Copyright, State Press, 1969. Tempe, Arizona Monday, October 23,1989 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 72 No. 39 Cleanup continues after Bay area earthquake Survivor slightly improved; plans for commute set Geologists say Valley couldn’t withstand quake By KELLY PEARCE State Press With much of the country still watching the Bay area recover from last week’s earthquake, ASU geology officials are warning that the Valley would not be able to withstand a quake of similar magnitude. . The “ B ig One,” which could register 8.0 on the Richter scale and would be 11 times m ore deadly than Tuesday’s earthquake, probably would be centered near Yuma and m ay do m ore dam age in Phoenix than in Los Angeles, experts have said. The Bay area quake, which registered 6.9 on the Richter scale, occurred Oct. 17, with 59 people already known dead and $2.87 billion in property damages. Robert Dietz, an ASU professor emeritus of geology, said the worst earthquake the V alley has ever encountered measured 6.2 on the Richter scale and originated in the Sonoran Desert, south of Arizona’s border. The most severe earthquake to strike the Phoenix area in recent years was a small quake in 1973, measuring 3.0 on the Richter scale. Dietz said the San Francisco quake w ill in c re a s e aw aren ess and in terest in earthquake phenomena. In addition, he said an earthquake the magnitude of the one that hit the Bay Area would not devastate Valley buildings. But other ASU experts do not agree. T ro y Pew e, an ASU professor emeritus of geology, said Phoenix skyscrapers are not in zone one, while Bay area structures are in zone four. Zone four buildings can withstand sideway force that is 18.3 percent o f the building’s weight, while zone one structures can tolerate force that is 3.4 percent. Phoenix has its own building code and SAN FRANCISCO (A P ) — Rescuers euphoric over finding a survivor in a collapsed freew ay resumed work at a frustratingly cautious pace Sunday, and earthquake-shaken Northern Californians mapped strategy for Monday’s commute through “ gridlock.” Longshoreman Buck Helm, who spent four days in a tomb of Interstate 880 concrete and steel, was in critical, but stable, condition at Highland General Hospital in Oakland with some slight improvement, hospital officials said. Engineer Steven Whipple, hailed as a hero o f the rescue, said he was checking the fallen double-deck freeway for stability on Saturday when he spotted the back of Helm ’s head with his flashlight, and then saw a hand w ave at him. “ It stopped m y heart. I thought maybe the wind was blowing and that’s what caused it. I thought I might be losing it,” said Whipple, 29. The number of dead pulled from the 1-880 disaster rose to 38, including a 4-year-old boy, bringing the earthquake’s toll to 59, with thousands injured and homeless and dozens still missing. Dam age estimates topped $7 billion, making the quake the costliest natural disaster in U. S. history. Baseball Commissioner F a y Vincent announced Sunday that the World Series would not resume until Friday night, three days later than originally hoped. The Turn to Valley, page S. Turn to A ftermoth, page 9. Sun D evil Spark photo Most bridges in the Valley, such as this railroad crossing near the M ill Avenue bridge, are design­ ed to withstand an earthquake measuring 6.2 on the Richter scale, according to John Zaniewsky, assistant professor of civil engineering. Many ASU experts say a quake on the scale o f the one that struck the Bay area last week would do extensive damage to the Valley, where structures are not built to endure such strong seismic forces. equipped to withstand a tremor of more than 6.0 on the Richter scale. Pew e said there are numerous faults in the Valley, but they are inactive. Yury Shedayi, a n ASU associate professor of architecture who has an interest in earthquake building codes and construction, said Tem pe buildings are classified as being Poll: Students reject pro ball park at ASU Student View point is a w eekly p o ll o f student opinion in the State Press. The un scientific p o ll, conducted a t points around cam pus, is m eant to provid e an insight in to students’ views on issues o f the day. By KIMBERLY HARRIS State Press “ Take me out to the ball gam e,” goes the traditional baseball melody. But some students are more concerned that the line “ take m e out to the crowd” would apply to the University, should ASU become home to a m ajor league baseball stadium. Student Viewpoint Out of 100 students polled Friday, 58 said they do not want a professional baseball stadium at ASU because it would increase population on campus and create parking chaos. The students w ere asked if they would support the construction o f the stadium at the University. “ Parking would be even m ore hellacious, and it wouldn’t benefit us,” one student said. The unscientific poll was conducted at various sites on campus, and participants varied in age and gender. While some shot down the idea of a stadium on campus, 38 students said they support it. Most stadium-backers said they had no m ajor objections as long as ASU would not foot the bill, and the increased traffic Turn to Pod, pagp 3. S m a s h in g : There's nothing quite like spending a Saturday in defen­ sive driving school. Column. P age 4 S ta rte d U p: W hat becomes a legend most? The Rolling Stones and crew showed ’em at the L.A. Coliseum. Review. P age 7 N o D u c k S h o o t: For the first tim e ever, the Sun Devils lose to the University o f Oregon; 27-7. Blame it on the rain? Page 11 Today's w eather: M ostly sunny w ith a light w ind from th e w est and highs in th s m id-80s. Tonight should be fa ir w ith a low In tha m id^Oa. C lassifieds........ College C ulture. C o m ic s ........... Police R eport.... Sports...... 14 ..7 10 ..ft .11 S tate Press M tìndiiv. O cto b e r 9 3 .1 9 8 9 World/Nation R e sc u e w o rk in S an F ran cisco re m a in s s lo w d e s p ite e u p h o ria SAN FRANCISCO (A P ) — Rciscuers euphoric over finding a survivor in a collapsed freew ay resumed work at a frustratingly cautious pace Sunday, and earthquake-shaken Northern Cali­ fornians mapped strategy for Monday’s commute through “ gridlock.” Longshoreman Buck Helm, who spent four days in a tomb of Interstate 880 concrete and steel, was in criticalstable condition at Highland General Hospital in Oakland with, some slight improvement, hospital officials said. The number of dead pulled from the 1-880 disaster rose to 38, including a 4-year-old boy, bringing the earthquake’s toll to 59, with thousands injured and homeless and dozens still missing. Damages topped $7 billion. A t the 1-880 rescue site in industrial downtown Oakland, six sweeps o f the area where Helm was found with sniffing dogs and electronic gear turned up no signs of other survivors. Digging to rem ove cars and bodies was delayed because the double-deck freeway, which collapsed on top of itself, shifted under the strains of aftershocks, wind and even the rescue work itself . Workers placed giant airbags, hydraulic jacks and wood timbers under concrete sections, and used truckloads of dirt to build a sturdier foundation, according to K yle Nelson, a California Department of Transportation spokesman in Oakland. “ The problem is we still have to proceed cautiously and deliberately even though our people are encouraged,” said Jim Drago, another CalTrans spokesman. Despite the slow pace, rescue workers still have a renewed vigor $Unday. * “ We need to use every trick in the rescue books to make sure no one’s still up here alive,” said Bill Bromely, a construction worker moving debris. “ We know now that it’s possible. W e’re going as fast as w e can.” , U. S . b itte rn e s s o v e r V ie tn a m d e fe a t m ay im p ed e re c o g n itio n W ASHINGTON (A P ) — The Bush administration’s reluctance to grant diplomatic recognition to Vietnam stems from the bitter legacy of military defeat, say a handful of congressmen who argue that Vietnam has met U. S. requirements for improving ties. to 18 years and five months in prison for tax evasion. “ One can only speculate Jim w ill get a heavier sentence than Taggart — it’s a foregone conclusion,” Davis said in an interview. Taggart also was fined $500,000. , Assistant U. S. Attorney Jerry M iller said prosecutors will ask for a prison sentence, but he would not elaborate. M iller also would not say whether the government will ask that Bakker be taken into custody immediately 'a ft e r sentencing; prosecutors unsuccessfully tried to have him jailed after his conviction. The Bureau of Prisons recommends where the defendant w ill serve his time; the recommendation is subject to approval by the judge. “ W e’r e punishing V ietiiam fo r in flictin g a very embarrassing failure on the U. S.” 14 years ago, said Rep. Robert Mrazek, D-N. Y . Sen. Robert Kerrey, D-Neb,, who lost part of a leg in Vietnam, said the administration “ isn’t thinking through its Asian policy very well. It is driven by the same lack of understanding that led us to the bumbling mistakes of Vietnam.” That argument, however, is rejected by administration officials and what appears to be a m ajority jn Congress. “ Obviously there’s a bitter legacy but it doesn’t dictate our policy,” said a senior administration official, who spoke only on condition of anonymity. As a condition for establishing diplomatic relations with Vietnam, fo r the first time since the’fall of the U. S.-backed Saigon government in 1975, the Bush administration demanded an end to the 11-year Vietnamese military occupation of neighboring Cambodia. The Vietnamese say the last of their troops withdrew from Cambodia last month. But normalization of ties is stalled over the make-up of a new Cambodia government that the Bush administration seeks to replace Hun Sen, installed by Vietnam and still in power. The United States accused Vietnam of intransigence, saying inclusion of the m ilitarily strong Khmer Rouge — loathsome as it m ay be — is essential for achieving a negotiated settlement in Cambodia. Such a settlement would include a halt of foreign arms supplies to all parties, an international monitoring force and free elections. Am ong the administration supporters on the issue is Sen. John McCain, an Arizona Republican and form er prisoner of war, who last year sponsored a bill to establish low-level diplomatic ties. He withdrew it when Vietnam suspended cooperation for several months on the search for missing Americans. A b o rtio n rig h ts ad vo cates co n ce d e b a ttle , b u t n ot w a r o ve r B ush ve to WASHINGTON (A P ) — Abortion rights advocates conceded Sunday they have little chance of overriding President Bush’s veto of a bill allowing Medicaid to pay for abortions for victims of rape or incest. But pro-ch oice la w m a k ers and lobbyists said they still will put upa fight to override Bush’s veto on the $157 billion Labor-Health and Human Services appropriations bill. “ H ie outlook for an override is not good,” said Marcy Wilder, a staff attorney for the National Abortion Rights Action League, a main pro-choice lobbying group. While the Senate approved the spend­ Bush ing bill, including relaxation of the Medicaid abortion restrictions, last Thursday by a 67-31 vote, the House vote a week earlier was 216-206, far short of the two-thirds that would be needed to override the veto. Bush is also threatening to veto two other pending pieces of legislation over abortion-related issues: a District of Columbia appropriations bill allowing Medicaid to pay fen' all abortions for poor women in the nation’s capital, and a foreign operations bill that would lift restrictions on funding