Copyright. State Press, 1990 Tem pe. Arizona Thursday, September 20 ,1 9 90 A rizona S ta te U niversity’s M orning D aily Voi. 16 No. 17 Plan to give athletes edge in scheduling By PAUL CORO S tate Press E arth Shaken The Foucault Pendulum , located In the Physical Sciences Building F-w ing, knocks down a peg as it dem onstrates the rotation of the earth. The Intercollegiate A thletic Board w ill decide the fate of a proposal Monday that would allow ASU student athletes to slide past other students during preregistration. ICA Board Chairman Milton Schroeder said due to additional requirements levied on the more than 500 students participating in University athletics, preregistration priority should be granted to these students. This would place student athletes just behind disabled and Honors C ollege students in the rush for classes. Last year, about 18,000 students participated in preregistration. “Athletes are under very strict requirements in terms of time and making progress toward their degree to be eligible,’’ Schroeder said. “They have to file a program of study from the time they enter d ie University.’’ Schroeder said the ASU Athletic Departm ent tried to work with the pre-existing system to overcom e the problem s, but it becam e too difficult. As a result, the Student Athletic Services subcommittee, a subcommittee of the ICA Board, was organized last year to provide a solution, After alm ost three years of working on the idea, the SASC w ill present the proposal at this month’s m eeting. The proposal’s initiator, Faculty A thletic R epresentative Jerry Kingston, said he expects the recom m endation to be T urn to ICA, page 9. Regents, ASU combating high school dropout rate By KEVIN SHEH S tate Press The Arizona Board of Regents and ASU officials are going back to first grade. Arizona’s high school dropout rate is one of the highest in the country, and officials are hoping to arrest the trend by starting early in a child’s academic career. “(There) needs to be more university in v o lv em en t in th e d evelop m en t of c u r r ic u lu m a n d th e c r e a t i o n Of developmental programs for students,” Regent Eddie Basha said. “ More needs to be done.” Joint efforts by the regents, ASU and the Tempe Elementary School District #3 led to tee development of a pilot program last year. The Collaborative Literacy Intervention Project was officially approved at the regents’ meeting Friday. It will target “atrisk” first graders who have been identified by their elementary teachers as having reading or writing deficiencies, Basha said the state dropout rate — among the top 10 highest in the nation — has to be checked. To facilitate this, he said universities have to become involved. ‘ ’U n i v e r s i t i e s s h o u ld e x t e n d to elementary and preschools,” he said. “Not only to assist, but to extend to the curriculum development.” Basha, former president of the Arizona Board of Education, said that the CLIP program is worthwhile because it starts early enough in the child’s educational development. “ If we can ensure that by third grade the student is solid, w e’ll make a quantum leap in reducing dropout rates,” he said. Katie Doran, CLIP Coordinator for the Tempe Elementary School District #3, said the program benefits more than the at-risk students. “It’s a wonderful learning tool,” Doran said, “These are good m ethods that work w ith so m uch m ore than ju st at-risk students.” Lyndon Searfoss, a professor in ASU’s College of Education, said collaboration betw een the Arizona D epartm ent of T urntoC L IP , page 9. Student ree center fights overcrowding By CHRISTO PHER WEHLE S tate Press An ASU official said the University is working on solutions to combat overcrowding in the Student Recreation Complex as it enters its second year of operation after more than one million student visits. “If w e could spread out the students to utilize som e of the off hours, it would cut down on the crowded conditions, ” said Gerald Maas, director of recreational sports and student activities. He added that peak hours at the complex run from 3 to 4 p.m. and 8 to 9 p.m. Maas said the SRC is the largest, most extensive, facility of its kind in tee country with 15 racquetball courts, a 9,000-square-foot weight room, a facility for the physically challenged, a 70-meter by 25-meter pool and 14 tennis courts. “This in itself helps cause the overcrowded conditions,” he said. “ In a w ay, it’s alm ost a com plim ent to be as crowded as w e a re.” Meanwhile, the glut of fitness buffs is evident to students and SRC employees. S h o rt ch an g ed : ASU loses out to UofA for a spot on Money magazine’s list of the top 200 best buys in education: P age 6 “Sometimes it’s real crowded and it doubles my time in the gym ,” said ASU student Jill Squardo. SRC regular Mike Hayes agreed. “If a fire marshall were to walk in here he would probably shut the place down,” said Hayes, a sophomore liberal arts major. “I usually plan on adding a half hour extra to my workout simply because it takes so long to get on the machines.” Employees said they deal with the crowded conditions daily. “We have anywhere between 1200 and 1500 people come in here a day,” said Bob Osborne, a weight room monitor. “ If people are looking for non-peak times, the best times are early in tee morning and late at night.” But Osborne said, fortunately, the weight room equipment has stood the test of tee m asses. “With this kind of traffic you’d expect more abuse of tee equipm ent,” Osborne said. “So far, people have been real good with tee equipment, but with the use that it gets, w e do expect som e wear and tear:“ ' T u r n t o C r o w d s , p a g e 9- Students endure the wait In line to attend an aerobics class at the Student Recreation Complex* The University is currently working on solutions to combat overcrowding in the SRC. to d a y ’s weather* Sunny, w ith a high in the H u n g er p a in s: Those who put their faith in local diet centers are getting more pain and more gain for their low. 90s«: Tonight: Clear, w ith a low in the the staff at Bloomsburg College in Penn­ sylvania as an assisrant rnarh 11 low 70s. Page 2 Slate P m t Thursday, Septem ber 2 0 ,1 9 9 0 Rape lecture teaches self-help techniques By ANITA CARCONE S tate Press There are no right moves in rape situations, an ASU Department of Public Safety officer said during a lecture Wednesday. “Every person varies in how they will deal with the (rape) situation, and prevent it in their own w ay,” said Linda Stroh, DPS community service adviser. “Some people feel trapped if they lock all doors and windows, while others feel it necessary to feel secure.” In the speech titled, “Rape Prevention: Making the Right Moves,” at the Women’s Student Center in the MU, she said everyone must plan out what they would do if they are ever raped — long before they become a victim. Stroh, Who has worked for ASU/DPS for three years, including IV2 years in patrol, and one year as a detective, is a member of the Arizona Crime Prevention Organization and is an American Red Cross first aid CPR instructor. Fifteen rapes were reported at ASU last year, the lecturer said. The community service adviser focused on date, acquaintance and stranger rape during her lecture. ' Stroh said women on campus can prevent a rape situation by deciding beforehand if they are willing to engage in sex on the first date. “Don’t play a gam e,” she warned, “If you say no, mean no and say it firmly. Make sure you check out the date ahead of time, because guys have reputations to score, and you could be the next one for him to score with.” According to an acquaintance rape prevention program at the Center Against Sexual Assault in Phoenix, being prepared can be the best self-defense strategy. In addition, the center discovered that men can help stop acquaintance rape by examining their attitudes about women and sex. Later in her lecture, Stroh said in more than half of sexual assault Cases reported, the female is intoxicated and/or under the influence of drugs. In a survey of 6,000 college students taken in 1989 at the National Institute for Mental Health, 75 percent of the men said they intentionally got their dates intoxicated in order to have sex with them. In addition, 73 percent of the men did not consider what they did an assault. Stroh said an assault does not take place out of passion but out of a man's desire for control, self-esteem and increasing his ego. “ There is no harm done in being aggressive and taking charge of the situation if necessary,” the DPS officer said. “Embarrassment will occur, but it’s better than living with thé thought that you’ve been assaulted,” Although an attacker will never attack two females at the sam e time, Stroh said women should walk in groups and in well-lit areas to avoid becoming victims. While whistles, flashlights, mace, sirens and metal rod key chains are carried by som e, Stroh w as w ary about their usefulness. She said a w histle m ay be a good deterrent in scaring off a potential attacker , but if too much tim e elapses before m ace or another d evice is used, the attacker m ay use them on the victim . “The best thing to do is to fight and do everything you can to get away and get out of the situation,” Stroh said. “Submission is not perm ission. Just because you don’t fight, scream or kick doesn’t m ean you’v e given (the attacker) perm ission. “In som e cases it’s better to let it happen, but the best thing to do is to escape the situation.” Stroh recom m ended that rape victim s Call the police im m ediately and keep them selves and the environm ent in which they had been attacked the sam e. “If you don’t call the police for two to three days after the attack, m ost of the evidence is already lost,” the com m unity service adviser said. “Most court cases can be lost on lack of evidence. ” Today M eetings •A lcoholics Anonymous will have an open meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Street and University Drive. •M UAB Entertainm ent Com m ittee will meet at noon in the MU Programming Lounge. The band Able Gain will be performing. •A SA will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Convention Room. •E ngineering and Applied Sciences College Council will meet at 5 p.m. in Noble Library Classroom A. Everyone welcome, free pizza. •U SA fo r Choice will meet at 5 p.m. in Apache 221. •A AA E will meet at 5 p.m. in TCB 201. •C u n Devil Shooting C lub will meet at 5 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room. •Y oung Dem ocrats o f ASU will meet at 3 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •Financial Managem ent Association will meet at 3:30 p.m. in BA 296. Guest speaker will be Brian Hein from Shearson Lehman Hutton. •A m erican M arketing Association will meet at 4:15 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. •S o ciety fo r Women Engineers will meet at 10:40 a.m. in ERC 393. •N A A will meet at 4 p.m. 201 E. Indianola Drive for a tour of the FBI office. Rides available at 3 p.m. from Dean’s Patio. •C hristian Students Fellow ship will meet at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •A rizona U niversities Tennis Association will meet have office hours from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the MU Reach Office •B ap tist S tudent Union will offer a free lunch at noon at the Baptist Student Center, 1322 S. Mill Ave. •S hotokan Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. in the Student Recreation Complex Gym C. Special beginners lessons and martial arts classes will be offered. •E piscopal/A nglican Campus M inistry will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Lutheran Center, on the corner of McAllister Avenue and 15th Street. •U niversity Toastm asters will meet at 5:15 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room. •S o ciety fo r C reative Anachronism will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Room 213. A class in medieval herbology will be offered — bring a teacup. C o r r e c tio n s In the Sept. 18 issue of the State P ress, Stuart Wells was misidentified in a photo on page 9. In the Sept. 19 issue of the State Press, ASASU State Relations Director Rob Miller’s statements were directed toward Maricopa County voting procedures. The State Press regrets these errors. W e lc o m e B a c k ASU ! A R I Z 0 NA S T A T E - UN I V E R S I T Y □I Toppings: Pineapple Peppfroni Sausage Ground Beef Ham Bacon Mushrooms Onions Green Peppers Tomatoes Black Olives Jalapenos Hours: Monday - Thursday 11:00 A M -2 :00 AM Friday - Saturday 11:00 AM - 2:30 AM Sunday 11:00 A M -1:30 AM 1340 E. APACHE TEM PE Choice of Crusts Original or Whole Wheat Sod« A vailable Coke Sprite Diet Coke Dr. Pepper CLUB M EETIN G S EVERY TH U R SD A Y 7 P .M . AT ( H l M A PtiB ) DellvryAm University ’90 SKI CLUB ’91 IT ’S NOT TO O LATE!! Y o u c a n still s ig n u p a n d jo in A S U ’s la rg e s t s k i, s o c ia l a n d p a rty c lu b . T o n ig h t is n e w m e m b e r s ig n -u p n ig h t a t S u n n y ’s fro m 7 -9 p .m . $ 1 8 m e m b e rs h ip fe e in c lu d e s T -s h irt, a c tiv itie s a n d p a rty ID c a rd g o o d fo r fre e a d m is s io n to c lu b p a rtie s a n d e ve n ts . Broadway ★ VOTED #1 AT ASU! ★ FAST, FREE DELIVERY 829-0064 ^ All Competitors Coupons Accepted^» We Accept Mastercard & VISA on Delivery! I r 20" PARTY PIZZA $10.99 ^ with one topping & 4 free sodas r L 12" CHEESE PIZZA $3.99 T FOR DINNER TW O $6.25 12" Pizza with 2 toppings T 16" CHEESE PIZZA $4.99 j TW O TW O 12" 16" I PIZZAS PIZZAS I $9.88 $10.99 I [ _ ^2Jreesodas_ _ J _^hm tap^ngs^ j _ n [ d in n e r FOR FOUR $8.50 16" Pizza with 1 topping & M tfo w to p p iy^ j____ 4 1reejodas_ Ony o n . coupon per o r te . N M a . prisM DO N O T In clu d .tax. O te may expire w ithout n o lle .. W . acM pt a l c o m te te . ooupon tf of com parable size. (Except tor 2 fo r 1 coupons.) 