Copyright. State Press. 1989. Tempe, Arizona Voi. 72 No. 49 Monday, November 6 ,1 9 8 9 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Crash victim identified as ASU student By TENNY TATUSIAN State Press Jam l* Scott Lytle/Stato P r a n L ittle G i a n t This father and son duo ware only two o f the many New York Giants’ fansln attendance Sunday during the Cardlnaia-Glanta game at Sun Devil Stadium. New York defeated Phoenix 21-13. Story, Page 16. A 24-year-old man, who was killed Thursday when his b icycle collided w ith a ca r driven by a priest who had suffered a diabetic seizure, was identified F rid a y as a senior ASU architecture m ajor. M atthew Sean Murphy, o f the 2300 block o f W est Lindner D rive, Mesa, was hit by Fath er D aniel M cG rady, 64, who was suffering an attack because o f low blood sugar, Tem pe P o lice Sgt. A1 T a ylo r said. Murphy was taken to Scottsdale M em prial Hospital-Osborn by helicopter where he was pronounced dead on arrival. H e was w earing a helm et when he was hit, T a ylo r said. Murphy was president o f the ASU chapter o f the Am erican Institute o f Architecture Students a fter being an active m em ber fo r a year. Jam ie Busch, form er president of A IA S, said he had “ scouted” Murphy and spent a grea t deal o f tune with him travelin g to conventions. “ H e was v e ry talented and good w ith people,” said Busch. “ He had a grea t sense o f hum or.” M urphy’s potential w ill be a defin ite loss to the w orld of architecture, he added. M urphy’s sister, Colleen, said M urphy enjoyed riding his b icycle 15 to 20 m iles a day. H e had been to Europe tw ice to study architecture, she said, adding that he was an excellen t student. “ H e was just rea l a ctive,” she said. “ H e was supposed to graduate next M ay.” Turn to Student, page TO. Real bullet, not blank killed Phoenix man By TENNY TATUSIAN State Press P olice are Continuing an investigation into the shooting death o f a 20-year-old Phoenix man last W ednesday because o f the M aricopa County M edical E xam iner’s report that states the slug p olice thought to be a blank is a rea l bullet. “ W e have a lot m ore w ork to do now,” Sgt. A1 T aylor said. P o lice origin ally thought the slug that w as lodged into K illy Rankin’s head was a blank because there was no exit wound and his friends said that the gun was only loaded with blanks. T a ylor said detectives w ill interview a ll the people involved in the shooting again. “ It m ay not change the case,” he said. “ It m ay still be totally accidental.” Rankin, o f the 2500 block o f W est Corrine Street, died o f a gunshot wound a fter a close friend shot him with a gun that was not thought to be loaded. The incident occurred at The Commons apartm ents, l l l l E . Apache Blvd. P o lice are not releasing the friend’s name. Rankin and two other friends w ere dressed as cowboys from the 1988 m otion picture "Y ou n g Guns” fo r Halloween and a ll three men w ere carryin g real guns. They had accom panied about fiv e other friends to parties in Tem pe and Phoenix and returned to the apartm ent fo r breakfast. Rankin was in the kitchen when his frien d jokingly pulled the trig g e r o f a .38 caliber Smith and Wesson three tim es at others. When his friend aim ed the gun at Rankin and pulled the trigger a fourth tim e, Rankin fe ll to the flo o r unconscious, shocking his friends. Turn to Shooting, page 1 0 . V do again, would you come to ASU? Student Viewpoint pod. Page 3 Larson lobbies against stadium Anti-baseball measure to go before Senate By JOIE ANN LaPO LLA State Press Associated Students o f ASU President Pau l Larson w ill m eet with Tem pe City Council m em ber Don Cassano today in one o f a series o f m eetings with city and U niversity o fficia ls to lobby against a professional baseball stadium on ASU “ I want everyon e in C ity H all and ASU to know where I am com ing from ,” said Larson, who claim s to have “ overw helm ing” student support on the issue. Larson Larson has already m et with Tem pe C ity Council m em bers B arbara Sher­ man, B ill Ream , P a tricia Hatton and Carol Smith to voice his concerns. He has also contacted ASU Interim P resi­ dent Richard P eck as w ell as represen­ tatives from the Tem pe Sports Authori­ ty and ASU adm inistration. H e has an appointment to m eet with Tem pe M ayor H arry M itchell on N ov. 21. In addition, the AS ASU Senate w ill becom e involved in the issue Tuesday night when a resolution opposing the stadium is introduced at the Senate’s bi-w eekly m eeting. The resolution, which w ill be presented by the Senate’s U niversity Relations Com m ittee, states that “ professional sporting events w ill not be conducive to the proper academ ic environm ent.” “ I expect that the Senate w ill support the sp irit o f it,” said M ike Pressendo, ASASU executive v ic e president. “ They (senators) m ight want to change the w ording o f it. I ’v e heard much opposition to a pro stadium in L o t 59.” It's a Wrap: Film production com­ panies’ policies may be pushing dollar movie theaters into extinction. Page 13 H ow ever, R ichard Neuheisel, president o f the Tem pe Sports Authority, the group pushing fo r a pro stadium on reclaim ed land o f Tem pe’s R io Salado p roject in the area of ASU’s Lot 59, said ea rly last week that a stadium would bring recognition to ASU and would enhance the U niversity. The developed R io Salado p roject would add land, restaurants, shops, joggin g and biking trails along the river. Th e Senate’ s U n iversity R elations Com m ittee w ill introduce the resolution against the idea because “ students are not gaining anything from it (th e stadium ) and the im age (o f the cam pus) should be fo r academ ics, not sports,” said Jeanette W iedem er, legisla tive assistant to Pressendo. Larson has expressed his concern over losing som e o f the 4,300 parking spaces in L ot 59 if a stadium would be built there, but Neuheisel has already said students would not lose any spaces. Ream and Larson disagreed last week about the im age a professional baseball team would bring to ASU. Larson said he does not want ASU to be known as a “ professional sports U n iversity.” R eam said a pro fa cility would benefit ASU. Larson m et w ith Sherman F rid a y to discuss the proposed L ot 59 stadium site. “ She welcom ed a dialogu e betw een students and proponents o f the stadium ,” Larson said. Larson also said he is pleased that the Senate is becom ing involved in the issue. Th e resolution, which claim s the land used fo r the stadium would create “ a con flict o f interest between the academ ic standards o f the U n iversity and the intended econom ic gain o f other parties in volved,” m ay be put to vote Tuesday, Pressendo said. “ It cam e from the com m ittee so it m ight be (called fo r) second reading and action at this tim e,” he said. “ I f it says ‘ authored by the com m ittee on U n iversity A ffa irs’ then it is very possible and probable that it w ill be fo r second reading and action a t this tim e.” M ajor League Baseball is expected to announce expansion plans this spring. Huakies? Mush! The Sun Devils upset the University of Washington, 34-32, but the game could be linebacker Mark Tingstad's last. Page 15 Today’s weather: Mostly sunny, with a high near 80. Tonight should bs dear, with a low in the lower 50s. Ciaaalfiada.....^ ..;.;,..............;^ ..^ ......« ...^ is College Culture. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . „ 1 3 C o m lca ......;...f..........¿ .......,....¿ .........„ .,...t 4 8 porta.o.....«.....> ..é , „ . . . „ . „ . . , . . * , „ . . é, . . . . . „ . „ 1 8 Page g Monday, November 6,1989 S H tt P lW W orld/Nation N e w s p a p e r s a y s 7 P a le s tin ia n s r e s p o n s ib le fo r P a n A m b o m b in g LO ND O N (A P ) — Seven m em bers $6.95 Dinner Only Expires 11-20-69 traditional Russian folk instruments. Mi D A Z Z LIN G " " A T R IU M P H " —Montreal Gazette —fronce Soir, Park "S PE C T A C U LA R " —EdmontonSun S u n d o m a C e n te r Sun C ity W est T u e sd a y, N ovem ber 7 • 8 p .m . T icke ts: $18 ail seats T ick e ts on sa le a t Sundom e, G am m age, A ctivity C en ter and D illa rd ’s Call 975-1900 A facility of A S U Public Events HALF PRICE FOR ASU STUDENTS W /ID! ONLY S9Ü L u n ch - M o n .-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-: D in n e r - Sun .-T h u rs. 5-10 p.m. • Fri U n iv e rs ity 1435 E. University • Tem pe • 967-6911 in University Plaza Arizona Beach 25=5=5=» RESTAURANT Page 3 M o st students would ch oose to go to ASU again, poll finds Student View point is a weekly p o ll o f student opinion in the State Press. The unscientific p o ll, conducted a t points around campus, is m eant to p rovid e insight in to students’ views on issues o f the day. By KIMBERLY HARRIS State P rats A m ajority o f students seem to be satisfied with the quality o f education they are receivin g at ASU and would return to the U niversity if they had to choose a college a ll over again, according to an unscientific poll conducted Friday. Out o f 100 students random ly selected at various sites on campus, 78 said they would com e back to ASU. Reasons fo r why the students would return to ASU varied. S tudent View point “ 1 have been extrem ely pleased with m y professors,” one student said. “ The quality o f the teaching has been excellen t.” But w hile som e students based their decision on the quality of education at ASU, others w ere m ore im pressed with the Tem pe atm osphere. “ It ’s better than W yom ing,” a student said. “ It’s fun here.” Another student was m ore specific in his reasoning, saying, “ This school can party.” M ark Shoemaker, a sophomore business m ajor, said he would com e back to ASU a s e c o n d tim e , bu t u n d e r d iffe r e n t circum stances. “ I w ou ld ta k e ca lc u lu s a t M esa STUD ENT POLL W ould you return to A S U If you had to ch o o se a co lleg e over again? Yes No 78% 22% Community C ollege,” he said, adding that he is enrolled in the class fo r the fourth tim e this sem ester. W hile som e D evil die-hards said they liked ASU because o f the pleasant w eather, others said they wouldn’t com e back to the campus because o f “ Arizona’s blistering sun.” T h e V a lle y tie d its a ll-tim e h igh tem perature record o f 118 degrees last su m m er and s e t a new re c o rd fo r consecutive days o v e r 100 degrees. O f the 22 students who said they would not return to ASU, m any said the school was too big. W ith the campus population expected to reach 60,000 by the end o f the century, som e U niversity officia ls have begun looking at the possibility o f capping enrollm ent. “ The people are not personable here,” one dissenter said. “ And I get lost in the system ,” Another student said the U n iversity officia ls are “ m oney-hungry.” And another said that ASU is too much o f “ an athletic U n iv e rs ity ,’ ’ re fe rrin g to the recen t proposal to build a professional baseball stadium at ASU. Participants in the unscientific poll varied in age and class standing. S T A T E PRESS C l a s s i f i e d s . . .u n l o c k th e d o o r to n e w a n d e x c itin g a v e n u e s . 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 o r 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 _ , _ _ _ Reign on Her Parade Irwin Daugherty/Stat* P ress Heather M oore, 19, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mai Moore o f Tem pe, was crowned 1989-90 Fiesta Bow l Queen Nov. 2 at the W estcourt in the Buttes hotel. Moore is a fashion iherchandising/prom otion major at the UofA. Traveling’s easier w ith STATE PR ESS Classifieds! • Join us at the tent by the fountain Wednesday, Novem ber 8th, from 9 to 3:30 and experience the Apple Macintosh™ personal computer first hand. • Representatives from Apple Computer and major software vendors w ill be available to answer questions. • Special Holiday Bundles (and special prices, too! j make it easier than ever to own a Macintosh. November 8th • At the tent by the fountain • Register to Win a Free Macintosh SE * * M acin tosh S E in clu des 2 internal 80 0 K flo p p y disk d rives and 1 A p p le K eyb oa rd Opinion P a « t 4 ^ —,^£2£ ü ^¡ 2¡ í 2SSL2l 1 ^ — — — — — — — — —— ««S Ü ÎL Û 2 2 G u e st C olu m n _____________ Danforth Privilege of cross must end Rabbi B arton G. L ee is from the H iile l Jewish Student Center. A priest from ASU’s Newm an Center has observed that, “ it is hard to give up p riv ile g e ,'’ and the cross on Danforth Chapel represents p rivilege, the favoring o f Christianity over other religions at ASU. The debate on the cross is a debate o v e r p r iv ile g e , s e n s it iv it y an d ultim ately, over faith. Our country and campus are, in truth, m ulti-religious, multi-ethnic and m ulti­ racial. H ie goal o f the U niversity and our personal and religious goals should be to create a com m unity w here a ll human beings are treated with dignity and respect, w here no group is given special privilege, where a ll religions have access equal to public buildings — that, by the w ay, is also what our constitution mandates. H ie cross precludes use o f Danforth by Jewish and other groups because some of their m em bers are uncom fortable with worship, weddings, or religious study in a building m arked by a Christian sym bol. Danforth is not a Christian building, but a U niversity building; as such it should be as open as possible to everyone. Even if the law did not require it, greater sensitivity to the diversity of religiou s expression at ASU demands that the cross be rem oved. How sad that the Presidents o f ASU have not follow ed the lead o f the Faculty Senate, ASASU and the In terfaith Council which have called for Such greater sen sitivity to nonChristians who a re an integral part of our campus com m unity. The argum ent that the cross should not be rem oved because it is a “ tradition” reminds m e o f argum ents advanced against changing discrim ination laws which denied blacks equal access to schools, restaurants and restroom s in the South where I grew up. Fortunately, traditions can be changed fo r the sake of the principle o f sen sitivity and justice. By the w ay, the State Press editorial of N ov. 2 fa ile d to m ention that the Danforth Foundation has expressed no objection to rem oving the cross. Those who wish to keep the cross m ay w ell be m otivated by fe a r and by lack o f faith. They lack the faith that the Christian m essage can hold sway, make a differen ce in their lives and the lives of others, can com pete in the U niversity atm osphere o f free inquiry in ideas w ith ou t p r iv ile g e , w ith ou t sp ecia l treatm ent. Perhaps these are the sam e people who want to d eclare the U. S. to be a “ C h ristian n ation .” Som e o f th eir supporters have publicly argued that the U n iversity attorney, a Jew , cannot adequately represent the U niversity in c o u r