M a t e P Copyright. State Press, 1990 Vol. 16 No. 16 r e s s Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Wednesday, September 19,1990 Report: Athletes not m aking the grade Officials to tackle slide in academics By KELLY PEA R C E State Press An ASU official said Tuesday that the A th le tic D ep a rtm e n t w ill work on formulating solutions to tackle the declining academ ic record of University athletes after recent reports revealed a poor showing in the grade books. “ I am concerned about academ ic perform ance/’ said Jerry Kingston, faculty athletic representative. “We have turned to a lot of advice and ideas. We need to take that extra step to impose higher standards.” Kingston’s remarks came on the heels of ASU President Lattie Coor’s announcement Monday concerning University athletes’ poor grades. The lack of academic success was reported this summer to the NCAA, which r e q u ir e s a n n u a l s t a t e m e n t s fro m universities nationwide. Other information was released in a report delivered to the Arizona Board of Regents last week. In the reports, the five-year graduation rate for athletes who were freshmen in the 1984-85 school year dropped to 30.5 percent, compared with a 37.6 percent rate for all 1984-85 freshmen. K ingston sa id this percen tage has declined as the years have passed, adding that the graduation rate for athletes also has dropped. In an effort to combat the dilemma, Kingston said the Faculty Athletic Council will exam ine recruiting practices and attempt to change the glaring statistics that shadow ASU. “We have to see if we have any way to make ASU more attractive,” he said, adding that he is a member of the 10-member council. “We have to see if there is some progress we can make.” Regent Andy Hurwitz said the numbers are disappointing. “Our goals are apparent,” he said. “We want to increase graduation rates.” Hurwitz said, however, that while the figures were disturbing, they could be misleading. “You don’t know whether they represent a one-year aberration or a distinct trend,” he said. “If you look at just one year, you just don’t know.” Hurwitz said thé statistics often are not Turn to Athletes, page 9* Coor considers plans to adjust faculty salaries By KEVIN SH EH State Press T.J. Sokol/Stat* Press Bonin9Down Trom bone player Steve M orrison of the Reggae Revolution Band warms up Tuesday afternoon before a free corfcert performance at Palo Verde Beach. ASU President Lattie Coor said Tuesday that ASU is close to developing a market equity adjustment plan for faculty salaries. “We are within days of having a unifying document,” Coor said, adding that ASU would assist NAU and UofA in developing their own plans. Coor made the statement following a Council of Presidents meeting. The package, when adopted, would outline procedures and principles for the deans of ASU’s 11 colleges to follow when determining which faculty jobs would receive increases in pay, he said. Meanwhile, the presidents of the three state universities swapped notes about their respective budgets and faculty salaries at Tuesday’s meeting. Earlier this year, lawmakers included a 4 percent market equity adjustment in all three state university budgets in response to an Arthur Young study that revealed inequities in classified staff and faculty pay. Coor said his Upcoming salary announcement is the result of meetings between Interim Provost Elmer Gooding, the deans and Faculty Senate leadership. Faculty Senate President Arlene Metha said the faculty has been concerned about the issue. She said because the adjustments are to be developed in each individual college, there were concerns some deans were developing different salaries for each college. “Several faculty (members) feel that the individual may not be marketable,” Metha said, adding that the value of the Turn to Coor, page 10. Tempe police believe they’ve bagged robbery suspect By M ICH ELLE PAUL State Press Tempe police believe they have found the man who robbed local merchants with an imaginary weapon wrapped in a paper bag. D aniel B oretsky, a transient, was arrested Sunday after he a lleg ed ly attempted to rob Rollins Market on 1050 W. Fifth St. Police believe the man robbed the stores to support an alleged drug habit. “In every one of the armed robberies he simulated using a weapon,” said Tempe police spokesman Roger Austin. “He never C r o s s w a lk c o p s: Tempe Police beef up patrols on Mill Avenue to stop weekend jaywalkers. Page 7 really did have a weapon.” . Austin said Boretsky was identified in five of seven armed robberies committed in Tempe Tempe establishments robbed include the Double Rainbow Restaurant, 1805 E. Elliot Road, Arizona Video, 3306 S. McClintock Drive, Circle K, 501 W. Guadalupe Road, Bartoii Cleaners, 5114 S. Rural Road, and Subway Sandwich Shop, 2714 W. Southern Ave. Police said Boretsky is also a suspect in three armed robberies in Mesa and one theft S o u n d w a v e s; Crosby, Stills & Nash perfrom ed at 7 :3 0 last night at th e Mesa A m phitheatre. P a g e 15 in Phoenix. Joe Corvno, owner of Rollins Market, said he was cashing a customer’s check when he noticed Boretsky allegedly enter the store with a bag over his hand. Boretsky then allegedly followed Corvno to his office and demanded money, the store owner said, adding that he handed the man the money but refused to let go. “I raised m y hand and scared him,” Corvno said. “He said he’d shoot m e if I didn’t give him the money, he kept that up for about five m inutes/1 When Corvno realized Boretsky did not have a gun, he forced the transient out of the store with a shopping cart. Boretsky then drove away in a car. Corvno said thé robbery attempt was the first in the store’s 28-year history in Tempe. Tempe police arrived at the scene following the scuffle and viewed video tape from a surveillance camera in the store. Shortly after the attempted robbery, a Tempe officer pulled over a car with a bent rear license plate and discovered Boretsky T im e o u t : The ASU football team gets a rest this weekend as it has no games planned. Page 23 T u rn to Robbery, page lO. Today's w eather: Sunny, with a high in the m id 90s. Tonight: Clear, with a low. in the low 70s. .................25 Comics......'..........;...,...;..».........................22 ........... . 12 Sports....... .................27 .................23 Page g State P it t i Wednesday, September 19,1990 : 'm iSfeSito. aWSk. saH N e w cases By ANITA CARCO M E State Press An increase in the number of students diagnosed with sexually transmitted diseases this semester indicates STDs are continuing to spread at ASU, a campus gynecologist said. Dr. T. F. Blackwelder, ASU Student Health Center’s full­ tim e gynecologist, said human papillomavirus and chlamydia, two of the most common STDs, are currently infecting the ASU population. “I diagnose more than 10 students a day with Cases of HPV or chlamydia,” Blackwelder said, adding that he was treating no more than 10 students a day last year. Although Blackwelder could not specify the exact number of additional STD cases this semester, he said there have been 10 times more HPV cases than chlamydia cases so far this year. HPV, a disease that has the potential to lead to cancer of the cervix if left untreated, surfaces as genital warts and a variety of skin diseases for both men and women; Chlamydia, known to «tuse infertility in women if left untreated, can cause painful symptoms in its earlier stages. Men should be aware of symptoms such as discharge and burning pain when urinating. Women, on the other hand, may develop abdominal pain or may have no symptoms at all. Blackwelder warned that people who have the disease and continue to engage in sexual intercourse could further damage reproductive organs and infect their partners. “These diseases are a universal problem, and ASU is no different than any other university in terms of sexually active individuals,” he said. “I have worked and taught in other universities just as large as ASU and the number of STD cases ere almost the sam e.” Both diseases, he said, are very chauvinistic, meaning that men pay a less heavy price compared to women after contracting an STD. “It’s really unfair. Women risk losing their fertility and are at an even greater risk in developing cervical cancer with HPV, while men Will only have the symptoms to worry about,” he said. Planned Parenthood spokeswoman Kathy Jaksich said the risk of a woman developing cancer and many STDs is directly related to the number of sexual partners she had in the past. Blackwelder, who has been practicing medicine for more than 20 years in the Phoenix area, urged all females to get their yearly check-ups and use condoms, even if they are taking birth control pills. *‘One of the problems with birth control pills is that women feel invincible on the pill and are less concerned to use a condom along with the pill. This is dangerous, especially if she has been with multiple partners,” he said. “Condoms are the only w ay,” Blackwelder added. “Sponges and creams don’t give you any protection.” Danae Brownell, educator at the health center, said everyone has a different value system on what will work best for them in terms of protection, “Some people may prefer a condom while others m ay use birth control products that include Nonoxynol 9, an ingredient known to be on condoms and could kill the HIV virus associated with AIDS,” she said. Brownell also said sexually active women should consider yearly check-ups and watch for symptoms if (hey have had many sex partners. “When there are no symptoms present, it is difficult for a person to acknowledge that they could develop a STD,” she said, Brownell added that people can engage in other intimate practices, such as massages and kissing, without putting themselves at risk of contracting STDs. •M UAB Culture and Arts will m eet at 2:30 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room. •Lesbian and Gay Academ ic Union will meet at 7:30 p.m. in thé MU Yuma Room. •Native American Student Association will m eet at 5 p.m. in the Multicultural Room. •ASUW Film Society will show “ Ballad of Soldier” at 7 p.m, and 9:15 p.m. in the Kiva Auditorium at ASU West, •Community Health Services will offer cholesterol screenings from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. •Progressive Students Understanding Islam will meet at 5 p.m. in PS A 106. •Golden Key National Honor Society will m eet at 4:30 p m. in the MU La Paz Room. •Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineering will m eet at 5:15 p.m. in COB 252. •Students for Life will m eet at 2 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. •Public Program s College Council will sponsor a clubs fair on the Stauffer Patio from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. •Society for Range Management wilt m eet at 6:30 p.m. in AG B350. •Student Health Center will sponsor two presentations on AIDS, The first will be at 3 p.m. in the MU Ventana Room. And the second will be at 7 p.m. in the R esidence Education Center. •Circle K International will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the MU third floor conference room. •Phi Alpha Delta will m eet at 3 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room. •SH PE will m eet at 4 p.m. in EGG 347. •M ECHA will m eet at 3:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Today M eetings •Alcoholics Anonym ous will have an open meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Street and University Drive. •Traditional Taekwondo Club will m eet at 3 p.m. at the Student Recreation Complex Gym A. •Overtime will m eet at 7 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. •CARP will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •W om en's Student Center will meet at 11:45 a.m. at the Wom en’s Student Center to d iscu ss rape prevention. •ASU Undergraduate Law Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. at Armstrong Hall Room 119. Everyone welcome. •Phi Beta Lambda will m eet at 3 p.m. on the Dean’s Patio for a C hase Bank T ou r.. •M UAB Film Committee will show "Born on the Fourth of July” at 7 p.m. and 9:45 p.m in the Union Cinema for $1 per person. •Southeast Asian Studies Program will m eet at 12:40 p.m. in LL A18. Correction In the Sept. 18 issue of the S ta te Press, Secretary of State Dick Cheney was misidentified in a photo on page 3. • r CÔM P ÜTCR D ÉÂLS ~] FastData 386/SX U P G R A D ET OC O L O R V G A Monitor & Card *469 For Both 1*1478 • • • • • • • • • • WOW! Fattite la 386SX com eaStandard with: 40mb 28ma Hard Diak Monitor Included i G raphics Card l.2 m b or 1,44 m b Floppy Drive Enhanced 101 Keyboard 1 M B of 90he Mem ory P a ra M . 2 Serial Porta, 8 Gam a Port Phoenix B IO S 200 Watt Power Supply 1 Year W arranty FastData V G A Our'VBÁearslaftjNy, M ove to the head o f the class with this 386SX pow ­ erhouse. 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P iz z a not included. om W ED: THUR: F R I: m 30 Watney’s Promo Night Red Barrel or Creame Style M u gs $1.50 & $4 Mini Pitcher Coors Light Night M ugs 75* & $2.25 Mini Pitchers ALL DAY & ALL Miller Light & Genuine Draft NIGHT M u gs 75* & $2.25 Pitchers Also Jäger Shots $2 Join us from 9-11 p. m. fo r the fabulous Jäger g irls!! 5 3 0 W. Broadway, Tempo 9 2 1 -9 4 3 1 World/Natiom ESÜLESü S » ™ ^ _ _ _ _ ^ M an d ela ch arged, talks e n d a n g e re d JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — The government said Tuesday it will charge Winnie Mandela with kidnapping and assault, a move that could endanger its peace talks with her husband’s African National Congress. Mrs. Mandela, wife of ANC leader Nelson Mandela, will be charged in the alleged abduction and beatings of four young men at her home in December 1988. One of them, 14-year-old Stompei Seipei, was found dead. Mrs. Mandela’s bodyguard, Jerry Richardson, was convicted of murdering Seipei and sentenced to death last month. At his trial, the surviving victims testified that Mrs. Mandela, 56, beat them with a whip. She has denied wrongdoing. H ie announcement cam e as Mandela, the country’s bestknown black leader, met with other ANC officials to discuss the police crackdown on black factional fighting in townships around Johannesburg. Mandela on Monday threatened to suspend the peace talks if the government fails to halt the carnage that has killed nearly 800 blacks since Aug. 12. Most of the fighting has been between Xhosa and other black ANC Supporters and the Zulubased conservative Inkatha movement. He said new police measures announced Saturday, including reinforcements, roadblocks, weapons searches and mounted machine guns on police vehicles, would be “ineffective” and were a “license to kill” for security forces. Mandela has staunchly defended his wife and might be encouraged by supporters to break off talks if the government proceeds with the prosecution. President F . W. de Klerk and Mandela met twice last week and both say they want black-white talks on ending apartheid to move forward as quickly as possible. But the township battles, combined with the charges against Mrs. Mandela, make setbacks appear more likely than breakthroughs Klaus von Lieres und Wilkau, attorney general for the Johannesburg Supreme Court, had said he would await completion of the Richardson case before deciding whether or not to charge Mrs. Mandela. “After careful consideration of all the relevant facts, including possible implications beyond the normal legal ones, I have decided to prosecute Mrs. Mandela, ” he said in a statement. There was no immediate comment from Mrs. Mandeb» or her husband. They have accused the government of using the case as a propaganda campaign against them and the ANC, the largest black opposition group. They have said they would welcome a chance for Mrs. Mandela to defend herself. She has denied any wrongdoing but has never given a full account of the episode. An ANC statem ent refrained from criticizing the government and urged the news media to let the courts decide the case. Mrs. Mandela will stand trial with seven members of her former bodyguard unit who already have been charged, the attorney general said. She will face four counts of kidnapping and four of assault with intent to commit grievous bodily harm. She is expected to be formally charged Sept. 24, when the T a ra to Mandela, page 14.: M andela Keating indicted, to be held in lieu of 5$million bail Southern celebration Thousand* of psopl* gathered Tuesday af Underground Atlanta, an sntsrtelnm snt com plex in Atlanta, to celebrate the announcement that Atlanta was chosen as the sH * of tha 1996 Sum m er Olym pics. N ew s B riefs Soul-s earching Fatal collapse W a sh in g to n - M atthew Brow n reflects after a n ew s conference near Philadelphia- Philadelphia p o k e and firemen exam ine tye scene w here a the Vietnam V e te ra n 's M e m o rial b ackround T u e sd ay. Brow n, w h o two-story brick storefront colap sed onto M arket Street Tuesday, crushing enlisted in the U .S. A rm y on Ju n e 19, sa id after "a go o d d eal of sou l- tiree people to death and injuring eight ptoeis, according to authorities. se arch in g’ decided to refuse ord ers to report o n O c t 4. LOS ANGELES (AP) — Charles H Keating, the m an blamed by the government for the nation’s biggest savings and loan collapse, was jailed in lieu of $5 million bail Tuesday after hie was indicted on criminal fraud charges. R was the first criminal case filed against Keating, who has become a symbol of the national thrift scandal because of his high pay, lavish personal habits, investments in risky real estate and junk bonds, and alleged use of accounting gimmickry to conceal wrongdoing. The former chairman of American Continental Corp. and three other executives were charged in a 42-count state indictment with selling securities by false statements or omissions, selling securities without qualifications and lying to the California Department of Corporations. The department approved the sale of the high-risk, highyield junk bonds,: technically known as unsecured debentures, at branches of the failed Lincoln Savings and Loan of Irvine, which Keating controlled through American Continental. More than $200 million worth of junk bonds were sold to 22,000 investors, many of them elderly. “I don’t know how many bondholders are out th e re. . . but they’re dancing in the street tonight. We’d like to get our money back,” bondholder Shirley Lampel said Monday after the district attorney’s office said it had completed its presentation to a special state grand jury. The government seized control of Lincoln in April 1989. Regulators estim ate the bailout could cost taxpayers as much as $2 billion. Last month, a federal judge in Washington upheld the government takeover of Lincoln, saying the operation of the thrift by Keating and others “amounted to looting.” Keating already is charged in several civil cases, including a $1.1 billion racketeering case filed by the agency responsible for the thrift bailout. The federal government is conducting a separate criminal investigation into the alleged looting of Lincoln. The indictment was handed up late last week but kept sealed until Tuesday. It focuses on 20 alleged victims, a case narrow enough that Los Angeles District Attorney Ira Reiner said it could be presented without confusing a jury. “We could have named 22,000 victim s,” Reiner said. “But that would have created an unwieldy case that would have gone on forever and a day.” The felony charges do not seek to recover money for the bond buyers, but a judge could theoretically order restitution as part of sentencing if Keating and the othersare convicted, prosecutors said. Keating, 66, a Phoenix developer, has contended that the government has attempted to make a scapegoat out of him because he w as an outspoken critic of the thrift regulatory system . He m aintainvtbe bondholders would never have lost money if the government hadn’t seized Lincoln last year and forced American Continental into bankruptcy court. Also indicted were Judy Elizabeth Wischer , 42, of Paradise Valley, former president of American Continental; Ray Charles Fidel, 32, of Newport Beach, former president of Turn to Keating» page 14. W orld/N ation Page 3 Wednesday, September 19,1990 State Press M an d ela ch arged , talks e n d a n g e re d JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — The government said Tuesday it Will charge Winnie Mandela with kidnapping and assault, a move that could endanger its peace talks with her husband’s African National Congress. Mrs. Mandela, wife of ANC leader Nelson Mandela, will be charged in the alleged abduction and beatings of four young men at her home in December 1988. One of them, 14-year-old Stompei Seipei, was found dead. M rs. Mandela’s bodyguard, Jerry Richardson, was convicted of murdering Seipei and sentenced to death last month. At his trial, the surviving victims testified that Mrs. Mandela, 56, beat them with a whip. She has denied wrongdoing. The announcement cam e as Mandela, the country’s bestknown black leader, met with other ANC officials to discuss the police crackdown on black factional fighting in townships around Johannesburg. Mandela on Monday threatened to suspend the peace talks if the government fails to halt the carnage that has killed nearly 800 blacks since Aug. 12- Most of the fighting has been between Xhosa and other black ANC supporters and the Zulubased conservative Inkatha movement. He said new police measures announced Saturday, including reinforcements, roadblocks, weapons searches and mounted machine guns on police vehicles, would be “ineffective” and were a “license to kill” for security forces. Mandela has staunchly defended his wife and might be encouraged by supporters to break off talks if the government proceeds with the prosecution. President F . W. de Klerk and Mandela met twice last week and both say they want black-white talks on ending apartheid to move forward as quickly as possible. But the township battles, combined with the charges against Mrs. Mandela, make setbacks appear more likely than