20 KEG PARTY This Saturday at S teveo’s House 1301 E. University (Next to Beauvais! EVER YO NE W ELC O M E 7:15 p .m . T rip & E ven t In fo rm a tio n 7:45 p .m . Ski D evils D a tin g G am e 8 :1 5 p .m . Ski D evils T a n L in e C o n test W in K iller Prizes! C lub M e e tin g s are in fo rm a l, sto p by and c h e c k it out!! ********* 4 . . . . . . FINAL PAYM ENT DUE: S A N D IE G O BEACH PARTY TR IP Sept. 2 8 -3 0 ,1 9 9 0 It’s not too late to sign up for San Diego. Bring $89 to meeting and fill out room & car sign-up forms — you don’t need a car to go!! Call for more information...966-2304. San Diego Trip tincludes hotel, beer S S.D. T-shirt. A LS O : N ow a c c e p tin g * d e p o s its fo r U TA H # T h a n k s g iv in g W e e k e n d *»<•***■** N ov. 2 1 -2 5 , 1990!! Ski S n o w b ird , A lta. S o litu d e and B rig h to n . S239 in c lu d e s U tah T -s h irt, round trip v id e o bus tra n s p o rta tio n , 4 d ays lift tic k e ts , lu xu ry lo d g in g at S alt Lake s fin e s t h otel 5 S tar reso rt, p a rtie s , and all th e b eer you can d rin k all w e e k e n d long!! F or m o re in fo rm a tio n ca ll B ria n o r M ik e ...................'....8 2 9 J im .............................................967-I K a rie ..........................................967-; D a v e ..........................................827-! E rn ie ................' ........................945-' C a rrie ....................................... 981-1 A n d re a ..................................... 921J e ffo ..........................................966H o tlin e ......................................966- W orld/Nation S ta t» P re ss Thursday, Septem ber 20, 1990 P age 3 B u sh p ro te ste rs p e lt p o lic e w ith fo o d Associated Press photo A protester was arrested on Pow ell Street in San Francisco, W ednesday, outside the Fairm ont H o tel w here President Bush was speaking. Elghty-flve people w ere arrested, many o f them protesting the deploym ent o l troops to the M iddle East. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Demonstrators denouncing the Middle East military buildup and the Bush administration’s AIDS policies protested a speech by the president Wednesday, some pelting police with symbolic lasagna noodles. The noodle-tossing was organized by ACT-Up — AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power, which accuses Bush of ignoring a commission’s recommendations to speed federal approval of various new drugs, including some for AIDS patients. The commission is headed by Dr. Louis Lasagna, and was formed by Bush when he was vice president. “He has not said one word about this report,” said ACT-Up spokesman Joel Thomas. The significance of the other foodstuffs the demonstrators hurled wasn’t evident. About 85 of the approximately 500 demonstrators were arrested, police said. Chanting “Bush and Quayle belong in jail,” demonstrators faced off with hundreds of officers in riot gear. The demonstrators beat drums, rattled metal barricades and hurled bagels, melon slices and lasagna noodles at the officers. Police said the arrests were for failure to disperse and unlawful assembly, both misdemeanors. Officers began arrests when the protesters failed to clear the streets near the Fairmont Hotel, where the president spoke on behalf of U. S. Sen. Pete Wilson, the Republican candidate for California governor. Officers said most of those arrested were in the AIDS protest group, but the majority of demonstrators were objecting to the deployment of U. S. troops in Saudi Arabia following the Iraqi invasion of neighboring Kuwait. “I’m opposed to what this government is doing by sending our troops to Saudi Arabia and the Middle East, saying all these countries invited them in after we twisted their arm s,” said Hilda Cowan, a member of the Peace and Freedom Party. One man carried a sign reading, “U. S. Farmers Say No War.” “It’s taking more money and manpower from creating the type of world and environment we need,” said Michael O’Gorman, a vegetable grower from Salinas. At least one passer-by disagreed. “I just don’t agree with what they’re doing,” said Bob Murphy, a tourist from Narberth, Penn. “If we don’t stop (Iraqi President Saddam Hussein) now, he’ll just go into Saudi Arabia and start taking country by country.” Poland’s leader to resign, make way for democracy WARSAW, Poland (AP) — President Wojciech Jaruzelski, the only Communist le a d e r to su r v iv e p o litic a lly a fte r democratic revolutions swept the East bloc, told Parliament on Wednesday he will resign early to help Poland complete its transition to democracy. Jaruzelski’s announcement came amid increased calls for his resignation to make way for a popularly chosen head of state. Solidarity Chairman Lech Walesa has a lread y d eclared h is candidacy for president, and Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki, Walesa’s-former adviser and ally, also is considering running. As Communist Party leader in 1981, Jaruzelski im posed m artial law but p e a c e fu lly tr a n sfe r r e d pow er to a Solidarity-led government eight years later . He was named president by parliament in July 1989 for a six-year term. Jaruzelski sent a letter Wednesday to the Sejm, or lower house of parliament, asking it to name a date for ending his term. J a ru zelsk i announced h is planned resignation after a six-hour meeting at which the nation’s feuding political leaders agreed in principle to hold early elections for both the presidency and parliament. No date was set for what would be postCommunist Poland’s first fully democratic elections for president and parliament. The current parliament was elected in June 1989, but 65 percent of the seats were g u a r a n te e d to th e h o w - d is s o lv e d Communists and their allies. H ie president wants parliam ent “to enable him to transfer the office he holds to a president chosen in a general election,” a Jaruzelski spokesm an said in a statem ent. J a r u z e ls k i is “ c o n c e r n e d a b o u t preventing unnecessary social emotions and willing to develop democracy,” according to the statement, carried bÿ the official PAP news agency . Elections are expected as early as this fall and no later than spring. Participants in a m eeting Tuesday suggested that Jaruzelski should resign no later than Dec. 13, the ninth anniversary of the day he declared martial law to crush the Infamous Nevada brothel goes belly up MUSTANG, Nev. (AP) — The Mustang Ranch, Nevada’s oldest and most infamous legal brothel, shut down after filing for bankruptcy liquidation. A trustee says the U. S. government will try to operate the business until it can be sold. A lawyer for owner Joe Conforte said Wednesday that Internal Revenue Service harassment killed a $5 million deal to sell the bordello — more than 100 bedrooms on a 440-acre ranch — and forced it into liquidation in Federal Bankruptcy Court. Officials said Conforte owes $13 million in federal taxes. Conforte has said the debt is no more than $7 million. The Mustang Ranch has frequently been in the headlines, as an illegal operation, then the state’s first legal bordello. One man was killed on its prem ises; at least one wedding was held there. The bordello, 10 miles east of Reno, has been under Chapter l l bankruptcy protection since 1962. Under Chapter 11, a business is allowed to operate under court supervision to pay off creditors; under Chapter 7, its assets are liquidated and the proceeds distributed among creditors. Two attempts to sell the business through public stock offerings failed, including a $10 million offering last year. Prostitutes fled the .scene after Tuesday’s bankruptcy court filing, out of fear the IRS was about to raid the place. “Everybody just grabbed everything, called taxis and their boyfriends and got out,” said a woman who identified herself as Sheila. On Wednesday, four women who had worked there returned to get belongings and talk. They sat in red velvet chairs in the lobby and complained about events — and about Conforte. One woman, who identified herself as Beth, said: “Joe cleared out the bar, the cashier, everything, and walked out with a bag of money. Then somebody called and told us all to leave.” Assistant bankruptcy trustee Bill Knudson said the bankruptcy court plans to supervise the business and “watch the money." He added: “That’s what our goal is, to keep it in operation until they can sell it.” Knudson said plans-to immediately reopen the brothel were blocked by state health rules, which require any prostitute who leaves the premises to be retested for sexually transmitted diseases. That can take three days. Conforte attorney Pete Perry declined to name prospective purchasers who had agreed to pay $5 million for the property in the deal that feO through. Solidarity movement, according to sources co n ta cted by th e G a zeta W yb o rcza newspaper, Jaruzelski’s election as president in 1989 cam e about with som e support from Solidarity parliament members. It was meant to guarantee good relations with the Soviet Union in the first months of Poland’s democratic reforms. But the arrangement was overtaken by events. After Mazowiecki’s Solidarity-led government took power in September, revolutions swept through the East bloc, toppling neighboring Communist leaders. The Polish party itself dissolved in January. On Monday, police dragged away two Turn to Poland, page 7. News Briefs F ire r e sc u e A lien a ted Birmingham Ala. Shawn Bates stands in front of Wilson's Home for the Eld arty th at w as burned early W ednesday morning. [: our residents died. possessio n s just outside the United States border near San Yisdro, C a lif., while awaiting night fattt to sneak across. Opinion Recovering room Dukakis finds painM identity through sickness E lle n G o o d m a n Washington Post Writers Group BOSTON-The book begins with a sim ple declarative sentence: “I’m Kitty Dukakis and I’m a drug addict and an alcholic.” It is a sentence that sh e read to Barbara W alters while the cam eras were rolling. A sentence that led the exerpts in her hometown paper. A sentence repeated alm ost verbatim on the talk shows. In tim e, it takes on the quality of a m antra. This com plex woman is re­ introducing herself to the public these days as if w e w ere all m embers of a 12-step program together, sharing the sam e room, standing up and naming ourselves. “I’m Steve and I’m an alcoholic.” “I’m Betty and I’m a drug addict." “I’m John and I’m a substance abuser.” “I’m Sue and I’m a codependent.”: By the end of the book, the alm ost first lady has labeled herself as a substance abuser, an alcoholic, a depressive, a manicdepressive. She has listed a pharm acy of drugs taken, from am phetam ines to Prozac to Lithium, a directory of clinics tried from Hazelden to Self-Discovery, a roller-coaster ride of hopes raised, relapses recorded. The story of Kitty Dukakis doesn’t fit the literature of recovery