C opyright, State Press, 1989, Tem pe, Arizona Vol. 72 No. 61 Arizona State University's Morning Daily Wednesday, November 29,1989 MU Are alarm brings debate to early end By DARRIN HOSTETLER and MARTY SAUERZOPF State Press T u e sd ay ’s d ebate betw een Tim othy L e a ry and G uardian Angel founder Curtis Sliw a w as cut short by a fire alarm that forced officials to evacuate the M U , ending an event that began late due to overflow crowds trying to pack the Arizona Room. Approxim ately 300 people w ere turned aw ay from the Associated Students o f A SU Lecture Series event to avoid violating fire codes fo r the Arizona Room, one-third of which is unavailable fo r use because of M U construction. M any of the students pounded on the closed doors and began chanting, “ Let us in.” U niversity police officers inside the room shouted out at the crowd in the hallw ay, grabbing several people, ordering them to disperse and w arning them that they would be arrested if they failed to do so. Most of the crowd left when m ore officers arrived, but some remained, hoping that Leary would speak to them after the debate. “ The cops are dam n fascists,” said M ike Corm ak, a 24-year-old carpenter from M esa. “ Nobody w as going to get hurt — they didn’t have to threaten us. They’re just a bunch of glorified rent-a-cops.” O fficers on the scene declined to comment. A A re alarm forced the evacuation of the building an hour into the debate. There w as no indication of who pulled the alarm , but speculation ran ged from the G uardian A ngels to an angered student who w as denied adm ittance to the event. “ Somebody who didn’t get in pulled the fire alarm ,” said Joe Donalbain, a senior history m ajor. “ Somebody got pissed o ff.” “ B obcat,” one of the G uardian A ngels on hand, denied that any m em bers of the organization pulled the alarm , saying that if they did it, “ w e would no longer be A ngels.” Several students blam ed the police for setting Off the alarm to empty fe e overcrowded room and quell the students who w ere turned aw ay from the debate. “ It w as engineered by fee police,” said S al Caluccio, a junior political science m ajor. “ They thought it w as getting out of hand. Everyone is rather disgruntled feat fee auditorium is too sm all.” Freshm an D avid M agner said a U niversity police car Turn to Crowd, page 11. C u rat Sliwa, left, co-founder dt the citizens action group the Guardian Anggls, and Timothy Lgaiy.drug cultura guru, debate the legalization of drugs during a T uesday night presentation In the MU. About300 people were turned away from the debate to avoid violating lira regulations. The discussion ended when someone pulled a fire alarm In the building. Sliwa, Leary battle over drug war By NICKI CARROLL State Press A heated debate about fee legalization of narcotic drugs between G uardian Angel lead er Curtis Sliw a and drug culture guru Tim ofey Leary elicited explosive responses from fee students whoattended fee debate Tuesday night in the M U Arizona Room. L eary, leader o f the 1960s counterculture and form er H arvard professor, met w ife thunderous approval as he called for an end to fee Bush adm inistration’s drug w ar. “ It is insane that at this moment in w orld history, when w e should be m eeting to determ ine w hat new political structures w e want, fe a t w e should be sitting here discussing som e insane w a r on vegetables,” Leary said. Sliw a, founder of fee citizen action group opposed to drug use and crim e, received-light applause as he spoke about fee negative aspects o f fee country’s drug-ridden society. ‘ ‘The drug culture began system atically influencing our norm al life,” Sliw a said. “ Kick, instead of playing w ife Tonka trucks, w ere playing w ife bongs and other paraphernalia.” Approxim ately 1,200 people attended fe e debate and hundreds m ore w ere turned aw ay from fee event, which ended prem aturely because o f a fire alarm . L eary defended Ins position b y claim ing that legal drugs are causing most of fe e substance abuse-related deaths. “ The fatalities due to cocaine are about 3,000 a year com pared to 100,000 deaths from alcohol,” L eary said. “ And I guess w e have a problem w ife m arijuana,” he added, referrin g to reports claim ing fee d rug is harm less. “ W hy is m arijuana on fee list?” Sliw a said fe e m inority of drug users, w ho have no control over their abuse, m ake legalization im possible and im m oral. “ E ighty percent of those out there using drugs, and that includes alcohol, can handle it,” Sliw a said. “ Twenty percent of us out there get an insatiable appetite for drugs. Once it becom es system atic in their existence, Turn to DelMrt», page 9. Harris’ w ife defends consulting work for athletic departm ent Says she offered com pany services at discount rates By MARK CRISMON State Press Lenora B illings-H arris, the w ife of A S U ’s athletic director, said on Tuesday feat she offered her com pany’s consulting services to the U niversity’s athletic departm ent in an econom ical fashion and w ife the intent of being helpful. B illin g s -H a r r is , w h o o w n s E x c e l Developm ent System s, Inc., w as responding to charges levied in the local m edia that there was, a possible conflict of interest when she w as hired by Athletic Director Charles H arris’ top aides and paid by fe e U niversity to conduct sem inars fo r his em ployees. The issue concerns a four-day training sem inar B illings-H arris conducted fo r fee clerical staff in fee athletic departm ent in N ovem ber 1988 and a one-day refresher sem inar this year. H arris said his w ife provided a technical, professional service fo r which she is trained, at a below-m arket rate, and then contributed som e o f the money back to fee University. B illin gs-H arris, who has a m aster’s d e g re e in ad u lt education fro m the U niversity of M ichigan, has spent 15 years working in hum an relations and consultingrela ted fields fo r such organizations a s the U niversity o f M ichigan, G en eral M otors, Cigna Corp. and the U . S. governm ent. Ken Hein, owner of fee Hein M arketing Group, which perform s sim ilar services, said B illin gs-H arris’ price w as “ very in line,” even without the cash donations. P a t M essinger, an A T & T representative, said that com pany charges a price o f $70 H ey, O fficer: T h e End: W hat's it tike to be one of four women on A SU 's police force? Everything comes together for the B.F.A. senior dance concert. It has to. Page 10 per person fo r each 3& hour sem inar. Both o f B illin gs-H arris’ sem inars cost about $30 p er person, based on net cost to fee athletic departm ent. During N ovem ber 1988, four topics w ere covered, titled “ E ffective Communication,” “ P rid e , P ro fessio n alism and Im a g e ,” “ Im p ro v in g T e le p h o n e S k ills ’ ’ an d “ C ustom er S e rv ic e an d C on su ltative Selling.” M ike Alden, an assistant athletic director, said fee athletic departm ent uses A S U ’s personnel departm ent fo r som e training, but he did not talk to personnel about presenting these topics. C riticism a ls o has been leveled at B illings-H arris fo r approaching fee athletic departm ent w ife fe e intent o f selling her services. However, according to both B illingsH arris and Alden, the athletic departm ent approached her first. A fte r a T o u gh -d raft p ro p o sa l w a s Page 17 T ake Tw o: Head wrestling coach Bobby Douglas prom ires a ‘very good dual m eet' today. P age 19 Ostrom Harris subm itted to V ic to r C e g le s , c o lleg e development officer for the U A C , she w as referred to Alden. Alden subsequently hired her. “ The athletic department works more closely w ife the public than anyone else at the University,” Alden said. “ W e wanted to provide training to our clerical staff on how to handle disgruntled fans, how to be better Turn to Hwite, page 12. Today's weather: Mostly sunny, with winds from the northeast at 10 to 19 mph and a high In the upper 60s. Tonight: Mostly dear and breezy with a low in the mkMOs. Classifieds............................ 21 CoWsgs C ulture.................... ..........^ ....1 7 C o m te s ................................................... 18 Police Report...........................................1 6 8ports..v...VM.....^ .......u.......,..« .....;,.....o l9 S t a t e F ic t t W*rine$Hnv. November 99. 1989 The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Meetings •American Society o f Women Accountants (ASWA) Officer elections at 5 p.m . at the Spaghetti Company, 414 S. M iliA ve. •ASU Ski Devils will have a booth set up from 10 a.m . to 1:45 p.m. on the corner of Palm W alk and Tyler Mall. Information on upcoming events and trips will be available. W e will also be accepting deposits for Tahoe and Purgatory trips. •Arizona Council of Black Engineers and Scientists (ACBES) will meet at 5:30 p.m in TC, Room 317 to discuss canned food drive for the needy and stadium clean up for Dec. 3. •ASU Real Estate AssoCiation/Rho Epsilon will meet at 6 p.m. in BA, Room 217. Speaker from John Hancock and Associates. •ASU Flight Team will m eet at 6 p.m. in TCB, Room 201 to practice for the aircraft identification event. •The Commuter Club — Experiencing LHe Off Campus T he A •M .E.C h.A . (Movimiento Estudantii Chicano de Aztlan) “Balancing Family, Friends and Finals: The Ultimate Juggle” from 11:30 a.m . to 1 p.m . in the Student Services Building Amphitheater, •American Humanics Student Association will meet at 4:40 p.m. in the Architecture Building, Room 321. Tim Hayes of KPIMX-TV Channel 12 will speak on “ Media Relations.” Everyone welcome to attend. •ASU Gun Devil Shooting Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. For more information call 945-2893. •A.W .A .R .E. Test Taking Tips Workshop at 12:30 p.m. in the Student Services Building, Room A-278. •Bahai Club will meet at 7 p.m. in th e MU. Check monitors for room number. > •Campus Aglow will meet at 12:30 p.m . in the MU Graham Room. •Chess Club will m eet at 6:30 p.m. in the M U , Room 209. •Central American Solidarity Committee will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. Gregorio Osorio, Salvadoran Labor Leader, will speak on “ Risking Death for Democracy.” •Investm ent Club at ASU wilt meet at 4:30 p.m . in the MU. Check monitors for room number. W e are actively seeking new members from the ASU community. If you are interested in the stock market please join us at our weekly meetings. •MUAB Film Committee will be showing the film "Gorillas in the Mist” at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the MU Cinema. Admission is $1. •MUAB Entertainment Committee will meet at 1 p.m. in the MU Apache Room. New members needed. will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Social Sciences Building, Room 205. ' • ■'i xf i \ - ■. i •NAACP — Student Chapter African Awareness Program with Gabriel Vasquez from 6 to 8 p.m. in the Student Services Building Amphitheater. •Society of Women Engineers last general meeting of the year at 2:30 p.m . in ECG, Room 301. Everyone welcome. SWE shirts will be distributed, and the groovy retreat will be discussed. •Student Council for Exceptional Children (SCEC) will hold elections and discuss toy drive at 7:30 p.m. in the Farmer Education Building, Room 307. •Students fo r Environmental Awareness (S.E.A.) will meet at 7 p.m. in the Social Sciences Building, Room $ 1 3 . W e will watch a movie and discuss goals for next semester. Anyone welcome. • S tu d e n t G roup o f COOAMP (C o d ep en d en cy Anonymous for Helping Professionals) regular weekly meeting following the 12-step format at 11:40 a.m . in the M U, Room 209. Feel free to bring your lunch. Correction In the N ov. 2 edition o f the State Press, M esa. Community C ollege football player R ay Coultrap w as incorrectly identified as a player who w as suspended from the team in connection with a bra w l at the A SU D elta Chi fraternity house. Coultrap’s suspension w a s : not a result o f the A S U incident. i St a t e P r e s s M W E E K L Y C O L L E G E T O W N a g a z in e JO U R N A L ADVERTISEM ENT O L D C H -IC / 1 G O I 5 3 0 W. B r o a d w a y , T e m p o 9 2 1 - 9 4 3 1 j W ed n esd ay j College ID 2 for 1 Entree A ft e r 5 p.m. Featuring: D eep D ish Pizza, Fresh Pasta & Sauce Bar, 25 D iffe r e n t D rafts & 90 B ottled Beers S a tellite D ish and 8 T V s , Salads, S a n d w ic h e s , Pasta S p e c ia litie s Tam m y Vrettos New restaurant brings Chicago spirit to Tempe Thinking o f heading over to Europe this sum m er fo r a w hirlw ind tour? Save yourself a few thousand bucks and head on over to O ld Chicago instead. This new Tem pe restaurant and b a r is featuring a “ W orld B eer Tour,” which ow ner M ike H endrix hopes w ill be popular with the A S U m arketplace. The 115 beer tour features a selection spanning the globe, and upon completion, beer tour m em bers are inducted into the “ H all of F oam .” The O ld Chicago concept hails from Col­ orado w here the five other locations have been extrem ely successful. The Boulder and F ort Collins locations are also located in college towns and have been popular with the university crowd. This Tem pe location hopes fo r the sam e and has in­ stigated an “ A S U Appreciation N ight” every W ednesday. B y showing their A SU I D . cards, patrons can receive 2-for-l on entrees after 5 p.m . which include sand­ wiches, salads and pasta specialities. / O ld Chicago’s menu features Chicagostype pan pizza and the unique concept of the “ Pasta B a r.” A variety o f pasta is m ade fresh on the prem ises daily and custom ers can select from 18 different sauces of which six are available daily. M enu prices are very reasonable, and seconds on the Pasta B a r are a m ere 494 at lunch and 994 at dinner. Housed in the form er B ackstage Tem pe lo c atio n , O ld C h ic a g o 's in te rio r is decorated with Chicago street signs, ban­ ners and posters from C hicago city events and, naturally, beer signs. The Chicago C u t» and B ears a re alw ay s the home team here and patrons can watch gam es from eight different T V s. The upper deck of this two-story restaurant is available fin* private parties and group m eetings, both of which ow ner H endrix sees as an ex­ cellent w ay to m ix business and pleasure. Old Chicago, A S U ’s newest meeting spot in the finest W indy City tradition, S h ow you r server you r .college or faculty/staff ID and receive 2 for 1 entrees* f i T j . I ■ '■ j M A K E O L D C H IC A G O T ! Y O U R W E D N E S D A Y T R A D IT IO N ! J' ! I A • ■ A I O ffer is good from 5 to 10 p.m. in the dining room only and not valid with I anv other offer. JW I *O f equal or lesser value, pizza not included. . . . Ü State Press Page_3 Wednesday, November 29,1989 ; . World/Nation Suprem e Court rules governm ent should share In Iran settlem ents W A S H IN G T O N ( A P ) - The U . S. governm ent is entitled to som e o f the money Am erican com panies are aw arded by an international tribunal created as part o f the settlem ent of the 1961 Iran hostage crisis, a unanimous Suprem e Court ruled Tuesday. The justices said the com panies’ rights are not violated by requiring them — rather than a ll U . S. taxpayers — to help d efray the costs of the claim s settlem ent process. The court upheld a 1985 law that allow s the U . S. governm ent to deduct 1.5 percent of the first $5 m illion recovered by any com pany and 1 percent of anything exceeding that amount. Justice Byron R. W hite, w riting for the court, said the deductions are reasonable even if they do not equal the amount of money the governm ent expended to help the com panies w in their claims^ W hite rejected argum ents by Sperry Corp. that forcing com panies to pay the fees is an unconstitutional confiscation o f their property and that any costs to the governm ent should be borne by the nation as a whole. The Bush adm inistration said tens o f m illions of dollars w ere at stake, including som e $12.7 m illion already deducted by thé U . S. governm ent from claim s paid to com panies. The financial deal that freed the 52 Am erican hostages from Iran in 1981 included the U . S. governm ent’s release of billions of dollars in frozen Iranian assets and creation of an international tribunal to resolve claim s against Iran. The Suprem e Court in 1981 upheld the pow er of form er President C arter to approve toe settlement, and that w as not at issue in Tuesday’s ruling. W . Germ an chancellor proposes federation as step to unification B O N N , W est Germ any ( A P ) — Chancellor Helm ut Kohl Tuesday proposed a G erm an federation as part o f a sweeping plan to Unite the two countries after four decades of post-w ar division. , E ast G erm any has increasingly discussed the possibility o f a confederation, but the Communist nation’s leader, E gon Krenz, ruled out any talk of unification. “ A unity of G erm any isn’t on toe agenda,” K renz told W est G erm any’s A R D -T V network in insisting on the continued existence of two “ sovereign, independent G erm an states.” There are fea rs am ong Europeans to the E ast and the W est about the political and economic power o f a unified Germ any •with 80 m illion people. Kohl, in a speech to parliam ent, sought to a lla y those fears, saying: “ The G erm ans . . . w ill be a dividend fo r a Europe that is com ing together and never again a threat.” Kohl said he had no tim etable in mind to carry out his ideas and m ade it clear it could take years to form a federation. H e is expected to discuss his proposals with E ast Germ an leaders at a sum m it next month. Bush seeks to assure allies sum m it w ill have no surprises W A S H IN G T O N (A P ) — President Bush sought to reassure European allies Tuesday about h is-sum m it with Soviet President M ikhail G orbachev, prom ising “ I ’m not going to surprise them” with any agreem ent to cut nuclear weapons or reduce U . S. troops overseas. Bush sa id h e a n d G orbachev m ay discuss possible m ilitary cutbacks “ in a gen eral w ay ” when they m eet o ff the coast of M alta on Saturday and Sunday. But he added, “ In w riting I have m ade clear to M r. G orbachev — in m y handw riting so he knows it comes from m e, not the bureaucracy — that this is not a sum m it for an arm s control agreem ent.’’ The allies w ere aghast to learn in 1987 that toen-President R eagan and G orbachev had com e close to a d eal at a sum m it in R eykjavik to abolish a ll nuclear weapons in spite o f the fact that N A T O regard s som e of those arm s as vital to deter Soviet attack. Now , with toe collapse of hard-line com m unist regim es in E astern E urope and m assive budget deficits in the United States, the Bush adm inistration is considering m ajor cutbacks in troops and weapons. A fter toe two-day sum m it, Bush w ill fly to B russels on Dec. 4 to b rief N A T O leaders on the discussions. Czech prem ier vow s coalition w ill include non-Com m unists P R A G U E , Czechoslovakia (A P ) — P rem ier L adislav Adam ec prom ised Tuesday to include non-Communists in a new governm ent and try to end toe constitutional guarantee of toe party’s monopoly on power. Adam ec m ade the pledges te a m eeting with the opposition C ivic F oru m m ovem ent a fte r 11 straigh t d ays of unprecedented protest in Czechoslovakia. M illions of w orkers observed a two-hour general strike M onday, but toe streets w ere quiet Tuesday because the Civic Forum asked fo r calm . A fter the m eeting, governm ent m inister M arian C àlfa said Adam ec w ould subm it a coalition governm ent to President Gustav Husak by Sunday. Civic Forum spokesm an J iri Kanturek appeared on state T V ’s evening news with a 10-point statem ent outlining concessions m ade and further opposition dem ands. Two dem ands w ere fo r free elections and toe resignation by D ec. 10 o f Husak, a central figure in the crackdown on reform after the Soviet-led invasion o f August 1968. The Civic Forum and the allied Pu blic A gainst Violence in Slovakia also dem anded im m ediate revision of toe official view that the “ P ragu e Spring” reform s of 1968 w ere worthless. It called on Czechoslovakia to urge the Soviet, E ast G erm an and B ulgarian parliam ents to follow those o f Poland and H ungary in condem ning the 1968 invasion by toe five W arsaw P act countries as “ a violation of international norm s and toe W arsaw Treaty itself,’’ Kanturek said on television. C entrist opposition tries to build governm ent In India, b u t rifts form N E W D E L H I, India (A P ) — A centrist opposition alliance m oved Tuesday to form India’s first m inority governm ent since independence, but divisions began to surface am ong potentional supporters. The Congress P a rty of P rim e M inister R ajiv Gandhi could conceivably try to form a coalition, but it said it w ill becom e the opposition as the N ation al Front attempts to form a governm ent. The Congress P arty, which has led toe governm ent fo r a li but iV i years since India gained independence from Britain in 1947, won m ore parliam entary seats than any single party in elections that ended Sunday. But it fell fa r short of a m ajority. The centrist National Front alliance expressed confidence it could form the next governm ent. H ie front’s strategy is to opt for a m inority governm ent with the tacit support of an a rray of parties ranging from the Communists to Hindu fundam entalists. Opposition parties have been plagued b y highly publicized internal feuds. But they set aside their differences several months ago to unite and oust Gandhi’s governm ent. D ifferences am ong the parties started to em erge Tuesday when toe right-w ing India People’s P a rty said it would not support any governm ent that included communist parties. SHIS 20% to 40% on VURRNCT, SUNCIOUD, S€R€NG€TI, GRRGOVL6, R€VO, USA SPORT \N \C H E S BEEF K 'S pf SA Ϋ^ H o rn e QURLITV SUNGIRSSCS SRV€ 20% ON SRV€ 20% ON SRV€ 20% ON SRVC 20% ON SRV€ 20% ON VURRNCT SUNCIOUD S€R€NG€TI fi€VO GRRGOVLC m ade c t A \N UNB€RTRBl€ NOW FROM FROM $48°° NOUJ FROM NOW FROM S12000 FROMS4900 NOW Ovfatotui Mol UtatfdgeMol Tatuar Plora Tampa Gommone Cantar l<Äh ft/e . 6i B e th a n y H om e fld . 7 5 th fV e . & Thom as 3 8 th S t & Thom as fld . 7 2 5 £ Rural Ad. 433-2949 8732407 244-9119 966-5540 MISS ELLIE’S CHICKEN Ì RIBS J 2 1 2 E, APACHE • 1 BLOCK EAST O F RURAL • 966-0083 Opinion E22Ü State Press Wednesday, November 2 9 ,19 8 9 works better with cards than students Managing Editor I ’m thinking seriously of sending m y A SU student ID to take m y place next sem ester. A fter a ll, the U niversity seem s infinitely m ore inclined to accept as re a l the face on the card — instead of the person holding it. And the system is designed to accom m odate ID s better than students. O f course, there is the sm all logistical problem of getting the ID to cam pus every day and then transporting it from building to building. But that could be solved, and in the long run 1 suspect the effort would m ake the sprin g term easier fo r everyone involved. It would rem ove the m iddle step — m e — from the bureaucratic process. Consider how m any times students are asked to show their ID s in an average week. Then consider how much m ore efficiently thfe whole system would function if ju st ID cards w ere in it. It’s not such a far-out notion. F o r instance, this week is spring-sem ester schedule pick-up tim e, that gala occassion when students must face the computergenerated fate o f their projected dates o f graduation. T o receive that all-im portant schedule, students m ust head to the Ph ysical Education Building W est, stand in alphabetical lines, and . . ■ “ Do you have a student ID ? ” the helpful wom an on the other side o f the row of blueenveloped schedules asks with a cheery grin. Look at the schedule closely, I im agine m yself saying. Statistics, econom ics and a 7:40 reporting class. Do you have any reason to believe that someone would claim this schedule if he didn’t h ave to? W hat would this hypothetical interloper do with my Schedule, anyway? It’s not like he could change i t . . . that w ould require an r o H e’d need an ID to get anyw here with the registrar. So much fo r reverie; I hand the stillgrinning wom an m y ID . But that brings up the other point: This U niversity ju st isn’t designed for people anym ore. A person can’t stride into a re gistrar’s site and request a transcript ; he needs a picture ID , preferably his student card. A w arm body in a Sun D evil T-shirt has no chance of getting a seat in the student section o f the stadium unless it can produce a student ID . Checking out a lib ra ry book is alm ost effortless with a student ID . The librarian m erely puts the card in the little slot in the m agnetic read er m achine and tab dah — all the pertinent inform ation iS at hand. A re al person, no m atter how honest-looking, Simply won’t fit in the little slot, and the inform ation he provides m ight not be as available o r as accurate. So the system favors the little plastic cards that bear a likeness o f a re al student and a nine-digit num ber. So why not go all the way? W hy not send my Student ID to represent me in all m y oncampus functions? Tests m ight be a problem . I wonder if the ID would have to present m e to prove it belonged there? It could buy books fo rm e , since I have to show it to get m y check approved. It could stop in the M U and get a cup o f coffee; one sw ipe through the m agnetic student-m eal account m achine is all it takes. M y trusty ID could file the last-m inute am endm ents to m y program of study — it’d have to put in an appearance anyway. The sam e holds fo r filing to graduate in M ay, and probably fo r retrieving m y cap and gown. In fact, there is only one instance when I ’d have to take over for m y ID : graduation. F o r som e incalcuable reason, U niversity bureaucracy has failed to extend to the cerem ony itself. This is w here an ID is most needed! I could send it to class fo rm e . I ’m not sure w hat land of notes it would take, but it alm ost« certainly would be m ore sociable during that 7:40 reporting class. A S U is concerned that som e m iscreant w ill p ilfe r m y schedule — statistics, econom ics, 7:40 and a ll — but it trusts that a person is who he says he is when degrees are distributed? Think o f the savings. Core classes like E nglish 101 and economics could be held in M urdock — with a ll 43,000 A SU IDS lined up .in trays in one m ega-class. Perhaps w e could sw ap the cordial handshake w ith the dean fo r a cerem onious fin al showing of the student ID . It’d be so, w ell, lifelike. Letters Americans for Bozo want to know who real Bozo is E ditor: I believe it is my duty as President of “ Am ericans for Bozo,” to defend our organization from the slanderous comments of Photo E ditor Jack B easley Jr. In his colum n, hë speaks openly about a ll the troubles we had on our trip. I adm it the trip did not go a s planned. The trouble began when w e learned that our one c a r suddenly had engine problem s. The search then began to find at least two cars to transport our m em bers down to Tucson. W e found our means o f transportation and began the trip to Tucson. Unfortunately for Jack, though, he found himself in the c a r with no beer. Strike One ! W e arrived in Tucson and parked beneath a mountain, which appeared, from the road, to have the “ A .” Everyone agreed that this W as the righ t m ountain. Though, unfortunately fo r Jack, he had not spoken up. N o doubt he thought that this w as the right mountain as w ell. W hile the other “ BO ZO S” w ere w earing long pants to protect them selves from the cold night air, a s w ell as the thousands o f cactuses found on the mountain, old Jack w as w earing shorts! Who’s the re a l Bozo? Strike Tw o! Eventually w e noticed that w e had. clim bed the w rong mountain. Som e suggested, w e go back' down, find the cars and drive to the correct one. Instead w e traveled on. It .was already 2 a.m . W e knew from the start that w e w ould not return to A S U until at least 6 a.m . W e w ere right. W hat w e didn’t expect w as to w ait for som e idiot to pick cactus thorns out, of his knees because he forgot to w ear pants. W e wanted to defend A S U ’s honor and in a w ay w e did — w e tried. . W hat Jack fails to mention in his column is the fact that the “ A ” in Tucson is in the m iddle of nowhere, yet it is patrolled by police every h alf hour. On the other hand, our “ A ” is right next to the stadium and can be seen clearly from the street on any night. W e even o ffer free parking for our friends from the U ofA at the bottom o f the mountain. W hat is even m ore ridiculous is that our “ A ” stands above the Tem pe Police Station. W ow , what a deterrent! If Jack w ants to talk about a bunch of Bozos, he ought to go down to the Tem pe Police Station and ask them how the hell scream ing U ofA students can constantly clim b the mountain and paint the largest sym bol of A rizona State right under their noses. Jack also mentions in his colum n that w e tried to “ B S " the Tucson police. I ’ll have you know that little Jack B easley sat in the corner, w hile w e talked w ith our new friends from Tucson, Jack also says that w e adm itted to the police that U ofA w ould win this Saturday? Jack, what the hell are you talking about? The only person I heard yell, “ U o fA w ill win, can I please go hom e now?” w as you, Jack, Y O U ! I told the police as did a ll the other “ B O ZO S” what w e knew Was going to happen. W e shouted at them, “ A SU , A S U .” They laughed and escorted us out of town. Stand up fo r your school, Jack, and get som e guts! Strike three Jack, you’re out! I, with a ll the other m em bers o f “ Am ericans for Bozo,” considered the trip a success. W e realize that w e didn’t paint the “ A ” w e got lost and didn’t have enough paint. But there w ill be a next tim e, and when that tim e com es w e’re going to Tucson to paint the “ A ” and skin som e cats! Curt Ritter President, A m ericans for Bozo Greeks make mockery of air-band contest Editor: W hy is it that of the 10 bands that participated in Mock Rock, nine w ere fraternity m em bers? The only band not in a fraternity w as us — Bon Jovi. The only band who did not get any aw ard — not even a “ thanks for participation pat on the back aw ard ” — w as our band. Those of you who w ere there know that when the students portraying Jon Bon Jovi walked out on stage in the beginning the crowd roared. M oreover, when w e played “ R unaw ay,” the crowd again applauded. W e feel w e also did a great job as an a ir band. F rom the other bands w e talked to they also thought w e deserved an aw ard — namely second o r third place. W e originally entered the contest only to have fun. It turned out, however, to be an “ us” vs. “ them” affair. Tills only reinforces the view that fraternities are only interested in helping themselves — charities excluded. W e firm ly believe that the only reason w e did not w in is because w e a r e not frat members. W ith flagran t biases like this you, can be assured thatiwe never w ill be, M ark H alpert Senior, Political Science STATE PRESS Quotable DARRIN HOSTETLER E ditor “ Why should we subsidize intellectual curiosity? Ronald Reagan LETTER POLICY The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on anytopic. ^ All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the Stale Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tem pe AZ 85287-1502. CAROLYN HOFIG M anaging E ditor C ity E ditor...... . . . ... . A sst. C ity E d itor. . . . O pinion E d ito r......................... ..........M ARTY SAUERZOPF ......^...T Y R O N E MEIGHAN .............. ........b e n M cCo n n e l l Assoc. M agazine E d ito r........ ........ MATTHEW UNDENBURG .......... ..........M E G HALVERSON ...........?........M ICHELLE CRUFF ...... ........S U ZA N N E ROSS ........ .......G A R Y JACKSON ........ ....................PAU L CORO ....... ........M IC H E LLE ALLMAN Copy C h ie f............................. A sst. 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Opinion State Prese Page 5 W ednwday^tovefnberW ^I^N New war Poland, Hungary up for sale; Germans ready to buy Mike Royko Tribune Media Services Slats Grobnik looked at aU the happy Germ ans on the T V screen and said, “ W ell, there they go again .” W here are they going? “ P ro bably Poland first, like in 1939.” Please, you’re not one of thosetwitchy people who fea r that a prosperous or united Germ any m eans they w iU put on their D arth V ad ar helmets, roll out the tanks and head for the borders. “ No, they’ve w ised up. They know that ain’t the sm art w ay to do it. But I still think they’re up to som ething.” Look, they have becom e a peaceful nation. W hy do you assum e they have suddenly becom e a threat? “ It’s in their glands or their genes or their schnitzels or som ewhere. But every so often, they have a few steins of beer, hook their arm s together, start sw aying and singing and getting a ll teary, and then they say ‘L et’s go invade som ebody.’ They’ve been doin’ it since w ay back when they w ere w earing fin* rugs for underw ear.” So you think they’re going after Poland again? “ It’s already started.” Nonsense. There has been nothing in the news of that nature. “ No, I don’t m ean that they’re going in there shooting. Like I said, they w ised up.” Then w hat are they doing to Poland? “ They’re going to buy it. That’s the w ay you do things nowadays. Countries are like big corporations. Y ou lode around, see som ething you want and you cut a deal. That w ay you get the sam e results and nobody gets shot. So they’re buying Poland? “ They’re already at it. A s soon as Russia put Poland up for sale — they spun it off, like they say on W all Street — the G erm ans w ere ready to b u y ." Russia spun o ff Poland? “ Sure. W hadda’ya think the Russians turned Poland loose for? It’s like one of them subsidiaries of a com pany that’s losing money. They look for a buyer. Poland w as starting to cost too much fo r Russia to operate so they decided to get rid of it, put it on the m arket.” N ow the G erm ans are buying it? “ Sure. Poland is flat broke, up to its babushka in debt and is ripe for the picking. W e threw a few bucks in but not any serious money. The Germ ans, though, they got m ore money than they know what to do with. So they’re Already in there -s* i . 'PBW S THISK NOIWE FORNTOANDME TOBEDISCUSSINGDISARMAMENT.’ w aving money under Lech’s nose. And H ungary, too.” The Germ ans are going to buy Hungary? “ Right. That w as another subsidiary that w asn’t doing m uch for the Russians, so they spun it off. N ow the Germ ans are in there setting up banks. You watch. Ten years from now, the Poles and the H ungarians, they’U a ll be working in factories owned by the Germ ans, m aking cuckoo clocks and beer m ugs. Then cars and stereos and T V sets. And they’ll buy the Polish shipyards and the keilbasa and goulash factories and wind up owning both countries. Cheap labor and m ore elbow room . That’s what they alw ays wanted, but now they know how to do it. Y ou use a contract and a ballpoint pen instead of a cannon. Then m aybe they’U pack their satchels with som e m ore m arks and head fo r P a ris.” P aris? I doubt that. “ W hy not? They’U go there and say : ‘P ierre, zat is a nice tow er you have zere. Just needs a little good Germ an paint. In fact zis is a nice city. N am e your price. And vee prom ise not to burn it down.’ ” But what if it isn’t fo r sale? “ Everything is fo r sale if you m ake the right offer. I told you, it’s like W all Street. That’s the w ay things are going to be in the 21st century. Nobody’s nuts enough, except m aybe a few ayatollahs, to go the old-fashioned route, bom bing and shooting. Som ebody starts nuking, and w hat do you have to show fo r your investment? E ven if you win, you end up with nothing but landfiU dumps and people with three eyes and green skin. No,‘ the G erm ans have figured it out. AU these years, they’ve been getting richer and richer. So now they’re going to go shopping. W e used to do it that w ay, buying little countries, but now w e ’re in hock and w e don’t have the cash. So w e’re on the m arket.” Com e now, you don’t think the G erm ans wiU try to buy us. “ No, they took too long to m ake a bid .” That’s a relief. “ I wouldn’t rest too easy .” W hy not? “ M l explain it later. I got to go now.” Where? “ I ’m taking som e night school courses.” On what? “ M aking sushi.” ' Republicans only aspire to be lesser of two evils Joseph Sobran Universal Press Syndicate W A S H IN G T O N — I ’m not a Republican by nature, only by accident of vote. I w as raised in a D em ocratic fam ily. M y parents w ere active in local politics, and we took it fo r granted that the purpose o f getting into politics w as to w in elections. I assum ed the Republicans understood this too. I had m y big political conversion at the age o f 19. I started reading B ill Buckley, Ayn Rand and F rederic Bastiat, and I realized that Franklin Roosevelt, whom I ’d been taught to revere as a,so rt of heroic ancestor, w as probably at that moment roasting in the nether regions, assum ing that the Alm ighty attached any im portance to lim ited constitutional governm ent. This didn’t m ake m e a Republican. Nothing could do that. But I started voting for the Republican line as the lesser evil. I now understand that this is, in fact, the Republican self-im age: the lesser evil. It’s a disarm ingly modest attitude, but it helps explain why Republicans lose elections all the time. They are m issing a political chromosome. Dem ocrats have slogans like “ The N ew D e a l,” “ The G reat Society,” “ The N ew Fron tier.” Republicans don’t have slogans, but if they did, they’d be som ething like “ Vote R epublican: The Other Side Is Even W orse.” O r m aybe “ Vote R epublican: W e’ll T ry Not To Screw U p This Thne.” Ronald R eagan w as an exception, but he had Dem ocratic genes. Any hope that his adopted party would follow his exam ple of upbeat cam paigning w as dashed as soon as he w as no longer eligible to run fo r office anym ore. The Republicans im m ediately reverted to form , as G eorge Bush ran pn the them e: “ E lect B ush: He D idn ’t Furlough W illie Horton.” There is nothing wrong with negative cam paigning as such, but it is aU the R ep u blican s know becau se they a re essentially negative about them selves. They feel deeply tliiat the Dem ocrats have a prim ordial bond with the electorate and that Republicans can w in only by default. In this y ear’s elections, the Republican candidates scurried aw ay from their own positions, assuring the voters that they w e re n ’t serio u sly d iffe ren t fro m the Dem ocrats: They lost. And the lesson they are now d raw ing from this experience, naturally, is that they m ust henceforth strive* to resem ble the D em ocrats even m ore closely. They see h o lesson at a ll in Ronald R eagan’s trium phant career. They are program m ed fo r pessim ism . “ Republicans had long since m ade it clear that they didn’t know how to w in ,” w rites W illiam M cG urn in National R eview. “ W hat they proved Election Tuesday w as that they don’t know how to lose.” W hat M cG urn m eans is that even a losing cam paign can lay the foundations fo r future victory. “ Som etim es you can w in even if you lose,” says the political scientist A lan B aron (quoted by M cG u rn ). “ Ronald R eagan lost to G erald Ford, but he clearly built up a constituency that would be with him the next tim e around. In these races the Republican candidates did not build up any loyalty to the Republican P a rty .” M cG urn also quotes John Sears, R eagan’s form er cam paign m anager: “ I f you lost and it w as clear w hat you’d do had you won, then you’re in a position to run again, AU it takes is a few m ore people who believe you’re right — which is exactly w hat happened to Ronald R eagan. But if you lost and it’s not clear what you stood fo r, a ll you proved W as that you w ere the greater o f the two evils.” This y ear’s Republican candidates tried to w in by fudging the issues w hile personally discrediting their opponents. They failed even at that low level. And if the victorious D em ocrats d isgrace them selves in office, the R ep u blican s they beat w on’t be rem em bered a s h avin g o ffered w hat M c G u rn c a lls “ re a l g o v e rn in g alternatives.” The losers have earned oblivion. Finally, M cG urn quotes H enry H ewes, the an ti-abo rtio n can didate w ho m ade a surprisingly strong showing in N ew Y ork on a third-party ticket. “ Elections are not just about winning or losing,” Hewes said, “ i lost the election, but I feel like a winner because I accom plished som ething. Rudy G iu lia n i go t m an y m o re v o tes bu t accom plished nothing.” U nlike Ronald R eagan in 1976, this y ear’s Republican losers a re clearly washed up. They have no future in politics. W hat’s w orse is that their entire party seem s to be com posed of neurotic losers in perpetual retreat. They learn nothing from victory and draw the w rong conclusions from defeat. Wednesday, Novembe r « ? ,1989 Pageó M offord’s popularity falls, but Legislature’s climbs W ith the election y ear right around the corn er, recent poll results show that A rizona’s favorability tow ards Gov. Rose M offord has decreased a few notches while support fo r the state Legislature has increased. A lth o u gh the L e g is la tu re ’s support rem ains lukewarm , 43 percent of those surveyed in a N ovem ber Rocky Mountain P o ll gave it a fa ir job perform ance rating, up 6 percent from October. H ow ever, 26 percent of those polled gave the Legislatu re an excellent/good rating, down l percent from last month. The w orst criticism cam e from men, Republicans and businesspeople. Sen. Doug Todd, R-Tem pe, said the relatively low support erf the L egislature can be attributed to recent political action, including the im peachm ent of form er Gov. E van M echam , the scandal surrounding the state congressm en w ho fle w free on A m erica W est A irlines to H aw aii and the Mofford Manager recent auto insurance special session. “ W e are just not m aking people very happy,” Todd said. “ People are angry — they’re upset. Y ou have to blam e someone in this day and age.” However, the state senator said it is ra re fo r the Legislatu re to g a m e r “ excellent” ratings, and he is pleased w ith the slight increase in the " fa ir ” category. The Rocky M ountain P o ll, an independent and non-partisan survey conducted by the B ehavior R esearch Center o f Arizona, is • Class Materials • Works in Progress • Lab Manuals er Lowest prices for your students Shorter lines Free pick up and delivery Godfather’s Pizza 712 S. C ollege • 966-4225 V $300 $200 W C h a n g in g H ands R A R E L IO N R E S A L E BO O KSTO RE Browse through our 3 flo o rs of: PHOENIX SUNS PRESIDENT Fine S election of Quality Used Clothing , antiques . Collectibles, and Jewelry A • N e w & U sed B o oks • • C a le n d a rs & C a rd s • • B o oks o n C a ssette • FRIDAY, DEC. 1 BAC 116 1:30-2:30 p.m. R S e l l o r T ra d e your books at.Changing Hands. . Ro For quality cloth and paperbacks (n o text­ books, please) w e pay 30% o f pur resale price in cash or 30% in trade-in credit University which m ay be used to purchaseanything in '«r Serving Tempe Since 1977 0 . ■■ „ ea ls at .- S G o o d at t o a m P -6 r ic e s p .m OFF LARGE PIZZA (Sorry, nò trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M-F 10-9 Sat 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 M ill Avenue • Tempe • 966-0203 OFF MEDIUM PIZZA L e m o n & Terrace Plaza Televised Sporting Events EAT IN • TAKE OUT (w ith t h is a d ) . 921 S. Mill.. T empe Tempe Center (near Pic -n-Save) N 968-6074 _9t the store. O p e n t ill M id n ig h t F r i & S a t t ill 2 a .m . FR E E D E L IV E R Y 921-2222 American Bartenders . School YO RKER R E S T A U R A N T »no N IG H T C L U B o n D are a r in g M T O N Y 'S N EW Buy it, sell it, fin d it, te ll it. in S tate Press C lassifieds CAM PUS N O TES P R IN TS : COLLEGE o f BUSINESS G U EST SPEAKER JERRY COLANGELO adding that she is not running for re fle c tio n in 1990 because o f m edical problem s. “ Thè public has to realize that w e are all common fòlks w orking fo r common folks. W e are just plain people trying to represent the people.” In addition, the poll found that 33 percent of those surveyed gave M offord a fa ir rating, up 5 percent from October. Sixty-one percent of m inorities polled gave her an excellent/good rating. Also, 34 percent of R epublicans, 60 percent o f D em ocrats, 40 percent of m en and 48 percent o f wom en gav e the governor the excellent/good rating. M o ffo rd Spokesm an V ada M anager said the recent poll results are satisfactory. “ The governor said a little bit of a slippage is accepted and natural,” hé said, adding that the past polls have rated M offord higher than expected. M an ager added that the governor w ill continue to w ork hard to increase her job perform ance rating. Kenney said, “ The poll looks about right fo r w hat M offord has been running.” based on 609 telephone interviews with adult heads of households throughout M aricopa County. The m argin of erro r w as plus or minus 4 percent. Patrick Kenney, A SU political science professor, said- the validity o f the poll w as congruent with sim ilar polls about the Legislature and governor. H owever, he added that the slight change from October to N ovem ber does not m ean much because of the 4 percent m argin of error. O f the men polled this month, 24 percent b e s to w e d th e L e g is la t u r e w ith an excellent/good rating, w hile 28 percent o f the wom en gave the state body the sam e support level. Twenty-eight percent of white co llar w orkers and 25 percent o f blue collar w o r k e r s g a v e th e L e g i s l a t u r e a n excellént/good rating. Rep. Jenny Norton, R-Tem pe, who has been a legislator fo r three years and a lobbyist fo r 12 years, said last y ear’s legislative session w as the most grueling. “ But w e didn’t solve m uch,” she said, By KELLY PEARCE State Press * WE DELIVER! ^ o n e _ T h e F in e s t P iz z a a n d It a lia n F o o d in th e V a lle y * C all Ahead fo r T ake-O ut O rder» * D ine-ln o r T ake-O ut * WE DELIVER AFTER 5:00 P.M . * Handmade New York S tyle Pizza * Homemade Ita lia n Dinners * Large D ining Area N ew Tim es Best o f Phoenix 1989 B est In expen sive Italian Restaurant “ ...a il th e good th in g s an Ita lia n re s ta u ra n t sh ou ld be: frie n d ly , in fo rm a l, c o m fo rta b le , s in c e re & re a so n a b ly p ric e d . O f c o u rse , it doesn’t h u rt th a t it s e rv e s a rig h te o u s p izza and a re d sa u ce th a t you co u ld co nsu m e by th e T R Y O U R A L L -Y O U -C A N -E A T S P E C IA L S $ 2 °° P itchers $ 1 ° ° W ell D rinks $ 1 60 Bow ling/ per game TEACHING BARTENDERS SINCE 1933 • F U L L O R P A R T T I M E JOBS • F L E X IB L E H O U R S & P E R S O N A L IZ E D T R A I N I N G • S T A R T A N Y D A Y O R E V E N IN G , i f ■ . M a m u i wrnmmetnmt-wmm. r z z a h m 'tmtmTmammtahi LASAGNAHM THUK9DAY hSGHT SPECIAL « m ic c in i uwmttm h m Featuring ih Ó ur Lounge... * * *C h u c k H alt & The B ric k W all ^ •^ iR h y th m & B lues w ith Sm all Paul & D riv in * W heel •tP^Vdetic Sack G rateful Dead N ight w ith N o H obo Band C om e on and ta k e a b re a k a fte r c la s s o r th e lib ra ry . W e ’ve g o t s p e c ia l p ric e s e v e ry M o n ­ d ay th ru T h u rs d a y fro m 9 p .m . to M id n ig h t. S o ro ll in , ro ll so m e s trik e s , ro ll so m e g u tte rs , o r ju s t ro ll up to th e b a r. M O N -TH U R S 9 P M -M ID N IG H T T E I# iT & W L Features th e Best Blues Bands in the V alley Tempe’s Home fo r the Blues 994 H a p p y H o u r » 7 D ay» a W eek 154 N e w Y o rk e r W in g s A ll N ig h t S B y -S O T S 1 0 7 E a s e B r o a d w a y , Tempo 9 6 7 - 2 9 ^ 