United Nations’ family planning programs. Bush said he was unwilling to permit federal funding of abortions “ other than those in which the life of the mother would be endangered if the fetus were carried to term.” That is how the Medicaid law has stood since 1981, he noted. Bush personally believes rape and incest victims should have a legal right to obtain an abortion, but he is unwilling to pay for the procedure for poor women. N o -n o n se n s e ‘M axim u m B o b ’ to s e n te n c e e v a n g e lis t B a kk er CH ARLO TTE, N.C. (A P ) — Jim Bakker faces up to 120 years in prison and more than $5.2 million in fines Tuesday when he goes before a no-nonsense judge nicknamed “ Maximum Bob” — and the T V evangelist’s law yer is pessimistic. “ Maximum Bob w ill probably knock a year off the maximum,” joked George Davis. Bakker, 49, was convicted Oct. 5 of fleecing followers of his P T L ministry. U. S. District Judge Robert Potter last month lived up to his moniker in sentencing form er Bakker aide David Taggart I / H H 2C V A M E R IC A ’ S O R IG IN A L C O M E D Y S H O W C A S E A N D R E S T A U R A N T Best o f P h o e n ix ■ R eader's C h o ic e Best C o m e d y Club p resents WAYNE COTTER October 24th-29th As Seen On "The Tonight Show" MARK PITTA October 31st-November 5th As Seen On "An Evening At The Improv" Celebrate Our 1st Anniversary starring JEFF ALTM AN November 2nd & 3rd Tickets on sale now at The Improv .f W W W W tfW W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W IT ’S NO JOKE Bring in this portion of the ad and receive 2 free admissions* only Mondays and Wednesdays. You must be 21 with a valid picture I.D. ‘ Excluding special events. This is not redeemable for cash. Expires 12/27/89. For More Information/Dinner Reservations, 9 2 1 -9 8 7 7 . University & Rural Rd. at the Cornerstone Mall S h ow tim es: Sun-Thurs 8:30 p.m., F ri 8 :3 0 & 10:30, Sat 8 :0 0 & 10:00 Stete P r f a Monday, October 83.1989 Today The Today section (a a daily calendar of events happening a t ASU th a t is presented as a service to the U niversity com m unity. Any cam pus club o r organization can subm it en tries fo r publication to th e State Press, located in th e basem ent o f M atthew s C enter, Room 15. Entries m ust be leg ib le, are subject to editing fo r co ntent, space and cla rity , and w ill not be taken over the phone; Due to space restrictio ns, the State Press cannot guarantee p u b licatio n. D eadline fo r the entries is 1 p.m . th e previous business day. •S u n Devil Spark Yearbook student portraits will be taken from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 p.m. near Cady Mall. •A S U C enter fo r Asian Studies will meet at 1:30 p.m. in Social Sciences, Room 101. Dr. Giri Deshingkar will speak on “The Bumpy Road of India-China Relations: Past and Prospects for the Future” . •A SU Ski Devils will have a staff meeting at 8 p.m . in the MU- Check monitor for room number. Will also be accepting deposits for Thanksgiving Utah trip. M eetings •A rizona O uting Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. Will discuss backpacking, rock climbing and socializing in the Southwest. •A S U C oalition fo r W orld Peace will meet at noon in the M U Santa Cruz Room. Guests: Dr, Austin Jones and team from the Institute for Peace Education and Research. •B lood D rive — sponsored by Alpha Epsilon D elta ASU vs. UofA Blood Drive kicks off today from 10:30 a.m . to 2:30 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. Bloodmobiles wilt also be set up S tu dent portraits to be taken a t ‘photom obile’ until Friday Poll would not be a problem. Four students were undecided. “ I f the traffic w ere properly controlled, especially during school hours, then I would support the stadium,” another student said. Dick Neuheisel, president of the Tempe Sports Authority, said last week there is 60 percent to 70 percent chance that a stadium will be built on campus. The proposed construction site is north o f Sun Devil Stadium and would be part of the R io Salado Project, which involves the constuction o f parks throughout the Salt River. Paul Larson, associated students of ASU president, said last week he strongly opposes the construction o f such a stadium. Larson said the stadium would take up land that should be used for educational and academic purposes. r iP P I U rr! O T f5 " " ! W INDOW TIN TIN G ■ z < S N O Ü Q& $4.89 S P E C IA L r VALID MONDAY THRU WEDNESDAY ONLY. WITH ANY VEHICLE TINTED ■ SW C o rn e r D o b s o n & U n iv e rs ity SE C o rn e r 833-8256 730-1699 HEW WINDSHIELD NO COST TO VOUI* ‘ If y o u r c o m p re h e n s iv e is b e tw e e n $0-5100, w e w ill w a ive y o u r d e d u c tib le a n d c o lle c t th e re s t fro m y o u r in s u ra n c e _ y O U P A Y N O T H IN G I — 7 4 8 W . U n iv e rs ity , M e s a (Extension & University) SftNEfc P (A Ö O F F E R E N D S 11-1 -8 9 Only $4.89 plus tax for an Original Medium one-item pizza. No other coupons or offers valid with this special. Valid at this Dom ino’s Pizza location only. Lim ited tim e only. Please m ention this special w hen ordering. WE DO SEAMLESS WINDOWS! •FULL VEHICLE TINTING FROM $50 •9 YEAR AND LIFETIME WARRANTY •W INDSHIELD REPAIR •DASHMATS AVAILABLE 2033 W . University______ 2855 S. Alma School ■ c a r rie r •S o ciety o f Hispanic Professional Engineers will have a general meeting at 5 p.m . in the Engineering Research Center, Room 490. Topics to be covered: endowment raffle, scholarships, halloween party and more. Yearbook pictyre will be taken after meeting. □ ea phoenix voters last month rejected a proposition to build a professional baseball stadium in downtown Phoenix. Funding for the Phoenix stadium was proposed to come from property taxes. «O H •M U A B S pecial Events C om m ittee will meet at 3:15 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. Get ready for 60’s Dayl New members are welcome. With Domino’s Pizza, great pizza is only a call away. Fresh, custom-made pizza, DELIVERED, in 30 minutes or less. Use the coupons below for additional great savings. When it comes to pizza, Domino’s Pizza is at the top of the class. Continued from page 1 Rocky Mountain Windowtint •M U AB Film C om m ittee will have its weekly meeting at 3:20 p.m. at the Lighthouse by Hayden Library. C U T COUPONS NOT C LA S S E S Students who want their picture to appear in The Sun D e v il Spark yearbook must v is it the Spark “ photomobile” by Friday, Oct. 27. The “ photomobile” is located southwest o f the Cady M all fountain and is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. P ortrait sittings are free for all ASU students and take about three minutes. Undergraduates as well as graduate students are encouraged to have their pictures taken. A ll students who have their portraits taken will be entered in the Sun Devil Spark/Dominos Pizza Photo Finish Sweepstakes. The grand prizes a re free tuition for the fall and spring semesters. . "” at Life Sciences and at the Danforth Chapel. •In terV arsIty Christian Fellow ship will meet at 7 p.m. at First United Methodist Church. •M in o rity Pre-M ed Club will meet at 6:30 p.m . in the MU, Room 215-N. T H E P IZ Z A P E O P L E O F A S U R iv e r B o tto m 968-5555 903 S. Rural Rd. 827-1262 750 754 OFF any Medium O rigina l D om ino’s Pizza. One coupon per pizza. N ot yalid w ith any oth er offers o r specials; Expires: 11-15-89 IMPORT AUTO Repair Garage and Body Shop 011 & Filter Change Plus 12 Point Service Check FACTORY QUALITY 4 4 O O S GUARANTEED * 1 O * ® O ur drivers carry less than $20.00. Lim ited delivery area to inaure safety 1989 Domino’s Pizza. S o u th e rn [ $ ï" .2 5 ] r $ ï.5 0 " l $1.00 OFF any M edium Pan o r O rig in a l one o r m ore item pizza. One coupon per pizza. N ot valid w ith any oth e r offers o r specials. Expires: 11-15-89 $1.25 OFF any O riginal E xtra-large one o r more item pizza. One coupon per pizza. N o t valid w ith any oth er o ffe rs o r specials. Expires: 11-15-89 $1.50 OFF any O rigina l E xtra-large three o r more item pizza. One coupon per pizza. N ot valid w ith any oth er Offers o r specials. Expires: 11-15-89 __ ® N e w L o c a tio n 1 1 5 5 W . 2 3 r d S t. B ld g . 11 B . T e m p e 966-9716 HOURS: 11:00am-1:30am Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 am -2:30am Fri.-Sat. |fcV< ■JII__ itU L Q ’nCr? MH »1 ■» 129 .SiTP r .fl ■ ^ S u b ^ c l to all applicati*« s u t . & local « STPR ir . j ^ ^ j b p e t to Èli applicable stata & local _ ■ ■ STPR I ^ I n c l u d a . all apptcabla stata A local t a x ^ J j STM ^ ^ ^ r c h i d e s an a p p lica b l. s ta u & local NÖW~H¡RING*AT~9Ö3 S .'r URAL - 968-5555 ÉÜ O p in io n fa ge 4 ' _ S W t« P l«St Monday, O ctober 83,1989 C ra s h c o u rs e Don’t get a ticket; safety class will drive you crazy B rian Tassinari Opinion Editor J |H K The alarm went o ff at 7:30 a.m. But this was Saturday, and alarms aren’t supposed to go o ff on Saturday. It’s just not normal to get up that early on the one and only day that is uncluttered with work or school. This particu lar day, how ever, w as Cluttered. I had to get up and pay m y debt to society. The cop who pulled me over called it “ failure to control speed,” an excellent euphemism that nicely obscures the fact that while I was daydreaming, I slammed into a minivan on University Drive. (I nudged him, actually.) . For having committed this crim e against the city of Mesa, I was given two options. I could either pay the fine, have m y insurance go up to four figures a year for the next five years and consequently not eat for the next half decade. Or I could pay $70 and go to driving school. Having little time but even less money, I decided to matriculate in the National Safety Council’s Defensive Driving Course in beautiful Mesa, Ariz. The morning before class, I spent the first half an hour after the alarm rang trying to figure out a w ay to blow off the class and not feel guilty about it. I didn’t come up with anything, so o ff I went. The papers the court gave me said m y. class was going to be held at the Quality Inn on Main Street in Mesa. The name was half right — it was an Inn. But if there was one thing I could definitely say about this place it would be that it lacked quality. Our classroom — my prison for the next eight hours — was decorated in late-70s motelware. It was a place that would have made Gaudi proud. The drapes w ere those heavy gold-colored kind that I think must be advertised in “ Seedy Motel Magazine.” The carpet was brown (o f course) indoor-outdoor (o f course) and stained (o f course). When I entered the room, I could almost feel the presence of the hundreds o f insurance salesmen who had no doubt passed through this place attending seminars on Premium Whole life. A fter signing in, I couldn’t decide where I wanted to sit; a decision, which, at the time, was very important to me. I didn’t want to be too close to the front of the room, but I didn’t want to sit in back either. Finally, I chose a nice spot halfway back, next to a pretty blonde who appeared to be about as happy to be there as I was. I guessed from the look on her face that there was nothing else in the world that could make her madder than having to go to driving school on a Saturday morning. But I was wrong. As soon as I sat down next to her, she flashed m e a dirty look, picked up her purse in a huff and moved over to the next row. While I scanned the rest of the room to check out m y fellow inmates, I noticed that everyone in the room was very quiet and most were fidgeting with their pencils and shifting in their seats uncomfortably. I couldn’ t decide what was wrong at first, but then I figured it out: Everyone in there was