with its requisite upbeat endings. It is too raw fen* that, written in process, riding the highs and lows. There w as hair spray swallowed between chapters, new diagnoses made between drafts. At tim es this epic tale of one woman’s struggle for control reads like a P ilg r im ’s p ro g ress of illn e s s e s and treatm ents. Only without the prom ise of progress. It is not easy reading. I was saddened by “Now You Know.” In part, it w as the sadness of discovering that I liked som eone much more than she liked herself. The landscape of K itty’s childhood, hometown and high school, w ere fam iliar. But I had trouble finding the Kitty that I had known in an occasional neighborly way for 20 years. Hidden is the woman who is funny as w ell as intense, an enthusiastic gossip about life and love, a talker and a listener, passionate about her fam ily, her politics, her projects. It is all, except the honesty, m issing in these descriptions of the worst m oments of the w orst years of her life. In som e unhappy w ays, K itty Dukakis’ story is wholly self-centered, as illness can be. One of the tragic sym ptom s of disease is that it reduces the sum of the sufferers to their m ost painful part: the inflam ed disk, the m igrane, the m ental anguish. The soul of the poet, wrote D ostoevski, is in his aching tooth. For Kitty, the toothache was treated with addiction. But what troubles m e the m ost in this dutiful, serious, uncompromising effort at truth-telling is what the culture of addiction seem s to demand of the troubled in this era. Your whole identity. In other tim es and places, preachers demand that those seeking peace of mind nam e them selves by their low est common denominator: I’m M argaret and I’m a sinner. Now I wonder if recovery programs don’t demand a sim ilar price for adm ission to the community and the prom ise of help. In K itty’s tour through the world of help and s e l f - h e l p , sh e f o llo w e d the f ir st commandment, that you exchange an old identity card for a new one: “I’m Kitty Dukakis and I’m a drug addict and an alcoholic.” This is the new bottom line. Well, adm ittedly, I am no expert in this world. I have had no addiction more serious than th at of m y m orning co ffee. I understand the need to name and confront reality, I know the value of these programs. But how do you know when the bottom line is a building block for a stronger identity and when it is the rock you’ve crashed against? “An addict is an addict is an addict,” w rites K itty. It describes the stripping away of self. What happens when those who w restle with problem s of self-esteem are required to w ear such a label? Reading K itty’s book, I wondered whether she wasn’t also searching for identity in addiction, a nam e to her pain. I wondered whether her attem pts to speak and work and even w rite about addiction w eren’t part of another deeper search: for som ething m eaningful to do with her life. The oldest, m ost com plex questions about what philosophers like to ca ll the human condition are these. Who Am I? How do I lead a life? Today, Kitty Dukakis describes herself by her diagnoses. Drug addict. Alcoholic. M anic-depressive, As one of many who have known her, I hope that behind th at lis t a re w ords w ithout prescription pads — “com passionate” and “strong” — just w aiting to reappear. KEATING'S NEWEST INVESTOR... kTEENAGf i MUTANT LNW dA, n S T A F E D I T O R I A L F STATE PRESS SUZANNE ROSS Editor B O A R D U nsigned editorials reflect the view s o f the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board w rite editorials and the board decides on their m erit. The editorials dp not reflect the opinion of the State Press sta ll as a w hole. Board m embers include: NICOLE PERRON Managing Editor City Editor._________ - ............. .......HOBART ROWLAND Asst. City Editor._____________________ KELLY PEARCE ..................KRISTEN JOHNSON Copy Chief................ ______________DAN NOWICKI ..................................PAUL CORO ..........................KRIS TIMMONS ____.............STEVE KRICUN Magazine Editor.................__ ______ MEG HALVERSON Aaaoc. Magazine Editor.... __________.ROBYN PINKSTON Aast. Magagne Editor.._ . ____________GARIN CUMMINS REPORTERS: Kenneth Brown, Anita Carcone, Teena Chad well, Jeff Concors, Joseph Crawford, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron Levy, Patricia Mah, Michelle Paul, Michelle Roberts, Girth Sheh, Christina Schroeder, Kristie Young. SPORTS REPORTERS: Darren Urban, Greg Zele, Dan Zeiger. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty, Jeorgetta Douglas, Monique Hollin, Will Powers, Tamara Wofford. COPY EDITORS: Kellye Kratch, Michael LaMantia, Jill nbke. CARTOONIST: Rob Minton, Julie Sigwart COLUMNIST: Nicole Carroll. MAGAZINE STAFF: Michelle Croff, Vicki Culver, Christine Herbranson, Lori Lappiiv Deborah Nemko, Jon Wilz, Kramer WetzeL PRODUCTION: Cassaundra Cavineas, Dane Christ, Holly Hiatt, Jeffrey Luos, Mark Nothaft, LynneSenzek, John P. Smith, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Dan Ellatronv Todd Martin, Christine Millan, Mike Morris, Terri Smith, John Vaccaro Bill VanZanten. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, a t Matthews 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 Productkm:-C6Q2) 965-7572. The State Press is the only new spaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newpaper are not necessarily those of ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Suzanne Ross Editor Nicole Perron Managing Editor Dan Nowicki Opinion Editor The State Press w elcom es and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. A ll letters m ust be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to b e eligib le for publication. Please include your fu ll nam e, class standing and major (or other affiliation w ith the university) and phone number. Requests for anonym ity w ill be granted w ith an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. A ll letters m ust either be brought in person w ith a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basem ent o f M atthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 M atthews Center, Arizona State U niversity Tempe, A rizona 85287-1502, Opinion State Press Page 5 Thursday, S eptem ber 2 0 ,1 9 9 0 Stinky service Efficient service is greek to m ost U.S. businesses M ik e R o y k o Tribune Media Syndicate Opinión E ditor's note: M ike Royko is on vacation. While he is away, we are reprinting som e o f his favorite columns. The moment we sat down for lunch, I knew it was a mistake. It was one of those cute new yuppie-poo restaurants with ferns and a menu that listed calories. I knew it was an even bigger mistake when five minutes passed before the busboy dropped the silverware and napkins in front of us. About 10 minutes later, I snared a waitress as She was hurrying by and asked: “Is there any chance we can see a menu?” She flung down a couple of menus and rushed off. About five minutes later, she was back for the Orders. “I’m so sorry,” she said. “We’re short-handed. One of the girls didn’t show up today." When she finally brought the food, it wasn’t what I had ordered. “There are some problems in the kitchen,” she said;' “We have a new cook." “Never mind,” I said. “I’ll eat it, whatever it is. But what about the beer?” “Oh, I forgot, you. wanted a beer," she said. The beer arrived just in time to wash down the last bite of sandwich. When she brought the ehéck, which was wrong because she charged me for what I got, I asked: “Who runs this place?" “The manager,” she said. “He’s in the booth having lunch.” On the way out, I stopped at the manager’s booth. He was a yuppie in a business suit. He and a clone were leisurely sipping their coffee and looking at a computer printout. “Nice place you have here,” I lied. “Do you own it?” The young man shook his head. It was owned by one of those big corporations that operate restaurants in far-flung office buildings and health clubs. He also proudly told me that he had recently left college with a degree in restaurant and hotel management. That explained it all. His waitresses were short-handed, his cook was goofing up the orders, the customers were finning and what was he doing? He was having lunch. Or, as he’d probably say, he was doing lunch. f I don’t want to be an alarmist, but when this nation collapses, he and those like him will be the cause. First, we had the MBA — especially the Harvard MBA — who cam e along after World War II and took over American industry. With his bottom-line approach, the MBA did such a brilliant job that the Japanese might soon buy the whole country and evict us. But w e’re told not to worry. Now that we don’t manufacture as much as we used to, w e’ll be saved by the growing service industry. The problem is that the service industry is being taken over by people like the restaurant manager and his corporation. They go to college and study service. Then they install computers programmed for service. And they have meetings and look at service charts and graphs and talk about service. But what they don’t do is provide service. That’s because they are not short Greeks. You probably wonder what that means. I’ll explain. If that corporation expects the restaurant to succeed, it should fire the young restaurant-hotel degree holder. Or demote him to cleaning washrooms. It should then go to my friend Sam Sianis, who owns Billy Goat’s Tavern, and say: “Do you know a short Greek who wants to manage a restaurant?” Sam will say: “Shoo, I send you one of my cousins. Jus’ got here from old country.” Then he’d go to Greek Town and tell his cousin, who works as a waiter, that his big chance had come. When the next lunch hour rolled along, and a waitress failed to show up for work, Sam’s cousin would not sit down to do lunch. He would put on an apron and wait tables himself. If the cook goofed up the orders, Sam’s cousin would go in the kitchen, pick up a cleaver and say, “You want I keel you?” He wouldn’t know how to read a computer printout, but he’d get drinks in the glasses, food on the table and money in the cash register. That simple approach is why restaurants run by short Greeks stay in business and make money. And why restaurants run by corporations and managed by young m en . who are educated beyond their intelligence come and go. And mostly go. So if you are ever approached by a stockholder who wants to sell you shares in any of the giant service corporations, tell him not to bother showing you the annual report. Just ask him one question. “Is it run by short Greeks?” , If he says no, leave your money under the mattress. Can the U.S. public accept a real Middle East war? C ody S h earer North American Syndicate WASHINGTON — Sources in the Pentagon tell me that President Bush has been told U. S. forces now have enough military power in the Persian Gulf to invade Kuwait and crush the armies of Saddam Hussein. These plans include the use of heavy air strikes from carriers in the Gulf, and from bases in Saudi Arabia and Turkey. It is believed that all of Iraq’s air force would be destroyed on the ground during such an assault. Through the u se of so p h istic a ted electronic equipment, such as the F4G Will Weasel and EA6 Prowler aircraft, Pentagon p la n n e r s e x p e c t to ja m a ll Iraq i co m m u n ica tio n s, th e re b y rend erin g Hussein’s m issiles useless and his fighter planes without any guidance system. Iraqi forces in Kuwait, now under the direction of Hussein’s brother, would also be cut off s in c e th e Ira q i h ig h com m an d is headquartered in Baghdad. If this war option is carried out, U. S. forces would invade Kuwait City through a m assive helicopter and amphibious landing. Since Kuwait’s beaches have been mined, U .S . Navy Seals would clear the way initially. Are the American people ready to support a military strike against Iraqi territory? Are American troops ready to die for Princes and Sultans? If such an attack is launched, will the U. S. end up appearing as the aggressors, left to fight a desert war with diminishing supplies? Does President Bush want to jeopardize the international consensus he has built up behind the current blockade? Of course, som e Bush advisers have been telling him that public support for a lengthy blockage and military pressure in Saudi Arabia will not last, so he must attack soon. But how competent is