1 1 O O y a r d s e a s t o f M ill A v e n u e 1100 E. APACHE • 967-1656 • T fe R M S — C O E D C O U R S E S • S E R V I N G A G E I N A R I Z O N A IS 19 Bring inThis Coupon and College ID. ■ ‘100 OFF TUITION I I HOLIDAY SPECIAL! I VALLEYWIDE IOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE NA TIO NW ID E EARN EXTRA M O N E Y Paae Wednesday. November 8 9 .19 8 9 Bush, Gorbachev earn high performance scores in poll By KIMBERLY HARRIS State Press Arizona voters, in a recently released Rocky Mountain P o ll, gav e President Bush and Soviet President M ikhail G orbachev high m arks fo r their jo b perform ances. Out of 609 residents from the conservative Phoenix m etropolitan area, 60 percent of the residents most likely to vote gave G orbachev an excellent or good rating. A total of 62 percent gave Bush an excellent o r good rating, a 5 percent increase from a sim ilar poll in October. Patrick Kenney, A SU professor of political science, linked G orbachev’s high ratings to the Soviet leader’s personality and achievem ents in offlee. Kenney said. “ Bush is still on his honeym oon as president,” he said, a d d in g that it is ty p i ea 1 f o r a president to receive high ratings during his first year in the White House. T h e p o ll a ls o H H H L — J H I indicated that only p h Gorbachev 8 percent o f the total respondents said G orbachev is doing a poor or very poor job, w hile only 7 percent of those polled gave Bush a poor or very “ (G o rbach ev) has a likable personality,” he Said. “ And he has m ade som e m ajor changes in E astern E urope.” Bush owes his high ratings to his infancy as president, poor, rating. O f the Dem ocrats w ho participated in the survey, 63 percent gave G orbachev an excellent o r good rating, w hile ome out of your çhe ACCIDENT LAWYERS W HISSEN & TIDMORE ATTORNEYS 301 Ë. Bethany Home Rd. 279-7180 Y o u ’v e G o t W h a t It T a k e s ! BLO O D P LA S M A A _ _ _ _ $40.00 N A ß ! The QuaKy Source A rizon a’s older citizens also supported the Soviet president, but not a s prom inently, the poll showed. Nonetheless, 51 percent at retirees and 55 percent o f voters aged 55 and older gav e him a good o r excellent job rating. John Geer, A S U political science professor, said the state of the U . S. economy w ill be a determining factor of Bush’s popularity in the future. “ H istory shows the (popularity) trend to go down,” he said, “ but (h e w ill rem ain p opular) if the state o f the econom y is strong.” The m argin of erro r for the survey w as plus o r m inus 4.04 percent. t o t e P veçç. 9 2 4 -6 3 4 1 INFORMATION RESEARCH COMPUTERIZED WORD PROCESSING TERM PAPERS THESIS/DOCTORATE LOTUS 1 -2 -3 EXPERTS O C E A N PA C IFIC » M ° NEON SHRED- WEAR * ACTIO N SKI RENTAL & SPORT FACTS & STATS ON DEMON HOURS: S&S 10ajrn-6pm 8j39-4772*Àlmà School & Baseline SPECIAL STUDENT FARES Round trip from Phoenix No This coupon is worth the In addition, 75 percent of the Republican participants gave Bush h igh m arks, w hile only 51 percent o f the Dem ocrats graded him with an excellent o r good rating. 1S*N*OW*B*OA*R*D«S- N E E D IN FO F A S T ? • • • e • If you or a member of your family has had an acci­ dent involving serious injury or death, and you believe someone else is at fault — CALL US. We receive a fee ONLY if we win and collect for you. FREE CONSULTATION - - CALL Tea J Republicans showed less support w ith a 55 percent approval rating. Appointment Necessary for 2 donations in one week, for new donors and repeat donors who have not returned in 2 months. C olorado Springs ..,$ 1 9 8 San F ra n c is c o .___ _ _ $108 Boston . . . . _________.$ 2 4 8 Chicago . ................ $196 P o rtla n d ___ . . $158 M iam i .............................$216 Denver . . $198 S e a ttle ..................... $218 St. L o u is . . . . . . . ____ $158 Enjoy watching movies while you donate! 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Novem ber 8 9.1989 Dating services will find you a m ate—for a price By SALLY MOOES, TONETTA McCABE and DAVID WHITE Contributing W riters N eed a date tonight? N o problem . Just c a ll a dating service. D ating services o ffer a w ay fo r singles to self-advertise through video services or personal advertisem ents. One m atchm aking service in Phoenix is the Professional Connection, which w as started in 1987 by Lynette Hinson. The Professional Connection is based on the idea that single professionals are “ too busy and too p articu lar” to find dates on their own. Hinson said she is interested in people who are looking for longstanding relationships. In fact, she only accepts one out of seven people to ensure that the quality of her service is maintained. “ W e interview, screen and check references on all of our clients and accept only those w e feel w e can successfully m atch,” Hinson said. A fter the reference check, the client goes through a series of personality tests to assess four personality components: intellectual capacity, m otivational values, internal energy and reactive behavior. Hinson uses this inform ation to m atch the client on paper with someone she feels is com patible. A fter the m atch is m ade, Hinson contacts both parties. If both parties agree, they exchange videos that are view ed privately. The Professional Connection currently has between 140 and 400 clients, with m ore than h alf of those from Scottsdale and P arad ise V alley. Several A S U students w ho w ere interviewed thought that dating services w ere not fo r everyone. K im N eely, an A S U junior in the Fine A rts C ollege, tried a dating service once. She com pleted the initial interview s and personality evaluations fo r the Professional Connection service. She w as accepted but did not join because the program w as too expensive. “ It is good for som e people, but with m e I ’m outgoing enough to find m y own d ates," she said. M innie French, a senior A SU social w ork m ajor and m other o f one, said she would never use a dating service. “ They do for m e w hat I can do for m yself, and that is not good enough,” she said. D ating service statistics report that the average m ale using a dating service is 31 years old, 5 feet 10 inches tall and w eighs 173 pounds. H e tends to seek wom en the sam e age or younger than he is, placing m ajor em phasis on physical attractiveness and an active lifestyle. The average w om an using a dating service is 35 years old, 5 feet 2 inches tall and w eighs 117 pounds. She tends to seek m en the sam e age or older than she is, placing em phasis on inner attractiveness and em otional stability. Hinson said she thinks her service is successful in finding people who are com patible with each other. “ About 95 percent of m y recom m ended m atches are accepted and about 85 percent of m y clients date their m atches beyond the second d a te ," Hinson said. “ Alm ost h alf of those result in a serious relationship.” F o r a guaranteed m ate, the price is $10,000. However, if you are just looking for a relationship and not asking for guarantees, the price ranges from $500 to $1,400. P a rt o f the fee is paid intitiaDy and the rest is paid when the clients feel a successful m atch has been m ade. Com patibility Factors o f Arizona is the oldest dating service com pany in the state, Its Phoenix office opened in 1966 and has helped m ore than 30,000 people find dates. H ave a friend John D earth, owner and general m anager of the company, said about 1,200 couples have m et and m arried through the service. A t Com patibility Factors, a prospective client fills out th ree m u ltip le-ch o ice q u estio n n aires th at m easu re com patibility in 64 different areas. Some o f the areas include tem peram ent, sociability and attitudes about sex. The questionnaires, which are developed by psychologists, are then processed by a computer. Com patibility Factors sends out referrals every month to m em bers that would m ake com patible m atches based on their age and questionnaire answers. The referrals include a picture, phone num ber and som e of their interests. It is up to the person receiving the re ferral to decide if he or she wants to contact the person. Com patibility Factors has about 3,400 m em bers in its pool and each receives about two or three referrals per month. “ There’s a lot of inform ation on the re ferral form so it is hardly a blind date,” D earth said. Com patibility Factors purposely does not m atch people who have exactly the sam e interests, “ The dullest possible thing on a date would be going out with your m irror im age,” D earth said. “ Out o f the 64 areas of com patibility, a re ferral is usually com patible in 48 to 60 areas.” D earth said his com pany runs a background check on prospective m em bers that discourages people who “don’t fit in.” The check looks for a record of felonies, m oral and narcotics charges, as w ell as a history o f m ental problem s. “ In this day and age, there are a lot o f kooks and weirdos out there so w e have to be carefu l,” D earth said. The m ajority of Com patibility F actor’s m em bers are Turn to Dating, page 13. An Invitation to ASU Students w h o feels down? LUNCH C heer her up w ith a Personal in the S T A T E PRESS W it h t h e p r e s id e n t F rid ay, D ec. 8 N o o n -1:15 p .m . Classifieds. O n ly $1 .40 per d a y for 15 w ords or less. M atthews Center south basement 965-6735 President Peck is hosting a luncheon meeting to provide an opportunity for students to discuss matters of interest to them. To facilitate discussion, the number of par­ ticipants is limited to nineteen, so interested students should RSVP early, (no cost to participants) To RSVP: Call Lillian Val 965-5606 President’s O ffice L ittle Caesars P izza G roon rih 0 VALUABLE COUPON U Ë R Humons r | f t Hoir Studio TWO MEDIUM PIZZAS with cheese & S toppings Regular Price *14 men, £ ■aiKim Raza •Dm 966-5462 PluxTax IU L -S M L H I YOUR CHOICE: Coleen, Don, Tracie p.m ., 12-23-89 • PIZZAlPIZZA»«PMilPMr,«OncofEKM Extra toppings available a t add itional c o a t V a id only w ith coupon a t participa ting little Cc t »Excludes extra cheese. Expires: 12-7-89 SP ia n s e * 1989 Linie Caesar Enterprises. Inc " * * " / B Æ 5 u5 n" oa ■ TWO LARGE PIZZAS with cheese $049 VOUR CHOKE: • PtZZAIPtZZA* • PwilPanl- e One of Ek M Extra to p pings $1.90 covers b o th pizzas. Valid only w ith coupon a t particip ating U tile Ceasars. * Excludes extra cheese. * 1989 Little Caesar Enterprises, Inc SP tirajqounsels ternchHdprott • N.E. Corner Hardy and University ....... .. 966-3181 • S.E. Corner Southern and McClintock . . . . . 897-8114 PluxTax Expires: 12-7-89 Two Campus Locations To Serve You Phone Ahead for “Extra Quick'* Service Group Discounts Available 8 6 1 -2 2 1 2 Open Sunday - Thursday 11 A M - 11 PM Friday — Saturday 11 A M - 1 PM Adolest learns £ and won subject imeni figh Risk Child Ai She is a stem m at thqH Èfom ia School o f r Professiona l fycholoijKFresno. She makes a Ik difference irr pay's worn and when she graduates W kwith this exà » nee heiyuture opporturwes will ta r' am tolieoited- M 17-1273 (N atio na l) o r 800/457-5261 (1 Fresno. L os Angeles, nonprofit nransimin and Freu Wednesday, November 2V, 1989 Debate —— Continued from page 1. they becom e enslaved by it.” Sliw a said drug legalization sounds attractive to the casual d ru g user but would be devastating to inner-city Jamie Scott Lytfe/State Press Timothy Leary and Curtía Sliwa prepare to take the stage Tuesday night lo r a debate on drugs In American culture. communities. “ I w ill acknowledge from suburban areas, som e things Would be better,” Sliw a said ’ “ But you w ill create a term inal genocide fo r black, brow n and Indian people.” L e a ry said w h ile he recognized the conditions assaulting d ru g- ridden societies, he did not believe punishing substance abusers would help the situation. “ W e a ll share with you the problem s o f the inner-city,” L eary said. “ There is a big cocaine and crack problem . W e’ve got to do som ething about it. Prison is not the w ay. “ Y ou ’ve got to teach people not to abuse drugs. Let’s stop throwing kids in prison and spend that money on education and rehabilitation:” Sliw a rem ained silent as spontaneous applause erupted throughout L eary ’s comments but scolded hecklers who mocked his own opinions. “ Y ou sam e individuals W ho sit there piously are advocating not freedom of choice but rather some who w ill be destined to be born as crack babies,” Sliw a said. “ A ll of you out there are ready to say that’s the price of freedom . I call it legalizing the slavery o f 20 percent o f our population.” A long line o f students form ed to ask individual questions of the speakers, but only a few w ere posed before the event’s abrupt adjournm ent. Purchase any small, medium or large yogurt and receive the next smaller size for F R E E . Topping Extra Expires 12/13/89 L . ____ _______________________________ — -— ■— - — — BOOT UP for only Write a letter to Santa,., win $50! $995 (Just in tim e fo r Christm as) This com plete personal com puter package includes: •D u a l floppy disk «High resolution monochrome •12-m onth warranty m onitor (add $175 fo r color) •N e a r letter-quality printer •W ord processing with Spell­ check, DOS and B asi; C O M P U T E R M U L T I-S Y S T E M S 225 W. University, Tem pe OPEN 9 - 6 M o h -F ri 10- 2 Sat (N ext to Buffalo Exchange) Large selection of hew. and used computer equipment & printers. The State Press is having a “ BEST LETTER TO SANTA” contest! All you have to do is write a letter, submit it to information desk located in the North basem ent of M atthews Center and you m ay be a winner! 