breakthroughs. Klaus von Lieres und Wilkau, attorney general for the Johannesburg Supreme Court, had said he would await completimi of the Richardson case before deciding whether or not to charge Mrs. Mandela. “After careful consideration of all the relevant facts, including possible implications beyond the normal legal ones, I have decided to prosecute Mrs. Mandela,” he said in a statement. There was no immediate comment from Mrs. Mandela òr her husband. They have accused the government of using the case as a propaganda campaign against them and the ANC, the largest black opposition group. They have said they would welcome a chance for Mrs. Mandela to defend herself. She has denied any wrongdoing but has never given a full account of thè episode. An ANC statem ent refrained from criticizing the government and urged the news media to let the courts decide the case. Mrs. Mandela will stand trial with seven members of her former bodyguard unit who already have been charged, the attorney general said. She will face four counts of kidnapping and four of assault with intent to commit grievous bodily harm. She is expected to be formally charged Sept. 24, when the T ò n i to Mandela, page 14. M andela Keating indicted, to be held in lieu o f $5 m illion bail Southern celebration Thousands of p#opl# gathered Tuesday at Underground Allenta, an entertainment com plex in Atlante, to celebrate the announcement that Atlanta waa choaen a t the site of the 1996 Sum m er Olymplce. N ew s B riefs Soul-searching Fatal collapse W a sh in g to n - M atthew Brow n reflects after a new s conference near Philadelphia- Philadelphia police and firemen exam ine the scene where a the V ietnam V e te ra n 's M e m o rial b ackro un d T u e sd ay. B row n, w ho two-story brick storefront co lap sed onto M arket S le e t Tuesday, crushing enlisted in the jU.S. A rm y on Ju n e 19, said after "a go od deal o f soul- t re e people to death and injuring eight others, accordhg to authorities. se a rch in g " decided to refuse o rd e rs to report o n O c t 4. LOS ANGELES (AP) — Charles H Keating, the man blamed by the government for the nation’s biggest savings and loan collapse, was jailed in lieu of $5 million bail Tuesday after he was indicted on criminal fraud charges. It was the first criminal case filed against Keating, who has become a symbol of the national thrift scandal because of his high pay, lavish personal habits, investments in risky real estate and junk bonds, /and alleged use of accounting gimmickry to conceal wrongdoing. The former Chairman of American Continental Corp. and three other executives were charged in a 42-count state indictment with selling securities by false statements or omissions, selling securities without qualifications and lying to the California Department of Corporations. The department approved the sale of the high-risk, highyield junk bonds, technically known as unsecured debentures, at branches of the failed Lincoln Savings and Loan of Irvine, which Keating controlled through American Continental. More than $200 million worth of junk bonds were sold to 22,000 investors, many of them elderly, “I don’t know how many bondholders are out th ere. . . but they’re dancing in the street tonight. We’d like to get our money back,” bondholder Shirley Lampel said Monday after the district attorney’s office said it had completed its presentation to a special state grand jury. The government seized control of Lincoln in April 1989. Regulators estim ate the bailout could cost taxpayers as much as $2 billion. Last month, a federal judge in Washington upheld the government takeover of Lincoln, saying the operation of the thrift by Keating and others “amounted to looting.” Keating already is charged in several civil cases, including a $1.1 billion racketeering case filed by the agency responsible for the thrift bailout. The federal government is conducting a separate criminal investigation into the alleged looting of Lincoln. The indictment was handed up late last week but kept sealed until Tuesday. It focuses on 20 alleged victims, a case narrow enough that Los Angeles District Attorney Ira Reiner said it could be presented without confusing a jury. “We could have named 22,000 victim s,” Reiner said. “But that would have created an unwieldy case that would have gone on forever and a day.” The felony charges do not seek to recover money for the bond buyers, but a judge could theoretically order restitution as part of sentencing if Keating and the others are convicted, prosecutors said. Keating, 66, a Phoenix developer, has contended that the government has attempted to make a scapegoat out of him because he was an outspoken critic of the thrift regulatory system. He maintainrethe bondholders would never have lost money if the government hadn’t seized Lincoln last year and forced American Continental into bankruptcy court. Also indicted were Judy Elizabeth Wischer, 42, of Paradise Valley, former president of American Continental; Ray Charles Fidel, 32, of Newport Beach, former president of Turn to Keating, page 14. Page 4 Slate Furai Wednesday, September 19,1990 Air follies Cheney’s ouster of Air Force general is too hasty Meg Halverson. M agazine Editori In the summer of 1962 my father, F-100 pilot David Halverson, m et his fellow pilots of the Air Force’s elite 79th Tactical Fighter Squadron in Suffolk, England. Michael Dugan and “Tony” Merrill McPeak were two of the pilots m y father noticed immediately. “It was obvious even then that both Dugan and McPeak were on the fast track ; they were destined for great things,” he recalls. Thirty years later, both Dugan and McPeak are four-star generals; and both, until last Sunday, held top positions in the Air Force -i- Dugan as chief of staff and McPeak as commander of the Pacific Air Forcés. Since Dugan and McPeak had their first line assignment together as pilots in the 79th they’ve had curiously parallel careers. Although both men have climbed the military pyramid of power with almost equal success, it seem s that Dugan has consistently been the better liked of the two officers. “Dugan was certainly the more personable of the two. He is more concerned about people than McPeak,” says my father. It may be that concern for people that enabled General Dugan to edge out General McPeak three months ago for the Air Force’s top dog position, chief of staff. However, in that everchanging, globy m ass known as Pentagon politics, the tables have turned again. This time, McPeak came out on top. Last Sunday, after The W ashington P ost and The L os A ngeles Times printed some of D u g a n ’s co m m en ts about s e n s itiv e proposed military operations in the Middle East, Defense Secretary Cheney dismissed Dugan from his position as chief of staff and named McPeak as his probable successor. Once again, Defense Secretary Cheney is wielding a big stick at the Pentagon. If there was ever a question in anyone’s mind about who is in charge at the Pentagon, or about who is second in line as the civilian command of the military, Dick Cheney is straightening it out for them If any of those other senior armed forces commanders are even th in kin g about releasing sensitive information about the Middle East (regardless of whether or not it may be common tactical knowledge), they should think twice or be prepared to remove their bedecked appellates. What D ugan re v ea led to the two newspapers was how many combat and support planes the Air Force has stationed in the Persian Gulf area. He also revealed that military officials had compiled à list of immediate military targets such as air defense installations, airfields and aircraft, b a lli s t i c m is s il e la u n c h e r s an d communications centers. That was Dugan’s big mistake. No matter how obvious it seem s that military leaders want to aim for the most crucial targets during a conflict, if your toss is Dick Cheney you’re not supposed to talk about it. I asked m y father again about Dugan’s personality, about what would encourage him, after graduating from West Point and after 32 years in the zipped lip atmosphere of the upper echelons of the Air Force, to reveal information he knew was sensitive — information he was reportedly warned not to reveal. “He is an honest person who always says what he thinks,” says my father. “And he always has a good reason for revealing what he does . ” Cheney sa id what Dugan revealed endangered national security. It’s ludicrous to assume (hat Dugan intentionally announced sensitive tactical plans hoping to endanger the United States. It’s just as ludicrous to suggest that a man of Dugan’s expertise just slipped and let d eta ils about high priority m ilitary operations roll off his tongue. We are talking about a man who flew over 300 combat missions in Vietnam, a man who knew not only about the importance of keeping sensitive matters quiet, but also about tap dancing with the press. Dugan knew the risks of publicly announcing the tactical strategies of the U. S. Air Force. He did it on purpose. It’s possible that Dugan told the press about Hie potential Iraqi targets because he wanted to establish a good rapport with the press, a rapport that would enable him to repair the rag-tag image the Air Force has procured under past administrators. It’s possible that Dugan cared enough about the American public that he wanted us to know L E T T E R S Go, Devils Editor: In the past I have had the opportunity to work with many of the student-athletes at Arizona State University. I’ve seen how hard they work on the field and in the classroom . These students handle an incredible schedule including cla sses, meetings with coaches, training, practices, games, study halls, homework, etc.; they deal with the pressures of having to succeed both in the classroom and on the field, as well as obeying all ASU, PAC-10 and NCAA regulations. In my dealings with them I have learned much more from them than they have from me. I’ve learned what it takes to win: desire, persistence^ will, training, guts and discipline. One s tu d e n t w ho p o r tr a y s t h e s e characteristics is Drew Metcalf. In his four years of eligibility he will have completed both undergraduate and graduate degree requirements. He has more drive and more persistence than I have ever seen. Larry Marmie may have to chain him down to the \ F F STATE PRESS SUZANNE ROSS Editor NICOLE PERRON Managing Editor City Editor.---- ------- .......... ............ HOBART ROWLAND ......... ............... . KELLY PEARCE ................... .KRISTEN JOHNSON _______ _______TENNY TATUSIAN _________________DAN NOWICKI ___ _____ w .T. J. SOKOL .................Pa u l m a n Aast. Sports Editor......____ _________ KRIS TIMMONS Technical E d U ta ;™ ™ ~ ™ ™ - ~ ™ S T C V E KRICUN Magazine Editor...______ HALVERSON Aaaoc. Magazine Editor___ __ ____„..ROBYN PINKSTON Aast. Magazine Editor.....:___.™ ™ ....C A R iN CUMMINS REPORTERS: K enneth Brown, A nita Carcone, Teens Chadwell, Jeff Concors, Joseph Crawford, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron Levy, Patricia Mah, Michelle PauV Michelle Roberts* Girth Sheh, Christina Schroeder, Kristie Young. ' , SPORTS REPORTERS: Darren U rban, G reg Zele, Dan Zeiger. ' PHOTOGRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty, Jeorgetta Douglas, Monique Ho11in. Will Power*, Tamara Wofford. COPY EDITORS: Kellye Kratch, Michael LaMantia, Jill Tlfake. CARTOONIST: Rob Minton, Julie Sigwart. COLUMNIST: Nicole CanolL MAGAZINE STAFF: Michelle Ciuff, Vicki Culvet Christine Herbranaon, Lori Lappin, Deborah Nemkx\ Jon VM z, Kramer Wetzel PRODUCTION: Cassaundra Caviness, Dane Christ, Holly Hiatt, Jeffrey Lucas, Mark Nothaft, Lynne Senzek, John P. Smith, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRÉSENTATIVES: Dan Ellstronv Todd Martin, Christine Millan, Mike Morris, Terri-Smith, John Vaccarot Bill VanZanten. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic yeaç except holidays and exam periods, a t M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We do not answ er questions of a general nature. A dvertising and Production: (602) 965-7572. The State Press is the only new spaper exclusively published for and drçulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newpaper are not necessarily those of ASU administration, faculty staff or student body. what the big to y s are planning. It’s also p o s s ib le th a t D u g a n r e le a s e d th e information knowing that the threat of reallife, American style military action might force Hussein to consider retreat more seriously. Or c o n sid e r lo sin g h is b ed eck ed appellates. Permanently. R egardless of Dugan’s m otives for releasing sensitive military matters to the press, Cheney’s abrupt dismissal seem s hasty. Yes, Mr. Pentagon showed civilians that in his ultimate law school knowledge he is w illin g and a b le to uphold the constitutional lines of authority. Thè last time Cheney dealt with the'Air Force, he ended up the cuckold. Former Air Force Chief of Staff, Général Welch, failed to report to Cheney about the F-117’s embarrassing tombing inaccuracy. Cheney didn’t wield his almighty constitutional power over the F-117 fiasco. He didn’t even publicly rebuke it. Mr. Cheney w as not w illing to be cuckolded again by the fly toys. However, the only expertise Cheney has in military affairs is as former chairman of thé House Armed Services Committee. He has never served in an armed conflict nor has he served in any of the armed forces. His d ecisio n to rem ove D ugan (an administrative move unprecedented since P r e s id e n t T r u m a n ’s d is m i s s a l o f G en . D o u g la s M a c A rth u r a s th e commander of the United Nations forces during the Korean War in 1951) seem s more like an image bolstering device for pentagon power than a well-advised political move. bench to keep him off the field, broken leg or not. But Drew is not alone. There are many other student-athletes who depict these characteristics as well: Isaac Austin, Noelle Fridrich, Ann Rowan, Lars Heme, Brian Camper, Nathan LaDuke, Arthur Paul, Lennon Gardner, Gea Johnson, Patti Justin, Israel Stanley, Mark Hayes — I could name 100 more. They have all taught m e what it takes to succeed. In closing, I want to make a remark on fan behavior. I find it both classless and offensive when the. supposed home team boos their own players. Each one of the student-athletes does his very best. I rem em ber w atching Oklahoma beat Nebraska one year — and the Nebraska fans stood up and gave Oklahoma a standing ovationi. The Nebraska fans have class. Nebraska regularly has one of the best football teams in the country. Coincidence? I doubt it. My hat is off to all of the ASU studentathletes. I wish them all the best of luck. Go Devils! Keith M. Campbell Classified staff State P ro » Page 5 Wednesday, September 19,1990 C u ltu re d a s h America should take a m ore critical look at the Saudis Ellen Goodman W ashington Post W riters G roup BOSTON — The bulletins from the front these days are of skirmishes between allies as well as enemies. There are reports of uneasy encounters between Saudis and Americans. Even the military is talking about what they call, in a burst of sensitivity, “a cultural clash.” The old middle east hands-on talk shows say that our differences must be handled delicately. No ideological tanks for this engagement, no Stealth Bombers, just Some understanding of their ways. When in Saudi, do as the Saudis. That sort of thing. Well, I am first in class to raise my hand in favor of international understanding. With luck w e’ve learned something since our days in South Vietnam. Our cultures not only Clashed; we nearly exterminated theirs. Moreover, I am amused to find fans of m o r a l r e l a t i v i s m in t h e B u s h administration. Not a spokesman has said that our ways are better than the Saudis. They sound as benign as Mr. Rogers: We are each special in our own way. It’s an a c c e p t a n c e t h a t is a b s e n t w h en conservatives deal with a domestic clash of values. N e v e r th e le s s , I am w ary of the anthropological tone of this expedition, The m ost cited difference is, after all, between the way American and Saudi law s and customs treat women. The “cultural clash” m ost mentioned is between American women in uniform and Saudi women in chadors. Between rough egalitarianism and segregated submission. In the desert kingdom that forbids women drivers, our vehicles are “manned” by women This has garnered more than disapproval, indeed studied outrage, from the Saudis. ABC reported recently that a park was closed after complaints that the nearby scene was unfit for decent women and children to see. The scene was of American women in short sleeves. Our women, working in the heat, were told to cover their bare arms so they wouldn’t Offend Saudi sensibilities. An Associated Press story said that female soldiers who go shopping must now be accompanied by men who make their purchases. American women are told to keep their eyes down to avoid upsetting the male shopkeeper, who may regard eye contact on a par with alcohol and pornography. These áre not onerous adjustments. Americans would be uneasy if 100,000 foreign G. I.’s started hanging around their malls. Caution is in order. But you don’t have to be an ugly American, or an imperialist, to wonder about the larger implications of “cultural clashes” — to wonder about our values and our allies. When we embarked on this military action, President Bush said it was to protect “our way of life.” Surely our way of life , in clu d es, along with oil, a commitment to democracy, equality. It is notable that Saudi women are neither allowed to drive nor to govern. It’s notable that women cannot vote. It’s equally notable that men can’t vote. Our ally is a monarchy with no constitution, no free press, no free elections. What happens when cultural clashes go beyond those of T-shirts and bare arms? Do we defend a way of life that clashes with our way of life? Are Americans only the protectors of pipelines and the Status quo? If that is true, then we are truly mercenaries. Americans used to believe, often naively, in exporting our values. Our way was the best way. We converted old enemies — Japan and Germany — into democrats. We also alienated and misunderstood Others. Our vision was too simplistic. But of late w e’ve made som e strange allies indeed, Afghanistan, and before Saudi Arabia, Iraq. Now even Syria. More than once, a s a woman, I wondered if I’d rather be under the rule of Moscow than under the men of Kabul. Under Saddam Hussein, there is no penalty for a man who kills a female relative if she’s committed adultery. We have rationalized som e cynical alliances with the admonition that we must understand these cultures in their own Context. But the great ideological struggles over justice, equality and human rights can’t be dismissed as mere “cultural clashes,” The difference between a country that does and doesn’t believe in human rights is far more than a difference between a jitterbug and a square dance. Ideals are still our most important, most popular, most sustaining product. As for the Saudis, our nervous hosts and allies, change is due. As an American, I must hope that the upheaval in that place results in som e movement to democracy . As an American too, I must hope that the woman in the chador ends up behind the wheel. The key to weight loss: If it tastes good, don’t eat it Mike Royko T ribune M edia Syn dicate Opinion E d ito r’s note: M ike R oyko is on vacation. W hile h e is aw ay, w e ere reprinting som e o f h is fa vo rite colum ns. A fat actor has written the latest best­ selling diet book about how to shed excess blubber. If you are overweight, you might be tempted to buy it Don’t waste your money. Like many of the popular diet books — and there’s always one on the best-seller lis t :— it’s basically a rip-off. That’s because the author tries to convince tubby people that they can lose weight while still enjoying tasty, delicious, yummy, satisfying meals. It can’t be done. I’ve read all kinds of diet books because, like m ost self-indulgent Americans, I’ve spent much of my adult life overweight. I’ve tried the old-drinking-man’s diet, the eat-anything-you-want diet, the threesquare-meals-a-day diet, the lotsa-spicymeatballs diet, the gobble-pasta-till-youburst diet and all the other enjoy-eatingand-lose-weight diets. No matter what they claim, there is only one diet that works. I call it: The-You-Gotta-Suffer Diet. Having just lost 25 pounds in about 10 weeks, I know it works and I’m willing to share it with you. It’s quite simple. You don’t have to do a lot of calorie counting, measuring and weighing tiny bits of food or poring over time-consuming recipes. All you have to do is be miserable, which is fundamental to any successful diet. And you have to remember only one rule, the cornerstone of m y diet. The rule is : If you enjoy it, you can’t have it; if you don’t like it, you can eat all you want. This rule d eriv es itse lf from the scien tifically acknowledged fa ct that Mother Nature is a nasty, sadistic, mean broad. She made everything that tastes good fattening. And everything that is not fattening tastes terrible. An example is the Brussels sprout. Under my diet, you can eat all the Brussels sprouts you want. Stuff yourself with them. Shove them in your mouth with both hands. You won’t gain an ounce. That’s because Brussels sprouts are awful. Just as lettuce, celery, cabbage, carrots and m ost vegetables are awful. The only vegetable that isn’t awful is the potato — and only when it is French-fried. Or baked and heaped with butter, sour cream and chunks of bacon. Or covered with gooey cheese. Then the potato tastes great. Therefore, you can’t eat it. See how sim ple it is? Let’s say you go to a German restaurant. There’s no big problem in ordering lowcalorie foods. You just order the worst thing on the menu. The menu might have a pork shank with dumplings, which is great cuisine. So, you can’t order i t Order the broiled white fish, with some sliced tomatoes on the side. It’s enough