using elevator etiquette. This room I was in was like a giant elevator full o f strangers, and I had no illusions as to which way w e were going: We w ere going down — to be re-educated. The teacher of the class was pleasant enough, although he went into excruciating detail for every one o f the eight sections of the course. W e paid for eight hours’ worth of class and he was going to give us our money’s worth. E v e r y c o n c e iv a b le to p ic h ad an accompanying colored card that he’d placed on the board — no doubt for pedagogical punch. However, it made m e feel like we w ere taping a segment of “ Sesame Street.” I half expected to see Big Bird pop out of the closet and start talking about the two second rule. Eight hours in the same room talking about the same things with the same people makes for a very long day . There are only so many ways to sit in a chair before they all become uncomfortable. However, the worst part about the class wasn’t the fact that it was eight hours long o r that it com p letely destroyed m y Saturday. The class was ruined by the people who w ere compelled to ask as many stupid questions as they possibly could in an eight hour period. Everyone knows that all classes, whether in preschool 6r at a university, have at least one person in them who insist on taking up tim e by asking inane questions. What I didn’t understand was why w e w ere blessed with five tim e wasters. One m ember of this notorious gang-of-five was a drunk-driving advocate who insisted that it was an individual’s right to decide if he wants to drink and drive. He was no doubt a veteran o f many such decisions himself. Another guy insisted that seatbelts w ere a bad idea and that he’d rather take his Chances getting thrown from the car. He sounded like maybe he’d already taken his chances a few times — and lost. Even if you believe this nonsense, what are the chances of getting a driving safety instructor to Say that seatbelts are bad? Drivers ed teachers live for guys like this — it gives them a chance to roll out their statistics. The last guy I ’ll mention is a little bit harder to classify. He was a stream-ofunconsciousness “ thinker” whose ability to ask stupid questions was unrivaled, even within this esteemed group of time-wasters. At one point, it seemed very important to his understanding of crash safety to know whether the statistics used included Puerto Rico. What is ironic about all this is that at the start of the class, our instuctor said he did not want to waste time with peripheral issues and these type questions should be asked during tiie break. Mesa’s driver reprogramming officials can take com fort; they have accomplished their goal. I am going to be an excellent driver for the rest of m y life. Not so much because of what I learned about driving safety but because I know that I don’t ever want to go to driving school again. Letters Fetus is human Editor: This is a response to Elaine D aly’s letter in the Oct 8 edition of the State Press. In MS. D aly’s letter, she wrote that quality o f life is the issue in abortion for her. I quote, “ We feel that our lives and the lives of the children w e already have are more important than that of a two-month-old fetus. We feel it is better to raise three children w ell than four children badly because there is not enough m ommy to go around.” I am appalled by this sort of reasoning. Eliminating a human being’s life in order that another human being’s quality o f life m ight improve is absolutely wrong. And yes, I did call the fetus a human being. Not calling a fetus a human being is like not calling a baby, or an adult, a human being. Fetus, baby and adult are just categories of human maturity, and m aturity comes with time. I f the baby and the adult are human, then the fetus is also human. The fetus will become a baby in time, and the baby w ill become an adult in time. A fter all, each of us was once a fetus. Just give the little guy time to mature. I f you are not sure whether the fetus is a human being or not, I suggest you all better find out before you all commit murder by abortion. K yry Tek Sophomore, Civil Engineering STATE PRESS Q u o ta b le D ARRIN HOSTETLER Editor " Man is a blind, witless, low-brow, anthropocentric clod who inficts lesions upon the earth.’’ C AR O LYN HOFIG Managing Editor M AGAZINE STAFF: Scott Seckel. — Ian McHarg FREELANCE W R ITE R S: Sharon Kaney, Francine Stahl, Mish Tell, Richard Vigil. CARTO O NIST: Mike Ritter EDITORIAL ASST.: Lynn Vavreck LETTER POLICY The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempo AZ 85287-1502. PRODUCTION: Daniel Donley. Steve Kricun, Nancy Ness. Mark Nothaft, Deborah Prewitt. Lynne Senzek, Jason Silver, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Frank Culver, Jay Eekhardt, Dan Ellstrom, Lysa Fitzhugh, Lisa Horn, John Leathers, Paul Lee, Karen Usiewski, Brook Mullen, Terri Smith, Ray Zickel. REPO RTERS: Mika Burgess, Nicki Carroll, Mark Crismon, Elisa Elsberry, Kimberly Harris, Michelle Henry, Adriane Hopkins, KeMy Jain, Joie Ann La Polla. Sonja Lewis, Kelly Pearce, Tenny Tatusian. S P O R T S R EPO RTERS: Vicki Culver. Joel Horn, Tomi McEl­ roy, Larry Newell, Keith Rosenhagen. PH O TO G RAPH ERS: Jam ie O'Mahoney, Scott Troyanos. Lytle, Sundi Kjenstad, C O P Y EDITORS: Kelly Ettenborough, Nicole Perron. Brian The State P ress is published Monday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, atMatthews Center. Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempo. Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. W e d o not answer questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: (602) 965-7$72. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the A SU campus. T h e news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the A SU administration, faculty, staff or student body. O p in io n S f t e P lw Monday, October 83,1989 Page 5 Free Speech Civil libertarians used to support First Ammendment been a losing proposition for Catholics, thanks in part to the weakness of Catholic spokesmen. Dershowitz adopts a common strategy — he skips over the arguments Buchanan made and instead assails his motives. This m ay be the only course he can take, since he seems to have no answer to the arguments. The ad hominem argument, I always say, is the most graceless form of concession. Even if Buchanan’s character were as black as Dershowitz paints it, his arguments stand on their own legs. Joseph Sobran Universal Press Syndicate W ASHINGTON -— Alan Dershowitz of Harvard Law School, who also writes a syndicated newspaper column, has written an extraordinary attack on his and m y colleague Patrick Buchanan. W hatmakes it extraordinary is partly the violence of its rhetoric: Dershowitz all but called Buchanan a Nazi. (These Harvard professors can put the lead in the boxing gloves when they want to.) What’s even more remarkable is that Dershowitz, a noted c iv il libertarian, actually suggests that Buchanan’s column should be prevented from reaching its readership. He writes: “ The anti-Jewish views expressed by Patrick Buchanan are not reflective of mainstream America. They belong in the hate-mongering media, not in a nationally syndicated column and not on national television.” Dershowitz says Buchanan “ invites his fellow Catholics to mock Jewish sensitivities.” What Buchanan said in the column that Dershowitz is reacting to was something very different: that sensitivity is a two-way street. He angrily cited recent attacks on Catholics, verbal and physical, emanating from Jewish quarters and even from the Israeli government and noted that Jewish-Catholic “ dialogue” has Buchanan asked why there had been no international outrage about an event that occurred on the West Bank two years ago. In apparent retaliation against the Vatican’s appointment of a Palestinian patriarch o f Jerusalem, Israeli troops roughed up a Catholic priest in public, then shot up his church during mass. Dershowitz dismisses this as “ an everyday military incident.” > Well, it’s when such things as religious persecution become everyday incidents that civil libertarians are supposed to swing into action. It ’s strange that a man who hangs out his shingle as a defender of civil liberties should excuse any arm y brutality as cavalierly as Dershowitz does. Maybe he can explain the m ilitary necessity of violence against worshippers instead o f heaping infam y on the messenger who reports what he himself concedes is routine stuff. Since his own clients have ranged from the .pornographer A l Goldstein (publisher of Screw) to the Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard, Dershowitz should hesitate to assume thè posture of spokesman for “ mainstream Am erica” against a w riter and T V personality as popular as Patrick Buchanan. If Dershowitz hates Buchanan, he can always turn the page or the dial. I f others want to hear Buchanan out, that’s thieir right under the First Amendment, at least as Dershowitz used to interpret it. Besides, to paraphrase the point Dershowitz often has made on behalf of some o f his m ore out-of-themainstream clients, if w e ban Buchanan, w e m ay wind up banning James Joyce’s “ Ulysses.” And if Dershowitz really speaks for “ mainstream Am erica,” while Buchanan belongs to “ the lunatic fringe,” there’s no need to exclude Buchanan from the respectable media. Popular demand eventually w ill replace him with someone along the lines of Alan Dershowitz. The issue here isn’t'just Buchanan’s constitutional right to speak. Dershowitz grudgingly concedes that. What’s more important is the attem pt— and you can be sure Dershowitz is only the public tip of a much larger iceberg behind the scenes — to interpose an alleged standard of decency between a w riter and his readers, in such a way as to maim public discussion. Dershowitz willfully construes Buchanan’s defense of Catholic rights and interest as “ hate-mongoring,” freeassociates him with “ N azi w ar criminals” and uses this as a justification for running him out of the m ajor media. The ultimate result of this sort of tactic would be to give people who agree with Dershowitz a monopoly in debates where the public has a right to hear m ore than one side. But the very purpose o f free speech is to prevent a mainstream from becoming a monopoly. Civil libertarians used to understand that. Bush’s staff should view Gelbart’s ‘M astergate’ J e ff G reen field . Universal Press Syndicate N E W Y O R K - If you’re looking for acerbic political satire, you can check out “ M astergate” by Larry Gelbart, which just opened on Broadway. Set in a congressional hearing room, complete with T V monitors and a mush­ brain ed T V re p o rte r, “ M a s te rg a te ,” skewers not so much the abuse of political power but the abuse of language. It features witnesses who testify about “ non-discussion discussions,” inquisitors who ask, “ what did the president know and did he have any idea that he knew it?” and an O liver North type who, admonished to tell the truth, replies, “ starting when, sir?” You leave the theater chuckling over Gelbart’s ability to parody by exaggeration, and then you pick up the newspaper and you realize that the author wasn’t creating he was plagiarizing. On the front page o f The New Y ork Tim es T a k e Yo u r ia s t d r n s S T U B r r o u r HERE ■po N o r EXWMJE ■ and is this item: “ The White House plans to issue specific guidelines to Am erican m ilita ry , in telligen ce and diplom atic officials in Panama so they can provide clearer and more rapid communication with potential coup plotters.” The intention, according to an unnamed “ senior official” whose identity is known to every