the U. S. military? Do recent U- S. military operations in Grenada and Panama inspire more than limited confidence? On a longer range scale, what happens if Iraq takes six months to withdraw from Kuwait, but maintains a vast army as a menace on the Kuwait and Saudi borders? Does this mean our boys have to maintain some deterrent military force in the Gulf at great expense forever? Obviously President Bush wants a quick win which includes the elimination of Hussein and the defeat of his armies, specifically the neutralization of Iraq’s chemical and nuclear potential. But who can guarantee that a costly war would furnish these objectives? In every war gam e scenario plans go astray, thereby inflicting death on unintended targets. As torn and edgy as President Bush must feel in deciding between military action and pursuing the international embargo, let’s hope that the man who selected Dan Quayle as his vice-president has the patience to allow the blockade to work. For the moment, Saddam Hussein is virtually isolated by international repugnance and President Bush has got him where he wants. But if we attack tomorrow, the world will view this as a Pentagon assault. Should we wait a few months for the sanctions to succeed or fail, Bush could then launch a military attack and it would be viewed as an international relief effort. A survey of international trends in cancer in the most recent issue of Lancet, the British m edical m agazine, reveals a dramatic increase in the incidence of cancer in industrialized countries during the past twenty years. Researchers found that in Italy, Japan, West Germany, England and the United States, there were increases in all forms of cancer — except stomach and lung — in people over 54. These included cancers of the brain, breast, kidney, bone, lymphatic system and some skin cancers. Some experts believe the rising number of cancer deaths in the elderly could be a result of lifestyle changes associated with industrialization and greater affluence. Those born early this century have had longer exposure to substances now known to be carcinogenic. Some specific measures to reduce U. S. dependence on foreign oil include increasing automobile fuel efficiency standards from current levels of 27 m iles per gallon to 40 m iles per gallon, raising ethanol production and vehicles that can run on natural gas. Given the pressure to achieve budget reductions, it is likely that poor children will continue to be easy targets for bean counters. Nevertheless, it must be kept in mind that our nation’s record in treating children will is not good. The U. S., for example, immunizes fewer of its infants against polio than 14 other countries. Our country is still not one of 70 nations that provide basic health insurance to all women and young children. And our national infant mortality rate lags behind 18 other nations. As for schooling, American eighth graders know less math than children in Korea, Spain or Ireland. Who can be satisfied with this record? A Somerville, Massachusetts firm is now marketing the first condom that glows in the dark. By holding the condom up to a light for a few seconds, it activates a bright glow that lasts for up to 15 minutes and ail afterglow that shines for more than five hours. Page 6 ASU not m entioned as college ‘best buy* By JENNIFER FRANKLIN S tate Press Why, if UofA made the cut, did ASU fail to break into next month’s Money magazine list of top 200 best college buys? Officials from each university offer a few answers. An ASU official said the University probably did not rank because it is hot as “visible” as UofA and other top research schools. But ASU enjoys plenty of visibility as the 4th ranked university in Money’s “Titanic Ten” listing of the 10 largest universities in the nation. ASU’s student body numbers about 43,500. “The University of Arizona is a researchone university,” said Kathleen Church, ASU interim vice-provost. “That gives them more visibility.” Research-one universities must receive at least $33.5 million annually in federal support for research and development and have 50 doctoral recipients annually. The results showed UofA taking the 74th spot in the top 100 public colleges offering quality education at an affordable price. In many respects, Church said, ASU and UofA are similar, with the sam e admission requirements, tuition costs and about the sam e number of program offerings. Church said she believes the way a quality education is defined should m ake a difference in how a university is ranked. “With the offering at Arizona State University, you can get as good an education, if not better, in many of the programs as you could get at the UofA,” she said. Church also said UofA has a slight advantage because it is the oldest and most established university in the state and has a medical school. “It’s important for a university to have an established reputation, ’’ she said. A UofA official said the rating is well deserved, but for reasons other than the University’s research reputation. “We’re so strong in journalism, business and arid land studies,” said LuAnne Krager, UofA’s dean of students. “ But, y es w e are a research-one university,” she added. Krager attributed the University’s recent accolade to “a mission statement that is really working,” adding that it has been a goal of the University to take éducation outside the classroom. “We’re starting to formulize Out-of-Class learning so that it has a laddering effect into the classroom,” she said. Money magazine based its rankings on several factors including tuition and fees, room and board costs, the percentage of financial aid met by the university, and the student-to-faculty ratio. More funding needed fo r sun-powered car By STEVE BECK C ontributing W riter Funds for ASU’s solar-powered race vehicle are still needed to keep the project on the road. Construction is complete on the $150,000 Sun Devil Cruiser, a white tear-drop-shaped fiberglass vehicle with a Sparky mascot logo on the left-front fender. However, the 15-member Arizona Horizon Project Still needs more money as it readies itself for an Oct. 10 race in Japan. Edward F. McBrien, an ASU profcissor of electrical and computer technology, said funds are needed for future training. “The car is basically paid for, but the project needs funds for training future engineering students at ASU how to advance technology further,” he said. So far, the project has received various donations from corporations, including a $20,000 grant from Asahi Solar Corp., a Japanese-based firm; $5,000 grant from General Motors; $2,000 donation from the U. S. Department of Energy and smaller donations from businesses in the Valley. The ASU team finished 31st in the 11-day race from Florida to Michigan in July because of mechanical difficulties with the State P ro » Thursday, Septem ber 2 0 ,1 9 9 0 car. Four ASU stu d en ts and a fa cu lty representative w ill make the trip to Japan, which is paid for by the Asahi Corp. McBrien said AHP has encountered many problems with the rough draft of the car. “We originally hoped the car would weigh about 600 pounds, but the car ended up weighing about 1,000 pounds,” McBrien said. “By cutting holes in the fiberglass panels of the car and replacing them with a thin skin, w e w ere able to reduce the weight to 740 pounds.” Other problems include road-load loss, which is the loss of speed proportionate to the car’s extra weight. The more the car weighs, the more energy it heeds to make it move, McBrien added. Byard D. Wood, director of ASU’s Center for Energy Systems Research, said the group of students have done a remarkable job on the project. “ It’s been fan tastic w atching these students com plete a job that requires so m u c h k n o w l e d g e and i s s o t i me consum ing,” he said. “The experience these undergraduate students are getting is sure to help them when they get out in the real world.” XMAS AT THE TAJ MAHAL DEC 20-JAN 8 Tour India with Dr. Mahar and Receive 1-5 CREDITS From $2945 (Can be tax exem pt.) CALL COLLECT FOP MORE INFO India Travels (602)326-2973 J i-C A M P U S - i lC ornerj 7 1 2 S . C o lleg e PHOTO DOUBLE PRINTS $499 EVERY DAY 24 Exp. Color Prints CROSSWORD b y TH O M A S JO SEPH ACROSS 1 T urner, and others 6 , I’m Adam" 11 Chicago airport 12 Banish 13 Beta follower 14 Turn red, perhaps 15 Tries 17 Police alert (abbr.) 19 Ailing 2 0 — dedeux 23 Easter event 25 Site for Abe’S profile 26 No-hands instrument 28 Fishing need 29 China piece 30 Football lineman 31 Shell game prop 32 Overhead trains 33 Sizzling 35 Corpsman 38 — Zola 41 Friend DOWN 1 Record book 2 “Eureka!" 3 Not generic 4 Prepares for war 5 Beach site 6 — Streep 7 W W II enemy 8 Party staple 9 Pub quaff 10 Stag party attendees 16 Warned 17 IBM rival 18 Michael of Monty Python 20 Period between 1 2 c L A M U P L A B O R E R I N A L I N E B A L E R I N A N E N I V E N F T A I S E T P S O P O I E L 1 P I N T 1 M A L E R M Y O T R E N D T 1 O W A P O 1 N S N E D E M P E S O A V A N R O P E T W 1 S T S bird org. 37 “Gunga 27 Strutters' mates 31 River to the Rio Grande 39 Grant’s rival 40 Go awry 7 5 8 9 10 21 22 39 40 6 % . iä 11 45 vr “ 18 ■24 23 * 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 i p m 3 5 ^ 36 32 34 33 42 Title supplier 43 Charlie arid others 44 Smirk wr 36 41 . 43 1 - ■ 1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here’s how to work it : •A thief took a wallet from an employee’s purse in the Agriculture Building. Loss is estimated at $80. •A m ale student w as arrested for hitting a fem ale student in the face on the fifth floor of Manzanita R esidence Hall. He was charged and released. •A thief stole an employee’s wallet from her purse while it was sitting on a bench near the Intercollegiate Athletic Building. Loss is estimated at $50. •A vandal caused damages, estimated at $450, to a window at the Student Recreation Complex. Police are unsure as to how the damages were caused. Qiie letter stands for another. In this sam ple 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. ON TAR8 ET. The STATE PRESS FOR YOUR MORNING NEWS! CRYPTOQUOTE U A Y J H K TD JTU IV ZYAHKCM YGYAX PTY WVKYC Q X KTMJ T Y PO J TU Y G Y AX YJ R E VM •The windshield of a student’s truck was damaged while it was parked by Packard Stadium. Damage is estimated at $175. TK D E C P O P VA QKGY M . - R E J A Q Y M UYHYTC Y esterday’s C ryptoquote: TOIL, FEEL, THINK, HOPE; YOU WILL BE SURE TO DREAM ENOUGH BEFORE YOU DIE, WITHOUT ARRANGING FOR IT. — JOHN STERLING © 1990 by K ing Features S yndicate, Inc. man pointed a gun at him while he was: standing on the corner of McAllister Avenue and Orange Street. The suspect was in a dark-colored Mazda MX6. •Two students and two people not affiliated with ASU w ere arrested for public consumption of alcohol on Palo Verde Beach, just south of Palo Verde Main. Two of the subjects were also charged with being minors in possession of alcohol. Tempe police reported the following incidents Wednesday: •A thief stole a woman’s purse from the Safeway Supermarket, parking lot, 926 E . B roadw ay Road. Compiled b y State P ress reporter M ichelle Paul. CP MJOYQX •A student reported that an unidentified •A man was arrested for concealing and then recklessly displaying an open knife at Modern World Adult Bookstore, 1812 E, Apache Blvd. The police confronted the man after getting a call that he had stuffed 11 magazines down his pants. 9-20 AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW P o lic e R e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday: ; •An em ployee drove an ASU vehicle into an electrical box in front of Packard Stadium. Dam age to the right fender and door is estim ated at $200. o L 1 V E Yesterday’s Answer wars 33 Latvian capital. 