to make m e gag. When the waiter asks you what you will drink, follow the suffering rule. The best thing to drink would be a liter of German beer. The only thing better would be two liters of German beer. So, you can’t order it. Instead, you order the worst thing the bar serves: a diet pop. Or, if you are stupid as well as overweight, Perrier with a twist. Then com es dessert. You probably want something wonderful like a big slab of cheesecake or some kind of rich chocolate cake. Which m eans you can’t have it. Instead, you must suffer mid ask if they have any fresh melon. Squirt a bit of lemon juice on it, sm ile and pretend you are having a fine time, while you are ready to scream and do violence. Or m a y b e you ch o o se an Italian restaurant. Once again, Hie choice is not difficult. The best thing on the menu would probably be a plate of fettucine Alfredo, or spaghetti carbonara or lasagna. With a bottle or two of red wine. And a snort of anisette with yOUr coffee. So, you order the baked halibut. With Diet Coke. The rule applies day and night, every snack. Breakfast? Don’t eat anything good, such as pancakes with sausage, French toast with bacon or hash with eggs. E at miserable stuff, like half a bowl of oatmeal and some fruit juice. Achh! Evening snacks? The best snacks known to civilized man are a big bowl of ice cream or half a pizza or two peanut butter and jelly sandwiches or a giant-sized bag of potato chips and a six pack of beer. If you are a good American and a decent human being, you love these things. So, you can’t have them, Eat some low-fat yogurt instead. Ugh. That’s it. When you go shopping, just walk down die supermarket aisle. If something makes you salivate, don’t put it in your cart. If something makes you nauseated, take six of them. Just follow the simple rule of suffering and misery and you’ll lose weight. And, possibly, your mind. Q U O T A B L E "V §g|!jjS!j "Our liv e s are on th e lin e. W om en in th is cou n try are g o in g to d ie. W e're talk in g about you r dau ghters, you r gran d d augh ters. H e is a d isasterou s ch oice, a total d isaster for civ il rights and w om en 's rights." M olly Yard, president o f the National Organization for Women, on Supreme Court nom inee David H. Souter. "First o f all, ch an ge back to b ein g p ro-life, and m ean it." Former COP gubernatorial candidate Evan M scham on h ow Republican nom inee J. Fife Sym ington can gain the support o f h is followers. , /:• S W t F lW Page 6 By K R IST IE YOUNG State Press The futuristic, dome-shaped building at Rural Road and Apache Boulevard that used to house Valley National Bank will provide information for campus visitors in the future, instead of doling out money and approving loans. “ASU got the facility during the past year with the intention to build a visitor’s center there,” said Frank Hidalgo, assistant vice president for special programs in University Relations, adding that the bank was bought out by ASU so a visitor’s center could be located near campus. Upon completion, the center will be a welcoming (dace for prospective students, parents and business associates. “It will be a place where people can come and receive information for any facet of the University,” Hidalgo Said. “It will servé not only ASU, but the community at large.” In addition, the ASU Alumni Association and the ASU Foundation are also vying for space in the building. “We’re asking for the research segment (of the ASU Foundation) to move into the building,” Said Lonnie Ostrom, ASU development director, adding that the building can be shared. Jennus Burton, associate vice president for Business Affairs, said the building may also include University Relations offices, and definitive plans have not been made. In the meantime, Hidalgo will begin planning a visitor’s center. “We are trying to go with a minimum number of dollars,” he said. “We want to keep the sam e building, but do some remodeling to convert it.’ Hidalgo said this will include new carpet and a fresh coat of paint, adding that a target date to open the visitor’s center has not been set. “My personal goal is to complete it within four to six months,” he said. “Idèally I’d like to see it completed by the Christmas holidays, but that is not very realistic. “We are trying to move as fast as we can.” Funding for the visitor’s center cam e from money identified for ASU construction projects. ASU acquired the land a year before the bank relocated. The University then leased the site to Valley National Bank until its new branches were completed. Valley National Bank moved out of the building 11 months ago. Current locations include a bank at Rural Road and Terrace Drive and another at Mill Avenue and University Drive. Bill Kaukol, manager of the Tempe Valley National Bank branch at Mill Avenue and University Drive, said the bank worked with ASU to relocate after the University took over the building at Rural Road and Apache Boulevard. “We always knew w e would move,” he said. “Ours was the last piece of land the University needed.” Valley National Bank lost money after the move, but Kaukol said the bank now has a wider customer base because of its two branches located at either end of campus. “ It’s alw ays hard to give up a good location,” Kaukol Said. “The progress was needed to take place for ASU.” Earlier this semester, the site was temporarily used for the distribution of parking decals. Will Powers/State Press The Valley National Bank building on Rural Road and Apache Boulevard will soon be converted to an A SU visitors' information center. ' “We will work something out with Parking (and Transit Services in order to begin renovation of the building),” Hidalgo said. “We want to work (on the building) as soon as possible.” Arizona econom y climbs w ith federal spending By TEEN A CHADW ELL State Press Arizona’s economy has taken a slight upward bound because of an increase in the distribution of federal funds in the state, said an official in the ASU Center for Business Research as he cited figures compiled by the U. S. Department of Commerce. The distribution of federal funds in the state reached an all-time high of $13.4 billion in fiscal year 1989, said Tom Rex, research manager in the center . "Compared to prior performance, w e’re still doing relatively poorly,” he said. “ We’re not growing as fast as we used to (although) w e’re in the top 10 states in terms of growth rate right now.” Federal funding goes to programs such as S o c ia l S e c u r ity a n d M e d ica r e and D epartm ent of D efen se contracts in Arizona. The 9 percent increase in fiscal 1989 — well above the 5.4 percent national average — is significant because Arizona suffered a sharp drop in federal funds in 1988, Rex said. In 1987, $12.5 billion was distributed in Arizona, but this was cut to $12.2 billion in 1988. In 1988, the funding reduction contributed to the state’s economic slump, Rex said. HoWeVer, the state’s economy is now recovering, in part because of the 1989 federal funding increase, he added. Tracy Clark, senior research economist in the ASU Economic Outlook Center , said she is optimistic about the state’s economy. “We’ve been experiencing fairly good job growth,” she said- “In June of 1990, we were ranked sixth in the nation in job growth.” Arizona ranks near the bottom of the 50 states in receiving federal grants for its state and local governments. This is partly because Arizona does not participate in matching programs, in which the federal government matches funds with the state, Rex said. “It’s a case where the state still has to expend som e money,” he said. “Our Legislature is so concerned with spending money, they don’t take advantage of some of the programs.” Federal funds are received by a wide variety of groups and individuals. Direct payments to individuals, including Social Security and Medicare, account for nearly 50 percent of federal spending in Arizona, Rex said, adding that these payments increased 11 percent in 1989. In a d d itio n , s a la r ie s for fe d e r a l employees increased 9 percent in 1989, com pared to the 6.4 percent national average. This category includes military personnel, postal service employees, and civilian defense workers. Gentle Strength Co-op Natural Foods Grocery & Now open for muffins and coffee Monday thru Friday from 7:00 a.m. 1 5 Gallons of de-ionized w ater Chompie’s p il'f VTRETCW „ISIANd” N ew York Style W ater Bagels - Stretch Island Fruit Leathers Reg. 3 3 t each 2 9 0 e a c h Suggested retail 351 4/$1.00 Golden Temple Û T Bulk Granola ~ with this coupon Reg. $1.9911b. $ 1 . 6 9 / l b . R.W. Knudsen (reg. 190/gallon) Spritzers Fruit-sweetened Health Rich HEALTKSncH] Organic Snack Bars wholeroodmiac*v'• -n W Bring your own container or buy ours! 12 oz. reg. 8 9 f 6 9 0 Suggested retail 89( 650 coupon expires 1011/90 Prices good 9/19/90 - 9/25/90 L Gentle Strength Co-op is located at 234 W. University Drive in Tempe and we are open to the public 7 Days a Week M o n . - F r i. 9 -9 p m , S a t. & S u n . 9 -8 p m • 9 6 8 -4 8 3 1 State Press Page Wednesday, September 19,1990 J a y w a lk in g e n fo rc e m e n t u p Police Report By DIA N E T. SA N TO RICO State Press Students who fail to stroll within crosswalk white lines on old town Tempe’s Mill Avenue should not be surprised when they are confronted by a Tempe Police Officer wielding a jaywalking ticket. “Once people get caught, they usually don’t do it again,” Officer Ray Russel said. “Especially since jaywalking tickets are a $40 fine.” On weekends, Mill Avenue is a haven of fun for students as they converge on the area’s restaurants, shops and night clubs, he said, adding that the downtown population can triple on Friday and Saturday nights. " However, Sgt. A1 Taylor, spokesman for Tempe police, said this popularity can lead to problems. “As popular as it is, we definitely have some problems, and we have to take necessary actions,” he said. Some of this action includes additional patrols of the area from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights, Taylor said. He added that several officers patrol old town Tempe on foot and on mountain bicycles, while a motorcycle officer is present to enforce traffic regulations and monitor accident reports. „ .v '.: Russel, who patrols Mill Avenue on foot during the day and occasionally weekend nights, said jaywalking is more of a problem at the beginning of the school year. “The underlying reason to give jaywalking tickets is for the safety of everyone,” he said, adding that officers are reasonable and fair when they dole out jaywalking tickets. In addition, Russel said Tempe is one of the safest areas in the Valley. Employees at the Coffee Plantation, a gourmet shop on Mill Avenue, said they see Tempe police h a n d in g out jaywalking tickets all the tim e — not Only on weekends. Officer Roger Austin, a Tempe police spokesman, skid several Mill Avenue merchants have filed complaints stem ming from the increased activity in old town Tempe during the weekends: However, Michelle Perkins, a member of the Mill Avenue Merchants Association, said she has not heard about the complaints. “Most businesses do well with the extra exposure,” she said. Tempe City Councilman Neil Giuliano agreed. “Things seem to be running pretty smoothly in the downtown area,” he said. ASU police reported the following incidents Tuesday: • •An ASU employee found five bottles of Absolut Vodka in the Security Pacific skybox at Sun Devil Stadium. The ASU Department of Public Safety impounded the liquor. •A thief stole a student’s laundry, valued at more than $700, from the laundry room at 717 Alpha Drive. •A thief stole a compact disc and cassette player from a student’s room at Sonora Residence Hall. Loss is estimated at $150. •Two students at Palo Verde E ast Residence Hall reported getting harassing phone calls in their rooms. •A thief stole a Honda Spree motorcycle from Ocotillo Residence Hall and ¿ t e r returned the damaged motorcycle. Total damage is unknown. •A wallet, stolen from a student in the Student Services Building, was recovered in a men’s restroom toilet in the Home Economics Building. Tempe police reported the following incidents Tuesday: •A Tempe man, with fo u r, arrest warrants, was arrested and charged with false reporting after he called Tempe police and reported he was working a sting operation and needed backup at Hammerheads nightclub, 955 E. University Drive. Com piled b y S ta te P ress rep o rter M ichelle Paul. A ^ 'L I f your birthday is this month, the S T ffT C W R .C S S will give you I free classified liner ad. There is a limit of 2 0 words. IProof of birth month required Kiilatthews Qenter, south basement I PITCH-MU 12 Bands 2 Days Q $7°° -FAdvance, E S TDillard’s ’9 0 Social Distortion •Jesus Jones •Mojo Nixon •Soul Asylum •Som ething Happens •Gin Blossom s The Dead Milkmen •Dramarama •Scatterbrain •The Rave-Ups •Ecotour •Aquanettas Advance Tickets available at Dillard’s. $700 per nite— $900 at gate Chandler Compadre Stadium Gates Open 5:30 FREE PARKING :V Page 8 State Prêts Wednesday, September 19,1990 For local T-shirt couple success is on the "Edge* By LA U RA SCH M ID T State Press For two former ASU students, success has been measured on T-shirts. And it may net them a quarter of a million dollars by the end of the year. "We said ‘Let’s check into this,’ ” said P e g g y T ice-K averm an, a 1987 ASU graduate and part-owner of Border’s Edge, a Tempe screen printing business. “We were both college Students and neither of us had any money.” Tice-Kaverman said her husband and coowner Bill Kaverman actually began the business of screen printing T-shirts out of the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity house four years ago. “He would just do shirts for different events,” she said, John Lea, assistant chair and senior lecturer in the College of B u siness’ management department, said about 15 out of 45 students in his sm all business management class have serious intentions of starting their own business after college. “We don’t get a lot of feedback from students once they’ve graduated,” he said. “Feedback from successful students is rare and welcome.” . Tice-Kaverman said she put up $2,500 in August 1987 to set up a shop on the corner of College and Sixth avenues. The money paid, for the building deposit and rent payment. At first, the retail shop shared a 277-square-foot space with the store’s printing production. Later, Border’s Edge moved its retail store to a 2,300-square-foot basement. “It was very cramped quarters,” said Tice-Kaverman. “We could only have three or four people in there at a tim e.” Despite the store’s cramped business space, the sales volume rose from $4,700 iii September 1988 to $34,571 dollars by January 1989. In March 1989, Border’s Edge moved its production facilities to 2609 S. Industrial Park in Tempe. The 5,100-square-foot facility was capable of providing room for the company’s latest technical equipment. Currently, the store is located at 580 S. College Ave. in University Towers, and the warehouse is at 1555 W. 10th Place in Tempe, providing 10,000-square-feet of space. Tice-Kaverman said it w as difficult coping with the long working hours and carrying a load of classes at the sam e time. “We spent literally 24 hours a day together,” she said. “But we didn’t really have anything to lose except each other. It was just a commitment to work together.” K averm an , a fo rm er ASU sen io r industrial technology major who is six credits short of gaining his degree, said now the store’s clients include the Fiesta Bowl, Beauvais Gym, World Gym and ASU residence halls. He said the company prints about 3,000 Tshirts every day. “We deal with large contract businesses,” Kaverman said. He said even though he only has six credits left at ASU, he continues to delay g r a d u a tin g b e c a u s e o f h is jo b responsibilities. “I was on the dean’s list for the first three years of school,” he said. “ I had to sacrifice school to keep the business going.” ; Irwin Daugherty/State P re ss Peggy and Bill Kaverman, standing, have turned their screen printing business into a very profitable venture. Both are former A SU students. W m A FIESTA BOWL SCHOLARSHIP for a college-eligible Arizona Resident* 1st Prize - $3,000 Scholarship 2nd Prize - $2,000 Scholarship 3rd Prize -$1,000 Scholarship Each week throughout the 1990 football season, winners will be drawn for two tickets to the next home game at each of Arizona’s three universities. E nter w eekly contest o f school o f yo u r choice. W inners of weekly draw ings will also receive a pair of choice seats forthe FIESTA BO W L Football Game New Year's Day where 3 of the 33 finalists will win scholarships. Enter a s often a s you wish (no purchase necessary). O ne entry per envelope. Each entry m ust include the nam e of an eligible scholarship recipient* and the nutrition information pane! (or facsimile) from any size carton of milk. P L E A SE PRINT NAM E, CO M PLETE A D D R ESS, AND TELEPH O N E N U M BER ON P IEC E OF PA PER AN D IN CLU DE WITH NUTRITION INFORM ATION P A N E L 'Scholarship nominee m ust be an Arizona resident eligible for 1991 term or be currently enrolled at any Arizona College or University. (Em ployees and family members of Arizona milk producers are riot eligible.) Entries must be received by November 20,1990. M A IL E N T R Y TO: “Fiesta Bow l Sch o larsh ip Sw ee pstakes’’ at one o f the follow ing p o st office boxes. A S U ~ P.O. B o x 520, Tempe, A Z 85280 N A U - P.O. B o x 1448, Tempe, A Z 85280 U of A -P .O . B o x 560, Tempe, A Z 85280 S p on sored by U nited Dairym en o f Arizona m Page 9 Wednesday, September 19,1990 Athletes. Continued from page 1. in three years. In basketball, the grade point average dipped to 2.07, the lowest in five years. In addition, 16.3 percent of football players last year lost their eligibility because of failing grades, and three out of 12 basketball players suffered the sam e fate; Meanwhile, women fared better than their m ale counterparts. helpful because they don’t take into account athletes who drop out in good standing. “I want to see what Coor suggests after analyzing the statistics,” he said. The mean grade point average for the 1989-90 school year was a 2.3 for football players. This is equivalent to a “C,” and is the lowest mark the program has achieved N F i n d E E D A : r o a o P L A m t h C E T O e a e s L I V y w W E ? a to the University, they may opt for other schools where the standards are less stringent. “You have to be very careful,” he said, adding that in the end, ASU needs an athletic program that does not break the r u le s— on or off the playing field. The A ssociated P ress contributed to this report. The fiv e-y ea r graduation ra te for members of all-female team s who were freshmen in 1984-85 was almost 50 percent. All-male or mixed teams cam e in at 21.8 percent. But Kingston warned that the competitive balance could be placed in jeopardy if standards at ASU are raised. He said if athletes cannot gain admission ST A T E PR E SS Í v I T H C l A d A v S S I E I E D e r t i s i n g ! •Aerobics Only •Actionflex Wood Floor •Students $25/Month F ree S q u e e ze B o tO e w ith S e p te m b e r sig n -u p ! 1301 E. University, Tempe 894-6543 2nd Anniversary Fiesta The F o o d a n d D rin k S p e c ia ls Wednesday, Sept. 19 through Sunday, Sept. 23 State Press Production Department provides typesetting, paste-up and process camera services. Call for rates and information 965-5350 C h a n g in g H a n d s BO O KSTO RE Browse through our 3 floors of: • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • • Books on Cassette • Sell or Trade your books at Changing Hands. For q u alityd oth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) w e pay 30% o f our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in tire store.. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M -F10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 Mill Avenue • Tempe • 966-0203 CORONA $1.50: The Valley’s Favorite Mexican Import COYOTE MARGARITAS: W e are replacing our house margaritas during this time with margaritas diade with Coyote Tequila, IT W ILL M A K E Y O U HOW L!! COYOTE CRUSH $ 2 . 2 5 : Y o u’ve tried their slush, now try our Crush! ' TRAIN WRECK $ 2 . 2 5 : 17 oz,. (1/2 liter) of Depot’s own concoction. COYOTE LOVE $ 1 . 5 0 : A special shot. Your date will look better. SAUZA COMMEMRATIVO ONLY $1.00: Smooth, classic, pure agave, BARTLES & JAYMES RED SANGRIA WINE COOLERS $ 1 . 5 0 : Frank & E d ’s Mexican favorite. I N T R O .D è C I N 6 A m e r ic a n B a r t e n d e r s Schoo A ll Drink Specials Are Available in Bar Area Only Special appearance by M iss Coyote Friday evening Septem ber 21 LIVE MUSIC!!! Wednesday, Sept. 19 EARN $15-*20 A Z Z IZ Z per hour Thursday, Sept. 20 through Saturday, Sept. 22 (Full or Part Time) I 1933 $200 O F F T U IT IO N (Bring in this coupon college ID) | » — Teaching Bartenders since 1933 •Flexible hours & personalized training. •COED courses •Serving age in AZ is 19. (Financing Available! I You have to hear and dance to thisgband! T H E B E S T M E X IC A N F O O D F O R T H E B E S T T IM E S Try our authentic M exican culinary delights. It’s Delicioso!!! — — — —— — —— — — — — — — - i ' D EPO T C A N TIN A 2nd Anniversary 2 5 % OFF Any food items. Excludes beverages. Limit one coupon per visit per table. Offer good Sept. 19 through Sept. 23. Not to be used with a n y other discount offer. — M U ST P R E SE N T CO U PO N — 300 Sou th A sh 966-6677 StattPreu Page 10 Coor____________ Continued from page 1. individual to the University should also be considered when examining salaries. “I ’m hopeful the final version (Coor’s plan) will look close to (our recommendations).’’ The Faculty Senate, Metha said, outlined six principles it hoped would be considered by the deans and Gooding when determining fair market compensation for faculty: •The additional 4 percent funding is not to be used for merit performance or across-the-board salary increases. •Addressing salary inequities is a multiple-year process. •Everyone must be considered for market salary equity adjustment. •Target salaries should be set for all faculty. •Decisions should be based on national data. •There will be faculty reviews regarding the salary-setting process. Dale Hoskins, chairman of the Arizona Faculty Council — an organization representing faculty senates from the three state universities — expressed concerns over a review process at Friday’s regents meeting. He said the regents’ plan directing the three universities on the matter lacked a provision for faculty input and review. Coor said, however, that a review process has been built into the respective Universities’ plans. In addition, Coor said the university presidents compared notes on their respective budget proposals that will be submitted to the Arizona Board of Regents Resources Committee Oct. 4. Coor added that the committee would review the budgets and make a recommendation to the full board. “We will present each budget to the committee and determine what we can ask for,” he said. The Council of Presidents will meet Tuesday to discuss tuition and financial a id .' B R O A D W A Y S O U T H W E S T , S E À R S & 7 5 S P E C IA L T Y S H O P S , L O S A R C O S F O O D C O U R T 'A N D T H E LO S A R C O S M A R K ET PLA C E /SC O T T SD A LE & M C D O W ELL R O A D S / O PEN M O N D AY TH RO UG H F R ID A Y 1 0 A M U N T IL 9 P M / S A T U R D A Y 1 0 A M U N T IL 6 P M / S U N D A Y 1 2 P M U N T IL 5 P M / (6 0 2 ) 9 4 5 -6 3 7 6 Robbery—-----—— Continued from page t. behind the wheel. An officer who viewed the store’s videotape arrived at the Scene and identified Boretsky as the man in the tape. Boretsky, who was originally charged with one count of armed robbery, driving on a suspended license and possession of drug paraphernalia, is now charged with six counts of armed robbery. If found guilty, Boretsky could receive up to seven years for each count of armed robbery. Police said Boretsky allegedly began the robbery spree on Sept. 6, averaging one robbery every day and a half. At Subway Sandwich Shop, Boretsky walked into the Store and ordered a soda before he allegedly told the clerk he was robbing the shop, said manager Chris Canfield. Canfield said he is not convinced the arrest of Boretsky will end his problems with robberies. “AH the restaurants in this area are having a problem with robberies,” Canfield said. \buDontHavetobea PhysicsMajortoRecognize State-of-the-Art Chrom acolor Contrast Picture Tube w ith reflection-absorbing glass produces exceptional contrast a n d color fidelity. \ • Light S entry adjusts picture brightness as room light changes. / S entry Chassis e n su res high-efficiency picture and cool-operating, low pow er , consum ption. Som e d a y y o u m a y w rite a book a b ou t you r c o lle g e d ays... you r Sun D e v il Spark Y earbook w ill m ake a grea t reference book! O rder yours today! /n tS u n U v il 1% . UecLtbool Unified TViVCR R em ote Control puts TV a n d VCR controls a t y our fingertips. 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 M atth ew s C enter B asem en t 178 C hannel Tuning Capability connects you to all VHFAJHF broadcast channels. And up to 122 Cable channels. Autom atic C hannel Search elim inates inactive channels for quick scanning a n d channel selection. Sleep Tim er lets you set TV to tu rn off autom atically, The new Sentry 2 20"colorTV from Zenith is a hi-tech addition to any dorm room. And you can depend on it to last all the way through to graduation and beyond. Because it’s built to last. Zenith. We w ere o n th e cutting ed ge before there w as one. r*io I OFF T gH im I The quality goes in before the name goes on.« Bring in a n original copy of this ad for $20 off an y regular p riced Zenith product, V/Ui lau your yellow pages for the Zenith d ealer n earest you. Offer expires Dec. Consult ^ L . J31,1990. I., 1 7 7 U *20 OFF Page 11 B o n d p ro g ra B y M ICH ELLE R O B E R T S State Press Tempe officials hope residents will overlook a proposed .2 percent sales tax increase when they go to the polls Oct. 23 to vote on the authorization of $78 million to improve city services. Officials said if a 1990 bond program m eets with voter approval, it will fund a new police substation, w ater and sew age improvements, better parks, a new fire station and expanded busing systems. The largest bond on the ballot would authorize $30 million for water and sewage improvements. The next largest allotmènt, $20 million, would go toward transportation. The .2 percent sales tax increase will help cushion costs of city improvements, said P a t F ly n n , d ir e c t o r o f T e m p e ’s management services. Eight bond issues and the sales tax increase will be voted on separately. Flynn said although the increase would raise city sales tax form 1 percent to 1.2 percent, Tempe would continue to have the lowest per capita service cost of any city in the Valley. “Even with thé tax increase Tempe will continue to be a low-cost, high-quality leader,” he said. If the sales tax is knocked down by voters, Flynn said another bond package option would increase property tax five cents for the next three years on every $100 of ito fu n d T em p e im provem ents assessed property value. The increase would average $4 a year on an $80,000 home. Deputy City Manager Jim Piper said while the city already has a bond debt of $155 million, the existing bonds are steadily being repaid. If approved, Piper said the 1990 funding would not overwhelm the city’s present debt load because the bonds are issued over a five-year period based on project financing. City Manager Terry Zerkle said the proposed bonds fit easily into existing margins of the city’s Debt Management Program. Not all residents are sure Tempe can rise from under these debts. Former mayoral candidate Ken Van Daren said the economy in Arizona is not as well-off as it used to be and fears more debt will put a strain on future generations. “I think we have to tell our bureaucrats' and politicians, ‘No. you have enough of my money’,” he said. “The city wants more, the county wants more, the state wants more, the feds want more. How much more can we afford?” Van Doren claim ed the bonds will increase the city debt $500 per person. Van Doren said Ternpe can find the money elsewhere. ‘‘There’s lots of fat that could be cut out of the city budget,” he said, adding that higher taxes could discourage economic growth. But city officials said the money is long overdue. Jim Jones, Public Works Director, said the funding would allow construction of a new water reclaimation plant to be built in north Tempe. The plant, he said, would recycle sewer water and make it reusable for irrigation. Jones said the city would then use the reclaimed water for landscaping the ASU Golf Course, filling the Salt River as part of the Rio Salado Project and other projects. The city has outgrown the capacity to continue storing its wastes in the Phoenix storage plant it presently uses, he added. “We must continue to upgrade the system to continue to m eet the nœ ds of the public,” Jones said. Vic Linoff, Transportation Committee Chairman, said the $20 million bond for transportation will be the deciding factor in the city’s plans to develop a better transit system. Although a regional transportation plan d evelop ed by V alTrans to in tegrate Valleywide transit system s was voted down by residents last spring, Linoff said the bond at issue provides for only an improved Tempe transit system. Linoff said, however, that Tempe’s sy stem would la ter extend to m eet surrounding transit systems. Linoff said the city needs to improve its busing system s but, “Without funding, ittthe transit plan) is nothing more than a wish list.” RIGHT NEXT TO ASU 4 month Arizona ’s Finest Weight Training Facilities: • B ra nd new N a utilus equipm ent • B ra nd new C yb ex equipm ent • A lso Bodym asters, Icarian, Flex • 20,000 lbs. of free w eights (M ost in Arizona) Tempe spokesman Sgt. A1 Taylor said the $6 m illio n bond s e t a s id e for law enforcem ent facilities would help the department build a larger substation in south Tempe. “We need to expand the facility on the south side of Kiwanis Park,” he said. “We dispatch about 50 percent of our force from there and w e’ve outgrown the station.” Other bonds at issue include $9 million to improve parks and recreation facilities, $4.5 million for storm sewers, $3.5 million for municipal facilities and $1 million to develop museum exhibits and improve library grounds. TAKE CARE OFTHE STUDENT BODY. Blue Cross Blue Shield CIIBEK of Arizona \bujust cant doanybetten Cardiovascular Training Headquarters: • A h u g e selection o f Lifecycle & C yb ex b ikes • 10 Stairm aster 4 0 0 0 ’s • T rackm aster treadm ills c u u e x F ir e D ep artm en t sp okesm an R uss Wollam said the city needs a new fire station in North Ternpe. “The north end (of Tempe) has been a problem area with longer than average response tim e,” Wollam said. “The people who live in that area have been requesting a station there for 10 to 12 years.” A proposal for a fire station and a new fire truck was submitted to the Tempe City Council earlier this year as part of the bond package. Wollam estimated the project will cost about $1 million. If the bond is approved, Wollam said it would take a year to get the project rolling. Blue Cross and Blue Shield offers Preferred Care, an affordable health insur­ ance plan available to all undergraduates registered for five or more credit hours and all graduates enrolled in a graduate degree program. Preferred Care gives you the best level o f benefits when used with Student Health services. Tb find out more, stop by or call Student Health at 965-2411. The last day to enroll is September 24. Come See Why Beauvais’ is #1! N autilus î C ^R îm N B O O YM H STE R S ’ The Ternpe Fire Department has $4 million at stake in the bond decision. ASU FALL SEMESTER SPECIAL r r m n n ii Arizona’s Top Aerobics Program • 12 c la sse s every day— all levels • R e eb o k Step c la sse s R oab o k Excellent Facilities Tanning »Juice ba r • Snack shop G reat show er and locker facilities P rofessional training service Beauvais ’ Western Regional Aerobics Champions $ 3 °° pitch ers $140 W ell D rin ks $175 B o w lin g /Pe,9 M o n da y-T hursday 9 p.m.-Midnight R U N F R O M T H E SU N!! $1.00 Per Gam e (plus tax) C E N T R A L P H O E N IX •230-0055 • 8th Street & Cam elback R o a d •(behind R B Furniture) & Hourly * Rates ^Available, - TENÏPÈ1ÎÔW L 1100 e : a p a c h e Page 12 State Press Wednesday, September 19,1990 M ount G raham injunction continues SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A UofA telescope project on Mount Graham, home of an endangered subspecies of squirrel, was blocked Tuesday by a federal appeals court through at least December. Thè 9th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals voted 2-1 to continue an injunction it imposed Sept. 5 on tree-cutting for the observatory project, near Safford in southeastern Arizona, The court granted the University’s request for a speeded-up schedule in the case and ordered a hearing in December. Environmental groups have fought the $200 million project, saying it would lead to extinction of the Mount Graham red squirrel. H ie University denies the project would harm the squirrel. The court’s action “means no construction on the mountain this year,” said Sierra Club lawyer Mark Hughes. “We’re very happy. What we hope will happen is the government and the University will make the argument unnecessary by complying with the law.” He contended the law requires a new biological study by the federal government of thè effect on the squirrels. “We’re disappointed in the ruling and extrem ely concerned about the future of the project,” said University spokesman Steve Emerinè. He said the University might ask the appeals court to refer the case to an ll-judge panel for immediate revièw of the order blocking construction. The University said recently the delay was costing $25,000 a day. Hughes said he thought the daily cost was less than $9,000. The proposed Mount Graham International Observatory on 10,500-foot Emerald Peak is to include the Columbus Project, the world’s most powerful telescope, a joint venture of Arizona and Ohio State universities. Also planned are the Sub-Millimeter Telescope, for the Max Planck Institute of West Germany, and the Vatican Telescope, by the University of Arizona and the Vatican Institute. The red squirrel inhabits old-growth trees on the mountain. A spring census indicated only 132 to 146 squirrels remained. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists found in 1988 that the project would not endanger the squirrels’ survival, a report that led Congress to authorize construction. Environmental groups attributed the report to high-level coercion and said a new study was justified, based on further Fish and Wildlife Service review and a congressional investigation. But U. S. District Judge Alfredo Marquez refused to block the project in August, ruling that Congress, not the courts, must decide whether a new study was required. The appeals court intervened a week later, 12 hours before tree-cutting was to start, with a temporary order banning work. Tuesday’s order extended the ban at least until the court can hear the case. The majority vote to continue the ban w as by Judges Arthur Alarcon and Cecil Poole. "JO IN TH E ELITE A T " ‘T fC tK . 1 M onth U n I im ite d T a n n i n g COLLEGE NIGHT O n ly $ 3 9 00, L o w e s t in T e m p e & S c o t t s d a le 8 9 4 -5 5 7 0 1 1 2 6 N. S c o ttsd a le Rd.t tt3 u u ii r r (D ru g Em porium Plaza) O P E N E V E R Y D A Y »SC\ Redeem coupon now, expires 10-14-90. HE LEN s PO0 E A LONE1 HERo N HA NDWR 1 T, 1NG AT E1 M EN NOR s ERM ONSi OVA \ OO S C A M F RA Nn M c o ON S RE S T COo * EDs M ON T A N A EWE ORG ■ t 1N M 1NDRE A 0 1N G A NTON M 1 LER NE S T s 1 ENX RY CROSSWORD by TH O M A S JO SEPH 41 “SplitsA C R O SS ville” 1 “Red 42 L a sso s River* actor DOWN 6 Cartoonist 1 Become Walker silent (si.) 2 Workman 10 Veranda 11 Bear type 3Q ueued up 12 Lower 4 Swift 13 Skirt type 5 Draw 14 Shed 6 Spy feathers 15 Conductor am ong Andre spies 16 Sw iss 7 Popeye’s canton “goil* 8 Arrested 17 Mayday call 9 Drift 18 Terminal 11 White veggies 19 Nib 15 Luau 22 Film staple unit 23 Herbert 4 1 5— 5— Hoover's 10 state 26 Locate 1¿ precisely 29 Storage 14 site 3 2 “— folly to l é m be wise” lé 33 Fresh 34 Twenty Questions category 1 m . 36 Actress, — Moore ■ 34 37 Rod of tennis J à? 38 Chihua­ hua coins 3 d 39 Foe i l 40 Garde preceder at the It’s as easy as Yesterday’s Answer 17 Lonely 20 Vigor 21 In addition 24 Apple variety 25 Wind­ flower 27 Zero 28 Em ulates Chubby Checkers 29 Farm machine 30 Ludicrous 31 “Separate Tables’ star 35 Office note 36 “Whip r singers 38 Golf term T - 8 ANYTHING!! Cuervo, Jäger, Long Island Ice Teas, Jack, Schnapps, Margaritas, etc...— Anything! 9 5 Pitchers Cover : 1 ■ 18 ■ « ■ ■ m 27 À * ■ - J ■ i D A IL Y CRYPTO Q UO TES — Here’s how to work it: Coors & Coors Lite Live m u sic, fe aturin g: A Z Z IZ Z , G ro o v e M e rc h a n ts, W a lt R ic h a rd so n & T h e M o rn in g sta r B a n d , A u g u st R e d , R a in C o n ve n tio n a n d m any, m an y m ore! C h e c k ou t th e State P re ss a n d N e w T im es for all th e d etails. 9-19 AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another In this sample A is used for the three L ’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. Every W ednesday from 8:30-11:30 p.m. CRYPTOQ UO TE 9 -1 9 Q E Y V . S E M G T I K N GY I , * P I I V , B Y V V Q O Y U Z , FI ID E M J O B Y Q O E M Q O E W I ; D M T I Q E FIP E T I S E M K T T KUJ YU J P E T Y Q .— H E O U D Q I T VY U J Y e ste rd a y ’s C ry p to q so te : F R E E D O M F R O M E FFO R T IN TH E P R E SE N T M ER E LY M E A N S THAT T H E R E H A S B E E N EFFO RT ST O R E D UP IN THE PAST. — T H E O D O R E R O O SEV ELT C ) 1990 by K in g Features Syndicate. Inc. 1320 E. Broadw ay Tem pe, A Z A&U. 829-7777 m t ■ -M Û adw ay l&c$yo(ir State Press Page 13 Wednesday, September 19,1990 U tility c o m p a n ie s a n n o u n c e rate in c re a se s By KENNETH BROW N and JEN N IFER FRANKLIN State Press Students who have just gotten used to dealing with their utility companies had better prepare to make further adjustments as the Valley’s two monopolies put on new faces. Arizona P ub lic S ervice announced “sweeping changes” in its organizational structure last Thursday, coming on the heels of a fee increase on som e of Salt River Project’s services. Tempe has about 54,000 SRP users, white Mesa has about 116,000. APS serves about 389,000 customers across Maricopa County. APS President Mark De Michele said the company hopes to reduce the upcoming rate in crease request and prom ote price stability, but added that specifics of the reorganization will not be available until later this year. Company officials did say, however, that about 675 full-tim e positions will be eliminated to make APS a “more efficient, leaner” power supplier that can better c o m p e te w ith o th er V a lle y u tility companies, including SRP and Southwest Gas, APS produces what is currently among the highest-priced electricity in the nation, said Wayne Kaplan, spokesman for the company. Kaplan could not estim ate how many individuals the company would actually have to lay off after jobs are shuffled and severance programs take effect. Moreover, he said the streamlining will not hinder customer service. “What w e’re striving for is not ‘leaner and meaner,’ but as my boss always says, ‘leaner and nicer ’ ” Kaplan said. Meanwhile, SRP, which serves most of Tempe, w ill im pose higher fees for cp n n ectin g or d isco n n e ctin g pow er, returned checks, field collections, billing research and replacement of damaged electric meters. “This is not profit-oriented,” said Larry Crittenden, spokesman for SRP. “We are just having to cover costs of service w e’re not meeting now.” The service fees will be collected from individual customers who create the added costs, he said, adding that the increase will have its main effect on residents connecting and disconnecting power. “Most of it will com e from the turn-on and turn-off fee,” Crittenden said. “We do dozens and dozens of those everyday.” The current turn-on fee, $10, will jump to $16 and will include the turn-off costs, he said, adding that the actual cost is $16.04. “So you can see (the increases) are based as closely as possible on actual costs,” : Crittenden Said. For customers who fail to pay their bills, the cost of disconnecting and reconnecting services will increase from $20 to $23. Students who actually pay their own electric bills had miked reactions to the increase. “Sixteen bucks?” said P ete Mykytyn, a 23-year-old ASU business senior, referring to the new connection fee. “My bills are already high. Fortunately, I will be stuck (at his current residence) until I graduate.” But Sean Campbell, a 20-year-old Mesa Community College student, does not mind the new charges. “It won’t affect m e that much,” he said. ‘‘(The increase) isn’t that much of a change anyway.” The revenues from service fees, projected at $5.4 million for this fiscal year, do not include regular service rates. Energy use rates increased 7 percent in May. SAVE ’90 reg isters 4 ,3 0 0 ASU stu d e n t v o ters By ANDREW FAUGHT State Press The Arizona Students’ Association furthered its cause of making student voices heard at the State Capital by netting 4,300 voters at ASU before Monday night’s general election deadline. “We’re trying to take action ourself and go all the way to the top of the state Legislature,” Associated Students of ASU President Matt Ortega said, “That’s the answer to things like skyrocketing tuition.” Traditionally, universities have received 20 percent o f the state’s budget. However, currently, they are receiving less than 16 percent, as the state government has allocated funds elsewhere. “We’re looking for students to vote for legislators who will help the student’s cause,” Ortega said. “They’ve ignored Pima judge orders policeman’s killer to be tried as adult TUCSON (AP) — A Pima County Juvenile Court judge has ordered a Tucson teen-ager to be tried as an adult on firstand second-degree murder charges in the death of a University of Arizona police officer. Judge Pro Tern Stephen Rubin found probable cause Monday to transfer Eddie Morris Myers’ case to Superior Court. Myers, 17, remained in custody in the Pima County Jail, where he was transferred from the Juvenile Court Center, after a $500,000 bond was set after an initial court appearance. Myers is charged with having committed a felony during which Officer Kevin W. Barleycorn was fatally shot accidentally by a fellow officer, Ron Smallwood, The shooting occurred during a disturbance at a fraternity house. Police have said Myers tried to crash a party with some friends, and that he fired a .38-caliber gun during the incident. One fraternity member told a reporter just after the shooting that he had addressed Myers with a racial epithet. Deputy County Attorney Kenneth Peasley said a seconddegree murder charge for a trial jury to consider a s an alternative if it decides Myers is not guilty of first-degree murder. He also faces three aggravated assault charges. Assistant Public Defender Ragi Case waived hearings Monday that would have determined if Myers should face the charges and if he would do so as an adult. She said afterward the transfer issue was moot because Myers will turn 18, legal adult age, in November. She also said she received investigative materials from Peasley’s office only Friday, affording her little preparation time for a two-day hearing, and Said the hearing would have been painful, in particular for the officer’s family. “And to think it ail began with a State Press Personal!” State Press Classifieds 965*6731 Matthews Center Basem ent students because they say they don’t vote.” ASA’s campaign, Students Are Voting Everywhere In 1990, ended at midnight Monday at ASU, UofA and NAU. In order to vote in the Nov. 6 