reporter, editor, elevator operator and messenger in Washington, is to make American officials less “ inhibited about questioning plotters and giving them guidance on United States objectives.” This new policy evidently stems from the “ sweeping review ” of crisis management in the wake of the Bush Administration’s Three Stooges impersonation during the coup attempt in Panama (presumably, the White House will not countenance the term, “ abortive coup” for fear of offending the Right to L ife movement). Why do I get the feeling that Larry Gelbart planted this story in The New York Tim es to get publicity for “ Mastergate” ? Because it so brilliantly captures the fatuous bureaucratic mindset that always distances itself from reality. What happened is patently obvious. After all the rhetoric of the 1988 George Bush Rocky-Rambo-Read-My-Lips model, the Bush presidency has reverted, as do most administrations, to a reflection o f its president’s fundamental traits. In the case o f Mr. Bush, those traits include a fetishistic respect for “ prudence,” a lifelong aversion to politically bold moves and a compulsive distaste for dirtying one’s hands. Mr. Bush wants very much to look like a tough-minded president because he knows that a public appeal for restraint and ■Maybe Bush should have used the term Jimmy Carter made famous after the Iranian rescue fiasco: “an incomplete success. ” ’ prudence would remind Americans of Jim m y Carter. But taking real action would risk the lives of American servicemen; it could mean that some o f our boys would come home in body bags. Thus, the American m ilitary blocked two roads during the coup, publicly involving us with the plotters, but not a third road, down which Noriega supporters might have been traveling. lif e c n w n w e Tu r n e d o f f THE SEAT g a rS lò N .^ b u ARE V&ez ID AAO/e a b o u t T V k e Y x * Seat, flE A S t, a n d gUPCLEUf1! D O N C Thus, the Southern Command was advised that they could capture Noriega, but only through “ covert” means — that is, by not using any o f the 12,000-man force waiting on alert some 500 yards away. So what do you suppose these new guidelines entail? Maybe w e w ill be allowed to seize Gen. Noriega if we take three skipping steps into his m ilitary compound, provided we have first said, “ M ay I? ” Perhaps our Southern Command w ill put signs along roadways saying, “ Attention coup plotters: In case of an actual capture o f Noriega, follow the blue arrow s; kindly fasten seat belts and do not exceed 35 mph.” Maybe w e w ill ask the Panamanian Defense Command to provide us with a complete list of senior officers, grouping them according to their willingness to participate in the future coups; we also will insist that this list not be shown to Gen. Noriega. Well, m aybe I ’m being unfair. A fter all, Noriega was captured for a few hours. Maybe Bush should have used the term Jim m y Carter made famous after the Iranian rescue fiasco: “ an incomplete success.” Or maybe he should send his staff up to Broadway to see “ M astergate” ; after all, amateurs can learn a lot from the pros. More Letters Entrapment violates rights SON0WIM61Z>T>R|NK? NOU WANTlHE CtoCKEN _ _ O fcTHf STCfcKT jf ^ S ) lo N Q T E44AAE. "fóAY TA6LE5 U P AND SENT B acks in i r « u p ra e w r _ fbSiTiON FDR LANDING, SEATEtCTST^STENED, CAKRf-ON 1 U 6 6 A 6 E L r ^ UNDER TUE SEAT. DO NOT EXHALE. YOU WAV ©HALE. TW M K t JUFQR CÑN (O ' /Ip r I P f iiil NO-SMOKING FLIGHT. Editor: Brian Tassinari’s column o f last week regarding the recent arrests in the Farm er Education Building disturbed me greatly. He states that entrapment is only wrong if the person is innocent. The courts have upheld time and time again that entrapment is a violation of a person’s constitutional rights. His assertion that these rights only apply to innocent people is offensive. Our system o f justice is founded on the principle that everyone is innocent until proven guilty. His presumption that all suspects must be guilty if they are suspected of a crim e shows a total lack of respect for our system of justice. Form er Attorney General Edwin M eese stated, “ You don’t have many suspects who are innocent of a crime. That’s contradictory. I f a person is innocent o f a crime, then he is not a suspect.” (A s reported in U. S. News and World Report Oct. 14,1985.) Tassinari’s statement that bathrooms are no place for sex is absolutely correct. But no m atter how much I ’m offended by public sex, I ’m more offended by the violation of somebody’s constitutional rights, be they innocent or guilty. David Blais Junior, Computer Science S tate Press Pgeò, ASU Police Report GRE Michael Tomlinson PREP COURSES ^ For more inform ation please call 1*800*772*8378 G odfather’s Pizza» V$20 0 $30 0 OFF LARGE PIZZA The ASU baseball team was practicing at Packard Stadium. •Four students were warned of trespassing after police found them inside the ASU golf course at night. They said they wanted to play night golf. •A student was arrested after he was pulled over by police for driving with a suspended license on College Avenue. •A fire started in a room on the second floor o f Cholla Apartments while a student was cooking. Police said damage estimates are unknown. •A student was arrested after he pulled a fire alarm on the third floor of Palo Verde West Residence Hall. Com piled by State P ress re p o rte r Tenny Tatusian the basement of the Fine Arts Complex. He was described as a white m ale in his mid to late 20s. •A thief stole a mattress and two chairs from a student’s room on the first floor o f Sahuaro Residence Hall. •A thief stole a student’s w allet and jew elry, valued at $400, from her unlocked room on the 11th floor of Manzanita Residence Hall. •A student reported finding a white, powdery substance in a small bag inside th e 'firs t floor mens restroom of the Psychology Building. •A man not affiliated with ASU had his car hit by a baseball while he was driving east on First Street near Rural Road. ASU police reported the following incidents that occurred between Friday and Sunday: •Tw elve people, including one student, w ere ejected from the Arizona State/Oregon football gam e at Sun D evil Stadium Saturday for alcohol consumption. •A student injured her right ankle while walking on Orange M all by the MU. She was taken by ambulance to Maricopa County Hospital. •A student reported receiving harassing phone calls in her room at Manzanita Residence Hall between Oct, 6 and Oct. 19. •An unidentified man tried to enter the womens restroom in OFF MEDIUM PIZZA o n e In a Solo Acoustic Performance _ $2°° Pitchers $1»o Well Drinks $160 Bowling/per game C om e on and ta k e a b re a k a fte r c la s s o r th e lib ra ry . W e ’ve g o t s p e c ia l p ric e s e v e ry M o n ­ d ay th ru T h u rs d a y fro m 9 p .m . to M id n ig h t. S o ro ll in , ro ll som e s trik e s , ro ll som e g u tte rs , o r ju s t ro ll up to th e b ar. M ON-THURS T E M “ FACE UP IN THE RAIN” 9 PM -M IDN IG HT G A M M A G E A U D IT O R IU M • THURSDAY, O C T. 26 • 8 P.M. TICKETS: $16.50 P l^ b w L GAM M AGE. TICKETS ON SALE AT GAMMAGE. ASU ACTIVITY CENTER A N D DILLARD’S BOX OFFICES INFORMATION/CHARGE BY PHONE (w ith th is ad) O p e n t ill M id n ig h t Fri & S at t i l l 2 a .m . 9 6 5 -3 4 3 4 FR EE D E L IV E R Y TUSCANY A Tarnteo f Hew Ita ly 1100 E. APACHE • 967-1656 no3n A R IZ O N A STATE U NIVERSITY 9 2 1 -2 2 2 2 ÉVBR peahaunted „ e y T H É .5 A M Ë OLPACHfcS, AND PNNS f STUDENT LIFE • A.S.A.S.U. • W OM EN'S STUDIES A R I Z O N A S T A T E U N IV E R S IT Y A N N O U N C E M E N T O F W E D N E S D A Y , O C T O B E R 25 W O R K S H O P ttA m - PROGRAM: CHIBOF’RACTIC CAN OFTEN c o e e e c r the. CAUSE O p M E M O R IA L U N IO N A L U M N I L O U N G E 202 W O M E N M A K IN G TH E DIFFERENCEA G E N D A FO R TH E 90'S PAiN, 0 1 V1N& RELIEF | O R . D O N N A SH AVL8C P R E C T O R O F A M E R IC A N C O U N C IL O N ^ C A T I O N - W O M E N 'S P R O G R A M S AND PAINS nKtSi * • , ONCE f POR A U . I STARKEY CHIROPRACTIC CENTER you lastime G UEST: ; CALL D R . STA a¿eyT¿>D A y ...AND BANISH THOSE ACHES 960 W . University #110 NE Corner University 6 Hardy Behind AM/PM 9 2 1 -3 7 7 7 RESERVATIONS REQUIRED: C A L L S T U D E N T LIFE 9 6 5 - 6 5 4 7 f t * MONDAY: Ifit t f ta t» rtt & f a tm } M o n d ay N ig h t F o o tb a ll HOT DOGS $2 0 ° DRAFTS V PITCHERS RURAL & APACHE College Culture U rttN u S33LL Monday, O ctober 83,1980 The Usual Suspects Concert Review T h e p ric e o f fa m e SUCCESS M A Y N O T have changed country singer Randy Travis much, but some folkk in the music industry seem to have lost their love for him. “ The people in the business are for you when you’re beginning,” T ravis said. “ Then, once you achieve success they say, ‘Well, that’s enough — you’re over,’ or w hatever.” Travis has won m ore than 40 awards since 1986 but didn’t receive so much as an honorable mention at this year’s Country Music Association Awards. But Travis isn’t bitter. The people that count the most — his fans — don’t hold his success against him, they only contribute to it. His latest album, “ Old 8 X 10,” has sold over a million copies since it was released last year. “ The people that you call the fans are not much that w ay,” Travis said. G o rk y P a rk in D a lla s ? GLASNOST OR NOT, the Hard Rock Cafe in Dallas is going to have to do without a guitar from the Soviet rock group Gorky 'Park,'. The group was supposed to present the rock club with one of its guitars on Friday but w ere unable to obtain exit visas and w ere stuck at home. Gorky Park was a headline act at the recent Moscow Music P eace Festival which also featured Bon Jovi, The Scorpions, Cinderella and M otley Crue. Associateci Press photo Mick Jagger (pictured here at a concert in Philadelphia) dances and sings like he’s still 21. Steel Wills H o t p a n ts a t 5 8 H E R A G E N T ONCE told h er: “ You’re too old to be wearing hot pants.” Actress Angie Dickinson, who was in her early 30s at the time, had to agree. “ Certain things don’t work after a certain point. It’s just good taste,” Dickinson, 58, explained. She’ll be starring with Telly Savalas in an upcoming “ K ojak” m ovie on ABC . . . and she won’t be wearing any hot pants. “ You think you’ll look good or that they’ve photographed you well, but you end up fooling yourself.” Y o u ’re g u ilty , p a rd n e r TH E D U KE IS JUST too famous, say lawyers. According to polls, the former husband of John Wayne's daughter could never get a fair trial in Santa Ana because of the late actor’s popularity. Attorneys for Dr. Thomas Gionis said he should not be tried in Orange County (where the John Wayne Airport is located) on charges he conspired last year to hire men to beat Aissa Wayne, daughter of John Wayne, and her then-boyfriend Roger Luby. The Gionis defense went so far as to commission an Orange County poll that found that 46 percent of the 200 people questioned believe the Pomona doctor is guilty. An expert for the prosecution said the poll didn't interview enough people to be accurate and that it was worded to elicit certain responses. E n d o f th e K n ig h t T H E M A N WHO M ADE Stratford-uponAvon famous again is dead. Actor-director Sir Anthony Quayle died Friday at his home. He was 76. Quayle, who built Stratford-upon-Avon into a center of British theater, had been suffering from cancer. He was a well-known Shakespearean actor and had created a memorable F alstaff in a 1951 performance of “ Henry IV ” at the Bard’s birthplace. Quayle also acted in such film s as “ The Wrong M an ," “ The Guns of Navarone," “ Lawrence of Arabia” and “ Anne of a Thousand D ays,” which gained him an Academy Aw ard nomination for