSING, IBM PC, letter quality printing: Fast, low cost. Call Jackie, 831-8635. AGD’S MICHELLE C. and Heather, it’s our birthday, so let’s celebrate! Happy B-day! Have a great one! AGD love, Susie. A-PHI ADRIANE DeWitt, mom loves you. XOXO ACCENTS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ read, editing, all included. Quick turn­ around Call 894-6074. TRI-DELT SAMANTHA, Happy Birthday to a very special person! As if our anniver­ sary isn’t enough to celebrate! Looking forward to many more. With love from Tucson, «Jay. BABY BOA’S, great pets, $100.827-8675. LEON! HAPPY 21st!!! Hope you have that list of bars ready! Be good and no ralphing. Marie. $19,95 RESUM E Special, 1 page compu­ ter typeset, laser printout with 20 white bond copies or 10 copies on select resume papers. All 816x11” . Dr. Copy, 1032 South Terrace. Call 433-4688 for weekly specials. PROFESSIONAL TYPING, $1.50 page, Baseline/Alma School in Mesa, editing service available. Call 897-1038. LAMBDA CHI’S-Good Ipck with Waterme­ lon Bust! Sorry we can’t be there. LoveTridelta. ALPHA GAMS are excited because we have the best Lambda Chi coaches ever! Thanks guys!! We are ready to Bust out and Win! $1.50 AAA Word Processing/Laser printer. 34 years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. Marion 839-4269. TO MY Hunkster, this weekend we might no be together-but we will be forever! Luv ya, Honster. AGD’S DARCY and Lauren: U2R the best! Get psyched 2win Watermelon Busts. Love your dots!! LAMBDA CHI Chris G e t ready for an awesome time at Luau tonight! Be ready to limbo! Sigma love, Kath. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING NEAR ASU West. Typing of papers etc. Professional secretarial services. Reason­ able rates. Satisfaction guaranteed. 878-3355. PETS ! C LA SSIFIED S W O RK STRAW BERRY SWITCHBLADE, Hey Babe! Good luck at the “ Plaza’ ’ . Anastasia. KKT TISH -I can’t wait to see you all dressed up tonight! W KL Mamie. ADPI- VIP’S-Trust your sisters!! k AIKO AIKO Happy Birthday Sweet William-O. 25 and there's so much more! Much love, Cathy. • $ 8 .7 5 p e r h o u r (avg . e a rn in g s ) • F le x ib le p a r t -t im e & . fu ll- tim e p o s itio n s BRIAN S.: I love you econ bud! (Just kidding!) You’re doing a great job! W.Woman. DG'S-ATO ’S are psyched for anchor splash! (Part & Full Time Hours Available} ! VALET PARKING attendents, day shifts T 1:00am-3:00pm and 11:00am-5:00pm. Night shifts 5:30pm to close. FuH-time and part-time. Must work holiday season and must have clean driving record Call for appointment 861-9384. American Valet and Limosine Company Incorporated BOB; IF you really want to see me again, I work at Academic Files, Student Services. Noelle DELT SCOTT: Get psyched for Saturday. Let's rage at formal!! Sigma Kappa Caria. 894-0264 n \h H ) k AXO SAMMER, Behave yourself with my cousin and let him hear Let’s get naked! Have fun! Your Texan Matchmaker. BRIAN: I love you more than words can say I'm so glad you flew out for formal. Let's rage this weekend! Sigma Kay, Jane. D ia la m erica HOUR 11 A-PHI PLEDGE Amy Schuber: Your mommy is so excited you're her dot!! See you Sunday! SERVICES ARE YOU tired of tweezing and shaving? For permanent hair removal, call A Soft Touch Electrolysis. Free initial treatment. Near ASU. 829-7829 E L E C T R O L Y S IS -P E R M A N E N T hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discount. Call for more informa­ tion, 969-6954. WORD PROCESSING $1.25 and up: Fast turnaround. 10 minutes from ASU. Transcription and disc storage available. Saurini Typing Service, 966-2825. WORD PROCESSING—$1.50 per page. Resumes, design, editing. & laser printing available. Call 921-3770 evenings & weekends. WANTED CREATIVE JOURNALIST to help write speech for professional psychology project. Paid. 947-0043. NEED HAND crafted items for Consign­ ment Store on Mill Avenue, 967-4645. 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