t w it h o u t c o n s c io u s ly o r unconsciously being a “ Judas,” a traitor to the U n iversity’s cause. Surely these people lack faith — both in the gospel o f love o f Jesus, a Jew from Nazareth, and in the principle o f religious equality upon which this nation has been built. Fortunately m any Christians do have the faith , the confidence, and the sen sitivity to others to advocate that the cross be rem oved, that D anforth becom e tru ly an interfaith center. Letters What is to be done? Would that the President o f ASU take a position o f m oral leadership! Follow ing the m odel o f the U . S. m ilita r y b ase c h a p e ls , th e President o f ASU should declare that Danforth Interfaith Chapel must have not fixed religious sym bols, and that any group wishing to use the chapel must bring its own sym bols fo r its worship. Upon tak in g the cross down, the President should then o ffe r the Christian groups at ASU the opportunity to find a dignified home fo r the honored religious sym bol which has a history of connection to ASU. The cross atop a Christian building is proper, m eaningful, and beautiful, even as it is inappropriate and d is c rim in a to ry atop a U n iv e rs ity fa cility. W hat an exam ple of courage, justice and sensitivity such acts by ASU ’s President could provide! So much m ore noble that leaving sen sitivity and ju stice to the courts, so much m ore forthright than hiding from political flack behind a lawsuit. R eligion has a place on the ASU campus; Danforth should be open to a ll students and facu lty fo r weddings, prayers, m editation and study. Danforth must be on campus to provide a place fo r the expression o f the religious im pulse so basic to human beings. And religious groups and religious people should be working together in and from Danforth to struggle with problem s o f racism , sexual d is c r im in a tio n and h a ra s s m e n t, bureaucratic insensitivity to the needs o f students, poor pay for facu lty and staff, the need fo r greater public support of education and the enduring scourges of poverty, homelessness, and hopelessness in our society. The cross should be rem oved so w e can get on with the real tasks o f learning and doing to which all those who b elieve that humankind is created in the divine im age are called. Barberini: Ross colum n a distortion T h e S ta te P r e s s w ill c o n s id e r publishing guest ed itoria ls subm itted to the Opinion E d ito r in th e basem ent o f M atthew s Center. They should be from th ree to fiv e pages double spaced. A ll subm issions becom e the p rop erty o f the State Press. E ditor: Just as you step o ff the elevator on the fifth flo o r o f Ph ysical Sciences there are two spectacular photographs o f Sky H arbor and ASU ’s L ot 59 sw im m ing in the ragin g w ater o f the Salt R iv e r’s 1979 flood. Floods o f this m agnitude occur roughly every 19 years and can com e at any tim e during that range. A Quotable “ D iscu ssio n is an exchange o f know ledge; argum ent an exchange o f ignorance. ” — Robert Quillen LETTER POLICY The State Press w elcom es and encourages w ritten response from our readers on any topic. A ll letters m ust be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be e lig ib le for publication. P le a se in clu d e your fu ll nam e, cla ss standing and m ajor (or other affiliation with the university) and phone num ber. R equests fo r anonym ity w ill be granted with an appropriate reason. Letters are su bject to editing by the opinion page editor. A ll letters m ust eith er be brought in person w ith a photo ID to the State Press front d e sk in the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter or e lse addressed to: State Press, 15 M atthew s C enter, A rizo n a S tate U niversity, Tem pe A Z 85287-1502. ________ ___ E ditor: I am w ritin g to you regardin g the opinion page in F rid a y’s State Press about a story on financial aid. In that opinion article, Suzanne Ross, news editor, w rote an a u to b io g ra p h ic a l a r tic le sta tin g she received inaccurate or inappropriate'advice from a sta ff m em ber in the Student Financial Assistance O ffice. It would be illeg a l and unethical fo r m e to com m ent on the financial circum stances of Suzanne Ross. H ow ever, m y lack o f com m ent should not be interpreted that I am in agreem ent with her financial repre­ sentations. I t is m y opinion, that you as the editor or M s. R oss as th e n ew s e d ito r h a ve com prom ised journalistic ethics by using her position on the State Press to a ir a personal sense o f grievance. W ould it not be m ore appropriate and fa ir fo r an objective reporter to investigate a .claim of “ poor service” and talk to a ll parties and ascertain the facts and then m ake a judgm ent about what is fit (tru th ) to print? Is it appropriate fo r the State P ress to consume an en tire page with headline in an a tte m p t to le n d c r e d ib ilit y to an unsubstantiated personal story? Is it the strategy o f the State P ress to print an a rticle labeled as opinion which offers Ms. Ross and the paper protection, opinion that does not have to be truthful rather than do appropriate reporting? It is very distasteful fo r m e to read a story lik e this which, through innuendo, attem pts to m align an entire o ffice sta ff o f nearly 50 people and a student sta ff o f nearly 40. H ow ever, I am m ost distu rbed that Ms. Ross has the ab ility to take advantage o f her position and m ake public accusations against Ms. Sedik-Barker, a professionally com petent and respected sta ff m em ber in this o ffice. I have personally review ed the financial circum stances o f Ms. Ross and, at the tim e, M s. Ross received every possible consideration for e lig ib ility based on the laws and regulations that govern the federal student aid program s. Further, based on m y conversation with Ms. Sedik-Barker, the advice she received was accurate and appropriate. She was never, I repeat never, advised to have a baby in order to increase her financial aid elig ib ility . It should be noted that a student with a child does not necessarily receive m ore aid than those students who do not have children. F in a lly , I h ave the “ opinion” that Ms. Ross has distorted, in print, the conversation that took place at a counseling session with Ms. Sedik-Barker. M y opinion is based on the distortions and inaccurate statem ents she attributes to m e from a telephone conversation that happened only a few weeks ago. I f her quotes from me are not accurate, then I rea lly must question her m em ory and ab ility to recall a conversation that took place with a counselor m ore than a year ago. Person ally and professionally I take great offense that a news sta ff person and in fact, a news editor, can take advantage of her position on the paper to a ir her personal problem s and m isrepresent the good efforts o f a large number o f s ta ff and students who w ork in the Student Financial Assistance O ffice. I hope that the State P ress would attem pt to report the news rather than m ake it up as a page fille r. I also hope that the State P ress m ight find the distinction between good journalism and creative w riting. Pau l G. Barberini D irector, Student Financial Assistance Stadium will w ash aw ay baseball stadium or anything else you build in the Salt R iv e r bed w ill sim ply wash aw ay in a few years. I see no sense in pouring several m illion dollars into the Sea o f Cortez. Randall W hitlock Graduate Student, G eology STATE PRESS DARRIN H O S T E T LE R Editor City Editor.,*............................................ M A R T Y S A U E R Z Q R F Asst. City Editor.. ......... ..... . .. T Y R O N E M EIGHAN O pinion Editor.... ..... ................ ..... BRIAN TASSINARI M agazine E d ito r..... B E N M cC O N N E L L Assoc. M agazine E d ito r.............. .. M ATTH EW U N D E N B U R G Asst. M agazine E d i t o r . . . . . M E G H A L V E R S O N Listings Editor......... ............... .... M IC H E L LE C R U F F News Editor.................................................. S U Z A N N E R O S S Sports EditOr....^..,^....;.:......^......:....;..........GARY JA C K S O N Asst. Sports Editor....... ................ .....P A Ú L C O R O Copy C h ie f.. . ..... .... Í......_______ M IC H E L LE A LLM A N Asst. Copy Chief...... ............... .............W E N D Y ST R O D E Photo Editor..;.; .... .....JACK B E A S L E Y R E P O R T E R S : M ike Burgess, Nicki CarroM, Mark Crismon, Elise Eteberry, Kimberly Harris, M ichelle Henry, Adriane Hopkins, Kelly Jain, Jo ie Ann La Polla, Sonja Lewis, KeHy Pearce, Tenny Tatusian. S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : V icki Culver, Jo e l Horn,°Tomi M c E l­ roy, Larry Newell, Keith Rosenhagen. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Jam ie Lytle, Su nd i Kjenstad, B rian O'M ahoney, Scott Troyanos. C O P Y EDITORS: KeUy Ettenborough, Nicole Perron. C A R O L Y N HOFIG Managing Editor M AGAZINE ST AFF: Scott Seckpl F R E E L A N C E W RITERS: Sharon Kaney, Francine Stahl, Mish Tell, Richard VigH. CARTOO NIST: M ike Ritter EDITORIAL ASST.: Lynn Vavreck PRO DUCTIO N: D aniel Donley, Steve Kricun, N ancy Ness, M ark Nothaft, Deborah Prewitt, Lynne Senzek, Ja son Silver, E ric Zotcavage. AD VERTISING R E P R E SE N T A T IV E S: Frank Culver, Jay Eckhardt, D an Ellstrom, Lysa Fitzhugh, Lisa Horn, John Leathers, Pau l Lee, Karen Lisiewski, Brook Mullen, Terri Smith, Ray Zickel. The State Pre ss is published Monday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. W e do not answer questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: (602) 965-7572. . The State P re ss is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the A S U campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the A SU administration, faculty, staff or student body. O pinion Realignment Democrats keep winning, shouldn’t celebrate yet J e ff G re e n fie ld Universal Press Syndicate NEW Y O R K — If thé polls are right, the D em ocratic P a rty is going to be doing some serious celebrating next week. As of now, it is likely to win back the governorship of New Jersey, to retain the N ew York City m ayor’s chair and to keep the governor’s office in V irginia, and in the process elect the first black governor o f a state since Reconstruction. Add that to the fact that the Dem ocrats have taken fiv e of the seven special congressional elections this year, and what you have is the look of a vibrant, healthy loyal opposition, confidently striding into a new dawn a fter last y ea r’s presidential debacle. W ell, fa r be it from m e to break up a party, but there are some disquieting signs fo r Dem ocrats that the 1989 elections m ay, in fact, be a false dawn. Take, for exam ple, the debate over *‘realignm ent. ’ ’ A fte r Ronald R eagan’s 1980 lan d slid e, in w hich R epublicans also captured the U. S. Senate, the political w orld was intrigued by the idea that R eagan’s appeal to traditional Dem ocrats could presage a wholesale shift to the GOP, much as Franklin D. R oosevelt had made the Dem ocrats the m ajority party in the 1930s That, evidently, did not happen; by thé 1988 elections Dem ocrats had retained their firm control o f the House o f Representatives and . had won back control of the Senate., They held the m ajority o f governorships and state legislative houses. Thé bad news fo r Dem ocrats is that what did not happen on the surface m ay have b een h a p p en in g, and m a y s t ill be happening, along the p olitical fault lines — where earthquakes happen. F o r instance, surveys now show a near tie am ong Am ericans who are asked what party they identify w ith. Depending on w hoiii you b elieve, the gap is som ewhere between two and fiv e points; except fo r one b rief period around the ,1946 congressional elections, Republicans have not done so w ell in m ore than h alf a century. Second, if you take a longer view , realignm ent has already taken place in w h a t w a s o n c e th e m o s t r e lia b ly D em ocratic region of the nation: the South. D riven m ostly by the defection of white m ales from the ranks of the Dem ocratic P arty, Republicans have been winning races at virtu ally every level. E ven with the ‘Fo r instance, surveys now show a near tie am ong Am ericans who are asked What party they identify with. ’ loss o f four Southern Republican Senate seats in 1986, the G O P’s fortunes in the South — from governors’ chairs to county judgeships in Texas — would have been unthinkable a generation ago. The most significant cloud over the Dem ocrats, how ever, continues to be the lack o f intellectual vigo r — an ailm ent that has plagued the party fo r m ore than 20 years, * W hile the R eagan coalition was clear about its intentions — low er taxes, cut the size and scope o f governm ent, discourage socia l‘engineering, reassert U, S. influence in the w orld, rea ffirm traditional values — the last coherent D em ocratic argum ent was the G reat Society agenda o f the mid-1960s — and even that agenda was, in the m ain, the fin al fu lfillm en t of the prom ises o f the New Deal. The point is not that the Dem ocrats lack attractive national figu res: M ario Cuomo, B ill B radley, A1 G ore, Bob K errey, Richard Gephardt, Jesse Jackson, Lloyd Bentsen and others m ake up an im pressive cast. . It is not that the party can’t w in elections. It im proved its congressional standing in the w ake o f Bush’ s victory in 1988, and it w ill alm ost Certainly keep the Congress next year. But as long as the D em ocratic P a rty does not seem to know what it stands for, the m ore that vacuum perm its Republicans to define both them selves and their opponents. And sooner or later, voters who have forgotten how to vo te fo r a Dem ocratic president w ill stop thinking o f them selves as independents or disaffected Dem ocrats, and s t a r t t h i n k i n g o f t h e m s e l v e s as Republicans. That’s why Tuesday’s likely good news m ay in fa ct be a false dawn after all. More Letters Criss-Cross Faith will remain E ditor: B efore long, the answer w ill be plain and fo r a ll o f ASU to see: E ither the cross w ill be there or it w ill be gone. The Am erican C ivil Liberties Union lawsuit w ill decide what happens. To be fa ir, the judgm ent must take into account a number o f factors. These should include: the purpose the cross has been there, President P eck ’s reasoning fo r replacing it after its disappearance in August, and the AC LU ’s intentions for bringing it down. In a w ay, it’s kind of funny. The cross was there fo r several years with not a lot o f com plaint. It didn’t seem to bother anyone. The people who placed it there some 40 years ago lik ely put it there with pride, hoping it would m ean something to us today. , Then a few Sun D evils wanted it rem oved. They clea rly Stated their point: Danforth needs to be a place o f