his role as Cardinal Wolsey. Quayle most recently had worked as director for the touring company Compass. Colleague Sir John Gielgud said Quayle was “ ve ry fair, very unbitchy, very uninterested in gossip and always in a good humor, amusing and understanding.” T h e Rolling Stones prove that getting older doesn’t m ean giving up LO S A N G E L E S — U ndercover cops w ere busting bootleg T -sh irt salesm en in the stands, w hile the sold-out crow d grew dense, nea rly 75,000 strong. The sky was hazy and the buildings in the distance were fad ing behind the Los A ngeles smog. Hoards o f con cert attendants, dressed in p ie rcin g yellow , fe ll in to lin e, standing with th e ir m uscles bu lging in anticipation that the row dy crow d would g e t out o f line. A fte r a ll, the con cert was held a t the Coliseum , the outdoor arena that sponsored the 1984 O lym pics, and everyone knows that anything and everything that could possibly happen, usually does in L A. The a ir am ong the stadium crow d was calm and sweet and an occassional w hiff o f m arijuana d rifted in the lig h t ■ wind. There were ru m ors that one o f the opening bands, Guns N ’ Roses, was not goin g to m ake its scheduled appearance due to in n er disagreem ents w hich, e a rlie r in the week, sparked a tense Gunner perform a n ce on stage. There were speculations that M ick Ja gger and K eith R ichards were both so washed-up that they should have played th e ir gu ita rs on stage W hile s ittin g in rock in g chairs. The w eather foreca st even p red icted rain. The sun was dipping and the la st plane, with fly in g bani ners w elcom ing the con cert, was slow ly becom ing a fading m em ory. Herds o f people were p ilin g in to the chairs wrap­ p in g $20 shirts around th e ir waists and sipping fla t Coke. The policem en w ere try in g to capture floa tin g beachballs popping up fro m crow d m em ber to crow d m em ber. B ut no one paid m uch attention. A fte r a ll, there w ere m ore im porta n t things to think about. We w ere about to witness The W orld ’s G reatest R ock Band on stage. We w ere about to seie the R o llin g Stones. B y MISH TELL State Press espite the general views of critics and old-time music fans, no one who piled into the Coliseum for last Saturday’s Roll­ ing Stones concert left the gate disappointed. The band still rocks, and despite the members being well into their middle-age years, the energy displayed on stage was in­ credible. D The Stones hit the stage at 8:45 p.m. in support of their latest L P , S teel Wheels, with an opening of fireworks and an on-going light display of blues and reds. The opening song, “ Start Me Up,” was a crowd-revver and all the fans in the arena w ere on their feet, stomping and pounding. Mick Phillip Jagger, acting as if he was still 21, was dressed in a youthful yellow, gothic jacket. Keith Richards wore a simple blue sweatshirt and had a fire-red leather bandana tied around his head while Ron Wood stood tall with a long black jean jacket. Bill Wyman was dressed con­ servatively, in a maroon jacket and black pants. Charlie Watts was hidden behind his steel drum set. The band also added a three-piece back-up vocalist sec­ tion, two women and one man. The band, which was on stage for nearly 2% hours, played hit songs that would take even an average music listener down a trippy m em ory lane. Songs like “ Satisfac­ tion,” “ Tumbling D ice,” “ Ruby Tuesday,” “ Brown Sugar,” “ You Can’t Always Get What You Want,” and “ Gim m ie Shelter,” were just a few. The band added the special effects of inflating, almost immediately, two giant blow-up women in the song, “ Honky Talk Woman.” (H ere Jagger proceeded to pull on the strings of the balloons to m ove the women, well, rather suggestively.) The band also played the song, “ Sympathy for the D evil,” which was a treat to the audience since the song was banned from live performance years ago after an alleged stabbing was reported to have been inspired by the devilish lyrics. The band ended the show with “ Jumping Jack Flash,” and an intense five-minute firework display that lit up the USC sky. The famous Stones insignia (inspired by M ick’s lips) Was also in flames and implanted on the sides o f the stage, which stood nearly 25 feet high and 300 feet wide. The show was incredible and the Rolling Stones displayed a comradery and energy that is indescribable on stage. Guns N ’ Roses, often compared to the Rolling Stones, could have sold as many tickets if die band was on a solo tour. It was hard to distinguish which fan cam e for which perform er — the crowd was so diverse in age. But as far as T-shirt sales, more people sported Guns N ’ Roses on their backs than the Stones. (The Gunners even made a special T-shirt for the California concerts that read, “ Got Stoned in L.A. . . . Guns N ’ Roses.” ) W. Axl Rose was born to sing. The band, which did not mention incidents from the preceeding L.A- shows — where Rose made statements announcing the band’s break-up — opened with “ It ’s So E a sy” and cranked through nearly every hit song from the A p p etite fo r D estru ction L P . During “ Mr. Brownstone,’ ’ guitarist Slash, who scream­ ed “ I guess your finally getting into the f—ing grove,” dusted his fam ed black hat before reaching the song’s solo. Before singing the band’s No. 1 ballad, “ Patience,” Rose told the crowd that “ it’s a song (about something) w e all lack and could use a little more of.” The band warbled Bob Dylan’s “ Knocking on Heaven’s Doors,” which was opened by a Slash solo of A lice Cooper’s “ Only Women Bleed.” The attire of Rose, whose shorts had the entire back side cut out, revealing all, and his skeleton jacket, characteriz­ ed the radical, heavy performance that had all the fans, in­ cluding old fogies just waiting for the Stones, on their feet. S tate Press Monday, October 83,1989 P agé8 V a lle y ___________ Continued from page 1. structures could take force that is 6.3 percent of the building’s weight, Shedayi said. If an earthquake rocked the Valley, the area would look similar to Soviet Armenia when the dust settled, Shedayi said. Armenia suffered an earthquake last year that killed thousands. Shedayi, who teaches a graduate level architecture course in earthquake and wind resistance, said it is unlikely the V alley will upgrade its building codes to protect them from possible earthquake disaster. “The human nature is such that if you don’t need it, you won’t change it,” he said, adding that it will take a deadly earthquake to convince Valley officials. Shedayi said he strives to make his students conscious of the destruction of earthquakes. “Very often, a building, by ignorance, will be designed horrible for earthquakes even though they don’t realize it,” he said. John Zaniew sky, an assistant professor o f c iv il engineering, said V alley bridges are built to withstand an earthquake measuring 6.2 on the Richter scale and that the area would be in serious danger if a larger quake struck. Pew e said all of the newscasts and information about the San Francisco area earthquake is available in the geology museum, located in the lower level of the Physical Sciences Building. $ A R PMEXICAN S 1 TFOOD 4 £ ^ P X I FREE DINNER I With purchase of equal Or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Tempe location only. Expires 11-10-89. ■ University ■ "E 1 I I I I SS I Offer good | after 2 p.m. 9 6 0 W . U n iv e rs ity , T e m p e , 9 6 6 -0 8 5 2 S| B U Y O N E G E T O N E FREE THE PROGRESSIVE SELF-DEFENSE CLUB at ARIZONA STATE Equal o r Lesser Value FREE DELIVERY Is pleased to announce Its arrival at the Student Rec Center ASU AREA O N LY Interested in Learning Traditional Martial Arts and ; 220-4444 Sport Sparring? This club could b e for you! •Qualified instruction •G ood workout •Train with modem equipment and protective gear •Im proves stamina, coordination and flexibility •Strengthens mind and body STARTING: October 31, 1989 • TIM E: Tues and Thurs 4:30-6:30 PLA C E : Student R e c Center. Small Gym A • FEE: $10 per month For Chib information call Tom at 967-443$ (or drop by during practice) Exp,: Oct. 31,1989 Suh.-Thurs.: 11 a.m .-12 a.m . F ri.-S at.: 11 a.m .-2 a.m ; (Pleas© mention coupon when ordering.) O ne coupon per party per visit at participating Pizza Hut®dellvefy units. Not valid with any other Pizza Hui®offar. *2 0 * charge on all returned checks. Our drivers carry no more than •2000. Limited delivery area and hours. THE1 nU TTE R d $5 O F F COMPASS, MOEUR BUILDING, ROOM 108 965-2379 OR CALL CLH, 829-1350 EDUCATIONAL DISCOUNT PROGRAM BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS!! with this coupon (Participating Stylists Only) Regular Price Men $15 • Women $17 NEW PRICING 968-5946 709 S. Forest Ave. North of University Ave. Mon-Fri 9-9 • OPEN EVENINGS: A R IZ O N A ST A T E U N IV E R S IT Y d a ta systems M in iS p o r t laptop is a SIX POUND Sat 9-5 XT compatible with a 8 Mhz 8088 processor, a 2" 720K drive, 1MB RAM, backlit l;titd \«; ll uval ] "..U»l |1*-0H-sivitfl Smalt. okp<|iun»' /hum:vliHWJ&ii r.k«.v|rl!tit«uup ■Hllt.lhriilllillg Vt.lwlllli.lAuil •ik'. iiiilyi»ik-.; tA'Hktu T h ere is no form al presentation, so feel fre e to stop by anytim e during the event. Please brin g 4 copies o f you r data sheet/resume and transcript, i f avail­ able. D ress is casual. «un VERY I0 W C A I0 M E FROZEN YOGURT . H ayd en Square • 3rd & M ill (F re e P ark in g Across Street) Memorial Union Arizona Reception Room 12:00 noon-5:00 pm Expirés 10-30-t An equal opportunity employer Comics S tate Press Monday, October 23,1989 Page 10 by Bill Watterson The Far Side Calvin and Flobbes M A R IE T T A , Ga. (A P ) — A man infected with the AIDS virus was convicted of attempted murder for biting a police officer and sentenced to 10 years in prison. Gregory Scott Scroggins, 27, of Smyrna was found guilty late F rid a y night after three hours of deliberations by a Cobb County Superior Court jury. Judge Watson White sentenced him to 10 years in prison, which defense attcraey Greg Schroeder said was “ tantamount to a death sentence.” Scroggins bit Cobb County P olice Officer David Crook as the officer was investigating a dispute between Scroggins and his roommate, Paul Murray, on Jan. 29. Scroggins testified that he did bite the officer, “ but I would never intentionally inflict this terrible disease on anyone.” He said he bit because the officer had him in a choke hold, and he could not breathe. Schroeder said he would appeal Scroggins’ conviction. “ This decision sends the message that anyone testing H IV (AID S virus) positive and involved in a crim e can expect to be charged with murder,” he said. Tired of the hike? Buy a bike! Through the State Press Bicycles for Sale! r S TA TE PRESS C latsifled Advertising M atthews Center South Basement 965-6731 Pa AT-T im e W ANTED... w r it e r s to prepare 20-30 page reports on SEMESTER IN SPAIN various subjects. Little or no research r e q u ir e d . C o m p e n s a tio n by Gary Larson HI An Overseas Program o f Trinity Christian College — fee/royalties. Send samples o f your work (will be returned) and resume to P in n acle P ro d u ctio n s, 416 E. Southern A ve., Tem pe, AZ 8S262. Discover the people, history, and culture o f Spain in person. Put some excitement into your college career! Free Seminar For Nurses Seeking A First Job Live with a Spanish family; experience a different culture first hand; get to know Seville, one o f Europe’s most beautiful cities; and earn 16 hours o f credit in classes taught by highly qualified professors This month Stanley H Kaplan is con d u ctin g N ursing C areer Seminars coast to coast. Learn how to find the