22S W. UtrtvereHy 966-1388 FINANCING AVAILABLE 829-7131 The State Press . Entries w ill be judged on originality and creativity. P0WERL00K HA IR D ESIG N Entry deadline is Friday, D ec. 8, noon. NOW DONG NAIL O ff First place, $50; second place, $25 and third place, $10. State Press Matthews Center Basement W inning letters will be published in the Decem ber 12th issue. W ith This (First Time Clients, Participating Stylists Only.) Ad (One Coupon per person with this ad) ; fo r 1 TA N S m n n ft ì g a g g io A S U p o lic e o fficer 1 of o n ly 4 fe m a le s on fo rc e By KELLY JAIN S tate Press W hile patrolling her beat one Saturday m orning, A SU police O fficer K ay Gojkovich w as busier than usual. A boy w as reported m issing by his father. Gojkovich talked to the father and took the boy’s description. Later, she responded to a fire on the 15th floor of M anzanita Residence H all. Both situations involved helping people, which is the reason Gojkovich becam e a police officer. H owever, Gojkovich said m any students think A SU police are “ security officers” and that they w ere hired to give them a hard tim e. Those a re probably two of the biggest m isconceptions students have about A SU police, she added. “ They don’t realize that w e are real police officers,’’ she said. “ Students feel w e’re here to give them a hard time. W e’re h e re to m ake sure nobody violates the law s or destroys state property.” Gojkovich has been a pólice officer fo r 15 years and has spent the last 18 months at A SU . Site is one of four fem ale police officers on the 32-member force. Although today’s fem ale officers handle everything from m issing children to drug busts, Gojkovich said they w ere not alw ays view ed as equal to m ale officers. “ W hen I first started in law enforcem ent in the early 1970s, people reacted differently because they saw a wom an doing a m an’s jo b ,” Gojkovich said. N ow , She added, “ People do not think much about it because the num ber of wom en police officers has increased. Today, they are accepted by society.’” Doug Bartosh, who is the acting director o f the Departm ent o f P u blic Safety — the o f f i c e th at o v e r s e e s A S U ’s p o lic e departm ent — agreed. “ There w ere very few (fem ale o fficers) before 1975/’ he said. The few that w ere around w ere lim ited to responsibilities like com m unity service and juvenile cases, he added. Bartosh said it w as som ewhat difficult for wom en officers in the e arly 1970s because the idea w as new, and there w as “ a lot of concern about their physicial ability in hostile situations.” B ut after 1975, fem ale officers w ere m ore accepted by the public and by m ale officers, he said. “ In 1975, large num bers o f wom en started entering law enforcem ent,” Bartosh said, adding that from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s, it w as popular to be a police officer, regardless of gender. And now, Bartosh said he is not w orried about the physical capabilities o f fem ale officers. “ I ’ve seen a lot of wom en who are tougher than a lot of guys,” he said. Although physical capability can be im portant, confidence is a requirem ent for any police officer, Bartosh said. Sgt. Keith Bailley said that although A SU f e m a l e o f f i c e r s h a v e the s a m e responsibilities and training as the m ale officers, they sometimes have an advantage overm en. “ Som etim es in child abuse cases, the victim can relate to wom en if the father abused the child,” he said. It just depends on the situation, m aking it advantageous to allow m en and women to be partners, B ailley added. O fficer G illian Cross said being a fem ale officer can be helpful in other situations. “ F o r a split second, m en a re taken off­ gu ard because they are expecting a m ale police officer, especially when you y ell,” C ross said. “ It gives wom en an advantage because o f the surprise. ” But B ailley said people who a re in a lot of trouble don’t care if the officer is a m an o r a wom an. Scott Troyanos/State Press O fficer Kay G ojkovich fills out a th e ft rep ort fo r a stu d en t w hose locker in th e F in e A rte Building has been broken in to . z: ~dPP icrnent FflmiLT HdIR CUTTERS $ 1 00 I w /coupon C onditioning Rinse i1 ^2 3 ^^ w /co u p on W /th e $6.95 CUT { N o A p p o in tm en t N ecessary Ever! J Sham poo, C u t & S tyle Included Long H air S lig h tly H ig h er B ring T h e W hole Fam ily! | I V > 1 This year w e’re doing it again! Every Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday), M ike Puios of the Spaghetti Com pany w ill give you one FREE dinner* fo r each dinner you order! It's our 2-for-1 SUNDAY STU­ DENT SPECIAL. And it’s good fo r the w hole school year at both our Tem pe and Phoenix locations. D esigner Perm Special j Family h s is cutters - identified, w as arrested by a fem ale officer in 1987 for m aking false identification cards. “ I wouldn’t have felt any differently if it w ere a m ale officer,” the student said. “ I w as too scared about a ll the trouble I w as in.” G o j k o v i c h , w h o is a l s o a n A S U u n d e r g r a d u a t e stu d e n t, s a id she understands the gripes students have about police w ork at A S U , such as bicycle tickets. “ It is unfortunate that the U niversity doesn’t have (m o re) bike paths,” she said. “ Those that exist are m inim al. W e give a lot o f w a r n in g s. I ’m s u r p r is e d m ore pedestrians are not hit,” Gojkovich said she can sym pathise with students because she also likes to ride her bike on cam pus, but she does not ride in areas m arked fo r pedestrians only. - The officer said she is m ajoring in crim inal ju sticean d is balancing a jugglin g act this sem ester. Besides w orking full-tim e as a police officer, Gojkovich said she has a part-tim e traffic control jo b and is taking two classes. However, she said she could not recall giving any tickets to fellow classm ates. C o n trib u tin g w rite r D a vid contributed to this report. Connor SHO W US YO UR S T U D E N T I.D . Y O U ’L L G E T A A Perfect Cut Every Time ! “ M any people just go in shock — they just see the badge and ticket book,” B ailey said. “ They don’t even rem em ber if it w as a Tem pe officer or an A SU officer.” One A SU student, who did not want to be Gojkovich j1 A rty day o f th e week, fo r lunch or dinner, The Spaghetti Com pany is known fo r a great m eal at an affordable price. B ut the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL m akes o ur already te rrific prices even better! O ur dinners in clude a fu ll course m eal w ith a ll the trim m ings — from salad to dessert. So, d o lla r fo r d ollar, when you're hungry and you need a break, you c a n 't beat The Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! W ith 2 din­ ners fo r the price o f 1! But you MUST have your student I.D . card w ith you to take advantage o f th is offer. 15% gratui added to a ll discounted checks (except S enior citize n discounts). p^| inappOirtcmenc! I % ir r FamilT HSIR CUTTERS U niversity & Rural Rd. C ornerstone Shopping C enter | Phoenix 968-8008, South on Central Just Pasta McDowell Hours: M on,-Ffl. 9-9 • Sat. 9-7 • Sun. 12-5 257-0380 Chicken Cordon B lue, Steak Of Jon, Stuffed Filet o f Sole, Tenderloin, C hicken M arsala, Veal M arsala-end orders to go ARE N O T IN C LU D E D in the 2 -fo M special. in Old Town Tempe 4th Street and Mill 966-3848 State Press Wednesday, November 89.1989 C ro w d . Contlnusd from pegs 1. Photo by ftandy TWtbtw Students joetta for position outside the MU Arizona Room Tuesday night. About 300 students were denied admission to the debate between Tim othyLeary and Curtis Sllwa. / ’ arrived in front of the M U shortly before the alarm sounded. A SU police O fficer A1 Cam poy, the night duty officer, would not comment oh any of the evening’s events. ' Lecture Series D irector Don Shilliday said students w ere turned a w ay from the debate to m eet fire codes, but he did not know who pulled the alarm . H e added that he w ould be w illing to reschedule the event if there w as enough student interest. “ R ight now the interest is there am ong the students,’’ he said. “ I can easily find it within m y budget to brin g it back at a la rg e r location.” The event cost approxim ately $5,500, Shilliday said. A SA S U Activities V ice President J ’L ein L iese said it is a state law to evacuate a building in the event of a fire alarm . L eary said he had “ never had an experience like that” before Tuesday. “ But it’s just what I expect from a row dy university like Arizona S tate," he said. “ W e really sm oked it up in there.” L eary said he would be w illing to return fo r another debate, but said the U niversity should ?‘disconnect the fire alarm .” ' ■ Sliw a w as led out of the building by a group of Guardian A ngels but Was im m ediately surrounded by students who shouted questions and challenged the national civilian crim e-fighting organization’s objectives. Several students circulated petitions to deliver to A SA S U President P a u l Larson to have the debate rescheduled. Larson, who said thé turnout w as the largest fo r an A SU lecture since Ronald R eagan ’s visit last spring, said he w ould like to see another m eeting between Sliw a end L eary. Linda B ertràn, a sophom ore linguistics m ajor, said that Lecture Series organizers should have m oved the event to a la rg e r room to accom m odate the crowd. “ E ach student is paying. $25 to build the (student) rec center, which h as three big gym s/’ she said, adding that she arrived at the Arizona Room at 7:15 p.m . only to find approxim ately 100 people alread y w aiting in line. The debate w as scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m . “ They (the Lecture S e rie s) picked the A rizona Room to have this event,” B ertran said. “ They Obviously have people who w ant to hear this.” E ven Sliw a had to press his face against a window on one of the doors to gain adm ittance to the room. Floyd Land, director of the M U , said, “ Organizers did the best they could under the circum stances. W e got as m any people in as w e could. P ro bably a few too m any, according to the fire code.” Land said spectators probably should have been required to show student ID ’s to gain adm ittance to the event, and non-students should have been charged a sm all adm ission fee to keep the crow d down. Junior E nglish m ajor D arren Cook said, “ A quarter of the people in (the room ) aren’t even students.” Liese said, “ It’s a very difficult situation. Events are for students and students have firs t priority, but the public pay taxes and therefore events are also open to them .” Am y Young, a senior hum anities m ajor, said that the students should not have been turned aw ay because the debate would have educated them about drugs. “ W e have a m ajo r d rug problem in this country, and when people try to learn about drugs, they are turned aw ay at the door,” she said. Sta te Press reporter N icki C arroll contributed to this report. ' ' ms Sports Entertainment A d v e rtis in g M fibtography e view & & e n t ^ n n t< Page 12 State Pres« Wednesday, November 2 9 .1989 H a rris -----------------C o ntinued tra m p a g * 1. salesm en and general telephone skills. “ W e checked with ( A S U ) legal counsel to m ake sure there w as no conflict of interest. The figure that she gave m e sounded good, and w e just did it.” A S U Interim President R ichard Peck said the money used to pay B illings-H arris w as discretionary money — not state money — and can be used by the athletic departm ent as it sees fit. Lonnie Ostrom , A S U ’s director of developm ent and vice president of U niversity Relations, told The Associated P ress Tuesday that “ those dollars w ere given to Charles (H a rris) to be used at his discretion.” H e added that the ultim ate responsibility lies with H arris. Ostrom said there is currently no nepotism policy that w ould affect decisions o f this nature. H e added that because o f the publicity surrounding the situation, “ it’s something w e a re going to have to take a look at.” H arris said his w ife’s involvem ent with the program w as done without his intervention. B illin gs-H arris said that in 1968, she supplied the departm ent with 16,744 worth of training sem inars to clerical em ployees, but the sem inars only cost the departm ent $2,744. She said her norm al fee fo r the 1968 sem inars w ould have been $6,744. From that am ount she gave thé U niversity an initial $2,000 discount, which w as deducted from the bill. The rem aining charges totaled $4,744. The breakdown w as $744 for m aterials, $2,000 for training and $2,000 for custom ization, a process by which the sem inar program is tailored to the specific needs of the organization buying the services. In 1989, she w as hired to give the refresher sem inar. She received $1,000 fo r training and $500 fo r m aterials, after she gave an additional $500 initial discount from her usual [»ic e . B illin gs-H arris said she donated to the athletic departm ent $2,000 in cash last y ear and that this year, she intends to donate $500. That would leave her with a net profit of $2,744 fo r 1968 and $1,000 fo r 1989. Cathy R eid, A S U ’s athletic business m anager, verified that B illin gs-H arris had given the discounts to the U niversity, but R eid w as unaw are o f any further donations. H arris said he and his w ife have donated m ore than $4,000 to the U niversity over the last two years. Although other m edia accounts have placed the am ount of tim e B illin gs-H arris spent instructing at a total of 17 hours over the last two years, B illings-H arris said the sem inars actually took up 32 hours last y ear and eight hours this year. A lden said that w hile the actual lecture time amounted to 20 to 25 hours in 1988, B illings-H arris spent m any additional hours at the athletic departm ent setting up and preparing for the sem inars, “ F o r a one-day program , it w ill take six to eight days to prepare if you’re not starting from scratch,” B illings-H arris said. B illin gs-H arris said she currently has two other corporate contracts. One w ill pay her $10,000 over 10 months, when she w ill give four , four-hour sem inars and provide m aterials and personalized training fo r an executive staff. Another contract w ill pay her $80,000 over 12 months, for which she w ill provide training, m aterials and supervision. “ W hat I do is not specific to athletes — it is specific to people who are concerned about public relations and custom er service,” B illings-H arris said. “ W hen I w as approached I did not see any reason to say no. I s a w i t a s a n opportunity to provide services to the institution.” STATE PRESS Classified Advertising WHY ATTEND SCOTTSDALE COMMUNITY COLLEGE? • C o n v e n ie n c e —-o v e r 1500 d a y / n ig h t c lasses w it h in a s h o rt d rive. • Q u a li t y in stru c tio n — h ig h ly q u a lifie d &■ e x p e rie n c e d fa c u lty . • A f f o r d a b l e tu itio n — a lo w " r e s id e n t ” tu itio n o f $23 p e r c red it h o u r. Mon.-Thurs. 8am-8pm Friday 8am-3:30pm • S m a ll c lasses— s m a lle r c lasses m e a n m o re in d iv id u a liz e d atten tio n . O pen R e g is tra tio n fo r S p rin g Sem ester MK) N o w th ro u gh J an u ary 20 Classes begin January 22 R e g is te r at th e Adm issions O ffic e Register in person or by phone* *(phone registration for continuing Students only) * 423-6114 General Information 423-6000 Admissions .423-6100 SCC Activity Line 423-6156 Scottsdale C om m unity C ollege 9000 E. Chaparral Rd. at Pima Rd. 1990 MERCURY COUGAR Beware of Cat Cougar LS • 3.8-liter V-6 OHV fuel-injected engine • 4-speed automatic overdrive transmission * Power-assisted brakes • Air conditioning* Power windows • Reclining bucket seats with console and floor shift • Electronic AM/ FM stereo with four speakers and digital clock IFYOU*REAGRADUATTNGSENIORYOU M QUA1M FORA $400 INCENTIVE LA D Y SU N D EVIL BA SK ET BA LL D IAL C LA SSIC D e c e m b e r 2 ,1 9 8 9 G a m es b egin at 6 p.m . and 8 p.m . U n iv e r s ity A c t iv it y C e n te r Lincoln M ercury will have a car display, half-time shootout and give away FREE promotional items. MERCURY ■■■■■■■■■■■■■ LI NCOLN Quality is Job 1. W E ’RE ‘T O P S ’ IN H O L ID A Y C A R D S A N D G IF T S 829-9399 m it e r a i is thcCwacnteae SEEYOUR LOCAL LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER Ib q u a lify for cash back from Lincoln M ercury you m ust take new vehicle retail delivery from dealer stock by December 3 !, 1989. You m ust graduate from an accredited 4 year college or university w ith at least a bachelor's degree between January 1 ,1989, and January 31, ]9 9 0. 'Ib is offer is in addition to other purchase incentives w hich may be available. See your Lincoln-M ercury Dealer for details. Slate Pi— » 0age13 Wednesday, November 8 9 ,19 8 9 Physical conditioning classes added to Health Briefs Cholesterol screening offered spring schedule after trial semester run today at Recreation Com plex By SONJA LEW IS S tate Press Students hoping to squeeze some exercise into tight academ ic schedules w ill be able to enroll in a new physical conditioning class that has been added after a trial run this sem ester. P E D 105, Ph ysical Conditioning, w ill continue in the spring sem ester with two sections because A SU officials are expecting m ore students to enroll. The novelty of the course, which com bines weight training and aerobic conditioning, is that students m ay “ set their own schedule’’ when to attend class, said Donna Landers, the course coordinator. “ I think students would like the flexibility because it gives them m ore freedom to study for tests,’’ she said. “ I think they w ill also like the individual nature of the course.” The course is designed so students can com plete the A m State Press Classifieds work at their convenience. However, there must be a teaching assistant on duty. In addition, the students are asked to attend class once a week in which things like proper use of equipment w ill be discussed. “ O ur goal is to have the students w alk into any club and to know how to use the m achines and to develop their own specialized workout,” Landers said. Cindy D avis, a teaching assistant fo r P E D 105 who is pursuing a m aster’s degree in sports psychology, said the class also benefits students because they can adapt a workout for their individual needs. “ A lot of the guys just want to w ork on their upper body and a lot of girls just their thighs,” D avis said. Landers said she understands the fe a r m ost students have of joining other P E . classes. “ M ost students going into a weight room them selves are a little afraid , (b u t) w e’re different than the traditional P .E . class,” Landers said. W eVeat your service! SERVICES The A S U C ollege o f N ursing and Scottsdale Community Health Services w ill o ffer cholesterol screening today at the entrance foyer to the Student Recreation Com plex. Screening w ill be available from 1:30 p.m . to 4:30 p.m . at a Cost o f $7. The process requires about five m inutes and participants w ill receive total cholesterol levels based on a finger stick-type blood test. This service w ill be available to a ll Student Recreation Com plex m em bers. F o r m ore inform ation calll 965-4721. Canned food drive to benefit people w ith AIDS virus extended D ue to the response to the canned food drive to help those w ith A ID S, the Student H ealth Center is extending the canned food drive through Dec. 6. Anyone interested in helping with the drive should contact D an ae B row nell at 965-4721. Deposit boxes for nonperishable food item s are available throughout the cam pus and in the Student H ealth Center. A ID S education program s can also be scheduled fo r your group by calling 965-4721. Dating.