worship “ fo r the entire U n iversity.” Rather than throwing aw ay a prideful sym bol of the past, why don’t w e let m ore people display their religious sentim ent? Instead o f Danforth being a center o f controversy, le t’s m ake it a place to m eet friends. Wouldn’ t that be great? ASU ’s form er President J. Russel Nelson and current President Richard Peck determ ined som e things about the cross in light o f ASU b eliefs — they w ere tryin g to preserve the past. ACLU constituents and a ll people have every righ t to feel contem pt tow ard church leaders who have adversely affected us in recent years. W e have less a right, how ever, to take aw ay part o f ASU ’s heritage. W hether or not the cross rem ains w ill have no bearing on Christians. Th eir faith w ill stay no m atter what. It w ill be im portant though to keep what form er ASU people thought was m eaningful on campus. S. Andre Percy Junior, Business M anagem ent Nail Chanen, save cross E ditor: The dwindling quality o f education, ra cia l intolerance, indiscrim inate tuition increases, pathetically few parking spaces, the allocation o f student tuition to fund social clubs, and the national perception o f ASU as a vacuous party school are a ll legitim ate concerns that the “ leadership” o f ASU should be addressing with the sam e zeal as the alleged controversy over 10 lin ear feet o f wood atop Danforth Chapel. A fter all, if a sim ple icon lik e a cross is deem ed offensive by the sectarians, what would be their reaction if an entire church was found on campus? Aren’ t stained glass and pews religious sym bols as w ell? Since ASU is a public school and the state owns the land under Danforth, then how can the presence of any building devoted Solely to religious functions be ju stified under the Constitution? Campus Aglow ‘foolish’ E ditor: A campus group has objected to the representation o f the U niversity by an attorney who does not share their view on the rem oval o f the Danforth Chapel cross. Frequently an attorney does not share the opinion of his client. His job is to m ake the best possible argum ent in court fo r the persons or institution he represents. The 10-member group with the strange nam e “ Campus A glow ” does not represent the U niversity, and I would be saddened to learn that the m ajority o f the campus agreed with their opinion on this m atter. They are, of course, ignorant of an attorney’s role in the Am erican system of justice. Th eir enthusiasm has led them to take a foolish position. Richard C. Dahl . Graduate, H istory I f the m yopic focus o f this argum ent w ere expanded, w e’d see that the only resolution would be the rem oval o f Danforth Chapel itself. But before the w recking ball plows through Danforth’s heavy oak doors, ASU should save the-eross fo r posterity. The U niversity would be better served by nailing R egent Herm an Chanen to the beams as penance fo r squandering precious tax dollars in a frivolous countersuit over the regent’s seedy Selection process fo r ASU ’s new president. Perhaps w e a ll should follow Stanislaw L ee’s advice; “ When smashing momuments, save the pedestals — they alw ays com e in handy.” Bob Gam bles Junior, English Jane Derenowski Senior, Public Program s Individuals problem, not Danforth’s cross E ditor: The most attractive feature o f ASU’s campus is the potpourri of old and modern architecture co-existing on it. D anforth Chapel has been on campus for so long, just as it is — doesn’t its seniority g iv e it the right to rem ain as it was origin ally constructed? Rem oving the cross would be defacing the past. It would be the sam e as tearing down that rem ainder of what ASU has been built around: the stone on O ld M ain which reads “ Norm al School 1894.” Tearin g down that part o f Danforth Chapel, which is sym bolic of Christianity, would be lik e rem oving “ Sparky” from campus fo r prom oting Satanism, M aybe this is an extrem e exam ple, but tell m e, w here w ill the line be drawn? What else w ill be torn down a fte r the cross ? M y grandm other, who graduated from ASU in 1934, would have trouble recognizing most o f the buildings on ASU’s campus today. Old M ain would be one o f very few buildings with which she would Still be fam iliar. It m akes m e feel good to know that with a ll o f the new architecture, a ll o f the new construction, som e pieces o f the past have been saved fo r me to see as m y grandm other saw. H er son, who is m y father, graduated from ASU in 1961, and has alw ays known Danforth Chapel as it stands today. It Sickens m e to find that people with no feelin g for, or connection with, ASU’s past want to destroy some o f it. Someday, w ill I be saying to m y children, “ That’s old Danforth. O f course, it didn’t look lik e that when I was in s c h o o l.” T h e fam ou s G ra d y G am m age M em o ria l Auditorium , constructed by Frank Lloyd W right and celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, is very w ell k ep t— right down to the exact colors origin ally designed fo r it. So why must there be such trouble over repairs done to the humble chapel? Since when is it w rong to keep som e things as they w ere — to rep a ir property that has been dam aged, not in the name o f any religion, but m erely to support history? The w ay ASU once was should not be hidden from us. I sym pathize with those who feel that they are unwelcome to worship in Danforth because o f the cross. M ay I suggest, how ever, that the problem is not with the cross, but rather within Oie individual who cannot overlook the design o f the building in which he/she is undoubtedly w elcom e to worship. W e should take pride that the advances o f ASU do not conflict with its past, and save Danforth Chapel as it alw ays has been. Jennifer M arshall Sophomore, Broadcasting Page 6 T ax incentives used to lure firm to Valley By K ELLY PEAR CE State P ress The Arizona Board of Regents has offered a $1 billion com puter-chip com pany extra incentives in an attem pt to lure the consortium and produce “ a yield in the future,” despite criticism that the board misused its powers, board President Edith Ausländer said. Phoenix is one o f four sites being considered by the firm , U. S. M em ories. O fficials from the manufacturing plant w ere at the proposed Arizona site Thursday and Friday, considering the property’s pros and cons. I f U. S. M em ories decides to locate itself at a site owned by the U ofA C ollege o f Agriculture at 48th Street and Broadway Road near the Tem pe-Phoenix border, the Tucson campus w ill pay $600,000 to guarantee that the com pany w ill not have to be subject to property taxes. A fin al site is expected to be picked in the next several weeks. The other states vyin g fo r the company are New York, Texas and Colorado. The regents have offered U. S. M em ories $40 m illion in tax breaks to lure the com pany to Arizona, and the board has com e under fire from state legislators who say the board has stepped beyond its powers and jurisdiction. The board plans to buy a ll o f the com pany’s equipm ent for 10 years and m ake im provem ents fo r SOyears, thus allow ing the company to avoid paying taxes on these item s. But the Arizona attorney gen eral’s o ffice has said the regents’ tax incentives are legal. ‘ "H ie tax abatem ents are part o f the o vera ll package sent by Arizona,” said E d Johnson, assistant regents’ executive director. The state has offered U. S. M em ories an overall incentive package o f nearly $140 m illion to lure the company here. Ausländer defended the regen ts’ action s, sayin g, “ everything w e’ve done is to entice the com pany and see that it has a yield in the future.” The regents decided last week, a fter several weeks of conference calls, to approve the paym ent sum and now the board needs U niversity Properties Associates — a Scottsdale real estate investm ent company that is currently leasing the land from the board — to stick to its lease. Under the regent plan, U niversity Properties would be paid $600,000, and the com pany would then sublease the 57-acre parcel to U. S. M em ories fo r $1 a year. Land that is owned by the state is tax exem pt until it is leased out. But as long as U niversity Properties leases the site, the 297-acre parcel is tax free because o f a grandfather provision. Ausländer said if U. S. M em ories does not choose the Phoenix site, U niversity Properties has a yea r to find another person or group to assign the property to or “ walk aw ay from it.” “ U P A Has a substantial interest in the property,” she said, adding that it has pumped about $7 m illion in rent into the land. Monday. Now nbf 6.1989 A S U P o lice R ep ort ASU police reported the follow ing incidents that occurred between F riday and Sunday: •The Tem pe F ire Departm ent extinguished a sm all fire in a student’s room on the 15th floor o f Manzanita Residence H all Saturday m orning, police said. The fire started a t 10:30 a.m . and was put out by sprinklers, a spokesman fo r the fire departm ent said. The flo o r was evacuated and most o f the dam age was done by w ater, F orrest Ashcraft said. Ashcraft said that the fire m ay have been started by a toaster oven, •A student was hit by an unidentified bicyclist w hile she was w alking by Murdock H all near Palm W alk at noon Friday. She did not need m edical attention and described the bicyclist as riding a dark-colored bicycle. •Three juveniles w ere warned o f trespassing and loiterin g a fter police saw them spraying each other with paint guns. •An ASU em ployee was arrested a fte r police pulled him over fo r d rivin g on a suspended license near C ollege Street and U n iversity D rive. •A th ief stole a student’s watch and wedding band, both valued at $800, from a locked in the Student Recreation Com plex. • •A man not a ffilia ted w ith ASU was warned o f trespassing a fter police found him sleeping in the bushes on the northwest side o f M cClintock Residence HaU. •A student was warned o f indecent exposure a fter police saw him urinating in the bushes on the north side o f M atthews H all. •An em ployee found a plastic bag fu ll o f a green lea fy substance and turned it over to ASU police, who impounded it. •A m inor possessing alcohol was arrested in L ot 51. •Tw o m inors possessing alcohol w ere arrested in M anzanita Residence H all. •Tw o m ath teaching assistants in the Ph ysical Sciences Building w ere warned o f disorderly conduct a fter police received com plaints that they w ere being too loud. Both T A s w ere drinking alcohol. •A m inor possessing alcohol was arrested op the east side o f thé Alpha Epsilon P i fratern ity house, 717 Alpha D rive. •A student was arrested at Apache Boulevard and Sunset D rive fo r drunken driving. H e had a blood alcohol content o f .133. C om piled by State P ress re p o rte r Tenny Tatusian. T he State P ress M agazine A W K K K I. V C O I . 1. F. Ç, F. T C) W \ J O T H N A 1. Former hostage says he was a scapegoat COOPER C IT Y , F la . (A P ) — The 10th anniversary o f the seizure o f the U. S. Em bassy in Tehran brings bitter m em ories to Joseph SubiC) the only m ilitary hostage rejected fo r a decoration a fter 444 days in cap tivity. . The A rm y said the form er non-commissioned officer appeared in a film criticizin g the U. S. role in Iran, and, when tortured, disclosed facts about other hostages. Subic, 33, now a law enforcem ent o fficer fo r F lorid a’s Departm ent o f A gricu ltu re, strongly disagrees with the A rm y’s reasoning in not aw arding him the Defense M eritorious S ervice M edal. H e said he told his captors only what they already knew by perusing the numerous undestroyed file s le ft in the em bassy. A ll he did, he says, is confirm his signature on specific documents — and he notes he received an honorable discharge. “ I f I ’m b itter or not is im m aterial, Iran is in the past. I live fo r the present,” he said in an in terview in Saturday’s SunSentinel o f F o rt Lauderdale. “ You never fo rget those 444 days. But you accept them .” Subic said he thinks he was a scapegoat. He does not turn aw ay from what he did because he thinks there is no need to. He said he sim ply obeyed the Iranian radicals who took him prisoner. “ I read w hatever they asked m e to. I have no idea what it said,” said Subic. He did it, he said, “ Because death was alw ays there. So was the isolation. ” On N ov. 4, 1979, six months a fter he arrived in Iran and arm ed with a shotgun and a 9mm pistol, Subic was inform ed the chancellery o f the em bassy had been breached. H e was the first m ilita ry person to have arm ed contact with the Iranians. “ I would have shot but it was a question o f whether deadly force was necessary. They led with wom en in front o f them. T o shoot unarmed people was wrong. W e had standards to m aintain. “ W e thought w e’d be kept 20 or 30 minutes and the governm ent would com e and retake the em bassy.” The sergeant — a t 23, he was already a six-year A rm y veteran — believed in his country and in its president. When he returned to this country in 1980, he s till did. But it had been a long 444 days. Sm ith Corona presents three products that can help make schoolw ork academic. T h e Sm ith Corona P W P 2000 Personal W ord Processor is in a class b y itself. It's so com part it can fit in the m ost com pact dorm room . 