perfect RN job for you. Discover strategies that will help you ace the NCLEX. Review sam­ ple NCLEX questions. : Sign up for our NCLEX Review Course at the seminar and receive a valuable gift. Call us today and reserve your seat. £ la k e Kaplan Ó r la k e Your C lu ix c s college you attend from Spain. name Round trip transportation to Seville from New York, room, board, books, and tuition are all included in the cost o f $4,950*. Government grants and loans may be applied to our program. present street address SPRING SEMESTER — February 1 — June 1 FALL SEMESTER — September 1 — December 22 each year a d d re s s b e lo w . home phone zip F o r in fo r m a t io n o n fu t u r e p r o g r a m s g iv e p e rm a n e n t Monday, Oct. 23 Call 967-2967 for reservations STANLEY H . KAPLAN For full information send coupon to: Semester in Spain 2065 Laraway Lake Drive, S.E., (N 20) Grand Rapids, MI 49546 «Price subject to variation due to increased costs or value of the dollar abroad. L permanent street address S, l > Zip; N 20 yI Sports Page 11 Oregon rewrites history; Ducks upset Devils, fans By JOEL HORN State Press ASU fo o tb a ll p la yers vented their frustration — not with teammates or Sun D evil coaches; but with the fans — following Saturday’s disastrous loss to the University of Oregon. “ I think the Arizona State fans need to quit the head-hunting,” nose guard Richard Davis said. “ They’re not the doctor. They’re not going to prescribe what’s going to help us.” ASU lost to Oregon (3-3 Pac-10, 4-3 overall) for the first time in history, 27-7, in front of few er than 20,000 spectators on a rainy day in Sun Devil Stadium. “ Since I cam e here in 1985, m y feeling is Sun D evil football is at an all-time low,” Head Coach L a rry M arm ie said. “ This was a very disappointing, disheartening gam e.” ASU (0-2-1, 3-3-1) has not earned a win during its last games and pressure from fans and so-called boosters has increased on M arm ie and his staff. “ i f they want a great program, they can't fire the coach,” Davis said. “ Th ey’ve got to let Coach M arm ie recruit his players and let him coach them his way. “When no one shows up for the game, it hurts the program. The tide’s going to turn.” • Oregon tailback Derek Loville, who rushed for 203 yards and three first-half touchdowns on 30 carries, led the Duck attack- He became the first running back to gain over 200 yards against ASU since 1984. L oville entered the gam e with 277 yards on 101 carries (a paltry 2.7 yards-per-carry) and a single-game high o f 74 yards, which he nearly exceeded with a career-best 68-yard run late in the second quarter. The Ducks w ere averaging only 115.5 yards per game rushing. “ He’s always been a great runner, w e just haven’t blocked for him,” Oregon Head Coach Rich Brooks said. “ He had a great game, mostly because w e w ere able to block for him.” Davis said the Sun D evil defense was surprised by the Ducks’ ability to m ove the ball on the ground. Oregon finished with 267 rushing yards. “ That was by far the best run blocking w e’ve gone against," he said. “ Their running backs w ere definitely high caliber.” ASU’ s only highlight of the gam e came with 6:22 left in the first quarter with the Sun Devils facing a third-and-goal situation at the Oregon 3. Tailback Bruce Perkins took a pitch-out from quarterback Paul Justin and took a few steps to his right, then passed to Justin in the left com er of the end zone. Mike Richey’s kick gave the Sun Devils a 7-3 lead. It was all downhill after that. “ There’s going to be a lot of soulsearching going on this weekend,” Davis said. “ We got our butts kicked. Maybe the athletes w e’ve got right now aren’t ready to go out and play. “ W e’ve got to find senior leadership — leadership from anybody. I think the effort’s there. M aybe w e ’re having execution breakdowns, I ’m not sure.” Sun Devil safeties Floyd Fields (24) and Nathan LaDuke(29) try to bring down Oregon tailback Derek Loville, who scored three touchdowns Saturday. Brooks, who has coached Oregon in seven of its nine consecutive losses to ASU, said he was relieved the streak had énded. “ It feels great to get that o ff m y back, but m ore importantly I ’m glad we broke our immediate two-game losing streak,” he said. “ It gives us great hope for the future. This team has a new attitude.” The Sun Devils, on the other hand, have another hard week of practice and reevaluation ahead. They face Washington State (3-2, 6-2) Saturday in Sun Devil Stadium. “ W e’re going to have to strap it up and go,” Davis said. “ That’s all I ’v e got to say.” Phoenix shows what’s in the ‘Cards/ beats Atlanta By PAUL CORO State Press As if the gam e was not weird enough Sunday at Sun Devil Stadium, the Phoenix Cardinals achieved a couple o f feats they have not seen in awhile — a win and a running game. A f t « ' dropping four-consecutive games, the Cardinals held on to a 34-20 victory over the Atlanta Falcons in front of 33,894 spectators. All four Phoenix touchdowns were scored rushing. The last time the Cardinals did that was Oct. 14,1984 in St. Louis. “ Obviously, it was an important gam e for us,” Phoenix Head Coach Gene Stallings said. “ When you score that many points offensively, you’re doing a good job.” A fter a 22-yard A1 Del Greco field goal put the Cardinals ahead by two touchdowns with 3:50 remaining in the game, the Falcons threatened to score by easily marching down the field. “ We had an opportunity to cash in on something and w e blew it,” said Falcon quarterback Chris M iller, who completed 24 o f 44 passes for 249 yards. As Atlanta drove deep into Cardinal territory, the Falcons ran twice and used the remainder o f their time outs. With less than two minutes left in the gam e and a fourth-and-goal situation from the 2, Cardinal defensive back T im McDonald broke up M iller’s pass to Keith Jones in the end zone. “ It’s a real compliment to our players that they hung in there,” Stallings said. Atlanta outgained Phoenix 351-299 in total yardage, but the Cardinals converted 10 of 14 third-down attempts. O f course, the victory included more injuries. Defensive tackle Jim Wahler will miss three to four weeks with a knee injury. Comerback Carl Carter’s condition is day-to-day after a strained hamstring kept him out o f most o f the game. The Cardinals jumped out to a 7-0 lead when running back E arl F errell scored one o f his three touchdowns from 1 yard out. The drive, which cam e after an Atlanta missed field goal, was highlighted by J. T. Smith’s four catches for 50 yards, Phoenix quickly regained possession when outside linebacker Ken H arvey jarred the ball loose from the Turn to Cardinal«, page 14* ASU reveals top-rated performance; No. 2 UCLA, No. 6 USC steal show By VICKI CULVER Stats Press Although they lost both matches, ASU Volleyball Coach Patti Snyder said the SunDevils played their best games of the season this weekend against second-ranked UCLA and sixth-ranked USC. * During Friday night’s match against UCLA, ASU played strong for five gam es but was eventually defeated 15-10,15-13, 2-15,11-15,9-15. Snyder said the excitement of the team holding up in a close match against such a high-ranked team overpowered the disappointment of losing. “ I was very, very proud,” she said. “That was our best game of the season in terms of execution, adjustment, offense, defense. We really forced them into a tough match.” ASU Senior middle blocker Sue Nord said losing to UCLA in such a close match was emotionally hard for the team, but she agreed that the Sun Devils played a tough game of volleyball. “ It hurts to lose, but we should be proud of how well w e played together,” she said. “ It was incredible w e had them so scared at the end. “Against UCLA, everything was clicking, everyone was doing their part, so (UCLA) couldn’t key in on one person.” S co tt Troyanos/State Press Sun Devils Tracis Kisro (13) and Tina Barg (5) attem pt a block against USC Tro­ jan Ylaana Carrasco (15) during Saturday’s match. On Saturday night, ASU encountered its second weekend Pac-10 loss against USC, 10-15,16-18,17-15, 11-15, lowering the Sun Devils’ conference record 3-8. Alhough Snyder said ASU did not play as well against USC as it did against UCLA, she still was pleased with the overall performance. “ W e persevered on so many long rallies that fatigue eventually set in, and we weren’t getting any good swings at the ball,” she said. “ It really took the wind out of our sails.” Snyder said the Sun Devils are not spiking often enough, which she considers to be their biggest weakness. She also said she noticed problems in the area of blocking and ball control. “ We suffered a lot of broken plays,” she said, “ and w e cannot win volleyball games like that. W e were playing to keep the ball in play rather than to terminate a play.” Snyder said that the weekend matches w ere not only emotionally but physically tiring for the team. Senior setter Noelle Fridrich suffered a sprained wrist from all the physical strain of the weekend. “ Noelle played outstanding both nights,” Snyder said. “ She is as tough as nails. She hustled a lot of balls around the court and was a real inspiration for the team.” Snyder said sophomore outside hitter Mindy Gowell also played well. Gowell led the team in kills against U C LA with 15, followed closely by Debbie Penney with 14 and T ra d e Kisro with 13. Against USC, Tina Berg led (he team with 15 kills. The Sun Devils will compete against arch-rival U ofA on Wednesday. Nord said after this weekend, the Sun Devils are on a hot playing streak and would love nothing m ore than to defeat the Wildcats. “ UofA better be ready fo r us,” she said. P a g ç jg G o in S tate P ic i» Monday, O ctober 83,1989 D o w n H is to r y . Exp. 10-31-89 JAMES MANOR LUXURY APTS. Get your portrait taken for the yearbook, or 20 years from now you will regret it. 2 4 3 0 S . M i l l A v e ., T e m p e 1 mile from ASU 9 6 8 -6 3 2 2 3 Pay to the Order o f 965-6881 K. 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Enjoy watching movies while you donate. p u s Beer and Soda Photo Developing Health & Beauty Aids Compact Discs orner 712 S COLLEGE AVE - NEXT TO COLLEGE STREET DELI Sat 9 a m -10 d m. Sun 11 a.m .-10 o.m Phone: 967-4049 ★ SALE ★ SALE ★ SALE ★ TODAY % AND PICK UP YOUR $5 BONUS BY MENTIONING TEMPE PLASMA _ _ _ 894-1338 COM PACT $i i 8^ . D IS C S • C D ’S ^ (New Donors Only) (May Not Be Used With Other Bonuses) 933 E. U n iv e rs ity m M-F 7 30 a.m -10 o.m. PLEASE C ’M ON IN THIS AD a HOURS Mon-Thur 8 am-6 pm fd & s « s am-4 pm V a lu e s UD S 1 4 .9 8 lis t vO S K I UTAH $ » 9 G IA N T 5x7 S U P E R P R O IN F O 966-3890 o r 968-3303 P R IN T S Campus Corner Coupon 4®® *24 Exposure $ 9 " $ 8 " *36 Exposure $T3^ 35mm Color Print Rolls Only Campus Corner Coupon R eg M 3® 7 -U P D ie t 7 -U p , S q u irt In te rn a tio n a l A d v a n ta g e D ay and Evening Classes AND UP *12 Exposure5 5** $ Sale Good thru 10-29-89 Final payment fo r Utah due: November 9th 7 9 0 § New in te n s e conversational 5 FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL EVERYONE WELCOME Basic Spanish, French, Arabic, Japanese, Get the 286 machine that** priced rig h t Includes 40Mt>Hard disk. Monochrome M onitor, 640K, std. keyboard, 1.2mb drive and more. 1 A AvantageXT *499 Many ASU Professors own an A vantage. Gat one fo r less! Includes floppy drive, keyboard, and monitor. EPSON Do your homework home, at the Ubarary: at the ASU game, anywlmaral(This 7 pound wonder runs 1000‘s of PC software programs . Comes w ith 512K memory, disk drive and software. **639 "O Dot Matrix P rin te r $ -| y Q Fall Rebates! Equity 1+ Complete MONDAY NIGHT o FOOTBALL 515 0 Pitchers m 250 Drafts ( /) O NEW! S y s te m 4 P r ic e dö 7 p .m .