____ - __ C o ntinued fro m W EST CAM PUS V isit C LH In A ztech C o u r t, D o rs e y ft U niversity Visit H EA TH Z E N IT H C O M P U T E R S , 27th A ve. ft In d ian S chool 9 a.m .-3 p.m. (weather perm itting) V ielt us at COM PASS In the 829-1350 M iniSport laptop is a SIX POUND 279-6247 X T com patible with a page 8. between 26 and 39 years old, although the age range is 18 to 61 years old; V “T here are m any m ore fem ales in the ovei* 38-year-old age group that want to use our service and a disproportionate num ber of m ales in the under-29 group,” D earth said, D earth said m any o f his clients are doctors, law yers, bankers and professors. “ Y ou ’d be surprised at the num ber of Arizona State U niversity professors who com e in ,” D earth said. The service costs $495 fo r a one-year m em bership. K elly and Sue O’R ell m et and got m arried through Com patibility Factors three years ago. “ I thought I ’d have som e nice dates, but I didn’t expect to get m arried and be so happy,” Sue said. “ A s soon as w e m ot it w as like gan g busters. W e m et around Thanksgiving and w ere m arried by Christm as.” 8 M h z 8088 p rocessor, a 2" 720K drive, 1 M B R A M , backlit supertwist LCD screen, p a rallel, serial and RGB $1199 ports, fo u r h o u r battery, a n d an A C adapter/charger. Your Lucky N um ber STATE O F TH E ART - LIG H T , Y E T P O W E R F U L L D O N T LEA V E FO R CLASS W IT H O U T IT!! Z -2 8 6 -L P / 1 2 State Press Classifieds 965-6731 is a 12 M H Z 80286 zero w ait state, sm all footprint desktop With a 20 M B h ard d isk , 1 M B R A M , one 33" flopp y drive, a M O U S E , p a ra lle l p o rt a n d 2 serial p orts and 14" F T M COLOR m o n ito r. W it h $1999 Help Feed the Homeless 8 m hz version and Stanley H. Kaplan Educational Center will help you! M S D O S and $1799 M icro so ft W in d o w s with W rit e a n d Paint. L O W C O S T , Y E T P O W E R F U L , W IT H A Z -2 8 6 / 2 5 is a 8 MHZ M O U S E 8 m hz mono sys. $1549 80286, sm all footprint desktop with a 20 M B h ard d isk , one 5.25" 360K floppy drive, 512K R A M , a $1749 with M O U S E , p a r a lle l port, a se ria l p ort, a n d a 14" F T M m onitor. W it h M S D O S a n d M ic ro s o ft W in d o w s with W rit e a n d Paint. VGA monochrome monitor $1449 An upgrade to 640K RAM and 3.5" 720K disk drive are available at ft special bundled price o f $ 1 7 5 !! Supersport 286 one 3-5" 1.4 M B a fu ll size backlit supertw ist L C D screen. So ftw are in­ ¿KAPLAN TtA» Zanjan or Tcdw Your Chane— 'w ith 4 0 m b hard d isk DOS. $2699 F A S T , P O W E R F U L A N D P O R T A B L E !! Zenith offers a complete line o f powerful 386 com­ puters that run at 16,20,25 and 33mhz. SY ST E M S W IT H F T M V G A M O N IT O R AND 40 M G H A R D D I S K S T A R T A T : SPECIAL SOFTWARE OFFER MICßOÄOFTWOOD AND EXCELBUNDLEWITH ANY SYÄTEM . com plete $3399 20 mhz system $100 20 mb Supersport Laptop 80C88........................ $1799 data systems 967-2967 $2399 flopp y drive, 1 M B o f R A M , p ara lle l port, serial p ort, an d CO M PLETE 4 cans - $25 off 8 cans -$ 50o ff 12 cans- $75 off 16 cans -$100 off Offer good on: LSAT) GMAT, GRE, MCAT, DAT and at time of enrollment. is an 80286, sw itchable 12/6 M h z , zero w ait state lap to p with 20 M B h ard d isk , cluded is M ic ro s o ft Donate canned goods and receive a DISCOUNT off your course. 20 mb HR Laptop 80C 88........ .................... .....$1699 Dual Floppy Laptop 80C88......................... ........ $1149 Prices subject to change w ithout notice. O ther systems available. For inform ation call 602-274-9877. Phoenix Page 14 Wednesday, N o ve m b e r^ , 1989 Prof shares inspirations, encourages students to ‘shoot high' By TENNY TATUSIAN State P rw s John C raw ford wants his students to ask fa r an “ F .” “ Students ask m e to change their grad e to a higher grad e,” the associate,com m unication professor said. “ N o one asks m e to low er their grade. N o one says, ‘I could have done a lot better than I did,’ ” C raw ford, who also teaches speech classes, spoke to a group of students and faculty m em bers Tuesday afternoon in the M U as part of the L ast Lecture Series, a series of lectures intended to give professors a chance to speak about personal experiences instead o f textbook facts. C raw ford said be has experienced three types o f traum a — professional, social and spiritual — all of which helped him to grow em otionally. “ Traum a is a good thing,” he said. “ Out of an aw fu l lot of traum a com es an aw ful lot of good.” C raw ford explained that through professional traum a comes courage, from social traum a com es love and from spiritual traum a com es faith. Despite his spiritual traum a and the fact that he attends Crawford church on a weekly basis, C raw ford said he w as unsure of m any religious questions and he said he w as uncertain of the existence of an afterlife. • C raw fo rd said that he graduated high school with a “ D ” average, and he failed his first speech class in college. But he added that these events w ere an inspiration fo r him to do better and to get a doctorate. “ Som etim es I w ish I w ere on ground zero a gain ,” h esaid. “ I would like that challenge again. Out of a failin g experience I learned courage.” H e added that students are som etim es too com fortable w ith passing grades. “ A ll too often w e can live with that ‘C ,’ ” he said. “ A ‘C ’ isn’t that bad, but it takes the challenge aw ay. If you’re going to shoot high — shoot re ally high and see what happens.” The lecture series is sponsored by the United Cam pus Christian M inistry, Episcopalian Cam pus M inistry, United Methodist Cam pus M inistry and A ll Saints N ew m an Center. “ It’s an integration of w hat education is about,” said R ichard Pipes, a coordinator o f the lecture series. “ It lets people speak from their hearts, not just their notes. P l -ft n £ t € - f t fi t H THE N I T E C L U B G ee... I w onder if my pals w ill buy a S tate Press Christm as personal fo rm e this year. That would really be swells You can place a fifteen word Christmas greeting personal ad in the December 12 Christmas issue of The > State Press for. only a dollar. 1 5 f each additional word. What a great way to say Happy Holidays! Ad deadline is Friday, Dec. 8 at 5 p.m. Visa, MasterCard, cash or check with guarantee card welcome! State Press CLASSIFIEDS Matthews^C.enter Basement 965-6733* . REACH O U T A N D TOUCH... A N T A R C TIC A W EDNESDAY & TH U R SD A Y 250 D R I N K S B-1 0 :3 0 Live Reggae Thursday w ith Zion Knights. □pen till 3 AM • Friday Happy Hour 5 -8 :0 0 SWC of. Scottsdale & ÖaiTnifback F?oads B 0 2 0 9 4 5 # 2 3 4 5 ~ State Presi Page 15 W e d n « d ^ 2 ¡2 ¡£ ¡¡b « ^ 2 2 ^ 2 £ Poster Contest Inform ation Resources M an agem en t is spans« ' a poster contest a d v ertisin g the A S U C om puter F a ir to be h eld on F ebru ary 6 ,19 90 in the A rizo n a Koom o f the M em orial U n io n . T h e purpose o f th is fa ir is to show th e A S U com m unity an d th e gen eral p ublic h o w com puters a re bein g u tilized a t A S U . A ll posters w ill b e ju d ged accon iin g to the fo llo w in g ru le s an d th e poster b est rep resen tin g the im age o f the fa ir w ill be aw a rd e d thé sum o f $500. 1. A ll posters m ust be subm itted an d reg istered in C O M P A S S , lo cated in room 108 o f th e M o e u r building , n o la te r than 5 p .m ., D e cem b er 6 ,1 9 8 9 . 2 . A ll posters su b m itted becom e th e s o le p roperty o f Info rm ation R eso u rces M an ag e m e n t, A n zo n a S ta te U n iversity. 3 . AH posters su b m itted m ust b e * w id e b y 1 7 * high. 4 . A ll po sters m ust con tain th e fo llow ing inform ation: n am e: ."A S U C o m p u ter F a ir* location: ‘ A rizo n a R oom o f th e M em o rial U n ion * «late: "F e b ru ary 6 ,1 9 9 0 ” tim e: *1 0 a m . to 4 p m * 5 . E n tries w ill b e ju d g ed o n c re ativen ess , rep rese n ta tio n of th e com pu ter Hair purpo se and u s e o f th e "O ld W est* th em e. 6 . AH con testan ts m ust b e cu rren tly en ro lled a t A rizo n a S ta te U n iversity an d n o t a fu ll-tim e em p lo yee o f IR M . 7 . T h e w inn ing p o s te r w ill b e p laced on d isp lay in C O M P A S S o n D e cem b er 1 5 ,1 9 8 9 . 8 . In th e e v e n t th e w in n e r is d isq u alified , a n ew w in n er w ill b e se le c te d . 9 . AH po sters m u st b e o rig in a l, d es ig n e d a n d c reated by th e co n tes tan t. 10. A p a n e l o f ju d g e s w ill b e selected fro m  S U facu lty and s taff. 11. T o en s u re a fa ir s e le c tio n , w e a s k th at p o s ters not b e signed by th e a rtis t u n til a fte r a w in n er h a s b ee n se le c te d . 11 C R IM E zero m ; m F o r fu rth e r info rm ation con cernin g th e s e ru les co n tac t B ob A n d erso n , R avi S h a rm a , o r B urt B artram a t 5 -5 6 7 7 . PMEWCAN G A M M A G E A U D IT O R IU M PRESENTS -CRIMINAL - ■ ... t%lU§tK3E :' ** ^ASSOCIATION D C IIC M T : MM frillY IE mm I tasín Bote t R E C E P T IO N h FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1 7 4 10 P.M. JUSTICE STUDIES STUDENTS HONORING PROFESSORS: ' I. GAYLE SHUMAN SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2 2,7 410 P.M. TIC K E T S : $9 $4.50 for * ASU students! DUDLEY MELICHAR .£ . GILBERT BRUNS ' ALUMNI LOUNGE—DECEMBER 1 7P M _______ Funded by ASA G AM M AGE T ickets on sale a t G am m age, A S U activity C en ter and ait D illard 's box offices. IN F O R M A T IO N /C H A R G E B Y P H O N E 965-3434 INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT? YOU SHOULD KNOW YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS! •FREE Consultation and faculty •Auto Accidents •Motorcycle Accidents •Bicycle Accidents •W rongful Death •Faulty Products •Slip & Fall •D og Bites •Insurance Disputes 99.9K E Z to students ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Your Host "T h e Family" “ Çreat ItáCian fo o d ” 8 9 4 -M A M A 106 E»* U n ive rs ity D r. E V E N I N G S P E CI A LS W A T C H F O R O U R L U N C H S P E C IA L S •REDUCED percentage fees for cases of clear liability or serious injury •Hom e, evening & hospital appointments available ' KILLER CALZONE" 14 07. Soft Drink or Draft Ice Cream Cone T* U E mSm WwÊm o" PERSONAL PIZZA 1 F R E E TOPPING 14 07. Soft Drink or Draft Ice Cream Cone BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY CALL BAKER & MARCUS wm ¥ W mtáMWÊê Personal Injury Lawyers %,! DON’T GET HURT TWICE 438-1212 (4625 S. W endler Dr., Suite I I I. Tempe) ED I _ _ _ $215 SPAGHETTI DINNER With Salad & Ciarlic Bread 14 07. Soft Drink or Draft Ice C ream Cone _ _ ^ CHICKEN I’ A R M I CI AN O D I N N E R with bide of Spaghetti, Salad, Garlic Bread 14 o/ Soft Drink or Draft Ice Cream C one 1 4 " PIZZA PITCHER OF BEER OR m r OQ SODA, 2 FRI I gfcl " f D ■ CREAM C ONES Page 16 State Presa 2™ ì 22*™ì ASU Police Report Tem pe Police Report wom ens shower room of Ph ysical Education E ast. H e is described as a white m ale, about 20 years old, sm all build with freckles on the bridge of his nose and brown, w avy hair. •A vandal broke a window in a student’s room on the second floor of Sahuaro Residence H all. •A thief broke a window of a student’s car with a blunt object w hile it w as parked in Parkin g Structure Three and stole a radar detector and jew elry valued at $1,500. •A thief stole a student’s bicycle, valued at $200, from the bicycle racks at Ocotillo Residence H all w here it w as locked with a chain and padlock. A S U p o lic e re p o rte d th e fo llo w in g in cid ents th a t o ccu rred betw een 7 a .m . M onday and 7 a .m . Tuesday : •V an dals punched holes in the mens restroom at the east practice fields, causing $200 in dam ages. H ie w alls are m ade o f plaster board and can be dam aged easily. •A thief attem pted to break into a room on the third floor o f the Ph ysical Science B uilding by unhinging the door between Sunday and M onday. H ie thief stole the hinge screw s, which are valued at $3. •A student w as arrested on an outstanding traffic w arran t for driving with a suspended license at R u ral Road and Spence Avenue. H e w as released after he posted $564 in bail. •A student reported that a m an w as in the Tem pe police reported the following incidents that occurred between 7 a.m . M onday a n d 7 a .m .T u e sd a y : •Tw o m en w ore seriously in jured ifi it bar accident early Tuesday m orning on McCUntock D rive when a d river hit a p e d e s tria n w h o w a s c h a s i n g his girlfriend across the street, police said. Leonard M ortos, 22, of the 1700 block of E ast Don C arlos D rive, w as hit by Theodore Thorton, 28, of the 2100 block of North H ayden Lane. Both men w ere taken to Scottsdale M em orial HospitalOsborn w here M ortos is listed in critical condition and Thorton is listed in stable but serious condition. Compiled by State Press reporter Tenny Tatusian Police said Thorton w as speeding north in the m edian lane on M cClintock D rive when M ortos ra n in front o f the car. M ortos w as chasing his girlfrien d across die street during an argum ent, police said. •A 25-year-old transient w as arrested at Tem pe M ission Palm s Hotel, 60 E . Fifth St., after she w as found showering in the em ployees bathroom , •Tw o thieves w ere arrested after they stole a “ H appy Sperm ” candle from a studen t’s ap artm en t at U n iv ersity Tow ers, 525 S. Forest A ve. Compiled by State Press reporter Tenny Tatusian G radu atin g.. .on to Graduate School? C o n sid e r a m u lti-d is c ip lin a ry p ro g ra m th a t . b le n d s c h e m is try , b io lo g y , p h ysics, and e n g in e e rin g : MAJOR IN Bioengineering at the University o f Utah F o r ap p lication and fin an cial support* info rm atio n contact: D e p a rtm e n t o f B io e n g in e e rin g U n iv e rs ity o f U ta h 2 4 8 0 M e rr ill E n g in e e rin g B u ild in g S a lt L a ke C ity , U T 841 12 (8 0 1 ) 5 8 1 -85 28 PIZZA W e have opportunities fo r good students from o il disciplines. •S p ec ia l fellow sh ip funds m ay b e a v a ila b le for: B iom ed ical E n g in eerin g B iotechn ology L ife Su pport.in S p ace D ecreasing H ealth C a re Costs B iom ateria ls a n d ^ » c o m p a t ib ilit y B iom echanics an d R o b o tics \ Neuroprostheses M e d ic a l Im a g in g A r tific ia l O rgan s Su rgical Im plants YOU’RE THE DRIVER, N O T THE SPECTATOR. Minor in Economics. At Domino's Pizza you get the freshest custom made pizza at fantastic prices. 