21 Cancel 34 Arabian 22 Organ sultanate features 35 Porch 24 “Yes, Captain" welcomer 36 Earth25 William Webster’s bound 4 3 11 M O L E R A N 1 N P A R S N BROADW AY SO UTHW EST. SEARS & 75 SPECIALTY SH O PS. LOS ARGOS FOOD CO UR T AND THE LOS ARGO S M A R K E T P LA C E / SC O TTSD A LE & M CD O W ELL RO ADS / O PEN M O NDAY TH RO UG H FRIDAY 10AM UNTIL 9PM / SATURDAY 10AM UN TIL 6PM / SUNDAY 12 PM UN TIL 5PM / (6 0 2 ) 945-6376 State Preis Poland Continued from page 3 dozen demonstrators of the Confederation for Independent Poland who attempted to block the Belweder Palace, where Jaruzelski has his office. The protesters chanted “Jaruzelski must go!” and affixed posters with the caption “Already too long” to the palace’s iron gates. They derided the police as “Soviet servants.” Some protesters were detained briefly. A petition demanding the president’s resignation was launched recently by the Center Alliance, a political group formed to back Walesa for president. The 67-year-old Jaruzelski, who often appears remote behind his dark glasses, remains a complex figure in Poland’s political life. Responsible for among the most traumatic events in modern Polish history — Walesa and Mazowiecki were among thousands imprisoned by the military government — he also is the only Communist leader in the East bloc to retain office after democratic governments took over. Although technically empowered as president to run the army, the police and the nation’s foreign policy, Jaruzelski has taken a back-seat role and never interfered with the Solidarity-led overhaul of Poland’s government and economy. Born to a landed-gentry family in an eastern Polish village, he was attending a Catholic boarding school in Warsaw when World War II broke out. His official biography says he “stayed” in the northeastern territories of the Soviet Union working as a laborer during the war. But Poles who knew his family have said they were caught by the invading Soviet army and deported to Siberia, where Jaruzelski's father felled logs in a forced labor camp until his death. In 1943, Jaruzelski entered a Soviet officer training school and then served with the Communist-led Polish First Army, which advanced with the Red Army against the Nazis. He joined the Polish Communist Party in 1947, rising through the ranks until he was appointed defense minister in 1968, then the youngest of the East bloc’s top military chiefs. In 1981, as Poland was being rocked by the defiance of Eastern Europe’s only legal independent trade union, Jaruzelski was named first secretary of the Communist Party the only career military officer to rise to supreme power in the East bloc. Although he has spoken of the “very painful” decision to impose martial law, he has never repudiated the declaration. 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CENTRAL PHOENIX * 230-0055 • 8th Street & Camelback Road • (behind RB Furniture) WEST PHOENIX • 247-8830 • 45th Avenue & Indian School Road TEMPE • 829-6969 * 1102 West Southern • (at Hardy Road) TEMPE/ASU AREA • 921-9551 • 1301 East University (next to ASU) SCOTTSDALE • COMING SOON! • 75th Street & Camelback Page 8 State Press Thursday, Septemb er 9 0 ,19 9 0 Self-esteem key to safe sex, speaker insists sex,” he said. “Most college students know skills but don’t use them because they don’t fit into what they’ve learned.” Keeling said the basic skills needed to prevent STDs are self-esteem, assertiveness, the ability to define values, stress management, alcohol and drug use, and the know-how to handle intimacy and relationships. “These are the skills that prevent health problems,” Keeling said. “They need to be present in the next decade.” The speaker said for there to be a healthy campus environment, the student body must change as a community and recognize the cultural and sexual diversity. alcohol advertisem ents, and said this m arketing affects behavior. Consequently, this can result in situations that m ake people vulnerable to STDs. “Advertising tells us how to be, what to be and how to look,” he said. “Some of these are quite directive.” Keeling said 93.5 percent of men and 97.5 percent of women have had som e sort of intimate contact that they later regretted. Many cases involve alcohol consumption. “This externally-based value system w ill lead to fear of rejection being greater than fear of infection,” Keeling said. “Do you see Tom Cruise negotiating safe sex in Days of Thunder? “ It's easier to look at the next 10 minutes than the next 10 years.” Keeling said self-esteem is necessary to build skills based on values, which in turn need to be maintained to remain current, sharp and relevant. “Low self-esteem leads to factors associated with unsafe By ANDREW FAUGHT S tate Press The dissemination of AIDS information and research needs to reach a broader base than it did five years ago, a renowned speaker on the deadly disease said Wednesday. “Information is not enough,” said Dr. Richard P. Keeling, chairman of the AIDS Task Force of the American College Health Association. “We value what we watch on TV, what we read about and who we compare ourselves to.” The director of student health at the University of Virginia told approximately 50 people in the MU Ventana Room that wily advertising and lack of community support on college campuses act as negative externalities that contribute to the spread of sexually-transmitted diseases. “ It is infinitely more complicated than ju st sex education,” Keeling said. The lecturer alluded to several sexual innuendos evident in “With individualism, there is no support to make healthy decisions,” Keeling said, adding that a community needs to be built through leadership, consensus and community service. “Controversy is inevitable but that’s OK,” Keeling said. “We’ve got to bring out the common value in people in an enormous sphere of concern.” T he State P ress Magazine A State Press Advertising... 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B roadway O ffers valid Sept. 20-S ep t 30,1990 a t th e follow ing location only: 906 E, Broadway, Tem pe Thursday, September 2 0 ,19 9 0 State Press Come to Rio tonight for I C A _ ________ C ontinued from page 1. well-accepted. “ I think the board w ill probably recommend that it move forward to (ASU President) Dr. Lattie Com*,” he said. Schroeder said ASU student athletes have experienced “severe” scheduling problems in recent years that m ay have contributed to the declining graduation cate among University athletes. ASU athletes have been unable to take some of their required courses because the classes were scheduled during times that conflicted with their athletic itineraries, he said. Upon taking his current position in 1987, Kingston said the priority recommendation became part of his plan to increase the slumping student athlete graduation rate. “When you impose time restrictions, getting student athletes in classes that they are required for has become an increasing problem,” Kingston said. “I believe it is appropriate to get student athletes in the right courses, in the right sequence and at the right tim e.” Kingston said the proposal would have been completed much earlier had the U n iv e r s ity n o t g o n e through th ree presidents in as many years. When Coor took the reigns, Kingston said the priority preregistration for student athletes was not an immediate concern. “We’ve had to wait through the changing of the guard,” Kingston said. B e s id e s h e lp in g stu d e n t a t h le te s academically, he said recruiting would benefit if the proposal is passed by the ICA Board and Coor. “If we can show student athletes we place a high value on academ ics,” Kingston said, “it would also help attract student athletes who are interested in getting a degree.” While Schroeder said there w as no talk in the prelim inary d iscussions of giving student athletes an absolute priority, he said the subcom m ittee did consider ranking the athletes by their year in school. “My personal view is that I am in support of the idea,” he said. “We need to recognize student athletes have certain needs because of requirem ents. We need to do a ll w e can to find w ays to help them m eet requirem ents. But w e need to do it carefully to m inim ize the im pact on other students.” Schroeder ami Kingston said they expect to receive opposition from students who are not athletes. “I suppose their tim e is m ore pressured, yet it doesn’t seem quite fair because they are students like everybody else,” said Loyina P ivin , a graduate student in counseling. “I can see it to a certain degree, but not just because they are athletes. That’s som ething they chose to do.” J ill DeM ichele, assistant athletic director for academ ic and student services, said the change would actually help non-athletes. “This is a benefit to ¡all students,” she said. “ Student athletes won’t be scheduled for classes they can’t take. C lasses w ill be open in the afternoon.” “They can only take cla sses during certain hours. That cuts out half of their options in scheduling,” she added. DeM ichele said the proposal w ill allow only a certain percentage of student athletes to enroll in the sam e class. ASU R egistrar Ennis Underwood, who has been involved in.the proposal's planning stages, said the recom m endation would not affect on-line registration. W hile he said the technical part would be sim ple for the R egistrar’s O ffice to handle, he declined to com m ent about (he proposal. C L IP Continued from page 1. NO COVER TIL 8 PM Live on th e Patio 7 p m ~ 11 pm This coupon good for FREE ADMISSION th is T h u rsd a y Education, ASU and the nine participating school districts w ill be the key to the program ’s su ccess. “By themselves, (no entity) has the talent or the resources to take on the program,” he said. Searfoss said ASU would be primarily responsible for designing the program and evaluating the participating youngsters. He said after the fourth grade, the chances of a student suddenly becoming an academic success story after performing poorly is slim. Searfoss, who will be the evaluator of the program, stressed the importance of catching students early. “You don’t start ¡»eventing (dropouts) in 10th, 11th Or 12th grades,” Searfoss said. “You start early.” Tempe Elememtary School District #3 will provide training to teachers of nine school districts in CLIP techniques. Each school will pay up to $8,000 to train one to four of its teachers. Searfoss said die pilot program instituted last year was run on “a shoestring, a wing and a prayer.” “It’s an expression of the success of the first year,” he said. Searfoss said while the criteria is based on reading and w riting sk ills, m inority retention will be indirectly addressed, adding that many of the elementary schools participating in the programs are located in minority areas. While the idea of tutoring wayward youths is nothing new, Searfoss said the CLIP program adds a new wrinkle. Children, instead of being instructed by ou tside tutors unfam iliar w ith their classroom performance, will be taught by their own teachers. Searfoss said the most important aspect of the 12- to 16-week program is the ¡»rents. “The parents have a strong role,” he said. “Without the parents, the program wouldn’t work.” Searfoss said the parents are asked to spend 15 minutes a day with the kids to reinforce what they learned. Students are evaluated during the first week, and at the end of the program. He said while the final report will not be given to the Tempe Elementary School District until the end of November, the statistics indicated the youngsters made significant progress in the pilot program. ASU will be paid $70 for evaluating one student and $2,000 for evaluating 30 students, Searfoss said although the program is costing the individual school districts, it may end up saving toe districts money in toe long run adding that every child kept back a grade costs the system $5,000. Kathy Tackett, a teacher involved in the project last year, said the program helped her im m ensely. “I’ve been teaching 25 years,’’ she said. “I consider it the best training tool I ever had.” C r o w d s _____ For nightly drink specials & band info call 8 9 4 0 5 3 3 4 3 0 N. S c o tts d a le Rd Tem pe • A Z Rio Salado R estaurant C ontinued from page 1. Jill Tinker, a senior education major and building supervisor, said the SRC recently welcomed its one-millionth customer. “The biggest problem here , is with the weight room,” she said. “It should have been built twice a s big.” Lifeguard Jenny Craycraft, a computer information system s major, said the pool also gets packed. “The most crowded time is between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m .,” she said. “People can get crazy here but w e have the staff to handle it.” Maas said new equipment, including more walking and rowing machines, will be installed and som e minor reshuffling will occur to help speed workout traffic in the SRC’s weight room. “This should help to get the people through who just want a quick workout,” he »lid. In other areas of the SRC, M aas said the U n iversity is w orking to fix broken equipm ent. D u e to w h a t M a a s s a i d i s a m anufacturer’s error, a number of outdoor tennis courts are without lights. “We’re doing our best to replace them and to get the lights in working order,” he said. In later years, M aas said the U niversity m ay lode into plans for a new phase of the com plex, possibly located where the north tennis courts now stand. The proposal could include a fieldhouse, running track and an additional cardio­ respiratory w eight room, he said. “These plans are prelim inary and still have to be voted on by the Board p i R egents,” M aas said. Hobart Rowland contributed to this report. Comics Page 10 State Press Thursday, S eptem ber 8 0 ,1 9 9 0 b y B ill W a tte r so n the far side C a lv in a n d H o b b es I HOPE THE TEACHER CA14S ON VE! I HOPE I GET TO DEMONSTRATE A PROBLEM AT THE BOARO.' I ’LL IMPRESS EVERSONE/ BOY, I FEEL S H A R P I m m s math stuff ana ÎM READY FOR ANYTHING'/ HERE, SUSIE W E ONE SHEET AND PASS THE REST ACROSS. b y G arry T ru d ea u D o o n esb u ry CORPORAL! GOTA MIN- SORRY, MAN. I'MBEHTNP m -p p o u c . TO U S? w m y w ater R E G IM E N - YOUR¡LATIR REGImen ? what are un M e vi»/ YOUi GUYS ON, ANYWAY? «v ornóte /¡PAY SÌXGAUON5 ? THAT'SFUNNY— COULPBE THE PRESS a STORY ONLYGETSONE ju g g GALLON... you're issued SIX GALLONE EVERYPAY? CORRECT. "H ey! Y o u !. . . Y eah, th a t’s rig h t! b y J u lie S ig w a rt R a in e y D a y s C l d o n ' t T H IN K H E I ( w e w afta f /n d o n e LITERALLY W A NTED \ I m o r e p e r s o n to JO in OS TO "GRAB S O M E ­ [TllE m a r c h in g b a n d / Y COACH SEZ SO / J BODY OFF THE STREET/'; SHHH/ SO M E' /AUDITION ONE'S CXXAING!