-C lo s e ¡gift *6 9 9 Final Coat Equity LT Laptop KXP1180 Perfect fo r pepere end program Hednge. Indudee Vector S tried on Urani M ffe a tg e a . for PUB student travel catalog! Council fraud 14515 VENTURA BID #950 SHERMAN OAKS, CA 9141» 8 0 0 -8 8 8 -8 7 8 6 C h ang ing H ands MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE BOOKSTORE Browse through our 3 flo o rs o f: ATTENTION A S U fans. Limited edition ’87 * New & Used Books * > Calendars t Cards * Books o il Cassette • Roeebowi by world renowned sports artist Sell or Trade $130. Roeeignol Olympiques skis, Salo­ y o u r b o o k s a t C h a n g in g H ands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books. please) we pay 36% o f our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which maybe used to purchase anything in the store. , (S orry, n o lra d e ^in s o n Sat. o r S uri.) M - f 10-9 Sat. 10-6 S u n . 12-5 4 1 1 M i l l A v e n u e • Tem pe • % b -02<)3 Rick Rush. 867-1009. B O Y 'S 10-SPEED Schwinn, rarely used, m on bin din gs, 835-1456. S c o tt P o le s , $150. DE8IGNER W ATC H E S and hand bags, $60. AN styles. Delivery, discounts. Tom, 631-0424. SM ALL REFRIGERATOR, 3 feet t«H, $75. Great coffee table and end table, both $40. 921-8322. ■ — — •Newly redecorated •Vertical blinds •Designer carpet •4 sparkling pools •Laundry facilities •Greatfor rental sharing •Walk to ASU •1st Months Rent $99 (plus deposits) Open Daily 9 to 5 Utilities Included 1028 E. Orange 967-0489 ■ Page 15 Monday, O ctober 23,1989 APARTMENTS HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PERSONALS SIGM A K A P P A Lisa Pride- I'm so excited 1 bedroom apartments tat month free FURNISHED ROOM, male non-smoker. E A SY W O RK! Excellent pay! Assemble SUMMER JOBS outdoors, over 5,000 $325/month 2 blocks from ASU. Call Steve $210 including utilities. N o pets. Inquire at products at home. Call for information. openings! 966-6755. 1527 East Hudson Drive. 967-3658. 504-641-8003, ext. 7836. crews. Send stamp for free details. 113 apartm ents, ROOM M ATE TO share 3 bedroom Scotts­ ENGINEERING TECHNICIAN, mechani­ dale condo with 2 males. Male/female, cal drafting, Dorman. BEDROOM , 2 bath $190, Vi utilities. All luxuries, ASU d ose. part-time. Call 966-4040, 945-0309 ASU AREA 2 $325/m onth b ed room , plus 2 b a th , e le c tric ity . Air- conditioning, jacquizzi, no pets, deposit. EXPERIENCED W A ITR E S S . roommates for large 4 bedroom, tots of weekdays. school, manuscripts. Kathy, 830-8783. regret it! 965-6881. tion. Call Angela at Fitness Plus A S A P distributed to 500 em ployers in Phoenix area. Send SASE to Mr. P.A. Frost, 8021 RESTAURANTS/ BARS special. $350/month, 6, 9, or 12 months EARN U P to $500 a week mailing drculars rock material. Experience helpful. Full or lease . C lose to ASU. 1123 East Apache Boulevard. 968-6383. for various businesses. Send SASE to Part-time. Call Chuck Kelly. 945-1015. MARKET D ISCOVER credit cards on your campus. Flexible hours. Earn as much as $10/hour. Only 10 positions available. Call 1-800-950-8472, extention 3. NATU RAL FOODS Supermarket seeks ATTENTIO N COLLEGE Students: W e are the looking for students in our advertisement ca sh iers, $ 2 7 0 /m o n th tic, and self motivative. Earn $75-$350 per 8 9 4 -2 5 3 8 HOW ARD THE DOC’S CHALLENGE: If yo u ’re looking for an ap artm en t and bright en ou g h to b eep my p a g e r, m y sp ecial offer is fo r y o u ASU stu d ents an d fa c u lty ... CALL 1-800-SKY-PAGE F o llo w in s tru c tio n s . T h e P .I.N . # is 8 6 0 1 4 . department. Must be outgoing, enthusias­ following: Daytime stock and clerk s. evening E xp erien ce preferred. Apply in person at R ay’s Ranch Market, 40th ami Camelback. OLIVIA RECORDS (a Womans’ record between 1-3. company) accepting applications for inter­ CONTROL w eek en d s. 30 H ea vy hours, phone, FOR LADIES ONLY nights/ custom er The "N ew ” Beverly G rill and Bodacious Productions need yo u . O p p o rtu n ity a w a its som eone as Beverly G rill hosts the "B odacious Pro­ d u c tio n s M odel S ea rch,” S tarting Thursday, O ctober 19th and ending w ith the fin a ls on Thursday; Nov­ em ber 16th. R egister early fo r com petition slot. W inner w ill appear on the cover of "W here It's H ot.” Call 894-0635 Service. Confirming and setting deliveries. D.C, 1524 W . 14th Street, Tempe, 85281. VALET PARKING attendants, day shifts 11:00am-3:00pm and 11:00am-5:00pm. Night shifts 5:30pm to close. Full-time and part-time. Must work holkfay season and must have clean driving record. Call for appointment 861-9384. American Valet and Limosine Company Incorporated. view. Com e to W om ens’ Studies- Social or MS, and an Administrator, experienced. Sciences building, Tuesday, October 24, AEROBIC 276-5896. 829-1524, Dr. Lee. 10 arm 3 pm. workshop by National Aerobics Training COMPETITIVE SW IM W EAR store needs O V E R SE AS you part-time, retail sales. Must be avail­ Summer, year round. All countries. All able 10-2 Tuesday, Thursday, and Satur­ day, 10-5 Knowledge o f swinning and fields. Free information. Write UC, P O Box a c c e s s o r ie s helpful. betw een 10am-6pm. 92625 264-7774 52-AZ03, Corona Del Mar, California PART-TIME, for lunch waitress and lunch hostess. Will available. Pleasant working conditions. train. Short shifts. Convenient hours. Fun Call Mr. Morgan at 381-0477. PART-TIME, telephone answering service, CASH FOR gold, diamonds, sterling, etc. phone and typing experience required, Scottsdale. 947-7351. Mill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S. Mill, Suite CASH PAID, jewelry o f alt kinds, including CRAZY?!! W ORK smart, not hard. Part- gold, sterling, gem s, pearls, antiques, etc. time work, full-time pay, must have high Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave, Tem pe Center. 968-6074 1 block " from campus. FREE LOST/FOUND & tion, call (615) 779-5507 extention H178. TEM PORARIES for dependable receptionists, clerical, or data entry personnel. Evenings, flexible hpurs. gious com plexes which are predominantly studeqts. Call today!!! 820-3333, Todd H. Government Property Specialist. W W M Â 1 Ambitious | $600/month, $300 deposit. 966-0711 government acquired townhomes? Presti­ M 2 4 à 5- HOMES FOR RENT 1 ACRE, horse priviledges, multi-cultural. A short walk to mountain-preserve. Histor­ ic hom e, newly renovated in Mountain Park special planning district. 3 bedroom, H ardw orking students, w e’ve got the jo b for you! J $5.50 per hour Flexible E vening Hours W eekly Pay C ornerstone M alt Location f i R J R accurate, guaranteed. Central Phoenix, 274-5531. W O R D PR O CESSING , IBM PC, letter quality printing. Fast, low cost. Call Jackie, 831-8635. WORD P R O C E S S IN G , s e c r e t a r ia l services. 23 years experience. Student discount. Southwest com er, Miller and Chaparral, 994-8145. W O RD PRO CESSING for your typing needs. Fast turaround. C lose to ASU. $1.25/up. Transcription available. Roxan­ .*T “ Z ” Touch word processing. Fast, accu­ service. Southern and Price rate. Thesis and Law students welcome. Call Marilyn, 833-5559. W O RD PRO C ESSIN G — $1.50 per page. BIRTHDAY, BIRTHDAY, birthday. Send a Resumes, design, editing, & laser printing balloon boquet. Design your own Creation. available. 273-9710. weekends E L E C T R O L Y S IS - P E R M A N E N T Call 921-3770 evenings & h air removal, R em ove unwanted hair forever. Student discount. tion, 969-6954. Call for more informa­ WANTED KRISTI’S TA LE N T agency needs extras HELP THE earthquake victims -radio relief for is being held at the Colonade Mall at 18th pictures Tuesday, October 24th, from 8-4 Street/Camelback-any pm outside the MU. balloon boquet m ovies and commercials. Taking TU TO R NEEDED for Chemistry 113, In exchange will tutor in English, Spanish, or = »ic = = 3 t «e = = M t e ; PART-TIM E COOK. Preschool Strong bonding made with fiberglass resins. Doesn't yellow or turn brittle like acrylic. Will not damage natural noil. Full set $25 • Fills $16 246-9870 ADOPTION A LO T O F love and a future full o f oppor­ tunity await a special baby. Happily warmth and love. Strictly legal and confi­ you at sunset! I love you. Dawn. nia Caucasion couple eager to share dential. 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Other competent professionals who know and CHRISTO PH ER ROBINS. It'S m e Piglet! destinations. W e also buy transferable understand the adoption laws. With South­ Scottsdale Road. Monday-Friday. 9 am-11 Thanks for always being here for me. I love coupons! 968-7283. w est Adoption Center, if you would like, am, 2 pm-4 pm. you! STO CKYARD S RE STAU R AN T now hiring FOUR D A YS left! G et shot for the Sun and international, package tours to the G R E AT O PPO R TU N ITY for a graduate dinner line cook/rib man. Apply in person, Devil Spark Yearbook. Student portraits Holy Land/lsrael. 491-0501. 5001 E. Washington. are taken for FREE on a first-come-first- adoption 4 BEDROOM, 2 bath, close to ASU student to help run a small but growing management consulting film in Chandler. served basis on cady Partially Hours flexible, 10-20 hours/week. Skills Center, Inc. W e can provide professional and confidential help with housing, i fireplace. 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D e v e lo p m e n t TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING SUB SH O P hiring all positions. Earn to P O . Box 1002, Tem pe, Arizona 85280 $10/hour. Part-time weekdays. 921-7827. South o f Apache. 967-3658, 968-7012. BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED 1900 square •$ 8 .7 5 per hour (avg. earnings) •Flexible part-time & full-time positions •D a y & night positions available Inc. 234-Baby. $1.50 A A A W ord Processing/Laser printer. for lunch? Luv ya, Marie. 34 years experience. Theses, dissertation, K A P P A KATY, Looking forward to "Look A P A specialization. Marion 839-4269. $1.65 AN D up. Professional word proces­ KAREN H A P P Y 21st B-day to my best sor and former English teacher. Laser friend and the best room ie in the world! printer. Bob or Claudia, 964-6012. MALE/FEMALE ROOM M ATE needed in nia is the future. H ope you’ve done your $2.00/PAGE. studying because now it’s time to party. Bob, 839-3305. Alan at 820-5120 to register your band. very very clean. Must see! MALE ROOMMATE wanted (prefer Junior or above) Two bedroom, tw o bath Quad­ rangle apartments. $1 80/month pips utili­ ties Call 829-4986. N O N SM OKING , ' . .. RO O M M ATE ’ - wanted; $2l0/month plus utilities. Large house with large yard. Sterling 838-6743. Washer/Dryer, ' cable. ■ •• , - $1.50. Call Linda, 962-8075. boom stands including all $1150/best offer. 566-8464. hardware. MITCHELL P R O 100 tube head with two 4-12 stack, new condition $550/ best offer. whip it g ood! L ove ya Im and LaLa. A Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, flyers. how to party our way!! You're the best HI* Self-serve •Convenient Tem pe location S IG M A (a fte r 11 a .m .) Equal O pportunity E m ployer PE AR L DRUMSET, W orld series new 7 read, editing, all included. Quick turn* around. Call 894-6074. until w e get out together and sh ow tftem Call Sarah 967-0066 1-4. Desp­ erate, must sell!! N eed cash!! $250 each AC C E N TS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ OPE!. H A P P Y 19th Birthday? B e eUre and SIGM A K A P P A Cindy Cook- I can't wait 892-0492: N AG ELS LIMITED editions p iece kit, Smoky Chrome, 4 zildjians with A AA Q U ALITY typing/word processing. MOCK ROCK is com ing Novem ber 8! Call sis a girl could ask for! house $250 plus Vfe utilities. Brand new home, MISCELLANEOUS or all for $800. Call Jody, 968-0740 Quick turnaround. Call •Supplem ent your income or work your way through college foot house. Great yard, fun place to live, $225 plus V« utilities. Corbin, 894-4621. Adoption For help, call Southwest Adoption Center, super day! Oh, and by the way is a BLT ok Thanks for the update! Leah. 2 BEDROOM, furnished, pool, laundry ment 9 . 