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FHANKUN, K FnaSetRant3.Get4*tFREE C m • ATTORNEY-AT-LAW •AeteW IteMItawlEwM -- -------- » raa-waa MSthMItn ___ D EN TIST* _ aw are.mt a j| CHUBBY TUBBY’S Manéente C h iN A 07«6*1*« liai«, ar Chef « '» ■ I AMEMCANEYEMSTTTVTE ANDCANTOROPTCAL 15%OFFEyeEaawa/Eyewear Heftebousedoteaale«oruhm dl«estintePrunnendbalanndaaWng.ExpirasOet.SUM. AnySeraice m ean* B IC Y C L E » A vailable through: Student Health — Mental Health 965-4726 No Cost or Obligation. The “W e Care” card is your key to hundreds of dollars in savings throughout the year! FREE • FREE • FREE • FREE 968-5555 903 S. Rural Rd. HOURS: 11:00am-1:30am Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 nm-2:30am Fri.-Sat. Our d riven carry leas than $20.00. Lim ited delivery area to insure safety. ©1989 Domino’s Pizza. íñ’ ñn” -! rS i’ hi5"‘ l r¡ $r> V" S o u th ern ! Irei'Àn" $ 1 .0 0 I | ■ ! ■ | | $1.00 OFF any Medium Pan or Original one or more item pizza. One coupon per pizza. Not valid with any Other offers or specials. Expires: 12-15-89 165 8TP R a to hi a w n c » u a a lo c i u * U k S ubpct lo aNappticabls stala A local l NOW HIRING AT 903 S. RURAL - 968-5555 College Culture Stato Press Page 17 Wednesday, November 2 9 ,19 8 9 a re ridiculed w ith the drill-team inspired use o f fly sw atters an d whistles. Jock com­ posed a ll of the rhythm s h erself and then integrated sharp, clean movement resulting in a w ell-crafted piece. The bright costum ing and tight corps w ork m ake “ Sw at Syndrum ” a thoroughly enjoyable piece to watch —- Jock dem onstrates that m odern dance doesn’t have to p revail upon society’s evils in order to entertain. Jock forces people to laugh at their seriousness and relax, to achieve a state of m ind that m odem dance seldom allow s fo r fe a r of losing substance or meaning. Suna KjennM/stne Kress Joni Meeker In “ Choices,” a piece by Sondra Garcia that represents interracial conflict. Tracy Bishop and Sarah Novotny perform in Elizabeth Knock’s "Eveillangise.” Ce l e r y and l a m e A BFA after four years of dance and sweat By MBS HALVERSON State Press It’s the technical rehearsal for the senior concert at ASU - The nine (lancers who are contributing Work to the concert are spraw led around P .E . E ast’s studio theater — the sam e place they’ve spent at least the last four years sweating, dancing and creating w hile working tow ard their bachelor of fine arts degree in dance. The B .F .A . degree in dance from A SU is both rigorous and dem anding. The degree includes training in the technical aspects of the field, like lighting and sound, along with choreography and technique classes. The senior concert is, according to Ann Ludw ig, one o f the concert’s faculty ad­ visers, “ a culm ination of choreography, light and sound classes. It’s a degree re­ quirem ent that a ll dancers think about and p repare for during their tim e at A S U .” Some dancers begin actual choreography on their piece the sem ester p rio r to the senior concert. A p ril L eh er integrated a piece called “ P an ic” that she used in an inform al concert last y ear into her senior concert work, “ W indfarm .” B ased on the “ Book of Q ualities” by J. Ruth Gendler, the piece characterizes the emotions and qualities o f stillness, patience, despair and panic. The m usical score, com posed by faculty accom panist Sue Peck, includes h arp m usic and is effective in relaying the subtlety o f the qualities patience and stillness. L eh er’s choreography dem onstrates the physical discipline achieved through a strong training in ballet. H er dancers are lyrical, yet powerful, with a strong sense o f focus in their m ovem ent and within the piece. One of the most captivating moments in “ W indfarm ” is the duet “ P a ­ tience ,” w ith E rinn Sullivan and Jennifer D uxberry. D escribed by L eber as “ really bright, quick dancers,” D u xberry and Sullivan are extrem ely sensitive to each other’s m ovem ent and tim ing, w eaving motion and expression together on-stage. Leh er’s choreography produced effective characterization o f the qualities without losing the beauty o f m ovement. The corps m ovem ent throughout “ W indfarm ” gives the work a sense o f centrality and provid­ ed interesting dynam ics in the quality “ Stillness.” E ven when frozen in an upreach, the dancers com m and attention. Leher w as inspired to dance in the public school system . She w as m otivated by the excellent faculty at C am elback H igh School and encouraged to continue with dance. And she wants to return her talents to the school system . “ I ’d like to see a strong dance program within the schools because I w as so inspired by m y teachers in high school,” Leher said. “ I think a ll the arts, dance especially, have such a positive effect on kids that they’re essential.” Sondra G arcia’s “ Choices” involves col­ lisions with rom antic, cultural and in­ terpersonal relationships. U sin g N ative A m erican and Ethiopian m usic, G arcia captures the conflict between cultures and the danger of ethhocentrism. Extending her choreography only slight­ ly beyond the boundaries o f the traditional ethnic dances, G arcia evokes the hatred and pain that occurs when cultures clash. The strong partnering between D avid Jones and K athy Gonzales links the au­ dience to the abstract theme and helps unify the m ultifaceted piece. G arcia’s underlying intention is to il­ lustrate the inability of different people to understand and accept each other. “ So m any people talk about stopping the fighting between blacks and whites in South A frica,” G arcia said, “ but they con­ tinue to let it occur in their own countries. People have to start accepting each other fo r what they a re .” Ronelle Jock’s “ Swat Syndrum ” is a rhythm study using a live percussionist, whistles, fly sw atters and dancers’ bodies a s instruments. Jock’s sense o f hum or is a welcom e change from the usually heavy social com m entary that is the staple of m any m odern choreographers. B ased on im ages of m arching bands and cheerleaders, “ Sw at Syndrum ” is quick and funny. Traditional cheerleading moves Jock believes strongly that being able to enjoy the arts is a privilege. Because of the phenomenal cost (up w ard of $2,000 a y e a r) Jock w as unable to attend classes in p rivate studios as a child so she received her training from the public school system . “ I don’t think good instruction should be lim ited to private studios. There are lots of talented kids who can’t afford private lessons that could benefit from a strong dance program in the schools,” Jock said. Celery, w heelchairs, gold lam e and m ore celery are brought together in Elizabeth Knock’s vision o f recent televangelism scandals. Knock’s “ E veillan gise” is a com m ent on the im m orality o f T V evangelism and the pain incurred by the innocent people who fa ll victim to the glossy prom ises and blind faith. Knock uses w ildly creative costum ing and a m usical score, com prised o f tracks from The Violent Fem m es, D ead C an Dance and The Roches, to interw eave w hat appear to be ridiculously estranged im ages. Strange things about wheelchairs, you put them onstage and they becom e power­ fu l vehicles o f expression. Knock’s choreography handles the wheelchair as m etaphorical vulnerability illustrating the w ay that evangelists take advantage of those people most likely to believe in their cause. Knock’s choreography reflects a genuine sense of despair and comments on televangelists’ propensity to d egrade the values and m orals o f the people that sup­ port them. Knock’s dancers a re able to convey their intent though several partner­ ing sequences. And Knock’s use of direc­ tional lighting and color aptly enhances her m essage. A fter pursuing her m aster of fine arts degree in dance, Knock w ould like to con­ tinue dancing and choreographing m odem dance. “ T heir choreography,” said Ann Ludw ig o f the nine seniors, “ can stand with and excell above that of m any other graduating seniors.” And the senior dance concert w ill once again strengthen A S U ’s reputation as a reservoir fo r exceptional talent in the dance field. , , Art and its relation to the environment The Usual Suspects D rug rap ping A N IN D IA N A P O L IS P R IN C IP A L decid­ ed to cancel an anti-drug talk by ra p artist F lav o r F la v at a high school after seeing another m em ber o f the group Public Enem y on television. F la v w as to as p art of an anti­ d rug program M onday at N orth Central H igh School. The program w as canceled after P rin ­ cipal Charles Roach watched F rid ay ’s edi­ tion of the A B C N ew s program “ N igbtline,” in which a discussion of racism in m usic included a clip of Public Enem y m em ber Professor G riff calling Jew s wicked. The rap artist later apologized. “ B ased on the controversy associated with Pu blic Enem y, the convocation in m y opinion w as not going to be a positive ex­ perience,” Roach said M onday. The Rev. C harles W illiam s, president of Indiana B lack Expo, which sponsored the anti-drug program , said he w as disap­ pointed and that R oach’s decision bordered on racism . appear By GLENN LEVY State Press In the w ake of the Jesse H elm s art censorship controver­ sy, it at first seem s shocking that any artist w ould pro­ claim , as A SU art student P a ris Strom does, that “ w e’re at a tim e when each one o f us is going to have to give up som e of our rights.” H e precedes to prophesy that in the future, recycling ga rb a g e “ has to” be legislated. It sounds so ironic and O rw ellian at first. E ven frighten­ ing. Frightening, at least, until Strom puts it in the proper context o f Exxon oil spills and other “ accidents.” He rightfully sham es any indignant response that this would be a violation of rights, saying in a grav e tone that “ It’s scary not to do it.” It is this strong conviction which has led Strom to curate his second art show at the H arry W ood G allery , “ En­ vironm ental Concerns.” It is understandable that a great m ajority o f A SU students a re confounded by m any “ m essage a rt” shows. But this excellent, refreshing art show — a t the H arry W ood G allery until this F rid ay — has a m essage that anyone can and (m o re im portantly) should heed. A s Strom notes, the show aim s tp “ depict in an abstract and representational w ay the elem ents o f w hat m an has done to his environm ent.” The diverse, clever and fresh w ork o f the show affirm s that th e exhibition is a success both in tim eliness and execution. H ie show is fu ll of excellent photography, sculpture, painting, prints and even m ixed m edia work. B ruce R acine’s “ Untitled” cibachrom e i>rint, fo r exam ­ ple, is a pow erful superim position of sea, sand and a Shell oil station. H e blends photos of a shoreline and a city skyline, capturing the rushing tide just before it sweeps aw ay the forces o f big business. C arl S. D ah l’s “ E ntropy” is another original treatm ent of m an’s technological struggle with his environm ent. Only this tim e it is m an who seem s to be winning the battle. It is he who is standing on top of a la rg e black circuit boardsculpture stand. B ut one look at this black fetal-slim ed figu re’s am putated lim bs shows that, in technologically ad­ vancing, he has disfigured him self as w ell a s his environm ent. . t Other prom inent subjects of the show' include Atom ic destruction — the subject of Gordon A . Fluke’s psychedelic U ranium poster, “ P U U Stink,” — and the vibrant nature w e a re forsaking, the subject o f Julie B ow lands’ expressionistic-im pressionistic nature paintings. But, a s Strom concedes, the most prom inent subject of the show is that o f the oil spill, a la Exxon. R esa Scott’s self-explanatory poster “ O fficial Death T oll o f Sea Otters is 872” and D aniel M orago’s sculptural “V am p ires” express the oil industry’s m utilation of our environm ent and w ildlife. But, in title and treatm ent, it is J eff D ick’s “ Cash Cans” (o il on can vas) — a “ petroleum still life ” o f three red, white and blue oil drum s — which exposes in m inim al fashion the m otivation behind the m utilation. It is m ore than obvious that this protest exhibition con­ veys insight into the problem o f our tim e. Thankfully, the secondary m essage of the exhibition is one less dire. One look at the excellent art work in this exhibition quickly con­ veys w h a t Strom understates: “ A lot o f great artists are born out of the un iversity." «t a f r-> - •; Comics State Press Wednesday, November 8 9 ,19 8 9 18 by B ill W a tte rs o n T h e f a r S ide C alvin a n d H o b b es by G ary Larson /// r w teleph o n e by G arry T ru d e a u D o o n esb u ry MR. POWERS! I m tr v e ANDWATCHHER ESCORTSHIPS! WE NEARLY5M0MPEP ■pm TORPEDO capboot m/s TAIN* MORNING! AYE, AYS, 5!R ! bearing (M v m s o m r UGHTCRUISER! ne 60TA BADNEWS, UHAT GOODNEWS-TYPE ISTT, SITUATION,SIR.THE SAPOR* RADORTOWEROUST \ GOTSHEAREDOFFE/ = V— A CRIPPLEDAIRCRAFT- ANDINE GOOD NEWS* ÍTWASNT ONECE OURS. II-2.1 C1M3 Chromda Feature* ' Dfit nbuted by Untvnmi Prees Sy Obscene duck call. by M ik e R itte r Ivo ry T o w ers WHAT E5CITIH6, EXTRAUEGMT O P T PH? VOU 6UV FOR LITTLE OL' BEOLAH? A BRACELET? A NECKLACE? : A COZEN REO ROSES? A R tN S? WHERE ARE Vou 6 0 IH 6 ; WWE? CHRISTMAS SHOPPING? SO UTH B E N D , Ind. (A P ) — A fire that destroyed the cam pus laundry has forced som e U niversity of Notre D am e students to get a quick education in suds. And for som e of them, thanks to a “ great m om ,” it’s their firstever brush with the subject. In the past, m ale undergraduates w ere charged an annual fee and received an allotm ent of laundry services. There are no laundry facilities in m en’s halls. N ow , the students are having to use public laundry m achines on cam pus, “ I never thought I ’d have to w ash m y own clothes. I had no curiosity at all about it,” said Joe Theby, a freshm an, who said his m other and two sisters handled the laundry at home. “ It’s not too bad ,” freshm an P a u l Pearson said. “ I started on the whites because if som ething screw s up, they are easy to replace. ...A VCR? A MICROWAVE OWEN? A CE/UN& FAN? A PIRT BIKE...? I ■inf â l :S S 3 fc L 25° D rafts Lj'TlCJ r ie a t r e $200 pitchers t t l f 7 p.m.-Close Directed by Sylvia Debenport $199 C O M B O Every Wed. 4-7 p.m. Offenbach’s The Tales of Hoffmann tan m i & eatery <& r presents Musical Direction by Kenneth F Seipp Student Preview Beef, Bean & Cheese Burro plus Tortilla Chips & Salsa Wednesday November 29 7:30 pm FOCUS ON THIS ¿ te THE / NEW Shipments Every Week Our garments a re n o t seconds or irregulars! C; D IS C O U N T HUNTERS Gifts1 •Housewares* ‘ Stereos, CD’s TV’s, Boom Boxesl Personal Stereos*! WE CARRY DESIGNER CLOTHING G u m s , $ 2 .0 0 (w ith student ID ) U z CMbortto, Bugle Boy, Ocean Pacific, Dockers The Discount Hunters 7337 W. Indian School It’* worth the trip! A whole new fashion experience awaits youl 848-0130 • Phoenix Sung in English A l Ihe Arizona Stale University Music Theatre. O n Decem ber t. 2; 6. 8 & 9 at 7:30 in Ihe evening. Tickets on sale al Gamm age and a ll D illard’s Box Offices and also one hour p rior |o each performance Adults S9.50 Students & C hildren S5. 