general election, registration must be done 50 days in advance. Total voter registration at UofA and NAU was unknown at presstime. Arizona continues to have some of the most restrictive voter registration laws in the country, Ortega said. ASASU State Relations Director Rob Miller said his office is working hard to change the registration system in Arizona. “ (The Legislature’s) business is to keep people from voting,” he said. “Education has never been a high priority and that needs to change.” Ortega said he is pleased with the outcome of SAVE ’90, and added that voter registration peaked after Sept. 11, Die day of the primary election. “The primary election itself made a lot of students aware,” Ortega said. “Near the end, there was a m assive desire to vote.” . Miller, who likened the Legislature to the Politburo in the Soviet Union, said in order to gain political power in Arizona, large numbers of people who think alike must unite as a ‘Taw, grass-roots’’ organization. Ortega said the Legislature has not kept its commitment to state universities. • -■ “When you raise tuition and don’t improve the quality of education, that’s literally an unfair tax on students,” he said. Meanwhile, Miller said his next goal is to make sure 100 percent of the newly registered voters at ASU will go to the polls to vote. “If w e got 95,000 students in the state to vote, our issues would be addressed,” he said. Tired of the hike? Buy a bike! Through the State Press Bicycles for Sale! Don’t just graduate. Graduate experience The State Press departm ent is search ing for salespeople who are seriously pursuing a career in m arketing/advertising and would likë to gain professional ex­ perience selling advertising. You m ust be energetic, creative, gregarious, conscientious, a s dependable a s a Rolex, have reliable transportation, p o sse ss time m anagem ent skills and not be graduating before Decem ber 1991. If you would like to join our team, call today. Page 14 State Press W ednesdaxSeptem b«M ^1990 Mandela Continued from page 3. former bodyguards are scheduled to appear in the regional court in Soweto, outside Johannesburg. Her former bodyguards, about two dozen teen-agers known as the Mandela United Football Club, were repeatedly in onfrontations with police, journalists and black groups in the township. Anti-apartheid groups accused them of waging a reign of terror. According to court testimony, four black youths were kidnapped in December 1968 from a church in Soweto and taken to Mrs. Mandela’s home in the township, where they were assaulted, Mis. Mandela’s bodyguards accused Seipei of being a police informer and the three men of having homosexual relations with the white minister who ran the church home, according to the testimony. The Methodist church cleared the minister of any misdeeds. There was no evidence presented that Seipei, a well-known anti-apartheid activist despite his. young age, was a police spy. During her husband’s 27 years in prison,. Mrs. Mandela spent more than a year in solitary confinement without being charged and was under government restrictions, i n c lu d in g house arrest, for more than 20 years. The decision to prosecute Mrs. Mandela followed by a day the government’s arrest of right-wing extremist Piet Rudolph, who has claimed responsibility for bombing two offices of de Klerk’s governing National Party. Rudolph also is suspected of a weapons theft at an air force base. Law and Order Minister Adriaan Vlok said Rudolph’s airest showed that police regarded “crime as crim e” from either side of the political spectrum. The independent South African Press Association reported that Eugene TerreBlanche, leader of the extreme right-wing Afrikaner Resistance Movement, said it w as unfair Rudolph was arrested while Mrs. Mandela remained free. with the STATE PRESS Keating. Continued from page 3* Lincoln; and Robin Scott Symes, 37, of Malvern, Ohio, former chief executive officer of Lincoln. All four appeared in Los Angeles County Superior Court but Judge Gary Klousner postponed their arraignment to Oct. 5 because they had not yet read the indictment. Klousner ordered all four held. Bail was set at $1 million apiece for Wischer, Fidel and Symes. Five U. S. senators who received campaign contributions from Keating are currently under investigation by the Senate Ethics Committee. The “Keating F ive” — Sens. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., John Glenn, D-Ohio, and John McCain, R-Ariz., and Donald W. Riegle Jr,, D-Mich. — helped arrange a meeting between Keating and federal regulators during the time before the savings and loan collapsed. Symes’ attorney, Don Smaltz, called the bail amounts “outrageous,” saying they were motivated only by hysteria and politics of the case. The judge said it appeared that if convicted ‘‘the maximum exposure of each defendant would be approximately 10 years” in prison. Keating has frequently said he is broke and that friends are paying the mortgage on his Paradise Valley home. A ll yo u r favorites are back: .P o lic e R ep o rt » L e t t e r s t o t h e E d it o r •C o lu m n s • M o n e y - s a v n g a d s fro m y o u r lo c a l m e r c h a n ts Questions B o th C r e a t io n Process Evolutionists fear Science will crumble if they admit the existence of a creative force with purpose and design. Yet the cosmic ecosystem gives ample evidence of a Creator. Order does not spontaneously devolop out of chaos. Without input of organizing energy, energy/inotganic Firmament Upper matter cannot develop into See. Land human beings. Such Sun, Moon chance is statistically Fish impossible and has never been experimentally verified a n d to be like 1000 years. So one day means not 24 hours but an "age" or "era." Sequ e n ce Evolution theory is amazingly similar to Moses' 4000+ year old revelation with the exception of the "fourth day," when the Bible says the sun was created. F ram e o f reference Scientifically, the sun is essential for plant photosynthesis. This changed the atmosphere from reducing to oxidizing during the Proterozoic Age. The cloud cover parted and the heavenly bodies were first then revealed to the earth. B e re ason ab le Almighty God creates through scientific principles. Time to grow All created beings about the STATE PRESS 99 need time to mature. That God labored six days creating the univase is evidence o f this. According to evolutionists, the universe took even longer to form (IS billion years). II Peter 3:8 also interprets a "day" with God Live Entertainment Tues-Sat MON . ALL NIGHT ; CALL 965-7572 8am-5pm DAILY r FOOTBALL Giant Big Screen in New Expanded Bar Free Peanuts NO COVER G o d already survived the Flat Earth theory and the Copemican revolution. God is larger than the minds of His PR team. Hore parallela of aclanea and religion:]CARP 8 9 4 -3 4 1 9 IY OUR NEW Í A t—.•ó lini ? ErMMWHbWAKËRWAIWBEVERAGES ¿ W / 9-11pm. T U I ID 8-10p.m. W s No 4 E v o lu t io n O 8p.m.-Close $ 1 5 0 7 5 « ! W 0NSTCT i Q u a r t e r tr u e s I M a n ia 32oz. 1 Well, Wine, Draft Beer or I &Longnecks Jungle Juice 1 J $4 Cover $3 Cover M 0N STW tru ss >PETIZERS ECORNERSTONE versity&Rural SAT 1 ALL NIGHT S IN G L E DOUBLE NIGHT A dd a Buck to A n y D r i n k & Get a n n u c ti & < J u i c e 32oz. 7 5 O Refills Visa &MC Welcome NO COVER * N O C O V E R J u n g le C ollege C ulture State Press Page 15 Wednesday, September 19,1990 C ro sb y , S tills a n d N a sh By A A RO N LEVY State Press Woodstock. Those of you who were there, say “I.” No, don’t answer that, no one is listening to you. The m essage here is one of astonishment. Most of the students at this University were hanging on to some kind of umbilical chord around 1969. When David Crosby, Graham Nash, and Stephen Stills closed their set at the Mesa Amphitheatre last night with “Wooden Ships,” a song they debuted at Woodstock 21 years ago, you might have had a feeling you were re-living a part of history. A little corny, But go with it. In 1969 th e s e s in g e r /s o n g w r it e r s challenged the world to act, and bottled an aura through their emotional acoustics and terribly eye-opening lyrics. If you don’t know “Wooden Ships,” you need to. Astonishment. It’s the kind of feeling you get when you drive a car for the first time. You can’t believe the vehicle accelerates on your foot’s command, and more than that you’re not really sure if it is you behind the wheel. So you’re watching CSN and you can’t quite fathom the possibility that your father may have had the sam e concert experience that you had at Woodstock. The fact is, you were there. Woodstock, Mesa, last year’s State Fair — it just doesn’t matter. Whew! Let’s pull away from this psychadelic sentimental whad of words. Last night a unique crowd filled Mesa’s amphitheatre. There was more than one man or woman there over his or her prime years who had taken their Gotcha T-shirt and tie-dyed the death out of it. Turn to your right and you got a couple senior-citizens in plaid ready to play golf at the club in the morning. Perhaps the loveliest image was that of a mother dancing to the bands title Still performing together after 21 year« David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash gave an astonishing show last night at Mesa Amphitheater. track with her two kids; who by any fair judgment had to wake up for kindergarten in the morning. ASU and other students filled in the rest of the blank spaces in the audience along with those blessed people who witnessed the CSN of Woodstock. The third song “Live It Up” written by drummer Joe Vitale and Nash, jumped on the crowd and screamed its message. Nash lead on the vocals sending out the tone of fun T orn 16 Concert, page 17. Potential dilem m as facing publishing industry Fiction strong but some w orry about a recession NEW YORK (AP) New novels by Gabriel Garcia Mar­ quez, John Updike, Ann Rice and Stephen King should make for brisk sales this fall, but publishers and booksellers worry a recession could turn many buyers into browsers. The publishing boom of die past decade may be the pro­ blem. Net sales in the United States jumped from $1.4 billion in 1982 to $3.4 billion in 1989 and some worry the industry has become too big for its own good. “In the past we were recession-proof,” said David Schwartz, a retailer for 31 years and president of the Harry W. Schwartz Bookshop, which owns six stores in the Milwaukee area. “But since our last recession in 1982 w e’ve expanded our book publishing beyond that core population. We have more than doubled the buying public and we have a lot of new peo­ ple whose commitment to books is a lot more fragile.” “The horrible truth is if you want to play in the sandbox you might get sand thrown in your eyes,” said Brigitte Weeks, editor in chief of the Bode of the Month Club. “But the larger the sandbox the better. There can’t be any such thing as too big a book industry . ” “ I think I pretty much share the concerns about the economy,” said Stephen Rubin, president and publisher of Doubleday Co. “There’s a general feeling we’re in a reces­ sion, but there are certain books I hope will be recessionproof,” Fiction looks strong this fall, with Alfred A. Knopf leading the way. This is the publishing house’s 75th anniversary and Marquez, Updike, Rice and Geoffrey Wolff all have bodes coming out, New writers Nicholas Shakespeare and Walter Kirn m ay also attract favorable attention. “I think we have five or six selections from Knopf oh our list,” Weeks said. “It’s the most I’ve ever seen in the two years I’ve been here. We usually have at most two or three by one publishing house. We try to swing around.” The General in His Labyrinth is the latest novel by Mar­ quez, the Nobel Prize winner whose previous works include the best-selling Love in the Time of Cholera and the classic One Hundred Years of Solitude. Based on the life of Latin American revolutionary Simon Bolivar, The General in His Labyrinth is being published this month. Harry “Rabbit” Angstrom w as last seen cradling his grandchild at the end of Rabbit Is Rich, Updike’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel published 10 years ago. He was also operating a thriving car dealership and had moved into anew home with his wife, Janice. Now, in Rabbit at Rest, Rabbit has heart trouble, a second grandchild and a condo in Florida. This is the conclusion to Updike’s acclaimed Rabbit series, which began in 1960 with Rabbit, Run and w as followed a decade later by Rabbit Redux. The new book is due in October. Rice, author of the popular Vampire chronicles, a trilogy that includes Interview With the Vampire, The Vampire Lestat and The Queen of the Damned, has a new book in Nov. Called the The Witching Hour, the book’s story of a woman descended from witches who saves a drowning man covers four centuries and runs 800 pages. “Publishers like to present their best foot forward in the fall,” explained Barbara Morrow, co-owner of Vermont’s Northshire Bookstore. “I think this year will be strong. I don’t think it’s unusually strong, but it’ll be a good fall. There are a number of strong titles, the John Updike, the Jean Auel, Garcia Marquez.” Other major books include King’s Four Past Midnight and T. Coraghessan Boyle’s E ast Is East, both published by Vik­ ing; Larry McMurtry’s Buffalo Girls, and fiction by Allende, J. M. Coetzee, Muriel Spark and Nadine Gordimer. Plains of Passage, the fourth bode of Auel’s popular earth children series, will be published by Crown in October. “I think it’ll be great,” said Lou Haggerty, a buyer with the Tattered Cover in Denver, which at 40,000 square feet is one of the country’s largest bookstores. “I think there’s something for everyone . . . but I didn’t see anything that I thought was a blockbuster.” Turn to Books, page 16. Page 16 Slate Pie«» Wednesda^Septemb«M9t2990 Books__________________ ______ Continued from page 15. Among non-fiction books, Simop & Schuster Inc. will be heavily promoting Ronald Reagan’s autobiography, An American Life, scheduled for a November release. Double­ day will cap the baseball season i#ith Bo Jackson’s Bo Knows Bo, and Simon & Schuster has jupt issued Preston Sturges, the autobiography of the late director. Civil War readers will have several books to consider: The Civil War: An Illustrated History, is a companion volume to the nine-part PBS series scheduled for the end of this month. Geoffrey C. Ward, whose biography of Franklin D. Roosevelt won him the 1989 National Book Critics Circle Award, wrote the text along with Ric Burns and Ken Burns. Five historians contributed essays and the book contains more than 500 photographs. The Library of America is issuing memoirs by two Civil War generals, Ulysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman. Lincoln on Democracy is an anthology published by Harper Collins of the president’s speeches, writings and conversa­ T h e S tions. New York Gov. Mario Cuomo contributed an introduc­ tion and will help publicize it. Schwartz criticized the non-fiction list as “very weak” and said it continues a trend of the past years. “Serious nonfiction.is expensive to do. You need long lead times,' and you have to support the author doing research,” Schwartz said. “Publishers are looking for a quick return and less expen­ sive commitment to the books. Major publishers . . . are simply not willing to put out the kinds of dollars it would take to do these books.” Bill Shinker, senior vice president and publisher of the adult trade division at HarperCollins, insisted the commit­ ment to non-fiction books was still strong. “We’re willing to make investments and allow writers the time to do books,’’ Shinker said. “This fall we are publishing Ronald Hayman’s biography of Marcel Proust, and that took four years. “We’re also doing a complete revision of ‘Roget’s t a t e P r e s s Thesaurus,’ an investment the previous management didn’t want to do. It will be about four years ih the making.” Bernard Rath, executive director of the American Booksellers Association, dismissed criticism of current books as .based on the idea that in “the good old days everything was better.” More publishing houses means writers have more places to-go, Rath says, and that means more opportunities for solid writing of all kinds. Weeks also defended the quality of the fall list and thinks sales will be strong. She notes the publishing industry surviv­ ed the 1982 recession and will probably do fine this time. There’s always the chance of a slump, she says, but the publishing industry may still be the safest part o f the sandbox. “I’ve developed the following comfortable scenario,” Weeks said. “People come to the conclusion it’s cheaper to stay at home with a book. There’s a certain reality with books that’s hot associated with restaurants or movies or the theater. Books have a different niche in the consciousness.” M a g a z in e THE UNDERGRADUATE, LA W CLUB' 4 T h u rsd a y N o o n B ib le S tu 4 ? -Sterri? >-73lrGfofpei,**f/«I»»r B 0 ' '; “ Inform ation and Preparation” S P O N S O R O F M O C K LSA T O cto b e r 27 S e e u s for d e tails J o in u s for o u r m e etin g on W e d n e sd a y , S e p te m b e r 19, 4:30-5:30 p.m . R o o m 119 of A rm stro n g H a ll (L a w S c h o o l) F o r m ore inform ation le ave a m e ssa g e at R E A C H , 965-2255 ''tèftfi&tT o f the Wb&p m diii hfofidwsi ufr K m rtJB O A M Fall Semester - The Gospel of John, Part I Chapters 113 Chapter Date Subject Sept. 20 Life's Higest Enjoyment Sept. 27 Learning to Live by Another Life > -1 Qoupon 6X0^65 9-29-90 ^;.-- , , ftegutor Pnce $1$ women and P erns $50 and up Located Next to the Warehouse. Forest & Untv Arizona Stale {fmtvrstty. Tempe, AÄ ttfJtr* . ' Farfarther informatimi m it H ours 9 a.m .-8 p.m Mon thru Fri & S at 9 a.m .-5 p.m L IV E jAZL Blue Matter Quartet E v e r y W e d n e s d a y 8 p .m . k in k o 's c a r e s . • 8.5 x 11" copies from our self-serve m achines are on recycled paper. • We recycle our paper waste. • K in ko 's is looking fo r other ways to help the environm ent. Open from 7 a.m. til late Serving lunch daily Corner of «K C O F F E E * 6th & Mill PLA N TA TIO N 829-7878 1 ’ 7 pm-ciose EREV ROSH HASHANA DINNER Wednesday. September 19.5:00 pm at Hillel Students $4, Chevra $o Reservations by Monday, 9/VJ ROSH HASHANA SERVICES Wednesday, September 19,8:00 pm Arizona Room, Memorial Union Party to follow at Hillel Thursday, September 20,9:30 am Arizona Room, Memorial Union Friday. September 21 9:30 am at Hillel YOM KIPPUR SCHEDULE PRE FAST DINNER Friday, September 2 8 ,4:00 pm at Hillel Students $4, Chevra $8 Reservations by Wednesday, 9/26 YOM KIPPUR SERVICES Friday, September 28 ,7 :0 0 pm Arizona Room, Memorial Union K olN idie Saturday, September 29.9:30 am Arizona Room, Memorial Union Services conclude at sunset D r a fts $ 2 P itc h e r s 5 0 T P W D r a fts ◄ R I " ’V :: • ■ 7 pm-Close $ 1 50 L o n g I s la n d s $ 1 M a r g s B 7 pm-ciose L'SHANA TOVAH! HAVE YOU PICKED UP YOUR HIGH HOLIDAY ADMIS­ SION CARD? Stop by Hillel for FREE student admission cards for Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippur Services. Also, sign up forErev Rosh HaShana and Pre Fast Yom Kippur dinners. 25C 25C D r a fts $ 2 P itc h e r s $ l 50 L o n g I s la n d s $ 1 M a r g s S in g a lo n g w it h K a r a o k e _ 7 pm-Close 1 7 pm-Close $ 1 S h o o te r S p e c ia ls L IV E M U S IC 2 5 « D r a fts $ 2 P itc h e r s 5 pm-Close TEM PE LOCATIONS & * University & Forest • 894-9588 fax 894-6457 * University & Rural • 894-1797 fax 894-1986 University & Hardy • 921 -0168 fax 894-2038 1 0 ^ MESA LOCATIONS ■ Southern & Dobson1* 969-3326 fax 461-8442 Main & Stapley • 833-0036 fax 833-0972 *O p e n 2 4 H ours! HUM Jewish Students Union 1012 S . MIH Aye. 967-7563 / C o lle g e A A . &nflJ R ural & -a p a ch e \ T em pe ' State Press Page 17 Wednesday, September 19,1990 ^ Concert Continued from page 15. and emotion for the crowd to juggle. Nash takes the microphone again on J. D. Souther’s remake, “If Anybody Had a Heart.” Next cam e Nash’s “Just A Song” that he wrote on the way to the airport after his friend had bet him that he could not write a song in the 15 minute ride to catch his flight. Next, Nash prefaced GSN’s new song “Yours and Mine” with a penetrating monologue, “On the cover of Time a few months back, w as a kid with a rifle probably about to go into b a ttle/’ The crowd moaned and Crosby stepped up, “We w ere shocked too. We don’t care where the kid is from; it’s still the idea.” Crosby then took center stage and sang out with utmost seriousness, which is a bit out of his character. The song has such gripping lyrics as “Who are they to ruin lives like these,” and the repetitious chant of “He’s every mother’s son” over a heartfelt drum beat. The band finished the first half of their set with Still’s “For What It’s Worth,” the p ow erfu l p r o te st so n g of th e u g ly happenings at Kent State. Although it was great to hear the song, it was played with too much celebration to really have an effect. CSN took a break after 11 songs promising an acoustic show when they returned. This is when the people from Woodstock said, “Yeah, baby, it’s about time.” They cam e back and played all of their classics including “Deja vu,” “Woodstock,” “Helplessly Hoping,” and “Wooden Ships.” “ Wooden S h ip s” sta r ts out a s a conversation between concentration camp victims and then goes into the dramatic protest of the “horror (that) grips as we watch you die. All we can do is echo your anguished cry. Stare as all human feelings die. We are leaving, you don’t need us. ” OK, but what’s new? Crosby, Stills, and Nash’s Live I t Up sits on music stands next to “artists” such as Winger, 2 Live Crew, New Kids on the Block, and Duran Duran. What is wrong with this picture? How does a band stick around for 21 years in this dog-eat-mutt world? It isn’t easy. And what of Live I t U p! There is no question, song for song it is CS&N’s best album in two decades. “Live it Up” might be the kind of answer w e’re looking for. “We w aited to have fun with this,” said Nash, “It’s a new decade, and we wanted people to be able to put the cassette into their car stereo and tear up the mountain with the roof down and have a great tim e.” “ The music reflects that, the cover reflects that, and the attitude in the band reflects that,” adds Nash, “We’re out to have fun this y e a r /’ Jazz g ro u p to u n v e il P a rk e r arran gem en ts PHOENIX (AP) — A jazz ensemble that specializes in re-creating the music of Charlie “Bird” Parker has something special planned for Sedona’s ninth annual “Jazz on the Rocks” festival this weekend. Supersax and The L. A. Voices will unveil brand new arrangements of Parker classics “Body and Soul” and “Honeysuckle Rose” to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the jazz legend’s earliest known recording session. The session, featuring Bird and members of the Jay McShann Band, was recorded Nov. 30,1940, in Wichita, Kan., according to jazz historian Bob Davis. . “The recording was arranged for by three local friends who were big fans of the band,” Davis said. “Except for the guys in the band and those three, no one else knew of the existence of those things.” The recordings didn’t surface until 1974, nearly 20 years after Parker’s death, when they were released to the public on the Onyx record label, Davis said. Med Flory, who does arrangements for Supersax and performs with the group, said the album quickly went out of print and he believed it to be extinct until he learned that Davis had a copy. Davis said he suggested to Flory that he use the album to transcribe the two Parker classics and that they be premiered at the Sedona festival. “He jumped at the chance,” Davis said. Before the Wichita transcriptions were released in 1974, it was believed that the earliest Parker recordings were made in April 1941, said Davis, who will chronicle the discovery in a D ecem ber article in “Downbeat” magazine. “When yoU get a find like this, it’s the equivalent of a great archaeological find by an anthropologist,” Davis aid. “Charlie Parker w as one o f the incontestable geniuses of jazz.” Davis said Supersax primarily plays Parker’s solos “note for note, except that they are harmonized for a reed section and voices.” “They’ve been doing that since the early ’70s,” Davis said. “Their first album won a Grammy for best performance by a jazz sm all band in 1971.” DaVis said the group will be introduced in Sedona hy«Mk ANNUAL EXAM f B E iW W Æ ttW ffli FREE All-You-Can-Drink Pepsi $39?