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Stete P ie s» Monday, November 6,1969 Î2 2 L P h y s ic a l Plant’s 4 -1 0 plan suspended after experim entation Brixon and G rence said the scheduling d ifficu lties w ere a b igger factor than the le v e l o f service in the decision to stop using 4-10. He said som e isolated incidents m ight have occurred in which an em ployee was not availab le to answer a service call. “ Our biggest concern is to provide a high level o f service to the U n iversity,” G rence said. “ P eople som etim es just w ere not there when they w ere needed.” Em ployees on the 4-10 schedule, such as som e plum bers, electricians, a ir conditioning services and various shops in the Ph ysical Plant, Would have a day o ff during the week, and even though they w orked 40 hours, the o ff day created som e problem s, G rence said. B y D A V E TH O M AS State P ress An experim en tal w orkers’ schedule, im plem ented in an attem pt to expand P h ysical P lan t services, has been suspended a fte r a tria l run o f nearly a year, according to ph ysical plant officia ls. Th e 4-10 plan — so called because som e em ployees worked fou r days a w eek and 10 hours a day — was not successful in in creasin g o vera ll efficien cy, associated director Jerry G rence said. “ In a few service areas it was working, but in general it w as not,” G ren ce said. A ctin g P h y sica l P la n t d irector D ave B rixon said scheduling, w ith a few people on the 4-10 and others w orking tradition al eight-hour days, had becom e a problem . “ Th e concerns cam e to m y attention from supervisors who w ere having d ifficu lty with various people w orking differen t schedules,” B rixon said. “ It was ju st unm anageable." B rixon said there w ere only 37 em ployees s till Working 4-10 when it was discontinued about tw o weeks ago. Th ere w ere m ore people on 4-10 at som e point, he said, but he did not know the number. “ H ie nature o f the U niversity is such that w e have a fiveday schedule and w e need Services available ev e ry day,” Grence said. “ It’s a tough situation to m anage because o f the specialization o f services w e provide.” Under the plan, G rence said em ployees worked staggered hours in an attem pt to lengthen the tim e o f day services w ere availab le through thé Physical Plant. G rence said the plan w as experim ental and the em ployees w ere told it was being used on a tria l basis. S till, som e em ployees voiced com plaints over the discontinuance o f the schedule, G rence said. “ It (th e program ) went on too long,” he said. “ People liked the extra day o ff. Just lik e anything else, it was construed as a perk. E ven though w e told them it was experim ental, som e people got used to it.” Grence said the plan would be review ed over the next three to four months and could possibly be reinstated in the future. “ I think it is a useable m anagem ent tool,” he said. “ I am not saying that it m ight not be used in the future.” A 4rl0 w ork w eek would work w ell if the U n iversity went to a quarter system or a four-day schedule, Brixon said, adding that his departm ent would consider it again as a departm ent­ w ide m easure under those circum stances. “ Nothing is cast in stone fo rever,” he said. “ W e m ight g o to 4-10 under the righ t circum stances.” F o r now, the plan is not going to be used at a ll in the P h ysical Plan t, G rence said. “ W e fla t told our people at this tim e w e don’t have it,” he said. “ It is nice to have an extra day o ff. 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JUKI ui-ll ma« vim (o i ht- stfritid. Small, im-diuim«- I iarjR'Vt Kurt, Hui HikitiilVtiKuin's fnimIxtTHiiinki .. itiU'iulaiiHiTftl sjx f k^Tirily tiiH1 HI|Wm |X T CUSllHIKT. VERY UJW CALORIE FROZEN YOGURT H ayd en S quare • 3rd & M ill (F re e P a rk in g A cross Street) Expires 1T-1'5-| 5¿ J Pasc 8 Monday, November 6,1989 State F r m ASU W est expansion to begin; cam pus to in crease capacity WINDOW Rockv Mountain Windowtint TINTING O F F E R E N D S 11-17-89 W ITH A N Y V E H IC L E TIN TED $20 O FF! 1324 W. University By MARK CRISMON State Press Oust east of Priest) ASU W est is continuing to expand, as construction begins on the three final buildings that w ill be included in what is term ed the “ core cam pus.” B arry Bunns, vice president for planning and construction at ASU W est, said the expansion is d esp erately needed and “ should have been added years ago.” Bunns said that once the expansion is com pleted, the W est campus w ill be able to accom m odate 5,000 full-tim e students, a substantial in crease from the current capacity o f 1,500 full-tim e students. A la b o ra to ry / c o m p u te r c la s s ro o m building, a university center building and an o f f i c e b u ild i n g f o r f a c u l t y and adm inistration w ill be added to the already existing award-winning F letch er Lib rary and the Sands Classroom Building. A lso planned fo r the expansion are a new campus service com plex building, an expansion of the existing central plant and a d d itio n a l p a r k i n g lo ts , ro a d s and landscaping. These additional buildings w ill constitute Phase One of ASU W est’s expansion and w ill cost nearly $47 m illion. Phase One, in combination with the existing buildings, w ill constitute the core o f die campus. Construction is expected to continue until the end o f 1990 and Bunns said he expects the new buildings to be read y fo r use in the spring 1991 sem ester. The already existin g F letch er L ib rary form s the centerpiece o f W est Campus, and has earned the Honor Aw ard o f the Southern Arizona Chapter o f the A m erican Institute o f A rchitects fo r its im pressive building design. A lso existing is the Sands Classroom building that accom m odates alm ost two thirds o f a ll W est Campus classes. U p o n c o m p l e t i o n, t h e n e w laboratory/com puter classroom building w ill contain w et and d ry laboratories, com puter classroom s, darkroom s, research laboratories, fine arts studios and an astronom y platform on the roof. The university center building w ill be Volska Vodka, 750ml................$5.49 Arandas Tequila, 200ml............$1.88 Monterey Wh. Zinfandel, 750ml. $4.46 Black Label, 12-pk beer.............$3.99 U sed Playboy M agazines............$.84 By The Associated Press ASU is m aking two-thirds o f what it was m aking la st y e a r during professional Phoenix Cardinals’ football gam es a t ASU ’s Sun D evil Stadium. “ W e’re not losing any m oney on the gam es, but w e’re probably not going to make the revenue-w e had expected,’ ’ said R ob ert E llis , an ASU associate vic e president fo r U n iversity relations. ASU gets parking fees and a percentage o f ticket sales and concessions. According to a report in the M esa Tribune published Saturday, the U n iversity made about $230,000 fo r each Cardinals’ home gam e last season. W ith few er fans this season, ASU is gettin g about $150,000 per gam e, the newspaper said. The a verage attendance has dropped W E DO SEA M LESS WINDOWS! •FULL VEHICLE TINTING FROM $50 •5 YEAR AND LIFETIME W ARRANTY •WINDSHIELD REPAIR •DASHMATS AVAILABLE 2033 W. University_____ _ 2855 S. Alm a School SW C o rn e r D o b so n & U n iv e rsity S E C o rn e r 833-8256 730-1699 Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 imported Beers. 967-9079 A rizona’s 1st Brew Pub ^ Slate Press photo The Sands Classroom building w as one of the first com pleted in the expansion project at A SU W est. used for adm ission, academ ic advisem ent, career services, disabled student resources and the registra r’s office. A 10,000 s q u a r e - f o o t m u l t i - u s e instructional room is planned fo r the building, which w ill also house food service, student governm ent, the bookstore, student lounges and a child developm ent center. The new facu lty and adm inistration o ffice building w ill be capable o f servin g the adm inistrative needs o f 10,000 students. The campus service com plex w ill house campus security, a central receivin g area and the m ail service, w hile the central plant annex w ill contain an additional cooling tow er and therm al storage plant to service the new buildings. Bunns said the “ future at ASU W est is unlim ited,” adding that the campus gets “ v e ry good support from both the Board o f Regents and the Legislatu re.” Cards profits dow n for ASU from 59,117 last season to 40,238 this year through ju st th ree gam es, w ith fiv e rem aining. The revenue is p artly being used to pay o ff a set o f new locker room s in the north end zone last year. The rest covers stadium costs fo r the Cardinals’ gam es. “ It ’s hurting our total revenues. When attendance is down, the whole thing goes down,” E llis said. “ Our rental o f the stadium is based on a use fee, so when ticket sales are down, w e get less money. And, o f course, when there are less people in the stadium, concession sales a re o ff,” E llis said that if attendance does not im prove, the school lik ely w ill not be ab le to pay o ff the balance on the new locker rooms. H ow ever, he said that they w ill s till have a balanced budget. : : : : : : : j ï «î ; î j ; î ; î î ; j j j ; j j j j j j * j j • • • • • ••••••«••••••••«* * * ****** «.* aura- RUNDLE’S LIQUORS & MKT. 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W e’ll also explore positions for our Southwestern Operations. So don’t just stand by. Stop by. Thursday November 9,1989 6:00 - 8:00p.m. Bell Memorial Union Bldg. North Pinal, Room 215 To contact us about summer internships, work-study programs and entry-level positions, send your resume'to: Apple Computer, In c., College Relations, MS 39ACR, 20525 Mariani A ve., Cupertino, CA 95014. Apple Computer has a corporate commitment tothe __ principle of diversity. In that spirit, we welcome applications fromall individuals includingwomen, minorities, veterans and disabledindividuals. (Price includes the FREE Vi order) Offer good from 11 a.m.-l 1 p.m. Every Sunday & Monday WOODSHED I WOODSHED II , Food & Drink SW Corner of Baseline & Mill T E M P E 831-W OOD Casual Dining & Libations NW Corner of Dobson & University M E S A 844-SHED The power to be your best.™ 1 am. Monday. November 6 ,1969 College’s nursing enrollment rises; higher-educated students wanted B y S O N JA LEW IS S tats P roto N o one wants to grow up and be a nurse anym ore because the salaries a re poor, the chance fo r advancem ent is low and th ere is no respect in it, agreed A S lTs nursing school and loca l nursing associations. The ASU C ollege o f Nursing, follow ing a national trend, has experien ced a drop in enrollm ent since 1983. How ever, enrollm ent in the college has risen since the all-tim e low of 755 in 1986 to 829 this fa ll, college Dean Janelle K reuger said. K reu ger credited ah increasing demand fo r highereducated nurses with pulling out o f its recent enrollm ent slump. “ Th ere is a grea ter demand fo r nurses with higher d egrees,” K reu ger said. “ W e’ v e had a great increase in nurses w ith associate degrees tryin g to study fo r their baccalau reate.” But K reu ger said that the overall drop in enrollm ent from 1,085 in 1983 to this y ea r’s number can be blam ed on the A m erican valu e system , which em phasizes high salaries. “ Our society has changed its value system ,” she said. “ P eop le today a re m ore interested in m aking money and being in ch arge.” A ccording to a national report released in October, hospitals are also experiencing a nursing shortage that is a ffectin g the qu ality o f care patients are receiving. M elanie Swisher, vice president o f patient and physican care at Tem pe St, Luke’s Hospital, said she doesn’t think that Arizona has been hit as hard by a nursing shortage as other parts o f the country. “ R eally and truthfully I don’t think there is much o f a problem with nursing shortages,” Swisher said. Swisher added that on occasion St. Luke’s does experience shortages in critica l care. She credits this to a high burnout rate in that particular area o f nursing, but said that the hospital is s till able to accom m odate those shortages. “ When the w inter months com e, w e use registry or pool personnel (tem porary nurses) and they are able to nil our needs,” Swisher said. Swisher said that there would n ever be nursing shortages if it wasn’t so difficu lt to be adm itted to a school o f nursing. “ I don’t think they m ake it easy enough to g et into the training program s,” Swisher said. “ To m e, i f there is such a shortage, they (th e C o llege o f N u rsin g) would be accom m odating a few m ore students w ith good grade point averages,.” But K reu ger attributes the shortage o f nursing students to a need for m ore money. “ The salaries fo r nurses are s till low ,” K reu ger said. “ And the amount o f increase over tim e is low. A fte r 10 years nurses m ight not m ake too much m ore.” Cathleen Wilson, executive director o f the Arizona State Nursing Association, said that nurses need to be respected in their w orking environm ent in order fo r nursing to becom e a career that people w ill choose to enter again. “ Nurses need to have m ore participation in decision m aking and treated as professionals rather than blue-collar em ployees,” W ilson said. W ilson added that “ shared governance,” a fa irly new system in which nurses w ork closer w ith adm inistration on decisions, should be adopted by m ore hospitals. Scottsdale M em orial H ospital currently has such a system . R o sem a ry Y osh im u ra , p resid en t o f the A rizo n a Association o f Health Care R ecruiters, offered another guess as to why nursing enrollm ent is down and hospitals are experiencing shortages o f nurses. “ B asically, I think the m ain reason the recruitm ent in nursing schools has gone down is salary com pression,” Yoshim ura said. Yoshim ura com pares a graduated nurse and engineer in dem onstrating salary com pression. “ A new nurse and a new engineer start out m aking about the sam e amount o f m oney, but in 10 years the engineer w ill be m aking m ore m oney and the nurses aren’ t going to be m aking that much m ore,” Yoshim ura said. She added that there is hope fo r future nurses and that, salaries w ill go up — in part because o f the shortage and the realization by hospitals that nurses need to be paid m ore. “ Salaries w ill eventually go up because they are a ll over tile country,” Yoshim ura said. ASU organizations will hold food drive to benefit AIDS victims ASU H ealth Education and the ASU Task F o rce on A ID S w ill be collectin g „canned foods fo r the next two weeks at various sjiots around campus to benefit people with AIDS. C ollection boxes w ill be placed on campus from today until N ov. 17 and faculty, departm ents and students are w elcom e to oversee the collection o f canned food, said D anae B row nell, health educator and m em ber o f the Task F orce on AIDS. The cans w ill be delivered to at least three agencies servin g people w ith AID S in M aricopa County. B row nell said that often tim es people with AID S, because o f the high cost of m edical c a re and m ed ication , a re unable to purchase an adequate supply o f food. “ T rea tm en t is v e ry exp en sive and m edication can run into the thousands of dollars,” Brownell said. A representative o f one agency, AID S R eferra l Counseling and Education, said that the involvem ent o f ASU H ealth Education in collecting canned goods w ill allow the agency to use funds to help people with A ID S in oth er ways. “ W e can help m ore people pay the rent and put a roof over their head,” said Chas M cAvoy, educational coordinator a t ARCE. M cAvoy said the canned food is needed most fo r people in the later stages o f illness. Additionally, people naturally consume m ore food din in g the w inter months. “ The reason for this is that during certain TOSHIBA T1000 LAPTOP l |Avantage 286% *1295 Includes 40MB Do your homework at S C O home, at the Ubairsry, at the ASU gaine, anywnerol This 7 pound Wonder runs Get the 286 m achine that's priced righ t Includes 40M bHard disk, Monochrom e M onitor, 640K, std. keyboard, 1.2mb drive ana more. She also suggested foods that aré low in sodium, m icrow aveable and high in Calories and nutrients. B ro w n ell said th at w hen she w as origin ally interested in gettin g involved with the com m unity about a year ago, and the response d ie heard m ost from AID S agencies was that they need food. “ W e (H ealth Education) needed to be in volved and in touch with the com m unity,” B row nell said. “ And the response at the tim e was food.” — SONJA LEWIS DO YOU LO V E PEO PLE? f t then become a RESIDENT ASSISTANT! lOQtraofPC software *499 Many A 4 S U Professors own an Avantage. Get one for least Includes floppy drive, keyboard, and monitor. foods is that they a re sim ple and easy to p rep a re when you don’ t fe e l good,” B row nell added. D a J ¡9 AvantageXT Q stages o f the illness, people with AID S find it hard to m ake ends m eet,” M cA voy said. M cA voy said that often tim es people get th e ir in com e fro m fe d e r a lly funded program s which supply them w ith about $300 a month. “ It ’s alm ost im possible to liv e on that,” M cA voy said. “ W e (A R C E ) are here to get through the red tape. In the la ter stages o f the disease, M cA voy added, people w ith A ID S often have to quit their jobs since they no longer fe e l w ell enough to work.. B row nell Said foods that are most helpful to people with AID S are canned vegetables, puddings, b eef stew, juices and soups. “ Another reason ter collectin g canned OffceAuta Dot Matrix Printer EPSON Fa ll Robatea! N EW ! Equity LT Laptop $100 K w t e a r d .S 4 0 K .W l 1Qmhz processor 5-25’ am. drive. D O S. Saafe S M a s . RightWriter Rebate fdO K . tO m te. battery p owered, duM drives, and D O S in a battery Borland Ttorbo $49 Write BetterWithout Cheating! 