1 block W est o f Rural, 1 block agen cy-S ou th w est W ho’s Talking". H ope you are too! Kris. Systems, 963-4540 and/or send resume to TELEM ARKETING PART-TIM E facilities. 2 blocks from university. $330. No pets 1339 South Sunset Drive, Apart­ qualified to provide a loving, caring home counseling and medical arrangements. London is only m em ories now but Califor­ RENTAL SHARING them, and be reassured that they are for a child. G et the facts from a licensed mall. Walk ins Washington. STUDENT JOBS. Full-time, $300/week; « Beware o f "d esp era te," pleading couples you know w here you are calling when you CHI-0 KIM S. A little late but thanks so, so much for an unforgetably great time at A D O P T IO N . and self why are they s o desperate? W ere they TRAVEL hours per week. Only for the month o f pregnant who may m ake false promises. Ask your­ or older. Call 279-2000, then 4530. Rock. Call collect. PREGNANT able for special occasions. Also love to go KAREN BUTLER, Happy 21st Birthday! person, days, Cactus Nail Company Scottsdale You finally m ade it! S e e you in December. DELIVERY 995-1328 married, financially secure, South Califor­ the desert? You, me; the Celica... meet Tem pe. 894-5338. PART-TIME 181. ; First Time■Customers O nly AEPI BRAD- How about a rendezvous in SAME WEEK PAY •Tem porary •Perm anent •F u ll Time •P art Time CSC evenings. Thin and Natural Sculptured Nail pantry pre positions. Apply at 1539 North 1% bath, central heating and refrigerator, 4k vicinity. Phyllis, 820-7715. Touch Electrolysis. Free initial treatment. PERSONALS 966-0709 Ç Fast, For permanent hair removal, call A Soft Reward. 967-5307, leave message. TOP WAGES DELUXE 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. p W need. Satisfaction ARE YO U tired o f tweezing and shaving? Hayden library, Tuesday, October 10th. Street. Evenings, flexible hours. Apply at you reason able. accurate SH A R P CALCULATOR EL5S00 III, lost in JOBS AVAILABLE NOW O regano's Pizza 945 S. Mill at 10th Street. PRO FESSIO N AL W O R D PR O C E SSIN G of anything SERVICES Red Cross Relief fund. 273-9710. DELIVERY DRIVERS wanted ery. Shelly, 899-4816. order taken there will be donated to the O regano's Pizza, 945 South Mill, at 10th W H Y R ENT!!! S ave 1,000's! Own nice 101, Tem pe. 968-5967. (44/Camelback) 952-0585. DELIVERY DRIVERS wanted. Apply at P A P A G O PA R K I, 2 bedroom 2 bath JEWELRY Apply in person Monday-Friday 2-5 pm or by appointment. 5101 North 44th Street. word W O R D PRO CESSING , Spellcheck. Fast, Near ASU. 829-7829. Reliability and personality are important. Near Southern/Dobson Immediate occu­ Los Prados, E nglish atmosphere. Concern with appearance. pancy. $540/month, pool. 345-0388. ASU $700/month. Chris, 838-2646, Red Carpet-Weary, 968-3414. Russian, LAR G E ST company pf its Both skilled and unskilled. For informa­ Near Chinese. Spanish. French, kind in the Southwest. Evening shifts CRUISE SHIPS, now hiring all positions. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath townhouse LEARN JAPANESE, conversation, TO EFL Preparation. Arizo­ na Language Institute, 962-8677. CORK .'n Cleaver accepting applications word hustle! 968-2141. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath.townhouse. Sharp! Mesa. 963-9415 G erm an, and ne, 966-2825. certification Association. W eekend o f D ecem ber 1, J O B S $900-$2,000/month. self-esteem and know the meaning of the TOWNHOMES / CONDOS INSTRUCTION IN STU RC TO RS T Y P IN G processing cheap! F ree pick-up and deliv­ CMI COUNSELORS, experienced, BMS Call service available. Call 897-1038. P R O F E S S IO N A L week. Call Charles Turnbow, 423-7012, G e o rg e A n n A p ts . Baseline/Alma School in Mesa, editing Arizona 85051 (please print). Apply in person at Broadway Southwest Company Systems, 1428 North Scottsdale Walk to ASU, quiet 1 bed­ room, A/C. pool-side apts. NEED PE R SO N AL computer to type free? PR O FE SSIO N AL T Y P IN G , $1.50 page, North 43rd Avenue, suite 103-A, Phoenix, U N IT LANDSCAPE HELPER, install plants and HELP WANTED processing. 967-8369, John. 945-9402. Road, No.199, Tem pe, Az. 85281. word Trade computer time for your typing skills. Clerk. P lease call 894-2090. time? Find out how to get your resume established (but n ew to Phoenix) publica­ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES YM C A Q U A LIT Y TIRED O F applying to one employer at a I NEED 3 writers who love fitness, sports ic 831-2370. LARG E 1 bedroom apartments. M ove in Washer/dryer, microwave. $500/month. 820-8995. Experienced with M LA, A P A , graduate bar. 30/week, $6-$8/hour. Apply after 5 and recreation to contribute monthly to $99 1 s t M o n th ’s R e n t LE TTE R the day and have your picture taken. It’s history book, 20 years from now you will space, amenities. $270/month plus electr­ letters, books, theses. Editing. Donna, 464-9064. limited time! Don't delay. Stop by the free! Don’t b e left out o f A S U ’s official south o f University on 8th street. Cape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for special 34 photo booth on Cady Mall anytime during is now hiring for the s e e k in g processing. $4.25/hour. Call Jennifer, 258-4554. following positions: Aerobics Instructor, Pre-School Gym Instructor and Front Desk Walk to ASU, pool, laundry room. 1 block Spacious 1 bedroom, 1 bath, furnished. Meridean com ers. Call 784-4742: student TEM PE P R O F E S S IO N A L W ORD time, weekdays 3-9, weekends 10-6. Start Monday- G RILL COOK wanted. W oodshed II Sports lea se. fo r minutes from A S U . T h e Click, 231-0525. Call SCott, 968-4312. apartm ent PH O TO G RAPH ER portraits will b e on campus for a very Friday, lunches only. Excellent tips. 10 YOUNG break THE TELEPHONE SU RVEY, no sales. Part- AFFORDABLE years experience. Term papers, resumes, SHARE 2 bedroom condo, furnished, full BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedrooms. TO that you're my little sister) Love, your big sis??? priviledges, available now! $300/month. 893-0416 HAVE National parks, forests, fire East Wyoming, KaiispeH, MT 59901. $325-$435/month. Chris, 838-2646, Red Carpet-Weary, 968-3414 3 TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING RENTAL SHARING KAPPA B arb Stettner: KINKO’ S paper makes Macintosh the also. 933 grade. 566-8464. TUTORS East University. Call 966-2035, or 960 West ENGLISH TUTO R, paper editing. Eight University, Call 921-0168. years G et psyched!!! Mystery w eek is finally here! APA/MLA Love your Big sis. processing. 945*5744. EXPERIENCED typing/word N eed it fast? Cal! Jessie, professional writing experience, A S U English degree. Rates negotiable. 829-6712. THERESA, Y O U ’ RE an awesom e dot. T oo bad I didn’t eat the bread too. Theta love, ASU Liza. editing. AREA. Fast, Typing, Word processing, accurate. Call anytime. PHOTOGRAPHY Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. JA SO N THÇTA U ZA. Choppin Broccoli. SILVER/KID-MAN Photoworks FLYING FINGERS offers typeset quality C o m m e rc ia l THETA TONI- the fish lives. Theta love, with a Mac II and laser printer. Call Susan, actors’ , and artists’ , portfolios. Profession­ Susie. 945-1500. al work. Reasonable rates. 946-2475. - P h o to g ra p h y M o d e ls ’ , m Page 16 M onda^ O çtob«r2^ 1989 Buy 1 Yogury FREE 0 6 ,1 H O LID A Y Expires 11-6-89 TRE CORNERSTONE MU ■Not Valid With Any Other O ffer ì CHEESECAKE! Buy one slice and get second Vi PRICE Expires 11-6-89 | THECORNERSTONE I MALL Not V<*d With Any Other Otter . ...................................................... ............ T • • • • • • • • • • ••••••» •■ • • • • • • • • • j i j j j * '* ! '! * '* 2ï J t î t î î 2î * î 2" • • • • • • • • Sundays À Mondays Are Woodshed Wing Ding Dags Buy 1 Order of chicken Wings and get a 1/i order FREE! Always Available to Col :p = r tsr- J & -1 5 20—30 56 —45 £6— 60 wings.............:........................ . .................... .$3.50 wings...........,........................... ...........................$5.95 wings.......... ............. .................. ..... ——......... $8.25 wings...................... .................................. -...... $10.50 (Price includes the FREE % order) Offer good from 11 a .m .-li p.m. Every Sunday & Monday WOODSHED ! WOODSHED II Food & D rink SW Corner o f Baseline & M ill TEMPE 831-WOOD Casual D ining & Libations NW C orner o f Dobson & U niversity MESA 844-SHED Eating D isorders A w areness W eek O ctober 2 3 -2 7 N o o n -H o u r S eries 12: 00 - 1:00 G rad y G am m age R m . 108 M o n d a y , O c to b e r 23. * B re a k in g fr e e fr o m c o m p u ls iv e e a tin g T u e s d a y , O c to b e r 24 * D y in g to b e th in - A n o r e x ia W e d n e s d a y , O c to b e r 25 ■"Fear o f fa t - B u lim ia D E E P D IS C O U N T S O N F A R E S TO O VER lO O D E S T IN A T IO N S . C A LL FOR Y O U R LO W EST FARE TODAY! Here’s ju st a sample o f the guaranteed lowest airfares to get you home — or any­ place else you want to go - for the holidays. Seat assignments are available and you get Jree parking a t A IT Sky Harbor Park­ ing. Exclusive offer for ASU only from AIT Travel: P h o e n ix TG/rVino* R o u n d T r ip S a le F a r e s Austin .................. Baltimore...... ....... Boise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Calgary........... Cedar Rapids.... Chicago.... Colorado Springs ... Denver_____ Des Moines . . . . . . . . Durango . . . . . . . . . Edmonton . . . . . . . El Paso ................ Grand Junction .... Kansas City . . . . ___ Lincoln .......... Lubbock . . . . . . . . . . . Midland — Odessa .. ...... $138 00 From $198.00 From $218.00 ....... $199.00 From $198.00 From $193.00 From $99.00 From $96.00 From $198.00 From $98.00 . . . . . $219.00 ...... . $70.00 FTOm $98.00 FTOm $148.00 From $198.00 .. .. $148.00 ....... $130.00 P h o e n ix To/F rom Minneapolis.. Moline................... N Y -JF K . . . . . . . . . . . NY - LaGuardia...... Oakland .. ....... Omaha . .... Portland . . . — Pueblo . . . . . . . . . . . . Reno..... Sacramento .., Salt Lake City ... San Antonio . . . . . . . San Jose. . . . . . . . . . . Seattle.................. Sioux City . . . . . . . . Wash. - National .... Wichita . . . . . . . . . . R o u n d T r ip S a le F a r e s From $198.00 From $198.00 ,*rom $198.00 From $198.00 From $98.00 From $198.00 From $148.00 From $98.00 From $98.00 From $98.00 From $98.00 Fram$148.00 From $98.00 From $148.00 From $198.00 From $198.00 From $198.00 Make your reservations by phone or In person today! Payment must accompany reservation and can be made by cash, check or credit card. Lim ited number o f tickets available at these greatly reduced rates. P A R E N T S ’ H O T L IN E T h u rs d a y , O c to b e r 26 ■"Feeding th e h e a lth y b o d y 1-800-528-0290 Your parents can charge your tickets home on any major credit card. Have them call today! F r id a y , O c to b e r 27 ■"Fitness fo r life C e le b ra te “Fearless Friday” o n O c to b e r 27 F ea rle s s F r id a y - N o d ie tin g a llo w e d Sponsored by: Counseling & Consultation, 9 6 5 -6 1 4 6 Student Health, A p a c h e B lv d 9 6 5 -4 7 2 1 A IT Travel The Smart Way to Buy Travel Memorial Union -’ Lower Level 9 2 1 -4 3 0 1 Sale ends Saturday. October 28. 1989. All fares subject to availability. Limited number o f sea** available. All sales final. ^ A m e ric a W è s t What we serve is you.