®« (includes complete physical, pap smear, anemia test and urine test for protein and sugar) MÈÈBÈË BIRTH CONTROL PILLS, INFECTION and SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED D ISEASE EXAMS ALSO AVAILABLE AT AFFORDABLE PRICES. 21 W e s t B a s e lin e R o a d , T e m p e S /W C orner o f B a se lin e a n d M ill P h o n e 8 3 1 -5 5 3 2 Expires 10-15-90 YOU HAVE M O R E IMPORTANT T H IN G S TO DO THAN HO M E Th^'P iciitc' Company G ourm et Cafe F e a tu r in g : Gourmet Sandwiches«- Unique Salads * Specially C uller F R E E D E L IV E R Y (6 0 2 ) 9 6 8 -7 7 4 0 , ; ' " M onday through Friday - 11 a-ra-2 p.m , ■ F R E E 4 OZ. Y O G U R T W it h t h is c o u p o n . NO P U R C H A SE N E C E SSA R Y L im it 1 c o u p o n p e r v is it. 1415 Last University *101A 1P§|| Hour 10 a.m ^0$ÿ;4i Sik fc Sun 11 * m-4f>m ' &ÉÌÌlÈ3ÌlÌÉ£Ì* m s u if ricw ^ P a g eJ ^ Wednesday, September 19f 1990 M'Y J A N I ' A RY M arch JW DECEMBER A PRIL I f your birthday is this month, the STJTTC P1R.CSS will give you I free classified liner ad. There is a limit of 2 0 words. P ro o f of birth month required AUGUST jut. O JUNE UV — ' JuiY § E P T E MBKR c t o b e r C R IM E Z E R O = 30% W A REH O U SE D eli & P u b 60 oz. PITCHERS EVERY WEDNESDAY 8 p.m.-Close Choose from the largest selection anywhere! Offer valid thru 9-23-90 at Cornerstone location only. p a c ific £yes & T s The California Attitude • • • Sh o ts of S c h n a p p s 99* • Live Entertainment*« 130 E. University Drive, Tem pe, A Z 966-7788 Cornerstone • 966-5560 Rural & University 112 Price B alco n y T icke ts for A S U Stu de n ts! srmiLGHT # S T U D E N T RUSH D o n ’t m iss this special 1/2 price offer for the opening show of the inaugural se ason of The Valley Broadw ay Series. G A M M A G E A U D IT O R IU M Opening Night — September 19, 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Gam m age Box Office only. Call 965-3434 for more information. Co-sponsored by: MtiU by Garry Trudeau Doonesbury The elephant’s nightm are Rainey Days by Julie Sigwart ACROSS CAMPUS, A M A JO R CRISIS ARISES DURING MARCHING BAND PRACTICE' C O A C H SA V S T H E D R I L L W O N 'T W O R K W IT H O U T ONE M ORE f t* 3 TRUMPET-' T h a t's th e tick e t! State Press C la ss ifie d s C O L L E G li I B E R A L PROGRAM A R T S I S TU D E N T NURSES. C O N TIN U E YOUR ED UC A TIO N . . . TH E SM A R T W A Ÿ. O F A N D 9 C I E N C E S D E A D L IN E 1,1990 INSURE Y O U R FUTURE REGISTRATION O F STU D Y OCTOBER All undergraduates in the C ollege of Liberal A rts and j » Sc ie n c e s w ho will earn 87 or more credit hours during | I this sem ester m ust file a Program of Study by October i 1,1 9 9 0 in the College Graduation Office, Social Science * Building Room 111. I f I For information or if you have any questions, stop by the Graduation Office or telephone 965-2297. I | Act now. Delay could keep you out of the courses you want. HONDO, Texas (AP) — An Assembly of God pastor and two church members accused of trying to “beat the devil” out Of a south Texas man have gone on trial on false imprisonment charges. The Rev. Jam es Douglas Price, 42, pastor of First Assembly of God Church, and brothers Robert Leo Nixon Jr., 42, and Alvin Ray Nixon, 31, aré accused of false imprisonment in the Jan. 29 incident. According to a Medina County grand jury indictment, the three used force and intimidation to detain Evertt “Ray” Weimers, 43, and slapped him and poured oil on him as part of a religious rite. Dr. Ricardo Castillo, who treated Wiemers for facial and shoulder injuries, testified Monday that Weimers told him several men tried to beat the devil out of him in an exorcism. The doctor said Weimers told him that before the beating he spoke with Price; pastor of the church in Devine, 30 m iles southwest of San Antonio. He said he told Price he had been despondent over marital and financial problems. “ The preacher told him the reason he was feeling that way was that he had the devil in him and needed to be exorcised,” the doctor said. “Then the preacher went to get som e more parishioners to beat it out of his system .” Army Reserve Nursing offers a variety of opportunities to further your education at little or no cost to you. •Specialized Training Assistance Program (STR A P) provides an extra monthly stipend of over $700 for nurse anesthesia and operating room training, •Health Professionals Loan Repayment Program will repay qualifying federally insured student loans to a maximum of $20,000 for select specialties. •Montgom ery G l Bill can give you up to $5,040 to complete your B.S.N. degree. •Tuition A ssistance Program allows you to attend approved classes for B S. N . and the Arm y Reserve may pay part of the costs. A n d all o f th is is in add ition to the g o o d part-tim e in co m e a s a n A rm y R e se rv e officer. T h in k a b o u t it. T h e n th in k a b o u t u s. T h e n call: 1 - 6 0 2 - 9 4 2 - 5 2 45 , P h o e n i x , AZ I I BE ALL YOU CAM BE.* ARMY RESERVE State Press Page 23 JWedn«da^SepternbeM9ti1990_ O p e n date lets A SU in ju rie s re c o v e r B y PAU L CO RO State Press On ASU coach Larry Marmie’s appreciation scale, open dates fall somewhere between a hangnail and losing to UofA. However, considering a rash of injuries that have created some problem areas, Marmie is taking a different attitude this week toward the Sun D evils’ gam eless weekend. “I’m kind of glad we have got it,” Marmie said. “I’m not a big fan of open dates, particularly this early in the season.’’ After winning its first two gam es at home against Baylor and Colorado State, 23rd-ranked ASU will have a light practice week before gearing up for a Sept. 29 match-up at Missouri. By then, Marmie said he hopes to get senior starting flanker Vic Cahoon, senior starting nose guard Pat Mason and sophomore reserve tight end Bob Brasher back from injuries for the Missouri game. Mason may be the most important of the returnees, considering the loss of junior defensive tackle Shane Collins for the season. Collins’ reconstructive knee surgery is slated for Saturday morning. “ (Mason’s return) is going to give us an experienced player and some more depth,” Marmie said. The Sun Devils have been struck by the injury bug again. Junior reserve strong guard Bill Doverspike underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left knee Tuesday morning. Doverspike, who was backing up starter Tim Kirby, had been experiencing some inflammation the last seven to 10 days in the same knee he had surgery on last season. Doverspike will miss three weeks, which means he should be back for the Oct. 13 California game at home. Until then, Kirby and quick guards Jeff White and Bob Robertson will operate a three-way rotation at the two guard spots. Michael Thompson would have filled in for Doverspike, bub he quit three weeks ago. • • • Marmie said he will use this week to re-evaluate ASU’s personnel in pass situations. By losing his best pass rusher in Collins, Marmie said he was unhappy with the Sun Devils’ pass rush in Saturday’s '31-20 against Colorado State. “We didn’t get enough pressure on the quarterback,” Marmie said. “We did not tackle as well as w e did in the opening ball game. “I don’t think our defense played as well overall — not just the defensive line.” Marmie said he will be looking particularly at finding the “ best four-man pass rush combination” for the nickel defense. With Mason’s return, the Sun Devils will return to a sixman rotation at the three line positions. The Ram offense was on the field for over 36 minutes and 90-plus plays, about 30 more than ASU’s offense. Much time was eaten up by CSU’s 207 yards rushing on 56 carries, most of which ran right at the Sun D evils’ depleted "line. “I’m not disappointed that they were able to rush the football against us,” Marmie said. “ But I don’t care if they A SU Junior Phlllipi Sparks returns a kickoff during the Sun Devils’ 31-20 victory over Colorado Stats Saturday. rush for 1,000 yards as long as we win. “I’m more concerned with the 3- and 4-yard runs. The 4and 5-yard passes don’t bother m e.” think his intuitiveness was shown when he cam e back and made that last one.” ■■■m è*-. ' Senior free safety Nathan LaDuke made his 92-yard interception return for a memorable touchdown in the backand-forth method he ran. .However, Marmie said the pickoff itself was something extraordinary. “He went up in the air and had to twist his body to catch it,” Marmie said. “It wasn’t a routine interception. He may top it somewhere along the line.” Sophomore split end Eric Guliford may have had a career gam e Saturday night, but Marmie said it could have been bigger. Guliford set personal highs with nine receptions and 153 yards. From the middle of the third quarter on, the Rams, cam e hard at the ASU offensive line with an all-out Chicago Bear 46 defense. “That’s why Guliford killed them,” Marmie said. “They were trying to man-to-man him. We should have gone to him even more.” Sophomore placekicker Mike Richey had his career high point and low point in the sam e night. Richey missed his first collegiate extra-point and field goal attempts Saturday, but then clinched the gam e with a 48-yard kick that was the longest of his career. “It was bound to happen som e tim e,” Marmie said. “I Football stadium tu rf turns tough B y G REG ZELE State Press Last year when the ASU football team took the field on Saturday nights, it looked like they were conducting training for a possible match-up against the Iraqi all-star team. The field was nothing more than sand painted green by the end of the season. Many Cardinals fans were hoping this was a sign that the team was about to move to lovely Baghdad. No such luck. This “Dust Bowl,” as many old-tim­ ers called it, was the result of two sea­ sons worth of abuse caused by two team s playing in Sun Devil Stadium during the football season. “We were lucky we had anything growing over there the,past two years,” Stadium Manager Tom Sadler said. “This is the best schedule w e’ve had in the past three years with only two backto-back games and three no-game weekends.” Sadler The stadium grass, which ideally should be replaced every three to four years, had not been replaced since Darryl Rogers was hired as head coach according to. Sadler. Rogers first season was 1980. After the Paul McCartney concert last spring, ASU began a plan to replace the turf. However, it quickly discovered layers of paint-contaminated soil. In the end, it was decided a complete overhaul of the playing surface was needed. Sadler said six inches of sub-surface was scraped off and replaced by sand. In addition, the irrigation system was revamped. Tifway “419” sod was laid on top. Sadler called the new grass “state of the art sports turf.” The cost of the renovation was $85,000. Sadler said the money cam e from the stadium management fund that is made up of revenues from the Cardinals and Intercollegiate Athletics, which includes revenues from spring events. The project was finished on June 15, two months before the first Cardinals’ pre-season game. Just prior.to gam e time a violent thunderstorm rocked the T.J. Sokoi/SUt* P rau Valley and Sadler worried the new turf would be badly damaged. “During the game I didn’t notice much mud on the players uniforms,” Sadler said. “The sand did a great job absorbing the water.” After the game, Sadler found the field to be in relatively good condition. Before the last Phoenix game, the sprinkler system malfunctioned causing the turf to be overly dry at game time. The result was a badly chewed-up field and an idea was born. Now, prior to game-time, the surface is wet down to help avoid damage. ‘‘Nothing that would be a detriment to the players or footing,” Sadler said. Rye grass is also being planted now, instead of later as was the case in the past, so when colder temperatures kill the existing grass the field will be green. The Sunkist Fiesta bowl committee was concerned with the lack of turf during last year’s game. Another change since last year is that Physical Plant is no longer responsible for the upkeep of the field. Western Sod, the company that installed the new'turf, is maintaining Hie turf. Sadler said this is because ASU wanted the company that installed the sod to care for it for at least one year to insure everything went smoothly in the transition. He was careful to stress that Physical Plant “did a great job for many years." Change is coming again to the field, however, as ASU prepares Sun Devil Stadium to host the Super Bowl in 1993. A $2.7 million plan to lower and expand the field will begin in January of 1992. “This is to benefit the stadium in three w ays,” Sadler said. “It will increase player safety, take care of expanded media needs and make the field big enough to host World Cup soccer.” In order to accomplish this goal the first three rows on both sides of the stadium will be removed and the field will be lowered by 2 and one-half feet. Sadler said total capacity will be reduced by 1332 seats. Ron2one signs on as ASU assistant Tony Ronzone has joined the Sun Devil basketball coaching staff as a part-time assistant, ASU coach Bill Frieder announced Tuesday. Ronzone replaces Dave Miller, who accepted a position at Army this summer. In addition to on-floor duties, Ronzone will assist Frieder in all areas of the program, with emphasis on summer camps, academics and scouting. “I’m looking forward to working with Coach Frieder,” Ronzone said. “Of course, he’s a great recruiter, but he’s a great person to work with and his loyalty to his players and staff is tremendous.” A native of Castro Valley, Calif., Ronzone attended Bishop O’Dowd High School, where he earned Catholic All-America honors in basketball. Ronzone began his collegiate career at Nevada-Reno, where he lettered twice. As a guard for the Wolf Pack, he was a member of two NCAA qualifying team s and was awarded All-Big Sky Academic honors following the 1983-84 season. In 1985, Ronzone accompanied a team of Western Athletic Conference all-stars to Italy, where he was named MVP of the prestigious Buon Tiempo Tournament. He completed his collegiate career at Long Beach State, lettering twice and earning his degree in business management in 1988. Ronzone spent the past two years as a player/coach for the Wanganui Wolfpack of New Zealand. At that time, he was the youngest person ever to coach professionaly in the country, guiding the Wolfpack to a 14-4 mark in his final campaign. While in New Zealand, Ronzone played a major role in establishing youth camps that are still being conducted there. After playing professionally in the Philippines, Ronzone returned to the States to become an assistant coach at his alma mater, Bishop O’Dowd, who finished 1989-90 with a 24-7 mark. Ronzone earned his m aster’s degree in sports management from USIU-San Diego last spring. “I want to learn as much as I can from Coach Frieder, Coach Archibald and Coach McQuam,” Ronzone said. “My goal is to simply contribute as much as I can to the success of the team, both on and off the court.” Ronzone and his wife, Liwayway, reside in Phoenix. State Press sports reporter Dan Zeiger contributed to this report. Page 24 State Press Wednesday, September 19,1990 Cards look to TEMPE, Ariz. ( AP) — Phoenix Cardinals’ coach Joe Bugel said Tuesday that he’s “got black and blue marks all over my body” from his players hugging him after last week’s 23-21 upset victory at Philadelphia. He’s afraid his players might be saying the sam e thing after Sunday’s gam e at New Orleans. “They’re 0-2 and those guys are going to be snarly,” Bugel said. “You go down there, you’ll get some welts on your body. They can play. They’re no chopped liver. “I’m kind of getting nervous now for New Orleans. This is probably one of the best defenses w e’ll face this year. They have four potential All-Pro linebackers and they get to the football. They can make you look had. They present a lot of problems. It’s going to take the better part of 18 hours a day to figure out a scheme. It’s a little scary.” Bugel said the Cardinals will have to key on Saints’ quarterback John Fourcade and running back Dalton Hilliard. “They have one of thè better backs in the league in Hilliard. That’s the guy we really have to stop,” he said. “Fourcade, anytime you play against a guy who can run like he can, that always gives you a problem. A running quarterback can give you three or four first downs a game and that keeps drives alive and gives you a better chance to win.” Phoenix beat the Eagles behind second-year pro Timm Rosenbach, who completed 11 of 19 passes for 116 yards and rushed five times for 50 yards including a 13-yard scramble that helped set up A1 Del Greco’s game-winning 42-yard field goal with 25 seconds remaining. “He was magnificent,” Bugel said of Rosenbach, who was making only his third NFL start. “He got off to a shaky start * and Philadelphia kept coming after him with the blitz. They threw everything except (head coach) Buddy Ryan at him. He operated under a lot of duress. “But Timm w as at his best in the third and fourth quarters. When it looked like we had a chance to win the game, he played like the player we always thought he would be. I thought our whole team performed at its best in the fourth quarter. I think the conditioning factor showed.” Bugel said offensive tackle Luis Sharpe (strained knee) and cornerback Jay Taylor (ankle strain) may miss some practice time this week but should be ready to start Sunday in the Louisiana Superdome. “No doubt they’ll line up and play,” Bugel said. “You don’t feel good for six months once the season starts. The off­ season is when you rest up.” Despite the victory, Phoenix is rated a nine-point underdog against New Orleans, which has won three of the last five meetings. “They’ve lost to two good teams — the 49ers (13-12) and the Vikings (32-3) — and Minnesota made some big-time plays to beat them,” Bugel said. “They’re self-destructing right now, like we did (in a 31-0 loss at Washington in the season opener). But New Orleans can play defense. If you turn the ball over against them, you’re going to lose.” Cardinals w aive injured reserves TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Running back Tony Jordan and linebacker Randy Kirk, two of eight Phoenix players placed on the NFL’s injured-reserve list last month, were waived Tuesday by the Cardinals. Kirk, a fourth-year pro signed as a Plan B free agent in 1989, missed the final 10 games of last season with a broken left ankle. He missed most of training camp this year with a broken left big toe. Jordan, a fifth-round draft pick from Kansas State in 1988, had 160 yards and three touchdowns on 61 carries as a rookie and 211 yards and two TDs on 83 carries last season. However, he missed three games last season with a lower back injury and was hampered in training camp this year with shoulder problems. Both Kirk and Jordan were placed on IR on Aug. 27 when Phoenix trimmed its roster to 60 players. The move meant they would miss the entire 1990 NFL season, but could be released by the Cardinals at any time once they got healthy. T h e S t a t e P r e s s M a g a z in e ■\ W F. F. K l. V C O L L E C F. T O W N J O U R N A L I --------------------I fine I MEXICAN FOOD I i F R E E D IN N E R I a U n ive rsity ■i W ith purchase of equal or greater value. Not go od with any other offer or discount. Tem pe location only. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 10-5-90 I R o sita ’s P laza, 960 W . U niversity, Tem pe, 966-0852 I I I I i i $2.00 Off G re a se 'n G o 's V alvolin e Lube, O il & Filter Se rvice 1355 S. McClintock Tempe, 894-2798 Good only with coupon. Not valid with Iany other offer. V V alvoline People who know u se Valvoline! I____ _______ S S YOUR PRIVATE SPORTS COUNTRY CLUB The award-winning Western Reserve Club, a complete sports environment, offers the finest facilities, activities and programs in the Southwest. You’11enjoy the convenience, the privacy, and never have to stand in line! • F re e W e ig h t s • A e r o b ic s S t a ir m S a n d a ste rs V o lle y b a ll • K e is e r • C o e d L if e c y c le s In d o o r • E a g le - C y b e x • S a u n a / S te a m T e n n is O u td o o r • N a u t ilu s • S u n ta n R a c q u e t b a ll In d o o r • P h y s ic a l T h e r a p y • L e a g u e s M a s s a g e W C a fe / L o u n g e D ie t • O ly m C a m p ic II S w im m in g P o o l • J a c u z z i B e d s Student Lifestyle memberships available at receive a one-week trial absolutely free. Call Now! 968-9231 UNIVERSITY ASU i . * i B a s k e t b a ll B a s k e t b a ll a lk a e r o b ic s M a r t ia l A r t s — just $39.00 per month. Bring this ad with you to off«- expires October 15,1990 • Open 7 D ays a Week WESTERN RESERVE CLUB APACHE AWARD-WINNING SPORTS CENTER • AV ■■c •' » BROADW £ i • n o in it ia tio n f e e T h e ra p y C e n te r V o lle y b a ll BY D A V E B R O W N SOUTHERN SUPERSITONFWV . . . ÎN ' 2140 East Broadway Road • Tempe • 968-9231 State Press ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS A S U C LU B S/ O R G A N IZA T IO N S- you can m ake a difference! Help advisem ent at A S U and get your d u b recognized at the sam e time. Contact Don, 965-1256. Please leave m essage. B O O K S A LE , every Thursday, 11.30-1:30, H ayden Library foyer. Sheet m usic and records, 1st Thursday each month. F E M A L E N E E D E D to live at Com m ons on Apache. N o deposit needed. Furnished. W asher/dryer. W alking distance to A SU . Pool, jacuzzi, weight room, raquetball, and volleyball courts. Contact Rhonda at 967-1478. O ccupy now! N E E D Q U IC K c a sh ? W e ll buy your baseball, football, basketball, hockey cards. Bob: 345-8799, Angelo: 451-8425. T H E ST A T E P re ss M agazine is interested in students w ho have experienced a rom antic involvem ent with a professor. Call 9 6 5 2 2 9 2 and leave a m essage for M agazine Editor. E D P H IL LIP S: C risis In The Atm osphere Due T o G reenhouse G ase s. R oy M cA lis­ ter: Solution To 0 0 2 Build-up And Transi­ tion To New Transportation Technology. 9/19/90,7pm to 10pm in the Am phitheater of the Stu d e n t S e rv ic e s b uild ing. 438-8005 H O W T O Prevent W ar. Dr. Goeren/ Stockholm , Sweden. International Physi­ cians, Prevent Nuclear W ar. 10am, W ednesday, 19th. M U Navaho. 9652200. FAST FU NDRAISING PROGRAM Earn up to $1000 in one week for your campus organization. Plus a chance at $5000 more! This program works! No investment needed. Call 1-800-932-0528 Ext. 50 APARTMENTS 1 A N D 2 bedroom s, $199 special move-in. Covered parking, fireproof, pool, very near A SU , quiet. 1 bedroom : $310, 2 bedroom: $380 9 65 6 92 6 or 967-4568. 2 B E D R O O M special: $367/month. A SU , 4 blocks, 1014 South Farm er. Pool, laundry. 8257137: 2 BE D R O O M , 2 bath. W asher/dryer in each unit. W alk to A SU . $425. a month. 4950562. A 2 bedroom , one bath, six blocks from A S U . W asher/dryer, dishw asher in unit. $400/month. 967-6429. The State Press is looking for several new advertising sales representatives, th e rewards are m any...you’ll gain valuable experience in sales, layout, design, production and com m unications. This job is not for everyone, however. It’s highly dem anding and re­ quires every spare moment of your time...25 to 35 hours per week. And you m ust be an advertising, marketing, com m unications or business major with an incredibly strong desire to team about advertising and the insight to understand the benefits to this pre­ professional opportunity. If you have a dem anding c la ss schedule or lots of extra-curriculars, this job’s not for you. BUT...H you have a sense of pride in doing a good job; are creatively inclined; feel you can handle 30-40 local accounts, as well as your classe s and a rather dull social life; don’t need anyone to get you go in g every m orning and above aH, operate well under the pressure of a daily deadline...W E NEED YOU!!! Is this yo u ? Contact Jackie Eldridge today at 965-6555 for more information. B E A U T IF U L , N EW , large 1 and 2 bedroom s. W alk to A SU . Pool, laundry room: 1 block south of University on 8th Street. Cape C od Apartm ents. Great sum m er rates. 9 6 5 5 2 3 8 for specials. F A LL S P E C IA L : 2 bedroom , 1 bath. Cute red brick duplex apartm ents. Great loca­ tion, fenced yard. Quiet graduate student preferred. 8257675. ACTION Apartment Rental Service 649-0077 ADO RABLE STUDIO APARTM EN TS P e rfe c t fo r a n in d iv id u a l s e e k in g a q u ie t lo c a tio n c lo s e to A S U . P o o ls , lig h te d t e n n is c o u rt, a n d m uch m o re l! Eastridge Apartments 1522 E. Southern Ave. 839-9947 (Present this a d for additional $ 2 5 savings.) free gift to all for stopping by! N E A R A SU ! O ne and Tw o bedroom s. Pool, laundry, dishw asher. $330-400; m ove-in special. 1014 E ast Spence. 9656947. 1 B E D R O O M , 1 bath plus loft. AH appliances plus washer/dryer, garage. $600/month. 926-4757. 3 bedroom , 2 bath condo, A S U 2 miles. Covered parking, washer/dryer, vaulted ceiling. 961-1707. $65Q/month. NEWLY REMODELED T O W N H O U SE . 2 bedroom , 2 % bath 1 car garage, D obson Ranch. $550 monthly. Available 9/1. 8 352120. RENTAL SHARING 1 R O O M M A T E , w a sh e r/ d ry e r, dishw asher. $225. John, 9 65 7 49 7 day, or 9656911 evenings/weekends. 2 B E D R O O M , 2 bath. W alk to A SU . F u rn ish e d tow nhouse, w asher/dryer, microwave. $2S0/month. 944-4997. M ales only. A S U F E M A L E roommate. McClintock/ University. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, own washer/dryer. Built-in appliances, microwave, refrigerator, p o d , furnished. $275 plus share utilities: 967-8073 or 897-2076. A.S.U . W E S T Cam pus: 0 deposits. Room ­ mate special: 2 bedroom , 2 bath- $425. B d l Tower Apartm ents. 866-3298. C a ll fo r s p e c ia ls . LAM PLIGH TER 946-5523 F E M A L E N O N SM O K E R , own bedroom, ow n bath. W asher/dryer. $300/m onth plus Vi utilities. C all 9 651582. F E M A L E W A N T E D for furnished 3 bedroom condo. V* m ile from cam pus. Fall sem ester only. 921-1177. 1 block o ff cam pus 1 and 2 be droom s $160 m ove in Call Today! A p a c h e T e rra c e 1123 E, Apache 1 block east of Rural E N J O Y T H E Q U IE T ! 1 / 2 B lo c k F r o m Cam pus B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d , huge Tbedroom, 1 bath; 2 bedroom. 2 bath apart­ ments. All bills paid. Cable TV, heated pool, and spacious laundry facilities. Friendly, courteous managem ent. Stop by today! T errace R oa d A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T errace 966-8540 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT $150 O F F move-in! 2 bedroom , 1 bath condo. 10 m inutes from A SU . AH conveni­ e nces, fireplace, pool. $438/m onth. 2652066. S O L ID M A P L E dresser/m irror, $50. Chest, $20; night stand, $5; brass-plated queen , 1968 C H E V Y Baretta. excellent condition, air-conditioning. 24,000 m iles, AM /FM headboard. $10. 967-6170. cassette. $7,500. CaH 8353492. A ll types of furniture for student's needs at student prices. O N E B E D R O O M , one bath condo, washer/dryer, refrigerator. W alk to A SU . $325/month. Call Karen, M G M Real Estate, 3451919. S t u d io s & 1 b e d r o o m s a v a ila b le in a s m a ll: p e a c e fu l c o m m u n ity in N o rth Tem pe. F R E E u t ilit ie s , F R E E b a s ic c a b le ! 1967 O L D S M O B IL E Calais, excellent C ondition. S o le ow ner, m ust se ll. Upgraded stereo, air-conditioning. $6,195. 892-0145 o r 370-0270. IM M A C U LA T E 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo. W asher/dryer, covered parking, pod. L e ss 1 m ile A SU . 464-0093. O N E B E D R O O M , one bath. Pool, jacuzzi, c o v e re d p a rk in g , so m e fu rn itu re . University/Rural. Perfect for couple. 381-1710. APARTMENT HOMES: C U ST O M -M A D E D E S K S , tables, bedroom sets,, contem porary sleeper sofa. $125 to $375. 951-9707 or 995 2 30 6 . WEBB’S FURNITURE L U X U R Y H A Y D E N Square 2 bedroom , 2 bath, washer/dryer, refrigerator. Very nice. $850/m onth 967-3245. 9 6 7 -7 2 1 2 AUTOMOBILES F O R R EN T , 3 bedroom . 2 bath condo, near A SU . W asher/dryer, microwave, covered parking, pod . $650. 967-2344. N E E D A N apartm ent for Sp ring sem ester, 1 99 1 ? Com plete with two bedroom s, two bathroom s, and all furniture included. C lose to A SU . If interested, call 9656402. 1 & 2 beds Perfect location for ASU students. 1700 S. College, Tempe Call and ask for our specials. FURNITURE H A Y D E N S Q U A R E roommate wanted. Private bedroom/bath. C all Jeff, 554-2427 (before 6pm); 921-8253 (after 6pm). H A Y D E N S Q U A R E condos. Furnished, 3 bedroom condo. Looking for 2 male roommates. C all today! 967-4327. New & Pre Owned 10% Discount w /ASU ID R O O M M A T E W A N T E D N ice 2 bedroom , 2 bath apartment. W asher/dryer, fireplace, tennis, racquetbaU, jacuzzi. 10 m inutes from A SU - $250/month. Brad, 8950150. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D , share 2 bedroom apartment. $240/m onth plus yh utilities. 966-0618, leave m essage. R O O M M A T E W A N T ED for beautiful Papag o condo. W alking distance to sch o d . 2 bedroom/2 bath, all am enities. M ale proffered. $184-$234, negotiable. Sean, 731-4857 (leave m essage). HOMES FOR SALE N O Q U A LIFYIN G , better than renting. D arling 2 bedroom hom e. C.J:, Prudential A rizona Realty. 965 3 82 2 , 844-7700. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE 3 B E D R O O M , 1 bath unit in Tem pe 4-plex. Excellent location, 10 m inutes from A SU , 15 m inutes from Airport. Mint condition and priced weH below m arket at $49,900. New financing. Call now! 268-4453 or 9250456. O N L Y $29,900!! 3 bedroom , 1 bath. D e b b ie S h ie ld s, C o ld w e ll B a n k e r, 3757101 o r 901-3100, leave m essage. APARTMENTS 1990 M A Z D A M X6 LX, fully loaded, automatic. 11,000 m iles, Hke new. A skin g $12,750/offer. 8257203. 2077 E. University 829-7259 ‘8 8 F O X G L .for sale. A ir conditioning, A M /FM cassette, sunroof, 4-door, gray, tinted windows, 4-speed, very d e a n car. S te a l th is beauty for $6,700. C all 497-8541. COMPUTERS A A A A A C O M P U T E R tim e in exchange for your typing skills. John, 967-8369A M IG A SO F T W A R E , new. Cheap. Fortran D -Base III, Com piler, M idi, telecommuni­ cations, spreadsheets, data bases, word processors, gam es, m anuals, m uch more. M ike, 3857205. Ddivered. A P P L E IIC, monitor, second drive. Im age W ritertl printer, A pplew orks cop ies. A skin g $900. Jared, 894-9232. IB M C O M P A T A B L E Com puter and N LQ Printer. 20m eg harddrive, monitor, m iscel­ laneous software. 825 5 49 2 . A sk for Jeff. Let S t a t e P r e s s C la s s if i e d s w o r k fo r y o u ! TICKETS S T A R U G H T E X P R E S S , Sedona Jazz Festival, Basia, Linda Rondstadt, Cat on a Hat Tin Roof, L e s M iserables. AH 1st 10 róws. Ticket Exchange, 829-0196. $ $ $ $ IN ST A N T C A SH fo r y o u r v e h ic le s ! $ $ $ $ All makes & conditions. I'll co m e to your location! L isa 484-7055 MOTORCYCLES 1967 H O N D A B ite 150. Low m ileage, sky blue, recently tuned up. Purchased for $2,300, you can drive it aw ay for $1,200. O riginal owner, rarely used it. Call 3750101 day o r 3 7 5 1 7 0 7 night, a sk for M ichael. ’82 SU Z U K I G S5 5 0 Katana. Runs/looks excellent. Sport bike, black, m ust sell. $1,350/offer. 9 659162, leave m essage. M O N S T E R SC O O T E R ! 1985 B ite 250. O nly 5,800 miles. Clean, quick, reliable. Steal for $1.000: W arren, 9657991. JEWELRY C A S H F O R gold, diam onds. MiH Avenue Jew elers, 414 S : Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 9655967. CLOTHING BU Y « S E L L • TRA DE C LO T H ES P ED D LE R New Location ARCHES M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted. 1 bedroom in C hoa dorm. C all Joe, 784-0789. O W N RO O M , huge house. Southern/ McCtintock.^ P o d , utilities. $250/month p lu s 1/5th utilities. Tim , 9 8 5 3 4 3 1 ; 9 655039. I 1968 H O N D A C ivic L X . gold. Air condition­ ing, AM/FM/cassette, tinted, 40,000 miles, excellent condition. $8,000. 9755957. * □3 — FO B EST C re a tiv e D e d ic a te d M o tiv a te d O u tg o in g O rg a n ize d P e rs u a s iv e A d v e rtis in g S a le s Rep s . . . A S U A R E A , 2 bed room , 2 bath. $350/month, $250 first month 967-4789. Np pets. G R E A T D EA L: 2 bedroom apartment. Quiet neighborhood. 1 month free rent. 894-6468. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT M ILL We NEED: Pase 25 Wednesday, September 19,1990 A SU C lo th e s P e d d le r 966-2300 M -Tti 108:30, F-Sat 1 06 , Su n 12-5 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 19-IN C H C O L O R M agnavox. 11* years old. $210 or best offer. 8 251039, leave m essage. 2 1 -cubic-foot sid e -b y-sid e autom atic cuber/water; 18-cubic-foot open front auto­ m atic cuber; washer/dryer. 9651015. L E T S D E C O R A T E ! Excellent quality artwork. Personal show ings. Lithos, silkscreens, m ono prints and reproductions, fro m $25 to $500. For hom e b u sin e ss and gifts. Call 8251001 after 3pm. BICYCLES B IK E BO N AN ZA : 60-centim eter Takara, Shim ano 105, Hke new, $250; 49-centim e­ ter Bianchi, Shim ano 106, great shape, $250;. 21-inch Bianchi, Shim ano/Suntour, low m ileage, $200; 56-centim eter Shogun Tim e Trial, Shim ano 600, $325. 730-6333, after 3:30. F E M A L E C R U IS E R , blue huffy, good condition, with or without basket. $40 or best offer. 967-3859. G R A D U A T E ST U D E N T m ust m ove on. C a n 't take M ountain bike- m ust seH. $50. CaH Tim. 8356020. M E N ’S G T M ountain bike, 20 inch. Brand new , dark gray. $275 or best offer. Bike rack, new, fits sm all truck. $65. 992-7268. M O U N T A IN B IK E — 1989 Specialized Rockhopper, ¿O-inch frame, M ountain— LX , som e extras* $325/offer. C all Dave, 921-7589. N IS H IK I C R U IS E R S , 2 (m en and women) blue, alm ost new. $100 a piece or best offer. Evenings, 8 259687. TRANSPORTATION A A A D R IV E A W A Y . Fre e cars to roost major cities. G a s allow ances available. 21 o r older. CaH 4 751733. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES N A K A M IC H I car stereo. Sacrifice $300. 180-watts power am p, $50. 831-8959, leave m essage. O A K L E Y S U N G L A S S E S for sale- different style s available. Excellent prices and they are brand new! Call M ike at 9 659119. Great deals! S P O IL Y O U R S E L F w ith personalized gifts that sharpen your im age and organize your household. Satisfaction guaranteed. Se n d for free catalog to: JW F 4949 E ast V an Buren, Departm ent 67064, Phoenix, Arizona 85082. Buy of tha W ttk Papago Park TH, 2 Ig master bdrm s, walk-in closet, poolside. $88,500. Bob Bullock Realty Executives / W > -2 W 1 FURNITURE 8 ’ SO F A , Idveseat, chair, hassock. Rich chocolate brown. Like new. Call Kathy, 9 6 5 1 0 5 0 or 897-9120 after 5. B E D S ; TW IN: $70; FuU size; $85. Never used, stHt in factory w rapper. W ill deliver. 2559245. AUTOMOBILES 1964V* M U ST A N G , w hite with red interior. Excellent restoration, new tires. $6,200. T a un, 9751608. 1960 T O Y O T A C elica G T liftback, white, 5-speed. Ice cold air conditioning. M ust sell. $800 967-7837. 1962 F IR E N Z A coupe, white, 4-speed, 70.000 miles, AM /FM cassette, no air conditioning. $2,500/offer. 4959072. 1983 VW G T I with pullout stereo, tinted windows, ski rades, air conditioning, 83.000 m iles. $2,300/offer. C all Rob, 9650509. m Page 26 State P in i Wednesday, September 19,1990 TRAVEL A D V E R N T U R O U S F E M A LE / M A L E for Colorado River rafting trip. O nly m iss three school days. M e ssa ge — 921-9908. F L Y A N Y W H ER E U S A In you name! 48 states, $285-400. A laska, $500-600. Hawaii, Europe, etc. Y ou can leave today. A lso b u y in g tra n sfe ra b le coupons/ vouchers. Top prices paid. Travel Tips, 968-7283 (Y O U -SA V E ) R O U N D -T R IP T IC K E T from Phoenix to JFK, Thanksgiving break. Leaves Novem ­ ber 21, returns Novem ber 25. $320. Call 431-8961 for more information. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES C O L D . C A SH ! Pay tuition, buy new clothes, earn thousands a month while studying! C all 420-1997. U N B E LIE V A B LE !! IT only takes a phone call to discover this incredible opportunity. C all 230-5306 for 24-hour recorded m essage. HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP W ANTEÖGENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL A C T O R S N E E D E D ! Haunted house at the Colonnade Mall, Central Phoenix. Starting Septem ber 27th. $4/hour. 967-3613, Karen. E N G IN E E R IN G T E C H N IC IA N , full or parttime. O ne >year minim um M echanical Engineering or Technology. Som e job experience required. Phone 956-8200. DO W N TO W N Y M C A child care needs you! 2-6pm, Monday-Friday, no weekends! The perfect college job! 257-5161. JU S T D O it!! Se e M ichael Boiton/Kenny G. or Linda Ronstadt for free. S ig n up to be a volunteer usher before 9-24 on the A S A S U concerts door in the M.U. A M E R IC A N G R A D U A T E School of Inter­ national Managem ent, looking for U K citizens to participate in market research to be held this weekend. Please call 957-4109 if interested. E N T E R T A IN E R S W A N T E D for feature film s, T V com m ercials. Photo sessions. C E E C Entertainm ent, 274-6362. E A R N $700 part-time selling widely used female products. T his is an instant hit with no com petition and fun to sell. Set your ow n hours. C all Diane, 947-2910, 9-5pm. E X C E L L E N T P A R T -T IM E jobs. W e are looking for a few am bitious students to work on an on-cam pus m arketing project for major com panies. Y ou m ust be personable and outgoing. CaH Am y at 1(800)592-2121. G LA M O U R SH O T S. Full-tim e, part-time, w eekends. Photographers, custom er reps, m ake-up artists. Apply in person: Glam our Shots, Paradise Valley Mall, 4550 East C actus Road. I’M LO O K IN G for hard w orking, enthusias­ tic, athletic, energetic, people-oriented young men and wom en to help me se ll a new sporting good product. Y ou will work w eekends at resorts, conventions, and sw ap meets. Meet me on the northend of the University overpass walkway at 4pm sharp on Septem ber 21st. Look for the orange cable between 2 trees. If you can’t m ake this m eeting and are sincerely interested, call me at 786-4814. A S S E M B L Y P R O G R A M E R , part-time. C lose to A SU . R apidly grow ing com pany is looking for students with strong math aptitude to write softw are for R eal Tim e m ulti-user operation system s applications for V A X and the 68020. T o apply, call Ticketm aster at 968-2323. P H O N E S O L IC IT O R S $ 6 4 1 5 per hour Call Duane, 921-2831 or 470-1527. F A N T A ST IC O P P O R T U N IT Y , easy spare­ time income. For com plete details, send long self-addressed stam ped envelope: M .L.D., P.O. Box 37836, Cincinnati, Ohio 45222 A S S IS T A N T W A N T ED , 2-3 d ays a week General office duties and som a Studio work in com m ercial photo studio. Market­ ing and/or Photography know ledge help­ ful. 267-8845. F R A T E R N IT Y A N D sorority members. Earn extra money. National party favor com pany looking for sa le s associates. H igh C om m issions, work your own hours. 1(800)444-6484 C R U IS E S H IP JO B S . Now hiring for Christm as/Spring Breaks. N o experience n e c e ssa ry. D o n 't delay. C a ll now! 1-900-990-5621, Extension C117. 99« per. minute. G RO U .N D F L O O R opportunity. Earn $200-$1200 part-time talking to your peers. Call 924-0499. L E A D G E N E R A T O R design/drchjtectural firm. Com m ission, part-time, will train, m ay develop into full-time sales. Send resum e or com plete application to: 6031 South Maple, Tempe, 85283, Attention: C.W . L O C A L B U S IN E S S needs a dependable person with car for flyer distribution. Flexible hours. Call 921-1196. G U M B Y ’S PIZZ A now hiring delivery drivers, im mediate openings. Flexible hours. Earn $50 to $100 nightly. Take hom e 1 0 0 % of your pay. Call 921-3278. LO O K IN G F O R a friendly and professional delivery person to a lso do light w arehouse packaging. Part-time, 2-5 hours daily. M ust be able to lift 50 pounds and own truck or large vehicle. $5/hour plus m ileage. For the right ready-to-go individu­ al. C all Jodi at Total Fulfillm ent, 731-9225. G Y M N A S T IC IN ST R U C T O R needed parttime. 40th Street and Thom as. Call Carrie, 957-0046. M A K Ë Y O U R own hours. Telem arketing. Salary plus com m ission. 5 m inutes from A SU . C all 423-1624. YOU STARTED SCHOOL NOW IT’S TIME TO FIND A JOB HERE IT IS! “ Flexible hours “ Our salespeople earn $8-$17/hr. ($5 hourly guaranteed) “ Great job while going to school (1 7 % of our salespeople go to A SU ) “ The best training program in town NORTHAMERICAN CONSOLIDATED SERVICES One of the highest paying telemarketing com panies in Arizona! For your interview, call 894-0136 C A LL T O D A Y A N D YO U CA N EA R N A $100 BO NU S! C L O SE TO ASU ! Bring this ad for your starting bonus N E E D ED : M O T IV A T E D persons to sell sunw ear and suncare products poolside at area resorts. Need ow n transportation. Call 941-2751. N IN T E N D O G A M E B O Y players- earn m oney for writing dow n your tips and techniques. 