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Murphy kept his b icycle in “ im m aculate condition” and he was alw ays w earing cyclin g clothes, said Busch. M cG rady was d rivin g along R ural Road and rear-ended a car driven by Leonard E lliot, o f the 4700 block o f South Stanley P la ce, T a ylor said. Both cars pulled to the side o f the road and E llio t got out of his car and walked tow ard M cG rady’s car, T a ylor said. M cG rady’s car then began accelerating south on Rural Road and hit Murphy, he added. The car continued down Rural Road and hit a woman driving a w hite C hevrolet Cam ara. Jeanie Shackleford, o f the 600 block o f W est M ission D rive, was treated fo r m inor injuries at D esert Sam aritan Hospital and M edical Center, T aylor said. M cG rady was taken to D esert Sam aritan, w here he was given insulin and was released. P o lice do not expect to pursue charges against M cG rady . S h o o tin g Continued from pug* 1* Rankin was taken to Scottsdale M em orial Hospital-Osborn by ambulance and was then transported to Barrow N eurological Institute o f St. Joseph’s Hospital and M edical Center. Rankin was pronounced dead ea rly Thursday morning a fter he was taken o ff life support system s, a hospital spokesman said. Monument honors civil rights martyrs M O NTG O M E R Y, Ala. CAP) — A generation a fter M edgar E vers and M artin Luther K in g Jr. w ere killed, the nation’s first m em orial to m artyrs o f the c iv il rights m ovem ent was dedicated Sunday as relatives expressed hope that young people w ill carry on the spirit o f that turbulent era. Several people cried as they touched the cool w ater that flow s across a circu lar black gran ite slab engraved with im portant events o f the era, including the names o f 40 people who died in the struggle fo r ra cia l equality. The m em orial is o f the sam e m aterial and by the sam e architect as the Vietnam Veterans M em orial in Washington. “ I hope this w ill vita lize the struggle, keep it fresh in the minds . . . fo r the youth,” said O llie Gordon, a Chicago teacher whose cousin, lty e a r-o ld E m m ett T ill, was shot to death in 1955 by whites angered that he had spoken to a white woman. “ I talk about M artin Luther K in g and ask why w e celebrate his birthday, and m any children don’t know,” Gordon said. M ore than 400 law enforcem ent o fficers provided security fo r the dedication cerem ony, which was held without incident. A Ku K lux Klansm an from G eorgia tried to g et a police perm it to lead a dem onstration, but he w as blocked by the city and a fed eral judge. Speakers at the cerem ony included Rosa Parks, whose refusal to g iv e up her seat to a w hite man sparked the M ontgom ery bus boycott o f 1955-56, and rela tives o f those honored on the monument, including M artin Luther K in g III. “ The stru ggle is not o ver y et,” the son o f the c iv il rights leader told a crow d estim ated by police at between 5,000 and 6,000. “ Som ething is w rong in a nation that doesn’t set its priorities to take care o f a ll its people.” R elatives view ed the monument before the dedication which ended w ith thousands joining hands to sing “ W e Shall O vercom e.” “ It ’s a very m oving experien ce,” said M yrlie E vers o f Los Angeles, whose husband, M edgar, was the highest-ranking N A A C P o ffic e r in M ississippi when he was assassinated in 1963. “ It says to m e that there’s hope.” Julian Bond, the firs t black state law m aker in G eorgia, said it was im portant to rem em ber others besides K ing and E vers who died in the stru ggle. “ Without degradating D r. K ing, this was a lot m ore than a M artin Luther K in g m ovem ent,” he said. “ M any w ere ordinary, everyd ay people who rose above their ordinariness to m ake a d ifferen ce.” The $700,000 monument also honors Jam es Chaney, Andrew Goodman and M ichael Schw em er, who w ere shot to death during the 1964 Freedom Summer and whose slayings inspired the recent m ovie “ M ississippi Burning.” “ P oetry in gran ite” was how Goodm an’s m other, Carolyn Goodman o f N ew Y ork City, described the m em orial designed by M aya Lin. “ Nobody who sees it cannot fe e l that it’s a m oving, m oving piece o f a rt,” Goodman said. “ It brings that period so vivid ly a liv e that you can alm ost re liv e it.” The monument is in fron t o f the Southern P o verty Law Center, a few blocks from the Alabam a Capitol, where Jefferson D avis took the oath o f o ffic e as president o f the Confederacy in 1861, and n ear the B aptist church w here King launched the M ontgom ery bus boycott in 1955. The 9-foot-high gran ite w a ll is inscribed with words from the B ible that K in g chose fo r his first speech during the bus b oycott: “ U n til ju stice ro lls down lik e w a ter and righteousness lik e a m ighty stream .” state press o o fim SM tPlW Monday, November 6,1989 ACCOUNTING SENIORS I $30,000 a Year to Start! in u it c J . JOIN AN ORGANIZATION with a team of over 100 professionals and grow with the challenges! The Los Angeles County Audit Division is seeking candidates for the position of Accountant-Auditor. Our division conducts internal, external, and EDP audits, and manages accounting functions and special assignments. The starting salary for an Accountant-Auditor is $2517 per month with bonuses when you obtain your CPA, CIA or CISA. oun< fucationaC d tn lc w O n-cam pus interviews w ill be November 16,1989. See your placem ent office for details and a copy of our brochure. You’ve Got W hat It Takes! BLOOD PLASMA 1000 Y our blood plasm a goes to accident and bum victims and is used for hem ophiliacs who would otherwise suffer from uncontrolled bleeding. Y o u are a life-saving s o u r c e . . . it’s healthful, safe and easy. Plu s your ca n earn $115 plus a month. Enjoy watching m ovies while you donate. PLEASE C ’MON IN TO DAY □□ ■■ AND PICK UP YOUR $5 BONUS BY MENTIONING THIS AD (New Donors Only) (May Not Be Used With Other Bonuses) TEM PE P LA S M A _ _ . . /. _ 0 89 4 -1 3 3 8 933 E. U niversity HOURS Mon-Thur 8 am-6 pm Fri & Sat 8 am-4 pm Casey at the Bat NFL FOOTBALL PARTY JW^tchthe game on ejyr 2 kTVs & enjoy $2 60 om pitchers! B aseball & S oftb a ll B attin g R an ge Get 2 Free Drinks with a medium pjzàà or 4 Free Drinks %with asterge 4>izza! j £ m 1605 N . H ayden Rd. Across from Big Surf 9 9 0 -7 7 4 2 ONE FREE ROUND $2 O F T 1 Receive $2 O F F a H a lf H ou r G am e of H I-B A L L R eceive one free round when you buy tw o rounds one per group, per day one per customer; per day RUMP NIG HT, LET’S PARTY! Buy a large pizza & get a ■ v 6 0 o z . p it c h e r f o r 1 °!1 Fast & Free O e lfe r y within ASU Areal Htjt ovdns tn ëvçry truckl ^ ^ l E D IT O R S H IP The ASU Student Publications Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the State Press editorship for the Spring Semester 1990. Applicants for the position of editor: must be a full-time student at ASU in good standing (not on academic or disciplinary probation); Must have a cumulative grade index o f 2.50 or better; must have served two semesters on the staff o f the State must have completed a minimum o f 15 hours o f Journalism courses. Including news writing, reporting, editing and Journalism law; must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment, $2°° Pitchers $1°° Well Drinks $160 Bowling/per game Applicants must also; submit at least two letters o f recommendation from univer­ sity faculty members and/or professional Journalists; list on the application form the titles o f all Journalism courses completed and the grades earned In those courses; submit at least two examples o f a news story, feature story or editorial written for the State Press o r another newspaper and describe on the application form the functions and re­ sponsibilities o f previous positions held on the staff o f the State Frees or other newspapers. Com e on and take a break after c la s s or the library. W e ’ve got sp e cia l p rice s every M on­ day thru T hu rsd ay from 9 p.m. to M idnight. S o roll in, roll som e strikes, roll som e gutters, or just roll up to the bar. MON-THURS 9 PM-MIDNIGHT Applicants must pick Up application forms at the State Press office. Matthews Center North Basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. The deadline fo r receipt o f applications w ill be Thursday, N ovem ber 16 at noon. Bruce D .Itule Director, Student Publications Matthews Center, Room 133 Phone 965-5937 1100 E. APACHE • 967-1656 -A T T E N T IO N ALL ASU STUDENTS Would you like to... ★ ★ ★ ★ Meet new friends Exude enthusiasm for yourself, others & ASU Plan, organize and facilitate campus-wide evénts Go Out and Make A Difference Applications for the 1989-90 ASU Leadership Institute Team are available at Associated Students Room 208J in the MU For more information call John Giuliano, Leadership Institute Director at 965-3161 f Page 11 Monday, November 6 ,1989 State Press 5 it Ifm t tanm t $i ratm j 25 0 DRAFTS MONDAY: M o n d a y N ig h t F o o tb a ll 99° 'A lb. H am burgers 2 00 \ $ \ PITCHERS RURAL & APACHE Business research center wins award for publication excellence By GARETH HYNDMAN Contributing Writer The Center fo r Business R esearch at ASU has received the A U B E R 1989 Aw ard o f E xcellence in Publications fo r the center’s m onthly newsletter, “ Arizona Business.” A U B E R , the Association fo r U niversity B u sin ess an d E c o n o m ic R e s e a rc h , presented the aw ard a t its annual m eeting last month attended by representatives from university research centers from around the nation. A U B E R , form ed in 1947, is an association that d r a w s its m e m b e r s h i p fr o m universities that have business research centers that m eet sp ecific qualifications o f size and activity. ASU facu lty m em ber T im Hogan, director o f the Center fo r Business R esearch and execu tive ed itor o f A rizon a Business, attended the awards banquet in California ea rly in October. Hogan described winning the aw ard as som ething close to “ an Oscar at the Academ y Aw ards,” adding that he was surprised that his publication won the award. “ A lw ays in the past they (th e previous recipients) knew that they had won the aw ard before com ing (to the cerem on y),” H ogan said. H ogan said he had no k n ow led ge b eforeh an d th at “ A rizon a Business” had won the award. Hogan said he was im pressed that his publication w as able to win out over several o f the higher budgeted publications offered by other universities. The head of A U B E R ’s selection com m ittee said the decision was m ade “ in term s o f the one publication that did the best job o f doing what that publication had set out to do.” The publications w ere evaluated on a scale o f one to fiv e (p oor to excellen t) in four c a te g o rie s : Layou t/design /produ ction , writing/editing/com position, content and o vera ll quality. Judging w as done by A U B E R m em bers who a re considered experts in the fie ld o f business and academ ic publishing. A t the cerem ony com m em orating the occasion, Hogan was presented a plaque, which entitles the winning publication to display the A U B E R Seal o f Publication E xcellen ce fo r one year. Hogan accepted the aw ard on behalf of him self and his sta ff: Nan Beam s, editor; Jam es Dodson, associate editor; Sandy P alais, com puter graphics; and Diana H all and Rob Besett, editorial assistants. This is the firs t tim e “ Arizona Business” has won this aw ard in the 14 years o f the aw a rd ’ s h istory. E ach pu blication is allow ed to win the aw ard only once every fiv e years. “ Arizona Business” has been published in one form or another since 1953 when it started as a publication o f the ASU Bureau o f Business and Econom ic Research. When the Bureau w as split into the Centers fo r Business Research, Arizona R eal E state and Econom ic Outlook, the latter two o r g a n i z a t i o n s s t a r t e d th eir own p u b lication s, le a v in g the C en ter fo r Business R esearch to m ake “ Arizona Business.” Hogan said he considers the Center for Business R esearch a public inform ation outlet instead o f a data gathering extension o f state governm ent that m ost university business research centers can becom e, like the U n iversity o f Tennessee and the U niversity o f N ew M exico. ‘ ‘A ll they do is just gather inform ation fo r the state to be published in an annual abstract. They perform no rea l research.” The goal o f “ Arizona Business” is to present Arizona econom ic trends, surveys and indexes in a raw-data form at of graphs and chart analysis. Hogan and his sta ff try to avoid interpretation and forecasting, leavin g that to the Arizona R eal E state Center and Econom ic Outlook C rater, which often W rite articles fo r “ Arizona Business” and their own respective publications, “ Forum ” and “ Econom ic Outlook.” O f the 7,100 nationwide subscribers, the m a jo rity a re u n iversities and e v e ry politician associated with the State of Arizona. Banks and la rg e investm ent firm s that do business in Arizona w ill often have la rg e research divisions that w ill also ask fo r a subscription to the new sletter. Native American ‘codetalkers’ honored as world war heroes O KLAH O M A C IT Y (A P ) — The French governm ent honored som e forgotten heroes o f tw o w orld wars, the Oklahoma Indians who confused Germ an codebreakers by speaking over m ilita ry communications in their native languages. C hief H ollis