965-3434 Sports Siate P ro » Page 19 Wednesday, November 2 9,1989 Devils maul Mustangs; size overpowers speed By VICKI CULVER State Press The A SU wom ens basketball team proved Tuesday that speed m eans nothing when com peting against height as the Sun D evils (2-0) defeated W estern N ew M exico State, 76-57. A S U H ead basketball Coach M cH ugh said the W estern team has been scoring in the 80s and 90s because o f its quicker players, but T u esd ay the Sun D e v ils’ height w as overwhelm ing. “ It w as definitely a disadvantage for them ,” M cH ugh said. “ They are scrappy and they w ork hard, but they w ere outm atched fo r size. “ It’s tough when you’re 5-foot-10 to cover som eone 6-foot-2. In the second half, w e exploited the fact that w e w ere bigger and played the ball inside a lot.” A t the start of the game, McHugh said A S U w as not playing as tight a defense as it norm ally does because her players were a fraid of getting beat to the basket. H ow ever, she said the Sun D evils becam e m ore com fortable with the opposing team and w ere anticipating the passes by the second half. A SU dominated the passing lanes With 16 steals, com pared to the M ustangs’ five. “ W e em phasize the fact that w e want to deny the b all, ” M cHugh said. “ In the second half, w e forced them to get open and work to get the b a ll.” Sun D evil seniors L isa Jones and Carolyn D eH off led the team with four steals each. D eH off said it w as a team effort which enabled her to go fo r the ball. “ W e w ere really gelled together,” D eH off sa id . “ W e d id n ’t w o rry about th eir quickness, instead w e utilized our own height.” D eH off said she and the rest of the team did not expect the N ew M exico squad to be as com petitive as it w as and that the Sun D evils w ere surprised after the first half. “ W e underestim ated them, and they w ere a better team than w e expected,” she said. “ W e w ere told at the beginning that w e w ere th e b e t t e r t e a m , a n d u n d e r those circum stances w e som etim es don’t p lay all out.” A t the half, A S U w as leading by only 7 points, 34-27. M cH ugh said she knew her team w as capable o f capturing a large r lead. “ W e cam e out flat, but in the second half w e got together and played better,” she said. “ I don’t know w hy we have a tendency to start slow, but I do know that w e a re going to have to start picking it up and putting together two good h alves.” O ne as p e c t M cH u gh s a id A S U is im proving on each gam e is the shooting p e rc e n ta g e . T h e Sun D e v ils shot 42.9 percent Tuesday com pared to the M ustangs’ 36.4 percent. “F o r the most part, our shot selection w as good,” she said. “W e w ere running our plays through m ore thoroughly.” A SU had three players score in double­ figures in the gam e. D eH off led with 14 points and 10 rebounds, follow ed by Rosalind Senior and F ran C iak with 11 and 10 points, respectively. D eH off said she w as proud to be the leading scorer o f the gam e but that she did not play a s w ell as she knows she is capable. “ A t first, I really took them lightly,” she said. “ M y shot selection w as terrible, but I took a little fuel from the coach; and in the second half, m y work ethic cam e through.” With two solid wins to their advantage, M cHugh said the Sun D evils have gained valuable experience from the team s they have played. “ The kids are getting used to what is going on and are really getting a chance to see w hat they need to do to com pete on the college level,” she said. “ W e are going to use these two gam es as experience and clean up our w eaknesses so w e are ready to go F rid ay (in the D ial Soap C lassic ).” S c o tt T royano s/S tate P ress Sun Devil freshman Monique Ambers reaches in while defending Mustang forward Becky Darby in ASU's 76*57 win Tuesday night at the University Activity Center. A S U w restlers sq u are off a g a in s t P S U an d IS U By JOEL HORN State Press A spongy surface w ill blanket the U niversity Activity Center court today to m ake room fo r nationally ranked w restling team s as No. 2 A S U plays host to Portland State and seventh-ranked Iowa State. H ie m atches start at 1 and 7:30 p m ., respectively. “ W e’re going to see a very good dual m eet,” said Sun D evil H ead Coach Bobby D ouglas, who is in his 16th season at ASU. “ Portlan d State is the National Division II cham ps and Iow a State w as runner-up in the B ig E igh t.” D ouglas said the Sim D evils are especially looking forw ard to today’s com petition with the Cyclones. “ A ny tim e Arizona State and Iow a State get together, there’s going to be firew orks and I don’t think this w ill be any exception.” The Sun D evils (1-0) opened the season Sunday with a 32-8 victory o ver C al State-Fullerton, winning seven m atches and tying one in front o f 1,626 spectators at Fullerton. “ R egretably, w e did not perform the w ay I w ould like to have them p erform ,” D ouglas said- “ W e w ere sluggish, but w e w ere effective.” O verall, D ouglas said he w as satisfied with the win. “ Technically, I ’d have to grade us around 75-80 percent,” be said. “ Conditioning-wise, I ’d say w e’re som ewhere near that. St. John “ C al State-Fullerton did a great jo b against us and that’s a credit to their program . From the spectator point of view , it w as a great match. “ I would say it w as a good perform ance, but it w asn’t a beautiful thing to see. It w as enough to w in,” The Sun D evils jum ped out to a 6-0 advantage when senior A ll-A m erican Zeke Jones pinned the Titans’ M ichael G rubbs at 4:41 to win at 118 pounds, then redshirt freshm an LeShawn Charles increased A S U ’s lead to 9-0 with a 14-8 decision in his collegiate debut. “ His inexperience showed,” Douglas said of Charles, “ but he wrestled aggressively. H e expended too much energy, but with experience he’ll be a great one.” Fullerton’s Lyndon C am pbell narrow ed the deficit to 9-3, winning an 8-3 decision over junior A ndy M cNaughton at 134 pounds. A SU senior Townsend, Saunders, a 1989 N C A A finalist, follow ed w ith a w in via technical fa ll at 5:54. “ Andy M cNaughton, even in losing, looked great,” D ouglas said. “ H e probably W restled the best w restler on their team . “ Junior (Sau n ders) looked outstanding. He had a great m atch.” Senior Thom Ortiz, a two-tim e A ll-A m erican selection, gave the Sun D evils a 20-3 advantage w ith a fa ll over Jam es W alk er at 6:58. “ H e w restled a very sm art m atch,” D ouglas said. “ Thom m y w as w restling fo r the fa ll and any tim e you w restle fo r the fa ll, you’re taking chances. But he went after the fa ll and got it.” Sun D evil freshm an R ay M iller then won a 10-1 decision at 158 pounds. “ R ay M iller destroyed the No. 3-ranked w restler in the conference,” D ouglas said. “ H e w restled with a lot of poise. H e doesn’t look that great in the workout room. H e’s destined to be a great one.” Follow ing M iller’s victory, defending 158-pound N C A A cham pion D an St- John won a m ajor decision for the Sun D evils. The senior entered the season boasting a 35-match w in streak, 108 victories (fourth on the A SU career list) and a No, 1 pre-season ranking at 167 pounds in A m ateur W restling News. “ D an w restled a sm art m atch against probably the No. 2 m an in the conference . . . D an disected him in a sense. H e did a ll o f the things he had to do. “ I f he w restles the w ay he is now, he should have no trouble winning another national cham pionship.” Despite losing an 11-6 decision at 177 pounds in his first collegiate m atch, Sun D evil sophom ore Robert D labik im pressed the A SU head coach. “ H e did a good jo b ,” D ouglas said. “ H e m ade m istakes,, but he fought hard, H e w restled aggressively. W e don’t have any com plaints when they put forth the kind o f effort he w as putting forth.” In the 190-pound competition, A S U freshm an R ex Holm an w o n -a 6-1 decision and sophom ore heavyweight M ike Anderson battled to a draw with the Titans’ D avid Jones, capping the Sun D evil victory. “ M ike Anderson had a. great m atch,” D ouglas said. “ The individual he w restled is currently ranked No. 1 in the conference. Jones has dom inated the event in the past, so M ike has m ade great progress.” Im provem ent is needed, D ouglas said, if A S U hopes to repeat 1988’s national cham pionship season. “ W e can’t w restle Oklahom a (w ho the Sun D evils meet T h u rsday), Iow a State and Portland State the w ay we w restled Fhllerton,” he said. “ But again, being the first m atch, those things are expected. O ur freshm en perform ed as freshm en w ill perform — they’re unpredictable and they struggled. The results kind of speak fo r them selves.” Douglas State Unen V M n c id w . Novem ber 99. 1989 Zendejas discloses bounty hunters’ names to NFL P H IL A D E L P H IA ( A P ) — Luis Zendejas told an N F L official the nam es of “ four or five” Philadelphia E agles who he said told him that Coach Buddy Ryan had placed bounties on certain D allas Cowboys players before Thursday’s gam e. D allas running back Junior Tautalatasi said he also spoke to N F L security about allegations that the E agles had placed bounties on other players during his years with the team , from 1986 to 1988, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported today. In addition, league officials spoke with D allas Coach Jim m y Johnson and punter M ike Saxon, Zendejas, cut earlier this month by the E agles and signed by D allas, said he told W arren W elch of N F L security M onday that the Philadelphia players either w arned him before the gam e or adm itted to him a fte rw a rd s that p la y e rs w e re to be rew arded for knocking certain Cowboys out of the contest. “ I gave him the inform ation,” Zendejas said. “ I told him a ll the things about the whole thing. H e says he’s going to question them .” Zendejas, who said quarterback Troy Aikm an and Saxon also w ere targeted with bounties, would not disclose the nam es of the E agles given to the N F L , Zendejas said he hoped the E agles who talked to him would go public, but said the players had expressed to him a fea r of reprisals from Ryan. “ I just pretty much have to go on the hope that (an E agles p lay er) w ill stand up and say what he believes,” Zendejas sa id » “ Buddy’s job is on the line, and he didn’t do a very good job of keeping this quiet because he trusted it to a rookie (linebacker Jessie S m all). Someone w ill spill their guts. They a ll said after the gam e they wouldn’t com e after m e and that they w ere m y friends. “ W ell, if they are m y friends, som ebody w ill stand up and say the truth.” Sm all has denied that he carried out a bounty on Zendejas. Johnson, w ho accused R yan o f offering a bounty to his players to injure Zendejas and Aikm an in the E a g le s’ 27-0 Thanksgiving D ay victory over the Cowboys, said today it m ay be time to put the controversy to re§t. “ I think it’s going to be im portant fo r us that w e do put it behind us. Obviously there’s going to be questions about it, there’s going to be concerns about it,” Johnson said in an interview broadcast Tuesday on K R L D radio in D allas. “ If w e let ourselves carry on and fuel this situation by discussing it on an ongoing basis, I think it’s going to be a distraction for us.” R yan, whose E agles m eet the Cowboys again Dec. 10, has dism issed the bounty­ hunting claim s as “ ridiculous.” N F L Com m issioner P au l T agliabue met with E agles players M onday as p art of a series of trips to discuss view s of the leagu e with the players. Tagliabue told reporters an investigation is underway, but added he had few facts available to him at the moment. T agliabue said he couldn’t guess what possible penalties could be pressed against the E agles if the allegations proved true. H e also said the case m ight be difficult to prove, a point Johnson has conceded. “ Any time som ebody says that ‘X ’ said som ething to % ’ it becom es difficult to investigate,” T agliabue said. $900 FREE RENT FREE BIKE A thletics sign Henderson Free-agent outfielder Rickey Henderson received a $12 m illion rew ard Tuesday for helping the Oakland Athletics w in the W orld Series, signing the first four-year baseball contract since 1985. H ie A ’s also included a no-trade clause in the contract, guaranteeing Henderson’s presence through 1993. “ M y heart w as set on playing in Oiakland,” said Henderson, an O akland native. “ I love Oakland, b e e p down inside I felt I probably w ould be playing here no m atter what the term s.” / Y o u ’re a b ik e a w a y ... Cardinals sign Sm ith ÂIM0 R LUXURY APT! The St. Louis C ardinals, who struggled through 1989 with a m akeshift pitching staff, signed free-agent pitcher Bryn Smith to a three-year, $6 m illion contract on Tuesday. “ I ’m still kind o f stunned by the whole thing,” the 34-yearold right-hander said. “ It’s taken 15 years to finally get something that I ’ve been searching fo r.” Smith’s agreem ent w ill m ake him the second-highest paid player in team history behind shortstop Ozzie Smith. . M * wW a Giants sign Anderson Free-agent infielder D ave Anderson signed a two-year contract Tuesday with the San Francisco Giants. Anderson, 29, hit .229 in 87 gam es last y ear with one home run and 14 runs batted in. P rim arily a shortstop, he is expected to help out as a utility infielder. “ I wanted to stay in the N ational League, and the Giants w ere one of m y first choices when I started looking at other team s,” he said. “ W hat they did last' y ear and the changes they’ve m ade this offseason show they are serious about winning.” Indians sign Maldonado The Cleveland Indians signed free-agent outfielder Candy M aldonado to a one-year pact worth $825,000 Tuesday. M a irin n a rfn , 29, spent the last season w ith the San Francisco G iants, hitting ,217 w ith 23 doubles, nine home runs and 41 R B I in 129 appearances. H e gets a $50,000 bonus and a $775,000 salary. Parrish becom es free agent Catcher L an ce P a rrish w as declared a free agent Tuesday by arbitrator G eorge N icolau and has until Jan. 8 to negotiate w ith a ll clubs. H owever, C alifornia A ngels Executive V ice President M ike Po rt said the team already is taking steps to retain P arrish . — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS a s s o c ia t e d p r e s s c o l l e g e b a s k e t b a l l p o l l The Top 20 team e in the A ssociated P ress' college basketball p o ll, w ith first-pla ce votes in p a re n th e s e s , re c o rd th ro u g h N o v . 2 6 , to ta l p o in ts b a s e d on 20-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-S4-3-2-1 and la st w eek's ranking: . PREV PTS RECORD 3 1,453 0-0 1. Syracuse (23) 6 1,442 1-0 2. Arizona (10) 1,411 5 2-0 3. G eorgetown (9) 1,266 4-0 ’ 4. Kansas (16) 11 1,248 3-0 5. M issouri .- 1 1,247 3-1 6, UNLV 10 1,089 1-0 7. Duke (1) 8 1.026 0-0 8. Illin o is 2 1,009 M 9. LSU (1) -, 4 , 1,006 0-1 10 M ichigan 9 ' 976 2-0 11. Arkansas (2) 7 947 2-1 12. N orth C arolina 662 12 2-1 13. LouisviMe 14 658 1-0 14. Indiana 13 648 1-0 15 UCLA 505 15 0-0 16- Tem ple 484 16 0-0 17. O klahom a 18 464 o o 18. P ittsburgh 17 418 04) 19. N otre Dams 25 369 3-1 20. St. John’s 361 • 22 .; 1-0 21. G eorgia Tech 24 329 2-0 22. M em phis St. 21 254 00 23. O klahom a St. 23 171 0-0 24 Florida 124 19 ' 1-1 26. N. C arolina S t. m -P S W ri & i* § » F? JT A G E N E R O U S V A R IE T Y O F AMENITIES & FEATURES ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Two Sparkling Swimming Pools & Spas Volleyball Court Exercise Room Reserved Covered Parking & Bicycle Racks Clubhouse with Kitchen, Game Room, Etc. Centrally Located Laundry Facilities U n iversity A rizo n a S tate U n iversity A p ach e e ★ ★ ★ ★ Private or Sem i-private Entry Way Wood Burning Fireplaces Frost-free Refrigerator Double Insulated Glass Windows Plus Many Energy Saving Features Designer Mini Blinds & Two Contemporary Carpet Selection Private Patio • Optional: ★ W asher/Dryer ★ Cable T.V. ★ Microwave Oven ★ Ceiling Fan 1000 Sq. Ft. $595 to $625 C lo s e to A riz o n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity & S h o p p in g 3 B ro ad w ay cc 2430 S outh M ill A venue IN D IV ID U A L H O M ES FEATURES ★ ★ ★ ★ oc > .< Southern S u p erstitio n F reew ay To see: Call Manager, Ed 968-6322 (Some restrictions apply.) State Press Page 21 Wednesday, November 2 9 ,1989 Classifieds SCOPE OUC CHE DEALS iN tl7€ SCACE PRESS LINER AD RATES: Buy it, Tiny it, Sell it, Say it witt) a Classificò aò! 15 words oi less ' S3 00 per day tor i -4 day* S2.7S par day tor 5-9 days $2.50 per day tor 1 0 + days 15* each additional word The hist 2 words are capitalized No bold face or centering HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: In Person: Cash. Check