\3j!p M ^ ^ I I STATE PRESS Classifieds are like a good hot dog. NO BOLOGNA! Windy CUyCub 0 Appointm ent Not Necessary PERMS ■ I {Long and colored hair extra) CALL 966-1015 SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Stop me if you’v e heard this oner A fierce-looking man leads a Doberman into a New York hotel elevator already occupied by three women tourists. “Sit, lady!” he barks — and all three women hit the floor. “Lady” is the dog’s name; the dog owner is Reggie Jackson. He apologizes profusely and pays the womens’ hotel bill. Did you hear about the muffin-lover who had a twofoot m ass of undigested oat bran surgically removed from his intestines? What about that poodle owner whose attempts to dry her newly bathed pet in a microwave had tragic and m essy — results? Perhaps you’ve read some such story in a newspaper, or heard one told on a talk show. Maybe you’ve told one yourself. You may even know thte poor schlep to whom such things keep happening: the ubiquitous Friend of a Friend. If so, a news flash: You’ve been had. None of these stories is true, says Jan Harold Brunvand, a folklorist at the University of Utah who specializes in tracking and debunking “urban legends.” They’re oral accounts of strange occurrences that are told as if true and often believed. Unlike myths, urban legends are set in the recent past and star normal humans rather than ancient gods. $0-$100, we will pay your deductible and collect the balance from your insurance carrier. YOU PAY NOTHING! Call for details. (Certain restrictions and limitations apply.) 0 O " 7> R fl y y Includes u M conditioner and ■ W precision cut from | p yo u !” NEW WINDSHIELD NO COST TO YOU!* 'If your comprehensive deductible is between A Full Service Salon Open Every Day Including Saturday CUTS I’mta lk in ’ to I- I I 1 I "'I-' I I I I I I I . I I I "A good-haircut doesn't have to be the once o / a car payment!' Includes free ^ shampoo ” ^ ^ & conditioner from By GARY LARSON 7 4 8 W . U n iv e rs ity , M e s a ■ S S U «»,•« ! W tffi (Extension & University) SttNDf. 8 2 7 -1 2 6 2 i i i i l i i i i i Mini-Storage - Vehicle Storage jP é ■Aa % L o n g - short- t h ic k - t h in - w il d - cawn&smvE S Arizona Storage Inns T SPECIAL STUDENT RATES 5x5 5xio 10x10 10x20 $ 9** $14** $26*» $44** MTke h io u lh f IMixi-Stouuje V o p h " r 0 9 O /-0 Z lU 2235 W. 1st St. • Tem pe OR ■ TOTALLY 0U TR R C E0U 8 WE DO IT ALL I 966-HAIR COME SEE US TODA Y I 1032 S. TERRACE RO. 8r*ul Closed Sunday & ¡M o n d a y M i 1041 E. Lemon 987*2360 State Press TliuRda^eptembeiJ2^990 Page 11 Ex-Sun DevilJones becom es coach Finishes 1st in Seattle when I talk to m yself Isa y that fourth still isn’t first, which is what I wanted.” By DAN ZEIGER S tate Press Hoping to capitalize on the momentum he gained at the World Championships, Jones spent most of July and August in competition at the Goodwill Games. While most view the Goodwill Games as a depreciated rip-off of the Olympics, Jones said he felt the competition in Seattle was some of the toughest he had ever faced. One would think that someone who hais accomplished as much on the wrestling mat as Zeke Jones has, would be able to find happiness just about anywhere. And Jones, who graduated from ASU last spring, has found his paradise in, of all places, Bloomsburg, Penn., where he is an assistant coach at Bloomsburg College. “Coaching has been a refreshing change,” Jones said. “It’s a lot different from wrestling. As a matter of fact, coaching should add a new aspect to my competing because I’ll be doing both at the sam e tim e.“ Bloomsburg head coach Roger Sanders informed Jones of a graduate assistant position open at the school while coaching him in tournaments in Italy this summer. Although Sanders and Jones had kept in touch about the Opening throughout the summer, Senders was soon confronted with’a vacancy at one of his full-time assistant positions. Shortly afterward, Jones was awakened at 5 a.m. to answer the telephone. It was Sanders with an offer for the full-time assistant coaching job. Jones accepted. “ I was lucky because the position I got is a great one for someone my age,” Jones said. “It was a super opportunity arid, of course, I jumped at the chance. I wanted to coach because I want to give something back to the sport that has given me so much.” Wrestling has certainly given a lot to Jones and his family. HiS brother, John, was an All-American at Iowa State in 1976-77. At Huron High-School in Ann Arbor, Mich., Jones Was a three-time All-American and compiled a ill-6 record. Despite a strong wrestling tradition at the University of Michigan, Jones enrolled at ASU. “I chose ASU because of (Coach) Bobby Douglas, who is always true to his word and is greatly respected around the country,” Jones said. “Also, ASU was a team on the rise and wanted to win a national championship and we did that in 1987.” Although Jones compiled an impressive 90-20-3 record in his first three seasons, he saved his best for his senior year. In 1989-90, Jones established a new school record by compiling 22 dual victories, easily won the conference title and Was 38-0 entering the 118-pound national championship match against Northwestern’s Jack Griffin. But Griffin, who failed to score on Jones in any of their previous meetings, frustrated him on his way to a 12-4 decision. “In wrestling, the Goodwill Games is just like the Olympics, but maybe even tougher,” Jones said. “In the Olympics, every country is invited, so you might catch an easy first-round match. In the Goodwill Games, only the best eight countries are invited, so there are no easy matches. You face the best right off the bat.” Jones, competing again in the 114*4-pound division, advanced to the medal round with an 8-1 victory over Mustafa Cetin of Turkey and an 8-7 decision against Hedeo Sasayama of Japan. In the bronze medal match, Jones earned an 8-5 decision over Kim Sun Hak of South Korea. However, the best was yet to come. The U. S. team lator found itself in the gold medal round against the Soviets, the tournament’s perennial favorite. In what is quickly becoming regarded as the one of the greatest matches in U. S. wrestling history, the Americans claimed the championship with a 17-13 victory. Jones, who gave his team early momentum with a 4-3 decision over Sergei Zambalov, was one of five members of the U. S. team to post victories. Jones “It was a perfect season until the last match,” Jones said. “I was undefeated and sitting on top of the world, ranked No. 1, but (hen I went to the national championships and got beat by a guy who I had never lost to. ” Jones said he did not dwell on the loss. “I really can’t describe in words how beating the Russians “Winning or losing was never really a factor,” Jones said. “Whether I had won or not would have had no effect on what felt,” Jones said. “The realization of being a part of the best I’m doing now. I won the U. S. Freestyle championship three team in the world and that I helped make it happen was weeks later, a competition 1 would have entered whether 1 incredible.” Won or lost the NCAA title.” With his success at the World Championships and the Although Jones’ seventh-place finish at the 1989 World strong showing at the Goodwill Games, Jones said he sees no Championships was an almost unheard-of feat for a reason why he cannot accompany the U S. team to collegiate Wrestler, he went to this year’s competition in Barcelona, Spain, for the 1992 Summer Olympics. Tokyo looking for even more. “Well, I’m moving in the right direction,” Jones said, “I Competing in the 114(4-pound class, Jones advanced to the medal round by winning four matches and losing only one, a think I’m right on line for the Olympics. Looking into the 10-5 setback to Iran’s Majid Torkan, who eventually won the future, 1992 should be a bright year for m e.” Jones also said his youth might enable him to whistle Dixie championship. But in the bronze medal match, Jones suffered a tough 8-3 loss to Asban Agaev of the Soviet Union. at the 1996 Games in Atlanta. “Winning fourth place is quite an accomplishment for a “The 1996 Games are definitely not out,” Jones said. guy my age,” Jones said. “Most wrestlers reach their peak “Things will not end for me in ‘9 2 .1 have the chance to move at 28. I’m 23, so I guess I’m five years ahead of the game. on because I’m young and a lot of the guys I’m facing now Looking at it objectively, I should be happy at what I did, but will have finished by then.” Sun Devil strength coach advocates drug-free lifting By DARREN URBAN S tate Press Powerlifter Norman Hampton was upset that steroid-users were costing him a realistic shot at a national title. So he decided to try it too. “I did try (steroids) . . . for seven Weeks w h en I w a s 20, u nd er a d o c to r ’s supervision,” the ASU senior said. “I felt it wasn’t worth it.” Hampton eventually found an outlet for a lifter Who wanted to stay clean. The American Drug-Free Powerlifting Association, founded in 1981, provided the forum for Hampton to compete. “ I t ’s th e b ig g e st o rg a n iz a tio n in powerlifting,” Hampton said. “Guys were so frustrated trying to compete with the steroid-users. Even in the teen-age class, it was obvious.” Powerlifting consists of the squat, bench and deadlifts. A competitor is given three attempts at each lift and the winner is determined on combined weight. Hampton is a big believer in drug-free lifting, and despite his disadvantages has had many accomplishments. At 17, he set a teen-age world record at 165 pounds when he squatted 578 pounds. He won Illinois teen-age and m en’s titles and two consecutive European International Pow erlifter titles in 1984 and 1985 w hile in the Air Force. He won the Southwest Championship in 1987, and also has an Arizona Men’s Championship to his credit. After leaving the Air Forces Hampton decided to lessen his involvem ent in lifting. Irw in D aughnrty/Stat» Proas ASU assistant strength coach Norm an Ham pton, w ho won a national pow erlifting title e a rlie r this m onth, spots an ath lete liftin g in th e Law erence Strength C enter. “I kind of put it on the backburner,” he said, “I still lifted, but I wasn’t com peting.” Enter ASU strength coach Tim McClellan, who pushed Hampton into competition in February. “We felt that it being my first m eet back, why drop any weight? ” Hampton said. “We decided to go for a world rebord in the 198-pound class while I weighed 186.” . Hampton set the record with a squat of 718 pounds. He used the event to catapult him into the ADFPLA National competition earlier this month and come out with a national title, • McClellan, who has been coaching since 1978, said that Hampton is an exceptional lifter. • “ I’ve been fortunate to coach m any worldclass lifters,” McClellan said. “ (Norm) is up there. He’s number one right now,” Hampton said that friends Doug King and Larry McGuffin, McClellen, assistant strength coach Rich Wenner, and ASU physical therapist Robert Carl have all been important to his success. “I’ve had a lot of support from all of them,” Hampton said. “Rich is my training partner, and he’s a big help. He never m isses a workout.” Hampton has had a lot of athletic success, although not in the sport he had hoped it to be in. “I wanted to play pro football,” he said. “The only reason I wanted to go to college after high school Was to play ball, but I didn’t get any offers. So I decided to join the Air Force.” After four years in the Air Force, Hampton cam e to ASU as a 21-year-old freshman. “I knew people in the Air Force that were from around here and I had also enjoyed my Turn to Hampton, page 13. Page 12 State Press Thursday, Septem ber 2 0 ,1 9 9 0 Spurs’ W ingate accused o f rape happened if they had acted properly.” Spurs officials did not return a call late Wednesday from The Associated Press. After the charge in Maryland was filed, Spurs owner Red McCombs said contract negotiations with Wingate, a restricted free agent, were on hold. McCombs said he wasn’t assuming Wingate is guilty and said team and league officials would investigate the matter. Team officials said Wingate had been instructed by his attorney not to speak with reporters. Wingate, who played on Georgetown’s 1984 NCAA championship team, joined the Spurs in August 1989 in a trade with the Philadelphia 76ers. He averaged 6.8 points in 78 gam es last season for San Antonio. Wingate was jailed for three hours on Monday in Columbia, Md„ on charges of second-degree rape, battery and a fourthdegree sexual offense. He was freed on $10,000 bond. SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A woman filed a civil lawsuit Wednesday against. San Antonio Spurs guard David Wingate alleging he sexually assaulted her in June. It was the second rape accusation against him this week. Wingate, 26, was charged Monday in Maryland with the rape of a 17-year-old woman at his apartment. In the civil suit filed here in state district court, a 21-yearold woman alleges Wingate bought her alcoholic drinks at a San Antonio night club on June 24 and later offered her a ride. The suit claims that when the woman became ill, Wingate got out of the car with her down the street from his house and sexually assaulted and sodomized her. Afterward, the suit alleges, Wingate left the woman in a room at his house and “allowed at least two other friends of his in to rape her.” The woman required medical care after the attack, the suit states. The woman reported the incident to police. No criminal charges have been filed. Police spokesman Sgt. Paul Buske refused to confirm Wednesday whether Wingate is a suspect in the case, which remains under investigation. “There have been some extenuating circumstances that have prevented us from completing the investigation,” he said, declining to elaborate. The 17-year-old woman in Maryland told police she became intoxicated and sick at Wingate’s Maryland apartment, where several people were drinking beer and tequila. Wingate told Howard County police he had sex with the woman but said she consented. Attorney Marynell Maloney, who represents the woman, on Wednesday accused the San Antonio Police Department of moving slowly with the investigation. In another incident, an intruder entered Wingate’s large, two-story house in San Antonio on Tuesday and left behind a doll pierced by needles and a m essage scrawled in lipstick on a bathroom mirror. “The police basically chose to slow-ball it,” she said. “Unfortunately the Maryland incident may not have Police would not say what the m essage was but said they believe it was left by a woman. CO M PUTE R DEALS ""i FastData386/SX UPGRADE TO COLOR VG A M on ito r & C ard *469 For Both 1*1478 • • • • • ■ • • • • WOW! FastData 386SX comesStandard with: 40mb 28ms Hard Disk Monitor Included! Graphics Card 1.2Mb or 1.44 mb Floppy Drive Enhanced 101 Keyboard iM B of 80ns Memory Parallel, 2 Serial Porta, A Game Port Phoenix BIOS 200 Watt Power Supply 1 Year Warranty Upgrade to color now to make all of jour favorite programs look brighter and clearer. Getan awesome deal on a U bit VGA card and a 14". color VGA monitor with a swivel base. HURRY! 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W ALKER QATASOURCE now h irin g 6-10:30pm sh ift. Need enthusiastic, relK able individuals w ith average reading s k ills and good speaking voice for tele­ phone survey in te rvie w in g . S ta rtin g wage— $4.50/hour. A pply in person 10am to 4pm , M onday-Friday, 4515 South M cClintock Drive, S u ite 101, Tempe. 831-2971. EOE M ale/fem ale. W RITERS W ANTED fo r internship. M usic w riter, theatre c ritic , Cultural happenings and events, restaurant review s, short s to rie s . F or m ore in fo rm a tio n , c a ll 274-4858 between 12 and 5. YOUTH EMPLOYMENT Councelor. Parttim e , tem porary. $7.84/hour. C ity of Tem pe has an opportunity fo r a Youth Em ploym ent C ouncelor. A Bachelors in E ducation, Social W ork, or related fie ld is preferred. Apply in person at C ity of Tem pe Library, Social! Services Depart­ m ent, 2nd flo o r 3500 South RuYal Road in Tem pe. HELP WANTED— CLERICAL NEED TRANSCRIBER im m ediately. Price negotiable 965:3387 days, 921-0789 . evenings and weekends PART-TIME-CUSTOMER service. Compu­ te r m anufacturer has part-tim e opening for custom er service clerk. Position entails responding to custom er’s le tters. Candi­ dates m ust be able to w rite w ell. Ju nior or Senior English or other Liberal A rts M ajor preferred. Training provided. M ust be a non-sm oker and hours are flexible. S tart­ ing pay: $5.50 and 15-25 hours/week. Convenient Tem pe/Phoenix border. Call Janet, 437-9388 PROFESSIONAL PART-TIME secretary wanted for Tempe business. Type 50-80 words/m inute. Hours flexible, good salary blus benefits 820-8408. R E C E PTIO N IS T- PREFER S panishspeaking. 20-30 hours per week. Flexible schedule. Light paperwork and bookkeep­ ing. 10 m inutes from ASU $5/hour to start. 244-1383, ask for Lisa. RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST. FULL- or parttim e for Tem pe C onstruction Company. C all Dan o r Kim , 967-0000. SCOTTSDALE BUSINESS looking for receptionist/typist, also filin g , to work 8:30am to 2pm M onday through Friday., 949-8899 HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE S5/HOUR ROCKY’S Subs Part-tim e, weekdays. Across from Sky Harbor, 40th S treet and Airiane. 267*7464. BUSTER’S RESTAURANT in Scottsdale is now hiring w aiters and waitresses, bussers and hostesses. Please apply in person: 8320 North Hayden (M ercado del Làgo). F u ll- and part-tim e positions available. CORK ‘N Cleaver accepting applications fo r lunch waitress and lunch hostess. Short shifts, Convenient hours. Fun atm o­ sphere WHI train. Concern w ith appear­ ance, personality and re lia b ility are im por­ tant. Apply in person, M onday-Friday, 2-5pm or by appointm ent. 5101 N orth 44th S treet, Phoenix (44th Street/Cam eiback). 952-0585. HIRING FOR a ll kitchen positions. Both shifts— day and night. Apply in person. R io Salado, 430 N orth Scottsdale Road, Tempe. PIZZA COOK wanted. Experience a m ust. Room fo r advancem ent and good day. Call Todd at C ardinal’s Pizza, 829-0064. PIZZA DELIVERY drivers wanted. D aily pay, flexible hours; Im m ediate positions. C all Todd a t C ardinal's Pizza, 829-0064. RESTAURANTS/ BARS 6 EAST LOUNGE 6 E. 7th St. Tempe 254 pool Music Happy Hour M-F 3-6 966-2111 Page 15 RESTAURANTS/ BARS f TONITE : l 9 p m -1 2 :4 5 a m I : REVERSE : happy : hour : : : * 70C D rafts | J B ud, Bud Lig h t d : * : 2 for 1 Mini : : : PERSONALS SERVICES GAMMA PHI Suzi, can’t w ait till beig sis revealing. Your big sis loves you! STORMY— THAT blue cruiser is ju st the greatest, eh? Abuga buga buga Ah Ah Ah! Don’t leave to dinner w ith out me! Love ya, M indy. HAIR REMOVAL — Both electrolysis and w axing: Safe, sterile, effective. Spider veins, also. U niversity and Country Club. 962-6490. THETA TINA Blanda- Happy belated birthday; I m iss my sum m er room m ate. Oh yeah- how was the New Kids concert? Not! A Phi M arlena. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING $1/page. Laser p rin tin g included. You deliver and pick up. Alm a School R oad/Baseline. Jan, 897-1744. $1.50 AAA W ord P rocessing/laser printer. 35 years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. M arion, 839-4269. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , S e c re ta ria l services. 23 years experience. Student discounts. Southwest corner, M iller and C haparral. 994-8145. HAPPY B-DAY Sam! I got o ff w o rk2 -n ite to be w/you. Let’s m ake it a blast! Luv, Tom. HI TONY! Study hard You can do it! Good lu ck!! M otorm outh. JEN I BECK- ?Que pasa calabaza? Three m onths sin ce... Please retain some o f your nose today,.. !Te quiero luego! -Tom as. JILLIAN FRIEDMAN- A X O I know who you are, do you know me? U.R so awesom e! I lu v ya, cutie! Soon the m ystery w ill be solved. Have any guesses? You’re the sweetest dot. Love your ??AXO mom?? TO MY honey Rich, happy 6th m onth anniversary!! To a ll th a t lies ahead... "y o u ’re a ll I nee d." Y ou’re the one who shares my dream s and m y heart. I can't w ait til our dream s com e true. Love, M uffin. TRISIGMA TONIA— I’m so psyched you’re m y dot! Mommy Sigm a loves you tons! $1.50/PAG E. O n-cam pus pickup and delivery. D aily or FAX direct to me. WP5,1 and Laser printer. Class papers a ll types, ~ charts, resum es, etc. 15 years experience. Robyn, 996-3911. KAPPA ALPHA Jordan: W hen the d o c k strikes. H alf past six Hey! Let’s Mac tonite! —KA Hammer. TRI SIGMA Bryna! Y our Sigm a mom loves you. Hugs and vio let kisses, M om, $1.50 PER page. Term papers, letters, resum es, etc. A t Y our Service W ord . Processing, Linda, 839-6167. KAPPA ALPHA Tony: I'm proud o f you. C hivalry lives! Go Big or stay home! —KA Adam. TRISIG M A PLEDGE M arcie, mommy loves you soooo m uch!! Can’t w ait ’til Friday! Guess who? $1.75 AND up, professional w ord proces­ sor and form er English teacher. Laser printer. C laudia, 964-6012. KARLA K. Aren’t you excited fo r this week? No longer a little diam ond in the ru ff! W e love you! Love, your robm mie. TRI-SIGM A CAN’T w a it to have you as second tim e m em bers o f the Deke D aiquiri Club. See you tonight at 7:00. PETS KEVIN STULL: W elcom e back to ASU! I’m glad you made it- rage, rage, rage!!! MB. TRISIGM A DEBBIE: You are the cutest baby! I can’t w ait for you to be born! Sigma love, Mommy. A KINKO’S paper m akes the grade. K inko's typesets papers, resum es, flie rs, etc. Self-serve M acintosh com puters and ■ laser printers, too. 933 East U niversity, c a ll 966-2035. 960 W est U niversity, call 921-0168. Open early, open late, open 7 days! BABY BOA constrictor. G reat m arkings, good pet fo r apartm ent o r dorm . Paul, 948-4076. LAURA- LOOKING forw ard to the dance Saturday, especially yur birthday. I w ill m ake it special fo r m y Bela. Do you cappice? L squared plus TR equals TL. jagers : bandersnatch : * 5th St. & Forest BREWPUB *; BURMESE PYTHON babies, $150; Boa C onstrictor babies, $100. Leave message *a t 986-9457, Mesa. FREE CUTE puppies! Chow/Lab m ix, a ll black, 9 weeks old, very sm art. Jam es, 829-1784 FREE LAB-MIX PUPPY: aquired from owner who w ould have had to put it to sleep or be throw n out of her apartm ent. If interested please c a ll 941-5155. PHI PSI Actives and Pledges be prepared to get wet in .the ... grass during the Scholarly? event th is Saturday! PHI SlGS, congrats A lex and Jason!! Have a great weekend. M uch love, 2% and W ilm a. PHI SlGS— TriD elts are psyched fo r our Happy Hour tonig ht!! G et ready to rage for an hour, or tw o, o r three ... FREE LOST/FOUND PIPH I’S- YOUR coaches at waterm elon bust are ready to rage! W e hope you’re as psyched as we are! Luv, Lam bda-chi. LOST: BLACK lab puppy, wearing blue collar. Last seen Lot 57. Please c a ll for reward. 