Roberts o f the o f the Choctaw Nation and Kenneth Saupitty, chairm an of the Comanche Nation, received the Knight of the National O rder o f M erit m edals F r i d a y on b e h a l f o f t h e I n d i a n “ codetalkers.” E a ch a lso re c e iv e d , m uch to the m errim ent o f the m ostly Indian audience, the traditional kiss on each cheek from P ie rre M essm er, form er prim e m inister of France under President Charles D e Gaulle. The codetalkers got their start in W orld W ar I when an o ffic e r heard several Choctaws talking. They w ere quickly put onto; the communications lines to rela y orders and inform ation. C hoctaw , a ccord in g to the C oncise Columbia Encyclopedia, is a Muskogean language o f the Hokan-Siouan group — som ething not even the best-educated Germ an picks up in high school. Comanche is a Shoshonean language o f the AztecTanoan stock. T h e m ilita r y re c ru ite d C om anche codetalkers in W orld W ar II, but a form er soldier nam ed Schlicht B illy said he and ab ou t a h a lf-d o zen o f h is C h octaw comjmnions just sort o f d rifted into the communications area o f the A rm y. Register for ¿jiwiSffi) §im®ai§ ©@ajiKSi®3 W O M E N A N D J U D A IS M R E L IG IO N A N D E C O N O M IC JU STIC E Marcie Lee, Women’s Studies W ST 394 6:40-9:30 p.m. Monday Joel G ereboff, Religious Studies R E L 494 1598 1:40-4:30 p.m. Monday IN T R O D U C T IO N T O J U D A IS M Joel G ereboff, Religious Studies R E L 210 12:40 p.m. M W F A M E R IC A N J E W IS H H IS T O R Y Barton Lee, History H IS 270 3:15-4:30 p.m. T T H t M ODERN HEBREW Danny Ben-Gigi, Foreign Languages F L A 294 Elementary M odem Hebrew II 8:40 a.m. M T W T H F L A 294 Intermediate M odem Hebrew II 9:40 a.m. M T W T H F L A 394 Advanced M odem Hebrew 10:40 a.m. M T W T H For Further Information Call: 965-7255 or 967-7563 P a s c la M o n e ta Maie Pme November 6,1989 O utstanding professors h o n o red for a ca d e m ic achievem ents B y NtCKI CA R R O LL State Press It was a m eeting of the minds Sunday as the ASU Golden K ey Honor Society honored 10 outstanding facu lty mem bers at the organization’s annual reception. The professors w ere selected from m ore than 100 nominations based on the number o f votes they received from campus organizations, the number o f years they have served in their academ ic fields and their involvem ent in extracu rricu lar activities. “ It was a very hard decision to m ake,” said Golden K ey V ice President Lisa Swails. “ W e tried to get a broad representation o f the entire campus so that a ll students had someone representing them. “ They’re not the easiest, but w e think they’re the best.” Sw ails said Golden K ey w ill publish a book highlighting the professors’ accom plishm ents to distribute during spring registration. Education liaison R obert G ryder, who has taught at ASU for. 30 years, said he was speechless when he learned about his award. “ The students are gettin g better every yea r,” said G ryder, who helps place student teachers in the Dobson Center and Corona/Kyrene school districts. “ They continue to present d ifferen t challenges. They need som eone to listen to them m ore than in ea rlier years.” Econom ics professor Stephen H appell said he was honored to win the aw ard and that he tries to m ake his lectures m ore interesting fo r students. “ M ost of them com e in because it is a required course,” o m e o u t o f tjour» sriei vea d NEW WINDSHIELD NO COST TO YOU!* 748 W. University, Mesa | (Extension & U niversity) I * $ ¡5* » 827-1262 ' » I ! 1 a * 1 1 1 th e Ç t o t e P vess. $900 FREE RENT FREE BIKE ‘ If y o u r co m p re h e n siv e is betw een $0-$100, we w ill w aive 1 y o u r d e d u ctib le and c o lle c t the rest from y o u r in su ra n ce I carrie r _ y 0 y pAY N O T H IN G! — *■, v\ i f f ® H appell said. “ But I ’d lik e to think most o f them lea ve there likin g it.” Happell, who is starting an honors program in the C ollege o f Business, said he supports groups like Golden K ey because they recognize students’ academ ic excellence. “ It ’s im portant fo r honor students to receive as much recognition as our athletes,” H appell said. Other facu lty m em bers who w ere honored include: John Alcock, professor o f zoology; Suzanne Cook, associate professor o f m anagem ent; Thom as DeM assa, professor of e le c tric a l and com puter en gin eerin g; John D oebler, professor o f English; Anne Feldhaus, professor o f religious studies; D.G. K ehl, professor o f English; M aria Oparnica, professor o f English; and Robert Osterhoudt, professor of health and physical education. I 1 Y o u ’re a b ik e a w a y ... m O B LU XU R Y A P T ! A G EN ER O U S VA R IE TY O F A M E N IT IES & F E A T U R E S U n ive rsity A riz o n a S tate U n ive rsity ★ T w o S p ark lin g S w im m in g P o o ls & S p a s ★ V o lle yb a ll C o u rt A pach e ★ E x e rc ise R o o m ★ C lu b h o u s e with K itch en , G a m e R o o m , Etc, D o n ’t read th is unless... you want all you can eat pizza, salad, & pasta buffet. Everyday. Lunch 11-2 only $339 Dinner 5-8 only $ 3 " ★ C e n trally Lo c a te d L a u n d ry Facilities Private o r Sem i-p rivate E n try W ay M ill Only at ■ O n e g a n .% 894-1234 1 ^ PIZZA 2430 S o u th M ill A v e n u e S o u th e rn ★ W o o d B u rn in g F ire p la ce s ★ Frost-free R e frig e ra to r ★ D o u b le Insulated G la s s W in d o w s P lu s M a n y S u p e rstitio n Freew ay E n e rg y S avin g Features ★ D e sig n e r M ini B lin d s ★ T w o C o n te m p o ra ry C a rp e t S e le ctio n ★ Private Patio ★ O ptional: ★ W asher/D ryer ★ C a b le T .V . 1000 Sq. Ft. $595 to $625 ★ Microwave Oven ★ C e ilin g Fan [x * oc B ro a d w a y IN D IV ID U A L H O M E S F E A T U R E S ★ •o » > < ★ Reserved C o v e re d P arkin g & B ic y c le R a ck s Close to A rizona State University & Shopping To see: Call Manager, Ed 968-6322 (Som e restrictions apply.) College Culture State Press Page 13 Monday, November 6,1989 The Usual Suspects H o r o w it z d i e s RUSSIAN-BORN P IA N O virtuoso V ladim ir Horowitz died Sunday o f a sud­ den heart attack in his Manhattan home. He was 85. He was considered by m any to be the greatest concert pianist.. Horowitz em igrated from Russia in 1928 and played his first Am erican concert seven days later. His career spanned the century and he was a model for generations o f aspiring pianists. H orowitz, the highest-paid classical pianist in the w orld, tw ice played the W hite House — once fo r H erbert H oover and again fo r Jim m y Carter, on the occasion of the pianist’s 50th anniver­ sary of his a rriva l in the United States in 1978. Carter referred to the man as a “ na­ tional treasure.” E lv ir a a n d t h e d e a d ra c c o o n s A N IM A L R IG H TS A C TIV ISTS in P itt­ sburgh say they’re going to keep a fulllength raccoon coat won in an E lvira lookalik e contest. Th e People fo r the E thical Treatm ent of Anim als, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group, plans to use the expensive coat as a prop fo r national education program s it conducts. Chantal Hoffm an, a special projects assistant fo r the group, said the coat would be used to show how m any anim als w ere trapped and killed in order to m ake it. Jeanie Brown, a 38-year-old anim al rights activist, won the coat in the E lvira look-alike contest last weekend at N ikki’s nightclub in Plum Borough, using a costume donated by E lv ira (Cassandra Peterson) herself. Peterson, an anim al rights supporter, isn’t a big fan o f N ikki’s, which has recent­ ly com e under fire from anim al-rights groups apparently for givin g aw ay deadanim al prizes such as the coat. The club’s owner declined to estim ate the value o f the coat, saying only that it cost m ore than Krista G riffin, who owns the University and Valley Art dollar theaters, says the new distribution policies o f certain filin com panies may cause theaters to go bankrupt. B y FRANCINE STAHL. State Press , $1,000. s f p ! ‘Three Penny’ minus one W H EN TH E B R E C H T-W E ILL m usical “ Three Penny O pera” plays on Broadway this Weekend, rock star Sting (to som e ~ critics’ chagrin) w ill be there as M ack the K nife, but his leading lady, Maureen M cGovern, is not on the boards. M cGovern, who plays P o lly Peachum in the musical, has been out o f the show since Oct,’ 27 with a broken blood vessel in her vocal cords. Th e show has been in preview s and is o fficia lly opening Sunday. She is expected back in the m usical in about a week. U ntil then, M cG overn’s role w ill be played by her understudy, Nancy Bingham , said P ete Sanders, a spokesman fo r “ Three Penny O pera.” “ Three Penny O pera,” is based on the underworld o f V ictorian England. Sting plays Macheath, a nasty fellow nicknamed M ack the K n ife because o f his penchant for, w ell, knives. The production opened recently to poor review s in Washington. S a tu rd a y a t th e h o s t p it a l IN JA K A R T A , IN D O N E SIA — w hile P rin ce Charles was lounging about with President Suharto, his w ife Princess Diana spent Saturday at a leprosy hospital, vistin g patients. The Indonesian o fficia ls that accom ­ panied Diana w ere very pleased with her gesture and kindness. The hospital cares fo r about 2,000 patients su fferin g from Hansen’s disease, historically called leprosy. M ore than 1,000 Indonesians crowded the hospital to see her. Dr. Broto W asisto, an Indonesian health o fficia l, called her action “ a great exam ­ ple to a ll o f us” not to be a fra id o f people with leprosy, a disease that does not spread easily. Classifieds Page 18 CLASSIFICATIONS: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10 11. 12. 13. 14. 15 16 State P m a Monday, November 6,1989 Announcements Autos for Sate Trucks for Sate Motorcycles for Sale Bicycles for Sale Furniture for Sate Tickets for Sale M iscellaneous for Sate Computers Real Estate for Sale Apartments for Rent Townhomes/Condos Homes tor Rent Rental Sharing Roommate Services Business Opportunities LINER AD R ATES: 17. Help Wanted 18. Instruction 19 Jewelry 20. Free Lost/Found 21. On-Campus 22. Personals 23. Pets 24. Restaurants/Bars 25. Services 2 6 .Transportation 27 Travel 28. Typing/Word Processing 29. Wanted 30. Adoptions 31. M iscellaneous 15 words or less: $3.00 per day for 1-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 10 + days 15* each additional word The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. MSI 965-6731 HOW TO P LA C E A CLASSIFIED AD: In P erson: 8 Cash, Check (with guarantee card), VISA or MasterCard. W e're located in the lower level of Matthews Center, room 46H. O ffice hours are 8 a m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. You can also place your ad at the North M U Information Desk (fall and spring semesters only), between the hours of 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m, Mon.-Fri. r B y MaH: Send your ad (with payment) to: Sfafe Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Rm 15 Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 B y Phone: 965-6731 Payment with VISA/M C only. $6 minimum on all phone orders. WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? HOW TO CO RRECT OR CA N CEL YOUR AD: Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). Liner ads must be canceled before noon, 1 day prior to publication. No refunds will be given. Classified display ads can begin 2 d a y s after they are placed (if placed before 10 a m ). Ads may run for any length of time. Canceled ads will be credited to your account. Sorry, no refunds. A d v ertisin g P olicy: The State Press reserves the right to edit or reject arty advertising copy submitted. State P re ss Errors: Check your ad the R R S T day it runs. Ca ll 965-6731 with any corrections b efore noon. The State P re ss is only responsible for the first day the ad runs incorrectly. Corrected ads will be extended ohe day. Changes called in after the first day will not qualify for a make-good. Custo m e r Errors: Corrections must be made before noon. Compensation will not be given for customer error. ANNOUNCEMENTS AUTOMOBILES TICKETS REAL ESTATE APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING B U SIN ES S M AJO R S: Have your one page resumes distributed to Fortune 500, Free! Call Mike, 969-2099. BEA U TIFU L 1982 tan Cadillac Cimarron. Runs like new! Loaded, one of the few 5-speeds left! Must soli! $4,150 or best offer! 921-4026. 1 W A Y ticket to Palm Beach, Florida for D e ce m be r 22nd, 1989, $175. C a ll 784-8220. 2 B E D R O O M condos, Papago Park Village, $575 to $700/month. Bob Bullock. Realty Executives, 998-2992. I'LL P A Y half your deposit and $200 rent rebate. 926 E ast Spence. 9665630. M A LE /F EM A LE R O O M M AT E needed in house. $250 plus Vi utilities. Brand new home, very very clean. M ust see! 892-0492 F O R SA LE : 2 tickets to New Jersey. Leave 2:10, arrive Newark 11:41 on 21 Novem­ ber O nly $97. Call 894-9607, ask for Scott. V E R Y LO W down, beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath Tempe townhome. Too many extras. N o qualifying, must see! 966-6310. M U ST S E L L, plane ticket to England, round trip, 12/23 to 1/8. $580/offer. 439-8630. TOWNHOMES / CONDOS__________ RO UN D TR IP TICKET, Phoenix to San D ie g o , T h a n k s g iv in g w e e k e n d , 11/23-11/26. M ake an offer. C all 829-7415. 2 B ED RO O M , 2 bath, washer/dryer, refrigerator, dishwasher, pool. C lose to A S U at Papago Park Village, Curry/ Col lege. Ready to move in. $600/month. Call P hil or Patty at 6*1-5550, 947-7132: D O N’T FO R G E T your Sweetie’s Birthday. Send a balloon boquet. 273-9710. FASHION M O D E LS needed. Call Linda at (602) 242-7879 for more information. HANG-GLIDE! Our gently sloping man­ made training hill. S afe and exciting. Fly all day. W indsports 897-7121. H AR VAR D B U S IN E S S School wants you! Proven tecniques for acceptance to a top ranked M B A program. For more informa­ tion; send self-addressed stamped enve­ lope to: Business Success, Department 103, P .O . Box 1044; Qrem . Utah 84059-1044. C H E V Y C A P R IC E Classic, 1979. A real gem, runs great, moving to Japan in 6 weeks. M ust sell! $900/offer. 968-1807. SÌLL IT. 1 RO UN D TR IP Ticket from Phoenix to New York City, 11/9, return 11/14. Must sell!! $l50/best offer. Please call Jeff at 921-8133. LIFE IN SU RAN CE ideal for students. Term life insurance at reasonable rates. Call Manny Ellsworth, 275-3410. M ODEL SEA R C H Screening 369-6618. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE_________ M a g a z in e — F re e RETIRED U SU couple from Logan, Utah will house sit or rent furnished apartment in Tempe January and February. House exchange possible. C a ll November 6-8, 942-8430 evenings. SAFARI R ESO RT , Scottsdata/Camelback Road, offers $49 Sundevil Rate for ASU fans. Call, 945-0721. B eginning W ednesday, N ov. 1, 1 9 8 9 , th e M easles C lin ic at Stu­ dent H ealth w ill h ave n ew hours. T h e n ew hours w ill be: M on d ay, W ed n esd ay ■ & T h u rsd ay fro m 8 a.m .