998-1430, leave m essage. P A R T -T IM E T E LE M A R K E T IN G . W e have 15 im mediate openings, training provided to offer extended w arrantees on G M and Ford vehicles. $5 per hour, M onday through Thursday, 3pm to 9pm; Saturday, 8-1 pm. C a ll today, 831-1131. HEALTHY W OMEN EARN U P TO $ 6 0 0 .0 0 Harris Laboratories is recruiting healthy women between 19 and 40 years of age to participate in a Pharm aceutical Research Study to evaluate a medi­ cation used for birth control. To Qualify For This Study, You Must: ★ ★ ★ ★ P a ss a phone-in questionnaire. P a ss a free physical examination. Have a regular 28 day menstrual cycle. Be able to stayTn our live-in dormitory style facility 48 hours during 3 consecutive menstrual cycles. ★ Be surgically sterile or currently using a nonhormonai type of birth control. Y O U C A N N O T B E T A K IN G B IR T H C O N T R O L PILLS. For additional information please call Monday thru Friday between 8:30 A M and 5;00 PM 437-3820 Harris Laboratories, Inc. in a world of questions, Harris answ ers Walk to Work NEED A JOB? PART TIME $6°®/hr + commission + bonus ★ ★ U.S. Vanguard will hire over 100 telemarketers IMMEDIATELY. The opportunity for advancement is excellent. We offer paid training and a professional office environment. ★ Market Long Distance ★ service for the nation’s 3rd Largest long distance carrier. Various shifts available part-time & full-time will work around your schedule! C a ll M r. S titze r U .S . V an g u ard 1232 E . B ro ad w ay, S u ite #21 8 T e m p e , A rizo n a 784-1599 $8°° to $10°°/hr Full Training $5.50/hr Guaranteed • NEW LOCATION • Walking distance from ASU (Univ. & Rural) • NEW OFFICES • • NEW EXPANSION • • NEW HOURS • early m orning, morning, afternoon, evening, weekend As our Telem arketing Representatve, you would work in a fun professional envi­ ronm ent contacting custom ers nation­ wide for major clients earning great part tim e money on a schedule that you set up. For confidential interview, please call extension #33 at: DIALAMERICA 8 9 4 -0 2 6 4 A sk for extension #33 If; State Prass HELP WANTED— GENERAL HELP WANTED— GENERAL M A R K E T R E S E A R C H Interviewers. T his is your chance to find out what market research is all about. M arket Survey Group, a subsidiary of Market Solutions Group, a leading research and consulting firm specializing in the service industries, needs several motivated students who can work in the early evenings and W eekends on our C R T interviewing system s. No experience is needed, we will train. Start­ ing salary is $5/hour, plus bonuses, with salary review s every 4 months. Call 483-8214 or 483-7544 anytime after 1:30pm to arrange an interview. O r stop by at 8687 E ast Villa D e Ventura, Suite 309, Scottsdale (M cCorm ick R anch Area). T E LE P H O N E IN T E R V IE W E R S needed for m arketing research. Evening and weekend shifts. No sales. W alk from cam pus. $4.50 an hour to start. Steady work, no layoffs. C all to set up interview. 829-3282, Higginbotham Associates. N A N N Y O P P O R T U N IT IE S S a la rie s $150-$400 week. Join pur successful N anny Netw ork and experience growth with a great fam ily on East Coast. Call Arlene Streisand, 1(800)443-6428. M ini­ m um 1 year. FREE HAIRCUTS M ale & female hair m odels needed for halrcuttlng/styling com petition on Sept. 23. Please call on or before Sept. 22, pm hours, leave m essage (nam e & num ber) for Joseph Garcia. 252-1234 P E A C E M O V E M E N T , 2 positions, parttime. $7/hour. No.1 : organize a "T eachin ’’ sty lé c o n fe re n c e q u e stio n in g continued U S M ilitary build-up in Middle East. No.2: Data entry and sim ple statisti­ cal analyst of survey of National Peace M ovem ent M ust have access to own com puter. Contact Operation Real Securi­ ty, 921-3090, Jim Driscoll. P R É S Ç H O O L T E A C H E R S needed for part-time or full-time. W ill train. East location Am igo Preschool, 267-1539. P R IC E S A V E R S W holesale W arehouse is opening its newest w arehouse in Phoenix at 317 South 48th Street and is now hiring for the following positions: Personnel Specialist, Inventory Auditors, Reception­ ist, R e ce ive rs, Sto cke rs, C a sh ie rs. Bakers, M arketing Representatives, M ain* tenance, experienced C igarette T ax Stam p Clerk. W e offer com petitive sala­ ries, excellent benefits, bonus incentive plan, and opportunity tor advancem ent. For im mediate consideration please apply in person at Price Sa ve rs W holesale W arehouse, 5025 E a st W ashington, No. 108, Phoenix, Arizona 85034. EO E. P R O G R A M A ID E S tor before/after school program . 3-4 hours daily. Start $5/hour. 4309 E ast Belleview, Phoenix. T e le m a r k e t in g N e a r -N e rd le s s w o rk e n v i­ ro n m e n t, W illin g to h ire lo c a l so ro ritie s . R o c k & R o ll & A r iz o n a 's e a s ie s t jo b ! S c h e ­ d u le a p p o in tm e n ts. W o rk h rs.: M -F 4 -9 p .m .. S a t. 9 -2 p .m . $5/hr + co m m . C a ll D a n , 2 -4 p .m ., a n d te ll a frie n d . E O E . 829 -3 910 W A L K E R D A T A S O U R C E now hiring 6-10:30pm shift Need enthusiastic, reli­ able individuals with average reading skills and good speaking voice for tele­ phone surve y interview ing. Starting w age— $4.50/hour .Apply in person 10am to 4pm, M bnday-Friday, 4515 South M cClihtock Drive, Suite 101, Tempo. 831-2971. E O E Male/female Y O U T H E M P L O Y M E N T Councelor. Parttime, temporary, $7.84/hour. City of Tem po has an opportunity for a Youth Em ploym ent Councelor. A Bachelors in Education, Social W ork, or related field is preferred. Apply in person at City of Tem pe Library, Social Services Depart­ ment! 2nd floor. 3500 South Rural Road in Tempe. S E G A G E N E S IS players- earn money for writing down your tips and techniques. 998-1430, leave m essage. T H E R O S E Com pany is now hiring for rose* sale s in nightclubs and restaurants. Call for interview, 921-8855. IN C . 500 Company needs P/T Help to Fill 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Shift *5*° Guaranteed •Cash Bonus paid nightly •Cornerstone Mall location •Flexible Hours •Weekly pay CALL 968-4457 For an interview T E M P E C E N T E R tor the Handicapped Hotline: teach, care, and a ssist disabled adults and children group hom es and day program s. Part-time, fulltime. All shifts available. Other positions open. Call 894-2704. EO E. PA R T -T IM E C U S T O M E R service. Com pu­ ter m anufacturer h a s part-time opening for custom er service clerk. Position entails responding to custom er’s letters. Candi­ dates m ust be able to write well. Junior or Senior E nglish or other Liberal Arts Major preferred. Trai n ing ‘ pr ovid ed. M ust be a non-sm oker and hours are flexible. Start­ ing pay: $5.50 and 15-25 houre/week. Convenient Tem pe/Phoenix border. Call Janet, 437-9388. P R O F E S S IO N A L P A R T -T IM E secretary wanted for Tem pe business. Type 50-80 words/minute. H ours flexible, good salary blus benefits. 820-8408. R E C E P T IO N IS T - P R E F E R S p a n ish ­ speaking. 20-30 hours per week. Flexible schedule. Light paperw ork and bookkeep­ ing. 10 m inutes from A SU . $5/hour to start. 244-1383, a sk for Lisa. R E C E P T IO N 1ST/TYPIST. FU LL- or parttime for Tempe Construction Company. Call D an or Kim, 967-0000. SC O T T SD A LE B U S IN E S S looking for receptionist/typist, a lso filing, to work 8:30am to 2pm M onday through Friday. 949-8899. S E C R E T A R Y / O F F IC E m anager for sm all consulting firm in downtown Tempe: 25-30hours/week. W ord Perfect; Lotus 1,2,3; Legal/profession al office experience desirable. 784-1617. HELP W ANTEDFOOD SERVICE $5/HOUR. R O C K Y ’S Sub s. Part-time, w eekdays. A cross from S k y Harbor, 40th Street and Airlane. 267-7464. A C C E P T IN G A P P L IC A T IO N S for drivers and counter help. Earn up to $8 per hour at Sam m y B 's Pizza, 1 m ile north of A SU . 945-8850. B U S T E R ’S R E ST A U R A N T in Scottsdale is now hiring w aiters and w aitresses, b u sse rs and hostesses. Please apply in. person: 8320 North H ayden (M ercado del Lago). Full- and part-tim e positions available. C O R K ‘N Cleaver accepting applications for lunch w aitress and lunch hostess. Short shifts. Convenient hours. Fun atmo­ sphere. W ill train- Concern with appear­ ance, personality and reliability are impor­ tant. Apply in person, M onday-Friday, 2-5pm or by appointment. 5101 North 44th Street, Phoenix (44th Street/Camelback). 952-0585. H IR IN G FO R all kitchen positions. Both shifts— day and night. Apply in person, R io Salado, 430 North Scottsdale Road, Tempe. H U N A N E X P R E S S hirin g part-time: 10:30-2:30, 4:30-8:30. Apply after 2pm at 818 W est Broadway. 966-5006. RESTAURANTS/ BARS ¡T O N IG H T :★ * 9p.m.-12:45a.m. * \ • FREE LOST/FOUND ADOPTION FO U N D . G O LD ring, in Ree Center, on 9/11. 820-3324 to claim A D O P T IO N : S P E C IA L couple se eks new born. E xp e n se s paid— lovej C all Ja yn e and D ick , collect, anytim e: (914)351-5747. L O S T : B L U E sp ira l notebook C all 921-3925 or 966-7836. T hanks very much. L O S T : TW O keys on a square key ring on Tyler Street and Rural Road. If found, call 965-6511. PERSONALS A A A A A A G A M M A P h i- Get psyched for "B u s t!" Love your coaches. A D P l N IC O LE A nde rson— Now that your officially m y *lil sis,’ what more can I a sk fo r?!? Luv your ‘Big S is ’ Nicole. HELP WANTED— CLERICAL * A G D JU LIA — Congratulations Pledge C la ss President! Y ou M om loves you! Have a great week! A G D K R IS. I am proud to have you a s my dot. Looking forward to a fun sem ester! Love, Mom. A -P H I R E11R ED wom an, Happy 20th birthday. Let u s preface that: Twenty years ago you were bom. Love, young woman and middle aged woman. A R E Y O U a student? Is it your birthday? B rin g your valid college ID to the State P re ss classified departm ent in the south basem ent of M atthew s Center and you'd get a free 15-word personal ad! Happy Birthday!! A T T EN T IO N A LL G reeks: Gam m a Phi Beta is having a B B Q Sunday, Septem ber 23, from 1-6pm. Tickets are available through all Gam m a P h i's. Price of ticket includes food and fun. All proceeds benefit our Philanthropy fund. B IR D B E A R : Tweet Tweet Tweet Chirp! Chirp! Love your tail feathers! The Bird Lady. D E L T A S IG Steve J. H appy B-Day. Sorry you are going to lose to the "B u rg e r" on S a t u r d a y ’s V -b a ll T o u rn a m e n t. Y.I.T .B O .S. Ja y H. F R E E F A SH IO N show and total im age sem inar! Presented by C asual Com er and Be a u tiC on trol C o sm e tics. Thursd ay, Septem ber 20, 7pm, D obson Ranch Inn, La Posada I. Be invited guest of .Kedy, with BeautiC ontrol. Q u e stio n s? C all me, 949-8168. Career opportunities available! &fT p f R S O N ^ G A M M A P H I Jodi— Bew are of kam ikazi bikers. Next time take the car. Luv, Rob. G L A S S H O U S E E N T E R T A IN M E N T im ports New York’s hottest D J for your party. H ouse m usic all. night long. By G reg F. 24 hour hotline. 392-3197. H E LP ! I need w itnesses to a motorcycle/ car accident that occured on Septem ber 8fh at 4:30 in front of the stadium . If you can help, please call M ark ait 784-0668. H E Y C O L LE G E students! D id you know that personal a d s are only $1.40 per day for 15 w o rd s? W hat a great (and cheap) way to tot som eone special know just how special they really are! I W A N T a girt to play with me, a gam e of poem s or rhym es- w ho’d like to write, under another name, at alternating times. M y nam e is "R o m e o ", and I want a duel, a battle of romantic wit- write to me here, theaudience is seated, and the arena has been lit. JO N — H A P P Y 1-year to .my awesom e "H um anities M a n ." M uch love always! Laura. $ 1 °°; * * C oors L ig h t B ottles * S IG M A NU Spike, you ow n m e one case and one night. Call Dena, 4-8599. S K BET H : Happy belated birthday. H ope it w as a blast! Love, M om . S K G AB, you are the best pledge dot. I can’t wait for revealing. Keep guessing!!! T O M Y Alpha Gam M om Colleen: You are the best!! I’m so psyched for this year! Love your A G D Dot, Sarah. * BANDERSN ATCH * CHILD CARE PETS B U R M E S E P Y T H O N babies, $150; Boa Constrictor babies, $100. Leave m essage at 986-9457. M esa. FREE L A B -M IX P U P P Y : aq u irM (rom had |o put « ,0 steep or be thrown out of her apartment. If interested please call 941-5,55 Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing and counseling. 24-hour Hotline 966-5683 SERVICES A SO F T Touch Electrolysis- permanent hair removal. Free initial treatment. Near A S U 829-7829. D O N ’T B E hard to reach. Let A M V O X VoiceM ail take m e ssage s in your voice. N o equipm ent to rent/buy. Y ou don’t even need a. phone! Control from any TTone phone. For your ears only. Even send m essages. H a ssle free. Cheap: from $14.95/m onth‘. Recorded inform ation: 420-1260. Call or com e in: 1905 E a st Apache. 967-3900. LO V IN G C A R E for infant in m y home. 4-5 days/week. 1:30-5 plus. $3/hour. M ust be reafiable and have references. Call Linda at 966-5578 between Bam and 1pm. M O R N IN G S. E X P E R IE N C E D with infant (5 months). References and C P R required. W alk to cam pus. Katherine, 345-8442, days; 921-7929, evenings. week, occasional overnight. 2 require supervision and transp 257-1355. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING TYPING/WORD PROCESSING A K IN K O ’S paper m akes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resum es, fliers, etc. Self-serve M acintosh com puters and laser printers, too. 933 East University, call 966-2035. 960 W est University, call 921-0168. O pen early, open late, open 7 days! P R O F E S S IO N A L - W O R D proce ssing, m icrocassette transcribing. Legal briefs, M K T 351, N ursing, Theses, Dissertations. $2/page. Janet, 834-0893. A L L P A P E R S, resum es, letters, docu­ m ents, transcribing, editing, m ailings. College graduate u sin g IB M computer. Mike, 964-0994. A L W A Y S A V A IL A B L E for typing. Call Su sa n at 833-0373/ A PA /M LA E X P E R IE N C E D processing. Need it fa st? 945-5744. typing/word Call Jessie, A S U A R E A . Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. P ric e s are com petitive, negotiable. 966-2186. C U ST O M T Y PIN G . Fa st and accurate! Term papers and resum es. $1.75/page and up. Connie, 969-6618. F A S T -F IN G E R S Alan- hire the Typing M aniac. 244-2485/948-9264. F LY IN G F IN G E R S h a s M aclntosh/laser quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. Call 945-1551 for details. M E S A S E C R E T A R IA L Service, com puter­ ized, laser printer, full graphics. 15 m inutes from A S U . Northeast corner, M e sa Drive and Brow n Road. 844-1876. N E E D T IM E to stu d y? Let u s do your typing/word p roce ssing of your paper so you can. APA /M LA form ats; $1.50, double­ spaced page. C all Joanne, 966-1516, or Bobbi, 968-9166 (please leave m essage). TUTORS T Y P IN G S E R V IC E S - 24 hour turnaround available. 10 years experience. $1.50 per page. 998-7261.. T YPIN G /W O R D P R O C E S S IN G . $1/page. Laser printing included. Y ou deliver and pick up. Alm a School Road/Baseline. Jan, 897-1744. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G serving Phoenix and W est Valley. $1.50/page. Call Marji, 979-8907. MISCELLANEOUS LIQ U O R S IG N S - m irrors. Miller, Coors, M ichelob, others. R ange from $15-$30. Contact Michele, 947-2943. INSTRUCTION A E R O B IC IN S T R U C T O R certification w orkshop in M esa. W eekend: October 5-7, by National A erobics Training Association. C all 963-9415. TUTORS A C C O U N T IN G T U T O R IN G by A S U G rad student. 3 years experience all subjects. Reasonable rates. Bruce, 274-2799. E N G L IS H (ESL). Certified, experienced teacher, $15/hour, Private lessions. L e ss for 2-3. Flexible time. 921-9528. E N G L IS H T U TO R, paper editing. All su b je c ts, p ro fe ssio n a l e xp e rie n ce . Reasonable rates. 829-6712. E L E C T R O L Y S IS — P E R M A N E N T hair removal. Rem ove unwanted h a ir forever. Student discounts. Call for more informa­ tion: 969-6954. H A IR R E M O V A L — ? Both electrolysis and w axing. Safe, sterile, effective. Spider veins, also. University and Country Club. 962-6490. H A V IN G D IF F IC U L T Y studying or taking te sts? You m ay be "sw itching o ff’ one hem isphere of your brain. New hypnosis triggering technique helps with studying, sports, money, etc. Call 860-8111. T IR E D O F being ripped off on auto re p airs? M echanic of 20 years can save you money. Free estim ates. Dennis, 892-7813; $25«9 Nail Special Full S e t / $15Q0 Fill In Crimpers • 5th & College Ask for Darlene or Pam 966-5192 Professional instruction in accounting and finance Your Individual Horoscope — Frances Drake-.— 1 WE WANT ARIZONA TOBE W ^ M â Ê Ê & Ê È Ê 8 M Ê iiÊ Ê Ê Ê Ê Ê $È È È È & YOUR student checks FftCEl... i .. „...1 B A N K 619 S. Mill, Tempe 431-4705 FOR LIFE. »S E C U R IT Y PACIFIC BANK Cover Your A sse ts with Renters Insurance * $ 8 ° % , n Ask for Tom * Drafts * Bud. B u d Light BREWPUB * PREGNANCY COUNSELING S IG M A N U C oaches M ike and C hris— Thanks for all your hard work! A G D ’s love you! : • 700 j 5th SI & Forest C O O P E R A T IV E A D O P T IO N . L o vin g couple, state certified, with the best of everything to offer, se e ks birth mother w ho would like to meet and have open contact with the parents sh e chooses for her baby. For more information, call Char, collect. (602)297-2487. Protect Your Valuables TO D D : Just wanted to say...no more cookies for you. Y ou know who. * * C H IL D L E S S LO V IN G couple, married 7 years, Jongs for baby to share our secure, happy home. Confidential, legal adoption. M edical expenses paid. C all Kari and Bob collect, (818) 989-2369; attorney at (213) 854-4444. M A Y A — E V E N though you go to that other “school, you’re still irty best friend! T his weekend is going to rage!!! A nd we can’t forget 9 4 % ! Love, Sarah. S IG M A NU Steven Clark— T hanks for ajl your help in relays! Love, Delta Gamma. * * Page 27 Wednesday, September 19,1990 345-9525 JVL Get Met. «Ur n PaysTYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1.50 A A A W ord Processing/taser printer. 35 years experience. T heses, dissertation, A P A specialization. M arion, 839-4269. $1.50/PAG E. O n-cam pus pickup and delivery. Daily or F A X direct to me. W P5.1 and Lase r printer. C la ss papers all types, charts, resum es, etc. 15 years experience. Robyn, 996-3911. $1.50 P E R page. Term papers, letters, resum es, etc. At Y our Service W ord Processing, Linda, 839-6167. $1.75 A N D up, professional word proces­ sor and form er E n glish teacher. Laser printer. Claudia, 964-6012. A A K U R IT T Y P IN G - short papers, prompt service, transcribe tapes. C all after 1 pm: Linda, 831-0349. N O R T H E A ST V A L L E Y Word processing for your typing needs. Reports, resum es, term papers. 996-5564.___________. FOR THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1990 viewpoint ARIES SCORPIO ti|jC (Mai1. 21 to Apr. 19) Business demands may cut into (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) p Privacy abets romance, but there’s time you meant to spend with a close tie now. You may feel a parent or an inclination *to worry too much higher-up doesn’t understand your right now. Don’t dwell on limitations but make the most of present possi­ point of view. . bilities. TAURUS SAGITTARIUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) S fv A business tie or adviser remains, (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) A friend entrusts you with a unsympathetic, Carry on with what you’re doing, even if you feel others confidence today. Concern about a aren’t especially supportive right financial matter could dampen your enthusiasm for pleasure outings now. now. Routine may seem boring. Some delays are to be expected. GEMINI r*q CAPRICORN ^ (May21 to June20) n« A luncheon date is your best bet for (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You’ll get some helpful advice now good times now. Towards nightfall, you may not be in the mood for going which you should take to heart. or selfout for good times. A question Self-preoccupation consciousness could hinder your remains unanswered in romance. effectiveness in business now. CANCER AQUARIUS (June 21 to July 22) GWt It's a day when you may make little (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Social connections prove helpful in changes around the house, but you may feel that others aren't especially business today, yet you seem to responsive to what you have done. worry about a private matter now. Towards nightfall, you have a ten­ Guard against over-sensitivity. dency to withdraw into yourself. LEO -j fc PISCES *** (July 23 to Aug. 22) W •*** Things may not move as quickly as (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) You’ll get valuable business advice you’d like where job interests are concerned today. Don’t let yourself" today , but either a friend burdens you become discouraged. Tiy not to be with their problems now or asks you short-tempered with a friend tonight for some financial assistance, Morn­ ing hours are best for you. VIRGO « a YOU BORN TODAY are sensitive (Aug. 23 to Sept22) Shopping for the Self is favored and imaginative. You work well in partnership, but must guard against now, but a disappointment could arise today either in connection with periodic bouts of laziness. You have a romance or a child. It's not the best ' fine intuition which you should lean to tru st Both creative and practical, night for dating. you may have difficulty reconciling LIBRA these qualities. You’re capable of (S ept.23toO ct.22) W*» You’ll want some extra time for work that’s ahead of its times. yourself now. However, you may be Birthdate of: Sophia Loren, actress; faced with extra responsibilities at John Tower, US Senator; and Upton home today or a relative seems Sinclair, writer. unsym pathetic tow ards your Copyright 1990 by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Page 28 State P itti Wednesday, September 19,1990 A CLASS ACT It's a look that reflects your individual style and personality. It's a way of making a statement without ever saying a word It s wearing Marithe & Francois Girbaud Shop Monday through Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-0 In Phoenix at M etrocenter, P a ra d ise VtaHey, F ie sta Mall, C h rM b w m a n d Sco ttsd a le i Shop Monday through Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-0, Sunday 1 2 -0 at P a rk C e n tra l a n d W oatrid g e and hi FtagataS MaH. D illard ’s W e w e lcom e yo ur D illa rd ’s C re d it C a rd ,, T h e A m e rica n E xp re ss® C a rd , D in e rs C lu b International, M aste rcard® Visa® a n d T h e D isc o v e r C a rd .