784-8818, ROSES ARE red, vio lets are blue and frogs are green: E ric, I’ll lové you forever. Lisa. LO ST: BLUE s p ira l notebook. C all 921-3925 or 966-7836. Thanks very m uch. SAES, SIGMA Nus and Kappas— DGs are ready for a little you know what on the Beach Saturday. See you there!! LOST: SET o f keys w ith blue dancing bear keychain, between U niversity Towers and M usic B uilding. If found, please call 350-0237. LOST: TWO keys on a square key ring on Tyler S treet and Rural Road. If found, call 965-6511, PERSONALS AAAAA GAMMA P hi— 'W aterm elon B u st" weekend is going to rage!!! Love, your coaches. AGD MARNEE: I’m excited you’re my mom and psyched for an awesome year. Love, Stacy. ALOHA THETA, Sigm a Chi and Theta D elt! A D P i's are ready to roast a pig w ith you at Luau Saturday! ALPHA PHI K risti, 3/20, 4/16, 4/17, 4/28, 5/10, 8/23, 8/31, 9/8, 9/20. Here’s to 6 m onths of great dates (pun intended). I love .you, Sty. C hristian. ALPHA PHI K risten P. Hope you had a happy birthday. D id your I.D . work? Love, your sisters. ATTENTION ALL G reeks: Gamma Phi Beta is having a BBQ Sunday, Septem ber 23, from 1-6pm. Tickets are available through a ll Gamma P hi’s. P rice o f ticket includes food and fun. A ll proceeds benefit our Philanthropy fund. BIRD LADY: W hat m agnificent plum m age! Boy, can you fly o r can you fly !! Pooh. CHIO DIAMOND pledges— W e’re so proud o f you. Hope th is week is the best! Love, a ll the actives. DELTA SIG Donnie. I love you because: 1. The Gamma P h i's th in k you’re hot — how hot you’d soom fin d out. 2. You locked my keys in my car. 3. Everywhere you park you get a ticket. 4. You gave me the best sum m er ever. 5. You’re m y Duck man. C rissy. DG HANNAS— We love you! Can’t w ait -tH you’re in black. ERIN— GET wed soon! W ant to see your sm ile again. Your room m ie, Amie. FREE FASHION show and total im age sem inar! Presented by Casual Com er and B e a u tiC o n tro l C o sm etics, Thursday, Septem ber 20, 7pm , Dobson Ranch Inn, La Posada I. Be in vited guest of K elly, w ith B e a u tiC o n tro l. Q uestions? C a ll m e, 949-8168. Career opportunities available! GAMMA PH I'S Stephanie and Tiffany, The Red H ot C h ili P eppers and Dead Kennedys are bands! Thanks fo r dinner! Sigm a Nu’s Steve and Jeff. GAMMA PHI’S: C ongratulations on a successful finish in Sigm a Nu Relays. It’s been fun: Love your coaches, GAMMA PHI Rebecca G, Tonight is the night when you w ill see the tight. Ice cream a ll around and before you know it, your big s is ’ w ill be found. Love in PKE, your B ig S is’.' TYPING/WORD PROCESSING PERSONALS SIG EP Tim and D elta S ig K irk— Congrats on being our new . ChiO men— W e’re e xcite d fo r an aw esom e sem ester! Thanks— Love, the Ç hiO ’s. SIG KAP Pledges— pledge presents is th is Saturday, are you ready?! Love, the Actives. SIGMA KAPPA Lissa, you’re awesome! Love, Mom. SIGMA KAPPA pledges, show som e sp irit fo r Pledge Presents. Baby snakes are the best! Stephanie. SIGM A NU Alba— Thanks fo r being such ah awesome coach and anchorm an. Happy 21st!! You’re a stud! Love, the DGs. SIGMA NU Peace Frogs: Can’t Wait til Thurs. (tonite) fo r our reunion. Love, the g irls w ith Scruples. SK ACTIVES love your awesome pledges! G et exCited fo r presents Saturday night!! SK BETH: My pledge dot is absolutely the best! Can’t w ait til revealing. Love, Mom. SK GAB I liv e on the floor— are you getting closer?? Love, your pledge mom. SK KRISTINAW ! Get psyched for Friday! I can’t w ait! We are going to have an awesome tim e at Pledge presents! SK Love, your mom. SK TERESA— I’m so glad I am your pledge mom! Can you guess who I am? Love, ? SO, ROMEO, a g irl you ask to play your gam e of w it, exchanging poems and rhym ing lines— an im age I do Tit. Step aside as I unleash my m ind and a ll that lies w ith in, fo r you know not the m agic I’ve got, and I’m eager to begin. So a dual it is — choose your weapon, at your own accord. Choose wise, choose slow , for both o f us know ... The pen is m ightier than the sword. "J u lie t” . CHILDCARE ALL PAPERS, resum es, letters, docu­ m ents, transcribing, editing, m ailings. C ollege graduate using IBM com puter. M ike, 964-0994. CHILD CARE needed, before and after school. N orth Scottsdale. R eliable trans­ portation and references required. Call 998-8513. APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. Need it fast? C all Jessie, 945-5744. CHILD CARE in my home fo r 2 sm ali children. Part-tim e. Tam m y, 423^5496. LOVING CARE fo r in fa n t in my hom e. 4-5 days/week. 1:30-5 plus. $3/hour. M ust be realiable arid have references. C all Linda at 966-5578 between 8am and 1pm. SERVICES CUSTOM TYPING. Fast and accurate! Term papers and resum es. $1.75/page and up. Connie, 969-6618. MATURE BABYSITTER wanted fo r baby and toddler and to supervise teens. A fter­ noons and evenings. Dobson/Broadway area. 962-7466. FLYING FINGERS has M aclntosh/laser qua lity and now Fax-a-Shirt. C all 945-1551 fo r details. ADOPTION MESA SECRETARIAL Service, com puter­ ized, laser printer, fu ll graphics. 15 m inutes from ASU. N ortheast corner, M esa Drive and Brown Road. 844-1876. CHILDLESS LOVING couple, m arried 7 years, longs fo r baby to share our secure, happy hom e. C onfidential, legal adoption. M edical expenses paid. C all K ari.and Bob co lle ct, (818) 989-2369; attorney at (213) 854-4444. NEED TIM È to study? Let us do your typing/w ord processing o f your paper so you can. APA/MLA form ats. $1.50, double^ spaced page. C all Joanne, 966-1516, or Bobbi, 968-9166 (please leave message). CONFIDENTIAL OR open adoption...w ith Southwest Adoption C enter, if you would like , you can choose th e fam ily and even m eet them , and be reassured that they are qu a lifie d to provide a loving, caring home fo r a ch ild . G et the fa cts from a licensed adoption agency. Southw est Adoption Center: W e can provide a professional and confid ential help w ith housing, counseling, and m edical arrangem ents. W e serve a ll areas o f the co u n tiy, W e fa cilita te tra d i­ tio n a l, confidential adoptions or open adoptions. It’s your choice. For help, call Southw est Adoption C enter, 234-BABY. C O O PER ATIVE AD O P TIO N Loving couple, state ce rtifie d ; w ith the best of everything to offe r, seeks birth m other who would lik e to m eet and have open contact w ith the parents she chooses for her baby. For m ore inform ation, c a ll Char, collect, (602)297-2487. NORTHEAST VALLEY word processing fo r your typing needs. Reports, resum es, term papers. 996-5564. WORD PROCESSING serving Phoenix and W est Valley. $1.50/page. Call M arji, 979-8907 WORD PROCESSING fo r your typing needs. Fast turnaround. Close to ASU. $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825. INSTRUCTION AERO BIC INSTRUCTOR c e rtific a tio n workshop in Mesa. W eekend: O ctober 5-7, bÿ N ational Aerobics T raining Association. C all 963-9415. P IA N O LE S S O N S fo r b e g in n e rs . $5/lesson. For m ore inform ation, Call 829-6943. TUTORS ACCOUNTING AND finance professional in struction, study aides and exam ination strategies. Rates from $6/hour. 497-2097, G il. ' : ' '• • ENGLISH TUTOR, paper editing. A ll s u b je c ts , p ro fe s s io n a l e x p e rie n c e . Reasonable rates. 829-6712. MISCELLANEOUS LIQUOR SIGNS- m irrors. M iller, Coors, M ichelob, others. Range from $15-$30. Contact M ichele, 947-2943. PREGNANCY COUNSELING Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing and counseling. 24-hour Hotline 966-5683 Your Individual Horoscope . — FrancesDrake. . . =§ SECURITY m d F IC BANK ARIZONA Slop In and receive you r tin t o n le r of •fuctonf check* FREE/ 619 S. Mill, Tem pe 431-4705 WE WANT TO B E YOUR BANK FOR LIFE FOR FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1990 ARIES _ SUIKflU . (Mar; 21 to Apr: 19) ; (Opt. 23 to Nov. 21) Early morning crankiness is a A financial matter concerns you i A SOFT Touch E lectrolysis- perm anent possibility today. A difference o f taste the day begins. You and a friend ju hair rem oval. Free in itia l treatm ent. Near could arise between you and a close aren’t on the Same wave length toda ASU 829-7829 tie. Innovative ideas in business Tonight finds you enthused abdl prove successful. som e new ideas; ELECTRO LYSIS— PERMANENT hair TAURUS - j , SAGITTARIUS rem oval. Remove unw anted hair forever. (Apr. 20 to May 20) (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) fi1 Student discounts. C all fo r m ore inform a­ A minor money dispute is possible As the day begins you could be i tio n : 969-6954. now. It’s not a good day to take the too much o f a rush. A friend : children shopping. Couples will ergoy well-intentioned, hut his or hi HAVING DIFFICULTY studying or taking something new in the way o f enter­ advice is. not o f much help. Surpris tests? You m ay be "sw itch in g o ff” one tainment tonight. money developments today are pos hem isphere o f your brain . New hypnosis GEMINI M • tive., "• * TV • ¿ -j triggering technique helps w ith studying, ( May 21 to June 20) . A rv CAPRICORN ~ sports, m oney, etc. C all 860-8111. Remember to be considerate o f a (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) ftI family member’s feelings today. You Strivé to be more cooperative wit PERMANENT HAIR rem oval through elec­ m ay step on som eone’s toes without those you work with. You may not g< tro lysis. G reat student rates! 998-0343. realizing it. Surprise developments in the answers you seek about a bus business are positive. ness matter now. Tonight favoi CANCER ofiO socializing with others. f (June 21 to July 22) AQUARIUS Little things could go wrong at (Jah, 20 to Feb. 18) ¿y! Full S e t / $ 1 5 » Fill In home today and you'll probably ei\joy Be more "patient with a chili a change o f scenery now. Couples Judgment may be slightly off wher Crimpers • 5th & College will find this the perfect time for an financial interests aré concerne Ask for Darlene or Pam evening out together. how. Developments in business how - LEO -’ _ ^ ever are positive. (July 23 to Aug. 22) PISCES _ A small irritation could arise with a (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) núá friend or acquaintance now. Be Partners may not be in agreemer careful o f wasteful spending today- about the use of joint assets todaj It s a good time to tackle a do-it- Travel leads to new friendships. Yoi yourself project. may hear from som eone you havenVIRGO « a . heard from in a while. (Aug. 23 to Sept.22) YOU BORN TODAY are versátil > Soft-pedal differences with a busi­ but must be careful not to scatte ness colleague. It’s n ot a good day for your energies. Once you learn to trus personal shopping. Evening hours others, you’ll find them helpful ii though favor impromptu outings and ypur rise to success. A sense o get-togethers. humour will always be yoUr alls LIBRA », You’re often drawn to fields involvírt] (Sept. 23 to d ct.22) ISr& communication. Writing, publishing You're a bit impatient as- the day editing, banking, and advertising an begins. Try not to let temperament sortie o f the fields that promise yoi undermine efficiency. On the spur of fulfillment. Birthdate of: H. (». Welles the moment, you may pick up an item writer;. Chico Ilaihiltori, jazz, great for the home. and Clair Engel, actress. Copyright 1990 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. SERVICES $25J£ Nail Special W ANTED: TR I-SIG M A a t the Deke D aiquiri Club, tonig ht. Strawberry or peach Dude? ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytim e. P rice s are co m p e titiv e , neg otiable . 966-2186. TYPING SERVICES- 24 hour turnaround available. 10 years experience. $1.50 per page. 998-7261.. 966-5192 Page 16 Thursday, S eptem ber 2 0 ,1 9 9 0 State Press DANGEROUSLY CHIC, AND SO CONTINENTAL, THE COATDRESS TAKES A BOLD TURN WITH WORLD-WISE DESIGNS FROM PARIS BLUES. FOR FASHION FORWARD STYLING, AND AN INTERNATIONAL FLAIR, DILLARD’S IS YOUR PARIS BLUES HEADQUARTERS. LEFT: GANGSTER STRIPE COATDRESS IN BLACK AND W HITE. 76.00. RIGHT: ASYMMETRICAL SURPLICE COATDRESS IN BLACK W ITH W HITE COLLAR, CUFFS AND POCKETS. 7&00. PHOTOGRAPHED AT THE MANSION CLUB; PHOENIX. To order call 861-2241, Ext 3178 in Phoenix; elsewhere in Arizona, can 1-800-352-0703 ton free. Shop Monday through Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-6 in Phoenix at Metrooenter, Paradise Valley, Fiesta M all, ChrieTbwn and Scottsdale. Shop Monday through Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-6, Sunday 12-6 at Park Central arid Westridge • ' and in Flagstaff Mall. ’ D illard ’s W e welcome your Dillard’s Credit Card, The American Express* Card, Diners Club International, M astercard* Visa® and The Discover Card.