-N oon & 1-4 p.m . F R E E NAIL demonstration Of a new natural nail bonding product you can do at home in minutes! N o more destroyed nails with acrylics or glue-ons! N o more high costs for fill-ins and repairs! F o r more information, can Denei, 831-5366. MOTORCYCLES 1961 H O N DA CM400. Very tow miles. Excellent condition. Many extras. Must se«! $475/best offer. 829-9017. 1964 KAW ASAKI G P Z 750, top condition! Corbin seat, fairing, custom grips, supertrapp. $2,000/best offer. Chris- 464-2514. 1968 HO N D A Hurricane 600. Black and grey, flawless condition. 2,200 miles. $3,700. Ron. 838-6977. 1976 O LD SM O B ILE engine great, high mites, ugly, reliable. $600 or best offer, R ob 966-3254 1979 M U STAN G , great AM /FM stereo New battery, must seK. Leaving town. $1,295. C a ll Lon, 345-8709. 1980 M G B Roadster, maroon, black top and interior. Mint. 35,000 miles, $3,500. 991-0329. 1980 S U B A R U DL. blue, looks great, excellent mileage, runs perfect. Must sell, $1,450. Call 990-8045. 1981 D O D G E Aries $600/best offer. New tires $300 sterio included. Runs good. C all Alex 481-9599 1984 PO N TIAC Sunbird, turbo, fuel injected, new transmission, new interior, low miles. $3,400 negotiable. 274-2467. 1984 VW Cabriolet, W olfsburg edition, air conditioning, 5-speed. 54,000 mites, new tires, clean. $6900. 967-2647. 1988 M AZD A 323 hatchback air condition­ ing, AM /FM cassette, tinted windows, under warranty, $5800/offer 921-4355. U N B E L I E V A B L E !! N O R M A L lo o king sunglasses that allow you to see behind. Ideal for riding bicycle. Send $9.95 to the Juggernaut Company, 1309 East North­ ern, suite 904, Phoenix, Arizona 85020. '85 HO N DA Elite 250. Runs great. $750. M ust sell. 276-7886, Bifl, leave message. C Y C LE /S C O O T E R Insurance. Low rages, monthly payments, near ASU. Free quota­ tions, c a ll Phoenix Insurance Agency, 829-3070 BICYCLES AUTOMOBILES H E R P È S , SH IN G LE S, cold sore “break out etemination" tape. Proven effective. Confidential. For more information, Reve* Center, Box 40781, Tempe, Arizona 85274. YO U CAN SELL JUST ABO UT A N Y T H IN G W IT H A STATE PR ESS C LA SS IF IE D ... B E N O TTO 800 12-speed. Shimano aero components, m avic strapless pedate. Great shape! $300 Jo h n 820-5282. BIKES, W H Y pay more? Moving super sate, used bikes, new bikes. ’8 6 '8 9 models. Discount for cash. Bicycle Store, 1034 East Lemon. 966-6070. C O M M O D O R E U S E R S buy 1 get 1 free. 300 programs priced under $8. Great gift idea too! For Free Catalog: Original Programs, P.O Box 14801 Reading PA. 19612 G O V E R N M E N T H O M E S from $1. U Repair. A lso tax delinquent properties. Call 805-644-9533. ext. 237 for current repo list. IBM C O M P A T A B L E PCXT, 640K ram, hard d isk, m onitor, 101 keyboard, M SD O S. $600/best offer. 730-1422. IBM C O M P A T A B L E XT-turbo, 640K, 20M B, 5 Ve DD, monitor, printer, modem software, game board, more. $ 1,10Q/offer. 990-2495 COMPUTERS '81 TO YO TA Ce lica convertible, ; red, 4-speed. Air-conditioning, radiate, mags, stereo, alarm. Runs great, must seK. $4,995. 947-4904 Turbo/XT Computer 640 KB Memory . 2 Floppy Drives Amber Monitor Hercules Graphics 10 Disks, Paper 12-Month Warranty Everything you need in one package . Systems from $489 Pro Image Com puters 1000 E. Apache, #110 Tem pe 021-1129 HOMES FOR RENT S M A L L 2 bedroom house, 5 blocks from cam pus. Graduate couple preferred. No pets. $400, water paid. 967-4059. APARTMENTS 2 B E D R O O M 4-plex available now, $249. Furniture available. 9665596. B E A U TIFU L L A R G E 1 and 2 bedrooms C lose to A S U with microwave, ceiling fans, basic cable, pool, d u b house and much more. Rancho L as Palm as, 1249 East Spence. 829-9607 for special. B E A U TIFU L L A R G E 1 and 2 bedrooms. W alk to A SU, pool, laundry room. 1 block south of University on 8th street. Cape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for special. O N E B E D R O O M furnished, $230 plus utilities, pool laundry facilities. Studio, $250 including utilities. Rental sharing, $210 induding utilities, furnished,, colored T.V. 1339 South Sunset Drive (one block west of Rural, one block South of Apache), apartment 9. 1st M onth’s Rent REPOSSESSED V A & HUD HOMES available from government from $1 without credit check. You repair. Also tax delinquent foreclosures. Call 1-805-682-7555 ext. H-2003 for repo list your area. (Call 7 days a week.) COMPUTERS JUST GOT EASIER! ONLY $995 H A Y D E N S Q U A R E deluxe condo. 3 bedroom tri-level. Available January 1. Reserve now. 940-0518. W alk to A S U , quiet T bed­ room, A/C, pool-side apts. $270/month Apartments for rent $260°° and up 966-8838 Dot Matrix Printer Surge Suppressor Printer Cable MS-DOS 3.3 Word Processor, Spreadsheet, DOS Tutorial Full Support 8 9 4 -2 5 3 8 N E E D 2 Female roommates immediatley to share spacious 3 bedroom townhouse close to A SU . Washer, dryer, fireplace and pool. Must be clean responsible and like to have fun. $210 plus 16 utilities call Jenny. 9667699 NO N -SM O KIN G R O O M M A T E wanted for 2,000 square feet house. Washer/dryer, microwave, etc. $210/month plus utilities. 8366743. RENTAL SHARING BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES $165/MONTH RENT! Fem ale to share one bedroom apartment. Pools, jacuzzis, sa u n a s, b a lco n y , c o v e re d parking. 921-8839. IF Y O U are looking for an opportunity that will allow you to earn an exceptional large income while helping people call1 T.J.;v 821-9481, Fendy, 431-1134 3 B L O C K S to ASU. Graduate student wants quiet Christian roomates. Large, lovely home, 2 bedrooms available now. Share bath, 2 seperate phone lines. $175/month % to V* utilities. 967-4267 leave message. NATIO N AL C O M P A N Y expanding to Arizona. This ground floor opportunity is for those' motivated for success. High com m issions paid weekly. Call 837-9365. D E P E N D A B L E F E M A L E non-smokef, share 2 bedroom, 1W bath apartment. $217 plus Vfc utilities. Quiet complex, convenient location. AvaHabte^immediately. Heather, 921-8419. F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R to share 2 bedroom/2 bath condo. Own room/bath. Nicely furnished, washer/dryer. $210 plus V i utilities. Lynn, 894-8189. F E M A L E N O N -SM O K E R own room/bath at Quadrangles by Decem ber 1 or Spring semester $25Q/month plus utilities. Call Teresa 921-3523. F E M A L E RO O M M A T E to share beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo.-Close to ASU. Fireplace, security, pool, washer/dryer. $235/month, own room. 9663051. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed: Steadily employed non-smoker. $225/month. Call 420-0221, leave number, press no. key. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed for spring. Non-sm oker $250 plus V» utilities. Furn­ ished, own room and bath. Call Debbie/ Gina, 731-4751. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E non-smoker, to share large 2-bedroom condo. Pool, washer/dryer. $160 p lu s % utilities. 921-2261. L A R G E 2 bedroom, own room/bath. Pool, covered parking, all amenities. Very clean and roomy with vaulted ceilings. $250 plus V i SR P. 1 mile to A SU , College and Broadway. M ichael, 967-3741, leave message. G e o rg e A n n Apts. 7 1 JBUG, excellent interior/exterior. Good T ir e s , r e b u ilt e n g in e / lo w m ile s . $2,200/offer 966-5621. SEIZED C A R S , trucks. 4wheelers, TVs, stereos, furniture, com puters by DEA, FBI, IR S and U S Customs. A v a ila b le your a re a now. C a ll 1-805-682-7555 ext C-1669 (Call 7 days a week.) FO R L E A S E , 2 bedroom, 1 bath townhouse near A SU . $425/month. Evenings, Chris, 838-2646, R e d Carpet-Weary, 968-3414, $99 REAL ESTATE C O M M O D O R E 128 c o lo r m onitor, keyboard, two hard drives, printer, modem, joysticks, 300 disks, .,$600. 921-8839. Studios, 1,2, & 3 bed U P T O one month free! One, two bedrooms, $330 to $400. Sunrise Apart­ ments, 1014 East Spence, 9685947. COMPUTERS ASU Area HELP WANTED TIRED . O F working (dr someone else? Own your own business with breakthrough nail product! Earn up to $50K a year, with under $200 in v e stm e n t Caff Denei, 831-5366 HELP w a n t e d ; APPLICATIO N S NO W being received, piano player (musical technology), female vocalist (Spanish speaking skill helpful), male vocalist, for ja zz Musical, part-time employment immediately. By m ail P.O. Box 39713, Phoenix. Arizona 85069. C R U IS E S H IP 8 N O W HIRING for spring, Christm as and next sum­ mer breaks. M any positions. Call 1-805-682-7555 ext, S -1 114 (Call 7 days a week.) ★ EXTRA MONEY ★ Is nice, but you can help people too; E a rn $120 + a m o n th S A F ER . F A S T E R PLA S M A DONATION O N LY AT ABI C E N T E R S .D U E T O AUTOMATED PROCEDURE. $5 bonus to new donors on first donation with this ad. Ask about additional bonuses. (MondaySaturday). U n iv ersity P la sm a C e nter Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 S; Rural Rd. Tempe 968-6139 The Fountains TELEMARKETING PART-TIME •Newly redecorated •Vertical blinds •Designer carpet •4 spariding pools •Laundry facilities •Great for rental sharing •Walk to ASU •1st Months Rent $99 Supplement Your Income or Work Your Way Through College •D ay & Night Positions Available •Flexible part-time & full-time positions •$8 .7 5 per hour (avg. earnings) •Close to ASU (plus deposits) U niversity O ffice P laza t,V; N 1000 E A p ach e Blvd. 150 yards east o f R ural Road O p e n D aily 9 to 5 U tilitie s In clu d ed 1028 E. Orange 967-0489 Call Sarah 967-0066 (After 11 a.m .) Equal Opportunity Employer State P r w Page 19 Monday, November 6,1989 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PERSONALS SERVICES WANTED A A A A R E S E A R C H interviewers for Tempo M arketing research firm Absolutely no ••M s. Flexible evening/weekend hours. Start at $4/hour. Rapid raises. O ’Neil Associates- Susan. 967-4441. F R I D A Y / R E C E P T I O N I S T fo r a u d io Company. Secretarial, data entry skills a must. 969-8660. PART-TIME. L A R G E S T company of its kind in the Southwest. Afternoon and evening shifts available. Pleasant working conditions. C a ll M r. Wellington at 381-0477. M C R E YN O LD S- C O O L! Awesome! Hottt! Stud! Oh, and by the way, Happy 21st you Big Slug! May you never tip over in a gondola. Love, your infamous L.L. E L E C T R O L Y S I S - P E R M A N E N T h a ir removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discount. C a ll for more informa­ tion, 969-6954. W ILL P A Y big $$ for A S U - U of A Football game. Need 4 tickets together. CaH Richard, 965-8297 or 784-4724. PHI SIG S, your coaches are so proud of you! W hat a helleva team! TriDelt coaches. TRANSPORTATION ATTE N TIO N A N Y Fraternity, Sorority, or Student group who would Hkè to partici­ pate in a lucrative fundraiser before C hristm as Break. Individuals who would lik e extra spending money can also inquire. W e have the ideal holiday gift for A S U students, employees, and fans. Only one group and/or a few individual reps can be used. W e don’t offer free gifts for inquiring, only the opportunity to earn up to $20,000 like groups in Tucson, and Cham paign, Illinois have done. These groups will be happy to verify their results for you- If interested, please call 226-6864 C O R K ’ N C L E A V E R accepting applica­ tions for evening cocktail waitress and evening hostess. W ill train. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 2-5 pm or by appointment: 5101 North 44th Street (44th and Camelback). 952-0585. Personality a n d c o n c e rn w ith a p p e a ran ce are important. D R A FTIN G STUD ENT: Bishop LO F G lass C enter’s is looking for a drafting student to sk e tch several sche m a tic drawings. P a y m e n t d e p e n d s o n e x p é rie n c e . Contact: Steve Nelson, 267-0561 between 7:30-4:30. — — \ SALES REP NEEDED Earn monthly income plus usage fees on financial package.. Serious inquiries only! ■ . '• . v 997-1124 D R A M A STUD EN TS: Positions available for Youth Teatro Program. Call 839-2926, L isa Bazan. 5-10 hours weekly. E A R N U P to $400 weekly. Distribute flyers, need car. Part-time or full-time, your hours. 280-9913E A S Y W ORK! Excellent pay! Assemble products at home. Ca ll for information 504441 -8003, ext 7836 E X P L O S IV E C ALIFO RN IA Company look­ ing for people in Arizona. Earn substantial part-time, full-time income. People desir­ ing sales position and entrepreneurial m inded preferred. Ca ll 963-5539 or 391-1851. FU LL/P A R T TIME. Needs management for growing company. N o experience, wHI train. Hours to fit yoùr schedule. Call 897-2819 Ben. G O V E R N M E N T JO B S , $15,400-k$72,500. Now hiring, excellent benefits'. Call 1-312-742-1142, ext. J-9162A. IN STRU CT O RS N EED ED , Tap and JaXz dance, self-defense, gym coach. Tower P laza MSH, 946-9493. JANITORIAL PART-TIME evenings, flexi­ ble hours, Friday-Saturday nights off!! Bonuses, and advancement! Scottsdale and M esa locations. Call 945-4994. Eggiiigton’s An exciting breakfast and lunch restaurant is accep ­ tin g a p p lic a t io n s fo r w aitress positions. A pply in person after 2 pm 1660 S . Alm a S ch o ol Rd. Mesa LIKE M O VIES? S e e all you want for free when you join the O n e ’ Capri staff. Now hiring for all staff positions. Flexible scheduling makes this job perfect for students. 2323 East Cam elback Road. O N -C A M P U S S A L E S Rep. W e are looking for an entrepreneur-type, responsible student interested in making money sell­ ing Ray-Ban Sunglasses. O nly energetic, serious applicants send resume to: Kevin Green Solar Specs Company, 1173A Second Avenue, Suite 155, New York, New York 10021. P A R T-TIM E C O M M IS S IO N sa le s at Robinson's P V mall, M en’s shoe depart­ ment. Sales experience preferred. Call 996-0990, ext. 3528 Part-time jobs: • 24-hrs per week • Evening hours • Weekly pay T O P W A G ES •Cornerstone Mall SAM E W EEK PAY •Temporary •Permanent •Full Time •Part Time 966-0709 SE C R E T A R Y /R E C E P T IO N IS T . Typing, organizational, and phone skills neces­ sary. Excellent Chance for growth. Apply in person, Financial Associates, 9832 North Hayden Road, Suite 106. ST U D E N T J O B S Full-time. $300/week; p art-tim e, $150/w eek. O p e n in g s in customer service and retail. Scholarships available. Call 10 am to 3 pm 242-9677. ST U D Y AID wanted. Advanced knowledge in Computer Science preferred. $10/hour. 945-2003 evenings. S U M M E R J O B S outdoors, openings! National parks, crews. Send stamp for free East Wyoming, KalispeN, M T over 5,000 forests, fire details. 113 59901. TH E VINE Tavern is taking applications for floormen and cooks, part-time/full-time. R e fe re n c e s re q u e ste d . A p p ly 11-4 Monday-Friday, 801 E. Apache. location Call today, 968-4457 7 Failure Analysis Associates, Failure Analysis Associates, Inc, a national engi­ neering and scientific consulting firm that spe­ cializes in the analysis and prevention of engi­ neering system and product failures, is seeking engineers with outstanding acdemic and profes­ sional credentials for three openings in our Pho­ enix, Test and Engineering Center. Our center is a 160 acre proving ground with extensive fabrica­ tion, vehicle preparation, instrumentation, data acquisition, and data reduction capabilities. These facilities provide the capability for design­ ing and conducting a broad range of tests that support our engineering services. Our present openings are for two Mechanical Engineers and an Instrumentation Engineer. Failure Analysis Associates, Inc., offers a com­ pensation and benefits package that exceeds industry standards, including three weeks vaca­ tion, a company-funded pension, and medical, dental, and life insurance. A Failure Analysis Asso­ ciates, Inc, representative will be on campus Tues­ day. November 7. If you are interested in talking to us please contact Career Services at 965-2350. P R E M IE R E ’89- This year’s 3rd annual Homecoming Balt! Featuring ritual at Tem pe Mission P alm s Nov.9th 9pm to am. Tickets on sale for $5 on the maH! Don’t m iss this year’s production! 1 P R E M IE R E '89 have a great time at A S U 's 3rd annual Homecoming. D ance to music by ritual from 9pm to 1am at Tempe M ission Palm s November 9th! Tickets $5SIG M A N U Whitefeet, in black and white, it is d e a r the tradition lives on...and in thé end the best chapter will shine in the archive of history. The A TO Blackfeet. § ♦ ♦ ♦ t i ♦ i ♦ ♦ la v a ■♦ A ▼ ' from two old folks ♦ ♦ who love you! ♦ Happy Birthday SIG M A PI Randy A . Congrats Dude! Hope that the rest of the year goes smooth. Delta Maalox. T O T H E ladies of Delta Sigm a Theta: Remember, the power of love starts with you!!! ’ ■. ' : ; / '' T R A C Y C. Keep going baby! Graduation isn’t that far away. I love you very much. Delta Maalox. N E W HO TD O G restaraunt across from Sky Harbor Airport- weekday lunch hours. 244-1022 GUARANTEED ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ JO BS AVAILABLE NOW R E S T A U R A N T D E L I V E R Y d riv e r s needed, South Scottsdale location. Flexi­ ble hours after 11 am. 423-0095. S T O C K Y A R D S R E S T A U R A N T now hiring dinner hostess' and lunch waitresses. Apply in person, 5001 E ast Washington. $5.50 PER HOUR for dependable receptionists, clerical, or data entry personnel. R E D ROBIN now hiring experienced line pantry pre positions. Apply at 1539 North Scottsdale Road, Monday-Friday, 9 am-11 am, 2 pm-4 pm. T.V. PROGRAMMING/marketing trainee, Monday-Friday, 2:30-5 pm. Numbers oriented person with Apple Macintosh skills. 894-6768. V A LE T PA RKIN G attendants, day Shifts 11:00am-3:00pm and 11:00am-5:00pm. Night shifts 5:30pm to do se. Full-time and part-time. Must work holiday season and must have clean driving record. Call for appointment 861-9384. American Valet and Limosine Company Incorporated. A L L G R E E K S : Do you went to get involved in Greek week? If so, please com e to the first committee meeting November 8th at 9:30 pm in P V Main cafeteria. A L L G R E E K S : come to the bash that will change the way Greek party forever! With Ton-def live. This Friday at the Lambda C hi Alpha house. A-PHI LARA- yee haw! Hayrides under a starry blue night. How romantic! Suds, suaharos, sidewinders, and you! What could be better? M uchas Gracias, Dan the Dett man. ATTENTION FR A TE R N IT Y and sorority pledges: Get involved! Com e to the Greek week Committee meeting November 8th, 9:30 pm in P V Main cafeteria!!! HO M ECO M IN G ‘89-A salute to Holly­ wood! Com e see the crowning of A SU 's. K ing and queen on November 9th, 9 pm to 1 am at Sheraton Tem pe M ission Palms! M O C K RO CK: Last call for bands. Alan at 820-5120, will help you get set to perform. A nd, while we’re at it- M ock Rock- Mock Rock- M ock Rock« M ock Rock- Mock Rock- M ock Rock- M ock Rock- Mock Rock, 8 pm, Wednesday, November 8. S P E N D 8 weeks in Spain, Spring 1990. Share American culture with teachers and students. Contact International Internship Programs, 1-800-869-7056 for details. ST U D Y IN Japan th is summer. Learn about Japanese culture, business and society. Live with a host family. Other special features. Ca ll International Intern? ship Programs, 1-800-869-7056 for details. TRI SIG M A Balloon Ascension Friday, November 10th. Buy your balloons on Cady MaH by the fountain. O ne dollar per balloon. Prizes for balloons traveling the farthest! $1.65 AN D up. Professional word proces­ sor and former English teacher. Laser printer. Bob or Claudia, 964-6012. TUI, H E Y Babey! Happy 2 years! I love you 730 times more than the day we met! No reason to quit now. It’ s time to celebrate! Forever-n-jazz, Scott. VINNI, H A P P Y Birthday my little seashell!! Y o u're the best!! I love you! Leedy Bear. RESTAURANTS/ BARS ATTENTION FRATERNITIES, sororities! Throw your next social gathering with E d ip se D.J. productions: Very reason­ able. 461-3655 PERSONALS SKI UTAH , fully furnished condo at base of mountain. 20 minutes to 7 major resorts. Sleeps 6, fireplace, jaçquzzi. Great loca­ tion. Ail dates available, $700/week or $120 a night. Call (801) 261-5543. 34 A E R O B IC IN S TR U CT O R S certification workshop by National Aerobics Training Association. W eekend of December 1, Mesa. 963-9415 FO U N D . W ATCH in M U . Please caH and identify. 946-2223, leave message. F L Y F O R less, discount travel. Domestic and international, package tours to the Holy Land/lsrael. 491-0501. $1 50 A A A W ord Processing/Laser printer. years experience. Theses, dissertation, A P A specialization. Marion 839-4269. SERVICES EREE LOST/EOUND F L Y ANYTIM E continental U S A $350 roundtrip. Leave today! NW U S A $250! A laska-five weeks notice $450. Other destinations. W e also buy transferable coupons! 968-7283. band field. INSTRUCTION C A S H PAID, jewelry, of aH kinds, induding gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. MiH Ave, Tempe Center. 968-6074. TRAVEL TYPING/WORD PROCESSING W AITRESS/CASH IER, part-time. Apply in person at Pete's 19th Tee, 1405 North Mill Avenue (Rofiing Hills Golf Course). C A S H FO R gold, diamonds. MiH Avenue Jewelers, 414 S Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. A A A DRIVEAW AY. Free cars to most major cities. G a s allowances available. 21 or older. CaH 279-2000. then 4530. TRADITIONAL R IV A LR Y flag football gam e F *89— Si gma C h i pledges versus Sigm a Alpha Epsilon W AITER/W AITRESS and hostess needed immediately for part-time employment. Apply in person, Chopandaz, com er of Scottsdale Road and McKellips. JEW ELR Y ADOPTION $19.95 R E S U M E Special, 1 page compu­ ter typeset, laser printout with 20 white bond copies or 10 copies on select resume papers. A ll 816*11 ” . Dr. Copy, 1032 South T e rra ce . C a ll 433-4688 for w eekly specials. $2.00/PAGE. Q u ic k turnaround. Call Bob. 839-3305. A A A Q UALITY typing/word processing. $ 1.50. CaH Linda, 962-8075. A C C E N T S IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ read, editing, aU included. Q uick turn­ around. Call 894-6074. A KINKO ’S paper makes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, flyers. Self-serve Macintosh also. 933 East University. Call 966-2035, or 960 West University, CaH 921-0168. A P A /M LA E X P E R IE N C E D processing. Need it fast? 945-5744. typing/word Call Jessie, ADOPTION: A N empty bedroom in a loving financially secure home needs a newborn to fin it with hugging, loving, and joy. Let us help you. M edical expenses paid. CaH M ary and Marty collect, 203-443-6365. LO VIN G SO U T H ER N California couple (College Professor and Engineer) looking for baby to adopt. Financially secure, active, love children and animals. Friends, laughter, warmth to share with baby. W e can help with expenses. Ca li collect, Joe and Mary, (619) 943-7016. P R E G N A N T A D O P T I O N . A re y o u pregnant and considering^ adoption? Beware of "desperate," pleading couples who may make false promises. Ask your­ self why are they so desperate? Were they rejected by other adoption agencies? Do you know where you are calling when you caH "co lle ct" and how that state’s adop­ tion laws may vary from Arizona’s laws? Avoid legal com plications or even a disruption of the adoption by dealing with competent professionals who know and understand the adoption laws. With South­ west Adoption Center, if you would Uke, you can choose the family and even meet them, and be reassured that they are qualified to provide a loving, caring home for a child. G et the facts from a licensed adoption agency-Southw est Adoption Center, Inc. W e can provide professional and confidential help with housing, Counseling and medical arrangements. For help, Cali Southwest Adoption Center, iric. 234-Baby. W ANTED; B A B Y to love. Loving couple w ish to share their life and love with newborn. CaH Karen and Dan at 994-4181. W E KN O W adoption is not an easy choice. But if you have made that choice, please choose us to give your baby a lifetime of love, happiness, and security. We, in turn, will help your child to understand and respect this difficult decision. Expenses paid. CaH Rhea and Roger collect, (914) 6394158. MISCELLANEOUS CLASSIFIEDS WORK! V IS A O R M A S T E R C A R D ! Even if bankrupt or bad credit! W e guarantee you a card or double y o u r m o n e y b a c k . C a ll 1-805-682-7555 ext. M-1201. (Call 7 days a week.) MUSIC LO S T Y O U R love. Send a bandon boquet for $18 induding delivery. 273-9710. A S U AR E A. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Ca ll anytime. Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. EQ U IPM E N T S A LE : guitar amps, digital delay, power amp, wireless. Rock bottom prices: Leave message, 784-8073. B U L IM IA FLYIN G FIN G E R S offers typeset quality with a M ac II and laser printer. CaH Susan, 945-1500. TUTORS L E T T E R Q U A L IT Y word processing. Experienced with M LA, A P A , graduate school, manuscripts. Kathy, 830-8783. ENG LISH TUTO R, paper editing. Eight yearn professional Writing experience, A S U English degree. Rates negotiable. 829-6712. Private, confidential counseling. Insurance accepted. T h e re is a solution! G in n ie M onroe, A C S W 897-0444 468-3850 FR€€ RENTAL SERVICE Apartment Anders Tempe/Mesa 894-1391 N. W. Phoenix 841-5055 FULL SET $25.00 Rag.S45.00 SM00THC0AT is designed to create a very thin and natural sculptured nail, also perfect for natural nail overlays. • F ills without nipping, without fill lines, without nail damage. • You have the flexibility of wear­ ing your nail naturally, no polish, only buffed to a shine, will never yellow or become brittle like acrilic. • Smooth coat flexes with your natural hail to prevent lifting/w ill not pull away from edges, even after extended wear/made with strong bonding fiberglass resins. CACTUS NAIL COMPANY Scatttilile 423-5504 P R O F E S S IO N A L TYPIN G , $1.50 page, Baseline/Alma School in M esa, editing service available. C a ll 897-1038. P R O FE S S IO N A L W O R D P R O C E S S IN G of anything you need. Fast, accurate, reasonable. S atisfaction guaranteed. Central Phoenix, 274-5531. J A P A N E S E TUTURING , native speaker, ind ivid ual tutoring. Fo r details call 829-0558. PHOTOGRAPHY W O R D P R O C E S S I N G , s e c r e t a r ia l services. 23 years experience. Student discount. Southwest corner, Miller and Chaparral, 994-8145. J A S O N SILVER/KID-M AN Photoworks C o m m e rc ia l P h o to g ra p h y M o d e ls ’ , actors', and artists', portfolios. Profession­ al work. Reasonable rates. 946-2475. W O RD P R O C E S S IN G , Spellcheck. Fast, accurate service. Southern and Price vicinity. Phyllis, 820-7715. PORTRAIT PHO TO GFIAPH Y is out of fashion. Today, we want fashion photogra­ phy in our portraits. Custom Fashion Photography by appointment. You keep the negative. Prices start at $60. Call P ic tu re s Photography in Tem pe at 968-8610. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G for your typing needs. Fast turaround. C lose to ASU. $1.25/up. Transcription available. Roxan­ ne. 966-2825. W O RD P R O C E S S I N O C I .50 per page. Resumes, design, editing, & laser printing available. CaH 921-3770 evenings & weekends TYPING/WORD PROCESSING Job-Winning Resumés Whether you're starting from scratch or updating an old resumé, Creatif Strategies can help you design the perfect resumé. We help you with : • w riting • editing • layout • d e sig n • typesetting • paper & c o lo r se le ctio n • printinq 274-8180 Page 20 Slate P im Monda^Novemberò^WOT “HOW I RUDE $18^)00 FOR COLLEGE BY WDRKMG WEEKENDS.” A s soon as I finished Advanced Training, the Guard gave me a cash bonus of $2,000. I’m also getting another $5,000 for tuition and books, thanks to the N e w G I Bill. N ot to mention m y monthly A rm y Guard paychecks. T h e y ’ll add up to more than $11,000 over the six years I’m in the Guard. And if I take out a college loan, the Guard w ill help me pay it b a c k -u p to $1,500 a year, plus interest. It all adds up to $18,000—or more —for college for just a little of m y time. And that’s a hecK of a better deal than any car wash w ill g ive you. W hen m y friends and I graduated from high school, w e all took part-time jobs to pay for college. T h e y ended up in car washes and hamburger joints, putting in long hours for little pay. N ot me. M y job takes just one weekend a month and two weeks a year. Yet, Fm earning $18,000 for college. Because I joined m y local A rm y National Guard. T h ey're the people who help our state during em ergencies like hurri­ canes and floods. T h ey're also an important part o f our country’s m ilitary defense. So, since I’m helping them do such an important job, they’re helping me make it through school. T H E G U A R D CA N H ELP PU T Y O U T H R O U G H C O L LE G E , T O O . SE E Y O U R LO C A L R ECR U IT ER FO R D ETAILS, C A LL T O LL-FR E E 800-638-7600* O R M AIL TH IS CO U PO N . •In Hawaii: 737-5255; Puerto Rico: 721-4550; Guam: 477-9957; Virgin Islands (St. Croix): 773-6438; New Jersey: 800-452-5794. In Alaska, consult your local phone directory. © 1985 United States Government as represented by the Secretary of Defense. All rights reserved. M A IL TO : Arm y National Guard, P.O. Box 6000, Clifton, NJ 07015 ■ NAME ■ '' ' GM G F ADDRESS CITY/STATE/ZIP IIS C IT IZ E N AREA CODE r iY E S (IN O PHONE BIRTH DATE SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER OCCUPATION STU DENT Q HIGH SCHOOL G COLLEGE PRIOR M ILIT A R Y SERVICE G YES G N O BRANCH RANK AFM/MOS THÉ INFORMATION VOU VOLUNTARYV PROVCE MCLUOMO TOUR SOCIA«. SECUMTV NUMBER A*.l •£ USED FOR AECAUriRlGWJAPOSES ONLY VOUR SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER WALL BE USED TO ANALYZE RESPONSE TO IMS AO AUTHORITY OUSC S03 A 1CAJC06119 NP J